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May 5,1849. . . THEkNQRTHER^S ^ ^^^ 4 - ...
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iABrOTJR! BYBB. ¥. M.M«i)pUAli. ' See th...
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THE PROSE WORKS OF, JOHN MILION. "With a...
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The Illustrated !Atlas,. and -Mio ' desn...
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A Poetical Petition to Queerij Victona, ...
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»L * ^?t ^u a °Te%aPput intotype^e^avere...
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The Progressionist. 'No. LfNe^Series: Lo...
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The Uxbridge Spirit of Freedom; and Work...
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SUNSHINE AND .SHADOW; A TALE OF "THE NIN...
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:y^-Vmeto^XX'?: '^.:::..
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: . .PnorEBiTasd Labour.-—Those' whoi.,a...
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— _. : ' ;¦ AN Er^CTUA 'L . ClJRE F^R/^LEg^^^^ ^ " —
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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.
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May 5,1849. . . Theknqrther^S ^ ^^^ 4 - ...
May 5 , 1849 . . . THEkNQRTHER ^ S ^ ^^^ 4 - " - ''"** " - 1 . ¦ . . ---
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Iabrotjr! Bybb. ¥. M.M«I)Puali. ' See Th...
iABrOTJR ! BYBB . ¥ . M . M « i ) pUAli . ' See that proud ship , higlt looming in the -new ; Inspect the forests -whereiher timbers grew ; There labour wields the aie , and saws the beam , Then shapes her ribs , her planks , and caulks each seam , " .. ¦ ' ' " . ' * ...- ... .. ¦ . -., - -, ¦ ¦ ¦ "Where noisy shipwrighbjjly then-useful trade . Yonder her ropes are spun , her cables made , In that dense naxy mlll-her , sailB are-wove , '
By riggersfeshioaed , l » ent ,, umurled , orroye ; Yon anchor hanging' o ' er lierlbow . apeak , "Was forged . by labour , -which by paining deep , Discovers ore to cast her booming gun . "_ . > See now she's launch'd , and up her signals run , From maintop peak , down to her dancing boat , Prom-waister s shoe tack , to . the captain ' s coat , She's labour's own , - 01 d . England ' s oaken vrall , To brave the bfllpw , " ah " d the hostileTiall ; . ' . , She rolls'majestic on theheaying fad ? 7 " - . ' ;_ - ' - " . And spurns " the " oeean , ' a 3 Tsie labour ' s pride .
Close by the Thames the Gothic senate stands , The chiselled toy of labour ' s useful hands ; ~ Its towers , and arches , windows , . doors , andhaHs , Its sculptured statues , arms and solid walls ,:. Were all by labour reared , from lowest pile .-- - '" To fretted p innacle ' of ancient styhj . ' . ; ^ " .. ;" The c % temples , " arid ' piTu ' s toweringdome , ' - The palacepulats of the noble ' s home /' ' ¦¦ AU -witness bear of labonr ' s'fl ^ atfiil-. tasK ; - j ; ,- - ^ . - "Whose beauties grand . most eloquently ask , . "Why he , vsno all these * storied columns ; rears ,... A slave kneels ragged at'their base'in tears' ? By -whose bird palm then- symmetry was built , Tvnose scanty Itwyw oft entice to ginlt . " - " " Despondent duty at the loon ^' ahd frame ,- ' - ' ¦ "> Whilst robing beauty , hnt repeats the same ; ' . - : And wonders why its coatless back is bare , -., ¦ _ '¦•¦ Whilst weaving textures plentiful and rare . - ...
That peasant , stooping like the -willow ' s bough , "VVliose skiU directs the nieliorating plough , ., ' , . - Who sows the grain , and reaps the bending ear , '"' Whose toil each heart eipanu % ' ' all thresholds cheer , ' ' "; :.: - ' -. ¦ - ^ - :.: i-: ~ -. : ¦ . - ¦ :.- . ¦ " - [ Wonders-whyhev ' nridst . blessings : widely . ' shedy - Should seeMsehndren , y € ^ foT : da ^ y bread . - .. Mark that vast engine , in it ? swift ; career : . ... Those smiling passengers unused to fear ; - ,..- ¦ Their lives , more sacred thaif ]_ thcir wealth , entrust - ?¦ - ¦ To that mechanic black with oiland dust ;¦"¦ - ' And thou , Victoria ; great England ' s Queen , With all thy nunisters , are fearless seen , ; . Thy crown confiding to a workman'scare , . r . ( Oi ^ nor <^ "thefeeman'svotetbshafei a , . . . Withthose ' whose attribute is merfil y ' rehti ' ! "Whose wealth accumulates from : vraees / spenfr ;
But not from toil , who like the -lily , blow And live by works that from the willing flow . JtK ) ignorant to yrieldthe giant force ,. ; - - , Ofsteamcafeermgonifemig h ^ . cdurse . .. , j ^ jM «» it t 6 Vork"tKe nn ^ c-fte ^'; . ' . Vad mould ideas'that'its types express ;"' Tomake slight paper for the impress hold ; - " ¦ " - '¦ -fjiatkeeps its lesson when the mind growsoldi ,-Too ignorant the lens to cut , qr grind ;; .,- ,., , That draws Heaven s curtain to the . dazzled . mind , That shows where systems' over systems shine , That nears His thionieTOhmp 6 nmK I ) ivihe ; Jrom whose dread palm / and " awful labour grew , This atom earth , which into space he threw . ; . labour ' s the shadow of that Mighty Cause , -Who rules aU ' nature , " aiid wh ' o breathes her laws , labourwillyetaprouderendfulfil" " .- \; Subservient to Bis majestic will .
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The Prose Works Of, John Milion. "With A...
THE PROSE WORKS OF , JOHN MILION . "With a Prefece , Preliminary Remarks , and 2 fotes ; hy J . ¦!&? . St . ' John . Vol IE . London : H . G . $ ohni ' Yorkstreet , 'Covent Garden . ' ' This—the concluding volume ofiEltpn * s Prose "Works , is principall y occupied " witBL that" iminortal author ' s celebrated vorks on the , quest tionof "Divorce ; " works vvnich ^ may be said nearly to exhaust all the ' -philpsppliy and learning of the " subject ; " and which , " as the editor remarks , " may serve to enligKten "both © ur legislators and pMosophers , if ;~ ihey yrSi
"be nicest enough to listen and to learn . " There follows ahrief butinost , interesting treatise on "Education , " exceedingly worthy , the thoughtful- consideration / of ' statesmen . . . and public reformers . In this Tolume is also con .-tainedthe famons treatise on " The Likeliest 3 Mtans to Eemove Hirelings out of the Church . " . Milton , in lis opening address . t » the Parliament , observes with prophetic foresight f * Till religion be set free from , the monopoly of hirelings , I dare 8 ^ im , -tijat no model whatsoever of a commonwealth -will . " prove successful or oudisturbed . " . In the ioUowing extract he forcibly describes the evil . of _ -
.,- ' - ; HTBEIJSG PREACHEBS . - , Hire of itself is neither a thing unlawful , nor a ¦ word of any evil note , signifying no more than a due recompense or reward : as when ' our Saviour earth , " the labourer is-wbrlhyof his hire . " - That which makes it so - dangerous in . the church , and properlymakes'thehirehngj ' aword always of evil signification , is either the excess thereof ,-or the undue manner of giving and taking it . _ What harm the excess thereof brought to fhe ~ church , perhaps was not found h ' y'experience till the days of Con
stantine ; who , ontofhisz ^ thmkihghecould be r aver too liberally a nursing , father of the' ehurcb , nrifht be not unfitly said to have either overbid it or choked it inihe " nursing . ' . " Which" was foretold , as is recorded meeclesiastiealtiadrBons ; by a Toice heard from heaven , - oh the Very day that those great donations and church revenues-were given ; crying aloud , " This day'is poison poured into the church . \ ftuch the . event soon after verified , ., as appears py another no less ancient observatidD , " . That religion brought forth wealth ; find the * daughter devoured themother . " - " ' ' : . ' "We add thefonowing extracts .:
—TITHES . ; - But with what face or conscienceean they allege Moses or-theselaws for titles , as they how enjoy or exact them ; whereof Moses ordains ; the owner , 'as we heard before , Jhe ^ Btranger ,. the , fatherless , and the widow , partakers of ; the Levite ; . . and these lathers which they cite " , and'these though Romish lather than English laws ; allotted both to ' priest ' and Bishop the thfrd part only- ? - But these Our-Frotes . lant—these oar new reformed English' Presbyterian ' divines , against their own- cited-authors , and
to the shame of their pretended ^ formationwould engross to themselves all tithes , by . sta j : nte ; and" supported'Tnore Sy " their ; wilful . ob ; ninacy and aesire for ' . tUthy * . lucre ; tlm 'by flieseboth insufficient and- 'firipettinent anthoriiies would persuade a Christian magistracy and paraament—whom we trust (^ hath ^ restored for a , iappierreformation- ^ -to impose rupon . "as a Judaical Wd ceremonial law , ' and [ yat ' ^ fromthat law ' to ; . be Jiore irregular and unwariantable-i-Tnore complying vith a covetous clergy ^ -than ; any' -of those Popish iings and parliaments alleged , y ^ n-ij < '" ¦ ' ¦ - - -- -
Where did God " ever . clearly . declare-to - all ; lations , or in-all lands '( and none but ! . fools » art with their estates without the clearest , evij lence , on hare snpposals- ' and presumptions of iiem who aro : the . gainera-:. therehY ) ,- - . that : ihe ftiuiredthetenthasdueto HimorJfis ; Sonperp & tiaUv and in aU places ? Where . did he ^ demand it , tiatwe ihight " cereunly know as in all . claim ; , ofimporal'right Is just' and ' reasonable ? or'ff deaanded , where did he assign it ;" or"b ' y what evident onvevance to ministers ? . JtJnlejs they , can-demonsrate ' this bv more than conjectures , their title can i « no hettef " to fith . es than the title of JSetea ' . iraa bthose thines ' whicH'b ' y abusinsfhis master ' s . name
hrookedfrom'Saamah : ' . 'Muchness where * did ; be ouunand that-tithes ' should "Be " ' Jetched \! by ; forc ( * ere left no ^' nhder . the ' gbirpy ^ whateyer . his ' r ^ ht ths , to the lree ^^ *' ofering 5 f'of "men '"? Which ; is lie greater-Bacrn ^ c ^ V"to c beTy divine ahffibrl ^ to ake the name ' of ttoistyecessery ; tovioleijce , and " fbhing him of the Teryhonour which , he . ' aimed at iibestowirigrredy " the gosp ^^ to ' conmnTsunony aidrapinejTiofli " secular ana ecdesiasticaT ; ^ or , ; 9 n tie other side ) hot to giyi up' the tei | h ' of civil right aid propr iety'to ' the ' lrfc ^ l ' anrl impoSjtoea ^ o ^ f . cter-Smen , cohtnvebywith ^ iill'the . art " ahd " argument thit theb ?^^ "bellies ^ canmVenV 6-r ' suggest ' . 'i ; . "' . J .. . ' ... ; y BAPiis ^ :: MisBiicB Xsd icni ! ii 3 ? i ] iis ' | - , :: ' ' ^ ,-Howfll ^ Hhad ' hecorad-John ; theV ^• tist : fe de i nmdfeeXforhuJb ' aptismg ^' or ' CFn ^ onogs ? -Far-less itbecom % ! the 6 e ' / itb ^! ' ^&! , a ¦
¦ 3-eediness lower , than that ; of , t * ageSmen oauingiaB ^ smgers to their , shop , and yeti * paid ; bef 6 re " nand , to ' ^ ag an ferdbmgthat . which thosetbeirformde ^ d freelyr-li ^' men of . themselves' ! cpme to'be . bafr ti || d , they , are dther . brought hyjlimch asVad ^ idy P $ the minister , - ' or cbnie ^ tobe ' orie ' Of ; lnV ' . diseipIes ard maintainers .: " of whom , to ask / a'fees . as rit' -. were for entrance is a-piece of i ^^ . rcraftkbrlcaution , he 5 tting 7 Bohe hut ; beggarly * af . tists . * ' ? urial | and mirriagea ^ are sp lilile to . beanyp ^ r ^ pf j tt ' eiy . gain * that the j ; who ' conrider ' weU nwy fihdtfiem "to , heno part of their function . Atburials t & V ' attthdance they allege ' on the corpse ; ~ aU . ; the" ^ e ^^; do ;; ia loach unhired . . . But then-prayers at the gravei j ^ aifc peKtitio ' nslr ¦ required : ; yet " if ; ie ^ uifea ; . "iheir ; last performance to' / thtfldecease'd of their : own ; flockl Bat the fbBerallsermb ' tf ; , ' at't ]^*; c ^ 6 iee ^ or lif ' hot , an occasion ofieredtherii . topreach out bffeaeon , "Jrkichb / bherpart ^ ftheff bffi < 5 e ' . '" Bttt swngfliB ^
The Prose Works Of, John Milion. "With A...
must bespoken in praise . ; if due , their duty ; if . un , * due , their corruption , a peculiar simony of our divines inEhglana only . ' .. v ' , .- - # ? -- . ' ^ 4 ^ 1 ., - :: » - .:-:- . » ' ¦ - . . ; .- '? i .. ' . As-for marriages ' , that nunisters Should meddle with them , as ' not sanctified or legitimate , without their . celebration , I : find no ground , in ., Bcripture either , of precept or example . Likeliest it is ( which our Seldenha ' th well observed , L 2 ,. c . 28 ; Ux ; 'Eb . ) thatin imitation of heathehpriests / who were wont at nuptials to use many rites land ceremonies , and especially , - -ju'dging it . , would be prpfitablo , and . the increase of their authority , not to be spectators only in business . of such concernment to the life of man , they insinuated tluit ' marriage was notholy without their benediction , and for the better colour , made it a sacrament : being , of itself a civil ordi-_ - _
nance , a household contract , a thing indifferent and free to the ; whole race of mankind . ; ,, ' / ' ' . ' Towards the close of ^ s ' powerfuJl y ^ written treatise the author " asks : — How ^ ban' any Christian object it to . & Turk , that Ma religion stands by force onl y ; -and notjustlyiei $ froiri himthis reply * . ' iYours boih by force' / ahd money , : v ,.. Mii t 6 > : ; adds" ^ - ^ , This is ^ that which makes . Atheists in the tana , " whom " they so mueh complaiii of ;/ not : lie want of ' manitenance , rpr pre ^ dQers ^ as they allege , but the many hirelings " aad ... cheaters ! that have the gospel in ^ heir ; liands" /; ) ' ; han ^ ! tbat ' still crave and . arenever-satasfiei . ''^^ -Thisiia p lain speak- ; ing with . a vengeance 2 ; He concludes with the folbwing : ^— " _ * V , . ' " . ' . ' , : '' l ' . ' ...,. " , !!
•" .: PLUK TRUTHS ..... . .. : Christendom might soon rid herself ( of the . hire ^ ling crew of parsons ) and be happy . Sif - Christians would but know = their own - dignity ,. theirirliberty ; their adoption . ' and let-it jiotbe . ; wbnderedi . if'lsay , their spiritual' priesthood ,: whereby they . have all equally access to " any " minjsteriarfunction / v ^' eneyer called bytheirowtf abu ^ tie ^ sVand ' thechMch ; though they never came , near commencement or university ; But while Protestants , toavoidUhe due labour of understanding -their . ; otto .- religion , Larb ; . content to lodge it in . the breast ,: orjrather-. in , the . ' ^ obks , of a clergyman ,-, " ahdj'fb . . take ' , it " .-thence ; by "„ scraps and mammocks , as hVdispense ' s it in his Sunday ' sdole ; they willhe ' always learningand ' never knowing ";
always infants ; always- ' either his vassals , as'Iay papists are ; # > 'their priests : ;; or at odds- ; with himj as reformed principles give them some light te be not wholly , conformable -,. whence ^ inhnite . distufbr ances in the state , as they ^ ' j & p , Y [ must ' needs ^ follow . Tihis much 'had . Itoiay ' j' ; ahdi' tsnppo ' se | wiiatmay be enough to them , who- are- 'hbt avariciously bent otherwise , . touching the likeliest irieans to remove hirelings out of the church ; than which nothing can more conduce to truth , to . peac « ,. anQ ' aU . happiness bothmchuVchVandstateV If ( Ihe npt "'^^''^^ , believed , the event" will bear me ' jnthes ' s'to have ' spoken truth ; and I , in the mean whilej have borne my witness ; hot out of season , to the : churchand to : my country . '•;; , : -: ^\ --- ¦; . > .-i :-- H < i > : - . ' . " ¦
r Milton ' s' * . * Famih ' ar Letters ^ concludethe volume . - Of theselettera . two or . three : are peculiarly aflfectingirevealing as-they do somewhat ofthe trials and" so ' rTOWs ; of ; tiieir great author , and his majestic resignation under the weight ^ of calamities of iio ordinary kind . ¦¦ - His second ^ letter to : the patriotic ^ Athenian , ; Leonaed Philakas ; can hardly . 'fail to draw tears from the reader—tears of sympathy and admiration . ¦ • ' ¦¦' . -:: ; - '^ ' ¦ . J . k .-
In publishing this remarkably cheap edition of the prose -works of Matow , . Mr . Bohn has done for the public ;' good-that-whichentitles hmi to the thanks of the community generally , aad the applauding aid of the directors of the press in particular .- '' We-shall be much gratified , if , the notice •' ¦ Whave taken "Of - these volomes , sb ^ 'be ^ otmd-to' have ^ , ' asristeci'the sale " of workB which "" '' 6 ught'tolbe ^ xtithe ; hands of every Engh ^ hWan . T ' " - ~ - ' ¦ " '' ¦ ?' - " - -
The Illustrated !Atlas,. And -Mio ' Desn...
The Illustrated ! Atlas ,. and -Mio ' desn History of 'the . World : 'GeograpKcal ^ PoUtKdl t'Com ^ mercMf ' and . Statistical . ' ^ Edited b y Ri . - MoNTGO ^ RTMAKTnf , Esq "Parts I . and It / London : J . andF . Tallis , 100 /^ St ;' John' street . : - .. , . . This is a most super )) ^ ork—and as cheap ' as it is beautiful . Wepiuotethe following from the mtoo ^ uctpry address :- —; . : v ' j ; To general education , geography : is as ; necessary
as grammar is to language ; -indeed , ignorance , on -this point is scarcely consistent ^ mthpractic ' al ' khbwV ledge on any other . It is smted to all ages , and to all classes of society ^ and must possess peculiar interest to - the people : of a - ' rnaritime kingdom , like England , whose peace ah . d prosperity .: are so , intimately connected with the , extensjon , ; of . commerce , and whose colonial , mercantile / , and : iriternatiorial relations include aUreg ^ ons'froni . the-AxCticto the Antarctic circles / : ' - ; : . 1 ... - ¦ " .-
Issued in fortni g htl y parts- ^ -of' which there will be about thir ^ -iwo- ^ the work , when , completed , wiUmake ; airiagnMCerityoluin part will Contain / twoi niusfrated coloured maps , engraved ' On iteel , accompanied by four large pages ; of ] ' des ^ rirJtaye ; " MtM-p ress .: ' The Parts befor ^ hs' cbh ^ in'lniaps of ; th " e ' { Easterh HehusphereX ' . " CabobL'the Punjab / , and Beioochistan . ; * - ' " ^ usfeia )" . ' ^ Mexico , " CaUfqrnia , and Texas : " / Th ' esemap ' s ( witiitKeilluV trations which acMmpan ^ ftehi ) are beautifnily engraved . " Thelettef-press ^& 6 ughcbn dehsedf-is ' suflicieritly ; full J . 'to . impart . to the reader' correct idea ' s of . 'the generd character of theearth , " and / the several countries-into which itis'dryided . ' ... ' Eyery ; family " should purchase'tiiis admirable ' Atlas . ' . " . .- "
A Poetical Petition To Queerij Victona, ...
A Poetical Petition to Queerij Victona , 8 fC . ofc . ' ] B y . Dn VP . M . M'Douam ,. Liverpool Published ; by Ifrs . P . . M . Vai'Donalh 71 , : ; Front Portiand-stieet .. .- ; . " . .. . ;! - •' . ' ... -, ' :,, This poetical petition- is'"on" behalf of the oppressed -working classes' of Great Britain and- ireJand , : in : demand-- of their political rights . " We extract the'fbllowing introductory notice : -- ' :.:: ; f "•• - '; - ? ^ - ' ¦ - ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - '• Thisis published by Hrs . :: M'I ) ouall , " of 71 , ; Froht Pbrtkmd-street ^ : Iiv : erpool ,: inderi the superintendence " of a Committee , who have volunteered to .
assist her . in business until her husband ' s , . liberation . Li'handing it . to ; Mre . M'I ) buaIL hb } said , f I shall be burled" alive iii sbme'jbf "these mjodern iho ^ uisir tiehs , ' withotit the possibility 'of cofrirriunicating my feelings , wishes / -or . opinions , on any . 'subject , : therefore ,. I charge you' to : publish ;" any ^ or . " alii : of my writings , which I leave behind : me ; and . I hope , the people will do' jou ' an ^ d'them justice , . for . I shaQ te denied both the right ' and the duty to assist my ' children . " The Gommitteb trust that they will be sup ported in their attempt to Jpfotect Dr . M'Dbualls persecuted femilyinii : —" x . . "'i : -: ;"; : . : r- ; - •¦ ' ?;; -. -Signed on their behalf , by , _ .: ' { . } -.. ; - " . ' . ' . ' ,, " .- " . * . ' . " " . iJJ » KEW "V ? att / . Secretary ...,. Iiverpool , 'April , 1849 . " ., ' 7 _ . ; . ' . ' [ . " ' , ' . "
1 "Thet poem 3 * r'r „ '' poetim "' petitibh ''^ w commend itselfil . nSeluies ^ htitl ^ atjthe' head -of the preceding eolumh / ' * are : ex- ' tracts from this work ; vTFe . " a 3 d tije ftDowing ' lme fr ^ . the pbet" is ^ dres smg . the . QueeC : ~ V " " That jeweuca ' crora . n ' pbn- ^ ., ; Ttfas ! chased and " wrought b y inen who pine for " ' - ' hread . _ . ., ., . ¦¦ - . - . . -Thenowe ' ry Lnce , 'the silk , andsatin train , i , ! - ' Were wove by hands . all cramped by - cold and . -. paini ; .: ! -:- >; : ;; / . 'L .-tjc ; Vo ¦ aji : i : ui ' . : 'L > ii : . s'v : Consumptiyedeath rests on that needle ' s nojni » , ' Andpat smaUph ^ afstm-bs . t im n ^^ - 'That cotfbn ^ damji iwHh ' n ' egrb ' s crimson tears , " ; ;; 0 Ife ' tah >' " ' cbhvey ' s of brief and bl'ghterl years ; '„ ' ' That' iable * ladb ; : mofe fatal than the gttn , ^ - ; : " ' "Strikes dowj ( e ' er forty yearS ^ their « anashave . run ; : 'Those * eoahU ^ bla ^ . upontivyj MaeeM ' Explo ' sibns dreacl , " the ^ . a ^ iw ^ anaqnuubling earth and
^ he ' speechles ^ agohy ^ orphan / s tears ! - -JJ ~» " ' ' -. Jhosesoldiersjitoo ; that'tteaththetropicshroU , ' 'iaidsMvei ^ tbepolev . aresonsD ^ toUry * . : Those seamen , rough , for frqlic » or the fighter ; ., ' 'Mve ^ wred ' somftlbwly . eot , ormp . ther / s ^ ht . ; ;; Their'health ; ' tlieir honlb , -theif tou ^ ' / theirrhyes : ¦ ¦ > ^ theirali , " ^' . *' ,, ' - ' ^ L' ! , ! " ? ; — - ^ ' ^ . ' ^ : i ; J Afefreely 7 rauy ,. attheir'countfj ? scall .- ' ^ -- ; " Andshall tbosemeri , whajO ^ rithefia ld and w & reu I ' Tlaveiborneyour flag ; smkrighttesstO ; the graye ! . . ^ And ' aU ' their kindred live " * fidot ' s life , it ; .: ? ifidBttoil , and want , and their long deadly strife , . "" Withoutthe sunrage power , tO"shi , eid and save . . T $ ' $ ?< ^ orksnop ' slaveryf and workhousefgrave I ' . . r 5 ? e l earhesti ^ ij ^ mmehdthis ' -pbem bur readers •* its extehsrvStirVrJ ^^
»L * ^?T ^U A °Te%Apput Intotype^E^Avere...
» L * ^? t ^ u ° Te % aPput intotype ^ e ^ avereP cerredthe following Mtice * bm - . Dr ; MtftoUaU : —> ' . ^ n . "" « i-- ' - ^^^ F ^^^ eEniaojj- ^ - ^ n ! --.: v | ii - - .-The ; Dortor Tnotharajg seenlflie ; proof of the smailEoem , coindnofcofcotrrse i ^ correct tuiy error - but , havms-heen rilOBjed ; a . copy ; moPnsojii he requests 'is to . point oat * na ^ ox ^ Hv > wa 4 ; - _ «• M y , the seconu' heingleft ojit al-; . r . ; ir- « . ye ^^ me ? w ^ . ow . aDcie ) it nobl e foe ,. '' 4 i v' :. ' : aeTe SSsnKontaeBanube , Iaiine , iiaPix '' i 3 & BiB ] are ^ -oe : or ^ d-miiK » errors , WUch ' wlfl be coiv
»L * ^?T ^U A °Te%Apput Intotype^E^Avere...
authpi-, and may be of considerable service to his lwreaved femily . \ ¦; : ^
The Progressionist. 'No. Lfne^Series: Lo...
The Progressionist . 'No . LfNe ^ Series : Lou-1 ; don : B . Ward , 54 ,. Paternoster-row . : A peony . ;^ periodical , published ' ( we ' beliiBve ) monthly ; devoted to the axlvocacy of Chairtist prihciplesi -,, - ' - '_ ::: , ; w ; ' -. ' ^ 1 }
The Uxbridge Spirit Of Freedom; And Work...
The Uxbridge Spirit of Freedom ; and Working pMan ' symdkatori' Np .: 2 . v Uxbridge : J . Itedrup ; I < bnaon ,: VJ . \ Watson , 3 , Queen ' s Head-passage , Pater iipster-jpw ; .. ' ... . : At least , . in its outward and . visible ; form , this is ah improvemept ori ^ o ^^ QaB- ^ Spmt ;" there is also an addition of four , pages ; As regards" the matter , it is sufficient ^ tQ . say that it is nbt : ihferior fo ' th ' es content ' s , of fae-fa'st hum *
beri The signatures , of the ; writers ( working men ) ° are significant : ^ - ^ Ai .. 0 uvTier , '' "A penibcrat , '' " A Prbletanao , ' ' >& c . They speak'bnt ; bravel y . Suchi ^ Vdpen ' and advised '' Writing ih . defeiice"bf Beniocratic principles is mo st cheering . :.-There is sohie ' first-rate poptry in this number ; witness , the following spechhen ^— :: :..: t . - •' . _ ,,.: .-. : \ .. v .. ' ¦ .
- ;;; - ¦; . PRESS ; 02 T ! PBESS oni . ' -- . Press onj press 0 n l ' ye rulers r . in , the stirred - ^ world ' s onward track , — - >> ; ' ' - ' •' _ • It-moves tob ' sure for ye to put the clock of free-• - ' ' : domhack ? . .. ilti / : ! , ; . ;' - ; t '¦' . ' . ¦ ¦ ' ¦' ' ¦ ¦' ' ' We're gathering . up , from near and far with - souls . !> -, " , in . fiery " glow , / , ¦• -,.- f ; f . ., / . y And Bight doth bare its arm- 'of might to bring " thje , spoilers low . . . —&> .- . Kings ! ipriests . ! ye ' re far too costly , and we weary ' ¦ ' of your rule ; - ¦ - / ' - ' -, ' - ,. / .: v ' , ' : " , ; ' , We-crown no more . Diwiiity ' - ' where nature wntcth ;[ . ^ Ibol ! " Ye must not bar ; our glorious path ; as in the days : ' / 'dgone ; . ' ., ' . ' ¦' . ' ., ' .. { ., -- -., ••• . T- ' - ' -- - v ' ' ¦¦ , - -: You"ftiow , - that . God . made MEN , not . kings nor ' "• • ' knavisn priestsi ' pres . s-brii- •;''; .
Tresson ; - ' press on ! ah' 1 nobles ! ye have playeda a ^ rdaring ^ me , " ' • . n - v : I - . ';'•' - ' ; '¦'' ¦ . ' ¦ - ' Butjyour s ' tai's are : faUing , iand out-fades the pres-., " tige of : your : n . amei-j-v ^ , > ::: -.. . .,-..- . ' ,, Tbb . longhave ye . been fed . and . nursed on human : i . bloodandtears , " ' '""" ' ' "" *" Thehaked truth is known , . and Labour leaps to life . 'iiiand swears ...- . • . - ..- - ' - His ] pride of strength to blbated' ease ! he will ; hp r ^ -silonger . giye , ^ '' ?^; ' ^" - . ' ;^' .: ^/^' : ;; , ''; - ' :. ; . ' " . '' .: ' , ' F . orall . who live should work ,-lords ; . ] then all . who ''''" WbrkTmight . lWe'i ' Ciij ' jl ; ' ^ i ; . . The-struggle comes ; make much of what ye ' ve i- ' - ' wruhglromfatherland— '" - } '; Press . oh , press on : Uhddy we ask ^ tofniorroiv . we'll ^ . ^ ewnmdiid !¦'¦' . ' p . u ' r . ' <; ' . ¦ - .. ' .-::
Press ;; onI-amiIlion pauper-foreheads press in . - r-inisery ' sdustj- ^' ' ¦ - ¦ - - ' ; : '' . The " champions , of , the . golden'truth , still eat the ' ^ mbuldy crust / -i - : ' ' -- ; - / J " - "'• " *•' TMsdamning cursei oityrants , must , not crush the , s " nation ' sheart , —• ,, ' ' . ; ..,,.- ., . . ' :. l : Thespiritof aouui 6 iirBlayeB ,- doth pant , on fire to , ,,-:.-start / '" - . ''' - ¦ - i . " . " " ! '¦ ' ; " ' . " . " . : i ' , ' - Aad . strive to mend the world , 'and walk in freedom s . " ' march sublime , ¦ ¦ - " . " " ¦' ¦ ¦ ¦ ' While ' myriads . sink heart-broken , » and the land o'eri " swarms with crime ,:- ; ¦ - •»/ i . * 5 Oh ! God ! " they cry , ?! we , die , and see no earnest :,-..-: won ! " / ' : " .. ;/ ' /;;; , "" -, ' /' . " . " . " - Brpther , ! join hand iind- heart , and tb the work;—/ press ^ hypressbn !'' '' ¦¦" ' { ' ¦¦¦' ¦ ' ] ~'[ ~~
lx' £ The ; Vxpridge ] Spirit of Freedom defieryes , and , ye trust , " will command , the support of the ^ OTkihg classes ;' - " ;;;;/^; . ' . ;/; . ;;;;' . " . ' ; ' }
Sunshine And .Shadow; A Tale Of "The Nin...
SUNSHINE AND . SHADOW ; A TALE OF "THE NINETEENTH CENTURY . ,
- > BI THOMAS MABTIN WHKKLEB ,, ;; .:,. tate Secretary to the National Charter . AssocLition i -.: ¦ ¦ and National land Company .. . /_ l , , ; ¦• - ; . ;• ' . ; , ' C ? A ? r EBi ' yif , " . ' . ; " ; ... ., Read on / and thou shalt find fit speculation , Deep as the depths of thy sagacity ; ; I will decry the present generation ; ¦ " - " ' - As portrait painter ; show my small capacity ; - ^ Pernapsrilmaketheedoubtmypen'sveracity ; j Perhaps I'll ravelin things dead and gone ; -. - But ali ; T askthee is , read " bn !! read . " on ! - , - - " -.. ' : " '' 1 : V ' . '" . ' . ; ' ' - " Beste . ' .
, In a spacious drawihg-rbom . in one ' of the bestsituated streets in the town' of 'Liverpool , adorned with mbre ' profusibrithah warranted by good taste ; ¦ sat Walter Jforth ; , Nearly , eight years have passed li g htly over ., him since' his : j introduction to < our readers ; the fine , . frank , . high-spirited boy was now become ; thepolished biiizeri : ' , of the : world , ahdireported . to be one of the mostprospefous merchants oftliisfar-famed'commercial city .- Time had hot effected ' many changes , in the . person of Walter North '; he ; was what the : ladies ( God bless them ) denominate a handsome man ; tall , . and ' . well-proportioned , vith . fine black eyes , raven hair , and features , rather ^ remarkable for ' vivacity and ; good nuhibur [ than for intelligencer -He was still
uhmarried / 'thbugh-aprize in tlie matrimonial market that many were contending for ; "but Walter , looked on marriage as no did on any other portion of his ; business— -with the keen eye ofa trader . He . was . stiil young ; he could now command a niatch that a few years : back he could not have dreamed of ; business 'Was fast increasing ,-and afew ^ more years ' of singleblcssedhess might enable . him to mingle his blood with'that of . England ' s i nobihty , so he . heeded , , riot , the pits and trapfalls in which anxious mothers and maiden aunts sought " , ^) en snare him , but" pursued his ambitious schemes , ; smiliri g \ vith " self-obmpla" cbficy ! at their seifish- views . ' - ' His father had retired fr ' om trade , and was living in the suburbs of the metropolis '; and : under , WalterJs management thehusiness had progressed- ^ -both in London and Liverpool —from almost a retail ' concern , to a gigantic
mercantile establishment , ' " ; Walter was the beau ideal of a merchant ;" ' open " and candid by nature , the shrewdheBS and spirit bf : tra ' de ; that he had imbibed from his father , tenablod him to make good , merchandise of these qualities ; careful without being penurious ; enterprismg , without being rash ; ' indifferent to * the interests ofothef ( s ; ' yet careful by attending to . . the decencies of lifei'tb obtain- their , good opinion ; . he was ' a specimen of : that'large-arid influential class who / destitute of any high . 'pr inciples , ; and , deficient in-intellectual attainments , ; by their tact and rea ^ i ; ness : to accommodate theiriselves to the world , leave talent and principle far behind thenv'in its estimation , succeed far better in : securing to .-themselves p bssesaibh of its treasured " goods , and bfd fair to delhrone ' the feudal aristocracy of the realm , and hiohdp " olise ' thepbliticalPahd social power of 'the ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦
empire .: [ " - - ' -- ' -- **> ¦>• - > ' .-: ' ..:. > --. ¦ . .. Arthur Morton ,, with a . cultivated intellect , . with an enthusiastic love , of justice , and an . [ enlarged spirit" of benevpleripe / is in danger of perishirig from the'warit of the necessaries of life ; whilst his : quohr dam'friehd ^ Hleficieht ' iri all these Qualities , but gifted ^ with worldly ' prudence- ^ is ric h in ' -the world's goods , arid deemed an . ornament to his class . ' r Such is life , and such the qualities necessary for ; success The generous , the noble , . and ! enthusiastic , are candidates'iror a life of poverty , ' arid inheritors of ah early and unwept giwe ; whilst the cold , sfelfish calculator , whose heart ' ' nevcP ' warmed ' with love to God or roan ; - rolls in- we ' alth , and ; luxuryV and his fair fame . is . embhizoned . byithe , r chisel , of the .. statuary ;
; Wheh such . thmgs ai ; e , caiTwe wonder , that the tem-Iple of virtue -is ' . deypid"bf ' worshmpersY whilst the temple ^ of" ^ mriioS ' is ^ hrorigenhy ' - thousands of eager ' devoteeSJ / whb . ln their haste ' to ' offer homage atnerpolluted'Shrine , crush and destroy each other . Alas ! strong indeed must be ourhelief in the doctrine of humah perfectability , and great indeed our trust in the prin ' cipje ' of progression , or all ' wbuld be ' carried [ away'by'the s & eam / and th ' ej Tv ' brld becoine one huge market ; : where youth , beauty , intelligence ; and virtue would be . bartered away for luxury and ease ; ' and patriotism ; and independence , be among the catalogue of . thuigs that . were , but . 'jffhose existericehas ' ceased ; ' \ . "" .. :. * , '" .. . :,, r , , ' .. , t * . * - ;; - - , - ., ! ' ; i Sad ' arid depressing , as is this picture of human
nature ,-faihtnbt' - 'thonmaii'Of the'OFuture , though pride ^ d ; meanness fade : away , | . foRpride and meanness to succeed them .- ; yet it will not'alwayslbe . so . -: th' epresen ' t . ' transitibn phase pf „ society , is ah ; eady passing away , " ' arid'the brig ht future appears in . dim perspective ';! then ° shall * i noble 'hearts ,-with noble feelings glbwmg ! withm T ( nnidVtliem . ; JThe ; cfarse of > ignprance > shall vanieh before : the , lightr » f 3 increaserl . khowledge , ^ and ^ this . ' fair globe ^ Becom , ^ the- hapbyj . regionjhich Iafinite Jnfelnierice ^ esi & nWittbrhe , -., . 4 l .. . ,. . ; ' " ' - Such thbugbt 6 % dsuch studie 8 ; engrossed ^ not the atfentiohbf ^ Wa'I ^ 'Nbrtn " . O'Seatedbefore ahlazife fire ^ ( iti waa : h . winternevening . ) and occasionalry sipping at theLeontents . flf . a ^ i , oA ' rp Kim : he . seemed buried in ; thought . and from
the cast ! of msfeatures . the subject ofhis cogitation wKfn ^ unpl ^ aht ^ preHt ' ^ h > smile titfto ther * raVlty of his closedlipg . ' and he muttered andiblyU ^ Theisilly fooljtoiretusesuclran offer "; ihe & Sr oTJoe North ; true , he is double her IS'W a residence . fe * -l ^ , M «^ . ir * r »« % SAj 4 hited'to the strehgth ' of his cohstitntionrbut ^ So ^ irl , ishl » WiU « ra / inWHOi ^ widowW a : * p lenaid : jomtoey : vSir , Jasper ; s name -rnSnIeiions ; wiUhe , oi ^^ service . to ; me , m ; . inyjjmatri mSLspec ,: and ; -ther . match , must , eome ,. off , A ^ Ssfen hbre Hue of W 3 ; c ^ un ^ anpe re' s uSStne cbntra ^ g : brow ^ and ; 't ^^ ^^ S nSSWalmdst ; empty- tumbler - , ' showed-that ? K « l-wal deeplymeditatintf : on sthemeans to t ^^ omMie ^ fctiwmgh ^ agam
Sunshine And .Shadow; A Tale Of "The Nin...
fWj 2 n a m T T * Tl ' « ^ " write to Julia ^ - # ? n d , a v few greeks : with , me ; and trust to my P w-iJ ^ Lvftii ^ - ^^^ ^ this marriage ,-should Itins ^ al'ttlegentle force must bo i ^ ' ¦^ ' Jh £££ , ir . « lder brother ' - arid"the . best judge of her true interests V So saying , "herapidly rung the ^ bel at lus elbow ; which ^ waslnswerea by a servant lnliyery and ordering writing ' materials , he speedily ^ despatched a . miss ; v | to , f < . Joseph North Esq ., Oporto ; House ,. Brixton , " . ' ,, withan ; enclosure for Julia . -contammg ' an affectibhato ^ invitation to spend' aj short period' at his bachelor residence : Replenishing the tumbler from'the decanter beside him , ho applied himself vigorously to . discussing Jits contents , ^—his feet , are . thrown . upon the opposite vuuirnuia uagiuui sutuib oi
,. a cigar speeouy perfumes the room , and Walter North is as happy and as free from qualms of conscience as though'he had not been , planning the ruin of his only Sister ;'•• Conscience , thou art a very ( cheat ! frighting" the itimorous , but Playing , : t . he . part , of , a . sycophant . to the bold J . Thou arch tormentor of ' mankind . ' whipping theirv sm-with - lash of their om entwinihg . Writhing beneath thy .-terrors- the iflurderer hatK rushed madly .: to .-the-scaff pldrJthe weak-minded fallen a victim to the suicide ^ grave , : 0 r sought the worse refuge of a maniac ' s cell ; whilst the strOUff-^ tftr- ^^ - ' ^ ^'^« - ' ^ M ' ba ! a ' ruled , thee as his slave , and deprived thy . scorpion ash of lts ^ envcnomed sting . .. Thbri wastimDlanted ^ in
by nature . tne-hreast . of man neither . to-be his serf n 0 ^ iPB ' r « t . to act . as . a-moral barbmeteiv testing , the weight and rvalue of his good or evil deeds , and feerving as a ' chccktb guide and . regulat 6 his actions . . Custom has rendered theV what ' thou art , and formeoVth y meSheB of such suhtlehut'felaSi tic . niaterial . s , ; that ,. they -encumber , and ' erush the weak , . buiarepowerlessjtprestrain the str 6 ng ;; thus adding another , ml to . the , heavy chain which the bulk of mankmd ^ hug wit jrsuch ; dreary , pleasure to their hearts , ' fettermg the- freedom' bf their limbs , andcausmgthem'tofall ^ h ' easy " prey to ' their relentless oppressor , ' , who . laughs 'with Satanic . ' mirth at their , spasraodicstruggles . to achieve their natural freedom .. .-, .. ; -,:.. - . , . t ,, . ¦¦ ,. ¦¦ - , , .. . ;;• ' ¦ X ' .-P't ^^ wi ^ ' . y . , X . ' r ^ :
:Y^-Vmeto^Xx'?: '^.:::..
: y ^ -Vmeto ^ XX' ? : ' ^ .:::..
: . .Pnorebitasd Labour.-—Those' Whoi.,A...
: . . PnorEBiTasd Labour .- —Those' whoi ., are possessed of enormous , wealth would fairi : persuade us' it is the offspring of their own -industry .. it is . no such thing ; their own industry , would riot sell'iri any iriarket in the ' world for ' sixpence . -. . They . ' might have speculated , ; employed- others > or 'i-esorted' tb ariy of the thousand and one stratagems by which immense fortunes arc , made ,. by , gambling . . with . therlabbur ; of others ^ but ,. separateIrbm society , or acting individually : as- wbrkmen , where . would their hhmense wealth / arise'from ? - ' It is clear then , that the exorbitant . ; sunis in the hands " of our merchant ' princes and great manufacturers , is ; the , difference between the acknowledgmenti doled . out . to the : ! producer , and , ! the : actual price , which the > commooity < niav '
realise . ^ -Chartist' Tracts for the Times ..- . / . ' . ' . , ' TheBoston Post isfesporisibleforthe follbwirig t-i ' , ' Why . is Jenny Lind ; like ' aileg of well-fed mutton ? Because , she isneitherlOnMjnorilioonj . " '' : ' ^ StAVBBT . ^ -T , The ; weight : of . chairis ; - ^ number of stripes , hardness of labour ,- jand other , effects * of a , master ' s : cruelty , 1- may make , pne servitude , n ^^^ miserable- . than another - ';' 'but he is a slave " who serves the best arid gentlest man in- ' the w 6 rldj as wesll yas he . who serves the worstr-and he does serve hint if he must obey his . commands and depend upon : his will . —Algernon Sidney . ,..: < :,. , ; , . :, . ' , j , r ,-, s ; , ;? A Beaten Echo ., - - . old writer ' thus describes a talkative female : — "T'krioiv . a lady who talks so mr cessantly that ; she won't give-an . -echq fair : p ) ay : She . hassuch an everlasting rotation of tongue , that ' an . echo must wait until : she dies' before it can catch her last' words . " .. - ¦ -. -..: ..,.. ' .,,. .. ;
• • Waniof UKibN . —thc ' more numerous men are , ; the more difficult it ' . isfor ^ thetn to ' agreelri anything , andsothey ' aregoverned . 'Thereisnb ' dbubtthatrf the poor shouldreason , — -Mwe'llib ' epobrno longer / —we'll inake . the rich take their turn , ' "—they ^ could easily do it , , were . it : not that thcy . . oan't ; agre . e ; ; so the cbmrnonj soldiers though much more , numerous than their - ' officers , are governed ' by them , for the same '" reason ; - ^ Di-. * -JbSijJon ' . - ' ¦; ¦ '• . ' - '' .--. ; . THEiHousKibF ^ CoMMONS .-i . The British House of Commons has been proved one of the most corrupt assemblages , that can , well , be imagined . ' So . much so , that '' they , arebfteh engaged in long debates to
prevent bribery , at elections , arid other evil practices , by : which a number of " th ' om ; obtaih seats in' that assembly . ... Afew weeks ago , Mr . Moffatt introduced a bill to compel members of parliament to pay their debt , ; a number of them ; relying , on their privileges to enable thbmtbjdefraud their creditors . The perjury , bribery , ; intimidatioriV ' threats , arid personal mjuwefl inflicted on the " ' electors at each trial of party strength j" would fill volumes ; and- we continually find a portion . of those elected , again . unseated for . the glaring corruption which they or their agents had practised .- ^ - Chartist Tracts for the , Times ., . ; . . NbW > DEFin 1 iioN , of an , Evergreen 1 ~ A man who does not learn' by experience .
¦ j-r Parhambnt Infkbiob to -tub People . —If Par-Iiariierit . should begin to refuse g iving satisfaction to the people ; , the people will - begin to refuse . putting any confidence in parliament ; and if this should ever come to be the , case , they , ( the parliament ) not only may ; but ought to be put aside : ~/ SiV John Barnard' [ s Debate on the Convention , 1739 . •' - > - - ' ¦ - . . The Morning Herald is not very complimentary in itseriumeration of Sir ^ Robert Peel ' s isup ' porters : — "Everyhard-handed , and grasping Jjsw-reyery . wolfishandhungry Dissentev—every turbnicntand disloyal Qloman Catholicf- * v ' erydisappointed and sour , WhigrRadical pamphleteer arid ' essayist . " - Ruffs . —Queen . Elizabeth and her ladies are represented ; in , all pictures as . casod-in ^ whalebone , - with ' -waists ; very long , - and . made excessively small by - tight-lacing ., v with enormous . stiff r ' uffs . round their ithroats , ' and sriiall caps of ^ poirit ' lace ,. ; which now go ; by the name of Queen Elizabeth ' s cousirij
Mary . Queen of Scots . " The ruff was soriietimes keptupright by arwire . frame ; , and .. ^ was sometimes so stirfl y . starched : as to . stand up . by -itself ,, ;; Starchof various kinds camojintb fashion , ; , and . in the next reign na , j certain Mrs . ; Turner' brought over frbrii abroad the'methbd of making yellow , starchrwhich was so much admired ; - 'that' e ' veiy fashionable lady appeared -in a yellow-ruff doneup with Mrs ' . 'Turher's starch . Mrs . Turner ... was . at length hanged for murder . She ' appeared . on ithe , scaffold in a handsome ' yellow ruff . ' . Every lady threw away hei-s ; andnbt ' a yellow ruff was seen' any more . The starching , of ruffs became so important a business ) that ' a Dutchwoman named Vim' der Plasse came-tb London to carry on ^ andteachtheiart ; ' . Thepremium she ' aslced was five pounds—a great sum in- those , days- ^ and an additional pound for , the secret ,: of preparing the starch .- ^ -Guide'to ~ ' Trade . r- " Th Dress Maker . , ¦ : - - ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ^ - >¦• ¦ ¦ K- '' - ' ; :- " ••'• V- [ - ^
The House of Lords is composed of the ; descendants of our landed laristocracy ... Some owe their eb > vation to the time-serving andpoliticalsubsevYiency Of themselves or their ancestors , whilst others ' are ' descended fromthe offspring of royal bastards . This departriieritof the British ^; Constitution vis ; all but powerless , exceptas'a ' usefulmachinb ; forpla 6 ing its veto on any measure which . public bpiniohideniandfi from the Minister of the day , - . and which , he-may desire . to avoid . From ; the cleverness and ^ address with which'they perform those kind ' ofifices ;'' , they have beeri ternled by sBriVe , the ; Obstructives ,, ' . and . ' / by others ; depominated'the House , of . Iiicu . rable ' s . ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' Suppose ' * fellow ; what has hothirigj marries a gal , whafr has ' nothing ; -is her things ^ his ' nj- or-.: is his her ' n ; or . his'n and hers her ' n ? . A nice 'Question
to decide ; thatT ; ' - - ' r : ,: > ' ^ ' ' \ i \ . V ' .. ' !; ' . '' " " ; , -. ' , ' . ' ^'" " .-f 'V ; : Benevolence , — Th ' er ebahhqt ; b , e ' a ; m ^ ^ object ! in ; cre ' a , itibn ' : than a ' humjin ! being '' . 'repleteVwith benevolence , meditating in ; what manner ho . might render himself-mostacceptable'to-his .-Creator , ' 'by dbirigmbstgoodto . hiscrcatures . ^^ JRVWjn ^ . y ; ; ;; '; 'At thb'late ; Kjlkehriy Assizes , - | Cbns ( tabfb' Devlin having giVeri-evidehfae a ' gairist one ' . | Juke , Byrne , ; thc latter , affecting to be hbrrified ,-- excLaiiriedj ' , ' It ' s . rib wonder for the pitaties to be black when the likes iv youisrhijthecountry ! " •¦^ . ( .- ¦ ¦ " ¦ . i .- ' ' ' ' -. - "AFFECiioNs . ' - ^ It appears' unaccountable that our tb ' ache'fs generally have directed their : instructions tothehead ; with very'little attentiori ' to the ' heart . ' From : Aristotle down t ( i ; Lqckb ;; b boks without humbcrhave been compbsed . for cultivating and
improylngthe . understandmg :. but few ,. in ! pvoportion , ifor ' cultivating and .: improving . ; the ^ affeetions;—Zorrf Kdimee . I ' -i- ' ^ ' wS " -, ' .- ,. ¦ : ; . !( .. „ . A ^ .: . ¦> ,-: ;; . ; . ;¦ ::: ; > . «' .-: _ :-. u-. i 'A CuscHiB . r--An Irish ^^ Knight wasbrice , dispufing ' with & 'Sr ^^' ^ xa ^& M ^^' . tigel aft dj ' s ^ ndirigbf theirrfamUiQs , whentheiatterj ' ias aifinisher to ' . < the argumenti . said that his ancestors we ' re -id the ark ! withNbah ' . ' : : "That isnothirig , ' ? says ' -the'Hibernian ' , with ' ia'rich brogue , ' «« foif ; at- the delug ' e ' ^ fathe ' rs ; were cruising : abbyt . ^ n ^ IbW offlqr . fyn !'' : »^ Pbintbbs ! , 1 * r /^ odijior for the " news " , " for behold it is his duty at the appointed , time , to g ive . it . uritp . thee ; witihoukasKing . When tHou . dostwritefor ' "his " pape ' rVneyer ' say .-junto hiiriy ^^ ' " 'What thinkestfthoui-or , my ^ : * pieoe ? - "* -fbrit maybe ; that the truth may-offend rthee «' - ^ Brisinpt ; fit'thatthb ' ushbuldstaskrhini whb'is ' the ' - authbr'bf
an : ; ariicle " , -f pjyflis ; dw . fe 9 . ui , reB , ;} h things tb i hijQiself . " lyhen th' 6 u" ; dbstj : eriteir ' . intb '; nis bflice , "haveiacareTuhtb . thysolf :-Jhat . . . thbuudb ? t ' , nbt look 4 t what-may > be lying opehjfor . th ' aibiB - iiot'meet ih the ' si ght ' r bfi-: gobd breeaing . ^ 'Neither' exanrthe fthou'the pirbbf sheetytor ' it i ^ nptre ' ad ytb . 'hieetthirie eye , ! tbat ; thpttjniayM . paper / Ofthytowri .. to " any ^^' othef , randrsubscribejim' m ^ i ate l y . for . it ^ . and pay-in advance , ' andiit ! Shali ; be welltwiththee ^ ndthylittleones ! ' -. ' rwK'i ^ u ' ^ 3 fqA r iPANCT' * 'DREs « . UiAt'abaU fdr th . fe' , VBbyal , ^ maryii n ! Ed ) p $ ^ 21 st ; appeared , in a ' str ' a-ri ; g p ; ' \ f ^ right sjde . he appeared as a lady , -with flbwihg ' oringT le , U bint elegantimuslih dressy and-on the leftiad ' a gentlcroan ; and on " , either-riewthlt f-proflle-wa ' s , admirable ; ^ The . bpmbinatibfbfthehat' ^ on-his'head . wM ' yery ^ tfeieititiie duphoitr M & j & jj & u : ^ Si ^ s ' ^
— _. : ' ;¦ An Er^Ctua 'L . Cljre F^R/^Leg^^^^ ^ " —
— _ . : ;¦ AN Er ^ CTUA ' L . ClJRE F ^ R /^ LEg ^^^^ ^ " —
Ad00317
;¦ rii ABERNBTHYVS ; PlLii ] OINTMENT - . What a painful and noxious disease isttie-TOes < and , conipiirativuly , how few of the afflirtPfl h » m i , „„ cured by ordinary appeals to medical skill- ! - This , no doubt ; arises from the u 9 ° fpowerfufaoe & ^ f ™ : a . euUy aoministered by the profesBiou ; -: indeed ,-. strong 3 internal medicines should always bo ^ oiS in , 11 frc , ! " « ^ complaint The proprietor of the : above , . qmtment , after years of acutt-sufrering , placed himself « mWV ^ ' ? tb ? ment bf that eminent surgeon , MrV'Aberhethy ; washy hhn . restored \ to perfecthe ii ^ -Mtt liS ^ n & 1 fl t J l 0 ti y Bt-Svithbutthe slightest returnof the disorder , over a period of fifteen years , during , which time the snmf . aw fi " prescription has been tho means of healing ' a vast number of desperate cases , both iu and out of the nronKetni ' viiS ? - ^ of friends , most of which cases had been under medical care / and some of them for a very considerable tiinn \ S rielKJ ' s Pile Ointment was introduced to the public by the desire of many who had been perfectly healed bv its \™ vll ~ tibh ; and sinco its introduetion-the fame of this Ointment has spread far- and wide j ^ cven the medical profession «•«« slow aud unwilling to acknowledge the virtues of any medicine not prepared by themBelyes , do now freely and ' ' 4 » , iiHv admit that Abernethy's Pil ^ Ointment'is'hdt'only a valuable preparation , but a never failing remedy in overr , t , ' . » TS variety of that appalfing malady . . .. „ -, - ; ; J "jst ^ . antt -- . Sfifferera - ft-om tlie | ' iTes wm nbfrepent giying the ^ Ointment . a . trial . Multitude ' s of-caees of its efficacy miuht b . > nroducedj if the nature of the ' complaint did not render those who have been cured , unwilling to publish their l'ariie-i " - Sdldin covered Pots at 4 s . - Cd .,-or the-quantity of three is . Gd . pots' inohe'forlls . / with full directions fur use by Bar clay and Sous , Parringdon-street : ; Edwards ,-St . « Paul ' s : Church-yai-d ; Butler , 4 , Cheapsine ; Newbery , St . Paul's ' sji-tton " Bow Church-yard ; Johnson , ' 68 , CorrihHl { 'Sanger , ISO , Oxford-street ; Willoughby and Co ., ' ( Jl , Bishopsgate-stvect With ! OUt ; . Owen , 52 , Marchmont-strcet , -Burton-cresent ; Eade ^ 39 , :, Gbs \ vell-street ; Prout ,- 220 , Strand ; Hannay : md Go 63 TV ?; sfreet » Prentice , '' 84 ; Edgeware-roiid ; and retail by allrespectable Chemists and Medicine Vendors in London ' L . \ lBesure to ask for " ABEKNETHY'S PILE . OINTMENT . " -The Public are requested to be on their guard a-ainst noxious Compositions , sold at low Prices , and to observe that none can possibly be genuine , unless the name of C . iTi . vo is printed on the Government Siamp Amxed'to each pot / 4 s . ' 6 d . . -which , is the lowest price the proprietor is cnaWed to sell nat , ; owing . tothegi-eatexpense . offtheIngredients . -,, / .. ' j ,- Y -
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"" , ';' ;; : . ^ .-,:,-.- !• : : C , OHIf : S : AND' BUlSIOXfi ; ; : : - ; ! :. "¦;¦ . ; : ' . Pi ;; U ) L ^ . fhxend' , : ¦ . ' ; . ' :. . ; ,. X ;• . ¦ .. ; . .- ¦ : ' : . -Patrmis ^ by . the ^ alFamify ^ Nobility , Glergx ji & c . [ s a . sure and speedy Cure for those severe annoyances , without causing the least pain or inconvenience . Unlike a ii othe remedies for Corns , it & operation is such as to render tlie cutting of Corns altogether unnecessary : indeed , - neiniiy s-iv the practice of cutting Corns is at ' all times highly , dangerous , , and . has been frequently , attended with ¦ lamt-niaioj ' jJnseijucnces , ibesides its lisbihty to increase their growth ; it adheres witlvthe most gentle pressure , produces nu hisiaut aud iehghtful relief from torture , and with perseverance in Its application ; entirely eradicates the most iuveterate Corns and Bunions . ) . : . t . ... ¦' ., . -..- ; ¦; . : ™ rn ' ? , ^™ onfaIs ¥ ve sS 2 e re ?» vcd from upwards . of owhundred Physicians and Surgeons of the gi-eatest emiiu-co as well as from many Officers of both Army and Navy , and nearly one thousand private letters from the gentry i » town and country , : speakingm high terms of tins valuable remedy . >¦ - . i ° J «»«« " Preparedhy , Johh " l '' ox , m bores atltjll'd ,, oSthree . imall boxes in offcfor - SA-DA / Srid to be had , withfi . il directions for use , of all wholesale and retad medicine vendors in town and country . The genuine has the i mne of ! " Li Pox on the stamp ; ' A 2 s . 9 d . botcures the most obdurate corns . " - ¦ - j • v ,. iauauu i ;;^! ,.- . !¦¦ " ¦ ¦¦ <¦¦ - ¦' - ¦ -- - ' ¦ - ; '' - ' ' '¦ ^ Askfor "Paul ' s Every jfan ' sFriend . . Ahernethy's Pile Ointment , ' Paul ' s Corn Plaster , "' mid'Abbrn ' ethj- ' s . Pile Powders , are sold by the Mowing rr-pectable Chemists and Dealers nvPatsnt Medicines : — .- ' ¦•> ¦¦ . ' -., , '" : ' : < 'Barelay and Sons , Earringdoh-street ; ' Edwards , 67 , St . Paul ' s Church-yard ; Butler , 4 , - Cheapside ; Ncwuerv St . « S « - , ? uton ' , i ^ Chur ch-ya'd ; Johnston , 16 , '•' Greek-streetrBolio , and CS . CornhUl ; Sanger , ¦ , 150 ¦ Oifiwiireei Wnloughby and Co ., 61 , Bishop . sgate .-8 treetJ « ithout ; Owen , 52 , Marchinont-street . ' Burton-crescent : Bade , at * CoswcllI Street ; Prout , 229 , Strand ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; Preutis , 84 , Edgeware-road : and retail by all resnecU able chemists and medicine : vendors in London ... ' - .-. ,::.. . r Coontot Agents . —Bainesand Newsome , Heaton , Smeeton , Reinhardt and sons , J . C .. Browne , 48 . BriRRate Denton Garland , Mann , Bean ,- Hah-ey ,- 'HaighMatfe Tarbottom rBollaud and Keiriplayi Land , Moxom , C . Hay , fus iirinratenbpdes , BeU and Broqk . -rLord , R . ; C . Hay , Medical Hall ,, Lecds ; lUmnungton , Maud and Wilson , Kogerson , Staiilield ' Bradford ; . Hartley , Denton , Waterhouse , Jepson , Wood , Dyer , ^ Parker , Jennings , andLeyland , Halifax ; Smith , lilland * Hurst , Cardwell , Gell , and Smith , Wakefield ; Pybus . Banisley ; Knowles Tliorne , Brook , and Spivev , fluddersfield Hudson , ¦ Keighley ; Brooke , Doncaster ; : Matthews , Greaser , Driffield , Cass , Goole ; Milner , -Pickering Stevenson ' Whitby , ; iBolton , Blanshard and Co ., Hargrove , Fisher , Otley , Linney , York ; Wainwright , Hoivdeu ; Hoisby , \ ViwWham ' Jefferson ; Malton ; Buckall , Scarborough ; Smith , Furby , Bridlington ; Adams , Colton , Pullen , Selby ; Omblier Market Wefghton ; GledhUl , Old Delph ; Priestley , 'Fox , PontefracV ; -Dalby , Wetherb y ; Slater , BediUe : Dixon , Nortlinllcrton : Wardi : lUclunond ; Ward , Stokesley ; Foggitt , and Thompson , Thirsk ; Mo ' nkhouse , Barnard Castle ; Pease , Darlington Jcnnett , Stockton . Aud by all respectable Chemists and Medicine Vendors in every Market Town iuEnWand * 1 Wholesale Agents , —Messrs . Bolton . Blanshard and Co ., Druggists , Micklegate , York . ° ¦ ¦ " ¦ ';
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, ; r i - „ iv .-j CAUTION . . -: ¦ . ¦ .:: ?¦ : Unprincipled persons , taking advantage . of-the celebrity of 'V 1 ' "DB . LOCOCK'S . WAFERS , " , . attempt to foist , upon . the , public , various Pols .-. and . Mixtubes under nearly similar Tiames . "'"' ' ' ' '" ' The public is cautioned ; that ,. all such . preparations-fire spurious and an imjposition : 'the onl y genuine Medicine has , besidesthe words " Dk . ' -Iocook . ' s ' Wafers" ~ ' 6 h the Stamp ; the Signature of the : Proprie ' tor ' s-. Sole , Agents , Da Suva and Co . V on the Directions given with every " Box , ' without which none are Genuine . ' - ' ^ .. ' ;; UNDER , RJcf ^; P 4 TR ^ GK . ^ r : ; - :: r-raRFECT . . raEEDQ ^ RQM ' ; Ci ^ [ n Ten Minutes afteruse , and a-rapid Cure-of Asthma and . ¦ , ' Cflnsvunption , . and . aU , DUordcrsTof , ihe . Breath . , ¦¦ , '¦¦ •' " = ¦ and Lungs , is insured'by " ' - - - ' --DB ; . LOGOCR ' S PULMONie WAFERS , The truly wonderful powers of this' remedy 'have ¦ jaUed forth testimonials from aU " ranks ^ f society , in all quarters of the world . ; . iThe : Moy , ing have been-just re- , c 'ived * ¦»¦ ; ' ~ — ' ¦ " \ ... Z : ¦ . ; . . SUR PttlSING CURE - 0 F ASTHMA , ¦ , "•; ' :, i iFi-om-Mr . Wiiiiam Bowen , Carflet ^ ' Haverfordwest . Sra , —Having been afflicted for ' many' years'with' a-violent cough and asthma , and having-tried another medicines in Vain ' , ' I ivas recommended to try Dr . Locoek ' s Wafers . I sent to you for a box , and , , to my great astonishment , I found relief the very first night , 'and have continued to get better ever since ; Their ' effects are really wonderful . ' My appetite is now good , whereas ; formerly I- could scarcely keep any food on my stomach .-. .. I have my self since , recommended them to several persons , who have always received the greatest relief from them . —( Signed ) W . Bowes . —Dated February 4 th , 1818 . : =: ;;' . „ ' : CURES OF CONSUMPTION . Gehflemen , —I can myself speak " of "" your Wafers with the greatest confidence , having , recommended them in many cases of pulmonary conBumption , and they have alT ways afforded relief when everything else has failed , and the patients having been surfeited with medicine , are delighted to ' meet with so efficient a remedy having such an agreeable taste , Ac—( Signed ) ' - John Mawsost , Surgeon , 13 , ' Mdsley-street , Newcastle-on-Tyhe . —December 5 , 1847 . ; ' - ' IMPORTANT TO ALL WHO . SING . From Mr . ; Edward Page , Director of the Choir and Organist " of St . Peter ' s' Catholic Church / Leamington . : ; . Gfthtlemen , —Having frequently suffered much-from relaxation of , the throat , I have often been obliged to resort to various preparations ; but since I have had the good fortune to try Dr . Locoek ' s Pulmonic Wafers , I am now but seldom obliged to resort to them , for . the extraordinary good effects they have produced are most surprising . ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ - Even ' - ' when' the ' throat appears to'be completely eyhaustedj and the voice to be nearly gone ,, two or . three ( at most fourjwill in the shortspace of halfanhouror so , completely restore its flexibility and power : ; and they do not act as a mere temnorary exciting romedy , nor do they lcayo any lassitude after . — " ' '"•' ¦ ' . ' ; . ' - ' ' ¦ '• Having felt the great value of the remedy , Ifeelit aduty to generally recommend it , as I am convinced that all persons trill find ; immense benefit fi-om the general and perseveririg-use-ot it , arid XshiuT be happy to answer any inquiries . —Edwabd Page . '—June 21 , 1847 . ' - ; , » . . The particulars of many hundred cases maybe had from every agent throughout the Kingdom and on the Continent , Dr . Locoek ' s Wafers give instant relief , and are a rapid cure of asthnias . ' consiimptionsj celds , and all disorders in tlie breath and ' lungs , & c . ¦ ' [ - ' . '•' . - ' ' ¦ ' .- ' . ' ' '; : < ' ¦ •" , " " To singers-ahd ; publio-8 peakers ' they are invaluable ,- as in twohburs ; they remove all hoa , rsene ' ss and increase the power arid fleitifiiiity of the voice ! - ' Xtaey"liaye ' ' a-nidst : pleaianttaste" i , (; "' ^ -- '*¦' . '¦ :- ¦ ' -: - — .. '' - , ' - - ' - ¦¦ Price Is . 'ljd .- ; 2 si 9 dr ; and lis . per . ^ box ; or sent per post for . ls . 3 d . ; 3 s . ; or lls . Gd ., ' by Da ^ SilvA and Co ; , No . 1 ,, Bride-lane , Fleet-street , London . . '• ' ! . ' ' ¦' -PROTECTED BY ROYAL I ^ TmS PATENT . :: ; ; ;¦ DR . i ; OCdCkiS ^ EMAlEMftiERS . ' : : ! HAVE'NO TASTE OF MED 1 CINB ; . .-. , : i ! THE 0 SLY MEDICINE RECOMMENDED TO BE ' ! . > ?^ :-j .: - . - ' TAKEN BY-FEMALES . ' .- '; " '; '" ¦¦ " . " ,, : ! : i ; i :, Price , Is . ljd . " ;; 2 s . 9 d . ; i ' andils . jperBox . ;' .:,, ; ; ' , r : ' . 'i :- - . . ' - : ¦ . ' BEWABE OF IMITATIONS . , , ' :, ' , .: iUnpriticipied ' Persons counterfeit ' . ' , this 'Medicine in . the ' form of PILLSJ & c ' . ' "Pm-chasers must therefore . observe that 'hone ! are genuine "but . ' . V . WAFERS , ' . ' and that the word s ? " -DR .-LOCOCK'S ^ AFERS f / . are . in the Stamp outside each box . ¦' . '¦' :, .. ' , ' . ' , - . ' ' "' ¦ ' , ; . ,. | - - ¦ ¦ ' , . ; ' . * ' ¦¦ OBSEEVE . i-There are ' various Counterfeit Medicines , 'having word ' s on the 'Stamp' so . neabit . ' besemblkjg these ; asito / . mislead , the unwary . ' , purchasers ' must therefore strictly observe the above caution . . ' ,.. ; . t . ; .. . -. ¦ ¦<•• Prepared only by the Proprietor's A gents , Da Suva' and fco ., i , Bride-lane , " Fleetatreet , London . Sold by all 'Medicine Vendors . v > ,, r . _ ,. .... ......... . u , ,
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i ' riX ' :: ) ' YOU MAY ' BB 0 UrWyeT | ' _ ' _ ^^ ! r'V ; ? vi HOLLOWA ^ blNTMENT . " ""' ' CURB . OF EHEUMATISM AND , RHEUMATIC GOUT . Extract of a Letter from Mr . Thomas Binintdn , Landlord of the Waterloo Tavern , Coatham , Yorkshire , late of the ¦ V Life Guards , dated September-2 oth , 1848 .. ' - > . ; - . . ; i f . Smi—For a long time I was a martyttoJtheumatism and Rheumatic Gout ,, and , for . ten . weeks previous ., to using your mediciries ' I was so bad as not to be able to . walk . - 1 ¦ fiadirledddctoring . andjnediclnes of : every . kind , -but aU . to . hb ' avaUrindeed . I 4 aily got :.. wor 6 e ,. and feltfhat I must sHoruydib . ' - ' Frora ' seeingyour'remedles- advertised in the ' . paper . L'take in ; I thoug ht I wouldgivethema'trial . ' / 1 did so . Iriibbed the ointment in- . as directed ^ . and . kept oabf bage ieavestotheparts " thickly spread with it , and took the Pills night a ndlmbrriihgj ' In three week ' s I was enabled to walk' about for an hour or . two in . the ; dayiwithx-aj stick , - aii'd in ' seven weeks I could go anywhere without one .- , 1 am now , by the -blessing' of God . and your medicines , quite ' well , ; and 'have ! been' attending to . n » y-business-for ; more than ; sevcn mohuis . vyithoutany . gymptoms of ; . the return " of . my old complaint . ' * Besides my case of Rheumatic Gbiit , I have lately had proof that your Pills ' wad Ointment ' -will heal ahy . old wound or . ulcer ,. as a married womaiij living near .-me , had-had ' a tad leg for four years ,. which KO oiie could ciire , . and I gave ' 1 her some ' of your 'Pills' ario-Oinbheht ;' wlnch ' soundly healed It when nouiing \ rtse jvoulA'doit . o iFor .-ypur . information Lh ' ad the .. honour to , serve .. my country , for twenty-five ' years'in the'fffst'feghhehtof Life Gui ? rds ; , - , and ; was'Cighieen Jyearsa ( corporauMI-vasltwo years > in > the Peninsula > Yar „ andwafi at ^ the . Battle of 1 Waterloo . . ;][ . > ya 8 discharged ' wi'th ' a ' pension-oh the 2 nd of September , 18 ^ 3 . Thecommanding'bmeei' at - 'tHe . ume ; wa s ' Cblohel Lygon , whois nbw , hGeneraVr . l . belo 9 ged ; t {> . thc b-pop , of ; Captain ^ the-Hon . ! Henry-Bwhig . —( Signed ) , tiioriAs Bmotok . —To iProfessor . Ho ^^ AT . " t ^'"*''! * - '" c : > - - ' ; . ¦ - ' ; - '"' '•" CURE ! 0 P A BAD LEG OF TWENTY-ONE YEABS ' i M - '' . ' ' ; f " - ' ! . - ;' • or " . STANB nf 0 . f ;; j ; o-yi y . ir / ivn . Ml ¦ : Extract ' of a ietter from ^ Mr ., Anarw , BrMW Blicksini * : ' -Eydmouth ; -near Berwick ; datedI the Mft . of August ,, 15 f 8 . : ! WMYit ^ "ple ^ ureand ' gratitdde fI have W inform you thatrarter stUlaringibr . twenty ^ nejore ^^ tb , a . . < bad Jeg-,: wMch ' wdded to M ) ond o ^^ a * dlffereht'times everji medical man rt ' etonericeta this p ^ W ' the ' coimtry . hntu ^ toidpurpoM . IIIiwasfr ^ ue ^^^^^^ uriable' to work j andM pain and ,. agonal ; pft ^ n enduve ^ ribbne ' c < mte ! l - My'tegis-ri 6 wdssdund , as ever , it wa « in chaeed'fronVjMr , , Lf pavWson ( , dr ^ st , -Be ™ ick upon . Twrtd / WllO knows ' lhy - case weU , and wdl , I » m ™ re , ke hatmv to certify with me , if necessary , as to the ^ truth ' of -tW 8 ? wonMooure . ^ Signed ) . ANi >^ fessbrHOIXOWAT ..- ; .. , ,- : ¦( , . ¦ - . .: < . f \] Wlj ^ . W ' ' \ ii \' , ix \ i ' ¦' - - < AMPUTA ^ ibN $ F \ Wp ; T ^ ES . . PtoV ^ T : ED , - , ferVAotof ale ttet'frbm Kr , \ 0 U . yer Smith Jenkins , -dated ' ' Sii-IWg-superinjending , abpufcax ^ pntha-ago . ^ he ,. ereetiohof oue oVour railway , hndges ,, odby . the laft ofa ; ¦ S ^«^ n 7 TnV ' riBntrftbt wa 8 ' - Heriou 8 ly bruised XvhicTr S ^ nsu lt some of ithe emin , e ^ . ? urgeonS ; which j l didMUid vvastold tlint'ih order to'savettyfaoVtwo Of my tks miist Wtaktn off / nih despair } I-retifriiea Hbme » -to impartTthei melanthoiy news to my . w-ue ^ hitending . ^ o subnuthto . jthe .-operftfiqn , it " ^ W ^ th ^ fc rtropi « u to . try , yoar valuable OihtmentandPius , Which I-did ] and was bythfir means 1 ih threewee . k 4 en 4 bJe 4 ; io . rj » ume 1 ' ,
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* ion , and at " this time my toes " are perfcetty cured — ( Signed ) Oliveb Smith Jjenkins To Professor Jlolloway , AN EXTRAORDINARY CURE-OF . A DESPERATE SKIN DISEASE . .. - . On ^ the ; 2 l 6 t-July , -1848 , the Editor of the Mofttssilile , newspaper , published in India , -inserted tho 'following editorial-article , in his paper : — "We know for a fact , that HOlIoway ' s Pills-and Ointment act . in a most wonderful manner , upon the- constitution ,- as an eccentric Coolie , ' called Eli 2 a , employed in our establishment , was . affected , vath ftiyriads of Ringworms , which' defied ; all . the lleerut doctors , and promised to devour the'poor ' mah- before he was' underground ' ;' ' we tried ' Hollbway ' . ' upbn him , and in a month he was perfectly . restored •• to Ids' former condition and cleanliness of skin . i The effect wasmiraculous , " : The Pills should be used conjointly with the Ointment Rl most of the following cases : — -: Bad Legs ' . Corns ( Soft ) -: "Rheumatism Bad Breasts' - ' Cancers Scalds Burns Contracted and ' ' Sore Nipples Bunions . . Stiff-joints Sore Throats BlteofMoschetoes Elephantiasis . Skin-diseases ¦ and Sand-flies Fistulas .. Scurvy i Coco-Bay ¦ - Gout :-..... ¦;¦ ' Sore ' -licads Chiego-foot Glandular Swel- Tumours Clulblaues lings Ulcers . Chapped-hands Lumbago Wounds : ' Piles Yaws ; Sold by the Proprietor , 244 , Strand , near Temple Bar , London , and by all respectable Vendors of Patent Medicines ' tlu-oughout tiie civilised world , in Pots and Boxes , Is . lid , . 2 s . « d ., 4 s ., 6 s .,-lis ., 22 s ., and 33 s ' . each : Thereis a very considerable' saving by taking the larger sizes . N . B . — Directions for the guidance '" of patients are affixed to each pot and box .
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ON PHYSICAL DISQUALDJICATIONS , GENERATIVE -INCAPACITY , AND IMPEDIMENTS . TO , MAIUUAGE . Tweuty-nfth edition , illustrated with Twenty . Six- Anatomf-; . cal-Engravings " on Steel , enlarged , to 19 (! pages , price 2 s . Gd ;; by post , direct from the Establishment , 3 s . , 6 d „ ' in postage stamps . ' THE S I L B'N T F R I E ' N D ; a medical work on the exhaustion and physical ' decay of the system , produced . by excessive indulgence , the consequences of infection , or the abuse of-mercury , with observations on the marmed state , and the disqualifications . which prevent it ; illustrated by twenty-six coloured engra-, rings , and by the detail of cases . . By ' R . and L . PERRY and Co ., 19 , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London . --- - --Published by tho authors , and sold by Strange , 21 , l ' utcrnoster-row ; Hannay , 63 , and Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Starie , 23 , Tichbonie-strect , Haymavket ; and Gordon , 146 , Leadenhall-street , ¦ London ; 3 . and It . . Raimcs and Co ., Leithwalk , Edinburgh ; D . Campbell , ¦ Argyll-street , Glasgow ; J . Priestly , Lord-street , and -T .-Mewton , Churchstreet , Liverpool ; It . Ingram , Market-place , Manchester , ; - ¦ - ' . ¦¦ ¦ _ ' ¦ Part the First' - Is dedicated to the consideration of the ' anatomy and physiology of tlie organs which are directly or indirectly engaged in the process of reproduction : Jt is ' illusfrated by six coloured engravings . ,:.-: ¦ . ,: " ;¦>'•'• .:. ' . ' ¦ ¦ : Part the Second . ' . ¦ -Treats of the infirmities and decay of the system , produced by over indulgence of the passions , and Uy the . practice of solitary gratification . i . It shows clearly the , manner in which-tho baneful consequences of tliis indulgence operate on tlioeconomy in tlie impairment and destruction of thesocial--and 1 vital powers . The existence of '' nervous and isexual debility and incapacity ; with their .-accompanying train of symptoms and disorders , are traced b the chain of ¦ co nnecting-results to their cause , ¦ This selection concludes with ah explicit detail of the means by which' tlwsa effects ' may be remedied , and full ' and ample directions for their use . It is illustrated by three coloured , engravings , wliich ' fully display the effects of physical decay . ¦ ¦ Part the Third Contains an accurate description of the diseases cpse ' d by ' infection , and by the abuse of mercury ;; primary' and secondary symptoms , eruptions of the skin ,-sore throat , inflammation of the eyes , disease of the bones , gonorrhoea , gleet , stricture , & c , are- shown to depend-on this cause , Their treatment is full . described in this- section . -The effects of neglect , either in the recognition of disease or in the treatment , are shown ' to be"the prevalence of the virusin the system , which sooner ov later willshow itselfin one of the forms already mentioned , ' and entail , disease in its most frightful shape , not only on the hv 4 ivid \ ia \ himself , but also on tlie offspring . Advice for the treatment of all these diseases and , their consequences istendeved in this section , which , if duly . followed up , cannot fail in effecting a cure .. This part is illustrated by seventeen . coloured engravings . Part the Fourth ; : ,, . : ' Treats of the prevention of disease by-a simple application , by wliich the danger of infection is obviated . Its action is simple , but sure . It acts with ,, tho , virus chemically , and destroys its power on the system . This important part of the work should be read by every young-man entering . into life . ... c . -. >! , ' . ,: ¦ ) . "¦ -.- ' ' Tart the Fifth . <¦' ...:: ¦ ... . . Is devoted to the consideration of the Duties and Obligations of the MarriedTStaterand of th ' tfeauses " which" lead to the happiness or misery of those who have entered into , the bonds of matrimony . Disquietudes and jars between mar' rie'd couples are traced to depend , - in the majority " of in-, stances , on causes resulting . from physical imperfectionsarid errors , and the means for their -removal shown ' -to be witlihi reach and effectual . The operation of certain disqualifications is fully examined , and infelicitous and unproductive umons shown to bo tlie ; necessary consequence . ' The causes and remedies for this ' -state . form an important ' consideration in this sectionof the work . . , V
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. . : '•; ; f ; THE CORDIS BALM OF SYWACUM , ; Is expressly employed to renovate the ' impaired , powers ot life , when exhausted by the mfluenceVexerted ^ by ' solitary indulgence on tho system . Its actionals purely balsamic ; , its power in re-invigorating the frame ; in all ; cases of nervous and sexual debility , obstinate : gleets , "impotency , barrenness , aud debilities arising fibm ' iyenereal' excesses , has . been demonstrated by its unvarying ' success-in thousands of cases . To those persons who are ' prevented . entoiing the married state by the consequences of early- errors , !! is invaluable . iPrice lis . per bottle , or four quantities in one for' 33 s . ; ' " Mi ' ' " - ;; - : -THE CONCENTRATED BETERSHTI ESSENCE : Ah attli % phultio remedy foi' purifjiiig the system from vernereal contamination , . ' and ie recommended 'for any of the-, -. varie ' d , forms of secondary symptoms ,-such as eruptions on * the ' skiii , blotches on the head and face ,, enlargement of the-; throat ,: tonsils , ; ind uvula ; threatened ' destruction of the . nose ,- palate , & o . -Its : action is- purely detersive , and itsbeheflcial influence oh the system is undeniable . ' Price lisand 33 s . ' per bottle ..,.. .. . .... . .... ,.., ,, . -. . i . The , £ . 5 case of Syriacum or 'Concentrated Detersive Essence , can only be : had . at ; 19 , Be ' riiers-street , 'Oxford-street ,. London , " whereby , there is asavhig of £ . 1 12 s ., and the pa-; tient is-entitled tb receive advice without' a fee , which advantage lis ' applicable only to'those who remit £ 5 , fora ' picket '' i ' . ' '" ''"'' . "'"¦ -- 'Consultation fee , if by letter , £ 1 . —Patients lire requested : to be : as minute as possible in' the description of their cases . . Att ' ehdanoe ' . daily at 19 , " Bei-ner 8 i ' stre 8 t > - " Oxford-street , 1 ; Lbndoh ; ; from eleven' to two / , and -from five ^ tb eight ; ' oh . Sundays from ' eleven tb one . '• ¦ ¦ •• ' ''" - ' ' ';¦ ¦' ; ' - 1 ' " ,. Sold . by Sutton and Co . ; Bow Church TardjW ; Edwards , 67 , St ;; paul ' s Church Yard ; Barclay and Sons , Paningdon . ; st / a ' et , ' : CV ) rahill ; B ^ ler and-Co ., 4 , Clieapside ; R . Jonn-: son . C 3 ,, Cornliill ; L . Huli ; New Cross . ; > Vv B . Jones , Kings , ton ; yt . ; J . ' TannerViEgham ; S . iSmith , ^ Windsor ; . J . B . ' Shillook' , tBrbmley ; . T . . lliches , London-street ,. Greenwich ; , Th 9 s . > Parkes ,: ^ Voolwich ; Ede and Co ; j iDorking J : and John , Turley , '' High-street , Romford , of / whom . may be had the "SlliENT ^ EIEND . ' . '; V , ,::. f . ;;; ; ,. >; . . . , .. .. / ; , ( :, ; : :. -.
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Mjbo ; tH-ACHE ,. rErmaken , t . ly , ; t iL ! , (! fc : tJRED by u 8 ing BRANDE'SENAMEL ' , ' fbr - filling ; decaying teeth ; -and . rendering . them sound -and' ' ¦ painless . ' ¦ Soldby . Chemistssrerywhere . . PriceIs / perpackoli" -- " . ' " ' . " * , ; "" i-wU RECENT TESTIMONIAL . ¦ : . « :- ¦ •; : (> .- ¦ : j SiB , i-iFjndlng . 'BRANDE'S : ENAMEL-sq excellent . - for its ( PJirppse ; I feel it-my .-duty to recomniondi ' t'tball who suffer with the tooth-achethatlicomein cpntact WithY-tbereforei ' 'you wUl ' . 6 bligeiby ; sending : a . packet t ' oMr . jilamGg Williams Ilobliins , ( St- ; Wednesbury .- ^ ' Your obedient soi-vant ; Thomas . Moixabd . '—Wednesday ,-Marchl 8 , 'tl 849 ' w ij-. ' ! c , 'i . ' . % ' . ' ' ¦ : : ' i-* CAUTION ;^ -The : great ^ success * of tins- preparation -has induced . numerous .. unskilful ^ persons to produce- ^^ spurious ' , iraitatiqnsviand ' j to . ' icopy . ^' , Bran ; de ' s iEnftmel' ^ iA'dvcrtise ; . . ments , " ^ It isneedful { therefore , to guard-against . suclvim- ' ' p ^ osiUbns , by seeing-the signature of JonfriWuiis ' . BCCOai " ) pajnies each packet . .. ^ . r-r ,.-, • » , London : Manufactured only by JOHN WILLIS , 21 , Eas T ^ mple'Chambcrs ;^; WlritefriarB | iFleet-s 'treet ; f rtmoved . fr . ' ' r ^ % n ' SrbiiUdipgs , BaU 8 buryrS 0 , uai » i . iWholesaleiby all--t < . la ^ . Medicinegouses . -, yM iiw > t . cao-i b . i *» x ,- { . v ; j : ) ? •'• • / " wwuldlthei ^ libo ^ imyi ' o ^ eultyrinrobtalningvit . -. U ^ tMr-Ueii ! ^ mp . s ^ o . J , OHN-yfIlLlS ' ( asabove ) , ! andyou withensure ^ the genulnb abticlb by bbtubn or post . Twin , . authentic , TestinwnialSjS . withfulldn-ectionsforuse ' , acctm-( paiiy -each / ipacket . T ^ hich ¦ con tauiSjienongli ; -aEnameh to £ a mt ^ t & ih : —&^ T && w ^ . i 2 w && te ^ " -
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 5, 1849, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_05051849/page/3/
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