On this page
- Departments (5)
- Adverts (3)
-
Text (18)
-
that will be made from these monster evi...
-
-«^^__ asofttg
-
WELCOME AS FLOWERS IN HAY. Ai day's decl...
-
^ fD (eni.
-
A Letter to the Tenantry of Ireland, con...
-
GENERAL WILLISES. General "Willisen, com...
-
¦ — "V
-
lIAYMAItKET THEATRE. A new extravaganza,...
-
SEW STRASD THEATRE. ^Mr. J. Palgrave Sim...
-
The Metbopowtan Istbhmexts Act.—This act...
-
IRISH DEMOCRATIC ASSOCIATION TO All • y....
-
THE POTTERS' EMIGRATION SOCIETY. We have...
-
rusisHHENT of Dbath wi Burhwo.—-Your cor...
-
cilm RS ; ^: C0WBY AND ^ S
-
Steamers w AusiniWA.—The following extra...
-
Mvmm
-
Ftyrtto KiTEfiN Canton.—A foreign missio...
-
? 1 L£F YSI0AI' MSQFALIPICATIONS , 6ENEKATIVB KCAPAOITY , AND IMPEDIMENTS TO MABBMoI Thirty^Brst fldition , illustrated with Twenty-Six Anatomt. n * JpSrinngs on Steel, enlarged to 196 pages, nriea
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
That Will Be Made From These Monster Evi...
August 17 , 1850 . y HE NORTHERN STAR . - --- ¦ ¦ _-- -- ¦ . - — . - l { that will made from I — _¦•¦ " ¦ ¦ " ' - ' ' " _*""*''^ _*^ _- _S 5555 a 5 ___!*» _w- « P _* ai i _.... _¦ i _.-
-«^^__ Asofttg
- _«^^__ _asofttg
Welcome As Flowers In Hay. Ai Day's Decl...
WELCOME AS FLOWERS IN HAY . Ai day ' s declining , a mid sat twining A _garkndshimogv-ituT-ild flowers g _? 7 J , , Bnt her heart it _wal sore , and tbe tears _gelled oer Ber eye , at the door , on that eve m my . * "Trom yonr plighted bnde , on this holy day , A true love token offond vows 6 p <* en That may not be _broken-tbese _floors of May . « t _vr - _^ in _iiea ib if von hold to your faitb , CoS _^ r or with wealth , come m sickness or To _roy heart you'll be welcome as _flowera in May . « Yet oh ! if ever , when wide seas sever ' Our hearts von waver in faith to me , A true Irish maid will never upbraid Affections betrayed—from that hour yon ' re free !
«« I set small store apon golden ore , " I'll not lore you more for your wealth from the sea ; _iHie hand that will toil at our own loved soil , Tree from crime or from spoiL is the hind for me I " The blessing half spoke , her fast tears choke , And strong sobs broke the young man ' s prayer ; One blending of hearts , and the youth departs—The maid weeps alone ia the silent air . __ 1 many score , that lone maid ' s counted o er Of day-dawns and night-falls—a year to the day ; . "When sadly , once more at tbe seat by the door , Stood the youth as before , on that eve iu May . For the love of thafc maid , wherever strayed , Kept his soul from stain , and his hands from guilt ; lite an angel from Godtill his feet retrod
, The cherBhedf sod where his first love dwelt . "I bring you no store of the bright gold ore , But , poor as before , I return to decay ; _sJor mv bride I ' ve no wealth bot broken health , Hopes withered and dead as these flowers of . ' May . " The maiden has prest her true love to her breast , Her joyful haste no doubts delay ; 3 _ his arms she sighs . " 'Tis yourself I prize , To my heart you are _jwleome as flowers in May l
THE TRUE MAN . I inow of no crusader bold „ or palmer , nor Paynim , However stout his battle arm Or loud his battle hymn ; Nay , though they sum their chivalry "With _Blchard _gather'd in , And add one worthy of their fame , The brave old Saladin ; I know not one of all tbeir host From rearmost to the van , "Whom I can bold by right and truth So brave and true a Man As he who of his own resolve ,
, By conscience pricked and stirred , Hares brand a Wrong before the world , By deed , or thought , or word ! He is my hero , first of all , Thoug h spear nor sword he wield , "Who holds the "Wrong his onl y foe , The right his only shield ; "Who dares to battle for the Truth , Though Error on her side
Has gathered hosts , and shakes in wrath Her pennons far and wide : " The more the merrier , " in his cry , This hero , braver far Than ever he , ' gainst Saracen "Who waged the bloodiest war ; For though he win for but one truth " Whem martyrdom is passed , His victory is for his race , As long as time shall last 1 CD . _Stpibt .
^ Fd (Eni.
_^ _fD ( eni .
A Letter To The Tenantry Of Ireland, Con...
A Letter to the Tenantry of Ireland , containing an exposition of He Rackrent System j and . pointing out o . Remedy , 8 fC , 8 fc . By William _Cosxeb _, Esq . Dahlia ; J , B . Gilpin , 59 , Dame street . Mr . Conner is the oldest and the most indefatigable of the defenders of the rights of the tenantry of Ireland , and this pamphlet is welltimed , now that the Tenant Bight question is . giving rise to a new Irish Agitation . In the - work before as . Mr . Conner commences with an eloquent denunciation , of the "Kackrent S ystem , " the main evils of which are exorbitancy
of rent and insecurity of tenure . He proposes a two-fold remedy—" a valuation and perpetuity ; ' * observing that—A perpetuity will avail nothing without a valuation , as what tenant , even though having a perpetuity of his farm , could continue to hold it at a loss hy exorbitancy of rent ? And again , a valuation ¦ will afford no protection to tbe tenant without a perpetuity , for when the term or lease expires , tbe tenant loses the farm altogether , although he should have it at a fair rent by _yaluation . Therefore , it is a "valuation and perpetuity , sot separately , bnt conjointly and together , which can effectually remedy the rackrent system , and afford full and complete protection to the tenant .
Bearing in mind this property of onr twofold remedy , let ns , hy this test , try the chief remedies whieh hare been , advocated ; from time to time , and we shall find their total insufficiency , to arise from ihe omission ofa valuation , or ofa perpetuity , or of hoth . Thus the tenant right of Ulster is clearly insufficient as a remedy for the rackrent system , from its possessing no valuation for the fair regulation of _refits In proof of this , Air : Berwick ' s case , as _rerorded by him in his published , pamphlet , is quite conclusive .. Mr . Berwick gave the large sum of £ 1 , 008 for the tenant rig ht of Ksnahreen , county _Sown , on the estate of the Marquis of _Hownshire ; he expended the farther sum of £ 800 in permanent _^ improvements ; . and when the . lease expired , his
¦ landlord , Lord P ., set a rent oa the house , and a 'large acreable rent on the land , so that , notwithstanding his tenant rig ht , Mr . ' Berwick was glad to _ 3 t his hands out of Lisnabreen with the loss of -nearl y all his £ 1 , S _00 . It is so obvious , as hardly to need the remark , that had Mr . Berwick a valuation , Ms landlord couldnot have invaded him at all , much less have committed the wholesale plunder detailed hy him , and which has never been denied by his landlord , nor by any one ow hw behalf . Itis eonaUy plain that had Mr . B . a valuation , without a perpetuity , he would still have been put out on the expiration ofthe lease—proving that without both a va luation and a perpetuity-Conjointly , and together , he could have no security or protection whatever .
And further , those plans which consist in securing the tenant in the amount of his improvements , on his being , turned out of his farm , at the expiration of his term or lease , have neither a yaluation nor a perpetuity , and consequently leave the entire rackrent system in foil force and ] malignancy , with the slight exception of returning , to the tenant any of his own money , which he may have expended in improvements . So long as he holds the farm , he is still oppressed by the . evil of exorbitancy of rent , and . if _during . the term he happens not to be ejected for the non-payment of that exorbitant rent ; and In numerous cases the tenants are so ejectedi he will still be met , at the _« _ad of his term , by the evil of insecurity of
tenure , and turned out to the road . It is clear that this man fares no better than the tenant who makes no improvements . The one makes , no improvement ? , and is turned out—the other makes improvements , and is also turned out—where , then , is the difference between them ? They both bear the whole weig ht of the entire rackrent system . But by a valuation and perpetuity , the tenant hot onl y gets rid of the greater and more certain evils of exorbitancy of rent and insecurity of tenure , hut he also gains the fullest protection for all his improvements . By a valuation * . the . tenant is left the means bf making improvements—which is full as * important as compensation after they aremade ( for if not made they cannot be protected , and they cannot be made , generall y , under the grinding _exacfcon of an exorbitant rent ) -and withaperper tuity he may with perfect safety go on improving _admjauhani for _yrm * heand his family after
, _& , §? _£ _^ v _l he faim - they continue to enjoy , the use and benefit of theimprovements ,. and whea they part with it , they will get much more for their improvements from the _' new tenant , to dispose of them together with , the . iarm , than they Trill from the landlord separate froin the farm . By . this obvious and just mode ; the ' tenant or his Smay , wflrnot heinvolredin _hti _gation with the landlord , or his heirs , as to the amount to be alm . Mills , with respect to the improvements made 6 y BmaU _w pea _^ t / cultivatdrs , is applicable to very much of the improvements made even by large or _capifalist farmers _^« ' The improvements to . be looked , for from peasant cultivators are the result not of money , but of their labour , applied at such various times , and in snch
minnteiuir-• tions _, as id be incapable of judicial appreciation . " My object , in these observations , will fce attained when the tenantry class ; whom t address , 'and whose ri ghts and interests I honestly defend , shall hare their , attention steadily fixed upon the two leviathan evils of . exorbitanoy f of . rent and . 'insecurity of teiure _. ' and ba ' the Terr small deduction
A Letter To The Tenantry Of Ireland, Con...
that will be made from these monster evils , by returning to the tenant the amount of his own money expended : in improvements , on being turned out of his farm , and sent adrift and desolate upon the waves of the wide world . The above have been the onl y specious plans proposed for the protection ot the tenant . As for "fixity of tenure" and " equity of tenure , " these were phrases having , no meaning , and adopted because they had no definite or intelligible meaning , and for a long time used by trading politicians to humbug the _neonle Out bf their money . be these monster _evUs . by
on the pretence of obtaining for them redress of grievances relating to their land tenure . It were well if the delusion of " Ulster tenant , right , " and " tenant improvements protection , " phrases much used , I ani sorry to say , in the present day , for the same unworthy purposes of deception , were gone into the same dark oblivion , for I have said much more than sufficient to demonstrate to every intelligent and honest mind , tbe complete delusiveness and total insufficiency of these and of all other plans which the ingenuity of man can devise , short OV i _VAtDATIOJ" AKB _HSBPKIOITr OP HIS FARM 30
IHB TENANT . The . remainder of the pamphlet is partl y devoted to answering objections , and partly to citations from Stuart Mills' new work on Pp . litlcal Economy , favourable to Mr . Conner ' s views . The plan of "a valuation and perpetuity" is likely to find warm adherents on the part of the Irish tenant farmers .
General Willises. General "Willisen, Com...
GENERAL WILLISES . General "Willisen , commander-in-chief of the Schleswig-Holstein army , is about sixty years of age . Descended from a noble Prussian family , he was early destined for a military career , and in the campaign of 180 G _, served , as eadet . in an infantry regiment . After „ . the disasters of Jena and Auerstadt , he returned to . the "University of Halle , where he spent the next few years in the retirement of study . "When the circle of the Snnl was added * to the kingdom of Westphalia , Willisen became liable to the military conscription , wbich was established in the new . monarchy after the French model . His attempt to withdraw from the operation of this measure miscarried . He was carried to _Cassel , and
for a short time imprisoned there . This event took place in 1869 , just as Austria was about to turn for the fourth time her arms against France . The occasion was favourable to Willisen ' s fli ght , however otherwise venturesome this may have been . He proceeded to "Vienna , entered a free corps , with which he foug ht in Italy and the T yrol , and a few years later returned to the Prussian service . From 1813 to 1315 we find him attached to the general staff of Field-Marshal Prince Blucher . He was then in a good school . Led at first by Seharnhorst , then by Gneisenan , and including such men afj Generals Clausewitz and Grolmann , this small corps of officers comprise the rarest military talents . Willisen remained in this position for a certain time after
the conclusion of peace , and at the end of twenty years experience he was , appointed to give instruction in military history in the General Military School of Berlin . The aim of his instructions nas to lay down a clear and complete system of warfare , which in respect of method must of course be his own work , but aa to its princip les . was nearly related to the system expounded in the writings of the Russian general , _Jomini . Proceeding from the axiom that the object of the art of war is victory , and of victory the attainment of military ends , fie regards the army the instrument of attaining those ends , under two aspects—first and chiefly , according to its requirements ; and second , as to its capabilities . The supply of the first is the subject , then , of
the first part of military science— - "the doctrine of conditions " or strategy : to teach how the latter may be best brought ont and applied is the object ofthe second part of tbe system—tactics . Willisen then considers victory aa it may be attempted in one of two ways , either by aggravating ' tbe eheniy ' s difficulties , or b y attacking : him . It will be seen from the foregoing outline , that Willisen ' s instructions were at least systematic and logical . His views , however , met with various receptions ; and to confute certain objections nrred against his principles , he undertook in 1831 , through the m _£ dram of the Military Weekly Gazette , ito establish and illustrate them by the course of the tben undecided Polish war of independence . In his articles
he incidentally gave advice to the Polish'heroes , and thus disclosed a political bias in no way calculated to win the favour of the court . Willisen , at that time a major , fell into displeasure . His articles , however , made a great impression in all circles ; they were clear , defined by logic , and animated by political feeling ; but the issue of tbe war was unfortunate for their author , as it directly contradicted , his predictions , Thus Willisen had prophesied that if tho Russians below Modlin should cross the _Weischel , tbey would be lost . But they did so . and took Warsaw , and so shortly ended the war . Damaging as tbe exposure of tbis error was for Willisen , the death of his scientific rival and opponent was a more important event . General von Clausewitz died _November IC , 1831 , and soon after his widow published , from the copious literary remains of her husband , that work entitled " War , " which has since become so celebrated .. . . Many of
Willisen ' s views were here controverted , and his theory generally denied . After long silence Willisen published in 1840 a reply in a formal exposition of his system '; be has had many opponents , but no rival to " be compared to Clausewitz . For several years before 1818 Willisen was stationed at Token , withthe office of chief of the general staff of the fifth army corps , and afterwards as commander ofa brigade . The plenipotentiary powers id the duchy o Posen in 1848 are part of the history of the commotions of March . In the autumn of the same year he was present with Itadetsky at the siege of Malg hera , and observed the progress of the . Italian campaign , whose history he has . since written . In the promotion ' s of the spring _andsummer 1849 Willisen ' s name was omitted , and this circumstance may have induced him to ' ¦ apply for " the dismission which was granted him in the spring , with the title of lieutenant-general .
¦ — "V
¦ — "V
Liaymaitket Theatre. A New Extravaganza,...
lIAYMAItKET THEATRE . A new extravaganza , entitled the Hippopotamus , has little to recommend it beyond the ; popularity of its title . The scene is laid in the _Roshervilie-gardens , where . the hippopotamus is supposed to have just arrived , and the plot—a very ordinary one of conjugal j ealousy—is connected with the . extraordinary animal by the circumstanca that the jealous husband has been irritated by his wife ' s frequent visits to the wonder of the day . ' A situation in
which this husband , acted by . Mr . Wright , disguises himself aa a vendor of fruit and ginger beer to watch the movements of his wife , and pelts the object of his jealousy ( Mri Paul Bedford ) with the articles of his stall , is somewhat amusirig , and the hi ppopotamus , which is introduced towards the conclusion , 13 very well made up . Howeverl the whole piece is much too loosely connected , and the combat between an uncaged lion and the more unwieldy quadruped on which the curtain falls is singularly devoid of meaning . Abusurdity is of course intended ,, but this need not be carried out in too fanatical a spirit . ' '"
Sew Strasd Theatre. ^Mr. J. Palgrave Sim...
SEW STRASD THEATRE . _^ Mr . J . Palgrave Simpson , who was favourably intrbdiiced .. to the pnblic by the elegant little drama of ' Poor - Coiuin waiter , is the author of a slight fttca bronght ' ont last night , under / the title of Witiiout Incumbrances ; The plot turns on the dilemma , of a : simple usher ,- who taking a situation " without incumbrances , " is , induced by _isome fellow-travellers on a railway , to pretend that the wife of one ; and the intended _ofanbther , disguised | in such attire / are his own wife and " child . ; The position of the usher , who is a timid bashful man , and whose patroness has . a horror . ' bf . "incumbrance ? , " creates . amusementin . the hands of Mr . Compton , and there , was considerable applause , at the _fsU of the curtain . '
The Metbopowtan Istbhmexts Act.—This Act...
The Metbopowtan _Istbhmexts Act . —This act , under which Dr . South wood Smith has been . appointed an additional paid member of the Board of Health , will be speedily enforced in " The Metropolitan Burial-District , " which comprises the ' city of London , Westminster , Southwark ,. and numerous parishes set forth in one of . the schedules . annexed . There are seventy-seven sections in the act , which act ia \ to be executed by the Board of Health . ; The board iftayfprovide new . burial grounds , and her Majesty , on a report of the board in council , m ' ay order the discontinuance of interments in churchyards and other places . Regarding the , removal of poor persons to reception houses to be " provided , it Jb enacted , by the . thirtieth section , that . the . hoard may at any time , after the passing of the act / appbint medical or other officers ' who , -in the case , of death within the district , may , " where the
persons having the . direction ot the . tunerai ot vne _oeceased may so . desire / ' _cause _-the . body ; to ; be decently , removed to one of .. the . houses , for the reception of the dead . Among the provisions is one under which the Board of Health may " contract '" for funerals at fixed charges , so tbat there ' are likely to be "three classes" of funerals , according to the means of the parties . The " salary of ibe ad-i ditionjil paid member ofthe Board of Health , is not to exceed £ 1 , 200 a , year . Corroi ? tbom Isnu . —A vessel just arrived from Bomba y has brought the large number of 3 , 710 bales and 25 half-bales of cotton as part of her . cargo , . of East India production ; and another vessel , arrived on the same' day from Gonaives _, , a port of St . Domihgb _. has " brought 89 bales ' of cotton , the _growttfofthatialaad , ' ' . ' . ' ,. '
Irish Democratic Association To All • Y....
IRISH DEMOCRATIC ASSOCIATION TO All y . _--.. -., _; ' : ¦ _^ -DEMOCRATS , Brother D * jiiooiUT-i , ~ In the last number but two of the : Star a letter was inserted from our brothers of Glasgow in whioh ' thero was ah _accusation brought against me , charging ihe with withholding from , the men of _Franeis _' _-streefc a letter intended for their perusal . Now that that charge is true I distinctly and emphatically deny , as the following . " bUl of . particulars " will show . The evening ofthe day on which I received thai letter I proceeded with hV in torrents of rain / to the room in wbich we hold bur weekly meeting , and which is considered ; as the place of general rendezrou ? . There Iread it aloud foreverymemoer who" entered ; IRISE _ _5 _ o (_ uV [ _fw _^^
no one from Francis-street attended . The next ni ght the committee sat 1 laid the letter , with the resolution contained therein ; before them , and as I was very busy at the time , I requested them to g ive authority to jfr . Doyle ( one of the founders of the association , ) to answer it , — -they did so . ' MjvDoyle got permission from them to bring it home , in order thathe might make no mistake . The meoting adjourned , —no Francis-street man attended , although two were on the general committee . The next ni ght I was again at my post , and the _Franois-street men did come . ' They asked for the letter , I told them where it was , at the _samo time I informed them ofits content _^ and that if they would wait Mr . Doyle would come with it ; when they could see
it . Then they showed us their letter , which also contained the resolution ; they read it for us , waited about three minutes , certainly not five , would not wait longer , and then went away , and have never como near us since . They were not long gone when Mr . 'Doyle brought the letter , although he h _\ d not finished the answer to it . This statement , I think , proves that there was no " kidnapping " in the . question , and if there was , not I , but the , committee members were the guilty parties ; if not so , the fault is attributable to ' the non-attendance of the _Francis-street . men . Now one word about my
former letter . Our friends in Glasgow seem to lie under a strange misapprehension , for they appear to think it . came from me as an individual , —this ia not so ; it received the sanction ofthe committeo before it went tb London . They also think that it dealt too severely with the _Frahcis-street men ; any person , I am Bure , judging impartially between their ' s and mine , will consider it but a'fair and just retaliation . I remain , Brothers , / Fraternally and devotedly yours , , Thomas CoxtsN , P ; S . —I write this in nay individual capacity . —T . O .
The Potters' Emigration Society. We Have...
THE POTTERS' _EMIGRATION SOCIETY . We have received from a correspondent resolutions adopted by themembers of the above society at a meeting held at Fort _Winnebago , on the 3 rd of June last , dehouncing . tue society as a deception to the working _classes . . _' .. ' . ' At an adjourned meeting , held at the same place , on the 8 t h of J _jme / the following memorial was unanimously adopted : — " TO THE _PEOPIA OS OBBAT _. BRITAIN . ' *! ' We , your humble memorialists , being members ofa certain society existing in England , and known by thenameof the 'Potters' Emigration Society , ' beg to lay our grievances'before you ; The abovenamed societ y , b y their prospectuses , head bills , advertisements , books - of rules , lectures , and bv
means of a weekly paper or . periodical , called the Potters' Examiner , lead the working and other classes bf fereat Britain to believe , that by means of subscri ptions paid by persons joining the abovenamed society , they ( the society ) have secured for them ( the members ) parcels of land , of forty acres each in extent , _aitnatedupon the Fox River , Columbia county , . Wisconsin , United States of America ; that they had prior tp September , 1848 , secured as much as 50 , 000 acres ' in the said county , f Tliat the land was composed of good black soil of great depth and richness ; that it was easily cultivated intoprbfitable farms ; that stores well ; stocked with every kind of provisions were in the society !? possession on the spot ; that good cattle , implements , & c ., had been purchased , and were upon the land for the use
of _^ he settlers , and for cultivating certain lands set apart , and theprodHCe of which ' was to be for the advancement ofthe settlers themselves . That employment could at all times be got upon the lands , and cash or produce ( as required by the workman , ) obtained / according tothe current rates of labour in the State ; that members preferring employment ap . _*\ rt from the society could always obtain it " in the immediate nei ghbourhood ; that all could support their families in a comfortable-manner , and ultimately acquire _^ independence ; and that certain other statements set forth in thb book of rules ! & c ., hereunto annexed , were attainable by all persons becoming members . ' - ' '"' ¦ ,, " Now we , your memorialists , having thrown up our employment in Great Britain . —broken un our
comfortable homes ' , —separated from our friends , — borne thebxpehse / _dahgers _. ahd hardships' of a' long and weary' journey , ' ; arid ' arrived at the aforesaid place , our . destination , find the greater' part , if not the whole , ofthe statements to be grossly fa ' so . and the promises to have been either improperly carried bat , or not p erformed at all . We find the land at present in thb possession of the Indians , and cannot be sccured'by any party until surveyed by the American government' and afterwards brought into the market for sale , and therefore that all settlersjare considered as trespassers . The greater part of the land is sandy , br wet marsh land , " and in the opinion of many practicaPinen ' , unsuitable for farming . The cattle purchased are unsuitable , 'being mostly aged and weak , instead of young and vigorous . That
portion of the land set apart for cultivation in aid of the members is ill-managed , so that loss instead of profit can but be _expectedi The stores ( so called , ) seldom contain even the common necessaries _Ofllfe , and the prices charged for whatever may bo there are greatly in advance of any other store . The labourer ( when labour can be . got , ) receives lower remuneration than is the custom in the State , aud then produce and ' not cash is thepayment ; further , if a man earn , say five dollars a weels , he can only obtain three or four dollars worth of stores , the rest being booked as due to him . The provisions , instead of being ; purchased " when cheap and stored , are boug ht in Bmall and irregular Quantities ( when greatl y heeded ) , and generally obtained upon credit price . The ' meihbbrs upon , the _' latidhave boon compelled to exist throughout ' the past winter upon
flour mixed with water , and in such small'quantities that some have sunk under it ,. and met with a grave in aland far from alltheir * relations ; numbers have been obli ged to leave , and wander through the country houselessandpenhiless , and have in some cases died , leaving families _withsut support . " Employment , cannot be- got for many ; miles round , and cash , can seldom , be got , stores being the mode of payment . The society , instead of being in a prosperous condition , ' as it would have been had the 'immense sums subscribed been properly laid out , we have reason to . believe is greatly in debt , both in England and America , and is only kept on foot by . means of false balance-sheets , and generally the management has been , and is sucb , that it will be impossible tb avoid Bankruptcy and niin to all connected with it . ' "
fJ Now we , your memorialists , humbly pray that the British public will take the above-named statemerits into consideration , and cause the affairs of the said society , tobe thoroughly investigated , nnd a hotter course ' of prbceedingsadbpted , in order to prevent our fellbw-couhfrymen ' from being duped , as we have been , by being ' - caused to break up their homes and quit their native land to be thrown destitute upon a strange , country without the means bf extrication .. '" .... " . ; '' And your memorialists , as in duty bound , will everpray . "' ' _, '• ' '"
Rusishhent Of Dbath Wi Burhwo.—-Your Cor...
rusisHHENT of Dbath wi Burhwo . — -Your correspondent , E . S . 6 . W . gives an account of a woman burnt for the _murder of her husband in 1783 , and asks whether there is any other instance of the , kind inthe latter part of the last century . I cannot positively answer this query , but I will state a cireumstaricbthat occurred to myself about . the year 1788 . Passing in a hackhey-cdach up tile Old Baijey to West'SmithfieW ,. I saw , the unquenched embers of afire _ofposite , to % fgate ; on my alighting I asked the coachman ' . ' '' What ' . ' was that tire in the Old Bailey , over which the . wheel of your carriage passed ? " " _Ob _/ _sir , "he replied , "theyhave been burninga woman for murdering ber husband . " . Whether he spoke the truth or not I do not know , biit I received it , at the time as truth , and . remember the impression it made on me . It is , perhaps , , ?? well ' tb state that there , were some fifteen to twenty persons standing around , the smouldering embers at the time I _assed . _^ -A _' ofw and Queries .
p New : Apr , _REtAiiNO to Pabish _MEEnsos . —An act of parliament has just come into force ( 13 & 14 Vibt ., c . 57 , ) by which the desecration of churches , in holding parochial meetings , can be prevented . It is declared that the _holdingof vestry or other parochial meetings ' in the _parish church or chapel , or in the ' vestry room attached , is productive of . great scandal to religion , and ot , hcr ; great inconvenience . The Poor taw . Commissioners ave now empowered , iipoh the application of churchwardens , Ac , of ariy parish where the population exoeeds 2 ; 000 , to mako an order to enforce this act , and on the expiration of twelve months , certain _. m . _eetmgs _. connectea with _neiu
parisb matters are to be prohibiten irom _dciuk , _except'ih ' _cases 'bf urgency , and' then with the previous sanction of the 'Poor law Commissioners . Places may be provided and money borrowed , to be bharged . on the poor rates' for the purpose of httmg up meeting rooms , & c „ . for the transaction of paro-Chial _business . / . , ¦ ¦• • • - ¦"' - _«' '¦ ' ' " ' ' CioSWO THE AcCOWrANT . GBNEBAI . S P *? FICB IN BASKKirpfcr .-On Saturday last a notice _wasissued byorderof the Lord Chancellor , thatthe office of the Accountant-General ih Bankruptcy will _^ e closed from the 22 nd instant till the 12 thbf Ootober next _. h ' oth days _inclusive ; and during . the : i « W . ai no dividend wwryantii Trill _IjalBStied , ' , . _„ _.,.- _] ' < _Z-.. Z
Cilm Rs ; ^: C0wby And ^ S
cilm ; _^ : C 0 WBY AND _^ _S
« 5 _? V _^ ° _^ 5 _<> 8 K » _-We earnestly call your attenmou to the following address and propositions to SL _A ° T ? one genera ' ' - « e foncyand figure hi / t _?^« DhT » believing it is the onl y means we _ua-se of _gmng expression to our wants and feelings . _-.-ine . trade in which we have been brought iiphn ° _S _u h m have _beiJn t 8 U 8 bt to xe ] ytor _** * iT 8 linpod , has . _vmdergone various changes ' this last twenty _yeara . and ihe working classes have been _caueu upon to make heavy sacrifices / either in _accumulated expenses , in additional labour , ' or in _diannished wages . And these changes have _^ driven us t o , greate r exertions to , maintain our position . _»^ _w ° " _^ _' _^ _*' . _ded t 0 " « hoars of . toi ) , and broUght toi „ 8 _jd . the earlier labours of ' his cniidren , tqmake up in , some measure fnr _whatht .
_ , J the * ntro < _iuctwn of some new pracfice . n _^ T the 80 Urce of a 11 wealth , it is _indispensable that an equitable distribution of profits should take place , so that , each _ an shall be rewarded according to his industry . _! . _' ' Bat sa < jh _W _' n _^ _w _° e the _caae unless you unite in one common bond of brotherhood to protect your ahour- . vvhich is your property . Everything that " _» e mind of man can invent is done to protect the property of the rich , while yours is left _unprotected , and becomes a prey to the selfish and avaricious . . Our employers tell us they get little or no ! profit _"H-. _' . beir goods . We have only . to glance at | those colossal _eBtablishments ' now being built and already in full operation , to find an answer to such an
assertion . * W e bave no wish to prescribe , a maximum for the rich , ' bnt we do desire a minimum ,, for the labourer—that he shall , not be . reduced below the means of living , To that class of men denominated undertakers , ' we say , , " Con B ' ider . these questions ; abandon that _aristberatic feeling , aiid ' unite witb your fellow-men . Your ruin is still pending , by the further application of machinery . " ' ' j Some suggest the . propriety of petitioning the government to tax machinery . ' To such we say , it would not mitigate the evil , but rather aggravate it , as all taxes are paid . by labour . - •¦¦¦¦ .
We venture to suggest to the trades the necessity of the application of land—tb the machinery made-idler—and the principle of applying machinery for the benefit—instead as now—against the workman . Some may say . it cannot be done . Bui to that numerous class of weavers that have looms of their own , we say it " can be done . "We wilt suppose a case , and it is not improbable that a manufacturer required a hundred hands to work tenhoiirs a day to _. supply bim , with goods , and that he was to prepare machinery , that would do as much' work withfthe aid . of ten , men , as . the hundredidid , it would thus throw ninety out of employ tp become competitors in the labour market , and form : a reserve for ihe masters to fall back oh' in reducing wages . But if the workmen were to become co .
partners in thelnacbihery , it would keep „ the : bundred on , and suppl y as many goods by working one hour in theday . The same principle would apply to a thousand or a hundred thousand . Then machinery would be a blessing instead of a curse . You have knowledge , ingenuity , and Industryunion and co-operation will furnish the means . If thiswas donefit . would change individual competition ; into brotherly love , and turn despair into a bri ght future . If you love your homes—your ; families—consider this question . By union you would dispel tyranny , by _cooperation you would improve your social condition . It is said that the school of adversity ia the school of wisdom , and , surely we are in that school , and it is time we became united in the wisdom of warning those who hold tbe helm of state , to have a care for the system wbich is
pulling one class of society down after another , aud if the labour question is not attended toj which is the foundation of all greatness , the superstructure must fall . In calling upon you to support the Protective Union , we have only to instance the great advantages of the Plain Weavers' Association , which has rendered good service to the trade , by protecting the interests of the honourable manufacturer and the weaver . ; We do so in full confidence that we shall not appeal in vain . We cannot think ; that a body so numerically large as that of the weavers of Coventry , can sink in the scale pi wretchedness and misery , without affecting in a great degree the town at large . _ -. _> . '• '' " ' !
We submit the leading objects of the Union for your consideration , which were adopted at a meeting of weavers from various districts on July 26 th , 1850 , at the _Oltl Mitre , Much Park : street : — ' , ' l . ~ To remodel thtt Figure Weavera' Association , so as to embrace the weavers engaged ia every department of tbe fancy and figure trade of Coventry . 2 . —That the name shall be the " Coveptry Fancy and Figure Weavers' Protective Union . " _thejprin . ci _plcsof justice to be maintained both to the manufacturer and the weaver . \ " " '' ' ' " 3 . —That the customary prices paid . by the trade for fancy , ribbons ,, either in the plain or fi gure looms , shall be the guide in all disputes . ;
4 _,-rIn the event of any new nature of work being introduced , the Committee shall , in conjunction with the employer , fix as fair price bas possible as is consistent wiih the circumstances , so as to allow a fair _remut- ' _eratiou for the expense and , trouble of the weaver . ; . " . __ . ' . \ 5 . —Any weaver thinking be ought to _haveimore for making any pattern he is engaged on , and does not feel able to defend his own . case , shall , by apply * ing to the Committee , have their advice and assistance . ' _'; . _| , , ¦ f „ ... [ , ' . ' " " ... _, '¦ ' 6 . —Under no circumstances are the Committee to countenance a strike , unless such strike is by the advice and consent bf the trade . Let truth be onr watchword—justice our shieldreason ahd argument our weapons—and then we 8 haU command respect .
. Brother Weavers , —We are actuated by no vain or ambitious motives in thus addressing you . If we succeed in arousing the dormant energies of some part of , the weavers , we shall have done something towards the dawn of that day whea—It is come—the glorious _timej f' ' . . ~ ; , , When the fetters of slaves shall burst ; And earth shall bo fair as Eden prime , ; And man shall bo free as the first .
Signed on behalf of the Committee , -,. W . Hosikr , General Secretary . Committee Room , Old Mitre . N . B . —the Committee request tbat every weaver will attend their district meeting , when a deputation from the Committee will attend , of which du « $ notice will be given ; .
Steamers W Ausiniwa.—The Following Extra...
Steamers w _AusiniWA . —The following extract ofa private letter from Sydney indicates an opening for thb ' _profUablo employment of sonie additjpnal steamers in New South Wales : — "Within th > last few days tho _Phasnix steamer has become a wreck in a southerly _galo , about five miles from 'the Cla- ' rence River . She now lies stranded . ' on " the beach high arid dry , _\ _and quito a wreck . ' j Her engines may be saved , and all her spars " and gear . Thus you seo we have lost the only steamer that plied on that important line , making an additional opening fbr ' a steamer of double the size and power ofthe Phamix , whicli , indeed , was never large enough for the trade . I intend , as soon as I have leisure , to get you all the particulars of the dividends and profits
now paid by the Hunter ' s River Company , and what the Phoenix was paying . There is the Port Philip and the Launceston line now only about a quarter supplied ; indeed , froni ten to twelve good steamers equal to the Shamrock , that is , about lib or ISOhorse power , and to carry from 200 to 300 tons of cargo , would . 'find ample employment aud capital profits oH . _cbe various lines now requiring steanior 3 both to the ; north and south . I wish the public iii London could be made acquainted with our wants iii this ' respect _/ fbr _' wo have no capital Hbre to build how steamers . "Oiir means of intercourse along the lines of coast and up our navigable rivers havo become so limited that many . , parts of this country aro nowleftihabeyance . " : ¦ . _- ! "' _" '
, _, Ceylon _ako tub MAun ' mus . —Sir George Anderson is appbinted Governor of Ceylon , and ii to bo succeeded iri the' government of the Mauritius by Mr . Hi _^ ginsqn _/ now _Governor-ih-Chief of the _^ beward Islands . ; Sir George Anderson has . earned his promotion by , the , nbility ,, wiih which Jie . has bon . ducted the government ' of the , Mauritius , where ; ho has effected a corisidcrablb veductibh'in' the oxpbh : _'dituvej' and introduced maiiy useful p ' ractioal re _^ , forma . _iv . Mr .: _Hijfginson was introduced into the public service b y Lord Metcalfo , and has proved himself worthy of his friendship , and . patronage . — Globe . " '[' . ' . ''
Woods _anh _Fonssis . — -The Right Hon . Thomas Francis Kennedy , Paymaster of Civil 'Service in IteU _ d ; hasbeen appointed _onoof the Commissioners of Woods , Forests , and Land Revenues , ' lithe rpbm of Alexander Milne ,. Esq ., . retired . We presume ' that , the transfer of so active . and useful a public' tier vast as Mr . Kennedy , from _the pffioe in Dublin ; has ' been made with a view to somo economical arrangements' in the _Payina ' st ' er _' s ' office there aa well-as the good of the department where bis ; services , will m _fRUlfftbe J »» _ue _ayailable , —Observer , f . _;(; ' "
Mvmm
Mvmm
Ftyrtto Kitefin Canton.—A Foreign Missio...
_Ftyrtto _KiTEfiN Canton . —A foreign missionary thus writes of kite flying in Canton : — " The sky is a universal flutter of kites . I counted this afternoon frbni iny window ninety-three , which were floated at various heights with great skill . Some represented hawks , and admirably _ftattated their _mancedyres in the air , poising themselves , and sailing , and darting ; gaudy butterflies floated around ; and dragons , formed of along succession * of circular kites , with a fiercehead , flew about the B _& y .- The Majority were of merely fanoiful shapes . Loud noise , like a wind instrument ; could be heard from them . ' 'The most amusing form was that of a large fish _; _-wbj 6 h > through the blue above , moved its tail and 'fins with a ludicrously natural effect ; Those , like ammakvare also fl » wnin paira , and made to fight . " ' '' ' ' :: ' ¦ _Tmractof eating strawberries , _sayg an eavinent medical _writerj cleanses the teeth and Bumsand
, purifies the breath . It _assista'digestion and fortifies the 8 tomach ; ' > and being of itself entirely ¦ pebble , never turns four or'undergoes fermentation . In many cases it Is positively medioaly removitig _rheainatic affections and other ' diseases arising from obstructions of the system" ' " ¦ ' ¦ ' . ' ¦¦ A _Wimbss who was examined before- a select committee of the House of Lords , respecting the manner in which a petition , purporting to be signed by " 19 , 000 " of the ratepayers of Liverpool , had been got up , confessed that" He had , upon one occasion , gone to a public bouse , where he had sat down and written about 300 ' of the signatures which first appeared attached to the petition . . "While he was at that publio house , three others of the _agents and himself had dipped themselves into a water butt , so that the committee , when they arrived at their place of assembly , should believe that they had been walking about all the day in _tlwrain . " ! . , -
One of Pate ' s alleged delusions was , that his bowels were full of bricks , and the doctor had not the skill to remove them . We _haveheard thata member of the British aristocracy , managing , his affairs with uncommon astuteness , and yet nnder the belief that be was constantly in that condition "in which ladies wish to be who love their lords . " A Ckrtain Irish attorney threatened to prosecute a Dublin printer for inserting the death of a living person . The menacer concluded with'tbe remark , "That no printer should , publish a death , unless informed of the fact by ihe party deceased . " " What would I like to have ? " said Mrs . Winblossom . " Why , a two-bushel basketfull of needles , and all of them ere needles worn clean up to the eyes
in making bags , and all tbem ere bags . chock full of dimuns . You wouldn ' t talk about Callyforny arter that . " ¦ ¦; . , ¦ " ; . _' ¦ ;;> ' : _¦ . A tale is told of a hypochondriac gentleman of rank and fortune in . Ireland , who ; fancies one bf his legs is of one religion and ¦ the other bf another . He not _unfrequejitJy puts one of his unfortunate legs outside the bedclothes to ; punish it for its religious errors . A Yankee _TiTtE . —A Yankee , whb found it uphill work to support himself and ; family on a small gravel knoll , which he hired in old [ Connecticut , turned his face , a little more than a ' year ago to the land of gold , exhorting bis wife to be of good courage in his absence , arid leaving his landlord minus a small amount ' of rent . ' After Working his passage to
San Francisco , he "footed it ?' - ' up to the mines , and commenced a course of digging , for ; which'his previous experience on the " aforesaid farm' abundantly qualified him . ' But he ' scon fonnd that the stream of _go'd flowed steadily from the mines to the sea boast , and that he could fill his bucket the easiest , and probably the soonest by tapping the current at San Francisco . He accordingly _"Treturned to the fatter place , where he looked about for a location Finding an unoccupied piece of ground , he put down stakes , stretched a ' rope round it , ' and pitching his tent in the enclosure , commenced trade . Presently an old settler came along , and accosted him rather roughly , as follows : " Hallo , stranger ' , what are you doing on this ground >" " Selling licker and
small notions . •" Anything yew want tew buy ?" "Well , you take it mighty coolly ; this is my property , and you most leave it . " " We'll see about _tbatj" replied the Yankee . "I ' ve he ' arn that ' possession isnine pints of the law "' % t Now , I ' ve got my title in thatway , and unless yew can show a better , yew may '¦ ¦¦ be gbodJookih ' , but yew can ' t come in , ' as the _circusfolks _say . " The propertyowner attempted to argue'tbe case ,, but the Yankee stuck to his text , and carried the day ; being allowed to remain in "possession" until the rigbts _. of real estate-proprietors ' should be ' better vindicated by public legislation . ' Three or . four months ago ,
finding _himself the owner of- a - handsome fortune , he began to feel longings for home ar . d family , and having settled _U'V his business _^ he sold th e _riglit to his _location for 7 _j 000 dollars . When the new tenant came to take possession , he asked for a deed of the property . '' Never'yew mind a " deed "' said the Yankee ; " jSbsiistivn ; is nine pints of the law , and a good title enough ; hereabouts . ' ' " . ' . _" ; _UAOY TALK OF _** A WAG O _^ * Wa . _'I At the Carlisle . County Court last week , George Finlay ,. a sharp Httte ; fe \\ ow , ; liying in * ' The Fleet , " Caldewgate , by profe . sibn a weaver , was summoned _, by Mr . _Kentiie , a watchmaker and draper , for refusing to pay the balance due for a clock-rprice 303 . '
PuwiiFr : I put tbe clock up in his house , _^ when he was away at theharvest , arid when he returned _, he promised to pay me . He has paid me 16 s . on account , but threatens to _pfty ' no more . .. - '• ' ¦ Jud ge : What havo you to say to tbat ?—Defendant : Och , I'Utcllyburhonour all _' aboutit .. - ! Judge : Very well '; goon . * ' ' DKFKNniNi ;; He came to my house when I was away at . the harvest ' , ' and put up a worthless old * ' wag o' th * wa against my wife ' s consent . ( Laughter . ) ' ¦ ' _Junos : How could he do that ? Defendant :
Och , but he did , yer honour ; he put ber up—he forced her up . ( Renewed laughter . ) JuDG * : Have you paid hiin-16 s ; on account ? Defendant : Jist stop a bit , and I'll tell you all about it . He says to my wife , " _Jii » t * let her stop up till he comes home , and then'we'll see ' about her . " Well , yer honour , ; I came 'home ; and tbere she was sticking against the wall . " ( Laughter . ' ) My wife told me all ab'bht it ; and he came down thehexi week . I sajs to hini _; " I won ' t have _her—P won't have her 1 V "Why won ' t ye have her ' ?• " ' say s _^ h ' e . " Because , " says I ' " , '' she sometimes goes too fast ; and sometimes too slow . " ( _Langhter . ) And then , yer honour , she lost a stroke ; - ( Laughter . ) f , ¦¦¦ ¦< Judge : Then , did you return her ? Defendant : Turn her ! ' ( Roars of laug hter ; iff which the judge joined heartily . ) JcDGk : Did you return the . clock to hiin ? Defendant : Och , jist stop a bit , and I'll tell you all about
it . ' ( Laughter . ) "Oh , but , " says he , "if she dosent suit , TH take her down again and put up-a fine cased clock . " Och , he did , yer honour . ( Laughter . ) Sol paid oh till my neighbours told me he was dbly sayiner that as an excuse , a , nd th ' atif I paid liim anymore I would never ' get another clock . "Then , " says I , " devil another fartbiiig Til' pay him , till'I get another clock . " ( Laughter . ) ' Well , yer honour , he comes down and he says " Why won ' t you pay ?" "Pay ! " says I , "I'm going to pay no more till I geta better clock . " "T _'^ - _^ _-. wid ye , " says beflourishing about my floor ( for he was drunk at the time ) _-f _- "If ' you don ' t pav , I'll summons you up . " " Suwimons away , " says " I , " for I'll never pay another farthing bf tUe— -old ' wag o' th' wa . " ( RoaiS of laughter . ) " ' ' " ' _! Juugb : Well , what became of her ? Defendant : Och , she ' s yonder sticking yet . ( Renewed laughter . ) But I'd have served him right if I'd done its Will Pitts did . ¦• • ¦ • _¦'•' ¦ - _' - " ' , ; . _ _ ....
Judgk : Howdid he do ? Defendant' : When Will got his ; yer ' honour , he puts her in the" stuff shop " for five shillings—[ . laughter)—so " my friend " there ( plaihtiff )' was glad to release her , 'or he weuld have lost her a ' togetherf ( Renewrd laughter ) . ' _PtiiNTiFF attempted to speak here , but _Defend am burst upon him with— " You are . as bi g a _rbgne as ever put a hat oh a head . " ( Roars of laughter' ) '"¦'•* ' - ' ' ' l •''' - '" , , , 'lhe . Judge decided that'if _parties' would go and traffic with women in this sort of way in the absence of their husbands they should have payment but in very small" sums . —Defendant to ' pay' sixpence per _wrekv- _^ -Carlisle Patrio _fy '" '' _' •¦' : ' ' AN'OiiATOniii the Houseof _^ Commons' was describing the inordinate love of praise w hieh characterised an opponent . " The honourable Member , " said'hb " is ' so fond of beihg praised , tha _t'I really believebo would bo content to give up the g host , if it wcrbb ' ut . _tbllook . np and read the stone-cutter ' s puff on his . tombstone ? . !; ' .. f
. '' Books of dovotion nnd of gallantry are sold m aboiutan ' _equjilproportioh—the only difference be-. ; tweehftheinHs this J , more peop le read books of gallantry . ' . tKen ; Viuyf tliein ; ' and 'hipre people , buy books bfdeV 6 _UonVthAafread ' t )) en ) , ''r , ' . _'' ' . '" . f" , ' . ' ¦ '' . I wisii jou woiild pay . a _, littlo attention , _'siri ' . ' _.- _'cxclaimed . a . stage-manager " : to a careless aotor .. "Well , sir , so I am paying as little as I Cflb , sir' " was ; the ciilm reply . " -- ' Woman . —A-woman is the most _iaeonsistent compound of _obstiaacyfnndf self-sacrifice . , that I am ac _quaintcd with .: She . would permit her head to be cut off for tho sake _< of her husband , by tho
Paris'tan oxecutionersV but not the hair upon it ; she ' can' also deh y herself ' niuchfor'the sake of others , hht _" nothin ' g ' . fov : hei ; .. ow ; _she is _capiCplo of dopriving'herself of three nights sloop , but for thof sake of her own _higntVirest she cannot broak off _oneminute sooner her nap but of bed . Though neithoy-spirits hbv butterflies have a stomach they cannot possibly eat less than ; a woman going to . a ball or to , the altar , or who is cooking for guests ' , "but ' _slibuld _the doctor and her body be the only justf cause and impediment ' why she should not' eat an Esau _' _rme _ssi she devours . if directly . " ¦ The" self-sacrifice : of ¦ nieii '• shows itself in bxact cotitr & vies- . — Je an Paul Richer . < ' _- ' 1 ¦ ;
Tat . Dirboior op A Bank . —A . Yankee paper says in , an qbituary notibe that ' ¦ the . deceased had been for several , years _ibankflirebtbrrnotwithstanding which . he died _, a , ' 0 _bfis ' tian anU : _tfBiferga . _lly / re ' _ii peoted , ' L ¦ - ' " ¦ " ¦ _•' iVa .:: _;' _- " :: " '
? 1 L£F Ysi0ai' Msqfalipications , 6enekativb Kcapaoity , And Impediments To Mabbmoi Thirty^Brst Fldition , Illustrated With Twenty-Six Anatomt. N * Jpsrinngs On Steel, Enlarged To 196 Pages, Nriea
_? 1 _L _£ F YSI 0 AI' MSQFALIPICATIONS , 6 ENEKATIVB _KCAPAOITY , AND IMPEDIMENTS TO _MABBMoI Thirty _^ Brst _fldition , illustrated with _Twenty-Six _Anatomt . n * _JpSrinngs on Steel , enlarged to 196 pages , _nriea
Ad00319
Tf ; SHEIfT FBIEND ; of th « _«? _w cal w _? ° ? _e-mauation and physicald _« t & 4 m ™ _Af _^ wai I' Moessl _ra _indalgence ' _theconse _Sr _^ _enUtTStraled _' h ' v ? _^ _^ _f _^ _' _™ and Co ., 19 , Berners-street , Oj & rL tf / _et _Tnnflm ; Published by the authors ' , _.-md _solSltrw i _Taternoster-row ? Hannay , 63 , and Sanger 158 _nftJ _^^ _H Starie _; _SVT _' _ehtorn _^ _Weet _. n _^ _mK _Leaaenhnll-street , London ; J . ' and II . Ra _ _, ™ Leithwaifc , Edinburgh ; D . Campbell , _Arjryll-street Oln _^ _gow ; _JiFneslfy , _Lord-streot , and T . _Ke-rton , ChuX street , Iirerpool ; E . Ingram , _Jfaritet-place _, ilanche 3 ter . PartthePirst Is dedicated to the consideration ofthe anatomy and physU ology of theorgans _wlrich are directly or indirectly engaged iu the process of reproduction . It is illustrated by » Gi coloured engravings . ¦ y- ¦¦ Fart the Second .
Ad00320
IMPORTANT . . Established Fifty Years . THE great _euccess which has attended Messrs . PBBDE in their treatment ot all those Diseases arising from ' ia 31 > _sretio ' n or excess , and the number of cures performed by them , is a sufficient proot ' of their skill and ability in the treatment of those complaints . Messrs . _Pbewb , Surgeons & c ., may be consulted as usual from 9 till 2 , and 6 till 10 , iri all stages ofthe above com * plaints , in the cure of which they have been so pre-emi . nently successful , from their peculiar method of treatment , when all other means hare failed , which has secured''for them the patronage mid gvatiiudo of manj thousands who have benefited by their advice and medi-
Ad00321
EXTRAORDINARY SUCCESS OF THE _UEW REMEDY !' . ' Which has never been known to fail . —A cure effected or the Money returned . PAIN'S IN THE BACK , GRAVEL , LUMBAGO . RHEU MATISM , 60 UT , DEBILITY , ST 1 UCTURE , GLEET , & c .
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), Aug. 17, 1850, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_17081850/page/3/
-