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THEJ>BAN&E|i.'EHB FEEL, AND ITS PIPPINS. - ____
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IAILQHISG ESTABLISHMENT.
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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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DAVID WINTER , Tailor , Mercer , akb "Woolles Draper , No . " 5 , " West Street . LEEDS , begs to present his grateful acknowledgments to his numerous Friends and the Public , for the Favours they baTe conferred upon him , and respectlully folieits a conomiaiiee thereof . Every description of Tailoring , in tbe fir 5 t style of Fashion , on the most reasonable Terms ,
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WESTMINSTER IMPROVEMENT COMn PANY . —To be incorporated by ActofParlta ment . —Capital , £ 750 , 1 ) 00 , in 7 , 50 O * Sbares ot £ li ) 0 each .
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HnaagasBBBsaninii . wim .. LINEN- DMPERT , SILK MERCEKY , HOSIERY , GLOVES RIBBONS , LACE , HABERDASHEEY , ETC ., ' S'S ^ RedS ^ PricS ! 1 Rooms contain an "ExteWw" Assortment of Entirely New Patterns , at a great FAMIX , "ST JWOUaiTING AND FUNERALS FURinSHED . Hudderefield , May , 1838 .
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TO THE INHABITANTS OF HXJDDERSEIELD AND ITS NEI&HBbUKHOOD . ¦ : ¦ , ¦ . . . - ,: " : ¦ ¦ m - " ;; ¦ . \ " ¦ . ¦ T H I S D A Y I S ^ E-0 PEN ED TP SHOP FOR THE BALE OF TEAS COFFEES , AND SPICES
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40 , COMMERCIAL STREET , LEEDS . n » MW . FRANKS , Successor to the late Mr . C . Porter , 35 , Loweriead Row , most re--pevt : ully bej-s leave to return Thanks to the Nobility , Gentry , and the Public in general , for past Favours already conferred on him since his commencement in Business , and humbly solicits a continuance of their kind Patronage and Support . M . W . F . has the honour to announce to them that be has Removed his Establishment to more Commodious Premises , No . 40 . COMMERC 1 A 1 STREET , ( Late in the Occupation of Mr . Craven , Saddler , ) where he purposes keeping a Selection of the Newest and most Fashionable Songs , Piano Fortes , Harps , Guitars , and Music , from the most Popular Operas , & « Performed at her Most Gracious Majesty ' s Theatres , Royal Opera Houses , and Grand Concert Rooms , at a Reduction of 25 PER CENT . DISCOUNT . _ N . B . —The Nobility , Gentry , and the Public , arc respectfully informed , that tbey will have an opi portunity , if required , of bearing each piece of Musicplayed over , on the Piano Forte , prior to their becoming Purchasers , as Mr . T . Smalpage is . engaged for that express purpose . ' fj ^ Piano Forte and Singing Taught by Mr . S . I on tbe most reasonable Terms . 1 Also , a large Selection of New and Fashionable Sougs , Piano-fcrte Music , &c , &c , AT HALF PRICE . Portfolios of Music sent out on approbation , to " any part of the Town or Country . , An Elegant Assortment of Guitars , Violins , , Violincellos , Clarionetts , and every other description of Instruments appertaining to Military Bands , r Also , English and Roman Strings of the first quality , Bows , Bow Hair , Resin , Mutes , Tuning Hammers , and Forks , Reeds , &c \ , &c .
Untitled Ad
IMPORTANT TO TRADESMEN . — + — A GOOD PEN is a very desirable article to all Persons in Business , and a Good STEEL PEN is now acknowledged to be very Superior to Quills , and much Cheaper ; but how , it will be asked , can we obtain some Good Ones ? The answer is
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PUBLIC DINNER , TO J . TXEI . DEN . Esq ., M . P . 'TIHE Frietirls of John Field-en , . Esq ., M . P ., -L are respectfully informed that a PuBtic Dinnkr will- be given by the Working Classes ol Manchester , on Whit Monday , to that Gentleman , as a testimonial of their respect towards him , for bis ir . iwearitd ' exertions in the cause of Liberty and Humanity . Tickets 2 s . 6 A . each , to be had at tbe Advertiser Ofiic **; James Wroe ' s , Ancoats Street ; Abel , Heywood ' s , Oldham Street ; Mr . Barrow , Draper ' Dean ' s Ga'e ; Universal Suffrage Association Room , ho . 9 , Whittle Street ; Mr . Appleton , Bank Top ; Mr . Willas ,, Bookseller , Hanging Ditch ; Mr . Richardson , Chapel Street , Sallbrd .
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THE STAR IN THE EAST , WANTED , _ in the chief Towns of Yorkshire , Lancashire , and } he adjoining Counties , AGENTS for the Sale of this rising Publication . The Pajier of this week contains- some Account of THE CONGRESS At MANCHESTER , and may be obtained of A . Heywood , Manchester ; Green , Leeds ; Mann , Leeds-and such other Agents as may be appointed in the interval . All Applications for Agency to be accompanied with ^ reference as to the respectability of the applicant , to be . ' addressed to the Proprietors of the Star in the East , Wisbech , Cambridgeshire ; and to be free of postage . Orders received by J . Hobson , at the Northern Star Office ,-No , 5 , Market-Street , Leeds .
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Btf ^ inSill S W ^^^^^^^^
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LETTING OF THE TOLLS OF THE FREE MARKET , IN LEEDS . np HE LEEDS IMPROVEMENT 'COMJ . MISSIONERS HEREBY GITE NOTICE , That the RENTS or TOLLS of the above MAR ^ ET ^ wiU be LET for ONE YEAR by PUBLIC BIDDING on Thursday , the 24 th Day of MAY Instant , at the Court-House , in Leeds , at Twelve o'Clock at Noon , subject to such Conditions as shall be then produced , which may in the meantime be inspacted at the Office of BARR , LOFTHOUSE , & NELSON , T , \ . , 1 , Park-Row , Leeds . Leeds , May 2 nd , 1838 . N . B . A Deposit of £ 50 will be required from each Bidder at the Time of Bidding .
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SAFE AKD EXPEDITIOUS CONVEYANCE ^ OB . MERCHANDISE TO : ..,.. AKrn Vis . Q 7 nt LoirnoH . ; : ; . ' - ;' . : ;; ; "¦ ¦ ' -,. TOSN BROWN SWIFT takes this opportunity M of lnformidg his Friends and the Public generally , that he has declined the Business of Wharfinger in favour of Mr . James Appleyard ; and in thanking them for past favours , begs respectfully to solicit Public Patronage and Support for his Successor . r ? James Appleyard begs to announce to the Friends and supporters of Mr . J . B . Swift , as well as to the Friends of the late Mr . Richard Clarke , that he lias entered on the above Wharf , and Holicits a continuance of the patronage with which his Predecessors have been so long favoured . . .. Vessels will sail from Hay ' s Wharf , London , to Leeds , and from Bridge Wharf , Leeds , to London , weekly . ~ The Dispatch and Safety of this mode of Conveyance , combined with the prevention of Leakage and Pilierage , by conveying the Goods through in one Bottom , must render it a desideratum to the Public . J . A . begs to assure the Shi ppers generally , that no fixertiou on his part shall be wanting to make this an economical snd expeditious transit of Goods . Enquiries will be promptly answered , and all Letters attended to , addressed to JAMES APPLEYARD , Wharfinger , Bridge Wharf , Leeds . John Humpherv , Wharfinger , ? Hay ' s Wharf , Hare and Easty , Agents , ^ Lo ndon .
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NEW VICTORIA PRINTING PKEsV JOSEPH PRIESTLEY , PRINTING PRESS MANUFACTURER , ' . - . ' - . - . AND : ¦ ¦"' ' ; . " " " ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Planing JWachiae Maker , BEGS to call the attention of Letter- Press Printers to his New VICTORIA PRESS , which , tor X ruth of Workmanship , Evenness of Impression , W ^ t n ^ . ™ B , nn » iih gl . and | atow . ' ailjCJiedpnt « i ' m ''" rrice , he challenges comparison with any in the a Orders for PLAINING MACHINES , of all bizw , tsecut ^ with Punctuality and Despateh . . . Hawing Work , of every description ^ takenin and executed in the bt ^ t manner . V ' ' P ^^ rWrE' ir ^ S * ^ a gM Second-band ; PRINTING PRESS , ( Manchester make ) , Demy Size , whicbhft t on afforHAt a ^ privrp ^ on ^ ilerate . . A GOOD ROOM TO LET , Nineteen Yardt ' long by Six wide well Lighted ; and the * i > artT taking it can have POWER to the extent of Three Horses . ' . * ¦ - . ¦ ¦ ; -. ,,.. _ , [ One Concern . ] Machine Manufactory , Tenter Lane , ( Near the Bridge , ) Leeds , Mav 18 , 1838 .
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PUBLIC ACCOMMODATION TO MAN . CHESTER AND NO MONOPOLY , HHHE SURPRISE COACH continues Running X from LEEDS to HUDDERSFlELD , OLDHAM , and MANCHESTER , from the Talbot Inn , Briggate- the Coach OFticE 123 , Briggate ( two Doors above Kirkgate End ) , and Saddle ; Inn , Briggate , Leed < , at a QUARTER BEFORE NINE O'CLOCK everj-Morninir . The old Firm by using every atcitagem in their power , have been endeavouring intake tbe above Coach off the Road , but the Puhlic are informed that the above Coach will Run , in spite of all Opposition , at Reduced Fares . The Proprietora rppectfully solicit the Favour of the Public to th « V above Coach . ¦ Performttd by . JOHNSON , HIGGINSON , & Co .
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TO THE INHABITANTS OF LEEDS , AND THE " NOBILITY , CLERGY , GENTRY , ANT ) FAMILIES IN THE NORTH OF ENGLAND . Six
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If , in this inventive and marvellous age , the Iraman mind can receive anything jew as- wonderfnl , the juice Vhich Sir Robebt Peel squeezed out of his pippins on Saturday last , may furnish food for contemplation . . Not that there was much novelty in the principle * expressed hy the Right Honourable Baronet , nor yet in the mode of expression ; but there was something stalling in the manner of their accomplishment . "We have read
the speeehes carefully , and twice read those portions which the press have thought particularly worthy of repetition , and jet we are of opinion that a blindfold , selection would have answered all the purpose ? of oar contemporaries just as well ; inasmuch . as one spirit , and one alose , was breathed a'l through ; namely , a sad repining to his gaping brood , that their over zeal and anxiety for prey was ill-judged , because tie enemy to be supplanted had left but a scanty Exchequer , and therefore the hopes of the aspirants must he subdued for yet a Bale longer . Sir Robert triumphantly boasted of having thrown his
mantle over the "Whigs , and thereby saved them , from the Tasbness of their too precipitate friends . "He explained the different position whicb he , as an Opposition Leader , has maintained , to that which Ihe Whigs would be liiely to occupy ; and he boasts of the gradual re-action which has taken place in favour of his party ! But alas ! he forgets that the re-action is but of a negative quality ; though mavbap lie regards not the non-elective influence . And here we may be ancuin ^ upon false premises . Doubtless Sir Robert ( though principally reiving upon a strict obedience to
tbe word of command , " Register , Register , BedrtfT , " ) must nevertheless have thonghtof , { though he could not condescend to mention ) the ion-elective influence . Our support , then , he nra * t , t » a certain extent , build upon ; while his objection to the pre = ent Government is , that they have already yielded too mueV to " experiment . " He seems to forget that withholding , and not concession , is the roct upon which the "Whi gs have split ; and that the Radical strength of which tbe present Government fee ' s die want , would be a positive out-door
opposition to every principle contained in the speech of tbe Right Hon . Baronet It is true that the hasty isolation after the death of th * late King , from z dread of Tory perseverance , during the registration of 1836 , and a consequent increase , during that period , of Tory voters , may inspire " Sir Robert with the hope of two trials ; the one from a change of opinion upon tbe part of some in favour of his Government , and the other the alternative-of dissolving , and trying the effect of tie registrations of 1836 and 183 " , allowing time till October to
marshal his bungry forces . But let us suppose him in office . The thing we marvel at is his presumptuous ignorance as to the mode of holding it . Three hundred gentlemen , with a few reporters , lit down to dinner , well knowing that , to that room u confined their strength , their power , and their means . No sympathy beyond the walL *; no voice to respond to their aspirations . " While he was lamenting those embers which are but raied , and which a "breath may ian into- a flame , in consequence of " the unsettled state of other nation ? and
other questions , could he not cast onp glance at home , and see the inflammable pile to which his oScial breath would be as a match ? Does he ihinl that the waters of tbe Atlantic would quench " « 6 > e flame which the recollection of his former policy in Ireland would rekindle ? or does he suppose that the charges upon which he condemns the Whip would be strong inducement here at home .
to foster "Af « still more bloody reign ? or that we shnnld , crab like , follow him in his backward motion ? When he speaks of olden times , he means centuries ago ; when tee speak of olden times , we measure space by intellect and not by time . "When he last took office , jublie opinion was disunited ; now , it is united . The Poor Law Amendment Act was but an infant
now , u is a monster ; and though it be the child of tbe "Whi g ? , he is its godfather , who did promise and tow three thing ? in its name : Firstly , that it should renounce God and all his works ; Secondly , that it should keep the three-h-adtd Devil-King ' s unholy Trill a nd commandments , and believe in all the articles of their faith ; and , Thirdly , that the poor should do whatsoever they were commanded , in that Rate in -wfc-eb . \ t pleased their masters to call then , and walk into the Bastile in the latter end of their days . The poor gentlemaa has lived in the atmosp here of Dray ten and Spring Gardens ; aid has taken his account of "Whig hatred from the
tamping" Northern Commissioners , which the Eaner holidays brought to the north . Had he Tinted us , in our bumble retreat , we wonld have toMhim that his appointment to office , after his u Church and State " speech , would be the signal to * ms ; and that if ye hate the "Whigs , because their regn has failed to confer any benefit upon the i * ° ple , we hate the Tories more , because the se mblance of liberty , which in cur poverty we posf e * i , would be tak . ni from us . "What ! Peel and ¦ "EL 1 . ISGTOS ! Ominous names ! Peterloo "Waterloo and Rathcormae 1 Oh ! graves of the innocent slaughtered , —the slain in honour of God *'
—is tbe green grass wbich grows over you to be crimsoned witb more innocent blood ? Is the village tjrantagain to be minister of Ireland ' s laws ? And is the Bible to be held upon the bayonet over your eon-. gnwea heads as the triumph of the law Church and a * iaage of conquest ? With the "Whi gs is power " »« waste not our time in denouncing a powerless faction ; but let tbe Tories with tbe principles of eir Iwder , now take office and we pity his temeritv .
But from tbe trial let the Radicals read amoral , ^ Kl j , that to defy both , they mnst be strung msekes . In all the contests for pre-eminence , thv aiicals . are bnt slaves to grace the triumph of the Dquerers . Let M as ^^ more DO y pogjtjon . 3 i t ** ^ ° nr Etren ^ h warrants— if united—« ate . As defeat followed the display at Leeds ; . v ^ . * ^ ai- ^ of the dinner party been It ; ** '* Huuse Bpon sir thomas d ** e O-CK . LA . 'KD * -mr . iA , vr ,
-rr-ZZ *^ I ° h ° neSt maD ' -th whom the ^ y co ^ edanc ^ : ^^ ^ the mode m which the measure was carried ^ p ^! - h - * ° ° ne ^ « " *»« what * °$£ T ^ ° J ™ * USSBLL ^ ¦ ** the 1 v BOt TElue U OM Wa * or ^^ r , and , ^ only as a Tory defeat . Such then ba * tbe practical attempt of Pekl . Rs . d . w
* ime ^" » ( the la 8 t » awfW ««¦) The Ejected ?!? ' ° D thC eTidmCe Of *** ¦ P ^ J ** » W . Wj of the ^ tuou , Irisi
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peasant , in the dead honr o ? night , " to the foul inspection of an Orange policeman . How miserable that the want of well directed strength upon the part of the Radicals should thus make them of no consideration in the several changes . The Right Honourable Baronet speaks of us merely as things te be restrained , and boasts , as his only greatness , that when the "Whi gs have failed in numerical power tp insult and oppress , that the three hundred vere at hand upon all fitting occasions . "We tell the Right Honourable Baronet , asr we told bis __ , _ —
Northern Commissioners , namely , that neutrality and perfect qu . escence , should have b % en bis ground ; and we do believe the Great Statesman , that even now the fames auri " of his young asd injudicious , bnt " cant-want" friends has plunged him into a premature contest . Suppose him to come in , what then ? TTill he raise the Exchequer to the standard of his youngfriendr expectation ; or will he reduce expense * to " the level of the Exchequer ? The first he cannot do j the second be dare not do ; fortaieaway money , and , you leave the virtuous Baronet bo support .
After the speech of Sir Robert Peki ., and the response of his party , developing the mode by whiih ( in case of regaining power ) they mean to govern us we would strongly recommend every man , t specially in Ireland , to prepare himself for the worst . The fault of the people is that they prefer cure to prevention . Even now , we should rind somi foolhardy enough to recommend a trial for S : r Uobekt , as if he had not been sufficien ly tried . Bu : while we thus at once declare the enmity which the people bear to Toryism , let not the . "Whigs imagine that while we beat tbe one , we shall allow tbe other to trample upon us . No , no
they have their own dastardly cowardice , and that alone to thank for tbe colours in which Sih Robert painted them oh Saturday night . Had tbey relitd upon good detds and firm friends , they need not humbly bow and thank Sir Robert for the very many good natured wounds he has iurlicted by his support . Radicals do your duty , lest between the two stools you once more come to the ground . No union with either party upon their pre .-ent principles ; tbe faults of tbe Tories add no lustre to ^ Tiigs . Universal Suifrage or nothing !!! And in our endeavour to weaken one enemy , we mnstbt cautious lest we confer power upon the other .
Thej≫Ban&E|I.'Ehb Feel, And Its Pippins. - ____
THEJ > BAN&E | i . 'EHB FEEL , AND ITS PIPPINS . - ____
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VOL . I . No . 27 . . V- ; , / : ¦ . kTTODAYr ^ Y l » . !«« . '¦ . - Im ^^ . U * , , ^ i ¦¦^^—^ ^ ^_______^ t ^ ========: HnaagasBBBsaninii . • On ITtvu Si » TT t t ^^^ . „ « . « . r \_ . *
Iailqhisg Establishment.
IAILQHISG ESTABLISHMENT .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 19, 1838, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1006/page/1/
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