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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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rewards ignorantly and ineffectually punishing or tending with vindictiveness against the necessary "Sets they would acquire other ideas , feelings , d general qualities , which would be to themselves * tprnal causes of good , and which would make them eternal causes of good to others ; and they would move all other external causes of evil , and substitute f rthem the external causes of good , and would thus ffectually prevent the formation of bad or inferior ualities &c , or of internal causes of evil in those Educated under their influence _ . _ . ' dislike badness
Man must always inferiority or , or ¦ what appears to him to be inferiority or badness ; nd this dislike must , in some degree , be extended to the individuals in whom these attributes exist , so long as the inferiority or badness is excessive ( for man is so constituted that he must dislike that which is offensive to him ) , but by the removal of the false supposition respecting the imagined free will of individuals , and of the false and unjust ideas and feelings and habits of thought and feeling consequent upon that supposition , —dislike would be divested of the unkindness and harshness which , through the influence of that supposition , are now aesociated with it ; and would be made to be accompanied in all cases by compassionate and kind ideas and feelings , and
consequently by gentle , though judicious and firm treatment ; and , so modified , and correspondingly expressed , under other favourable influences , which the knowledge of the causes of good and evil to man would cause to be formed ( and which shall be subsequently referred to)—the expression of dislike or disapproval , operating upon man's natural love of approbation , would be a powerful reformatory external circumstance ; instead of being , as it is when felt and expressed as at present with the harshness and vindictiveness of blame and retaliation , a powerful external cause of evil , tending always to excite , in those whose characters have been formed under its influence , injurious ideas and feelings and conduct , similar to those which are thus expressed and
exhibited . I must reserve the further consideration of this subject for another letter . Henry Travis . P . S . In my last , " resist without an effort or temptation " should have been— " resist without an effort a temptation . "
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THE CATHOLIC TRUTH . October 29 , 1851 . Sir . —It is well to note the signs of the times , and to rest assured that , out of the chaos of opinion which at present reigns in the realms of theology , order will arise , and a new creation of religious thought arise , more in accordance with man ' s advanced state in civilization and science . Some of the clergy of the Established Church , convinced of the untenableness of the old doctrine of depravity arising from man ' s fall , are teaching that of progress and development , uniting these ideas to the orthodox terms of redemption through the merits of Christ's sacrifice , strange as this association is . Ihearda reverend gentleman , last Sunday evening , endeavour to interpret Paul ' s language in Romans viii . 20 on this hypothesis . The creature ( i . e ., the whole creation ) was made subject to vanity ( i . ., was made imperfect , because finite ) , not willingly ( either by the Creator or the creature , but necessarily ) , who hath subjected the same in hope of salvation ( query , from imperfection ; ergo , from finiteness ) through the merits of Christ Jesus ( the revealed God ) . Of course , believers only , according to this hypothesis , obtain the benefit ; consequently , the strong objection of intolerance und injustice is not in the least removed by this mode of treating the subject , especially as Sin and Satan are an busy and successful under the new hypothesis us the old .
I particularly wish to draw the attention of the New lteformera to these and other attempts , on the part of the orthodox , to drug in opinions they have long combated , but which are ut lust too strong for them to withstand , und , making them their own , render them subservient to the maintenance of those narrow , soul-Bcparuting creeds which oppress so heavily the heart of humanity . Thus have they done "With astronomy—denounced and persecuted its truest
tent-hern , and then claimed that science ua their nobleat ally . So with geology . Fifty years back , the deductions which have wince been made were only dim perceptions . Those who demanded for the eurllYa oxiHU-nco a period rather longer than nix thousand years were pointed out as infideln , destroyers of ( iod ' a truth , & (; . ; and now the learned divine complacently talkH of the myriads of nges of thi « globe '*) progressive « xiMt . ence , with ' the text , " because in six days the Iiord created the heuvenn and the earth , " Htaring him
» i the face ; and now the ; theory of ihiiii ' h progreHHive development they would quietly absorb , and make it n part and parcel of their nyHtern , without following « ut the necoHHury consequences to which the adoption of thin doctrine must lead , viz ., that all evil and imperfection in disappearing a . s man grows into a moru Perfect being . Here all creeds and institutions take r ««> k an processes for arriving at thin result , when each man uluill become a luw to himself . ** t the Reformers , then , be on their guard , and , while they uidcuvour to erect their ftltttr of iuith to
the Divine Beneficence , let them be prepared to expose the artful attempts of sectarianism to filch the new cloth for the purpose of patching their old garments ; nor rest in too great security , supposing that they have demonstrated the rottenness of existing institutions sufficiently , and that no more need be done in this direction . One earnest mind who could grapple with the realities of the subject , might indeed overttirow the whole fabric of sacerdotal error , which stands totteiing on the verge of destruction . Let each man , then , respect the share of work allotted to one and the other , and by united efforts the hag of Superstition—with , its bell , book , witches , demons , and damnations —shall be expelled the habitations of humanity , and Love , Truth , and Justice shall preside and control the inner thoughts of all . "Verax .
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MONEY MARKET AND CITY INTELLIGENCE . Saturday . The gradual rise in the price of Consols this week is striking . On Monday they closed at 9 SJ jf ; on Tuesday , at 98 | 99 ; on Wednesday , 99 & ; and on Thursday , 981 99 . The closing | price yesterday was—Consols , 98 | 99 firm . The fluctuations have been : Consols , from 98 £ to 99 j ; Bank Stock , 214 to 215 ; and Exchequer Bills , 52 s . to 55 s . premium . Yesterday Foreign Stocks were done at the following quotations : —Brazilian , at 93 | to 94 j ; Sardinian Bonds , at 83 | to 84 f ; ditto Scrip , £ dis ., being a further advance io both securities . Spanish Five per Cents , were done at 21 to i ; ditto Three per Cents ., 39 $ ; ditto Passive , 5 § ; Dutch Four per Cents ., 90 £ ; ditto Two-and-a-Half per Cents ., 59 |; Danish Three per Cents ., 76 \; ditto Five per Cents ., 102 £ ; Venezuela , 36 to 4 ; French Five per Cents ., 91 f ., at the Exchange of 25 f . 15 c ; Portuguese Five per Cents ., 92 ; Russian Four-and-a-Half per Cents , 103 J to 3 ; and Peruvian , 874 .
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SHARES . Last Official Quotation for Week ending Friday Evening . Railways . Banks . Aberdeen .. .. 10 g Australasian .. .. - — Bristol and Exeter .. 79 British North American 45 Caledonian .. .. 6 | Colonial .. .. .. — Eastern Counties .. li % Commercial of London .. 25 j Edinburgh and Glasgow 2 London and Westminster 30 Great Northern .. .. 17 London Joint Stock .. 18 j Great S . & W . ( Ireland ) 35 ] National of Ireland .. — Great Western .. .. 81 $ National Provincial .. — Lancashire and Yorkshire 57 f Provincial of Ireland .. 41 Lancaster and Carlisle — Union of Australia .. 35 , 4
Lond ., Brighton , &S . Coa » t 95 Union of London .. 14 | London and Blackwall .. 7 f Mines . London and N .-Western 116 } Bolanos — Midland 55 J Brazilian Imperial .. — North British .. -. 6 § Ditto , St . John del Hey 19 South-Eastern and Dover — Cobre Copper .. .. 34 g South-Western .. .. — Miscellaneous . York , Newcas ., & Berwick 18 | Australian Agricultural 15 York and North Midland 2 Ti Canada 49 ^ Docks . General Steam .. .. 27 $ East and West India .. 142 Penins . Sc Oriental Steam 67 ^ London 116 Royal Mail Steam .. 83 St . Katharine .. .. 79 South Australian .. 23 A
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FROM THE LONDON GAZETTE . Tuesday , Nlvemher 18 . Bankrupts . —S . Isiibkwood and N . T . Ishbhwood , Ludgate-hill , house decorators , to surrender November 24 , January 1 ; solicitors , Messrs . Reid , Langford , and Marsden , Friday-street , Cheapside ; official assignee , Mr . Bell , Coleman-street-buildings—T . Lougii and C . W . Lewis , Great St . Helen ' s , Bishopsgate-street Within , drysalters , December 1 , January 8 ; solicitors , Messrs . Fry and Loxley , Cheapside ; official assignee , Mr . Bell , Ooleman-streetbuilJings—W . White , Winchester , Southampton , builder , November 28 , January 2 ; solicitors , Air . Sanger , Essex-court , Temple ; and Messrs . Edwards and Godwin , Winchester ; official assignee , Mr . Cannan , Aldermanbury—G . Wakelinq , Chelinsford , auctioneer , November 2 i ) , January 10 : solicitors , Messrs . Treheni and White , Barge-yard , Bucklersbury ; and Messrs . Chalk and Meggy , Chelmsforii ; official assignee , Mr . Nicholson ,
Basinghall-streot—S . Asiilin , Eastcheup , corn-factor , December 5 , January 30 ; solicitor , Mr . Murray , London-street ; official assignee , Mr . Punncll , Guildhall-chambers — J . Cus-TA . NKU , Greenwich , miller , November 29 , January 10 ; solicitors , Messrs . Lawrence , Plews , and Boyer , Old Jewry Chambers ; olficial assignee , Mr . Nicholson , Businghull-street—A . Mouatt , Creed-lane , City , wine meichant , December 2 , January 0 ; solicitors , Messrs , Young and Son , Mark-lane , Fcnchurcu-strcet ; official assignee , Mr . Groom , Abchurch-lane— It . W . Dadd , Chatham , victualler , November 25 , December 23 ; solicitors , Messrs . Cox and Son , Bucklersbury ; oflicial assignee ; , Mr . Graham —J . Fum . uk , Ely , Cambridgeshire , stonemason , November 28 , December 23 ; solicitors , Messrs . Pickering , Smith , and Thompson , Stone-buildings , Lincolu ' s-inn ; anil Messrs . T . and (» Archer , Kly ; ollicial assignee , Mr . Stausft-ld—J . C . Sankohd , Paternoster-row , utationcr , December 5 and 23 ; solicitor , Mr . limes . Billiter-struct ; official assignee , Mr . Stansfeld—J .
Whit-WAJi . jun ., Huildoihlit'lil , woollen cloth manufacturer , December 1 and 22 ; Holicitors , Mr . Floyd , Hudili'ralield ; and Mesarn . Bond and Iturwick , Leeds ; ollicial assignee , Mr . Hope , I . eedd—J . Him ., Thome , Yorkshire , wine merchant , December ( i , January 10 ; solicitors , MewarH . England und Sons , Hull ; anil Mr . llulwer , Leodn ; oilicial assignee , Mr . r ' reeman , Sheffield—T . Caiik , Doucaster , innkeeper , December 0 , January 10 ; solicitor , Mr . Smith , Doncaster ; official assignee , Mr . Freeman , Hbeflield—It . Collins , Bawdlands . Clithoroc , Lancashire , grocer , November 2 < > , December 11 ); aoliciioiB , Mr . Hutton , Manchester ; and Messrs , Bhit . khurst anil Hon . Preston ; ollicial usaignee , Mr . Lee , MancliCHter—J . Entwi . slk , Manchester , cotton manufacturer , November 28 , December 19 ; nolioitorn , Me ^ ra . Sale , Worlhington , uud Shlpiniin . Manchester ; ollicial asignee , Mr . Lee , Manchester — T . FllAV , Wigan and Manc . liostor , check manufacturer December 2 anil 13 ; solicitor , Mr . i \ Liycw , \ Vigau ; odlciid aaaigneo , Mr . Fraser , Manchester .
I ' ridfiy , JVovttinbur 21 . BaNIUUH'TS . —J . ClJSTANiJH ( anil not ( Justaner , an before advertised ) , Greenwich , miller , to surrender November 29 , January 10 ; Holicitors , Mchhi-h . La \ vr ; iuee , PIcwh , and lioyer , Old JewrycliainbeiH ; official assignee , Mr . Nicholson , Basinij ( hull-ntroet—T . Patiknt , Halfion Waldon , EsHex , cooper , November 21 ) , January Hi ; ( solicitors , Me . iHiri . Sliurpe , Field , Jackson , and Ncwbold , Bedford-row ; und Mchim'm . Thurifuod , KallVou Wuldeii ; ollicial assignee , Mr . PrnneU , ( Juililhall-cliumberH , BuHinghall-Hlrcet— A . Bit . viu oltt > . A . winbl ) -row . Mile-endroad , licenced victualler , Nnvember 21 J , January Mi ; aolicitorH , Mt-Hsiri . bhiien uud "Grunt , Koiiidiigton-crosH ; ollicial u-uigime
Mr eiin < ll ( iuildba ! l-i ' , hainbciH , ItaHiii « hall-n .. rcet—H . Solomon , Strand , tailor , November 2 H , December 31 ; Hohcitor , Mr . Fiuney . Furiiivul ' p-inu , llolboru ; o / fleial uHHignce , Mr . Staiiufcld — 11 . Wooi . k and L Lyonh , <; ii |) plcgaf . c-l > iiildingH , umbrella iiuuiuiuctiirei'H l ) e < embrr 3 , Jiuiimry 2 ; Holioilor . Mr . Purker , 8 t . PuuI'h ( Jliurchyard ; ofllciul aii ; iigne (> , Mr . HUuuleld—W . l ^ VANH , Baiibury , t ) xl < irdahiru , ironmonger , Dccoinber U , January td ; solicitor , ' Mr . Aplin , Hiiiiliiiiy ; ollleiul tiHuiguee , Mr . Urulium—E . S Ci . akku . HI . Muy (^< tiy , Kent , buker , December ^) , January <> - " nolicitoi-, Mr . lloblor , Hucklerubury ; ofllciul UH » lgn , ; > Mr > Gruhum—T . Uaknjom , Pull-muitt Eimt , uud Willeadou , wino uiyiolidiit , Vocouibvr i > , Juuuiwy Q ; avlkilor , Mr , Aaucaloy
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BANK OF ENGLAND . An Account , pursuant to the Act 7 ih and 8 th Yictoria , cap . 32 for the week ending on Saturday , November ' 15 , 1851 . 5 ISSUE DEPARTMENT . £ £ Notes issued .... 29 , 114 , f ) 15 Government Debt , ll , 01 o 100 Other Securities .. 2 , 984 , 900 Gold Coin and Bullion 15 , 081 , 060 Silver Bullion .... 33 , 375 £ 29 , 114735 £ 29 , 114 , 435 BANKING DEPARTMENT . £ £ Proprietors'Capital , 14 , 553 , 000 Government Secu-Rest 3 , 180 , 188 rities ( including Publ ' icDeposits ( in- Dead-weight Aneluding Exche- nuity ) J- . ' ^ 'l'TS " quer , Savings' Other Securities ,. 11 , 818 / M'J Banks , Commis- Notes 9 , 528 , 870 sioners of National Gold and Silver Debt , and Divi- Coin 580 , 909 dend Accounts ) .. 0 , 938 , 290 Other Deposits 9 , 308 , 899 Seven-day and other Bills 1 , 189 , 609 £ 357 lG ' . ) , 98 ( 5 £ ' 35 , 1 (> 9 , 98 G Dated November 20 , 1851 . M Mahshali ,, Chief Cashier ,
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B 1 UT 1 SH FUNDS FOR THF , PAST VTKEK . ( Closing Prices . ) !¦
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S'atur . \ Mond . Tuns . JVedn . T / iurs . rid . Bank Stock .... 214 ^ 211 J 215 215 — 215 3 per Ot . Red .. « J 7 fe SJ 7 S OH A 88 « 7 s 1 ) 8 3 p . C . Coii . Ana . 98 H « J 8 i | \) Hl !>!) lM «^ 3 p . C . An . 1720 . 3 p . Ct . Con ., Ac . « . » H . j 1184 98 9 ' . »; \ 'JH ' »'•> 3 J p . Cent . A 11 . 3 Hg « J 8 . { « J « . J it'J \ i ) H , ' JWR New 5 perCt » . l- ' . > LougAii 8 .. 1 HC () . 7 , 1 7 7 7 7 7 Ind . ' st . KMp . ct . 202 * 2 ( Jl . i 203 2 M \ Ditto Honds .. 58 p 5 H p 01 p iYi p 5 ' . ) p ( j . ! p Ex . Itilla , 1000 / . 51 p 55 p 55 p 52 p 55 p . ) . ) p Ditto , CtMh . .. 51 p . i ; i p 55 p 55 p 55 p 55 p Ditto , S 11111 I ! 51 i > 5 , > i ) 55 p 52 p ' 55 p 5 . J p
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IOKKIGN FUNDS . ( Last Ofliclal Quotation during the Week ending Friday livening . ) Austrian 5 jierCents . — Mexican 5 per Ct . Ace . 21 ! Belgian Bds ., 44 p . Ct . HO Small .. .. 2 ( 1 , 1 Bru / ilian 5 per Centft . IKi ^ Neapolitan 5 per Cent / . ; . — BuenoD AyreH ( i p . CtH . 45 Peruvian 4 ^ per Cents . H 7 ;{ Chilian 6 per Cents . .. 1014 Portuguese 5 per Cent . — Danish 5 perCenta . .. 102 . 1 - per Ct » . 33 ; i Dutch 24 per Cents ... 5 < J AniiuitieH — _ 4 per Cents . .. ( M \{ Russian , 1 K 22 , 4 J p . Cl .... 10 . t , i Kcuudor BoikU .. 3 i Spun . Active ! ., . ') p . ( Ma . 204 French 5 p . C . An . atl ' ariH !)() . /() I ' uH . iive .. 5 3 p . Cttt ., JilL } ll . > >(> . IO ' Deferred .. —
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C () It N K KCHANG K . Ma . kk-i . anh , FitiDAY , N «) v « mbor 21 . — 'l'lie supplicK of all grain are small thin week . Wheat and JJurlcy without alteration . Oal » ( id . dearer . Arrivals from November H > to November ' 22 . JCnglisli . Iritih . J '' orei { j ; n . Wheat .. .. 1980 2180 Hurley .. .. 28150 Oatn i : t ( i () i : «) 0 [>(>() FLO Wit . Town-uiailn p « r mick 37 b . to 40 a See . oiulu 35 — ' M F . Mttex and Hnllblk . on board i ( hi |> 33 — ; tli Norfolii uud Hloekton 31 — . tl A me . lean per burrel 11 * — JW Canadian . PJ — X ' A Whvuton Jirewd . « 4 d , tU « HI , louf , ilou ^ lioldw , t > 4 <« .
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GRAIN , Mark-lane , Nov . 21 . Wheat , II . New 33 s . to 3 . r > 3 . Maple 30 ^ . to 32 i Fine 35 —37 White 27 —28 Old 3 fi —38 Boilers 30 —32 White 36 —38 Peans , Ticks . .. 28 —30 Fine 38 —40 Old 30 —32 Superior New 40 — 41 Indian Corn .... 27 —2 'J Byo 25 —27 Oats , Feed 16 —17 Barley 23 —24 Fine 17 — IS Maltino- 26 —28 Poland 19 —20 Malt , Ord 48 —52 Fine 20 —21 Fine 52 —50 Potato 17 — 19 Peas , Hog 28 —30 Fine .... 19 —20
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GENERAL AVERAGE PJLUCE OF GRAIN Week Ending Nov . 15 . Imperial General Weekly Average . Wheat 36 s . id . I Rye 26 s . 0 J Barley 26 7 Beans 28 8 Oats 18 1 ( Peas 28 3 Aggregate Average of the Six Weeks . Wheat 36 s . 2 d . Rye 24 s 8 Barley 25 7 Beans 28 3 Oats 17 5 Peas 27 5
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AVERAGE PTUCE OF SUGAR . The average price of Brown or Muscovado Sugar , computed from the returns made in the week ending the 16 th day of November , 1851 , is 21 a . lid . rer cwt .
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Nov . 22 , i 85 ij ® f ) £ aairn * 1119
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Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 22, 1851, page 1119, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1910/page/19/
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