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o THE NORTHERN STAR. Mai*ch 20. f^»
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ABERNETHY'S PILE OINTMENT tM
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Tex Hours' Factory Bin.—Bhapford, March 13.
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iato attti %&to immntt*
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NORTHERN CIRCUIT-York. March 13.—Edmund ...
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ETHER A SAFE REMEDY. Mr. Cattlin, surgeo...
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Hotel a**» TAVERN-KEEi-Ens' Provident In...
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JPwWe jammp
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Ratepatino CLAiisKs.-On Monday «,*£"- me...
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Saw-ousi " Bui-ad.—Sir J. F. W. Horschcl...
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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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
O The Northern Star. Mai*Ch 20. F^»
o THE NORTHERN STAR . Mai _* ch 20 . f _^»
Abernethy's Pile Ointment Tm
ABERNETHY'S PILE OINTMENT tM
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——— . _> . i — What apaiufuland noxious disease is the Piles ! and eimpaniire _. ' _im _^^ J _^ have been per _maiwtitly cured bj ordinary appeals to medical skill ! Th ... no doubt "' X ; n » I ? , Q ,, _^ i " ° ° _{ P 0 werfu aperients too frequently administered by the profession ; indeed . _^ I __^ . 0 _^ _ \ _^ _» lwa he avoided _inallcasesofthis complaint . The _proprietor of the abovelOwtM _*** _£ * _"ft . _? _* & _^ _l , lims , '* under the treatmentof that eminent surgeon , Mr . Aber . iet . -y , _»«» _& _J _™ _Z ° _tlitatT _^ nl J _^' _^ _\ _^ it ever since without the slightest return e , f the disorder , over a P _£ _^ _Jp _£% 2 _^ _- * __\^ _***» the same Abernethian prescription l . _Ss been the means of healing a * _^ Jl _™^* _?^*™ _***** * both Wand out oftlie proprietor ' s circles of friend-, most of which cases had be * r »»*•* _»« _™ _"'M * - _"T ° the _" !? a ™ 'y con-5 df ruble time . Abernethy's Pile Ointment was introdueod to t _^ e P „ * ,, by the desire of many who had been perfectiv healed by its application , and since its introducaon the fa me _< of thu Ointment has spread far and wide ; even _th- e Medical _Professioi , _alwavs slow add unwitlins ; to _actoow edged the virtues of any medicine not _prepared by tlien _^ _ell-es do no _^ _fKelyanffrankly admit that Aberne thy » We ¦ _Ointment is not only a valuable preparation , but a never failine remedy ini every s tage and vanetj-of thatappang malady . Sufferers will not re-pent _givit . _*; the Ointment a trial . Multitudes of eases of its efficacy might be produced , iftm , nature " of the complaint did not render those who have been cure _« l unw . llmg to publish their names . Sr . ! d in covered Pots , at 4 s . f . d . ov the quantity of ¦ hr _. _eis . 6 d . Pots m one for lis , _withfull directions for use , bv C _K- ii .- ( Acentto the Proprietor , ) _Napier-stre-et , Hoxton , * < cw town , London , where also can he procured every Patent Jfedicine of repute , dire-cl ¦ fiwni : the original makers , wtt _» alloirance on taking sixat a time . *«* _ile sure to ask for " _ABENETUX *> PILE OINTMENT . " The Public are requested to be on their guard c * _tii-t noxious compositions sold at low prices , and to observe that none can possibly be genuine , unless the name f J Kiso is printed on the _Governmam Sump affixed to eaeh pot , 4 s . Cd ., which is the lowest price the proprietor _* _i _, e . l « l to sill it at . owins to tlio pre :. ! _evnense of t . _emgre-dients .
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C u ii i \ S AND BUNIONS . PAUL'S EVERY MAN'S FRIEND . Patronised by the Royal Family , Nobility , Clergy , ie . tt a tare and speedy Care for those severe annoyances , without causing the least pain or inconvenience . Unlike a otli _. _* _-r remedies for Corn" -, its operation is such as to render the cutting of Corns altogether unnecessary : indeed , w may say , the practice of cutting Corns is at all times highly dangerous , and has been frequently attended with _lameii _talT . e e _* onscqueucts , besides its liability t _. » increase their _growiVi ; it adheres with the most gentle pressure , produce _aii _ii _^ tant and delightful relief from torture , and with perseverance . * ia its application , entirely eradicates the mos in _.-t . rate Corns and Bunions . _Testimonials have been received fr m upwards of one bund ed _Physici'ins and Surgeons of the greatest eminence as _wt-11 as from ms ny Officers of both Army and Navy , and nearly one " thousand private letters fi om the gentry in _towi ar .-: ¦ ¦ uiintry , speaking in high terms of this valuable remedy . _Prej-ired t > y John Fox , in boxes at ls _ljel , or three small boxes in one for 2 s _9 d , and to be had , With full direction for use , of C . Kisg , Napier-street , Hoxton , New Town , Londem , and all wholesale and retail medicine vendors in toivi an-. i _e-ouutry . The genuine has the nameof John Fox onthestamp . 2 s 9 d Box cures the most obdurate Corns Ask for " _Paul'f Every Man ' s Friend . " Ah i iiethy ' s Pile Ointment , Paul ' s Corn Plaster , and Abernethy ' s Pile Powders , are sold by the following _rcspectabli Cbcmi .-ts and Dealers in Patent Medicines : Barclay and Sous , _Farringdon-stree-t ; Edwards . 67 , St . _Taul ' s Church-yard ; Butler , 4 , Cheaps'de ; Newbery , St Paul ' : ; Sutton , Bow Church yard ; Johuson , 16 , 6 : _eek-street , Soho , and 6 J , Cornliill * Sanger , i 50 , _Oxford-strc-et "Wd ' _onjliby and Co , ill . Bishopsgate street Without ; Owen , 52 , _Marcliniond-street , Burton-crescent ; Eade , 3 . 9 , Gos _w-il > tr _.-e ( - * ; Prout , 229 , Strand ; Hannay and Co .. G 3 . Oxford-street ; Hunter aud James , _Webber-row ; Mid retail by al _respectable chemists and medicine renders in London . Coi-stm Agents : —Baines and Newseme ; Mr . Buckton , Times Office ; Heaton Smeeton , Hall , Reinhardt and Som J . C . itrowue , 4 * 1 , Briggate , Thornton , 35 , Boar Lane , Oeuton , Garland , Maun , Bean , Harvey Haigh , late Tarbotton _Bolland aad Ken-play , Land Moxon , C . Hay , 106 . Briggate . Iti ; odes , Bell and Brooke Lord , R . C . Hay , Medical Hall Leeds : Cooper , Key and Fisher . Bradford ; Hartley , Berry , _.- _" _ute-r , Leyland Halifax ; Smith , Eland , llurst , _Cardwel foil , Mo ' th , Wakefield ; Pybus Barnsley ; Knowles , Thome , Brooke and Spivey , Huddersfield , Hudson , Keighley _Lottliouse , Reinhardt ( late Carlton ) , Kirton , Alcock , Ba > nes _llum-ll , Bell , Burton , Healey , Mclson , Freeman , Pickei ing . _i-ai-ton , Williamson , Chapman . Hammond , Wallis , Walker , Broomhead , Noble , Forster , Hardman , Stephenson _W _* _iv , Ujekr and Baker , Hull ; Pipes , Keningham , Johnson , _Earle , Cornwall , Robinson , Brigham , Bevcrl « y ; Brookes DoiieaMer ; Matthews , Creaser , Driffiield ; Cass , Goole ; Milner , Pickering : Stevenson , Whitby ; Bolton . Blanshard and Co - Hargrove , Fisher , Otlev Linnev , York ; Marston , Brigir ; Hurst , Robson , Armiiage , Ingolby , _Lonsbottom * U _.-..-i » , ; v / HinT-fright , Jlouden , * Ravner , " Smith Burlington ; _HorncDy , _Wrai _. jrliaro , Jefferson , Mnltoli , Rhodes , Snmu CSl .: i ;! _Hlev . Broml ) ead , Ireland . _BueUull , Scarborough ; Suiith . Fu by . _llriddngton ; Adams , Colton , Pullen , Selby © n , _h-. " . _' , Market . Weighton ; Fleck , Marsh , Rotherham , _Uattersley , Kail , Officer , Barton . Browne , _Qainsberough _Clt-elliUl . Old Delph , Priestlev , Fox , _Pontefact ; Dalby , Wetherby , Slater , Bedale . Dixon , North nllerton , Ward , Rich _mou-. l ; Ward , Stokesley , Foggit and Thompson , Thirsk , Monkhouse Barnard Castle ; Pease , Darlington ; Jennetl _Stoeiito . i ; and bv all respectable chemists and medicine venders in ever * market town in England .
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COlGliS , HOARSENESS , AND ALL ASTHMAT ASD PCLliOXART COM _- _rliAlNTS . $ _XTFECTCALLTCWSED BT KEATING'S COUGH LOZENGES . Upwards of thirty years experience bas proved tbe _infellibilHy of these Lozenges in the cure of Winter _Ceugh , _Hoarseness , Shortness of Breath , and other Pulmonary Halsu ' ts . Tlie patronage of hii Majesty , the King of Prussia , Mid hif . Majesty the King of Hanover , bas been bestowed on the u !; as also that of the Nobility and Clergy of the United Kingdon * , and , above aU the Faculty have especiiii ; - recommended them as a remedy of unfailing erBcr-cy . Testimonials are continually received confirmatory of the value ol these Lozenges , and _proving the per- ' feet 3 . _i _* - ety of their use , ( for they contain n » Opium nor any _yfeparationpf that drug ;) so that they may be given _toferasl ; . - of tbe most delicate constitution , and children of the uu . et _tenderest years without hesitation .
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VALUABLE TESTIMONIAL . The _fallowing Testimonial efa Cure ofa Cough of twenty _; ear _* _staudiog , aad recovery of strength wiil be read with much interest : — Sie . —I beg to inform you that for the last twenty years I have suffered severely from a cough , and bave been u-a _. ier medical treatment with bnt littlerelief , and lave ne , t for many years been able to walk more than lialf a mile a day . After taking three boxes of your Lozenges my Cough entirely left me , aud I have this day
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_# N THE CONCEALED CAUSE OF CONSTITUTIONAL OA ACQUIRED DEBILITIES OF THE GENERATIVE SYSTEM . Just Published , A new andimportant Edition of the Silent Friend on Human Frailty . tioe ti . 6 d ., and * ent free te any part of the United _Klnedom on the receipt of a Post Offige Order for 8 l . 6 d . A MEDICAL _WOrtK on the INFIRMITIES ofthe GE . NEBATIVE SYSTEM , in both sexes ; being an en , _"Talry In to the concealed cause tbat destroys physica . f »« -rgy . and the ability of manhood , ere vigour has esta ] wubed her empire : —with Observation * on the banefu •» eu of SOLITARY INDULGENCE and INFECTION jK _^ _fnd eonsU tutional WEAKNESS , NERVOUS _IRRIM _«& _n-r £ ? _£ SUMPXlON . « - _* •» the partial or total JSillNCTIOH oftheBEPKODIJCTIVB POWERS ; with ¦ _twFS _^?*** - _" - * _ttedestructiveetrecteof Gonorrhiea , _^ kmiufr " ' * md _Swondary Symptomi up explained _tocSd-R _^^ tt _« w _« kUEm _*^ nedwith Ten ¦ » 9 _*^ onre _« Engra _* ring 8 , _reprefentinrthe deleterious in-
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_stuenceuf Mercury on the skin , by eruptions on the bead * ace , and body-, with _apjroved mode of cure for both _< exes _; followed by observations on ths obligations of MARKIAGE , andheaithy perpetuity ; witk directions for the ¦¦ emoval of certain Disqualifications : the whole pointed jut to suffering humanity as a "SILENT FRIEND" to & e consulted without exposure , and with assured _eonfi--ienceefsu seeds . > . R . and L . PERRY nd Co ., _Cot * auLTit < a _Sdbqeons . Published by the Authors , and may be had at their Residence , 19 , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London ; sold by Strange , 21 , Paternoster-row ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , O * f 0 rd . street ; Gordon , 14 t > _, Leadenhall-street ; Pen-ell , 10 , Westmorland-street , Dublin ; Lindsay , 11 , Elm . _row _, _Edinburgh , D . Campbell , 136 , _Argyle-street , Glasgow ; . Ingham , _Market-street , Manchester ; Newton , _Church-Itreet , Liverpool ; Guest , Bull-street , Birmingham . opinions or inn fbes * _.
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GOOD NEWS FOR TIIE MILLION I ! I N all cases where practical experience a _« d economy with secrecy is required , consult with J . _MOIUII _. and Co ., Surgeons , No . 31 , Newington-causeway , Southwark , London , who , during an extensive practice oi twenty-two years , in which time they have been successful without a single failure , in 40 , 000 cases which lengthened and extensive practice enabled them to effect a complete cure of every stage and symptom of all disorders arising from Indiscretion excess , solitary habits , « c , includ ing Impotence , Seminal Weakness , & c . The cures performed in le 6 s time and on such economical terms as were never before practised , no restraint of diet eir hinderance from business at all necessary , or fear of d ' scovery or exposure . J . M ., and Co ., may be consulted by letter , patients stating the full _particislarsofthe'rcase , when ancqually perfect cure will be effected as by a personal visit . Advice and a Prescription will bo forwarded in reply by return of Post to any part ofthe Country , and correspondence continued until a perfect cure is accomplished on receipt of Ilalf . a-Sovereip n .
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render their operation mild and agreeable ; they do not require the least confinement or alteration of diet ; and may be taken by the invalid with perfect safety ; as an occasional dose in all nervous and debilitated cases , recoveries from protracted diseases , etc ., they will be found highly valuable , imparting vigour and tone to the system when emaciated by disease . Their value as a general tonic and restorative of tbe impaired stomach and biliary system , is daily manifested to the proprietors by their increasing rapid sale , and the numerous _testimonials forwarded by those who have proved their efficacy .
Ad00217
The following , with many others , has been recently received : — Communicated by Mr . O . BiTTEss , Chapel-bar , Nottingham . { _Tovember 27 th , 181 _C . Sirs , —Tho many thousand boxes I sell in the course of a year fully testify the superiority o ( Parr ' s Life Pills over every other patent medicine . Old and young , rich and poor , all acknowledge the great benefit they derive from taking them . Many ladies and gentlemen of high standing in society , and numerous respectable families have adopted Parr ' s Life Pills as a fami'y medicine ; and thou sands liavo given me full proof , verbally , of thc cures wliich Parr ' s Life Pills have effected . I remain , gentlemen , yours , obediently , Geoiiqe Batters .
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Communicated by Mr . _Gamis , Yeovil . Yeovil , July 13 th , 18 _'C . Sirs . —Having , during the last two years , witnessed the remarkable efiicaey of Parr ' s Life Pills , I feel much pleasure in stating the following cases for the _encouragement of others . I am , truly yours , Medicine Warehouse , Yeori ! . J . ( Jamis . E . A .-An elderly gentleman , came for a second box of Parr ' s Pills , and with pleasing astonishment said , " These are tho best pills I have ever had , and J intend always to keep them by me * , they are the best remedy for the Piles I have ever tried . " P . G . —Another person , aged 76 , affirmed , that , after trying almost every medicine fur Indigestion and Bilious Complaint . Parr's Life Pills stand unequalled , and emphatically said it was the best aperientmedicineextant .
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BEWARE OP IMITATIONS . None are genuine unless the words " Parr ' s Life Pills , are in White Letters on a Red Ground , on thc Govern _, inent Stamp , pasted round each box ; also the _fac-sbnil " of the signature ef the Proprietors , " T . Roberts and Co ., _Crane-court , Fleet street , London , " on the Directions . Sold in boxes at Is . lid ., 2 s . 9 d ., aud family packets at I is . each , by all respectable medicine vendors throughout the world .
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ASTONISHING EFFICACY OF HOLLOWAY'S PILLS . The Testimony ofa Clergyman vouching to Eleven Cases of Cures by these wonderful Pills . Extract of a Letter from the Rev . George Prior , Curate of Meeagh , Letter _Aemiy , C ' arrigccrt , Ireland , 10 th Jan . 1816 . "To Professor Holloway . Sir , —I send you a crude list of some eleven cases , all cured by the use of your Pills . I cannot exactly giro you a professional _niiine to the various complaints , hut this 1 know , some of thuu baffled the skill of Derry and this County . In a previous letter this gentleman st . _' _. tcs ; _. s follows : —Within a short distance of my house resides a small farmer , who f .. r more than twenty years has been in a bad state of health ; Mrs . Prior gavo him a _b-xof the pills , wliich did him so much good that I heard him 6 ; iy , for twenty years past he never ate his food or enjoyed il so much us since taking your pills . ** ( Signed ) George Pition . * # * The above reverend and pious gentleman purchased somo pounds' worth of the pills for the benefit of his poor parishioners .
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Bad _indigestion , with extreme Wea _* kness an Debility—an Extraordinary Cure . Mr . T , Gardiner , of No . 0 , Brown-street , Grosvcnorfquare , had been in a very bad state of health for u long time , suffering much from a distended stomach , very impaired digestion , with constant pains in his chest , was extremely nervous , and so greatly il 'bilit . tod 113 _scurce-ly . _-ihleto walk one hundred yards ; during tlio long period ofhis declining health lie had tlio advice of four of tlie most eminent physicians , besides Ave surgeons of the greatest celebrity in London , from whose aid hed .-rived no benefit whatever ; at last lie had recourse to Holloway ' s l'ills , which he declares effected a perfect cure in a very short time , and that he is now us strong and vigorous as ever he was in h s life . This bring so extraordinary a case , may lead many persons almost to doubt his statement , it might therefore he necessary to say that Mr . Gardiner i » a broker and well known _. Cure of a Confirmed Asthma , accompanied with great Debility .
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Extract of a Letter from John Thompson , Esq ., Proprietor Oftlie Armagh Guardian , Armagh , l'th April . _Isl 6 . To Professor Holloway . Sm , —There is nt present living in this city a Serjeant , who had be ' en for many years in the Army at Cabul , in tlio East Indies , from whence he returned in September last . On his way here , from the change of weather of a tropi cal to n moist climate , he caught ; a very violent colli , which produced a confirmed c _.-isu of Asthma . In December last he commenced taking your pills , and by the use of two lis . boxes , with two 4 s . t'd . pots of your ointment well rubbed into his breast , he is , I am happy to say , not only cured of the Ast ' ima _, but is also becoino so strong and vigorous , that he informed _ineycstt-rday ho could run round the Mall with uny person in the city , and thathe never got any medicine _eijuul to yuur pills nnd ointment . ( Signed ) J . Thompson . THE Earl of Aldborough cured of a Liver und - _* temiiicli
Tex Hours' Factory Bin.—Bhapford, March 13.
Tex Hours' Factory Bin . _—Bhapford , March 13 .
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—A meeting ot the central _slioit-time committee ol the West Riding of Yorkshire was held at Bradford last night , when the following ; resolution was adopted : — " That it is the deliberate opinion of this meeting that nothing less than a legislative enactment toprotcct young people from being worked move than twelve hours per diem , will ever satisfy thc claims of justice to the manufacturing population of these districts , and therefore tiiey most _urjjcntly re - quest their parliamentary friends to do every thing in tlieir power to secure the adoption of the ten hoars clause ofthe present Bill , so that this Iongagitatcd question may now be brought to a final and _satisfactory settlement . "
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HotiowAt _' s Pills and _Oistsient . —An Extraordinary Cure—Edward White , residing at No . 4 fi , Clement ' s lane , Strand , was an in-door patient at King ' s College Hos . pitul , for an abscess in the thigh , and a wound nine inches long on the same limb . He could neither bend his knee or put his foot to the ground He remained at the hospital five months in bed , when ho was _UlfdVlWid that "' nothing more could be done for him , " ho was then curried to his home , and commenced using the above invaluable medicines j he is now , to the astonishment of every one , soundly cured , and can walk as well us ever he did iu his life . _Auebsetuv ' s Pile Ointment . —One of tho greatest legacies bequeathed to human kind , by the immortal Abernethy , was , no doubt , his wonderful discovery forthe most loathsome
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Northern Circuit-York. March 13.—Edmund ...
NORTHERN _CIRCUIT-York . March 13 . —Edmund Kaye , 78 years of age _. was pu on his trial for a felonious assault on an interestmi but diminutive child , then—that is , the 29 th of No vember—only nine years of age . The prisoner _wai in custody at the Winter Assizes , but the child wa then wholly uneducated , and this Court _adjournet the case to give time for her being instructed . Shi now gave a very clear account of the outrage , am her evidence was supported by another child as to th _< prisoner having sent ner away and detained the pro secutrix , and by a surgeon who was called in on thi 2 nd of December , and also her mother , as to th stato in which the child was . —Mr . Baron Rolf ! said all such cases of assault on children were ver
grave offences , but this was particularly revolting on account of the offender being in the last stage o life , and he should not be doing his duty if he _dii not pass upon him the highest sentence of the Jaw _notwithstandim ? h « great age . He then _aentencei him to be transported t « r the term ofhis natural life Riot bt R ailway Navigators . — C . Winterton T Harness , G . Wilson , C . Smith , F . Porter , am J ' Blackburn , * vei _' charged with a riot and assaul at Spofforth , near Wetherby . On the day in ques tion the prisoners , together with 100 or 200 othe persons , assembled atSpotlorth , on th occasion o a sale by auction tak , n « P ace on the premises of _i person named James _ahortlana . l ne prisoners an railway labourers , emp laved < ? n sme . adjacent works Amongst other property to b 0 sold was a qllantit _; of beer , two barrels and half of wi , ; j , snjne „ f thi men fetched out ofthe cellar , to which they had bj force sained admittance . _Thuy knocked in thi
ends of the casks , and dispensed the beverage to tht astonished crowd , in their boots , hats , and othei _equally extraordinary substitutes for classes and pitchers . The prisoners at the same time made an attack upon Joseph Mortimer , who remonstrated against their conduct . Finding he should get the worst of it , he escaped to the house of a person named Parker , but the prisoners pursued him , burst open the door , and dragged out poor Mortimer by the hair of his head , and severely maltreated him . Subsequently the mob proceeded to a mill , occupied by one Deighton . whom they compelled , by threats and violence , to give them snme beer ; and they also assaulted a man named Groves . Tho man who _strock Groves was made prisoner , but was ultimately rescued by the prisoners and tbeir companions . Evidence of these facts having been given , all the defendants were found Guilty , and sentenced to be imprisoned for three months at hard labour .
Wounding bt a Lunatic—John _Cartwright . 20 , was charged with having feloniously wounded Petei Singleton . The prosecutor is a labouring man at Gokar , in Huddersfield . On the morning of the 17 th December lie was proceedinc ; on the road to _Iluddersfield , when he was mot hy the prisoner , who had that morning escaped from the workhouse , and by whom he was assailed and stabbed in the thigh . Tho wound was three inches deep , and of a very danserous character . It appeared that the prisoner ' s intellect had been affected by repeated fits , and the jury found bim Not Guilty on the ground of insanity . He was ordered to be kept in custody during her _Majestv ' s pleasure .
_Miucn 15 . —Cuttiko and _Wous-jino . — John Moon , a " navvy , " _ajed twenty-three , was indicted with intent to _dogtievous bodily harm , to Robert Newsome , at Battley _Carr , near Dewsbury , on the 25 th December . The prosecutor also is a labouring man , and on tbat day was at a public house with some friends ; the prisoner came in . and he and one Ottey began playing at " puff and dart , " a game in which the party blows a dart _through a tube at a mark . It was the prisoner ' s turn to blow the dart , while Ottey was standing near the mark , when the prisoner , designedly or not , blew the dart into Ottey'a face , in which it stuck . A fight between them alone , according to the evidence for the prosecutor , ensued , which " ended in the prisoner being
turned out ot the house . A quarter ofan hour afterwards the prosecutor and three others went away , and in going home had to pass through a yard where the prisoner was , and on one of them remarking that he was the man who puffed the dart into Ottcy ' s eye , the prisoner drew his hand from his pocket , rushed upon them , struck a violent blow at thc'first of their party , who evaded it , but the prosecutor received it on the thigh , where it indicted a frightful gash , which the surgeon stated was five inches Ions , and in one part one and a-half inch deep . lie struck a < _jai _*\ , and cutanot ner of the party in the back , and the indictment included counts for that _cutting with the like intents . This was a new experiment , and
was objected to by the judge , who called upon the counsel for the prosecution to elect on which case he would proceed , who _thought the indictment was right , " because it was all one transaction "—a view of the law wholly untenable . Information was given ( 0 the constables , and two of them went to the prisoner ' s house to take him into custody . He was abed and asleep , and before awaking they examined his pocket ? , nnd found a knife with recent stains of blood upon it . They then awoke him and told him what tbey wanted with him , when he jumped up , swore he would not betaken by them , ran to bis pecket , as _wassupposed , for his knife , and behaved with the greatest violence . After retiring for a short time , the jury found him guilty ofthe felony . Sentence was respited .
March 15 . —Whitehead v . Great North op Exoland r » ilwat _cohpany , —accident and dbatn from Neolioesce—This was an action brought by Mr . F . Whitehead , a manufacturer in Saddleworth , to recover damages against the company for injuries which had caused the death ot his wife , and put him to expenses amounting to , in tho whole , £ 525 . The plaintiff ' s counsel said he understood it wascontended for the defendants in this trial , that they , a railway company , were not to be held responsible like other common carriers . But he _apprehended they were so j and that although they were no insurers against every kind of casualty , they nevertheless must be held as undertaking that no injury should be sustained , through fault or negligence of theirs in the
management of carriages and trains employed by them . The death of tho plaintiff ' s wife had in this easo been occasioned by an act of the company ' s negligence , either by the improper placinirof enrriages together , or by the excessive speed at which they had been driven , or by those two combined . lie now brought this action to obtain , first , indemnity for the sufferings he had endured during a long and most painful illness suffered by the unfortunate lady previous to her death _^ and , secondly , to reimburse him a large sum of money which he had been obliged to expend for her medical care , for nurses to attend her , _lodging , & c . ; to all of which expense he had been put by the _negligence or un & kilfulnesacomplained of . Ths principal witnesses for the plaintiff were Captain J .
Ilarland , Richmond , Yorkshire ; Mr . J . Meak , alderman , York ; Mr . Parsons , dentist , York ; and Mr . Watson , surveyor , Cumberland . They al ) , on the evening ofthe 4 th of October , 1 S 45 , got into thc mail train at Darlington , to proceed towards York . The plaintiff and his wife also entered a first class carriage in the same train , they being on their return from an excursion in the north , and having come to Darlington in a one-horse chaise , which with their horse they were taking on with them by the train . That train was considerably behind its regular time , having not arrived at Darlington until about twenty minutes to pi- * :, instead of five minutes to five , in the evening . On starting , it began to go at an unusual speed , about forty miles the hour or more . At about the
fourth mile , just over the bridge , near Croft , which thero crosses the Tees , and towards thi ! end of a curve which there is at that spot , several severe shocks were felt , and one , if not more of the carriages became turned over . _Mj-jor Parker , once the secretary oftlie company , was amongst the passengers , and tho station master spoke to him about the time . Captain Ilarland , Mr . Meak , and Mr . Watson said that the speed was greater than any they had before experienced ; and the former witness expressed his opinion that the placing of the trucks , with carriages on them , had contributed to the accident . The trucks , by the jamming up of the carriages , and getting off the rail , appeared to be smashed to pieces , and several ot the wheels were knocked off by contact
with the stone sleepers . Mr . Meak first perceived many yards of one of the rails to be thrown up as high as the top ofthe carriages . There wore 23 yards torn up . lie sat in the coupe of a _carriage , along with Mrs . Meak . They had his portmanteau between them , and the corner of one of tho trucks , which came next to their coupe , was forced into the place where they sat , and into the portmanteau . Mrs . Whitehead wns wounded by a similar breaking in nf one carriage upon the other , in which she was sitting . She received some dreadful wounds , having both her legs and one thigh broke , and a very serious injury besides on the back . The Burgeon who had attended the unfortunate lady at tho spot described how shockingly she had been wounded . His bill
alone for attendance was £ ' 51 6 * . od . She was alterwards attended by Mr Thorpe , and that gentleman stated her death to have occurred on tho 11 th of June . She died of the injuries received , ns beforementioned . The defendants' counsel having dispensed with formal proof oi' the railway tickets which plaintiff had ob aiued , one _bernx for his horse , the learned judge said , on looking at the printed notice , tbat the company would not take the risk of conveying horses , that it might be very well for companies not to take upon themselves such a risk as that , but some of them repudiated any other risks for themselves , and it was to be wondered that the legislature could allow them to go SO far in that way .
Thc plaintiff ' s expenses now claimed came to the sum of £ 525 . Mr Martin said he certainly should not contend that these companies , as carriers , were not liable , if a easo of negligence were proved ; buthe thought that was not done here , for it was neither shown that forty miles per hour was anything excessive for a railway train , nor that the placing of the trucks had been dangerous . It' the latter had really been the case , it was strange that Captain Ilarland , who said he had noticed them at Darlington , had not spoken about the tracks before he set off from that place
Northern Circuit-York. March 13.—Edmund ...
p * , * d _i >\ . n « . „ nmm t officer for _investi-Gineral Pasley , _^ e _govemmwu « dethe _, gating such cases had heen down , k . , t he inquiries into the cause of the _accitw * . '! . ? comi ) any had not said a word in condemnation 0 ¦ wa {| t 0 * or their servants on account of negligent ?* * . „ _•••„ . skill ; and _knowinethat . and tbe _p'wntitf . _**;?™ General Pasley , who waa now in York , the i . o was that the plaintiff had no ground for the a _'* _****^* tion against the company on which this action _* as grounded . The jury found for the plaintiff : damages the amount of the expenses incurred , £ 525 .
, OXFORD _.-Worcbstkr , March 13 . Arson . —James Campbell wascharged with having at Pinvoie set five to a barn , with intent to injure John Hurgan . On the 3 rd of February , the building in question contained a quantity of straw and agricultural implements . At an early hour in the morning , smoke was seen to proceed from it , and , in a few moments , flames shot up from the roof , and very speedily the whole was burnt to the ground . The conduct ofthe prisoner was most extraordinary ; he was the cause ofhis own detention and apprehension . On the day oftlie fire he met one ofthe witnesses , and said hehad been setting the blacksmith ' s barn on fire , and if anybody wanted him , he should bo found going on tho road to Worcester . The parly did not
then know of the arson , and consequently allowed the prisoner te go his way . At a late period of the day , hearing the news , he set off after him on the road he had mentioned , overtook , and finally brought hira back . On returning , the prisoner said he thought tho building belonged to Borne old farmer , or he should not have done it . Upon a box of lueil ' er matches being taken from his pocket , he said he had fired some buildings that morning at Evesham with their aid , and had done it to get into gaol . It subsequently appeared that the prisoner is also charged with another burning in Gloucestershire , and will be tried there at the ensuing assizes . Guilty . Sentenced to be transported for ten years . Riot . —William Button was indicted for having :,
at Bromsgrove , on the 2 M 11 of September , riotously and _tumultously _assembled , with others , and demolished the shop of Edward IIancox , and destroyed bellows and other implements used in the making of nails . The prosecutor had a _nailor's shop about fonr miles from Bromsgrove , and refused to join in the late strike of tbe _nailors in thai district . Several of those who so struck for wages assembled together and committed depredations upon the property of those who refused to join them , amongst whom was the prisoner , who , it was sworn , on the day named in the indictment , headed a mob , who effected an entry into
the prosecutor's shop , cut his bellows , and destroyed other implements used in his trade . For the defence 1 two witnesses were called , who saw the prisoner in : the market-place at Bromsgrove at two o'clock on the day named in the indictment , shortly before the offence alleged against the prisoner was committed . _: It appeared that he went by the nickname of " Butcher , " and as such was addressed by some of the riotous persons assembled . The jury found him j guilty . And his lordship , alter telling him he ought to be transported , sentenced him to one year ' s _irapri-¦ sonment and hard labour .
MIDLAND CIRCUlT _.-NoTiiNonAM . Mabch 15 . _—Neolbctof a _Luxatic—Joseph Large , one of the attendants at the Nottingham County Lunatic Asylum , was found guilty of having left an insane person , named Doubleday , by himself for a short time , contrary to orders , and who , during the prisoner's absence , committed suicide by strangling himself with his shirt . The prisoner was sentenced to be imprisoned six weeks . Curious Charge of _Poiaoiuxo . —Elizabeth Smith , 20 , and Sarah Taylor , 68 , were indicted for the murder of George Taylor , aged 36 . by havine eiven him
arsenic at various times . Smith was the deceased ' s housekeeper , and the other prisoner was his step-mother ; and itappeared from their own admissions that Smith had given him arsenic for the purpose of making him unwell , and thereby keeping him at home , as Smith , who was attached to him , greatly disliked his rambling from home and his habits of dissipation , in which scheme of reformation the stepmother joined . No new facts came out on the trial . One peculiarity of the case was , that no trace of arsenic had been detected in the stomach ; but the surgeon thought the poison might have passed away by vomiting . Verdict Not Guilty .
NORFOLK CIRCUIT .-Bedfokd . March 16 . —Arson . — James Goodliff , aged 40 , was charged with wilfully and feloniously setting fire to a stack of haulm , the property of Mr Addison , of Little Staughton , on the 25 th of November . The prosecutor and prisoner reside at a very short distance from each other , and the stack in question was discovered to be in flames at about ten o'clock at night , at which hour the prisoner roused the prosecutor and asked for a saddle and bridle , in order that he might saddle a horse ,. and set off for an engine to StNeot ' s . Having obtained those articles , the prfsoner rode off on one of the prosecutor ' s horses , but what became cf him after this did not very distinctly appear , for he was not seen at thc firo , which was
confined to the haulm stack . In tho course of the inquiry , which was very properly instituted , suspicion , however , attached itself to thc prisoner , who was shown to have been drunk at seven o ' clock on the night of the fire , and to have borrowed some _lucifer matches for the avowed object of lighting a pipe and candle from a friend , to whom he made a complaint of tho difficulty of getting work , and expressed himself to the effect , that "he knew what old Addison wanted , and that w & s a d—d good blazing , and that heshould have afore long . " In addition to these points , evidence was adduced relating to the details of the locality , and the correspondence of certain foot-prints with the boots of the prisoner ; one of tho witnesses concerning which latter piece of evidence triumphantly produced two portentous
impressions in clay , which were preserved and packed with great care in wooden boxes . These impressions are stated to have been made by the boots of the prisoner , and , at first sight , seemed to produce a great effect on the case , as they were taken to be tho originals , but , to the surprise of the whole court , it turned out on inquiry that they had been made by the witness himself after the fire for the purpose of comparison with tho originals , so that they did not carry the case much further against the prisoner than the boots themselves , Mr , Tozer having addressed the jury , commenting on the case as one which was not sufficient even to call on the prisoner to explain it , his lordship summed up , and the jury returned a verdict of Guilty . Sentenced te 15 years' transportation .
Ether A Safe Remedy. Mr. Cattlin, Surgeo...
ETHER A SAFE REMEDY . Mr . Cattlin , surgeon-dentist to the Caledonian Hospital , has addressed the following to the editor of tho Weekly Times : — The vapour of ether has long been known to possess the power of producing transient intoxication ,- and , therefore , the novelty of its recent exhibition consists in its administration , mixed with rather a large portion of common air , for the purposo of _depriving the patient of sensation under surgical operations . That ft possesses other than this most useful property cannot , however , be denied . Some of my patients have manifested its first important influence by singing , screaming , or struggling , and afterwards relapsed into a perfect state of unconsciousness , during which I have frequently extracted three largo molar tooth , and _sometiu-es as many as seven troublesome . - fangs , without the person being in tho
slightest degree aware of their removal . More generally , however , the patient , after breathing tbe mixed vapours for two or three minutes , after a little muscular ri gidity , reclines as if "in the arms of Morpheus ; " the hand , when raised , falling to the side—the pupil of the eje being mostly dilated—the pulse small and quick . Some few _pmons _. upon consciousness returning , exhibit many of the common effects of laughing-gas ; and I think this condition , in some instances , was induced by the prcma . ture application of exciting questions , in which respect visitors are very prone to he injudicious . Delicate females sometimes evince various slight symptoms of hysteria ; but the great majority of patients remain for a short time amusingly loquacious , or quickly arouse from pleasant dreams , although in three instances the dreaming was disturbed and uncomfortable .
Every patient has been carefully watched , A few , certainly , experienced a slight wu & _knest in the knees ; but only two out of upwards of sixty complained of some headache and _sie-kness after the inhalation of ether , to ono of whom it had been administered twiae , and to the other three times , at the same sitting . I have invariably refused the vapour to any patient evincing signs of congestion of tbe brain , heart , or lungs ; and ( without being prejudiced in favour of tbe remedy ) am strongl y impressed with Us harmlessncss in the bauds of any qualified gentleman , who will avoid its use in eases similar to tbe above , and discontinue the remedy upon the appearance of any unfavourable symptom _.
Hotel A**» Tavern-Keei-Ens' Provident In...
Hotel a **» _TAVERN-KEEi-Ens' Provident _Institi _* - _tio--. —The eighth annual meeting was held on Monday , at Craven Hotel , Craven-street , Strand . Mr . T . Clark , late of Windsor , presided . Frora tho report , read by Mr . Tapster , it appeared that tke required fund of £ 5 , 000 having been completed , the committee would be enabled to grant temporary relief to distressed members . The subscriptions and donations of tho past year had , with the previous b dance , amounted to £ 1 , 200 8 s . Gd ., of which _£ So 5 13-. 6 d . had been invested , making thc capital B ' . ock £ 4 761 10 s . 10 d ., leaving a balance of £ 100 0 s . 2 d . Since auditing this account additional donations had come in , so as to enable the committee to invest £ 228 3 s . 2 d . more , which would make their funded stock £ 5 , 000 . There had been a great increase of members , who numbered 248 , in addition to 745 honorary members .
Accident to Mb . Waguokn . —This indefatigable traveller , while crossing the Alps with Mr . Austin , the engineer and surveyor , was upset in his carriage . An avalar . che had fallen across the road , which had been cleared away only from half the breadth ti tho road . It heing night , the postilion did not see it , and he drove one wheel up the slope ofthe bank and overturned the carriage . Neither Mr . Wagborn ot his companion were , however , ia tho smallest degree hurt .
Jpwwe Jammp
_JPwWe _jammp
Ratepatino Claiisks.-On Monday «,*£"- Me...
Ratepatino CLAiisKs .-On Monday « , _* _£ " - meeting of electors of West Hackney , _TowIm _** - « lets , was held at the Tyson Arms , _Dalston ,, > S into consideration the recent vote of General _* _**« one of the members of the _Jiam ! ees > a J ! . _^ f Duncombe ' s motion for th < - repeal of the Rainn ,.- * Clauses of the Reform Act ; and in Sae * l J * **! tr _,. t occasion of SirW Clay ! ff _&** 3 * _/ _l _fte _riamlets , John _Mateson , Esq ., was _unaniZ _\ cai . - - .-l _tO the chair The Chairman coXft the electoi _-s present on the public spirit which 1 ? them to comfl forward on an occasion of such vast 5 portance . It _tC . opeared to him to be a sound 22 * tutional _principle tor the electors to canvass the ret . of their _representaV- ' _es in Parliament . ( IW bea » , The electors had reaH' _-n to complain of the vote j their representative , General Fox , on the motion 2 Mr Duncombe , for the rePe _» _-i _*> f the _Ratcpayi-it , Clauses of the Reform Act , and of the absence from his place in Parliament on that occasion of tbeir other representative , Sir W . _CVv * He ( the Chair man ) had observed that the tVhi' ? B . in o pposition ' were useful tothe public ; while in _t'ffice they seernJ
. paralysed and inefficient . He , _ther _.-fore , called on tho electors to make an effort tobe really repf * , _sentcd , and to adopt steps to that end , _** hould thoif present members refuse to carry out the * _irevaletfeeline ofthe Hamlets . ( Hear . ) Mr F . Clarke then proposed the first resolution— " Thai this meet _, ing thinks it necessary strongly to remonstrate w \[ General Fox on hisvote against Mr Duncombe's mo , t on for the repeal of the Ratepaying Clauses of the Reform Act , a clause by which thousands of their honest and industrious neighbours nre _deprived o the elective franchise , and do hereby convey to him tbeir opinion , that erery opportunity ought to t , embraced by their representatives to creatly extend the numberof electors . " In moving that resolution
he considered the Ratepaying Clause of tho Reform Act unwise and impolitic , that it was a tax upon labour , and that it onpht on principle to be repealed , and more particularly as labour was , in proportion , more heavily taxed than real property . The _rcsoln . tion was duly seconded , and unanimously adopted , A resolution disapproving of tbe absence of Sit V " , Clay from his place in Parliament on the occasion in question , was then duly proposed , seconded , and unanimously adopted ; and the chairman was requested to convey both to the respective members . Waste _1-akd Society—The half-yearly general _meeting ofthe Irish Waste Land Improvement So * ciety was held on Saturday , at the King ' s Arras Tavern , Poultrv , for the purpose of receiving a report
as to the condition of its affairs and future prospects ,, The Earl of Devon in the chair . Colonel Robinson , R . E ., read the report , from which it appeared that ' in the month of March last , the gallant colonel went on a tour of inspection over the society ' s estates in Ireland , with a view of ascertaining the system of management pursued ant ? the future prospects of thi society . The stewards had been requested to induce the tenants , if possible , to abandon thc sowing of po . tatos , as it was _imrjossiMe to distinanish between the good and bad seed . The appeal in some instances was _successf 1 , but the Connaught peasantry could not be induced to give up their favourite potato ; and hence , compared with others , they had suffered frightfully . There was £ 1 . 784 due upon the shares
of the SBcietv . the balance in cash was £ 69118 s . Id ., and the liabilities figured £ 12 , 461 18 s . Id . There _, port , after _civine a vivid and painful picture of the " misery and desolation now existing in the sister kin'dom , " and after expressine fears that the worst was not arrived at , stated that the society ' s tenants would be remunerated for their improvements , would not be charged their rents , and would have seed given tbem of all kinds on loans ; and also that there was little dancer of their being visited by the unparalleled privations which were inflicting and destroying the other inhabitants of Ireland . Tho
noble chairman , after commenting on tho report , and stating that , if possible , tho society would borrow money of the government to carry out their object _, said that it was satisfactorily proved that Ireland had within itself ample resources for its wants if they were properly daveloped . ( Hear . ) If _thosa resources had the benefit of capital , and tbe personal superintendence ofits own landlords , they would convert the present horrors existing in Ireland into a medium for thc future advancement of thatcountry and the amelioration of the condition of her people , ( Hear , hear . ) The annual election of officers having taken place , the meeting separated .
Irish Co '' fei > e : _atio'' —On Sunday , a preliminary meeting took place at _Cartwrii-ht ' s Coffee Ilouse , Redcross-street , to form a branch of this society , and to open a public reading-room . Mr Sullivan took tho chair . Mr Cartwright was elected treasurer , and Mr Clancy , secretary . Several resolutions wero passed to effect the objects of the _meeting The _readinsr-room will be open for members at 2 o'clock , p . m ., every Sunday . Tho service of a library is already at the use of the society , composim ; several hundred volumes , including Puffey ' s _McCormick's , and Davis ' s works . History of Ireland , Repeal in the Corporation , Mercenary Informers , etc . The Labourer , _Peojrfc ' _s Journal , Chambers' ; London Journal , with the following _i-apers . Nation , Northern Star , Times , Advertiser , Daily Sun , & c . A public meeting will be held on Sunday evening , ( to-morrow ) at eight o ' clock .
The GovK * _mt- _* _- . _* XT . _Sc-ikm _* - of _Educat'OS . —Oa Monday evening a nublic meeting was held at the Tabernacle , Shoreditch , to take into consideration the scheme of education recently propounded by her Majesty ' s ministers . Mr . Josiah Conder alluded to the success which had attended the exertions of the Dissenters when Sir J . Graham introduced his education scheme , and expressed a hope that the same decided courso will be adopted with respect to the present measure . Education was the business of the people at large . It was not the business of tho government . Dr . Davis , the Rev . Dr . Campbell , the Rev . II . Richards , the Rev . R . Parsons , and other _stentlemen _, severally addressed the meeting , and resolutions denunciatory of the government
education scheme , and pledging the meeting to oppose it , were carried . PnOTECTION OF FEMALES FROM SeDCCTIOX . —A meeting of the supporters of this institution was held on Monday at the London Tavern , Sir Edwin Buxton . Bart ., in the chair , in the absence of Lord Robert _Grosvenor , M . P ., from whom an apology was read . The object of the meeting was to agree to resolutions expressive of their approbation of the Bill now beforo Parliament , for the purposes " of the more effectual suppression of trading in seduction and prostitution , and for the better protection of females ; " and praying tho Legislature to pass the same with as little delay as possible . The Bill contains bat thirteen short clauses , the substance of
which is as follows : —Clause 1 provides that any person procuring illicit intercourse between parties shall be punished in the same manner as the keeper of a brothel ; clause 2 imposes the same punishment upon any parent who may aid his or her daughter in her moral destruction ; clause 3 describes what the Act holds to bo a brothel ' , clause 1 gives power to convict summarily the keeper of , or servant , or assistant in a brothel , tho punishraeBt for the first offence to be three , and the second six months , the third , or any subsequent offence , two years' imprisonment : clause 5 any person sharing
theprofits ofa brothel , or the wages of prostitution , f 0 be proceeded against as the keeper , Ac . ; clause _i C describes the mode of proceeding on summary con- viction ; clauses 7 and 8 describe the mode of pro * ¦ ceeding on appeal ; clause 0 empowers the avoidance > of any demise of a brothel upon conviction of the ) keeper ; clause 10 prohibits the removal of proceed- ¦ ings by means of certiorari , or their being quashed I for want of form . The remaining 3 clauses refer to ) matters of form . The chairman , the Earl of Mount- - cashel , the Rev . Mr . Hughes , and several others _s spoke to the resolutions , which were unanimously y agreed to .
London DisTnid _LEnun Gammers . —A meeting g of this body was held on Friday evening , when the ie following resolution was adopted : — That the meeting was of opinion tbat the time haa id arrived for the London district letter carriers imine'ili * li . ately to lay their grievances before the Lords of tl"" lie Treasury , by memorial , nnd that a deputation of twelve veof their body , with the & ttendance and assistance of two , voi or more members , of the Ilouse of Commons , should wait lit ; upon their lordships , praying them to take their case _isei into their serious consideration , and grant them a _scaleile of salary increasing according to years of service , as as
recommended by the commissioners of revenue inqulrjirji In their eighteenth report . Also compensation for theirein loss of extra duty money , TheGeneral Post _lettercarrinsHS being now in the receipt of the same for their officiaHa ! losses . They trusted that their lordships would notnoi lose sight of the facts that , while the Genetal _Post-osl supernumerary letter carrier commenced his du ties at ai a salary of 23 s ., the London district letter-carrier _beganjaii with 19 s . a week only , with the disidvantage of _haviuftiut frequently to try to maintain two houses , in _consequt-iici-iic : _ofhis liability to be sent to numerous places within l ' i II or thirteen miles of London , to do duty at various timeitaei which was not the case with the former : and HO Beniordon
Omj were receiving 25 s . per week , out «¦> nearly 900 meHnei tho remainder at 20 s . per week only . Great numbers crs i the seniors and juniors performing 22 deliveries pe pi man , and nine collections for those respective _snlnris ' rieB whilst many of tbe General Post letter carriers were » o n _« In the receipt of 23 s ., 25 s ., and 3 h » . per week for sir ss deliveries per man ; and some of the latter , In receipt tpt 25 s . per week , were only about four years in the _sevvic-vio none ot whom performed more than two deliveries les the day , and the evening sorting duty , hut no _collectiofctio : At the same time many of the senior London distriistn letter carriers ha , * ' , been in the service 30 years , and son sol 40 years .
Saw-Ousi " Bui-Ad.—Sir J. F. W. Horschcl...
_Saw-ousi " Bui-ad . —Sir J . F . W . Horschcl _stat'tatt that saw-d _' _ust itself is susceptible of conversion in i « a substance bearing no remote analogy to bread ; a : ; « though-certainly less palatable than that of flo < fh » yet no way disagreeable , and both wholesome » e _» _digej ' tible , as well as highly nutritive . '' ' . HE Poisonings at Clavbbino . —Sarah _ChesbXsba _w ranged upon three indictments in this case , _^ _, ;; \ riedat Cheltenham a few days singe , Thej * ieji _returatd _verdicta oi " Not guilty , "
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), March 20, 1847, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_20031847/page/2/
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