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. THE NORTHERN STAR; ^___J^^ CI1 L^ 18 -...
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NOtY PUBLISHING. THE POLITICAL WORKS OF THOMAS PAINE. Complete in one thick volucie, price 5j., ia which
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THE NORTHERN STAR, SATCRDAY, MARCH 11, 1848.
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THE GUIZOT OF ENGLAND AND THE MEN OF LON...
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PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW. The financial inco...
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£0 leasers $c CoiTcsuonuer is.
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Ml-CELLANE-.US. gasr Now that Parliament...
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MAKcncsTER,—Great Repeal Demonstration o...
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KS.CSIJPTS Of THE MATlON&i ^^ COMPANY, "...
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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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»<Wr>Ay, Mabch 6 * T"B ?°™E 0w L0r D3 Sa...
states—that indi . idu » I beinc a Mr Cochrane , « ho had ovadv riisements iu the i . ui . lic pip " , "u . l l- . v !>»«¦ - hiils iHue . 1 hy hin . . summoned a public ™^ \ " ] |™' fttar ., «» . . for * . purpose - —^^ s : ^ Sor ^ p ^ " ^/—ik ^ i t ^^^ f ul lS "" d : ; ^^ Lerep Ued to this «• ^ s ^^ rr « i ssss t £ income jlWal . Tho c .-mnvssiontrs Yfjained SUChOiJ «» """ B
. .. _ . .. . , „ .,. „ :,: „_ / t ,. nafl Pot sssprted that lo meet to petition a « Vnst ' ihi Income Tsx was illegal ; but that it was fll- 'c xi to hold acy public meeting daring tho sitting of parliament within the limits they had before stated . ( He * r . hear . ) Mr Cochrane then give up the project , and intimated by p iicards to tbe public that tho meeting wou ld not bs held Some persons , however , assembled at the place mentioned ; but with regard to the collision between the police and the people , and the grave consequences which had followed —( a laujrh ) —be believed they had all been exmpiistd in the breaking of some lamp ? , which the police most effectually but most temperately . ? oppressed . ( Hear . )
F A'SESit-ES Bill . —On tbe bringing cp the report on tbis bil l Mr Labopcdeec intimated that he had amended the bill in accordance with the suggestion made to him oa the previous nig ht by providing tbat sick passengers lanain- on aay par : of our shores should have the right to bs convened hack to the place of embarkation , and that in case of persons oa landing in consequence if sicknt-si the parage money should be returned . The report « as th . a received , and the bill ordered to be read a third tiwe . Th ; house adjourned at a few minutes after SIX .
WEDNESDAY , Mabc . h 8 HOUSE OF COMMOSs . —The bou * e met at twelve o ' ek-ck . and went into ceimmittee on the Roman Catholic Relief Bill . Protracted diseuisions arose upon several of ihe clauses , and three divisions look plaje . At six o ' clock the further progress of the bill was Stopped , and the bouse adjourned , the committee to sit again n-xt Wednesday-. TudbsdaT , Mabch 9 . HOUSE OF COMMONS . —Mr S . Cbawfobd ' s motion for ! he llepcil of th-3 Qaarter Acre Clause , in the Irish Poor Relief Bill , led to an aaimated discussion . Sir W . Som-rvilK Sir G . Grey , Mr M . J . O'Connell , Mr Roche , Colonel Coa-jlly . jMr Monsell and Colonel Dunne , speakiDg a .-aTrsr the repeal of the odious clause , which denies relief " to a » v man occupying one quarter of en acre of ground ; Mr O'Piaherty , Mr O'Connor , Mr Aglionby , and Mr Wak ' ey supporting tbe motion of Mr S . Crawford . Wo tire Mr O'Connor ' s speech from tbe AIubsino
Cheosicce : — Mr j . Vakgus O'Cok . voe ssid that if oe bad any doubt as to the pol « cy ot the motion ot his hon . friend the member for Rochdale , it had been removed by the speech of the right hon . gentleman , the Chief Secretary tor Ireland . The ri » ht hon . gentleman get out bv saying that hia hon . friend had misinterpreted the laws , but the right hon . gentleman ought to have recollected that the law had been fr ? mcd for persons who were lar more ignorant of its nature than ills hon . frien d- namely , the landlords of Ireland generally . The invariable rule , howevtr . was . that the landlords were to have the benefit of any miBinternretation of the law tbat might take place . ( Hear , hear , ' and ' . No , no . ') The right hon .
gentleman did not deny that the landlords nad taken & a * vanta £ 3 of th »^ ciaive to level houses , and to exercise an ilk-gal right ; and jet he said that the workingof the law would be perilled if the clause were Struck out . No ^ v what could be a stronger proof of the incapacity of the government than such an assertion , for the clause to which such vital importance was attached was otte n-it introduced originally into the bill by the government , butbvthehon . member lor Dublin ( MrGresoryJJ Theriihthon . gentleman appeared to have altogether ioivo'tan the part ol " his hODOuT able friend ' s speech referring ta tenants iu common , ( Heir . ) lie was prepared to trace the who e of the anomaly with regard to those holdings to the Legislature . -. ' Tiie 403 . freeholders were introduced fur
political purposes , and ai'ain hve or six tenants were admitted in common und .-r one lease and one stamp for tiie purpeSs of ii . ereasin ^ the political power ol the Isn-llord . It was with the same object in y . ew tbat they were no * legislating also . But he wou d ask the house to h-ok to the justice of this nnde of prcedine . Jf a man were able to maintain his Jami y wit ' mut lelief : 'Ut of the poor ra * ' - s on a quar . er of an acre of land , it followed that 1 000 . 000 ofaccs w ull supportf . iur millions ot lamiiies , or tvje ty nrilu'U . 3 of persons , aud therefore that the fifteen ni : ri"nsof acre * in Ireland onuht to maintain a popu ' . i't on of three hundred millions of souls If tha : were m > , ho * did it hai-pen that ru o the present irai ed population ol Ireland they s ; w tlitn
-Banusof victim-j dying every wck of absidute fonnrie ( Dear , he * r ) ? lie could tell the ri « ht hon . ge-. tleman the Caief Secretary for Ireland , and the right hon . h-ronet the Secretary if State _ for xh-HomeD-P-irtment , tint , there was nothing in history like tbe present condition of Irelaud . ( Hear , h " -- ) If they read of a million of people being sla ' nii war . they w « u ! d be diiven almost to madnes at sue a sacrifice of human ii : " e ; and yet they sat her discussing in calmness the policy of retaining ia : quaner-aiTfi clause by which equal dtslruoiio o human life was involved . He ( Mr O'Connor ) 1 rew ihe feelings of the Irish people p . rlnps bettt-r las the righth--n . gentleman ; and he could leli im that , if the nous-- : did noc Jegis . ' are mure justly ,- „ ..
Bore humanely f > r Ireland than they hid hitherto done , there would > ho « Iy be an end to British dominion in Ireland . ( Heir , hear , bear . ) It-was imp ssihie that a just , a humane , and a sei « sible people could endure to be treated as the people ot Ireland have jeeu . They had heard mueh sympathy expressed for th ? poor Erg'i- < h people wb » TTere ? ent over here front vFranee , and all tbat !; d treen done in the way ' of * pr « viding them withfoe > dai-. d clothing . But why , he asked , was there t « he r . o sympathy whatever sho ^ n lor the people of Iieland ( hear , bear ) ? lie gave his cordial supporc to the moaeaj » f'h' » 3 honourable frie . d , tao'igh-there w ;> b a parwrfthe bill , refn-rinsj to mortya ^ es and til . ' e-
decds . 'bf which he could not anj . rove . That , however , h ;; d nothing to do vrith the main olj . ct , to be effected—tiie repeat of the quarter-acre clau-e . The main portion of his honourable friend's speech had besn wh dly pa-sed over by the riaht honouratilgentleman I' -X . i , no , " from Sir VV . S-mervil ' e ) . The rigac ( i--uiourab ! e eentlrmin h . id cartainl ? e «» - tradicted his honourable triend , but he had not attempted to < i-prove his arguments . He ct ; uid tell the rii-ht honourable gentleman that though h " might prevail on the house to a « rets wuh h m on this euestion , he ceiuid not prevent the Irish pe- 'plefmrn cons -derinsr whf ther their interests were dene justice {} in that house or not ( Hear . )
( From oar Third Edition of last iceck . ) FRIDAY , -Mauch , 3 . ffOU-E OF LORDS . —Isr a Poor L » tt . — Ear ) FiTzeviLLi ^ u in reierenre to the working of the Irish poor-law fcia-ed , that the pour of that country were maiut-jinvl tin the miserable pittance of fivtpeace tircefv . things a week ; it was therefore imjiosfibie to Enppofd that the law would either be tnvciuil tlier ., or relieve this country frosa the Influx e > f lush paupers while the ssm piid lor their subsistence would not maintain iif-, alt'ioeierh it might protract existence .
The Clek & i and EdoCaTiom . — The occa . ion Ot I , > rd I / TTTLtTo . v ' j presenting a petition from the Diocesan Boird vf B-lucuien on the sutj ctof the manage , meat clauses required by the caan > ittee of the privy coumil t < ' I'e inserted in the trust deeds of schools-re ceiling aid from parliamentary grants , li d tp . a discus eioii , the B s-, op of Worcester complained e . jf the . mann-r in wbica the petition had b : en gort ^ jf-Tlotice not feavjcir been eivrn to all the mecntM $ - ( Tr the board in < jue « ti-j 2 . Nothing was more raas ' ohalle than thai laymeu tviio contributed towards these grants should hare a share in their masazement .
Tie Marquis < -f Laksdowhe said it wts only of late that anything ha-1 hcen heard about ths exclusion of the laity lroin a share in the management , and the bid given to the Xittonal Soci-iy had been on the under-tm , diug that the clsiuv . s now comp ' ained of were to be ihe ursus of union . He could not admit the principle , the rt-f in- , that the cltrey should have ihe power of overruling thi-Opin ! oT , R ¦ f ih « the lay managers . HOUiE OF COMMONS —Ihcome Tax . —The Chas-CELLoaof the Excheqoeb , having moved the order ot tiie d « for 50 . tg into committee of Ways and Means , on the Income tax resolutions , Mr Hob :-man moved , that if the Income tai be continued , it is expedient to amend the act , and not to impose the same charge on incomes a i ; ini from professional a * jri pre .-arious sources , as on
Iho ? ' derived from rtal h , rty . The honourable mcpab . T roaelud ^ d a p •«¦ jM . 4 ' . ch illustrative of the hi r ' sh p and injustce o : t ^®| i ent tax , by annout ciug his f lic to ha to reUin i l / jMi \ •¦ number of scliedulcs as in thejre = ent act , but J * * c them differe-nily . In-Com £ 5 a'i ' -ng from profefsii-ns he nou'd take from fChet'uU- D ^ ud piece ill Biheelul-J B , which referred to nc-etnes a ? o of a precarious and terminable nature , r-z e : a'Ju ^ eats arising from public offices , leaving ' D ' cniiriiv for incomes urising from trade , commerce , and manufactures . And the scale of tax he would then propose would be as follows : —Oa incomes included in schedu les A aad C he preposei an addition of one penny U-tke present rate of tux , making eight-pence in the poun 3 . On incomes which would be included in schedul" E viz ., professions and emoluments from public efficishe piopostd that the tax should be four-pence in
tbe >* ound ; and u , on incomes included in shedule D , viz ., trade , cuinmorce , < fec . he proposed the intermediate ra ^ ecfiirpenCB in the pound , leaving B as at present . 2 v ibis sUsht increase on schedule A , they would relitTe all the other classes , and raise a revenue more " than eoual to that derived from the tax , cad without * those very vexatious objections to which thi impost , as now levi . d , was liable . This arraanem-n * . gave a total , ecev- > rdin ^ to hia calculation , Of £ 5 oSl U 00 , instead Of JEo . 600 , 000 , which had been the pr < j < iuce of the tas for tbe lnr-t year ; hut ministers calculated in their budget fur tho ensuing-yenr that the tax would produce only £ 5 , 200 . 000 . His proportion would , at all tvciitj , fii : more equally on ihe several elates of income than the present , and he bei : ~ Tta tUe ta 3 ^ - he proposed was so far just , that it
»<Wr>Ay, Mabch 6 * T"B ?°™E 0w L0r D3 Sa...
rsadi ; a d fference between those incomes wr . ich wfc « 5 jurniMient , ; nt whioh rcprei-ented nccuiEO . ated cupitil- tho e wtiich represented lab >« r aad-skill only , it kid also this recommendation , that'it would relieve those who were most oppressed 4 jy't ! sc * ax , ns now imposed , while tJ » o only additional burdifa which WvWild be thrown upon any class was tho crtra penny in the ponnd on permanent incomes—a--bnr £ en which he heliered would bo cheaply purchased by the large amount of relief it would givs to other classes , the sitisfHCteon with which the change would -bo received by the coun'ry generally , and the ease with which the iax
would be eol ' ected . The honocvahlo member was loudly cheered during , and at tho close cf , his speech . A protracted discussion ensued , ( the proposition beintr , of course , opposed by the government ; at the termination of which tke house divided , when Mr Horsma-a ' s motion was negntived by a mej-wtty of 175 . tbe numbers beitu : 316 to 141 . The ^ house then went into committee pro forma , to sit again on Monday , Mr Hume intimating his intention ef proposing that tho duration of the tax be limited to erne year . Tbe committees on the array . navy , acd ordnance and miscellaneous estimates , were nominated ; and the house adjourned .
. The Northern Star; ^___J^^ Ci1 L^ 18 -...
. THE NORTHERN STAR ; ^___ J ^^ L ^ - \
Noty Publishing. The Political Works Of Thomas Paine. Complete In One Thick Volucie, Price 5j., Ia Which
NOtY PUBLISHING . THE POLITICAL WORKS OF THOMAS PAINE . Complete in one thick volucie , price 5 j ., ia which
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wil be found bovciaI pieces never before publuherj m England ; and an appendix , containing the Trial $ Thomas Faiiie , with a portrait of tho author . Jeist FuMisbrd , in Ptnnr rummers and Fonrpenny p « ts . VOLTAIRE'S PHILOSOPEICAL DICTIONARY . May be bad , ceimplete , in two volames , handsomtly bound , 12 s . The first volume has a merfalllea likeness of the author , and the second , a full length portrait , as he appeared in his 70 th year . To the first volume is prefis--d a . copious Mem-. ir of his Lift ) and Writings . Efery care has ben taken to keep tbe text correct , so tbat it m > y remsin a lasting monument of the genius and indomitahle perseverance of the author in enlightening and liberat'ii ? bis fellow creatures . Tho two volumes contain 1 , 276 p » ges , clearly printed , crown 8 vo . YOLTAIRE'S ROMANCE AND TALES , In one vol ., price 3 s . Gi .
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PORTRAIT OF rE . AR . GUS O'CONNOR , Esq ., M . t \ , T MARTIK informs bis friends and the Chartistbody . generally , that he has reduced the price of his lithographic full-length portrait of their Illustrious Chief to the following prie-e : —Prints . Is ; coloured ditto , 2 s . t ) d . PEOPLE'S EDITION . To be had atthe Northerx SiiK office , 1 % Great Windmill-street , llaymarliet ; Sweet , Ge , use Cite , Nottingham ; Heywood , Manehester , and all booksellers in the United Kingdom .
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TO TAILORS . By approbation of Her Majesty Queen Yictoria , and II . It . II . Prince Albert . NOW HEADY , TITE LONDON AND PARIS SPRING AND SUMMER . FASHIONS for 184 S . bv Messrs BENJAMIN READ and Co ., 12 , Hart-street , Bloomsbury-sijuarc , near Oxfordstreet , London ; and by G . Beroer , llolywell-strect , Strand ; mid all Ro . ikse-liers , an exquisitely executed and superbly cloured PKIXT . The elegance . f this Print excels any b .- 'f < irepub ! is !; ee ! . accvmp .-in . ' ed wilh the Xsuest Style , and extra-fitting Froe-k , Riling Dress , and Ilunting . Coat Patteins : the im-st fashionable dress Waistcoat Pattern , and an extra-fitting Habit Pattern ofthe newest and mo-t elegant style of fashion . Everyparlicular part explained ; method of increasing and " diminishing the whole for any size fully illustrated , manner of Cutting and Making up , and all other information respecting Stvle and Fashion . Prie-e l"s . post free lis .
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SPRING SESSIONS , 1848 . "VTOTICE is hereby given , that the SPRING GENERAL ± S QUARTER f- £ * SIO . VSof the Peace for the West ItiUini ; of the County of Y ' ork , will beholden atPosTEfract , on Monday the Third day of April next ; on iihich day the Court will be opened at eleven o ' clock ofthe foreuooa . and on every succeeding tlav at nine o ' clock . Prosecutors and witnesses in Prosecutions must be in attendance , in the following order , viz : — Those in Felony , from the divisions of Strafforth and Tie-khil ! , Lower Agbrigg . Baikstonash , Staincross , and Osgol . lcross , at tho opening ofthe Court on . Monday morning . Those from the divisions of Upper A ^ brigg , Morl . y , and Pkyracfc , at tno o clock in the afternoon ' of Monday . Those from the divisions of StainclifTe , Ewcross , Claro and tbe Ainsty ( being the remainder of tbe West Ridiiu- ) , and those iu all cases of misdemeanor , on Tuesday morni"g . The Grand . Iv . ry will be required to attend at tbe opening ofthe Court on Monday , when they will beiminerii ; : 4 en y sworn and charged , and afterwards motions hy counsel will be heard .-
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THE LAND ! THE LAND !! > TO BE SOLD , A FOUR ACRE ALLOTMENT , drawn in the November ballot , tbe owner having engagements that pr . vent his taking possession . All letters must contain a stamp , anl be addressed , -Mr J . Wheeler , 3 P , Coley-street , Reading , Berks .
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NATIONAL LAND COMPANY . A FOUR ACRE SHARE-fullypaid up till the present time . Any person can have the same , by p .-r ? iii the original price , and the expense of the advertisement . Apply to T . . W , le , South Wharf-ioad , Paddingtou . The reason for selling is , that the present proprietor is Emigrating .
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THE LAND . mWO shareholder ? , having two Four-Acre shares paid-J . up , as a family ticket , and anxious lor itnuiediale location , will exchange them for one Four Acre , already balloted for . Application ( if by letter ) , addressed , 30 , Tichborne street , Edgcwai-t-road , London .
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Jufitf ublished , price -One Fonny , A LETTER by Fearqub O'Connor , Esq . M . P ., « TO TIIE RIOII AND THE POOR ; To those whvLivo in Idleness Without Labour , and to those who are Willing to Labour fcut Compelled to Starve . ' Price 2 s . per 100 . ord 8 * . per 1000 . i WHAT MAY BE DONE WITH THREE 'ACRES V V OF LAND , ' Explained in a Letter , byiF-RimoC ! O'CoNNOE , Eas ,, M . P . To be had atthe Office of tho National Land-Company 141 , High Holborn .
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Now Ready , a New Edition of MR . O'CONNOR'S WORK ON SMALL FARMS To be had at the Northern Star Office , 16 , Great Wind mill Street ; and of Abel Heywood Manchester .
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JDST PUBLISHED , ( Uniform with the " Labourer" Magatlna , ) Price -6 d . A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON SPADK HUSBANDRY , being the results of four years' experience . Br J . SlLLETT . M'fiowan and Co ., 1 G , Great Windmill-strect , London aud may be had of nil booksellers .
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JUST PUBLISHED , PEICE StXPEUCS , NO . XV . OF " THE LABOURER , " coNTAiNiNo 1 . The March of Freedom , a Poem by Ernest Jones . 2 . Insurrection ofthe Working Classes . The Origin of Swiss Independence , 3 . Tbe Poor Man ' s Legal Manual , 4 . Tho Romance of a People . 5 . The Wolf and the Church , a German Legend tvitb an English Moral , fi . National Literature . Russia ; being another black page iu the history of Nicholas , 7 , Last Dying Speech and Confessioa of an Es-King . 8 , The Imprisoned . 9 , a Lessen to Tyrants . 10 . The Pirates' Prze . 11 . Literary R-. view , Letters ( pre-paid ) to be addressed to the Editors , 16 reat Windmill Street , Haymarfcet , London . Orders received by all agents for the "Northern Star " nd all booksellers in town ahd country .
The Northern Star, Satcrday, March 11, 1848.
THE NORTHERN STAR , SATCRDAY , MARCH 11 , 1848 .
The Guizot Of England And The Men Of Lon...
THE GUIZOT OF ENGLAND AND THE MEN OF LONDON . A glance at ouv columns will suffice to show that the promise held out by the great Metropolitan Meeting in the Westminster Road , last week , « as not a vague and idle assertion . A series of glorious meetings has since been held , the object of which will be to organist ' the Chartist party in the Metropolis , and enable them to feel their strength . This is a beginning , and a practical measure ; the next steji will be the bringing tbat power to bear upon a corrupt and miserabl y weak Government . These meetings have , however , been attended with remarkable and lamentable
circumstances , showing the bad spirit of that Government , and the brutality of its minor executive . As will be seen in another part of our paper , Mr Charles Cochrane called a meeting in Trafalgar-square against the Income Tax , and on being told by tbe Government , who had rummagedanold lumber-box of legislative folly to find an obsolete Act of unmeaning nonsense , that a meeting in Trafalgar-square was illegal , Mr Cochrane never attended the meeting he had called , but sent
some placards instead , telling the meeting , after Ihey had assembled , to disperse . The people were naturally indignant at such treatmen , considering that Mr Cochrane ought not ta have exempted himself from the responsibility he had brought on them , and ought at least to have acted as placard in person , when he might have obviated the danger he shrunk from , by taking the meeting to another part of town , less objectionable to West-End aristocratic sqneamishiiess .
' 1 he public , however , were determined not to come together for nothing , nnd consequently elected a chairman , and several speakers addressed the meeting . The Chartist Executive took no part in these proceedings , yet resolutions for the Charter were unanimousl y adopted , b y the spontaneous feeling of the public . Everything proceeded with the greatest order and decorum , and the meeting was dissolved and dispersing , when a well-fed man began to taunt the people with idleness and laziness , telling them they had all the liberty they deserved . On this insult being resented , the police—who were read y at hand—made an unprovoked and indiscriminate
onslaught . Even children were struck and wounded , and we have since learned , that besides those mentioned in our report , a woman , in mourning , had her head laid open by a Policeman ' s truncheon , and has been conveyed in an almost hopeless state to the Hospital . Now , we beg our readers to mark these circumstances well . A system of terrorism is evidently aimed at . Our Government mean to adopt an opposite course from thnt of France . Guizot permitted forty-seven banquets , and stopped them when too late . RUSSELL , the Guizot of England , thinks he will nip English demonstrations in the bud . An enemy of Chartism must have sent the " sleek
man to the meeting at 'I rafalgar-square to disturb it , and afford a pretext for police interference- Certain thieves then took advantage ofthe disturbance , CREATED BY THE POLICE , to commit depredations—and the howling p ack of the Press seizes on this to inveigh against the " Chartist rabble / ' Endeavours , again , to raise the idle cry of " destruction "thus to injure , by these lies , the moral force ol the movement , while terrorism is to paralyse its " physical force . Verily , Russell is far cleverer than Guizot . But this will notdo .
The Executive have put forth a placard disclaiming the disorderly proceedings alluded to , and those proceedings reveal of themselves the quarter from whence they came . While the Chartists are there , all " is peaceable ; when they leave , the minions of faction are at work , troubling , with their puny efforts , the great waters of Democracy . Thus , their lies will recoil on their own heads . And , as to terrorism , we laugh it to scorn We dare the despicable Whigs to do their worst . We dare them to interfere with the right of Englishmen to meet in public to discuss their grievances
We challenge them , at their peril , to infringe our liberties . If they do , their miserable faction will be swept from power , as effectually as a hurricane whirls the dry leaves of autumn . Instead of thus preventing open-air meetings , the Chartists have themsehes called two such meetings since the police outmge of Trafalgarsquare . At both the conduct of the Chartists was exemplary in the extreme—while their imposing numbers would have mocked resistance had they intended violence . These
meetings will not , and must not , cease—and thev must gather each time in strength and discipline , so that , when the Convention meets on tbe 3 rd of April , it may find London PRE PARED TO RECEIVE IT , and to lend weig ht to its deliberations and resolves . Let the public rest assured these meetings shall not be mere noise and spouting—practical and constitutional action will , ere lon <> - , be demanded at the hands of the people and they must prepare their minds and affirm their
determination . With reference to the Press that has designated a meeting of 15 , 000 as a " rabble of three hundred "—which taunts thern with heiri" - "houseless vagabonds "—which laughs "tba ' t their apparent squalor increases every hour" we can onl y say , that it would be more becoming if its prostituted columns would show them some means of ' obtaining houses and regaining health ; and we tell that venal Press , that a grave responsibility attaches to it , if it succeeds in making the governing class believe that the people are the lovers of mischief and destruction , and that their political { power is
The Guizot Of England And The Men Of Lon...
weak and utterl y inefficacious . It > ; J " K ' . : rich emp loyers a " sorry--service . They will wake one day to their " grand mistake" when it is too late , and ibitterly curse that il ' ress which deceived them as * g the real power and character of the People . ... It oug ht to conciliate 'instead of irritatingit ought to act as the . mediator instead of the exciter . . As one effect , perhaps , of this siELy and suicidal policy of tlio Press , the cwntempt may be considered - with which Mr Monckton Milnes ' s observations . in the House . on the Trafal gar-square meeting , were received .. He , too , paid a just tribwte to tbat meeting , by
saying — It pr . coedefl quietly nod ipeacteably till after a erimbcr of speakers bad been heard , being o » nducted with perfect iticorum find ir . inqeUliity . ot ] the part ofthe people . After tho speakers eeasert , and tliu meeting to nil appearance waa nbout to disperse , a oollisioo took p ' eice between the police nnd the p : oplo , which had resulted in some very ^ ravc conseqii' -ncca . ( Pooh 1 Pooh !) lie wished to ask the right him . gentleman what were tho instructions Rivm to tho police * ( Luaghier , and cries of 'Oh , oh . ' ' ) Sir 0 . Grey Bald : Ho was not aware thst any graver conBrquciicuR hud ensued tlitiu tho breaking of some lamps and windows iu a disturbance .
Sir G . Grey , of course , counts as nothing the number of bleeding and wounded victims the children and the women struck b y the police , and carried insensible to the hospitals , and lingering in danger . The answer was that of a Whig ] and the «' Pooh ! Pooh ! " and " Laughter" of the legislative wisdom of thr country was worth y of a Middle Class Parliament . Eng lishmen . ' how long will you tolerate such a Government , and groan under such a system . No wonder that the cries of Paris are finding an echo hi the streets of London , Glasgow , Edinburgh , and Manchester ; and that Great Britain should pant after the liberty of France .
Parliamentary Review. The Financial Inco...
PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW . The financial incompetency of the Party in power , becomes more obvious as the debates on the Budget proceed . They may appropri ate the exclamation of tbe foreigner when he tumbled into the water , ' ' We wi'l be drowned , and nobody s / iaftlielp us . " Mr Horsman , one of their own friends , and formerly a Lord of the Treasury , considerately came to their rescue on the question of the Income Tax , and propounded a measure with reference to it , which certainly bore the impress of thought and careful calculation , and , had it been
adopted , would have removed some ofthe most palpable inequalities of the present tax . But the Chancellor of tbe Exchequer pooh-poohed the plan in tbe most cavalier style . The impudence and almost arrogance of his manner , was only matched Hy the utter absence uflqgic , fact , and common St use , in his matter . He had always opposed the Income Tax . but if we were to have it , lie thought it was better it . should he in its -prosent — that is , the most objectionable shape in which it could be levied ; therefore , as he cannot do without it , no alteration is to
take p lace . As to the inequality ofthe present Tax , Sir Charles Wood considers that rattier a merit than otherwise . Our whole system of Taxation is full of inequalities , and one inequality balances another so nicely , that the jackass is , upon the whole , prett y fairly loaded with the panniers lie has to * carry . Such is a specimen ofthe political and financial reasoning of the precious ninny b y whom the good people of Halifax are misrepresented , and tbe country at large injured and p lundered , It is yiriotis to remark , however , the manner in which tbe old st ; igers of office
fraternise with and hel p each other in any effort for keeping- their hands in the pockets of the tax-payers . Mr Goulhurn , ex-Chancellor , Wets among the first to come to the hel p of his successor ; and , in fact , supplied him with the little in his speech bearing the semblance of arguments . Mr Goulbtirn himself is , however , much more entbusiasticin bis admiration ofthe tax than Sir Charles Wood . He absolutel y went the length of declaring that Ire was in love with it ! There is no accounting for tastes , but that , certainl y seems to us the strangest affection we ever before beard of !
With respect to Mr Horsman ' s plan of levying eightpence in tbe pound on incomes derived from realised property ; sixpence on incomes from tbe funds and certain occupations ; and fourpeiice in the pound upon professional and trading incomes ; there can be no doubt whatever , that if we are to have an Income Tax at all , it was an immense improvement upon the present mode . of levying the tax , and whether it be renewed for one , or for three years , would have been felt as a boon by tbe struggling classes , upon whom tbe littrden falls with tho greatest pressure . But
feeling- that any tax upon income is indefensible in principle , aud that realised property is the legitimate subject of direct taxation , we think that ought to have been raised as a previous question . It may be said chat b y this means many who live in good positions nnd are able to pay , would escape taxation . We do not admit the argument . Every prudent man in the middle and professional classes who lias a family to provide for , will live under his income tbe surplus / whatever it may be , trust , in order to be profitable , be invested in some way or other , to yield a per centage , and the
momenc bis . earnings assume that tangible shape , they come within the sphere of a property tax . An Income Tax , on the other hand , either presses on the capital and means of tbe trader hampers him in bis business , and thus fetters industry ; or , it takes awa y from a lar ^ e class of struggling , bard-worked persons , the few pounds which ought to go to the Insurance Office , to provide a trifle for their families in case of their own death , and the consequent total loss of the income earned by their skill and intelligence . The Government triumphed over Mr Horsman , although 143 members were
found to vote for his certainly more equitable plan . The light was re newed on another ground by Mr Hume , on the next occasion •• vlien the Budget came under notice . That veteran Economist proposed that the tax as it existed should be renewed for one year only , in order to give time to the Government , to revise our whole system of taxation , and effect decided reductions , as well as propose u new and more equitable system . The Chancellor of the Exchequer opposed this reasonable proposition . With less than three years be will not be content ; and as to making any very close
investig ation ot the present estimates , wh y that cannot be done in tbe hurry of business When " the hurry of business ' ' is over , be will look into tbe matter , if possible . Now , if we understand anything ofthe " business" of a Chancellorof the Exchequer at all , it is to prepare these estimates , and superintend the collection of the taxes atrreed to by the Legislature . Why did he not , before " the hurry of business '' came on , have his work read y in a workmanlike fashion ? If he gets the tax for three years , we much fear that , with the indolent habits of office , we shall find ut the end of that term , he will be as far from having done his dutya ^ lie is at present . On Monday evening , he . had , however , the support of Sir
It . Peel , who spoke one column in defence of the Income-tax , and two columns in defence of his Commercial policy , and his letter to the people of Elbingen , of which he gave a new version , and contended that it harmonised with all he had stated in the House and therctore , was no revel ation of an intended new system of taxation , as people said it was . LordGr . Bentmck made a fierce onslaught upon the iamworth barone t , and , b y reference to tbe present condition of the manufacturing operatives of this country , showed that so far hat Commercial policy had proved anything but a blessing to them . Lord George spoke inside what many people say outtado of Parliament . I ree-trade is very generall y coining to be known as a humhua- , and , ere long , wehave no dou it that its utter failure to realise any . thug like-employment subsistence , or W
Parliamentary Review. The Financial Inco...
fort , to the masses , will be so imli . ab ' e that even the few enthusiasts , who yet retain Ji lingering faith in its efficacy , wi ? j be restored to their senses . The opposition to the Budget , on Monday , was so strong that ilhe debute wa * again adjourned , to be resura-ed on Friday night , < ind the Russell Budget seems destined to be met by a protracted resistance at evenstage of its progress . On Tuesday , both Houses sat for a very short time , and dispatched some routine business . On Wednesday , the Commons occupied
the whole sitting in committee on the Roman Catholic Relief Bill , and , indeed , the week has been destitute of any feature , either of novelty or importance , —a fact which happily relieves ns from the necessity of inflicting a long commentary upon a mere Caput mortuam at a time when all minds are vividlv and fervently occupied with the great and exciting eyents iri France ; and the occurrences in London , Edinburgh , Glasgow , and Manchester attest the restless heaving of the elements under our own political and social system .
£0 Leasers $C Coitcsuonuer Is.
£ 0 leasers $ c CoiTcsuonuer is .
Ml-Cellane-.Us. Gasr Now That Parliament...
Ml-CELLANE-. US . gasr Now that Parliament lias assembled we mu * t , as a general rule , nxclude lengthy communications , unless reports ( welt written ) of very important meetings . Reporters , writers of letters , and Chartistand Land sub-secretaries will , therefore , oblitie by rushing their communications as brief as fio . i sible . We shall be glad if some of our eorrespi n den's will try to improve their writing ; and shal ' thank others , who mi ^ ht do so , to fee us have their reports . « fee ., before Thur . -eiay .
PUBLIC MOxVIES . VVe request all Fub-secrefariw ? , and other persons who may have occasion to send public moaie .-to the Metropolis , to pay attention to tho following direction ! . : — Monies for the understated purposes must be addressed as follows : — Payments for the Northern Star . Mr William Itieler , 16 , Great Wiudmill-Btroet , Hay market , London , iVaeioitaJ r & nd and Libour Bank . ' Tho M » u « ser of t <\ e Nutioiutl Land and Labour Bank , i \' o . 403 , New Oxford Street , London , ' National Isanti Company . ' The Directors ofthe National Lund Company , No . 144 , High Holborn , London '
National Charter Association , Mr Thomas CI , rk , No . 114 , Hi (» b Holborn , London . Central Registration and Election Committee . Mr James Grassby , No . 8 , Noah ' s Ark-wmrt , Stan , gate , Lambitth , London . ' Na < ional Victim , and Widows and Orphins Fund . Mr John Simpson , Elm Cottage , Wacerloo-street , Camberi"vli , Loudon , ' For Mrs W . Jones . ' Mr John Simpson , Elm Cottage , Waterloo-street , Ciieube'rWi . 11 , Loneb .-n . ' . Uclrojiolitan Cliartist Hell . ' Mr— Tnpp . No . 5 i , Finsbury Market , London . ' Drfnice of j ) fr . O'Connor ' s Seal in Parliament . ' Mr Thoniiis Clark , No . 144 , Ili ^ h Holb .. ru , London . ' Prosecution of the Manchester Examiner . ' Mr Tln / raus Clark , N . > . Hi , lli * h Hoffeoru , London . ' 77 tet Slcaford Case . ' Mr Thomas Clark , N . » . 144 HiKh Holborn , London . '
The Fraternal De"Mindi . ' G . Julian 11 . mi y , No . 1 G Great Windmill-street Uayuinrltet . London . '
United Trades' Association . 'Mr Barratt , No , 11 , Tottenham Court Road . London ' 33 J- Monies sent con ' rary to the above direction . - win not be acknowledged . * * 1 ' rivate letters intended for Mr O'Connor , an ' - s .-nt to this office , mast be marked ' Private . ' Correspondents ate requestcl not . to trouble M O'C'tmor with letters , repotts , & J ., intended tor the Star ; nor with any letters that , should be addressed as set forth above . Mr II . II Tiiohne , Oalcenshaw . —Mr Br ^ aJley is not supplied direct iVoni tti-s oiYue . Ills Loudon age'iit can have the p > rtraita on applying here . G . G ., Hock Ferry , near DirlcEiihead . —The same reply ax to Mr Thorne .
I ADliiAM . —Petition headings may lie had on application tc the Nnri m . il L . tnd OfHo-e , Mf , Hi gh H'Mom , Mr Ove . vden , Leamington . —It terminated on the 15 th ol January . Messrs Clark , Li-ioester , Tomlinson , Collie , and Gwil . linn , Westminster . —The Agents mentioned are not supplied bv us . It ' the parties from whom they pr-.-cure tho N'iRuieus sr . ni apply tun .- - , they shall have the portra i ts . Oldiijm — Julian Ilirney is much obliged fir the invitation ofthe Oldham < liaitists , but sorry be must de . t-Jiiieit . AH the time he can possibly spare from his editorial dutie * must be ( jiven to the ' advancement of t't movement in the metropolis . Mr M'Kay , Cumuoi'k . —The Nohtiieux Star is charged 5 s . Gil . p .-r quarter , in advance .
To DlpoSitous in Saving Hanks . —S r , —I think if there was ai-ire-ubr of the Hanking system extracted lroin the last Laboubeh , and published at about one » hillhi £ or ei litcen pence per h indrcd , to distribute amongst the depositors in Savings' !! atil < s ( and adiressed to t : em ) it wuuld extend the knivwiedero t « fboth the Land Man , and the Hank mure widely than it is , as there are yet vast numbers of people wbo do not look at the Stau , but who mi :, 'ht be induced to read somethini , ' short an- plain , and to their a-tvatttaie , as the Hank would affwiel to them . ' The different ' districts mi . ht subscribe according to their m ans , for the purpose of ( irt-ulatiiif ; them amongst those who they know to bo depositors in Savings' Bjnk « , and thus both beueht the depositors themselves , and the Land Company . If the suggestion is worthy of notice , you may , perhaus ,
hurt a corner in your journal to insert in . —J . 11 . To the Bdttoroftlie Nohthehn StaII . — « ia . . If jou think the followinif worthy a eo-ner in your journal , it is at your service . Last spring I planted tliirty-cix large ;>• .- ) - tat . ics , one yard apart each way , t « enty-t ' uur cips and ttvelvdprince regents ; the cups produced idllus . and the prince regent * , 7 llhs ., total , ' . ' - . ' . lbs . I measured « ff the same quantity ot ' giound . inthe same field , that was planted with tho i-lou ,-h ; the drills were tivetit ; -seven inches in breadth , and the potatoes nuddtinif sized , and planted whole , fifteen in the drill : the twenty four yards of cups produced 17 Jibs ., the twelve yards of prince regents 8 libs ., total , JatJlbs , beinir 341 hs . mors than those which were planted one yard apart each way . The conclusion that f have come to is this , that a yard is not too much between the r . / ws , hut , that e £ hteen or twenty roue- inches are enough in tho row . Mr Wolly will see , by the abovs statement , that over fifteen tons can be produced from an Enclish acre of a
very middling soil , for if thii- ! y .. 'ix yards produce 23-Hbs , 4 , 810 yards will produce : » , » 17 , 77 ilbs , which are 15 tons 7 cwt ., and 1 am of opinion that , if it was welt cu tivated , it would produce a great de-il more . —On as Kaiiinington , gardener , Middleton , lu-ar Leeds . — March 5 . Katis IIii . l . —Loth parties must attach their names to the advertisement . The charge would be six shillings each insertion , T . A . Short , per Mr Jones , for the Westminster National Charter Association , 2 s . ( id . EiutATis-u . —In our last appeared a statement , that the printers of Clitheroc had suffered a reduction of 1 Is . in the pnuiid ; it should have been * Barrow' instead of ' Clitheroe . ' Notice—Owing to the crowded state of our columns it has been impossible this week to insert several reports and communications , and to reply to maiiv eorrcsponeleuts .
LEGAL , NOTICE , —Owinf ; to the : p . n-u occupied b y PwUtwven . tary proceedings , no legal correspondt- ' noe can fiu > i place iu the Star during the Session . All those tbererore , whose cases have bs-en nn . swered .. tily Iti the StaB , aro requested lo send theit addresses and a postage stamp should they nquii-u private answers , Ertsr . sT Jones . I have received many letters enquirin . ' Low the caee > in hand are ( .-oin ^ on ? Ail corruspondi-jis may rest assured they will be properly attended to in due course This must bo an answer for all , as it is impossible t-. i answer all such letters .
Makcncster,—Great Repeal Demonstration O...
MAKcncsTER , —Great Repeal Demonstration on St Patrick's day , in the Free Trade Hall . The public of . Manchester and its vicinity are respectful . ' . ! informed that a publie meetino will be hold in the Free Trade Call on St Patrick ' s day , the 17 tli ol March , to take into consideration the best means ol accomplis-liiim a Repeal of the Legislative Union betwea Great Britain and Ireland , mm which occasion a deputation from the Irish ' Confi'deratioii will attend , and the undermentioned Mistinsnislied advocates of liberty will addresa th' » nit otitis : — Smith O'Brien , Esq , M . P , Foareus O'Connor , Ksq M . V \ , T . C . An » tey , lisq ., M . l \ , C . G . Duff / , E q ., John Mitchell , Esq , John Martin ; E ^ q , Lougnatu , T . F . M-Ghee , Esq , P . 0 ' logins , E q ., W . P . Roberts , Esq , and many others . The Committee for getting up tbe public meeting on the 17 th and tho tea party in the Town Hall on the 18 ch of March , inst ., call upon the friends
Ot freedom and lovers of universal justice , who wish to aee a Iong-suffbrins and down-trodden country restored to her just riuht-s , to rally round them , fill the Hall t > overfliwim , ' , and , by their united voice ? , show them that they are not unmindful of the all-important events which have taken place in France within th-5 last few day ? , and thathey are determined Ireland shall be restored to her rank as a nation . As , also , that they will work for liberty until they sea every people , nosv straerglin ^ asaiwat tyranny and oppression , in full possession ol all the rights enjoyed by citizens of a free state . irishmen , hlnglialtraen , Scotchmen , evince your cooperation in the eood cause—to falter would be trea . son against enslaved millions , i'hu chair will ie taken at half-past six o ' clock . Admission , platform one shilling ; gallery , fourpeiice ; body of the house , twopence . Tickets to platform to be hail at the committee-room , 33 Great Ancoats-street . and frora every member of tbe committee .
Ks.Csijpts Of The Matlon&I ^^ Company, "...
KS . CSIJPTS Of THE MATlON & i ^^ COMPANY , " " ** FOR THE WEEK ENDING THURSDAY , MARn ! PER O'CONNOR . ITUBE 8 . Lake Loch ., 4 10 11 Dudley £ * . d Spalding .. 0 5 0 NewRaelforcl " l 5 ° 0 Stiefheld „ id o 9 Aberdeen " 1 l 3 3 Heading .. 10 0 0 Nottingham " » 1 3 Desborough „ 4 0 8 No rthampton " 7 3 OiiUniiwD .. 0 U 4 llundav ' Cardiff .. 6 10 Warrington " ° ° 0 Harnstaple ., 9 IS n Young Marylebone .. 1 17 8 AccrhiL'ton " 5 l 0 6 Thrislington .. 4 13 3 Hull " J » t ] Central Ilosscn- Uradford , York ' , „ 2 : * dale .. 50 0 Bramhn ; * ' « « Westminster .. 1 10 0 Inverkietliinir " . ? 12 6-Shcerneas , Mr Kinghorn , , G « Stubbins .. i 19 0 Leicester , Astiii I 5 ° Stockport „ lo a o Merthjr , piiwi !\ i ,, ° » Hanley .. US 3 iu Leicester , Free 6 ° Oldham „ 0 14 6 man Doncastcr „ 5 0 0 South Shields " a ,. ° Nacup .. 5 0 0 Bristol " ? h > 8 Mold .. 1 17 G Manchester " ,, „ ° » St Gtrmains Frorae , T Honors nr 8 deUvit .. 3 0 0 Kewent ° ? ' » Rotherham .. 8 i 6 Birmir . frham " ° ° & Maltoti .. 12 l . i i Goodwin ' t ft Armley ,. 394 Wakefield " ! n ? Jidinburgh ., ' 2 0 0 Prescott ,. ,,, » CarlMle .. 5 0 0 Leicester , Goody " " 2 Kochel ; ile .. 3 2 8 Gloucester „ T , ? K r * » ¦* " 8 n f ' Stockt ° n -. 6 !• ! Katchiie Bridge 4 12 2 North Shields .. n Dimburj .. S 8 e fiirvan ,. , i „ ft Chi . tl . am .. 2 13 6 BrightHnwea .. 2 0 l llury Couiter .. 7 2 0 Somers Toivn „ 2 3 e Winlaton .. 3 0 0 Birmingham , Royston , Bar- Norwich , Bug . r - 5 0 0 shaw .. 45 , Totness .. 5 10 10 Palford .. 4 a a Gcorgio Mills .. 3 fio Bermnndsey „ l g S Neweastle-upon- Cirencester „ 3 13 0 Wr yn K . ur « " 15 ° ° Hawick .. 0 10 7 Elizabeth Conip- « im Williams .. 1 u 0 n » - •¦ ' ° l" ° KichThoslVater . - Henry M Smith 0 5 0 man .. 060 -. amuel W Col- T ? li Clark .. 0 19 0 J „ -050 Thus Tilley .. 0 10 0 Thomas Canej ; .. 1 0 0 s P Effland .. 0 5 8 Chas Howard .. o 10 0 Joseph Edwards 0 1 0 Al-ix Iillerey .. 0 HI 0 Geo Bishop .. 0 1 0 ¦ as Chapman .. 0 0 G James Frost .. 9 5 0 John Koo .. 1 2 0 Wm wiUon „ 0 . _ , " George Bennett 0 t 0 Geo Johnson .. 0 3 l _' m B . rrett .. 0 5 u Chas Mowl I 0 2 ft Caroline Smith .. l 0 0 j „ im Major .. 2 1 * ^ John Leu-ester .. 0 3 6 W Crow .. 0 'I I Joseph Uie-huidrf 0 5 s Robt Crow .. a 2 a Joseph Erring- Wm Thatcher „ 0 1 a ton __ .. 326 Wm Proael .. 0 0 R Thos sturpeon .. 0 5 0 Ann Broail .. Our Geortyo Bam- Wm Byson .. 0 ' 8 biomjh ., 0 5 0 JasD Thomas .. 0 2 n Wm 1 'iei-ce .. 0 3 0 Jas M'I . e . in .. Q 2 n Wm Powell .. 10 0 Edwd Barlow .. 0 5 6 £ 390 6 9 EXPENSE FUND . ~""" Lakelnc-li .. 0 2 0 ' New Radford .. 0 « -i D-dboroU o'h .. n 3 6 Aberdeen .. 0 . 3 if Unknown .. 165 Nottingham ., 0 l- > 3 Cardiil' „ 0 2 o Warritytou , Thrislington .. 0 ( 1 6 Young .. 0 C a flniiiey ., 1 8 c' Hull „ n , < - , ¦> Oldham .. 0 0 0 Kinahorn .. 0 - fi Mo : d .. u 2 6 Leicester , Frccllotherbam .. 0 8 0 man .. 0 s c M'llton .. 0 Vi 0 South Shields .. 0 i g R .. chdal 8 .. 0 9 lo Wak-field .. 0 1 0 I'iymouth .. 1 7 0 Prescot .. » j . 0 lUetclilte Bridge 0 7 fi Gloucester „ 0 Hi 0 Oewsbury „ 1 16 0 Girvan ., 0 U 0 Chatham „ 0 18 3 Norwich , Bag . "xtord .. 0 2 0 sh . iw .. OU ? Totness „ 0 4 0 Salford .. 0 IS G Cirencester .. 0 i G Joseph Errin ' - Hawick „ ( J 4 0 ton .. 0 2 0 OanielTompkins 0 2 0 Joseph Richards a 4 0 Alex . Vhite .. 0 4 0 Daniel Allsop .. u 2 0 Daniel llieth ,. 0 4 0 John Major .. 0 2 0 £ i ~ - 7 W Total Land Fund ... ... £ 390 p > 0 Expense Fund ... , „ \ q 7 >) i Rule 3 - ... oil i a . £ 407 5 5 Bank am jo < i £ 1303 13 : q Receipts of the Ne ^ v Land Company ... 19 0 0
ErtRATA . —Last week , Iveston should have oppeared , Land , £ -:. 4 s . 0 . 1 ., and Expense Fund , 2 s . The secretary wh . scut lis . 4 d . for Land and £ 1 . fis . " id . f « r Expense Fund will oblige by sendinjj the naiuc of the Branch . Wm , Dixon , CDKISrO ,- Li £ B DortE , Taos . Clabk , ( Correp , Sec ) Pbili ? JI'GaATH , ( Fin . Sec . ) Manchester ... .. .. 73 7 fl Chm-ley , Money Club . „ 10 U 0 Ilulnie , Goud latent Burial Society .. 200 0 0 Oldham .. .. .. s > 3 5 Rossenelale , First Fruit of Impartiality Lod . ; e , N ' o . 79 , of Ancient Order of Druids B 1 thfield ,. .. 11 0 9 Blackburn , Auxiliary Bank .. .. 20 0 0 Stockport , Power Loom Weavers' Association .. .. a 0 0 Rochdale , per Edward Mitchell , from a Land Member .. „ „ li ) 0 0 Shetrield , Provision Company .. ,. 3 0 0-Swindoo , Auxiliary Bank .. .. 000 Eliand , per 1 ) . Mai-sden for N . Dewhurst .. Iti 10 0 T . 1 ' mcE , ifanager . DEFENCE Of MR o ' cONNoa'S SEAT IN PAELUSrSNT . V ? Barker , Tod- Manchester , J morden .. 0 10 Yaro .. 110 TTuwuscnd . do . a 0 6 Hinckley .. 0 2 0 W Itobe-rts , do ... 0 0 6 A Ledbury Fai-mer 0 ' i 0 Fa ' rplay . do . .. 0 2 6 A Few friends , WAsliworth , do . 0 0 ( j do . .. fl S 10 W Suteliife , do .. ( I 1 0 Bury , W Coulter 14 1 w Suta . 'iffe , do .. 0 1 0 Do . per Samuel II Ilellywell , do . ' ) 1 0 CO ^ son . 0 12 5 It Lord . do . .. 0 10 Do . Rev A M'Do-J Suie-bfie , do . 0 0 6 nald .. 0 0 G Toelmorilen Land Do . Captain Strong--Company .. 1 13 6 burg .. 0 5 0 Bolton , per Dow- J W Anderton .. 0 1 0 ling .. 0 4 6 Northampton , Saxmunden ,. 0 7 2 Munday .. 0 14 5 T Tomlinson « 0 1 C Do . Mr Spencer 0 2 I Ke-e- ! e > Land Com- Do . T Cobson .. 0 2 0 p . my .. 0 52 fl T B , do . .. I ) 5 0 De .-boraugh .. 0 i G T B , do . .. 0 4 0 Hull .. 0 10 0 W L , Xorthamp-Three Friends , to" .. 0 2 S M .-a-. i . ies .. 0 3 0 W L , do . .. 0 2 6 II Hnytons „ 0 1 0 Bramhope , Smith 0 7 6 II Wuittard „ t ) 2 6 Thornton , Sut-S Bur ^ 'o .. u 0 6 ctiii ' e ., 0 3 0 J Madden and Mr East Binley , Armstrong .. 0 5 0 Butler .. 0 5 6 Two Frien-ls , White Abbey , Garebrid (; e .. 8 1 0 Rdev .. Oil 1 ) 8 , near Abber- Bradford .. 0 0 11 d > : en .. 0 5 3 J Seath , King . Lambrrhead Green horn „ 0 -j 0 Land Company o 2 3 T Gr'fflth .. n n 0 City , Ladies Shoe- J Hathsato .. 0 0 S mukers 0 7 0 A Leech .. 0 1 t > J Harnet , Lincoln 0 2 0 T M ' i . ean .. 0 0 6 iV Cateir .. 0 0 6 J Humphrey .. 0 ^ 3 Uxbridere .. 0 10 0 J Grant S piers . 0 0 t '> riin ' sH . iirton „ 0 4 3 Rictid Frazer .. 016 E lu-nvr .. 0 10 Ann Frye .-s „ 0 i 0 T A Woolridge , William Moss „ 0 . i 6 and B Wood ., 0 1 0 Redmond Asher 0 0 0 Sacriston Col . Dani 1 Disinan ,, 0 n 0 liery , per R Turn- Robert llemley . 0 8 6 hvtll 0 10 10 James Duiuford «» I 0 Ashburton , Coombs 0 3 2 Wi an ., 2 % 0 Yarmouth Land Few Friends , Company ., 10 0 Newton , .. 0 6 6 T F Wakley .. 0 2 0 Brad-. haw . lane . 0 5 * A Sunderland H Weaellv , York t > 2 t > * Painter .. 0 1 0 A Navie ' 0 ' S Ueckmondtviko , M Letuion , Man-Auisworth Swash Chester ., 0 2 6 Chartists , tbo . 0 10 3 Three Land Mem . Do . J Furnley .. 0 4 4 bers . 0 ¦ ' 0 lliglitown Swul . Two Wives , do ,. ' . 0 i 6 low .. 0 2 1 Mr Goodv 0 0 0 Girvan Land North Shields " n 9 0 Lompany , Ac 0 15 8 Hawick n M 5 Leicestor tNo . l . ) J M'Neil .. 006 Land Com- D Harnict ,. 0 0 « puny , Astill ,.. 3 10 11 J Atlinburgh .. 0 Q 6 J 1 ; ( -l-ecii „ 010 RM'Oeuigil „ 0 Q 6 1 ) an-y .. 0 1 0 J M'Qnall .. 0 0 6 J I- In j lor .. u 1 0 JM'Uiubon . .. 0 2 6 J R -p- ; r .. 0 10 Loughborough .. 0 8 7 . llr . lleo „ 010 Sheepsliead .. 0 ? < j A 1 iiend „ 0 1 0 Doncastcr ., 1 It 0 A r ew rnends , Aberdeen Comb Admiral Dun- Makers .. 1 lo 1 r C x ' , " n c » 1 " ° 2 6 Two Friends , AVest h M D , Stvat- cowes „ 0 1 ? v ., « . " 2 s ° Nt'wcastle-upon-Mansfield , Lllis ' s JO I'M . do . .. 0 10 0 n Ut ^ , 0 1 11 A Few Mechanics , Do . George ' s and Hat tlepool , por « lneraau ' s .. 0 15 E Hull .. 12 0 Iwoi'i-ieuds .. 0 0 a Coachmalccrs and Messrs Turner , others , New-Levvtsh -iu .. 0 5 o castle „ 0 H 6 Trowbrid . -e .. 0 6 4 Blavdon . T Lamb 0 11 t > Falkirk , G Thonip- X Y Newcastle .. 0 8 6 s „ 0 15 0 Three Friends , i ' edder , \ rogridL ; e » , per . UJnds .. Q I 0 C Hatter , ami Mountain Land r- 'f w I M ° c «>" P ^ . v ; .. Olii 6 Lite : held Land 1 si 0 Bi-idp ,. rt , Mr « ° w- \ r " ° * 3 Ellis » A 5 6 Mr Willis ,. 0 1 Q Gre . Hiwieh .. 0 I » i Alurylebono ¦ ¦ 0 1 * 3 mi nji The following sums -n-ere received and have bee " ent-ired into the totals of jmt wooks but have not \^ l articularised iuthe pubiislicd lists of it ms :-L ' aikH }'< 17 s .: L p , Sunderland , 5 s . A typographical error incurred , 111 the list of last week , in the case of York , i »»* sbiiliii Mvas set forth instead of one pound . TU-J 3 . CliiUK .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), March 11, 1848, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_11031848/page/4/
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