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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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^ "JSlAT S'S-GJQITT AND RHEUMATIC _ D PILLS . ^
Another extraordinary cure of Khemnafrsm , from JLmcoltuhire , communicated by Mr . Mall , Book ^ teller , Gainsborough . ( To j £ r . Prout ^ 229 , Strand , XonSon . ) " Gains'boroTJgh , April 7 , 1838 . Stbt , —I am requested "b y Thomas Thornhill , of this town , to conimirnicate to yon the almost mira"' . " . cnlons benefit he has received from _ . the use of BLAIR'S PILLS : he yurcn 3 sed a box of theni at my shop last night , stating that he had been suffering from Rheomatic Ferer for the last fifteen weeis , whichTiad Tenderedhim unable even so much as to lift Ms hand to Ms head , -without great pain . I was astonished to see him again this afternoon , laughing sad throwing his arms about like a madman . He came to state , that he is . already all hat cured , i-Tea 31 y . could , not have imagined that a . single day conld ha-ce niade . -soch a difference in the appearanee of a man . Yesterday he was nespairing : of relief , and looked the pictnre of misery , to-day he is full of spirit , and seems as happy as a prince . The fame of the Medicines is now spreading rapidly . } I see . my Block is exhausted , you Trill therefore oblige by sending six dozen T > oxes immediately , to Tour obedient servant , - .. " ' . . - ¦" . - B . S . HALL . These Pills are taken without the least care ot attention , "b y either sex , young-or old , and have the - peculiar property of entirely removing the disease "without debilitating the frame , which is universally \ r left in a stronger and "better state than "before the j malady commenced . Aisd there is another most important effect belonging to this Medicine—that it prevents tie disease flying to the brain , stomach , or other vital part .
Sold hy Thomas Pront , 229 , Strand , Londonj and , by his appointment , by Snieeton , Reinhardt , Heaton , H * y , Allen Land , Clapham , Tarbotton , Smith , _ Bell , Tovrnsend , Baines and Newsome , Xeeds ; Brooke , Dewsbury ; Dennis and Son , Moxon , Xifctle , Hardman , Collier , Hargrove , Be 31 erbj- , Yort ; Cooper , "Goldthbf p , Rogerson , Newby , Key , Bradford- ; Goldthorp , Tadcaster ; Rhodes , Snaith ; Briee , Priestley , Pontefract ; and all respectable Medicine "lenders throughout the Engdom . Price 2 s . 9 d . j » er hox . Ask for Blair ' s Gout and Rheumatic Pills , -and © bserfeHhe name and address of " Thomas Prout , 229 , Strand , London , " impressed on the Government Stamp affixed to eaek "Box of the Genuine Medicine . -
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WORKSPUBLISHED byJOHNLIMBIRD , : " . ¦ - ¦ 143 STRAND . Every Saturday , with Engravings , at 2 d ., or in Monthly Parts , Sd ., and ready for delivery with the Magazines , ; THE MIRROR ; of LITERATURE , AMTJSEMENT , and INSTRUCTION .
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With Engraving * , 5 s . in cloth , ARCANA of SCIENCE and ART ; or , an Annual Register of Useful Indentions and Im- provemenfcs , Discoveries and ^ Jew Facts in Mechanics , Chemistry ^ Natural History , and Social ] Economy ; abridged from the Scientific Jonrnals of the year 1836 . .- . ' " This "Work may be considered as an Encyclopsdia , to which the most eminent of their time stre eonssaiitl ^ © ontribntiDgJ' '—Hew Mim lh . lt / Magaxine , —notice of Arcana of Science for 1832 * - P-ice 5 s . cloth ,
FAMfLY MANUAL and SERVANTS ' &ULDE . . ** A "very useful little "Work , which will at once serve m a'Cookery Book , a Guide for . every description bf Servants , and a valuable Assistant to the Head , of every Family . "We shall recommend this Bool every where , if it were only for the sake of the excellent suggestions on the * self-improvement' of House Servants , "—Gardener ' * Magazine . In Number * , at One Penny each , or Two Number * in a Wrapper , price Twopence ; and Monthly Par t * , price Sixpence , - GOLDSMITH'S NATURAL HISTORY , with NOTES , by Hexby Lnnbs , from all the Popular - Treatises which have been israed gince the time of Goldsmith ; collected with the utmo « t care , combining a mass of information , aad reference , forming a complete vade mecum of modern discovery in the science which it illustrates . Complete- in Two Volumes , with upwards of £ 00 Engraving * , price 10 s . 6 d . each . The following Works , printed verbatim from the best Editions are Published in Numbers at Twopence each j also , for the convenience of Purchasers , in Numbers at One Penny each ; 0 r Complete at the prices affixed : — Goldsmith ' s Vicar of "Wakefield , lOd . The Mysteries of Udolpho , 3 s . 6 d . Mackenzie ' s Man « f Feeling , 6 d . Bawelas , 8 d . Paul and Virginia , € d . The Old English Baron , 6 d . The CasUe of Otranto , 6 d . Romance of the Forest , Is . 8 d . Almoran and Hamet , 6 d . : Elizabeth , or ths Exiles of Siberia , 6 d . Nature and Art , 8 d . The Italian , 28 . A Simple Story , Is . 4 d . The Castles of Athlin and Dunbaynea Sicilian Romance , Is . The Man of the "WorW , Is . Zeroed by Dr . Moore , 2 s . - Joseph Andrews , Is . 6 d .
- jauaparey uunxer , is ^ » a . Edward , hy Dr . Moore , 2 s . 2 t , Marfin ; Fahsr , or the Story of u Criminal , 4 d . Botlerick Random , 2 s . 2 d . Belisarjoa , Is , Farmer of Inglewood Forest , Is . 8 d . St . Clair of the Isles , 1 « . 8 d . - Tom . . Jones , 4 s . . Noarj » had , and Solyman and Almena , 8 d . Peregrine Pickle , Ss . 6 d . . " . - ' Robinson Crusoe , 2 s . 6 d . Peter "Wilkins , 9 d . Eccentricities of Colonel Crockett , Sd . Goldsmith ' s Essays , 8 d . Dr . Franklin ' s Life , 8 d . Dr . Franklin ' s Life and Essays , 1 » Bacon * Essajs , 8 d . S&lmagnndi ^ or "Washington Irving , ls . _ 8 d . The Microcosm , by the late Right Hon . G . Canning , Is . 6 d » - Arabian Nights' Entertainments , Embellished with 150 Engravings . - Plntaieb' Jl LiTea , forming 2 Vols « with £ 0 Porferaiti . FACTS PROVING "WATER to be the only BEVERAGE fitted to give HEALTH and STRENGTH to MAN , price Threepence . A T&EATISE on &e VIBTTJES and EFFICACY of a CRUST of BREAD saten earrjin a Morning , fasting , in relieTingihe SenrTy , Stone , &c , arising froni ObstrnctioM . Also , on the Properties , Virtues , and Salntary Effects of ta « Safira , or PASTrnG SPITTLE , when applied to recent Cats , Pains , SoreEyeg , Corns , 8 sc . ThirdEdition , price 6 d . ¦ With an Engraving , price One Shilling , INSTRUCTIONS for BREEDING , REARING-, and MANAGEMENT of the GANABY FINCH , bj an Experienced Amatenr . The IngtrnctioM relative to Management are applicable to ¦ flRntiwt . ¦ fttt % ' - - J . Hob * jk , northern Stvr Office , ! Lccdg ; *« M * U Booksellers and Vead ^ rs of Cheap p ^ noffifeabFikrtmg bonttiie Country . ' .-- ¦ - , Jc I ^ BPF , ?^^ ** . o « conie Agents for tie Sale ofa **> Vof « "Works , will be wpplied with CabGoOTfi * aMP « Pting Bills , ob applicitiea te the Yaltlishcra , ' - . -i - .- •¦¦ " ¦ . . ¦ - " . .
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M CASm OEjpq ^ CY GOMDLT THE TB 1 MKE ai 4
Cli ^ i ^ Stage m of atJTENE ^ AL DISEA ^ ^ wVi . ; -W . -: \ ' ¦ : > " .. " - ^ . j . : : ^ v ^; U- ' j 08 * JubliBhed b y V " : ¦ '*;¦ " - ' "i ^ - / >^;; - ' ¦^¦ ¦ . ' > y ? \ .:: ' [ : ' ; . ; 4 , < 5 r « at Charles Street , JKrininghaca ; : 23 , Slater ' . Street , _ I . iveipoolja ^ j 2 ,. Bale Street , Manchester ; 0 . - ^ - > .- " ' . ' * ' ^ dtivengya < i « with each B » xof > - ' c ¦ w -
PEREJ'S FD"EIEZIN& SPECEFIC PIILS , - ^ ...- ' v Price 2 * . 9 d . As . 6 d ., and 11 * . per Box , " > ^^^^ / CONTA INING a full description of the above complaint , ILLUSjHHk ; y TRATED BY ENGRAVINGS , shewing the . "different stage ? bf J ^ y ^ p ^ QJL" this deplorable and often fatal ; disease , as wolf as the dreadful effects /^ f \ w k arising from the use of mercury , accompanied with plain and practical M&W - m $ &a ! r % && ^ . ^ . ^ * 0 T an effectual and speedy cure with ease secrecy , and safety , JF $ ! b&a 8 & ! $ - m $ & 7 ^ . without the aid of medical ansistance . ' - ' M&mlmBmBFW ^ &L- ¦¦ pE ^ Y * PUMFY ^ & ; SPECI ^ fc . PILt ^ p ^<» . 3 g / 3 W . 4 »; 6 a ^ £ && f t ^^ Mw JK 4 lM $ ZD ^ 3 is ., ; are well known throughout Europe and America to be the most ^ HfJv \ ^^ hIB ra £ Wy ceTI ^ 'a an ^ ffwtual ' cpre > Ter ; 3 wcoTered , -. 'fo " revery ^ stage " andr 8 ymp \ toro ^ efflt ^ jl I W I I ^^ S r ' " ° ** - e ^ eDer ^ al Disease , in boih sexes , including Gonorrhsea , Gleets , ^^^> IH' hw uJ&r Secondary Symptoms , Strictures , Seminal Weakness , Deficiency , and ^ g /^»» i ) Jgj ^ fcy ' all Diseases ef the Urinary Passages , without loss of time , confinement , - ^ kS 3 ^^ t or hindrance from business ; -they have e ffects ^ the most surprising cures , : ^ rafek fSJmT - not only in recent and SBver * cases , but when salivation and all other ^^ a ^^ r means bave failed ; and when an early application is made td these Pills ^ i ^ r ^ , *^ e ? ure ° ^ ^ 8 Venereal Disease , frequentlycontracted in a moment ^^ T of inebriety , the eradication is generally completed in a few days ; and in the more advanced and inveterate stages of . the venereal infection , characterised hy a variety of painful and distressing symptoms , a perseverance in the Specific Pills , and -to the directisns fully pointed out in the Treatise , will ensure to the patient a permanent and radical cure . It is a melancholy faet that thousands fall victims to this horrid disease , owing to the nnskilfulneHg of iriiterate men , who , by the use of that deadly poison , . mercury , ruin the con 8 tituti « n cause ulceration , blotches on theliead , face and body , dimness of sight , noise in the ears , deafness , obstinate gleets , nodes on tReshTn bones , ulcerated gore throats , diseased nose , with nocturnal pains in the head and limbs , iill at length a general debility anidecay of the cpnsUtution ensues , and a melancholy death puts a period to their dreadful sufferings . .
In those dreadful cases of sexual debility , brought on . by an early and indiscriminate indulgence of the passions , frequently acquired without ite knowled ge of the dreadful csnsequences fesulting therefrom , and which not only entail on its votaries all the eiervating- imbetilitios of old age , and occasion the necessity of renouncing the felicities of marriage to t » os « who have given way to this delusive and destructive habit , but weaken and destroy all the bodily senses , producing melancholy ,-deficiency , and a numerous train of nervous affections . In these distressing cases , whether the consequence of such baneful habits , or any other cause , a certain and speedy eure may be railed on hy taking PERRY'S PUBlFyiNGr SPECIFIC PILLS , and by a strict attention to the directions pointed . tutV-in \ Ay- " treatise ^ " wWcXfully : ( E ixplain 8 ' -the dreadful results arisingfrom tbe ? e melancholy cases . MESSRS . PERRY & CO ., SURGEONS , may be consulted as usual at No . 4 , Great Charles Street , Birmingham ,. and 23 , Slater Street , Liverpool . Oily one personal visit is required from a country patient , to enable Messrs . Perry . & £ o . to-give such adrics , as will be the means of affecting a permanent and effectual cure , after all other means have ^ proved ineffectual . Letters for advice mustbe post paid , and contain the usual fee of one pound .
Sold by the principal Medicine Sellers in erery Market Town in England , Scotland , "Wales , and Ireland ; also on the Continent , and North and South America . ¦ ' Soldat the Intelligencer Offie « , and by Heaton , Townsend , R # inhardt and Son , Tarbotton , Rhode * , Trant , Leeds ; "Whitaker , Hardcastle , Ridge , Gillatt , Fisher , \ Vreaks , Slack , Saeffiald ; Woodhead & Nail , Claughton & Co ., Chesterfield * , Sisyons , "Worksop ; R . Collinson , W . Gething , "Mansfield j J . Fowler , EastRedford ; G . Harrison , J . "Walls , Barnsley ; Adams , Selby ; Greaves , Fall , Knaresbro ; Hurst , Cardwell , Stamfield , "Wakefield ; Stanfield , Keighlty ; Cooper , Bra ' dford ; Hartley , Berry , Leyland &Son , Halifax ; England , Jacob , Fell , Sprrey , Hudd « rsfield ; Brice , Parkinson , Priestly , Pontefract ; Foggitt , Peat , Thirst ; Dalby , "Wetherb y : Stafford , Brook & Co ., Doncaster ; T . S . Brook , Dewsbury ; "Wilkinson , Skipton ; Langdale , Korthallerton ; Goldiliorp , Tadcaster ; BowmanRichmond ; Rhodes .
, Snsith ; Richardson & Son , Low Harrogate ; B . Moxon , Meyn »] l , Ross &Burton , J . Haycrtft ,: Lee & Perrins , Hull ; . Dennis & Son , Bellerby , DeipVton & Moixon , T .. Marsh , R . Burdekin , H . Southeran , "W . & J . Hargrove , York : Earle , Ramoden-, Beverley ; Ainswortb , S . Turner , Chamlty , Fox , Scarbrd '; Allathorne , Pocklington ; Kirby , Market "VYeighton ; Turlay , Howden ; Sherwood , DriffieldjFurby , Br idlington ; Atkinson , Kirby Moorside ; Anderson , Ripon ; Yeoman , ^ vVhitby ; Smith , Guisbbrough ; Flower , Malton ; Duck , Stokesley ; Cbri . 'topher & Ct ., Stockton ; Wilson , Rotberham ; Robinsoii , Boronghbridge ; ColliHson , Cave ; Hall , Easingwold ; Cas » s , Goole ; Barkers , Helmsley ; HarringUn , Hunbanb y ; Hawkins , Masbam ; Longbotham , Middltham ; Walker , Foster , Otley : ¦¦ Atkinson &Son , Pickering ; Knowles , Thorne ; Sutton , Nottingham ; Woodward , Leicester ; and sold b y most resuectabla Medjeine Vtnders throughout the Kingdom .
London—Barclay and Son , Farringdon-street , Butler , 4 , Cheapside , Edwards , - St . Paul ' s Church Yard . N . B . —Country Druggists , Booksellers , Patent Medicine Venders , and every other Shopkeeper can \ je supplied with any quantity of Perry ' s Purifying Specific Pills , with the usual allowance to the trade , by Barclay and Son , Farringdon-street ; T . Butler , 4 y Cheapside ; Edwards , 67 , St . Paul ' s Church Yard ; Snttbn and Co ., Bow Church Yard ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; and by all other wholesale patent Medicine'Houses in London . :.
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INFANTILE DISEASES REMOVED , IT has been well and triily observed that" he who makes ^ wo bl ades of grass to grow where but OHe grew before , is a real benefactor to his country . " Can any eulogy , therefore y be teo high for that man ,, wh » y with ; the jessing of God ^ it . enabled every year of his life , to rescue many thousands of his fellow-creatures from an early grave ? USE ATKINSONS INFANT'S PRESER-¦ ¦ ¦ - ; . ; : VATIVEH 1 ¦ ¦ . . ; Might be ch alked upon every wall in town or country ; but as this Medicine has not attained it ' s celebrity ( a celebrity of Fifty Years standing , ) from puffing of any description so neither does it seek to rest its future fame upon any other basis , than the simple facttha ' t upwards of FIFTY THOUSAND BOTTLES of it are annually seld in Great Britain .
For the prevention and cure of those disorders incident to Infants , it is a pleasant , innocent arid efficacious Carminative ; intended as ji Preventive against , andaCure for , those complaints to which Infants are . liable , aa Affections of the Bpweln Difficult Teething ; . Convulsions ! , Rickets , &c . and an admirable . Assistant to Nature during the progress of the Hooping Cough , the Measles , the Cow Pox , or Vaccine , Inoculation . The Buperior excellence of thia : Medipine , which can be attested by any respectable fan % in Man , Chester , has induced several unprincipled persons , in
Tarioualargetowns ( particularly St . .-Helens , ^ Dudley and Liverpool ) , ^ to , ifend a Counterfeit Medicine , with a copy of the Bill of directions , although the Proprietor is happy toreay with very little ( success ; yet great jnjpy , no doubt , to the suffering infants , and no leas pain to their anxious Parent , have been thus occasioned . To prevent which , and in order to obtain the Genuine Medicine , observe that each Bottle has upon the Stamp affixed over the cork , the name of " Robert Barker , No . 1 , Marketplace , Manchester , " engraved thereon , by favor oi Her Majesty ' s Cdmmissiohera of Stamn DuteLa
Prepared only by Robert Barker , ( nepbew and successor to ^ and formerly partner with Mr . Atkinson , ) chemist and druggist , No . 1 , Marketplace , : Manchester , inmoulded bottles , at Is . lid 2 s .. ^ d ., and 4 s r 6 d . each . Sold retail by most re pectable druggists in town and country , and mav be had wholesale of the proprietor , and at the usual medicine houses in London .
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TO THE SUFFERERS FRdM BILIOUS AND LIVER COMPLAINTS . THE unexampled success of FRAMPTON'S PILL OF HEALTCH calls for particular attention . These Pills give irninediate relief in all spasmodic and windy complaints , with the whole train of well-known symptoms arising from a weak stomach or vitiated bilious secretion , indigestion , pain at the pit of the stomach , bilious or sick headache , heartburn , loss of appetite , sense of fulness after meals , giddiness , dizziuess , pain over the eyes , &c . &c . Persons of a full habit , who are subject to headache , giddiness ^ drowsiness , and ' -singing- in-the ears , arising from too great a flow of blood to the head , should never be without them , as many dangerous symptoms will be entirely carried off by their immediate use . They are highly grateful to the stomach j create appetite , relieve languor and . depression of spiritp , getttly relaxing the bowels without
griping or . annoyance , removing noxious accumulat ion * , rendering the system truly comfortable arid the head . clear .- The very high encomiums passed upon them by a large portion of the public , is the best criterion bf ' their merit , and the contihual statements of their good effects from all parts of the Queendom , is . a 8 oureeof the highest gratification . - : Sold by TV Prouty 229 j Strand ; London * Price Is . ip . and 2 s . 9 d . per box ; and by Sraeeton , Reinhardt , Heaton , Hay , Allen , Land , Clapham , Tarbbttbn Smith , Bell , Townsendy Baines and Newsome , Leeds ; Brooke , Dewsbury ; Dennis arid Son , Moxon , Little , Hardman , Collier , Hargrove , Bellerby , York ; Cooper , Goldthorpe , Rogerspn , Newby , Key , Bradford ; Goldthorp , Tadcaster ; Rhodes , Snaith ; Brice , Priestley , Pontefract ; and by tbe Venders of Medicine generally throughout the Kingdom .
Ask for FRAMPTON'S PILL OF HEALTH , and observe the name and address of " Thomas Prout , 229 , Strand , London , " on the Government i Stamp
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v FEARGUS O ^ CONNOR , ESQ ., : ¦/ : TO DANIEL O'COjpELL , ESQ ^ M . P . k : ¦ - - ¦ . .. . . ¦ ¦ - LETTERIII . ^ S iii ,- ^ I fear from the multiplicity bf matter which ttoletter must necessarily contain , as the session of Ib 34 was an important one , that I shall b ^ e obliged to trespass upon you at great length , as well as nY ) on various subjects .. You have denouncedme as a person ^ unworthy of the confidence of the Liberal pMty in Ireland ^ and . if the facts , which : I am abo ! it tolay before the public , are such as to entitle n public man to _ confidence , my earnest prayer is , that I inay live without public approbation . ; If your power was less , I wonld scorn to defend myself by accusing you ; but , perhaps , as has been but too
^ oiten the case , , the truth of my charges will furmshBrourids not only for your ^ aciiuittal , but foriny condemnation , and procure for you an increased flow of . pubhc cpnridence . What a task have I undertaken ! I dash with pigmy force against the LolQSsusrof modern , policy ; 1 raise my faint voice against him whose lisp lias silenced a nation ' s roar , whose soothing tones have rendered death a balm to the starving man , till he hugged the messenger , and longed to lay his wasted frame in the emancipated earth , as a wiihng martyr . The fearful odds startle me , but hold--I-must be right , for justice shall be done to Ireland , and the voice ot justice is immutable . Yesthen-rto the eight millions I appeal , and ask but
justicer-you cannot pack id large a jury for I have an . appeal to twenty-four millions , and even shou'dyourgarnished fable succeedinarresting justice there , 1 -havethe universal triburiiti still lefi und should ja . Hice be banished from off the earth , 1 have Him who made the earth to listen and award the victory to thu riKhteoHs . I treat you then as a problem which must be solved—I place you in all yoor proportions before tlui nations ol the earth , and if , out of tiucli incongruous inuterials , a true and sightly figure enn be drawn , then will I fall down audpavyou earthly adoration ; then shall I become not only a lover of expediency , bu t an advocate for the substitution of an . order of things suiting your htywiUandle
mig _ . pasure and a mpeka- of-those institutions ,, and a reviler of tlio > e principles , which foolish men admired , because they were founded on notice and had liberty for their object . Jf ' bw marfc , Ssi . r , you cannot wear the shield vhichhas so often defended you , and against which so many arrows have been broken ; it was but a guard against . the shaits of individuals-who ' cayilled ' at your language , or felt personal dislike ; no peu assists me , lio man has made a single suggestipifto me , no party stands at my buck , making a tool of me to humble you . In this conflict I stand alone , unaided , unadvised , and unsupported . I now come to the work of the session . Our first work wus in presenting petitions upon the subject ot th « Ilirpeal of . the Union , and the total abolition of tithes . In . order to frame one charge against you , 1 must aeairv recur to the " Rfenftal
< T juestion . _ In the iirst place you recommended , that uo discussion should talce place upon the presentation of petitions . This I knew was lor the purpose of having the first cut at the question , upon bringing forwardyour motion , aud 1 merel attributed it to vanity ; bntyou and the . Irish member ^ and , indeed , the English members , must recollect , that justice to the accused was the burden of your soug ^ and that one of , the greatest grievances of which the people ot Ireland had toconiplain , was , that " political animosities ran su high that ull questiorisahd trials were more or less timed ; with apolitical feeling and that juotice could not be done , so long as ail Grange sheritr , the organ of an Orange party , had the Dominaiioii of jurors , the crown having a right to set any number aside , and the accused only being allowed to choose out of those who were not objected to-by the crown "—whose very , selection added suspicion to the most pure .
I Lad , in my own practice , witnessed the horrors of the jury system . The attornies ^ who go the Quarter Session circuit , in general khov ,- every individualin the county , and , upon prisoners being arraigned , the respective attorhies challenge for the dock . The prisoners know nothing . ot what is going on ; Dining the day it may be , as I have frequently witnessed , that an important trial is expected to come on in which the prisoner may be an Orangeman , and charged with shooting or violently assaulting a poor Irishman , lu such case the attorney lor the defence endeavours to procure a jury of stroiiL
political -bia . « , and the result has frequently been , that the strongest evidence against the party-man is of no avail , while the most tlimsy case , against a batch of what are called tithe rioterii , will be certain . to-Satisfy , the same jurymen—as a body will be guilty of acts which the basest among them would blush to acknowled ge U 3 an individual . However , it was in order to remedy this anomal y , that you told the people of Birnoiugbam and Liverpool that you had thought the Repeal of the Union necessary . But now Sir . for your consistency—now for your honesty—now tor your title .-to confidence . You have been charged in the House of Commons , with stopping the passing of liberal measures for Ireland ; when you boastedof your nroDhetic skill :
you were told that you had used your best endear yours to give effect to your own prediction , these remarks , lio we ver , were mere assertions , but I ' am going to prove the fact . Mind , the prisoner you said had a right to object even to the face of any man , who was obnoxious to liim—min d the evil ot the Jury Bill was one of Ireland ' s greatest grievances—mmd , the Itepeal of the Union was to remedy this system—and further mind , that the Itepeal was given up for Justice to Ireland—Justice to Ireland-Justice to Ireland"Alas ! poor country ! Almost alraid to know itself . "
| Listen to your mode of procuring justice for Ireland . \ ou gave up the Repeal for Justice—you sought Repeal to rectify the anomalies of the jury system , and you thought that justice would do it . Did you wnnt to correct the e \ il or to make a novel parade of a new word ?¦ Had Itepeal grown stale , and like the RomnUfi , are iho Irish loud . of the " re ruin" tiova ' twit f" and did . you supply justice ? yes , to correct the Jury syj « t « ni ; tlieu what was your course ? In 1834 you moved for leave to bring in a bill to alter the Jury Law in Ireland : you ejeposed the iniquities of the system very forcibly . IVoin vouir ownkuowledge ot its working , you laid more ftresa upon its j ' ]
importance than " upou any other questiou connected -with Ireland . I was delighted with , the chance of making a part of my trade unnecessary . I therefore ; at some length , and by throwing ia my slight professiohal experience , assisted you by seconding your motion for leave to brinj ? in tke bill . Lord Spencer , ( then Lord Althorp and Chancellor ofthe Exchequer , ) together with Lord HatUerton , ( then Mr . Littleton and chief secretary for Ireland , ] opposed your motion . You seemed indignant and frequently with , uplifted eye exclaimed , " Good God ! what chance has Ireland in auch a . Parliament !" |
When the noble Lord and Mr . Littleton had closed , some Irish member , I think Mr . Shiel , was speaking in favour of your motion . I took the opportuiiity of conversing with Lord Althorp and Mr . Littleton upon the subject . I Pat between thein ,-and spoke , if not the identical words the very substance which I shall state : — " Hbw can yOu wonder at Irish agitation out of the House , or a warm Irish opposition in the House , when you OpposV the ir iv troduction of a Bill , by the leader of the Irish p arty , although you cannot defend the svstem which it seeks to remedy ? I am tired of agita tion ; and , if you wish to put a stop to it ^ do not oppose us ; allow Mr . O'Cbnuell to bring in the Billand correct its
, iaults , or oppose it on some : fair grounds ; but rely upon it , that you promote dissatislacribn by yoiir opposition , " Whereupon Mr . Littleton said , "Well , Alihorp , what do you say ? there is something in what U'Counor says ; " " Well , " said Lord Alfborp , » let us hear gome morej "—which , referred to the speech of the person addrtosingtlie ^ Hougei-rllelt the noble Lord and Mr . Littleton , with the conviction , indeed with a certainty , that they would allow you to bring in the Bill .. I returned-to you , sat next to you ^ and said , " Well , you are all right ; Althbrp and Littleton will allow you- . to bring in your Bill ;" to which you replied , iEh , what . how do you know ? '' '" Because , " said I , ' * they saidas much . "
Upbn the moment you started from your seat , seized the person who was speaking by the coat , and said , " Sir , in consequence pf the violent opposition whidh my motion has met with from the noble Lord and ' the Right Honourable ; Gentleman , I beg leave , in order to save the time of the House , to / withdraw" it ; it is , Sir , another melancholy' instance of the mode of treating . my unhappy country . " . You literally paralyzed ine—I thotight for a moment that it was one of thos ^ splendid manffiuvres , upon whibh you prided yourself ; but , judge of my astonishment ^ when upon my asking , "WaUy in the name of Godj why did you do that ; did not I tell you that they would not oppose you ? upon which : y . ou f lapped m «} . on the thigh , and said , " never mtnp , I am BEtTER TlEASEp THAT THEY : OPPOSED HE , IT Witt GIVE me more power in Irelanb . " I looked at you for a moment with astonishment , and said , " then . Sir ;
never again aslc me to support any measure ^ of yours ; upon which I left the House in perfect disgust and from that moment I looked upoii you as themostartfol man I had-. ever met " When I contrasted your energy ^ while depicting the horrors of the system which . your Bill sought to correct , with the treachery which your own words conveyed ^ I gave a , long , a deep , and a sorrowful sigh : lor the liberty of the poor Irish " hereditary bondsmen / ' I did then think that you wished the real physical and no c the moral blow , which was to set thein free but as the country must pnt . a construction : upon what you meant , with reference to THE : DESTRUCTION : OF BOTH OUR TRADES , IN IrEland , so also must theysolve t ^ . e rosianing of your replyupon ; theJury Bill . Cbufd I Idngersuppose that you wishedall grievances to remain unredressed , to Btrengthen your Repeal debate ? No , I was then convinced : that Irelana free Would no ldtV . -rer pay the wages of agitation , while Ireland enslaved would
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S ^ SSS ^^ ***^^ mm ? m ks 0 ^ M youmeanthat whichjrese ^ e * LyonWfflSg of power whereon to rest your title to reward—W jusuce-ybu ; mean tbe ; delegation ; of power tovyour guardianship ,: and to be used Accfeg-to yofcr wuiui
ana capnee . i now dumiss the Jury Queition , and coine ' -to a subject yrlich . will open tht eyes of all Iovert of justice ; : '; * " : Tri -There are circumstances , which , though trifling mark the character . An honest politician glories S the success of his causa , no matter by whom ac * compltshed ; a trafiEfclsiDg politician grumbles bvVfc every species of improvement , of which he is not the projector . Ail honest politician should , after thS longest life , be able to read- his : eyery stieech ; andt cacyasshw every word ^ his / motive and hi s action ; with the ^ ame delight that the really charitable can look . baek upon his unostentatious bequesfa , done f or ^^ the good ofothie ' w , ^^ and hot irt the \ op « ' of au encreased return . The virtuous politician ^ rill sei rfom ; be called uppn : to ; defend , himself ; for . shonlA :
juogment IaUin directing Improper course ; justice ^ Th > T aig L i y ?* Z ™™* , * nd nothis integrity . Or the other hand , I acknowledge yonr pqwer of jndgw ment , although you havje made a false estiniateof the judgment of those who have ; to decide upon tha soundness ot yours , yhile rimpeach your integrity , lo my subject— ¦¦*¦'¦ . " * ? the ^ e « ion . of ^ 34 , Mr . Cobbett gave ^ otica of a niotionv wbic ^ : had for its object the ' rembval o * ? 5 £ I 1 - ^ \ toxa M st of Privy Cbuncillors ; he broughtit Jcrward in a very full House . When you entered ihe Hoo ^ e , you took many positions , and at leiigtl , seated yourself next your victim . : f uuiiatnat
. >« u couta not bear the idea of my speaking m tho ^ Quse-biit that mi ght have arisen froni fb * . Aw which ypuprbfe ^ ed ,: and a disinclinatioa that I- slould become unpopular- ^ much personalheat wd 8 _ mixed up with -debates upon Irish questiqn ^ of course I could not su ppose that you wrmldiiijurepne whom you ac knowledged had ren- dered such service to the Liberal cause—yon would : ^ not injuremy popularity injure me by holding me " up _ to . public and personal odinm , in the Theatre t whereon you wished me to shine ? No ; and I am Wloim * to give a striking proof of your mode of bringing but a novice . ' :
Mr . Cobbett brought forward his motion . While he was speaking you said , * . My dear Feargus , if F ' elden should happen to be . absent when CobbeU moves , don ' t let his motion fall lor want of a seconder . " " Why , " said I v"isiti gbbdmbtion ?" « -fu ! ? r ' - , £ | e P liec 1 ' - ' ? m-. admirable me ?" ihen , said I , f have the hbnour Of seebndingit ypurselt . ** No , no , " gaid you , "I fad a Personal quarrel with Peel , and up 6 n that account 1 could npt ' tb which I replied " then , as I don ' t want to have a personal quarrel , I shall avoid it , by not seconding the mbtion . " This was : pure andaisinterested upon your part , to permit tue man , whom you would not ( upou other occasions ) allow to » pe » k to second an admirable motion , but of course
theworla will suppose that jou voted , at all events , for the admirable mbtiori Surely Sir Robert Peel could not carry his . personal resentment so far ,: as to quarrel with a member of Parliament for dotog his uuty , although hemay feelannoyedat his taking ' a prominent part in his accusation . But , what will the world think , when informed , that you voted against the admirable motion , or did not vote at all , as you , were not one of those who ; divided for the motion . Ijuttb . prove to you that I Iove ' justiceV 1 . voted , against the motion , but I afterwards made one of tour who voted against the motion being expunged , from the order book , and I did it because Ithouglit it Unconstitutional , and . not from any feeling of either personal or public dislike to Sir Hoberfci Peel . ¦ : . - ¦ ¦ : " . , ¦ ;¦ ' •¦' . -.. ¦ ¦ '¦ : ¦ : '¦; . -. .. •¦
Now , won ' t you confess , that your joy would have ; been Unbounded j if I had subjected myself to th ( i ' persbnal aiiimbsity of Sir Robert Peel , and to the general reprobation of the remaining members' ? Doii't youjthiiik that the character for squabbling ^ whichyour kindness wbuld have , entailed Upon me ,. would have spared you the necessity of continuing ; as my keeper ? dragging me downi or attempting to stifle my voice ; don ' t you think that a general buzz ; upon my rising would hay < i affected yourobject ? - And . don ' t you well know ; that it is in the powerpf tlie House to mark any member with disapprdDktion ? Never was there a moredeadly arro \ y aimed at . any man , and , had it hiti ¦ you would have ¦ g loried over the ruin of your victim , but every man . in the House knew , that ^ if I thought it a good mptipn , 1 should have seconded it even at any
Dersonal risk , but inasmuch as I objected to Ireland being condemned , and coerced , for acts said to have been committed some : half century back , I could : not see the justice of trying Sir- Robert Peel npon » charge , the grounds of which : were laid in 1819 , arid , moreover for an act in which , he was Supported by * majority in bothHbuses bf Parliament . But when I ' next have tHe honour of a seat iuParliament ' if ybuv will bring forward a motion' for the rembval froin otiice of " the base ^ the brutal and bloody \ Vhigs , ?^ who passed the Coercion Bill , I will second ity aa * that would be an admirable motion ; and I will tak e all personal risk offyourshbulders . Really , as I prpcfied with your biography , I become disgusted-wiflxi public life ^ and feel indaced to retire frpmthe piiblia stage , lest the ambition of evincing piower at theexpenceot national liberty , should seize me in some moment of self-conceit . - - ¦ ¦ ¦' .. ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ - ¦' . ¦ ::
The sessibnbf 1834 was , fpr Ireland , auimporr- ant one ; that of 1834 wasidly spent iutryingmettle r . balancing forces and arriingmg partiesitheCoercioa ^ Bill j and a determinati pn to put db wn the Repeal spirit , and to subdue the Irish . Reform phalanx- ^ superseded all other bnsiness . In 1834 ,: you brought " on the Repeal Question in the worst speech I ever heard ; you laboured unconnectedly for six hours / through seven centuries of oppression ; ybu were not a genuine advocate of the measure , the opposing ! torce frightened you , and your aim seemed to be apreparation for retreat . You were driven to th& stake , and you found that what you had assumed ' for an Irish toy to amuse children , could : not betreated as 3 uch before men . Your reply : was better ^ than ybur speech ; j y 6 ur ; stomach seemed to haver recovered its tone , when yeu had thrown bfif . the
Pb'Spn I for in good truth you « xpected that the . seed : of Repeal would have produced many harvests in Ireland ; you never imagined that it would require to > be changed so soon . You began in yoiir reply to talk , oi / being governed like Yorkshire , and you told an Inah _ member , who tpok ypu to task upon the observation , that yon merely said it ina joke , a * fjeland could not be governed like any part : of England ; but ,, the fact i < , you have been joking with the country until the country can bear your jokes no longer . : : v ' ¦ ¦ Well , the Repeal bubble burstj and you waatedr another bauble for the children ; you went to the tby-shbp , and there you sayr aLord Mayorin . robes * and an Alderman on the bench , and all the officer * in livery—and now , said you , I have the
" lie plus ultra" of hobby horses— I'll put a set of place-hunting patriots upon my ponies—they com * mand the people ^ we have no press : and I'll pit the new Lord Mayor in each ; town against the Prieit of the parish ^ Who can't care for . the question—and againsj ; the vulgar rabble . : : ¦ ; : »¦ ; Sir , I shall now show , that you had no thing-whatever , to do with any great question of public importance , except to take . -it ; up as" an agent to ^^ collect rent ; you naye certainly shown : the value of the principle ^ cbntained in some measures , but , when it was near ing itacloseyyou were sure to step in and mar it . You had nothing to do with the Corpora ^ tion question . I wag in-the House when notice w& » given for bringing in a Bill to Reform . Corporations
m England and , Wales , I begged that Ireland might be included , ' and some of the ministers said that Ireland would follow * . ¦ : - ' While : I am upon the subjecti of support which public questions have .- met -at ybur hands , I shall here take , leave to observe , that you- have had nothing to do with any of the great questions upon which you build ypur fame , save the Repeal of the-XJnibn , and that you ; strangled ., , ; "Rlhea were a source of discontent before you Were born , and their total . abpKtipn was fast approaching ^ - when you stepped in with . -yotir blasting system ot instalments , your fifths , and ; your eights , aud yonr portions of principle . During the session of ^ wnich 1 wnte , your object was to preserve enough bf the sore to enuure a periodical visit from the quack . The appropriation , such as it was , which gives the Irish Catholics
a power to tax themselves m the gum of £ 50 , 000 per annum for education , instead of gettiug £ 40 , 0 ( K > from the state , this was Mrv Ward ' s measure , and a very ^^ silly measure it ; is ;^^^ the Education of Ireland has been'l ' ofur ^ bane . Mr . Wyse is th « ehkmpton of Irish education , because he knows ; that / hw ^ actions will stand the examination of informed men . The suppression of the Orange system is- exclusively the work of Mr . Finn , backed by : Mr . Hume . ¦ ¦' - ' . In tho correction of all these abuses , you took no part , because their removal vw 6 ttld ^ et&en : your power . The Poor Law Question was' smothered by ybu ~ Mr . LittletoQ ' B BiU for altering the Quarter Sessions ' Law in Ireland , ^ -the best Bilf ever presented to the Heuse of Commpns ^ wasnaes ^ oyeoi b ^ I was night after night presairi g hiVn ft > bring ¥ far . waVdi : ' ¦ : ¦'¦ v : ^ :: . - ¦; *'' . ' ¦ - . . '¦ . - ¦ ¦ :- ' : "' ¦ ¦'' ^ rV ; - < ' - > :- ~ , . ¦ .- ; . C : ' . . ' ' ,. ' . ( To be continued mow next . )
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¦ ¦ A CERTAIN DISEASE CURED WITHIN ONE WEEK AT BKADF 0 B . D AND LEEDS . ^^ ff ^ ^^^^ j ^^ i ^ Si ^ i ^^^^ SSS ^ SSSS ^^ li ^ ^ ° Announce ,-that in order to asconunodate J ^^ Y ^ VTt ^ M ^^^^^^^^^ those Patients who have vi * ited him from Bradiord , JH ^^ I ^ A ^ I ^ K ^ J ^^ v ^ J ^^ a and the neighbourhood , he has been induced to attend ^^ ^^^ y ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^™ - tDat place , and may be consulted every Thursday ^ at MM ^^ & ^ igi ^ jfQj ^ r ^ l ^^^^^^^^ S Ko . 2 , Dead Lane , next to the Junction Inn , from MiMBejia ^§^ i |^ a ^ l ^^^^ Ten o'Cluck in the Morning to Five in the Evening ; ^^^ KKmKMSSSwffm ^ MSfi mv ^ naSBn ^^ y and during the other days of the week , as usual , at his own house Kb . 60 , Bottom of Templar ' s Street , Leeds . He continues , with unabated assiduity , to eradicate every species of infection . In recent eases " , a perfect cure is completed within a week , or no charge made for medicines after the expiration of that period ; and in those of the utmost inveteracy , where other ^ practitioners have failed ^ a proper perssverance in his plan of treatment insures to the patient a safe well grounded , and lasting re-estabhshment .
He hopes that the successful , easy , end expeditious mode be has adopted , of eradicating every symptom of a Certain Disease , without any material alteration in diet , or hindrance of business , aa'd yet preserving the constitution in full vigour and free from injury , will establish hi » olai ' mi for support . Ag this Disease is one which is likely to he eootraeted whenever exposure tateVplaeey it 1 « notliSe manyotbervisitors , once in life , but on the contrairy , one infection may scarcely havebeeh removed , when another may unfortunately be imbibed , therefore the Practitioner requires real judgment in order to treat each particular Case in such a manner as not merely to remove the present attack ^ but to preserve the constitution unimpaired , in case of a repetition at no distant period . The man of experience can avail himself of the greatest improvements in modera practice , by being able to distinguish between discharges of a specific and of a simple or mild nature , which can only be made by : one in daily practice after- ^ ane consideration of aH cireumstances . In th « same manner at birth , appearances often take place in children , which call for a proper knowledge and acquaintance with the disease , in order to discriminate their real nature , and which may be the means of sowing domestic discord , unlessmanaged by the Surgeon with propriety and skill ; but instead of possessing the proper Qualifications , so essential
to the Practitioners in this in « dncus Complaintj you often find low Mechanics vilely pretending to have studied the Healing Art , and deluding the UnwaTy by their nefarious Nostrum *; it is these Men who are the most arrogant in their pretensions , who , by want of skill destroy more than even Pestilence and the Sword . Can Patients therefore , labouring under this Complaint ba too cautious into whose Hands they commit themselves?—the Propriety of this remark is abundantly manifest by the same Patient frequently passing the Ordeal of several Practitioners before he is fortunare enough to obtain a perfect Cure . "Were Patients sufficiently aware of the Risk they encountered , when they commit so serious a charge as Life to illiterate and inexperienced Hands ; and were they to be "Witnesses of the excruciating Sufferings of too many unhappy Ticrims who are sacrificedno improper Treatment , they would pause before they proceed and would inquire further than the plausible Hand-bills and Advertisements presented to their Eyes , by self-retommended Nostrummongers and Emperies . The following are some of the many symptomsthat distinguigh this Disease : —a general debility , " eruptions on the head , face , and body ; ulcerated tore throat * , scrofula , swellings in the neck , nodes on tie shin bones , cancers , 'fistula , pains in the head and limbs , which are frequently mistaken for rheumatism , &c . &c .
Patients m the country , by stating their eases and enclosing a remittance , may have proper remedies sent to the amount , with directions so simple and plain , that parties of either sex may cure themselves without eTen the knowledge of a bedfellow . Mr . " vV ' s . inTariahle rule is to give a Card to each of his Patients , as a guarantee for Cure , which he pledges himsfclf to perform , or to return his Fee . » - Attendance from Eight in the MorniDg , until Ten in the Evening , and on Sundays till Two . t& ° For tbe greater convenience of his Patients , Mr . "WILKINSON will attend every Thtjhsdat , from Ten in the Morning to Five in th * Evening , at No . 2 , Dead Lane , next to the Junction Inn BBADrOBD .
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One of ihe Drs . HENRY trill attend etery MONDAY and TUESDAY , at Mrs . Bennett ' s , York Place , EUDDERSFIELD ; every WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY at N » . 4 , George Street , facing Eastlrook Chapel , BRADFORD ; and every day at their principal Esiailishment , 16 , PARK-SQUARE , LEEDS . A . TREATISE IS JUST PUBLISHED GN THE VENEREAL & SYPHILITIC DISEASES , AND GIVEN "WITH EACH BOX OF DE . HENRY'S FEENCH HEROINE PILLS , pi ONTAINING plain and practical directions for the effectual cure of all degrees of the above com-\ J plaiats with observations on seminal weakness arisingfrom early abuses and the deplorable consequences resulting from the use of mercury , the whole intended for the instruction . of general , readers , so that all persons can obtain an immediate cure with secrecy and safety . Prepared and sold by the sole Proprietor , at No . 16 , PARK SQUARE , Leeds where they may be consulted as usual * In Boxes , 2 s . 9 d . and 4 s . 6 d . each . "With each Box is given directions how to take these PU 1 « , observations oh points beneficial to the patient , being hints worth knowing by those who are or have been , sufferers from this dreadful and devastating malady .
That « ruel disease which has destroyed so many thoa ? ands is now unhappily so well known that a KOital of lU effects is quite unnecessary , its maugnant influence extending by inheritance from family to family , and when the great DoctorHenry became professor to the University , he conferred an invaluable benefit upon mankind by the discovery of his grand panacea for the cure bf this deplbrable complaint . Lne certainty wittrwhieh the Pills are continually administered can be attested b y many thousands who are annually cured by them . "What medicineman be more appropriate than that which has given such general satisfaction ? The French Pills root out every particle ofthe insidious poison , purifying in their progress th * whole massif fluids . They not only remove the disease but they renovate by their action the different functions of the bod
y—expelling the grosser humour , and in a manner so imperceptible as to convince the most sceptical of their astonishiag and unequalled powers . They neither contain mercury nor any other mineral , and may be taten without the slightest suspicion of discovery ; thoy require no resttamt of diet , loss of time , or hindrance of business , but effect a complete cure without the least exposure to tkepatjeat . At any period when the slightest suspicion may exist it will be well to hav « recourse to the FrtBch ^ PiUs ; for . when taken before the disease has made its appearance they act as a certain preventive removing the oomplaint effectually and secretiy . The deplorable state in which many persons hare been when visiting the Doctor ( from the use of mercury ) renders it imperatively necessary to caution the public agaiast that dangerous mineral wheo injudiciously administered . : ;
. Tif Doctor , after an extensive practice of Thirty Years , has rendered his counsel an object of &e _ ctaiost consequence to all who are labouring under hereditary or deep seated maladies ; to those troubled with semmal weakness , his advice will be invaluable ; hundreds have owned his skill in these omplaints . lo tae youth of hoth saxes , whether lured from health by the promptings of passion , or the delumons of mexpenence , hw advice is superior ; is his practice he unites amild gentleness of treatment , and possessing bo thorwgh a knowledge bf bis art , the most deplorable cases afford no resistance to his skill . His extennye practice has rendered him the depositary of many distressing secrets which are tept with unblemished taitn and homonrj to persons so afflicted , it s highly necessary to observe that an early application is of the greatest importance , and that with such a practitioner any hesitation in disclosing their disorder , must ^^^ d ^^ y at dBrtructiTeasitis false and unnecessary . To the neglect of such attention , are a ^ &ibatable many of those hapless instance * , which , while they excite tbe commiseration of the beholder , « ho « ld also impress him TOth the fear of self-reproach . Tb all such , then , we address ourseWes , offering hope- ^ nwgy—muscular strength—felicity ; nor ought our advances to appear questionable , sanctioned as tt « y are oytne multiplied proofs of thirty years' guccessful experience . Letten ( post paid ) inclosing a re-« uttanc « , answeredb y the return of post , a » d Medieinei punctually transmitted to any address , either by ^ tials , ar name . Back entrance , "West-Street . One Door from St . Paul ' s Church . .
"Wllk each Bex vrill be ghen practical obMryations , gratuitousl y , on the above disease . T * * ^?^ T Wil 1 . a " end f ^ y at bis principal residence , No . 16 , Park Square , from Eight ia the mornimg tall Ten at night , and on Sunday from Nine till Two , where he will administer advice to any one taking these Pills , or any other of his Pre aratioas , without a fee . >
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^ . ; ' g : EApv . EMPtOYMENT . ; " , : ¦ ^ i ^ QNS ^ haTing , a littl ei time to spjire ^ are ap-X ^ prwd that ' 'Agetite . . ^ p ^ na e ... t 6 :: W :. app \ bin ; tediQ London , and country Towns , by the EAST INDIA TEA COMPANY , forthe salej-jif their celebrated Teaa , ( Offices ^ ,-Qneat Sfc Helen ? si Bishopsgatestreet ) * r They are paclced in leaden Canisters frbin an ounce to a nound ( apian found exceedingly convenient ) aidneither shep npr fiktures are required the License-is OHlyvii * per- annum , Excise permits are abolished ; and many during the last thirteen yearsi have realised considerablai 4 ni ? cimea by the Agency , without ls ^ let or loss . : Application to be made free to Charles Hancock , Secretary .
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EETURN OF THE ' D OfiCH £ 2 S TEE LAB O URESS ! ¦• ¦'¦ : •¦• ¦¦ ¦ . . - - .- .. Now Publishing , Price Foubpence , THE VIGTISTS OE WHIGGEEY , 1 BEING A STATEMENT OF THE ¦ ¦] PERSECUTION EXPERIENCED BY the DORCHESTER _ LABOURERS , AN ACCOUNT OF VAN PIEMAN'S LAND , iflTHTHE HORRORS OF TRANSPORTATION ; FULLY BEYELOPED , BY GEORGE LOVELESS , 0 NE OF THE VlCtUIS .
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Jls » Just Published Price One Penny , THE CATECHISM OFTHE neweoMlto i BY ROBERT OWEN . Thii day is publiuhed , Price One Penny , » T 1 HE LABOURER'S REWARD ; or , THE 1 COARSER FOOD DIET-TABLE , as prbmulgated by the POOR-LAW COMMISSIONERS . . This Table is published on 1 b broadsheet , and contains an "Appeal to the Labouring Men of England , " that should be read in every Cottage , wad Workshop in the Kingdom . - ; Justpublished , TriceThfeepence ,- '¦ ¦'• TRACTS on REPUBLIGAN GOVERNMENT and NATIONAL EDUCATION Bi R . D . Owek and Francis Wright . Price Twopence each , HOPES and DESTINIES of the HUMAN SPECIES . By R . D . Owen . ADDRESS ON FREE INQUIRY . ByR . DOwen . ¦ - ¦ . ¦ ' ¦ - ¦ : ¦ -. - ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦ - . ¦ ¦ ¦ Price-Sixpence , dSKer ^^ - " ' SWIT 2 ERLANn Also , complete in 2 vols . with Memoir of the Author Also , Price 8 d . gtitchied , and Is . Clothy A New Edition of OWEN'S ESSAYS on the FORMATION OF CHARACTER ^ C Price 7 sv 6 d . THE SYSTEM OF NATURE . By M . De M fRABAUD . ' The w ork of a great writer it unquestionably is itB menthes in the elequence of the composition ' ¦ ¦\ - ^ fyd . B # ouBhuifr '* $ i ({ ur ! ti : Tfatqiym' Also , Price Threepence , The VISION of JUDGMENT ; By Lord Byron . ; ^ ° Tbis Edition is enriched witrtTaluable Notes br RbbertHall , W . Smith , Esq ., Profes 8 orWason , &c . * c . MASK FOR ^ ctEAvE's pENN ^ r Gazette /' WITH CiBICATURESi BT , C . JT . GRANT . rRlCB ONE PENNY . It cotttainsiLots of ^ ood things ^ andReadingfor « yerybodyj , vnth Engravings . - " ¦ , * ¦ > Lo »^»» 57- Cleave . Shbe-tane ; HbbMonvNorthein } Star Office , Leeds ; and aJlDealeroin Cheap Papei .
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Highway B . dBBEiiY . —Ph Wednesday vp & r asMr ^ Baci : , of the ^ firm of ^ Eagle and Ba ^ 4 ^ tillers in Lpndon , yrti # ^ -ridingirom Newrk * t »! Slwi ^ tord , five men suddenly rushed froni thf i he agei t » p *>» him , ajtid knocked bihj jEroin his hotifc Th ? Wr lows thenVheld hini a ^ w ^' o ^ robbed him of upwards of £ 200 ia ^ golJinctno'teli
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Dec. 29, 1838, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1038/page/2/
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