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CcGQiSviu andibie addresiie? v ¦ 2 . ^ T...
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^ IN EFFECTUAL CL-HE FGit PILES, FISTULAS, - ' &c.
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AWOxMAN SHOT BY HER HUSBAND. IN MANCHESTER—COMMIT TAL OF THE MURDERER.
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One ef the most deliberate and cold-bloo...
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Assassination at GREBN0CKa~On Thursday M...
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THE FRENCH KEPUBLig. BtAts dv nuinm. Tha...
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SPAIN. The Queen of Spain ' hasmisoarrie...
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The latb Revolt in Newgate.—Flogging 5? ...
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Ccgqisviu Andibie Addresiie? V ¦ 2 . ^ T...
v ¦ 2 . THE NORTHERN STAR . ' ' ,,,... _^ - _^ _^
^ In Effectual Cl-He Fgit Piles, Fistulas, - ' &C.
_^ IN EFFECTUAL _CL-HE FGit PILES , FISTULAS , - ' _& c .
Ad00209
-ABERNETHY'S PILE OINTMEMT , ' _Wut ¦ ¦ ¦ -mainfai ™ d norious _disease is the Piles ! and comparatively how few of tho afflicted have been pcrma . U- - ; _5 _P" _° tS bv _ordiaa- _^ ppe _^ uVto Me dical skill ! . This , no doubt , arises from the use of _powsrful aperient * _^ r '/ . r ' _ri'L _^ ministered by the ? _Profession ; indeed , strong internal medicine should always be avoided in nil _Wo . r _^ > ci .. iy _num _raisie _' rietor of tte above Ointment , after years of ac : te suffering , placed himself under _S ; ™ ' _^ , t of Uiafc eminent surgeon , Mr _Abernethy , wai by him restored to perfect hsaltb , and has enjoyed it ever ice irt _.-. _u-wu -jj - _jjjteit retarn ef the Disorder , over a period of fifteen years , during which time the sarx s _Aberr _^ tniav '' ' _- ; criptiortRas been theme-ins of healing a vast number of desperate cases , both in and out of the _Pro-Beiriia .: 1 _^ _-=- _i _„ friends , most of which case ; had been under Uedical care , and some of them for a very _consider-IhhVth-V ' _abernethy's PUe Oiatinen : was introduced to the Public by the desire of many who hadbeen perfectly _Sna ' pil v _i' 5 application , and since it * inroduction , the fame of this ointment bas spread far and wide ; even the _Hed'ci _\ -viVs _^ ion , _alrrays _sloiv and unwilling to acknowledge the virtues of any Medicine not prepared by _them-Eelves ' _t- _* ti _x freely and frankly admit that Abernethy ' s Pile Ointment , is not only a valuable preparation , but a never- *' " : - remedy in every s ! _£ <; e and variety of that appalling malady . .. . Suu _.- ' _-rs _iro-. n the Piles will not _repaut giving ths Ointment a trial . Multitudes of cases of its efficacy might fee pro _. _ia--sl , if the nature of ton cmplaint did cot render those who have been cured , unwilling to publish Sol _3 _^ _,-orerei pots , ei is . o & _^ or the _quantity of three 4 s . 6 d pots ia one for lis , v . ith fall directions oriir ; . ' ¦ •¦ ¦ O . £ isg ( Agent to tbe Proprietor ) , No . ol , Xapicr-strcet , Hoxton New Town , London , where also can be ' pr <> _. ¦— ¦ ¦' - -i every Patent Medicine ot _reputa , direct from the original makers , with au allowance on taking six at a ti . - .-- - # _j' re -ure to ask for' ABERNETHY'S PILE OISTMENT , ' The public r . re requested tobe on their _gtifird _egainsi :. K \ ir . \ n coapositun : _? _, sold at iow prices , and to _obaOTe thst none can possibly bs genuine , unless the name ef KiX' - - _'•?; rinted on the _Government Stamp _aiSxed to each pot , is . 6 d ., which is the lowest price the proprietor ; s _ecablc-i . - _~ _~ til it at , owing to the _^ _rcat expense of the ingredients .
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CORNS AND BUNIONS . PAUL'S EVERY MAN'S FRIEND ., Pal _. xmcd by Vic Ryyal Pa « i ? v , _» 6 biWy , Clergy , is ., I ? a 5 .. e and speeoy cure , for t ' aose _s-.-v _^ re n-. _Doyancc . _^ , without causing the least pain or inconvenience . Unlike Ell oth- i ; e _-iieiies for * corn * -, its o ; _-cr ; : t- ; .. ) :: is sueh as to render the _cutting of corns _altogether unnecessary ; indeed , we _iiriv v . v _, the f . ravticii cf cutti :. _*; < _vtns is r . t ? . U times _dangerous , and haa been frequently atteuded with lam «! i _(* al tile _a-: _rm _-uences , _bdid _.-s its liability to increase their _growta - . it adheres with the mostgentle pressure , produces an Instun : : _* J delightful relief _fiv-ni torture , aid , with _perseverance in its application , entirely eradicates the rcos _; invet < r _v c * nis and bunions . Ic ; t ; -. _wiliis have _bs = u received _froa upwards of one hun _^ r _^ . i _Puys-oians and Surgeons Of the _greatest eminence , as wcL .. ; from _jaany _oScers of both Ar-y and _i avy , and nearly one thousand private letters from the jjentry in town a . * _, ounlrv , " , sp : _aking ia hig h _teru-is of this valuable remedy . r r _^ . _; .: byJoHX Fox , _inbtxt ? : _* t 1 .=. _li-i ., or three small boxes in one for 2 s . 9 _d ., and tobe had , with full _Slrcctlo _* _--- for use , of C . Kiko _, So . ? :, _ITayier-street , Hoxton _hsrr Town , London , and all wholesale and retail Modi _Ciuevc : _** ts in town and country . The _jeninne nas the name John Fox on the S'amp . A 28 . 9 d . bOX CUreS the most olv , - . rate corns . _A- > k for ' P : ; ui ' s Every Man ' s _FrieaS . ' Ah- r- _<~ il ; i's Pile Ointment , Paul ' s Cora -piaster , and Aben . ethj _' s Pile _Pewderg , are sold by the following respectable C .: u : s : s aud Dealers in Patent Med c ' mt : — E-r ; ... _jaSSous , _rarrinsdocstreet ; Edwards , 67 , St Paul ' s Church-yard ; Butler , 4 , Cheapside _; _Sfewbery , St _FavL ' _s ¦ _^ -r . _if-n , _Eov ? Church-yard ; Johnson , G ? , Cornhiil ; _Sansar , 150 , Oxford-street ; _Yfillourrhby and Co ., 61 , Bishci _=. -. i : estreet Withont : _Erme . " 3 , Gosw e ' . _l-street ; Prout , 223 , Strand ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; and retail r - _' v'J respectable _Chstnists a _^ -. d Medicine Vendors m London . Cou- _* - -a Aqests . —Mcjler can Son . _Hesald OSce , Bath ; _AVinnall , Birmingham ; Noble , Boston _; Brew , Br ; :. L :. : i : F . rris aad _Scora , _Brlitol ; _Har ; .: r , FEEE _PaESS _O'fi .. ' * , Cheltenham ; Brooke and Co ., Doncaster ; Sim . _inond . - jTChester ; Seswis , U _^ _rha-. n ; _Evnns and _Tlodgson , Eister ; Coleman , Gloucester ; Henry , Guernsey ; _S-. rr- : :.. _'i : ' as ; _Dnjgan , _Herefor-i ; Brooke , Hu . iderffield ; _Steph-. ason , Hull ; Penuel , Kiddtrminster ; Baines and _Ke' _7-- - : - .: : _« sdE ; _Aspinal _, Liverpool ; D _.-ury , Lincoln ; Je . vsbury , _Hanchester ; Blackwell , _Kewcastlc-upon . Tyne ; But : _or _jCLniiT OSce , Ko « ingh _* i ! n ; FUiv ; _** jtr , _Kobiois _Xetts Office , Norwich ; Mcnnie , Plymouth ; Clarfc , Pilot © _ffije . _i _' r-. ' . an ; Ueckley , Putn _:-T : Staveley _. _rieaoing ; _SqEarey , _Sslisburj ; Ridge and Jacksen , _JlEBcnBT Office , _Sbci 5 ; : i ; _IVattou , _Chsonicix _OScj , _Shrewsbury ; _Kindull _, Soutiiampton ; Mors , _Stcfford ; Bogky , Stamford . ; Sims _> : ¦ : ¦; tport ; Tim _? _-. n 4 Carr , Hew id Office , _Sunderlvad ; Sacndcr ? , Tiverton ; Roper , _Ulrerstone ; Card _, _tveli , "? _'t : t !; ld ; Sharps , Adt £ rti'E * 3 OSes , Warwick ; Oioeon , Whitehaven ; Jacob and Co ., _'Winchester ; _liasa-r-fT-adCo , , _Wofvirnasptor : ; Dri _^ U . n _, _VTo . _-ccsUr ; _llabson , Yarmouth ; Bolton , _Blanskard end Co ., Yo : k ; .-. a King , _Brid _^ ni ; BaiUrn _, Cowb _.-iJgt ; Evans , Carmarthen ; Williams , Swansea ; R ? . _incs , _Edinbargl- ; _Alhu , -. : uo _5 k ; Harshali ' , Edfast ; Bradford , Cork ; Butler , Dublin ; Thompson , Armagh" j and by all respectable _CiKinU-- una _^ ediciae Tenders in _eiery _licrkft Towr . _throughout tiie _Paited Kingdora _,
Ad00211
_^ _fe " v _^ - > - - r' - _^~ _-. X ' ¦ j- _w— _'J _^ _j - ' " ' ¦ _•^__* * -3 _& £ ~ t _^ - _^'~_______^ _^___ . _^< _i E _At-KNoWiLEiiiD _T . l 1 : l-T :: _^ BEST _iIKDICIN E IX TKE _VfOSLD . Thi- - : _iviicina has brsn _before the _SritiA public only a few yi . _rs . and perhaps in the annals of the _Ttorld _was never _m-u-A success _equsl to tbeir _ jro _^ res _? ; tVe virtues o : bis M _< ¦ . -: ni _Mereato : iceackno _-.-. le ; . ; ed wh ? revcr tried , snd rt ; :. _jmcaOaaoB _follesved _rer-iniramdsaoa ; hundreds' .. : _loontoaeknowledgethatl _'^ r . _s ' sLiFE _C _' _lLLsliad saved r : c : _r-., end were loud ia their praise . The s : ar : I ; B ! r _actst : : ; - _^ vero _continuallr _brought before tVe public .-it _oncsr' .. j . cdaayprcju . iicevi-hi ' _.-hso . 'nrr ' . _jaTbavoi ' t . _' lt ; ; he cO"tij , ii -cuod _wliich resulted _zra-u _iheu * use spread _thezr ame :... .. ud wide , at this _mom-nt there is scarcely a count- ¦ - .: the face of tho _glsbe which . h _* s not heard of their i . _i-3 _t 5 , and have _sccjht for cu _; plies , whatever mit _' it " he cost of tran 3 Bi _; ss : on . Tia- _United _^ _tat-is , Ca . i -. d i _r-idip ., and even China , have had . _mraonse quarjtitie ? _s . ;; : _isd to their respective _countri s , and with the same r-f _i . t asia Em'snd—Universal Good .
Ad00212
_Er- _^ : __? _---- _;~ _- __ _T _* r . ? _- £ _igs _& iThe _extensive practice of i , _U "' . . Vl ' _ : i _ i &? g . S | v _? I _Hass .-s R . andL . PEREY and , ' ; _'**• - - " _~ ' _* _vMjg _^ _aAS Co ., the continued demand for * n'SrVo _?^ titlea 7 vhT , slLSN' _? * MBND _, _'( one _? _nndred _a-d _twentv-five thousau 3 _sopierof _wnica have _ossn _lolfiV and the extensive sale and high repute of their _Medicines hava _inditced somoucprincipled _perions to asinine tie name of PEBET and closely imitate the title of the Work and _namas of the _M-idicines . The _puolic is herebvetutionedthat such persons are not in anyway _coar-cctcd witk the 5 rm of R . and L . PEaRT and Co ., of ¦ Loudon , who do aot visit the ¦ Provinces , and are only te be _totts-alted personally , or by letter , at their Establishment , IS , _Berners-Etreet , Oiford-srr _«* l , "London . _TWESTT-FIFTH EDITION . Itlastrated by Tweaty-six Anatomical Engravings on Steel . On _Physical _DisqualificatiOTis , Gmeraiire Incapacity , aid Impediments to _iiarnzge : _^ ucw and _improved edition , _enlarged to 19 u pages , price 2 _~ . _f _s . ; fay past , direct from the Establishment , 3 s . Si . in postage " stamps . :
Ad00213
-jVTO MORE PILLS NOR ANY OTHER MEDICIXE ! _ V -CONSTIPATION and DYSPEPSIA ( INDIGESTION ) the main causes of Biliousness , _Kervousnesg , Liver Complaints , Nervous Headaches , Noises in the Head and Ears , Pains in almost every part ofthe Body , Heartburn , Low Spirits , Spasms , Spleen , 4 c , effectually behoykd irom the systGm , by a permanent _restoration of tne digestive functions to their primitive vigour , v . itbout purging , inconvenience , pain , or expense , by DC BARRY AND CO . 'S REV ALEXIA ARiBICA FOOD . ( The only Food which does not turn acid upon , or _dis . _taud , a weak stomach , and a threepenny meal of which savei fon' times the value in other Food ; hence effecting a saving instead of causing an expense . ) *
Ad00214
been using it daily a 3 d , r _« . cted , and I am . happy to say that it has produced the most salutary change iu-her sys" _t-. m .- _& c . —James Porter . - " St Andrew-street , Hertford , 1 st June 1818 . —The _lleVa-Ienta Arabica Food has doue mo a most considerable deal of good . —0 . Reeve . AGESTS FOR THE SALE OF TUE REYALENTA
Ad00215
, FAMED TimOUGIIOUT THE GLOBE . HOLLOWAY'S PILLS . A CASE _f ) F DROPSY . Ex' . ract ofa Letter from Mr William Gardner , of Hanging Haughton _, Northamptonshire , dated Septembei 11 th , 1847 . To Professor Holloway . Sm , —I before informed you that my wife hadbeen tapped three times for the dropsy , but by the blessing oi God upon your pills , and hor perseverance in tailing them , the water has now been kept otf eighteen months by their iieacs , which is a great mercy , ( Signed ) William Gailsnf . ii .
Awoxman Shot By Her Husband. In Manchester—Commit Tal Of The Murderer.
AWOxMAN SHOT BY HER HUSBAND . IN MANCHESTER—COMMIT _TAL OF THE MURDERER .
One Ef The Most Deliberate And Cold-Bloo...
One ef the most deliberate and cold-blooded murders tbat it has ever been our duty to record , was perpetrated in Manchester , early on Tuesday morning . The locality of the daring _eutraj-o was Friday-street , Le ? er street , neatStcveriBon _' _s-square , and the _unfortuuate victim was a young _woaan named Diana Clark , who , some three jeara ago . was married to a man named Wjllnm Adamson . ' For some time they lived together in Newton-street , but . never appeared to ba very comfortable . The woman , it seems , had been _previously married , and her first husband ia now undergoing eentenco of transportation for some crime committed in Manchester . Adam 8 on had also been married before ; and his former wife and family are now living ia Hulme . Singularly _enough , it is said , that each knew of the
other ' s marriage before they became united ; and _notwithstaEding that they lived in a state of apparent comfort for . ' some time ; but . naturally enough , occasional private disturbances arose , whioh terminated about two months ago in the woman returning to live at ber father ' s house in Oldhamroad , and at the Eame time Adamson , wo understand , took a . lodging in Grej ' _ncourt , Lamb-lane , Salford . Three or four weeks ago , he visited big wife at her father's . He removed a box from thonce , and appeared to be on good terms with her . From that time until Tuesday morning , it was not known thathe had ever seen hfr . She was employed as a reelerinthe Hanover Mills , at Bank Top , and was proceeding to her work at half past five o ' olook on Tuesday morning , when her _imuband , * Adamson ,
met her in _Lever-street , and , it is said , requested that she wonld once more live with him . Some angry words arose , and Adamson _threatened toshoot her , when she ran up _Friday-sfriet _, and was ' pursued by ' her infatuated husband , whs produced a small pocket piBtol , and , standing within a few feet of hia wife , he took a deliberate aim at her head The pistol , however , snapped , and a number of people who had been attracted by the woman ' s cries for kelp , ran toher ag _? _iitanoe , but before they could render any aid the pistol was again cocked , and the contents lodged in the _uoiorlunate woman ' s head . The pistol wa 9 loaded with a ball , which went rieht through her head . Tho policoman on duty in Friday-street seized hold of the man _imraediately , and had him taken to tbo _pidieo-station ; and the woman waa taken to tho infirmary , where she died in the course of . half an hour . The eiroumstance created
the greatest _GXiiitement in the ne ' gabourhood , and the dreadful aot wss committed in tml view of not less than six or eight individuals . At prcBent we haTe _bren unable to glean mnch relating to the character either Cf tbe murderer or hia unfortunate wife . His wife by a former marriage , and two children , reside noar _Welbeck-street , Hulme , and we aro Informed that ho vi-. ited ber a few weeks a ? o , and when some ofthe deceased ' s relatives oame thereto make inquiry into his oonduof , ho took down a gun and threatened to shoot them , The police , however , interfered , nnd prevented any serious consequence ? . It is said , that this ia not tbe only instance in which the interference or the police has been necessary to deprive this man of _firearma . He was a ribbon _weaver , but has not been at work for eome time . The prisoner was then committed to the _asBizes to take his trial for wilful murder _.
Assassination At Grebn0cka~On Thursday M...
Assassination at GREBN 0 CKa ~ On Thursday Mr John Kerr Gray , the town clerk of Greenock , was shot in the open street by John Thompson , auctioneer , of that town . Mr Gray had left his office at about 4 o ' clock , when , as he was walking down the street , Thompson came out of a court close by , and drawing a large horse pistol fired it iuto his hi east . Fortunately the ball , wliich was a very large one , did not strike any vital part , and was extracted
in the afternoon without much difficult y . He is still , however , in great danger . Thompson , when he had fired the pistol , walked coolly away , and was almost immediately apprehended , when he made no attempt to deny what he dad done , saying , he had waited for Mr Gray for some time in order to shoot him . It also seems that he had spoken of his in _d ention to several persons , who , however , gave no attention to what they looked on as an idle threat t Lord Stanley is the steward of the Jockey Club ra tke p lace of Lord George Bentinck . '
The French Kepublig. Btats Dv Nuinm. Tha...
THE FRENCH KEPUBLig . _BtAts _dv _nuinm . Tha correspondent of thoTiMKssays , to judge by tho language of those of the'A ssembly who have still * the hardihood to avow themselves partisans , advo _* - crates , and _tuppc-i'lers of schemes of universal pillage —t hey do not yet add tbe word ? universal massacrethe party is yet * formidable .- —The good sense or the _o'ear-sightediiesj of the mrjority of the Assembly _, who see _spoliation and _aiaugliter , the firebrand and the guillotiEP , in the perspective of all the measures recommended or _cantemplaied bv _Citizen Proudhon
and his associates seem likely , to prevail , however , and . may yet save France . It would bo consolatory could tbe conduct of M . Proudhon and tho other Communists in the Assembly be deemed incontestably the result of despair ; but wild and rambling aa aro his speeches , there is in thrrn a consistent _atroeUy that _argm-s the exisienco of a system , nnd of a cleterrnir . ation and a sense nf powers on the part of its _Uphoh . _kl' _3 to _Cflf _/ y out its _principle , which _suggest fears that another conflict in the street * is inevitable _^
_ybhy good . It appears ihat bal ' oro surrendering Iheir arms _aomc of tho _disaffected of the National Guards have rendered them useless . The report of Lieutenant Ihttaillard , ono of the officers appointed to examine the muskets which have been _eo'lecle-1 from the National Giiarn ' 3 who have be 9 n disarmed in Paris , pt ' _Axea tha ** , severnl of those _mule ' s have b : en rendered unfij for _ir . rvice by being bared in the barrel in the part covered by the _sto _<* k of ths _^ un . Ai . Domes , one of the members of tho _National A _^ _embl y . who . it will bo remembered , was wounded at one of the barricades _during the _iasurrcction , died on Thursday _wei-k last of his wounds . He is the fourth member of the National Assembly who has fallen a victim of thia _injurrectisn .
All tha dwindled forts in tho neighbourhood of Paris , in which state prisoners are at present confined , are _boinsr placed in a condition to sustain a _rieee . The embrasures are mounted with cannon .
STATE OF PAM 8 . ( _Fi'orn tha correspondent of John Bull . ) Juxy 19 —Order has reigned in Paris this vfi > ek _; such order as reigned at Warsaw once . Melancholy _bt-yond description is the look of this glittering city with its deserted shops , ita 50 , 000 soldiers encamped on straw in the streets , —its loaded cannon ready to firo , —ita niKht- ? _ignals and nightly _oaaassinationS )—and the inexpressible _consternation of all its inhabitants . The truth is . that an open crater still yawn * beneath our feet , threatening daily to pour forth its torrents * of devastating Java , Th © first aot of this horrible drama is hardly brought to a close , when a new and bloody interlude is _preparin ? . Whother the English press represents the real state of aff urs _,
I ksow not ; the French _^ _press _^ is bo completely _Kaggtd . that a true exposition of it would iromediately ' entail not a prosecution , but , a preventive arrest , and the suspension of the indiscreet journal Even tho Becrecy of private correspondence is violated to Buch a degree , that no em can venture to entrust the whole truth respecting men and things to the pages of a letter . B 8 assured , however , that under this apparent lull Paris is again on the eve of a general conflagration . Confidence , _freedom , art 8 ( ond . industry are . destroyed ; misery comes striding down npon us with threatening step , with murder , rape , pillage , and _waon in its train , _Hunger ia ereanining an _explor-ion with which even the military dictatorship will bo unable to cope .
Already General Cavaignac , with his mere military courage , proves unequal to the occasion . His dread of assassination is . such that be hardly ventures to admit any one to an audience , Ic 3 _t a murderous dagger should cut ' short his life . The General deplores the victory he has gained , and the violent measures of _reaction into which he has been pushed by the _eoterin under _whoie fatal influence he is acting . A man of upright character , but undecided in hia political _viewa , he undertook the war _anainat the bar . rioades with martial Z 2 al . and caused the cannon to roar in PariB for forty eight hours with energetic bravery ; but in the progress of his victory he fell ucdei * the influence of personal passions , and became the _unresisting tool of meu whose only desire was to gratify their inveterate hatred by striking their enemies . ( Fiom the Daily News . )
The spirit of reaction is apparent everywhere in Paris , but still more so in the provinces . The patriotic cries in favour ofthe Republic , and the hymn of the Marseillaise are now never heard . In the theatres of the capital bnrlettaa are produced and received with shouts of applause , is whieh the doctrines , symbols , and phrases of democracy are held up to ridicule . M . Colfavre , a lawyer , the supposed editor of the Perb _Dcchbne previous to the insurrection of Jane , was arrested on Friday . According to the returns _published by the Moniteub , the number of wounded of Juno still remaining in the civil hospitals ef Paris , in the evening cf the 21 st , was 797 . Nine had died on that day . Paris was visited by a tremendous storm of thunder and lightning on Sunday night and Monday worning .
At the _opening of the Bitting : of tha National Assembly , on Monday , Citizen _Marrast , the new president , on taking tho chair delivered a suitable speech . General Cavaignao announced a project of a grant of a pension of 3000 fr . to the mother of Citizen Domes , who _hasjust died of tho wounds received in the insurrection of June . Citrzm Dimes was a member of the Assembly . Louis Napoleon has resigned tbe seat to which he was elected by the inhabitants of Corsica .
MOBE ARRESTS . On Saturday night about thirty persons were arrested at Ciichy , and on Saturday morning some _pertons were also arrested in the Faubourg St _Antoicc and the Faubourg St Marcel . On Monday 134 insurgents , on many of whom were found . documents inculpatory of themselves and others , were arrested in the _Baniieu . Several txamining magistrates went on Monday tp the prison Saint Ls 2 ar ;> , shore there ara about 460 insurgents who have not been interrogated . In this number are sick prisoners who have been sent from the forts de _l'E-itaud _Romainville , and also upwards of 200 women , who . were taken on the barricades , orlwhilst they were carrying ammunition to the insurgents . -.. ' . ''
The reapers in the neighbourhood of Paris have found some dead bodies , supposed to bo those of insurgents who diedof their wounds alter taking refuge in the corn . Tuesday . —The discussion in the Assembly to-day was upon the proposed law of the olubj . The Assembly appeared to take little interest in the general discussion , the _greater part of the articles having been successively - voted . The 13 ih article only , which _subjects every elub to bo licensed by . the municipal authorities , occasioned & lively
discussion . _^ The clubs of Lyons have _been closed by order of the authorities of that city . - _-. ¦ •• _-
Spain. The Queen Of Spain ' Hasmisoarrie...
SPAIN . The Queen of Spain ' _hasmisoarried . Of course ! DANUBIAN PRINCIPALITIES ; . The Austrian papers publish an account of the total failure of the counterrevolution which a certain Colonel Solomon attempted at Bucharest . Solomon himself fell into the hands of the people , who would have torn him to pieces , but for the presence of mind of soma young mau , who conducted him to a dungeon ; when interrogated he confessed thathe was in the pay of Russia .
THE CIVIL WAR IN HUNGARY . _PEsni , July 15 , An _eatafette which has arrived here has brought tbe intelligence of a successful action having been fought between the troops and the insurgents near Werschelz . The colonel of the Uhlans , Blomberg , was the hero of the day . The insurgents had sixty killed and wounded , and twentyone prisoners have been taken ; among them wae their chief , Stanimirovilz , two pieces of cannon , and two colours . The Hungarians have had only two killed and three wounded .
ITALY . The Paris papers of Saturday contain the follow _, ing telegraphio ' despatoh _, received on Friday : — ' The _Austrians entered Ferraraon the _li' . h of July , to the number of five thousand . _Thay ocoupied the principal posts ofthe town , and levied a war contribution on the inhabitants . The Pope , protested against the occupation , and the Chamber of Deputies unanimously voted the project of a league of all the states ot Italy against Austria . ' The Turin _journals of the 2 lst announce a victory obtained at Governolo by General Bava over two thousand _AuBtrians , from whom he has taken a standard , two cannons , and five hundred prisoners .
The _PiBDMOHTBjB Gazette , ofthe 20 th , announces that the Piedmontese troops arrived at Venice on the 14 th , and were received with loud cheera by the people . A despatch from Paris contains news from Naples tothe rub , vrh ' _chs _^ _tatas that tie immediate _invasion of Sicily by thirty thousand men , had been re solved upon . The embarkation of the troops was fixed for the 20 sh . The despatch further states that K of tt . port had beta flel 2 ed in tUe har "
RUSSIA .-THE CHOLERA . _fS _/ _- ° ! u lof thecholera ' t 0 th 83 _° 1 . 017 were added duting the d » y _ f these 222 recovered , 576 died ; on the 8 ch thero were 3 790 sick , 853 were atacked during the _day-574 died , 172 recovered . On the 9 th there were 8 , 817 patients in the hospitals Accounts of tho 12 th inst . mention that on that day there had been C 92 individual * taken ill of cholera ; 219 had recovered , and 398 had died ; the number of siok on the 12 _^ h was 4 , 006 . Altogether , from the commencement ofthe disease in St _Petersburg , there had been 13852 cases of _cholcraj recovered , 2 . 173 ; died , 7 , 623 person * .
Spain. The Queen Of Spain ' Hasmisoarrie...
Letters _fram Riga state that tbe cholera W broken out there also ; and down to tha lota , / VU case 3 had been known to have occurred . According to _account from _Sweoen _wreiflaPB lilac the cholera has broken out in the province ot * inland .
¦ INDIA . _MiO 0 N ? riIUCy AT LAHORE TO MURDKR _™ J » M _™* ¦ Accounts from Hong Kong to the 2 < tth of . May , _Bambay , the 2 nd , Calcutta the 3 rd , and Madras the 10 th of June have been received . The news irom the Punjaub is of a most serious _riatnra ; BO Ies 3 than tbe discovery of a conspiracy at Lahore , originating with the agents of tbe Ranee , having for its object the massacre of the European officers and soldiers at that station , to bs effected with the corapiicitv of " our own native troops . Tha plot was discoand
vered in timo to avert its frightful consequences , Bomo of the originators had already paid the _psnaities . _Tno latest advices from Lahore were to the 22 nd May , at which date all was quiet ; but the utmost precaution was taken to maintain the peace of the capital . A largo magazine of arm * in the city , furnished of old by _ftunjest Singh , haa been _underminsd by order of the residen t , aad blown up , as thy _poiulace had begun to help _themsolvcs from that repoaitory . The strictest _garrison duty was being maii _-. lained , and every offioer had been called in from
the districts
UNITED STATES AND MEXICO , _^ By tho Cambria , C aptain Harrison , we are in po « - Ees _:-ion . of advices from New York to the 11 th , . Boston _ to the 12 'h , and Halifax to the li ± instant respectively . The official proclamation of peace had been publishc-d at Washington . Tho President , in his _raessago to Congress , announcing the ratification , _reebramends the appropriation of twenty _milliona to _fulfa the treaty stipulations , to be paid in four annual instalments ; provision for the appointment of surveyors of the boundary line j for the appointment of a Board of _Commis-noners to _decideon the claims of United States _eitizsas against Mexico , ' the immediate establishment ofa territorial goverament over California and New Mexico , and the extension of laws over the same > tbe regulation of commerce on the coast by law ; liberal grants of publio land to settlers : and , finally , that no Increase in the army
be made . Tbat part of the message which states that indemnity hadbeen secured by the acquisition of territory , and that the brilliant exploits of the army were a guarantee for Beourity _, was received with laughter , as waa also that portion of it whioh : says , . ' we shall probably be saved the necessity for another foreign war for a series of years . ' Tha ' debt of thecountry , at the close of the war , we are now told , is only 65 > COO , 000 dollars , an amount large enough to cause some trouble in its payment . ,.
Our intelligence from Mexico is important . Paredes was in full rebellion against the government . Oa tho 15 tb of June he entered the city of Guanajuato at the bead of about 400 mea , and made himself mabter of tbe military stores in the city . The garrison , after a show of resistance , joined hira . _Bustamento and Minion , who were sent against _Paredes , aro believed to be acting in concert with him . The States Congress of Guanajuato was immediately _dissolved _. the lawful government displaced , and the country is evidently alarmed at the prospect of the success oftbe revolutionists . ; An address has been issued by the rebels , _pvotestine * in strong language against the treaty with tne United States .
We have the moat deplorable accounts of robberies uoon the highways in all parts of Mexico . American deserters join the professional _ladronesat Mexico , and even in Vera _Cruaiacts of violence are constantly committed almost with impunity .
MEETINGS IN FAVOUR OF IRELAND . ( From the correspondent ofthe Morning Chronicle . ) Philadelphia , July : 11 , —The Irish and Mitchel meetings still continue , but , as the speeches and proceedings are now generally the mere eohoea ofthe meetings that had been held before , and of which so many accounts have beea transmitted to you , I forbear to d well upon them at length , unleBS whsre some new point or feature has been developed . This however has been the case at Williamsburgh , New York , where ' a monster meeting of the Irish Republican Union , ' wa 3 hel in the open fields a few days since . A ' declaration of independence for Ireland' was read and adopted , according to whioh ' every man in
Ireland shall ba the owner of a piece of land ; ' Ireland ti be an independent nation . Mr Mooney said , that no man was to' sign that document unless he was onboard the ship that was to carry hira to Ireland '—meaning the Irish Brigade . Tho same speaker ateo said : ¦— We will assail Canada , India , Ireland , at once ; even the city of London , where we have half a million of Irishmen , shall be burnt about the villains that _seized John Mitchel , " & c , & e . Mr O'Connor said he was going to Canada . He was told he should be arrested . If he were 50 , 000 men would croas the border . ( Tremendous cheers ) I observo that there have been Mitchel _meetings at Boston , Charleston , and Pittsburgh .
( From theAto York Tribune , July 11 . ) IRISH _ItEPUBUOAN _FNIOIft A _masB meeting of this Association wns held list evening at the Shakspeare Hotel . About eight o ' clock a procession arrived , attended by music , and the large Hall was quickly crowded to its utmost capacity , Among those present we noticed one or two Members of Congress . At the call of the meeting , the chair was taken by W . E . R 0 BINSOH 1 Esq , Thomas Hatbs acting as secretary . .
Mr Robinson , on taking the chair , said , we are , most of as , Irishmen—and what has the land of our lore not suffered ? She bas been slandered , even by her oppressors , and our country bas been thrown in our teeth as a disgrace . Poor Ireland ! she is the victim of tbe worst government on tbe faoo of tbe earth . Mexico has a bad government , yet the people do not die there of starvation , as in Ireland . The Chinese , the Japanese may have bad governments , yet not so bad aa the British government , for there the son of toil , after planting the seed and watering it with bi » tears , and reaping it in the sweat of hia brow , is not obliged to yield it up to be carried from hia sight , while he is compelled to lie down himself and die for want of food . God has blessed Ireland
with a luxuriant sou , and has caused the earth . to yield plenty even for her crowded population ; but the husband man there lies down and dies upon the very soil whioh oppression has robbed of its fruits His wife perishes by his aide . The infant < on her breast tries to draw sustenance from that fountain of life which nature has provided for it . But desolating famine has sealed them all for its viotims—child , mother , and sire—in one black burial blent ., _Cofflsless they are covered beneath Irish earth , or are left unburiod , to be torn and devoured by dogs and birds of prey . Now I appeal not to Irishmen , to Americans , to Frenchmen , to Germans—I ask is tbere anything human , with human impulses , human sympathies , that will not cry out indignantly against the
qontinnacce of a government which reduces a [ people to this nnparelleletl degradation ?; For seven centuries has Ireland crooned beneath an oppression worse , far _worss , than Egyptian bondage . The glory of her former days—her Patricks and her Columbas coming in marked contrast with the degradation—the _Cromwella and _Castlereagha of her later history . Shall thia stato of things last ? ' Should not the moral sen . timent of the world be declared against it . But it may bo asked , what can we do fpr her ? I reply , what can we not do ? We have Bpoken fer lnr . We have laboured for her . We have prayed tor her . We have done all but die for her ; and that wa are ready to do—that we can do—that , if necessary , we will do . ' Who wonld not die to save her and think his lot
divine ? ' She is our mother—the blood that is in our veins archers , and there is not a drop of it in our hearts that we will not cheerfully give her when she needs it . Onr blood , our bodies , our hearts , our souls , ail ! all ! are hers . She has only to draw on Bight , and her draft Bhall not bo dishonoured . Eng land raises the foolish objection that we have no right t 9 sympathise with Ireland , as we are citizens of arietber nation . Now mark the _hypoorisy of this declaration . At the very moment she makes this claim , her laws , as expounded id the latest oases . proolaim that we cannot shake off our allegiance to her . She has not even yet acknowledged the existence of the Naturalisation Laws of the United States . We have remonstrated with her for the right of locomotion . We have protested against perpetual allegiance to tyranny and insolence , Our
protests and remonstrances bave been of no avail . She claims _tfeat wo owe perpetual allegiance to the land where we were born . As she is obstinate t then b . _* * it so , we owe the land of our birth—the sweet Green Isle of the ocean—we owe her the perpetual _allegiance of love . To the heartless tyrants whs have so long blighted , with tho _withering of their presence , that 'Gem of Ocean , ' we owe the perpetual _allegi _* anoe of eternal hatred . We have no enmities for the English psople—we would rather hail them as brothers ; our hatred is for the government—that destroying demon , which has feasted on _thegroans , and bathed itself in the _tearB of the people of England ns well as of Ireland . Let us swear , then , by that double allegiance of undying love , and _unextingukihablo hatred , to free our native land from her oppressors .
Mr Robinson took his seat amid prolonged npplaus _) . Thomas Moonby . Esq . then read a report of the Irish Republican Union , addressed t > the friends of Ireland throughout the United States , from whioh we give the following _extraots : — ' We have already sent to Ireland several Bmnll delegations who will find quarters and friends among the people for those who may follow . We are sending more , and shall not eease till we have established a net work throughout Ireland to be moved by ono experienced hand when the people are attacked . These will move with the rapidity of the lightning ' _d flash—will ea 1 the _peasant soldiers of Ireland with the science and determination of _Republican America- ' Mr Mooney , before _reading the report , made some eloquent remarks . He was followed b y Messrs . Thomas Flyhk and W _, J .
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I _CcGQiSviu eloquent andibie _addresiie ? , _WhicheliVK frequent outbursts of applause from the audipfip _* . Subscriptions were then handed in , and _wk _thrcff _fifiaera for tho Iibmyoflreiand . ( ho _n , ' _^ adjonmeo . A meeting is to be held by the A « Bn _$ tion thia _evening in Jersey City . " _^ ( From the New Fork Tribune . ) * _T 0 _* J LOUDON TIMES ABD IRELAND . Our readers will find in our _columns to-day a ] 0 . article from the Times , in which it tries to rep ] y _? our statement of the grievances of Ireland , ft . written in a style somewhat more moderate than . ! the went of the Tory giant of England whea ahiujij Ireland . It has only replied to a part of our ' _staf ment , but promises to take it up _ajain . We hat not seen its second article , but when we find it 2 shall give it a place . '"
We hays not room for a reply to-day , but _ . u take some other opportunity of sustaining our po _^ _ciona and commenting on the startling coufei 3 i 0 L which the Tim £ 3 makes even in its own defence . " What utter nonsense * is it t _° see , 1 paper of * L character of tha Times attributing the wots of _\ L , land to ' tho dispensations of Providence '!—V 7 _asf _* ' _Providecco that made the _English law 07 which "; was not murder to shoot or InJl a mere _Irkhmat / _i Was it Providence that _mado _. 'ii 'felony' for the _in-ie _^ of the people's religion to teach the elements of _evm temporal knowledge to tbe young of their _churcfaei } Was it _Froyidence that wrought the desolations * f Cromwell and William , and _consSscatfd the pfcperty of the rightful owners to tha va _^ ab nd araj of the English , _whwe _progress ov » r the W . d _wj
marked by mer 3 of patriot blood , nnd mounts _^ g of unbnried bones ? Is it Providence that even mi ? propf _^ _tes the ' clearance system , ' by which _peasants aredrivtn froa their crumbling huts to die in % ditch , that room may be made for _brosding pheasants and hunting _d-rer for tho sport of Iho heartless land . lord ? Was it Providence that executed _Emraell _, murdered Filz _^ erald , transported John MitcheHia fine , persecuted to death aud transportation _thqpg who loved their country , that the renegade who be . tra / ed her might light his way to power and place by a brand caught from the flames which _eocBUtnsd her _prospsrity ? Shame—shams upon those- who ittribute to a just Providenee crimes and _craelt ' _-ea _perpetrated by themselves ; so horrible in _thkir planning , so fiendish in their execution , so _mourn _^ l in their effects , as to ' make even angels weep . ' *
The Latb Revolt In Newgate.—Flogging 5? ...
The latb Revolt in Newgate . —Flogging 5 ? the Ring-leaders . —On Saturday between tie hours of nine and two , the officials connected wib Newgate were busily engaged in removing the while of the convicts who were convicted at the life _sesssions of the Central Criminal Court and sentened to be transported , being a fortnight previous to the usual period . Amongst those so sent away were 12 convicts who prodneed the revolt in Newgate In Wednesday last . After the convicts had been ova- - come and doubled-ironed on Thursday , Mr Alderman Gibbs visited Newgate , when the whole of « e proceedings were brought before him , and a loig investigation took place , which ended in two of tie
convicts being found to be the ringleader ! _cvl _,, ; outbreak ; and Mr Alderman _Qibbs having tae authority , ordered the two ringleaders to receive three dozen lashes each , to be carried into effect on the following morning . Accordingly , at 7 0 ' clonk , the usual preparations were made , and although it was intimated to the party that some of them would undergo severe corporal punishment they com . menced singing the well-known chorus , ' Britons never will be Slaves . ' This they _^ sung until thtir two companions were led put to receive _punishment at the hands of Calcraft , the executioner , who administered three dozen lashes to each , without , however , eliciting a single sound from either .
Clerkenwell-green—On Monday night , le « tween 1 and 3 o ' clock , the inhabitants of _Clerkwwell-gfreen and the immediate neighbourhood were placed in a state of considerable alarm in conjequence of a number of persons having collected on the Green . Some policemen of the G division lad previously arrived there , to be prepared in caseof any meeting ; but , notwithstanding they were sell ) , while there were others in plain clothes , after a consultation , it is supposed , a person , who seemed to be of some respectability , took up a _positon adjoining the _lanap-post in the centre of ClerkenwiU . green . As he showed a disposition to make a spee < b , a crowd of persons m a few minutes collected _roild
him . Upon his beginning to deliver his addny . / policeman went uj > to him for the purpose of _< _ndeavouriag to induce him to go avay , but withrat effect , when a few stones were flung at the poif _^ fe _, and , as there was ' evidently a determination to o'er resistance , information was sent to the _station-hase of the G division in the Bagnig < _je-wells-road . Ba the meanwhile the mob , which had collectedto between 300 and 400-persons , were addressed by the speaker , who observed that tbe people had him petitioning the House of Commons , and that it ' as of no longer any use to petition that bod y- W f le arguing upon the rights of the people , and _th- ? : ' _^ vantages of republican institutions , Inspector jl _& n arrived , having with him a force of about 20 _ien with three sergeants , upon whom being seen a _grat number of the crowd went away . Above * j ) 0 , however , remained round the speaker , who _contirjed his speech until the police got up to him . \ hl
inspector attempted to persuade him to discootiiue his conduct , but he insisted on bis right to _diso As he continued , Mr Julian was compelled to _tfe him . into custody . He was promptly conveyedto the station-house by five policemen , followed b _^ n immense crowd . There he was charged ixh riotous conduct . He gave the name of John 2- " ; r Orr No . 23 , St John ' s-square . He stated tha ae was a licensed preacher , but would not give he authority by which he was licensed to preach .. He also informed the inspector . that he had _some-ttiperty to live upon . The accused had been delisting pamphlets under the following title , of wlch it is believed he is the author : — ' The Sign Jf the Times , as expressed in the House of _Comnona on the 10 th of April and the 12 th of June , 18 _^ . ' Inspector Julian remained with his men on _Clerfcnwell-green to a late hour .
Singular Adventure of a Lunatic . —Here is at present a poor woman in the _Bolton workhttse , who left her home about a fortnight ago , and htf _** amusing adventure . She is the wife ofa _garner named Steward , residing in Kearsley , and shileft her home on Thursday fortni ght , unobserved byaay of the family , in order to visit Lady _Ellesceie _, before whom she wished to lay some petitior or complaint . At the railway station at Clifdenjthe carriage of Jacob Fletcher , Esq ., of _Peel-hall . _was in waiting for a French gentleman , who was coring on a visit to Mr Fletcher . The gentlema ! in question arrived in the same train as the poor luntic ,
and being rather peculiarly _pressed MrFleicUrJ servants appear to have taken her for a fiver ' " ir companion of the foreign visitor . She _marked forward from the railway to Mr Fletcher's carrije , followed by the Frenchman . When the _gentium got into the carriage , he bowed to her with Par / ian politeness , under the impression that she _was _/ _ane of Mr Fletcher ' s household sent to e 9 sort hh to Peel HaU . When the carriage arrived at Mr | _letcher _' s residence , the lunatic still passed as a fjp d ot the French gentleman ; but a feeling of _de ( cacj prevented either from asking for an explanation . At length the party sat down to an elegant rpast , when the conduct of the lunatic became so mrketl
and extraordinary that Mr Fletcher and hi _? w m looked at each other in route astonishraei _^ 'An explanation ensued . The French gentleman de _^ ared that he knew nothing of Mr Fletcher ' s visitor having found her in the carriage when he _enured . The poor creature was then requested to _witWraw , but she was too fond of her new quarters , and obstinately refused to move . A policeman , however , was sent for , who took the unfortunate _womanUav . Mkrihyr _Ttdvil . —Rkcoybrt of Speech . —! fc _* months ago a young female , named Elizibeti Edwards , residing at No . U , _Cyfarthfa-row , _wassererely attacked with fever , by the _icfluence of whieh ah 8 was deprived of tho power of _ulteranop . Sle re _«
covered her health ' , and resumed her work as a letup * stress , but waa notable to produce _asin _^ _- h- _-ow i ' sr the _spa < _-e of four months . After resortinfe _.-, _* _»>• to va ious hinds of medicines , she was dircciedby ibJ advice of a lady—who had been in a similar _stite for twelve months—to boil two ounces of red _musts _^ seeds and a horse _raidisb , iu a quart of old ale , _uatu reduced to a pint and a half , snd to take a wine _glau of this deoootion every morning . For the flriit . _ttif _d-vjushe felt , at times , excruciating pain in thetbio " and _abaut the insertion of the tongue , and after repeated trials , on the morning of the fifth day , to b «
astonishment she pronouccud the word ' Mari' ( t _^ name of her cousin ) . Stupified and trembling w _»» feelings intermingled with j _^ y and fear , at the JoTely sound of her on n voice , it was some time before bW recovered her self-possession , when at _length _r-fiee _*; claimed in Welsh , ' OMari , yrwyft / ngallat ,: o _,, -a < ( ' O Mary , I can apeak' ) , Tne rumour spread _ _*>?* _* the neighbourhood in alt directions , and _crowifW n _« friends and acquaintances hastened to oiingn _*_»?" her upon tho recovery . She has continued V _eiU * y that precious _requiBite _^ articulation—in ft * ll * w tion ever since . \ _ The new poor rate upon Ki'dea division of _ _ju _W _* unionamounts to . 17 a . in the pound . ' . ...
, . A site has been taken , at Galway , for _onj _of _" . * most extensive barracks in Ireland , and _vn ioh i _» estimated t 9 t accommodate a regisae _* . t of _^'/ _n _*'; and two ej-infantry . The eito is near _thread' * Gort . :,
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 29, 1848, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns4_29071848/page/2/
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