British Press (Newspaper) - December 6, 1821, London, Middlesex Number 5930. ' his tbe of Mr. $ Henix Mh Mr. STArV j j ' V ' The Second the of the in win new The the the 8cene^thfr:HU, of which the Grand Entre of the 2.-2G8irery, 9s.; Upper Second the - cits only Be 6l)tiiaediritr Mr. at the - k A New Way to OJJ L iif M. acted THE TWO OF pulte sf Mr. Sir Mr. Sylvia Miss la of Play will 8a|i:ii'1}aetic, and Poetry selected front In Act will a new PAGES OF THE by Mrs. A the or of at the opened at Slk Play at 3s.6d.-Pit, 39. Second Second of Frederick the Great irill be repealed 3t|rsuBat. the into 1^^^ ob the of sen. the Right tW with and universal solicited to lake ' of bbt on take so a part in the ipf His reason that considered the bad yet found himself to came to so agricultural he Would wishes of the present of be Mr. sen. haying presided at of the begged mention of assembling un the Many were of thai it be a course to call a meeting the but fur on socb where opinion would be to he was persuaded be many andl benefit be bad the eastern of lo what were feelings abd the and therefore down in of from of portion of Mr. LAM BE the of fak a held at on which he attend at Lewes this He was express a be be efficient moSe of and a6 well as felt pressure of ' which ibey bad been to in their He mention of what he haij as to the The number of men out of employ in the district was most so that ii had been computed there at the iBt ope rape alone of no than 1,000 persons in such a predicament and appalling corroborated by Mr. the clerk of he said there were so of he meant to include ib the number those who bad been hired by farmer occasion fur their at a rate greatly beyond the value of their he ten shillings fur what coold been performed at well horses at the of Tlie now expressed proceeded from men during the cheerfully forward to support their share in of the and who considered it a doty equally binding Ib come forward as they did ' Mr. HAVILAND WHS also deputed to attend from the eastern of the He had not however been aware that the Gentleman who bad last would be He begged to moat strongly what had been said by Mr. well relative to the existing as lo propriety of calling a He that a would have a much better and he doubted not llist an example on the part of Sussex would be followed throughout Mr. jun. that an allusion been made to the hop he bee leave lo read from the evidence offered before the Agricultural of House question put to together with It wasas Have not most of farmers in your district a hop I at least of the is not what is in the hop place I live in divides that part of the to eastward of me there are a good many to the west they are not found to unless will grow any aud cau return for greatest I know of is in tbe are nb know real of of sen. 4bere be the poor bad 3(>^ deduction af last years was to bis having to who otherwise liave beett the parochial He for labdar tKe WtX pb a from a to ilie In thai were a employer tii ferrying or what Lord to ascertain whether jn and of ployed pa was the that he present - reply a J HAyiLAND in. ber of had greatly that of were 400 including aod other parishes were similarly Mr. LAMCE i very by which to estimate the real amount of - In the of a themselves lo maintain each a of ' The means a Ibe nine be could hbd performed for in added to the amount of If he went to the market for lapd might be the of the that the would be Mr. weife would give a lamentable account things in. had si heart-rending scene a few day's he of drawing Wllich as been said by evil Ihal thus their labour ten having nothing to to and it disgraceful way bad been - as a upon received lower orders He - U presumption to in. hat as no other had dune Would lake the liberty of to only Diode relief could he Every given lo the the fat pre and Buenos Ayres could to this way much might be The real cause of the present difficulties without taxation while was we get 00 the pressure of that the value of ihe pound reduced to 20ii. all Opp perhaps a. relief would be found .in encouraging the in every possible in the expenditure of Tbe means and necessaries of - life not now 80 high as in 1793, it could nut be a bring down the of public same He spoke npl of - the poor be did not think were the persons who should be made to on the merited all that Ibey hot he Spoke of a in the salaries of those who could bear a Another mode of relief might pff the taxes pressed hard upon the lower and to make up the deficiency by a properly were the views entertained upon tbe and these modes of relief which feel disposed offer the shape of a specific but merely as a of his Mr. sen. that question at present before meeting whether or bad poor From own of be no in say had very materially within the last five The farmer paid to value of his to as as Ihe whole the poor koew not the should be compelled a He disapproved of There had three at on the men should he paid by n bad prevailed of putting up lo of and a fair there hearty get a shot I time to be a. friend's iu the eastern part of the hiring a man of 33 or 24 years of would give him no. more than per To who occupied nearly the whole of parish in which be .it was a matter of perhaps little consequence the were paid by of paid out of but who lived id Urge it became a very He the was not bound to pay more than what was a fair in which case the pour hp was would be since this moment more meu out of employ Jhan at the same period last Mr. MARTIN had been by Mr. that in bis were 100 uf To so high a had in consequence of poverty and of Ihe that the were and considered themselves In. He left the front to lodge what must be the of He scarcely knew if he was authorised in stating told by Mr. so poor as to determine him to dispose of his finding they absolutely consumed it Mr. rose for the purpose of to what had fiom his who had said be conceived it to be a point of little to himself occupying nearly Ibp of the parish he his by himself ur out of poor With all that there very al least as amount of relief which he was entitled 10 By from ihe pariah of. the might have for it had actually BO that out of the 1,000/. which had been in to the poor Ihe parish ill which he was burdened with only ' they bad lo take the men themselves find ill order lo their a lo He liad employed iu was indeed a painful of worked Cell bis M this 160 in the df The distress in of -had not judging ibe poor raira were very uncertain and be so of paying for it was actually Abd it not be at Hands the is Po fur their 8eryi , 1820, and 1821. Mr. E. called on Mr. Durrant to if importation bad nut taken the prices of corn would have been what they actually D. replied in the Mr. MARTIN that he acquainted with a sian in from whom he that ports should be opened for ihe importation of foreign he would be through his Russian for whom he acted as a to pour in no less than 150,000 quarters at once into this The land in it was was not cultivated farmers as in this but by Ihe Nobles of the apd by these the merchant to whom he alluded to be on the in this or to be in for the disposal of an opportunity offer by the opening of our The supply which he had merchant he could immer import from which every intelligent him must kouw to be of the best wheat in yet friend told could be sold at last was equal lo of The freight would be only 3/, a as he that two loads of Russian market at 14f. even our wheat was at 121.-a must be the of the if their ports bii Their and of other who seemed lo think their interest distinct from that of the must infallibly To against such a the he omitted on the part of the to avert the cloud to burst ond to save themselves and Ihe country from while It was to do so. he was an advocate for a connly or for other proceeding that promised effective expression lo the and adequate publication to the case of Ibe - Lord EGREMONT thought a county a Very unfit place a of fur thp details necessarily such a could never be duly considered or at such a But with what view should u county be convened upon subject Was it with a view to Parliament If he the who supported that proposition to consider that applied to last and bad they done or their case by that They should also sensie uf the upon the and purpose nf their application to asd Ibey never could foe or in contradiction tp decided opinion of the other of The of the country as he had already within the lest years no less than It quite incredible titat such increase should not an He believed that within Ihe last two years our had tp encounter very litile iir nothing of from foreign The had not lotig of bavins from .i conditional as 10 the import of foreign or a. permanent duty upon that and chose the Still the 10 his the duly hare been for those while that duty would hare been he confessed ty that he felt greaf difficulty upon the whole of and wish ascertain what could be done or what proposed 10 He lo hive before any further proceeding was after expressing the utmost for the judgment of his another application in the of upon this be highly to satisfy of iho he He haJ to that the of the laie Agricultural then before was only carried by of County who Ibe still it was the wish of for that the come forward their own liV the not make such advocates in must feci themselves by those whom endeavoured to But the the having been laid before the their it was of most 10 their nr or He and if tenor borne be ready that had done by Ihe wat but be them to the the be of as its superior first to which had m pn end it to leave their and aud cesie