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   Courier (Newspaper) - September 15, 1831, London, Middlesex                                o commence his WINTER of LECTURES on Monday the 3d of lui ST. M mil begin on in this on at seven in the may d tihe or at Mr. Lawrence s 18, and domestic Premium by post Mr. torn Eight in the unUl Seven in of One Shilling for each The Tunnel Is is dry and the descent is bj a and easy to the Sept. 8.1831. M Thomas of in the pariah of the county of having by bequeathed certain monies to to manner directed of his John William James Jru lor and Lis Ann the children or nf the said Testator's above named Brothers and ot m forthwith to send in their claims to monies properly to Mr. R. or to Messrs. m No. 12,518] THURSDAY FOR BOMBAY the fine Ship JOSEPH burthen 720 tons will Sail positively in all the month of This ship is well manned and armed carries a and her accommodations for aie of the most superior Freight or Passage apply Crawford and 71, Old or to the at the 10 bo in pursuant to a Decretal I Order of the High Court of made in a cause t. and Edwards v. with the approbation of Francis Esq. one of the Masters of the said at the Swan on the M day of October and at the Oal W in the town of m W on day of October a valuable FREEHOLD and I situate in and consisting of two freehold a stable and and a and about six Square yards of and tiree sereril leasehold held for the residue of a term of ninety-nine in the town of and nino acres of freehold and bop in the of and also six freehold and in may be had at the Slid Master's in London of Messrs. Hilliard and Messrs. Rosser and Gray's Mr. Mr. and at the place of TO be SOLD pursuant to a Decree of the High Court of made in a cause of v. with the approbation of Sir Giffin one of the Masters of the said at the in in the County of on the day of 1831, and at the Inn kept by Mrs. in in the County of on tie day of the same between the hours of fire and six in the on each of those in all the real ESTATES of late of Bank in Monk in the of which were by his will to pay his debts and consisting of a Bobbin several and Closes of and pasture situate Church and in tie county of ai It in the county of it the county of may be at the said Master's in of Mr. in Gray's of Messrs. and in the of Hartley and at at in the county of aad of Mr. at in and at tie principal Iims id and 'The Estates may be viewed on application to the respective SUCCEDANEUM for DECAYED WITHOUT HEAT or and INCORRODIBLE TEEtH WITHOUT Wires or other SURGEON No. 32, grateful for the high and patronage which has so eminently distinguished their professional exertions since their arrival in the British respectfully to their Friends and the Public in that they still continue to restore with their celebrated MINERAL so universally RECOMMENDED oy the faCULTY af London and The operation of filling teeth u performed in a few WITHOUT the SLIGHTEST or They also Fasten Loose Teeth in a manner singularly and supply or partial Sets formed of the above or of natural without wire or other and guaranteed to answer every purpose of articulation and The Faculty are invited to witness the successful result of Mineral aa in One of the above firm may be for a short on Mondays and at No. and the alternate at No. Leamington CONVEYANCE from LONDON to and to nil places on the and back by consequence of an arrangement between the Owners of British the LONDON Captain JOHN Owners of the Capt. GOODS and PASSENGERS can now be conveyed up and down the Rhine by the London upon the same terms as by the and the terms of freight for goods and passengers hence to and from thence to ore henceforth to be alike by both The London Merchant leaves London for Rotterdam every and Rotterdam for London every Saturday the Batavier leaves for London every and London for Rotterdam every For any further particulars please to apply to Hofman and Agents for the London at their No. 4, where the passage by the London Merchant may also be booked as also at the Spread Eagle Regent or at 157, and at at Messrs. D. and Sept. 11. 1831._- TO be peremptorily pursuant to an Order of the High Court of made in a of with the approbation of Henry Esq. one of the Masters of the said at the Public Sale Room of the said in on the 4tb divy of 1831. between the hours of One and Two o'Clock in the in One a consisting of a or tenement and and about HT acres ol situate in the parish of in the County ol and of the Manor of with the timber and timberlike and growing particulars whereof may be at the said Master's in aforesaid of Messrs. and 10, King's Bench Mr. Mr. Mr. 3, London Messrs. Brooksbank and 14, Gray's Mr. and at the principal Inns in and and a period like the II ibe to with tbe various treatises and morbid and the ilU to which nature li muck and of wUlch that of 1, to It Willi peopled by of JM Miliny in and of. the and to added to which ii impregnated ia iu the Leaden into the To lucli in the or large and the or to a tropical THE ROYA PORTABLE aa the and and renderine of more tban the moit and Water It equal in and lar In tn and to It all the iced THE OP THB PROCESS to afford a sufficient to the am their been adopted in tbe principal in- or tlie tbe of tbe and the nf families throughout the United evidence of several of the mon eminent medical been ITS ALL OTHER PLANS OF FILTRATION 7t remedy for 1 be aad state of of the Royal ex - of carriage and I- rvo G. on IS per o ' IB 110 o ditto I o 40 a 0 Jme 63 an 0 Filters and may he of the in every large town the United at New Ac. that been passed upon tbe Royal Port and of the moat eminent or the prompted to fabricate various humble imitations of their the recommends ROYAL GEORGE are placed upon The in operation on red and black 4c, paai to the moat brilliant obtained nt the Office of the 69, tlie WHEN Men of Education and Professional Skill use to discover the moat safe am certain of a few the of experience is the best GOSS and CO. have been to make the ibe object of their in of are and effectually a. alio long in or too often by timely of whether the of baneful or any vbich tbe of the become as of JJ ei The practice ha. Enabled by a superior inveterate or without to in diet or of their mode of ha. been to fail in one instance in Which many after and injurious methods bad been to thM offer in the country are requested te of and maSner for and pan of the be 1. Tbe of LIFE a Th. 8YPHILIT-andS. tElANA and be Gentleman of and perhaps be thought an acquisition to an accomplished appeals to any Voung Lady age scarcely exceeding like may not find within her own circle any one suited to her tastes or Mature reflection oii the existing state of society in this country has satisfied that there can be no want of feminine delicacy in those who notice an which is dictated in the true spirit oi Any having courage to place confidence in bis may safely communicate through Y. 3d, with whom to facilitate correspondence and conduct tbe negotiation to an interview have been gentleman proposes the winter in having an entree to all that is in that delightful BAKER and CO. have ai their immediate disposal a large Sum of Money for by way of purchase of Reversionary or Life Interests in the or Bills or pecuniary accommodation granted on personal boors from Ten to Four All letters must be rpo NOBLEMEN AND of the BEST CLOTHES that can be produced s.d. Extra Saxony Dress Coat 3 Ditto Black or 1.1 Extra Saxony Frock Skirts faced with Silk 18 Extra Saxony Trousers I 10 Ditto Black or 1 14 li None but No clothes T. are warranted to be equal to any that can be lei the maker be who he Lieutenant's Uniform and of tlie best lower than but the best materials therefore les kept ready A Suit of 41. The articles supplied at these prices by W. THE PUBLIC i. directed to the state of their and those offered to them for and are at the same time respectfully cautioned against purchasing any Locks security is but the with seven manufactured by S. MORDAN and CO. The se curity this Lock ought to make it a chief point witl parents to use no protecting their children and from falling into those snares which temptation and curiosity too often lead to and giving an inviolable security to property as private moveable in the absence of the and whc personally or by post PUBLIC G. FISHER ami CO. beg leave to return their grateful to the Nobility and for the great patronage they have received for the last four seasons of the Public and Subscribers of the Horticultural and Zoological for their highly approved waterproof PROM 1)1 which they will feel highly honoured by their Fisher and and Clog Manufacturers to tbe Royal between and N.B. Clogs on the same HANDSOME Large Quantity of this Fashionable Article of in the very besi has been by an eminent Manufacturer to J. No. 234, to be for Ready a great Chinchilla Siberian Isabella Russian White and the beautiful with and long tippets to equally Furs and pARKER'S FOUNTAIN LAMPS for DINNER DRAWING giving the light of 3, 6, or 9 Candles Extract from the Report of the Royal Institute of France on the Fountain This Lamp is remarkable for its simplicity of its being easily requiring no precaution but what every servant con and tlie light which it distributes unites nil the qualities which can bp and equals the of the best mechanical Sitting of Sept. 1830. 26, Cornhill and at the Manufactory near the Regent's Park 69, and 2'), MANOR and to in be LET 4lu tbe RIGHT of SPORTING ovaj of One Thousand Acres of about three mUu from tbe Sea with the right of deputing a particulars apply to Messrs. Crabtree FOR PARALYTIC The Restorative Cordial of Dr. by comforting and strengthening the promoting tranquillizing tlie and diffusing warmth and animation to the cold and torpid affords speedy by its invigorating proves an effectual remedy for Paralytic Complaints with indigestion and nervous Sold by in bottles at 9d. and with and respectable by Messrs. 4, comer of St. London Lower and Edinburgh sold by Messrs. Royal Messrs. Barclay and 95, London ana the principal Medicine in town and Wholesale by the No. 1, Hackney 11. be post a 30s. equal to two of will be forwarded to any part of the EN I G M A What is as vividly brilliant as Yet for strength of reflection is justly Which rarely descends but on subjects that And though to tlie skies is sull close to the ground } Do you 'tis as plain as the nose on your when in yon polished boot may be seen W here all things surrounding you readily It's Robert Warren's Jet Blacking I mean in all in every And sold by him at the This easy shining and brilliant prepared by ROBERT 30, and sold in every town in the in and Paste in at 6d., and Is. Be particular to I enquire for 30, Strand j all others are counterfeit iMBER 15, 7. by a twenty yeara of a in a WHOLESALE BUSINESS in any hU would be adequate to a small hu no objection to tbe and would be willing to make himself useful to by letter to 17, - THE LONDON Proprietors of the request the Subscribers will early as of tbe latter Salts The odd Parts to will be delivered at the original 8s., the 4d of they will then be raised in 10a.-73, BOOKS PUBLISHED THIS THE Second and of NAPIER'S HISTORY WAB in the with 8vo. We know of no u be predicated of the T. and New COLONIAL Letter to R. F. Esq. M CRISTOPHER Price Is. 6d. Printed for James Cochrane and 11, and sold by all MILITARY MEMOIRS OF JOHN 3 post 8vo. price one THE EXTRAORDINARY MILITARY CAREER of JOHN late Lieutenant in his 87th Written by To be had of all and of the DR. SCHOOL one very laree pocket most beautifully price 7s. in or 7s. 6d. of ANEW ABRIDGMENT OF English and for the use of Grammar Into this edition are introduced several alterations and improvements for the special purpose of facilitating the labour and increasing the knowledge of thi young By JOHN LL.D. A new edition to which is now an Index of proper Printed at the University for Thomas No. 73, R. Griffin and Glasgow and may be had of all respectable Booksellers in the United Containing Five Thousand Receipts one neatly and closely printed in double comprising upwards price only 9s. 6d. THE COOK'S By RICHARD of tbe House St. ' In this famous volume will be found receipts for dishes of every from tbe sumptuous fitted for regal to those over which domestic parties in the middle classes make merry on holiday Post Henry Colbum and Richard NEW WORK BY MR. three THE By the Author of Tales of the O'Hara The &c. Henry Colbum and New In two 8vo. COUNT LAVALLETTE'S Written by ' We have perused the of with much eagerness and Tbe story is a told with great The history of his must always be considered as one of the chapters in tbe history of o - - Henry Colbum and Richard New OF AN ESSAY on INDIGESTION or MORBID SENSIBILITY of the STOMACH and as the proximate or Characteristic Condition of Nervous Mental and many other witli an improved Method of medicinal and By JAMES Physician Extraordinary to the price 6s. by the same price 83. 6d. in 2. of the Pursuit of being Au Excursions through 6cc.; with Observations and Reflections on the Medicinal Influence of Travelling Change of Foreign and in Sickness and in by S. 174, FOR THE SACRAMENT FOR A new Edition of for the LORD'S With a Companion to the Intended chiefly for the Use of By MARY In neat pocket bound in a superior in black 3s.; in 63. Printed for and By the same and on the CANONICAL Tbe Second corrected and Iu i 8vo. HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH 8ro. price 1/. 6s. THE H ISTORY of the CHURCH of By J. B. S. of St. Mary and Vicar of London Baldwin tmd SALES BY Copyright of Works by Sir Walter be SOLD by PUBLIC in the Royal Exchange on tbe September at Two THE entire COPYRIGHT of the following written by Walter Ibe Life of Life of consisting of Lives of Charlotte Sir Ralph John Miss Daniel De the late Dake of Buccleugh and Lord George Lord the Duke of Samuel Henry Tobias Richard Oliver Samuel Lawrence Henry Horace Clara Mrs. Ann Le Charles and Robert of the and Essays on and the IS included in the collection entitled Sir Walter Miscellaneous Prose in six volumes of which the above specified comprise about five No auction For particulars apply to Walter 3, Royal or to Trustee on tbe estate of Archibald and Co. 17, Estate in Orkney for - To be SOLD by PUBLIC within Calder's on the day of 1832, at Twelve o'Clock by of powers in a THE ESTATE of in the parish of Mainland of The principal Lower has a suitable and is enclosed and subdivided with stone contains about 200 half arable and the rest and is let on 1 lease current for eleven Tie rest of the Estate is divided into a number of small yielding about 62/. of making the gross land rents about The feu duties a stipend but are chiefly payable iu kind by the te and leave of free rent about 50/. Besides there are valuable Kelp to 20 tons The soil is and the situation advantageous for sea whereby the estate is rendered very It is only two miles from the royal burgh if the county to which there is a cart and horse This property contains good stations for prosecuting the Herring and other which are now carried on to in In order to secure a sale and encourage the estate will be exposed to the upset price of 1,600(., being little more than the amount of the heritable debt which at present affects it. If desired by the it may be arranged that the greater part of the price shall remain a burden upon the The Estate may be viewed at any and further particulars learned by applying by post to W. R. Edinburgh Mr. w IV From the Gazette ele dated is. We have just received a letter from which informs us according to a by tbe five of and accepted the France is from all the to the It is affirmed that the French troops that have mained in will return to France at the end of the We have a letter from which The with troops on sailed for The likewise with on Admiral Hugon vrill certainly hoist his flag to-morrow on board the frigate This added to the order to dismantle tbe Algiers and tbe the indicates that the projected expedition lately talud of is given some other Admiral be to take tbe or the of forthe Levant should A letter from Donai of the 10th of September day before yesterday detachments of artillery and of the of the arrived at coming from the army of thf to remain in The 8th of coming mm the army and going to will at to A letter from of tbe We have that byan order ofthe Minister of War the environs of will be ol 18.000 Ihe of We the officers of 19 are going to be formed 12.) Sept. 2. The Russian General arrived here this coming from the day after to-morrow be will em for It appears that the journey of this is connected with some diplomatic A dreadful fire has just destroyed a part of tbe pretty of situated under the walls of oor city towards the The fire was occasioned by the imprudence of workmen marking with a hot iron some spirits of French Sept. 12.-Five Per 88f. 70c.; Loan of 1831, 87f. 60c. Four per 71f. 25c. Three pei 59f. 30c. Bank Stock Exchange on 25f. 10c. Three 25f. 24f. 95c. Sept. 13. A letter from dated the 1st is reported on that the having attacked i battery erected in front of were repulsed with greai From this commencement it is concluded that the placi will be obstinately and that the prompt retreat ol the Polish army on the capital was for tbe purpose of concen while the Russians are obliged to divide defend themselves on both It besides appears that the does not want and that the siege may last Sept. 7. and are invaded by tbe cholera This scourge is only ten leagues from Every moment ii may break out The affairs of Poland are enveloped in the greatest mystery it appears that in consequence of a the Russians are retreating happily for hut unfortunately for European tranquillity for the contes will thus be indefinitely if the do not inter fere efficaciously to prevent it. THE Sept. 11. ORDER OF THE THE ARMY IN THI I announce to the army by the present order of the that 1 have received ftom his Majesty the official with to communicate it to the to tbe se veral governors of and the commanders of corps under my that hostilities between Holland ant Belgium are suspended for six which commenced oi tbe of August at 12 o'clock at to thi lOth of October at Sept. 8. The Prince of On Prince of Orange went to and then to to inspect those two fortresses and tbe troops in garrison His Royal was expected in last town on Saturday Tbe garrison was to have been under and the inhabitants adorning their houses in honour of the several triumphal arches were We expect hii Royal Highness here Prince Frederick arrived ai It is said that their Majesties and the Royal Family will to Amsterdam this but the day does not seem to be It is said that Ihe departments of the Interior and some will undergo a new Several officers of the have lately been with the the Order of On the lOth the three remaining companies of the Amsterdam militia were to leave to join the battalion in tbt environs of To-morrow the militia of who had so glorious a share in the 10 were expected to return to that The inhabitants intended tt receive witli great THE PUBLIC by or W W Aug. 27,1831. The Duke of Orleans arrived in this city on lasi with Marshal They immediately waited on the Kinj having dined with accompanied him in the evening to the The Belgian army is to be composed of two one ol and the other of 15,000. How this will be considered by the two who have decided on Belgium becoming a neutral with an army of men 1 know 1 have heard it and that in good that there are to be seven French Generals and 300 officers ol different ranks embodied in the Belgian The two Chambers have elected their &c. tbe M. de Stassart is to be President Baron and Count Vilain Vice Presidents and Baron Count A Commission has also been appointed for drawing up the Address to the It is composed of four and the H. Baron Vilain and Count In the Chamber of M. Gerlache is and M. Barthelemy and Messrs. Henry de and De The Commission for drawing op the Address is composed of six Members and the M. M. M. M. A. and M. M. Lefevbre and Count Vilain were appointed M. left us on Saturday on a special mission to and General Gobies is to leave this for the same on a mission relative to the demolition of the There is to be an exchange of prisoners under tho surveillance of the M. Latour returned to France on Sunday The foundries of cannon at Liege are at work night and Morning Monday an inquest was held at the House of on the remains of John who died in the prison on Saturday from extreme brought on by a want of the common necessaries of Mr. Henry clerk of tbe produced the warrant ol commitment of Mr. one of the Magistrates at on which deceased was committed on the 5th for fourteen imprisonment and hard as a rogue and having been found wandering and sleeping in the open Mr. the said he was in the yard when the deceased was brought He was in such a deplorable state of that it was with difficulty that he could be got within the prison gate and his weakness and debility were that he could not walk up the steps that led to the prison He gave directions that the rags should be taken with aa much care aa and that might be immediately which was attended Mr. tbe stated that was taken to the convalescent He was iu a moat emaciated and very He had no particular but seemed in a state of He administered restoratives and nourishing food but he was too far and died on Saturday morning about fi Ha attributed his death to want and The Jury returned a That the deceased died a natural death by the visitation of brought on by extreme in consequence of having been refused relief by the parish of St. George in the in the county of Middlesex morning as attended the As the Rev Mr. about to leave the for the reading Mr prepared to aid in tbe solemn services ol the that struck many of friends as greater energy than he had seLed Towards tie close of the second he was observed to falter and at the conclusion of it the The Rev. was led from the desk by Mr. Tufnell into the without any apparent he breathed his last in a few minutes the Tbe case of the Spanish refugees is a case misery and affliction that ought not to appeal to English sympathies in The situation of of those men is deplorable in the several have recently perished of drag on a precarious only saved by the uncertain succour of casual charity from the last ol Is it fitting that the asylum which England offered to those fugitives of an tyranny should only allow the privilege of lying down lo while her protection satisfies Us notions of chanty by providing them with a grave We are are aware that there was a fund raised in the some years for the relief of tiie Spanish i but it appears it is As to the fund which had been placed by the Crown at the disposal of the Duke of Wellington for the of these we neither know it amounts to at nor how it is A few persons are said still to derive advantage from if what was stated lately at the Mansion by some of the be its operation is very limited compared with tbe sum still We that those individuals were misinformed stated its amount at 18,000/. We think it time lo ask 3 question or two relative to this matter in the Spanish patriots had a chance of succeeding iii attempt to establish a Government in one ot the finest countries that tyranny and priestcraft ever 0[>-pressed and our own in Parliament and out of were profuse of their and lavish of their But now that they have our Liberals shrink from all contact with them and their they would from beings infected with the The Government it declined to do anything on their although the supplicants for bounty were stimulated and encouraged to forfeit rank and affluence at and engage in desperate enterprises against the speeches of some of our leading politicians in both Houses of who now till important In the The well known political sentiments of the Duke and the relation in which he stands to King by holding dignities and estates in did not make him the most eligible person could be selected to administer the Royal bounty to the exiled His selection of persons whose names were lo be placed on the or struck was said to be very It that he made a regulation that those who received 10/. as travelling expenses to leave the country should consider themselves as having no farther and we did avail themselves of this miserable pittance to proceed lo join their in their late unsuccessful invasion of ihe Spanish Some of them lost their lives in that ill fated and betrayed Are the who made the only effort in their power to relieve others of the charge of to be allowed to that effort ended m the ruin of their patriotic hopes unless IS speedily they must die in our streets and houseless who ask for shelter and a morsel of in That we do not overcharge the of their destitute condition it is only necessary to refer to what passed at the the other it three Spanish a colonel and two with starvation marked on their came and Mr. Hobler lo save them and others of their miserable persons of rank and large hereditary from They declared that they had ml bread for the last that death had come 10 the relief of and was close al ihe heels of the The French who fled in swarms to our shores at the period of the first French had not to tell such a tale as They received the bounty of England in no stinted Both Whig and Tory contended with each other in succouring and supporting Yet the French emigrants were the supporters of and the Spanish exiles are its could wish that our had not mixed up any ill-natured political insinuations with an appeal lo the charitable feelings of the British It should be enough to have it known that these beings arc and the bare announcement of that fact should in itself be sufficient to procure immediate the whether in enterprises against despotism they had received all the moral the acknowledged sympathy of this country could or whether their defeat had been mainly owing to unworthy and a want of cordial and active cooperation among their before our men with the most urgent on cur benevolence suffering humanity can enhanced by the circumstance of their being reduced to by their ardour for that willi we cherish in our the Times Now what will the enemies of reform lo the of the people on that important topic as if bv J crash of from the repose into winch had under the conviction that all was going on well favourite beyond that the enemies of them and of liberty impute their quiescence lo see them roused into legree of zeal and their and we have no doubt will carry the reform the House of It is a glorious development of of a whole nation The meeting of the livery is on The requisition for an assembly of ihe ot Westminster is in the course of Middlesex and the Borough follow the merchants and the bankers are tu immediately and then the who shall be first to throw up their caps for reform and the pure It is lucky that harvest is for is no work so would oDt have been on such an occasion as the Will all this convince ye that the are in earnest for That their zeal and in this cause are unabated If tell us what proof you assurance you they will be afforded you but beware of obtruding any mockery upon a roused Listen lo the speeches on the approaching if we deprecate we be wise in But since die they the rt lie as hard as they are ab e. There is an of in agonies that mounts to the height proverbially but step from the Only think of one of the organs of that faction calling out for popular as an encouragement to the House of Lords to the Times of appealing lo the and meet us with the as from the Now we challenge on own We reject and deprecate we ourselves to the and and consistent energy of the middle classes power is assisted and developed by the and on welfare that of the country itself is so entirely middle gentlemen of all householders throughout whose rights are all respected and lor by ihe present system is tn every one of our countrymen and cry as we already not in assemble in their respective and to save tbe great charier of their common liberties from It is true that the majority of of hours of their rejection of the aud more we make no the individual wbo may propose that wiU feel about the same degree of comfort as General and his Tory supporters after their over the for wp suppose it may be assumed that no of Lord Greys need be lucked for as the consequence of an adverse majority on the second reading of the form What is there lo prevent an immediate not until 1st or 2
                    

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