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( : ^i!:ui jimr:-agr^850u— ->——^¦^¦~^r- ...
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33oetri!
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ODE TO THE SUN. •;;.;-.= ,; :: Bt LElflK...
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ftemeiBS.
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THE NATIONAL IffSTMJCTOB. Part IX London...
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THE DEMOCRATIC REVIEW OF BRITISH AiVD FO...
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ROYAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION, i In the ...
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THE IRISH DEMOCRATS. The usual weekly me...
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Lori> Staxlbv asd tub llirox D/sroicr As...
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J.] the pom as' e^raeion;^ciety. • : :• ...
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TO THE MINERS OF THE UNITED '-;¦ ¦ ,'.,'...
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: THE MINERS' APPEAL TO THE PUBLIC. FniE...
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' Discovert, op Frescoes in Stkdium OnuR...
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varmm
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A pebsom, reading a paragraph;in the pap...
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AN THE PREVENTION, OTJBE^AND \J General character of SYFHILTJS, STHICTlNffiS.
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Affections of tha PROSTRATE GLAND,.VENER...
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
( : ^I!:Ui Jimr:-Agr^850u— ->——^¦^¦~^R- ...
( : ^ i ! : ui jimr :-agr ^ 850 u— - >——^¦^¦~^ r- „ .....-.. _ , .,. ^^ . , ^ .. .. ¦„ , _ , „ , Jt kfcijMx ^ - ^ , _^ . ^^ ^¦ - ¦^ - ¦^— ^ v- ' . - ¦ . - <¦ ¦ - ¦ - ' ^^ ¦ ¦ . ; .- % ' - _____ " ¦ " ' ~ " ¦ — ¦¦ -..- - „ .,, ¦ . . ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦ , - ¦ , , ., .- , ' ' ' : ' , .- . } .. '¦ :,- ¦ O ^^^^ " ^^^^^^ - - — - — ~ 1 ¦¦¦¦¦¦ - ¦ -- ¦¦ _ _ . _ .. _ ., __ _ — . — - ¦¦ _ ¦ _ ¦ ... " ¦ " ^ ¦ » "" ^ ^ ^ - - - - .- — - ———A . —— -
33oetri!
33 oetri !
Ode To The Sun. •;;.;-.= ,; :: Bt Lelflk...
ODE TO THE SUN . •;; . ; -.= , ; :: Bt LElflK HOST . . . -: y Pre * Presence divine J Great lord of tola out-aptiete » Bri Bringer of light , and life , and joy , and Beauty-God God midst a million gods that far and ^ H ( Hold each lis ofts in rounds of rapturous Orn Qv ^^^^^ il ^^ BeliBelieve in any god fcsslifeeagod than taoa . Tho Thon art the mightiest of all tningswe ^ sce . . ' A And tboui the mightiest * art among the kindest ; The The planets dreadfully and easily , . ¦' - , '• ¦'' ai in sacred thou vrmdest
A' About thee , sport , ; And Jlnd thine illustrious hands for all that power . Tig ] light soft -on the babe ' s cheeky and nurse the ° budding flower . The They say that in tbine orb is movement dire , 1 . Tempest and flames as oh a million oceans :. We Well may it be , thou heart of heavenly fire ; 8 Such looks and smiles befit a god ' s emotions ; We We know thee gentle in the midst of all , By By those smooth orbs in heaven , this sweet fruit on the wall . If < Ifeelthee here , myself , soft on my hand ; i Around me is thy mate , celestial presence ; Be Bererence and awe would make me fear to stand Within thy beam were not all Good its essence : W Were not all Good its essence , and from thence Al All good , glad heart derivM , and child-bko confidence !
I : I know that there is Pear , and Grief , and Pain Sirangefoes , though stranger guardian menus , . of Pleasure i
I I know that poor men lose , and rich men gam , Though oft th' unseen adjusts the seeming measure : , __ .. . I I know that Guile may teach , while Truth must ( . Or bear contempt and shame on his benignant brow . 3 But while thou sit'st , mightier than all , 0 Sun , . And e ' en when sharpest fell , still throned Kindness , " I see that greatest and that best are one , And that all else works tow ' rd it though in
blindness . . Evil I see , and Pear , and Grief , and Pam , Work nnder Good , their lord , embodied in thy reign . I see the molten gold darkly refine , O ' er the great sea of human joy and sorrow ; I hear the deep voice of a grief divine Calling sweet notes to some divine morrow ; And tliODzh I know not how the two may part , I feel thy rays , 0 Sun , write it upon my heart . "Upon my heart thou writest it , as thou , Heart of these worlds , art writ ' on by a greater ! Beam'd on with love from some still mightier brow ,
Perhaps by that which waits some new relate *; Some amaz'd man , who sees new splendours driven Thick round a Son of suns , and fears he looks at heaven , f 'lis easy for vain man , Time ' s growing child , To dare pronounce on thy material seeming : . Heav ' n for its own good ends , mute and mild To many a wrong of man ' s presumptuous dreaming . Matter , or mind , of either what knows he ? Or bow with more than both thine orbe divine maybe ? Art thon a god indeed ? or thyself heaven ? And do we waste thee here in light and flowers ? Art thou the first sweet place , where hearts , made
even , j Sing tender songs in earth-remembering bowers ? Enough , my soul . Enough through thee , 0 Sun , j To learn the sure good song—greatest and best are one . Eoongb for man to work , to hope , to love . Copying thy zealunlir'd , thy smile unscorning : Glad to see gods thick as the stars above , Bright with the God of gods eternal morning ; Bound abont whom perhance endless they go , Ripening their earths to heavens , as love and wisdom grow . 3 'Rapturous' —transporting , carrying away . The reader can take the word either in its spiritual or material sense , or both ; according as he agrees or disagrees with Xeppier and others respecting the nature of the planetary bodies . t Alluding to a central sun ; that is to say , a son governing otner sons , supposed to exist in the constellation of Hercules .
Ftemeibs.
ftemeiBS .
The National Iffstmjctob. Part Ix London...
THE NATIONAL IffSTMJCTOB . Part IX London : J . Pavey , Kolywell-street . TJxder the guidance of its able editor this publication is , -week by week , advancing in interest , and the importance of Its contents . This part contains admirable articles on "Competition , " " Pauperism , " " Labour , " " Socialism , " & c , & e . Mr . O'Connor continues the narrative of his Life and Adventures , which must be read to be appreciated . "A Biography of Joseph Mazzini , " a continuation of the story of " The Secret , '' and other articles , will repay perusal . We will take for extract a brief notice of the celebrated
EOBESPIEBRE . When the States-General met at Versailles in 1769 , Maximilian Robespierre , a deputy of the tiersetat , was an advocate at Arms , where his inflexible integrity and love of justice had already procured him the appellation of "tbe incorruptible . " Be had then obtained no political eminence , and in the National Assembly he was thought little of ; he Stood alone there as completely by his integrity , his austere morals , and his devotion to the interests of the people , as the more brilliant but leas virtuous Mrabeau did by his eloquence , his genius , and his audacity . But Robespierre was the representative of a ereat nrinc ' mle . and the Democracy of France
was not slow to discern his worth . Lamarttne says , that he atone comprehended the revolution when it first lowered upon the horizon ; and that white the Constitutionalists and Girondists were contending for place and power , the idea of the amelioration ol the condition ol the proletarians was germinating in the bosom of the obscure advocate of Arras . Buonarotti says , that Robespierre ' s idea of the revolution was , that it ought to change entirely the material and moral condition of the labouring classes . Bis domestic life presented a praiseworthy example of probity , virtue , and simplicity ; he lodged at a cabinet maker ' s ; and though hemight haveamassed wealth , as Danton and others of the revolutionists did , his personal effect ? were valued at his death at
little more than £ 5 . In the National Assembly he proposed the abolition of the punishment of death , but then , as in 1848 , the humane wishes of the democrats were overruled by the votes of the party of " peace , law , and order . " The guillotine at a later day must be considered as an instrument of war rather than as an engine of judicial punishment . Supported by tbe most advanced minds among his party , he gave freedom to the negroes of Hay ti—he put an end to the practice of burying the dead in towns , and called into existence the beautiful cemeteries around Paris—and he banished from the cap ital all those who sold obscene prints and books , as Caussidiere did in 1848 . Is it wonderful , then , that the proletarians of France should cherish and revere the memory of tbis man ?
The Democratic Review Of British Aivd Fo...
THE DEMOCRATIC REVIEW OF BRITISH AiVD FOREIGN POLITICS , HISTORY AND LITERATURE . Edited by G . Juiias Harney . July . London : Watson , 3 , Queen ' s-liead-passage , Pater noster-row Is this number of the Democratic Review , will he found an admirable defence of the Roman Republic , from the pen of H . Forbes , a ^ Briton , v ^ io nobly gave his sword , and r isked his life in the recent struggle for Italy's freedom and independence . The author of "A Glance at History / ' has written an elaborate review of the career and character of Julius Cffisar , to whom he has done full justice , proving that the great Roman was really
tne mena of the people , while his assassins were the real tyrants of the Roman common-JW o- .. A tength y iwiew of Louis Blanc ' s Hietarrc Pages , " exhibits the rise of the reaction against the French Republic , which began as soon as April 1848 . An excellent article exposing the " Intrigues 0 f the Middle Class Reformers ; " a Letter from the pen of the Editor and one from his Paris corn * , pondent , with the addition of some poetry complete the contents of the li ^ i f 0 T Jul J ' We give the following extract : —
THE BZATH OF CiSAR . The senate heaped upon Ciesar all the honou-s they could possibly bestow , he was elected consul every year and dictator for life ; he was appointed superintendent of public morals and the title of imperator and father of his country was liberally extended to him . Amidst these triumphs Cassar ' s atnf" ^ t < Jevete < i tot » e prosperity and ) iapp ine «* oufce Roman people . He forgot that there had ^ opposite parties and was benificent alike to torew ScfPom P ey aBd his own . He laboured '•> nn every specie of abuse or grievance ; jus-
The Democratic Review Of British Aivd Fo...
tiee , wa « admitted without partiality , ' and' ibe mean andselfishvice of nepotism ( the ^ besetting : sin of Whig and Tory gorerametts , ) was unknown in the departments ' of the state . The separate rights of the different magistrates were defined , and his pa-: teraal care was extended , to the most distant prpr vinijes . Thedraihing of the marshes in Italy—the navigation of the Tiber—and the embellishment of Rome alternately employed his capacious mind ; He adorned the capital with magnificent buildings , and caused Carthage and Corinth to be re-built , establishing colonies in both cities . Above-all—not loosing . sight of the sacred duty of kindness to the poor—he devoted his efforts to the reforming of those laws which patrician rapacity had enacted for its
own base and exclusive purposes ' . In short alt his aims , his wishes , his desires , seem ' to ' be-concentrated in behalf of the best interests of mankind Hia glory , however , was now drawing to a close— - malignity , envy , and base selfishness triumphed . ' Casar ' s reforming projects ! called forth patrician hatred , and the aristocratic vultures . dreading innovation , and detesting -all improvement , formed themselves into a conspiracy to murder him . Brutus and : Gassing' headed the conspirators . Having taken his seat in the senate , on the " ides of March , " the conspirators crowded around . him ; Cimber gave the signal by laying hold of hisi robe , and Casca struck him the first blotv- —Ciesar
starting from his seat , with the steal of his tablet wounded the assassin . in tho arm . The vigour and attitude of Caasar alarmed'the comspirators , but closing around him , Caesar received a second stab from an unknown hand , whilst Cassius wounded him in the face . The noble Roman still defended himself with spirit and energy ' until he . found that Brutus , upon whom ho had conferred the highest favour of friendship , ¦ was among the assassins—at such black ingratitude the . heart of this great and generous man gave way .. He made no further resistance , but exclaiming , '?* And thou , too , Brutus , " he folded his robe around him , and in dying dignity sunk down under the dag ~ gers of his murderers , his body pierced with three-aud-twehty wounds .. ;;
, JSe event in the annals of ancient Rome has more engaged the attention of historians than' the assassination of Julius Cfflsar . Whilst all' admit the splendour of . his abilities and the disinterestedness of his character , he has by many , with singular inconsistency , been- held up as a tyrant and usurper . These historians , influenced by prejudice , and for the most part the hirelings of aristocracy , have unscrupulously traduced the character of the renowned Roman , urging as a' plea , . in favour of the assassins , that Cajsar having abolished the liberties of his country , had rendered himself amenable to the penalty of death . . The truth is ,
that Caesar s lore of humanity prompted him to the glorious ambition of acquiring power in order to destroy that oppression under which the Roman people * had long suffered ; and because he hesitated not to abolish unec / ml laws , framed for the protection of the rich alone , every vile effort has been used to throw odium upon his name . It should bs remembered that the then Roman form of government , like the present infamous Republic of France , was one of the vilest of aristocracies . Casar's virtues were well known to the citizens of Rome , and it is to be regretted that he perished before he had accomplished his humane and beneficent designs .
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Royal Polytechnic Institution, I In The ...
ROYAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION , i In the model department of this establishment , there has lately been deposited a specimen of the " Patent Noiseless Wheels , " manufactured by Marks and Co . This invention , ' which consists in the application of a solid band of vulcanised India rubber over the iron tyres of carriage wheels , and by these ifieans a carriage is rendered perfectly noiseless , allowing conversation to be carried on without any more effort than is required in a quiet room , and a considerably greater amount of ease is
imparted than can be attained by means of steel springs solely . " The wear and tear of carriages fitted with the patent wheels is materially reduced . '_ As they may be said to roll along upon soft cushions , all the jolting and shaking attendant" upon common wheels is done * away -with . In addition , this patent redaces the draught of carriages very materially It may be supposed that a wheel having a soft tyre , which is compressed and somewhat flattened under the wheel , would , as it rolls onwards , require more draught , like the common wheel passing over soft ground—the .
contrary , however , is the case } and it has been proved , by experiment , that the patent wheels reduce the draught by nearly one-third . Tho explanation of this is , that the tyre is elastic , as well as soft ; and although the elastic tyre is compressed in front of the wheel , it immediately expands again behind the wheel , giving back the power required to compress it . Two sets of th € se wheels have been ordered by the Emperor of Russia , which have been despatched to St . Petersburg * ! , The lectures by Dr . Bachhoffiier and Mr . Pepper continue to draw crowded audiences daily .
The Irish Democrats. The Usual Weekly Me...
THE IRISH DEMOCRATS . The usual weekly meeting took place on Sunday last at 26 , Golden-lane , Mr . Dvvaine in the chair , Mr . JorcB read a . letter received from Mr Bernard Fulham , intimathg that the " Irishman " newspaper would . re-appear in the course of a week , which was received with acclamation . Dr . O'Connor read the report of the last week ' s proceedings , which was received with applause by the members present . Air . NoxFiANNJGAN proposed a vote ofibanks to the proprietors and editors of the " Northern
Star" and Beynoid s Journals , as they were the true exponents of civil and religious liberty in England . It gave him an outline that these men were really " Sons of Freedom" by inserting the humble proceedings of that body in their valuable journals wiihout fee or emolument , but for the ad . vanceroent of human progress . The speaker concluded by moving a voie of thanks to the honourable member for Nottingham , and Air . G . -W . M . Reynolds , which was seconded by Mr . Daly , and carried with acclamation .
At this period of their proceedings some strange gentlemen came in and adud what was the object of their meeting , or was it qefl to strangers , which was answered in the affirmative , by the Chairman , who said he was in duty hound , to explain to them the object of their assembling together that night ; he said that they were a branch of the Irish Democratic Association of Dublin ; that their first object was to get their organ on its legs again , in order to give publicity to their proceedings ; and secondly * to do something for the land of their birth , in order to elevate it from its present degraded state . These were the objects of the meeting , and the cause o / their assembling that night .
One Of the gentlemen , Mr . Hughes , thanked the Chairman for the corteous manner in which be received them . ' He said he bad seen an account of a body of Irishmen assembling there . He made bold to come too , as an exile from the poor old country ; nothing would give him more pleasure than to cooperate with his ' countrymen in any constitutional struggff- ; aad although tie friend that was with him that night was notan Irishman ! StiU he wga a lover of liberty . The speaker concluded by thanking the
meeting for the corteoua manner in which they listened to him . Dr .. O * Conkor proposed the following resolution — « ' That we , the Irish Democrats , resident in Lohdon , view , with the utmost indignation , the conduct of the raerabeis of the . House of Commons , for the treacherous manner in which they absented themselves when the People ' s Charter was brought forward by the honourable member for Nottingham . " Mr . Joter could not agree with the resolution . The resolution was carried ' unanimously .
Mr . Flanagan directed the attention of the meeting to the privations of the French , Polish , German , and Hungarian refugees in this country , and concluded by putting down his subscription , which was followed by others . The money will be given to the proper person for distribution . A vote of thanks was given to the chairman , and the meeting separated . .
Lori> Staxlbv Asd Tub Llirox D/Sroicr As...
Lori > Staxlbv asd tub llirox D / sroicr Assocmtio . v . —This society having addressed Lord Stanley , calling on him and the Protectionist leaders in parliament to assist in procuring Protectionist reaction by pushing out tho application of free trade to labour employed in other than agricultural pur - Buits . Lord Stanley has replied by letter , that lie caimot adopt a policy resting on tho principle of a co :: iViet bctwecu diffet'Mit classes ; he . idds— " With rezard to that great interest tho cotton-trade , whence proceeded the main agitation for tho repeal of the Corn Laws , the existing duties upon foreign articles entering into competition with them are so trifling , that . I do not apprehend that an > material effect would be produced by their entire removal !"
J.] The Pom As' E^Raeion;^Ciety. • : :• ...
J . ] the pom as' e ^ raeion ;^ ciety . : : ¦ ¦¦¦'•<¦¦ . '¦ A : .-... > T " " !;; ••; ¦ : . ' ;' ?! = 'H ' . ; TO THE EDITOR OF THB NORTHERN STAR . Sir , —vVith your kind ' . permission , I beg to call the attention of your readers to a communication lately inserted in your . journal , and signed "Philip arid Ann Poiritoh . " That communication is Written by ¦ a member of the -Potters' Emigration Society , and condemns , in no measured terms , the institution to which he belonged . It is to this condemnation that I wish tocall the attention of your readers . >
• The Potters ' . Emigration Society / originated in a trade combination of the operatives of these districts . The folly and efficiency , of permanently improving the price of . potting industry by a- system Of ' , direct ant & tflttistn with employers , or through themedium of strikes and tura-quts , having jbeen bitterly Experienced by " working potters , it was . agreed that a legal association should be established ^; based on a joint stock principle , and enrolled under the Friendly Societies' Acts . . The object of this association was the purchase ' of land in the' western states of the North-American Union , and to remove'to'that land ' the unemployed hands of the trade , placing at their command' forty acres of land , at the cost of ^ 11 , to he paid for in the course of ten years after allocation , with implements and provision for the firstyearof settling , to be paid for in labour , j
" Asa first essay in this novel mode of trades improvement , three working men of the trade ; were sent out ; in 1844 ; tn Wisconsin , there to select and to purchase land for the use of the society .-. An estate of 1 , 600 acres was , purchased , and named Po' - tersville . To this estate some-forty families ; were sent , at a heavy cost to the trade , the whole of whom , with' some few exceptions , ' are now " , doing well . ' Understand me , the . whole cost of land , buildings , stores , ; and transit , was borne hy the members at home , and riot by the colonists- ^ the latter being allo » pd ten years to return the uareeogt , without interest , to which they' had placed the society . These familiesnow owe the society some £ 60 . or £ 70 each ; and instead of heiri " swindled" by theseciety , are in a position to injure the body by with , holding the payment of their just and lawful debts .
The second step taken by the society was that of securing , in pre-emption right , some 50 , 000 acres of land on the F <* x River , Wisconsin . This right , you will understand , can only be held by the settler , and not liy , the society ; and hence the fact , that the settler alone , has the power of injuring the society , and hot the society ' of injuring : the settler . This estate is called Emancipation ] Ferryj and will not be inthe market fur purchase before the end of October next , and to which have been sent some'four hundred families within thelast two years , comprising hiechanics ' of all trades , to whom the society haa been opened . : ¦
For this estate , Mr . Philip Pointon and family embarked in March last , having been a member of the society for upwards of : five years . In the course of that . pf'iod he had paid into the society no more than £ 1 Is . 6 d ., and 15 s . for a Yankee axe , two beetlin ? rings , and two wedges ; the said 15 a . being the cost price of the articles enumerated . . On his arrival , at the land he claims his axe , rings , and wedges ; and , as he states , receives them . He is next shown forty acres of what he acknowledges to be " good land . " but it is " eighteenor twenty miles from the Fort , and about twelve from the first store , and Ann would pot go . " .
---Yd'tr readers , sir , will acknowledge that on an esfate of 50 , 000-acres , taking up some twenty-two miles of frontage on the banks of a river , tunning seven miles back , and having three stores—your readers will acknowledge that the last settlers Can . not all be placed around tbe / rtftf store . Mr . Pointon does complain , and very unjustly too . To the truth of our stores being imperfectly stocked , we sorrowfully subscribe . . But this proves up designed wrong in the managers of the society , nor impracticability in the plans of the institution U simply proves that our ' funds have been limited . We hare now , until spring next , stopped all further settlement ; and are applying the whole receipts « f the society to remedy the evil complained of . .
But this is not '' swindling . " It is rather the generous confidence of working men , supp ly ing the wants of others of their fellows five thousand milea a ^ ay . If there be any semhlaoce of in ' jnstice , it lies on the part of Mr . Pointon . As a potter , he derived advantages from the removal of the surplus labour of his trade j as an emigrant , leaving his country under the society ' s auspices , he hud passages secured for himself , wife , and six children at 10 s . a bead less than other passengers paid ; and , as a shareholder in the movement , has been guided to what he terms " a fine situation on the banks
of the Baraboo . river . ' ' " Indeed , " he says , " I tell you the'truth when I say it is the prettiest place we have seen since we came to America . " And yet this man , paying £ 1 Is . 6 d ., and nothing for management in' the course of five years , and into a trades' fund , too , dares to talk of swindling I leave , sir , yon and your readers to judge impartially of the justice of his complaint , subscribing mysell Your very obedient servant , WhXiam Evans , General Agent . Shelton , Staffordshire Potteries , July 1 st , 1850 .
P . S . —I forgot to state that the share , or the £ 1 Is . 6 d . stock held by Mr . Pointon ,, can be sold by him '; and that there are numbers in the socie ^ who would viiUirijsly purchase the same . As a counter statement to that of Mr . Pointon ' s , be so kind as to insert the following : — " PottersviUe , December 2 nd , 1849 , "Dear Mother and sisters , —I take the present opportunity to write a few lines to you , hoping it will find you all in the enjoyment of good health , as it' leaves us at present . I have the pleasure to tell you that John received your letter last Sunday , and we were glad to hear you were in good health . You desired me to write and send you all the par .
ticulars of what we have got . ) Ye have got ninetysix acres of land , which lies on the south side of a hill , and on the south end of it there are twelve acres of meadow laud , from which I cut my hay , all the rest is good ploughable land ; so you see that I have eighty-four acres that lean ; plough . My crops during the last summer were ten acres of wheal and two acres of oats ; I cannot tell yon the quantity of . bushels yielded , for I have only threshed thirty out for seed . I had also half an acre of potatoes , which brought me seventyfive bushels , all sound ; We had a first-rate lot of garden vegetables ; they were all from Laughton ' s seed . When I lfift England I brought with me about thirty
shalots , and planted them when I first arrived'on the land , and this year I have raised six bushels of them ; they grow a great deal larger here . I have now got twenty acres under cultivation ; I have put fifteen acres of wheat in this fall , and it is look - ing very well . We have one yoke , of cattle , one cow and a heifer , four pigs , and thirty chickens ; a waggon , a siad and cradle , used for cutting wheat in this country ;" heaides a fanning mill , rakes and hay forks , a plough and harrows . I have a ' good log building - ; it is twenty feet in length by fiUean feetm width s v . Hh two windows in front , and a chimriey atone end built with stone , and a cooking stove at the other . We have a sofa and two
tables , a cupboard and a large rocking chair ; in fact we have all useful things . We have a good cellar , fifteen-feet by ten feet ; and' a granary and two log . stables ; I shall have the' most of pay land fenced in this winter . Please to send us word whether l \ x > King called oft you , as we asked him to call and tell you . a few particulars ; he is one of our neighbours , and started from here with Mr . Twig ' g . P eso kind as to remember me to Henry and George Lawton , and ask Henry to send me a few gooseberry and black currant trees , and a few strawberry roots , small ones from the slips ; pack them in' a small box , with light mould or moss , and please to send tliem by William Joluisoii , who is now in
Hanley . We are very much obliged to father for his presents of the capss for the children ; they are very muchpteascd with them ; ' tell Raehavl that I think much of the neckerchief that she knit me . We have had twobee-trees , one last year and another this , do our own land ; we had a hundred weight of honey out of them , iwas very sorry to hear that grandfather had heard some unpleasant accounts of us having some money ; at the same time 1 feel some disappomUnerii & t John not getting the money j h . ul if grandfather was here and could see the farm , be would let him have the cash . There arc thirty dollars paid on it , and the other payment , sixty-five
dollars ( about £ H ) , is to be made on the 15 th of June ; if the money is not paid at that time , the land is lost , and the first payment as wd ) . He has four acres of wheat on it , also two thousand rails , which is sufficient to fence ten acres ; the land is in my name . If John misses this chance he will not get another , for law ! is increasing in value very rapidly , My farm is worth a thousand dollars noyv . Tell grandfather that he has no cause to put himself about , for in two years from how , all tbe money owing will -be paid back . The price of land is a mere nothing compared io what it takes to get jit into good cultivation . You wish to ' know' whether George was at home wbe / i sick ; he was ; he is now
J.] The Pom As' E^Raeion;^Ciety. • : :• ...
quite well ; and lXjybfking at Portage ; he ; comes home . sometimes . ^ Please , give ; our loves to all our relations aiid 6 l 3 neighbours and accept the game yourselves ; so rio' ! mqre at present from . your ' affectionate sokanddaughter * ¦¦ ' - ¦ ¦ >• " ¦ ¦ • • '''¦¦' : " James and . MARTHA Hammond , ' , ' , '
To The Miners Of The United '-;¦ ¦ ,'.,'...
TO THE MINERS OF THE UNITED ' - ;¦ ¦ , ' ., ' . ; ' ¦;/;;; . KINGDOM . . ' - . ' ¦ TO THB RDITOa i OF THE ; NORTHERN . . STAR , ; ? . . » "r ^ fdeputatidri ; from the Miners ' , ; Association are at ( present in tondon , and we , beg , through tbe mearom ; 6 i ;/ ypuryaiuable paper , to draw the attention of t ^ e " mining body to the danger there is o ( losing the , bill ; so recently introduced before the legislature ; and * an abstract of which appeared in your last week ' s , ; journal . Yes , tjie colliery owners hav , e opposed the bill , ' and' are " threatening its destructiony . ' . as is eyidene ' ed by tEemoiioh of the Earl of Lonsdale and the Marquis of-Londonderry , who moved the third reading of the hill that day ; three monrtwv- " . '( ; : .. ' , ' ., ; .,, ' .. ... - ¦ : ¦ :,.,... ;¦ ¦
Here then we have along , tedious , and expensive inquiry made into the cause of tbese r dreadful events , which carry off so many lives , ' arid render miserable so many widows aivd orphan children / and which commission . of . inquify , with -every -other official inspection that has been , made for the last four or five years , and more , all going to establish the necessity of ; inspection / of amines , and detailing the amount of negligence of the . managers and agents of the same , together with the numerously signed petitions of the'iminers themselves ; and when the government have ! introduced a ' short' bill , just to gently touch the enormous evil ; ' two' noble ,
proprietors of collieries" set -themselves iu opposition thereto , and cosily move . " that . the . bill be read that day threei months . " ' ' What a ' state of things to contemplate r't ' wtf individuals ; and interested ones too , have influence- ancfipower to overthrow the work of thousands , of | p ? r 8 qn 8 , ; and on which the government themseives ' expehd ' ed ' a vast sum , of money ; all of which labour . and anxious thought ; of the people , and the inquiries of the government are threatened with destruction by the ' eforta of these two noble lords , who are thus ' empowered-to exonerate them selves from the responsibilities consequent upon the want of inspection . ,,
Should not reason arid common , sense have dictated to the noble Earl of Carlisle and . the government , that the objections thus raised should have determined themi'the more to persevere with : the bill , seeing that the cause of such opposition arose , without doubt , from a fear of the inspection ? Hence a sure criterion of its utility . Yet , instead of this , we find that attention is : given , , to the objections , and the hill altered ^ or , as they term it , amended
to suit the . whim and caprice . ; bf such , interested parties . ' The deputation have taken the earliest opportunity of waiting upon the Earl ' of Carlisle to remonstrate with him ' oh the matter , but whether he will attend to therecommendation of the deputation , or not , remains to be seen . The noble Earl did not offer any serious objection to reinstate the original matteriri the bill , but as it will again be brought before the House on Thursday night , a short time will try jt . •'"' ¦ . ' ,
" The deputation have determined to appeal to the miners throughout Great Britain to summon courage to battle thisquestion mth the capitalists' ; to afford , by their : coritributions to the deputation ; the means of watching the further progress of the b \ U , so as to ensure , ' to the utmost extent possible , an effioieht measure , ' and if those means are not forthcoming then , the miners can only blame themselves for all the calamities of this nature which may hereafter hefal them ; ,, ;" We trust they ' will see it to be their duty to help forward this cause of humanity . :
Any correspondence , may be addressed to Mr . D . Swallow , No ; 2 , Northuraberlandcourt , Charingcross ; or to Mi Jude , British Coffee-house , Agarstreet , Strand , London . Yours on behalf of the deputation , ; ' - . M . JUDE . At a Delegate Meeting held at Mr . Thomas Greener ' s ,- \ Cock ; Inn , Newcastle , on Saturday , 13 th day of July , 1850 , the following resolutions were read to themeeting , and adopted aiid signed by the ; delegates ., present , and forwarded to the Earl of Carlisle , by the miners'deputation .
lst That the Bill now before the Legislature , intitutled , ; ' An : Act for the Inspection of Coal Mines , ' although hot so comprehensive as desirable , is nevertheless . well calQUlated to en & Ute a Considerable diminution Of the serious and fatal accidents which'occur so frequently in the coal ' mines of this country . " 2 nd . —" That the opposition recently made thereto in the House of Lords , is untenable ami
opposed to all official recommendation and our own . experience , and therefore ought not to be entertained nor attended to , inasmuch as the effects of such supervision will be harmless upon those colliery proprietors who give proper attention to the well-being . and ; . safety . of their workmen , and need only be . dreaded by those who neglect ( as officially declared many do ) the requisite means to ensure such safety and freedom from accidents . "
- 3 rd . — " That as coal miners who are regularly employed in procuring , this necessary of life , amidst numerous and unforeseen dangers , we earnestly solicit your lordships to preserve the provisions of the Bill , as originally proposed , it being our opinion that the-suggested , alterations made by . a noble Peer , on the third reading of the Bill , would destroy the efficiency thereof , and thus expose to continued dangers the lives and health of the miners ;"; . . . '' , ' 4 th . — " That a petition , founded on the above , be also signed by the miners and their friends , arid forwarded with all due despatch to both Houses of Parliament ; " . .
, 5 th .- — " That ( fie petition just read , be printed , and copies taken ; to each colliery with sheets for signatures , ' andi . that the same be signed as quickly as possible , and j returned , post paid , to Thomas Weatberly , Sign of the Cock , Head of the . Side , Newcastle-on- ' Tyne . '' .
: The Miners' Appeal To The Public. Fnie...
: THE MINERS' APPEAL TO THE PUBLIC . FniESDS ANp ' ,: F ELL 0 W-C 0 UNTRTMBN , — As the alarming sacrifice ox' human Jifoin the coalmines of this country is fearfully on the increase , there being in the year 1847 , ° aM two following years , not lesa than . two thousand four hundred lives lost by explosion and other casualties , which are in very many cases quietly passed over by tho Coroners ' courts as " "Visitations of God , " & g . j This wholesale slaughter of their fathers , Boris , and brethren , have induced the miners to petition
the Legislature for Governmental Inspection of Mines , so that their health ; lives , and limbs , m ^ y be more protected than , at present ; yet , they regret to say , incredible as it may appear , that there are parties who are using all their influence tO render futile tho intentions of such petitions , / : "•' . . / . They therefore call oh their humane and benevolent couTitrymen ' to assist thern in a pecuniary way , that they may be enabled to send a proper deputation to London * to impress Upon the legislature the necessity , of giving . them an efficient measure of relief , & o . ¦ -.. . . :. ; . ; r ,,
They respectfully announce that Marie . Thornton and Muckelroy are duly authorised to receive subscriptions to thei "V entilation Fund , which will be thankfully received , \ ' By . order of the Delegate Meeting of Juno 29 th , . . ; ,. ; Tiios . ¦ Wbatukbly , Secretary . . M . Jude , Treasurer . Subscriptions , in small sums , amounting , to £ 1 da . 8 ( 1 . havo been , received by George Muckelroy , of Washington Colliery , ' besides £ 1 received from Spring veil Colliery .
' Discovert, Op Frescoes In Stkdium Onur...
' Discovert , op Frescoes in Stkdium OnuRcn . Sussitx . —ThQ workmen at present engaged in pulling down this venerable- church prior , to tho erection of a new one , havo discovered some' beautiful frescoes , and which aro riow . latd open . Tho subjects aro admirably executed , and occupy the entire north wall of the have of tho church . One of tliem represents the . "Virgin Mary , with Christ by hor side , his hands and feet pierced , and supplicants imploring tho Yirgin to intercede for thorn . Another , St . Christopher carrying . Christ over tho
River Jordan . ' The flsjuvo of St . Christopher is very liivge , reaching almost from the base to tho top of the wall ,: and tho colouring of his dress and shield aro in good preservation . Another is sup . posed to bo tho Day of Judgment . The llev . IV . D . Willis , of Elstcad Rectory , as well as several other members of tho Archte ' ological Society , have inspected the frescoes . As ' several sketches havo boon taken of those frescoes , wo aro not without hope that eventually . the public may bo presented with a sight of their fiio-similos . — Sarmi Standard .
Swumw . in ' . Tiiu Nkw Lord CuiscEU . 0 R . ~ Thc Qiioeh hold a privy council On Monday , when her Miijosty was pleased to dolivortho Great Seal to the . Itight Hon . Sir -Thomas - Wildo , whereupon the oatiis of Lord IJigh Counsellor of Groat Britain was by . tho . Q . UBon ' s oommanil mlministcrcd , to him , laiid the Lord Chancellor took' his piaco at the board accordingly .
Varmm
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A Pebsom, Reading A Paragraph;In The Pap...
A pebsom , reading a paragraph ; in the papers , that ai largo piece ' of land wasi washed away ' by an inundation , but that the account , vbs not fully confirmed , was cut short by '' a . gentleman , who observed , " That , if it ' was even true , . there was no ground for the report .- ' . ' ., ' ,. .,. > . - ••• - ¦ ¦''' - ¦¦ . ' . ' ¦ Bk & ndt v . v 7 AiBn . --Water is composed . of certain gases , ' one of them quito explosive . The other evening , when a lecturer on chemistry was decomposinB water . and ' nausin terrific exblosions of its
component gases ; a rather free-liver in the audioneo exclaimed ; as ho held hia handBtohis ear , " Catch me pUttitigttfaterinmy brandy after this—I might be blown up , like the boiler of a steamboat !' ¦ . A Plagiarist ItBraovBD . —A young author obtained permission from the celebrated Pirori to read him a traged y , which was about to . be ' produced . At every passage which betrayed plagiarism Piron took off his hat and bowed so frequently ^ that the author , curious to ascertain the cause , asked him what was the matter .- "Oh ! " said Piron , "it ia mevely a habit I have of saluting old acquaintances . " ¦
' Church Sittings . —At . the visitation at Hertford last week , the archdeacon said , it could not be too extensively known that if there was a vacant seat in a church , and any parishioner was unaccommodated , ihe might -complain to'the , churchwardens , who could not refuse to place him . in it ... Except in tho case '" of a . faculty , ^ which was extremely rare , no man could claim a pdvv as his own . He might have \ iald for its evecfiori ,. but that gave \ him no right over any more seats in it than his family actually
occupied . ; . ¦ - A Lor for tjie ANriQUARr . —The original charter of the lands of Powmode , in the year 1057 , was lately discovered by accident in an old chest . It rims as follows;—" . I Malcolm Kanmore the King the , firso of my rein ; -given ' to the Barren Hunter upcrand nether , Lands of-Powmode with all the Boiintfswithin flood with tho Hoop and Ifooptown and all the' Bounds up and down above the hearth to Heaven , and allbeJow- the . earth to hell as free to fcheo and thine as ever God gave to me and
mine—And that for a Bow and a Broad arrow When I come to hunt upon Yarrow And for the mair faith Ibite the white wax with my teeth before Margra and Mall my nurse . " Malcolm Bakmobb , King . " Sic subscribitur . " MiuaRAT , Witness . ¦ ' - " 'Mall , ' Witness . " A Poem , 'by Robert '; Burns , 7 n ' eVer- before published , has just been discovered . Mr . R . Chambers pi'onouncesitgenuine ... ' The / Scottish Press says : — « ' It is iriternleo , we hear , to print it in the new edition of Burns' works , at ' present in the course of preparation by the Messrs . . Chambers . " .
The U . S . Marshal- for the . Eastern ^ District of Louisiana , advertised : to . sell at public sale in New Orleans , on the 20 th u \ t ., four hmdred aridninetythrec slaves , of both sexes and allages , from infants tooldage . Among . the number was one old man called Sampson , aged 111 years . . ' - 'Wnt ., is Old , Neptune" getting into , dissipated habits ? i-Because : he is , carrying-more * ' steam " than usual . / When do your teeth usurp the ' functions of the tongue ?¦—When 'they are chattering . ' , _ Ths . i , astqaso . of modesty . isthat of . a .-lady who discarded her lover , a sea captain , because he said hehad " hugged the shore . " i
... " Of what fruit , is cider made V— "Don't know , sir , " " What a-atupid boy ! " What did you get when you robbed Widow Coffin ' s orchard V— " I got a licking , sir . " The editok of a down east paper—a bachelorsays , '" The reason why the women do not cut themselves in two by tight lacing is , because they lace around the heart , and that is so hard they cannot effect it . " " Tom , " said a colonel to one of his men , " how can so good and brave a soldier aa you get drunk so often ?"— - Colonel , " replied he , " how can you expect all the virtues that adorn the human character for sixpence a-day a' '—Something in that ! ,
Two sEBVANi girls , who had been to see the trains on . a recently-opened railway ! were comparing notes ; one said , "I-thought I . could svift pvetty fast , but they'd , beat me—they'd run a mite a , minute . " « Oh , " said the other , "that ' s nothing , the telegraph goes a deal faster than that ; if I was a lady I'd always go by telegraph ; " ' Mr . Dvce Sombre has printed in Paris , and circulated in London , a . pamphlet . of fivehundred and ninety octavo pages—to prove Ms perfect sanity . We quote the following sad announcement from tho Era : — " Dr . Buckland , the Dean of Westminster—the eloquent and the learned writer of the remarkable Bridgavater Treatise—is bereft of reason , and is now an inmate of an asvlum near Oxford . "
It has been determined to establish a Presbyterian college in Derry , in connexion ^ with the General Assembly of Ulster , ' for which a lady , namod Mageo , has bequeathed £ 20 , 000 . The Zoiwf ( m * n-y Journal states that the Irish Society of London are to grant ten or twelve acres of land for the site of the college . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ " Will you dine with mc to-morrow , Mr . ?" asked on Irishman to another . ' . '" Faith , and I will , with all my heart . " - "Remember , " . ' tis only a family dinner I ' m askin' you to . " "And what for not ; a . family dinner is a mi ghty pleasant thing . What have you got ? " " Ocb , nothing uncommon ; an elegant piece of corn beef and potatoes . " " By the powers , that beats the world ! list my dinner to
a hair—barring the beef . " Criticism of Sebmons . —Talking the other day with a son of Gael , who had newly come from his " mountains wild , " we inquired' what sort of preacher was the minister of a parish in tho North , whom we had known in our younger years . " Oh , " said Donald , with a shrug of the Shoulder , "ho pleases some folk weel eneuch , and Iken he thinks ho does real weol himsel '; but 1 ken he doesna please mc' He has nae birr about him , sir ; it conies awa frae him easily eneuch ; and it ' s' may bo , too ; of gude eneuch stuff ; but yet it comesna in the way thatmaiat o' us would like it ., We dinna caro _ muckle for a man that throws aff his matter as if it wero silk ribbons he was spinnin '; we wduld like it better did it come aff like the rows frae an auld wife ' s humming wheel ! He doesnsi gie ' s a screed like yer auld freend Mr , Lathflrdesk the
Ah ( sir , he was tho man to din ^ stour frae the book-bo & Yd ! " "All true , " we said ; " but yet we have heard that your present minister is a superior man to our old cronie ; ' Mr . L . We are told ho is both a better scholar , a deeper divine , a more ornate-preacher—in , fact , a person much superior in every respect but one—ho does not roar so loudly . " J'Roar , sir ; that ' s a' the " difference in tho world , sir . It may do wed eneuch wi' you and ithor coUege-byedfoSh to hear fine-spurn sermons , and listened to polished flights of ' what ye cu ' classic eloquence ; but this will not do wi ' a real Highlander , sir . Ka , na , sir , we maun hae something mair than this ; sir ; we maun hae a man that can speak out , sir—a man that can fecht in the poopit , sir—a mah that can flyte , sir—a man that can shake his nieve at ye , sir—a man , sir , that can ca' yo names , sir—in fact , sir , a man that can fricht yo I "—Ayr Observer .
A OnAVEYARD AND ITS CONTESTS . There lie levellers levcll'd , duns done up of them . selves , There are booksellers finally laid on their shelves , Horizontally there lie upright politicians , Dose-a-doso with their patients sleep faultless physicians ; ¦ ' There are slave drivers quietly whipt under ground , There bookbinders , done up in Uoal'tla , are fast bound , ••¦• :.. ' '•; There the babe that ' s unborn is supplied with a berth , There men without legs get thoir six feet of earth , There lawyers repose , each wrapt up in his case , There seekers of office are sure of a place , ' There defendant and plaintiff are equally cast , There shoemakers quietly stick to their last , There brokers at length become silent as stocks , There . stage-drivers sloop without quitting their box . ,: Prater ' s Magazine .
Nearly 150 tons of steel are employed annually for . making steel pens , producing upwards of 250 , 000 , 000 pens . . Tnu Area of Hyde-park is 387 acres ; Kensington-gardens , 290 ; Regent's park , 403 ; St . JamesV pnrk , 83 ; Green-park , 71 ; Victoria-park , ' ICO ; Grcenwiclupark , 174 . ' ' ,- ' '" At the rate of two persons only ! to' e & ch & cvo , Europe and America alone contain land enough to support more than four hundred times their present population with an abundant supply of food . Add to these Asia and Africa , and tho * islands of the Pacific ocean , and how many times must tho population of the earth bo multiplied before tho earth will be " replenished . " At Rknnison ' s baths , Bristol , ' a celebrated diver , last week , jumped from an elevation of eighty feet , with a pair of boots in his hands , which , before rising to tho surface of the' water he had pulled on to his foot .
Female Editors . — There are six papers in the United States under tho editorial charge of ladies . Thc . v are—tho Pittsburgh Visitor , . Mrs . Swissheltn ; tho Windham County democrat , ( Vt ., ) Mrs . 0 . J . II . Nicholas ; tho My ( Seneca Falls , ) Mrs . Blooihor ; tho . Lancaster Gazette , ( Pa ., ) Mrs . Pearson ; the -Yazoo Whig , Mrs ; Horn ; tho Mountain Sough , Mrs . Prowett . —Mw York Observer . A New Trade . —To the number of ingenious devices whereby ¦ some of tho inhabitants ot London obtain a livelihood , another has just been added . Somo speculative individuals , taking advantage ot the nowly invented knife-cleaning machine , lmve established a travelling workshop , with which , after the manner of tho ¦ - tinkers and chair-menders , thoy move about from houso to house ; and clean knives at Id . per dozen . The scehoof operations is constructed in the shapo . of-an' immense \' square cliest , like tho advertising vans , and in it arc two or three of the knife-cleaning machines , with a man to work
A Pebsom, Reading A Paragraph;In The Pap...
each ; and , as is known by those who havo seen knives cleaned by the process , the work is done ia a very satisfactory manner . '¦¦ ¦ ¦ , Soon has been the extraordinary demand of lata for cod-liver , oil for medicinal purposes , that the price has risen in the southern markets from about £ 20 to £ 36 a ton . The liver seems to be the most valuable part ; tho cod fish , which this time last year was bringing £ W per ton , was last month selling as low as £ 9 .
An The Prevention, Otjbe^And \J General Character Of Syfhiltjs, Sthictlnffis.
AN THE PREVENTION , OTJBE ^ AND \ J General character of SYFHILTJS , STHICTlNffiS .
Affections Of Tha Prostrate Gland,.Vener...
Affections of tha PROSTRATE GLAND ,. VENEREAL and SCORBUTIC EllOTTIONS Of the face and body , Mercurial excitement , < fcc , followed by a mild , successful audexpeditieus mode of treatment , . ' , . Thirty-first edition , Illustrated by Twenty-Six Anatomical Engravings on Steel . ' New arid improved Edition , enlarged to 11 * 6 pages , ust published ^ pric * 2 s . Cd ; or by post , direct from tho Establishment , ' 3 s . fid . in postage stamps . . i " THE SILBNT ETUEND , " a Medical "Work on Venereal and Syphilitic Diseases , Secoudarj Spmptoms , eouon-haa . & c , mthaTMSCnmiOXFOR THEIR PREVENTION ; physical exhaustion , and decay of the frame , from the eftect * of solitary indulgence aiid the injurious consequence * o ! the abuse of Mercury ; with Observations on the obligutioni ofiUnitrAOB , and directions for obviating certain disqualifications . Illustrated by twenty-six coloured engravings . By It . and L . PERRY and Co ., Consulting Surgeons , 19 , Beniera-stveet , Oxford-street , London . Published by tho authors , and sold by Strange , 21 , Paternostcr-rotv ; linnnay , 6 » , and Sanger , 150 , Oiford-street ; Starie , -2 S , Tich . bomestreet
- , Haymnrket j and Gordon , 146 Lendeiuiaiin street , London ; Powell , 88 , Grafton street , Dublin ; nndlbiirnesand Co ., Uith Walk , Edinburgh . Part 1 . treat * of the miatomy and physiology of the reproductive organs , and is illustrated by six coloured engravings , .. - ... ; _ Part It . treats of the consequences resulting from escessive indulgence , producing nervous excitement , and generative incapacity . It is particularly addressed to tttose who are prevented in consequence from entering iato the marriage state . Illustrated by three explanatory ? ngravt » gs . .. - --; Part III . treats of the diseases resulting from surecnos . Illustrated by seventeen coloured engravings , Part IV . contains a Remedv for the PjiEvfi . 'm ' o . v of Disease by -a-simple appucatiom , by which the' danger ol infection is- obviated . Its actios is simft . h but sere . It acts with tho virus chemically , and destroys its power on tho system . This important part of tlie work should not escaj ) o the reader ' s notice . Part V . is devoted to tiie consideration of marriage a % & Us duties . The reason of physical disqualifications , and the causes of unproductive unions are also considered , and the whole subject critically and philosophically inquired into . .
The Authors as regularly educated members of th » Medical Profession , haviug had long , diligent , and Practical observations in the various Hospitals and Institutions for the relief of those afflicted with i ^ pUilia , Secondary Symptoms , Stricture , Venereal and Scorbutic Eruptions of the face and booy , have perhaps had an unusual ' opportunity of witnessing thoir dreadful and destructive consequences in all their various stages . Hence , knowing the practical necessity of sound judgment in such sorions cases , and haying seen the Injury that has arisen from the carelessness and neglect of its study , Messrs . R . and L . PERRY have devoted their attention exclusively to thispeculiar class of maladies , and the relief they have consequently been enabled to render to their fellow creaturesis fully testified and gratefully
, acknowledged by convalescent Patients , and others daily arriving in town from all parts of the country , for the express purpose only of personal consultation , while their exertions hare been crowned with the most signal advan . tages , yet , from what they have experienced in inquiring into the nature and causes of these infectious complaints ( from their most simple condition to that o / ihe most danger , ous and inveterate ) they have always entertained the possibility of their meventio-v and removal . Messrs . R . and L . Pekbv and Co ., Surgeons , may he consuited as usual , at 19 , Beracrs-street , Oxford-street , London , from eleven to two , and from five to eight in the evening ; and on Sundays from eleven to one . —Consultation Fee £ 1 .
THE CONCENTRATED DETERSIVE EBBEB 3 B AN AKTI-SIPIililTlC BEMEDY , Is recommended in Svphilis and Secondary Symptoms . It searches out and purifies the diseased humours from tie Wood , and cleanses the system , from all ( . ' etei / oi-atingcauses . Its influence iu the restoration to health ot ptr « sons labouring under the consequences which inevitably follow contamination is undeniable , and it also constitutes n certain cure fo iscurvy , scrofula , and all cutaneous ernptiens .. Its active principle we transmitted by the medium athe circulating fluid throughout the entire frame , an * even penetrate the more minute vessels , removing and « pelling in its course all corruptions and impurities from the vital stream , sons altogether to eradicate the virus of disease , and expel it with tfce insensible perspiration through the medium ef the pores of the skin , and urine . Price lis ., or four bottles in one for 33 s ., by which lis . is saved , alse iu £ 3 cases , hy which will be saved £ 1 12 s . To be had at the London Establishment
THE CORDIAL BALM Ol STBIAOUM Is expressly employed to renovate the impaired powers of life , when exhausted by the influence exerted b y solitary indulgence on the system . Its action is purely balsamic ; Its power in re-invigorating the . frame in all cases of ner . reus and sexual debility , obstinate gleets , impotency ; bar . renness , and debilities arising from venereal excesses , hasbeen demonstrated hy its unvarying success iu thousands of cases . To those persons who are prevented entering the married state by the consequences of early errors , it is invaluable . Price lis , per bottle , or four quantities iu one for 83 s . The £ 5 cases of Svriacosi ot Concentrated Detbbsiv « EsSEXCE can only be had at 19 , lierners-stveet , Oxfordstreet London , whereby there is a Saving of £ 1 I ' - ' s . ) and the patient is entitled to receive advice without a fee , which aivautage is applicable only to those who remit £ 5 , tor a-. acker .
' PERRY'S PURIFYING SPECIFIC PILLS Constitute an effectual remedy in all cases of Gonorrhoa Gleet * , Stricture , and Diseases of the Urinary Organs . Price 2 s . 0 d ., 4 s . Gd ., and lis . per box . Patients are requested to be as minute and cmicite aa possible in tli « detail o ' f their cases , noting especially th * duration of tiie complaint , the mode of its commencing , its symptoms and progress , age , habits of living , and ¦ position in society . Medicines can bo forwarded to any part of tk « world ; no difficult ! can occur , as they wUf be secur « k packed , and carefully protected from observation . ' N . B . —Medicine Vendors can be supplied b y most of the WholesaW Patent Medicine Houses in London .
Ad00321
CURES FOR THE UNCUHEDJ HOLLOWAT'S OINTMENT . An Extraordinary Cure of Scrofula , or Jung ' s Evil , Extract of a letter from Mr . J . II . Allid . iv , 209 High-jfreet , Cheltenham , dated January 22 nd , 1 S 50 . Sir , —My eldest son . when about three years of age , was : ifflict » d with a glandular swelling in the neck , which after a short time broke out into an ulcer . An eminent medical man pronounced it as a very bad case of scrofula , and prescribed for a considerable time without effect . , Tho disease then for years went on gradually increasing in virulence , when besides the ulcer in the * neck , another formed below the left knee , and a third under the eye ; besides seven others on the left arm , with a tumour between Hie eyes which was expected to break . During tlie whole of the time my suffering boy had received the constant advice of the most celebrated medical gentlemen at Cheltenham , besM « s being for several months at the General Hospital
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 20, 1850, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_20071850/page/3/
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