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must be hf if duetheir ifuh iTB May 5, 1...
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LABOUR! SI SB. P. u. ji'notJAit. See tha...
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SHE PROSE WORKS OF JOHN MELTON. "With a ...
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The Illustrated Atlas, and 3Iodesn Histo...
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A Poetical Petition to Queen Victoria, f...
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^; v^u^ * ke ab oye;was put'ihtd type we...
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The Progressionist. No. 1. New Series. L...
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The Uxbridge Spirit of Freedom, and Work...
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SUNSHINE AND SIIADOW; A TALE OP THE NINE...
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Fanetif0.
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PRorERTt and LABOUK.—Those who are posse...
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AN EFFECTUAL^ C URE FOR PIL ES, FISTULAS. An. ~ ~
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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.
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Must Be Hf If Duetheir Ifuh Itb May 5, 1...
May 5 , 1849 . T E J _^ QRTH IRK STIR , —— -:.. : ? v _™ ¦ _- * - _™ - _^ - * - _^ _- _^ ~' - ~ Z _~'' _5 ' _- ' _*~™* ' _- _,-r--jrz _~ mir _* r _~ .. ___ ..... _^ . ,... ' ~ f ~ " ' * " ' _!* "" * _! ,- - "" _"_ _. ' . ' .. _„ . ... " ' ' n * " * " _•*** " — ¦ ' _^^^^*^**^*** _- * _-- _* _- l _^ 1 _>! _*^' * _-- _"" _T- | _l---iit 1 Mir _iff _^^ _^* . ..... _ ¦ I _1 ** ~ _^ _U * I- i ¦ " | ¦ ¦ . .. \— ' _~ ' _"" •• - _•••• - _••• - - _^ .
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Labour! Si Sb. P. U. Ji'notjait. See Tha...
LABOUR ! SI SB . P . u . ji _' notJAit . See that proud ship , high looming in the -view ; Inspect the forests where her timbers grew ; There labour wields the axe , and saws the beam , Then shapes her ribs * her planks , and caulks each seam , Where noisy shipwrights ply their useful trade . Yonder her ropes are spun , her cables made , In that dense flaxy mill her sails are wove ,
By _nggersfashioned _, bent , unfurled , or rove ; Yon anchor hanging o ' er her how apeak , "Was forged by labour , which by mining deep , Discovers ore to cast her booming gun . See now she's launch 1 'd , and up her signals run , Prom maintop peak / down to her dancing boat , From waister s shoe tack , to the captain ' s coat , . She ' s labour ' s own , Old England ' s oaken wall , To brave the billow , and the hostile ball ; She rolls majestic , on the heaving tide , And spurns the ocean , as rare labour ' s pride .
Close hy the Thames the Gothic senate stands , The chiselled toy of labour's useful hands ; Its towers , and arches , windows , doors , and halls , Its sculptured statues , arms , and solid walls , "Were all hy labour reared , from lowest pile To fretted pinnacle ofancient style . - ' -- ¦ _Theicity temples , and Paul ' s towering dome , The palace pillars ofthe noble ' s home , All witness bear of labour ' s fruitful task , "ffhose beauties grand most eloquently ask , "Wh y he , who all these storied columns rears , A stave kneels ragged at their base in tears ?
By whose hard palm their symmetry was built , Whose scanty wages oft entice to guilt . Despondent duty at the loom , and frame , Whilst robing beauty , but repeats the same ; And wonders why its ooatless back is bare , Whilst weaving textures p lentiful and rare . That peasant , stooping like the-willow ' s bough , Whose skill directs the meliorating plough , Who sows the-grain , and reaps the bending ear , Whose toil each heart expands , all thresholds cheer , Wonders why he , ' midst blessings widely shed , Should seehi 3 children weep for daily bread .
Hark that vast engine , in its swift career ; Those smiling passengers unused to fear ; Their lives , more sacred than their wealthj entrust To that mechanic black with oil and dust ; - And thou , Victoria , great England ' s Queen , With all thy ministers , are fearless seen , Thy crown confiding to a workman ' s care , Too ignorant the freeman ' s vote to share , With those whose attribute is merely rent , Whose wealth accumulates from wages spent ; But not from toil , who like the lily blow And live by works that from the willing flow . Too ignorant to wield the giant force ,
Of steam careering on its mighty course . ¦ Too i gnorant to work the magic Press , And mould ideas that its types express ; To make slight paper for the impress bold , That keeps its lesson when the mind grows old . Too ignorant the lens to cut or grind , That draws Heaven ' s curtain to the dazzled mind , That shows where systems over systems shine , That _nears His throne , Omnipotent , Divine , From whose dread palm , and awful labour grew , This atom earth , which into space he threw _, labour ' s the shadow ofthat Mghty Cause Who rules all nature , and who breathes her laws _, labour will yet a prouder end fulfil Subservient to His majestic will .
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She Prose Works Of John Melton. "With A ...
SHE PROSE WORKS OF _JOHN MELTON . "With a Preface , Preliminary Remarks , and . _Dfoies ; hy J . A . St . John . VoLIU London : H . G . Bonn , _Yorkstreet , _Covent Garden . This—the concluding volume of Milton ' s Prose Works , is principally occupied with that immortal author ' s celebrated worts on the Question of "Divorce ; " works which "may be aaid nearly to exhaust all the philosophy and _learning ofthe subject ; " and which , as the editor remarks , " may serve to enlighten both our legislators and philosophers , if they will
be-modest enough to listen and to learn . " There follows a brief butmost interesting treatise on " Education , " exceedingly worthy the thoughtful consideration of statesmen and public reformers . In this volume is also contained the famous treatise on " The Likeliest _Meansto Remove Hirelings out ofthe Church . " ; Mn . TO * y , in bis opening address to the Parliament , observes with prophetic foresight , " Till relig ion be set free from the monopoly of hirelings , I dare affirm , that no model whatsoever of a commonwealth will prove successful or _xmdisturbed . " In the following extract be forcibly describes the evil of
HrSEUSG PREACHERS . Hire of itself is neither a thing unlawful , nor a 'Word of any evil note , signifying no more than a due recompense or reward : as when our Saviour aaith , " the labourer is worthy of his hire . " That which makes it so dangerous in thc church , and properly makes the hireling , a word always of evil signification , is either the excess thereof , or the undue manner of _saving and taking it . What harm the excess thereof bronght-to the church , perhaps _trasnotfounahv experience till the days of
Constantine ; who , out of his zeaL thinking he could he never too liberally a nursing father of the church , mig ht be not unfitly said to have either overlaid it Or choked it in the nursing . Wliich was foretold , as is recorded in ecclesiastical traditions , by a voice leard from heaven , on the very day that those great donations and church revenues were given , crying aloud , " This day is poison poured into the church . Which the event soon after verified , as appears by another no less ancient observation , " That religion _brought forth wealth , and the daughter devoured the mother . "
We add the following extracts : —
HTHES . But with what face or conscience can they allege Moses or these laws for titles , as they now enjoy or exact ihem ; whereof Moses ordains the owner , as we heard before , the stranger ,: the fatherless , and the widow , partakers of the Levite ; and these fathers which they cite , and these though Romish rather than English laws , allotted both to priestand iishop the third part only ? But these our Protestant—these oin * new _rdbrmedEnglish Presbyterian divines , against their own cited authors , and
to the shame of their pretended Keformation—• would engross to themselves all tithes by statute ; and supported more by their wilful obstinacy and desire for filthy lucre , than by these both insufficient and impertinent authorities would persuade a Christian magistracy and parliament—whom we _tmstGkid hath restored for a happier reformation— -to impose npon as a Jndaical andceremonial law , and yet" from that-law to __ he more irregular and unwarrantable—more complying with a _covctons clergy—than any of those Popish tings and parliaments alleged .
"Where did God ever clearly declare to all nations , or in all lands ( and none but fools 5 art with their estates without the clearest evienee , on bare supposals and presumptions of them who are the gainers thereby ) , that he required the tenth as'due to Him or His Son perpetnally and ; in all places ? Where did he demand it , that * we mig ht certainly know , as in all claims of temporal right is just and reasonable ? or if demanded , where did he assign it , or by'what " evident conveyance to ministers ? Unless they can demonstrate this by-moretban conjectures , their title can be no better to tithes than tbe title of Gehazi was
to those things which by abusing his master s name he rooked froiblfaaman . 3 fuch less where did he command-that tithes * should be fetched by force , Where left ; riot under the gospel , whatever his right was , to the free-will offerings of men ? : WMch is the greater , sacrifice , ; to b ' ely divine authority , to make the name of Christ , accessory to violence , and robbing huh of the very honour which he aimed at in bestowing freely the ; gospel , to commit ' simony and rapine , both secular and ecclesiastical ; or , on thebtherside , not to give up the tenth of civil right _Wdjropriety to the" tricks and _unpostures of clergymen , ~ c 6 ntrited with" all the art and argument that their bellies , can invent orsuegest ? - .
-.. BAPTISM , MARRIAGE , ASn BURIAL PEES . Bowill H had _becomeTJohn , the Baptistto demand fees for his bapt ising , or _Chrirt for his _christenings ? : _ilar less it becomes these : now , with a _greefews lower than that _^ f tradesmen calling passengers to " their shop , and yet '; paid beforehand , to ask again fer doing that which those _. iheir founders didfreely . "'" If men of themselves * come-to be ; baptised _^ they ' are either brought by" such as already Hay : the minister , or come to he one of his disciples
and ntaintainera : of whom to ask a fee as it were 1 -for entrance ia a piece of paltry craft or caution , " befitting none but beggarly artists . Burials and ; jmarriagesare so little to be any part , of their gain , that they who consider well may find them to be no ' _paii of ti \ eir _fonction . At burials their attendance * they allege ; on . the corpse _;; all the , guests , do . as much nnhired . But their prayers at the grave ; _-sufc : * p « stitiouBly required : ; yet . if-reqiiired , their , last . _TCrfonnance to . the -deceased : of their own flock . " . _^^ t . the" & _uie _^ 8 _« monj : _attheir choiee „ . oV if not 0 jfi occasion offei-ed theni _; to , preach -out _, of season -. _" _ffluch is _oite parti of their' office , £ uf _wiaQthhig
She Prose Works Of John Melton. "With A ...
must be spokenhf praise ; if due , their duty ; ifuh " due , their corruption , a peculiar simony of our divines in England only . . I As for marriages , that ministers should meddle with them , as not sanctified or legitimate , without their celebration , I find no ground in . Scripture either of precept or example . : Likeliest it is ( which our Selden hath well observed , 1 . 2 , c . 28 , Vs . Eb _. ) that in imitation of heathen priests , ; who were wont at nuptials to use many rites and ceremonies , and especially , judgingit would be profitable , and the increase of their authority , not to be spectators only in business of such concernment to the life of man , they insinuated-that marriage was not holy without their benediction , and for the better colour , made it a sacrament ; being of itself a civil ordinance , a household contract , a thing indifferent and free to the whole race of mankind . - _-r _*>„^ 4 . I _** _ 1 ' _lJI " _- •_ - _ l ' zZ _* . -If J ., n 4 _> _V . _a _^ _. J .. i . l _^ . : «
Towards the close of this powerfully written treatise the author asks : — " How can any Christian object it to a Turk , that his religion stands by force only ; and not justly fear from bim this reply ? 'Tours both by force and money . '" Milton adds : —" This is that which makes Atheists in the land , Whom they so much complain of : not the want of maintenance , or preachers , as they allege , but ; the many hirelings and cheaters that have the gospel in their hands ; bands that still crave and are never satisfied . " This is plain speaking with a vengeance I He concludes withthe following : — _. -:.
PLUS _-rauTHS . Christendom might soon rid herself ( of the hireling crew of parsons ) and be happy , if Christians would bnt know their own dignity , their , liberty , their adoption , and let it not be wondered if I say , their spiritual priesthood , whereby they have all equally access to any ministerial function ; whenever called by their own abilities , and the church , though they never came near commencement or . university . But while Protestants ,- to avoid , the due labour of understanding their own religion , are content to lodge it in the breast , or rather in the books , of a clergyman , and to take it thence by scraps and mammocks , as he dispenses it in his Sunday ' s dole ; they will be always learning and . never knowing ;
always infants ; -always either his vassals , as lay papists aro to their priests ; or at odds with him , " as reformed principles give them ] some light to be not wholly conformable ; whence , infinite disturbances in the state , as they do , must needs follow . Thus much had I to say ; and , I suppose , what may be enough to them , who are not avariciously bent otherwise , touching the likeliest means to remove hirelings out ofthe church ; than which nothing can more conduce to truth , to peace , and all happiness both in church and state . If I be not heard nor believed , the event will . bear me witness to have spoken truth ; and I , in the mean while , have borne my witness , not out of season , to the church and to my country , - ..
Milton's " Familiar Letters'' conclude the volume _^ Of these letters two or three are peculiarly affecting , revealing ' :. as tbey do . somewhat of the trials and sorrows of their great author , and his majestic resignation under the weight of calamities of no ordinary kind .. . ' His second letter to the patriotic Athenian , Leonaed Philaeas , can hardly fail to draw tears from the reader—tears of sympathy and admiration .
in publishing this remarkably cheap edition ofthe prose works of Miltox , Mr . Bohn has done for the public good that which entitles him to the thanks ofthe community generally , and the applauding-aid of the directors ofthe press in particular . . We shall be much -gratified if the notice we have taken of these volumes shall be found to have assisted the sale of works which ought to be in the hands of every Englishman .
The Illustrated Atlas, And 3iodesn Histo...
The Illustrated Atlas , and 3 Iodesn History of the World : Geographical , Political , Commercial , and Statistical . Edited by E . Montgomery Martin , Esq . Parts I . and II . London : J . andF . Tallis , 100 , St . Johnstreet . This is a most superb work—and as cheap as it is beautiful . We quote the following from the introductory address : — To general education , geography is as necessary
as grammar is to language ; indeed , ignorance on this point is scarcely consistent with practical knowledge on any other . It is suited to all ages , and to all classes of society , and must possess peculiar interest to the people of a maritime kingdom like England , whose peace and prosperity are so intimately Connected with the extension of commerce , and whose colonial , mercantile , and international relations include all regions from the Arctic to the Antarctic circles .
Issued in fortnightly parts—of which there will be about thirty-two—the work , when completed , will make a magnificent volume . Each part will contain two illustrated coloured maps , engraved on steel , accompanied'by four large pages of descriptive letter-press . . The Parts before us contain maps of the " Eastern Hemisphere ; " " Cabool , the Punjab , and Beloochistan ; " " Austria ; " "Mexico , . California , and Texas . " These maps ( with the illustrations which accompany them ) are beautifully engraved . The letter-press—though condensed—is sufficiently full to impart , to the reader correct ideas of the general character
of the earth , and the several , countries into which it is divided . Every , family should purchase this admirable Atlas .
A Poetical Petition To Queen Victoria, F...
A Poetical Petition to Queen Victoria , _fyc , Sec By Dr . P . M . M'Douall . Liverpool Published by Mrs . P . M . M'Douall , 71 , Front Portland-street . _, This poetical petition is " on behalf of the oppressed working classes of Great Britain and Ireland , in demand of their political rights . " We extract the Mowing introductory notice ;— . ' ' - ' 1-J ; - - . This is published by Mrs . M _; D 6 uall , " of 71 , Front Portland-street , Liverpool , under , the superintendence ofa Committee , who have-volunteered to assist her in business until her husband's liberation .
In handing it to 31 rs . M _* I > ouall , he said , " I shall be buried alive in some of these modern inquisi tions , without the possibility of communicating my feelings , wishes , or opinions , on any subject , therefore ; I charge you to publish any , or , all , of my writings , which " I leave behind me , and I hope the people will do you and them justice , for ; I shall be denied both tbe right and the duty to assist my children . " The Committee trust that they will be supported in their attempt to protect Dr . ' M'Douall s persecuted family . - * ¦ : ..:.- Signed on their Behalf ; , by .::.: :.. ; . < , __ _Asdbew Watt , Secretary . ; Liverpool , April , 18 i 9 .
The poem—or " poetical petition * - '— -will commend itself . The lines entitled "Labour , ' . ' atthe : head of the preceding column , are extracted from this work . Weaddthe following lines—the poet is addressing the jQueen : — ' , That . jewelled crown upon thy youthful head , Was chased and wrought by , men . who pine for bread , ~ The flowery lace , the _silkiand satin train , . Were wove by hands all cramped by cold and pain . - _'•¦' -- ""¦ ¦ _' ' J _, ;; j Consumptive death rests on that needle's point , " . And that small pin disturbs the infant ' s joint ; ; That cotton , damp with negro ' s crimson tears , > Its tale conveys of brief and blighted years ; . ' That table blade , more , fatal than the gun , " ; Strikes down e ' erforty-years their sands have run ; - Those coals thatblazeupon , thy peacefulhearth , ;
- Explosions _dreadj thedamp , andcrumblmgearth Announce , with miriirig risks , and _mdyihg fears , j The spcechle ' ssagohy , and orphan's tears : v 1 _''\ - ' ¦ Those soldiers , ioo , that ' neath the tropics broil ; - And shiver at the-pole , are sonsof toil ; ' _^ 3 ¦ ; j Those seamen , rough for frolic , or the fight / , ' i Have cheered , some lowly cot ; or mother ' s sight ; Their heaiti * , ' theirbome _^ "'" theirall ; '; . Vr . " . " . """ . " ... '¦" , ' . ¦ ,, ¦' . ' I Are freely , fully , at'their country ' s call .--- ---- — And shall those men , who . o ' erthefieldand wave ! Have borne your flag , sink rightless to th _& grave And all their kindred lire a helot ' s ; life , _,- . _;' .. . v , -1 ' Midst toil , and want , and their lorig'deadly , stri fe _^ Without the _suffirage power to shield aiid save '; . worn workshop slavery 7 and workhouse grave ! j . 7 $$ earnestly recommend this ; jpoenr . to our _rgersj * its ; _extenave c & _culafion'is , _^ _uWtbe
^; V^U^ * Ke Ab Oye;Was Put'ihtd Type We...
_^; v _^ u _^ * ke ab oye ; was _put'ihtd type we have _re-^ _Y ? . - following notice from Dr ' M _* D 6 uall ' : — _' n _« T _\ n _; t _^«^ _*^' _* _rCTr ™ ' _^ r * vil _tou ; _:- ; _AnlwJ _^^ _01114 _™**^ _^ l" ° Pto £ the smaUpoenJ , could not , . of course correct any _tgti- . v * _bmV _Srbeen _allo-Ted a copy in _^ Prison , he requests : Wto"SoutB r _a : » Arefiree . ; _like'Ejan te / _onrWdeirtTiobie f _<* . ¦• -, I Thtjre . are _^ _pne _^ or tjro nnnorerrora _-whichwUtiiwi- ' T _^ Z'j ' . lS ' , izZ : J "J . _& . _s-j ; . _^ . " 0 -i :. * _, _;^ _- ;/ _;! r ] _„ _, ... I .
^; V^U^ * Ke Ab Oye;Was Put'ihtd Type We...
authoiy _- " and " may * be of _congideYable ' service to his bereaved family . ' - _^ .. _^ . **¦»* , _. 'r---j- _ -f _^ _,- > - - _-- _ - _« .- ¦ -- - -. , _,,-. — . " ¦ ,
The Progressionist. No. 1. New Series. L...
The Progressionist . No . 1 . New Series . London ; E . Ward , 54 , Paternoster-row . A penny periodical , published ( we believe ) monthly ; devoted to the advocacy of Chartist princi ples .
The Uxbridge Spirit Of Freedom, And Work...
The Uxbridge Spirit of Freedom , and Working Man ' s Vindicator . . No . 2 . Uxbridge ; J . Redrup ; London : J . Watson , 3 , Queen ' s Head-passage , Paternoster-row . At least , in its outward , and visible form , this is an improvement on . No . 1 ofthe " Spirit ;" there is also an addition of four pages . As regards the matter , it is sufficient to say that it is not inferior to the contents of the first number . The signatures of the writers ( working men ) are significant;— "An Ouvrier , " "A Democrat , " "A Proletarian , " & c . They speak out bravely . Such M open and advised " writuig in defence of Democratic principles is most cheering . . There is some first-rate poetry in this number ; witness the following specimen : —
PRESS ON ! PRESS ON S Press on , press on ! ye rulers ! in the stirred world ' s onward track , ;— . It moves too sure for ye to put the clock of freedom ' back ? We're gathering up from near and far with souls in fiery glow , And Right . doth bare : its arm of might to bring the spoilers low _. Kings ! priests ! ye're far too costly , and wo weary ofyour rule , We crown no . more Divinity where nature ivriteth "Fool !" Ye must not bar our glorious path , as in the days
agone ; You know that God made MEN , not kings nor knavish priests , press on ! Press on , press on ! : ah ! nobles ! ye have played a . daring game , But your stars are falling , and out-fades the prestige . of your name . Too long have ye been fed and nursed on human ilood and tears , The naked truth is known , and Labour leaps to life and swears .. . His pride of strength to bloated ease ! he will no longer give , For all who live should work , lords , then all who work might live !' The struggle comes ; make much of what ye ' ve wrung Irom _fatherlands—Press on , press on : to-day we ask—to-morrow we'll
command ! Press on ! a million pauper foreheads press in misery ' s dust , — ¦ _¦ ¦' . ' . The champions" of the golden ; . truth , still eat the .. mouldy crust . . - .-This damning curse of tyrants , must not crush the t : nation ' s heart , — _- The spirit of a million slaves , doth pant ohfiro ' to start , - _:. ' And strive to inend the world , and walk in freedom ' s march sublime , While myriads sink heart-broken , and the land o ' er' swarms with crime , " Oh ! God ! " they cry , " we die , and seeno earnest won ! - Brother , join hand and heart , and tothe work , — i press on , press on !" _. . " ..
• The Uxbridge Spirit of Freedom deserves , and , we . trust , will command , the support ot the working classes .
Sunshine And Siiadow; A Tale Op The Nine...
SUNSHINE AND SIIADOW _; A TALE OP THE NINETEENTH CENTURY .
nr THOMAS MAHTIN WnEBLER , Late Secretary to the National Charter Association and National Land Company . . Chapter VI . Read on , and thou shalt find fit speculation , Deep as the depths of thy sagacity ; I will decry the present generation ; As portrait painter , show my small capacity ; Perhaps I'll mnkethee doubt my pen's veracity ; Perhaps I'll revel in things dead and gone ;; But all I ask thee is , read on ! read on ! . Beste .
In a spacious drawing-room m one of the bestsituated streets in the , town of Liverpool , adorned with more , profusion than warranted by good taste , sat Walter North . Nearly eight years have passed lightly over him since his introduction to our readers ;; the fine , frank , high-spirited boy-was now become the polished citizen of the world , and reported to be one of the most prosperous merchants of this far-famed commercial city . Time bad not effected many-changes in the person of ' , Walter North ; he was what the ladies ( God bless them ) denominate a handsome man ; -tall , and well-proportioned , with fine black eyes , raven hair , _and-feaiure 3 rather remarkable for vivacity and : good humour than for intelligence . He was still unmarried , though a prize in the matrimonial market that
many were contending for ; but Walter looked on marriage as he did on any other portion of his . business—with the keen eye of a _ trader . He was still young ; he could now command a match that a . few years back he could hot have dreamed of ; . business was fast increasing , and a few more years of singleblessedness might enable him to mingle his blood with that of England ' s nobility , so he heeded not the pit ' s and _trapfalls in which anxious mothers and maiden aunts sought to ensnare him , but pursued his ambitious schemes , smiling with self-complacency at their selfish views . His father , had retired from trade , and was living in the suburbs of the metropolis ; and under . Walter ' s management the business had progressed—both in London and Liverpool —from almost a retail concern , to a gigantic mercantile establishment . Walter was the beau ideal of
a merchant ; open and candid by nature , the shrewdness and spirit of trade , that he had imbibed from liis father , enabled bim to make good merchandise of these qualities , * careful without being penurious ; enterprising without being rash ; indifferent to the interests ofothers , yet careful , by attending to the decencies of life , to obtain _ their good opinion ; he was a specimen of that large and influential class ¦ w ho , destitute of any'high principles , and deficient in intellectual attainments , by then * ' tact and readiness to accommodate themselves to the world , leave talent and principle ' far behind them in" its estimation , succeed far better in securing to themselves possession of its treasured , goods ; . and bid fair to dethrone the feudal aristocracy of the realm , and monopolise the political and social power of , the empire ; - "
• Arthur Morton , with a : cultivated intellect , with an enthusiastic love of justice , and an enlarged spirit of benevolence , is in danger of perishing from the want of the necessaries of life ; whilst his quondam friend—deficient in all these qualities , but gifted " with worldly prudence—is rich in the world ' s g oods , and deemed an ornament to his class . Such is life ,, and . sueh the qualities necessary for success ! The generous , the noble , and enthusiastic are candidates for . a life of poverty , arid inheritors off an early and unwept grave ; whilst the cold , selfish calculator / whose ' heart never warmed with love to God or . man , rolls in-wealth andliix ' ury _. andhis fair fame is emblazoned by _thoi chisel of the statuary . When such things are , can we wonder that , the
temple " of , . virtue : is devoid of worshippers ? whilst the temple ' ' of Mammon is thronged by thousands of eager devotees , whoj in their haste to offer homage _ather polluted shrine , crush and destroy each other . Alas ! - strong" indeed must . be our belief in the doetrine of human perfectability , and great _; indeed our trust in the" principle of progression , or all" would be carried away by ' the stream , and the world become one huge market ,-where youth , beauty , intelligence , and virtue would be bartered away for luxury and ease ; : and : patriotism : and independence . among the : catalogue of things that were , but whose existence has ceased .,. .,: •¦ - . - "" . ¦ -. f . -v ' Sad and depressing-as is this picture of human nature- faint-hot thou man ; of the Future , though
, prideand meanness fade away , for pride and meanness-to succeed them ; _> yet it will riot _^ always be so : the present transition . phase , of society .. is , already ' passing away , and the bright future appearsin dim Mrspective ; then shall , noble . hearts ,, ' with noble feelings glowing within themselves , scatter blessings round them ; ¦ : Thecurse of ignorance j shall vanish before the lig ht ; of-increased ¦ knowledge , andi this fair , globe _beComo the , happy < region which Infinite _mteniMrice'desighed iUd . be . . . ,, . ., .. < .. f . ¦ _< ; _: Suchthdugh _' ts _ahd-siieh studies engrossed not the attehtionofWalter _^ orth : : Seated before a blazing fire -fit ;; was a > winter .: evening , )! and occasionally . ' . » i j . 1 _^ _-j . « _ir . _« _f-o + nmWor whlfth ; stOOd _vouwui ?
sipping . le wi _* . v ; : ;? r _?*^ "V _"—vi _jy-ri _; before lam , he . seemed buried m . thought ,, and frpm thecast of _his'features the _^ . subject of his cogitation was : of _^ an' - uripleasaht -riat ' ure _,--rat ' -length a smde broke-the _' gravitybfhis : closed lips , andhe mutt ered a _^ iM y ; i- ?// The silly . fool , _Fto refuse such _; an- offer ; a baronetcy and _" £ 4 , 000 a . y - _» r . . isjno . bad . catch for _thedaughter . of Joe . North ;; true , , he _, is double her _Se 3 a" residence * mthe ; West- Indies > s not cfntributed to t . . _strerijeth of his constitution , ' but _fSttCT'for-the ' girlish _^^^^ soon -be- 4- Woommg Sw * _wiS-5 plendid , iomtnro _^ _^ _SESond _% _W _^ : kservi « o _; _te m _^ _im m - ? _SJSs W sombre . hue _" ' of . h _» countenance _, re . ¦ _^ u . ! i _^ KSftlmosfc empty- 'tumbler ,- showed _jffi _^ tv _hhiiihwiw
[ _wjlueveiuia _-ODjeM , f _-w-jgw _* ; _- _^* _vr ' .. _^ - : " _.,: *» ? " - ?• _-jfO Oii ¥ ' _VQiii C '' . _* S _iKf _^~ i '>'<' ' . ' ¦ . .
Sunshine And Siiadow; A Tale Op The Nine...
S sDendTw _^ d 3 : _^'' rwi « _writ e t <> _^ tSt ' Sf _^ with me , and trust to my _SdrSiW _^ _to- . fixpe _^ _tolihig- _inaiTiag 8 , i _nlied Am /„ _iv _, llttl ? _, _S entIc force m _™*> _^ i _p _? j _AA i not . elder brother and the best judge Of . her true interests ? " So sayihg he ranidlv a servant in livery , and ordering writing materials _i _?' T „ lif ° 5 0 Use _« Brixton . '' with an enclosure for Julia , containing an . affectionate , invitation : to spend a short period at his ? bachelor residence . Replenishing the tumbler from the decanter beside him , he applied himself vigorously to discussing its contents ,-his feet are thrown : upon the opposite chair ; the fragrant scent . of a cigar speedily neriumes ine _: 1 . _^ - ' _*' i ' "''i-.- < W ! _v-5 :. ' -:, : > -.: ¦ _.--..-.,.. ~~ , — ¦
room , and Walter North is as happy and as free from qualms of conscience as though ho had not been planning the ruin of his only sister . Conscience , thou art a very cheat ! frighting the timorous , but playing _, the part of a sycophant to the bold ! Thou arch tormentor of mankind 1 ; whipping _few _*!" ? v _W of then- own . entwining . Jam L _^ n _. _yV terror _* - * the murderer hath _fZ _rSl * t 0 the _? u 5 cide _' 8 _^ re , or sought the n _%% \ llf ? f a - ? _aniac _* 8 cell ; whilst the _Itrong-Sth ;\ _'iir _* _° _^ ' ted man of the - ™ _-M haa _KifnSnL hl 3 8 la _^' ; and dc P riTed % scorpion K & S « _WT - stin _S' _Thpu wast implanted by natuie in thc breast of man neither to _beLserf : a
_S _; _S _rt _W _M _^ ot " - _«» » " moral barometer , testing the weight and value of his good or evil his actions . Custom has _rendered thee what thou _ftJ _^ _J _^ _i _^^^ ' _^ _- _^^' _wWe bute-n 3-tic matenaU , that they encumber and criish ' the _^ _AA-V _^ _Lfi 6 _vovfi'less to restrain the strong ; thus adding another ink to the heavy chain whfch tho bulk of mankind hug with such dreary , pleasure to their hearts , fettering the freedom of their limbs , and . eausingthem tofall an ; casy prey to their re _i lentless _oppre 8 Sor ) _^ , 0 kughg wfth Satanic mirth at their spasmodic struggles to achieve their natural freedom . ° ¦¦ ¦¦ .,. : ¦; -. ' : '• - _•_ . : ( To be continued . ) - - ¦
Fanetif0.
_Fanetif 0 .
Prorertt And Labouk.—Those Who Are Posse...
_PRorERTt and LABOUK . —Those who are possessed of enormous wealth would fain persuade us it is the offspring of their own industry . It is no such thing ; their men industry would not sell in any market in the world , for sixpence . They might have speculated , employed others , or resorted to any ofthe thousand and one stratagems by which immense fortunes arc made , by gambling with ' the labour of others , but , separate from society , or acting individually as workmen , _ . where would their immense wealth arise from 1 It is clear then , that the exorbitant suras in the hands of our merchant , princes and great manufacturers , is the difference between the acknowledgment doled out to the producer , and the . actual : price which the commodity may
realise .-rr Chartist Tracts for the Times . , The ' Boston , Post is responsible for the following * . — " Why is Jenny Lirid like a leg of well-fed mutton ? Because ' she is neither ' Grist nor Albonu " _SiiAVBBT . —The weight of chains ; ¦ number of stripes , hardness of labour , and other effects of a master ' s cruelty , may make . one servitude more miserable than another ; but he . is a slave who serves the best and gentlest man in the world , as well as-he who serves the worst—and he does serve him if * he must obey his commands and depend upon his will . — Algernon Sidney . A _BeatEiYEcno . —An old writer thus . describes a talkative female : — " I know a lady who talks so incessantly that she won't give an echo fair play . She has such an everlasting rotation of tongue , that an echo must wait until she dies before it can catch her last words . i
Want op __ Union . —The more numerous men are , the more difficult it is for them to agree in anything , and so they are governed . There is no doubt that if the poor should reason , —" we'll be poor no longer , —we'll make the rich take their turn , "—they could easily do it , wero it not that they "Can't agree ; so the common soldiers though much more numerous than their officers , are governed by them for the same reason . —Dr . Johnson . The House of Commons . —The British House of Commons has been proved one ofthe most corrupt assemblages that can well be imagined . So much so , that they are often engaged in lone debates to
prevent bribery at elections , and other evil practices , by which a number of them obtain seats in that assembly . A few weeks ago , Mr . Moffatt introduced a bill to compel members of parliament to pay their debt , anumber of them relying on their privileges to enable them to defraud their creditors . The perjury , bribery , intimidation , threats , and personal injuries inflicted on the electors at each trial of party strength- Svouldfill volumes ; and we continually find a portion of those elected , again unseated for the glaring corruption which they or their agents had practised . —Chartist Tracts for the Times .. I New Definition' of an Evergreen . —A man who does not learn by experience .
; Parliament _Infemob id the People . _^—If Parliament should begin to refuse giving satisfaction to the people , the people will begin to refuse putting any confidence in parliament ; and if this should ever come to be tho case , thoy ( the parliament ) not only may , but ought to be put aside . —Sir John Barnard ' s Debate on the Convention ; 1739 . ' The Morning Herald is not very complimentary in its enumeration of Sir Robert Peel ' s supporters : — " Every hard-handed and grasping Jew—every wolfish arid hungry Dissenter—every turbulent- and disloyal Roman Catholic—every disappointed and sour : Whig-Radical pamphleteer aiid essayist . " I , Ruffs . —Queen Elizabeth and her ladies are represented in all pictures as cased in whalebone ,
' with waists very long , and made ! . excessively small hy tight-lacing ; with enormous . stiff ruffs round _itneir throats , and small caps of point lace , which how go by the name of Queen Elizabeth's cousin , Mary Queen of Scots . The riiff was sometimes kept upright by > : a . wire frame ; -and was sometimes so stiffly starched as to stand up by itself . Starch of various ' kinds caihe into fashion ; and in tho next reign a certain Mi's . Turner brought over from abroad the method of making yellow starch , which was so much admired , that every fashionable lady appeared in a yellow ruff J done up with Mrs . Turner's starch _., Mrs . Turner was at length hanged for . murder . She appeared on , the scaffold in a handsome yellow ruff . Every lady threw aiyay
hers ; and not a yellow ruff was seen any more . The starching of ruffs became so important a business , thata Dutch woman named Van der Plasse came _' to London to carry on and teach the art . The premium she asked was five _^ pounds—a great sum in , those days—and" an additional pound for the' secret of preparing the starch . —Guide to . Trade . — " The Dress Maker . " ' ¦¦¦'¦ - "' , ' :: ' ' - . ' r The House of Lords is composed of the descendants of our landed aristocracy . Some owe their , elevation to the time-serving and political subserviency of themselves or their ancestors , " _. ' whilst , . others are descended from the offspring of royal bastards . " This department . of the . British Constitution , is all but powerless , except as ausefulmachine for placing its veto on any measure which public opinion demands
from the Minister of the day , arid , which hemay desire to avoid . From the cleverness and address with which they perform these kind offices , they have been terined byf some , the . Obstructives , ; and by others , denominated the House of Incurables . Suppose a fellow what has nothing , marries a gal what has nothing ; . ' ¦ is her' , things his ' n , or is his her ' nj or his'n and hers her'n ? A nice question to decide , that ! . _.. ' .: ;' . ; , ; ::. "¦ . ,.:,, ' , ' ,. f .. ' ,., :: ::. _, BENEVoiiENCE . _^ -There cannot , be a moro " glorious object in creation th . in a human being replete with benevolence , meditating in what manner he might render himself most acceptable' to his : Creator , by doing most good to his creatures . —Fielding . . At the late ; Kilkenny Assizes , Constablo Devlin having given evidence against one Luke Byrne , the
latter , affecting to be horrified , exclaimed , " It ' s no wonder for the pitaties to be black when the likes i v you is in the country !" ,, ,- _, ,: ; : "' : Affections ' . —it appears ' unaccountable that our teachers generally have directed their instructions ; to . the head , with very little attention to the heart .: From Aristotle down to Locke , books without number have been composed for cultivating and improvmg the understanding-but few , ' in proportion , ' for ' cultivating and improving 'the ,. afleetioris _.- _^ Iortf Kairnes . ' .. _ f , ; ., ' :.: ' . f ' , " . " .. ' . ; . " _, _^ . ' _. [ ' .. ' _- ' ,. _ . \" ' ' : _/^ :: \\ A CuNcriER . —An Irish Knight , was once disputing _with'a French courtier as to the age and standing of their families , when the latter , as a finisher "to , ' -the argument ;; said that his ancestors were : in the ark
with _& oah . . " .. That is nothing , " , says the Hibernian , ; with ; arichbrogue ; « 'foi _* _^ -at ... the delugolmy _.- _'fore-: fathers were cruising about in aboatof their own !" ¦ ¦¦ Priniers' Proverbs . —Never inquire thou Of the editor for the news , for behold itis 'his "duty at the appointed time to give it uritot ' thee without asking ! When thou dost write for his paper , never say ~ uhto him , ; - ' -, Wha ' t thin _^ it hlay ; be that . the ' _jtruthmay . offend , thee . ' ., ' ; It is riot ' fif ; that _^ _^ _thftufshouldat ask" himlwlio is ' tho , ' nutlipr ' . of an article , for his duty . requires him . to _keepVsueh things to himself . » When : thou . dost , enter -into his office , have a ; careUnto'thyself that : ' thou ! dbst ! not look at what' Piaybelyitig open , for that isV . 6 t' hicet
in , the . sight " , of j . good _^ breeding . ' , Neither examine tho . u the proof _sheets foi'it ' . is _^ eye , that - thou mayest . understand it ! . 'Prefer the paper of thy town to any other ; ahd .: _subscribe immediately for ; if ,-arid _piy in advanoe , " and it shall be well with , tKee andthy _^ _littJe dhes . - _n ;; : ' ¦ ' •'' - : ; ' ¦ , ' : "A ; FANdr _DnEss . _^ At a . ball for ; tiib" Ro ' pl Infirr _maryJh Edinburgh _^ _onivTfles _^ _jan ' otficerfof thb . ; 21 st appeared in a strange fi fancy . ' _^ dress . : _; i . On the ; right _side-heiappearodias _- _alady ; with _'nowing- 'ringletsarid elegantmuslin ' ' ' dr 0 S 3 V" arid dh " 'the' -leftfas » . gentteman - ; . and oh either ' view the ' profile : was ' adjnirable ' . ; The _^ pjpijination ' _^^ _roh-. _hia . head was . very _^ cioverlfihianagea " _|^ eTW _; W i _$ hJ _^^! d _^* l _^ _- _^ ! , .. ;¦ _iw . _uvf--. _. ; _* , — . ; , r ;* j £ _" _: i . ir . '' _-J" iii _a ' .- ' - ' i ' . * ¦¦ .- _>' .-. _* -- _' « -- i . _** i _\
An Effectual^ C Ure For Pil Es, Fistulas. An. ~ ~
AN EFFECTUAL _^ C URE FOR PIL ES , FISTULAS . _An . ~ ~
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ABERNETHY _' S _Pl-Ljj OINTMENT . What a paf th-ul and noxious disease is the Piles ! and , comparatively , how few of the -. _fflioto _^ .. „•' cured by ordinary appeals to medical skill 1 This , no doubt , arises _fi-om _ite _wTr $ _^^ J _^* _T _^^ administered by . the profession ; indeed , strong internal medicines should -alwaysTbe _avnwSS _?« n _^ fre ( l u _« ntl J _' complaint . Thc proprietor of the above Ointment , after years of acute suffering , _riaenrtI hlm . nl ? f . , *? of this ment of that _eminent surgeon , Mr . Abernethy ; was by him restored to perfect health , anil 1 has _^ ni _ov _^ -f tr . _" _without the slightest return of Hie disorder , over a period of fifteen years , during wliich time the _« m » m vw « "ce prescription has been the means of healing a vast number of desperate cases , both in and out of the nronri _^ ' _» n of friends , most of wliich cases bad been under medical care , and some of them for a very considerable _timo _Tf nefhy _' s Pile Ointment was introduced to the public by the desire of many who had been perfe ctly healed _brS , _™ r tion , and since its introduction the fame of this Ointment has spread far and wide ; even the medical profession nh _""* Slow and unwilling to acknowledge the virtues of any medicine not prepared b y themselves , - dp now OTelv and _fraiiSS admit that Abernethy _' s Pile Ointment is not only a valuable preparation , but » never failing remedy in _everr _alnmTo _^ i variety of that appalling malady . . . - J g 0 _** Sufferers from the Piles will not repent giving the'Ointment a trial . Multitudes of cases of its efficacy mk-ht be nrn _. duced , if the nature of the complaint did not render those who have been cured , unwilling to publish their names Sold in covered Pots at 4 s . ' Gd ., or the quantity of three 4 s . 6 d . pots in one for lis ., with full directions for use by _Bir clay and Sons , Farringdon-street ; Edwards , St . Paul ' s Church-yard -Butler , 4 , Cheapsine ; Newbery , St , Paul ' s Sutton " Bow Church-yard ; Johnson , 68 , Cornhill- Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Willoughby and Co ., 61 , _Jlishopsgate-str ' eet With put : Owen , 52 , _Marchmont-strcet , Burton-cresent ; Eade , 39 , _Goswell-strect ; Prout , 229 , Strand ; Ilannay and Co « 3 Oxford-street ; Prentieo , 84 , Edgcware-road ; and retail b y all respectable Chemists and Medicine Vendors in London ' V Be sure to ask for "ABERNETHY'S PILE OINTMENT . " The Public are requested to be on their guard against noxious Compositions , sold at low Prices , and to observe that hone can possibly be genuine , unless the name of C Kino is printed on the Government Stamp affixed fo each pot , 4 s . Gd , ; wliich is thc lowest price the proprietor is enabled to sell it at , owing to the great expense of the Ingredients . ' , ; CORNS AND BUNIONS . PAUL'S ' EV . ERY ~ MAN'S FKIEND , : Patronised by the Royal Famil Nobility , Clergy , Ac , [ s a sure and speedy Cure for those severe annoyances , without causing tlie least pain or inconvenience . Unlike aU othB _* remedies for Corns , its operation is such as to render the cutting of Corns altogether unnecessary indeed wemav _sav th ® practice of cutting Corns is at aU times highly dangerous , and has been frequently attended with lamentable consequences , besides its _liibdity to increase their growth ; it adheres with the most gentle pressure , produces an instant and delightful relief from torture , Midwith . perseverance in itsapplication , entirely _IVadicatcs the most inveterate Corns and Testimonials have been received from upwards of me hundred Physicians and Surgeons of the ¦ greatest eminence , as well as from man ; - Ofccers of both Army and Navy , and nearly one thousand private letters from me gentry u own and country , speaking m high terms of this valuable remedy ! bJ Prepared by John Pox , in boxes at Is ; l _* . d ., or three sniall boxes in one for 2 s . 9 d „ and to be had , withfull directions for use , of all wholesale and retail medicine vendors in town and' country . The genuine has the name of John Fox- on the stamp . A 2 s ; 9 d . box cures the most obdurate corns . . ' ¦ _- ., - ' - _^^ : : Ask for "Paul ' s . Every Man's Friend . " _^ Abernethy ' s Pde Ointment , Paul ' s Corn Plaster , and Aberneth y ' s Pile Powders , are sold bv the _folloiring respectable _Cncuusts and Dealers in Patent Medicines : — ° _¦ _- _? _l _. _¦*¦ _' _¦* _I' _, _- v Barclay and Sons , Farringdoii-street * , Edwards , 67 , St . r . iuVs Church-yard ; Butler , 4 , Cheapside- Newberv , St . Paul ' s ; button , Bow Church-yard ; Johnston , 16 , _Greek-street , Soho , ' and 68 , Cornhill ; Sanger , 150 _Oxford-strcet ; Willoughby andCo ., Gl _. _Bishopsgate-sti-eet Without ; Owen , 52 , Marchmont-street , Burton-crescent ; Eade , 39 . GosweUl street ; Prout , 220 , Strand ; _Hanoagr and Co ., G 3 , Oxford-street ; _Trentis _, Si , Edgewarc-road : and retail by a 1 respectable chemists and medicine vendors m London . ' _" .. ' .. j ««¦ _-. »¦¦ - . _« . i-Cou . NT » _-r Aqemis . —Barnes andi Newsome , Heaton _, Smeetonj lteinhardt and sons , J . C . Browne , 48 . _Briasate Donton Garland , Mann , Bean , Harvey , Hnigh , late Tarbottom ; Bolland and Kemplay , Land , Moxom , C . Hay ioG Bri- 'ate-Rhodes , BeU and Brook , Lord , R . C . Hay , Medical Hall , Leeds ; Rimmington , Maud and Wilson , Rogerson , _StanTield ' Bradford ; Hartley , Denton , Waterhouse , Jepson , Wood , Dyer , Parker , Jennings , and Leyland , Halifax ; Smith , Elland Hurst , CardweU , Gell , and Smith , Wakefield ; _Tybus , Barnsley ; Knowles , Thorne , Brook , and Spivcy , Huddersfield ' Hudson , Keighley ; Brooke , Doncaster ; Matthews , Creaser , Driffield , Cass , Goole ; Milner , Pickering- Stevenson ' Whitby ; Bolton , _Blanshardand Co .,. ] Iargrove , Fisher , Otley , Linney , York ; _Waiiuvright _, Howden ; Horsby , Wra « xham ' Jefferson , Malton ; Buckall , Scarborough ; Smith , Furby , Bridlington ' : Adams , Colton , l ' ullen , Selbv ; Omblier Market Weighton ; GledhiU , Old Delph ; Priestley , Fox , Pontefraet , ; Dalby , Wetherby ; Slater , Bedale ; Dixon , Northallerton Ward , Richmond ; Ward , _istokesley ; Foggitt , and Thompson , Thirsk ; Monkhouse , Barnard Castle ; Pease , _Darlm-ton Jennett , Stockton . And by all respectable Chemists and Medicine Vendors in every Market Town in England . ° ' Wholesale Agents . — -Messrs . Bolton , _Blanshard aiid Co ., Druggists , Micklegate , York .
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CAUTION . Unprincipled persons , taking advantage of the celebrity-of "DR . LOCOCK'S WAFL'RS , " attempt to foist upon the public various Pills and _MixTuaES under nearly similar names . The public is cautioned that all such preparations are spurious and an imposition : the only genuine Medicine has , besides the words " Du . Locock ' s Wavers" oil the Stamp , the Signature _. of the Proprietor ' s Sole Agents , DA _SlLVA and Co ., on the Directions given with every Bos , without wliich none are Genuine . UNDER ROYAL PATRONAGE .
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; " ? : YOU MAY BE CURED YET ! _HOLLOIYAT'S _OINTMEST . CURE OP RIIEUMATISJI AND RHEUMATIC GOUT . Extract ofa Letter from Mr . Thomas Brunton , Landlord of the Waterloo Tavern , Coatliam , Yorkshire , late of the Life Guards , dated September 28 th , 1 S 48 . Sin , —For a long time I was a martyr to Rheumatism and Rhcuinutio Gout , and for ten -necks previous to using your medicines I was so _bad-as-not to be . able to walk . I had tried doctoring and medicines of every Kind , but all to no avail , indeed I daily got . worse , and felt that I must shortly die . -From seeing your remedies advertised in the paper I take in , I thought I would give them a trial .-. ] ,-1 did so . I rubbed the ointment in as directed , and kept cabbage leaves to the pavts thickly spread with it , and took the Pills night and morning .. In three weeks I was enabled to walk about for an hour or two in the day with a stick , and in seven ' weeks I could go anywhere without one . I am now , by the blessing-of God and your medicines , quite ' well ,
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tion , and a : t this timd my toes are perfectly cured , — ( Signed ) Oliver Smith Jenkins . —To Professor Hoiioway . AN EXTRAORDINARY CURE OP A DESPERATE SKIN
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ON PHYSICAL DISQUALIFICATIONS . GENERATIVE INCAPACITY , AND IMPEDIMENTS TO MARRIAGE . Twenty-fifth edition , illustrated with Twenty-Six Anatomical Engravings on Steel , enlarged to 1 _SG pages , price 2 s . Gd ; by post , direct from tbe Establishment , 3 s . 6 d ,, in postage stamps . THE SILENT FRIEND ; a medical work on tbe exhaustion and physical decay of the system , produced by excessive indulgence , the consequences of infection , or the abuse of mercury , with observations on the mam-led state , and the disqualifications which prevent it ; illustrated by ttventv-sir coloured cngrarings , and by the detail of cases . By R . and L . PERRY and Co ., 18 , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London . Published by the authors , and sold by Strange , 21 , Paternoster-row ; Ilannay , C 3 , aud Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Static , 23 , _Ticlibornu-strect , Haymarket ; and Gordon , 14 G , _Leadenliall-streot , London ; i . avid II . Uaimes and Co ., Leithwalk , Edinburgh ; D . Campbell , Argyll-street , Glasgow ; J . Priestly , ' Lord-street , and T . Newton , Churchstreet , Liverpool ; R . Ingram , Market-place , Manchester .
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r \\ 0 O . TH-AC HE _PERMANENTLY JL CURED by using _BRASDE'S ENAMEi ; for filling decaying teeth ,, and _rendei-ing : them sound and ' painless . Sold by Ch « mists _everywlieiie . ' ' Price is . _pes-paclict , ::, _!¦; . . . .:. ; o _) ; RECENT . -BE & TIMONIAL _. ; ' ' - ; _o- _' Sib , —Finding BR ' ANDE'S : ENAMEL i sa excellent for ha _purposei I feel it mydut _* t torecommeniia io all who suffer v > itb the tooth-ache that . I come in conts « t with ; therefore , you will oblige _bysendjisg a packet to _ili \ James Williams Hobbins , : St : WednesV * w-v . —Your ob ' e _^ ent servant , ' _TaoMis _MouuuD . _—Wednes-fe _jt _^ March 13 , : 1349 ; ¦ :.- _' . :, ,: ;; > 'CAUTION ;—The greot _^ Buccess _Otitis preparation has induced numerous , unskilful _persaas '• 'to' produce spurious
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 5, 1849, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_05051849/page/3/
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