On this page
- Departments (2)
-
Text (8)
-
Untitled Article
-
33*&trfDS
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
V*C f-i- : -. _
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
Untitled Article
TO l ~ d ~ Z CB . MH 1 SJS OF SHROPSHIRE . In th ? Spring of 1642 , tfca culllFra and Iron- 'srcTkerfl of Sonit Shropshire were amongst tLe firmest and foremost ^ uTMates cf onr beJoTed Chartfr . J 3 the ' spirit of Draiocracy ds&d amongst them now , or only de jHrth it ? I "wo \ ild in the following lines call npon tbfciD to a-vrake , arisa , and again unfurl the . banner of freedon ! Ail Engiand is moving ; will Shropshire K 3 Dd alose , silent , and mute ? Raise the Chartist banner h : eh , Pisn : it in the TVrckin *; " 1 ^ : its mottoes proudly fly , To the tyrant speiiii . ? .
Asitste each \ rood 6 d Tale , Agitate fcich Tillage ; Show tLs ¦ wife and orphan pals , How lie factions piil ^ e . lr ?» Te no spot in Shropshire -wide TnU - * n owns the Charter ; Sr-ire the man who would divide " r « nr ranis , or freedom barter . Prove that in each vein no ^ s- rai 3 The Sri : ish blood of old ; And that—crnshirg / rceioai ' s foes Ye daiw be 2 rsn , sni bold . C-s-e not in your coble cinje , Until yoa freedom ps : n ; Aai liberty , and eqcal bws , Are Esglaad ' a oira a -ain .
Tiiea bear the Ctartist fiag ones more , O = r mountain stream and tic ; A cause like yonx ' s , sa bright and pure , Is neTtr doom'd to L . U . Hsy S ; b , lSi 3 . f . * The highest bill in the Mid ^ anig ; it is situa te a iin miles fioia Wellington , S-Jop , and is 1320 feet iSo ? c the l = Tel of the sea .
33*&Trfds
33 * &trfDS
Untitled Article
THENAT 1 OXAL TEMPERANCE ADVOCATE AND HERALD , Vol . 2 ., No . 5 , May I 5 : h , ll-i-i . This excellent periodical still keeps era its -way warrir ^ against evil and doi : ! g much good . Tns iEdcfi '" - « £ ii >! e Doctor who conducts it is a wii-rmaa Kjr : hy oi " hi ? post . He ke-ps c . lw- _ v < dropping on the ss-rTiS sics ? . From various attitudes and ditFerent sns ;! es , hi ? fire may be directed , bu : i : is always * de ! iTcrtd home" at one point . Tie giant evil of iz .:--mpcTmce is his tarter , and fce saff-rs notah . g to e > r ;? e hi > quiver out of which an arr-.-w can b ; ma-Je to wunni its monster , nor do :-s one of them ever nrs ? i : ~ mark . Tne readiness Tr : h which he cake ? al : p ;? :-i-2 snbj--c ? 5 bend to his g-n ; us and uphold i . is ? r .-: eni , enables Dr . Lee > - to rnake this ; -a ; -er XLvdh more in ' . erssv . nsly diversified in Chirac :- r ? a--l tore than nrgnt be expec : td . We give the iorlow-115 cstracts ircm ihe Iradtr in the sumb-. r now rer ' vre us : —
"CHARITY BEGINS AT HOME . " " But , " it msy said , " it shonid not tnd there . " >* e-Tsr : h « -irS 3 , th _ - s ^ ell of lisa proverb csatoics the kcrctl tS . i i ? est truih , aci supplies a tsucssrene f jr the Ucttctcn cf falae-aiotiTed , if not fallacious charity . Real cbzfilj vriH always bc-jin st hesce . The bcit love , ) iie light , via radiate from the bn ^ htes : ctiJrc It will seek to b ~ al the sorrows of home firit , the suff = rlngs of buniasirj sXitTTrzr&s . He ¦ whoproTiuf s not for his ok bon ^— "whose labours begin net a' Jsnixi ' tm— "whose fxp-iT ^ Td beneTolence io tgeXa L . i 3 own cc-nntry and kinfir ^ 2—is an I > FIDEL , i e ., he has ro : the trne Epiri ; of Cb-. stiia faith and charity . There is , hosre-er , ia the Trtric . a s ^ tndlEg , popular , and cSciocs sr : ; i 1 ' \ ii . Cf ol bir-Tolesce , "which passes carrent for charitj— "which d-. li » : hts in cemmivtess - ^ d subscription lists , and n . i = s i ^ tlf tnown in lood-txprfcssed sympathies on p .: p = r or p ' -tforras—that , after ail , is rotten at the cure . Its t ! e :. n is t * : ^ copic . not microscopic ; it can see the ?
nffc .-iurs v-i thtf Hindoo wide" * , and the light of fctr funsril l yre , far across the "waBte of "Waters , and btyond tie path : « sa deserts and snow-crested mountains tf distict cortlntnts , tnt is blind te the English wife , -whose lift and lore and hope are being daily consumed , an airfnl «^ cr . 2 ce tc the idolatry ef British intemperance . It can prtttrate to the "tery cectrr of India or C' . ica , ard LiTutst , in the poppj-garc ' . tiis cf Assim , that the rich soil tbonld be ni 3 de to yieJd poison instead of food . but it cannot decline its lufty gb .: ce to the hop-yards cf E ^ nt , the orchard * of Devos , ar . d the bar ! ey-f eiris of &U Zr . ^ ijud , " whichare made to contribute » o that Cl"B 5 E of BiiTAi >' , acd * nppcrt thatMAM'FACTCREor i' c " > - EOL , 'which tranaecrd a hnndrec-fold in drenufnl conseqnesces the horrcr 3 of Indian stipt-rstiticn and the trcSc in opicm . >* o ; that is merely a fc ' in-J or a' popular cam —a sham of charity— - which b- _ s n j charity for hcrne . ar-d therefore not a sincere am Christian charity is relation to hnmanity at large .
\\ -won ' . d be arousing , did not the :-n > ject present so Ethncholy aa exhibition of hum ^ n iifl . - .-ni : y , to :. ot « the blindness and ii : con 3 ; 5 teEC ? of thtsc PjofeSicw . -I Chiii'y . A renoaikaVie txairip ' . e of this sort , fc ^ pp-nisg within ths "vraila of Pjiiaitent , Las ju- * . st > : uf . ec SEnenl attention . " The CoEUiittees of the Wesirjan , the Baptist , and theL n on MissioEai-r SocietieshaTc rrcStnttri , thr < u . ; ii Lord Ashley , p * titioia to the Kuube of C-j ^ h-lU , prajing for the aboiiti-.-nof the OPica TRA-Fi ic -wlilth fc-fixts such dreadful mischl-f both on the Inaiaj tuu Chinese peculation . Lord Ash ' . ey ally laid kre the evils cf the cpium traric , and , ia a bin-owing s . zA impressive itittmeDt , dcj ; cteJ the dca " y and brnta'iz ' rg effects of th = dru 2 on the muid 3 and bodies of tit -Chinese , bc- _ h of ^ hich sre para ' - ; z -J , leaking drivdlir g tzi los'hs ^ Hse objec ts of those -who iEduiged in it . Hs ab ¦ produced etstistical tables to -now the ir . jefy dote Ij ieglrjuzx ? commerce—tsWw that showeti t .: at as the iDpcrtati .-E of opium inert : * -d . th . t of cs . 'onQoods J& , vzi ri ^ rersz . H- likewise proved thst it pr * judiced iii Ciiiwe opains ! Chrisiiari > J tbit it obitructtd the Work c-f l-ii&siunariea , wLo w-. ; e inf . bythuitqmry"Wtj their conntrymtn iEiport ^ i this dcJct . rio ^* dm ? ? Br T .- ; csced icecical testiii ^ ony to prove iu evil tff-cts < r ^ ti . % eoiatitution , and cc-cln ; ed by a roost impressive tlt-.-i t-j tTsry Cnristiin acd pstriot , to is .-is : in wip ii a tiiif . Jbljt from oar ccu- lry . Tr . e uuble tfjits cf X :. * i AsbirT hire btm ntnaaliZid , i ^ iirna-. h aj numbers . * tic ' Hi-nts of C-: zutu : e ^ c-ju ! j refer to our onn
i- - Ij . is . aa-i testify to m-.-re crime , trretchedress , aca r : r ^ r _ ^ : ^ a : rd by ::. * xic&tins I ' quors in our o-we C-U .:-:- . tti-TS vrss to be fo--iJ in Ctini thronjrh : bs use o ? ::-3 tb The Ti . u €$ ci : ' r ^ 5 th if Apiil reports SU K :: rr : P ~ : to h 3 Tr iiii , tlnr .: g the . isicssioa— " Ar- _ E- - :: U . T-T 3 cj-pcslt = so ft ? T s-s . ^ -ii . K u :. the sn ' r-ject cf ;; ,- . : Dj Tfe n .. t C-iiTe a l ^ rje icTenae , to the £ S . c ;^ : .: i' 3 iOO . Ot-0 , f : cn- tol-aeeo , ^ Lieh is smv-kevi acd ehf =--a , and "wL ~ xh i ^ a . c * t bi : iiiula . * -ici b v-i its cha-Bctrf ¦ Dj Te not alio raise a reve ' _ ue from Gi . \ , spi-£ ns Luyji . "f t'i > £ ?—articles vtich s-re ofu-u i ^^ -d 31 » : 'W 'j - « . « , CW . d yivi r-i-c ( 0 JK ' -iny clfjasirO ^ S COJ ; j > e-C ' j !; . u * f . From bjLT . ey a > .- ; e a Tt \ ti . u < of tr . Tffttn 8 asd j , . ¦ v , v "w . - . s dciiTed . lf ~ lih : ht ; e f-tcU before zi * !•' - ' ~ ' t -liktd to in . erdici ih * iuipo :-M . ion of cpiuiu a / id d--- ' - J r , t ;;» fcir . h iti c . der ! - j i-iiX ^ U ^ i TH £ > lx > - i-ii-i . r :-: i . riuPLE . " "VV :, tc-. s ti-in- tLe x > ui : cy
"" — : i i - L is the iar-L-f Chiirse , atd yet sui ' -ams a sjstc ^ -K ^ . ^ iid ' , iE 2 i 2 Uchn ) .: r ' ruiichiif to c ^ Tne : ghbf . urs , fci = ; . d = ; i-a relatives at £ & ; .-. £ . >"¦;•» , tbouj ; a the aJlegatcr . _ f i double tTil C 3 j . not by uukn C-Etrjbn ^ to the poicc ^ cii . f cne gouJ—and tb = rtfure tLe casuistry of 2-e J - -iL .:= r E ^ ppli ^ s tut a mi = tr-ble tp' / . ^ s y for the cji ~ r jfro-jctrs ar . d Tt ^ ccii—be EcTritL- l ^> s a-lniiEistsJ ; " ... -r- pttiuoiers a severe caiti ttici ; ,- foU 2 iird on thri .-: i ) , iir-ej--.-d , acd c- i ' q : Je-vlti- /> cJ chiriirtt j- of " - «" ' ' t > -. j .:: y , vrhii . h weeps t-v ^ r the -K-ret ; ht : a victjins cf ii . v . ui , v . iLe it reajis profit in stU " . ce from the iu--f- ^ r . j- vf the Victin ^ of a ' . coiol- We trust the ar ; 7 ar .:.-: t : « - _ i } -. v : iih . em ^ pv " : icii by the Pinner -cill iisae is ft-. iu : tLe petitioners cf their false and incmriit *" . c _ ir . T , aEjii-dcce iheiu to come out , -with tqc ^ l cec r ; _ n , vs tte teni-Der&nce qses > Uu 2 , anu dtnounct the tr ^ fl-. ia ^ it tcxicating prisons , both at / io » e and z *' S-Ld . ' VT *! do not -wit ^ * L = ra to diaiini = fa , but to E -e ... u by the power of C ' -nsistti-cy , their tfTurts s ; - " ^ =: the tr- ffc in tie Iji 6 ;_ n puison , cpinm . ' Phj-£ ic--, bci . : ? . > s * i / - —is a dtrclarati-.-n on - ^ bich they aitt *" . " - -. ' act , by ceasing to sanction the tn . £ ; in the irr . L = t j ^ b ^ n , alcohoL TVe fay , then , & 0 THIS , BUT Li ^ i > 0 T IH £ 0 THE 2 . U > D 0 > E . B -es the leader from which -n-eh 2 % ^ taken the S ? 0 Te L - nere j ^ g 5 £ Tera ! solid and valuable ar : c !( -f , rr-revrs of 5-medc 2 n cr ? o ef books , srd all ihe TeicHraiiee news of lie vre «^ . Ki ~ ic ^ a perfect - . ocrr . ; I o ^ tbe moTenicnt . T ~ c- V-j :: ' j 7 ic 1 Ttin ^ rrorirc •^ & : ¦ £ . ' ¦ c ? ^ "i » obe i f-a . d -v * verv iE 2 . n s . nd vryiiiin a ^ kL . gco ^ . " '
Untitled Article
THE FLEET PAPx'RS . i-a . GiSTLia i . \ D the F > cro } r "Diu . agaix . — % ¦ Oa ^ iltr has returned Vj tLe at ;?^ k u pon the ts ^ ciiH . n c'auics of the misisirr-ai Facrory Bill . ~^ . -niirki have a force about t ' r . ria wnch we look j ^ ja vain in tbe-wrh : r £ ; s r -i ar . y other Ean . The . xtt '^ Tir' are eow , iDdeci , of i . ddjr : onal interest i L l « ° f " ' E ^ s" a ^ e Tfo ^ ds of wisdom ^ to ^ " KLigV' suljects —hi ? poor factory hands , tv ]; o "" ¦ efajow will be dtfi ^ hiti to leaj n thai he r . Hi ^^ - la ;^ tnt : r right , ' and ^ dTocate 3 their c ; u : v , eTe : : ^/ . ea scdrerricg the ¦ " educated 71 portion of 'he * a-id . In the forthcorrirs ^ rtJiEbfcr ( dated May 27 ) , « 1 st ; addresses Sir Jame = Grahzm : —
. ^' - >—^ dacsticn . ' Education . ' is the -word which j ^ - " * ? unded thresh thr length and bris ^ th of the ~ t- ~ _ It matters so ; -wbtie or by -whoa— Education » the cnly theiEe discussed , -whether dn the 2 J-e-h , -use or in the Dkrenters' meeting bouse— , JT ^ - -cchanics' Institutes or the Houses of Par- ' ~^* - * J- - ; bj cb-sj-raen in the streetii . vt Cabinet . * r" - ^* - in the C--until Cbas , bti—Educaiion is low ; " ¦^ H - ~ s -uiJTCt upon Tfhich all ran Ica .-ned- ' y prattle . ) -jv a pTay > s : j > > 1 ri : at " ' Edubjdvii '! 1 t 2 C"w a man j £ ~? CiE nt -th 6 i read nor "Trite—be ; s a pood servant , tRi tiSd , tther , nei ^ tonr , and sutuct—he is a tcist
Untitled Article
man and an honfst Christia- ; but he is n-t tdue-sled even in the A BC . Tne rarional / &o ! of this see ; there is no need to nanie hhi . j : p < -rt . 3 ps the im-gt / C 3 n . rJ and ci-rftqaenMy tbe best educated riisn of l , i 8 day . He is is-inc-rul , for none wj ) l say that he is honest Th-r . t msn , however , is cunning , and corstquent } y he is not destitute cf rches , h nonra , cr rank . Nay , wa hire r * -c-nt } y / nruished proof that it is possible that an educated ruan may be a fool—that a Minister of the Crown maj . whilst mourninj over the ignorance , and legii-latin ? f » r the Education of tbe Peopie , talk nensenseeven in Parlivment—nonsense -wnicb , in a SnDdsy-schcol , vccu \ d have entitled him to the fool ' s-cap . Read your own -words , spoken in the House of Commons . Msy 1 st , 1843 . when ycu-were dt £ erih ; nj { the duties or your schoolmasters— : ead , and educated asvrn are , blush at your own ignorance . Ton said , so Th * Times assert * . —
" It vas the duty of the master to see that tbe pupil not only leaned words , tut acquired i-Jeas , the rule , therefore , must be , that the master was not to be a co-mmen ' . aior , but an erri-ositor "— "Tfce matter , in expla . aing tbe passage of Seripture , -was not to be at liberty to give to it a doctrinal t-xplnnation , his duty bs _ ing mereiy thct cf au expositor , laying bafure his pupUs the trtse zn \ obvious meaning of the passage , tdkir-g care not to iccompoj . y it u-i : h any comments furourq 6 V oi aan , -se : o the dM . ii . e * c / ant purlicviar f . ' ;;; . . 7 * or ted : tint was the line of bis uuty . asJ if he deputed from it he teas iaV . e to be dhmitsed . '
Sach an absurdity was propounded by sn educated Secretary of Staoto En educated House of Commons , back , d by " the Britbh snd For < f gn School Society , " all of them educMcd men !; Yrg . Sir , and at such an ignorant c ^ . ^ i-- ni-ration cf wt r-As wi * J out rueacir . g , no . « urp : is 3 -p " . ^ mir . ifcsted . The idueiied - * praker aud the cdw . a ' id hciiers -were satiffiej that the ignorant masses ¦ w ^ -uid take ju ? h folly for wisdom ! And tb-. s education plan , foTsooth , is the pff-prir . g of the " collecuv ..- -wisdom '' € f the nation assem .-led in Parliament ; Sur-17 there is some mistake here ! It csDcot be their < . ffspring . OM " Absolute Wisdom" * himsef must have presided et that Cahiaet Conncil ! Tali about education , indetil— education from Euch a source . ' Why , Sir , the only s . nsibie an 3 ver to such rigmarole wouM be a sound fi . gj , icg— " a rod for the Idol ' s back , ' ' says Solomon .
If you have truly defined " the < 5 utj of tbe masters , " y > u have plated the ofSoe above ibe powirs of any human Wii . ? , - Thus your whole sch = me is a tieiu&ionan inipossibility . ? * * * * Wh ? n you talk abctit Education r . nd bring Bills into P . ^ Tiiame . t to force Proplt to \ e rducai-. d and th : » t too at the r 0 ^ 3 ixpcr . ee , is it ycur wish to a-LVcrt thtm int ¦ l-.-j . nitd fu-.-Is aE ' . cuuhlr . ' j > r-. vps ? or do jou aim at nsak ^ ii Vt-ur pupil- ici ^ -i m , Lt ter . ' Dj not sn tr at these qn-sti ^ j . " . Sir ; there 13 more niLani : s i 3 thtm , mure ne ^ i for thc ;; i , than you may at £ rrt imagine . It si-jms tJ jse that th : rc i 3 a great mia ' akf—a P ^ rli :: rutrn : rj-y , a M--li -riui jiiistak-e . cu ibis Education qufft : ^ : ; . I may tiicyunt . r ; . 'ffi"a ! t 7 if 1 tiure to gr . ijp ! e with i :. Tz . zl is ta nssoa v hy J make the at- cu ; pt .
iLil ! r ^ -: ' ¦ B ' ur-bo' .-ks , " which yo-. r C . mrjis = . on < "rs of I . qnirj L ^ vt \ -: iz ] j furLiih ^ J y . u with , tt'lu * that the woik"i : s pnp . e ure imrut-r . i s .: \<\ ctttitutd i ; EC . iusi . th ^ y arc uacUueattrC ; aca b « :. - n !> a Ecw .: ;; bt tLiii ; t 3 5 ! ,-3 the min ^ s t-f i ^ ur jbuaath . ¦ phis acd st ; . i-s : 'i . n ; r . xt a h » , coiiivir-rd up by > iurtelf , is propos « 1 to cars in : morali " . 7 ar-d tie ir .- ut . ion affisai ; the w rki v g c 2 _ i 5 cs , by wLat is termed a cc-myulsoTy Education . Hoir , if the prcniisjs be trus , » . e . if the immorally and destitution of the working classes Uo ari-t-from their want of education , then thv proposed renicdy is wise . If , however , the iiLn . otair . y and destitution of the woikirg classes buppen 10 have , its origin in U ' . e educttHcn r . f th . : r emiIjjcrs , ittn the tx'tnsion cf tbht suit o . ' idiication can Lut iriertaie the evils vrhich &ie ententUrni by itself .
Mayb ^ p I sLnll laughed ; but ntv » r mind—I aia acv-ns-omed to the jt-rrs of V c cdu .-jted I havs > fen mid ; - to feel tbe height of their lasb ; regardless of increasing iheir disp ! c-ai-ure , I wjll tt li n-y thoughts , unpleasant though th » -y may be . to educated tars . If tbe working pt-cple are imuivr . 1 ^ ihi ilrbtitrte , I be . ieTe it is because their emp ' oy « r 3 are educated . ' for the r-. suit of that education ochil-ita it « ; f ; n " an es ^ n : j . ) e which 5 s Ujns ' . ai . Py btfore tbe e ; . ts vx the chiL'rrr [ whom they ernjjlo >] . ami in "shicb thry i 'be childr-i . ] s tow Tip , famiiiari . u with tbv gryt-ts frauds , the snVi ' i ^ t tri cks , an- \ tl : e most diihonebt evaiions . habiiit-. i ! - y practised by the maslcrs . ' * Have tht chiiOrtn other or better cxamplo to guide tbtw ? I did not require a "Blu-.-booi" t © in ' orm me on thit sn > jrct . I am , however , rijoiced tb ^ t , amid so mrcii delusion , the truth has forced itself oa the co :.-victian of one of your own officers .
Well , then , the case being bo , a ; : d it being a truism tbst " example is Btronger than preeept , " the first step towards a a :-fe ana c-rtain rtme-. y will not be to titend the impure system of education from the masters to tbe children , but to find out what is wrong in the system of education already given to the masters , which it is proved bis issued in tbtir setting such bad cxumples to tbe nnfortunate children who are in their ercj-1 jment . This , S : r , is the " common sense" Tiew of the question . It is certain that the " habitual practice of the gro .-K- ^ t fiau'J ? , the sabtlest tricks , and the n : o » t cilsliontit ev- « uts , " mast be leas ' , cs highly calcub . tcd to br * -cl a c-n-ration cf immoral knr . Vra . If tbe "
maatera" are allowed to yet such tX-iuj-les to tbe chikl . vn , it ::. s . i : t : s cct vrhat o ' Jie * tchovls ><; u may fo \ e th :. « t cLi :-: r . n t > 2 t * . 5 Di ; unless yc-u csn alrer the educMitn c ? tbei- R . si / s , "the LVbi ' . u ¦! pr ^ cticid" which are cor . st- 'Vj j-.- cE-uted to the chiiijr . n , will , as sure as tX 35 uj' ! e ia £ tr-: i ) gcr than prect-pt , train tbe juvenile operatives in vicious habits , and the forced school education tLi * . you intend to give w : il unly serve to niike then jnoT * txvtrt '> y frauduk-nt , more subtlt triJkst-. s . ar .. \ more 6 i ; fconr .- - . itaTcs ! Rrj ¦ " the following ^ n > c- " ' tt>—it is trne . A bny was encased in tLe service of a Manchester merchant . One even :: ? he retu . ned home , and Sii ' i to hia mother , " My master is a vcry bid nian . " T . ' . e Hiother re-paed , " D . iit say £ 0 , my child ; he is on- - - of tbe b .-ft men livirs . He is Tty rel gk-us . *'— "Dd you not al ^ -nvs tel : me , motb-r , that : f I tH lies I ihuuld te a ) . u boy ? ' icq ' - ireJ the ia-J . — " Yts , chil'l , to be sure I did , " rejjin-d the mcthf .-. — "WJ 1 , thtn , I am rare my maitcr tells lies , ix ± so he ii a ba-1 msn . Yeitrr-. i-. y a pers . - 'ES ' ld him Eorr . e goods , rii <\ V « fo : e h& bc'asfc ' - tt-tu my nii'ter sii-. l tL ^ y were Vriy bsd ar . i ! full of fai l ' s ; ar . i ta-day , vc Ltr . he wa 8 tijing to sell th ' m , he s » id th-. y were as good as c ^ uW Le . " The same bay w- , sj ' , n £ iter , tcld by bis matter to say to a pcr ^ n who kiath-.-c at the door , that "his Lua . ter was not at fcouie- " Tize b-- > 7 E-id to the visil r , " Pieaii ' , Sir , i ^ a- ter Eajs he is not at home" When t '^ tt c -met-j th « : roster ' s < a . rs , the b ; y was tliicLargcd , ' b-. cause L- ?
W :. s a f _> . <; . How ssy you , . ^ " . r J ^ mes , was the educu ' . ed m&J ' -cr cr the unti'i ; C-i " -ta / v !>! the wisett of the tv .-. ; ? Sre slfD , with Ttfcrer . ce to edu > a ! 'd rn'sters in Scotlac ;—the c . al-: i . ' . e proprietors . Oa the 15 : b t-f May , 154 . " .. in rh ¦ Fouie of C-mHiins , Lord AfLiey r-roved thriii rui ; ty , by the evidtnee of their own tsEQwri- ' - ' , r . f imT'Osin ^ lies on that House , by inLiniida r . r—* ' crszot mzg , " tha'is the word—women to sign } i-t : tirs t ' irr .- > t ! y entreating tha kgisljture to r = R ; .. vt : the T > rc > tvct : o ^ -: f tbe law from them—nay , even " rira-£ ; or ' "' the c ' . r-rnj to petition Psrliamtnt to rej t ? l the law w > : ch tscliules Wimen from the t . rribie bdiI detestable blvrery in mines ; and then pretending that thj ? e p&ti ' . ions -were tbe spontaEeous tSoTt 3 cf these pocr ffmalis and the clergy . So that , individually iad c ^ llectiTrly , it is proved—yes , eir , p-p'itiTely proved—that itu education of the masters is vicivas .
1 wor .-1 « T , after the perusal of Mr . Home ' s report , that y . a Gr-Z . not a . once think cf provlili- £ a tur- to r . rj th ? 5 ' : rc 5- of natkcal evil , hy brin ^ iiig in a Bill f ' jr il' - b't ' - f i - ' ¦• Jvciiion of the masters . TLe rt-nir . rts are forced from me , because I knew , Unz btf-: re Mr Borne iuf' -rmed ysu cf the fact , that a-ticucL there is gTtat immorality a «" . ong m ^ cy ffitat-iTB of the working c ' assrs , as a body , there is moTe fct-r-r . ^' y , more patriotism , more sacrifice of se'f , and r-or * true n'lcion , than amon ? thefe who compose the rrj ; -1 cle pnd upp ^ r c ' . as 3 ^ s of society . I krew , also , b .-f-. re Mr . Horra published the fact , that it was the txin . pk ff "th = masUrs" that festered immorality anvrg the working people , and that it vras their k = av : rr wh : ch created tbe destitution of tbe
indus--T 1 OU 3 . Oa that subject I have already written Tolumes ; I as , tLere ' , grstified Uiat in that Let , as in many oVdits , tbo " B'ue-booka" bsve eslablizhed ail that 1 h-Tv told EO 1 jDg 3 £ 0 . * * B-c ' : n , tl . cn , at the beginrin ? , and rcstrn-n , by Ch iiiic ?! i ^ TTf . t ) . c vicious prf-pensities of tLe eouci ' ed : ^_ . * - £ , z . ~ ' \ r-.- -- to it that , in future , their eurcr . -jn ibi ;' : i ';¦ CuRibiiA ^ ! Do this , Sir , and you will tccn
£ r . d t' e ' - ! - ;? - -1 cfiucts oi your labours in a virtuous acu irc ? j r . ^ as X- -. - . ul-ution . You will then need eo forced iatio'il tu ' -e ^ tl on for tbe pocr . Teen , tbe motbtr , tLe Lchcolr . ^ st ^ r , ^ sd the c '^ r ^ ymaTi will soon regai n their r ,= i-. i _ n as jreCv-ptcrs to the minds of tbs ptop ' t—a - i / . ca fr . ai which ( : or the Tiicst turpv-Bcs tf Evlf-:... . lucUsenunt , they have been uriven , Ly the cuniiirg , c .- ^ eily , and irjustice of the educated muiters ! >" ever f-jreet ' . Lit , if educatkn is worth hiving , 115 seeds MCST lie MilZE-NML Hence the tuonst-r evil of the Factory ijitcin , Lnd the unnatural employment ut infants in the production of weaith , which prevent thos . - f . eds from being sown in the mieds of tbtir unt-. Tj'j izf-nt victims . U =: i ! you can c-ntrive a plan to keep mothers at home , and muke ihiin the nurses of their own children , it is vain that you attempt to Ciirlstianiza and moralize the people . . _ . _
J * yen \ c ™ . a deaf ear to this suggestion—if you think OAs p ^ .-nl un-srrlby of the most serious an ! solemn attecti-zi cf a State ? roan , you still have to learu the ruditti-nts cf a Statetman ' s education . The cc : s : deration is awful , but the trntli must be tola . Englsnd Ehculd weep over its accumulated miiJioj . s of treasure!—we should view thta a 3 they are . the sn ^ ea of our pro ; p ? tiiy ! If we could but know wLut the i ^ tion Las lost , ii . tbe j . hyElcal and mental
Untitled Article
distraction , di . 'torti jn , and iteatiusti n consequent on the accuu . u ' uted milli-nsof our Arkprrtelits , tarPefls , anJ o-ar . Marshal ' s , 5 nitp . nl of pridiijij r-nrselvea < 1 such a- ? cumu ' iations . we shcu ' id put on sackcloth and ashes for the nitioi-al crimes which are consequent on such wealth . On this most important topic , I wiii not rest on my opinion alone . The able Editor of the Standard baa thua eloquently d ' Bcanted on the gams subject : — "We have a rich nation and a poor people—this is the
first and greatest of evils '— " As the world has hitherto been governed , and according to tha prevailing doctriv . ea of political economy , national "wealth must be the cause of national misei y . The consequence i 3 not , however , necessary in the constitution of nature . "" The rich cannot become excessively rich -without the poor becoming excessively poor . " — " Thus , confusion is brought in , and the fabric of subordination ia destroyed . Poverty first becomtss isifamoua , aud next it becoaj . 's formidable . Shamed as a beggar' now , it is soon ' dreaded as a foe . ' •'
" What is the remedy ? When we see one man , or a number of men grow in a short time enormously rich , we know that some must have betn ruade paor . Respect tbe ri'h man ' s riches , bttt relieve the poverty of those from u-hom he has extorted them . Again , when we see a number of ptoj ' le reduced to extreme wretchedness , look out forE ^ -uit . enormously rich man or cluss that hns suddenly started up—again , respect their riches , but be cartful aot to tnabk' thtm to txtcud the sphere of mistry . Above all , protect the poor , and the other classes will protect thpniselvca . If the poor are not in a condition to benefit by your protection , educate t ! ein to that condition , bill protection must < jo first . " — The Standard , April 21 , 1843 .
To return . In the next place , Sir , you must combine beahh of K » . } y with tha devs'lapenient of the mental faculties It matters not if you are educating a Judge , ' an embryo Sragman , or a HaucUioom Weaver . If , in the process of jour education , y ^ u are negligent of physical health , you are burdening , destroying , aud weakening the State . j Then , as you have resolved to undertake the educa-, don if the people , you must tike c-. re tbat the seed is adapted to thu sol , and applied in just proportions too , and be cutful to prepare land in which tho plant can afterwards a mish and the fruit ripen ; clsj your farm , ' the nation , will be unprofitable ar . d -worthless . I IS is worse than useless to teach what cannot afterwards be profitably used . As -well mi : jht you spend your moiiey a-. d time in building a house knowing that it wouJJ nevi ? r be occuDit-d .
Th < .-se remarks are nett : fa!—these facts must be well considered , before any plan of education can be bucci ; ssfu'ly digested . Before it is iua ' ured , other weighty £ u j cts mu ^ t ba discussed and unueibtooJ ; for if your sole oiject bi - to teach a p-rn ' . ^ t ' on to ier . 1 , write , and typL'r , without reference t > the ftitu : o u : iiity cf those ncquiH-ra ? T ; ts , ro real good can l . j . ff .-ctul . T ' . o object of eduea'lon .-h uM b _\ first to impress upon the mind tLd dread of that responsibility to G > d 1 umler v * hich 1 very rational bei . "g ou ^ bt to live ; fur it is Crrtahi . that "' Tiie feirof th > j Lord is the btginning of knowle-U-.- "—then to l ^ ' 2 d jij ii to improve their Eatu-. il . ' acu ' . t ' ies , to cultivate them h -j us to e-miilu tLosa fa ^ ui-i-i to assist in the iiiiprovL-ai . ^ nt cf their physical ci . E- 'iiicn . ::: ui thus ty aetura thtm-clrus fruin poverty " .: >•! ilestiuitum .
To vff-ct this , tbpy shculd be tan ^ ut acquire a knowjtvice of the wiil «_ f God , ai . d of those facultiesthe U ! e : its of tbe n-. ind , ami of th « arts and icitnees , which may hereafter co :. duce to their us ' -f ; i ' u > .-ss nnd prc-firahle eaipioyme ^ t—thus afFurdin ? ;\ n es ¦ i ) , e ( whkli nitut be placni \?; thiu the reach of ail ) from poverty and destitution . U :. less you ^ cct thia by your education , you pruduce h . nm indteacl of good . Acain , men should he taught the right use of such knowledge , so as to be able to give that direction toi'a esrrciee as Eh ; : ! l ma ) i <) it i jeneralfy useful an-i btm-Seial . Thty sboulil kam that tba sole obj ct of Uieir instruction is not that tiuy may accumulate wealth , thevuby hopirg to procure huppintss fur th maelvKS , but th : tt they , reir . geach one of a great family , ( that f .-. inily ia tbe whole catioD , ) each weuld best secure his own presp * 5 "i » y hy prciuotin > c U : e happines of all .
To fix their attention to this principle of oid <; r , it will be necessary that each member of society should bt well instructed in his rights and privi'ejes . as well as in his duties . He will then be abie to detect , the flrtt bivash uf the unJTerr .-. l Jaw of order , and will be anxious to correct that error , not moro fer his own interest , than for the benefit of all . Thb true j . nnciple of action , the p-lnciplo of universal ortkr aud uf the due proportion , should be taught , studied , and preserved—that principle which is at eternal variance with selfishness au'l competition , and is opposed to tha wild theory of irresponsibility and freedom of action , ( engendered by what are callud liberal aud enlight ned principles , ) which teaches that each man m . ty chrose for himself , without reference to the common weal .
Tbe true principle , which is the Christian principle , and the only pricciple which can be pr <~ . < luct've of re ^ . 1 pro . ' p . ri : y , teaches that mviuncan benrp ' l h ' nuc ' f to the injury of another . Whezi this truth is thoroughly unicrstcod , the acquiremi . nt of knowledge i 3 u ^ tfulotherwise , educated mun , Leing rejeanlless of their responsibii . ty to Gud and their neighbours , produce the evils wiiisu -we are now depioring , aDd become culti-Tatt-d sav 3 C »<» , c 5 vil : z * d Lrutes , and educated knavesm .-iking a profit of other people ' s neceeeitn .- > , by reVeuing the Christian command , " Whutaosvcr ye would tbat men should do unto jjii , do yo t-vtu so to tbuu- " Yc 3 , Sir , it is from the wa :. t of this truly Chriiti m e-. lncati ' . 'n aniorg the " misters , " that t . ur ^ rty and Jesti'ntion icbw ;; itc tbe las ' l .
H is also fri / m a disregurd of this principle of lovo and order , tl : ^ t so nvucli co : ifus . u : i of opinion and uf action pTe-7 "iil 3 in tbt world , >' u wobiKt that siion bad teed bLuuUi proiluca the fruits of immorality , p : ; V- rt" , anil destitut : ¦ ¦» . It is , tli- n , clear th . t a mere sccn ar education , cr that wh ch only tea hs 3 man to write , cyph r , Wurk , aiiil invent , must b-j inoperative fur »^ ooil—nay , it w . il 1 ' e injurioua , because it increases the po " . er , and the disposition alio , tf creating niore niisebief , if it be unacc-mpanie'i hy the proper direction of those £ cq n .- 'H ; en . 8 in their future operations on society . Its : > ure tff-ct will he , a rctitiemeut of viilaii y—nior « Fcrf ' . Ti : ;? jjarsimony . The tiui > c » aud victima tving made moje cucniag , their
Let me h * } erf ^ cf v u-iderttood . This sound nn < l true CHRISTIAN eiucitiu ; . ii a * ntCcSisary for tbe rich as for the pour—fur the learned as for the unlfarue'l . U ^ dapp i ' . y , hitheito ; :. has tet-n negli-cted . lleiica , whether v . e writch th 3 operaii ns of tbe gover ment , the rjoTiieJ , ths Agricultural , or the manafjcturiug int ' - rtsU , we ri-- ; ' ! th it , ;; s Mr . Horno says , ' the grossest fr ^ iiti . - ' , the sul /;! cit tr cks . nnd the most dishonLbt eva *! ons , have btt ; j hahitua ' i / « ractii > e ( l . " How can it bo otherwise wbtu universal , uncontroVcl co : u r <; ticn , under tLe sysum of" buyhig ut tbu cht-apest , market , a-. ul iellin ^ a " , ths dtare ^ t , " ( a system stamped with fraud an I ku :. Vciy . ) is 'au « ht as a Christian pnne'ple by uur legi .-laloM , acil ii . cu . tatcd < n Vttv miads of the- pe ' plo , by the- Lighcbt authorities , aa " tbioriiiciple of common fctsite" ?
I nm perfectly aware that this view of the case will net bd r . pin > 7 c <' . by the part : a wto ai « e .-irichini ; th * : n . r- ¦ - ? - -a by tL-r cuunin ^ iii .-. i knave-ry on the products uf tbe inciustry of their viefms . Uut , sir , t » only qu-. ation wiiiime is —! s IT trle ? Kio \« in « n V > be so . ami now having bten supported anil ci ) i > nrnibii by the Ripoits of jour o-rru C « 'iuHiisbioners . I i !< vin it ¦ u to yourself nni tn the jaibiio t-j assure jou tLat any scheme of Er . ueut : d that is - ( ranting in the inculcsttii n of j'ist principles of ictu < n , whether it be giv .: n to g'jvtr-Eors or povrriieii , to en . ployers or employed , will t > e ucpioductive of good . Believe n ; e , sir , it is much more necessary that i . ur States ;!' , -n end S-jnatora should " go to school , " tl , ; u ; that ou : art Z . 3 r . nd labourers thouM imbkie // a'trnutiuus ¦¦( " coej 2 i .. 'H i-eaae . "
The "Bluc-bookb" denrnstrate tbat "the masttrs "the upi _ -tr md mi ! . ! il ^ c ' : ^ sseE— 'iaving obtuint-d tuu Cre : ^' -ei-. degree of this mere secular euueatiun . v . i ; hou ; the t ' . ue tu \ iud princip li ; of oi \ lt : r aud uuum to uirect them , l'ri ; i ^ tLus 1 st loose on . " -ocieiy , have app ' u" ' thsiuEc ' TuS to the work of individual s ^ :: iCdi . se ! iieot iiutesd cf social good ; aud , as Mr . Homo s ; vs , by meana of " the habitual practice of the grosse-st frau-i » the tublest tricks , and the mo ^ t dishonest evasions . " ( in other words , by their c ' enn . ess , dive ^ teil of s . iciai anJ mcral restraint , ) th .. t tbey L ^ . vo ui 2 > i * tbeinselvea the prolific instruments of euiiul t-vil . By a disregard of the rights of othcra , cml a reckless pursuit of ealf-interrfit by uncontrolled cmpetition , they have made iheir education the c&uis <> f the greatest uatknal evil—tha bmercit national curse !
Xay , so deeply hss this eucc ; itional oiseaso Ilsjin the-public mind , that the vci-y s . mcLsof evil a ; v caHed tLe fountains of good—righ ' c souui princip . > -. ive vanished , in older that tky evil cul-IL .- at principle 01 unr ^ a : rained cump&tition , of the uuconir > IIr d action of the educated han .-r . n fucultite , way have fuU scope on the ignorant and the deftnccles . ' . Still worse—so cunningly and cleverly have argument and statistics been managed by tLn vornries of the free and unfettered , but wrong principle , thut e-vvii those whose feelings are shocked and ouira ^ nl by tte cui-sed fruits of this bad system , are bewikirrttl by thecnnniDg sophistry of the advocates of Comp-tition ; and while their hearts revoit at tho cons- quences . th ; y are induced to pau % e , ray , sometimes eveu to surrender the causa of trutb , by saying , " We gr nt that your theory is true , but , in corsequence of different v . stisu interests , it is imx > roetic&ble in our present cirouri--Btances . "
Untitled Article
CuoLr . HA oTa serious character has ' " " -jk « m out in the p-ari-h of Eye , near Pot . crborou" '' .. Inn Quee . v has resumed her daily bavoucLo rides with Tnuce Ali >; rt . There are six hundred Church livings in the gift of the Lord Chancellor of Eh <
t Society has been formed at Berlin , chit fly con-Pi 3 ting of ladies , to impiove tho condition of females in India ! The Mystehy Solved . — " A down east Yankee says the light supposed to bs a comet ' s tail , is nothing more than a streak of li « htnin # // iz up . " 1 Mr . O'Conneu . will not Ieav 8 Ireland to attend ' his Parliamentary duties before the lOih of June . — 1 Limerick Chronicle . Mn . Greek , the aeronaut , has arrived in Dublin , and will ascend in his baloon from different parts of Ireland during tho summer . Father Mathlw is expected to arrive in England in the course of a short time , and is expected to visit ' , Cambridge , Wisbeach , Norwich , Ipswich , and many other places . ,
Notice has issued from the Lord Chamberlain ' s office , that the Queen ' s birthday will not be cele- 1 brated on the 24 ai instant , but on a later day , to ba I fixed hereafter . 1 A Meeting of the members of the British Iron ' Company was held on Friday , and a committee to ) wind up tho aff-n ' rs of the concern was appointed . The statement of ihe affairswas exceeding y uosatis- j ac : ory , the losses for the last year havh »« been very great . 1 Provisions in the Principality . —Fresh eggs
ni * n n . \* w Lftl Jmff of cntfiin fi \ y O . ¦ j \*< A ¦) P . . »• 1 _ L- « il v-.- \ t \ i \ are now beliing at beven for 2 a ov 42 fur 1 ^; salmon trout , nino for CJ ; bast fresh butter retail , 10 J per j lb ; potatoes Gib fora Id ; a quarter 01 veal ctwts i only 2 d Cd . llent is atthcsauio low rato as living , an : l clohtes of the native manufacuire cost nest to nothing . — iVelchman . The Wkst India rrnil , with inteliigonce from ; St . Ihcmaa'a to the 17 'ii April , t > ports sickHn-ss and coutinuod shocks of earthquake in tho W «< t Indies . It is computed that one-thii'd t > f tho crop in Guadaloupe is destroyed .
Notice to Everyiv > dy . — Tho pr . 'j : ctors of tho Aerial 5 h : p utv ) now prepared to taku contract .- ! for regulating clocks and watches by ilie day , v / er-k , month , or year . Thoir fiiciiities oi' constant ai - : x . ~ s to tiit ; gua will enable them to s-. > t chronomtt' -ry nearer to it than has b < : cu attempted bei ' ove . Ships at sea supplied twico a day with the m-jan lime at Greenwich . —1 ' uncfi . A IIkvkrknd Di-I'ailtkr . —Tho Rev . Chas . Tayler , of South vvell , in INotiingharnshire , who got no less than £ H 00 a year by his preachiog , and £ 5 % a year by School-teaching , ha ? made an as ^ i ^ niueiii to his creditors , and abseuti . 'd . himself , lcnvins hia claimants to cou-iule themselves with this bpiritual advicu-, " Do as I .--ay , not as I do . "—Sun .
The ceiifmonv of churching the Q-ieen took place at noon on Friday , in the Chapel Royal at Buckingham Palaco . Tho Archbishop of Canterbury efiiciased , assisted by the liishop of Loiv'on , Dean of the Chapel . Tho 13 i ; hop of Norwich attended as Ckrk of thoCio . et . On Friday sc 7 on mechanic 3 sailed from Sunder-Isud for th . » contin-nt , in search of einploynu-nt S ^ Te ral Eng'i h arti- > an ' , masons , sawyer ? , ls . c , have of la to , from timo to time , en . igrated tioa tho V «\ ar for France , , Vr-i ; h a view to better their cjudi : iun . — Carlisle Journal . Irish Fkhsents to the Prince cf Wales and Pkj : nC ; . ss Koval . — Cornelius D-iiovan , a woodturner iu Mnilow , has received £ 'J from the Queen and Princo Albert for a present o : ' toys and a tiimiijutive spiniilng wheel , hi . i own manufacture , sent to Buckingham Palace . Oue of tho toys was a top for tho Prsnce of Wales .
The Iron Trade . — I ho total number of blast furnaces in Great Britain , for the year ending January , 18-43 , was in blast S 3 !) , and ont of blast 190 , whilst the annual produce taken at 50 weeks amounted to 1 , 210 , 000 tons of crude iron . There were mad « 8000 tons at the Forest of Dean ; ia South Wales , T . 7 , 3 . 30 : in North Wales , 19 J 50 ; in Northumberland . 25 . 750 ; iu Yorkshire , 42 , 000 ; in Derbyshire , Jo . 7 oO ; in North St : iflfjrd .--hirf , 21 . 7 iO ; in South Staffordshire ; 300 , 2 . 50 ; in Shropshire , 7 C , ' 2 UO ; and in Scotland , ' 2 ' 6 li , 550 . — Welshman .
In the will of the recently-deceased Mr . Arkwri ' t ; ht , there is ono line which perhaps contains more than any one line that was ever before , or may i . ver bo written . It is— " I bt-qucatb to my son-inlaw , Sir It . Wigram , one million sterling . " Sir R . WigrJin married one ot Mr . Ark ^ vright ' s daughters ; and had tho father-in-law left hid property to Lady Wiiiram , there u oald have been ouly £ 1 per cfiiS . ( i 10 , 000 ) payiiblo as legacy duty ; but having be q ' . u : iiheil £ l , Hi ) 0 , 0 li () .-. 'criii / g to his ; on-in-law , th .-re srf £ 10 ptr ci-nt . legacy duty to bo paid , which amounts to Xl ( iO , ( J ( H ) . Thu- . 1 small portion of this hviath . in-fortuno of £ 7 O' ) O , U 00 returns to the public . —Jiriyhton Uuzelle .
Ei / - 'Pf . mevt . — On Monday some sensation was created in Tvnby , by : hu v opoineut of a young lady of family and fortune with a German musician , or . e of tho itinerant bai . 1 peiforming here last season , who remained during Ihu winter , giving lessons on the guitar . Tho attempt was nmde a week previously , but fru-tra ( . 'd by the lady ' s friends , who ( ? iscovered the plan , and iutercoptod her flight . Sho ciitiivod , however , to r&capo through a window in defiance of lu-avy showers ot rain , copiously descending the who . ' o of Suii'iay night . Tho route of iho ftiili ires has not been tract-rf , but the first part of tln-ir juiirn' -y was performed on foot . The lady has a handsome fortune at her own dispotal . —
Wchhmun . E . N 6 USH LiTtRAiiv Characters . —Lady Blesi-iu ^ - t ^ ii is iho \ vi ,. o' . v oi' an Harl , with an allowance ot £ 4 , 000 a-ycir , an *! , though sho receives no lacii ; - stiic is visite'l by a circle ot rnn . of rank and political eoi . nence , who wjuIiI , probably , know httle of her as him >> . y -il ' . o authoress of tho works that benr her naiin . ' . Ln ly S'l-piiey and Lady Charlotte Buj-y r . rc a !^ o woni 11 of rank , and the J ' prmer gives Very fine panie-. that ivrtairily would not be drawn together b > iilt iiK-ro Jiicrary fanio ovor a cup of tea at th » ta-t end . Mi " . Bulvver conj-s of a vi-ry aristorvatic family , i ^ a Member of Pariiamont , and has £ 1 , 200 a \ - m- lor his pmato forinn ^ , besides being an eleuaiitc oi' the first watvr . D'braeli has nuiriod a
v . i v 1 ich asid \ t-ry fa-bion-ibio widow , and , in his b . > v itifii ! munsion ia Park-hn ^ , cares very little for ai -.- con- ( ti ' . encc t ; ivcn to him as the author of ¦• \" iv ' . l * . i ! bi ' i-y . ' Lady Cluitcrion ' s position is ia ,. ci- i . amatitd ihuu beitercd by her weak-tea scribb . i g .-. ; atid ilic Hon . Jonu Wi . ^ on Croker is a poliiK-u .. whippur-in , and inherits sqoic of tho tainted uiilao hih fr ' eiid , the dissolute Marquis of llertforj . L . ui Enieline Stuurt Wortli y ' s productions arc the pi ..:: ; ' ni mortification of her titled husband , and the uav .-rktu hors find in lite rat tin ; a > a social influence : ieith-1 an udvant . igenor adenimint . GhristOjyiicrNoflh ! .- a professor moral philosophy , uiid Lockliart mar-11 . J ie daughter o' Walti-r Scott , aud these ure < 'iuu .. iStai » ccs to which i ! uy owe some of tho adv-.-iuagfs of th ' ir po-ition . Thcst are tho most of Wu anj ^ ng Ihe liti .-rary notabilities whose standing in . society i- ; mainly based on other than literary V . U ) K . ; iions . J 3 ut ill-. ro is a large c-lars m .
vclydist : iii ; u-.-ihcd as hi rary ni' n , whose social consi quenco i .-, m all iirt beunug-i , iit ; le understood in this c-u-iry . Tiiwnas Moon , Mr . Word-worth , Mr . i'Aicur ( Barry Cornwall ) , Tliomas Hood , Mr . v ' uusworih , aud some oihvrs , are frequently guests a ; ie tables of the nobility and aristocratic gentry o . E ^ aiHuct . Hut , at these same tables , Mrs Moore , Mrs . Wordt-worth , Mrs . Proc . or , Mrs . Hood , and Ur-i . A .. iswonh are newr seen , and seldom asked lor or ; bought of . The author aud his wife are not ou in luc code of fashion ; but this humiliating distuition , which , at the first blast seems , as Dogberry says , '' v-ry tolerable and not to bo endured , " is , up ; . 11 1 fl .. 0 ion , so much a convenience to author .- , to t it is doubtful whether the habit of inviting th' iu --nifly did not ai ' ow from ( . heir own suggesf'oi . iijii j / i'actic-j . — Brother Jonathan , edited by A . r . Willis .
Last Fiudvy night ' s G ^ z'itte announces the folif '> iu _ jppoui . ' iufnfs : — I T . ' : < . E irl of It ton to be President of the Board of Control . I Prince Alb . rt to be Governor and Constable of j \ V-il .-or Cat-do . ' ¦ \ ( ji -crge 1-Jdward Anson , Esq ., to be Treasurer of r' 0 ) liii .-ehold of the Prince of Wales ; Thomas ' P mberton Lei « h , to b- Chancellor and Keeper of j the Great S ^ al to his Royal Highness ; James Robert I Gardiner , l > q . to be Secretary and Clerk of the Coui-cil to his Royal niginess , aud Keeper of the ' Records of the Duchy of Onnvall ; Edward Whiie ,, K-q ., to bo Auditor of tho Duchy of Cornwall ; the , Honourable John Chetwynd T-ilbot , to be Attomey-Gi-. ira ! to iLt ; Prince of Walts .
J . ' ime * Robert Gardiner , Esq ., to be Secretary , R-ccivtr-Utuera ] , and Keeper of tho Signet , tor the Stewartry and Principality of Scotlard . L'cutenant-General the Honourable Patrick Stuart io f ^ e Governor of Malta . Francis Burgess , Esq ., to be Chief Police Magistr :: t- ; anri ihe Reverend George Giles to be Chap-1 u of the Female Penitentiary in Van Dicxnan ' s L . nd . . William Walter Raleigh Kerr , E 3 q ., to be Assistant Audi tor-General to the Government of the island or Mauritius .
Untitled Article
- — _ _ ¦ . -rs-: flf ^ a THK r-PEHNM . L M \ 'iU :--n . — It , i- :. 'C » OT J i ' y rep rn-i -ri , a ; iJ'ip' / ii f , ' . > T , j ; : thor : y / har J . t-u : >; C '\ , w \ ^ -, whos'iot poor Til !> ; y , 2 .: 3 p ' : r . Ti'l , on C-ir' -tnaa- ; d . iy la ? r , \ y . \ t at lo'igth be n aijjrehcuciflff , T )¦} principak of a respectable / annufac-nring c . sfab . .-ibueijt ia the « pi « libaurhood of R-.-ddJieh havo roceived letters from their au nt , in Afneri .: ^ , stating that an English police officer had pursued 2 he a .-saisin to that country , and had apprehended hira , : ind wou ! -l forthwith return with him to England . — Worcester He ral' ! .
Pi ; n 3 shmrnt of Death . —An act came into operation on the 11 . h ult . j amenJing the act 4 th and ' Victoria , c . 5 ' ! , relating to uunishments substituted for capital offoacc 3 . By the last mentioned statute persons convi . ' ted of maliciously destroying property were to be transported for seven years , or imprisoned for any period not more than three your-- . 1 c seems that doubts have ari § .-n whether they could be innsported for life , and the present act doc ' . an-s tha f offendurs shall , at the discretion of tho Court , be liable to traiisportation for lii ' c . or to imprisoniaent aot exceeding three years .
Orange Wine—A Spanish journ . il states fn-. t in \ consequeuca of the abundance of the growrh ooranges in the South of Spiin , and the afn > iltv of ' disposing of them , several of the growers convert ' th'j ; n into wine , which is slid to ba of a de iciou ^ 1 quality , and resembling iziuch in flavor tho w ; : io of 1 Madeira . The jiice is pressed , aud k-fo to fennent ; in the fame way as that of the grape , after which' it j is put into casks , without tha admixture of eu ' ier al- j cohol or iva , er . —A ' . henteum . ' Impudent Rodukrv . —While tho corpse of Lord . , Fitzgerald , la ' . e Pr-sident ox the Board of Controul , 1 was lying in the bou ^ . e , two rascals deliberately -. vent i in , during the confusion of measuring for mourning , t and fi-tchcd up thoplate chost irom the ba : l < -r ' s 1
pantry ; they carried it through all the servants , t placed it in a cart , and drove off . The robbery was n , ) t suspected for some time , aa the men did not betray any concern , but walked as if on bus nes 3 , but the butler being asked , it was discovered purmission \ had not been gircn , a'iid that all the plate wa 3 stolen . ' A cabman has been arrested and sworn to as one ; of the men , by a female servaut ; he had a cart and i horse answering tho description with him , when apprehended . Caution to Importers of Saus \ oes . —Bologna 6 aa .-at ! O 3 , of Brussels manufacture , seem hkoiy to be
at a discount tor some lime , in conseqpence tf a oiscovery made by the polico at Molenbtek . Tho ptoprietor of a ham and beef shop in that faubourg had for some time been purchasing a considerable quantity of horse fl sh , and c . m ! e dead of disease , under pretence of manufacturing black ( lamp black ) . It was obf ? erved , at tho isama time , that he was making a very considerable pvovision of Bologna sausages . T /; e aUentfoa of tia ' po . 'ij e having been dirtcfed to the .-e circumstances , a hrgn q-Mintny of thoc-n suspi- c- <; ti 3 sausages were selzud upon tho premises , and handed over for ch- raii-al analysis to competent person * . —/) ritish Gazette iBru-sf-Is ) .
Railroad Fxioiction . — W" see it stated in thy Derl-y Reporter , li 1 . 1 L on tho M : < : ! att i R ; iiiiv ; iy , pa- > - songrrs Win ; have p ; iid for t ck >; 3 f , r a gr-.-a'er distance , anJ stops ' u ^ vt of ih 3 gr-.-atcr distance , -arc required to pa ^ i ' or t'ao Ic ^ s . Some Kent ! ' mc . 11 who had p ; i ;< J for tick- , ti from Derby to Coveiurv ( sixty jiiiles ) , stopping at Leicester , half ' . ho distr ^ icc , wcro told their Coventry tickets woii ' a not clear them , and w .-re called upon to pay in a-Jiliiiun the LeicouT fare . This is too gr -only absurd an injustice If a passenger bo taken ill on the roa- 'l , or receive intcJJiyenco causing him to alter his plans , is lie to pay more for only relieving the train of his weight , and vacating a plac ) wheh ai . uther may fill , paying a new faro for tho same place !
The Stone pier at Greenwich has become a ruin , Ono of the piles that fronted the pier and supported fho masonry gava way , between nin ? and ten o ' clock on Tuesday morning , and part of the structure fell with a loud crash . The damage spread to other parts of tho pier ; which was shattered in every direction , largo stones crackuig ami breaking in p . occ ? . Several puoplo wero oa the pier at the time ; but no one was hurt . It is supposed that the whole foundation has given way ; and it is said that the loss will tall ou the contractors , Me&srs . Grisell and Peto , as a more solid foundation ouj ; lit to have been formed . The " permanent" pier cost £ 3 ' ) , 000 .
Loss of Life , and UrjiAUKAnL 1 ; Pkiservation . —On . Friday raorni / ig threa m-jit , natneiy , Robert Price , Hugu William- ; , and John Owen ( accompanied by the Rev . W . Wiliiams , curate of Llunbedr Goch , according to previous arran ;; eaient ) quitted Redwharf-bay in a good siz >; d fishing-boat , for the purpose of collecting sea-weed at Puffin Islam 1 , for potatoes . Tho three men wero thus occupied ft > r several hours , which period was passed by tho clergyman iu the telegraph station , or in sauntering about the island . At four o ' clock in the afternoon tho whale party started o ; i the homevard voyage ; and it being a dead ca ' . m , the oars wcra made to do tha work of sails for about half the distance , by which limu there sprung up a stifnVn brefz-, which induced tho captain ( Price ) to hoist etury stitch of canvass the boat carried . The imprudence of thii was evident to the others , who remonstrated with Price , but , ha heeded them noi , until awakened to a ssn ? e ofduugerby the water rushing in over tho bows , In the confu-ion occa .-ioncd by shortening sail , and lightening tho boat , she cipsizud , aud rolling over and over , finally settled kve ] upwards . Robert Pricu and Hujjh William- * , who could not swim , sunk almo t without antffuit ; ono of them clutched the lux of the Rev . Mr . Williams , who , by a vigorous tffurt , disengaged tiirast-lffwcn tho drowniug man ' s grasp , and laid hold of the bottom of the boat not only iu such a way as to su .- tain his own weight , but materially to assist John Owen in establishing himself on tho keel , upon which Mr . Williams also got astride . Escaped from the very jaws of death , thoir position was yet one of ex ' . nma peril from the rolling ot the boat , aud it required their utmost exertions to maintain an equipoise . In this state of agonizing suspense , at a distances of more than a mile from low-water mark , they were kept for hoursdrenched , exhausted , their l . mbs paralyzed from cold and inactivity , and with scarce a hope of human aid to sustain their sinking spirits—what wonder thai , despair should enter into the v > -ry soul' It was thus with poor Price , ua'il re-assured by the encouraging words of tho minister , " GoJ , who has preserved us thus far , will asauredly-deliver us out of this peril . " Presently a vessel hove in sifht—deliverance was at hand—their cries were h-. ard—a boat was scut to th « ir assistance , and after uiueh difikuky and delay tln-y W ' . re , about midnight , got on board the smick Su-an , of i 3 an , ' < o r , from who ? e captain they received that care and attention their precarious and hciplcss condition required . Tliey wore landed at Bangor , on Saturday morning , when Mr . Williams received the hearty congratuia ' . io ^ s of his friends . T . ie reverend gentleman speaks in the highest terms of the noble conduct of Captain Griffith Williams , who risked tiie safely of his vessel in effecting their deliverance . Tiw two unfortunate men who perished were siiish ; m ? n , but John Owen ( -aved with Mr . William' *) is married , and has a family to maintain . A more providential escape , pt-rhaps , is not on record , for tho ciptain had that morning contemplated casting anchor at Por . ii < lyiiIIaeu—had ho done- so , the survivors must have b ^ tu losi . inevitably , for it is their belief that thry c : > uld not possibly have hold out a quarter of an hour longer . —C ' j-rnarvon Herald . Dreadful Steam-hoat Exposion . —Louisville , April -23 , W 43 . — Ou the l !) ih instant , tho htc-amer Harry of the West , on her way from New Orleans to So . Louis , having shipped 40 cords of wood ac a point 40 rniic-s below Memphis , on the Mississippi river , was about leaving the bu . uk , when two flues of the larboard boi't-r collapsed . One of tho firemen who stood directly in front of tho bt'ii-. r , wa- b . own overboard , and , doubtless instantly kili < - j . Another was found dead on the for > c ; istlc ' s deck . Sevc-ral of the hands , including the two cook-, are missing , besides some of the deck passengers ; enother had his jaw broken in two places ; another was bae'ly bruised and injured inttrnaliy bv steam . A decu paascngor , with 1 , 200 dollars in gold in a belt round his person , jumped overboau , ar . d was drowned alongside the boat , leaving Lis wife and child on
board . I saw four other men floating down the river , holding on the driftwood . A ekifF from a flit boat put off after them ; and whether they were saved or not , I cannot say . Nor was it known , nor do I think it ever will bo known , how many , ail told , are lost . The mate had his leg broken iu two places ; another man also had his log broken . Five or six of the hands at : niched to tho boat were sadly scalded , some of thtm vciy sevrcly . I was standing at tho extreme forward part of the hurricaue deck , when 1 hoard the pian ' s bell ring for fhe engineer to go ahead . 1 started ti go al > , and when abreast cf iho wheel-house I heard the cxplos : <; n . The boiler deck was torn up , and tho stanclirn , under which I had been standing , wis knocked
d : < wu . O : ie of the pilots tuld n ; o that , had I rcms .: ncd forward . I should Jup / vitably have been thrown o - rboard . Thank Gou 1 I received no personal ii-. jury whatever . Tho steamer Gray Eagle wis woouing at the time of the accid . nt aboni three miles and a half above tho Harry of the West . She irrmediately came down to her assistance , tix > k the Harry of the West in tow , and drew her to Memphis—au act of great kindness aud humanity to the wounded on the part of her captain . To crown our confusion and distress , very soon after tho expiosien , Captiin Horbon announced in the cabin that the Harry of the West was on fire . Fortunately , it was soou extinguished . There were about thirty cabin passengers
of whom perhaps ten wero women , f ! ud tho boat drifted into the middle of the nvi r , wtai-o the current was rnnniog at the . rate of five miles an hour , the tragedy would have been still moro terrific . —The Harry of the West is a new boat , built at Cinciunati , for the St . Louis and New Orleans trade , and is owned at St . Louis . She is believed to be the largest boat ever built at Cincinnati . She is 232 . 4 fevt in extreme length ; hc-r breadth across the guards , abreast of the wheels , is 59 . i feet ; and she has an eighteen feet hold . Her burden is 750 tons . Her cabin is ll > 8 feet long . She has excited much admiration for her size , beauty of model , and splendour of decoration , wherever she has appeared .
Untitled Article
*¦ ' >¦' ¦ f '" ' ' -V- ur ; .- ; u u-n fj-.: c (! Oiod on . o : t : ;; - lay iu i > iii = < ; m ia'jruiujii 8 bd hy th ' j A : torn ' .. y-Ge : iernl , Ij rcn-tv-r ir < nn Mr ilar :-: V " ;' ' > 'l i 2 " n to th . nmou'it of i ' o ^ OO , f < -r ill .-gally dutV-tu-iiji- ' the Doard of Ca-t > un of duoVa Day . 'be ou Oil pairs of jz \ ov ? 3 . Mr . Hard is s glovo-imyyrter i . \ ull J ^ vry nnd ho ha . > 3 partner , M . Vid < -1 , at Gronobh . The ' fraud wastff cr . ed by a collision between Mr . Tye , who acted as Custom -house-agent for th (; importers , and two as Cudicm-house-officers , Mr . Horn- rslsaia ane Mr . JJurnby Burn by turned Qaeea ' a evid « ce ; llomcrshara : a ccn <\ ; Tyo is said to be a-t Boul ^ ne . Some glov-: 3 wore lauded from the LaJy de Saum .-tr . * 2 iu Fobruarv 1841 ; and Buruby , the landing-wiUer , took a' -sight entry" of the goods in a "blue b > pk . "
laia book is one of which tne leaves are stamped ana the strings are secured vviih a Government soal . Af orwarris , at t 5 ie distance of Tye , and with the aid of Hom-rshatn . tho leaves were torn ou * of the book , a , fr-j-h seal being forged ! and other loaves from a b'ank book v , vre substituted , with a falsa entry , ratine the iroo ? 3 under the true quantity—nainaly , 5-1 U ! 5 airs , instead of 1 , 43 D pairs : the duty paid was £ 127 , instead of an amount proportionally larger . Another charge r- ! "t ' . 'd to som >; goods landed abJufc thr . sam « timf . T .- .-defendant's cour . sel took some tuchuical nijj- 'Ctions on points of law , a « -l contended that there r-aliy was no evidence to bring home to him proof of pu . rticipacion in tho fvaud . The Jury rfitnrn < : d a verdict for the Crown , damages £ 4 . 500 .
Rr . PKAL .- —Tho Repeal movement in Ireland grows hotter ; all the Catholic Bishops have joined it ; it has advanced to the dignity of a movement denounced by Governni .-nt ; and Mr . O'Connell talks to multitudes vying in numbers with tho whole British army in the worda of prumise common to revolutionary leaders on the evo of action—though O'Connell verbally disclaims all violence . Troops congregate ia Ireland ; and ihe agitators generally think that the "Repeal mokes progress under perseveranca andz ^ al , just a 3 Catholic E .-nancipation made progress uudec the same agencies , to actual fulfilment . Yet the English politician has no difficulty in perceiving that the Irish are as far off R-. paal as ever . Those who calculate their progress omit one element iu the
calculation—England . * In tho case of Catholic emancipation , the agitators had on their side—justice , expediency , and the conviction of England : in the case of Repeal , neitheT of tho ? e advantages is wi'h them —for tUo Repealers thmsalves hive put theiv present claim as an alternative to "ju 3 ; ice for Ireland "; therefore justice m '' ;' iit bo rendered to Ireland with * out Repeal . In favour of Repeal , Mr . O'Connell has his own will and the consent of the easy Irish people minus the Protestant population . But the Uuinn is an Imperial question , and Ireland ' s consent fven if unanimous , would not suffice . When North Carolina , a sovereign statf , which Ireland is not , ta . 'ked of seceding from tho American Union , it was compelled to dr ^ p it s stout language , and it
still bo-longs to the Union . Th ^ agitation , indeed * def a '« th ; i objects of the real friends of Ireland ; for E igtaud and Scotland have no sympathy with it—it rstranpes ( hem ; whereas a well-coiicened agitation , f- » r tho jj ^ t end . ^ to which Repeal is proposed us thr ; mean * , v . oul ^ enlist iu its favour . all the "rowing practiciil liberality of Great Britain . One t ' oing not crcJirab . 'e to Ireland is exhibited by the disturbance—the utter nrM' ! ect and impotency of the iTinh K ^ ntry . In England , in case of commotion , all look to the Government to guide and direct , ; but * all are ready to do avast deal . In the rural districts espec al ! y , the gentry are among thoir people , not only quelling force but using counteracting ii . iflfences . Tlii ] is at ill more Hpparent before the critical time :
( when cne agitation is sure to b-get i : s count er-agitai tion ; and every question is debated in every town I and hamlet—ru . is tho g-nuntlet of every disturbing infl'i . iico , gua-sive and cotrciv ? , public aud donaostic . ; Every qae-tion id thu 3 ripe ? ed aud settle ' " ! by the nation at Jan ;^ , before the Government is called upon to ^ ive effect to the balance of opinion . Iu Irdand , on the contrary , nothing , in times of em-: barrdSsmont , stands between the Government and ! the poj . u ) : » ce . True , there are divers loyal persous i who will fight when callud upon ; but there is no niediati .-ig class mixing with the people , moderating I them , neutraliz i ng extremes , and leaving nothing ' but final and well-ascertained results for Government
to deal wiihril . Hero is an immenso gap in the machinery of Irish polity ; one cause why Ireland 1 do-is not feel the iiifljence of central government ia , a . comparatively steady and easy pressure , but only ¦ in hours of extremity , harshly and resentfully ; one cause of habitual unrulincts—of popular resistj ance of every unpopular tax—of reckless sacrifice of i lire and property , because Government is wholly for-[ gotten . Thus does absenteeism become its own punishment . —Spectator . Anotheh Conflagration at Liverpool . —Another 1 most destructive fire broke ou in this town about two o ' clock ou Friday morning , which in a very j short timo reduced three large warehouses to little I more than a heap of smoking ruins . This fire com-[ inencad i . » i a back cellar of a warehouse in Jaekson ' s' 1-nie , a narrow passage between Union-street and Queen-street , a short distance from the Exchange . Tho warehouse contained a largo quantity of cotton , ; saltpetre , and other inflimmablo articles . About j . half-past two Mr . Hewitc , Mr . Leveratt , and other , Fnperintendents of our police force , arrived ou I the spot ; bur , as usual , half an hour elapsed before I Fufficent water could be got from the main ? , and in , the mean time the fire gained ground rapiuly . Duri ing this delay , the flames had reached tho second ! story , ce / itai / i-Sng sakpetre , which soon afterwards j exploded with a trewc-udous noise , blowing up part I of the wall , and doing other damage . This exp'loi sion was followed by anothor , almost as terrific . None ; of the firemen or bystanders were injured , although some of them had very narrow escapes . The Sre spread rapidly , and about four o ' clock the blaze was
fearful . At nve o clock all hope 01 saving the warohouscs where the five first commenced , or Wright ' s warehouse , to which it had spread , was at an end . The firemen therefore turned their attention to the adjoining valuable warehouses , one of which was alreaiy on fire . Between eitjht and nine the third warehouse had caught fire , aud in the course of the morning : that also was destroyed . Next to the shed , adjoining the warehouse on the east side , which had first' linked , aud from which the explosions had proceeded , was another shed , also filled with a large quantity of saltpetro in bags , and such men as could be got on the emergency were employed to carry xc out into a yard in Queen-street . Police-firemen 255 , Armstrong , and 355 , Dixon | kwere the first who got on tho top of the warehouse next to that consumed . One po ' iicxfficer was severely , but net dangerously wounded by a brick fr < im the warehouse in Unionstreet falling and cutting him in the forehead . We have heard of no o'her acciJent . The whole of the police , officers and men , did their duty well . At a quarter-past ei « ht , the front of the large warehouse came down with a groat crash into Union-etre ° t , struck a hou ^ e opposite , and carried part of the . corner of the house along with it . Some of the burning materials thus thrown into the dwelling set it on fire ; but the ' . ngines being brought to bear upon this fresh conflagration , it was soon s ot under . The wiad during the morniag blew from the S . E ., but was not very high , else the immense body of . fliflie must have ret fire to other buildings , and the damage would have been much more extensive . During tho afternoon the fire , which was confined to the three warehouses , was got under . The total loss 19 estimated at from £ 60 , 000 to £ 80 , 000 . The origin of the lira is not known . —Liverpool Times . I Imposition . —A lady in Nottingham , having com-! municatcd a wish to several persons , that she could like to see stpoe enc Mesmerised , was waited upon by a young girl , who said she should be happy to gratify her . The lady thanked her for her kindiicfry , acd sent for a young gentleman she knew could 'Mesmerise , and he agreed to come . A time was appointed , aud the young girl was sent for , and he commenced operating upon her . In three m ; nute 3 she was thrown into a state of coma . She went down on her knees and repeated a prayer ; she emptied her pockets , sang , recited one of Watts ' a hymns , and performed various other extraordinary acts , to the great a&tonishment of the lady and tae friends she had assembled round her , to see the
wonders of Phr . no-Magnetisrn . They were highly gratified fur about a quarver of an hour . When the young girl was restored , she said sho felt quite well , aad recittd several pieces of poetry as a proof of it . A fow days after , the lady was waited upon by Bome of the giii ' s friends , who informed her that the giri had nearly lost her senses , and her sight was so far gone that she could not see to work in consequence of havL-ig been improperly Mesmerised , and that unices something was done for her , to enable her to cea « f .- working for a time , she was a ruined g rl . Tho lady -vs-ii . 3 horrified , aud they saw it ; they t ; .: u ca . d , if she would allow her three or four . 'hii'irgs a week , till she was able to work , they would say no nvjre about it . The lady agreed to do
ic . Some weeks passed on ; she was no better ; wjen a relation , a medical man , coming on a visit to her , the related the aircumstance , and he said ho believed she had been imposed upon , and was determined to see the girl ; he went to her heme , aud a .-ked if there wa 3 a young man lived there who could Mesmerise people , - he was invited in , and there sat tho blind girl , backstitching a pair oF shirt wristbands for a young man . He entered into conversation with her ; she told him she had been thrown into the mesmeric sleep above twenty times , and it never injured her , and offered herself £ 3 a subject if he . conldfind the young man he was in search of ; he thanked her and said he did not know
how to requite her for her kindness , aud offered to give ner sixpence for one of the wristbands she was Stitching so neatly ; she said he might have it ; he took it and departed . In the course of an hour the gentleman again entered the house , accompanied by the lady and a policeman . She was then given to understand it was at her option to return the money she had exacted , or be taken into custody , on a charge of obtaining money under false pretences ; she gladly preferred the former , and after having severely talked to , she confessed she had nearer been under mesmeric influence at all , but that it was all " sham" from beginning to end , —Nottingham Review *
V*C F-I- : -. _
V * C f-i- -. _
Untitled Article
* Report of Mr . Home , Sub-Commissioner on CbilcitUB' Employment Commission . —HO .
Untitled Article
At the armual meeting of the governors of the Kensington Dispensary on Thursday , Sir Henry Willock , K . L . S . in the chair , the treasurer , Mr . Sainlsbury , announced that he had that dsy received from His Royal Richness Prince Albert h ' . s gracious consent to be named patron of the institution , in the room of his latt Royal Highness the Duke ot Sussex ; and tl . at Prir-C ' -1 Aibtit h . ; d sccompauicd bis acct piaEno of ihe cfibe with the liberal and perfectly r-pon ' . ane'rjs c i ; a : icn r . f £ 20 , in aid ot the funds t >» the parity . TT . c rumounecn ^ nt v ? as received v , 'ith heTCO . nlivv ' yfeei-n ^ sof jvaufication by themcet . ng , and the \ ho treaiuicr w : ; 5 request , d to return , a Siutable attfijHvLdE ; m £ L . t in as&ame .
Untitled Article
—— — ===== ^ _ _^^^^ ^^^ THE NORTHERN STAR .
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), May 27, 1843, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct652/page/3/
-