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^ F_-BU-_t 14, 1846. ^^ THE NORTHERN STA...
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SONGS FOR THE PEOPLE KO. T.
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DOUGLAS JERROLD'S SHILLING MAGAZINE— Feb...
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THE FAMILY HERALD—Pari XXXIII. London : ...
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f _ rE ~ PICTORIAL HISTORY OF AMERICA FR...
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ANNUAL BANQUET OF THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC ...
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Preparations fob War.—Whatever may bo th...
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, __ 35ankrwpte, $zi.
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BANKRUPTS. (FroiA THtedatft <!*«««#, fcb...
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Frightful OccuimuxcE.—On Sunday morning,...
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used ilollo- toll y cure^hja-. 'h jj _ c...
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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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^ F_-Bu-_T 14, 1846. ^^ The Northern Sta...
_^ F __ -BU- _ t 14 , 1846 . _^^ THE NORTHERN STAR . - ~ _'f- «
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. _^^ _m _^* " -- _—l _^^ .- _* . ui- » " _> ' i _nri mi _i j .- _, _--- ,-- ¦ ¦— - ' ¦ ¦ _¦ _* _*«»>** - _^ ' - ¦ i __ _w BEAUTIES OF BTBON . K 0 . XIX . ' " THE _St-GB OF _CORJ-JIH . " "W < "We dose our notice of this poem with the Mow Inge ing extracts ' . —
THE __ SI _ G __ I . On dun Ci-Merotf _. ridge appears The g leam of twice ten thousand spears ; And downward to the Isthmian plain , From shore to shore of either main , The tent is pitched , the crescent chines Along fhe Moslem ' s leaguering lines ; And the dusk Spahi's bands _advanca Beneath each bearded pacha ' s glance ; And fax and wide as eye can reach The turban'd cohorts throng the beach ; And there the Arab ' s camel kneels ,
And there tus steed the Tartar wheels ; The Turcoman bath left his herd The sabre round his loins to gird ; And there the volleying thunders pour , Till wares grow smoother to the roar . The trench is dug , the cannon ' s breath Wings the far hissing globe of death -, Past whirl the fragments from the wall _. Which crumbles with the ponderous ball ; And from that wall the foe replies , O ' er dusky plain and smoky sides , With fires that answer fast and well , Tbe summons of the IufideL
THE HOSEO & S Ot WAS . And be saw fhe lean dogs beneath the wall Hold o ' er the dead their carnival , Gorging and growling o ' er carcases and limb ; They were too busy to bark at him ! From , a Tartar ' s skull they had stripped fhe flesh , A- ye peel the fig when its fruit is fresh ; And their white tusks crunched o ' er fhe whiter skull , As it slipped through their jaws , when their edge grew dull , As they lazily mumbled the bones of tbe dead _. When they scarce could rise from the spot where they fed ; So well had they broken a lingering fast
"With tbose who Toad fallen for that night ' s repast . And Alp knew , by the turbans that roll'd on the sand , The foremost of these were the best of his band ; _C-imso- _' and green were tbe shawls of their wear , And each scalp had a single long toft of hair , All the rest were shaven and bare . The scalps were in tha wild dog's rcaw , The hair was tangled ronnd his jaw ; Bnt close by the shore , on the edge of the gulf , There sat a rait nr . Sapping a wolf , "_?__• had stolen from the hills , but kept away , Scared by the dogs , from the human prey ; But he seized on his share ofa steed that lay , Pick'd by the birds , on the sands of the bay _.
TBI ASSAULT . As the wolves , that headlong go Oa the stately buffalo , Though with fiery eyes , and angry roar , Aad hoofs that stamp , and boras that gore , * - He tramples on earth , or tosses on high The foremost , who rush on his strength bnt to die j Thus against the waU they went . Thus the first were backward bent ; Many a bosom , sheathed in brass , StrewM the earth like broken glass , ShiverM by the shot , that tore The ground whereon they moved no more ; Even as they fell , in files they lay , Liketh-mow « r _* sgra _ satthe _ toseof day , When his work is done on the Ievell'd plain ; Sneh was the fall ofthe foremost slain .
As the spring fides , with heavy plash , from the cliffs invading dash Huge fragments , sapp'd by fhe ceaseless flow , Till white and thundering down they go ,. Like fhe avalanche's snow On the Alpine vales below ; Thus at length , outbreathed and worn , Corinth ' , sons were downward borne By the long and oft renewM Charge ofthe Moslem multitude . In firmness they stood , and in masses they fell , Heap'd by the host of the infidel . Prom the point of encountering blades to the hilt _.
Sabres and swords with blood were gilt ; But the rampart is won , and the spoil begun _. And all but the after carnage done . Shriller shrieks now mingling come Prom within the plunder _ed dome : Hark to the haste of flying feet , That splash in the blood of the slippery street } But here and there , where ' vantage ground Against the foe may still be found , Desperate groups , of twelve or ten , Hake a pause , and turn again—-With banded backs against tbe wall , . Fiercely stand , or fighting fall .
THX FALL OF COBI . VTE . So near they came , the nearest stretc-t'd To grasp the spoil he almost reach'd When old _JTmotti ' s hand _Touch'd with the torch the train—Tis fired . ' Spire , vaults , the shrine , fhe spoil , the slain , The turban'd victors , the Christian band , AU that of living or dead remain , Hurl'd on high with the ihiver ' dfane , In ene -aid roar expired ! The shatter _ed town—the walls thrown down—The wave a moment backward bent—The hills that shake , although unrent , As if an earthquake _pass'd The fhausand __ ap * le _ s things all driven Tn cloud and flame ath-rart the heaven , By that tremendous
blast—Proclaim'd the desperate conflict o'er Ou that too long afiiicted shore . All the living things tbat heard The deadly earth-shock disappeared : The wild birds fie w ; the wild dogs fled , And howling left the unburied dead . The wolves yell'd on the cavern * - hill Where echo roll'd in thunder still ; The jackal ' s troop , in gather _^ cry , Bay * -, from afar _complainiogly , With a mix * d and mournful sound , lake crying babe , and beaten hound : With sadden wing , and ruffled breast , The eagle left his rocky nest , And mounted nearer to the sun _. The clouds beneath lum _seem'd so dun ; Their smoke assail'd his startled beak , And made him higher soar and shriek-Thus was Corinth lost and won .
Songs For The People Ko. T.
SONGS FOR THE PEOPLE KO . T .
_HO-TOCR TO TKE CffAMPIO-J OP FREEDOM . An offering to the shrine of power Onr hand * shall never bring ; A garland on the car of pomp Oar bands shall never fling ; Applauding in tha conqueror ' s path Our voices ne ' er shall be ; Snt we have heart * to hononr those Who bade the world go free ! _Traise to the good , the ] pure , the great , Who made as what we are 1 Who lit the flame which yet -hall glow With radiance brighter far : Glory to them in eoming time , And through eternity , Who burst the captive's galling chain , And bade the worldgo free ! Robert _hereon
&Ebicto& _
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Douglas Jerrold's Shilling Magazine— Feb...
DOUGLAS JERROLD'S SHILLING _MAGAZINE— Febh-ab-. London : Pinch Office , 85 , fleet-street . We consider this number of _Jerrold's Mamcine to be inferior to most of its _predecessora . This inferi-rity is mainly the result of tbe absence of two of the principal featnres usual in this _publicati _» n—the editor ' s story of "St . Giles and St . James , " and the excellent "flistoiy for Young England , " neither of wbicb are in tbe present number . The best of the contents are , " Tlte Confessions of an Old Picture , " and "Memoranda of Maturin . " The former of these is by Horace Mathew , and is a capital satire upon the manufacturer- of " Salvator Rosa ' s , " and other " productions of the great masters , " made up
to gull" retired tripe-merchants , " and similar knowing connoisseurs , including the commissioners of the _National Gallery . The "Memoranda of Maturin " is a short but Tery interesting sketch of the chequered career of one of earth ' s noblest children , the author of " Bertrand , " "Woman , " and " Melmoth the Wanderer "—one oi Ireland's distinguished authors . Wiux __ . _-l-WOT contributes No . 2 of his pleasant sketches of " English Scenes and Characters , '' hia subject being "Dick TteuTern , the country wag . " The village wit is _alwaj-t a welcome , though somaiime _ a _misciieroos character . There are several other articles , most of them instructive and pleasing . We select our extracts , which we are compelled to cut
down to the smallest possible compass , from "Juniper Hedgehog ' s" excellent letter to his acquaintance " Ebenezer Prune , grocer and general dealer , of the town of . Numskull . " The letter sets out by telling " Ehene-er" that his letter came safe to hand . There was no fear of tbat . No letter that showed * man to be a fool , ever jet miscarried . " It appear * that "Ebeneier" has been writing to "Juniper " in high spirits at the calling oat of the militia . The Iowa of _NumskulL he avers , is " ripe for war . The mayor is very hat for glory , and the mayoress and her daughters dying to see the whole town in regimentals . " In reply to this , the philosophical cabtnaa suppose- —for the sake of has argument—Numskull to be the scene of actual conflict , and thus dis
courses on THE BEAUTIES OF WAB . Xetme see : we will begin about seven o'clock in the morning . The major is yet in his bed , lying on lus hack ,
Douglas Jerrold's Shilling Magazine— Feb...
twiddling his thumbs , aud counting over his virtues Whi __^ -ba _ g- _ ra . h ! a shell-fired by the _tS _£ _Wholehog _artaiery-- _^ , niei £ _& _££ ? CusMom , _Pcnnsylvanian frig 6 te ) - & Us _ftrou _^ the roof-throughfloor and _floor-carries away , nevermind » g the mayoress ' s screams , half the state tester , " ™ S r _& ema orandhkwifeunhurt _,-bat . tiU _ -lliDg _\ L 3 dining-roon - and parlonr _.-wd intent upon doff * wor _* descending into the cellar , and finally dropping £ w . ?_ S ° l _^ jy t * st _fee ' s-wmg _poryustgSrto be bottled . Now , this bomb well snp _^ _se u > befhe U sugar-plum of war .
The major jumps out of bed , thinking of his moneybox , his plate , his bonds , his pipe of port , and his wife and daughters . The lady mayoress screams like-no , I can t think of nothing stronger—like a woman 1 And then her five daughters , all in their bed-gowns and curlpapers , rushing ia , scream , too , to show the tenderness and the weakness of their womanhood . Now , Ebenezer , arn't all these creaturespretty hypocrites - I mean what I say—and I'll prove it . Bless their little satisfied souls ! how they do lore the military , to b » sure 1 What a beautiful thing is a review to ' em—isn ' t it ! And how they'll smile npon cannonballs as if they were thing- to eat—and how the . wink their precious eyes in the bre & -t-ph \ t « 6 of the dear office ™ , more than if they Blared in their own
looking-glasses 1 Aud then , in their little puffed-up hearts , they think no more ofa man than ofa barn-door fowl , if be isn ' t a soldier . But only put a feather in his capred cloth and gold laoe on his body—roll him tight rouud with a sash ( the babe of glory!)—aud let a long sword dangle by his side—and to woman's heart , what a dear peacock the sweet fellow is ! She could follow him all over tiut world ; his feathers are so fine , and he does strut so beautifully ! And in this way , Ebenezer , do women again and again make themselves parties to war and wickedness ! In their hearts , to be sure , they don't mean It . They' ll faint , some of ' to see a cut finger ; bat then a review only shows the frippery of war- —with ont the blood . The music ' s btautiful , and there's no ca ll then for lint .
Well , the mayor , and his wife and daughters , are all embracing one another in the bed-room , when bang comes another shell , and blows away Maria and Louisa ( young pretty things , that never did harm to _onybo-j . into fhe next world . Bang—bang—fall the shells ! Crash goes the house , and the mayor and his wife , and three daughters , scramble down stairs , and bide in the cellar ! Mow , Mr . Mayor , was a great man for war , and all its glory . Yes ! when full of his best port , he would give his favourite toast— "A speedy warand soon ! " And wherefore 1 The purple-faced old ass knew nothing of war but its eutside finery . The regimental band , tbe fifes and drams , made him feel as strong as Sampson—bnt then he'd never had bomb-shells drop through his house , and his helpless children slaughtered under his eyes .
How very differently does he now—squatted low , like a toadstool in his cellar—think of war ! How does he groan , and shake , and in his ' misery tear his grey hair , as he hears the hellof war roaring about him—and listens to the yell * and -boats of men , like devils escaped from ths burning pit , to work destruction . ' And now—bang —bang—his house is burst open—half the regiment of the _Pennsylvanisn rifles flock in—Pillage , Pillage is the cry—they tear from room to room—thej descend into the cellar— they stave in pipes and hogsheads— -they seize the mayor ' s three daughters—and ( could he ever have thought it !) now is he grateful that Maria and Louisa , in sudden death , met a better fate . W 4 _^ € ie poor mayor makes a rush at one of fhe heroes , when his brains ars knocked ont by the butt-end of a musket , and the " glorj" continues , ,
Let me hear no mora of jour cock-a-doodle-do-lng about the splendour of war , and the grandeur of the militia . If jou want to punish your _feUow-ereatures , _aru'tjouagroe _. r and a general dealer , and can't you be satisfied ! There ' s short-weight , _ d _ Iter _< i- _ _, passing off bid money , —fifty ways for you to delight the devil with ; but don ' t treat him to the morsel of all that he best loveswar—wicked , stupid war ! We earnestly recommend the entire letter to the " gore-and-glory-mongers . " Its sound sense makes it alone worth the price of the magazine .
The Family Herald—Pari Xxxiii. London : ...
THE FAMILY HERALD—Pari XXXIII . London : G . Biggs , __ 21 , Strand . We gladly welcome another Part of this excellent publication , which , as it increases in age , seems to improve in quality , which is more than can be said for many works of far higher pretensions . We have not time ourselves to read romances , but we axe acquainted with those whe do , and who have assured us that the romance matter contained ia the Family Herald is so plentiful and so good aa to leave them neither time nor inclination to patronise the circulating library ; theyfind the purpose of such a library fully answered by the contents of the Family Herald . As soon as we get a Part of the Herald we first read
all th * " Notices to Correspondents , " in which we _are sure to find a considerable amount of wit and humour , particularly in the answers to love-sick ladies , many of whom consult the oracle of this publication . We next read all the editorial articles , and never without deriving intellectual pleasure and profit therefrom . These articles should be studied by all who aspire to be " thinkers . " A brick from the rubbish of the ruins of Babylon could scarcely afford a more unsatisfactory specimen of the once mighty city than can any extract we can make room for , give an idea of the writings of the editor ; vre will nevertheless extract from one of the said articles the following anecdotes of
_NOBIHCOIl AMD _XOUEKBXS . Northcote , the painter , was a real boor , and his taste for the beautiful and poetical in form and proportion did not improve the moral character of his mind . IU wa . penurious , ill-natured , selfish and conceited . Ha was never in lore ; he regarded women as mere wasters oi money . This , we are sure , will enlist all the ladies against him . Still he was noble iu bis independence . One day the Duke of Clarence , whon sitting to him , took lurid ofhis morning gown and said , " Northcote , jou don't devote much time to the toilette ! " "Sir , " said Northcote , " I never allow any one to take personal lib _. rties with mt ; jou are the first who ever presumed to do so , and I beg your Royal Highness to recollect that I am in my own house , "
No courtier would have behaved ia this manner—it was too spirited for such a gentleman . Ths Duke made a handsome apology , and used to speak of Northcote as a " d d honest fellow . " But whether honesty be one of tbe attributes of a finished gentleman or net , we must leave to the determination of posterity , or any one else who can settle the point . NoIlekenE , the sculptor , was also a boor whom art refused to polish , though himself a polisher . It it said of him that he preferred the society of the rude and uncultivated , and used to sing snatches and catches , and mimic the London cries over pints of porter in the public houses . Ha was _particularly fond of music , but it did not lead him into the society of the elegant { and yet he
had it in his power to more in the most refined circles . Dr . Johnson , who was a boor himself , was naturally enough ptrtiii to him , but to all other edusated and polished men be was particularly disagreeable . Yet he was a good soul notwithstanding . Though parsimonious in reference to himself , he was generous toothers . To his nurse , who kept his house after his wife ' s death , he would - ay , " 1 cannot sleep , I cannot rest . Is there any person I know who would be the better for a little money !" And he gave away monej freely , in large suns , to relieve the distressed and aid the honest poor . This was one of the sworn duties of the knights of old ; it was the boast and glory of chivalry to de _ y itself , that it might relieve the distressed .
Besides an immense mass of miscellaneous matter , we notice useful and interesting articles on " The Teeth , " " The Opera and the Ballet , " & e . & c . ; and some very good poetry , original and selected . A penny a week laid out in purchasing the Fami l y Herald , will be a penny well expended .
F _ Re ~ Pictorial History Of America Fr...
f _ rE ~ PICTORIAL HISTORY OF AMERICA FROM ITS DISCOVERY BY THE NORTHMEN , TO THE PRESENT TIME . Br Ions Fnosr , AM . —London : Willoughby and Co ., S 6 , Aldersgate-street . Ahistoiy of America for "the people , " is a desideratum which , if well executed , cannot he too highly extolled . England claims the parentage of the great Republic , which already competes with the oldest and mightiest of European states , and whicli Republic can hardly fail to advance in power and greatness until the whole continent will acknowledge
her laws , or at least bow to her influence . As Englishmen , we shall always remember that the Americans of the United States are our brethren , and that every triumph achieved by them , if achieved in a good cause , we , to some extent , share the glory of . The two nations are united by ties of blood , and the past histoiy , present state , and future progress of each muBt be interesting to the other . The history before us will , ifwe mistake not , embrace not merely that of the United States , but of the entire continent . We have looked through the first part of this work , and , so far as we have seen it , must award to it our sincere approbation .
In saying this we must be allowed also to say tbat we regret two things—first , the want of an introductory chapter , giving the author * , idea ., together with a condensation of the ideas of other writers on the subject of the origin of the American Indians , and their history duriug the ages preceding the discovery of the continent bath by Columbus , and by the Northmen . It may be said that such an investigation must ba purely speculative , whereas _histoi-v should be a record of facte . Of course " facts " should form the main portion of all histories , but mere " facts" without theory , however s peculative ,
is but dry reading , and will scarcely make thinkers . Poetry , theory , speculation , have made more deep thinkers than all the records of mere "facts , " however trustworthy . Second , we regret that the exp loits of Colcmu-s are not told at greater length . The barbarous doings of those _mihtatr ruffians _Cokths and _Pwinno , and the other less distinguished though equally cruel and avaricious Christian cut-throats , we object not to see condensed into any reasonable compass ; but Columbus was a man of a different stamp ; one of tbe few " great" names really worthy of immortality . Had the rest of the discoverer , of
F _ Re ~ Pictorial History Of America Fr...
_£ America been actuated b y his noble and philanthropic spirit , how much of Wood and tears shed would never have flowed ; how much of suffering would have been spared to the new world , and of infamy to the old . ' On the other hand , we are glad to see justice done in this work to the brave Northmen , who undoubtedly first discovered the American continent . All peop le know that' _Colvmbos discovered America , " but it is only the few who know that there had been discoverers , and even colonists , some centuries before the time of the great Columbus . The honour of making the Western continent effectively known unquestionably belongs to Coivmus . "From his glory as the great discoverer , it would be _uniust in
the slightest degree to detract . " But the claim to a prior discovery , urged in favour of the Northmen , and never relinquished by the Icelandic scholars , has recently been revived by the Royal Society of Antiquaries at Copenhagen , and supported by such a weight of testimony , as to leave no reasonable doubt that the first discoverers were our Scandinavian brothers of Norway , Iceland , <_ jc It was not till the 3 rd of August , U 92 , thatthe expedition under Coi / ombus set sail from the shores of Spain ; but there is good reason to believe that as far back as the year 986 , America was discovered b y Burse , the Icelander . Other _discoverera followed in his track , and a colony of Icelanders and Norweeians waa
established ofi the American coast . It is , indeed , capable of proof , that Professor Finh Magnusskn , a native of Iceland , now resident at Copenhagen , one of thc most distinguished Icelandic scholars of the day , and the immortal sculptor T _« okwi _ i _ d- __ , recently deceased , are descended from one of the most celebrated of the brave adventurers who first explored at least a portion of the American continent . Thc first chapter of this work details these discoveries , and willbe found highly interesting . This work is published in weekly penny numbers , and sixpenny parts . It is profusely embellished with highly finished and beautiful engravings , and is just such a work as we can mosc heartily recommend to our readers .
Annual Banquet Of The German Democratic ...
ANNUAL BANQUET OF THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY FOR THE EDUCATION OF THE WORKING CLASSES . { DIE DEUTSCHE _BILDUNGS-GESELLSCHAFT FUR ARBEITER . ] There exists in London a society which deserves to ba better known to the readers of the Northern Star than hitherto it has been . The name of the society is given above ; its origin will be found described in the speech of the chairman ; enough that wo here state that it dates the commencement of its existence 60 far back as the 7 th of February , 1840 . It was commenced by a very few working men , in the midst of most disheartening obstacles , chiefly the result ol the failure of the " national Germanic movement , " ofthe years 1830-1-2 . 3-4 . Theignorance ef thegreat mass of the people had done more to ruin the " national Germanic movement , " than even the force
and terrorism directed against it by the German despots ; hence the founders ofthe new society argued that if they would command success they must first take steps to illumine the minds of the working men , and thus render them independent of chiefs , and indestructible to the assaults of tvrants , Dismay doubt , and apathj * pervaded _tfje broken ranks of the Germanic emigration , at the period that this society commenced ; but , thanks to the energy and unconquerable perseverance of its founders , aided by the equally efficient zeal of each new member , the society has grown from the acorn to the young oak , not yet at its maturity , but continually growing . A large number of the German working men residing in London are now members of this society . The
usual meetings ofthe body are holden at the Red Lion , Great Windmill-street , the large room of which is , however , far too small for the meetings ef the members . The society has a reading room , supplied with ten newspapers , German , French , and English ; a library , containing five hundred volumes , maps , globes , and other scientific apparatus , musical instruments , < tc . Lectures ou astronomy , history , geography , dr .., & c ., are regularly delivered _. Classes exist for the instruction of the members in singing , drawing , languages , die . Weekly meetings are holden for the discussion of political and social principles . We may also add , that every alternate Sunday evening , at six o ' clock , a few of tha members , together with a few English , French , and othei democrats , meet for the purpose of conversing on
political subjects , and mutual information concerning the progress of their principles in the several countries of which they are natives . t The great principle of the society is Communism - , it is almost needless to add that this necessarily includes all thatthe English people understand hy "the ultra-Dem . eratic principle . " The sixth anniversary of the society was the 7 th instant , but that falling on a day inconvenient for any public festival , the supper was deferred until the 9 tl- —Monday last . _. The festival took place in the spacious and beautiful hall of the White Conduit I louse , one of the finest rooms in London . At the head of the room an illuminated transparency was erected , exhibiting a figure of Justice standing erect on " the globe . " beneath was the following inscription in German , French , and English : —
_"AUeMenschensind Bruder , " Tous Us hommes sonlfreres . "All men are brethren . " The number who sat down to supper was about 2 . 0 persons , including a number of the fair sex . Ol course tke great majority were Germans ; next to these the French were most numerous ; several Englishmen and Englishwomen were present , and natives of Poland , Switzerland , Spain , lluii _. ary , Denmark , Sweden , Belgium . Norway , Russia , and Turkey . We should not omit to mention that the singers ot
the society , numbering about thirty in all , greatly added to the harmony and pleasure of the evening by their admirable singing of the beautiful German liberty Bongs . With the exception of being Bomewhat late served , the supper was admirabl _y got up , and the good order and arrangement maintained throughout the evening was worthy ofall praise . The chair was ably filled by Charles Schapper ( one of the founders ofthe society ) , supported on his right by Julian Harney , and on his left by Colonel Oborski . After the cloth was removed ,
The Chairman gave , in German , brencb , and English— "The Soverign People , the only source of legitimate power . " Drank with _thfee times three . Song— " Welcome to the friends of all nations . " The Chairman then addressed the meeting in three speeches , German , French , and _English , which were each enthusiastically applauded . Tlie following is an outline of his address in En « _Ush : —Friends , brothers , and sisters of all nations , I thank you for assisting the German _Sodcty at this , their sixth anniversary . By such meetings as this wc shall learn to know each other , and by regarding each other as brethren , we shall be the better able to improve our condition , and establish the rights of men in all nations . ( Cheers . ) When in 1830 the nations awoke
from their long slumber , the Germans also awoke . They remembered the promises made by perjured kings , when in the day of tribulation they appealed to the people to release them from the iron yoke ot Napoleon . They remembered that these promises had never been fulfilled , but that the royal traitors , once relieved from French domination , had rewarded the people who had fought aud bled tor them , not with liberty , but with tyranny and proscription . ( Hear , hear . ) Remembering these things , great excitement was thc consequence , and several little revolutions actually did take place in Brunswick , Cassel , and other places , and some German princes ( not the worst of them ) were sent packing . ( Cheers . ) There then commenced the Germanic national
movement . We were all , Prussians , Saxons , Bavarians , Brunswickers , __ * .., to form one grand nation . Public meetings were held , fine speeches made , a national colour was adopted , red , black , and gold , and we had flags , ribbons , and even pipes red , black , and gold . There was great excitement for a time , but at last the governments commenced persecuting the leaders—numbers were thrown into prison , others forced into exile , aud others frightened from their principles . Universal proscription was now the order of the day ; and while numbers left their country , themassesleft behind , deprived of their chiefs , and having but a very limited knowledge of their rights and duties , fell into despair and apathy . The emigrants again rallied round tlie " red , black ,
and gold , " but they were not long permitted to do no . Switzerland was menaced , and compelled to refiife shelter to the emigrants . Louis Philippe readily seconded the wishes of the German despots , and even Belgium was no longer a refuge for the exiles . Under these circumstances the German nationality movement entirely crumbled away . Nevertheless , the good cause was not wholly abandoned . The unswerving friends of liberty saw that the grand cause of their former failures had been the want of education amongst the working _clasaea . They therefore set about forming societies to instruct the working men . Even iu _ _8 UutriC- where political _-oeieties were not allowed , these societies were organised under the form of singing clubs . Thus following the spirit of the times , the attempt was made in 1810 to form the present society , and the attempt haa been crowned with success . We long had
to struggle with disheartening difficulties , but theso had been surmounted . ( Cheers . ) The chairman then described the present strength and resources of the society as noticed above . Wiser through the lessons of experience , the projectors of the present society determined to make _intelligeace the _basiB of their movement , and to have no chiefs but principles . ( Cheers . ) Our treat chief—we have no other—a universal brotherhood . ( Great cheering . ) Men of all countries are made welcome to our society . No man is asked whether he is a German , Englishman , Frenchman , or Russian ; but simply " are you an honest man ? " ( Great applause . ) I will conclude by wishing that tlic age may speedily arrive when there will bc for all men but one country—the earth ; but one family—mankind ; and hut one religion—honest y , aad tlic worship of truth . ( Great cheering . ) The singers then gave " Tlio Song of Liberty . " Thc Chairman then introduced " our friend and
Annual Banquet Of The German Democratic ...
brother of the French Democrats , Michemi . " The speaker delivered his sentiments in French : the following is an outline of bU remarks , which were very warml y applauded .-Friends and brotbers ,-Why are we here . assembledV What do we intend r * ° - i " desire to abolish the present unnatunl political and social system . We want to construct a new _cJifice on a broader and firmer _baBis . Wo want to give to the mass their rights ; for you know that the mass have been , for centuries disinherited . For _instance , m the united kingdom of Great Britain , tliere are about twenty-eight millions , of peo-P _ _T . m . _ . tllat number there are not a million oi landholders . ' -not even half a million ! not even a quarter ! In France , in thirty-five millions of people .
there are at least six or seven millions of landholders ; but that number decreases every day . Worse still is the state of Germany , wlicre in many provincos the peasantry are yet sold with tho land . In Russia thc number of slaves are far greater than the free men . Ihe earth was givon to man for his habitation ; and we see thousands of' thousands that have fib home , no pillow for their head . to rest upon . Christ was right when be said , "The birds of the air hare nest-, the foxes have holes , and the son of nun Hath no place to lay his head . " A poor dog sleeps hy a bank or on the threshold of a palace , but one of those thousands of wretched people , who should have the audacity to lay hisaching head in thesame place , would be dragged to orison bv the _noiice of tbe
aristocracy : and those- very poor workmen , who hardly gain enough to support their children , find UiemselvcB obliged to give from tlieir pitiable salary a parttonay a rapacious landlord for a miserable hole tor a lodging . Are they better treated as regards their food ? No !—no ! their existence is still more deplorable . We _haveseenthemin _Englandfightingforputrid meat and stinking bones , which dogs refused . The Irish population , the inhabitants of Flanders , of several districts in France , Germany , Sweden , & c , only exist on water and potatoes , and to-day cliey have not even this deplorable food . We hear from from all parts cries of despair ; we hear of suicides of people , who drown , hang , and shoot themselves . "Is it our fault , " demand the partisans ofthis system , "if there has been famine ?" Notwithstanding tlte famine , the earth lias produced enough to feed her ohildren , for in all the provinces tlie shops swam , with eatables , but the poor people
have not money , so they starve . "Is it our fault ?¦" say our adverearies . Yes , it is your fault . '—for it is tlie fault of the present social system , of which you . ire the champions . ( Cheers . ) Are we , thon , culpable , iu trying to destroy tliis frightful social order ? We want to establish another , founded onthe basis of equality , liberty , and fraternity . This new system will destroy those calamities which overwhelm the people , for it will give them back the earth , which is of right theirs . ( Great cheering . ) But by what means shall we accomplish this great work of humanity ? Is it by revolutionary massacres ? No , noa thousand times no I We will arrive at our end by instructing men ; by teaching to the mass their rights , to individuals their duties . ( Applause . ) When this knowledge has descended to the lowest ranks of society , the revolution will be accomplished , and the happiness of humanity complete . ( Great cheering . )
The Chairman said , I have next to introduce an English friend , our brother Julian Harney . ( Applause . ) G . _Juiiax H _ KN _ r delivered a somewhat Iengtliy address , ot which tlie following is an outline : — Sister and Brother Democrats , lam happy in having the privilege of assisting at this meeting . I have heard with much pleasure tho constitution and objects of your society , as explained by tho . ' chairman . Knowledge is thegreat wantot ' themasses . Ignoraneo , if not the original sin , was certainly the original curse ; for what but the ignorance of the many has enabled the few to tyrannise over them ? ( _Clicais . ) Man is like the horse , he does not know his own strength , otherwise he would not submit to be a slave . ( Applause . ) No doubt , force has had much te do witli
the subjection ot mankind to slavery ,, but fraud has had still more , and but for the ignorance of the many , thecunning few could not have succeeded . ( Cheers . ) - ou will all have observed that every horse drawing a waggon , cart , coach , or other carriage , is furnished with two pieces of leather , stuck behind his eyes , and overshadowing them . What these aro calledl don't know ; but I call them " blinders . " ( Laughter . ) 1 have heard it said , that these " blinders" are necessary to prevent the horse looking back and seeing the heavy load lie is tied to , thus blinding him to his slavery . _^ ( Cheers . ) Just KO it is with man . Every poor , ignorant , willing slfire has his two "blinders ; " these "blinders" ave priestcraft and national prejudice . ( Great cheering . ) Butforthese inventions of the fraudulent knaves , who have aided
the tyrants ofthe sword in their conquests over human ri » hts , men would never have been , brought to that willing or hopeless submission to tyranny whicli yet too extensively exists . Priestcraft has ken employed to frighten men out ef thew reason , and national prejudices to make tlicm hate each other . ( Applause . ) When men have grown restive under tlie . yoke of oppression , the priest has always stepped iu , and ordered submission , asserting that it was the will of thc gods that the few should rule the many , and tho nitny suffer in this life , as a necessary probation , to fit them for a promised happiness in a life to come ; threatening them with tlic vengeance of heaven if tlicy disobeyed their rulers , for the powers that ue ire ordaiued of God . ( Laughter anil cheers . ) Our _ireat poet , 1 ' opc _, has well said of priestcraft , it
• " Gods of conquerors , slaves of subjects made !" ( Applause . ) "Priestcraft has also set men against •_ a-l \ otlv _ - , tvnd made them enemies when they hould have been brethren . The bloodiest wars , tho the most fiendish persecutions , the most atrocious crimes have been enacted in the name of religion . But superstition was not sufficient to make men enemies to each other , as sometimes it happened that neighbouring states were of the same faith , therefore national prejudice was encouraged and fostered , an : l hence Spaniards and Portuguese , chough living on one piece of land , and of the same religion , had hated each other—ail the worse , too , it would seem becau « e , iiko rooks and crows , they were close ] v related . Again , Englishmen and Frenchmen
_Siave been taught to regard each other . as " natural enemies . " Fifty years ago it was the belief of every loyal Englishman that Frenchmen lived on frogs and wore only wooden shoes , and that such people were only fit to be hated and slaughtered . . It was one of the maxims of Nelson , taught by bim to the men under his command , to " hate a Frenchman as you would thc devil . " Theso absurdities have died out in England , I trust , never to have a resurrection . _( Cheers . ) John Bull has been also considerably prejudiced against our chairman ' s countrymen , and I think he has had some excuse for his prejudice . ( Laughter . ) The English _peopleonly know Germany through the needy and stupid kings , princes , queens , and princesses , who have imported themselves
into this country during the last century and a half . [ The Cliaiimain : " Why did you not send them back ngain ? "l ( Cheers . ) To say _nothing of our "lovely Queen , " we have two unadulterated Germans at present to support—Prince Albert and Queen Adelaide . The one lias thirty , the other one hundred thousand pounds yearly . The country that lavishes these sums upon two individuals—as aniEnglishman , I blush to own it—in this same country , there are thousands of agricultural labourers whose wagos do not average all the year round more than six shillings a week ; so that before a six-shilling-a-week ' abourer could earn tho sum paid to Prince Albert in one year , he must work two thousand years ; and to earn thc sum paid to Queen Adelaide in one year ,
he must work between six and seven thousand yeart ! The sum spent upon this old frump of a queen would give to nearly two thousand families a pound a woek every week in the vear . Would it not be bettor that two thousand families should have this sum divided among !; them , than tbat it should be lavishod on one individual , to ono fraction of which she has no honest claim . ( ChcM-. ) You will not , then , > vonder at the prejudice of my countrymen towards you Germans , seeing that too many of them have not learned to distinguish between the German people and German despots . ( Cheers . ) Nationality has in other timebeen necessary . Thc nationality , championised by a Miltiadcs , a Tell , and a Wallace , was a positive good ; ' . it saved mankind from universal and
irredeemable slavery . In our own day , too , the invoking of the spirit of nationality in some countries is indispensable to rekindle life in those countries , and to induce those nations to strike the first blow for liberty . I consider Poland and Italy to be two instances where thespirit of nationality " may be invoked with beneficial results . 1 would , however , suggest to the Poles and Italians , that mere freedom from Russian and Austrian domination is not all that is necessary . We must have no king Czartoryski . ( Cheers . ) We must have no kingdom of Italy such sa the Italian deputies solicited of the " Holy Alliance " in 1815 . ( Cheers . ) We must have the sovereignty of the people in both countries . The education of the peopleandat leastthe progressive social
ad-, , , vance ofthe people , _everprogrcsshiffi until tho _people own no masters but themselves , and enjoy thc fruits of their labour , uninfluenced by oppressors _^ any shape or name . In other countries , such as England and France , tmwe is no need to rekindle national feeling ; on the contrary , tho cffortB of tho good men in both countries should bo directed to tho abolition of the remaining prejudices which a barbarous cultivation of the spirit of nationality , in days gone by , called into existence . I appeal to the oppressed classes of every land , English , French , German , Spanish , Polish , Italian , Swedish , Prussian , and all others , to unito with each other for the
triumph of their common cause . ( Cheers . ) " Divide and conquer , " has been the motto of oppressors ; " Unite and triumph . '" should bo our counter motto . Whatever natural differences divide Poles , Russians , Prussians , Hungarians , and Italiaus , these national differences have not prevented thc Russian , Austrian , and Prussian despots uniting together to maintain their tyranny ; why , then , cannot the people of those countries unite for the obtiiinmont of tuetr liberty ? ( Cheers . ) Victoria exchanges vi .-its with the hoary traitor of tlte harricailc _.-t _, snd both boast of the friemlsliip existing between tliem ; why , then , should not Englishmen and Frenchmen _Jiail
Annual Banquet Of The German Democratic ...
each other as brethren ? ( Cheers . ) I am convinced that tliis fraternal union could be accomplished , il the leaders of public opinion throughout Europe would work faithfu ly to their mission . The oauso of the people in all countries is the s » me—' . he cause of labour , enslaved and plundered labour . I spoke of Queen Adelaide ' s _Balary , but wc must remember that she is but one , and to her salary must be added those of the other members of the monarchy , anil the _sycDplmnts of the court . Then there are the salaries paid to the Ministers , to Generals , Admirals , and the Army , —to the useless swarms of government officials , the host of excisemen , customs officers , and others ; thousands of hard-working bees
being plundered to support these useless drones . ( Cheers . ) f hen , to say nothing ef the enormous cost of voluntary reh ion , " such as the building of _chajiels , thc support ot thousands of dissenting ministers , teachers , missionaries ; bible , tract , ami countless other societies ; to say nothing of these , the established church has its income of several millions . But the robberies of our political system are scarcely more than as a drop ii \ £ l \ e bucket compared with the robberies of our social system . In the first place , there is the gigantic robbery of tho land ; and when wc remember that many of our great landholders possess rent-rolls twice or thrice as enormous as Queen Adelaide ' s salary , wo may begin to understand bow it is that the tillers of the soil are
doomed to exist on Cs . a week . ( Cheers . ) Again , the enormous incomes of the great millowners , the fortunes of tlio merchants , the profits of the shopkeepers , the fees of the lawyers , all aro wrung from the working man ' s toil . ( Cheers . ) The very capital which the capitalists vaunt tlie possession of , asserting but for it labour could not bo employed , and the labourer must stagnate and perish ; what is this capital but the creature of labour , tho accumulated proceeds of labour ? ( Cheers . ) This state of things exists not only in England , but throughout Europe . In each country the tyranny of thc few and the slavery of the many are variously developed , but the principle in all is the same . ( Cheers . ) All political changes that havenot for their end the correction of these evils , are but political shams , A so-called republic , in which thc rich rule , or in which even rich and poor co-exist , is but " a mockery , a delusion , and a
snare . ( Cheers . ) In all countries the men who grow tho wlieat live on potatoes . Tlie men who rear the cattle do not taste flesh food . The men who cultivate the vine have only the dregs of its noble juice . The men who make the clothing are in rags . The men who build the houses live in hovels . Thc men who createeverynccessiiry _. comfort _. _andluxury _^ resteeped in misery . Working men ofall nations , are not your grievances , your wrongs , the same ? Is notyourgood cause , then , one and the same also ? Wcniay differ as to the means , or different circumstances may render different means necessary , but the great end—the veritable emancipation of the human race—must be the one aim and end of all . ( Applause . ) I conclude by giving you the sentiment— " Fraternity the means , Freodom , Equality and General Happiness the end ; may the working classes of all nations combine in brotherhood for the triumph of their common cause . " ( Great cheering . )
The singers then gave the song of the German workmen , " Always forward . " [ The remaining speeches we have received no report of , we can only , therefore , intimate the sense of thein . ] Henriech Bauer ( German ) addressed the meeting , thanking the founders of the society for their great exertions in promoting the welfare and objects ofthe association . lie spoke of the great progress of the society , and concluded his address by reciting a poem ofhis own composition , composed for the occasion of
the meeting . The poem elicited the enthusiastic applause of all conversant with the Gorman tongue , I We understand the poem will be printed in German _, to gratify the wishes of many members and friends of the society . ] Colonel Oborski ( of the Democratic section of the Polish emigration ) then addressedthemeeting in the French language . He expressed the pleasure he had in attending this anniversary ; himself and hia countrymen would always be happy to give their assistance whenever they could aid the cause of humanity .
The Chairman * called for three cheers for . the Polish Democrats . Three times three were given . Messrs . Kken and Wrigolesworid ( English ) then briefly addressed the meeting . Charlbs Pf abmder ( German ) then spoke on the ne . ess . ity of instructing the working-classes , to free _thi-m from the prejudices of a misdirected education , and thereby secure their aid in carrying out the present movement . ( Applause . ) Holm ( Dane ) spoke in Gorman , expressing his happiness at the progress of union amongst the
working-classes of all nations . He knew something of Jus own country , and something of Germany , and , notwithstanding the declamation of national parties in both countries , ho could aver that the working men cared nothing for these ancient rivalries—they knew their true interests were only to be promoted by brotherhood , and they were accordingly uniting . — ( Cheers . ) Several songs and popular anthems having heen sung , three cheers for the chairman , and three for fraternity , closed the proceedings . The hall was then cleared for dancing , which was kept up with great spirit uutil an tarly hour .
Preparations Fob War.—Whatever May Bo Th...
Preparations fob War . —Whatever may bo the result of tho present aspect of affairs , the standing army is about to be placed in a most efficient state by the addition of 10 , 000 men , and tbe militia will be brought into readiness for immediate training on the shortest notice . Tho Ordnance Corps is to be increased betwixt 1 , 400 and 1 , 500 men , one half of that number to form a battalion of the Koyal Regiment of Artillery , consisting of eight companies of Royal Sappers and Miners , commanded by officers of the Royal Engineers . There are at present seven troops of Royal Horse Artillery , three troops C H , and Rocket troop , at Woolwich ; one troop E , at Newcastle ; one tvoopr F , at Leeds ; one troop D , at Dublin ; and one troop A , at Limerick . Eaeh of six of
the troops has four guns , which are to be increased U six , with the usual number of gunners in proportion . The Royal Marines are to be increased to the extent of 2 , 500 men , and the land forces of the line regiments 6 , 000 men , but whether the latter will bc added in battalions or additional regiments is not j _« t made known . The increase of the navy will be about 1 , 000 men , but it is already in a very efficient state , and _steam-Ytaselsof very great power can be manned by afar toss number of hands than skips of war . This is a very great advantage , and a great saving of life during engagements , as the destruction on hoard of crowded vessels is far creator in nronortion to thc
number on board , as was recently » hown by the great loss of life on board tho French vassals at the engagement with Rosas in the _rivtr Plate , the number on board being generally ahout one-third moro in French vessels than in English of the same class . A very important addition is about to be made in all large war steamers of thc British navy , by the addition of two er mot * light .-pounder gunB , mounted in every respect in the same manner as the light 6-pounder guns of the Royal Horse Artillery . These guns arc te be fitted with men-harness , to be taken on shore when required , and moved from one place to another , with or without the aid of horses . —Times .
The Ship Tor ? . —It is a curious fact with respect to this vessel , which has excited so much notice and interest in thc public mind , that the crest or _araiB of the _ownsr arc the arm and shoulder of a man holding in his hand a bloody spear or javelin , with which hc is apparently about to strike an object , and that this was actually painted on tho stern of the vessel . It was very generally noticed whilst she was lying inthe Dock-basin , and the circumstance is worthy of remark , simply because its appearance was significant , in consequence of the veryfrightf til scenes of slaughter and bloodshed enacted on board while on the open sea . The vessel is now on the ocean , again bound for a cargo of cotton . :
The Late Attempted Suicide at NewI-Oton ; ano Mysterious Death . — On Monday evening a protracted inquiry took place before Mr . William Carter , the coroner for East Surrey , at the Giraffe Tavern , Penton-place , Newington _, respecting the death of Mrs . Susannah Vasey , aged seventy-five _yeats , who died on Friday last under very sudden and singular circumstances . The deceased is the mother of a female who is now lying in a very precarious state from the effects of a severe injury to the throat , which , it was alleged , had been inflicted by her husband , who has already undergone severalcxamina . tions before thc sitting magistrate at the Lambeth Police-court . Richard Vasey , of 3 , Alfred-terrace , Penton-placeNewingtondep-sed that the deceased
, , was his mother ; she was thc widow of a bookbinder ; she had generally boen in the enjoyment of good health up to Fridav morning last , when she complained of a severe pain in the side . Witness advised her to consult Mr . Young , the surgeon , residing m Upper Kennington-lane . He mescribcd for her ; after which they proceeded on their way home , and when near the Kcnniiigton-road , thc deceased fell to the ground through weakness . Witness raised her up and conveyed her to her residence , and having made her bed , he laid her upon it , with Iter clothes on . Witness gave her a glass of the medicine , which she said gitve her great relief , lie remained by the whon
bedside until about a quarter to two o ' clock , she seemed much better . Witness then told her hc was going out to see his sister , and haying been satisfied that she want d for nothing , he loft hor . At seven o ' clock in the evening , witness returned , and upon going into the room , he found her lying on tlie bed , quite dead and cold . Witness immediately called up the nurse , who ran for Mr . _Stowers , the aurgcoti . who attended , but his services were ofno use . Other evidence having been received , showing that death had arueu from disease of the heart , the jury unanimously recorded a verdict ol Natural death from disease of the heart . "
Isc _ xdiaryi 8 m ix _NoitTit _DnitBTsiHRE . —A destructive fire , which there is reason to believe to have been the work of an incendiary , broke out on Sunday morning ut l _' _-dley Wood Farm , about eight miles from CVsterii-hl . The damage done is estimated at JiGOO .
, __ 35ankrwpte, $Zi.
, __ 35 ankrwpte , $ zi .
Bankrupts. (Froia Thtedatft <!*«««#, Fcb...
BANKRUPTS . ( _FroiA _THtedatft _
_Audley-street , Oxford-street , printer—George Goddard of Leicester , toa-dealer — Samuel Purcell , of 420 , Strand ironmonger—Stephen Bretton and Thomas Tunwell , of Charlotte-street , _Fitzroy-square — Cooper _Ewbank , of Manchester , share broker—William James Dunsford , of _Bi-i-tol _, surgeon— Richard Allerton , of _Bootle-cum _. Linacre , _laucashire—George Codrington Nicholls , » ometime of Woodside . _Birkunbs-d , but now 0 f Upton , Cheshire , commission merchant—Joseph _ifellanby , of Hartlepool , broker—William Beynon , of Birmingham , _liutton manufacturer _.
MVl _. _EXDI DSCtASBC , Thomas Rylanu , _tii-st dividend of it . in the pound , payable at 3 , _Guildhall-chambere , any Wednesday . John Pa-kin Luxton , of _Munster-street , _Regent's-park , first dividend of ls 8 d . in the pound , payable at 3 , Guildli-U-cliambcrs , any Wednesday , William Dettmer , of Marylebone-street , pianofortemaker , second dividend of ls . 3 d . in the pound , _payabk nt 3 , Guildhall-chambers , any Wedneiday . Edward Philip Harding , of Gravesend , hosier , first dividend of 3 s . 8 d . in the pound , payable at 3 . Guildhallchambers _, any Wednesday . Abraham P . Driver , of CaKcge . wharf , Lambeth , flour dealw _, second dividend of 4 d . in the pound , payable at 3 , _Guildhall-chambers , any Wednesday .
Louis Eltze Seignette , first dividend of Is . 4 d . in tfc _« pound , payableat 3 _, _euildhall-cbambers , any Wednesday . John Currie , _|[ of 26 , Mincing-lane , merchant , first dividend ot 20 i . intbe pound , payable at 3 , _Gui'dhaHchambers , any Wednesday . Currie and Seignette , of 26 , _Mincing-lane _, first dividend of lOd . in tho pound , payable at 3 , Guildhall-chambers , any Wednesday . John Frankland and Thomas Frankland , of Liverpool , merchants , final dividend of 3 _Jd . in the pound , payable at 7 , Charlotte-street , Manchester , on February 21 , or any subsequent Tuesday , Henry Fawcus , of _Stockton-upon-Tees , Durham , timber merchant , _sicond and final dividend of ls . 7 d . in the pound , payable at 57 , _Cfrey-street , _Newcastle-upon . Tyne , any Saturday ..
Robert Fawcus , ef Stockton-upon-Tees , timber merchant , second and final dividend of ls . Id . in the pound , payable at 57 , Grey . _gtreet _, _Newcastle-upon-Tjne , any Saturday . Ann Akehurjt , of East Mailing , Kent , baker , first dividend of 5 s . 6 d . in the pound , payable at 12 , AUchurchlane , February li , and two following Saturdays .
DIY 1 _D-11 D 1 TO BE _D-OIABID , Atthe Court of Bankruptcy , _Lendon , John Yates , ofthe Island of Guernsey , and of 22 , York _, road , Lambeth , shipowner , March 3 , at one—John Mortimer , of 1 , Adelaide-street , West Strand , bookseller , March ., at _balf-past one—William Williams , of 16 , High _, street , St . © ilea ' s , victualler , March 4 , at one—James Mabbs , jun ., of Chichester , Sussex , baker , March _., at _half-past twelve—Joseph Moore , of Tamworth , _Warwickshire , draper , March i , at twelve—Charles Tapp , of _Wigmore-street , Marylebone , « oach maker , March 1 , at half-past eleTen—Thomas Ratnett , of Cambridge , tailor , March 4 , at eleven—William Henry Blackmore , of Deaustreet , Soho , plumber , March 4 , at two .
Inthe Country , John Smith , of Liverpool , victualler , March S , at hahpaBt eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Liverpool-John Burton , now or late of _Levenshulme , Lancashire , victualler , March 6 , at twelve , at the Court of _Bankruptcy , Manchester—Betty Thorniley , of _Broadbottom , Cheshire , grocer , March 3 , at twelve , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Manchester—John'Dyson , of Abby Dale Werks , Sheffield , scythe manufacturer , March 5 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Leeds—James Crich _,
of Sheftield , maltster , March 5 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Leeds—George Holdsworth , of A _' ortbowram , Yorkshire , worsted spinner , March 5 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Leeds—John King , of Kingstonupon-HuU , mercer , March 5 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Leeds—William IbboUon , of Sheffield , merchant , March 5 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Leeds—William Senior , of Sheffield , hosier , March 9 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Leeds—Joseph Gould , of Sheen , Staffordshire , cheese factor , March 2 , at eleven , at the Courtof Bankruptcy , Birmingham .
. __ n . i « A- _ i to be grant * - » leii _causi be shown to tbe ontrary on the day of meeting . Benjamin Jones , 34 , City-road ,- _drapur , _Murcl _* . 3—Jyhn Elliott , of the Pavement , _Fhubury , surgeon , March 5—William Robert Edwards , of 3 , _London-road , Surrey , linen draper , March 3—William Faryon , of 56 , Farringdon-street , City , _vittualler , March 8—William Henry Blackmore , of De __ -Jt . eet , _Soho-square _, plumber , March 4—John Evans , of 234 , High . street , Shoreditch , cheesemonger , March 4—Edward Spell » r , of 36 , Beniers-street , Oxford-street , tea dealer , March 3—Charles Wyna Davies , otherwise Charles Davies , of 293 , Holborn , upholsterer , March 3—Sarah Caroline Fry , of Margate , Kent , _statioier , March _3—Jamos Msck , ef Ruaidean ; Gloucestershire , coal proprietor , March D—Edward _Wookev and Francis Hares , of Bri-tol , drapers , . March 12 .
C _ l - tPHA- _ J t _« »* _t-ani _* - hy th « Court of Ken ' ew , unless _etBia be show * to the eontrary ea or before _February 24 . George Atkins , of Lirerpoo ) , brewor—Thomas Rollings , of Ingram-court _, Tencliurcli-street _, wine merchant—John Gadd , of 79 , High-street , C . umden-town , baker .
_FAKTOEMIII-S » ISSO _ V _ D . Samuel Becsley and John Clark , of Oxford , horse dealers—Henry Stevens and John Smith Davis , of Birmingham , brti-lers—William Henry Kitchen , Edward Kitchen , and Isaac Webb Moore , of High-street , St . Giles ' s , ironmongers ( so far as regards Isaac Webb Moore)—Richard _Craftcr and J , R . Summers , of 171 , High-street , Hoxton Old Town , chemists—John Ellis and William Allinson , of Whitchurch , Shropshire , bootlniikcr?—George Hinde , William Hinde _, and Elizabeth Hind ., of Lancaster , linen drapers—Henry Wright and John Thompson , of Halifax , _woolstaplers—Emma Martin Richardson and Martha Chetbam Hardie _, of Chorltonupon-Medlock _, Lancashire , baby linen makers—lienrj Spvnce and W illiam Mnrkland , of Manchester , copper .
smiths—Daniel fiatley and Edmund Taylor , of Ipswich , Suffolk , tobacco manufacturers—John Mooney and George Iliukes , of Huddersfieid , _sharebrokcrs—Edward Kent , William Woulds , nnd William IfcibgOOd , Of Manchester and Bury , smallware manufacturers — John Astlcy and Nanny Astley , of Manchester and WMtefield , nankeen manufacturers—James Savage and Strethill _Okes Foden , of _Essex-street _, Strand , architects—Daniel Buchanan , Daniel Craumer Buchanan , aad Thomas Sill , of Liverpool ( so far as regards Thomas Sill)—John Msckeand and Alexander Muckeand , of Newcastle-upon-Tyne , drapers—Mary Ann Salter and Mary Tomliuson _, of Uxbridge , Middlesex , schoolmistresses—Henry Weston imd Charles Allen Young , of _Wellington-street , Southwark , bankers—John Hewitt Galloway nnd Edward Cleathing Bell , of Kingston-upon-Hull , attorneys—James Boltou and Thomas Coups , of Freston , Lancashire , spindle makers—John M'Clure and John Haslatu , of
Manchester , merchants— William Cardwell _, Edward Cardwell , and Thomas Tooral , of _Manchester , s . _iar _.-brokers ( so far as regards Thomas _TootalJ—Catherine Mellor and James Ryder , of Liverpool , merchants—Thomas _Muirhead and Alexander Hunter , of Chatham , Kent , drapers—Juhn Graves Clark and William Clement Beatson , of Masbrough , Yorkshire , glass manufacturers William Holt , James Holt , and John Holt , of liochdalc , Lancashire , woolstaplers ( so far as regards -limes Holt)—Joseph Carand and Emmanuel Thromel , of Londou—Isaac Fairclough and Edward Davies , of 'long and _Ka-tgh _, Lancashire , counterpane manufacturers—John Walmsley , jun ., and James Moorhouse , of Liverpool , coal merchants—John Hancocks and Samuel Jackson , of 179 , Broad-street , Islington , in Birmingham , pork butchers—Henry Plowright and Daiid William Martin , of King's Ljnti , Norfolk , linen drapers—John Richards , jun ., and Thomas Rogers , jun ., of Reading , Berkshire , attorneys .
Frightful Occuimuxce.—On Sunday Morning,...
Frightful _OccuimuxcE . —On Sunday morning , at an early hour , police-constable Sullivan , whilst ou duty iii John-street , St . _Gaorge-in-tlie-East , saw a woman issue irom the house No . 13 , and run up the street enveloped in flames . Her shrieks were heartrending . Sullivan at once proceeded to tear away lier clothes , and in a short time succeeded iu relieving ; her , but not uutil she had suffered moat _fr _^ Utful injuries . Assistance was procured from the Denmarkstreet station-house , and she was conveyed on a 1 _stretchor to the Loudon _Hospital , where she lies in a a most precarious state . The unhappy Buhcrer is a a young WOWim namod _SJavy Anne O'Connor , and it is is supposed her clothes ignited whilst she slept before : e the tire , as she was in a complete blaze on rcncliing ig the stroet .
Massla-Gii _. er . —On Tuesday Mr . Payne held an in inquest on the body of Robert Townsley , a seaman , n , lato mate of thc Siberia , of Liverpool , who was killed ed in a fray with Samuel Colbeck , a bargeman , in Vine- ieyiwu , _Tooley-street . Verdict , " Manslaughter . " . _* . _*" Colbeck is in custody . [ Sec our Southwark police _ici report . ] _IIO-IiOWAY ' S PlIXS _AN'D OlNTMKNT . —A solemn de- do duration was made the 23 rd day of May , 184-, at a thc Mansion-house , before the Lord Mayor , Sir John oln I'irie : —liichard Cloake . _stokerj in the employ at - a
the office ol * the Morning Advertiser , daily newspaper , pet declares that for a considerable time ho ' wasaiuictea At with ulcerated wounds on his ankles , ivhieh Ire- frc queiitly incapacitated him from attending to his hi duties ; in consequence he was admitted an out-door doc patient at tho following institutions : Bartholomew _s ew and King ' s College Hospitals , and lastly , at the Dis- Dii _pcnsai-v iii _CJmuceij-iaiie , hut witiiout obtaining the : tt least relief : lie also declares that he then wav ' s Pills and Ointment , which radicall af tor every other means failed .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Feb. 14, 1846, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_14021846/page/3/
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