’ 366 .— FINANCIAL STATEMENT MADE BY LORD ALTHORP. From Bell’s Messenger. Lord Althorp, after alluding to the pla- ces and offices abolished. proceeded to state the amount of the Revenue and Ex- penditure for the year ended 5th of April, 1833. The income was - - The Expenditure - 46,853.000l. 45,366,000 Leaving an excess ofincome (1,437,000 The deficiency ofthe year end- ed 5th April, 1832, was 1,200,041 So that the Excess ofthe year ended 5th April, 1833, more than makes good the deficiency of the preceding year. The improvement of the present year, compared with the pre— ceding, is not less than 2,728,000! But this improvement has arisen not so much from increased Re venue, as from di- minished Expenditure. Thus, for instance, The income for 1832, was 46,6U,000 For 1833, it was 46,853,000 .—— Showing an Excess of Income in the latter year only, 235,000! —_ But the expenditure for the year, ended April, 1832, was, - - - - 47,859,0001 And for the year ended 5th April, 1833, - . - 45,366,000! Being a diminution of Expend- iture of - - - 2,493,000] His Lordship after analysing the differ- ent branches of expenditure, with a view to point out the reductions, proceeded to estimate the revenue for the year, which he took at 46,494,128! He estimated the expenditure at - - - - 44,922,219 Leaving a surplus of - 1,571,9091 This brought his Lordship to the ques- tion of what part of this surplus ought to be reduced by the repeal of taxes. The Taxes to be repealed are— On Tiles, On Advertisements which at present are for every inser- tion 35. 6d.—to be reduced to 28. for the first insertion, 1s. 6d for the second, and ls for the third and every subsequent insertion. The whole duty is now 150,000!. the proposed reduction is e- qual to One-half - Marine insurance—foreign ade, where premium is un- r 163., duty reduced from . 6d. to ls 3d. 5 where der 305. and above 15s. reduced to 2.9- 6d.; and re, the present duty to _ — - - 37,0001 75,000 - 244,000 ~Portion ol'duty on raw Cottons imposed in 1831, - 300,000 ‘ Reduction of one-half Duty on Soap, - - 300,000 Probable diminution of Revenue, 1,056,000! As the estimated surplus for the year ending 183-1, is 1,572,000 After deducting the Taxes re- pealed - - 1,056,000 There will be a surplus of reve- nue of 516,000 THE BRITISH AMERICAN be continued, - - 100,060 Assessed Taxes--reduction of duty on all shop-windows, and deduction from House Duty in proportion to re- duction of Window- ' duty 100,000 On taxed Carts 30,000 Duty on Shopmen, \Varehousemen. store keepers and Porters, 45,000 On Commercial Tra- vellers and Hawkers On Stewards, Bailifl‘s, 4,500 9,500 'c. In all, - - Such are the heads of the annual Bud- get proposed on Friday night by Lord Al- thorp. Salaries abolished or reduced, not shown in the account of increase and diminution (Ranger of Parks - - 1,239. Master of Mint - - 1,000 Q. Lord Chancellor - - 500 s: Keeper of the Great Seal in 3 Scotland - z 1’9“ = Lord Chancellor of Ireland 2,000 <1 Chief Justice of King's Bench 2,000 Chief Baron of Scotland 4,000 Kings Stationer in Ireland 1 1,645 Civil List Pensions - 85,000 Civil List OtIice - 30,585 2 { Consuls - - 55,487 .3 Diplomatic Expenditure i Colonial Reductions - 12|677 Governors’ Salaries in Colonies14,097 Inspector General of Prisons [Ireland] 330,517 1: THE BRITISH AMERICAN. JUNE 22, 1833. WE have received no later Eu- ropean news during the past week. Death of John Randolph—We have copied into our columns to day, a no- tice of this eccentric genius and dis- 00 47 tinguished statesman. When he enter ed Congress, in ’78 he was the youngest \nd at the time of his death, he was the Odest member of the National Legislature. Tomany of the bad passions which beset huma‘ nature, he was an utter stranger-F. . He kmw nothing of envy or malice—he was a was-m friend, and a frank, open and magnanimuus foe. His unrivalled elo- quence—-hls most dangeroUs weapon, sar- casm, which he. was accustomed to weild with unequalled afl'ect, made him an antag. onist on the flOOI'Ot'Congr-ess, not less fear- ful than powerful. The confidence reposed in him by his constituents in early life ‘Va; continued almost without interruption to the close of his life, at the advanced age of sixty-one. If he had faults, he was like other men; his virtues and excellencies should alone be remembered, and he had no common share of them. In the same city and near the same spot, where his youthful efforts rendered his name conspi- ‘ cuous in the councrls of the nation, bya striking coincidence, he finally terminated his earthly existence. Mr. Randolph, it is said, has provided ‘ for the EMABCIPATION or ALL 1115 suvrs. He has also made provision for the support of such of them as are children until they l are able to take care of themselves—and for the aged and infim during life ——E. De- morrat. Mr. Jameson, the new Attorney Gene- ral for Upper Canada, arrived at New York in the W'apoleon. It is stated in a late Quebec Gazette, that one hundred thousand bushels of wheat have been taken out of bond in England, for shipment to Canada, and that proba- bly a larger quantity would be sent; that a large quantity of oats, too, was expected, sufficient to affect the price of the article in that market. Lieutenant Johnson, of the 66th Regi- ment, for a wager of 400 dollars, under- took lately to walk from Fort George', Upper Canada, to the Eagle Tavern, in. Buffalo, and return—a distance of seventy two miles—in eighteen hours; which {eat he performed in seventeen hours, with ap- parent ease, including crossing the Niagra River from Waterloo to Black Rock. The day was very hot and sultry and the roads were much broken up by the previous hea- vy rains. Quennc,May, 22.-—The number of ves- , sale which had arrived at this date last year was 175. At noon, to-da the num— ber on the Exchange books an reported, was only 59. Very few Emigrants have arrived, and accounts from Ireland say that they will not be as numerous as they have been for the last three or four years. are "swung? in}: > 9.52.. *1/42in _a.4ux>~‘