234 



Smith, G. Nottingham, currier. 

 (Foster, Lawrence Pountney-place ; 

 Nuttall, Nottingham 



Smith, T. Bromley, sheep-salesman. 

 (Addison, Gray's-inn 



Sirley, J. East Peckham, baker. 

 (Bigg, Southampton-buildings 



Scott, W. Bristol, merchant. (Hicks 

 and Co., Bartlett's-buildings j Tan- 

 ner and Son, Bristol 



Sainter, W. Kingston-upon-Huli, 

 worsted-manufacturer. (Capes, 

 Gray's-inn ; Shearburn, Snaith 



Sainter, J. Snaith, worsted-manufac- 

 turer. (Capes, Gray's-inn j Shear- 

 burn, Snaith 



Smith, D. WaJham Green, stage- 

 coach-proprietor. (Willis, Sloane- 



Stephenson, J. R. Manchester, iron- 

 monger. ( Ellis and Co , Chancery- 

 Hampson, Manchester 



Smith, J. and J. Hutchinson, Liver- 

 pool, shipowners. (Chester, Staple- 

 inn ; Mallaley, Liverpool 



Thompson, N. Dartmouth, master- 

 mariner. (Wolston, FurnivalVinn ; 

 Wolston, Brixham 



Taylor, J. Kirby-Misperton, timber- 

 merchant. (Hicks and Co., Gray's- 

 inn ; Walker, Malton 



Thackeray, J. Manchester, cotton- 



Bankrupts. 



[FEB. 



spinner. (Ellis and Co., Chancery- 

 lane ; Hampson, Manchester 



Tidman, E. Birmingham, victualler. 

 (Heming and Co., Lincoln's-inn- 

 fields ; Bird, Birmingham 



Thatcher, W. Westminster, victualler. 

 (Glynes, Vine-street 



Tatton, J. H. Thames-bank, coal- 

 merchant. (Ivimey, Harpur-street 



Vandercom, T. Hampstead-road, 

 plasterer. (Farden, Great James- 

 street 



Williams, W. Bristol, iron-founder. 

 (Austen and Co., Gray's-innj Ar- 

 nold and Co., Birmingham 



Williamson, J. and T. Rishworth. 

 Keighley, worsted-spinners. (Daw 

 son and Co., New Boswell-court ; 

 Weir, Bradford 



Walker, J. Clehonger,miller.(Church, 

 Great James-street } Bellamy, 

 Hereford 



Walters, T. ]un. Cheadle, innkeeper. 

 (Barber, Fetter-lane J Brandon and 

 Co , Cheadle 



Watson, w. and T. Yeoman, jun. 

 Cliffe-cum-Lund, miller, (jaques 

 and Co., Coleman-street ; Wood 

 and Co., York 



Wildblood, S. Rayton, maltster. 

 (Ellis and Co., Chancery-lane j 

 Holden, Liverpool 



White, J. Bolton-upon-Dearne, inn- 

 keeper. (Taylor, John-street j Bad- 

 ger, Rotherham 



Wright, J. and J. Davies, Liverpool, 

 grocerc. (Taylor and Co., Temple ; 

 Miller, Liverpool 



Wood, J. Haddenham, baker. (Lo- 

 vell, Gray's-inn ; Nash, High Wy- 

 combe 



Wicks, P. Holloway-road, cheese- 

 monger. (Fisher, Walbrook-build- 

 ings 



Whitby, T. Liverpool, miller. (Ad- 

 lington and Co., Bedford-row ; 

 Parr and Co., Liverpool 



Wagner, G. and W. Chapman, Greek- 

 street, drapers. (Ashurst, New- 

 gate-street 



Wake, M. Wapping, anchor-smith. 

 (Brown, Mitre-chambers 



Weston, G. Lane End, Stafford, 

 earthenware-manufacturer. ( Hicks, 

 and Co., Bartlett's-buildings ^ 

 Brown, Hanley 



Yeoman, T. Siitton-upon-Derwent, 

 corn-Factor. (Jaques and Co , 

 Coleman-street j Wood and Co., 

 York 



Yates, C. Stafford, banker. (Dax 

 and Co., Lincoln's-inn-fields ; 

 Jones and Co., Staffordshire-pot- 

 teries. 



ECCLESIASTICAL PREFERMENTS. 



Rev. J. H. Watson, to the Rectory of Tydd St. 

 6iles, Cambridge. Rev. R. F. Jones, to the 

 Vicarage of Compton, Barks. Rev. J. P. Mar- 

 riott, to a Prebendal Stall in York Cathedral. 

 Rev. G. C. Rashleigh, to the Vicarage of An- 

 dover, Hants. Right Hon. and Rev. Lord W. 

 Russell, to the Rectory of Eastmanstead Chey- 

 neys, Bucks. Rev. M. C. Thompson, to the Rec- 

 tory of Woodstone, Huntingdon. Rev. E. R. 

 Thead, to the Rectory of Fletton, near Peter- 

 borough. Rev. W. Hicks, to the Rectory of 

 Stunner, Esses. Rev. C. Fisher, to the Rectory 

 of Culton, Suffolk.- Rev. G. Bonner/to be Minis- 

 ter of the New Suffolk Square Church, Chelten- 

 ham. Rev. R. Newcome, to the Rectory of 



Clocacnoc, Denbigh. Rev. P. Poore.to the Rec- 

 tory of Fyfield, Hants. Rev. R. Ward, to the 

 Rectory of Stanton, Norfolk. Rev. V. K. Child, 

 to be Domestic Chaplain to Earl Buchan. Rev. 

 H. J. Barton, to the united livings of Latton and 

 Eisy, Gloucester. Rev. J. Bramston, to the Vicar- 

 age of Great Baddow, Essex. Rev. J. Spur- 

 geon to the Rectory of Twyford, Norfolk. Rev. 

 H. Gipps, ,to the Vicarage of Corbridge, Nor- 

 thumberland. Rev.H. J.Todd, to the Prebend of 

 Husthwaite. Rev. W. Cuthbert, to .the Chapel- 

 ries of Bowtry and Austerfield. Rev. F. Cus- 

 tance, to the Perpetual Curacy of Rippenden, 

 Halifax. 



CHRONOLOGY, CARRIAGES, DEATHS, ETC. 



CHRONOLOGY. 



December 24. Exeter 'Change, the ancient 

 bazaar of London, totally demolished, and its site 

 added to widen that part of the Strand on which 

 it formerly stood. 



25. By news from Constantinople, dated, the 

 Blonde, Nov. 5, it appears that our ambassador 

 gave a grand entertainment on board that frigate, 

 to a party of 450 visitors, comprising all the prin- 

 cipal Turks, Franks, and Russians, with a num- 

 ber of Turkish and Frank ladies!!!* 



27. (Sunday!) The Solicitor-General paid a 



* Amongst the distinguished guests were a 

 number of Turkish nobleman (a thing nnprece- 

 dented in the annals of history), such as the Se- 

 raskier Pacha, a second person in the Turkish 

 empire ; the Capitan Pacha, High Admiral of the 

 Turkish navy ; Gazee L'Asker Hekim Pacha, or 

 Sultan's physician; Reis Effendi, Secretary for 

 Foreign Affairs ; Halil Pacha, Ambassador to 

 Russia ; Silektar Agasi, Sword Bearer to the Sul- 

 tan ; Abdulageit Effendi, Chief Surgeon, &c.,with 

 a number of naval and military officers. 



third visit to the Fleet prison, and remained, ex- 

 amining the Chancery prisoners, from about 11 

 A.M. untiU P.M. !!l* 



* Two of the prisoners, after a long incarcer- 

 ation in the Fleet, the one three years and-a-half, 

 and the other a much longer period, received their 

 discharge a few dayssince, through the instrumen- 

 tality of Sir Edward Sugden, who, in both cases, 

 had exerted himself greatly, and in one of them 

 paid j20 out of his own pocket. The name of 

 one of these prisoners is Measell, and that of the 

 other Butcher. Measell, shortly after his im- 

 prisonment, lost his wife, who died of a broken 

 heart, and some of their children followed her. 

 The tears trickled down the old man's cheeks as 

 he narrated his short and artless story. After her 

 death he had contrived to pick up a subsistence by 

 taking other prisoners to lodge in his room, and 

 supplying those who wanted, and could afford to 

 pay, with the luxury of a bedstead and a few 

 chairs in the cells of the Fleet!!! He has crawled 

 from his old habitation into the heart of the City 

 of Charities, whether to a dwelling or to the 

 streets we know not ; but this we know, that he 

 had not the means to pay his discharge fees, and 

 would have been detained on account of their 



