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-L* hatethrough thenotonety oftheirarea* efficacy Bt AIR'S ! GOU> AND XtisbwfilC vtiM hate, through thenotorietv attVetirarkiki «ffii^
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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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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Just published , in royal 18 mo ., cloth , price 3 s . ; and sent iii Towno » Cirtntry free , bypostj & . *\ fc , : MANH OOD : the ' CAUSES ^ iWPREMA-. WJRE DK > L . UJE » < with Plain Directions for ITS PS ^ I ^ To ^^^ B ^ 7 IONr 4 MUres » ail to those suffering jrom the destructive effects of Excessive Indulgence , Solitary Habit * , or Infection ; folbwed W Obsenrations on Ae TREATJ 4 ENT ^ of SYPHILl ^ fi ^ paRHCEA , GLEET , dro . Ulnstrated with Ca 8 « 8 ^ &c . .. ¦ " ' '¦ . . .., . ¦; C Vlfy ^ L ^ l ^ l ^ aiul ' co ^ AIfV . ' " - - - Consulting Surgeons , London . ' - Published by the Authon , and eold by BaHiere , Medical Bookseller , 219 , Regent-street ) Strange , 21 . Patejra « Bter . -row ; Advertiser Office , £ ^ oil > jiAvievf Office , N 6 t « ngham ; Machen ahS Co ., 8 , D * Oli « rstreet , Dublin ; Duncan , 114 . High-street , EdihWrgh andjtQbe . had-ofallB < M > kflellorgr--z—r r ~~ = r .-rr ^ . :. ; The ; Wo » fc whichis'iiow presented ^ the pnbl | e is able reaeon , have be ^ ejther ^^^ hfirroTeiloeied , or treated w ; th apa ^ hy ^ ana almosk iadiffierenceiby ih « ordinary jURS ^ of these , affections , ko point out their causes , and * ° murk the terrific conseguenoea , social ,. JopraT , and ^ hyelcd which are / fnreja followlrpm indulKehc > , "In certain habita , would b « entirely out of plioe in an ftavertiaomoiit . We have npiesitation , however , in saying that there is no member of societf by whom the book will not be found interesting , whether we consider such person to hold the , relation of a PARENT , a PRECEPTOR , or a CLERGYMAN-
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The PARENT , who beholds bis beloved child pining away , and fast approaching to a premature grave , in consequence of some disease , wbiohj for want of a careful inv . eatigat ! on of its real cause , has been set down to theBcoreof consumption , wUl , on perusing this' work , be astpn | shed to find that in nine-tenths of the cases of joung persons of both sexes , who perish Of . whAt is called polmonary con-BumpUon , , b > aH disease , t ab ^ , &o . ^ e sole and exclusive origin has been the . indulgence in certain destructne habits , praensed by . youta" much , more
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-L * hate , through thenotonety oftheirarea * efficacy , become the onlf Medicine in general use , for the cure of those dreadfully painful diseases . Gout Rheumatic ^ u ^ r » h earaati ^ Lumbago * Soiattca , TioDoloreux , F » inBinthe . HeadandFace , frequently mistaken for the Toothache , and all analogous complaints . The recent testimonial of Lieut . Masters ( of Hawley ^ near Bagflfotyiaiejof theiRoyal Newfoundland Veteran Corifpanies , who was invalided home by a Garrison orded , together with the numerous certificates , which have been published from persons in every station of life , from all parts of the Empire , particularly those of the Rev . Dr . Blo o mberg , the Chevalier De la Garde , &o . &c , demonstrate this preparation to be one of the greatest discoveries in Medicine . hate , through thenotorietv attVetirarkiki « ffii ^
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frequently than is at ausnepected . . :, \ , The PRECEPTOR , alio , who holds temporarily at least the relatioa and responsibility of a parent , will , by persuui ^ this -work , be directed , and very much assisted in investigation and detecting tb « too often oonceaicd practices so often introduced info schools , whereby the health and ultimately the lures of his pupils are sure to be compromised , unless the evil be cheeked in proper time . He will here find a clue tocnidf hint tbroughihe intricate maue © f this moral . Iab . yrinih , and a standard whereby toiodie w ^ dffceacy of iaalth ehoald appear ^^ to attack any
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y appear any of his yonai char « fc wtattiieteal cause of suoh atuck may fa and alms he will be enabled to check the evil in it Jjooipient state . . ¦ , ¦ . The CLERGYMAN , -in whose sacred character is at onoe concentrated the . twofold relation of parent and instructor , will here be directed as to the nature of those habits to which youth is addicted ; he will also be enabled to point oat the disastrous consequences which are sure to follow from them , if not relinquished . ' ¦ ..- Messrs . CURTIS and CO . are . to be consulted daily at their residence , No . 7 , Frith-street , Soho , from Ten till Three , and Five till Eight in the Evening .
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Country Patients are requested to be as minute as possible in the detail of their cases—as to the duration of the complaint , the symtoms , age , general habits of living , and occupation in life of the party ; the communication must be accompanied by the usual consultation fee of £ 1 , without which no notice whatever can be taken of their application ; and in all oases , the most inviolable secrecy may be relied 0 *» . ' ' . ' ' ; . ' ¦ ¦ ¦ .., ' ¦ ¦ ' N . B . —Seven Doors from Soho Square . Sold by J . Hobson , Market-street , Leeds ; and ShUlito , York . ¦' : ¦ : ¦ ¦
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Sold by T , Prout , 229 , Strand , London . Price Is . ljd . and 2 s . fid . per box , and by his appointment , by Heaton , Hay , Allen , Land , Clapbam , Tarbotton , Smith , Bell , Tovmsend , Baines and NewsoaQe , Smeetoh , Reinhardt , Leeds ; Brooke , Dewsburv ; Dennis and Son . Moxon , Little , Hardman , Coliioc ,. Hargrove , Bellerby , York ; Brooke and Co ., Walker and Co ^ Stafford , Doncaster ; Linney , Ripon ; Foggitt , Thompson , Coates , Thirsk ; Wlley ^ Easingwoid ; England , Fell , Spiyey . Huddersfield ; Ward . RinhmnnH Pimomii w-ndmo . t ,.
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. ., borouch ; Pease , Darlington ; Dixop . Metcalfe , ' Langdale , Northallerton ; Rhodes , Snaith Goldtherpe , Tadcasterj Rogerson ; Goldthorpe , Cooper , ' Newby , Kay , Bradford ; Brice , Priestley ^ . Ponte' f 2 ^\ l Cardwell- ^ ill , Lawton , Shaw , Dt » wson , ¦ With . Dunn Wakeneid ; Berry , Denton ; Suter , Leyland , Halifax ; Boot and Son , Rochdale ; Lambert , BorougUbr % e ; Dajby , Wethorby ; Waite , 1 Harrogate ; and all respectable Medicine Venders throughout the kingdom , frice 2 s . 9 d . per box .
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Askfor BUnr'g Gout and Rheumatic PUls , and obsbrvb trie name and aildresB of "Thomas Prout , 229 , Strand , London , " impressed on th , e Government Stamp affixed t » each Box of the Genuine Medicine . ¦ ' ' '¦• \
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QUO PARR B 1 VAST WILL A TESTAMENT . A MOST singular document has recently been brought to Tight , and is now in the possession of the Rev . Wm . Arthbr , of East Peckham : it appears to bare been written by the celebrated OCD PARR , who attained the almost incredible age of one hundred and fifty-two years , and who left thjs dopnmeut , to a relation ; it is written on I > ar « fB ^ tfaRfea , although upwards of two hundred tS $ !* 2 &kw ® - * excellent state of preservation . ^ baWMMsatM an extract : —«•• ¦ " - i ¦¦
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fS ™ li ^ W » # ^ Wferaoe of % m \ gMBm tag catted me to attain to my miraei ^ oft ^ Albei t m my youth I was afflicted wittv ye Bfopdj . Flux and King ' s EviL but which all left me by using some dayes ye herbs as herein written . " , . ¦¦; , -. . . ,. . - . . . * \ J 3 ere follows the receipt : — ' ? ^ Moreoyer , I bequeath to my second Great Grand-* onje niethod I employ for preparing ye medicamerrt . Given this day , and in ye fifth year of my age , u Thomas Pahb »»
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" Winnington , Salop , Jannarie 17 th , 1630 . " " This singular character was the oldest man . with one exception , that Eugland ever produced : his biographer says , " the days of his youth , according to his own account , was a series of long and painful illness , but that by some secret means he cured himself , and was stronger than most men when he married his first wife , which he did at the advanced ago of eighty-eight : he again married at the amazing age of one hundred and twenty ; at one hundred and thirty U « used to thresh corn , and do any laborious work . He had seen ten Kings and Queens of England . Parr spent muoh of his time in the study of the
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vegetable world ,, and has fortunately left behind him , though long hid to the world , tho valuable ruits of his labours . Besides the valuab ' e receipt from which Parr ' B Pills are now compounded , there ate several MSS » , pieces written in his old quaint style , on . the value of health ; his opinion * , though somewhat differently expressed , were that the varieties of clime and modes of living make but little difference to our period of existence—that the laws of nature are simple and easily understood , but they require perfect obedience . ';¦ ¦ .
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The Clergyman who holds the valuable document abovementioned , ; has , by tho assistance « f a very able chemist and physician , caused the receipt of m > Parr ' s to be made into Pills , and although only a space of ' eighteen months have elapsod since tho trial , upwards of seven hundred cures have been effected ; more than one-half were considered incurable ; and what is more remarkable , cases which possess the very opposites as regards outward symptoms : the balsamic and invigorating effects on the blood produced by these medicine ' s is perfectly miraculous ; many who have kept their beds for
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years have been so speedily re-invigorated with an infusion of new blood , and' consequently of new life and strength , that their ife-appearatipe amongst their fellow-beings , who had lonk given them up as incurablo , is looked upon as the greatest of the many great wonders' of this miraculous age . The whole of our system is built up from the blood—nerves , sinews , muscles , and even solid hone ; this being tho oas « ,. the graud , object is to keep this precious fluid ( flic blpqd ) . in . a pure and healthy state , for without Ihw . piifity disease will show itgelf in Borne way or other . <¦
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Cases of every description have all been cured simply by the use of Park ' s Life Phis , thus showing that what has been considered different disorders , and requiring different treatment , all originated in the same cause , and can be cured by one uniform treatment . Although powerful in conquering disease , they are as pure and harmless as new milk , and may bo administered with confidence to the invalid , however weakly from long ill health , who will soon enjoy those delightful symptoms of a return to strong health , namely , good appetite ,
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sound sleep , and an increase of animal spirits . To have produced a medicine bo benign and mild in its operation and effects , and yet s » effectual in searching out-and curing disease of however long standing , exhibits on the part of Old Parr deep research and a thorough knowledgeof his subject . This Medicine is spld , by appointment , by Edwards , St . Paul ' s Church Yard London , in . Boxes , at Is , Ijd ., 2 s . 9 d ., and Family Boxes , 11 s . each ; the Boxes at 23 . 9 d . are equal to thrco ' small , and those at 11 b . equal to five at 2 s . 9 d . Full directions are given with each box .
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May also be had of the following Agents : —Birmingham , Shillitoe , Chemist , 43 , High street ; Bristol , E . S . Dowling , Chemist , High-street ; Bath , Meyler and Son , Printers ; Newcastlo-on-Tyne , Blackwell and Co ., Printers ; Manchester , Mottershead , Chemist , Market-place ; Liverpool , W . Rawle , Chemist , Church-street ; Leeds , Reiuhardt and Sons , Chemist , Briggate ; Sheffield , Wb j taker , Printer , Iris Office ; Edinburgh , Duncan , Flockharfc , and Co ., Chemist . « j g » Ask for "Parr » s Life Pills . " Any Bookseller who has not got them in stock , can readily procure them in hia book parcel from London , without extra charge , i
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, rnce wopence , AN ADDRESS TO THE WORKING MEN OF AMERICA . BY ELY UOOUE , Of New York , and one of the Representatives to Congress for that State . N . B . THE TRADE SUPPLIED with all the LONDON PERIODICALS oa the most liberal terms—for prompt payment . No letters taken-runless prepaid . . London : J . Cleave , Shoo Lane , Fleet Street ; and by all the Agents for thid paper in tCown and Country . ,
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aim Jnst published , price Sixpence each , CONSIDERATIONS TOUCHING THE LIKELIEST MEANS TO REMOVE HIRELINGS OUT OF THE CHURCH : By John Milton . A SPEECH FOR THE LIBERTY OF UNLICENSED PRINTING , addressed to the Parliament of England . By John Milton . < k The ruadiug portion of the Radical public will not do their duty unless each and all of them possess themselves of these splendid Tracts . " — The National . , Also , price One Penny , THE C OBUETT . CLUB PETITION . : " Humbly Shuweth . "— See the Petition . "The Petitioners have made a most impudent and deliberate Attempt to insult and coerce this House !"" —Sir Robert Inglis ' s Speech in the House of Commons . ,
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Just / piiblisheu , price One Shilling , CHAB . ' Ci ^ M ; . » . ^ jw JOrganizatioft el the , people , embracing a plan . tbr the Education and Improvemeixt of the People , politically and socially ' ; addressed tb the Working Classes of the United Kingdom , and more especially to tho advocates of the Right 3 and Liberties of the whole people , as set forth in the " ' People ' s Charter . " Written in Warwick Gaol by WfiUam Lovett and John Collins .
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THE LAW-ENDOWED CHURCHES . Just published , in small Octavo , price One Shilling and Sixpence , boards , AN ABRIDGMENT OF HOWITT'S POPULAR HISTORY OP PRIESTCRAFT . IuBmall Octavo , price One Shilling and Sixpence ^ boards . ** The author of this deeply interesting little volume takes a rapid survey of priestcraft , as it has existed from the ^' earliest periods , and ends with an able exposition ef the manifold corruption of the existing Church of England ; It will supply the long-exftthig deficiency of a popular history of religious imposture ;"—Satirist . : ¦ .. •'
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Also , price One Shilling , THE LIFE , CONVERSATIONS , ato TRIAL OF ROBERT EMMETT , Esq ., Leader of the Irish Insurrection of 1803 . Also , price One Penny , THE CELEBRATED SPEECH , delirered by that lamented Patriot , at the close of his Trial , for High Treason .
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Also , price Twopence , WAT TYLER ; a Dramatic Poem . In Three Acts . By R . Southey , Poet Laureate to her Majesty . Illustrated with Two elegant Engraving * . " Every lover of his species should make an eSbrt to circulate this splendid and truly invaluable Poem . " —Patriot . *"• ' Price Threepence , THE VISION OF JUDGMENT . By Lord Byron . Suggested bv the composition bo entitled bv the author of Wat Tyler . " *• This is a most extraordinary Poem . "—Time * . This edition is beautifully printed , and enriched with Notes by Robert Hall and others .
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, Also , price Sixpence , . ; . . , . . COMMON £ ENS £ , addressed to the Inhabitants of America . I . On the Origin and Design of Government in general , with concise Remarks on the English Constitution . II . Monarchy and Hereditary Succession . III . Thoughts on American Affairs . IV . The ability of America , with Miscellaneous Reflections . - To which is added , an APPENDIX ; and an Address to the People cajled QUAKERS . By Thomas Paine , Author of " The Rights of Man . "
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, mSSEBXAXim : M& WWST f RINCIPLBS OF GOV £ ai (^ 6 WT . gg , Tbwaaa Paiae , Pri « airopineey \ f w -f ' -- " " '* i' '¦ ¦¦ : 4 % This Pamphlet is ' a masterly , defence of thte Hght of ; every man to the possession of the Electro Franchise . f
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TO TBE KEADINO CHARTISTS OP GrSUE&T BRITAIN , Whose attention is requested to the following List of Cheap Tracts now publishing . Price One Shilling and Sixpence per 100 , or Five for a Pennjf , The Question : —WHAT IS A CHARTIST * - ANSWERED as to Phinciples amp as to PiucridB . « The friendB of the Charter are earnestly requested to aid in j ^ vin ^ tHis admirable . Trsct an extemive circulation . A Liberal Allowance to those purchasing to give away .
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Also , price One Penny , on a broad-sheet , with an Engraving of the British Deadly Upas Tree , THE NEW BLACK LIST ; being a Comparative Table of Allowances to Rich and Pool Paupers , with a variety of other useful information , important alike to the . non-consuming producers , and to the non-producing consumers . - Alw , price One Penny , ADDRESS to the Fathers and Mothers , Sons and Daughters of the WORKING CLASSES , on the System of Exolosiye Dealing , aad tbo formation of Joint Stock Provision Companies , showing how the People may fret themselves from oppression . By Robert Low * bt , Member of the late Conventton . and ShaTcholdcrvin the Newcastle Joint Stock Provision Company .
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¦'¦" . .. ¦ ''¦ . Just' ^^ edi "¦¦¦ " ^ -- - ^ v :: . BICHARDSOatta POPULAR : i . yfiiwrniM ^ - ^^ mi . - ¦;¦ ¦ ¦ ¦'¦'¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' raiOTTriiitelEiicfi , : v--i ¦ rtO ^ NTAlltlNCf « i Wmo * i of the Taxititai VJ Syste » -Natk « al Debt-Par and Cost of S Army aud , N * lT ^ Aftw choice jGSTiJ Contingeicies —Estimi ^ tfs ; *» i ^ ihe ; Years , 184 <) miji , l |^ r-mei ^ ariistif ^ pAeMT Cana ^ Com mi ^ oner ^ m J »« " > Bn » Abbejr , Lands—What n « r « ttie Boyal TamdyHBhCiand ;«« ft do fhejr GditVA ' niteaW . CotopwAt ^ e State of the" Srifow $ B * N ^ Tne Felon j ^ g > e Paatilaed : Pauper ^ > and . the Ind * pa& #
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PEEJr ? , INjgiT ^ SECRaTSERyiCE MOlMi ^ Factory Inspectors , alias Government SDies—Vain , able toS ^ 'tT ^^ te' -ymto * . StnrJrS . Emigration , Ac ^ - > "r > " x- ' j " i ' yt * ' - ; ¦ ¦¦ . ' . ' ¦ . ¦ . .-Vt PEEPATTirMfWBRS Alfiy . THEPAllSOm ! Showing the Connection of ChnTch and State , and the value of several hundred Good Fat LivingL with " other important information . i TT * London t Published by John Cleave , at his P « m » Gazette Office , Shoe-lape , Fleet-street ; HejirooT Manchester ; O'Brien , ^ Abbey-street , Dublin ; aM the Glasgow Universal SnSirage Association , Thomfr . son . Agent . Jehn- Leech , Button Road * Hodden * field , Agent for the Weat . Riding . ^^ N . B . —A few of last year ' s Black Books on Sale * apply to the Booksellers . Every year is different * and eaeh equally useful , . '
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# s& mi ^ iifsoiij ; ;^ G $$ r BAVING devoid his Stodies for away Y « ars to **~ JfcJS * &lQ& TreajtmenlW toe , T £ N | &EAX BISEASE , in an Its Tariong Fownfi jijsovWSi ( rifthtfol eonsecra » Beie « tosqIISiic from ftUdettrnT tiTABracttoV ^ Self Abnee , " « ay 1 » i 0 mowSSSI suited from Nine in the Mornia / t iiffTen at Mm . and on Sundays till Two , at 13 . TRAFAlio * tt STREET , NORTH STBBET : B ^ irf ^ S Thursday , at No . 4 , GEOKGE SmEfiT . Bradibai . from Ten till Fito , . ' ; - , - . ^ •" ,, . ¦ ¦ , ^ ,, % ~ i : V * - ¦ % * IniMieajm » jparIi ^ Cttre ^^ mpleie ^ wl ^ i : ptTBonkl visS . wjll ^^ te s ^ h . Adiw « ajad IbE cfnea that will enable them' SbtaiTa oennSeni and effectual . Cure , when , afrlpr l&nrmj
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' Having saeccaafully acquired a , ttoronA know , ledge of aQf the Tarious stages ol ^ ajL | nsuUoiui and too Often fatal disease , and the ie'ftorable resulk . as weU ai frciinent loss of life , which often occrn through displayed ignorance , bj those « ttqualiflt « V having but . Tcry 'little knowledge either , « r £ » * 4 U . order , or component priniMples of . M . ^ alcftitfjtnM the system becomes tainted , the whole maSsofilood impure , and the C ^ nrtitutlott ruined with Pokoat producing Ulcers and Eruptions on vaztonspArtiugif tbe body , « W « J »« tor > 0 . b « wa- ^ fmi plosjjly w . sembling and mistaken fajfiatases of a less pahu ful character . Mr . W ,, aSfcM » inber of the ^ ediSl Profession , aiid fromih # ^ H » nat ure of hi » pmt
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^ ce , can , witn tne utmof * eonttdence , even to tbe most timid , offer hope ; vigour , ^ and * perfect KeaUh , Whi »* agriefferayoung person , in the very wla « , of life , te be snatched out of time , and from all the enjoyments of life , by a disease always local at first * and which never proves fatal if properl y treated , as all its fatalresuhs are owing either to neglect or ignorance ; . ¦ ¦ - / . ¦ : . ; ¦¦ . ¦ : ' '¦ i ; - <; r : cj i ¦ ¦ ¦'' : - ^; Mr .. W . ' b invariable rule is to give a Card ; to each of his Patients as a guarantee for C ^ re , whjdi < he pledges himself to perform , or to retnrn his J ^* : ' For the Accommodation of those who eannot eon TBuiently consult Mr . W . ; person ^ , they say the following Ageats . with Printed direcfiona U
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plain , that Patients of either Sex may Cure themselves , without even the knowledge of a bedfellow . . ¦ Mr , H ? ATON , 7 , BrirateJLeeda : : Mr . Hartley , Bookseller , Halifax . Mr . toBWHJB 8 r , 37 . Jfew Street , HudderBfield . ' , : Mr . HAEai 80 B , Bookseller , MarketPlace , Banul « T Mr , Habqbqvb ' . s Library , ^ , Cone f Street , York . Messrs . Fox and Son , BookseUero , Pontefeactr Harbison , Market-place , Ripon . ; > Langdalk , Bookseller , Knaresbro and Harrofale -: Mr . R . Hcbst , Corn Market , Waktficld . V
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, Mr . Davis , Druggist , $ e . 6 t Market Place , Mancheater . . ' .-. .. ' : ¦ . .- ' Mr . Johwsox , Bookgeller , Beverley . J Mjr . ^ OBtB , Bookseller , Boetott , Uneoliishirv Mt . Noblk , Bookseller , Market-place , Hull . Mr . H . HuRToif , Louth , Lincolnab . ir 9 . / Iris Office , Sheffield : ' Chronicle Office * 1 mt& Street , Liverpool . : And at the Adtertiiet Q ^ cs , Lowgate , Hull . Lettera . inclosing a RemiUance j / aiJswered by ? eturn of Post ; and , Medicine PunotuaUyjUiuuQuttcd totheaddreB 8 , Mtherbytnitiau ^ rname .
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TNtr AS ^ t ^ 3 £ ertf ! C ? rtM | iatit ^^ Mt ^ A ¥ ^ » r ^* W REALjpiSEASE , in . its mild and WtafcnriM fortfca ; just published ^ iby Messrs . . ; -PERttY' an ( t CO ., Sdrokoks , ' No , 44 ,- Atti < m-8 tree » i ***** * and 4 , Great Charles-street , Birmingham , and fi& ^ : $$ ! ga ^ ta&ES ! fi 4 s . 6 d ., and lls . per Bk > x , ctotajni ^ a ^ descrff tion of the above complaint , illistrSe ^|> y E » gttV intra , shewing the different sUg « & d ^^ . 4 ei 4 cTaJtb and often fatal disease , aaweU as th ^ imtodXolttflbetl of Mercury , accompanied with' pliAu ^ Tpracticil directions for an effectual and spe&y xfare , wftfi ease , secrecy , and safety , without the aid of Medkat
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assistance . , . . ¦ : : Perry ' s Purifying Specific Pjjls r price 2 sl 81 , 4 s . 6 d ., and 11 s . ( Observe none are genuine wimout the signature of R . - and L . Perry on the side ** each wrapper ) which are well known throughont Eurqpe and America , to be the most ,. certaia Vfi effectual cure ever discovered far ' eVery $ t » K «' aM Symptom of the VenBreal m <^ m *« tiFm » , including Gonorrhwa , Gleets ^ iSe < jo » dary Symptaa Strictures , Seminal Weakness , , J ) wieaey , aw Diseases of th « Urinary Passag ^ w ^ ost tou ' of time , confinement , or hindrance froni 'Stismfts ; They have- effected the most - * urDris 1 ntr < ure » 4 ; Hot
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only in recent and severe cases , hat when saliviUiiMi and all other means have failed ; and when aneaoj application is made to these Pills , for the cure of the Venereal Disease , frequently contracted in- moment of inebriety , the eradication is generally completed in a few days ; and rathe more advanaM and inveterate stages of venerealjnfeetion , charaflteriaed by a variety of : painful and distressing syp ^ - toms , a perseverance ia the Spfeclfie Pills , in . whiw Messrs . Perry have happily $ ompreBBed the aW * purifying and healing virtues of the , principal part of the vegetable system , and which is of the utmost importance to those afflicted with Scoibutio aff « -
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tions . Eruptions on anv part of the body , Ulceratiom ScroiulouB or Venereal taint ; . being justly calculated to cleanse the blood from all foulness , counterftt every morbid affection , and restore weak and emiciatod constitutions to pristine health and vigour . ' The rash , indiscriminate , and unqualified use w Mercury , has been productive of infinite mispii « f » under the notion of its being an antidote for a certain disease the untutored think they have oiyfw saturate their system with -Mercury ,- and theybBn * ness is accomplished . . Fatal errpfl- ThousMWart annually cither mercurialized , out of existroc ^ PJ their constitutions so broken , and the fon ^ tiQJS , "
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nature so impaired , as to render -the resjoue of iw miserable . The disorder we have in vitw . pi ^ f ^ r | fatal results either to neglect ., or i gnortknee . In ^ first stage it is always local : andlwy tb be *»»[ guished by attending to the directions folly P *™* out in the Treatise , without thft ^ alle « t : iHjarjW the conatitution ; but when neghftted , or iinWW « W k §^ i » * # l 2 f ^ ¥ ' t ^^ & j ^^ m » an incurable attd fatal tna ^ r . ^ what & VWjVS * young m * B , tb « hor > eof hiswuril ^ ana th ^ ww of his ? parjaats , ehould be snatcbed from alttb « f ^ J pects and enjoymotna . of life by ^ ie conse quea « a » one unguarded ' momont , and byadisease whicn u » % in its own nature fatal , and which never provw * . properly treated . . : - - ' •>*}« . It is a melancholy fact that thousands-hlu ^ frn to this liorrid disease owlhg to the unskilfov ^ j ? illiterate meiiv who , by the iiseof thatdeadlyjP ^« mercury , ruin the constitution , cause ulcW' « "l blotches on the h . ad , face and . body ; : $ " ?* £ & sight , noiso in the cars , deafneasr obftinatftJ ^ TJ nodes on tho shin bone , alcerate J Bore _ W ?* "n
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diseased nose , with hoeturnal ' iwtinsin tbe !»*»»•? limbs , till at , length a geueral debiBty of th « wr stitution' . ensues , ' and a melancholy deat h p « w period to their dreadful sufferings . ¦¦ . % + Messrs : Perry and ' Co ., Surgeons ., V WJZ consulted , as usual , at No . « , Albwn ^ T Loeda ; and No . 4 , Great , 9 b arle ^ S Birmingham . Ouly one personal visit ^ 'fjvjsj from a country patient to . ehaolif Messrs . " ^^ wt , Co . to give such advice as will be the means of fifo ing a permanent and effectual cure , after auv *» means have proved ineffectual . ., . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' y ^ fiuB Letters for advice must be post-paid , ana co »* - the usual fee of one pound . ¦
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THE CORDIAL BALM OF SVBIACOTJIs now universally establif bed . w » * Tff& $ nm fficaoy . It is possessed of thn most wy « gjjgj powers ; warming and cheering the spmwi * " ^ moting digestion . It is an exceaent "Jf ^ n nervous , hypocondriae , consumptivet ^ j-- * # comp ^ nfai * &Hde , and weakness an suJg ^ .. juvenile iittB ^ udencIoa . ¦ , ^« t { ti « fl . »<* SoldiiiBottlesy atHs ^ or . ftjW ^ : . ¦ i family bottle , for ^ Ss ^ duty included ^ . ^ Observe—No . ' Ai , Albion ^ tteet , ¦ Ltwr < -
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PUBLIC DISCUSSION ON THE REPEAL OF ¦ \ .. ; IEHECOJLN LAWS . ( Frmm our Manchester Corrapmient . ) . J ^**?*^***!* ' October 30 th , a mostimportant . fibe »* onfee * place in Cbarfcstown Chapel , Aabfera . * S ££ g £ ^ % ? 'b ' issr-. **** ***** W »« J «*« wr , mlMr . HnaigMi , a Lecturer in the ;**^^ »« - *»*««» *** **•*»«¦ The evealMs ;« / which the gentlemen delivered their addresses ^ SL * **^^ " *<** " *'** * * ««* * £ * ta ? fean a ehafoeage to discuss t » s proposition : _ * Wta » to » wp « fl •* the bread Uk , UBseeomjaafed ^ . ° * *; "wfitf meaaBres , -would benefit Hie : *»*^ «*•**¦ of thb ewmtrr- ? Mr .-BaJrato-ir maln-^ ^_ ...
. * * f *~ T ^ BfOslthay The chattenf » h * vmg been 'm ^ teS , ^| fe ^« i tptead from Mtw lo iH the ^ taWnah ^ t-a ^ gBi , ud at «» appointed time "Wa&wlafreieieeawendlnf their way to the Ghapei ; -ByBaTf-peit eight- © 'dock , the place wa » eompHtMy -jturthed , « ad bmtfredj -woe reluctantly eompeBeaibe ^ eave , anafcte te ebtafa a aeet farelSet love ¦ w money . SM ael ^ UleVett tak ^ in the piceeeecUngs win appear ¦ stvMentlrea thla feet , that sot only tfce oparethreejbtit marty of fl » infflewB « attended to hear ; the remit of tWa investigation , and an- appeared to feel the bntpertandext ttha . point in tepnte .. Ntfthlif-tould * Ktet& the d—emu Maatfeatefl by the vast multitude ¦ - aiartiilllad un lawimailm ; and it is bnt jvticejto mj t till laWBBl i—> Bw wlirtu ereaiBg the disputants were
ttateoed to « tth Hwgntnt ittotiat , ^ the fitness rf the « a * aloef * B « cal power was not OBlymaniloBted . in their heb « TiaHt , bn » ai » o In the ability with which theyappaarad to grapple with every position advaneed , g » mplatott ; oattto-oeeaaton , adopted aa Bsaerhand i-aaeftoflof nSstas ; the wind . A deputation was aent tto tbe vdtad Trishww , in order to secure their ¦ 4 Mfcaaoa «; a ** ttor tonne mm of Erin gave . them a t ^ pnpt djHdai , aad left the acmiBee »* ot Cobden and < Ore * to fight their own battles , sot bamf willing to < Iea * Jfcfcaaa their aurietiTue kt propping up . the y irtUsi auj and profitoeracr of af ^ hitter aad ita viei-Bitty . A *« £ « ht o ' clock the dispatante entered the room . It wa » three parta foIL and at hatf-part eighth the M ^ aaa ^ iaM # ** &aV " - - - * "" ^^ ¦* VDBBBZB " ¦ TC ^ ff ^^ fc ftfHtfaV - *
- ' 9 * tbe motion « T Mr . HlfSnbottom , cotton matter , Mr . ^ jah Baadheat was ealkd to the chair ; aad Mr . ; Ra * gaa hariagsead the letter of Mr . Bairatow , convey-4 ngta > ehaDenge , \_ » M |» tt ** ir said that be hoped the ladies and ^ pntkaaiftv prijiiil would consider that be was only a 2 £ ff ? " * T ?* *¦* ** ***» ewasi his hnperfectipna , ^ P 9 « dWi they would ahev ub ntatis of apprbb » - f £ ^*** & ** S ***** «* ttoe of tpMtois , but "KS ^^^ i ^^ ¦ &mm * mOag ** mee > - B % ittirchseCTeff-tet-i ^ loped ^>« > woald conduct IbMKHlTM i » lh * 7 " « Te > T * d doneT ^ l ^ e Hae whiah each speaker would be allowed na half aa how for tie paring speeches . lie then called » pon Mr . Bairstowto pemtfce Wjispjjyi , -
Mi . Ejumatpir . aid , th « qnesUon inTolrad in the propoattioo whkh they had thst ertaing before them yM net whether the Oo * n Lt > wa were jast or Mjnrt , w * " Whether » repeal , naaeeompanied with other wmedlil jaeygret ^ woBld be a benefltto society r * They ¦ ww » met to argue its relatiTe bcartogs tfpon th « con-« tton « of sodety . He thooght it highly neeesaaW thai the ndleaoe should folly understand the question ta order that ftey might be better able to arrlTe at just eamehisictBS , ' . after beuiag the point diseossed , Tb » OtewaKe ob ^ tet of the Coin Lurs m to proteet the tendowntn of this country against the competition of tbe foreigner , on the same principle that manafaetorers WB » protected against their foreign rm 2 a . The Corn ?* wi had existed for eentariesalternate periods
oc-, esrrfng * rhea they were inopera / tiTe . The preeen Cokb . ^ tak-wm -wem enacted . in 1928 , and fixed tat maximBm and minlnmm priee « of erain to eonsumptJon ia this e » nntry . Mr , Baintow tha ^ read the . Kale of prises imposed at that fime by thePeel and Wellington administratfon . He then' eoni £ tn » d >—Haiin $ fixed upon your minds the principle npon which they were eonstitafed , we shall come to the point in hand ; and . that la , if » repeal of tbem , wiQumt ottisr remedlai measnres , would be » efit «< iety , ! K » question fa « n > occur * , Whatiaaooety ? He remarked , thatAodety nuansnot ooe section of the naSoir ; bnt the enfiw m »«^ # f the pwglet aad reaebeB : £ u bs ^ ond . thoae erenmscribed BmU « 4 ra wn by the exegnafrn ef aU . eonntriesas it
, tofiafi > w > ininifffcyt oeU&gr . aaajr This deflniHon hem * pzeaotod , Qw < ittatkm is ; Would a repeal of afae Com I * w » beaeai tlw aa&n f labour is the ¦ orate « f all wealth ; -without laboBx , neither goreniaenW eocUty , nor instttafions of any kind could exist It isfroa this they hate their origin , ud by this they are supported ; anything tending to cripple the indastry of the nation snstin | BZB all ehuaes , but more espeetaHy tt > e lahoorer : l * 6 oor has its right , the right of pcotectiaa ; aadtheliboBxcr ha * the ri ^ xt of existence The few of sstntB dsenes that the wants of the labourer shoOd be lat sapplied ; the aarplus only of that labosr should be interchanged . ETerything prodaeed Tithont the aid af machWy exbihUs man in a ATage atatef while the apnUaaoes of iaeehankal
agaati ULproatction indicate addatj , termed drilised . ImpsoTesieats itf this kind are . hteaajbags , when , they aeaaeBi bsnanJaboor without tfinriwUiijit ^ its comf ort *; twtwhssiUwy sappTani human , labooii "wiUaMA giving aa ^ equrc akat In jretorn , they are an munftfg ^ te ^ curse . Machiner y now sapemdee hoaaa labour , not gtriag to the labonrez the means ef « bsi * i «» ee in return—( & vbiee , "U doos ! - );—therefore , it is one of its moat deadly enonies . Thxt power employed « gaiast m » n wtj an aataxed . QBCOBnmvUTe . and Jmspontible power ; it vaed mote K > f tboae articles which it pro-< taoed , " although ifr-mpplanted manual labour . The sTeatawaB of the misery of ear country wasjaot attrlbaiahle W the Com Laws , bat tn in iMei £ l Tllatil batU » of wwlih . AH the eoaioets preAtWl brtho
»* ay wetft , japaepolised by th * few , waitetlM « ttfafa aaawby wh « a they were prodaoed wwa * atatT ^ f Jo t want . The c&oaee of this eovntry * nfeerj ware in ¦ fht ' wre before the Cera Laws existed ; they ttraek ianneaanxaWy daepec . Xheae eaases were to be found in Ota Tory frame-work < £ socie ^ , and erer would be matil the whole fabric of society was reconstructed . Xhoae ebangao-ineladed aa entire altetatioa in all the axxaafeBteota of society , L e ., ciTll , peiitfcal , eodesias tical , fisaadal , and social . The Com Law Repealers maintained that the cause of all our miseries was the disproportion eiisting between demand and supply ; he , ( Mr . & ., ) on the contrary , maintained that increased farnHtien of production always * impoTexiahed the artisan , unless a demand was incseased in the save proportion as the ineresao of « nr prodBetrre power . In
toe course of the last century our manufacturing power had increased , at tie least , fifty-fold ; and he need only appeal to the experience of the operatiree present , in order to proTe that their comforts had been lessened in the aagw proportion . If this agent in production is allowed U > & * on atits present rate , the situation of the ountry would ba ruinous . This was where ho . disagreed -mth tbe Bepnlera . Itiey felt oae single grieTanee , and blasoaed it about as the cause of all oar miseries ; he , on the contrary , maintained that the Corn Law was one of the least ccusea in operation , and khat nothing but aa entire change in all our institutions Would ultimately benefit the operatire of this country . "Until this Augean stable was entirely washed out , and ita corruptions destroyed , the people would not oriij be as bad , but would get gradually worse , morally , politically , sod socially .
The address was listened to with marked ' attentton , and ) the speaker : resumed his seat amid the . applause of the Tast « ssembly . Mr . FimaSAK fben rose , and said he had listened wfth the greatest attention to Mr . Bairstov . Ho certatd ^ aad touched npon many things during his ' tt * aaaii& ^ ba& 1 » had not produced anything upon Wai ^ S ^ as ' % ** able to ground an argument . He \ ras £ jiSfcMbfcMfclto ;' u | i ^ iUM eat acknowledge that the Com , Xaws TiaiT erVlnl far a century ; bnt . he would inform OIhatth « y bad not only had been in operation for one 2 jaaaUu y , but three . Mr . B . had girea them , a most w . Tf ^ d and eloquent portraitare of the present gradations ; -of society , and ef the erlls under which they laboured . V Bat he -wished to give Mr . B . to understand , that he
himaelf lMwnted such a stale of things as math as hi ™ . Mx . Bsixatow inaintsiaed that our eiils arose from the bad distribution of wealth , and seemed to desire n community , of property , an equxlity of all things , by the profilgato aad iajzy as well as the . respectable part of the * country / . ' l ( A nice , , ** he said nout o'th" sort . ") Be , 3 £ x . 7 jnainxu miLfnt ^ . ir ^ A thxfcinch a . diatribntion af wa ^ L ^ L& ^ apoaslblaL ^ at 2 id ~ kd » oesi ^ a . i « p « al oi the Corn Iawb aa escalated to benefit all classes of tbe community . Mr . JSairstow had referred to Corn Laws as existing so ^ back as 1688 . He , Mr . Finnigan , Had culled the- pages of history , particularly at the period when an export bounty was granted , and at that Urns the misCTy of the people was indescribable .- According to Ite&a Swift , tbe people lay dead in the field .
hafing expired for tract of food . The ome effects had been produced by Corn laws in our time ; and unless repealed would prove the country ' s ruin . He , iir . F ., could not delight the audience with poetic language , but he should , supply them with facts . He would refer them to the Btate of things immediately preceding the Com Lswa being enacted in 1814 . Commerce was then extended , wages rase , and oar intercourse with other countries increased . In 1815 , the Corn Laws were passed , and wages fefl directly . What was tbe cause ? The Com Laws being enacted ; and no other arguments could be adduced to the contrary . While the measure professed to benefit the agricultural labourers , it bad annihilated all the email farmers , and had poured them into the manufacturing districts . The wages oL the artisan had fallen ever since ; but let
them remoTe the cause , and the effects would cease . Without any other remedial measure , the repeal of the Corn Laws would benefit society . If the bread tax not ooly heightened the price of food , bnt cramped labour by preventing an interchange of commodities , a repeal of suh law must be a public benent He never had s&id a repeal of this law ¦ would be a panacea for all our evils Hz . Bakstow had sketched out a beautiful picture * t society fr ? . n a florid imagination , and then exclaimed , " Would a repeal of toe Gom Laws effect this ? " He ooMdered man a progresssiTe being , and thought n « period would arrive , when his capabilities for improvezaeot would find a limit -, and he also considered that repeal of any one bai law was so far improving his condition . Monepoly was an « vil in any country . Tbe bead tax was one of the werst kind , because it struck
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a * the means of subsistence ; and therefore its abrogation was absolutely " mdltpenaiMfi . ' Hr . "F . ' tnen | resmned Ms Beat : ; j : •; .-: t , x Mr . Baiestow fhen rose and said" his opponent hav tried to frfghtei them -wlai i Imgbear « speetiBS .- * community of property . He deled him to ttef that bis words would' bear any such eoastrattkm . His mat objection to the" repealers was , that they pointed to Corn Law * as ' rmning our trade , and paid Xht great cat » 4 dt ^ afi * our misery was a Disproportion between supply afid demand . Osr trading tranaaetions ' had increased gradually for tbe list fifty years , and the misery of the people had been augmented In the- 'same ratio . ' Mr . B . then referred to Corn Law statements * and shewed that , from 1803 to 1815 , ttu average price
of grain was higher without Com Laws than with them , proving that other causes influenced the price of grain morethaa Cora Laws . Mr . F . had tried to make him anajpolofbt < tf the bread tax He denied the insinuation , and beliered himself ; a better repealer than ; the gentlemen of the league , becanse he advocated tb ^ n& . cearitf oT Sur pastel n « t onlj being enabled to do away with tbebreid tax , ^ wt ' plactn ^ uieni IflaponfllUcintO n ^ Maethetf share " of the benefits . " Increase our exports , " said the repealers , " and you will be nefit the people ! " Ireland was" the largest- exporting country aader heaven ,. in proportion to ita site , and je * no population was so miserable . "Oar oowatry is too mail , " said they , " to produce food for its people . " This waa a dowjiriglitbUiphemy of the Goa-wnV ' made ik .
Dr . Chalment asserted that if our cotmtry was ettxrflnnded with walls of adamant , it would supply food for seven times its present population . The Inconsistency of these men was beyond all endurance . First , they said , " Repeal the Corn Laws ; and you removethe cause of all our miwxy i * _^ Ehen they -aaid , It is only one of the causes acting upon the operative classes . " Now when men -were so full of contradiction * th « y were left without anything -to grapple with . The people were left without any protection whatever against as unjust and oppressive an oligarchy ae ever riled in any country . Our operatives wert agitating for a repeal of these laws , wken the middle dasses were armed to the teeth against them . Witness Peterloo . ( Great sensation . ) And when they had reduced the artisan to the point of starvation , and
fo&e oa pnlllng down bis enTtlog * till t&ey could pull them down no longer , the Qregs and Cobdens wanted their assistance to repeal the bread tax ! The right of Suffrage ( said Mr . B . ) is what you must struggle for ; and tai you obtain thai , your hopes of permanent improvement in your condition will prove futile . ( Protracted cheering . ) Mr . P . has referred to the years 1814 and 1815 -to prove the bad effects of tSe "bread tax , The awful ipecateUon induced by the prospect of peace is 1814 , and the rupture ef 1815 . caused the sudden reduction that toot place , or ebe how eaaMr Finnigan ' account for the low in \ s > 3 , ' when n » such laws existed * Hi * fefarenee to that period is compietery oat of place . One single proof that a Repeal of the Com Laws , as an isolated measure , would benefit society , has been brought forward . Mr . B . sat down « mid lond cheers .
Mr . FiNNioiN began by saying that Mr . Bairstow was one of the most clever reasoners he ever met with , because he bandied his ( Mr . F . ' b ) argument * before the people to smit his own purpose . He must say that his opponent had brought nothing forward . ( Loud cries of " You Be ! " «• Sit down J- " Thou ' rt done r and hisses . ) After order was restored by the Chairman , Mr . F . proceeded to quote from Cobbett Those who ¦ wish to see it again , most refer to the discussion with Leech and Finnigan , for it was nothing more ?>»»» a repetition , word for word . He appears to have but
one set of ideas upon this subject Several persons cried out that Flnnigan was completely fast , and had nothing more to advance la support of his cause . He acknowledged at one time he was a Chartist , at another time he appeared to be one of tbe greatest enemies t « that cause . He said th&t the Com Laws were the prolific source of all the miseries which afflict society ; and , in the next breath , declared that the Corn Laws were net the only cause of these evils , but a great one ; and then again saying that if tbe Corn Laws were repealed , it would be a panacea for every evil , and such other incongruities as these .
Mr . Bai&stoVt rose , and Mr . Finnigan protested against'his repry , » tating that the meeiing would be brought to a dose . The meeting requested Mr . Bairstow to go on . He then commenced , and in a strain of eloquent declamation pointed out the evils of the present system . He brought out most beautifully tbe action of taxation upon tbe people , and the opposition of every class to the enfranchisement of the masses ; and compared tbe amount of taxation levied upon the operative * of this country and tbe comparative small-Bets of imposts in other countries . The meeting appeared wrought up to a pitch of enthusiasm unparralleled in this place . He urged upon them to go on for the Charter , and nothing less ; pointed out their utter helplessness without the possession of political power ; and resumed his seat unid load expression * of applause .
Mr . Fikxiojlr rose , but all was repetition in bis attempt to reply . Don Quixote , in his crusade against the wind-mills , could not not appear more ridiculous . Cries of " sit down , you feol , " rung from every corner of the meeting . He went on , however , but confusion itself could not be more confounded than he seemed to be . He attempted to be wttty , but bis Thetoric fell wittumt any impression upon the meeting , tad be at length sat down . -W » lwo ~ dlajxitazrtt each addressed the meeting for another qaajfri ; of an hoar ; after whldrthe following wer tcHmpiilwaiiiiltted by the chair , aad adopted . An anwiximeatwa proposed by the repealers , but it met with bat few tupporten : —
" That the people , having been so often bdtmyed ' py aiddkrdass Government promises , and beUevrag that i'EBtato of Commons constituted like the present Tilt ao * abrogate tbe bread monopoly , nor any outer impost latewsstlng themselves , tLis meeting pledges iUelf , wttb the rest of the nation , to follow its onward course until tbe Pevplei Charter become * tbe tew of tbe United Kingdom . " Three cheers were then given for Feargus O'Connor and the Northern Slot , three for Frost , Williams , and Jones , and all the incarcerated Chartists , and three for the Charter , when the meeting broke up .
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PUBLIC O LA ON THE REPEAL OF THE UNION . Mr . Editor , —This agitation , as Mr . O'Coimell h& 3 been pleased to christen it , is virtually at an end , and the question of repeal i ? , in my mind , completely a humbug , which never can be revived , cot even as a jest . I wish , however , to address you onoe more on the subject ; as the proceedings upon it are a remarkable exposure of the excessive ignorance of certain Irish gentlemen of political rank , on topics essentially to be known , and which are well understood by the infinitely more intelligent and better informed workmen of our manufacturing districts . I am convinced thai it would be almost impossible to find , amongst our classes of humble tradesmen , in our small toWBs , even in the agricultural provinces , persons &s stultified with respeet to the laws and principles of trade , ts Mr . O'Conuell and hi 3 more
dignified Bnpporters of the question of ' repeal . " In reading their speeches , it was impossible to suppress the frequent ejaculations— " this is stupid enongh for a cathedral town ; bad enough for even Oxford or Cambridge . " I need not , Mr . Editor , apprehend being suspected of any lnkewarmness with reject to the Irish nation . I am as fervent as Mr . O'Connell in wishing her to be placed on an equality with England , aud I am as anxious that both countries should be greatly elevated in the scale of religious and social freedom , but these desires on my part are compatible with the thorough contempt 1 have for the question of repeal . At the great Leinster Repeal Meeting , on the 15 th instant , Mr . O'Connell ut * ered mouthfuls of trash , which I advert to , not to depreciate his talents , but as a proof of the hollowness of his cause . He
exclaimed" In your names I protest against the Union , and demand its repeal There is in this assembly physical force enough to achieve that repeal » y violence ; if violence were an element that we would resort to ; but it is s ' oi There is here intelligence enough to secure repeal , and patriotism enough to assist me in consummating that blessed measure for Ireland . I arraign the Union in its origin—I arraign the Union in its operation—I arraign it in its conttanancd , and I demand _ its cessation . " After some farther observations , he said , " Now 1 come To $ sk you , how" "hasTfie Union worked ? Lord CornwaUis put into the hands of Lord Fingal a paper stating , that if the Catholic nobility and gentry consented te the Union , or if it was carried , no matter -whether they consented or not , the Catholics
should be put upon the same footing as the Protestants , and have emancipation . The "Union was carried , and many slingerns Catholics avoided signing tbe petition against it , whilst som 9 signed in favour of it . We'll , but -what did they get for this ? Jnst what the placehunters wculd get from Lord Ebrington—contempt and refusal ; for when his Majesty , King George the Third , had the Union carried in the Irish Parliament , if he did not tear the paper and spit in Pitt ' s face , he refused to ailo-w him to carry the Emancipation Bill . " This is Hibernian logic . Mr . O'Counell arraigns the Union , simply because there has been little or no Union at all , a perfidious King having perjured himself in breaking its principal stipulations . Let there be a bona fide Union , and if , after a fair trial , it is disadvantageous to either country , or to the aggregate of the empire , let it be modified , or let it .
for Heaven a sake , be repealed ; but do not let Mr . O Connell find fault with the actual operation of a measure , oa the ground that it lias never had a fair trial , or been permitted to operate . With respect to physical force , the idea is preposterous . Ireland , with regard to physical force , is , and ever has been , for its size , the most contemptible country iu the world . What t ^ as she against Queen Elizabeth , Oliver Cromwell , William the Third , or , to oome to later periods , what was ahe in the rebellion of 17 £ 3 , when her populaco had all the righteousness on their side , and every thing calculated to inspire men to mental and physical exertions ! Tho tyranny of England against Ireland has been enormous—far beyond any parallel in history , and yet , what has been more despicable than Irish resistance ? Compare it to thas of the Dutch against the Spaniards ,
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to that of the people of England against Charles the First , to that of thepeobltt of SootTami igtioBt EcT- > wardfte First and Third , and agatost Gb&rlestbe Vim -and Second * to "tit * f the Welch agaittet « nSli 8 k * gRre * jerB , t 6 tbAt of Washington against the bigotted tytajit , Georg 4 tl ^ TMrA , * tf that of tbe FrMMh against t * e > Bottrb < Wis , Wr W Ihat of the many States of South America against tfrtf dominion of Spain awl-Portugal , ¦ WotUd'it fo aoBaibfo for even Mr . O'Connell to compare ahj » wemanoe that Ireland ever offered against ^ tke bloodstained croekies of England , to the conflict of the ' Poles against the PUUsiaos , or tii « equally noble resistaaraa of tfitSpaniudsand PortnjraeMiagatast their Mini
oonlwt * whieh are ww ^ ndtag ! Pshaw i Witt * nspaoVto Ireland gaiilng . any thing by physical force , the mUtaho *« fiabarba * buB set of Circassians ftg&iaBt Russia , cannot to mwr * contemptible . Ireland UT ^ voUing ia all huwaa tympatbtee , with respeet to Individual acfa of turpitude aad craeltjy but as -to eombined movBmerite against oonaututed aathonfee 8 , « be rftabaokfcely u impotent as aaetol CaffrM , at the picmy Bogflmen of Soitt AlHea Tho mwtanoe of Ireland must be moral , or borrowed from England . la it unTakio rererfe toUhesq established , faota and sound opinion * , *< kefc Mr O'ConneU can thus infiame the pasaionaof a molti * tude by such balderdaah a « what fbliows ! :- ~ t ' "I was in th « « 0 « MMl # Vpperary yesterday , andi heard the chirrup Br ^ PlTpperary boys . There was a touch or the DToga * * aiwr tttotonguef , but the spirit
of old IrelaaeVwa * ift the * hearts—merry and cheerfuK lively and light-limbed as the thousands who surround me now . Oh I I do « olehnnly declare I hare seen thousands of the people of other nations congregated together—I have seen the stout Scotchman aad the well-fed Englishman , but amongst neither have I seea tbe Irishman's wpaal j Irishmen , with eyes lighting with intellect , heart * ready for any peril , and manly forma I wu yesterday in Tipperary , and had 80 , 000 of the boys about me . Surely the Welshmen are not better than the men of Tipperary f I suggested to them yesterday that if one Tipperary man was put la a passion he would try whether he was not fas good as seven Welshmen . Bttt ail thU is the effect ef the Ynton . This is apart of the operations of that mea , sure , and remember that the law was lately made and confirmed . " ,,
Following this there is a tirade about the corporate rate of qualification for voters , aad other subjects of substantial . grievances , In which I go heart and hand with O'Connellj but I cannot bear to gee all the good , points of . a cause in which sacred liberty is involved , prostituted to a brutal appeal to'the brutal passions of the populaoe . Lord StailoyV Soerpion Stanley , as Mr . O'Connor eatts h ! a ^ Sha # the Irish as a set of perjurers ; and heaT ** hVwUil exclamation of Mr . O ' Connell on the subjtet : w >? "Do you understand me—perjurersf Irishmen , sons of chaste and pure mothers—Irishmen . VhnsBaads ofcaaste , affectionate , and puie wives-r-Irishaien ; ! Wbtheri of loTely and pure Bist « r»—Irishmen 1 whose women are celebrated all over the wntld for theirpurity , loveliness , and chastity , —Irishmen I are you the soas , husbands , aud brothers of such wom ^ n as these , ' and will you bear in tranquillity the maddening reproach of
being villanous perjurers ? ( Cries of ' No , , neter . '» Then Stanley is mistaken . (< Oh , faith , he ii ^* . ' This ib deoent , after Air . O'ConnoU ' s celebrated declaration that all English ladies and women of humbler stations were strumpets . Bat contingent to 4 his are Mr . O'Connell ' s proofs that the Irish are , or at least were , all perjurers , for ha tells ug that the Irish Union was consummated by bribery , " and that Lord Ebrington still carries on his Government by bribery ; and yet bribery , of necessity , implies perjury . All the Irish Noblemen and Commoners that were bribed to vote for the Union ( and they were very numerous ) were sworn legislators , and the bribery of a Government is always diffused amongst those of a station to be sworn against its
influence . Air . O'Connell is a truly Irish reasoner . He says to bis opponent , " You tell a very great lie , " and immediately convinces him , by facts and argument , that be spoke the truth . This gentleman declares that Christianity in Ireland is more pone than it is in England , and , as one of his proofs , he cites tho ingratitude , immorality , and ihoBoandatons violation of all decencies , of all moral principles , and of all religious feelings in the recent election for the Mayoralty of London . Tnis does not prove his case . The evils he points out in tho London election are lamentably disgraceful , but yet there are eases equally bad in Irelitad . - - , ' All Mr . O'Connell ' s points on the repeal question axe unsound . His first resolution awerte-r ' ' ' ¦
" That the Act of Union , being dishonest aad Illegal , as to the mode whereby it was obtained—being imperfect , inasmuch as the compact was never fulfilled , being impracticable , as proved by Its nonfaUUmeat —• impolitic , aa regard * England , whose ~ Interest it must be to have as a faithful ally under the British Crown , rather than an ill-governed and discontented provinceand , finally , being ruinous to Ireland , as proved by the misery * n * destruction it has entailed upon the country , is a measure whose speedy repeal an oppressed nation loudly and determlnately , yet legally ,, demands . " I grant the chief premises , but each leads me to a reverse conclusion . The Act of Union was dishonest as to its mode of completion , but it does not folk * , that after 40 years we shouldjpeVcrt tOrthaitdfiftJM If the Union ware repealel , howponjd thedilnonesty fee remedied 1 Let the amount of tqAJbery aaid to thajrjftt be Mmany millions as ^ Mr . fyO&ZSk arithmetic can ' naaw , can w » t » y repeal xeo ^ veriiaV _ -l _ # _ : _ . * ' _ _ . JJBj al .. L .. ¦ - S _ « ¦• ¦ j a ' i 1 • ' ' \ rio iraction too / too
ox none , or puniea sons , oasTa * ten , nephew ^ ileces . or rrandchjldrcb , thatjwwli ' herit tho ' wealtrFa ^ uIrMbt the bribe ^ l Tliire all , probably , not twenty nbHlmen , or Itlsa comoita « irL that took the bribes that Ire now in existence ^ aiia , eonaidering Irish habits of desperate diiwipatlon , w *\ bably seven-tenths of thejaoney reoeived in bnoes ure dow tbe property of Irish tradesmen , and of still humbler classes , and it would not make Mr . O'Corinell popular to reclaim these bribes . In common cases , such as tke Beresford family , the estates purchased by the bribes are still in the possession of the lordly heirs ; bnt I see no moral or political use in leclaiminx the money , were it practicable . Were there a repeal , and , for example , a hundred thousand pounds extracted from the Beresford family , would it make any future Irish Houses of Parliament a wit more proof against bribery ! Mr . O'Connell ' s next remark
is" No , the English House of Commons and the British House of Lords , by an unanimous vote , declared that -while they resisted the repeal of the Union , they would take care to remedy all the grievances of Ireland . In addition to that declaration , we had the royal pledge t « the same effect . Yes , that was the public and solemn declaration of the British Parliament to the Crown . Chivalrous spirit of England ! where are you now ? Contrast that pledge with Stanley ' s BilL You have promised to redress Irish grievances , instead ef which you not only aggravate those thai already exist , but you endeavour to inflict a greater one thau we could
possibly have imagined was in store for us . There is but one magic in politics , and that is to be always right , and to put your enemies perfectly in the wrong . Have I not done so by abandoning the Repeal question in 1834 ? The people are now in the right , and their opponents evidently in the wrong , since they have broken faith with them . Nothing could be more binding on King , Lords , and Commons , than , the declaration I have alluded to . How is that declaration to be described ? I will tell yon . in one word—it was a lie ; a word indignantly , bnt properly applied . Tes , King , Iiords , and Commons lied , when they made that declaration . "
That Parliament lied there is no question , but that a repeal of the Union would remedy that lie , or cwre the Parliamentary habit of lying , is another point . I will now cozne to the ignorance of Irish gentlemen upon theeubject of political economy , which is beyond what Europe can imagine . Mr .. O'Connell introduces a Miss Dillon into a Repeal AssocMioa with these words— - ; . ; ; " Her father , " said the Hon . and Learned Gentleman " has done me the honour to enclose one pound as hexsubscription . We are now quietly trying an experiment on Irish manufacture ; but Mr . Dillon has preceded us * He is at the work for the last twenty years . He kept up a stock of Irish manufactured goods , andhedid ever / . thing in his power to make his customers take them la preference to English goods . " . < ¦>~ JL-j
The only mode by which an Irish mmdKetorer could induce Irish people to buy his goods ; ii preference to those of an English manufacturer , would be to make them better , and to sell them cheaper . What has this to do with the Repeal ' of the union ? The lawa of human nature ' are universal , and were wo to have twenty Unions , ^ or 200 Repeals of the Union , customers would , by instinct , go to the manufacturer that gave them the best supply at the lowest price . Bui Lord Ebrington deprived this Mr . Dillon of the custom of Government on account of his joining a Repeal Association . This , if true , is very base on the part of Lord Ebrington , bui it is purity itself to the monstrous baseness of the observation of Mr , O'Connell on the subject . He nays to the IrfBh people , " HOW CAN THE WHIGS EXPECT TO
GET VOTES WHEN THEY TREAT MEN IN THIS MANNER ? " A more detestable recon * mendation to bribery and corruption never escaped from a Tory priest or clergyman . I must now conclude . Mr . Lalor maintained that Irish exports were a proof of Ireland ' s poverty and want of trade . What a thrice double ass must a man ba who utters such nonsense , and what thrice trippled asses must those bo who listen to him * Exports imply imports , and exports and imports constitute trade ; aud Mr . Lalor ' s ideas amount to an annihilation of commerce , or a retnrn of the fanciful existence of Adam before Eve , when ho must have carried on an Irish trade , and exchanged every thing with himself . Let Mr . Lalor speak for himself : —
" Why they say if the Union be repealed the English will not take your beef , mutton , bacon , corn , and eyery other good thing - thai u exported out of the country , and we must eat them all ourselves . - . Why , my friends , that in itself would make another good reason why we fchould wish to have the Union repealed . Now , it
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wotfd be a very comfortable Mug to be eating Vie fine fat pics an * the fine fat iomtMt tore senf&mifU £ n < Amdj mast m * a& < tfm < tr « ttorvtoff . Tt ifould be a queer ) way to rex" Irishmen , or make them careless about repealing the Union . There Is not one amongst you ; that would not be able to take your allowance out of a ] goodfafrpig ^ c- Af ' : - ' ' \\ ¦ . vr" ~ ' ¦¦ ; .- ; .-v l ' ¦ ¦•¦ : " '¦ ' > Irish nature , they . say , is not human nature ; and God forbid that hviman nature uhoald have , anyl tb S > A 99 M ^ ' - {^ ' - W ^ : : m * fe ; Mif . vWor'B Q imfaiVmM , fte 4 v « . InbjecW ^ owoonld the Irishmen eat their pigs without Birminghafftoratesi ? fe ^^ te 5 ^^^^ Mw ^^* 5 ^«" clouts , by which they must be cooked . Would the Irish eat them raw I How . wenld . the : trishr reai
thftir . ca $ e wtthput the jBboes , elothjng , and implements ^ ajid conveniences , supplied front England There is not a pig . exported $ rom Inland into , Eng-Ijipd ' ihal does nw reiurn , an equivalent ; mfipglish . goods to . the minor or major advantage ^ s > t Irishmen ob JEnglighmen ,: acoordiag to the casualties ' of the awket . \ ¦ ¦¦ , ¦ - . ¦ ¦ -: ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ,.. •; . - ..: ?* * ¦ 1 , " Mr . O'Connell and hia ¦ ' aider ^ ari . ( Wraci ng ana in doing this they are losing aa . opportunity of adjanoingtthe , causa of f ^ eedpm , -Circulate kjaow * ledge amongst the people as a means of resistanoe to pnes ^ oraft and craft of every , port , but neyer let -na appeal to ignorance , or ittempt to support a . cans * by exciting the brutal prejudices of aa infatuated multitude , i . , ¦• ¦ . % .- , ¦• ., ¦ ,. ¦ -, < . -.. - , T EOHUOOlay . '
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EXrBAORbltUBY OcCVfcJLENCB IK THE CHANNEL . --Our reporter has been on board the Sauth America , « ad -waa shown one of th « epibin dead lights of the starboard side , which bears a deep indeniure or hole , evidently made by' a ball , apparently considerably larger than a musket balU It has perforated a piece of canvllesoutsideof the deid light or shutter . The siBeof the gun or guns flred is riot known , but soine of those on board conjecture that the weapon was a swivel-gun . The first officer of the ship snggests that she might' have been a revenue vessel , bftt ihis ia not very probable , inasmuch as ahe did hot show a pennant . Besides , it is rather " sharp practice" for revenue vessels to fire into ships , unless they have refused to lie to on being summoned to do bo , and are making sail to escape , and thus affording strong ground of suspiojion that they are engaged in illic $ traffic . As the . matter stands , inve » Mgation on the jpart of the proper authorities beoomes imperative ; . —lAterpoolSUmndard , i
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.. ¥ t E r y q ^ T ^ E ^^ s x ^ Rr " ' ¦ ¦ : ¦ ¦ ¦ ' •; .: ¦;; v ; :
-L* Hatethrough Thenotonety Oftheirarea* Efficacy Bt Air's ! Gou≫ And Xtisbwfilc Vtim Hate, Through Thenotorietv Attvetirarkiki «Ffii^
-L * hatethrough thenotonety oftheirarea * efficacy Bt AIR'S GOU > AND XtisbwfilC vtiM hate , through thenotorietv attVetirarkiki « ffii ^
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Nov. 7, 1840, page 6, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/king-y1kbzq92ze2709/page/6/
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