On this page
- Departments (1)
- Adverts (13)
-
Text (5)
-
» THE STAR OF FREEDOM. ^ % " J 3 ^ !," 1...
-
WOWS'8 RIGHTS CONVENTION IK AMBBIW. % A ...
-
INDIA. THE OVERLAND MAIL. THE WAR IN BUR...
-
Pleasast "Visitors. — The Seminole Chief...
-
WORKING TAILORS' ASSOCIATION, 68, WESTMUfSTEH BRIDGE ROAD, LAMBETH.
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
France. < Prorogation Of The Corps Legis...
Austria to Hungary , has caused to _be arcnlatedan address to hia partisans ; exhorting tbem to . persevere ,, and holding out thlhopes oi an _« rly emancipation . It wadd _. d that he has iuforuiedtheHungarian _^ f _^ Z _^ t Z _^ eetion raisins- a new loan of large amonnt for the next insurrection . _SmI PeS , who fas ofthe principal commanders ; in fte _£ £ _* _presented to be opposed to tbe raising _^ _fe _' decreo of December 30 th , 1851 . _FiehWIarshal _Ttkdetkv had forbidden all public conveyanceg to carry anVprinted books or pamphlets of any kind , on pain of belno- treated aa propagators of clandestine publications . By a ° new decree of the 25 th , tbe _sase punishment is to ba extended to tbose who send such p ro d uctions by public conveyances other than the Post-office .
ITALY . The Austrian " Terror" in Venice . Tesicb . — The military commander of _Este has published the new sentences of , the court-martial , and tbe number of tbose condemned to death reaches 100 ! 200 citizens bave been condemned to irons for different periods of years . There also remain in prison about 400 , wbo will be shot or pat in irons . The executions are so numerous , that the Venetians are raising a subscription to build an asylum for the orphans of the victims of Austrian tyranny .
UNITED STATES . OUR . _AMERICAN CORRESP 02 vDEjS CE . The Democraticparty and European intervention—Conference of latter-day Saints—Catholicism in America—Sandwich — lends—Battle between Uie Mormons and Red Indians—Cannibalism among the Fejecs—Kossuth ' s movements-Melancholy disaster—Terrible explosion at Cleveland . ( From our own Correspondent . ) _Kzw Y qhk , Joke 16 . The choice of General Pierce for President , and _Rufus King for President , by the Democratic Convention at Baltimore , has given great , and almost universal satisfaction _, to the Democratic party . 1 have little doubt but tbat they will both be elected by a very considerable ma-Knowing this , I cannot help feeling grieved thai theywho call themselves the "Democratic Party , " are not « _a % Democratic ; instead of being , as most of them are , the upholders of slavery and other iniquitous existing " institutions . " In my last communication , Imentioned that the
Conventionhad been silent on the subject of our foreign policy . I believe , that on this important question—really "the greatest question the day" for the people of this country no party will long be able to keep silence , or will have the ' power to shirk it . Kossuth has carried the great idea of American intervention in Europe home to the mind of every man in this country , " who ' s heart is in tbe right place . " I do not admire the Kossuth doctrine of intervention in favour of non-intervention . I regard it as imperfect , and inadequate to tbe requirements of the tune ; but I am thankful to Ko 3 suth for haring broached the principle at all . It is one which was sure to be greedily caught up by a people like ours , and I have no fear but thai in a little time the doctrine will become perfected , ___ America will see the justice and necessity of interfering _^^ _Euron e , not only to repel tbe attack of a foreign foe , but also to free the peoples from the bonds imposed upon them in tbeir days of ignorance by internal tyrants , which bonds thev have now no means of bursting nnaided .
I repeat , this all-important question must be taken up by emu men who Bhall henceforth be entrusted with tbe guidance of the _aSairs of tbis great Republic . We seem to have , as well as the nations of the old world , a vast amount of gullibility amongst ns . The priests of the Pope and the disciples of Joe Smith seem equally successful in collecting in tbeir " meetings" crowds of the "faithful" to listen to tbeir absurd harangues , and in collecting in their pockets the dollars of said "faithful" followers . I learn , f rom t h e "Deseret ! _Kews , " that the " General Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was held at the Sew Tabernacle , Great Salt Lake City , April 6 , President Brigham Young , presiding . Brigham Youn g w a s su s t a in ed , by the unanimous vote ofthe Conference , as tbe President , Prophet , Seer and Revelatoa of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints , in all the earth ; and Heber C . Kimball and _Willard Richards as his counsellors and the authors of the Church generally , a hitherto organised , were sustained in like manner . "
It would appear from the sayings and doings at this saintly Conference * that " never before has the Lord ' s Store House been so well sapplied with wheat , meat , butter , eggs , vegetables and other useful articles , and bis pasture with cattle , as at the present time . " After giving a flaming account of the proceedings of the Conference , the "News" adds : —" Thus ended tbe most glorious Conference of the Saints of the most high in these the latter days . Revelation upon revelation has been poured ont from time to time ; the spirit of God has rested down upon tbe Saints in every meeting during this Conference . "
Absnrd as may appear this melange of eggs , and saints butter , and revelations , it is quite weak in comparison -with the lecture of Orestes Brownson , who , " teld forth " in the Broadway Tabernacle last night . The subject of the lecture was " The incompatibility of _Prestantism with Liberty I ! " You will not doubt that the very modest announcement that Oreste 3 would satisfactoril y pro v e thi s incompatibility was quite sufficient to carry me to the Tabernacle to hear tbe very Catholic lecturer . From tbe note 3 I toot , I am enabled to give you an extract or two from tbe Rev . Doctor ' s speech , which will hest enable you to judge of the merits of bis " arguments . " After saving that the freedom of inquiry , so mueh boasted of by Protestants , was only the freedom of holding error , and that Catholics had no need of farther inquiry , as they had already found the truth , he said : —
The danger in this coantry is fram Hadicalism . This the Catholic Church always opposes . It invariably sets itself against Abolitionism , Kossuthism , Quixotism , and all the insane inventions of moderaNew Idghtism . When foreign demagogues strive to fan the fires of Revolutionism and involve our country in the ill-omened quarrels of Europe ' Catholirism boldly breasts the torrent of fanatical excitement and forbids her _chi'dren to take part in the agitation . When incendiary efforts are made to array one section of our own country agaiust another , ana adopt measures which tend to destroy the national compact . Catholicism always is found on the side of theTMon . Kot that our civil liberty depends on Republican institutions . To suppose this is a mistake . It proceeds not from political bnt from crrii institutions , which we inherited from Old England , ir . her best and most glorious davs of Catholicity . In the motherly bosom of the Catholic Church alone , were the influences which would make thia the chosen home of _mteui freedom
country geace _, , and religion Think of tbat , Master Brooke ! Mark how Catholicism op po ses "foreigndemagogues , " "insane measures tending to destroy the national compact "—that is to say' i t on pose 3 the abolition of slavery . Tbe " friend of freedom ' ' ' too ! Heaven save freedom irom such friends _» sav I ' This oration of Oresfe 3 forcibly reminds me of a poetical defence of Catholicism I remember to have heard in Dublin _tvhen I visited tbat capital of the " gim of tha _sae " many years ago . It was from a street singer popularly known 33 Zasimu 3 , who was in tbe habit of turning into rythm tbe political questions of the day , and retailing them in the form of a song to an admiring mob . In order to show the blessings of orthodoxy , be pnt , and answered , an _interesting question in the following elegant couplet : — " "When was it Ireland to England did stick ? It -was when England was all Catbolick "
Accounts from Honoluln state that the parliament of the Sandwich Islands was formally opened by the King on the 13 th of April . Account's received here from the plains , speak of fighting between the Mormon emigrants and the " Indians . It is _gaid that the Mormons bad not proceeded over one hundred jmle 3 from the Bluffs , following np the north bank of the P l atte , when tbe Indians commenced the levying of black mail by stealing into tbeir camp at night and driving of Iheir cattle . Thia was repeated several nights in succession _trhen at length one of tbe night guards fired upon and _grounded an Indian . Finding that no more could be fedped from silent and stealthy roguery , and exasperated at the wound inflicted upon their comrade , the red men
_determmed upon more decisive measures . Accordingly at the dead hour of midnight , when the whole Mormon emigration were sleeping in . assured security in the valley of the Elk Horn Hirer , the Iodises charged on horseback info ( heir midst , firing arrows and shooting guns at random and yelling as if all Pandemonium were let loose . ' The consternation of tha emigrants , who knew little of lavage habits , wa 3 very great , but thev were driven by Bbeer necessity to a vigorous defence . So soon as the Indians discovered ihat the eamp was thoroughly aroused tbey retreated as precipitately as they originally charged ' dnvingbefore them as many horses and oxen aa they could ! The rumour is that two of the emigrants were killed and _eeveral wounded . What injury the Indians received no one knows .
On the Sth inst . an Irishman" named Hugh Duffy was Blabbed by _> brutal fellow in Mulberry street , and subsequently died in the Kew York Hospital . At Lousivilie a man named _Geiske has committed suici 4 e b | auootWiK himself , supposed to have been caus 9 dby _^ _S _^ « _Jj _£ _l wife ' whom be _^ o tried to kill . iJ ? hJ _^ J _^^ T ' _!^ 8 ' that there i 3 n o _Solera _iL , _^ w 'J , - L % SalIe ' _aDd tbat the telegraphic * mort that _six-ty _bb- _ourershad died on _therailroadat ; the _fctter place is without foundation .-The physicians of La HL _?™ m _^\ Mepo tt _^ ethe publication of that despatch , in which they say _tbartherels not a ' single case
Mr . Hunt , a Wesleyan missionary amon » the _Feiee _<» who & _£ fa ! dfe 2 2 L _3 _S desc » P _^ . _^ _tee _? _Sl 00 C £ i _IfTif e yea f ' within fifteen miles of ha residence . Some of thera eat raw human flesh , and Chew it as sailors do tobacco . Thev sometimes eat their best friends . When parents grow old , they are killed by tbeir children . Sometimes tbey are buried alive or thrown to tbe sharks . Women on the death of their husbands are killed . Kossuth has removed from the _Irving House fo the private boarding-house of Mrs . Cornell , So . 52 East Sixteenth-street , where he will probably remain until he starts for Europe . t » _w - J P el , er _Foreat City , which left Cleveland for « w ? at .. o ' clock on the evening of Monday , when _awutten miles out , coll a pse d on e of h e r flues , killing three _« " _«¦«« . _^ o one else was injured . n « , _nW . * happened on Tuesday last in the HUlt _d - _*? tb ( SJ _** v . Edward D . Yery ( pastor ofthe ChtmL _%° r M . _5 e parisb of _PortlaVd , ) Pro f e s sor 2 _FSS . _^ fon . _stents , named Band , Phalen , Grant , boS ti r _± if . _-S A ( V ' a GoIIe _2 e . were Proceeding in _„ J _?? _. _^ _Cape Blomidon , ( near _Windsor . Nova Scotia 1 a
• o fag also pVriS . Weie drow 0 ed - 0 ae of _« " > _* " > _^ _tK _^ JS _^ . ™ * J » city was moat intense . It : _,. . n _? and as unexpectedly manifested as it was
France. < Prorogation Of The Corps Legis...
oppressive and enervating . The mercury m _WaU-street got up to 81- in a cool place , but tbe average heat as en dured by labourers and pedestrians was fully 90 ' .
» The Star Of Freedom. ^ % " J 3 ^ !," 1...
» THE STAR OF FREEDOM . _^ % _" _J _^ ! , _" 185 * .
Wows'8 Rights Convention Ik Ambbiw. % A ...
WOWS' 8 RIGHTS _CONVENTION IK AMBBIW . % A numerously attended _-WouTau ' _s Rights Convention was held in Ohio towards the latter end of Jast month . Am ° « s the speakers were Mrs . Francis D . Gage known as am » Fanny , ' wbo presided ; Mrs . Jane Frohock , Mrs . Catheime Severance , and Mrs . Josephine Griffin . The following are the resolutions of the Convention . — 1 . Resolved , That in the proposition affirmed by this nation _^ o he _self-evidently true , that ' all men are _^^ _jAX _^ \ va , ' is a general term , including the whole race without dulinc fa 2 _? £ oTved , That this equality of the _^ _" _^ _fallnaustriah does extend , to rights personal , social , legal , _^ _J _" _* and religious-including , of vonvse , representation _»^« g _*™ ment . the elective franchise , choice of < W _# _^^ tJSl tialdistribution of the _regard of effort ; and _» n _"ff _^ Xr " these particulars , "Woman has the same right to choose n « r _-pnere _ofaction , as Man to choose his . . , „„ ; ninvidual 3 ResolvedThat since human being J » » n _™?™ JEJ
. . every _spterl _^ dthat is _feHaTgeBl he or ri » can fill , _*»«**»«* right to determine the proper sphere of another . w onjan i . _Besolved , That the assertion of these Il _ _*_ % ™ J _ _£ _ _fo equally with ilan , involve the doctrine that she , equally with mm should be protected in their exercise . _-mumA re . 5 . _Hesolved , That we do not believe any fe _* _d « P _«** _££ ¦ strictU * nnecessary to preserve the distinctive _*»«»« and that in demanding for women equality of rights w _» tneu fathers , husbands , brothers and sons , we neither daw _" _»* _*! _£££ tire character nor wish them to avoid anj duty , _^ la > ' _^ lae leim nine delicacy which _legitimatelybeloDgs tethem as motners , vive > , sisters and daughters . . „_ . „ -n _„ : _^< , fi , 6 . Resolved , That to _psrfect the marriage union and provide tor the inevitable vicissitudes of life , the in _?^ y 5 J * _52 £ . S « n should be equally and distinctly recognised by the . partiestnemselves , and by the laws of the land ; and therefore , just ce and tue highest regard for the interests of society require tint _£ _"«** » _soameuded thatmarried women be permitted to _f ° fo _**™*™" on their accountte acquireholdinvestand dispose of
proown : , , , perty in their own separate and individual right , subject to all corresponding and appropriate obli gations . Otofpnf 7 . Hesofved , That the clause of the Constitutionof _^ w « State ot Ohio which declares that' all men have thei right f ? _2 _?* S the possessing property , ' is violated by the judicial doctrine that the labour ofthe wife is the prooeity ofthe husband . . f 8 . Resolved , That in tbe > Deral scantiness ° _^ _penj-ation of woman ' s , the restrictions imposed by custom _«* J _^ ° f ' X npon her choice _ofemployments _, and her _opportuniWor earnmg money ; and the laws and social usages which _WW _*** _*^ button of property as between men and women , _^ ve together produced a pecuniary dependence of woman np n man widely and deeply _inj-urious in many nays , and not the least of all in too often _perverting marriage , which shonld be a holy relation growing out of spiritual affinities , into a mere _Dargain and sale , a means to woman of securing subsistence and a home , and to man of obtaining a kitchen _drudsre or a parlour ornament . .... value the
9 . Resolved , That sacred and inestimable in , as are rights which we assert for woman , ( heir possession and exercise are not the ultimate end we aim at , for rights are not ends , hut only means to ends ; implying duties , and are _tohedemaiidedm order that duties maybe performed . _« . „ . „ _* 10 . Resolved , That Goa , in constituting woman the mother ot mankind , made her a living providence to produce , nourish , guard , and govern his best and noblest work from helpless infancy to adult years ; having endowed her with faculties amply , but no more than sufficient , for the performance of her great worK . Be requires of her , as essentially necessary to its performance , the _iuu development of those faculties . , . .. ,. . 11 . Resolved , That we do not charge woman ' s privation ot ner rights on man alone , for woman also has contributed to this result ; and as both have sinned together , we callonbottttorepeaUogether , that the wrong done by both , may , by the united exertions ot both , be undone .
_Anot he r "Woman's _Sights Convention assembled at _\ V est Chester , Pensylvania , on the 2 nd ult ., and s t for two davs . Among those present were Lucretia Mott ; Mrs . Frances D . _Gase , of Ohio : Mrs . Catherine I . H . _ftiehols , Editor of the " Windlam ( Vt . ) Democrat ; " Dr . Harriet K . Hunt , of Boston ; and Mrs . Ernestine L . Rose , of Hew York . , , , . The following resolutions among others were adopted : — Resolved , That tbe present position of medical institutions , precluding woman from the same educational advantages with man , under pretext of delicacy , involves an acknowledgment of the imnramietv of hUeverhelne her medical attendant .
Resolved , That we Will do all in our power to sustain tuose women who , from a conviction of duty , enter the medical profession , in their efforts to overcome the evils that have accumulated in their path , and ia attacking the strongholds of vice . Resolved , Thatthe past actions and present indications of our medical schools should not affect us at vll ; and notwithstanding Geneva and Cleveland Medical Colleges closed their doors after graduating one woman each , and Harvard , through the false delicacy of the students , decided it inexpedient to admit one who had been in successful practice many years , we woald still earnestly follow where duty points , and leave the verdict to au enlightened public sentiment .
Resolved , That the true interests of society demand that woman sUould be represented in the government , and that her most strenuous exertions and most valuable serrices are to be obtained only through her participation in its _responsibilities and emoluments . . ¦ Resolved , That if it be true , that it is woman ' s province to soothe tbe angry passions and calm the belligerent feelings of man , we know of no place where she would fiada riper harvest awaiting her labour , than in the halls of our National and State Legislatures . Resolved , That in demanding for women that equal station anong their brethren to which tbe laws of Nature and of Nature ' s God entitle them , we do not urge the claim in tbe spirit of an adverse policy , or with aDy idea of separate advantages , or in any _appiebenMon of conflicting interests between tbe sexes . Resolved , That the greatest and most varied development of the human mind , and the widest sphere of usefulness , can be obtained onlj by the highest intellectual culture of the whole people , and that ail obstructions should be removed wbich tend to prevent wo . men from entering as freely as men upon the study of the physical , mimhil and moral sciences .
India. The Overland Mail. The War In Bur...
INDIA . THE OVERLAND MAIL . THE WAR IN BURMAH . J 7 te army at Rangoon . —Probable cession of Burmese territory _, lighting in Uie Sazara Country . —The Nizam ' s debt . We bave received the Indian papers by the Overland Mail which left Bombay on the 22 nd of May The" Bombay Times" thus speaks of the prospects of the Burmese war : — * ' It is now generally understood that nothing more will be attempted in Burmah till after the rains ; that , contrary to tbe original expectation , the whole force will remain in t b e c o un t ry , for the most part in . all likelihood on board the shipping , and that the war will be resumed with double vigour
the moment the season permits . Amidst tbe apprehensions experienced of tbe nnhealtbiness of the Delta ofthe Irrawaddv , and the melancholy recollections of our former losses from disease , it must be remembered that the position in which matters now stand is nearly as unlike as possible to what it was in 1825 , and that it by no means follows from tbe mortality wbich then occurred tbat our troops in Rangoon should suffer more during the approaching rains than they usually do during the wet season anywhere in new or inappropriate quarters . Should it prove otherwise , aud pest i l e nc e beg in to threaten us , the fleet which bore the army to _tangoon could in a few days carry it beyond tbe reach of
malaria . Bombay will , it is said , be called on to provide some 5 , 000 men , and our soldiers are eager for the fray . If tbe same determination of purpose and energy of spirit wbich now actuate our councils remain , there is every reason to believe tbat three months after the renewal of hostilities the war will be concluded , and a treaty dictated by ns signed by tbe Golden-Footed Monarch in his capital , sece d i n g from the Crown of Burmah for ever an ampl e sl i ce of his dominions . We have had no intelligence from the seat of war for the past fortnight , and we in reality looked for none . Admiral Austen left Calcutta oa the 3 rd inst . in the screw steamer Rattler , after a sojourn of a fortnight at the capital . "
Disturbances still continue along tbe north-west frontier , where warlike arrangements on an extensive scale are in progres s , notwithstanding the near approach of the season when out-of-door occupations of all kinds cease . A force of horse and foot were under orders to march to _Nowshera on the 7 th of May . They were to be provided with pontoons , to enable them to cross the rivers , if necessary , or lesser streams swollen by the melting of tbe snows . _Yariousforts had been attacked or captured in the Hazara country ; operations were still in progress , and it was hoped tbat ( hey would in a week or two bave closed auspiciouslv .
Our Resident has , it is said , been instructing to reason and persuade the Nizam into the measure of ceding to us sufficient _territority , from the revenues of wbich we may pay the entire army we have forced on him , and wbich is now _k-p t up as a guard on himself , and over which he bas not the slightest control whatever . It is affirmed that within the last fifty years the British have got a sum of half a million sterling , in the shape of liquor duties , which of right should have gone into the Nizam ' s treasury . But India is a land of sharks , and the idiotic , like the Nizam , are likely to he eaten up by their cleverer co-rascals .
THE IONIAN ISLANDS . The Parliament House burnt down . —An Ionian Romance . — Tne Greek and Roman Churches . The Parliament House at Corfu was burnt on the ni ght of Wednesday , the 9 th of June . All sorts of stories were afloat tbe next day as to the origin of tbe fire . Some said it was tbe work of incendiaries , and the partisans oi the government and radical parties accused each other of tbe crime . However , no proof whatever could be found to substantiate any such supposition . On the 12 th tbe parliament met in a large room over one of tbe cauits of justice . A message from the Lord High Commissioner was read , and after some formal business the assembly adjourned for the purpose of having an answer prepared in committee . *
Most people wbo have been to Corfu , bave beard of or seen a woman who for some years past has been styled la beUavilana , " the beautiful peasant . " She keeps a wine shop about five miles from tbe town , near the shore of the old Venetian harbour . She is a widow , not much more than thirty years of age , although she has alread y buried three husbands . However , there wera so many candidates to fill the office of the fourth that continual quarrels have taken place . About a month since a gun charged with slugs was fired through the keyhole of her door and wounded one of her suitor _^ _lKThJ *) lice , in order to discover
who was _iiKeiy to oe _acmated by jealousy , got a list of her admirers from tbe fair widow , which then amounted to fifteen , all of whom bad proposed marriage , _besidesoJher three hangers on . It appears that the number must have increased , for last week a party of _twenty-five armed men attacked her house in the pjght , wounded severely some of the peop le who were within , including the fair lady who
India. The Overland Mail. The War In Bur...
was stabbed in tbe neck after having suffered more brutal outrage from three of the gang . Five suspected persons were apprehended next day , and on the 1 / th ult . the woman was sufficiently recovered to come into town and give evidence against tbem . , _ . There are two questions at issue between the Iomans and tbe Roman Pontiff- The Pope desired to appoint a bishop as head of the Catho l ic c h urch in Ionia , b ut the senate would not suffer more than a Gerarc _h , or High Priest , and so his Popeship was fain to be content with such . The other question relates to mutual toleration betweeu the _Groek and Roman churches . The _lonians complain tbat a ltho ug h they accord fu l l re l igious freedom t o the Roman Ca t ho l ics , the members of the Greek church are persecuted in I t al y . The Senate threaten that if the question is not satisfactorily settled they must be " under ihe unfortunate necessity of adopting measures wbich tbey would wish to avoid . "
Pleasast "Visitors. — The Seminole Chief...
_Pleasast "Visitors . — The Seminole Chiefs Wild tat , nger laii , and faeir companions ' , have arrived in the City of Mexico ou a friendly visit to the President and Congress . _,, .,.. The total amount of material aid secured to Governor Kossuth in America is about 90 , 000 dols .
Working Tailors' Association, 68, Westmufsteh Bridge Road, Lambeth.
WORKING TAILORS' ASSOCIATION , 68 , _WESTMUfSTEH BRIDGE ROAD , LAMBETH .
Ad00208
TRUSTEES . Lord _Gom-Bicn , | A * A * _Vansittaet , Esq . As working-men organised for the management and execution of our own business , we appeal with great confidence to our fellowworking men for their hearty support , Wa ask that support in the plain words ot plain men , without the usual shopkeeping tricks and falsehoods . We do so because we know that we ofl'er an opportunity for the exercise of a sound economy , but we make our appeal more particularl y because we believe that every honest artizaii in supporting us will _fec-1 tliat he is performing a duty to the men of his class , which to overlook or neglect , would be a treason and a disgrace . AVe ask for the support of working-men in tbe full assurance that no better value can be given for money tban that which we offeraud we desire success through that support , not solely that we may rescue ourselves from the wretchedness and slavery of the _slopsystem—but more particularly that our fellow-workers of all trades , encouraged by our example , may , through the profitable results of self-management , place themselves and their children beyond the reach of poverty or crime . Relying on the good faith of the people , we await patiently tha result of this appeal , Walter Cooper , Manager . list of prices
Ad00209
THB CAUSE OP LABOUR . THE CITY WORKING TAILORS' ASSOCIATION , 23 , Cullnm-street , Fenchurch-street , City . A few working men holding the conviction tbat co-operatiou is the best means of elevating their condition , and t _!« at of the class to which they belong , have formed themselves into a body for the purpose of carrying on business for themselves on the principle of Associated Labour , at tbe above address , and earnestly appeal to all v » ho are desirous of rescuing the working men from their present degrading position attendant upon the infamous slop and sweating system . They _ospreially depend upon their brother working men of other associations to give them tlieir support . They pledge themselves to deal honestly by their customers , in supplying only genuine' articles , and charging a fair and moderate price ; and no effort shall be wanting on their part to give satisfaction to those who may favour them with a trial . - — . . Charles _BUGxT Manager .
Ad00210
MATRIMONIAL ALLIANCE ASSOCIATION . Legally Established 1849 . Head Office , London , Lincoln ' s Inn Field Chambers , ani 2 , Portsmouth-street , Lincoln ' s Inn Fields . —Branch _OfBces , Liverpool , Manchester , Bristol , York , and Aberdeen . Confidential Referee - R . Warwick , Esq . MATRIMONIAL ALLIANCE ASSOCIAHON , conducted on the system as so successfully adopted on the Continent , legally established as a medium _^ or the introduction of both sexes unknown _taeach . other , whi _^ are desirous of entering into matrimony , and who may rely on strict honour and seereey . None * but respectable parties negotiated with . Appli . cants may sign by initial or otherwise . Full particulars , with printed forms of application _. lists of agents , and instructions , sent free , on receipt of six post stamps by . Hdqo _Beb-eseom _) , Esq ., Secretary . Registrar ' s Offices , Lincoln's Inn Field Chambers , and 2 , Ports _, mouth-street , Lincoln ' s Inn _Fields , London . Note . — Communications from the continent and abioad promptly nnswered . Unpaid letters refused .
Ad00211
'to tho millions : fjAPITALlSTS MAY , BY COMBINATION , \ ) prevent a Poor Man from obtaining the highest value for his Labour , but Capital can never prevent a Poor Man buying his goods in the cheapest market—And at BENEmNK and Company , 89 and 90 , Cheapside , the Working Classes may be supplied with everything necessary to furnish an eight roomed house for five pounds , and every article warranted of the best quality and workmanship . TheMowiogis the list of articles— 8 . d . Hall Lamp , 10 s 6 d ; Umbrella Stand , 4 s Gd 15 0 Bronzed Dining-room Fender and Standards 5 6 Set of polisked Steel Fire-irons _____ ....., 3 6 Brass _Toast-staud , ls Gd ; Fire Guard 3 , ls _69 M . ! .. 3 0 Bronzed aad polished Steel Scroll Fender . . _^ _fc ... 8 G Polished Steel Fire-irons , bright pan " .. ! .. 5 fi Ornamented Japanned Scuttle and Scoop _....,.,,.. 4 6 Best _Bsd-room Fender , and polished Steel Fire-irons 7 0 Two Bed-room Fenders , and 1 wo setB Fire irons .. 7 6 Set of Four Block-tin Dish Cov _.-rs ............. .. u 6 Bread Grater , 6 d : Tin _Candlesiick . 9 d * " _i _i
Ad00212
THE _SILEIVT TJ 8 IEND . IN SIX LANGUAGES . O Fortfeth Edition _, ontaining the remed y for the prevention of vJ _^ _S- _^ , 8 trat _! _^ ° ! le Hundred Anatomical and _Explanatory Coloured Engravings on Steel . On Phvsical Disqualifications , Generative Incapacity , and Impediments to Marriage . __ A new and improved edition , enlarged to _™ pn . . i _{ M _* 2 s : " -1 _' _4 ' reet from the establish _, ment , 3 s . Gd . in postage stamps . B y R . and L . Pert ** and Co .. _SSSS !? _,, Surgeons 19 , Berners-street , Oxford-street , London Published by Sherwood and Co , 23 , _Patcrnoster-row and sold hi
Ad00213
T ONDON AND COUNTY FIRE AND LIFE li ASSURANCE COMPANY . 1 NCOKPOBATED BV ACT OE _CUOAM & ESn . Chief Office .-m , OXFORD STREET , LONDON . Near the British Museum . With Branches or Agencies inmany of tbe principal Towns _GreatTJritain , 2 ?( _M » Jte _)*» .-LONDON A _^ D COUKTY BANK . SPECIAI . A _* OV 5 f j _NTiOEB . . A Guarantee Fund of £ 100 , 000 with a mimnium interest of £ 5 Pe poHcie ' s Indisputable , and not liable _' _fctE ' _oj-feiture . Credit given for payment of premiums in certain _cnseS * _^ _, Life Policy Stamps and Medical Fees paid by the Company . Policies issued from £ 10 to £ 5 , 000 at Low Rates ot Premium , pajabls yearly , half-yearly _, quarterly , or monthly . The whole of _Prfnhe iuhyand ' declined ' lives accepted . Prompt payment of _^ Xary Fire Insurances taken at ls . Gd . per cent , and loss of rent by fire provided against . 8 _viheiv the _aunaalpwrnvi
Ad00214
CHEAP AND _Sl'ANDABB \ V 4 » K _* t . & Now Publishing in Nos . at One Penny each . ALL _BPLESDIDLr ILLUSTRATED , 1 ,-THE LOST MARINERS , or the Search for Sir John Franklin _, aa authentic account of the various expeditions that have been sent in search of tho missing ships : with numerous plates . 2 —LAMARTINE'S TRAVELS in the Holy Land : with coloured frontispiece and Title , and numerous other plates , 3 . —THE PILGRIM'S pROGRESS-compkfe edition ; with coloured Frontispiece aud numerous other plates . 4 —THE TRIALS OF LOVE , or Woman ' s Reward , by Hannah Maria Jones : a tale of surpassing interest . With a superbly engraved Frontispiece and-Title , and oilier plates . Sixteen large pages in each Penny Number .
Ad00215
IMPORTANT SOCIALIST _PUBLICATIONS . ROBERT OWEN'S JOURNAL . THIS JOURNAL ( Published weekly , price One Penny , and in monthly parts , price Fourpece ) _, Explains the means by which the population ol tbe world may be placed within new and very superior circumstances , and provided with constant beneficial employment , and thereby enabled to enjoy comfort and abundance , and great social advantages j and the direct means by which this change may be effected with benefit to all classes . The addresses on Government , on Education , to tbe Delegates of All Nations to the World ' s Fair , and on True and False Religion , which have latel _^ appeared in the pages of tbis Journal , bave been reprinted iu the form of cheap pamphlets , and will be found to contain information of the deepest interest . The Eleventh Monthly Part of this Journal is now ready , Price 4 d . Also the First Volume , Price 2 b . 6 d .
Ad00216
DR . _ClTLVERWEIaL , OK THE PLEASURES OF HEALTH . A series of popular works , Is ., each , by post Is . 6 d . each . ENJOYMENT OP LIFE . 'Health , recreation , and rational use of time . ' Contents , —Early rising ; Spring and Summer mornings , Excursions about the Enrirons of Loadon—the Parks , Lanes , Hills , Forests , Fields , High-roads , and other pleasant places Country Trips and Rambles ; the Sea ; London at _DJjljbt , Evenings at Home ; Music ; the Drama ; on Eating , Drinking , Sleeping , Bathing , Air , Rest , Ease , Occupation , ite , 11 . and in .
Ad00217
_TTblsisthe Medicine of Nature '—Sir 1 1 _^* = _^*>» ' _*; Ra ,. issue of the Second Edition of T _« tt Ti ' wm _* _&^ rp . _SKELTOxVS < FAUllY Zl U ADVISER _^ now publishing , price 2 s fid k i ¦ _^ CAT prehensive treatise , of the vegetable practici of „ _t-i-- but C , J _^ first and second _Nosiof the ' MONTHLY _BOtVw ? , ' ' -Chi FAMILY HERBAL ' , ' : priceld . May be hud 0 f _^ ' _^ 0 Uu «? e town aad country , thefirst Saturday of every l „ l book _>* Hers £ Published by Watson , 3 , Queen ' s _Head-paSsZ Pm _. London . Agent for Bradford , W . Cooke , Vicarlianc _, le « ° " " v In the press , and shortly will be published _priceT _^' A PLEA FOR TIIE RESTORATION OP TitPv _!' _' ' Practice of Medicine . iUL ' E _& ETA * _Bi ,
Ad00218
PROSPECTUS - _^ OF THE NATIONAL ASSOOIATION OF UNITED T » _m FOR TIIE J _- "ADJ § _PROTECTION OF _INDUSTRY ASD _EMPLOYMENT Op , „ is ut _wf eova AGRICULTURE AXD _MAN UFACTURES . Established 21 th of March , 1 S 45 .
Ad00219
MOAT'S VEGETABLE PILLS ; made by W . 0 . MOAT , Member of the Royal Coliwe of Sur . geonsof England , and Apothecary , 314 , _Stjund " _, former ]/ l'aitner with the late " . Mr . Morison , thellygeist , British College of Health , " —« . remedy for the great majority of Diseases , often _i-ft ' tfctir . g re . _markable restorations to hea : tli . Mr . Moat's PiLts will be found to possess no objectionable quali . ties _^ and are confidently recommended as a most useful Family Medicine , combining the finest tonic properties with those ofa mild and safe aperient . The _cnnimou experience of mankind teaches that the daily health depends ia a great degree on the regularity of the alvine evacuations . Crowded cities nnd monotonous employments give rise to various ailments , such as stomach , liver , and bowel disorders , _thefrtquent occurreaces of whicli _renders it necessary to have a reliable medicine adapted for general use . Mi * . Moat ' s Pills fulfil this requirement , Tliey are of oue sort only , and do not necessitate absence from business . Mr . Moat recommends them as tbe best form of tonic and aperient medicine to betaken generally where the services of a medical adviser are not felt to bo requisite . * For the administering to children Mr , Moat ' . makes _smaUtr _pitei coated with sugar .
Ad00220
HERE IS YOUR REMEDY . TTOLLO WAY'S OINTMENT . A . MOST MIRACULOUS CURE OF BAD LEGS , AFTER FORTY-THREE YEARS' _SUFFERING . Extract ofa Letter from Mr . William Galpin , o f 70 , St , Marfi Street , Weymouth , dated May loth , 1851 . To Professor Hguoway _, Sib , —At tb age of eighteen my wife ( who is now sixty . onc ) caught a violent eold _, which settled in her legs , and ever since that time they have been more or less sore , and greatly inflamed . Her agonies were distracting , and for months together she was deprirfo entirely of rest and sleep . Every remedy that medical men ad .
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), July 3, 1852, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns4_03071852/page/2/
-