7 NOVEMBER 1835, Page 6

Lord Kenyon has sent a letter to the Chester Chronicle

with a copy of Fairman's denial of treasonable talk to the Yorkshire Orangemen ; and this the silly Lord, of singularly short memory, thinks quite suf- ficient to clear himself of all blame or suspicion!

Mr. Nathaniel Goldsmid, nettled at the exposure of his insignificance in the Morning Chronicle, demanded the author of the letter which gave an account of his birth, parentage, and education ; declaring it to be " false, and malignant." The editor of the Chronicle asked Mr. Gold. amidto "specify the falsehoods ;" but that gentleman confined himself to his general charge of falsehood and malignancy: so the Morning Chronicle kept the secret of the letter-writer, and Mr. Goldstnid has made himself more ridiculous than ever by the publication of the cor- respondence, in the Tory papers. After all, there is nothing so dis- graceful in being a converted Jew. or in having a father who changed his name from Moses to Moss, or even in being nicknamed " Boots " at the clubs. A man of common sense would have laughed at, or dis- regarded what seems to have put poor Mr. Nathaniel Goldsmid into a passion.