29 MAY 1830, Page 6

BIRMINGHAM GE'.777:An Senota..--A hill was introduced to the House of

Lords, the i thee ,1:.y, lv tlie Governors of the Birmingham Grammar School ; in -.chl •'1, without the slightest hint being conveyed to the inhabitants, who e•-- • ) deeply interested, a clause was foisted dis- qualifying all persons er the Church of England from acting as Governors. This ate , render minatory, as tar as they were able, the late liberal acts of ,ideture, has been defeated ; but the defeat of such a nefarious ts e is no suilielent punishment. Men who dared so to sport with .• decency ought to be held up in future to public contempt. eel Itheeengliam who hereafter keeps company with these than the law of the land requires, degrades himself, as thus sought to be made an engine of intolerance: • e. year ; and in a short time, it is supposed, • We hope Some patriotic memiter wi•! • lee:en:anent of these ,e1 le,- tee inhabitants, so fu n u

nds i trustees Fn.. • that they may be ma :a en :fable for the ;.$)ses for which they were originally intended.

IsTaanosent Scno —The Gozetk, has express .

in the hands of trust-- .

parish of Stoke-upon- .

THE 'CABINET

number of English it read in the usual ‘,

gular a nature as to the Chancellor of the the thanks of the I': whom it teas dire:t • . Chancellor, regardii,,. .'• held in the Comm, .• No such person as when the letter ich,• him was unavailiena servants in the este•.: correspondent of tie- nt' the most vital in: - more nor less than a Morning Register ; a.• Chancellor of the Esed vidual. To us it see::.', mercial Committee op:: e latter addressed to a private individual, and read it and comment d in was more remarkable than either the Chancellor's condescension, or the presumption of his correspondent.

Inhan GRIEVATSC:: • —7" happy to uial 11:e.;e diminishing in intensity, if not nune.,.... ft.: 2 ,d. the newest is the refusal of a Roman Catholic to pay a cle Tlle f'n. Er:-ning Mail talks most

moodily and mysteree, neselile refusal. Iles the Mail never heard of a sect of • ss pre-eminently the most peaceful in the world, who have for s a a befelred yt ers refused to pay church-rates, and on whom, notwit• n the rate has been very regularly levied ?

The Mail may leave 5!7.• to their discretion—they will manage the non-conciliatory Bielsop, we warrant. s.;ys the Pottery .e thousand pounds eed se:fools in the re live in number.

deys since, amongst a . ,, . scial Buildings, and • A,' which were of so sin- t. This letter was from an acknowledgment of to a Mr. Younger, to • ., had forwarded to the at the meeting- lately . ...eninst the 11PW taxes.

.; nay :hoille:;an present time, inquiry after :eared that oile of the lounger, and that the t empire, upon ft subject a, tee thug's subjects, was no eeroent is from the Dublin into c.eznnent on the conduct of the rerreslenaling with so obscure an indi- t the cool and cast- way in which the Com-

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