METEOROLOGICAL TABLE, extracted from the Register kept at Edinburgh, in the Observatory, Calton-hill. N.B. The Observations are made twice every day, at nine o'clock, forenoon, and four o'clock, afterThe second Observation in the afternoon, in the first column, is taken by the Register noon. Thermometer. Sugar. THE price of this article of trade is various and unsettled. The market is very heavy, and the sales limited. The buyers in general keep back in expectation of the prices becoming lower; but as the stock is greatly reduced, and it is certain no supply of any consequence can reach this country for some months, there is a greater probability of a rise than a fall on this article. A hurricane in Jamaica in November (a most unusual time) has greatly injured the crop of 1819, as the Canes, on which the dependence is chiefly placed, are then come to nearly full growth, and are therefore more easily torn out of roots, broken and destroyed. The price of Sugar may be stated to have declined 1s. per cwt. In Foreign there is nothing doing. Considerable purchases have been made in Lumps, but still there is no variation of price. Molasses are heavy and declining.Cotton. The market continues very heavy, and for Bengals, in particular, greatly depressed. In London it is chiefly of this description which is to be found at market. Liverpool there has lately been some appearance of revival in the Cotton market, but it is not likely to be to any great extent. The great stock on hand, the large quantities continuing to be imported, and the great fall in the markets whence this article is produced, must tend to prevent any considerable rise, at least for a considerable time. The imports last month were 60,063 bags and bales, which, if it continued at the same rate during the 12 months, would give 60,000 packages more than last year. The importations at this time also are not on the highest scale.. -Coffee. This article fluctuates greatly, so much so, that it is impossible to give any correct idea of the state of the market. The quotations are merely nominal: Yet there is little doubt but that Coffee will continue to bear a good price, and be in regular, if not in very extensive demand. 1.Tobacco. The demand for At this article is reviving. Some sales have been made for home consumpt. The buyers believe that it has touched the lowest point of depression. Therefore inquiry is revived, and as the exports to the Continent have been considerable, the holders are sanguine of higher prices. Of the other articles of commerce our details may be short, as there is little interesting concerning the markets for any of them. In Tallow there has been considerable transactions, but the prices are giving way. Hemp is sold under our quotations, and in Flax there is little doing. Oils are quoted lower, and sales heavy. The Grain market is dull. In Fruit there is no alteration. Beef, if good, is in demand. The sales of Bacon are heavy. Butters are in limited request, and a further decline anticipated. In Rum there is little doing, nor any variation in price. The price of Brandy is unsettled, and the sale of Geneva languid, as the importations of these articles are very considerable. In our last Report, we took a general review of British commerce, and the countries to which it was daily extending. We omitted to notice a trade to the Red Sea, which we are happy to perceive is entering upon by British capital and skill. Mocha is the chief port at present where this trade is carried on, but there is not a doubt but that it will soon extend with increasing energy to all the ports in that famed sea, both on its Arabian and its Abyssinian shores, and also along the eastern shores of Africa, to the southward of these countries. During the war, the Americans carried on an extensive and lucrative trade with these places, by means of having the Isles of France for their rendezvous. This trade we may now fairly anticipate is gone into hands whose industry and honour will rapidly diffuse through these distant and once more interesting regions the blessings of knowledge, eivilization, and peace. Since our last publication, we are happy to see, that our accounts of the extensive trade and flourishing revenues of our country, are borne out by the highest authority. By the statement of Lord Castlereagh, in the House of Commons, on the 9th instant, we learn that the actual increase of the revenue for last year, was £5,328,000; while the expenditure was considerably less than what had been anticipated. Thus the great point is clearly and firmly established, that the income of the country exceeds its expenditure for last year about £3,500,000, with every appearance of a progressive improvement for the year now running. From the same authority, we also learn that the exports of this country for the year ending the 5th October last, of articles of British produce and manufactures, calculated at the official value, or value as entered at the Custom-house, amounted to £35,325,000, about £100,000 more than in 1815, the year when they exceeded all the previous years, by £10,000,000. The excess beyond 1817 is £3,325,000. But our readers must bear in mind, that this is by no means the real value; it is greatly more ;-this is only the manufacturer's and exporter's price, namely, what they cost them at the ready money price. To this we must add their profits, and all expenses of commission, freight, insurance, &c. which are all profits to the British nation, and certainly as much part of our trade as these articles themselves. Taking these together, at 25 per cent. we have the enormous sum of £44,156,250, as the actual value of the exports of British produce and manufactures for one year. When to all this we add the exports of articles of foreign produce, of which our readers may form some idea by turning to our last Commercial Report, where many of these exports are very minutely given, and where they think on the vast internal trade of this country. When they reflect upon the amazing extent of our imports, (the produce from our West India colonies, and cotton, from all quarters of the world, being equal to £32,000,000 alone) they may then form an idea of the prodigious trade and stupendous mercantile interests and establishments of this wonderful country. It exhibits to the view of the inquirer, a picture of human skill, ingenuity, capital, and industry, such as never were put in motion and activity in any age of the world, and such as can hardly ever be surpassed in any succeeding age. It strikes faction dumb, malevolence mute, and our boldest enemies with terror and dismay. Bright and brilliant as is the picture here exhibited, let no one imagine that the commercial sky is to remain for ever unclouded, and never be visited with a storm. This must be the reverse. It is approaching with rapid strides. A time of commercial pressure and difficulty is marching hard after many, and will soon overtake individuals. This arises from four great causes, all directed to the same point. The first is the drain of money for foreign loans, and purchases in foreign funds; the second is immense commercial speculations; the third springs from the general and indiscriminate system of our manufac turers, of consigning goods to every market, without being possessed of that knowledge which would have enabled them to judge what was best suited to each; the fourth and last cause is, the great loss on cotton-wool imported into this country last year. This cannot be less than £3,000,000, two thirds of which is perhaps confined to Manchester and Liverpool. The first cause may now be considered as nearly removed; the second arose from the great facility with which money was obtained, and which has induced many to go to a great extent in every market, to endeavour to retrieve the immense losses sustained by various causes in the disastrous year 1816. But still the evil consequences of all this will be partial, temporary, and, in comparison to the whole, of small extent. Compared to our whole trade, it is like the storm on the ocean, which shatters a few ships in a corner, while prosperous gales bear the great proportion on their way. It is the thunder storm of the torrid climate which passes ina moment, and leaves a purer atmosphere and more enlivening sky. It can no more injure our general strength, wealth, and prosperity, than the shaking a few acorns from the lofty oak would impair its grandeur or injure its strength. Errata for last Commercial Report For Rum paid duties, 1816, read 1818. For American timber, provisions, and stones, read timber, provisions, and staves. Course of Exchange, February 2.-Amsterdam, 11: 6: 2 U. Antwerp, 11:9. Ex. Hamburgh, 33:7: 2 U. Frankfort, 1: 10 Ex. Paris, 23: 80: 2 U. Bourdeaux, Cadiz, 40 effect. Gibraltar, 34, Leghorn, 52. 23: 80. Madrid, 404 effect. Genoa, 47. Malta, 50. Naples, 423. Palermo, 127 per oz.. Oporto, 58. Rio Janeiro, 65. Dublin, 10. Cork, 10. Agio of the Bank of Holland, 2. Prices of Gold and Silver, per oz.-Portugal gold, in coin, £0:0:0. in bars, £0: 0:0. New doubloons, £0:0:0. New dollars, 5s. 9d. 5s. 7d. London, Corn Exchange, Feb. 1. Foreign gold, Silver, in bars, Liverpool, Feb. 1. s. d. s. d. 3. d. s. d. s. Wheat, per 70 lbs. Rice, p. cwt. 0 0 to 00 English. 11 0 to 12 0 Flour, English, 63 to Scotch 10 0 to 12 0 p.2801b.fine63-0 to 65 0 42 to 55 Welch... 11 0 to 12 0-Seconds. 56 0 to 60 0 65 to 72 Irish ... 11 3 to 12 9 Irishp.240lb. 52 0 to 54 0 to Ameri. p. bl. 44 0 to 47 0 28 to 31 Dantzie . 11 6 to 12 6-Sour do.. 34 0 to 38 0 32 to 34 Wismar .. 11 6 to 12 0 Clover-seed, p. bush. 34 American. 11 0 to 12 58 Quebec ..9 6 to 10 to New... 52 to 56 ... Superfine Foreign to - Tick Fine 75 to 82 Fine. Superfine New 42 to 50 Potato do. 38 to -to New 68 to 71 Malt, ... Fine Fine Flour, 60 to . 55 to 65 Scotch Gray Pease. .53 to 58 Bran, per q.. -to to Rye Fine Barley -to English,grind.6 6 to 6 9 English 40 0 to 43 0 Malting... 9 0 to 10 6 Scotch ... 33 0 to 35 0 60 Irish. 6 0 to 6 6 Irish.... 36 0 to 40 0 7 6 to 90 8. Butter, Beef, &c. Foreign 69 to 7 6 Butter, per cwt. s. Malt p.9gls. 11 0 to 13 0 Belfast Oats, per 45 lb. Newry 9 Waterford Eng. new. 4 6 to 49 Drogheda 70 5. S. Must. Brown, 12 to 20 -White... 14 to 20 Tares. .... 12 to Hempseed 65 to Clover, Red, -Yellow, new -White. Carraway .70 to 72 ,130 to Canary - to Coriander New Rapeseed, £46 to £-. 80 to 90 Common .. Average Prices of Corn of England and Wales, from the Returns received in the Week ended 23d January 1819. Wheat, 79s. 5d.-Rye, 56s. 7d.-Barley, 64s. 5d.-Oats, 34s. 10d.-Beans, 71s. 9d.-Pease, 70s. 5d.-Oatmeal, 38s. 1d.-Beer or -Big, Os. Od. Average Prices of British Corn in Scotland, by the Quarter of Eight Winchester Bushels, and Oatmeal, per Boll of 128 lbs. Scots Troy, or 140 lbs. Avoirdupois, of the Four Weeks immediately preceding the 15th January 1819. Wheat, 68s. 5d.-Rye, 51s. 8d.-Barley, 48s. 7d.-Oats, 29s. 4d.-Beans, 49s. 11d.-Pease, 50s. 7d.-Oatmeal, 23s. 10d.-Beer or Big, 41s. 6d. Wheat. 1st,......40s. Od. 2d,......37s. Od. 3d, ......34s. Od. HADDINGTON. Barley. Os. 11d. to Os. Od. Os. 10d. to Os. Od. . 1st,. .....25s. Od. 2d,......21s. Od. 3d,......18s. Od. FEBRUARY 5. 1st,......39s. Od. 1st,......25s. 6d. | 1st,......25s. Od. Note.-The boll of wheat, beans, and pease, is about 4 per cent. more than half a quarter, or 4 Winchester bushels; that of barley and oats nearly 6 Winchester bushels. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ENGLISH BANKRUPTCIES, announced between the Ist and 31st January 1819, extracted from the London Gazette. Allum, R. Chatham, Kent, builder Atkinson, J. Dalston, Cumberland, cotton-manufacturer Aubert, N. B. Lloyd's Coffee-house, and Harleyford-place, Kennington, insurance-broker Atherton, T. Liverpool, tanner Burgis, J. Southampton-street, Covent-Garden, ornamental paper-manufacturer Barker, J. Stratford-Common, brewer Brown, J. Leeds, straw hat manufacturer Booth, J. Oxford-street, grocer Cater, S. and J. Home, Watling-street, warehouse man Chapman, R. Hammersmith, surgeon Churchill, J. Stanhope-street, Clare-market, common-brewer Collins, F. New-Fishbourne, Sussex Cooper, T. Kennet-wharf, Upper Thames-street, merchant Carver, J. and W, Peet, Basinghall-street, merchants Cowley, T. Bolton-le-Moors, Lancashire, warehouseman Durham, J. Shadwell-street, carcass-butcher Davis, N. Gloucester Terrace, New-road, Whitechapel, merchant David, J. Threadneedle-street, merchant Fitzgerald, T. St Catherine-street, ship-owner Herm, J. Birmingham, screw-maker Hardie, A. Union-court, Broad-street, merchant. Hudson, W. Upper Thames-street, earthen-ware man Hughes, S. Liverpool, liquor-merchant Jacob, J. Gravel-lane, Houndsditch, tobacconist Jones, J. and H. Hughes, Liverpool, merchants Jones, E. Great Sutton-street, Clerkenwell, coalmerchant J. Kernot, Castle-street, Leicester-fields, druggist Longman, F. G. Norwich, malster▾ Lumley, W. Jermyn-street, wine-merchant Lloyd, T. and J. Winter, Blue Bell Yard, St Lutey, T. Wapping, master-mariner M'Leod, T. H. Pinners-hall, Winchester-street, wine-merchants Merchant, J. Shepton Mallet, Somersetshire, inn keeper Morris, J. Woolwich, cordwainer Morgan W. Bristol, victualler Noble, M. Lancaster, chemist Oulett, J. Charlotte-street, Fitzroy-square, jeweller Oxenham, J. T. Oxford-street, mangle-maker Phillips, R. Exeter, chemist Perkins, C. Perkins Rents, Peter-street, Westminster, victualler Price, D. Watford, Herts, linen-draper Peet, W. Basinghall-street, merchant Payton, W. Lincoln's-inn-fields, wine-merchant Perkins, J. Tiverton, timber-merchant Power, J. and R. Warwick, Finsbury-square, merchants Ridley, T. Seaton-sluice, Northumberland, brewer Rogers, J. Old Broad-street, merchant Ritchie, T. Air-street, Piccadilly, merchant Robinson, J. Holywell, butcher Reddal, T. Liverpool, merchant |