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e 1 can 0 Jtise SO, 1849. - "' JU THE TS...
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JU *lf?0E*n>. fJOEtrgr
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EOBERT BLUM'S FAUEWELL TO HIS WIFE AS HO...
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3Sex>icto
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THE DEMOCRATIC BEVTJEW OF BBTTISH AND FO...
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THE ILLUSTRATED ATLA.S, and Modern Histo...
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Mackenzie's Edtjcahoxai. "Works, Jtfacor...
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The irvBBrooi. Fisascul Reform Associati...
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THE DEFECTIONS OF THE LONDON PBESS. (Fro...
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Poisonous Nature of Effluvia from inn De...
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.' The late' Mr.*Youatt,'in one of his o...
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, -^arcetieg. ^
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The Magpie ano hie Paksox .. —I have bee...
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r .. ...,'...., 5Y0U..MAYBE CU11ED YET,, ... .,. ..,„ .1,., HOLLOWAT^OItfTMENT.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
E 1 Can 0 Jtise So, 1849. - "' Ju The Ts...
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Eobert Blum's Fauewell To His Wife As Ho...
EOBERT BLUM'S FAUEWELL TO HIS WIFE _AS HOUR _PREVIOUS TO HIS _EXECUTION . Farewell , _fareweD _, my dear good wife , to thee I 31 y eyes are flowing , and my heart is sore , _2 for that I must die ; but , Oh ! love , that we Must meet no more . Death had np terror , and my heart forgot , " Waraed-withits truth-zeal- _^ thou dost livein
me—Eager to be just , it move d , and reckoned not The loss of thee . But tears avail not now , we ne er shall meet , One little hour will see us far apart ; So , let the grief-dew , glist ' nmg on this sheet , Speak for my heart . "My heart is fat too fin , and bound about With too sfa * ong sorrow , bo fi n d r en t i n words Tho u gh s oft im a g inings straggle to be out like prisoned birds . As I remember all that thou hast been .
"When mine own heart was in its palmy days , Blooming on m y bosom , like a flow e r uns e en , * Bnt felt always . But I forbear ; why should I disentomb The sleeping happiness that marked the past 3 "Wh y harrow up my heart to re-illume "What cannot last ? All these we felt-all these wefeel no more ; Our honied partnership is broken up , And fate hath filled , -auto the running o ' er , A bitter cup . And Iwould drinkit , too , without regret ; "Would the too human portion of my soul , Looking heavenward , once for all forget The love it stole .
A few-words more—and than , no more but death My darling little ones I leave with thee ; Teach them to shieldmyname from slander ' s breath , Their sire dies free ! Give Hans this ring , it hears his father ' s seal , He need not fear to use it ; o ' er the earth Good men shall honour it , and he shall feel Pride in his "birth . Ibis watch I leave to IHchard—let him know That it was by me at my dying hoar ; This diamond stud to Ida ,-with its glow \ Like a young flower . Heave "Qua chain to Alfred—let it be The only chain his frecborn neck shall bear Tell him his father died , his spiritfree ... . As mountain air .
And now , my wife—my own , my faithful wife—The _J-ingof our betrothal—here it is—Upon it , fo r th y constancy through l if e , I press one kiss . Kiss thou it off , and , -when we meet above , T h ou _'ltgive it back , with many more to tell ; Once mor e , a d ieu , my first , my only love—They come- —Fabewell ! Annfield Pottery , Glasgow . - "Wm . _Ltoe
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3 _Sex > _icto
The Democratic Bevtjew Of Bbttish And Fo...
THE DEMOCRATIC _BEVTJEW OF _BBTTISH AND _FOREIGN POLITICS , HISTORY , AND LITERATURE . Edited by GL JutUSf HaKSEY . _3 fo . 2 , Jul y . London : 5 , Wine Office-court , _Meet-street . The articles in this number of the Democratic Review axe numerous and varied ; all , however , "breathe one tone , that of stern natred of oppression , and an enthusiastic devotion to the holy cause of Justice . _FoHo-wingtiieEditor Letter to the Working Classes , Mr . Alfred Walton contributes another admirable epistle "To the Trades of Great Britain and
Ireland . " The Letter from the Paris Correspondent of ihe Review , on the " Present Political Aspect , and Prospects of France , " contains some striking revelations of the wonder-M progress of Democratic-Socialismj ar id Industrial Emancipation , in Paris , and fh e p rinci pal cities of France . A second letter from " Terrigenous" -forcibly asserts , and maintains , the original commonality of Land . _^ An elaborate "Political and Bastorical Review " ofthe principal occurrences of the month of June , includes reflections on Mr . Hume ' s
motion for Parliamentary Reform , and the principal debates in "both houses : also on the popular movements , both political and social , abroad and at home . The infernal consp iracy of the French rulers against Democracy ; the atrocious bombardment of Rome ; the struggles ofthe German Democrats ; the War in Hungary , <& c ., & e ., are amongst the subjects reviewed in this article . From an _ably-written paper , bearing the signature of "One of * The Men of the Future , ' " select the follawing extracts : —
_JIO-VASCHT . The only pretence for a Monarchy that approaches feasibility , is the similarity ofthat form of government to the patriarchal , or family system , -which existed in the infancy of society—such , for instance , as that of Abraham , Lot , & c . —and it is argued that this family system has been transmitted from age to age , until it has reached onr era . Allowing this , which , is the most favourable position in which the monarchial system can be p l a ced , let us examine the grounds on -which its claims Test . Society , like individuals , has its non-age , and the superior organisation of man enables him to preserve the experience ofthe preceding generation . Thus , the yonth of twenty is > capable of
attaining a gdneral knowledge ofthe _a-equirements of his progenitors ; and the varied knowledge thus _accnm-ulateu from generation to generation , leads to results that would exceed tbe belief of onr ancestors . "What would the simple and unsophisticated people who lived in the time of Alfred the Gre a t , think of modern railways and steam-boats ? "No doubt if sne"h . applications of mechanicalpower had been projected in their day , the projectors wonld have been deemed insane . It is clear that as the experience of society leads to improvements not conceived possiblein its earlier sh-ujes of existence , that the same rule should hold good in all arrangements that concern the welfare of the people . That there was a time when
theinexperience or "brutality of mankmd _reqmreoT a stringent , or despotic form of government , might _oe disputed , but if admitted , the continued existence of such institutions under totally different circumstances , permits of no defence . "What should we think of a body of men who wonld now propose ihe abolition of steamboats , railw a ys , canals , and macadamised roads , and a return to mountain tracks and pack horses ? And what should we do if the same parties insisted on carrying their propo sitions into practice 1 However preposterous _snch ideas they -would be less so than the demoniac efforts now making by tiie Continental despots to stay the march of governmental improvement , and turn hackthe tide of popular progress .
But even tbe pretence that Monarchy is a type of ihe patriarchal system , cannot be sustained . A p atriarch , or head ofa family , Is supposed to interest himself in the welfare of the whole family . This is not the case in our modern Monarchies , but notoriously therererse , the mass of the people being coerced and plundered as serfs , and outla-ws , and the fruits of their industry wasted in not and extravagances by the -ruling few . Bnt tins is not the darkest phase in which to view the evd results _^ f irresponsible governments . It 'a not merely the wealth -which they absorb to themselves without rendering an equivalent to society , tiiat forms the ieaviest _charire _asainst them . It is the obstructive
power"wMch they possess and use to stay the onward marehof sock p rogress , andthe development ofthe vast-wealth which exists in an uncultivated sod , and in the sinews of the unemployed people , the power-which keeps the masses in a state of semibarbarism , ig norance , and poverty , at the same time that there are abundant means at hand to feed , clothe ; and educate them , and elevate them to their proper position in the social scale—the power by which they have seized on tiie means of _essence , the land , afld on all that appertains thereto , t h us lea _* ring the people houseless , landless , paupers , on their native soiL _. , Of course this is not the sole work of the monarchs , or crowned heads , yet it is perpetrated under the cloak of Monarchy , for kmgs _ cannot
exist withontlosts of satellites , -who profit by their pro _* dnuty to the throne , and tow : everlasting and duuiterested loyalty to the _mon _*» ch . _^ The y are Ioval whilst they fatten on the spoil of the people , hut become the veriest rebels -when they-are debarred "free access to the national _^^ P ' _- _>« truth of _thish-Kbeen -reeenti y _^ where the loyalists , par _*«* % _*" ' ,. _^^ _/ _, f gracious Majesty ' s Representative , _^ the ± . arl _ ot Elgin , _-withmudW-rotteneggs , _^ otfwhat they considered , their ' . _te _^ _jm-lfl h _the-by _^ this specimen of _CanadianRoyalty . will be found afair sample of the sack , as their loyalty both in _England and elsewhere may he _measures Dy ine amount of p lunder which they may extract "from tne people ; under the protection of royaliy . _^
The "league of kings" may for a while stem tiie torrent . but the necessities of hnmamty , and _nature's _inexorable demands , will stiU go on _accumulating until every vestige of the life-destroying and _LVatalSn-power of tyrants _isextingmshedfor ever . The _^ nakrfthig is oh the . wall , what pity that the _SdnSsSd obstinacy uf rulers _enMfe _fromt fcen-
The Democratic Bevtjew Of Bbttish And Fo...
_S £ ? e " _^ f _^ 1 _interpreHt . _^ _0 ) n their . tTt _^ l rests the responsibility . As thev sow , _ISkSSZ * 1 _** _-- _^ h 9 _« _Wd that they stall cling so tenaciousl y to the worn out relics of SS . Tr * _)> _X PPt > sing their stubborn will to the _mtel hgence of the people cause so much blood to flow . Still their , opposition is futile ; the neople are no longer subservient and unreasonm-j slaveslof power , a nd ev e ry ad d ition a l tr a ct , pamphlet or periodical m the cause of Democracy , & an ' additional stepping-stone by which the people will Tdtimately reach the goal of freedom . m The Jlanifesto of the Red Republicans of Germany is a startling and eloquentl y-written document . We give the following extracts — _eonrisids the "Daniels who « _nn , _v _+ _«^~ . t ,-j . a _- _^^
_-IHEPEOL-BTABU-S SEVOLUnON . o _„ f _« _i ma tnasarr v _M for _Ae decided , the out-andout revolutionary democrats to throw their words and tteir acta mto the scales of history . The cowar dl y and dirty work of the counter-revolution is terminated , and we are at the commencement of an entirely new , a -whole revolution . The liberties _^ ne from the governments in February and March , of which the bourgeois , more especially the _tonnan bourgeois , is fond of boasting , are now happily entirely destroyed . The caricature of a constitutional Monarchy , that abortion of a halfrevolution , has been obliged to give way to the absolutism that preceded the days of March . The
treason of "Novara makes Italy share the fate of Germany . The only people that still unfold the banner of revolution are the Magyars . They are the connecting link between the old and the new revolution , and -will render possible the new victorious rising of the people in neighbouring Poland , in Germany , and even in Italy . The stream of revo-. _lution has run from " West to East , and is ori the point of rushing back in a strong tide to its heme . If , in its course round the world , it again touches the "West , it will not be left , like the first time , with a passing greeting and a secret shudder , but men will lay a fast hold on it , and sink it into the deepest l a yers o f the p opu la r mass , to stir up therefrom a new state and a new humanitv .
Our party date the European Bevolution not from February , but from June . The battle of June is ihe birthday ofthe Bed—of our Republic . . This later more terrible struggle , threw that of February into the shade . The revolution of February effected a momentary change in the form of the government , and the persons composing the Executive ; but the insurrection of June aimed at a transformation of the social system itself . The revolution of February was sure of success , as it contented itself with removing the first stone that obstructed its path ; the insurrection of June could not ensure success at t he onset , as it declared war against the present infamous state of society . In the revolution of February all parties coalesced against one , that of the dynasty of July ; in the b a ttle o f June , one party , that of the Socialist Democrats , fought against all the others . The battle of June is a sure
pledge of liberty . Its greatest result is , however , _incbntestibly the conviction that we cannot obtain one inch of ground for the realisation of our views an d p lans b y the s l ow an d quiet path of reforms ; that we have enemies opposed to us , who regard all means available to put down our party , and against whom we must consequently employ all means , without pause or weakness ; that we cannot realise the principles of our party until the present condition of society is completely uprooted and destroyed . The battle of June has split humanity into two gre a t c a m p s , between which neither reconciliation nor indifference can exi s t ; a n d f o r t his re as on it i s the commencement of our revolution—of the revo-Intion of the Proletarians . We shall always stand in opposition to , all so-called Democrats who cannot determine to draw the last consequences from this revolution .
AU parties now agree that the insurrection in Hungary is not a national movement , but a European revolution . Magyars , German s , Frenchmen , Italians , fight the war of extermination against the united absolutism of the eastern powers . This straggle has procured an army for the revolution which -will seek battle-fields and laurels in every land of Europe . The Hungarians' w ar has prove d that one man on the side of the revolution is worth ten hirelings in the pay of Absolutism . The Hungarians have taken the initiative in the great worldwide war which the dying spasms of Absolutism have called forth . Tbey have relieved France of its -post in tbe history of the world , Rus s ians an d Magyars will meet in deadly conflict for the possession of "Vienna . The result of the struggle will decide the future , fate of Germany . It is therefore imperious that it should be the battle-cry ofthe German revolution .
Following the above is a copy ofthe speech of A & uasd Barbes , on the occasion of his trial for an alleged attempt to overthrow the French Constituent Assembly on the 15 th of May , 1848 j delivered in the presence of his Judges of the High Court at Bourges ; now first published in the English language . Critical notices of several new works conclude the contents of this number of the Democratic Recieio .
The Illustrated Atla.S, And Modern Histo...
THE ILLUSTRATED ATLA . S , and Modern History of the World . ' Geographical , Political , Commercial , and Statistical , _indited . hy It _MONTGOMERY _Martest , Esq . Parts 5 and 6 . London : J . and . F . Tallis , 100 , St . John-street . These Parts contain beautifully executed maps of "Prussia * " "France , " " Germany , " and "Russia in Europe . " The utility , beaut y , and cheapness of this publication must render it u niv e rs a lly and deservedl y ' . popular .
Mackenzie's Edtjcahoxai. "Works, Jtfacor...
Mackenzie's Edtjcahoxai . "Works , _Jtfacor ' _* Spelling Book Part I ., with all the cuts . Mayor ' s Spelling Book , complete .- London 5 , Wine-office Court , Fleet-street . These are other two of the remarkable series of cheap School Books which * we noticed a few weeks ago . They show the advancing spirit ofthe age has at last reached this important branch of social happiness . "What the Family Herald , Reynolds ' s Miscellany , and other similar works , were to weekly entertainin * reading , so these are to school
bookstwice the excellence , twice the quantity , at less than a sixth of the usual p rice . Battledores , horn-boohs , penny , twopenny , th r eepenny , and sixpenny primers arc rendered contemptible , in comparison with these books now before us . The first part contains ample spelling lessons from one syllable to seven . The re a ding lessons are p lentiful , and admirabl y progressive ; besides the little stories there are " Lessons on _Natural History , " _"Se l ect Fables , " " Industry and Indolence contrasted , a tale by Dr . Percival , " and "Moral and Practical Observations , " to be conjmitted to
memory . In fact , seventy-one pages of good , plain , clear printing , in a stiff wrapper , for the same amount as our unirading clergy charge for a peep into that "house of God " called St . Paul ' s Cathedral . The complete book—in addition to what we have noticed—has Dr * _Fra"nktjn's Advice to Young Tradesmen ; Phillips ' s Golden Eules ; Scripture , Roman , and Grecian names , accented ; "Words . of the sa me sound , but different signification ; Introduction to the Arts and Sciences ; Outlines of _Geography ; Chronology - . The Universe , Select Poetry , Rules for Spelling , Grammar , of
Rules for Reading , Sp ecimens Writing French and Latin Phrases , Arithmetical Tables ; the Church , "Watts ' s , and Phillips ' Social Briton ' s Catechisms ; list of the British Monarchs , and Prayers for all occasions . This work , now sold regularl y by the BookseUers at eig hteenpence _, is here , _^ in _JlACKENzie ' s series , cnargedless than a fourth ot that price ' We do not know how this is managed , but tiie fact is before our eyes . "When a person sacrifices personal interest , and breaks through an old expensive track to benefit Ids- Mowmen , lie deserves support , and we feel conndent success wiU attend these cheap and excellent School / Book s . - ; _Vi
The Irvbbrooi. Fisascul Reform Associati...
The irvBBrooi . _Fisascul Reform Association have issued 15 , 000 tracts during the . past year . _"Sp-st _vearthev hope . to ISSUe 15 Q , 0 W . . ....... _^ _SlmS & B _sWss . _-Thereareisomesingnlar superstitions regarding the imposition of baptismal Se _^^ he peasantry of Sussex believe that if a child receive fname previously given to a deceased brother or sister , it will also die at an early age : lt is deemed luchy to bear a Christian name with the same-initial as that of the surname , as _^ Reuben Rusr sell Samuel Smith _^ Peter Picrpoint . In some parts of Ireland it is a commonly received notion , tnat by _r _ivin _^ child the name of one of its parents , the life ff _tffat parent is abridged 2 _m ; _7 Estlion « i , many _-nwents-ove their chUdren the names of Adam and Eve thiiking thereby to ensure for tbem a long life ' In - Catholic countries the imposition ot a _salnt ' s ' name is supposed to bespeak his or her _patrocage-for the namesake . . _: : ; ! - : " _. '' . ' . ' . ¦'
The Irvbbrooi. Fisascul Reform Associati...
SD 2 I _S" 8 S _^ - , A : NT ; D 5 ABQ _5 ! A . TALE OF _'
TIIE _SINETEENTH OENTUItY . — ' ¦ _- ¦ - ' - _* - " _*'¦ - * - •• ¦ < - BX _.-I H 0 MA 8 MARTIN : WHEELER- " ' Late Secretaryto the "National Charter Association :- ? _-. iand 3 _« ation _^ pnipiERXin . I heard as all have _heai'd ' lif e ' s various story , And m no careless heart transcribed the tale ; But , from the sneers of men who had grown hoary In shame and scorn , from groans of crowds made pale ¦ - ' .- _* : By famine , from a mother ' s desolate wail - _^ O er her poUuted child , from innocent blood l oure d on the e a rth , and brows anxious and pale With the heart ' s warf a re , d id I g ather food T o f ee d my many thoug hts ; atameless multitude . : ! - -- ¦¦ • ¦¦ . Shelley .
Julia , Arthur , Mrs . Elkinson , and Mr . Burke were the usual occupants of tbo mess-room when the weather was not sufficiently calm to be on deck . Mr- wee . ks and the purser were generally on deck with the captain . Mr . Burke was a tall , sallowlooking man , remarkable only for his devotion to the table and his careful superintendence of the ships cook—he seldom spoke except at table / and then only relative to the good or ill -qualities of the viands ,- after dinner he returned to the cabin , to sleep away the time until the next meal was announced . Mrs . Elkinson was likewise accustomed to an afternoon siesta : so that Julia and Arthur were generall y l e ft a lone during the time between the dinner and tea bells . It was during these interval s th a t Arthur , confided to Julia the minute particulars of his history ; the dreamin _^ s of his boyhood—the reveries of his apprentice vears—his
struggles with poverty in the metropolis—his entrance into political life—the exciting scenes that occurred in Birmingham—his unjust accusationhis flight , and the . awful details of the shi pwreck ; these events , told in the eloquent and impassioned manner which Arthur could so well employ , wer e sweet "but strange music to her ears—like Desdemon _* s he love d hira for th e dangers he ha d p a st , and he loved her that she did pity hun . In her eyes he became a hero of . romance , and she longed to know the principles of Chartism and the motives of its persecutors ; her heart truly informed her that the first were good and noble , or Arthur would not have adopted them , and the vindictireness and injustice of the latter were then apparent . In forcible language did Arthur depict to her the wrongs endured by the people through unjust legislation , and the simple but complete means of remedv propoun d e d * by the Charter .
" Look around , " said he , at the close of one of then- conversations , " on the myriads of our fellowbeings who yearly perish from hunger , or diseases brough t on by hunger , whilst the boards of pampered idlers groan with the weight of every excess . "View the dying thousands who Feel that their lives might be prolonged by a few drops of those generous liquors which are maddening and destroying the lives of their possessors . Se e th e thous a n d s of honest artisans . through whose ragged garments every winter ' s wind pierces like a dart , while yon sleek trades are well clothed in the raiment the others have created . Observe yon group of haggard females , compelled to desert their infant offspring , and sacrifice the joys of maternity at the shrine of
tha Factory Moloch . Glance at that crowd of women-men , inverting the order of Nature , and performing a mother s duties—nay , look not steadily at them , or then * wan faces will blush with shame and anger . Trace the career of those deserted babes—see their stunted frames bending beneath t h e i r protr a cte d ' labour , and their infant blood poured forth like water , that bur millowners and manufacturers may become refined and luxurious . Gaze upon the white hairs of those ancient labourers , the venerable of the land , who after producing more wealth than would have kept themselves and their families in affluence—cheated of the result of their labour—are compelled to enter tbat hell upon earth a Union Workhouse , or turned
adrift on life s dreary common , to starve and die . Julia shuddered at these harrowing p ictures , but alas ! their truth could not be _gainsayed . . " Does not such a state of society , " continued Arthur , " need a change—a state where honest Ind ustry starves , whilst bloated Idleness pants from excess—where "Virtue and Patriotism hide their heads in hovels which shake beneath the carriage wheels of the sycophant and the sensualist-r-where millions arc yearly wrung from tlie life ' s Wood of the poor , that cormorant bishops and pampered parsons may preach the doctrine , that the rich man cannot " enter into Heaven , and that passive
obedience is the grand injunction of God ? A state where ermined judges and . silk-gowned counsellors sit in state to distribute the mockery of justice to him whom their laws have rendered criminal , and where more money is yearly extracted from the marrow of her sons , forthe detection and punishment of crime , than would , if properly applied , for ever banish crime from the land . Yes , Lady Baldwin , it i s f o r teaching t h ese truths t ha t I a m r end er ed a f ug itive from justice , an exile from my native land . " •'""" et , " said Julia , " surely it is but the designing few who support these monstrosities—the majority of the upper classes need only to have them pointed out to take steps for their removal ?"
" Ah ! Lady Baldwin ; your charity leads you to jud ge them too favourably , "Wrapped up in the mantle of their own selfishness , they heed not the destiny of those beneath them—they tread on a slumbering volcano , the lava of desolation surrounds them , buc they Lave grown accustomed to the scene , and walk in fancied security . Providence , they say , has destined the many to poverty and labour , and it is useless for them to repine , and w ith this bla s p hemy on their lips they dismiss the subject , and proceed with their routine of existence—pleasure without enjoyment , revelry without mirth . If , perchance , one of their order should interest himself in so vulgar a subject , he is dubbed an eccentric or a monomaniac , an d his presence is shunned as a bore . " . " But the middle class , " said Julia , " surely they should aid the working men in so noble a struggle —their interests are similar ? . ' - * ¦ ¦ ¦ .
' -So , deal" lady , their interests are not similar ; they are as d' _^ tinct as the positive and negative poles of an electric battery ; they apparently belong tO the same body , they are influenced by the same cause s , but the effects on each are widely differentthe interest ofthe working man is to sell his labour at : the most profitable rate ; the interest of the other is to reduce it down to starvation point ; the one is benefitted bythe whole ofhis order being well employed and well paid ; the object of the other is , by the introduction of machinery , and the encouragement of pauper immi g ra tion to the l ar g e towns , to cause a redundancy of labour in the market , that he may . work upon the fears of the sensitive and the weak , and purchase their labour afc
his own price . Prior to the passing of the Ecform Bill , there was one solo point of similarity in their interests—both were equally disenfranchised : but when , by aid ofthe energy of the working men , they achieved that measure , the chain of the labour slave was rivetted still firmer ; the employer was politically free , but the brand-mark was still deeper engraved on the brow of the employed ; the ladder by which the middle class had risen was thrown down as useless , and they had ever since endeavoured , by every means in their power , to ally themselves to the upper class , and to build up a wall of separation between them and the woikinj * men . Selfishness is their ruling principle , —gold , the idol of their worship ; to this divinity all must
bow and bend . The shopkeepers and small trades _^ men alone have a common interest with the working men , but tbey , too , are either so immersed in the hard struggle for bread that they heed not the sure method of obtaining itthrough good and cheap government , or so lamentably ignorant that they sell their birthrig ht for a mess of potagc . " . " . - ¦¦¦• • ... . Julia . rephed * not , but sighed deeply , her ; visions of the " _"briglitnc 3 B o £ human nature -were fleeting fast away , but centred still more firmly in the one , to her mind , perfect specimen before her . Arthur continued : "So , fair lady , redemp ti o n for the working classes must spring from themselves alone ; long experience . has shown in every instance the credulity Of depending upon others ; and even _-rmnnff working men there are grades of aristocracy ,
who look down with contempt upon their equally useful brethren , who earn a few shillings less per week than themselves . Thus does the princip le of aristocracy penetrate even into the heart bf democraey , robbing it of vitality and strength , and causing the day of its deliverance to be afar off , for , of all enemies , the most deadly are thoso within our own ' ranks .- -But , perhaps , " said Arthur , mournfully , "it is a portion of our destiny tliat by sorrow , sufferino *; and persecution , again and again renewed ; can we alone'he fitted for _* the enjoyment of calm and peaceful liberty . " * _, _iv ., . --.:. , j . * •• ¦ .: -: ¦• There was something in the tone and manner oi Arthur that went _^ to the , heart of ; julia , —she answered hot _. ' bnt thought of her own-bitter lot-, ' and that for her ; there was no ultimatum of enjoyment .
" With such conversations as these did they wile twav the tedium of the voyage . . Julia drunk in the words of Arthur as from * a fount of inspiration ,-lus _sentimentB became her sentiments _. -hisfeelmgs . her SngB ,-and oh ! how . ; grate ful to Providence would she . have been if his lot , . though one of _uoverty and danger , could have been shared by her l \ s 0 Wealth and titles , what gaudy trappings ye nve how brilliant , but how unsatisfactoryJ - Your votaries rush through every dangei _^ -u _*^ every _Sce-spare neither age , nor s ex , friend nor foe , to Ep themselves in your embraces , and when sue , _^ _hasWow hed their _mrtions _^ hey find toe late that voiir folds are ¦ venomous , and your embraces _eniS v _Mtiety and disease . Poor Julia 3 she sought _nofweahX _^^^ £ S na y the penalty _^ others' vices , ;* Poor n ? _ScTon P _fc _aMSf _'^ _lW _^ S h _6 iir allotted parts , and _SBS-ft" _** 1 _^ Las ' _^ termmed foi ns . An Sm _smugg ling against a _. _universe _^ a feather
The Irvbbrooi. Fisascul Reform Associati...
against . the . _wmd' ; that wafts it—yefc have we seen the feather , coquette-like , fluttering between contending breezes , _oav ifs choosing its own coursepleasant _delusionrflatfering to our vanity , but ' fatal to . our happiness . _ Julia North , or rather Lady Baldwin , thinks that she could give up wealth and title to reside in a cottage with the chosen of her heart—that her destiny is in' her own hands—that she has to choose between love on the one hand , virtue and matronly pride on the other . Poor moth fluttering around the light , th y destiny is irrevocably fixed , thy minglea yarn is nearly span , tho sister fates will spare ye not . ( To be continued . )
The Defections Of The London Pbess. (Fro...
THE DEFECTIONS OF THE LONDON PBESS . ( From the People ' s Advocate and New South-Wales Vindicator , ) It is now nearly forty years since the two great poets , B yro n a nd M o ore , visited the editor of the Examiner , when suffering incarceration for the political independence of that journal . _ThoSronroF RraiNi , was conceived and executed , we believe , by Leigh Hunt , in Surrey gaol . Our desire is to direct the attention of oaf readers for a moment to the Examiner ' s course from that landmark in its history . - '
Persecution _assailed it , but thc i _" xaiiitH « r was steady in its political faith . The storm passed , and the gallant ship , with'its freight of mental life and activity , proceeded onward , still proudly breasting the waves of corruption and power . For forty years the Examiner h as . b een s e e n b y Europe in the vanward of liberty—an' ardent and effective promoter of the " good old cause ! " A clear and commanding intellect has been displayed in its advocacy of popular ri ght s , winning for it a " stirry place" in the fourth estate , while its steady adherence to truth has secured to it the public regard a nd confi d ence . But alas , its present conductor has stooped to the patronising hand of government!—the Examiner can no longer be reckoned in the
service of those Who are struggling to be free . The pride of man ' s mind is too great to allow it unhesitatingl y to acknowle dge a master—to stand up at once the unblushing apologist for the powers that be ; bhttheevilleavenisatwork ; its late articles Show , t h oug h as yet but faintly , the pervasion of the moral poison . __ . We could even bear with the truth-distorting , villany-breathing , blood-jocose , liberty-vituperating articles ofthe Times , if wo had not to bear with the defections of those veteran journals -whose names are grown , a s it were , household _synonymes of justice and freedom . We remember O'Connell ' s red nomenclature of the Ti m es , and we remember the raw-head-and-bleody-bones that glared upon our childhood from out the stori _e s of the old nurse , and we prepare ourselves to encounter all manner of dazzling monstrosities . We know i ts pest il ent ial nature and we walk through its atmosphere with
the plague-preventer at our bosoms . - _Looking at thc London press , it is impossibl e t o suppress our fears for the public good , and our apprehension of public evil . The jaundiced views taken of the late tremendous events in France—the kaleidescopic pictures of those fearful and all-important occurrences presented to the world—the tortuous misrepresentation of what the French had rendered clear and plain , and the ungenerous-and untruth-loving interpretations of the mystical there and dimly , seen—all these things have a portentousness in their hazy aspect , which must cause deep anxiety to the well-wishers of British journalism . Nor to us , the colonists of New South Wales , is this anxiety the least groundless ; -our ' caterers for English news pounce on all the worst portions of the unseemly patchwork ; every bad product of perverted zeal and talent seems to be relished
astonishingly by our local journalists . They think , perhaps , that their popguns will be the more formidable for havi n g some sme ll of th e pow d er a n d shot from th e cannon ofthe Times . In this they are not wise in their generation ; the people of this young country , with all their apathy and " intellectual barrenness " ( as the Herald calls it ) are athirst for truth . '
Poisonous Nature Of Effluvia From Inn De...
Poisonous Nature of Effluvia from inn Dead . —Mr . Mackinnon , M . P ., at a meeting respecting burials in towns , stated the following fact : — " A lady having died , her body was placed in a coffin , upon which was nailed a plate , describing her virtues , age , and station in life . The nails fastening this plate were , unfortunately , so long , that they passed through the wood and lead of the _. coffin , whieh caused tho effluviaof the body to escape , and the gas proved of so noxious a nature that lour of the deceased ' s daughters , who inhaled it while pining over the coffin , died within a fortni ght afterwards . : Workhouse Test . —The number of vagrants relieved during the six months ending March , 1849 , in tho workhouse of Sunderland , was 582 , at a cost
of £ 5 9 s . Id . The number relieved during the previous six months , ending September , 1848 , by . the relieving officers , out of the workhouse , but nearly all in Bisbopwearmouth , was 5 , 206 , at a cost of upwards Of £ 120 , The difference arose f rom the p lan now adopted in g iving relief to vagrants , which is this : —When vagrants apply for relief at the workhouso ( where alone it can be given ) , they are taken tO tho bath-room , made to strip , and have their clothes examined . After receiving a cold bath , they are furnished with a clean ni g ht-gown and a bed . In the morning they are made to rise before six , and in the first place , ' are reconducted to the bath-room to dress . The males aro then employed two hours breaking stones , and the females an equal time picking oakum ; after which they are
supplied with a breakfast , and are then seen out ofthe town by one of the porters . It is rarely that a ' second application is made by them . _Numbersoftte applicants have even refused to receive tho relief administered in this way , and have left the premises muttering cui'ses loud and deep against , all who have participated in establishing such a test of pauperism as a bath * . The mere saving , however , in the amount of relief secured by the change is very triflingcompared with the cost these vagrants otherwise entaUed to the union from their not unfrequently being taken ill at the ' . 'lodging houses " where they were temporarily located , themselves and families , in such cases , becoming chargeable for months , and in many instances permanently , owing to the difficulty experienced in ascertaining their settlements .
. Lusus _Nature—We have to record a lusus nattira , of which , in modern times , tho Sicilian twins Kitta-Christina and the Siamese brothers were the most memorable instances .: At Eevneghem , a village three leagues from the town of Bruges , forming nearly the central point between Bruges , Thourout , and : Ostend , were , born , on the 28 th ultimo , two children ofthe female sex compactly united to each other . The two bodies join at the sides ; the ligature union beginning a little below the right breast of the ono and the left breast of the other , and continuing as far as the navel , so that the children do not look each other in tho face , but are turned
one towards the other in an oblique position . Thoir heads , arms , thighs , and legs are perfectly free , and they have the proper use of all their limbs , and their position is such as to permit thoir mother to nurse both at tbe same time without difficulty . The curate of the parish baptised them the day of their birth in the names of Marie and Sophie . . The parents are poor servants , working and residing in a small farm held b y an old bachelor ! The husband ' s name is Tanghe ; his wife ; aged about thirtyeight years , has lour children . This birth has made somo considerable noise in the neighbourhood , and the curious already begin to besiege the farmhouse where it took place .
A Notorious _Burglab , named Phillips , confined at Chai'lestown ,, M as sachusetts , revealed to the warden and marshal the hiding-place of a rich booty on the banks of the river , and they took him to the spot in a cab . The three dug deeply into th e earth by turns , until they . had made a largo pit ; and Phillips then tumbled the warden in upon the marsbal , arid made his escape ! The _Makbie Ahcri at _Bucwngham PAiiAOB . — Preparations have commenced for the removal of this celebrated arch , which will be re-erected at the principal entrance , to the Home Park at Windsor Castle . ' ¦'' . '" . '
.' The Late' Mr.*Youatt,'In One Of His O...
. ' The late' Mr . _* Youatt , 'in one of his orations to the members ofthe Veterinary College , observes— " that by the improvements in modem chemistry , the medical _pi-ofesBion are enabled successfully to treat diseases which were previously supposed -as not within the .: reach cf inedicine . ' * This truth has been manifested for . many years , but in no instance of greater importance to mankind tban by the discovery of Blair ' sGout and Rheumatic Pills . ¦¦ - ¦ ¦ _' ¦¦ " ¦ Co-ass AN * ij B * jsioss . —" Paul ' s Every Main's Friend , " for the cure of Corn ' s and Bunions , has been so long before tlie public—so Highly approved of , that it is scarcely necessary to say anything in its praise . - We can- say that ; where the directions have been properly , attended to , we have never known it to fail . giving relief , andinmostenses has _proVed a complete cure , without any of the painful and dangerous operations ; ofcuttiug and filingso generally -made use of by Cora " Doctors , . who . , stylo themselves _. . _'fCluropo . dists . " ¦¦ - ¦ ' - ' - ¦ ' . ' - ¦ _" " ¦" . ' : * _- ¦ " _„ " ' ''' _ ' state
HOW TO CUBE BY HoiAOWAT ' _s PlIX 9 a Disobdekeb OF THE BoWEts Thousands of lives might be saved by _idoptinK the following means :-To eschew the use of fruit * vegetable- * , pastry , eggs , the fat of meat , sauces , wuie , beer , and spirits , and to avoid committing any excess ., lo cleanse well & e stomach ,. liver , ' and bowels , and purify the * blood of all impurities , which win be effected by taking five . or six of llolloway _' _s pills night and morning for _fafteen , days , aud tlien for some littlft time two or three doses awee _* k . ' Thus the highest state "> of ¦ health wiU be obtained , and even cholera prevented , r The same precautions should be' taken in cases of ordinary bowel complaints . ::. -- _, ; ... _. .. . ... . . -Worth A'GuiiJBA . —Mr . Thomas ' _Featherstohc , tlie respected . Secretaryjof 'Xho- Sheffield * . Temperance Society , ' haying suffered severely fi-om tooth-ache , was cured by the use of Brande _' s'Enamel _. ' upon which , he wrote tothe _pro-, p rietor to ' the following _enect : — " I would-have given ' -a guinea for siieh a cure as this 1 " And there are _tliousands now enduring torture , who , if tliey knew the . advantages really derivable from the uscof this prepar . itibri , _. would buy aguinea _' s worth for a ' _shilling _, andput on end to'their sutt ' _ei-ings . They are , however , so many impositions , afoot , thatpeoplereliict antlyplace confideiice / where it may justly be bestowed .. _b _^ _^ _I . ¦ _.- _* _-, •; . ! .: '' _-. _-. - . _:. _•" . * _ii . ; _-. ¦ ' < _c
, -^Arcetieg. ^
, - _^ _arcetieg . _^
The Magpie Ano Hie Paksox .. —I Have Bee...
The Magpie ano hie Paksox .. —I have been half tempted to believe that the , magpie first suggested totyrants , the first idea of having a tithe-eating olergy . The magpie devour _^ t he corn and grain ; so does the parson . The magpie takes the wool from sheep ' s back ; so does the parson . The magpie devours alike the _yountr animals and tbe eggs ; so doos the parson .. The magpie ' s clack is everlastingly going ; so is the parson ' s . The magpie repeats by rote wordsthataretaughtit ; sodoestneparson . Themag--pie is always skipping and hopping , and peeping into othernests ; soistheparson . The magpie ' s colour is partly black and white ; so is thc parson ' s . Tho greediness , impudence , and cruelty of magpies are proverbial ; so are those ofthe parson . I was saying the other day to a farmer , that if th e bo r oug hmongers had a mind to ruin America they would , another time , send over five or six good large flocks of mag p ies , instead offive or six of their armies , — William Cobbett .
The Athenaium shows how our postmen put a girdle round about the earth : "The letters now posted in Great Britain exceed 330 , 000 , 000 annually , a number which , taking the average length as fire inches , if laid end to end , -would reach 26 , 040 miles , a distance greater than the circumference of the earth . " Names . —Christian names , as well as Surnames , are often exposed to most ludicrous corruptions . A good story , m point ; is told by ** the Doctor . " "A gentleman , called Anketil Gray , h ad occasion for the certificate ofhis baptism : it was known at what church he had been baptised , b ut o n se ar chiug the register there , no such name could be found ; somo mistake was presumed , therefore , not in the
entry , but in the recollection of the parties , and many other registers were examined without success . At length the first register was again referred to , and then upon a closer investi gation , they found him entered as Mss Ann Kettle Gvey . ' Mb . Hudson ' s Testimoniai ,. —For this testimonial under £ 16 , 000 were subscribed . This was paid into the York Union Banking Company , to be presented by the Committee for the testimonial to Mr . Hudson , but the honourable gentleman thinking " delays are dangerous , " took the money out , and applied it to the purchase of Albert-gate House , which is reported to be how for sale . —Herapath ' s Journal . ' _SuGGESTun Legislation for America . —The
enactment of no laws either b y Congress or State Legislatures , which shall grant special privileges . Thc greatest good to tho greatest number should be the object of aU Legislative Action . The acknowledg m e nt oft he _Natur a l E i ghts of al l , regardless of Colour or Clime . A Free Elective Franchise—Free Schools and a FREE SOIL . Direct Taxation for the incidental . expenses of Government . The red uction of the s a l a ries o f p u bl ic officers , where too high , and a moro economical Administration of Government . —More protection to Labour and less to capital . —Land Limitation . —Homestead Exemption —and the reduction oi the hours of Labour in esta b lishments chartere d by Law .
The Medical Times recommends a " student clause " to the medical bill : —¦ " Be it enacted—tbat no student shall Along the streets at midnight with a pal Swagger , cigar in mouth , on mischief bent , On pain of being styled a rakish gent . " In socieiv , as actually organised , each is false to all , and all are false to each ; but the source of the universal falsehood is , that every one is false to himself—is false to his individuality as an individual . Earnest Men are never offended that others who differ from them the widest in opinion should bo earnest ; but they are offended that the earnestness of others should treat their earnestness as folly and guilt . The Principal Eva . —Some , however , oft h e most honest and fearless of the Radicals have shown
the institution of private property in the soil to be wh a t it re a lly is , namely , an evil ofthe first magnitude , and one the abolition of ; which must be an early fruit of the political enfranchisement of the people ;—S . Bower . A Scriptural _Sqao . —The imposition of baptismal names has frequently been influenced by some whim Of the parents , At Charlton , county Kent , three female children , produced at one birth , received thc names of Faith , Hope , and Charity . A peasant , residing in a vill a ge on the Sout h Do w ns , in Sussex , once presented an infant at tho font , and desired the officiating minister to give him the name of
Acta . The clergyman , puzzled at the suggestion of so strange a name , inquired how it was spelt , and whence it had been selected . The honest man replied that it was a Scripture name , and as his four former children bore the names of Matthew , Mark , Luke , and John , he should like to have this one christened "Acts ! " The intention was , how e v e r , overruled , and a more regular appellation conferred . Unfortuftately for the poor child , the circumstance Was no # forgotten in his iafter life ; and as he had two younger brothers , named , respectively , Richard and Thomas , the _roguish urchins of the village used to annoy the whole tamily by the following rigmarole : —
"Matthew , Mark , Luke , and John , Acts o ' Fost l es _, Dick , and Tom . _' " There mioiii be sonie hope of our amendment if we would but confess our faults ; as a man must be awake that tells his dream . —Seneca . LUTHER used TO sat— " Inthe name of God begins all mischief . " All must be fathered upon God . _Fohce Justified . — If a robber i nv ad e my h ouse , or a murderer attack my family , shall I not use force ugalnst him ? If in my own defence I am compelled to slay hiin , is not this a righteous act ? Is the evil less , when the robber calleth himself a legislator—when the assassin is a minister ? Shall the one be "justifiable homicide , " and the other be branded as " rebellion ?"
r . Woman ' s Temper . —So tr a it of character is more valuable in a female than the possession of a sweet temper . Home can never be made happy without it , It is like the flowers that spring up in our pathway , reviving and cheeringus . Let a man go home at night , wearied and worn by the toils ofthe day , andhWsoothirigisawoyd dictated by a good disposition . 'It is sunshine falling u p on his heart , lie is happy , and the cares of life are forgotten . A Bweet temper . has a soothing influence over the m i n d s of a whol e fa mil y . Where itis found in a wife and mother , you observe kindness and love predominate over the bad feelings of a natural heart . Smiles , kind words , and looks , characterise tlie . children , and peace and love have their dwelling there . Study , then , to acquire and retain a sweet temper . It is more valuable that gold ; it captivates more than beauty , and to the close of life retains all its frcshness * and power .
The _Lanh Common Property . —Tho land or earth , in any country or neighbourhood , with everything on the same , or pertaining thereto , belongs at all times to the living inhabitants of the same country or n e i ghbourhood in an equal manner . For there is no living but on the land and its productions , consequently , what we cannot live without , we have the same property in as in our lives . — Thomas Spence : It is in the daily occurrences of mere commonp lace life , with all its mixture of folly and impertinence , that the proper exercise of virtue lies . — Carter .
R .. ...,'...., 5y0u..Maybe Cu11ed Yet,, ... .,. ..,„ .1,., Hollowat^Oitftment.
r .. ..., _' _...., 5 Y 0 U .. MAYBE CU 11 ED YET ,, ... .,. .., „ . 1 ,., HOLLOWAT _^ _OItfTMENT .
Ad00318
CURE OF iiHEUlIATISlI AND MIEUMATIC GOUT . ' Extract ofa Letter from Mr . Thomas Bruntou , Landlord of the-Waterloo Tavern , CJoatham , Yorkslure , late of the Life Guards , dated September . 28 th , 18 * 8 . . . Sm , —For a long time Iwas a martyr to Hheumalism and Rheumatic Gout , and for ten weeks previous to using your medicines I wns so bad as not to be able to walk . I had trifed doctoring aud medicines of every kind , but all to no avail , indeed I daily got worse , and felt that I must shortly die . From seeing your remedies advertised in the paper I take in , I thought l would give them a trial . I did so . I rubbed the ointment in as directed , and kept cabbage leaves to the parts thickl y spread with it , and took the Pills night and _morning . In three weeks I was enabled to walk about for an hour or two in tlie day with a stick , and in seven weeks I could go anywhere without one . I ani now , by tho blessing of God and your medicines , quite well ,
Ad00317
TIIE _POPULAIi- REMEDY . D ARR'S L _I'F-E PILL S . 1- Which arc aclinowleged to be all that is required to ¦ conquer Disease and Prolong Life .
Ad00316
AN EFFECTUAL C URE FOR PILES , FISTULAS , & c . ABERNETHY'S' PILE OINTMENT . What a painful and noxious disease is the Piles ! and , comparatively , how few ofthe afflicted have been permanently cured "by ordinary appeals to medical skUl ! This , no doubt , avisos from the use of powcrtul aperients too Iremiently administered by the . profession ; . indeed , . Strong internal medicines should always bo * avoided * -n all cases of this complaint . Thc proprietor of tlie above Ointment , after years of acute _suftemg , placed lunisett under the treatment of that eminent surgeon , Mr . Abernethy _; was by him restored to perfect health , and has enjoyed it ever since without the slightest return of the disorder , over a _peiiod' of fifteen years , during which time _^ the same Abernetbian prescription has been tlie means of healing a vast number of desperate cases , both in and out of the proprietor ' s circles of friends , most of which cases had been under medical care , and some of them for a very considerable time . Abernethy ' s Pile Ointment was _introfluced to the public by tlie desire of many who had been _peMcOy healed by Us application , and since its introduction the fame '* of this Ointment has spread far and wide ; even the . medical profession , always slow , and unwilling to acknowledge the virtues of any medicine not prepared by themselves , ao now freely and frankly admit that _Abernetli-y ' s PUe Ointment is notpnly a valuable preparation , but a . never foiling remedy in every stage and variety ofthat appalling malady . , ' . ' . Sufferers from the Piles will not repent giving the Ointment a trial . Multitudes of cases ot it 3 etheacy might be produced , if the nature of the complaint did not render those who have been cured , unwilling to publish their names , . i . Sold in covered Pots at 4 s . 6 d ., or the quantity of three 4 s . Od . pots in one for lis ,, witli full directions for use , by Barclay and Sons , Farrihgdon-street ; Edwards , St . Paul ' s Church-yard ' ; _llutler , 4 , Cheapsine ; Newbery , St . Paul ' s ; Sutton , Bow Church-yard ;* Johnson , 68 , Cornhill ; Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Willoughby audi Co ., 01 , _llishopsgate-street Without ; _-Ow 6 h , 52 , Marchmbnt-street , _Burton-cresent ; Bade , 39 , _Goswdl-street ; Prout , : 22 U , Strand ; Ilannay and Co ., GS , Oxford-street ; Prentice , 84 ' Edgeware-road -and retail by aU respectable Chemists and Medicine Vendors in Eondon . V Be sure to ask for "ABERNETHY'S PILE OINTMENT . " Tiie Public are requested to be on their guard against noxious Compositions ; sold at low Prices , and to observe that hone can possibly be genuine , unless the name of C . -King is printed on the Government Stamp affixed to each pot , 4 s , fid . ; which is the lowest price the proprietor is enabled to sen it at , owing . to the great expense of the Ingredients . ¦ -- ¦ - - ¦ - - - -- ¦¦ _' ; ... CORNS AND BUNIONS . ' ! : .. ' _: ¦¦ , PML'S : EVERY MAN'S FlilEND , ** •'';¦ - , ' : ''; , ] Patronised by the Royd _^ Is a sure and speedy . Cum for those . severe annoyances , . without causing the least pain-or ineonvenienco Unlike ill other remedies for Corns , its operation is such as to render the cutting of Corns altogether unnecessary indeed we may ' sav the practice of cutting Corn s is at aU time ' s highly dangerous , and has been . 'frequently attended with lamentable conse quences , besides its liability to increase their growth ; it adheres with the most gentle pressure , produces an instant and " delightful relief from torture _* _'and with perseverance in its application , entirely eradicates the most inveterate Corns and Bunions , I . - -- ¦ - ' ' - - - - : . . ¦ .- ; . . Testimonials have been recei _*/ e . dfrpm upwards of one . hundred Physicians and Surgeons of the ' greatest emitfene ' e as well as from many Officers of both Army mul Navy , and nearly , one thousand private letters from ' the gevitry in ' tbwn and country , speaking in high terms of this valuable remedy . . -- . _. fa J Prepared by John Fox , in boxes at Is . 'lid ., or three small boxes in * one for 2 s . 9 d ., and to bo had with full directionB for use , . Of aU Wholesale and . _retad _mememe vendors in town arid coun _^ the stamp . A 2 s . 9 d _, bos cures the most obdurateconis .. ; v ..,- * *¦ * ° - ¦ - * ¦¦ -. , _-.- •¦ _, .. i ! ; ' ; ¦ '¦ - ' j _..- _**^ _* ' * _^ . _"" - ' ¦ ''' _- ¦ ¦ ¦•• SlC ! _fW ' '' ' 'Abernethy's Pde Ointment , Paul ' s Corn' Plaster , and Ah eraeth y ' s Pile Powders , are sold by the following respectable Cliemists and Dealers in Patent Medicines : — ¦ y- :- ' ¦¦ . ';' ¦ - _- '; .: . •¦¦ ¦ _:. ' ' - * . . " _>„ Barclay and Sons , FarringUotf-street -Edwards ,- 67 , 'St . ' Paul ' s Church-yard ; ' Butler ) 4 , - CKoapsMe ' j Newb ' erv _. _' St Paul ' s * ; Sutton , Bow'Church-yard _;» Johnston , ul 6 , ' _Groek-stroet , ' Soho , and , 08 , CornhiU ; Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; ¦ _WiUoiighbysaud Co ., 61 , _Jhshopsgate-street Without . ; _OWen _, 62 i'Maichmo ' ut-street . _Bm-toii-creseent ; Eade , 39 , ' Ooswellstreet ; Prout , 229 ,: Strana _^ Hannay and Co ; , 63 , Oxford-Street ; _Prc-ntis _, 84 , Edgewarc-ro _' ad ; and ' retail by ari respectable cUendsts and . medicine vendors in London . -. :.:... . , - ' * ' CODNTOX ' AGEKTS , —Baines and Ne ' _wsomeiHcaton _/ Smeeton , Beihha ' rdt ' andsons _. vj . C . _Bi-owrie , 48 . Briggate-, Denton , Garland , Mann ; Bean ; Harvey , _iHaigh , ' late Tarbottoin ' j _Bolland ' and _Komphly _) Land , Moxoiri , C . ' _. _IIlR _, 106 / Briggate ; B 2 K * des , BeU andBrook , _^ _'lord , B , C Hay ; _-Jledical Hall ,--Leeds ; _BhmniDffto » , Maud and . Wilson , ' _Rogersbu , Stanfleld , Bradford ; Hartley , Denton , "Waterhouse , Jepson ; iWo 6 d 1 ; Dyei _' ,: Pai _* kcr ,. Jenhings , aiidLeyland , "nalifax ; Smith , Elland ; Hurst , ' _Cai-dweU , _; Gell , ; and _Smithy Wakefield ; : Pybus , Bamsley !; Knowlcs , Thornc , Bvobk , and . Spwev : ' Huddersflel . d i Hudson , Keighley j _, Broeke , Doncaster ; .. Matthows , jOreaser , Driffield , Cass , ' Goole ; _"Jlilncr Pic ' _Jceri- _* _' _**'* ' Stevenson , Whitby . ; Bolton , Blansliavd arid Co ., Hargrove , "Pisher , Oflev , Linnev _, Yorh ; 'WaimwislitrHQWdenYnors by , _\^ W _^ P ' Jefferson ,. _"Maltoit ; Bucltall _, ' Scarborough ; ' Smith , _Furbv / Bridlin _^ oa . ; -Adams , Coltdn , 'i ? ulleii ; _SMbyi ' Ombjioi ' _Mai'KCt Wei ' gliton ; Glediiill / _'OWUelph ; Priestley , Po . _- _^ l ' onieeraot ; , ; Dh % , V'Vtlie ' rbv Sla ' ter . Bedale "; 'i ) i-von , Northallerton * , Ward , ' Richmond _y-Wavi _, _Stokesley- _. Toggitti and Thompson ' , ' Thhsk ; _MonkllouBe , Bawuird _Caslic _* . Pease , Dariingtpn _JenDiptt ; Stockton ; . _¦ Andby . aU respectable ! Chemists aiid Medicine' Vendors in every Market Towii in England . -.. > ... " \\ £ Otr" £ S 4 _L & _AOCT _* _l * s ,. T _^ Mossrs . ; Bolton , Blansharil and Co .,, DE Uggists ;; Micldegate , X 6 ri * . . ' ; . , ' _-,, ' , : ' •• - ••• - " - ; ' _** * " l- _' _- ' _l- ' _^ H f -l ] ¦ - ' " , _¦¦?¦ •¦¦' '¦> : _: "¦"/ . ¦¦ _* : - _¦¦'¦•
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 30, 1849, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_30061849/page/3/
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