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FRANCE. STA1E OF TBS COUNTRY. The Monite...
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THB REPUBLIC AGAIN BETRAYED BY *H ASSEMB...
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THE CALIFORNIAN GOLD FINDSRS. The accoun...
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NATIONAL ORGANISATION OF TRADES. TO THE ...
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DESPOTISM IN IRELAND. The following is a...
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THE EXTRAORDINARY TROPER--L ties of this medicine are thus described bv nn
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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 .-j- ' *™ m IO , l ag-2 - ¦ ¦—?— ¦ ¦ * fry ' t \ On 1 * " ^ «^^ . «?„ ! % . M « "" J-bohaaT ^ Trr «!« . « , a « u ™ uniity , as it may hchad reoouv ™ Trail of sicknesswith to
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France. Sta1e Of Tbs Country. The Monite...
FRANCE . STA 1 E OF TBS COUNTRY . The Moniteur of Thursday contained an account of souc trifling disturbances -which took place in different portions of France , and about the beginning of last week . At L yons , Macon , Chalons-sur-Saone , Strashurg , Limoges , and Troyes , the spirit of disaffection was p lainly exhibited . According to the government partisans , a vast plot was discovered to be on foot , which was to have broken out not only in Paris , but all over France , on Monday ; and that the societv called the Solidarite Republicaine , " **« at the head of it . Undoubtedly , there was a conspiracy—it was the government that conspired agamsv the people . . .,,., _„„„ , •„ Mobile in
It has been stated that the Garde were open revolt at Courbevoie , at the Abbaye , and at me fort of We Briche . THE REIGN OF TERROR . The number of arrests effected in consequence of the events of the 29 th of . January , » more than 200 , and documents af great importance have been seiz ed at the residences of some of the accused . M . d'Ahon Shee is in secret confinement in the Conciergerie , . The editor of M . Proudhon s journal was convicted on Wednesday of a seditious libel , and sentenced to three years' imprisonment and a fine of 3 , 000 f . A great number of persons have been arrested on the charge of having been the mediators between the Sociil > sts and the Garde Mobile .
PARis . Friday . —The Moniteur of this day publishes an account of some trifling disturbances which took p lace in different portions of Fiance , about the commencement of last week , and endeavours to connect them with the alleged conspiracy of Monday week . The only positive fact mentioned is , that some workmen paraded the streets of Strashurg on Monday , under pretence of damanding work . The old Municipal Guards are walking about the streets for the first lime since the revolution of February 'We * are requested , * says the Tresse , 'to contradict the news of the arrest of the Commandant Bassar , of the 5 th b attalion of the Garde Mobile . He never quitted St . Denis or his battalion .
The Paris papers of Saturday criticise her Majesty ' s speech-England ( says the Debati ) has placed itself at the window , from whence it busies itself , contemplating Europe . The effect is to make England contract herself within herself . Lord John Russell ' s ministry is neither Whig , Tory , nor Radical . It is everything and nothing :. Its vitality is but a negative force , and merely subsists for want of presumptive heirs . Lord Palroerston is the Minister chiefly menaced in Parliament . But he will extricate himself from peril , and repel all attacks—first , because his opponents know of no policy to substitute for his ; secondly , because he knows so well how to confound events and negotiations , that we defy any one to see their way through them save himself .
M . Forestier , colonel of the 6 th legion of the National Guard , who had been arrested , was set at liberty this evening . The Consfitutionnel announces a forward movement of a portion of the army of the Alps towards Paris .
THE IMPRISONED PATRIOT D ALTON" SHEE . The -Presse says that M . d'Alton Shee is not suspected of any actual conspiracy , and that he has been arrested merely on account of his advanced opinions . His papers have been seized and sealed , but nothing bar . been found in them that compromises either himself or any one else . The following is the letter which Count d'Alton Shee has addressed to the French papers : — ' A residence in a prison would be supportable , could those who were confined there be secured from calumny ; but the bars do not exclude falsehood from the prisoner , and cowardice finds means to penetrate them .
• All sorts of inventions are current at this moment regarding me . An evening paper pretends that 1 was arrested with 200 Socialist Republicans , whilst I was in the act of presiding over the club of La SolidarUe Repuhlicaine . ' I was arrested alone , at my own house . I never presided over the Solidarile Republicaine , which is sot a club , I may say in passing , but an association , to which I am utterly a stranger . * A morning paper echoes rumours still more strange . According to this print , there was found at my house a decree of the future Provisional Go-Ternment , levying a tax of three thousand millions en the rich , suspending the liberty of the press aud the individual , and delivering up to some unexplained vengeance a part of the population .
' This calumny was so extravagant , that perhaps its authors calculated that I should disdain to notice it . I must disappoint their calculation . As falsehood can enter into a prison , let truth issue from it . I give the lie , then , to my calumniators , who hope to escape from my notice by the monstrosity of their attacks against me ; and I can assure all honest mcH , that I felt myself free from all reproach on the day when I took no precaution to defend my liberty ; and that the conscience of the public , lik ? that of my own , will be satisfied rs to the unreality of the charges brought against me , on the day when I shall appear before justice . D'Aiton Shee . ' From the Conciergerie , 3 rd January . ' M . Lhermixier has addressed a letter to the Minister of Public Instruction , resigning his professorship in the College of France .
the assembly . At the sitting of the National Assembly on Thursday , a long discussion took place on the proposition brought forward by M . Lagrange , in the same of the Montagnards , for a general amnesty of all persons at present in confinement for political crimes aud misdemeanours committed since the 24 th of February , 1848 . In the end , the Assembly decided , by a majority of 531 to 167 , that the proposition should not he taken into consideration . A great number of petitions were presented , praying for the dissolution of the Assemb-y , MLedru Rollin presented a petition from some hundreds of the inhabitants of Paris , praving for the impeachment of the Ministers .
The Committee of Justice has resolved to report ag ? " nst the proposition of M . Ledru Rollin for the impeachment of the ministry . The committee appointed to examine the bill on the clubs , have decided , by a majority of nine to six , that it would declare in its report that the measu ..: was , in its opinion , unconstitutional . Nevertheless , two members of the majority , M . M . Senard and Cremieox , declared that they would Join the minority in affirming that it was necessary to modify the bill on the clubs , voted in July last . Almost all the conuxUtee came over to that opinion .
* On Saturday night , the committee having recommended that the proposition for an inquiry into the conduct of ministers be rejected , the Assembly in return rejected the report of the committee by a majority of 407 to 387 . The cabinet immediately assembled at the President ' s palace , and resolved not to resign . The Assembly was , in consequence , this day to discuss a declaration to the effect thrt the policy of the cabinet is dangerous to the republic . The sitting of yesterday was unusually tumultuous . Considerable agitation pervaded political circles .
The defeat of the Cabinet yesterday is attributed , in a great measure , to the exertions of M . Marrast , who has for some days past shown increased violence against the Cabinet . He was one of those who voted for M . Ledru-Rollin ' s motion for the impeach , ment of the Ministry . The President of the Republic has shown his displeasure by refusing to partake of the State dinner given yesterday by M . Marrast , as President of the Assembl y—a dinner given speda'ly in honour of the Prince—on the plea of indisposition . A letter received in Paris from M . Gm ' zot announces his intended arrival here in March . It is added that he will retire to the department of the Calvados , and will not re-enter into public affairs .
Paris , Sunday . —M . Thiers has left Pans for Lille , where his father-in-law , M . Dosne , lives , in consequence of the receipt of anonymous letters threatening his life , and attempts having been made to enter his residence . For some time past bis house has been guarded by soldiers . I In the Rue Chaussee d'Antin this afternoon four musket shots were fired from the street into one of the houses . Two National Guards were seized by the police , charged with this act . Paris , Monday . —No one here now believes in the existence of the Socialist conspiracy , which the government made the pretext for the demonstration on Monday T ast . The Moniteur has been bring n $ forward accounts of disturbances in the provinces , to show that the pretended conspiracy extended all over France , but the attempt has been a miserable faflore .
Thb Republic Again Betrayed By *H Assemb...
THB REPUBLIC AGAIN BETRAYED BY * H ASSEMBLY . . .. Paris , Tuesday M ^ JffflS National Assembly divided JJ ^ JSSl were General Oudinofs motions , and both a b taTori !^ r 43 o n 031 r favour of General ° * S A slemWy ' then divided on General Oudinofs Jmn , wS w « to the following effcee :- The Assembl y , adopting the conclusions of the committee and considering that the bulletin offensive to the Assembly has been formally denied and blamed hy the M inister of the Interior , passes to the order of the day . ' . . This motion was carried by a majority of 461 to 359 , leaving a majority in favour of government of 102 . M . Perree ' s amendment consequently fell to
the ground . QUESTION' OF DISSOLUTION . On Tuesday the multitude of propositions for the earlv dissolution of the Assembly , were withdrawn in favour of the proposition of M . Lajuinais , which is in substance this ;—The Assembly shall immediatelv proceed to discuss and pass the electoral law , after " which it shall regulate the electoial lists . The elections will take p lace the first Sunday after the definite closing of these lists , and the new As . sembly will meet and the present Assembly cease to exist in ten days after the day of such election . The practical effect of this will be that the presmt Assembly will be dissolved , if no other incident should intervene about the middle of April . M . Lajuixais having developed his proposition , M . Guichard , and M . Pagnerre , spoke
against it amidst unceasing and violeut interrupti » ns on the part of the Assembly . M . Felix ; Pyat said , in reality , the mandate of the Assembly ought to cease only when its work was completed ; but that work was decidedly not yet terminated , and therefore , ie facto , the Assembly ought not yet to withdraw . ( Murmurs . ) The honourable representative then went on to remark on the contradiction between what was now proposed and the language employed formerly , even by if . O . Barrot . with respect lo the labours of the Na . tional Assembly . On January 8 , that honourable gentleman had " made a pompous eulogium of the Assembly and its wor . ls ; and now the design was
to dismiss it . The design was to injure the Repub l c—( no , no)—and to prevent the consolidation o f Republican inst'tutions —( dissent)—but the hopes of the enemies of the Republic would be disappointed , and , no matter what mig ht be done the Republic would eventually triuttph . An insurrection , dynastic and ministerial , had lately been held up to the notice of the country —( loud interruption)—a sort of moral 18 th Brumaire had been attempted . ( Continued interruption ) M . Felix Pyat , then recapitulated the immeasurable proofs the Assembly had given of its love of order and society . It had voted the laws on the state of siege , on transportation , on the clubs , on tumul'uius
assemblages , on the forty-five centimes , on the press , individual liberty , and many others , with which it had armed the government to enable it to crusb anarchy . That Assembly had shown itself so subservient as to exclude from the Republic the sincerest Republicans , and to admit the posthumous Ministers of Louis Philippe and the defenders of the Sonderbund . To requite it for such valuable services it was not even permitted to die a natural death . This was ungrateful , hut logical . The Assembly , notwithstanding , continued attached to the Republic , and its Republicanism was its mortal sin . Its enemies wished for a legislature which would efface the very name of the Republic , and tnnsform the
President into a king . The President was a mere hat awaiting a crown . Ministers themselves had held from the tribune language for which they ought to have been sent to Vincennes . They were as guilty as Hubert . The proposition of M . Rateau was a dynastic and ministerial insurrection ; it was the invasion of the Assembly by the reactionary party , or as it is called , the honest and moderate party . ( Laughter . ) M . Felix Pyat , in conclusion , declared that If he and his friends were anarchists , they would vote for the proposition , persuaded as they were that the legislative Assembly would be followed by the Convention . ( Loud applause on the Left . )
After a speech from M . Sarrans , M . Lamartijje delivered a very lengthy speech in favour of the proposition of M . Lajuinais . He declared that France trembled at the violent Republic , but loved the moderate . The fears of the Republic dated from the procession of the 200 , 000 men in the streets of Paris in the month of March . —This speech produced great excitement in the Mountain , and the Assembly adjourned at half past six o ' clock .
GERMANY . AUSTRIA . —An army bulletin , dated Schemnitz , the 23 d of January , contains the intelligence of the occupation of that town by the Austrian troops under Lieutenant Field Marshal Baron Csoricb . on the 22 d ult .
THE WAR IN HUNGARY . We have news from Vienna of the 2 nd inst . The Hungarians , under Perczel , having crossed the Theiss , advanced towards Pesth , so that Major-General Oettinger had been obliged to retreat to within eight German miles of Pesth ( about thirtyei ght English miles ) . This had induced Field-Marshal Lieutenant Wrbna , the commander in Pesth , to issue a proclamation , warning the inhabitants of that city to abstain from all hostile demonstrations , threatening instantly to bombard it should they attempt anything against the Imperial troops . 12 , 000 men and fifteen batteries were immediately sent from Pesth , and the field-marshal and his staff proceeded to the expected sceue of action on the 26 th .
ITALY . ROME . —Advices from Civiia Vecchia announce that three ships , under a flag which was believed to be that of Spain , had been signalised . The people immediately ran to their arms . It adds : ' This news is given under all reserve . ' The provisional committee of public safety has issued a proclamation , dated the 22 nd ult ., appointing the trial of the insurgents of the 10 th January for the 24 th inst . 11 Pensiert Italiano , of the 29 th ult ., under date of Gaeta , of the 23 rd , says that Count Marturi , the Sardinian envoy , had declared , in the name of his government that all measures were taken to replace the Pope on his throne . ' Some disturbances took place at Florence on the night of the 27 th ult .
The names of the Roman deputies in the Constituent Assembly were published on the 28 tb , and celebrated by 101 guns and the ringing of bells . Among the deputies named we remark Sturbinetti , Sterbini , Muzzarelli , Galletti , Campello , and Charles Bonaparte . LOMBARDY . —On the 30 th ult . the second instalment of the forced contribution imposed by Radetzky was payable . The greater number of proprietors declared they would not pay it , preferring rather an expropriation of their property .
The Piedmontese Gazette , of the 30 th ult ., publishes a protest of the Minister Gioberti against the violation of the armistice by the Austrians . This document states that an illegal system of spoliation had been established under the name of contributions , or extraordinary war tax ; that property of emigrants had been confiscated ; Jand that Italian vessels had been seized on by the Austrian fleet , notwithstanding the conditions of the armistice . TUSCANY . —About ten o ' clock at night on the 27 th ult . some of the people , accompanied by foreigners and others from the country , paraded the city of Florence , uttering seditious cries , and
exciting the people to revolt . They first attacked the watchmen who patrolled the city , attended by the civic guard . They then went into several guardhouses , and destroyed the doors and furniture . The delegate Carii was the object of menaces of death . The tumult assumed a most serious character in the Faubourg Degli Albizzi , and in the street Dei GaljacolL A fight took place , in which the the cure of St . Felicita was mortally wounded . The rioters were arrested , but all with the exception of one , who was severely wounded , effected their escape . After some time tranquillity was restored . Several arrests were made .
SARDINIA . —King Charles Albert opened , in person , the Session of the Sardinian Parliament , on the 1 st instant .
UNITED STATES . The excitement regarding California , so far from seeming to decreaie , now that the novelty might be said to be worn off , was daily becoming more intense , as each succeeding statement arrived from the diggings , three weeks' later advices from the scene of operation mention that gold lumps , fully two pounds In weight , are daily fouad . The district is said to extend over 300 arcs .
The Californian Gold Findsrs. The Accoun...
THE CALIFORNIAN GOLD FINDSRS . The accounts continue to increase in interest . The New York Herald introduces a highly interesting letter from a correspondent at Monterrz , California , with the following mysterious paragraph : We have also received a private and confidential letter which contains intelligence so astounding concerning the gold regions that we forbear giving it to the public at this time lest they should not credit it , and might only laugh at us for our pains , and accuse us of attempting to hoax and deceive the public . '
The Herald then goes on to declare that there were strong reasons for believing that Governor Mason and all his officers , men , mules , and waggons , were engaged digging on the banks of the Sacramento river . Colonel Stephenson had also disbanded his regiment , and gone on the like errand . This officer is said to have collected upwards of one million of dollars worth of gold dust . Captain Marcy , son of the United States' Secretary ol War , was engaged in the same pursuit . The correspondent ' s letter , which is dated Monterey , November the 16 th , is highly interesting .
1 We can row call ourselves citizens of the United States . We have now only to go by law , as we formerly went by custom , that is , when Congress gives us a government and code . The old foreign residents of California , having done very well ten or twenty years without law , care but very little whether Congress pays early or late attention to the subject . These who have emigrated from the Atlantic States within the last three or four years der . m the subject an important one ; 1 only call it difficult . The carrying out a code of laws , under existing circumstances , is far from being an easy task . The general government may appoint governors , secretaries , and other public functionaries ; and judges , marshals , collectors , & c ., may accept offices with salaries of three thousand or four thousand
dollars per annum ; but how they are to obtain their petty officers , at half these sums , remains to be seen . The pay of a member of Congress will be accepted here by those alone who do not know enough to better themselves . Mechanics can now get ten to sixteen dollars per day ; labourers on the wharfs or elsewhere ) five to ten dollars ; clerks and storekeepers , one thousand to three thousand dollars per annum—some engage to keep store during their pleasure at eight dollars per day , or one pound or one and a-half pound of gold per month ; cooks and stewards , sixty to one hundred dollars per month .
In fact , labour of every description commands exorbitant prices . My previous information to you I merely forwarded to your office to open the way to the future belief of your many readers . I had not much expectation of being believed . The idea of mountains of quicksilver only wanting the ingenuity of man to make them pour forth as a stream—of rivers , whose bottoms and banks are of gold , is rather too much to play upon the credulity of New Yorkers or Yankees . I suppose my story passed as an enlarged edition of the Arabian Nights , improved and adapted to California .
' Whether you or your readers took the tale for fiction or truth I know not . Your last paper that has reached us is of April . This I know , the Sandwich Islands , Oregon , and Lower California are fast parting with their inhabitants , all bound for this coast , and thence to the great' placer' of the Sacramento valley , where the digging and washing of one man that does not produce one hundred troy ounces of gold , twenty-three carats , from the side of a half sprangle to one pound in one month , set the digger to' prospecting , ' that is , lookmg for better grounds . Your ' Paisano' can point out many a man who has , for fifteen to twenty days in succession , bagged up five to ten ounces of gold a dav .
' Perhaps it is fair that your readers should learn , that however plenty the Sacramento valley may afford gold , the obtaining of it ha sits disadvantages . From the 1 st of July to the 1 st of October , more or less , one half of the people will have fever and ague , or intermittent fever . In the winter , it is too cold to work in the water . Some work in the sand by washing from the surface in a wooden bowl , or tin pan ; some gouge it out from the rocks or slate ; the more lazy ones roll about and pick up the large pieces , leaving the small gold for the next emigration . The extent of the gold region on the San Joaquin and Sacramento rivers extends a distance of eig ht hundred miles in length by one hundred in
width . It embraces not only gold , but quantities of quicksilver in almost general abundance . It is estimated that a small population actively engaged iu mining operations in that region could export one hundred million dollars in gold every year , and that an increased population mig ht increase that amount to three hundred million dollars annually . You may believe me when I say that for some time to come California will export , yearly , nearly or quite five hundred thousand ounces of gold , twenty two to twenty four carats fine ; some pieces of that will weigh sixteen pounds , very many one pound . Many men who began last June to dig eold with a capital of fifty dollars can now show five thousand
to fifteen thousand dollars . In this tough , but true , golden tale , you must not imagine that all men are equally successful . There are some who have done better ; even four thousand dollars in a month ; many one thousand dollars during the summer ; and others , who refused to join a company of gold washers who had a cheap made machine , and receive one ounce per day , that returned to the settlements with not a vest pocket-full of gold . Some lt-ft with only sufficient to purchase a horse and saddle , and pay the physician six ounces of gold for one ouncf of quinine , calomel and jalap in proportion . An ounce of g-dd for advice given , six ounces a visit , brings the fever and ague to be rather an expensive
companion . A' well' man has his proportionate heavy expenses , also , to reduce his piles or bags of gold . Dry beef in the settlements at four cents per pound , at the Placer , one to two dollars per pound ; salt beef and pork , fifty to one hundred dollars per barrel ; flour , thirty to seventy-five dollars per barrel ; coffee , sugar , and rice , fifty cents , to one dollar per pound . As washing is fifty cents to one dollar a garment , many prefer throwing away their qsed-up clothes to paying the washerwoman , that is , if they intend returning to the settlements soon , where they can purchase . more . At to shaving , 1 have never seen a man at the Placer who had time to perform lhat operation . They do not work en
Sunday , only brush up the tent , blow out the emery or fine black sand from the week ' s work . Horses that can travel only one day , and from that to a week , are from one hundred to three hundred dollars ; Freight charge by launch owners for three days run , five dollars per barrel . Waggoners charge fifty to one hundred dollars per load , twenty to fifty miles on good road . Corn , barley , peas , and beans , ten dollars a bushel . Common pistols , any price ; powder and lead very dear . I know a physician who , in San Francisco , purchased a common made gold washer at twenty or thirty dollars , made of seventy or eighty feet of boards . At a great expense he boated it up to the first landing on the S < -
cramento , and there met a waggoner bound to one ofihe diggings with an empty waggon , distant about fifty miles . The waggoner would not take up the machine under one hundred dollars . The doctor had to consent , and bided his time . June passed over , rich in gold ; all on that creek did wonders , when the waggoner fell sick , called on his friend the doctor , whose tent was in sight ; the doctor came , but would not administer the first dose under the old sum of one hundred dollars , which was agreed to under a proviso that the following doses should be furnished more moderate , In San Francisco there is more merchandise sold now monthly than before in a year . Vessels after
vessels arrive , land their " cargoes , dispose of them and bag up the dust and lay up the vessel , as the crew are soon among the missing . The cleanest clear out is where the captain follows the crew . There are many vessels in San Francisco that cannot weigh anchor , even with the assistance of three or four neighbouring vessels . Supercargoes must land cargoon arriving , or have no crew to do it for them . Some vessels continue to go to sea with small crews at fifty dollars per month for green hands . Old hands are too wise for them , and prefer digging an ounce or two a-day , and drinking hock and champaign at half an ounce a bottle , and eating bad sea bread at one dollar per pound . 1 have seen a captain of a vessel , who by his old
contract in the port whence he sailed , was getting sixty dollars per month , paying his cook seventy . five dollars , and offering one hundred dollars per month [ or a steward ; Ms former crew , even to his mates , having gone a ' prospecting . ' Uncle Sam ' s ships suffer a little the same way , although they offer from two hundred dollars to five hundred dollars for the apprehension of a deserter . The Ohio , however , laid in the port of Monterey about a month , and lost only twenty or thirty men . Colonel Stevenson ' s regiment is d » banded ; ninety-Bine out of one hundred of whom have also gone . « prospecting , ' including the colonel , who arrived in Monterey last month from his last post , and was met by his men at the edge of the town to escort and chew him into the
The Californian Gold Findsrs. The Accoun...
town . The captains , & c . ' , have bought up country carts and oxen , turned drivers , and-gone to the placer . Our worthy Governor , Colonel of the 1 st Dragoons , & c , having plenty of carts , waggons , horses , and mules , with a few regulars left , has also gone . Commodore Jones , lately arrived in Monterey , supposing it to be the capital , head-quarters . & c , hut found not even the Governor left . Where headquarters is may be uncertain . The Washington Union contains a letter from Lieutenant Larkin , dated Monterey , November 16 , received at the State Department , containing further confirmation of the previous despatches , public and private , and far outstripping all o ther news in its exciting character . The gold was increasing in size . . . . ,. _ -
and quality daily . Lumps were found weighing from lib . to 21 b . S everal had been heard of weighing as hig h as 16 lb ., and one 2511 ) . The gold regions extend over a tract of 300 miles , and it was not known that it did not extend 1000 . A letter from Commodore Jones states , that many of the petty officers and men had deserted and gone in search of the gold . He adds , the Indians were selling gold at fifty cents the ounce . Many vessels wert deserted by captain , cook , and seamen . The ship Isaac Walton offered d ' scharged soldiers fifty dollars per month to go to Calloa , which was refused . She was supplied by government sailors . All the naval vessels on the coast were short of hands . Nearly the whole of the 3 rd Artillery had deserted . Provisions were scarce and high ; board , four dollars a-day ; washing , six dollars a dozen . Merchants' clerks get from 2 , 000 dollars to 3 , 000 dollars a-year .
National Organisation Of Trades. To The ...
NATIONAL ORGANISATION OF TRADES . TO THE TRADES OF GKEAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND . Fellow-Men , —In my last letter I pointed out ths manner in which the first principles of the constitution , adopted by the London trades' delegates , in establishing the universal right of the people to the soil may be effected ; but as that Cannot possibly ba accomplished under existing circumstances , I therefore beg to call your attention to the fifth principle , set forth by the delegates , as being well adapted to give immediate relief to the pressing wants and destitute condition of large masses of the trades . This proposition is to the following effect : — ' That as Great Britain and Ireland contain a superabundance
of land , skill , and capittl , to profitably employ and comparatively support more than double the presenl population , the government should introduce a bill establishing self-supporting home colonies , to give immediate employment to the numerous , but compulsory , unemployed et our' population . ' I therefore beg to press this upon the attention of the trades of the provincial towns , and call upon them to co-operate with the London trades in their endeavours to place it before the legislature . lean , not , at present , state the precise steps about to be taken by the delegates to bring it before Parliament , but I understand a public meeting will shortly be held , at which that and other business , connected
with the movement , will be discussed ; when , I have no dmbt , a systematic plan of operation will be developed . In the meantime , as it is the desire of the delegates that as much publicity should be given to their proceedings as possible , with a view to secure the co-operatipu of the trades in the provinces , I submit the outline of a planfor their consideration ; and , without assuming that it will be precisely the one adopted , I know it to be in bar . mony with the general feeling of my colleagues . In going to Parliament to ask for home colonies , I think we should propose , as the basis of a plan , that ten thousand families be taken , say from ten of our principal towns , ' or as may hereafter be determined ( because the question must be made universal to secure universal co-operation ) , and placed upon the crown or waste lands , to employ themselves in
productive labour , instead of remaining in compulsory idleness and absolute pauperism . Let us suppose , then , that ten thousand families , of five each , be the starting point ; we have next to consider what quantity of land and capital would be required for the . establishment of home colonies , composed of one thousand families each . Supposing we apportion one acre to each member as a minimuni , that would be five acres for ea <> . h family ( and if arrangements could he made for ten acres to each family with a proportionate amount of capital , so much the better ); we have next to inquire what amount of capital would be required to commence and successfully establish their practical and permanent operation in agriculture and manufactures ; for I would have the trades bear in mind , that any scheme of colonisation to be really successful must combine manufacturing with agricultural pursuits .
First , then , with regard to agriculture . All practical men agree that it requires from eight to ten pounds per acre to procure the necessary implements of husbandry , seed , & c , to stock a faroi ; and ten thousand families , at the rate of one acre to each individual , would amount to 50 , 000 acres , which being multiplied by £ 10 per acre , gives a sum of £ 500 , 000 . It would require £ 15 per acre to ereei the necessary dwellings within the colonies ( al « though in the North of England and Scotland it may be done for less , as both materials and labour are much cheaper ) , which would be an additional sum of £ 750 , 000 ; aad we may calculate upon £ 120 , 000 for the purchase of machinery , the
ernet'on of manufactories , and casual expenses . And as it would be at least six months before the colonists could have any real substantial return for their labour or capital bestowed upon the land , it is clear that they must be provided with the means of subsistence in the meantime ; and if ten shillings per week were allowed to each family for six months , ( and they ought not tohave less ) , that would be a further sum of £ 130 , 000 , making iu all £ 1 , 500 000 ; for which very insignificant sum fifty thousand human beings might be placed in a state of comfort , and complete independence , instead of being left to starve in the highways and streets , or beneath the portals to the mansions of the rich . The land , of course , would be let to the colonists upon the most
advantageous terms they could make . The money could be advanced b y the government issuing Exchequer bills to that amount , which would in no way embarrass the government , or impair the Exchequer ; and an agreement could be made to pay back the principal , with the usual per centage , by instalments , within a reasonable period . But the question may be asked . Is the government likely to grant our request ? I answer at once , they are not likely to grant anything unless thsy see the trades are in earnest in their demand ; but we hare reason to know that there are several influential Members of Parliament , differing in political opinions , who would support us in home colonies , but who look , foolishly enough , no doubt , with suspicion on other movements .
Whether the government grant our request or not , it is our duty to continually press that subject upon the attention of Parliament . I would also have the trades and the people generally , to keep this all important fact in view — that it is to ftis question of the application of land , labour , and capital , that we must come at last , if we are to effect any real practical benefit for ourselves . The empire abounds with these available elements for human happiness , and general improvement . There are at least 10 , 000 , 000 of acres out of the 22 , 579 , 300 acres of uncultivated land in Britain ; and Sir J . Sinclair , the celebrated statist and improver of agriculture , was of opinion that not more
than 1 , 000 , 000 acres of uncultivated land are unsusceptible of cultivation ; so that there is plenty of land without , in any way , interfering with that already fully stocked and occupied . Moreover , the quantity of Crown lands , according to the estimate of the most accredited authorities , if sold in the market , are worth £ 20 , 000 , 000—and all in the hands of royal dukes and court favourites . With regard to the unemployed labour , it has been estimated that , if it were fully employed , £ 1 , 000 , 000 worth of additional wealth per day might be added to the quantity already produced . As to money , be
it well understood , that alt governments have the power to create , not gold , but any amount of the symbol , or representative of wealth , in paper , or any other cheap instiuraent of currency for public accommodation , that may be determined on . The government manufactured , for their own use , last yearj nearly £ 3 , 000 , 000 worth of Exchequer Bills . Let the unemployed masses demand th « t a millionand-a-half be issued to create useful employment for them this year . All classes of capitalists can obtain credit to cany on their business , and why should the people not share in the public credit also ?
But they will not share in anything really beneficial to them , unless they unite and demand it with firmness ; disewtion , and resolution . This would be the commencing point , if the people had a govern , ment of their own choosing , to-morrow j and it would not even be commenced then unle « s the people well understood the measures , and had the will to work , out their emanci pation . Let no man suppose that , because we address ourselves at present pait ' cukr' . y to the trades , that therefore the movement will b =
National Organisation Of Trades. To The ...
of a circumscribed or limited character . On the contrary , if it sticceed-and we have strong hopes ot Us success-it will then be found to be of a more comprehensive and powerful character than it may , perhaps , at present appear . To do that effectually , we must first pus the now-existing and powerful machinery of the organised bodies of Trades Unions in motion . Thev are responding to the call of the delegates in London , in a manner that inspires hopes for the . complete success of the movement . Last week we added one thousand to our ranks—viz ., one society of tailors , ' and another of bootmakers ; . c . .:.... ~ . n . ;^ nr limited character . the
conand three others of the most numerous societies in the metropolis have each summoned a general meeting upon the subject , and we are informed others are about to take similar steps . But the Trades in the provinces must also do their duty . The delegates will , no doubt , address them shortly , and explain what may appear to them best calculated to secure their co-operation . In the meantime , the Trades in any town , who are desirous at once Of giving their aid ' to the Trades of London , can communicate their desire to the secretary , at the Craven Head , Drury-lane , who will give them all
information required . And bear in mind , it is to you , men of the Trades , that the accomplishment of this great work chiefly belongs . Alfred A . Walton .
Despotism In Ireland. The Following Is A...
DESPOTISM IN IRELAND . The following is a copy of the communication from the Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland to the Secretary for the Home Department , which the Marquis of Lausdowne , in the House of Peers , and Lord John Russell , in the House of Commons , presented to parliament on Friday night , and which Mr . J . O'Connell was prevented from alluding to on Monday , in the House of Commons ;—• Dublin Castle , Jan . 26 .
' Sir , —As the period is now approaching ' when the actof the 11 th and 12 th Victoria , cap . 35 , by which the Habeas Corpus Act was suspended in this country , will expire , I feel it my duty to bring under the consideration of her Majesty ' s government the reasons which induce me to recommend the continuance of that law for a further limited period . It was with deep regret : that , on a former occasion , I felt myself compelled to ask for the enactment of this measure , but circumstances have since fully confirmed my opinion of its urgent necessity , and I can have no doubt that the course then adopted by her Majesty ' s government , and the moral effect produced by the almost unanimous support which the bill received in parliament , mainly con * tributed to the suppression of the rebellious movement whieh unhappily broke out in this countrv .
'While availing myself of the extraordinary power confided to me by the act , it has been my earnest endeavour to limit its operation as far as possible , and to confine the deprivation of personal liberty to the cases of those individuals who were actually engaged in treasonable designs , or who , by encouraging the disaffected , endangered the peace and tranquillity of the country . No instance' occurred of any arrest taking place except on sworn
informations ; no person was retained in custody longer than the public safety appeared to require ; and although- the number of individuals whom it was my painful duty to place in temporary confinement was considerable , having amounted in all , at different times , to about 120 , yet , considering the extent to which treasonable organisation had been carried , not only in the metropolis , but in several counties of Ireland , the number can hardly be said to exceed what might have been anticipated .
' The secrecy afforded by the enforcement of the law , and the conviction that its provisions would only be applied against those whose conduct had rendered their detention absolutely necessary , has been felt b y the community at large ; and the restoration of order in place of that which for a time was a reign of terror , has been hailed with universal satisfaction . But , on the part of those engaged iu the late treasonable movement , no indication whatever of sorrow or repentance for their misdeeds had been observed . Their regret is confined to their failure , and their hopes are directed to a more successful Isseue on the first favourable opportunity ; nor is there any reason to beliave ( and upon this point I have eoltected
information from various persons on whose judgment and local knowledge 1 could rel y ) that the recent orderly conduct of the people in the districts where disturbances prevailed or were threatened , proceeds fromany improved feeling as regards either the law or the Executive Government . The total absence of support of the authorities in their endeavours to suppress insurrection , the renewed attempt at rebellion in the vicinity of the town where the leaders of the movement were being brought to justice , and the disregard of proclamations requiring the surrender of arms , are facts which indicate that , however the failure of past attempts at insurrection may have weakened the confidence of the disaffected , the
feeling which gave rise to aud encouraged that movement still remains unchanged , and would again become active upon any occasion that appeared to offer even a distant prospect of success . ' It is true that any future attempt at rebellion will be much discouraged by the failure of those which have passed , and the originators of any new agitation will have none of the prestige of success to aid , and much of the sense of the past discomfiture
t ) damp their exertions ; but still this country has been too long trained to a system of agitation to be at once weaned from such a course , and nothing but a continued enjoyment of that - peace which the absence of all political excitement has now created , the improved habits it will generate , and the social advantages it will not fail to produce , can save Ireland from wasting her energies in the strife of rival factions , instead of exerting them b y industry for the improvement of the country .
* It is to secure for Ireland this continued repose which is so vitally essential to her prosperity , to protect the country from the renewal of an agitation for objects that cannot be attained , and which for many years has disturbed its tranquillity , scaring away capital , destroying confidence , and rendering impossible the steady application of industrv , that I desire strongly to impress on her Mjjesty ' s Government the importance of applying to Parliament for a renewal of those powers which the llth and 12 th Victoria , c . 35 , placed at the disposal of the Executive Government in Ireland . I am well aware of the grave responsibility I incur by this recommendation , and it is with extreme repugnance that I venture to
ask for the renewal of an act , which infringes tht constitutional rights of any portion of her Majesty ' s subjects ; but I think I should fail in my duty ' if , from any personal feelinasof mv own , I hesitated to state the facts which I know to be correct , or to recommend the course which I conscientiously believe to be necessary ; and if her Majesty ' s Government should see fit to propose , and Parliament to sanction , the renewal of this act , I trust the manner in which it has hitherto been carried into effect will be an earnest that its future administration will be marked by leniency and justice . « Sir , with great truth and regard , ' Tour obedient servant , , _ . „ . , 'Clarendon . 'The Right Hon . Sir George Grey , Bart ., & c . '
The Extraordinary Troper--L Ties Of This Medicine Are Thus Described Bv Nn
THE EXTRAORDINARY TROPER--L ties of this medicine are thus described bv nn
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. juyM , says : — Alter particular observation of the action of Paiir ' s Pills , ' I am determined , m my opinion , that the following are their true properties : — "First-They increase the strength , whilst most other medicines have a weakening effect upon the system Let any one take from three to four or six pills every twentyfour hours , and , instead of having -weakened , they wiU be found to have revived the animal spirits , and to have imparted a lasting strength to the body . "Secondly—In their operation thoy go direct to the disease . After you have taken six or twelve pills you will experience their effect ; the disease upon you will become leas and less by every dose you take ; and if you will per ^ evero in regularly taking from three to six pills evert dav your disease will speedily bo entirely removed from the ystem . "Thirdiy ~ Thcy are found , after giving them a fair trial for a few weeks , to possess the most astonishinir and in vigoratmg properties , and they will overcome all obstinate ' complaints , and restore sound health ; there is a return of good appetite shortly from the bejrhinW 0 f their use Fhust then- mildness as a purgative is \ desidenrtum greatly yequn-ed by tho weak aid delicate , pSS TO PERSONS GOING ABROAD . These pills are particularl y recommended to all persons T & t ^ ( $ *** ' ** * theraseI toaFcatSge of climate . Officers of the Aiurr and Ntvr Mi » - SS . ^ T" * ^ - . Wl 11 find theTaninTaluahTe ? hfjfei ^ ' medlcine cIlC 8 ts . as a preventative of M ^ SnVfafl ™? ^ S 68 S 0 Pre ™ l <> nt in our Colonies , cspetwuymtliew cgtinuiog , where a small hoi recently sow lor 10 s . In America also its fame is getting known its virtue duly appreciated , causing an , ' uimense do mand for it ; and there is no country or port in the world where it will not speedily become an article of extensive ' i 1 i
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«^^ , «?„! % . M « "" J-bohaaT ^ Trr . « , a « u ™ uniity , as it may hchad reoouv ™ Trail cases of sickness , with confidence in its siim . ii % to »» iu its power to produce relief . ! " «¦•»}• , ail ( j TO LADIES . Parr ' s Life Pitts are especially efficacious i „ -, variety of ailments incident to the tair sex . Inrtj , ' t ! le the most delicate constitutions will find them i ,.. c' ) of both before and after confinement ; and for cenm t , a l > schools , they cannot be too stronirly recommend ,. ' , ! "¦ £ in mildly and speedily remove all ' Skin Ernpti , m < \ ., \ X ness of Complexion , Xervous Irritability , Rick ' ir , ' . ' , i , ' and Depression of Spu-its , Irregularitv , or Genowl 1 ) , ' . ° ment of the System . " " ige . CAUTION . None are genuine , unless the words "PARK'S nr ,, PILLS" are in White Lettebs on a Red Gucini ) ,,, , ' Government Stamp , pasted round each box ; nW . 'Xlr simile of the signature of the Proprietors , "T Ho ? ,, {?¦ and Co ., Crane-court , Fleet-street , London , " on tl „ . > ¦ * tions . K " ' ^ Sold hi boxes at Is . lid ., 2 s . 9 d ., and family pad-p ., , lls . each , by all respectable medicine vendors tbrouX tha world . Full directions are given with each kn JUt
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TRY ERE YOU DESPAIR . HOLLOWAY'S PILLS . CURE OF ASTHMA . Extract of a Letter from Mr . Benjamin Mackic . a rcsnoc able Quaker , dated Creenagh , near Loiurhail in ' . } ,, , dated September llth , 1848 . a - ' ' Respected Fkienu , —Thy excellent Pills have cf . vctnil ] cured me of an asthma , which afflicted mc for tlnve vj-,,-to such an extent that I was obliged to walk mv roo ' iiV » r night for air , afraid of being : suffocated if I went ' to 1 ,,., ' ] i ,. eough and phlegm . Besides taking the Pills , 1 vn \ , ] , ' * \ plenty of thy Ointment into my chest night ami mornii ) .. ( Signed ) Bewamis Maceie . —To Professor IIollowav . " '"" CUKE OF TYPHUS FEVER WHEX SUPPOSED TO i > p AT THE POINT OF DEATH . ^ A respectable female in tho neighbourhood of r . o ; i" - » ia ! l was attacked with typhus fever , and lay for five days « jjij out having tasted any description of food . She was givi-n over hy the surgeon , and preparations were made for h .-r demise . Mr . Benjamin Mackie , the Quaker , whose case Is referrea to above , heard of the circumstance , and ktiowin * " the immense benefit that lie himself had derived from IliiE loway ' s Pills , recommended an immediate trial , and celit were given to her , and the same number was continued night and morning for three days , and in a very short time she was completely cured . X . B . —From advice just received , it appears that Colonel Dear , who is with his regiment in India , the 21 st Fusileers , cured himself of ft very bad attack of fever bv those celc brated Pills . There is no doubt that any fever , howcvei malignant , may be cured b y taking , night and mnrninR , eopious doses of this medicine . 'Die patient should bo induced to drink plentifully of warm linseed tea or barley water . CURE OF DROPSY IN THE CHEST . Extract of a Letter from J . S . Mundy , Esq ., datpj KemiiV ton , near Oxford , December 2 nd , 1818 . " ' * Sir , —My shepherd for some time was afflicted with wa ;/ . On the chest , when I heard of it I immediately advised him to try your Pills , which he did , and was perfectly cured and is now as well as ever he was in Ms life . As I mvnl !' received so astonishing a cure last year from your Pills * . i-Ointment , it lias ever since been my most earnc . i t endeiu vour to make known their excellent qualities . —( Signed ) j " S . Mo . ndv . —To Professor Hollowav . THE EARL OF ALDBOItOUGH CURED OF A LIVER - AXD STOMACH COMPLAINT . Extract of a Letter from his Lordship , dated Villa Messina Leghorn , 21 st February , 1815 . '' Sm , —Various circumstances prevented the possibility ol my thanking you before this time for your iKilitwitss " in sending me your pills as yon did . I now take this cm .. ; -. tunity of sotidinjr you an order for the amount , awl at ' tiit same time to add that your Pills have efiected a cure of ; t disorder in my liver and stomach , which all the most cmi ' . nent of the faculty at home , and all over the coming * had not been able to effect ; nay , not even the waters of Carlsbad and Marienbud . I wish to have another bu . v ; i : i . l ft pot of the Ointment , in case any of my famiiv should ever require cither . —Your most obedient servant ( signed ! Axdbokoimh . —To Professor Hollowat . '' CURE OF A DELIBITATED CONSTITUTION ' . Mr . Mute , a storekeeper , of Gundagai , New South Wal ?? , had been for sume time in a most delicate statu of Iieu ' ith his constitution was so debilitated that his death wis shortly looked upon by himself and friends as certain ; hat as a forlorn hope , he was induced to try Hollowav's Pi : ' :- - , which had an immediate and surprising effect upon i :. s system , and the result was to restore him in a few ivt , k > to perfect health and strength , to the surprise of all who knew him . He considered his case so extraordinary that ! a-, in gratitude , sent it for publication , to the St / duty . Vomit , ; Herald , in which paper it appeared on the 2 nd . lanu . i-v 1848 . A few doses of the Pills will quickly rallv the c :: c ' r ! gies of both body and mind , when other medicines li-ve failed . These celebrated Pills are wonderfully efficacious in tiic following complaints : — Ague Female Irregula- Scrofula , ; : Asthma rities King ' s Evil Bilious Com- Fevers of all Stone and Civm ! plaints lands Secondary Sv >| . ; i-Blotchcs on the Gout toms Skin Head-ache Tic-Dolourct : x Bowel Complaints Indigestion Tumours Colics Inflammation Ulcers Constipation of Jaundice Venereal Al ' . ' t-tthe Bowels Liver Complaints tions Consumption Lumbago Worms of all Debility Piles kinds Dropsy Rheumatism Weakness , nv-n Dysentery lletcntion of whatever cany-Erysipelas Urine & c , ic . Fits Sore Throats Sold at the establishment of Professor IIoixow . iv . 24-1 , Strand ( near Temple Bar ) , London , and by most all res-.- ctable druggists and dealers in medicines , througlii > t ; t ' ;!; c civilised world , at the following prices : —Is . lid ., - ' ? .: I , 4 s . 6 d ., lis ., 22 s ., and 33 s . each box . There is ' a cousiiti-rable saving by taking the larger sizes . N . B . —Directions for the guidance of patients in every disorder are affixed to each box .
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OX PHYSICAL DISQUALIFICATIONS , 6 EXEKATIV 3 INCAPACITY , AND IMPEDIMENTS TO JIAMUAGE . Twenty-fifth edition , illustrated with Twentv-Six Anato-nical Engravings on Steel , enlarged to lk pages . p : u * 2 s . Gd ; by post , direct from the Establishment , 3 s . Gil ., in postage stamps . npHE SILENT FRIEND ; ¦ * - a medical work on the exhaustion and physical decay of the system , produced by excessive indulgence , tho coii « ...- - quenccs of infection , or the abuse of mercurv . with ob .-. rvations on the marrried state , and the disqualincati . - . ns which prevent it ; illustrated bv twenty-six coloured cult : ! . vings , and by the detail of cases . By R . and 1 ,. PERKY and Co ., 10 , Berners-slreot , Oxford-street , London . Published by the authors , and sold by Strar . icc il . IV . er . noster-row ; llannay , G 3 , and Sanger , 150 , Oxford-stint ; btavie , 2 ; ., Tichborne-strcct , Haymarket ; and Cordon . 146 , Loadciihall-street , London ; 3 . and 11 . Raimes and Go ., Leithwalk , hduibuif ; h ; 1 ) . Campbell , Argvlt-sirect . Wasgow ; J . Priestl y , Lord-street , and T . JCewtoii , Cluuihstreet , Liverpool ; It . Ingram , Market-place , Manchester . T , ,. ^ Part the First Is dedicated to the consideration of the anatomv and i-liv-iology of the organs whieh are directly or indireetlv cii-vlvJ m the process of reproduction . It is illustrated liv * L \ V' > loured engravings . „ . ! -,. Part the Second , treats of the infirmities and decay of the svstcm , prmlucv . 1 hy over indul gence of the passions , ami by " the practin- rf solitary gratification . It shows clearly the manr .-.-r in winch the baneful consequences of this indufeonco oin-nite on the economy in the impairment and destruction of ; iw social and vital powers . Tho existence of nervous an J sexual debility and incapacity , with their aceompa . tviiK tram of symptoms and disorders , arc traced by the chain w connecting results to their cause . This selection conel-. ife with an explicit detail of the means by which these eiw- ' . s may be remedied , and full and ample directions for t !; .-: v use . It is illustrated by three coloured engravings , w ! iK ! i fully display the effects of physical decay . Part the Third Contains an accurate description of file diseases cairo-ii ^ infection , and by the abuse of mercury ; primai'v ami *• condary symptoms , eruptions of the skin , sore throat , iifliimuiation of the eyes , disease of the bones . goimiTli-. u , gleet , stricture , < tc , are shown to depend on " this t-iiii-o . Ihcir treatment is fully described in this section . The . )' leets ot neglect , either in the recognition of disease or i : ' the treatment , are shown to be the prevalence of the vinrf in the system , which sooner or later will show itself in « : « of the forms already mentioned , and entail disease in ¦ •* most frightful shape , not only on the individual himself . '• - '•' also on the offspring . Advice for the treatment of all tlu-w diseases and their consequences is tendered in this wm-n , which , it duly followed up , cannot fail in eiiectinsr a > : ;* Ibis part is illustrated by seventeen coloured en- 'ravi'i ' ¦ ' . , „ ' . , l ' avt the Fourth treats of the prevention of disease by a simple apiilicaa '* i by which the danger of infection is obviated . Its aniw •' simple , but sure . It acts with the virus chemically . » rJ destroys its power on the system . This important )<¦ * of the work should be read by every young man viiwfc ! into life . T , ' Part the Fifth is devoted to the consideration of the Duties and OMWtions ot the Married State , and of the causes which lew ! U the happiness or misery of those who have entered into •>' bonds of matrimony . Disquietudes and jars between ironed couples are traced to depend , in the majority ef : > stances , on causes resulting from physical imperfect : •»' and errors , and the menus for their removal-shown ic ' ^ withm reach aud effectual . The operation of certain ' *' quahhcationsls fully examined , and infelicitous and ti : 'i" - ouctive unions shown to be the necessary fonscquon- >'• the causes and remedies for this state form au imi * r !» :, t consideration in this section of the work . TILE CORDIAL BALM OF STTBIACUM Is expressly employed to renovate the impaired powers > J Me , when exhausted by the influence exerted by sfli :. « J indulgence on the system . Its action is purely balstm " ' ' its power in re-invigorating the frame in all cases of ' •«' vous and sexual debility , obstinate gleets , impo tency , M- ; renntss , and debilities arising from venereal excesses- r . ;> been demonstrated by its unvarying success in thoiisa ' * ot cases . To those persons who are prevented cntcntip •"' married state by the consequences of early errors . it > " valuable . Price lis . per bottle , or four quantities m ^ for 33 s . THE CONCENTRATED DETERSIVE ESSENCE An anti-sypliuitic remedy for purifying the system fix * " ' £ nereal contamination , and is recommen ded for W . "V , ,, varied forms of secondary symptoms , such as eruptiosi- the skin , blotches oh the head and face , enlargem ent ^ ^ throat , - tonsils , and uvula ; threatened destruction o > - ; nose , palate , * c . Its tiction is purely detersive . »«« beneficial intluonee on the system is undeniable . 1 11 CC and 33 s . per bottle . . r .-. The £ 5 case of Syriacum or -Concentrated Dctersu c ^^ ' sence , can only be had at 19 , Bemers-street , Oxw ™ - ? . < ,. London , whereby there is a saving of £ 1 I 2 u ., a . , . > tient is entitled to receive advice without a ft'C , ' " ' ™' , a j vantage is applicable only to those who remit i <> i , packet . tf ( l Consultation fee , if by letter , £ 1 . —Patients are " ^ j , to be ' as minute as possible in the description ot V ! ' . t , Attendance daily at 19 , Bcrners-street , Oxioro-- a i London , from eleven to two , and from five to t'S" ¦ Sundays from eleven to one . , „ _ ,,,.., il ? , Sold by Sutton and Co ., Bow Church Yard ; " !"' „|„ ,:-G 7 , St . Paul ' s Church Yard ; Barclay and Sons , Fani " .- .,,.,. ? street , Cornhill ; Butler and Co ., 4 , Cheapside ; " -. ^ p . son , C 3 , Cornhill ; L . IliU , New Cross ; TV . B . Jones , n ^ ^ ton ; W . J . Tanner , Egliam ; S . Smith , V bi ^ ' ^ ni Shillock , Bromlev ; T , lu ' ehes , London-street , i '« -. ,, , i , ti Thos . Farkes , "Woolwich ; Ede and Co ., Dorking , ; « ¦" , . ^ 1 Turley , High-street , Uomford , of whom may oe ii "SILENT FELEND . "
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Feb. 10, 1849, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_10021849/page/2/
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