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futile attempts at euro hy mercury and o...
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jfovc i|it Imeiit§B«<*.
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FRANCE. The President of the Republic ha...
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dforogit fStfeccllanin
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The celebration of New Year's Day in Par...
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THE CASE OF JANE WILBRED. It will be rem...
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The Great Fall- of Niagara.—On Tuesday e...
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Amazing Success of the New Mode of Treat...
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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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Futile Attempts At Euro Hy Mercury And O...
futile attempts at euro hy mercury and oth 8 January 11 ; 1851 . 2 THE NORTHERN STAR . ___— - === ==== * ^ ———^— m ^*^ ^ ^ ¦ _ . » .. „ , nta nt nnrR bv mercurv and nth * .
Jfovc I|It Imeiit§B«≪*.
jfovc i | it Imeiit § B «<* .
France. The President Of The Republic Ha...
FRANCE . The President of the Republic has definitely accepted ihe resignation of his Ministers ; indeed , he had no alternative , as , individually and collectively , thev assured him of the utter impossibility of theii being able to hold out any longer ; that the Legislative \ ssem-ly had imbibed a notion that ii was the chief power of the State , and that the President ' s position was no longer tenable , if he persisted in his assumption of superiority over eveiy ether power . Oa Friday evening , after the dehaie in which they bad beta so signally worsted by General Changaruier , they drove off and fined with
Louis Napoleon , at the Eiysee . They then and there told him that their resignation was inevitable The Prince then offered , in the extremity of his distress , to offer up General Changaruier as a sacrifice , and to deprive him of his command of the troops in Paris ; to this proposal M . Baroche replied that such a proposal might have been entertained en the preceding day , but that it was now impossible . It is , perhaps , fortunate that this bold measure was rejected by the Cabinet , as , had it been acted up in , I am firmly persuaded that blood v » nuld again have stained the streets of Paris . General Changarnier is the defacto President of the Piepub
lie , whilst Louis Xapolean holds the title de jure ; and there can be but little doubt that bis sudden -dismissal vou'd have been followed by au insurrection . The Prince baa all the appliances and means of State , but the General has 115 , 000 fixed bayonets at bis beck and call . Like the Centurion , he spaaks as one having authority ; bis popularity with the vast body of troops now quartered in and about Paris is unbounded ; whilst despite all the cigars , champagne , and cold fowls , so hospitably distributed to the soldiers at the reviews of Satory , and La Mamie , Louis Napoleon is their constant subject , of ridicule .
The ' Patrie' published the following ss permanent orders from the Commander-in-chief , to the troops assembled in Paris : — 1 1 . Mot to obfiy or pay any attention to any request until after taking or having received the orders of the Lieutenant-Geneial . * 2 . Not to listen to representatives of the people . ' 4 . To shoot all traitors instantly . 20 . Every order which does not come from the General-in-Chief is null ; ta reject the advice given by every officer not employed under the Commander-in-Chief ; no orders to be executed excepting those coming from the General-in-Chief or his regular agents .
' 21 . Every requisition , summons , or demand , on the part of a civil , judical , ot political functionary , -shall be rigorously repelled . ' These orders excited very much surprise in Paris , and M . Napoleon Buonaparte interpellated the Minister of War on the matter . The Minister and M . Baroche asked for a day or two ' s adjournment , in order to give time to see if there was such a document in his office ; hut the Assembly refused and Gen . Changarnier rose and gave the desired explanation , and said that no permanent or temporary instructions of the nature of ( hose given in the
* Patrie" had ever issued from the Commander-in-Chief . The * Patrie' thus put upon its mettle , published on Monday morning an exact version of the orders , signed by Gen . Keibell , who commands one of the brigades in Paris , which were issued , necessarily with the authorisation of Gen Changaruier , during the insurrection in June . These orders contain all the objec ' . ionable passages so emphatically repudiated by Gen . Changarnier . Such a public scandal as this would create a considerable disturbance in England , but as Sterne says , ' they maaagethese matters better in France . '
various rumours are flying abont as to the formation of a ministry . Some persons think that thpresent crisis will be prolonged in order to get up demonstration in favour of the President others ; state that the Ministers hold their portfolio pro tern ., and that the Ministry will only be slightly modified . The great object of Louis Napoleon appears to be to get rid of Gen . Changarnier , whose power and infkenc- ? , both over the Assembly and troops , is said to be unbounded . It is feared that if an attempt is made to dispossess him of the command , there will be serious disturbances . It is also said that Louis Napoleon bas been advised to throw himself upon the country , and sec what good that will do .
The desire of . the President to get rid of General Chanzarnier became { known to the members of the Assembly on Tuesday afternoon , and was , it is said , received svuh the strongest expressiou of disapprobation . According to the latest accounts , it appears that no ministry bas been appointed yet ; and this fact seems to indicate that the President intends to be in no hurry , but by letting the present crisis continue to rouse the feeling of France against the Assembly , which bas become very unpopular of late .
GERMANY . Up to the 2 nd inst ., the various committees appointed at the Conference at Dresden , were still occupied with the examination of the various paragraphs of the old German constitution , with the view of ascertaining how far they could be modified . It is still doubtful whether England and France have protested ( as some German journals assert they have ) againsj the admission of non-German provinces into the Germanic Confederation . The probability is , that those powers have contented themselves for the present with starting some objections to that contemplated step .
There are many rumours afloat respecting the plans which will be proposed at Dresden . And , among others , it is asserted that Austria will advocate the depriving of the respective Legislative Chambers of Germany of the right of refusing the taxes , and the tribunals of the power of pronouncing any decision as to the legality of ordonnances emanating from the governments . The Committee of the Conference on the organisation of the supreme central power and territorial questions held a meeting on the 2 nd inst ., at which it was understood the question of the admission of the non-German States of Austria , was warmly discussed , but no decision was then arrived at .
The third committee , empowered to deliberate on material interests , commerce , customs , & c , also held a sitting , wherein the tender question of customs approachinent is also said to have been mooted , not as a point to be urged at the present in a crude form , but as a germ " foe future development . A meeting is abont to take place between the Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia , at
Dresden , for the purpose of completing the reconciliation between the governments of the two powers , and establishing a lasting and solid amity . Personal meetings of this sort between monarebs are , however , not noted as being verv eminent pledges of enduring peace between their " respective countries , and therefore it would not be advisable to build any sanguine theories on this event , even if it takes place .
PRUSSIA . The Chambers re-assembled on the 3 rd inst . Count Rittberg . the President of the Upper Chamber , in opening the session , expressed . a hope that consttutional liberty would be tdhered to by those who were sitting ta Conference at Dresden , and that the scenes in Hesse Cassel would not be attempted in Prussia . These remarks have been censured as out of place . It is said that Manteaffelis anxious to get the budget voted , as there in no money iu hand to carry on the affairs of the sttte , and a quarter ' s salary is due to all the officials eraployed under government There war , no discussion on the address , and the lower chamber , on the 4 th , adjourned to the 7 tb .
_ The Second Chamber , in the sitting of the 5 th not , resolved , by a majority of 147 against 141 , to ffi ? A ^ *^ «• * - ¦»¦«
SPAIN . On December the 30 th Donoso Cartes , the Mon talembert of Spain , made an eloquent s ^ eck in opposition to the government estimates , SU £ throws some light on the state of affairs iu Soain In concluding he said :-That socialism would < o < m develope itsel f in Spain for the same reasons it " had developed itself in France . Socialism would not fall till the great system of almsgiving , established fly the churcn , was brought into practice aeain . The church had divided the poor into three classes
, the farmers , the workmen , and the bejrjrars To the farmer she rented land as cheap as possible ' the workmen received employment either in manul factories er in raising beautiful monuments , and the beggars were fed . That division no longer exists and as tnereis monopol y of capital , there is war between the proprietor and the workman , and so . cuuum will be the consequence ; and at the first awarder that occurs in Spain the government will see that there are more socialists than they ima-$ w . The gwemmeat should , not spend the ;
France. The President Of The Republic Ha...
public money in erecting theatres , but in repairing the crumbling churches , those palaces of the poor , a id should exert itself to better the public morals . SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN . v Measures are being taken by Austria and "Prussia to settle the Schleawig affair . Two commissioners have been appointed , who are to proceed to Keil for this purpose ; and the Austrian and Prussian troops are being put in a state of readiness to march to Schleswig-Holstein , to enforce the settlement . It is said that the Stadtholderate will not submit to this dictation , in the first place , because they are not inclined to do so , aud in the second , because the troops would b 2 certain to disobey any orders to that effect .
Dforogit Fstfeccllanin
dforogit fStfeccllanin
The Celebration Of New Year's Day In Par...
The celebration of New Year ' s Day in Paris is well worthy of being witnessed , and would infuse life and gladsome feelings into the surliest and sulkiest of misanthropic mortals . Throughout the entire day and the succeeding week the whole city is literally turned inside out . The Boulevards are occupied by string * oi tented shops , under which fragile covering are displayed glittering heaps of paste jawellery , gimcrack ornaments , scentless perfumery , and tasteless confectionary , cheap toys , cakes , and gilded gingerbread , which latter article is in great request with the al fresco purchasers .
Throughout the whole of the 1 st and 2 nd inst was a living tide streaming from the Madelaine to the hastile , from the Tuileries to the Barrier de 1 ' Extole . The gardens of the Tuileries and the Palais Royal were alive with children and their nurses ; and the Champs-Elysecs was swarming with gaily dressed holiday folk , who assembled in motley groups around peripatetic conjurors and dentists and found in the open air hundreds of patients upon whom they operated with great skill , whilst up the middle of the noble avenue the carriages of the half-ruined hut still showy nobles clatter
along with gaudy livened servants . Thus , to all appearances , Paris is all gaiety and prosperity , but there are corners of the veil which may be lifted , and will reveal that all is not gold that glitters . The shopkeepers will tell you that but for the crowds of English who inundate the cspital , they would sell nothing . Trade is dull , and speculation is stagnant . The preparations for the forthcoming exhibition in London have instilled a fleeting activity in the workshops of the Faubourgs , but the arge manufacturers complain that they have no orders . Everybody is complaining , and much distress prevails in the manufacturing districts .
The trial of Lopez and others concerned in the Cuba expedition has commenced in the Circuit Court of New Orleans . The question of coloured immigration from the United States h ? s been made the subject of official discussion , and excites much interest . It is supposed that the free coloured Americans of the Southern States may enjoy the liberties and equality in Jamaica which are virtually denied them on the soil of the American Republic . The Danes have repaid the attack made on them three or four days ago at Molihoest , where they lost twenty prisoners , hy surprising and carrying off a picquet of seventeen Ilolstein jagers near Kropp , who fell without resistance into the hands of a patrol of Danish cavalry .
In Hesse Cassel measures of execution , by the way of billeting troops at free quarters upon individuals implicated in the refusal of taxes , continue . Among these are included almost all public functionaries , burgh . fr guard officers , and some private indiduals . The number of men quartered varies from five to ten or more . A master saddler who , in the open streets , grossly insulted some Austrian officers and soldiers , and sought to cause a riot , has been arrested , tried bycourfc-martial , and condemned to one month ' s imprisonment .
Advices from Texas states that tliere has been some difficulty at Matamcras on account of the nonpayment of the Mexican troops . It was proposed by the military to take possession of funds in the Custom-house , in order to meet the deficiency , and to throw open the port for the introduction of all kinds of goods at a nominal rate . This was resisted by the civil authorities , who are determined to close the port of Matamoras rather than yield to the ag . gressions of the . military . The Indiana State Convention has reconsidered the section securing the right to married woman to hold property , aud have refused to sustain the provision
A terrible steani « boat disaster occurred on the Mississippi River on the 17 th ulf . The steamer South America took fire near Bayou Sara , and was totally consumed in less than twenty minutes , thirty or forty lives being lost by the calamity . Also another steara-boat was destroyed on the Monongahela , near Pittsburgh , on the 20 tb ult ., by the explosion of the boiler , by which several persons lost their lives . A lump of solid gold , worth about twelve dols ., the first of the week , was found near the mouth of Shoal Creek , in Arkansas , by several gentlemen while they were engaged in examining a bed of coal . Those who profess to have some knowledge of such things , express it as their opinion that gold exists in considerable quantities at that place , or iu the neighbourhood .
General Chaplin , who was in custody for aiding and abetting the escape of slaves in the United States , bas been released from gaol , on 19 , 000 dols . bail . A letter from Baltimore says be will now have aa opportunity of returning to the Free States , and as he values his liberty for the remainder of his life , he bad better never come back . Let his friends pay the hail bond and thus secure his escape , for rest assured that all the ingenuity and talent of counsel can never save him from conviction by a Maryland jury . M . Frederic Bastiat , a French representative , and a distinguished political economist , died at Rome on the 24 th nit .
In Paris , the creditor who arrested M . Mauguin on the 4 th commenced an action against the turnkey who obeyed the summons from the Legislative Assembly to release his prisoner , and there is little donbt that the judicial tribunals will make a stand against the pretensions of the advocates for parliamentary privilege . The skirmishes between the Holsteiners and the Danes are becoming every day more important . The frost , however , the great hope of the former , bad not set in up to the latest dates from that duchy . In November last the public revenues of Spain amounted to 30 . 034 , 055 reals more than in the corresponding months of 1849 . During the vear 1850 , the sum distributed by the Queen was 2 , 000 , 000 reals , the number of poor relieved by her was
14 , 265 , On the 17 th of December , Omer Pasha made his triumphal entry into Bosna Serai . Mabmud , the rebellious Pasha of Tazla , rode on a miserable saddle affixed to the back of a peasant ' s sorry jade . After him rode the other prisoners the Musselims , the Cadis , & c , each horse being attached to the saddle of its predecessor . Four Nisams ( Christians ) , dressed as jesters , with cap and bells , and performing all kinds of antics , led on the mournful procession . Alterthis
, first act was over , Mustepba Pasha Bahic was led on fcot through the streets , and it is said that the sad spectacle drew tears from the eyes of many of the Turks who stcod round . Oraer Pasha intended to proceed at once to the Ilernegowina . Mabmud Pasba bed escaped to Vinkovze , in Siavonia , hut fer some reason unknown he returned to Tuzla and voluntarily surrendered himself to the Seraskier ) who ban treated him as above mentioned , and paid the arresrs of his troops with the 18 , 000 ducats which he found in the fallen despot ' s possession .
It is said that the French government bas given j orders to several steamers to watch the court of Italy , especially aboat the Soman States , to prevent any attempt being made to disturb the present state of Italy . The Genoa peters of the 2 ud give an seconnt of a serines disturbance which occurred in that city on the preceding evenicg . It commenced by eome idle hoys insulting a few tirailleurs who were regaling themselves in a wine shop . The soldiers attempted to chastise the offenders , but found they were backed by a mob . A scuffle ensued , which was with difficulty stopped by the timeif arrival of a piquet of eational guards . Marshal Radefzky fell fram his horse and injured his arm while at Verona , but not to such an extent as to create any uneasiness
. The Stakeholders have devoted a sum of 15 , 000 marks to the education and support of the orphaned chddren of the soldiers who have fallen in battle . . - «» « . ?* £ H . ambur 6 b has decreed the expulsion of the Hungarian refugees in that town . ?^ , 1 , ° , ^ ° ren ce the 30 l n states that the delegates of that city had communicated to the booksellers a long list of worts which the government had thought proper to prohibit . Those " books * e derided into tvto categories—one of which the introduction it prohibited , the other of nhichthe sale » forbidden .
The Celebration Of New Year's Day In Par...
A letter from Cadiz states that the number of trevellers , who had repaired thither to embark in tl e Caledonia steamer for Cuba , was so considerable that a great number could not find room on board . According to an ordinance published on January 5 th by the administration , the following papers are excluded from the Electorate : —The Berlin « Con . stitutional Zeitung , ' the ' Kladderadascb , ' the ' National Zeitung , ' the ' Deutsche Reichs Zeilung , ' the ' Weser Zeitung , ' the' Kolner Zeitung , ' the « F rankfort Journal , ' the « Augsbour » h Algerasine Zeitung , ' the « Vereins Blatt from German Operatives , ' the ' Turnblatt of Schwalm , ' and the « Nord Deutsche Zeitung , '
Letters from Naples , of the 27 th of December , state that the partisans of Mazz ' mi have been circulating proclamations in that city , in consequence of which a great number of persons had been arrested . In the Cape of Good Hope journals of the 18 th November , it is stated that tranquillity prevailed on the frontier , and the Kaffirs exhibited the apparent disposition to live in peace under the mild government of Sir H . Smith ; but many persons entertained the notion that as soon as his Excellency should have returned home , some attempts would
he made to effect an outbreak . A proclamation had been issued by command of Sir II . Smith , stating that ihe Chief Sandilli having failed to appear at the late meeting , or to account satisfactorily for his absence ; ' now he it known that I hereby depose the said Sandilli from his rank as a Chief , and that I appoint Charles Brownlee , Esq ., Commissioner for the Gaika tribe , to assume the direct controul of Sandilli ' s tribes ( whose loyalty I have no reason to doubt , ) under the instructions of the Chief Commissioner of British Kaffraria , Colonel Mackinnon . '
The cholera has again broken out it St . Catharines , Jamaica , and some fatal cases had occurred . A serious disturbance that took place in B » . rbice , British Guinea , on the eveningof the 7 th December , between the black soldiers of the 3 d West India Regiment stationed there , and the police . These black soldiers are all Africans , commanded by white officers , to whom it is hut justice to the privates to say they invariably show the most profound and unwavering deference and submission , and
whom , we feel quite sure , they would follow into any dangers . It appears that the disturbance arose out of the arrest hy the police of one ot" the noncommissioned officers of the Si V est India Ii-ginient , while standing on Saturday evening in the market of New Amsterdam blocking up the way ; and that on the arrest being made a body of the black soldiers , armed to the teeth , proceeded down to the police station , and rescued their officer , as indictments say , vi el tirmis .
The Case Of Jane Wilbred. It Will Be Rem...
THE CASE OF JANE WILBRED . It will be remembered that at the last meeting of tho board of guardians of the West Loudon Union , the case of Jane Wilbred was brought under their immediate notice , and that it was resolved to offer a reward of £ 20 for the apprehension of Mrs . Sloane . That , however , did not produce the desired effect , although it put a great many officers on the alert to try and discover her retreat . A second resolution was passed to petition the Secretary of State to increase the reward to £ 50 on the part of the government . The government in this instance have shown great promptitude in attending to this petition , for hardly had it been presented , when it was publicly announced that the government would give £ 30 , in addition to the £ 20 offered hy the guardians , to any one giving information that may
ultimately lead to the apprehension of Mrs . Sloane . So great has been the interest excited in the initio ' s of the public by this atrocious case , that the Royal Free Hospital has been literally besieged by peo . pie wishing to see Jane Willired . Indeed , " it has been found necessary on visiting days to place her in a private room , apart from the wards , in order that she may not be subjected to the cruel scrutiny of strangers , and particularly to that of the great number of artists who daily apply for permission to take her portrait . The committee have passed a resolution that she shall not be seen until after the trial ; consequently , if the trial ( which is anticipated by a great many will be postponed till next sessions ) does not take place this week , the public will have to delay their curiosity to see what kind of a person Jane Wilbrcd is until near the end of February next .
The Great Fall- Of Niagara.—On Tuesday E...
The Great Fall- of Niagara . —On Tuesday evening last our citizens were startled on hearing a loud and terrific noise , resembling , as near as we can describe it , tho heavy booming of artillery in quick succession , which shook tho earth around us very sensibly . Part of the Horse-shoo Fall on tho Canada side had fallen , carrying away about ten rods of the rock in length , by four in width . The canal boat , which had been lodged for the last few months on the brink of the rock which has fallen , and which has excited the admiration of all who beheld it , was also carried over with the rock . It is now in the whirlpool ,
two miles down the river , dancing attendance on the freaks of that great maelstrom . The crash occurred about seven o ' clock in the evening , and it is indeed providential that it fell at such an hour and at this season of the year , llad it been in the summer , when so ni :. ny thousands oi strangers arc here , there undoubtedly would have been persons crushed to death ; for it is precisely the spot whence so many contemplate the grandeur of nature and heboid the waters of tho mighty cataract above them rusking terrifically over their heads that is now filled with husc masses of
rock which have fallen from above . Tho loss of this portion of the rock has not in the lostst diminished in appearance the view of the Falls , but has , in our opinion , added to the scene , which looks grander and more sublime , if possible , than ever . Niagara Falls Iris , Dee . 14 . Civil List . —The Queen bas granted ! pensions on tho Civil Listot £ 100 a year each to Mrs . lielzoni , the awed widow of the celebrated traveller , and to Mr . Poole , the author of "PaulPry , " and of several contributions to periodical literature , who is , we regret to hear , a great sufferer from bodily infirmities . —Observer .
Amazing Success Of The New Mode Of Treat...
Amazing Success of the New Mode of Treatment .
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r ) U . BARKER'S Compound Indian Ex-± J tract , for Secret Debility , and Impediments to Marnage , is exclusively directed to the cure of nervous and sexual debility , irregularity , weakness , consumptive habits , ami debilities arising from mental irritability , local or constitutional weakness , generative diseases , ic . It is a most powerful and useful medicine in ail cases of syphilis , or any of the previous symptoms which indicate approaching dissolution , such as depression of the spirits , melancholy , trembling of the hands or limbs , disordered nerves , and inward wastings . The fine softening qualities of the Compound Indian Kxfraet is peculiarly adapted to remove such symptoms , aud gradually to restore the system to a healthy state-even where sterility seems to have fastened on the constitution , this medicine will warm and purify the blood and fluids , invigorate the body , and remove every impediment .
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DU BARRY ' S IIEALT 1 I RESTORING FOOD THE REVALESTA ARABICA , CAUTION . —Tho most disgusting and injurious compounds being sold by unscrupulous speculators upon the credulity ofthe Public , under close mntatbu of the name of DU BAitUY'SItEVALENTAAIt ABICA FOOD , or wtih 'i pretence of being similar to that delicious and invaluable remedy for Indigestion , Constipation . Xervons , Bilious , and Liter Complaints , Messrs . B VEUV aud Co . caution Invalids against these barefaced vttempw at imposture . There is nothing in the whole vrctablekitiBdom that can legitimately be called simhaij to ju Barry ' s Kevalcnta Arabic * , a plant which is cultivated bv Du Barry and Co . ou their estates alone , and tor the preparation and pulverisation of winch then ' own Patent MS c dnery alone is adapted . Let Corn Chandlers s ? u U en pease , beans , lentil , and other meals under teir proper name ., and not tritle with tho health d ' Invalids amihinVntt . for whom DU BAKRY'S REYALEMA ARABICA al Bu IfaS and ' Co ., 127 , New Bond-street , London . ft'lias thVhig hesi ' app ^ obation of Lord Stuart Je Dee . es ; the Venerable Archdeacon Alexander Sua . of Koss a n „ r „ nf thvea years' nervousness j Major-General 1 nomas
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Z foid anv sickness at the stomach since I comhm ' ^ cour Pood , Ac . I remain , gentlemen , yours very ^ X f R ^ v ) T'lOMAs M . SSTEH , of Farnley Tyas , Yorkshire . Wri our ' s Leeds , December 9 th . 1 S 47 . ~ T . ; iZ I am happy to be able to inform you , that Gentlcmeiv-18 m a u wM ( , dj the Pei , ? ° n / v'" !! rTit benefit from its use ; distressing Has derived ury V £ « ^ removed , amlafeel ? „^ tSKfflndSced . Having witnessed the bemgof icstoicdbw . lbovc , mcntio „ cd case , I can wi h neficial eflucts in tne . uo pleasure in confidence reconimendiMnd » ' i „ doing iri . cnWWW , SuoRl ^ , kite Surgeon mTlZ V ^ uSernu * , Reading , Berks , December 3 rd , 184 * . „ i »„ . . i since the lady ( who had Some tin . e has «^ ,. ^ P ^ l ? or want of digestion , aebeen an myuhdfor In tee ,, jtais ^^> atiun 0 , strengUi } ^ SWrifetessKW s ^^^^ V } g ^ -- ' ^ Pouteu , Athol-street , Perth , May 2 ml . 18 * 8 . Dear Sir ,-Your excellent Arab . cn rood has comP'ew . restored my stomach , nerves , and liver , " •>> « " « ™ ! disordered for nearly twenty years past , and in > beaitn i £ IZv ^ vthine-I could wish , and has been so these 11 uu
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" ~ CURES FOR THE US CUBED ! HOLLO WAY'S OINTMENT . An Extraordinary Cure of Scrofula , or King ' s . Evil . Extract of a letter from Mr . J . II . Alliday , 209 High-street , Cheltenham , dated January 22 nd , 1850 . Sin , —My eldest sun . when about three years of age , was afflicted with a glandular swelling in the neck , which after a short time broke out into an ulcer . An eminent medical man pronounced it as a very bad case of scrofula , and prescribed for a considerable time without effect . The disease then for years went on gradually increasing in virulence , when besides the ulcer in the neck , another formed below the left knee , aud a third under the eye , besides seven others on the left arm , with a tumour between the eyes which was expected to break . During the whole of the time my suffering boy had received the constant advice ofthe most celebrated medical gentlemen at Cheltenham , besides being for several months at the General Hospital
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IMMENSE SUCCESS OF THE SEW MODE OF TllEATMEKT . As adopted by Lallemand , Pkord , Dislandis , am ! others , ofthe Ihpital de $ Friicricns a Paris , a . ; fc nou uniformly practised in tins country by WALTER DE ROOS , M . D ., 85 , Eu Place , Holiiokn Hill , London ,
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futile attempts at euro hy mercury and oth 8 r % .. . , dangerous medicines , have produced the most alana ^ SU tvom the great extent of Du . De Roos's practice for „ . _ veirs and his former connexion with the various i ,, ? , o ions both in London and Paris , for the reliefut j " , "' " mcted ' ritl . Debility , Syphilis , Secondary Sympu ,, ^ * tnres , Gleet , Vencval and tecwbutic eruption , } . ' ™* - faceand hodyjhe hot had perhaps unusual farili ti " ! ' « observing the pecularitics and consequences of cn ,, ^ , cular stage . Hence he is enabled confidentl y and omS tioulj to undertake the remova of ev . ry sy nip . ^ . ^ eS ingthe most inveterate or lon S standi ,,, ) hl % m a time as is consistent with safely or return of money " Country patients wishing to place themselves , ' .. . tmvtnient will be minnt * in the detail of their ^ , n » to prevent trouble , no letters from strangers will t . £ ** to unless they contain £ 1 in cash , or by P » st . ofi „ ,, 7 ? Itoioorn 101 uvice _ . » .. „ , nta nt nnrR bv mercurv and nth * .
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AN THE PREVENTION , CURE , AND \ J General character of SYPIIILUS , STIllOTtm'S , Affections » f the PitOSTllATB GLAND , VF . NEiilUL . ind SCOlilJUTlC EUO PTIONS of the face and body , . V . wair ' tal excitement , Ac , followed by a mild , successful and i . r , 'cditiousmoile of treatment . Thirty-first edition , Illustrated by Twenty-Six Anatomical Engravings on Steel . New and improved Edition , enlarged to Jwd i'scea , ust published , prict is . lid ; or by post , direct i ' rum ' zba Establishment , 3 s . Gd . in postage stamps . "• HIE SILENT FRIEND , " a Medical Work on Venereal and Syphilitic Diseases , Secondary Snmptoins , tionorrhxa ,
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Jan. 11, 1851, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_11011851/page/2/
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