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Albion Monday, November 15, 1830,
Middlesex

Albion Tuesday, November 16, 1830,
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Albion Saturday, November 20, 1830,
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Albion Thursday, November 25, 1830,
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London Times Friday, November 19, 1830 ,
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Hagerstown Mail and Washington Repub Advertiser Friday, November 19, 1830 ,
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London Lloyd List Friday, November 19, 1830 ,
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Course Of The Exchange Friday, November 19, 1830 ,
Middlesex

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District Of Columbia

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Albion

   Albion (Newspaper) - November 19, 1830, London, Middlesex                                Second crown 6d ON FINANCIAL By SIR HENRY Sir Henry admirable to which we have more than once directed the attention of our John This day is small THE of the BOOKS of argued from undesigned coincidences to be found in when compared in their several By the Fellow of Johns has already signalized himself by on the Acts of the as individual intimately conversant with the most minute particulars of holy and a very successful disciple of in the management of that species of Christian which arises from the discovery of undesigned dence of revealed volume cannot fail to increase his It is both a pleasing and instructive and is credit able to the and piety of the respected We think Blunts clever and very web of argu ment will be read with as it certainly must with Monthly by the same The VERACITY of the ACTS A New Edi Post John FRIDAY NOVEMBER IMPERIAL PAJ Price NEW HISTORICAL SCHOOL BOOK Just in with bound and HISTORICAL or IllUs T rations of the most important periods in Modern with a particular Account of the British Constitution and to English By of Trinity Printed for and Just New enlarged of HISTORY OF to of MODERN GEOGRAPHY ROBERTS ELEMENTS and with TAYLORS of ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY and COMPANION to the Third PRACTICAL LOGIC Hints to Young Theme WILLIAMSS CONVERSATIONS on ENGLISH SYLLABIC a new Me thod of Teaching 8s HISTORICAL of the NEW TESTA HISTORY and NORM Civ bound and May be Whittaker and SCHOOL CA WITH ON AN ENTIRELY In royal neatly bound and embellished with numerous illustrating am ENTS of oh a New designed to the Memory by comparison and classifica By M The Geography is accompanied by an in with the outlines of the prevailing Forms of Degrees 6f comparative size of and and the Climates and Pro ductions of the Earth in royal This Atlas has been compiled from the and con all discoveries of and Clap But its principal claim to attention is founded ori tlie entire novelty of the plan each map not only tlie outlines of countries but a series of numbers to the and which indicate their comparative and enables the student by reference to the table of to discover their actual The Isothermal chart exhibits the climate of different as determined by with their most important and presents a striking illustration of the diversity existing in the same according to the situation of In the moral and political the outlines of each country contain a showing its and several emblems indicating its and state of and in a moral picture of the Printed for and A ve a complete School HOUSE OF The of Craven the oaths his ABOLITION Op the abolition of were presented by the Earl Lord Lord Snf field the Marquis of Lord the Marauis of Bishop and the Earl of the Earl of Earl OP COMMON rose to move the second rif tin Ul mt the on a recent evening to lay on lordships The object of those bills was to carry into effect some of the recommendations in the report of the commis who had been appointed to inquire into the means of improv inx of justice in the He did to comprehend measures all the re commendations of the Of the expediency am practicability of some of them he entertained considerable was sure that he meet with the concurrence o when he it was a subject which required deliberate The experience of his whole lifi had confirmed him in He had accordingly bestowed jail the consideration in his power upon the bills on their lordships i Of YOUNG DRAW op an improved Plan A SERIES OF PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS IN LANDSCAPE PAINTING IN WATERCOLOURS By JOHN CLARK Illustrated by 55 Views from of The with the Four Parts of Descriptive Letter are all contained in a strong and handsome covered with and resembling a royal 4to The price of the work is Six Guineas a sum which does notes ceed what is usually paid to a twelve lessons URANIAS MIRROR A View of the Heavens on a plan perfectly original Designed by a The work consists of Thirtytwo large on which are re presented all the Constellations visible in The Stars are according to their as to when held up to the light their natural Appearance in the Cards are accompanied with a Familiar Treatise on written expressly for this purpose by and il New fitted up in a neat price beautifully 3 The PORTABLE DIORAMA consisting of and Picturesque Scenery with the necessary apparatus for the various effects of tlie ap and the on ciple of the in Regents Park accompanied with a De on various Fitted up in a SIX ADDITIONAL VIEWS and SIX SH to ac KS 5V THH M signed by Many Thousand Views The My placed a neat Price a or The Cards are fitted Second Designed fe va the number of Cards is The changes which may be produced to the al incredible number of Price in a of hundred small historical devices Principal Events in Scripture The Mip a descriptive and a complete Index with their Latitude and Price Strand of whom may be on L or a if by letter postpaid to R II quanti 6 nW f OH ffi this and he hail availed himself of the advice and suggestions of learned From his noble and learned friend on the and from several learned memoers of the he received essential He stated this in order to show lordships the propositions which he was submitting to i them had not been hastily The bills were five in and were Judgment and Execution the Inter the Prohibition and Mandamus the Arbitration and the Witness Examination The noble and learned to describe the of the various but he was heard indistinctly below the upon a sub ject Of so much and involving so many technical de tails we will not incur the risk of attempting to report Lord said that he did not rise the reading noble and learned friends the he thought as far as they they were calculated to do much Undoubtedly caution was but he had no hesita tion in saying in his much more might be done with a view to diminish the expensive and dilatory character of the law in its present After a few observations from Earl Grosvenor and Lord uer the respective bills wero read a second and ordered to be committed on The of Wellington was and in his usual HOUSE OF COLONIAL Ipswich places by Sir Bunbury and other to the same from different parts of the CHINA LITTLETON presented a petition from the Staffordshire the trade to China might be He called the attention of the house to a passage which stated that tlie petitioners considered distress of the lower orders not from the use of but from the existence of Lord ALTHORP and Sir WROTTESLEY supported the and lauded the conduct of the BROWN presented a petition from praying that Roman might be put on the with Pro MALT CURTEIS postponed his motion for the repeal of this tax until after in he of the unsettled state of 1 Lord presented petition from the scot and lot payers of complaining that all the inhabitants were not permitted to but that the right claimed exclusively by a twelve aldermen and a limited number of of whom twentytwo only were and petitioners prayed for reform iii the representation as well as in their own particular did not think allegations in the peti tion were founded in The member for Taunton suggested that the petition should be as it had a tendency to prejudge the and he was now on the eve of a Lord said he would withdraw it if the sense of the home was in favour of such a The SPEAKER said the noble use his own dis Lord agreed to withdraw it for the On the of W WYNN the Rye Appeal petition was ordered to be taken into consideration the 7th of The member stated that the petition had now been six months on the OCONNELL gave notice that he after move for leave to bring in a to exempt all Protestant dissenters and Roman Catholics in Ireland from the payment of Church rates also a to secure the liberty of the by allowing in criminal Informations in cases of libel the truth of the allegation to be given in evidence also ah humble address to his Majesty in favour of a Roman Catho inhabitants of equal JOHN WOOD supported the and that he thooght the object of those wbo petitioned for a repeal of the Le Union which would be in his a most mischievous measure was to Irish and he recommended these to come forward and to peti tion for that which they really and they would find many English members to Hfe system of Church Establishment required both as regarded expense and and that it was only in consequence of the Legislative Union it had been maintained up to the present The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER defended the Irish and it never was in a better state than at pre Ht denied that nonresidence existed to such an extent as to considered an and he referred to the proof which had been afforded of i this on the last occasion when the question was brought supported the but bore witness to the exemplary conduct of Ministers of the Irish HUME denied the accuracy of the made that there were only twentyfive nonresident clergymen belonging to the Irish Church gave notice that he would move tomorrow for a return of all the nonresident He declared that the whole establishment required ami that whoever the minister he must it It longer that who had no should receive large emolu ments or that such immense to new he should be subservient to the the and not attempt to rule them with a rod of lauded the and and character of the Irish Clergy BROWN observed that the honourable member wbo had just sat down mistook the purport of die the member for who had not attacked the character of the Irish Church but had merely stated that he did not know what so many Protestant churchmen could do in that coun He must say that he concurred the spirit of the IN presented a petition from the Roman Catho a parish iii that the grants made for the edu in Ireland should be to the original so asto be to apply for the benefit of the Roman Catholics as well as BROWN gave his cordial support to the OCONNELL presented a from parish in the town of stating the felt in attributing and praying its WOOD presented several petitions against the ance of the system The Marquis of CHANDOS presented a petition from the of The Marquis of a petition from the pro inhabitants of a praying that the elective that town might be Sif WILSON presented a of against the present establishment of the new po1 He observed that they did not cast any on the conj duct of the individuals of the new for if they did he should certainly find himself compelled by his experience of the conduct of these men to dissent from the for as far as he had had any opportunity of observing the conduct of the new police he be that they generally performed their duty very The an alarm at the the police force which they declared to be With that ob servation he did not concur he had no fear of them he did nnt think that this establishment would endanger the liberties of the people especially in the times in which we The petitioners dso complained of great expense of the and they were charged an of on account of He was of opinion that that was the chief and the only real cause of complaint the Sir PEEL said that if he had remained in andif any one had proposed that a committee should be appointed to quire whether the charge for the police could be he should not had the slightest difficulty in acceding to proposi He on the be most ready to acquiesce in not expense of the police had in the slightest degree his conviction that it was absolutely necessary that some Such force should exist for the preservation of tUe persons of the inhabitants of this great but because he glad to be afforded the public opportunity cf examining into every proceeding connected with the police mode of its arrangement the real amount of the ex pense which was incurred for arid of having a comparison both on the score of expense and between the improved system of and that which formerly Hear He should be glad to be afforded such an opportunity for the purpose of doing away with the gross misrepresentations which had been spread abroad by interes persons on this any such committee should have been he for one should have been most if he had continued in to second the motion as he felt convinced that the result of the evidence which would be produced before that would be to establish in every respect the which the new police possessed upon the public approbation and Loud cries of People supposed that object of the new establishment in Lon to keep watch upon individual Now no po no matter how could do so if the indi vidual inhabitants of such houses did not respectively exert them selves a little tq protect their own It should be remembered that within the last few in consequence of his accession to the there had been various public as reviews and other public which immense crowds of people had been and in all uch instances the most perfect order had been maintained by means ofthe new It was obvious at once that in a population such as existed in this of upwards of there be some civil means for preserving order and If no suh civil the only alternative would maintenance of an immense military anda corres ponding increase in the army estimates nnd If he Sir Robert Pcl had been rightly the most on that a single accident had He undoubtedly thought that it made a question whether a f the charge for the police might not be borne by the at He believed that if the expense or the police had been limited to in the they would not lave heard a word about the unconstitutional tKit Loud cries of He feared it would be impos ime to the police establishment at a less tlian hat now for and if charge was to continue 0 be defrayed by a local it would be impossible to reduce it below in the He must that when complaints were made of in the pound being imposed in of the establishment of the local police that uch a charge was not fixed by the act at in the and 1 the overseers of the different parishes asked the inhabitants o pay in trie pound account of the new he would ell tiltin that the overseers had no authority more han in the pound fur Ha knew that a real nrs on that and lie bought it right to say thus much with a view to remove He vas afraid that the result of the labours of a if the harge to be by local would not be to educe its He hoped that the if it should be would enter minutely into every portion of the financial with regard to this it would consider the mount of the mode of forming the various and hat it would examine into tlie condition of every class of the police nd that it would conider it was possible to produce an ient and respectable corps less than the present He Sir Peel did not think that such a force could be produced for less but if it and he had in no man have been more ready to acquiesce in any such suggestion rom a onthe The which had u the first urged the plan of the ew that the amount of was not such as wuld secure respectable persons to fill the situations in A aweek was the subject to certain deductions for and other One object in the formation of lie new police establishment having removed it from i he power of the local parliament should always have n opportunity of exercising its power of inspection over and I lat from time to time tlie various connected with it come under the consideration of He conceived i hat the period had hardly for the institution of such an Colonel SIBTHORP protested against the the country at large with the expense of tlie metropolitan police BYNG believed that the great grievance of with the new was the The certainly much to complain of in that He from the member foe for he thought as tlm country at large was interested in the preservation of tlie peace of the it should defray a portion of the expense of the me MABERLY conceived that the system de from tha want of local long as that feet it would he impossible to amend tlie police The complained because had not patronage but he hoped that no member in that house would attend to such a and that the object of all to place the management of the police under an efficient Hear MK WYSE was of opinion that as long the principal uf taxation existed in the that the country at and Ir land be called upon tobear a portion of expense of the police this He instanced the ronsta establishment in the expense of which in the respective counties by grand jury and he that evety place should defray its own local Sir PEEL that the had thought that ho Sir Peel was wrong the suggestion which he made but the gentleman himself upon the veiv grounds he had i he gentleman Impose no contribution on the every plane bear the bu Ulen of its own local and do not Ireland pay forth Now the fact that the metropolit paid the police of Ireland for the greater portion of the expense of constabulary in Ireland was defrayed out of consolidate By the act under which the new police it that of the expenditure should be laid before parliament 30 days after its if it should meet in After a few words from from who deprecated the proposal of taxing the large for thi of the metropolitan contended that DubUn should pay for its own police as wsll as and stated that the at the west end were favourable to the new and from Cressett who was inaudible in the the was from the parish of on the subject of tile new was broulit and ordered to be The of after stating that the lie to bring in was almost similar to the which he introduced on this subject last but which the extreme pres sure of business had prevented him from carrying leave to bring in a to alter and amend the and to legalize tlie sale of a few words from Wortley and from who hoped no time would be lost in pressing a of this j kind through the motion was agreed and leavi given I OF The moved for to brin in I for amending the law as to the attestation of Iv expressed a hope that the postpone his until te the more generally He soon to see a uniformity the kw upon this tor the present he that the legislature should not The could not to his the object of which to remove i Leave was then given to bring in the i wished to effect the of removing not a measure of such utility it did uot the to which it might hereafter be The was brought in and read a first op On motion of the the into committee upon the Administration of Justice After a few words from passed through t and ihe report was ordered to be revived this over the that house was bound to institute any i which might be necessary on the He would sav s Secretary of if police force was not honestly managed and it would be a instead of being n to the He was therefore of opinion that a committee from time to be appointed on the not with a view to throw any doubts upon the general effi uf the but for the purpose of seeing whether any might not be made in if wt Mith regaul to the recommendations of the parishes hey had been always properly attended to he had shown favour n the lie was sure that every gentleman in that onse must know that he Sir Robert Peel had not prostitute the ase their recommendations would be attended as well as those om any other But if the parishes were to recommend hose they thought and if there was to be no difficulty whatever n complying with their the effect wouldbe to give o the parishes a control over the appointment of the which it as the object of thc act to take Out of their The effect ould be to do away with all the benefits resulting from the new and to do away with the arrangement of a hole metropolitan placed under the control of one pon which arrangement the efficiency of the present esta so entirely At the same time he thought that here should be always a ready disposition on the part of that head o act in concert and cooperation with the parish WILKS concurred with the right gentleman in thinking iat the additional expense was in a great degree the cause of the of the new He was anxious that a committee be appointed on the and he was sure that the ap ointment of such a committee would be received with gratitude bv ic Sir PEEL and gave that the rfe should move for the appointment of a select on the He he would move not from any doubts which he entertained of efficiency of the new but because he was anxious that the e Hole establishment should be examined in all its and with Hat he should move for a full inquiry on the subject that the from three who ad intrusted him with petitions to the house the subject j con in asking for the appointment of He thought hat the principle upon which the new police establishment was an excellent and that mucH of tHe which encountered arose from It was in his an Irt and other country the was complained as a great The of as he which formerly paid only now He thre power of to do away with a On of the Marquis of the Game ment was read a first ami ordered to LJ on 30th Lord STANLEY presented a petition from certain Dissenters o against negro and a similar peti tion the Dissenters of Lord CAVENDISH presented a similar petition from a of Dissenters of HOBHOUSE that in the present state of the Adminis it would be useless to discuss the relations of the country with He should therefore withdraw tlie THE TRUCK Lord SOMERSET presented a petition from the of against the truck ROBINSON presented a similar petition from ihs retail traders of The member wished that a migit be appointed upon the gave that immediately after Christines bring in a to enable parishes in Ireland to their poor by voluntary At tea minutes to six the house PARLIAMENTARY Mr Robert Grant to extend the Clause of the lath 1 which to the Police by virtue of that Act from voting at the Election M in for certan Counties therein name and fcr any City or Borough within the Metropolitan Police Elections of throughout the Littleton the payment of Wages than in Hume Select Committee to inquire state of the Laws tlie payment of wages in Lard Advocate alter and amend tlie Laws regarding taking of in heritable property in MARCH Davies 5 Select Committee on Efficiency of Secondary Mn of the Stamp Duty on News papers and to exempt ths in two Tithe of for the Administration of Justice in tlie Court of Advocate for establishing a General System oi Police iii Burghs to arnaud the regulating Kennedy to do away disabilities which at present prevent eldest sons of Scottish from representing in FOREIGN Further extracts from me Paris Papers receive 1 ys From the of A circular of the minister of desires the make him acquainted immediately with the ss nearly it can be of those citizens who least 26 years of and pay the sum of in direct This dv sire of the minister the project of proposing this the new qualification of the The inquiries that have beer made for the department of the Upper Garonne promise that number of citizens whose taxes will qualify them to be electors will be about so the diminution of the produce an addition of about The interpreter sent from Algiers to with orders to appear before the prefect of to give an which is said to be rather in the tion between him and the Bey of It is in contemplation to transfer to Toulon the which is at the entrance of the port of contains the decree cf the Court of which itwill meet in a public the at on day the Count de and Genoude and will be at instance of Astor to appear OF rise has been and was succeeded  

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