17. Committee of Supply-Miscellaneous Services 20. Mr. Whitbread's Motion for an Address respecting the Congress Report from the Committee on Parish Apprentices Petition from the British Inhabitants of Rotterdam ........ Account respecting the Management of the Public Debt ...... Appx. .... 543 of the Commons respecting the recent Events in France 434 V. PRINCE REGENT'S MESSAGES. April 6. Prince Regent's Message relating to the Events in France Mar. 16. Convention between his Britannic Majesty and his Catholic 224 April 7. Papers relating to the Person, and Family of Buonaparté 387 Papers relating to the Transfer of Genoa.......... Mar. 16. Treaty of Peace and Amity between Great Britain and the United States of America; signed at Ghent, December 24, 1814 ...... 209 Treaty of Peace between his Britannic Majesty and the King of Denmark; signed at Keil, the 14th January, 1814 Treaty of Friendship and Alliance between his Britannic Majesty ............ ....... 226 April 24. Treaties (Substance of) between his Britannic Majesty and the from the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the Public Income and Expenditure of Ireland Appx. cxv - of the Minority in the House of Commons, on Mr. Pro- of the Minority in the House of Commons, on Mr. Whit- of the Minority in the House of Lords, on Earl Grey's Motion for an Inquiry into the State of the Corn Laws of the Minority in the House of Lords, on the Marquis IMPORTANT PARLIAMENTARY WORK. Lately published, handsomely printed in royal octavo, price in boards 31s. 6d, volume XXV of THE PARLIAMENTARY HISTORY OF ENG LAND from the Earliest Periód to the Year 1803, from which last-mentioned epoch it is continued downwards to the current time in the Work entitled, "The PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES," published under the Superintendence of T. C. HANSARD. This Work contains the most accurate account of all Proceedings and Debates in both Houses of Parliament; Addresses; King's Speeches and Messages; important Parliamentary Papers, Petitions, and Reports; Protests; Lists of Persons filling the several high Offices in Church and State; Indexes, &c. &c. and will form, with the PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES, publishing under the same Superintendence, a complete and uniform Parliamentary History of this Country. In the Edinburgh Review, No. 49, June 1815, page 208, note, mention is made of this Work in the following words: "The' (New) Parliamentary History.'-We cannot quote this careful and judicious collection without bearing testimony to its singular merits. It deserves, as well as the New Edition of the State Trials, to be numbered among the most useful and best conducted Works of late years. Both are indispensable parts of all collections of English History. To mention two such important Works in a Note on the review of so worthless a publication as that before us, may seem to be a treatment very unsuitable to their importance. The truth is, that it has long been intended to notice them more becomingly; that such an intention is far from being now relinquished; but that experience of the accidents which are apt to delay the execution of literary projects induces us to take the earliest opportunity of apprizing all our readers of their great value." The present Volume brings the History down to May 1786. The 26th Volume is in the Press.-Communications from Family Papers, or from Persons now living who took a part in the Debates of the period to which the Work is now arriving, will be thankfully received. Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown; J. M. Richardson; Black, Parry, & Co.; J. Hatchard; J. Ridgway; E. Jeffery; J. Booker; J. Rodwell; Baldwin, Cradock, & Joy; R. H. Evans; Budd & Calkin; J. Booth; and T. C. Hansard, |