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THE NORTHERN STAR. .. 8amnia« 7, law. EX...
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foreign inuWiqentt
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' FRANCE. The President having returned ...
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I: i-.y, .-:; .,)¦ . -•„, >, - IMPORTANT. .,vlV ¦ '• . ¦:¦:, • •' >si_ f. ' .-.'.!:¦ Established Fiftv Years.' ' '
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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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The Northern Star. .. 8amnia« 7, Law. Ex...
THE NORTHERN STAR . .. 8 amnia « 7 , law . EXTRAORDIN
Foreign Inuwiqentt
foreign inuWiqentt
' France. The President Having Returned ...
' FRANCE . The President having returned to Paris from his tour in tbe eastern departments the journals are counting up the results . The correspondent of the 'Morning Chronicle . ' * ays : —* -The journey having been avowedly undertaken for political purposes—every one asks what effect it- has had on public opinion , and on tbe future prospects of Louis Napoleon himself ? I * nnst he-admitted that , there is a great diversity o opinion on this subject , and that with the exception , perhaps , of the President himself , who is said to be delighted bevond measure with all that has :
occurred ; not another man in France , is completely satisfied with the result . The over-zealous Buonapartists—men who in the blindness of their z * al would compromise any cause—cannot conceal from hemaelves that tbe spirit of Republicanism is trenger in France than they expected , and that in the course of the recent journey the evidences of its BBBtence were forced on their unwilling ears in a manner that put an end to « U doubt of the facfc . Previous to the journey they had given s « ch open expression to their wishes , and to the hopes which they permitted themselves to entertain as the
consequences of Louis Napoleon ' s appearance among the people , that it i « now too late to deny them . The partisans of the Elvsee , even to the most moderate among them , fully expected that the sentiments of France in favour of the nephew of tbe Emperor would become so undeniable as to place the renewal Of his tenure of office as President beyond alt doubt ; and tbe more ardent among them felt no little confidence that Louis Napoleon , who left Paris as only President ef a Republic , would return to it with the prouder title of Emperor of the French . There is no doubt that all those who entertained
Such exaggerated and preposterous hopes as thtse are dissatisfied , however much they may disguise their disappointment . The demonstrations at Dijon , Lyons , Besangon , Belfort , Mulbausen , gtratsburg , and Metz , against imperial pretensions , are too significant to be misunderstood ; and though the receptions at . Nancy and Jtbeims were so flattering as to revive hopes which had previously been nearly extinguished , the almost universal cry of Vive la Repuhlique ! ' with which the President WBS saluted in his passage along the Boulevards of Paris , puts an end to all expectation of any immediate results from this famous journey .
' On the other hand , the parties who oppose tbe pretensions of Lonis Napoleon are not quite satisfied . The Republicans , while proclaiming the devotion of the people to- the Republic , inveigh against the sycophancy of the public functionaries . The Monarchists , while admitting that a feeling hostile to the Empire was shown , are not very well pleased that there was no demonstration anywhere in favour of the Bourbons . Doubts are expressed as to the feeling of the army , which , contrary to the usual practice in France , appears to have been very chary of its applause in presence of the President .
Theirs and the ' BargraYes' also fought shy of would-be Consul or Emperor ; and in short , as an evidence of the feelings of the country , and as a means of opening the way to a solution of the great crisis of 1852 , tbe President ' s journey leaves every . thing pietty much where it found them—iu doubt and confusion . He is , however , indefatigable in his endeavours to procure a prolongation of bis tenure of office , and after a brief rest from one tour , made arrangements for another to Cherbourg , for the purpose of reviewing the navy . Tbe opponents of the Republic have been pressing forward the Consuls General of the department to demand a revision—in other words a destruction of
the Constitution before 1852 , the appointed time ; the object being , in the first instance , to secure the continuance of Louis Napoleon in office , in order that the plots of the various Pretenders may have time to ripen . The correspondent of the < Chronicle' says : — * Tbe deliberations of the councils-general are not yet sufficiently advanced to enable us to judge of the precise number vfhich will recommend a revision of the Constitution , but there is no doubt that out of the eighty-six at least fifty will adopt resolutions to that effect . Hitherto only one councilgeneral , namely , that of the Pyrenees . Urientales » has shown itself completely Buonapartist . . It has recommended ,. first , that the Constitution should be revised ; and secondly , that the duration of the presidency of Lonis Napoleon should be fixed at
ten years . In most instances tbe resolutions adopted are merely general , namely , that the Constitution should be revised , according as may be considered advisable in its wisdom by the Assembly . To this resolution not only the Buonapartists , but the Legitimists and Orleanists agree , as they each and all expect that the advantages to result from the revision will ultimately turn in favour of their own particular party . The only parties who seriously oppose it are the Republicans , bath mode * rate and ultra , who coalesce on this occasion . One council-general ( that of Avejron ) has refused to entertain the subject . A proposition for the revision of the Constitution having been brought forward , it was rejected by a majority of eighteen to eight , which shows that the Republicans are in a large majority in that part of the country . ' :
The Republican papers are loud in their condemnation of the conduct of the President of the Republic , with reference to this unconstitutional proceeding . The ' National' re publishes the circular addressed last year by M . Dufaure , when Minister of the Interior , to tbe councils-general of the departments , informing them that any attempt on their part , either by petition or otherwise , to procure a revision of tbe Constitution before the legal period , is a crime punishable by the laws , and that the government was determined to enforce those laws . It asBB M . Baroehe why he is now silent , when it is notorious that the club of the Dix Decembre is urging tbe couactts-general to an immediate revision of the Constitution , and when his silence may be construed into convenience ?
Thirty-seven persons were arrested by the police during the entry of the President of the Republic into Paris . On their examination they all declared their only offence was that of crying ' Vive la Repuhlique !' Some of the pipers give a report that in conse . quence of the bad reception given to Louis Napoleon at Metz , the National Guard of that place is to be dissolved . And it is also said that he intends te punish those that gave him such a bad reception a * Besancoa , by demanding the expulsion of & " Swiss from the department . A very pretty way of show , ing his gratitude for the shelter and hospitality he received from Switzerland when be was himself a refugee .
TheteadingLsgitimistswhoreturnedfromWiesbaden are greatly embarrassed bow to answer the questions that crowd on them as to their future policy . One thing seems clear : many that were heretofore moderate are now disposed to push matters to extremities . Conciliation of interests is found no longer possible , and tbe partisans of the Duke of Bordeaux hint that the President may consider himself lucky U he reachs tbe end of his official term quietly . The result of the President's journey , of the pilgrimage to Wiesbaden , and the death of Louis Philippe , has been to set the three contending parties more by the ears than ever . M . Mole holds aloff from the government , and is notoverpleased with thecoolreception g iven to his counsels . M . Thiers sticks to pure Orleanism , and supports the Duchess of
Orleans in her disinclination to a fusion . M . Berryer seems less disposed to support the President ' s government than when be set out for Wiesbaden ; and if the Duke of Bordeaux has effected any union in the conflicting factions of the legitimist party , this has been done at least as much by the approach of the moderates to the ultras as of the ultras to the moderates ... The friends of the President are as confident as ever in the star of Louis Napoleon ; but , their hatred of the Legitimists becomes daily- less disguised , and it seems highly probable that a new message , or a change of ministry , will mark the commencement of an energetic policy for curbing the pretensions of the partisans of the elder Bourbon branch . That these will support the candidatures of Changaraier for the presidency appears a supposition far from improbable .
The trial of M . Florentine and tbe four witnesses of tbe duel in which he inflicted a wound in the brexst of M . Amadee Achard throws some light upon the state of tbe literary world in Paris . A literary club called 'La Societe des Mens de Lettres , ' and numbering among its members several distinguished literary men , formed , out of its body a select committee for the purpose , of in vestigating the character of M . Fiorentino , and deciding whether a member of the Societe , who had been called out by M . Fiorentino , could accept the cbailanae without dishonour . This jury of honour ; 'as it was called , after a full inqairy , decided unaniinoBsly that M . Fiorentino was not entitled to the satisfaction of single wmbat which he demanded . They set their names to a
' France. The President Having Returned ...
r- ^ SA "" ^ mass of evidence for , the juinof a man's character was never accumulated . ; , Avast number of persons , musical composers , opera . ringers , managers , and generally pebpMin terestedjri the success oi those performances , which the ogro-dolce pen of Fiorentino was employed in lauding or laurating in the columns of the' Coraaire * and * Constitutionnel , ' were summoned before this formidable tribunal , and there in . terrogated exactly at they would have been in a public court of justice . The offence , of which the testimony furnished by-these numerous witnesses went to convict Fiorentino , was that of levying black mail , or other blood money , as a safeguard against the onslaught of Jus venal pen .
. The statements contained in this document , though unpublished r became matter of public notoriety , and found their way here and there in foreign and domestic journals , obtaining for M . Florentine a deputation of a by no means-enviable ' kind . In tbe meantime he was invited to appear in person . before the committee of the * Gens , de Lettres' in order to confront his accusers , but did not think proper to comply with this summons . Nevertheless , -the depositions of parties friendly to them were taken , but seem to have had little weight with the jury of honour . Among the names attached to the verdict
of this jury was that of M . Amandee Achard , a contributor to the Assemblee Nationale , ' with whom Fiorentino had once been on intimate ; terms . ; To see bis former , associate foremost in tbe band of bis assailants roused the blood of the Neapolitan , and he made the / euf / fe / w » of the ' Corssire' tbe vehicle of his fury against this adversary . A < duel followed with the aword , a weapon in the use of which either party were skilled , and at the first set-to M . Archard was wounded in the breast . At the trial before the Court of Assises of the Scene all parlies were acquitted .
The President set out on Tuesday morning , by the Rouen Railway , on his journey . to Cherbourg , accompanied bv the ministers Baroehe ; Ronber , Lah ' nte , and Desfossea . The affairs of the government are entrusted during his absence to the three ministers who accompanied him on his journey to Lyons . ¦ ' ' - \ '' ¦ ' '; j The Count de Cnarabord , on the evening of the 30 th ult ., took leave , in a set speech , of the Frenchmen who still remained atWisbaden . The address is chiefly remarkable for his using the word'King ' in speaking of himself ..
The Procureur of the Republic of Strasburg has issued warrants for the arrest of two men , onr the charge of having formed a plot for the assassination of the President of the Republic . One of the men is named Nestor Poulain , and represents himself as the editor of a democratic , journal in the south ef France ; the name of the other is not known . j .
GE 1 MANY . A series of protocols , letters , and negotiations have-, for some time past , occupied' the attention of the German states , in which the main object of tbe principal contending parties seems to be the acquisition of political predominance , " Prussia manosuvres for that purpese , and Austria counter-man ( Buvrfs . The people are not in the slightest degree- interested in these mere court intrigues . ..
SAXO » ¥ . According to the government semi-sfficial organ , tbe ' Dresden Journal , 'it is resolved to introduce considerable reductions forthwith in tbe army . The reduction to-nearly one-half ; Us-numerical , strength will enable the Minister of War to reduce- hit budget in a somewhat comparative ratio—under reserves of extraordinary supphesi in the case of need ; , The' Dresden Journal ' also-announces- that a petition has been addressed to the government by a
considerable number of manufacturers of Chemnitz , praying it to endeavour , through i |; 8 plenipotentiary at CasaeJ ,. to obtain a renewal * of the , Belgian treaty , and if possible to obtain conditions favourable to sundry articles , namely , the stocking trade , which article ; say the petitioners , Belgium does-not manufacture largely—a demand which it is- to he apprehended will lead to strong resistance en the part of the manufacturer * of Tourney arid the vicinity of Courtray .
The whole of the persons prosecuted for rebellious offences during the month of May , within the jurisdiction of , the tribunal of Tharand , have . been pardoned . The greater part are persona who held municipal funetiofls . <
BAVARIA . The monster trial about to take place atZweibrucken . in the Palatinate , includes , a list of 404 persons accused of bating taken share- more or less in the revolution of last year . They are divided into various categories , viz . ; twenty-eight for ' illegally imprisoning ; twenty-one for destroying bridges and public roads ; fifteen for seeking to . debauch soldiers from their duty ; . ninety-eight for robbing tbe public treasury ; seven teen , for carrying offmilitary effects :: eighty for exacting money and other property ; sixty-six for forcibly carrying off
horses—of wheh 202 ( horses ) are still forthcoming i 117 for misdemeanours of all kinds and sortseffected by violence or menaces . Among the accused are several names , celebrated at the period as leaders of the democratic and rebel parties—such as the ex-Professor Kiukel , already condemned to hard labour for life and in prison in Prussia ; Dr . d'Ester of Cologne ; StruvefGustavns ;) Fennerl von Fenneberg , the well known biscuit-baker of Vienna Misroslawski and Sznayde ; Blanker , of Worms ; Schloffel , and seven other ex-members of the Frankfort Assembly , & c .
SAXE-COBURG GOTHA . The government have , for the time being stifled the chamber by resorting to uprorogation on the 25 th . The representatives did their duty to their constituents too honestly to be palatable to worthy stomachs . Their last work was to make a hew law of taxation . They however rescinded their resolution to subject the Sovereign ' s income and property , and that of his . family , including , of course his Royal Highness ; Prince Albert ; to taxation . The question at issue ; between the Ducal house and the Chambers , relative to the allodial revenue of 50 , 000 florins resulting from' their ' mother ' s estates , is not determined , having been referred to the ordinary tribunals .
' HESSE CASSEL , There is every reason to believe that the government will find the hew Chamber—in which the Democratic party has a decided and compact ; majority—as difficult to manage as its predecessor , and that as "little hopes can be entertained of the majority according the supplies necessary for carrying on the government , the present . ministry . must again dissolve the Assembly . It has been shown ,
by the opening speech made by thejMinister , that nothing would have enabled the government to carry out the public service , the taxes having been refused , but the assistance of the Elector , who has advanced the necessary funds from his private fortune . " .. ' This , ; however , cannot be ., relied on much longer , and therefore , if the Chamber persists in its refusal , thereiseems tp 7 :, be . . nprespurce , left . for the government but a co ^ dVfai or absolute submission to the Democratic majority . . , .:. ¦ .. ¦ ¦ . ! ¦¦' . ] " .,. ¦
A tight holdover ) the purse strings is the best trammel upon reactionary and corrupt governments .
. ;; . ; Denmark andthe michies . ;;; ; Both armies still maintain the position they have occupied during the last three weeks , and if appearances are to be trusted thereis' ^ no probability ' of an attack being made by either for some t ' nrie'to come . The Danish General does' not seem inclined to hazard thMexritoiV ig ^ ther general engagement . ¦ Not only aire substantial huts being erected : in and around . Schleswigas winter quarters for the Danish soldiers , ; large quantities of provisioria and forage of ' all kinds ; heaped up as provisions for' thewinter , " arid the gronnd'ori -which the huts and " ' stbrehpuses : are situated ' « 'strongly
, ' fortified , ii' po & Bibte ;^^ brbfeen 7 up Md ) ren ^ redj . iro pjossiblef or jibe , Danish . troops . to jw ' orklupmbleatedi The position now : occupied by General Krogh , is extremely favourable for > such a purpose .. . A chain of moderately high hills commences immediately behind Schleawig , and . terminates at Eckernforde . i . It is oh these hills . that ; the ' celebrated old wall the 'DahnewerkV ' was built' by'iihe Germans ages ago , to withstand the invasions nf the ancient Danes . Some part ' s of this ^ enormous work still exist in the
neighbourhood of Schleswig , and have once before in the present war been : the scene of a bloody fight . Gen ; Krogh has rebuilt those portions of the old wall which time and cultivation had destroyed , ' and has crowned the chief heights between Schleswig and Ecbe rnfprde with entrenchments behind which his infantry ; ind artillery ' can npperate to great advantage . A much largCT army tnan tHat of the duchies would be . nKesMiy to storm any portion of . this posilion , seeing that theiloss of life . consequent upon such an attemptiwouldbemoatenormous . Itis hot likely that General WUliien will ui ^ e the attempt .
' France. The President Having Returned ...
To the Westward the position occupied by General Krogh is covered by the river Treene , and another small brook ( the Reiteran ) which runs into the former , and which has been dammed up in order to flood the marshes and morasts in the intermediate district , which the prolonged heat of the summer had dried and rendered passable in many places .
INDIA . The dates by this arrival are Bombay the 24 th , Calcutta the 13 tb , Madras tbe 16 ih of July . The event of the past month , has been the melancholy suicide ; of Colonel King , of , the 14 th Light Dragoons , at . Wuzeerbad , . near Lahore , on the 6 th ult . The deceased commanded the 14 th at Chillianwalla , where from some cause or * other up to this day a mystery to the world , the corps retreated from before the enemy and got into momentary confusion , and overset a couple of our own guns , '; thereby causing them ito . be ; { captured by ; the ; SikbaiT Matters were smoothed over by .. Lord Gougb , whose own conduct as regarded generalship , was on the same
eventful day any thing , but brilliant , and . in na short time probably all , ' would have been , forgotten had not Sir C . Napier , in a speech to the corps some time back , alluded to the matter in a cuUiog « ay , by saying that such a cbrps ' as the 14 th would go anywhere , or do anything , if properly cbmni . anded . This taiint acted * powerfully oh the over-senaitive mind of Colonel King , who , however ,, is'said at first not to have taken it to himself , tilf subsequent harshness made it butto 6 apparent . ' ' -Frorh ' the time this conviction look possession- of the unfortunate gentleman ' s mind he became the prey of a -settled melancholy , which he never seema to'have been able to throw off . 'In June some ; of bis men -were
taunted at the theatre ; by i the , at tiller y men i with being cowards , which was of course resented , and a row ensued . Shortly be / ore this .. a man , of tbe corps , named M'Lean , was . taken before ; Colonel King for some crime , and on being sentenced to punishment , called him a coward .. . For this he « a tried by a court-martial , and sentenced , to corporal punishment , which he underwent on . the 20 th of March ; and the man on being taken down from the halbertS , walked ' towards Colonel ' King and again called him a coward ; using at the same time , grossly abusive language . M'Lean had ¦ managed'before coining out for punishment to -get enough -liquor to make him shortly after tipsy , hoping thereby to deaden hi > feelings * to the eat- ' o-nine-tails , and tit was while under the influence of the liquor iand the
pain caused , by the 'dogging , that , he . agains committed himself as the above navrated . ; He was now ordered io be tried by a general euurt-martial , which he ; accordingly , was on the 3 rd of June ; and , was sentenced tcseven years' traneprtation . , : , Qin this being reported to Sir C . Napier hejrefused to sanction the sentence , and " , commented particularly on the fact that ' the man was allowed to-get "drink ; -he concluded by asking < the court , therefore , to reconsider and ; to mitigate its sentence , foi however disgraceful ¦ ' and- insubordinate the conduct of ' the culprit- may have been , it was certainly as much produced by negleet of ; duty in others , as by- the drunkard himself .- The sentence appears / to . me to be severe beyond all proportion to the crime , in the peculiar circumatanarB al » 0 Ye , 8 Wedf ;«» u . :.. :
The court adhered to its decision r aod as a close the commander-in-chief pardoned the prisoner and ordered him to return , to his troop . Colonel King seems to have been- driven to the desperate , course of self-murder by these incidents , arid 1 blown but his brains by apistol loaded . with . powder onl y *; . ' A 'decided disagreement fieemVio exist between the governor-geuerabarid the coriimarideT-in-chief . ' ¦ ' The Affreedees have again closed tbe pass to Sbhat , and seem inclined to be as t ' r ' ooblesome as ever . 'A- man of ; tbe Horse Artillery has been shot by one of them close to his quarter guard . A . plot has . been discovered for effecting the release of the ten Sikh state prisoners ^ confined at Allahabad . -,.. ' . :: ; : -v
A tragical event has occurred on board the Honourable Company ' s : cargo boat ; Kaltogunga , in tow of the steamer BerhampOoter , at Patue . It appaarg , that she ! left Allahabad with , thirty-nint Sifeb convicts with a * very weak guard . Tbe arrst Of ) the guard were piled between them , and the convicts , when at Patna , the latter having seized the-firearms , vrhich were loaded ; - , rose upon ' the guard , and a desperate conflict ensued ) Two of the guard arid twee of the convicts were killed , and the convicts succeeded in running ; the boat ashore and escaping . ; It appeared tbaktbe affair took place in-tbe day time , which renders it still more extraordinary .. . . . ., . -. i >
The latest news frem Pashawur gives aoeounts of the fall of the right wing of the barracks in which the" 61 st Feot ' were-located—the building being known as General A ^ Uabile ' s palace--ori ; tsbe evening of ihe 5 th July , just as tbe men were about to go . to rest . ' - " . '' . '''' ' ''' , '" ' ' . ' " . . " ' "''' . " '•
' CEYLON . ^ 7 The' Bengal Harkaru'of July Srd ^ on the authority of its correspondent , publishes , a number of statements which appear fully to substantiate tbe charges made against Captain Watson ; ia connexion with the so-called sebellionih this island . Among the witnesses examinedby the commission was Col . Drought , who had to produce the two . following letters , which'throw even the famous , proclamations into the shade . " ieth , Augnst , 18 i 8 . " Mj dear Watson , —I wish you to explain toyourofBcers atMatelle , that lam surprisecUh ' ey did ; ' not sentence ' the four prisoners to . be . executed . A plunderer in these , times
is a miscreant in the double capacity of a rebel and a felon ; who would , if he could , ' first take youis life , and thehyour property . Remind them that aU . engaged- as those . were are rebels , and that all rebels should ) suffer death . Sir ; a : Oliphant has given it as his opinion that we are dealing too delicately with-the rascals ; and that a great deal too much time is taken in detailing evidence . . The court have ; undcr . the present law , merely t « satisfy themselves as to the parties being guUty " or ' otherwise , find , arid decide aa . cordingly . —Yours , . ; \ .: > -.: T . A . Dboughx . "; " I said almost all this in a note ! wrote before receiving the courts martial . ; . "" . ' " ' T . A . D . " - . ' . "My dear Watson , — -You are getting on swimmiagly .
Ypw deputy judge advocate will of course receive the usual allowance fur every day the court fits . Impress on the court . that there is no necessity for ¦ taking down .-the evidence . 'in detail , so that they , are satisfied with } the guilt or innocence of the individual ; that , iv sufficient fur them to find and sentence . This is the law and mode ; have you no case for example on the spot ? You speakiof Bintenne . I start two officers , and thirty men . i » -tb » t direction to-morrow , to effect a junction there by ' a , similar morement from' Baddala , the trnops from here returning through the Knuckles and Lower Doomhera . ,.. . '¦ ' Yours , T . Ai DaoCGUT . 'f V
; It . might . be supposed from . the tone of . Colonel Drought ' s letter that' he and his dear Watson were dealing with ' a gang ' or-Thiigs , or a horde of despe . rate Moplnbs , instead of a mob of silly sheepish people , ' whose rebellion was put down without , we believe , the : lbss of a ' . ' ' vain on the aide of those employed tO'Bupprmit . ' ' « . : •• - ' L ; ' :, r ' , l . ! : ' t : ' . f V " . ' - ; ;; AusfRALiA , "; ; :. v ^ ; ' ' : " AOITAWON FOB AX ' AOi > TBALIAN ' FEDBEAL
' . REPUBLIC . ' Melbourne papers to the 16 th ' of Mayhave been received . They bring . intelligence of'tile c ' om mencement of an open'and determined " agitation of tbe question of the severance of the ; Australian colonies from the mother country . Tbe agitation has been originated by . the Rev . Dr . Lang , a Presbyterian minister and old ; colonist , who published lately { in the English papers a strongly-writteni letter to tbe Colonial'Secretary regarding the misusage of their colonies by the' Coloriial-office . Dr . Lang delivered i long lecturei ; pn ; tbV ;' subject at Melbourne , ' breath-. ing respect foir . ^ be ; Q ; ueen , '' aii ' d'Jgeneral good-will to . England , yet ' etrpnglyadro ^
dependence ,., He recaptulated , the . leading instances of alleged . mis . us 8 ge . under ¦) which , the . coloniesihave suffered , and likewise puts forward other reasons' of a cogent description for the . adoption of that . step , to which be believes Great , Britain wilikssent , f on a' proper' [ repfeseiit & iioti ^ of . ' ' the' ; case . '" ^ WHile in Englan ^ l hf b ^ cqns ' ulted . r ^^ political world ,, and received ^^ to that effect . ; His idea of forming a "' great political league , in order to bring about the desired release , was cordially approved bjr thex : cbl 6 nists , i and ithey informed him that ^ Englari'd wtts now ifiilly prepared for such a movement on the ;^ part of' her colonies generally ; those o ' f / the ' rri especially that ' were able
arid filling ; to govern ' theinselveB , and to (• ffer properi termsforj the " future ^ for Brifish' ^ roops ' to p | it ; idpj ? n insurgent ; . colonieSi and to hold them against , their , will , was past' for ever . Dr . Lang ; goes oa , to recommend the immediate formation of ari ' Australian League , ' to consist of all colonists who pay an entrance fee of 5 s . with a yearly subscription of not Jess than 19 s . Ttie executive powers of ¦ ibis bodjytie proposes , shall be intrusted to a ; presiderit , vice-president , one or more secretaries , and acouucil of fifteen , who will pursue fbe objects set forth ; in the four following resolutions : — ¦¦¦ ¦ :- ¦ :,. ¦ : ; ... ' -. ! , ' ... ..., '¦
'I . To unite in one grand political league for mu tml protection and defence , and for general advancement , the five Australian colonies of New South Wales , Van piemen ' s Land / South Australia Port Philip , arid Cookslarid , ' or the MoretohBay couutrvihat thejnhahitantsI pi these colons may ' hence ' forth feel and ^ nowthat . theyare nolonger isolated tad detached wmottnUieg-to be goYerned and e »»
' France. The President Having Returned ...
pressed separately and independently by ukases from Downing-street , with none to interfere for them from without—but one people , having common interests and common objects , the nucleus and elements of one great Australian nation . 2 . To prevent tbe degradation of any one of these colonies into a mere receptacle for the convicted felons of Great Britain and Ireland ; and to remedy , as far as may be practicable , the enormous evils that have already resulted from the prevalence and abuse of the transportation system ^ certain of these Colonies . : f :
• 3 . To encourage and promote , hy every legitimate means , ' the influx of an'indnstrious ,: virtuous ; and thoroughly British population into these colonies , that their vast arid inexhaustaWe waonrees may . be . duly and fully ,. developed , ; : aud :, that : # . ey , ffa ^? fitted as . 8 p « 5 diiy as ; possiblei ( for taWng \ he , hig hand influential place which they ' are evidently destined to hold in the " ctvirtsVd world , as the great leading power of the southern heinUpbCf e r ,. . ,,.,- r . -, ' { , ^ / C ' Td acfiieve / by > 6 ral ; meanVexcW 8 ively , and witli ' the full approb ^ tibn arid ; cottcurrfence ' of ^ reat BVit ' ain ; the / entire freedomt and ^ independence of these ' coiohiw ' . ' and their erection into , spjereign- and iridependettt , 18 tatest to be : incorporated"into-one K reat'poiiticaV federation , like theiSwiia cantons of Europe , or the United Statesrof America ,, under the style arid title Of 4 ; The United Provincesj of Australia . " - ' ' •' : / - ' : ' ^ ' ¦ '< ..
Asshrain ' g that England wilLagree to the erection of the proposed republic ^ Dr : Lang ' a ' . ' scheme descends ; to the minor arrangement for its government , which he ^ would cbra ' mit ; to the hands of a ; preisident , with a ; . sajary ; of 43 , 000 ! per . annum ., ' ^ A ' gen > ral Legislature : would assist and . control the , president , with functions it is designed Jo assimilate to , those of the American chief roagiatrate * v >•*!¦ ¦ .. < u > ¦¦ , . ; -, ;; {' On ' all matters of . internal legislation , edueatiofl , ' religion , police , public wbrks ; arid so forth , Dr . Lang recommend j that the respective states of the federation ' shpuld be left perfectly free . Dr . Lang entered ; into the details of tbe . scheme at great length , arid every . word was applauded to the echo ., ~ ,. .,,, _ Dr . Lang appear * to have been subaeqMently , cast
into prison arbitrarily for some ; matter of debt , to the great displeasure of the Melbourne public , j who were raising a subscription to ' procure bis release . The particular of ; the ; affair are not giveh in ' ariy ; of the papers that have reached'lridrai ' - ¦ " ' . ' ' The raining , mteresi at Adelaide"isi'in . a flourishing state , and the total proceeds bfcdpper mines during the last-five years , are estimated at 5592 , 252 . ' Gold washing has ennrmehced with sufficient . prospect of success to stop emiaration to California . ! ' Experimerits have been made on the sanda from the bed
of tbe UpkapanrigFa , ' a ' atream- south of 'Adelaide , with a newly invented tnachineV capable of washing from twenty ^ five to > thirty t 6 ns ; per . day ^ Two 6 uiices of gold were pbtairi ' e ' d ' from ^ ' ^ promising indications of coal have been met with On , the Bomb , side of Kangafoo Island . IA nwapaperib th « German language , called the * Sued-Australiaclie Z « itu » g , ' has been established - ; in Adelaide ^ arid . ap- ' pears to be conducted with great ability , i' It circu- ' tates- chiefly ' among the German immigraats , whose nunabers are increasing-fast . ; ' ' ';' - ! v '' ' [ 1 - < ;
WEST INDIES . Advices from Jamaica'esterid '' t 0 the 7 th ulfc , ' ' the August holidays ) winch ? were formerly eelebrated with great sbowand parade by the peasantry , paefledioff very quietly , , acarcely [ an event occurring to . dispel / the . ordinary monotony of . Jamaicai'Sfe . The island remained' pretty healthy ,, excepfe in the town of . Falmouth and the parish of Metcalfe ,, where a goodideal of sickness prevailed among chHdteB . In Falmpmh it was feared tlierc would be m ' uori safferincwiien the wet seasomebmmericed ; ' ; '
; . Very > corisiderabie , interestipas beenVefcifc ' din Kingston ^^ by , the trial of ' a ^ raembfirofjihe'tosemhly at . the Surrey Assizes , charged with , the . larceny of thirteen barrels of cement ... . The person charged was Mr . James Taylor , one of the members-for Fort Royal parish , and - a very popular person in his private capacity . ¦ The . Jury returned ., a , verdict of Not Guilty ' , which was moat rapturously receive'l by thei fergesi audience perhaps ^ that ever attended the Kingston Courthouse , ' . 'Crime continued on the increases-more in respect to the-character of the ounces than their numbers . The most disgusting and unnatural crimes that ever disgraced a calendar were abjudicated . at ' -the- last criminal assize , which had- closed - its sitting . at Kingaton-. : . ' UNITED- STATES .
., The Cambria brings intelligence which dates- Irons New 'S orb to the 20 th ult ., from Boston to the- 21 « t , and from ; Halifax to the 23 ro \ . ;; ' ' ' . [!'' , ' ; . . Tbe most i m portant item of political news-ia the a ' nuouricement'that the '' ; ' di 8 e rences' between-, the United / State'ii arid PorfKgarhave bees settled ^ -PortugaVconsentirig to pay in all cases ' - except inithat of the . © enHraPArmstrong , ; aod ' that is to be left- to the arbitration of a J disinterested' power , ' i probably Sweden ^ ¦¦ ' ... < <¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ . ¦ .:, .-.. ' The latest dates from ' Washington are to fhe-I ^ ib ult .. The Senate , having passed the Utah Bill , the Texas Boundary Bill , the bill for establishing a territorial government in . New Mexico , and the bill for
admitting California into the union , had taken up tbe-Fugitive Slave Bilh Several amendments bad been offered , but the measure was making slow , progress . In the House of Representatives ,, motions to suspend tbe standing orders and to take up the territorial bills sent , from the . Senate on the 20 th or 28 * d , were rfjected .. The Appropriatio ' n Bill was advancing very tardily . . ' . V . ' , !! . ' . ' . .. " . Texas - seems resolved to continue ohstiriateonthe bpundary . arid other . territorialrquestions . '; ' , The , crop was yeryalvttridant . - Thie ' New York Herald' says W The surplus , over and above what we will require for home consumption , and what will be probably exported , rtill . be unusually large
this yeaf , and must bring the price-down to ave ' ry low fiiiure—as low , perhaps , 'as we have ever , seen it in the market . The extraordinary yield of wheat and flour , while it will : reduce : the prices of those articles so low 83 to phce them , within the command of the poorest , will also ,-have , the . same effect on other commodities , such as pork , beef , & . C ., and the result-will-be , that there will be hot ,. brily plenty of the necessaries of life ,, but they can . beprocured at moderate prices . ' The people inay . defy all' attempts ' to , keep up prices ,. fp » the . crop is so great ' that ' it will ' be impossible' to monopolise it , and it
will . be well for some operators , who hold'large quantities , if they can succeed in holding their poaitiori / aad- avoiding 'bankruptcy . ; Another such a prolific country "¦ ¦ as the United States does . not , exist . With every variety of soil and climate , and with an extent . of territory : greater than ; the . whole ; of , Europe , it 8 eemsjhard ! y ; impossible for a general failure'tb occur . A severe frost may take place in one lection , a continuance of i rain , in another ,, which mi g ht to tally destroy 'Be ' crops ' , but ' tbie loss would weigh ' a ? nothing in the general . yield throughout the country . We ought to be grateful for such peculiar advantages as we enjoy . '' ' *'• ' "' ' " 1 : i 1 ' ' , ; ' ' , ' - ' . ' . ' ; . '''''
The fashionable and theatre-gomg' circles of the large citietf ' jh ' ave had something ; in--the way of alleged criwiL coin , to talk atiout ; in consequence . of Forrestptb ' eactor , ; having made his 'declaration' or ' complaint ' - against : his wife , as the beginning of a suit for divorce . ciIj , rv > v-r-i- ; ; - " ¦ •'• In this document ' . ' . he . Alleges adttlteww practices on the par . t of his ¦ [ wife . with George ; Jamison , at Cincinatti . 'N . P . . Willis ' , ' , Daniel Marsden Raymond , R . Willis ^ , palcraft , J . ^ R . Rich , TH ., Wykoff , W . H . Howard , ' and " diversi other , pjarsbris whose names are atpresent ' unknpwri , j ' . ail ' of New York « ' . ' , : . \ ,. It w . ill ' be seen that several literary' gentlemen are riahied ' ; in this / f '' deciarVGon * ~ i ^ b ' re ~ '' tfaan one ; pf whom , is ' linpwn in England ; one ,- especjally ^ byhis agreealJIe vrii ' umea . ' It is . oiily justica-to say . that the public ; ' or ' at least a- majority ,-believe that '; Mr :
Forrest is mistaken in this matter—that . his ear has been ahused with ^ inuendos-and-goesipina ; reports flgairist Mrs . ^ Forrest , until he has convinced himself that > he . must'have ' di 8 h 6 naured him . > ; : v ;; I ;^ lates ^ arriyaV ^ frera ; Cuba states that there b J ^ een an emeuie at P , uert 0 | Princlpe , bat gives no fur ther ^ particuiars . ' ^ cep ^ uponf the . ; insurrectionists , antf , k'illed or wounded about'thirty . ; , Perhaps-thft , whole affair ia'doubtful ^ a rumour g ot * up i to '; stimulate a , new invasion ^ It ; is singular that is connexion with this matter several Washington correspondents state that the u / " ? , d States Government has positive intelligence ° | -. . e'ftrmatibn pf ainew expedition against Cuba . One wpnld have thought that the warm reception given f ; to Lopez . and -his , 'band Would have cooled 'heir adventurous ardour . ; . '; ' ; ;
'' * The Indians appear to be committing terrible' devastations on the Texan frontier , many houses havihg ' ibeen . burnt and' planters murdered .. The savages are said to muster 6 , 000 strong . We have an ^ accoiiht'from tbe ' south to ihe effect that ; the Texans have , raised'BibOO'ibeh for-the purpose of , takiqg ; riosjessi 6 ^ ofi ^ in defiance of the laws and ' governmeni ' . . , " . oJ'Kh ' e United ; , Statesi If this be really , so , the men had- much - better be scnVBgainst Vce Inuisnn 'who mo viol & ting Texw ' \ . i- ; . J- \< - ; ii « 1 . - . -- -J ; . ¦;¦ > ' . ;;¦ ! ..- ; :. ' < >¦; :
' France. The President Having Returned ...
homes and firesides . ' But then people are » P '» believe that these 8 , 06 p ., men ; are ; a \ l , moonanine . 3 , 203 immigrants have ^ arrived' at ; « eff io « w - j" '•' . " ¦¦ „ ; " j ' -T-. V ; " ,-v . . ¦ % r ^ arnum offers a premvum ^ 200 dollars for the best national song , to beaung by Jenny Lmd as an introduction on her arrival , in America . The mortality is still greatSfrdin the cholera in the western cities ; yet there is reason to hope , from the latest accounts , that the pestilence is subsiding . The ^ sun-strokei haa been very fatal-13 deaths from ^ this / caus ^ in a single week at New Orleans , and as many perhaps in New York and Philadelphia .- EuropeanB are very hable to this affection in July and August ^ before they become accl imated . It is , therefore , . unwise , ; to leave their native shores at auchHime ' s as must ensure their arrivaltn ' tfi ' 'States ' inthe'hots / eiiob * . '"'' ' **?* : "'" ' : al in iub oi iu "
e , _; arriv » u > uB u «» . »»« -- ,.: ' ,. , ' '' the Pacific : which arrived on Wednesday , brought later news . , ' - .. , ; , . / From Washington : we hear , that . the . Fugilive Slave Bill has passed the ; Senate ; n ' -.. ' " * -- \ It is rumoured that a disagreement in the cabinet will lead toils reiorginasation . .-,- •< , , ;^ . •> A convention had . beeft , held in ] New York State . fngalive 8 ia ( vesianjd ,. theirj white friends , . . ;; t ; Of ., these ; two-thirds were .. . b | ack 8 ,,, and white Vomen ., ; . Resolutions ... ' . of ' - . " the . ' ... most extraordinary charVcteflwerVpassed , ' . one of which . advocated immediate civil , war / In connexion with this , a projected insurrection of slaves iri . AlabaiBa' has been discovered . The conspiracy extended to at least
400 persons , and , as usual , we have rumours of an intended general massacre of the whiles . It was quelled without much resistance . - - ¦ '• 'ifh ' e- ' * New Yorker ipemoorat' orgfan of the German tailors , ' has the following : — - ' '^ Tbe blbbdyscene ih the 16 th Ward , between the respectable lailors and the murder . Ioving police , together with their helpers , the ^ loafers and niggers , has well filled every heart with pain ; and sadness ; ,, i l Ob , yepcofihungering . tailorBi ; ' . .. ; -, , ,, , ' . . Your justdemands , your . holy , rights i as free men
of a free state , are trampled . into the mud . Through paid bands of bailiiffs , not ptily , your rights are attacked , ,- but . also- your person ' s . ; They ' knock you down , poor unhappy menju ' st like mad dogs /; they treat you just like murderers ; they , peri you up , whiieypur murderersirun about at liberty ! . ¦ * Haynau ; - tbbu greatest man-butcher ! Ferdinand of ; Naples , Frederick of' Berlin , behold here , and re / oice ! •' Ye do-not stand alone X Rejoice , ye com . rades in the persons iof the police ' and loafers beie , who ' make all possible > efforts tosexceed you in this bloody trade ! ¦; i ) v !; - '• . - . .,. .- . - ¦ ¦
> i •' . .-Ye monarchs in Europe , igreet them iwith your rejoicing , ^ sound y our hymns , and let , in all ; the churcfiesj-P . r . ayers , he offered up' for the bailiffs here , that their can-o ' -nine-tailing . here ; in free America may , tbriyejbloom , arid , priesperlI ' ; ' r " . ' . [ , *; tpok , ; this , way ' . Frede " rrc ) t , of Berlin ; here , top , ' are . ' the 'lordl y ¦ ' , 'fouricUi '; £ > , weep tears of joy , and sendypur : orders with flags , 'toops . and inexpressibly thanks' will 'be given . theer bloody dbgi by the glorious bloody dogs herei' - - ' - . 'Rejoiee , thou sable Emperor of P ' etersburgh , and be convinced- 'that 'every sacrifice , will here be raftde , here in this free republic (?) to introduce his cat-o ' -riiriei . t 8 » rsy 8 temi- '•'' ¦¦ ' ' '
' "' ; ' Rejoicei . and . praise ' ye the Lord , ' all ye am . bassadors , consuls , and aristocrats ; for , heboid , the people are cast . down , and ye continue unmolested to betraehten ( may mean to cheat as well as to reflect ;); . ¦; , - - c : ¦ - ¦ . - ' Turn your eyes and-sing and pray , ve priests and Jesuits ,, and praise and magnify the Lord , for he has chastised the wicked ! 1 Behold ! ' through the interferenee of your believing brethren ,. ' the ' . priests and loafersj were they , ' the poor ones , transported into eternity , & c . '
Cahforniaft . news state that many murders had been committed , especially , at the southern mines , where in several instances two and' three men at a time had ; beefi-foufid in their tents with their throats cut . 'At and near , Sonara / , says one account , ' not a miner can . lie down " at riight . with an aaauramce that the morrowVauri will not finA him a victim of the assassin ' s knife . ' Twenty men ; had been murdered there inHwo- ' weeks . " The Caiiforriia ' n papers haye . neatly two columns of accounts of the murders of miners and travellers . The Indians . tbb r are troublesbme- at nearly all the mines especially those that are among the mountain , streams , and many lives had been lost on both sides . ; . ¦ . ' ' .- > ¦'¦ . ¦ .- ¦ ¦ : ¦¦ -. ' ,... ¦ -CANADA .. ¦• ,...
The LvGt & h & TvnE—Politicab . MorEMES'Sfii—Montreal , Atjchjst 5 . — -The protracted struggle between tbe press and the Legislature in this cclbny has withheld the language : of « the . debates from , the public ,: and the facts , denuded of rhetorical embellishment , are- alone chronicled . , The origin of the dispute was below j contempt— -want of courtesy on the part of a member , a few hasty words , and a large amount of vain and fooliah pride on the part of the Assembl y ^ who , invoking a , precedent ' , almost
obsolete iul the Imperial Parliament , forced the press to consult the dictates of . honour and self-respect . ' The popular feeling sustains the journals in their combined resolution :: to refrain frora ' reponing members' speeches j and the latter , deprived of that alimerit which stimulates the mania'for ; speechmaking , are-wearied of discoursing to vacancy . : - Some of the bills sanctioned by the Governor-General are ' of . the highest importance . Among these we may particularly mention the Banking Bill , and the Currency ; Bill ; . ; .-.-: <
¦ ' ¦''' .- ; ¦ . " " PACIFICItfAIL . : The Avon brings date ' s from San Francisco io the 1 st of July . ' Emigration to California was still on the increase ; hundreds were daily flocking to the diggings by way ' of ; Panama' and across'the plains frointbfl southern states of America . The rivers during the winter-months being so high have prevented many adventurers from working to any advantage . "At the beginning of the dry sea ' son iri May dams were commenced across the different rivers with the intention to turn them completely from their course , but the dams as soon as formed were washed . aWi ; tt is in the beds and on the banks of the rivers . that , most , gold has hitherto
been found . Labourers can earn at . the ; diggings wages averaging from eight dollars . to twelve dollars per diem : so soon as they have accumulated sufficient furids to ¦ purchase the necessary implements for mining , they generally desert" their employers and work ori' . their ; own account . ; The mode of appropriating land ' 4 a ' a " curious one , each person bein g ^ allowed Warrivali ^ to stake off ten pace ' s of ground till thejwliole ' river or ravine 'is taken up . Provisions and' « H the necessaries of life . could , be obtained at treasonable rate .. Plour was selling at the diggings at 30 e . per pound , while in January three . dollars - pier pound was the common price .
Any one ; : going . now to California ( says a correspondent just returned thence ) should at once proceed to the . highest , lands , as it is the opinion of the old miners that theigold is washed down from the mountains to the rivers and valleys . At jjew Creek , emptying into : the Yuba river , gold has been found the highest mountains to an enormous extent ; after diggirig some eighty or ninety feet ;; a vein of gold was struck : yielding from' ; six to-eight ounces per man per day ; and with ' every : prospect of- ^ its coiitinufrrg . One man soW < his cfaim '( ten paces ) for 20 , 000 dollars . 'The mountains near the Sierra Nevado also ' proved ; very rich ,. two . men . having averaged 71 b . a day for severalidaysr ., : .. ' l ^ L . ML : i -iii . i i :- ! :. ; .,. ..: '; . . ' . " . "
I: I-.Y, .-:; .,)¦ . -•„, ≫, - Important. .,Vlv ¦ '• . ¦:¦:, • •' ≫Si_ F. ' .-.'.!:¦ Established Fiftv Years.' ' '
I : i-. y , .-: ; ., )¦ . - •„ , > , - IMPORTANT . ., vlV ¦ '• . ¦ : ¦ :, •' > si _ f . ' .-. ' . ! : ¦ Established Fiftv Years . ' ' '
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T : S r .. Buccess . which has attended ; JL Messrs . PBEPE in their frcafment of all those Diseases arising irom inalMretion'cir ' excess . ;! and the number of cures .. perforined . Dy them . is . a sufficient proofof their skill anal abihty in the treatment of those complairits . " ; . . Messrs . Peede , Surgeons ic ;; may be consulted as uiual trom 9 till 2 , and ' 6-till 10 , Un all stages of the above com ; P ? . " *' , ?! . in . 1 i | ie . cure , of , which they , have been so pre-eminently successful ; 'from their peculiar ' method of treatment , when '' a"ll * other !' means hare failed , which lias secured ! fo * , thera > lhe ' . patronage and gratitude of many thcusands who have benefited by their advice and medicine . ... —* . ««* ,- „ - ! ' , . Their treatment has been matured by an extensive practice iri lon ' flon for upwards of Ft / ty KaM , and will not subject any "; patient to . restraint of diet or hindrauoe from businuss . r . ! ,. ' > - ¦ • ¦ i-W . " vo ' - ¦' . ¦ .- „ ' : ' •' Those who ; may require „ their . aid . are re « pectfully invited te make early application , as Messrs . Peede pledge themselves to that secrecy so essential , in isuch-cases , ( and it will ever be found that lasting benefit can only ; be obtained from qualified Members of that profession , who give-up other l ucrative branches of the profession , arid devote their ; whole time to the ; , study . '" of the above neglected class of diseases , ) and-to assure therri that si speed y restoration to heBltli and strength may be relied on . at lialhhtusMloharges ' . ' ' ¦ - ' '; - ¦ ¦•' " ; ' -i . >>" •!• ¦ y , V " , ¦ -i .- ' i 'Personssuffering frorn-scorbutic eruptions , secondary symptons , obstinate - gleet , stricture , seminal , -. weakness dehflity , andnUdiseBses . of the winary , organs , tjeated with appropriate medicinesaccordirig to the riariire of thV case .: j ^ - ^ ... . , - ; . v - i ' " ^ ¦ ' .. ^ ; ., totters ( Mst ^ aldfdes ^ lJbing mmutely the case ; and encloslnst the uswl fee of £ lin stamps or money order will ensure proper advice and medicine i beluK ^ forwarded WanjW ^ irtthou ^ ( with until recovered , without further chance : . > ! i ^ a Jteg PK ^^ I ^ uor ^^ Qra " - - ' : ' : - '!' : - ' ¦ ¦ : ¦ / , - ; iM ' - ¦ ,-. ;
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EXTRAORDINARY SUCCESS OI THE MEW REMEDY !! Which has ^ never heeri knoum iu » fail . ~ X ' curi ejected or the Money returned . PAINS IN THE BACK , GRAVEL , LUMBAGO , EHEU . MATISM , GOUT , DEBILITY , STRICTURE , GLEET , Ac . ¦ ¦ - ¦ - ¦>' ¦¦ DR ; iBASKER ^ S ^ ' - '' - p -TKR I F ' T C P I : L L S t : have lori ? been well * nown as the only , certain ciiife for pains in the baclt and kidneys ,- gravel , lumbago , rheumatism ; gout , gonorrhea , eleeti syphilis , secondary symptoms ; ' serfllnal debility , 'and all diseases of the bladder and urinary organs generally , whether the resultof imprudericB or derangement , of the functions ,, which , if neglected ; invariably result lb symptoms of » far niore ' s ' eriotts cli & irter , and frequently an ' agonisirig death [' By their suintary action oh mcidity of the stomach , ! they correct bile and . ^ iaau eestion , purity and promote , the . renal secretions , ^^ thereby pi-everitih ^ the lorrnatiori of stone In the bladder , ' and establishing , for life the . healthy functionsipf all . the e organs . Tbey- have " never been known to fail , and may be obtained through mostme ' dlclne vendors . ; Price la . 'l jd » " 2 S . 84 , and 4 s . 6 d . per box : 0 r sent free on receipt ' of the price in postage ; stamps , by , Dr . . Alfred , Barker . —A considerable saving effected , by purchasirig the larger boxes , ¦ ' " -- . - ; ';;•• ' ; TEsxiMoirfAts . ' -: ¦ . ' -. ••! - W . H . ¦ vTilits ; Acton , writes ::-j « I am quite cured now . 1 had suffered from grave ) and pains . in the back and loins , I consider them a ' great blessing . ' •' - Mrs . Ediiey , Hackneyi writes : 'They cured my scrofulous eruption after all oiher medicines had failed , ' , Mr . Howe , Acton . : ' Your pHJs quite cured mygravelarid pains in the back ; I had tried every pill advertised to Ao purpose / :. . , ¦ ¦ nj- - ,., ¦ :, ;¦ . ¦ . ¦¦ .- ¦ . ¦¦ ¦¦¦'¦ . ' Dr . Thompson : I consider yoar pills more adapted to these diseases generally than any formula Ihave met With , ' ' '• - . . . ¦ : ¦ /; ' ,: . ¦ ' ¦• ¦ . : ¦ ' . (! Rev . J . Stone / Wigan : ' Send me four boxes for some of [ my poor parishioners ; they are a great blessing . ' Mr . T . Parry , Ruthrin , writes : ' Send me a 4 g ; 6 d . box for a friend ! the one I had has quite ured me . ' .. Address Dr . 'Alfred Barker , 48 , , LiverpoolTstreet , King ' . scross , London , ivhere he may be consulted daily from' 9 till 1 mornings , and 5 till 9 evenings ; Sundays 9 , tiU l . - . jil TP XTBAORDINARY ,, SUCCESS i : , QjF JLy , TflE 'NEW MODE OP TREATMENT . DR . ALFRED BARKER , 48 , Liverpool-street , ' King ' s-cross ,, London , having lmd a Vast : amount of practice at the'various hospitals in London , and an the'Continent , Is . enabled to treat with the u ' linost certainty pf mre , every variety of disease arising from solitary and ' sedentary habits , indiscriminate excesses , and infections , ; siich as gonor . rho 2 a , gleet , strictures , and syphilis , . «• . venereal di . sease , ' in lall its various forms and stages , whether , prirnary orsecondaiyi which , o » vittg to neglect or- improttr treatment , -invaiiab ^ y . end , in gou ^ rheumatism ,.. skin diseases , gravel , pains te the kidneys , back , and loins > and finally , an agonising death ! The lamentable neglectb this class of diseases by medical men in general istoo . wjll known , and their attempts to cure by means of . such dangerous medicines ; as mercury , copaiba cubebs , jfceyhava produced the most deplorable results . ; All sufferers are earnestly invited to apply » t once . to Dr . Barker , an ; he guarariteestoallaspeedy arid perfect cure , and the eradication of every sympton , Yfhetner primary or secondary , without the use of any of , the above dangerous ; medicines —thus-preventing , the possibility of any after symptoms . This ' truth lias been bome out m thousands of eases , ana as a further guarantee he undetakes to cure the most : in . veterate case in a few days , without hindrance fronvbusi . ness , or any changeiof diet , & c , ' . Country patients , must be minute in the ' detail of their cases as . that will render a personal -visit unnecessary . , i Advice , with'medicines ten shillings . In postage ' stamps or by post-office order Patients comsponded with till cured , Females : B » y witii : the . ' utmost safety . confide themselves to . the care of Dr . ; Barker ,: as . the ; most , honourable secresy and delicacy are observed' in -eivery case , ' -At home daily for ^' consultation- 'from 9 till 1-mornings ,: arid 5 tiU 9 evenings ; Sundays 9 till 1 . - ..,-,., , ; ,, ; ' .-,.,:, : <¦ . , | -Post-office orders to be made . payable at the Genera Post Office , 'to Dr . Alfre d Barker , , Liverpool-street , King ' s-cross , Londen , A cure effected or the money returned in all cases . Just Publishing , and sent free for two postage stamps . Symptoms of disease and O THEIR TREATMENT . A guide for all sufferers , by Dr . ' Barker . ' i '• .. ' , omW 9 < P " *** ****» ' , ; This treatise is indeed a boon to the pabftc , as it has the two-fold advantage of ptainess , and being written by a ; skilful and duly qualified man , who evidemly well under . ; stands his subject . —Timet . This is a pamphlet of superlative-excellence , and one : which we should recommend to the perusal of aU ; in act it is quite essential tathoee who contemplate marriage- — Beeord , .
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DEAFNESS AND 8 IKGING IN THE EARS INSTANTLY CUBED WITHOUT PAIN OR OPERATION . ri ^ BE APPLICATIONS OF DR , PEAR-. JL .. SON'S wonderful discovered remedy in all cases of Deafness enables sufferers-of either sex , even an infant or most , aged persons , to hear a watch tick at arms length and general conversation , although having been afflicted with deafness for thirty or forty yearsj without the use of any instrument , or possibility of causing pain or danger , to a child many of whom boru leaf , with persons of all ages whose cases had been , by the old treatment , pronounced incurable , after the use of this new discovery have had tneir hearing perfectly restored . Dr . Charles Pearson , Consulting Surgeon of the Bar In . firmaryibrthecureof Deafness , begs to offer this valuable remedy to the public from benevolence rather than gain , and will forward it . to any part Fbee on receipt of a letter enclosing five shillings arid sixpence in postage stamps ' or inony order , to Charles Pearson , M . D ., 41 , ' Sand Pitts , Birmingham . Dr . Pearson daily applies his new remedy , and has cured thousands ot most inveterate cases at the Ear Infirmary and in Private practice , in the presence of the most eminent of thefaculty who have been utterly asto nished at . the cures effected .
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AN THE PREVENTION , CURE , AND \ J ' . General character of SYPHILUS , STRIGTDRES , Affections of the PROSTRATE GLAND , VENEREAL and SCORBUTIC ERUPTIONS of the face and body , Mercurial excitement , < tc , followed by a mild , successful and expeditious mode of treatment ,. , - ' .. . Thirty-first edition , Illustrated by Twenty-Six Anatomical Engravings " on Steel . New' and improved Edition , enlarged to 196 pages , iist published , price 2 s . 6 d ; or by post , direct from the ERtabWahment , 3 a . 6 fl . in postage stamps .. "TEE SILENTiFRIEND , " a Medical Vforkon Venereal and Syphilitic Diseases , Secondary Spmptoms , Gonorrhasa . & o . vwitha PRESCRIPTIOif FOR THEIR PREVENTION ; physical exhaustion , and decay of the frame , from the effects of solitary indulgence and the injurious consequences ot the abuse of Mercury- ; with Observations on the obligation * of Makbuce , and directions for obviating certain disquaUficatious . Illustrated by twenty-six coloured engravings . By R . arid V . PERRY and Co ., Consulting Surgeons , ••!> , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London . Published by the . authors , and sold by Strange , 21 , Paternoster-row ; Han . uay , 63 , arid Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Starie ; 23 , Tich . borne-street , Haymarket and Gordon ; 1 W Leadenfiall * street , London ; Powell , 88 ,,. Grafton-street , Dublin ; andRaimes and Co ., Leith Walk , Edinburgh . J Partl . treats of the anatomy and physiology of the re ^ productive - organs , nnd -is illustrated > by six coloured engravings . . " l ' art If , ' treats of the consequences resulting from exces . sive indulgence , producing ' . ' nervons excitement , andgenera . tive incapacity . It is particularly addressed to those who are ; prevented in consequence from entering into the marriage state . Illustrated by three explanatory engravings . ¦ ; . .. ; .::- ; . ; . . Part III , treats of the diseases resulting from infection Illustrated by seventeen cbloured ' engraviHgs . ¦ Part IV . contains a Remedy for the Prevention ot Disease by a simple application , ! by which . the danger ot infection is obviated . Its action is simplb but sure . It acta ' with . the virus chemically ; and destroys its power on : the , system . This , important part of the work should not escape , the reader ' s notice . _ Part V . is devoted to the consideration of marriage and Us duties . The reason of physical disqualincadenB , and the causes of unproductive unions are also considered , and the whole subject critically , and philosophically inquired into ; ' ¦ ¦•• -. ; ... >; ;'¦ : >• . !•• .: . .. - The Authors as regularly educated members oi ths Medical Profession , having had long , diligent , arid Practical observations in the various Hospitals and Institutions for the relief of those afflicied with Syphilis , Secondary Symptoms , Stricture , Venereal and Scorbutic b ' ruptipns bt the face and bony , " have perhaps had an cndsijai . opportunity of witnessing their dreadful and ^ deslructlva conftequeiicas in all their various stages . Hence , knowing the practw 1 necessity of . sound judgment in such serious cases , andh ¦ - ing seen the injiiry that has arisen from the carelessness . m « l neglect of its study , Messrs . R . and- L . * PERRY have devoted their . attention exclusively tothispecuUar class of maladies , and the relief they . have consequently been enabled to render to their fellow creatures , is fully testified and gratefully acknowledged by convalescent Patients , and others daily arriving in tewn from all parts of the country , for the express purpose only of personal . ' consultation ,, while their exertions , have been crowned with the most signal advaa . tages . yet , from what tliey have experienced iu inquiriuj into the nature and causes of these infectious complaints (/ rom tfieir most . simpte condition to that o / die moat dangerous and inueterotej they have always entertained the possibility of their prevention and removal . : Messrs . R : and L , I ' EKRYaiid Co . ; Surgeons , may be consuited as . usual , at 19 , ; herners-street , Oxford-street , London , from eleven to two , and from five to eight ia the evening ; and on Sundays from eleven to one . —Consulstation FeejBI . . '; : >< . {' ¦ . . : ¦ ,.-. _ THE CONCENTRATED DETERSIYE ESSENCS ' ' ' '" . an Awrr-sirHiiiric bbmedv , " ¦ ' , ' Is recommended in Syphilis arid Secondary S ymplsmSt B searches'out and pui'ilies the , diseased humours from tso blood , and cleanses the system from all ^ deterioratta ? causes . Its influence in the restoration to ueiilth of p # ' sons labouring , under the consequences which inevitablj follow contamination is undeniable , and it also constituK ' n certain cure fo lsourvy ; scrofula , and air cutaneous erup * tions . ' Its active priricipUA we transmitted by the meiiiH * of the circulating fluid throughout : the entire frame , an * even penetrate the more minute , vessels , removing and &• pclling in its , course . . corruptions . and impurities frosa the vital stream , so as altogether te eradicate the virus of disease , and , expel . it . with , the insensible perspiratio " through the medium of the poreVof the skin and urine . . ¦; Pricells ., orfQur bottles-in one for 33 s .,, by which lM ' is saved , alse in £ i cases , " by which will he saved £ 1 $ *< To be had at the Lbndon Establishment . -THE COUD 1 A 1 JBALM OF SYRUCUM Is expi ^ essly employed to renovate the impaired power * « life , when . exhausted by the ! irifluence exerted by solitarj tadul (; en < S 6 otiihe ' system ; > Ita action is purely bals » ml (!> its power in re-invigorating the frame in aU cases of a ' ' vous . and sexual debility , obstinate gleets , impotency , barrenness , " and debilitiesarisfngfr ' sin venereal excesses , Mj been dembri ' strated by its . unvarying success in . thousm "' ofcases . To those persons who are prevented entering *• paarried state by the coriseauene ' es of early errors , ' it . » \ valuable ; 'Price' lis . ' : per w ^ tle , ; or four quantifles to ' ** for . 338 . 1 .,,, ; . ... . ™ . ¦ . ,.,. ; i .. „ . ¦ . „ . The £ 5 cases of Svbiacuk or Concentkatkd Detbss '" Essence can only'be had at '; 19 , Bei'ners-street , Ox » r « street . London , whereby there is asaving of £ 1 W ^' Sa the patient is entitled tojreceive advice . witliouta fee '„ ,, taf aivantageis applicable only to those who remit ** i 5 D > PERRY'S PURIFYING SPECIFIC Pl ^ ° ffi 8 Constitute an effectual remedy In all cases of OouorrB Gleet * , Stricture , and Diseases of the Urinary OW Price , 28 ., 9 d ., 4 sVGd , ' aiidlls . per box . - ' . ^ fatients are requested to be as minnte' and COM" ^ pdssibleiri tMfletan of their bases , noUng espeoiauj )(| duration'of the complaint ; the mode : of its com'n * n ^| i i symptoms and progress , age , haWU of living . J ^ f ( n in . society ., Medicines can be . forwarded to WVMJZdt world ; no difflculVr caa , occur ,- . as ' . they . ' will oa sey »* , packed , and carefully protected frbm obwrvat lw . ^ -jji N . S . —Medicine Vendors can be supplied by mw , « , ' WJiolesRloPstviit'Meakiii * Svattt i » bwuton , . ¦¦¦¦
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Sept. 7, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_07091850/page/2/
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