that WRIGHT and the whole of his a box for depositing any sums at the associates have been elected honorary office of COBBETT's EVENING COBBETT'S EVENING POST, the publication of the first number of which is unavoidably put off to SATURDAY, THE 29th OF JANUARY; when it will certainly be published. To this office I wish all letters, for myself, to be addressed. The postage must be paid, a régulation which I am sorry to adopt, but which has been rendered absolutely necessary by the hostility which the sons and daughters of corruption are carrying on against me, through the means of sham letters. This is labouring in their vocation; for they know well that what they make me pay in postage, goes towards augmenting the taxes, and their food consists of taxes. may be easily got over. Let it be recollected that it is the great number-N. B.-To all those gentlemen who of small sums, from which large sums have forwarded money towards the most frequently arise. There will be Fund for Reform, who have also put their names to their letters, and whose letters I have received, I have written answers, in my own hand, and under my own name. And this I shall continue to do; observing only, that I shall set apart a portion of only one day in the week for answering such letters; so that, gentlemen will be so good as not to deem me negligent, if their letters should not be answered quite so quickly as they might reason ably expect. PAINE'S BIRTH DAY. There will be a Dinner at the Crown and Anchor, in the Strand, on Saturday, the 29th instant, to celebrate the Anniversary of the Birth of that famous Political Writer, and most able and successful Advocate of Liberty, THOMAS PAINE. 1 Preeisely at SEVEN- o'clock, the Chair will be taken by MR. COBBETT, who will, with permission of the Company; offer some remarks on the merits of 2 PAINE, compared with the pretended merits of PITT and of Fox; and will then submit the question, whether it be not more worthy of a just and sensible people to institute PAINE CLUBS than to institute Pitt Clubs and Fox Clubs.-Tickets, at five shillings each, will be ready at the Bar of the Crown and Anchor, and may be had there, at any time before nine o'clock on Friday evening, the 28th instant; but, there is no engagement, that Tickets can be had later than that hour. COBBETT'S EVENING POST, ,, me even The first number of which will be published on Saturday the 29th of this present month of January," will be of the same size, and sold at the same price as other daily evening papers.-THE PLACE OF PUBLICATION WILL BE, No. 269, STRAND, LONDON.—It will have that mark of "respectability," called a stamp, for which four→ pence will be paid by before the print be put upon the paper. The Paper will be sold to news-men in the usual way for sir. pence, and they will, as I am told is the custom, sell it to their customers for seven-p en-pence. Those who publish newspapers in London, do not sell them in retail, further than from their counter? wish to take this paper will be pleased Those gentlemen, therefore, who may to apply to their news-men in London, unless, indeed, to the agents of those news-men in the country. For the further information of our friends, the Reformers, in the country, it, may be necessary to observe, that, by forming themselves into little reading partnerships of twenty and thirty, and hy getting one of the number to write to a news-man in London, sending him the money before-hand for a quarter of F Walling, Dun a.year or any other period, they will Hodgson, Wimpole-street, Cavenbe sure to have the paper regularly by dish-square.-Scripp, South Moltonpost. Nothing will be more easy or street. Scripps, Oxford-street.more agreeable than to meet in little Scribb, Edgware-road. Leach, Bol companies and read all the news all sover-street, Oxford-street.-Clement, about the state of France and Ame-192, Strand.-Stemman, Prince's the debates in Parliament; street, Leicester-square. rica, all all my commentaries upon the "wild opposite Adelphi, Strand.-Westley and visionary projects" of all the in- & Co., 159, Strand.-Walker, near numerable political quacks that are Red Lion-street, Holborn. now coming forth with their nostrums: combe, Middle-row, Holborn.-WiThe news-men are a numerous body, all, Fetter-lane.-Kennedy, Fetterare, in general, very punctual in lane.-Gibson, New Inn Passagetheir attention to their business. I Bellamy, Lincoln's Inn Fields.-Tuc have endeavoured to get a complete ton, Wardour-street, Soho.-Limbird, list of them. * ! Wardour-street, Soho-Lucas, Wardour-street, Soho. Hathway, Poland-street, Oxford-street-Blackburn, Post Office, Knightsbridge. Miller, High-street, Kensington. and 6972 The following is the most perfect list that I have been able to obtain, and any of those gentlemen may be applied to for the Paper-Bagshaw, Brydges-street, Covent-garden + Heward, High-street, Kensington. Axtell & Co., Finch-lane, Cornhill Spencer, East-street, Manchestersquare.--MShee, George-street, Suf, folk-street, Borough Appleyard, Duke-street, Adelphi.---Joseph Appleyard, Catherine-street.-W. Bousted, Fludyer-street, Westminster. Byfield, Charing-cross.-Bain, Palmer's Village, Westminster. Ridgway, Piccadilly. — Laking, Curzon-street, May-fair-Smith & Co., Duke-street,Tomlin, Red Lion Passage, HolGresyenor-square. Huntly, Duke- born.Kimpton, Bell Yard, Temstreet, Grosvenor-square. Lloyd, ple Bar. Richards, 7, GoughHarley-street, Cavendish-square.square, Flect-street-Marlbro, Ave, Burtenshaw, St. Martin's-lane. Perks, near St. Martin's Church. Maria-lane, Saint Paul's: Ray, Clementson, Lambeth Walk-Hol Creed-lane, Ludgate - hill. Far-lands, Vauxhall Walk, Lambeth. mer, Commercial - road, Whitecha- Chappell, 66, Pall-mall.-Cole; Greenpel-Dowling, Great Ayliff-street, wich:-Redford, London-road, Saint Whitechapel. Cruse, Little Bri-George's fields. Kirby, Staffordtain. Joel, Little Britain. Hel- street, Bond-street. — Pond, Oldton, Penton-street,......Pentonville. - bailey.-Delahoy, Deptford.—Horner, Sargent, Penton-street, Pentonville. James-street, New-cut, Lambeth.-Woodward, Bull-head-court, New- Dawson, Camden Town.- Davis, Barnes, Cock-court, Hampstead.-Adams, Somers Town. gate-street. ton, Grafton-street, Soho.-Brown, 108, Ratcliff Highway. Handford, opposite Chancery lane, Holborn. Trunk-maker, near Charing-croas. Aldershaw, Adam - street, Edg-Wrangham, New Bond-street. La ware - road. Krause, Portman- ton, New Bond-street.Davis, būs street, Portman-square. Riebat, Paternoster-row Jobbins, Sloane Blandford-street, Manchester-square. square. Young, York-street, Hans Greenwich.-Harwood, Great Russtreet, City.-Newman, Little Eastsell-street, Bloomsbury.Kettle, near cheap. Phora, Tower-hill. - Cox, King-street, Holborn. -- Alexander, Mile-end-road.-Johnson, Mile-endCity-road. Lewis, Mount-street, road.-Gravat, Windmill-street, CityGrosvenor-square.-Onwhyn, Cathe-road.-Moodie, Cheyne-walk, Chel rine-street, Strand.-Wood, Exeter- sea. Rhodes, Chapel-row, Little street, Catherine-street, Strand. Cayler, Blackman-street, Borough. Pocock, Union-street, Lambeth. Chelsea. Hubert, Compton-street, Soho.-Hearn, Compton-street, Soho. Standard, Bow-Windsor, Mile endOllave, Mile-end. Sufferson, I fensive things, which quacks put Little Warner-street, Clerkenwell. forth relative to the cure of a disease Jobbins, near Turnpike, Pimlico. the very existence of which, in the Bousted, King-street, Westminster. world, ought not to be known to Jenkins, New-road, Paddington. those whom I wish to have for my The Clerks of the Roads, at the Post readers. I leave the publication of office, are likewise newsmen. such things to the supporters of po litical corruption: was The office of this paper, is, as observed before, at 269, Strand, London, where a clerk will be in at tendance to receive Advertisements and other Communications from this time 0402 forward; and advertisers may depend upon strict attention being paid to A their orders. It is impossible to say, of circulation at present, what extent of the Paper will have, but, be it what it may, it shall never contain any advertisements, or paragraphs likely to tis have a tendency to cheat people to put their money in the lottery, nor any of those disgusting and of Printed by H. Hay, 11, Newcastle-street, Strand, for T. DOLBY, 290, Strand ́ |