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Just Published, Price 2s 6d. (Or Bent free to the moBt remote parts of the Kingdom, in a sealed envelope, on the receipt of a post-office order for 3s 6d.)
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Untitled Article
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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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THE SECBET WIEDICAL ADVISER BEING a practical Treatise on the prevention and cure of the VENEREAL DISEASE , and other affections of the uriuaxy and sexual organs , in both sexes , "with a mild and successful mode of treatment , in all their forms and consequences ; especially Stricture , Gleets , affections of the Bladder , Prostrate Glands , Gravel , &o ; shewing also the dangerous conseqnences of Mercnry , such as eruptions of the skin , pain in the bones , } &o-, with plain directions for a perfect restoration ; embellished with engravings . An ample consideration of the diseases of women ; also nervou debility ; including a comprehensive dissertation on the anatomy of Marriage , impuissance , celibacy , sterillity or barrenness , and various other interruptions of the Laws of nature . AJbo some animadversions on the Secret Sin of Youth , which entails sucb fearful consequences on its victims . $ g » This Work is undeniably the mest interesting and important that fhas hitherto been published on this subject , imparting information which ought to be in the possession of every one who is labouring under any secret infirmity , whether male or female . BY Mj WILKINSON , CONSULTING SURGEON , &o . 13 , Trafalgar Street * Leeds . Of whom they may be obtained , or from any of bis Agents . MB . M . W . having devoted his studies for many years exolnsively tojthe various diseases of the generative and nervous system , in the removal of those distressing debilities , arising from a Beoret indulgence in a delusive and destructive habit , and to . tho successful treatment of VENEREAL AND SYPHILITIC DISEASES , Continues to be consulted from nine in the morning till ten at night , and on Sundays till two , —and country patients requiring his assistance , by making only one personal vjsit , will receive such advice and medicines as will enable them to o- tain a permanent and effectual cure , when all other means have failed . In recent cases of a certain disorder a perfect cure is completed in one week , or no charge made for medicine after that period , and in those cases where other practitioners have failed , a perseverance in his plan , witnont restraint in diet , or hindrance from business ,-will ensure to the patieut a permanent and radical care . - , ¦ 3 , . A complete knowledge of the symptoms and treatment of these insidious and dangerous diseases , can only be acquired by those who are in daily practice , and have previoaslygone through a regular course of Medical Insibtjction ; for « unfortunately * there are hundreds who annually fall victims to the ignorant use of Mercury . and other dangerous remedies , administered by illiterate men , who rain the constitution Ly Buffering ^ disease to get into the system , which being carried i by the circulation of the blood into all parts of the body , the whole frame becomes tainted with venereal poison , and most unhappy consequenceB ensne , at one time affecting tno skin , particularly the head and face , with eruptions and nlcers , closely resembling , and often treated as scurvy , at another period producing the most violent pains m the limbs and bones , which are frequently mistaken for rheumatism ; thus the whole frame becomes debilitated and decayed , and a lingering death puts a period to their dreadful Bufferings . What a grief for a ? young person in the very prime of life , to be snatched ont of time , and from all the enjoymentB of life , by a disease always lo ? al at first , and -which never proves : fatal if properly treated , as all its fatal xeBultB axe owing cither to neglect or ignorance . Mr , W . ' b invariable rule is to give a Card to each of his Patients as a guarantee tor cure , which he pledges himself to perform , or rotura his fee . _ For the aeeomodation of either sex , where distance or delicacy prevents a personal visit , his PURIFYING DROPS . price 4 s . 6 d . can be had of any of the following agents , with printed ! directions so plain , that they may cure themselves without even the knowledge of a bed-fellow . They are particularly recommended to be taken before persons enter into the matrimonial state , lest tbe indiscretions of a parent are the source of vexa-
Untitled Ad
tion tojbim , the remainder of his existence , by afflicting his innooent but unfortpnate offspring with the evil eruptions of the malignant tendency , and a variety of other complaints , that are most assuredly introduced by the same negleot and imprudence . : AGENTS . Hpti—At the Advertiser Office , Lowgate , and Mr . Noble's Bookseller , Market-place . Leeds . —Afc the Times Office , and of Mr . Heaton 7 , Briggate , i Wakefleld—Mr . Hnrst , Bookseller . Halifax—Mr . Hartley , Bookseller . Huddersfleld—Mr . Dewhirsfc , 39 , New-street . Bradford—Mr . Taylor , Bookseller , near to the Post-office . ¦' . ' ¦ . London—Mr . Butler , No . 4 . Cheapside . Barnsley— -Mr . Harrieon , BooSscller , Market * place , j Yorfe—Mr . Hargrove ' s Library , 9 , Coney-street . Ripon-pMr . Harrison , Bookseller , Market-place . Knareaboro ' and High-Harrogate—Mr Langdale , Bookseller . Manchester—Mr . Watkmson , Druggist , 6 , Markei-pla . ee . Beverley- ^ -Mr . Johnson , Bookseller . Boston—Mr . Noble , Bookseller . Loath—Mr . fturton , Bookseller . Liverpool—At the Chronicle Office , 25 , Lord-Btreet . i Sheffield—At the Iris Office . Mansifield—Mr , S . Dobson , Newa-agent , 519 , Belvedere sneet . Pontefraot—Mr , Fox , Bookseller . Gainahorough—Mr . R . Brown , Bookseller . Nottingham—Mr . Sutton , Review Office . Newark— -Mr Bridges , Bookseller . Mr , W ., is to be consulted : every day at his Residence , from Nine in the morning till Ten at Night , and on Sundays from Nine till Two . OBSERVE—18 , TRAFALGAR-ST . LEEDS . Attendance over Thursday in Bradford , from Ten to Five , ! ait No 4 , George-street , facing East Brook Chapel .:
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C GRIMSHAW and Co . 10 , Gore © Piazzas , Liverpool , are the sole Agents for Second Cabin and Steerage Passengers by the "OLD" ! or "BLACK BALL" Line of Packet Ships , from Liverpool for New York , sailing punctually en the 7 th and 19 th of each Month ; they have also other first-rate American Ships for New York , on the 1 st , 13 th , or 25 th of each month , and occasionally to PHILADELPHIA , BOSTON , BALTIMORE , and NEW ORLEANS . TO QUEBEC AND NEW SOUTH WALES . Applications , personally or by letter , will be promptly attended to , and the lowest rates and every information given .
Untitled Ad
Just Published , price 2 b . 6 d . and sent free , " enclosed 1 in a sealed envelope" on receipt of a Post-office Order ifor 3 s . 6 d . MANLY VIGOUR : a Popular Inquiry into the CONCEALED CAUSES of its PREiVI ATURE DECLINE ; with Instructions for its COMPLETE RESTORATION , addressed to those suffering from the Destructive Consequences of Excessive indulgence in : Solitary and Delusive Habits ' , Youthful Imprudence , or Infection ; including a comprshensive Dissertation on Marriage , with directions for the removal of Disqualifications , and Remarks on the Treatment of Ghonorrboe , Gleet , Stricture and Syphilis . Illustrated with Cases , &o . BY C . J . LUCAS , &CO ., CON 8 t 7 LTJNG SURGEONS , tONDON J And may be had of the Authors , 60 , Newmanstreet , Oxford-street , London ; and sold by Brittan 11 , Paternoster-row ; J . Gordon , 146 , Leadenhallstreet ; G . Mansell , 3 , King-street , Southwark ; C , Westerton , 15 , Park-side , Knightsbridge ; H . Phillips , 264 , Oxford-street ; Field , 65 , Quadrant , Regent-street ; Huett , 141 , High Holborn , London ; J . Buckton , Bookseller , 50 , Briggate ^ Leeds ; J . Noble , 23 , Market-place , Hull ; W . Lawson , 51 , Stono gate , York , and W . fiarraclough , 40 , Fargate . Sheffield ; T . Sowler , Courier Office , 4 j St . Ann s Square ^ and H . Whitmore , 109 , Market Street , Manchester ; W . Howoli , Booksollei-, 75 , Dale Street ; and J . Howell , 54 , Waterioofplace , Church-street ; Liverpool ; W . Wood , Bookseller , 78 , High Street , Birmingham ; W . AH . Robinson ; & Co . 11 , Greenside-atreet , Edinburgh ; T . Price , ' 93 , Dame-street , Dublin ; and by all Booksellers in the United Kingdom . ** The various forms of bodily and mental weakness incapacity suffering and disease , faithfully delineated in this cautiously written and practical work , are almost unknown , generally misunderstood , and treated upon principles correspondingly erroneous and superficial , by the present-race of medical practitioners , j Hence the necessity ! for the publication o ( a timely safeguard , a silent yet friendly monitor , or , where debility has made threatening inroads * the means of escape and the certainty of restoration . The evils ito which tbe book adverts are extensive and identical in their secret ypd hidden origin , and there are ! none to whom , as ! Parents , Guardians , Heads of Families , and especially of public Schools , is confided the care of young people , who ought to remain fox a moment devoid of that informaiiou and those salutary caationa this work is intended to convey . Not | only are the most delicate forms of generative debility neglected by the family physician-, but they reauire for their safe ; management the exclusive study of a life entirely ! abstracted from the routine of general practice , and < as iii other departments of the profession ) attentively concentrated in the daily land long continued obearvation requisite for the correct treatment of sexual infirmities . " If we consider the to pics upon either in a moral orsooial view , we find the interests and welfare of mankind seriously involved . The effects of lioentious , indiscriminate and secret indulgence in certain practices , ate described with an accuracy and force which display at } once profound reflection and extensive practical experience . "— The Planet . "The best of all friends is the Professional Friend and in no shape can he be consulted with greater safety and secrecy than in " Lucas on Manly Vigour . " [ The initiation into vicious indulgenceits progress—its results in both sexes , arie given with faithful , but alas ! for human nature , with afflicting truth . However , the Authors hive not exposed the evil without affording a remedy . It shows how " Manly Vigour ? ' temporarily impaired , and mental and physical emasculation , produced by uncontrolled indulgence of the passions , can be restored ; how the sufferer , who has pined in anguish from the consequences of : early indiscretion— -afraid almost to encounter his follow man , can regain the vigour of health and moral courage . The work is written in a concise and perspicuous style , displaying how often fond parents aredeceivedby the Outward physical appearance of their youthful offspring ; howtheattenuationof the frame , t > alpitationof the neart , deranKeineiit of the nervous system , cough , indigestion , and a train of 8 ymptoms indicative of consumption or general decay , are often ascribed to wrong causes j and instead of being the natural results of congenital debility or disease , are the consequences of an alluring and pernicious practice , alike destructive to the mind and body . " ^ -Bell ' s New Weekly Messenger . ** Although a newspaper is nofc the ordinary channel for the expression of opinion upon the merits of a medical work , this remark la open to exception in any instance where tho public , and not the isolated and exclusive members of the profession , are the parties addtessed . Upon that which is directed to men indiscriminately , the world wiU form its own opinion , and will demand thaiiniedical works tor popular study should be devoid of that mysterious technicality iu which tho science of medicine has hitherto shrouded its own ignorance . The work before us treats of subjects we believe generally , yet very strangely , neglected by the medical attendant , and requiring doubtlessly ( as in operative midwifery aud the surgery of the eye ) an entire devotedness to a deeply important branch of study . Tho tone of this book is highly moral , and it abounds in well-, written , harrowing , yet correct displays of the suffering consequent upon unbridled sensualism . No human beink oan be the worse for its perusal ; to multitudes it must prove a warning beacon , a welltold appeal ito reason , a permanent blessing . It is written in a clear intelligible style , and is evidently the production of a mind long and practically conversant iwith . tbe diseases of the most delicate division of the'human organization . "^— The Magnet . " The security of happiness in the marriage stats is tho jchief anxiety of all ; but many dread entering upon wedded union , through a secret fear of unfitness for the discharge of matrimonial obligations . This essay is most particularly addressed to all sufferingfuhder a despondency of the character alluded to ; a , nd advice will be found calculated to cheer the drooping heart , and point the way to renovated' healthl' ^ MesBrs . Lucas & Co . are to be daily consulted from ten till -two , and from five till eight in the evening , at their residence , No . 60 , Newman-street , Oxfotfd-Btreet , London . Country Patients are requested to be as minute as possible in the detail of their oases , as to the duration of the complaint , the symptoms , age , general habits of living , aii < i occupation in lifo of'the party , The communication must be accompanied by the usual consultation [ fee of £ h without which no notice whatever can be taken of their application ; and in & 11 cases the most inviolable secrecy may be relied on . Sold by Me . Joseph Buckton , Bookseller , 50 Brige&ie , Loads ; ana Mr . W . Lawson , 51 , Stonegate , York ; by whom this Work is sent ( post-paid ) iii a sealed « nvelope for 3 a 6 d .
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Just Published * the 12 th Edition , Prico 4 s ., and sent Free to any part of the United Kingdom on the receipt olf a Post Office Order , for 5 s . THE SIXENT FRIEND , A MEDICAL wloRK on the INFIRMITIES of the GENERATIVE SYSTEM , in both sexes ; being an enquiry into the concealed cause that destroys physijeal energy , and the ability of manhood , ere vigour has established oat empire : — with Observations on the baneful effects of SOLITARY INDULGENCE and INFECTION ; loca and constitutional ] WEAKNESS , NERVOUS IRRITATION , CONSUMPTION , and on the partial or total EXTINCTION of the REPRODUCTIVE POWER . S ; with means of restoration . the destructive effects of Gonorrhea , Gleet v Stricture , aud Secondary Symptoms are explained in a familiar manner ; the Work is Embeixished with Engrav * ings , representing the deleterious influence of Mercury on the skin , by [ eruptions on the head , face , and body ; with appboved mode op cure for both sexes . ; followed by observations on the Obligations of MARRIAGE , and healthy perpetuity ; with directions for the removal ! of Physical and Constitutional Disqualifications : the whole pointed out to suffering humanity as a "SILENT FRIEND" to be consulted without exposure , and with assured confidence of success . R . and L . PERRY , and Co ., Consulting Surgeons , London and Birmingham . Published by tho Authors , and sold by Buckton , 50 , Briggate , Leedaf ; Strange , PateruosteT-ro'w ; Wilson , 18 , Bishopgate-street : Purkis , Comptonstreet , Soho ; Jackson ; and Co ., 130 , New Bond-street , London : Guest , Steelhouse-lane , Birmingham ; and by all Booksellers in Town and Country .
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THE CORDIAL BALM OF SYRIACUM . Is a gentle stimulant and renovator of the impaired fnnotions of life , andjie exclusively directed to tho cure of the Generative System , whether constitutional or acquired , loss of soxual power , and debility arising from Syphilitic disease ; and is calculated to afford decided relief to those * who , by early indulgence in solitary habits , have Weakened the powers of their system , and fallen intp a state of chronic debility , by which the constitution is left In a deplorable state , and that nervous mentality kept np which places the individual in a state of anxiety for the remainder of life . Tbe consequences arising from this dangerous practice , are not confined to its pure physical result , but branch to moral oues leading the excited deviating mind into a fertile field of seducive error , — into agradual but total degradation of manhood—into ' & pernicious application of these inherent rights which nature wisely instituted for the preservation of her species ; bringing on premature decripituda , and all the habitudes of eld ago : —such a one carries with him the form and aspect of other men , out without the vigour and energy of that season which his early youth bade him hope to attain . How many men cease to bo men , or , at least , cease to enjoy manhood at thirty ? flow many at eighteen receive the impression of the seeds of Syphilitic disease itself 1 the consequences ] of which travel out of the ordinary track of bodily ailment , covering the frame with disgusting evidence of its ruthless nature , and impregnating the wholesome stream of life with mortal poison ; conveying into families ^ the seeds of . disunion and unhappinees ; undermining domestic harmony ; and striking at the very soul of human intercourse . j The fearfully abused powers of the humane Generative System require the most cautious preservation ; and the debility and ^ disease resulting from early indiscretion demand , for the cure of those dreadful evils , that such medicine should be employed that is most certain to be successful . It is for these cases Messrs * Perry and Col , particularly designed their CORDIAL BALM OF SYRIACUM which is intended to relieve those persons , who , by an immoderate indulgence of ] their passions , havo ruined their constitutions , or in their way to the consummation of that deplorable state , are affected with any of those previous symptoms that betray its approach , as the various affections of the nervous system , obstinate gleeis , excesses , irregularity , obstructions of certain evacuations , weakness , total impotency , barrenness ] &c . As nothing can be j better adapted to help and nourish the constitution , so there is nothing more generally acknowledged to be peculiarly efficacious in all inward waitings ' , loss of appetite , indigestion , depression of spirits , trembling or shaking of the hands or limbs , obstinate coughs , shortness of breath , or consumptive habits . It possesses wonderful efBoaoy in all cases of syphilis , fits , head-ache , weakness , heaviness , and lowncss of spirits , dimness of sfght , confused thoughts , wandering of the mind , vapours , and melancholy ; and all kinds of hysteric complaints are gradually removed by its use . And even where the disease jof Sterility appears to have taken the firmest hold of the female constitution , the softening tonic qualities of the Cordial Balm of Syriacum will warm and purify the blood and jaices , increase the animal spirits , invigorate and revive the whole animal machiue , land remove the usual impediment to maturity . | This medicine is particularly recommended to be taken before persons enter into the Matrimonial . State , lest in . the eventjof procreation occurring , the innocent offspring should bear enstampeduponit the physical characters derivable from parental debility , or evil eruptions of a malignant tendency , that are most assuredly introduced by the same neglect and imprudence . Sold in Bottles , price lls . each , or the quantity of four in one Family bottle for 33 s ., by which one lls bottle is saved . Prepared only by Messrs . PERRY & Co ., Surgeons , 19 , Bornera-street , Oxford-street , London , and 4 , Groat Charles-street , Birmingham . Observe , none are genuine without the signature of R . and L . BERRY and Co . impressed in a stamp onjthe outside of each wrapper to imitate which is felony of the deepest dye . The Five Pound cases , ( the { jurckasing of which will be a saving of one pound twelve shillings ;) may be had as usual at 19 , Bemers-street , Oxford-street , London , aud i , Great Charles-street , Birmingham , ' and Patients in the country who require a course of this admirable medicine , Rhojuld send Five Pounds by letter , which will entitle them to the full benefit of such advantage . May be had of all Booksellers , Druggists , and Patent Medicine Venders in town and country throughout the United Kingdom ! the Continent of Europe and America . | Messrs . PERRY expect when consulted by letter , the usual fee one pound , without which , no notice whatever can be taken of the communication . Patients are requested ] to be as minute as possible in the detail of their cases , as to the duration of the complaint , the symptoms , a ^ o , habits of living , and general occupation . Medicines can be forwarded to any part of the world ); no difficulty can occur as they will be securely packed , and carefully protected from observation . PERRY'S PURIFYING SPECIFIC PILLS , Price 2 s . 9 d ., 49 . 6 d ., and lls . per box , ( Observe the signaturejof R . and L , PERRY and Co . on the outside of each wrapper ) are well known throughout Europe and America , to be the most certain and effectual cure ( ever discovered for every stage and symptom of the Venereal Disease , in both sexes , including Gonorrhoea , Gleets , Secondary Symptoms , Strictures , Seminal Weakness , Deficiency , and all diseases ] of tbe Urinary Passages , without Ios 9 of time , confinement , or hindrance from business . They have effected tho most surprising cures , not only in recent and severe cases , but when ' < salivation and all other means have failed ; and are of the utmost importance to those afflicted with Scorbutic Affections , Eruptions on any part of the body , Ulcerations , Scrofulous or Venereal Taint , bein $ justly calculated to [ oleanso the blood from all foulness , counteract everj morbid affection , and restore weak and emaciated institutions to pristine health and vigour . I It is & melancholy fact that thousands fall victims to this horrid disease , owing to the unskilfulness ef illiterate men ; who by the use of that deadly poison , mercury , rain the constitution , causing ulcerations , blotches on the head , face , and body , dimness of sight , noise in the ears , deafness , obstinate gleets , nodes on the shin bones , ulcerated sore throat , diseased nose , with nocturnal pains in tbe head and limbs , till at length a general debility of the constitution ensues , and a melancholy death puts a period to their dreadful sufferings . Messrs . Perry and Co ., jSurgeon 8 , may be consulted as usual , at 19 , Bernefs-gtreet , Oxford-street , London , and 4 , Great Gharles-street , four doors from Easy-row . ) Birmingham , punctually , from Eleven in the Morning until eight in : the Evening , and on Sundays from Eleven till One . Only one personal visit is required from a country patient , to enable Messrs . Perry and Co ., to give such advice as will be zi ; means of effecting a permanent and effectual care , acter all other means have proved ineffectual . j N . B . Country Druggists , Booksellers , Patent Medicine Venders , and every other Shopkeeper oan be supplied with any quantity of Perry ' s Purifying Specific Pills , and Cordial ] Balm of Syriacum , with the usua ^ allowance to the Tirade , by most of the principle Wholesale Patent Medicine ] Houses iu London . Sold by Mr . Heaton , Briggate , Lee . ds *
Untitled Ad
THE BEST MEDICINE IN THE WORLD !!! BEAD I AND JODGE FOB TOUBSKLVES ! ! rpHE following statement of facts baa beencom-X munioated to the Proprietors of PARR'S LIFE PILLS :-Messrs . T . Roberts and Co . Malton , Jan . 30 , 1843 . Gentlemen , —Though it is but a very short time since I last wrote for a supply of Parr ' s Life Pals , I find that owing to an astonishing increase in the sale of them , I am again compelled to request you to send me twenty dozen of the small , as also a supply of the large size . I should wish you to forward them by railway to York , thence by carrier , as early as possible , as I am afraid my present stock will be exhausted before they reach me ; I enclose you the oase of a person who resides in Malton , and whose testimony may be relied upon as being strictly correct . This is but one case selected from an almost incredible number of others , which have come under my notice , in which cures hare been effected by tha use of Parr ' s Life Pills . Many highly respectable persons in this neighbourhood , who previous to the introduction of Pair ' s Life Pills had a decided dislike to Patent Medicines , are now thankful that they are able to add their testimonials to the beneficial effeetJf of these pills . By forwarding me , without delay , the . quantity of pills as ordered above , you will oblige , Gentlemen , yours , respectfully » J . WRANGHaM . Gentlemen , —When I consider the very greafc relief 1 have experienced from the use of Parr ' s Life Pills , I think it not only to be my duty to you but to rvery one who may be suffering from similar complaints with which I have been afflicted , to make my astonishing case as public as possible . For along time past I have been greatly troubled With a most severe nervous complaint , giddiness , and swimming in the head , which increased to such a degree that at times I was compelled to leave off from my work ] being unable to bear the least fatigue or excitement . At the suggestion of many of my friends , I was induced to try various medicines , but found , that my complaint instead of diminishing , was daily growing worse . Having fortunately beard of the beneficial offsets of Parr ' s Lite Pills , I resolved to give them a fair trial , though I must confess with but little hopes of deriving benefit from them , aft ^ r having tried so many other medicines without success ; I immediately purchased a small sized box of Mr . Wrangham , chemist , the only agent for the sale of them in Malton , and fortunato indeed has it been for me that I did so , for though 1 have just finished taking this one box , I find myself so far relieved that instead of daily , nay hourly , suffering from that dreadful complaint , nervousness , with its attendant miseries , I am restored to my former good health ; my nerves are strong—the giddiness and swimming in my head are totally removed , and I am now able to attend regularly to my trade . Allowing you to make whatever use you may think proper of this statement and eling truly grateful for the benefit I have obtained from taking Parr ' s Life Pills . I am , Gentlemen , your obedient Servant , THOMAS PATTISON , Painter . N . B . I shall be glad to answer any enquiries respecting the gnod tho pills have done me . To Mr . T . Roberts and Co ., Crane Court , Fleetstreet , London . A most extraordinary Case of Cure communicated , by Mrs . Moxon of York . Mrs . Mathers , of that City , had for many years been affected with a most inveterate disease , which her medical attendants pronounced fp be Cancer . It originated in her breast , and continued to spread nearly all over her body , defying every effort of surgical skill . Parr ' s Life Pills being recommended to her , she resolved to give them a trial ; and , speaking of the result , ehe says she cannot express the inconceivable advantage which she haa already derived from them . She further states that she is now almost well , and ascribes her convalescence solely to the persevering use of that sovereign medicine Parr ' s Life Pills . . From Mr . R . Turner , Lewton . To Messrs . T . Roberts & Co ., Crane Court , Fleetstreet , London . Lenton , near Nouiu ^ ' . ^ u , Dec . 12 , 1842 . Dear Sir . —I beg leave to tender you my warmest thanks for the great benefit which I have recieved from your valuable Parr's Life Pills in Jfoe cure of a distressing species of fluttering , or palpitation of the heart , which I experienced some years , and which has now , by the use of three small boxes of your invaluable medicine , entirely left me ; and indeed , I now enjoy better health and spirits than I have dons for some time . Hoping you will , for the benefit of the public atlarge , make my case known , I remain , Gentlemen , yours , very gratefully , RICHARD TURNER . N . B . —Any person who may not credit this statement may , by referring to me , obtain satisfactory answers to thoir enquiries . R . T . From F . Mattheisz , Jaffra , Ceylon . Jaffra , October 17 th , 1842 . Sir , —I beg to inform you that having undertaken the small supply of the celebrated Parr ' s Life Pills , lately received Here from you by the Rev . P . Peroival , they have met with a very rapid sale , and the constantly increasing demand from every part of the province ensures to a very large extent success to the dealer , and good to the people at large . May I theieforo fake the liberty of requesting you will be good enough to send me 1000 boxes by the very first opportunity , making , if you please , the usual discount to purchasers of such large quantities . I beg to remark that the value of the above will be given by me into the hands of the Rev . Mr . Percival , who has kindly offered to be responsible to you for the same . I remain , your obedient ervant . F . MATTHEISZ . Please address me F . Mattheiez , Jafixa , Ceylon . To Messrs . T . Roberts and Co ., Proprietors of Parr ' Life Pills , Crane-Court , Fleet-street . Communicated by Mr . H . Foster , Chemist ; Winchester . East Stratton , near Winchester , Dec . 13 th , 1842 . Sir , — -You will remember I sent to your shop for a bottle of medicine round which was a paper containing testimonials of cures effected by the use Of Parr ' s Life Pills . Amongst many others I observed one ; a case of Rheumatism , which appeared to me similar to my own cage , and seeing it so successfully treated , simply by the use of Parr's Life Pills . I resolved upon giving that invaluable medicine a fair trial . I had been afflicted with Rheumatism many years , and at the time to which I refer was suffering acutely . I determined , as I have said , on giving Old Parr ' s remedy a fair trial ; and accordingly sent for a box of tbe Life Pills . By the use of these pills I am enabled to say that I am now as well as ever I havo been during tho whole of my life . Thank God , I can now walk as well as ever I did . At the time when I first tried Parr ' s Life Pills , I could scarcely walk during the day-time ; and at night I could get no sleep . lam now enjoying excellent health , and sleep soun-iiy , and lam free from pain of every kind . I am , Sir , yours , &o . JAMES DANIELLS . ( aged 50 yearn ) Mr . H . Foster , Chemist , Winchester . Parr ' s Life Pills are acknowledged to be all that is required to conquer disease and prolong life . No medicine yet offered to the world ever SQ rapidly attained such distinguished celebrity ; it is questionable if there now be any part of the civilized world where its extraordinary healing virtues have not been exhibited . This signal success is not attributable to any system of advertising , bnt solely to the strong recommendations of parties cured by their use . At this moment the Proprietors are in possession of nearly SQ 0 le . Uers . from influential , respectable , and intelligent members of society , all bearing testimony to the great and surprising . benefits resulting from tbe ase of the med ieine . This is a mass of evidence « n its favour such as no other medicine ever yet called forth , and places it in the proud distinct tion of being not only the most popalar but the most valuable remedy ever discovered . CACTION—BEWABE OF ISIITATIOK 3 . In order to protect the public from imitations , the Hon . Commissioners of Stamps have ordered the words Parr ' s Life Pills to be engraved on the Government Stamp , which is pasted round the sides of each box , ia white letters on a red srounrf . Without this mark of authenticity they are spurious and an imposition * Prepared by the Proprietors ! T . Roberts and Co ., 5 , Crane Court , Fleet-street , London ; and soid wholesale by their appointment , by E . Edwards , 57 , St . Pauls , also by Barclays and Sons , Farringdon-street , and Sutton and Co ,, Bow Churchyard ; Sold by Joshua Hobsos , Northern Star Office , Leeds ; and at 3 , Market Walk , Huddersfield ; and retail by at least . one agent in every town in tho United Kingdom , a " nd by most respectable dealers in medicine . Price Is . lid ., 2 s . 9 d ., and family boxes lls . each . Full direction ? are given with " each box . A most extraordinary Case of Cure communicated , by Mrs . Moxon of York . Mrs . Mathers , of that City , had for many years been affected with a most inveterate disease , which her medical attendants pronounced fp be Cancer . It originated in her breast , and continued to spread nearly all over her body , defying every effort of surgical skill . Parr ' s Life Pills being recommended to her , she resolved to give them a trial ; and , speaking of the result , ehe says she cannot express the inconceivable advantage which she haa already derived from them . She further states that she is now almost well , and ascribes her convalescence solely to the persevering use of that sovereign medicine Parr ' s Life Pills .
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A most extraordinary Case of Cure communicated , by Mrs . Moxon of York . Mrs . Mathers , of that City , had for many years been affected with a most inveterate disease , which her medical attendants pronounced fp be Cancer . It originated in her breast , and continued to spread nearly all over her body , defying every effort of surgical skill . Parr ' s Life Pills being recommended to her , she resolved to give them a trial ; and , speaking of the result , ehe says she cannot express the inconceivable advantage which she haa already derived from them . She further states that she is now almost well , and ascribes her convalescence solely to the persevering use of that sovereign medicine Parr ' s Life Pills . A most extraordinary Case of Cure communicated , by Mrs . Moxon of York . Mrs . Mathers , of that City , had for many years been affected with a most inveterate disease , which her medical attendants pronounced fp be Cancer . It originated in her breast , and continued to spread nearly all over her body , defying every effort of surgical skill . Parr ' s Life Pills being recommended to her , she resolved to give them a trial ; and , speaking of the result , ehe says she cannot express the inconceivable advantage which she haa already derived from them . She further states that she is now almost well , and ascribes her convalescence solely to the persevering use of that sovereign medicine Parr ' s Life Pills .
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DtJBlXN . —The lAh TJeiveaal Suffrage Associa tion held their Bml TreeKy meeting at their great iooHi « , Ifo . 14 , 2 Jorth Anne Street , at six o'doti on gnntlaj last " Mr . Henry Clari yns called to the chair . The CHAIBJUS begged leave to remark , before toe jegnlar business of the ineefcinij commenced , that owing tosometotgBlKityaiae-post-cffice , or unusual del ^ y * I the jiaverpool imS , tte Jforlhtm Star , -winch should have been delivered to Mr .: i > jott * s *^ ht o ' clock last 3 Bght , aid Sot arrive rtfll tJevsi * o'docfe lost morning ; and even tbsn toe letter earners did not-deliver the pared , alleging as a leaaon ihailt -was too btavy . Perhaps 28 x . Goaiy , 3 ie Sootca gentleman , who acts as secretary iere , gave diresfiens not to deliver any more lication to the Post
newspapers . However , an app 3 fc » ter Generalcan , and 3 k > doubt-waibe made ; andin flie event cf getting no xedrest in that quarter the snbjeci can i « irooghi belore Parliament ( Hear , hear ) Jt -saa advertised in three of the Dublin papers , on Saturday , that ibo Eorthern Star vould contain the ConsEpnndence betireen Mr . O'Hi ? idns and Ixsrf Eliot , -which TraspiibTiatiediatliB ^ fisi ^ y FteemajTs Journal , of 3 Smrsday . the 2 Otb , bnt mppressed by all the -weckij papers , leastaie « onn > ry people should see it , and see in it thai the ttIb calumny circulated and repeated over and OYer ' agzIn , fcy the ^ ions Liberator and his followers , -was nnfounfled . The ; -would see that Sr . O'Higgtn « vas not an Orangeman / although lids pidna old lentlemaiL , truo goes to "Wetland chapel every morning , had given currency to tbe slander , and sever jet made th 9 least atonement for it There vras an immense
vrowd . about Mr . DyotfB house at eight o ' clock last night , some of "whom aaid that sooner than not get the jwper they -sronld gire a shilling for it . He hoped that their * "Wf £ ib » h Chartist "brethren ironld send lbs paper containing this admirable correspondence to every part of Ireland . jHesr , hear . ) Mr . Ktotx read the rales and otjacfcB of the last day ' s proceedings -which -were confirmed . Mr . O'HIGGI 55 said that lie had several letters to raid , -Bbick he -vassare -would be Tery gratifying to the -rnpetrng , one ef Trlijch -was -from an Trfriwian "Who resided in ~ BnEtol . ana with -whose admirable and truly
patriotic vrnbngs the readers of the TtorBiem Star "were long familiar . "Who m it Uiat did not read -with pleasure and profit the letters in the Star , signed altexuately"yaite 8 " and "W . H . Glifbon "—( hear , hear ) . The leading of these letters in the Slar irere -a source of greatgratificaVion to Mm , ana llB derived considetaile infarmauoiiftom them . Jlr . Clifton is an Irishman , and it "will he grateful to his Irish heart to learn in his temporary odle the genuine -warmth -with -which his name has been hailed by his countrymen assembled hers today . Mi . O'Eiggins read Mr . Clifton ' s letter , -which "Was loudly cheered , ana concluded by moving Ms ad-¦
pnMym Mr . SniO 5 Tobis seconded the motion , and said that as an Irishman , he -was proud of Mr . Clifton . It 'was pleasing to see how men of talent anil integrity rallied round the standard of real political liberty , in Trptanrf , Chartism—( cheers ) . There is no liberty except in the Charter—( hear , hear ) . Where does the poor Imnest man find ibe least hope of redress for his manifold wrongs and grievances bnt in the Charter alone ? The-Charter Ja the poor man's mainstay—his last plank —his only hope . Xet as but gtt it , and every blessing vSl follow—( cheers ) . Hbttm proud of having had the opportunity of seconding the admission of Mr . Clifton —ihear , hear ) .
itr . O'Higgibs had the pleasure of proposing Mr . ChxiBtophEr Byrne , % znbtantSal and -wealthy fanner , for admission . He had some dealings - with Mr . Byrne & few days since , when he expressed a -wish to be informed a little upon Chartism . He had heard so much said against it that he -was -very anxious to know ^ ftt » Tnawnfwg ( jf Jfc . SOBBfi people told T >™ Ah « . V . Qxe CbartiEtB were % « t olunpnosipled men yho had comhined together for the purpose of depriTing oUier people of their property , CTerthrowing religion entirely ,
and » TrmMint 7 T > g the ty ""? i religion { hear , hear ) . Be { Hz . O * H . } explained the real principles and objects of Charfism , to which Mr . Byrne replied , Well then span my conseieBec , I bare keen a C&artlst all my life , aou ^ lDBTEi faiew ifbefore—Iheai ^ liear ) . Propose ibb at your aext meeting , and send me my card by post I win shew it at the chapel next Sunday , and maybe job -wont hare Chartists enough from the county of "Widftow in a short time . " Here is a eonTert for yon . Herer Band-90 jUssH hxve jilsatj ol them . Truth will prerailatlast
JSx . Ei > ynsp Bdttsxs seeonded the motJon ; He look that opportunity of stating that some tame ago when he ioqniredSat these rooms he was told by a man of the nam * * f 3 Jelly , a hatter factor , set to come in here ; that you wera aQ Orangemen—( hear )—that this wasxn Orsnge lodge .. There is . also s man of thename of Keary , a porter in the linen Hall , -who has often tola peaces , coming iere to take tare and not enter this place , as yon -were all Oraagemen % and that 2 &r . OConnell « id that you -were to -get so much a head for all you could hetray—{ he&r , hexrl . Now it is ¦ way prohable that this Seary lain the pay of the Corn Hxehange , or dse what intsrest wonld ha hare in thus teffing lies ? There is also asort ofhedge-schoslmastse in tbe x ^ goboiirhood , whoae name , I thrxtk , is Ssrtaagb , and -who also turns people sway from this place hy telling lie * abont yon . There -were some- Kildaremenhae a few ^ day » ago , and while waiHng in
toe street to get in wiUi their cars , some three or four lellows canie out of tfitift ^ the ahoemalEezs , sad told these poor men to tike care of themselves , as they ¦ were going into the house of -onB of the bloodiest Orangemen in I > obliri—( shame , " zbame ) . It is trne -wiatlKky —( hear , hear ) . The Sing ' s are religious men ; and I therefore hope that they ! are sot snilty of the Worst of eritnpjtjl ^^ Krirng , TWifEi ^ t i « g yfl "Tpifyfftg tbfftr oeighboars- As for Bielly ; and . his son , and Xeary , ^>«> Tjtipt » TT «^ p pnfter itTB \^ giCT i « ni » g ^ i -t > jf > schoolmaBter . they aze too ^ npzsst , too aelfish , aM too Stupid to he . held Tesponioblft for anyUgng they gay ; yet tbey fioa great deal of harm . They go about to barbers shops to orenlate their calnmnies i but God is just , and he ¦ will protect the innecent ; their poisoned shafts will all recoil npon themselTea . Indeed they are not so mneh to blame as those -who employ giara . 5 lr . Sjxna iraaadmittea .
2 dr O'Higghss moTed and Mr . Raftsb seconded the admission of Mr . John Edward Bounds , Mr . BotrsDS Tose and said that he felt Tery proud and Tery thankfnl for the ikid manner with which he was admitted a member of the' Associatien . He had been an attaitiTe obserrer of their proceedings during tiie last twelTe month * , and it , waa rot till after the 35 iost BHtrirrft " corisidcirataoB that he had made ap his mind to join their ranks . late many others he was lead to believe Uat the * « y > r « . « nn -was snlavf ol bnt heta > ew"by erperience that this -was false . TThenJhe "Whip were in power erery effart was made to crSb them ^ they -were called Tone * , and now , -when the Tories are inlpower » " ^ tortnnrig . their ingenuity to put them down , they are still called Tories . Mr . O Gonnell hadstatadrepfcatedly thst this-sras a secret sodetj ; that 700 -were ioniid together iy unlawful oaths . Now , he ( Hz . Bounds ) was a Protestant , and Daniel O'Connell is a Catholic ; and had he { Mr . Boundi ] said of sny other
society or andmdaala half what Mr . O'Conaell had j aid of flus society aad some of it » members personally te shoQia feel honnd to mike restirntion ; bat perhaps ISx . OConnell has s carle Vanchc from his private Chaplain tobetfe , Tilify , and calomsiale the members of this Axsocianon . He IMj . Bounds ) admired the Catholic Bdigion for one of its practices , which is that of making restitution jtnd this snDjBCt was often spoken of BmanjBt his Mends With respect and admiration ; bn « jg hsa they looted xipon O'Coimeir » pBHic conduct ; tia tile calumniea against all who would not join bin in Mb fieTions political irandenng ? , lie and his friends jarriYtd at the conclusion that this admirable system of restitution was only made to apply to the poor ; the rich and the great were evidently exempt from its wholesome operation . At all events Mr . O'ConneU is exempt from it Perhaps he is so on the principle of British law , «* that the King can do no wrong . * ' { Hear , hear , and ckfterx . )
Mi . O'Hjggiss zose and said that lie sad waited till ibr a far the pnrpose of heing enlightened by two influential members of the Bepesl Association , who had T < gmBofi \\ ib \ t in \ itrtiirm nf coming tothe meeting that day , and-who undertook to prove that Mr . O'Connell ¦ was taking the wisest , most prudent , and most effective means to enact an immediate repeal of the Union ; and that tbeje-JlNdacme ? the large suxaa of money , as Bepeal Teut , ^ na ihBippropiiaiion of it , afforded ample proof ol the ' -pstaoSsm , a » wlsiom , ana the integrity of Daidel OCGnnell , and those who acted with him . He tMr . XJ-Hig ^ ns ) regretted the absenee of those enlightened rmembeni of the Bepeal AssoeiaKon . He tfifered Tery widely from them . Had they come , the discnssion wonldhavebeen carried ongood-hnmonred ) v - lfcere -would have been no angry feeling , no personal annnofiity . bo atnise « r sitnperstian , cut a iair Sfid hononrable olseozsion npon q ^ e ^ Diui © r pubBc notnlieu , tfiasr , heat ) He had no bad ^ eeliM towards £ be
MrOGonneU ; on : contrary , he . wishediiinalong life and every happineas that ihiB world can afford . He ! admitted that Mr . O'Connell was &e greateal lawyer of ' the age—the greatest orator ef the age—the most eloquent hub of the age : «» powerJnl was the influence of that eloquence , fbai . he 4 Mr . OB . ) -would not blame sny man for being led astray by at . He a&nltted aw greavaad rapaialleifid populariqf—he admitted that he had at one period , from 1830 to 1 SS 4 inclusive , three Jdncdoss at his back . He admitted flat from 1834 ^ ffll 1839 his Ms ds the Whigs had commanding msjarmesin &e House ef Commons . But witti all flus legal knowledge ; -with all this eloquence ; with all this popularity ; with bis friends in power , to whom be repeatedly Toted the-sternsl grntitaflfi ol the Iiisb uaiion , -wbat ^ ifl ne ever < to , or propose to do , in Ms place in Paieasaenv * ir tbehenefit of Ms country ? It may "besaifi thitiheToryHonEeof lords-sroald thwart his measares ^ bat surely a man , -with three kingdoms at bistt-tk , EtonVi have bad the laoral conrare to have
proposed scmethmg or olber . WBat did he do ? Kotbinj ; ? Then as be did nothing of wba % use "was be in Parliament ? He did -a . great deaL Ee said the county Pablin to a ncn-Bepealer for a plaea for his £ on-ia-3 aw , Ciristcpter Fitesimon , He sold the county Heath to a non ^ Bepealer f or a place for his son , Mr . Morgan OCcnnelL He scld the county Keny to a ron-Kepealer for a place for hSsson ^ n-la-w , Mx . Charles O" ( 3 jmnelL He sold the county of Carlo w to a koc-Bepealer , one Bsphael a J « rw , = cd subsequenMy to anothti uos-Bepealer . He caused Mr . "SV . S . Cra- » - fcrd to b = tiiced cat of Dandalk , and got a ion-Be
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~ ' ^ —5 ? ' % -.-- " - ¦ - pealerln his place . He sold Bangarron for a pbee for his son-in-law , French . He got "Whig pUces for six of his nephews ; and , at the election of 1837 , signed a ' placard , stating that the man , who ahonldvpnt any other pltdge to the candidates than that of supporting tbe Melbourne Adminietration most , he in the pay of the Tories ; that the man who should name Repeal must be « Tory or in Tory pay . Tithes were then to be adjusted , not abolished ; and the Whig adjustment was a tithe rent charge . He supported the Whigs through thick and thin . He stood before ) the Trades political Union in the Arena in . Abbey-street aa thB GoTernmerit candidate , ^ threateniag jRitb losa of place every nnfortunatetslerk in ofilce who shbnld dare to vote against the Government : Daniel O'C * nnell , thus putting
fee very worst of Tory practices , ( corruption and . perjury ) into active operation . The late Major Sbar was © bilged to go to the hnstingB npon tTri » occasion , and declare before God and his country , that Daniel O * Con-Tien represented his politics and interests h \ Parliament tetter UianiisTory opponent Did aiiy believe that ? no net one . This -was very pleasing to those vrho took a stort-sishted view of the subjec ^ , bnt to me at any rate it was thoroughly dis ^ nstiiig ; so jnnch no , that 1 refused -to vote for Mr . O'Connell , and expressed , pnbUcly *' expreised , my disgast at and aWjorrenceof his eondnct Why did he support Whigs ? Was it because they passed , the English Poor Lav ? Amendment Aci ? Waa it because they declared that they-would prefer a civil -wet with all its horrors to a Bepeal of the Union ? Was
it because thsy passed the Irish Coercion Act ? Was it becanse they passed the Rural Police Act which gives tbe most despotic power-to the Lord Lieutenant for the £ me being ? Was it because they passed the Irish Municipal Bsform Bill , and helped to degrade the great leader of the opposition to support tithes and ministers ' money , by enabling him to sit as Lord Mayor , and actually disfranchise those -who followed hia advice by ref osicg to pay the un&oly impost ? Wbat a picture of political infamy -was O'Connell , dressed out in all the gswgaws of civic chief magistrate , striking off the Burgess roll every man who had followed his advice by refusing to pay minister ' s money ! be who a abort time before raised his hands to heaven— " Here note , in the taxfx&prcsaux of that God icJio is to judge mei and be / ore
my assembled countrymen , I vow never to pay one Jarthing of iilhe , jor ministers' pumey . '' Here was a vow registered in heaven I And after this , the same man swore to disfranchise , and did disfranchise , all his fellow citizsns who adhered to their oath . ' There is a sample © f Wfciggeiy for yon . Was it because tbe Whigs passed all those base laws , that Mr . O'Cssnell gave them biB indiscriminate support ? No ; bnt because he sold himself to them for pelf and ephemeral power , as Caspar sold himself to the foul fiend in the Wolfe ' s Glen , and from whose dutches he would have had no more chance of escaping than the ill-fated Caspar , had not the Chartists turned out the per&dious Whigs and thus saved the "liberator * frpai po ] ititical damnation—{ great cheering } . It is now a long time sines he ( Mr .
OB . ) had told his countrymen that Mr . O'Connell was not a Bepealer—that he did not desire the Bepeal —that the object of the Bepeal Association is the restoration of the Whigs to power . Had they been In power we should not have beard one word of the Irish Arms * Bin . it would have passed jungly and quietly as it did when they were in power . O it is a mighty fne thing to get a man ' s throat cut by a friend . " Take away pablic liberty bit by bi $ , " say tb . 8 Whigs . *« We are your masters , and will remain so as long as we can , " say tbe Tories . The difference between Whig and Tory is just this . Whenj the devil pats on & smiling face , Presses like a gentleman , bides als taa in hia breeches pocket , his cloven foot in a wbU ma ^ e boot ; tells the unwary that he ist their real
friend , invites them to dinner and champaigne ; gets them into his clutches , and secures them , he is then a Whig : but when he stands up boldly and tells yon be has cheated and oppressed you , and -will continue to do 80 as long as he can , and appears before you openly with his cloven foot , cecked homered wide mouth , barbed tail painted sky blue , and a fork in his dexter paw , than he is a Tpryj and be Vwho -will tmsteilhT Whig or Tory will be equally deceived , and deserves . ¦ > deceived . ( Great cheering . ) The Irish people are deceived , doped , and plundered , by both Whig and Tory . The press baa joined ttae two accursed factions to make sport of - the people for their mutual advantage . Ths Catholic clergy , formerly the polar stars of the people , their friends and guides
thrcugh every difficulty , are now muled aa well as the poorest individual . Sat their eyes Trill soon be opened . Let them but look at the official report of the Corn Exchange , signed Thomas M . Bay ; and if thst does not open their political eyes and let hi the light , the Almighty is blinding them for his own wise pnrposes . Here is the official report ; read it ; seebow your Bepeal money has been appropriated— £ 10 , 000 cf it given to the enemies of Bepeal . This money—this money , I say , wfll surely « bedivil yon * darilnt "; ljgao . 000 Bepeal rent regularly handed over to Wellington and Peel J Good security to keep the peace , and help to send over more troops to Ireland I Daniel , yon are the " darfinf ; it is yourself that knows how towreyoar own bacon , and cheat your supporters , priests , bishops ,
. laymen , and all , even your friend the Archbishop of Tram ! Daniel , * ' a vie , " yon told ihe people at Gal way and at Cork , and other places too , that yon would cripple the Tory Government , by causing tbe funds to become ahoost Tameless . It is clear , then , that you know how to do it ; andequallyclearthstyouhaveVested ^ lO . OOO Bepeal rent in the very foods which you iatend shall become ¦ valueless , in the event of thst Gorernment , to whom yon have given the money , refusing to concede your darling object , tbe Bepeal ! Yon may say , - by way of excuse , and in order to deceive those who do not understand tbe nature of investing money in Government securities , that you can get the money back ; but this is not true . The money can never be got back from the enemies of BepeaL They had a bad stock of old goods on band , £ 10 , 00 ( Ts -worth of which yon took off
their ftnndn . This bad &u > ck must always remain oat * . some-one must take it off your : hands ; but sot the enemies of Bepeal , the Tory Government , to whom yon have given the money . The ease stands simply thus : —A has cheated B cut of an estate B collects as much money from his friends and supporters , { some of -whom are the tenants of A } aa ha considers necessary to insure sneceas in & court of law ; but finding that bis proceedings have embarrassed bis opponent A . he gives him two-thirds of tha money npon hia own security which he knows right well , will never be paid ; bnt on the contrary will remain as a mortgage npon tbe shoulders of the Tery parties who subscribed the money . "Daniel yon are the darlint" Here is the ! official return- Xet every Chartist in the empire keep a copy of it Nothing can equal it for barefaced nnblniing villany .
. Beport from the official organ of the Coin Exchange : — " Mr . O'Connell begged to make the following report : ; "loyal National Bepeal Association , Com Exchange rooms . " 1842 . 25 th July , 1843 . " Beceived from 5 th April to 4 th July inclusive 999 3 7 " 1843 . " Beceived from 4 tb -April to 3 rd July inclusive „ . 15 , 798 11 3 " Increase on tbe quarter £ 14 . 799 1 8 ' By order , " T . M . Bat , Secretary . " On Saturday next £ 10 , 000 of that would be funded . He would hand the scrip to Mr . Bay for £ 10 , 000 . " Is this the "way to Sepeal the Union ? - Well , well ; for cool sheer rascality this stands unrivalled . Bnt what has become of tbe remainder of tbe Bepeal rent ? Is this the only account the . public Ehall have ? Where are the auditors of last year ; whom every body knows are whslly innocent of the leust particle of knowledge of an account current ? Will Lord Brougham "be satisfied with this report of the quarter's Bepeal revenue ? According to the official weekly annonoemente of the sums recived st the Corn Exchange from the 31 th of April , 1842 , to tbe 5 ih of Aprils 1513 , distinguishing each quarter separately the suras received stand thus : — 1842 . £ & < L Quarter ending 5 th July ... 999 9 7 Quarter ending 4 th October ... 3 , 763 11 10 £ 1843 . Quarter ending 5 th January ... 13-540 2 : 3 Quarter ending 4 tb April ... 15 , 167 13 4 £
£ 33 , 870 17 1 Tbe public should be fully satisfied as to how this vast -sum of money has been appropriated . Has Mr . Bay been banded scrip for this £ 33 870 17 s Id . ? "i If so , just be so good as to let the public know the fact . Bnt add to this ran of . £ 33 , 870 17 s . Id . the balance of the last o narieiB' igvame not given as yet to P « el and Wellington , £ 5 , 798 lls . 3 d ., and we have a sum total kept in the back ground amounting , according to . their own Btatementa , to £ 39 , 669 8 s . id . What have -yon done with all this money ? Yon have got a great deal of it from poor warm-hearted Catholic curates who perhaps deprived themselves of many a good meal In order to enable them to subscribe their dearly earned mite to the regeneration of their coontry . It is a crying sin to cheat a peor curate . Perhaps it is all for tbeir good . Bnt when and how is tbe Union to be
repealed ? He ( Mr . O'Higgins ) -would just say in conclusion , that be regretted very much the absence of his two learned and enlightened Bepeal friends—{ hear , bear ) . ¦ Mx . Dtott said he regretted it had not fallen ito his lot to second the admission- ol Mr . Oifton , jwhose letters be b . afl . -with MDgnlar pleasure perused In tbe Sorihem war . Both men as Mr . Clifton were an tononr to Ireland , and calculated to raise the character i or irishman in the estimation of their English fellow - - | fjpjscts- The notions of Mr . Clifton regarding liberty . were broad , comprehensive , and unfacHous—( bear )—he did not
taut the gift of freedom to a particular i ^ £ ^ 9 ^^ % L 2 X « ! » 7 S 5 | 2 £ K = te { KW £ : [ ^^ f 7 < flflns or section of the people : « a . « .-3 r ? s % ? xJHk : »^ r-s £ -a sssisysr . 2 -t 2 Asft
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right of " women to the ff * aiebl * 8-r-the Chartists as a body did not go for the extension of the / Suffrage to the ladles , ; -He ( Mr . D . ) thought him » eU , aid had no hesi UUqninavowingaa opinion long held , and ' not now for-the first time put forward , that whatever show of reason there might be for withholding the vpta from the feme covert , there was none foe ^ ee p ^ it from / c / nejo / c . * butheneverwonldgothelengthofassertingthatfemales aZo « should form the electoral privilege . He was no favourer of Gyneocncy , or petticoat government ( hear and laughter ) . Thatwoald be as unjuRt as the system that wonld jshut ont the political influence of women altogether . Bab what would they say to the fact , that Mr . Q : Connell , who had so often fallen out with Ihe phrase "Universal Suffrage ? ' which he
scoffed at because he would have it that the words included the fair sex , after exhausting the fertility of his proliS . 3 ingenuity—after rambling througb . ' Complete , ' Manhood , ' Houeehold , ' and a dozen other euffr&ges , had at last come to the conclusion that none but women should possess the franchise : —ibb , oh ) . They might smile and cry Oh , " but the fact was substantially to . Mr . O'Connell had declared that , co-eval with tfce Kspeal of the Union , it would be made constltutionul in Ireland that all married men should vote—( hear , hearj . And had further tfeclaied that no idle and unwed goroons should havo the privilege—( hear . ) Thus it would be necessary to be bound in the fettero of matrimony before a man could shake off his political chains , and the entrance to the Temple of Liberty
vreuld be through the porch of Hymen—( hear , hear , and loud laughter ) . Yes , my bachelor friends , a Repeal of the Union will settle your hash—( loud laughter ) for no man can vote , says this Governor of the Catbolia Emigration Society , unless he has a wife . Now Emigration presupposes a surplus population ; and yet here is a bonus held ont to induce early and improvident marches , and to stock the country with hosts of lUtte existences lor whom there is nothing but starvation and misery provided—( hear ) . He ( Mr . D . ) would not go into all the bearings of this ridiculous proposition now , because he intended to bring forward a specific motion on the subject , on Sunday evening . He need scarcely advert to the injustice of excluding the bachelor who , If he did not produce consumers , which
unfortunately were too numerous , at least produced provisions and commodities necessary and useful to hia fellow beings ; besides paying his just proportion of the taxation of the country . In fact this poposition was as complete a blunder as the " manhood" suffrage out of which they had so completely bauterad Dan , that he now never dared : to mention the word —( hear ) . This new verbal bantling would like wisefall still- born from his lips ; for it was impossible any people , however prone to nasiduction , could stand the attempt to transfer all polltical power to the wives of men , many of whom supposed their partners already exercised too much dominion . They all recollected the laughable ease put by Franklin regarding ifao jackass , oat of which tbe man voted , to whem If eddy afforded a forty shilling beneficial interest The doctor asked when Neddy died , . and the vote died with him , was it not clear that the vote appertained to the ass and not to the man —( hear and a laugh ) . Well , how stood the sapient proposition of Daniel the
profound ? Why ^ rhen tbe -wife died , the husband lost hia vote : freedom wks buried in her grave . Who then substantially-would possess political power under this new regulation ? I the women and they alone—( hear , hear ) . Now he ( Mr . D . ) was just gallant enough to share this power with them , but be would not consent to transfer all to them— "he that gives all gives none , " was an old Baying—( laughter ) . He therefore gave notice tbat be would next Sunday bring forward a resolution , protesting on the part ef that association , against the proposal of Mr . O'Connell , and declaratory of the natural and inalienable right of every male aged twentyone years , being of sound mind and unconvicted of felonious offences against the laws of bis country , to the possession of the electoral franchise—( hear ); that was the well-considered declaration of the first item in their political creed , and they would not part with it easily , even at the request of Mr . O Connell himself . Mr . D . sat down amid loud cheers .
Mr . George Marsden was admitted s member , after -which Mr . Rafter Was called to the chair , and the COrdkl thanks of the meeting -were given by acclamation to Mr . Clark for his gentlemanly conduct in the chair and his untiringIzaal in the cause of real political freedom . The meeting separated one and all crying out against Hcushold . Suffrage , Wife Suffrage . Manhood or any other Suffrage short of Universal Suffrage . Ths M / Mber of cases decided by the Tribunal of Commercb of Paris , amounts to forty thousand annually .
In thb Sheriffs Cotjbt last week , a verdict for the Crown for £ 3 , 954 , Is . 2 d . was obtained against Messrs . Candy and Bean , silk importers , f « r duties unpaid . The affair is one of the Custom-house frauds . An SMPLO 5 E of the Parisian post-office , of rather high standing , haa been suddenly arrested ; the charge against him is said to be the having aided another individual in seducing a wife from her borne ; and sheltering tbe guilty couple after the elopement . It is said that tbe head of an eminent fancy goods firm in the City , lately exebequered for participation in the Custom-house frauds , has absconded after many futile attempts to obtain a compromise from the government , and for which he is aaid to have offered a very considerable sum .
Precocious Geniuses—Filial Afpection . — Jim , how ' s your mi ?"— " She's fat and strong—how ' s yours ?"— " Feeble enough . I've got so that I can lick her now , and have every thing my own way . Tou don't see me gold' errands , and doin' chores about home , like you used to ?"
Just Published, Price 2s 6d. (Or Bent Free To The Mobt Remote Parts Of The Kingdom, In A Sealed Envelope, On The Receipt Of A Post-Office Order For 3s 6d.)
Just Published , Price 2 s 6 d . ( Or Bent free to the moBt remote parts of the Kingdom , in a sealed envelope , on the receipt of a post-office order for 3 s 6 d . )
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Aug. 5, 1843, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1224/page/2/
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