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¦ & c. ' f HE '^^Ol^fiMl^P^f ft fc R A.1...
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DR M'DOUALL.
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We bare received a message from Dr M'Dju...
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THE CHOLERA. On Saturday last, the follo...
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CoaricxiosT rj*ou the Exciis Law .—At th...
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How -ready
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THE MAN OF ALL WORK. " William Goodenoug...
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THE YORKSHIRE AND LANCASHIRE VICTIMS. On...
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THE NORTHERN STAR . SATOftDAY, DECEMBER 2, IMS.
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LABOURS WARNING VOICE TO PAMPERED IDLERS...
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. i::^ _ ¦; ", ;.'Kfe^ ;: riCiPNM^^-- ''...
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THE WEST RIDING ELECTION. In whichever w...
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MR CHARLES BULLER. The sudden death of t...
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fco fteauers # corresoonfleuts
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^T We are sorry to announce that we cann...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
¦ & C. ' F He '^^Ol^Fiml^P^F Ft Fc R A.1...
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Ad00413
TOR SALE , THREE FOUR-ACRE ^ M ; JO SHARE ^ in th b S ^^ f , S & SS Sleach . IntCTdingpureha 8 er »« t » PP 1 y 1 IM , a the proctor- ™*^* Z £ 2 ! % Britannia BrHgc , Apply w J *» es Steel . LUn'air , dj aiiir- » - Anglesea , North Wale * . -
Ad00412
^ IONAl- WSD COMPANY . T „„ eJ ™*& RIES OF THE VAKIOUS H ! pA S vr HE 3 of £ Atonal Land <^ span , iu BRA ^ C «^ it « rarc requested immediately to London Mdrtt v ^ cimv . ^ r member * , top */ tho « x-C-Uet * SEd ££ & S » BinninS ** ' * . *«^ bring £ S **? , ** i ^ AetSoWate : * ° d « ib « ff have rapear ^ ° ^ ed to rnVf rtii ^ mt n % Ifaope those Asho ^ I notTef ^ uf & tir Ujit , ^ immediately do so . If ffiS ^ rfSXeodma their number * members , i ^ ulrt foS then what their portion will amount to , aattw * J . Gbassbt , diitriat secretary . Koah Ark Co « rt , Stangate . isnAeth .
Ad00414
NOTICE . mrTo THE CHARTIST MEMBERS OF THE Westminster branch , and the membera lately meetinr at 6 * . D « n Street , Sobo , wiUjneet at the Partheneam < 5 k < Hoas » . SlU * rtln « I «« , < mS « niajr ( to-morrow ) cveninp , at seven o ' clock , ti decld * « pon aome suitable pise for tuture meeting * , and other bwintss of importance .
Ad00415
TO TAILORS . By approbation of Her Majesty Queea Victoria , gad H . B . H . Prince Albert . NOW BEADY , rpHE LONDON AND PAEIS WINTER X FASHIONS fisr 1848-19 . Messrs Benjamin READ -nd Co ™ It . nart-street , Bloonwbrirj-square , London ; and b 7 GJ & V « , Hot -well-street , Strand ; * rerJ splendid YB 1 ST , suprrolv orloured , accom paniedwittothe ( most fosUooable , norel , and extra-fittiug rUdrngDriss , Huutw ^ nd FrdcfcCo ut Patterns ; tie Albert Paletot . Dress aud Morning Waistcoats , both single and double-breasted . Also thefitory of Cutting Cloaks of every description frj . UsWained . « ith diagrams , and every thing respe-s . thw ^ st yle and fashion iUa < . tr » ted . The method of m . wearing and diminishing all the patterns , or any others particularly expl * ra « d- Price 10 s . . ^ READ akCo . btg to inform tiwse who consider It not rielit to pav the full price for the new system of Cuttse ? , bating recently purchased ihe old one , that any petsoife having done so wit . in the last year , will be diarred only half price fer the whole ; or . any parts of the new system , published 1 S 48 , which will supersede everything of the kind before conceived . Particulaw end terms sent , post free . Patent Measures , with full « pJ « n « Soa , S « . the-aet . Patent Iudicater , 7 a post-free . Renrtered patterns to measure , la , each post-free , sold by Head and Co , 12 . Hart-street * Bloomsbury-square , London ; and aU Booksellers . Post-office orders , ani Post Stamps , taken » Cash . Habits per . formed for the Trade . Busts for fitting Coats on ; Boys figures . Foremen prorided . — Instroctiona in ontting complete , for aU kinds of Styla and Fashion , wWch can be aocoaipHsfeed in an incredibly sharttime .
Dr M'Douall.
DR M'DOUALL .
We Bare Received A Message From Dr M'Dju...
We bare received a message from Dr M'Djuall , ihronjh Mm M'DaaaU . who haa recent ! / seen him fer the Erst time these three months , relative to ths di missal of lecturers employed by the Land Company . He states that when iu London ( as etidence i j Clears ' s ca-e } , abant tbe time ttie society was closed , be * » w Mr O'C-rauor iu the Adelphi , and mentioned his reluctance to ba continued as » lee torer , because he conld no longer add either to the numbers , or the capital of the society . The Doctor ssys that he had many discussions upon the subject , in different parts eft he country , which may be rameTibered . as ha spoke freely upon each occasion , and looked upon it ss an imposition to hold an effiee thst had no duties , and which duties wre returning nseqoiralsnt for the stiary . The same view of j the case was taken , he believes , fey Mr O'Connor , -at he was reengaged ( in a letter written by Mr Thomas CUrfr ) , aa a lecturer for the National Charter Association , at the same moment tbat he was informed of his dismissal as an efficer of the Land Company . If it was considered advisable to do s > , be will not allow an j .-blame to retf upon him , an that prtTji tiut his services were , ? ecognued . Tae Doctor farther state ? , that be has got shored inti ( he ditch by striTing to keep others out ; and by penary alone , Thcrc ore , he calls ijpon the manly lovers of fair pity to protect him from attack in his defence ess , and most cruel snd hard position , where he cannot—and dare no » —attempt a vindication in wrisinz . The Doctor , if be lives , will meet all opponents on the 16 . hcf An Rait , 1699 , Until thfp , reepect ( be Dkfkhceless Fbisosek .
The Cholera. On Saturday Last, The Follo...
THE CHOLERA . On Saturday last , the following cases were reported to the Board of Health : —Hackney Road , 1 , ratal ; Camberwell , i , fatal ; Somhwark , 3 , 2 fatal ; total in London only fire cases . At Sunderland l and at Barking one fatal case occurred . Edinburgh , 20 , 3 fatal ; Leltb . 4 ; labberton { from 1 st November , 58 . 6 fatal ? ln * eresk from 1 st November , 2 ; Craroond from 1 st November , 8 ; Lasswade , Loanhead , from 1 st November , 34 .
Inquest . —On Friday evening last , an inquest was held in Goodman ' s Fields before Mr W . Baker , coroner , on the body of a child named William Keating , aged four years , wko died after a few hours ' illness , with all the symptoms of malignant cholera . The inquest was called at the instigation of Mr Lidd'e , the medical officer of the district , in consequence of bis having been called to attend no less than fire cases of Asiatic cholera in the court where this death took place . MrLiddle stated that the court was about seventy feet in length , and about five feet wide ( a person standing in the middle of the court might touch the houses on both sides ) . The ventilation was impeded by a deed wall at each
end of the court , the houses were crowded and dirty , aud many of the privies were overflowing . He had no doubt the child died a natural death from Asiatic cholera . The coroner remarked ihat the court was on ? of the worst re had witnessed , and it appeared impossible to remedy the defective ventilation of it . He said he would write to the parochial authorities respecting it . Mr Liddle observed that it was highly expedient that an officer of health should be appointed for tbe Tower Hamlets , who should have power to compel the owners of property to render
the houses which are let to poor people wholesome , and if the property be so bad that it cannot be remedied then , it should be condemned . The law now gave power to surveyors to condemn property that was dangerous from dilapidation . The same power ought to be given to au officer of health , to condemn houses which endangered the lives of the inhabitants from poisonous emanations . The coroner said he believed there was a law which rendered an owner liable to the charge of manslaughter if a case of death ensued from the unhealthy cosdition o ! a dwelling-house .
A sign that cholera is on the wane in London , was afforded on Tuesday , by the fact that the Board of Health issued no report of cases . The deaths , from all causes , in the metropolis , during the week ending Saturday last , were 1 , 207 , being 53 over tbe average . Of the total number who died during the seven days , 118 were destroyed by scarlatina , and 70 by typhus—two diseases which continue to be much more fata ] than ihe dreaded cholera . Glasgow . —Cholera . —A boy . named Jatnei William M'Cullam , about six years of age , residing vrith his parents in Wadell ' s Land , Springbank , who took ill on Monday night last , about eleven o ' clock , died on Saturday night . The family are very poor ,
and the father has been out of employment for ten months . A Mrs Scott , residing at 294 , Argvle Street , was seized with cho ' . era on Friday night , ' and was removed to the Clyde Street Hospital . On tbe same night a young man . named Francis Doolln , seventeen years of age , residing at Springbank , took ill . A boy and a girl , of the respective ages of four and six years , residing with their grandfather , in Grove ' s Land , Springbank , died suddenly on Saturday , supposed from cholera . Both of them took ill on Fr"day night . A woman residing at Wood Lane , Broomielaw , was taken ill about noon , on Saturday , and was removed iu the afternoon to the
Clyde Street Hospital . It was said to be a bad case . Two cases were likewise reported yesterday morning one , that of an old woman residing at Stephenson ' s Land , North Wooleide Road ; and that of another ¦ w eman residing at Kelvin Row , South Woodside . The child of Mrs E & stou . who died of the disease , took ill yesterday . Other two cases were reported yesterday—one in Bed Host , North Woodside Road ; and one in Steventou ' s Land , North 'Woodside . Since the above was written , we have learned that the female who was removed on Saturday to Clyde Street Hospital died yesterday afternoon . — Mrth British Mail of Monday .
Coaricxiost Rj*Ou The Exciis Law .—At Th...
CoaricxiosT rj * ou the Exciis Law . —At the county msgiaa-atet' office , Boch-. £ t . r , on Monday , Jit Henry Matthews , of If-opham , appeared in answer to an Infor . xsatir / aat the Instance of the officers of the Excise , for tbat be , being a planter and grower of hops , did between the 1 st of August , 1817 , and the 1 st of November ult ., grow 6 , i 5 Sies . of hops , the duty on which amounted to £ 5716 jol ; and this sum not having been paid btfore tbe day of eahibidng the said complaint , he had rendered himself liable to doable the amount of duty Defendant adtaUted hia liability , audit was stales tbat Mr Wilson , the landlord , was in possession fer arrears of rent . An order for ptyment waa made , and spcMoa on behalf of tho defendant a-suxed the Sadie Cficars ttttreqnittd mm should be fortheoaisgin lit ( SIS .
How -Ready
How -ready
Ad00418
PORTRAIT OF GEORGE BRIDGE MOLLINS Tho above portrait taken by Mb co-patriot , 'William Dowlinjj .. P / iea Bi . A . few On * tlp « rlor tinted paper , Is , Orders received by Mr Dixon , IU , High Holborn .
Ad00419
IMPORTANT TO BREWERS . —Rapid fortunes J- are being made by those Brewers who use the Concentrated Isinglass and Sugar Finings in tbe -copper . They prevent acidity enda . l subsequeat trouble , * v the article becomes bright immediately after fermentsiian . Sent to any address , intflrcpoand canisters , with directions f « r one , at 2 s . per pound . zOSbs , upwards , 2 s . 6 d . Oy AROIEW YfooB and Co ., 105 , St Jo ' an Street , Smith , field , London . Terms , cash .
Ad00420
IfGYPTIAN DROPS , a Certain and Speedy Cure * for STOKE and GRAVEL , cent Free to all Persons , by enclosing Seven Stamps , to Taokis Wilkumctk , Land Agimt , Gainsborough , Lincolnshire .
Ad00421
rPO BE SOLD , TWO FODR-ACRE PAlBiUP JL SHARES in tbe Sttional Land Company . Apply , pre-paid , to Mr S . Smith , Bookseller , Gveengate , Salford .
Ad00422
TO BE DISPOSED OF . a PAID-UP iPOERX ACHE SHARE in the LandCompany , with all-ex panses paid for the present year . _^ ' Applications to be made to S . SrrrnrKtr , 'Three Horse Shoes , ' Merthyr Tydvil .
Ad00423
How Ready , a New Edition of MR . O'CONNOR'S WORK ON SMALL FARMS . TH « CHEMIST EDITION BV «« KBilBBW . Price ls . 6 d ., A new and elegant edition , with Steel Plate ef fc « Author , of RAISE'S POLITICAL WORKS . No . 24 , OF " THE LABOURER , cortemte : — 1 . Female Slavery in England ; S . Position and Prospects ot the National ti tad Company . 3 . The Fore ' en Events of tha Month . 4 . National L'terature . Just Published , price Is . 6 d ., winning a neat volume , EVIDENCE TAKEN BY THE SELECT GOKmlTTEE Appointed to inquire into Tee National Lucd Cokpast : with a review of the same , and an Outline of the Prepositions fer amending the Constitution of the Company , so as to comply with the Provisions of the Law . Watson , Queen ' s Head-passage , Paternoster-row , London : A Hey wood , Manchester : and all Booksellers in Town and Country .
Ad00424
PORTRAirOF CUFFEY . The shave portrait , taken by his fe'Iow-aunW , Win . Dowlinjj , ia new ready . Price 6 d . Orders received by Mr Dixon , IU , High Holborn .
The Man Of All Work. " William Goodenoug...
THE MAN OF ALL WORK . " William Goodenough Hayter , Liberal M . P . for "Wells , son of J . Hayter , Esq ., married a daughter of W . PuMord , Esq ., brother-in law of R .. Pulsford , Esq . jM . P ., Director of the Great-Western Railway ; South Wales'Railway ; Oxford , Worcester , and Wolverhamp . ton Railway , 1845 ; Wilts , Somerset , and Weymouth Railway ; Waterford and Dublin Railway ; Sambre and Meuse Railway } West Flanders Railway ; and Gloucester and Dean-Forest Railway , 1845 ; Promoter Life Assurance ; a Queen ' s Counsel ; Judge-Advocate General ; Chairman of the Land Committee , and Bencher of Lincoln ' s Inn . ' '
There ' s a man of all-work , and the man who unblushingly denied—when charged by Mr O'Connorr-bavinganything'to do with Foreign Railways . Here is a gentleman , with £ 2 , 000 a year as Judge-Advocate General , fully establishing the truth of the old maxim , that " The more a man has to do the more leisure time he has on his hands , and the less he has to do the greater his fuss . " This official , who patheticall y stated tbe onerous duties discharged by the Judge-Advocate , when the necessity of his services were called in question , devoted three
months of his time , by day and by night , to the strangulation of the Land Company , and then , as he stated , spent six days in manufacturing a report which was unanimousl y rejected by the Committee . Sir Boyle Roach ' s bird could only be in two places at the same time , while the Channel constituted no barrier in the way of this ubiquitous animal . Did not his parents select a good name for this Will-o-the-Whisp , when they had him christened Goodenough ? Did not the babe evince character in his early propensities , when in his infant looks the shrewd parent saw strongly developed—A GOODENOUGH HAYTER !
The Yorkshire And Lancashire Victims. On...
THE YORKSHIRE AND LANCASHIRE VICTIMS . On Monday , the I lth of December , Mr O'Connor will be at Detvsbury , and on Tuesday , the 12 tli , at Liverpool , and at both places lie would wish to meet delegates from the neighbouring districts , both upon the Land Question and the Charter after the public meeting ; and for that purpose he hopes uis friends will engage a large room , as the delegates will , no doubt , be numerous , and he has to express a hope that those delegates will , according to the means of their several districts , bring some funds to secure ihe best defence for the veritable Chartists , and men whose offence , in our conscience , we believe to have been the
salvation of thousands of tbe working classes from the snares of hired spies and informers ; but if they are sacrificed , the fault will be with those who refuse their assistance in the hour of need . It appears as if the enthusiastic Chartists were not aware that the Yorkshire and Lancashire Victims will be tried on the 12 th of December .
The Northern Star . Satoftday, December 2, Ims.
THE NORTHERN STAR SATOftDAY , DECEMBER 2 , IMS .
Labours Warning Voice To Pampered Idlers...
LABOURS WARNING VOICE TO PAMPERED IDLERS . The solution of the Labour Question , as a means of creating peace , contentment , and happiness , has been the subject of our life ' s thought . We have watched the shuttle and the loom , the hammer that strikes the anvil the plough , the spade , and the hoe—the scythe ' the sickle , and the flail—the trowel , the shovel * and the plane , and we have estimated the profit that the worker haa made for the employer . We have passed through wildernesses ,
deserts , uncultivated wastes , and half-cultivated lands—we have heard the charge of idleness preferred against the adventurous Irish , who seek the lion ' s share of labour , gratified with the hope of p reserving a miserable existence through a life of misery ; we have seen them paring the streets , carrying the hod to the coping-stone of the loftiest mansion , quarrying the stone , ' and undertaking every description of druggery , satisfied even by wages measured by the destitution of their fellow sufferers .
We have shown , a thousand times over , that there is no wealth save in the produce of Labour , while there is no law save for tbe protection of the capitalist , whose profits , when trade is bad , are made up of reductions in wages ; and hence the maker of his fortune is dragooned and bullied into submission while starving , while his employer has realised sufficient in prosperity to " bide his time"for adding more to his store . When the Economist has boasted of thehigh wages earned by manufacturing operatives in prosperous times , as compared with the scanty amount earned by the agricultural serf , we
Labours Warning Voice To Pampered Idlers...
'have shown - premature old , age , ' sickness , iri-¦ canacity' & r other work , and d rambling , un > settlndaife , aa a set off . agjunct , these , boasted advantages . We fcwe shown that > theaverage life of the much p itied Dorsetshire 'lttbourer is ¦ fifty-three years , while Ubat of 'ths artificial i-slare is but twenty-eight years ; tand we have ^ established the fiwt upon the . cleanest laws of . rig ht and justice , that , if the manufacturing skve runs his . sweating iraoe ina « c « mparatively 4 & ort ueriod , wfoea foe arrives a * the gaol —•
• which is incapacity * hreugh premature old age —that he shauM have . earned wherewithal to live upon , not m comfort , but dn affluence for the rest of his Me , having devoted its prime to the aggrandisement of the individual speculator , and the support of ostiosal institutions , instead © f being separated & em his wife and family , and handed over to the tender mercies of a pampered official , separated from those who are dear ' to him ^ nd Ro oked upon as « burden to society , which he alone bias contributed to sustain *
Would not the emaciated peer , the gouty prelate , or the ricketty , haif- begotten aristocrat—paralysed ^ from dissipatiou- ^ cheerfull y change places with the healthy peasant cracking stones by the wayside ? thus establishing the fact that wealth can never compensate for tbe loss of health ; while , when the poor man loses his health in the service of the capitalist and the State , he is handed over to mart yrdom . Not so with our soldiers , with our sailors , and policemen ; not so with retiring officials , who are superannuated at the age of twenty-eight , or , whose services may be no longer required ; they receive compensation in the shape of a retiring pension , being overpaid when they perform but little , and as drones become plunderers of Labour ' s hive .
What is the dearest thought of the barrister who pours over musty volumes by a flickering lamp—of the merchant , the banker , the manufacturer , the shopkeeper , the . pawnbroker , and publican—what is their inducement to labour till the dead of night ? Is it not the hope of an early retirement from the fatigues of office , with means furnished by the sweat of the producer , whose holiday never comes } Wbileithe Economists have
beenboasting of the superior condition of the manufactur ing operative , have they ever taken the questions of health and comfort in old age into account ; or have , . they ever seen that the artificial slave represents the race-horse , who has run his sweating race through life , while young , and is old at five ; while the Dorchester labourer represents the agricultural horse , not worked too young—not pushed beyond his powers—not suffocated in an unhealthy stable , and young
at twenty . How we have laboured to convince the working-classes of the injustice of that artificial state in which millions are kept for the benefit of the few 1 And how often have we warned tbeir ruler ? , that a dissatisfied people may be progressively won to contentment , if they could recognise in the acts of their rulers any desire to better their condition , however flow the process of reclamation . While , upon
the other hand , a people stung to misery by lung suffering and neglect—securing the upper hand by a combination of force—would reject with scorn what before they would have accepted with thanksjand if whatisrefused to justice is conceded to fear—the change , so far from Jjeing a bles % ing , is a curse—aa men who would cheerfully labour in the one case , would look upon labour as a degradation in the other , and contend for a confiscation of the property of the rich as tbe sustenance of the poor .
Will our rulers never take warning , or will they still vainly hope to produce a full Exchequer from unemployed Labour ? Do they imagine that because they can feed class upon class , and curb the vengeance of the one by the satisfaction and enthusiasm of the other , that they can as easily wage war against the dissatisfied of all classes ? Ireland has been admitted to be England ' s greatest difficulty when the Catholic peasantry alone were dissatisfied ; but has not that difficulty increased ten-fold , now that every class in Ireland has become disheartened ,
dissatisfied , and disgusted r But do our rulers hope that the sympathy expressed for those landlords , whose tenants have absconded without paying rents , will be a set off against those scenes of Irish misery with which the eye is again every day met ? When we read of Hlfes . of oatmeal being allowed to a family of nine , for a week ' s subsistence , or two pounds a day , or little more than three ounces for each individual ; when we again read of the stench emitted from the loathsome cabin , caused by putrid bodies that have died of starvation ; when we , again , read of the rats having
devoured portions of those lifeless bodies , what sympathy can we feel for those who , though deprived of rights , never perish of hunger It is a subject which makes the hair stand on end , and would make the pen run riot in spite even of the Gagging Bill , if we thought eur bitterest words would rouse the labour sufferers to a sense of their duty . " Oh , " says the puling minister , We gave you eight millions of our money ; we are not chargeable with your improvidence and idleness . " But , we ask , if children grow up idle , dissipated , reckless , and improvident , is not the fault chargeable upon the parent , and do
not the rulers of a country stand in the same relation to its people that a parent does to his children , and are they not chargeable with all national crimes consequent upen bad government , as the parent is chargeable with the crimes of his children consequent upon bad training and management ? It makes the heart sick and the blood run cold , to read the maudlin sympathy expressed for tyrant landlords by hired scribes ; while the most adventurous and industrious people upon the face of the earth are charged with all the sufferings consequent upon tyranny , oppression , and misrule .
We dare not sing the Whig poet ' s Irish war-whoop , who was free before he was fettered with a pension , and thus appealed to his oppressed country ;—¦ . * ' Thea onward lbs green banner rearlBg . Go flesh every sword to tho hilt , Oa oar tide if virtue and Erin , Oa theirs ii the Saxon aad guilt . " This was the qualification of the Irish poet ( Tommy Moore , ) for Whig patronage ; while ,
were we to urge its following , we should be consigned to the convict-ship , in chains . But we love human life too well—we respect just principles too much , to invite an exciteable people to reliance upon such false hope ; while we would warn their rulers , who should stand in the relation of parents , that in spite of the law ' s terror , the cannon ' s roar , or the sabre hunger will break through stone walls , and a starving people will lose all command even over their own actions .
The Whigs promised every thing for Enggland and Ireland , while both countries and especially Ireland , have , suffered unparalleled privation and want under their rule . And we unhesitatingly assert , that had Peel been in office instead of Russell English money woud not have been expended ^ raaki „ g * JF % the beds of nvers-in building brides Where n „ d e X V » dig S & *&» to-day , and filling them up to-morrow-instead of being employed in profitable reproductive lahour . Butwehav * the consolation to feel , and to believe , thatnational suffering will prV duce national unity ; and that next sessionfinsteadof seeing the Irish landlords acting as the flank company of the Whies . sicked „„
with the area or taxation , poor laws , government loans , and the rest of such rubbish , we shall see them boldl y . standing together for nationality , having discovered that they cannot be worse governed than they are by their present rulers . Siace the Union , the division of the people in Ireland has effec ted but little damage to the country , compared with the disunion of her representatives in Parliament . And when that disunion ceases , then the Prime Minister willl [ yield to fear what he has refused to justice ,
. I::^ _ ¦; ", ;.'Kfe^ ;: Ricipnm^^-- ''...
. :: ^ _ ¦; " , ; . 'Kfe ^ ; : riCiPNM ^^ -- ' ' - > '' The following is Kiri ^ 'fionstable ' s appeal , upon which is- based his pretensions- to fill the office of President of the French Republic : — , ' ' To recall ma from txU * you named me representative of tbe people . On the ere of the ejection of- the first magistrate ot the republic , my name preient a itself to yon as a symbol of order and security . These testimonies of go honourable a confidence are rendered , I am a fare , rather to my same than to me , wko bavo a * yet done nothing lor my couatry ; but the more tho memory of the emperor affords ma its p » trorja «« » and inspires your suffrages , the Morodo I feel bound to declare my sentiments and my principles . Thera must be no
muconc-p-tion between us . I am not an ambitious man , who sometimes dream of the application of subversive theorist . Educated in free couatriee , in tbe school of misfortune , 1 shall always remain falthfal to the duties which your suffrages shall impose on me , and the will of tbe Asserably . " ' If I am named president , I will not retreat before any danger , before any sacrifice , te defend society so audaciously attacked . I will devote myaelf wholly , without msntal reservation , to coaioUdatiag a republic , vote in its inwe . honest in its intentions , grout and powerful by its acts . I shall engage my honour to leave , at ( lieend of four years , power consolidated , liberty untouched , and a real progress accomplished . Whatever may be the result ef the election , I shall bow before the will ofthe
peeple ; and my concurrence i * given by anticipation to any jast and firm government which re establishes moral as well as physical erder , which effectually protects religion , family , and property , theeternal bates of all soeiety , which takes the initiative in all reasonable reforms , calms animosities , reconciles parties , and thus allows the disturbed country to rely on the morrow . To re-establish order , is tn restore confidence , to provide , by establising credit ,, for the temporary insufficiency of resources , —to restore flnancialproiperity , To protect reli-K ion aad family , is to assure the liHcrty ef Wor-hip and the liberty of instruction ' . To protect property , is to maintain the inviolability ef the produce of labour , is to guarantee the independence and security of possesion . —
indispensable foundations of civil liberty . As to the reforms that may be effected , the following appear to mo the most urgent : —To adopt such rigid economy as , without Injury to the public service , will allow a diminution of tbe most onerous burdens of the people ; to encourage enterprises , which , by developing ; the riches of agriculture , may in Prance' and Algeria afford employment to unemployed artisans ; to provld « for old age of the operative classes by suitable institutions ; to introduce info our industrial laws the ameliorations which tend not to ruin the rich for the advantage of tbe poor , but to found theweltareofeachontbe prosperity of all ; to restrain within just limits the number ot employes dependent on the s tn te , and which often make a tree people a people of
mcndUants . To avoid , that dangerous tendency which induces tbe state to execute itself what private parties could do as well or better than it . The centralisation of iatereits aud enterprises is a . kind of despotism ; The principle of a republic is opposed to monopoly . An / lastly , to preserve the press from the two excesses which always compromise it-arbitrary interference , and its own lieence . With war , there could be no cure for our ills , l ' enct , then , would be the most intense of my wishes . France , at the first revolution , was warlike , because she was compelled to be so . To invasion she responded by conquest . Now she is not provoked to it , she may dn secrate her resources to pacific ameliorations , without renouncing an honest and resolute policy . A great natlen
should holditapeace , oraererspeak » rai « . Tooarefor the national dignity , is to care for tho army , whose patriotism , so noble and it disinterested , has been often mistaken . In maintaining tha fundamental laws w ich are the strength of our military organisation , tho load of tbe conscription sbeuld be lightened , anl not aggravated . Not only tbe officers , but the subalterns and fleldien who hare so long served under the banners of the country , mu ' thave a certain piorision . made lor them ,, Therepublic must fee generous , and place f jith is its future . I , who havelknown exile and captivity , look forward with the
most ardent hopes to the day when the country may , without danger , abolish all proscriptions , and efface the last traces of our civil discords . Such are , my devr M . low-citizens , the ideas that I shall carry to the exercise of power , If you elect me to the presidency of the republic . The task h difficult-the mission most important , I arruaware ; but I do not despair of discharging it , in callingto its accomplishment , without distinction of par . ties , the men whose high Intelligence and probity recom . mend . them in public opinion . Moreover , when placed fit the head of the French people , there is an infallible means of effecting good—that is , to desire it .
If . words were a mirror , in which we could see the writer or the speaker faithfully represented , we would reject the objectionable portion of the above address , and accept the major part of it , as constituting . King Constable ' s ample qualification to fill the office to which he aspires ; but as great men , great poets , statesmen , philosophers and warriors , invent , stereo ? type and perpetuate their proverbs , we , of the little fry , may be permitted humbly to follow in their footsteps , and our proverb—which is strongly illustrative of King ConstableJs position , as it is , and as it will be if
electedis , THAT THERE IS A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MEN SEEKING FOR POWER , AND EXERCISING POWER ! " Words are bat wind , actions spoak Ihe m \ ti ;" and , as one of the most wily diplomatists of ancient or modern times has truly said , " Words arc glvtn to nun to conceal , not to express , their opinions , " we attach but slight importance to the index of King Constable ' s future career . The composition is good ; the points are well selected and ably , because briefly , sustained , and , asa whole , it is a perfect masterpiece of policy ; but , then , the King Constable did not write it , * and the very fact of his not writing it is evident proof
that in his canvass , as in his office , he is a tool in the hands of some clever mechanic . And if we were called upon for an opinion as to his fitness to fill the high office for which he is now a candidate , and were we in total ignorance of his character , his incapacity , and vain ambition , we should unhesitatingly declare , that the very fact ' of a large portion of the English Press playing their "SPECIAL" of the 10 th OF APRIL against his rivals , is , of itself , sufficient proof of his incapacity , and establishes the conviction , in our mind at least , that already their exists some secret conspiracy between English diplomatists and tie French-English " Special . " . Although all time antecedent to the passing of the Reform Bill , may , of chronological riiriit . MtAumr ± n t > i « OLD ALMANAO . as far 7 *¦ ¦
u— - •*~ o ~ —r- ~ - — ~ " as mere English questions are concerned , nevertheless we cannot banish from our minds the fact , that , both previousl y and subsequent to the passing of that measure , the policy of England has been operated upon , and sometimes wholly governed , by foreign events ; Hence , the revolution of 1793 led to England's necessity for creating the Irish rebellion , for the purpose of establishing the Irish Union j arid h < id it not been for the treachery and perfidy of Dumouriez , all the promises held out by the affrighted English Minister to the Irish people , would have been realised ; while the treachery of that English tool emboldened the British Minister , and changed the promise of amelioration and emancipation into increased stringency and violence .
Our National Debt was not wholly incurred for our foreign wars , fought upon the battle field . No ; a large , if not the major portion of it , was distributed as Secret Service Money to the traitors of foreign nations . Again , the Revolution of 1830 — the three glorious days in Paris ^ - and not English agitation , secured the Reform Bill ; while the dread occasioned by tbe French Revolution in February , would have secured a vast extension of rights for the English people , had not its real objects been frustrated by traitors abroad and traitors at home . As long as French
liberty was in the scale , English opinion was balanced * , but the moment that the Provisional Government of France ^—with a poet at . its head—was tickled by the English Press , and perhaps something more substantial , the results promised in February vanished in April , and the English Government became more than ever tyrannical . Not only was the law perverted , but the Constitution was suspended . \ nd if there was not a tyrannical law directed against the liberty of the Press , it was presumed that the definition given , by Lords Brougham and Campbell , of the Gagging Act would have equally secured its prostration .
It takes some time to change the customs of an old famil y ; they cannot all at once relinquish those social habits ' . upon which depends their social position ; to give up the hounds creates alarm ; to put down a few carriages excites suspicion ; to dismiss a large portion of the household bespeaks poverty ; and the inability te meet tradesmen ' s bills entails expense , and but too often contumely ; and hence the weak and vain man will go on plodding in the road to ruin , while courage and economy might have saved him from the gulf . If all these family changes , when made , proceed by slow degrees , how much longer time does it require to enforce those PRUDENT AND NECESSARY CONCESSIONS from a
Government that lives upon existing dissipation and abuse ? However , as the day of reckoning is sure to come upon the individual , so is it sure to overtake the Government , and the protection of Englishmen against those former connivances by which England was enabled to hold its sway , will now be found in the fact , that
. I::^ _ ¦; ", ;.'Kfe^ ;: Ricipnm^^-- ''...
England—impoverished ! at . home , by ^ misrule , will find it difficult to ' maintain her ascen . dancy by the strength of her purse . . ' The great poet has said , — "If England cannot keep the dog from her . own door , let her be worried . '' England cannot now keepthe dog from her own door . Her last , card is played . The league of Kings have long maintained their despotism against the league of People , until , at length , the league of People has become too powerful for the league of Kings . No longer can treachery or artifice convince a starving people of the value of a system which denies the mere right of complaint ; no longer can Economists convince their dupes that " it is wise to reject the ordinances of the Creator ,
and in lieu thereof , to accept the dogmas of gambling speculators ; " no longer will a people—whose Christianity and love of religion is boasted by the Prime Minister of England , and the representative of the University of Oxford—believe that famine , starvation , and death , is the dispensation of God , while the means of life are monopolised by the idle . And yet , notwithstanding a thorough knowledge of English suffering , of English grievances , and of English ( opinion ; and not . withstanding a thorough knowledge cf Irish want , Irish starvation and death , our rulers would now hope to perpetuate these anomalies by forming a solemn league and covenant with King Constable .
But even should he be elected to the office of-President , he may have . enough to do at home , without interfering in British politics . However we may doubt—and therefore dispute—the fitness of Prince Louis Napoleon to nil the office of President of the French Republic , we must take his manifesto as a trap baited to suit the taste of the majority of the French people , and then let us see whether it realises the truth of another of our old proverb ? , " That tbe folly of to-dsy Is , the wisdom of to-morrow . "
France is already mainly an agricultural country ; and yet to - the improvement of agriculture in France and Algeria the Prince candidate looks for the realisation and true developement of the French Republic . Is not this some consolation for the continuous abuse we have received for advocating the better cultivation of the soil , as a means of producing national happiness , contentment , and peace ? Again , the Prince relies upon peace as a means of developing the national resources , and securing national aggrandisement through individual contentment . Hear oar words upon this subject .
" War is to fade wKattte hotbed is to the plant , it forces it but strengthens it not in its growth , while peace is as the pure air of heaven , which forces it not , but strengthens it till it arrives at a wholesome maturity . " Again , by the improvement of agriculture , thePrince , not precisely in our words but in their literal acceptation , tells the citizens of France how the poor may be made rich , and the rich richer , without trenching upon individual rights or property . But that which is the greatest confirmation of one of our oft-repeated assei tions is , that the Prince tells the people " THAT THEY CAN DO MUCH MORE FOR THEMSELVES THAN ANY GOVERNMENT CAN DO FOR THEM . "
As to the army and the relaxation of the syatern of conscription , if we could see the future man in the present manifesto , we might be inclined to pass it over as a mere electioneering clap-trap to catch the military electors ; but we find a bit of bait suiting to the several classes , from the highest to the lo * west—suiting the palate of officers of the highest rank , subalterns , non-commissioned officers , and privates , men of property , and men of no property , manufacturers , shopkeepers , traders , mechanics , artificers , artisans , and labourers , while , ingeniously enough , there is no confession of social principles , but evidently ,
language sufficiently delusive , if not to catch , at least to neutralise that party ; and wound up with a captivating peroration , that , of all things governmental economy is indispensable . We differ with King Constable only upon the question of the army . We are not only , not for the diminution of the army , but we are for a considerable increase in tbe army ; not , however , by conscription Or enlistment , but by voluntary service ; not for an army that commits cold-blooded murder in acts of aggression according to law , but a national army ,. which wages no aggressive war , and which only marches to battle as an aggregate of individual feeling , under the
motto—EACH FOR ALL , AND ALL FOR EACH , to defend the rights of all and each . We are aware of the value of a good electioneering squib , whether issued by a candidate for the Town Council , a Member of Parliament , or a President ; and attaching to them a real and not fictitious value , upon Jthe part of the English and the Iris people , we unhesitatingly give it as our opinion , that the election of the English Special Constable of the 10 th of April to the Presidency of the French Republic , will be
the greatest blow ever struck at liberty in this country . As we stated last week , if Cavaignac , or any other Dictator , is elected as President , those who made can unmake ; but if King Constable is elected , he will rule by the sword , hoping to follow in the footsteps of his Uncle , and France becomes a military despotism , at the disposal of the English Minister , to suppress British discontent , with a view of insuring British co opera tion to effect a similar result In France . However , the address of Prince Louis
Napoleon establishes the fact , that its able writer considered that the very best basis of his claim , was the acceptance and avowal of those very princi ples which would be likely to be most acceptable to the enlightened French people , ana for the advocacy of which we have long and tamely borne the opprobrium of that very Press which , when accepted by- its tool , lauds them as generous , extensive , and just . Then , is not " the folly of to-day the wisdom of to-morrow ? " and may we not live in hope of seeing those principles , now scoffed at , one day universally accepted .
The West Riding Election. In Whichever W...
THE WEST RIDING ELECTION . In whichever way the pending election for the Wtfit Riding of Yorkshire may end , tbe cause of the people will gain nothing by it . The factions have managed to seiie on the ground , and will effectually keep out of it any man who could be really useful to the country . When the Mornin g Post made the announcement in a leading article respecting the possible candidature of Mr Richard Oastler , it inspired for the moment a hope that tbe Tory
party were beginning to awaken to a sense of tbeir real position , and to see that the only thing that can save the landlords from beiug swallowed up by the moneyocraoy , and the cottonocracy , was to join the people , and struggle fer tie ascendancy of pi inciples which will enable mon to live ia their na live land by means of honest industry , instead of converting society into one vast gaming house , aed raining erery thing really valuable in a nation , bj makin < the maxim— " Buy in the cheapest : sell in the dearest market "—the sole religion , conscience , morals , and business of mankind .
It teems , however , that they are not yet aware of their true position , er of the ruin which impends orer all the great interests of the Nation , in consequence of the blindand suicidal policy which now predominates in the National Councils . The Weit Riding is reduced to the alternative , either of elect iog a steadfast supporter of things as they ate—a friend to all existing abuses in Church and State , or a man npon whose professions of liberality—vague though they be—it ia evident not the slightest « . lianoe can be placed . The first public appearance of
& ir tuning Lardley , at Leeds , was quite sufficient to stamp his character with tie brand of insincerity and equivocation , and amply justifud the dessrip . twe cognomen applied to him by the good folks of Edinburgh-. " Sir Cunning Eeley Smith . " The manner in whieh he iarro * ed his statements with respect to the Sutfagc , as he was pressed bf « ucoe «» wye questions , is one of the richest specimens of ' fencing en a cross-examination , and at the same tun v , one of the clearest exhibitions oi innate Tory , ism that we rt member . Sir Culling , if gent to Parliamen t , will te every inch a Whig . Fow . if any , of that
band of ! ' patterera" in a double sense , will cxorI Klin tho art of "keeping the word ^ f promise to thS and breaking it to the hope . " : If Mr RoabnT ? brought forward , of csurse he will not hsva « f slightest chance of being returned , and the Cnn « . ya tive will walk in between theso-called LiberJRS ' didatefl . Under any circumstances we should imS tbatthereturnof Mr Denison is pretty certai ? £ ? » s things stand , it is better that it should be so V is much preferable to have an open , honest anH straightforward opponent , than one who fights ' in th datk , and whom you never know vrhere to catch w the jreatebi industrial constituency iu the countr . cannot continue to send an enlightened and ea » , ^ friend of the « rights of Labour " to PwIiaaenfc Sf at least advisable tbat it should ah upright man «? business , and a Yorkshireman , instead of a stranwi and a trickster , of whom the only thing certain T . that he is a religions bigot , who , for mere diff *« w of taitb , would deny bis fellow-citizens full partinlSr tion in these rights to which all have an « 2 i claim
, no matter what their creed may be . There is nomething in the way in which thf . reugwus gentleman has been foisted on the con $ ! tuenoy , which is eminently characterise of th « double-dealing and disregard of true morality which distinguishes the party of whom he is the represents . tire , and especially of the professors of cant Thia party hunted Mr Filzwilliam from the field , becaZ he was not capable of giving such explicit answers to the questions put to him , as were satisfactory to the people That youthful scion of the aristocratia house of Fitzwilliam , had , at all events ,. the ml sense aed honesty to retire from the contest , the moment the pe ? Veof Leida pronounced So unrquL vocally as they did ; and of his brief canvass it vm
oe saw , notning became him so well as its close . Bnt "bavin ? secured bia secession , the Free Trade Dig . senteru aeem to have been determined to impose * their selected candidate upon the Riding , at all hazards , and in despite of the popular will . Hence the fact that the candidature of this most pious and liberal Baronet commenced with a lie . Mr Carbatt grossly and deliberately misstated the result of the show of hands in the Cloth HaJI Yard , and seems to have done so on several occasions since . We observe that the so-called "Liberal" Morning Papers have ooentd mouth in support ef Sir CulJinz Eardlev .
What " consideration" may have been offered for that support we know not , but we have a strong recollection that thoje very advocates were , not long ago , the most violent opponents of the saintly Baronet , when he stood for Edinburgh , and wan defeated- The West Riding will surely not put up with the rejected of " Auld Reekie . " If his puri . tanism was too strong for tbe stomachs ef lln inhabitants of that somewhat extra pious city , it will surely never go down with tbe sturdy , liberal-minded men of Yorkshire .
Mr Charles Buller. The Sudden Death Of T...
MR CHARLES BULLER . The sudden death of this gentleman in the very prime of life , is a sad blow to tbe party at present hi office . There can benodoubtthit , taking him all in all , he was the cleverest man among them ;' and apart from hia undoubted talents , possessed the art of concilia * tion in a remarkable degree . His humorous speeches , and good hearted manner , made him popular alike with aU parties . His recent appointment as President of the recon-Btitu ' ed Foor Law Board gave promise to the
country of a more humane and satisfactory administration of a law which has from the moment of its enactment teen universally and deservedly unpopular . During the short period he held the offije , the complaints respec-iog i s harshness , cruelty , and inhumaaityforn 5 crly | so frequent—greatly diminished ; and though he was prevented by the pressure ef other business from attending to the question—a prominent one in Parliament—yet be gave indications of a caretul and ' thorough study of the subject , with a view to introduce practical and beneficial alterations ia the law ; alterations not suggested by a fanatical code of political soinomy , but by the actual circumstances nt both rate papers and rate-receivers . Just at the close of the session he introduced a batch of bills of a
somewhat ; temporary and transitional nature , on which , the impress of hia own peculiarly frank aud businese-like character was unmiitakeably stumped , and it was carious enough to watch the address , and the imputable good humour with whioh he managed to carry all parties with him as far aa he went . There can be no doubt that , had he not been thus suddenly cut off , we should have had some very beneficial alterations and amendments made in the law during the ensuirg Session . By his death another man of much influence has been removed from the Lower House . It opens a wide field of speculation as ti ( he effect which the death of two such men as Lord G . Bentincksnd MrC- Bailer , will have on the political destiny of their respective
parties . Tbe Whigs were too weak , bath in talent , intelligence , and personal popularity to spare a single man ; and the loss of one who possessed all these qualities in a pre-eminent degree cannot fail to be a serious and damaging blow to them . Oa the other hand , the " ruck" ef tha Protectionists-no longer withheld by the sturdy honesty of Lord G . Bentinck from fraternising with the abler Peel section of the Conservative' —are not at all unlikely to join them , for the purpose of driving the present Ministry from fcffica . We observe that the war between the Protectionist and Peel organs , to which we referred a few weeks ago , is still carried on ; but , in tbe case of the latter , with a boldness and determination that
indicates its labours are telling upon the parties it addresses . If a fusion of these two sections is once effected , tho lease of Whig office-holding will htve run out—a consummation most derontly to bs wished for—and we will add our most fervent hope that , go when tbey may , they may sever again be allowed to insult , deceive , and oppress the people of England . Some rumours of a reconstruction of the Cabinet , caused by the contemplated retirement of Lord J , Russell , seem io be entirely without foundation , and to be merely the common fabrications of the Press about this time of the year , which appear as regularly as the accounts of the " sea serpent , " and other periodical wonders , iu the imaginative columns of our contemporaries .
Fco Fteauers # Corresoonfleuts
fco fteauers # corresoonfleuts
^T We Are Sorry To Announce That We Cann...
^ T We are sorry to announce that we cannot publish any 'forthcoming meetings' & c in future , unless paid for a * advertisements . We are compelled to adopt this csurse , in order to avoid the heavy duty we have lately paid on « uch announcements . The publication of ballots , raffles , & c , are illegal . Juiutf Oarnet has received from Ur Phillips the sum of 9 s . 6 d ., to be divided between Mrs Jones and Mrs K'DoualL J . H . hft * forwarded the money . IlALiiAX .-Julian Harney has receired from Mr V . Hinchcliffe the sum ot Ten Shillings ( being part ; of the proceeds of a Tea Party , got up by the Female Chartists of Halifax ) , for ifrs Ernest Jones . J . H . has forwarded the Ten Shillings to Mrs Jones . W , Hxixr . Bristol . —No reflections were cast upon any of the lecturers by the Conference .
H . Wjxiuns . —L'Ami on Peuple is happy you are so well pleased . Amongst the best works advocating the political and social rights of the Proletarian , must be included Paine ' s Political Works , Cottett ' s Works ( particularly his Legacy to Labourers ) , Bray's Labour ' s Wrongs and Labour ' s Remedy , Louis Blame ' s Organisation of Labour , Buonarotti ' s History of Bxhoeufs ConspU racy for Equality , Rousseau's Social Contract , and many others * too numerous to mentian , ' J . Sweet acknowledges the receipt of the foUowinjr , sums ( sent herewith ) for the Victim Fund , via .:- £ s . d . UrsJoynes .. 0 o 6 Mr Gee « 0 0 5 Mr Shepherd .. 0 0 8 Mr T . Holmes .. . » 0 6 Mr F . Holmes 0 0 8 Mr Brown « 0 0 8 AFri'nd „ 0 0 6 Mr Chipindale « 0 * ° MrDann .. 0 0 6 Fromltipley ,. 6 8 0 FromArnrid 0 5 0 Mr Smith M 0 0 ' 4
• Newton ' Head * 0 2 0 J . Sweet acknowledges the receipt of the following sum * for Conference expenses ;— £ . S . d . Sutton-ln-Ashfield M m .. Oil Mansfield . .. ~ - M 0 3 0 Bikhinqhak . — Messrs Wills and Goodwin beg to acknowledge the receipt of the following sums . — FOR MRS JOHN FOSSEM ,, £ i , d . Councillor J . Baldwin 1 1 0
DEFENCE AND VICTIM FOND . Councillor J . Baldwin .. .. ,. 0 10 0 Councillor H . Holland 0 2 6 Councillor J . Hawkes .. .. ,, 0 2 6 Councillor T . Poolton 0 a ' 0 Alderman Weston ,. .. ,. o 2 6 Councillor T . C . Perry 0 2 6 A Friend . J . W .. 0 8 6 Charles Goodrick .. ... .. 0 2 6 ¦ V i iUiamBlaxland , 0 l 0 Mr Thomas Field 0 16 . MrT . Store 0 l ' 0 Sundry turns by members .. .. 0 6 0 Mas M'Dodaii ,. —Mr Roberts , Manchester , has received from a few friends at Oldbam / Ts fid .
T 1 CHM FOBD . E . Schoisi beg * to acknowledge the following sums : — S . Auckland .. 0 1 0 K . Scholey .. 0 0 & T . Ward .. 0 6 6 J . Ihompssn „ 0 0 6 G . Soffe „ 0 0 6 J . JohMoa .. 6 0 S W . Carter .. 0 0 6 W . Taylor M 0 0 6 P , eceived for Executive , by John Abmott : — Mr Robert Jervis , Snig ' g End .. .. 0 16 THB MMJCHSBTEB VICTIMS . Thomas Oimesbbb has received the following sums : — Preston , per J . Brown 18 6 Padiham , per R . Dodgeon .. .. 0 12 « Winchester , per G . isturgess .. .. 0 2 6 Crewe , per W . Cruhton 0 9 0 Londtn , perE . Stallwood .. .. 0 18 3 MrpoHovAM has received a collection , — At HudderstielA ., o 10 6 John IVoodhouse . ' .. 015 0
, JohnGlaahill 0 10 Joseph Gilbertson 0 0 6 Elian I Land Members .. .. .. 0 10 0 All other monies will be announ : ed next week , A Constant Rbadbk . — G . J . Holyoaae . Ration , Queen * Head-passage , Paternoster . row . Trevu . —We cannot answer your question . MrS , Kybd informs Mr Side , junior , that he will attend at the South London Hall any » lgb > . next week , and hope * he will inform him immediately , what night will be most convenient . R , ? . SI >• win'aton ; George Kendall , Sutton-in-Ashfielaj William Kibber , Tiverton ; and G . Cavill , Sheflleld-Julian Harney has handed ihe Post Office Orders to Mr Bider ,
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Dec. 2, 1848, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_02121848/page/4/
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