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^p^.. ._,... ' THB " NORTHERN/ STAB;, _ ...
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StbatfOuD.—A public meeting *wss held at...
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NOP7 PUBLISHING.
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THE NOKTHEHN STAR, SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1848.
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THE GUIZOT OF ENGLAND AND THE MEN OF LON...
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PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW. The financial inco...
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Co tfteaaers & Corresponoetr ts.
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Ml-CELLANEi'CU. jjggr- Now that Parliame...
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We request all Sub-secretaries, and othe...
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Manchester.—Great Repeal Demonstration o...
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¦RUiCiiilP'r'ti OB* THE NATIONAL £.&*«$ ...
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PER O'CONNOR, ¦ BABES. . La7<eLoch .. 4 ...
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EXPENSE FUND . Lake Loch .. 0 2 0 New Ra...
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Total Land Fund ... ... £390 6 9 Expense...
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Receipts ofthe New Land Company ... 19 0...
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Errata..—Last week, Iveston should have ...
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Manchester .. ,. .. 73 7 6 Ch.irley, Mon...
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DKFEKCE OP MR o'coSNOa'3 SEAT IN PARLIAM...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
... Monday . Mabch 6 Tiie Jfousb Op Lc11...
Stated-thai individual Wng - Mr C-. cl . rane . _^ _W _fr _& V / _nUemwts in th * public P _*^« _"f _** L _Tragpftmrf by mm , _shotted _aj * _^ * _£ _faliar-suHare . for the _^ rpose oi J _^ J _^ _^ prktyof petnion _^ p _^ _- _^ _^ f tl | f T _i-ecommusiou'ersj-v police bl Qea __ _F- _^ _SS _^ ELE * * _w p , ace wi _* " d _^ J _» rfha . l . . _*«** in the parish of St ««•* ° _* _. _^ Irdln sir _Oehnne replied to this com-E _* sl _<*^" _£ 8 " rpo _« was to petition against the _^ nlcaT _^ and tbat _^ _cwas not befere aware that _oiwu
• _Z & -ct was illegal . The _commissural r _^ SS * _X b » _a _cot assr , ed that I 0 mect w petifI " SSLt _rtM-I « . con . ! Wc was illegal ; but that it WK _fltTiral to hold _« y public meeting _dsrin _f the sitting < _af _rSitsmeht within _« to limits they had tefifr _. _AAcd i £ e 3 r hear ) Mr Cochrane thea ? w < _ap the _preset , _^ _sd _hiilmate ' _dbypVicardsto tbe _puolfcthat the _tseetf _& would not hi fctld . Some persons , bowevhr , _wsemwtd at Ihe plBCCSientioaed ; but vtitfcwSrard'to _* ff » e _col-Jkion between the police and the peepie , _andU « grave 2 nsrquenc . es _wnlch bad foHo _«* - « l * _JartS _^ -he ta lieved . bevhE . - i all been comprise- ! _* _t _the'tWuag of _mne lamps _*««* P oUce mtt « ffft , aa ' f _tut m 0 " _temoerattlyVaiTressed . ( _He-ar . _^
_PA-BES' -it _^ _S BUI ,.- On the _briucing _Uptlw report on _thi-iili _ifr'LxBorcBESE _intfnatst _rbif he _* feid amended _tnebm ' iH- cci . _rdauce _^ lth the s _- _^ ges _iton'aisde to hira _S the _prions nig ht by pr _^ feg _* Uia _«* rtcfe _passengers Sndin-: flfc anv pun of our _sticks _should have the right £ be _elided hack to _tfceirKce of _^ herkat . ou , and « tet iu -case of persons _Ending Hi _conKquewjr «* _S _: kaeHf tt .. p . « _-se mo _^ _hoirld'hereturned . Tho report was thru receive _* . _* Ed _the'bU ordered to be re _» . d a third lime . . The house adjourned at a few _tr / _hmtes afur biz . ¦
WEDSSSS . _SY _. - _' _ilkt'a ; 8 -3 ' OUSE OF _COMUe-KS . —T he-hou-e met at _tnx _*? e o ' clock and went into _comminee ou the Rom * < 3 _± - _-7 SCI . IC Relief Bill , _frrotraciec'di'cussions arose _epmr . s & Veral ofthe . clauses , and three- divisi . ns took _pfese . & x _* ix o _* clock tbe _* urthu- _fpsfcreEB of the bill _wts ' cropped , and the tocse adjourned , the _commtiUe _tesit again ntxt Wcdr . _eidcy ; - . TH ! _trt 55 > XY _;^ iBca 9 . ; i HOUSE OF C 0 K « O _>' =. —« _s . _Caxwroan _' _s _rablisn _-Srthe Repeal Of _fhr'SLlwr f sLere _Claus-, in _theifcrish "Poor Relief Bill led to un -animated discussion . -Str w . gomervilla , Sir G _/ Grey _. -lifH . J . _O'ConB _. ll , Mr-fi » _= fae , _Colonel Ckrsiolly . lMr 4 loa . iU and CoW Dunne , qub -hg against the repealof the _^ dious _clause , whieh denies relief * to . _» _j-min _ocreftfa R one quarter of an acre of eroand ; Mr _O-Flaherty . _-MrtrOannor . _MrAgHoftfe , and _ilrWafe ' ev _supnartifl _? the motion of Mr i > , CrR « ford . _itY _* e ' give " Mr _^ _'ConnoVs -speech fro m the _&& . z * _iva _ifcEBoi'icr . _s : — _i
......,. , ¦ _MrFKAKGCS- _O'CosiME said that if he hed any _Ambt as to tbe policy ot the motion o * bis bon . friend the member for _-Rochdale , it had been removed by the speech ofthe rig ' _irrkan-. gentleman , lbs thief Secretar y lor-Ireland . The mht hou . gentleman S 6 tout bv safing that his hon . friend had nnsinterfc feted the Isw _*; hut tha rig ht hon . gentleman ought ¦ fi » _havereeoHectt-d _that _' _-fie law had _De-n-frMnc-l for _persons who were tar-more igno Vant of its nature _vian his he _« . _frhn « - namely , the _landlores of Ireland _jrenereifc . The invariab _' e rule , liowewr . was . that-the landlords-were to have the benefit of any _inirinterprctation _' of the law that _misht t _^ he place . *• Hear , hear , ' 5 _anH 'So , no . ' fhn _inbl hon . gentleraan did not dsny that the landlords-had taken _* d v : nrs < Te of th „ _s _claupe to level house ? , and to
_exercise av > _ilh-gal _rioiit ; and vet he said that the work-• _inWfthe ' _aw-ao-ib- _f-eperilled if the - clause were struck out . Noivwhatcould be _astronger proof of the Incapacity of the _novi-rnraentthaii such an assertion , _tfor the clause _ityfc'hicli such vital importance was attached was _iiKe-mt introduced orig inally into the hill * bvtb . e <* _orernment . butbi the hon . member tor Dab-< li ' n { _Mrfiregory' )? The _rkht hon . _gentlomae appeared -to nave altogether _foraoiten the part oi his honour " _^ ible friei _> c ' sspecch referring to tenants in common , "( Hear . ) He was prepared to trace the who _' e of the ¦ annmalv with _regard ' to those holdings to the _Legislature . ' The -Ms . freeholders were introduced for -po'itieal purposes , and _airain five or six tenants were _admitted in common under one _leasoand one stamp -for the purpose nf increasing the . poiitical power of
- 'the _lamitord . _;; It was with tne same q _bieJCt m view that they were now legislating also . LBuc he would i & sk the hou = _eto hiok lo the justice of this mode of -proceeding , -if a man were able to maintain hifl _^ family without _re-ief ? ut ' of the poor rates on a - _^ quar ter of anacreof land , it followed that 1 . 000 . 030 - _•< of acres wool 1 support four millions of families , or _^ twenty millions or' _^ _rsans , aaJ _therofi _. re that the ' _^ fteen _miiii-. insuf acres in Ireland oa « _-ht to maintain -a . population of three hundred millions of sou ! s . -If that , were so , ho _^ did it happen that out-of the _-present limi-ed population ot Ireland ihey Haw _thousands ef victims dy ing every wetk _of-absolute famine _^< IIear , he * r ) ? lie could tell the right hon- _ge _itlejnin the Chief Secretary for Ireland , and the right _ian . b _;^ oaet the Secretary ef -S tate for _ihs
_'HomeBeparlment . _thtt there was _nouims in . history , like the present condition of Ireland . - ( Hear , hear . ) vJi thev read of a million of people _hei . i . _p slain in _Vwar , ihey wawd be driven almost to madaes _* at snch ia sacrifice -cf human life ; and yet -they sat there - _-tdiscussing _in-cafmuess the policy of retaining that . _rfluartcr-a _.-rf--clause by which equal destruction of - tinman life -was involved . He ( Mr 6 _'Oonuor ) knew f the feelings of the Irish people perhaps better than . _. _r-the right hon .. gentleman ; - and he could tell him -: that , it the boase did not legislate " more justly and : CIE 0 re humanely f » r Ireland than they-had hitherto v _: done . there- _^ _oald shortly ' be an enei to British - _^ dominion in Ireland . ( Hear , hear , hear . ) It was _» _- £ tnp _issib'e that a just , a humane , and . . a ser-- ; -sible people could endure to be treated as tbe -pebpleot Ireland havebsen . They had-beard mueh i sympathy expressed for the poor _EngiL-h people who _jrs-ere rent over bere from France , _andidl that had in
_^ _been done the way of providing ihem _-ew-uu f oodaEd _Nothing . But why , he asked , was thera to be no sympathy whatever shown forthe people of Ireland ( hear , hear )? He _giire his cordial support to the motion of his honourable _friend , tfcough there was a part ofthe bill , referring to mortgages and titledeeds , of which he could not approve . That , howrever , had nothipg to do with the main-sbjict to be effected—the repeal ofthe quarter-acre clau > e . The main portion _ofrhis honourable friend ' s-speech had _isen wholly pa = sed-over by-the . _richt . honourable -gentleman t _"* N . o , no from Sir W . Sumerville ) . -: The right honourable gentleman" had certainly _cem-. - ¦ tradicted his _hooourabie friend , but he had net : attempted to _diaprwe his argumeots . Be could - tell the right honourable gentleman that though he slight p ? avail-OB tho house . toa « _rei withliim on this _question , he could not prevent the Irish people from considering whether their interests were d « £ e justice ¦ -t > in th & thouse _orsot ( ilear . )
. _-SaiDAT , _Maech 10 . t- _'In the H 0 U 5 B of . _LoSDS noihing of interest tran-- £ _pired . - - -- ' : _HOUSSOF _COaMQSS . —Hr H . J . _O'CcisaEtt reparted from the L : nc' » lhJJlection _Committee that Charles Seely , E 5 q ., was net duly elected ; that bribery by his agent and treating _were . praved ; and that sums exceeding tfae _necas-sars _expmses had _baen paid to BCn-re « i' _^ _eat electors . After some conversation a new v ? rit was Ordered . ¦ " - _ITrAldecman _Sidket , on _mcvine the _printing _. _af tbe petition frem the City of £ _Z-ind » n _complaining of the alarming increase of the _efieuss of window _breakicg intiniateiJ bis intention of calling tbe notice ef the house to the subject on a future _duy .
The house then weBt imc Committee of Ways -and _Metns on tfce _iucoine tax resolution ; but the debate principally _raia _' . _vsd itself into one ef _Iree trade and . pro . Section , _according to the views of the various speakers . The votes of < he hon . members , _however , would be thus distributed : £ h favour of the government proposition , of _continnms ihe tar for three yearj—Jfr i , _Wjjsop , ilr _Hiles _, Mr Brotherton , Mr Cardw _*!! , and ilr 17 . E . Glad .: _ewrne ; for Mr Kume _' _s amendment , cf limitation to ont ' _j-esri—Ifr J . S . _Siaith _, Sir W .. _ifoles « _-ortb , and Mr Disraeli ; the debata was adjourned , onthemotion of Ur ' . Hacgreeor , till _Uonday . . The Passengers Bill was read a third time and passed , and the house adjourned .
^P^.. ._,... ' Thb " Northern/ Stab;, _ ...
_^ p _^ .. . __ ,... ' THB " NORTHERN / STAB ; , __ _. Maech II , _Igjg _^
Stbatfoud.—A Public Meeting *Wss Held At...
_StbatfOuD . —A public meeting _* wss held at the "Mechanic ' s Institution on _Thursday evening-, to congratulate the French people on the _^ access ofthe revolution . Mr Smith was called to the chair , and in _gn able manner _esplsised fhe object of the meeting , and congratulated them on tbe numbers _assembled ,
and the enthusiasm . displayed . _ Mr 3 . Sha _^ moved the first resolution z— 'Th 2 t this _meeiiog _reca _^ _nifiing the natural _eaurJity of man , £ nd seeing this princible carried out in the glorious _Fc-sseh . _revolution , hereby express _tfeeir sympathy with that- heroic . people , and _trnsfc that happiness and _pressrierity will its their future lot . ' Mr W , Dison in a powerful _speech 8 _ecoRded the _resoluuoD , whicii wag carried _syaanimously . Mr Britter moved a petition to the House of Commons , for the adoption of the People ' s . _Cfj-arter , 1 \ M . Wheeler _Eeconded the petition , sebirii _traa passed without opposition , and ordered to fee presented to the house hy Fowell Buxton ,, the ¦ CCOEty member . Ths meeting then quietly " dispersed ; the village was occupied by a strong _bady of tie police , but their presence was perfectly _uc-Keejessar ? .
_GESSrrsnCH District . —A- special general meeting ofthe _paid-ap * shareholders of ths Land _Company and friend ? will take place on Monday next , March 13 tb , to take into consideration the propriety _oHsubscribing weekly sums to ba deposited in the National Land and Labour Bank , to aid the nwre speedy allocation of the members . Messrs Brerverton and _Hobinsonwill attendand lay the particulars relating fco the plan before the meeting . —It is earnestly requeued that every paid-up member will attend . ¦ Bs _rififii , _GsEEK _.-rprA . lecture will be delivered at Ene Crown and Anchor , Cheshire-street , Waterloo * Sf * Bethnal Green , by Ernest Jones , Esq ., on on 1 _^ _gras of Democracy in Franca and Italy , ' SS _?*«»»& March 13 th . _Admigsion free .
Nop7 Publishing.
NOP 7 PUBLISHING .
Ad00412
THE POLITICAL WORKS OF THOMAS PAINE . Completo in one thick volume , price 5 s ., io which wil hs found sever * 1 pieces neVtr before _publifhed in _England ; and an appendix , containing the Trial # / Thomas P _& ine , with a portrait of tho author . Just Published , in Penny _r-urol-exB and Fourpenny parts , _VOLTAIRE'S PHILOSOPHICAL DICTIONARY . Hay ha had , complete , in two _vohmeB , handsomely bound , 12 s . The first volume has a medallion _likeaesi . oi the author , and the second , a full length _perttuit , »» he _appeared in his * 70 th year . Ta the first volume is prefixed a cepiosg Memoir of his L'f < J and Writings . Every care bas _tra-m taken to keep the t . xt correct _^ ao that it nuy remain a lasting monumtnt e-f the genius and iadoraiiaWie perseverance of the author in enlightening and _libtrat-ng his fellow creatures . The two volumes contafe 1 , 276 » _ges , clearly printed , crown 8 v 0 . _VOLTAGE'S ROMANCE ASD TA * iES , inono vol ., price Ss . € i . i THE _ESVIL'S PULPIT , By tbe tReT . Robert Ta * - ion , _two-robi- price 5 s ., _pubtisbed-atSs . > THE * 3 IAGESIS . By tho same author , price Ss ., published St One _Guinea . _TPfc MANUAL OP _FfcEE-ffttSONRY . By GarBIe , _palilis-Jred at 15 s . aHdmiw reduced to 6 s . This is tho only eSitlon that _contains _the'eefebrated _Iiitrodectlens , beins a _complete K > y . toihe _nciince and myptery of Ma < _s » ry . Three parts in ' OSa TOlume , handsomely _btffied . "i " _^ HE MIRROR OF * _RC"fc-ft * KCE , one thick vol ., 400 : _££ _!?*« 4 t _« , - _" _auDle column " . . price 5 i .. _contatnioR fhe _foli-lnttin-: —Leone Leoni . hy _'Seorge _Ssnd—Pbygiologj of ' _^ : _itrimot . y , fifty cuts by'Paul tie Koek—Whits _Hduse , t _* u ~ _R- > rasrce , and t ! ae History « . f Jeany , by the _sn'nu I author—Simon , thc _Radical , a Tale of the _French Ue ' < ¦ _solution—Memoirs of aaOld Man of Twenty-five , an _amusinr tale . < fcc , i W . _Dugdale , 3 C , Holywell-street , Strand ,
Ad00413
PORTRAIT OF FEARGUS O'CONNOE _, Esq ., M . f „ T MARTT 7 _itvTorras his friends and tte Chartist body . generally , thii he has reduced tfee price of his lithozraphic _fulWennth portrait of their Illustrious Chief to thc following price : ;—Prints . Is ; coloured ditto , 2 s . 6 d . PEOPLE'S EDITION . To he had at the _Nortiiebk Stah office , Ifi , Great Windmill-street , _Haysnurket : Sweet , Goose Gate , Nottingham ; Heywood , Manchester , and ah booksellers m the United Kincdom .
Ad00414
TO TAILORS . By _approbation of lTer Majesty Queen Victoria , and a . R . H . Prince Albert . HOW READY , THE LONDRN AND PARIS SPRING AND SUMMER _FASmeiNS for 1848 . bv Messrs . BENJAMIN READ and Co ., 12 , Hart-street , nioomsbury- _'square , nearOxfordstre-1 , London : ; and by O . _Bebueb , Holywell-stFeet , Strand ; and ail Booksellers , an exquisitely executed and superbly _o-lo » _ad PltlNT . The elegance nf this Print excels any _bcfurepuhlished , accompanied with the Newest Style , and _cxtra'fitriiig Frock . Hiding Dress , and Hunting-Coat Patterns ; tho most fashionable dress-Waistcoat Pattern , and an extra-Suing Habit Pattern ofthe newest and _mo-t elegant style of fashion . Every particular part explained ; method of increasing and diminishing the whole for any -size fully illustrated , manner of Cutting and _Maying _> cp , and all other information respecting Style and Fashion . Price U's . post free ! Is . READ and Co . ' s new scientific s _\ stein . if Cutting for 184 S is ready , and will supersede _evetjthing ofthe kind heretofo e conceived . All the Plates are numbered and lettered , and < 'ii the scale of _Eighteen _IiiclseP . Whole size , never before attempted , containing twenty-three square feet : pu titulars , po _^ tfr _.-e . Patent Miasures , with full explanation , _^* , t he set . New Patent Indicator , fora « eertainimr proportion and dispro _^ _-ortion , illustrated with Diagrams price 7 s . Patterns to Measure ( all registered according to Act of Parliament ) post free . Is . eaeh The whole sold by _Reah and Co ., 12 , Hart street , _Dloomsbury-jquare , London ; and all Booksellers , l ' ost office orders , and Post Stamps , takm as Cash . Habits performed for the Trade . Busts for fitting Coats on ; Boys ' _fiaures . Foremen provided . — Instructions iu cutting complete , for all kinds of Style and Fashion , which can be accomplished in an incredibly short time .
Ad00415
"WEST RIDING < JF YORKSHIRE . SPRING _SESSIONS , 1848 . "Vr / OTlCE is _hcreb-e given , that the SPRING GENERAL _ L \ QUARTER SESSIONS of the Peace for the West liitlinj : ofthe County of Tork , will beholden _atPon-rEfeact , on 3 f < m < fa /* fte _TAirtt day of . iprilncxt ; on which day the' Court will be eipcned at eleven o ' clock ofthe forenoon _, and on every succeeding dav at nine o ' clock . _Pro-iecutors and witne .-ses in Prosecutions must be in attendance , in the _following order , viz : — Those in Felony , from the divisions of Strafforth and Tiekhill , Lower Agbrigg . Barkston . ish , Staincross , and _OsnoWcross , at the opening of the Court on Monday morning . Those from the divisions of Upper Agbrigg , Morley , and _Pkyrack , at two o ' clock in the afternoon of Monday . Those ft oin the divisions of Staincliffe , Ewcross , Claro aud the _Ains-ty ( being thc remainder of the West _Riding ) , and those in all cases of _misdemeanor , on Tuesday morni'ig . The Grand . 1 ar . _v will he required to attend at the opening ofthe Court on . Monday , when they will he immediately sworn and charged , aud afterwards motions by counsel will be beard . The ! raverse Jury will required to attend on theopening ing ofthe Court on Tuesday morning , when their names will be called over ; the court will then proceed with the Trials of Felonies and -Misdemeanors , commencing with the trial of respited Traverses . The attendance of jurymen will not he excused on the ground of illness , unless it be verified bs affidavit , or proved by evidence in open Court . Solicitors are _reqnire-1 to take notice thnt appeals must be entered with the Cierk of the Peace before the sitting of the Court , on Monday ( the firstdayof the sessions ) ; and the list of appeals will be called over by the Clerk of the Peace at Half-past Eleven o ' clock ofthe same day ; and all appeals in whicii counsel are not then instructed will he struck out , and the hearing of such appeals as are not then strack out will commence on the Wednesday _mornint ; _following , ut thc sitting of the Court . That copies ofthe order of removal , of the examinations , and of the notice of char _, L'eahility , must he filed by the Appellants , with tie Clerk ofthe Peace , on the entry of the Ap . peal ; and before the hearing of the Appeal , the Appellants must also file with the Clerk ofthe Peace a copy of the uoticeand grounds if Appeal . And that no Appeals against Removal Orders shall be heard unless the Chairman is also ¦ furnished by tbe Appellants with a copy of rll the above documents . In all appeals against convictions , the respondents must file the conviction not later than the sitting of the court on the first day of the sessions . Coroners aad High Constables must ba in attendance at the sitting ofthe Court on Monday morning . The names of _persons bound over to answer in Felony or Misdemeanor , with a description of the offence , must be sent to the Clerk of the Peace ' s Office , three days at least btforei the first d . _iy of the Sessions , together with all _oppositions , convictions , and recognisances . AND NOTICE IS ALSO HEREBY GIVEN , that the public business of the _aiding will be transacted in open Court , at Twel _ve o ' clock at Noon , on Monday , the first day of the _Sessb-ns , when motions for gratuities , and the Reports of the Finance Committee , of the visitors of the West _Ridln- ; Pauper _Luaatiu Asylum , ofthe Visiting Justices ofthe House of Correction , and of the Committee appointed to provide Lock-ups in the West Riding , will be received and considered . And at ihe same time and place , application- will be made for a grant to enlarge the Court House at Wakefield . For a grant not exceeding £ S , 000 for the further enlargementof a Pauper Lunatic Asylum , at Wakefield . And for an increase ofthe salary ofthe Chaplain of the Ilouse of Correction nt Wakefield . And Edmund _Denieon _, Esq ., will move that the valua . tion ofthe Riding , for the purpose of aCountyRate . be revised and amended . And in pursuance ofa requisition to me directed , signed by seven Justices of the Peace for the said Hiding , Notice is hereby given , that at-the same time and place tha Ju _^ _tie-es ofthe Peace then aud there assembled will take into consideration tha propriety of providing a Lock up and a Superintendent Constabl .-s' House , at Scissett , in the * aid Ridinp . under thc provisions ofthe 5 th and uth Victoria , cap . 109 , intituled 'An Act for the appointment and pay . ment of Parish Constables -, _' and of making such grant of money out of tke County stock or rate of the said Riding , for-those . purposes as the Justices then presiding shall deem expedient . ' _-, ¦ - ¦¦ C . ' H . ELSLEY , '' . ' Clerk of _thcTPeaco . ¦ Clodsot the Peace ' s Office , Wakefield , ' _" ' . ' _' ¦ '' 7 th March . 1816 .
Ad00416
THE LAND ! THS LAND !! TO RE BOLD , A FOUR ACRE ALLOTMENT , drawn in the November ballot , the owner having engagements that _pn-vent his taking possession . All letters _aiuet contain a stamp , and be addressed , Er J . Wheeler , 30 , Coley-street _, Reading , Berks .
Ad00417
NATIONAL LAND COMPANY . A FOUR _ACRS 5 HAEE ~ -fnHy paid up till the present time . Any _person can have the same , by paying the original price , and the expense of tihe advertisement . Apply to T . . W ., 16 , South _Wharf-road , Paddington . The reasuu far selling is , that the present proprietor is Emi . grating .
Ad00418
THE LAND . TWO shareholders , having two Four-Acre shares paidup , as a family ticket , and anxious tor immeeiiato location , will exchange them for one Pour _Asre , already balloted for . ' Application ( if hy letter ) , addressed , SG , Tiohborne street , Edgeware-road , London .
Ad00419
_PIUS T EFFECTS OF THE GLORIOUS FRENCH REVOLUTION . An immense meeting of the Delegates of the irades of the Metropolis , was held at the Bell , Old Bailey , on Thursday evening , March 9 th , to consider the distress of the operatives , when the delegates , with one consent , agreed that the basis Of any remedy must be " Universal Suffrage . * ' A nd ] report of tbis interesting meeting will appear in onr next . rr The Trades Delegates assemble again at the Bell . Old Bailey , at half-past seven on Thursday _evenine , March 16 ih , . / _t >
Ad00420
Just Published , price One Penny , i A LETTER by _FrARooa O'Conkob , Esq . , M . P ., « TO THE RICH AND THE POOR ; To those who L' fe in Idleness Without Labour , and ti ) those who are v yy . ling to Labour but Compelled to Starve . '
Ad00421
_PrtoeSs . por 100 or 18 s . per 1000 . C " _-nsrHAT MAY BE DONE WITH THREE ACRES YV OF LAND , ' Explained in a Letter , b _» _fEAaaVb O'Connor , _Sso .., M . P . To be had ' _attue Office of tho National X and Company Ut . Hieb Holborn .
Ad00422
Now Beady , a N < _sw Editio f MR . O'CONNOR'S WORK ON SMALL FARMS To be had atthe _Mtrtfiom Star Office , 16 , Great Wind _tttili _Stretti ' and of Abel Heywood Manchester ,
Ad00423
_JiUSr _VUVblStWl ) , ( _Uaiforrnvtithslae Labobhee" Magazine , ) Price 6 d . A PRACTI'C _& L TREATISE ON SPADE HUSBANDRY , " ' _behig _thstJNesults of four years' _experience . Bs J . _Sillett . _Jt'Oovran _aradCo ., 1 G , Great Windmill-street , London and may he had of all booksellers .
Ad00424
JUST PUBLISHED , _paics SIXPENCS _, NO . XV . OF " THE LABOURER , " CONTAINING 1 _. Tho March of Freedom , - a Poem , by Ernest fonts . 2 . Insurrection ofthe Working Classes . The Origin of Swie _* _Independence . 3 . Tbe _Toar Man's _Lt-cal Manual . i . The _Romance of n Peopl _.-. 5 . The Wolf and the Church , a German Legend with an English Moral . 6 . National _Literature . Russia _; being another black page in the history of Nicholas . 7 . Last Dying Speech aud Confession of an Ex-King . S . The Imprisoned . . 9 . a Lessen to Tyrants . 10 . Thc Pirates ' Prize . 11 . Literary Review . Letters ( pre-paid ) to he addressed to the Editors , 16 Great Windmill Street , Haymarket , London . Orders received by all agents for tho "Northern Star ' and all booksellers in town and country _.
The Nokthehn Star, Saturday, March 11, 1848.
THE NOKTHEHN STAR , SATURDAY , MARCH 11 , 1848 .
The Guizot Of England And The Men Of Lon...
THE GUIZOT OF ENGLAND AND THE MEN OF LONDON . A glance at our colum is will suffice to show that the promise held out hy the great Metropolitan Meeting in the Westminster Road last week , was not a vague and idle assertion . A series of glorious meetings lias since been held , the object of which will he to organist the Chartist party in the Metropolis , and enable them to feel their strength . This is a beginning , and a practical measure ; the next step will be the bringing that power to hear upon a corrupt and miserably _weitk Government . These meetings have , however , been attended with remarkable and lamentable
circumstances , showing the bad spirit of tbat Government , and the brutality of its minor executive . As will he seen in another part of our paper , Mr Charles Cochrane called a _meeting in Trafalgar-square against the Income Tax , and on being told by the Government , who had _rumm-igedanoldiiimber-hoxof legislative fully to find an obsolete Act of unmeaning nonsense , that a meeting in Trafalgar-square was illegal , Mr Cochrane never attended the meeting he had called , hut sent
some placards instead , telling the meeting , nfter they had assembled , to disperse . The people "'ere naturally indignant at such treatmen , _considering that Mr Cochrane ought not to have exempted himself from the responsibility he had brought on them , and ought at least to have acted as placard in person , when he might have obviated the danger he shrunk from , by taking the meeting to another part of town , less objectionable to West-End aristocratic squeamishness .
I he pub-Jit * ! however , were determined not to come together for nothing , and consequently elected a chairman , and several speakers addressed the meeting , The Chartist Executive took no part in these proceedings , yet resolutions for the Charter were unanimously adopted , by the spontaneous feeling of the public . Everything- proceeded with the greatest order and decorum , an ( J the _meeting was dissolved and dispersing , when a well-fed man began to taunt the people with idleness and laziness , telling them they had all the liberty they deserved . On this insult being resented , the police—who were ready at hand—made an unprovoked and indiscriminate onslaught . Even children were struck and wounded , and we have since learned , that
besides those mentioned m our report , a woman , in mourning , had her head kid open by a Policeman ' s truncheon , and has been conveyed in an almost hopeless state to the Hospital . Now , we beg our readers to mark these circumstances well . A system of ierrorism is evidently aimed at . Our Government mean to adopt an opposite course from that of France . Guizot permitted forty-seven banquets , and stopped them when too late . RUSSELL , the Guizot of England , thinks he will nip English demonstrations ia the hud . Au enemy of Chartism must have sent the "sleek
man" to the meeting at IrafaJgar-sqiiare to disturb it , and afford a pretext for police interference- Certain thieves then took advantage of the disturbance , CREATED BY THE POLICE , to commit depredations—and the howling pack of the Press seizes on this to inveigh against the " Chartist rabble . ' ' Endeavours , _. igain , to raise the idle cry of " destruction "thus to injure , by these lies , the moral force of the movement , while terrorism is to paralyse its physical force . Verily , Russell _ig far cleverer than Guizot . But this will _notdo . The Executive have put forth a placard
disclaiming the disorderly proceedings alluded to , and those proceedings reveal of themselves the quarter from whence thev came . . While the Chartists are there , all " is peaceable ; when they leave , the minions of faction are at work , troubling- , with their puny efforts , the great waters of Democracy , Thus , their lies will recoil on their own heads . And , as to terrorism , we laugh it to scorn We dare the despicable Whigs to do their worst . We dare them to interfere with the right of Englishmen lo meet in public to discuss their grievances . We challenge them , at their perilto infringe
, our liberties . If they do , their miserable faction will be swept from power , as effectually as a hurricane whirls the dry leaves of autumn . Instead of thus preventing open-air meetings , the Chartists have themselves called two such meetings since tbe police outrage of _Trafalgarequare . At btfth the conduct of the Chartists was exemplary in the extreme—while their _imposing numbers would have mocked resistance had they intended violence . These
meetings will not , and must sot , cease—and thev must gather each time in strength and discipline , eo that , wk & n the Convention meets on the 3 rd of April , it may find London PRE PARED TO RECEIVE IT , and to lend weight to its deliberations and resolves . Let the public rest assured these meetings shall not be mere noise and spouting—practical and constitutional action will , ere long , be demanded at the hands of the people—and they must prepare their minds and affirm their
determmatwn . With reference to the Press that has designated a meeting of 15 , 000 as a " rabble of three hundred "—which taunts them with beine * "houseless . vagabonds "—which laughs "that their apparent squalor increases every hour "— - we can only say , that it would he more becoming if its prostituted columns would show them some means of obtaining houses and _regaining health ; and we tell that venal Press , " that a grave responsibility attaches to it , if it succeeds in making the governing class believe that the people are the lovers of mischie and destruction , and that their political power is
The Guizot Of England And The Men Of Lon...
weak and utterly inefficacious . It is doing its rich emp loyers a sorry service . Theyvwill wake one day to their " grand mistake" when it is too late , and bitterly curse that Press which deceived them as to the real power and character of the People . It ought to conciliate instead of irritatingit oug ht to act as the mediator instead of the e xciter . _, As one effect , perhaps , of this ailly and suicidal policy of the Press , the contempt mav be considered with which Mr Monckton Milnes ' s observations in , the House on the Trafalgar-square meeting , were received . He , too , paid a just tribute to that meeting , by leaving : —
It pr < _ceedeel quiotly aw penceably till after a _number of speakers bad bton _ht-arel , _b-ing conducted with perfect decorum and tr . inqutll . ty ou tbe part of the people . After the _opeakera ceased , and the meeting to all appearance waa about to disperse , a _collision took place bectveen tbe police ond ibe people , which h « d resulted in some very _^ ra _tu _conscqui-nccB . ( P oH ! _Tonh ' , ) He wished to auk the rigtit _hvm . _geotle'tian what were _theinstmctiona _givin to the police ' 1 ( Laughter , and cries of Oa , oh !*) Sir G . G & _ETBaid : He wbb not aware that any graver con _nequi-ncea had ensued than tbo breaking ofsome _laniDs and tvindows in a disturbance .
Sir G . Grey , of course counts as nothing the number of bleeding and wounded victims the children and the women struck b y the police , and carried insensible . to the hospitals , and lingering in danger . The answer wn _$ tlwt of a Whig ; and the " Pooh ! Pooh ! " and " Laughter" of the legislative wisdom ofthe country was worthy o f a Middle Class Parliament . Englishmen ! how Jong will you tolerate such a Government , and groan under such a system . No wonder that the cries of Paris are finding an echo in the streets of London . Glasgow , Edinburgh , and Manchester j and that Great Britain should pant after the liberty of France .
Parliamentary Review. The Financial Inco...
PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW . The financial incompetency of the Party in power , becomes more obvious as the debates on the Budget _proceed . They may appropriate the . exclamation of the foreigner when he tumbled into the water , " We will be drowned , and nobody s / ia / _Hielp us . " Mr Horsman , one of their own friends , and formerly a Lord of the Treasury , consideratel y came to their rescue on the question of the Income Tax , and propounded a measure with reference to it , which certainly bore the impress of thought and careful calculation , and , had it been adopted , would have removed some of the most
palpable inequalities ofthe present tax . But the Chancellor of the Exchequer pooh-poohed the plan in the most cavalier style . The im pudence and almost arrogance of his manner was only matched hy the utter absence of logic , fact , and common si nse , in his matter . He had always opposed the Income Tax , but if we were to have it , he . ' thought it was better it should he in its present — that is , the most objectionable shape in which it could he levied ; therefore , as hi _> cannot do without it , no alteration is to take place . As to the inequality ofthe
present Tax , Sir Charles Wood considers that rather a merit than otherwise . Our whole system of Taxation is full of inequalities , aud one inequality balances another so nicel y , that the jackass is , upon the whole , pretty fairly loaded with the panniers he has to carry . Such is a specimen ofthe political and financial reasoning of the precious ninny by whom the good people of Halifax are misrepresented , and the country at large ' injured and p lundered . It is curious to remark , _however , the manner in which the old stagers of office
fraternise with and help each other in any effort for keeping their hands in the pockets of the tax-payers . Mr Goulburn , ex-Chancellor , was among the first to come to the help of his successor ; and , in fact , supplied bim with the little in his speech bearing the semblance o f arguments . Mr Goulburn himself is , however _, _mue-. h more _onthusiasticinliis admiration ofthe tax than Sir Charles Wood . He absolutely went the length of declaring that he was in love with it ! There is no accounting for tastes , but that certainly seems to us the strangest affection we over before heard of I
With respect to Mr Horsman s plan of levying eightpence in the pound on incomes derived from realised property ; sixpence on incomes from the funds and certain occupations ; and fourpence in the pound upon professional and tradin g incomes ,- there can be no doubt whatever , that if we are to have an Income Tax at all , it was an immense improvement upon the present mode of levying the tax , and whether it he renewed for one , or for three years , would have been felt as a boon by the struggling classes , upon whom the burden falls with the greatest pressure . But
feeling that any tax upon income is indefensible in principle , and that realised property is the legitimate subject- of direct taxation , we think tbat ought to bave been raised as a previous question . It may he said that hy this means-many who live in good positions and are able to pay , would escape taxation . We do not admit the argument . Every prudent man in the middle and professional classes who has a family to provide for , will live under his income ; the _surplu-v , ' whatever it may be , must , in order to he profitable , be invested in some way or other , to vield a per centage , and the
moment his earnings asstime that tangible shape , they come within the sphere of a property tax . An Income Tax , on the other hand , either presses on the capital and means of the trader , hampers him in his business , and thus letters industry ; or , it takes away from a large class of struggling , hard-worked persons , the few pounds which ought to go to the Insurance Office _^ to provide a trifle for their families in case of their own death , and the consequent total loss of the income earned hy their skill nnd intelligence . The Government triumphed over Mr Horsman , although 143 members were found to vote for his certainly more equitable
p lan . The fi g ht was renewed on another ground hy Mr Hume , on the next occasion _-vhen the Budget came under notice . That veteran Economist proposed that the tax as it existed should be renewed for one year onlyi in order to give time to the Government to revise our whole system of taxation , and effect decided reductions , as well as propose a new and more equitable system . The Chancellor of the Exchequer opposed this reasonable proposition . With less than three years he will not be content ; and as to making any very close investigation of the present estimates , why that cannot be done in the hurry of business When " the hum * of business ' ' is over .
he will look into the matter , if possible . Now , if we understand anything ofthe " business" of a Chancellorof the Exchequer at all , it is to prepare these estimates , andsuperintendthe collection of the taxes _agreed toby the Legislature Why did he not , before " the hurry of business" came on , have his work ready ' in a workmanlike fashion ? If he gets the tax for three years , we much fear that , with the indolent habits of office , we shall find at the end of that term , he will be as far from having done his _dutyasj he is at present . On Mondav evening , he . had , however , the support of Si ' r R . 1 eel , who spoke one column in defence of
the Income-tax , and two columns in defence of his Commercial policy , and his letter to the people of _Nbmgen , of which he gave a new version , and contended that it harmonised with all he had stated i „ the House , and , therefore , was no revelation of an intended _S _£ ft e ! Vf * r _* xati , - _™ people said it was . LordG . Bentinck made a fierce onslaught upon he larmvorth baronet , and , by reference to the present condition of the manufacturing operatives of this country , showed that so tar that Commercial policy } iad proved anything but a blessing to them . Lord George spoke inside what many people say outside of Parliament , Free-trade is very _generally coming to be known as a humbug , and , we long , we have " 0 doubt that its utter failure to realise anything like employment , _Ssubsis . _^ nce . or com-
Parliamentary Review. The Financial Inco...
fort , -to the masses , will be so palpable that even the few enthusiasts , who yet retain a lingering faith , in its efficacy , will be restored to their senses . The opposition to the Budget , on Monday , was so strong that the debate was again adjourned , to be resumed on Friday night , and the Russell Budget seems destined to be met b y a protracted resistance at ever _£ stage of its progress . On Tuesday , both Houses sat for a very short time , and dispatched some routine business . On Wednesday , the Commons occupied
the whole sitting in committee on the Roman Catholic Relief Bill , and , indeed , tbe week has been destitute of any feature , either of novelty or importance , —a fact wliich happil y relieves us from the necessity of inflicting a long commentary upon a mere Caput _mortunm at a time when all minds are vividly and fervently occupied with the great and exciting events in France ; and the occurrences in London , Edinburgh , Glasgow , and Manchester attest the restless heaving of the elements under our own political and social system .
Co Tfteaaers & Corresponoetr Ts.
Co _tfteaaers & _Corresponoetr ts .
Ml-Cellanei'cu. Jjggr- Now That Parliame...
_Ml-CELLANEi'CU . _jjggr- Now that Parliament has assembled we must as a general rule , exclude lengthy communications , unless reports uoett written ) of very _important meeting * . 'Reponers , wri'ers of letters , and Chartist and . Land sub secretaries will , therefore , _obligeby making their communications as brief aa pos sible . VVe shall be glad it some of our _correspi n den _* 8 will try to improve tlieir writing ; and shal thank others , who _might do so , to let us have their reports , < fc <\ . before _Thiiii-day . PUBLIO MONIES .
We Request All Sub-Secretaries, And Othe...
We request all _Sub-secretaries , and other _persons who may have _occaiion to send public _monies to the Metropolis ! to pay attention to the _followin-i _directions : — Monies for the understated purposes must bt _addressed aa _followa : — Payments for the Northern Star . Mr William lluler , 16 , Gre . at _WindmilLatrcet , Haymarket , Load , n , National _J-and and _Labour Sanh . ' Tho M _Hinder of Hie National Laud imd Lahonr Bank , So . _493 , _N-. w Oxford Street , London . '
_Aationa _* . Land Company , ' Tiie _Directorw of the Rational Lund Company , No 144 , High Holborn , L ndoii . ' _irtitionaJ C / iarter . 'lsjoc ' afioii ; Mr Thomas CI irk , No . 144 , High Holborn , London . Cen ' ral Regislra'ion and Election Committee , 'Mr James GraMb . v _, No . 8 , Noah ' s Ark . eourt , Stangate , Lambeth , Linden . ' National Victim , and Widows and Orphans Fund . Mf John _SiutpftMi , Elm Cottage , Waterloo-street , _Cumbern-i-ll _, London . ' For Mrs W . Jones . ' Mr John Simpson , _Elin Cottage , Vfaterloo . Btrcet , Camberwell , Loud n . '
Jfefropo ' ttati Chartist EM . 'Mr — Tnpp . No 5 ' 2 , finsbury Market , London , ' Def . nee of Mr . _O'Connor ' s Seal in Parliament . ' Mr Thomas Clark , No . 144 . _ili fih Holb . rn , London . ' / _Vosccitt ' _oii of the Maiicliester _Examiner . ' Mr _Tliomat _Cluik , No . 144 , _Hitjb He > li » i > ru , Loudon . ' The Sleaford Case , ' Mr _Tliomai Clark , N » . 114 . Ili _/ li Ilolborn , London . ' Thc Fraternal Democrats . ' fi . Julian _llirn-y _, No . 10 , Ureal Windmill-street _Ilayuiarkot , London . '
( Tinted Trades Association . 'Mr Barratt , No . 11 , _ToUtfuliatn Court Road , _Lotielon . ' _jjgT Monies sent con _' _rarj ta the above directions will net be acknowledged . * * Private letters intended for Mr O'Connor , an
Padiham . —Petition _headings may he had on application to thu Natijiial Land Umce _. _l-ll , Ili _^ U Holborn , Mr Ovenden , Leamington . —It terminated on the 15 th of January . Messrs Clark , Leicester , Tomlinson , Colne , and _Gtvillintn , Westminster . —The _Agents mentioned are aot supplied by us . It' the pat-ties from whom they pro . euro the _NonrnEBN Stab apply to us , they shall have the portrait !! . Oldham —Julian _lltrney is much obliged fir the invitation of tho Oldham Ohaitists , but sorry he must _declineit . All the time lie van possibly spare from his editorial duties must be given to the advancement ol Ve movement in the metropolis . MrM'ItAT , Cumnock . —The Nortiibbw Stab is charged 5 s . Cd . per quarter , in advance .
To Depobitohs in Savino Hanks . —Sir , —I think if there was a circular of the _Banking system extracted from the last _Laboubek , and published at about ono shilling or ei hteen pence per hundred , to distribute amongst the depositors in Savings' Hanks ( and addressed to them ) . it would extend the kneiwledge of both the Land . Plan , and the Hank more widely than it is , as there are yet vast number * of people who do not luokatthe Star , butuhu might be induced to read something short and plain , and to tlieir a ivatitate _, as tha Bank would afford to them . The different districts _mijtht subscribe according to their m _ans _, forthe purpose of circulating them amongst those who they know to he depositors in _Savings' Banks , and thus both benefit the depositors themselves , and tho Land Company , li tho _suggestion is worthy of notice , you may , nerhans ,
And a corner in your journal _te > insert in , —J . J 3 , To the Editor of the _NoiniiEas Stab . —Sia ,- If you think the following worthy a corner in your journal , It is at your service . Last spring I plant-id thirty-six large potatoes , one yard apart each _tv _.-ijr _, twenty-four c > ips and twelve prince regents ; the cups produced 151 lbs . _> vpd the prince regents , / Jibs ., total , _22-lbs , I measured off tho same quantity of ground , in the same field , that was planted with thc _plouuli ; the drills were twentj-seven inches in breadth , ami the potatoes middling * sized , and planted whole , fifteen in the drill : the twenty i ' _ouiyards of cups produced _17-iibs ., the twelve yards of prince regents Silos ., tula ' , _iotilbs , being _Sllbs . mora than those ivhich were planted oiie yard apart each ' way . The conclusion that I havo come to is this , that a yard is not too much between the rows , but , that e ' ghteeii or twenty four inches are enough in the row . Mr Wolly will see , by the above statement , that over fifteen tons can be produced from an English acre of a
very middling soil , for if thirty-six yards produce 25 i "! bB , 4 , 810 yards will produce : H , 417 , 7771 b . ' , whicii are IS tons 7 cwt ., and I am of opinion that , if it was web cultivated , it would produce a great deal more . —Chas Faib . ninoton , gardener , Aliddleton , ntar Leeds . — March 5 . Katis Hill . —lioth parties must attach their names to the advertisement . The charge would be six _shillings each insertion . T . A . Short , per Mr . tones , for the Westminster National Charter Association , 'Js . 6 d . Efl . BATcr . ii . —In our hist appeared a statement , that the printers of Clitheroe had suffered a reduction oj lis . in the pnund ; it should have been ' Barrow' instead of ' Clitheroe . ' Notice—Owing to the crowded state of our columns it lias been impossible this week to insert several reports and communications , and to reply to many correspondents .
LEGAL . NOTICE . —Owing to tbe -piee occupied by Parliaraen . tary _proceedings , no legal correspondeuoe can find place in the Sta _& during the Session . _Alltho-ie there ! ore , whose case * have been answered only in the _Stjh _, aro requested to send their addresses and a _poatu _^ e stamp should they require private answers . Ernest _Jones . I have received many letters _enquiring Uow the _caseB in hand are going on t All correspondents may rest assured they will be properly attended to in due course . ThiB must be an answer for all , as itis impossible to answer all such letters .
Manchester.—Great Repeal Demonstration O...
Manchester . —Great Repeal Demonstration on St Patrick ' s day , in the Free Trade Ilall . The puMic of Manchester aud its _viciniti' are respectfully informed that » . public meeting _wii ! he hold in thc Free Trade Hall on St Patrick ' s day , the 17 ih of March , to tako into _consideration the beat means ol acoomplifihiiiK a Repeal of the Legislative Union between Great Britain and Ireland , upon which oc casion a deputation from the Irish Confederation will attend , and the under-mentioned distinguished advocates of liberty will address tbe meetine ; - Smith O'Brien , Esq ., M . P _, Feargus O'Connor , Esq , M . P mT . C . Anstey , Esq ., M . P ., C . XI . Duffy , E-q ., John Mitchell , Esq _, John Martin , Esq ., Loughatu , T . F . M _* Gheo ; E . » q _, P . _O'Uiggiiia _, E-q ., W . P . Robert ? , Esq , ami many others . The Committee for getting up tho ' public meeting on the 17 th and tho tea party in tho Town Hall on the ISth of March , inst ., call upon the friends of freedom and lovers of universal justice , who wish to Bee a long-suffering and down-trodden country restored to her _juat rights , to rally round them , fill the Ilall to _ovorfliwing _, and , by their united voices , show them that they are uot unmindful ef the _all-iiuportant events whioh havo taken place in France , within thi last few days , and that they ara determined Ireland shall be restored to her rank as a nation . Aa , also , that they wiil work for liberty untii they see } . every people , now struggling against tyranny and oppression , in full _pessession of all the rights enjoyed ' by citizens of a free state . Irishmen , Englishmen , Scotchmen , evince your gooperation in the good cause—to falter would be treason against enslaved millions . The chair will he taken at _lulf-pagtsix o ' clock . Admission , platform , one shilling ; gallery , fourpence ; body of the house , twopence . Tickets to platform to foe had at the committee-room , 33 Great Aneoats-street , and from every member of the committee . ! , ' i I . > _, i 3
¦Ruiciiilp'r'Ti Ob* The National £.&*«$ ...
¦ _RUiCiiilP'r ' ti OB * THE _NATIONAL _£ . _&*« _$ COMPANY , FOB THE WEEK ENDING THURSDAY , _ilAROII S 1818 . '
Per O'Connor, ¦ Babes. . La7<Eloch .. 4 ...
PER O'CONNOR , ¦ BABES . . La 7 < eLoch .. 4 10 11 Dudley „ _,, * : _- Spalding .. 0 5 8 NewRadford .. , _' _« Sneffield _« 10 0 _« Aberdeen „ n i Reading » 10 0 0 Nottingham .. 6 i % _Oesborough _« 4 0 6 Northampton , 3 Unknown .. 0 14 i Munday ., i „ „ Cardiff . -646 Warrington , ° *> Barnstaple M 9 IS 0 Young „ 5 .. . Uarylebone .. 1 17 8 Ai'crington „ t * ., £ Thrislington .. 4 13 3 Hull .. ' _» <> Central fiossen . Bradford , York \ a a \ dale .. 5 0 0 Bramhope .. Zl I Westminster .. 1 10 0 Invnrkietriing .. 3 {» _; Sheerness . Mr Kinghorn .. „ ,, jj Stubbins .. 4 19 0 Leicester , Astill s n I Stockport . .. 10 O 0 Merthyr , Powell 2 n _n Hanley .. 28 3 III Leicester , Free . ° Oldham .. 0 14 fi man
Doncaster .. 5 0 0 South Shields ' 2 } r 2 Bacup .. S 0 0 Bristol „ : _^ ° _' Mold .. 1 17 6 Manchester ., ,, X } % St _Gtrmains Promt , T Rogers n i « deLivit .. 3 0 0 Newent ., r n ' . _Uotherham .. 8 4 6 _Birmingham , ° Malton ., 12 15 4 Goodwin ., K „ ft Armley „ 3 9 4 Wakefield „ t <\ !? Edinburgh ., 2 0 0 Prescott „ o 13 n Carlisle .. 5 0 0 Leicester , Goody 9 n n Rochdale .. 3 2 8 Gloucester .. ? _s n I'lymuuth .. 8 12 H Stockton ., 6 l ( i Katcliffe Bridge 4 12 2 North Shields .. 4 _][ » Dewsbury .. 9 8 6 Girvan .. 17 a Chatham .. 2 13 S Brightlinjrsea ., 2 t ) n Bury Coulter .. 7 2 0 _So-hers Town „ 2 3 _g Winlaton .. 8 0 0 Birmingham , Oxford .. 2 5 0 Gray „ § 00 _lloyston , Bar- Norwich ,
Bagrow .. 5 0 0 shaw ., 4 5 3 Totuess _„ 5 10 10 Balford .. 4 0 a _Georgie Mills .. 3 6 6 Bermondsey _„ 1 8 0 Newcastle-upon- Cirencester .. 3 13 o Tyne .. 15 0 0 Hawick .. 0 16 T Elizabeth Comp- Wm Williams _„ 1 8 j ton . 0 16 0 Rich Thos Water . ' Henry M Smith 0 5 0 man .. " 0 6 0 Samuel W Col . Eli Clark ., 0 10 0 'ins „ 0 5 0 Thos Tillcy 0 10 0 Thomas Canez ., l 0 0 S P Efflan ' d .. 0 5 6 Chas Howard .. 0 10 9 Joseph Edwards 0 1 0 Alex Tillcrey ,, 0 in 0 . Geolii _^ hoD .. old
Jas Chapman .. _OOG James Frost .. 850 -lohn Iloo .. 12 0 Wm WiUon ., 0 2 g George Bennett o 1 0 Geo Johnson H 0 3 6 w m B rrttt .. . 0 5 0 Chas Mowl „ 0 2 5 Caroline Smith ., l o » John Major .. 2 12 0 John Leicester .. 0 3 6 W Crow „ o 2 o Joseph _ItirtiLi-dj 0 5 0 Robt Crow .. o 2 o Joseph Erring . Wm Thatcher „ o 1 0 ton .. 3 2 6 Wm Broad .. o 0 6 Thos Sturgeon .. 0 5 0 Ann Broad .. 0 0 6 George Bam- Wm Byson „ o 2 fi brough „ 6 5 0 Jas D Thomas .. o 2 0 Win I ' _n-i-ee ., 0 3 0 Jas M'Lean „ 0 2 0 Wm Powell _« 10 0 Edwd Barlow .. o 5 8
£ 390 6 9
Expense Fund . Lake Loch .. 0 2 0 New Ra...
EXPENSE FUND . Lake Loch .. 0 2 0 New Radford „ 0 2 4 * Di . sbun . ujih .. 0 3 6 Aberdeen .. 0 J H Unknown .. 16 5 Nottingham „ 0 12 9 _Cii-ili / T .. 0 2 0 Warriiigccn , Thrislington .. 0 C 6 Young .. 0 C O Hanley .. 1 8 C Hull .. 0 8 3 Oldham ,. 0 6 0 Kinghorn ., 0 2 5 Mold .. _U 2 6 Leicester , Freellotherham .. 0 8 0 man .. 0 8 6 Malton .. 0 12 0 South Shields .. O 4 G Rochdale .. 0 9 10 _Wakcn ' old ., 0 4 0 Plymouth .. 17 0 _Prescot „ 0 8 o ltatcliffe Bridge 0 7 6 Gloucester M 0 10 0 Dewsbury .. 116 0 Girvan ,, 0 13 0 Chatham .. 0 10 3 Norwich , Bag-Oxford .. 0 2 0 Bhaw ,. 0 ll 6 Totnoss .. 0 4 0 Salford „ 0 IS 6 Cirencester .. 0 4 C Joseph Erring . Hawick .. 0 4 0 ton .. 0 2 0 ¦ JanielTomphins 0 2 0 Joseph Richards 0 4 0 Alex White .. 0 4 0 Daniel Alhop .. 0 2 0 Daniel Hie th „ 0 4 0 _Joiiu Major ,. 0 2 0 £ 18 7 _H
Total Land Fund ... ... £390 6 9 Expense...
Total Land Fund ... ... £ 390 6 9 Expense Fund ... ... ly 7 9 * _Rules ... ... 0 11 2 _£ 407 5 8 _J Bank 001 12 9 £ 1 303 18 5 _J
Receipts Ofthe New Land Company ... 19 0...
Receipts ofthe New Land Company ... 19 0 0
Errata..—Last Week, Iveston Should Have ...
Errata .. —Last week , Iveston should have appeared , Lund , £ _? . 4 s . 9 d ., and Expense Puud , Vis . The _Secretary whnsentl 4 S . -Id . for Land and £ l . tis . Sd . fur Expense Fund will ohlige by sending the name of the Branch . * V » , Dixon . _Chribtoppeb DofLE , Thos . Clark , ( Corres . Sec . ) Pbimp _H'Osats , _( Fia , Sec , ;
Manchester .. ,. .. 73 7 6 Ch.Irley, Mon...
Manchester .. ,. .. 73 7 6 Ch . irley , Money Club - .. 10 0 0 Hulme . Good Intent Burial Society .. f > 00 0 0 Oldham .. .- .. 32 3 6 Rosscndale . First Fruit of Impartiality _Lodjte , No . 79 , of AncientOrder of Druids 'Boathfield .. .. .. 10 8 0 _f Blackburn , _Auxiliary Bank .. ,, 20 0 0 Stocltport , Power Loom Weavers' Associa . tion - .. .. 800 Rochdale , per Edward Mitchell , from a Land Member .- .. n 10 0 9 Sheffield , Provision Company ., „ 3 0 0 Swindon , Auxiliary Bank .. .. 609 Elland , per 1 ) . Mar-den for N . _Dewhurst .. 1 G 10 0 T , Pbice , Manager ,
Dkfekce Op Mr O'Cosnoa'3 Seat In Parliam...
DKFEKCE _OP MR o ' coSNOa ' 3 SEAT IN PARLIAMENT . W Barker , Tod- Manchester , J morden ., 0 1 o Yure „ 1 l 0 _T ToH-nsend , do . o 0 o Hinckley „ 0 2 0 W Roberts , do ... 0 0 6 A Leabury Farmer 0 3 9 Fa ' rplay , do . .. 0 2 6 A Few friends , W Ash worth , do . 0 0 6 do . 0 S 10 W Sutcliffe , do .. _i > 1 0 Bury , W-Coulter 1 i I W Sutcliffe , do .. 0 10 Do . per Samuel ll Hellywell , do . e 1 0 _Cosson .. 012 5 It Lord , do . .. 0 10 Do . Rev A M'J > o-J Sutcliffe , do . . 0 0 6 nald .. 0 0 6 Todmorden Land Do . Captain Strong-Company .. 1 18 fl burs .. 0 5 9 Bolton , per Dow . J W Anderton „ 0 10 ling .. 0 4 6 A ort ' iamptoa , Saimunden .. 0 7 2 Munday .. 0 14 5 T Tomlinson _« 0 1 6 Do . Mr Spencer 0 2 1 Eeelei Land Com . Do . TCobson .. 0 2 0 pany .. 0 12 6 T 11 , do . .. 0 5 0 _Deshorough .. 0 1 6 T B , do . .. 0 4 0 _flut'l .. 0 16 0 W h . . _N _' orthamp-Threo Friends , to- .. 0 2 6 Mal . mies .. 0 3 0 TV L , do . .. 0 2 6 ( 1 Hay tons .. 0 10 Bramhope , Smith 0 7 6 H Whittari ... 0 2 6 Thornton , SaU « Iturcc .. o O 6 child ., 0 8 0 J Madden aad Mr East Binley . Armstrong .. 0 5 0 Butler .. 0 5 fi Two _Fvien- _' s , White Abbey , _Gijrebrid ( _ie .. 0 10 Riley „ Oil D 5 , near Abber- Bradford ., 0 0 11 deen .. 0 5 3 J Seath , _King-Lsniherhead Green horn .. 0 2 8 Land Company o 2 3 T _Grffith .. n n fi City , _L-idies Shoe- J _Bathgato .. 0 0 6 makers 0 7 0 A Leech „ 0 1 " J Bariiut , Lincoln o 2 G T MM . ean .. o 0 6 W Cator .. 0 0 6 J Humphrey .. 0 6 3 Uxbridge .. 0 10 0 J Grant Spiers .. 0 0 6 Thrislington .. 0 4 3 Richd _Frazer .. 0 1 6 E Turner .. 0 10 Ann Fryers ,, 0 10 T A _Woulridge , William Moss .. 0 0 fi and E Wood .. 0 10 Redmond Asher 0 0 6 Sacriston Col- Dani . 1 Disman .. 0 0 6 liery , per R Turn- Robert Hemley . 0 6 6 bull o 10 10 James Dumford 0 1 « _Ashburton , Coombs 0 3 3 Wigan .. 2 8 0 Yarmouth Land Few Friends , Company .. 10 0 Newton , .. 0 6 6 T F Wakh _. y .. 0 2 0 Bradihaiv . lano .. O 6 * A Sunderland H Weadly _, York 0 2 0 Painter ., 0 1 0 A Navie .. 0 3 6 _Ueckmondwike , , . M Lennon , Man-Ainsworth Swash Chester _.. 0 2 6 Chartists , & e . 0 10 3 Three Land Mem . Do . J Furnley .. 0 4 4 bers „ o 2 9 _Ilightown Swal- Two Wives , do ... o 1 6 low .. 0 2 1 Mr Goody „ o 2 0 Girvan Land North Shields .. o 9 0 Company , & c 0 15 8 Hawick .. o 19 5 Leicester ( No . 1 . ) J M'Neil „ o 0 6 Land Com- D Harmel .. 0 0 6 pany , Astill ,.. 2 10 11 3 Attiuburgh .. 0 6 6 Mr Green „ 0 10 _RM'Doug & l .. 0 0 6 D Parry .. 0 1 0 J M'Quail .. 0 8 5 J F Taylor .. 0 1 0 J M'Gibbon „ 0 2 6 J Rep- * .. 6 10 _Loughborough .. 0 3 7 MrMee .. 0 10 Sheepshead _., 0 2 0 A Friend .. 0 10 Doncaster " .. 1 IC 0 A Few Friends , Aberdeen Comb-Admiral Dun- Makers .. 116 I can 0 10 Two Friends , West L M D _, Strat- Cones .. 0 _' 1 6 ford .. 13 0 _Neweasfle-upon-Newc istle _, _Wagg 0 3 5 Tyne „ 112 6 Mansfield , Ellis ' s J C f Itf , do . „ 0 19 9 Men .. 0 1 11 A Few Mechanics , Do . George ' s and Hartlepool , per U'h _. teuiau ' s .. O 1 5 B Hull .. 1 a C Two Friends ,. o 0 ll _Coachmabers nut } _Mesjra Turner , ' others , Noir-Lewish > m .. 0 5 0 castle ., 0 U $ Trowbridxe .. 0 6 * Blayden _. T Lamb 0 11 " Falkirk , G Thomp- X Y Newcastle ., 9 8 6 son „ ¦> 0 1 $ 0 Three Friends , Pedder , Mogridge , per M Jndo ., 0 1 ° C Hatter , and Mountain Land H Hatter . 0 3 0 Company" . 016 6 Litchfield Land 19 0 Bridport , Mr Company . „ 0 4 3 Ellis ., 0 5 6 Mr Willia .. 0 16 Greenwich „ 0 i * i Marylchoao „ o 3 _JEllJJj Tho _followiag sum * wera received and have _beel entered into the totals of past waeks hut have no » _hff l _articnlarised in the published lists of it _-ms : —Ll » ndlY » Wb . ; IP , Sunderland , fis . A typographical error ° : c _£ - ' ' toe list of last week , in the caso of Yorfc _, _«* _ohiUmg was cet for ti iustead of one pound _, Taos , _GhfiS * tsasgj
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), March 11, 1848, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_11031848/page/4/
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