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W", ANTED a VESSEL, in constant employ, i)a j ,to ^.arry Lancashire Ore. from Ulverston to Tay- 1 lew'eli; v"1'011' sta!'liS ''eights, to be made to Win. ^niaygerwn-V?orks, Neath, Glamorganshire, 4X7" ANTED, a YOUNG LAD, of respectable •Hvi waniTn!;0115' as an APPRENTICE to a LIN EM jo <3 1? m DRAPER, in one of (lie pri ucipal towns A V Walej.-A Premium will be expected. A Knowledge of the Welsh language is indispensable. Apply to the Printer-letters post-paid. J. and VV. HAND) (Late oj Nant, near Carmarthen), OT AY IN G removed to Moilestou, near Nar- il-min ,1 !► ?!0St resP,ectiu!ly inform Noblemen and Gen- LA?D- auce of their favours. al pB a co"tmu' Molle stan, J an, to, im, Brecknock and Abergavenny Canal I Navigation. Jersons desirous of SELLING SHARES will'ha faio"01CeIV W'" COil»iHinicate the lowest Prices that Tors of ill" l° jJessrs: Powell, Jor.es, and Powell, Solici- _Con» offers will be made by them for purchasing. oiamunications by letter must be paid. _Ttt notice. — YY HEREAS in the month of December, T?riet f r}^ a l^OX, brought to Swansea by one of the addressed '• S. Michael, Swansea, to be I j? e Coach-Office"—was deposited in the Warehouse iy VAV.ID DAVIES, and has not since been claimed :— ° e \s hereby given, that if the said Box be no! taken One Month from this date, and all expenses PAID, it will be SOLD, together with its contents, to delay sail3e.—'Witness my hand the 18th of Jan. 1821. DAVID DA VIES, Wharfinge r. SWANSEA. TO BEL E T, AND MAY BE ENTERtO UPON IMMEDIATELY, A MOST commodious MOUSE, situated in Rutland-place, late the residence of Mr. Charles -Sylvester commanding an extensive view of the Bay and surrounding country, containing a breakfast-parlour, dining- room, drawing-room, and seven bed rooms, an excellent Kitchen, back-kitchen, pantry, £ cc. For further particulars enquire of Mr. C. Sylvester, Wind-street. TO BE LET] urnished or Unfinished, for two years and a half from Mthe 25th day of March next, I OUNT DRYMMA, beautifully situated six miles trom Swansea, and three from Neath ■consisting of two parlours, five best and two servants' bed- rooms, two kitchens, cellars, brewhouse, good stabling, and an excellent dog kennel, with fifteen acres of Land. or particulars apply (it by letter, post-paid) to Hugh •k'ltwisle, Mount Drymma. Neath, Glamorganshire. Cardiff Brass and Iron Foundry. THAT valuable CONCERN to be DIS- POSED OF by PRIVATE CONTRACT, either the WHOLE or ONE-HALF with one of the present Partners. It is at present in full employ, with every con- venience, and one ot the most profitable Foundrys in the Principality. 1 he Contractor, if required, will be favoured by pay ing one half the contract money down, and the other half in six months with undeniable security, provided he contracts for the whole concern. I I Apply (if by letter, post-paid) to Parry and Edwards. GLAMORGANSHIRE. TO BE LET, "nÙM THE 2D OF FEBItu ARY, 1821, (ALTOGETHER OR An •IN T^° 011 THREE ALLOTMENTS), CfP'tal GRAZING FA KM, called the •Within sltuatB '» the parisli of Penlline, and market i„ Wal^fbr'f '|f Cim'bri(%e' tl,e best weekly The Farm ""I fence,-of which its A Acies, or thereabouts, manng- i'eeding Land-the REM NMI ^RET. R.LCI!' SOUNRF« VVEIL KNOWN Arable, with a good Barn W* <)f Sl'll"r quality, at present yards; the whole plentin.n^0'1''lK)'.lse' alld tw0 Feed,"P- shaded, and latelv HTM i„ snpplitcl with water, well For a ?iew appfy to MrgTi ''T^ Cowbridge; and for particnl /•<^0we ls' the tenant- at Mr. Griffith Llewellyn, Ba«U,?l('i.y let'e,r' post-paid) to J "gian-iiall, near Neath. TO BE LET R™" »"R«S»5 £ A W* FAMILY-HOUSE, iaKiag-street m excellent repair; consisting, on the in'' of a kitchen, pantry, butler's-pantry, and n"^ ^l'or» the first floor, three good sitting rooms • on ol] floor, a spacious drawing-room and two bed-rooms dressing-room to one; and, on the attic i, r Jh A cSh-HS'SSi*"0 °» «W«tio„ ,„ «»„„ Ule For.pariiiculars apply to Mr. Walter Rice Howdl, At I January 17, 1821. WITHIN A MILE AND A HALF OF NEATH. rriHF TO BE SOLD OR LET' 1 i Three-lived FREEHOLD LEASE of 1 i Three-lived FREEHOLD LEASE of COTTAGE, ■and romantic view in the™™?1bVlctutfsV}* posite to Gnoll Castle and it r„ Nl"al,V be" exactly «,p- witlr-a Farm-HOL'SE an SV' 't-0Reth-er end 24 Acres of highly-impro^ed l^;GS> gOOC1 rt"a,r' OFADMINSOON/6' BEI"?-AN (,E FL<»Pr.and consists water-closet with'a L-ITRTU""R°?MII E'LT LJEC'"ROON)S' and a offices, and a canital RPLL.6'1.8" A",S,UFAB'E AIL(I convenient and a well-SiZED walled C F ^°° STAB'E ALLC^ coach-house, the choicest r C°'nl,,eld.V locked' with nearly in full bearing. are 1 ver*" Wealthy and the premises;*S?'by'iJuer postpaid.8 t0 Df' Plurabe' 011 'p.IlE PECTORALGEL1 XIrS Vhe supeVio?efficacy of ^h^medidl'e P^ved Coughs, sad asthmatic affec ions Z' ?a8es °fcolds' Pectoral.on it very^-shortly Sie, M'u g"t!e ex- ^im.c powers tend to heal soreness amd all-v?fC" -r ba'" >» t:ie lungsL ui hf^twri, i al,a«y.l»e irritation Ve"'ie"'iu e™ij 1 sj? 1 sjde t,ra en/rraivd. on the strnm att iehr.l T? t Ch,e"p' ui8h})friri<1> r. t Me/tea to rack hafth /») ^U^„,h nf Vtm l3KTATI0XS uvula-.similar talcs SWANSEA. TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, On Tuesday, the 6th of February. 18'21, at eleven o'clock in the forenoon, at Swansea Quay, where she now lies, BRIG PRISCILLA, P&t&p Of Carmarthen, Together with all her Materials; burthen per register J13 3? y4;li Tons easy ilratiglil of water; a suitable Vessel for the Coasting or Forelgll I rade, and will carry 166 Tons. Applications (post-paid ) to be made to Mr. Wm. Philipps, Timber-Merchant, Carmarthen; or to Messrs. Grove and Sons, Merchants, Swansea. A man on board will shew the vessel. TO BE PEREMPTORILY SOLD, TO THE BEST BTDDEIIS, IN LOTS, Pursuant to an Order ot his Majest y's Court of Exchequer, upon a Writ of Extent, The King against Henry Hollier, Esq. before Abel Moysey, Esq. the Deputy Remem- brancer of the said Court, at his Chambers, Mitre-Court, Inner-Temple, London, on Monday, the 19th day of February, 13^1, at twelve o'clock in the forenoon, subject to a-ich conditions as may be produced at the time of sale, A 1' RLE HOLD ESTATE, consisting of TWO XIL FARMS, called RHYD-Y-PENNA and RHYIJ-Y- BLEWIN, and the several MESSUAGES, BARNES, GAR- DENS, OUTHOUSES, PIECES or PARCELS of LAND or GROUND, and COPPICE WooD, thereto belonging, situate, lying, and being, in the pari-h of Lanishen, near'the town of CardifF, in the county of Glamorgan, and containing in of CardifF, in the count y of Glamorgan, and containing in the whole, by admeasurement, 214 Acres, 1 Rood, and 34 Perches. Particulars may be had of Horatio Leggatt, Esq. Solicitor for the Affairs of Taxes, AdeIpht-Terrace?Strand, London at the Chambers of the said Deputy-Remembrancer, Mitre- Court, Inner-Tetuple, London at 'he Office of Mr. E. P. Ric-.ards, Cardiif.-where. and at Mr. Legutt's, a Map of the Estate may be seen and at the principal Itius in the neighbourhood. Important Works recently published by Longman, Hurst, llees, Orme, and Brown, London. m Elif OI,RS of the REBELLION in 1745 Ifi. and 1746. By the CHEVALIER de JOHN- STONE, Aide-de-camp to Lord George Murray, General of the Rebel Army, Assistant Aide-de-Camp to Prince Charles Edward, &c. &c. Containing various important Particulars relating to that Contest, hitherto unknown or imperfectly understood. Translated from a French MS. originally deposited in the Scots College at Paris, and now in the hallds of the Publishers. In 4to. with Portraits of both the Pretenders, from original Pictures in the posses- sion of Earl Beauchamp. Price £ '2 2s boards. 2. LETTERS- written during a TOUR through NOR- MA N DY, BlUTANNY, and other Parts of FRANCE, in18:8;iociudtngLoca) and Historical Descriptions, with Remarks on the Manners and Character of the People.— By Mrs. CHARLES STOTHARD. In 4to. with nmne- ous Engravings, after Drawings by CHARLES STOTHA RD, F. S. A. ,£''2 12s. 6d. bds. 3. The HISTORY of the REIGN of GEORGE the THIRD. To which is prefixed, a View of the progressive Improvement of England, in Prosperity and Strength to tfte Accession of his Majesty. By ROBERT BbSET L. L. D. Author of the Life of Burke, &c. &c. A new Edition, completed to the Death of the King, 6 vols. 8vo. ^4. TRANSACTIONS of the LITERARY SOCIETY of BOMBAY. I11 2 vols. 4to. with numerous Plates. Piice £ 5 15s. 6d. bds. 5. LECTURES on the PHILOSOPHY of the HUMAN OPT MINP. By the late THOS BROWN, M. D Professor Of Moral I hilosopny in the University of Edinburgh. In 4 vols. 8vo. ^Price 2 12s. 6d. bds. /) I f6'crrVJr^r » S of tl,e GREAT OPERATIONS °f RY, 1 RLPHINE, HERNIA, AMPUTA- A0NLtJTKISM> and LITHOTOMY. By CMAS. BELL. Parts I. and II. The Work will consist of Five PlIrls in large 4lo. each Part containing four Plates, with Letter-press. Price 15s. plain, or 21s. coloured impressions. 7. M EMOIRS of the LIFE of NICHOLAS POUSSIN. By MARIA GRAHAM, in 8vo. Price 10., 6d. bds. By the same Author, THREE MONTHS passed mthe MOUNTAINS EAST of ROME, during the year 1819, 8vo. 6 Plates. 10s. 6:1. 8. TheHISTOKY o'f the CRUSADES, for the Recovery I and Possession of the HOLY LAN D. By CHAS. MILLS, Esq. Author of A History of Muhummcdanism. In 2 vols. 8vo. Price .t'1 ls. The second Edition. 9. The EXCURSION. A Poem. By WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, Esq. In 8vo. Price 14s. bds. 2d Ed. Also, air. WORDSWORTH'S other POETICAL WORKS. complete. including l.yrical Ballads, the River Duddori, the White. Doe of Eifstone, and the Whole of the Author's other published Poems. 4 Vols, foolscap 8vo. 1L 1.2s. 10. The POETICAL WORKS of SIR WALTER SCO IT. Bart, including the MINSTRELSY of the BORDFR and SIR TRISTREM. Beautifully printed in 10 Vols. 8vo. by Bailantvne and Co. with ten Vignettes from original Drawings, by Nasmyth, and Portrait of the Author, Price 61. bds. The POETICAL WORKS of SIR WALTER SCOTT, Bart. 12 Vols, foolscap8\>o.3l. 12s. bds. ft. ESSAYS and SKETCHES of LIFE and CHARAC- TER. I he 2d Edition, in post 8vo. Price Qs, bds. 12 MEMOIRS of HORATIO, LORD WALPOLE, se- lected from his.Correspondence and Papers, and connected with the History of I he Times from 16711 to 1757. By W. COXE, M. A. F. R. S. F. A. S 2 vols. 8vo. 3d Edition, enlarged, ll. 6s. 13. TA LES of the HEART. By Mrs. OPIE. The 2d. Edition, 4 vols. It'mo. Price ll. 8s. 14. LE TTERS written lor the POST, and not for the PRESS. In post 8vo, price l?s. boards. 2d Edition. 15. PRINCIPLES of EDUCATION, Intellectual, Mo- ral. and Physical. Bv the Rev. LANT CARPENTER, L L.I). 8vo. Price 12s. boards. ffi. Tile ABBOT. A Romance. By the Author of Waverley," &c. in 3 vols. isnm. Price iI. 4s. boards. 17. HISTORICAL ACCOO NT of DISCOVERIES and TRAVELS in ASIA. By H un II MURRAY, F. R. S. E. Author of Historical Account of Discoveries in Africa. In 3 vols. Rvo. 2/. Us. boards. lis. HISTORICAL ACCOUNT of DISCOVERIES and 1 RAVELS in AFRICA. In 2 vols. 2d Edition, enlarged. Price 1/ 7s. bds. 19. CONVERSATIONS on NATURAL PHILOSO- PHY. in which the Elements of that Science are familiarly explained, and adapted to the Comprehension of Young Pupils. By the Author of "Conversations on Chemistry," &c. In 12mo. 10i 6d bds. with 22 Engravings by Lowry. 20 SIR FRANCls DARRELL; or. The Vortex. A Novel. By R. C. DALLAS, Esq. Author of" Percival," Aubrey," "Morland," &c. &c. 4 vols. 12mo. ll 8s. bds. 21 LETTERS from Mrs. DELANY (Widow of Dr. Patrick Del any) to Mrs, FRANCES HAMILTON, from the year 1779 to the year 1788; comprising many unpub- lished and interesting Anecdotes of their late Majesties, and the Royal Family. Now first printed from the Original Manuscripts. The 2d Edition, in post 8vo. Price 6s. 6d. 22, CONVERSATIONS on BOTANY. with 21 En- gravings, 3d edit, in I 7s. 6d. plain, or 10s. 6d. coloured. 2j. J ALES of IMAGINATION. By the Author of "The Bachelor and Married Man," &c.&c. In 3 vols. 13.710. Price 18s hoards. 24. A DESCRIPTIVE, DIAGNOSTIC, and PRACTI- CAL ESSAY ou Disorders of the Digestive Organs and General Health, and particularly on their and Complications, contrasted with some accute and insidi- ous Diseases being an Attempt to prosecute the Views of Dr. Hamilton and Mr. Ab ra;thy, and a Second Edition of Additions. By MAR- SHALL ALL, M. D. F. R. b. E. &c. Sec. in 8vu, price [ 7s. boatdst litst .Published-Price Three-pence, THE FIRST NUMBER of a New Weekly Work, to be entitled THE ECONOMIST: to be devoted to the Developemeiit of Principles calculated rapidly to ameliorate the Condition of Mankind, Homo sum,—nihil Hiimanum. a me alienum puto. A Society is now formed in the Metropolis, 011 the principles alluded to in she following Address. So soon as it is fully established, THE ECONOMIST will possess a co' new, exclusive, and most interesting and important feature, in a Weekly Journal of the Proceedings of the Society, and in accurate Notices of its Progress, and of the State of its Members, as respects the Health, Employment, Amuse- ments, Comforts, Instruction, and Morals of the Adults and the Education, Trainin-s. and Employments of the »r&~J"st published, The REPORTof Hie COM- c appointed to examine the Principles on which the Society was proposed to be formed, and the Practica- bdlty of carrying the Design into Execution. Sold at the Medallic Cabinet, 153" Strand; and may be had of the BookseHers.—Price 9d. ri HF. Collective Affairs of Men have hitherto been very grossly mismanaged. The true Principles of Society have been very little, if at all, understood. I he leal causes of the vice, poverty, and wretchedness, whicn have scourged the great mass of every people, and have anally consigned the mightiest empires to destruction, have, till very lately, been overlooked, or entirely un- known. The powers acquired by mankind, for the production and distribution of wealth, the diffusion of knowled"e, the growth of virtue, the reduction of human labour, The en- joyment of comfort, and the establishment of security, have been rendered, with relation to the great majority of every people, nearly useless, by the influence of counteracting principles, inherent in, and nearly coeval with, the frame of society itself. The ECONOMIST undertakes to PROVE these assertions, by a few self-evident, intelligible, common-sense state- ments, as plain, as simple, and as palpable, as they are t: He will take England as the portion of the globe on which his proofs are to be exhibited England, with all her means, with all her power, all lier glory. all her wealth, all her learning, all her beneficence England (strange, and hitherto unaccountable anonially) with all her wretched- ness, all her vice, all her poverty, all her ignorance, all her distentions and degradation. England possesses he means and the power of creating more Manufactured Goods than the world can consume; and her soil is capable of furnishing several times the num- ber of tier present population with food. Notwithstanding this power, and this alienable source of superabundant subsistence, millions of her own people are hut impeifectly supplied with some, and are entirely des- titute ot most, of the necessaries and comforts of life, and of 1 lie number)ess articies of convenience or of elegance wliicn inyemive skill has contrived for the accommodation or embellishment of society. Here, then, is a source ofweahh which is not sufficiently opened, and a power of production which is not exerted; and here, Oil the other hand, are unsatisfied wants, which the inert power, if we remove the causes that now restrain its activity, is much more than adequate to supply. The sphere of wretchedness (to slate the case again)'en- larges, the wants of the people increase; yet the power, which is able almost immediately to satisfy these wants, and 111 a short time to pour a superabundance upon the whole nation, becomes more and more inert. The manuiactursr.the. merchant, and all who have not yet looked to the bottom of this long perplexing subject, are in the habit of remarking, or rather complaining, That there is no demand for goods; that the market is overstocked; and that the times are bad; because, say they, more goods are produced than can be consumed. The ECONOMIST utterly denies the truth of these alle- gations. He hesitates not to declare, That the parties ad- vancing them are mistaken nor to pronounce that they have deceived themselves, and are guilty, however unin- tentionally, of deceiving the public, on a question of the highest importance a question involving our very exist- ence, as individuals and as a nation. For what description of goods is there no demand ? With what Commodities is the world overstocked ? Of what ar- ticles, the product of land or of industry, does there exist a greater quantity than can be. consumed ? Is it of bread, or any other necessary of life, the product of the soil ? I will shew the landholder, even in this rich and flourish- ing land, hundreds of thousands of half-starved wretches, whose cry of distress, whose clamorous demand for bread, has at length penetrated the palaces and the breasts of their astonished and alarmed superiors. Does the complaint come from the clothier, the hatter, the hosier, the tanner, the cutler, the potter, the joiner, the upholsterer, the founder, the builder, or even the scholar, the teacher, and the moralist? I will take the first four through the streets of London; and I will shew them, in London alone, a multitude in it abject poverty and squalid attire, the supply of whom, with comfortable apparel, would empty their full ware- houses, and for a season exhaust their stores. I will carry the cutler, the potter, the joiner, the uphol- sterer, the bedding-maker, the founder, &c. into the miser- able abodes of millions of Britons and I will exhibit to them an almost endless succession of bare and dreary dwell- ings, the equipment of which with the necessaries and com- forts, to say nothing of the elegancies of life, would, for a time, engioss all their means and employ all their industry. I will expose to the builder multitudes of human beings, crowded together inlihhy, incommodious, and tin heal th 1 u I hovels, languishing in garrets, and expiring in damp and dismal cellars, in workhouses, inhospirds, in jails. I will even shew him thousands of houseless and unsheltered wretches, inhaling their mortal malady with the distillations of the night, or perhaps breathing their last sigh on(Ahe in- hospitable threshold, which is closed upon the pleadmg elo- quence of Nature and Humanity, and repels the heart- breaking damlwd of silent Misery; and I will ask him if he does not think there is ample scope for the extended con- sumption of our inexhaustible materials for building and for the increased employment of him and all his labourers. I will display, even to the scholar, to the teacher, and to the moralist, millions of intelligent minds, shrouded in the darkness of ignorance. I will shew them the best principles of human nature, perverted to the worst and most unnatural purposes, by the neglect, the cruelty, and the disgraceful allurements, prepared by society for the destruction of the ig- norant and the unwary. I will shew them Vice and Crime, and all the monstrous ministers of Corruption and Demora- lization, let loose by society amongst the haunts of men, every day destroying thousands of their fellow-creatures; and [will ask them, Whether there is not a boundless field for the progress of inteOcct.—for the exertion of all their zelll.-the operations of all their genius,—the diffusion of ail their knowledge,—the realization of ail their projects, for the happiness, the improvement, the elevation of their fellow-creatures. Did the narrow limits of a Prospectus admit it, I would prove that the same opposing extremes exist in all the affairs and circumstances of life That though there is ignorance on the one hand, there is more knowledge on the other than is sufficient for its re- moval,-knowledge, the blaze of which would speedily il- iiiiiiitit. the darkest recesses ofignornnce, did society merely open channels adequate to the diffusion of the mighty and and effulgent flood That, tiJOugh Vice and Crime (the progeny of political errors) are rapidly decomposing the elements of society, and preparing the votcanic massof conflicting principles for an explosion that shall level the proud institutions and dis- tinctions of civilization with the ground, and bury in tln-ir ruins all the graces, the charities, the intelligence, which ages of assiduous culture have brought to theif present growth—we, nevertheless, possess the certain means of averting the catastrophe which threatens us, and of almost instantly allaying those portentous grumblings, which too p.ainly indicate the approach of a terrible convulsion, that would hurl mankind back into barbarism: That, though hundreds of thousands of English families ar.; inadequately supplied with food, and though (his coun- ar.; inadequately supplied with food, and though this coun- try even depends upon Foreign Nations for a portion of the first necessaries of life; yet, that ottroffn soil* and our vast unemployed powers of production, are capable of immedi- ately furnishing a superabundance of produce for the satis- faction of the first urgent and indispensable demand of na- ture: hat though we have an immense population, not only ill-instructed, and ill-fed, but inadequately lodged, uncom- jfoitably clothed, and wholly unfurnished with innocent pleasures, with healthful and agreeable recreations, with all the articles and arrangements of convenience or of comfort winch engage the minds, cheer the spirits, adorn the per- sons, and embellish the ilbodes ofmankind,-yet we have materials,—we have the command of means,—we have bands, above all, we have science and mechanism, capa- ole or surrounding each individual with mure of all these goods than his utmost wishes can desire. Well," it may be said, these are indeed self-evident truths. It undoubtedly appeui-s that there may be pro- duced more than enough for all, though so many thousands' have but a scanty competency, and though so many'hun- dreds ot thousands have not even that. But," it will be asked, How is this most desirable object to be effected ? How are mankind, after so many ages of disappointment, wretchedness, and of peril, to enter upon that happy state (which poets and philosophers have indeed anticipated, and which the sacred volume of Christianity has foretold, but the arrival of which seems to have been for ever ols- strucled by circumstances, over which mankind have hi- therto had no controu!? The preceding statement of facts m:¡y indeed excite a sigh for the condition of poor, per- plexed, contradictory human nature; but unless you point out with more distinctness than former projectors have done, the means of overcoming the manifold evils which you have depicted, mankind will be little better for being convinced of the magnitude and reality of their wretchedness." The ECOVOSIIST does undertake to point out, and to prove, and to carry into practice, the means by which the sum of vice and poverty, and consequently of misery, shall be ra I) idly diminished and, if it be capable of diminution, what is to hinder its final distinction ? He undertakes this on no uncertain theory, but on prin- ciples, the whole of which have been demonstrated in piactice on combinations, the knowledge of which is the result of extensive observation, of profound research, and of enlarged experience; principies and combinations, the true knowledge and right use of which will enable mankind immediately to improve the character, promote tiie comforts, and secure the abundant subsistence, of the present gene- ration, and to establish on a rock the happiness of the next. The measures which are calculated to effect this great change, may be commenced almost without an effort. All the persons who at present have employment, may instantly begin to climb the ascent without soliciting a helping hand from those who stand above them. The utterly destitute will require less aid to render them and their descendants happy and independent, than that vyhich must, under the present system, be afforded them for the prolongation of a miserable existence, from public and private charity. The poor will be relieved from their wretchedness, and the rich will be benefitted bv the process. The ignorant will be instructed, while the learned will derive vast accessions to the sulu of human knowledge and wisdom. The vicious will be reclaimed, while the virtuous will, in a great measure, be witbrlrawn from temptation. The humble will be placed in a situation of safety, and of gradual elevation, while the great will gain security. Land and labour will become ofgreatly increased value, and will always command their true worth. Of the latter (labour) there will for a long time be too little for the demand, though there is at present so great a scarcity of employment. The present money wealth of the country will become many times more valuable, active, and useful, than it now is ;-80 truly and obviously so, indeed, that the effect will be the same as if foreign nations were suddenly to pay us a tribute, equal to several times the amount of our present money wealth and as if that vast accession of wealth were equally divided am jig the population. Plenty will overspread the land will in- crease irtue will flourish 1—Happiness wiit be recog- nized, secured, and enjoyed. ° All that the ECONOMIST has at present to request is, that no one will pronounce against these expectations, until the grounds on which they are entertained have been examined; that he may not be condemned as a visionary, merely be- cause he seems to promise more than can be realized ;— that no one will refuse to accompany him in the investiga- tions, merely because he may appear to unfold prospects too brilliant to be real,-hopes too flattering to be grati- fied,—happiness too great to be enjoyed in this world.— Language of this kind has already been too long heid,- 1 here are few things so great that man cannot attempt their accomplishment. There are many seeming impossibilities winch he posseses power to overcome. Science has already achieved triumphs, which remain as so many standing mira- cles effected by human agency. If you repeat to all, unin- structed person the steps of a mathematical problem, and announce to him its result, he can neither comprehend the process, nor acknowledge its truth. The result, however. is not lhe less true, because to him it is unintelligible. If, he has been frequently to!d, indeed, that all mathematical demonstrations are unesring, he may assent to the truth, merely because it is a mathematical truth. In like manner, when the principles and combinations of which we are about to treat shall be more generally understood, their truths will be universally acknowledged. In like manner, it is impossible for any persons who are as yet uninstructed 111 these principles (however intelligent or even enlightened they may he in other respects) to comprehend the nature of the combinations, or to assent to the truth of the results which the ECONOMIST announces. They must accompany him, step by s:ep, throughout the investigation. They must be taught to comprehend each individual step se- parately, and the laws by which its relations with all the rest are determined, before they can comprehend the magnificent whole which arises from their union. The ECONOMIST pledges himself to prove, in his succeeding papers, the truth and accuracy of the parts, and of the whole. He only entreats that his readers will patiently at- tend,—that they will diligently examine,—and, above all, that they will dispassionately decide. He has already shewn that there are almost boundless wants, and that we possess equally boundless powers of production, for the creation of all the goods by which those wants are to be satisfied. He hopes we shall at least hear no more, therefore, of there being no market for our pro- duce,—of there being no demand for our commodities,-of the necessity of looking into every corner of the glwbe for customers, while we have so m-iny millions of ill-supp'ied consumers at home. He trusts that mankind, at length convinced of this great truth, will set about emancipating themselves from the thraldom of ignorance, 'which has hitherto rendered all their energies nearly nugatory that they will now complain, .ot of the want of goods, of means, or of power, but of the errors which prevent the exercise of their power, the command of their meajis, and the distribution of their goods;—that, having at length discovered, that their multifarious evils arise, not from the absence of markets,—not from the limited extent of the demand,-not from the paucity of consumers,—but from the prevatence of erroneous principles, which continually interpose between the consumers and the producers, and which tend perpetually to close the channels of circulation they will set themselves seriously to remove the real causes of all their calamities,—to break down the barriers which have shut out man from man,—and so to open, renovate, and enlarge the channels through which aloae their bound less treasures can be circulated, as to afford an easy passage to the full-swelling tide of their wealth, knowledge, and happiness. The ECONOMIST points confidently to his future pages for the full developemeiit of those principles, simple when regarded separately, but wonder-working in their combina- tion, which will assuredly place under the controul of associated man all those elements of the moral and physical worlds, the true knowledge and command of which are indispensable to his happiness, and which will enable him, under the tutelage of the Great Author of Nature, to re- create the E ,rth, which he is destined to inhabit, and wliich be was commissioned to" subdue." He appeals fearlessly, to his ensiling Numbers, as the humble medium through which will he exhibited, by the co operative, aid of energetic minds, a bold, luminous, and correct outline oftheTcmpie cf Truth, for "dÜch men have j SG.ono sought in vain; bnt to which the researches of eiilighieneti humanity have at length led the way The I ceedin^rive'll fJSC;overer was sl(iwer t!<au that of snc- nissie-he IT h<3 0(llJ °Pened and cleared the lh» rfcrioiiiVhIf re,U VC Wi"c!l ha<i ll"'ilert0 concealed tiie neares rn 6' CVe" lr°,nl tho3e who llad approached off The mi It may now be descried id'ar mmd without stopping to examine the approaches, v I, si. a,i,d W,lh transP°rt, into the habitation foe her filt fc0, '"I!-? it is only in retracing- .1,0 1. « « Hi she iinds the imperishable track over which vi«n,a n ^°rmed of all the facts and all the cxpe- fi a ,fn.iillK1"^ 5 that every single material is in itself V r1. a l ii" "l l'ie.broad and unbending course whick stie tias so rapturously found, there are no deviations'front the oirect line of unerring precision, merely because the principles of error and of falsehood, with all their devious inclinations, are wholly excluded from tne work. If in this first paper the ECONOMIST has succeeded in establishing the fact, in convincing his readefrs that Ihe.-e must be some mischief in the frame of society.-that there is some fatal error which thus prevents men from usiof and enjoying the bounties of creation ;—which has lurnetTtheir very blessings into curses,—has held them in ignor^ce while they have been cultivating led ihtm into poverty while they have been creating affluence and, power.-and which daily and hourly defrauds them of the treasures diffused over the fair and fertile face of the globe* he has already gained an important point, all indeed whicli he could hope to attain in the first instance and has already effected all that he at present intended to accomplish. The knowledge of the evil is half its cure. Having clearly ascer- taincd the disease, the public will be the better prepared to administer to the principles of health. Having distinctly marked the wide spreading roots of that destroying cancer winch devours the substance of society,—whicn is drying1 UP "le healthful springs of life, tainting and Contaminating nM the intercourses of social existence,—they will be ena- bled with the greater certainty to set about the extirpation of the evil. The remedies which the ECONOMIST has to suggest arc entirely emollients and restoratives; he purposes neither to amputate nor destroy his aim is to produce a new and renovating action, which shall restore the diseased organs, of society to health and vigOllf. and even promote their enlarged growth aud rapid improvem«nt, in size and strength, in beauty ot form, and elegance of proportion. All Booksellers and Newsmen are requested to receive orders for this publication. —Communications, post-paid, are respectfully requested to be addressed to the Editors, at the Med.dtic Cabinet, 158, Strand, London; where the work will be published every Saturday morning. Stricturesoit the successive Numbers, and Essays in favour of, or in op. position to, the principles, from whatever quarter they may come, will be freely admitted. The single object of the Editors being the discovery and developemeiit ot truth, they intend to examine the correctness and practicability of prmoptes.—not the motives and conduct of individuals, The attainment of their object cannot, therefore, be facili- tated by any thing which tends to excite irritation and. they trust that all communications with which they may ba honoured, will be characterized by a similar spirit. The Editors earnestly solicit the co-operation of the pe- riodical press generally, in promoting the work in which they are embarked. Though they have chosen the appella- tion of TIIE ECONOMIST for the vehicle of their labours, the principles they are about to advocate are sources of the most bountiful dispensations. In consistency with theni (their only object being the extensive diffusion ot know- ledge the most important to mankind) they freely offer the contents of their pages to all other publications. They wave all advantages of copy-right,—all ■Exclusive claim to the property of their productions; and will be happy to see them transferred, iai whole or in part. to the columns of every publication in the kingdom and they entreat that they may criticised, sifted, and examined to the bottom. POWELL's COUGH ELECTUARY. The Medicine high in estimation, As any in the British nation, For all affections Pulmonary, Is Powell's Cough Electuary IT giveth such speedy relief in dry teasing winter coughs as will at once please and astonish, generally cures a fresh cold in a few nights. and so admi- rably opens, cleanses, heals, and comforts the breast and lungs, when sore with coughing, or oppressed with thick PHLEGM, by its balsamic and expectorating virtues, that many despairing, aged, ASTHMATIC PEOPLE, who were strangers to ease or comfort, nor could attend to any business, or lie down in bed through a laborious cough, a shortness of breath, or difficult respiration, have been enabled, by taking one pot, to enjoy each, as thousands have witnessed during the last thirty years. A NEW CASE—Will. Snow, a respectable grazier and butcher, of ill Leicestershire, had a bad Asthma; until near sixty years of age and had tried many things without effect; but upon taking the Electuary a short time, his life (whicli before was miserable) became compa- raiivelv comfortable, and, by a continued use of it, he gradually got so well, that he has now scarcely a synipiom of the complaint, except when he gets a cold," which a few pills always removes, and though now more than seventy, he was never in a better state of health.—This statement he has made to me at my house. this 24;h November, 1820, and atlowed ine to publish it in any way I thought proper. J. POWELL. Sold wholesale by the Preparers, Powell and Co. Lough- borough and Barclay and Sons, London, whose name is engraved on the stamp, and who last year sold 1 12 dozeii more than in any former year aud retailed by the Printer of this Paper, Edmond, Lister, and Dawe, Swansea Hv- bert, Neath Dyke, Mertliyr-Tydfil; Yanghun, & Wil'l'ianis, Brecon; Davies, Bridgend; Vachall, Cardiff; Price and Wyke, Abergavenny Price, Crickhowell; E\'ans. and Harris, Carmarthen^ Davies, Druggist, IIaverfordwest and in all the principal towns in the kingdom; price 9d. and 1Std. a pot; the small pot makes J3 doses. PersonaiBeaiity. THE LADIES are assured, that all the cosmetics ever yet discovered, do not possess, in an hundreth degree, the good qualities of PRICE and GOSNELL's PA I EN I N A PLLS CREAM, as a benutifier hundreth degree, the good qualities of PRICE and GOSNELL's PATENT NAPLES CREAM, as a benutifier and clearer of the Skin. Sunburns, pimples, freckles; ringworms, tetters, spots, tan. redness of the nose, &c. are often peculiar to tender and delicate complexions; by the regular app!icn ions of the Patent Naples Cream once a day. or twice or thrice a week, the skin and fluids are gradually cleansed and cooled, and assume that clear transparent while and red, which denote them in a. healthful state. Its innecent efficacious and refreshing Balsamic qualities, render it an excellent and salutary wash for infants, as it,keeps the skin soft, cool, and free from dryness. Sold in London onlv by the Patentees, Price and GosneHi Perfumers to his Majesty, No. 12. Three Kings-court, e Lomb rd-street, price os and 10s. a Bottle.—Also PRICE and GOSXELL's ROSE BLOOM, for beautifying the Vin, the countenance, is thè best and most innocent cosmetic yet known in the world, and which imparts such a natural and lively bloom to the Skin, as cannot be distinguished from nature. Price 5s. 6d. per Bottle, wi.h Directions for use. Price & Gosnell, Beg to return thanks for the extensive patronage their Johnstone's Patent Windsor, real Old Brown Windsor, Violet, and Miiiefleur Scented Transparent, and real Palrrt Oil SOAPS; also, their Macassar Oil; Treble distiHed Lavender Water, Cold Cream, and Patent Naplefe Creann &c. have received from the Royal Family, Nobility, and Gentry and at the same time t" caution them against, the mirriherless pernicious preparations daily imposed ort Shopkeepers and the Public, (in the Country to ail incredible extent) by inexperienced and unprincipled speculators, by means of pirated bills and labels*, exact inflation of Messrs. Price and Gosneli's. Sold at Swansea by Mr. Morgan, and by all respectable Perfumers and Medicine Venders throughout Europe.