53 
1845.) THE NEWSPAPER. 
eo a 
pa se ae int ted a wish to withdraw his motion, griet ropolts anv its Vict mit 
tny 
sine all for the Sr ss aes some Mem- 
eed t it t A;riculiural Deputatior .—A number > KEG 
F bat i A consequen 
k the 2 Oppos ubmit 
isior gentlemen, and farmers, representing the agriculturists 
oi 
rs were allowed to convert their 
that if th 
| Birl 
cattle and sheep, they would be able to pro ‘oduce better 
y 
| meat, as the malt would create flesh as well as fat, and 
to meet the foreign i i 
or of this country, waited upon Sir Robert Peel, by appoint- 
c ment, on Saturday, and laid before him the present de- | i seha abh $ ape cahe pes 
irman re K icultural interest, urging its c aim |} mt gs ce upon the repeal of the on. 
Wore g tho Mr. Darby, M.P., for a Se sex, — that wool had 
p risen in value, by reason of the d of foreigners 
et iar mond, Marquess of Salisbury, Earl of Essex, Earl of B long irte FA ponie character, gen. of men d 
the ARTA March, Lord Beaumont, Mr. Bankes, M.P.; Mr. Bram- itis pu ntry fo or ies: se Siemsintion; aon 
e SURRY | ston, M.P.; Mr. Darby, M.P.; Mr. Denison, MEPs; ese tg i EAE 
the stamp duties in | Mr. Du Pré, M.P.; Mr. Miles, M.P.; Mr. Newdegate, which M Mr. Baker agreed, by stating that the freak 
e fe Be passed in the fith year peh bn T T x n ME: | did not object to hs introduction oe raw materials, 
ets me resolution havin ro Ees DU bn Troliope, Bart, i 3 embracin the 1l bou of this he: 
bht prg art. pro s d to address the ho rt Sir John Tyrrell, Bart, M.P. ; Mr. Wodehouse, M.P. ; Batten - peenis ee reser e 
sor Trent aa cboundiag necessarily in calcu- r. H. G. Andrews, Somerset ; Mr. R. Baker and Mr. ntof lal an al 
e iria N EAA é ws Sieg heed aie a ri an vem Essex; Mr. shige ee ig 7 ; S p ener tnawneehs it had the an cp displacing the 
ime, in o o allow a reduction of | a, eh ma pnia ne pari in eo Hil. rene of the English producers. Tn reply to another 
Py SODE, 3 ; : ques stion of Sir R. Peel, as = He — of — was 
oduce nse- 
ram 
ditch, Salop; Mr. Hudson, Norfolk; Mr. S. Jonas 
ri 
c p; d 
Cambridgeshire; Mr, S. Mills, South Wilts ; Mr. Mose 
ey, East Sufolk ; Mr. Rbdwell, West Suffo es ir. 
Oakley, Herts; Mr. Paian d a W. Bennett, Bed- 
reven 
3 them, thet zt ht hon. bart. said he thought 
sctly 8 safe Br stating, par on the 5th wath 
sù clear surplas revenue of a 
f price, pes was ar yom re- 
muner: atiog. Mr. Turner, of _Uppington, near Exeter, 
folldwed by stating that hes 
. Shatkell 
shire; Mr. R. Smith, Rutland a ee evenson, Linco la- 
ir D Mr. Wa 
took a ara of the different 
the w d 
out sa Property p> T uke of Richmond 
3 pened the” ‘object of the“depu > i ‘stated that 
Duke of Buckingham fully arias gee ge the objects bee 
sentim ents of the deputa ation, and w i have attended 
} 
Sir R. Peel then said thik e should readily 
an co 
Mr. Bake ker, of edhe having è appoin nted a the 
. J. Allnutt, ‘Berk from, a shire in Stha same week unless he felt the im- 
por ortance f the subject, and the wish he had to inform 
. Warsop, H gt age existing among the 
j farmers of t was sorty to iaform him 
that nearly aT, the small occupiers, as tenant 
farmers, were ina state of insolvency ; and the remainder, 
with — of D who hold large occupations, would 
very soon be in the same state, unless some measures 
er as to ‘avert the distress complained of- ne, 
I tion, he was sorry to observe many 
e deputation had to make. rea who were not attached to their farms by the 
ties of a large family, oF other oh reumstances, were 
rpations taljve vd 
committee to open the proceedings, 
ing, that from the year 1842, prices of agricultui ral pro- 
= ce ar d fallen to an alarming extent, and that in conse- 
the fa armers Were unable to contend with the e ex- 
qien iie 
remnants of their eer $ whilst others, w 
families to employ, continued to farm on a maaria 
their live a bax increasin na co quantity of grain an- 
fii 
Ea 
| 
nesday. | * z 
mmittee of Ways | Upon t the Government share in any re missio n of 
zL ros@gamidst | taxation. Amon shores were the Duke o f Rich- 
|E 
al 
ere entertain he co 
ly g ssening their resources, which effect 
s further increas dor bya paaien of their labourers, 
from an inability to pay — For his own part, he 
worthy of this which a attention had of late been gies directed 
Her $ 
as not E fateh Á 
r 
ly yga 25 years ; wae $i 0 i y 
i been 1 
the i oak 
ant (loud ee from Mies pend fat j uname it at a far pais increase of 
ded to ask for one extra shil- | would oyed; zpen E 
try amounted to 95,500 men, be the case if actually ompi ng ser shag 
it could be reduced ta y would incur p e 
i ration of the poor law 
ast t rn: 
per annum aped for ” hai z 100 acres of fair land he oc- 
cupied than for the precedi nes. His onl 
y 
by | sope was that the rig Pep a n. baronet would haan ther 
ers 
into his serious consideration, a and g diggs far- 
ion i g ope 
as not too large, since torty- way of A, he pate Mt actually em 
y- It was not intend-|1Qs5,. and thus the tenan Aua had found it their 
r than sufer them to be 
re- 
‘vould be of the | Policy to employ them 
>. the medi mie 2 the parish 
other way that the Government peor them. 
Mr. Smith, of Rutland, gone the satemens of 
adverting 
6.600002. With respect to | relievi ed a throug 
u to phish 
wa: 
ja to the distressed state of 
graz zier, from the so price of meat, ested by 
made, and entered largely into 
ast year, and thi Ve tha 
e of the increased and increasing mag- 2 3 
isincrease was not for the pur- | P ducing a direct charge of pmd of 180k t to TE foreign ‘competition. Mr. Bennett, 
and colonies. He | 100 acres; that otl 
Ses Of war, but to o protect British. commerc 
efore proposed an increase in the navy of 4009 oe sty a great extent, and whilst these things were e operating 
explanations of the: diferent burthens the agriculturists 
of the importance 0 of are 
of whom would amount to about 184,000}. He di tan 
would cause any jealousy to 
i duce had diminished 25 to 30 per cent.} and that as Tent 
ddressed 
of the malt tax, & eral other g 
Sir Robert Peel. on n the pea ag and the meeting sepa- 
| tke tha mE. ai the courtesy with which 
he m rected ge og 
Wilful Destruction p poe ele brated Portland V 
—Our po and the pul me Fa be ma 
to learn that t the well-kuo f Gre 
ve 
the ante-room ‘in o Teitin oe. pee ing gs 
g collection of sad as — 
diture go be reduced, and therefore begged on 
regard to st Pistion, he should 7 [tenant m 
O i i e sho tos 
nce in the expenciture of 187,000 pect elast year. nt, such was the dimin inished 
h Sres therefore, b prices of ris that ent whatever could be ob- 
00 total estimate tained from the poorer acer of soil, and so long 
r, he calcu” | as the burden exist ted, unless ~~ increase of prices 
5 followed, tl classe would be invo ved i in 
ruin, Mr. Baker proceeded to to 
| ti a how r Tittle of the expen- 
| 
i n i Friday byay who 
of taxes being made, that they had the first and greatest 
claim. Mr: Ellman, of Sussex, cage and ee that 
he statement of Mr. Bak 
Fini 
visited the Museum 
n that pan > 
4o Sred several persons w n the room, viewin) 
It thei hat pies 
g the 
o y | he fally concurred in t r, both collectio when their pera be ghee attracted by aloud 
expenditure, | asto the extent and amount oi rae on hastening to ascertain t ause, the 
eration of 3,400,000. agriculturists. Mr. Allautt, of <n, M made a fall Send the vase scattered in foams about the floor. 
Ll Governmen nt and the Hous. {statement to the same eflect, | and 3 showed that, upon | The consternation was great, every one fear ring l lest he 
vi ; | highly cultivated lands, labour p No one 
In the first | th I l } tments ; ad if yrs ai, they 
pr he in- | of Jand farmed by himself oe others. This was ld | ner was the sound 
pcan iemed ec Mr. Shackell, of Berks, wao stated for | heard tside of pra saa ‘ae the doors were 
i seve eeks h l his Barley b b ly el d. Mr. kins, who has uper- 
op can ie maltsters obtained a heite a rticle of fi that department, questioned the 
gar from produce at 33s. per — and the pries had for several |in ‘the > apartments, a all of whom m gave satisfactory answers 
weeks nome oe r R. Peelh ques as taxed, when he at once 
s! ia | tion as o whet her any pas remission ot tax y was pa sort er that he had phos ate mischief. He was 
f ms. on r ustody. E conveyed to Bow 
| bited tt under ent a piye erami- 
f . su 
is t i itered. The ređuc- 
duty preg per OT gerne the -price senate into comin with the foreigner, who ‘had 
erlb. Claye = „sugars are to be r naes all these advantages, and therefore they were unable, 
ia 
nation arsi Mr. 5 ardine. er 
f himself ; bat a few minutes after ap 
are the bar, the landlady of a coffee- 
218. 9 . id.; ty © sugar imported from Ind: 
$. 9d., and the duty on Feces lahowie foreign sugar will English m arket, Mr. Hudson said he could bear 
Phe duty on th ff alto- 
and o 3 artic haya ed eoan te oe tn De abo- | mony to to ke facts stated by his brother farmers, "aa 
onsider: icultural distress prevailed, and alt hough 
= in the county of Norfolk the rents had bez aid up, it 
od and not fr he 
ed they c a ~ consol closed at 9985) 5 of the farms. The farmers sca labouring under great 
per Cents., 100; New Three ze = disadvantage by the alteration of the tariff, in proof of 
ithfield 
shop in Long yey entered the co 
magistrate that the prisoner, whose name was Wm. Lioyd, 
came to wre 4 o house about two months 
back, repres t he was a scene-painter, CON- 
nected with Ce a and other paipa and came 
rom Dublin, where his mother and sister resided, 
father being dead. The landlady Saad wot He = 
his 
Bank Stock, 2123 ; India Bonds, 70 being in custody, her brother having met him 
ts ket last M n he inquired of "ais sales- | charge of the police; and but for this jis PRSTEN lie 
— | men the reas Pane mt ‘sold ata g Eoi he | information respecting the prisoner ¢ ave been ob- 
>| was reques sok % Ta acr risa ri tained. It appears, — r, that he has been passin 
| tore see a hundred head thea on > the county | unde: er an assumed n aps on Tuesday at n re-ex- 
f ted of a great deal of oo land, whick o sive his real name, as it mi 
i | could only be made to prod ace good crops of corn by a nvolve others ia bi dis ace. Mr. Bodkin then — 
wt | larg t upon n the farm, and fed with | the case on behalf of wy ssa ees of the Museum, upon 
i ce rtainly produce PN a considerable | whom the dat uty € devolved of pn ting in nae cate on 
lean as i t of th ges tland, who had kindly per- 
pron, stonemasons — J, oil-cakes, which 
, jun Per paoi, book- quantity of f fat, but not so ‘much fiesh or lea 
Warsox may ae Reid Cheltenham, 
iw ote co tshire, stonemason—R. requi! 
r a red by the consumers ; an vasi convinced, from | 
s £ ae “Woes, Bristol, | his own experience, and also of others who had tried it, | 
mitted the property i A gaion to be placed in the 
Museum for the inspection of the public. It was deeme d 
