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€%arttj§t aBmrltftrjw
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THE BASE DISPATCH NEWSPAPER.
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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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rpHE Proprietors of Parr ' s Life Pills call public A attention to the following facts : — They published a skort time Binse in the newspapers the letter which follows : —
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READ AND JUDGE ! ADMITTED UNDEB P 1 PTY TEARS OP AGE THE FIRST NINE HONIHS I A MOST favourable opportunity to the Industrious Classes to ensure themselves Proprietors of Land and Property—to provide against Sickness , Want , and a Poor Law Union—1 b offered to Healthy Men , in Town or Country , by joining the
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FRAMl-TON'S PILL OF HEALTH . TO THB SDFFEREHS FBOM BILIOPS AND LIVBB COMPLAINTS . rriHE unexampled successs of FRAMPTON'S X PILL OF HEALTH calls for particular attention . These Pills give immediate Telief in all Spasmodic and windy complaints , with the whole train of well-known symptoms arising from a weak stomach , or vitiated bilious secretion , indigestion , pain at tbe pit of the stomach , bilious or sick head-ache , heart-burn , loss of appetite , sense of fulness after meals , giddiness , dizziness , pain over tbe eyea , &o . From among many kind testimonials communicated to the proprietor of this useful medicine , the following is selccied : — " To Mr . Thomas Prout , 229 , Strand , London . " 5 , Cooper-etreet , Manchester , March 12 , 1842 ,
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Just Published , price 2 a , 6 d ., and sent free , " enclosed in a sealed envelope" on receipt of a Posi-office Order for 3 s . 6 d . MANLY VIGOUR : a Popular Inquiry into the CONCEALED CAUSES of its PRE 1 VIATURE DECLINE ; with Instructions for its COMPLETE RESTORATION , addressed to those suffering from the Destructive Consequences of Excessive Indulgence in Solitary ( and Delusive Habits , Youthful Imprudence , or Infection ; including a comprehensive Dissertation on Marriage , with directions for the removal of Disqualifications , and Remarks on the Treatment ' of Ghonoirhco , Gleet , Stricture and Syphilis . Illustrated with Cases , &o .
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fi GRIMSHAW AND CO ., 10 , Goree Piazzas , V , Liverpool , Despatch fine FIRST CLASS AMERICAN SHIPS , of large Tonnage , for NEW YORK and NEW ORLEANS , every week ; and occasionally to BOSTON , PHILADELPHIA and BALTIMORE , and for QUEBEC and MONTREAL , a ' lso first rate British Vessels to NEW SOUTH WALES and VAN DIEMANS LAND . THE " OLD" LINE OF PACKET SHIPS , ( BLACK BALL LI . VB , ) SAIL FIIOM LIVERPOOL FOR NEW YORK ,
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Just Published , the 12 th Edition , Price 4 s ., ^ sent Free to any part of the United Kingdom on the receipt of a Pest Office Order , for is
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Just Published , Price 2 s . 6 d . [ Or sent free to the most remote parts of the Kingdom , in a sealed envelope , on the receipt of a post-office order for 33 . 6 d . )
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TEETH . BRADFORD AND LEEDS . MESSRS . MAJOR & CO ., Surgeon Dentists , 13 , TRAFALGAR STREET , Leeds , adopt in their Practice all ihe recent Improvements in the Detital Art , and all Operations on the Teeth , Gums , and Palate , on those sound Surgical Principles which have gained them such extensive Patronage . ; Having studied Surgery , they can with confidence undertake those difficult Operations which so often prove la'ai under the hands of the mere Mechanic Tnevr Charges are suoh as to be within the moans of those who are often deterred from consulting a Dentist , through tb » fear of Expense , and are thus drivpii into the hands of the uctkilful or itinerant Practitioner .
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CUBKn .- ^ The Irish TJiuverBal Saffraee Associa- [ Eon > 3 c 3 d their usual ¦ weekly jneeting , on Sunday last , at icx o ' clock iu the evening , 3 Hr . Jolm Ksegan in the ; chair , Hz . Win . H . Djoti , secretary . i * r . Djott isad fbe rules and dJqJecis cf the Association ; also a j peat -cumber of lEtten from Tenons psris of England \ and SceSand , ana a few frcan tie West , and South of ! Ireland , all of "cinch were # f the most cheering nature , ! and Eoiae ssKcg "whether It was atfll Mi . OConnellS j opii&zi 4 fcst 5 i "was sbajiEpGTia&e"b& = iic 6 to be a Char- ' ilstln Ireland —( bear , tear )—and Also requesting to be anfcEscd as to Low His Union is to be Repealed , anA \ iflsi asps ice liberator anfl Ms Sead slanderer of the j Irish people , lam Stede , have taken to icturn Sepsal j Meebss for the City of Dublin , for the County of ; DnblisHid though la ^ not leastft * the County of {
, , Kcrrj ; sad-was the murder of Mr . Csflay , ^ t Clones , I not sheading human blood ; and ¦ sas jsoi the Repeal j agitation in Irelsnd Ins-sad of in the House of Com- f moss , tbe Immediate cause of this blood shedding— ¦ jhesr , hear . ) Sit Henry Clsik isid that in ecuse- ! jgaeut * cf the "rile , TRiissisaii slanderous libel , which fljat ^ Kaented nondescript , Tom Steele , hsdpnblisbad in the Freeman ' s Journal of Tussfisy last , upon the Chastise of Great Britain , and his base and cowardly Bttatt upon 2 &T , -O'Conaor , ¦ who had been labouring late sa& early in season and out of season , to bring ; about a tindly feeling and cordial undetstscoiaz be- , iwesn the people cf Ireland asd England , \ rith a view \ o smclioTate the c&nol&on -e £ Ike -woriinr people o !
j > oih ecainfeneB ; and in ¦ srMch hs "wes 4 hw 2 iied and tnppoced by "Ireland ' s head pacificator . " He ( Mr . Clari ) should , irith . the leave of ths meeting , Tritb-Kbrsw tbe motion of "Bxidi he had given jfctice last Snn&j , trhidi "was to the cfftit , that the British Char&ts should persevere as tt-ey fcsd fctgun , by for- ( givlig eU de -wrongs that vera heaped npcn them , sn < l JCO-operaSe ¦ with , their Jrlah brethren for a Repeal of tb . e ' Usiosj lasj-wieniessw the " iead padficator ** Tuta \ Steele , creating distnrbsnce and roiling disstnticn aa ' BsnaL by BiaSra'srJEg bis Eame from a Repeal Asso- ' dation in London , because Mb bettas -were admitted a snember of it ; because Sir . Feargas O'Gannor , a man "Srho is as trEnsceadanHy scperior to Tein Stade as any msa can is , to anofchsr . -vras admitted a
mficljer < jf a Repeal Assadstion in Iiutdoa , Tom Stseie Tsitisflxe-sr Ma mame in tbs Eost scarrScua snd < S-est 3 iSBjmcT from tiie Association . ( Hear , best } Who is this Tom SteeSe ? J > dc 3 he iaujriae that ^ ra do not inowliiin ? Why , ths feUcv-R-ould isTe " & 5 cn ^ ad to get leave to clean boob acd slices for She asc = stors of O'Connor . He forced himself , or tsT ^ pt prevailed npon 2 dr . Ifichelaa Parcel O German , to fore- ? Mm into Us Catholic Association a few months befars Catholic ensardpatJon . and be took care to assist in sqaanderlng about jSl-MKJO cf the Catholic ? ent in dnrafcera-ess and fiebacclieTj of all sorts at the Clare slficSoa ; and tw ^ iB the fellow trho ostastaScns ! y withdra-srs his name from an association in London bee&sse Mr . O'Cosncr , whom three millions of JSritish
mH § scis loyBj honour , and trust , becomes s member . ( Hear , Itesr . ) He ( 23 z . Clark ) iad taken up too mnsh time Trlii fids < Irnnken bnffoon . H © begged to trith-5 ra 37 ihs motion . 2 dt O Higgius said that the Association « 7 ed an obligation to Mr . Clark for ths manly jBplni - » M ^ i ha hsd evinced in xepElling the -co-syardly sad malignant attack on thsr " Rag ' iisb brethren , asd < m 3 ! r . O'Connor in partieaiar , by that miserable gsswling ^ ava and sycopbaat t&a Head pacificator . ( Hesr . tesx , hear . ) He ( Mi . O'HigciEE ) shonld submit a iBsslTilkra to the netting condemnatory of the tJasfcarfiiy paragraph alinded to . ( Hear . ) Ii -would SB become their Assodation lo aQoir any sland ? r opon f ^ iprr 'PTT g iTtih treUiren to pass ¦ withonj ths strongest ^ jasdemaaiion . Th& IMiish Chartists , like hones : men ,
ihrew tbeir -w 2 m > 1 b strength mto the Bcale , ana gave all iheaia iniieir power to thia Assodaaon -when its anfant ^ steps irers assailed—{ hear , hear ) . Tiu 3 shoald asver be forgotten , bnt Temtanbered Tilth gratitude npaa-evey fitting occasion . Look at the piccu poafion 3 n -srhich 4 he tyy ^ TJnlrersal Snffraga AsBociation no-WEtsuos . SeelhetttabiB covered with , levtsrsfroia tbe chief toiros aud « atie 3 of Bngland and Scotland , legaestisg his ( Mr . O'Higgins ') advice ami opinion irpisn the preset Bapaal aritation , and to i 3 »» wha . z je 53 TJ 3 ihis Association hs ^ taken , or ^ icsud take , re-Bp ^ Jing tiie Repeal mo ^ fcmsnt- Tho EngS&h people leqaire ns to give &em a character of tfca Rtpsal leadas . They are afraid to trosfc them , and ^ rili not trnsi than , exce » S npen car chamcts of ttem . Ihej
toj ja = 12 y raj fl ^ ' th * y "FEra Mtesyea beiore , ana Hiat , therefore , th ^ are distrastful 01 the present Bepeal leadeis . To this we answer , " Ten are right Dosottrastthem . If yen . do , they -aill ssil yon aad us to a Whig Government Help aa to get the Union Repealed , but confide not in Irish Repeal leaders . " Upon this subject ie { Mr . CHiggins ) published a feter in the ' Sorfkem Star of the 27 th nltimo . tEfaat letter "was not ¦ wnKen -nth that care and atsxsssa "jsinch hs £ honld have -Biiiea . He -sis going to fee eomvtry -srlien ^ e -wrote-thst letter , and had not one moment to spare ; the letter thertfore ¦ was rot -writtenTriQi that care , accuracy and clearness , to "wiich the great imporiasce of the subject "was snHtled ^—( bear , hajr . ) Ife -sras a most estraoniinary
change in tha poliJicalmovenieait 3 of the conntry to aee the letiers from fiarty places in ^ Siest Britain coming to BolmniblBan 53 tt 3 i' » ienalasJam ^ JIx . O * H . ^ T € qTi <* ting 15 m to give a character of a man "wio once stood so fc'gh JntheestlmaUonof iveryRaoical Reformer in Gfcat ftritTwrij but"not one of -whom -would trust him no * . H « ( MtOtH . ) had no oificnlly aiaD in believing that Mr . 0 * 00101611 had not title aSghtest hope or intention of repealing fSseUnion ; thai theirbole end and object of tie icpeal agitafion tras to force the "Whigs into power again . The Catholic Clergy are sincere Repealers , and so also firs She great bulk of the people . £ st he ( Mr . OIL } Tegretisd very much Shat hs could not l » ok npon theRepealerBin any other light than that of inaves and dupes . Rgpealsra are divisible into these two classes .
3 > epgnQ upon ii that in the event oi the "Whigs , Lord < John and the lest of them , coming into power , tbe I Bepeal of the Union wiD be put in abeyance , and JSx . Daniel O'Gonnell Tfffl come forward as he did ± n 1837 " the Gtsvemment cairdidate . " Peojfe may imagine that they can keep Mr . O Council to the Xepeal question j but this is a great mis- j teke . Hb wBl crive a coach acd sis through ever } , nronusd hs Trmrta to the public , snd <^« mT > consistency , j SB he did before j demand a fair trial for 1 he TFhigs ;! declare that they an setl&e those of 1 SSS-0-4 O ; pledge I himself that I * rd John has given up flaality ; and ask ' the people will fiiey not try fbB effect of " Justice to ] Ireland *?; call © very Repealer an impracticable block-1 bead ; ana fill that IP&ddy , in his . wisdom , stcfii his ,
•' canteen * ' in the window , not to . let in the light or keepitont , but io keep out the " could . " He will ask . fhepeoplb to conSfle in him , and say if they hid a , eusa to plead whom would they employ ? Ko » the To- j jfies , surely , who are opposed to the Liberal Govern- ^ snent —( bear , hear } . Seep the Tories cut , wiU then be : the cry ; snd Justice to Ireland will mean as it did be-: lore , "Whig places for the County Kerry road jobbers snd their progeny . The terms ? ory-Ratii £ a ^ s -frill ] t » again applyed as terms of contempt for honest ; jnen . Groveffing Banienls , rascally Radicals , blooOihizsry phymcal-Jores ChartSsts , Saxon Enemies , and V > forth , will ba the mildest terms which will be used towards all those who have the manliness and integrity to stand firmly troon the immutable and
jQorions principles of the People ' s Charter , and refuse to hsrk in at the tale of ths bloodiest , the basest S&d most brutal faction that ever disgraced the council d a sovereign , the pensions "Whigs . Nevertheless fee ( Mx . 4 )* HIgglns ) would strongly advise the Chartists to petition and agitate for the Repeal of ths Union for the sake of the measure itself , and not because Mr . O'CoeseD was the treacherous and hollow-hearted advocate of thit ¦ measure . Keep ifim to the point , indeed 2 the thing is imposible . IiOok to his votes npon the Tithe Question . Surely his conduct towards the poor factory children cannot be forgotten . The Dorchester Labonrea were betrayed . The Glasgow Cotton Spinners were pronounced guilty before they were tried , andiy whom ? by DanM O'Connell , In Mb place in Parliament , and
oat of Parliament , He , as a ^ reat constitutional lawyer , cried -out loud and long for the blood of the Stephen's , fho OastJert , « nd tb 9 O'Connors and hallooed on the Government 10 prosecute ths sues who he knew in his soul were honestly straggling for public liberty . Trust such a man ! No , nd He ( Mr . O"H . } hoped that his Chartist brethren would never become so low , so utterly degraded , as to confide in the man again . If they do they ought to be deceived . Can they forget Stephensan's-sonare ? Can they forget ths cowardly threat to bring over five bundled thousand Tr « Tmi <» n to aid f ^» Whig Government in their tSbrts to crush the devoted advocates of public liberty in England ? " Well he knew when he made this tmcolent offer , that Charfism is as essential to political
Mivation , as Christianity is to eternal salvation . But eternity itself wonM be sacrificed at the time for the purpose of keeping Xord Joan anS ths "Whig gang in their placea . He talks about Repeal and says that the man must be a bad TriBTiman -who < Ioeanot become an enroltedRepealHr : ihatiB to say , to pay his money into feseog on of 12 » Cam Exchange . Where is his son Morgan O'Connell ? "Where iB hiB son-in-law , Christo . pher r Pit ^ mmonB ? Where is his son-in-law , Charles P / Connem "Where is his brother John O"Genn « 31 , of Gaud—and Ms nephew Morgan John © "Connoll , of " hom U » e Tories made a Deputy Tagn frmy . * . © f the SOBnty ^ rrraieoUiaaay ? "WhEae aacethose gentlemen ? Are jSiey enrolled lepealen ? Ifo , not one . of them
xotjae fheyyikeiy to become repealera imtil « ueh time aiaeToryiainisfcry aieon a » < ve of dismissal ; and «* en »? n 1 * Jtaa-may jom the lepealers in the hope *> r getting a Whig «> p for deserting the cause . See bow ttffllawyea are quiffing the Courts now when there is no hope xS . - promction from the Tories , and joining the repeal , lesring the four Courts as rats leave % sbzj old ship . Depend npon it , Toryism is on the Bans , or else tba lawyers would j » t desert it for lepeaL IhereareKaaegood ttings in e ^ oecfafion , 01 c 3 se » a many of flie lawyers would not have joined the mikrof Hjb xepealaa . They ean eaaBy iae off into the rVhlg ^ Vnp * , and abandon repeal . Those learned genliemen inoiy right weE that the repeal acitation is
xmij carried on as a means to an end ; and that end is thepatronageof thelnshBsnch ant Bar . In tbe event © likexeifcorafian of the Whigs to power , the repeal is « ure to he placeflin abeyance jnst to give the friends cf Ireland another farr triaL I * t our 3 Sngliah brethren not 1 » deeavedbysnpiy Bound , and hollow professions . At the repeal mettisg at MUl-street , in the-county of Cork ,
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the Liberator has thrown out a , broad hint even to P . rJ and the Iron Dake , to the effect , that should the Tory Government comply with what he has defined as justice to Ireland he . will abandon repeal , and help the Tciies tc crash Hherty in [ . England , let all England read the report id the Freeman of ilcnday last , and then judge for themselves . Here it is . Read it : — " England , in her present state , oare not force on coercive measures —( hear , hear ) . She has Charti 3 in at home within her centre . She has Rebecca and her daughters in Wales , and ! she is at war with the Seotch on the qnestion of the' Church of Scotland — 'hear , hear ) . They attempt io threaten jra , but we despise them . We point to the ; discontent in other places , and ssy , do es justice , and -we will
STJIEAGHTUES TOUB HAXDS , AS » INCREASE T 0 UE P 0 WEE . * Can any man of common sense doubt the meaning cf thia effer ? Is not this a renewal of the oflter to bring over five hundred ^ thousand Tipperary men to put down Chartism in England ? Can Sir Robert Peel or the Duke of Wellington mistake the meaning of this offer so " strengthen their hands and increase their power * ? Tho maii who is cspable of making an offer of this sort should be trnstsd by none tut fools . Mr . O'Higg-ns concluded by proposing the following resolution ; : — " That this Asso « iallon conjare 3 the Chartists of Great Britain not to be swayed from their generous purpose of lassistang the Irish Repealers , by every legal and constitutional means , by the late splntteriEj ? piece of personal malice
inerted in the Freemtnfs Journal newspaper , by that isf ? acted egotist and parasite Tom Steele , who , it is rell understood , by every one inj Ireland is only resiBfc « 1 by his * atjgcsi ieadeb' to amuse the public , nd v . ho , like oihers among his * motley * predecessors rho have displayed their antics hi the train of some f EsglaBdfc merriest moBarchB , is fond of a cccasional bit cf misdiief , andf who as ' ¦ Ireland ' * tezd Pacificator * takes every opportunity to create diairbasce , and fcraient discordand ' animosity between le r ^ al friends of Ireland , the British Chartists and le Repealers . " Mr . Henry Clarke , seconded the lotioc , and in an able aud judicious speech repudiated le attack Epos tbe Cinrttst body , and justified tho sociation in the canse it was purauing , and £ aid in
canclusioa , that that association wauld teach those hollow hearted sham patriota whoj lired on the hard earning of his poor , plundered , and duped countermen , that they could not slander our English friends with impunity . ( CheeiB ) Mr . Dyottsaid he did not rise for the purpose oi opposing ihe motion ; oirthe contrary , he thought it infinitely to tte credit of that as 8 osiatiGn , thsta disclaimer on their part , as Irishmen , should promptly go forth of file filthy insolence of that eccentric political baffoon , familiarly known to them all as the renowned Tom Steel J This infuriated " pacificator" had the assurance to denounce Mr . O'Conner and call the vast body of the English Chartists , *• miscreant Fcargusites . * Here was a pacificator ^ Upwards of three millions of English men . forgetful of the wrongs heaped npon them by Mr . O'UbnneH , who panted for the Whig Government ' s command to march five hundred thousand Tipperary men to put down the Kadicals of Fngland—forgetting
the busa and infamous slanders so often fulminated from the rostrum of the Ccrn Exchange iy Ireland ' s great but moat inconsistent patriot , vsbe leads Tom Sltde about lite a tame bear for exhibition—whan these real and tne-hea : ted reformers , thera staunch aad indomitable lovers of freedom , saw the Irish threatened with coercion , snd the constitution invaded , magnanimously advanctd to the rescue : and what was their reward ? insult and vitupsratien from Tom Steele . Was he authorised ?—( hesx . i If not , that most urwue paragraph which appeared in the Freeman and smelt so strong of spite and whiskey , would be disaww « d—lei this be dons and the union of the people of both conntries would soon tear to flitters the Parchment Union framed by a corrupt and sordid legislature—( hear . ) He warmly supported the resolution . The motion was then put and carried , and ordered to be | advertised in the Freeman ' s Journal . Mr . Toaia was called- to the chair , ¦ wnen tbe usual vote of thanks -were given to the Chairman , after which the meeting separated .
ASEfiBSBK- —Glorious Demomsihatton in S . VOCE of Rzpeal . —On Monday week , a public setin ^ -was bvld on the Inchss to tako iato csnslderaonthspTopi ^ ty oi supporting the Irish in their agitiun for the B ° pea * ot the Usicr ? . The area of sTound button tha hastin ^ s were erected > vras thioneed by a reat xuniber of people long before the time affixed for immeccicg business , and a great heal of impatience -is manifesr- d by sn immense multitude in the line of reels lezavsg from the Chartists' Hall in George-street > the place of meeting . This throng considerably ohmeted the progress of the passengers ; snd it was halfast eight o ' clock before the busting * were occupied . Lr . James M'Pherson was voted to ite chair . The hairman said he would with much pleasure bring
beore the very numerous and respecoible meeting sow > fcfore him a matter which he hoped had engrossed heir most serious attention , hi order that they might » able to decide -whether they would coolly and eareesslv suffer the Government to carry out its hostile hreate against Ireland ; or if they were , on the other land , willing to stand forth at all hazvrds and shield their brethren of the Sister Isle while they are peaceiuUy sail legally wrenching themselves from tbe iron grasp of a privileged race , who have hitherto appeared much more willing to sweep that misgoverned and patient people from the face of the earth , than te fill their fcmptj stomachs , clothe their nakedness , or otherwise administer to tbeir wants . He could not help noticing the foul stain which had been cast upon the Protestants
in Ireland by tbe Government , in its having asserted , with the greatest confidence , that they would act in concert "with the military against the Catholic population . If such a report' was true , he hoped tbe Protestants in Antrim , Down , Tyrone , Derry , Fermanagh , and UlBter would join their brethren of the same faith in England and Scotland , in telling tho G , Temment that they hold such a declaration is utter detestation He then introduced Mr . James Strachan , who moved the following resolution : — " That thia meeting views with rtrong feelings of indignation the tyrannical and unconstitutional disarm ing act f ^ i Ireland , considering it a base attempt to lay the people bound at tha feet of a destoying aristocracy , and to leave the means of defending life and property
in the hands of bloodstained faction only . AIbo that if the Peel and Wellington Government carry out their threats and destroy the constitutional right of public meeting and free discussion of grievances in Ireland , this meeting pledgeth itself to ro ate common cause with its brethren in Ireland , and use every legal means to bring those traitors to justice , and will deem every man a disgrace to bis country that would aid She tyrants to carry ont their unjust and coercive acts . Holding the right of every nation to discuss and repeal whatever acts of Parliament they deem wrong and injurious ; but yet we remain csnvineed that the mere establishment of a Parliament in Ireland or any country , will not give national freedom or just government , unless tbe whole people have the ehoosing ef that Parliament . "
Mr . Robert Lo # ery seconded the resolution , After which a show of hands was called for , when a forest of hardy fists soon made their appearanee in behalf of the sons of the Emerald Isle , and the resolution was declared to be carried unanimously . Tbe meeting then voted resolutions confiexanatory of Sir Japjes Graham ' s Factory and Educational BQL The mover of this was Mr . Htnery , and the seconder Mr . Archibald M'Donald . Tcese were also carried unanimously . This concluded the buBinesB . The meeting gave three hearty cheers for old Ireland , three ffr Feargas O'Connor , Esq . ; three for ill . Hill , for his advocacy of justice to Ireland , and three for the Northern Star ; after which the meeting separated , highly pleased with the ^ orderly "i ^" HT in which the business had been conducted .
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NOMINATIONS FOR THE GENERAL COUNCIL . BaOHSGHOVB . Mr . Matthew Hoyle , weaver , Kiddenmnster-Toad Mr . Edwin Jones , boot and Bhoe maker , Worcester street . Mr . James Heywood , sflk-weaver , Sidemore . Mr . James HaJJ , bnttoa-inaker , Sidemore . Mr . Joseph Cooper , bntton-maker , Chartist-lane Mr . John Pinfield , button-maker , Holy-lane , sub Treasurer . Mr . Henry Prosser , boot aad shoe-maker , W 01 cester-sireet , snb-Secretary .
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_ 2 THE NORTHERN STAR .
€%Arttj§T Abmrltftrjw
€% arttj § t aBmrltftrjw
The Base Dispatch Newspaper.
THE BASE DISPATCH NEWSPAPER .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 10, 1843, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct805/page/2/
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