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2 THE NORTHERN-STAR. l^ October ^im.
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AFovtitn *Htellt$enf e
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FRANCE. The Great review on the plain of...
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The Cholera Morbus at Malta,—We learn; u...
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f|N THE PREVENTION, CURE, AND VJ General character of SYPHILUS, STRICTURES,
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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2 The Northern-Star. L^ October ^Im.
2 THE NORTHERN-STAR . l ^ October ^ im .
Afovtitn *Htellt$Enf E
AFovtitn * Htellt $ enf e
France. The Great Review On The Plain Of...
FRANCE . The Great review on the plain of Satory , near Versailles , has created immense excitement . Not less than 200 , 000 persons poured out from Paris to witness it . The Committee of Permanence and several members of the Assembly were present to watch the proceedings . The troops formed four long lines , the first consisting of the infantry , the engineers being on the tig ht ; the second line was formed by the carabineers and cuirassiers j tbe third by the dragoons and lancers ; the fourth by the cb & sseurs and hussars . After executing several manceuvers , they defiled before the President .
_ . .. The cavalry , having during the filing off of the infantry broken its line into squadrons , which formed an immense column , filed off in its turn at full trot before the President , whom they sainted with the sabre , shouting ' Vive Napoleon ! ' with great animation . The carabineers and lancers cried ' Vive VEtnpereur !' On crossing the road of Satory he was received with enthusiasm by the crowd , who waved their bats and cried * Vive Napoleon 1 ' . ' Vive 1 'Empereurl ' The correspondent of the- « Dail y News' says : — 'I was astonished at the evident favour shown to
the President , who was so lately pursued with cries of * Vive la Republique !* while Changarnier looked much chagrined , and was received with great coldness . Louis Napoleon , on the contrary , looked iadiant with satisfaction , and was evidently highly gratified with the results of the day . ' A meeting of representatives of the Republican party , who now muster pretty strong in Paris , was held on the previous evening , in which the questions of the reviews and the prorogation of tbe powers of the President were discussed . A protestation to the Committee of Permanence , having for its object the condemnation of the reviews , was proposed by several members . This protestation , published in the journals of the opposition , would , it was asserted , induce an expression of popular opinion . After some discussion , however , this step was postponed .
The review formed the subject of a long and important debate at the next meeting of the Committee of Permanence . Not daring to take the bull by the horns , it limited its functions to mere Scolding . After declining all measures smacking of energy . it employed six of its members to draw up Sj / roces verbal , which should contain as many tart reflections as possible upon the President . ¦ This document , drawn up by MM . Dupin , Bedau , > Odillon fiarrot , Jules de Lasteyrie , and
Leoa Faucher , points out the features of the review disapproved by the committee , and blames the Minister of War for not having taken more decided measures to prevent the repetition of unconstitutional ones . The familiars of the Elysee have received hints to abstain from tampering with the officers , or paying visits to the barracks . General Changarnier declared tbat every military measure had been taken to secure the sovereign legislature against all surprise from whatever quarter .
Since the review of the 10 th , one new symptom has been disclosed in the situation , which will daily assume a greater importance , and must be regarded as the germ of a fresh revolution . The Orleans party have abandoned their hitherto passive attitude , and have openly assumed an offensive position towards Louis Napoleon . Two main facts have contributed to bring about this sudden declaration of war , the Bartbelemy circular , which killed all hopes of fusion , and the imperialist manifestations on the plain of Satory , which have exhibited the progress of Buonapartism in the most important regiments of the army . The Orleanists no longer cherish the alliance of the elder branch to
promote a subordinate interest , but to put forward their own claims as supreme . The determination the pure Orleanists have taken to oppose the renewal of the President ' s power even for four years is a serious step , for it leads directly to a military revolution . The majority of the parliament is bitterly hostile to Louis Napoleon , and , if this sentiment were the reflection of the national mind , they have perhaps sufficient control over the army to supplant the President , and restore the monarchy of July . But the nation is not in the least animated by those angry feelings which agitate tbe Permanent Committee ; nay , perhaps that
instinctive sense of justice , love of fair-play , sympathy with spirit , and tendency to see the ludicrous side of things , lead them to attach no great respect to tbe solemn acerbities , fierce displeasures , and rancorous censure of what is really nothing more than a royalist club , who would upset the constitution and the republic to-morrow , if they dared . They open their campaign on the 12 tb of November with a serious intention of opposing the President's reelection , who must look for a new series of storms in France . Tbe socialists will take heart , and gather strength for the day , on which they are to make at the doors of every mayory in France their protest against the electoral law of May 31 .
Tbe ' Patne * announces that its principal editors have quitted it . The cause assigned by the 1 Opinion Publique * is tbe refusal to give a more Buonapartist character to the paper . The Socialists declare that tbey will take no part in the approaching election in the departments of tbe Nord and Cher , in consequence of the new electoral law . This course is unanimously accepted and definitively settled by that party throughout France , and will be observed at all the elections which take place before the general election of 1852 . Five Socialists , forming part of the Corps of Voraces , of Lyons , have been sentenced by court-martial to imprisonment for one year , and to be deprived of their civil rights daring tbe same period .
Six men who had been arrested for exciting the workmen of Livordan ( Meurtbe ) to abandon their work , have been sentenced by the Conn of Toul to various terms of imprisonment . The' Moniteur' publishes official returns , showing the receipts of the Customs and Excise department for the nine months of the present year , from which it appears that the receipts of the present year exceed those of the corresponding period of 1849 by 28 , 183 f ., and of 1848 by 41 , 227 f . A young man was assassinated in the open streets of the Faubourg Poissonniere at eight o'clock on Sunday evening . This act of vengeance , occasioned by an irreparable injury inflicted on the murderer , was not intended for the person who became by mistake the victim . The author of the crime has been arrested .
M . Proudhon ' s celebrated paper , the 'People , ' announces that it must at length succumb to the persecution to which it has been subjected at the hands of the government . It appeared on ftiondav for the la ? t time . Tbe bandloom weavers at Ribeauvill , in the Haut Riiin , have struck for higher wages . A private in the 56 th Regiment of the Line was sentenced to death by court-martial in Paris on Tuesday for having struck a corporal . The responsible editors of the eight journals prosecuted for infraction of the press law , -with regard to signature , are cited to appear on Friday before tha chamber of appeal of the correctional police , to hear judgment on the appeal which they have put in against the judgment of competence delivered by the correctional tribunal .
BELGIUM . The Queen of the Belgeans died on Friday morning , at ten minutes past eight o ' clock . She was surrounded by her mother , brothers , and sisters , the members of the ex-Boyal Family of France . Her husband and family were deeply affected . Every shop was closed , and most of the private houses also . There was but one expression abroad of concern and regret , and this fee / ing was resounded to from the remotest corner of Belgium .
HESSE CASSEL . The crisis at Hesse Cassel has reached another and most ominous stage—a stage anticipated , however , from the first by all those acquainted with the spirit of the Hesse Cassel troops , or , at all events , with tbe fact that these troops had been sworn to the constitution , and that , at a moderate computation , threefourths , either from conscientious or from other motives , would consider their oath to the constitution more binding than that to the Elector , and would consequently refuse obedience to the Sovereign's orders directly—that is , by direct
insubordination—or indirectly , by resignation . The whole corps of officers , with same few exceptions , have tendered their resignations , and have thus committed what may be paradoxically termed honourable and constitutional mutiny , against which there can be no injunction , no resistance , either upon the grounds of military duty or honour . The officers were not at liberty to disobey overtly and still retain their commissions , albeit their oaths to the constitution might have served as pretext and palliation . In order , therefore , to serve their consciences , and their honour as soldier * , they have resigned , a procea the more fatal to tbe Elector , as it may be said
France. The Great Review On The Plain Of...
to crown the glacis of those passive approaches which have brought his' assailants to the foot of his citadel . Excluding the officers of the Elector ' s Hus . sars , all resigned ,- excepting ¦ five . Several staff oflicers must also be added to the list of resigned . Meantime those who have adopted this ste , p have announced to the general commanding , tbat in order not to leave the troops entirely without officers , and to prevent tbe dissolution of the corps , to which
they belong , they will consent to serve until such arrangements are made as may be deemed necessary by the government , but upon condition only that they shall not meanwhile be called upon to enforce any measures founded upon the unconstitutional ordinances . The ntter embarrassment of General Haynau , under these circumstances , may be well conceived . He cannot withdraw any of his measures , unless by order of the Ministry , and it is utterly out of his power to attempt enforcement .
All hope ot a reconciliation of elector and the nation has been abandoned . Tbe further particulars which have transpired concerning the reception of the two deputations te Wilhemsbad have powerfully contributed to this feeling ; nothing could have been more peremptory , not to say insolent , than the language of the Elector to officers who have faithfully served him and his father . Colonel Hillebrand was told on coming away that Haynau had orders to arrest any officer who hesitated to execute his commands . The judicial functions of the Auditorial General are suspended ; the court , however , acts at present , not recognising the validity of the orderl Preparitory to the execution of his written measures ,
Haynau has removed General Garland from his post of commandant of Cassel : Lieutenant-Colonel Bardeleben holds it for the present ; the order for suspending all the civil governors of districts has not yet appeared , but it is preparing . Henkel and Oettker , 'both deputies , and the former a member of the Permanent Committee , are held in confinement , and the newspaper offices are all in the bands of the military . The first act by which Haynau intends to try the reality of his new powers is to wrest from the Burgher Guard its arms-. The disposition of the officers of the army was again manifested on the 8 ib . Haynau requested one after another of bis atan to accept the post of commandant , from which he was removing General Gerland : nearly every one declined . General Urff has re-Mgned his commission , and it is considered tbat in
this course he will be followed by the majority of the chief officers . The greatest excitement exists on all sides . Letters from Frankfort of the Ilth fust ,, in tbe ' Kolner Zeitung , ' state that two Austrian corps in Bohemia and Vorarlberg were advancing upon the frontiers to carry out the intervention in Electoral Hesse , when they received counter orders , and fell back into their eld positions . Count Thun , the Austrian agent at Frankfort , received this news on the afternoon of the 10 th when the Frankfort Council had just resolved to call in the intervention of Austria and Bavaria in Hesse . It is stated that Lord Palmerston s protest induced the Cabinet of Vienna to abandon the thought of an armed intervention . From Hanau we learn that the officers of that garrison have resolved to follow the example of their comrades at Cassel .
The' Deutsche Zeitung publishes a supplement announcing tbat the Elector of Hesse has abdicated .
HESSE DAKMSTADT . A second ordinance has been published by the Ministry , containing a number of restrictions on the freedom of the press . The new law is Draconic . Censorship , caution , or exclusion from the postoffice , it is true , are not mentioned , but the penalties are enormous , amounting , in some cases , to islOO fine and two years' imprisonment . A copy of every newspaper must be sent to tbe police-court , signed by the editor , an hour before the publication of any edition . A list of prohibited foreign
works will be given from time to time in the ' Official Gazette , ' and persons found selling such forbidden books , pamphlets , or newspapers , may be imprisoned a month for each copy . A third ordinance is to appear in a few days relating to the preparation of the jury lists ; and a fourth will remodel the law of elections of the Second Chamber , after the pattern of that of Prussia . The First Chamber will consist half of life-members , nominated by the Grand Duke , and half of spiritual and temporal notables , and a few members elected by tbe largest tax-payers .
DENMARK AND THE DUCHIES . The expedition against Friedrichstadt is abandoned . Troops siege-batteries , and gun-boats , were withdrawn from before Friedrichstadt on the 5 th without molestation . At mid-day the Danes , probably thinking that they should find only a small number of dispirited Holsteiners , made a sally from the city , but were repulsed with so much energy that they were glad to retreat , leaving their dead upon the field . The scene presented at the
gate of Rendsburg , as the conveyances arrived , bringing in the wounded , was most affecting . Mothers surrounded the waggons , and climbed up by the spokes of the wheels , to see if they could catch sight of a son among the wounded , whom they had not been able to descry in the ranks . When the last waggon came , and brought no son , the last hope was gone , and the only comfort to be obtained was the tale of some old sergeant , who had seen the young man die just by him , fighting bravely for his " country .
The loss of the army of tbe Duchies in the unsuccessful attack upon Frederichstadt was very large . With the end of the operations against it another period of iuactivity in the field has commenced , but no one ventures to hope that the recent events have brought tbe conflict in any degree nearer a conclusion . A natural association of ideas connects a not remote failure of the defeated side with repeated reverses . But there are many things that render the war in the Duchies a peculiar one . Though unacknowledged and unassisted by the States of Germany as Governments , the Holstein army has behind it an immense population , from
which a continual stream of recruits flock to it , not in large bodies , but in such numbers tbat in a comparatively short time tbey amount to something considerable : The Staathalterschaft have somewhat relaxed their regulations as to the admittance of recruits , and at the present time of year tbe prospect of a winter , with little or no employment , is sending hundreds into the ranks * The conscription is put in force more strickly , and a younger class of men is called into service . In a very short lime the Holstein army will rather exceed that of the Danes in number , and everything promises a winter campaign . With the first hard frost there will probably he another attack on Frederichstadt .
The Danes on tbeir side are not idle , out their activity is strictly defensive—that is , they are on every point fortifying their lines so as to provide against every possible variety of attack . The labour is excessive , but everything is done , and done well too . There is not a blockhouse or a breastwork that is not placed , according to tbe testimony ofthe Holstein officers themselves , with the greatest skill , and it is evident that the Danish engineers parfectly understand their business . In a short
time their position will be an almost unassailable line , reaching from the shore-of the Baltic at Eckernforde to that ofthe German ocean at the Eyder . Behind this they can defy even the superior force that Germany may gradually place at the disposal of the Holstein Government ; but the winter will cut the Danes off for at least two months from the island and all co-operation by sea , while it is equally relied on by the Holsteiners to render tbe marshes and moors passable .
The inhabitants of Fredericbstad t , whose dwellings have been destroyed , have fled to Husutn and the neighbourhood . They are in a deplorable condition —most of them have lost all they possessed , for during the cannonade they conld save hone of their property . A committee of the inhabitants of Husum has been formed for their temporary relief ; rations of bread , meat , and coffee are issued to them , and the magistrates have headed a subscription for them with 200 dollars from the Government funds .
A Danish patrol was made prisoner , in the neighbourhood of Kropp , an unfortunate painter , who was wandering about , sketchbook in hand , in hope of stumbling somewhere on a battle that he might transfer to canvas . . He describes himself as coming from < he little State of Russia . He is in a very awkward position , as all persons found within the debatable ground between tbe two lines , provided with the means of drawing and sketching , are liable to be treated as spies of the most dangerous clasE . He was sent forthwith to Flensburg .
Our advices from Rendsburg and Hamburg are of the 11 th and 12 th inst . No new events bad taken place . The Danes were employed in fortifying their position in the north and west of Eriederiebstadt and in the vicinity of Schleswig . Touningen , foe , was surrounded with entrenchments . A short cannonade had taken place on the part of
France. The Great Review On The Plain Of...
the Danes against the'ferryitiou . se and the pilot stai tion at Wollersum . " Being attacked by the Holstein horse artillery , and their fire : having been returned with shrapnells , the Danes retreated .
ITALY . THE ROMAN STATES .-Great excitement has been produced in Rome by the account of a recent military tumult in the city of Sini gaglia , produced by the entry of a company of Roman soldiers , chiefly non-commissioned' officers , who were upon their march from Ancona to the depot at Bologna . 'The inhabitants of Sinigaglia ( who , although the Pope ' s own townspeople ; are not amongst the most devoted of his subjects ) , partly from- ' a slumbering but not extinct feeling of nationality , arid' partly' out of spite to the Austrian garrison , marched out of town to meet the Romans , and received them with loud shouts of applause , which , exciting the enthusiasm of the soldiers , awakened responsive cries on their part , and the whole crowd entered the , city
Vociferating vivas to the Roman army and the Republic , and death and destruction to the priests . A spontaneous offering o ! wine and refreshments to the arrivers did not , as may be 'imagined , damp the proceedings , which became so anti-Pontifical that tbe superior oflicers , after some vain efforts to restrain their subordinates , abandoned the scene , whilst the Austrianst too few in number to interfere , were , it is hinted , not behind hand in participating in the good liquor and echoing the toasts which accompanied it . The general exultation was not however of long duration . Tbe Pope ' s brother , who was at Sinigaglia at the time , exclaimed— ' Dogs , ye have had your day J' He sent . off . a courier to Rome , directly to Pio Nino , who communicated the intelligence to Cardinal Antonelli , who in turn sent Austrian soldiers to quell the unruly soldiers and townspeople .
The ' Daily News' is under the ban of the Roman government . Signer Piale , who ; recently presented a list of the journals he wished . to take in for his reading rooms , saw the' Daily News' and the ' Na * tionai' of Paris indignantly marked out of the category by the supervisor , who informed him that if his Holiness himself were to ask' for . such pernicious publications , theywould be refused him—an assertion one can easily credit , since , by the arts of those who surround them , , ' . " Princes , like beauties , from their youth , Are strangers to the voice of truth . "
The new batch of cardinals has been created , commencing with Monsignor Fornari , the nuncio at Paris ; The other cardinals are Monsignbri d'Astras , Archbishop' of Toulouse ; Bonneley Orbe , Archbishop of Toledo ; Consenza , Archbishop of Capua ; Mathieu , Archbishop of Besancon ; Homo , Archbishop of Seville j-Gousset , Archbishop of Rheims'j Semeran-Beekh , Archbishop of Olmnlz ; Geissel , ' . Archbishop of Cologne ; Figueredo , Archbishop : of Braga ; Wiseman , Archbishop of Westminster , ( a metropolitan church recently erected by the Pope , ) and Apostolic Vicar of tbe London District ; Pecci , Bishop of Gubbio ; Diepenbrock , Bishop of Breslaw : and Robert ! , Auditor of the Reverend
Apostolic Chamber . Thus most catholic countries will be satisfied , since the promotion has been impartially distributed to one Roman , two of the Roman provinces , one Neapolitan , ' three 'Frenchmen , two Spaniards , one Austrian , two Prussians , one Portuguese , and last ; -not least , one Englishman , for such we must undoubtedly consider Cardinal Wiseman to be , although actually born at Seville , in Spain . Of the whole fourteen , he is the youngest , being only forty-eight years of age ; whilst the eldest is the Portugese arc ' ibistep who has waited for the scarlet bat until the venerable age of eighty . Only four cardinals are now wanting to complete the sacred college .
Another subject of interest with the Roman people at present is the condemnation to death and the expected execution of several criminals . With respect to those concerned in the murder of the'Jesuits on the bridge of St Angelo , they are considered to have fully merited their sentence ; but tbe sympathies of the public are strongly aroused in favour of two young men accused of having instigated Domenigo Pace to assassinate the colonel of gendarmes , Nardoni , since absolutely nothing has been proved against them in support of such a charge beyond the occasional furnishing of small sums of money , which they say was done out of charity to the assassin , One of these young men , Antonial by name , is a shoemaker , and only twenty years old ; his principal offence appears to be that of belonging to a political sect . His mother and sisters are
heartbroken at the idea of his being shot in a few days , ' and have made unheard of efforts to get at the Pope in order to present a petition for bis sentence tone commuted , but they have been invariably repulsed . The other man , named Fabio , who is" con " demned as an accomplice , rendered himself rather conspicuous by fighting a duel , soon after the taking of Rome , with a French sergeanlmajor , who ; in a public cafe , stigmatised all Italians as cowards : Signer Fabio offered to prove with pistols tbat he , for one , was now coward , which the Frenchman declined , as he only fought with the sword . The Italian , who was ignorant of the use of that weapon , adjourned the duel for three months , in order to learn fencing , and when the period was expired , waited on his adversary again . The fight took place , and ' resulted in both the combatants being severely wounded .
A new Guillotine is being constructed , the old one having been dragged down last year , amidst the execrations of the populace , to the bridge of St . Angelo , and there burnt on the piazza opposite the castle , together with several cardinals' carriages , which were consigned to the flames by the mob on tbe same eventful evening . NAPLES . ~ Terrorism reigns in this country . Uttering the word constitution is a crime in the eyes of the government . To discredit the liberal party , on a late occasion tbe bust of bis Majesty was
exposed with blood round tbe throat , suspended in the village of Angri ; several persons were arrested , and when it was about to be proved that the whole affair was got up by a certain Major Yovine , a government spy , the processo was ordered to be suspended , and the prisoners liberated , who were subsequently refused the power of exposing the royalists' plot . At Regglo , some time since , twenty-three political offenders were tried and liberated by their judges , whereupon the King threatened to displace them , because it was argued that they must belong to the constitutional party . \ - > -
One of the last victims to political opinion in Naples is the dramatic author , Coucetiiello . The activity of the police is by no means diminished ; the chief aim is to destroy opinion . The journals , now entirely in the hands of the police , have become positively insane in their endeavours to destroy opinions diffused'during the liberty of the press . The state trials have again commenced . The court was occupied with a long and tedious examination of witnesses . It was proved that Colella , the man who denounced the ex-minister , Baron Poerio , was promised a government emplovmentof
twelve ducats per month . Most of tbe other parties employed by the police to accuse the prisoners are proved to be the very worst characters ; many have suffered imprisonment for theft , and other crimes too revolting to record . Not one respectable witness has appeared in court to incriminate the prisoners . The projected condemnation of the accused is obvious from the innumerable instances of illegality on the part of the judges , and if anything could lower the present state of morality in the kingdom of the Two Sicilies , the present state trials would be sufficiently demoralising to do so .
SPAIN . A new court intrigue has sprung up at Madrid . On the 4 th of this month General Serrano was induced by Narvaez' to - attend a levee , at which the King treated him with marked discourtesy . It is stated publicly , that Serrano , exasperated at the treatment which he received at the Palace , and being determined to obtain full . and coniplfite satisfaction for . the affront , of which he was the object , has written a letter to Narvaez , in which he declared that , having presented himself at the levee contrary to his previous intention , and solely through deference to the advice of General Narvaez , and on the assurance that he would be well received , he would
regard the conduct of General Narvaez as a snare laid for him unless the General should resign , or unless he ( Serrano ) should be appointed Inspector-General of Cavalry , which place bad been promised to him , and of which he was assured bis appearance at Court was the necessary preliminary . The letter concluded by giving General Narvaez only twenty four hours to comply with either of the conditions proposed , or otherwise satisfaction by ' arms . It is said that this report has been circulated by order of General Narvaez . It only remains for the Duke of Valencia , to resign , or to force the King to yield , for a duel is out of the question , as such a proceeding , far from justifying General Narvaez , would throw a doubt on his conduct .
UNITED STATES . The last mail brings the following intelligence . The session , of Congress has adjourned .. All the
France. The Great Review On The Plain Of...
appropriation ' bills were passed . The five important measures for the ' adjustment ' of ' the Slave Question are riow la « s of theland . Under One of these , already , a slave , who had escaped from Baltimore a few years ago , has been arrested , taken before tbe United States commissioner in New York , identified and sent back into bondage . Little or no excitement took place on the occasion ; but the facts , as they are circulated through the press , are commented upon by the northern journals in a spirit of no little indignation . The law is denounced by many as
odious and tyrannical , and the impression prevails that it cannot be carried into effect in all cases . Among the important bills that were lost during the session were the Cheap Postage Bill , the Pacific Railroad Bill , the Philadelphia , Liverpool , Southampton , and Havre Steam Navigation Bill , and the bill for the modification of the tariff in 1846 . Tbe existing ' tariff , therefore , continues in full force , but a great struggle will be made to modify it at the next session , which will commence in December and close In March .
The Southern ultras are still actively engaged in an effort to provoke disunion . Govenor Towns , of Georgia , has called a state convention with the object of-considering the measures that have just been passed by Congress , and determining the course which that state should pursue under the circumstances . Another unpleasant scene occurred in the Rotunda of the capital , between senators Foote and Freemont . Colonel Freemont made a remark , impeaching the honour of General Foote , when the former was immediately knocked down by the latter . The bystanders interfered , and the affair was ami- ' cably adjusted the next day , through the intercession of friends . ' But for this intercession the session of the Senate might have been closed by a sad tragedy .-
: The Jenny Lind mania continued at Boston , It was announced in that city on the 30 th ult ., by tbe authority of Mr . Barnum , that Mdlle . Lind will probably not go again to Boston after this visit , as she goes to London in June to be present at the "World ' s Fair ; " and therefore has but about eighty nights more to sing , which will be principally divided between New York , New Orleans , and Havana . She will sing but little in Philadelphia or Baltimore , and probably not at all in Cincinnati , St . Louis , or other Western cities . She sang at rehearsal on the 30 th ult ., but was quite indignant at the large numbers present .
The Cholera Morbus At Malta,—We Learn; U...
The Cholera Morbus at Malta , —We learn ; under date of 3 rd October , that the hopes which had been , entertained since ; the 26 th of September , of an early total cessation of the disease , had , been somewhat damped by its unexpectedly manifesting itself on tho 2 nd of October on board the Frolic , brig-of-war , lying at anchor at the entrance of the dockyard creek , where she arrived on tho . 22 nd of September from the ; . Pirceus of Athens , quite healthy . The attacks , confined to the seamen , were several in number , and . of sp violent a nature that three proved fatal in the course of a few hours , under which circumstances the rear-admiral superintendent had very judiciously ordered her to sea ,
and she left early on the morning ofthe 3 rd of October . The regiments in garrison are free from the sickness . The detachment of tho 44 th , which , after being more than decimated , was removed to the neighbouring island of Gozo in July last , returned to Malta on the 31 st October in ; her Majesty ' s steam-vessel Medusa . No arrival had taken place from the fleet since it left the offing of Malta on the 8 th September , under Vice-Admiral Sir W . Parker . The Volage , which left Smyrna ; on the 27 th September , with her tender , the Research , as well as her other tender , the Auxiliar , , from Syra , were daily ; looked for at Malta , which port the Yolage was to leave for England , to be paid off , not later than the 15 th of October .
Hudson ' s-bay . Produce . —Tho first arrival for the season of skins , furs , & c , from the possessions of the Hudson ' s-bay Company , in North America , has taken place by the Prince of Wales , arrived in the Docks from Hudson ' s-bay , with 196 bales , thirteen cases ; and 130 other packages of skins and furs , nine packages of feathers , one case , nine baskets , and seven kegs of castor , two hogsheads and five baskets of quills , two hogsheads of quills and isinglass , nine other packages of tho same , two casks of grease , two of meat , six of tongues , one bale of ivory , and forty-six packages of tallow , consigned to the Hudson ' s-bay Company , and the produce of that northern region . Simul taneous with tho above arrival , the Company ' s vessel Prince Rupert has arrived in the Docks from Hudson ' s-bay , with 240 bales of skins and furs , and other productions of the same district .
F|N The Prevention, Cure, And Vj General Character Of Syphilus, Strictures,
f | N THE PREVENTION , CURE , AND VJ General character of SYPHILUS , STRICTURES ,
Ad00212
Affections of the PROSTRATE GLAND , VENEREAL and SCORBUTIC ERUPTIONS of the face and body , Mercurial excitement , < fcc , followed'by a mild , successful and expeditious mode of treatment . Thirty-first edition , Illustrated by Twenty-Six Anatomical Engravings on Steel . New and improved Edition , enlarged to 196 pages , ust published , price . 2 s . 6 d ; or by p « st , direct from the Establishment ,, 3 s . fid . in postage stamps . "THE SILENT FRIEND , " a MedicalWorkon Venereal and Syphilitic Diseases , Secondary Spmptoms , Gonorrhoea . & c , with a PRESCRIPTION FOR THEIR PREVENTION ; physical exhaustion , and decay of the frame , from the effects of solitary indulgence and the injurious consequences of the abuse of Mercury ; with Observations onthe « bligations of Mabuuge , and directions for obviating certain disqualifications . Illustrated by twenty-six coloured , engravings . ByR . andL . PERRY and Co ., Consulting Surgewis , 19 , Berners-strcet , Oxford-street , London . Published by the authors , and sold by Strange , 21 , Paternoster-row ; Hannay , 63 , and Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Starie , 23 , Tichborne-street , Haymarlset ; and Gordon , 14 G Leadenhallstreet , London ; Powell , 88 , Grafton-strect , Dublin ; and Riiimes and Co ., Leitb . Walk , Edinburgh . Parti , treats of the anatomy and physiology of the reproductive organs , and is illustrated by six coloured engravings .
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' AN EFFECTUAL CURE FOR PILES , FISTULAS , Ac . ^ « A B E ! R N E ' I H T'S , P * ^ E O / l N . T M ; E N , A What a painful arid noxious disease is the Piles J and ^ comparatively , howfewoftheafflicted hare heen pe * ' nently cured by ordinary appeals to medical skill I This , . no doubt , anses from the ™ of powerful aperient > frequently administered bythe profession ; indeed , strong mteroalmedkunes should | always be . avoided in all «« J of this complaint . The proprietor of the above Ointment , after years of acute suffering , placed himself under ( l es ireatment of that eminent surgeon , Mr . Abernethy ; was by filmrestored to perfect health ; -and has enjoye d it e . ° since without the slightest return of the disorder , over a period of fifteen years , during jvhich fame the same AberI thian perscription has been the means of healing a vast number of desperate cases , both in and out of the proprietor circle of friends , most of which cases had heen under medical care , and some of them for a very considerable tim ' Abernethy ' s File Ointment was introduced te the public by the desire of many who had : been perfectly healed h » •?' application , and since its introduction the fame of this Ointment has spread far and wide j even the medical profe » si „ always slow and unwilling to acknowledge the virtues of any medicine net prepared bj themselves , do now freely . > i frankly admit that Abernethy ' s Pile Ointment is not only a valuable preparation , but a never failing remedy in eve ~ stage and variety of that appalling malady . , ,.., . . ^ Sufferers from the Piles will not repent giving the Ointment a trial . Multitudes of cam of its efficacy mf „ L , be produced , if the nature of the complaint did not render those who have been cured , unwilling to publish tS . names .-- , . .. : - . -. , . -. ¦ Sold in , covered Pots at 4 s . Gd ., or the quantity ofthree ^ s . 6 d . pots in-one for lis ,, with full directions for us „ by Barclay and Sons , Farriflgdon-street ; Edwards , St . Paul ' s Church-yard j Butter , 4 Cheapside ; Newbery g ' Paul's ; Sutton , Bow Churchward ; Johnson , 68 Cornhill ; Sanger , 150 Oxford-street ; Willoughby . and Co ! ei Bishopsgate-street Without ; Owen , 52 Marchraond-street , Burton-crescent j Bade , 39 Goswell-street ; Pnmt , ^*) Strand ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; Prentis , 84 , Edgeware-road 5 and retail by all respectable Chemists and Medicine Vendors in London . ., . .-.-.. V Be sure to askifor " ABERNETHY'S PILE OINTMENT , ' \ The Public are requested to he on their guat 4 against noxious Compositions , sold at low . Prices , and to observe that none can possibly be genuine , unless the name ef C . Kino is printed on theGovernment Stamp' affixed to each pot , 4 s . 6 d . ; which is the lowest price the . proprietor is enabled to sell it at , owing to the great expense of the Ingredients .
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IMMENSE SUCCESS OF THE NEW MODE OF ! TREATMENT . . As adopted by Lallemand ,- JRieord , Dislandes , and others , ofthe Hopital des Veneriens a Paris , and now uniformly r > ractised in this country by
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has solicited me to send Wm another box , which he feels assured will cure him ; you can use our names as you think proper , that others sufferers may be convinced of their value . ' — Direct to Mr . John Farquhar , weaver , & c ., Kin . ross , Scotland . Mr , J ., Higham , Burwell— ' I am happy to say that tie person , though he has taken only one box , is a wonderful deal better , and will recommend them to any one so suffering . ' ¦ N . B . —Persons wishing . to consult the Doctor , in anj case , may do so by enclosing £ 1 by Post-office order , pay able at the Holborn Office , or otherwise , with a detail of the symptoms , < tc , for which Advice and Medicine will be sent . Patients corresponded with till cured . Address , Walteb de Roos , M . D ., 35 , Ely-pla ' co , Holfcora . hill , London . Hours , 10 till 1 , and i till 8 . Sundays ei . cepted , unless by previous arrangement .
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TO THE AFFLICTED . EXTRAORDINARY SUCCESS OF . THE NEW MODE OF TREATAIENT . DK . ALFRED BARKER , 48 , Liverpool-street , Tiing ' s-cross , Londos , having had a vast amount of practice at the various los . pitals in London and en the Continent , is enabled to treat with the utmost certainty of cure , every variety of disease arising from solitary and sedentary ha & ifs , indiscriminate excesses , and infections , such as gomr . rhoea , gleet , strictures , and syphilis , or venereal di . sease , in all its various forms and stages , whether pri mary or secondary , Which , owing to neglect or improi « r treatment , invariably end in gout , rheumatism , skit diseases , gravel , pains in the kidneys , back , and loins , and finally , an agonising death ! The lamentable neglect cf this class of diseases by medical men in general is too well known , and their attempts to cure by means of such dan . gerous medicines , as mercury , copaiba cubebs , ic , hare
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RUPTURES EFFECTUALLY AXD PERMANENTLY CURED WITHOUT A TRUSS !! DE . BARKER'S REMEDY lias he « j entirely successful in curing many thousands c cases of Siiifflc ' iuid Double Ruptures of every variety ; W * has long heen recognised by the whole ofthe medical P * fession as the only remedy every discovered fortius alar " ' ingcomplatot . - ,..,,, . n , All sufferers are earnestly invited to write , or paj L ''' Darker a visit , as in every case he guarantees a cure */ his peculiar mode of treatment . Tho remedy is eq «; 1 "J applicable to male or female of any age , and is easy /»» painless in use , causing no inconvenience or con "' ' nient , Ac . . - .. . ¦" . ¦ ¦ _ ,, „
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 19, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_19101850/page/2/
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