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ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE; " ~ m - ' —— ¦ " : --
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FROM FRIDAY NIGHT/S GAZETTE, April ^
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Stoflock into the nary .,-One ship tejg&gfe ^ ras . rtaakable ,, fQr / -hajing . * , ^ JPg ^ l ?• £ & "The Toonger ones were iccostototd * , ^ jee ? Sl ,,: ^ jou ' ogfcf honourable ? lubbers on . -A * ^ SWa t Vrf , ^ i mt saa u ^ ' and ^ e < iown . _^ B * pmVijfe . © £ ? J 5 wtf SttJtncent , _ ¦ JfioT 3 BKMBXT ^ -If Tour -wife happen to Jbe ^ f opinion that absolute monarchy is -bett er than cons ^ oH ^ goTen ^ nt , be ieogne 4 J J ^^ otsaj Toursnrereign was not of yqarown choosing . / .
dfel ^ lM aDj w ^^ airrtime / onl of a ^ n ^ ^ m ^ ^ r ^^^^^ of ^ ny iBofaOTj ' Bhonld not go to sea . - : AlfcsTA&x . —An oldv gentreman of 84 , Wng taken , to the altar a young damsel of about . sixteen , tie * elersrfinan said to him : — " The font itf at the SSfffflSTd&ik * . 'A mi" oo I want with aefont ? " saia the old genfleman . "Oh ! . I beg toht paraon , " said tlie ^ clerical wit ,. "I thought tou had broughtthis . chiia to bfr christened ^ ^
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TktE&torsefa * . \ Jhe . $ pr 1 ken 8 hrr vuh to be dutitKthr undeciiood thai it tgbrt&K a vehicle J * r the dttcuttton of mal Public QuatiHU , they are not to be identified Kith the Srxti * enU or tia Ijbvucoc ttf their several Correspmdenis .
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Gmpsrixntft RaAsdixe Laboareri tekhether * earning the vafte KomMi -JVag ^ i " - ^ ' " &t ? tos ^ U curse , and Irdas ^ ti ^ at ^^ tioxieaiirig armkt , fcrfcea no part bY i £ e § aiet * kt RiflaBiofe , it conastedpEttojaif y o { ^ aa ^ jnted snpplr of aew dance andgaai vanfeiy of Tfeia&abfe - / oodTdf their own snrreBg , ^ lie Islst q ^ tt , iiid inWeat ' twr fecfacm : - ^? a mea ' 6 r Women wrEnidmaWin ireland , ibM I hare seenilirea cl ^ fe 1 ibl * nttlfcardejy S ™ & * ftB-. pTonapns ^ eKiBrea-io ftl feVfeiy wn ^ bp ^ of 81-pefton& men , TromenrandJEnildren ^ rw ^ " " i ^^ P ^ * . ™ the week « ndmg 6 th "raober , 183 ^ be ^ qf more than an average # ifceir *« &Iy expenditure ;— ' " '
4 Hi iuar £ of newinilk , at id .... _ 1 17 2 potatoes and other vegetables ... 2 13 6 BaH « , 1 & . id ,, Po ^ rW 7 i ' d ,,. L 11 81 S ° " 2 f - rent-.- . ' . ..,,, 0 4 3 iurf for fi » I ,, - . » v , *« . „ . „ ., 0 0 9 • £ Q 7 H
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Food and loo ^ & Jbr ^ l- ' perton * aTeraging less ^ SubfcoHdition ofthe ramafe * of Ralabine now be compared , « 8 itongl » t to bt * vp & ihe condition bf Jfthpttren whose . earnings are the same , the band-JwStto ^ efve ^ earnhi ? , by ^ * JgjJgJ Iabonr , &o » 28 . to 5 * . per ^ eek ; ^« Staffordshire iian ^ -eanfiw : ^> m ' . 4 a * to 10 s . ; thtf ag&caltnral lalK ) ttr ? iMn' Wt W * - «^ - - « Mt «» s * ^ ome other . parti ^ r fiWi-wfli ib eir 6 * . . to -9 « . per week ; labourers in-the-north and earf of . Ireland , badly employed , and working for Jfrom . 8 d . to Is . per day ; bnt jnore partaculwly compare Iheir condUwn trU / i the ifottneil peasantry in the teegt of Ireland ( where thifi- ejrperhneTifrwai ' , mad fX > . without any
employment at ^ all for tnontna m wmter , wnose arw « ffi' : « ariritfgi throngboai fee je » r yntt \ MDt amount tor # kiw 4 » y » and this foy &e support , not pf the iridanSiuuouty , ~ h d dfd'targejamtly , his Trife and children do other employment than attending to aKttleplot of ^ potatoe ground , and begging ; their onrr _ &t& a , scanty supply of potatoes , and ' these freq&fitly of bad qnaDty , the whole family covered wS » fiS ^ , aa 4 clothed witbfrags , all terduig and sleeping in the same apartment , . upon a bit o : dirty straw- iwith , pigs , ducks , poultry , dogs , goats , : cow . s , ~ snd asses , on an earth floor r covered with mire , and manure of every descriptioa . The apartment a miserable mud cabin , roofed with thatch ^ or ; tods , often" without window 6 r chininey , and nine the door
times out of ten with a dungTieap before _ ; no bed , no fttrnitnre , scarcely any utensils , save a cart iron potr in which , the potatoes are boiled for the-fiuufly ^ dinner , and in which , afterwards , the surplus and the . refuse Are scrved . up to : tbe grunters Let them compare , the condition of these unfortunate individuals . with that of the members of this society , and remember that Ralahine was only the ^ S ~ ifipfromsucb"a state of things as this j they will ' then be able to form a just estimate of its valae . An 3 "IeFiraIsb ~ Be"T ) orne in ~ mind , . thai the utir fortunate classes 1 ' fiave here enumerated , form the majority < jf the icorking population of England and Ireland . Shame upon this land of 'Infidels , nicknaming itself Christian ! ! ' - . ' I am , respectfully , JOHls FINCH .
Liverpool , May 2 , 183 S . "JLad let those vrho find fealt nith the milk and v ^ fetabte diBrrf-R » ialune , reflect , that" » o hom « n being has aaj satbral light to require another to do that fot him or her , that ie « r ihe wan 33 Ttfc » e to do for that individual j" and therefore , t » a rational stale of society , aU those teho iriU have beef , mutton , veal and jiori , mini in turn Jc 3 l the animals for tkwtseizes .
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TO THE EDITORS OF THE NORTHERN STAR , Gentlemen , —What strange times we live in WHen I " agitate , " for the ~ emancipation of the " Slates" in the " Factories" and the " Bo «« ct , " I am held up to the public , by the "liberal" press , as an ** Incendiary , " a "Tiger" and " a ifood ~ tArrst . v monster . ' I am represented as an " itinerant mountebank "—* ' a demagogue" and " a disturber of the peace . " At one time , my friends -are advised " to send me to a lonasic asylum' "—at anotber thu Government is urged "to try me for treason , ( Aai I may expiate my crimes on a Scqg ' old * " What strange times we fire in , I say . Those very persons vehothus charge— those men , trho desire my caption and death —because I hate Slaverv , and am resolved to defend
the rights « f the Poor—are now , " itinerating' exciting the people against the 'Government , '' " agitating" and "" disturbing the p * aoe of tke country . " They are ""leaving their homes" and " neglecting their flocks . " They are denouuciug their opponents , ** as the enemies of God and man , " aud are levelling-the shafts of the -Almiplity against ever } man , woman , and child " who ¦ null not now forsake father and mother , " in order to listen to their " wild and forioas declamations" against the " tormentors and murderers" of the poor defenceless blacks . ' I am glad fosse them once . more iu the field . 1 f they are sincere—onr" caqse . beingont * . and the same—( hey must now help noi . Trtdhagainsifalsehood—lfteriy agam « t slavery- ^ justice against opprestfon—Christranity against cmetmsnetsl is our cause , and they say that it is theirs . £ kiet -skins- oxvhife skins
make no difference—* ave , that -the latter are nearer b « me—and demand our Jirtt care . It matters not , if sin be committed , whether it be in J . iiixic . 4 , or England—in KiNesrax or in Makchesteiu 1 ani led to make these remarks , because 1 see daily in the newspapers , " Solent and inflammat ryspeeches . " on the black "Slavery question , vttfxed at public meetings lere and there , iy many persons who have bitherto "beea my bitter opponents , when 1 have been seeking -for tie emancipation of the Pactory Slares . By many per * ons » who encourage the new system of Tsmi&tt ,-adopted in ^ tur modern ( mtiites . ' If these men sincerely wi « h for the liberty of tie blacks , 1 pray that they wiD listen to tbp fot levring two or three lines—God is just—He will . vever perjut exglaxd to be hoxovj 1 ed by asolishixr Slavery ix her Colosies—until she
HAS ABOLISHED TWS MORE HORRID SYSTEMS OF Slavery at Home . The only urny ( o secure ilte blessings of God , in your henevotent exertions hi Ji (~ voitr of Jier Colonial-Slaves , is to seek his favour by releasing' cur homebred and home-bou / ul Slaves . Do not mistake me . Gentlemen ; I rejoice to rind nay old' opponents , now pleading for liberty—it delights me to hear , that tne anti-slavery platforms are thronged by those , wno themselves live on the fruits of home slaverv , —and who hope , by enforcing the damnable New ^ Poor Law—to gain still more , by facer vagts and Jiigker rents . I rejoice at th » " circumstance . because so long as they preach Liberty
whether 4 hey be sincere or false , I know that tney ase sowing good seed ; never mind , if they will only Mxep over the miseries of the black slaves , although flie j know it iiot , ¦ they ure loosening the shackles of tUetr . oven . Every tear , which watered the floor of the House of Commons , from the eye of Pease , was a-sledge hammer acting upon the * irons of hisoicn slaves iu Darlisgtos ! Every peal-of Brougham ' s eloquence in the Lords , was a Hash of Heaven ' s lightening against hjs ows code of m crder , daSy executing in his facourite Bastilesl The people understand it all . ( rod is now working out their salvationeven bv means of their bitterest foes .
, The other day I received a letter , dated Man " chbetes , and signed Holland Hoole . This letter is intended to arouse the millowners , rto use their influence with the government , to perpetuate Slavery in tlteFactories ' . JtisinteudedtodeprivetliehttleFactory Slaves ol HhaXsIuzdow of protection , which the present law affords . This same Mr . Holland Hoole was chairman of the "bit ef a parliament , " which forced Government to pass , the present law , in the hope "that it -would prove impracticable" Hoole now finds : that it has dene the Slaves some little
good , and consequently he wants to rouse the milUovnaeTs ^ io he / p / iiitiiocluiin tfie Slavesfasler ! VV ' elL , now ., Gentlemen , is not this too had ? . When . ~ you hear fhat Hoole " is a Minister of tlie Gospel , & great Misttmaryman and & * tronq ; Anti-Slavery mcn , uud all that sort of thing , —you will , I am sure you will , sgree ^ oth me , that even Pease , the weeping senator and white . * to > e mastec . must be disgusted with Holland Hoole ! On the same day that I received Holland ' s letter , I received one Jrom a friend in ilAscaESTER , who to awa&eu mj sympathy for the Blacksj sent it oh a sheet ef paper , with an etching of a-hlack slave on his knees , before his white master , who stood by him , waving a heavy whip over his t brother's head . " No man pities the poor blacks more than I do . / have sufered , with Wilberporce iu tlieir cause , when the present race of "emancipators . " were denouncing Wilserforce as " a wretch
nnfit to h * » e , " and were urging every effort , mo \ mg earth , and hell , to keep him ant of parliament , And thus smother the very sound of emancipation in that placei I know that nxy Manchester friend , thiiiks- that he does God service by spending mX money in these little pictures of the poor black slaves ^ bnt J t ni ? n "it was in bad "fektej" "to send-such a drawing fcam Mancbesxer !! to ilxby HaS ^ i From Man Chester , the seat of a slavery infinitely more horrible thaa that in the West Indies . !—from Manchester , whose erery brick is cemented with the blood and upheld by the wasting sinews of little , innocent ,. Enghsh , fi » e-boni , JinJant slopes . I' Proin Manchester , whose every guinea lias-been coined out of the souls of these tjoox > 5 c
ifeisj . Troih Manchester , whose chief officers ate feasting on the blood of the shiin ! and whose holy Priests fof every denomination ) itanctbn tbenorrid practices of their Deacons and members , and are seSitent to build . up ihe walls of their Zion with the iaue ; - , ' cemented by the blood of myriads of innocent ¦ riclimsi . From Maxcjibbteb , the residence of that H 5 ghPrie 6 t of Moloch , HoiXANpHooLEi It was , Hi < leea - , ' " anT ) ad taste . " J ihought , to send IMs little picture ' fropi MancHEST 3 EBiJ to Fixby HahJ ! to the *! Kinr'of fhese pdorjwhiteslaves!—to tWman whom the black " einair ' c&ators" have counted worthy of ^ Jeath . —^ whom they sought to destroy , eveni is ibe days of W-n 3 ERy ©* CE ; and whom' late , under tie bannera of their < now ) aportate , Mob '
^ peth . ihey hired a band to-assassinate in open day J , I told , nay friend "itwas , in bsvd taste . " , 1 merely meni ^ n ihi ^ l ii ^ e ' djcBmsiahce to show ypu ^ how vuxmstsfeitf , « PHie good inen . are . * , ' ^ . ' . ; rip ^ ce : yp &atito advocates of the freedom of the , bl ^ ckj % ' areMwwondering . iiowitis ** thi # Gb 4 has irbwnea on ihar ~ efforts , and . di ^ apjrainSujd their hopes . " It wpcld hayp . been ' strange , had w * Been > baeT ^ eV ' ^^ ven- 'snorH-signted idali eari TpeVceire i ftattee T grea ^ im ^ nry « f Ike noisy declaimeriag&irist ibck . ' sliivfefy /^ n fh « -prdnnciall > oards , are > nfafwho jsre i ^ hdixi-eWier dftti ? owners of ' tvni&fHaves , oi tnen
• ortae gretsroppooraMS * emancipatwBT nay , T ^ S a ^ 'Oi "&em are'those Tgry men who spent'ibeir TBikisy $ > Qp ^ nse . myielf and my ; ' HvDvtsRBriELv Mends -ix > -be murdered - ist T ^ a ^ kefield . -It would indeed ie ' strange , if . ^ ha-blesang of God _ could rest oc ^ snch aaenii "I graat / tliat Jh * re ate . a few ; con ^» - . test advpeatgg ainimg& $ iem ,. wad I rmvx th < & it is soj " becausetbese v& ? i afa ^ ieto ^ fhi . fi ^ ch ke ^ ps the , maisJfroin ! pT ^ r * ia * tioi}—their ^ jTesence seems to gjsft a warrant ^ tiie ^' ation ^ t / tot God ' ha \ . hot qia ' ndpnea Ihe ' ca ^ f , " ^ Bv ^^ oyr" can . any jnanj who regard ' s this' qn&hon ' « ihe work of 60 $ expect that he TriD nononr BjaorGHAM with coriajjeat ? Bkotsba » . the father and upholder of English
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Bastijir Tyranny ! J ^ -or 6 * CdJJ ! fELi ^ Vio ^ for one thousand pi (> ces itf' Gold ; ' «» WHas' conscience , * nd betrayed hu innoc&TcKenfet , { he Factory Children , into the hands of their murderers ? Depend iapon it , Genflraaen , ' Gcid wSl never pot his bionpur on the heads of the iyraritg and betrayersof bisi p'oori He knows Ae difference between big children and nraruprersj ' ' . * ' ¦ - ; ¦>'• • ^ Let np one , say , 1 write this to oppose the real / neft&ofMBie bW ^!! . ' Idei ' otincedtne ' presentlaw when it was in-prbgre « s ; 1 said ii ' vnu- ' a Seluswn a ndaiobb ^ rv . ^ . I asserted . tha , t the slaves wbnldnot be beneBftgd hi % ano tho 8 fe " yniti , ' now deiibtuice it so ldudIy , Y ^ ' * bdl 3 f&i At inii : "I We always been for ijNsTA ^ Ttm ^ YoTitt ^ emaiMapauon . Idih so still I was . always pp ^ psed $ to * i * iw $ Tibs to the owners , lam . so still . , ever ' agrbe 4 To { CQiki > E 3 &iTi < ss to the slaves . I do , sasfiM . ;' Tpe ' j ^ , 000 , 000 rfiould now be inverfedior the benefit of those emancipated
• laiei , who , 'fjpJri ~ $$ iK ¦ ' ' of , flge , sichiets or infirmity ) of . jt ^ a | i ^ oriepM ( jy ^ ent , " will , ( if nd prbvidon is' made J 6 i t | ijbKj wBe ^' t&ey become free agents , die of httitger ' i ' iadpVGM ^ i " 'and Q'Connell , and every other en )| toci ^ a ^ 5 r of ^ -tlieir scbpbli will oppoife tfiis , This ^ rmaj ^ is . against every article or iheir creed ,, iehjch ^ onfy allows relief wider the mtne of pensiofi tit the rich land the great . But if prp \ idpn M not , 'to b 4 4 ^ ' for Ifie slaves , who from any cause , " mrti& eaffl iheir ; breqet— when emancipate 4 ~ their" last state vfR TTe" wbr ec" than their first Ler'their »^ ^ enas IboV ^ ettto ' ithfs pouit The principal bbjeipt ; howeVef , ' . which I have in view , at the / p ^ e ^ en ^' mopien . t , vi , iC possible , to uitiTE all the trloe frtetUti of Liberty , of God , and of the Poor , in" one strong bori 4 itf \ fraterriityr-ca 3 l it what you may—I care not for nanies—" Union , '"Association— Club " - —or anything else . Only we will have no secTets .
It is evident , that the selfsame spirit which resolves to enslave England by the < Net ? Poor Laic , and which , is now striving to obtain a cruel enactmeht , 7 ot « crease the _ slavery of the factor )/ children , is also working , ( though the . persons employed are different the spirit is the same J to fasten the shackles on the black slaves . I therefore propose , that eigrg person who really hates slavery , loves the poor , and believes the truth tf God ' s holy icord , should instantly , ( forgetting all party and sectarian differences , ) incorporate himself or herself in a society , whose sole object shall be to obtain the following three great objects in one act ff Parliament—The total Repeal of the New Poor Law , " jl plain , simple , and efficient Ten
Hours' Factory Act , and an instant and total DESTRUCTION OF SLAVERY IN OUR COLONIES , with H transfer of the Tvxnty Millions from the owners to the Slaves . Now , gentlemen , irthe friends of the Blacks , will unite with me on this broad basis ( and no man who really in his conscience before God , appoves of any one ttf these measures , can disapproves of the other tuv ) I ani ready , -from this moment , to devorte all my remaining energies in " agitating" thi kingdom , on these three questions , from North to South , from East to West . 71 . am ready to vspend and to be spent in this sacred cause , and I will engage , God being my helper , to raise such a ferment in this country , in support of these three measures , as shall make thie Government , ( be it Whig , Tory , or
Radical , ) yield totheloud and united demand of England for Justice— and set every rfave , male nnd female , voung and old , black , brown , or white , at perfect liberty . Bat no more petitioning , * that dny js gone by . What say you , Gentlemen , will yon join me ? Aye , truly , I am sure you will . Oh what a shaking there will " then be ! We shall have no hollow hearts ! no false pretenders ! no betrayers ! no weeping tyraBts pleading for liberty I no oastile supporters no skifiy gormandisers ! but we shall be all tnie men . and we will resolve to have all these measures passed ato « ce . None in this trinity " shall be greater or Ipss than another ; " ** none shall be before or Rfter anotber . " We will have " three" blessings , but only"" one " act ! 1 shall send our friend the Rev . G . S . Bulls copy of thisletter ; he was sent , as the delegate from Bradford to London , ¦ to the great
meeting in support of the poor Blacks . I fancy he will join me , and I hope , when he reads this , he will immediately lay it before his constituents in "Sradford , and through them , coinmunicate the plan , to the Parent Society , and ^ thns it will get to every ether emancipating association . Tf they join us , we will then have a long pull , a strong pull , and a ptill altogether" and then , down shall the cnstle ot tyranny tumble—it shall fall—and for ever moulder iu presence of tbft sons of liberty 1 Our motto shall b ' e "NO MISTAKE , » O SURRENDER , DOWK WITH SLAVERY all ovEii tee world . " If they refuse , then we shall know tbat their tears about " the blncks are only such as crocodiles sued . You have much influi'iice , use it , —do your best to h . lp me , and believe me to be , Gentlemen , Yours obediently ,
RICHARD O . NSTLER . Fixbv Hall , near Huddersh ' eld , * Apr ii .-28 th ; 1838 . P . S . I have just received a letter from my friend J . PERrEVAL , £ sq . son of the late Rt . Hon . Spencek PERcr \ - AL . He has been ouaii auti Poor Law excursion . I will give you a short extract from bis letter , because I "think youT readers will be gratified to find that he is still busily labouring in the rield of humanity . I have many other letters from the agri cultural districts , informing me how dissatish ' ed the labourers are , and hmc much the gentry are deceiving themselves . l { there were a northern movement just now , ( I mean southward ) , oh what an England we should have ! We ahould have no petitioning , but
we should hare what Lord Howick seems to think of more value . Mr . Perceval says— - ^ 'I called at Sevexo . ves en a solicitor , a boot-maker , and a brewer . The conversation was depicted and strong agai . nst the principle ai } d operations of the New Poor Law . 7 he solicitor , an old gentleman , said' There is a person who was formerly the landlord of the Black Boy ; he and I were old friends , but he is now obliged to come upon the parish . . H « often used to show me favours , and I returned : them : noto . if I go down to the workhouse , I may not bring him even an applet and what is worse . J cannot speak to him , except inpreeence of his muster !! I call that very hard . ' " And so do I . It is hard !—it is unjust !—it is unnecessary cruelty!—itis . shutting up
the bowels of mercy . '—it u > the death-blow to charity !—it is the grave of Christianity ! Bot , Gentlemen , it shall not be endured much longer . Mr . Perceval proceed *—" The brewer is a Guardian of the new Union j he had a servant whose father was ill in the workhouse . This man applied to his master for an -order to go and see his sick father . His master , who was going out , had not time to write : an order ; but told his -servant * to go down to the workhouse , and use his name , and that , no doubt , he would be admitted J The man went down , and tras refused' ¦ admittance to sec his sick _ fathe-r though he assured the master . pf the workhouse , thai he had his otca tnaster \ s leave to do so . ' . ' . ( his owii master was a Guardian of the union . ) The next
DAY , WHEN" HE WENT DOWN TO THE WORKHOUBE , PROVIDED withA « vo * nER . HIS POOH FATHER WAS NO MORE . " J dare not publish Mr . Pebcival'h iTemarks on . this , case of horrible devilism . He is horror struck , and he expresses himself so strengly , that I dare not cepy him . But ,-Geiitleraen , let me a ^ k , why all this ; Bnnecessary severity ? Why this unheard of cruelty ;? Is poverty . now really . worse than mvrder ? Hiid that pauperbBen a convicted SK . UDERER he xcoidd have been allowed to Imveseen his son the day beforeAmexxcutiqji . Ob , horrible horrible ! Brougham , that law its thine !! some day thou sbalt answer for it ! Gentlemen , if this be aE the comfort which , the JQueen can afford to her poor . subjects , let her be crowned in sackcloth ,
kneeling anon ashes ! or rather , let her refuse a crown wMcSrcanonlyconfex disgrace on a female and a Christian , and let the demoflrdainiie . d , tke execrable nionstet , 'J . under . whose . rales and" regulations "these enormities are practised-: ^ lei . him . b , e jerowned in iron , bj ^ atan , ( Lord Brougham actingAshjs VTox y as he did at the begettiagq ^ tin * monster ! $ . . and then letJifi people , of Engkad , ha , vg at them U and restore to Victoria the onsullied " uncommissioned crown ofiier , ancestors I Jfti 5 tJier on jMx . Pbscivai says , "I met with . four -lab ourers , on the road to Hastings ; Jhey . all coutplainfd of the New Poor Law ; . One , a very inleUigent man , argued wry .. senably ,. but he eaid , .. * that thei ' -, poor were m tied down , . that ttej , could not come forward hi a . constiiiUional iwnner zgziv&t it , and
in all probabjiiiy , they must lie , forced to acts of violence . ' Another acknowledged 'ihat he had been driven by hunger this winter , to do two or three things , which he 2 > elieved , if knowga , would [ subject him to transportation . ' 1 al ^ o ^ piet a tradesman of Hastings , who told me that the ^ aw vasnot popular , and paused great discoDt *? n ; t and . sufiering . " , : . Mr , PerceVjU . * ajjf a good dearmdee , but it will keep . - ' ' ' " J ' . ^^ ^ u , l ;; " ' "' ' "'¦' " ' - " ' ' ¦" . ' i I wooder : i | Bjbouahjm . and Rich « ojsq and the r ^ Si . W & . f- » W hft * hti ? "Mend to try their ,- —~ S' Some ' time elsl r % fll tefl' yon what I was going Ip '^ ntef' I wUrifell-tfce £ 6 roVa » y day , il' « iey"kwc aifer "" . '•' ' - ; '¦ - '¦¦ ¦ ¦ - - ^< . < , r h » ' ! v" r 8 hiai ¥ eryf ^ on rec ominend every pfeuper to leave , the Baitfieg M the 1 pauper ! drew , and then present ttaswelves beforethe-magistrates . They :-sefll ihus he better treated and better fed for two * OTiihrfee - " _ * JL _ « V T t ¦ - •'" -. ¦¦ ¦» '¦* ¦ iJ * ii 5 w ^ - «^(| nectio 3 ^ a
* * ** ™«^ j ^«^^^ ae * . maw of theni * already ftrjing ftoa ^ jTan , . and thejCSad it ipns ' weru . ^ twhafa ^ llm i-ito ^ morafike a ^ amakf thelab ^ nrereindepwi ^ f W Tralj > , e ^ tiero eib we a'fein ' aidrry « -ay- * -but ^ tke ^ Aii < i « 8 % erVm » ffwi ^ join usi- % iB wffl ^ flooii ^ set ^ the ^ fflaJtew ^ fbJt ; vie wUl esiabHth Situs princi ple * A *«! iandiiin th ^ i colonies , -despite of BRoutoAM ,: and . O ^ CojsNfeLL ,, and HuME , iarid Ro « 8 ELL , iaad } PEE )^; Mi 4 iPEA » B , and ' Mobpsthv jail : the Slavery . jpvijog , -jjew ; : Pppr . Lawi ^ ffl * f ^ - - ¦' " " - ¦ :. Vv-v - : ¦ ^ -ii 5 > 'f ' ' . itfriineh- ' f&rr . i ' m , TJn > moxnent bnnj | ffie jajette , r & ^ . , GAi . yEBLiy , r fA % ^ 5 ^ P ^^» i&t ^ jormefli tDerein | t . tttft > : ttje Comniissioners 'iaVe " ord ^ V ^ m ^ Wo ^ TMu ^ tb ^ % 1 d- ^ - ^ and" alio ) a W ^^ jbjr ftetoBOTW . BuicKETT for the poor of CaiTefieyfor-evtf . r TTm is ao doubt to raise innnjey ' for an accursed ^ aWle ! T * nv ferther Mfforineti that the poor paupewsifeW b 6 iBiAoyedfrom CiU-
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VERiBY Workbowe to Ndflirti ^ BliBRLEv , there ito be ^ ra 1 e 4 . and n ^^^ d ^ itfe ? - Oh ^^ tlie sale of that < formi I obserw ^^ ftt nit Lau ^ made by meh > who were « rt ; tbfe i re **« feentatiye 8 of the Poof of Calverlev , iscatynitifitihi ! ifffe . It will be robbery of the worst de 8 criptioii ^ ^ hi ^ is the way fo undernH » e . tbe title of all property , I always said it wonid d 6 so , and bo it will . Thfcpoor have asimnil ^ right to sell the Gaardians ( A ? rt > is # s ?> pr ^ ertyi ^ s ' he has to > elli * ftWrr Taft not to ine abotjt ^ Law ?> -yif tbisbe ^ •^ Law- ' i-ithen is th ^ Pewl our ^ Law ?' giver , I hope and ir ?( sfthep ?^ e u $ lriseenloa&atel
ana legally prevent this- riMerjr . May the man be curted who bnys it ! . Ainenvand * amen « elf the rate-payers of € aiv * rler 8 tibDMtto ^ thi ^ sbrt of plonder al ^ n&vbidding -bf Po ^ BR and Andrews ; ' why then , I imstire ; if Power and Andrews were to take a fancy . ¦ "by order of tMei Commissioners , " to run wanton joniflie wivefand dangHters 6 i the ratepayers of Calverleyj ( and Ikee nothing in Power or Andrews to make this froKcunKke ! y ) , fb payera would not , I ani' sttrie ' they would »* t have pluck enough tointerfere , and prevent the execution of such ^ Orde ^ V' On-rdear— -me ! " ¦ "¦ •¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦"¦¦ V ; .. ¦ ¦ - ¦ : " — : ¦¦ - . -: ^ v ; - ; v ' . ; ¦ . >¦ - ^ vR ; O . ¦
Jiarkps.
JIARKPS .
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COMPARISON OF FOREIGN GRAIN AND FLOUR WITH TtlB EN ^ tlSH MARKET . The pnoeof H-hite wheatflhbread of the first qnality itParia is &Uo tneloaf : of twokilogrammes , wWcE w Idas thai ) 6 d the loaf of 41 b Enghah weight , and the . price of bread of the firat quality in London beiia K . 9 ( l the loaf of 41 b , the difference is 50 per cent that bread is deureriii London than at Itoiu . ' The highest quotation of ^ white wbent of the first qualitf W 331 the lj hectpUtrej which equals 40 * 54 the quarter ; The highest qnotationpf flour of the flwt quality ia 59 fthe 159 kilograHiineai which answers , to 37 s Id the wick of 2601 b Englwh weight , aad the highest qnotationi of floq ' r of ( he flrst quality in Londoa being SSs the » ack , it follow ^ that flour iM 48 | per . cent dearer : i * London than tit PaTisv ' and that with ; tW sum of- jf 2 15 s a man inaybuy 4131 b of fine flout at ParisV ^ herea * With the ramesnm he can buy only 2801 b m London . ' . ; : ; The following ia the state of thiiigsinother partspf Krance : — . ¦ AtjR » mDray the nigheat quotation of white wheat of the fiTst quality is 20 f 80 c , whicb abswers to 47 s 8 d the q ' narter . At Oneaiis the registered iBeanprice ofwheatis 19 f 68 c , which eqnal » 45 s Id thequarteri 'At Uhartres the hkhest quotation
of « h « at w 21 f We , vrhjcft equals 49 a 3 d the quarter . A t Meaux theqnotatioaof whoatofthe < i « tquality u 20 f , of the second quality 19 f 33 c , and of the third quality 18 f , which gives a meanpriceonyfllc , and which answers to 43 s 4 d the qnarter . At Peronne wheivt tules frbni 16 f 50 c fol 8 f 756 , which is from 37 s lOd to 43 s the quarter . At Blois' the registered mean a price of wheat is 19 _ l 0 c , -which answers to 43 s 3 d the quarter . A . Charleville the hi g hest quotatioriof wheat in 26 f 50 c the ' ljd hectolitre , which equal * 4 w 5 d the quarter . At Bpiien wheat rules from Wf 50 c , which ia from 44 s 8 & to 47 s 2 d . the quarter . At Soissohs ' the quotation of wheat ' of the iirst quality is from 18 f 91 c , to 19 f 23 c , p . t the second qnality from 84 f 46 c to 18 f 84 c , andof the third quality from 17 f 69 c to J 6 f 29 c , ¦ yvhichgive . i a mean price of 18 f 5 / c , and which answers to 43 s 7 d the quarter . The highest quotation of flour of the first quality is 50 f the 159 kilogrammes , which eqnals 31 » 6 d the mck o f 2801 b English weigliti and the highest q hptation of flouit of the first quality in London Mug 55 s the sack , it jqitoWt that flour is 74 | per cent dearer in London th ^ n at Soissonsi and that with the sum of jfT , 15 s a man m ^ y buy . 4691 bof iineflowatSoiiMons , whereas with the same sum he can only buy 2801 b in London .
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LEEDS CORN MATtKET , May 1 . The arrivals of Wheat and Oats to ' this day ' s market are larger - than last week ; Barley and Beans , smaller . There has been a fair demand for Wheat ; at un advance of Is . to 2 s . per quarter . Barley has also , been in good demand , and rather more moneyJbm be « n inade . OaU , Shelling j and Beans , but little alteration . Bnpeseed dull sale and ratner lower . WHEAT ner Quarter of Eight Biishels , 601 ka . Norfolk , Sullblk , E « i > x , new reii , ; 57 , Si ) , nhe 60 s . wht . 61 s 65 s Lincolnshire and Cambridge , do 57 s 59 s , do 60 s , dp 60 s &ls Yorkshire .. ; .......... " .... do . 57 * , 59 s , do 60 s , do 60 s 63 s Old .. i- .. ... ;; ., i , ,. do 57 a 59 s , do fil » , do SOsitta BARLEY per Quarter of Eight Imperial Bushwls . . Norfolk , and Suttplk ........... . new , 29 s . extra fine 33 s 34 s Norfolk , andisiaiplk ........... . new , 29 s , extra fine 33 s 34 s
Lincolnshire , .... i . i ........... do 28 s , dp 32 s 33 s Yorkshire , UV > ld i Boronghbridne , do 26 s , do , 32 s 34 » Peas , White ..... J .... ' ... i .............. dp 34 s 40 s Do Grey ,,,....... ........... > .,...... do 33 s o < 5 s BEANSperQu !» rtMof 631 bsperBnshel ,, \ . Tick , .......................... new , 35 s , 3 " i ? , old 35 s 393 Harrow and Pigeon , ............ do 36 s , 38 a , do 38 s 42 s OATS , per Quarter of Eight Imperittl Bushels . Potato ,...... - . [ .. new 24 n , 233 , oM 27 s Poland , do 24 s , 25 s , do 27 s SmalluadFriezland ................... dp 23 s , 25 s , db 26 s Mealing ,................ new 12 d . to 13 d . per Stone of 1 Jibs . SHELyNG , per Load of 26 Ub 3 ,.... old 30 s 31 s new —s to —s MALT , p ; T Load or 6 Bttshels ^ ..... " „ ¦;¦ ........ . 36 j , 38 a , to 4 la RAl'KSSKD , per Last of 10 QuaTterM , ....... " . J ; 26 to jtTi —a
AUUIVALS DURING THE WEEK . Wheat 5219 Malt ................. . 40 Oats ........ 732 Shelling 320 Barley 978 Flour -, Beans ... ..... * .,, * . 414 Rapeseed .............. 909 Peas ...... Linseed ......... ... 86 Tares .................. THE AVERAGE ' PRICES TOR THE WEEK , ENDING Al'KIL 24 th , 1838 , Wheat . Oats . BiMrley . Beans . Rj-c . Peas . 3235 ¦ 82 ft 2613 429 33 — 59 s . 3 d . 22 » . 5 d . 3 Is . lOd . 35 s . 4 d . . 38 s . A A .
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LONDON WOOL MARKET , BRITISH & FOREIGN .-Mon . The accounts which have latelycome to hand from our manufacturing Jistricts being much more cheering than : those receiwd tlience some weeks , since , Biost of the holders of Britiuh wool are demanding enhanced rates ^ whkh tney h . -tve , aa yet , b ^ d to 1 « 2 d . Although but little actual business has . been concluded during the past week in . foreigii wool , we have to state , that the prices of all kinds of foreign wool , particularl y the superior desc-iptions , are exceedingly ¦ well supported .
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SMITHFIELD CATTLE MARKET , APBit 3 ft . [ Whenever the word stonn ocenrsin these prices throughout thu » paper , it is to be coMJilfircd as thv imperial stoae of tilba and « uca pnly , no otheroeing lawful . } ]¦ Thtre was , for the ; time of the year alarge supply ofjfeaets offeiing in our market this morning , the ; genemi quality of vrhich . was ^ jnite as priine-as eould be expected . The number of Beae& which we received by steam-packets from Scotland wj » a jnnch larguri . ttaoi has been the case in several preceding weeka , vis ., 521 , but lew of which were beneaththis middle quality . This state of the supply caused the buyers ^ : » -ho wnr «> oy no means numerous , to hold pff in anticipation of reduced . rutcs , which wer « submitted to in order to effect sales , therefore we quote Beet'fall yJJd per jBlbs . loWer . than , on this day 8 e . 'niijght 3 and everi at this reduction , the whole of the Beagtswere not disposed of . jAlthough the supply of shee >
was Bomewnac less tnan tnatsnown nere oa Monday laat , no improvement was apnorent . in . the demand , and the prices were barely iupported . . ... Prime sm ; i ] l Lambs . ¦ c ymruanded ^ steady jiale , at fully ; : late rat <«; but miffie jniddiing and inferior -kinds of Lambs little was _ doing .. Tbri trade with Calves ( the supply of which wais limited ) was heavy , at barely but at nothing auotable beneath , the prices noted on last market day ^ yWlth Pigs trade Was on the whole . dull , at but little variation in prices , . ;; . ¦; . : : About 600 i 3 cot 8 came from tfprfoJk ; 200 Scots audDevons from Suffolk ^ 10 0 Scots and Herefwls , from Eisexi ^^ 00 ^ gcots and Devoriaj from Cambridgeshire ; 400 shbrt-luiin : * , from Liucplnshire ; 200 shoTt-horns -and Deybns , from
Xeicestershire ; 200 * hort-honi 8 aiid runts , from Northamptonshire ; 300 Devons , frp . m Devonshire { 20 GiJerefard « , from fierefoidshire 52 rScate y . J * ea > from Scotland ; 24 flevpna and tuats , ^ from Sussex ; i 5 , rnnts and Devons , from &irrey ; 20 : Devozwajud rnnts . from Keni ; 25 Scotsahdfunts , from Oxfordshire ^ and 40 Devoiia yo& junia , from WsirVrickshiBei , Tie remainder of the supply of Beasts came chiefly from &e lieighbdurhood of the metropolis . ¦ , '• ., -, ¦ : ; . v i '¦ ' ¦¦¦ , ' ¦ ¦;< ,: . '' ' :, ' ' ¦ ¦ :-, ¦ '¦ ¦ ' , The supply , pf . Sheep was cHefly _ tjpmp ^ d pf SDutbdoWis , Leice 8 ters , * Doisets , Kents , Kentisjtt Jhiitfbreds y . with a . few pens of . Somersets , Gloucp ' sters , and SdObyiteam from Atecdeen . ' v :- ¦ ¦ : > ' ¦¦ . . - , , - . - , •;¦; " ¦ : : " : ¦ ' .: ¦¦'¦ ' •¦ , - .- . - ¦ ; i'Tha Lnmbs , iuiiwuber about 2 , 500 , were ^ mostl y Doriets . ¦ : ¦ ; ' ¦' . ; Pel sVoneof'BIbs . to sihlc the offal .
. - ¦ .- ¦ ¦ . • ¦ e ..- 'd . ' . ; - i i . d / - ' .. ¦ ¦ - . " .. : - ' /¦¦ : ¦ - a . i . " "'¦ « a fiiferior Beef ... . 2 4 to 2 4 Prime Befif . . >; ,. . 8 2 to 3 6 Ditto Mutton .... S 4 .. 3 6 Ditto Mutton . » . U 8 50 Middling Beef ... 2 * .. 2 10 Lamb . * .... ; .... j fei 7 ' ft Ditto Mutton .... 3 ; 8 ,., 2 J 10 YeM ,,.. . M . i ... ; 4 4 .. 5 0 LIV ^ E CATTtB AT MfftKET , Beasts , 3 , 381-isheap , ^ 22 ^ 10-iCalveS y 92- ^ P } ggf 380 . Live'Gattle atMaTket on Friday hirt :- ' Beasts 442—Sheep 3 , 215—Calves 69- ^ Pig 8542 . ^
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^ E ^ GAT ^ Ald , yS $ p $ to ^ pJ& ^ £ ( MQ 0 * . Vie tavjngreceiv ^ dbut a ye ^ wpderat ««| i { mlitpf , slajMhter ednwaft ^ ce thkdarfvefai&t ^ viteanipacliieta fifpmScotland , ' aad . that wn ^ ch has " arrlredbeing pf gopd 4 uaUty . art adrancem mort « ale « ofab ^ it ^ ajerab ^ ha ? beenobtained , whiUt the demand throughout tile wdek for countr *) 4 a'ttffht « -ed meatJ » aa teen yerjjateady , ; Tfa ^ jqiaattft 1 y of : n < es * * Aibited lor Bftle firom farj «» wrparts of ED « la , nd i « bat moderate . About &pm djflSepJparti . ' . Of aeadfyga from Ireland tne recjafpts ;^ e \^ a % tt »| w > &tyeaiiSci ^ etnatbut ^ waeh hitherttttj ^ asoni -ife uppers 'biviiig iritimated : that those Pi ^ . * bi ! hiare- « 8 n , e hither ' aliro ; producehnwe' thdn when wiwigBedslanghtei ^ . trAWujtgOO 5 iwa pigs BiVe come hither Iron Cork and Dublin since ^ ur last . :. ' ..,:, , "
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; ¦ ^ MMDGfr ^ CGRNi ^ gEXCHANGE . ^ - \ ^ >' . ' ¦ : ^/ ' 'JtiB ^ LiKWi ;' ii < ia * ' ni *; Awiitfc ' . ' w . ?>*; K : : tH ;'' * ' ) . ^ - ^ i jfi'W- ' .:: xLT . p : yiif "' v '' ' " ¦ ¦' . ¦ Ka ' ii-- ' d--irj ) c . ' -t » iii '•¦ ' ii ^ fSSSSW ^\ S ^ ¥ ^^'' ^^^^^ S ^^ a ?* . Jf ««" s ; * ?» th vtplehTjnueg of wind ., prevaTIih ( f ' . miuliininf MdifeAxwAigSin ihmieiifrowLMaiiexi XtT ^^ tomfo .: ( *^ ry re -, ^? N ^ ' * ? # ' ??; P »^ Jf « Wa , to > v ' 0 lwu } 'ti JP . Sf % !*? % aodScotch ha-Irish ., ; Wheat met » n early , and ' £ ^^* e ^ A » bfShir ^ o ^ bi ^* a 4 ta ^ i » irto&i ^ raL ^ £ * l *^ ^ *» 1 ' 5 * «( fo % weaJi ^ , « M 0 ) A ? I ^ M ^^^^ % « lft WrrWftfTrreeft ^ as
steady demand . Beans were 1 b . per ^ trt « inMvma . &fcen W » ifi U ¦ ^ SoS ^ ftS ^ JK ^ L HlXMdWh . apZinTequAU AU sorts . -p f OjiW ^ eft ^ HtiJpWHtTMvi jwr * q ^^ r > <* ir A ? , not being quite to plentifuJ w -flii'firi CJirn , itm titen AMily
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at this improvenient , ^ the trade , ^ on the ^ wbql ft ** a z ' ^ uoyaw and liealthy aspect Thera ; Uv ^ fceifsSfr wlea , made free on board at panta ' e , and « ttter ports bini during J ? ^? we e <» f the finer qnaUtiea of wBe > t , aoaptedfor tte KnghaKmsrket , and " several parcels on thei » pot in bond have phangeahand «> t ( aaiBiprOTeineiit o £ JJsjto ^ SrBer avmei , and ' considerabte . inquByi ^ tiU jBfiata for ; Syjbe » t und er lock ' , ; i ne sales of other , articles in bond are confined to '»»¦ ' eipprt deiaand in small quantitiea . Tb > season ntay be cansidered jnearly . oyer for Clpverseefl i as only now and then an order : omeS m . Prices of wd are 3 s . to 4 b . per cwt . lower than la * t week . ¦ '¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ . /¦¦• i 1- . ' . . . ;; ' ¦ ' . - ' ¦ ¦ ' '¦ .. ¦ ¦ ' ' '
GURRENCy PER IMPERIAL MEASURE . I ' - ' - ' KVHEAT . s . ; « . Malrj Kbrfplk Pale .. 52 ' i « 60 'Essex , Kwot , Suffolk 56 ! i . 65 Warev .... r .. i . i ' .. ; 61 .-. 63 i :. Whitev . vi .. » iki .. ' 58 v . 7 <) ¦¦ : < ¦; .: * ' ¦ ¦ :: ¦¦ ' PEAS ' " Nprfplk&Lincolnahire 56 .. 63 Hogr and ( Srey ^ ewv , 33 ., 34 , ¦ ¦ . ^ White , do . Ao . . a . 56 .. 64 Maplu ... » ,... ' .,... > . 34 ,. 35 Yorkshire ....... .... White Boflera ...... 36 , ., 3 Q Vyest Country Bed .. V BEANS . ; White , do ... * ..... On ! ij ' ¦ . ' , ¦ ^ Northumberland and" t ?^« ' aiX "'* * ' * ' * 33 37 Scotch White .... 54-.-. 56 'S ! f ™ w *• " * " * " * ' 40 Moray-Angusand ; Mazagan , ^^ .,.. UotttsWeRed .... 0 .. 0 V OATS .
\ yhite ............ 0 ., 0 Englishfeed ........ 20 .. 23 IrishRed .-J ^ ew ...... 52 .. 60 Snort small ...... Do . White . V ,... ; . 56 .. 62 Poland .......... 22 .. 26 BARLEY . ScbtcK , common .... 22 .. 25 Grinding .......... 26 . ^ 29 Potat ^ e .....,..,. 26 ., 30 Distilling- . ; ,.,...... 30 .. 32 Berwick .......... Malting , New ...... 33 .. 36 Irish , white ........ 21 ... 26 Chevalier , New ...... JDo . Potatoe , .... i . : Malt , Brown ........ 48 .. 50 Do . Black ........ 20 .-. 22
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BIPERIAt AVERAGES . ' Wht BarleiOats Bye Bns . Peas Week endingMar . 16 th 1838 56 3 28 10 20 8 31 6 32 9 33 0 23 rd 5610 29 6 21 2 30 7 33 1 32 9 . 30 th " 57 9 29 7 21 4 33 0 3 S 11 32 10 April 6 th «? 58 « 29 ? 21 4 31 7 33 U S 3 1 13 th u " - 5810 30 1 2110 31 8 34 2 31 11 . 20 th .: « . ¦ ¦ ¦ 58 , 9 29 10 21 8 31 4 34 ? 33 3 Aggregate Average of the last six weeka ....,..... 5710 29 1 21 4 31 1 33 9 32 1 C Duties . i ....:........... 29 8 18 4 15 322 919 9 21 3 Do . on grain from British . Possessions out of " . .
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SUGAR , COFFEE , COCOA , AND SPICES . SfJGAR . s . d . a . d . COCOA . Large Lumps .. 72 0 a 73 0 : s . d . s . d . Small ditto .. 73 0 a 75 0 Trinidad ( per Mblasses , British 29 0 a 30 0 cwt . ) .... 40 0 a 54 0 Bengalgood and Grenada 40 0 a 52 0 fine ........ 0 O 3 0 0 St . Lucia .... 0 0 a 0 0 Barbadoes . Fine 0 0 a 0 0 Brazil ........ 35 ' 0 a 40 0
COFFEE . SPICES . Jamaica , Fine 110 0 al 24 0 Cinnamon lb . 3 4 a 7 6 Middling 104 0 a 10 S 0 Cloves ( Am-Ordinary ... ^ . 84 0 a 68 0 boyna ) .... 1 0 a 1 2 Demeraraand Do . ( Bourbpn ) 1 1 a 1 2 Bcrbicegood Mace ...... 2 8 a 7 0 Middlina ; ,. 106 0 a 116 0 Nutmegs ( un-Gobdandnne garb . ) 4 10 a 5 6 Ordinary .. 80 0 a 96 0 Pepper ( Cay-Ordinary and enne ) ...... 0 " 8 a 2 6 Broken .... 69 0 a 82 0 Pimento ( Ja-Dominica , . maica ...... & 3 a 0 4 Middlinif .. 98 0 a 120 0 Ginger ( Jamaica ) Goodandnne White ...... 80 . 0 a 130 0 Ordiniiry .. 84 0 a 97 0 Fine large .. 140 0 a 210 0 St . Domingo 42 0 a 44 0 Barbadoes .. 48 0 a 56 0 Mocha ...... 72 0 a 120 0 East India .. 22 0 a 32 0
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LEATHER ( per Ib . ) d . d . d . d : Crop Hides , 30 a 401 bs . 11 a 13 German Horse Hides . . 10 a 21 Ditto , A 0 a 5 ti \ bs .,.... 12 al 4 J Spanish Horse Hides .. . 12 a 24 Hitto , 50 a 601 bs . 13 a 17 Calf Skins , 30 a 40 lbs . Bull Hides ..... 10 al 3 ( dozen . ) . ..... 14 al 8 Vitriol Butts 16 ' a 17 Ditto , 40 a 50 lbs 15 a 21 English Butts ... 14 a 24 Ditto , 50 a 60 lbs ie a 22 Foreign Butts ..., 14 a . 17 Ditto , 70 nlOQtba ..... U a 20 Foreign Hides ....... 10 a 12 Large Sealskins ..... . 11 a 15 Dressing Hides . 11 a 14 Ditto , Small . 20 a 22 Ditto , Shaved ........ 12 a 15 Kips ..... 10 a 18 Best Saddlers'Hides .. 14 a 16 Basils ................ 7 a 12 English Horse Hides .. 10 a 13 Bellies ... 6 a 8 Shoulders .. ... 7 al 3
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HIDES ( per lb . ) d . d . d . d , Market Hides , 56 a Market Hides , 96 a Wlb « ............... 2 fa 21 104 lbs 3 J . . a < fj Ditto , 64 a 72 lbs ..... 2 i a 3 Ditto , 104 a 1121 bs .... 4 a 5 Ditto , 72 a 80 lbs 2 $ a SJ Calfskins ( each ) ...... 6 s 6 a Ditto , SO a 88 lbs ..... 3 a 3 j Horse Hides , ditto ..... 8 s 0 d Ditto , 88 a 96 lbs ..... 3 | a 3 | J THE WATERSIDE POTATOE MARKET . In consequence of the weather having been unseasonable duriog the preceding week , business was brisk at advanced prices , and should there be a continuance of cold , a further rise may be expected . . ' . a . s . ¦ '¦ ¦ a . . s . York Reds ( per ton ) 70 a 80 Snawstper ton ) ..... ; 40 a 45 ScotchReds ........ 60 a 70 Devon Keds 60 a 70 Kidneys .... ... 60 a 65 Jersey Whites ...... 40 a 0 Natives . 45 a 50 Blues .............. 50 a 60
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METALS LEAD . / 1 , £ s . JE . fi . £ . % . Britwh Pig Litharge .... 23 15 a 0 0 ( perton ) .... 21 15 a 0 0 TIN . s . d . s . d . Sheet ( milled ) 22 ^ a 0 0 In Block * .... 92 0 a 92 6 Bar .......... 23 15 a 6 , 0 Ingots S 3 . 0 a 93 6 Patent Hhoi ,- , Bars .......... 94 0 a 94 6 la 12 .. i ... 24 15 a 0 0 COPPER . Red . or Minium 23 15 a 0 0 British Cake j ? 91 a jtO 0 White ...... 30 10 a 31 0 Sheets , perlb . 0 11 s a 0 0
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LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET . Monday Evening , April 30 , 1839 . Their has been a very animated demand throughout the week , and the businog 3 is on an extensive scale ; an improvement of jd per ib . has taken place generaUy in . thQ prices of American , and in some instances } d per lb . advance may be noticed in the low and middling qualities , but in all other descTiptibhs , there , is np alteration . 4 , 000 American have beeii taken oil speculation , and 850 American , 100 Pernambuco and 263 Surat for export . The sales , vrhich amonnt to 39 , 240 bags comprise—< ; : '¦ . "" •¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ "•• ' ' '¦ ' ' ' & i ¦ ¦ . " - ¦ - '• ' a "• , d , 260 Sea Island ...... 16 J to 36 390 Bahia & Mac . 7 to 8 — - Stained do .. \ ... . 6 to 13 . — Demenira , &c .. . 9 itp 12 | 11560 Bowed Geor .. 5 | tp 8 J 570 Egyptian ...... 81 to 12 | tionn ^ Mpbile ...... 5 J to 8 j —Barbadoes : .... 6 j to 7 *^ C Alabama , &c . 5 l toGJ 700 Peruvian ...... 73 to 8 * 13970 NewOrleana .. 5 | to 8 | , 70 Laguayra ...... 6 } to 8 oonl Pernathbuco , 30 West India .. 6 i to 8 3 au f Paraiba , * c . 8 J to 93 1820 Snrat ... ; .,... 3 | to 5 * irnf Aiarannam ' . » 8 to 9 j ~ Madraa ........ 4 to 59 ^ JSawginhed .. 7 to 8 J —Bengal ........ 3 J to 5 The Imports for the week ara 14 , 461 bags . j Compataiive view of the Imports arid Exports pf Cotton into and from the whole kingdom , from the 1 st p ? January , to the 21 st inat . and of the Imports and Exports for tne same periodlastyear . ¦ i .... . > i , ¦ ¦ Into tlie kingdom this year : . ; American .. ...... . . bags 461 , 567 South American .. .. ..... .. 45 . 544 ' West Indies , Demerara , &c . .. .. 835 Ea « tlfldie 8 .. . » ...... * ; , 9 , 810 Egypt , Ac . . i .. .. ...... . 14 ^ 295
Total of alldescnptions .. . .... 532 , 051 _ ' . ' ¦¦ : ¦'"' . Same period last year :. * ¦' American .... .. bags 531 . 211 ¦ South ' American .. i % . .. 45 , 579 . . ' ' WestiIndies , Demerara , Ac . . 1539 ' . - ¦ . '¦ Ea 8 t ; lndie 8 »; .. .. .. 43 , 442 Egypw&c ... ... ..... 5 , 074 Increase of imports as compared : , ¦ :. ; with BamRrjenodlast year , bags 105 , 206 ¦^ - " ; " ' ^ ¦ ¦ : Jj : r ^ PO % 3 iN . 1838 . ' . ;¦;/ . : : " - '' .. r ^^^ % ^ t r , ; Totol , ; in :: 1838- , ^ . ; . v . ; 13 . 821 08 ^ u Mpnday , April 30—TheljuBiuess ^ ^ tp-dayi 8 , consjdprabie , 8 , 000 ) ags haye beeii ' aolil , 5 jW ) 0 of whicn are on . speculation , and 200-ft * exipprt - . prices haye rather ah irowwa tendency . ? The , silMtp- 'day ^^ rSeSW Pernam , at % f . toMl 4 WfaM » 7 # dt 6 i 7 ld ^ 2 O . aiar * iibam 8 d ^ i 50 > Egyptian . 8 ^ A ' , A 0 Q Sxn ^ t 4 d to 54 d } ^ eaAinericau . 5 Jd to 8 Jd : The sales on . . gator ? ; d ^^ eif ; 6 , 0 W ) . / v ;;^' :: ; . ^ - ;¦ : . ¦¦ ¦ . . ;; ' - , , - ¦ ¦ ,.. -. •; ¦';¦ ¦ :- . ; - ; i ' j : i . y :. ii \ ¦ . ' / r . fj ' i . ^ -. - -. ' ;^< -2 - . ' -&y-., i . ; :- ' : ¦ » ¦ ' . "¦ ¦ : ' : ~^ -- 'U'r : ' : ;] ' ¦ a j StTGA £ t . ^ - < Tn « market continues ia-. a . owsttfflpnewed ;! state , ' iwrticuliirlrr fcr fan lftWjaridescriptBmB j . jthe bdifew of fl hjc& ' laweEer , hiiyinii submitted , to 9 jif « tji . wnjJWfaraWe jqLwline , iayea ^ celde < l ' inse ^ gaV » t % ? W ^ # « # »^ mSfthoW t *^ 1 same !^*!^^ BafladoeB hate be ^ n ftilten W ; he '( rWc * W , mSkin |' th ' e tp'taK sales of ihetwfekieW-Mids AtittblirtoWeftqTMMo ^ H ^^ been a good d . eja '» di « F 4 | or « jmSugar , Mi 5 i ^ , cj » 8 ^ ana ^ ¦ jAiuPernaiBs / hava ; bfrw . 2 * P »^> W - ?* ; y * p 19 3 &AL 9 6 d - w vV » rv fffietan * yellow fttffia 3 d : to 23 a 6 dtfcratfv 'Tnetttosati " i $ Tm ^ ' £ W ° fi ^ &p <^^ per cwt from the quay .- The sale ' plantation Coffee « iom- ' , ) r iae 60 caskj > t&W ^ tP itefify ^ i 9 ?» Ml » brought venf : ullprices ; 5 neorainary and mladling realised 107 a tp 112 s per Wt / - ' Nu Wile 1 »^ rBpoTte 4 > iis foragitii / Notfaiigndone infcoeoav w £ ft 9 > b > gp Bi ^ g&fi ^ < ifordi nary Puueptoj ? a . tSdj ^ a ^ ipd bags , blackJr > gpetatiajto inboBiatz 3 ted , jOOObagg Eagt India at 13 s to UtM . wrl cWfJii % 6 » a ;' . Th 6 'iafe pffiunj on limited tt'WdrJJncha J > eit > f > TflT * , iitt'bvquot * tion 9 . Mi ; ' > ' '' J
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There is no disposition to buy Indigo , and the small » le » brbuihtfonwrd mMb * i % Mk jtexfy ynQx t ^ e ^ exceptipn tf six chests , withdrawn . About 80 chertsSheU Lac hive been aolft at 60 s to 100 « , anff a s " uBifoquan % or Lac ^ Djei , » t lid to 1 * ; 2 d . 25 rfe 35 « waaa < Kept « d ( orfortybaleiiveryotdnu » iyBeT » g » i iSafflower . The bminesa inSaltpetra hasbe > nconfined to abort 400 bags at ( 20 » to 24 sj and * small lot . of Nitiate of Soda , at i JD ^ EWpJCJDS . ^ In these ; articles there i « li « l « change and the demand still very mode ' rjrte f about 100 ton * Campeaebr Logwopa sold it jf 815 s , a nd 20 of Jamaica at ^ 7 2 s 6 d » 50 tons ' of Cub * Fustic brought ^ 7 lOi tojffi , 10 *; a ftw toa » ¦ ofRedSand « r * Wpod ^ S / &da () in eSat > anwoptl ' . j £ i 10 » per
ton . Thedewwjd for ^ urpentino ^ . regulaf , but the prieedf ljwtw , efk cannot be obtamed fqr good parcels , . and yte 'tUtTefore reduce th ^ Quotatioiw , about 160 (> baTOl « * - hare been <» M at 12 s 9 d . to _ ; lSs Id . Of Archiigel TarlSO barrels l » r » brought 18 s . ; The salea-of Mdntw *! P » t and , Pearl Ashe » have been very tnflimr , and noJders have « ubn » itted to a slight «»»^ J ^ l ' ''iS J *\ S ! # * Newypik > Tax ^ d , brana IO& brought 5 ^ . 6 dtq 5 ; eXind , a . ' jmift parcerof new soldat 72 a , 6 d , perKhd . NotAtewtiftW WClovewee 3 . ' Qner- ^ citron Bark goes off stewly , - at former rates . There are some - large sales te report of Hides in salted River PUte , 12 ^ 00 * having-been disposed of ati 4 f t » 4 gd ^ per lb ; East India Kips have advanced considerably , and 22 , 000 sold by auction at 9 } 6 & to 10 d for Bowid dry salted , 8 d to ' 9 | d for brined , and 6 id for dry , ana rubbed m proportion ; also , 2000 i Bu % lo at 31 d to
4 « a ; , JSWtfry ^ saAtea Wajnl 8 t . « d" to 5 jd , WO wet salted at 3 fd per lb . The saje of Tobacco have been nnim * ortant .. Mfyb fte excepfion of a partial inquiry for BnJtnsto » e to am vs the market for this article remains m the simfe inanimate state aa for some time past , and ; in the absence-of actual business , prices are unaltered . > Nothing worthy . of notice done this week in Shutnac . Of Argolg , the sales have been , about 60 cask * Oporto , atJ 3 s : ; to 33 s 9 d per cwt and « fC ffamfitTartar ; eight casks fine Venetian brought &b ; 9 d to 65 s' 3 d tier ewt owing to the scarcity of this article . Several parceWoiSmyrn » Madder Roots have been offered al public sale without findu » y buyers , and this article , as well - a * all sorts of Ma'dders , ' eontinues to be much jjegleftedvjOf . Valonia , AQ tons &ir Smyrna brought ^ lS , 17 s 6 d : t& ^ " 16 vet to 0 , ex ship . . The . dullness
in the Olive Oil trade continues , and the sales or the week are chiefly insmall lots . Cod and Seal Oils are quite neglected ; 10 tbnaofSouthern Whalebrought UP 31 per ton ' . > Pule Rape and Liuseed Oils are little inquired for , and are 10 s to 20 s p « T ton lower .: Nothing of moment ba » been- donet in , Palm , OD , and the holders seem disposed to accept ratbar lower pncea ; we , however , continue withou ^ nmvala . Oil of Turpentine i » ratnerlea 8 jnqviiredfor , aiid the price a trille lower . ' ' Baltic Hemp is still in fair demand , and tbe" stock -light ; in- ' East India there are no salt's reported' . The Tallow market has experienced some little : improvement , and a few sale * of Petersborghyellow candle haye been effected at 5 la 6 d to 52 a per cwt ; the demand ,, howevtr , is still on a very limited , scale ., ' . '' . ' . '' ¦ ' . " . '" . ¦ ' - ¦¦ '¦ ¦ ¦ '¦" . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ " ' - - ¦ '¦ - ; ¦ ' . ' ¦ ¦ . ¦' ,. " -
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LIVERPOOL CATTLE MARKET , Monday , April 30 . ¦ The . supply of Beasts at market to-day has been , rather large , aud the quality has been generall y pretty g « od , but we cannot , note any , alteration in prices from our last week ' s quotations , holders not being willing to give . way , and buyers rather . numerous . - The market , notwitnatanding ' the veryunfavourable weather , has beeh principally cleared up . We have also had a tolerably good supply el ' Sneep , and in consequence of many country ' buyers Vbeui& present , an advance of p rices has been obtained . Good Beefsold at from 5 Jd .-t 6 . 6 Jd . ; lnferib * 5 d ., but priucipally at the antecedent prices . The first quality Wether Mutton may be quoted at 7 Jd . ; middling and inferior quality varying from bd . to . ; 7 d . ; per lb ., but . chiefly it the latter p rice . Number of Cattle at market .- ^ BeastejUtt * , Sheep , 2 , 945 . ' ¦ CATTLE IMPORTED INTO LIVERPOOL , From the 23 rd to the 30 th Ap ril . Cow » . Calves . Sheep . Lambs .. Pigs . Horses . - 1 , 122 0 2 , 057 248 5 , 033 107
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LIVERPOOL CORN MARKET , MONDAY , APRIL 30 . During the past week we have had moderate arrivals of Irish Flour and Oatuieal v of Grttin the imports have beeri trivial , and the Improved tone in our Wheat market , whicbi we had occasion to note in our report of this day . se ' nnight , has been followed by a decidedly better demand , and advanced prices . On Friday a fair business was done wth the town ' amiUeTS , several parcels of Wheat were also . taken for distance in the interior , and a few lots- on speculation , fine Insured selling at 8 s . lOd . to 9 s . ; choice samplei are now held at 9 s . 2 d per 701 b 3 . Hour has met a free sale , and must be noted Is 6 d to .-2 s " . per sacjk , dearer . Oats are also held for higher p rices , but the inquiry is limited ; 3 s 3 d is demanded : for the best , and 3 $ 2 d per 451 bs . for good aiealiog samples of Irish , IuOatniieal , which has been offering cbtaparatively cheaper than Oats , a considerable business has been done ; -25 s 3 d to ^ 25 s . 9 d . per , 2401 bs , the current : rates for Irish manufacture . There has been little English Barley offering " , prices ^ as last noted . Beans and Peas without variation .. Bonded Wheat isvnquWft \ lfoi , butt . heTeaielievf if any sellers at theraiBsat present offered .,
CORN EXCHANGE , Tuesda y , Two o'clock . There was less activity in the Wheat trade this morniiK f than on Friday , but all qualities were'held for an advance ot 2 d to 3 d per bushel , and 9 s 3 d per 70 lbs . was paid for Irish Red . Oats were also about Id per bushel dearer , but the amount of business was limited . Floor and Oatmeal wereeach in request ; the former at an advance of 2 s per sack .
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MANCHESTER CORN EXCHANGEj Saturday , April 28 . At this morning ' s , market there was a good inquiry for Wheat ,- and holders , firml y demanded an advance of Id . to > 2 d , per 701 bs . There was likewise a read y sale / for Flour at the previous currency , but factors generally demanding aa advance of 6 d . to Is . per 280 lbs . on choice and suitable parcels in fine condition ; the business done was- chiefly , to oon * Burners for present use . In Oats or Oatmeal no variation can be noted , and the trade in other articles- was generally . on terms , similar to the quotations of this day se ' nnight .
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BANKRUPTS . JOHN BILLETT , Northa ^ et , Kent , cattle salesman , to surrender-May 15 . Jurie-8 , at , eJeven o ' clock , at the Bankrupts ' Court ; solicitor , Mr . Sandellj Bread-street , Cheapside ; official assignee , AJr . Graham , Basinghall-srreef . BENJAMIN BROWN , New Windsor , oilman , May 8 , at two o ' clock , June 8 , at eleven , at the Bankrupts' Court ; solicitor , Mr . Bartholomew , Gray ' s-inn-place , Gray ' s-inn ; oflicial assignee , Mr . Johnson , Basinghallrstreet . ' JOHN KING KENT , Craven-street , Strand , money-serivener , May ; 12 , at two o ' clock , June 8 , at eleven , at the Bank-, rupts' Cour t ; solicitor , Mr . Plaits * ikmthampton-buildingt , Holbbrn ; oflicial . assignee , Mr . Alsaeer , Birchin-lane ,
Cornhill . , JOSET-tl SELLERS , Ashbourile , Derbyshire , ironrobnger , May 11 , June 8 , at eleven o ' clock ,, at the Red Lioa lno , Belper ; solicitors , Messrs . Litchlield and Owen , Cnancery-! ane . . ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ . - . ¦ . . ¦ - ¦" ' '' " ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦•; . ¦ ¦'¦¦ "•¦ ";¦¦' . - ¦¦ THOMAS BROWN , Glocester , victualler , May 18 , Juner 8 , at eleven o ' clock ,, at the office of Messrs . ' Whitcombe and Helps , Glocester ; solicitors , Messrs . Whitcomb * ivnd Helps , Giocester ; ¦ . ¦ - ¦ . V ; . : ¦ : ¦ W 1 LLIATW SWAIN , Leamington Priora , Warwickshire , builder , May 16 , at ' eleven o ' clock , June 8 , at twelve , at the Lansdowne Hotel , Leamington Priors ; solicitor , : Mr . Butter--field , Gray ' s-inn-square .: ''¦' -.. ROBERT REYNOLDS , Manchester , cabinet makeri Mar
8 , at . one o ' clock ^ June 8 , at ten , at the Cpmmissionera ' Rooms , Manchester ; solicitors ,: Messrs . Adlington , Gregory Faulkiier , " andFo ] lett , Bedfprd-rpw . : THOMAS TROLLOPj Friskney , Lincolnshire , dealer in beer , May 3 , June 9 , at twelve o ' clock , at the lied Lioh Inn , Boston ; solicitor , Mr . Staniland , Boston . - J . OHN STOCK , Preston , Lancashire , corn merchant , May 21 , June 8 , at eleven o ' clock , at thV Town . Ha ^ Prest uu ; solicitor , Mr . Fiddey , Seijeant ' s-inn , Fleet-street . FRANCIS GARTH , South Shields , Durham , eominon brewer . May 15 , June 8 , at eleven o ' clock , at Kay ' s Hotel , Suuderiand-near-ike-Sea ;; solicitor , Mr , Francis , ieaciaTchbuildings , Fenchurch-street .. ; . ¦ ' ¦""' . '
' . . PARTNERSHIPS DISSOLVED . . .. Robinson and Slater , Msinchester , woollen drapers . Taylor Robinson , aud Co ., Sands-milla , Yorkshirej drysalters ; as far . aa regards T . Heiuingway . W . Gilbert , C . Fletcher , and S . Arnbldj / Sheffield and Rawmarah , brewersv : Roberts , Brothers , and Co ., Burnley and . Pen die , Lancarfiire , cotton Bpinners . T . Preston and Co ., Sheflleld , tailors . Richard-. whj ; Ellison , and Co ., Leeds , machine-makers ; as far as regards A . Barrow and A . Gteen . ¦ :
DIVIDENDS . May 21 ; P , Gans , Manchester , cotton spinner . May 22 , W Patten , Heatori Norris ; Lancaahfre , druggist . May 19 , W Robinsonj Stones , Lancashire , woollen rapntrfacturers . . e ® lTIFI ( pATES-MA ¥ IgX , r N . Russell , NprthaUertpn / yorksbire , flax dresser . : ;
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FROM THE LONDON QAZETTE , May 1 . ¦ ^ . V' - ' ' ' : . v :. ; ' BANKRUPTS . ' ' ' " ' "¦ '' . : " ^ HERBERT GOLDING , victualler , New-iwUard , Shoreditchi fo surrender May 8 and June 12 . at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy . Gibson , Basinghall-street , official assignee ; 'Ashley , Shorediteh . JOHN BROADHURSTj carpenter ^ Shelton , Staffordshire , May ' . -Ifi i at ^ w . 0 , and . Jnne 12 , at one , at the Swan Inr > , Haiuey ^ Siaffprdshire . Button ^ Hanley ; King ,. Farnival's Inn , Xongpn .- ... *'; . "¦ : : ' ¦ , : ¦• : : ELlZ ' ABEtH GOWAN ana ' ^ THUR SHANKS , common br trwers , Morpeth ; Northumberlaiid , ^^ May 26 , at eleven arid June 12 , at > one ^ at the -Bankrupt Commigsion-rponjs , NewcMtlfi-upon-iTynfi . ; Charlton and Woodman , Morpeth ; ComptofU , CUurch .-c <> urt , Qld Jewry , London . : WJUjIaAJVlr PjOWJSLL ,... saw-manufacturer , / Birniingham , MajrTau ' aJBB ' . / nne 12 , at one , at Rdyal Hotel , Birmingham . Ben 8 oi , Biniringh ' am ; Chiltop , ( Jhancery ^ ne , London . * WILWSM-PRATT , theybttiwer , grocer ; lat * of Leamington- ^ TforsyjMay 18 ^ and Jdne 12 ^ at twelve , at . the Lands-( Inwno . 'Hotel . Irfamitifffon-nriors . Nelson . Middle TVttitiIo
London ;; Morris , . Wamick . , i : , : ; .. VHLLfAM . J . OSBSt nctipHer , Brecon , May 22 and June 12 ; at twelve ; at the Castle Inn , Brecpn . firegpij and Son , Clertienf ^ lnni London ; lyes , Brecpni " : \ " > JOUN'itroSDAIiB , <* enii 8 t ; Putham , May 22 , at nine , and JunetJ 2 »' . atele » eni art th » iEteece ; Inn , Darlington . Mewbprn ,, Gnsen-temc ? . Jfew B > wHead , Middkaex , LpndonVjMewbuny andHatchmspn » Parl ^ igton . ' - v "; BENJAMIN PARTEb . lace-manufacturer , ' Noitingham , Mayfl , asd June 12 , at eleven , it ihe George the Fourth Inn , -Nothng 1 iaffl ^ BBop ,, Basnigbaa 4 treef , London ; PusonsandScnsvNottmgham . " . L-n' : >¦ y , . . JOSBPH ^ OAJE ^ , ^ nj ^ per ; , 0 k » 9 opi Derbyshire , May 16 , at one at ^ he . Np ^^; Ar ^ ^ Gl ^ pY and Jtme : 12 i at ^ J ^ V ^ to cn-COui ^>^^ rabnrjr , ' £ oiia 6 h j' ^ mrai and Hinde , Sheflielu . " ^ . - '! i ' ><¦*¦' - -. ?} ¦ ' . f ^* . ¦ •¦*" > * , .-v " "Ujviiiii .... ' ¦ ¦ ;" i SAMfffi * "WJSliSi Jt ^ . tbakery Nottfa » g *» m / iMay l 2 ; at oioora
iIVE » " » W " 9 .. ; . ppm . wni ; Jutm , t « X ' i » Inn , » ; ouum , ¦ EjgyTlRfi ll > AM ' 3 i " edalldealer , Old' NeWtoi r , Suffolk ^ ftftf 18 , ? a 12 f Jum ^ iSAt ^ twelVe , at fl » Ow # nanflAnchor 1 Miia ^ mh . -vWarrlo ^ 8 fowina ^ MvM « rriott ^ Red ; Licmsotum ^ IisOddBi •¦/ in'i ' t \\ i , si i- -- -: 'j -viJj ¦ - <" ¦ -y */ ..-. ! .. ; j > " . v . *' -- ; : :.. ¦ ' ^ V W ^ OWJ ^ AMi !^^ . ! , ?^^^^ « % J « ne , 12 pat . eley » h { j | f . < U 2 ^ TpH ^^^^ r ^*^ r' ^ ' ^^^ v ' P f xr > i& ^ v ? m 7 iil * 4 J ^ f ^^^^^^ ii ^ S - rfon&vIiiVerMob 1 'tittledale aM Baru * ire | ivWata-8 treet , Mv / Bni )« l ; Blackstoek , 3 unee , Vui « e «» f , aid ^ etwo ^ d , Teia-JQ ^^ R AGC ^ . rata ^ er ^ oOeor , i& * a $ e * % t , ilay 12 , 'fcfc ^ I « 3 % - B ^ lj ^^ pm &n ^ if ^ tmng
. BO&B&T HUOBBSvUaor , Wjffib « Bs . Dsnhig ^ kir ,, W » r ; JftUHli JfipiWi -4 «» itM | f *« gj f « it »^» ^ y » 8 « ay ( Arow- fim , JWaRrlWrawJ ^ IiV ^ W 1 ? - * ¦ 4 Wt ? % and 0 o . j J ^ araiijndbuUaingi Gray ' siinn , LonQon . ¦ *' . " ¦ a - '¦?"" ¦ ' : ^ PHiMS ^ OSfWJOHN ^ ^ OTL 5 ri ^« 09 K , bWt 8 eMere , 8 W 6 VM » r 9 > « t ( w ^ % : fcr ^ JwM * t ^^^ t ^ Cofn mereial-roomiy finite ^ HiU . Bmtol 1 Cbwka » ad Ooi ^ L « t eolaVisnrfiela * . Itondcc ,- ; ,-, i , ^ ,: " : j-. ~ [ . ' . '¦ '• .-... ' ; .
Original Correspondence; " ~ M - ' —— ¦ " : --
ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE ; " ~ m - ' —— ¦ " : --
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CURRENT PRICES OF GRAIN per Imperial Quarter , QUANTITIES and AVERAGE PRICES oif BRITISH GRAIN , per Imperial Quarter , sold in ' the London Market , during the week , ending April 24 . - —Wheat , 7 , 933 qrs . 5 & . lid . Barley , 3 , 801 qrs . 31 s . 7 d . Oats , 21 , 429 qrs . 22 ts . lOd . Beans , 1 , 874 qrs . 32 s . 7 d . Peas , 786 qrs . 35 s . 2 d . Rye , 23 qrs . 32 s 7 d
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TALLOY / AND CANDLES . Whitechapel Market price of Fat , 2 sl 0 d . In quantities of 81 bs . s . d . s . d . Town Tallow ( per cwt ) 51 0 Graves . 18 0 Russia do ( Candle ) .. 51 6 Good Drags 0 0 Whitedo . 0 0 Mould Candles ........ 9 0 Stuff ' ... 40 0 Store do .............. 7 6 Rough do 26 0 Inferior ditto 6 6
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HAY AND STRAW ( per load of 36 trusses . ) Smithfield . Ji . s . \ £ . s . Whitechapel . £ ¦ s . J > . s . Hay-. . ............ v , 3 15 a 4 15 Hay ............ 3 15 a 5 0 Clover ..... 5 0 a 6 0 Clover .......... 5 0 a 6 0 Straw .. 1 18 a 2 2 Straw ........... 1 18 a 2 2 Cumberland . Portman , Edgeware-road . Hay .. ..... 3 l 5 a 5 0 Hay .. , 4 10 a 5 0 Clover .. 5 0 a 5 10 Clover .......... 5 0 a 5 12 Straw 1 18 & 2 4 Straw ..... 2 0 a 2 4
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PRICES 01 ' HOPS IN THE BOROUGH . The hop market is heavy , but no alteration in prices . Old duty ^ lao . OOO . Karnharn " ¦ ¦ . U . jti 0 to 9 0 East Kent , Pkets ^ 4 0 to 6 6 Mid . Kent Pkets 3 15 .. 5 12 Weald of Kent do 3 10 .. A 0 Bags . ¦ ' .. :.. 3 15 . 5 0 Sussex Pockets .. 3 5 .. 3 16
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LIVERPOOL WOOL MARKET , APRIL 28 . Many influential patties have been inquiring for Mogadore , Pcro . vi » u , and East India wool ; arid -the lower descriptions of this article in general were taken to a ; moderate extent ; in other qualities we have nothing of iniportauce to report . Imports this week , 97 ; previously this year 14 , 265 . Total , 11 , 396 .
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> >* ^~^ 9 xL THB NO ^ M t 5 MAT , 7 . 1006 ^^ , ^ . ,- ^ ^ ^^ ¦ - ¦¦ ,--& ** •**¦ ¦ - ¦ ' ¦ " - —— i «« ^ i ^ aiMi- ^ i-. i- ^ - ^ Sggi ^ SSSS ^^ _¦ .. ¦¦ : ¦¦ ' ^ - -:-,. - - ' : ; -. ¦ . . - . - :-:- .. - .. -., . --. ¦ " - ;\ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ - : ¦ ¦ ¦ -.- - ¦ - ^ ' - . : . ¦ . " , *' ., 0 .
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TO THE EDITORS OF THE NORTHERN STAR . , HALAHINE . \ T 10 HESTIC COMFORTS AT BAXAHTKB . —BFTECTS OF XACHIHEBT IN COMMDNITY . ^ OMPARISOK OF THE RALAHINE LABOTJBEBS "WITH OTHEBSEARXrSG THE SAME XOKIKAL AMOUNT OF "WAGES .
DOMESTIC COMPORTS . I personally aTn 3 mintrtelT examined all the domestic airangerjaents at RaJahine ; I found aB ike cottagesof xhs marriedmerabeTS provided yritb . comfort-^« teds , bedsteads , bed-clothing , tables , chairs , < fev ^ and the whole as cleaa and as ^ neat as . the average of the honses of the iestpart of the working people in England . The infent school , which was & cottage at the end of a row ef six cottages , in which flie parents olthein&ntsTedded , had aneatrocking crib »> 3 th good bed and bad-clothing for each infenf , good beds for the little children , forms , books , slates , < fcc . for the school 1 f lay-ground , or . gymnanom , with climbing-poles , wises , < Src ^ behind the sckool ,
for eiercise . and amusement ; and the same furniture , bedding , and other cba \« nieiices for the governess , as the other cottages . The governess was an amiable jouns woman , trained for a teacher in the Infant Model School in DBblin : the children appeared to have great affection for her , and they were much better token-care © f and provided for by feer than they could have feeen b y their parents at home . ' The commirxee-TOom , sad tne room used for a school for the vomhs and adults for society meetings and for lectaKSi were well fitted op with forms and defies , and provided with books , slates , &c The public dining and baU-i-oom had large tables , with forms , < fcc for the accommodation of the single members ,
and such of the married as preferred p « fefcc to private . meals , *? hieh was generally the case , a # it was more pleasant to -themselves , and saved lafebur in their cottajres . Over these rooms were tsco large dormitone £ one feThe boys and unmarried males , and the ofher for the girls and unmarried feaales : a good bed , Wisieads , and bed-clothing were provided for each aoult ^ nember , and good beds and bedsteads for flie jouths ,- but the youths slept two or three together . Ope adult female had the charge of and \ ept the dormkoriesia order : andanotberiemaleattended
to the committee , lecture , and dining-rooms . The washing and cookery being done in proper places away ftsm the dwellings , and the children taken c * -e * of in the infant school , enabled married women to perfonn their day ' s labour for The Society , and to keep their cottasBs ' always clean and neat with very fitde labour ^ All these desks , forms , tables , chains ,-beds , bedsteads , &c were xaade by -themselves and their carpenters and smiths , -in ; their spare time , withont interfering with their daily labour . The timber and other materials were purchased by Mr Yandelenr , and charged to the Society .
MACHIXERY IK COJOtTJiflTT . Thsv had very convenient apparatus for washing-, and for boiling their potatoes . The potato-washing machine was a cylindrical vessel , . something like a squirrel cage , placed bonzonl&Qy on a frame , on which it was turned round with a handle in a trough filled with water , till -they were clean ; they were then put in ' o a cask with holes in the bottom , for the admission of the steam ; thisvessel fitted ihe top of a bo 3 er rilled with boiling water , ' upon which it was placed , and they were soon nicely cooked by the steem : one man corild "by these means prepare , in
two hours , snmcient for the whole Society . Every tto > wt >< they conld devise were adopted to save time , labour , and expense Jn the washing of their linen . Their saw mill ftnrl thrashing machine saved much tfraft and labour . They gladly availed themselves of every assistance science or machinery could give , because mac / iinery , a * we have before observed , tamcered its proper ^ end with thaaj it lightened their labour , and increased their means of enjoyment The'ollowing Address contains theirawn experience mthismatter : — "
Cspy of the Address of the RalaJiine Association to iheir Brother Labourers in England aiid Ireland , printed and circulated by the Society on first using their new Morse Reaping Machine in ihe harvest of 1823 , which did as much work in one hour as they could Jiave done by h&nd in twelve , and saved aforinigAfs labour to the Society .
- TKT 0 mrStSEStSa 7 ' KSOffi £ DGEilS POWER ! " Fellow Labourers , —? We the members , of the Eafcihine Agricultuiai Association , address . yon on behalf of ourselves aiid our co-operative brethren , and recommend irou ^ ser iousTy tQ reflect ot » the evils which die dally improvements in machinery are likely to inflict upon you , "unless yoa adopt ' some mode by which machinery shall work jb £ A yon and far you ^ and not against jjqu . All ' new-inventions , rach as ** "g reapingjsia ( Aine , y $ & £ a& .-of injuring benefits us ; for , instead of bending ear backs in reaping , and squeezing die corn , with our ^ hands the vhc&s day , we make Sdfi . machine do it far us , _ whilst we have only the comparatively easy cperations of ts
hmdingand stacking . 3 Jns machine of ^ ttrs one tf fhejtrst machines ' ever given to the worJeixg classes to lighten their labour , and at the same tiae increase their -comforts . * It doesaiotfcenefit any one person amous us exclusively , fior throw any indnsdual out of employment . Any kind of machiiiery used for shortening labour , except iised in- a Co-operative Society like-oursj mtist tend" to lessen wages and to deprive workTjajj men of employment , and .-finally , either starve them , force them into « 6 me other employmeai ( and flitis reduce wages- in that also , ) or compel them to emigrate . iVfetc , if the workmg ^ dasses would cardialtff and peaagidlg unite to adopt our system . Jto power or party could prevent their Mtocess
The plan W 31 injure bo one ,- 'but pace every individual willing to work with either iead or hafes , in employment ; and « nable £ fech- Socie ^ sot © train up and usefully . educate their childreny that they could , wiftr esse ^ ffiad pleasirrpe ita themselves , create more -wealth tfcait tray « rai 5 « onsumei "' ^ WeijH » thus united ^ we distribute- wkat'wis reqtrire "« f ibe produce we-i 3 « ate > * inUw best « nd moi $ ecoBonacal manner ; wseisdaeafe- ^ ar ^ hadren in € be best manner , arid go « 5 n . ourselves idonrjowB sata&ction apdcomfort . TjbII the ' owiere-off land , % stif they wiir to use machinery benefidallyj they- ^ oirld form yqu into Sociedes whereitcanridt Jajsres , i > nt where-ycsi in ana
"tfoiiid have ^ aa'ffltewt B ^ nf protecting it . And shoold"Gt ^ beinducedito Tinite with you in "Biese arrangeniraSv so « dvwji ^ eaas to aD parries , thevwenld soon see a gre ^' woiderfaV aoifrapid inproTement Wifee state-or &e cotmtryi There would bes ' o mBm ^ kcrartfBk m the mitettfabimdanop S -Dot any necessity ftirindnrtrioBfl " wortenen "to leaye &dr home , fr iends , and coantry ,- for foreign wood and wilds , whilst ifceimafire Itnd masns bntpariia % cultivated . " - ' - ¦ By order of &e C » niinit&s J . C . CRAIG , Saeretary . Raiahine , 21 st Augnsi , 1833 . '
From Friday Night/S Gazette, April ^
FROM FRIDAY NIGHT / S GAZETTE , April ^
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 5, 1838, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct347/page/7/
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