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LN CASES OT SECEECY CONSULT THE TSEATISE
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THE NATIONAL CHARTER.
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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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EASY EMPLOYMENT . . PERSONS having a little time to spare , are apprised that Agents continue to be appointed in London , and country Towns , "" b y the EAST INDIA TEA COMPANY , for the sale of their celebrated Teas , ( Office ? , 9 , Great St .- Helen ' s , Bisbopygatestreet ) . They are packed in leaden Canisters from an ounce to a pound ( a plan found exceedingly convenient ) and neither shop nor fixtures are required ; the License is only Us . per annum , Excise permit * are abolished ; and many during the last thirteen years have realised considerable incomes by tbt Agency , without Is . let or loss . Application to bt made free to Charles Hancock , Secretary ,
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RETURN OF THE DOECBSSTEE LABOURERS ' » Now Publishing , Price Fouupence , THE VICTIMS OE VHIGGERY , BEING A STATEMENT OF THE PERSECUTION EXPERIENCED BY THE DORCHESTER LABOURERS , AN ACCOUNT OF VAN DIEMAN'S LAND , WITH THE HORRORS OF TRANSPORTATION ; JULLT DETELOPED , BY GEORGE LOVELESS , ONE OF THE VICTIM 8 .
Also Just Published , Price One Penny , THE CATECHISM \ OF THE J * NEW MOTUL WORM , . > BY ROBERT OWEN . Thi * day is published , Price One Penny , THE LABOURER'S REWARD ; or , THE COARSER FOOD DIET-TABLE , as proroul-Cated by the POOR-LAW COMMISSIONERS . * , * This Table is published on a broad sheet , ind contains an "Appeal to the Labouring Men of England , " that should ^ e read in every Cottag e md Workshop in the Kingdom . Just published , Price Threepence . TRACTS on REPUBLICAN GOVERNMENT and NATIONAL EDUCATION By R . D . Owen and Francis Wright .
Price Twopence each , HOPES and DESTINIES of the HVMAN SPECIES . By R . D . Owen . ADDRESS ON FREE INQUIRY . By R . DOwes , Price Sixpence , •^ A ^ TELL ; or ' SWITZKRLANl , Or LJ » r . Kr . U \ Also , complete in Qvols . wnh Mt-moir 01 the Autlun Also , Price 8 d . stitched , and I . « . Cloth , A New Edition of OWEN'S KSna \ S on the FORMATION OF CHARACTER . Price 7 s . 6 d .
THE SYSTEM OF NATURE . By M . De AIibabauu . ' The w ork of a great writer ii uiMjiieMifi-i ^ . h i > its merit lie * in the eloquence o ! tin-composition . —Lord Bruu ; liU 7 rt ' s Xutitrul HivuIulu .
Also , Price Threepence , The VISION of JUDGMENT . By Loiu . Byko . v OsPThis Edition is enriched with valuable Noie .-by Robert Hall , W . Smith , F . ^ q ., Profew , r Wilson < fcc . A'c . ASK FOR " CLEAVE'S PENNY GAZETTE , " with CARir ^ Ti iu rs , BY C . J . GRANT . TRICE ONE PENNY . It contain ? Lot . " of tfood Things and Readinp for - 'verybody , with Engravings . ^ London V—Cleave . Shoe-Lano : IJobson . Northern Mar Office . Lt-ea >; and all Dealer ^ \ h < h- ai . i ' . iuei
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( From the Sun of Saturday . ) A meeting of the Association took place lnst night , at Chesney ' .- Rooms , Foiey-street , I ' . irtlaudplace , f ,. r he purpose of forwarding tl : e objects ol the National Cimru-r , aud to elect a dek-giue tor the : Wy ] ebone District . The meeting was wry numerously attended . Fearous O'Connor , Esq ., was unanimously called tu the chuir , and proceeded to address the i " . fl 1 I 3 g " IJe 8 aid ~ On » ast Tuesday week , they Lad had a most glorious meeting in that place ; and , as the chairman called upon to preside over tlmt meeting , it was bis duty to report progress to them up to the present time . Since then they had held four glorious Radical ultra-Deniocmtir . m .-cthnw in
London and one glorious one at 13 rJHt . il . As the correspondent of the Times newspaper hud taken it upon himself to give what he called un account oi that meeting , he ( Mr . O'Connor ) felt it his duty to give ih-ra a fair representation of it . ( Hear , uear . ) Hewoold first premise to them thai these meetings were pall and wormwood to the Times . and all the classes whom the Times represented . On the 26 th of December , the day before \ i-trJav , it was announced that h meeting of the working cl ; i > se < would take place at Bristol , and , notwithstanding the _ lory Mayor and Corporation of Bristol set all their engines to work to intimidate the people from attending , they mustered , iimidst frost and oeltm * rain , between eight and ten thousand . Ti ,, > n ,, r _
respondent of the Tunes says there were ab .-ut 500 r agamuffin * . ( A laugh . ) S ' ow all the persons who ad not receive tuition from th « Times , were culled , by the limes , ragamuffins ; and the correspondent says further , the meeting wns principally coiupo . ed oi women aud boys . He ( Mr . O'Connor ' ) had asked the chairman of the meeting at Bristol why there were not more women there , because he liked to see the women present , and the fact wm there were only four women at the meeting . ( Hear , hear . ) 1 he reason assigned wtu that the authi mien sent their emi » san-i and spies to the women , warning tnem not to permit tueir husbands to at teuu . TherW were no boys present , because the day was cold ; the meeting wns held at a distance from Bristol , and the place was not adapted for aplav-trrouud .
Therelore the limes correspondent lied , and he knew he bed . ( " Yes he did . "; He stated that there were only one hundred and thirtv in the procession , but they had taken the precaution to count the numbers in tbe procession , und then * were near 3 , 000 ; and when it had joined the meetiug , it did not seem to compose more than one-fourth ol the entire . ( Hear , hear . ) So much for the Times and ltscbrrespondent . There was one statement in it which was correct , namely , that the Duke of Beaufort and the Gloucestershire yeomanry , with tueir heavy ploughshares in their scabbards , werepresent ; the 14 th Hussars were also there , with their gallant Colonel Brotherton , who would not allow his men to sabre the people during the Bristol riot * . . ( Cheers . )
iaey rode through the procession ; bnt did the people injure them ? No ; th . y took off their hats and cheered them . ( Great cheering . ) But there was a hoax played off upon the Dragoons , ior it was" announced that a torch-li ght meeting would take place at Chiton , aud the troops were Kent down there under the pelting rain , to apprehend the parties . ( Great laughter . ) These gallant fellows rode down to Clifton , and every ship they saw with a lantern at its bowg , they said , " There ' s Feargus O'Connor and his ragamuffins . " ( Hear , Rndlaughter . ) They thought the people were holding a meeting in the sea , and that they would be obliged to turn themselves into hone-marines , in order to apprehend them . ( Roars of laughter . ) But at Bristol they held
a glorious meeting , and had elected delegates , and the best test of the value the people placed on the acquisition of their political rights , was that they paid down , oat of their hard earnings , a snm of £ 25 for their dinner . That was a pretty good proof that a spirit was abroad in Bristol , giiuilar to that which existed in other parts of the country—North , South , and East . He ( Mr . O'Connor ) had succeeded in establishing a great union of the working classes in the West of England . That was the object of ms visit . Let the 1 imes and its correspondent state that if it thought proper . He " would now report progress further , and tell them that their enemies were alert and awake . On the morning after the first meeting held in that room , a noliceman of the
A division called upon Mr . Cbesney , and asked if it were true that Mr . O'Connor had b ' een there on the previous evening ? Mr . Chesney replied , " Yes ; why do you a * k ? " "Oh , nothing ; only that Sergeant Campbell sent me down to be snre of it . " "Had . he any reasons ? " "None , whatever ; we were talking about it , and he sent me down to ask . " Now , it was clear that Sergeant Campbell musthave had some motive for sending down all the way from St . Giles ' s to make the inquiry . That very morning , before Cbesney was up , two gectlemenhad called , and sent to ask him if he was going to have another meeting at his rooms ? He replied , " Yes . " They said it would be better for him not to allow t ! e ragamuffins to meet there . ( Hear , and . a laugh . ) TLat ke was too respectable
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a man , and it would b * better for him not t > allow them luVrobm . Such were the" machination * by which they vrere to be put down . Parliament met in six weets . and exactly in proportion , as they ¦ etood together , should they be able to obtain what belongeq to' them , or their enemies would be able to put them down . If they were only , united , and no sham-Radical came amongst them , their cause would be glorious and they would triumph . Nothing would strengtb ° n the Whig * more than their disunion —nothing would strengthen the Tories , for they were down already . ( Hear . ) New parties were springing up , not with a view to relieve , the working class * s of their . disabilities , hut with a view to obtain their ow » ends . First , there was Lord
Durham aud the Household Suffrage party—next , then * was Mr . Ward , the Member for Sheffield , aiid a few other landed proprietors , vrlio had not n single foot ot land in the world ,. seeking for a repeal of the Corn Laws , and saying how generous they were in calling upon the GorernmVnt to give up what was called a monopoly . ( A laugh . ) Would they allow these two parties to divide them ? ( No . ) If the Household Suffrage party obtained a fragment ' of their forceit weakened them and gave the others no power . _ If , on the other hand , the Anti-Corn Law party divided them it would weaken them , but giv « the other party no force to carry the project into eflect . The view * of these parties , therefore , was , not to carry the measures they proposed , but to prevent the people' from attaining that which was meat , drink , and clothes to them . ( Hear , hear . ) There had been an Anti-Corn Law meeting at Manchester , and i similar one was about to take place
in London , and he wonld , therefore , give them his opinion , and tell them in what way the repeal of the Corn Laws would be of grant importance to them . If they had Universal Suffrage they would then be enabled to divert the pavings effected by the repeal of these luwg into the pockets of the working classes . ( Ch-ers . ) Ue ( Mr . O'Connor ) hud been call ed a destructive , a revolutionist , and a firebrand ; I'Utitjti-np ^ fLJjgijis duty to prove to them the bloodthirMines ^ rt , ^ the mmrclnal feelings of those , who * ere . the ekemies of the repeal of the Corn Laws ; and he wo aid farther show them that their repeal , without apcompatiying measures , would only lead to bltfodHhed , xtrifr , and mil wur . ( Loud a |» d loutf Sieers . ) On the other hand he Mould satisfy them that in seven days ateT the other measures had been'obtained , the repeal of the Cornlan-s would follow as n matter of course . The Cornlaws hud been granted to th , e landlord as- a boon , when the produce of their lands ceased to fetch n
war price . Under the law of primogeniture , the law of settlement , and thje law of entail , the land in that country was , mortgaged to the Jews and money-Hungers , so that they could not obtain sufficient Irom the land for their own support , and to p ; iy the Jews and monoynionKers \ When they found they could not obtain tbe same prices as during the war , although the debts contracted b y them were mitde according to the fictitious value the laud obtained during the time of war , they being old representatives in the House of Commons , said to the ministers , i- We will not givn you our support unless you place us iu the same position we were in during the war . " ' 1 he landlords immediatel y got the protecting dm . y un their corn , four years afterwards ; that was in
Jt > lu , and in 1 SIt * themoneymongers got their Peel ' s Bill ; and m 1 K 38 there wore the hand-loom weavers and the operatives , who , because they were not represented lii the House of Commons , Were told their case w ; is not yet ready for hearing . Comnur-sionvrs were abroad to collect fitcts already too notorious , and yet the legislature had not been guilty > l a smgl- net to place the people in the same position they occupied during tho war time , although tlie landlords and monpymongers had been more than twenty years in that fictitious position . He would suppose , for argument sake , that a property which wueu peace was proclaimed was worth only £ 10 , 000 , was now worth £ 15 . 000 ; that property gimme landlord i 5 , 000 more thun he-would . otherwise
possess—that made him ui . it pendent of jointure > . marriage settlements , and money-mongers . If they disturbed that state of things before they obtained Universal Sutl ' mg . ' , without destroying the law of primogeniture ^ th * law of settlement , and the law of eutail , they Would only set the landlord ngainst the tenant , and de-titution and tirii-g of stuckrt would be the inevitable result . The Corn-law Repeal party now said they wanted free trade , because the labourers iu that country could nor compete with foreign , which was there lore underselling tin-in hoth in their own country and abroad . That was truv ; Inn would tmy linn tell him titat il the repeal of the 2 Corn-laws " was carried to-morrow , the ( iuvermneiit would not t . \ . ic its power to turn all the advai . tasvs derivable trim ii
into us own coilers . as well us they had turned all the benefits and advantages deriu-d from i-vn y "tiu-r nnpr Yemeni that had taken place ? ( Hear , " hear ) He ( Mr . O'Connor ) wns llor the repeal ol the Covn-Iijws—( cheers)—but as Mr . Cobbi'tt had said , Peel ' . s Bill should never have passed without some accompanying measure . If that had been done , the Bill would have been beneficial , but without them it was a destructive measure . He admitted that the Corn-laws vfould be a great step to acquire , but they could not do so and ut the same time ailvocat" l ' niver .-ul Suffrage . He admitted that , if f e landlords joined them , they would In ; strong indeed , but they had never joined the people for any good pnrpose , but merely to promote tueir own ends .
( Hear , hear . ) If the Corn-laws were repealed , tin ; Church , that upas tree , that plague spot ol society , would then be assailed , and the landlord ' s would b < - obliged to fall into the ranks of the people , and bent it and the moneymongcrsdown as fa * tas they could . 1 hey were aw » re that a tiiil had been passed for England by which the property of the parson was superior to that of the landlord himself , and the tithe now levied was according to the increased value the l « nd had received by the protection of the Corn-laws . The landlord paid the tithe upon £ 1 . 0 . 000 , and if the Corn-laws were repealed , he would still have to pay it upon the sum . if he were called upon to do thin , he would at once enrol himself among tin in . Tlu > y wonld then say , the Government has alwi » vs $ poken of the national debt as a branch of the uationnl Suith
They have also spoken of tho Com-l » ws iks a braneli of th « national faith with the landlords . Now . you hiive broken faith with us , and we see no necessity tor State parsons , which we abominate , nor for legislating Hishops ; and we shall have an investigation in : o the national debt . Art for the ChurcV ., I shall in future pay no money but to tlie altar at which I worship . " ( Tremendous cheering . ) It might be snid thai that win H \ ev « assertion , Tmt he would prove it by analogy . In 1735 , the Irish House of Commons being I ' roiestunt , passed a resolution tantamount to the law called the Tithe Adjustment liill , by which all grass lands were exonerated from the payment of tithes . The Protestant landlord , with his 4 . 000 acres of grass land , paid nothing , while the poor Cathohc widow , who cultivated her
acre of pomtot's on the other side of the fence , wns obliged topivy a guinea for tithes . ( Shame , shame . ) The rich landlord thus went and worshipped at the expense of the poor Catholic widow . ( Shame , shame . ) From that period up to 1823 , nearly a century , the landlords persecuted their tenantry who refused to pay tithes . An magistrates they convicted them—as yeomanry officers they shot them—as jurymen thpy hung them— -and ns citizens they transported them ; but in 1823 Mr . Goulburn , being Chancellor of the Exchequer , found that the system was throwing Ireland out of cultivation , ' aud lessenmg the security of his pet church , and introduced the acreable assessment , by which the grass laud paid its fuir proportion . That was not done because ( ioulburn felt for the poor occupier but because
, le was anxious to support the overg rown Church , which was already overpaid in various ways , by land that did not belong to it , and tithe it never should possessed , to the amount of £ 1 , 500 , 000 ; the result was that the landlords , magistrates , and grand jurymen , were the first to , take the chair ot the " antitithe meetings ; aud tho saine party , in the Housr of Commons ; said that the English " people must wonder that the Irish people had so long submitted to that state of things . Wh y did the Protestant landlords join the people ? Not to abolish the Church and the parsons , but to put the tithes into their own pockets . He remembered the plan of a Scotchman for tranquillizing Ireland— " Whenever there is a riot in a district , I would hang the magistrate and
parson , and you would hear no more about it . " ( Great laughter . ) The object of the lnndlords in joining the Irish people was to make them a footstool to come into power . He would tell them that by perseverance , and by being manfully united , they could bid the parsons , the landlords , the . Tories , the VV higs , and the sham Radices defiance . If they abandoned their strong-hold under the hope of obtaining the support of either of these parties , tliov would fall as a matter of course . Already they had the whole of Wales with them—they had delegates from every town and county in South Wales , and among them was a Magistrate from the county of Monmouth ( M " r . Frost , of Newport , ) who was elected to serve as a delegate . ( Loud und continued crios of "hear , hear . " ) Their next step would be to secure the co-operation of the most brave , the most gfatel ' ul , the most in . dustrious and the most insulted people on the face of the earth , the Irish . ( Cheers . ) If they established that
once union , then there would be an end to the dominion of the tyrants and the moneymonger 8 . He was a Protestant , but his family and himself had made more sacrifices to destroy tbe power of the Protestant Church in Ireland , and establish perfect and entire equality , than any oiher man . Nay , he went so far as to say , that if there were to be a National Church , that ought to be the Catholic Church . He contended that with perfect civil equality there should be no religious disability ; but at present such was not the case . They wanted the people of Ireland with them , but they must agitate that country in a different manner from England . The latter was a manufacturing , and the former an agricultural country , and although he had been listening to speeches in the House of Commons since the Reform Bill , and althou gh he had heard the Minister rising in _ his place und talking about the importation of spices , and nutmegs and cinnamon ,
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fhouSP ' ' d ltyil 9 "f' " ^ ap :-s , until l > e bad ought he was eating p lum-paddm *; and although nght alter -night ho heard discussions about free trade , during the three years he had been in the House of Cornmonsf , he had " only heard one speech on the subject ot Insb . ajmpnltaK . and that £ a 8 from Mr . Abercromby , tlie Speaker of the House o ^ Comrnoiis , when opposing flip court-martial clause of the Irish Coercion Bill and he ( Mr . O'Connor ) had said that il there wereten men in the House who possessed as much knowledge of the subject , and as much zeal , Ireland would yet be a happy country . Protestantism was not in the Court as m the pulpit , or in the jurybox—it was the power and dominion of the landlords and the landed proprietors , and the influence that
gave them in . the representation , which gave Protestants the ascendancy . What signified sixty or seventy Members in . the Imperial Parliament ; a local bullylandlord of straw could break a tenant of steel , and every tyrant of a village would still continue to oppre .-s bis tenant . He ( Mr . (/ Connor ) had put three nuitionson the books of tho House of Commons , with a view of applying the industry of the people to the cultivation of the hind . * One vvas «¦ sweeping poorlaw measure ; another was the ri ghts to lenses for ever at a corn-rent , and in all cases where the ratings were too dear , tlmt-the question should go to a Jury ; and another was tho removal of all magistrates being clergymen from thu Commission of the Peace . He observed that there was now a cry for free-trade , but
no jnan could be a political economist on agricultural matters unless he understood practically how to farm —unless he cn \ f the errors . of the present system and could point out a better one . ( Cheers . ) These men asked the people to go to Poland , Sweden , Sicily , and other places for land j but ho ( Mr . O'Connor ) would tell the people that if the labour of the counwa .. i beneficially applied , there was more land in England , Ireland , and Scotland than would furnish enough to enable the parlies to live , and to make it a great exporting country into the bargain . ( Very l'ui . d cheering . ) Why did not that take place ? Because the lnw of primogeniture , the law of entail , and the law of settlement prevented it— because the landlords annexed a condition to the taking of land
, restraining it from its most valuable operation , and preventing the tenant from cultivating it as he pleased . ( Hear . ) When they heard of this ontcry about the Com Laws , must they not suppose that there wan a kind of single-stick play between the money mongers and the landlords ? The moment the price of corn was reduced , a fall iu wages would take place . Every tux upon the land was a restriction to iu proper cultivation . Then there was the 1 oor Law Rate , the hop-tax , the police rate , the church cess , und the county rate . All those were interferences with the proper cultivation of the land , . but nonn with the landlords' title to let . If they had fniversal Suffrage , the landlords would he compelled to let their land * in such proportions a * would best
: the exigencies of the State , and the interests of the people . They were living under laws enacted by a Parliament which bad committed suicide in 1 M 2 , uud « -r lawn arising out of the old feudal system ; but . what they wanted was manufacturing laws to govern the new state of society that had arisen , and to render machinery tha working man ' s holiday instead of the working man ' s curst ' . ( Great cheering . ) l . ' nder the present system the people were deprived of what was thair own inheritance , and it had locked up a great proportion ot tlie treasure . If a fanner , under the . present system , held one hundred acres , with his wile and h \ i * children , and four or five « labourers , thiit would support twelve persons ; but if it
was divided into two farais , of fifty acres each , then it would support tsvo families , with a proportionat- number of labourers , which would be twi-lw more than upon a farm of a hundred acres . Let them but divide that again into five farms oi twenty acres earh , and that would give five families of seven each , or thirty-five persons , with labourers iu proportion . II these were each divided into faims of ten acres , they would amply support seventy persons instead Ol twelve upon tho hundred acres badly cultivated , ( lleur , near . ) He ( Mr . O'Connor , ) was inclined to carry it still further , and divide it into lurms of live acres , aud the other would have one hundred aud forty persons liviug better , and paying their it-nt bettor than under the present law of pri °
mogenitiir . ' . He contended thuu , that Uuivcisal Snlintge would have accomplished that ior thorn . Mr . Spring Rice iu replying to Air . O'Conntrll on the question of the repeal of the union , discovered an important fact , that it required mor . * houses for I'igiii miilioiiso : neoule iu 1 KM , Uau tvrSJ inillioui ni 1 SU 0 •/ 'tiu'Tttibie , ' says Air . Spring Rice , " because there are more flours now thu uuiou must have pro-pered ; and be-jause there ; . rc more shi ps to cany over the produce of tight millions , thau was required to convey the produce oi' ; JJ millions ; aud because a greaier duty is returned trom these ports , 1 . Rip Van Winkle , although 1 have slept thirty-four yc-. irs , seeing now more ships and more housesii . ver mind the inhabitants)—say that the country
must be prosperous . ' ( Laughter . ) He gave no credit lor thirty-four years of progressive , improvement , twenty years of which was profound peace . Let them not suppose that from the repeal of the Corn Laws , unaccompanied by other measures , any benclit would accrue to them . No ; but if they obtniuud Universal Suffrage , then they would be uble to turn thi « repeal of those laws to their own advantage . ( Cheers . ) He would ask , who were the political economists of the present day ? Mr . O'Counell . Mr . Ward , the Member for Sheffield , and Mr . Francis Place : —these men knew ns little about political economy a , s a pig did of geometry , ( lloivs ot laughter . ) It " they gave one of these men a . cabbage-nardeu to cultivate , they wonld grow cabbages
in it to all eternity , never supposing that it would grow any thing else ; aud yet . these men talked ol going to Poland lor corn , instead of making the Irish happy by cultivating the land . Mr . Spring Rice ii >* -rti-d that the lnsh people must be hu . yuy , because th « deposits were increasing in the Savings ' Baiiks . That tie ( Mr . O'Connor ) contended was Vhe greatest proof of t , ; t'ir poverty . In England , when the money was going into the Savings' Bulks , it was mi unjust abstraction from the comforts the working classes ought to enjoy ; but , in Ireland , it was an abstraction- from the legitimate nse y to which capital should be applied . ( Hear , hear , hear . ) Why wa . s the niouey deposited in Savings ' Banks in Ireland ? because there was no confidence
between the landlord and the tenant . The land was lelt uncultivated and the Government was receiving the interest of the poor man ' s money . No wonder , therefore , Mr . Spring Rice was' glad of its increase . It couUl not lie denied , that the people- of that country were industrious . They might see them upon the tops of the highest houses—paving the streets—and read y to take any job ; and , therefore , that meeting would agree with him , that it was necessary to provide such men with sustenance , a happy house , a . nd clean fireside . By means of steam , Irishmen could now work in Dublin till five o ' clock on Monday evening , and passing over to Liverpool in the course of the night , without the loss of a single day , throw themselves into
the labour market in that country , and deprive the working classes of employment . ( Cries of " hear , hear . " ) Well , then , Ireland « as the breeding country , and why they could not stop it was , because he believed that the women there bred without the men . ( Greet laughter . ) They brought forward their-Malthiasinn principles , to assist them , in order to show that the House of Commons was always indulging in scientific legislation . ( Laughter . ) They were always indulging : in legislation upon spices and sweets , but he . defied U \ ein to show him any legislation with respect to agriculture or potatoes , ( Cheers . ) Lord Chandos was always talking about the landlords , while they supposed he was talking about the land . Now he ( Mr . O'Connor ) was
talking about the men that dig , and delve , and grow ; but who get nothing . ( Cheers . ) Now he wanted to teach the people that agiculture . and commerce should make head . But then it was said , oh if yon can ' t live here you can go to New South Wales ; or Canada- Indeed ! When he saw gentlemen ' s pleasure grounds broken tip for the benefit of the people and agriculture ; when he saw commons enclosed and divided ; so soon ashe found that race-courses were broken up , that race-horses and dogs were put an end to , and that then the people had not . enough , then he would join them in quest of other lands in other countries . ( Cheers . ) But first , please God , they would try their power at home . ( Cheers . ) The meeting , would now , perhaps , allow him to introduce to them Mr . Whittle ,
the delegate irom Liverpool , and the Editor of the Vtmmphn newspaper , (( ireat cheering . ) He would assure them that he was a great friend to the cause of the people . ( Cheers . ) Now he had told the meeting two or three things ; he had told them the different modes by which they must agitate England and Ireland . ( Hear , hear , and continued cheers . ) He had shown them that the Government would not interfere with the present existing duties upon agriculture , and he had shown them that the land of the country was amply sufficient ior the supply of the population , if properly employed . ( Cheers . ) He could assure the meeting that they would not see halcyon days until they had accomplished Universal Suffrage . He had cautioned them agaiust the Malthusiuhs and the Corn-law Repealers . ( Cheers . ) Upon the one side they had Lord Durham , and the
Household Suffrage party , against whom he could not sufficiently caution them . ( Cheers . ) When a party got up , looking for extreme liberty and for their just rights , attempts were made to intimidate them ; and when the Government found they wer ^ not sufficiently strong , then they created another party , in order to defeat the purposes of the former . ( Loud Cheers . ) Household Suffrage might be a good thing but there was not a man who advocated it that would give it to them . ( Cheers . ) If they were to say to Lord Durham they would lake Household Suffrage , what would that Noble Lord say ? Why , " I am still for Household Suffrage , but 1 don ' t ask foi any other man to be so . " ( Cheers . ) Then they had Harry Brougham ; he had written a capital letter to the Queen —( cheers . )—and if he ( Mr . O'ConnorJ could get over the damnable Poor Law Bill , and some of the other measures that Harry had intro-
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duced , there was no man he should more auDtove of , and nothing would delight him more thanTsee those two cocks , Harry and Durlmn , sparring toeeber _( laug hter ) -if tLy were he woW ^ f ab l •* " Hatty would have him under . ( Loud chew . ) ^ Durham would be like au inflated balloon —( laughter ) -or like a barrel organ—the moment t { ° Wr , ° A ' P , rhl&-W { w touched Harry would catch fcun . ( Great laughter . ) But tha worst was , Harry was not to be depended on . ( Cheers . ) Harry had ^ r 1 ir e' aian 0 H tp ^ MP in his youth enough £ * . H ¥ V m ' OV . \ admiUed . that ; but tnen Hftrry did not practice what he preached : for » tfte very tim * he broached that doctrine he was adding to hu own'income . ( Cheers . ) The * mart
\ t " ? , , i out , tUeie two fellows > "e begged their ti ^ tl te rdon ' ' b « t they must do ft quietly they had the best of it , and they must tak * e care that neither of those fellows had the best of them ' I hey were . told that Russia was a power S w « a str ltry f dr « ad « d-let them recollect that there P " a « fttt ^{ "W country toward . Durham wh h ^ " * * ^ ° mmsm K ^ ri ^^ t'iferegS
agricultural labourers , and saying they thev w « r » ignorant . Now * he had receivedla letter 1 mm an agnoultuial labourer , part of which was published ) Vvi f ' ? f * l ™ & in whi <* he said the landlords aud farmers had sent a troop to suppress the : meeting at . Bnstol , and that the labourers of the district had subscribed :: to pay eleven of their fei ? i . S !" tead , * meeting ' * were t 0 ** 5 cludid \ h 7 S 9 ° u ° - Pr ° Sr ess > and coneluded b y expressing their intentions , in case of aU ' ti ^ T ? l ? C ?? , ^ H Well , n ' otwithstandall this he ( Mr . O'Connor ) was there with his Duke ° t t ^ ll 0 U r f ' : hebelieved that of Se Duke o Beaufort ' s was iti the right place also ( Cheers . ) 1 he authorities ot Bristol -were deter ! mined to take great care of him , and accordfnglv they billetted no less than six Persons S ° & ?
ta £ "; frf Pt ' ? v th - * ^^ - Aermined t o take good care of him , with theft < fc&t ploughshares by their , sides , and a most laughable figure they cut , and it Svas his firm belief thaWthey had begun to hght they would i ^ ave killed no peS but themselves . ( Laughter . ) Iu six weeks KrlTament would assemble , and all he , asked was , thaTthev would take no steps to damage their cause . ( Che , r and cnes of « We will not . » f He trusted tueywS o , -t it be said that they wanted Universal Suffrage to plunder and rob - ( cheers ) -but that they were determined that legislation should not stand Still till they had Universal Suffrage . ( Cheers . ) From the moment -that the' Reform BUI passed up to the present time , notwithstanding the boasts of Mr of ^ t i - - " lugle Ac t passed for the benp « t ot the working , mau- ( cheers ) -and he trusted th *
meeting would say to that individual , ' . ' We- will torgive you all yodr faults , if , with , all the power you possess , you will sho . w us anything you have done or the benefit of the working man . " When he ( Mr O Connor ) was in the house of Commons he had d 0 " » li . f could for the working classes-cheers ) —he had laid the foundation-stone for saving tho Dorchester labourers-rcheer . s ) -and he did all he couid to save the unfortunate Glasgow cotton-spinners . ( Cheers . ) ' They must suppose there was something wrong , when a man who had so much power to shake a Ministry as Mr . O'Connell had , could not , put his finger upon a single aiieet
oi tbe Statute book , containing some enactment to better the condition of the working classes . ( Cheers . ); Was itjor this that he was to b » abused f Was it for this that Mr . O'Connell should stand up in Dublin and say he ( Mr . O'Connor ) waa gmlty ol treason , ? . What did Mr . O'Connell do ? i \ iT ' , ? -, - 0 ok a pa P > and read fora it a speech he Mr . Otoimor ) " never made . What was Mr . U Lonneli , or how consistent was he ? ( Hear , hear . ) H h y he ( Mr . O'Conn or ) had heard him ou a Saturday call tlie I louse pf Commons GbO pickpockets . He ( Mr . Ui Connor ) satb y him on the following Monday , when LordSandon charged him with it . He V ¦ i ;« c ' onnor )' 8 aid to . hira " stick tr . it ;"—aud what did Mr . O Connell do ? why hegotupand denied it stating to him ( Mr . O'Connor ) that he would not say they were G 50 p ickpockets , because , if he did , he should be one * himself . ( Great langhter . ) Look to his great Precursor Society : it was uretenderl
that its great object was to effect the repeal of the Lnion ; if such had been its object , he ( Mr . O'Connor ) would have decidedly favoured it , but it had no such object in view . ( Criei in the crowd of Question , question . ) Who cried question ?—the question was whether the uepple of Ireland were with , them or not . A person in the crowd— " Mr . O'Connell never called them 650 pick -pockets ; he called them 650 scoundrels . " _ Mr . Feakous O'Connor stood corrected : it was M ) scoundrels . ( Great cheering . ) He had now spoken to them on several points , and he had cautioned ttiem against having disunion in their ranks ; « nrl
he would now conclude by relating to them an anecdote which had-been told b y Mr . Frost , the Magistrate of Monmouth ,- one of the delegates to the IS fttional Convention , for the purpose of showing the beautilul working of the Reform Bill . ( Hear , hear . ) "In the town of Newport there were four houses , 'Nob . 1 , . 2 , and 3 , belonged to a party entertaining Whig princi ples ; No . 4 was the property of ail individual of high Tory notions and at the registration there , No . 4 being about to be disfranchised , the Solicitor for the Tory party got up and said , " please your Worshi ps , but there is a Wter . clo . et attached to No 4 . " ( Great laughter . ) Ob , * aid the person presiding , " that may alter the case . " The Whig Solicitor tnen got up and said , the water- closet belonged to the four houses ; " the party presiding saidagain that would alter the cum
-UaugLter ) -and ultimately the whole of the houwa were enfranchised . So much for the value of the seats ior Newport . ( Cheers . ) This was the sort of freedom winch the people enjoyed , and a pretty sort of freedom it was . In Wiltshire he had seen women , dressed m men ' s jackets , breaking stones upon the roads- ( cnes of " shame" )—and they had no alternative- but either to do , that or be immersed in a bastile . ( Cries ol" shame . ' : ) He ( Mr . O'Connor )™ dete £ mined not to leave London , notwithstanding the threats ot the police- ( cheers ) -Mr . Ward , the Times and the 6- / o £ e , until he had established a union there similar to those which he . had established in the North . Iherehehad raised the temple of liberty , and he was determined that its banner should float over ths metropolis of England . ( Great cheering . ) bvery meeting in London gave increased power to their exertions , and they , must all register a vow in
neaven , that they would have Universal Suffrage , or die in the attempt . Mr . O'Connor sat down amid Joud and long-continued cheering . ^ lr' T" 0 MAS »™* ed the first resolution , which was to the effect that the principles contained iu the People s Charter of Universal Suffrage , Annual Parliaments , No Property Qualification and the Payment orMembers for their services , were jnstand reasonable , and that this meeting should adopt them , and also that Mr . Cardo should be the delegate for Maryleboue to the Rational Convention . The present struggle was for the establishment of a good moral principle among them . The rich said thfir
were moral , but " where was their example of that ? They fared sumptuously every day , but they denied even the common neceswarie * of lite to the poor . Mr . Feargus O'Connor here interrupted Mr . 1 homas by stating , that he had that moment got a secondedition of The Sun , containing an account of the arrest of the Rev . J . R . Stephens , the following was the account of it : —¦ "Manchester , Thursday Evening , Teno'Clock . — rhis morning two Bow-gtreet officers arrived ia this neighbourhood , armed with a warrant from the Secretary of State for the apprehension of the Rev . J . K . Stephens , of Ashton-under-Lyne . The caption was ehVcted without the least uproar , or even suspicion , till the thing was effected . He was
conveyed to Worsley for examination , and from this circumstance there can be little doubt , but that this arrest is in consequence of some proceedings at Leigh , about two or three weeks since , on which , occasion it is well known that the speech ( which ha » not , thatl am aware of , appeared in any journal ) was unusually piquant . Whether the examination will be private 1 cannot say , but if not , you will , of course , have information of what transpires . It is understood here that a sort of preliminary investigation will take place this evening . All the Magistrates of the district , however , ; are summoned to
meet to-morrow , and as far as jnformation goes at Worsley . Should thfi proceedings be private , which is most probabie , you must be content with the on dits of the day . 1 shall endeavour to be a diligent caterer . Mr . Oastler Is in Manchester , and has been in the neighbourhood now nearlljp fortnight There is not the least excitement heJe ' in consequence of these proceedings ; " He would leave the meeting to form their own conclusion of that , and let the business now proceed . -Mr . Thomas concluded by proposing Mr . Cardo as the delegate te represent Marylebone at the National Convention . I ne mouon was seconded , and
* * J '?!? u ' came fo ' 7 « d - ' iuhM . in nch ' - cneerinff . As he had been proposed as a delegate , it was nlce « My . that he should give this npting hi opu ions upon the principles of file PebpBTg Charter . They were not new to the people of this country . They were no innovations ; most of " them had stood among the laws of the land , and it was for the purpose ol placing them again among those laws that ( Continued in our third page . ) .
Untitled Article
A CERTAIN DISEASE CURED " WITHIN ONE ^ VEEK ^ T BE ADFORD AND LEEDS . . dJBHBS ^ SJ ^ ESS'y- 'J ? -J i £ - 'B- '' - ^ -4 ft ^ Sli 8 Hi ? : ^^ W 8 ftk REGS to announce , that in order to ascornmooate his own house No . 60 , Bottom-of Templar ' s Street , Ltecs . He continues , " with tcaVated assiduity ' eradicate eyefy spede > of infection . In itc-ent ca . ^ , a perfect curt is ccmj . lcted withiu a week , or no charge mace'for nedicinrs after the expiration of tbat period ; arc in those of tbv utmost inveteracy , where other practitioners have failed , a t-roptr perseverance in his plan of treatment itsuits to the patieut a safe "Well grounded , and iastine re-e ? tabhsi : nieat . '
He hopes that the successful , easy , and expedition ? mode' be has adopted , of eradicating ever ? Symptom of a Certain Disease , without any material alteration in diet , or hindrance of business , aid vet preserving tke concretion in full -rigour and fret from injury , will establish his ciaimi for * u ] . port . As thia Disease is one which is likely to be contracted whenever exposure taie * place , it is not like many otter viators , once in life , trot on tbe coetts . 7 t , one infection may scarcely havebeen removed , when another may unfortunately be imbibed , therefore the Practipocer requires real judgment in order to treat each particular Case in r ^ ch a manner as not merely to remove the present attack , but to pre .-erve the consntcdon nnimpaired , in case of a repetition at no di .-tant period . The man of experience can arail hinb-elf of the greatest improTfemenu in moders practice , by beirg able to distinguish between discharges of a jpecrfie and of a simple or mild nature , which can only be made by one in dailv practice , after doe consideration of aH eirc-amstanc-eu . In tbe 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 rDeac ? of sowing domestic discord , unless managed "b y the Surgeon with propriety ard = k : l ! ; tut iisiead of po « e ing the proper Qualification * , so essential
to toe Fractitioo « r « m ihi < iCRucon 3 Complaint , yon often find low ilecbanics viiely pretending to have « udie-i the H ^ alia ^ Art , and deluding tbe Urwary by their nefarious Nostrums ; it is these Men who are the most arrogant ia their pretensions , wt . ^ , by want of skill destroy more than even PegtilcDet- and th « Sword . Can PatJents therefore , la&o ' -ricg Mde- tak- C ^ mplaii ; : be too cautious into who « e Hands they commit themselves?—the Propriety of tils remark is abundantly manifest by tbe same Patient frequently passing the Ordeal of several Practitioners before Le is fortunate enough to obtain a perfect Cure . Were Patient * sctatieady aware cf the Eisk they encouEterrd , when they comrcit so serious a charge as Lift to illiterate ac d" isexperieneed Hands ; and -were ihej to )* "VYi tnesses of the excruciating Sufferings of too many Tmhipgy Victims who are sacriSc-ec : o improper Treatment , they womld pause before they proceed and wodd inquire fnrtaer ttaa the p : aus . b : e Hand-bills and Advertisements presented to their Eyei by self-recommande-i yostmiEnio-ge-rs and Emperic =. The following are some of the many symptoms that disting-uish this Disease : — a general debility , eruptions on tbe head , face and bod y , ulcerated sore tiroaw , scrofula , swellings in the ntek , nodes r-n tte-gtin bones , cancers fistula , pains " in the head and limbs , which are freqcectl- ? mirttken for rheTimatism , &c . &c .
Pariest ? in the ccEntry , by stating their t-ase « ard enclosing a remittance , may iave proper remedi e * sent to the amount , with directions s-o -ircple and plain , that parties of either sex may cure themselves ¦ with out eTen ^ the incwledge of a btdfellow . Mr . "W s . iEvariable rale is to g ive a Card to each of his Patients , as * guarantee for Cure which he pledges iimstlf 10 perform , or to return ri = Eee . V Attendance from Ei ght in the MomiEgj until Ten in the Evening , and on Sundays till Two . ^ = Por . the greater conTenienc-e of bis Parienrs , Mr . ^ ILKIXSON will at tend everv Thcrsdav from Ten m tbe Mor ^ ng tu live m the Evenk g , at ^ o ' . 2 , Dead Lake , next to the ' Junction Inn ' ± 5 SADfO"RI ) . '
Untitled Article
One oftte Drt . HEXRTwill attend nery UOXDJYend TVESD . 1 Y , at Mrs . Bennett ' s , York Place , EUDDEESFJELD ; every WEDSESD ^ Y and TH URSDAY at No . 4 , George Street , feeing Easthrook Chapel , BRADFORD ; and et / ry day at their principal Estallishment , ; 16 , PJEK-SQrAHE , LEEDS . A TREATISE IS JUST PUBLISHED ON THE VENEREAL & SYPHILITIC DISEASES , AND GIVEN TTITH EACH BOX OF
DR . HENBY'S FRENCH HEROINE PILLS , p OBTAINING p lain and practical directions for the effectual cure of all degrees of the above com-\ J paisu w-ith ooserraoons on seminal weaiuess aririnjrfro'fc early abuses , and the deplorable conseqnenc « rer clnzg from the use of merenry , the whole intended for the instruction of genera ] readers so ^^ t ^^ asS ^ S £ SSS » VP ? r a fi ! / 15 S ^ Whk ' " deS& ° 3 O m ^ ^^^^ unhappilv so well known tbat a f ^ ° ^ **?** » q ™ " "Mcessary , its malignant influence extending bv inheritance from fanvih to ffi «^^^ S | Tr ¥ ^ - 0 ClOrH < rll ? v eCMle Profe " ° * ^™^\ he conferred an invS £ benefit nppn mankind Vr the oiscovery of his grand panacea-for tbe cure of this deplorable comnlaint S l ^ M ^ dift ?^ ^ r ^ ^ f--ered can be attested by J ^ JZl ' ^ LtT' ^ -1 ^ = Vv •? " ^ ^ meQiclIie caD te more appropriate than that which has given such |^^»^^ s ^^ ts ^^ = trg > ls ;\ s SSSS ^ FH- ? r — ™ ^ ' - * zr ^ % F % z t ^ lr ^ l' ^ ' , aaamay he taken without the slights suspicion of discovery ; thev require no s ^^^^^ ssrs& ^/ A , ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ Sri ^ i&s ^^^
&i ^ l . ^^ Sli . i '" " .. V ' , P ! : aetic 8 » f Tkinr - T . au , Iu reodered hi . connK ] an object of mmmmsmmm IRA each Box -will Ue gh en practical observations , gratmtocsl y , on the above disease . The Dostor will attend dailv at hi * isri ^ ci-nal TPBiflpnpo vn m t > \ o r - ^ . , JBM ^ ^ - ^^ lrlis ^ H " ^^^^ -
Ln Cases Ot Seceecy Consult The Tseatise
LN CASES OT SECEECY CONSULT THE TSEATISE
Untitled Article
On even- Stage and Symptom of ths VENEREAL DJSEASE , in its mfid and most alarming forms , just pablished ; by MESSRS .. PERRY AND CO ., SURGEONS , 4 Great . Charles Street , Birmingham ; 23 , Slater Street , Liverpool ; and 2 , Bale Street , Manchester ; ' and given gratis with each Box -of
PERRY ' S PURIFYING SPECIFIC PILLS , Price 2 s . Sd ., 4 s . 6 d . , and IU . per Box , M ^^ ' - r ^ ONTAIN ING- a rbll description of tbe above complaint , ILUCSMBQ l L / ' TEATED BY ENGRAVINGS , shewing the different stage- of dPw ^( y ^ k th ? s depiorable and often fats . 1 disease , as wsll as the dreadful effects ^ W £% F ( > & ^ . arising from the use of mercury , accompanied with plain and practical ^ 5 ^ ^^^^^ 9 ^ directisnsfo r an effectual aBd speedy cure wixh ease , secrecy , and safety , WijW ti jfBKJ ^\ without tbe aid of medical resistance . Ay ^ HBS& ^ X ^ v PERRY'S PURIFYING SPECIFIC PILLS , price 2 .-. 9 d ., 4 s . 6 d . M ^ w P ^ tSSBiL ^^^¦ aD ( i 1 Is ., are well known throughout Europe and America to be the most # E 5 9 ^|| f 3 JBr certain and effectual cure ever discorered , for every stage and symptom ^^ HW B Ec tIh S 3 / Sw of the Venereal Pisease , in both sexes , including Gonurrbcea , Gleets , ^ BrLXv W ffltlsTLttSr Secondary Symptoms , Strictures , Seminal Weakness , Deficiency , and ^^ tyM ^ -j'fa « F y _ all Diseases of the Urinary Passages , without loss of time , cor , finement , y@j § S 3 S g& ® r or hindrance from Business ; they have effected tbe most surprising cures , ^ C 3 ^ k JSSSp ^ not only in recent and severe cases but when salivation and all other ^ H ^^ feD ^ means hare failed ^ and when an early application is made to these Pills T ^ HSr for the cure of the Venereal Disease , frequently contracted in a moment ^^ J r of inebriety , the eradication is generally completed in a few days ; and in the more ad vanced and inveterate stages of the venereal infection , characterised by a variety of painful and disrresjmg srmptoms , a perseverance in the Specific Pills , and to the directiens fully pointed out in the Treatise , trill en ^ -iire to the patient a permanent and radical cure . It is a melanchoH fact rhat thousands fall victims to this horrid dispase , owing to tbe unskilfulness of illiterate men , who , by tbe cse of that deadly poison , merc-ury ., ruin the constkutien , cause ukerauon blotches on the bead , face and body , dimness of sight , noise in tbe ears , deafness , obstinate gleets , nodes on the shin bones , olc-erated sore throats , diseased nose , with nocturnal pains in tbe bead and limbs , till at length a general debility and decay of the constitution ensnes , and a melanchol y death puts a period to their dreadfcl -sofTenngs . In . those dreadfnl cases of semal debility , brought on by an early and indiscriminate indulgence of tbe passion ? , frequently acquired without the knowledge of the dreadful consequences resulting therefrom , and "which not only entail on its "votaries ai \ tie enervating imteciVmes of cAd age , and occasion the necessity of renouncing the felicraes of marriage to tiosw " * ho have given way to this delusive and destructive habit , l ) Dt weaken acd cestroy all the bodily senses , producing mclanctolr , ^« fieienRy » «»»•! * unocrouo iiaiu of nervous aff » fCBons . In these distressing cases , whether the consequence of such baneful hahits , or any other canse , a certain aad rpee&j cure may be relied on by taking PERRY'S PURIFYING SPECIFIC PILLS , and bv a strict attention to the directions pointed ont in the treatisei , * hich fully explains the dreadful re * cks ari ? injr from these melancholy ca # es . : MESSRS . PERRY & CO ., SURGEONS , Kay be consulted as usual at No . 4 , Great Charles Street , Birmingham , and 23 , Slater Street , Liverpool . Only one personal visit is required from a country patient , to enable Messrs . Perry & Co . to give such advice , a * will be the means of affecting a permanent and effectual cure , after all other means have proved intfTettuai . Letters ior advice must be post paid , aad contain the usual fee of one pound . Sold bv _ tbe principal ? viedicine Sellers in every Market Town in England , Scotland , Wales , and Ireland ; also on the Continent , and North and South America . Sold 2 t tbe Intelligencer Office , and ny Heaton , Towr . send , Reinhardt and Son , Tarbntton , Rhode * , Trant , Leeds - , "Whitaier , Hardcastle , Ridge , Gillatt , Fisher , "Wreaks , Slack , Sheffield ; 'Woodhead & 2 sail , C 5 ar : 2 ^ ton & Co ., Chesterfield ; Si-sons , "VN ' crksop ; R , ColSinson , W . Get bin ^ , Mansfield ; J . Towler . East "R edford ; G . Fiarrison , J . VTaiL =. Br . msiey ; Adams , Selby ; Greaves , Fall , Knare * bro '; Burst , Cardweil , Srasfield , "SVakeSeld ; Stanf . eld , K . tighlry ; Cooper , Bradford ; Hartley , Berry , Leyland & Son , Halifax ; England , Jacob , Fell , Sp : vey . Hudcersfidd ; Brice , Parkinson , Priestly , Pontefract ; Poggitt , Peat , Thirsi ; Dalby , "SYetaerby ; S- uifford , Brook & Co ., DoncASter ; T . S . Brook , Dew * bury ; "Wilkinson , Stipton ; Langdale , Northailertan ; Goldihorp , Tadcasrer ; Bowman , Richmond ; Rhr * de « , Snaith ; Ricaarc-on & . Son , Low Harrogare ; B . ^ lo . \ on , Meyneli , Rnss & Burton , J . Haycroft , Lee & Peirins , Hall * , Dennis & Son , Bellerhy , Dcichton > & ; Moxon , T . MarAs , R ,. Burdekin , H . Sn ut ^ eran , "W . & J . Hargrove , York : Er . rle , Ram'den . Bever ' . cy ; Ainsworth , S . Turner , ChamifT , Fox , Scarbro '; Allathome , Pocklington ; 3 L ! iby , Market ^ Veighton ; Turlay , Howcen ; Sherwood , Driffield ; Furby , Bridlinston ; Atkinson , Eirby Moorside : AndcrsoB , Ripoa ; Yeoman , "VYhitb y ; Smith , Goisbor . iugh ; Tlower . llalxon ; Dnck , Stokesley ; Chr .- * . - >; -ber fc Cc , Stockt' -n ; SVilson , Rotherham ; RnhinsoD , Boronghar ir . ge ; CoKinson , Cave ; Hall , 'Ea .-ir . cwoid ; Ca * s , Goole ; "B urktr * , Helmsley ; Harrirgtun , Hcnbanby ; Bawkins , ilasham ; Lotpbotbam , Mid . ^ ieham ; "Walker , Foster , Otley : Atkinson & ton , Pickering ; Knowlts , Thome ; Sutton , Nottingham ; Woodward , Leicester ; and sold by most respectable ^ Medicine Venders throughout tbe Kingdom . Lonccn—Barclay and Son , Farrin ^ don-iLreet , Butler , 4 , Cteapside , Edwards , St . Paul ' s CLnrch Tard . N . B . — Country Draggisr ^ , BookselWr « , Patent 31 ecicine . Venders , arc ! every other Shopkeeper can i-e supplied with say quantity of Perry ' s Puri "" y ; n 2 Specific .-Pii ' . s , with ' . be -usual allowance to the trade , b y Bare-lay and Son , Farringcon-srreet ; T . Bu :: er , 4 . Cneapside ; Edwards , OT , St . Paul ' s Church Yard ' ; Sutton aaa Co ., Bow Cbrrca Yard ; Hanr . a . T and Co ., 63 , Oxiord-street ; and by all other wholesale patent 3 Iedicice Hoases in LondoE .
The National Charter.
THE NATIONAL CHARTER .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Jan. 5, 1839, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1039/page/2/
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