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%otal atiXf (Bmeval 3EttteIUgejwe,
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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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IHE lOSDON TBEDE AND SHi ^ BOCK . . - . ,, _>_ -WBI _ b . : - _ ., Fdlmanj a yeir , dote side by side , ^ StaBmxSt ^ r , 'M london Pride . _ Tc ^__ W _ o— : _ ieycame togrow , 1 dp 3 M > iesrej-iMwdpiia&wy - ' - 3 niJ ^ Ilni 5 iirja «|^ oTtt 3 ifia 3 / ' __ isnrel east ) V whole-onie yfo ^ p _ be Shamrock wajfqflively jgreea " Iji early ds ^^ Va / srMaeois . j _ . a _ » : h ^ inaxgra hs&xzmT Inda ^ cf c ^ d ; Imll ^ pueT ^ me ^* , Sceraoon tii other ' s xreepligfiioota Dia * teal themselves roond ~ _ h ^_ inroci * s loots : Then thief-like fasten'd In lieif soit ¦
And snck'd the ssip of poor TrefoiL TFnt _ in 1 a _ iepe-t Xbndon . 3 Wde * Gptnpsohi $ h , a 5 qtufc > ' to tide . Pora Shaiarock , tfIioconH seldomsee *' ! &eSan ^ M ^ fwBj ior * een-i » M ah 8 j Bare Trhan " an . adirenfe Hast did blow , And laid her j righbonrthonqr . loir . ! I 2 ieii , in the angry'IadyV Bpite ; ' Sie diauk the sboVr ,-she asw the light , ' geeij&lh'd he ; tdcklied eh&nnBlB dew , And gattie ^ diealth and streng ^ j anew . . She aw those joyai ^« nneftbixiH £ aiT 8 n , And Btf ^ wore by 2 ier ndghiwiirgiven j Tether food iatore aye fe prove , She paid "he / jealonihite-with lore ; re
Bat "srten ^ ce mo TdcdZipiiyis earns , And raitJdthe o ' er-gwro storm-bent dame , The ingrate strova her all to lake , And forc poor Shamrock tbns . to apeak : ¦ "ISd ^ Obont j * Q \ Ebm with equal light , To fee ! yori sun axufzee Ms light , _ p enjey the blessings ^ f tMs earth ; Or if ^ hi follows piior birth , la tM » » H 1 xtronget ii my fiaim . ^ long "was I "known , ana great my fame , > before lie woilde' ^ t'h ^ ja . thy n ^ me . } Sot letting all those strongdaims lie , Itort' , . tell m £ is ltwolto
To jhwaxt my offspring a ? they use , Tohieikxiy heaitJio-bi £ Mitfceir eyea ? Sore if liey spread t&eart 2 Jalpfi 5 , Grow handsome , ' beallhy , stont and strong ! Dtey'wiHaB &naliaaKr . l > e I ^ To lend itatTiselnl strength to IBse j _" nu « could We teep eadi olher . watm ,. And gnardTis from all coming h » rm ^ We'd steady stoodi when wDd ^ winds Wovr Andlan ^ iin \ spiteoffrost or anow , And -gaaiil the rost of out loTed Janrel , Grownsitk snd jaleip see iri-juarreL * «_ Jo rnoie ^—t&-7 EX' 3 , idn £ b ;« n % fpndfiny'flsihJBetreriiluaieyea ; ' '
» 1 _ hear no more—yoar bounds III mark , inditcp you ererin the 3 afk ; Hsieis a « rtle—look you here , One step beyond it if yoa dare ; jwiif I leai ^< ra more complain , j _ tewtbyjaMnglieait . a twain ; I've _ ia _ e thy sons kill t ^ sriother , And soon , they ahall destroy their mother . TB thns ^ 4-aiasb . 5 fieaTeBlylfir 8 j Pnllf / ar ^ ht with Jore" * * mast deadly ire , Sc&tter'd ttieXondon Pride ar < jundl _ he ^~ - _ fc elonas-rosr a ; yri __ horrid , sound ;
The'ViTidlishtelngiMii'dssaiQ , And Md theXsnrd on the plain I Sat soon sncceeftfa heavenly sals . ; Soft dew * desceoa and showers of balm j ^ Thft sim shoots forth his kindest iay And ShamrocksbHngthens erery day ; And TMB'd tiyhesTenVas ^ astance bland , Bid » fair to spread o ' er all the land-She ynards the blasted lanrel ' Bxoota . Th * ram-tared Xaoxel npwsrd shoots , And gratefnl wreaths its dark green bows To SKC 8 cratSbimrock ' s aged-brows .
.. -Kbux . Take heed , learn wisdom , hence weak man , And keep a good Mesa while yo » can . If to your friend yon are nnkind , _?—» Jore -will be against yon join ' cL Eefloct that « TEry act yoo do * To . strengthen him , doth&trengthenytni ; __ ¦ serve yon _ e is—witting--ablfl— - Two twato will make Hie strongest cable ; To Sod airiend and keep himateady , To haTe t »™ «*__ ¦ in reach ami ready . Thebob . Jrom The Pbxss , as Jris& newspaper , svjpresxd "by drtenaxuLiotarry ** T 7-nox "
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SOCIAL CW OF TEA . Pro feliihe arnBfcard ! s _ toW 4 _? so _ y T _—t health and strength impair ; I ' ve linger ed at the midnight bowl , Which brooght ^ he morning care . 3 ntxow nndonded reason reigns , Proclaim- the captive free ; At home I hoard raj liUe gains , Anil drink my £ up of tea . To find the happiness of earth , I ^ tthoDihtless mortals roam ; Tm on the temperate cotter's hearth , 171 th soberness _ &t home . There zitsihis happy « n » 'ii-ng -wjfe ¦ With chernbonheTkEee ; Sere he enjoys a peaceful life , "Witt social " enp of tea . .
Ye BsciabHesstall brothers be , May € oiyonr nnionbless ; Tnta ^ -zaoze demands our sympathy , Than brothers in distress ? TTniteinJoTe and while ITe life , , Mjxtaeni prayers&aSlbe % That J os-sad each Teetotal wife , Ne ' er wasVa cup of tea . Caiaiale . JOBS SaTSOH
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5 TA 33 S OF IKELAND . By Abthtib O'Goxbob . Hepnblished , -with & Bedkaiion io the WoTk ingCSasses of England and Ireland , by JIeaiegiis ifCoxsoB . London , Q eare ^ Shoe-Jan » Heet-Btreet . Aoopjof ihisibooi vr&s seat ions for renew in onr last ; bni ire had 3 iot time to read it carefoily before ^ ding io press , and we aerer speak . of any book nntil we hare read it . We bs , Te now read it , asd-tre commend It hear til j to aniTersal reading . We cannot better characterise the work , iban in the TfOidB of 3 Jr . O'Connor ' s iedica ^ on , to witich we fc % and eniirelj sabscnbe . ** Tie reader , when paaaug the state of Ireland , as described by Arflrar O ' Connor in J 7 S 8 , -wouH , if dates irere omitted , imagine thai he was leading the present
history of that -ocruntry . In it , "will be found the Zealand substantial grieTance ^ of vrhich Ireland iiien complaiaed , and not obb of irbi £ ^ i op to the preseat Jhoar Abs teen Tedres 9 ed- - The aaihor *^ gns V ae law-church and the application of its ^ HKa&mal ftmdB , and the Irish laadlords and . ttara anajouBnt-of . their properties , as amongst fp greatesigrieT&nces of 4 foat conn ^ rj ; he shows «^ Penneions effect of thelaura of priniogenitnre , « f ; S ^^ n £ nt , 3 aid entail , aud tiieir jniimie connexion "SoflLJhe state chardi amd its ^ ependanla . - Upon ihe Bnbjeet of the land , 1 » contendsi as ererj honest laan musi contend , that no country -can ¦ * tB cona&red prosperens , or her people independent , » cereinflie . * jsiein . of proprietorBhip <> f smalliarms , ted TMyeraal &feage , do iiot fonn flro « ase of her ** aal and political iEEamfions . "
ToUas -we may add , that € he excellence ' ' of ^ be Matter iB fnHj egnaBed by the ^ eloquence of il > e i * n-^^ le anS aie ferridiiess ofihe sQle . ' -It is * " . w « * hioa speateiomeat dace to the nnderstandingi ^« J « e feelisgs of the reader . The % orKijg man ^ fti 5 > j ft * dsS ^ mjwoter -unaccustomed W-Sellberafej 6 m Atf ' -lmf ^ Bee- ' -tiiB jnagnitode and ieel JKe T » re ^ n « J ^ ihe-eiilsS 3 > onrtrays . 'irprcan lae hflp ^ ert ^ y-B ^ froia tie eleaff jnsnBer in Trhich the eiils ofuos-5 ? OTerfliaBBt = arela 3 d l > efore him and exMbited'in
^^ rresnliS j-Jthai the so | h 6 r 5 s leasonings , thoorai ^ adeaiosppljio " Ireland ; ar © jippBM ^> le 4 o ^ ll _ Bs ^ ties ; : « ia ^« ati atonal Irelaatrmaj'te ^ SO : . ¦ stoemecaBe , *^ ca ^ of Ireland , is more or less , the *^ if / wery . 46 nntry . ifi ^ ^>» fi 3 elea 4 edW « 8 t ^ Mtt ^ atertf ^ Msme , hsw | nEiirped anthorijj-inde-*> $ a « aUtf 35 * people . = Hence , > ffiepre « ait , Troik ^« Aa ! iS ^ £ ir- * 4 ^ a ) i ^ ' 'iin . - « lw ^ & ! p ^ - « f- ' * - ^> tei «^ eaif % . £ D |^«^ i ^^^| Mleror «» C 3 » rti ** 3 br ^^ -writershowB dearij fltat &e TO fane 3 remedy for ^ lemnltifanoHS jjrleyaneeBie 01
jPMasappirealTB tolje / loroafl m . the . adtabuioB ft ^ gensral- ^ jraitaplee of jright'whleli learo the l *» erof contronliDg all jsoTernment in flieirhole ^ jfe , We eoBoinend to the carefiil conBJderation * S ^ ealera the foBowii « shortcxtract ^>
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"Toresn ^ dy-these soanifold e'rils , to Yhich I . haTe , traced "flie "miseries and snffeMgs of Tty " connny , - it hai -been acknowledged by every Dian who 33-not within the pale of nsurpataqn and corrnption , th ? -t CijfHOiiC EXiSCipIiioil , and a restoration of Popuiab . ; Be-- ? BBSEirTATiON , " arethe % nly cfBcfentexp ^ diente . f Bot ifgnstice , ^ rh ieh requiia that no maoj mnchlesstha deeded majority oIa , uaUen , shonld ba ^ eprlTed oT , hto political" i ^ h ' ts on ' Mcoxmt of Ha Teftglona opMomi ordftiniihatthVCatholiciBBonld ^ not haT ^ fewer rights than the Protestants- and ^ if ifc ' is an incontx « rartibla fartjthatnxch is the present Bsnrpatlon . of jighte , as Trill _ PioteBtaot as . CathoUc aat eyen % raih ; thfl Gatnx ^ tar-werW » Sniitted to the fuHest . paiUapatton of t&ti Tfgh&poMsisea byiheir Pretestant ^ eTlow-dOEens aJ
piwenfc , botti Protestant and Catholic . woold doad , . th » tjaie-ri ^ tiU « I jWhich they jirere . robb ^ i j were | lnflnitdy Jnore numerous , and more impoitatit ^ than those they rajoyeS ^ eTen bef ere the " present annihilation of eTarjr . TB « % e of ' eonsatntional right—It Hiust appear manifert to the most superficial obserrer , that . Cathollc exaltation , to the present height of Protestant *" freedom only / mnit proTe mbi&j inadequate to' the establish mint -of our NAifdRii laBEirr . Disdaining / thta , to add uneargnaient more , to the thousandB . which remain alreadjnnanswered , in favour ef the EmanJdpation of my Catholic Countrymen , letting it lesfoii the solid basis of justice , and blending it with the gauerdl cause . V shall eonclnde this address "with an inTestigatton of our fWKfrai r ^ rW . . . i ¦ «
He then , after many pages of demonstration * concludes thus ^ 7 , . . _ i "If I have nceeeded in-demonBtrating that ; selfinterest is the goTernlng principle ' in politics , aswell as of all hmnan action ; that we are the creatures of our "want asd desires ; that thoie who possess the means of satisfyiDg those-wants and desires , mnit possess the means of inflnencu > g the actions , and commanding the Berrices of mankind ; that thoBe who possess property are possessed of those means , and that those laws which saosopoUze property ; invest a -few with the power of dictating to the many , which Is inTariably abused , and a necessity on the part of the many of yieKhig to « ch a dictation , I trust I hare impressed on tbexilnds of my coantrrnien , that all Reform which
would leaTe the monopoly ef property untouched , must prpye ingnfilcient , and that the onl 9 reformation by -which their "liberties can be secured is that which destroys ^ the depenaence , ssd- estaWlsheB the independence , , of the " Whole Cokstitdent Bodt . I trnst I . iaTe con-rinced them , that the . independence of the Conatitncnl ~ Bodj is the guardian of liberty , ana not the duereBon or -virtue cf those they ielectj andjthat the abolition of all laws for the monopoly of property is Ibesole means by which it can be established . 11 BEBTT CAHKOI STiHB BUT ON - JHR BROAD , TIEM , XSV TBBTSCT BASIS OP VNlYERSJLL J&ESENTATION . " Be- the aBpfirstraclnre what h nay , if yon -will haTe liberty , yoa mnst first estaWJah this foundation for it to rest on ; > nd-that | you may bare this perfect representative " basis , yoa must look to the constituent people of whom it is formed ;
yoa mast abolish au monopolies , which other wise would destroy your independence . ¦ Thus youfwill reform . toubsbites . This is the true Reformation . " Finally , we commend this book to universal reading j and especially to Irishmen , for whom it is not less , calculated sow in 1843 , than at its first publication in 1738 . Irishmen now seek Repeal ; -and the reasonable pretext for their asking is , that they stand Dot jm a level wi £ h England , wxth which they are pretended to be united . Bnt let them beware ofrany Repeal "Which" -wonld merely raise them to the level of misgovernment in England : for this . would be oiily , as Arthur lyCoxaxox says , to discover that the rights to which they had been admitted were comparatively "valueless , and infinitely less than those from which they were still debarred ; and that it was just time to begin & new straggle for the attainment of their trne position .
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"HEBECCA" IN WALES .: ' * Rebecca" is far from being appeased . She Mill continues her nocturnal visits ; and though her destructive prowess is , for the present , confined to Toll-gates and Toll-houses , it is apparent that there are other and deeper causes of dissatisfaction which will , In all probability , lead to more extended action , unless a vigorous and adequate remedy for the intolerable grievances of the -Farmers and their labourers be immediately devised and applied . There is great room to doubt that oar ** Statesmen " have not the necessary courage even to attempt this . They will rely on the ** ordinary powers of the lair "
io suppress the " spirit of dissatisfaction and outrage f and if these are not sufficient for the purpose they will apply for , and receive ** extraordinary " powers . By these means they may possibly succeed in " pnUing down" " Rebecca "; though it wonld appear from her Bjtematised movements ; the nature of the country she has at present for her abo 3 e ; and the spirit and faithfulness of the sons of the hills , that such " pntting-down * Will sot he accomplished without difficulty . But should this " policy" succeed , what better shall ¦ we be ? Shall we have ridded ourselves of the
danger ! Will the causes of the turmoil and ferment be removed J If ** Rebecca" be hanged even , trill that enable the Farmers to pay their * fixed Titfies" ; their * ' increased and iJtCREASMQ Rates ; their "ZyiKenlf ; and their EXCESSIVE TiXi . nov" \ Will the stringing-np of " Eebeoca" add to their ahffity to paytfcfeBe B rrx £ iP * charges , trith Wheat at six shillings a "bushel * O no I There is the eanse . To iha * -point obt zSvria must be directed . Pbkl ought to find out the way howto enable the Farmers to pay the Rente , Rates and Taxes " fixed" when
Wheat . was at ten and twelve shillings a-bnsbel , now thathe has by bis Pzbx ' 8 Bni andbis Pxa ' aTABCTi reduced "Wheat to six shaiings a-bushel I When he has done that , he will have ridded himself of the inconveniences and dangers arising from the organized movements of ** Rebecca and her daughters "; but until he has done that , or reduced Rents , Rates and Taxes to the altered circumstances of the country consequent on his measures , he will wield the T > owers of the law , whether ** ordinary , " or rt extraordinary /* to very little purpose .
Every thing in connection with this matter is of high moment ; especially to the toiling millions of British subjects , whether located in England , Wales , Ireland , or Scotland . To them it is , Indeed , ail-important . The pressure of the system has , ni last , reached the middle class Farmers . It has long been , known that ihe only hope for redemption on the part of the working-prodnoer from a state of thraloGm and eonseqne&t poverty and keen privation , was in the certainty that THE THIKG would destroy even those who had contributed to its
maicfainence , at the expense of the comfort , wellbeing , personal liberty , and even the lives of the xisr . That JiopciB now on the eve of being realized ! The screw has reached the middle-classes . It iB working them up to desperation . They openly avow their own * recklessness" and ** don ' t-care-whafc . thej-do " -iEm ! It is of thiB class that" Rebecca" is the head I She is leading them pretty successfully as yet ; and we have cot seen , nor are we ablo to anticipate , the effects that may result from her warr fare .
The writer in the Times , from whom we quoted so copiouslj last week , continues his communications . The nature of the struggle he describes , and the minute revelations he mak < K , as to the condition , feelings , and designs of the Welsh Farmers ; together withiiB candid and open avowal of the real causes ; of the "Rebecca * ' ferment ; make apology needless for again giving * copious extracts from his epistles . To understand the nature , and extent , and cause of the Welsh Farmers' movement is of the last importance to those for whom we write . Here are the means t » enable them to form an opinion : — Narberib , Pembrokeshire , June 29 .
In a former communication 3 stated that notices had been given at Kaiberth anneantiBg tie intention of the TO&l-contents to pay a Visit to it "to-day . This being the ease , I yesterday left Carmarthen , 'in order that 3 might be upon the spot , and personally observe what took place . On my way 2 paued St Clfear ' s , where » hB d&strncHonof the gatas first eonuneuced ; aud 3 sa- » tvo tolMiouses in ruins , with the place where one toll * Tkto ^ and a gate had stood , but iHBeh had been razsd to the" gronna so perfectly that a * strange * wauld not in 0 W . tfrat * ncfl things -had * ver » fcood upon the spot All ftronjb my journey , over a distanoe of Upwards of thirty tuflessihe nme talewas told me by every one 1 the
eonversed-trife »^ « ma unrterBal dtecoptent and » pirit ofin » aboadinBtionpreTailed . Aflesflhaaarrfred it a ' plaee e » Iled 5 Bi « : eUy , ' « l « venonilk » ^ rom Pembroke -dockyard , the road to Narberth being scrosi the country , aad it being Bieni aftsrtes o'elockat night , l ! procure « one of the country people si a guide , and on the Way con' T «» ea * iSjinniMto ib& feneral feeflng ofthe people is far as his knowledge went He"described tome in simple but sort forcible terms the miserable poverty they were suffering , and the sin , the wickedness , and the * oppressions under which be said they laboured . I ought here to remark that the lower orders in Wales hate a fionsJderable degree of religious fanaticism about
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them ; are tmal of them Dissentera , and in tbe constant habit ^ f quoting ^ Scripture fdrJeverything ^ hfch they ' advacee ; cn ^ this m an ^ pplisd ^ oine ,-text from Sstipture to almost every obsssv ^ tipr . tb . atiba u 3 ed : . b . ecgpipared tho present * eeasoif to Daniel s " vision ; and as we paasea thft-ITflt < rt-b < 5 UBe > -by the way , -by'fc * themost mhstantial ^ ad _ J > estbnafcfao »?©^ ini taip '» aJ 0 i ^ cBehood : —be aald , " Ahl Sir . there ' s . Jhe ^ -house of oppression ,. * Qtem whom God hath joined together let no mail put asunder . pti- yda . 'Sir ; tHSTfit r ! ghrtbatitneFlIibuld . ' becauss we . arei poor . f talre four cchUdren'ifrom thehs mother , and me froni . uiy wife ^ if Lwsa , compelled to go inthare ? And do > ou tliink"ft rigHf tl » at Jt a poor gftlhad beni ted as ® f , " icVsmiuld be obfiged tbpay all or the childT That law feas caused * pretty many to bar
put out of the way-fit cansesthe murder of the ; ianocent—but nothing can stand that is against ; God , and , tbislawisagainrtih ) d >>« dl '' On reaching Nttrbertb , atthonghHt vni th&a tiiat Iofce hour of the nighfcat which usually ther jnhabibuta are all at rest , I found the town in a complete commotion . The magtarates hai belda-sn ^ g ; . spe ^ al « pnstableB had been sworn in ; and a squadron of the Castle Martin yeomanry" cavalry iHi ^^ « atne ' - rBglBiBnl 'which distingaishBd themselves against the FreoohiatFisb ? uard commanded hy Major fowling and I ^ eutanauta Bryant and Byeri , had joat inarctied In . I inquired caxefally as to their reasons for apprehending another'visit from "BfibBCca , " finding that she haivnot only been there three times already , but . had destroyed all the gates
above the " town . 1 was informed by one of the magistrates that the redoub ^ ble " Rebewa" herself had on Monday evening passed through where the toll-gate and toll-houseat the upper patt of tfce town u * ed to « tau < l , and addressed the toll-coUectar , depmndeel what he 4 id there , and upon the man ' s attemptins to answer , told him that between that ' time and Thursday night she and her children , to the number of 1 , 000 , shouid come ; again , and that if he v ? as there and- demanded toll , she would not pay it , hut blow his brains out . The tollcollector then asked what aHe could want there as both the gate and the tollhouse were down . " Rebecca " replied that there were ] larger houses than that should come down . Tha . man jthea said , ** What J the poorhouse ! " "I answer no Questions , but you shall see , "
was the answer , and she passed on ; leaving tbe collector in a state of the ntmost consternation . As the Union Workhouse had sheen threatened . with an attack during the night , a detachment of the yeomanry , under the command of Sergeant-Maj ' sr Sees , was stationed in the house the whole-night ; and special constables were sent out to obserro anytiiipg -wbjcH might take place in the surrounding conntry ; a despatch was also sent express to Captain Mansell , » t St . dear ' s , to call out the troops under his command , and scour the various roads between St . dear ' s and Narbetb , so as to be enabled to render any assistance which might be needed , and also- to cat off any parties they might meet on the roads . At about balf * past twelve e ' olook at nigfefc the special constables , who were opt upon the watch on
the Cardigan road , observed the Kebeccaites' * approaching to the number Of between £ 00 and l , 000 , bn horseback and on foot , with " Bebecca" at their head . They came on to within half a mUe of the upper , gate , of-the torn where they were met hy some one belonging to their party , who informed them of the atrival of the military , and that a portion of them were stationed at tbe Workhouse . This caused a halt and a consultation among them . At length , however , the constable incautiously showed himself , and the party , seeing that they were watched , made off To-day the grea £ - fair was held a Narbetbirbut all passed off quietly , awing ; no doubt , to tbe presence of the uriUtgrx . There weru hundreds of . fine cattle and horsea aViB ^ fair ; but every one said they had never known soTJ&cl a one ; no purchases were made , and , in fact ; the prices offered will bo perfectly atartling to- your English readers , via ., for yearlings only £ i were offered ; for a pair of last year ' s calves 25 s . each ; and for a very fine caw not £ 4 \ horses did
sot teU at alt i inquired Also as to tke working of the Poor Law here , and -endeavoured to procure a dietary , it , but was told by the cleik that he could not givj it without ati order from the Board The farmers and all others , however , complain of some of its clauses -bitterly , and declare that the rotes are very much higher since it baa been in operation . With regard to the tolls , they areas oppressive here aa in Carmarthenshire ; only ! imagine , for instance , from Bigelly to Narbertb , a distance of 4 ^ miles , there are three toll-gates , each charging 6 d . and 9 d ; as the case may be . Above Narberth there are no toll-gates ; there were nine on the 'Wbitland trust , viz ., Pulthrap , 1 ; Trevanghan , 2 ; Na * berfh-ea » t , 2 ; Narberth Plaindealings ^ ttte , 1 ; Princes or Ludchurch , 2- ; andBoberston Watben 1-. Every one of these are down , and the housas also , with the exception of the house at ludehurch , which iff only partly demolished . Nor would thetTnisn Housfts here stand a single night nnless garrisoned by military . : -
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break the 4 w , jbut that he would not betray one of tWavfof too highest Award tbafr could t * oflfered , a * d thwfoelta ? I , f «*? lji # e toib © -g ^ ieral . ^ SCaeihoatiJi ^ - of : ttia . pepnVe ^ ia ^ inxal di ^ trista alsd , iigaiflst ., the pflor Lt . w is ^ duanlmous ; ' they declare ft to ^ a ctu el im ' d uujOBtjfflld ' that-w . hsfevw otherf t « 4 y ai » y of the rates bolKg -Jessene * by it , they say theyi i »* y sthem , andongbt totoow ^ that theypay jooxM more than ^ hey , ^ S ^ frl w ^ Cnton . ppuws ^ are objects , of their spedfar detestation , and they ;*©*' present the itratfge appearauee of being fortresses gtorlaoned ^ ite ' feOop ¥ i Instead 6 t being asylnnw ^ fpr the poor' •!«*»» i »* howr eT * ^^ y ^ ? o ? . I , am flrmly ; 0 f opinion that im th « present ternpes of the people " theie would not be one of them but would ^ destroyed i * they were ' not thus goaide ( i . f ... v ";
, Meetings , have beep held by the MagiB > yate » , and , ? e ^ c ? . ?* ^« * wP ? n in . A v ^ ry active and . inSuen-. faaiaragutratehas , however , pubMly Btated If aTma ' opinion that they are useless , Sslngtheete emphatic ^^" L ^ 1 don ° fe beUeve- that a | « ingle r constable could be fonnd in the , county who , would or could execute a warrant . " ' Some "< Sf tKe magist » ate » havinjr rendered themselves unpapula * , the following noUoe baa been aarred upoa ,. apme . ot , [ their tenantfjr , and I win leave your re 4 oe » B to dx » w their own inferences as to the efifecfc produced by it on the minds " of any but the most stout-hearted persons : — . r ¦ : " To John Eyaos of Pantwlty ~ a tenant of Captain
lto r . ! » wes . of Qtam PalL , Sir I givelypu . notice to . quit your premises and take everything yau have on your ! premiaes away , a&Mlput thenVMfe , as ^ . Rebecea and her daughters will he there to destroy the <* holeihouse and everythtagin our power to d ^ ateoy on tha piMmiUes besides , As your master and other gentlemen are revenging oa the people they took to | priaon yesterday We Rebecca ' 8 jaaugbtera are detenainea to nave onr levenge out upoa them to pall all their houses dowa , and put all their woods on flre , an . 4 likely murder ttiem in the bargain . " '
I have copied thia notice verbatim el literatim ; even to the ptfnctuatidn ; and it will be seeh by the apostrophe uaecliathe , wprrt "Rebecca ' s" that-it is Uie-production of no ignorant person . . * I have myself seen the receipt « f a rate-payer In the borough of Carmarthen who , nnder the old system , paid 16 a . per . quarter , and ¦ now pays for tb « same premises 253 . So much for the truth of tbe official statement that there was a great reduction . i
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DALKEITH . A Delegate ; Meeting of the colliers of Midjand East tothian was . held on Satur-. day last , the 1 st inst ., at the house jof Mr . Douglas , Gallows-hall tdll ^ to tak e in to consideration'the propriety of joining the Miner's Association of Great Bri ^ ajn and Ireland . There weretwenty . deiegatea present , and a /? reat many more would have attended but the meeting was hot generally known * Mr . Thomas Younj ? was called to the chair , and Mr . Wo . Daniells appointed secretary pro tern . The meeting wasl addressed at considerable length by Mr . Wm . IJanieHs , who showed the grdss injustice practined upon colliers generally , exhorted them to join their English brethren , as the only mesas by
which tney could petter their condition , or even kee tlioir present position . He was much applauded . A discussion then took place among the delegates on th laws of the above society , which were unanimously approved of ; and the delegates pledgedjthemaelres to use the influence they possessed to induce the oolliers they represented to join the Same . After a vote of thanks'had been given-to the Chairman and to Mr . Wm . Paniells , the meeting ^ which was a very harinonious one j bepke up » . ; There will be another delegate meeting oh Saturday , 15 th of July , in the Freemason's Hall , Dalkeitbj chair taken at b « o ' clock in the evening . There is every prospect of the Scottish [ colliers shortly joining their English brethren . <
STOCKPOKT . —RgpEAL jnp the Union . —On WedneBday evening last . Mr . Thomas Clark leotured on this BUbject ! on Cave Green . The audience . was large , and enthusiastio , the majority' being Mr . Clark ' s own coiinfcrymon , who liaiened with breath ' less attention to the unanswerable facts adduced in favour of the JRepeal . At the close of the lecture-a person entirelyiunknqwn asked perniisBion to speak , which was readily granted . Hte address was nothing better { than a very silly appeal to the worst passions of Irishmen , and a denBtfoiation of Eng-Iuhpoen , whp , tie , Baid , would , if they ^ had thochanqo , again volunteer to put Irishmen down . Mr . Clark replied and deprecated all attempts to sow dissehsion ^ amongst 1 men , who had eiuoh au interest in beins united . The best possible feeling was the result of AirClark ' s lecture
. . W * * - ** ¦ IT ! m . ** «>> BWV 1 *« V * f t On Thursday Evening another meeting was held iii EJgley , which was effectively- addressed by Meesrs , Webb , ! Carter , and Clark . The frequency of our meetiug is causing inquiry , which will Borve tho cause much ;
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The Cost to the Country of t&e execution of onr slave-trade treaties , for the year 1812 , is no less than £ 575 , 446 . ; A Mookt IisqciRY . —A WeBleyan correspondent of th « Globe asks , if the WeBleyan 8 cannot claim from Government the ; expenses to which they hsve been put , in opposing the Educational Glauses of tbe Factory Bill J ; Cheese . —A return made to the Houeo of Commons shows thib the quantity of cheese imported into Great Britain duripg the year a 842 was , from Europe lC 5 . 614 cwt ; from the United Stat « s , 14 , 098 cwt . ; from British possessions , 36 OWti ; total , 179 , 748 cwt I
The Land pok the Lju > iBS . —When a boat arrives at any of ; { the landings &t Iawa , baying young ladies on board , the bachelors crowd and hover about , after tho manner of Cockney cabmen ; and sing out , "Have a husband , rates ; have & husbakd ?" Cart , the coloured servant of General Washtogtoo , to whom the last ; Congress granted a trifling penulon , has just died at GresnleaCo point , America . He was believed to ho lia years old . Shabp EyesIght ;—An American , ' describing " the prevalence of duelling , trammed up with , " They even fight with daggers in a room pitch dark . " " Is it possible ? " was the reply ,, "Passible , Sir ? " returned the Yankee : " why , { l have seen them . " There are ' w Present three Queens and ' two Kings in London—the Queen of England , the Queen Dowager , and the Queen of the Belgians ; the King of Hanover , and tho -King of the Belgians . ; .
In different tqwas the Mayors have issued proclamations to the ; inhabitants , ordering all dogs going at large to be muzzled during the hot weather . Mr . Charles jKean has purchased Key-Sell , a villa near Horndean , In Hampshire , for 3 , 700 guineas There is a park of thirty acres attached ; to it . The Claim of Washington Shirley , to the title of Earl Ferrers has been decided by the House of Lords in his favor ! The Annual Assembly of tbe preachers in the connexion of the late Kev . John Wesley wilt beheld this year at Sheffield . Toe first public sitting , for the choice of president , secretary , and other officers , takes place on the' last Wednesday in July .
Sihgblab . Weather in June—On the 17 th of June , 1791 , a remarkable change in the weather took place within a few days . The thermometer , which stood at 75 , fell to 25 degrees . The bills of Kent and Surrey were covered with boar frost and whitened with snow ; In many places there was ice of the thickness of a shilling . ! The Earl Op GieNGALL in the course of the debate on the Spirit Duties Bill stated in the House of Lords , that there'is scarce a . private atilL in any part of Ireland of which the Constabulary are hot aware , yet take no trouble for its detection , as it ' * would not be genteel to interferey ** 1
A STB am eb is being constructed for Captain Hayword , which will do the distance from . folkstone Har , bour to Boulogne ( twenty-seven miles ) in fine weather in two hours , so that the whole journey from London to Boulogne , and back may In favourable Circumstances be performed in fourteen hours and a half . The Shannon Commissioners have decided on making extensive excavations on tbe bed of the river , in several places in the counties of Roscommon , Longford , and Leitrim . ¦ . ' ¦" By an Imp ^ tuax vkase , published at St Petorsbxugh , all Jews residing within fifty worsts of tbe frontier lines of Prussia and Austria are ordered to proceed more into the interior . Those who possess habitations and property within that range are required to sell them withinltwo years . '
A letter from Copenhagen , of June 22 , states that on the Slat the premises of Mr . J . Holm , . in Chrjatiaflshavn , were struck by . lightning . The premises were fullof combustibles , ion which the water had but little effect ; among them were many thousand tons of edala . The firemen happHy ' succeeded in saving the laboratory of tbe artillery , to which , a buildiBg } s attached containing 75 cwt . of gunpowder . . A lbixbb from I ^ briz hrlngs the duaatroua account of an earthquake hayiug nearly , destroyed the whole of the town of Khbf , lietween fee liake of Urh ( a and Persia , by which upwards of a thousand people perished . Th © . inhabitants of Tabria had also been alarmed by frequent and violent shocks . , ; t : MptLE . Lenobmand , the celebrated fortune-telier , died yesterday , at Paris , aged 72 . She ieavea a fortune « f about 500 , 000 f ., and has tut otheriheir -than a nephew , at present in the army .-r-FrencAjwpcr .: v .
: How to makb Lerchkb BiTB .--The leech which it isintended to apply is to be thrown intoasaucer containing fresh beer , and is to be left there till it begins to be quite lively . When it baa moved about in the vessel for a few monients , it is to be quickly taken put and applied . This method will rarely disappoint expectation ; and even dull leeohea j and those which have been used , not long before , willdotlreir duty . It will be Iseen with astonishment bow quickly they bite . —Medical Gazette .
#M£F ,Rts! Mavu&Menx*
# m £ f , rts ! MavU&menX *
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- ^ HOUSE OF COMMONS . —Friday , June SG .
The amendments qt the Lords to the Northampton and Peterborough Rail Way Bill were agreed to . On the motion of Mr . Qteeixe , Chairman of Committees , Mr . Thomas Clwke , solicitor , was called to the bar , and stated that he had been agent for the Marquis of Townshend for the test twenty years , and that the Marquis had approved of ^ he Totf&sbind Peerage Bill now passing through tha House »*« f Legislature . On another motion made by Mr . Greene relative to the
Bill , the Earl of Leicester ( evidently labouring under emotion ) asked the House for time to bring forward the evidence in his own defence , land expressed his belief that there was more at the bottom of the transaction than had appeared by the evidence . Mr . 8 . . Wortley , tfcho introduced the Bill , assured the Noble Leid that there was no disposition to hurry forward the Bill j and that any applicatioa he might make in Committee would be listened to in a apirit of the most perfect fairness . [ Mr . F . Berkeley gave notice that when the Indoaura BUI came again before the House he should move that it should not apply to any lands within ten miles of London or within fiVe miles of any other town . -
In answer to a question from- Mr . Aglionby , Sir James Graham said a cpmmuoic&tlen had been made bj the Chancellor of the Exchequer to the Poatmast « r-General , calling his attention tio the Act for the Registration of Voters , and the necessary order , both with respect ta objections and notices of claims , bad been prepared by the Post-offiee , anil all the necessary operations would be in force this day .
THE FACTORIES BILL . Mr . B . Hawes begged to ask the Right Hon . Baronet , the Secretary of State for th « Heme Department , a question relating to tbe Factories Education Bill . It was generally understood , that when the Right Hon . Gentleman struck but the clauses relating to education , be left education precisely in the same state in the factory districts , as It was underline old law . What he wished to ask the Right Hon . Baronet was whether or not , In the clauses relating to ) education still standing in the bill , there was any new matter ; and whether they extended beyond that of giving « to the Privy Council a power of appointment of fnsjiectors ? , Sir James Graham said the Honourable Gentleman
had been so obliging as to give , him notice of his intention to ask this question ; but in doing so the Honourable Gentleman had paid , him ] ( Sir James Graham ) an unmerited compliment , in supposing that it was in his power , by any explanation tie could give , " to make the matter more Intelligible than the bill itself setfotth . The whole of tho bill relative ! to education- was comprised in toar clauses , the 28 ttt and the 31 « t fnclaaive . Mr . Hawes said that very ] considerable misapprehension existed out of debts , as to the tendency of the clauses retained ; and he thought it would not only tend to the convenience of the House , but to-the public itself , if the Right Honourable * Gentleman would enter into a brief explanation of these clauses as they now stood . .
Sir J . Gbahah believed that , as tbe law existed , and as he proposed it to stand , it would be very much the same . At the present time , those who , were subjected to the compulsory law were persons between the ages of nine and thirteen ; It . was proposed to reduce the age from nine to eight At present ckildreu were liable to work in factories for eight hours , and to be educated at any period during the twenty-four hours . It -was now proposed that the children BheuW only work b ! x hours and a half each day ; aaii that they should not work both , in tb © forenoon and the afternoon ; but that the six bouts and a half should either be in the forenoon or in the afternoon , arid that inlflve days out of seven there should be education for three hours , either in the forenoou on in the afternoon . By tbe present law , no
notice was taken aa to the place where the education was given , or as to the system of instruction that was adopted . Now , it watt proposed by the present bill that tbe Privy Council should have tbe power to appoint Inspectors to visit all the schools by which certificates were granted ; and on receiving a report from the inspecters aai to the lncoQvenience |> f the place , or aa to any . objection in the method of education pursued , the Privy Council were empowered to netify to tha schoolmaster the defect so reported ; and unless within three months that defect should bet remedied , the Privy Council vrculd have tha power jof stopping the grant made to the school . He believed he had now stated exactly the extent of the alterations proposed , without omitting anything of the least importance .
Oa the order of the day for going into Committee of supply , - j Mr . HUME rose to move resolutions , importing that tbe pension of £ 21 , 000 a year paid to the Duke of Cumberland ought fo be discontinued while he continues to be K'ug of Hanover . No one would be more opposed than himself to any breach of public faith : but no such breach would follow from the step he now piopoBed . He referred to the Acts of Parliament on which the pensions of the JRoyal Dukes depend ; and ha argued , from the language of the enactments , that the provision' was originally intended to cease in any , case where i ^ was no longer wanted for the maintainance of its object as a member of the English Royal Family . On the occasion of the | ate grant to the Princess Augusta of Cambridge , the popular charaoter of ber father was insisted on ; ba would now / on the ground of unpopularity , withhold the public money
from the Duke of Cumberland ! But his main objection was , that the Duke was now an independent Sovereign ; for he thought the money of tha English people ought not to be placedj at tbe disposal of a foreign power , who might employ it against their interests . He had received a paper from several working men , showing that this money would maintain 1 , 050 families , and that the exportation of-lt was tno withdrawal of so much from thejcipital which should employ British labour . The King of Belgium bad voluflfcarily given np the enjoyraeht of his pension ; the King of Hanover ought to be in no better Ritnation Moat censurable had , been tUa conduct of the Duka of Cumberland in 1835 with respect to Orange lodges , which he , a ' Field Marshal of England , had continued to encourage among the troops , in disobedience to the orders of the Horse Guard * . He ought to have been , brought to a court-martial for that . The Orangemen ) took a stci-efc oath—an illegal tbipg , for which poor
men , seeking only a rise of wagesi had been tried and punishsd . } Mr , WIU . IAMS seconded the motion . There were now three 5 . vereign Princes living upon tho English taxes—tbe ICing of Henover , tb ' e King of Belgium , and " the Duke of Mecklenburgh Strelltz . These , and the like burdens , Were the causes of the ^ present paupcnani . , , j . . Sir R . Peel considered that it woujd be inconsistent with the good faith of Parliament to withdraw this grant . He thought- that the subject of thai Orange lodges bad been somewhat unfairly infatpduaed aad referred to the proceedings which took place in Parlianient upon that Bnl 4 ect in 1835 , fhcludinr a letter " from
tha Duke to Lord J . Russell , then jreadty that Noble Lord t » the Mound ,, from which ifc ; appeared thatihis Royal Highness , on . learning , his IMajest /' fl pleaaurej had taken immediate steps toward '' the ' dissolution of the lodgel Parliament in 1831 ' Tvhen'it guaranteed thi « pension , must hava : beea Weil « w « r » that the Doke of Catabarl&nd was likely to beepme ^ ing of Hanover ; for the Dukes of Yort and Kent were ( hen dead , and there was ' little probability that BarigWilliam wouldhave a son . Oh tiro former occasions when this attempt had been made by Mr . Hume , Parllameqt had refused to interfere ; , and those refusaUj were , { substantial confirmations of the grant . ' " * -
Mr . Waluace complaineil that tbe Duke had tefused to be examined before a committee of the House of . Commons on the subject of tbe Orange Lodges . He ipoke of the Duke in term * of general diBparagement . 1
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Mr . Ferrand asked , who had made thiB motion ? Why . the member who obtained nis first seat in Parliament through the dnflugnce of ; the Dake » at Wey-a niouthf He would leave Mr . Huma to his ooascieacs ; if ho had one The Orangemen bad been calumniated , and now Ireland ; was in the hands of trait ^ lS . The Oraugeaien would stand by their Queen , when the selfish views of their opponents would be plainly discerned , ' , ' . ; . .. ' ;" .. Mr . CVBULLER , in supporting this motion , proceeiled on no ground of hostility to th « King of Hanover : '
put be construed the words ofthe Legislature as intending the grant merely ^ for the support of a aiemyr of theSRoyal family as suc h , Gonsldetfag the inability of the Crown to provide tor its children , he regarded the nation as in ' locd parentis to them ; but what parent would strip himself to enrich a child who had coineintd a largo fortune froin anotbei ' quarteir ? It wai not wise to ptesa tbe people too hardly upan auch a 8 ubj « ct : they were ¦ willing" to maintain Hlei * own Royal family ; bnt If suchgrauta aa 1 he » e were forced upoa them , they would look more rigorously into the whole subject *
Sir Howard Docgias supported the claim of the King of Hanover . Captain Berkeley saw no greater beach of-faith in withdrawing this pension , than in discontinuing the title of the widows of naval officers to the pensions which they could formerly claim . Mr , Ferrand had said Ireland was in the bands of traitors : he himself had supposed it to be . in tbe hands of Her Majesty ' s Ministers . The House then
divided—For Mr . Hame ' 3 motion .,, 91 Against .. 197 Majority against it 106 Monday Jolt 3 . Mr . Villieus presented a petition from the land * owners , farmsrs , &n < i inhabitants of Kent , agreed to at a meeting on Penenden-heath , for a repeal of the corn * Iawa Mr . Ferrand presented a petition from 26 , 000 thread-work knitters of the counties of Nottingham , Derby , and Leicester , complaining of the suffering to which they were subjected by the effects of machinery-, and gave notico that be -woTild bring it under tho notice of the House at an estfy day . ¦ Tbe Norfolk island Bill was read a second time . Mr . BiiBWiTT gave notice that he would on Tuesday ask her Majesty ' s Ministers whether theDuke of Wellington was in the political service of tha Crown , subject to Ministerial responsibility . The House went into committee on tbe Irish Arms
Bill , Lord Clements vindicated his motives in resisting the progress of the Bill . It was a penal measure ; and every hoar , nay , every minute , in obstructing its passage , was so much additional liberty to Ireland . < The House then went into committee , beginning with the ninth clause , which had been postponed on Thursday night last , on account of the ambiguity of its phraseology . Tha Government now proposed what was practically a new clause , aa the phraseology was entirely reconstructed . Lord John Russell , Mr . Moore O'Ferrall , and Mr . Pigott . dwelt on the fact that , notwithstanding tha anger which had been manifested on th , e part oCtae Government and its supporters , ' on Thursday night , they had now substantially admitted that they had bees in tbe wrong , and practically confessed that tha Bill was clumsily constructed , thereby justifying the pertinacious opposition whlck bad been given to it .
Mr . Roebuck objected that according to the forms of tbe House , the clause must be postponed to tha end of the bill , as it was substantially a new one . Tbe Chairman decided that it was not substantially a new clause , but an amendment of the existing one . Mr . Roebuck told him that this was a point not for the decision of the Chairman , but of the committee . . Lord John Russell eaid it was a matter of convenience , on which strict rule need not ba scrupulously adhered to . After considerable discussion , there was a division , when the clause was carried by 128 to 69 . ' The 10 th clause was agreed to ; but the II th clause provoked a long discussion , with several divisions .
Mr . Morgan John O'Conneli ,, Sir Denhah Norrets and other members , assailed the Attorney General for Ireland , who seemed Incapable of understanding , or explaining the meaning of a BUI , for which , on the part of the Government , he was responsible . At last , after a tough straggle , through every sentence , and the introduction of several amendments , the 1 lth clause wasordered to " stand part of the Bill ; '' The 12 th clause , which enacts the penalty for keeping arms without license , after an amendment , to which the Government acceded , was carried .
Here the further progress of the Bill was suspended ; and after disposing of seme other business / the House adjourned .
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London Cohn Exchangk , Monday , Jdxt 3 rd . — The stands being scantily supplied , Epglish Wheat was brisk , at au advance on last Monday ' s quotations of from Is to 2 s per quarter . The best qualities of Foreign Wheat commanded Is per ? quarter more money . The value of other kinds was supported . Barley at full pxioes . Superfine Ware Malt was a turn higher ; in other kinds only a moderate business was done . Oats at a rise of 6 d per quarter * Bean ? and Peas were in a steady demand . Towcmade Flour was unaltered , bat ship marks were Is higher .
London Smithfield Market , Monday , July 0 . —There was , comparatively speaking , a scanty attendance of both London and country buyers , most of whom manifested much disinclination to purchase Beasts , except on lower terms . However , the primeat Scots were taken somewhat more freely than of late , and the improvement noticed in the currencies on Friday last , df 2 d per 81 bs / was supported ; other kicda at unvaried quotations . The Mutton trade was extremely inactive , yet the best Downs sold at
prices quite equal to those noted on tma day se ' nnight , or from 4 s 2 d to 4 s 4 d per 81 bs ; in other kinds t thevalue was with difficulty supported , fox Lamb 3 the demand was very dull , at an abatement on last Monday ' s quotations of quite 2 d per 8 Ibs , the highest figure not exceeding 5 s per 81 bs . Calves at an improvement in their rates of from 2 d to 4 dper 81 bs , the top figure reaching 53 per 81 ba . Pigs at full prices—viz ., from 83 2 d to 4 s per 8 ibs . During the past week ten cowa havo been imported into Londoa from Rotterdam .
BoROtjQfc and Spitalfields . —Sirioe onr last report the demand for old potatoes has been dull , at drooping prices . The heat Scotch reds 80 s to IOO 3 per ton . New Potatoes 6 s tolQs per cwt . Forergn . potatoes met a slow demand at 4 s to 6 s per cwfc . Tallow . —The depression in this market still continues , both on the spot and for forward delivery . The arrivals and deliveries for the past month have been about equal to the same period last year . The advices received from St . Petarsburgh this morning have a downward tendency . Town Tallow is plentiful at 40 a net cash . " Bobough Hop Mabkb * . —The valne of most descriptions of Hops has suffered an abatement , during the past' month , of nearly or quite £ 1 per cwt . in the duty there is no betting , bat . < we estimate it at £ 155 , 000 .
Wool Makket . —The puhh p sales of Colonial Wool were brought to a conclusion on Tuesday last . Out of the quantity offered , viz . 16 , 000 packages , about . 13 , 200 actually found buyers , yet the prides ruled about Id per lb under tbe previous sale ' s rates . By private contract , only a moderate business ia doing , at late quotations . Manchester Corn Market , Saturday , JvlY' I . —We have experienced a steady demand for the choice marks and superfine qualities of fresh manufactured Flour during the week , and , stocks being in but limited compass , factors were enabled to realize the full previous currency . The inquiry for . Qafc 3 has
been active . The arrivals of Wheat and Flour coastwise are to a fair extent ; and those of Oatmeal and Flour from Ireland continue liberal .- From the interior the supplies of Flour do not exceed the current demand for the article . At onr market this morning a firmer feeling was exhibited , and > the late quotations of Whaat were fully supported . Flour was in fair request , and , in some instances ^ au improvement on the rates of this day jso ' nnjgbi Was obtained . There were but few Oats on ealejaud rather higher prices were demanded for thiB aitiele . Oatmeal , on the contrary , w& 3 saleable only in retail quantities , without material change ia value .
Liverpool Corn Mabkbt , Monday , July 3 . — A few cargoes of Wheat have arrived from the knghsh eoask&nd 6 , 840 i loztis of Oatmeal from , foeland ; but . the week ' s imports of grain , « fto . are , on the whole , of a moderate , amount . To-day the Atmosphere aas ^ een warm , but for thcee dayapreyious we had a yetora of cold temperature , and , influenced at this season by the state of the weather , holders of Wheat again showed more firmness ; the millers « nd dealers , to © ( hajving ¦ , worked .- themselyeB bara ; of 8 took > i , were , freer buyers yeg teniay , than for some weeks Jbcfore , and the mariet &r that . grain closed
With a moderately fair quantity sold , and aa advance of ldto 2 d per bushel on last week ' s prices , generally . FJoar hwalsomet abeUeraale . Thesoajfcityof-all kinds of Oats i » a rather enhanoed their value , thongh the demand for them haa been limited ^; a few choice Scotch : have brought 2 $ ; lOd , good , 2 b 8 d to 2 ^ ; : 2 s 6 d per 45 tps hap been paid for a lot oft fine -Irish Q tealing , and some of the importejsi arer askjDg rather over this rate . Oatmeal has beea in moderate request only , at 209 to 203 6 d . per load . Barley , of which the quantity in thiB ^ market ia very small , must be quoted 2 d per 601 bs dearer . Beana and Peas are as last noted . ' ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦¦ - _ ¦ - .- ¦ ¦• . ¦ ¦ - ¦
" 'LlVBBtOOL CATTiB MAHfeET , ' BfONDit , Jtttt 5 . —The supply of Cattle at markelr i ^ iy haa been much the Bame as last weefe ^ both withrespeotto piice and quality . Beef 5 d to ( SdVMuttoii S 3 *« H& % Lambs 5 £ d io 6 } A per Ib . Nnmber of Cattle at market : —Beasta 908 , Sheep and Lambs 8 , 425 .
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3 BE PHYSIOLOGICAI , QUESTION : THE MEDICAL DISCGSSIDS HELD AT FKAMLISGHAM , SUFFOLK , Mxsm 29 , 1843 , BETWEEN J > b . P , B . Jssss , AND "Whliam Jeaefkesos , Eso ^ Scegeos . ( THE CHAIiEKGER ) OX THE NATUBB ASD USES <) F ALCOHOL . —London , Brittain , ll , Paternoster Bow . "We owe some spolegy to ihe taloiled snd inSefetieabhr philanferopw author of ihis Teport , for
havmg permitted It to remain so long unnobced . 33 » fectis , ibat 4 n ihBhuny and "worry of husiness it had been laid aside and forgctten : a fate » hich tre irnst it -mil not experience at thelaads of any of onrrcaderB ; though we ^ dooht not that ihe doughty 2 flr . Jesnxeson would -mHingrjforget ether that the report was in existence , or thai the discussion had erer taken place . There is inthislittlchooka mass of physiological facts , evidence , and data , "With which every man ought to be acquainted ; every jnan ftnght therefore to knj ssd Tssd it .
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Yesterdav , a veryfnll meeting of the magistrates of the county of Pembroke was held at Haverfordvest . ¦ i . Colonel Owen , Yice-JLieutenant of the county , took the chair , and the following magistrates were prasest : —Messrs . John PhilUpsi of Wllliainetone , John Lort Thillips , John Allen Lloyd Phillipps , Henry Leac ' u , c ^ aiimsn of . the quarter aewions , Jonathan Paul , John Hill Harris , John Edwards , W . 3 . Swan , James Mark Child , William Jones HeathSeld , George Kuach , C . Mathia » > James Propeit , Charles Bowen , Joshua Painter , George Rowe , William Phillips , of Brida ' shill , and the Bavs . G . Harris , Canon of , St . David ' s , F . Leech , John Pogh , Thomas Phelpa Martin , James Junes , tc . The Mayor of Haverford-west , and the two other boronghmagistrates&lso attended .
The Chairman commenced- by reading the Secretary of State ' s letter , which stated that inconsequence of informatiun -which the < 3 K > vernment had ' received , directions had been given to : Colonel Lov © to proceed to Wales , and take the command ot the troops there , and exhorting the magistrates to a strict discharge of their duties , by issuing -warnintfl against all offendera , the Government having placed such troops at their disposal as they ihought * uffici « nt to preserve the peace . It also expressed th « readiness of the Government to offer such a reward as would lead " to conviction . Tbe
cbalnn&n' then required the opinion'ef the meeting as to -what vras necewary tolbe Sons , an A after some consultation , It vra ^ decided that the southern districts of the county were in such : a disturbed ^ tate that it was necessary to have a reinforcement of troops , to" be stationed at Narberth as the most " central place * and that -a communication to that effect should be immediately made to the Home . Secretary . . , ^ The Magistrates then issoed an order for ' the assembling of the Yeomanry Cdvaby , tobe statlsned at Narber th' until relieved by some regular troops .
Tarions re » edies were } also suggested , tome magistrates recommending that the . pensioners should be called out , and' placed under the command of the Adjutant of the Militia ; " and a manifesto was ordered to be d ? awn out , -stating th » t the magistrates were prepared to heat and to redress any real grievances hi their power . i - . At length one of the Magistrates said— " Gentlemen , —A number of remedies has been suggested , but I have not heard one observation as to tha real evil , which is the poperty and distress of the country , and which has ARISEN I » H . OSl HIGH BENTS , INCREASED AJfD INCREASING TITHES , EXORBITANT POOB AND HIGHWAY KATES , AND JSXCESSiyE TAXATION / while ihe depression upon . Agricultural Produce is such as ttyptdit totally out of ihe jxrwer of any man to meet these demands . " This caused a general sensation ; and the magistrate continued— " I call upon every gentleman present to lay his hand upon his heart andeay if such be not the case . "
This matter , however , was sot entered upon , and the meeting separated . I shall offer" no remark , upon this , bnt am bound to say that I see nothing but distress in the country . Tha farmers , instead of living as we were used to see them , live and eat with their servants , and upon such simple food as barley bread and ! buttermilk , flummery and potatoes . . '; Begelly , just below Narberth , is in the centre of eight parishes , ' which are all dependant upon tbe Anthracite Collieries . ' 2 have myself personally inspected those collieries , and have seen at one of them , that of the
Messrs . Ppcock , of St . Bride's Wharf , London , I should say upwards of from 8 , 000 to 12 , 006 tons of anthracite lying on the ground spoiling from the depressed state of tbe trade . ; There are others here—the Kilgetty , Broadmore , Merton , andHeancastle Collieries —similarly situated . The proprietors must be suffering immense loss from tbe deterioration occasioned to this 8 pec 5 efl of coal by its lying exposed to toe weather ; and the proprietors deserve : high praise for spiritedly continuing tbe works under existing difficulties ; for were they stopped , I fear that the result to this portion of the county , which is nd * r peaceful and happy , would be lamentable .
Carmarihin , Saturday Night , July 1 . 7 « u have no doubt in town been alarmed by-a statement published in the Standard , stating that there had been a battle at Newcastle Emlyn between the troops and the mob , in -which the ' soldiers were worsted . Hating read the statement ; I happily ara enabled fo give it a complete , contradiction ; although it contains many things that are true , such , for instance , as the death of the soldier Seams , and is very ingeniously put together . Itfs perfectly tru % that the Dragoon ' s did match to Newcastle Emlyn on that day , and that one of the men -was drowned , but it-was accidentally while bathing , as I have already , informed you in a previous report , and I rfjonid not nave again alluded Tto iJ 5 , but 1 ortHeimyressioii - ^ hieh must have 'been madehy'tee report in . the < S"io » dar < t 6 uca an account having gained admission
into its columns is , however , only another instance . of . tbe propriety of a iwyer ' relyiBgjior its Inifbrmatioh * upon its ace * Hlad « porla «» % lonaiwho Ue&g upon ^ Beipot / and responsible for thaie conduct , will of course take care not to furnish , any statemenbi'which they-have not w » a ascertained to be correct . In ifwt , tbere bu' been no ceUMon betwoen ' the "RebeccaiteJ and the miatary since tte attack at OarmaWhen dn'the Monday , although the woiki of gate destruction eontinues unabated , and is indeed carried on every night jwiih greater effrontory than ever : ihey are > however , too-wary , and have tbehrbutscouta tod well posted , to be caught , to which must be added that not a single person in the country wouli give informaaon . I can-Tersed -with a very respectable : man to-day , irbo is aware of many of their doings , and knows their person *; ha told m » that he bad persuaded them not to
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r , tiOU 5 E OF LORpS .- ] -FKiDAT JtwE 30 . PatitioQB were presented by Lord' Lyttleton . lord Hath ^ rtonj and Lord Waarncliffd , against the Charitable Pawn-office BilL j Lord Garbeny presented Ja ' petition from Cork , against the Repeal of tho UaiOn , and espresaed a hope that her Majesty ' s Government would adopt means to pot down the present agitation . At tba reqoeat ot the Commons , leave'was given to the Duke of W « Mingtou to ! gW 6 evidence before the Saipwwcka Committee , as to the best mode of preventing vessels from shipwreck . '
The Eartof Aberdeen moved the second reading of-the Apprehension of Ofifekera 9 iU ; in confowbity with' treatiai entered into between this country and France andf the United States . Theobject of the Bill was to detect and bring to punishment persons guilty of offences against life andproperty . Lord Brougham , Lord Cottenham , and Lord Campbell spoke in favour of the Bill , which was read a second time , and the House adjourned .
MONDAT , J . DXY 3 . Tha Dake of Richmond presented a petition to tbe House of Lords from tha pawnbrokers of Liverpool against the Pawh-offices BUL ] The Marquis of Clanrlcarde gave notice that on Monday he would make a motion relative to the unconstitutional'dismissal of magistrates by the Irish Lord Chancellor . ! j On the motion of Lord Campbell , the Law of Libel Bill was read a first time . [ The Archbishop of Dublin gave notice that he would
present this evening a petition from upwards of two hundred membera of the Established Church in Ireland on the subject of Church [ Government On tbe motion of the Earl of D&Ihousie , tha Apprehension of Offenders Bill was read a third time and passed . ' 3 ' On the motion that the Church of Scotland Benefices Bill be committed , Lord Campbell moved as an amend ment , that tba objections made to a presentee by the parishioners must be of a spiritual nature , or founded on physical defects , disqualifying him from a due discharge of his duty . | The question led to a lengthened diseosBion . The House , after considering the Bill in Committee , adjourned at half-past eleven jo ' clcxjk .
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Untitled Article
THU N . ORTHBBN . giUlRi ^ 3 li— ¦ _ u ' * ~ ' - ''" ' — — '—~—^— -- ' | |^ . i __^ J * j _ ¦' . ' _ ¦ ¦ laiTTr ¦ __^_^__ ^ ^ TO ><>< 4 .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 8, 1843, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct940/page/3/
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