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Constitution

   Constitution (Newspaper) - April 8, 1827, London, Middlesex                                PRO PRICE THEATRE DRURY On Easter April THE Listen Doctor Miss Aft which a The principal Characters by Miss arid Miss And other in which Laporte will A GRAND Music by Will be brought forward immediately after and wijl be in Three post 8vof Military SECOND Just in with a Portrait of his an inferior without the por k i of Occurrences in piist price Third LETTERS COCKNEY a Author of London i THE IDENTIFICATION of the of may he had price Printed for WILLIAM to Royal Highness the Duke of Yerk ane the Reyat opposite the j FROM TUESDAY RIGHTS OFFICE OF April Royal John Freer to be second M retired on second Samuel tobe first vice Freev Aprils 1st of from the vice who receiving the difference Cor bet Luxford by promoted Lewis the to vice receiving the difference Cornet to be wlo 16th Harris by par ebwe i of to by Vice to Somersetshire horse the Ship of April 10 and at 18 Caledonian v I of at at the i The Paris stiH which took place at the funeral gf Those of this subject The Grand Referendary the Chamber of Peers OB Monday and it was resolved to wait the result of the legal the has already The ibis if we from the likely soon to that the order to prohibiting ui way than was than a number citizens which had been the sequence or me f On the 1st of March was price Six with a Portrait of the NAVAL AND To j CONTENTS The Tomb of Marcos moir of the American General System of Colonization in Navy and Army the at of the late 73d be wop the be i to n and udt present wbeu fiction thit and which 1 tt Wi f it tobe pur I T W by vice to t Richard Indian of tbe British and Losses at different Promotion of Naval the Union Banner Britain and with of tbe James on the Duty bf by Sketch Book Subaltern Young Rifleman Comrade French Urbans Army and Naval j Address to Captains of the Royal Navy Captain White aud Major Snodgrass on the Burmese Wor Nautical and Military and Orders and 1826 and MARTIAL Major Browne Ensigns and Cookney Apothecary and Military of the Sir Tuod Count at and Returns W in the aad Published by Edinburgh Wood ant 1 W be rice To W vice Anderson Cap In price fine Just by WILLIAM Bookseller to tbe Royal Public 145 aud SIR TAYLORS LAST SEVEN MONTHS of the Royal Highness the DUKE OF Lieutenant Q Second Malcolm freta m 233 Toot tbe 77th Foot upon ire dated in or the to the Order of To Lieutenant from to the to Vice AM to the John have to of was the We are fT setting Torth the present with great energy which has the tig expressed regret at adding hiscon to prevent the disgrace i die de part of the ceremony was of the and to graut them also that the King 1e la Roche had ordered nun to wait to address to them bis pro the Cham ber motion to thank the Grand Referendary proceedings were insti auy further be This if we believe the reports of agreed to without oppo 1 April April The with his has ordered the Pilote of PARLIAMENTARY HOUSE OF APRIL Several petitions were on the subject of the Corn Laws and the Catholic which caused no APRIL Two Petitions against innovations on the Corn Laws were one by the Earl of from certain land owners in Cornwall and the other by Lord from two parishes in Lord presented a Petition from the operative weaver of complaining of the tyranny of their Lord BEXLEY that the Petition merited considera but reminded their Lordships of the extreme delicacy of interference between the employers and tbe APRIL Lord CLIFDEN presented a from the Borough of against cruelty to and another to the same purpose from Margarets both be merited their Lordships serious Dn second of the Spring Gun rr instances bad come to his knowledge of the of and one to late as the day of a gentleman thereby shot bis owu He in 1 setting string any as no man bad a do that indirectly which would be if done per e of thought in no situation ought spring guns to be allowed to be Lord was of the same of CARNARVON was also against any local exceptions their APRIL moved an to make tbe Spring which was and in answer to Lord proposing the correction of a about other besides spring that the omission of such SCENES imd COFFEE South Post A KBY TO VIVIAN GREY his Ministers express family of La which is mark of his regret at the events in of misunderstand took place funeral of tie Duke de la We read io the private correspondence of the a that the Marques of Chaves has sold to the English for a considerable original correspondence which he kept up with the Government and that feels himself to he April omission in the minutes bich had been presented on who on that occasion which had disgusted all day by M Cas MEMOIRS OF AN ENGLISH COUNTESS ten by 3 THE AGE A Fungar vice Reddere quec ferrum SUFFOLK STREET r THE EXHIBITION of the SOCIETY of BRITISH ARTISTS is OPEN DAILY to the from Nine in the Morning until Suffolk Patt MaU Admittance PEERS BRITISH and FOREIGN TION OLD BOND Subscribers to this Establishment are regularly supplied with in all Parts of the United and from the ex tended Arrangements upon which it is they derive the following superior are entitled to the immediate of the New Proprietor engages to purchase for Subscribers any Works of general that may not have been previ added to the have the right of choosing from a most extensive Collection of the established Works in the various Branches of and Italian are admitted to the use of a costly Series of embellished with highly finished and coloured which iu a beautiful the His of the an cient and modern together with Maps and Catalogues with Terms can be had on or for warded to any timber and I llllllll ill RAINBOW AND FAMILY late at the Bedford takes this opportunity to inform his Friends and the Public that he has lately taken the above and fitted it up with every comfort for Gentlemen and Families and trusts that bis and the first qualities of supplied by will give general BANKRUPTCY from April 54 to May glass and Sandau and woollen PARTRIDGE and nnd May Old Broad Upper Allen and Dins mer and April G wax Pearce and A Mar Notting OS XT ef timber Mansfield St West Kent and appear of all France as police Maid be t he the substance of what he lie which took place f the minutes from V i A that he of Peers would grant reparation for that Several minutes are before you pronounce judg you should hear A Marks of stand It is fit that this mode of discussion should be I thank you for the You have proclaimed your You judge without is knows you do uf uc words would render the and mentioned a recent instance or two of a most mischievous by a neigh bour of which showed that some people were not to be re without an unreserved all implements of destruction on their APRIL The Spring Gun some farther and some slight new modifications of it were GAME had no objection to making game saleable but thought that every person selling game should take out a The Marquis of LONDONDERRY was of that if the ex law led to that now proposed would rather in crease than diminish the The LORD CHANCELLOR was not sure that the new was an improvement he reserved bis opinion upon its general prin ciples till the third reading was HOUSE OF APRIL CORN Sir Tt that the gave encourage ment to foreign growers of corn at the expense of the British farmers and No other nation ever pursued a similar policy and the inevitable consequence of the measure medi would be to contract the cultivation of coru at in would if tbe passed and he observed that the Upper House had already instituted an in which ought to have taken place in the aud was absolutely necessary before legislating on so interesting a Sir concluded by that the be read a second time that day six CURTEIS thought that the tendency of the was to ruin the aristocracy and the constitution of the GRANT that do what we would we must be an importing country and our was to act in a manner as to secure a favourable source of when the exigency He that the very large sums lately laid out in the improvement of the evil distinctly showed that agriculture was a profitable employment of capital the importation of nones alone for during tbe preceding having cost not He intreated the to view not as a but a national f at which the legislature never forget to WESTERN objected to subject to those prin ciples of free which bad failed with respect to other com The of was to drive capital not only to raise but also to provide ships to bring it here and in whatever view taken involved a most hazardous expe debtor from the necessity of surrendering bis effects to bis credi several striking examples of which he With re spect to prison it was most Men and werfe huddled and the grossest debauchery was the inevitable HOBHOUSE seconded the The ATTORNEY GENERAL that imprisonment for debt was of long and could not be dispensed with in a commercial country like this but if any practicable means could be devised for alleviating the miseries of the House would no doubt listen to a plan for that CALCRAFT thought that doing away with imprisonment for debt was an Utopian but admitted that a case had been made out attention of the PEEL thought that Hume had taken too wide a cir and alleged the impossibility of combining so many dif ferent views in one and the inquiries moved not be efficiently considered in a He maintained the absolute necessity of civil ad at the same time that great abuses larly in the Kings Bench did upon the of present A less extensive measure of improvement should meet his Sir WILSON supported the and contrasted the law of England with the laws of France and in neither of were arrests permitted tin after JOHN SMITH set the last speaker right with respect to the law of where a debtor might be arrested on his acceptance before the cause came to be Alderman WOOD approved of the and complained of the miserable state of the to remedying of which he thought some part of the fund in Chancery might be HUMR for the present consented to leave the case and intended to bring the motion forward again after the APRIL There not being forty Members at four the Speaker declared the House Captain GORDON that the best criterion of a conn trys prosperity was be found in the condition of its labouring population which was far from being comfortable at but it is declare i He to state that he at least in aud was not likely to be improved by tbe claimed the insertion of the Words of bis j intended is the correction you require J WHITMORE that the opposition to the was founded in gross delusion and reminded him of a which had been presented to that House 70 or i T O BE genteelly a small neat situated about half a mile West of Hyde Park Apply to Ayling House NOCTES MY as you has been ane o some and even now I do not eat the bread of For ae third o the twentyfour tak ae day anither through out the Im i the open wind and per or its hail and and they are blessed by the band that sends against me on the Im at my mony o them to he sure in the but the few that no the wark o ye may believe that or my best to write a o my or if no a a harmless composition as ane bits o Shepherds or the like if study hae nae wi the or bearin them their or crackin wi a or happy wi the mistress by our ain twa sayin but thinking a and For the frae ten at nicht to sax in the that sweet that is the Jot o a gude con aud out o which I come as regular at the verra same minute as if an angel gently lifted my head frac the and touched my eyelids with as yoursel either evening or morning no verra lang anes 10 be except on the sabbath but as I hope for humble and as the prayers us beings should ever and at a or aye on the brink of death Can there be ouy great in a life and excepting always the corrupt thochts of a mans ain which has been wisely said to be desperately when it think in its the verra perfection o never left or Mount with out feeling myself a better aud a wiser man shall ever stop a nicht in my without o the best thats in be t meat or drink and if the coof canna drink three or four he has nae business in the But if he do nae than follow the example Ise set hell rise in the mornin without a aud fa to no wi that ause that yon drunkards yoke on to the butter and bread and the and the and the as if they had shipwrecked iu their and scoured wi the saltwater wi that aud steady that speaks an sound in a its operations as clock and gives assur of a lang and and a large family o FROM FRIDAY NIGHTS The Marquis Lord Lieutenant of the county of Kent bu with bis taken tbe of tbe West Rent Regi ment of Dated 3d PARTNERSHIPS Johnston and Little mod dealers in lignum and and mer nnd Great Bradley and wholesale and Long cloth and and and steampacket and Belts rind Royal musical ami Stoke arid New and and and floor and ai and and Queen and as far as regards and April West Collins Leominster and London Hurd and Temple and Corn Brooking and and Harvey and Stephens and Little Thomas Walker and and Ellis and Hamilton and Col Saviour Staple Inn and April April and April Stafford and and pin miller May May draper April 27 boot and April April andH Sikes and S Old Stafford manufacturer of cabinetmaker May G anil corn of Lan and Lower West desire the insertion of the which were so justly applied to the ma of the 1 require the insertion of the following police causes tobe even foot of the the inanimate remains of those their have merited the Jove of their also require the insertion of the following paragraph Without without and the bayonet was raised against the breast of an industrious and grateful paying a tribute of to a aud one of those who reflected the greatest lustre on our ancient After nome farther the question was put on the and Wednesdays Paris contain the report made to the Chamber of Peers on the Duke de la by the Marquis de Grand This docu which is of considerable and drawn up in an ostentatious not very clearly the particular transaction which gave occasion to the Its tendency is upon the whole rather to exculpate than censure the It states the laws or ordinances respecting funerals from which it appears j that a decree of the Prefect of the dated the 17th of prohibits the carrying of coffins by of and directs that they shall henceforth be conveyed by carriages drawn by An Imperial of the 18th of directs that the poor shall be buried decently and and that there shall be as to form Between the carriages for the poor and the the only differ ence being in the ornaments cf the funeral It is stated that these regulations had been strictly adhered to for nearly some partial them having occurred within the last three Instances of these departures are the first of which was permitted by the Commissary of but he was blamed for giving his consent and the others took place without the previous knowledge of the With regard to the present it is stated that this Commis during the ceremony in the applied to the Prefect of Police for aud Prefect directed him to see the regulations He is then represented to hare bad a conference with one of the sons of the and is stated to have from what was that the family of la assented to the the funereal though the words quoted imply no such assent The Commissary then interposed to prevent the students from carrying the and the contest took place of which an ac count has already been March way of accession of Count the French to the proposals made by England and Russia in favour of the Greeks is now Itis that the Reis Effendi has given verbally a negative New York papers tp the 17tb have been dreadful fire occurred at Norfolk Virginia on the by which sixty houses and other buildings were and a loss of dollars was According to a letter of the of February i received from the Legis lative Bodies had met for an extra opened by a speech from the in which be announced that the despatches received from the French Government were very and that it behoved all to be prepared for the There was much anxiety on the subject among the merchants at Peter Moore is now in prison at the suit of Lord Palmer and his Under Secretary the two latter directors having paid the money upon the bond given by with four as directors to the Cornwall and Devon Min ing to the and received from them a of the chases in Philip Per one of the has paid his share of the having become cannot of course be called upon for his is in and not therefore available but the Noble Lord and his Under Secre being determined to make each codirector and defendant who is competent to have continued the execution against Peter In the mean bis Lordships solicitor proceeds against the with the view of enforcing the payment of the Hamburgh papers to the 1st contain accounts of much damage caused by the overflowing of the waters in East Fries and of the melancholy situation of the unfortunate inha who fear that more disasters await The inunda tion had lasted three 80 years against the making of turnpike the petitioners stated would ruin their markets by facilitating communication and introducing Sic ACLAND was of that after already taken any resistance to the would place the turist in a worse situation than What amendments he thought necessary he should propose in the BANKES conceived that the prohibitory to a cer tain was the safest for the country to follow we must encourage the cultivation of our own and furnish em ployment to our own people without which it was idle to talk of the means of national Sir thought that the system of free trade could not be acted upon without a great reduction of and diminishing the and naval expenditure which be with respect to the army and at present as he had always that such a ought not to It was the spawn of political econo of whose theories he was most heartily He was decidedly of opinion that the proposed law would produce a competition between the foreign aud home growers of to the great disadvantage of our own For the second 243 for the Sir gave notice of an intended motion by him for an address to his to appoint an unanimous ad ministration in the present critical state of public Sir presented two Petitions from com plaining of the introduction of the military at the last whereby several persons had lost their He allowed that turbulence bad taken which be maintained might have been suppressed without military execution and hoped the now before the House for the regulation of the police of would put ah effectual stop to such sanguinary pro Sir that the assistance of the mili tary was absolutely necessary on the occasion the Riot Act was and the Mayor was compelled 19 seek safety in the and it was impossible to quell the riot by PEEL had a strong aversion to calling in military aid on such hut was of opinion there was no alternative in this Sir GRAHAM persisted in his charge against the and was ready to show that he culpable misconduct on the of created the riot on that Sir in pursuance of his brought under review the hard case of the Irish in to rebuild and repair Protestant churches and the same time excluded from voting at parish than half a million had been raised iu Ireland since the for the support of Protestant principally upon It the house would concur with him in condemning such he Sir would found a on the GRATTAN seconded the GOULBOURN that his new would do away with many and he was inclined to adopt any further practical means of redressing any remaining our whole system of policy with re spect to and consent to grant a part of the pub lic money for erecting churches iu that rather than oppress the Catholics for that PLUNKETT deprecated the Latitude of discussion and thought that the must be kept however small the number of Protestants in the with every wish to treat the Irish Catholics could not admit that they ought to be wholly exempt from contributions for the support of the established If that principle were good for why not also for Eng land and would not the natural consequence that multi tudes would desert the church to evade the Sir NEWPORT then consented to withdraw the resolution for the on condition of having leave to bring in the after a few words of leave was DEBTORS HUME that a select committee should be appoint ed to consider the state of prisoners confined for the ave rage number pf whom could not be less than He con tended that as it is frequently to the inasmuch as personal imprisonment exempt the APRIL IRISH Sir NEWPORT moved for a Select Committee to examine how the grants of Parliament to so far as the sums pro posed related to the purposes of charity and The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER that the Estimates for the year had been reduced to the extent of and that as the Report of the Commissioners on the subject had not yet been he thought the appointment of a Com would be RICE thought the estimates were and had but a poor opinion of the value of the the expense of which had already been Some of the Com missioners had become school and had made them selves arbiters of reminding one of the controversy agitated during the lower about the signification of a GOULBURN justified the proposed LESLIE FOSTER justified the separate to which he had put his GRATTON was for submitting the question to a Com up HUME was of the same After some more observations by LEWES and the question was and the motion negatived bv a majority of HARVEY or returns of the state of causes in the courts of instancing the numerous delays to suitors were put in The that the evident object of the motion was an attack upon the Lord and thought that no public advantage could be derived from the TAYLOR saw no reason for believing that the Chan cellor was pointed and wondered how his friends should think it necessary to protect his dignity by smothering an in like the It was absolutely necessary for to whether the Chancellors duties were not too onerous for The court wanted and must be PEEL that the information sought for in a great to be found in the Report of the Com missioners The tendency of the was to cen sure the and he thought it in the present stage of the surprised that such a motion should be when it was almost a matter of course to grant such means of DAWSON that if the ground of the objection to the production of the documents was that the Judge might not lose his let the country grant him his a or twice and wipe away the tears of insisted that the House was hot treated fairly on this He knew nothing of Lord Eldon but as a public saw in bim a man with all his Jhe progressive improvement of the If Peel would do for the Court of Chancery what he was labouring to do for the criminal he would erect a monument to himself in the hearts of all classes of the CANNING did not know how far the motion might be ne at some future period forthe elucidation of the but was decidedly against present temper of the Majority against the APRIL The Marquis of CHANDOS wanted to know from how far the law had been put in force to down the Catholic PLUNKETT did not think that he was the proper person to be applied to for such Colonel TRUNCH maintained that the Catholic Association must be pat and that the law was sufficient for that pur Much had of late been done for bettering the condition of but the wisest measures must fail without the sup pression of the The Gentlemans speech throughout was heard with regular notes of rr PEEL deprecated so multifarious a and that bad no more to answer with respect to the execution of the than he himself CHANGE OF Sir KNATCHBULL hoped Sir Lethbridge would withdraw his motion for addressing the King about the appointment of an unanimous circumstances having occurred to render the motion Sir LETHBRIDGE declared readiness to withdraw his if he could be from that a new Ad ministration was about to be CANNING thought that the he had himself a few nights was sufficient evidence that an admi was being formed but that Sir might use his own discretion about withdrawing his motion BREACH OF The SPEAKER called the attention of the House to a subject their A who signed himself had written three letters to the Secretary of the Home in very unwarrantable ou a made in that by the Honourable in one of threatening to answer him from the PEEL explained the he had cautioned Hume against this HUME said that nothing could justify such CANNING thought it impossible to pass over such moved that Jennings do attend the House on Monday COURT OF COMMON Thursday a Court of Common Council was held at Guildhall for the despatch of public STATE OF THE NIGHTLY Alderman called the attention of the Court to the state of the nightly watch within the with a view to their better It was the custom for the watchmen to off their posts at five oclock in the morning from the beginning of March to consequence of the citizens of London were left without any protection from five till half past nine in the at which hour were on The result of this practice that the great majority of crime that took place in the city was committed at an early hour in The worthy Alderman concluded by mo ving that a committee be composed of an a and a Commoner of each ward to report to the Court the of the nightly and to consider the means of placing the system under better The motion was agreed and the Court APRIL morning the Marchioness Wellesley embarked at Howth for Holy on her way to Her Excellency arrived at at nine accompanied by his Excellency the and was received by Sir Ed win Sir the Major Rick Major Captain Skinner and Captain Her Excellency immediately proceeded on board the steam packet under the usual salute from the which attended her Excellency to and Sir embarked with her anif attend her  

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