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Other Editions of Trades Free Press

Trades Free Press Sunday, July 29, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, July 29, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, August 05, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, August 05, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, August 12, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, August 12, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, August 19, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, August 19, 1827,
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Trades Free Press Sunday, August 26, 1827,
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Other Editions from Sunday, December 23, 1827

Daily Courant Sunday, December 23, 1827 ,
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Country Journal Or The Craftsman Sunday, December 23, 1827 ,
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London Age Sunday, December 23, 1827 ,
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Atlas Sunday, December 23, 1827 ,
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London Nimrod Sunday, December 23, 1827 ,
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Bells Life In London And Sporting Chronicle Sunday, December 23, 1827 ,
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Logansport Telegraph Sunday, December 23, 1827 ,
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Trades Free Press

   Trades Free Press (Newspaper) - December 23, 1827, London, Middlesex                                HELPED EVERY ONE HIS AND ONE SAID TO HIS BE OF GOOD 0. VOL. No. 1^8. DECEMBER 23, 1827. PRICE ON THE NEWSPAPER PRESS OF ye takin An faith prent have received the following article from a Correspondent who seems to have no little knowledge of the Press of and consider it in this eventful that the people should have a fair anil honest view of who affect to be either their instructors or their we have withheld onr customary Essay to give it a Tbc to be ite cure faith doctors the other Now I Mr. that aa we are all agreed that our common country constant want of able and honest we do better than examine into the character and qualification of such and see how far we ought ov ought not to pin our faith to their learned We are by no means in a state of such excellent that either Whig or Liberal or who edit the are disposed to say we can do without All seem to press upon as their several and not one considers that wc are able to dispense with his particular To be some grumblers have insinuated that the physicians were called upon to heal themselves before they began others but this must be a fori have not yet heard of one of them who ever complained that he The fact they are all wise their own apd as they must know more of themselves thin I can I shall just leave them in the full enjoyment of that I shall merely speak of them as they in their proper according to the of thoy are supposed to in other according to their The is The Conducted by Mr. B-s and Mr. with the assistance of a large Mr. This journal is the most influential in though how long it will continue so know It is remarkable for a mass of matter compressed with judgment and arranged with early In politics it is the product of It does not lead but follow it. It not bribes from but from It will not take 10,00CM. from one but if it be likely that 10,000 copies will be sold from advocating the side that such individual would have desired to more need be It is understood among the that the support of the late Queen which shook England to its was only determined tipon by of of the proprietors determining that she should be and being of opinion she should The question which was most calculated to make the paper sell 1" and as the Queen seemed to be the most popular just the Queen was If witchcraft were believed The Times would expatiate upon Sir Hale or if the people took it into their heads to applaud a war like that of the i to encourage a crusade like that of or to rush into a contest like that of G Times would he their most obedient and whenever the same people filtered their The Times would | always be ready to show good cause why it ought to alter its opinion At I think The Times is the champion of liberty knowing as V do governing principle of I would tell my brother mechanics to place no dependence upon a journal that is Every tiling by and nothing ' This which has taken to itself the exclusive appellation of the u Leading for which it often been unmercifully quizzed by its less successful upon one or two indignantly repelled the charge of direct Haw. far it may be guilty or innocent of direct bribery I know but this I a journal which so slavishly instead of direct public is as guilty of corruption as the one that inserts an to answer a certain for a certain Instead of the title of * I think that of Echoing would be much more So has The been in its efforts to follow and to flatter public and by great and vast expense in procuring intel and literary that I have reason to know Anna and her have shared from 25,000J.to 30,OOOZ. per annum for several The next journal in popularity is the Morning alias the Broad There is a sort of taste and agreeable arrangement about Times; Ibut never mortal such a heterogeneous mass of matter is generally crammed into the columns of Its though it appears clumsy is not on the There I am inclined to about one-third readable matter in the Herald than In the Times; to attempt any thing like or to place all articles of the same class would give a heaviness to the whole that would to the and repulsive to the As it Mr. the editor and has enough to do attempting To look over the various articles as besides the both foreign and domestic from all extent much larger than what Times have severalty is up of that carried conviction into the Cabinet tarried conviction into the I now come to the The glass of fashion and the mould of the mirror in winch dandy may see his own nothingness witling his abortion his stately lady's maid her Ignorant and my lord's lordship's and her ladyship's The would require the eyes of Argus and the of Briareus Mr. T- does besides Very frequently In the Herald rather inclines the anti-liberal to which it has for many years attached and as a generous enthusiasm is not mixed up with the of the love many opportunities to sly hits and severe cuts at every thing of higher pretension than mere matters of the Herald be anti-liberal in its general It is a decided and an uprooting reformer of public It has always economy and and has done more in. showing the bubbles of the than all the other journals put It is a Church and sort of wedded to old and looking with scorn modern principles and improvements hence the a large and enlightened system of legislation need expect from It is in politics what Lord Eldon was looking at what hat rather than what be unlike Lord it is and The next on my list is The Morning Solely edited by Mr. called by that Ajax sense and cunning Doctor B This journal has always been attached party in is occasionally seen of is too much connected to hg ever calculated editor w one of the powerful reasoners of the and and can bring into at any more more and more information to upon a given than any or perhaps any of his contemporaries but on the is. far from being an Writing of a more superficial ridiculing instead of epigrammatic suit the newspaper much better than and erudite compositions hence it that while elegantly and eloquently got nothings of the Times are read by the more laboured and vigorous productions of the Chronicle are comparatively Yet Mr. a wit in his and his sarcasm rarely fails to It is as strong without being so coarse as old and has a merit which the Ajax can never neither inconsistent nor The next is The New along with the by Mr. once a Whig and with the same to Mr. Daniel once a determined as determined a The gentlemen of these journals seem to have made up their like a certain pious and prudent never to lose sight of one that whoever arc in they will never be matter what be the State they will live and die Vicars of and considering that such is their avowed they have displayed no little taste in trimming their and shaping their course with the various breezes that have lately blown from the r neighbourhood of In talent the New Times holds a tolerably high rank From the nature of its which is always advocate the varying measures of varying nothing of course can be said respecting its save that it never can be for popular inasmuch to Mr. Pitt in his early no Minister can be for popular remain and since the Canning star has been lord of the the New Times has with considerable the and enlightened commercial policy which was brought into play by the eloquent apd his profound Mr. It has in a masterly the superiority of a system of reciprocity over one of its reasonings upon that immortal to become rich yourselves you must contribute to the of your This view of the principle of foreign trade was advocated by the Nob Times and its evening the at any period prior to the adoption of the same principles by the The pretensions to weakest It Is among only a f to as stupid as the appellation perfectly Well understood by all whose rank does not entitle arid i- As tool of a party of Peers who defeated the first of. Legislation that proceeded from t House and the food of the the Morning Post is of course the advocate of all he may be who never condescends to denounces in bitter terms every thing appears to it opposed to its masters the and Wellingtons Chancery system and the barrack Church and the army and the It is conducted by Mr. of whom I know nothing Tub Public Is a and straightforward dedicated almost mercantile matters in what it does concerning political though seldom so eloquent or so or self-sufficient as its rarely good or judicious I shall not more of it at as it does not come within the of many of your Not Morning The last and the the catalogue but which the Few can tjm patronage licensed victuallers hence there is scarcely a without having such an im mense it goes no It is the least in and apparently the lowest in intellect of the Morning but it be so. It is generally sound and honest in its and is not often wrong in its calculations but along with its often a day too 1 wish was otherwise for the Advertiser might be made Me paper of the There is journal so independent of party as the Advertiser is and must necessarily and no one that could do greater good if ably and energetically I that mine do not like much in their for good and substantial but the public want all they can get if the Advertiser were as large as the Herald or and four so that it might be cut in two mine would get two papers for their and two readers for their one without the much apprehended danger of their customers keeping their several portions for too long and public at large would buy the Lam to the they purchase either the Herald or The editor of the Tap as the is sometimes vulgarly is Mr. a who grown gray m the and who ought to be permitted to retire with applause and a which I trust will be acceded to by all who would not desire to Foed on his brains and then leave him to be ' Dec. 6.--At St. there Train general report of a note drawn up under the arid a hii Majesty's to the Foreign Ministers at the Russian All the letters agree in that ing the advanced of the the would confine itself tho means of to taking them by to yield hitherto refused tq grant to of * It Xs news has for that the the Russian Army of Caucasus has since the taking of with Abbas tho ti which secures to Russia tho provinces rn i i 1 An article from Berlin notices as addressed Emperor to the Russian in which he repeats the live assurances of his not desiring to but declares that ho will agreed upon by his Allies Porte refuse to to other to No is mentioned for this ' -i i ' j. t { v 4' 18.-Yesterday an net messenger from for the court the arrival Majesty's the i 1 u Singular case op Chassereau stated that the woman at very well had some time since applied to him for an order of stating that her had at an hotel in this with a man whom she never saw nor but that now a married man and the father of a family voluntarily came forward and himself the father of the and to this was ready to make The Magistrates observed they never had so singular a case and the following conversation took re you married No. Is the person who now says he is the father of the the same that you met No this man is the father of the Did you see hini at the hotel 1 No. Did not you say that the man at the hotel was the father of the child 1 Was het No. Why then did you say so Because I was forced to it. Mr. whole tale of the hotel a it David had no that present man was not the real but was induced to knowledge such interested the A man brown livery stepped and avowed himself the if he was willing to take an oath that he believed himself to be the be very bijt affer he he should not it. The woman her and the Brighton 10.-The, have considerably on our since out authentic opposite circulated almost every but Metalliques 90^ Bank vert I the Gazette de Dec. 19.)-4-To the gave yesterday we now that was not prised at the which as ho Is propositions ot the Allied at the same time that he has no resources to mid it. ' on the 2d of November that Egyptian brought to tlie Pacha the at This event has not in the his sentiments or his conduct regard td The corvette La which left j i s Our correspondent date v 14th of writes as news which we received of a -is confirmed by the expresses to-day from At the time of the departure of the Actions of the Bank had got up to 1,074. It is thai the Reis had Ms wish directly the negociations Tho news i ment on onr The got up to 99 9-16; the 1,289 a 90; the 1162. Letters from Cadiz that by of the 14th qf it appears that Laborde v. was ready to sail with his in which several i thousand troops had been Nov. 27.-A Russian sHip here in from brings news from that place of the 23d. On firmans had been the ships of all on the 23d they were i owing to tho arrival of the CapUan who gave a different turn to the f and also to the affair at Tlie captain who r arrived deposed the government that the French and English squadrons had bgen re- n fused a free passage by the Castle and that they forced their way by levelling it with The other letters from Odessa state Russian was ready for that eVen the pontoons necessary for passing the Danube had three Russian but still Avar not plated at O a Thursday a very genteelly dressed man y and having every appearance of a - walking leisurely along near when a person tapped and accused him of his horse and cart not an hour The accused stoutly dented the hut in the end was consigned of an During the bustle by thia a gentleman was robbed ayery vela $ ' able gold and with thief got clear off. 1 On Tuesday night about twelve two of the police dismounted patrol a. near the turnpike at on suspicion of his having - s w ho had not honestly Upon que he leaped from darkness of the made his found in the cart two large cheats and a large bag of from made the next had been the Ashford oil iff jJ to that The waggoner missed the his waggon between Footscray A patent has been lately obtained for proof of thin cast-iron into each and effectually carry off London Weekly  

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