462 
Hewett, G. Henley upon-Thames 
Femi J. Long Acre 
ewett, T. Carlisle 
Hirst, T. Marsh, Yorkshire 
Holmes, T. and Co, St. Martin’s- 
in-the-Fields 
Howard, R. and Co. Mitcham 
Hooper, P. and T. Bedford, Bar- 
tholomew-place 
Honghtons G. Herenles buildings, 
ambeth 
Hoyle, R. Newcastle-npon-Tyne 
Hughes, M. B, and J. Horton, 
udley, Worcestershire 
Jennings, C. Portsea 
Kay, T. Prince’s square, Ratcliffe 
Highway . 
Kemp, W. Bath 
King, J. Tonbridge 
Law, W. Copthall Chambers, 
Throgmorton-street 
Latham, T. D. and J. Parry, De- 
vonshire 
Latter, J. Windsor 
Leach, H. Bristol 
Leigh, T. Manchester 
Leeds, T. Gerards, Cheshire 
Leppingwell, K. Croydon 
Lower, G. Commercial-buildings, 
Mincing-lane 
Lenn, T. Jerusalem Coffee-house 
aitlund, D. New Bridge-street 
Major, J. W. Frome Selwood 
M‘Leod, J. C, St. Paul’s Covent 
Garden, and J. Jeffray, North 
Britain 
Mackenzie, C. Caroline-street, 
Bedford-square 
Marshall, J. Gerrard-street 
Mayor, C. Somerset-street, Port- 
man-square 
Mawdsley, H. Ormskirk 
Mains, T. Barton-apon-Humber, 
and R. Nicholson, Glamford 
Briggs 
Millard, S. Gloucester 
sais te P. Charlotte-street, 
loomsbury-square 
Murray, W. Pall Mall court 
Nicholls, N. Holborn-bridge 
Nicholl, E. Henie! Hempstead 
Noble, M. Battersea 
Political Affairs in November. 
Noble, BR. Clarke’s-terrace, 8t, 
George’s East 
Ockley, V. Feriington, Norfolk 
Osler, J. Truro, Cornwall 
Palmer, S. Bourton-on-the-Wa- 
ter, Gloucestershire 
Paradise, J. Newcastle-st. Strand 
Pardon, G. Plymouth 
Parker, A. Cheltenham 
Peyton, W. G. Upper Thames-st. 
Peritpierre, E.South-street, Fins- 
bury-square 
Phillips, R. Ashburnham, Sussex 
Player, J. B. Bristol 
Porthonso, 1’. Wigton, Cumber- 
land 
Pothonier, F. Corporation-row 
Portlock, R. Andover 
Ene, W. Lawrence Pountney- 
ane 
Preston, J. Skipton, Yorkshire 
Pycock, J. Doncaster 
Richardson, G, Mecklenburgh- 
square, and T. Vokes, Glou- 
cester-street, Queen-square 
Robinson, G, byl al 
Rowbottam,W. Oldham, Lancash. 
Royle, J. F. Pall Mall 
Racher, S. Old South Sea house 
Sanders, J. W. Newcastle-upon- 
ne 
Sandford, W. and J. Box, Salford 
Samson, T. Lynn 
Schwieso, J. C. and F. Grosjean, 
Soho-square 
Scarrow, T. and J. Carlisle 
Schbesinger, M. B. Church-court, 
. Clement’s-lane 
Seager, S. P. Maidstone 
Serrols, J. Fenchurch-street 
Seward, A. Salisbury 
Shirley, R. Butklersbury 
Sidwell, R. Bath 
Simpkins, J. Store-street, Bed- 
ford-square 
Skinner, O. Gorleston, Suffolk 
Somervill, J. London Wall 
Spencer, T. Gray’s Inn-lane 
Stabb, T. and J. Preston, Tor- 
nay, Devonshire, and J. S. 
russa, Botolph-lane 
[Dee. 1, 
Spitta, C. L. and Co, Lawrence 
Pountney-lane 
Sykes, J. and J. and W. Redfearn, 
Aldmondbury 
Tabrum, R,. and J. Barrow, Man- 
chester | 
Tarlton, J. and W. Smith, Liver- 
ped ’ 
Taylor, J. Leominster 
Thompson, H. and F. Moses, Ro- 
therhithe 
'rhomson, W. Manchester-build- 
ings, Westminster 
Thompson, J. and J. Newcastle- 
upon-Tyne 
Thornton, D. Kirkheaton 
Topham, C. Stourport 
eatin . Stangate-wharf, Lam- 
et 
Trood,E.Churchstanton, Devonsh. 
Tucker, J. H. Jermyn-street ~ 
Tuckett, P. D, and W. Bristol 
Turner, T. Stock Exchange 
Turner, R. Liverpool } 
Turner, W. and J. North Mold- 
green, Yorkshire 
Vincett, N. Northampton-place, 
Old Kent-road 
Ward, R. R. Maiden-lane, Buttle- 
bridge 
Walker, J. Nicholas-lane 
Wells, S. Middleton-garden, Pen- 
tonville 
Wells, J. Dunstew, Oxfordshire 
Wellington, J. jun. Chard 
Weech, S. Commercial-roud, Rat- 
cliffe-highway 
Williams, RK. H. F. and M.Wilson, 
Liverpool 
Williams, L. W. Fleet-street 
Wingate,J. Bathwick,Somersetsh. 
Wild, W. Sheffield 
Willey, W. Leicester 
Williams, P. jun. Knightsbridge 
Wood, W. Wimpole-street 
Wolff, J. and J. Dorville, New 
Bridge-street 
Wotherspoon, M. Liverpool 
Worrall, W. and R. Williamson, 
Liverpool 
Youden, S. Dover. 
POLITICAL AFFAIRS IN NOVEMBER. 
GREAT BRITAIN. 
——a 
ceeds conception. 
We call the atten- 
NS event of political consequence 
has characterized the month at 
home, unless we consider as such the 
neutral and pacific character which 
our agent at Verona has happily pre- 
served in the Congress. If this wise 
and necessary change in our councils 
did not precipitate the death of Castle- 
reagh, it may perhaps be regarded as 
a consequence ; and hence the change 
of Castlereagh tor Canning has proved 
auspicious to the welfare of Britain, 
and the happiness of the world. 
Considerable fluctuations have taken 
place in the funds during the month, 
arising from reports from Verona; and 
many active jobbers have been ruined. 
No change for the better has however 
taken place through the country, 
which, drained of circulation, and the 
means of local purchase, by taxes, rents, 
and assessments, for non-resident re- 
ceivers, exhibits a degree of domestic 
distress, which, we are assured, ex- 
tion of our readers to the first paper of 
this Number, which illustrates the 
proximate causes of this distress, by 
tracing the actual operation of the 
machinery of our social system. 
In the administration of the law 
during the month, the public have been 
surprised at the sentence passed on 
one Bridle, late keeper of Ilchester 
Goal; the charges against whom had 
led to the appointment of a commis- 
sion, on whose report he was first dis- 
missed, and then prosecuted by the 
Attorney-General. He was convicted 
of avery aggravated misdemeanor, in 
confining a prisoner in a damp cell, 
putting him in a strait-waistcoat, and 
applying a blister to his head by way 
of punishment! The exposure of such 
enormities, committed by whomsoever 
they might, and the difficulties of 
bringing this class of offenders to jus- 
tice, seemed to imply the necessity of 
an exemplary judgment; but, in con- 
sideration 
