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..3. . -. .^. ' THE fooKTm^LilllL*^- " -...
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THE NORTHERN STAR; AND NATIONAL ; TRADES'JOURN AL,
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Christianv. Turkish" Tenets.—The late collision of Turkish steamers in the Black Sea places the
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onnstian part ot the crew ot the sinking...
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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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..3. . -. .^. ' The Fooktm^Lillll*^- " -...
.. 3 . . -. . ^ . ' THE fooKTm ^ LilllL *^ - " - " AP 6 PSJ 16 - 1845 '
The Northern Star; And National ; Trades'journ Al,
THE NORTHERN STAR ; AND NATIONAL ; TRADES ' JOURN AL ,
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ESTABLISHED in Leeds in 1837 , im ? « Jr *«« 5 »? leading Provincial Journal in the Kingdom , is now . published at So . 310 , Strand , London . V / wrt , ' P Theohjectofther « . prietorin estobhsh . n theAortt « rn , Starts to furnish a-fearless and ^ thfulorgan . fortte , representation 0 f the Labouring Classes , whose interests fjimtune immemorial have been shamelessly neglected . , The removal of the Star to London has enabled its , cppdnctors to supply tiie reader with . the latest intelligence , as well as the most interesting news ; in consequence of ¦ which its number of readers have materially increased ^ the Metropolis , and its country circulation can br ;' equaiied * - few . even the most extensively circul »*^ Metropolitan + * j ¦ — - - * * newspaper *" ' ' . , , .. ' .. « . / - Prom the extensive circulation ofthe Northern Star , tojjether wi th Uio fact that it is read by all classes of society as the organ ofthe movement party , Advertisers trill find it to be a medium of cemmuirkation with the public at large worth notice . -Boohs and Puhlcations for review must . be addressed ( post paid ) to tho Editor , 310 , Strand , London . . Adverisements and orders for papers to be addressed to Feargus O'Connor , 340 , Strand , where all communications will be punctually attended to . « ' . The following extract from the Newspaper Stamp Returns for October , November , and December , 1818 ( since which no returns have been made ) , show that the Northern Star is far at the head of many old-established London Weekly Journals : — .. .... .. 1 TWOO lews ofthe"World .. 86 , 000 United Service € la-Eecord .. .. .. ' .. 83 , 500 zette .. ; .. .. „ 19 , 500 Examiner 71 , 000 Patriot 60 , 000 Britannia .. .. .. 60 , 000 Spectator .. „ .. 48 , 000 Tark-laue Express .. 54 , 000 Era .. .... - - 41 , 000 © ablet 45 , 009 John Bull .. 39 , 000 Abserrer .... .. 41 , 080 Watchman _ _ .. 33 , 000 Hflas 37 , 000 Age and Argus ,, .. 22 , 500 nonconformist .: .. 30 , 000 Sentinel .. .... .. 20 . 000 Bell ' s Sew Weekly JournalofCommerce 13 , 500 Messenger .. .. 22 , 500 * * * Observe the Office , 310 , Strand , London . The following Books are published at the . Northern Star office , 3-10 , Strand , and may be had of ail Booksellers and News Agents . , < 1 | . I r
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. CHAMBERS' PHILOSOPHY REFUTED . . Just published Price Fompence ( forming a Pamphlet of 56 pages demy 8 vo ., in a stiff wrapper ) , THE THIRD EDITION OF " A POLL and COMPLETE REFUTATION of the PHILOSOPHY contained in a TRACT recently published by the MESSRS . CHAMBERS , of Edinburgh , entitled the " Employer and Employed . " ¦ This valuable little work contains the most complete defence of ( lie demands of the Working Classes for their fair share of the enormous wealth created by Machinery , as well as a justification of Trades Unions . The numerous appeals that have been made to Mr . O'Connor from nearly every part cf the kingdom for the publication , in pamphlet form , of those Dialogues that lave recently appeared in the ttw &^ d 7 * efim ^ ia to gratify «* at appears tg-fe ^ ai most unanimous Wish iI-U . e"Labouring Classes . " The Employer and the Employed , " . * - . * byPeargus O'Connor , * * beats anything even of its author ' s . —Economist . t ' ¦ - " ¦ - ¦ ' > ¦
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Complete in one Vol , neatly Bound in Cloth , A PRACTICAL WORK OS SMALL FARMS . Price Tiro Shillings and Sixpence . BT FEARGCS O ' COKROK , ESQ . i The desire of the author lias been to furnish a valuable compendium at such a price as would enable every working man to become possessed of it . ' It contains nil the practical instructions , together with Plates , describing Farm-house , Offices , Tank , Farm-yard , & c . ; with particular information requisite for carrying out all the operations . N . B .- —The above work may still be procured in numbers , price 6 d . each . . ; " I have , within the last few months , visited every part of France , and I declare that I have seen more misery in one street in Dublin than in all France ; the people are well dad , well fed , aud merry ; they are all employed on Shall Farms of their otm , or on equitable takings !"Vide Lord . Cloncarrys Letter hi Homing Cironide , Oct . Stt , 18 i 3 . Those persons desirous of bettering their condition and of becoming "Independent Labourers , " by entering the "Productive-labour * Market , will do well to read ' . 'A Practical Work on Small Farms , " by Feabgcs O'Connoe , Es 9 . It contains much useful information , invaluable to the parties for whom it was written ; and Old Farmers will find many useful lessons in the new system of husbandry , wliich they have yet to learn . The work displays great practical knowledge , and is written so that any one ¦ who reads ' may understand . Mr . O'Connor seems net to have used cither the old or ' new nomenclature' in this work ; he has " hot buried his meaning in chemical technicalities , which very few understand , hut which most -writers oil agriculture seem so desirous ot using . Perhaps they donut understand the practice of Fanning so well as Jhe theory ; and , therefore , mystify that which they caunoi explain , by some long chemical term , which the plain reader-may pass over as a "hard word , " hard to pronounce , and harder to understand when it is pronoenced . The reader-niU find that Mr . O'Connor has avoided aU those hard names , and suited the language to the toiling labourer , whose college is generally the workshop , or , at best , the Sunday School . Though the work is written for holdeis of Small Farms , yet no Allotment Tenant ought to le without it ; the valuable information it contaiss respecting tilling and cropping is alike useful to atL" —Extract from a Farmer ' s letter . "This really useful little volume ought to be in the hands of every one at all connected with agricultural pursuits . "—Void's Weekly London Nacspaper . "Although we feci no desire , in the language of the jroud Peruvian , in contemplating what we hope to rejoice in , the contentment , prosperity , and comfort of our fellow men , to exclaim— "This , this is my work ; " nor is our object , as Mr . O'Connor declares his to be , "that each manwho is willing to work may he independent of every other man in the world for his daily bread , " yet we can with much pleasure recognise in the book before us a powerful instrument for aiding in developing in man a vmch higher destiny than he has hitherto attained . "Mr O'Connor shews clearly , what will soon be apparent to all who reflect deeply , that we are not left without the means of obtaining not only all that is physically requisite for man ' s progress , but also that we may readily pro-( lace what is apparently desirable ; for none who carefully psrnse this work can doubt that a system of small farms , held by active and industrious labourers , would amply return , in exchange for healthful exertion , far more than is requisite to preserve physical strength . ' , ¦ ' Healso shews thatsomcthingmorc than this is requisite to ensure happiness , for he says in page 121 , "I feel convinced that man can place no reliance whatever upon his fellow man or a community of men , when circumstances operate upon his or their minds , the influence and effect of which would he stronger than any abstract notions of justice . For instance , if a community of la-Douring men purchase a quantity f land , and hire la . bour lor its cultivation , hcvever just their intentions aud pure their motives , they wiU nevertheless feel themselves justified in raising the price of the land , according to the improved value conferred upon it b y the labour of the Tiirpd workman . This power of steadily trenching upon the rights of others is one of tho greatest disadvantages against which the labourer has to contend ; and those hired by a community , at the end of twenty years would be in no better condition than they were at starting , while the community of proprietors would have increased the value of their property twenty-fohl ; that is , they would have robbed those labourers , by whose industry tiie value Was increased , of nineteen shillings in the pound . " " These remarks are powerful arguments in the sphere in which they are written , and if examined in their relation to the universal , they confirm the testimony that "The earth is the Lord ' s , and all that therein is ; he round world and they that dwcU therein ; " for , after partaking freely of what is good for each order of creation , any self-appropriation , by whatever parties indulgedin , is from evil , and will produce its consequence , namely , vice , crime , and misery . "We can strongly recommend Mr . O'Connor ' s work to our readers , containing a great amount of practical information on agriculture , which should be most popularly diffused . "— - ConcordwBi Gazette . ¦ _ May be had in Four lumbers , price Sixpence each ; or neatly bound in Cloth , Two Shillings and Sixpence . ¦ ¦ - f , IT > - 1 i t ¦ - - 1 s e b a S e 1 b i b ' ¦ t ; , f ¦ - ' f
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Also , Price Pom-pence each , Numbers I and II ol TBI STATE OF IRELAND . By Abthob O'Cosnob . No man can understand the position of Ireland , or the bearing of Irish questions , who is not conversant with this perfect picture of Ireland's condition , the causes of her degradation , and the remedies for her manifold evils . i : i ?
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:.-.:.- . ; ..- Also , price 2 i . Gd ., Second Edition A SERIES OF 1 ETTEBS FROM FEARGUS O'COXNOR , ESQ ., BARRISTER AT AW , TO DANIEL O CONNELL , ESQ ., M . P . ; -.-Containing a review of Mr . O'ConueU ' s conduct during the agitation of the question of Catholic Emancipation ; together with an analysis of his motives and actions since he became a Member of Parliament . The whole forms a complete key to the political actions of Mr . O'Connell , and reconciles all the apparent contradictions in the acts , of one of the greatest agitators ofthe present day . This edition contains the confirmation of T . Attwood , Esq ., of the principal charge brought by Mr . O'Connor against Mr . O'Connell .
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-All persons 'desirous of completing their sets of the - ' ^ HTER TRIALS , may yet do so , as fewcopies IfNQa . -i hand . atifl remain < ,.. ' * fOPU & AB CHAEiCIEHB , 4 . - * f BAns o . ^ UtaigiusheJ persons , from Portraits ofthe following v . v < uwtifnlstyle , maybe fleet engravings , and executed in ... -- * Wiarg (; japshMattheA ' orfkrnStar OmCej 3 io , Stran .- ^ Robert T . -8 . Buncombe , Esq ., M . P ., Richard Oas ... <*>&„ - Emmett , John Frost , Dr . H'Douall , and Fearens x . - . nor ; PJ > te or < he Trial of Prostand others at Monmouth , gate of the Furt National Convention , kudplateof the Frocession accompanying the National Petition-0 f 1842 ' to the House of Commons . The price of the above portraits and plates is one fhilling each .
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; ' , , | , Half-length portraits , of the followmgtvdisHnguished characters may bt ) irafcd 1 it , ft £ > fa ^ aence each : —Andre ^^ l [ arvei ;• General KrthurTOotittOli-William Cobbett , Hefiy Httfit . 'Itichard ' Oasaer : Thonjas ^ Attwood , Jame £ ' Bronterrt ' O ' BHen , aS ' d Shr ^ Vmiahi Molesworth , Barf . . 7 „• ' ^ . . ^ , The above portraits have been given at different times to subscribers of the Northern Star , and are allowed to be the most complete collection ever presented with an * / newspajer .
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5 . _ -- * ..- — -.-=. - - ^^ . Price Two ShiliingSi .. * -... _ - r . , « . FIFTEEN LESSONS on the ANALyGrY and SYNTAX ofthe ENGLISH . LANOUAGErfor the . use of adult persons who have neglected the study of Grammar . By Wit . Bin . < Fifth edition , revised and amended * ¦ The Lessons in these works are intended solely for the useof natives . They are divested , therefore , of aU those hair-breadth distinctions and unnecessary subdivisions in Analogy , which , if at all useful , can only be useful to foreigners , The science of Grammar is disentangled in them from the folds of mysticism which have so long enshrouded it- The . absurd and unmeaning technicalities which pervade all other works on Grammar arcexchanged for terms which have- a definite and precise meaning , illustrative of the things they-represent . The Parts of Speech are arranged on an entirelyncwpriaciple , founded on a philosophical consideration of the nature of language . Th « necessary divisions and subdivisions-are rationally accounted - for , and . the prbaciplcs of Didversal Grammar demonstrated so fully that the meanest capacity may understand them as-clearly as it understands that two and two make four . ... - ; In Syntax , the formation of-the EnglUh Language is exclusively consulted , without any « nnecessary reference to other languages . ' , A- majority of the numerous Rules < given in most Grammars are-shewn to be little better than 1 a heap of senseless tautology . The necessary Riules are | demonstrated upon ratioualprinciples , and illustrated by . a variety of examples . I By the use ofthe fifteen lessons , and the accompanying exercises , anyone may , in : a few weeks , acquire a good knowledge-of Grammar , without any of the-disgusting drudgery which , under the present system , prevents nine out of ten from ever acquiring a knowledge of Grammar r at all . "A competent Grammatical knowledge of our own language is the true-basis oh which aU literature ought to rest . " - —Bishop Loieth . . ?* Mr . Hill is evidently an originaltliinker . He attacks t -with ability and success , the existing system of English . Grammar , and points out the absurdities with which it is encumbered . Justly condemning the too frequent practice of making pupils commit portions of Grammar to me-! mory a stasks , he maintains that the only proper way to ' the memory is through the understanding It is ¦ but justice to him to say that , in a few pages , he gives a more clear aud comprehensive view of the structure of - the English , language , than can be found in sonic very " elaborate works : "—Literary Gazette . ¦ ! "Mr . Hill has discharged his task with considerable ability and no -person can peruse his books with any-- thing like attention , without obtaining a clear and suffi-: cieht estimate of the construction and laws of his' verna-¦ cul ^ Vuiffue ;"—Leeds Times . ' : ' IT " " A ' conSreiusiloiiffi . ^ . ^! HH ^ 2 I 5 » MfeC * e 1 principles on which th' language of Milton and Shakspeare rests . —Brad ^' d Observer . ¦ ] > "It is calcidated to give the student a correct idea of ¦ Grammatical construction—of the analogies of the language—and ofthe nature of the various parts of speech ; It is simple , but not mean ; clear , bnt not diffuse ; aud there are few works in which the first principles of Grammar are better explained or more ably followed up . "York Chronicle . , : .,. . , ; - - ¦ . ¦; . ¦; .- : / " .: —— The method he . has . adopted , to convey his lessons is the least repulsive to a learner that we have yet seen , not excepting- that of Mr . ' Cobbett ......... the whole seems to be intended as a mental machine to abbreviate the labour of the mind . "— Glasgow Liberator . " 1 ¦ I - " ' s i T 5 A ^ e r 0 * f ' * '" J ' " - ^
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Price One Shilling . - PROGRESSIVE EXERCISES , selected-with great care , and adapted to the Rules and Observations respectively contained in his . Fifteen Lessons on the Analogy and Syntax of the English Language , and in -his Rational School Grammar . By Wa . Hill . Third edition , revised and corrected . :
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Pnee Sixpence . . : ; THE GRAMMATICAL TEXT BOOK , for the use of Schools , Children , or Private Students . ; In this little book theprincipte of Grammar , expressed with the utmost possible conciseness , are exhibited for the memory . It contains , in a few pages , the pith and marrow ofthe whole science of Grammar . ; So much are the principles of this important ' science simplified in these little works , that by the use of them a parent , having no previous knowledge ofthe subject , may , - in one week , be qualified to instruct his children without other assistance . All the above works may be had at the Northern Star office , 340 ,. Strand , London . ; Of John Cleave , 1 , - Shoelane , Fleet-street ; James Watson , Paul's-allcy , Fateraos ' - ter-row ; II . Hetherinston , 40 , HolyweU-street ,. London . Of A . Heywood , 58 , Oldliam-strcet , Manchester ; J . Guest , Birmingham ; Messrs . Faton and Love , Glasgow ; J . Uobson , Market-walk , Huddersfield ; and of all booksellers and news-agents , who can procure them to order .
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. - , y - - - . - ; - ALL MAY BE CURED !! ¦ BY nOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT . FIFTY ULCERS CURED . IN" SIX WEEKS . -. EXTRACT of a Letterfrom JohnMartin , Esq ., Chronicle Office , Tobago , West Indies : — February 4 tli , 1845 . To Professor Ilolloway . Sir , —I beg to inform you that the inhabitants of this island , especially those who cannot afford to employ medical gentlemen , arc very anxious ot havingyour astonishing medicines within their reach , from the immense benefits some of them have derived from their use , as they have been found here , in several cases , to cure sores and ulcers of the most malignant and desperate kind . - One gentleman in this island , who had , I believe , about fifty running ulcers about his legs , arms , and body , who had tried all other medicines before the arrival of yours , but all of which did him no good ; butyours cured him in about six weeks , and he , is now , by their means alone , quite restored to health and vigour . ¦ . ( SignedJ - Johw Maetin . - FUes , Fistulas , and bearings-down . A Remahkable Cube by these Pills and Ointment . —A half-pay lieutenant , lately residing at St . Helicr ' s , ; 1 Jersy , whose name h y request is omitted , had for three years suffered from piles and fistula , besides a . general - bearing down , of the most , distressing nature ; He had f twice undergone an operation , but to no purpose , and at , last gave himself up to despair . Yeti notwithstanding IT this complication of complaints , together with a . debili-> tated constitution , he was completely cured of all his infirmities , and restored to the full enjoyment of health by - these justly renowned medicines , when every other means 1 had failed , i l £ rfraordtHar , sj Cure in the West Indies , of Leprosy , and other direful skin diseases . 6 June 3 rd , 1844 . t Mr . Lewis Rcedon , of Georgetown , Demerara , writes , ¦ - under the above date , that Holloway ' s Pills and Ointment - have cured bad legs that no doctor could manage , ulcers 1 and sores that were of the most dreadful description , as s likewise leprosy , blotches , scales , and other skin diseases e of the most frightful nature , aud that the cures effected b there by these wonderful medicines are so numerous and a extraordinary as to astonish the whole population . S CaiiccrcdJBrcarf . — -A ironder / itlCircumslaneo .-...- .. ' .. ' e Copy of a Letter from Richard Bull , bootmaker , Tatton , 1 near Southampton : — : . . ' . 9 February 9 tli , 1845 . b To Professor Holloway . -. i Sir , —The Lord has permitted to be wrought a wonder . b ful cure of cancers or abcesses , of twelve years' standing , in my -wife ' s breast . In the latter part of the time , eleven ' ¦ wounds were open at once . The faculty declared the case as past cure , several pieces of bone had come away , and I t expected that my poor wife would soon have been taken ; fromme . It was then that a friend , recommended the , use of your pills and ointment , which , to our . utter f astonishment , in the space of about three months , healed ¦ up the breast as soundly as ever it was in her life . - I shall ever remain , i - Your most grateful and obedient servant , - - 1 ( Signed ) Ricuabo Bull . inic « ii ! 0 on the Chest and Shortness of Breath . ' Copy of a Letter from Mr . Jeremiah Casey , No . 1 , Comp . ton-place , Compton-strcet , Brunswick-square , London , f AprU 25 th , 1345 ^ - ^ To Professor Holloway . Sh " , —I beg to inform you that I believe I had been , for i more than three years , one of the greatest sufferers in the world with chronic asthma . For weeks together my : hreathwas frequently so short that I was afraid every i moment of being choked with phlegm . I never went into ' ? a bed ; vwy often , indeed , I have been obli ged to pass the night without being able to recline sufficiently to lay my head on a table , lest I should be suflbcated . No one thought I should live over the winter , nor did I expect it I myself ; but I am happy to say that I am now able to work from morning to night , and that I sleep as well as ever I did in my life ; and this miracle ( I may say ) was effected by rubbing your invaluable ointment twice a day into my chest , and taking tenof your pills at bedtime , and ten again in the morning , for about three months . - ; .-v - ' - . ' .:. ' ( Signed ) . . Jekemiah Casei . In all Diseases of hie Skin , bad legs , old wounds and ulcers , had breasts , sore nipples , stony and ulcerated cancers , tumours , swellings , gout , rheumatism , aud lumbago , likewise ureases of Piles , Holloway ' s Pills in all the above cases , ought to be used with the Ointment ; as by this means cures will be effected with a much greater certainty , and in half the time that it would require by using the-Ointment alone . The Ointment is proved to be a certain remedy for the . bite of mosehetoes , sand-flics , chiego-foot , yaws , coco-hay , and all skin diseases common to the East and West Indies , and other tropical climes . . - Burns , Scalds , Chilblains , Chapped Hands and Lips , : also Bunions and Soft Corns , will be immediately cured by the use of the Ointment . Sold by the Proprietor , 244 , Strand ( near Temple Ba ^) , London ; and . by all respectable vendors of patent medicines throughout the civilised world , in pots and boxes , at Is . 11 & , ? s . 3 d ., 4 s . 6 d ., Us ., 22 s ., and 33 s . each . * * > ifi i § a very coughjerable saving in taking the larger V- "• . -: !•¦ : ¦ .-: ¦ - ,, SIZ Birecno . ^? F !? e ifmdancc of Pat ients are affixed to each pot and box ;
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M . - y ¦ ¦— i . Vast puhUshedi Sixteenth A *' .. „ ,.,,. . ; . ... Mr and «« e frfc rJJ ^ J ^ : im ^ t 0 Mi ^^^ WhMm r V MEDICAL WORK on nervous debility and the con--I ¦** :, ccaled cause of the declihe of physical strength and loss of mental capacity , with remarks ,, oa the effects , of solitary indulgence , negleeted ^ gonorrjjoaji , jyphilis , secondary sjmptomB , & c ., and mode of treatment ; followed by , observations on iuarriage ,-with proper directions for the removal of all disqualifications . Illustrated with engravings , showing . the evils arising from the . use ofmcrcury , and its influence on the body . By R . J . Bkodie and Co ., Consulting Surgeons , London . Puhlished hy the . Authors , - and sold by Sherwood , Gilbert , and Piper , Paternoster-row ; Mr .. Noble , ; 114 , Chft « cery . lane ; Mr . Purkiss ,- Compton- street , Soho ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; Barth , 4 , Brydges-street , Covent-garden ; Gordon . 146 , Lcadenhallstreet , London ; Robertsj -Derby ; Sutton ] : Aegfcuj-omce ; - Notfingham ; Gardiner , Gloucester j Fryer , Bath ; . Harper , Cheltenham ; Keene , Bath ; Cooper , Leicester ; Caldicott , Wolverhampton ; -Jeyes , Northampton ; Parker , Hereftrdi ; Turner , . Coventry ; Slatter , Oxford ; New" tori , " Ohurch-strect , aiid- Ross and Nightingale , Chro-1 nicte-onicey Liverpool ; Fcnis and Score , Union-stroot , Bristol ; Wood , High-street , Guest , Bull-street , Birming . : ham ; Collins , St . Mary-street , Portsmouth ; MendhamV I Nelson-street , "Greenwich ;; Davis , Bernard-street ,- South-- ampton ; and by . all booksellers in town and country , 5 OPINIONS OF THE PBESS . - This is a "work of great merit , and should be placed in " the hands of every young man who is suffering from past ' folly and indiscretion : It contains many valuable truths , s and its ' perusal is certain to benefit him in many ways .- — i London Mercantile Journal . V- , ; . . , ' ,- - . ' -, ;• : --f-i » r e ! The authors of this valuable work evidently = well understand the subject upon which they treat ; and this is the T best guarantee we can give those persons to whom it is likely to prove serviceable . It is a publication ' wbich- ' can , 5 aud ought to be , placed in the hands of every young man A to guide him . among . the temptations-of . the world : to ^ -which'fccmay be subjectcd .-rKentish Mercury , . . ,.: ¦
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to is - - is a - - e - e ; THE CORDIAL BALM OF ZEYLANICA - or , Nature ' s r Grand Restorative ; is exclusively , directed to the cure , of nervous sexual debility , syphilis , obstinate gleets , irregun larity ,. weakness , impotency , barrenness , loss of appetite , 0 indigestion , consumptive habits , and debilities ;' arising from venereal excesses , & c . It is a most powerful and useful medicine in all cases . of . syphilis , constitutional * weakness , or any of theprevious symptoms which indicate approaching dissolution , such as depression of the spirits , f fits , headache , wanderings of the mind , vapours and ' * melancholy , trembling or shaking of the hands or-limbs , '" disordered nerves , obstinate coughs , shortness of breath , and inward wastings . . ^ - -: ; :- ;• : s . This medicine should be taken previous to persons ' , en-J teriug into the matrimonial state , to prevent the offspring suffering from the past imprudence of its parents , or in' heriting any seeds of disease , which is too frequeHtly the ease . Sold in bottles , price 4 s . 6 d . and lis . each , or the 1 quantity of four in one family bottle , for 33 s ., by which one lis . bottle is saved . " . The £ 5 cases ( the purchasing of which will bejysssjgj " of £ 112 s . ) may be had as usual .- Patienf ^ n ^ tKecountry who require a course of this admirivjjj ^ me ; cine , should - ' ** " i f Sifter , which will entjjij them to the full benefit ^ - - . - . . ^ --. ^ " ... ^ . ^ ... of such advantage ; ' ::::-, ; . ; .- ¦ ¦ : ..
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\ BRODIE'S PURIFYING VEGETABLE PILLS are universally atkHOwledgcd to be the best and surestremedy for the cure of the Venereal Disease in both sexes , including gonorrhoea , gleets , secondary symptoms , ' strictures , seminal weakness , ' deficiency , and all diseases of the urinary passages , without loss of time , confinement , or hindrance from business . These pills , which do not contain mercury , have never been known to fail in effecting a cure , not only in recent , but in severe cases , where salivation and " other treatment has been inefficient ; a perseverance in the Purifying Vegetable Pills , in which Messrs . Brodie have happily compressed the most purifying and healing virtues of the vegetable system , and which is of the utmost importance to those afflicted with scorbutic affections , eruptions on any part of the body , ulcerations , scrofulous or venereal taint , will cleanse the blood from all foulness , counteract every morbid affection , and restore weak and emaciated constitutions to pristine health andvigour . . Price Is . IJd ., 2 s . J 9 d ., 4 s . 6 d ., and lis . ' per box . Observe the signature of ' " It , J . Brodie arid ; Co ., London , " impressed on a seal in , red wax , affixed to each bottle and box , as none else are genuine . .. „ ; Sold by all medicine vendors in town and country . Be sure to ask for Brodie ' s , Cordial . Balm of Zeylanica , or Nature's Grand Restorative , and Purifying Vegetable Pills . -. -- ,., ; . Messrs . Brodie and Co ., Surgeons , maybe consulted , as usual , at 27 , Montague-street ,, Russell-square ,, London , from eleveno ' clock in the moming . till . eight in . the evening , and on Sundays from , eleven o ' clock till tyro . , Country patients are requested to be as minute as possible in the detail of their , eases . - ; The . communication must be accompanied with . the usual cqnsultatioii fee of . £ 1 , and in all cases the most inviolable secresy may be rei liedon . ; v -..- ; , v ; : ; , ,: :.- ni ' it-a :, ; -. i-S . - ' ' . ' . * : " i . ' . il ::--i . ' -.., '¦• ¦;¦ : N . B .- —Country . druggists , booksellers , and patent medicine venders can he suppUed with any quantity of Brodie ' s Purif ying Vegetable Pills , and Cordial Balm of Zeylaniea , with the usual allowance to the . trade , by the principal wholesale patent medieine houses in London , . Only one personal visit is required to effect a permanent cure . Observe!— : 27 , Montague-street ; RusseU-square , London :
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WRAY'S FAMILY MEDICINES . A ' i PATRONISED BY Her Grace the Dowager" Sir C . F . Williams , Knt . ' Duchess of Leeds , Sir Edward LyttonBuhvcr , Lady Sherborne . Bart . Earl of Lincoln . ¦; Captain Boldero , M . P . Marquis of AVaterfoi'd , EdwardBaine ' s | Esq ., M , P . Lord Bantry . Archdeacon-Webber . Doctor Bloomberg , Vicar of General Maitlarid . i Cripplegate . ' General Gardner , Mr . Justice Cresswell . General Nisbitt . ¦ # ¦ And families ofthe first distinction . . . I ^ HESE Medicines ; which are found to possess so great - a power over the respective complaints to which they are applicable , as frequently , to render further medical aid unnecessary , were also honoured with the patronage of- — " His late R . H . the Duke of Lord John Churchill . . Sussex . - - Sir Francis Burdctt , M . P . Lord Charles Churchill , George Byng , Esq ., M . P , Sir Matthew Wood , Bt . M . P . And numerous Medical Gentlemen . of eminence in London have borne testimony to their efficacy . ¦ ¦ Prepared and sold , wholesale and retail , at 118 , If olbornhill , and 344 , Strand , London ; and may be liad of aU medicine-vendors in the UnitcdKingdom ; also in America '' of J . 0 . Fay , at his Drug Store , 193 , Broadway , corner oi Dey-strcet , New York ; in Munich and Frankfort , of Frederick Breul ; and can be obtained in . the principal Capitals of Europe , as well as all her Majesty ' s dependencies . Strongly recommended by the Faculty , Wmtfs Aromatic Spice Plasters for tin Cliest . —Coughs , Colds , Asthmas , Shortness of Breath , Pain or Tightness ofthe Chest , Affections of the Lungs , « tc ., are effectually relieved , and in many cases entirely prevented , by the timely application of Wbay ' s Aromatic Spice Piasters to the chest , which are far superior to the common warm plasters , and frequently supersede the use of internal remedies . No person during the winter ought to be without one , travellers by railroad in particular . Sold at Is . and Is . Cd . each . / . ; Wray ' s Concentrated Essence of Jamaica Ginger . —A certain cure ; and preventive of all Nervous Complaints , Spasms , Gout , Rheumatism—an invaluable remedy for Flatulence , pain in the Stomach , also an excellent adjunct to Scidlitz Powders for debilitated constitutions , In bottles at 2 s . 0 d ., is . 6 d „ and lis , ¦^ Wray ' s Chalybeate German Scidlitz Powders , in boxes , containing powders for twelve glasses , at 2 s . each , and iu bottles , fitted in-cases , with spoon , measure ^ tic ; , complete , at 7 s . 6 d . and 10 s . Cd . each . Very convenient for travelling or exportation . Common Seidlitz to malic twenty-four glasses , 2 s . per packet . : Wray ' s Improved Sodaic Ginger Beer and Lemonade Powders , in packets , for eighteen glasses , at Is . and Is . 3 d . ; or in eases , complete for travelling , at 5 s . Gd . and 7 s . Cd . each . Wray ' s AnHbUiousPiUs-r-ln boxes at Is . IJd ., 2 s . Od . j and 4 s . Cd . each . —These Pills are an excellent remedy for preventing and removing Bilious disorders ; they gently operate as an Aperient , and , by keeping the bowels in a proper state , are calculated to promote that regular office of the Bile which is necessary to the preservation of health .. Hence their beneficial effects in removing Indigestion , Head-ache , Giddiness , Sickness , attended with a feverish heat ofthe system , loss of appetite , oppression of the chest , iSsc . . ¦ i Wray ' s Specific Mixture , warranted to remove Urethra ' Discharges in forty-eight hours—in the majority of cases , twenty-four—if arising from local causes , / .-,. Sold in bottles at 4 s . Cd . and lis . each , with full instructions . Wray ' s Improved Suspensory Bandages , well adapted for ¦ Sportsmen , Gentlemen hunting , riding , walking , suffering from disease , relaxation , local debility , & c . ; approved of and highly recommended by the late Mr . Aberncthy . Best Jean ; Is . and Is . Gd . ; ditto with fronts , Ssl Cd . ; Knitted or Wove Silk , 2 s . Cd . ; ditto with elastic springs , 7 s . Cd . ; Wray ' s Steel Spring Trusses , for Hernia , properly adapted ; single . 5 s . Cd ,, 7 s . Cd ., and 10 s . 6 d . ; double , 10 s , « d ., 15 s ., and 2 l 3 , , Medicine chests fitted up for family use or sea voyages . . Genuine Drugs and Chymicals . of every . description ,, with their several preparations , according to the Pharmacopoeia of the -Royal College of . Pbysciaiis . - A largo stock of new , English Honey , of th . efiuest : qualityi- retailing ; at Is ; and-ls . Cd . pcrlb ., aud . the b . es t -West India Tamarinds at the same price . „ „ ,. .,, , , - A liberal allowance Merchants ; and . Captains . : Physicians' - -Pres « riptiong and Family BecUjuus carefully P »^ wcuratc / y prepared hy genttemen reguku-jly qualifced . ' ... ... , ,, ¦ ' Ph ysician ' s Advice- > from el ' . wcn tjjl one , evcry day , Surgical Attendance every evcnh . ' (> ' from ? ev tj 11 nin ' AU utters to benddreseed to " 3 i * &> W S 7 { }} s >? ' 1-born-hill , »
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p . &* - IMPORTANT INfSfeMAh ^; , r ^ 4 ? 4 ^ # r ^^« J ^ P > POOR If ^ IAN'CtRIEJP , " ' $ COn ^ nly ^| Smmcnded to SflWtnd a : cer 1 ^ ur e 1 o ^^ % ^ , 89 / Pg | ( if of twenty years' standing ) , cuts , b ' urns , scalds , bruises , chilblains , ulcers , scorbutic eruptions , pimples in the face , weak and inflamed eyes , piles and fistula , gangrene , and is a ' specific for eruptions that sometimes follow vaccina , tlon . Sold in pots at 13 Ja . and 2 s . ' 9 d . each . ilso , his PILUL 2 B AXTISCBOKHDL ^ , confirmed by more than forty years' successful experience as an invaluable remedy for that distressing complaint , called scrofula , g landular swellings , parriceiarly those of trie neck , Ac . They present one of the best alternatives e \ er compounded for purify ing tho blood and assisting nature , iu all her operations . . They are efficacious also in rbeumatism , and form a mild and superior toily aperient , and , may be taken at ali times without confinement or change of diet . Sold iu boxes at 18 Jd . aed 2 s . 9 d ., By the late Dr . Robsrts ' s will , " Messrs . Beach and Bar . nicott , wh o had been confidently entrusted with the preparationof his medicines for many years past , are left joint . proprietors of tiie Poor Man ' s Priend and Pilulaj A'ntisurophulav & c ! , - & c , with the exclusive right , power , ¦ und-authority'toarepare and vend the same . The utility •< jf these medicines is folly testified by tliousands of persons who'have / been benefited by their aid . Amongst the numerous testimonials received , the following is cleeted :: — " To ' Messrs , Beach and iJarmooff , Bridport . -Gentlemen , —Amongst the . many cures performed by yourinvaluable medicines , I may mention one—the person does not wish his name to appear in public print ,- but . . you may . refcr to mefqrtlie facts of the case . . 'A man , whom disease ; had so affected his"face that it was one complete outbreak ; and souisgusting that lie was obliged . to . keep . it covered ,. and , after trying several remedies , but all in yaih , . , iYaS : iiiducc . d , to try ' ^ your . Poor Mail ' s Friend and Pills ' . After using a pot and a bos of pills , ' he seemed to grow worse ; hut through my persuasion he continued the medioine , and when he had used , the fourth pot ol ointment , and also the pills , he was completely cured , and has remained so ever since ; now nearly six months . j ManyotherremarkableiiistancesofcuresIliaveknown , . inasmuch as I positively think it is one of the best medicines ! am acquainted with , for the diseases to which it is recommended . '¦ . . . - ; Yours very faithfully , ¦• . V •' .- . ¦ ' - ¦ ; ¦ :- . ¦ : " - ; .. ; . THOMAS McADAM . . Dungannon , April 6 , 1841 . y . ' Beware or Counterfeits , —No medicine sold under the above names can possibly be genuine unless "Beach and : Barnicott , late Dr . Roberts , Bridport , " is engraved and printed on the stamp affixed on each package , ; , Sold wholesale . 'by the Proprietors , Beach and Barsi" cott , at their Dispensary , Bridport ; by the London houses . ; ' and byappoiiitment by Br . Butler . vDublin ; Marshall , Belfast ; O'Shaughncssy , Limerick ; M'Swceny . Gal-, way ; M'Adam , Dungannon ; 'G . P . Atk | n ?; . clteSiisf , ^ 123 , Patrick-street , near thc JIai-k jt , Cork .
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Just Published , ^ A new and important Edition of the Silent Friend on ¦;¦ " '¦ / Sii ' P F ™^" .. ^ .- ' ,... " , ' . [ , ..- ' Price 2 s ,. 6 d ., and , sent free , to . any part . of . the . United Kingdom on the receipt of a Post Office Order foi , "' , 8 s . " 6 d ;;_; . ¦ - ;; .. _ . ' " ,.. ; ' . ' : ; ' , ' . - ' A MEBIC AL WORK on the INFIRMITIES of the GENBRATIYE SYSTEM , in both sexes ; being an enquiry into the concealed cause that destroys physical energy , and the ability of manhood , ere vigour has established her empire : —with Observations on the baneful effects of SOLITARY INDULGENCE and INFECTION j local and constitutional WEAKNESS , NERVOUS IRRITATION , CONSUMPTION ,, and on the partial or total EXTINCTION ofthe REPRODUCTIVE POWERS ; with means of restoration ; the destructive effects of Gonorrliaja , Gleet , Stricture , and Secondary Symptoms are explained in a familiar manner ; the Work is Embellished with Ten fine coloured Engravings , representing the deleterious influence of Mercury on the . skin , by eruptions on the head , face , and body ; with approved mode of cure for both sexes ; followed by observations on the obligations of MARRIAGE , and healthy perpetuity ; with directions , for the removal of certain Disqualifications : the whole pointed out to suffering humanity as a "SILENT PRIEND" to be consulted without exposure , and with assured confi . denceof success . By R . and L . FERRY and Co ,, Consulting Surgeons . j Published by the Authors , and may be had at their Rcsidence , 19 , Berners-strcet , Oxford-street , London '; sold by : Strange , 21 ,-Paternoster-row ; Hannay and Co ., 03 , Oxford-street ;; , Gordon ,-110 , Leadenhall-strect ; Powell , 10 , Westmorland-street , Dublin ; Lindsay , 11 , Elm-row , Edinburgh ; D . Campbell , 130 , Argyle-strcct , Glasgow ; Ingham , Market-strcct , Manchester ; Newton , Churchstreet ; Liverpool ; Guest , Bull-street , Birmingham . opinions or TII 13 press . , i i "Wo regard tee work before us , the "Silent Friend , " as ii work embracing most clear and practical views of a series' of conijlaints ; , hitherto .: little understood ,, and passed over , by- 'ihe majority of the medical profession , for what , reason we are at a loss to know . We must ; however , confess 'hat " a " . perusal of this work has left such a favourable impression on bur minds , that we not only recommend , ' but cordially wish every one who is the . victim of past folly , or suffering from indiscretion , to profit by the advice contained in its pages . "—Age and Argus , . f'The Authors of . the "Silent . Priend" seem to be thoroughly conversant with the treatment of a classof . complaints which sire , . we fear , too prevalent in tiie . ' present day . The perspicuous style in , which this book is written , and the ' valuable hints it conveys to ' those who are apprehensive of entering the marriage stale , cannot fail ' to reicommend it to . a careful perusal . "—!©•« .-.,,, . . f ? , Tbis ; work should be rcad . by all who value health and wish to enjoy life , for the truisms therein contained defy , all doubt , - ^ Farmers' Journal , :. ' \
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; . TIIE CORDIAL BALM OF SYRIACUM ; Is intended to relievo those persons , who , by an immoderate indulgence of their passions , have ruined their constitutions , or in their way to the consummation of that deplorable state , are affected with any of those previous symptomsthat betray its approach , as the various affections of the nervous system , obstinate gleets , excesses , irregularity , ' obstructions of certain evacuations , weakness , total iinpotency , barrenness , & c . ' ; ; This medicine is particularly recommended to bo taken before persons . enter into . the matrimonial state , lest , in the event , of procreation occurring , the innocent offspring should bear enstamped , upon it the jihysical characters derivable from parental debility , i 'Price lis ., or the quantity of four at lis . in one bottle for 33 s „ by which lis . is saved ; the £ 0 cases may be had as usual , which is a saving of £ 112 s ,
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THE CONCENTRATED DETERSIVE ESSENCE , An anti-syphilitic remedy , for searching out and purifying the diseased humours of the blood ; conveying its active principles throughout the body , . even penetrating the minutest vessels , removing all corruptions , contaminations , and impurities from the vital stream ; eradicating the nun-bid virus , and radically expelling it through the skin . Price lis ., or four bottles in one for 33 s ., by which lis . is saved , also in £ 5 cases , which saves £ 112 s . , Venereal contamination , if not at first eradicated , will often remain secretly lurking in the system for years , and , although for . a while undiscovered , at length , break out upon the unhappy individual in its most dreadful forms ; or else , unseen , internally endanger the very vital organs of existence . To those suffering from the consequences which this disease may have left behind in . the form of secondary symptoms , eruptions of the skin , blotches on the head and face , ulcerations and enlargement of the throat , tonsils , and threatened destruction of the nose , palate , ttc , nodes oh the shin bones , or any of those painful affections arising from the dangerous effects of the indiscriminate use of mercury , or the evils of an imperfect cure , the Concentrated Detersive Essence will be found to be attended with the most astonishing effects , iii checking the ravages of the disorder , removing all scorbutic complaints , and effectually re-establishing the health ofthe constitution . To persons entering upon the responsibilities of matrimony ,, and . who ever had the misfortune during their more youthful days to be affected with any form of these diseases , a previous course of this medicine is . highly essential , and of the greatest importance , as move serious affections are visited upon an innocent wife and offspring / from a want of these simple precautions , than perhaps half the world is aware of ; for , it must be remembered , where the fountain is polluted , the streams that flow from it caunot be pure ,- . perry : s PURIFYING SPECIFIC riLLS , Price 2 s . 3 d ., 4 s . Od ., and lis . per box , With explicit directions , rendered perfectl y intelligible to every capacity , are well known throughout Europe to be the most certain and effectual remedy ever discovered for gonorrhoea , both in its mild and aggravated forms , by immediately allaying inflammation ' and arresting further progress . . '' ..- ' . - .. ' . ' .:. . ¦' ¦¦¦ - " . ; Gleets , strictures , irritation ofthe bladder , pains ofthe loins and kidneys , gravel , and other disorders of thc . urinary passages , in cither , sex , are permanently , cured in a short space of time , without confinement or the least exposure . . . , The above medicines are . prepared onl y by Messrs . R . and L . PERltY . and Co ,, Surgeons , 19 , Bcrnevs-street , ' Oxford-street , London . Messrs . PERRY expect , ichen consulted by Utter , the usual fee of One Pound , without which no notice whatever can be taken of the communication . . Patients are requested to be as minute as possible in the , detail of . their cases , as to the duration of the complaint , the symptoms , age ,, habits of living , general occupation . . Medicines can be forwarded to any part of the world ; no difficulty can occur , as they will be securely packed , and carefully protected from observation . Messrs . Perry and Co ., Surgeons ; may be consulted a « usual , at : 19 ,: Berners-street , OxfordWeVLo " tuaUy . from Eleveu till Two , and from Fivean - 'St ' On Sundays from Ten till Twelve . Onl y one rsonai visit is required from a country - patient to en-iht Messrs . Perry and Co . to give such advice as will he'X means of effecting a permanent and effectual cure Iftot all other means have proved ineffectual , ' 1 N . B .-Country Druggists , Booksellers , Patent Medicine Venders , and every other shopkeeper , can be gunnli . dw . Vi any quantity of the Cordial Balm of Syriaeum t £ To » ' . centrated DetersivcEssence , and- 'Perry ' s Purifv L C ' cific Pills , with . the nsual allowance to the & - ^ - most of the principal Wholesale Patent Medicine IIouss in London , of whom may be had the « Sii ent friend »
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* j ! . -s ^ Vi ; '' , - k . '¦ , i & il ^ mmSmoFFm , 90 , Wiiterloo-road , Liverpool . THE Subscribers contimw to despatch first-class Packets to NEW YORK , UOSTON . QUEBEC , MONTREAL ,-PHILADELPHIA , NEW ORLEANS , and ST . JOHN'S , XH . ., ' . . „ , „ . ... ,.,.,.. «» , They are also Agents for the Now Line of New York Packets , comprising the following ma ' gnificcnt . sliips : — Tons . To Sail . HoTTiKqUEn ...... 1100 Gth September . Livebpool 1150 ...... 6 th October . Who . havc also , For New York St . Patrick UeO ' tons . „ „ .. Republic 1100 „ „ „ ... ' ...... Empire ..,. 1200 „ „ „ ¦ . -... „> .,. Sheffield .. 1000 „ „ Boston , Lama 1000 „ „ Philadelphia ...... Octavius .......... , ^ !) 00 „ „ New Orleans ...... Geo . Stevens , 800 „ „ „ Thos . II . Perkins ... 1000 „ Passengers going to the Western States and Canada can know the actual outlay to reach any important point on the Lakes and Rivers by obtaining one of Tapscott ' s Emigrant ' s Travelling Guides , which can bo had- by sending postage stamps for the same , to George Rippard and Son , and William Tapscott , as above .
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PARR ' S LIFE PILLS - . • . - - .-.. ¦ - " J . } i .,-. ;; t : ¦ - ; A RE acknowledged to be all that are required to con-Xl .. quer disease and prolong life . , .,.,. ! i The extraordinary success of this medicine . is . the wonder of the age ; it has been tried by hundreds of thousands as an aperient , and has in every instance dprte gppd ; it has never in the slightest degree unpaired the inostdelicate constitution . Tens of . thousands have testified . that perseverance in the use of PARR'S LIFE PILLS will completely cure any disease , and art ) living witnesses of the , benefit received . from ; this invaluable medicine . . Testimonials are received daily , and ft would be impossi-, ble in , a , newspaper to publish one half . received ; .. aiid . the following are selected as people well . known in their re . spective neighbourhoods , and whose testimony is unquestionable . , Further sheets of testimonials , and . the " Life . and Times of OldParr , " may be had , ' gratis , of all agents . . "¦ . ¦ -... ¦;' . '¦ . . . ' , . :-. ¦¦ . .. " :., , The following case of cure by Parr ' s Life Pills is communicated by Air . C . Ruiter , chemist and druggist , Shaftcsbury ; Dorset , agent for Parr ' s Pills : — , ; ; ; A respectable farmer residing near Shaftesbury , had for years been subject to the most distressing attacks of giddiness of the head , frequently attended with severe head [ ache . The various medicines he used at different times ' did him little or lio good , till he ' was induced to give Parr ' s ' Pills a 'trhil . . ' The very first dose iiftorded much relief , and lie has found thein more serviceable than any other me-. i . licip '' lie has taken . He always resorts to them on finding any ' s ' yinptoius " "Of- { " !!• wnipJa'i . it'CSJni ag'O . n , nn'i tfjey invariably relieve him . The attacks have beeii much less tVequent since taking Parr ' s Pill ? , and he believes by continuing their use his comulaint will entirely leave him , Dated April 20 th , 1815 . From Mr . W . Alexander , bookseller , Yarmouth : — , You will probably remember the nanie of the respectable octogenarian gardener , Mr , Cowles , of Blunderstone , who still ( with his son-in-law ) attends our excellent vegetable and fruit market . Mr . Cowles , when I last saw hhn , a few . weeks ago , was in excellent health , and , although eighty-eight years of age , works at digging in his garden several hours in the day . He still continues occasionally to take the med cine , which he believes , under Providence , to have been the means of conferring on him so much comfort . Since I wrote the above , I have inquired after Mr . Cand , and learn that'he is quite well and hearty . The late severe cold weather affected him much ; but , having taken your excellent medicine , he is quite well , cheerful , aud atle to resume his work . WtLHAM AlXXANDEB . Champion Oflicc , March 5 , 1815 , Gentlemen , —I think it only fair to mention that a man named Scanlon , residing in Sligo , porter to the Bianconi Car , on purchasing a box of your pills , declared to me that for the last eight years he has suffered severely from a bad stomach , no food resting on it , and swelling often existing ; and that after finishing one box at Is , lid . ho felt not only better , but well ; can now eat any food , and his appetite and spirits increase . I remain , gentlemen , your obedient servant ,-C . Verdon . Beware of spurious tmitationt . Beware of spurious imitations of the above medicine . None are genuine unless the words PARR'S LIFE PILLS are in WHITE let-teas on a RED okound , engraved on the Government' Stamp , pasted round each box ; also the fac-simile of the signature of the Proprietors , "T . ROBERTS and Co ., " London , on the directions , . ' -. i Sold in boxes at Is ; lld . ^ 2 s , 9 d ., and family packets at . lis ., by Edwards , ' 67 / - St . ' Paul's ; Barclay and Sons , Parringddn-street ; Sutton and Co ., Bow Church-yard , London ; Mottcrshead ' and Co ; , Manchester ; J . and R . Raimes and Co ., Edinburgh ; Mitchell , Glasgow ; and by all respectable ' druggists and patent medicine retailers throughout the kingdom , —Directions are given with each box . >
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UNDER ROYAL PATRONAGE . DR . LOCOCK'S PULMONIC WAFERS , THE TESTIMONIALS already received of Cures of Asthmas , Consumptions , Coughs , and Colds , and all disorders of . the breath and lungs , by Dr . LOCOCK'S PULMONIC WAFERS , now ml upwards of fifty sheets of closely printed paper , and numbers continue to be received almost daily—not only from England , but India , America , and all other parts of , theworldr—proving them to be the most unfailing and speedy remedy ever discovered .-. ^ ; ..: ¦ ,.- ; ., ; :-v . - The following ; has just been received from tiie Rev . J . Stainsby , Rector of Ilauover , Jamaica . : tu . i . , Dated Nov . 20 , 1844 . i Gentlemen , —Having been cured of an obstinate and distressing cough , under which I laboured for the . iast eleven months , by the use of your Pulmonic Wafers , I take the liberty of addressing you these few lines , hoping that my fteblc testimony of their efficacy maybe the means of inducing those who suffer as I have to apply to so safe and effectual a remedy . '" . I am , gentlemen , your obliged servant , - ... ; J . Stainsiit , Rector of Hanover , Jamaica . CURE OF ASTHMAS , CONSUMPTIONS , & e ., itc ., IN CHESTER . . Read the following from Messrs . Piatt and Son , 13 , Foregate-strect , Chester . March 20 , 181 S . . Sir , —Your invaluable Wafers continue to perform wonders here . ; Since our last we could send yovi dozens of cases of the most astonishing cures . One gentleman , who has had a bad cough for years , bought one box , and was cured before using tiie whole of it . He gave the rest away , and they were equally bene , ficial . , A medical gentleman here is so convinced of their value , that , besides regularly recommending them to his patients , he had some a few days since for one of his children , for the hooping cough . . One of our . clergymen also , who laboured under an asthma many years , has received such extraordinary benefit himself , that he now gives many boxes away every week among the poor . Persons who have laboured under asthma , asthmatic coughs , consumption , & c , call upon us almost daily to thank us for having recommended to them this "instant cure , " iS : c . -.: ' -. ' ' M . Platt and Sox . ANOTHER EXTIUOllDlNAllY CURE OF CONFIRMED ASTHMA . Mrs . Gordon , of Flookcr ' s-brook , Chester , hadlong been given up as incurable , and was for many weeks confined to bed in the last stage of an asthma . She could not sleep for her difficult breathing , cough , & c . The first two Wafers she took relieved her cough , an hour after which she had a comfortable sleep , and in twelve days was able to walk out . Mrs . Gordon will be happy to reply to all inquiries . March 20 th , 1845 . IMPORTANT TO ALL WHO SING . From S . Pearsall , Esq ., of her Majesty ' s Concerts , aiid Vicar Choral of Lichfield Cathedral . Lichfield , 10 th of July , 1845 . ;¦ Gentlemen , —Alady of distinction having pointed out to me the qualities of Dr . Locock ' s , Wafers , I was induced to make a trial of a box , and from . this trial I am happy to give my testimonial in their iavour . ; I find , by allowing a few of the Wafers ( taken in the course of the day ) to gradually dissolve , in the mouth , my voice becomes bright and clear , and the tone full and distinct . . 1 They arc decidedly the most efficacious of any I have everused . . .- -, ... ( Signed ) . SAMUEtPEillSALI ,. :. i Tiie particulars of many hundred cures rnay be had from every agent throughoxU the kingdom and on t / ie continent . i Dn . Locock ' s WirEns give instant relief , and a rapid euro of asthmas , consumption , coughs , colds , and all disorders of the breath audlungs , & c , & c . , To Singehs and Public Speakees they are invaluable as in a few hours they remove all hoarseness , and increase the power and flexibility of the voice . They have a most pleasant taste . Price is , lid ,, 2 s . 9 d ,, and lis . ' per box . Agents-Da SilvaandCo ., 1 , Bridclane , Fleet-street , London . _ CAUTI 0 N .-To protect the public from spurious iputat . ons , her Majesty ' s Honourable .. Commissioners have caused to be printed on tho stamp , outside each box , the words , Dr . Locock ' s Wafers , » . in white letters on a red tf rj ^ jid , without which none are genuine , ' " : ? oldby all Medicine Venders .
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¦ POPULAR WORKS ' - 'NOW PUBLISHING BY ; W , T 3 UGDALE , 37 , IIOLYWLLL-SIRhLT , ' ATEW Waflk ' EOOENE SUE , "DE ROHAN ; 1 \ Oil THE COURT CONSPIRATOR , " in penny numbers and fourpenny parts . The first part and number seven are published this day . Translated expressl y for this edition , and nothing omitted . . THE WANDERING JEW , No . 33 , and Part 8 , is out , and is eVpccicd to be completed in forty-two numbers . . THE . MYSTERIES ' OF PARIS , uniform with the above , is progressing Part 5 and No . 20 are ready . « ill be speedily finished in about thirty numbers . # * Order the Nonpareil edition . . The Mysteries of Paris may also . be had in sixty penny lumbers , or fifteen parts at fourpe . nee each ; being the Brst translation in the English language , and the only one that contains all the original editio . i before the authorhad curtailed it to plcasa the fastidious taste of a too prurient public . Tin ' s cditien has fifty engravings , is printed in good bold type , and the whole , handsomely bound inred , in one volume , may be had for 4 s . * * A liberal allowance to dealers . Also in two volumes octavo , neatly bound ,
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VOLTAIRE'S PHILOSOPHICAL DICTIONARY , without abridgment or mutilation , containing : every word of the edition in six volumes published at £ 2 ' 10 s . The first ivolume has a medallion likeness ofthe author , and . tho second a full-length engraving of Voltaire . as he appeared in his seventieth year . To the first volume is prefixed a copious Memoir of his Life and Writings . Every care has been taken to keep tiie text correctj so , that it may remain ' a lasting monument of the genius and indomitable perseverance of the author in enlightening and liberating his fellow creatures . The universal fame of Voltaire ; tlJe powerful blows which lie dealt to superstition and ; r . nvnny , from which they will never recover , have long rcn' deixd this book celebrated ' above all others , as the great advocate of freedom and humanity , and the aniloiibfiible jassanant of tyranny , whether spiritual or militant . p 01 . , beauty of typography , arid correctness of the text , the publisher will challenge competition—and for ch imcss ll 6 will defy ' all . The two volumes contain 1270 pa ges , »„ £ . ¦ may be had in 120 penny numbers , thirty parts at f 0 llr _ pence each , or in two volumes , handsomely bound and lettered , price 12 s . Sold by all bookseUers .
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: The WORKS of THOMAS PAINE , uniform with Vol . ' taire ' s Dictionary , to be completed iii one . volume , or ' sixty penny numbers , each number containing sixteen pages of good , clear , and readable type . The first part has a bold and excellent portrait of Paine , after Sharpc , from a painting by Romney . Strange as it may aiipear , there has yet been , no complete and cheap edition of the works of this celebrated man . Richard Carlile placed ihcm beyond the reach of the lvorking classes lriicn he published them for £ 2 2 s , the Political Works alone , and the Theological Works for lOs . Cd . ¦ It is calculated that the whole will not , exceed sixty numbers atonepennj each , or fifteen parts at fourpenee . Eight numbers are now published , and the succeeding parts will be issued with rapidity .
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; y 0 LT . AI ] lE S R 0 Jr'ANCES 7 NOVELS , ' and TALES . Tiie celebrity which these famous Talcs have obtained in all European and American languages renders all com . ment superfluous . For wit , sarcasm , and irony they stand unrivalled . This will be the first uniform and com . plcte edition , and will comprise the following celebrated works : —Candide , or All for the Best ; Zadig ; . The Huron , or the Pupil of Nature ; The White Bull : The World as it Goes ; The Man of Forty Crowns j . The Princess ot Babylon ; Memnon the Philosopher ; Micromegas ; Plato ' s Pream ; Babcbee , or the Fakirs ; The Two Comforters , Le ., ' & . C . Six parts , . fompence each , and twenty-four penny numbers , are how ready . The remainder ni ) J speedily follow . .
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The DIEGESIS ; being a discovery of the origin , evi . deuces , and early history of Christianity never before or elsewhere so fully and faithfully set forth , By the Rev . Robert T AVI . OK .. Complete in fifty-four numbers , at one penny each , or thirteen parts , fourpenee each ; or may be had , neatly bound iu cloth and lettered , price 5 s .
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, THE DEVIL'S PULPIT , or the Astro-Theologic . il Lectures of tiie Rev . Robert Taylor , published under that title . coinplote in forty-eight numbers , the two last com . prising a Memoir of the Life and Writingsof theReverend Author . This work was formerly published in 'twopenny numbers—now reduced in price to one penny . All the numbers are reprinted as they fall out , so that sets may be constantly obtained . ";
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, The parts may be had separate ; parts I . and II ., Is . 6 dV each , and part III ., 2 s . May be had of all Booksellers . , Paul deKoek ' s Works , full and free translations : — NEIGHBOUR RAYMOND , price Is ., a most amusing tale . The BARBER OF PARIS , 2 s . SUSTAVUS ; or the Young Rake , 2 s . GEORGETTE ; or the Scrivener's Niece , 2 s . BROTHER JAMES , 2 s . MY WIFE'S . CHILD , Is . 6 d . THE MAN WITH THREE PAIR OF BREECHES , 2 s . TOURLOUROU ; or the Conscript , 3 s .
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. Also , INDIANA , by George Sand , a Romance of Illicit Love , 3 s . FERRAGUS . TIIE CHIEF OF TIIE DEVOURERS , by M . de Balzac , Is . Gd . Will be followed up by others of the same writer .
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, ilAKKlAUlS PHYSIOLOGICALLY DISCUSSED . In four parts . —Part-I . On . the Necessity of Marriage ; Precocity ; Effects of Wedlock . Part II . Instructions in Courting ; . Sudden Love ; Organizations ; Madness cured by Matrimony ; the- Courtezan Reclaimed . Part III . Limitation of life justified ; Protectors—their utility and general adoption . Part IV . —Real causes of Sterility ; remedies . From the French of Jean Dubois , 2 s . Cd . iiuius Oi
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' i' ± lll , osoi llY ; or , p rivate advice to young married people . Containing the various hypothesis of Generation ; Structure of the Female Organs ; Conceptions ; Remedies against Barrenness and Impotency ; with a curious anatomical plate . 2 s . Cd . AU the above , and more extensive Catalogue , may be hadfrom every vender of periodicals . All orders punctuaUy attended to .
Christianv. Turkish" Tenets.—The Late Collision Of Turkish Steamers In The Black Sea Places The
Christianv . Turkish" Tenets . —The late collision of Turkish steamers in the Black Sea places the
Onnstian Part Ot The Crew Ot The Sinking...
onnstian part ot the crew ot the sinking vessel m a not very advantageous comparison with the Turks . The Christians , it appears , were not half so resigned to the will of Providence as the believers in Mahomet , and , instead of suffering themselves to sink meekly and quietly , they set up a , loud yell of horror as the vessel was going down . The 'Turks / on the contrary , uttered no cry , and stirred not a muscle . With all our conviction of the . splendid superiority of Christianity overlslaimsin , the crescent certainly beat the cross in this instance . The impassivencss of the lurks seems more creditable than the outcries ofthe Christians . It is but fair to give the devil his due , Ike Mussulmcn must bo allowed to have acted like
brave men , and the utter hopelessness of escape only sets off the fortitude with whicli they met their fate . For once the doctrine of fatalism served them in good stead , and their resignation and faith in it were demonstrated under circumstances that admit of no dispute . It may be that the hope and near prospect ot meeting some , of the . charming houris , and lastinjr too ravishing joys promised by tho prophet , helped then- . courage a little . A manwho believes himself about to enjoy but half the . delights of a Mahomet ' s paradise may . bo excused forfeeling wondrously indifferent to mere sublunary felicity ... The Christian heaven oilers a more pure , but more shadowy sort of happiness , and to a Turkish imagination would not seem yery attractive , since , even the followers ' of the cross think it prudent to defer going there to the last possible moment . —Satirist . .
j Extraordinary Leap ' . from ' . Huxgerfobd , Suspension Bridge . —At an early hour on Monday morning considerable excitement prevailed in the neighbourhood of-Hungerford Market , in consequence of it being known that Mr . II . Ivenworthy , ihe wellknown teacher , of swimming ,--had undertaken , for a , wager often sovereigns , to jump from the battlement ofthe above bridge and swimto Blaekfriars Bridge in the short space of ten minutes ( with tide ) . ; At six o'clock Mr . K . i accompanied . by several friends , made his appearance at the bridge , and sh . ortly . after-[ wards plunged from the centre of it into the water , and immediately afterwards was to be seen striking put-manfully for the opposite bridge , which ? lie at tained within the time , amidst the clieers of the spectators , and won his wager ! Mr . K . suffpred . some slight injuries in his descent by falling into , the water sideways ,
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Aug. 16, 1845, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_16081845/page/2/
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