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. ¦' ( '•¦ ' ; j • ¦ ¦ -'; ¦; ; Price Is. lid. per box. ¦: . rr . HIS excellent 1 farhily PILL,, is » medicjne 11'' : /of lohr-tried ' efficacy for correcting all disorders'of the
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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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stomach ) and bowels , - tho i Commpn symptoms of wincn are co * tivenes 8 , flatuency , spasms , loss of appetite , sick headache , giddiness ,. senseof fullness after meals , dizziness or tho ojeBV drbwiiness , ' and pains in ' the stomach andbowels ' , indiff ? stion , producing a torpid state of the Jiver , and a consequent inactivity of the : bowels , causing a disorganisation of every function of tHefranie , wfll , in this inostiexc ' ellent preparation , by a little perseverance , he effectually . ; removed . . Twoor tlirce doses will convince the afnicted : . of its salutary effects ' . ' The stomach ' will speedily regain' its
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: ¦;;! ' •;; , » .:. ; ' pjiDEU ' KOYAri rATROIfAG . B . ' - '" fi ^ \ '" ' ^ . : ' FERFEC ^ ' FREMoii ' from ^ COUGHS fy , ffn <; i ~ \ . ¦ Minutes after I 7 se , . . " ,. ;¦ . Instant Relief andRapid Cure of Asthmas , Cdnsiimp ;; tion , Coughs , ; Colds ,, and all Disorders of the Breath and Lungs , arc insured by . : ¦ , > y , , ' DR . LOCOCK'SPULMONIC ^ APERS ; . - -The extraordinary powers of this invaluable Medicine ' a ' renow proved by a' mass of evidence and testimonials , which must convince the most sceptical , tliat for all disorders ot the , Breath , and Lungs , it i p the most ieft ' ectu ^ l reiricclj' eri ? r discovered . ' —TJie following nrc a feyv . testimohials' ^ reoe ' rved'hy " tho Proprietor , many hundreds of which may be had fi-om cvery ; Agentin : tlie Kingdom : — : "
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. r If . Mankind are liable to 911 c fltsease more tiiari ariotlier , or if there are any particular affections of thij human body we-requiretohave a ; knowleigeof : ov « r . therest ; it is certainly that class of disonlers ' treated of in the new and improved edition of-the "Silent Friend . " . Tho ' authors , iii thus sending - ' forth'to the world ¦ another' edition of theii medical work * . cannot irefrain from expressing theu * gratification ^ at the / continual success attending their ' efforts ; which , cbmbined with the ¦ assista » ce pf - medicines , exclusively of their , own preparation , - have been the happy causo of muigatHig « nd . averting the . mental and . pliysicalmiseries attendant on those peculiar disorders thus proving the'fact , must al |
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. ¦ ,- " : J : ^ M ^ & ^ t ^ a A \ . ^ M ^« . M—————»»——¦ . ' ' " I-~~* - . H&T 3 % J&if { e ~ ihir& \ ¦ Contains , an accurate description , of the diseases caused bi infectio ^ raha ^ the L alM 8 «> f ' nlei ' cury ; primary andse . condary « ymptoms , - « rnptions ef the 1 skin , sore throat , inflammation of the ^ eyee , . ^ sefle ( of i « ie bones , gonBrrhaia , r iee ' t . ' Btriature" ; ' tie ., are shown to depend on thig cauib , Their treatment iB-fally described in this section . The ef . fects « f neglect , either in thejrecogniti » n of disease or in tho . treatmcnt , ar « shown to . be . tho prevalence of the virus iff the system , which ' sooner or later will show , itself in one of the f « rm » alrflaar mentioned , , and / entail ? distoss in it 8 mist frightful shape , no ^ onlyoajtheindividual hunself , but ' also in thV offspHng . Advice for the treatment of nil thege diseases and their consequences is' tendered-ih this sectiotis which , if duly followed up , ca « not ; fail lia-effectiag a cure , Tliis partis illustrated by seT » nteen coloured engravings . ¦;¦ : ' . ;^ i [ Y'fj f r , j f . 'Part ^ Fourth ¦ '¦ ••' Jjli . ' „ Treats ofthe pfeTention , of diaeas ^ bylarslmple applicatio n by which " the dahgor of infection is obviated .. Its action is ' simple / but sure , fit ' acts , with the virus' chemically , and destroys its iprww ; on-the system ' . ¦ This important part ofthe . work . should ., he ,. readby , every youngmstaeDter % into life . V / . ' '' . " . ' '' . '" . " . ' ! ¦ " . ' ' ' ¦ " i
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GOOD HEALTH , - ; GOOD , SHRITS , ' AND LONG ¦; . LIFE - SEOUIlED ;) By ; THAT : HIGHLY E « j . ' . . TEEMED EOPIJIiAll ' i REMEDY , - .... ., \ P ; AiR R ' : Si r ; ll ^ IfP'E-:: P IrL L S . " ^ ¦ . - ' : l : ~~~ ^ 111 ' ' ' 11 "' - " *~ T . ' ' r i
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¦•! . - •" . ' i \ ¦ ¦ ' I T 0 U MAY . BE ^ CURBD YET , . ¦;; HO L L O-W-AX' S OI ; N TMENT . .. -. Cure of ¦ Rheumatism andRkeiimatic Oout . Extract « f a Letter from Mi . Thomas Brunton , Landlord of ' tlie' Waterloo Tavern , Coatham , Yorkshire , late of tbe ! LUft Guards , dated September 2 Bth , 1848 / > : j Sib 1 ?—For a longtime Iwas amaityr . to Kheumatism and Rheumatic Gout , and for , ten weeks previous to using your medicines I was so bad as not' to be able to walk . I had tried doctoling '' and ' . mBdicines of every kind , but all to n » avail , indeed I daily got . worse , and felt that I must siortly'die ; "Prom seeing your remedies advertised in the paper I take in , I thought I would give them a . trial I did so . I rubbed the ointment . in as directed , 'and kept cabbage leayos to tlie parts thicldy spread with it , ' and took the Pills niglit and morning . In three weeks I was enabled to walk about for an hour or two in the day with a stick , and in seveuweeks I xould go anywhere without one . I am
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. " : ¦ : ¦\ - : - - ' ^ mNCE- v ; : ; : ^; ; k ^ On ; WedneEd ^ : Ml ^ Denagronze proposed an amendment to the ministerial b . 1 aff ^ tmg the priinarv instructors , proposing to ; place them uuder the care of ihe ac ademy rrctors . This amendment was rejected , as also one by M . ; Nettement , substituting for academy rectors the committees of arrondissement . . . M . de Montigny then moved his amendment , to the effect that appointment of primary teachers should be left to the communal councils , the prefet preserving the right to-dismiss ? - He added a . clause fixing the duration of the law to six month ? . M . Mole supported M . de Montigny ' s amendment . pother orators followed , " after which the first article of the bill , as amended by M , de Mcmtigny , wai adopted . :
: The bill presented the previous day by the minister of justice , for increasing the pay of r . on-commis sioneH officers !» y 20 c . per day , was referred by the-Assembly to the committee on the biwiyet . In the course of the iiiting ef this day , however , on the motion of M . de Mamay , who , being struck with tbe political importance of the bill , thought that it should be examined by a special committee , the Assembly came back on its decision aud referred ii to the bureaux . ¦ Another amendment , by M . Salmon , was carried also , by which the prefet , before cashiering a teacher , must take the advice of the commits d ' -itrondissement . However , as the ' Debats' truly Bays , tlieprefet will not be obliged to follow the ad-• ricegiven . _ . . ...
On Thursday evening , the 5 th clause of tne Schoolmasters'Bill was proposed as follows : — 'No teacher when dismissed caiiiopsn a private school in the commune in which he had extrcistd the functions from which he had bfen removed . ' The wording of this article excited a great uproar amongst the Monntain , and the most energetic epithets were applied ty M . Beogrest , who , in ihe' name of the Committee , proposed to add the wards ' nor in the adjoining commune . ' The article was voted—ayes , 338 ; hoes . 255 ; majority lor the clause , 83 . Paris , FRiDAY .-This day the bill for placing the primary instructors under the despotic , contro ] of the ¦ government precepts was finally adoptedthe numbers being for the bill 3 S 5 ; -against 223 ; majority for the bill 162 . , . : i
The following is from the ' Patrie ' : — ' We learn with the most lively satisfaction that the government has just decided , ia a Council of Ministers , thai it will immediately sead an expedition to La PJata .- It was positively stated at the Aasembly that the squadron would be composed of one or two frigates and several small steamers . The expedition ¦ will be' p laced under the command of Admiral P abourdien , who will unite to the command full diplomatic pjwers . The effective strensth of the trcop 3 to be sent , will be 2 , 000 men , under the : immediate command of Colonel LannesdeMottebello of the 7 th chasseurs . ¦ - ¦ ¦ •'¦> : ¦
1 La Presse' contradicts the statement ixrice repeated of ' La Republic , ' that the celebrated Madame George Sand has been ordered by the police to quit Paris . It expresses its convictions that ii such a fact occurred , Madame George Sand would not fcil to refuse obedience to so arbitrary a
measure . ; The' Presse , ' in its number of tbis day , says the ' JlMiiteur , ' — ' Publishes an article' eutilled Inconsistencies / in which it copies the entire article of the ' Reforrae' of the 2 d December , for which the editor of the latter waV sentenced , two days ago , by the jury , to fine and imprisonment . Tbe ' Presse' haling printed the article apart from the repoit of the trial of the ' Rsforme , ' inserted in its number of yesterday , the Attorney of the Republic ordered the 'Prssse' of this day to be seized in its office and at the Post-office . '
• The * Presse , * says its editor , — ' During Van -fifteen years it bas existed was ' ¦ ' never the objeci of any seizure . To-day it was seized by order of the Attorney-General Baroche , who no doubt is anxious to summon again before him M . Emite de Girardin . Why was our number seiz-d ? We did not even take the trouble of'inquiring , for we are as certain of our tirinciples as we are of our intentions . The ' Pr ^ sse ' already suffered two
persecutions , one in June , 1847 , and the other in June , 1 S 48 . Their result is kn-jirn . E'gbt months after tha editor of the ' Presse' was summoned to the bar of the Chamber of Peers , in June ,. 1847 , M . fiebert , Keeper of the - Seals , was obliged , on tbe 24 th of February , to fly in all haste and seek refuge in a foreign country . ¦ Seven months aiter the Presse' was suspended , in June , 1848 , General Cavaignac was condemned by the ballot of the 10 th of December . *
• This , evening , ' adds the 'Presse , '— At this Passage of the Opera , tbe Five per Cents ., which lad closed a £ 94 f . 25 c fell forty-five centimes en the report of the seizure of . the' Presse . ' This measure , which nobody could account for , was generally regarded as a political event . ' It is announced that the elections to replace the representatives convicted before the High Cjurt of Justice at Versailles are to take place on the 3 d of January . ¦ ¦ ¦ M . Vratee Durrieu , editor of the ' Temps , ' was condemned by default by the Court of A ^ siz ^ . of Paris on Wednesday to imprisonment for two years , a nd to pay a fine of 5 , 000 f ., for having published 8 letter addressed by M . Yanthier from Versailles to the electors of the Cherl
Ramon de la Sagra , an eminent writer on politi al economy , and who has lately attracted attention in France uy aTfork on ihe anarchy of the epoch , was sometime ago expslled from the French territory . Thinking that the causes of this measure had passe- ; away , he set out a lew days ago for Paris , but * ras Stopped in Bayonne , and , in pursuance of a telegraphic despatch , conducted again to the Spanish frontier . " . . " Tbe cold is extremely severe in the south of Prance . . 'For nianj years , ' says the ' Semaphore ' — 'We do not remember a more rigorous winter . The thermometer constantly ranges several degrees below the freezing point . At sea the north wind blows with great violence and prevents the arrival at Marseilles of a number of vessels from the
colonies . We have been informed that several had been obliged to put into the ports of Spain . Oihers are probably detained in the Straits . It is to be boprd that the first easterly wind will enable them to reach their destination . We are happy to announce that , notwithstanding the inclement weather which lias prevailed in the Mediterranean , our maritime correspondence records no other wreck than that of the Sollecito , an Austrian brig , on the coast o ' Sardinia , Our intelligence , ' moreover , indicates that countries generally less exposed than ours to the inclemency of the winter are cruelly tried this year . Letters from Italy received by the last packet mention that the country round Rome is entirely covered with snow . Our poor soldiers quartered at Tiroli and Civita Veeehia suffer sadly from the rigorous cold . ' - \ ¦
Some curiosity has been excited by the statement that a deputy of the Mountain , named Pradie , has tbi 3 day laid on the table of the Assembly a proposition , n questing the Assembly to adopt a measure of legal resistance , in the event of any coup d ' etat Tjeing attempted by the President of the Republic ; Paris- Monday Evening . —The correspondent of the 'Morning Chronicle' writes under theabovfdate as follows . —The « Reforme' 3 id not . appear yesterdayrnor hasit done bo to-day . The mystery is explained in a letter addressed by the editor to some of . the newspapers . 'At eleven o ' clock on Saturday eight , when the paper was in type and ready to go to press , a hnissier enters the
printingflfiice ana summons the printer before the tribunals for pfrin ting the' Reforme' at a time when the caution-money of the paper was not complete . ! What was to be done . The public offices were closed , and the money' could not ; consequently be paid . The following ! day was Sunday , when they ; w ere also closed ; and the result is that by this manoeuvre the government prevents the publication of tbe'Reforme ' for two days at leas ! . ' Withoat giving any opinion as to the politics of toe Reforme , " every one ¦ will see haw grossly yiolent and unjust the ' cdndBct of the ^ uthorHies in this case has been . The state-»« nti 3 not givan by the Red Republican papers but ^ J . ' Siecle / a paper as well known for its
moderation S 3 for it 3 ability . After stating that M . ^ ieyy , iihe printer , deb a large establishment , in which he pirate : no less than sixteen different newspapers of all shades and opinions ( including the * Moniteur / 4 ?* ™ * ? ' ; ? ' Credit / the Siecle , ' and several of the : mcSderate papers , as well as the ' Reform , ' ) it iaai ^ 'At eleren Vclock oil Saturday ; night . It Ew / rrmyea . Mikssighafion to appear on the 16 " L cf Januiry . ' before the tribunal of Correctional Po'ice ; : where- he ; will probably ; see himself conde-ared to a month ' s imprisonment and a fine o one thousand francs , for publishing the Reforme ' triftout that paper haying its cautioa-money ' cflmp ^ ete . Wha facts ? On the lOt ^ of Jan .
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the' Reforme' had its caulion-money complete ^ On the 11 th a fine of one -. thonjuuid--. francari is | blaimed , and paid ciut of * ihat 3 ; cautipn % pfi ^ f 8 nd / , on the 12 th , % &t % n ^ ce , ^ npm ^ ut ^ , diEcial or non-official no ^ fication , tie } printeriis / prosecuted because . b ! e ' haiipnnifd . a ^ aper ^ lwithput ^ cautionraoney . ^ F ron ? thisl fc would appear ^ that hencefdrth it will " be necessary , before a printer consents to print a journal , that a cerUfieate should be presented to him every day fr om the Minister of the Finances , aptnnwledcin ? that the caution-money is comp lete .
If tbe printer does not do so , he exposes ' hunself jn-? wfihlj'loTfflonWs '" iinpnsw ¥ rHent '' and ^ 'fine ^ o"f one thousand francs . - A month ' s imprisonment for an offence which be did ' not intend to commin and which he committed withonthis knowledge-Llnese are monstrosities which ought to strike the minds o all hon ? St men , and we hope that-there are sun voices in the press to brand them ; ; It w not- a question of party , but of fairness , and we have suf . ficient esteem for our adversary to believe that they will protest against such acts of violence . The following are ? the introductory : remarks of , the
• Siecle ' :- /¦¦ : .. ¦¦ ; ¦" ; , ' , . . When certain journals accuse us of calumniating the government we are obliged to quote facts , which , unfortunately , al Way s go further than the most-exaggerated suppositions of party spirit . M . 'Barocbe has jii ' st added a new article to the thousand laws Against " the liberty of ihepreBS ; never had the fertile spirit of the procureurs-genereaux of the K"Stora noil , never had the ; Belard 3 , ' the Marchangys , the Jacquinots de . Pampeiuna , the : Broes , and / many others ; never bad the ' Persils , thePlougoulms , and the most fanatic men " of repression , the imprudence to interpret the laws or the press and on printing , as M . liaroche now pretends to ; do . Yesterday
morning the 'Reforme 'did not" appear .. Wehave received tbe following letter on this subject from the Reformfe' office : — 'Last : nig hf , at . eleven o ' clock , our printer , came to inform us that he bad received a summons from , the Parquet , and that , consequently , it was impossible for him to print our journal . The composition was terminated , but , notwithstanding the 'Reforme' could not appear-this morning , nor will it do so to-morrow . The moment chosen by the government to shackle our publication was skilfully chosen " ; it was very well ; known that some men " sought at this , moment to substitute
an intrigue for the traditional ; policy ' of the' Refonne ; ' that on Sunday the . ministerial offices were ctosed , and-that it would be impossible for us to regularise our position towards' the finance ; there was , therefore , " a ; certainty of stopping for one or two days : a : journal which the ' royalists-pursue' with implacable . animosity . ; However this may be , we shall defeat their calculations , and we hope . that the pi . triotism . ef our . subscribers will . not fail . us on this occasion ; to seizures may succeed measures of intimidation ; " we shaiinot stop before tbe . exigencies of the treasury , any more than we hayeyieldsd to the rigour of co ndemnatiohs . ' , > - .. ,. ; ¦
TufiSDAY .- ^ -The ; discussion ; ' of the organic laws on public instruction , commenced yesterday , ' when M . Banheleray" St . Hilaire , spoke )( hisf opposition lirthe-bttl ; ' His speech occupied the entire sitting .., Wednesday . — Yesterday M . Barthelemy ' , St . HilaiM ^' resumed and- concluded his speech . The Bishop of LaRgas followed : ; in ' - support of tbe bill . Victor Hugo followed ^ 'an d , ¦ according to the Times , ^ made a- . violent-speech in opposition to the bill ; and its ] delivery , z w bich was applauded with frenzy , by the ; Mountain , was accompanied by eq'ially . strong gesticulations . His attack on the
clergy , and on those wiiom he accusecL-of . wishing to establish the Inquisition , was received with applause : l . y ; the Left , and with indignation by the Right . 'Much : tumult prevailed ; during the latter part of his speeclj . and the speaker . was more than once reminded by the President that he was losing sight of the main object of discussion , and was only indulging in bitter personalities , ; and most insulting expressions . His final announcement and vete against the biil was accompanied by great violence of gestures , and was applauded loudly by the Mountain . The adjournment of the debate tcok place at . a quarter to seven o ' clock . ¦
- GERMANY . ; - - - ; The 'CologneGazette' of . the 10 th inst . contains a telegraphic " message from Berlin , dated Wednesday at noon , stating ihat the . royal message . had just been delivered to tbe ; . Chatnb ' ers . ' The message ; expresses the hope that . the revision of-the constitution willhe concluded , andvthat the Upper Chamber will be definitel y constituted during the presen t session , in order that the bath ' , tir the cohstUution may be taken by his Majesty . ; ; . ; ' - A memorial ; was also presented to the . Chambers containing the alterations whichj the ministry propose to make in the constitution . ; A peerage is proposedfor the Upper Chamber , but the Second Chamber is to possess the initiative in all money matters , as in Eng ' aud . .-...- ' ' - . ; ¦ ... '¦ ' ¦' . ' "
DDni r \ T ' T rrio ' rni .. ' .. ii i- •_¦ • . !_ BERLIN , JanV 12 . ' — The cold has set in with intense " severity . We have had the thermometer down to fourteen Reattaur for the last t . wo days in sheltered places , arid as low as seventeen to eighteen in opea spots exposed ; . ' tp ithe sharp east wind . The land is , however , well covered in all parts by a phick coating of snow ; . The- accumulation of ice upon the Vistula , > .: Oder , Warthe ' , and other rivers , leads to apprehensions of serious misfortunes when the ^« ealher _ breaks . ;
The discussions in . the fractions of the Chambers of Friday and Saturday on the Royal message have been very storray , ~ andjt . is now pretty certain , thai sonie bf-the proposition ' s will be rejected ; that of a creation ' ' of hereditary members ! of the Upper House is the most . ' strongly' opposed , arid ] wriites most parties against-it ; ' a ' large . majority I in the npgative . is'fBllyexpected . ; A . Cabinet Council was held on Saturday , and ; . it is .. understood that the . Ministry will stand or fall ; by tbe articles . If they are rejected it will resign , and it is most probable the resignations will beacceptedi ;
• .. - -. . •¦ . - . ¦ : ; ¦ / -. ITALY . . .,.:: . ¦ :, ¦ ... ¦ : . - :. ., ¦ •• -The 'Venice Gazette , ' of the 2 nd , states that a workman in . that ; city has been sentenced to tea months' imprisonmentjby . the military tribunal , fc Waving in his ' possessipn a concealed ratisket and sonic fulminatinK , powder . j , ¦ ,.. " ? . " - ' , ; .. L . Letters-from Leghorn , of the , 29 th ult ., state that more personsiwere- arrested on the precedin > . evening fen singing seditious songs in the streets . : > , -Piedmont : —Letters from Tnrin of the 9 th , s * tar . e that the Piedraoritese CKamberbf Deputies ' , | after a warm debatpj'had voted !; the 'ratification of the treaty of peace ' concluded at Milan on ' jts . iBth pi '¦ August last , -with the Austrian , Government . , 01 ' 129 deputies who " . voted ,. 112 votid for , the ratificatioH ,. and 17 against it . ;/ ::: ; - „ : ' ' . >!; -i :: ;^
¦ HUNGARY AND / AUSTRIA . ' ' ¦; ' ¦ The ' Magyar Hirlap ' : ( of Pesth ) publishes in its official column a decree of ¦ the-court-martial sitting in that town , dated Jan . " lj which ^ caih upon the following Hungarian leaders' to ; appear before ' the court—Louis Kossutb > ; M ^ Casimir BattbTvauyi , ' Etienne' Batth ' yanyi , ' Rameis , andothers . _ A term bf iuiietyV . days . isjassigned to them for the purpose , y ;;/ ,, .- , . ; ;• , " ; . . . ^ Letters from Klagenfurt announce the serious HIness of M . Georjey , late Hungarian Ge ' neral j ' . . V " . 1
The WieherZeitung .- is' still busily engaged in publishing the constilntidns ; of ther yaripna • provincesand- ¦ ' C ' sownlayds ^^ v ltfisistated ' tbat ' th ' eTro ^ vinciaV piets ; are : ^; ; bey ( Bonvoked ; i ^ that the ' Diet ^^ of Jthe Aus ) na ^^ mpire . isttp ; meet in 1851 . - ' . _ A . rumourisxurrent jftt ,, ^ "ienna to " thi effect that . the slate , ef ^ siege . oft the- capital ! is to bs raised in April or May . ,-Troops areiistill- being sent ' to Bohemia , and part of the army is collecting clqBe to the frontier " ofc Saxony . ^ 'Prague and-Tlieresienstaat are filled with soldiers andgene ' ral ; bfficers ; : arid : pre : parationona laVge scalei aremaking ^ for acampaigu . . Presbdrgh , DEc . ' S q . ^ AJparagrapV has gone the . rbuhd ' tif ; the . German papers ,-giving the world to undsrstand that . the , motherandchildren of Kos 'i
suth have beeniset at liberty * ; : Ihatrupon leaving their prison at Peith they cameto Vienn (» iji order to provide themselves with a'passport to Turkey . The only ; vrofdif truth in'this Btbry is tliat'this ' . noble old mother , ' with her threei Mrandejiildren , left their prison 4 ' . Pesth / but U , Waato eiitet anew gaol at Presburg ; Tand / such'Ja gaol i ) . ' . WKen-the . se helpless beings , vrere consigned to . the hospital of the Schlossbergi ; the cholera and tyhpns were ; both raging there , and ' Death busiest U from couch to couch . tended the sick . * i TteS'choIera ; and jtyphuk hare done ( heir work , and deatln ' s-hot io busy / now among the patients | ' the" " grandmbtijeirV and ' . ' the three little KosBUths ; are , ' still . there , ' think ! , GriJ ' . ' -ali well . Yes thank God , " and , not the . AusjfianS' for
that . ' The children of Guy on ar- alao ; ther , behin ) that tall black " wall , pierced with little squa 8 hole , , that runs round the ^ top , of the conical hill Overhanging the town . Yon are not to understand tha ^ . because they are in / a prison-hospital , they ' areihLa ward raised Witb : either ; the ' erowd of sick br criminals : Theirapattments are ' sncbi ;^ s , se paratedfrqm inch' ft nejghbbuThb 6 d ; lantf' ' unhauiited ^ by ; 8 uct ! ter rible associatioBB , would probably " eOntent their
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modest warits . The children have a tutoi ^ ppoihted Tiv the government . An attempt was ma ' delatterly w mdul htedt&e # sBu th , by . th ^ figol lihft ^ and a epmmpdious residence elsewhere loleaveyhe children ; with wha ^ Ejiccess tnay fio iroagined ^ lf ghe ' had be ^ n thei r , mother , ; instead ofil ? eir father ' s mother , the proposition could not have been rejected with greater scorn . Where the wifeis remains to thi s-moment a profound secret . 4 , r j r : i ; Nbr are these the only family at ; Presburg strHck by theJIungariaujCaramity . Therearesomestruck indeed far deeped Tliere "is the % idow of' General EeininKen "; there"is the ^ idow of ::
GeheraVDamjanich , free indeed , both , to . carry theii- ; sorrows and destitution whither 'they , please ; i i ' beiieve that the folio wing , prayer ,. composed b y ... Damjanich thei nig ht before his execution , has not , before , iiesn published . On its authenticity .- > you' may-depend . Ther ( e ' , is a famil y resemblance about such C ( im )) OS \ tions tliat makes them c ommonly fall short , of the interest which attaches to the awful : hour which : iiispires them ; yet rarely has a more manly farewell been breathed to the world than that of Damjanich . He alludes in the beginning to the agony : of parLing with his wife , who is ypung . aiidKeautiful . ' Prayer op General Damjanich before his
- , ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Execution . ¦ _ :.-. : ; ;¦ « = ( ¦ _ '¦>'¦ ¦>'¦¦ -: 'Ruler of the Universe , to thee ; I ! Hft * m }) ' supplication , ^ Tnou hast strengthened : me in the feari » l ; hour of parting ; strengthen rae still ; oh father ,. that 1 may endure the hard trial , the foul , aUhono . urabk death , strqngiy / and like a mail ! . He ' ar ,. oli | Lord of infinite goodness . aud mercy ,: my longing : prayer ! Thou hast guided me , oh Father , in fights and ^ bat- i ties , hast enabled me to ; face many dangers ^ ' anil brought me unscathed out of lriahy a ^ do . ubtfulconi-, ! '
flict . Preised be thy name for ' ever ^ : Prbtect ,, 61 ) Almighty God , my unhappy cdiintry' from jTurther calamity . Turn the heart of the monarch to . ii > ercy for my companions in misfortune who remain behind , and guide his will for the good of the ; peoples . Give oh Father , strength : to .. rny poor Emilia , -that she may fulfil the word she has given me ,: and uea ' her lot in humility ; witlithe Kelp . of ; her belief . BhssArad ! . Bless ppor disaskT-smiitei ^ Hungaty ! Tiiou hast known niy heart , and no step orffjinelias been hidden from , thee . Judge ; me' graciously
aecordihg . to the same ,: and grantVme . a merciful ' re ? caption into thy kingdom beyond the . grave . ; Amen . ' Will it . be believed , that , these two belpleRSiwomen , Madame Damjanioh and- ' Madame , , Leiiiingen , afier the execution of their husbands , were not only despoiled of all ' property in land , inherited in their own right ,, which ' iai contrary to the IJungariarij'law , but not even suffered ib retain a fraction : of the personal properly of their husbands ? ; iSay , even thejr wardrobes were sacked , and ' .. their . 'dresses . ' and' trinkets snatched from them . . It , does , credit ' to . thejeitizens ! of Aradthatthey . would notbidYor those . articles o ( . female apparel when put up to the public auction : for that they deserved the blessing of ; Danrjanich ; The dresses were knocked down without civil
competition , cheap to Austrian officers . * . Leiningen , wa . g an accomplished'scholar as well . as soldier ,: aud . hail composed a liistory of the war ^ This manuscript , ' secreted with jealous care by . his / wiiiow , who valued it more . than her jewels , did not : escape the narrow search to which her effects were . exposed , and Vas also torn from her possessiohV ; : . ^ 'It . 'V-r . *' .. " :- ! | ;" - , Hundreds of harrowing facts , which have-ri ' eyer oozed , into publicity , are current in the . ' society-of-tbis city , from which they ' caiinbt escape ' even by ; tire
posl-office : ho one ; who wished to remain at . Presbnrgmore than twenty four Ifours-would have the imprudence to coramit to a , ' letter aught : ; y ? Viich couhl shams the government .: ! : As this wilLreach ; you by j a private hand , ram -not restrained by the ; same . scruples . There is ' . a young ; lady . here , the betrothed bride of Lopfestj , one of the Hungarian noblesVwho was degraded ito the ranks . The last ' news she re " - eeived from her . future husband , who iji .. in : Italyi ' . was that . he . had receiyed . " fifty . ! blbws ' witli , a ^ cudgelby way of . discipline . v : > ;* : ; ¦ ' - ¦ •— : ¦ ¦ ¦' ¦ : ' ¦ ¦ ¦< ' ;¦ ¦ ¦ ¦) ' ¦ - ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦•¦ ¦•¦'¦
At yienna on the last day of . tne ; year ; a spimer was condemned to runthe gauiiiet , . ; His comrailes turned out , as commanded , but when he ran through the lines not an arm was uplifted to strike him , I believe they thrash offenders in , this way , with their wbislielts , ' Tbis was by no means an miinteresiing incident to close the first half of the 19 » h cehtuiy with '";; aiid is , IjUnderstand , the first ' instance-, ever known of sucha demonstration of manly dignity ^ on the part of the common : soldiers ; TheyvdisdMhi-d the function of executioner impoECd upoii them by officers less . civilssd than themselves . This unanimous and silent protest on the part ; of the \ men against a barbarous mode of puni . sHment , aii ' d ' reif jeetion of tbe base reliance laid on tlieniito become instruments of torture bas-something- about it * well worthy of attention . The top of society in . our . days must be taught by the bottom . „ '» ;>; .. .
TURKEY AND . RUSSIA , v , j We have received letters from "' Constantinople , which state that many of the . Huugarian . refugees have embarked in English and Spanish steamt-rs ;; those who remain in the capital , are obliged / to state , in writing , that they wilPbei ready' to leave it mi the 1 st of February . , N 6 . satisfactory resolution has yet been , adopted . with respect to ; the principal Magyars .- —Hamburgh Correspondent , Jan . 7 ,. . ' ' - ^ :.. . The Wanderer' of Vienna states that . the Hungarian General Kmety , who has embraced Islamism . has . been appointed Governor of " the fortress 6 ? Schumla ; ' " ' "; '¦ - ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦ : ¦ . . . - : ¦ ¦ . ¦ > ;; ¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ; , '>; -., ; , j . ¦^ e have the following from Belgrade : ¦—¦! Simicli bas been . named Minister of Justice . . Since ib has
been understood that the Porte will finally make concessions tp . Russiaon the . qiiestidnoftherefugpes , a more Russian tone prevails here ; and the ' Priiice is said to have just signed a declaration to the effect , that he will not allow young Servians , educated abroad . to be educated anywhere but in gussia . ' . ' ; : ; : Letters received in Paris from Constantinople ' . of the 30 th Dec ' state ' that the . dispute be ' twcen ^ Kussia and the Porte on the subject of the Hungarian , ' refugees has been definitively 'settled . Some delay was occasioned in censequeiicc of objections' made brthe Baroni . de Sturraer , the Auitrian . ambassador ;
to the . words of a part of the treaty- ; , but at ; length an alteration having been madej which was ' accepted by M . de ^ Sturmer , atf referendum , M-j&iTito ' ff ,:. the Russian ambassador , expressed' his wish ' notj to pror long any longer a situation of doubt and : uncertainty which wei ghed on the whole . world . He accordingl y ' paid the Grand Vizier an official visit ,-aiid a £ | tlie period- o £ the departure of the stearoer -the-documents had been exchanged and the relations' between the' two countries restored . ' ' ' ^ > , ' ; v ; o j , ., . ^ , The French Ambassador immediately ( despatched a steamer with the information for his government . '
Untitled Article
DiRXi Disease , and Misebt , in Sodthampion . — An inspectcr belonging to the Health , of iT 6 wiis ' Commission is now at Southanipt 6 ri , ' inquiring ; ihto the sanitiiry condition of that town . He . has . been iit the Guidball , moi'hiug , and evening , ; for the ; last ten days ,, receiving evidence as . to the state ' . qf . di'iunage , supply of water , street nuisances , - ventilation ofdweliings . xthc efficiency' of the 'local 'boardsfa ' nd nets of parliameht ,, the int'feiftjariil-burial . groun'ds ' , the . 'funeral expenses bf . th ; e : pdgr |' th ^ . cpmnl ' oybind 8 ' , the ; . -public . walks , &c . ; In . ltheafterriobn'ihe . 'inspector visits the various ; localities ; i equirih 2 '" s ' ahitary regujation ' s . ' Tlio ihtovest theso inquiries' excite fimongst . thb workiriff classes is veryj ' gre at . " '' "At ' u'i ghi . 'thc Guildlihll is crowded with , working ' Inienj ' a ' ri'd the intelligerico iiitil eageriipss with '"' « Hibn fliey
give evidence , 'show how sensible they are of physical , discomfort , varid how susceptible ' they | are' of moral elevation . The inspector ^ is ' accompanied . 'in ' his visits'to the . Ibealities by ; th 4 autltoi'itiea J of the tbwnV numbers of tradesmeh and ifen ' tlemenj neiv . spaper reporters , and by men emplbyed to measure'the size of rooms , windows , &c ., altogether formingo a body , sometimes of fifty persons ; -who are gui ' ded , by elergyinen arid rriddical men' into ' - the " ™ ' opt' Obscure arid filth j places ; The facts coilected ; . by ^ tnes 6 ( ihvestigatwns as , to the . misei 7 ,-, diseasei ' and ' moral depravity . engend . ered : by unhe . iltliy-iloealities-ai'e truly appalling , and . cannot fail to . impression itho ! legislature ^ the absolute necessity of abolishing every tax , tiiat'interferes with ! the health of the population aticl . deprives them ; pf light atid ' air / ' & large huinber bfmgst-yaluable . ' statisticar ^ and social state of Southampton and its inhabitants , have : been 'handedi ' to ' the' inspector b $ resident ^ scientific andiprdfessibnaPmen ' . Tho , plac 6
sVmbfittonea in the report uppnist . jaichaers and Holy- ; rood . parishesiavecohtjgu 6 u 3 , j : b ^ tho tie atitifuliHighstreet , in Southampton , ' formed of lofty hoVsesland handsome shops :. St . Mary ! s parish istho parisKof which the Earlbf Guildford is re ' etoi'i" The iinspector ' s . report oh the ; state of the town is" anticipated with tho greatest m ^ of Sputharhptpn , and is expected to be both important and interesting . , ¦ There can be . little . doubt but it will induce immediate : steps to ' be taken for improving- the" dwellings of the' poor , for introducing' sanitary ^^ regulations , by ^ Wp fi ' tKo'lieaUph ' d ' ippmfbi't ' of tu > inhabitants jnay , beimpro ved , ' and ' fbif removing thpse " ^^^ spots of . filth and wretbh ' eu ness from whence , in Southampton asinoth ' er larger ' towns disease and death stalk forth at inte ' rvals to strike . down' -eyen - the strong ; : the tempei-atei ' and 'the jreaith ^;;; :: ; .. j ;; -: ' "I ; - - , - , . = : ; -: v ¦ ¦ •;¦ ¦; ' : ¦ i i '" - - ¦¦ ' ¦¦ \ ^ WwilivoKaay ' ninety iiniies an ^ iir , i swallows fly faster , and the swtft two . hundred milgs anhour .
Untitled Article
-Daring Highway Robberies at ' . "BiBuiKoiiAu . ^ - ' On . Tuesday , eveHing , ' ' about half-past , six o ' clock , ' Mi-i . Sc 9 . ttJjjin ' i , ; s 6 n ' ., 9 f , Mi > ' Scotti " accpuntant , ' on hisjretuni ; . frpm busiiipsstbuliis father ' s residence ; iu Mosbley-i-badj ; was , > near theihouso ¦ ofi Mr . " Colmore ,: Highgate ( scarcely a , mile- from the Birmingham markfet-halll . ' sui'i'quiided : by four ' mehl brie ^ of wh ^^ k ' tfij b ^ , tlia " others held ' him ' on ;; the , ' grbun ^ watch ; rand : chain , and alpuvso containing ' a small ; sum of -money : - Mr . . Scott ,- 'passingo the vtojl-gate aboutlaO ' yards ^ eiireriBirmingham ;! observed . liis future issailanis ' standing in ' . the ' - ' roa'ai ' They' fdl- ' lovy fed' . him ^ and ^ bn ; .:. iu ? vwing ! j nci ^ l y ;; pppesifc tKe ttighgatefielda pne ' . bf the party exclaimed ; VNowfs the time , " and'Mr . Scott , was immediately , prostrate
on the ground . . " - He attempted ; to give ' ^ an ; alarm , wheii ' ono of jthe fellows'called upon hi ' Bcbnipanions to ' , "thrpttle ; liim . » ' .. This : they didv ' so'far aa to stifle " his ; outcry , " arid having succeeded in ' theii 1 object ,-the ithieves escaped—one orVtwo through ' the adjacent / fields leading from ; Higligate to'the Pershore-roadi- ^ nd thW others - along- the public highway'in the direction of ^ Bordesley .- ' -Inibrmation haying been communicate d to the police , 'Chief- ' pupewptwaent Stephens in ttie ; cp . urs e of ? the evening sawiMr . Scott , and : tho place where itbff rbbperyi waaeffected ; butthefootpadsare . as yet . unknown .- Similar . outrages 'have " 'lately been committ ed ' with impunity mother outskirts of theioVn ' . ' Last webK * Mi \ ^ Anster ,- a respectable manufacturer of Bii'minghani ^ re ' siding * at Carpenter ' s-roa'd , Edgbaston ; was returning throughiOhurh-roadrwhen he was stopped by a man in every way answeri ng
Untitled Article
thedescripiibh ^ p 'ipan ^ ho is supposedjto have committal ' Beverai . 'lep > gdatioiis of similar atrocity jvhich : > have ~ occurre ' ofmiiW the last few weeks . JJDhelKjvnitput atpistSl \ to S& , \ Anster ' s heakl , and , living o | tained ' a ^ w shillings bv his mbnacing ¦ bonduot . ffiucceededliii mating his escape , i Great blam ^ is ^ VtcibVed-to ^ hfcbrporation for not providihg ; thS h " orough ? iv . ith ' adequate police fpi ; ce , ; for , however active and intelligent the presentcpli ' - stabulary may bp , they are not sufficiently niirnerpus ( to jpeiJform ' efficiently the duties impose'd ' upoi thernii The suburbs are almost entirely unprotected a&hpurs , when ] thc police are most required . ; v"A'Biu 6 ts CoMPiAtNTHviTH'lNbioiraTios ' oF-Thbee ' -Yeabs ' ^ ^ edGsorih 1 ibn ^ M 'iiiln % ho is supposedly have
Stindino Cubed . by HollowAT ^ s .-PiLts . —Mr . C . 'Winiains , of Dangannon : had ! : bGenfeiuft ' cring for three years with a severo bilious coniplajnt /' accompaniid with bad digestion , and a constantf oxpectoration ,. of , phlegm :, his , affliotions from these disorders were so great , that for nights together itwas impossible for hitrl to lie on abed . ' All the medicines he had taken failed to give liim relief , ! he therefore-deters mined upon ; givingllol ! owfty sl insa trial , and ho waasoon ( rrhtifiea With tlie . result /^ r miSTaluable . mcdicme speedil y ririproved his power of digestion , removed the-excess - or bile , and re-established him . ln perfect health . , :, x :
Untitled Article
• om ' JiKtir ^ Y H J . 1850 . THE NORTHERN STAR . _^ 2 . ¦ ,- " : J : ^ M ^ & ^ t ^ a A \ . ^ M ^« M—————»»——¦ . ' ' " ~~* - . H&T 3 % J&if { e ~ ihir& \ ¦ Containsaccurate descriptionof the diseases
Untitled Article
i ' mi nil 11111 ————¦¦ " ¦ — ———— : STEPxNEY MEE : lT"i'NG ) -rMR . CLARK AND ' M . ' TbflHB ^ DIWB . OF THB ^ i ) BTHKKN STAR . ^ f iiK . - ^ Voiir ' reader ^ . raust ? Haye' ' noticed that at the'Stepney meeting ,. held on Monday , the 6 ih mst , lundertook to prove the -correctness' and wisdom of - the resolution moved at the-said , meeting by Mr . Camp bell . Mr ,. Clark , accepted of . my chaUeng ? Jo , lo sof InHheicoliimns of ttfe ' ? Moming Chrprficle ' and ' ' Morning Advertiser ) Mr . ClarkViacceptance of ray ' chiilenge ^ is published to the world . ' ; and as it has not ,, cither . by , M ^ Clark ^ pr-any , pf : hisJ . friends hfien . contradicted , pr . quaped , 1 feel bound , in
hbno ; urias ; a public ; nian ; Ua fulfil my pledge . 1 may statetliat I wasin iio ' way connected . . with . the call , ing bf the ' St ^' ney meeliiigtr tbat ; I attended the said Meeting uiisplicited j ;; that L am , personally , unknowii tomost of the-parties who called the meeting together ; that the only part Book inthe proceedings was wi th a view to restore' order , when conr , fusion : was great ; i that 1 will discuss the quebtidn ^ at issue ,: on its r . own ; merits ' , apart-. from alLparty ^ rind sectional considerations ; and . that so far as X am
cpucerned I am of no party : but . the party of trnth . > . Mr . ' Alexander . Campbell mpyed-fr' That ; as labour is . the source of ; alf . " wealthi . it . evidently-foliows ^ that the prosperity and independence of . Great Britain » nd her colonies will be ' most promoted by employ ^ iog and ; protecting ,, ' in Jthe greatest nuinber , a lieaUhy ^ industribus , ' and '" moral '; population , . which can be ' edupateil and ' . comfortably maintained by their own industry ; and ; therefore , iu ' the opinion of this meeting , it is Hhe first and' most important duty of the ¦ BritisK . Legislative ; and ; : hief M ajesty ' s Governraeut , ' 'to lidopt ' . such ' i measures ^ as ' will ( jt-st secure employ menfr ; to 'every one pf-the populati p . n j and procure : for their labour an abundance of the ¦
necessaries and comforts of life . * ; v ¦ > , ' : I i / " ' ' . ji Tne i first part . offthe resolution- ^ ' Labour- is-the source of allviweaUh —admits of ; dispute , as labour w ithout , ( land cpuld ; not produce , wealth-i-neitber could land ; without labour . Sir John Jeryis ,. ; her Mnjesty ' fs ' Attorney-General , on the - trial of Sharp and Fussellji assurediihe Qqurt , that laboqr | was not tbe , spurce . _ 6 f . airvvealtb ^ / But , ^ kupwing ; as I do , that : sp timnipotent ' is labour , that il ' . ia . considered by politidai economists ' ' to' be the source of all wealthy ahd th ' at John Locke . and the hig hest authorities of past age 8 ? have" 80-written of labour , Iacceptoof their dennitipn and-phraseoldgy ; in preference : to the
doctrines and definition of even sp ^ high an authority as Sir John Jervis ^ : ^^ liabbur Js ' the exertion ; pf power for the production of utility , ' and , therefore , mu 8 t . h 8 . ye been " . the , first , price ; paid ; for the . enjp yme'ritaiidpoBsesslon of property ; for without ., ah ' nxercise of power for ^ . the .. . ^ production of j utility , npthjng . useful couldexist ' T-no , productions could be excliahged , and , th ' erefbre ,-tioj commerce . could be known among men : " ' Hitherto , ''' in Vhis coittitry ; the productions of wealth ' ' have been ' ' . flmule' ^ b ut the fei julati 6 hg _ affectiiig the ' exchange ; and 'destribution of tlie properly ' . produced ' ¦ ' ' have been'inefficient ; "'the Idbourer 3 ! haye-toile'dl but nave ' i riot possessed
insufficient quantities the product'of'the > r ' iabour .. HYet theyiarcrigetfin . ' unceasingly -proclaiming . ' That labour-iis the ; sourceiof all wealth . ' ! If = Mr . Glark dp . Ubt 8 'ithe :. correctnesSi 6 f , the ; proposition , 'I willfeel obliged . ., to ; him f or some ; solid ^ reasohs on the opposite side , . tending to prove , ' . That lab . our is NoT . ihe Epurceiof allwealtli . ' \^ ^^ W , « .-, \ , ;;^ . Tlic ( . resolution , . continues , ^ , ' , It ; evidently , follpv / s that , the \ . prosperity ja ' ndi , ' indepenaence of Great Britai ; f , and . her ;' c ' olpnies , ' can be . mpst by employing ' and' protfrctjhgi ; in the greajest nurn h er , a healtby , . iridustrio ' us ,, and' ' moral ! population ; ^ hich xari be ' educated and ' ebaifbrtauiy maintained bv their b wii industry . ' : ¦ ' '¦ - ::
i ;' lf labour bethe source- ' of all "wealth , it clearly ttVlifvva 'ib " at . -the' prosperit y / and ' , independence ¦ of a iiationi ' must belibest ' promoted by protecting ; and employing the producers of wealth . It ¦ is lament ! able to , know that so plain a ; statement , of tbei interests of mankind should give rise to cavil or doubt . One ' ' of ; tbe ; chibf ' causes- of the revolutions of all nations ; " .. hiis' ^ beert ^ a ; . neg lect ' -of , tbat . pla'iii , and ,: \ o my nnndv ' unmistakeablejproposition . ; : A . pcpulation , ' generail y . employed ,-would not-be ' subject , to riots ' ; . or . " dis , tui ; baijces of any kind , provided ; ihey had a fair share of the fruits of ¦ :,, their own industry . - » In
Kngland , vast numbers of our populatton live in idleness and luxury , vast ; numbers in idleness and yagrancj li ' many . able and ' ,-. willing ; to \ work , l ' are neither , half em ' ployed-nor half ¦ fed , = others ¦ ' . are wholly unemployed !;' , Arid in a country so situated , what can ' bc more hecessaty : than for thb ; attention ofigovernnient to be : directed to -the true sources pi national prosperity . . ; And ,. . if ; ' ; the : ' protecting- ; and , empioying theprbducers of- wealth be iiot . the , true causes of national' prosperity , Mr . -Clarke will oblige me ; by . stating his reasons in ; fayourof , nbitprotecting and ribn-employing the producing classes , as related . to a nation ' s true interest , h :.- ;^ ' •' ..
'' ¦ Thb last part of the resolution states , the first , arid most . important ! diity of ^^ gb . vernment lp be the adoption of ! such : measures . . as will best secure the etn " - p ' oyment , and provide ; afi ; : abundance of the ' necessaiies of life to tbf prpducers ' .. ; " Thelast is by- far ' the-most . importtnt . part . of ., the- ; resolution ; an ' d'L ca 'l the . attention . of Mr . Clark to the following ; stitement'Of the connexion between society . and government , quoted Jrora . the writings of Thomas Paine j— ¦¦ ' : . ;; . ;; Ji ;; . ; i ' . ' '; ; ' '"¦¦ ' „ •'¦ ¦' . " ; :. \\\ v > , :. Society' in' ^ vc ry state is a blessing , but government in itA best state , ' is but aneeessavyevil- ^ in its worst state . an iiifoleVaiile one ; for when we suffer , or are . exposed to the saihe miseries by a government , which wo might expect in d ' country , without a sovehiriient , our calamity , ' , is
lieieliteried by reflecting that wp-furnish tlie . . nieaii 8 \ py which we suffer . Government , Hire dress , is ; , the , badge of . lost innocence ; the' palaces of , kings arc based on tlie . bowers . of para ' disd Tor were tlie impulses of ' conscience clear , uiii . form ' and . irrasisttbly ^ obeyed , man Would need , no other lawgiver ; hut that not beinjj the case ' , ' lie finds' itinecessury ' to , ' sui'ren'deii ' up ' -a part of his , ' prbperty . to furnish means for . theprotectiou ' of . the rest ; and this lie . is induced to do by thcsamepVuderice which , -in every otherciisejiadvises him | ' 6 ut . of two ' evils , to choose the best . Ayhei-efore , security ueinjj the true desifen . and end of governmerit , it un ' ariswcrably follows that'jrtiiiteyer formi there appears most likely to assure it , to' / as with the least bxpense . and greatest benefit ,-is preferableto , all others . ;•; . - ' ... ' , ; j ?;' ; . ' ' r ' ] ^
¦¦ j 'The ' i ; labourer 8 of : England ! have yielded up , part of ; their / ' property ? . but have '/' not receiye'd . priotectibn and security for / what' they retained . It . is " tliiajincreased ' protection which is ¦ guaranteed in the de- ' claratipn of American Independence , and jsalsp trie . « strict responsibility ? ; alluded to in the ; preamble ofv . the-People ' 8 Charter . ; : > If government be ; ini'ho . waj ^; to mterfere-fop ; tb 6 proteelion . of ¦; the " pr oduecr of . irjealtb' ; and itlie '' . regulation ; oif . the , ' prpoluetioiis of wealth ,, ; ferH : wbat ,-: does- government . exist '? - ;;> ¦ The ; npniinterference ; doctrine- ^ sp '' ' - ' popular among tlie nidnied-andgbverriirig classes— -Is / a givirig | Up ; of the very principle onc which ; authority"demands
allegiance ; 'andjIgta teaching . which L hope ;" will ; , never ; bpcbmf pop ' ulat ; auiong i . he '' trades ^ of [ t . hk ; ' metrop oiis . For | myi part , ] l thihkV / withf . Humejtliati' -A constitu ^ tion . is only , so far good-as : it provides ajremedy ag 4 in ^ /^ a ! r ^ dmiWstratipny . : Ahai ^ iyernment , jean . do " nothing . . towards ' securing eiiiploy . 'raent , and providing an abundance ofthe necessaries ! pf life ' for . tbe / prpducers ; . p f'Vealth , 'I ; wish ; we bad an end -at ,-the , rARCE . ibf , governing-, altogether . " : ilfit be ( hot i the .. fir 8 t- ' and most imppftant duty of ¦ the 'Brif tish legiiilatura and' hex \ Ma 3 esty ' s '" goy . ernment , ' ' ; to adopt such measuresi aslwill best secure Employment
to . every . oiie of the population ; and ^ provide , for their ISbpur an abuhdah _ ce / of'the nefcessaries ; and comforts of ; lif ^ ., wiJif ; MiVC ! a J « ' inform ^;^ sV . wiia ' t , J in-his judgment , 'is : the . first and most important duty ^ of / the . British legislature and her Majesty's ; government . ? I f , i t , be . . no t , the duty . , of ,, govern men t to project .. the producers oKwealth and regulate theiproductipns . ^ bf labour , \ for what does . government ' exist ?; "'' | " ^[ ' f , ' 'C ^' " ' -h ' - ' :- ¦ '' i ¦ ' ¦'¦¦ : » - ' a ' , r ^ Amubl M . : Kydd . ! l
. ¦' ( '•¦ ' ; J • ¦ ¦ -'; ¦; ; Price Is. Lid. Per Box. ¦: . Rr . His Excellent 1 Farhily Pill,, Is » Medicjne 11'' : /Of Lohr-Tried ' Efficacy For Correcting All Disorders'of The
. ¦' ( '•¦ ' ; j ¦ ¦ - ' ; ¦; ; Price Is . lid . per box . ¦ : . rr . HIS excellent farhily PILL ,, is » medicjne 11 '' : / of lohr-tried ' efficacy for correcting all disorders of the
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Jan. 19, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1557/page/2/
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