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; THE BATH WESTERN MEETING OF DELEGATES.
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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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This Day is Published , Price Two SHiM-ixes , handsomely bound in Cloth , FIFTEEN LESSONS OS" THE ANALOGY AND STHTAX OF THS EV 6 XJSH LAXGUAGE , for the Um of Adult Persons wbe have , neglected the Stndy of Grammar . BT WXLLXASEt HZLL . » ¦ ¦ c- - Third Edition revised end amended . The Author has great pleasure in preseadog , at a reduced price , tbisnew gnd improTed Edition of his vrort , to the many who have enquired for it , d \ ring tfce sbert time it lias been out of print . In these Lessons , the absard aad unmeaning technicalities "which , pervade all other Works on Grammar are exchanged for terms which have a ' definite and precise meaniDg , illustrative of the thing * they represent . The Parts of speech are arranged " en an entirely new Principle , founded on & Philosophical Consideration of the Nature of Language , and applicable to all Languapes . The necessary Divisions and Subdivision * are rationally accounted for—and the Principle * of Universal Grammar demonstrated so fully , that the raeaBest capacity may understand them . In Syntax , the formation of the English Language is exclusively consulted , without any unnecessary reference to ethtr Languages . A majority of the numerous Rules given in most Grammars are shown to > nj liale better than a heap ef senseless Tautology . The necessary Rules are demonstrated upon rational Princi ple * , and illustrated , by a variety of Examples . ALSO , BT THE SAME AUTHOB , Price One Shilling , Bound in CbtJk , THE RATIONAL SCHOOL GRAMMAR AND ENTERTAINING CLASS BOOK . This Work was written at the request of many Parents and Schoolmasters , who being dtoirous ef Bring the Author ' s former work , " Fifteen Lesson * , &e . " in the Education of their children , complained that , being written for Adults , its * tyle was not well suifcd for the youthful mind ; they regretted , therefore , that it ceuld not be made so universally useful as it otherwise might have been . For the obyiation therefore , of this objection , the " Ratiokal School Grammas" is bo written as to amuse while it instructs . The principle of the Work is preeisehr that ^ jf the Author ' s "Fifteen Lessons , &c . " Taking oat merely th * ^ ontroversial part , ail that can be said * of that "W ork may be said , with equal force and pr opriety of this ; while its style and diction are perfectly within the scope of an ordinary youthful mind , ih which' tb ' ey ^ are calculated to excite a deep interest and , consequently , to rivet the attention , whilst they communicate information which mast , therefore , indelibly impress the memory . BY THE SAME ATJTHOK ., ALSO , Price One ShilUtig , bound in Cloth , a Second Edition sf PROGRESSIVE EXERCISES , SELECTED FROM THE BEST ENGLISH AUTHORS , AND SO ARRANGED AS TO ACCORD WITH THE RESPECTIVE LESSONS IN EACH OF THE FOREGOING WORKS . This Work is a Taluable and nseessary accompaniment to either or both ef the foregoing ones . It i * so arranged that the exercises therein contained suit either the " Rational School Grammar" for children or the " Fifteen Lessons ' fer Adnltt . A gradation of principles is carefully observed ; so that nt » It-awn of the exercises shall anticipate any information in succeeding lessons of the Grammar . Also , this day is published , price Threepence , THE PECULIAR SAXCTHX OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH , A SERMON , DELIVERED IN BETHEL CHAPEL , HULL , feY WXLUA 8 I HILL , MINISTER O * TBE SAID CHAPEL , In this diseourw , the long agitated question of the propriety of teaching writing and accounts in 5 abb * th School . " , is completely « et at rest , - The authority , precepts aid practice of the Lord Jesus Christ are shewn to hate a direct tendency to the Establishment of the Custom . The whole of the aWe Works may T > e had of Josbtja Hobson , Northern Star Office , Leed ? , of Abel Heywood , and Messrs . BAXCRsani Co . Muntbrtter ; or of Cleave , 1 , Shoe-line , Hopsgk ' 112 . Fi . ~« - -Rireet , aad Sm ? xlN and Marshall , Stationer ' s Bali Court , Lcurion ; ai . d all otce ' Booksellers .
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DR . JOHN ARMSTRONG'S LITER PILLS . " I care not how T am phyxicked , so it be not by the adventure of a Quick , but the advice of » Physician , who , I am sure , will prescribe no more for me than may consist with my safety , and need do : h require . "—Old Divine . mHESE LITER PILLS bare , since 1835 , I completely established thpmselve- ? as a favourite family aperient , as a most effectual remedy for an inactive irver , and as an excellent antibilious medicine . Cut very small , and givrn in a little treacle or preserve , they are a safe aperient and vermifuge
for children . - They are a decided solvent , and preventive of stone and gravel ; and ulcers and obstinate aores speedily heal under their benign influence . The skin is kept clear of spots , and the general health \» improved by their occasional use . Dropsieal persons find great relief from these pill ? . They contain neither aloes , gamboge , nor colocynth ; occasioning no piles , nor any pain in tbeir operation The fine vegetable extracts * whereof they are composed will not retain a spherical form , lite the common aloetie pill * , and they ought to be kept in a dry place . For females , and as a dinner pill , they are imri railed .
Messrs . Winstanlry , of London , the proprietor ' s compounding agent * ( in the stead , of Hr . Eddj ) , are instructed to supply only the London whoitsale houses . Sold Retail in Leeds , at the Northern Star , Mercury , and Intelligencer Oa&ee ? , and by all druggists and patent medicine venders in tht kingdom , at ls ' . l ^ c ! . per box , accompanied with the late Dr . Armstrong ' s own advice and directions , and some interesting eases . Observe that the stamp ha * the name of the medicine , "Dr . John . Aimstrong ' iLivtr Pills , " engraved rpon it .
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RETURN OF THE SOSCBESTEK LABOUB . CB . Sl ^ Xow Publishing , Price Foubpekcb , THE VICTIMS OF VHIGGERI , ¦ ' BELNBASTATKXSKTOrTHI FEBsxcsrrfira ixpembscxd mthedorcesstsp LABOURERS , ACCOCKT OF " VAN DIEMAK * S LAND , WITHTHB HORRORS OF TRANSPORTATION ; TTTLLT PKTrLOPZD , BY SEOBGE lOVtLESS , OKI OF TH * VICTIMS .
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Alto Just Published , Price One Penny , THE CATECHISM OP THI PW MORAL WORLD . BY ROBERT OWEN . TMi day i s published , Price One Penny , THE LABOURER'S REWARD : or , THE COARSER FOOD DIET-TABLE , m promulgated by the POOR-LAW COMMISSIONERS . V T * u * Table u published on ft broad sheet , and contains an "Appeal to the Labouring Men of England , " that should be read in every Cottage and Workshop in the Kingdom .
Jiist published , Price Threepence , TRACTS on REPUBLICAN GOVERNMENT aad NATIONAL EDUCATION Bt R . D . Owes aad Facers Wm 6 ht .
Price Twopence each , «« cfS R R T ? 7 NIE 8 ° ** HUMAN SPECILS . By R . D . Owes . ADDRESS ON FREE INQUIRY . ByR . D . Owot . ' Price Sixpence , D 2 jVEMD i TELL ; ° ^ SWITZ ^ LANI > ± l « o , coBiplewiii 2 vok . with Meaoir of the Author Also , Price 8 d . sritthei , aad 1 « . Cloth , A New Editianof OWEN'S ESSATS on th * FORMATION OF CHARACTER ?^ the « . Price 7 » . 6 d , THE SYSTEM OF NATURE .
Bx M . Dx Mulabaco . * The work of a frtat writer itasquestjoaablji iu merit lie » in the eloqnence of the compocition . ' —Lurid Ertmg / ua * ' * X * ht r * l Theology . ALso , Price Threepence , The VISION of JUDGMENT . BtLordByro * . f& * T hii Edifionis enricned withraluable Note * % y Robert"H all , W . SnntJi , Eso ^ Professor Wflson . 4 w . * e . ASK FOR * "CLEAVE * PENNY GAZETTE , " ; ' WTTB CtATCATtrftES ,
« T C . J . O&AJTT . FBICE 09 Z rEVKT . It MstaiBs Lota of food Things and Reading fo ? , ew * jS 04 j , witli Esfnrinfs . , * : l *»» o « i—Cleare ^ iioe-Lane ; HobttoiuNorthein Star Office , Ue 4 »; and ill Doaien in Cheap Paper . 0 - '
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CAUTION TO LADIES . rnHE PROPRIETORS of KEARSLEY'S X ORIGINAL WIDOW WELCH'S FE-. MALE PILLS , find it incumbent on them to caution toe purchasers of these PiTls against Imita nons selling under the name of Smither * , Lewi-, &c , ani calling themselves , the craad-daughters oJ the late Widew Welch , but who have no right to the preparing of them , the original recipe having b t fcD * ° W the late G- Kearsley . ° f Fleet-Street , whose « idow found it necessary to make the following Affidavit for the protection of her property , in the year 1793 . r "
AFFIDAVIT . First . —That she is in possession of the Recipe for making Welch ' s Female Pill * , which was bequeathed to h « r by her late husband . Second . —That this recipe was purchased by her . ,. hn * band ' oi the Widow Welch , in the ve 8 r 1787 , for a valuable consideration , and with a view for making the medicine for public sale . Third . —That she Catharine Kearsley , is also in possession of the receipt signed by the said Widow VVelch , acknowledging the having received the money of the said Mr . George Keanley , for the purchase of the absolute property of ' the siid recipe . Sirorn at the Mantion-House , London , the 3 rd Day of November , 1798 , befvre me ,
ANDERSON Mayor . These Pills * o long and justly celebrated for their peculiar virtues , art strongly recommended to the notice of every lady , having obtained the sanction and approbation of mosx gentlemen of the medical profession , as a safe and valuable medicine , ia eftectually removing obstructions , aad relieving all other mcanvenienees to * bich the female frame i . « Hable , espe cially those which at an early period of life , frequency arise from want of exercise and general debility of rhe system ; they create an appetite correct indigestion , remove giddinew and nerron * headache , and are eminently useful in windy disorders , pains in tht stomach , shortness of breath and -p »\ p « ation of the heart ; being perfectly innocent , may be used with safety in all seasons and climates .
Sold wholesale and retail , by J . Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; also , by J . Hobson , Northern Star OSice ; by Jsmeeton , Rfinbardt , Heaton , Hay , Alien , Land , Clapham , Tarbotton , Smith , Bel ] Townsend , Bame * and Newsome , Leeds ; Broeke , Dewsbury ; Dennis and Son , Moxon , Little , Hard ' man Coll-. er , Hargrove , Bellerby , York ; Cooper , GoVdthorpe , Eogenon , Ncwby , Key , Bradford , Cooper , Gold tborpe , Tadcaster ; Rhodes , Snaith ' XPV !\ Pr «« ley , Pontefract ; and all respectable Medicine N enders ia town and country , at 2 « 9 d per box . "
Observe , the genuine are wrapped in white paper , and have the name C . Kearsley engraved on the ( rOTernment Stamp .
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GOOD NEWS FOR THE MILLION . " Opi / trper orbem dieor . " P ALEY , the greatest of mora' fhilcwopheru , truly enumerates children as among the principal sources of human luppinesi . —At no period is human me so precarioas as in the early stages of infancy ; for it is a fact no less lamentable than true , that a theleast one half the children born in Great Britain pensh m a state of infaricy . Of these , some die for wsnt of medicine , but by far the greater portion from fie abuse of it . PernicioBl stupefactives , whose basis } g laudanum or other nfiiates , are constantl y administered to tender infante , especially among the poorer classes . These [ dangerous compounds allay pain for a time by gtupefyiDg the senses , but ultimately leave the agonised little sufferer in a
worse * tate than before . The ignorant and deluded , though anxious , well-meaning , and affectionate mother , thus procures herself a little more ease from nursing , but her darling child either shortl y perishes , or , if it sorvivej it is only to pass its mortal pilgrimage ( from its constitution having been thus enervated and undermined ) in a state of lethargic insensibility . Deeply impressed with the magnitude of these serious evils , and animated with a truly philanthropic zeal
to arrest their progre !« S j it was that the late Mr . Atkinson ( a man of original talent , and of superior intellectual attainments generally , as well a * a . skilful chemist and apothecary ) directed his best energies to the formation of a compound suited to the various complaints of infants . His laudable efforts w « re at length crowned with the success they so well merited , in the production of that most invaluable preparation ,
ATKINSON'S INFANTS' PRESERVATIVE , * 5 , >" , ° w stood the test of analyxation , the o ^ lwl ' , * boTe *"> *•» « 7 ordeal of public Sn ?^ Wf * ^^ and of which fifty IniK ^? "t ammally « ° feJn GreatBritain ! S ^?? E 32 W £ - 5 X raiH ^ SS ^ Sp ^ S ^ IE _ _ M „„ aunuraoie
^ assistant to nature doing the progress of the hooping cough £ measles , and the cow rox , or va ccine inoculation
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BOOCOCK'S MNNER PILLS . s rpHIS excellent Family Pill i 8 reajirkabfe far its orders ^ n& ^ n of the » tomacb ari * bowai , talte » dH * oK aridity ™ A ^ tonwch ^ l ^^ bS ^ BElS . , ' Hpaaiw , lew * of appetite , aente «* tft » ffl ^^ ieS antf > ntimeroiu other cow ^ tot ^^^^ Trll * fltlrely obviated by confi ^ infWd ^^ SoJJ accompanying each brtx .. r Thei irepartlojtiltaiv recommended'to « U pewoai wb ^ e s ^ ac hT ^ head are iUQT&tret / vftaT' | iWjSft 3 tin K w jSh , y «|» eoiiui ' * hey- * eldom faSL to f « tt ^ e >^ nd if tSe 2 after too free ari indulgeice , at |» JBle , &iyT > m § m rfetow the ' gyitem to itB ^ alurai * repose . ^^ ., Sold" in boxes ' at ' is . l ^ d . and 2 s . ftd . each .
BOOCOCK'S COUGH ELIXIB . This is the most safe , efficacious and approved medicine ever offered to the public , for the relief « f cough * , colds , asthmas , hooping &fti ^ ftofliiFobstructions of the breast and luDgu . It is of incalculable value in old , husky , and dry coughs ; dissolve ? congealed phlegm in the throat , and by promoting gentle expectoration , it affofds wonderfti ^ euse in relieving the difficulty of breathing ^ spi ^ tingjof blood , &c , peculiar to asthmatic complaints'and ' consumptions . The night cough , which generally gives so much pain and trouble to those afflicted with , it , a dose of the Elixer will give instant relief to , and ensure to the patient a comfortable and refreshing ileep . / °
In bottles at Is . l £ d . aud 2 s . 9 d . eaeh . , Sold by John Bbocock , Chemist , Leeds ; and by his appointment by J ., Heaton , Briggate ; A . J . Marriott , Druggist , Upperhead Jftow [ u Ji Hobpaa , Market Street , Baines&NewBom . a ^ diliJJ . Mann Leeds ; Gell , Alderton , and CardweH , Druggitte , Wakefield ; Ellin , Ossett ; andby most of the respectable medicine venders throughout the kingdom . Agent * supplied on the usual terms .
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_ Copy of a Letter from Herbert Mayo , Esq ., F . R . S . y Senior Surgeon to Middlesex Hospital , and Professor of Anatomy mnd Pathology . King ' s College , London , fyc . fyc . \ e To Thomas Holloway , Esq . Sir , —Will you excuse this informal answer ? The Ointment which you have sent roe has been of Use in ALL the cases in which I have tried it ; send me , if you please , some more in a few days ' time ; I have enough for the present . Yours trnly , H . MAYO : 19 , George St ., Hanover Square , April 19 , 1837 . ; HOLL OWAY'S UNIVERSAL FAMILY OINTMENT will be found far more
efficacious in the following Diseases , than any other Remedy extant ;—viz . Ulcers , Venereal Ulcers , Bad Legs , Nervous Pains , Gout , Rheumatism , contracted and stiff Joint ? , Pains of the Cheat and Bones , difficult Respiration , Swellings , and Tumours , &c . Its effects have been astonishing in the most severe Cases of Stony and Uloerated Cancers , Sarofula or King ' s Evii , in all Skin Diseases J , as Ringworm , Scald Heads , &c , and in Burns , soft Corns , Bunions , &c . 540 Medical Certificates , moat of wnich are from the first Medical Authorities , such as her Majesty ' s Sergeant Surgeon ; Sir B . C . Brodie , Bart , y and such like aniinent Names must for ever set at rest all doubt as to the superior efficacy » f this Remedy . I l ^ £
Sold by the Proprietor , 18 , Broad Street Buildings , City , London , and by all respectable wholesale and retaii Medicine Venders throughout the Kingdom , in Pots , at Is . l £ d ., 2 s , 9 d ., and i » . 6 d ., each . The largest size contains six of the smallest , and the second size half the quantity of the largest . ' d *
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On Monday last , the meefiBg of Delegates convened from all "Working Men ' s Associations , and Radical Union " , in the Western District of England atvd Southern parts of Wales , took place at the Ro # m 8 of the Working Men ' s Association , Bath , and there was a numerous attendance of Delegates . From the importance of the meeting , and the amount of practical knowledge contained in the speeches delivered on the occasion , we are induce ^ to give the purport of the several speeches , in order that our readers may nee what is the Btate of feeling and of opinion in the West , relative to the present movement . , j ' ,
Mr . Phillips , on being called to the chair , stated that all present knew for what purpose they had met—it was to ascertain whether the men of the West were prepared for the coming struggle . That was a solemn occasion ; it was of vital importance to the people at large ; and he hoped that the Delegates , upon whom depended , in a great measure , the success of the struggle , would not come to any rash decision respecting the line of conduct to be pursued when the Convention met in LondoD , but that they would be guided , in all their movements , by a calm and determined spirit . , ; ,
Mr . Griffith , from Ponty Pool , then proceeded to state what the people were doing there ; it was difficult to persuade them that the country was in so bad a state as some persons represented ; The peopl ? in Ponty Pool were well off ; they received good wages ; and therefore it was that they could not judge of the bad state in which other \ parts of the United Kingdom were placed in consequence of low wagex , and the dearnesH of provisions . However , there was a strong Union of working men ; in Ponty Pool , who are resolved to cooperate w » th their brethren in other parts of the United Kingdom , and . to take nothings lest than tte ; People ' s Charter . ( Great cheering . ) In that ! part die
morals of the people were improving { , = they were becoming more and more intelligent every day ; apd nothing could equal their zeal in the good cause of Radical Reform . ( Cheers . ) ! Mr . Lane , from Blandford , expressed similar sentiments . The Association there contained hut few members , in consequence of the means taken b y the privileged few—the lovers and the apers of the Aristocracy in Blandford , to prevent the working classes from uniting ' together . They were determined , however , to unite in defiance of their opponents . ( Great cheering . ) ' ' ' Mr . Edwards , from Newport , said , it afforded him much pleasure to boar that such was'the state
of feeling generally . The greatest obi ! tacle » the men of Newport haa to contend with , wer e the present electors , who had discovered the fact , that if tjhe People ' s Charter became the law of the land , they could not sell their votes for ten or twenty pounds , as they now did . ( Hear , hear . ) Mr . Edwards proceeded to state what the plan is which Mr . Froist , the Delegate for J ? ewport , in tended to submit foi the consideration of the Convention when they meet in London ; and he , Mr . Edward * , thotJght the plan would be a wise one , if generally acted upon . The meeting that day was not to propose this or that plan for the adoption of the Convention , but to
ascertain whether the great mass of the people is whh us ; he found that they were , and that circuinstadce alone should stimulate him to redouble his exertkins when he returned to Wales ; he would go topou the Welsh hills , and , by the bright inte lligence he-had received that day , he would illuminate all the ebontry around . ( Treinendoas cheering . ) The ttenSof Wales are up—are ready to abide whatever order that the Delegates , when assembled in London , mW think it prudent to issue to the peoplei of Britain but they decidedly objected to any resort being maite to physical force , to achieve the object for which ire are contending , except it be for uelf-defende . ( Cheers , and cries of "That ' s it . " ) , . , I
Mr . Harris , from Tiverton , depicted ; in atrojig terms , the distressed state of the agricultural Ia | bourers in that part ; and said if they , the meeting , knew the misery which was felt by those poor me a , they would copcludij that emething wn wroi ig somewhere . M no happened that they knew whew that was > 4 jjttt 6 » the passing of tbe Refor * Bffllof 1830 , the wtifc classes had been united < with t le aristberaoy-af ^' ost the working classes , and , thfeite * fore , thejmen v . Tiverton had made up their minds to aoppart the People ' s Charter . ( Ch , eett . ) T le last w ^ rds they expressed to him were thatbe sheufld infoni his brother delegates , that thongh the men af TPiver ^ n are very poor , and art oppressed oo every « de bj their employers , yet they would not be p at down , but would aid tbeir brethren in the holy e > deavouir to rid the land of Us foes . ( Great Onwrini . ) The spjeaker stated that wages in that part aVerag ^
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about ten shillings a-week to agricultural labourer *; coals were sold at Is . lOd . per cwt ., and other necessanes were equally dear . Delegates from Winsley , Bradford , Trowbridge , Frome , Combe Down and other places , addressed the meeting , and each and all expressed the firm fi&ennination of the people in those places to snpiort thiPeopte ' g Charter . . " , Mr . BA % Ti . BTr | 5 of Bath , propowd the following resolution : — Tb * itfcis meeting having heard the wiooastateinenfeaoft ^ e Delegates from the Western dutrict of Eogland ata Southern part of Wales ; att * iearmng Ae . BtiW of feeling and of opinio * generally * fcvourabU to . an active and determined Use jif rao ^ l conttior , do pledge ourselves in the nam * of * Ouf . se * eral Associations , to co-operate ^» A >* ae *^ oTher , with the men of the North and ether parts , in order to render effective the labours of the Convention about to assemble in London . " Mr . Vincent seconded it
It was then put to the meeting , and earned ana-Bir oouil y ; amid great cheering . ffiR ^ sH **^ proposed . the next naolatioH : — That - an Address to the People of the W » st of England and Southof Wale ^ nrging upon them the necessity , of un . On and co-operation , & sent forth W ^ S T *" - 01 " Poli - ^ cal bodie » 4 nthQseparts , and that the name of their secretaries be attached to their Address . ' . ; > , Mr . Edwakds , ef Newport , seconded tie resolution , which was carried likewise unanimonsly . The . btHunest of the ^ day . now being gon « through ,- the meeting broke op , after giving three cheers for the -Radicals of the West , and three for the People ' s Charter .
PUBLIC DINNER TO THE DELEGATES . In the evening , abont rixtj , inclusive of the Delegate * mi Membeiy of the Bath Working Men ' i Association , sai down to an excellent dinner in the large room of the Chequerrlnn , ; and Mr . Lewis , the landlord , tie ^ rves great prafae lor the manner in which he fitted np the room for the occasion . In the course of the evening , some patriotic songs were sung , and all present seemed to be delighted with the prospects held « ut to them from the proceediDg of their previous meeting—prospects which dispelled all doubt frem the mind as to the 8 ucces « of the General Convention' in the coming stru etrle . Bath Guardian . ^ g 8
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POOR LAW SEPARATIONS . Court of Queen ' s Bench , Jan . 30 . TflEQuEENp . THEGlURDIANSOFTflESTRANB UNION , Mr . Creswell said , he had to move for a rule to shew cause why a writ of « rftdrar « should not issue to bring before the Court an order , made by the Poor Law Commisnoners . He « h « old state to tbeir lordships , he had not the affidavits , en which the motion was made , in his tand , but it was in the possession of the person who instructed him , who had left the court . It wan a mere formal affidavit , f bang betore their lordships the question , as to the validity of an order for separating man and wife in the workhouxe , that being one of the general regulations that the commishioaeM had formed for the
regulation of the peor in workhouses . Undoubtedly , before the passing of the recent Act of Parliament for the management of the poor , the law , as it existed , held it dangerous even to effect a temporary separation between man and wife ; and there were many cases in which their lordship * had decided to that effect-rone of them was the case of " the parish of St . Michael , Bath , v . Nunney , " in 1 Strange , 554 ; there wai another decision in Skinner , 606 . And there were och « r cases where the law had been laid downin thri same way as in the case of "The King v . Elthem , " 5 East , 115 , inwhich case , the husband ; being an , Irishman , had married an English wife , and he consented to her being removed to her maiden settlement , and the Court held , that as
he had consented to the separation , the order was good ; bnt the Court had entertained a doubt afterwards whether that . decision was good , without there being the consent of both pariies . There -was ^ another case , of * The King v . Leeds , " 4 Bamewall and Aldefson 498 , which arose under the statute of th& 69 th of George 111 ., cap .. 12 , which enabled the justices , when a loreigner had married an Englishwoman , and had children , to remove the husband from the country , but they were bound to take the wiife and children with him j and Lord Chief Juitice Abbott , in giving judgment in that case , said-it was contrary to | ood pohcy to allow a separation , even b y consent . Tfho Court held that a reparation , even by consent , was
contrary , to wnat . appeared to be the effect of the statute of iie 12 lh « nd J 3 th of , Charles I j ., cap . 2 , wbAch authorised the removal ojf any person or persons who came Into a parish ^ aijd had no right to remain there , and it would segm that in such cases they were to be removed to the plawof their settlement : bnt although thegeneralauthority toremovd was given , the CoUrtrheld Ae authority must b « exercised according to the principles of the law then existing , and confined it to the power vested in the justices b y . that statute . Then there was the statute as to certificate * , vdthreKard tawhichit would be found , in the case of " -The King p , Carlton , " reported in Barrowe ' s settlement cased , 813 , a woman watrbYiDgui oiie pariah , under a certificate from
another paruh , and the latter , therftfore , under the statute of 8 . and 9 William III ^ was bound to receive her . She married an Irishman , and afterwards becoming chargeable to the parish , she was remo * ed to the parish which had given the certificate . The Court then held , that inasmuch as such a removal separated her from her husband , that order could not be made , and consequently the pariah in which she was found , although they had received her . under certificate , was bound to " keep her . Therefore these statutesof Charles II ., authonsing the removal , and the statute of William III . compelhng them to receive the poor , were both apparently nullified by this decision . But no on » ever doubted the propriety of the decision , because they said the statute most be construed in such a way as not to invalidate the law . The impropriety , or rather niegality , of separating bnabandand wife bemg so r trqngly . established 1 b these c « se « . he
wwnea ^ uieirlardahipato see whether the New Poor JLj awjWl had m * de any alteration in that respect . The 16 th section *» f that act authorised the commisnonera to administer laws for the relief of the poor U commenced thns- « Be it fcrlher enacted that trom and after the passing of thw act , administerinr the jaws for the relief of the poor thronghout England and Wales , according to the exiating laws , or such laws as should be in force fer the time being , shall be subject to the control and direction of the said commissioners . " That was the general power that was given to the commissioners , that the administration of the relief . for the poor was to be under their control , but subject to the existing laws . They were not to , have power to alter the lawbut they
; mustjrame their proceedings according to the law , therefore the powers afterward * given lo make rules and ordinances for the government of the poor must be made , he apprehended , within such limits as the existiuF laws Irom time , to time might appoint . Then followed this clause— « And for executoig the power * given to them by th * act , tke commissioners should , and were thereby , authorised and required , from time to time , as they" shbutd have * occasion , to make and issue all such rules , orders , and regulations for the management of the poor , the government of workhouses , and the educationand management of poor diildren , as they should think fit . " Iherefore the laws they were to make were to be rules , ordinances , andrfeulationii for rti « Tn » n » ,, o .
ment of the poor and for t ^ e government of worknouues ; all thatmerely was for the effecting that they were previously authorised to do- ^ namely , to admin-1 * ter t ? the relief of the poor according to the laws at that tune in being . ~ Lord Denman thought there w ? ° nat m ? oiilt of t » n » ft" » thp Poor Law Act forbnnfting x » p , tho order , but there -was ageheral rale of Emitoaon of six months . He wished to know on -whose behalf Mr . Cresswell applied .-Mr . Cres « - wr fl said , he was instructed by a right rev . prelate , who was very anxious that thi « question should be discussed . —Lord Denman wanted to know wh y he had not brought it forward sooner ? If he was an aggrieved party , perhaps the limitation would have apphed to the time of the grievance . —Mr . CressweQ wonld state to their lordships that he had ao doubt it originated in complaints somewhere . Some corres pondence had , taken place oa the subject , and itwaa suggested that the question / could oe raised with
reieience to a JUondon union , and desiring that it should be brought forward in an amicable way , they had' taken the Strand Union , where the order had been jnade and was in force . —Lord Demttan € Uppo 3 ed that all the notices iu writing . had regularly been given ten days previous to the ^ anplication being made?—Mr . Cresswell said that had not been done ; ithe oommiitsioners having been communicated with , they would raise no formal objection to the matter . Ab far asthe commusionen we *» concerned , they were quite willing it should be brought before the Court—Lord Denman thought it weald be better that u should be moved earlier in the term than this , and the Court wpuldlOce to see all thefonnalptoceed-Mgs . He wasnot quite sure they gnghttaenterintoa dweusaon of ^ sort merel y for ftepiupoae ef letfl » g + question , unless iwme . party was aggrieved ; and the Cour t would like to seelfll' the reralar machinery and proceedlngi .
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• - ' ¦' . ' ¦ . - ¦¦ : ¦ . ¦ » ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ —* , Chbap BBKA 0 . —A considerable wager haa bet-n laid that by the fim of April bread will be cheaper m London than in Paris . Kailwatb IK Irbland . —A numerous meeting was holden on Friaay in Dublin , to " take iat j consideration the propriety of calling upon GeTern-»* pt ta adopt the best and most expeditious meant of introducing a comprehensive system of RaUwayi into Irelands" A series of resolutions in favour oi yie affirmative aide of the proposition were adopted
Valuable Publications. ^
VALUABLE PUBLICATIONS . ^
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" " ~ i i' ., ¦ ¦ " . - j » ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ m ^^ mm ^ mmmimm IN CASES OF SECRECY CONSULT THE TEEATISE On every Stage « od . Symptom of th « VENEREAL DISEASE , in its mild and moat alarming fomu , just publish ** by . . MESSRS . PERRY ANLV CO . *! SURGEONS , 4 , Great Charles Street , Biftoingham ; ' 23 , Slater Sttett , LtvBrpool ; and 2 , Bale Street , Manchester ' and given gratis with' eachi Box of
PERRY'S PURIECT& SJ >! cmc PILLS , Price 2 » . 9 i / ., 4 * . 6 d ., and Us . per Bw , ? ^ iLHk ' f 9 S ? AJSSSS ^ i . Jwgptjm pf the aboye complaint . ILLUS-¦ : ^ f llBBk ' " « " 5 a IWtM ^^ W ?™*^ » newin |^ the dftferenii rtage ^ f lW flLlWk' ' - ¦ '¦ T # ' -W' ^ meiSSj , acc «« patiH 5 d'with , plain and practical M&W mHBkZ . ' - ^ y ^ M ^^^ tyt an 4 ip «^ y ^ witti ^ ase , secrecy , ^! « tffe ^ , Jmf ^ nMPfl ^'* w 1 t 1 Ar Atf aid of wsfibal % mSnm ^* * ,. - — ^ aWf ^* 'T ^^^ - ^ ^ . P rice 2 « - * - > *¦• " «• ^ K v \ ^ 1 ^ 9 as ^ LV ¦ '' are J * known throughout Europe and America to be the most - ^^ LJV ^ HfiUjB- ^^ T ? m and effectual cure ever discovered , for every stage and symptom ' : ^ mr ¥ MmE& ? J& ** ? && ** Disease , in uo « % xe ^ including GouorthJiei , Gleete , ^¦ WLIisalJAy , Secondary Symptoms , Strictores , Seminal , W ? akness , Peficiency , and ^ fiaSHKf' ' aI 1 M *** 99 * ot tl > e Uriuary Passages , withoi ' t loss of time , confinefflent , ^ aPPSSf or fcmdra . Dce frmn business ; they have effected the most surprising cures , ' ~ ' ^ iB £ ' ~ JEW not only m recent ' and « ver «' ¦ ' ' « a ^^ nt ' 'Whfen- * ali'hi « ott and *! 1 other y ^ gbf means have failed ; an 4 when an early application is made to there Pills ^^ V ' for the cure of tb » Venereal Disease , frequently contracted in a moment ^^ of inebri ety , the eradication is generally completed ina few days ; and jin rhe more advanced and inveterate Rtages of the venereal infection , characterised by a variety of paisfil and distressing symptoms , a perseverance ih the Specific Pills , and to the directions fully pointed out in the Treatise , will ensure to the patiest a permanent and radical cure i
It is a melancholy fact that thousands fall victims to this horrid disease , owing to the unskilfulnessof illiterate men , who , by the use of that deadly poison mercury , ruin the constitution , cause ulceration , blotches on the bead , face and body , dimness of sight , noise in the ears , deafness , obstinate gleets , nodes on the ihin bones , ulcerated g « re throats , diseased nose , with nocturnal pains in the head and limbs , till at length a general debility and decay of the constitution ensues , and a melaneholy death puts a period to their dreadful sufferings . ' ¦ ¦ .- ¦ ... ¦ ¦ - .-. ¦ In those dreadful cases of sexual debility , brought oa by an early und indiscriminate indulgence of the passions , frequently- acquired withont the knowled ge of the dreadful censequenees resulting therefrom , and which not only entail « m its vQtarie * all the enervating imbecilities of old as * , and occasion the -necessity
of renouncing the lelicities oi marriage t « twwe who have * given way t « this delusive arid destructive habit , but weaken and destroy all the bodily senses , producing melanchol y , deficiency , and a numerous train of aervotw affection * . In these distressing cases , whether the consequence of such > baneful habits , or any other cause , a certain and speedy cure may be relied on by taking PERRY'S PURIFYING SPECIFIC PILLS , and by a strict attentioi to the directions pointed Oat in the treatise , which fully explains the dreaiful re » ulu arising from these melancholy cases . MESSRS . PERRY & CO ., SURGEONS , may 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 , as will be the means of aflecting a permanent and effectual cure , after all other meant have proved ineffectual . Lette r * for advice must be post paid , and contain the usual fee of one pound ;
Sold by the principal Medicine Seller * in every Market Town in England , Scotland , Wales , and Ireland ; also on the Continent , and North and South America . Sold at the Intelligencer Office , and by Heaton , Townsend , Reinhardt and Son , Tarbotton , Rhodes , Trant , Leeds ; "Wbitoker , Hardcantle , Ridge , Gillatt , Fisher , "WrvakiJ , Slack , Sheffield ; "Woodhead& Nail , CUugbton & Co ., Chesterfield j Sissous , Worksop ; R . Collinuon , W . Gething , Mansfield ; J . Fowler , East Redford ; G . Harrison , J . Walls , Barnsley ; Adams , Selby ; Greaves , Fall , Knaresbro '; Hurst , Cardwell , Staafield , Wakefield ; Stanfield , Kfighley ; Cooper , Bradford ; Hartley , Berry , Leyland &Son , Halifax ; England , Jacob , Fell , Spivey , Huddersfield ; Briee , Parkinxoo , Priestly , Pontefract ; Foggitt , Peat , Thiwfc ; Palby , WetherUy : Stafford , Brook & Co ., Doncaster ; T . S . Brook , Dewsbury ; Wilkinson , Skipton ; Langdale , Northallerton ; Goldthorp , Tadcaster ; Bowman , Richmond ; Rhodes ,
Snaith ; Richardson & Son , Low Harrogate ; B . Moxon , Meynell , Ross & Burton , J . Havcroft , Lee ; & Perrins , Hull ; Dennis & Son , Bellerby , Deighton & Moxon , T . Marsh , R . Burdekin , H . Southeran , W . & J . Hargrove , York : Earle , Ramsden , Beverley ; Ainsworth , S . Turner , Chamley , Fox , Scarbro '; AUathorne , Pocklington ; Kirhy , Market Weighton ; Turlay , Howden ; Sherwood , Driffield ; Furby , Bridlingten ; Atkin « on , Kirby Moorside ; Anderson , Ripon ; Yeoman , Whitby ; Smith , Guisborough ; Flower , Malton ; Duck , Stokesley ; Christopher & Co ., Stockton ; Wilson , Rotherham ; Robinson , Beroughbrid ^ e ; Collinson , Cave ; Hall , Easingwold ; Cass , Goole ; Barkers , Helmsley ; Harrington , Hunbanby ; Hawkins , M . a » ham ; Longbotbam , Midnleham ; Walker , Foster , Otley : Atkinson & Son , Pickering ; . Knowles , Thoroe ; Sutton , Nottingham ; Woodward , Leicester ; aud sold by most respectable Medicine Tenders . throughout thw Kingdom .
London . —Barclay and Son , Farringdon-strett , Butler , 4 , Cbeapside , Edwards , St . Paul ' s Church Yard . N . B . —Country Druggists , Booksellers , Patent Medicine Venders , and every other Shopkeeper can be oipplied with anj quantity of P « rry '» Purifying Specific Pills , with the usual allowance to the trade , by Barclay , and Son Farnngdon-street ; T . Butler , 4 , Cheaps > ide ; Edwards , 67 , St . Paul ' s Church Yard ; Sutton and Co ., Cow Church Yard ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; and by all other wholesale patent Medicine Houses in London .
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One of the Drs . BERRY teill attend every MO RD AY and TUESDAY , at Mrs . Bennett ' s , Yerk ' Place , HUDDKRSFIELD ; every WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY at No . 4 , George Street , facing Eastlrook Chapel , BRADFORD ; and every day at their principal Establishment , 16 , PARK-SQUARE , LEEDS . j * TREATISE IS JUST PUBLISHED ON THE VENEREAL & SYPHILITIC DISEASES , AND GIVEN WITH EACH BOX OF
DR . HENRY'S FRENCH MEROINE PILLS , p OJSTAINING plain and practical directions for the effectual cure of all degrees of the above com * KJ piaiBta with observations on seminal weakness arisingfroa eariy abuses and the deplorable conse-} uences resulting from the use of mercury , the whole intended for the instruction of general readers , so | i | hat all persons can obtain an immediate cure with secrecy and safety . Prepared and sold bv the sole Proprietor , at No . 16 , PARK SQUARE , Leeds , where they may be consulted as usual . In Boxes , « . 3 d . and 4 » . 6 d . « ach . With each Box t » given directions how to take these Pills , observation * on points oeneficial to the patient , being hints worth knowing by those who are , or have been , sufferers from this ireadful and devastating malady . That cruel disease which has destroyed so many thoneands is now unhappily so well knows that a recital of its effects is quite unnecessary , its malignant influence extending by inheritance from family to family , and when the great Doctor Henry became professor to the University , ** he conferred ah invaluable benefit upon mankind by the discovery of his grand panacea for the cure of this de plorable complaint The certainty with which the Pills are continually administered can be attested by many thousands who u-e annuAlly cured by them . What medicine can be more appropriate than that which has given such SeHeral satisfaction ? The French Pills root out every particle of the insidious poison , purifying in their ? r 8 rei ! l the whole " mass of fluids . They pot only remove the disease but they renovate by their action the different functions of the body—expelling the grouser humour , and in a manner so imperceptible as to convince the most sceptical of their astonishing and unequalled powers . They neither contain mercury aoruny other mineral , ana may be taken without the slightest suspicion of discovery ; they require no restraint of diet , lost of tame , or hindrance of business , but effect a complete cure without the least exposure to the patient . At any period when the slightest suspicion may exintit will be well to have recourse to the French Pills ; for when taken before the disease has made its appearance they act at a certain preventive , removing the complaint effectually and secretly . The deplorable state in which many persons have $ een when visiting the Doctor ( from the use of mercury ) renders it imperatively necessary to caution the public tgainstthat dangerous mineral when injudiciously administered . The Doctor , after an extensive practice of Thirty Yearf , has rendered his counsel as object of the utniort consequence to all who are labouring under hereditary or deep seated maladies ; to those troubled wrth-senunal weakness , his advice will be invaluable ; hundreds have owned his skill in these complaints . To the youth of both sexes , whether lured from health by the promptings of passion , or the delusions of inexperience , his adviceis superior ; in hi » practice he unite * a mild gentleness of treatment , audposaessing m thorough a knowledge of his art , the most deplorable case * afford no ttsistance to his skill . His exten . nve practice has rendered him the depositary of many distressing secretaVhieh are kept with unblemished faith and honour ; 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 amount to a delicacy as destructive as it is false and unnecessary . To the neglect of such attention , are attributable many of those hapless instances , which , while they excite the commiseration of the beholder , should also impress him with the fear « f self-reproach . To all such , then , we address ourselves , offering hop *—energy—muscular strength—felicity ; nor ought our advances to appear questionable , sanctioned a » they are by the multiplied proofs of thirty years' successful experience . Letters ( post paid ) inclosing a remittance , answered by the return ofpost , and Medicine * punctually transmitted , to any address , either hy nitials , or name . Back entrance , West-Street , One Door irom St . Paul ' s Church . - With each Bex will be given practical observations , gratuitously , on the above disease . The Doctor will attend daily at Ws principal residence , No . 16 , Park Square , from Eight in the mornlig till Ten at night , and on Sunday Irom Nine till Two , where he will admirister advice to any one taking these Pills , or aav other of his Pre . arations , without a fee .
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A CERTAIN DISEASE CURED WITHIN ONE WEEK AT BRADFORD AND L ^ EDS . —^— £ & 5 &g lSf&KB § E&SBMitlMSKB&BB ^ BEGS to announce , that in order to asconunodate H yi . P « ? ^ 7 /^^ pQ ^ V 7 ^^ |^ mH ^ ° * Patients who have visited him from Bradiord , ^^ AAft ^ iffio ffi ¦^ WrJiiJ ffN M !/ ik ^ nl an ( ^ t ' nt ; > 8 bbourhood , he has been induced to attend ^ BHHBXBB |^ j ^ p * BnMnKBfl 5 B { that place , and may be consulted every Thursday , at fl ^^^ Bv 47 i . ? Xft 3 vr # Af /^ flHiHn ^ ° * > ^ ea ^ ^ 'ane ) vext to the Junction Inn , from ^^^^^ U ^^^ I |^ UH | Ten o'Cleck in the Morning to Five in the Evening ; ^^ BHpBVV' ^^ DIWBHIMBKHBJi ^ and during the other days of th « week , as usual , at its own bouse No . 60 , Bpttom of / Templar ' ii Street , Leeds . He continues , with unabated assiduity , to eradicate every species of infection . ' In recenj case * , a perfect cure is completed within a week , or no ( sbarge made for medicines after the expiration of that period ; and in those of the utmoatinveteraey , where other practitioners have failed , a proper perseverance in his plan of treatment insures to the patient a safe , well grounded , and lasting re-estabhsbment . > He hopes that the nuccessful , easy , and expeditious mode he has adopted , of eradicating every ymptom of a Certain Disease , without any material alteration in diet , or hindrance of business , and yet ^ reserving the constitution in full vigour and free from injury , will < establish his claims for support . As this Disea . se is one which is likely to be contracted whenever exposure takes place , it isnollike many other visitors , once in life , but on the contrary , one infection may scarcely bavebeen removed , when another may unfortunately be imbibed , therefore the Practitioner requires real judgment in order to treat each particular Ca »« ia * uch a manner as notmerelv to remnrn t > i « -nrpapnt « . tf !» £ > V . Ymt tn nrpa < irv * . * K «»
^ jnxtitution unimpaired , in caue of a repetition at no distant period . The man of experience can trail himself of the greatest improvement * in modem 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 , * fter due consideration of all circumstances . In th » same manner at birth , appearances often take al&c <» in children , which call foT a proper knowledge and acquaintance with the diseas * . , in order to iiKcrjminate their real nature , and which may be the means of bow ing domestic discord , unless managed b y the Surgeon with propriety and skill ; but instead of possessing the proper Qualifications , so essential to the Practitioners in thi * in » iduous Complaint , you often find low Mechanics vilely pretending to have itudied the Healing Art j acd deluding the Unwary by their nefarious Nostrum *; it in these Men who are the niort arrogant in thur pretenuions , who , by want of skill destroy more than even Pestilence and thv Sword . Can Patient ? therefore , labouring nnder this Complaint be t » o cautious into whose Hands they commit themselves ?—the Propriety of this remark is abundantly manifest by the same Patient frequently passing the Orde&l of several Practitioners before lie is fortunate enough to obtain a perfect Cure . Were Patient * sufficiently aware of the Ri * k they encountered , when they commit so serious a charge as Life to illiterate and inexperienced Hand *; and were they to be Witnesses of the excruciating Sufferings of too many unhappy Victim * wbo are sacrificed to improper Treatment , they would pause bvfore they proceed , ind would inquire further than the plausible Hand-bills and Advertisements presented to their Eyes , by ielf-recomtpendcd Nostrummongers and Emperief " . The following are some of the many symptoms that distinguish this Disease : —a general debility , eruptions on the bead , face , and body ; ulcerated sore throat * , scrofula , swelling * in the neck , nodes on the shin bones , cancers , fistula , pains in the head ind limbs , which are frequently mistaken for rheumatism , &c . &c . Patients in the country , by stating their canes and enclosing a remittance , may have proper remedies « ent to the amount , with directions so simple and plain , that parties of either sex may cur « themselves vithout even the knowled ge of a bedfellow . Mr . W's . invariable rule in to give a Card to each of his Patients , as a guarantee for Cure , which he pledges himself to perform , or to return his Fee . V Attendance from Eight in the Morning , until Ten in the Evening , and on Sundays till Two . fif For the greater convenience of bis Patients , Mr . WILKINSON will attend every Thursday , from Ten in the Morning to Five in the Evening , at No . 2 , Dead Lane , next to the Junction Inn , Bradford . ' V All Letters mmt be Past Paid .
; The Bath Western Meeting Of Delegates.
; THE BATH WESTERN MEETING OF DELEGATES .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Feb. 9, 1839, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1044/page/2/
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