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TC TO TIIE TRADES OF GREAT BRITAIN. Mi Mv Friends,—Feeline a warm interest in anv sub-
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jcject ject conuected with the interests...
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TO WILLIAM WISH-I-MAY-GET-IT, Eso. . Mr ...
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-*+<*******~^^^^~+++s+***** JocasEYMES T...
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imia mtlltww*
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( ^sotl/ i t i't^iAfxsvt-es^ f vc-*c s~ ...
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^ < t1~^ " a -w^ ¦ ¦ "_ ' < --> AND NATI...
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Jmtupi Jntelltjjence*
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FRANCE. In thc Chamber of Peers on Frida...
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HOW STKEET. f-iidav.—I'osT-orncE iioii»E...
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Duncomub Tbsti.mosial. — Central Commit ...
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PRICE TnREE-nALFPENCE. JOE MILLER THE YOUNGER, ENLARGED TO THE SIZE OF PUNCH. •**
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jrortfK-ommg itotings.
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CHARTIST CO-OPERA'! IVE LAND SOCIETY". M...
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BANKRUPTS. (From Fridaa's Gazette, July U.J
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William I , arsic-v, - | Vo.iiitic-!i,li...
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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.
Tc To Tiie Trades Of Great Britain. Mi Mv Friends,—Feeline A Warm Interest In Anv Sub-
TC TO TIIE TRADES OF GREAT BRITAIN . Mi Mv Friends , —Feeline a warm interest in anv sub-
Jcject Ject Conuected With The Interests...
jcject ject conuected with the interests of the Working C Gas Classc _* " _* , I hare uo ordinary pleasure in directing your blast best attention to a document addressed to your body bby a by a provisional committee , elected to make arrangcinieunieuts for _bringingyour cause ' before a Conference of _t _roai roar own delegates , on the _2-Stb . of tliis month . ] live . Evcr v man who takes pride In tho progress that the i que question of Labour is now making , will be filled with _< one one feeling only 9 n perusing thc document in ques-1 tioi tion . A feeling of gratifying wonderment that such i a I a p iece of composition should emanate from the Lai Labour class . I have read it over again aud again ,
Bin will with a desire for brevity in all matters conceniin _** m" your interests , I could net find a paragraph , I _sci sentence , line , or word for erasure , without _endan-<* c-i " _tring its whole merits , with the exception of thc X 9 two fust clauses under the head of " coxstitctios . " 1 1 menu the amount of shares and thc mode of ti voting . _tP the qucstiou of share * 1 shall merely ol objcrvc _. _i ' _uaxthc amount is , ' m my opinion , put ten ti times too high , if thc plan becomes national ; and is -with respect to voting ( thc only question in which a any principle is involved , aud which has induced n mc to address you at all upan thc subject ) , 1 d differ as widely as night from day from thc c committee . It is thc only principle against
\ - which both you and I , in onr individual capacities , ] Lave been so long struggling . It is the principle of p lurality voting—the princip le of Sturgc Bourne ' s Act—the principle under wliich church rates and ether unjust taxes have beem imposed by thc wealthy ¦ upon thc poor . It may he urged , aud not without point , that thc society is not a mixed government for varied " _intercits—that it is a corporate body , with equal individual rights . It is , I know , intended to be so , and it is _beeauw * the p rinciple of plurality voting would br « dt itup Jissiieh , that 1 object to it . _lalsoobjerttoasliareholdcrlicingdcb : irn . dofhisri £ htofvoting until his full share is paid up , as he might be thereby deprived of his vote for seven years at < M . per week . 1 object to tlic princip le of proxy voting , because it makes onc man thc ruler of other men ' s brains , and
because it affirms that reason can have no effect upon the judgment . It negatives thc possibility of _ai-gmiient convincing , or else it affirms , which is _j-oin ; too far , the power of one thinking , reasoning , and deciding for many- I further object to the Permanent investments under thc head Aitucatio . v or Fcxns . I object to it because it would make thc society a stock-jobbing society . I object to it because I believe that a new state of society , to be valuable , can only be formed out of individual equality . I have always contended , that before you can create a perfect state of society , you must teach each man his individual worth . There exists the same
difference between making individual happiness out of an aggregate of improved mind and producing au aggregate of mental improvement out of individual happiness , that there is between building a house of shapeless lumps and building it of dressed stones . I believe that wc must first find out the place that each man is dcstliicd by nature to hold in society , and then you may rest assured tbat each will be satisfied _uith his proper station . I have been invited to canvass the document iu question with temper and in a good sp irit . I have done so now but briefly , merely pointing thc attention of those who aro to be represented to the points most requiring their attention . I should not have done more than express my unbounded delig ht st seeing such a document , had not those principles , at variance with my whole life , been included iu it . I well know that , though I shall not
get , and do not deserve any of thc merit due to the authors , that I should be charged with culpable silence , had I abstained from comment . Moreover , as the principles of thc Charter and the character of my leader , Mr . Duncombe—aro dearer to mc than anything in this world—I cannot , in justice to liim and to myself , abstain from statins that the Terr points upou which 1 write underwent _con-sidei-ablc discussion , and that Mr . Duncombe expressed his uncquivocalobjeetion to thc principles of _r-LLKAUTt of votes ; and althou"h it is highly commendable that the minority
should bow to thc decision of tlic majority , yet it never would do to sec the Chartist leader ' s assent given to the most anti-Chartist principles . I write for thc sixpenuy subscribers , and commend them to the care oftheir wealthier brethren . I have always dreaded the aristocracy of tke Trades , and I fed assured that thc adoption of the plan , as it now stands , would give them a greater power thau ever , over thc dcinoeraey . However , it is cheering that all is but BUggistion , aud that tho people themselves are called upon to adopt or reject what may seem to be most wise . There is noiv hut a short time for deliberation .
The last Conference named thc day lor thc next mcetiug . The place of meeting is engaged . Thc committee have decided against tlieir right to postpone for further consideration , and , above all , at no other time cou'd they secure thc pr . _si-Jciicy of their nurivalled chairman . Therefore , to work tlicy must go , aud not at all prematurely , f _« . r more time would but lead to more apathy , and at last only thc latest moments would be devoted to _businc-s . I am , jour faithful friend , Feargus _O'CoKxon .
To William Wish-I-May-Get-It, Eso. . Mr ...
TO WILLIAM WISH-I-MAY-GET-IT , Eso . Mr Dear Whl , —You see that I now rank you amongst my friends ; an' _, in faith , so I ought , for you arc doing me and mine good _serricc . Dear Will , I thank you very sincerely for the following letter , published in Lloyd ' s of last week : I hope and trust that the proprietor will have equal cause to be obliged to y ou , but I fear not . TBE CHABTIST XOnSS--rBAF . To tie / . 'difor oj "ILjyd ' s Weekly h ' _ewsfvper . " Sur , —I have to thank you for the advice given to me as to the best mode of obtaining hack _tlielittle amount _-trliich I subscribed to thc Chartist ' s Co-operative Laud Soeiety , and I certainly should greatly prefer to receive it of Mr .
O'Connor himself , or of Mr . William I ' _rowting Huberts , rather thau to take it from either of tlic two Middlings , who , I perceive from vour last week ' s paper , volunteer to pay the money in order to _yrcreat our _{» i ing a _rititto their masters . But 1 shall have a trord to say to their masters , ivhieh renders it very desirable I should see them , and I seek _tokuoirfron * tliis is to Iw . _iewniplislied The notice iu the _Xorthern . Star was , that all money should he sent to William _rrotrtiug Roberts , care ot _Feargus _O'dimor , Esq ., _JHO . Strand . The rules say all money is to he sent to "William _Froivting "Roberts , Esq .. care of Feargus O'Connor , Esq ., M , Gnat _Mnrlborouj-h-Stree _^ _Recent-street Whieh of these plac e * _isi-orrect * At neither was Ilr . William Roberts to be found last
_tvetifc ; at neither was _Feai-gus O'Connor . Both ivere ill the country . T _^ n pointed out th--law list as a channel "by which to obtain information of Mr . Roberts , and that those who werc solicitor « , mid not in the law list , should _l-e avoided . I find tliat the _name of Mr . Roberts is in the law list , under the head of Loudon solicitors ; hut after giving the address in _London , Bath , Manchester , mid _XeiTcastle-u * K * n-T . rneare also added as his address , so there is no necessity to avoid him ; the difficulty is , that he may avoid us . If I am to go from London to Bath , froin Rath to Manchester , and from Manchester to _Newcastle in quest of him , by the time I arrived at the latter place , he might have returned to Loudon , and if I followed
( him there , lie might again hare set off for Rath . I hare t « en Hun - king if we had subscribed our £ 5000 , and after . depositing it in thc bank , our treasurer had , under Rule I 9 . mad- aj-pu ' ration on behalf of tlic trustees fbr the witli-I _flrawal « f { lie same , and it had been so withdrawn , tliese I four r « _iuV ,. c _& . of Mr . Roberts ( to _iar nothing of tbe two I _aaaiti-ma i . 3 _^ Strand _^ 54 , * Great Matihoronjrh-I _*^ _"f _*" )» uglithavereuderedit very inconvenient for the soortv . 1 and mjshopmate * have all _discontinued to Purchase the _Xorthtm Star ; but onc copy , which was paid lw » quarter in advance , still romw , and I see that last week-a , eOcn T _lSccretarvoj _^ CujihUI Co-ouerative _uoa _- _MicirtT iMiortc-.
'' Many _sumnk-. ve been sent to the treasurer , which wrtlbo _acknonlcd gcd b y that gentleman on his return to town . This _appe-ws to us _asingularmodeofcarrringonthe busine ss as does the report of Mr . O'Connor in ihe same paper , that he does uot know the exact number enrolled at Manchester ; but that be receired several _p-mmls for entrauee . As he is neither constituted treasurer , or district secretary , I wish to know in what capacity he receives _ the money . Because , if one director , Mr . O'Connor , is at hberty go to and receive several pounds in one place , t
noknowing of how many persons , then another _director ( for instance , the next oa the list , Mr . I )« vle ) may do the Kjme , a _„ _a so anj . _„ meaAa . _^ grij _j , p r i _^ " ° ' " Mr " Uou , * r , s » a ,, d theuther direetiors , have published " an address to the Chartist bodv generaliv . hut more _espec-all y thc members ofthe Chartist _Oi-operative 7 _™^* - "'"' "' * _' I ' ' S answer the objections contained m jour lap : r , aud tiie answer is ** to this we reply —the rules of the society make ample provision for the security ofthe funds . " IstVistliesecuritv * _Irresponsible collectors , and absent treasurers . Tliey also say , " then k no obstacle to _enrolmeut . ' * I am Informed that no
enrolment can take _plsia tlittlOUt u _reat alteration in the _ruU-s ; but Why Should flley enrol if it is uaneccA-arv t And if it is necessary ia July , was it not touallv so _' in
May ? They complain of your xtating that they proposed , with a capital of £ 5000 , to locate Tdh persons , giving each £ 15 IGs Sd ., total _ttSsiT 18 s .-Id ., and still havo an estate , left worth £ 373 ? l ., - and all to be done in four years . They say , it was promised to locate 19 i 3 _persons within tliat time , and to give tliem . £ 15 16 s . Sd . Tills would be stiU more miraculous , for I find it would require _upwar Js of £ -.- |) , 000 to give £ 151 Gs . 8 d . to l , tt ! 3 persons . Yet it is promised to do that , _.-md still to have an estate left worth
£ 31 , 314 . Xor docs it enter the calculation that any portion of tiie £ 15 ICs . Sd . is to be _rc-puid * , fov it is distinctly laid down , " Cottages erected , and the sum of . £ 13 ICs . _Sii . _presetted to cach member ; " so re-payment cannot be expeeted . I have to thank you for opening my eyes on the subject , and I make Ihe observations th . it other persons may have their eyes _oitencd also . I am , sir , your obedient servant , William _Wisu-I-aAT-cri-ir . Lambeth , July 1 , IMS .
Dear William , —You , no doubt , remember the verj familiar old adage , —
" There is safety in a multitude of counsel . '' So then , as you saw by the previous week's " Star , " that I was to be iu f « nicashire last week , you guessed , sage prophet , that I could not , like Sir Hoyle Roc-he ' s bird , be there , and at 340 , Strand , and 54 , Great Mnrlboron :- "h-street , at one ar . d the same t ' llhO . But , dear Will , I am always well represented nt both places ; and I have been at home every hour of every day since Monday last , expecting a call for yout 'Js . 3 d ., and 3 d . premium , but yeu havo not done mc the honour of a visit . My friend , you object to my receiving monies at Manchester , and not _knowini _* the number of shaves , but , had you been a ' s anxious
lor knowledge as you appear to be for notoriety , you might have consulted Mr . John Murray , district _Aecrctary , and he would have told you how thc sum received by me was made up ; aud , if not satisfied with that double entry , you might have applied to the general secretary , Mr . Wheeler , whose residence is _i'rkttv gcjuorally known to be 213 * , Templcb : ir , and , as he keeps . 1 check upon both , he would have satisfied you ; and , that failing , you might have access to the treasurer ' s account ; and , all failing , you could have luid a look at the " Star , " and then you would have been at liberty to publish a notice like thc following in Lloyd ' s : —
" _C-mhTlST UOVSB TBAP . " _Kotieo to our numerous readers . " lias any person paid monies to the treasurer , subtreasurer , or general-secretary , or other officer of _tin-AISOVE association , which has not Veen _acknowlcrigt-d in the columns of tint rascally paper ' The Sorlkcrn Star . ''" Now , there is an open course for you , if you don ' t wish for a trip with your next 3 s . 3 d . from Loudon to Bath , thence to _Newcastle , back to Manchester ,
md so back again . William , why did you not open your eyes as wide as tlicy now appear to be , before you paid your first , second , and third instalment 1 for you must have heard then . What a capital oculist friend Carpenter is ! Why , man , you appear to do nothing but con over the rules of our society . Now , then , to show you that this multitude of counsel presents great _fafcty , read the following , which I tbuud one mornin g last week in my moose-trap : — Wisbeach , July 2 nd , 1 S 45 .
TO FEARGOS O ' COXXOB , ESQ . Sin—Hating seen the letter of Mr . UUl ' s in Lloyd ' s newspaper of June 29 , pretending to be a reply to yours ofthe 31 st , in tho Northern Star , aud supposing tliat you would nrito to Mr . Hill , _i ! j ; iiii in your paper of next Saturday , 1 thought I could give you a _little information respecting the character ofthe man alluded to , for I live within a short distance of where- Mr . Hill lived _nad carried on the business of merchant , _lu corn , wool , _couls , spirits , Sic , as well as banker , in which branches he failed about twenty years ago , and caused the complete rain of _agruat many people in Wisbeach and thc neighbourhood , and likewise a great excitement & r n lung time , for he made such fair promises , and some placed
such couhdence in hun , that they bought liis one-pound notes at 10 ? ., 12 s ., ISs , and even 17 s . eaoli , nnd thereby ruined thraiselvcs , his creditors receiving not more than 2 s . fid . in tho pound , in two separate payments . Some lime after tliat , ilr . llill _a-r-iin commence *] business as merchant in com , wool , coals , wine , and spirit , as well as shipowner , common brewer , and proprietor of the Starin the Bast—not editor , as you stated in your let ter of the 21 st ., although I dare say he did chief part of the _iditlng . You must bear in mint that it was some years before he got into all tliis tnade tliat I have mentioned ,
for the people wore very dubious for some tune . About four years ago , or somewhere thereabout ? , he failed a _-. _i-coml lime , to the tune , 1 am told , of £ SO , 000 or upwards , so you may depend hc caught some of them again . 1 can « _s-. uro vou that no pi-rson lias caused such serious _lofst-s io the public In and _ntjoat _Wjsl-eai-Ii as _Iie'lias , and , coii ; _-iderin ; r the attacks whieh I supposed he made upon jou , in Lloyd ' s paper of the 8 th " and 15 th of June , 1 thought it was nothing but right that you should know a little of the man you had to deal with ; and admiring your principles , as I always have dune , I have taken tlle pleasure of writing you tliese few lines .
Tou will please excuse atl imperfections in my letter , as I am but a very moderate scholar . I am , your humble servant , James _Ksate . P . S . —He is called "Jemmy Hill , tiie bad paper man , ' " at " WUbeach ; aud I think you might very well give him n hint ofa few of these things . J . K . Dear Will , I am the very last man in the world to make an ill-natured remark upon others' misfortunes ; but then , as Poor Richard says , "three removes are as bad as one fire , " so you see that people will l » cautious ; and experience makes mon wise . 1 knew there was a something touching you home about the chances of failure . True , it is many a good man ' s case ; but , then , never put your eggs in a basket that the bottom has fallen out of . You , no doubt , heard all about the £ 1 notes , and the many
occupations of the proprietor of the Star in the East , and perhaps you will now see good reason' for that gc « _tfeman-BKAi . ER is cons advocating a repeal of thc Corn Laws , as a sni p _owxku as well . In faith , we live in rtrangc times , when poor deluded men will so speak out for themselves . I shall make no further comment upon thc above letter than merely to ob serve , that thc poor people of Peterborough and Wisbeach have not yet been gulled by the bait in my mouse-trap . Poor burned things , they dread the fire . Now , read the following letter from Droghcda , Ireland , and see how Lloyd ' s protective , considerate , virtuous people-loving editor has scared the mice from thc trap , and then read thc list of subscriptions , aud especially the £ 15 odd and £ 2 from France . Yes , really , all from France ; and see how you and Carpenter between you have changed our name to " UNIVERSAL _Co-oPKuATivB Lasd Associatiox . "
Mcle , Drogheda , July 2 nd , 18 « . My Dear Sir , —I take this opportunity of returning vou my most sincere thanks for your unflinching exertions in behalf of the oppressed against the oppressor , hut the ci-use of my trespassing on your attention is , _havinj-: seen your reply to tliat chapter of accidents which appeared iu Lloyd's , and the satisfactory manner in which j ou upset his puerile reasoning * , also tho bonus held out to the workin , * _chis-scs from the adoption of tiie Chartists Co-operative Land Society . May _Lask if persons in' Ireland can become members of it- ? if so , will yon , sir , have tbe kindness to transmit me a copy of tiie rules and _psospectus ! By doing so you trill much oblige jt-number of sterling democrats in this locality ; among the rest , your _rinrere friend , Ilucn Cabakeb . ¥ . O'Connor , Esq .
Dear Will , —I have the pleasure to inform yon that I am in great hope ofbeing able to _canyojafeihe plan without selling one acre of ground ; and I'll just tell yon how . I think , when we purchase the land , wo can raise building-money on mortgag _* ; , to be paid off , ns nil mortgages may , with six months * notice ; and that in less than five years every occupant may be able to pay down his quota of the redemption-money , and purchase-money , and have his holding for _bvei : heist _pitE- _* . Think of that , you dog , and that shall not stop the process of buying and subdividing .
Now , dear Will , be sure and write to me every week ; but then let mc have your letter ; , as by one of the most unforeseen , and strange , and unaccountable accidents in the world , you wrote the second half of your letter last week , and published it too , and , notwithstanding this apparent paradox of the press keeping a secret , I assure you that your letter was sot in the number of Lloyd ' s sbst to mk . Sow , is not that odd ? What _n capital dodge ! What a protection against being answered ! And , what a great man I am tohave a whole paper printed
for myself ! Will , in thc number of Lloyd ' s now before nie , there is tliis _heading : — _PCULISUKD OX FlilDAY AlTKRSOOX . For distant parts only . Ah Will , Will ! arc Peterborough ' and _Wisbcitcli amongst thc Distant _Pauts ? And did you think that thc burnt dupes there would think it a god-send to lind the treasurer axv wiikre , or to hear
_sometuisc of their nroncy ? Now , William , after acknowledging your great services , I will not call tliis avery shabby dodge ; but , let mc tell you , tliat it would have been right to send some of your eyewater to the poor fellows in distant parts , as you profess to write speciall y for their protection . Why , then , confine your caution to tlic open-eyed lnetropo'is , where all men seo all things ? I'll tell you , Will—it is because Lloyd ' s publisher has received more than onc notice like the following * . —
Sir , —You will please to send me a quire less this week . I _feurtlie dastardly anonymous attacks upon O'Connor are calculated to injure the circulation of Lloyd ' s _psi-ier , as many readers are giving it up and taking 6 _"f < _**> instead . My dear William , when I had gofc so far , I was favoured by Mr . Wlicclcr ' with a copy of Lloyd ' s , having the other half of your letter , and over the leader arc these words : —
PCIILISIIEO ON' SUNDAY _Monxixs , Containing the Latest Intelligence ofthe Week . . All , you cunning little regttey pogtiey , so your lcttor is thc latest inteUigence , is it ? Bnt see what a lie Carpenter told ! I mean a fib—ns JOU don't liko tllC word ** lic . " Why , in his paper of the 28 th of . Tune he cut your letter in two , thus : —[ We are compelled to postpone the remainder of Mr . Hill ' s lcttor till next week . —En . ]—Now , was that true ? and did he overbold it for his latest , from its importance , or
did you wish to have a peep at Friday ' s and Saturday ' s Star for my reply to your nonsense ? Whatever caused the mistake , William , you havo got yourselves into a mess . I see nothing in your long rigmarole about the repeal of the Com Laws io require even notice , further than merely to observe that yon arc a surprising fellow to have forced Peel , and Russell , and Cobden , aud the League , into tho adoption of yom * bread-eating plan . You know the _storv of the old man who believed thatthe
Tenterden steeple was the cause of thc Goodwin Sands - much in the _Kime spirit you complain th . it you ami the other Hill had some squabbling in the two riv-i-Stars in 1841 , and that lie Burked and " ut his pipe" with one of your _lettcis . I have no doubt he did ; itwas his common practice ; but then , William , I never refused to meet you in discussion on thc subject ; but it would be no wonder if I had—a man who frightened Peel , and Russell , and Cobden , and' tho League , would swallow mc bones and all . You are a perfect boa-coxstiiictob man .
Just onc word more for the present . William , as I have not received thecightpencc from Saffron-hill , ot thc cightpence from Coventry , or the still greater sum from Whittington and his Cat ; perhaps you have , and as small favours are thankfully received , and may be as sate in my hands as in yours , will you oblige mo by transmitting the amount for thc _satisfaction of the subscribers . Rut , after all , you decline to meet me in discussion—WISE AlAiV , YOU HA VE DONE WELL . ' Have you got it yet , Will ? Ever yours , dear William , In the cause of TRUTH , _Fhakgus _O'Conxoo .
-*+<*******~^^^^~+++S+***** Jocaseymes T...
- * _+ _<*******~^^^^~ _+++ s _+ ***** _JocasEYMES _Tailoiis' Din . vkii , —On Inst Monday week upwards of seventy of the joun eymen tailors of York sat doun to a most splendid dinner at tin-Hop Grove Inn , in the vicinity of York . After doing justice to the gooi things set before thim . the company adjourned to the pleasure grounds , where they amused themselves with tlic games of cricket _, skittles , & c , until "Hay began to draw her curtain , ' * when all retired to the house , and there partook of an excellent supper . After the cloth was remove ' , the chairman gave thc toast , " May this day be ; i step _awards the downfall of the tyranny exercised on the operative tailors of York , " which was loudly cheered . An excellent amateur band followed witli the air , " A man ' s a man for a' that . " Several otliei toastewere given , likewise _s-ongs and recitations , froin _llyron , Shelley , and Campbell . Harmony was kept lip for Sevoial ' llOlu . * , until at length the hour for re timing _homeivard arrived . Several omnibuses am ; c it * being in waiting , all returned to York high ! . - satisfied with the day ' s entertainment .
Imia Mtlltww*
_imia mtlltww *
( ^Sotl/ I T I'T^Iafxsvt-Es^ F Vc-*C S~ ...
_( _^ _sotl / _i t i't _^ _iAfxsvt-es _^ f vc- _* c s ~ t _^ _t _& < -- >
^ < T1~^ " A -W^ ¦ ¦ "_ ' < --> And Nati...
< t 1 _~^ " a _-w _^ ¦ ¦ _"_ ' AND NATIONAL TBIDE _^ JOURNAL . VOL . VIII . NO . 400 . LONDON _SATURDAY JUT Y 10 1845 price fivepewe or _ xj \ JX \ Jj \ _jvt " _JAlUilUill- U UJ _) X _\& t IOIJ . Five _Shilling and Sixpence pe * Quarter
Jmtupi Jntelltjjence*
Jmtupi _Jntelltjjence _*
France. In Thc Chamber Of Peers On Frida...
FRANCE . In thc Chamber of Peers on Friday a smart discussion arose onthe chapter of tlic budget relating to Algiers . General Castellanc condemned the attempts made to occupy so extensive a country at a cost o ' 100 , 000 , 000 annually to Franco , and with 10 u , ( Hw ineu . Thb Jesuits . —The leading feature in tho Paris journalsof Sunday is the sueccssful termination nt Baron Rossi ' s mission to the Court of Koine , al ; doubt upon the subject liaving been put an e id to by thc following semi-official announcement in the _Iksso-gcr of Saturday night : — " The lung ' s governmen t _, has received news from Home . The _negotiation
confided to il . lto _< si has attained it . ** object . Tlic congregation of Josuits will cease to exist in France , and is about to terminate of itself : its houses will be closed and its noviciates dissolved . " Tha Debats accompanies thisconmiuuiciition with tlic information that it nag only six months ago that the Government- ivoeived i _' _ufuriiiation of the re-establishment of the order of Jesuits in France ; that about that time tho simultanwus reports of divers provincial _procumu-s da Roi showed that houses connected with the order were forming in all directions , and it was ascertained that _tivcnty-tno houses had already ba'ii fully completed . Although the law armed thc authorities with power for their prompt suppression , yet the Government preferred the more prudent course of
appealing , in tho first instance , to the spiritual authority , mid _JM . Rossi was dispatched to Rome . The task which this diplomatist had to execute was delicate and difficult , and his success is- a proof of Unsound discretion which dictated the choke of so able a man . How _secrotly the ncgociatioti ni list have been managed is proved by thc fact that tho Fieneh organ of thc Jesuits , the Waivers , was quite blindfolded . Only three days be f ore the authoritative announcement in thc Messager the Jesuit journal stated , in a triumphant tone , that the _ncgocistion had failed ; and such was generally believed to have been thc fact . The Paris journals of Monday are mostly occupied with the " expulsion ( as it was deemed ) of thc Jesuits from France . " Thc Gazette de France , a _parti-pretre _j-mriial , edited bv thc celebrated Father de Genomic ,
is _s- ) hardy as to venture an insinuation against the I _' opc himself , who , according to the brave abbe , quailed before menaces regarding his Italian dmui nions . The Jesuit organ declares naively that the Pupal decree has broken its heart . The National states that sixty-two master carpenters have agreed to the advance to five francs pet * day demanded bv theoneratives ; in consequence of which nearly five hundred havo returned to their workthose who havo so returned arc forming a iiind for the s _ipport of their fellow workmen whose employer- * have notycl given in . The heat in Paris was intense on Sunday anil Monday . The thermometer stood at two o ' clock , in the shaclc , each day , at about 90 of Fahrenheit . A number of horses fell dead in the streets from thc excessive heat .
The Paris papers of Tuesday are , like those of the preceding day , occupied principally with the expulsion ofthe Jesuits from France . The Opposition prints and the organs of thc Government continued to exprc- * their dclightat this triumph , while thc _Legitimatist journals and La 1 ' ressc deplored it as a victory ovir religion itself . _TheQiwtWiwme having announced , on authority of letters from Rome of thc 2 Sth and _2 _'Jth ult ., that thero was no truth in the statements in the Moniteur relative to the suppression ofthe Jesuits by order of tke Pope , the Patrie observes , tlwt "itwas scareeir possible the Government would publish a
result of such importance if it were not true . However -unlikely the assertion of-the- Quotidicnne npneared . tlic editor of the Patrie had , nevertheless , deemed it expedient to seek for information on tin subject , and had "ascertained that the communication made to the public tt ' . _ifi copied , word for word _, from the despatch addressed to the G overnment . That despatch was brought to Paris by a secretary H the French Embassy , who was to leave on _Monda . i evening with the repl y of the French Government t < thc Pontifical see . " " Wc are confident , " adds th * Patne , " that the orders of tiie General of thc Jesuithavo at this moment reached Paris . "
_Dkith of a ItF . ruiiucAX LKABEn . —The Pari ! - iouin ils of Tuesday announce the demise of one o . the elding Republicans ofthe capital , a M . Raban , aniniiavcr . who formerly Jived at the entrance o | the Palais Royal , and who , although hump _backeii and o' a very delicate constitution , was concerned in all the movements of the Republican party since 1 S 30 . He was arrested and imprisoned several _11 lines . and remained under the surveillance of the police to his last moments .
SPAIN . A-unuixo State or the Capital . —MADmn , _J' _-xk 2 S . —Fronx the appearance o f the troops at the different points in this city forthe last few nieht _.- _* past , as sunset approaches , " it would seem as x \ t . w Government was almost in hourly expectation of _•> movement . Last night , however , these appca » ' « _* _* _' "* presented a more threatening character than for soinc time past . Groups of people _wereseen at the I ucrta d _. _'l Sol and in the Plaza Mavor , engaged in earnest
France. In Thc Chamber Of Peers On Frida...
conversation , ahd discussing the various topics ofthe day . It was said that the acquittal of the Efpectador was to have been made the signal the day before yesterday for an insurrection in a liberal sense ; and thatthe constitution of'lS 12 was about 'to' _^ . be proclaimed . Whether tho information thus given-was ' believed or not , . the " authorities , however , took good care to provide ' against any casualty that might occur . The regiment La Reina Gobemadera , and a battery of mounted artillery , remained the whole of yesterday under aims , and ready ior action ata moment ' s notice , in tlieir barracks . On account of the rumours which hud been afloat the whole of yesterday , that an attempt would bo made to disarm the guard at the Post-office and the Custom-house , and , on account of
the Cl'OWUS that wore assembling in the _l-tolii del Sol . ami Plaza Major , the Captain-General appeared at the head of a troop of cuirassiers in the latter place , and thence proceeded to other parts ofthe town . There occurred , however , nothing to call into action the military forco . Tiie groups dispersed , and rctirci . to their homes . The guards , however , at the places abovementioned , remained under arms , the whole of the night . * and the soldiers did not lay aside their muskets for a moment . The guardsare ' still doubled , aiid _^ the same precautions arc taken to-day . A trilling disturbance took place at Seville on tho ' 20 t ! i . Some young mon uttered cries in favour of the Constitution of 1837 , and paraded the streets with a ling ; lint the ' garrison liaving been called out . order was quickly restored .
PORTUGAL . _TitR Elkct-oxs . —A letter froni'Lisbon of the 30 th ult . gives the following account of ministerial infamies in relation to tho forthcoming olections : —Preparations for thc approaching electoral campaign are going on with unabated activity . Thc party in opposition profess ' great ' contidenco of success ; but 1 _j-raitly doubt tlicy feel it . At all events , tliey cannot fail to have some misgivings when thoy see the multifarious tricks ' tiie government is putting in play against them . In addition to thescvoralstratagems I have described in some of my last letters , a few others have since been devised , - which arc equally worthy of notice , for theircool effrontery , aud the utter disregard of publie opinion wliich tliey imply . Ono of these , and tlic most barefaced , is the registration as qualified voters of a _creat number of men whose very accent proclaims
them at oncoto be natives of _Gallicia , and therefore Spanish subjects . Hy this means , in oue parish of this city , which I take as a sample ofthe rest , the number of voters , which might to bo 293 , has been raised to 435 , the extra 1-12 consisting of Gnllego water-carriers , who must vote with the government mi pain ofbeing _doprivod oftheir licenses should they do otherwise , if this be a representative , system ol ¦ pjvernment , then assuredly it is such a one as the yrcat Autocrat of all the _lUiss _' _ins " might safely set lip in his dominions without thc least diminution of his real power . After this I need scarcely add that the opposition appear to havo but a very slender chance of success . There is no ' use , however , in speculating any further upon tho result , as in about six weeks hpneo the question will be set at rest , thc elections being to commence on the 3 d of August .
SWITZERLAND . The Zurich Gazette states tliat Dr . Stoiger had upon the 1 st been honoured by the commune of _Vidnu with the right ofcit izcusln ' n . The doctor , it was said , would settle iii Berue , and there resume thc practice of medicine . At Bulo Campagnc thc anti-Jesuit party have proposed thc establishment of a Swiss Catholic Church upon the principle now spreading through so many of the German states . The samo party in Lucerne complain of persecution , which the authorities make no efforts to prevent . Letters from licrne , ot the 4 th instant , state that the Jesuits had been already placed in possession of the parochial church of the Franciscan Friars nt Lucerne . Mr , Scott , the new _Sed'ctiivy of tho English Legation fn Switzerland , had arrived at licrno .
A letter from Basle , of the 4 th instant , states that the small town of Tliusis , which , after Guirc , was the most manufacturing aud richest in the canton ofthe Grisons , had been entirely destroyed by firo .
GREECE . _FiuniTi , Statu of tub Country . —Athens , Junk 21 st . —An official voport has just been received of the destruction of the village of Ceropolis iu Acanuuiia _, which was attacked and pillaged by ' a baud of about twenty robbers , and then totally burnt . Another village near Dr-ignnicstre , in the same province , wa .-. surprised by another baud , at noon-day , who killed one of the inhabitants , severely wounded two others , and carried off two of the principal proprietors , for the purpose of compelling them to pay " egregious ransom . " Here , in the capital , an attempt was made to break into the treasury , in spite of the guard placed there . Luckily the robbers had only succeeded in breaking open the lock of tho outer door
when they were alarmed , and nindc their escape . A _few'days since a " merchant _wiw stopped in a carriagi on tke road to the Piiwus , at live in the afternoon , robbed of 700 drachms ( about £ _2 , _"i 0 ) , and was severely wounded , as well as tho coachman . This during act , committed at such an hour , in the mosi frequented road in Greece , where carriages aro continually passing , is'imputed to persons employed b the police . Assassinations are also becoming so frequent that no one routines out in thc evening , unle . _* _* well armed . Fivo days since , about nine at night , ¦• - young man , the nephew of Licut .-Colonel _Kiiratasso ! _-.
one of the Kinn ' s aides-de-camp , was stabbed in th . hack a moinciil after he had quitted his house , amleft dead in tlm street . No one can _maginc tin inoiirc of * this crime . The day before yesterday , tin printer of the Conner ( F Athencs , an oppnsitioi jonriial , wn * stabbed in the street in open day , by ai unknown rulliaii , who effected his escapo . It wouh be endless to report all the outrages whicli are hourlj committed , aud which keep the population in a con slant state of alarm and terror . The conduct of tin government in tho mean time is most _citi-noi-dinnr-i it _aiU'ears that its indulgence towards _ccrtaii brk'Andx is _uio-dmustiblc .
The _iv-wc states that a letter from Athens , received by way of Trieste , mentions that Grivas had lieen killed in a duel , fought with Kallergi , the King ' s iiid-de-camp . The cause of this duel was lately detailed in the Herald . Some apprehension is said to be felt on account of the number of Griras ' s followers , which amount to 2 , 000 desperados .
CIROASSIA . The Co istituthmtiel publishes a letter dated from the frontiers of Russia , the 17 th ult ., which states that the check suffered bythe army under the orders of Count Woronzow , and thc difficulty of maintaining a strong military force in the provinces now half deserted , force the -Emperor to adjourn the definitive pacification ofthe Caucasus . Not only will there be no _mnrefrc-h troops sent there , but it is thc _intcnt'on of the Emperor to diminish the number of thc troops already there . It is supposed that 50 , 000 men distributed in the numerous forts of the Caucasus may b _© _regarded as sufficient to maintain the defensive and the utatus quo .
UNITED STATES . LivEnrooL , _Mosdat Evening , Eight _o'Clock . — The packet ship Oxford has just arrived with New York papers of June 10 . We take the following extract from their correspondence , dated Washington , June 14 : — " A rumour has been circulated at Washington and Baltimore , said to rest upon good authority , that the President has offered the mission to England to thc lion . Louis M'Lane . of Baltimore . "
NEW ZEALAND . Drhaofci . Conflict _ubtwebx the _Settlehs anu tub _Natines . —Falmouth , Julv 7 . —The Midlothian , Morison . from Sydney , NSW , arrived off here and landed a mail ; also fhe following report : — " On April 2 , in lat . 35 43 S , long . 177 56 E , spoke theiVfary _. ofNew Bedford ( whaler ) , - which reported having seen , three days . previously , her Majesty ' s ship North Star working into the Bay of Islands ; also reports that the natives there nnd the crew of her Majesty ' s ship Hazard and the British troops had an encounter ; and the flag staff had been pulled down , and thc town of Kororarika burnt , about a hundred of the natives had been killed and wounded , and about eighteen or twenty of the English : thc commander of the Hazard badly wounded . The British residents had all left for Auckland . Quietness had been restored . "
How Stkeet. F-Iidav.—I'Ost-Ornce Iioii»E...
HOW STKEET . _f-iidav . —I _' _osT-orncE iioii » EKi- . —James Byrne was _hi-ought up In custody of Veake , an officer employed by tlic I _' ost-ollice authorities , and placed ut the bur ' before Mr . J . u _* di « e , charged with stealing- a letter containing a . f . _1 " auk ot * England note and a half sovereign , which came into his possession for deliver } ' by virtue ut' his office as letter-carrier , the propeity of the _rostnisister-C ' iiiiral . The letter was pusted at Cam-ten Town , by Mr . llsirri _*** _, an artist , and directed for Cambridge . The case was l ' rlly made out . The piisoncrsaiil nothing-in his < lcfencv , anil upon the application of Mr . 1 ' eaeoek the witnesses were bonml over , and the prisoner WIS _OI'dlTl'll io be remanded .
MA . UYI . _UP . OKF . Fridav . — Illicit Distillation . —A man named I ' atiicli Sullivan , and William Cullius _, a buy about sisteen years of 1151 , 0 , were placed at the bar before Mr . " uonir , charged under the 7 ih and _Sth Geo . IV ., _ehapC _"* , 8 cc . 33 , wilh heing concerned in _woi-l-iii-jiui illicit still at Vo . 15 , lilandi ' ord-inewfs , 1 _' _urtmaii-s-juare . There were _miiner- 'HS casks , Sic in the kitchen , nnd the " trade" had no doubt been carried oil for soinu time past to a considerable extent . A seizure of tlte spirits , kc , was made . — Tlw prisoners neve convicted in the penalty of £ 30 uneh ; in default of payment , three months * imprisonment in thc House of Correction .
WORSHIP STREET . Thursday . _—Asother Attempt at SnciDE . — Lewis Thome Lewis , ayoung man of very vespcctnble appearance , stated to be the son of n gentleman of property , was placed at the bar before "Mr . _llinghain , clnuved with bavin--- attempted to drown himself in the _Kcgcin _' _j Canal , and also with violently assaulting Jfr , George Chambers , 11 master carpenter , who had prevented him from accomplishing his purpose . It appeaved from the _stntcim-nt of Mr . Cliaiubi'is , whose fucc was very much swollen and discoloured , that while passiii _; , ' down the _Quteu ' _s-road in company with a friend , between nine and ten o ' clock on the preceding night , he observed the prisoner , who appeared to be in a state of frantic excitement , running duwu the centre of the road , _kiekin- ; his hat before him , and using the most dreadful imprecations . After
pursuing this strange conduct for some time , the prisoner suddenly declared thathe would throw liimself into the canal , and instantly started oil" as fast as he eould in that direction . On _i-eaching the fence ut the side of the towing-path , tlm prisoner attempted to spriuj * over it , but in doing so his foot was caught by the rails , and pitching headforemost over them , he rolled down the bank into the water . Witness and his friends , who had followed thr prisoner in expectation of his threat boing realised , immediately hastened , to his assistance , m < l just as he was in the act of sinking _smweevteu in getting hold of liim nnd pulliiig liim out . The prisoner , however , exclaimed that lif was determined to drown himself , and struggled so strenuously to release himself , that one of them was obliged to pinion his arms and the other his legs , in order to effect his : cinovnl . While _cirryititr liim
in the direction ol the _station-houso a livery-servant and other persons came up , and tbe former , who stated himself to be groom to tlio prisoner ' s father , requested lie might he given up to liim , and , on witness refusing to comply , the prisoner by a sudden effort succeeded in ' gett ' ng- his _rh-ht-liaiid at liberty , and struck liim a violent blow on the eye , which hc whs about lo repeat when lie was stopped by a policemnii , whom he also assailed in ' the same manner , lie was at length removed to the residence of bis father , who , on being apprised of the circumstances , said that his son had made similar attempts hefore , and ordered the charge to bo entered against him . The prisoner was fined £ 5 for the assault , whieh was paid , and . he was set . at liberty . [ Low diet , his head > h , tved , exercise 011 the treadmill , and an occasional taste uf a _llOl'SC-wlnp would be of groat service to tliis tool . ]
S 0 UTIIWA 11 K . Thursday . —Assault akd Attempt at Sbicide . — William _Muvtin , ayoung man of respectable family , wns liruu ; l : t before jfr . t ' _littingh-im , charged ivitli assaulting Margaret Cmivy , and afterwards attempting to commit suicide at the polit _** station . Thv complainant stated that she is landlady ofa house iu the Waterloo-road , and that a female named l . ucis lodges in her house , whom the defendant is in the habit of visiting ; that on the preceding night the complainant , being alarmed ou heaving cries ot * "Murder ! " proceeded up stairs to Lucas ' s room , and found her lying on the floor , and the defendant . standing over her . lie seemed to he highly excited , and as he had a knife iu his hand , she ( theeuinpliinanl ) _inte-feral , and remonstrated with hiin ; but , instead of minding irh « t she _suiil , he treated her with much violmcc iu his attempt to tlll'll her out of the room , drugging her by the hair , nnd tearing her gown . She called out fur assistance : but
before a policeman arrived the defendant , with the poker , smashed the door , and did oilier damage , until hc was at length taken into custody and conveyed to the station house . The defendant did not seem to be intoxicated . A policeman stated that the defendant accompanied hint quietly to the stiition-liouse , and ho was locked np in one of the cells . About eleven o ' clock he ivas visited in the cell , when on opening the door he was found in the act of . _-itraii-jlin- ; himself , for which purpose he had fastened one ulld of a silk scarf round hi- * neck , while thc other end was firmly bound round one othis knees , and in this position lie tras found , und must have t fleeted his intention had not assistance arrived at the moment , lt appeared from other evidence that the prisoner was a thorough _proiligiite _, the bane ofhis parents ' existence . He was held to nail to keep the peace , and in the course ofthe afternoon _u _' iis liberated , his father having found tho required lUrctivs .
CLERKENWELL . Tuesday .-- Wholesale Swisdli . no . —A gentleman named Wilkins , ii member of n mercantile firm in the city uf considerable eminence , applied to Mr . . Bingham , th > . -itting magistrate , for advice and assistance under the following circumstances : •—A few weeks ago _u ' person of gentlemanly appearance and address , who said he resided at Ware , called at his house and gave _ajarge order for goods . Witness complied with the order , and sent 0110 of their travellers to deliver tliem . Tho traveller , seeing that the house had every _npp-uminee of fashion ami substance , left the articles , having been directed to call in a few days for tlieir _jirice . _llejiented applications wcre made for the money , but to no purpose , and applicant at length discovered that his customer was one ofa regular gang of
swindlers , who had victimized numerous London tradesmen , as well as several shopkeepers and others in their locality . They only remained a few days in thc house , hut during that time whole vnn-kmds of goods of various kinds were 'eft by credulous tradesmen ; they werc no sooner delivered thau privately conveyed away from tho premises . The house wns besieged by duns , but when admission was obtained thoy found it empty . The goods applicant sent were transferred to London by the-Eastern Counties K . iiliray , and he traced thom from the terminus to a livery-stable within the district of this court , where they then lay . Thc stable-keeper Tefusod to deliver them up to Applicant , and bunco the application . Mr , _llingliam said , Ue could giv « him no assist ? nee . Mr . Wilkins said he hoped the statement would be published , so that trades _, men might be put upon their guard .
THAMES . Monday . — Ex _* iessive Smuggling . —James Scott , a sailor , and the steward ofthe the ship Princess Alice Maud , from St . John ' s , New Brunswick , was charged upon a Custom-house information with smuggling 197 lbs , of compressed Cavendish tobacco , by which he had incurred _apraaltyofJGIOO . The information charged thc defendant with being on board a ecrtain vessel in the port of London , not being driven _thor-.-in by stress of weather or other unavoidable causes , and _haring on board divers , to wit , 107 lbs of compressed manufactured tobacco , tbe
same being in packages less that _SOOlbs . weight each respectively . The prisoner said the tobacco wns bis , and he had concealed it . He wrs very sorry for what he hnd done . He went ashore , and while he was ashore therevenuo otheers found the tobacco , No one knew anything ahout it but himself . Mv . Broderip fined tbe defendant £ 100 , and said ho had no power to mitigate . Mr . Hopper , clerk to the solicitor of Customs , said _thoprisoner would have to suffer a lung imprisonment _beforehewtisliberated unless be paid thc fine . Tho duty on tho tobacco was above £ 90
Duncomub Tbsti.Mosial. — Central Commit ...
_Duncomub _Tbsti . _mosial . — Central Commit e-3 of Trades , & c ., Parthenium , ' 2 , St . Martin ' s-lane , Wednesday evening , July 9 th ; Mr . J . Grassby , Carpenter , in the . chair . —Sums received—Per J . Heaton , Clithero , £ 2 os . ( 3 d . ; the Trades of Bury , per Martin Ireland , £ 5 . Per Mr . T . M . Wheoler—Mr . Rowland , Hackney , 2 s . ; Mr . Cheetham , Sheffield , 2 s . Cd . ; Mr . A . Holmes , Derby , 2 s . Gd . ; A . It ., Is . ; W . C . P . S ., Is . The members ofthe committee arc requested to attend on Wednesday evening next , July 16 th , at half-past eight precisely , tc decide on what the testimonial shall be . All poisons still retaining books or money on account of thc testimonial fund , arc hereby requested to forward the same on or before tho 16 tii instant to lt . IS ' _arman , Esq ., general trea > urer , 2 , New Broad-street , City , or to Mr . J . Syme , general secretary , 1 , Bishop ' s Terrace , Walcot-square , Lambeth . A Mketjno of THjf Mj . nkj . s of West Moor , Backworth , and Enrsdoii Collieries , was held on July 7 th , 1845 , at vScaft ' _fltd Hill , Mr . Joseph Fawccit in the chair . The meeting wai addressed by Mr . Auty , igeutof the Miners' Association , and was followed Hv Mr . Welslv , president of the _Executive Council . flic chairman then introduced W . P . Roberts , Esq ., io the meeting , who congratulated the Miner-- of the above collieries on their still holding fast tu the prin-• iples of union . Three cheers were given for Mr . Roberts and three for tlw union .
Price Tnree-Nalfpence. Joe Miller The Younger, Enlarged To The Size Of Punch. •**
PRICE TnREE-nALFPENCE . JOE MILLER THE YOUNGER , ENLARGED TO THE SIZE OF PUNCH . _•**
Ad00115
NO I of the Kerr Series ! coninincdtho HOUSE OP COMMONS TAKING TIIE HOUSE OF LORDS 1 _XTO CUSTODY , by Joe Millet ' s own _Acailouiician _*;; nnd 23 , 000 inipmsions have already boen sold . No . 2 , will record a Puiutiiig by the sAine Ar'ist , In which "A _' _tiwfl Graham abandons her offspring" tmd "'Nurse Graham is taken up upon the charge ; " also n b _.-nntirul engraving ot" " The Cabin of tlic ll ' oiiiirft'rf I ' _ensartt at tho late Cork Massacre , " with numerous other engravings . Joe Miller has now the nssistanee at liis Hound Table of Poet , . Mentor , Critic , Clown , Fool , ami Lenrueil Pig , nnd his pages will hu illuminated by all the brilliancy of the woefc . With the i \\ _, w Scries there is also a _iplendid » t * m Titl _* , Price _Three-halfiH-nce _. Stumped , to go free hy Post TwopexKC-halfpenny . May bo had of all I . _' _ooksellers and Newsmen . Ofliee . no . Fleet-street .
Ad00116
On Saturiln . v . July l : itli , « il ! be _'Hibli-ihcil , So . *? S of the MOltXlXG STAR , AND -PEOPLE'S ECONOMIST . ( Price Onii Pcimu . 10 NTATXIXG a Letter from Mr . ' KtzIcr in Caraeus _* — J n Ill-port of the _Diructor . " of the Tropical Emigration Society—tin in'tiele on the _StpuWjcs of the different Societies , which aim nt benefitting the People ; and much other interesting information ol ' theTio _* _iii-al World . The whole or the back ntmihorj can now lie had at Mr . Watson ' s , 5 , Pnul ' _s-allcy , I ' _atei-Bof-tei-. row _, ami OtliOC Booksellers .
Ad00117
NOVEL EXCURSION TO MUGIITON AND HACK IN ONE DAY . FOR FOUR SHILLINGS . _' _fpilK _MEMHElW . tmtl _I'HIKN'DS of the C 1 _UUT 1 ST JL _ASSOCIATION and CHAKTIST _CO-01 _'EHATIVB L : \ N 1 ) SOCIETY , respectfully . mnonncc to the l _' _liblie that they liavo _en-fii-fwl Special Train ; "fori ! 1 _'I . EASUKl * TRIP to the _IiMiutit ' ut nnd s-ilnliiinus town of _liKUMlTON , on Sunii . iv , _Auci-ST _Si-il _, _1 SI 5 . Thc Committee have _liui'lo _ifvui-j umingvmviit with the Hrightuii friends to _ifltlildi' the excursion a truly pleasant one . Children mider tiftcuii years half prire . The Trains will start from the terminus at London Hridgc at a quarter past S o ' clock _pvecwely , _raturning from _Urighton nt Seven in the even _, ing , thu : < allowing _iipivjinls of eight lionr _.- * fo visit tho Pavilion , Chain Pier , Devil ' s Dyke , Kemp Town , and tha num rous other attractions of tliis pleasant town . Tlm Trains will stay fivo minutes at tlio Croydon station , to take up friends from Croydon , Me ' rton , Mitcham , and tho surrounding districts , who must bo there jiiiiictiwiiv by _hnlf-pnst S o ' clock .
Ad00118
Iu tlm Pi-ess , and speedily will be published , in one voium * , post 8 vo , neat cloth , lettered , prieo 7 s . Oil ., TIIE rURGATOHY OF SUICIDES A Prisoii-llhyme : in Ten _HoMis : nv Thomas _coortat tiik chartist . Orders ( for the present ) to be addressed either to Mr . O'Connor , 54 , Great Marlboroil . i * li-street ; or to . Mr . Cuopej _^ 13 _^ Uliiclifriars-roiid , Loudon .
Ad00119
CITY CHARTIST HALL , 1 , Tunuitrain-Iaiio , Skinner-street , Snow-hill . Tho Char _, tints of the Metropolis , ami the l _' ublii * generally , am respectfully informed that MK . THOMAS _COOl'EK ( late of StufU . vtl « aol . nnd author of tho forthcoming Chartist cpiii , written In . his imprisonment , and entitled "The _I'lirj-atory of _Suh-ldos _* - ' trill _eoiiiiticiice a _suries of TK'KLVK _LECTL'IU'IS , iu the abnvuuanted spacious ami commodious fenii , on tho _iii-st SuuUnj _uveinng in August , Subjects afl folloW 9 ! I . —Ancient _Kjrvpt : its priestcraft ami d-. spn : isni , an * their effects < jn suvvntlin *; generations : its scic . ice _** _, monuments , ifcc ., etc , ' 1 . —Aucfont _ttveee-..: it « frootlom and enlightenment ; its literature , arts , philosophy , and social institutions , & c . 3 . —Ancient _Itoino : its democracy ( mil public virtue , with their decay and corruption ; its ago of great men , conquests , policy , Htvraturv , Ac . 4 . —The . Middle or Dark Ages : their superstitions ; power of Popery ; rise , of Mahomet ; the Crusades , ifeo , 3 . —Saxon period or English History : Alfred and hi * glorious philanthropy ; our niieient democratic institutions , Sic C . —Tlte Sovm' . ' . ii _Goiujuost _* . straggle * of Hie _Mngg , nobles , and trading ehi & ses for political influence ; _Wiek _. lilTe , Chaucer , Onxton , A'c . ; the "Reformation , " Sie . 7 . —Shalisperti uutl his contemporaries . 8 . —The English Commonwealth , and the Protector- * of Cromwell . 9 . —Milton : his patriotism and poetry , . fee . io . —The Restoration ; " Glorious Revolution" of 1688 ; commencement of the National Diibt , and modern system of government ; Walpole , Chatham , hurke , Pitt , _i ' ox , Sic independence ol America , _itc . 11 . _—Tlie'l ' i _' _i-nck Kevolution and reign of Napoleon , it 1- ' . —Byron and modern literature ; views of _prjgree ond prospects ofthe future _, j- }/* A few voices and instruments are practising , to popular airs , the " l'eoplu ' s-Songs , " also composed by Ilr . Cooper , in his imprisonment ; and each lecture will bo preceded and followed by the choral performance of one of tliese pieces , in which the audience w t . l be invited to join , K . B . —Further particulars of the"lectures , Sic , willb given .
Jrortfk-Ommg Itotings.
_jrortfK-ommg _itotings _.
Chartist Co-Opera'! Ive Land Society". M...
CHARTIST CO-OPERA' ! IVE LAND SOCIETY " . Meetings for tlic purpose of enrolling members and transacting ( _tlicr business connected therewith are held every week on the following days and places :- »
SUNDAY KVKMXO . South London _Clmrtist Hull , 115 , Blackfriars-road , at _half-pa-it six o ' clock . —City Chartist HaU , 1 , Turn * again-lane , at six o ' clock . — U ' ctminster : at tllC _Partliciiiiini Club Rooms , 72 , St . Martin K-lnnc , at half _, past _ssvcii . — _-Soiiicr * Town : nt the Hall of Science , 19 , Cumberland Row , King ' s-ero .-s , at hull-past seven _, —Sju ' ia / fields : nt the Standard of Liberty , _Ih-icklanc , at seven o ' clock precisely . —Emmett Brigade : at tlic Rock Tavern , Lisson-grove , at eight o clock precisely . MOSOAY EVENING . _Caxxxbcrwdl : at . tlic MontpeliiTTavern , Walworth , at eight o clock precisely . TCESUAT KVENIXp . Tower Hamlets : at tlic Whittinjjton and Cat , Church Row , _Bcthnnl-green , at eight o ' clock . — Greenwich : at the George and Dragon , lilackheath _* hill , at eight o ' clock .
London . —City Ciunusr Hall , I , Turnagain * lane . —Tho public discussion will be resumed at halfpast ten o ' clock on Sunday morning next . In the afternoon , at , . throe , tlm Metionolitan District Council will meet for the despatch of _busine _^ . At five o ' clock , -p _tu'stiiint to adjournment , the Victim Committee _wtil meet . At half-past six tfie Chartist choir will meet . The Ckniral _Ukoibtkatios Coumittkk will meet at the City Hall , Turitiigain-lanc , 011 Sunday , July 20 tli , at throe o ' clock in tiie afternoon . Tin * Exii . es _Restoration Committek will meet at the Hall , 1 , Turnagaiu-latic , 0 : Sunday , the 20 th inst ., at ten o ' clock , when it is expected thai every member will be present . Ham . < t SciKNcit , 19 , Cumberland-row , King ' _scvoss . —On Sundav _cvetiiiiu next , July Kith , at haltpast seven precisely , Mr . T . Al . Wheeler will lecture . Subject , "The Charter and thc Land . "
Camuhiiwkm . axd WAi . wor . Ti ! . —A meeting will _bs held atthe Monpelior T » v ><* n . Wniwor'l _* , on . Monday evening next , July 14 th , at _eij * t ' clock pre * cisely . HAMMERSMiTn . —A meeting will be hold attheD « n Cow , lirook Green-lane , on Tuesday evening next , July 15 th , nt eight o ' clock precisely . Towkr Hamlets . —The membcisof the Land Society meeting at the Whittington and Cat , Churchrow , Bethnal-green , arc requested to attend on Tuesday evening next , at eight o ' clock . City or _Losdok . — -Tiie members of this locality will meet in the JJiiil , Turnngain-lane , on Sunday evening next , at seven o clock . The Mkmbbrs of the Bermondsey and Rotherhithe locality are requested to meet on Tuc-sd . iv evening next , at the King ol" Prussia , Tooley-strcet .
"Whitkciiai'Kl . —Mr . John Sewell wiil lecture at thc _brassfoumlers' Anns , on Sunday evening noxt , at eight o ' clock _precis-ely . Westminster . —Pnrtlicu ' mm , 72 , St . Martin ' s-lane . —Mr . J . F . Linden will lecture on Sunday evening next , at hnlf-pai -t seven precisely . United Patriots' _Bkxeht _SociKTr . —The second anniversary of thi * * prosperuiiB institution will be celebrated at the Chalk Fawn T-avern , wmw _lVuaroee-liiU and Kegent ' tt park , on Monday , July 28 tn , with a festival ami ba . l . Feargus O'Connor , Esq *
in the chair . Dinner on table at two o ' clock precisely . The _riiilantropic Harmonic Meeting ot its members and friends will lie held on Tuesday evening next , at half-past eight , at the Society hm _. S'J , Mr . J . Skinner ' s , Brown Bear , twodoors ; from Dray-lane , Broad-street , Bloomsbury . IIm . ivax . '—Tlio next West Riding delegate meeting will be holden at Halifax , in the Working Man s Hall , _Bull-close-lanc , on Sunday , July 13 th , to commence at twelve o ' clock . The members of the local Lund Society will meet in tlio abovf ; room on Sunday evening at six o clock .
Bankrupts. (From Fridaa's Gazette, July U.J
BANKRUPTS . ( From Fridaa ' s Gazette , July U . J
William I , Arsic-V, - | Vo.Iiitic-!I,Li...
William I _arsic-v , - | Vo . _iiitic- ! i , li . _itni : _iker-Sainu « lL lp _l _)) ck _Uerinondt-ey-street , _viitti-iller- Wiiliiira _Haward Hawe , t ' ortseu , Hampshire , cun _k-r-Ju-tpli Thorn , _Act-v _Urentt ' ord , mid Orent _Kaliiijr , _Mi-liliestex , _plutnk-r-. ' _olin l ' arrow , Stur . ti _. ii , near Hurj" _*>'• Esln : iunt's , Suffolk , uraper—John _SJioH . _'i _*!'! , _Bristii _" , » r « _ci-r - Tliwnas Lore !! , lien . _strklge-muruli , _KiMien-euHir" _-, dealer — John Harvard , J _} rook . street , liiiiiil _^ _trM't , l » : iip-iiialccr—Wjiliarn _Burluigli , _Ilarverliill , _SufiVilk , _soivener—Tl ; e Forth Murine _IllSUt Mince _Coiiip-iny , _BifImjiSfatf-Rtrni-t Within , City , underwriters—John _Aiviier Dow , Homiurd , _Estt-. v , drapei—Thoiniis Eastwood , Brighton , cheesemonger-John Davenport , Little I . _ove-lune , City , _wSiulisslt * hosier—Jonn » Filbey , Kgluim , Surrey , _liceiised-vietualltr .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 12, 1845, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_12071845/page/1/
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