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2 THE STAR OF FREEDOM. JPNE 26, iSft0
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GREAT FIRE AT MONTREAL. On the 7th inst....
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* Tress of matter compels postponement u...
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FRAXKLLN PIERCE. Democratic Casmdate roa...
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WILLIAM KUFHS KEHJ, VSUOCBATIC CiSBttiis...
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SHIPWRECKS AND ACCIDENTS AT SEA. Shipwre...
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THE CHINESE IN CALIFOKXIA. Tbe "invincib...
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WORKING TAILORS' ASSOCIATION , ' » «3, w B3TMISSTER bridge ROAD, LAHBEIH.
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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.
Emsbcbqh.—The Strike Of The Plasterers W...
This refusal of Meagher to appear in public has given rise to a universal feeling of disappointment among the n > habitants of this city .
We havehad two'Women * 'Rights Contentions , the one immediately following tho other . The first held at Mapilon , in Ohio ( which I m entioned in my last letter ) , has oonctaded its sittings . The other , held at West Chester , Fensylvanta , has aha concluded its labours . ThisWomens iu " hts movement is certainly gauunz ground in America ; and t h ose Conventions have exercised a very considerable influence upon public op inion in regard to it . Fearful that this lenptby « ' yarn " is likely to take up too much of your space ,. ! enclose an account of the proceedings at both Conventions , ia order that you may be able , if yon have room , to gratify the curiosity of your female readers and all those who take an interest in the progress of the " Womans' Cause" in this land of "fearless thoug ht and fearless action . " * 1 find tbe best account in the "New York Tribune , " a journal which , althoug h very far from coming " up to the mark , " in my estimation , honourably takes up , and fearlessly discusse s , every movement which may contain even a germ of truth .
Jlr . Cl a y ' s health remains much the same as during the past fortnig ht , there being no change for either the better or worse .
2 The Star Of Freedom. Jpne 26, Isft0
2 THE STAR OF FREEDOM . JPNE 26 , iSft 0
Great Fire At Montreal. On The 7th Inst....
GREAT FIRE AT MONTREAL . On the 7 th inst . Montreal was visited with a most destructive confl ag rat i on , which has laid in ashes a considerable number of buildings in the business part of our city . I t c ommenced at sis o ' c lock , a . m ., at the corner of St . Peter and Lemoyne-streets , in thecarpenters shop of J . ' , Marsin , ivhieb , together with bis residence , was quickly consumed , and two of his children were burned to death . One died on the spot and the other in the course of the
aftercoon . From this point the fire extended to old St . Andrew ' s Church , which , together with tho dwelling-house of J . llahoney , and several out-buildings , was destroyed . On the opposite side of ( he street , the store of Ryan Brothers , and Co ., and Xo . 21 ( warehouse ) were burned down , with a large quantity of valuable goods in tbem . Other buildings in the nei ghbourhood , including those of Stephen G . Mills , Torrance and Jfcisteed , J . and J . Mitchell , and Lewis and Levi a e s Eschanso Hotel were in gre a t d a ng e r , and were saved only by the most strenuous exertions of the firemen - .
A strong wind from the south-west earned the devourfug element to St-Paui ' s-street , destroying in its passage the roofs of two houses in St Francis and Xavier-steets , belonging to Mr . Dewitfc . and o c cup ied as exchange offices . The Commercial Buildings occupied by the Imperial Customs Department , and others , were also consumed . Also , the store of Seymour and 'Whitney , and some outbuildings of Frothingbam and Workman , but their store was saved . The fire then extended its ravages on both sides of tho street , as far down as Little and Joseph-streets , where it was subdued . Several houses facing the steamboat landings were consumed . Total loss estimated at £ 250 to £ 300 , 000 .
* Tress Of Matter Compels Postponement U...
* Tress of matter compels postponement until next week of the re solutions , and of the * Woman ' s Rights Convention . '
Fraxklln Pierce. Democratic Casmdate Roa...
FRAXKLLN PIERCE . Democratic Casmdate roa thb Amebicas Pbesidexct . Franklin Pierce is anative of New Hampshire , and i s now about fourrr-six years of age . His birthplace is in Hillstorongh county , which has also the honour of heiaz tha birth place of Daniel Webster , Gen . Cass , Gen . Dixon Ex-United States Senator , and several other men who have risen to distinction . Benjamin Pierce , the father of the present nominee of the Democratic National Convention , served with distinction in the rerofatfonary -war . He afterwards became High Sheriff of tha county of Hillsborough and in 1 S 37 to 1 S & was governor of the state , and w a s much esteemed for his patriotism , and for his public and private worth .
Franklin Pierce had the advantages not only of the best education the neighbouring colleges could afford , but of an early induction into the science of politics . He studied law also , which he made his profession , and in the practice of which he is now profitably engaged at Concord , in his native State . His reputation as an advocate and jurist stands high . He is about middle sire , speaks with much fervour and eloquence , and is cultivated and pleasing in his manners . Mr . Pierce , after having been repeatedl y elected to a seat in the House of the New Hampshire Legislature , of which he was also speaker for a session , was returned as a Representative to Congress , in 1 S 33 , and was re-elected in 1835 . "While a member of the House of Representatives , he was elevated to the TJ . S . Senatebat resigned in 1 S 42 one
, , year before the expiration of his term . On resigning , he returned to the practice of the law . His opposition to John P . Hale , whose views on some questions he did not like , forms an interesting episode in the history of the Democratic party in Sew Hampshire . Ji pon the accession of Mr . p lk to the Presidency , he opted Mr . Fierce a seat in hj a cabinet , with the choice of the War Department or the Attorney-Generalship , but the Offer was declinfd , as Mr . P . considered he could better advance tbe interests of his family by continuing in the practice of his profession . But when war with Mexico was declared , Franklin Pierce , who re used a seat in the cabinet , was the first man in the Union to enrol his name m t h e volunteer army . He then sent about organising a regiment , of which when completedhe was elected colonel
, , though he sought not the hononr . He even wished tbe command transferred to Col . Eansom , president of a military college in Vermont , but bis wishes were not allowed to prevail , and CoL K . was appointed to the rank of maiot m the regiment . 4 Before the regiment was prepared to proceed to Mexico , President Polk appointed Mr . Pierce to tbe vacant & ^? w « £ ! I tbo Th 5 rd ***&& consisting of the imth ( New England ) regiment , the Twelfth , raised in the Southern States , and the Fifteenth raised in Ohio and Wisconsin . He soon after left for Mexico , and was at the ianning of the American troops at Vera Crnz . From thence le marched at the head of a strong force to join General
»» u , ana inonga one utile sailed in actual war service , the tact and skill with which ha led the march , repulsed the guerillas , and took care of his men , gained him high compliments from Gen . Scott , who is now " likely to be his rival in the contest for the Presidency . General Pierce was present at most of the hardest fought battles in Mexico , under General Scott , and exhibited all the qnalities of a good soldier . His health suffered , however , from the climate , and from a severe fall from his fiorse at tha battle of Contreras , he was not able to take that active and prominent part in the battle of Churubnseo , which he ardently desired . Few officers in the army Wire so beloved by their soldiers as General Pierce was by lus . He was kmd and liberal towards them , and many incidents illustrative ef this trait in his character have been told H "
. At the close of the war he returned to his old home , and r ^ ed the law practice . Th e Democratic State Convention of > ew Hampshire , assembled at Concord in January - last , nominated him to the Presidency , but he declined the nomination , in a letter which concluded thus :-« To these , my sincere and grateful acknowledgments . I desire to add , that the same motives which induced me Eeyeral yeara ago to retire from public life , and which since tfcat time have controlled my ] udgment in this respect , now iM . ™^* " * **»«!»> «» of m * " > . « ^ 7 event , before the Democratic National Convention at Baltimore , to Which you are a delegate , would be utterly regnant to my taste and wishes . " J * u „ u * ui , u > »^ n" Pi ^ e was . toerefore , as much as anyone , surprised to learn ha nomination for the Fresidenev Tt ;« 3 SES ty * H * fte 0 ffice ^ "Jnou ? tiff Sell and to his country .
William Kufhs Kehj, Vsuocbatic Cisbttiis...
WILLIAM KUFHS KEHJ , VSUOCBATIC CiSBttiis F 08 ^ g AMEWCiS _ _ „ Tice-Phesi » esc t . The Hon . William Rufos King ( who , by the nrovisinnq Of the Constitution and the election of the Senafe hal b consequence of the death of two President in ofSce , twice iecome Tice-President of the United States ) has for maw years presided over the Senate . He is a man also oS political experience ; entered the Senate npSrSrf ffi ? years ago , where he has remained ever since with IhL SiZl > { eml « * «« . j 2 J 35 KepX ^ wtopAnetKzz gwtnwnb at the Court of France wm $
¦—•» - — ^ . teBSLi ssat ^
William Kufhs Kehj, Vsuocbatic Cisbttiis...
THE FREE TRADE SYSTEM . -WHERE WILL IT END ? to ma swroR of tab an * ot """»*• . _ nat i 8 Sm -Durin g the last three years we have had what is termed a prosperoustrade , in the manufacturing ««™" ' and yefc we find the operatives generally in JJ ""*»^ state of poverty . The demand for labour has been ^ unpre cedentedl y great , but still the supply has been ?«»/«¦«*• From the farming districts of England and Ireland cro wds were daily flocking into the towns in this district ,. especially to Bradford , and thus the trades , easy of acquisition , were speedily tilled to their utmost limit . This . enabled the manufacturers to keep down wages to the panic leva ! , ana during tbe J 3 st year , when a lull took place , * o reduce them to the lowest limit ever before experienced in tms neighbourhood . T alinrfo mn « . narticularly to tne >» oo
combers . In addition to tho extraordinary mfluxof tanas to this latter trade , combing machines have been brought into operation to an enormous extent . Scarcely a wwa passes that some improvement is not announced ann a ^ new patent obtained . One man , Samuel Lister , son ol W » Lister , formerly M . P . for Bradford , ca « mot have less than twenty patents-some say more-to supersede hand laoour Were it not for these machines , or •» devils , as tbey are familiarly termed , forty or fifty thousand operatives wouia be required in tbe towns of Bradford , Halifax , Iveigmey , Bingley , and their outskirts , and the manufacturers womu be compelled to pay something like a remunerative price for labour , whereas , through the above causes , tne nest and quickest workmen can scarcel y gain a subsistence ay long hours ofincessant toil ; whilst the slow and inferior workmen are steeped to tbo lips in hopeless poverty , ana the old men are gradually giving u p the bootless struggle , and finishing their career in the Union Workhouse . At the same time that there was such an influx into the combine trade , there has also been a great demand for
powerloom weavers , and the wages obtained has waucea large numbers of young women to pour into the weaving sheas . Most reluctantly have the employers paid the wages which a limitation of "hands" forced from them , and they are now straining every nerve to create a surp lus of weavers by adopting the - two loom system , " or causing each weaver to attend two looms , and pay ing them proportionately less for double work . Should they succeed m their nefarious designs , the result will be that the weavers will have to do double the quantity for less than half the price they now obtain . In all directions this system of "icreased production and reduced wages is taking place , inrougnout Leicestershire , Notting hamshire , and Derbyshire , tho improved frames are making havoc of the framework knitters . We are , therefore , naturall y led to ask—Where will it end ? Is there to be no law but that of capital ?
Are the p eop le to ho murdered in order that a few men may acquire large fortunes ? But we are seriously told that this system is a great public benefit . The political economists gravevely inform us that all individual losses in these matters is a public gain . Let us see whether such be the fact . They tell us that it cheapens the cost of manufactured articles . I deny it . On the contrary ; I assert , from experience , that the spurious trash now sold under the names o f woollen cloth , Orleans , Coburgs , Paramatta ' s , < kc , is a mass of flimsy rubbish , —like the Jew ' s razors , made to sell , —that the mass of so-called woollen cloth is composed of warps made of cotton refuse , and the weft of old woollen rags , picked from the dungheap , ground up , and mixed with a small quantity of wool , to hold it together , which system has broug ht theTorkshire woollen trade intojdisgrace . I was the other day speaking to a man who
gains a livelihood by trading one sort of goods for another . He had been to Leeds , and purchased some cloth . (?) He had some imitation broad cloth , which he purchased for 2 s 6 d . per yard , and which felt and looked to be worth 10 s . per yard . Simpletons are thus taken in . In like manner with Orleans , Coburgs , & e . They are made from cotton-warps and devil-weft . Formerly , when a woman bought a stuff-gown , whether coarse or fine , she had some wear out of it , but now a few weeks * Sunday wearing and the colours are faded , as cotton and wool wiil not equally hold colours , whilst a few days active work at the wash tub finishes up the flimsy rag . So , iu like manner with the miserable apologies for stockings made in Leicestershire ; they are made of cast wool , deviled up , and spun to have the appearance of yarn . They are woven on the wholesale slaughtering system , and finished b y bein g
placed on wooden shapes , to make them look like regular " wrought hose . " Tho shopkeepers get as hi gh a price for these sham goods as the credulity or ignorance of their customers will permit . In like manner , it is difficult to obtain a pair of stockings worth purchasing . 1 allude to that description usually worn by working men . Like a whited sepulchre , they have a decent outward appearance , but inside tbey are a mass of ragged ends and unseemly lumps . When worn for a week , ten to one your toes become rather inquisitive , and peep out , to your great annoyance and discomfort ; or , should they stand the ordeal of tho wash tub , when dried , they look infinitely more like garters than stockings . Yet thousands of men aro kept in
a state of semi-starvation to uphold this system of infamous deception . Where then do the public gain by these nefarious practices ? The workmen are deprived of employment ; and those who cannot procure work at miserable wages are compelled to become the recipients of p arish pay . The purchasers are cheated , and the shopkeepers generally are forced to pay poor-rates to support unwilling idlers who would otherwise be their best customers . Well may we ask—where will this system of competition end ? End it must some time . It carries within itself tbe seeds of its own destruction , but meanwhile it is destroying the working-classes , who , ere long , will be compelled to form a Labour League , or suffer themselves to be blotted out of the Book of Life .
Scarcel y a trade can be mentioned in which neck-break competition , and "the devil take the hindmost , " is not abundantly exemplified . Even Lucifer-matches , which were once sold at a penny a box , are got up in a spurious manner and sold at three boxes for a halfpenny . But tbe most provoking part of the matter is , that , if we , who daily experience the bitter curse of this system of deception and fraud should , in the abundance of onr contempts , find fault with its aiders a nd abettors , we are immediately assailed as " Tory tools , " " Protectionists . " & e . The upholders of knavery are seldom at a loss for phrases to mislead the public , and draw unthinking dupes to their standard . All institutions which tend to uphold this piratical state of things are termed " natural , " " orderly , " " constitutional , " & c . ; but any approach towards a diminution of the power of plunder and lajjaoity , is denounced as "anarchy . " This is a net nhrase
of the money-scraping fraternity . It has been made to do some duty of late years , and is an indispensable note in the gamut of the sham patriot . During the lade commotions on the continent , every proposed change which was calculated to better the condition of the operatives was declaimed against as anarchical , and the true friends of the people termed anarchists . So adroit are the enemies of man ' s rights at coining new phrases , or perverting the meaning of old ones , that we shall need an improved dictionary for the benefit of the uninitiated in the science of political jugglery . It might proceed in something like the following style : —Anarchy : Any attempt to establish ajust state of society . Constitutional Monarchy : A spider ' s web to catchsmaliflies . ! Anarehist : An upright conscientious man , who desires to do as he would be done by . Civilisation : A scientific mode of fleecing mankind , making them thoroughly
wretched , and giving them an abundance of high-sounding phrases and senseless jargon in return . Liberator Moderate : A political mountebank , who can blow hot or cold to suit his own purpose . One who desires to pull down those above him , and trample on all beneath him in the social scale—a faithless , treacherous h ypocrite . Absolutist : One who possesses a large estate , or a long purse , wrung from the plunder of the people , and who affects to believe in the doctrine of Divine Rightr-wbioh means , that mankind were created ; for the benefit of kings and their parasites Philanthropist : One who cheats his workpeople , and whose name is paraded m the newspapers as a snbscriber to public baths , washhouses . and ragged schools , Ac ., « fcc . It is thus that oar language is losmgits common acceptation , tbrouph the fraudulent proceedings of those who evade the inianc-& * " ^ t Q e sweat of thy brorf shalt thoneat bS
, . " Were all the evils inflicted on the people by these marks might be deemed harsh and uncharitable ; — but it is not so . it is now notorious thJ that respectable knavery « studied as a See- and he who is the greatest adept at cheating his neighbour !™ considered a sharp trader and good business man . Therefore is our commercial proceedings an endless and intricate maze of deception , avarice , and chican e r y , somn o b s " that few men wiU enter into any transaction of imnortanea without the aid of a lawyer , and even on the bed oTdmrh those who have accumulatedl a few pounds by their industry are compelled to give a portion of it to some legal name that their children may obtain quiet possession of the re ' mainder . The capitalist , by the aid of machinery , approtonimseu ine wmcb
pnates ¦ means should enable the operative to live , whilst the landlord , by denying him the use of his property , oa which to exercise his industry , thus converts him into a hopeless , though unwilling pauper . What , then , is to become of tbe penniless labourer « Where will it end ! It is not difficult to surmise what it will lead to , tho straggling shopkeepers will ultimately find themselves ruined by the system which they have so blindly supported , and awake from their delusion to find themselves helpless paupers . We are rapidly approximating to two extremes—enormous wealth and servile mendicity Such are the mighty and much vaunted benefits conferred by capitalists and speculators on the children of labour I am , yours truly , Georob White Bradford , Yorkshire , Jane , 1852 .
Shipwrecks And Accidents At Sea. Shipwre...
SHIPWRECKS AND ACCIDENTS AT SEA . Shipwreck axd Loss op Li ** t -t Haxewood , of H j ^ iSi ^ i ^ / 1 . fl , a a mile off the coast of the villa ™ « £ V ! ei tt esia about Devon , and her crew coS ^ Vs ^ Sn * l ^ TX ? disaster ocenrrpd in ii ,. « auiA ? . I men' perished . The disaster occurred in the middle of
( he dtv'Jd • V ? r a number of people on the shore \ £ ? ' ad , n Slght of atttmptedto 5 ^ iS ^ tlt '? rtWBn » " »« M « l «>« I Ihevesschit b conjectared , JTS ^* tS £ she was observed to heel over , being struck tit ^? ly m , and soon after sunk and broke o * pX u ^ wT ? izv ^* ' ^*^^
A vessel of about 500 tons burden hntf / im ,. „ •„ . S ^ R ^ A ^ E ^»^ feS ^ ^ K Duncan , ff 2 ££ tft * ? ' * * ' - * " * * Argestes had a n ^ wSS ** ° her ca * ' and the Sthaxgfdbd , Jimp ifi mv Seven Carnarvon for l \ Sraack p ™«« m » . d Plough ; she Lonte ^ - ^ Mte on the bar this morning ; crew saved .
The Chinese In Califokxia. Tbe "Invincib...
THE CHINESE IN CALIFOKXIA . Tbe "invincible barrier" that so long se parated thn in habitants of China from the rest of the world is atlJin a fair way of being broken down . The temptation of Californian gold has been more than the Celestials worn capable of withstanding ; so in thousands they are hiddine adieu to the dominions of their paternal ruler tha •« bm ther of the sun and the moon , " and hurryimr awar tn thl golden land of the " barbarians . " y S affay t 0 the Brother Jonathan is becoming alarmed at theprosnect of a large immigration . They are continual y JS ^; n batches of 500 to 1 , 000 in Very vesseTfrom HERS 10 . 000 are reported as read y to come forward in a fleet nf merchantmen from Canton and other ports A prejudice which has for some time existed in the minda ef «« i ^ ^^ aS ^ t fl » Cbmamen ffi £ S 2 Sh and it is feared will lea'd to measuresofl ^ SfK »' The assumed evil which ttey S ^ & iS ^ at
| carrying away » r ., y au mo gold * h «^ they ^ anSfB f W 1 & out any commensurate expenditure ii tfiXSS & SE duced the Governor of the State to adS a sneeS message on the subject to the Legislature It ' hturned by the Governor that the Chinamen are all fitoS
The Chinese In Califokxia. Tbe "Invincib...
laboifr a ^? » wh 0 " " > nearfy 8 l 1 the proceeds of their SLw inclusion has been jumpe d at without any reliable information to justify it . The best-informed perwmp 5 on " ' Cte ( i with China W truth of tins aswhim Pn , am n' thr ° i » gh some of their spokesmen , amoa | X . " . bestial rejoicing in the name of Hab-NYa is the n i « ; Lave « , bli 6 h ° u a letter in reply to the Governor s EMS Hab . W and his friends' letter is a most excell „ , nPr ° d u ! ° » . and full of sly humour . They tell the Go-JX h , " m their country all great men are learned men , Thi i e Iftan ' mnk is just according to his education . ¦ ine mierence is obrin »« * h . t thn ( inventor , beine a great
, man by virtue of his high office , must of course bo also a learned man . This is a severe hit . There is another , Phi m 0 T ? H , nerio character . " We do not deny that many t-nmese tell lies ; and so do many Americans , eaenia courts of justice . Ilab-Wa evidently thinks the latter failing something worse than a " white lie . " Tho tenour of this let er has turned the tide a good deal in favour of the celestials , and it ig sincerely to be hoped that the prejudice againstthem will soon die awayl a < L GoTernor and Legislature of California will look beyond tbe present hour they may recognise a great pur-P . , n _ tbe unprecedented fact of a ' large Chinese immigration . They may welcome the thoug ht of Chinese fellowcitizens , learning their customs , their laws , and their religion . Their patriotism or their ambition may suggest to them that such a race . ChmesB in oriein . but American bv
education , may form a convenient link between the States and China itself ; and thnt , aided by it and their geographical circumstances , the Americans may one day acquire in China and the Asiatic archipelago the position now occupied by the British in India .
Working Tailors' Association , ' » «3, W B3tmisster Bridge Road, Lahbeih.
WORKING TAILORS' ASSOCIATION , ' » « 3 , w TMISSTER bridge ROAD , LAHBEIH .
Ad00211
, _ TBCSIEES . iOBD GODEEKH , | A . A . VASS 1 TTABT , Es « . As workinc-men organised for the manngtment and execution of our own business , we appeal with great confidence to our fellowworking men for their hearty support . W « ask that support in tho main words of plain men , without tlie usual shopkeeping tricks and laisenoods . Wedosohecauseweknowthat we offer an opportunity tor the exercise of a sound economy , but we make our appeal more particularly because we believe that every honest artizanin supporting us will feel that he is performing a duty to the men of his class , which to overlook or neglect , would be a treason and a disgrace .
Ad00212
THE CAUSE OF LABOUR . * VEE CITY WORKING TAILORS' ASSOX CIATION . 23 , Cullum-street , Fenchurcb-street , City . A few working men holding the conviction that co-operation is the best means of elevating their condition , and timt of the class to which they belong , have formed themselves into a body for the pur . pose of carrying on buiinessfor themselves on the principle of Associated Labour , at the above address ; and earnestly appeal to all who are desirous of rescuing the working men from their present degrading position attendant upon the infamous slop and sweating system . They espjeiaUy depend upon their brother working men of other associations to give them their support . They pledge themselves to deal honestly by their customers , in supplying only genuine articles , and charging a fair and moderate price and no effort shall be wanting on their part to give satisfaction to those who may favour them with a trial . Chaeles BowEs , gManager . LIST OF PEICES FOR CASH ONH . Dress Coat win a i / ress uoat £ 110 0
Ad00213
«*« ... iujuiaiNUlS ASSOCIATION tt „« = x „ ^ SoUy Established 1849 . Head Office , London , Lincoln ' s Inn Field Chambers and 2 Ports ¦ » t a mBT ^ A 8 ^?^ 1 Rcferee-R . Warwick , Esq . M S ° ^ ALLIANCE' isSQCIA . issss anHttM ^^ Regies Offices , L i ncoln ' s ffjiSdX ^ j 5 ? 1 & Nnrr f , r - ? tre ?' Coin ' s fon Fields , London . ¦ SW ' SB ^
Ad00214
'X'o the Millions ! QAPITALISTS MAY , BY COMBINATION VJ prevent a Poor Man from ohtaunng tbe highestTralue fnr v labou r , but Capital can never nrevent « PnS ? w »« i , or ? , and 90 Cheapside , the Working Classes may be nSSSrf ^ S ? everything necessary to famish an eightroomed ELI * & nS . ' ar & lB Warr 8 ntd ¦ " WJTSCft The following is the list of articles — . Hall Lamp , 10 s 6 d ; Umbrella Stand , 4 s 6 d . is „' Bronzed Dining-room Fender and Standards . . ' ? 2 Set of polished Steel Fire-irons X £ Brass Toast-stand , Is 6 d ; Fire Guards , Is 6 d I n Bronad and polished Steel Scroll Fender .. 5 ? Polished Steel Fire-irons , brieht nan .. ? 6 .
Ad00215
M ° 4 ' S vEG ^ rI ? Trr 7 ~ Fr ~ rT ~ r made by W . C . MOAT , Member » n P 1 ** 5 geons of England , and ApotheSlu tt ^} 0011 ^ «* Sur ! with theJata"Mr . MoBHox , tueHyg elst IS' / T ^ Partner -a remedy for the great m , Wy * ft ' m £ l % * ^ lege of Health , " markable restorations to heath wsea « es , often effecting retiefaXS Me « Hctoel conWnh g ^<^ S 2 Snl 1 ? » . m ? useful F » mi ! J and safe aperient . 0 mc P P ei- hes with those of a mild Aa » iffSr 4 » ss ** . *« «* ** evacua « ons . ? J ?' -. v b "e ^ ee . on the regalanty of the alvine ^ S ' uS ^ occurrences of whiei *« ,, !„ .., n' "i . P ^ V ^ ordersilthefrenhftnt :.
Ad00216
LONDON AND COUNTY FIEE AND LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY . IKCOEPOBATEB BV . ACT OF PARLIAMENT . Chief OJiee ,-iSi , OXFOBD STHEET , LOXDOK . Near the British tfusettm . With Branches or Agencies in many of the principal Towns Great Britain . Bankers . —IOST 30 TX AND COUNTY BANK . SPECIAL ADVANTAGES . A Guarantee Fund of £ 100 , 000 with a minimum interest of £ 3 * D 6 r cent Policies Indisputable , and not liahle to Forfeiture . Credit given for payment of premiums in certain cases . LifePolicy Stamps and Medical Fees paid by Hie Company . l ' olioies issued from £ 10 to £ 5 , 000 , at Low Rates of Premium , payable yearly , half-yearly , quarterly , or monfMj . The whole of profits divided . „ Unhealthy and ' declined ' lives accepted . Prompt payment of policy claims , , , - -, t ,, - Ordinary Fire Insurances taken at Is . 6 d . per cent ., and loss of rent by fii'e provided against . ... , . Fire policies issued / re « o /«« peu 8 « , when the annual premiums are 5 s . or upwards . . Policies
Ad00217
CHEAP APiO BTANMtABB WORKS A ' otd PttblMftfag in Nos . at One Penny each , Atl SFUSXDWVl mVSJ & AISD , l .-THE LOST MARINERS , or the Search for Sir John Franklin , an authentic account of the various expeditions that have been ent in search of the missing ships : with numerous plates . 2 . —LAMARTlNE'S TRAVELS in the Holy Land : with coloured Frontispieca and Title , and numerous other plates , 3 . —THE PILGRIM'S PROGRSSS-compfetfi edition ; with coloured Frontispiece and numerous other plates . 4 . —THE TRIALS OF LOVE , or Woman ' s Reward , by Hannah Maria Jones : a tale of surpassing interest . With a superbly engraved Frontispiece and Title , and other plates , Sixteen large pages in each Pcmy Number ,
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THE ROAD TO HEALTH ! HOLLOWAY'S pills ; CURB OP A DISORDERED LIVER AND BAD „ , , DIGESTION . Gopy of a letter from Mr . R . w . JBrbu , Chemist , 1 , Presco l Street , Liverpool , dated l oth June , 1851 . To Professor HoMowAr , ' list ' of PriZin ^™ S ^ PJ" *™ " * ba ™ « ood the hi g hes t on w s a le list ot Proprietary Medicines for some years . A eustomsr to wliom I can refer for any inquiries , desires me to let lu know the part culavsof her case , ghe had been troubled for jearsTith I £ dered liver and bad digestion . On the last occasion however the insoseierely , that doubts were entertained of her not being able ;^ T - ?""" lt ; fortunately ; she was induced to tn vour Fills , she had Sltr-Mtf ' ^ ^^ fi , ' and eaci ' ™ SK & 1 ™ K « vShe «> n -tinned to take them , and although health I ^ fln n ™ rf ' 8 hei 8 now inthe enjoymento perfect neaitn . l could have sent you many more cases hut the shore , from the severity of the attack , and the speedy ewe I think sS much in favour of your astonishing Pills ( Sienedi ft wS AN E HH ° ? J ¥ KY CURE SBeOMATW
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 26, 1852, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_26061852/page/2/
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