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'¦' iiiiMiji wui*j. 'Mmu. i lll.lll II II HI IIWJJJHI SSftt-tm. allegiance. Their request was not compliedtion of the soundness of communal Such iii * —J^Liq 1840 - _____ ----__™^^«^^ fr-H-E NORTHERN STAR. V — — ¦ ! Mum Ill Ill» 1 .111 ¦ HI. |i„ -1 ¦ -.1, „ ¦*¦ " '-" I*- -*"*- -*LV • O I jilW*:m«<v Tbmr reriUPSt -vv.-ic iinf ^nmiilinrl Itinn «P *i._ „ ' , - . . r, , ~ ~" ~ ' . ' . ' . ' . "^ — " - -^w^waaxL.^ wot^i »«-aM— — «aa_«. . „¦. . _.., , ,„.,
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THE KINGS OF THE SOIL. Black sin may nes...
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TO IRAJTCE. Oh shame on thee, "France! f...
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SLATER'S SHILLING VOLUMES. Evangeline: a...
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The History of Ireland. By T. Weight, Es...
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Memoranda of Observations and Escperimen...
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The Claims of the Redemption Society con...
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SUNSHINE AND SHADOW; A TALE OP THE NINET...
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ROYAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION. Lectures ...
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Divine Right.—" Kin^s havo divine right ...
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V&ttttiM
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A Voice moM Kirkdale.—" Chartism is dead...
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1 IN0I& DISQUALIFICATIONS , GKNEUATIVE ' lACAlAClTY , AND Ilil'KDLUKNTS TO MAKK1AGE .
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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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'¦' Iiiimiji Wui*J. 'Mmu. I Lll.Lll Ii Ii Hi Iiwjjjhi Ssftt-Tm. Allegiance. Their Request Was Not Compliedtion Of The Soundness Of Communal Such Iii * —J^Liq 1840 - _____ ----__™^^«^^ Fr-H-E Northern Star. V — — ¦ ! Mum Ill Ill» 1 .111 ¦ Hi. |I„ -1 ¦ -.1, „ ¦*¦ " '-" I*- -*"*- -*Lv • O I Jilw*:M«≪V Tbmr Reriupst -Vv.-Ic Iinf ^Nmiilinrl Itinn «P *I._ „ ' , - . . R, , ~ ~" ~ ' . ' . ' . ' . "^ — " - -^W^Waaxl.^ Wot^I »«-Am— — «Aa_«. . „¦. . _.., , ,„.,
' _¦ ' _iiiiMiji _wui _* j . 'Mmu _. i _lll _. lll II II HI _IIWJJJHI _SSftt-tm . allegiance . Their request was not compliedtion of the soundness of communal Such iii * _—J _^ _Liq 1840 - _____ ---- ___™^^«^^ _fr-H-E NORTHERN STAR . V — — ¦ ! Mum Ill Ill » 1 . 111 ¦ HI . | i „ -1 ¦ -. 1 , „ ¦*¦ " ' - " I * - - _* " * - - _* LV O I _jilW _* m «< v Tbmr _reriUPSt _-vv _.-ic _iinf _^ _nmiilinrl Itinn _« P * i . _ „ ' , - . . r , , ~ ~ " ~ ' . ' . ' . ' . " _^ — " - - _^ w _^ _waaxL _. _^ _wot _^ _i »« _-aM— — « _aa _« _. . „¦ . . _ .., _, _, „ _.,
The Kings Of The Soil. Black Sin May Nes...
THE KINGS OF THE SOIL . Black sin may nestle below , a crest , And crime below a crown ; As good hearts beat ' neath a fustian vest , As under a silken gown . ShaU tales be told of tbe chiefs "wbo sold Iheir sinews to crush and kill , And never a word be sung or beard Ofthe men who reap and till ? I bow in thanks to the sturd y throng "Who greet the young Morn with toil ' , Andthe burden Igive mv earnest song Shall be tbis—The Kings of the Sod ! Then sing for tbe Kings -who have no crown But thc blue sky o ' ertheir head ;—Sever Sultan or D ey had such power as they ; To withhold or to offer bread !
Proud ships may hold both silver and gold , The wealth of a distant strand ; But ships would rot , and be valued not , "Were there none to till the land . The wildest heath , and the wildest brake , Are rich as thc richest fleet , For they gladden the wild birds when they wake , And give them food to eat . And with willing hand , and spade and plough _. The _gladdening hour shall come , ¦ When that whieh is called the " wasteland "
now , Shall ring with thc " Harvest Home . " Then sing for the Kings who bave no crown Bat tbe blue sky o ' er their head;—Never Sultan or Bey had such power as they , To withhold or to offer bread . I value bim whose foot can tread By the corn his hand hath sown ; "When he hears the stir ofthe _yeUow reed It is more than -Music ' s tone . There are prophet-sounds that stir tbe grain , When its golden stalks shoot np ; "Voices that- teU how the world of men Shall daily dine and sup . Then shame , oh , shame , on the miser ' s creed , Which holds back praise or _* pay From men whose bands make rich the lands , For wlio earn it more than ihey ? Then sing for the Kings who have no crown
But the bine sky o er their head ;—"Never Sultan or Bey had such power as they , To withhold or to offer bread . The "puet bath gladdened with song the past , And still sweetly hc strikctb . the stringy But a brighter li ght on him is cast Who can plough as weU as sing . The wand of Burns had a double power To soften the common heart , Since with harp and spade , in a double trade , He shared a common part . Home lavished fame on the yeoman ' s name Who banished her deep distress , But had he ne er quitted the field or plough IBs mission had scarce been less . Then sing for the Kings who are missioned all Ton toil that is rife with good ;—"Never Sultan or Bey had such power as they , To withhold or to offer food I
To Irajtce. Oh Shame On Thee, "France! F...
TO _IRAJTCE . Oh shame on thee , "France ! for 'tis fratricide , storming Tbe «* cven iSl'd city , like Vandal or Hun ; Execration awaiteth those deeds now - performing , And thv children will blush for what _frenchmen bavc done . Could no spot be found , npon which to exhibit Thv prowess in war , but tbe land that gave birth To Rienzi _, "the last ofthe tribunes , " and rivet "Those chains that ber children had spurn d to the earth ? Tes' ves ! there are fields , -where nobly contending 'Gainst hordes , that a despot hath call'd to his Where * Bem and Dembinski , with Eossuth ,
defending , Might thy tri-colonred flag be with glory C displayed . Xet this be thy mission , let the flight of thy _eagles , Be directed to lands by the darkDanube s waves , And there flesh their bcais on the carrion of beaslcs _, That ihe autocrat sends to find plunder or graves . "WouhTst _effiice thc dark stain that ( by Ministers ' -jU "< _rliUSl , _,. . "Now duns _^ thy escutcheon ( to gain their own ends }? ., , .. Stretch thine arms out to succour tny bretnren now struggling _? or ricedom , and show them that Frenchmen are friends . IVhmchester . William Tatlor .
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Slater's Shilling Volumes. Evangeline: A...
SLATER'S SHILLING VOLUMES . Evangeline : a Tale of Acadie : By Bessy "TV . _XoxcrEixow . The Homes or Family Cares and Familp Joysj By _FlffiDEBlKA Bkemekj Toll Raphael . ' or Pages ofthe Book of Life at Twenty ; By _Alphoxse de "L _^ mautjse . London : Slater , 253 , Strand . "Evangeline " may be a very fine poem in the eyes of some persons , but we confess we cannot claim a p lace in tiie list of its admirers . To us it appears in the li ght of a p iece of descriptive prose tortured into a misshapen form —a form opposed equally to the plain sense of prose , and the harmony of poetry . We quote a , few lines from the portrait of
- EViSG-ElISE . air was she to behold , the maiden of seventeen summers ; Black were her eyes as tke berry that grows on the thorn by thc way-side , — Black , yet how softly they gleamed beneath the brown shade of her tresses ! Sweet was her breath , as the breath of kino that feed in the meadows , -When in thc harvest-heat she bore to the reapers at noontide Flagons of home-brewed ale : ah ! fair in sooth was tlie maiden .
Fairer was she when , on Sunday morn , wbile the bell from its turret Sprinkled with holy sounds the ah ' , as the priest with the hyssop Sp rinkles the congregation , and scatters blessings upon them , Bowu the long street she passed , with her chaplct of beads aud her missal , "Wearing her _i _' orman cap , and her ldrtle of blue , and the car-rings , Brought in the olden time from France , and since as a heir-loom , Banded down from mother to child , through long ¦ _rrcnerations .
Her father , "Benedict Bellefontame , " is described as Stal w orth and stately in form—the man of seventy winters ; Hearty and hale was he , an oak that is covered with snow-Hakes ; ¦ White as the snow were bis locks , and his cheeks as the oak leaves ' Here is an account of their "home : —
-Firmly "builded with rafters of oak , the house ofthe farmer Stood on the side of a bill commanding the sea ; and a shady Sycamore grew hy the door , with a woodbine ¦ wreathmi around it : Budely carved was the porch , with seats beneath ; and a footpath "Led through an . orchard wide , and disappeared in thc
meadow—And so fora . This may lie " poetry , " but , if so , such " poetry" has no claims for us . The story of "Evangeline '' is certainl y an affectm _* - _** one , and inthe hands of a true poet might have been made to rival the "Deserted "Village ; " told even in plain , -unpretending _"proscribe " Tale" mig ht have been made more effective than it is in its present shape . The prose " Introduction , " in . which is briel y -narrated the historical foundation of this poem , tells of oue of the most horrible cases of gigantic oppression ever perpetrated hy the strong upon the weak . We blush to add , that the oppressors were our own coantryinen . In 1 _J 13 the territory now called Nova
Scotia , but then entitled Acadie , was ceded by France to Great Britain . This territory was inhabited by a French population , small iu number , hut industrious , _reli- _^ ous , moral , and in every respect a pattern of human virtue ; prosperity and general felicity rewarded their good qualities . As colonists , they were allowed no voice iu the arrangement hy which they were transferred from French to English rule . Of course they were Trench at heart , and dreading that they might he some time or other required to take up arms againstFrenchmen , they entreated the " English that they ¦ mi g ht never be forced to so pamM a service , and might he excused from taking the oath of
Slater's Shilling Volumes. Evangeline: A...
allegiance . Their request was not complied with , bnt they were for many years treated with forbearance . In 17 * 55 the English Government came to the conclusion that these neutral French—as tliey were called—mi ght become dangerous , h y taking part ' . with ' the Canadian French , they therefore determined to destroy the colony . In September , Colonel Wixslow , a British officer , was sent with the King ' s commission to demolish the property of the neutrals , and transport them from the province . Without any previous warning , the Acadians were ordered to assemble together _jilW _* m «< v Tbmr _reriUPSt _-vv _.-ic _iinf _^ _nmiilinrl
on a certain _dtiy , when they were made prisoners and informed that their lands , cattle , and household goods were confiscated to the Government . In one district alone two hundred and fifty-five houses , as many barns , eleven mills , aud one church , were fired by the British military incendiaries , and burnt to the ground . Shi p ' s were in readiness to convey the Acadians to different parts of the continent . On the 16 th of September the male " prisoners " were drawn up six deep ; and the young men , one hundred and sixty in number ,
were ordered to go on board the vessels . They refused , unless their families might he permitted to accompany them : tbis was denied , and the soldiers were ordered to do their duty . The wretched Acadians no longer resisted , but marched , at the bayonet ' s . point , from the chapel of Grand Pre to the ships . The road from the chapel to the shore , one mile in length , was crowded with women and children , who , on their knees , and with eyes and bands raised to Heaven , entreated blessings on their young friends , so unmercifully torn from them . The senior man formed another detachment , and
their departure occasioned a similar scene of distress . Other vessels arrived , and the women and children followed . This was the doom of eighteen thousand EOULS , men , women , and children !! - ' Desolate and depopulated was the beautiful tract they had occup ied : their homes lay in smoking ruins ; tbe cattle , abandoned by their protectors , assembled about tbo forsaken dwelling places , anxiously seeking tl ieir wonted masters ; and all ni g ht-long , the faithful watchdogs howled for the hands that had fed , and thfi roofs that had sheltered them . "
These particulars are set forth at greater length in the " Introduction . " A fouler crime was never committed . Let those Englishmen who curse the desolator of Poland , bestow a portion of their maledictions upon the British exterminators of the Acadians . " ? The poem before us , tells us ofthe wanderings of one ofthe hapless beings ( transported from Acadie to the _New England States ) in search of her lover , one ofthe hundred and sixty young men first expatriated _ironi Acadie . It is a melanchol y story , and in the verse of ¦ GcOLDSJn . Ttt would have told most powerfully upon the hearts of all worthy of the name of human beings . In its present form " Evangeline" may be admired b y a few , but it can never become popular with the
many . Tho " Home" i 3 another volume of anew translation © f Miss Bremer ' s novels . ( Nearly 300 pages handsomely bound for One Shilling !) Of "Raphael" —a truly poetical work , cast in a prose form , we will speak at length on another occasion . These exceedingly cheap and handsome volumes must command a vast sale .
The History Of Ireland. By T. Weight, Es...
The History of Ireland . By T . Weight , Esq . Part Alii . The Illustrated Atlas , and Modem Bislo _.-y ofthe World . By R . Montgomery _Maktin , Esq . Part VII . London : J . and F . Tallis , 100 , St . John-street . This Part of the " History of Ireland , " embraces the events ofthe last years ofthe reign of Queen Eiizabexii , and the first years ofthe reign of her successor , including the Spanish invasion under Dos Juan de Aguila ; the battle of Kinsale , so fatal to the Irish and
their Spanish allies ; tho death of the- famous Red HuGn O'Donnell ; the ruin , submission , and final flight froni Ireland of _O'Neil , Earl of Tyrone ; the rebellion , defeat—and death of Sh _« " CaHIR O'DoHEnTE ; ihe famous plantation of Ulster b y King James , & c , & c . ' From the history of the rebellion of _O'Keill and O'Donxell , we take the following extract , descriptive of the horrors which accompanied and followed that struggle . FBIGHIFCL SUFFERINGS OF THE IRISH .
So effective was this ruthless policy of destruction that Mountjoy , in a letter written on the 12 th of September , ( 1602 ) , the day after bis return to _Xewry , acknowledged that not only in Tyrone itself , which had been now reduced to a desert , but in thc surrounding counties , he had " found everywhere men dead of famine , insomuch that O'Hagan protested unto ns that between Tullaghoge and Toom there lay a thousand dead , and that since our first drawing this year to Blackwatcr , there were above threethousand starved in _Tyroae . " We add the facts stated by Aloryson , an eye-witness : " Sow because I have often made mention formerly of our destroying the rebel ' s corn , and using all means to
famish them , let me fe y two or three examples , show the miserable state to which the rebels were thereby brought . Sir Arthur Chichester , Sir Richard Moryson , and the other commanders ofthe forces , saw a most horrid spectacle of three children ( whereof the oldest was not above ten years old ) , all eating and knawing with their teeth the entrails of their dead mother , npon -whose flesh they had fed twenty days past . * . * ¦ * * . The common sort of the rebels were driven to unspeakable extremities , beyond the record of most histories tliat ever I did read in that kind . [ He here relates another and more horrible case of cannibalism , which we omit . —En . JV . &] The captains of Carrickfer & us and the adjacent garrisons of the northern
parts can -witness that upon the making of peace and receiving the rebels to mercy , it was a common practice , among the common sort of them ( I mean such as were not sword-men ) , to thrust long needles into the horses o our Engbsh troops , and they d ying thereupon , to be ready to tear out one another ' s throats for a share of them . And no spectacle was more frequent in the ditches of towns , and especially in wasted countries , than to see multitudes of these poor people dead , with their mouths all coloured green by eating nettles , docks , and all tilings they could rend up above ground .. These and very many like lamentable effects followed their rebellion , and no doubt the rebels had been utterly destroyed by famine , bad not a general peace shortly followed . Tyrone ' s submission .
The Part before us ofthe " Illustrated Atlas " contains maps of " Spain and Portugal , '' the " British Isles . " For utility , beauty , and cheapness this work is unrivalled .
Memoranda Of Observations And Escperimen...
Memoranda of Observations and _Escperiments in Education . By _Cahouse South-wood Hill . London : J . "Watson , 3 , Queen ' s Headpassage , Paternoster-row - . Parents -will find many valuable hints in these pages , -wbicb b y ihe help of patience and a wisely directed affection for their offspring they may turn to good account . To young mothers especiall y we cordially recommend this pampblet .
The Claims Of The Redemption Society Con...
The Claims of the Redemption Society considered ; -or the principles of Home Colonisation explained , _f yc , _$ c . By DAVID GrRBEN . London : Berger , _Holywell-etreet ; Leeds D . Green , 166 , Briggate . Tins is tbe report of a lecture delivered by Mr . Green before the members of the Odd Fellows ' Literary Institution , Trinity-street , Leeds , on the 7 tb of December , 1848 . The Eedemption Society was founded in October , 18 io , and enrolled under the Friendly Societies' Act . Speaking of the progress ofthe Society , the lecturer savs : —
If early success is to ho taken as a prestige of luture prosperity , the fortunes of the Redemption Society are secured . The society had not been in existence for more than a year and a half , before one of those singular events arose which are so seldom witnessed in the world . Nearly unknown , aiid certainly nntried , our principles and plans attracted the attention of a gentleman in South "Wales , Mr . George "Williams , of Gorse , in the county of Caermarthen . Mr . "Williams had travelled much in the United States , both north and south ; but whaUiad most attracted his" attention , were the communities ofthat country ; he visited most of these , and resided some tune with some of them ; the conse _* _--\ queue--- of tins was , a thorough and profound convic-
The Claims Of The Redemption Society Con...
tion of the soundness of communal economy as contradistinguished from competitive society . With these convictions he returned to England , and , fortunately for the interest of our soeietv , fell upon a notice of it in thc People ' s Journal , written , if I mistake not , by Mr . Howitfc . He wrote to us at Leeds , requesting all particulars , which wore duly sent to him , and after a short interval we received another letter , in wliich he made us the extraordinary and munificent offer of the reversion of a landed estate of one hundred and sixty acres . We were in a manner incredulous , but in order to remove all doubts , we wrote him a plain catechetical letter , which he answered to our entire satisfaction . Wo then submitted to him the conditions upon tinn _« P * i . _ „ , - .
which alone we could receive this noblo gift , namely , that he should , by proper deeds of conveyance , make over to the trustees of the society , all right and title to tlie estate , unconditionally ; that he should not expect or claim any influence , office , or power in the society more than any other member , or receive any immunities or privileges other than what the society in its soverei gn will might confer . To all these severe , but necessary conditions , he immediatel y and cheerfully assented , and has now fulfilled them to the letter , by conveying the estate to the society . The estate is burthened with a mortgage of £ 1 , 200 , but such is Mr . Williams ' s zeal in the cause , that he has suggested a mode , and I believe will carry it out , of liquidating this , with advantage tothe society . Within the last month circumstances have rendered it necessary for the society to take possession of part of the estate . This has been
done , and we have sown eleven acres of wheat , and purchased eleven head of cattle , and are making preparation for locating some of our members on the estate next month , or in February . * As fast as money comes in we intend to put the whole of our land in the best condition , as respects cultivation ; thoroughly draining ifc first , and then extirpating the weeds , and introducing every possible improvement . We shall begin to build dwellings , workshops , and a school ; we shall then prosecute those kinds of small trades which may be introduced with comparatively small capital . The articles which we shall manufacture will be designed for use , not for show or sale merely ; they will be made in the most substantial and neatest manner . These articles we shall sell to our members in all parts of the country , and we believe that we shall bo enabled to sell them at a cheaper rate , if wc feel inclined , than is given for an inferior article .
The rules and regulations of the Society , together with much interesting information respecting the American communities , will be found iu this Lecture .
Sunshine And Shadow; A Tale Op The Ninet...
SUNSHINE AND SHADOW ; A TALE OP THE NINETEENTH CENTURY BY THOMAS MARTIN WHEELER , Late Secretary to tho National Charter Associatio n and National Land Company . Chapter XV . The love of woman is a blessed thing , The heart of woman is a throne of power-Fond , and more fondly still , it loves to cling , And grows more fond whene ' er most dangers lower-Constant beyond this world ' s imagining : Rich in all love—kind nature ' s bounteous dower : Our guardian-angel—promise—guide in life—Our hope—joy—pride—grace—solace—home-star —wife 5
A few more days passed in a similar manner brought the Esmeralda to anchor at Carlislo Bay , where , the vessel having been signalled the day previous , they found Sir Jasper Baldwin , Mrs . Elkinson s son , and a bevy of attendants , awaiting their arrival , to assist in unloading the luggage . Pompous and stately did Sir Jasper receive his young wife . There was naught in his manner to soothe her wounded feelings , or raise within her _sentir ments of affection or regard . It * vas such a reception as an Eastern Sultan would give to a favourite slave—pomp and splendour , destitute of lovo or respect . Sir Jasper was proud of his wife as ho would be of a fine norse or a dog , or any other appanage ofhis estate , but it " was the pride of ownership and not the pride of affection—it was vanity and not love .
Kindly -was the reception Mrs . Elkinson received from her son , and courteous the greeting ho gave our hero , whom Mrs . Elkinson kindly invited to accompany them to a friend ' s residence until the morrow , when Sir Jasper intended to sail . Affectionate were the adieux Arthur gave to Captain Weeks and his late companions in misfortune . The next morning sawthem under press of sail for D . Arthur was now introduced' by Mrs . Elkinson to Sir Jasper as an early acquaintance of his wife ' s , whom a most singular and awful calamity had again introduced to her .
Sir Jasper made a cold formal bow , and looked aught but graciously on his wife ' s acquaintance ; nor was his good humour increased when he hoard that Mr . Elkinson was about to appoint him to a confidential situation in his employ . Julia , who was in the cabin , knew not of this introduction , but , ill reply to Sir Jasper ' s inquiries , with a palpitating heart and a confused air , told him of hev brother ' s friendship for Arthur , their youthful _acquaintance , and its unforeseen renewal . _Xbthing- was tliere in this simple tale that could offend Sir Jasper , but nevertheless he felt irritated . Ho compared himself with Arthur , and felt that he gained not by the comparison . He , therefore , determined that this acquaintance should cease , and haughtily informed her that the wife of Sir Jasper Baldwin must not
recognise an acquaintance in any one who filled a subordinate employment , and trusted that her ladyship would inform him that on reaching D—— , their intimacy must for ever c 6 aso . nad not Sir Jasper thus haughtily wounded her feelings , this blow would not have been felt so acutely , for Julia had pro-determined that Sir Jasper should have no occasion to reproach her with her intimacy with Arthur . Dear as he was to her , she had maae her decision , and though in giving up his acquaintance she was parting with the last tie that linked her to happiness , yet the consciousness of rectitude would she imagined support her ; but Sir Jasper ' s interference had deprived the sacrifice of all merit . It was no longer the offering up of her heart at the shrine of virtue , but an immolation of her soul on the altar of Mammon .
During the day she had no opportunity of communicating with Arthur , who seemed sedulously to avoid her . She , therefore , retired to her cabin , and after much hesitation and many tears , folded and sealed the following note : — " Dear Arthur , —The kindness manifested by you during the voyage , has rendered that a p leasant recollection , wliich would otherwise liave been a dull vacuum . The happy recollections of our youthful days , wliich have entwined your memory with all my past enjoyments , have made your presence contribute greatly to my happiness , but happiness and
me are not destined to be companions . My husband ' s notions of dignity do not allow me to continue an acquaintance with one whose station is not superior to the one you arc about to fill , To obey is my painful duty . Regrets are vain and useless . Perhaps this harsh mandate may be a real blessing . Believe me , that I shall ever treasure the recollections of your kindness , and though I may not again listen to the pleasure of your conversation , yet will the sentiments of honour and the doctrines of patriotism you have ever inculcated , remain indelibly impressed upon memory ' s tablets , until ' life ' s fitful dream shall end , and tho dark unknown become a tried reality . * ' Yours , sincerely ,
"Julia . " It was on . the following morning that _Ai'thur received this note . _-g' » m and again did he peruse it , scarcely conscious ofhis own feelings , but joy waa uppermost , joy at the thought that his love was not expended in vain—that the idol he worshipped in secret _resuonded , though ever so faintly , to his adoration ; and though his fate could never be linked with hers , though the music of her voice might never more ring in his ears , though her beauteous form might no more meet his gaze , yet the _thought that he had been a source of happiness to her , that his memory would still remain dear to her , this was a joy he dreamt not of , and a source of pride and consolation . In all the delicate feelings of the heart , in all tho finer sympathies of our nature , how much
clearer and stronger are the perceptions of woman than man . Julia knew almost by instinct that her presence or absence formed the sunshine or shadow of Arthur ' s existence , and this knowledge of its being reciprocated gave strength and vitality to her love , whilst Ai'thur knew not of the devotion he had inspired until Julia's fareweU letter gave him a faint glimpse thereof . With such mingled feelings did he sit down to answer her epistle . " Beloved companion of my youth , —With feelings of pain have I received my dismissal from the temple of my adoration , where I knelt—oh ! how humble a worshipper—content with my lot , dreaming not of higher aspirations . Alas ! even this happiness must
no longer be mine . I must still continue to worship , but the shrine will be for ever removed , and my dark and chequered lot lose the only star that illumed its erratic course . Hard and unfeeling man , could not aught else have soothed thy pride without making shipwreck of my treasured happiness ? Lady-Baldwin , accept my hearty thanks for your kind remembrance , and if a love , holy as that of angels , pure as the dreams of infancy , be an acceptable offering , oh ! receive the oblation . It w ill not tarnish the virtue ofthe altar , but will ascend as the grateful incense of a devotee to the shrine of the Most High . " Ever yours , " Ahihub Moeios . ' * June , 1819 . Four members are on . the farm : nine acres ofoats are growing : a field ' offive' acres has been thoroughly drained ; four acres of it planted with potatoes , and one sown with turnips : a number of sheep were _purchased earl y _tasprmg , which have lambs . Our mode oi araunng hag attracted much attention in Wales jit ia eflected without stones , tiles , or " sod ; and completely dried the very wet field as fast as the drains were finished ,
Sunshine And Shadow; A Tale Op The Ninet...
Such was the wild and passionate-outpouring that Arthur gave in repjv to the letter of Julia . The mandate of fair Jasper had worked a spell on their young hearts . Writing beneath its effects , Julia had used certain _expressions in hoi * letter that her heart at another time would not have uttered , though deeply would it have felt them ; and Arthur ' s love , that would ever have been kept as a treasured secret , burst from its hiddeo source witli a violence proportioned to tho strictness with which it had been pent up . Their eyes were opened , their lore was no longer a secret . Happy was each in its r , , . . . .
consciousness , though its future enjoyment was for ever denied them . The blissful knowledge of first i ° of love reciprocated , and rendered sweeter by the hazards that surrounded it , this was their happy lot . But such joy , though exq uisite , is transitory ami short-lived . The brightest colours quickest lade—the fiercest , nanio is soonest exhausted—the glare 01 the sun needs the darkened glass to view its splendour . The prophet of Horassan wore a silver veu to conceal the bri ghtness of his visage—so love neeus the mantle of discretion to temper its warmth ; def 0 ° t _™ eS the VeiI of tho P ° P het t 0 conceal its ( 2 b be continued . )
Royal Polytechnic Institution. Lectures ...
ROYAL _POLYTECHNIC _INSTITUTION . Lectures on the 1 ' rod _^ . v of _AniinciAL Ice . ' r _^ _-,. ; . ; _" ! h ° aner has been delivering an interesting lcctuie on the various methods of producing _avtihci-lice at this Institution . Tho production of cold artificiall y , tho learned professor stated , _depenus in alt cases upon one great principle , viz : that when bodies pass from tlio solid to tho fluid , or 110 m the flmd to the gaseous condition , they require an increased amount of heat to enable them to exist _^ in their new form . To produce cold , then , wo merely have to bring together such bodies as can be made to pass rapidly from one state tothe other ; m doing they rob surrounding bodies ofthe heat which they contain and produce the desired effect
, , if we p lace those bodies wc desire to coot in connexion with them . It will be seen from this that it is necessary to employ vessels adapted to each particular case , and for this purpose the patent arrangement of Mr . Masters stands alone . Many of them were exhibited on the lecture table , and appeared at once simple and economical . A bottle of wine may be . iced in a few seconds , at a cost of not more than one half-penny . Tho learned Doctor concluded his discourse , by an illustration of the extraordinary fact discovered by Dr . Bontgony , viz . - of freezing water in a red-hot vessel . —The lecture was attended by a numerous and hi ghly respectable audience , who testified their approbation of the professor ' s entertaining and instructive lecture by loud and continued applause . .
Colliery Ventilation ' . —Lord Wharncliffe having moved for a committee on Mr . Gurney ' s petition for the more efficient means cf preventing the loss of life , arising from imperfect ventilation and consequent explosions of the fire damp or explosive mixtures generated in all ventilated mines , it was arranged that tke committee appointed to investigate that important subject -in the House of Lords , were to witness the experiments recently introduced by Mr . Forster ( a great mining proprietor ) , which are recorded as perfectl y efficient , according tothe report of that gentleman , on . the "largo scale , " ov in other words , which have been carried out by him quite to his own satisfaction . For this purpose the committee adjourned to the Theatre of the Polytechnic Institution , on Wednesday last , when they were put in possession of the extraordinary power which is to be obtained by thc assistance ofa simple jet of steam , tho introduction of Mr .
Goldworthy Gurney , a gentleman well known in the scientific world as the originator ofthe Budo light , in the Houses of Lords and Commons . Mi- . Gurncy having made somo experiments at the above institution , some ye & vs since , was induced to believe that it was a subject worthy of tho consideration of the ' - mining world , " and from his theoretical experiments Mr . _Forsiev was induced to make the experiments practically , which it was considered proved that" theory is tho father of practice . Tho experiments made on Wednesday were witnessed by means of tho hydro-electric boiler , and gave a good illustration of Mr . Gurney ' s ideas . This being a government measure a great many parties of the Houses of Parliament , and those interested inthe subject had been invited . There were present the Duke of Argyle , Lord Wharncliffe , Lord Brougham , Lord Lonsdale , Lord Kelson , Lord Granville , Sir Holds worth Williams , * Bart . ; Mi * . Mackinuon , M . P . ; Mi * . Vivian , & c .
Divine Right.—" Kin^S Havo Divine Right ...
Divine Right . — " Kin _^ s havo divine right to reign , " thoy are heaven ' s favorites , commissioned to keep down the rabble , to wear the crown , to hold the sceptre , to rule tho people , and to govern the empires . Be it so , I know if there be a " divine right" for kings to govern that , they often acquire that " right" in a most strange , and , as I think , in not a very right way . Thc following method was adopted by a servant to obtain for his master thc crown of Persia . When thc usurper Smerdish Magian was slain by his nobles , it was debated among them as to what sort of government it would be most proper to establish , —one contended most strenuously for a " democracy , another insisted as warmly as the first speaker that an _aristocracv
would bo most advantageous to tho people , and a third declared for a monarch y , whichfound favour in the eyes of the majority . A monarchy was to bo founded , —then thc question , who was to be lung ? came to be debated , and it was resolved that it should be referred to the Gods . They were to meet the next morning at sunrise , on horseback , at a certain part of thc city , and hc whose horse first neighed was to be king . The groom of ono Darius made use of the following stratagem to gain the crown for his master ; he led , thc night before , a marc'into the appointed place of meeting , and brought to her his master ' s horse . The next morning at sun-rise , the lords assembled at the rendezvous , and tho horse of Darius had no sooner came
to the place whore he had smelt the mare , than hc fell a prancing and neighing , whereupon the nobles , believing Darius to have had tho " right divine " conferred upon him by Heaven , declared him king , and placed him on the throne . It must be acknowledged that this was a novel way of acquiring thc '' divine right . "— Uxbridge _Sjririt of Freedom . Political " Plain Speaking . —When Napoleon wrote bulletins about the star of Austerlitz and the fulfilment of his destiny , we wore all equally shocked at his principles and his stylo . Yet the apologies still ringing in our ears for the wars of _Aftgnanistan , of Seindo , and of Gwalior , thoug h made but yesterday by the hi ghest authorities on cither side of the House of Commons ,
wore but a plagiarism from the Emperor 01 the French , in more correct , though less animated language . Nor could it hc otherwise . Empires cannot be built , up , cither in the West or in the East , in contempt of the laws of God , and then be maintained according to thc Decalogue . When tho vessel must cither drive before the gale or founder , tho helmsman no longer looks at the chart . When the pedestals of the throne arc terror and admiration , ho who would sit thero securely must consult other rules than those ofthe Evangelists . Sir John Shore was the St . Louis of governors-general , * but if Glivc had been like-minded , we should have had no India to _govern . If Hastings had aspired tothe title of
" thc Just , we should not havo retained our dominion . If Wellington had ruled in the spirit ofhis conscientious predecessor , wo should infallibly have lost it . With profound respect for the contrary judgment of such a man , wo venture to doubt whether the severe integrity whicli forbad him to hear the sceptre ofthe Moguls as others had borne it , should not have also forbidden # his bearing it all . Needlessly to assume incompatible duties , is permitted to no man . ¦ Cato would havo ceased to bo himself , had ho acted as a lieutenant of the usurper . The British viceroy , who shall at once be true to his employers , and strictly equitable to the princes of India and their subjects , need not despair of squaring the circle . —Sir James Stephen ' s Essays .
The Great Sea Serpent . —Pbobable Solution o p the Question . —Mr . J . A . Horriman , commander of the shi p Brazilian , makes the following statement;—Ho lett tlie Cape on the 19 th of Feb ., and in the morning of the 2 ith the ship was becalmed in lat . 26 , south long . 812 east , being about forty miles from the place where Capt . _M'Quaigh , R .. , is said to have seen the great sea serpent . About ei ght o clock that morning he perceived something right a-beam , about . half a mile to tho westward , stretched along the waters to the extent of from ¦ twenty-five to thirty feet , and moving with a sinuous motion . The' head , which seemed to be several feet above tho water , had something like a main running down to the floating portion , and within about six feet ofthe tail the supposed animal forked out into a double fin , As the Brazilian
was making no headway Captain Horriman had a boat lowered , and took with him Mr . Boyd ; and , on nearing the object , it was found to be nothing more than an immense piece of sea-weed , evidentl y detached from a coral reef , drifting with the current which sets ' constantly to the westward in this latitude , and which , together with the swell left by the gale , gave it a sinuous snakelike ' motion . What appeared , to be tho head , crest , and raano ofthe _immcnsuniDoIume'i , was but the large root , which floated upwards , arid , to whieh several _pioces ofthe coral reef still adhered . The captain had it hauled on board , but , as it began to decay , was compelled to throw it over . -He-now regrets that he had not preserved it in a waterbutt for the purpose of exhibition in the Thames , wherethe conflicting motion produced by the . tido and steamers would . in all . probility _/ give it a like . appearance .
A Prophetic Sono . — " Won't you sing , a song , sir ? " said a lady to her lover , as they were alone one evening ; The lover soon commenced the ' p ' opu . lar an * , " I won't go home till morning . " And sure « nough he didn't ' -
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A Voice Mom Kirkdale.—" Chartism Is Dead...
A Voice moM Kirkdale . — " Chartism is dead . " Hear us , you traffickers in human misery ! from this gaol wo shout , Sol nor never , will do , so long as a spark of manly , . feeling inhabits the human breast . __ We hurl defiance at you , and , with God ' s help , will once more assist in driving youfrom that position winch jou disgrace and dishonour Be of good cheer , our brethren *! for , although-the" wicked may reign for awhile , yet the final day of reckoning will come—and , from the gloom of a _dungeon , we implore you to hope en work on—truth and justice must ultimatel y prevails—Chartist Tracts . . As Uglt Question . —An old gentleman who has dabbled all his life in satistics , says he * never heard of more than one woman who insured iier life . He accounts for this b y the singular fact of one of the
questions on every insurance paper bein- _** , " What is your age ? " ° ¦ - Wit is not the produce of _stad y ; it cornea almost a 3 unexpectedly on the speaker as on the bearer : one of the first principles of it ia good temper j the arrows of wit ought always to he feathered with smiles—when they fail in that , they become sarcasm . The Huuax mind , like a plant , requires careful treatment to ensure its proper developement . Each mind has its peculiar characteristics , which must be dul y considered b y the trainer , or ho will cut away that which is wanting , and leave that which is superfluous . A Nuisance . —A novel mode of putting one down has been adopted in the quiet and picturesque village of Shenstone , in Staffordshire , with complete
success . For a considerable time , a number of illiterate young men assembled at thc principal entranco to tlie church , and amused themselves b y making indecorous remarks on the person , dress , & c , of each female ( irrespective of social position ) as sho entered the church . So female escaped their vulgar rudeness . A fortnight ago , a handbill , of which tho following is a copy , was posted throughout the village . — " Wanted , about twenty youngmen , ofall shapes and sizes , from the tali dandy , with hair enough on his upper works to stuff a barber ' s cushion , dowii to the little hump-backed , frecklefaced , cow-legged , carroty-headed upstart . The object is to form a gaping corps , to be in attendance
at tho church doors , on each Sabbath , before tho commencement of divine service , to stare at the females as thoy enter , and make delicate and gentlemanly remarks on their persons and dress . All who wish to enlist in the above corps will appear at the church _dooi'S next Sunday morning , as usual : when tliey will be duly inspected , and their names , personal appearance , amount of brains , Ac , registered in a book kept for that purpose , and published in handbills , to he distributed all over the parish . To prevent a general rush , it will be well to state that none will be enlisted who possess intellectual capacities above that of a well-bred donkey . " The nuisance is discontinued .
American SnKEWDXESs . — " My child , take thoso eggs to the store , and if you can't get ninepence a dozen , bring them back . " Jemmy went as directed , and came back again , saying , " Mother , lot me alone for a trade : they all tried to get ' em for a shilling , but I screwed ' em to ninepence . " Uxmistakeabms Him to Letter _Cakiueks . —We received a letter yesterday containing sixpence , and with this injunction inscribed over thc address : — To Carriers and Sorters . —Don't steal this sixpence and take it for half a so v ., as you did last week , and so deprive me of my Sunday paper . "—Leeds Times . Were men wiso pride and arrogance would only excite pity .
Honesty is treated as a crime when _rogues govern . _Tiikee Wives . —A clergyman in England was thrice married . His first wifo ho married for money , the second for her beauty , and the third to takecaro of him when he was old . His last partner proving a shrew , ho was accustomed to remark that , during his life , he had three wives—the world the flesh , and the devil . Athens now boasts of twenty-two journals , a greater number , in proportion to its ' population , than any other city in the world . Of these sixteen are political , ono legal , ono medical , and two literary .
Defiance to _Tvkaxts . —Wo triumph ! the cause of the people triumphs ! tho miserable farce of royalty which has been so grandly played , is ending now I it may , it will end in blood ; but mark you , tyrants , if you will havo blood for your " Inst supper , " so let it be ; but when your drunken saturnalia is over , yonr measure of iniquity will bo full , and your places empty ! this is tho soul ' s oath of the men ye combat!—and 'tis time ye had ceased tobe , for , _whon-yo shall have become extinct , it will take the . world and ouv humanity long ages of struggling to recover from the tyrannies ye have worked . Our cause may demand many martyrs , many Marcus Cartiuses , many Arnold Von Winklercids , and thoy are ready , dauntless , _unbundling ready to leap the chasm , and front the bloody weapons of destruction—ready to die that tho ' pcople may live . —Uxbridge " _Sjririt of Freedom " Coxclude your dinner with a mouthful of hard crust . It aids digestion , and scours thc teeth better than any tooth powder .
_JJotiii-W makes . 1 man more economical than living on his own account . So long as a youth has his " Governor" to go to for his expenses , hc will aways sec reason for generosity . Let him have no mouoy but what ho can earn , and ho will immediately soo more reasons for saving than for spending . Bukdexs ox Land . —Those comprise , amongst other trifles , mortgages , opera-boxes , race-horses , Irish tenants , contested elections , and sometimes a Queen ' s visit . —Punch . National Distinctions . —It is curious enough that nations should be distinguished by so trifling a circumstance as the mode of using the " fork at table . An Englishman is remarkable for placing his fork at the left side of his plate ; the Frenchman is
recognised at table for using thc fork alone , without a knifo ; a German for planting it perpendicularly in his plate ; and a Kussian , for using it as a toothpick . Hunoariax Diiess . —A coarse linen shirt , a ditto pair of very full drawers , a hat , and boots , is tho common dress of the peasant . To this must be added a large shccpskin-cloak , dressed with the wool on , which "is calculated to keep out thc cold in winter , and the heat in summer . " When the weather is severe , the wool is turned inside ; when hot , the order of things is reversed . Thc cloak , notwithstanding its heavy appearance , is beyond all price to persons who arc obliged to bivouac , as it effectually keeps off the night dews ; whicli areas pernicious to the health as thc vapours which rise
from thc morasses . Ignorance is the basment on which tyranny is built ; behold the superstructure falling as men disturb the foundation . A Stern Premonition . — " I ain't a going to live Jong , mammy . " "Wh y not , you sarpent ? " " Causo my trowsers is all torcd out behind . " A Stated Thought . —Woman would stab herself witli her scissors if she thought she was no better than what Fashion made her ! ( ladies are requested t 0 2 mt this in their Albums . )—ranch . Ix the extra polite circles of Sow York , the Night Mare is now * termed the "Nocturnal horse of tho feminine gender . " . . . ¦
1 In0i& Disqualifications , Gkneuative ' Lacalaclty , And Ilil'kdluknts To Makk1age .
1 IN 0 I _& _DISQUALIFICATIONS , _GKNEUATIVE ' _lACAlAClTY , AND _Ilil'KDLUKNTS TO MAKK 1 AGE .
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Ml % » _- _« vi ™ ' - ™ t ™ ted . wtth _T-vcnty-Si-- Anatomi . _f'S ? _S- " StL _" e 1 enlarged to 196 pages , price hi postage SS * ' 6 "' ' 0111 _«» _- _^ _MuJnC _** _% .. f HE ' S I LENT FRIEND ; oL _^* _m _^ _Sontfm _^^^ _whichpmeiitit ; _illustratedh _' U _^ l _^ X _^^ a vings , ant ! liy tlie detatf of cases . By K _. im d Ll'ffi and Co ., _I & , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London Published by Hie authors , aud sold bv Strange , 21 Pater _, noster-row ; Ilannay , 03 , and Sanger , 159 , Oxford-street-Starie ,-23 , 'ficM _* orne-street , Haymarfcet ; and Gordon , 146 * _LeadenhaU-strci-t , . London ; J , and R . Kaimes and Co .. Leithwalk _, Edinburgh -1 * . Campbell , _ArgvII-strect , Glas . gow ; J . Priestl y , Lord-street , and T . Newton , Church _, street , Liverpool ; _&¦ Ingram , _llai-ket-plsse , Manchester . Part the First Is dedicated to the ccatrideratioii ofthe anatomy and physiology of the organs whieh are directly or indirectly en > _-aged m tlie process of _reprotfoetion . It is illustrated by sis coloured engravings .
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_FRAMPTOS'S _VlLu'OF HEALTH , Trice Is . lid . per box . THIS EXCELLENT FAMILY PILL is a medicine of _lon-j-tried efficacy for corrccling all disorders nf the stomach aud bowels , the common symptoms of which _ai-e costiveness , _tt-. _iUucuey , _spiv-vm _; -, loss of appetite , sick head-ache , giddiness , sense of fulness after meals , dizziness of tlie eyes , drowsiness , and pains iu the stomach and bowels : indigestion , producing a torpid state of the liver , ami a eonsciiueiit imictivit . v of tlie bowels , causing a disorganisation of every function of lhe frame , will , by a little perseverance in this most excellent preparation , ba effectually removed . Two or three doses will convince the afiiicted of its stilut & _ry _cft'euts . The stomach will sneotlilv regain its strength ; a healthy action ofthe liver , bowels , and kidneys will _rapu'ly take place ; and instead of _listlessncss , heat , pain , and jaundiced appearance , strength , activity , and renewed health will be thu quick result of biking this medicine according to the directions accompiiiiyinscach box .
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A _Eemakkami * Cl'i : e of _Diiorsv o ? 'WS _Ciiiot in * Lor .--own's Pats . —Kxtract _» f il _lc-ttev fr _*>* n mi : * _.-undy , fanner . Kenninj-ton , near Oxford , dated *! ud _recciiHicr . _IS'S- — "To Professor Hoiioway . —Sir , _—Uiivni-j on : _i former occasion apprised you of an extraordinary cure _unon myself by you r invaluable _med-cme , it gives mc grail pleasure to testily again to its _eilicacv m . e . case ot Dropsy of the Chest , with which my shepherd was allhctet . _U . whom tbe moment I was informed ol . tho nature ot his complaint , I recointticnded ¦ _¦> . trial ot- your l ihs . wIiic . l advice was adopted with complete i _.-Ut-.-ess , tor by . _tiikm-j -J few boxes only he was perfectly cured , aud is now _lasou-m health . "
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AN EFFECTUAL CURE FOR PILES , FISTULAS , & c . ABERNKTHY ' S PILE OINTMENT . "What a painful and noxious disease is the Piles - " _^^ P _* _™^^^ cured hy ordinary appeals to medical skill ! This , no doubt , _w _^ _^ J _^^^ _J _^^ U in all cases » ftli & administered by the profession ; indeed , strong interna " _^^^ _" _^^ ptaccd _^ clf under the treat-• complaint . The proprietor pf the above Ointment , after yeaia ot . icut _^^/"' , _^ _, / . _„„! lias enjoyed it ever sinco ment of that eminent surgeon , Miv Abernethy ; was by him restored _^ without the slig htest return rf . _**"** _" ' _* - _^ iu iKid . out of the proprietor ' s circles prescription has been the means of healing a vast number _« _« Pel _™* _° _^ H _\_„{ . vcry considerable time . Aborof friends , most of which cases had been under medical ca 'i e _\ _\/ _° " \ : 0 ' ,, ' ad b » en ncneetlv healed by its app'ica . nethy ' _s Pile Ointment was introduced to the public by the desire ofma ny _*» » - _™ l _^^ _S ' _' _^ tion , and since its introduction the fame of tins Ointment has spread to . a _*•«* , «« _«•<"»***" , I > slow and unwilling to neknowledge the virtues of any medicine notprepi rod _^* _g * _S _"; . ™ S admit that Abernethy ' s _l'ile Ointment is not only avaluablc preparation , but a nc _« i hulm- vemccij mu _cty _^ c _cloTand SonS , Pam . _* _gdon-Street Edwards , St . Paul ' s Chuvch _^ _u-d ; Butter , _^^ J _^ _S- _^^^ et WW .: _SeSo _^ ov _^ it at , owing to the great expense of the Ingredients . . .
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CORNS ' _AND BUNIONS . PAUL'S EVERY MAN'S FRIEND , Palvonisedbv the Royal Family , Nobility , Clcm _. & c . a a sure and speedy Cure for those severe annoyances , without causing thc least gain or _inconvesiencc . _Unh-lce :- __ ¦ vt _. iei _* _remeXsfovCorus _/ _its operation _js such _astorender the cutting of Corns altogether _uimecessary - _* J _»^* _«« _-TO . _"g :. _^ _Pmcticeof _cutting ' _CornsisataU times highly dangerous , and has been _frequently a ended v _^> _™ _^*^ , - £ _Suences , besides its liabUity to increase their growth ; it adheres - * lth _^^ _- _^ J _^ _RW S _^^ _^ I J deh htM relief from torture , and with perseverance-in its application , entirely _oi'sdicates the _aiosimvttcrate _twn-. B _Sonials have heen rece _*^ well as from many . Officers of both Army and Navy , and nearly oue thousand private letters feom tlie gentiy ax country , speed-in ;; in high terms of this . valuable remedy . . .. . , , , . wJtfc . _S-11 _nirci'iiuilS _lVe . » _-u-ed by . lolm _FoS , _inboxe--at Is .. Ud ., or three _sm-ul h . o _^ for use , of all wholesale and retail medicine vendors in town and country , ihe _gciiuuu .. _l _& ' . _»* - the stamp . A 2 s . 9 d . box cures the most _ohdurate corns . . Askfor ' -Paul's "Gverj ' . Man _' s . Friend . _^ thefoUBv . _in-vesneetaUe Abernethy ' s _PUe Ointment , Paul ' s Com _Tlaster , and Abernetl _^ _- _s _PHe Powders , _ar-j-sold by the l 0 J » . in o l _^ _pci-Wjie Chemists and Dealers in Patent Medicines :- " _ ¦¦ ¦ _ . , . . _ ., 1 _cheaa-ude ; Newherw : 9 r . ¦ Barclay and Sons , _rtwrrngJon-stveet * , Edwards , 6 ., St . Pa * . _* l 5 _Chwti-J «« . _^ _V „ _*? 150 . Oxford-street ; . Paul's ; Sutton , * Bow Church-yard ; Johnston 1 % Greek-st _* _-cet , Soho , _^^ i _SS _^ _c _; _^ l _* : "Willoughby and Co ., Gl _. _Bishopsgate-strwt Without ; Owe street ; Prout ,-229 , Strand ; Hannay and Co ., 63 . Oxford-street ; Pre * _itis , 8 * . _a-Oo _,- _" _- " * * _- * * V > « ,, r ' "" - . ahlc chemists and medicine vendors in London . - , ; _.,,. „„ , i . „ _, t C ' _""R _rvvno _« * _Bri- _> ca _* _-a Denton , Co nN-n « _AoESTS-BainesaudNowsome , _Iteaton , _Smeetou , K _^ 'f _^ _. _^^ nd _Nhrot \ ( 1 hB $ _6 hr _^ e ; Garland , Mann , Bean , Harvey , Haigh , lato Tarbottom ; Boll-Hid and _* __^^ 1 __^ 'J _ l _^^;^ - _^^ s \ s _^ l ItHodes , _BeU and _Broot , Lord , H . C . Hay , Medical Hall , _^^^^ _jtt- _^ and _*^ Iiffi _^^ ui _&^ toitn , Elland ; Bradford ; Hartley , Denton , Waterhouse _, Jepson _, Wooa _. _Dyei _' _, 1 _>^^^^^ _SS _^ _X _^^^«^ Hurst , Cardwell _,-tleU _, and Smith , - _"Wato-field ; Pybus , _^ ra _^ i _^** _$ _^« £ _^ Hudson , _-Keighley ; : Bro . Ue , Doncaster ; Matthews , _^ _f V _^ Whitby ; Bolton , Blanshard and Co ., Hargrovo , _. l i _?^ , ° _0 wv j- _S _> ° l h . ' _^ _Sffi Tito * Omb lier , JIai ket JeWon , Malton ; _BuckaU , Scarborough •* Smith _y Furby , _Bndbnrt » i _Adwas , CoJton , Puller ., -f _^^ . _t _^ ton ; WeiRhtort _; Gledh & L OldDelph ; Priestley , Fox , Pontefract , ; Dalhy . Wethcrhy _, _Shuei , Hedale ,- W _^ - _. _Dartortoi _* , \ v 3 _Rinhmnnd Ward . _Stokefilev " Fo _& tt , _and'I'homMon , _IhiKus ; Mon _^ onse _^ Daraard _OasiUs ; * f _^ i _^* 7 _?* - * -H _^ o imau * _Aosrm-Mea-ws . _Mtm Blanshard -Md _*> x , _Cvuggists , _MloWegate , York ,
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 14, 1849, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_14071849/page/3/
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