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IETTER FROM A VICTIM OF THE POWELL PLOT:...
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Hgwabias Refugees;— The Vienna Mirror gi...
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.lllE..Tfi^ay. R^FA CfTORXAJT ^
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- TOTHE tnrrOR OF TUE. SOKTHEUS STAR. Si...
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The FtOATixG of the . Tnini) Tobe of the...
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T nl ;T rUE 0NIA ?•?^D^0 T^E MEMORY "' o...
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' ¦ Weiohts Asri Meascres;—On : Saturday...
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•A TofrNO : 'Iad y tSus'''writ«' aribriy...
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ON,; PHYSICAL-,DISQDALlFICATIONS,, GPNER...
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m -mimMOMS-mhbofheaiitii. ;.; f I.--* .!...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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_^• _'l _^ _iMwTSwiw _^ S _^ ok ' - _> ,. '• ~ A » - "" * _.- "¦' - " : •• _' ? _£ _" . l _^ J . . ; ' : _„ ¦ -- - _^ s - _. _jpyrich _^ e ha _^^^ _^™ _"' _^ Barns . ' . _Jl _^ . _toibawotfbud _^ A * ** * " _^ groves where- the Ifawthorn-bush A * ai » ajyw _ _» _" » s _, ; _, . - - - $ _Se hillUit Is Miss 60 tehold . - _~ f ' _^ _K ndscape all smiling , o ' _eHsheeted _wflt gold . ' . _S * 5 ? 5 SSSl and brakevo _' er lowland and lake , . _JSI _^ OO keeps echbi incessant , awake ; _SdSfS _^ er of leaves add the buzz 0 _f bri ght WBBH _5 _S _* everywhere when the Hawthorn-bush - . _^ blooms . "; ' _- . ' •'¦' ¦ ' * "
_rfl 1 _cfl . B _bU tblhebreeze _^ harpof _ tende restsound ' - _Ss ponucth-tbe glades _^ and green vistas resound : _iTcihon one by one , tho whole emulous chour ifi » full-throated anthem to heaven respire , — . EFrcf roffl tbe depth ; of the wood , where they nestle their brood , . _, j , ; . _j [ toe _itep ofthe ranger doth seldom intrude ; itfitfhere none but rash truant to rob tbem presumes , 01 Oi tbeiry bnngreared' among the sweet llawthornbnshjblooms . ... -. , " ' . , _jj _, j _}^ _whisperine zephyrs unfold their fans wide , i At At tending on Nature at sultry noontide , — _iOiOn the glimmering heath where she languishing lies , . . i «• _j _>' ercome bv tbe glances of _fond-gazingskies ! — W Wien the son sinks to rest , and the beautiful West 1 jj _, _Becmbles some blissful abode of the blest , _., ' _¦• . . ' W ffnT'ed myriads awake , as it were from their tombs , Tt To p lay with sweet May ' _mong the Hawthorn-bush blooms . - . " - ' - • ¦ "•" ¦¦
T ( The o wlet abroad is at eve early seen ; Ti The bat flitteth round the < wfc gloomy and green ; T'The tiny silk moth is as full of delight A A 3 an angel of love ' neath a sky ever bright ! _.- T The dew on the blade by fairy-hands laid , Ii _Intb millions of millions pf globules is made ; \ Which the lingering twilight all ni ght _lonjf illumes , £ At that hour in each bower when the Hawthornbush blooms . ... -.
1 The minnows , up-leapinsr _, disturb the starred rill ; 5 The nightingale ' s ditty rings sweet round the hill ; i Dim shapes , " such as none but the gifted can ken , < Converse , indistinct , down the elm-shaded glen ! ' j That part of tli 9 skies ' neath the pole-star which lies .. ; . . -. - - . - -: ' . " - ] is sparred with light ' s purest ethereal dyes' 'lis the fan-light of day o ' er night ' s portal of g looms I . . . . - * .-: . ] _Lig ht and mirth bless the earth when the Hawthornbush bloom ? . -- - --
-And the coy Tillage maiden , in silence and fear , . To get " holy hawthorn" now hies to the mere ; - . Tnat , laid on her pillow , in dreams she may see . " The hid that ere longig her bridegroom to be . ' Jjo ! she starts with affright , as some sceptre of night - Bad howled in her ear—drops the . blossoms so white , ¦" ¦ '• _¦¦ - ' _- ¦ :. _ : Unnerved ' by the ' chaffer , whose _graveiuzzing plumes . ' : _'"• - . ' " . "•'" Ontstretehed when shereached the sweet Hawthornbnsb blooms !
Thon childhood-loved , insect , what thoughts come with thee ! And _whatTales ; ' - _iftfg " since told , ' neath yon old _fTillage . tree ! -.: r- _-f-f- ;¦; Then , life seemed a-vista of endless sweet _Mays—Ab- ! those were our innoeent cockchaffer days !; Fore : hope-illumed years , like the clime . of the ' - . -spheres , .. - . . : . --Your- sounds and your songs , burst afresh on my ears I ' And what feelings are stirred by thosedeep Whitsun' : ¦ ¦ drums , ' . _-.-. - _.-- - ; That resound from towns round when the haw thornbosh blooms ! - " .-- '• '
_3 Tis charmmg to listen morn ' s earliest-bird ; Or to linger alone where the ring-dove is heard ; - Or at noon to recline on the brink of clear wave , Where the lily decked _Naiads their naked charms lare ; ; "fis sweet aye to meet old friends and them greet-Yet nbtbingto me is so charming , so sweet , As to walk at cool eve amidst wafted perfumes , Through the grove with lovey when the Hawthornbush blooms ! . Cooper 1 Journal . ' - ¦ - . 'WnxuM Joses . .
Ietter From A Victim Of The Powell Plot:...
IETTER FROM A VICTIM OF THE POWELL PLOT : y- ' . - . The following extracts are from a letter-received by Mrs . Lacey , from her husband ; William Lacey , -one of the victims of the Powelbplot of " _184 S : — ; : ¦ : : Launceston , Jan . llthf , 18501 ' . " . _"Mt Dear "Wife;— : I have no doubt but you will think the time long before you hear from ine . "Wo set saQ from Portland on tKe ~ 17 th of August , and , after a pleasant voyage , landed safe on th ' e 2 t ) tbof _Koremberi much to our-surprise _, at Hobarfc Town , for we , ( the Chartists ) , were always told that _^ e should be landed at Port Philip . -The whole of the Chartists ( with the exception of Mnllins ) with thirty boys were landed here ; the rest went on to Port Philip ; but when they got there they were not allowed to land , and were obliged to go on to Sydney . I have not heard of them since , I shall
not be surprised if they do not hare them there . We had a ticket of leave given to us before we left theTessel . together with a first-rate character . On landing , which was on Thursday evening , we twere ' taken to barracks , to remain there until we conld meet with employment . ' Fay , fowling , and myself , went but on Saturday ; I got engaged as foremen in one ofthe first shops in the town ; as I was anxious to get out I did not stand for wages : for the first month I went for-15 s . a per week , with board and lodging ,: with a promise to be raised at the month ' s end ; but I found the place not to suit me , the master requiring more of me than it was possible for man to perform . The whole of the business rested upon me , as he was no tradesman himself , and no scholar ' ; I had the books to keep , as well as cut but , and he was one of the worst tempered men I ever met with , so Heft him at the end of three weeks , for I knew I conld better myself .
I am" going to commence doing a little for myself , and I have no doubt but I shall get a good living ; the prospects here are very much brig hter than" at home . It is a fine healthful country , I have no doubt much more so than England ,. Provisions here are -very cheap : good muttou ,-2 d . per pdnnd ; best "beef , 4 d . ; lean get a good rump steak , 4 d . ; bread , _= ld . per pound ; very good potatoes , 4 s . per cwt . ; flour , from Ss ; to 10 s . per cwt . ; fruit in abundance , -aud-very cheap . Rents are rather high in good situations , but very low outside the _^ town . My trade is considered the best on tbe Island ; I can get good soleing leather at 6 d ; per pound ; good kip , atls . 2 d . ; lasts here are very dear ; men ' s 3 s . Cd . psr jJiiir at home yon can get them for lOd . ; wo « flaxawl
men s are 2 s : 9 d ., at home od-. ; hemp , , , Blades , bristles , and webbing , ' all these things are double the price that they are at home . Men ' s good woolleu clothes are Tery dear , but slop-made you can get very cheap . 'My dear wife , I should like you not to be later in the year- in : setting sail than July © r-August , _as-it-is the pleasantest time pf the year you can come put in .. I saw an account bf the cholera raging verybad , and that Williams , the Chartist , died in prison . I hope , nyr dear , the Lord hasbeen pleased to ' spare you all in health , and that the time will not be long before we shall be happy together again . ' Your affectionate _huBband , ' .. " - - _- _¦¦ - " . _^ rM _lacer . Launceston , Jan ; ' loth , 1850 .
P . S . —Mr _Dssn Wif _£ , —Since I _wrotetbe above , Ifind the . ship sails ' on the 16 th , and I now inform you that I have bought some very strong soleing leather at 6 d . per pound , and kipatls . 2 d _., and have got orders for nearly " a ; week ' s work . I have taken a small cot near tW ' narbour , -where the shipping comes up , at 2 s . per week , until you come . __ Trade is very good , and dress-making is Tery good here ; I Shall write again in amenth or less ; I _^ hope you will write every month , as the expense is only 4 d . to pay ont _^ send me word the came ofthe vessel , and the time she sails , as soon as you know , as I
may prepare for yon , and be ready to receive you , aa we know some time before tbe ship arrives , and what ship it is by the signal . I hope yoH will not be later in " the year in setting sail than I stated , as yon will not be so liable to roug h weather . Sol most bid yoa adieu , my dear , praying that you all aay soon be landed with ' ' " ' Your affectionate husband , - _Tym . Lackt . '
Hgwabias Refugees;— The Vienna Mirror Gi...
Hgwabias Refugees;— The Vienna Mirror gives the following as a correct list of the refugees now under the surveillance of the Turkish government — "Kossuth and Casimir Bathyany , with their _« _ives , Messaros , _Dembinsky , tbe two Perczels _, Psilmski , Matrinski , Szolosi , Brieanti , Yi soczk , _« Asbotb _, and Gyarmann . Tbe following have accomianied tbem voluntarily _:-Szerenyi , Prattz , _Jinr , _Kalapa , Wagner , Acs , _Spneey , Haka , Mihaievicz , Ilaseman _, Lorode , and Timane . Ibe t « lbwmgarethe names of thosewho , havingembraced
Iilamish _i are now at Aleppo :-Ben ) , _iaoacsinshj and his son , Balog and bis son ( tke latter remains a Christian )* Zarsicocky , Slein , Konethy , Hallau , 3 fewegyey , Albert Barati , Tork , Orosdy , Levay and his wife , Schoff , Seyderber , Schneider , and Grimm . " ' - Mrs . _Giqver . —The stage has sustained a great loss in the retirement of-this admirable'actress , * ho took her leave of the public at the New Strand Tbeatre oii- Saturday ,- after an honourable . career of upwards of fifty years . We understandthat she will take , a * farewell benefit at . one of the " large
.Llle..Tfi^Ay. R^Fa Cftorxajt ^
. lllE _.. Tfi _^ ay . R _^ _FA _CfTORXAJT _^
TO THK ; Mdatf _^ 0 N .. 81 R : jJU € SS ' Q IUBAU , ' - BABT _., ItP . & B _/ - _^ B _^ _pVing _^ efgreat ihfluetfee * fhich you possess with thr members _Sf . the _nbuse" ofCommons , and tbat on _thesHbjectoY , the Factory Acts you are _enutled to _apeafc-npon autborityj . I venture to press upon your attentiou the claim , which the factory operatives believe , they have to yoursupport , onthe question about to be submitted to , the house by Lord John Manners . ¦ _-.-: -. ¦ ¦ t : _...:=. _!; .. ' _.. _ ¦¦ It will be in your recollection that ; in tbe year 18 * 4 ,. as Secretary of State , you introduced and passed an Act for the better regulation of factories . That Act , amongst other things / wa ' s intended to prevent ' a mode of working young persoss , called working by . relays" or . shifts . ' * Tho reason
for the prevention was ' that thatmodeof working deprived young persons of the _benefits _' of the acts _paissed to . restrict the periods of their labour , firstl y , by spreading their hours of work over so " long a period ofthe day as to . deprive them of any : means of recreation _^ healthful exercise , -and . education _, and , secondly , by . rendering the . means of detecting violations of the law so difficult that all masters who chose to do so mightwork the protected operatives _beyibndf the legal limit of their labour with impunity . ,. .- - — - The just and . necessary ; enactment so passed by you bad for a time the desired effect . In 1818 some masters again adopted the injurious and prohibited mode of working . They wero-proceeded _against .
and in some instances suffered the punishment which the law provided for . their crime . At last , however , the question liaving been carried to a court of appeal , it was found to the dismay ofthe helpless persons intended , to be protected , and to thesatisfaction of tbe few tnasters _. _who bad sought to deprive them of that protection , that the prohibition intended by , your act had not ' been expressed with sufficient precision , and that , theref ore , the evils which Parliament , at your ' suggestion and under your advice , bad'determined to prevent , " were still hot prevented . . : :-. r _. ' _- At the commencement of the present session a proposition was made to ainend tbe . _acf of 1814 , in order to effect the object which parliament by that act intended , ' and you ori that occasion , answered every objection to the proposition , by the assertion , that this was no question of the policy of factory
legislation , but that it was a question of honour with parliament , whether it should permit : those whom it had taken under its peculiar care tb be despoiled , of their acknowledged rights by reason of an omission of a purely technical character . This ,- your answer , carried conviction tothe minds of all men ; it fixed the . course , of every honest man ; and it reassured and comforted the hearts of thousands who naturally looked to you as the statesman on whose judgment parliament would principally rely . : - : ' ; It would be out of _; plac " e for me to trouble ypu with a detail of the various turns of fortune which the cause of the factory , operatives has met with inits course . The . operatives " have had much to complain of , and much to contend against ; and they have loudly complained and ; manfully contended . At your hands , sir , they , have-had nothing to complain of . ' . v .
Tbey know , thaton the generalsubject of factory legislation , you do notagree with . them , but they know that you have taken the course becoming you in asserting their right to : the full enjoyment ofthe advantages granted to them-by the-act of .. 1814 , and they now respectfully but confidently ask you to follow the course . indicated in your past conduct , and expressed-opinions , by . using all your influence to defeat the . measures now proposed by her Majesty ' s ministers . ' .. ' . ' That that measure is in direct opposition to your opinion of what i « just in onr " case , : ifc is scarcely necessary toargne ; : Onr position is this : —The government does not deny our rights tothe benefits
of the act of 1814 , but , i » , confirming those benefits tons , it proposes to repeal the ' act of 1817 , b y which the labour of young persons was limited to ten hours per day , and to extend the period of their labour to ten _hoursrand a half-per day . This , it ' . _is said , is to be done by way of compromise . But , sir , permit me toa < k , a compromise between whom ? The operatives have no question with any body but with tue parliament They ask the parliament to do that whichf it is bound in honour to do . . - Surely , parliament does not intend to compromise a question , of its own honour ? to ask the poor factory people to give it a consideration for doing that which it is bound in honour to do without ? It is admitted that
tbe people have a right to the act which they'd _^; mand at the hands of parliament ; how then can the parliament , with justice , affix a condition to that act which deprives the people of advantages of infinitely higher value ? Itis disingenuous , sir , ' thus to assail the rights of tie poor . With the . question of tenhours we have now nothing to do . ' That limitation was granted by . the parliament in 1847 , and then acknowledged to be a measure of _necessary-though- . tardy justice . ' If "it can-be shown that the / parliament of 1847 was . _mistaken ; that the aet passed . by it has not realised the good expected from . it , and that it has been productive of evil , it will be . the duty . of the government to propose , and of parliament to enact its
repeal . But at present , while no voice is raised against it ; while evidence of its beneficial effects come pouring in from all sides ; while all classes of the people , husbands ,, fathers , mothers and children amongst the poor , the better portion of their employers , medical men , and the ministers of religion , ' all unite in petitioning-parliament to preserve that act entire—surely to attempt , its repeal is to set at defiance every principle of truth and justice ! In conclusion , I would _suggest for . your consideration the fact , " that a breach of faith , on the part of . parliament , towards , the factory operatives , would create feelings in tbem such as all good men must wish to prevent . The working people of Bolton , man address lately presented by them to Lord John Manners , thus express themselves on this sulject : — " If parliament shaU enact the . mea- ; sure proposed by her Majesty ' s " _ministers , then thousands of ber Majesty ' s faithful subjects will be
learning for half an hour daily this dangerous lesson—to regard the government as the oppressor of the poor , the defrauder ofthe working classes , the invader of ceded rights , the fawning'supporter of the encroachments of tho rich and powerful , the violator of-the Magna Charter of manufacturing labour . This would be a dangerous ' education for the" people . * It would not be the way to form quiet , loyal , _andlbvingsubjects . " Such , sir , is the language of people , who have no interest but to speak as they feel , and , " if such ' Bo their feeling , does there need a stronger proof to the mind ofa statesman that to be just is , in this case , the only sound policy ?—I am , s . ir , your most obedient and most humble servant , John Avison , Secretary to the Lancashire Central Committee for the protection of the Ten Hours Factory ' . ' Act . * . " v ;;' . _- " " . ' : _' . ; 27 , Bloom-street , Portland-street , - " '' , __ . Manchester , June 11 th . - - . ' '"
- Tothe Tnrror Of Tue. Soktheus Star. Si...
- TOTHE _tnrrOR OF _TUE . SOKTHEUS STAR . Sib , —I was appointed as delegate to the Reform Conference by _ a . society of working men , with the view oftheir joining , the above . body if they . considered them deserving of support , but not feeling satisfied with their conduct they-resolved , upon joining the Kational Charter Association . Some time after the conclusion-of the Conference I- ' re ? ceived a letter from Mr . Thomas Beggs , calling upon me to see to the . enrolment of members and the collection of funds , which letter I laid before the members , when they unanimously _Rsolved that I should send the following reply to Mr . Beggs . lam , Sir , yours respectfully , -- - Robebt Stokes . :
Trinitv Chapel , Bethnal Green . " Trinity Chapel , Bethnal Green . , " Sir , —Having received your letter of the _Sth . of May , 1 hastened _^ o lay it-betore the members whom I had the honour to represent at the Reform Conference , when having discussed it 3 contents , they came to the unanimous conclusion not to support the association at present ,- for the following _. reasons ;—lst . The-refusal of the Conference to . discuss the important resolutions introduced by'Mr . G . W . M .. Reynolds . —2 nd . As fa portion . of the working classes ]; they considered themselves insulted by the refusal to hear the representatives , of 3 rd
their own order at the aforesaid Conference . - _^ . Thev were dissatisfied with the property qualification for the members of the council of the association . —1 th . The refusal of the council to accept as a member an honest man , in the person o f G . J . Holvoake , for the sole reason ,, as they believed , of his having thought for himself . These , with other reasons which I shall not trouble you with at present , have decided the members on the course they have adopted . They instructcd . mo . further to add _^ that should the association-at any future time deem it expedient to adopt a more liberal policy , they would be most happy to assist them by every means in their power .
! "lam , dear Sir , ' _Youw , in the cause of true Democracy , " To Mr . T . _Besgs . " " Robert Stokes . "
The Ftoatixg Of The . Tnini) Tobe Of The...
The FtOATixG of the . _Tnini ) Tobe of the Britaxxia Bridge was accomplished on Monday morning , amidst the enthusiastic , cheering ofa numerous body of spectators . The . time occupied in the operation—from tho time the signal wii 3 given by Captain Claxtbn , to tbe time when the tube is deposited between the p iers—was exactly one hour and a half , being a much less period of time than was occupied in floating the tubes now in their places . -It is also'worthy of . remark { and shows that experience in this , an it f all other matters ,. is useful ) that tbis _^ _is the first ; tube , that has been floated on the day . appointed . the two , first baying beenattended with'delays and difficulties which did not at alt interposein the present instance ,
The Ftoatixg Of The . Tnini) Tobe Of The...
__ . BOROUGH ' OF f _^ GREENwiCH ; _^
T Nl ;T Rue 0nia ?•?^D^0 T^E Memory "' O...
_T _nl _; _T _rUE _0 _NIA _?•?^ _^ _0 _T _^ _E MEMORY _"' oS _^ F _?^™^^^^™ ALEXANDE R _mWa M _^ _W _ADPPORT . OP , THEIR _WINDOWS AND _oRPHAifs . _,., ' . .. ; ' . ; Thb good . men and women of , . Greenwich being desirous of aiding : and _, as 8 i 3 tingtbis beneyolent object , took the _.. Glpucester Garden 8 , > ear the Park gate , for a tea .. _festtyal , and publtb meeting , oii Monday _; June , _thaJOth , ' and ; ipvited ; the assistance of their friends ,,, _-between . . sixty . " and , seventy , persons , sat _dora to tea , served up . in Mr . _Parkin ' s best style . The : tabies cleared , a . material . ihcrease was made m tbe numbers of the company . " _,, A platform was erected ,, and the . gardens , prepared for _a-public ' meeting . , _^ Messrs . Brpnterre O'Brien , 'W . Davis , Stallwood ,, M ! les , Arnott ,, and , the members of the 1 uii 11
. _vyuuiuiHse , sieppea . iorward . amid . much applause . , , . . _„ . ; . ' ' . " . " ' : ¦ ' Mr . - _Bwan was unanimously called to the chair and said : —Those who had . _iread the public press , must be . aware , that in ' . 1818 , Williams . and Sharp wero convicted of political offences , that tbey were sentenced to . long imprisonment in Tothill Fields Prison ; the treatment tbey , there ' received had doubtless induced cholera , ; of which _^ they had died , and that had met to , in some , measure , solace their widows and orphans , by adding to the Testimonial Fund , and also to aid in tho diffusion of those glorious . principles for which Williams and Sharp had offered . up . their lives . ( Hear , hear . ) He had a
letter . placed , mhis bands from tbe . Rev . William Linwood ; indisposition had , prevented that gentleman from being . present ; he nevertheless expressed himself . ' m , favour , of the object , and wrote _. _as follows : — I cannot help enclosing a . trifle towards the Philanthropic object of your meeting . " ( Loud cheers . ) ¦¦' _- . . _! '' . ' ¦ . Z ' . Z " _- ; Mr . ; jEFFRv then moved ,. and Mr . Hodges seconded , the following resolution : — " . That in the opinion , of this . meeting ,.. Williams and _iSharp , having , sacrificed . their , lives , iri , ' tbe causo of the people , it is the duty , of the people ! to subscribe to the Testimonial now . raising . to givesustenanceto their-widows and families . ' . ' . """ . ' . ' " " . ... 1
, , Mr . W . _Bavis ; . r 63 e , _/ am | dst ,. much . cb " eering , ; to support the resolution , and , said , the middle classes , who had been the jurymen , in the case of . the Chartist victims / in 184 S , had seen their error ' ; some of tbem had repented of tHeir deeds , ; and were now With the Chartists ; but Chartism itself was _. useless , upl _? ss used as a lever to obtain social fights . ' . ( Hear , hear . ) ' .- iHe resolutioa- spoke of support to , the . Williamsand Sharp testimonial ,. and . he thought , if those , who bad cheered , them . on ' In , ; their , career , " whioh had- led . to tiieir Imprisonment aiid subsequent deaths , now ' deserted . ' , their widows and orphans , _andrefjised-tp _aidthS . Testimonial Fund , they- . would ' actbasely , indeed . /( Loud . cheers . ) , . He trusted the . time ,, was fast approachinir when . men
would think and act for themselves , and when they woiild read and consult the best books—among which . he -numbered those writterifarid . . edited by Bronterre O'Brien . ( Loudcheers . ) , When viewing the apathy ofthe people , he sometimes thought that they had as good a government as they , deserved , but , reflecting on the enthusiasm andmani y virtues of the democratic few , he seriously and earnestly ! prayed for a . _speedy change , f He believed many pf their Chartist friends had fallen victims through the ignorance of police reporters ; where good government reporters had attended , good had invariabl y come of ii i and their friends had nothing , to _fenr _^ ( bear , _hear)—aridthe-lattergentlemen had ' always been'treated with . fall due courtesy , arid respect . TVose whb wished well arid honestl y , to _sobiety'had notbin _? to fear , but much to hope , from Chartist
speeches - and actions . Mr . Davis . then briefly gbincedat the points of the People ' s Charter , and declared he bad noj sympathyf with Free Traders ; on the contrary ,- he . thought tbey _Wd _. _jvj _^ ly beta designated , traders in human flesh . . _Indeed j he did not believe that : there were ' three , members in'the present - House of . Commons for whom he could conscientiously vote ., . As . an illustration- of . the want . of protection through , representation , . Mr _^ Davis quoted the case of the . poor Essex , labourer , who was " summoned before the Bench to show cause why he did not support a . wife arid three . children out of the miserable pittance of seven shillings per week ,- without parochial aid . ; and , trusted whilst theyj with their voices , carried the resorution tbey would , by their funds , aid the testimonial . ( Loud _, cheers . ) Z . .. ,..
The resolution was then adopted , and , a liberal collection made . ; _,. " ... [ ' [ . ' . ' ,, _-- . . Mr . _Witn moved , and Mr . " Knowies seconded , , the following resolution : — CTbat iri the opinion of this meeting no measure of Parliamentary Reform short of that proposed in _thejPepple ' s Charter will ' suffice to protect the . industrious classes of , this cburitry from social oppression ; and that , wc . ( _lo therefore-pledge ourselves to continue , the agitation for the Charter till it becomes the jaw of the land . '' . , j ; i _Mrl ' BROSTEBBE . ' 0 'BBiEif ; ' was . then called on to supjiort . the ' resolutiori amjjlst' loud _jihe . _ers ; and said he : thought he ' saw ' . _Messi-s . 'Jnsb . ectors Mainiieu _^ arid Mirks ' . ' present ; , he hoped _jhey . had contributed largely to tie funds , ' as . tbeyrepresented
_aVovernment that bad much to . do ,. witK . the p _' rbsecution , persecution , and ultimate death of th ' o victims ; and , as . " ' Charity , covereth a multitude _fofsirii " it mig ht do sometbiri ' g . for therii in heayeii . ; andhb did not think theyf had much to ; hope ' for infhat direction ( Great applause , j Before he weritfurther ,: he must _appldgise _. fpr the absence , of _, their friend G . W . M . Reynolds , who was detained atthe office from pressure of business ( _Hear _. _' _. hear . J ;; The resolution he was supporting was drawn , up in * -the style it was , because there fwas " a party , in this country who thought ; or ' professed . to , _tpink , that none should W enfranchised . but those who could pay . the poor rates , or , in other words , .. those " who could . support , themselves and others ; bufc . he
_contended that . it was those who . could not , under existing circumstances , . support themselves , ] that required thef . frauchise ( Loud cheers . ) There ; w _^ _re but . two means . of getting the Charter , , f ' viz ., by forceand by law . ' Thisf ' being so ,, it wagI the duty of policemen and soldiers tpbecoine Chartists , as then there would he ' no cause for brute . force ! arid no fear of broken h ' ea'ds ( Hear , hear . ) . In fine , government . should be Chartists ;; arid if it did not ,-in his conscience he believed it wouldfriotlong . be allowed to be agoverriinerit . ( Great cheering . ) -it the _members . of it were good christians , , they riiiist be Chartists ., as . ' Holy . ) _Yttt _' ; said . _' ' . Tlifi . lab ' oiirep shall be the . _first . par taker fof _theffruits ' _. ' _^ _whereas ; ihe labourer ,. under the present system ; scarcely
_^ even tasted the fruits ( Hear , hear . ) _., This w as .. not the only _piece'f of Cbristiari'doctrme . in favour ofthe Chartists , for was : it not written , ' " The / ' rich" man . shall not , enter the Kingdom . of Heaven ?; ' Surely , if this bo s 6 ,. it , was , ri 6 t right thatfthey should elect or have persons as _theTrfre ' p ' resenfatives _, in Parliariient who , had such ., ' a . _sureT chance ' . of jgoing . to hell . ; f ( Lpud . laughter . and :. applause . ) , Again , . _;* , The , bread" of the needy is , their life , ' and he who defrauds them thereof isfa inan of blood ' ;" ¦ yet were riot the poor continually defraudedI of their bread' ? Look to Ireland at tlio time of the faniino , 'food was literally - carted away / arid tKe ' people left'to pine and perish of hunger ( Sensation , )' :. Thus had they the truth . of the Scripture with them ( Hear ;
hear . ) Williams and Sharp had injured no onethey had'destroyed no property—yet not being educated ; they may have spoken _perhapsunwiaely ; but if they were ignorant , surely it was the fault of the governmentjVrWho . had not ; _caused them to be instructed . ( Hear , - hear . ) _., The .. government had bought _^ utf physical force bri their side . The getteWup of tliat meeting should take c . i ' re that "the principles coritairied in that resdlutiori ' were widely propagated . . The present system of representation imposed .-a property qualification . ; ,, and he oared not how low ; the line was drawn , . if the qualifica :-tion , was as low as one _shilling , it must have its effect . Under ; the present social arrangements , there-was scarce a " mechanic , when he had paid
his just debts , who : had a shilling to call his own ; ( Hear , hear . ) . [ At this moment Mr . O'Brien * had a _bjll placed in his hand , convening a meeting in support of theNatienal Parliamentary arid' Financial Reform Association . ! Having read the ' principles enumerated at the head ofthe bill , there ( said Mr . O ' Brien ) if there be any-one wboL . wants .-a double dose of humbug let bim goto that . meeting . 'Why } these men called themselves financial , reformers ; and Cobden , ] who-was the grcatest ' _ariibngst them , proposed to reduce ' tho expenditure by ten millions ; now he should much like to know of what avail this would be to ; the man who was only in receipt of eight shillings a week , or what the poor
men in Ireland , ; who obtained the magnificent remuneration . of four pence or five _pe rice per day for his labour , Would be benefited by this ? ( Loud cheers . ) The debt bad been nearly doubled' since the battle of Waterloo , by" theincreaso of money value ; it was _concocted in bank rags , at sixty per cent ., worth about forty pounds in ¦ ' ¦ _Bilver , but had ribw increased in value to _ninetyj--and if things were as they should' be ; an equalization ¦ would immediately take place .- ' - He would" not by any means advise interference at privatomeetiugs ; but were a public meeting was called for _^ a shortcoming measure , there he did advise thq ' peopleto move the whole Charter as a just , and ; the only official measure of political reform , ( Loud cheers )
The resolution was then put aud carried by acclamation , as w . is also ' a voto of thanks to tho chair man ; and the meeting separated . 1 ' [ '' , '
' ¦ Weiohts Asri Meascres;—On : Saturday...
' ¦ _Weiohts Asri _Meascres;—On Saturday last , the bill , as amended by the committee , to alter and amend the law relating to weig hts and measures was printed . Itis provided that examiners are to cease to hold office on the first of February , and to transmit the standard weights to the Clerks of the Peace . . ' There is power g iven to inspectors to enter premises , arid seize defective or unjust weig hts . The Chinese JriHKbfas ' penetrated still further into . the heart of European civilisation , and is now airly in the Thatnes ' waters , alongside Essexftreet , in the Stw . ' :: ' . :: ' ' ¦ ' "
' ¦ Weiohts Asri Meascres;—On : Saturday...
_i-i . V" if" , : ¦¦; _M _« .
•A Tofrno : 'Iad Y Tsus'''Writ«' Aribriy...
• A _TofrNO 'Iad y _tSus '' 'writ _« ' _aribriymously in '" the family _Heraldl _^ _-ntW ' 6 _^ _mHcokeisiMt tiie * 5 _ireofiny'ljiti and . my , constant prayer is that r may ' -hi blessed with ' _-a good and affectionate husband , and that-J ... may be enab _' ed to be a good a ct' ° nate wife and mother ... Should-1 be denied '" 3 / fi ° P . for . grace to resign myself— but I fear it _^ _S _?* . ' * _tara'triBl _¥ m 8 : V _- ' « " : ' _'' _» _'•"•"• ' - _^ . i . _'i _"WE _i _HXvis a _^ _manin _-MissiBsippiiso lean-.-that , he ; makes no ; _shadow at all .. A : _rattlesnake struck six . _tpes-at . _his . i legs , but b vain , and retired in . _disaust _;
Hemake _^ . all hririgry _' _Tvho'lobk athlm 5 arid i when childreri meethini in the Btreet , they all run home crvingfor'breM -. 'He _' was ruled but " . of acompany which started for California lately , lest his presence should increase , the sufferings of that already starving country , —American . paper . :.,,.., v .,, .,.,, . . „ . _> _.-, _, , Thb _. ewtress . of the , laiicaster [ Literary [ _Gazette sa' _^ _sfshe wo ' uld ' as joori ' nestle her ' nose 'in a rat ' s nest of 8 . wingle tow ; as allow a man with whiskers . to ! kissher _.--.. : ; v . ; « : ' .:. i . ¦¦ : _- . _-::-, ; t ; _' : _\\ y
• a j , sas we _" ¦ * _- ' 8 W _-hothopinions ; in any twosided matter ; and we add . to the , above the _Spanish proverb ,: — " A . kiss . wit'Kout a iriocsttiche , is an , egg wihtout salt . " ] '• _< ' ¦ '• ¦ _' ' ' .. _^' '• " ' , ; , „ ' * S _3 THEriB ' s 'beeri " another ' rupture of Mount Vociferous ! ' ? . _said Mre :. Partingtoh ,: as 8 he put down the paper and putup her specs . _ . ' ! The , piper tells -all about the . biirning ' ather running down the _mount ain , , but It _doih ' t tell us Kow it was set fire to " . There are many heople full" wicked enbiigh to do it , ; , or perhaps it was caused by children _flaying with _frictiobs matches ; . 'twish they had . sent ; for our _firerbrigade , they , would . _gqo , nhave put . a . stopi _toj . _the _WJng _^ linient ; , and J . dare say , Mr .,. B / aidwopd and _^ _¦? _flt ' ? P _. wpuid . h _^ veg ohe , for they are . what I , call real" civil engineers . Perhaps Towh ' serid ' s ' sauce arid prunella might prove a cure fore ' uch ' _rUptionSi " _- '• _At'Wioan a _s Weep sturk fast in ! a chimney-pot ; in hi 3 _< struggles . he- broke- it , , and _rofled off thereof encased in . the earthenware . shell . _Fortutjately _,. he escaped unhurt .. "''"'" .,.,: ¦¦'
f An old ftaid of _Threadneedle-street beirig at a loss for a piricusliion made use of an onion ! - On the following morning she found that all her needles had tsars in , tbeiroyes _.- _; _: - . _i _..-. ¦ ¦ ¦• : . _. " y , Z ' _- - ¦) , _& >;> ¦ ' . . _CaEDtr , _Losy is like a Brok , en _Looking-glass . -rExactly . Rather , hard to _sbave with aiiy ' flonger . , Man Proposes ; and Gold DisroaES , —A . maideri lady' of our ac ' quaihtarice ' objects very strenuously to the first partof _thisproverbj'forlsneisays _^ the men don ' t preposeat all . . _»; :,: ; .,. ; _'; ,: _,-.. "' ; ,: _LtKUTBNANi _., ELLioTT , . of : the 99 . ; regiment , 'has _discoveie , d in the .. IritefibV of Western Australian race of cannibals who d'Vour- ihe bodies of fri nds and foes . Lieutenant 'Elliott writes _/ _i- _' _-The ' native ' s iri . tbose distriots eat their dead _^ _old-meni and children . . The heart is given to the mother , as they say it assuages , her grief ! " _-. , ,.. . ..., _,.,., „ ....
.. Gj _/ _tta _Pbhcha Hoots . —Two days ago a _Gftrr man _. / wearirigguttapercha boots ' _. _'left 'Brusse _' sfor Paris'by Railway . ; He placed liis feet-orithezifd pari cdhtainirig hot water , ; with .. which ; the .: carriage was supplied , and _fellasleep . f ; Qri arriving at the ' station of Tubize he prepared . to alight , btit , to _' hi ' s " astonishment , ' found that ; his boots stuck fast to tlie ' warming pan , and as he _. pulled to rorapve them the spies split into shreds . At las ' , amidst the _lourl ' laughter of his .. fe , llbw-travellers , he had to draw his feet " out of his _bodts altogether , and , ' ' having ' _sent'hf _s _bngg'ge bri before , had to wrap them'in pockethandkerchiefs and newspapers ; audi iri that- pitiable plight he came all ; the , way . to , Paris . — _. _Gq-ligndni ' s Messenger . - .. - . . 7 . . . - r _:.-: ' . ' . .. ' ... _, . ' ,. _- ,, ,... . ' The . STATpB . rirEye , ' _^ sculptu red by PWersythe American artist , arid' c ' onsiHered'tb bo hfsriiasterpiece ; was recentlylostbri' -the' Spanish _^' cdastby ifee ' wrebk of _theTessel on _boardxf which it was placed for . transittotherUriitedStates .-. .. _..-,: ' ; . ' "
_, _tZ- _' _-Yu gbtting up _. in the world , ' ! as . the , _gudgeon said when , drawn out . of ihe ' water . ' _| ,- ' ' , . ; . ;; ' . _"WhV _is . twic _eeleven lite twicof . teri ?— -Because twice eleven is twenty-two ; and twice ten is twenty to _6- > ' ! - ¦ _- _¦ : '¦'¦ - ' _¦' : ' - ¦ _i- > _-. ' .. ' . _' ., " _; i . _' j iiZu . U :. _- ¦ . .-The- ' _Constaswno _^ lk cor respondent of the homing Herald says the number of Polish and Hungarian refugees who have adopted the Mohainmedari' religion already exceeds 2 , 400 ; _' __ ' ' ¦' _- '¦ - ' V ' _'' A woMAN . offering to sign _. a deed , ; the judge asked ber whether her-husband compelled her to sign ? " He compelme , ! " said the lady _. r" no , nor twenty like him , " : ; . . _- ;¦ - .. ' _¦;" ' . ' ; . vr ' _.-Z ' f " ' ; '' I , for one am sick and weary , "' Of these _everSastirig prigs ' ; f : ' - '* _Quite'disgiiste'd witlrthe shu'ffiing ' - ' - ¦¦ ' _: f' _^ Of the miserable Whig «} , il' ! ,, > .. . _, . _-,. •• ., r _;•' _-. ; Withtheirimpudent ; ayerm . ent 8 , . ; , ; . _;?;•• . ;; . : ' : ; -And their _. fjagrant thimbierigs . !' _^ _,,-.. , _; _,.., .. [ . [ _ . [' . . '""' . " , [ ' . Blackwood'sMagazine ,-- < _-.
. ' A ' _TpuNa sailor was drowned last' week at . _Wivenh ' oei . _' _IWh ' en _stripp ' edfor burial _. _' _after'the inquest , the body turned out to be- that of a _' . girl . 1 : She had shipped at Harwich in sailor ' s clothes . _:, the week . before , ! , _. . . _.. _fi , ; ... " - . ; _, _-, ' . . - ., _.-. ' .. _' ..- ,. ., , -f _,- . ' .- ' .. There .. isf ' a f reb pft . ' pu . rfe ' nt in New Yorlfe . that Capfajn Warner"is' ribo ' ut to ' settle in tKat ' country , ; having made arrangements with ' the American government for the purchase of the long / range and the invisible shell . ! .-. ¦ .: _:-. i : : . ' _- > .: ;!!'•/ ' '• •' . _iv-m _;? : ¦ '" ¦ f ' : ' _- ' . ; t '' . How _> syourson to-day , ? . ' - ' asked .. _^ . friend of a stpek-brpker ; .. ' ' yery bad , " rep lied . the '' bid gentle : trian , " _strlviris to-compose his' agitated features , " very bad indeed ! " I _woufdnot ' give ten " per cent . _fdr'his chariceof life . " r rr . ¦ - ; , . ,: ;• ..,. ' . - ,-, ¦ v _"ToiJ . BAD better ask for manners .. _. than moneyi " . said _. a finely-dressed gentleman toa beggar _. bov who bad _aBked for aiins . | f'I . ' asked"for what ; 1 thought yoti had the md ' st' 6 fi" _' was '' the boy ' s reply , ' ' ' : ... ; . .
Patrick Murphy , residin'j _in'Rayrriorid-Btreet , was last ; week' fined twenty-shillings arid costs ,-for keeping six full-grown pigs in his ; . front parlour ! —
Liverpool Times . - ' _, _... . ., . , i ; i . . „ .., ' _-.. ! _-ju .. Postage Stamps ' have _: Been _brotiglit'into . ' u se in New South _Wales _. the design being the great seal pi the colonies , with the mottb ' e ' B . " ' ¦ - "' - " • " _> ; ' - ; "I Wonder ' now : theyrriafee Iucifer mutches _^' - ' said'ayoung-lady toher _husband-.-withjwhomsheiwas always quarrelling . ' _, ' The process is very simple—I once made .. one , " .. he .. ahswered . " How did . you manage . it _r . ' - _^ _'lBy ' leadirigyou't ochurcH . _'' ; . „ ; . , We are _auttibrised to say that Mr . John _Macdoriald , of Mansfield _Woodhouse _/ who attained . . his hundretlryearlast November _^ : _will . run . any .. mar . in England , his ; own weight- and age ,,, ( or any sum . — N .. B _; :, Nohurdles . _^ _A _othnpSani Guardian . , _] .,,, , ; . . _,-
. Remedy f 6 r , ; Dullsess . —An' author reading a tragedy to . ii friend whb ; was a proctor , when 1 he , ; bad gone through three- acts ,- asked r . him ; his opinion . ¦ _• ' Why , really ; " replied the proctor , ' , _' _, the ,-third act is full of distress , that I . dp not see now . you pm pos-8 tb ] y . heighten it in tW following ones , and _tlienj consequently , it willgrowflat . " "Oh , " said'theauthor ; let irie alone for that j I intend / inthe very next act , f to put myhero intothe spiritual court . ' - ' , t v .- . "Books , " saidCHANNiKG , _Jno lecture to working men _«! books are thetrue _leyellers ,. giving toall . who will , _( _aithfuily rise ' thein , ' the society . and ' spiritual presericef ' of the best > nd greatest of Our ' race ' ; so that an _individual may be ' excluded '' 'froiri' what is called good society , ' and ' yet notpirie for want of intellectual
' _^ PREs ' s _^ In ' theiriatter of dress , ' whether you be riiari 1 or , woman , - the niore yoii approximate , to uniformi ty of colour the be _' tter : ' ' : _''*' . ; " _, . ' _¦• • •' . The . following witty couplet' was uttered by an old . ' geritleriian _^ wfio ' s . e'd impor-i _tiiriel _' him for nipriey i' _^'' ' . ' "' ]" \ ' _" _'' " ' _; " " Dear Bell ;' to gain morieyVsure _silericb is _bestji _.- ! ZFbr _' dumb belts are fittest to open the _cKeut . " . _TiMiNG'iT .- _^ A miriister ' iri the _^ land fo . hndpne of _bisparisbioneS [ intoxicated , Next day hecalledto reprove bim for it . ' ; ' :: ... > _-. "It is wrong ' to get df uhk , " _siiid thb parsoni" I ken that , " said the ; guilty person , "but then I dihna drink as meikle as you dp . "
. . _^ _hjv / sir , how . is that ? "— " Why , gin ; it- please ye , dinna ye ave'take a glass 6 * whiskey " and , water after dinner . ? ., . ' ..,, _^ u . n . ' .,, ' J Why , yes , Jemmy _. ' sureI takea _' _glaesof whiskey _^ ft _^ r dipn ' er ;' irierely . t 6 aid _digestipn : " - _^ " And dinn > _i ye take a glass p _' ' Whiskey ; toddy every night _wheii-ye are ' Rarigin ' to . bed ? . " ' _, ' ;; M '' ' . _'' _. , " . "' i ! ' _" V Yes , tob ; e ' svire ; I . iust take a . little toddy every night tp help rne ' sleep . '' " ' ' '' '' :., ,: r , .. Ayell , " cbntiriued the piirishipher , ' , ' f « that ' s just fpueleen glasses a' week , and 'about si ' _ity every month , ' I only get paid p rice a' rnonth arid then-it ' I'd take sixty ' glassesVit wad make _me'doad drunk for a week . Xow , ye ' see , tlie only difference is that ye'time it better than I do ' . " ' . ' ' " _"' •; . ;; -: .:
- How : T 0 mai _^ e an Englishman .- —Among the shipping _detoined by . Sir W .. Parker ' s squadron is a Maltese ; , vess el , whioh , probably to _secure , the advantages of nationality . in the ports of , -Greece ,.. had procured Greek _papers , and ,, therefor _^ _.. _tbpugb , really -British as to ownership and crew , became liable to the consequencesof the blockade . The masterbad married a young person of Falmouth _, and the time for the ap _^ - _pearanceof . their _firstrborn arrived during their detention . Th _^ pnents could not bear the thought oftheir little one being . a Greek , and as the , lady , Was . staying on shore atthe Piiceus _, a Union Jack was lahded and substituted for the counterpane ol thebed . Iri ' _spit " of the locality , therefore , it was undeniable that the chiid . was . born under , the British iflag . . r ; , ¦ '" _¦ '" •'
A- Frenchman Fast . —The . word . " fast" frequently troubles _^ foreigners ( especially _; Frenchmen . ! when leavning the English language . The word fast admits a triple signification—hence the trouble . W _, e heard a Frenchman last fast day , tell a boy to hold his horse ' _swift . " _Fast ; you mean , don't you sir ?" interrogated the lad . " Ve ] , - fast , den ; mais , I rib understand dis . " "There goes a fast horse , " exclaimed a bystander , as a lively trotting-boise passed by . " How ' is zat ? " inquired the astonished French : man ; " zare is von fast horse , and he goes like lightening all de time ; zare is my horse—he i 9 fast , tooi and he no-move . '' "This is fast in reality , by the appearance of the road , " said another . ( Oh ! ah ! I see deni " _- said-monsieur : " dis is called fast day , and everything is fast—ze horse sat goes is fast , zo horse zat is tired is fast , andze folks zat eat nothing and eat it _^ slow is fast , "Vota countries' ! " > t -: - ' ¦ ¦¦ _- ¦ ¦¦ ¦ •* ... •• . _-. ¦ . . _, .- , _;; _, _;
•A Tofrno : 'Iad Y Tsus'''Writ«' Aribriy...
_, _EJdS _^ L _^ RESTORING FOOD , _-mif'rKw _^^ _^ _^^ r _* bi _cav- _- _» _- _^ tion of W , name of _. _DulSft _^ BI « A _^ _tS ' c / b _^ or ' wtih ' i' _^ e _' _W _^ _MWj * _^* _- -licious . _andIriVRTuablercnied y _' f " r _fSS _tidniNervous , Bilious , _nnddveV Co _3 _nft f _^ _BARJtY , aud . Co , caution Invalids _^ Sttb _^^ rb 23 w _25 _' . _attempts at imposture , _.. _Therpf _M n _^ _OTtSSffi vegfetable kingdom that canilegittmatcl y _beWeaVi _^ _ifin Du _Biirry's RevalcritoArabica , a plain Whicb _iSateS by Du Barry _^ nd Co . on their estates' _albne , and for ' the Dre poration ; and- pulverisation' of-rtliicli ' -tiieir- own Patent Macbinery . _nlone is adapted , ; / let Corn Chandlers sell their pease ) beans , lentil . vand . other . meals under . their proper ' name ' s , and riot , trifle , _jivith the health , of . Invalids and _Ini farits ; for whom ' . 'DU ' _BAltRY'S _REVALENTA AltABICA !
' alone is _ridaptedi ' ¦"' ' - ' - ' " ' / " l ) u Barry _ond'Col , 127 New Bond-street ; Eorid oh . '¦• " 1 . _IthasthohighestnpprobationofLord'Stunrtdo Oecics : ; the . _Venenible _jArchdeacpn -Alexander Stuart ,: _bfi ; _U 6 s 8—a . cure of ' _tlifije , years' ne , rvou _^ _uesR ; Major-General Thomas Kiii _& _ofEJimouth . ' . Captain Parker ; i _> . Bingham , R . N . i . of _No ' . ' 4 _Farkiwilk , 'L { t ' t ' le Cnelse ' a , ' Eoridon , who > yas cured of twenty-seven vears _' _-dyspepsia iri si ! r Tyceks' _n'inie , '; Captain ; Andrews , B . N . r Captain Edwards ; R . N . ; William : Hunt , Esq _., Mrrister , atrlaw , iKing ! s College , Cambridgp _,-who _. after suffering sixty years _fromipartiabparnrysis , has , regained , the , use , of his . limbs ina very _nbort . time upon " tins excelled * food ; tlie . Rev . .. Charles ' Kerr . " _of'frinsloff , Buolc ' s—a cure bf 'fitrictional _' _dlsorder ' s _'; Mr . _Tlibmaa Woodhouse , Bromley—recording the ' _efire of a lady frbni const ! --: patipn : and ; siclsnessidurlhg pregnancy ; 'the Rev . Thomas Minster , of St . Saviour ' s ,. Leeds—a cure of five years ' nervousness , . with , spasms and daily vomitings : Mr .
Taylor , coroner of _. Bolton j Captain Alloh—recording thb cure brepileptic fits _j'Do ' ctbrs' [ _Tre ' _iirid . Harvey ; James _Shorlandi'Esji . _/ Nb _^ _'S Sydney-terrace , ' Reading , " Berks ; _'lafe surgeon in : the _90 tliU _<» giment _^ -a cure-of dropsy ; _Jumen _Porter , _Esqi , _Athobstreet , Perth _^ acure of thirteen years ' cougli „ witli general debility : ; J . Smyth , _Esq . ;< 37 : _Loiver _, A _« y-street , _^ Dub lin ; .. . Cqriielius r ., , 0 , 'Sullivan ,- M . O ., F _.-R . _CiSli Dublin—i ' peifect ciire of thirty-gears ' , indescribable agony from ' aneurism , . ivliich'had _resistedallbtber _remedles ; and _. 20 , () 00 b ' ther _' _well-kri ' own iridlvld ' uiils ; wboltave sent the discoverers and importers , 'Du Barry'ind ' Coi _* . 127 New , BQnd-sti'eet , Iondon _,-testiraonlalsofthDextraordino . ry _mnnner in ., irhicli , thein health has . been , restored by ' tliis , useful and ecpnpmi . cal _. diel ;; after , all . other remedies . had been tried iti vain ftr ' ma ' iiyyenrs _^ arid _. ' _allhopes of recovery _abarid-. ' irietf ;' Afull'feport of importan ' t ' curcs" of ' the abbv ' e and _mtitij Other complaints , * arid te ' stiniorilals'from parties of the highest respectability , is , wennd . l sen ' _tirrJrtls bv . Dii
Barry . and , Co , '—Jtto . _iiiiiisr Ohronicle ., Jn ; canisters , with full instructions , weighing ; lib . nt _.-2 s 9 d . _; 21 b , at 4 s 6 d ; 5 D ) . at lis ; 121 b . ' at 22 s ;' superior refined , quality , IOIb . 33 »'; _-5 n ) . 22 s ; saitably . packed for all . _cltiriates '; ' . Canisters _forwarded by , Du _, Barry nnd _, Co ., on receipt of post . omce or ' biihlfers' orders ' ftlie 12 lbf and . 'lUJh , canisters free _of-caiv riage . ) Each canister _beaVs , the . seal ' and _ signature of Du . Barry arid Co : iri * ull , _WitHbuiTvhich _none'du"be genuine , Dti- Barry ' and Co ;' , 127 New _Bond-street- London . fAVn measure of precaution against spurious imitationi 1 ; 'Messr ' f . Du Barry and Co .-. have . _appointed such agents in -Lnridon and the _. _country _^ vliose jtlgli respectability is an . additional giiariintee tb the _piiblic . of the genuiiieriess of their healtbrestbrbig food . '' Thus ' , in Lori'dbh , " ' are agents _V-7-Fortnum , Mason ' , arid Cbf , _lSSPiccadilly / purveyors ' to her Majesty the Queen ; _Pledges and Butler , ' 155 _Regent-stfeet ; _, F . ' 'Deane . 116 _Mounfcstreet ; Abbias . 60 Grace ' _ehurcli-streetl Browning ; 4 , _Gracechui-ch-8 treet ; Skolton , 49
Bisuopsgatesti ; ect _; 10 D - . arid . 451 Strand _r _.-ijCheapside ; 5 _^ , -Lamb ' s _Coridliit-stret-t ; 54 Upper _Bakef-sticet ;' , i 5 Edward-street , Pbrthia ' n-sn ' _yare ; ' 24 Mbtcomb-strcef ;' 63 and 15 ( 1 _Oxfordr Btre ' etr '; ' Barclay . 95 Farringdon-street ; Edwards , 67 St ; il _' aul _' sChurch-yard ;; Sntton , Sanger , _and'Hannay ; James ( _Yoiten 8 _,, 4 Laurie _. -terrace , _Westininster-road ¦ ¦ late of Lil ' dgate-hill ; Newberyand Son _. i _. St .. Paul's ; _AV ; _,, Windlei chemist ,. 48 _Portinanlplace , . _Maidii-hill ; Russell andCo . _y _M'W _' _Kingistr ' eet , ' ' _CovCiitg ' ardeh . ' and ,. 72 . " High-street , Bbrntigh ; Lindsey ; 10 Newland terrabe , _' ' Kensington , _iCrbsse and-BtackweH , 2 _I So ( io-squarb '{ -Dann , ' _iTohnson , and Co ., 84 New _Bondistreeti : _UobertiWood , 1 _? 2 New Bop . _d-streel ;; j ; , \ V > SvRuni . » . "y _. ; 3 fiueen-street , pIace , _Cfieftp- side , Laugher _^ . chemist ,. Camden . town , _; \ V ., E . Smith , 12 Keen _' s-rbiv . waVwortl _^ road ;' . ' Matthews ,, ' . grpeer _,, _'Albe-i marle-street ; Shuttlewoftb arid Stam ' per , ; i 4 ( i L ' c ' _adenhall'stre ' et r'Hick' s and Sod ; -72 _Welbeck-kreet _;^ Holmes and
( Jinneford , 1 Spring-street , ' _^ _Sussex-gardt-ns' _- . " - Samuel _jHardstan-. _-. 89 and 90 . i . [ Higli . street > ) , . Cainderi-towri ; II . Freeth , 32 a Great- College-street .,. Camden-iown ; _Lcieki wood , 75 New Bond-street ; . aiid through all grocers , chemists ,,. ' mcdielrib " vendors ;; " nnd' booksellers in ., the -Kingdom . '" ' •' ! ' T ' - ' _'" - ' ¦ ' ''•• ' _'' ' ¦ . ' . ; .,. ' ; - _CAUTibNi—The riame of Messrs . ' Dit Ba _brt'S ' invaluable ' food _. ' nsalso that of their firm , have , been so' closely imitated that invalids cannot ; , too . carefully-ilook , -at ' . the exact spelling of both , and also Messrs . Bp _Baiibt , ' s _address ,-127 New . Bond-street , _^ London ,. _in ' prde _' _. to a ' ybid being imposed upon _byErvaleritai _' ReaT'Reyaieht ' _ai'W _^ therspurious compounds ot p b ' as ; _beani' lent ' al { iowder , Indian and Oat riibal _, under a close-imitation ofthe name , which have nothing to recommend . them but . the reckless , audacity ol- their'ignorantand unscrupulous compounders , and which , ' though admirably . adapted for pigs ,. nro . uId play sad havoc with the 'delicato . stomach of an invalid or iritarit . '
DU , BARRY'S , ; . HEALT ' fl-R ' ES TpRING , ' FOOD _^/ . _^^ _forlK _^ A _^ DSand ' _^ PA _^ T _^ . ' ' _.-, _« _,. ,,. The _REViiiESTi _Ababica .. discovered , _exclusively grown , arid impbrfed by Do , _BisBV and'Cp ' . '; 127 _J Now Bond-street _^ _Londimi soleto < Vners ofthe ' Revalentft Estates , arid ofthe Patentilacliinn . by _which-alone the curative . principles' of theplaiit ' ciinbe'developed . ' ' ..,.., ' . ' ,. - This li _^ ht ' delielousbreakfast Fsrina ( witlibur ' medifc ' _ine ofanylnnd _. _'iiyithout jncbnveriien ' ce ; -and -without expense _, asit saves fifty times its cos tin ' other-more expensive remedies ) ispeedily _; and pevmanently . ; reinoyes dyspepsia ( indigestion , ) . constipation ,, acidity ,, cramps ,, _spupms ' , fits , heartburn , diarrliaja , ridrVo ' usiiess _bilibusri ' _ess , affections " Of the liver and kidneys , flatulency , distension , palpitation of thelieart _. 'hervous headache ; 'deafness ; _noises-in the head and ears , pains in almost every partof the body , chronic Inflammation ' and ulceration Ofthe stbimich ; eruptions _onj _tt ) esk | ni _sci-ofula _, consumption , _drpjis _^; rheumatism , gout . ' nauseaand ' voinitlng during ' _* pregriaricy _.-- ' a & eii _eatiiiel _' - _' oi * del
at-sea , _Jow . spirits , . spleen , general , ) ilityii ; pavatysi ? , _^ cbngh , *' asthmaV _iritfuietudd , ' sleeple ' ssrie ' s ' s ' _, ' -involuntary _blusliiiigf'trembrsjdislike ' _titsbcietyiuiififnessfor study , delusions ; loss of memory ,: vertigo , blood tothe head , _exhaustlon r nielanch . qly , ' : ground ! ess ; . fear , ! j _; _ndjecUinni wretched _, ness , thoughts . ot . seli _^ destructibt )) . & . b .. . The . best , food for infant _^ and , invalids generally ; as it is Ihe only food which n ' ever ' turns acid ori ' the weakest _stomachj but imparts a h'dalthyVclish'fbr ' _-IurtcIi ' and' dinner ,- _aed- restores -the _fa ' culty _^ of digestion and .-nervous and . muscular i energy to the most enfeebled . —Do Babrv and : Co ., 127 i'New Bbhd'street ,-London . , . _.,:. ; n ,..., _!¦ . • . 1 ¦ ; - ; , . _., „ ., Analysis by _' thecelebrated Professor .. of . Che ' mistrj _.- and 'Analytical Chemist , AndrewUre , ' M . P ! i F . R . S ., & c , & c . : — I hereby certify ; that having ' exarrilried' Du Biirry ' s Eevalenta'Arabica , ' _Lflhd it to be a pure- vegetable _Fii-ina ,- perfectly wholesome ; -.- easily digestible , likely to prumpte a . healthy action of the . stomach and' _boty . els , and thereby to counteract dyspepsia , constipationi arid . their nervous consequences— _AndbeiV TJhe ' , , U : D .,, F ., U . S . ' , die , Analytical Chetriist ; 24 , 'Blbbriisbury . sq ' nnrc , ' l ] 6 hdbri , June 8 , 1819 . - ' •'
: - ; i ; : ; i ¦ : ; . BKASE _' BV ' ' _lfflU'EB ' oB bP _' _MJSSl . _t ';' ' . . ; . f .. _- _iiiTheConsul-Generalhas-beenwderedto inform Messrs . DuBarry ; andCo ., itlmt : the Kevalenta , Arnbiea they had sent to his Majesty the £ mperqr ( . has . by imperial permission , . been forwarded fb the" Minister ' of tlie . Imperial Palace ;—Russian Consulate General , Loudon ; 'December 2 , 1847 . ¦¦ : ¦ _/ - ¦¦¦ _' ¦ ¦ ¦' - ¦ - ¦ 'Mi- !• ¦!¦ _-: '"" - . . ,. „ ¦
" .: f - - _.:-i :.. _" . : _< . A _FEVYCASESS" - -. _-: -:-' _.- 'i _; .-From the'Right Hon . tlie Lord StuartdeDecies _.- _.-ii , _-, ; , i ; Gentiemen , —Ihavederived , much ! 'benefit fromthe _. use of tho' Revalenta Food , ; It ia pnly , due to the public aiid to -yourselves , tbfstiite . that you ' lire . at , liberty , ' to make any use of this communication-wnich ' youVmay think proper . ' —I r-: main , gentlemen , your obedient servant , Stoaut do Dkcri ! s ' , Dromana , 'Capp () qu { h , 'Cbuiitj _Wkterfbi-d , February 15 , 1849 . - ; ' : i : _< _i-i _::-.-r ; _. : •' ¦ > ,. ' _-. : ir _. _' ! _: _;; . . ;• , ;¦ : - _; _,.-,.. _Tiventy-ieven years' dyspepsia , from . . which I _^ _havesufferedgreulpainandincoiivcnieiicc ,. and f . r _. which I had consulted the advice of many ' , lias' been effectually removed ' by your excellent Rcv ' alerita ' 'Arabica '' Food iri six weeks ' time , & e— Pabkeb D . Binqham ; Captiiiii Royal'Navy , 4 Park Walk , Little Chelsea , London , October ; 1848 . ; ; _jHear ; Sir ,- _^ I willithank- ybu to : send . ine ,. ; bn receipt , pf this two ten-pound canisters of iyo , uc _, ! , l { cva ! eiita Arabica Food , ' , 1 lbeg to assure you ' tliat its beneficial effects''have been ' duly , appreciated ' by , diear" sir ;' ' most _^ espectfull } _-, Tubs . _Kisto _, Major . Geri . V'Louisa Terfac ' e ; 'Exmbnth ; iAug . ' 171849 . . _, . ... ; \ . ¦ _¦[¦ - ¦
, From the Venerable' Archdeacon of Ross . .-- ,. ] _:-: _Saar . 'Sir , —Icannot speak too fa ' vounibly , pf tbc . Revaieqw ArabUni . * .. IJaving had ap attnclvofj . bad-fever ' about . thr _. ee years ago , I . have ever since lieeri suffering , from ' it _> . . ' effects , p ' roducVg excessive riervousness , pairisfiri my neck arid left arm ; arid general Weakness' bf constitution , which havc _' pi'cvcnted me in a ' great degree' '• frbin _follriiying my usual avocations- ; - -these .-sensations , _wadded -to restless _riigbts , _pavticulavly aftey , pveviqu 8 _ie . xereise , ; ofie . n . renilt'V . ed my life very miserable ; but I am happy to saythat , haviiig , been _induccd-fo _. t . ry your Farina about _twomdriths since , l am now altrib ' s ' t as ' trangef'to these symptoms ; which . I con'fid ' eritly' liHp ' e will -be rerabved e ' _ntirely ' , with ; the Divine _, ¦ blessing , "by " . tlie continued _use-. of'this food , " I have nn objection tliat my name should appear in print ,- > yhich . how-. : ever , in 'kis instance is overcome ; for the sake of suffering ' humanitj . -lam ' , Sir ,: your obedient servant ,- Alexs . Stdabt . ' Arcli ' deacbn of Rosa , Agbadbwn Glcbo _, Skibbereen , County Cork . August 22 , 1849 . ' i now consider myself ii stranger " to all ' complaints ,,
except a hearty old age . I am as well as ever 1 was ; and . even quite free from the _vexatioiis : _arid- troublesome annoyaiicb ; _ofjan eruption , of -the skin , of-which 1 . liad _. sufferal for years , and which my medical ' attendant 'had declared-incurable at my time of life . " Aboiit . ' sixty _^ yeara , ago I 'had a fall from iriy horse ; hemiplegia' was the consequence . ; my ; left " firm ahd'leg we ' re paralysed ; 'also my ' left ' eyelid and the eye was displaced : From 17 _S 9 these dilapidations ' liuve ; re 8 isted . _uW-remedies untii , now , at the - . ago j of , _iVighty-Bvi , iby . twq . ycars . use of yoiirdeiicious breakfast , fpod , my left arm and leg liaye been rendered .. as useful to ' . ' mc as the tight , and the iVft eyelid ' restored to ' health "; ' the eyo so much sq that it requires no spectacles , & c , " 'Fdceniitkis extraordinary cure of much importance tb sufferers at large , and consider it my duty to pt « ce tUb _alioye detnils . ' _af . your disposal , in any . way you tliink . will . promote the welfare of others . , Faithfully ,- Wm .- libirr , _BarHster-iitliaiv . ' King's Col ! cge , ' . 'Cambridge , Oct . 15 , 1849 . ' ' ' ; ¦ _- ¦< ' ) . _- ,, I have found it to be a simple , though ' very ''efficacious and ' pleasant food , doing good to my ' own and others fuuc tional disorders . : ( _UCv ; _j _Cbarijsb'Kebr , . _AYinslovy _, _Biuksj Jan . 22 , 1848 . ¦ , , '
My deai' ; Sir , —It is not to . bo . told all . the benefit youi ' foud . lias been t ' o ' _-nie ; aiid my little ( son cries for a saucer of it every mbriiing—he'riev er " wanted a doctor since it came into the house . I consider you a blessing- to society at large . ' Most faithfully yours ; 'Walter Keating , 2 _Manning'place _, St . Saviour ' s .-Jersey , 4 th Nov . 1849 ; _. ; ; : ¦ Mi _' _iDiimpievwiHtliank Messrs . . Du Barry arid Co . to send / him an . other _j canister of their Revalenta Arabica , it agreeing . so well with . his iiifiiiit , " ( This'hifuht Was six days old wheii it cbm ' monc ' ed " living on' the Revalciita . ) 21 , 'Que ' cn ' s-terrace , Uii 5 'swater , 22 ud Nov . 1840 . Sir , —I have given your Revalenta Arabica Food to my little nirl , _iwho-. _is- ; ot a , delicate constitution ; and I find it does her much good , & c ., ic . II . , Clabk _, _Catheriiie-stiect ,: Frome , Somerset , Dec . l ' _Otli , 1818 . " '" " . " . ; ; . _•' _-, Respected Frieiuls , —1 linve given your _AraWca Food to a ' _gii'lbflifteen , wliu'duviii K theltist scveiv vears bud not been a day without vomiting fifteen ov sixteen times ' , and sometimes oftencr .. The _fourtlrdny after she commenced your Food vomiting ceased altogether , and she has : not thrown . up since . ; her , health is . impvi . ving _woiulotfutly . William Marhs , 11 l'titrick-street , ; Cork , 4 th of . April , 1849 . " ''" _- 1 - ' _..., _; ,.
_Gehtlemen _, —The lady for whom 1 ordered your Food 16 six months advanced in pregnancy , and- wa . v suffeiing severely from iudigestion , constipiition , throwing up her meals shortly after eating them ,,. haying a . great deal of heartburn , aud being constantly obliged to resort to physic or the enema , and sometimes both . I am happy to inform ; you'that your Food produced immediate belief . She lias , never been sick since , had but little heartburn , and the fitnctibtis-aremot _* . reguliw ,-4 c :-T « os . Woodiiouse , Devon Cottage , Bromley , Middlesex , March 31 st , 1849 . : ' - _Dbar-Suv _^ I am happy to say mj daughter has _gi-eatly benefited by tabinB your KevalenU Arabica Food , Her :: i ' . ! : A _..-: i' ' ¦ 'M' - _> : _' ¦ ' f . .. _¦' . ¦
•A Tofrno : 'Iad Y Tsus'''Writ«' Aribriy...
epileptic fits are much less frequent thon formerly ; iasteal _afjsaming _^ _BJti _^ _iwa _?!!^^ o'even or eight weeks between aPd , witli very Tittle omvulf ! _fib'fi : _"' l jim iH grerft _liS _^ _'tllefaV _^ _aifilWlelrJinsher , _asme _' ligtmTy imbr { _tvtidtmtleaMmdmriih _% ttt I am , dearSbv _yoursi _-ifaithttilly , _rJoHtiidLr _^ _AiLEUij Oapt . n . A London , 9 th February , 1850 . „•;? * / -r / . « -r ; ii . „ Respected Friend _. _rrr , ! thuilt no one i who had ; recelved or seen so _riiiicbgpbd ' arid _" cbriifort result from . it as in my mother ' s case , ' wb ' iild ' be wlthbut ' it'iri' sickness . "Fli > m art _atlmertytb'UsethiMs'rtWas _^ thoutb'ink' est'bOst _. _'ialid I will cheerfully answer any inquiries ; ; Iiin , itby fliend , _ilDWAr . i _> Cobbett _, _SanHapyvUmjinocr _^ _Acv _^ i _Princeftstist t _, _Jianchester , 3 rd month , 19 th , _Whrr _., _1 , . sir " ,:. , ' _.-r Dear Sir , —I am glad to telLyou _thaOTieiaiarrhtE _.-i , of whichThttd'sufferedtUf * twoyeiri s ; ls nirich ' Improved , ind nlltheattendant-symptoms oonsiderablynbated , since I commenced taking . tb 6 i'BevalenUi _. ; ' ' nna « h 0 uld'it continue without -arelapse _;\ l _shallaiave-ilittle . _toeomplaip »( . & e . Samoel LaxtonMarket-street ' .- LeicesterNovember 2 nd ,
, , , ' .., ? , r Sir , '—i ' have derived CGh ' sideraWo " _oene'fll from the _SJS _. S 16 4 1 l _^ alenVa Arabich ' . _'X'AvO ; IlARRYs' _^ O ' ptician , ' 50 , Holborn '; Londoii , ' DecI _. 22 nd 1847 / ! l i £ _* M _« IV ... ;; . • For _thedastfiveyearsilhave . _'heen _inia most _deptprahle c 9 ndition . , p . f : health , ihaving .. been _Bqbfeet during that period to most _' _scverejiairis . in . ' -the ' . b ' ack , _behest , right and left « _df > ,, _wfiieh ' , produjied' vbmlfing" afm'bf . lafly . ....... ; : ;; Ncx . ttoGod _KIowe ' yonagreat debt _Afgratitude . I have net bad aoysiek . iess _'at'the _^ _stom ' _acli- ' s'ifiet-1 com . menced . youriFoodif < fce „ & oKa 3 _* _Binain ; i gentlttmeli , -, ours , very , truly , ( ReyO _5 hq 3 _., M . Insteb , ( Qf FarQley iTyas , York-8 hire .-, St , _^ ayjour ' * _, Loed 8 Dec . 9 ih _,. _ISiJ . . Z ' u _.,,. _.., f Gentjcm ' en , —lara , happy tobe aBl . e _^ .. inloCT _^ ypu . that the person for ; . whom the former qu & btlty- _wdSwoi-nred , has derived very- great' benefit t > om Its' use '; _dwtrt-ssiiuj _sjrmptomsoflonff & _titndingJhavoJbaenreittoVe'd _. _' ahau feel . ihe of restored health'induced ; r . Having . witnessed the be *
npfit'ial effects in ; _. _thp-v above-mentioned case , ; I- _cjjii wit * ceiifldence . recoinmend it , and spall . havejmuol _jj _rihr . ttsure ia so doing whenever an' oppo ' rtUdity bffers _. He . tip lam , gehtlem ' eri _;" veryfiruly _youi-s '; ' Jame _^ Snbm , Ains , "lhteSurgeon _^ OlbRegt , ; _' _^ , _Sydney _iterracb ;? Reading , _Bbrks _, Dee 3 rd , 1847 _,- ' -y . ' - _ti _..:, ! lv / mc _; _. " , ' : ici !; -: ' ::.-if < _f-H i , Sometimehas .. povv _ekjised-.-sincet the lady _^ _njio had been an invalid for th ' irteen , yeari . _figm want of . di _/ _ri-stioa , accompaniedr ); _VHb cpugJi _^ a . ndf . ge . ijoraf . ' _. prpMratii'n ol ' strength ) 'ferwhoiri Iprocure'd yn ' ur Arabica "Food , bu b ' een _usirig-it daily ' as _dweeft ' d , and Fh ' tn'bf / pp _/ _tb' _^ ay that it has producedamostsiilutary : change _in'her . ' _sysfem , Ac . Ja _^ ies Pobteb : _; _-Athpl-streetrd _' _erth _" , _itiny : Vr _& , il 8 & , pear . Sir , _7 TYpu , rT . excelIent , Arabicia , _Fpod . biis epmpletehj _restorefofiny stbtriach , ' _nerns ,. ; arid _, lii ; er ,. wjii , t | li' _X beea disordered for nearly _tu'ebty year ' s' ' past , arid' my " n > alth U Kdw _eveirthinj , ' r-ebulil _' ' tvish ; _arifd his b' _0 eri _sb ' tlie 1 e tliret months ' i past ; - _&;;'>' AndSew _'Fsaseb , ' -Hadding ' tdn , East
Lothian , March 3 rd , 1819 . , ; Iiii ¦ •¦ ¦ ' , . .-j . , Ajfull . report o £ important crires ; of the above / and man * other ( c . omp ! aint 6 _,. _anii } a cbpiofu'j , _extract f , from .. _$ . j >? 0 p 0 testi . trianiaVs ; froiri parties . of ' tlie _^ i glVestresije . ci ; abi ) # { . is sent _gratis'by Dtt _^ _arry'aho' _^ In crin ' _sters tvfth' fdlf _insfriic ' troris _,-we fgWng My _af-c ' s . Od . ; 21 b ., ' . at _^ s : Cd ' _r ; Site , atnisvpl 21 bi , iBt' 22 _sf-y _-snper-refined ; 1 _qualityj _,- ] 01 b , _<; _-i _33 s . srolb ., 22 s . : ! puijably , pfld > ed for aU climates . Canister * forwavdoi . by . Du . 13 _« r £ j , anil Co ., _bn _receipt ' of pbs ' Hffice ov bnnXer ' s orq ' ers tnej , 21 b . and 10 lD . ' carriage " free to rt ( ir town or _. rUilway station connected by rail- ' ' witli London " . " _Dii Barry aWd'Go ., 121 : New . _Bbnd-Rtifeef , _Londori'i'alsO _. ' o'f _FortnumjiMaSou and Co . iia 82 !! Ficcadilly . ; Hedgesiand _iButler _. r . _iSS , oRegcnt . _street , " _Barelay , -1 > 5 . . EarriBgdoiMtreet ; ,- £ d wards . 6 ?
_St- yaul _' _sCjiurc _^ -yardj _buttpn .. Sanger „ and _irapnt-y , G 3 ' 0 . _v fbrd-stre ' et , _\ ariil ' . tlirough ' airi'e ' spectab'e _^ _^ _^ i _' _bemistsi ' me ' _diciheVeii'dors ' _. _'imd ' books ' _ellers'in' the _'kingdom . CabHbri ' . ' —The nalrie of'Messrs . ! _-T ) u Barry ' s 'invaluable iFood ; a 8 ! also that ofthe firm ; 'hare been so : closely imitated . that _inyaJids . Qannot . toorpare , 6 dly ' . _looki-. at : the exact spelling of Doth , and alsoM : ssrs . Du Barry ' sadb _^ css , 127 , , Neyy B _ond-S _^ _rj eet , . London _^ in . ordei : , to , ny _. oid fj _^ hig imposed upon - ' _^ y ' . IirValenfa ,, IIe » l' ' Arabian ' Ke , i _nlfrnta ,. Lentil _'Powybr , oV'otHer _' _spuHolM _^ _cdriJpburi'dS'bYVeas _! _e _, beans . - Indian ' -rfudioatm ' e ' aT , under aiei ' os & imitation' " of tlte name , . whichJiave nothing . 'to .. recommejid : _themiibut-tbe reckle . ss ,, audacityi of _^ _their ,- / ignorant - . _and-unscrupulous tom « pounders , and which , though' admirabiytadaptcd * : for pigs , . would play sad havoc with . the _delicate' stomacli ' ' of an _in _« vamlbrwnuit . _';' _- _'' " ; ' ¦ _'" _' _- % > _-n- _^< _> >' _-- \
On,; Physical-,Disqdallfications,, Gpner...
ON , ; _PHYSICAL-, _DISQDALlFICATIONS ,, GPNERATIVl ; . _fnjcAi _^ _cttY , yAN _5 , . i _^ _Apii _^? s _^^^ Thirty-first edition ' , illustrated witbtT _f _tyepty _^ ix _^ natomi . _; , cal , Engravings . on Stee . 1 . enlargedito' 18 . 5 ] pages , price ' _' 2 _.-i . 6 d ; "bypbst ) direct ' . _'frbiriTlffE' _^ blislimfenti , 3 s . 6 d . ' " inpostiige's & m ' ps ' _- . ' ! _- '; iij * ' •• - '" ¦ - ¦ - ' _- r , v c < o " -in _TiyFEi' W \ _- _pW 8 _fm _FE ? _1 ! E _« ND ; fn _riYeficaIwork . oritIm ' e'ibau ' 9 tlori a _^ Of tlie system , prbducid _bybxces ' siVe indalgcnfcByitlio conse . qiteneef of _infectioni'cm'tli & abuse of mercury _^ iwith _obser-. yatifin ? , ; on tlie' _martried _.-iStote , and ) the ; _disquapeationn . _ivJiiRhpreventat _^ . Jljus ' tra _^ ed _. by _^ wcnty _^ en < . 5 raving 8 , _. and . Hy ' the detail ofchses . ' 'By It , _an'd'fc PBRRT and Cb : ; i ¥ ! BeVners-sf _re ' et , ' Oxfbrd _: str ? et , _^ 6 n d' 6 ti . ' ' FublisIied . fiy the _huthbl-s , and 1 sold by Stra ' tige "; ai , Pater , 'n " o 3 ter-roW'riHannay / 63 ,. 'anbV Sanger , ' 15 i ) t ; . Oxtorid-street Starie ; . 28 _,-Tichb * orne-sb : eet _^ _IIajTnarket 5 _andiGoflon , 146 LeadenliaU-street ; London ; J . and R . _^ Raimes _^ and Co . Leithrialki _"Sdiriburgii . ; . D . _iCariipieU . Are ' _vlMireet , Gla _« _^ .... T- - _- _-ti-TiUt . ; r _kjV--...-ia » _-i . ViSSW' _Tji ' lSiuB m u liv & _anccfc _lliv _vnuiuu
guw , o . I liy , _umu- _, uuu _. _^ vvun , street , Liverpool ; R . Ingram , Marke , _t-81 aeeJ _Manchester . ; _r-. . . j _. "i *! 7 i . ;> _- - , _v-: _»' .. p arttIia . _'Finit . _' ; = _;" : _' _-3 _lii Is dedicatedito the _consideraitioniof _theianatomyj & id ptiysl . ology ef the orga _>\& which , _« _e-directly , er indirectly engaged in , tbe process of reprop ; Uctibn . , _if is . ulu _^^ six coloured . _erigiwjrigs ' , ; , '' . '" " „ ¦'¦ ., ri ' ' f . " ... ' V . V ,. ' . j " "" •; .. _' _"' _^ I ' aVt'the _^ econd _:- _' _---- _' 1 _--- " _^ Treat 8 _'Wifi ' e ' infirriiih ' es ' aiia'aeb ' ftydftke' ' _sytftem ;' prodaced by over , indulgence ' of Uie passion ' s ; . and ky tlie practice o solitary gratification . l _^ , sh , oyih dearly the manner in which the-barfeM consequences of this indulgence operate on „ . the . econoiB , y in the in _^ pairmeut . and , . _destruction of tha social' and vital _'Vower _^ . ' Tiie _oilstenbe ' 'of ncrvcus and sextial ' 'debility' _-and iricapticity _, ' with _' -tHeir- accbbipanyibg train of symptomi'aiid disordere _/ aretracedvb } ' _tht -ham of connecting results to their cause . _Thjj _^ lec _^ ioncoiidudcd _^ _ithjan . _expjicjtdctnil . plt _^ _o _^ ean . _sb y _wlucpi , _tlicie effects may . b » fejnedied . arid'full" and ' ample ' _QirgcWo _' ns . for their hse : ' it _is'Uluktrilte'd-by _tlirkiibIbJfcd ' 'b'riB ' _raVfSfes , which _fuUy'display'thSeffecteoT ' _pliysWala ' e'Csy ; _'if-i
r : i . w _n-ur-. _? . i :. rT & _fithemnti'Zru-: i mi Contains an : accurate description of thediic . _<) ses , causod by nfeptiep ,-andby the abuse p £ mercury j ; ptv wry - arid se . coiidary . symptoms , e ' raplujns _qt tho . iki . n , sbtfe _Siroat _, in flatnriiatioriof the ' eyes ; _"difeeaae of In ' e'bori ' _esJ'lonorrhaja , gleet , 8 trietufe ; & c . i fife shown--to _'dejwhtl- ' offw * cause , Tiieir" troatment is fully'describedinHnls . section . The ef . feels of neglect ; _-eithcrin the _^ ecognitienriOf disease or in the . treatment , aro , _shpwp to be the -, prevalppice _^ q _^ the virus in the _. _s _ygtem , wbicli ! , s _] oonQ ' r or " later , wi " , _show'Ttself in one ofthe forms already " _menubned , faHd ' . eritail' _5 iseise in its most frightful shape , not only ' _oiitlid irid , _ividiinTb 3 iiself , but also _on-the-offspring . - _"'Advicbfor _^ ke h _' eatment of ill these diseases . and . thelr . censequfiuces ia . tendered in this sections which , _sif-dulyfQUQwedup ,. camiot :: _fail ( , in _. _electing a cure . This part i 3 _illustxatod by , seveiiteeri . coloured iepgraviugs .
Treat 3 ofthe preventionof _dwease by ft _slnfijle implication , by . which the danger of infection is obi _1 ated ?< It _«« aetion is _simple _, 'buti sure . - 'it acts witln _tfii ' _i-Irus chemically , and destroys iUipower om . the . system ' . ! -iThisy * U ) po »; _tant part of the _jwork _shpuld-b ? _reaA by , _^ T ery - } _-qung , nia _^ entering _IritoUfe _., , ' _, 'f , ' . „ - _.- ' . , il-.- ' . ' _....: " .. ' _, ''"'•„ ¦ _'"' ,. 'Part the Fifth "~ : " _*•* Is _dfivot ' ed _^ to th'b '; cofi ' sideratibri' ' of th _' c ' _DWiSmiObliga . tfon ' _s _oftheMilrried State , anil of the ' causes- " wliloli lead to the happiness or miserj of those who have entered into the bonds , of . matrimony . Disquietudes and jars .. _ljfj _^ een mar . _rtedceuniesar _^ traced . to depend , . _irif _, the , _iriajpste _<> f in . _stanqesi , qrif ] causes ) _resulting from _^ physical iniDerfections ariderror ' _si'a'rid ' _the'meansfOr'their feme ' _Va ' l :: shoivn tobe ' wi ' t'lnri ' reacHnnd effe ' t _^ _ffl ' 'Tb ' e « ' . operatioh of r < 5 eitain die . qualifications is fully _examined , _auiinfelicitoua . oitd _uuproductive : _UHiou 8 , _ _-sh « jvb M b ?; tiie . _necessarjiiopnsequence . The causes and remedies for this , state _-formj _, a _] a impovtaut consideration in this seBtion _. of tlie _yyijrlii ' r '' ¦ Z ' ,, _..., .-.. _v _; ¦;[ ... _^ . 1 ' .: _± . \! _ t , _. _'i-j > ..: ¦ -15 _*
.,- ; TUE , COItI ) IAL , BALM Qf .-SYK _^ q _^ M Iscxpresslyemployedtareuovnte _theiimpait'e ' _ditpowersof _UfflfiiYhen _^ hi _^ _stedi b y _^ Uiqinttuenee _^ eKerted _^ by solitary indulgence _bntlie _' _sy ' steni " . _^ I . ts . a ' ct . iba , js , p , _urely-. ba ! . stimic ; its power in _' re , -invig . orafing the frame'in ; alt cases of nervous and sexual debility _, 'bbslinatc _gieetsi' iropiire'ficy , barrenness _^ and' debilities _ttMsiiig'fr'bm venereal excesses , has beeh demonstrateti by its unvarying success iu' thousands of . _cases . j . _To-itbose _; persons :. _^ _vIjq a . re .-pr . eyonte , _% entering the married state by the consequences , qf . eiu ; _iy . errors , itis invaluable . Price _Ils-.-ner bqttle ' , or'four . quantities in one , Yor . _53 s " _* : _" ~ y '' ; ;; , _^ t ,, n . _n _Attinnti-syiihilitio rcmedyfor _puriiyinj tha systerp-fi'om ve ,
neretu coiitaniinatiqn „ and _ja reconimendQd , fpr _,.. any of tbe varied _foririsfofsebbridary sjriiptpriis _, such on the skin , blotches bri the head aiid face , enlargement ofthe throat , tonsils , arid '' uvula ; _threatened-destruutSin of the nose , palate , jikc . _v'dts- action is ' . purely _detersrw . and Its Seiieficial influence on the system is undeniable . Price 11 b and 33 s .-per ; bottle / ,,-f ,, r ., r , ,.,,,, ' .. .-Z 'fhe 5 £ . cusp of Sj ' viacum _, ' _or'Copcentra . ted TCtersive _, E 8-se ' nce can bply Iiehad'h ' , ' _Bei-.- « ers-stro (! t ; ' 0 * fwd street , _LoridoriSwKerebJ'thWelsii _savlng ' of lC ' 12 s . ; _KOT the _payeiit-isehtitled _toWceivb _' a 3 vic 6 > witlioutiS . _ftej _5 vhich advantage is applicable only U >; those ; who remilTO _; . for a packet , " - .., _i-- , . _-,-.-nv-.-.-i _,-r .. r . ' . iM :.: > _- < _-i .-. _- '; i _,- iiL- f , f _Conssltatiqn fee , ( if , _, by letter ) , _. l _^—Tatibnts are requested to to " as miiiut c " as possible in llie' _description of th ' eivcases ; ' : ' "' " _' ' f ' ¦¦ "' '' - ; '" " ¦¦ _' ' ¦
_, : - Attendance ' _-daily at ! 19 ! : _Beniers-streeft'' -Oxford-street , London , : from eleven tc two _,- _- ; and . from _"fivestctieight ; on Sundayfromcleven . toone . _'T- _.- ' _- ' ! _- ! i ' i _.- » ina
M -Mimmoms-Mhbofheaiitii. ;.; F I.--* .!...
_m _-mimMOMS-mhbofheaiitii . ; _. ; f I .-- * . ! _PricelsilHijierlbox . ' _*"• _; _-- _!« 0 _TillS _. kcell _^ nt'Faniily _J'lLLjra _^ _Iodiciue _,. 1 '' ' ¦ b ' f ' _long-tTic _^ ' efficacy ; ' foi' __ correcting ' . _riffSftorders of tlie _stofnacn' » iid'b ' o _\ Yc , fs ; llte cbmmibn syraptorii _^ of which arc _costiveness _, flatulency , ? _spasms , , loss of appetite , sick _heod-atlie ,-giddiness ,-6 _ensB-.. of-fulne . BS ! after ; tneals , dizzincs 3 : of the eyes , drowsiness _njid pains . in ; . the , sfqmacli and _^ bowels ; : indiges , tioii ; p , rqdui-iiig . a ,. _tQi'jiidf s ' tiitpfwthe liver , iuid _^ a consequent ii \ ac _\ iv 1 fy ; of the bowels ' ; _bating a _ilisorgajitsalion'bf _evc ' ry ' ftmctibn of _' thc fra ' mo ;" wll , in this rriost excellent _prbpaVatibb ; _- 'by a -little _pei'sevti-ance , be effectually removedi ' - Two w threo dosesiwill corivincc the afflicted of its . salutary effects , The stomach »} H speedUy regaiu its strength ; a healthy , action of _^ ' _Wjl _^ _ff . bowels , and kidneys will rapidly take place ; aiid instead _^ otlistlcssric ' ss , heat , pain ' . ' aninarindieed appeavance ; 'strength , acti .
vity , and renewed health , will be tlie quicKresn «« _uiKing this medicine , according tb . the directions ; accompanying each-box .- . ¦ . .. t ¦; ; _,- - _; _* ;< ' ' . iL . . T , hes « pills are , _aiavlicutai-ly . effieacious _, for stomach coughs , colds , agues , shortness / of breath _, And ' afl obstruc . tibhsohlwuHnid _7 passagc . _v ; _'and--it > tnkeh _' ' 0 « er to tree an indulgence at table , they quickly vnstore _' . tbtj _system to its natural state of repose : ; . ¦ _.- .. , ¦ _, w . j ; . . . ; - _> 3 ' l _' _ei-sous of aFl LL , UAlUT , . w | io are . subject to headache , giddiness , drows ' iuesA ami _Sfeing ill tho curs , arisinit ' _fram too great a flow Of Wood to . tho hehd , shoula iievoYuc without theni ; as ninny"d _.-ingei-ods'symptoiiis will be entirely carried off by their _immediate vtx , in •/ _ForFJiAlALES , theso . pilis are most , truly _excellent , removinB all obstructions , the distressing hea , d- _^ he so very prevalent with tlie . . sex , ; depi ; _cssiqn ,, " of spirits , ' diilncss of _sicht , nervous affections . Moieties , pimples ' . ; _artdsalUm-niss of the Skill ) andgiVc a -lichltfiy aiid _juv ' _c-Ytile blbom to tho cbniplc ' xion . ' - ' ¦ _'•'; ' ' '• - ¦ «• _>« ii
i-To SfOTIIERS _thoyavo confidently _reconimeijtled as the best medicine that can ho taken _duriugprcgnanvy ; and for _chihli'tiiofall ages , they are _unequalled . . . . . . ¦ j * , As afpieasaiit , safe , andfca ' sy _. apcri _. enti _th ' cy ritlitc the re . commendation of a riiild' opera tion with' the irib ' _sfsucccssful effect ' , an I require no rbstriiib _' t ' df _diet-, ' ' 6 i- Confinement during their use . _^ ' By regulating _the-doseaccoi'sJiiig to iha age and strength ' of tlie patient , they _beeonie- _^ uitaWe for every case , in either sex , that can be required ; _i-. nd for ELDERLY PEOPLE they . _wiU _. _ljo found ' _toitbb the most comfortable medicine hith _' crtb prepared ) ' _^ _SoldT > y T . _'l _' i'ont ; ' 229 Striirid , 'Loitdoii . Price Is lid and 2 s _Od'pvrbox _,-and'bythe'Vemlei'S ' of Medicine generally throughout _tlicltiiigdoni , . . u i-. ; ¦ _-, / . : « AskforFRAMPTON ! S ; E ' lLI _, OF , UEALTlf , and observe _theiuame and -addre , _83 of ; -, «< Thomas 4 Voi )( , _^ j 9 Strand , London , " on the 6 ov « _ruuiwt _Staro ' n . ' _... _^ . - : 0 t [ ¦ _¦ ' ¦' - " ' _"¦' - > _' - >¦ _' ¦ ' •! , _' - ! ,: _¦; . ! V : 'If 1 . ? ..... : •¦ : ! _:-. _; -,: Z . _lL . Al
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 15, 1850, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_15061850/page/7/
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