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EACH DAY'S PRICE OF STOCKS IN AUGUST, 1808.

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[Printed by J. NICHOLS and SON, Red Lion Passage

SIR JAMES BRANSCOMB and CO. Stock-Brokers, 11, Holborn; 37, Cornhill; and 38, Hay-market.

THE

GENTLEMAN'S

LOND. GAZETTE
GENERAL EVEN.
Lloyd's Evening
St.James's Chron
London Chron.
Globe--Brit.Prefs
London Evening
The Sun-Star
London Packet
English Chron.
Times-Aurora
Morning Chron.
Morning Herald
M.Poft-Ledger
Courier--Ev. Ma.
Dai.Ad.&Oracle
Morning Advert.
Traveller-News
Commer. Chron.
Pilot-Statesman
35 Weekly Papers
Bath 3, Briftol 5
Birmingham 3
Blackb. Brighton
Berwick-Bury

CAMBRIDGE

Canterbury 2

Carli.2.-Chefter2

ChelmsCambria.

MAGAZINE

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Cornw.-Coventry]
Cumberland 2
Doncafter--Derb.

Dôrchet.-Effex

Exeter 2, Glouc. 2
Halifax Hants2
Hereford, Hull 3
IRELAND 35
Ipfw.1,Kentish 4
Laneaft.--Leicef.
Leeds 2-Lewes
Liverp 6.-Maidft.
Manchefter 4
Newcastle 3

Northampton 2
Norf.-Norwi. 1
Notts.Nor.Wales
OXFORD2. Portf.
Prefton-Plymo.

Reading Salisb.
SCOTLAND 19
Salop--Sheffield2
Sherborne, Surry
Shrewfb.--Suffex
Staffordshire
Stamford-Tynej
Wakefi.-Warw.
Worc. 2.-YORKS.

Jerfey 2, Guern.2.

Meteorological Diaries for August and Sept. 762 Longevity in Herefordshire-On Swallows 796
Vegetable Materials for manufacturing Paper 764 ARCHITECTURAL INNOVATION, NO. CXXV. 797
Vaccination dispassionately discussed ... ibid. Choice of a Wife-Mrs.Ord-Baroness Offaly soo
Jourhal of a Voyage to Batavia concluded. 766 REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS; viz.
Mr.JusticeHardinge's Charact.of Buonaparte 767 Charges by Archdeacons Pott and Cambridges01
Captain Hardinge-Illustration of Scripture 768 Bishop of Exeter (Fisher's) Fast Sermon .. 804)
Knowle Chapel-Dabridgecourt's Brass... 769 Burn's Christian Officer's Complete Armour 805
The Founders and Restorers of the Saxon Laws il. Mr. Burke's Letter on the Catholic Claims. ibid.
Verses by the late Ald. Boydell's Grandfather 772 Selection of Psalms adaptedtoaParish Church 806
"BiographiaBritannica"-Miscell. Remarks 773 Letter to the Bp. of London by Mr. Stone. ibid.
Key to Characters in "The Spiritual Quixote" 774 Dr. A. Bell's Sermon on educating the Poor ibid.
Chemistry-Charade by Professor Porson..775 Hort's New Panthern-Sermon on Holiness ibid.
Notes on the Church of Blything, co. Suffolk 776 M. Depons' Travels in South America... 808
A Modern Definition of a Dangerous Man. ibid. Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson . 815
Account of Mounteagle House, Southwark 777 Kathleen, a Ballad-History of Shrewsbury 819
Dr. Lettfom's Fifty-fourth Letter on Prisons. ib. LITERARY INTELLIGENCE-Index Indicat. 820
Mr. Neild's Remarks on Horsham Gaol...778 SELECT POETRY for September 1808, 821-824
On the Mifapplication of Clerical Titles. 7so Proceedings in the late Session of Parliament825
The Uses of the Cuttle-fish-Indian Fish . 781 Interesting Intell. from the London Gazettes828
Sir Philip Sidney-Ash-tree bearing Pears 781 Abstract of the principal Foreign Occurrences840
Watson's"Historical Catechism"commended 782 Country News-Domestic Occurrences.. 845
Evils of Circulating and Juvenile Libraries. 783 Additions and Corrections in former Obits. 848
Viceroysof Ireland--Vine-leaves--Shakspeare 784 Births and Marriages of eminent Perfons. 850
White Lead Manufactories-Capital Punishm. ib. Obituary, with Anecdotes, of remark. Perfons 851
Illustrations of Horace, Book II. Epistle I. 785 Average Prices of the Markets for September 863
THE PROJECTOR, N° LXXXVII.
795 Daily Variations in the Prices of the Stocks 864

Embellished with Perspective Views of KNOWLE CHAPEL, WARWICKSHIRE;
and of MOUNTEAGLE HOUSE, SOUTHWARK.

BY

SYLVANUS

URBAN, GENT.

Printed by NICHOLS and SON, at CICERO'S HEAD, Red-Lion Paffage, Fleet-ftreet, London; where all Letters to the Editor are defired to be addreffed, POST-FAID.

1,808.

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The average degrees of temperature, as noted at eight o'clock in the morning, are 3 65-31; those of the corresponding month in the year 1807, were 63 17-31; in 1806, 62 7-31; in 1805, 63 1-3d; and in 1804, 60 1-3d.

The quantity of rain fallen this month is equal to 3 inches 6-100ths; that of the corresponding month in the year 1807, 2 inches 55-100ths; in 1806, 4 inches 27100ths; in 1805, 2 inches 25-100ths; in 1804, 2 inches 26-100ths; and in 1803, i inch 81-100ths.

St. James's-square, Bristol, 9th mo. 7th, 1908.

METEOROLOGICAL TABLE for September 1808. By W. CARY, Strand. Height of Fahrenheit's Thermometer.

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THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE.

For SEPTEMBER, 1808.

Mr. URBAN,

FOR

Sept. 15. OR some time past, among other pursuits, during my leisure hours, I have tried a variety of experiments respecting the various and least expensive articles from which Paper can be made; and, partly with a view to this, I have travelled through the greater part of Scotland, England, and Ireland. The result of my experiments and observations is, that by far the cheapest and most ready articles from which Paper can be made, are the refuse of Hemp and Flax; and the hempen particles of the Hop and Bean plant.

It is a fact that about the generality of mills for beating and dressing Hemp and Flax, a large proportion, in some inland places amounting to nearly one half what is car, ried thither, is either left there to rot under the name of refuse, or thrown away as of no use; because too rough and short for being spun, or converted into Cloth. Now, from the experiment I have tried, I have uniformly found that though too tough and short for being converted into Cloth, even of the coarsest kind, the refuse of Hemp and Flax, on being beat and shaken so as to separate the strawy from the tough stringy particles, which can be done in a few minutes by a mill driven by wind, water, steam, or even by an old blind horse, becomes thereby as soft and pliable, and as useful for making Paper, as the longest and what is reckon ed the most valuable part of the plant, after it has been converted into cloth, and worn for years,

In its natural state, it is true, the refuse of Hemp and Flax is generally of a brown and somewhat dark coLour. But what of that? By the application of a little oil of vitriol, and other cheap ingredients well known to every bleacher, such refuse, with out being in the least injured for

making paper, can in a few hours, if necessary, be made as white as the finest Cambric. By being beat when wet by a mill or otherwise, it also acquires a considerable degree of whiteness.

There are at a medium published in London every morning 16,000 newspapers; and, every evening, about 14,000; of those published every other day, there are about 10,000. The Sunday newspapers amount to about 25,000; and there are nearly 20,000 other weekly papers, making in all the enormous sum of 245,000 per week, At a me dium, 20 newspapers are equal to' one pound. Hence the whole amounts to about 5 tons per week, or 260 tons per annum, But though this is not perhaps the one half the Paper expended yearly in London on periodical publications, and what may be called fugacious literature; and not one fourth of what is otherwise consumed in printing-houses in the country at large; yet there are materials enough in the refuse of the Hemp and Flax raised in Britain and Ireland for all this, and much more.

Nor is this all; for the bine or straw of Hops contains an excellent Hemp for making cloth, canvass, ropes, cables, and a thousand other articles; also the very best materials for making all kinds of Paper, And it is a fact, that were even one half of the bine of the Hops raised in the Counties of Kent, Sussex, and, Worcester, instead of being thrown away after the Hops are prisked or burnt, as is commonly done, steeped for five or six days in water, and beat in the same way as is done with Hemp and Flax (independent of what might be got from scarlet runners, nettles, the haum of potatoes, &c.), there would be found annually materials' enough for three times the Paper used in the British dominions.

While we admire the rapid progress that is making in Painting, Sculpture. Engraving, Architecture, Coach-building, and the elegant arts in general, one cannot help being astonished at the slow progress that is making in discoveries of the useful kind, in various departments. Though it has not been attended to, aor, so far as I know, has ever been mentioned by any one, yet it is certain that, according to its size, every Bean plant contains from 20 to 35 filaments running up on the outside, under a thin membrane from the root to the very top, all round; the one at each of the four corners being thicker and stronger than the rest. It is also certain that, next to Chinese, a seagrass, in other words the material with which hooks are sometimes fixed to the ends of fishing-lines, the filaments of the Bean plant are the strongest and most durable yet discovered. These, with a little beating, rubbing, and shaking, are easily separated from the strawy part, when the plant has been a few days steeped in water, or is damp, and in a state approaching to fermentation, or what is commonly called rotting.

From carefully observing the mediuin number of stalks, or bean plants, in a square foot, in a variety of fields, and multiplying these by 4840, the number of square feet in an acre, and then weighing the hemp or filaments of a certain number of stalks, I find that there are, at a medium, about 2 cwt. of hemp on these filaments in an acre, admirably calculated for being converted into canvas, cables, cordage, and a thousand other things where strength and durability are of importance; as well as, with a little preparation, into Paper of all kinds, even that of the most delicate texture. Now, as there are, at least, 200,000 acres of ticks, horse and other beans, in Great Britain and Ireland; and since, where there is not machinery for the purpose, the poor of each workhouse, and others, both young and old, males as well as females, might (hemp having risen lately from 60 to 100 pounds per ton) be advantageously employed, and gain something handsome for themselves, in peeling or otherwise separating the fi aments from the strawy part of the Bean plant, after the beans are threshed out; I leave it to you,

Mr. Urban, to judge of the importance of the idea here held out, not only to the landed proprietors and the poor, but to the community at large. And, as the insertion of the above in your useful Miscellany may be the means of preventing many, perhaps some thousand tons of valuable vegetable materials for making Paper, &c. from being thrown away as usual; your giving it a place, as you lately did the result of my experiments on the Pruning of the Vine, will much oblige him who has sent you a specimen of Bean Hemp; and who is, with respect and good wishes,

Yours, &c.

Mr. URBAN,

JAMES HALL.

Sept. 24. HEN the happy exertions of

ceeded in completing important discoveries, a considerable period must generally elapse before the real value of these discoveries can be duly appreciated. On their first promulgation, the truth is liable to be obscured, both by the misguided enthusiasın of their honest advocates, and also by the violent malevolence of interested opponents. The dispassionate and penetrating mind may indeed, at all times, discriminate between reality and misrepresentation; but to convince the multitude is no easy task. The generality of the world are far more influenced by ridicule than by reason. Scurrility and Invective carry greater weight than solid arguments; and vulgar jokes are more forcible than irrefutable facts. The most beneficial inventions are hence retarded in their progress, and the vilest impostures are not unfrequently received with the warmest encouragement.

These observations have been occasioned by the consideration of the rise and progress of a modern discovery, which has justly excited an unexampled interest. I allude to the the system of Inoculation for the CowPox, which Dr. Jenner introduced into the world. The merits of this discovery have been discussed with an earnestness and solicitude proportionate to its confessed importance; and innumerable publications have appeared on the subject. The advocates of Vaccination have exulted in the prospect of exterminating the

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