British Statesman (Newspaper) - May 11, 1819, London, Middlesex TUESDAY MAY PRICE KINGS THEATRE CONCERT MACAULEY has the honour of to the and the that her arv and Musical called ar anu THE Will take place on May SerioComic and Musical most of lias been written for the present will be into Three PART or what you to be her own proper Possession of Macauley s is for present Under Why the called The me if ail those endearing Young First f to the Memory of of Harry Prettyman s In d a Fashionable Management in a Dialogue between a v Manager and a thee T John FART In ths Character of the Comic PETIT In which Miss Micaley will give her Imitations of the h and Yorkshire Captain Robin Caricature chere PART In the Character of the Tragic Tributary Lines to the Talent of tions from to Concluding LeRetour de and Mac will be performed on the Pianoforte by Miss ANN her first appearance iu Books are now at the Libraries of Hookham and Pall Mall Strand Cheapside and at the Box Office of ihe Opera House where Places for the Boxes maybe Guinea Single Five Shillings each Three Shillings or Eight One Doors to be open at and the Performance to com at Eight THEATRIC or Plain Truth addressed lo Common just published by Miss price Two to be had of all Tickets and Pamphlets to be had of Miss THE GRAND MUSICAL in and by FLIGHT and ROE Organ is Exhibiting from Twelve oclock till under the immediate Patronage of His Royal Highness the At the Instrument performs the Introduction to Handel s Mozarts Overture to and celebrated Military Movement from his Twelfth vrith a grandeur of effect and precision w aal to Orchestra of most scientific On every at Two Mr performs instrument a Selection of the most favourite THURSDAY Evening the manual powers of are by 6ve di rection of THOMAS Admittance to the daily One To the Two Shillings and TO ALL WHO VALUE THEIR IMPROVED SPECTACLES upon an entire new principle to suit the most difficult to baliad only at two doors out of on the left hand Sight being the source of our highest and most intellectual per is the most abused and as It cannot but be that the means generally resorted to for its im are too frequently the cause of its by men taking upon themselves to assist the sight with neither truly or by any means adapted to the of which ought to be particularly attended Those Ladies and Gentlemen whose sight has been impaired by the use of improper have now an opportunity of more recovering their if in the power of addition to this important the Faculty have unequivocally that Improved Spectacles alone ought to he in consequence of tending to preserve the sight to extreme old Please to observe two doors out of on the left All letters from the giving a description of the and the distance that persons can see to an order for payment on a correspondent in will be attended THEODORE of Red Lion is glad to find that JOEL HARTS Ad inserted in the Morning Herald of the 9th and Morning Post of the 10th renders it sary for him to intrude himself much more upon the gence of a liberal as they will observe that Joel H art hac now changed his and expressly admits that he did not perform any of the cures referred to by his former This was the only point of controversy between them that at ail concerned the who will not judge of the ability of Theodore Hart for any thing he may say of nor by any illiberality Joel Hart may descend to the only and best which Hart need to again refer the Public to the oases of cure performed by and challenging Joel Kart to adopt the means threatened by his last advertise as the result of a more full explanation must expose Joel and prove to the Public which of them is en titled to their superior patronage aad Red April To Theodore Red DEAR the having seen an adver in the signed Joel of Foley endeavouring to deceive the Public by him self the credit of all the attested cases of cure lately y you at your Establishment in Red we think upon us to most that we were by the application of your without receiving advice or assistance whatever from Joel during short connexion with but on the we indi feel ourselves solely indebted to your advice and your application of the Baths for we and to you for your usin attending to the whole department and manage ment of yourself we have left our respective resi and the particulars of our at your for the of all per who may chuse to apply at your We denr Signed April JOHN GEORGE of their Majesties the Great Britain and inventor of those useful and agreeable having heard that people circulate the report of his having retired into cautions his Friends and the Public to whom he stands so highly that this assertion is totally and on the he continues his profession with the same success he has had twen at his where he may be as from ten till takes this opportunity of cautioning the Public against those who attempt to counterfeit his Com which is totally proved from the mafly specimens entirely unfit for brought to him by those who have been deceived by impos and their insidious PATENT THE PATENT SCALES are made of and strength years used witH perfect and we with equal adapted branch of trade and They are made suitably to be used upon or in the the or the the or the vessel and are Useful and valuable inall public eSHa and private They are also made of sufficient accuracy to weigh gold or the finest or of strength ami capacity to the heaviest goods with such and as to place them beyond all They are universally admired for and sound workmanship and approach as near to and stand as high in as the most perfect invention of the present Made and London where all orders will be duly and securely to any part of the for ready A NEW A SON of seeking Was lately In a learned dispute Concerning the as onward they And the change in our both sultry At length one grand sentiment seemd to That a wonderful with luminous Had lately appeard in the West very And exceeded in lustre the Evening With glasses of evry description To peep at this Comet he anxiously tried When luckily chancing one to stand Not far from Northumberland in the A lustre unusual attracted his view stead of one there now appeard And though each wore in brilliance an equal and motion seemd both the same This botherd Astronomer much Though Comets hd he had never such For like a brilliant they Like a in a moment were 4 The fact a to pass WARRENS two Boots highly as And the radiant beams the Astronomer Were reflected by WARRENS Jet This Easy Brilliant Prepared by ROBERT And sold in in Bot and Also PASTE in and A Shilling Pot of Paste is equal to Four Shilling Bottles of V Ask for WARRENS SECOND REPORT FROM THE SECRET ON THE EXPEDIENCY OP THE BANK RESUMING CASH Continued from our Paper of The next important point to which the Committee will call the attention of the is the amount of the issues of the Bank of which are outstanding upon Government securities in other the amount of the debt due by the public to the Bank of The necessity of the repayment of a large portion of that debt has been so earnestly insisted on by the and the nature and extent of the connexion between the Government and the involves so many important that your Committee deem it incumbent upon them to enter into some detail with respect to the origin and gradual increase of the advances made by the Bank on behalf of the and the effect which they have when carried to the amount at which they at pre sent of depriving the Bank of that controul over the issues of possession of which is deemed by them an essential preliminary to the resumption of Cash In the Appendix to the Report will be found an ac count of the amount of wade by the Bank of England to Government on Exchequer Bills aud other from the year 1J92 to the latest period to which it can be made The first item of this An Advance out of sums issued for the payment of dividends now amounting to the sum of ought in the opinion of your to be considered as any portion of the debt due by Government to the It arises from money lodged by Government at the Bank for payment of dividends to public which not having been has been withdrawn from the and applied to the public under the provisions of Acts of the Legislature passed in the years and It is not therefore an advance from the funds of the but is the property of the public which has been made available for public until demanded by It will be seen from the that a great propor tion of the advances of the Bank are at present made under the two heads of Exchequer Bills and Exchequer Bills purchased and before the Commit tee point out the distinction between those heads of the they will shortly advert to the laws which have been passed since the institution of the Bank for the re of their advances to of the Bank by the 5th and a penalty is the if they any or if they advance Majesty by way of loan or anticipa tion public other a of loan is or shall be granted Such credits have ever been granted from time to and advances made upon The amount from the year 1777 to the extracted from the documents published In the Report of the Committee of of will in the rear an Act was protecting the and Company of the Bauk of England from on account of their having or ad any sums of money in payment of accepted by the Lords of the payable at the but not charged ou any the The motives for passing this Act detailed in evidence given by Bo a Director of the to the Committee in the year He that it had the custom of the time out of to ad for the amount of such bills of ex 38 were directed for payment to the until was about 20 or when the Treasury for the amount of such to rom rtie respective accounts to which the bills ly In the American they had beea to a larger Ibut he believed Doubts ta whether the penalties of the Act of Mary did not extend to this transaction aod for of removing the Act of 1793 was introduced and It appears to have been ori that the Bank be empowered to to a limited amount of or but the Act passed without any limitation its opera tion being of course confined to advances upon Trea sury bills of on which species of no advances appear to have been made since the Bf an Act which passed very shortly after the first Restriction Act the Bank were prohibited from making loan or advance on account of the public ser during the continuance of the Restriction but at the commencement of the following Session it was enact that the Bank may make an advance on the credit of duties on and on the imposed in that and any other advance which may be authorised by any other Acts may be passed during the con of the IB almost all the Acts authorising the issue of quer Bills passed a special clause has been empowering the Bank to advance the whole or a portion of the amount specified in the They never advance any sum beyond the amount to which they are limited in the several nor have the bills issued to and the bills purchased by ex that The bills described as are those which pass directly to the Bank from the under special contracts or agreements entered into for the bills issued upon the credit of annual and upon the advance of as a loan to the in consideration of the renewal of The bills are those which are taken by the Bank usually on an application from the when an issue of Exchequer Bills takes and when cannot be sold to the public at a The Bank never credit any nor deduct any discount upon the taken nor do they resell such bills to ihe account in the Appendix shows the total amount of Exchequer Bilb authorized to be issued by Parliament in every year since the year and the amount which to take of description of amount of the advances of ihe Bank to Govern deducting the sum issued from the Unclaimed Dividends on the 26th and 2d of August of each year since the year and of the Banknotes issued during the corresponding half appears from the Accounts presented to your Committee to have been as BANK to June 1814 July to to June 1815 July to 1816 to June 1816 July to 1817 to June 1817 July to 1818 to June 1818 July to From the year 1790 to the year when the Re striction Act the amount of advances made by the Bank to and of the Notes outstanding on the 25th February in each 1790 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 The of advances to the Government does not appear to have for some time previously to the Restriction a much less proportion to the total amount of Notes than the advances since 1814 have borne to the Notes issued m correspond ing It will be that a material reduction of the debt to the Bank took place between the month of and the month of 1816 it having been reduced in the latter period to the sum of deducting the advances from Unclaimed This debt was again increased between February and the Augast War Taxes to a very considerable amount were remitted a large authorized by several Acts of was made to the Unfunded and to the advances for which the Government were indebted to the The amount of those ad vances was again reduced from to 2 between the 2d of and the of Fe It was in to repay to the Bank a sum of from eight to nine by gradual instal ments of one million a from the month of May the Bank having then considered that repayment sut ficient according to the evidence of the Governor to enable them to the experiment of the resumption of Cash To meet these and the services of and also to effect aether reduction of Unfunded provision was by a loan of three in a gradual funding of Exchequer Bills to tlie amount power to the bers of makin moue instead ot b er Exchequer Bills and it was that tha Wank retain onehalf of the to the ex IMPERIAL HOUSE OF MAY NEW REPRESENTATIVE PEER FOR from the office of the Clerk of the Crown and Hanaper in presented at the bar an official return of the election of a Peer to serve on ths part of in the room of the late Earl of The envelop in which the return was enclosed opened by the principal Clerk at the and the turn it appeared that Somerset Earl of is elected a Representative Peer for in the room of Earl of The Bishop of LIMERICK one of the Jrish Repre sentative Prelates took the oaths and his The Charity Churches was read the third timo and On the Motion of the Archbishop of the Benefice was second and ordered to be Lord after a very few prefatory and that in the whatever may bi found objectionable in Bin could the second reading of tion which accordingly took HOUSE OF This the last day receiving the of Private the SPEAKER took the Chair soon after three MELLISH presented a Petition from Parish of against the Parish Clerks which was read and referred to the Committee on the INSOLVENT DEBTORS Lord ALTHORPE presented the Report of the Com on the Insolvent Debtors and give that on 20th he intended to move for leave to bring in a new for the relief of Insolvent The Report was ordered to be HUME rose to present Petitions from the Magis and Trades of the Burghs of Montrose and against the Scotch Accounts The Petitions were and ordered to lie on the The Country Bakers Regulation read a 1 jime and GRANT gave that on Wednesday sennight he would submit to the Honse a rela tive to the condition of the manufacturing and labouring poor in GRAHAM presented a Petition from Hull against the Poor Settlement and ordered to lie oa the BERNAL presented a signal by the and many most respectable Inhabit ants of the Borough of that the Elective Franchise might not be taken from and that they might be heard by Counsel against any for that and ordered to lie on the POOR SETTLEMENT Petitions against this were presented from the fol lowing places Castle and Thetford They were and ordered to lie on the Lord presented a Petition from In habitants of the neighbourhood of against the Agricultural Horse and ordered to lie on the The Merchant Seamens Wages was brought Read a first and ordered to be read a second time on Monday A was ordered for the Borough and Port of in the room of Colonel who has accepted the Chiltern SMITH presented a Petition from certain in habitants of praying for Re and ordered to lie on the ARMY On the motion the Report of the Committee of Supply be brought Sir PARNELL rose to oppose the sums on the Array In the present situation of the the force now proposed to be maintained was much for a Peace It was of the Noble Lord opposite to make out why it was necessary to main tain so large a It appeared the income of the country was at present short of the expenditure by no less a sum than Any person who had read the Report of the Finance must see taking into consideration every the only addition to the income of the during the that could million and a The most perfect now both at horng and a large and formidable army was kept on at immense ex With respect to that part of the vote which re lated to the maintenance of the army in it was a question closely connected with the system of civil government in that country for he was convinced that the great amount of the military force for that was to tiie defects jf the system of civil government adopted in that part of the It had all along been overlooked in the discussions rela tive to the military forca in that the Yeomanry in that country were a species of force peculiarly appli cable and serviceable for the purposes that made the military necessary in that The expenses of the Staff department in Ireland were enormous ton as as that of Ireland and Scotland con as nearly as the same of acres yet the estimates of the Staff department of Scot fand was only that for Ireland was The mistake with respect to the government ot Ireland was a system of conciliation in ment hal not been Every thing was done by force in the government of and the maintenance of the great now for that Colonel said he entirely agreed with the opi ion of the Baronet who had just mon tent of the monthly payments To lie military force now proposed wasn an unex in the annals of our He convinced that a much smaller number of mea than was mentioned in the estimates would be sufficient for all the military service now But as he was not in possession of the necessary official he was not prepared to say to what extent a reduction in the number of men was He now ready to show to the that even without reducing ihe numbers there might be a clear saving to the country of On the cavalry he thought there might Ve to the extent of and on the of