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THE NORTHERN STAR. June^ is^
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WEST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE
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The Gbeat Biutaix St**a.w-Si«p. —This stupendous iron specimen of naval architecture arrived at
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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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The Northern Star. June^ Is^
THE NORTHERN STAR . June _^ _is _^
West Riding Of Yorkshire
WEST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE
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vmSUMUER SESSIONS . N _™ _™ - . _tc _^ pr -EBY GIVEN , that the Mdsununei ° 2 _? ? oS M-tf _Tof the Peace for the West _^ _^ _SA * _B be opened at Smmon , " _^ _iSSSi * J _ofSi _neSTat Ten ofthe _n v _^ f _fteForenoon ; and hy adjoumment from thence _^^ _oSa _^ Anroan , on _WEDKEsnAT _, the 2 nd day 25 S £ _-onthof ion , at Ten of the Clock in the Forenoon ; and _: dso , hy _fhiA' * _rAdjourinn- _» tfi * _omthenre , _win he holden at BorHEKHAS _" , on Mosdat , the _7 fh day of the same month of Joxt , at half-past Ten of the Clock in theForenoon , when all Jurors , Suitors , Persons bound by Becognisance , and others having business at the said several Sessions , are _required to attend the Court on the several days , and at the several Hours above mentioned . Solicitors are required to take _Notice that the Order -of Removal , copies of tbeNotices of Appeal , and examination of _** he Panp <* r _, aw _-paired to be filed with , the Clerk ofthe Peace oa ¦*•"• entry of the Appeal : —And that no Appeals against Removal Orders can be heard unless the Chairman is also furnished by the Appellants with a copy ofthe Order of Removal , of the Notice of Chargeability , ofthe Examination of the Pauper , and of the Not ice and grounds of Appeal . AndNotice is also hereby Given , That at the said General Quarter Sesaons of the Peace to be holden at Skipton aforesaid , an Assessment for the necessary expenses of the said Biding for tbe half year commencing the 1 st day of October next , will be laid at the "hour of Twelve o'CIock at Soon . C . H . ELSLEV , Cleric of the Peace . Clerk ofthe Peace ' s Office , Wakefield , 9 th June , 1845 .
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LIST OF BOOKS , PAMPHLETS , & e . " rUBLISHED ASD SOLD BT ABEL HEYWOOD , 58 , OLDHAM-STREET , MANCHESTER . London , by J . Watson , St . Paul' salley , Patcrnoster-row ; II . Hetherington , Holywell-street , Strand ; J . Cleave , Shoe-lane , Fleet-street ; and by order of any bookseller and uewsvendor in the country . PRICE 2 s . 6 d ., in cloth , or in & nr parts at 6 d . each , "A Practical "Work on the Management of Small Farms . " By F . O'Connor , Esq . . Pries 2 s . * 3 d _., handsomely done np in cloth , with a portrait of Baron Rolfe , and new title , " The Trials of Feargus O'Connor , Esq ., andFtfty-eight Chartists , at Lancaster , on a charge of Sedition , Conspiracy , Tumult , and -Riot , " This edition was originally published at 6 s . 6 d . in doth , or in eight numbers at id . each . A . H . having _purchased tin ? whole stock , oners them at the low price of 2 s . Cd . per copy . Parties requiring odd numbers to make ap sets should apply immediately , or otherwise they _canxot be obtained . Price Is ., cloth , "A Rational School Grammar , and Entertaining Class-Hook . " By William Hill . Price Is ., cloth , "A Companion" to the above . By WiffiamHiU . Price 3 d ., in wrapper , " The land and its Capabilities , *' and "Repeal of the Union - ** two lectures delivered at Manchester . By Feargus O'Connor , Esq .. Partl . > priee 6 _d ., "Biology : "being an inquiry into the -cause of natural death , or death from old age , and developing an entirely new and certain method of preserving active and healthful life for an extraordinary period . " By "Br . P . _Sewbotham . Price Is ., by post Is . Cd ., " One Hundred and Fifty Receipts for _mai-Trig _. calces , gingerbread , costards , curds , reams , patties , pies , tarts , puddings , sweetmeats , jellies , & c" By Miss Leslie . Price 6 s ., cloth , 12 mo ., "Mackintosh' s Electrical Theory of the Pniverse . _" By T . S . Mackintosh . For ihe convenience of purchasers this work is also issued in numbers , at 3 d . each . Price ls .-Id ., " Au Inquiry into the Nature of Responsi bility , as deduced from savage justice , civil justice , and aodal justice . * - By T . S . Mackintosh . Price 1 b . 6 < L , doth , 12 mo ., " The Political Text Book : bung extract * from the works of scarce and eminent writer---, arranged under various heads . " By William Carpenter . Price 2 d , " The Labouring Classes . " "Anexcellent ptapilet , ' --Bo * ton ( American ) CyarUrlyBevkw . Price 8 d . , 132 pages , " Rousseau ' s Social Contracts ; or , "Principles of Political Rights . "
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AN EFFECTUAL REMEDY FOR BILIOUS , LIVER , AND STOMACH COMPLAINTS . "" Out ofthe ground hath the Lord caused Medicines to grow ; and he that is wise will not despise them : for with such doth lie heal men , and taketh away their pains . "—Eccles . xxxviii . 4 and 7 . AS a Preserver of Health , and a gentle yet efficacious remedy for Indigestion , and all disorders originating from a morbid action of the stomach and liver , STIRLING'S PILLS have met with more general approbation than any medicine yet discovered , requiring no restraint of diet or confinement during their use . Tbey are mildin their operation and comfortablein their effect ; and may be -taken at any age or time without danger from cold or wet They speedily remove the causes that produce disease , and restore health and vigour to the whole system . For females they are invaluable , as they remove obstructions , promote a regular circulation , and improve the complexion , giving the skin a beautiful , dear , and blooming appearance , which by iheir use may be retained to ihe latest period oflife . Also for children they are the best medicine that can be used , as they expel worms , carry off crudities , 4 c , from the stomach and intestines , by which they prevent illness , and lay the foundation of good health for future years . Free livers , who are subject to head-ache , giddiness , drowsiness , irregularity of the bawds , nervous irritability , Ac , should never be ' without them , for , by their prompt administration on the first symptoms of illness , fits , apoplexy , gout , and many other dangerous complaints , may be prevented or cured . They are particularly recommended to officers of the army and navy , and persons going abroad , as a preventive of those diseases to frequently arising from heat and change of climate . Prepared and sold by J . Vf . SimtrsQ _, Pharmaceutical Chemist , in boxes at ISJiL , 2 s . 3 d ., and 4 s . Cd ., each , and can be had of all respectable medicine venders in the _fcngdom . Thegennine has the name on the stamp . * * * Ask for Stirling's Stomach Pills .
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TILE TRULY-WONDERFUL CURES OF ASIRMA AND CONSUMPTION , COUGHS , COLDS , _d-c . "Which are everywhere performed by DR . LOCOCK'S PULMONIC WAFERS , H ATE long established them as the most certain , perfect , and speedy -remedy in existence for all disorders ofthe breath and lungs . It is not possible in the limits of this notice to give any -great number of the immense mass of testimonials which _arcconswntiyrecdvi-dbytheproprietors . The following will , however , be read with interest :- — CUBES IN LIVERPOOL . From Mr . P . Roberts , Chemist , Ranelagh-street , Liver pool . " January 2 nd , ISio . " Gentlemen , —I send yon two cases of cures which I have received since my last , and I think it would be doing good to advertise the Wafers in Liverpool , as they give very great satisfaction to all who take them . They are quite the leading article for coughs and colds this winter . "Yours , Arc . P . Roberts . " "RAPID CURE OF COUGH AND DIFFICULTY OF BREATHING . " Hale , near Liverpool , Dec . 10 th , 18 « . " Sir , —1 write to inform yon of the great benefit I have received from taking Locock ' s Wafers , which you recommended tome . I was so much oppressed at my chest , that * - , when I lay down , a coughing fit came on with such violence that I have often thought I should not lire to seo the morning ; hut now I can sleep a whole night without coughing , after taking only two boxes of the Wafers . ( Signed ) "J . Hilts . u To Mr . P . Roberts , Bandagh-street . " AKOTHER CURE OF COUGH AND HOARSENESS . "Parliament-street , Liverpool , Jan . 1 st , 1515 . "Sir , —It is with much pleasure I bear testimony to the extraordinary power of Locock ' s Pulmonic Wafers * . I had been troubled with a cough and hoarseness fornearlv two years , without relief , when I was induced to try _lacock-s Wafer * - , the effects of which were soon -risible , for one large Wx ( 2 s . 9 d . ) "has quite cured me . I hare since recommended them to several of my friends , and they have also experienced the greatest relief from them . ' " I remain yours , ever grateful , ,, « , ,. ,. _ "Johs _WttUAKS . _** ¦ To Mr . P . Roberts , Ranelagh-street . " ANOTHER SUBPRISBTG CURE OF ASTHMA . The Declaration of W . Wright , coachman to A . Spottiswood , Esq , Hockley , near Dorking , Surrey . "January 16 th , 1845 . "My wife laboured under an asthma for upwards of four years . She had the best advice to be procured , but without receiving the least "benefit ; bur , on _th _» contrary , she continued to get worse . Her suffering from her breathing and cough was dreadful ; and I never expected she could _i-os-ably recover . The first week she commenced takinj ; - Locock ' s Wafers , she found more relief than from anything she had ever tried before j and she is now , I am liapjiy to spy , in the midst of winter , as free from congh or ailment as ever she was in her life in tact , she is perfectly enr-d . "I ri ; -: a be happy to repl y to any inquiries on the subject " _Thcp-nk .:: ,:. s of many hundred cures may be had from etery agui tiucughMt the kingdom and on fhe continent . Ds . _Locccs ' s _Wafeks give instant relief , and a rapid Cure of atlhmas , consumption , coughs , colds , and all disorders of the breath and lungs . To _Sis-ii-iis and Public Sfeakebs they are invaluable , as in a few "hours they remove aU hoarseness , andincrease the power and fl-adbflity of the voice . They have a most pleasant taste . Price Is . _ljd ., 2 s . Sd ., and lis . per box . Agents-Da Silva and Co ., 1 , BrideJanc , Fleet-street , London . Sold ijy one or _moreagents in every town throughout the Mng-CABT 10 H . _—^ Toprotertthepubhcfrom _Marions _iraitanZxtn _% _£ _** ' _?* ' ' Hono ' _*** e _^ _mmissioners have -wornl _^ f * _£ Q V ** _*> 0 Tltsiae _****• ¦*• 52 * _££ T ? r \ Wafas _' " * Ietters _ra _» « d swan , without which none are genuine . _**» ldbj * _HMedicva-j Tenders ,
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- I POPULAR WORKS NOW PUBLISHING BY W . DUGDALE , 37 , HOLYWELL-STREET , STRAND . NE W WORK BY EUGENE SUE , "DE ROHAN ; OR , THE COURT CONSPIRATOR , " in penny numbers and fourpenny parts . The first part and number seven are published this day . Translated _expressly for tliis edition , and nothing omitted . THE WANDERING JEW , No . 33 , and Part 8 , is out , and iB expected to "be completed in forty-two numbers . THE MYSTERIES OF PARIS , uniform with the above , is progressing . Part 5 and No . 20 are ready . Will be speedily finished in about thirty numbers . * # * Order the Nonpareil edition . The Mysteries of Paris may also be had in sixty penny numbers , or fifteen parts at fourpence each ; being the first translation in the English language , and the only one that contains all " the original edition before the author had curtailed it to please the fastidious taste ofa too prurient public . This editit » n hasfifly engravings , ispiinted in good bold type , and the whole , handsomely bound in red , in one volume , may be had for Is . * # # A liberal allowance to dealers . Also in two volumes octavo , neatly bound , VOLTAIRE'S _PHILOSOPHICALDICTTOXARY , without abridgment or mutilation , containing every word of the edition in six volumes published at £ 218 s . The first volume has a medallion _likeness'of the author , and the second a full-length engraving of Voltaire as he appeared in his seventieth year . To tiie first volume is prefixed a copious Memoir of his Life and Writings . Every care has been taken to "ke » p the text correct , so that it may remain a lasting monument of the genius and indomitable perseverance of the author in enlightening and liberating his fellow creatures . The universal fame of Voltaire ; the powerful blows which he dealt to superstition and tyranny , from which they will never recover , have long rendered this book celebrated above all others , as the great advocate of freedom and humanity , and the undoubtable assailant of tyranny , whether spiritual or militant . For beauty of typography and correctness of the text , the publisher will challenge competition—and for cheapness he will defy all . The two volumes contain 1276 pages , and may be had in 120 penny numbers , thirty parts at fourpence each , or in two volumes , handsomely bound and lettered , price 12 s . Sold by all booksellers , The WORKS of THOMAS PAINE , uniform with Voltaire ' s Dictionary , to be completed in one volume , or sixty penny numbers , each number containing sixteen pages of good , dear , and readable type . The first part has a bold and excellent portrait of Paine , after Sharpe , from a painting by Romney . Strange as it may appear , there has yet been no complete and cheap edition of the works of this celebrated man . Richard Carlile placed them beyond the reach of the working classes when he pubUshed them for £ 2 2 s , the Political Works alone , and the Theological Works for 10 s . 6 < L It is calculated tbat the whole will not exceed sixty numbers at onc penny each , or fifteen parts at fourpence . Eight numbers are now published , and the succeeding parts will be issued withrapidity . VOLTAIRE'S ROMANCES , NOVELS , and TALES . The celebrity which these famous Tales have obtained in all European and American languages renders all comment superfluous . For wit , sarcasm , and irony they stand unrivalled . This wiU be the first uniform and complete edition , and will comprise the following celebrated works : —Candide , or AUfor the Best ; Zadig ; The Huron , or the Pupil of Nature ; The White BuU : The World as it Goes ; The Man of Forty Crowns * , The Princess of Babylon ; Memnon thc Philosopher ; Micromegas ; Plato ' s Dream ; Babebec , or the Fakirs ; The Two Comforters , Sic , Sic . Six parts , fourpence each , and twenty-four penny numbers , are now ready . The remainder will speedily follow . The D 1 EGESIS ; being a discovery of the origin , evidences , and early history of Christianity never before or elsewhere so fully and faithfully set forth . By the Rev . Robert Tatxos . Complete in fifty-four numbers , at one penny each , or thirteen parts , fourpence each ; or may be had , neatly bound in cloth andlettered , price 5 s . THE DEVIL'S PULPIT , or the Astro-Theological Lectures ofthe Rev . Robert Taylor , published under that title , complete in forty-eight numbers , the two last comprising a "Memoir ofthe Life and Writings of the Reverend Author . This work was formerly published in twopenny numbers—now reduced in price to one penny , AU the numbers are reprinted as they fell out , so that sets may be constantly obtained . The MIRROR of ROMANCE , in one volume , containng four hundred pages quarto , with upwards of fifty iUustrations , and the following cdebrated works : — Leone Leoni , by George Sand , now Madame Dudevant , one of the most powerful romances ever written . The Physiology of a Married Man , by Paul de Kock , with upwards of fifty illustrations , is given entire . Jenny ; ov The Unfortunate Courtezan , bythe same author , containing a most affecting moral , drawn from real life . The Bonnet Rouge , or Simon the Radical , a tale of the French Revolution , —a work of great merit . The White House , a romance by Paul de Kock—Memoirs of an Old Man at twenty-fire ; a most piquant aud amusing tale . _Mancai . of Fbeemasonht , verbatim from the editions pubUshed by Carlile , for 15 s . AU the above may be had in one volume 5 s ., or in ten Parts at 6 d . each . A Uberal allowance to the trade _. In oue thick volume , price five shiUings , The Manual of Fbeehasonbt , Parts I . II . and III ., as pubUshed by Carlile at 5 s . each , may now be had uniform in size with Chambers' Miscellany , aud most elegantly printed . This edition contains the prefaces and introduction to each part , which are omitted in tbe other reprints . Part I . contains a manual of the three first degrees , with an introductory " keystone to the Royal Arch . Part IL contains the Royal Arch and Knights Templar Degrees , with an explanatory introduction to the Science , Part III . contains the degrees of Mark Mace , Mark Master Architect , Grand Architect , Scotch Master or Superintendent , Secret Master , Perfect Master , and upwards of twenty other associations , to which is prefixed an explanatory introduction to the science , and a free translation of some of the Sacred Scriptare names . The parts may be had separate ; parts I . and II ., ls . 6 tL each , and part III ., 2 s . Hay be had of all Booksellers . Paul de Rock ' s Works , full and free translations : — NEIGHBOUR RAYMOND , price Is ., a most amusing tale . The BARBER OF PARIS , 2 s . SUSTAVUS ; or the Young Rake , 2 s . GEORGETTE ; or the Scrivener ' s Niece , 2 s . BROTHER JAMES , 2 s . MY WIFE'S CHILD , ls . _6 d . THE MAN WITH THREE PAIR OF breeches , 2 s . TQURLOUROU ; or tho Conscript , 3 s . Also , INDIANA , by George Sand , a Romance of Illicit Love , 3 s . FERRAGUS , THE CHIEF OP THE DEVOURERS , by U . de Balzac , ls . 6 d . WiU be Mowed up by others of the same writer . ON THE POSSIBILITY OF _LTMlTWii _# _oPULOUSNESS . AN ESSAY ON POPULOUSNESS—to which is added the THEORY OF PAINLESS EXTINCTION , by Marcus , price ls . * # * The celebrated pamphlet where it is proposed to forbid the intercourse of Man and Woman when they are poor , and to make itfdony when a child is the result . The Theory of Painless Extinction coolly discusses the method of extinguishing life , when the intruder has not property immediate or expectant to support that life . The MONK , by Lewis , verbatim from , the Original ; twenty-four plates , price 2 s . 4 d . MARRIAGE PHYSIOLOGICALLY DISCUSSED . In four parts . —Part I . On the Necessity of Marriage ; Precodty ; Effects of Wedlock . Part II . Instructions in Courting ; Sudden Lore ; Organizations ; Madness cured by Matrimony ; the Courtezan Reclaimed . Part III . Limitation of Ufe justified ; Protectors—their utility and general adoption . Part IV . —Real causes of Sterility ; remedies . From the French of Jean Dubois , 2 s . Cd , FRUITS OF PHILOSOPHY ; or , private advice to young married people . Containing the various hypothesis of Generation ; Structure ofthe Female Organs ; Conceptions ; Remedies against Barrenness and Impotency ; with a curious anatomical plate . 2 s . Cd . AU the above , and more extensive Catalogue , may be had from every vender of periodicals . AU orders punctually attended to .
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A new and important Edition of the Silent Friend Human Frailty . the fodbteenth edition . Just PubUshed , Price 2 s . Gd ., in a sealed envelope , and sent free to any part of the United Kingdom on the recdpt ofa Post Office Order . for 3 s . 6 d . THE SILENT FRIEND . A MEDICAL WORK on the INFIRMITIES ofthe GENERATIVE SYSTEM , in both sexes ; being an enquiry into the concealed cause that destroys physical energy , and the ability of manhood , ere vigour has estabUshed her empire : —ivith Observations ou the baneful effects of SOLITARY INDULGENCE and INFECTIONlocal and constitutional WEAKNESS , NERVOUS IRRlI TATION , CONSUMPTION , and on the partial or total EXTINCTION of the REPRODUCTIVE POWERS * with means of restoration : the destructive effects of _Gonorrhea Gleet , Stricture , and Secondary Symptoms are explained in a familiar manner ; the Work is Embellished with Engravings , representing the deleterious influence of Mercury on the skin , by eruptions on the head , face , and body ; with approved mode of cure for both sexesfoUowed by observations on the obligations of Mar ! RIAGE , and healthy perpetuity ; with directions for the removal of certain Disqualifications : the whole pointed out to _suffering humanity as a "SILENT FRIEND" to be consulted without exposure , and with assured confidence of success . By R . and L . PERRY and Co ., CoNSCLTisa _Scsgeoss , London . Published by the Authors ; sold by Heaton , and Buckton , Briggate ! Leeds ; Strange , Paternoster-row ; Hannay and Co ., 630 , Oxford-street ; Purlris , Compton-street , Soho , London ; Guist , 51 , _BuU-street , Birmingham ; and by aU bookseUers in town and country . OPINIONS _OE TBE MESS , "We regard tte work before ns , the "Silent Friend , " as a work embmung most clear and practical views of a series of complaints hitherto little understood , and passed over by the majority ofthe medical profession , for ¦ what reason we are at a loss to know . We must * , however , confess that a perusal of this work has left such a favourable hr . pression on our minds , that we not only recommend , bnt cordially wish every one who is the victim of past foUy , or suffenngfrom indiscretion , to profit by the advice contained in its pages . " —Joe and Argas ,
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" The Authors of the "SUent Friend" seem to be tbo _^ roughly conversant with the treatment ofa class of complaints which are , we fear , too prevalent in the present day . _Theperspicuovis style in which _thisbook is written , and the valuable hints it conveys to those who are app _?"** r hensive of entering the marriage state , _cannot-fail to ¦ to . commend it to ' a ! careful perusal . " -- Bra . " This work should be read by all who value health and wish to enjoy life , for the truisms therein contained defy all doubt—Farmers' Journal . THE CORDIAL BALM OF Sl'RIACUM . Is a gentle stimulant and renovator of the impaired functions of Ufe , and is exclusively directed to the cure of such complaints as arise from a disorganization of the Generative System , whether constitutional or acguired , loss of sexual power , and debiUty arising from SyphiUtic disease ; and is calculated to afford decided relief to those who , by early indulgence in soUtary habits , have weakened the powers of their system , and fallen into a state of chronic debiUty , by which the constitution is left in a deplorable state , and that nervous mentality kept up which places the individual in a state of anxiety for the remainder of life . The consequences arising from this dangerous practice , are not confined to its pure physical result , but branch to moral ones ; leading the excited de . viating mind into a fertile field of seducive error—into a gradual but total degradation of manhood—into a pernicious application of those inherent rights which nature wisely instituted for the preservation of her species ; bringing on premature decrepitude , and aU the habitudes of old age . Constitutional weakness , sexual debility , obstinate gleds , excesses , irregularity , obstructions of certain evacuations , total impotency and barrenness are effectually removed by this invaluable medicine . Sold in Bottles , price Us . each , or the quantity of four in one Family bottle for 33 s ., by which one lis , bottle is saved . Prepared only by Messrs . PERRY and Co ., Surgeons , 19 , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London . None ave genuine without the signature of R andL . PERRY ana Co . impressed in a stamp on the outside of eachwrapper _. to imitate wluch is felony of the deepest dye . The Five Pound cases ( the purchasing of which wUl be a say of one pound twelve shUUngs ) may be had as usual at 19 , Berners-street , O-rfbrd-strcet _, London . Patients in the country who require a course of this admirable medicine , should send Five Pounds by letter , which will entitle them to the Ml benefit of such advantage . May be had of aU BookseUers , Druggists , and Patent Medicine Venders in town and country throughout the United Kingdom , the Continent of Europe and America , of whom may be had the " Silent FniENn . " Messrs . PERRY expect , when consulted by letter , the usual fee of one pound , without which no notice whatever can be taken of the communication . , Patients are requested to be as minute as possible in the detaU of their cases . PERRY'S _PCRIFYHSG- SPECIFIC TILLS , Price 2 s . 9 d ., 4 s . 6 d ., and Us . per box , ( Observe the signature of R . and L . PERRY and Co . on the outside of each wrapper ) aro weU known throughout Europe and America , to be the most certain and effectual cure ever discovered for every stage and symptom of a certain disease , in both sexes , including Gonorrhoea , Gleets , Secondary Symptoms , Strictures , Seminal Weakness , Deficiency , and aU diseases ofthe Urinary Passages , without loss of time , confinement , or hindrance from business . They have effected the most surprising cures , not only in recent and severe cases , but when salivation and aU other means have failed ; they remove Scorbutic Affections , Eruptions on any part ofthe body , Ulcerations Scrofulous or Venereal Taint , being calculated to cleanse the blood from aU foulness , counteract every morbid affection , and restore weak and emaciate . I constitutions to pristine health and vigour . Messrs . Perry and Co ., Surgeons , may be consulted as usual , at 19 , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London , punctually , from Eleven in the morning until Eight in the evening , and on Sundays from Eleven till One . Only one persona ! visit is required from a country patient to enable Messrs . Perry and Co . to give such advice as will be the means of effecting a permanent and effectual cure , after aU other means have proved ineffectual . N . B . —Country Druggists , BookseUers , Patent Medicine Venders , Sic , can be suppUed with any quantity of Perry's Purifying Specific Pitts , and Cordial Balm of Syriacum , with the usual allowance to Gie Trade , by most of the prindpal Wholesale Patent Medicine Houses in London . Sold by Mr . Heaton , 7 , Briggate , Leeds , of whom may be had tha " 8 _'dent Friend . "
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CHOICE OF A SITUATION Domestic Bazaar , 326 , Oxford Street , tamer of _Rtoent Circtwt . WANTED , for Large and SmaU Families , a number of FEMALE SERVANTS of every description , with straightforward characters . This demand is created through the arrangements being highly approved by the NobiUty , Gentry , and the PubUc generally . Ladies are in attendance to engage Domestics from Ten to Five o ' clock daily . There are Rooms for waiting in to be hired ; not any charge made until engaged if preferred . To those who wfll take places of All Work no charge whatever . Servants from thc country are much inquired for . There aro always a few vacancies for Footmen and Grooms , N . B . Upon applying do not stand about the doors or windows unnecessarily .
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Just _puoKsRea _" , Fifteenth Edition , _utustrated wiw cases , and twdve fine engravings , price 2 s . Sd ,, in a sealed envelope , and sent free to any part of the kingdom , on the receipt ofaposiofflce order for 3 j . 6 d . BRODIE ON DEBILITY IN MAN . A MEDICAL WORK on nervous debiUty and the concealed cause ofthe decline of physical strength and loss of mental capacity , with remarks on the effects of solitary indulgence , neglected gonorrhoea , syphilis , secondary symptoms , & c , and mode of treatment ; followed by observations on marriage , with proper directions for the removal of aU disqualifications . Illustrated with engravings , showing the evils arising from the use of mercury , and its influence on the body _. By Messbb . Bbodie and Co ., Consulting Surgeons , 27 , Montague-street , Russell-square , London . PubUshed and sold by thc Authors , at their residence ; also by Sherwood , GUbert , and Piper , Paternoster-row ; Mr . Noble , 114 , Chancery-lane ; Mr . Purkiss , Comptonstreet , Soho ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; Barth , 4 , Brydgcs-street , Govent-gardcn ; Gordon , 146 , _LeadenhaUstreet , London ; Roberts , Derby ; Sutton , . Review-office , Nottingham ; Gardiner , Gloucester ; Fryer , Bath ; Harper , Cheltenham ; Keene , Bath ; Cooper , Leicester ; Caldicott , Wolverhampton ; D'EgviUe , Worcester ; Jeyes , Northampton ; _Ousley , Shrewsbury ; Parker , Hereford ; Turner , Coventry ; Gibson , Dudley ; Slatter , Oxford ; Newton , Church-street , and Ross and Nightingale , Chronicleo & ce , Liverpool ; Ferr iss and Score , Union-street , Bristol ; Wood , High-street , Guest , Bull-street , Birmingham ; Collins , St . Mary-street , Portsmouth ; Mendham , Nelson-street , Greenwich ; Davis , Bernard-street , Southampton ; and by all booksellers in town and country . OPINIONS OF TBE PEES 8 . "Brodie on Debility in Man . " This is a work of great merit , and should be placed in the hands of every young man who is suffering from past foU y and indiscretion . It contains many valuable truths , and its perusal is certain to benefit him in many ways . Brodie and Co . hnva also published " The Secret Companion , " a work of a very valuable character , which is enclosed and sent free with all their medicines . —London Mercantile Journal , This author ** of this valuable work evidently well understand the subject upon which they treat ; and this is the best guarantee we can give those persons to whom it is likely to prove serviceable . It is a pubUcation which can , and ought to be , placed in the hands of every young man to guide him among tbe temptations of the world to which he may be subjected . _—Jfentwfc Mercury . THE CORDIAL BALM OF ZEYLANICA ; or , Nature ' s Grand Restorative ; is exclusively directed to the cure of nervous sexual debiUty , syphilis , obstinate gleets , irregularity , weakness , impotency , barrenness , loss of appetite , indigestion , consumptive habits , and debiUties , arising from venereal excesses , Sic It is a most powerful and useful medicine in all cases of _syphiUs , constitutional weakness , or any of the previous symptoms which indicate approaching dissolution , such as depression of the spirits , fits , headache , wanderings of the mind , vapours and melancholy , trembUng | or shaking oftho hands or limbs , disordered nerves , obstinate coughs , shortness of breath , and inward _wastings _. This medicine should be taken previous to persons entering into the matrimonial state , to prevent the offspring suffering from the past imprudence of its parents , or inheriting any seeds of disease , which is too frequently the case . Sold in bottles , price 4 s . Cd , and lis . each , or the . quantity of four in onc family bottle , for 38 s ., by which one Us . bottle is saved . With each is enclosed "Thc Secret Companion . " The £ 5 cases ( the purchasing' of whicli will be a saving of £ 112 s . ) may be had as usual . Patients in the country who require a course of this admirable medicine , should send £ 5 by letter , which whl entitle them to the fuU benefit of such advantage . BRODIE'S PURIFYING VEGETABLE PILLS are universally acknowledged to be the best andsurestremedy for the cure of the Venereal Disease in both sexes , including gonorrhoea , gleets , secondary symptoms , strictures , seminal weakness , deficiency , and aU diseases of the urinary passages , without loss of time , confinement , or hindrance from business . These pills , which do not contain mercury , have never been known to fail in effecting a cure , not only in recent , but in severe cases , where salivation and other treatment has been inefficient ; a perseverance in the Purifying Vegetable PUls , in wliich Messrs . Brodie have happily compressed the most purifying and hcaUng virtues of the vegetable system , and wliich is of the utmost importance to those afiUcted with scorbutic affections , eruptions on any part of the body , ulcerations , scrofulous or venereal taint , will cleanse the blood from all foulness , counteract every morbid affection , and restore weak and emaciated constitutions to pristine health and rigour . CONSULT " THE SECRET COMPANION , " Embellished with engravings , and enclosed with each box of BRODIE'S PURIFYING VEGETABLE PILLS , price Is . lid ., 2 s . 9 d ., 4 s . Cd ., and Us . per box . Observe thc signature of " R , J . Brodie and Co ., London , " impressed on a seal in red wax , affixed to each bottle and box , as none else are genuine . Sold by aU medicine vendors in town and country , of whom may be had Brodie ' s medical work on Debility in Man . Be sure to ask for Brodie ' s Cordial Balm of Zeylanica , or Nature ' s Grand Restorative , and Purifying Vcgctable PUls . Messrs . Brodie and Co ., Surgeons , may be consulted , as usual , at 27 , Montague-street , RusseU-square , London , from eleven o ' clock in the morning till eight in the evening , and on Sundays from eleven o ' clock till two , Country patients ate requested to be as minute as possible in the detail of their cases . The communication must be accompanied with the usual consultation fee of £ 1 , and in all cases the most inviolable secrecy mav be re-Ued on . N . B . —Country druggists , bookseUers , and patent medicine venders , can be supplied with any quantity of Brodie ' s Purifying Vegetable PiUs , and Cordial Balm of Zeylanica , with tbe usual allowance to the trade , by the principal wholesale patent medicine houses in London . Only one personal visit is required to effect a permanent cure . Observe ' . —2 l t Montague-street , Russell-square , _liondon ,
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ENGLAND'S TRIUMPHANT CONQUEST ! THE GLORIOUS EIGHTEENTH OF JUNE ! THE ; i " BATTLE OF WATERLOO . —The Proprietors of the'PlCTORiAL TIMES have the proud gratification of announcing their intention of offering to the British nation on SATURDAY , the 21 st JUNE , a splendid LARGE ENGRAVING , thirty-three inches by _twenty-four , representing that ever-memorable Battle , and the crowning triumph by British valour after a long and arduous war . The original picture , from which this ongraving has been taken , was purchased for four hundred guineas , and presented to her Majesty ' s Royal Military College at Chelsea , and has never before been engraved ' . The point ofthe Battle is taken at the moment of tho most intense interest , on the evening of the 18 th , when tho Great Hero of the age is making the last and decisive charge upon the dense masses ofthe French Army . In respectto costumes , Sic , Sic , the utmost fidelity has heen observed ; and , in addition to the general news of the week , tbe PICTORIAL TIMES of the 21 st will contain an accurate and faithful detail of the Battle , with views of Hugoumont , Farm of La Haye Sainte , La BeUe Alliance , and many other sketches , showing the various points ofthe action , also a beautiful Engraving of Napoleon , surrounded by his brilliant stuff . In order to bring within the means of every class of her Majesty ' s subjects this magnificent number , with its unsurpassable Engraving , the charge for both will bo only One ShiUing , including a Key to this noble work of art , and can be obtained of any Newsagent or Bookseller in the United Kingdom ; and , for the facility of parties residing in remote places , upon their remitting thirteen postago stamps to the Office , arrangements have been made for forwarding this Engraving and Newspaper free of any further charge . OFFICE , 351 , STRAND , LONDON .
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ALL MAY BE CURED !! BY HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT . FIFTY ULCERS CURED IN SIX WEEKS . EXT R ACT of a Letter from John Martin , Esq ., Chronicle Office , Tobago , West Indies ;—February 4 th , 1845 . To Professor _Holloivay . gir i beg to inform you that the inhabitants of tbis island , especially those who cannot afford to employ medical gentlemen , ave very anxious of having your astonishing medicines within their reach , from the immense benefits gome of them have derived from their use , as they have been found here , in several cases , to cure sores and ulcers of the most malignant and desperate kind . One gentleman in this island , who had , I beUeve , about fifty running ulcers about his legs , arras , and body , who had tried all other medicines before the arrival of yours , but all of which did him no good ; butyours cured him in about six weeks , and he is now , by their means alone , quite restored to health and vigour . ( Signed ) John Martin . PUes , Fistulas , and bearings-down . A Rehabkabie Cube _bt _toese _Pum _ano _OiNTKEtn _* . —A half-pay Ueutenant , lately residing at St . Helier ' s , Jersy , whose name by request is omitted , had for three years suffered from pUes and fistula , besides a general bearing down , of the most distressing nature . He had twice undergone an operation , but to no purpose , and at last gave himself up to despair . Yet , notwithstanding this complication of complaints , together with a debUitated constitution , he was completely cured of all his _infii-mitieB , and restored to the full enjoyment of health by these justly renowned medicines , when every other means had failed . Extraordinary Cure in the " West / mites , of Leprosy , axxi other direful skin diseases . June 3 rd , 1844 . Mr . Lewis Reedon , of Georgetown , Demcrara _, writes , under the above date , that HoUoway's Pills and Ointment have cured bad legs that no doctor could manage , ulcers and sores that were of the most dreadful description , as likewise leprosy , blotches , scales , and other skin diseases of the most frightful nature , and that the cures effected there by these wonderful medicines are so numerous and extraordinary as to astonish the whole population . Cancered Breast . —A Wonderful Circumstance . Copy of a Letter from Richard BuU , bootmaker , Tatton , near Southampton ;—¦ February 9 th , 1616 . To Professor Holloway . Sir , —The Lord has permitted to be wrought a wonderful cure of cancers or abcesses , of twelve years' standing , in my -wife ' s breast . In the latter part of the time , eleven wounds were open at once . The faculty declared tbe case as past cure , several pieces of bone had come away , and I expected that my poor wife would soon have been taken from me . It was then tbat a friend recommended the use of your pUls and ointment , whicli , to our utter astonishment , in the space of about three months , healed up the breast as soundly as ever it was in her life . I shall ever remain , Your most grateful and obedient servant , ( Signed ) Richard Bull . Wheezing on the Chest and Shortxxess of Breath . Copy of a Letter from Mr . Jeremiah Casey , No . 1 , Compton-plaee , Compton-street , _Brunswick-square , London , April 25 th , 1845 : — To Professor Holloway . Sir , —I be *** to inform you that I beUeve I had been , for more than three years , one ofthe greatest sufferers in the world with chronic asthma . For weeks together my breath was frequently so short that I was afraid every moment ofbeing choked with phlegm . I never went into a bed ; very often , indeed , I have been obliged to pass the night without being able to recline sufficiently to lay my head on a table , lest I should be suffocated . No one thought I should live over the winter , nor did I expect it myself ; but I am happy to say that I am now able to work from morning to night , aud that I sleep as well as ever I did in my life ; and this miracle ( I may say ) was effected by rubbing your invaluable ointment twice a day into my chest , and taking ten of your piUs _atjbedtimc , and ten again in the morning , for about three months . ( SigRed ) _Jebemiah _CAssr . In all Diseases of the Sein , bad legs , old wounds and ulcers , bad breasts , sore nipples , stony and ulcerated cancers , tumours , swelUngs , gout , rheumatism , and lumbago , Ukewise in cases of PUes , HoUoway's PiUs in all the above cases , ought to be used with the Ointment ; as by this means cures wUl be effected with a much greater certainty , and in half the time that it would require by using the Ointment alone , The Ointment is proved to be a certain remedy for the bite of moschetoes , sand-flics , ehicgo-foot , yaws , coco-bay , and all skin diseases common to the East and Vfest Indies , and other tropical clinics . Burns , Scalds , Chilblains , Chapped Hands and Lips , also Bunions and Soft Corns , wiU be immediately cured by the use ofthe Ointment , Sold by the Proprietor , 244 , Strand ( near Temple Bar ) , London ; and by aU respectable vendors of patent medicines throughout the civilised world , in pots and boxes , at Is . _IJd ., 2 s . 9 d ., 4 s . 6 d ,, Us ., 22 s ., and 33 s . each . There is a very considerable saving in taking the larger sizes , N . B . Directions for the guidance of Patients are affixed to each pot and box .
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PARR'S LIFE PILLS . READ the following letter from Mr . Vf . Alexander , BookseUer , Yarmouth : — Great Yarmouth , March 27 , 1845 . Gentlemen , —Being recently at Norwich , I called upon a gentleman af , his request . He said , liaving seen your name in a newspaper as an agent for the sale of PARR'S PILLS , and also letters addressed to you testifying their efficacy in the cure of various complaints , I resolved to try them . I had beenvcry unwell for two or three years , my stomach much out of order , and I constantly felt a painful difficulty in breathing ; I employed two medical gentlemen , and took a great quantity of medicine , but derived no benefit ; on the contrary , I found myself daily declining and getting weaker , so that I could scarcely walk from oue street to another ; indeed I was in a melancholy desponding state . Accordingly , I purchased a box , and took tliem as directed . At the end of a week I was much better , having taken , I think , only eighteen pUls ; consequently , I continued taking them regularly , and when I had taken two boxes and a half , I became quite well , and to this day I have enjoyed life , having now good health and good spirits . If , however , I feel any slight indisposition , I have recourse to tho medicine I have so much reason to prize , which restores me to my usual < rood health . This gentleman wished his case to be made public , although for obvious reasons he could not authorise mc to give his name . This timid , perhaps in some cases , prudent cautiousness is not uncommon . A neighbouring gentleman has several times admitted to me that he derives great benefit from the occasional use of Parr ' s medicines , but will not permit nie to mention it to any one . am , dear Sir , yours , respectfully , "WILLIAM ALEXANDER . P . S . The Pills have entirely removed the cough and Asthma . MR . IIACKETT , THE CELEBRATED AMERICAN ACTOR , now performing m this country , gavo the following important testimonial to the efficacy of PARR'S LIFE PILLS before leaving for America : — To the Proprietors of PARR'S LIFE PILLS . Sirs , —Having used PARR'S LIFE PILLS on several occasions when attacked by violent Bilious complaints , and liaving been fully satisfied of their efficacy , I beg leave in justice to you , as proprietors of the medicine , to testify as much . Yours , respectfully , Long Island , Nov . 9 , 1844 . Vfu , h , _IUcK-sir . 4 * 5 ? The extraordinary effect of this medicine is the wonder of the age ; it has been triedby hundreds of thousands as an aperient , and has in everyjinstance done good ; it has never in the slightest degree impaired the most delicate constitution . Tens of thousands have testified that perseverance in the use of PARR'S LIFE PILLS will completely cure any disease , and are _Uving witnesses of
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the benefit received from this invaluable medicine . —Sheets of testimonials and the " Life and Times of Old P » rr" may be had gratis , of every respectable Medicine Vender throughout the kingdom . Beware of spurious imitations of the above medicine . None are genuine unless the words PARR'S LIFE PILLS are in "WHITE letters os a RED gbouno , engraved onthe Government Stamp , pasted round each box ; also the fac-simile of the signature of the Proprietors , " T . ROBERTS and Co ., " London , on the directions . Sold wholesale by E . Edwards , 67 , St . Paul ' s ; Barclay and Sons , Farringdon-street ; Sutton and Co ., Bow Church _, yard ; Mottershead and Co ., Manchester ; and J . and R . Raimes and Co ., Edinburgh . Retailed by at least one agent in every town in the United Kingdom , and by all respectable chemists , druggists , and dealers in patent medicine . Price 13 _Jd ., 3 s . 9 d ., and family boxes lis . each . FuU directions are given with each box .
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WRAY'S SPECIFIC MIXTURE for Gonorrhoea , warranted to remove Urethral Discharges in forty-eight hours : in the majority of cases twenty-four , if arising from local causes _. Sold ( in bottles , 4 s . fid . and lis . each , duty included ) at 118 , _Holborn-bill , and 334 , Strand , London . Sold also by Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Johnston , 68 , CornhUl ; Barclay and Sons , 95 , FaiTingdon-street ; Butler , 4 , Cheapside ; Edwards , 67 , St . Paul ' s Church-yard ; and by aU medicine vendors in town and country . Advice given gratuitously to persons calling between the hours of eleven and one in the morning , and seven and nine in the evening . Where also may be had Wray ' s Celebrated Balsamic PiUs , for the cure of gleets , impuis- ; sance , strictures , seminal weakness , whites , pains in the I loins , affections of the kidneys , gravel , irritation ofthe I bladder or urethra , and other diseases of the urinary [ passages , frequently performing , in recent cases , a perfect ; cure in the space of a few days ; they have also been found decidedly efficacious in cases of gout and rheumatism ; aud an excellent remedy for the removal of the evil effects of self abuse . In boxes at 2 s . 9 d ,, 4 s . 6 d ., and lis . each . By post free , 3 s ., 5 s ., and 12 s . " A mild diuretic—a soothing balsamic—a powerful tonic—and an excellent invigorating pill . "— Sunday Times , Wray's Alterative Tonic Powders and Pills , a certain specific for tbe removal of pseudo-syphilis , secondary symptoms , & c . 4 s . 6 d ., lis ., and 22 s . a packet . Wray ' s Improved _-Sttsnensor */ Baxxdages , well adapted for sportsmen , gentlemen , hunting , riding , walking , suffering from disease , relaxation , local debility , -fee , approved of and highly recommended hy the late Mr . Abernethy . Best Jean , ls . aud ls . 6 d . ; ditto , with fronts , 3 s . 6 d . ; knitted or wove silk , 2 s , Od . ; ditto , with elastic springs , Ts . 6 d . RUPTURES . _Wrays Improved Steel Spring Trusses , for hernia , properly adapted ; single , 5 s . 6 d _., 7 s . 6 d ., and 10 s . 6 d . ; doubles , 10 s . 6 'd _., 15 s ., and 21 s . j Physicians' and Surgeon ' s advice every day from eleven till one , and evening from seven till nine . j
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THE NORTHERN STAR , AND NATIONAL TRADES' JOURNAL , ESTABLISHED in Leeds in 1837 , and since then the leading Provincial Journal in the Kingdom , is now published at No . 340 , Strand , London . The object of the Proprietor in establishing the Northern Star was to furnish a fearless and faithful organ for the representation of the Labouring Classes , whose interests from time immemorial have been shamelessly neglected . The removal of the Star to London has enabled its conductors to supply the reader with the latest inteUigence , asweU as the most interesting news ; in consequence of which its number of readers have materially increased in the Metropolis , and its country circulation can be equalled by few , even the most extensively circulated _MetropoUtan newspapers . From the extensive circulation ofthe Northern Star , together with the fact that it is read by all classes of society as the organ ofthe movement party , Advertisers wUl find it to be a medium of communication with the public at arge worth notice . Books and Publications for review must be addressed ( post paid ) to the Editor , 340 , Strand , London . _Adverisements and orders for papers to be addressed to Feargus O'Connor , 340 , Strand , where all communications will be punctuaUy attended to . The following extract from the Newspaper Stamp Returns for October , November , and December 1843 ( since which no returns have been made ) , show that the Northern Star is far at the head of many _old-estabUshed London Weekly Journals * . — NORTHERN STAR 117 , 000 News ofthe World .. 86 , 000 United Service Ga-Record 83 , 500 zette 19 , 500 Examiner 71 , 000 Fatriot 60 , 000 Britannia 66 , 000 Spectator 48 , 000 Mark-lane Express .. 54 , 000 Era 41 , 000 Tablet .. 45 , 000 John BuU 39 , 000 Observer 41 , 000 Watchman 33 , 000 Atlas 37 , 000 Age and Argus .. .. 22 , 500 Nonconformist .. .. 30 , 000 Sentinel „ 20 , 000 BeU ' s New Weekly Journal of Commerce 13 , 500 Messenger .. .. 22 , 500 * # * Observe the Office , 340 , Strand , London . Thefollowixxg Books are published at the Northern Star office , 340 , _Straxxd , and may be had of all Book- j sellers and News Aqents .
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CHAMBERS' PHILOSOPHY REFUTED . Just pubUshed Price Fourpence ( forming a Pamphlet of 50 pages demy 8 vo ., in a stiff wrapper ) , THE THIRD EDITION OF A FULL and COMPLETE REFUTATION of the PHILOSOPHY contained in a TRACT recently published by the MESSRS . CHAMBERS , of Edinburgh , entitled the " Employer and Employed . " This valuable little work contains the most complete defence ofthe demands of the Working Classes for their fair share of the enormous wealth created by Machinery , as well as a justification of Trades Unions _, Thc numerous appeals that have been made to Mr . O'Connor from nearly every part of the kingdom for the publication , in pamphlet form , of those Dialogues that have recently appeared in the Star , have determined him to gratify what appears to be tho almost unanimous wish of the Labouring Classes . "The Employer and the Employed , " * * by Feargus O'Connor , * # beats anything even of its author's . —Economist . Complete in one Vol ., neatly Bound in Cloth , A PRACTICAL WORK ON SMALL FARMS . Price Two ShiUings and Sixpence . Br FEARGUS OXONXOR , ESQ . The desire of the author has been to furnish a valuable compendium at such a price as would enable every working man to become possessed of it , It contains i . ll the practical instructions , together with Plates , describing Farm-house , Offices , Tank , Farm-yard , & c . ; with particular information requisite for carrying out all the operations . N . B , —The above work may stiU be procured in num . bers , price 6 d , each . " I have , within the last lew mouths , visited every part of France , and I declare that I have seen more misery in one street in Dublin than in all France ; the people are well clad , well fed , and merry ; they ave all employed on Shall Farms of their own , or on oquitable takings !"Vide Lord Cloncurry ' s Letter in Morning Chronicle , Oct , 5 th , 1843 . _Th-js-Apemtodesixons of bettering their condition and of becoming " independent La & owm _, " by entering the "Productive-labour" Market , will do well to read "A Practical Work on Small Farms , " by _Fergus O'Connob , Esq . It contains much useful information , invaluable to the parties for whom it was written ; and Old Fanners will find many useful lessons in tiie new system of husbandry , which tliey li « ve yet to learn . The irorfc disp _/ ays great practical knowledge , and is written so tliat any one who reads may understand . Mr . O'Connor seems not to have used cither the old or ' new nomenclature' in this work ; he has not buried his meaning in chemical tcchni . salitics , wliich very few understand , but which most writers on agriculture seem so desirous of using , Perhaps they do not understand the practice of Fanning so well as ihe theory ; and , therefore , mystify that which they cannot explain , by some long chemical term , whicli the plain reader may pass over as a _"hax-d word , " hard to pronounce , and harder to understand when it is pronounced . The reader wUl find that Mr . O'Connor has avoided all those hard names , and suited the language to the toUing labourer , whose college is generally the workshop , or , at best , the Sunday Scliool . Though tlte work is written for holders of Small Farms , yet no Allotment Tenant ought to be witliout it ; the valuable information it contains respecting tilling and cropping is alike useful _, to all . "—Extract from , a Farmer ' s Letter . " This really useful little volume ought to be in the hands of every one at all connected with agricultural pursuits . "—Lloyd's Weekly London Newspaper . " Although we feel no desire , in the language of the proud Peruvian , in _contemplatinir . what we hope to rejoice in , the contentment , prosperity , and comfort of our fellow men , to exclaim— " This , this is xny work ; " nor is our object , as Mr . O'Connor declares his to be , "that each man who is willing to work may be independent of every other man in the world for his daily bread , " yet we can with much pleasure recognise in the book before us a powerful instrument for aiding in developing in man a audi higher destiny than he lias hitherto attained . "Mr . O'Connor shews clearly , what will soon be apparent to all who reflect deeply , that we are not left witliout the means of obtaining not only all that is physically requisite for man ' s progress , but also that we may readily prodace what is apparently desirable ; for none who carefully peruse tliis work can doubt that a system of small farms , held by active and industrious labourers , would amply return , in exchange for healthful exertion , far more than s requisite to preserve physical strength . '• He also shews thatsomethingmore than this is requisite to ensure happiness , for he says in page 121 , " l feel _toiivinccd that man can place no reliance whatever upon liis fellow man , or a community o _« men , when circumstances operate upon his or then- minds , the influence and effect of which would be stronger than any abstract notions of justice . For instance , if a community of labouring men _purehase a quantity f land , and hire labour for its cultivation , however just tlieir intentions and pure their motives , they will nevertheless feel themselves justified in raising the price ofthe land , according to the
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unproved value conferred upon it by the lab 011 _^ hired workman . This power of steadily _trenchin ° l ) " > the rights of others is one of the greatest disadv _^ against which the labourer has to contend - tt _a * s hired by a community , at the end of twenty y ' ei _** ' bein no better condition than they wcre at start ; _^ " _^ the community of proprietors would have _iiicrl' 8 , *• _*"*¦* * value of their property twenty-fold ; that is , the - lStd tl 1 _* have robbed those labourers , by whose industry « " _" " _"" _"l was increased , of nineteen shillings in the pound » _* ''* " These remarks are powerful arguments in h , in which they are written , and if examined in _n _^ _, tion to the universal , they confirm the testimn _* rela " " The earth is the Lord's , and all that ther _" ' ' he round world and they that dweU therein' ! " i % after partaking freely of what is good for _^ t \} ' ' _'•>' ¦ creation , any self-appropriation , by whatever part * _?' dulged in , is from evil , and wiU produce its _con-. ' _*** namely , vice , crime , and misery . a I **'"** ; , " We can strongly recommend Mr . O'Connor ' s our readers , containing a great amount of pra ctin r _u - ination on agriculture , which should be mostn " r _" diffused . _"—Concoi-cTiuni Gazette . P 0 l" % l ? May be had in Four Numbers , price Sixpence ei * , neatly bound in Cloth , Two Shillings and Si . \ ji L ., j ' " Also , Price Fourpence each , Numbers t _« , i , THE STATE OF IRELAND . By _Akthou O'Cos _° ' No man ran understand the position of Ireland ' * 0 *' bearing of Irish questions , who is not conversant _» ¦ f '• _' _* perfect picture of Ireland ' s condition , the « msc- , _•"*• degradation , and the remedies for her manifold ev'l _^ Also , price 2 s . Gd ., Second E dition A SERIES OF LETTERS FROM FEARGi _;* - r ,, NOR , ESQ ., BARRISTER AT AW , to m _^* O'CONNELL , ESQ ., M . r . ; - " - _' MEl . Containing a review of Mr . O'ConneU ' s conduct a the agitation of the question of Catholic Emnn _,. _* _,,, _?' 5 together with an analysis ofhis motives and actions * ' he became a Member of Parliament . The whole f . i _^ somplete key to the political actions of Mr . O'Coihpu _" * reconcUes all the apparent contradictions in the - ' , _?¦"* one of the greatest agi tators of the present day , _'*' This edition contains thc confirmation of T _. , _* _. « Esq ., of the principal charge brought by Mr " fW ! **' against Mr . O'ConneU . ' o ' " _-
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j All persons desirous of completing their sets nt LANCASTER TRIALS , may yet do so , as _tatV _p . still remain on hand . _^' _* PORTRAITS OF POPUUR CHARACTERS . Portraits ofthe following distinguished persons , fro ! steel engravings , and executed in beautiful style , n > j v _v ! i _hadattheNbrffimi Star Office , 3 i 0 , Strand : —Large si j ¦ T . S . Duncombe , Esq ., M . P ., Richard Oastler , _lut ! Emmett , John Frost , Dr . M'DouaU , and Feargus _O'Con I nor ; plate ofthe Trial of Frost and others at Monmouth ' plate of thc Firft National Convention , and plate 0 _fti ,, ' Procession accompanying the National Petition ofl 8 ' * j the llouse of Commons . The price of thc above portrait * and plates is one shilUng each . Half-length portraits of the foUowing _distinguishf _* characters may be also had at the Star office , price sir . pence each : —Andrew Marvel , General Ar thur 0 'Coimor I "WUliam Cobbett , Henry Hunt , Richard Oastler , _Thorna ! [ Attwood , James Bronterre O'Brien , and Sir WiDiatr Molesworth , Bart . j The above portraits have been given at different tim « i to subscribers of the Northern Star , and are allowed to _b' the most complete coUcction ever presented with am ' newspaper _. Price Two Shillings . j FIFTEEN LESSONS on the ANALOGY and SYNT _« ofthe ENGLISH LANGUAGE , for the u * c of _adulter _, sons who have neglected the study of Grammar , By w UlLl . j Fifth edition , revised and amended . The Lessons in these works are intended solely for th * ' use of natives . They are divested , therefore , of all tho ; - hair-breadth distinctions and unnecessary subdivisions ia Analogy , which , if at all useful , can only be useful to fo . rexgners . The science of Grammar is _disentaaglcd ia them from the folds of mysticism whicli have so long en , shrouded it . The absurd and unmeaning teclimealitiewhichpervade aU other works on _GrammarareexcliiUKwJ for terms which have a definite and precise meaning , i | , lustrative of the things they represent . The Parts o / Speech are arranged on an entirely new principle , _fouii-toi ' on a philosophical consideration of th * nature of las . 1 guage . Tha necessary divisions and subdivisions are rationaUy accounted for , and the principles ot _tfnivvr-jf Grammar demonstrated so fully that thc meanest cap * . city may understand them as clearly as it understands ¦ that two and two make four . In Syntax , the formation of the _ISngiJisft _LaiigiKU'e is exclusively consulted , without any unnecessary reference a other languages . A majority of tha numerous _Rulti given in most Grammars are shewn to be little better than a heap of senseless tautology . The necessary "Rules are demonstrated upon rational principles , and illustrated by a variety of examples . By the use ofthe fifteen lessons , and thc accompanying exercises , any one may , in a few weeks , acquire a jjood knowledge of Grammar , without any of _ttwdisgwitw _? drudgery which , under the present system , prerents nine out often from ever acquiring a knowledge of Gna » B » T at aU . " A competent Grammatical knowledge of our oira 1 anguage is the true basis on which all Uterature ought to rest . "—Bishop Loivth . " Mr . Hill is evidently an original thinker . He attackwith abitity and success , the existing system of English Grammar , and points out the absurdities with whicli it is encumbered . Justly condemning the too frequent prac . tice of making pupils commit portions of Grammar to me . movy a _stasks , hc maintains that the only proper way to the memory is through the understanding .. Itis but justice to him to say that , in a few pages , he gives a more clear and comprehensive view of the structure » f the English language than can be found in some very elaborate works . "—Literary Gazette . " Mr . HiU has discharged his task with considerable ability and no person ean peruse his books witli anything like attention , without obtaining a clear aud sufficient estimate ofthe construction and laws ofhis verna . cular tongue , "—Leeds _Tixnes . " A concise philosophical and lucid exposition of thi principles on wliich tl : *» language of Milton and Shakspeare rests . "—Bradford Observer . "It is calculated to give the student a correct idea of Grammatical construction—of the analogies of the language—and ofthe nature of tho various parts of speech _. It Is simple , but not mean ; clear , but not diffuse ; and there are few works in which the first principles of Grammar are better explained or more ably _followed up . "York Chronicle . " —— The method he has adopted to convey his lessons is the least repulsive to a learner that wc have yet seen , not excepting that of Mr , Cobbett the whole seems to be intended as a mental machine to abbreviate the labour of the mind . " — Glasgow Liberator .
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Price One ShUUng . PROGRESSIVE EXERCISES , selected with great care , and adapted to the Rules and Observations respectively contained in his Fifteen Lessons on the Annlogy aud Syntax of the English Language , and in liis Rational School Grammar . By Wm , Hiil . Third edition , revised aHd corrected .
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Price Sixpence . THE GRAMMATICAL TEXT BOOK , for the use of Schools , Children , or Private Students . In this little book the principles of Grammar , _cxpres _^ with thc utmost possible conciseness , arc exhibited for tlw memory . It contains , in a few pages , the pith ami ! "ar _* row of the whole science of Grammar . So much are thc principles of this important science simplified in these little works , that by the use of tliem a parent , having no previous knowledge ofthe subject , n « J _* . in one week , he qualified to instruct his children _ivitlwuother assistance . All the above works may be had nt thc Nerthcr _. _t ' " ' office , 310 , Strand , London . Of John Cleave , 1 , Slicelane , Fleet-street ; James Watson , Paul's-alley , _Kitersoiter-row ; II . Hetherington , ' 0 , _Holyweil-stract , London . Of A . Heywood , 08 , Oldham-street , Manchester ; •>¦ Guest , Birmingham ; Messrs . I _' aton and Love , Glasgow ; J . Hobson , Market-walk , Iluildersficld ; and of all book _, sellers and _neii'S-ay-cnts , who can procure them to order ,
The Gbeat Biutaix St**A.W-Si«P. —This Stupendous Iron Specimen Of Naval Architecture Arrived At
The Gbeat Biutaix St _** a . w-Si _« p . —This stupendous iron specimen of naval architecture arrived at
Plymouth at eight o ' clock on Saturday evening , from Blackwall . Although , from the fine weather iu her trip thither , there wcre little or no opportunities for removing tho prejudices which have unfortunately been extensively imbibed against this speculation , it nevertheless proved the efficiency of the screw propeller , and her remarkable qualities in point of speed , as our correspondent informs us she made once or twice no less than fourteen miles an hour . She passed by the fleet at Spithead , and waited off _Cowes for half an hour to land passengers , & c . Thousand * ) of persons assembled on Plymouth Hoc and the adjacent heights to witness ' her arrival man . v hours before she made her appearance , aud the Severn , Cork steam vessel , took on board from Gill ' s Military At
Pier a large party , and went out to meet her . half-past seven , the Great Britain was discovered on the New Stone , and as sho rapidly approached the port , entering tho Sound by the eastern end of the breakwater , signals were hoisted at the citadel , ana the bells of St . Andrew ' s struck out a merry pea-All thc yachts and vessels in port werc dressed witft flags , and hundreds of deeply-freighted boats werc on the water . Tho monster ship was taken charge ot by Mr . Walker , the Queen ' s harbour master , byvthoia she was handled like a small cutter , displaying ' _•» proportions before the assembled multitude in tne Hoc , thence to Barnpool , and afterwards _bringmher to in a most masterly manner to _Milbay , where , with the greatest case , she was placed alongside tlic pier without letting go an anchor , or liaving a WW out . Thc nautical men at Plymouth expressed great astonishment at the small area in which she ww
turned about . . , Electric Gun-. —Anew " electricgun" was trie ** on Friday the Cth inst . on thc south side of hW street , Westminster , before Sir J . Cockburn . « » capable of discharging 1 , 000 balls in a minute , _oW- _" ' of the balls _perforated a three-inch hoard .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 21, 1845, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_21061845/page/2/
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