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a " ^ THE STAR OF FREEDO M. July 10 ]ft*...
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* The same indignation bad muted ia fhe ...
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ADDRESS OF TH E WOMAN ' S RIGHTS CONVENT...
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Liverpool Election.—Seizure of Weapons.—...
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WORKING TAILORS' ASSOCIATION 68, WESTMINSTER BRIDGE ROAD, LAMBETH.
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A ' Not ' Uncommon Discovery. — A vounc man, who has
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recently taken a wife, says he did not f...
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Transcript
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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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Advantage Of A Return Ticket.—" Jack" Ne...
us us ftps rrd to the quartier of Parts , where we hoped sli . * I be ; be able in scf . Cs = r = c : want to the Foarbourg Saint iarcearceau , and thea to the centre of Paris , where we found rmeime other citizens determined to resist ; here and there uirricirricades might already be seen ; bu t t he t roops dared no t Hit cat come to an engagement iu the streets . They contented Kiemaemselves with butchering the passengers on the indication '' the the police-agents . For my part , I erased to be imprinted II a 1 a lithographic stone , in one of the smallest streets of me que quartier Poissonniere . the proclamation of the Journalists , mat tat of the " Revolu t ion , " and the decision of the Hi gh aourburtof Justice , which declared the President an outlaw , fchsnasnka to ibe exertions of a young writs * , wtose name , 'I'hiejhich I shall be happy to speak aloud at a future time ,
5 gnignifiei for me intrepidity and devotion , I had , a t five Vcl o ' cl o ck , nearly three thousand copies . We carried them at lireoree times , under our coats , through the midst of the irunrunken soldiers , to tbe environs of the Rue Neuve Saint lilust ' ustacbe , to the house of another citizen , who couragetusljusly took upon himself to have them distributed during taene night and the morning of the following day . As we jassassed the top of the Rue Notre Dame-de-Reconvrance , t earearly opposite the gymnasium , a group was bru t al l y dislersersed by some sergeants-de-ville and soldiers of the line . r i ' or or a moment a shrill cry was heard : they had shot a rronroman—a woman I—on whom had been found a proclamaiionion . We had hundreds about us , hut we lost all feeling f tf personal p e ril , so much were we penetrated with indigt taxation and horror .
I I had an appointment for the next morning on the Placelin-in-Caire . "Whilst awaiting the hour , I traversed tbe streets undnd boulevards to see if so much audacity and cynicism ' TOtroald not at last arouse the population . On my honour ' . ' , & declare , that at seven o ' clock all nay hopes had returned . ' . ' . h . believed the revolution almost certain for the morning . ' . ' . * . was present at the doings of the last hours of the reign itf if Louis Philippe ; I was intimately connected with the iiveventa which caused his fall ; but I have never found , in ichehe hearts and on the lips of the passers by , either against I LoLobas Phili ppe or any other prince , t h e scorn and horror : if if which Louis Bonaparte and bis counsellors were the
uniifferaraal objects . In every part of Paris it was known that I LoLouis Bonaparte had come forth during the day—that he Ibabad passed along the Kue-de-Rivoli and tbe Palais National to to within sight of tbe Rue Yivienne ; but that there , terri-Sefied , notwithstanding his formidable escort , at t he sullen asaspect oi the town , and the murmurs that arose from the popopulous quarters , he had c o wardly and preci pitatel y t urned baback . The Elysee no longer appearing a sufficiently safe asasylum , he fled . it is said , to Saint Cloud , —like Tiberius to hihis island , in the days when Rome inspiring him w i t h fear , bihe ordered his rowers to turn the vessel at the entrance of tithe Tiber , and take it back to Gaprea .
In t he b o ulevards , in the streets , and in the public places , tlthere was everywhere the same withering disdain , the same irindi gnation . The troops being scarce seen , the people inddulged in the most ardent and assuring comments . There it were mentioned officers who had broken their swords , genenrals arre st ed t h e p rec e dingeveniug , who havingescaped , w o uld a agitate tbe departments , others who , iu Paris itself , in the ii morning would put themselves at the head of the insurreo t tion . I do not believe that besides the army , and som e of IBonaparte ' e damned souls—souls rated , and twenty times t sold , I appeal to all those who traversed it like me—a single ] person inPariswho did not call down upon him all tbe shame < of defeat , all the rigour of an exemplary chastisement . If ! some of his partisans would here and there , though verv
: lately , dare to whisper their adhesion , they were imme-¦ diately scorned and ridiculed by the crowd . If the army persisted , it was impossible , for certain , to foresee the immediate confusion of the Dictator ; but they had another hope : they faithfully believed that he would net find , af t er his victory , F r enchmen v ile e n ou gh to rally around him , to form an administration and a government . The members of the famous Consultation Commission bad been inscribed by authority on tbe list published by tbe " Moniteur . " The majority ot them regarded that list as a veritable pillory ; they protested against it , and n quired their names to be withdrawn . They were far from expecting , in a word , that indescribable baseness , those revolting apostaciea , which , in expectation of the Empire , make in t h e f a ce o f E u rop e a crown of ignominy and sbame for official France !
In the morning the true battle would be fought , and each of us was resolute . Tbe Republicans formed groups of from fifteen to twenty men , and proceeded towards the populous quarters . Many of them took up a position in the Rue Saint Denis , at the top of tbe Rue Thevenot . The spot was well chosen for repulsing tbe attack of tbe troops encamped at the Porte Saint Denis . The Rue Saint Denis forms a curve , and in order to play tbe cannon on them it would be necessary to destroy the houses . By the Passage de la Trinite , they communicated with the Rue Saint Martin , where they established the ammunition stores and ball foundry . At noon the barricade , constructed with paving atone s , was truly formidable . They might well confront an attack of cannon and grape-shot . At two o ' clock in the afternoon tbe first howitzer was
fired ; a poor woman who was standing at her door was literally cnt in two . For an hoar , the soldi e rs of t he law remained on the defensive . They had placed some marksmea in the adjacent streets , to protect the barricade . When they had succeeded in repulsing the infantry , t be cannon was brought against them . It was three o ' clock . The fire was terrible , and continued unabated until four . The Republicans replied by a stead y fire ; they had succeeded in forming a band of a
hundred me n ; an d t hey coll e c t ed nea r ly as many mu s ke ts in the neighbouring houses . . They had still plenty of powder . All the cannon-balls passed two or three feet above t heir he a d s , and struck the upper stories of the houses furth e r on , where they created fearful havoc . They could very well see that the troops were nearly all drunk . At four o ' clock they were compelled to slacken their fire ; and they remained in fearful anxiety ; the cannon was echoing along the line of the boulevards ; they hoped that the battle had seriously begun .
On the approach of night , the infantry entered the street , when they were made pay dearl y for t he massacres on t he boulevards . Tbe Republicans repulsed them several times ; but at last , overwhelmed by numbers , and surrounded on every s ide , they retreated , fi gh t ing , t owards t he quar t ier Montorgaeil . They found the streets bristling with barricades , but without a single defender . They took up a new position , and hastily constructed a species of fortress at the corner of Saint Sauveurand Mandar streets . At nine o ' clock in the evening , they stillattempted to resist , but i t was too late ; the troops , guided by police agents , a tt acked t hem on every side . The melte was truly horrible ; the night was dark , and they fought foot to foot . The Republicans did not
dispsrsp , und e rc ov er of t he da r kness , until after a most determined struggle , and at that moment , each of those who remained upright might have believed himself almost the only surviver . We have there saffered very cruel losses ; then were killed men animated with great bravery , and a sublime devotion . We ought , for gratitude , one day to collect their martyr names . For my part , I r e collect a t t his moment only Dussaubs , the brother of the representative , Paturel ( de Rouen ) and a young student , named Carpentier . Whils t t h e y thus fou ght from the Rue Saint Denis to tbe Sue Mandar , other barricades were being raised simultaneously , and so to spi-ak , spontaneously , in the faubourg Saint Martin along tbe canal and the boulevards , in the Rae da Temple ; in all directions , indeed .
It was indeed a very serious attempt ; but , unfortunatel y , it was cat in pieces without communications , or any possible rallying point ; there was no possibility of its uniting to form that profound and compact mass of efforts which assures the success of insurrections . I am convinced , that Louis Bonaparte would have been defeated and chastised , could the resistence have lasted three days longer . The National Guard would at last have taken part in the struggle , and we know that the bravest of the legions were for the Constitution . The army would perhaps have understood the enormity of its crime ; the Refugees of London , Brussels , and Geneva would have had time to come to Paris , to animate the masses by word and example . Already the preceding evening I had met oue of them , Gu s tavo Naquet , who announced to me the arrival of others more popular in the morning . Tbe last news—the savage compression of Paris—stopped them , and they remained on the frontiers . * Louis Bona-
A " ^ The Star Of Freedo M. July 10 ]Ft*...
a " ^ THE STAR OF FREEDO M . July 10 ] ft *>
* The Same Indignation Bad Muted Ia Fhe ...
* The same indignation bad muted ia fhe same action Ledrn Rol-JJn , LcnUBJane , Felix Pyafc Cauisidiere , BibeyroRes , Martin Ber nard , Dela jclnze , Hadier de Honjan , Etienne Arago Cosurderay , & c . tho proscribed representatives , journalists , and workmen , from June , 1818 , to Jane , 1819 . Bat the straggle is only adjourned—as is the victory . The foUomng proclamations vrere issued : —
• TO TSE CBSiCH PEOM . E . ' After two years of conspiracy and complicity among the enemies Of thapeople , the tsost aad-cioasamoagstthem consummate a brutal and perfidious attempt Thou hast understood the criminal designs that a traitor would conceal under the names of Republic , Sovereignty , and Suffrage . Thou hast arisen for vengeance . Europe will arise also ! Every rebel ia an outlaw ! There exist no more any of the institutions of tha part . Accomplish then a great Revo . lotien , which will realise for all the People ' s Liberty , Equality , and Fraternity ! We are about to do our duty , as thou skonldst do thine , Toanrs IVvecfa Sepubligue . Demxratig . ue et Sosiak . ' XrrU , Boiehot , Beyer , Hopp , Pflieger , Holland , representatives of the people ; Thore , editor of the 'FraieSepabligae . "
* TO TBE SCB-OFFICEBS ASD SOLDIESS OF THE AEHT ! Cqhbadm The rights of the people , mutfliated and violated during twojeara . by the majority of the Auemblr , and by the President are subjected to a new violation , tha most brutal and odious of all . " ^ Napoleon and his partisans are outlawed J There no longer » a < tt 6 ume sovereignty of the people . That sovereignty , behind llllSrSrf "aP * ? concea ' shimself , thathe may the more easily m £ ^ % i i £ ft l 8 thatof Jour relations , friends , and fellow . aia ^ 4 ^ y 01 ? C 0 nMatt 0 be theacwmplieesof a cowardly * oTtoS ^^ . agamst - the fe ^ land ! will you consent to T ^ rSSKi ^ S ^^ , ^ 15 ^ 1116 P «> Pte , to crush your ^ cS ^^^ S ^ to ^ driihtandjusthS ? ' Companions ! una toroaS ^ StS" *?^ epeople , who appeal to yon , who ex-! £ *• l ^ i « fe *' "a |! !* o is guilty ofhigh tree . S ?^ to 4 ^ -3 » 5 £ F &* % ^ efs k « fr «< J yoofrom all k ^ Sg » - £ f £ « r MS'B &« ik
* The Same Indignation Bad Muted Ia Fhe ...
parte and hi * - ' accomplices well knew that the slig htest retardment wol 3 have teea thdr destruction . From tbe 2 nd bands of p olice ag e n t s , armed or barricaded as ma fort , occupied the churches to prevent the sounding of tbe tOBCii . The drummers of the National Guard were forbidden , under pain of death , to appear in uniform in tbe streets , and to the officers and sub-officers to make any attempt to convoke the legions . On the 4 th the first musket shot had been fired in the Rue Saint Denis , by tbe Bourgon brigade , the last in tbe Rue Montorgueil , by the regiment of Colonel de Lourmel . Between these two musket-shots eight brteades . besides artillery and cavalry ,
were unchained on Paris ; during nine hours , forty-soldiers , horse m en , and artillerv fired in the streets , and mas acr ed in t he hous e s ; orders w ere g iven to bum and exterminate uutil not a hand was raised to combat , or a voice to pro . est . At three o ' clock some of my friends and mo were d riven r » y he fire from the Rue du Petu-Careau to the Rue du Miall , where we attempted another sand , and from thence to the Rue Viwnnes , where we were still u . der the fire of musketry . We dispersed at last , and I remained alone in the Rue Montmormey , before tbe panoramas in the centre or a formidable quadruple fusillade . I took refoge in a little cafe , at the entrance of the panoramas , the door of which was instantly closed , a few seconds afterwards there was not a street in the quarter hut was occup ied b y the troops , and every one they found in tbem massacred ! the Boule
During two hours the cannon thundered on - vard des Italiens , on the Boulevard Montmartre , and the Boulevard Poissoniere , and an incessant fusillade accompanied the cannon . Two cut-throats with large epaulet'es , Rsybel ! and Canrobert , ordered them to fire at the windows , into the interior of public clubs and of private'houses , whilst grapeshot tore awav the doors , to open a wide passage to the assassins , who showed neither respect nor pity ' for anything , not even for the feebleness of sex nor forage . The victims were not counted , the number was too considerable ; and then they were so anxious to carry away the bodies ! Tbey were , for the roost part , passers by surprised by this tornado of shot and fire , tbe curious , attracted to their windows by tbe first reports , merchants whose blood or brains , at the moment they attempted to shut their door , was sbed on tbe threshold . Poor
p ? oplp , lastly , evidently inoffensive , whom it was necessa y to seek out , to kill them , in the corners of their houses . Long after the fire had ceased , tbe circulation remained interdicted on tbe boulevard ; some hours indeed were not too much to clear away the large pools of blood and the heaps of mangled bodies ! A young man , who , at half-past four only , could issue from the house contiguous to the Theatre des Varietes , w as obliged , in order to reach his own quarter , to walk through pools of blood , and stride over the lifeless bodies that stressed the paving of the boulevard . There was no fig h t ing from tbe street Lafitte to the Boulevard
Poissoniere and the great carpet warehouse of Aubisson , so sadly celebrated for tbe sacrifice of human life committed there . There was only fighting in the narrow streets that separate the Rue Saint Denis and the heig h t s of t he Pe t i t e Carreau , from the Rue de Rambuteau and tbe Pointe Saint Eusfacbe , On the boulevards there was nothing but massacre , and massacre without motive , without the slightest provocation . I appeal , if this is disputed , to tbe bodies of women , old men , and children which , at half-past four , still lay stretched on the public way and on the sieps of the Theatre des Varietes !
Address Of Th E Woman ' S Rights Convent...
ADDRESS OF TH E WOMAN ' S RIGHTS CONVENTION . The following Address , written by Miss Ann Preston , was adopted by the Pennsylvanian Woman ' s Rights Convention : — The question is repeatedly asked by those who have thought but little upon the subject of woman ' s position in society , ' What does woman want more than she possessed already ? Is ehe not beloved , honoured , guarded , cherished ? Wherein are her rights infringed , or her liberties curtailed ?' Cloning pictures have been drawn of the fitness of the present relations of society , and of the beauty of woman ' s dependence upon the protecting love of man , and frightful visions have been evoked of the confusion and perversion of nature which would occur if the doctrine of the ea . ua ! rights of man and woman was once admitted . The idea seems to prevail that movements for the elevation of woman arise not from the legitimate wants of society , but from the vague restlessness of unquiet spirits j not from the serene dictates of wisdom , hat from the headlong impulses of fanaticism . We came not here to argue the question of the relative strength of intellect in man and woman , for the reform which we advocate depends not upon its settlement . We place not the interests of woman in antagonism to that of her brother , for
' The woman ' s cau ? e is man ' s , They rise or sink together , Dwarted or Sod like , bond or free . ' We maintain not that woman should lose any of that refinement and delicacy of spirit which , as a celestial halo , ever encircles the pure in heart . We contend not that she shall become noisy and dictatorial , and abjure the quiet graces c-f life . We claim not that she , any more than her brother , should engage in any vocation or appear in any situation to which her nature and abilities are not fitted . But we ask for her , as for man , equality before the law , and free . dom to exercise all her powers and faculties under the direction of her own judgment and volition .
When a woman dies leaving behind her a husband and children , no appraisers come into the desolated home to examine the effects ; the father is the guardian of his offspring -, the family relation is not invaded by law ; but when a man dies tbe case is entirely different ; in the hour of the widow ' s desolation strangers come into the house to take an inventory of the effects , strangers are appointed to be the guardians of her children , and she . their natural caretaker , thenceforth has no legal direction of their interests ; strangers decide upon the propriety of the sale of the propertyearned , perhaps , by her own and her husband ' s mutual effortsand her interest in the estate is coolly designated as the' widow's incumbrance 1 . ' In ihe extremity of her bereavement , there is p'led upon her not only the dread of separation from her children , but that of being sent homeless from the spot where every object has been consecrated by her tenderest affections .
Nor is the practical working of this law better than its theory ; all over the country there are widows who have been made diiubly deselate by its provisions—widows separated from their children , who , if tbey had had the disposal of their own and their husband ' s mutual property , might have retrieved their circumstances , and kept the household band together . We ask for such change in public sentiment as shall procure the repeal oi this oppressive law . rt ' e ask that woman shall have free access to vocations of profit and honour , the means of earning a livelihood and independence for herself ! As a general rule , profitable employments are not considered open to woman , nor are her business capabilities encouraged and developed by systematic training . Gloomy must be the feelings of the father of a family of young daughters
when he is about to hid farewell to the world if he is leaving them without the means of pecuniary support Their brothers may go out into society , and gain position and competency ; but for them there is bat little choice of employment , and . too often , they are left with repressed and crippled energies to pine and chafe under the bitter sense of poverty and dependence . Their pursuits are to be determined , not by their inclination , judgment and ability , as are those of man , but by the popular es . timate of what is proper and becoming . In Turkey public delicacy is outraged if a woman appears unveUed beyond the walls of tha Harem , iu America a sentiment no less arbitrary presumes to chalk out for her the precise boundaries of womanly propriety ; and she wh & ventures to step beyond them must do it at the peril of encountering low sneers , coarse allusions , and the withering imputation of want of feminine delicacy .
Even for the same services woman generally receives less than man . The whole tendency of our customs , habits , and teaching , is to mike her dependent—dependent in outward circumstances , de . dependent in spirit . As a consequence of her fewer resources , marriage has been to her the great means of securing position in society . Thus it is that this relation , which should ever he a ' holy sacrament '—the unbiassed and generous election of the free and self-sustained being , too often is degraded into a mean acceptance of a shelter from neglect and poverty 1 We ask that woman shall be trained to unfold her whole nature : to exercise all her powers and facufcies . It is said that the domestic circles is the peculiar province of woman that' men are what mothers make them , ' But ho w can that woman who doss not live for self . cnlture and self-development , who
has herself ho exalted objects in life , imbue her children with lofty aspirations , or train her sons to a free and glorious manhood ? She hestcan folfil the duties of wife and mother , who is fitted for other and varied usefulness . The being whs lives for one relation only cannol possess the power and scope which are required for the highest excellence even in that one . If the whole body is left without exercise , one arm does not become strong ; if the tree is stunted in its growth , one branch does not shoot into surpassing luxuriance . That woman whose habits and mental training enable her to assist and sustain her husband In seasons ot difficulty and whose children re * y on her as a wise counsellor—commands a life-long reverence far deeper and dearer than can be secured by transient accomplishments , or the most refined and delicate imbecility . All women are not wives and mothers , but all have spirits needing development , powers that grow with their exercise .
Those who are best acquainted with the state of society know that there is , at this time , a vast amount of unhappinesa among women for want of free outlets to their powers ; that thousands are yearning for falter development , and a wider field of mefnlness . Tho same energies which in man find vent in professions , and in the thousand forms of business and study , must find an ennobling channel in woman , else they will be frittered away in trifles , or turned into instruments to prey upon their possessor . To follow the empty round of fashion , to retail gossip and scandal , to be an ornament iu the parlour or a mere drudge in the kitchen , to live as an appendage to any human being , does not fill op nor satisfy the capacities of a soul awakened to a sense of its true wants , and of the far-reaching and mighty interests which cluster around its existence .
We protest against the tyranny of that public sentiment which as . signs any arbitrary sphere to woman . God has made the happiness and development of his creatures to depend upon the free exercise of their powers and faculties . Freedom is the law of beauty , wr itten by His fingers upon tbe human mind , and the only condition upon which it can attain to its full stature , and expand in its natural and beautiful preparations . It is recognised , in reference to man , that his Judgment , opportu . mtes ,, and abilities 1 are the only proper measure of his sphere . Ihe tools to him who can use them . » But the same principles are not misted in their application to woman , lest , forsooth , she should lose herfemmuie characteristics , and like the lostpleiad forsakeher native sphere ! It seems to beforgotten that the laws of nature will not he suspended ; that the human mind , when released from pressure , like water , must find its own level ; that woman can not , if she would , cast away her nature and instincts ; that it is only when we are left free to obey the inward attractions of our being , that we fall into onr natural place , and move in our God-apnointed orbits . We askthatnone shall dare to come in between woman and her Mafcer , and with unhallowed hands attest to plant their shallow posts and draw their flimsy cords around the heaven-wide sphere of an immortal spirit .
We mawtaui that God has not so failed in his adaptations as to give powers to be wasted , talents to be wrapped in a napkin , and that the possession of faculties and capabilities is the warrant of nature , the command of the All-Wise lor their culture and
exer-We believe that tha woman who is obeying the convictions of her own soul , and whose ability is commensurate with her employment , is ever in her own Uue sphere , whether in her quiet home she is training her children to nobltaass ana virtue , oris standing as a physician by the bed of sickness and sorrow—whether with Elizabeth Fry she is preaching the gospel of glad tidings to the sad dwellers in prison , or like the Italian , Laura Bassi , is filling a pro
Address Of Th E Woman ' S Rights Convent...
fessor's chair a :: d expounding philosophy to admiring and instructed listeners . While we demand for woman a more complete physical , intellectualand moral education , as the means of stre ngthening andbeautltying her own nature , and of ennobliug the whole r : \ ce , we also ask for a more elevated standard of excellence and moral purity in man : and we maintain that if there is any place of resort , or any employment in society , which , necessarily , would sully the delicacy of woman ' s spirit , in that man also must be contaminated and degraded . Woman indeed should wear about her , wherever she moves , the protecting investment of innocence and purity , but not less is it requisite that he who U the companion of her life , should guard his spirit with the same sacred and beautiful covering . We believe that woman , as an accountable being , cannot innocently merge her individuality in that of her brother , or accept from him the limitation of her sphere . .
, In all life ' s great extremities she also is thrown upon her inward resources and stands alone . Man cannot step in between her and the ' accusing angel' of her own conscience ; alone in the solitude of her spirit sha must wrestle with her own sorrows ; none can walk for her ' the valley of the shadow of death ! ' When her brother shall be able to settle for ber accountabilities , and ' give to God a ransom for her soul . ' then , and not till then , may she rightly com . mit to him the direction of her powers and activities . We ask , in fine , for the application of the fundamental principles of Christianity and llepublicanism to this , as to all other questions of vital importance ; and appealing to all who desire the progression and hap ( iness of the whole race , ive ask them as magnanimous men and true women , to examine this subject in the spirit of a generous and candid investigation .
Liverpool Election.—Seizure Of Weapons.—...
Liverpool Election . —Seizure of Weapons . — On Saturday , from information receive ! by the police , a posse of constables was despatched to the workshop of Mr . Jarvis , turner , Williamson-street , where they found prepared ^ several hundred weapons of the most formidable description . Tbese were at once seized and conveyed to the policeoffice ; they filled a large spring cart . For some time past the Protectionist party have been boasting , in regard to the election , that tbey would " win , tie , or bring it to « wi angle ; " and many of the worst characters in Lancashire and Cheshire have been brought forward for the purpose , as is generally believed , of intimidating tbe liberal electors from making their appearance on the election day . The new head-constable , however , Captain Greig , an old soldier , was not to be entrapped into any party measures ; and he has already won golden opinions by the prompt and vigorous precautions taken to secure tbe peace on Tuesday and Wednesday next . The Mayor , also , who , though belonging to the Protectionist party , ia , a high-spirited honourable
man , has expressed his determination to call the magistrates together for the purpose of adopting measures to secure the public peace . The weapons seized were ordered by an alderman of the borough , a member of the Orange Society . Each weapon consisted of two pieces of seasoned ash , of about two feet long , turned like a constable ' s staff , so as to give a firm hold for tbe hand , and fitting into each other by a screw , so as when united to constitute a pike handle four feet long . That they were intended as a pikestaff is obvious , for one end fitted into a ring , and in that end was an indent , into which a pike blade or spike couM be driven . It has since transpired that weapons of an equally formidable description . - but upon a different principle , have been manufactured in other places , but all are made after models suggested by a foreign refugee to the Chartists some years ago . Tbe weapons were conveyed immediately to tbe Town-ball , and the head constable was summoned by the mayor to ascertain and report upon the existence of an alleged conspiracy to provoke a breach of the peace on the day of nomination . —Cnronicfe and European Times .
Irish Constabulary , fob Australia . — It is stated that the government intend to send 2 , 000 Irish constables to aid the civil power in Australia . The Tba Trade , July 5 . —The deliveries of tea in the metropolis last week were much tho same in quantity as previously , being about 550 , 0001 b .
Working Tailors' Association 68, Westminster Bridge Road, Lambeth.
WORKING TAILORS' ASSOCIATION 68 , WESTMINSTER BRIDGE ROAD , LAMBETH .
Ad00209
TEUSTEES . Iobd Godebich , ( A , A . Yansittart , Esq . As working-men organised for the management and execution of our own business , we appeal with great confidence to our fellow , working men for their hearty support . We ask thut support in the plain words ot plain men , without the usual sbopkeeping tricks and falsehoods . We do so because we know that we offer an opportu . nity for the exercise of a sound economy , but we make our appeal more particularly because we believe that every honest artizan in supporting us will feel that he is peifo . 'minga duty to the men of his class , which , to overlook or neglect , would be a treason and a disgrace . We ask for the support of working-men in the full assurance that no better value can be given for rnuney than that which we offerand we desire success through that support , not solely that we may rescue ourselves from the wretchedness and slavery of the slop sys . tern—but more particularly that our fellow-workers of all trades , encouraged by our example , may , through the profitable results of self-management , place themselves and -their children beyond the reach of poverty or crime . Relying on the good faith of the people , we await patiently tha re suit of this appeal . Walteb Coopeb , Manager .
Ad00210
MATRIMONIAL ALLIANCE ASSOCIATION . Legally Established 1849 . Head Office , London , Lincoln ' s Inn Field Chambers , and 2 , Portsmouth-street , Lincoln ' s Inn Fields . —Branch Offices , Liverpool , Manchester , Bristol , York , and Aberdeen , Confidential Referee - R . Warwick , Esq . M ATRIMONIAL ALLIANCE ASSOCIA-¦ TION , conducted on the system as so successfully adopted on the Continent , legally established as a medium for the introduction of both sexes unknown te > each other , who are desirouaof entering Into matrimony , and who may rely on strict honour and secr « cy . None but respectable parties negotiated with . Applicants may sign by initial or otherwise . Full particulars , with printed forms of application . lists of agents , and instructions , sent free , on receipt of six post stamps by t > ... . «„¦¦¦ ... Hooo Bbbesfobd , Esq ., Secretary . Registrar ' s Offices , Lincoln's Inn Field Chambers , and 2 , Portsmouth-street , Lincoln ' s Inn Fields , London . fcoTE—Communications from the continent and abi oad promptly answered . Unpaid letters refused .
Ad00211
To tho millions ! CAPITALISTS MAY , BY COMBINATION , V prevent a Poor Man from ohtaining the highsst value for hij Labour , but Capital can never prevent a Poor Man buying hig goods in the cheapest mark « t-And at Benetfisk and Compant , 89 and 90 Cheapslde , the Working Classes may be supplied with every thing necessary to furnish an eight roomed house for five pounat , and every article warranted of the best qualltv and workmanship . ' The following is the b ' st of articles— g < ? Hall Lamp , 10 s 6 d ; Umbrella Stand , 4 s 6 d 15 0 ' Bronzed Dining-room Fender and Standards 5 6 Set of polished Steel Fire-irons ; 3 g Brass Toast-stand , is fid ; Fire Guards , Is 6 d 3 0 Bronzed and polished Steel Scroll Fender 8 6 Polished
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MOAT'S VEGETABLE PILLS ; madebyW . C . MOAT , Member of the Royal College of Sur . geons of England , and Apothecary , 344 , Stbato , formerly Partner with the late " Mr . Mobison , the Hygeist . British College of Health , " -aremedy for the great majority of Diseases , often effefticg remarkable restorations to health . - k .. JESKtoS ? be found to potsm n 0 objectionable quailties , and are confidently recommended ns a most useful Familv ^^^^^ ^ ^ Savfe ^^ ^^^ The common expertew * tf mankind teaches that the dails evacuations gWBt depCe ° * " »«¦ £ »*« & M alSe n ^
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T ONDON AND COUNTY FIRE AND LIFE JLi ASSURANCE COMPANY . INCOBFOBATEB BT ACT OF PARLIAMENT . Chief Offiee .-iSi , OXFORD STREET , LONDON . Hear Hie British 3 fns « itn » . With Branches or Agencies in many of the principal Towns Great Britain . 2 tanitere . -10 NDON AND COUNTY BANE . SPECIAL ADVANTAGES . A Guarantee Fund of £ 100 , 000 with a minimum interest of £ 5 ncr C 6 ut Policies Indisputable , and not liable to Forfeiture . Credit given tor payment of premiums iu certain cases . Life Policy Stamps and Medical S ' ce * paid by the Company . Policies issued from £ 10 to £ 5 , 000 , at Low Rates or Premium , payable yearly , half-yearly , quarterly , or monthly , fhe whole of profits divided . , , . _ , _ , . , Unhealthy and ' declined' lives accepted . Prompt payment of ^ o ' rotaaryFire Insurances taken at Is . 6 d . percent ,, and loss of rent by fire provided against . . Firepolicies issueifree of expense , when the annual premiums are 5 s . or upwards . . . . „ ,.. Policies
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CHEAP ANMJ S'l'AKDARD WOKKS Nov ) Publishing ™ Nos . at One Penny each . XVL SPI / BNDW 1 S U . UISTBATED , 1 —THE LOST MARINERS , or the Search for Sir John Franklin , an authentic account of the various expeditions that have been gent in search of tbe missing ships .: with numerous plates . 2 . —LAMARTINE'S TRAVELS in the Holy Land : with coloured Frontispiece and Title , and numerous other plates , 3 . —THE PILGRIM'S PROGRSSS-com 2 ' ' « te edition ; with co . loured Frontispiece and numerous other plates . 4 . —THE TRIALS OF LOVE , or Woman ' s Reward , by Hannah Maria Jones : a tale of surpassing interest . With a superbly engraved Frontispiece and Title , and other plates . Sixteen large pages in each Penny Number .
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IMP ORTA N T S O CIALIST PU B LICATI NS . ROBERT OWEN'S JfOURNAI .. THIS JOURNAL ( Published weekly , price One Penny , and in monthly parts , price FouivPece ) , Explains tbe means by which the population oi the world may be placed within new and very superior circumstances , and provided with constant beneficial employment , and thereby enabled to enjoy comfort and abundance , and great social advantages ; and the direct means by which this change may be effected with benefit to all classes .
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DR . CUX . VBRWSX . X . , AN THE PLEASURES OF HEALTH . \ s A series of popular works , Is ., each , by post Is . 6 d . each . ENJOYMENT OF LIFE . ' Health , recreation , and rational use of time . ' CoHTEwrs—Earlyrising ; Spring and Summer mornings , Excur . sions about the Environs of Losdon—the Parks , Lanes Hills Forests , Fields , High-roads , and other pleasant places , Country Trips and Rambles ; the Sea ; London at Night ; Evenings at Home ; Music ; the Drama ; on Eating , Drinking , Sleeping , Bathing . Air , Rest , Ease , Occupation , & e . «»«"" g , 11 . and m . FRAGMENTS FROM THE MOUNTAINS . Two Vols . Vol . 1 . —A Visit to the Lakes ; Sketch of Edinburgh . & o . Vol . 2 . —The Lakes of Killarney ; Reminiscences of Dublin , & c .
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PROSPECTUS ^^^^^ OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF UNITED Tn . \ T , T < __ FOR TUE -1 DES PROTECTION OF INDUSTRY AND EMPLOYMENT OF UB AGRICULTURE AND MANUFACTURES . Established 2 ith of March , 1843 , OFFICES , 259 , TOTTEKHAM-COUKT-ROAD , tONDOX . Pbesidknt—g , a . Fleming , Esq . CoMaiKEE . -Mr . Frederick Green , Mr . William Peel , jr r n , Winters , Mr . Edward Humphries . ° * TKA « Hua . -George A . Fleming , Esq , 6 , SaviUe Row , VnW „ Road , London . ' " al « ortu BANKEiis—JointStoclc BankofLondou AooiTOB—Joseph Glover , Ehq ., Public Accountant , 12 , BuckWi London . •""'¦ wttsliYiry , SncRETABT .-tor . William Peel , W , Tottenliam-court-wwd Loiiao
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THE SIIiSNT FfrJlEND . IN SIX LANGUAGES . Fortieth Edition . C ontaining the remedy for the prevention of disease Illustrated by One Hundred Anatomical and Explanatory Coloured Engravings on Steel . On I'fiywcal Disqualifications , Generative Incapacity , and Impediuunts to Marriiige , A new and improved edition , enlarged to 19 S pages , price 2 s . Cd . ; by post , direct from the establishment , 3 s . 6 d . in postage stamps . By 11 . and L . Perry and Co ., Consulting Surgeons , 19 , Berners-stvcet , Oxford-street , London . Published by Sherwood and Co , 23 , Paternoster-row 5 and sold by Hannay , C 3 , and Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Starie , 23 , Tichboniestreet , Haymarket ; and Gordon , 46 , Leadenhall-street ; Barclay and Son , 95 , Farringdon-street ; W . Sutton and Co ., 10 , Doirchurchyard ; W . Edwards , 67 , St . Pnul ' s-churchynrd ; Butler and Harding , 4 , Cheapside ; It . Johnson , 02 , Comhill ! J , and tt . Haines and Co ., Leith-walk , Edinburgh ; D . Campbell , Argyll-street , Glasgow ; J . Priestley , Lord street , T . Newton , Cliurch-strect , Liverpool ; R . H . Ingham , Market-street , Manchester ; and J . H . Powell , 15 , Westmoreland-street , Dublin . Thomas Relet , Bookseller , 10 , Spring-gardens , Bolton , Lancashire .
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TUE ROAD TO HEALTH ! H OLLOWAY'S PILLS , CURE OP A DISORDERED LIVER AND BAD DIGESTION . Copy qf a letter from M : Ii . W . Kirkus , Chemist , 1 , Prescot Street ^ Liverpool , dated 6 th June , 1851 . To Professor HottowAV , Sin , —Your Pills and Ointment have stood the highest on our sale list of Proprietary Medicines for some years . A customer , to whom I can refer for any inquiries , desires me to let you know the parti , culars of her case . She had been troubled for j ears with a disordered liver , and bad digestion . On the last-occasion , however , the virulence of the attack was so alarming , and the inflammation set in so severely , that doubts were entertained of her not being able to bear up undw it ; fortunately ^ she was induced to try your Pills , and she infomws me that after the first , and each succeeding dose , she had great relief . She con- tinued to take them , and although she used only three boxes , she is now in the enjoyment of perfect health . I could have sent you many more cases , but the above , from the severity of the attack , and the speedy cure , I think , speaks much in favour of your cstonisliing ; Pills . ( Signed ) R . W . Kibkus .
A ' Not ' Uncommon Discovery. — A Vounc Man, Who Has
A ' Not ' Uncommon Discovery . — A vounc man , who has
Recently Taken A Wife, Says He Did Not F...
recently taken a wife , says he did not find it as iiara w s ™ married as he did to buy the furniture . , . „„ .,, A lady , on being separated from her husband , onang eo her religion , being determined , she said , to avoid his company in this worhtand the next . „ t ., . „ The wife of a shoemaker named Darker , tbe first e » weni of their love—aBne boy . —The following day a wit ° d » T to the husband , that his wife had got a little lig hter ana « little Darker ; , , „ . „ The " Providence Transcript" says , there tf »» 7 £ i aristocratic , that she refuses to take a newspaper becaus e s made of rags .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 10, 1852, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_10071852/page/2/
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