On this page
- Departments (3)
- Adverts (8)
-
Text (13)
-
S ' "" ' A < T B T A E fctfe portiof 2 ....
-
xN EFFECTUAL CUJffi FOR PILES, FISTULAS, &c
-
a$mtiU'upt&-
-
(From the Gazette oi Tuesday, Mar. ' SS....
-
•CHRISTENED. At the parish church, Brigh...
-
An improvement has been made in chimney ...
-
WALKS AND WANDERINGS AROUND VVAij O'CONN...
-
TIIE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Conld neither th...
-
Tnu Arctic Expedition.—A Reward of £ 2,0...
-
Gaution to the Pdblio.—No sooner is a me...
-
f oitce mm
-
MARLBOROUGH STREET . _ STAnBi„a Cas-T^ D...
-
Mtjtekiovjs asd Tragical Occurrenck IS E...
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
S ' "" ' A < T B T A E Fctfe Portiof 2 ....
2 _. : - " _" _,. S ' - , - ¦ . _; : : _~ - ~ _^ _A < \ & _fevvff _° _^ B _s T A E . - _ , — - — _ - _^^ 1 _? _jgl _^
Xn Effectual Cujffi For Piles, Fistulas, &C
xN EFFECTUAL _CUJffi FOR PILES , FISTULAS , & c
Ad00211
_ABEUNETHY-S PILE OINTMENT-. .. . . „„; , silos i and comparatively how few of the _ifffifcterl _T _« ave _Tboen pcrma-WHAT a painful and _noxous ai > _tase _ys m , TW no doubt ) . _^^ from the . ttsc 0 f _povretfel aperients W neatly cured by _^ T f _~ i _^ VrJe 6 _^ indeed , strong Internal medicine should _ahrajs _bemnded m all too _frequently _^^^ IH _^ _Jt _^ _ex hnm _Ointment after years of ac _tesuHering , placed hmiself under cases of this complmnt . . T 1 " _;^ _"" w j _^„ etliv , was by him restored to perfect 'health , and has enjoyed it ever the treatment of tli ; itcroment- _^«> Dis 0 P ! i > 0 T * er a perkMi ., f _fil ' teen years , during which time the same _Ahtr-«« ce w . tliouttii 9 _/ : ji ( ht « t r . _tm-noyne _^ _ _^ number of _desperate caseSi both in and out of the _Pronethian Prescription has been ine _™* f « v » « _^ _^^ _^ _^ Kcdicalcare and some „ f them for a very considerprietor's circles of _^ Si _^^ ent wiwiotreduoed to tbe Public by the desire of many who had hten perleetty able time . Aberne hy * _Ww _*« ' . * _^^^ l ) ie fame < _, f tbis _Vmtuunt lm _* P r , ud far and wide ; « m thc lealed by its- _'PP i _« non , ¦ » _" ? " _° c d _^^ to aek ao _« ledge the virtues of any Medicine not prepared by _tlnm-Hedical _Protowon _, - _^^^/^^ _n _^ V _Abcrnctby ' s Pile Ointment , is _uot _^ ly a valuable preparation , but a _^^ _irt'ri _^ _**«**« of _cases _of it _, _efaeaey _nj _- _^ _* _jffiffS * tta _iiS-3 "" ™ e _ctSamt id not render those wbo have been 6 ured , novating to P all . « h their names . _ouanti'v of three 4 s . 6 d . pots in one for lis , witb full directions gold in _^ _" _[^[ . _^ _f _^^^ _feoavieSri _S ; Napier rtrcet , R _. xton New Town , London , where also can _tePcSed £ _S ? Patent Meencineof repute , direct _froSi the original _makers , with an al lowance on _tok . _^ _« atatirn « . E j . ENT > , The abHc arG reqUcSted to be on their _puard ? f -n , c , _, _>^ _£ t - _£ i » sold at low prices , and to observe tbataone can possibly be genuine , unless tbe name of _SSS _S _GovevnmenVstaEip _aS . xcd to each pot , * s . cd ., whicii is the lowest price the proprietor « eaabUd to seU it at , owing to the _freat expense of the . _ngretonte .
Ad00213
CORNS AND BUNIONS . PAUL'S EVERY MAN'S FRIEND , Patronised ofthe _lioyil Famil y , Kobitil _* , _Clerpu , & o . _^ j _? ,- _tknen cM 7 i > re annovances , without causing the leastpain or inconvenience . _Unlika Is a _sm-e _^ _nd speedy cure wr thc _^^ vcre _^ _nnoj _^^ _^ _^^ S _^ _^^ Ulmcce . illdei ; d > _rt _^^*™™*!?^?^?** - _™ _™ is at all times dan _^ rous , ami has been frequently attended with _latnentawe may sr . y , Jtue practice of _- _« " « ;* < ™ . . th u . . dhcres „ ith tl , c most gentle pressure , produces an Sr tatt _^ _rdefaK _^ _irf frS torture " _« d . _witlf perseverance in its application , " entirely eradicates the _niosi iuvet . rate c « _r- » s and bunions . un « _ards of one hundred Physicians and Surgeons of the greatest _eminone-e , _Testinio-. n _^ s _havebe _. _nrv _^ ivrdl . on , _^ thousand private letters from tbe gentry in as well as _irnmmni'V _oinrrra ot tutu ai . iij " _¦"_ - ' ¦ .. _, ' * at _twn aad « _mryA _^ 2 s . M ., and tobe hnd f lrith fuU Prepared bj __ Joks 1 ., x _^ n b .. _se > at is . _^ _' Boston New Town , London , _-ind all wholesale and retail Medis : s , s _^^^^ _^^ t _&^^ x _^ i _^ _^ - _"i —* _^ _Abwn «! u's rae Ointment , _haul ' s Corn riafter , and Abcmrtiff _' _s Hie Powders , are sold by the following respect _^ _^ f _^^ _^^! f _^^ i _^^ , _^ , St _Phil ' s _Church-vard _; Butler , i , Cheapside : _ycwbery _. St _JtT _* ¦ X % " ' _r-i . V _Tvnrd _lolinson . 6 S , Cornhill - _, _Sansar , 150 , Oxford-street ; _Willouiihby andCo ., 0 ' 1 _, _SS _^ _a _^ _TiSt _^ de : _^ _Street - , Prout , x » _, Strand _; Hannay and Co ., « , _OxforWet ; aud r _^* _S _^^^^ *¦«¦ . _* "" on - _» _-. -Brighten : Ferris ami _Sco _' rc , Bristol ; _Harp-r , Fuze _Tbes _, 0 « ne _, Cheltenham ; Brooko and Co . _Doncaster ; Sim . _monns Drcl-ester ; Scawin , Durham ; b _™ .. «« Hod « , a , * e « ter _, _& , l «» . n _, « WcStEr ; iie „ Gut . rHSey ; Berrv nali ' ar- Du" _-an _H-ratord ; Brooke , _liudder . -field ; _biepb-nson , Hull ; _Pennrl , K . dd _rminstt-r ; Baines and _T tX _„ L . f ' .. _-. X „ i _Tiv ,. r _> , fnl-Drurv Lincoln ; JewsBury _, Manchester ; Blackweil . Keweasi ' e . upon . T \ ne ; _^^^ 6 _t _^^ S _^ i _?^ . _Kccii _** ws Office _Kortvicl . ; Mennie Plymouth ; Car ,, Pi , ox Office _Fr-ton- _Hecklrr , _Pataey ; _Stagey , IWiue ; _Surrey , _Sahibuw : IMge and J _^ _oksou _. _IIeecdrv Office , Sheffield _j ' wMto _^ _CaaoWcLEOSc ,, _Shrewsbury ; Randall , Southampton ; Mors . _Stsfford ; B « _ley S . _amfcrd ; Sims Sto « tocrt . Tm _j . nd Carr . H £ BiLD Office , Sunderland ; Sacde-f , Tiverton ; Roper , TJlverstonr ; Card _, veil _Vakcfi-H ; ' sharpe . _Adtesti . m OiSce , _Warwick ; Gibson , Whitehaven ; Jacob and Co ., _^ inehester ; Maunder and Co _tVol « rl . aa . _pton ; _B _. ighton , _WorceiUt' , Uacson Yarmouth ; Bolbn _, Blanshard and Co ., York- _J-jhn K- _' _-i _? _Brid-r . d - Bcl _' ard _Cowbridje ; Evans , Carmarthen ; Williams , Swansea ; Raines , Edinburgh ; Al ' an ' _G-eenocV- ' 51 m shall . Belfast ; Bra _^ _f-r _. 1 . Ceil : ; Butler , Dublin ; Thompson . Armagh ; and by all respectable _Ctumusb aud _SWieine Venders in every _Marktt _Toers _tfenwbout ihe United Kin dom .
Ad00214
_fAMEB _THUOCGHOCr TaE _liLOBSj _EOLLOWATS pills . A CASE OF DnOP ? T . Extract of a Letter from Mr _Vuliiam Gardner , of Umging _Ilautthtou , _Xorthamptoashire , dated September llth , lni 7 . To Professor Ho _' lowav . Sib ,-1 before informed yfi'J that my wife had been tapped three times f .. r the _Jrojisy . but by the blessing of God up . m jour j . ills . aud _hervcrseverance ia taking ttu-in , the water Tins uow been kv . pt oft _eighteen _luoutiis b ) tht ir _iieanK , which is a great _mere-y , ( _Sunrd ) _'XiLLim Gaedkkb . DISORDER OF TOE LivEU A 3 D _H'lBN'ETS . Extract ofa Letter from J . K . neyCun , dated IS . Kin gstre _^ r , _Sveinev , _Xew South U ' ales , the 3 _'Jth September 1817 . To I _' rofcssor _Ifollo _^ ay . Sik . —I h- _^ ve the p : c : _esure to _infff-rm you that , Stuart A . _Donaldson , Esq ., an rniinent ir : « ch . ! iit and agriculturalist , and also a _magistrate o- this to « a , called on me on thc igta iustanr , aha purchased your _medicines to the amount of _Fodkbes ' rcC _> _ss to be furwarded te his cheep _stariujis in . New l- ' _iy'ajid . I _!< - ' _? t :, ted th . to = eof _Msoversfcershaelcouiuwi _" Sydney some time previously ior medical aid , his risorier hem _? an affection _e-fthe lirer and Kidneys — th : it _Ijo had placet ! the _aiau for three months uader the care « f oi ' _. c uf the _bsst _surgeiins _, _Tiithou : any _coo-. l re _^ _uitins from thc _erestra _^ _-at ; the mar . then ia < _ie--iiair used your pills aid _tiintLiseut , aud much to his own and ill- L ' _uualti'Cifs ast nishnieut , was completely restored to his health by-their means . _3 _fo _\ _r , this _Eurprising cure was effected -in about tera days . ( Signed ) J . It . _Heibon , A DISORDER OF _TUIZ CHEST . Extract of a Letttr from _I > Ir William Browne , of 21 , South Main-street , Bandon , Ireland , dated . March Snd . 1547 . To Professor _TToIlo-. vny . Sie , —A _yiiun _^ l _; dy -. _vl-. o was suffering from a di _^ rder of _tie ehu _~ t , with hu-lungs _EoesjeeJinali' delicate that she had the _^ r _^ atest _d-tarulty oi _breathing _ifshe-cot'ka _liHacidd _. v . hieh was gei : erally accompanied by r . rarly _lotal loss of _appetite , _together _v . ith such general dciiiity of bo _^ y as tu _oblige her to rest herself when Bcii » S un but one _flight & f _stuirs ; tha _comeianeGd t _' lk ' uij ; jour . pills about six months siv . ee , and I am h : ippy to inform you they have restored her to per : cet health . ( Signed ) Williaji _EitovfXE . A . CURE QP A _^ THilA . _-A'XD SQOUTSESS OP _BIlEA- ? i ! . Extract di a Letter from the Rev . David Williams , _Evident _VVesleyan ilinistcr , at Ee _^ umaris , Island of Angl- sea , Xe i th Wales , Jauuarv Hth , 1415 . To Professor Ho !! _o-.-..-. y . Sir , —The pilU which I requested you to send me vrere for a poor man of the name of Hugh "Davis , who before he took tlncm , v . -as almost _unrjb ' e to v _. alk for the _tvaai-sf ¦ _farea-. h ! and had only taken them a few days _whence appearel quite another man ; hi _^ bri-ath is now easy aud natural , aud he is _increasing daily and _strong . _f _^ ued ; _-DiTiD Williams . THE Earl of _Aldborocfjh cured ofa Liver and Stomach Gar-piste t . Extract of a letter frera the Earl of . Aldborough , dated Tilla Messina , Leghorn , 21 st February , 1845 : — To I ' rcfcssor _Uolloivay . SlB , —Various circamstanees prsreated the possibi'ity tny thanking you before this time for your politenes _nding me your pill ? af yon did . J novr take this -opportunity of _sendimj _g-ou an erderferthe ameunt , and Ut the same liin- » , to add that yoar pills hare efi ' ected a cure of a disorder in my liver and stomach , which all the most eminent of the faculty at h mr , . and all over the continent , had not be » a _ablv ta effect ; nay I not even tho waters of Carlsbad _ajid _Xsrienbad . Iwish to have another box and a pot of the ointment , in . case any of my -famiiy should ever require either . Tour most obliged and obedient servant , _Signed ) _Aldboeough . These celebrated Pills _as-e wonderfully e _& caritms in the following complaints . — _SiliousComplaiats i * e : nr . 3 e irregu- Scrofala , orKinss A ? ne _latitiea Evil Af & ma Pits Sore Throats Blotches on Skin Gout _Secocdarr Symp . Bov . ei Complaints Ileada > hs torus ¦ _Colics ludi gestaan Tic _Detloreus Constipation of _Ijifh-. _anEalLon TuniOiirs thi _liuu-e _!« Jsnndics Fleers " Go : _iH : mption _LirerCc-mslaints _Teneresl Afiee-Debaity Lumbago tions _5 jS - _" iies Worms , _zll kinds Dysentery _Rhematism _IVeakntS ? , from irysipeias Retci : tioaoiT 7 rinB whatevei-cauee _Fevtrsofallkinds Stone _and-travel & c , & c . Sold it the establishment of _Professor _Holloway 244 -Strand , near _Temple Bar , r . or . dOF .,. and bv all _resphtablc _DroK-isiS ;; rni _Dsiiiersin _ilsaicincs _throughout the _eivilizeii nx-rlu , at the fo !' _eiivingpricec ; : — Is . licL , 2 _j . * _£ . is . Sd .. lis ., 22 s ., and 33 s . each boz . _I'hereis _' aeoasider ' able gaiin _? by _taking the larcer sizes . N . E . —Directions fer the _guidasce _^ of patients in _svery disorder aw afixed to each hor .
Ad00216
BLAIR'S _^ OPT AND _RHEUMATIC PILLS . —Cory ofukvitrirom ilr J . iMViiion , Chemist , Moiik tar , Yori :. ' To Mr Thomas Prout . ¦ * lith June , 1317 . ' - ' t , _—Having suffered most dreadfc : l y for the last six rears . rum repeated attacks ofthe _goui , and receiving EO benefit fiom the best medical advi :: e I could obtain , I _* vas induced , ab' _-at six weeks ago , to try a box of _Hlair's Gout and Kheumatic Fil s . Wiien I commenced taking them , which wns in the afternoon , my _latt and elbows w- _^ re very muchswollen and infiimed : I was suffering the most intense agony . I had tiiat night sound and refreshing sleep , aud awoke in tbe morning comparatively free fro : u paiu ; and before I had finished the box ., I never was better in ra _> life . They have not only entirely removed the gout , but have also very much improved my _general health . I have since _recommended them to _f ' _sur individuals , who _iiave _suffered mueti from gout _andrfaeuinatisui ; and they all speak highly of thc benefit _tfce-y have received frosi them . If * ca think my case _wcrthy of insertion amongst the many cures effected by yovtr won . derful medicine , you are at perfect liberty to publish it . — I am , s-r , yours- respectfully , i . J . Wilson . * Thc abi . _rc testimonsl _eshitUfi the never-failing effects of tbis valuable med : cine wbich affords to the afaicted with gout , rheumatism , lumbago , sciatica , and all _asalagoas _complaitits , _speedy aud ceitain relief . They require neither confinement nor attention Ofaqy iind , and mvariatly prevent the duease attacking the _stomai-h , bra ' n , or other vital part . Sold by Thomas I ' rour , 229 , Strand . London ; and by lis appointment by Heaton , Land , Hay , Hai _^ h , Baines and Kewsome , Emeeton , _Reinhaidt , Horner , Rushworth , Stavelly , and "Brown , Leeds ; Brooke , Dewsbury ; Bolton and Co ., Shackleton , Durdekin , _Butteriield , Clark , Fall , and Har . grove , York ; Brooke and Co ., Walker and Co ., Hartley and Dunhill , Duneaster , - Judson , Ripon ; Foggitf , Coates , and Thompson , Thirsk ; Wiley , _Kasingwold-, Spivey , Huddersfield ; Ward , Richmond ; Sweeting , Knaresborough ; _BTarson . and Wilson , Darlington ; Dixon , Metcaife , and Iangdale , Northallerton ; Elicdes , Snaith ; Spinks and Fannett , Tadcaster ; Rogerson , Hick , Sharp , Stick , Bradford ; ArnaU and Co ., _V- _' ainivright , Brice _, and Priest ' ey ; Pontefract ; Cordwell and Smith , Wakefield ; Sutter , Yeyland , Kart ' . ev _, Ueuton , Dyer , and Lofthouse , Halifax ; Booth , Rochdale ; Lambert , _Boroughbridge ; Dalby , and Swales , Wetherby ; Waite , Harrowgate ; "Wall , _Ilarnslej-, Atkinson , Bri " ghouse ; nndaIlre _* pectibie Meiieit . e Tenders _throughout the United Kingdom . Price 2 s . Sd . per box . and by the Venders of Medicines generally throughout the kingdom . Ask for BLAIR'S GOUT AND RHEUMATIC PILLS , and observe the name and address of Thom . is Prout , Rtom i _?^* _* - ° ndon , ' impressed upon the Government _oiarnp a £ hxtd to eaeh box of the GeHuine Medicine .
Ad00217
• members oftwv 7 ? _* » ia 6 ns of his orations to the _ths improvement _^ n _" _^ Coile 5 ° < observes- - That by fession _we _^ 1 _^ _T _™ 0 liern chemistry , the medical _pro-^ ere previons ' ysunr _" ff £ Efnl , yto treat diseases which _£ < _-ine . " This trntl h _« _^ "" I 111111 _^ _™ of * i _>« - bat _, ' iT no instance of _^ 1 * 7 _^ ° _^*^™*? 5 _*> n . _iban by th ? _toeorary o £ B _^ S _^ i ? I , ee _J t ? , ii nanWlld _PjUs " * ' s _**^ 6 eo _** t and RJieumatic
Ad00215
SCDRTY AND IMPURE BLOOD . ASOTBEE Hi )> T EXTRAOBBlSARt CURE BT MEANS OP HAL SE'S SCORBUTIC bROPS . —The following case has excited so much _interest , thut the Guardians of t'ue parish of Br _? nt , Devon , have considered it their duty to _siir-. i their names to the accompanying important •» - clarution . It is well worthy the notice of the public : — Wc t : ; e undersigned , solemnly declare , that , before Thomas Uobins ( cue of our _pnricl . iuncrs _) , commenced taking Halse ' s Scorlutie _Dreips , Ue -wasliterally covered with large _running wounds ( some of them so large that a . person might havo laid his fist in them ) , that before he had finished the first bottle he noticed nn improvement , and that by continuing them for some time be got comp _lettlv restored to health after everything el 6 e had failed . lie had tried various sorts of medicines before taking ' Halse ' s Scorbutic Drops , ' and had prescriptions from -thc must celebrated physicians in this country , without -deriving the L-ast benefit . ' Halse ' s Scorbutic Drops ' have completely cured him . and he is now enabled to attend tj hi * labour as well as any man in our parish . From other cures also made in . this p : \ vt , we strongly recommend' Halse's Scorbutic Drops' to the notice of the public . ¦ Si gned by John Elliott , sen ., Lord ofthe ilanor . 'John Man . vixg . ' William _Teame . * _HSSIY GOODMAV , _'AtiTHcr . Lasgwo & thy . ' June 21 st . 1 S _13- ' The above-mentioned Thomas Ti- _^ * ) ins was quite _incapiiLIeof d-. ing any hind of work _r _* aatever . IJefore he commenced taking _th'se drops son ? - of his Hounds Here _solar ,: etliatit was most awful to _le- < ik at them , ani the ite ' . _iiis and p ; ti : i of the wounds generally- were must dreadful ; indeed , the po <; r fellow _touul be heard _sereeehisig by _paSsars hy , hotk day and night , f _..-i- sleep was entirely out of tke _queitien . He was reduced to mere skin and bone , and daily continued to get weaker , so that there w-s every probability of 1 l . » 6 peedy death . The _clhict which 'liaises Scorbutic Drops' had on him was , : \ sit weiv , magical ; for _befoi-e he had taken the first bottl- _? , bis Oeep was sound and _refreshing , the itching _ceased , and the pain was very much lessened . Persons who see him now can scarcely believe it is the same man —thc pale , salluir , _siciily complexion having given way to that ofthe roieate hue of health , and his veins filled with blood a ., pure as purity itself . For all scorbutic eruptions , _lepvobj , _fiiseascii legs , wounds in any _Tnirt of tbe body , scurry in the gums , pimples anil blotches on thc _necft , arms . ' or face , tin se drops are a sure cure . They make the _disease vanish like snow before the sun . Their action is to purify the blood ; they are composed of the juices of various _heibs , and are so harmless t » at they may he safely administered even to infants . The enormous sale whicii this medicine has now obtained is an undoubted proof of its _invaluab' _-i properties , the great sale of it being principally thro _«* f ; h recommendation , Any medicin * vender nill procure it _n application . Reid tho following extract from the _Kottikcham Review : — '/ . _ujhiHijj o / _theUmd the cause of Scurvy , Bad Leas , ie . ' Itis really astonishing that so many persons ' should be content to be afflicted with scurvy , wounds in the leys , ifcc , when it ii a well-ascertained fact tbat Halse ' s Scorbutic Drops make the disease vanish like snow before tbe sun . So one is better able to judge of the value of a medicine as to its effects on the bulk of the people than a render of the article ; and as venders of tkis medicine we can conscientiously recommend it to our friends , for _there-is-se . irceJy a day passes but we hear some » xtraordinary accounts of it ; iudeed , we have kno * rn parties who have tried ether advertised medicines without th _» least _succ'ss , and yet on resorting to this preparation , the n jw _justly celebrated Halse ' s Scorbutic Drops , the disease has yieleet as if by magic . We again say , try Halse ' s _Searbutic Drops . _ilalnft ' s So * butie Drops are sold in bottles al 2 s . 94 ., and in Pint bottles , containing nearly six Vs . 9 d . bottles for Us ., and Halse ' s Galvanic Family Pills are sold in _lioxes at Is . 'lJd . _and 2 s . Sd ., by the following appointed _Agents :: — Wholesale akd Retail _Lokbox _A-cent _? . —Barclay and Sons , tFarring _. _ion street ; C . King , 34 , Napierstreet _, noiton New Town ; Edwards , St Paul ' s ; Butler and 3 arding , ' 4 _,-Chsapside ; Sutton _andCs ,, Bow Church Yari ; Newbery , St Paul's ; Johnston , 68 , _Cirahill ; Sanger , 1 * 1 , Oxford-street ; Ead _» , SS , -Q « swell-street ; Haliett ,-83 , High Holborn ; Prout , 22 S , Strand ; Hannay _and'Co ., 6 ? , Oxford street ; Willoughby and Co ., Ol , _Bishopsgate-street-Without ; and T . Steward , 61 , Cropley- _gfc-ect . Heir North road . WsCLESiLE _ASD . F . STA 1 L _COESTaY A « EHTS . —Evans and KodgBOu _,: Eiet _= r . ; W . Wheaton , Fore-street , Enter ; Winnall , _Birmingham ; Adand , Plymouth ; Cole , Stonehouse ; _Riiraes , Edinburgh ; _Seett , _Glasgow ; Alian ( _i-Ui-dical HeII ) , . Greenock ; Byors _, Duvonport ; _Wht & _tOll , _Riiigweod ; _Jihn _ILmg , Bridgend , Sontk Wales ; Bradford and _,-X *? ., Cork ; Ferris and Score , Bti » t 6 l ; _£ _oBBNAL and , Hebald _OfSces , Sath ; _Bratr , Brighton ; Marsbell , Belfast ; Scawin , Durham ; _Wari and Co ., EahHn ; Potte , -Banbury ; Buss , Faversham ; Bowden , : Q ainsborough ; Henry , Guernsi-y ; . Fauvel , Jersey ; Actbony , Hereford ; Harmer and Co ., Epswich ; Baines and 5 eiv > -ome , Leeds ; Lathbury , Liverpool ; _O'ShaDjinmay , Limerick ; Hares and _Angles , Maidstone ; Sutton , _Ksttragham ; Mennie , Plymouth ; _Bjglej-, 6 tamford ; Xett , 'Ciiord _; Brooke „ Doncaster ; Clarke _^ _iPreElon ; Procter , . Ckeltenham ; Heard , Truro ; Boltoa and Blanshard , _ToEkj Drury , Lincoln ; Noble , Boston ; French , Chatham . ; Ilecblay _, Putney ; Noble , Huil ; . _and Brcdie , _Salisbury . —Burgws and . Co ., New _YorkjSieber end Co ., _Pniladclpiiia ; _Mortar ; , _Nsw Orleans , . and Keddinj and Co ., Boston , AKE & ioi .
Ad00218
CN THE _CONCEALED CAUSE ? HAT PREYS OK THE HEALTH AKJ > _SHOUTESfs THE _DUBATIOST -CF HUMAN LIFE . _IHrSTKATID WITH _NtJJCEaOUS CoCoBErD EN « BAV 1 R 8 S . Just Published , in a Sealed Envelope . rgri » e 2 s . Cd ., or free ; hy post , 3 s . 6 d . _CfiUTROUL OP TliS _PASSIONS ; a Popular Essay qrtthe Duties aud Obligations of U _^ ried Life , the _unhapp-iaesE resiUting i * r . _oniphysical _iinpe-ftiiReats and defects , with directions for their treatment- ; the abuse of the passions , the premature decline of _health , and mental ar . d _btdily vigour ; indulgence in solitary and delusive habits , precocious _erections or infection , indscing a long _traitaf _disoreli-rs affecting the _principle organs of 111 * body , _cSt'tsing c > ns impU _«* s , mental _att , _& nerrous debility asd indigo- , tio i , ivii & _-remarks on g . _jiaarrheea , gleet , _stricture , and syphilis , illustrated witk _Sj ' oured _Engravingsaati Cases . _COt-TTENTS OF TffS WORK . Chap , ] . _—Theis _^ _oence of the _excessiveindnlgeoM of the passions in _icd ? icing bodily _ditesse and mental _decrepitude . _Illustrated with Colouree Engravings . Chzp . 2 .- Enervating and _dfistructive effects of the vice ef seliiadulgence , inducing s . long train of diseases , _indirection , hysteria , insanity ., _moping melaacholy , _consumption _, stricture , _iuipotencesnd sterility , _«' th observations Jin rite purposes and obligations of _marriage , and the _reihappf consequences of _vnfrnitful unions . Chap . 3 . — Seminal weakness and gene ? _ative debility : the nature of impotence and sterility , and the imperfeeti » ns in the _per formance of the principal _rjtal function c » _isequent ? a _mal-practices , the treatmeat of the diseases of the rind and body which result from these causes . Chap . 4 . — _GenorrbiBa , its symptoms , complications and treat _, cent , gleet , stricture , and inflammation of the prostate . Chap . 5 . —Syphilis , its complications and treatment , oases , Concluding Observations , Plates , etc . By CHARLES LUCAS and Co ., Consulting Surgeons , 60 , Newman-street , _Oxford-street _. _SLondon . Member ofthe London College of Medicine , & c ., e " ie , S > ld by Brittain , hi , Paternoster-row : _LTaanay and Co ., 63 , _Oxford-streot ; Gordon , 116 , _Leadenhall-street-Hansel ) , ll » , Fleet street ; _Sasger , 150 , Oxford-street ' London ; Winuell , 76 , High-stre ? t , Birmingham ; _WhiU more , 119 , _Uarket-street , Manchester ; llowelj , 01 _Chirch-street , Liverpool ; Robinson , 11 , _GreenBidestreet , Edinburgh ; _ToweU , IS , Westmoreland-street , Dublin , and all booksellers . The tesk of preparing and _prodacinj the work entitled 'Confcreul ofthe _Passioni , ' by Messrs Lucas , though apparently not oae of magnitude , demands a most intimate acquaintance with the mysteries ofa profession ofthe hig hest character . To fay that the author hae produced a volume which cannot be otherwise considered than at a treasure , and a blessing to tie community , it not saying too much ; and being written by a duly qualified _mudical practitiofler . its pages give evidence of the results of much
Ad00219
personal _inrcrtigation _, and great _resaareuQs . i _uMlie study & f medicine . In a word , ttte work has _meidts-vAieh _devefspe no superficial attainments , and iv ; oardUli j and most arnestly recommends it for general _{ Mwusal . —Weekly _© _rawfofs . Tke press teems with volumes upon _the-saiance of medi ene aad the professors ofthe art curaftwo : abound kut t is rarely even iu these days , wt « u ' 'intellect is _« n he march , ' that we find a really useful medical w » rk t was with no small gratification that -we havo perused tha unpretending , but really truly _valunbla little volum _» entitled , 'Controul of tho Passions , ' hy _Messrs Lucas ! The awful _cousr _^ _iencos _« f depraved 'habits , early _acuit-ed , are setfo . _- thin language tint must oo * a . _s home wiih hmowms ; fovea to the _puvent _sajl llie _Tletim , iv _» regard this publication as one of _aelass rtUat is most productive of _bauefix to humanity . The subjects , h ghly important and delicate , are treated ia a style whick at once » xhibits the _possessiou of great scientific _kaowledge , com-Hiied with the fidelity oi" truth . Theaatlior or this work is a legally qualified medical man , aud we most cordially recommend it . —Conservative Journal . Persons desirous of obtaining the above work , and not wishing to apply to a bookseller fi » r them , may , to ensure secrecy , have itdirect from the authors , by _ftncltwing Is . Cd ., or postage stamps to tantamount . At h » me from ten till two , and from five till ei ght j immediate replies sent to all letters , if containing the fee of £ _l . for advice , ic . ; 60 , Newman-street Oxford-street , Londe-a .
Ad00220
A _BERKETUY'S PILL f or the NERVES _nu-i MUS . A CLES . —The Preprietor of these Pills is a medical man . The brother sf a patisnt of his applied to Mr Abernethy for advice . Ue gavo him a prescription , and _taiuss pills ureprspai'ud _aceui- _« leljr from that prescri ption _. The patient's complaint was a nervoui one , «» d , it was _Btterly impossible tor any oae to be in a worse - !» adition than he was ; muscular power was » _lsolOSt in someparts , and his legs fairly _totteroi undor him . Ha had a box ef tiie pills prepared , and Use efiacts _inere aU but _juiracnlous ; fur not only did the nervousness leave him , but muscular power returned to all parts dgficient of it . The proprietor has since tried tl . em im _buadre'ds of his patients , and he can conscientiously state Hut their effects in r » storiug nen-ous energy aud muscular power bave quits astonished him . Price 4 s ( Id . ntiet Us . a box . _ABBHNEfHY'S PILL for the NERVES' nnd MUSCLES . —The nervous invalid should _lwe na time in resorting to this truly _woitievfal medicine . They are so harmless that thoy m » y be administered with perfect safety to tin most delicate _constitutaoas . As before stuted , their _offi-cts are all but _mh-aeulou _.- !; one W ef tUtm will prove the truth of this assertion . As regimen ' aud diet they are of _theutmostevmsoquencc in all narv-< us _disorders , the particulars , as r « a _» mmended by the _wtc Mr _Aburnethy , will be enclosed round _oach kox , _4 s . lid _aadllfi . _ABEltUEtHY'S PILL for tho NERVE ? nail MU 5 OLES . —Thepreat celebrity which tlirse pills have now ebt : iincd is a sufficient proof of tlieir great value in all nervous complaints , for their celebrity has beea caused by their merits , and no ; by advertisements . In addition to their properties as a nerve . us medicine , they are us invaluable as an Antibilious Pill , and wonderfully strengthen the stomach , creating a good appetite , and _eausing refreshing sleep . Asa Female pill they _ai-n also valuable . Their effect on the system is lo purify the blood , and this they do in a m . _ist astonishing manner , making blotches and eruptions vanish as if by magic . ABERNErHY'S PILL for Ue _KBBTH 8 aad MU 3-CT / SS . —No lady wh _. hisa f esire to beiii tho possession of a beautiful complexion should hesitat * a & _e > _aient in _procuriiu a box : for , by their extraordinary virtues in _purifying the blood , the roseate hue of health quickly ftppears Oil tha _before emaciated an'l pale el _«« ks . They are _als-J invaluable to persons wko _suffer froia tho headache . 1 'rico 4 s . 6 d . a box , and in boxes continuing three 4 s . 6 d for lis _. Wholesale and Retail Low »» n Aoehts , —Barclay and Sonf , _Fsnin _^ i ' on-sir-et ; C . Kini ; , ti , Napier-st , _IIoztou-New _Toiva ; Edwanis , St P * _ui's ; Butler and Ilardlig . 4 , _Caeapsidu ; Suttoa and C _» ., Bow Church-} _H . Vi . ; N . H « _-b _. ; ty , St Paul ' s ; _Jahuaton , GS , CornVaU ; _Sanger , 159 , Oxford-sweet ; E _^ do , 39 , _Qoswell-street ; IIalleit , 83 , High Holborn ; Prou ' , 229 , 8 : r . ind ; Hannay nnd Co ., ( 53 , O . _tford-strvet ; Willoughby aud Co , 61 , Bishopfgate 6 tie » t Without ; aud T . Sheward , IG , Cropley-street , New _North-road . Wholesale and Retail _Couktet _Aosnts . —Evans and Hodgson , EsaUr ; W . _WheaUn , Pore street , Exetor ; Winnall , Birmingham ; Aeland , _Piymeufh j C »! e , _Stonrkonse ; R « imes . E iinburgh ; Scott , _Glasgow j Allan ( _SIciiicEl _H . ill ) Greenock ; By ( rs , _Devorp-art ; Wtieuton _, Ringwood _; Joha Kin ;; , Drirtgcnu , South Wales ; _Bradford and C _» ., _C-rlt ; _Fsrris and Score , _Bristol ; _Jocknal and Hebald Offier . s , Bath ; Breiv , _Brl _^ hVon ; Marshall , _B-Kast ; Seawin , Durham ; Word & Co _j Djhliii _; Potts , Banbury ; . Bu _/ e , _Faveisliam ; Bow aen , _KEinsborough ; Henry , _Guernsey ; Fauvel , Jersey ; Anthony , _Ucr--ford ; Unnntr r . nd C > . , Ipswich ; _Biiin-: _? and Newsemy , T . _^ cds ; _Lithtury , Liverpool ; O'Shau _^ hnftssy , Lieaevick _* . _"Anvtsaad _Avgcl ? , _iUUr tOYie ; Sutton . Not _' tiogham ; M _^ _nnir _, Plymouth ; Bag . 'cy , Stamford _, Kett , Oxford ; Brjoke , _Dmcastfr ; Cluike , Preston ; Proctor , Chelienham ; _Henn-1 _, Truro ; Bo _^ on and _Blnnshard _, York ; Drnry , Lincoln ; NoWn , Boston ; French , Chatham ; _ILckby , Pu _' . net ; Noblo , IIull ; Brodie , Salisbury . —Burgess ami Co , Nov York ; Z . ibti and Co ., Pniladelphia ; Morgan , New Orleans ; and _Rerl-lin _^ and _C- > . Boston , America , _t By enclosing tifty-ejght Btamps to Mr C . King , as above , a box will be fortvardi . d to any part of the united _Kingdom , post free , and iltven . _dtwen and six stamps for an lis . box .
A$Mtiu'upt&-
a $ _mtiU'upt _& _-
(From The Gazette Oi Tuesday, Mar. ' Ss....
( From the Gazette oi Tuesday , Mar . ' _SS . ) BANKRUPTCY ANNULLED . Fichard'Farsons , of Plymouth , buiider— Morr ' s Lumley . _df 31 , _Gibson-fquare , _Islington , _andtf _, Great Trinity-lane , City , couuniisiou agent .
_BANKRUPTS . Robt Thompson , of _Basingstoke , stone mason—Chas . Ellis , of _Easthnthly , Sussex , grocer—William Maunder , ofS l _' eel-plae . _» , Kensington Gravel-pits , baker—William Henry Norman , of 12 , Adam ' _s-place , _King's-road , Chel . sea , and 12 . Drury Jane , baker— William Clark Wright , formerly of Bajswater , but lute o { Norland-square , Notting-hill , _shipowner—William Joseph Joyuer , of Aveley , _E'sex , manufacturer of agricultural machines—William Hughes , jun ., of Chatham and Stoke , grocer—William Yarington Scott , of _Morth Walsham _, No _.-folk , plumber-Thomas Wintcrton . of _Tottenham-cevurtroad , hosier-John Talbot _Ubsdell , of Exbury _, _brickmaker—Henry Charles Robinson , of Brecknock-crescent , Camden-town , and 2 , Caledonia-place , _King's-eross , mirgeon—George
Williams , of Snrbiton , Surrey , draper— David Harris , of Newport , Monmouthshire , _gre-cer—Mark Kirk _. of Nottingham , builder—LukeLench , of Worcester , tobacconist—Joseph llobson and Thomas Mowbray , of Leicester , builders—Stephen Fisher , and Wil iam Cliff Brown , of _Newdrk-upon-Treat , builders — George Hawkins , of Bristol , victualler-John Fryer Coombes , of Eristol , milliner—Humphrey Turner , of Bristol , draper—James Ga ' - pip , of Broadwindsor * Dorsetshire , innkeeper—Abraham Dunn , of Hedon _, Yorkshire , _attorney—Elizibt-tu Green , of Spring-mill , and Crosland-moore , " Yorkshire , common brewer—Richard Nickson , _oft ' efn Mawr , Denbighshire , publican—Henry Buckniaster , of Liverpool , wino mer chant—Thomas Rooney , of Liverpool , tailor—Henry Coleman , of Liverpool , stock broker .
INSOLVENT PETITIONERS . Charles Wa'ker , of Leominster , Herefordshire , farmer —Thomas Henshaw , of Bur . on , Cheshire , licensed vic tualler—George Goodwin _, of Eccles , Lancashire , rail _, wav time keeper—Henry Hudson , of Stockport , Cheshire , out sf business—Richard Ivey , of Pottreath , Cornwall , bucr _seller-llichaul Jacks and Thomas Jacks , of Walton on the Hill . Lancashire , chemists-Thomas Richard Sudlow _. of West Derby , Lancashire , hook-keeper—Thos . Robert _Aiibor , of Witham , Esses , outof business—Samuel Dickinson , of Adington , Lancashire—Eldred _Fillarly , of
Horsham , Sussex , butcher-William ? turfc , of New Shorebam , Sussex , carpenter—Jose : li Oakley , of Brighton , out ot _business—Charles Pearce , of _Scarborough , innkeeper - Harriet Payne , of Cheltenham , outof _business—George PrideauK , < jf Barnstaple , basket maker—Richard l ' ebb , of Askern , _Yorkshire , butcher—Thomas Shepherd , or Broadworliiy-town , Devonshire , boot maker — Sarah _Wright , of Salford , Manchester , outof business—Robert Howcrefc , of Wisbeach , St _Teter _' s , Cambridgeshire , butcher—William _lierridce Ilall , of Wist » eavli _Gnyliini , Cambridgeshire , tailor—Edward lloper , of Colchester , chemist _.
SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS . William IIeu < icrson Matheson _, of Leith , merchant—V W . Henderson , and James Bogie , jun ., of Kirkaldy , corn merchants-Samuel Wallace , of Kilwinning , Ayrshire , nierchunt—John P . ichardson , of Edinburgh , banker—Nathaniel Harvey , of Glasgow , tailor .
•Christened. At The Parish Church, Brigh...
• CHRISTENED . At the parish church , Brighton , on Sunday ., ihe 10 th « iK ., Feargus , son of Thomas Harvey , one of-the 'Old Gtards' of Chartism , a . member of the Land . Company , acd ; aIso a member of tbe Fraternal Democrats . _MAERIED . On Monday morning :, March 20 th , at Brighton Old Church . John Home ( a successful allottee on the Minster Lovel Estate ) , to Matilda _Pdiitock . Abont fifty of tlieir _friendssai down to dinner , and just as the cloth w . ac being cleared , Mr Heme waa presented with a pig which was put on the table , and after _regaling himself with beef _gjravy from the dish was ehristencd—Maria _ElizabethtVifionnor , Minster Love * .
DEATH . On Friday , Kerch 17 tb , _Thomae Clark Warren , a"cd fourteen months , son of John and Maria . Warren , of Macclesfield , and was interred at St Ann ' s , in the parish of Westminster , on Sunday , tke 19 th . Lately , at _Snip ' s End , Corse , _Gloucecrershii-e , John Coolen , eldest son - » f Mr Eli Coolen , late of Sooteville Les Rouen , France . Tho deceased was a member ofthe eeeond section of the National Land Company , Iioucn branch . His remains were borne to his last home , Corse church-yard , by his friends , who deeply lament his loss , as do also his sorrowing parents . ' GtOEV TO TUEJI THAT DlE IN THIS GBEAT CAUSE ! _' •—Amongst the victims ofthe French Revolution , buricdon Saturday , was George Good , a young English printer ,
who was shot through the breast in the attack on the Chateau d'Eu post , Palais Royal , while _fighting with the people . —Paris correspondent cf the _Mobnijig HebaLd . — [ The young Englishman who has thus sealedhis devotion to liberty with his life ' s blood , was the son of Mr John Good , so well known to , and respected by , the inhabitants —but more particularly our Chartist brethren —of Brighton . Mr Good , sen ., is one oftho comparatively few middle class men wbo , holding in utter contempt thc _sdfish prejudices of their order , ' have honourably distinguished themselves by an earnest advocacy of univer-6 al freedom . The father has tendered _mrniy pecuniary and other sacrifice ' , and the son has now _sacrificed existence itself , forthe advancement of the ' good cause . ' However , . . , ' Hope is not withered in affliction ' s
blast—The patriot ' s blood ' s thc seed of Freedom's tree . ' May that assurance afford some _cons & lation to the esteemed parents of young George Good . ]
An Improvement Has Been Made In Chimney ...
An improvement has been made in chimney sweeping machines , by forming the springs , _jsjnts , & o , of the brushes of vulcanised India rubber
Walks And Wanderings Around Vvaij O'Conn...
WALKS AND WANDERINGS AROUND VVAij O'CONNORVILLE . , CHENIES . 'Tis Sunday taor ' ning—day of rest from labour—a wise institution of the olden world , when man s temporal as well as spiritual interest was cared for ; all nature _seeme hushed in repose , the v ery cattle in tho fields seem _toreclino more luxuriously , _ai if conscious tbat it was theirs as well as man ' s holidiy _, and oursee' be they who would make it a day ot gloom and ascetic austerity , contrary to its original intent . 'Tis Sunday morning' , I fake my dog— . 1 beautiful animal of the retriever species-given to me by my friend Sam Kydd , and start for a ramble . Where shall we " 0 ? My _dog jumps the sMle opposite onr gate This decides the point . We will cross tbe
common lo Chenics-it is a rural walk , tbrounb our neighbour farmor _Biggs ' s ground . The meht has been stormy , but the sun now _shinea resplendent )/ , _casing a spirit of life and joy around . Itis my first walk after an illness ofsome weeks . Hew ray frame seems to revive under tho cheering influence oj a lovely day . I cast eff the langmir and depression , inseparable from illness , and look around with a mirthful smile My dog , who ha _^ _lonc mi _seed my company _, and hia usual rambles , can scarce keep his spirit within bounds . Now he starts into yon field _, scattering a whole flock of sheep ; anon , he is chasing the larks ; the cows in the farm yard nes _* . attract his attention . * Li"n ! Lion ! leave tbe cows . Come
to your master , ' and anon , ho is crouching at your feet . What is man without a companion ? Truly , was i . said , even in the Garden of Eden . ' It is not _good that man should be alone . ' And a _dog . is a companion I dear ly love ; if joyful , you can tive vent to vour _exuberar-c of spirits in your gambols with him : if morose . ch d 3 him ; it will clear your spirits as thunder clear thc atmosphere . Thin , nviy be nonsense , but , with Mrs Barbauld , I pity the man who cannot talk nonsense . We bave cros ? ed the fields , and arrived in Chorley Wood Bo ' , torn , a little hamlet , about three-quarters of a mile from ' ourhome . ' Hero wo met with the * Lovetts , ' ti ; c ' Winnotts , ' and other fine old Saxon names , which _bring b . ick
the times of Robin Hood and his merry mea , and Friar Tuck and Little John—tales which formed the delight of our childhood , and are still capable nf affording much instruction to our adult age . We ascend a _sterp hill , and are now on Chorley Wood Common , without exception , one of the mos * . beautiful in the kingdom . It comprises about 500 acres _, rising in the form of a mound , and whenyou have rseended the summit , the -view ia really splendid , embracing a large extent of thi ? , tbe most _delightful portion ot Hertfordshire . We cross the common , its beautiis opening upon us as we gradually ascend . Rustic _cottages here and there variegated with a new brick residence , _abnurd on t > e outskirts of the _common . In one of the latter lives the village
shopkeeper and cott'ge lawyer , one whose annals would be well worthy of record ; hut we must not trench up » n his privacy ; we give him a nod as a brother radical , and pass onward by a pretty _cottage , _aituite in a deep dell , environed round by such a beautiful and compact hedge that the wreathing smoke alone infnrms you that a human habifation is near . Many of these beauteous dells are to be found on the common , containing _cottages with their pretty gardens , and making _q-ii re a feature in the scene . We have diagonally crossed thc common , and in a few minutes find ourselves in the Black tlor .-e , comfortably epjoying a glass of homebrewed and a crnst , - with a relish that exercise of this description can alone give . The house , landlord and _landlady
are quit ; - in keeping with the commor—substantial , _noucht shnwj—ihe latter a portly Dftir , _weifihina about twenty stone eaeh . We start refreshed on our ramble . Linn _plunjrs into one of the numerors ponds with which the common _abounds , and such a cackling of Kfese _h heard aa would deafen the ears ot a city dandy ; 'Lion , Lion , ' and again the dog is at our side , ar . d the geese are onco more monarch' ' , — nay , nature owns no monarchs , citizen rulers of their watery domain . How salt and green is the mossy _gras-i after the late rains . —how beautifully blooms ' the furze . Lmajus , the botauist of Sweden , ay , and ot the world , on seeing in _England , for the first _tlma . 11 field covered with its _goldrn blossoms , exclaimed , enraptured , that it was the most lovely
sight he had ever beheld , and its varied succession of _blnorn has given rise to the old saying , tbat , ' when hira - ¦ is out of blossom , kiesing is out of fashion , ' a period that lovers will pray may be far distant ; apropos _, oflove , wo have now arrived at the church , a new erection of flints , with stone _groins _. —the flints are worked with _mathematical precision , and _eontrastins ; with the _vrw-tar iu which they are _embedded , _vive the whole a , very pretty _i-ffect . It is Chorley Wood , onr parish church , already _associated with our deareifc hopes nnd regrets , —its _jny-bells rinsing out their merry peal , has consecrated Hymen ' s torch to some of our youthful allottees ; and a ' ready has the death of one of our number , Mrs Ilic _' _taulson , a favourite of old CobbetL _' a _, rendered its q uiet g-assy
churchyard no common oarth to us ; we all accompanied _herremains to this her last home , and when my own hour comes , I would not wish a more fitting one ; abutting on the common atul on the high road , it forms a boundary between tbe natural and artificial life , like death itself , that great boundary between the known and the unknown world . Opposite the chuivh , on the ruht hand , is a pleasant mansion , its lawn _sloping down to the common , and rented by i ord John Russell , who is about giving it np , Iler Majesty having presented him with a mansion at Richmond , that he amy be nearer to her . royal residence of Windsor , when a certain interesting annual event takes place which will render her stay there for a short period indispensable , and
eventuate in _blesssing us with another royal specimen of the beautieB of monarchy . A crowd in tho road now attracts our attention , they are collected round farmer White ' s gate , and in a cesspool havediscovered a sheep skin , and tho skins of upwards of adizen _fowls , the whole having evidently been stolen , and placed here to avoid detection . Poverty has been miking fearful havoc ia our neighbourhood , and if . fences oi this description are numerous . We loiter in the crowd , and listen to the comment . * Poor people cannot starve . ' 'Mr White has been thrashing with the machine thia month past , while wo have lain still . ' ' We'll , they ' ve had a good blow-out for once . ' ' It v . -as wise to skin the fowls , they'll never be able to swear to them . ' This is the state to which our rulers have brought society . Crime meets with sympathy instead of abhorrence . Crime , did I say , is it crime to obey tho laws of nature ? is it _crirno for starving men to satisfy the pangs of
hunger ? Nay , is it not rather a crime of the deepest dye to starveciuietly in aland blessed by nature with a bounteous plenty ? I know that this doctrine may bs called vicious and immoral ; I know that it ia opposed to the customs and usages of our false _civilisati-m ; but I detest the iron chain that custom hath woven round the _leslings of mankind . I will ever wage war with that worst of all despotisms , which chains the tongues of men , lest in their enthusiasm they might utter truths dangerous to the safety of cur social and political fabric . We'e I one ot these outcasts , these pariahs of society , I would pour forth such biirnb : /? words , aa th' uld raise tbe veriest coward into fell resistance . What is life or the _losi of life , to the thousands who are yearly dying of hunger ? wbat need they but to muster spirit from their own ranks to raise as formidable a standard bore , as ever thejacquerie of old did in feudal France ? This may be said to be treason and rebellion , but it ia truo to reason and humanity .
Upon tho crimson tented plain , B « neath tho ocean wave ,
How many of earth ' s _nobhst sons , Have filled a _rebel'n grave , We now leave the Common , and with a greater _stiffhessin ourgait , as more compatible with thehigh road , and the serious thoughts just engendered , march musing onward , the common and common rights being the subject of our meditation . There has Jong been a talk of this beautiful common being enclosed i if so , the usual plan is for the land to ba divided among the various farms in the parish ; according to this arrangement O'Connorville would come in foe its fhare of tbespoil . Selfishness argues it would bs advantageous to havo the common on . closed . Principle asks what would become of the numerous poor families , who gain half their livelihood
by keeping _stcck , collecting manure , cutting _lurzi _, fern & a ., off * he common , and principle , as it ever should triump _hs over selfishness . Besides , although the common ia almost too far off . being a mile by the road from the nearest houses , for any stock whieh . we at present keep , yet we find it very beneficial , for ire can out both _fuweand fern—the latter making thc very best manure , superior to straw . Last vear I used a considerable quantity of it , Bat a truce to' ; meditation . It is aboat three miles ( from O'Connorville to Chenies . We reach the ancient almshouses atthe entrance ofthe village . We copy the quaint old'fashioned _inscriptions This ' Hospital waa bilded Ado . ' 3 B 03 , of the _fowndacion of Anne _Covntess of Warwik , Daughter of Fravnces , Erie of Bedford , who departed 1603 , and Bi
Her Wil appoynted the same to be made for the releile of tenne poore people . ' The whole village of Chenies is the property of the Bedford family ; it was their original residence when they were simple , ( query cunning ) country _gentleman , ere the spoil of the church had enriched thera atthe expense of the rights of our Catholic population . Ia the church , a plain ancient edifice , reBt tbe remains of the Bedford family , including the two wi _^ es Ofthe present Premier , ( a third is atill _Livinj ) , thair g _oraeoua tombs contrasting strangely with the simplicity of the building . Lord _Wriothsley Russell , brother to Lord Jehn , is the Vicar , and generally performs the duties thereto attached ; he live _^ in a mansion adjoining the church , and hears a deservededly high character for affability and benevolence . The village is pretty , most of the houaeBhaving boen recently
erected , and remarkable tor the porches , chiefly of brick in front of thedoors , scarce a house _bsing destitute of this convenience * , whether the inhabitants are in any way allied to the ancient philosophers of the porch , I have not yet , been able to discover . Adjoining the chur » h is the chief attraction of the village , the ancient mansion of the Russell family , a beautifu l
Walks And Wanderings Around Vvaij O'Conn...
brick structure of the Elizabethan _fctfe ; a porti _on of two wings remain standing in excellent preservation ; they are completely embkzoned in . ivy _, and when seen by moonlig ht form as _sharroing a scene as _^ any in th « kingdom , _farmoro vaunted for beauty , iho mansion must originally have been very extensive ; tradition attributes its destruction to tbat great leveller Cromwell ; there undoubtedly waa a combat in this _neighbsurhondimemorial 8 of which are still to be seen . The mur _. siou was used as an almshouse some years back , but is now in the occupation ofa person named Floyd . I have not yet had an opportunity of _uUUitig the , interior which report states to bo well worth _inspection . Whilst viewing this interesting specimen of the architecture of our ancestors , 1
could not avoid tracing a resemblance _batwen it and the present sta _' _-e of society . Both are alike venerable from their antiquity , and though hoary and decayed within look pleasing to the eye , but the ivy that gives apparent strength and beauty to the ruin is gradually assisting in crumbling it to decay ; soa _' so with thn _. _expediencymewuies of tbeday ; though * h * y eive an apparent youth and freshness to tho old worn fabric , jet their very incongruity wil ! assist in bringing it more speedily to ultimate destruction . May the temple of liberty be erected upon its ruins Wo now bend our steps homeward , passing through the beautiful clumps of elms which form a grave in the centre of the _village ; embowered in these elms is a double-action pump , of a novel _description , which
throws water from an immense depth to the surface , and constitutes the chief supply _i . f the village . About half a mile from Chenies we quit tho road _: nd proceed home by the green lanes ; these green lanes , how many pleasant associations they call to mine ' . —how many poe _* 8 have sun ? of them and novelists pictured them ; but the stern eye of utility eees only laud lying in waste that would supply bie » d to thousands of pining stomachs ; between this and O'Connorville upwards of 100 acres lay thus comparatively idle , one donkey being the sole tenant ofthe d ra > -sno . Lion , who has been at a loss for an adventure , _pounces upon the ass , who is quietly resting his _overwearied frame ; round and round him wheels tiie dog . jumpiDg and harking in veryglee , until
emboldened by the apathy of the beast , he _seize * him by the nose . So it is with the human animal , overwearied witb the heavy burdens which social and political tyranny have forced upon hira , he has not spirit to resent the repeated ' _nsultsiouvred hira until Ihe oppressor , emboldened by his non-resistance , consummates his despotic-design ; and so varying in thought from _gravis to gay , as vary the skies in our Protean climes , n _fie-tingevery light or sombre tint , » e journ _< y homeward ; and now , quietly seated in our arm chair , record these notes , trusting the reader will have ns much pleasure in perusing them as we have in inditing thera . Thomas Martin _Wueeleh . O'Connorville .
Tiie French Revolution. Conld Neither Th...
TIIE FRENCH REVOLUTION . Conld neither the cunning king nor his cunning minister just have looked across tbe channel and seen how o « r _rultrs manage _these matters ? Could _vhey not have seen that by _leaving open thc safety valve of popular complaint—allowing us to throw off our _wralh in talk and newspaper declamation—they can i , 'o on for , jears , perhaps for ages , htyitic' on us as much burden as they please , Could he not see that our c' _. vernment has loaded us with tbe debts of all Europe , crushed our commerce , swamped our colonics by monstrous _mow-polies , filled our towns with misery , and Ireland with _bosigary and death—but have taken caro not to shut down the safety valve of complaint , or their fate would have been—what his is .
But the point which it concerns us f 0 fix our eyes unon in this _idorious demonstration , is thc _magnificent power ef popular fortitude and wisdom which it has _di-ifilaypd to the world . A people _rising in the face of 100 000 soldiers , of a deadly cordon of fortifieations , and nf a murderous police in arms in the very heart of them , ar . d _dissipating all the might of arms , the _torco of governmenta _^ iibtelty , and the splendour of royalty , like a mere morning mist . Tbe whole has cone to pieces with a suddenness that resembles nothing but the shifting of a theatric scene . Is this then monarchy ? How wretched a thing it is . I _< this then military power ? How despicable it is I Is 1 his then a peopb exercisin g i \ _s _wW 1 , Hov _? g ' orious . '
If after this there be a monarch unpunished for bis treason lo fhe state , we may bo _^ ure that there is a people equally remiss . If there bo liberty inii-inml there is ft degraded nation ! The French have destroyed the last portion of the prestige of _tyranny , and wc owe them a debt whicii we can onl y repay by asserting our own rights as boldly and as nobly . We have seen in this country how the coward hut greedy vampire of aristocracy shrinks and trembles atthe first _brava word of the nation . Wo saw it atthe time ofthe Reform Bill — we saw it but ihe other day at the production of tbe audacious Whig budget —vet , we lie prostrate at this moment , _enduring
abuse , extravagance , and _extortion , which we exclaimed _iigainst half a century ago . Taxation extends itself , but sot the _suffrage—retrenehRient is a word actually lost out of the mouths of reformers . The aristocratic phalanx of placemen sit in all th' _? bloom of unshorn patronage , pensions , salaries , and power , and the people pay nine tenths of the taxaticn and starve . Lock , fellow countiymen , across the channel , and let that national pride which bas often led you into bloody contests witb your Gallic _neighbors at least inspire you with shame at the elory which they have won from jou in the contest for _poetical liberty .
Look ox mat _pict-jrk asd on this . — A great people winning in two days the charter of their _libtrties from the hands of false rulers ; in the midst of slaughter and excitement acting out the poetry of religion : another people , once great , grovelling in misery and dtbi at tke feet of the feeblest government which ever plundered and _disgracrd these realms . A _nation must be lost indeed which does not profit by tlio mighty lessons whieh have just heen read to the world . _—Williasi _Hoviit .
Tnu Arctic Expedition.—A Reward Of £ 2,0...
Tnu Arctic Expedition . —A Reward of £ 2 , 000 for the Discovery of Sib John _Feanklis . —Lady Franklin has issued a notice offering a rewatd ot £ 2 000 , with a view of inducing any whaling ship , which _reforts to Davis ' s Straits or Bafh ' n ' s Bay , to make search for tbe expedition under the command of Sir John Franklin , respecting wkr _> m the greatest apstety has lor some time past been manifested , no tidings having reached England with regard to the _progress of the expedi- ion , or the safety ot those who compose it . Her ladyship ' s notice stipulates that search bhall be made ih those parts which are not in the _sco ; ic of the expedition sent out by gnvcrnrr . ent , and that the £ 2 000 is to be divided as f .. lio « s : — £ 1 , 000 between ihe owner ? , captain , ofticrF _, and _acw of any ship which shall _rtt-purt from the usual
fishing grounds , for the purpose ot _cxpwins Prince _Hesfent's Inlet . Admiralty Inlet . Jones ' s _Sou-. _sd , t _. r Smith's Sound , providing such ship finding ths _expedision under Sir John Franklin in dis ( rest , shall make up to and afford it relief ; and £ 1000 to be divided amongst the officers , owners , and crew of any shi p which shall at an early period of tbe whaling season make extra ex- , rtion for the above _objs ct ; and in the event of _discovering the expedition , should such _assistance be required , britii ; Sir John Franklin and his party to _England . I-Ier ladyship intimates that , in order that there may bo no misunderstanding about tbo _ reward . " , the matter shall ba referred to the following gentlemen , whose decision shall be final , these gentlemen having kindly consented to act as referees in the matter :
—Admiral _Beaufont , Captain Sir William Edward Parry , R . N ., and Mr Ward . _PabliaubntauyPapers . —Housk op LoriD' * . ~( 75 . ) —Increase and Diminution in _iS-juiiHs of _Pkrsdns , Salaries , & c , in Public Offices in 1847- —In 1847 there havo been added to the official _peisonnel of ' 1 . 2 S 2 individuals ; there has been an increase in the amount of official salaries of £ 64 , 222 i . 7 * J . ; of emoluments of lS ,. > 29 . lis . lid . ; ol retired allowances of £ 14 521 . 16 s . 3 . 1 . ; of expenses , £ 36 C 49 . K Till . ; being a total of £ 133 , 925 . Hs 4 | 1 . Per contra there has been a reduction of thirty-two
persons ; and a diminution of salaries to the amount of 7 , 730 . 81 . 10 d . ; of emolument ? , £ 4 . 040 . IBs . 114 . ; of retired allowance ? , £ 6 C 57- _los . lOd . ; of expenses , £ 5620 . fl' . 7 R ; in all , £ 24 070 . Is . 25 R The chief _increase has been in the- Customs ( . 02 persons and . £ 40 , 077 . I 81 . IU . ) and in the Post-office ( 1 , 109 persons and £ 38 , 987 . 12 * . S ) , )—Uopsb of Cruums . —( 170 )—Freight Money ( _Guxknmch IlosriTAi , ) . — From Nov . 29 . h , _18 o 7 . to April 20 ih , 1847 , the treasurer of Greenwich Hospital received for freight money , £ 98 , 009 18 * . 4 d ., This total was paid " on 1 , 731 voyage . * ; £ 24 . 238 10 * $ } d . was received on public account ; and _iC 73 , 77 l ' r Bi , QhU on _priyato
account . _Wf . ST LONDOK As 1 _I-EnCL 0311 RB A 9 BOCUT 10 N .--At the last meeting of the committee _^ t & is Association , March 24 th , Mr G . _Wiggcoll in the chair , the secretary _presented nearly three _hundred pamphlets _iromEul Stanhope ; _ahso , books from _{* . . M . Reynolds , E-q , _Lettera from Mr _Riehaiyi Cobden and Mr John Bright were read ; likewise , a letter complaining of Colonel Fox ' s enclosuve pra rj _' 18 at Kensington . Kind friends having either been thanked by resolution , or elected honorary mem bers for services rendered , the raeesing adjourned .
Gaution To The Pdblio.—No Sooner Is A Me...
Gaution to the _Pdblio . —No sooner is a medicine well established in public favour than a host of imitators _Spi-hlf ? up , who , lot' tha Salt * of profit , not onl y-ivrootho Proprietor ofthe Genuine Medicine , but inflict a serious injury on the unwary purchaser of their _base counterfeit trash . Those remarks apply to tho remed y which is so well known as ' _Abernethy ' s Pile Ointment . ' This excellent remedy for piles has been established b y undoubted proofs of its efficacy . Purchasers may he able to detect these frauds by asking particularly for « Abernethy ' s Pile Ointment , ' in covered pots , _pvice is 6 d . ( which is tho lowest price thc proprietor is enabled to ell it , owing to the great expense of the ingredients ) , nnd observe the name of C . King ' , is on tho _government stamp , pasted round each pwt . Sufferers from piles will not repeat giving tho Ointment a trial ,
F Oitce Mm
f _oitce mm
Marlborough Street . _ Stanbi„A Cas-T^ D...
MARLBOROUGH STREET . _ STAnBi _„ a _Cas-T _^ _DoD & _Ey-STitEST . — H . nry P . irkcr w _*» Ch » r _™ _i _» . » , bavins stabbed E _' Cu Barges , and W m J _™ _«« Ritchie . The case of Mary Ritchie _vras taken a short time ago , as her _wouudn were sufficientl y _boakd to en able ber to come _forward and givo tvtdeuee . On thhi charge the prisoner was ordered to stand full y _cttrnmitted Eliza Burgess was now sworn , and said I _sm a single woman , ani I lodge with toy mother nt . _Vo . 20 , Dudley _, ftreet , I have _kt-pt company with the _prtgouCr - about two years . On Saturday ni < hf _, fie 19 th of P « biuary , wo came home _together to my mother ' s , and hs wanted to stop there all night ; but my mother objected , und tha prisoner left , _aayine , ' I shall not see you any more . ' o » Sundiy morning , I wan looking out of the window and I
saw hira go by . I wtnt down _» -. air . _» and asked if he had any money . He picked up a Kreat stone and _taid he would das '' my brains out if [ did not ko aw » y from htin . I then left him . About ten _minute 3 afterwards he knocked at our door , and when I opened it ive had a lew words about money , upon which he struck me in the month . I ran up stairs and culled to my mother * He tried to pull me back , and tore my clothet in the _struggle . About ten minutes after he came up to _OUC room and pulled out a knife . Hu said ' Tftat ' s for the pair ofyou . ' Then my mother came _befjremo to save me . I saw the prisoner make seviral b _! owa at her with the knife in tha stomach . I screamed and my mother ran .
out of the room . _Prisoner directly tried to lock the door . I pulled his arms back . Then he ran at me with the knife . I turned ray back , and fee srabbed mo in tho back . I triad to get out of the room , but be prevented me , and placed himself _against the door . I took hold of his arms and swung him round , ond he then ' jobbed the knifo at mo over hie shoulder , and stubbed me on tbe forehead . I got oot of the room , and assistance camo , nod I waa token off to _Charns-cross Hospital . I was in the _family-wny b y the prifonci- at the time , and I have since been confined in the hospital . —JfrStcilgall , _housesurpon at Charing . cross Hospital , de _« cril ed tho wounds which witness ba _< received . —The prisoner made no defeuco , and was fully committed _.
SOUTIIWARK , —Jealousy . —• Amelia Bray was chargod with taking a quantity of laudanum witb intent to poison _harself . On _Afondsy af . ernoon the prisoner walked into tho Surrey Coffie-house , in Union-street , and called for a cop of coffee Tbo coffee having' teen placed before her , a person sitting in nn adjoining box heard something fall on the floor , looked over , and saw that it wbb _» n _impty pliinl . He picked it np , and found that it had contained laudanum , which she had _i-vUentl _j swallowed . She _was conveyed to St Thomas ' s Hospital _, _vdierc the stomach-pump was used , ond with good effect .
Her _step-mother attended , and said sho was a girl of excellent t _* L ? p r and disposition uuiil _slie became attached to a man whom she had very recently seen enter a cone rt-room with _anoibrr female . She had a good homo , and friends _willing to _receive ha , if sbe would promise not to repeat the attempt , —The magistrate 8 'tid thatho sh ? _uldstroufly advise her parents to let htr remain in _prisen _, where she would lie taken every caro of in the infirmary , and h _» Te time for _rvfUctiou , beBideg _receiving the wholesome advice of the chapluin of the gaol . The prisoner was tlun _commitied .
CLERKENWELL . —A Coal Company . —MrLockstone , a half-pay officer , _applied to Mr Combe for his assistance and advice . Applicant _suted that nt the commencement of the present month he saw au advertisemrnt in the newspaper , _stiit _' ng that respectable parties who wished to increase their income rrou . 'd be employed as _collectors for orders and moniy , by _appling to ' B . C ., " No . 61 , Charlotte-street , Islington . Applicant presented himself , and was introduced tj a person who represented _hiinoelf as the manager ofthe Mi'chanW and General Coal Club Company , newly started ; capital , £ 20 , 000 , in shares of £ 1 . ; deposit Is . per shnre . The office ha 3 a _businesf-like appearance ; ecveral _peteons wero acting as clerks , Haunt ; been informed it would bo necessary for every collector to tako forty shares , at Is . < _-ach , he
readily as _< cnteu , nnd paid tho money . His appointment was made cut , in which jt was specified that be was to pay the further sum of £ , fl . on or before thc next , or in case of default , tho _fchillir . g per share for tha forty sharis was to be fotf . _i-ed . The applicant was to receive . - £ 80 . per nnnum _, payable out of tke profits of the com . P & ny , unJ _wastngftged for a particular district . He was to solicit orders , and sub-collectors , who were to take three shares each , at Is . _jicr share , were to receive £ , 15 . per annum . He went on _ae-ively with bis duties , collected numerous order * , nnd _engaged several _sub-collectors up to Monday evening last , when he proceeded to the office of the oompany and discovered that the plaoe
w :-. s closed , snd all the parties had ' bolted . ' Tho place was _beelege _^ by dup . - ( 5 nncl disappointed collcctrr _* , and tradesmen who had been swindled , and _although every possible _iequiry had teen made no _tidings _whatever could be traced of the _mtsaicr or bis _colbngiiGS . —Mr _r- usnttt . one ofthe _ushn-s of ihe court , said that several respectable persons hud upplied t > ore for Information how to act , as they had be _^ n defi \ iu ! ed wider similar cirvumstances to Mr LoeUstone , Inquiries hnd been made by the police of the _distric , who had appertained that tbe 'Mechanics' and General Coal Ciub Company , " was a complete fraud . —Mr Coaibe , after listening attentively to applicant , regretted tbat he could do nothing for h ' . m under the _circsmstrtneea .
GUILDHALL _—Liabilitt op Mastehs to Scppobt tueib Apprentices . —Mr John Axon , bookbinder , WEB summoned for refuting to pay the _nages due to Matthew Bennett , his apprentice . —The father of tha complainant stated that about filtetn _monihs back he apprenticed bis son to the defendant for sis _jears , and he was to receive four shillings per week during the term of bis servitude A Bhort time ago the lad became ill , and was obliged to attend at the hospital as an out-door patient , in _consequence of which he wns unable to woik , nnd his master refused to pay him _bii weekly wages . There were threo _wee-ks now due at threo shillings per week , an _arrangement having bsen entered into , when last before ihe
alderman that complainant should take one shilling lesB if the boy continued ill , —Mr Aion _thonght he was not bound to support 'he led when deriving no benefit from his labour . —Alderman Chaliis said the 4 'h cf Geo . IV . was imperative on the _subj-jct . —The defendant said he _woul . _l not pay n farthing , —Alderman Chaliis said that in that case lie must go to prijon . The lad looked too ill to work . —The defendant replied thathe would do that tn preference to _giving a penny The deposition of tho parent was then taken , and Alderman Coallis ordered the payment ofthe _f-rfce _we-ks and the costs of the summons to be paid After a little hesitation Mr Axon ultimately cham / ed his mind and paid the money .
Mtjtekiovjs Asd Tragical Occurrenck Is E...
Mtjtekiovjs asd Tragical _Occurrenck IS E $ SIS » —Much sensation haa oeen created in tbo county of Essex by an occum nee of a very tragical nature , which lode place at Itiyleigh . Mr Thomas Roberts , a _traclesman of that place , who was the nephew of tbo . Mayorof Rochester , returned home about twelve o ' clock one night last weflr , after _playing a rubber if whist _ivitli force friends , lie appeased in excellent spirits , § ir . d liavin . _trsmokril a pipo with his assista . ut and _appt-eufit-e , thty . ill retired to bed . M * Roberts went _inta the bedroom of tho two young men partly dressed , with a candle in one hand and a pifcol in tiie other , and , in a '• . urrfcd manner , desired _lliem to get up , and call in somo _neighbours , for there were seven or eight men in the h . iuse , who
declared they would bave his money or bis life . Tbey iniuv diately run out , nnd upon relurnimr they found ! vli- Robertson the stairs , with the pistol lying by bis side , and his brains blown out , A surgeon _' _was quickly brought in , but life was quite extinct . There was not the _slightest appearance ot any forcible _€ R ° trance into the house , hut in the sitting-room a candle was _burning , aad eight wine-glasses , each containing a small quantity of gin , were standing on the tabid Nothing was missed from any part oftho house . A coroner ' s inquest was held to inquire into tbe circumstances of tbis very mysterious affair . — The coroner , upon the opening ofthe ease , said that the first , account he had heard of the occurrence impressed hira with the idea tbat the deceased had
destroyed himself , but since his arrival in Rayleigh , he was induced to think it might be the result of accident . —Several witnesses were examined , who detailed evidence to the effect already stated . —The coroner , having read over tho depositions , observed that the strong presumption was , that the deceased , when ho spoke of robbers being in tbe house , must have been labouring under some extraordinary mental delusion ; fsr , after tho most searching investigation , nothing had been detected at all calculated to justify that _assertion . It was difficult to assign any rational motive _feir such an assertion , even had the deceased contemplated suicide , tbere beiti " , nothing to prevent
him . The caso was involved in mystery , which HO further inquiry was calculated to dispel . It waa probable that the wound which caused death was the result of accident ; at all events , the Bafest course * to adopt , would be to return such a verdict as would leave the matter open to further inquiry , _sbouldfresh evidence be obtained . The jury accordinglyreturned a verdict , ' That the decased , Thomas Roberts , came to his death from a pistol wound ; but how or by whom inflicted there was no evidence to show . ' _'Ihs coroner then granted his warrant for the iuterment of the body , and the _praceedings terminated .
Fatal Accident to a Guard on thb Lasteeh Counties Railway . —On Saturday morning , tne of those lamentable occurrences which too frequently have their origin in apathy and indifference , or upon too great reliance upon former hair-breadth escapes , took place on the line of the Eastern Counties Railway . It appears tint the down train arrived at the Bishop ' s Stortford station ( 32 miles frora Londonjat about half-past eleven , a . m ., where it received some luggage , and departed . The guard ( Morgan ) , who is thesonin-law of Mr Ray , a licensed victualler , di
_Long-lano , Shoreditch , as the train was proceedirfj , . , _^ ised himself for the purpose ef adjusting the posi-• • i of some boxes , and , before he could be aware of X _[ _, \ e train , which was passing rapidly along ,- _pro'ressc u underneath ono of the arche _? , and the head ) f tho u ' ufortunate guard came in frightful collision vitha pi *** ion of the inner roof , and , it is supposed _^ tilled him instantaneously , as , on the arrival of the rain at the' ' station , his head wrb found to be Ireadfully fn . _stored and indented . The unfortunate leceascd is at " * ted to have been ) tho finest man one -aged _udou thh > ' Mm of railway . ___
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), April 1, 1848, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_01041848/page/2/
-