HC Deb 18 February 1833 vol 15 c852

Papers ordered. On the Motion of Mr. HUME, all Sums rated by the Commissioners of Sewers, in the South and East Division of the County of Middlesex, from the 31st of December, 1830, to August, 1832.—On the Motion of Mr. Alderman WOOD, Accounts relative to Distillation, in Great Britain and Ireland.—On the Motion of Mr. O'CONELL, the Number of Churches in each Benefice in Ireland, and the Number of Persons charged with Criminal Offences, committed to the different Gaols in England and Wales.—On the Motion of Sir THOMAS FREEMANTLR, the Number of Prisoners indicted and tried at the last Michaelmas and Epiphany Quarter Sessions, for each County in England and Wales; for Offences which, prior to the Acts 2nd and 3rd, William 14th, cap. 34, 62, and 123, would have been Capital Felonies.—On the Motion of Mr. WOLRYCHE WHITMORE, an Account of the price of Corn, Grain, and Flour, and of the quantities imported of each sort into Great Britain, in the year ending 5th January, 1833.—On the Motion of Mr. SHAW, the Number of Offences, against the Law committed in Ireland during the years 1831 and 1832.—On the Motion of Mr. SPRINO RICE, a comparative Abstract of the two last Population Returns made in Ireland.

Petitions presented. By Mr. EWART, from Liverpool, for a National Plan of Education.—By Mr. MORGAN O'CONNELL, from Navan, for a Repeal of the Union with Ireland.—By Colonel LEITH HAY, from Elgin and Banff; by Mr. ANDREW JOHNSTON, from Dundee; and by Mr. DUNCOMBE, from Askham-Richard,—for the Better Observance of the Sabbath.—By Mr. GODSON, from Kidderminster; and by Sir JOHN KEY, from the City of London,—against the Assessed Taxes.—By Lord ASHLEY, from Idle,—in favour of the Factories Regulation Bill.—By Mr. DUNCOMBE, from the Bailiffs and Burgesses of Sear-borough, complaining of certain Allegations contained in a Petition presented to that House by an HON. BARONET.—By Mr. HARLAND, from Durham, against Slavery; and by Mr. STRICKLAND, from the Protestant Dissenters of Eccleshill, Yorkshire, to the same effect.'—By Mr. W. WILLIAMS, from several Places in the County of Monmouth, for the Abolition of Tithes.—By Mr. O'CONNELL, from the Roman Catholic Clergymen of Navan, against the proposed Coercive Measure against Ireland; and from the National Political Union of Ireland, against the Vestry Act,—By Mr. MATTHEW HILL, from Robert Franks,—for an Inquiry into the Merchant Tailors' Company By Mr. FENTON, from Rochdale, for the Abolition of the Protestant Hierarchy in Ireland.,