Aggregate Average of the Twelve Maritime Districts of England and Wales for the Six Weeks succeeding 15th May 1820. Wheat, 70s, 10.-Rye, 44s. Q.-Barley, 31s. 11.-Oats, 25s. 4d.-Beans, 45s. 2d.-Pease, 46s. 1d. Average Prices of Grain in Scotland for the Four Weeks immediately preceding 15th June 1820. Wheat, 67s. 6d.-Rye, 37s. 4d.-Barley, 30s. 7d.-Oats, 24s. 5d.--Bearis, 35s. 6d.-Pease, 346. 7d. Oatmeal, per boll, 198. 10d.-Bear or Big, 27s. 2d. COMMERCIAL REPORT. THE month of June was distinguished by rather more activity in the demand for West India produce than the preceding one.-Coffees have more particularly been affected by it, and prices have experienced a considerable degree of improvement, as well in our own markets as abroad; it appears that an actual diminution of stock, more than speculation by which an article only changes hands, has been the immediate consequence. The stocks in London have lately been greatly diminished, notwithstanding a large importation has taken place. At Liverpool, the stocks are lighter than at this period of the last two years; the stocks at that port, on the 1st January 1820, were estimated at 1260 tons; the imports to the 1st July were 1130 tons; the deliveries have been 930 tons for exportation, and 410 tons for home consumption, leaving the present stock 1050 tons. The stock in London of West India Coffee is 4120, being ten tons less than at this time last year; prices are about 7s. higher.-The deliveries of Sugar for home consumption, in the last six months, are estimated at 86,000 casks, besides 2000 tons of East India Sugar; at Liverpool there remained on the 1st January 6400 hhds. and tierces, to which were added during the last six months 15,300. The sales during the same period have amounted to 18,100, leaving the quantities in first hands 3600 hhds. and tierces. Notwithstanding the almost total interruption in the imports of Cotton from the East Indies, the large supplies received from the United States have tended to keep prices down; the increase of imports from the United States, when compared with last year, being 77,000 bags and 28,500 from the Brazils, whilst 83,600 bags less were imported from the East Indies. The stock of Cotton in the KingdomAmerica. Brazil. E. Indies. W. Indies. Total. Leaving the present stock 132,500 63,800 272,700 15,300 484,300 The present average weekly consumption is estimated at 4900 bags, and the stock equal to two years consumption.-The stock of Tobaccos in the warehouses at Liverpool were, on the 31st of May, 5784 hhds. since which 380 hhds. were imported from New Orleans, and 171 from Virginia, &c. The deliveries for home consumption and Ireland have amounted there to 935 hhds. leaving the present stock 5400 hhds. The deliveries of Tobacco from the 1st January to the 1st instant have been as follows in London : Course of Exchange, London, July 14.-Amsterdam, 12: 6. Antwerp, 12: 8. Ditto, at sight, Hamburgh, 37: 4. Altona, 25: 80. Bourdeaux, 26: 10. Frankfort on the Cadiz, 344. Gibraltar, 30. Leghorn, 47. Genoa, 44. Dublin, 74 per cent. Cork, 8 per cent. 12: 3. Rotterdam, 12 : 7. 37 5. Paris, 3 days sight, Maine, 155. Madrid, 344. Oporto, 49. Rio Janeiro, 55. Prices of Bullion per oz.-Foreign gold in bars, L. 3 : 17 : 104. New Dollars, L. 0:4: 10. Premiums of Insurance at Lloyd's.-Guernsey or Jersey 12s. 6d.—Cork or Dublin 10s. 6d. Belfast 10s. 6d.-Hamburgh 10s. 6d.-Madeira 20s.-Jamaica 30s.-Greenland out and home 4 gs. to 5 gs. Weekly Prices of the Public Funds, from June 21 to July 12, 1820. ALPHABETICAL LIST of ENGLISH BANKRUPTS, announced between the 20th May and 20th June 1820; extracted from the London Gazette. Ackroyd, M. Leeds, earthenware manufacturer Ainley, R. Doncaster, haberdasher Ainley, J. Blackmoor Foot, Yorkshire, clothier Ainsworth, T. and R. Bolton, J. Thornley, War. rington, and P. Cort, Turton, Lancashire, whitsters Ansell, W. Cambridge, upholsterer Austin, R. T. Rotherhithe, merchant Ashby, W. M. Albury, Surrey, paper manufacturer Askey, W. Oxford Street, tailor Bage, T. South Shields, joiner Bailey, J. Watling Street, merchant Baker, E. Pope's Head Alley, Cornhill, broker Ball, E. R. Albury, Sussex, paper manufacturer Balters, J. Southampton, grocer Barter, H. Bishops' Waltham, grocer Bell, J. R. and W. Wilkinson, Old Broad Street, merchants Bentley, R. Liverpool, grocer Bibby, R. Liverpool, merchant Boullen, P. Norton Falgate, hosier Bradley, J. Manchester, cotton manufacturer Bramall, J. Saddleworth, Yorkshire, worstedspinner Bragg, J. Whitehaven, thread-manufacturer Butts, T. C. Nag's Head Court, Gracechurchstreet, wholesale perfumer Butt, T. Southampton, shoemaker Cadogan, J. Water-street, St Clement's, carpenter Chaplin, D. Haverhill, Suffolk, maltster Cryer, T. Siston, Gloucestershire, dealer Dickinson, J. Church-passage, Guildhall, warehouseman Dorrington, W. Town Malling, Kent, collar-mak owner Green, E. Leeds, earthenware-manufacturer Hackett, R. Newport, Isle of Wight, spirit-merchant Haigh, J. Ley Moor, Yorkshire, cloth-merchant Hardwick, W. Poynings, Sussex, farmer Henzelt, J. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, linen-draper Honyman, J. Church-street, Spitalfields, silk-manufacturer Huggett, T. Bermondsey-street, grocer Izod, J. Holborn-bridge, hardwareman James, W.jun. Bromyard, Hereford, auctioneer King, C. M. Upper East Smithfield, wine and spirit merchant Lancelitt, W. Llandilo, Carmarthenshire, druggist Langhorne, H. and W. Brailsford, Bucklersbury, merchants Lindop, R. W. Badnall, Staffordshire, dealer Lowes, J. Commercial Buildings, Mincing-lane, wine-merchant' Macknair, J. jun, and J. Atkinson, Cornhill, mer chants Martin, J. Liverpool, merchant Mason, G. Chard, clothier Miles, W. Oxford-street, linen-draper Morris, T.jun. Wing, Rutlandshire, baker Needham, C. jun. Liverpool, merchant Park, T. King's Stanley, Gloucestershire, woolstapler Pilling, J. Rochdale, woollen-manufacturer Prentice, A. and T. Shelly, Manchester, muslin manufacturers. Pretty, T. Tipton, Staffordshire, iron-manufac turer Robertson, A. Grosvenor Place, builder Searle, J. Lower Grosvenor Street, shopkeeper Shaw, J. Wem, victualler Shaw, W. Brough, Westmoreland, cattle-dealer Smith, G. Leicester Square, tailor Smith, J. Coln, St. Aldwyn's, Gloucestershire, tallow-chandler Snowdon, B. Harrow, grocer Stock, G. Newfoundland Street, Bristol, cabinetmaker Sugden, J., and W. Mitchell, Dorking, carriers Sugden, R. Halifax, bookseller Sylvester, W. New Woodstock, mercer Triphook, T. St James's Street, bookseller Trudget, W. Bury St Edmund's, miller Wade, J. Keynsham, Somersetshire, and J. Wade, Watson, R. Leyland, Lancashire, farmer West, W. Bredenbury, Herefordshire, dealer Wilby, D. Ossett, Yorkshire, merchant Wilby, B. Dewsbury, clothier Willey, T. Strand, bootmaker Wilkinson, W. Old Broad Street, ship-broker Wills, G. Hatton Garden, broker Withers, W. Cheltenham, coal-merchant Wood, G. Gloucester, marble mason Worth, T. Talbot Court, Gracechurch Street, haberdasher. ALPHABETICAL LIST of SCOTCH BANKRUPTCIES and DIVIDENDS, announced June 1820, extracted from the Edinburgh Gazette. SEQUESTRATIONS. Adie, Róbert, and John Macqueen, Dallirie, near Dunean, Robert, Glasgow, shoemaker and spirit- Ferguson, James and Co. Glasgow, drysalters and merchants Fleming, John, Cupar Fife, merchant Hamilton, John and William, Lanark, wrights Harper, George, Edinburgh, mercantile agent Keith, Malcolm and Donald, Greenock, merchant Jeffrey, James, and James Jeffrey and Co. Edinburgh, merchants Jeffrey, James, Edinburgh, draper Johnstone, William, and Co. Glasgow, merchants and soda-manufacturers M'Nab, Francis, Sciennes, near Edinburgh, merchant M'Ruer, James, and Sons, Glasgow, wrights and Page, Geddes and David, Edinburgh, merchants Sclanders, Andrew, Glasgow, baker and grain- Scott, Hugh, Greenock, haberdasher, &c. Toshach, John, Calton, Glasgow, wright and cabinet-maker. DIVIDENDS. Anderson and Macdowall, Edinburgh, booksellers; by the trustee there Blair, William, Edinburgh, printer and publisher; by J. Balfour. W. S. there Forrester, Anderson, and Jarvie, Glasgow, hardware-merchants; by D. Cuthbertson, accountant there Gorbals Spinning Company, Glasgow; by the Graham, Alex. and Co. Glasgow, and Graham, Hay, John, senior, Kinross, flesher; by Alexan- Kay, Archibald, and Son, Glasgow, wrights and M'Donald and M'Phail, Glasgow, merchants; by Newbigging, Archibald and Co. Glasgow, mer- Paul, Daniel, Greenock, merchant; by the trustee there Ross, Thomas, Montrose, merchant; by J. Brand, banker there Soutar and Walker, Dundee, wood-merchants, Scott and Balmanno, Glasgow, merchants; by J. Steele, John, Edinburgh, carver and gilder; by THE LATE HUGH WARRENDER, ESQ. DIED at Edinburgh, on the 8th June, HUGH WARRENDER, Esq. of Burntsfield, his Majesty's Agent for Scotland, and Deputy Keeper of the Signet. We do not take notice of the death of Mr Warrender for the purpose of saying that his loss will be regretted by all who knew him, although on this occasion these would not be words of course. To his immediate friends and relatives, to whom we know he was affectionately attached, the loss is irreparable, and we sincerely sympa thize in their sorrow. But we thus particularly advert to the melancholy occurrence for a different purpose, and with the warm desire of bestowing a much higher praise, of recording to his honour, that, while holding, as he did for a long period, the office of Agent for the Crown, which in some hands would have inflamed party spirit, he uniformly evinced, in the discharge of his official duties, a superiority to every little or party feeling. To the Crown he did his duty faithfully and honourably, while to the subject he was uniformly accommodating, kind, and charitable. Where the law was rigorous, he took pleasure in softening its severity; where it prohibited intercourse, he was anxious to make the privations felt as little as possible; and in his breast the confidential family secrets of a state prisoner were as safe as in that of a father. Easy of access, plain and unaffected in his manner, the poor could approach him without embarrassment, while the overflowing goodness of his heart irresistibly led him to take an interest in their sufferings. Many instances might be given of his high honour and unceasing benevolence; but it is enough for the present to allude to them. "The good we do lives after us ;" and we recollect of few names that have a stronger claim to general esteem and regret than that of Hugh Warrender.-Scotsman. As a mark of esteem and respect for the memory of the deceased, the Society of Writers to the Signet, of which Mr Warrender was so long a distinguished member, attended his funeral, in full mourning, with their gowns, and walked before the hearse, four abreast, the junior members first. Sir George Warrender, one of the Lords of the Admiralty, chief mourner, supported by his brother, and other relations and friends of the family, among whom were several of the Judges of the Court of Session, followed the hearse on foot. The procession was solemn and impressive. THE LATE LORD DUNDAS. Died at his seat at Aske, in Yorkshire, on the 14th June, aged 79, THOMAS LORD DUNDAS. His Lordship was Lord Lieu |