Page:Blackwood's Magazine volume 001.djvu/550
Reeve & Leigh, Manchester and London, warehousemen
Sandmark, A. London, merchant
Scotland, R. South Shields, ship-owner
Sampson, J. D. Ipswich, silk-mercer
Smith, T. P. Bristol, whalebone brush-manufacturer
Smith, E. Derby, bleacher
Sherwin, J. Burslem, Stafford, iron-founder
Sparkes, C. L. Southbersted, shop-keeper
Smith, T. Wilsden, Yorkshire, dealer in wood
Scrubsole, S. Liverpool, merchant
Sizer, G. Holborn Hill, London, mercer
Stone, W. Milverton, scrivener
Spall, G. London, coach-maker
Slipper, J. Crostwick, Norfolk
Tidswell, T. Stockton-upon-Trent, baker
Thornburv, N., and E. Taylor, Stroud, Gloucester, clothiers
Taylor, J. Ottery St Mary, Devon, smith
Wallace, W. Workington, ship-carpenter
Whitney, T. & H. Macclestield, cotton-spinners
Wilkie, C. & J. London, yeast merchants
Vhite, T. North Shields, merchant
Whittiugton, W. Mauds worth, Stafford, farmer
Wint, H. De, Stone, Stafford, surgeon
Wilson, J. Hanley Stafford, potter
Weldon, J. London, warehouseman
{{c|
Alphabetical List of Scotch Bankruptcies, announced between the 1st and 31st July 1817, extracted from the Edinburgh Gazette.
Brown & Niven, Edinburgh, hatters and hosiers
Byars, J. Forfar, spirit-dealer
Hay, J. Delchiracn, Banffshire, merchant
M'Allaster & Duncan, Glasgow, merchants
Monteith, Duncan, & Co. Glasgow, grocers
M'Lellan, J. Castle Douglas, merchant
M'Clure, W. Kirkcudbright, merchant
Kussell, D. Durie Foundery, Fifeshire, founder
Rutherford, J. jun. Kelso, merchant-tailor
Scott, W. Falkirk, merchant
Stevenson, C. Island of Islay, cattle-dealer
Stewart, T. Leith and Glasgow, carrier
Thomson, A. Edinburgh, builder
White & Co. J. Glasgow, merchants
DIVIDENDS.
Calton Hill Foundery Company, Edinburgh; by Wm Ford, Caledonian glass-work there, 13th August
Crombie, John, Colinsburgh, merchant: by James Stevenson, merchant, Edinburgh, 16th August
Christie, Alex. Aberdeen, merchant; by David Hutcheon, advocate there, 18th August
Dickie, Matthew, Pennyglen, near Maybole, grain and cattle-dealer; by John M'Clure, builder, Crossbill, 21st August
Gray, David, Kincardine, ship-builder; by James Turcan, ship-owner there, 15th August
Gray, George, Peterhead, merchant; by George Yeats, advocate in Aberdeen, 17th August
Hutcheon, Alex, and Charles Nicol, Glasgow, merchants; by John M'Gavin there, 22d August
Lerro, Geo. Edinburgh, jeweller; by John Graham, jeweller there, 4th August
Macfadyen & Maccallum, Glasgow, merchants; by P. Grierson, jeweller there, 6th August
Mackenzie, David, Peterhead, merchant; by Geo. Yeats, advocate, Aberdeen, 17th August
M'Kellar, Duncan, Glasgow, merchant; by Macpherson & M'Lachlan, writers there, 2d August
M'Lachlan, D. &Co. Glasgow, hatters and hosiers; by James Imbray, merchant there, 27th June
Shannon, Stewart, & Co. Greenock, and Shannon, Livingston, & Co. Newfoundland; by John Dunlop, writer, Greenock, 10th August
Sinclair, Alexander, Glasgow, vintner; by John Wright, Edinburgh, 11th August
Smith, A. Ayr, writer, builder, and cattle-dealer: by James Martin, writer there, 6th August
AGRICULTURAL REPORT.
The almost daily showers which have fallen since the date of our last Report, and for some time before, and the present very unsettled weather, have placed the prospect of harvest at a much greater distance than we then delighted to contemplate; and the more weighty crops are at last beginning to fall to the ground. After a careful examination of very recent Reports, from Correspondents in almost every county in Britain, we are led to believe that the produce of the present season, in wheat, barley, and oats, is likely to be at least equal to an average on all early soils where sound seed had been sown; but that even in these favourable circumstances the harvest must now be late. It will be near the end of the month before reaping becomes general in the south of England; and in Scotland, the approach of the crops towards maturity has been so slow for these three weeks, that there is reason to fear the ensuing harvest will be almost as late as the last. Yet a month of clear warm weather, after so much rain, would rapidly change the hue of our fields, and call forth thousands from the abodes of poverty and despondence to the healthy and animating toils of autumn. Beans and pease will yield a scanty produce. The hay crop has not been so weighty as was once expected. Hops, and fruits of every kind, and the seeds of clovers, cannot be productive. Turnips are now suffering from too much rain; and, for a month past, little progress has been made in cleaning and dressing fallows. Potatoes are said to promise a very abundant crop, and, fortunately, a larger quantity has been planted than in ordinary seasons. Of all our crops, this is perhaps the one to which we may look with the most gratifying anticipations for the relief of the lower classes.
The corn markets have continued to decline, though but slowly, since the middle of last month, for which no other cause can be assigned, than the great importations of Foreign grain; the effect of which, in reducing our prices, is now no longer counteracted by our exports to France, where the new crop begins to come into consumption. Butcher meat, as usually happens in the summer months, has fallen; and cattle for grazing, owing to the abundance of the pastures, are in demand, at a considerable advance of price; yet