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British Traveller And Commercial And Law Gazette

   British Traveller And Commercial And Law Gazette (Newspaper) - October 4, 1832, London, Middlesex                                No 3498 Price 7d EAGLE NOTICE is hereby pursuant to the an ANNUAL Til of the Proprietors of Ten or more it- will the the 5th day of llif Aero Sir John ve o'clock at for the purpose of receiving of the and of Electing Five in room of in the room of Rawlins W. Charles Esq. Richard jne in the room of John nut bv who are eligible tobe by p. Auditor Bridge Sept. 7, 1832, INSURANCE is hereby that the BOOKS of this Company will be SHUT ilic mil liny of October to the 5tU day of November I of Five per will commence it iW Office in the between the hours continue paying every the same HENRY P. Sept. 7, 1832. SALE BY order of the FAMILY for a term of at a low ground n dining and drawing room by 18, windows opening on a ik 1.1111), a and man's a largo room built for and used as best bed with dressing Mier nnd water laid four bed rooms ivilli linen an mill on the basement good green and garden and Ironi and lij wbich with particulars may be Messrs. nnd nnd .il Ibo 'm UTE OF YORK'S of of the late Duke of York proceedings at the since the last meeting had been received on the subject of his Royal some of lo be by extreme a letter was rend from a Mrs. of it for a series received interest upon to the amount was given by his Royal Highness to one by whom they were assigned to her in the 4lli, or King's in Her son had assigned the bonds as a means of supporting her mil lier and in formed the lource of To the day of the had continued to receive the event they had not been paid n nnd plunged into What rendered their more fact although their claim ii 111! lira admitted by the rejected and thus left them of She had written to Sir and Sir Benjamin as well en the obtained Her son was now she and her were completely or four ikr from holding bonds which U been also paid during lifetime of the exhibiting cases of great and ilic might be enabled to to the contemplated proceedings in the solicitor for the creditors with the solicitors lo the the solicitors of Messrs. Cox aud desire to adopt hostile proceedings be of rendering justice kill unless some such means are lie will be adapted for opening the Tlie principal point to which the creditors in the first to apply their energies is the supposed debts due from the late King lo the Duke of Tlic respecting the jewels which are to come into the hands of the executors after lie of the and the unsatisfactory answers given the executors lo the pi lo by direction of the Master in as manner in which those interrogatories the transactions between Woods Forests and the as well ns bj the house in the was separate head of Strict mil also into the value of tho mines in which are now working by the South upon to be well his present Majesty is has always been that iho debts of other be but it is denied that he fci would be enabled lo pay 1,! the King eame into possession of Mills upon the death of George is asserted whatever money in some way or his It is 111,1 i of .il were left by the late by ashort II were considered rather the Crown than as property over r lo exercise a personal brought against especially for countenancing the i of properly to a large amount to have come forward r their having purchased various 1'" ' including within ilie description of perquisites would be unless under t' intend to continue their exertions until decided operations will take TO at Queen square a case of the importance respecting the right of overseers paying poor the pav expected to come of which the office was crowded by to the united parishes of Margaret anxious to bear the decision of the ago ihe parish of St. of the Select by an majority of the adopted the new and the new who elected since the adoption of the new have dial the persons who have served the office of above-mentioned parishes have always exempt during the lime were paying the and that such for die hundred In discovery the new overseers caused 13 against some of ihe late overseers to be to show cause why they had not W T why a distress warrant should not gonds nnd taj appeared before Mr. excited Ihe must intense as the were only a small part of ihe number liable ti. be summoned should Ihe ibat they were liable to pay parochial was a rate payer be would rather decline hearing it would all who resided in a desultory conversation this was agreed Marriott when the cases called t of the claims against the late overseers T to the who gave it as his were liable to pay ihe parochial the lime they were in and that there 1111 exemption w some of the did poor A now look when consented that the cases aS until had taken Co. the AND THURSDAY 4, 1832, GENERAL some time ago lha Lord Henley was about to start fur and we lire happy to bave it in power now to state that a which has received the support of names the roost for or respectability in the calling on his to come decidedly it in process of Ai no man of Tory gentlemanlike or Christian can vote for Mr. H and as Lord Henley has s nigh claim on alt who possess such we hope and trust that Middlesex will purge ofF the base stain which it has by having the quondam member for Montrose as its Lord Howick and the Division OP petulant and family is prosecuting his canvass for the northern division of the county of after October 2i, at 18, in Two the of Beaumont Executors of. taken m and refusing to pay his respects to on thb alleged ground of shortness of time but really because tho son of the Lord Premier believes his election to be and does not think it worth while to go through the fatigue and of a personal On Tuesday his visited and on we are he entered Morpeth accompanied by C. W. Esq. by Mr. Bigge and the members of his his Lordship proceeded to the Town where he himself of a which has been His Lordship again alluded to the report of his having induced Mr. Culley to retire I was informed that a report was in but 1 am happy to find that it has not had the intended 1 heard that 1 was accused of being to sacrifice the independence of the northern division of the and endeavouring to compromise your Interests in an unworthy Such accusations are altogether His Lordship then that he had preferred meeting electors in that to waiting upon them not from any deficiency of respect in but because he thought that would give them the best opportunity of inquiring into his sentiments 3S Ihe time he was able to spend in ihe country was extremely rendered it impossible for him to wait upon he deemed it better to make no and see them thus And again be He had been in Parliament six and his and principles must be well known to did not think it necessary to repeat them but if any gentleman required any explanation of his public he should be most happy to afford aa a justly was insulting in a manner which will be long It was neither worth his trouble to wait upon them isr to explain his sentiments to This beats Beaumont and Ord Paisley in an article under the head of Price of Of the present candidates for ihe the or its two Mr. of among our juveniles at the most This important advantage cost him only seventeen was thus on ap. proaching the hustings on espied on the skirts of dense mass of itinerant fruit whose stock of apples was at Che above Mr. Hamilton bought the apples and thein thrown among the crowd like halfpence a in days of when halfpence were more This produced a vast deal of Hamilton for ever 1' bawled out the and had a show of hands been taken on the ' Who shall be members there would have been a hard run between the delighted youngsters and their more grave and aged Palmerston has been nominated as representative for this An active canvass is now going on lo ensure his Lordship's as his Lordship has accepted the offer of being put in requisition is in course of lure at to call upon the Marquis of to become a candidate for North Mr. Stonor has declared himself a candidate for Mr. is a candidate for Mr. De son of Charles De is about to offer himself as a candidate for the of Great South meeting of electors of South held at Southampton on agreed lo a requisition to call upon Lord Palmerston and Sir George T. to become candidates of thai is now said there will be no tion in the western division of and that Mr. and Sir C. Lemon will be In the north eastern division a contest is The candidates are Sir W. Mr. and Lord Gal of a letter from Sept. 26:-" Great exertions are making to prevent the return of a Goverment The great majority of the landed Protestant and are determined in their opposition to Ihe Grey And there is not a shadow of but that the county of will return two Members opposed to the Grey Sir John Burke has not tbe least prospect of Lord influence has vanished both in the county and in the town of and most is an Mr. Lambert and will positively go with all his influence against Sir J. of which he makes no Lord a Roman whose son is married to Sir J would not register votes for for he and his family hate the Mr. James Daly will be supported by ihe gieat majority of the return is beyond All his friends are making strenuous exertions in his Mr. Thomas of will I our second He has about five hundred voters on his property He will be warmly supported by the independent interests of this who arc determined to place the Marquis of interest de Mr. Martin was one of our most strenuous friends in 1830; he gave his powerful interest for Mr. and against Lora Clanricarde at which on that the in the plenitude of his he would never allow Mr. Martin to sit for But matters have wonderfully changed and the landed interests of Galway will now prove to the that he shall no longer lord it over them with It is generally imagined that Sir John will he is the most unpopular man in The Roman Catholic clergy are amongst the most determined of the although he professes their the town of Galway the return of Mr. Dennis of and of Counsellor Lynch are both will be returned against the influence of Lord and his friend of whose bog and rock freeholders mention was made in a late debate in the Poor Anthony who thought to come in on the Lord's was actually hunted out of They would not listen to him at Ihe late public meeting he attended So much for the popularity of an Anglesey place On the 17tliult. the great bell of St. Paul's at fell and in its descent broke through the roof of the and did considerable Fortunately no one was on the 20th at parish ef aged 103 Mr. Hervey much esteemed and deeply regretted by a numerous circle of friends and He was in full possession of all his faculties till within s few days of bis About twelve months ago he was actively employed in the of hla son's His of which in his youth was remarkably but of a later date were not go deeply on his He lived but a moderate quantity of but not given AND Cotton Oct. 2._Thc Cotton sales this day are 1,000^ at 9|; at 9}; at 6J, and at 84, Oct. 2i-(High water at one minute past S. W. Ught the from the Cape of Good with Prince Lee from St. John's with ftom from with and rushes { with with wheat ana from mith from Gal. with wheat oatmeal from Glasgow f and fiom with One three and three arrived off at five r.H. Oct. 2.-(Wind at Holyhead light Great inward No. tbe Robert British at 12 OCT No. 831, the British brig inward at 12 and at four No. the Lady British Off Point Lymas mward No. 33CI, the British at three p.m. Liverpool Oct. 2.-For this day's market lha arrivals of Irish Wheat are and of most other the though not are Fine red Irish although rather more saleable than on were farther reduced in and must be noted full per below the rate of Tuesday tbe beat of which the proportion in is met a tolerable inquiry at a trivial whilst the inferior qualities of and all sorts of were extremely dull of at our reduced A amall parcel of new Irish malting one at has been about 4s. 9d a 4s. per Malt arid Beans were in slow and Is. per likewise continued to meeCa very the decline above was full Is. Oatmeal 6d. a Is. per sack than on this day Sept. 29-The supply of Wheat ibis day far exceeded the and the quality being generally prices Is. per the principal part waa in bad There was alio an overstock of and the prices receded about 2^ per Beans and Oats also fell in per of 220 26s. a 28s., per pack of 240 44s. a 45s., fine 36s. a 38g., seconds 289., per load of 240 24s. a 26s., Irish 2Ib, a 258., Beans per of 3^ bushels 16s. a 17a., per load of 240 6(i. a Hams lb. 6d. a Fylde Country per cwt. 43s. a 49s. OF NEW YORK PRICE ' expected from the interior this it Is will fall a good deal short of that in previous Purchasers in come into market and the prices of Pots have within a i a cent per lb. 6 dollars per 100 has been freely Pearls are but little enquired and the price not well demand continues both for home use and and Ihe slock of all descriptions is reduced unusually The in addition to our 3000 bags Brazil at 13^ to 13} bags and barrels Porto 14 lo 14^, and 70 bags inferior at 12^ There is no St. Domingo worth naming in Tbe from 1st to 31st was 18,492 and 336 stock in this market has been fast creasing for and is now reduced so that holders bave been in some to obtain an advance of particularly on the iine for home The transactions for the last three days embrace about 500 bales of at 10 a 12 300 10 a 200 9i a and 150 New lOJ a making 3 total for the week of 2,000 Flour and demand for Flour is quite a decline of a 25 cents per barrel has been submitted The principal sales of Western fresh have been at (i dollars 12^ a 6 dollars 374 at 6 dollars 13.^ most descriptions of 6 dollars - 60 a 6 dollars 75 with small parcels of for 0 dollars 97i cents a few hundred barrels sour Western Canal were sold at 4 dollars 874 6 Rye Flout remains at about 4 dollars 50 and Corn Alcal as last the 1st to tbe 31st of 9,458 have heard of no further sales of Sales of North River Rye at 78 cents Northern Yellow Corn at and Northern Oats at 60 from 1st to 31st Corn 4,118 noticed extensive sales in our last and have only to add 1,200 Buenos at 14 six mos. noticed sales of 3,000 pigs New at 51 a 6 cents per 6 and about 75 tons old at 4^ cents first public sale this season was made at tiie stores of O. E. It was well and went off with the whole embracing upwards of 9,000 sides of being and the prices obtained an improvement on the former is in and full prices are 100 English at 314 a 324 and about 100 New on terms not further advance of 4 eent has been obtained on Whale a parcel having been for at 29 cash sales of in at 98, and Linseed at 90 a 92 sales of the week amount to about at 34 a 4 The stock ia very and there is very little lo be had under 3j No further Total from the lat to the 431 Skina are more and rather 15 a 20,000 prime have been within a few at 27 a 29 on which is a reduction of 3 a 5 on former of Brandy during the week have been more extensive than for some time embracing at 140 cents j J. J. 136 a 140 150, and nnd 1624 Sales of Holland and in small lots at 1124 In there has been very little Whiskey has farther in at 31, and barrels at 32 A sale of 20 barrels White 5th at 1 d. 68|c. per is an active demand for all and prices are well The transactions that have come to our knowledge since last comprise about 300 New at 6J a 7* 300 Porto 7f 24 some St. Croix our range about 150 Havanna at 7J a 84 40 New by at a 7 d. 19c per 100 lbs. 3 and 4 Sugars are very and the stock of all much smaller than sales have been made of 36 averaging 4 3 and 4 60 bales Cuba 84 a 94 and 30 hales 374 a 574 cents per lb. 4 mos. No arrival since our Total from 1st to 31sl 843 inclusive of all on not cleared on the a stock of 15,630 The only this of which we have learned the to between 400 and 500 bales at an average rate of 8| per lb. There is yet gome in but it is chiefly of or other than real Sugar and continue to quote as and have nothing particular to There ig yet a doing among the and the export Mi week hait been to fill up vessels about to be have been the principal sale of tbe for equal proportions of second and first 2, 3, and 4 the Freights ate dull and vessels have been for of 260 casks at 35 abort and 400 cases at 2 dollars per short By 2 dollars 374 a 2 40!cents; 2dollars75 cents 80 41 a 43 Porti 46 pipes and half pipes casks 3a6mos. Wool is in and nearly all in market has been sold at an advance of la 2 cents on previous Sales of first quality at 37 Very Wool has as yet been brought to Benjamin Levy's Neni Orleans Prices Current of August 18.)' The steam boat from arrived three bales of Cotton of the new We seen a sample of it in the who said that though it had been much cut up by the the quality was of long and handsome We heard no conjecture as to the price that it would probably thing is now BO and the demand so that abundant arrivals of new crop would hardly at this moment stimulate as far as we have the appearance of the of every and that of cotton in is very Without some it is that the quantity and quality will be fully up to the most sanguine expectations of the following are the returns of arrivals and in the port of during the months of 1832, compared with the three mouths of 1830 and 1831 664 913 1830. 1831. 47,031 42,608 55,169 464 604 647 611 32,405 525 38,299 507 36,223 1831. 506 507 455 696 630 730 1832. 686 668 1832. 69,217 62,666 73,926 FOREIGN DUTCH ' THE Sept. 80. The Marquis of Ambassador of France to our set out on Saturday evening for on leave of The Marquis will act as Charge during The Magistrates of have announced that tbe cholera having ceased in that the communication with wbich haa been interrupted since the 22d of will be opened again on the 30th of and consequently going beyond the frontiers will only have 10 provide themselves with certificates of health after stopping a few days at It is expected that the present Session of Ihe States General will be closed on the 13th of as the new for which preparations are already will be opened on the of that The Princess of Orange has been pleased to send to the Governor of tbe province of the sum of 1,000 florins for the relief of cholera patients in the city of Sept. 30. There remain now 65 cholera patients | the number is daily 18. We expect Count Pozzo di Borgo He will stop a few and then return to It is supposed that he comes to consult with our Ministry on the measures to be taken to preserve peace in It has been reported on that Lord Durham will also come to and it is imagined that bis Lordship's visit is in consequence of Ihe unpleasant events in the and the of the Turkish from the successes of Ibrahim and that the European Powers can no longer indifferent but must think of means to put an end to this and to prevent tlie of the Turkish Sept. 30. The Handelsblad quotes from the French and English journals the statement relative to the proposed measures of coercion against but doubts whether such measures have really been determined especially whether they will be carried into effect without previous notice from the Conference to which has not yet been but should Holland be attacked in a manner resembling the barbarity of former it as the injury becomes and if its own strength is rely with firm confidence on Him who has always delivered it in time of 24 per cent. Amort 44 per cent. 34 per cent. Voluntary 1831, 6 per cent. Ditto 1832, 5 per cent. Sept. 29. 41| 71 56 951 8O4 424 564 m Parish a vestry meeting of the of Boston on to nominate len out of whom two are to be chosen by the to serve office of Surveyors of Great for the next the Vicar in the Chair it from the accounts of tlie Surveyors for the last Blundell and that the whole expenses were only 9701.. whilst in former years they have averaged of 2,2001. per The saving has been ted by more economical management of the aud by purchasing the necessary materials upon a better principle than heretofore hos been An Antwerp paper contains the following account of Ihe health and trade of Englishman who lipids a very important station In society gives particulars of the slate of consider The cholera makes dreadful 150 to 200 persons die every misery is now at its and commerce was never in a more depressed From to the City a great number of shops are shut and every day the number The Tories no longer make their usual and If prompt ond effectual means are not quickly resorted serious commotions may be expected in the A letter from the province of states that a very serious has been existing for sometime in that and has carried off a great number of up to this period there are still ftom 60 lo 70 ill out of a population of 720 The medical man who attended tho major part of the individuals who were indisposed has been himself compelled to keep his bed for some so that they are without medical aa the doctors who live in the adjacent pans are not able to attend them and being on the spot when their assistance is de On Wednesday last a fashionably in a black silk dress and white gave a girl sixpence to take a letter from South where sho was to the On the letter it to contain a and ihe following Due lo the Oct. 1. a Much as the Whig Ministers have glorified themselves by great and good deeds in divers and sundry places in the British there remains yet on one spot of it their sublime and so perfectly and consistently in all its aa humble chroniclers of the glorious doinga of our we feel templed to advert to it for the gratification of the admirers of The spot to which we U that which once a King's House and Excise and a Mayor's and the houses of some forty or fifty other in a city called We are not aware whether ihe name of thla place has escaped the of Lord as the state of the King's revenue did on a late occasion but ns bis has little slips of sometimes about sucK we are sure he will take it kind of ns to him on this We two years being forcibly struck with the appearance of prosperity and comfort that then From the natural attractions of the place and Its a considerable resort of and even of and it was the abode of a large number of affluent India Its and and and which had of late years received large were then the scenes of an active and busy which dispensed trade and employment to thousands and tens of thousands of The labouring classes as the remuneration of their indeed as might bat more really ill most other a spirit of civic united all natives of rich and in one strong sinew and affectionate and which nol been surpassed even hi Scottish The charities of Bristol were large and so much so as to form a prominent feature in a description of the The tone Of mind of the people was not of that march of intellect sort is always and never where it is wanted but of that plain honest which would wrong and ef that limited which was not to be and to think it being tbe people what is higher than religious and drew the 8trea.n should bring success 10 labours and peace to their from the Such was and such were tbe people of only two years of tbe convulsion which baa since befallen to but something may perhaps be usefully said of the causes which led to that and of tbe effects with which it has been Of these causes the first appears to us lo that while the population of as of all other haa been the commerce and trade by which should naturally have been progressively Of the steps wbich have led to this the first in point of is a misfortune of foreign the of the trade in what was Spanish by the transfer of the sheep to Saxony in Buonaparte's has now become Saxon This the Importation of which from Spain was a valuable branch of the commerce of ia now imported at the more adjacent harbours at the East aide of the The next and a sledge hammer blow it by which the trade of was is one for which we have to thank exclusively the pertinacious of the Whether these great patriots were throughout Ihe upon best possible terms with the whose dirtiest work they were is a question which we do not profess to When the late Mr. under the romantic idea that it would lead to a introduced into England what is called the free trade there fell upon all dosses of men of capital and such a visitation of tress as has never been While this universal calamity parts of the it affected various Tbe impoverishment of the country caused a of tbe demand for those things in wbich the of Bristol was The competition of foreign at cheaper and at for lower means of interest on all the prosperity of the city in great measure But the blow more heavily than all struck at the revenue of the more and consequently at the trade and subsistence of all classes dependent upon the expenditure of that revenue in was the injudicious attack which the recent policy of the Legislature has made upon West Indian At the Congress of when the slave trade had been some years declared illegal in British and while the duties on British and foreign colonial produce remained the great and important point that the slave trade of other countries should also aa to all practical In France and Spain the trade was yet suffered lo and the subjects of these countries were thus enabled to bring colonial produce into market upon terms which left to the English planter scarcely the name of In the the in the humane desire of mitigating the grievance of added weight to weight in the expenses of the and reduced and what had been once valuable to a stale of From this cause in the gradual operation of Ihe lasi 12 aix thousand West Indian of different degrees of who formerly spent the ag. gregate of their incomes in have retired into The effect of a blow like this upon ihe general trade of a city in which the revenue of every class depends upon the general prosperity of all the other needs no When we consider the weight of these and increasing abstractions from the trade of the and the people who were to live by this trade were still we are no longer at a loss to account for the condition of the people gelling continually worse and The rebellions of the belly are the says Lord though ihe people of Brislol were long a patient indeed through the civic patriotism of which we have the severity of their case was considerably yet there is a point at which it is no part of prudence lo try how far patience will the condition of Bristol was thus getting the workings of the free trade system in other places were producing distress in want of and were spreading with a horrid and constantly increasing Many sere the efforts of patriotic and wise men to open the eyes of the legislature to these effects of the but in A scrap of economy which we shall speak had got into and it was believed that this system could nnc by possibility diminish the trade of the country With the fire raging before the Whigs and the Economists resolutely persisted that water at any rite wag not year after they suffered the distress to go with a want of feeling which can be equalled only by their unrivalled These things were great and they and slowly corrupted the tone of that high moral and political which has long rendered the English a peculiar But to do this required other accessories and the Prince of whose agents are of all agents the quickly found In the constantly Increasing distress wbich the people which in better times were felt but lightly and paid with became a serious A party in the which systematically labours to overthrow everything that was anxious to confound the distinctions of For Ibis purpose they cast their eyes Upon that order of who of all least capable of defending their rights against systematic and artfully directed the popular discontent against the revenue of the The clergy of ihe Church were It was to have while the causes of it wire yet in loss and injury thus inflicted on the West Indian and it was possible to have provided a An abatement of about 15s. per cwt. on the duties on the production of British would have been a relief to the and would have cost the Government for the which was thus not paid os duty on would have remained in the hands of some portion of tbe by whom it would shortly be spent in commodities part of the price of which would go as duty to the the remainder formed the wages of the persons by whom tbe commodities were And these persons would have spent what thus came to them in a similar constituting a second addition to tbe produce of the and a second addition to the mass of wages to be spent as the There would in a few have flowed into the through the amount in which the West Indian interest in first  

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