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" Westerbam * 9 6 6 John Addiion "~ 8 TH...
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FORTHCOMING MEETINGS
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IMPORTANT TO THE LAND MEMBERS. The Novem...
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MESSRS O'CONNOR AND JONES'S TOUR. In con...
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INTERESTING PUBLICATION. In the Press, a...
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To thb Readers,—The Editors of the North...
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THE NORTHERN STAR, SATURDAY, NOVEMBEB 6,1847.
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"THE RIGHTS OF PROPERTY." Within tbat la...
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Colonial atrt ibm'gn,
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The news this week from India, France, S...
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&o -f tea&er* & CoiTOpontoii te
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KHCElLANEODS. $ 3T In consequence of the...
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THE BALLOT. A ballot for 300 acres of th...
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•tfxs^sss -«y * *wm(| "**^** »-*--s«* **...
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Dr M'Docali/s Root-.—Todmorden, Sunday, ...
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IMPORTANT NOTICE.
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. THE LONDONERS HAVE BEGUN A HOME VOB HO...
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: JUST PUBLISHED. (Uniform with the " La...
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Printid by DQJJGAI, M'GOT*CAN , of 16, Great Wffit bmcci lui oi
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, jiuymurKHL, uauiiy n««"»"" i-jeW" Offi...
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
National Victim Tomaitii ^ .-^Hntuu^Tntn...
_stv-cmom . —Oa Sunday _eveoiaj i « _,-, me hail of ihe _lyjeum , Stockport , presented a splendid appearance , beii * _liUtnHy _^ _cramm eel at _UTeryfew minite s after the _timi announced for the p _* c * _eedin-f . Mr Davies , the chairman , after he bad read an article from the ' Stab , ' _introduced the lecturer , Mr R . Sheldon Chadwick , who epoke for nearl y two hours duration , amidst -the most enthuslast ' e applause . The heat tbanks of the meeting _wwe awarded to _ftejatmgand talented lecturer , aud the meeting concluded . Somas Tow * . —Aa overflowing audience at tended on Snaday evening last , at the Bricklayers' Arms , Ton . bii _Jge-street , New-road . Mr Thomas Lucas was called to tae chair , and read an excellent article from the Stjuon -National Organisation * which was warmly
, tp 4 _* uded . John Arnott , the sub-secretary , then read a letterfrom Mr Tapp , the secretary of tbe Iato _Metrot-alitan Delegate Committee , calling on tire locality to elect two delegate * to tie said _co-omittee , in order to _reorganise the metropolis ; and said , that being confi-« 2 ent that the members ofthe Somers Town locality were most desirous that this vital and important question should b- sufficiently carried out , he _wonli move that a meeting be called for thst _purpose on Sunday evening next , which was secon led by Mr Fussell , and uuani mously agreed to . Mr Johu Fussell delivered an able and _excellent lecture on Mr O'Connor ' s Laud Plan , in
whieh he fully _proved its utility and practicability ; with such f . _irc- ; _defended the character of Ur O'Connor , from the base c-lumnieB of a . vile and hireling plugging ; ant denounced them as being actuated by dishonest and sordid motivts . The lecture was received with much enthusiasm . Spirited addresses were also delivered by Messrs Stebbing ( of Highgate _. ) "Weeks , _Burt-n , Robinson , _Farris _, Turner , Arnott , and Child . £ 1 . 3 i ., the proceeds of the late harmonic meeting , was ordered to be forthwith transmitted to- the Widow Dadsob ; and after a vote of thank * o the lecturer the meeting _separated , highly delighted with what they hsd he-rd _.
Baiearoir . —At tke quarterly _raeetiag of Ko . 2 branch , held st Mr Dean ' s , No . 8 , Chsrlti . _sfreet , the following _ofneers were appointed : —William _Fiett , _treasurer ; Johu Br-.-rn , secrete *;* Edwin Parkinson , scrutineer ; Henry "Mackenzie and George _O'Freel , auditors ; Jobn Trivis , _Jotrn Attril , Boez Leffon , Richard Cook , and Mechich _La'sasn , form the committee . Psescot . —The members of this branch met on Suncay last , when Joseph Lawton was elected secretary , John Mercer , treasurer ; John Welsby cud John'Beauziont , auditors . _UeetJBgt wil tike pl . ee every _fertsight st Mr MeMer * _* . The next faceting' trill fctlce place ou _Sn-. dvv the 14 th inst ., at two o ' clock .
Qcees ' s-Head , _jteab Halifax . —On Sunday last a crowded meetitg was held in a large chapel lately occupied by the Primitive Methodists , to hear a lecture from Amtrjse _ToraKnson , late of _Mau-hester . The lecture was a very able one . The Teetotalers " and the Chartists have united , and taken the chapel at Round Hill , in which lectures will be delivered every other week . On Sunday evening , Mr Douavan . of Manehesttr , delivered an instructive lecture on the Land and Labour Bank . Macclesfield . —Mr J-hn West delivered a very _juwrtstiag and ins : ruciive address in the _Charlie room , _Stacley-sreet _, on Sunday evening last , to a numerous and respectabk audience . A vote of thanks was awarded to Mr West , and a _subscription was entered iato to ass _' st Mr O'Cuaner in pro . ecatieg the Manchester Examiner , _andsevery other paper tbat attempts to libel the _Company or Mr O'Connor .
RADroiD . —At a meeting of the members of this branch on Monday evening last , t ' ae subject of the local Levies was discussed , when the following resolution was pas-ted unanimously - — 'That the sum of one penny per share , per quarter , shall be paid by the shareholder * of this branch ( except those who have paid np their _ehar < rs , ) ss a remuneration to the branch secretary , ont of which he shall pay all tho expenses of tha locality ; hat those who have paid ap their shares shall pay half the-hove sum . ' The following resolution was also _pasred unanimously :-- * That the secretary bo em . powered to take ell levies out of the first money paid after the quarter is due . * The above rules to take effect on and after January 1 st , 18 * 8 .
XoBTHG-tBEBLAHD akd _Dubbax —A district delegate xneeti-g of members of the Nttloaal Laud Company wac held at No . 5 , Nomters Garth , Sunderland , on Sen a ; , October 31 st and tbe folio-ring places were rtpre-ented by delegates —NeweaVtle-upon-Tjne , Mr J & mca Watson ; North Shields , Mr John Rawlings ; Souri Shields , Ur William _Gilfillan- Surderland , Mr Hsarv _H-ore * ; B : shopweannoutn , Mr _WiUiara Dobbie ; Shiney Row , Mr Thomas Watkin ; _Thernley , Mr Tn- m-tt Dance ; Jarrow , Mr Joseph Mitchell ; Darlington , *; Mr John Moss : Mr William Gilfillan in the _chtr . The following resolutions were passed : — Thai thc delegaus present co hereby instruct the disric : secretary to write to the directors , to request them to send Mr John West , to deliver lectures on the National Land Con-piny in each branch in ths counties of Northumberland a-. d Durham . ' * That tho delegates pr n : _rexmztead esch fcrar _.-ch of tbe Laud Company int . sac-nines , to lay a levy of 2 d . on each member
of tie L-m Company , forthe _purpose of defraying the lector , rs' tr ivelling ixpenses in these , eoanties . " « That Mr O'Connor is fully entitled to , and we hereby tender him , our sincere thanks for his _undeviatiag and _Etraightforsrsrl conduct relative to the _nnmanlyattacks made upenhiai and the principles of the National Laud Company . Aad further , we _herel . y pledge ourselves to procure tbe neces < ury aid to bear Mm harslets . * _thtou-h the impending trial , for tbe vindication of his character . ' * That tha next _general disttict delegate meeting be held in the heuse of Mr Thomas Watkin , Mill Pitt . Shiney Riw , Durham , on Sunday , No-ember _14- & , at eleven o ' clock in the forenoon . —Jakes Nisbett , District Secretary . —The members ofthe National Charter Association in the counties of Northumberland and _Durham , are informed that the next district delegate meeting will be held in the house of Martin Jude , Cock Inn Head of the Side , Newcastle-upon-Tyne , en Sunday November 21 st , at two o ' elock in the afternocn .
_Toweb Hamlets . —At a meeting held at the Glob * and Fricn ! - , en Sunday ; _* T « nio » . f-i hear a lecture Irom Mr M'Grst !) , a resolution , ou the motion of Mr John Bhaw , was adopted , strongly condemning Joshua Hob . sou for his impu " eat challenge to Mr O ' Connor , pah . lished in _Uoyt * _Threepenny Trash . Mr M'Grath then delivered an able and interesting address . Many mem . bers came forward to assist in the ballot for the por . trait of Frost , framed and glazed , which takes place on Wednesday , November 17 .
" Westerbam * 9 6 6 John Addiion "~ 8 Th...
_" Westerbam * 9 6 6 John Addiion " ~ 8 THE NORTHERN STAR . Kc _^ m _Uto '"' ____________________________________ mmmmm _tmmWmm _ mmmmmmt _ mmm 1 _^^^^ _B _^ _i — - l * f .. «»« . t . _— . > O fl « Vt _ t . _ . 1111 .. " *"* " — -Sr-
Forthcoming Meetings
FORTHCOMING MEETINGS
_Tivertos . —The quarterly rr . _eetinsr of the Chartist _Ass-ic ' atk-n will be held on Friday evening , November 12 A , at the Half Moon Inn , when J . W . P . Wilkinson , of Exeter , will be present , " Liverpjol . —A lecture will be delivered at Mr Farrali * _* , 4 , _Caxneau-streer-, by Mr Thomas Jones . Subject : ' How can Labour best emancipate itself !' Chair to be liken at half-past seven o ' clock . Martlvbose . —A lecture will be delivered on Sunday evening , November 7 th , at the Coach Painters ' Arms , _CircuS'gtrest , New-road , by Mr Llnd » n . Subject : * The Laws of Nature _^ at seven o ' clock . A members' _meetiag will take place on Monday eveninj , November 8 th , at tho above place , at eight o ' c'ock .
Lamcith . —The Chartists of Lambeth and Southwark are earnestly requested to meet in the South _London Chartist Hall , on Wednesday evening next , at _eistit o ' _clock , for the purpose of forming a locality ofthe National Charter Association . _Hetwood . —The members ofthe Chartist Associa * tion are requested to meet in their room , on Sun " day next , the 7 'h instant , at oue o ' clock in the afternoon . Ma RuffbyRisley will lectare at the Globe and Friends , _Morgan-street , Commercial-road , ob Sundav evening , November _7-h . Subject : 'Monarchy snd _Republicanism . ' Chair to be taken ai half-past _saven o ' clock .
Mb J . Joxes will lecture at the Globe and Friends , _Morgan-street , Commercial-road , ob Tuesday evening . November 16 th , at eight o'clock . Subject : ' The Charter snd Land Company . ' _Towcu Qaulris . —Mr Wm . Dixon , of MaBch & ter _, will lectu-e on Sunday next . N-vember 7 th , atthe Sir Walter Scott , opposite N . rth irapton-streat , Cambridge-road , at half-past seven . Shoreditch . —On _Sunday evening next , Mr Jones will leciare on the * Currency , ' at Mr Tomliui ' _Grfec-eate , Hackney-road , at aeven o'clock . _Meltikos will bs _bcld on Sunday at Somers _Totu _, ( Bricklayers * Arms . ) _au-1 on Tuesday ; Bethnal Green . _(\ _"ririt * iugt . > n and Cat ; and ou Tuesday ;) South Lond )? Cbartist Hall ; Shoreditch ; Midgley ; and Rochdale . BnwHTas , —A , supper in commemoration of the birth of the late H _? nry Hunt , will takt place at the Artichoke Inn . on _Wednesday , Novembtr ldth .
Hr Dokovass Route . —Sunday , November 7 tb , Bramup ; Monday , Leeds ; Tuesday , _Wakifi-ld ; _Wadns-day , Dewsbury ; Thursday , Sowerby ; Friday , Hebden Bridce . 5-iTTisaHuc _Encrioa Tba _PAatr akd Ball . —In _constqa-aee of the extraordinary demand for tickets for the Some at the Exchange , in honour of the return of * r _\» r _-ns O'Connor , Esq . to the Common , ' House of Parliament , the committee of management havo entered into arrin ements with the proprirtor of tht _ConservativoUa'i _. lortiie-uecf the Assembly _Rjoms for the same evening ; . _Mssriaes wirx be held ia bshalf of the National la-id _Company , on Sunday , _Novenv-cr 7 th , at Salford , Oldham ( Mr Wyld willlecturc ) , Bury , Longton , Bishopwearmouth , and Newcas tle on Tyne . On Monday evening at Smethwicke and Suuderiand . On Tuesday nt M » ccie « fitli and Leicester . .
Sono . —¦ _A'sembly-rooms , _Dean-street . —Mr John Skel . ton wal deliver his concluding ; lecture on 'Superstition , ' cm Sunday evening next , November 7 ih , at half-patt _seV-nprerasdy . At seven o ' clock tbe Chartist locality and Westminster branch ofthe Lind Company will meet for dispatch of " pasines _* . Mr Thomas P _' eker '"* _UI will also be in attendance as agent for the 'NationalCo-operative Benefit _Siicleiy . ' " The Irish Confederates continue their weekly meet . _iig . _etixy Monday evening . ' On f aesday evenine ; , the National Begistratlen and _Central EiectiouCotamiaeo will meet at eight o ' clock pr * e ' : _* e " y . _TheJfsttonal _TictlmComniittea wul meet at the tame ylice andheur .
Important To The Land Members. The Novem...
IMPORTANT TO THE LAND MEMBERS . The November number of the | Labourer , ' contains an article upon the legal points of the Land Company , from the pen of one of the ablest law writers , and one of the first authorities of the day ; the barrister who , upon all occasions , has been employed in the intricate mysteries of the law , by Mr Kober . 5 , tbeMiuefiA . ttoi * ney-Genera . l . In this article , there is not a single legal point touched upon by any of the' Good Ruffians , ' and commended as able and interesting by ihe J / _ancA « fer _£ ramt ' ner , thatis not handled , dissected , and disposed of in the most
clear and simple language . Not , in the mysterious language of barristers , analysing the law for magicians , but in language written expressly for the enlightenment of the working classes . Every shareholder in the Company should possess himself of this valuable legal manual of the position in which the Company stands as regards the law , as well as to inform himself as to the perfect security of the propertv for the trust purposes , notwithstanding its temporary investment in Mr O'Connor ' s name . In fact , the writer takes a review of every single objection urged against the plan and its legality , and leaves not a single point in mystery or in doubti
Messrs O'Connor And Jones's Tour. In Con...
MESSRS O'CONNOR AND JONES'S TOUR . In consequence ol the unexpected meeting of parliament , Messrs O'Connor and Jones are unavoidably compelled to postpone their intended tour , until it is understood what course the government means to pursue . As it is highly probable that the present session may not last beyond the Christmas holydays . and should an adjournment till the spring of the year take place , those gentlemen will start upon their projected tour after the Christmas holvdavs .
Interesting Publication. In The Press, A...
INTERESTING PUBLICATION . In the Press , and shortly will be Published , a very interesting work , entitled , THE LIVES OF THE PRESS-GANG . This work will contain a faithful narrative ofthe most interesting incidents connected with the life and private affairs of Ur Harmer , proprietor ofthe Dispatch ; Mr Lloyd , proprietor of Lloyd ' s Weekly Newspaper ; Mr Carpenter , his Editor ; Messrs Alexander Ballantine and Thomas Ireland , proprietors of the Manchester Examiner ; and of a celebrated M . P . contributor , not Mr Bright , but a more cunning _individual ; of Thomas Bailey , proprietor of the Nottingham Mercury ; and to which will be added , an interesting narrative of the lives of the contributors to those papers , and which as a review ofthe morality ofthe conductors of the press , will be found well worthy the attention ofthe pnblic .
To Thb Readers,—The Editors Of The North...
To thb Readers , —The Editors of the Northern Star beg to announce to the _readeis of that paper , that the most complete arrangements have been made to furnish them with the best reports ofthe approaching session of parliament , and that neither expense nor trouble will be spared to procure forthe Northern Star the latest . intelligence up to the hour of going to press with the several editions .
The Northern Star, Saturday, Novembeb 6,1847.
THE NORTHERN STAR SATURDAY , NOVEMBEB 6 , 1847 .
"The Rights Of Property." Within Tbat La...
"THE RIGHTS OF PROPERTY . " Within tbat land was many a malcontent , Who curs'd the tyranny to which he bent ; That soil full many a wringing despot saw , Who _work'd his wantonness in form of law ; - Btbos . If there is ' one duty which more than any other , it is the bounden work of every true patriot to perforin , that duty is to labour —heart and soul—for the destruction of the influence of the journalist press , as that press is at present conducted . _~
Of all the obstacles that beset the path ofthe true reformer , those presented by the hostility anil perfidy of the periodical press are by far the most injurious . The hundred thousand bayonets wielded by the Government of this country , with all the additional physical power that " Government can command , is as nothing compared with the power of that gigantic combination of gold and lies , which knaves and fools have vaunted as *• the palladium ofour liber ties , "but which daily experience proves to be the most deadly enemy of the rights , the interests , and the happiness of the millions .
There is no villany in existence that has not its advocate in the ranks of the press-gang ; there is no crime that can be committed against the body politic , that is not sanctioned by the press—always providing that the criminals are not petty villains . Murder and robbery , fraud and lying , must be committed on a grand scale—that suffices to render them legitimate . According to the press , war is " national glory , '' and the vindication of " national honour . " The plunder of the people of thirty millions of money annually , to gorge the Debt
leeches , is upheld by the press as , "the honourable maintenance of national credit . " The defrauding of _six-sevenths of the people oftheir rights of citizenship , is defended by the press as " a wise provision of 'our glorious constitution . ' " The chicanery of the law , the State-craft of the pulpit , and the "burking ' and slandering habitually employed by the press itself , are held by our" best possible public instructors , " to be necessary and laudable for "the preservation of ' our glorious institutions . ' ' -
It is true that there are" many journals , which affecting the philanthropic "dodge , " make a dead set against some particular grievance , and contrive to manufacture a certain amount of popularity by thundering against the game laws , capital punishments , church rates , tithes , & c ; or by advocating certain paltry " reforms , " such as free-trade , education , revision of the excise laws , separation of church and state , Ac . But these journals are , generally , as bitter and unscrupulous in their hostility to anything in the shape of real reform , as are the vilest Tory papers . There are exceptions , but the exceptions are "like angels' visits , few and far between . "
The Times occasionally affects the character of " the poor man's friend . '' Some glaring abuse of our monstrous Poor Law system , some outrageous exhibition of landlord heartlessness , or some shameless stretch of magisterial authority , is made the occasion forthe Times fulminating in behalf of " the rights of humanity . " But let an earnest effort be made to confer upon the people the power of righting themselves , and relieving themselves from the cruelties of Poor Law officials , the tyranny of landlords , and the despotic insolence of magistrates , and , forthwith , the Times assails those who are parties to that generous effort with all the weapons of its _sar _*> casm and slander , its abuse and lies .
liie article noticed in our last , in which the Times sought , by dint of slang , sneering , and misrepresentation , to render both odious and ridiculous—the popular manifestation at ''the Crown and Anchor , " on the 25 th ult ., would , of itself , be sufficient proof of the shameless hostility of that corrupt journal tothe cause of truth and justice . But a subsequent number of that journal contained a still more disreputable article—we allude to its comments on the Memorial of the Catholic Hierarchy , presented to the Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland . The memorial itself , and "his Excellency ' s" reply , we leave tobe dealt with by Mr O'Connor , who has promised
to do justice to both ; we confine our remarks to the abominable doctrinespropounded by the Times , concerning the " rights of property . " The Catholic Hierarchy complained in their memorial that , in Ireland , "The sacred and indefeasible rights of life are forgotten amidst the incessant reclamations of the subordinate rights of property . " On this , the Times mAs , "Does the Roman Catholic Church , then , really teach that the right of life is indefeasible , and superior to the right bf property . ? Such ' s not the teaching of , the . English ChurcL No English Bishop would ever preach such - doctrine / The more shame , then , to the English Church . If that Church is perishing , if its influence is crumbling away ,
"The Rights Of Property." Within Tbat La...
if Catholicism is rapidly gaining ground in this country , what wonder , when the one Church is the support of the rich- oppressor , and the other at least professes to sympathise with the poor oppressed?—when the English Church defends the rights of property , and the Catholic Church the rights of life ? In England , "the rights of property , '' says the Times , " are enforced with an absolute rigour . There is no such thing as open or social resistance . " This the Times applauds , notwithstanding its withering consequences , which it proceeds to describe , without one word of protest , as follows : _—** Under this strong regime
the whole labouring population has lost every vestige of property , lost alt right to cottage or land , lost almost all right to the tribunals and processes of law . " Such ( according to the Times ) are the natural results of English veneration for "the rights of property . " The landed aristocracy acquired possession ofthe soil by the sword , or by grants from royal robbers . The present generation of that class perpetuate their usurpation by fraud and force—law and a standing army . They live in mansions of surpassing splendour , and are " clothed in purple and fine linen , and fare sumptuously every day . " On the other hand , the tiller of the soil works "from early morn
to dewy eve , " for nine , or ten , or , in some places , seven or eight shillings weekly , which enables him to vegetate , half naked , in a wretched hovel upon the coarsest food . Quite right , the English peasant respects " the rights of property ! , " The aristocrat claims proprietorship over thousands of wild creatures , which he slaughters for his amusement or his profit * the pennyless poacher shoots a solitary pheasant or snares a hare , and for that is dragged to gaol . Hurrah for " the rights of property !" Fishing in the rivers and " trespassing" on
the fields of the rich man is forbidden and punished by the law , made to protect ' . 'the rights of property !'' Property must be protected ; therefore , " the taking of a pennyworth of " waste" or rags is punishable by the law , which , however , permits the factory-lord to deprive his workpeople of the fruits of their industry to any amount he may thinkproper , through the medium of a reduction of wages . This protection against
petty plunderers , conjoined with the power to plunder upon a grand scale , forms part and parcel of " the rights of property ! ' ' The workless , homeless , clotheless , foodless being is insulted with the name of " pauper , " condemned to have his best affections outraged , and g iven food inferior in quantity and quality to the-provender ofthe rich man ' s dogs and swine . Any better treatment of the poor would increase the rate ? , already a burden upon " the rights of property !"
The exercise of a freeman ' s right to a voice in the choice of the law-makers of the land is denied to every man not having a brickand-mortar qualification . Class-legislation is the great bulwark of "the rights of property !" Our whole system of government , with our enormous standing army , police , judges , jailors , and executioners , is maintained not for the _^ preservation of the liberties and welfare of the people , but to uphold " the rights of property !" The result is , as stated by the Times , that " the whole labouring population has lost every vestige of property—hst all right to cottage or land—lost almost all right to the tribunals and processes of law !"
In fact , the wrongs of poverty are solely caused by ' the rights of property !" The Dukes of Atholl and Argyle depopulate huge districts , and doom the wretched inhabitants to perish by famine , fever , or ship wreck ; but in so doing , they only exercise "the rights of property V The _$ ew Zealanders and Caffres dispute the right oftheir English spoliators to deprive them oftheir lands , andfor so disputing are given over to indiscriminate slaughter ; and this is defended by the press as a necessary and wholesome vindication ( on the part of the English ) ofthe rights of property ! " The crimes and _^ cruelties of the war with China
, were occasioned by our opium-dealers demanding the aid of British cannon to enforce " the rights of property ! " Even in the United States , the theoretical excellence of Republicanism is nullified by the conspiracy of the graspers of " property . " In the so-called "free states , " land robbery and wages slavery havealreadyproducedastateof things similar to English society . In the southern States the labourer is a bought and sold chattel , and every attempt to liberate the unhappy being
is punished by Lynch law , or by the law of the land * to attempt to give liberty to the slave is , in those States , the highest crime against" the rights of property 1 '' The ostensible pretext for the States picking a quarrel with Mexico was , to compel the payment of a few millions of dollars , alleged to be due to certain Yankee traders . In pursuit of those '' dollars" immense sums have been squandered , far exceeding the amount claimed from Mexico—very many thousands of lives have been sacrificed—the Mexicans have been
cursed with all the horrors of pillage , fire , rape , and murder—the American Union has acquired a name of eternal infamy , and a claim to retribution , which future taxation , wars , and intestine divisions will be sure to inflict ; all occasioned by sacrificing the rights of man to "the rights of property !" The number of victims immolated to the " rights of property" exceed , by millions upon millions , all the victims sacrificed at the shrines of all the false gods of this world , from the birth of time to the present hour . From Moloch to Juggernaut , earth has seen no
sacrifice equal to that which in our day is hourly going on , of broken hearts and withered lives ; —deaths by hunger , toil , grief , the sword , and the gallows , to maintain in their unholy supremacy "the rights of property * The English peasant is accustomed , like his fathers , to toil , suffer , and die , and offer no resistance . The Highlander , emasculated in soul , dies and makes no sign . Though the Caffres and New Zealanders can fight , as their invaders know to their cost , they are too far from the seat of power to alarm the governing classes . In one portion only of Victoria ' s dominions is there that resistance to " the
rights of property" which is of sufficient im-. portance to render the ruling few uneasy . In ' Ireland the violation of the rights of life by the landlords do , rather frequently , entail upon the violators the penalties prescribed by the fierce justice of revenge . Iu Ireland only do our rulers find " the difficulty " of ruling —a difficulty which will , we trust , become more difficult , until they zealously get their hands to the work of sweeping away the monstrous abuses—social and political—which have turned that country into a hell upon earth .
In another column our readers will find an account of the infernal doings of some of the landlordocracy of the county Cork . The little all of food possessed by the growers torn from them for " rent ; " the houses ofthe peasantry torn down , and the wretched beings driven to add to the sweltering mass of town-pauperism , or left , old and young , men , women , and _children , to perish by the way-side of cold , disease .
and hunger ; the pitiless skies their only covering , and a ditch their bed of death . Rather than this accursed state of things shot-Id continne , we say , "perish the rights of property" and the demon-possessors of property too . If the murderous aristocrats were the victims of an Irish Jacquerie , they would but meet with their richl y merited reward _. We war not against property ; onthe contrary as our support of the National Land
Company proves , we earnestly desire to see tbe workingclasses obtain for themselves social independence and political freedom by becoming possessors of property . Our hostility is directed against that infamous _« system , ' which sacrifices life to ; property , and makes wealth the tyrant over its creator—labour . We desirei a just state _« f things in which propert _/ shall be subservient to human life ; io wfcich
"The Rights Of Property." Within Tbat La...
the land shall be the recognised property of the state , and the tillers of the soil _shallhe the first partakers of its fruits ; in which labour shall have its just reward and natural rights , and bej no longer sacrificed in the field , the factory , and the legislature , at the shrine ot capital and class-usurpation . Until such a s tate of things is _established ; until the rich learn to do justice and love i ' i
mercy ; until the press becomes what it _. should be the pre acher of truth , the _scourger of wrong , and the defender of the oppressed , we shall continue to denounce both , —both the hireling journalists , and their selfish employers . We will respect " the rights of property , " when property respects the rights of man , _J but against the present cannibal system , we proclaim " war to the knife !"
Colonial Atrt Ibm'gn,
Colonial atrt _ibm ' _gn ,
The News This Week From India, France, S...
The news this week from India , France , Spain , and Portugal , is devoid of interest . The tidings from SWITZERLAND leave no room for doubt , that by this time civil war has commenced in that country . The commissioners , sent to the cantons of the Sonderbund , having failed to effect a pacific arrangement , aud thecompromife , proposed by the League at the last moment , having been rejected , there was nothing left but war . The deputies ofthe _Sonderbund qui . tedBerne on the 29 th , having first published a protest and manifesto against the acts of the Diet . According to the latest accounts , the troops of the Confederation were marching on the insurgent cantons . ITALY . Terror reigns throughout the dominions of the King of Naples . The most infernal cruelties are inflicted upon the insurgents who fall into the hands of the royalist party . '
&O -F Tea&Er* & Coitopontoii Te
_& o -f tea & er * & _CoiTOpontoii te
Khcellaneods. $ 3t In Consequence Of The...
KHCElLANEODS . $ 3 _T In consequence of the enormous length of the re-. ports of tho Manchester and _Nottingham meetings , we ' have been cetnpelled to curtail all communications Inserted ; we have also been obliged to postpone the con * tributions of numerous correspoadents till our next . _g" "" _° Letters from thefollowing correspondents will be ln _> sertedln our next number . Henry Ross , W . M . _Clifton , H . CulUngham , and ' ProPatria . ' Several other letters are under consideration . Give ns it now!—The lines with this title shall appear In our next . Revib . _ws . —For the reason above sto tod we hare been compelled to postpone our usual ' reviews . ' Notices of The Poems of Henry Gracchus , ' the _'LiBorBER' for November , and several publications will appear in our next . United Tbades' _Associati . n . —The weekly report from
the United Trades' Association has had to share the fate of other postponed matter—excluded by the reports of Hr O'Connor's proceedings . The whole shall appear in our next , Hi . O'Conrok received a letter , dated 12 th _« f September , on his return from the Continent , from Hr Throat Cook , 4 , _Unlon-plaoe , Norwich , enclosing 10 s . for the Holytown Miners , the secretary will pleas * call at the _Noktbebr Slit office for the amount . At the Newton Heath meeting : Mr O'Connor received from Thomas Mitchell , t , Court _H-jrod-street , £ 1 for the Nottingham "Election . i _{^* Since the foregoing notices were in type , we have been compelled to withdraw a mass of reports of Land and Chartist meetings , notices to correspoadents , < fcc , to make room for the astounding exposure of Somerville before Sir Peter Laurie . The withdrawn matter shall appear in our next .
The Ballot. A Ballot For 300 Acres Of Th...
THE BALLOT . A ballot for 300 acres of the Company ' s land will take place at 83 , Dean-street , Soho , London , during the ensuing week , and in the following order : — First Section—Monday , Nov . 8 . Second Suction—Tuesday , 9 . Third Section—Wednesday , 10 . Fourth and Fifth Sections—Thursday , 11 . The ballot to commence at seven o ' clock in the evening of each day , and to he continued until the completion of each section . Thomas Clark , Cones . Sec .
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• _tfxs _^ _sss - _« y _* _* _wm (| " _**^** » - * _--s «* _******** RECEIPTS OF THE NATIONAL LAND COMPANY , FOR THE WEEKENDING NOVEMBER 4 . PER MR O'CONNOR . SECTION No . 1 . _SBAMS . £ _g , d . Alva h 0 10 0 Barnsley , No . I 4 0 0 Ovenden .. 10 8 Norwich , Bradley 3 14 0 Ely H 0 io 0 _Sutton-ln-Ashfield S 1 0 Reading m 3 0 0 Kidderminster , 5 0 * Sudbury .. 3 19 0 Birmingham , Crayford . .. 8 9 8 Goodwin N 1 12 0 Longton « 0 10 Leeds .. 4 0 0 Limehouso .. 0 10 6 Heckmondwike 2 0 6 ' Hamilton H 0 7 0 Leicester , Astill S 0 0 Carlisle » 10 0 New Radford .. 1 611 Hebden Bridge 17 0 Merthyr , Jones 2 12 0 Lower Warley 812 0 Blackburn „ 0 8 2 Rochdale .. 0 8 0 Bradford N 8 0 6 Burnley _. No . I 0 6 0 Trowbridge „ 2 2 0 Lambeth _» 6 1 9 Sunderland .. 8 18 0 Nottingham .. 117 6 Leamington ., 010 0 Glasgow .. 0 4 0 Hull .. 0 2 6 Hamilton .. 0 10 0 Mottram .. 1 19 9 Preston , Brown 10 0 Manchester .. 1 10 8 Burnley , No 3 ... 110 Preston , Llddel 0 8 ' Cheltenham ., 0 13 _C Stalybridge .. 10 0 Huddersfield .. 0 9 0 " rVhittington and Oxford » 19 0 Cat 8 10 4 Newport , Mon- _Newcastle-uponmouth .. 0 2 10 Tyne „ 0-12 G Tiverton .. 210 0 Colne , No . 1 M 0 8 6 Truro .. 0 0 « Ashton .. 0 7 6 New Milns .. O « 7 Liverpool n 1 o . ° Boulogne .. 14 8 Blackburn . .. 0 3 2 Carrington .. 012 6 £ 82 14 6
SECTION No . 3 . Loughborough _^ 0 6 0 Devizes .. 3 4 0 Birmingham , Gray 0 0 9 _Sutton-in-Ashfield 3 12 1 Alva . 9 18 0 Stafford .. 0 10 Ely „ 6 9 4 Birmingham , Shrewsbury .. 011 ll Goodwin „ 2 8 8 Newcastle-upon . Lancaster .. 4 10 0 Tyne _„ 110 Leeds « 2 0 0 Howsell .. 016 0 Armley .. 18 6 Shoreditch . " . 0 10 Heckmondwike 0 10 Crayford .. 0 10 New Radford 0 8 0 Longton .. 0 10 Banbury _« 0 10 Chelsea .. 0 2 6 Merthyr , Jones 2 12 0 Limehouse - 0 2 0 Leigh .. 0 6 2 Market Lavington 6 15 2 Blackburn .. 10 9 Iveston _» 2 9 8 Ledbury .. 0 2 6 Rochdale .. 0 10 Westminster « 2 8 4 Burnley , No . 1 2 18 fl Carlton « 0 10 Clayton West 2 14 Bradford N 6 0 0 Camberwell .. 0 6 0 Trowbridge _« 0 18 0 Falkirk 0 2 6 Sunderland .. 016 6 Somers Town ., 0 14 6 Torquay H 1 110 Lambeth .. 1 10 6 Plymouth H 013 0 Whittington and Leamington M 17 0 Cat .. 596 Hull .. 040 Nottingham » 9 ll 0 Hawick _» 117 4 Bristol M 1 14 0 Mottram ., 1 8 9 Darlington ., 010 0 Manchester .. 15 6 Preston , Brown 0 5 0 Stalybridge ,. 2 0 0 Cheltenham .. 13 6 Gosport „ 010 e Huddersfield .. 0 5 0 Walsoken .. 0 14 Stockton .. 618 0 Geo . Martin .. 0 16 Barnsley , No . 1 0 10 0 Geo . Allison .. 0 2 0 Carrington » 2 IS 8 Moses Gillingham 3 14 0 Teignmouth ., 2 6 0 Liverpool .. 1 18 1 Norwich 317 6 Gainsborough .. 0 10 New Milns „ 16 0 Nuneaton ... 0 10 Newcastle-upon . Blackburn ., 19 9 Tyne ,. 1 16 0 Puialey .. 15 6 Perth . < 8 4 6 Bilston ., 1 2 0 Salford _* . 0 ll 6 Birmingham , Ashton » 0 16 Goodwin » 16 4 G . Bishop .. 0 10 £ 229 1 2 * _- * ' _«**** - *
BBCTION No . 8 . , _HaddersBeld .. 5 7 0 Stalybridge M 6 0 0 North Shields .. 0 l 0 Walsoken ,. o 6 0 Stockton H 0 10 0 James _Cutriss ,. 0 5 0 Barnsley , No . 1 10 0 E . Langan .. 0 2 6 Sutton-in-Ashfield . 4 14 4 Allan Harper „ 6 8 c Hexham ~ 010 0 Thomas Kyne ., 0 10 0 Newport , Mon- Colne , No . I „ 4 9 6 mouth » 014 0 Ashton M 2 i 8 5 Wootton-under- GIossop „ 4 is o Edge „ 2 6 0 Liverpool „ 0 8 0 Blandford ., 2 4 8 Bacup „ 3 10 0 Tiverton „ 5 10 0 Gainsborough ., 0 6 10 Newcastle-upon- ¦ Holytown „ 0 12 8 Tyne „ 110 Blackburn .. 6 H 10 Chelsea .. g 10 10 Banbury „ 0 8 6 Bury n 4 17 8 Wednesbury „ 5 0 0 £ a !? l sle _-,., _?• 1 M Merthyr , Jones 0 6 0 Hebden Bridge 0 1 C Bermondsey .. 9 4 6 Blythe „ 3 4 4 Leigh „ 8 2 6 _& » J ,. " 8 8 * _B-ackbum „ 6 14 10 Kilbarchan „ 017 0 Ledbury M 0 1 0 Rochdale .. © so Westminster H 0 12 0 Burnley , No . l ., 114 0 Alloa „ 1 ll 0 Campsie ., 0 8 6 High Wycombe 2 6 0 Stepney „ 011 0 KettsrJDg .. 100 Norton Folgate 8 0 0 Bradford „ 4 0 0 Falkirk .. 0 2 6 Trowbrid ge ., 2 14 6 Somers Town .. 2 8 6 Sunderland „ e 5 0 Whittington and Torquay „ 0 1 0 Cat .. 2 11 0 Plymouth ., 3 8 0 Cheddington .. 0 3 8 Stafford M 1 9 * Stoney Stratford 12 6 _Northampton „ 6 0 0 Birmingham , Gray 0 16 Chatham „ l io o Winlaton „ 016 6 Birmingham , Loughborough 0 410 Goodwin „ o 18 4 Alva M 513 6 Lancaster „ e 1 ft Ely .. 2 5 0 Leeds ' o 8 o Shrewsbury „ 113 6 Armley „ n 3 » Newcastle-upon . Heckmondwike 417 o Tyne ., 1 18 10 Birmingham , Shin 2 6 2 Upton . _on-Serern loo _Smethwfck .. o i « _SrtU H _?« 2 " - "" terLovell n 8 o Shoreditch ., 1 is o Leicester , Astill 16 0 0 Dundee „ 8 _tG 0 New Radford " 0 4 8 Lambeth „ _i 4 6 Leamington „ 215 0 Nottingham .. 1217 0 _Halsfeft " 1 Glasgow _M 112 6 Hull _^ \ n 0 Bristol „ i 5 Q Hawick _« 08 0 _, 1 ! [ 1 , 1 ! 1 ? _, I , )
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_Darlington .. 0 17 0 _HotoWB . - . }} . { Hamilton .. 1 6 0 Manchester * » » Preston , Brown 0 8 Acenngtou - _» _» * Burnley , No , 2 1 8 « Go < -port . « ' . . Cheltenham „ * 12 0 Bilston . ¦ - ¦• » J J Bolton _" .. . » . e 0 Preston , Liddell « » _« Merthyr . U _ML , " J 16 6 _Boulogne . „ 0 8 6 Aberdeen « " - _*> D Chipping _"forton 0 18 0 _ , £ 266 4 8 mmmm _^^^^^^^^^^^^ =
« ECTI 0 K _Ve . _i . SStSsA _iSlEgs I asBr _^ . ssggir B * - ° ¦ _g * - _* ¦ .. _^ sr . ,., Ovingdon .. 10 0 Leeds ? 4 _« _Mountain M 4 U ¦ _Armjey •• _, J } wSngborough Vi 4 _fnsterLovA _. Hindley , Cook .. 3 0 10 Wednesbury . 50 0 _Jpton-on-Severn 1 8 10 Merthyr . Jones 0 14 6 Burslem .. 4 16 0 Bermondsey .. 815 0 Farrington .. 14 4 J **** " * , 2 ' X w *« t-rham .. 10 0 Mells , Smith .. o w o HowseU ? . 4 4 o Leicester , Freeman 6 8 o Shorfditch : 2 _i 6 Blackburn - - . 80 . 6 8 Crayford . .. 1817 8 Crewe - J i J Chelsea . 2 IT 0 £ *»!* . " o 10 0 ar : . » ¦ Hr : i " & S _**™ . !» : ¦ . §«»—* - ¦ " _— : J !! : _-BSE _* . If ! tSmm * , ' - : » : _! - € } - is MarketLavington 18 0 6 Bramhope / .. I « « _nivtha ' \ 0 10 0 Trowbridge « 010 9
_Sffon . _I 815 4 Sunderland - J JJ JJ Kilbarchan - 5 8 C Torquay - 8 18 10 Rochdale ., 2 610 Bacup » ¦ { J Burnley , No . 1 6 0 0 Plymouth .. 14 1 6 Mansfield , W . « _« 7 0 Leamington .. I 8 6 Clayton West a 2 7 0 Stow-on-the-Wold 5 0 9 Worksop .. 7 7 0 Derby - I 3 6 Campsie .. U * Hi « M 16 3 Camberwell _« 14 0 Hawick - 013 8 Stepney » 0 ll 6 Chickenly - 10 | 0 Norton Folgate 719 6 Mottram m 7 8 3 Falkirk » 814 6 Worcester _~ 18 16 0 Hammersmith 0 2 0 Manchester .. 4017 11 Somers Town .. 0 17 « Accrington .. 1 8 6 Whittington and Go * port .. » 1 " Cat .. 1 4 « Bilston .. 26 0 0 Lambeth .. 013 6 Preston , Liddel 2 8 7 . Swindon .. 10 0 Stalybridge .. 10 0 o Nottingham _« 61 3 0 Walsoken „ 812 4 Glasgow m 8 3 0 Samuel Lee .. 0 2 4 Bristol - 815 9 E . H . Travis .. 1 « 0 Darlington .. 612 1 Rd . Evans .. 0 10 Preston , Brown 1 16 6 Wm . _Cruikshank 0 4 0 Oldham _.. 5 0 0 Edwd . Emmery 010 0 Burnley , No . 2 1 7 6 H . Battenbill ., 2 0 0 Cheltenham « 15 0 J . T . Smith .. 0 4 0 Bolton » 5 0 0 J . Francis Arm * Stratford-on-Avon 1 16 0 strong « 4 16 Huddersfield .. 416 0 J . B . Wilson .. 0 2 0 ' North Shields M 4 6 11 Samuel Turner 0 5 0 ; Stockton M 6 6 10 f _homas Dartes 0 2 6 ] Northwich .. 1 8 0 _Elia . Ammdell 2 6 Barnsley , No . 1 « 10 0 Jane Mansfield 1 0 0 Carrington - 1 11 lo Charles Mowl .. 0 10 Devizes _» 5 6 6 Shadrach White 0 2 0 Retford _» 6 4 0 Francis Long .. 214 o Hexham _» . 0 2 0 Angelina Anderson 0 8 0 Stafford .. 0 10 James Ashton .. 0 5 0 Cambridge « 0 8 0 _Gainsborough .. 2 14 6 _Newport , Mon- Chester _« 0 17 0 mouth h 010 0 Aberdeen « 8 14 0 Teignmouth .. 8 0 6 Holytown _« 0 6 0 Wootton-under- Blackburn « 20 6 8 Edge „ 4 10 6 Stoney Stratford 812 2 Blandford _» 214 6 Paisley .. 2 7 6 Tiverton _» 18 0 Edwd . Yaxley .. 0 3 0 Truro .. 317 9 J . G . Knowles 0 4 0 Barnard Castle 0 14 0 Elisabeth Box Old _Basford » 9 19 6 Comloy .. 0 2 0 Newcastle-upon- J . Arthur Comley 0 8 6 Tyne „ 15 0 0 Edwin Comley 8 2 0 Perth .. 012 0 Geo . Comley .. 0 a o Merthyr N 2 19 0 E . D . E . Comley 0 2 0 Boulogne .. 4 2 6 James Daly .. O 1 61 Colne , No . 1 .. 16 16 6 John Thomas .. 0 5 0 Salford .. 12 13 7 John Lloyd .. 0 5 0 Liverpool m 4 4 0 Birmingham , Basup „ 2 10 0 Goodwin „ 16 8 0 £ 835 7 8
SECTION No . 5 . Preston , Brown 715 2 Raistrick .. 6 3 10 Cheddington .. 10 8 0 Wellingborough 2 10 0 Stoney Stratford 17 2 9 Gorbridge .. 2 0 Birmingham , Gray 112 6 _Newcastle-upon-Loughborough 4 3 4 Tyno .. IS 14 0 Alra _„ 7 4 0 Hindley , Co * k M 0 10 _Cleator _» 1 16 0 Reading H 4 11 8 _Mountsorrel .. 212 0 Burslem _« 4 18 0 Mountain .. 0 10 Shoreditch .. 0 7 0 Shrewsbury .. 0 8 0 Crayford .. I 16 2 Jersey , St Killier ' _s O 10 O Longton M I fl 0 Gloucester , Guy 5 4 0 Chelsea ,. 0 5 0 Eccles m 5 0 0 Limehouse „ 3 15 0 Abingdon ... 10 8 0 Aberdeen ... 0 . 7 8 Chipping Norton 0 14 0 Campsie ... 0 12 6 Hamilton ... 0 8 0 Camberwell ... 110 Carlisle ... 5 0 0 Norton Folgate 0 5 0 Hebden Bridge 0 8 6 Falkirk ... 10 6 Market Laving- Hammersmith 116 tou ... 16 9 0 Somers Town 2 lfi 6 Dover ... 0 2 6 Whittington Lower Warley 0 5 0 and Cat ... 0 10 6 Blythe ... 14 0 Lambeth ... 0 4 0 Iveston ... 3 11 2 Swindon ... 8 0 0 Rochdale ... 0 15 10 Stratford ... 0 4 0 Burnley ( 1 ) ... 0 2 6 Nottingham ... 26 11 3 Mansfield , Alnwick , T .... 5 4 0 Walker ... 0 3 0 Glasgow ... 8 5 6 Mells ... 2 12 0 Kendall ... 0 6 6 Tewk . bujy ... 3 3 0 Lancaster ... 0 9 6 Blackburn ... 14 6 6 Lincoln , Budd 6 14 8 Crewe ... 5 6 9 _Leeds ... 2 0 0 Ledbury ... 0 14 Heckmondwike 114 0 Westminster 0 5 6 Birmingham , Ship 4 9 0 Alloa ... 0 12 0 Smethwick ... 516 6 Kettering .,. 610 0 Minster Lovell 16 2 0 Droylsden ... 2 13 0 Leicester , Astill 16 0 0 Bradford ... 5 0 0 New Radford 3 0 6 Trowbridge 8 10 Banbnry ... 34 12 8 Sunderland 9 9 4 Merthyr , Jones 3 18 0 Torquay ... 0 7 0 Bermondsey 0 10 Plymouth .. 0 2 0 Leigh ... 2 7 0 Leamington .. 1 16 6 Exeter ... 10 0 0 Norwich ... 2 6 0 Mottram ... 8 2 2 Halstead ... 8 4 0 Manchester 21 13 4 _Stew-on-the- Accrington 7 16 4 Wold ... 10 6 Gosport 5 18 8
_» ... Derby ... 1 15 6 Bilston ... 3 0 0 Darlington ... 5 0 0 Bristol ... 13 5 8 Preston , Brown II 1 0 Chickenly ... 6 4 0 Burnley , 3 ... 012 Hull ... 0 17 6 Cheltenham 15 17 6 Hawick „ . 517 2 Huddersfield 14 17 10 Sutton . _ln-Ashfield 0 12 7 Oxford ... 5 6 0 Hexham ... 1 4 fl North Shields 0 13 1 Northampton 10 0 0 Boston , B ... 8 12 0 Devizes ... 8 0 0 James Goldle 5 4 0 Dionysius Moden 5 4 0 _PeUrGoldie ... 5 4 0 G . J . F . ... 0 4 0 Thomas _Goldi * 5 4 0 G . Goodacre , jun , 1 14 0 Charles Goldle 5 4 1 John Winn ... 0 6 0 Timothy Hunt 5 0 8 J . W . _Pelrce ... 3 11 6 Charles Culllford 0 3 0 JohnW . Peirce 8 11 6 Rob . Anderson 2 12 0 Newport , _Mon-&» nB « _eley ... 3 7 0 mouth . ... 0 9 0 MariaRobinBon 6 10 Teignmouth ... 3 16 0 Martha Aldridge 0 10 Wootton-under . James Seth Edge ... 6 18 0 _Wallls ... 5 4 0 Exning ... 6 4 o Jesse Sawyer 1 0 0 Blandford ... 2 16 9 W . Pollard ... 0 12 0 Tiverton ... 0 6 0 Isabella Burton 2 12 0 Truro ... 0 6 0 James Wrag _... 5 4 0 _Malmsbury ... 5 8 0 W . Roberts ... 5 4 0 Belmont ... 5 4 0 John Watson 2 12 0 Steeple Claydou 18 8 S Wm . Austin ... 4 14 0 Spilsby ... 6 t _, MaUon Murray 4 14 0 Birkenhead ... l _e n Preston , Liddel 43 10 8 New Milns ... 0 5 11 Ann Beeley ... 0 5 0 Newcastle-upon . G . Goodacre , sen . 5 4 0 Tyne ... 28 4 10 G . Goodacre , jun . 8 10 0 Perth 0 10 " Samuel Belcher 5 4 0 Boulogne ... 17 6 wm . Smith ... 5 4 o Colne ( No . l ) 6 12 2 J . Addison 8 9 0 Padiham ... 5 4 0 T . Finlay .. 0 1 0 Salford .. 9 4 11 Stephen Baker 0 8 0 Ashton ... 0 17 0 George Bugler 0 8 0 Liverpool ... 9 18 9 Wm . Baillie ... 0 10 0 _Gainsboroigh 0 14 8 Henry _E-ra Chester ... 9 10 Suggate .. 2 12 0 Nuneaton ... 5 18 0 Geo Paikin ... 8 18 Holytown ... 0 8 0 W . Hodgson ... 5 4 0 Blackburn ... 14 C 6 JoliuTigurs ,,. 0 2 6 Exeter ... 10 0 6 Geo . Martin ... 9 5 0 Campsie .. 5 1 fi Rioh . Griffith 0 16 Stoney Stratford 13 IS 3 R . Elcome ... 5 4 0 Reading ... 4 17 - ] W . Clarridge 0 5 8 Timothy Hunt 0 4 0 John Simmons 0 10 Whittington and G . W . Philips 0 2 0 Cat 10 5 - „ £ 872 15 5
EXPENSE FUND , . CheddUgtcn 0 8 0 _JamesGoldls 0 2 0 _toaghborough 0 3 6 Peter Goldie 6 2 0 ft ! . * , " « 6 6 TI * on * M Goldie 0 2 0 Oindon ... _oio Charles _Goldlo J 2 0 w V „ " ¦ ° 2 G Robert Anderson e l 0 _Moantsorrell 0 1 0 Ann Beery 0 1 0 Mountain ... 9 , Henr , AIn "' ° _a \ ° n Shrewsbury ... 0 2 0 J . Seth Wall ' s 0 2 a Jorsey _. St _Helier . 0 4 6 Francis ion " J _fester , Guy 0 2 0 W . Pollard ... - { 0 Kl" v -V ° 2 ° ¦ * M- _« Gillta gl » B . t 2 0 Corbridge ... 0 4 _O' _- _^ _abella Burton 0 1 0 Congleton ... 0 2 0 John Watson 0 1 0 Newcastle-upon . W . _Austiu ... 0 2 0 _itni a '" ! _Md-onMarray e ' 2 0 Upton . on . Severn 0 8 0 Samuel _Belehor 0 " 0 f" _* - ° 7 iveston ... 020 _Jer hyr ... a 2 _, -, , J J J Boulogne 9 5 0 J . G . _Ba-stowand Colne ( Ne . l ) 0 19 Brother ... 920 Padiham _.,., . 6 2 0 Timothy Hunt 0 2 0 Spilsby ... 0 2 0 Nuneaton ... 0 2 _Birkeuhetd .. 0 9 6 _Blaakburu ... 3 0 ft
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_, , i i j J 1 i , , _| Shoreditch ' Aid W . Chapman 0 I I Crayford ... 0 6 0 Geo . Martin 0 ! * Chelsea ... 0 8 0 _Gidean Taylor q i > * Soroen Town 0 2 0 Stephen Mills 0 * 0 Limehouse „ . 0 10 0 John _Brlckwosd o I ' Abingdon „ . 0 4 0 dee . Parkin o i ' Aberdeen ... 0 1 10 J . F . Armstrong o I ' Borj ... 12 0 W . Hodgson 0 i S _' roudwater 0 6 6 Richard Elcome 0 o " Hebden _Bridge 0 16 6 _DjprmUlu- Moden o o ' MarketLavington 0 10 4 G . Goodacre janr . o o " Loww Warley 0 4 0 James W . Peirce o t J Blythe ... 0 2 0 John W . Peirce b j Iveston ... 0 8 0 Thos . Humphreys 0 j J Kilbarchan „ . 1 _" 0 Halstead ... 0 i ! Rochdale ... 0 2 0 Derby ... 0 » Mansfield ... 0 4 6 Hull ... 0 ' Clayton , West 0 18 10 Hawick ... - „ ? Woiksop ... 0 4 0 Chlckenley ... 0 2 , _Campjie ... 014 6 Mottram ... „ l { » Norton Folgate 0 1 8 _Manche-ter ... i fl - Whittington and Accrington ... o 5 . C » t ... 0 6 6 Gosport ... 0 9 I Nottingham 1 16 8 Bilston ... 2 - . Alnwick ... 0 2 0 _Preiton ( Liddle ) 1 3 . Glasgow ... 015 9 Staleybridge 1 „ . Bristol ... 012 6 Walsoken ... 0 1 . Darlington ... 19 0 E . n . Travis t - . Hamilton ... 0 4 0 G . Goodacre senr . 0 2 , Preston , Brown 0 13 0 Leicester Freeman 8 _» 0 Burnley { No . 2 ) 016 0 Blackburn ... * _; _, Cheltenham - 2 10 11 Crewe ... 0 1 . Huddersfield 0 9 6 Westminster 0 8 j Oxford ... 0 10 Alloa ... 0 2 0 Boston ... 0 2 0 Csrlton ... 0 2 j Northwich ... 0 16 High Wycomb 0 4 g Devises ... 0 4 6 Trowbridge ... 0 g t Retford ... 0 2 0 Sunderland 0 5 5 Stafford ... 0 10 Torquay Quay 0 2 j Birmingham Good- Plymouth ... 0 7 * win ... 0 11 0 New Radford 9 15 ' t Lincoln ... 0 2 0 Banbury „ , 1 ; Leeds ... 2 0 0 Bermondsey 0 lo q Armley ... 0 7 0 Leigh ... 013 g Heckmondwike 018 9 Mells ... 0 1 Birmingham , Ship 3 6 Minster Lovell 0 6 0 8 me . bwick ... 0 4 0 Leicester , Astill 3 9 } Newport , Moa- Exning ... 0 2 9 mouth ... 0 4 0 _BlandfordJ ... 0 3 _{ Teignmouth ... 0 8 0 Tiverton ... 0 « g Yfoo ton _. under- Trwo .. O 2 g Edge ... 4 8 0 Glasgow ... " !| _Mulmsbury ... 0 2 9 Liverpool ... 8 fi ja Belmont ... 0 2 0 Gainsborough 0 2 0 Bernard Castle 0 10 0 Chester ... 0 0 -j Old Basford ... 0 4 0 Aberdeen ... 0 1 * Newcastle-upon * Campsie ... 0 2 * Tyne ... 0 5 8 Markinch ... 0 1 j £ 63 15 J j
j . i ' TOTAL LAND _tOUD . Mr O'Connor , Section No . 1 ... 82 14 6 Mr O'Connor , Section No . 2 ... 229 1 2 Mr O'Connor , Section No . 3 ... 266 4 3 Mr O'Connor , Section No . 4 ... 835 1 8 Mr O'Connor , Section No . 5 ... 872 15 5 Expense Fund ... ... 6315 1 Rules ... _«• 13 11 $ £ 2 . 363 9 Ci Banfc ... . » 181 2 9 Land Purchase , per Mr Russell 47 « 0 £ 2 , 591 18 JJ Wm . Dixon . _Chkibtofhek Doile , Thos . Cuxk , ( Corns . Ses ) _Puitir M'G-UTU , ( Fin . Sec . )
Errata —Two pounds sent , some time since , from Kil . barcban should have appeared in the Star vf the 23 rd of October , the amount forming part of the fourth section total for that week .. In the Star tf the 16 th of October , Hull should be section No . 4 , £ 6 12 s . 6 d . In tlie _Star « " the 23 rd of Oct ., Worcester should be section No . 4 , £ 10 6 s . Id . ; and that of the 30 th , Hanley sbould hare been section No . 5 , £ 11 . Newport Pagnell should haw been section No . 4 , £ 1415 s .
NOTICE . The manager has received a remittance of twenty-nve pounds from the * illnerva Lodge , Ovenden , No . 681 , _'ia the Deposit Department of this Bank . T . Pbicb , Manager . RECEIPTS OF NATIONAL CHARTER ASSOCIATION Manchester ... 3 0 0 Brighton , per Mr Burk ... Oil Flower ... 0 3 0 £ 2 4 1 FOR THB PKOSKClJTIOIf OF IBB PROPRIZIOBB OF TBI MANCHESTER EXAMINER . Shoreditch ... 0 19 Oxford ... 0 5 ' R F . Burk ... 0 10 Armley ... 0 3 0 R . H . Burk ... 0 10 Gilbert Burton 0 0 ' Carlisle ... 10 0 Hull ... 2 10 Mansfield ... 0 110 £ 4 4 7 lOIl _PROSECBTIOH 6 V SLEAFOAB _MtTBDEB . CASE . Darlington ... 0 10 0 Kilbarchan ... 10 0 Windy Nook ... 0 2 6 Mansfield ... 0 0 1 Richd . F . Burk 0 10 Armley ... 0 2 0 R . H . Burk ... 0 10 Hull ... 0 13 « £ 2 9 19 C . Doile . Secretary ,
Dr M'Docali/S Root-.—Todmorden, Sunday, ...
Dr _M'Docali / s Root-. —Todmorden , Sunday , 7 ; Bacup , Monday , 8 ; _HaBlingden , Tuesday , Aoerington , Wednesday , 10 ; Clitheroe , Thursday , H ; asd Padihiun , Friday , VS . Dr lt'DoaaU will lecture at Burnley , on Sunday , 14 . Ma _Wkit ' s Roote . —Bilston , Sunday , Nov . 7 ; Leicester , _Monday , 8 ; Belper , Tuesday , 9 ; Core-try , Wednesday , 10 ; Kiddetminster _, Thursday , 11 ; &• - Gloucester , Friday , 12 . Mr West will commence " nit labours in Devonshire , at Exeter , on Monday , 15 .
Important Notice.
IMPORTANT NOTICE .
. The Londoners Have Begun A Home Vob Ho...
. THE LONDONERS HAVE BEGUN A HOME VOB HONEST INDUSTRY . Patrons . —! . S . Duneombe , Esq ., M . P ., T . Waklej _, Esq ., M P ., B . Bond Cabbell , Esq ., M . P . Have you read the Tract on the Land and Building Society for the Werking Millions 1 If net , get it , read it . Price only One Penny . Published for the Society , by 0 . Berger , 19 , Holywell-street , Straad . Sold by all cheap booksellers , and the Society ' s agents : also to be bad , with full Information , of Daniel William Ruffy , _secretarr , offices ofthe Society , 13 , Tottenham-court , New-road , St Pancras , London , by sending three postage stamps .
: Just Published. (Uniform With The " La...
: JUST PUBLISHED . ( Uniform with the " _Labovreb Magasiue , ) Price 6 d . A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON SPADE HUSBANDRY , being the results of four years' experience . Br J . Sillett . M'Gowmi aad Co ., 16 , Great _Windmill-street , London and may be had * f ull booksellors . _HUBTOJ- * S TEMPERANCE AND _COMMERCIAL COFFEE HOUSE , BACK LANE , NEAR THE TOF OF KING STREET . J _SJTR NURTON in rotnrning thanks for the support
tTJ . hitherto reeelved , begs most respectfully to inform the public of Blackburn and its vicinity , that !" will open the above commodious establishment on Saturday , the 13 th inst ., by a public tea party . Tickets , 8 d . each , to bB had at the T » mperance Hall , WhaB"J Bank . Tea on th * table at five ofcloek . Mr Nurton pledges himself to devote his attention to tho comfort and welfare of Commercial Travellers , ana tho Public , who may fav » ur him with their patronage . N . B . The members of the National Land Company will meet at the abovo house on the 13 th inst ., and every succeeding Saturday _evening , atthe usual hour .
TO TAILORS Now Ready , by approbation of her Majesty , Queen _Victoria , and U . B . H . Prince Albert , „_ _. THE LONDON and PARIS AUTUMN and WINTER FASHIONS for 1317 and IMS , by Benjamin Bea * and Co ., 12 , Hart-street , Bloomsbury-square , _London and by G . Berger , _Holywell-streot , Strand , London ; most magnificent and superbly-coloured Print , surpas _" - ing ever-thing ofthe kind previously published , accompanied with tho most fashionable full size Dress , Riding , Frock , IIuHting , und Wrapper Coat pattern-, with every
particular part tor each complete . Also , the most fa "" " ionable and newest style Waistcoat Pattern , includiof the manner of Cutting and making up the whole , w _' - * information respecting tlio new scientific system <* Cutting , which will be published Jan . l , 1818 , and wi ll supersede everything of the kiud bofore conceived . Pnf " 10 s ; or , post free , to all parts of the kingdom , lis . Patent Measures , with full explanation , 8 s the set ( tbe greatest improvement ever known In the trade ) . Patterns W measure sent post frea to all parts of the kingdom , '» each .
NEW PATENT INDICATOR , lor _ascertnininR proportion and disproportion in all systems of cutting , tw method of using It , and manner of variation clearly ill- ?; trited-Caveat grented to it . Read for the same , Ap ™ 22 , 1817 , signed by Messrs t ' oole and Capmael , Pa *" n ' Office , 4 , Old . squnro , Lineoln ' s-lnn , London .-Daetar '' - " ? signed by tho Right Honourable Sir G . Carroll , Lors Mayor of London , May 1 st , 1847 . Price , with _diaera- * clearly explained , 7 s ; or , pos ' . free , 7 s 6 d .- Sold by _« " »•' Read and Co ., 12 , _Hartstreet , Bloomsbury-square , w . don ; G . Berger , Holywell-street , Strand , London ;"" , all booksellers in the kingdom . Post-office orders w » post stamps taken as cash . Habits H . H . L . perforine" w the trade . Buslfor fitting Coats on Boys * figures .- * ' men provided . —Instructions in Cutting comp lete , tor . kinds of Style and Fashion , wbich can he accompi - « in nn incredibly short time , but the pupil may con * ' " until he is fully satisfied . - _~
LONDON _NEWSPAPEttS _.-TuMi ? , Herald , _Chr _»* < fcc , posted tbe day of Publication , at ' _- ' "• * _,, Quarter . Sent the day after publication , at 10 s per q _^ ter . Other papers equally moderate . To be _&*' _£ !! . _„& . vnnce . Address to Jas . Iloutloy , News agent , 13 , w w street , City , London . _^^^
Printid By Dqjjgai, M'Got*Can , Of 16, Great Wffit Bmcci Lui Oi
_Printid by _DQJJGAI , _M'GOT * CAN , of 16 , Great _Wffit bmcci _lui oi
, Jiuymurkhl, Uauiiy N««"»"" I-Jew" Offi...
, _jiuymurKHL , uauiiy n _«« _" » _"" _i-jeW " Office , in the same Struct aud Parish , for tbe _Tt _< p it & FEARGUS O'CONNOR , Es . i ., M . P ., and _« .,, by William Hewitt , of Ko . 18 , Obarles _^ treet ,, * _don-strect , Walworth , in the parish ef St . Maty , f , ngton _. inthe County of Surrey , at the _OOice . - _« ., Great _WindmilUtreet . _fiaymarkct , in 'fie City * _miustsr . —Saturday , November 6 tb , 18 « 7-
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Nov. 6, 1847, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_06111847/page/8/
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