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falsehodand honour to of it fitf MX 25,1...
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Tie National Instructor. Kb. 1. London :...
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SlSTOEIC.: PAGES- : FROM THE FRENCH ..^E...
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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.
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Falsehodand Honour To Of It Fitf Mx 25,1...
MX 25 , 1850 . TH _^ IIPRTHERN STAR , 3 * ' i 1 : j- ¦ ¦ /« i i .: I ¦ : _^—— _^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Ji \ } } f \ £
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Ihbpoptn^Pbelts. , ., ^ Sbtm'^Ineaam Sad...
_iHBPOPTn _^ _PBElTS . , ., _^ _SBTm' _^ _ineaaM sad aad ' _vexational ; - T 0 _^ C _^ new « ,- _^ iasie withtl _» newB > - _' _^ _f'ff _^ v | _MS _*?^^ ' _^^ _^^ ' _^^' . iSSsJMfc wb '« W _Sundays-tiebetterday . _^ _JTn ewdesa I should . Boombe ; raging : on _-JjtalSfe , itmittea _noi , _jmstftb _^ Sailing " stamps it ahrother _. _ttuear _, v .- _: _* _- ¦ _.-. or
tirSeyndiis iUumnuBg the _u _^ imess ages . . ; Vewi new 8 ,- _^ - * nneai ? t a 0 neira _,--r ...:.. _tftlAMnbraoesapriricip _a _, Bteri _^' _nqnHwncessional , " , « eiw _neni—bringme . thenews , _~ - \ ' " _jie t » 3 * t of politics , social , and national _, j _^ told _wft a Bnee _^; rm"i ; ' C _6 artiBi and _rented . I scorn to giro truth a denial . _jSSbtatf _d-lBr _&> deek _^ _'datistoewt _, _iVSthe _teople have yet to find eanse to be loyal _S _R _caDpns _Tiropd gbrgNl with the s weat and Mo **! ,. ' _,,.,, _' - ., _ .. < p _^ in _» d fiom the hearts of the _"Want-stncten Ven _^* 1106 J _^ cento _" nBr 8 t »* --¦ When shall th ? thunders burst ? _ind scourge _ftom" earth ' s 6 _ir fields its polished _Se _^ _uewB , —bring ma the news , — ¦ Par all peace with the proud must be ; henceforth conditional . ' . ' "
. . ... ,, Keirs , _news _,-liasteTOth the . BeTO ,- . _Ihe-broadsheet . of politics , social , and national . _SIbB _« bendBUYiahstfllatthe _^ of _^ ti _% ? So : _Knowledga _hasgoneon in its godlike _comjtodSSod stands forth , proud of heaven ' s and blushes to think on his former submissiou . Han speed . . on , ye heralds bright , scatter your mental light , - ¦ indfear not the fruits of the truths you have And soon shali the . shoutgo forth , — Thundered from south to north , — — ¦ "Britons ! arise ! See , your fetters are broken 1 _Ifews , news , —bnng me the news ,. _^ J Ever _weleoin'd by " me with , a passion , devotional . - Kew _^ _newav-Jiaste withthe hews _^ . . . Hfithits banner ' of Sed- _^ bqih social and national . Edirimreh , * - " , _Jj _^ _a _Hmbkess .
THE HEART'S THE _APPROVEfG PLACE " The leathern cap may carer worth As wellasprmcdyplame , 5 ¦ ; BY J . & M ' _KKSZtS . : oiher & bbist of wbrdly fame , . Of honour , title , race , _^ -= The outward form is . but _tii _^ name , The heart ' s tiie approving place . For riches may _,,-..,.. - " _rrltafoTtuneVra ? , ' . Of change _^ fluttering wane , . O _' ereloudedbe _"' With misery , ' ¦ - ; . = . - - • _¦¦«" - Yet the heart doth still remain ; -
"What though the outward garb be torn , A wreck of shattered woe ,.: There's many a tinsell'd noble born , "Whose heart ' s his , greatest foe . ., E ' en honest ' toil , ¦ ' ' ' He fain would foO , From _gaming its reward , f & cankered heart , - ( to scarcely part , ; "With what his serfdom stored .
The outward form may glittering shine , With ostentatious show , .. ' . Yet still the heart doth inward pine , _ifhonesfy _' safde . " - - . Your : _heaitfs reliance , ifay bid defiance , . To the proudest head on earth , If labour ' s name , ' :. " .. Your wealth can claim , ' And honesty your worth !
Give me the man of honest . worth , Though rough his outward form , Howe ' er so lowly : he by birth , He'll conquer richesscora . - _ Fortune may frown , His hopes to drown , In this wide . world of . strife , , And vaantingly , Heconquera'tothelife , ' '
A palace may with lustre brighfi-Appear a home of mirth , Yet auU false honours * rueful might JJay reign , instead of . worth . The honest soil _"'"¦ Of labour ' s toil : _- To audit may lowly seem , - Yet joy abounds , ; . - And mirth surrounds ,.. The hearth where _wortlTs supreme
Then why should worth unheeded lie , "Whilst tifled ' _vice doth reign ? * .. ComeTOuse ye , break triumphantly , Oppression ' s direst chain ; . . In freedom's cause , ' We'll crush those laws ,. That shame our native land , Then Liberty , fraternity _,. And worth triumphant stand .
Sebiew?;
_seBiew _?;
Tie National Instructor. Kb. 1. London :...
Tie National Instructor . Kb . 1 . London : Publishes by W ; Eider , 16 , Great Windmfll-stieefc . _^ Ehaye receiv ed the first number of this new . _candidate for public patronage , toa late to do more"tlianaimonicethefa < _H ; 6 fits app _^ _M We may _add , ; fiiat it is neatly printed , and its _columna give promise of a judicious varietya Wending of _ffie _' entertaining with the useful . Tie contents ; include the first of a series' of papers oh the "Progress and Effects of steam amen . _Machinery _;* ' an article oh . the poet Wordsworth ; Chapter . 1 of a . story entitled "TheSecret f aad _& e first four pages of the
_"Iafeahdidventures of Feargus O'Connor , Esq ., " M . P . " _^ elriiu st pos _^ one extracts , with the exception of the _foUovring paragraphs hum the Editor _/ _s openmg _^ _ih _^ s : ~; . That there may be no mistake as to bur objects , •* e hire distinctly to' state , that-in ' politics we ahall advocate the . adoption , unmutilated , of the "People ' s Charter _^ ' because Political Bights ' _intsBin the nation , aud the nation is composed of individuals , no one of whom has a right to exclude another froia * _. _the-lrahchises common -to . all . : In Social Science _^ we shall basei aUpropositions oh the . _oroadseri ptural ' ahd unassaifable ground , that . the _J _^ nd is the creation of the Author of the Universe , ? Bd thai , [ while manias a fair claim to ; all that he iadiriduall y produces , he has no right whatever to appropriate to his own use that which God gave for
These two departments of human thought , leading to human action , are , though separate in their _ex-^ _alaspect , identical . in essence . _iThe Political _Reformer stives to . win for the masses the pos-E of political power .. The Social Reformer _"Aeafo show them how that . power may-be uiecl _JBost beneficially for themselves and the community . The _^ _JlAnoHu , Ikstbuctor" will aim at _repre-^ tingaad wconcilmg _. both . Jt will be _. _^ _sseutially , journal of ; political and social progress ; not as s > _sasured by . the . opinions adopted after reading the u f , mu , " but ' as laying , the foundations , broad and ¦ _*!& , of tiiose great and holy pnndplesof society , i 9 _og which alone _hnmaq _comfnurii _' _ties can defy all _ttemufations ofages and races . -,
Slstoeic.: Pages- : From The French ..^E...
_SlSTOEIC .: PAGES- : FROM THE _FRENCH .. _^ EVOLUTION OF ¦¦ _> FEBRTJAB . Y , 1 : 1848 , By : _Loras " ' _Blusc . I « ndon ' . _- . Tribune Office / Wellington-street _^ orth , Strand . : '' ¦'' . ' ' ] . _** o weeks ago we promised to return to this 2 * we now do so , our object _Iwhig to bring _" _¦^ _t he ' readere of this journaI the author ' s 5 _^ _eroUe'Tefutati on- of the _^ Ee respecting
_^ auth orship oftteAteliers _Waiumimx , ite r _^ and _raterateoV in : flie turn , and other _^ _oug'jbuTnals . :: - ; v " '"" . . '' ' „ " _Otrr enemies" observes Louis Blanc , _*^ d'vaMy attempted _to'roVus of : ttte . _^ ffecr , n ° _fthe people ;! so' they ¦• next' _deternnned JJjnun us _witii the middle bla 3 s , by _attri-^¦ _Qg _/ _the' creation of the _crfeKfrinaft _' oiurux to _^ _It _f _^ hphrg ; an infamous fie that no one _^^ have believed who had 'e _^ _erread-riiy _J _™^ but which ; _itiwas considered , mignt _^ _wv antageouil y-panned ou _' ' p _^ on : " _-the-igiio-^ e of- tiw raajorny . _'* Twenty ¦ ¦ tiihesyfrom . 614 _Tnbane or the press , have I refuted this
Slstoeic.: Pages- : From The French ..^E...
falsehood , and challenged any one to contra dict : me publicly ; . _uorhasv any one dared to do so .: _Kmorehe required , here are proofsi dear as the midday-sun . " _,.,. . ( .. _Lbuia _Blanagoes on " to _wow'ftat .. ' ,,: -, __ . _««•««« _« -
: THB _ATBUBRS _HATIONIDX _VTSSS 0 E € USieED . , ; . '" _- > . _..:-., _Ht . iiua . ' : ' . ' . ' _:-. " _.-V . July 5 th , 1818 , M . " _irancois Arago was examined by the _Jcommittee bf majnry _respecting | thelitisffew nationavx , arid replied : "It was M . Marie who was ' occupied in . the organisation of ; the ateliers nationaux .-: -,, .:-.. ,- " _-. ' - _---. - - „ ;¦; , r _- " It , was , in fact , it . Marie [ who biganised these workshops , and ' gave the direction '' _oithem'tb ' ohe Mi EmUe ; -Thom % a ridiculous ; _low'feUow _^ -who puffed ' up _' withan importance he , never _reallyjiosw _sessed , ; 1 ndulged in a vulgar disposition to . traduce prindplea . _whitm he-had _notihe _i _Capaoity _. _to _. ' understand , and did . not ; _heatateJ _» attack , me , -without having the power' to introduce me to reply _: '" Well ,
in his deposition of _July' 28 th / lc « 8 , i 3 B _.= _-fimue'uaomas says-: * ** I have never'spoke to M . TJouis Blanc in _myJifej _ilrdon't _Jmow-fam ;" _,..-a . contiujies ; " while Ivreuiat , the atelier , 1 " saw / : M . Marieevery day ,- often twice a-day ; MM . Eecurt , Buoh ' ez , and Marrast almost every day '; I saw M . de Lamartine only once , ' M , Ledru Rollin never ; nor M . Louis Blanc , never saw M . Floconnor . M . Albert . - This director of the atdiersnationaux had already said , in his deposition of the 28 th _JTnne _. _t . 1848 . i _' . _l have always gone with the mayor of Paris against the inauence of MM . _iLeflru Kollih , Hocbn , and others . I was in direct hostility : with the Luxembourg / I openly opposed the inflaence of M . Louis Blanc "
Now , there . is not a single deposition-in the whole three volumes of the inquiry to . weaken , the force of these most ' clear and _^ ifiye ' . b ' fBVsial _^ dej clarations . ; Let them search all the archives and all the poisoned weapons so gladly * seized upon by the counter-revolution to injure me ; and they will not nnd a _smgle . declaration . _- . that ; : tend _^; . inj . the least , to _, point me out as the ; originator , organiser , or even approver ; of the ateliere nationaux . . -. To the evidence , already .. adduced ,, Louis Blanc adds the official acts and decrees from the Moniteur _, provingheypnd thereachpfdoubt that
_theprojectoftheJte _^*^ oftonat « was entirely a scheme of Marie ' s , and was as entirely _carr ried oat by that traitor ; and his instruments . ] Although one of the Provisional Goyernmenti _. _LouIb Blanc was not even TOnsulted ; ni the matter .. "Theresolutions , _V heohseryes , " were , come to at a sitting to which they took care not to call me . " If it be urged / tihataithoughthe Ateliers Nqtionaux were established withouthis . sanction , tiiey were , at _leasts established , on his principles—that assertion is at once disposed of _byshowingthat IHB BO-CALLED . " . SmoSilw" WXEB _HOt
SOCIALWOBKSHOPS . . , _; . t : _v > .. . . She social workshops that I proposed , „ were in : tended to bring together , all the workmen ofthe same trade . ' ¦ [ ¦• - ' ¦ ; . ' - ' The national workshops , such as they were under M . ] Marie ,. exhibited a ; number of workmen gathered -together indiscriminately from ; every : jar . riety of trade , and all employed , at the same kind of work . ' ' ' - .: ''" " . ' . ' ' ['"' , . Tn the « ocwZ workshops , such as I had proposed them , the workmen would form a sort of joint-stock company . witiVthe governHieht ,. but . would work for
their own-common , profits : that is _^ . -witn _allithe ardour of self-interest united to the powerful influence of association , " and that feeung . of honour _termeditspritdecorptJ '' . ' ~ ' " _"' : * " . "''" In the _national worJxhops of'M . Marie _; the state acted merely as employer , and thai workmen . hired servants . Now , as the -labour _waa _^ _useless , _; . a mere pretence , and , m most , respects quite new to the ; workmen ; the ; government was __ cohseg . _nently only squandering its firiarices by _^ giving a premium toidleness , and alms to the . poor under a pretenceof
wages . - -.. j . .. ' ; .... _- •; ...:- _; . . _' . _-. _.--The social _uiorMops , according-to my proposals , would hare formed families , of . workmen ,, suited . by the firmest bonds of _solidarity , haying the strongest interest to be _mdustribus / andthereforeproductive . ' The national workshops under M . Marie , were but a tumultuous assembly of proletarians ; bound together by no tie , but a sort of military _^ Mipline , unr der chiefs bearing the strange but . characteristic title of Irigdiers , and " for whom nothing was done but to give them food for want of knowing how to occupy them . ' _- ¦ ' - ....
Louis Blanc proves still , more _^—that the ateliers noiionaux were established for the purpose of undermining his influence ; in , fact , were created for the purpose of placing air army at the ' disposal '' of fhe " enemies of Socialism . Even Lamartine has written , that "the ateliers nationaux , ¦ f ormed , ( ill the meeting ofthe Assembly _^ a sort of check to the soctarian workmen of the Luxembourg , ¦ and the seditions workmen ofthe clubs . Far from being in _the'payof Louis Blanc—as'it has " been Baid—they _^ were inspired by _^ the spirit of his adversaries . " _*• ' ; . : i ; Louis Blanc pays the following _eloquent tribute to thelbftv principle and sterling
patriotism of the delegates of the Luxembourg- _^ " It is unportant to observej that "the ! delegates of the Luxembourg have never , received ' a farthing . " Their mission was ever and entirel y , gratuitous : insomuch that it was the cause of their greatest privations and , most severe troubles—most of . them being dismissed by their ' enraged ' . employers , ' and followed up by a most barbarous and unrelenting persecution . Combinations were formed against : these advocates of the'poor , in order to deprive them ofthe bread of labour ; . and their consequent distress was afterwards shamelessly used as an ar-£ rnm ' ent against them . . _.- ;
" What hasi become now of " all yonr deceptive ' theories ? " saidsbme'ta'them . '" ul You . are- _toluol the organisation of labour ; ' the advantages of ass ' o i ciation are held up toyou ; thespeedy abolition of _proletarianism is promised .- you-rmere rhetorical flourishes , Utopian dreahM , ' ; Willrb . ' . _^ he-wisps ,.. by . which yon are led away , naked and famished , into tbe'lahd of cbime ' ras ' . Come to yburselyes again , miserable beings ; turn a deaf ear to the fascinating / bnt empty , sounds of such orators , Bemerhber that poverty is the inevitable lot ofthe greatest number . Were everyour-suifferings greater f . _Uo yon not hear the cry of your children , or see the pale cheeki of their mothers ! " ' ¦ " '"'" : ' .. ' ¦ : " ' ' . "
. . . Such were the words of men who ,: with cool calculating cruelty _. -shut up _theu * . ' capital j went . about complaining of toss of credit , suspenued the works they had commenced , and refuse _^ tonndertake that " which _. ' was offered them , in ' order ' that they might bring abbut ' the evils they'had . foretold ; and ; lent themselves to the basest tricks in order to prevent the realisation of ideas _thatf . they had declared iin-. _practicable-tthehypocrites ? :, , ; , _, : ; - But the peonle were not to be deceived . Neither threats . nor promises , " artful _advice nor prolonged distress , could shake the calmness with which the
representatives ofthe corporations of the Luxembourg held their solemn hunger council-meetings ' And we , who were daily witnesses of this heroism , ; whose only reward was in . its holy , enthusiasm , were , deeply affected with admiration aid _rispect ; ' Highminded men / accept this testimony from brie now in exilei the emotions of whose heart were all ' known to you . In the midst of all my afflictionsahd solitude ! I have -yet _onesourcd-iOf - . _happihess-. that neither , ' fortune nor my enenues . can take away-rit is _fliepleaOTreJ'the glory , of bemg . lbye _^ _Dysuch men as you : " . '' - " .. '" . '
We _closetihis subject _mth'the _^ following extract frbni Louis Blanc ' s eloquent '' ., ; PEOTEST AOiraST' THB _CALTMSIATOBB . . : -After all these overwhelming _^ evidences ofthe falsehood of the accusation brought _againatme , and after my having so repeatedly and publicly proved this falsehood , that I should _still . have . beea made ' the-yictuh of . such " a _slauyerj-sKows _^ the . imniehse _, power of calumny when- we . see aU shades of oppres-, _sive parties equauy making use of it . " - The ' ateliers nationaux wasted the public money ,- humiliated tiie labourbyj » rofferinglnm : thebread that he wished togainforhimselif ; -tbey ,.. brought dispredit _, upon _state-interferene ' e jvith rlabour . ; ' ; and # ;' instead , of _fbrhune ' associations of labourers , ' they raised bafc _^
_talious of _uten ' paid to be idle , _compbsingan anoma lous army , that would brie day have to be digbanded at ; the _nsk . of civU- warJ j The _^ flimsy ; logioians - of the laissez-faire system were delighted to attribute to us all these _^ evils . What a splendid opportunity for . the supporters of the old political ' . econbmist Ideasi to excite public opinion ; against us by pointing to these ateliers _nationauxas a complete application ofthe- Organisation of Labour , and yet . they ; were at best but a bungling parody on it ! . The .. imposture _, was unmistakable in . its tendency : ; it ; furnished our adversaries with the opportunity of' _sayirigi'for want of argument , ' '' " What use ' reasbnihg about it ? Have we not here one fact'in answer to all your theories ? " , But was there not enough'to . confound
the mo 3 t unpudent calumny m the associations that ' did take theu * _ongm , from the I _* u : embburg , as that bf ' the ; _tailors—tnafbf the spinne rs-f-o . f the ' lacemakers , arid the saddlere , which' were ' aU- ' bo radically different' from the _^ _eKera-natfoitauJe ? : And yet so much determination of villany and falsehood has been-employed to confuse the public mind in this respect , that even now there are persons '; who _ionfbundthe ' present ' working men ' s . assocutions , that arose solely but ofthe Lvxembonrg , with tbe _^ m _»^ ha 4 thongb th _^^ those are prospering , and , _thankBeavenl-willcflnfcue to _^ perV Add to this the voluntary _. silence Lhave _solonginiposed upon _mysetf ; _fat _& W _® im of an _rajusVaccusationU thought that Ee to whbm _ifreally applied would hare made it a point
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of honour to acquit me of it . He thought'fit _,-f or bjs _^ wninJerfistJt to . keep , JL 8 ifent , _^ d _^ : % ; for his interest , thought ' -fit- to br silent on the subject , until e _% Mdo _^ , ments , b ' _rbughTt _thejtiiitti to light . Since that time the _' _persohage of wflVrii ' I ' speak _, and who was once my _^ , colleague _,, has placed his signature beside those who' proscribed me . Cruelly Save I expiated my _Bcraples Of _deliisaby _l-Biit no matter 1 I am not a man to repent of that . ___ _'W ' . _' « Ji _« . . »
Mathertziis Selj-Instructorznwriting, ' ...
_Mathertziis Selj-InstructorZnWriting , ' fa * - _$ cY London-:- { Em Mackenzie , ? $ Wine- _r _^ Office Cdur _^ _'Fleefcfitriet : _^ _'' _^ _^ ; ' . " { FOR two-pence , the teacher _^ pupilj and selfinBttttctor , may . obtain , embodied mthis small , bnt' _! ; _vaI _^ Ue _.-irorI _^ _Ia series . pi * usefiir . _IeisQni by which a ; . _defective-ihandrwriting _^ _niiy ? he amended , ' and a beautiful , easy , and _biisinesslikestyle , sp _^ iiy _^ attained . _^ The author-truly obsffl r _^ , _-tJiatX" . _(' ¦ ' . ' ¦ l ' z _.-. . '¦ ' " ; - ; '' _,. '' . ' . ' . - ;¦ . ! . - f « _jn the _. _eiecutibuofjall theduties , private
and -. public / to . which the pen is _; _subservient good hand writing is _esfientiil . ' _v - 1 ¦ - '¦ ¦ ''• ' ¦ ' ¦¦ . u Many a _^ _brthy aspirant to ' faine . has _laboured to haye publicity . giyen to _hiklucubrations ,: but met ; . with . irritatingy neglect from writing an imperfect hand , editors not having time or inclination to derapnerhieroglyphjos . ; _| f ' , _FnenSjihip 8 _; liavei cooled _^ _ndi ceased from pothooks . _tjeing ' receive _^ ¦ _mth . ' cbhtempt or _inattentibnl ?' , , '; i ... V
; ; " _StiUmoreserioris , in ; a commercial coun . try like England ; are the' _consequences''to _^ a man of busiriess 7 jhis industry may ; be rendereo abortive , and _' ruin' and "beggary' be his por-: tion _jflirpnghoutiMfe , " merely & om bad : pen' nianship _^ _-h _^ r : _' : ; -. ; _m - ¦ ... ¦ .:- , ... ; : : ' ¦ ¦ ; - i * T _^ ereceipt of _aweU-Tmttenktfer / from a friend _^ or _wri ; espbhdent , ' alway sure from its easy perusal , ;' and commands attention , while respect is , felt for thetwriter ... ' : ; M- Enough has been said-in " the few lines preceding to Bhow _fthe-importauce , ' pleasure , and utility of writing a good hand . '' , ; I ,
.: Directions for . -the making -and mending of pens ; receipts for making "Black ,- ' MRed , " " lndQliblei _^ and " mde 8 tructible ,, Inks ; and forms of epistolary ' address' will be , found amongst the useful mformation contained in this little book . j ; _MacJ _^^ _s-Se _lf-Instructot in Writing has our hearty recommendation .
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\ Thei Whitsun Hoiipats^L^Nngihelastweek...
\ Thei WHiTSuN HoiipATS _^ l _^ _nngihelastweek . preparations ouan ' extensive scale have been making in the m ' _etrbpblis and the suburban' towns _andjjvil- ' lages to gratify tie curiosity of the sightseeing crowds / who at this season ofthe year perambulate the' streets , overburdenthe steamboats , fill the omnibuses , and rush in thousands to "havea trip on /' the rail" Greenwich _on-this-as on similar occasions _mlprewousiyears _' . ' was'lohe : bf the principal pointa _^ of attraction .. . -From ; an- earlyjhp ur ; . a _, con- ; tihuous _. _stream . pf human J _^ ings _, floated _Jdown _i . rtiie riv ? r _^ , " poured _alo ' nb ' the road , ' and . swept down ,, tbe railwayjandbykid _^ lay th e fai r , ithe park ; the streets j and _Blackheath were covered with gaily dressed and Iighthearted persons anxious to see and be seen / and enjoy the _pleusures of Greenwich fair and all its various amusements Gravesend
. _Brighton ' , . , Dover , Richmond , and , as the sportsman would say , other outlying localities / ' had their attractions and their . visitors . All the metropolitan : railway stations were crowded with _passengera . hustling and elbowing each other in order to secure" ' the ' first and best . ' seats , and it-may withtrutfi'be saidthat . " in the _' memory of 'the oldest inhabitant " no preceding Whit-Monday exhibited . more ; numerous or . < ( apparently ) more happy crowds -. of persons -proceeding in _* all directions to enjoy a hoUday . '' The various exhibitions in the West-end at present open were crowded to overflowing throughbut ; the day ,,. A yast ; number of holiday folk visited the _ National Gallery , the Zoological . Gardens , tiie . British . Museum ,,. Westminster Abbey , and the other principal public buildings . ' The various panoramic - and scientific _exhibitionsreceived also an unusually large share of public patronage . ;¦ , ¦ _¦¦ Z _> , - " .. ¦ _- _¦(¦¦ _.- — _- ... _- . ' ; ' . _- '• ::
:: - _'Z- _; r . y , Z ; , _LYCEUM . j _-, . ; , _,.. , ;; - . .. ¦ A burlesque _opropiw of current events and . those which 1851 maybe _expecfed . ' tb bring " with . it ,., was played here ' _last night for the'first time / under the title of'NoveltyFair ; ' _wJ _' _iBrtfts / or 1851 . ' The piece was ! successful ; and after the leading actors had made their bow in fronfrof-the 3 _enrtain , Mr . Albert Smith , responding to . a : call from ( theupper boxes for the author , went " through a similar cere ' mony . ¦; '; Z - .,: __ .. _ .,. ll : i ;; STRANLV : J , :.. _--., ' ,, _«' ' ... - ' An entirely new ; and origbal Satirical and _Pplitico-EcohomicalWhitsun Morality was produced at this
pleasant little theatre . ' The piece ; may be described as a , ft ' _^ _4 rScte''dramati 8 ' ed ~ its " whole ' aim being to prove that . if the diggins in California continue to be ' worked as at present , a sovereign will hardly be worih its _weightln _^ _reacT . ' * ' If " is entitled the . PAt ' fosbpHer _' _s Stone . . The scenery , does the highest credit to a painter and a commedian somewhat new on the London boards—Mr . : \ V .: Shalders . . The acting was as effective and amuBing as the materiel allowed , and the piece-was put oh _thestage in , a- style 5 quite equal to what ' might have been expected , in , a' larger and ' morepreteriding ; arenaV ;;!/; ¦ /¦ , V' ' : ' / . ';/ , ; ,.
_-\ _ASTLEY'S ROYALi AMPHITHEATRE . _; ¦ ' _Thesuccession of great events _whichhaveresulted in the ' stipremacy ; . of .. British rule over the whole surface of India , from the conquests of Clive and the tragedy of the Black-hole , have _ieach in their _turnj provedafertile subject for the illustration of the stage .: Whatever may -be the next ; dramatic representation drawn ; from India , it will : not exceed in interest the now ' old spectacle of _. T & _'Atfgfariizian War ' , or the Revolt of _iCabvl , _andBritithiTriumphsin 2 _tu ? ia ,. which was revived at this highly popular place of amusement .. -The main events of this portion of British' history _r . afe : strikingly rendered by Mr . Batty _' _s playwright ; , as well _as ; . by hiS . _uhique corps
_dramattoiie engaged in the spectacle , and , that the resources of a vast establishment have been' lavished upon : their representation in a manner which entitle theprbprietor ' s enterpriseto unreserved commenda-; t ! bhV The leadine characters , were , extremely-well _suppbTted ; the tc _^ Ieauxbriluant ' , and the auditory , who i were very numerous , highly delighted ; The remaining performances which gratified the : holiday visitors consisted : _ofj-a series _« f _; _feats Of equitation , relieved' ' by ; thie _^ drolleries--bf _/ _Jfessrsi . Barry , and ' Wheal , ' arid of _^^ the . 'la _% hable _\ farcb ; _TOeTw 6 ffre _^ prie _* . _Barrvfs antic performance upon the first fiddle ;' waB as inimitable in its way ' as any of the single-string peculiarities of Pagahini . ¦ ' ' ¦ '
• :. _s . '! i : ; marylebone . ' : ; . -Thishouse was opened for the Whitsuntide holi * days on- Monday r _eveningr-and _ww attended-by-a numerous audience . The leading feature _. in the attractions bfthe _i bill of fare was the _reappearance of W . : G . V . " Brooke , the ' eminent tragedian .. The performances commenced with Shakspeare s tragedy of Sing John , - _inwhichMr . Brooke sustained tbe part bf the recreant , usurper , of his brother 8 throne . The ' entertainments ' concluded , wittra serio-comic fairy spectacle , founded on a'tale of Alfred Crowquill's and written , by . Mr . E Sterling , entitled ihe _JToMmcro ' s - \ SpeU . ¦ ' This ; : afterpiece introduces . a varietybfelphiri ' _sceheryV erichantmenw , revels , and fairy dances , _audto _auch afforded : much satisfaction and merriment _to'the auditory , . who conducted them- ; selves , considering tha _^ me _occagion wa _^ a _/ W _^ itsuntide -saturnalia ,.. _^ with ; J 5 bmparatiye ,. propriety and decorum throughout the _' entire evening . , ' _" . ' -- ' , ' ,
, " ; . i ; . _- ;/ :. ;; . ; surrey , ;; « . _- ., . , ; ..,...,.. This' theatre " fttVni & _hedVth _^ hoMay . f _^ with an abundant bill of fare , in which two or . three of the productions . were novelties ; atie ' ast oh ' . 'this side the water . ;' ' The-first _play-t _' _was _' _enti'led _^ _ttWa '; or lugarto , the Jmlatto , ' a translation from' the French of Eugene Sue , and bearing indubitable mark'B of its origin .. ' The plot _tunb _. upouthe _. power . obtained by the Mulatto ( Mr .-T . ' Mead ) over . Gontrah de Lahoy ' ( Mri T . ; Stiepher . d _)^ hb _^ secrets , which give rise to many _ihferesting . _iricidehts . It was _receivediwith-great applause ; :: The Ethiopian Serenaders of Mr . G . _iWv _^ _j . _ibcfbreiand after the _Extravagania / , of . lThc . _^ ihree _^ Princes , _entertained the coippaDy with tteirin ' egrp ; sohgs . . The ehtertanV ment 8 cbricluded with the [ _tytiratiandist , -in which was some _' excellent _^ _dancing-by 'Mr ; Fiexmore _, the author ; assisted by . _thecorpsdeballet . :
. _v- _- _- _- > SURREY _^ OOLOGICAL g _ardens . . The season opened ph Monday at tjvs' highly popur Iar place- of resort _^ the Vast numbers' that _^ thrbiged the grounds on the occasion ' testifying at once to the excellent taste of the metropolitan sight seers , as well as to the _confidenceJwh ' ichth ' ey _reposejn-. the ; talent bf Mobs . _'Juuenl ' _undet wh ' b _^ commenced : _^ 4 'he entertaiiimehts were _^ varied and attractive , and included , in addition to _^ _^ the musical perfbrhiahcesi ! the Grind ; Dioramic ; View _^ _of-the Passage ofthe Alps by . the French Army wider Napoleon . ' the display _offireworksi wbich closed , the _eritertainments '; was mbs ' t briUiiint and artistic ,
\ _-A . _' : _- J \\ cremorne _, gardens . ; . . These _gardens _ppe ' ned . ba Monday evening _^ with more than their _usualedoi , under anuncloudedsky , and were crowded ' with company firom * ah early hour . With theJ beauty of the grounds' the pubb ' o are . already _acquaihted . - tW" Polycrbme Palace oi _^ avia" i _» intended to eclipse all previous efforts in architectural scenic illusion- \ The _iUurainations were profuse ; and tasteful , and there was a complete round of the amusements incidental to places of out of door _enteiiahunen _^ . '' '' . " _: '
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! ' Good amnb is all _powerful * and ; , alone : necessary . , Evil isbuta huge accident in the world : and that is wby _^ ts _. fa . te ' _. is . ever . tb _bervanquished . Now while the victbries ' of good are definitive , the defeat of evil is irrecoyerable : printing will ever remain _^ tortnre ' will _neverbe _fe-Mtablish ' ed _^ nor the'fagbt'bf the inquisition be relighted . " ' Religionshave _, ceased to _" _^ .. _raartyrs ; politics' must Bboni ! cease' to , make y \ ctima . _^ £ ouiaMihcl ZU \ Z > ui ; c n ' : _A' _^ _- Rating _Sufbeaoeisnotmanhoodsuffrage . Whoevjr w _.-8 upremeover the administration bf the . _taxes _^ l _^ _prd _^ ftherate _bobE'i _zWZ _' , ' ¦ * . - "; ; ::: y ' i , _•? _?*' _-- _\ _WJifv'Jn , _ajSe't _»* ' _fiSt JWMkV _' . a ' _igbod . balf , a week old , _mwsold : fbr ; thesum-bf one shilling .-- .- ' - ¦ : \ m . Booth , pf "tbe _^ peel . _InnZ _^ st Retford , has found in a-brocellb cabbage ' . a -hedge sparrow ' B nest . . _^' . _~ - " r : ¦;' - _' . ' ¦ ' •¦ ' _^ . _---o r ' _.:- ' i " ~\ : z ..:: ''
.. , _<\ The _Kkbrv _'fiWobuiii _» i _^ A _^&^'—^ Thiifs the big A , the king ofthe alphabet , the leader of the host , andginer ' aV of jail . the , letters '" . - _^ see . how . he stretches o . iiti ., b _^ . ' ' tw 9 , 'l eg 8 _^ V ' as : ' much ' . _' as- _tolsay—* Thrin up my heels . ' if you can . l wTerry : _>^ Ah _V > Good-toy ! v that ' s the _veryAways of that ; you'libe a ? F _^^ % ' _? r _!» ;; Keep your ; finger ;; bhuimV / an ; d Te- ' . mimber . that A . _standaifor ' ''Attin'tibni that ; ybu , _must always pay . tb _mei and I ! Arithmetic '; th ' at _jbu'll ' _lsoon come to , with . Algebra ,: a _jwhilei and Admiration , thatiyour mother will be in when she sees wh ' atla ' _mrog you ' ve got . _iWaititillybuget ihto _^ _histoify / ind then you'll see what a renouwned warrior ¦ _Alexander the Great was , though . nothing to . some of our ould Irish heroes . Mahy ' s the , good _tbinJEf this letter has
done ; when you go home , look-at the gable-end of your father _Blouse / and ybu'lli ' see . it's' copied from the letter _Ai * - Wei must give ' _aribther _spscinien' _; of the' _IrjshTutor _. Lwhich . is in regard to theJetter W : — ' _Ddfcbleipyewi'i-, -Terry :: ' " , ' _jDoubleCyew ' . ' 'That ' sright ,, anyhow , bedadl ; It _/ svprogress- ; yer making . . See , my ( fear , the . rayson _^ that ; he ' _s _> . called Double _. yew _. is _becauseiitdakes two of his neighbours to make him up to what he _isj ' only they should have called him Doqble . y ; biit they ; were -hot so parti- ; _cular in thim _times . aa . we are how , and' so . we can ' t ' help 6 urseM 8 . ' fbithe : times : gbhe ; . by _/;;^ ¦ WiBe , thai ; _imaB _& . _ypurto _. be , ; " and Witty > as ' I think ye are ; _andWigi such as I have on ' my : head , and it ' s ! nearly ' worn 'but it-is , ' aid I ; want anew'one ; badly ehough : Jatid' ; WhiBkey , _' that ' 'brin'i 3 many _: _^
dacent man into _twuofe ; , anq makes us see . double ; . and Water , that ought ' always to be mix _^ with iti _especiallyforfaymales ; and : World ) -that ' s ( too hot fori some people , -and' too could -for others _;* and Writing , that _you'Jl-be-in soon , if yer-father don't forget _. the _, slate ; , and . Wrestling ; you ' re so fond _^ f .- _' Terry griiis _^; , _-- r ! ' _^; ' ; , ' "' : /; _¦ . - ' ¦ _"' ' z' i _KickiNO- 'AT ' NoTHiNo ' . ' _^ A 8 h ' rewd . farmer , Ii _^ _Yennohtshire , " _le _^ _lal _. _ure _^ _fleci _^ _hed _' . _an _' _swe _, _r _. _ing _, _' the speech of _amemberwhoiwaS ; remarkable for _. nothing but his frothy -and pugnacious impudence ' ahd ' self cqneeit _^ _thus . _; : _" Mr ; Speaker , ' ! can't , reply to that erespeeeh , for it always wretches me , terribly , to kick atnottung . '' _^ . ; 'i _^; :. _^ (;; : ' _4 : ; ;;; : '; , _^ iJ' _^ ZZ' _- 'l ' _- 'i' v . ; ' _Onittbii BXBRor . ~ Tnw : man , a lawyer ,, without ideas of infliienoe _,-consequently had neither enemies
_horj jealous-rivals . - M . Odillon Barro't o wedhis'bein'g leader of . the dynastic opposition / to his mediocrity ; hadhebeen ' ev . er ; 8 _b'little' worthy of : it ,, the ' _. honour wouldhave-bVeb envied _' him . _- _^^ The ; EFFB 0 ri 3 of Shot pit " thr Fibxb of _BaxtHb . —You can form no jdeaof the _stbrmiof-balls and shells , which crossed each other in their-deadly course . ' ; Before and around the spot _; btf which _iFielfli Marshal _Radetiisky was ' 8 tandibg ; Uhe ' heay _|; 16 lb . Shots ploughed up the ground ,, tracing , in one place a deep furrow , and cuttingdown a tree' like stubble in _. _s-notherV' It-is remarkablehbweach _. _kind-ofmissilejhaa its owhbharac ' _teristic . J There : is the" tremulous howl of the large round _shotj the whistle ' of the _muiket ball / the hiss : of the shell , " - like that- ofthe
Catherine ; wheer ; , fire-work , ' . and . then its detonation as it . bursts . * ;;; 0 f . the ' 3 e _lMti many _: which fell amongst us missed _firei and many exploded harmless in the air , ; but where one fell and did its office ' the effect was fearful . One such , Btruek an . officer '' ; iB-:. thci . ' breast , exploded at that instant , . struck down a man ' to the right and left , and cut off the ' upper , part ' of theioffices ' s bbdy , ; in _aueh _afashion -that : _his .. -frigbtened horse galloped off some distance' with ' the feet of the . corpse iathe stirrups . " n . Such : are the _spectal _clea which afield of , bat tie occasionally presents . ; Not far off laid a _Pie'dmontese _; artillerist , Who had been struck on tbe forehead " by-a spent 61 b . shot , which remained in the wound . A hussar hadbeen
killed at the same instant with his ; horse by a shot which had passed through the _heck'pf ' . the , _flatter ; they had sunk together _. ithe ' rider . still in the saddle , and . the sabre _stillin 'his hand ' . The sudden , col lapse of a man in full vigour is what : is most : fearful to behold . ' . ? One _^ sinks ' without- a-groan ,-another jumps high . from the ground , withla . shriek , ' falls over , lies stiff , and . is dead ! I saw : a Grahzer from _theBanat , with a ball inhis . forehead ,., _falterra few psces , , leaning on his ; m " usket like , a _drankeiriman , andithen , after a faint whisper ' abont his . home , expired . Over the town the cannon smoke had spread a colossal canopy , which floated motionless above the roofs like the " _crbWniofiitheiltalian'pine trees . — Scenes from the Life of a . Soldier in Active Service'in
V ; THEBXPBNsB . of , a copy of d will fromjDoctors ! Commons entiTely'dependsbnthelength of it—about 4 d . for every seventy-two words . If is stated that the dehts affecting the Mountcashel estates amount to _£ 27 o 000 . o - _¦ : _; -: A ; Fact for N _^ _turalisis . —About six weeks ago a party _obtainedipossession of . a leveret ; Having a cat which had a number of kittens , the young , hare was placed among thein . ' Puss ; made , nqdistinction between it ' and fierVown'family , but . ' _nursed ' . it _^ with the same tenderness ; , ' When shifting ' her'b ed > she carried the young hare carefully by the back ;; it how ; ever did not relish this' _hewjmbde of transit tor some timel : ' The'Ieveret'died Ihe Other day ; , ' having _| been , ' it is _supposedi'de ' _stroyed by a " strange cat , . to the
great grief of its adopted mother . . : ' GiTriNff . our _/ b . F : ' A , ' _^ pi ? PicuLTX .., -7 j A clever amateur theatrical performance was late given at the Theatre Royal , Bath , ' . wh ' en an amusing occurrence took place during theehactment of the , _well-rKhoyvn farce _oiDiqm _^ _tidfkttiiDihmoAd . ' ; Captain _'Sey mou _^ and Captaini Howard had to ; 'fight _,-a ; , _^^ duel , but , the . pistols having , we' suppose , ; a _strbng' _/ desire . to _. ke ' ep , the peace , refused to " go off . " After , severalr _. _ineffectual attemptsto produce a report , Mr . Callaghan , who represented Captain Se ' yniouri threw ' the . hbuse into convulsion ' s of ; : laughter , ' iiy suddenly _^ comingj forward and -exclaiming , ' ' . ' Ladies ' and _. _gentlemen , _Ianisupposedfbbekilled ; " . Andheplaced _. himself bh the _ground—^ heatiicaliy dead ' accbrdingly ; , _' ,. , ' . ' . ; . ''
-. _Cunious EpiTAPH '; r ~ The' following , curious , ; inscription appears in _' the ' churchyard v _Pbwsey ; . Dorset' , shire ; : —hereVJie's ;' the . bbdy _^ of- _^ Lady ; O / _Lopney- _^ great niece of Burke _^' cqmmpn _^ _-rSKe : was—bland ! , ' passiphate ; and deeply religious ;' ¦ — alsb ; , _sKe painteu _^ in _. _^ Water ; ' cblburs- _^ ajid . _^ ent several _picturesMb' _^ the _^ xbibitibn . _^ - She" was first " cbusin _^ -tb Lady _tones' _j- _^ knd ' of . _stich-f-is 'the Iking : dbm ' of Heaven ; : ' . ; . ; _" ' . ' - 'Vv ' _- ' . ";; _, " . "' _- _{ QJ " / At thb ' _present'tasm _^ nt , thirty : eight ' , persbnB _^ are incarcerated iriNottingbamshire alone , ' through the game laws : ; Ttieir prosecution' has' cost £ 200 ; and twenty-five . wives ' and 6 eyenty ; -hine children are , . iii consequence of their imprisonment _^ receiving parish relief : ; - 1 ! _ir ' yz 'Z'Z ' _^ iy _^' : _!^ Z '¦'¦'"' ! .
. ....... , There are now in tlie , gaol , of _Enhis _' _SlS _prisonersy three times the ' number for ' , which it was built ' . i" ; The great ' majority of the unhappy , prisoners are charged with stealing _tuWipsipptatoes _/ and other articles of fpod , ; an'd aboiit a ibbiety of the remainder _^ withbeggary . ; ••' _- ' -- ;' . ; - _' . ?'' . ';;''; ' "" ; ; . " _, ";• ' . , ; . " " . ;' . "¦" . .. _Irissald that a certain lady ,: thewife , of an M . PV not a'hundred miles from York ,, asked ' if ;' there "; was , hot a new _Tdnd ' _-ofifish _tb'be _y had in ; Loiid p ' n _^ called gtttta _' p ' _eVchawfeft" _^'' '' _"'"'; : ' _, ; . ''; . ' . ; _, ; . ' _;'"'' ' ' 'Zli < _r-i ¦ y '" _< ! _nAu EMToB _^' away ' 'down . eastr , who ' ser . ved four days on ' a fiiryi ' _saya he' . ' so foil . ' _of'Id _^ _jtWi itls , hard jwbrk forhim to kee ( p frpm : cheating sdmebpdy _^ , ' . _"ChoiceTof _X Pa 6 FBS . sioN ; 7 _^ An , _VbldVfarmer ; in
Cumberland once called his numerous children around him , and a ' _sked eabh'bf them' whathe _! vyOuldbe ' . 'Th ' e elder ; replied _^ that _^ fie would . ! be , a farmer , ' . like his faraer'ftue _' _M _^ third ' _itKat'he _/ wo _' uld Wa'drape ' r _' j _. and ' . s ' o ' bn . At last it " was the turn of tlie youngest child to ; roake ' _his selection ;; _^ dbe _. ' said , ' . " Oh ! I'll be auexecutor . ' ' This ; _anaweV ' excited ' ' 8 pme _^ , a 8 tbnishment "; ' ahd _^ tfie Childi oh being " _asked'fpirhis : feasohi-8 aid _/ "Oh !" an executor must be a tMving _^ 'tr ' _adelifot Ihave ' _bfr served that ever since father has . been an executor we have had ' meat _' _every'dBy in the ' week' for dinner . "
_; . ' _BoanEB DocTOB 8 . ~ When'tHe" Great Unknown " . was'travelling in Northumberland *) his - . servant was ; takenill , and the ' village , surgeon sentjfor . " * v _\ 'hen this worthy made bis _appearance _^ he ' wasat once recognised _, as a . quondam , horse-doctor in , Melrose , whose sole qualification to cure the ills , whichhuniau flesh is heir to ' consisted . ' in , his . having crossed the Border . When ' _rate'i bySir , Walter for his presumption , heconfesB ' ed _\ that . be ' h ' ad killed ' agood many : of his patients ; , but added , with . _natWte . which must have won ' : the heartVof any . _Scobbman . moreCBpeoir . ally so national a man as Scott ,, '' Ay , sir , but it'll . be _langbefbrei ' t ' mak 6 up'forFlodden . " . _; _, ; ;; ; ,, v ' SxrgbantCocklb , whowasa rpugh , blustering / fellow ; once got' from a witness ' , nibre , than ; he gave . Ina'trialbf a ' righttb ' a fishery , heasked the witness , " Dost thou love fish ?"" '' Ay , ;' replied the witness , " but I donna like cockle sauce with it ?"
' _,-, The _tebm _''Bbotmr 'Jonatbak . ' ' -- G eneral Washington placed great confidence in the good sense and patriotism iof : Jonathan Trumbull ,: who ,- at an early period -of the Ateerican'FevolutioriJ . was Gover . ' nor of the State of Connecticut ln a certain emergency ,- when , a measure bf great importance was under discussion , Washington remarked ; " _Wemust . consult Brother Jonathan on the subject . " . The result of that consultation was favourable ; ' Thus , froni the constant use of the _expveaavou , " We xsLwA _consult'BrbtherJonatbanl' _? whiohsoon passed from the 'army to the . people at large , we received from the English -that appellation which' has stuck' to us as _closelyasitheir- _?* John Bull " _tb-them _^—AZiYe _fwtheXasy _;^ -ZZ ,: •• ¦ : ¦ •¦
¦ *™ Him ¦ ° . 1 ? " R „ R Oa ™ B1no Hbbbs. '' ! Thbonltratiraalbembby ¦';-'' P ;A,R E'-B-^L^I'^ P I Ii L S. '• ,. ¦ . ¦ .• ¦ .•..: . (¦:.., . :. ¦ U.-..U ¦ - ¦ .' .;:- ≫¦¦¦ ¦ -'- ' ¦'.'¦ • ≪¦" "¦•
¦ _*™ Him ¦ ° . _? _" „ ™ 1 NO HBBBS . '' ! _THBONLTRATiraALBEMBbY ¦'; - _' ' P ; A _, R E _' _-B- _^ L _^ i' _^ P I ii L S . '• ,. ¦ . ¦ . ¦ . ..: . (¦ :.., . :. ¦ u _.-.. U ¦ _- ¦ . ' . _; :- _>¦¦¦ ¦ - ' - ' ¦' . ' ¦ <¦ " "¦•
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The Advantages derfyed . fromtaktag . PAaa _' B _. _IitrB-PttiBare ' _lA _t _^ _Zo _^^ _fanX'l _^^ _en , ' ;; ,: _v-,.- ' ' _-- _:.-.- _; if 2 nd . —SoundandRefreshing ' : Sleep . -. ¦( . . , ! i ' _-3 rd .- _^ Oebd Appetite . . 1 ; ¦ - . ' ' . ; ' i ! ¦ ith _. _rr-Energy _. of Mind and Clearness of ' Perception . ;; Sift .- —General Good Health and . Comfort . _. , , m ' _iififh _'—Thty are found , after _' giiiingihem ' a fair Mai JW afewweelt $ , ; tti [ potws the _ijwst ' _. _iistoniWnjriajKJ i _^ _g _^ atiji _^ Properties ' . ; ' . ;;; . ;; . ' ' . ' ; ' 'V _^ Tp have produced a medicine so'benfgn and mild inks operation and _effectvand y ' et ' so effectual in searctiing out ana curing disease of however long standing ; exhibits on tne part of Old . Parr deep research anda : ' thorough _khowledge-ofhig - subject . M <& _- _* i > . '> . r . ¦ _' ¦ - ¦ _¦¦ ¦ ¦ _<¦ ¦ - _-. ' _- < : - _^ _{ " •¦ _. _•"" _fenninej-unless the words ' - "PARR'S LIFE _rilili _SViareto ; : WmTB LBrrKM oh'a R * d _GEonsD ; dn the Goverwnent 9 ta _» p , parted round each box ; alg ' _oltbefiie- ' _rirailefttie
Ad00316
s i _£ _rotaeri } OnttrU ' _st » /\ . rBewdre \ of'Imitations ! ' ; ' EXTR _^ OBDIMRY' SUCCESS' OF _' THE -NEW
Ad00315
PAINS IN THE BACK , GKAVEL ,. LUMBAGO , RHEUMATISM- GOUT , DEBILITY :- STRICt | ure , ' gleet , ' *» r ;; t-: " _" . " ,: \ " ; : ; . _' ¦ _.., ¦• D _]&! i ) E : ; R 668 _^ compound renal j PILLS areia _' cxaww cbBBifor , tfie , above ' dangerous complaints , !? recently acquired , ' as also all disease ' s of , the ' kidn | bys ' andiirit ( ary organs generally ,- whether ' resulting ! from impi'tilence or otherwise , ' which , if neglected _inyarU ably ; result'in eymptbm ' 8 of ;' a ' . fiur ' m ' ore ; , serious _, ; character , - and ttequently _. andgdhisihj ; death ' ! ' , ' BVtheirsaVutary action oii acidity bf _, tbb stomach _,, tbey . correct . _blla ' and-indigestion ,- purify and promote ! the reiial ' _secre ' _tionsi ' _thereby ' . preventing' the 'formation of stone iri : the ' bladder , and establishing * for- life _, the heaUh _^ futictioiiB of " all these organs ' . . ' They have never been known to fail , and may ,- be obtamed ' through'most ' Mediciae Vendors . Price Is ' , l | d „ . 2 ? . > 9 d . v and ' 4 s : ' 6 d ; jper ' box ., ' or sent' free ' off . receipt , ot
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ON PHYSICAL j DISQUALIFIOAT 10 KS ; rGENERATIVB , ;< INOAPACITr , . AND ' l _^ EDIJBBNTS .. TO ; ltARRIAGE . > Thlrty-iirst ' -edition _^ iUustrated _witli _Twcoty-Six Aiiatomi- . cal [ Engravings on Steely enlarged . to 196 ' pages / price " _. . , ?« , _& L ; . by ; post , direct from , the _Establisltnuin _^ -8 s ; 6 di _^ ,. inpbstage , stamps .: i . ; " ( : ! _. ' : ¦ - _-.- ¦ ¦ - _-. K - _.- ! ' ¦ . «; . ' ¦¦ : _T'HJT S ' , 1 ;; _-L _; B : N ; _^ . ' ;; E _' ' R _1 EN J _* _v ¦ a medical work on tho exhaustion and physical decay of the system ; produced by excessive indulgence / tho _conse- _' quences , of infection , or the abuse of merouryiv . with bbser vati 9 n /; ori " the marrried state , and the _disqualilicatioD 1 wilch prevent it ; illustrated by twenty-six coloured -en ' - gravirigs , ' and by , the detail of cases . . ; ByR , and L ; 'PERRY and Co ., 19 , 'Bernerg _^ _str ' eet , _Oxfoid-gtreet , London . . -- ; "' Published by the authors , and sold by Strange , 31 , Paternoster-row ; Ilaiinay , C 3 , and Sangor , 150 , Oxtord-street ' Starie , 28 , _Ticliborne-street _, Haymarket ; and Gordon , 146
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' , ' :. _,. Brother Chartists ! , Beware of Imitations ! :,. ' .. ' . EXTRAORDINARY i StCCESS OE THE NEW
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. . CURES FOR THE UNCURED ! ¦ IT 0 " L L 6 W A Y' S 61 NTMENT •* " « - _^ n _jBstraordtnarj / Cure of Scrofiila _, or King ' s ¦
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 25, 1850, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_25051850/page/3/
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