NUMBER 206' VOLUME XXII, T II U R S D A r; F E B R U A R T 14, 1805.

ENNIS BLEACH-GREEN. • ' SIX-MILE-BRIDGE -BLEACH-GREEN.- consequence 'of the• mcnaccd invasion, it TO BE SET, was necessary always to kecp'a considerable From, lite First Day of May next, ANTHONY• HOROIIAN §5- LINENS, YARNS, &c,, are now,receiving/ number of men on the coast; a great part of JAMES Grateful for the very extensive patronage at Mr. M'N/aifsA's, Church-street, Ennk, these could not be- lodged without barracks, gfr The HOUSE and OFFICES of RICH. which he has experienced, and ambitious to render at Mr. Moo?.ii's,'.-gate, Limerick, which were now piepared for .8,000 men. apd at said Green, where the utmost care (with a general satisfaction, begs to- inform the Public that The Hon. Gentleman then proceeded to Foreman from the North of Ireland, and good every preparation is -made, and the most-unremitting move the Estimates according to she" follow- attention will-be paid, toensure the safety arid fifeh Workmen), will be taken to finish Linens, Yarns, LA KE- EL ELD, &c, in a proper manner, for a.ll which toe will be ing a bst racr, for Great Ikirain and Ireland :— in the best manner, all LINENS, DII-PIM, See. ; committed lo his care.—The immediate connection accountable.' JAMES CORNELL. Guards, Garrisons, &e. '-' •'•"' -Jan. it, 1S04, JOHN M'KAMARA. of the Bleach . Green to'his other concerns, enables ;''M.-„y8o 4,94$&o. ft « With n good MALT-HOUSE, and 24 ACRES, of him to give constant attention to the entire process; horces in the Plantations, and lie is detemiried' to solicit the favour of the Pub- Choice Meadow, Pasture, and Tillage Ground. &c. 46,95» 1,444,950 11 7 lic no longer than he shall be found to merit their AISO, ^jr New Garden Seeds. General and Stalf Officers, protection. with a State of the Par- 30 Acres of CRAGfiRIEW, near CoKonN. F§T PIECES received at the BLEACH GREEN, ticulars of the Charge 3 z RED AND WHITE CLOVER, Proposals to be made to at Miss BARBARA DWYER'S, High-street, Ennis, India Forces,^ 30,145 47i,46i on and at Mr. JOHN ED. DOUGHERTY'S, Ballinacally, AND Troops and Companies for MR-. ENRAGHT, COROFIN. for all which I will be accountable. RYE GRASS, recruiting ditto, 460 . 25,410.18 4 February 13, \8b$. Feb. 6, 1805. ANTHONY HOROHAN. Recruiting & Contingencies 175,866 7 g Have arrived to MICHAEL HI CRY. §t§ Twenty Tuns of GOOD HAY to be SOLD Embodied Militia and Een- by'Mr. ENRAGHT. cible Inf. 10.3,328 a,e63,"Si 18 3 EXCISE OFFICE, ENNIS, Contingencies for ditto 65,694 6 3 cjth February, 1805. IMPERIA L PA R -L IA ME NT. Clpathjngifor ditto- . 13^,7 93 o a TO BE LET, Full Pay to Supernumera- G?T This is to give NOTICE, that His EXCEL- Frem the zith Day of March nexti HOUSE OF COMMONS—Fir,. 6. ry Officers 34>4S° 6 3 LENCY, THE LORD LIEUTENANT has been • Offices , ',-' 191,838 -o 10 ARMY ESTIMATES. For such TERM as may be AGREED upon, : pleased ' to fehd' to 'AUG.' FITZ-GSRALD, Esq; Allowance to ~ Innkeepers, ' •trr The highly manured, and well enclosed Collettorc&r thcaccommodation of the Inhabitants On the morion of. the. SEC RET.A.RY . at &c. 476,699 s o of this neighbourhood, 6,000 BANK TOKENS, WAR the House, went into, a Committee of .Half-Pay and MLlitaryAl- GARDENS, PARKS, & TENEMENTS, to lie issued to all Persons applying, in exchange for Supply, to which was referred the several lowsncts i8i,jS8 10 s In the vicinage of Ennis. Notei of the Bank of Ireland, any sum not exceed- estimates relating to the Army. Ditto, American Forces 50,000 o o As held by the late Mr. PAT. SlTRED : ing Twenty.Pounds worth to one person, and the .Ditto, Scotch ,'irigade 1,0,0 o o §f§ The Situation, and local Advantages of said Bank Tokens, will be issued accordingly.- The SECRETARY at WAR said, it be- I n-Pensioners of Chelsea these Concerns, renders comment superfluous.: . AUG. FITZ-GERALD, Collector. came his duty ro call the attention of the and Kilmainham Hos, ..." Sjii-iT-' rg 5 House to the different paits of the military Out-Pensioners of ditto 196,169 11 11 PROPOSALS, in writing, TO EE MADE TO ', establishment of the empire. He was satis- 'Widow's Pensions - • 19 5 TO BE LET, Foreign Corps, 17,386, 85 [i3;0 6 4 Mr. DAN. M'MA HON, Emus. fied to think that he should not detain the February ir, 1805. For Three Lives, from z$th .March next, Hosp.-fixpences (Irel.) . 20,544 11 10 House long. Following the example of Royal Military College The following LANDS, part of the ESTATE of those who had preceded him in his office, (with the Gen, Staff, TO BE SET, The Hon. FRANCIS NAT. BURTON. some ot whom he was proud to imitate, he and particulars of the should content himself with noticing those Senior and Jun, De- FROM %5tl: MARCH NEXT, Part of DARRAGH, called LUCAS's 7 A" R' rJ partments) 13,315 6 4 33 3 15 in which a variation hid taken place in the The FARM and LANDS of . DARRAGH, about j- Royal Milit. Asylum 23^458 6 1 Part of Do. held bv the Widow M'Mahon 1 . charge. The principal increase of charge Barrack Depart. (Irel.) 483,698.11 . S DROMGRA NA BEG, and MissBro'ggy, j30 ^ had occurred in cons'ecjucnce of the addition Situate in the. PARISH of KrtiiiCT.is, Part of Ditto, .held bv Mr. Httxly, 85 a 10 of 20 rank and file per company, . .Sino'c I2.,S66,95I S 7 Within a few niinutes'Walk ot the Town of ENNI S, Part of KILMORANEBEG, held by 7 the estimace had been formed, however, a 'Deduct for India irorces 471,461 o it 3 5 ?.nd convenient to the principal Fairs of th® Mrs. Hunt, ' . reformation had taken place, by which the Country. • Total i7.,39S,49o 7 8 The above Lands are remarkably good for Fatten- total cxpenee had been diminished, by the ing, Dairy, or Tillage, with sufficient Meadowing, PROPOSALS TO BE MABL TO adoption of a plan for not voting the whole On the motion for the charge of recruit- and are within from one' to three miles of Ennis. ing the Forces in India, Mr, FRANCIS GEO. COMYN, Esq; Ashgrove-, Part of OU1LTY, in the Barony of Y addition for the cavalry, but only eleven, wished to be informed, whether, the force Or Mr. SYLVESTER O.'GORMAN, Ennis.. Ibt ican, near the village of Militown, | men per ttoop, considerifig the effective of here alluded to consisted of the King's .troop* MICHAEL CANNON, the Herd, will shew the choice Tillage and Dairy Ground, as j> 74 1 the cavalry at present, and the current alone, exclusive of the Europeans in the Bounds. February 4, 1805. held by John Slacpoole, Esq; contain- | amount of the recruits raised, no mateiial ing about . J alteration would be made in that resoect. C o m pa ny's se r v i ce. PROPOSALS, jn writing only, to be made t" the The next description of force in which a The SEC. at W AR said, it did consist Hon. FRANCIS 1 NATHAN!EL BURTON, Stan- material alteration had taken place, was of the King's troops exclusively j and in hope-street, LONDON,' until the 30th February, or that which was raised in virtue of an Act answer to an observation from Mr. FRAN- jfcffA to Mr FITZ-GERALD, at Tureen,''Mia will for- c IS ttiat the whole force in India in Euro- ward them. made two years ago, the Army of Reserve mlM pean troops was not above 8 or 9000, the IMPROVING Tenants, who will reside, shall meet Act, By this Act 50,000 men were to be with encouragement. JAMES and PAT, LYNCHY, raised in the Empire, 3?,,000 of which in SECRETARY at WAR also said, that though "By die Lord Lieutenant anil Councifof [/eland, of Tureen, will shew the Bounds. England, A division into sixteen districts the regiments'were not complete, the effec- A PROCLAMATION. January 2,0, 1805. tive amount was far above what the lion. ' HARDWICICE, had taken place with this view, each of T^fHEREAS by an AS parted in the Twenty, fcrft and. which was Lo raise two thousand men. As Gentleman stated. VV Twenty-fecond year or his Majcfty'e reign, enti- BARONT OF CLONDERALAW. it was difficult that any fixed standard could On the vote for Genral and Staff Officers, tled, " ,-An, A£V for the better fecutiiitf the Liberty of tiie Mr. CALCR. AFT made a few observa- Subje.a," and commonly called the Habeas Corpus Act, A BOUT 800 Acres of CARHUREA, midway on prevail among the vaiious modes of recruit- k.is provided, that it fliall and may be lawful to and. for the direct road from CLAR E to KILRUSH, by ing, by which this act was carried into exe- tions, in the course of which-lie stated, that the Chief Governor'and Governors' for the Time be ins, CRANNY BRIIIGE, will be LET, from the FIRST cution, it was thought proper to form six- at present there was no less than J36 Gene- and of Ireland, to fufpendi the faid Aift, day of MAY '.flext, teen garrison battalions, into which those rals on the Staff of England; in Scotland during fuch time only as there fliall he an a£t"ual Irivafion By -the Hon. Judge FTNUCANE, or Rebellion in Ireland or Crept BriLaio, an.I' that no who were under a certain size, or a certain there were 17 ; and in Ireland- 55 ; besides in DivraroN.s, as set out in Hand, Bills, to [be -Judge or Juitice of Peace (lull bail or trv any Perfon or age, or otherwise unfit for immediate ser- one in Jersey, and one in Guernsey ; making, Perfons charged with being concerned in'fuch Invafion or had at the Printer's.—-The NEW ROAD thro' the vice, had been incorporated. Those who Rebellion without an Order from Lhe Lieutenant, or Lord Land is nearly compleated, and at present passable. in .all 210. This was a thing unheard of, Deputy and Privy Council of Ireland :or the Time being, were under age, who were the principal and the necessity of it ought to have been Mr. JOHN EDK. DOUGHERTY, of Ballinacally, fiene.l by Six of the faid Privy Council, any Law, Statute part of this force, having grown, had vo- particularly explained. or Ulage tor the contrary in any wife notwithlland'ng. will shew the Divisions. Occupying and Improving lunteered into the line j and by other And whereas a daring Rebellion hath aauaily brokcn Tenants-will be preferred. August 36, 1804. The SEC. at WAR said, if he had pass- out in Ireland, and it KatlV'.become »dvil'eable to fufpr-ml changes, the whole amount of men in these' ed briefly over any material point, he must the Operation of the; fitl'd* Aft during the Continuance battalions instead of sixteen, by which a have doneso to save the time of the House thereof; By tht .LSSd. Lieutenant General and General Governor saving would be made in the charge for of- 7 Now we the Lord Lieutenant and Council do by this, of Ireland, in the first instance. If the expence under our Proclamation declare., That the laid be, and the fame • A PROCLAMATION. ficers of, 2,04,2,881. There was some alter- the present head appealed' to the Hon. Gen- is hereby ful'pended, of which all Judges, jutlices of HARDWICKE. ation in the charges for forces in India, but tleman unparalleled, it was owing only to, the Pcjace, and-others are required to take Notice. tiliREAS His'Majefty'f Service doth it this Time the expence of these was borne by the Com - And whereas there is reafoh to apprehend that- leveral require a fpeedy Supply of Seamen and Seafaring the unparalleled occasion of six or 700,000 Perfons, charged ivith. having been concerned in the faid Men, r.o man His Majefty's Fleet which is now fitting out, pany. In the item of General and Staff men i-n arms ; to the unparalleled danger Rebellion, are endeavouring to elcape Juftice by of part- We do by His Majett'y's Command direct and require all Officers, an increase of 13,0001. had been which had for some:time threatened us, and ing from Ireland.-' Civil Magistrates in this Part of His Majejty's United made. This was principally in consequence fiow we..the.hSord Lieutenant, being deSrciis to bring K'ngdom called Ireland, to ufe their tseft Endeavours to which would have long burst upon us but for of the system of brigading Lhe Volunteers, sll fuch offe'nders'to fpeedy Piiniflirrienc, do, by and with caufe all Inch Seamen or Seafaring Men, fit lor His Ma- the Luq arallec! exertion that had kept-'it off. ' the Advice of his Majelty't, moft Honourable Pi-ivy Coun- jelty's Service, as may be met with, to be taken up, and and annexing to the brigades field officers, Mr. QALCKAIX and the SEC. at WAR cil, ftriasy forbid any. Perfon whomfoever to depart from lent on'Boavo any' of His Miijelly's Ships or Velfcls in the whose utility in improving their discipline Ireland without having obtained a Pafifport for that pur- Ports, or on the. Coalt of Ireland, or to auy of His Ma- severally explained. pcfe, figned by our Chief Secretary, nr the Under Secre- had been fully demonstrated. A consider- jesty's Sea officers who may be employed to raifc Men on Mr. KlNNAIRD congratulated- the tary for the Civil Department, or either of them, or by Shore for His Majefty's Fleet, according as the Places, able reduction had been made in the embo- fome Perlon autbonfed by an Inftfumenf fubferibed by where, l'uch Strips 01' Veffels, or fuch Sea 'OflWs may be died militia, which it was proposed to vote House on tiieir having a Secretary at V/ar them, or either of them, to hgn fuch Paffports' respectively ftatipned fliall be nearert. And for the lih- possessing tl';e quality of good nature in so And dourngement of'the Perfons who fliall be entrulled with on the old system of 40,000 men' for England we do hereby flrictly command all Matters and the Care of conducting fuch Seamen and Seal-earing Men, and 18,000 for Ireland, the charge for eminent a .dSgr.ee, together with another Commanders of all Shi re and Veffels departing from Ire- they -will be paid by the Captain or Commander ol Inch' Which would be 2,176,060!. instead of quality, whitih he should not.then denomi- land, that they do not, upon any account whatfotver, Sh-p or veiTct, or Sea Officer employed on Shore as a'fore- nate,' in claiming merit for.his good nature take on board their Veifti«, .wiirn departing from Ireland, faid, relpeaively, a Reward of TWENTlTSHIl,LINGS any Perfon not having fuch Patfport as afore faid, fave and for each Seaman'or Seafaring Mart (it lor His Majefty's .2,663,0001. In the charge of officers, an with the House. He could not avoid ad- except the perfons aflually employ ed to navigate fuch Service, and Sixpence a Mile for every Mile they msy increase of 24.739L had been made in con., i verting to one branch of the service, which Veffels refpeOively. .•',•- have travelled, not exceeding Twenty Mile*in the Marl- And we do further command all Magiifrates, Officers time Counties, and,, Forty Miles, in the Inland Counties sequence of an addditional expence in the ' had been particularly noticed by the Right of the Revenue, anil all OfHcers Civil and Military, and. And-We do hereby further direct and require the bid Ci- Commissary General's OfEce, and an in- 1 Hon. Gentleman, as having derived essen- ! «H. other his-M-ajelly's Silbjefits, to uTe their ntmolt En. vil Magistrate? to give all poffible Countenance and Aflif. crease of 8,'oool. in the department of the tial benefit from, the augmentation ofthe deavo.urs to prevent; the departure of any Perfons from tance to .the Officers of His 'Majesty's Ships and Veffels, Ireland not having l'uch Palfports as afo-elaid. or to the Sea Officers of His Majesty's Ships and Veffels, Horse Guards.—There was an increase in Staff Expenditure^, viz. the Volunteers; Given at the Council Chamber in Dublin, the 18th or .to the Sea Officers who may be employed to l iife. Men the charge for foreign' corps, which atose though he should ^ot enter into the merits Day of July, 1803. on Shore, in i.enpreffing 01- otiierwife procuring Men'for. of that branch of oar military establishment, Redefdale, C. Tyrswly. Henry King. His Majesty's Fleet. from the augmentation in the German legion Chasi Dublin. J. Beresford. D. Latouche. now to contain 12,000 men, instead of i He had much d0ubx whether any advantage V/rn. Tuam. H. E. FOX. S. Hamilton. - Given at His Majelly's Caflle of Dublin, the 1.6th Day Drogheda. 5,000. In the .Barrack Department, the j on the score of improvement of discipline Her. Lmgritte. Mau. Fitz. Gerald. of March,. 1803. Annedey. 1 M.Smith. Standilh O'Grady. Ey His Excellency's Command, ' expence was a million less than .it had been' resulted to the Volut>reers from the appoint* Muskerrv. GOD lave the KING. Aa MARSDEN. last year. It was still so great because in ment of Brigadier jGeuerals. The old In- EOD Save the KING. I

Subsistence to Inn keepers . for Lodging, certain motions on the subject of the finan- of merchants, but to carry into tb~ spooling Officers sail 'continued, and there and for His Majesty's allowance of Small. cial situation.of Ireland. ' As he understood provisions Legislature. Having said thus was a perpetual jauing -between them and Beer, to tiie troops marching''in GreaVBr'i- 'from a collitnnnication with the Right Hon. much .in justification of the Irish Treasury the '.Brigadier-Generals, which would one Uia and Ireland, •'••> .Gentleman opposite (Mr. FOSTER), that c he should add, that he had no sort' of ob- day-another be productive of considerable • Mr. FuLLFR made 8pme'ob e.rvafiq'n3 ; no objection woul'd'be made to the produc- jection to any of the Noble Lord's motions. mischief. Brigadier-Geoerais might have ^ on the subject of inconvenience arising to ttoft of-the papers for which lie proposed to been wisely appointed "m the first instance, i he motions were then severally put and •some parts ''of the country from the con- move, it would not be necessary for him to agreed to. but it- would be very/;aiiwise to continue veyance of baggage. To tfhich the SE~ tresspass Jong on the attention of the House. them, when they, could, bo no longer .ser- C RII'TARY at WAR mallei SHORT reply, but • He should, therefore, barely state to the viceable. no'proposition-was made. .»'•' House the nature of the mdtions -which it HOUGHING CATTLE. Mr. WHIT BREAD was of opinion, On-tiie Estimate for the Barrack, Depart- was 'his intention to propose'; first, with that anv,inciease in the Staff Establishment ment being ;>:-oposed, - ! > • respect to the amount of all sums that had with a View to the improvement of the Vo- M r.1- fUNWAlRD expressed some doubts been drawn from this country, by way of FROM THE BUBLLN.E. POST. lunteers' in discipline, by the appointment ot respecting " the utility of some Barracks, loans, "for the payment of the army in Ire- We were the.first to depreciate this' fofa- Brigadier-Geneials, was wholly unneces- which had been forsctdd at a ' considerable land , 'and next, 'for an account of all orders mous practice, and we arc.glad to find our sary. From Iris .own experience he could expence 011' the coast. from the Lords of the Treasury in Ireland early.detestation.has been followed up by our cotemporalies with a zeal and alacrity affirm, that no advantage whatever had The SE'C-i.tETA:RY at WAR informed on that.subject. But; as in all probability, which must have tlje happidsf effects —lit been .derived .from such appointments, he the l-Ion, Member, "that the Barracks.to he should feel himself hereafter bound to Lork Mercanti/i Chromela oa per edftcfocted therefore, thought it. impr.od.ent to. add so- which he had - alfudfcd, were only ferrtpo- call the attention of theTloiise to that subject, with vast ability, contains thefoHovVin-p 'ob- much to .the public expenditure unneces- ''Ailfi- In the months of July, August, and hetrpsred he should' meet with tli'eir indul- servations on the subject;— ' sarily. .'; ., ., September, it had'.been thought necessary gence ih sf'afihg briefly his' own view of itr The CHAN, 'of the EX. stated, as the to. march considerable bod-iles-oif troops to the ,1 he House 'would recollectj that in consi- " We perccive wiih regret'and ino'igna- tion. tha1 t some abominable ruffians ground .of this particular. arrangement that coast'j - and it was therefore- deemed exp'e- deration of the extraordinary state of the , .. . uiurtaa haVt«av had been inspected, a'nd were re- The Report of the Committee was order- ed to be received to-morrow. Service of Ireland, together with the interest thereon, mailer of no concern.how a deep t.'afibres- : ported by the proper officers effective, a,nd and the charges of management since the year 1797. spy may suffer; >t the fact is, that itVa iitj'or immediateservice "About '40,000 only distinguishing the sum raised in e;,ch year. matter, or the first, -importance, that- every' remained yet, to be inspected. Alter su'ch a TUESDAY, FEB. 5. 2. An Account of the Amount of Notes of the person accused of crimes be brou'-ht to irs Bank ot Ireland in circulation in the year 1804, dis- rep-esentation, he was confident, the House Mr. A LEXANDER brought up the Re- tice, so as that his guilt or.innocence may' be port^ of the Committee of Supply. The tinguishing the quarters, and the notes under the would n'ot consider the -sum of 50,000-1. an valueof si. . ' apparent; not so much for his sake as for ies-oi.utioiis were agreed to, without any object to be put in competion with the great 3• An Account of the manner in which the ] that of the community, who havinp a cr-de object of improving the .discipline: of 'ifm observation, except on the part of the SE- Loans for Ireland were raised in Great Britain, dis- of criminal"jurisprudence, are 'deeply in very respectabl£ branch of euf defensive CRETARY at W A R, who explained in de- tinguishing the dates, the Rates of Exchange', &c. terested rathe strict', practice and execution - force. • - tail, by a reference fo the..estimates of last 4- A Statement of the Prices, and fluctuation of year, the. diffei'ence between them and the the Prices of Stocks in Ireland, from the ls.fof Ja- of it. Every, procedure which suspends the •Ml WHITBREAD admitted that, the amount of the estimates of the present year, nuary 179S, to the 1st of January i Soe, distin- aw, and substitutes .summary punishnfebr, Right Hon. Gentleman's statement respect- guishing the amount of Dividends on th'e "ist of Ta- 101 1 he service of the general staff, which he directed by no measure than the fallible judg- V.olnn.ieer force was very encou rag- nuary, 1805. had,stated to' be but 53,000, and an Hon. ment of a few individuals, is an evil not' of ing, but .contended, that their discipline had On the question being put on the first mo- Mem ber opposite had represented^ 130,000. tion". transient operation, out. of pernicious con- not been improved by-the Brigadier Gene- tinuance. It avoids mfofihe most sacred The Right Hon. Secretary shewed the dif- Mr. FOSTER observed, that the Noble 'rals, w'hfch the Rf, Hon. Gentleman ought covenant's in human society : it brings ference between the aggregate charge for the Lord had clone him the honbuf fo communi- to have proved, before be proposed such an community back to that ,-ide. state of nassfo- -staff service for Great Britain and Ireland, cate to him the substance of the motion encjease of expenditure. fhe Inspecting nateand angry punisluaent, out of'wfoch- , : was but 78,000, and that the increase on the which he has just'read to the House, to Officers were fully competent to every im- the amelioration of morals, and. the oraotice estimate for Great Britain, separately, in which lie'could hot have any possible objec- provement of the Volunteer discipline,— of_ technical justice had redeemed it. Ti- the-present year, did not exceed 53,000, at tion. But as the Noble Lord, from obser- This establishment liad grown by Small cie midity and resentment will alwavs resort to which he had rated'it in the Committee. A vation's he made, seemed to suppose the grees—First, Inspecting. Officers had b^-en that which is at once so prompt in execution reduction of 120,000 was also made in the Treasury in Ireland to have been actuated appointed, then Brigadier-Generals, and and so powerful in punishment; and the estimate for the Barrack Department, on by far different motives from those Which afterwards Major- Generals. - Il any or all habitual exercise of so convenient and so ra- - the motion of the SECRETARY at WAR they felt, he hoped for the permission of 6f these appointments could be dispensed pid a method of striking at supposed crimina - - The SECRETARY at WAR moved for the House, to state the motives'upon which with, they ought to .be retrenched. From lity, will render men.impatient of the te- leave to bring,n a for punishing Mutiny they acted. A sum of twelve hundred thou- h;s own experience, he maintained, that the dious scruples of justice, and indispose them and Desertion, and for the better payment of sand pounds, or of one million and a half, Generals were unnecessaiy,. and that the in to wait the cautious administration of the His Majesty's Forces.in Quarters. had remained in England for the service of spectors: alone were sufficient. It might law. Fhe due exercise of the law amends Ireland,' which icwai necessary to have have been expedient to appoint General On the question being'pu t-, the morals of those whom it often punishes transmitted to Ireland. The Lords of the Officers-in- the first"instance, in case it should Mr. FRANCIS having, missed the op- Its solemn ties are affecting, and its domini- be necessary to march forces to the coast • portunity, whilst the Resolutions of the Treasury applied in the first instance to the ons impressive ; and although it is often ter- but he was confident, that had. arijsen from Committee of Supply were under consider- Bank of Ireland, for this purpose, consi- fibletogu.lt, yet vice is sometimes persuad- a little , blunder in the or iginal marine- of ation, took this occasion, of aoplyine to dering them, as the most proper body to ed into better course by the: precepts of the trfo Right Hon. Gentleman for some ftmh»r appointing officers .to-the Volunteer Corns brufg the money'over. ' The. Bank however judgment Seat, and innocence is always imermati'ori respecting the militai y establish- If the-service to b^ derived Tom the ap- refused to lriie'rfe'r'e,' from an appiehension more dear to itself from the example.—But ments India. When he had. made some pointment; of General .Officers were great • that as many of the Directors were engaged Martial Law let loose, for criminality, short observations' in the Committee yesterday- the sum then was much too large.- ' in the business, of exchange, any Act which oi treason, as a permanent engine of severity with respect to the amount of the European A brief explanation then tdok .place be- would have the effect of constituting them nevefyetreproved, nor reformed, nor aided force now in India, he was not aware that tween Mr, -C-AL.CRAFT and' the SECRE arbitrators of .exchange, might draw down any one moral purpose. It is only justifiable there was not on the cable a paper contain- TARY, at-WAR, relative to. the difFerence upon their Court of Directors, odium and where there is array'against the King, where ing the last return of the amount of that ! between the estimate for the Staff Service for reprobation. -, Under such circumstance's every person concerned is demosttaiively de loree. By this document, if appeared that •the. present a-nd. of' the last years. Mr the Lords of the Treasury found themselves hnquent in theyrime of treason, where rank- here was only a deficiency of 5,000 in the CALC-R.AFT maintained that-the difference under a necessity of resorting to the means force is tiie remedy >hd;the?udden apolica- Establishment, including, the rein- on reference to the estimate of last year ap of drawing the money, and they had adopt- tion of it fhe best policy. It is right to • orcements that had been serif out fast. - But pea red to be co-respondent with his state ed the expedient of bringing it over"in Bank crush .traitors; but it is only right to punish hp perceived also in this paper, that exclu- ment of it at 130,000, and the SECRETA- of England Notes, of Bank Post. Bills.•— by law Oidniary criminals. It will be diffi- sive)! a detachment of 2.6c European arfil- They fixed the amount of the money to be cult to persuade ignorance and rudeness of Vf 7tAR, ^ fact, When .the i'fery," there was i.n tbe Island of Ceylon, a drawn for, and gave ten days or a fortnight's the value of this or that sort of Government Staff of Ireland was included, but still in .fo-rceof 6,464 men, „d he wished to be in sisting that the-increase in the' English S'aff a notice of the time of chawing foAit, in or' cnless b'y the practice . of .it,. The peasant •formed whether this force was Composed- of amounted but to 5303000. ° •der'that'all the merchants who might have who cannot comprehend doctrine, wilireal- .•Brinsh or native troops-. .occasion for'-the- accommodation^- should ly perceive what'is practiced—and it will lh€ C d Ut onth f °i! f r ?" f^ P <= estimate have-sufficient preVious'-iiiiithatioh' f it -— require more persuasion than falls to the lot for the embodied Militia for Great Brita'm T ,e KKTARY at WAR 0 V, rr ^Y acquainted They-fixed the ratfe of exchange also,' in M.;, CALCRAFTdesiied to be INFORM the Hon. Member, that 3iooo of this num-' human talent in general, to inculcate the va- ed whether the Right Hon. Gcntlem "n pl ber were'native troops; and wished him to order that such as should be disposed fo'of- lue of our civil freedom and the pre-eminence be awate - - posed to Vote the estimate for themiUtia, as of onc distinction wit!l fer, might be Tirade acquainted' with the of our law, if a d'shicr be abandoned for the ; itvt'as at present established, as he Mad stat- the miluary establishment for-.I'ndia. The terms. The first r'equired -was 200-000I mere outrage inspired by vengeance or su«.' ed in his opening Speech for the or gfoal es- yote was for 20,000 men ; the return con- andthe exchange was the rate' of ex- gested by misconception .of self interest, to tablishment ?.: - b tained only 13 j000 effective, or rank^and- change af the-mom'e'nt; but only j7p eooi the loose and unmeasuic-d severity of military The C.HAN, of EXb availed himself of hie, whr.stthe number voted included the- we re brought;. The Lords of the Tieasu - punishment—The Gentlemen of the co. that opportunity to state'the grritindfOpon whole establishment, officers, non-commis- ry, therefore, concluded tliafthey'had fixed' Carlow have pre!erred, the more enlightened, 1 which u had been thought ad Vis/able to vote sioned officers, a-nd privates.. the exchange at too high a rate, arid propos- and we will,venture to predict if they act' hemimate.fovthe o igi. a!: establishment of, lhe SECRETARY at WAR also, in re- ed the; next sum, which ,was also ,2CC,OOQ1 with spirit, the more effective course. If ; l f} the the Mitiaonly. It was i&uhf intention of ply to a question, whether -the European at to per cent, 'exchange; but uo more of ! 7, carry, the .law into effect they ' will His Majesty's,Government to biing forward troops Jn the; Island of Ceylon were incfod- tins sum was taken than in the' first instance, : punish those abandoned 'ruffians, who hflve namely, 170,000!. They, therefore, con- • dared to brave its vengeance ; and in so do- ' to Parliament a.pla„ forfactlitajhngt he trans- .ed in |he''20,000 men voted for India ? re- fer of the ...surplus .-of the militia? overV plied in the affirmative. Leave-was then sidered that to secure purchasers for the ing, there will be no. indisciiminate suffer- ing ;' gutlt'fenly will feel the blow\ and they ongmabestabtishrnent, to thjb'regular and given to bung m the Bill. ' .- whole'sums-wanted, the exchange should w ill gi ve back peace to their, country without dtsposeable force of • the coun'/ry Lord^ ARCHIBALD HAMILTON, i f - f.unhe!' lowered, and in consequence in volving innocence, for stigmatizing,for im- pursuant to his notice on, form-er day, rbse " they reduced it to par. Their niotive in so On the question being puf/ on tbe ,Est; '. a potence the, criminal jtuisprtadence of the fo. the purpose of submitting the%ouse-' doirigi the House would observe, was not mate for defraying the increased Rates for -land. - •••••. s .•".."•"" • to give any bounty to any particular classes company could do to keep the vessel afloat. whole value of'- the earg'o is estimated' at No further Intellfgence-has beeii-received In order toteinpt'the men' to exert their ut- aoo,oool. Nothing was saved, except' the tr WEDNESDAY'S MAI I.. with respect to the Rbchfoit squadron. most powers' at' the pumps, the Officers dispatches, and Some valuable p'riti's, - which ' stood by cheering tliem, and1 encouraging had-been sent out for General LA ICE. An extract fiibrh air American paper, an- LONDON, THURSDAY, FEB. 7. them by giving theni allowances of liquor. The'sibbp thkt came frbin the shore, after-:, nouncing: the su rrender of. Fulo Penan*, in A report was in circulation this morning, 1 At seven p. in. the ship's' cdrrroaqy being having taken most of the people from the' the Straits of, Malacca,, to the-Dutch Admi- that,LINOIS had TAKEN Prince of Wales's 1 almost exhausted, It was thought advisable tops, was scudding with all the sail she falFJ A RIS IN c K, and thecapture of three I land, with thre.e : Indiamen. This, news -to fire fresh signal gun's, in' hopes of obtain- could carry for the shore, when Mr. BAG- English East Indiamen, created -yesterday c unes by .way. of America,—-The Cantod, ing boats fro 111 the shore, to save as rhany GOT, the chief officer of the Earl of Abe-r- considerable sensation in the City. -It ap'- Briinsunck, and Marquis of Ely, are , the of the people On board as possfble. gdvenKy-, was discovered close as'fW'ri of the •pears in the New York Morning Chroiack of ships supposed to have been taken. One boat came off from the shore, which ship. The sloop imm'edia'tely lay to for the 5th January, and-is tints introduced: 1 took on board the Miss EVANS', 'Miss him; but ibis noble-spirited young man,' We mentioned yesterday thcvarrivalof the " Co-inmUiiicaied Ify a Gentleman lately arrived from JACKSON1, Mr, 'RUTLE.DGE, and Mr. ilthougb he had a ropein his hand, quitted, the Cape of Good Hope. Snpeist: after being separated from the home- { TAYLOR, a Cadet, a) 1 Passengers. Mrs- his hold, and, disregarding his own safely,! " The Goverrrmeht at the Cape of Good wil d bound Jamaica fleet in a gale of winch j 1 BLAIR, com pa n i o n to'. Miss EVANS', c'h ose plunged after Mrs. BLAIR, an unfortunate: Hope, on hearing sundry European'arrivals, They consisted of p. sail. The Stronger, • in spite (if ,all entreaties, to1 stay on boatd : fellowpasserigcr, whom lie perceived Abat- to tire latter end of Sept, 1 hat-the-British 'Capt. PINES, a,very valuable ..ship, from . 1 indeed,, there were many who would have ing atsome distance. Fie succeeded in coin Were preparing an expedition against that flu n d u ras, foundered on the 18th January ; mide the same choice, so lilt'e hope was ing up it'h h«'r, a'h'd 'sustained her 'above!' ^country, immediately took the necessary ih.e.ciew were saved.by the .Sage&t. there of the boat contending successfully witer, 'Wliile he swam tbivttrclj the sloop ;. measures to -put-it in the best state 'of 'de- agitri'st ebb high sea, itvs'o fiat k a night. •but just' as he was on the point. of reaching fence, &c. &c. / - - A niei'ican Papers to the 6th ult. arrived 1 It wis'now about nine o'clock, and se- it, a'terrible swell came on, and his strength " Advicesfrom -Tranquebar, state, that •ye.stc.rday. By these we learn, that,the ex.-. veral boati;''were heard Hi a short distance being totally-exhausted, he'suhk and never ., Pti'lo Pendng, in ihe Straits nf Malacca., 'ha'd peuition of the.Amei.ican.s agaipst Tripoli, from tlie ship, but they rendered op assisv rose. Tfie unfortunate Mrs. BLAIR sunk surrendered to the Dutch forces under Ad- has completely failed.—The Black Chiefs 1 tance to the distressed on b.oaid, after fiira, and this generous youth thus miral HARTS INC K, and at the same'time, ol St. Domingo, it is said, .were to hold a WORD'SWORTH : A dreadful crisis; was now appaoaching— pefished in vain. Captain' several English Indiamen had been taken. 'meeting the commencement pf the present every one on board' seemed assured on his had been two voyages as C&mmander, and i " A squadron of Biitish ships- war month', for the purpose, .of arranging the ;l fate. At ten o'clock the ship was nearly expected,that bis third voyage would make; and frigates were cruising of the Mauritius, terms pf a Commercial Treaty -.with- Great ! full of Water, and she began 'gradually tp his fortune. He hasleft a wife and a largej waiting, _ as it- was saiclfTbi the retufn of tlie JLitaiR. The French and Spanish in St..) : sink, coili usion commenced 0.11 board. A family. It was supposed that the ship's French Admiral L isois." Domingo are said, to-have come to blows, number of sailors begged1 ardently for more bot'tom'hacf been beaten in exactly under the in consequence of the treachery of the for- We do not attacli any credit to the lnt'elli- liquor, .when it was refused, they attacked pumps, and that therefore, they could not; mer,, who'offered to deliver up St. jago to gence. 'i'hb squadron of 'H.A^TSI'NK was, the spirit room, but were repulsed by their 'work with effect. During the tvfo hours, De s'.'s Ali'i'isE's on certain conditions.— as may'fie collected from LINOIS' account Officers who never lost sight of their cha- the passengers remained in the tops, the ship Twenty .seven Frenchmen, are reported to of his operations in the Indian seas, totally racte.j, and continued to conduct themselves 'had' gradually sunk seven feet, from whence h.jive been .killed in the conflict, and 300 incompetent to any Inierprize of that nature. with the utmost foiiitude. One of them it v/a's supposed, that she had struck upon a ! taken prisoners. The Spaniards expected was stationed at the spirit room door, with mud bank. The boats that saved the pep- j: Cornet BO.RCOYNE, of the 8th. Light S i he s> io n at tacked by D E S SALINES, wit.li a brace of pistols, to guard against surprise pie in the tops Carried them to Weymouth, Dragoons, who is saved'from the Abbeyga- aa a ray of Z2jQOo men, and had in conse- and there remained even while the ship w^s where tlicy'-received'the most liberal and hu- venny, has .lost, In baggage, &c. near quence solicited the protection of die Eng- WESTO N sinking, ,A sailor'was extremely solicitous mane a'lteiifion from Mr. - , a res- 1 500I. lish sou ad ron on the Jamaica station ; fo to obtain some liquor from him, saying " It pectable Merchant of "that town. which motives of prudence compelled a re- will be all as one an hour hence."—SWORTH, and. his. Officers . not a sufficient time for Gentlemen to" transfer her being laden with treasure and porcelain . not be prevented—God's will, be done."— their consideration from one important sub- were notwithstanding, of opinion, that the ware. He was seen for some time clinging, to the ship might be got off without sustaining any ject to another; for wliich reason, he; Several boats were heard.paddling.about ; ropes—Mr. GILPIN, one of the Mate's, material damage, and accordingly no signal thought it not unreasonable to propose-, if the wreck, at half past eleven o'clock, rnd i went down from the top to endeavour to save'" guns of distress were ordered to be fired for : ; any arrangement could be made,, which,' he a I: ho' they were hailed by the unfortunate liim, but in vain. The exertions of Cor Upwards of an hour and an half afterwards, feared,was impossible in the abscence of the personson. the shrouds and masts, they could net BURGOYNE, and the' Mates, were ' when t wenty were discharged. All this time Right Hon. Gent, (the CHANCELLOR OR not be prevailed upon to take them on shore. most exemp\arily gallant ; they did all that- the people were free from alarm, apd no :the Ex cHEou-®;K), that his motion should Thej;eas.on which was afterwards assigned human nature could do. idea prevailed that it would be necessary to ibe fixed for Monday se'nnight, and the' for this apparently inhuman conduct, was, The ship Was of the largest tonnage, hoist5 out the boats to be ready to take the iBudget for sortie subsequent day. that they were fearful that every person on about-1200 tons, and- was destined to Bengal' -! THIS DAY'S .MAIL; . . •• .protection against, the machination of the .disaffected.—R .was, not now prudent or' suspended year after year in Ireland, he information, Major' Si IT caused Barny Doo- gah to be apprehended on a charge of hay- LONDON^ FRIDAY, FEB. 8; ' desirable to go iiirpugh all the ciicriin- wished to know when it would end I—-Mr. .stances which .retidered.such a measure flc- 'Fox concluded by Imping that the House ing been concerned in the ihstirrcction of the Wc arc happy in,having it in our power ( ..cpssaiyj in.a country"j.ust freed fiom one re- were determined not tamely to surrender the 2,3d of July 1803, arte! of filing at and to state, • on tiu:,best authority,, some iutcili- : bellion which; liad succeeded tp another,,and Liberty of the People into the hands of,.Go- wounding Edw. Clarke, Esq. of Palmers- • , gfincec respecting, the squadron which lately in which this Bill would be the principal vernment without cause, without enquiry, town, a Magistrate, and 'with being a leader .sailed from Rochfprt. : Our accounts were, slippo.it of the loyal and, well affected. . It and without hesitation. •on that occasion ; he wasa'n active offender this-:;day- received by express from Ports- : was-also, satisfactory„ to have an assurance [Mr. Fox,having alluded to1 the severe "111-1798, and had a command of Rebels'at mo.uth, the post ha.ving set .out before-, the- from; experience, .ijiiat; the powers it gave treatment of Todci Jones during h.i's confine- Overton,- co. Kildare, and surrendered to intelliger4.ee was. received there. would hot be. abused. He knew the .No- ment, Sir EVAN NEPEAN assured- the General Dundas, and g'ot a protection ; he On Wednesday, they-were seen by one of pieman at the head of.the Irish Government, Hon Gentleman he had been misinformed.] is lodged in the Tower, our cruisers 5 miles distant. They consist-, 1 avid liatl.oppoi tuni'iic-s..of seeing that he .in- Lord DE BLAQUf ERE observed, that I,I ME RICK, JF KB. 13, edof 7, yail, 3 of which-were two deckers, herited from .hij.illustrious ancestors, a jea- the Hon. Gent, who had just sat down, ( Mr. • Monday last, a Dog ran into a Yard at and-4 frigates or vessels-armed enj'tuie; and lous attachment to the Constitution. Fie Fox) gave to the sentiments, pf his Hon. Newtown-Perry-, and bit a P'ig ; — i . were; then off Havre, wind N. E. and ,a as t was had,in fact conducted himself in such a man Friends on the present state of Ireland a -apparent the first Anmal Was macl,' he was heavy-gale. Signals-were made to them ner throughout the. whole course of his go- construction .which they would not fairly instanly killed, and next day the Pig died. . w-bich,ihey answered, inexplicably with an vernment, that there was hot a man in the bear. They had never asserted that the -—What renders the circumstance extraordi- inverted.D.utch Jack o.ver. the white flag. . country, who had not the fullest confidence whole of Ireland was as loyal,as the whole nary is, that it has scarcely been ever known It is now supposed they aie waiting to that he would not abuse any power entrusted of England, but that certain provinces were 'that the Canine Species-are so affected at ibis ..accompany some , expedition now getting to him. With respect to the grounds to be so.—Ulster, for instance, the inhabitants of season of the year, and that the symptoms , ready-at Havre, and waiting .a favourable laid by Government from the information which were certainly as well disposed to the of "Hydi ophobea seldom appear until three moment to put to sea.j but as their lurking'. thru had reached it, he had to say, that while existing Government', as those of any coun- weeks after the wound has been inni'e'd. pJacejs;now linoWn* 11,0 apprehension need he was in office in Ireland (as Attorney Ge- ty in England whatever.' The .Hon.-. Gen- be..entertained respecting them, and we may neral), information had been given by per- tleman had alluded to what he ivas pleased ENNIS, FEBRUARY i4. .expect soon to hear 9 good account of them. sons' connected with the disaffected; and to term the precipitation with which the Bill that the exposing to public view the chan- for suspending the Habeas Corpus Act in Since our last we have received the Packets of the nels through .which this information had Ireland was carried through Parliament in 7-th, 8th, and 9th inst. The former has sullied LOUDON, SATURDAY, FEB. 0, been obtained,, would have the effect to July 1803. He would just recal the atten- us with a melancholy account of the loss of the Earl The report of the capture, pf the Prince 'deprive Government of the sources of fu- tion o( the House to the circumstances of the of Abergavenny, outWard-bound East Inrliarnan bv ''of."Wales's Island, we are happy to find, is which dreadful event, the Captain, First Mare,'and ; •tur e discoveries, and to .expose the persons time. Antecedently to that period, applica- about 300 of the passengers and crew were plun^-cl entitled to no credit, as intel ligence has, been who had made the communication to the tion had been made toGovernment, request- into eternity 1 ' received from thence of so late a date as the knife of the assassin. The numbers, con- ing, fp.r the security of the well affected, These papers mention that the Rochfort squadron §tli'of August last,—Star. fined at present were but few ; and from the that a suspension of the Habeas Corpus consisting of 3 two deckers and 4 frigates armed en kno wledge he himself had of some of them, might be procured; but the Ministry, actu- flute, were descried off Havre, where they were HOUSE OF COMMONS—FEE. 2. they we're justly detained. If an, investiga- supposed to be wailing to accompany some expedition ated by motives of delicacy, not aware of about to sail from that port. HABEA S CORPUS. tion, cculd with prudence begTanted, lie had the extent of the danger, and anxious to in • Sir.EVAN NEPEAN,-in consequence The last Packet neither confirms nor contradicts no doubt it would establish the necessity for fringe the liberties of the subject as litile as the account of the-Rochfort squadron ; it is princi- of a notice given yesterday, rose to move the support and dcfc-nce of the loyal. possible, refused their concurrence. What pally occupied with a.debate which took place in the for leave to bring in a Bill for the further followed? The rebellion. In the mean House of Commons on Friday, upon a motion to Mr. WINDHAM said he would not con- continuance of the Act of 43d George [If. time the Government, having become continue the Suspension, of "the Habeas Corpus Act tend, wbet her the state of Ireland might, not in this Kingdom ; and upon-a division the Minister for the suspension ot the Habeas Corpus sensible of the necessity of the measure, be such as to render a suspension of the con- had Ii2 against 33. Wc- have paid as much atten- Act in Ireland. The continuation was ren- brought forward the.suspension of the Ha- stitution there necessary—but he must de- tion to this,Debate as our limits, this dav, would si- dered necessary bythe existence of disaffec- beas Corpus Act, and ob-.amed for it the mi't—our next publication will record the remainder. clare ihar this was the most extraordinary tion, -in considerable' degree, in Ireland, sanction of Parliament, with a zealous ex- application he ever'heard, because' there fhe Tribune frigate has arriveci m England *r0m by the avowed, determination of the enemy ertion for which they weie entitled to the Gibraltar, sr,d has General TIUGGE, lbe°Jate Lieut* was not.a single ground laid down foi; the ' to in vade that country, ami ihe preparations thanks of every hiend of Ireland ; but still Governor, onboard. House to form a decision upon. The flou.se notoriously marie tor that invasion, bythe it was too late. He was convinced,'and Several letteis have been brought by the above fri- was in possession of no fact whatever, and gate i. the latest dales are tire 37th December. I- ap- fact of the collection and association of a knew it to be the fiiui opinion of many therefore it ought not to agree to the motion, pears that General Fox fended on the iSth, bur the number oi Irishmen with the forces designed Gentlemen intimately acquainted with the in- without a previous enquiry by a Committee troops were not to be disembarked till the 1st of Jan. for that purpose, and the actual sitting of a ternal politics of that-country, that had the at which time a regular communication was to be as to the circumstances thaishoiild authorise :Committee, of United Irishmen at Paiis, suspension taken place sooner, the rebellion opened between the Town and the Bav. The fever it. The assertion that the character cf tlie had entirely ceased. ''"'.'• corresponding with®the United Irishmen in would never have burst forth. It was in- Lord Lieutenant of Ireland would .-guard . Ireland, -and .-•stimulating them to treason. finitely better to prevent guilt than to punish Not less than 1000 Cavalry-are under orders to em- thecoiimry from any ill effects or abuseof The Act now in loi'ce w-as to expire in six if. He was desirous, by repressing the bark at Pons,-nouth for the iVest indies.- power arising from the suspension was no New York Papers to the ,'j jth ult; - wereAeceiveil weeks alter the commencement of the pie- tieasonable attempts.of the turbulent and argument at-all in favour of it, and he in London on. Friday, last. They state, that Jiidre sent Session. He would, according to pre- factious part of the community in Ireland, ;; Pendleton was tried on the'roth ult. and convicted would therefore oppose the motion, cedent, move for leave to bring'in a Bill to to secure to the loyal and w-ell affected the ' of aiding and abetting in the late fatal duel between continue ic-further, till six Weeks after the Mr. PITT in an eloquent speech sup- enjoyment of security and happiness, Genera] Hamilton, and Colonel Burr. William P. commencement of. the next Session. posed the necessity of the suspension. Re Van Ness, Esq was also.tiiwff-and convicted of be- 'Mr. SHERIDAN reserved the full de- ing the bearer of the clwlkngej and for aiding and Sir JOHN NEWPORT said, he could said that the invasion of Ireland was ever abetting in the duel. never consent to a measure of this magni- since the commencement of this war a fa- claration of his sentiments upon the subject before the House for a future stage of the tude and constitutional importance upon such vourite object with our enemy, who sought It having been confidently stated, in some of the slight grounds as those stated bythe Right tti4 destruction of our independence and of proceeding. papers, that a French vessel had entered the BAV oT Hon. Baionet—and thought before any mo- our constitution. That for the more effec- Mr. ALEXANDER was surprized, .that Liscannor, and carried oft-a number of the inhabi- lion was mas made, the first necessarv step tually accomplishing this object there were any Gentlem-an should assert, that there ex- tants of the coast who had boarded her, and that a numbers of Irish traitors, who had escaped isted no cause for the suspension of the man had actually fallen a sacrafice-to the' terror-excit- should be,the appointment of a Secret Com- ed on fending that he was to be so unexpectedly torn mittee to enquire into ihe circumstances that from justice, now in Paris and other parts Habeas Corpus Act. He believed, that in from his country and' friends ; we think it riVht to might render the measure necessary.—Sir of France, instructing the enemy in the the North of Ireland, the people were in contradict the entire statement as. 2'silly and exlgn-e- John moved an amendment to this effect. means by which the inyasion was to be ac- general loyal ; but disaffection still lurked rated account, originating -in a circumstance very common in that part of the countrv, andi simply* Mr. DENIS BROWNE agreed that complished ; and that their great reliance among them, and if not kept down by the was on the-, disaffection which prevailed in strong hand of power, would soon become this:—a Smuggling Wherry hove off the shore, and. the greater part of the people of Ireland according to custom, was boarded by a number of too formidable for opposition. An Hon. were altogether as loyalas the people or this Ireland. That there was a fleet leady persons for the purpose of traffic, whe'11 the. wind * country.; but the circumstances in which equipped in one of. the French ports, and Gentleman had alluded to the period of Irish coming to blow fresh, the crew found it necessary to Ireland stood at present were distinct from prepared for the invasion" of Ireland ; and History, during the reigns of the earlier put to sea, but availed, themselves, as usual, of the next safe and convenient spot.to land their friends those of any lormer time. It was not only that this Scet was only pretcnted from sail- Princes ofthe BRUNSWICK Family, where ing by the vigilance of our blockading squa- the suspension of ihe Habeas Corpus Act and no doubt embraced the earliest opportunity of the machinations of Committees of United returning to dispose of their cargo. Irishmen sitting in Paris, that were to be dron. As •Jong as these transactions were first took place, and had compared that His Majesty's Prime and' Second. Serjeants, Dr. apprehended and guarded against, but mul carried on, and as long as that system of epoch to the present ; but he did not think treason, which had long convulsed the em- the resemblance so strong as the Hon. Gent, BROWME, and Sir JAMES CHATTERTON, Bart, tiiudesof them distributed along the whole are mentioned as the Judges appointed for the en- coast of the French Empire, prepared for pire, existed tn Ireland, it would .be neces- seemed to imagine. Atthe time the Jaco- suing Munster Circuit. invasion, communicating with the disaffect- sary to give the Government strong powers : bites were contending for the restoration of - ed at home, and sending emissaries befoie antl,the mild and humane character of the the STEWARTS to the thrones both of Great them to excite preparations, discontent and Chief Governor there, migliLbe a security Britain and Ireland. They had one corn insurrection among the people. Under to Parliament that these.powers would never mpn object in view. Now, the exertions of these .circumstances, it was prudent and ne- be abused. the Irish malcontents are directed to separate- Ireland from Great Britain, and to establish cessary ,tp continue the suspension, and not Mr. FOX, in ananimated reply, said it in the former country, a distinct and inde- to endanger the Constitution, by. exposing it was 3 matter of no consequence to him what pendent demociacy. The part of Ireland with unguarded confidence, to the attacks of the character of the Lord Lieutenant might which he had tlie honour to represent was 1 RR TO' BE LET, those who would take shelter behind it for be. It was enough for him that the Con- in a quiescent state, but he was satisfied that .j From the z$t-h Day of March-next; for such Term the purpose of destroying it. It was well stitution taught him to be jealous of granting as may be agreed on, the Farm of R IN E S K'EA, his constituents, although they laboured j known that hired emissaries from France exiiaoulinary powers.,,to any man : if there containing about 70 'Acres of choice,. Dairy and under nd necessity of availing themselves of }' had come to Ireland, with the treasonable was any fear of their being abused, the mild Tillage Land, on which there is a neat convenient the suspension, would heartily rejoice at the designs of exciting-disaffection, and convey- character ofthe man was the worst argument security that it would afford to such of then- HOUSE and OFFICES, . ing information. His great object in sup- •in the world. For if the powers were not neighbours as were not in such an enviable and a great convenience of Lime and Marl.—ft is porting the measure now proposed was to' necessary, they ought not to be granted at win, situation. It was a circumstance too well siUiate on'the.Banks of the River Shai in the prevent these , wretches from prosecuting all; and if, they were necessary, and the Half Barony of Leitrim, and Co. Galtvay, within authenticated to admit of the least doubt, their infamous purposes. • Lord Lieutenant wasan improper person to S miles of Wcoclford, 3 of Mount Shannon, and 4 of that to every point of France that is easily entrust them to, let him be removed. With Nenagh (by crossing the Shannon), and has the ad- Mr. HUTCHINSON said, he believed accessible from Ireland, numbers aie con;i vantage of Water Carriage to Dublin, Limerick, £fy.' respect to the arguments of the Right. Hon. the stare of Ireland at this time to be such as nually passing, whose object was surely not Gentleman (Mr. Pitt) he must say they As it would suit a Gentleman fond of sporting, to render a measure of this kind absolutely questionable. any small 'quantity of the Ground, will be-f.E'T with were more dangerous than, any he had ever necessary., He would therefore support the the House, -and the remainder-SET together or in motion on that account, and on the reliance heard before fall from him, and if he was Mr. MARTIN (of G'a;way) was against divisions. that some.salutary measures would be spee- to continue much longer in office, he should the motion, and he said that if the measure PROPOSALS will be received by WILLIAM- dily adopted in Parliament, with, a view of look on the doctrines advanced by him that was of that great benefit to Ireland, which APJOHN, Esq; of said place. night, as alarming in a very considerable several Hon. Members had asserted, it quieting the discontents that existed in Ire- WANTS EMPTGYMENT7~ land. . . V degree ; without any one reason except [ru- was rather unfair to, refuse to the people of mour, ' and ,alledged notoriety of Irish trai- ; A LAND STEWARD, whose character . Sir JOHN STUART lamented that me- England, a participation of its blessings.—• will bear the strictest enquiry for Sobriety, Honesty, lancholy experience afforded ample proof of tors being,in France, he wanted to take (a laugh.) and Care, is a perfect judge of buying and selling si! the necessity of the measure. He wis him- away the Constitution of a country in which ' Mr. DAWSON declared himself hostile kind of Stock, together with cultivating Land to self the representative of a county as sincere- that Right Hon. Gentjema,n admitted, that to Sir E. Nepean's motion. 'advantage, and keeping Labourers' accounts. I-ie has been employed for many years past by respecta- a very large majority of the inhabitants The «[ues_tion being put, there appeared for the ly attached as any in Ireland to.Britain, and ble .Gentlemen in the Counties oi" I.imenck- and were loyal. It. was admitted by all that Ire- Motion im'—For the Amcndment'33—Maj. 79. the British Constitution, yet it was hot alto- Clare, and will be heard of by applying to Mr. land-was now as peaqeable as. any. county in Leave ot course was given to bring in a Bill, and gether. This measure \yas called for by the. M. 0'CojsnQK, Shoemaker, Church-str. Ennis. s Committee appointed to prepare it. , ,