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Ctonritet fottelUamc?.
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TO THE IMPERIAL CHARTISTS.
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;[famcr,n $Boi>emettt$.
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WAKEFIELD CORN MARinM-^Jfe
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THE IRISH TRIAL.
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NEW WOOLLEN CLOTH AND TAILOHS' TRIMMING ESTABLISHMENT, j 57, BRIGGATE, LEEDS, AND MARKET PLACE, DARLINGTON.
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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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"JVT H « DAVIS respectfully invites the attention of the Public to his VALUABLE and EXTENSIVE STOCK 0 E WOOLLEN CLOTHS , Which he has purchased for Cash , and is determined to seU for a very small amount of profit . The Goods are of first-rate Manufacture , and not made for Bale only , but will have the good properties of wearing well , and ensuring future orders . The Stock consists of DOUBLE-MILLED WATERPROOF TWEEDS , BEAVERS . PILOTS KERSEYS . CASSIMERES , SUPERFINE YORKSHIRE and WEST OF ENGLAND CLOTHS WOOLLEN and COTTON CORDS , FUSTIANS , &c . &c . Waistcoatings from Is . 6 d . upwards , in endless variety . M . H . D . takes this opportunity to tbank the numerous body of TAILORS , who have patronized him since he dissolved Partnership with Mr . Cullingworth , and begs to assure them that no House in the Trade shall undersell him in any one Article . The Working Classes are invited to purchase Fustians , Cords , and Moleskins , at the above Establishment ; they will find it more advantageous to do so , and employ their own Tailor * -, than encourage the "Ready Made Clothes Selling Monopolists" who get rioh at the expeaoe of the Working Man , by paying him one half for a Garment that other Masters give .
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Jj > TOBKS HIEB AXI > IoXCASHIHB AgSNIS . —HSYing pude arrangements whioh will enable ns to pte Thursday ' s . proceedings & 4 the Dublin 5 riai , in an Edition on Friday night , we have fcept baek some portion of . their orders , . to forward with the later news , by Saturday Barling ' s mail . They will get them , in most eases , on Saturday afternoon . LATER EDITION STILL . qb Saturday evening , wa Bhall publish another Edition containing the proceedings ^ of Friday sp . to the dosing of the Court . This can he
forwarded by Vhe Sunday morning ' s Mail to most of Lancashire and Yorkshire . Send Orders immediately .
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__ t dxab Fkietd 3 , —This is a period of the year jisi all parties furbish up their several implements gf ¦ sarfare . The ruling party solicit u the early jgendance of their supporters f the opposition wriv , to he placed a . the disposal of its leader , ofraTonrs . orally all its adherents . The advocates g " practical improvement" and * progression / 3 ^ out apparent reference to either of the great pd&ictl pariies , h&Te _ heir consultations , their correspondence , their eoteries , and their meetings , to terse means hy which they can gain a certain jsciiDt of popularity . They call themselYes " the jsdtjendent . party . " . I , however , and I think
jsore appropriately , style them the Whig skirftiJters . We haTe then , * THE-oss-iniKG-AT-i-iiHE ^ arty ; or those Tfh o profess to he of no party at all ; is iave only one object in view , and that object the bettering ibe « n _ i _ ion of \ he workicg classes . TSuse several parties are represented in the House ef Commons ; and before I thall haTe another jpportunity of addressing yon , they -mil have tried their strength in the first round of the pat fight . The Qneen ' s speech , as it is called , , 2 ] be delivered ; and then the battle Trill fjafy commence . Curions as it m » y appear , fliere J 3 bj > annual oecnrrrace more laughable , or of J _ ss importance , than "what is called the Queen ' s ipeech ; and yet , odd as it must appear to rational Ben , there is aot one Incident to which political Tanks attach = o mnch importance . I believe those
ior whom I write look npon it as I do—as mere tnddle . However , be thai a 3 it may , we shall haTe 5 $ , » nd no mistake : and no doabt that Sir Robert Pad , whose speech in reality it will be , will conjp » i » late himself npon the state of the reTenue ; pen the return of manufacturing prosperity ^ upon Ota . neeess of his tariff ; npon the success of j fe " oBDECiST law" in Ireland ; npon the cor-__ J nnderftandisg at present subsisting between feelgn powers asd England ; upon the restoration tf Spain to legitimacy , and the recognition of the jrr state of affairs in Greece . There may be a psiug glanee at the efforts of the Corn Law Lejjue to sow dissension and dissatisfaction ; xsd there , may a 3 so be a sly hint at the neccsity of putting down all political associations .
Sow , as I belong to none of the aboTB parties , ati as I haTe nndejtaken to do whai mvst be lbs work of some one—to rally the Motehext Pabtt 3 I ib bound . to state my reasons for not joining either prty , or any section of either party . Of course , I seed not say that the people h&Te nothing to expect from the Tory party ; and therefore I shall confine » T » elf to reasons for not joining any of the crofessh 4 * Liberals . Taa "Whigs are now working heaTen and earth fcra restoration to power ; and the means by which jbej hope ultimately to accomplish that object are , ij % Tigonrons exertion in Ireland , under the padiDce , the patronage , and onion of Mr . O *
Conaell , the Duke of Leinster , the descendant of "No Pitpnf Charlemont , and a tribe of hungry solicitor barristers , and idlers . In Ehort , a liberal web 5 bang woTe to catch every shade of " liberality " in Ireland ; the object , the sole , the ^> nly object being jatronHje . Although I have taken a bold stand 4 jra 5 ast the prosecution of the Irish Repealers , and bve jnstined and defended many acts of Mr . Dt ! t > DEell ; ye * I should consider myself nnworthy tie riins . rion that I hold in public confidence , fed I allow a passing circumstance to warp my jsipnehi with respect to general policy . I JtQ you , then , that as a matter of course ies , the Irish sectioD , will be guided in their
tents by the prospect of patTcmage , and by &u alone . Mark me , I knew them . They are what in ever have been , and what they ever will be , lopjful in profession , rrEisjacAL is h > " » teb . ! 01 il itciions Dl "Whiggery , the mosfneicus , the most tcEitmptible . the most servile , the Brest crouching , &tmost insolent and jobbing , 5 s the Irish section . Trcm the moment of the ecaJiilon between the Irish 'litrals" as they were called , and the Whig ministry a 1855 , when the terms of cc _ 3 itkn "weie ' palion-J j e . " the Irish "l- "heral" section fcec 3 me the most nn-KnilnEg , the most unserapulon ? , the most unprinci-$ _ _ supporters of the "Whig administration , itocnage . distinction , titles , at wb eh the Tery kscwer of them laughed , were the objecis , the sole sljeet , of this detestable crew . They were ever at lie command of the minister ; most forward in their
support w . ministerial tyranny ; most darisgjn their -jspoStien to the people ' s rights ; ustil ai length the ml had become ^ corrupt that it carried eoma ^ ion it tie whole body ; and . Melbourne , the easy , the aiScing , the convrrial 3 deJbourue , fell a victim to JbedL-ease . Yes , the unprincipled snpport grren a Eibisters by Mr . O'CoiiEell and the "Liberal " hith members , aDd by aboui ten EnglUh *• Litserik , " who while they declared their oppositicn Sb ETery act of the "Whigs , yet were tTer ready to It to ihe cry of " the Whigs are in danger : " tioje jutks , I say , disgusUd the English cation , drove iltbcurne from office ^ aodrecoEcDed the people to fee jtsioranon of Toryism as a choice of efils . 1 ¦ sSnot , therefore , allow my horror and disgust at ik present State Prosecutions to seduce me into ibis itcin&tiBg and conTenient " Liberal" web .
Ike next section of " Liberals , " not calling themselTts Whigs , but to which the Whig par . y 1 ooks Strward for euccoht and support , is the League jam . Eusseil and a few others who are related to lie Wfci ? landed aristocracy will , for a time , trquenefmn this psr ? y ; but Palmerston , Worpeth , Uiacley , Howick , Banng , and others , who are 5 ; fo iBTt hir- ^ , win , when eTerytbing is ready , aid tea in the skirmish ; and B-ussell , Ehould they kcomesroKg % Ecugh , wiil then , atihe solicitation of tis friends , take tbe command for the purpose more if ratrsicirg licenuocEtess than of poESftsiDg J « Wfr . He would consider the sacrifice of his landed Seeds and relaiiTes a Terr fair offering at the tcrine
tf polhical pairciage . Bishops , judg ta , fat parEoni 1 , KBir&fej gtctrals , ambassadors , commissioners , JiKicasterf , cnstc-rD-bmte efficers , escise-cfirexs , * zo » 1 ] those thiEgs wculd be a good set-off against itrJcgredneiion in the rents of his "fee simple " ^ irres w hiie the m inor pickings bes towed upon Ktcrciuarts wotud be a fair inducement to poor J ^ isiong to support the new order of things . This J * Jirr -rrcHld considerably weaken the ranks of the ^ na ^ heTr , who -Rould be won over , some by fatrcEage , seme by proieesions of liberality ^ after CctEisaonB had reported , and others by tbe te > iBMiic influence vi— " O , kejp the Iobies OKi '
a j friend ? , such are tbe different sections of whieb ' & FerliamentaTi ) Movement Parly will be composed fe the preseot strntg ]^ : each wa ging sectioDal *» tf » re , fcut ail haring one common object—the Jslw&tjon of "Whiggery ^ Take them , then , as a patj composed o : those seTeral elemetts ; and I as-i ?? , is reasoning m n—as calculating men—as men * ao haye seen them in power before , what eanbi } ^ a < & the working classts tan tspect from such a fcifii ' -on ! Russell Mid the pure Whigs con tending fe ? he " £ nality" of tteBdbrm Bill ; Cobden and £ ? Yjbt Traders contending f i > r the rights of capital ; ^ the skirmishers raLJc ^ a faint appeal « the rights of labour , but ready to join
¦* the thunder of Tory denunciation I It must fcliw as a natural consequence rhat those several ^ vices will inveigle and seduce some weak-^ Bctdindi-ridnals of theI » lcTEii £ M Pakit ; tnt 1 ? lappy to be able to avcr , that ia no town of ^' aEd htte they been able 10 catch any six woik-? $ tten : that is , men who live by their labcur . li S iairwel ] nndersicod by the Chartist party that ^* Lague Fund has been li berally used lor tbe ^ poje ofbribing and seducing som e of the Chani-t f ^ tn ; and it is evident thai in some—but , thank S * i in few instacces—the ban has been taken . . ^ BttleTaiue . however , that ibose deserters have
* Si to their employers has convinced the League S « Osere is noir a public virtue pervading the whole * - tKE 5 T Paett which can neither be purcta ? ed ^ imimidaied . 3 t hae been the fashion for some j ? * to hold me up to public derision and scorn , r * y coBsisteECT to priuciplej snd to predict " the ** * f popularity , " " waning power , " - and " the r ^ 'Alandcnment of the workiDg el ? s = e ? . " And , ? ttnth , is I said at Todmtrden , I do not un-^ qceutiy marrel at the steady , the nnswerTing ^ V raeompromising Etippcrt of tie woiklr . g tj 5 ! continned to an individual who is ob-?^ . - "¦*© ; stand np in opposition to wealthy S * itfloeiitial bodies who promise so xench , and ^ Ubourhird to convince the pefple-tbatl ij * sand in the way of the realization wall j g Stoaased adTantsges . The aflmnhjg signs of
S *§ * " - « d ?{ ale . They preicised the workers ^^ oit jahuiidance and ease , from the accom-{ g ^ t of ihor scheme ; w hile epiejnporaneouBly W * Ke extension of trade , they B * e diminished tt ^ Jteased ^ raiaiy , and the want « f all power ^^« fta t heTone or the oiher . The . -woriwg ^ tSt *? l ^ rfeeflt aware of the prodigious amoum Ji ] £ B teiai pow -t sJnady arrayed against them
t e ^ PWiemijr fr jnaikct . They can . calculate ) SZ ^ Podacioe Bbility of this inechaBical power , j * * & 2 ^ - T ** ImiHs being erecied , and of old j ^ U ^^ WenOdle- for : four years bangtail ?* wwi ; iB ^ otrnifeianding this exiensiTei
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oomptition , this large increase of trade , they find that from the suplus in the labour market , the new and revived mills can be worked withont taking a snfficiency from the large reserve of unemployed to justify the faintest hope that . the most extensive measure of Free- Tirade would ever enable the operatives to compete with mechanical power . It is for these reasons , and not from mt / opposition , that tbe operatives oppose their masters . It is because every increase ofUrade , with unregulated machinery , must be followed by a reduction in wages—that being the commodity in which , and in which alone , the speculators now gamble . It is knowledge , that bane of tyrants ] and not Feargns O'Connor , that has ltd to the opposition to the League now become so general .
I have received some letters from parties boasting of their devotion to Chartism , whose names , however , are new to me , upbraiding me for my refusal to join in Mr . Sharaan Crawford ' s scheme for stopping the supplies . I laugh as well at the simplicity of the project , as at the thunder of the reviler . The advocates of this device can rally and unite for the proposed object as effectually of themselves , as though they had the whole nation at their back , tnth the Tories in power * The people have seen the slight effect produced by the petition of 3 , 500 , 000 men , in the refusal of nearly the whole House , even to hear their advocates at the bar . What , then , wonld be gained by even an equal display in favonr of any other measure . I for one do not object to Mr . Crawford trying his hand at this constitutional remedy for the redress of grievances , vbut 1 do object to being
A 1 > AKIT TCO CREATE HOPES THAT CAHKOT BE BE « AUZED ; to being a party to recommend the waste of national strength upon a mere crotchet , if I had joined in this wild cry , how I should have been denounced ! How 1 should have been taunted , and justly , with tbe folly , nay , whh the treachery of directing public attention from its long-sought darling object to play hide and seek in the 'Honse of Commons ! Can an } thing be more childish and ridiculous than the proposed object , to stop the supplies until the people's grievances are redressed ? Why what are the grievances , and what is the mode of their redress 1 Have we not long since come to the resolution that classlegislation is the great , the crying grievance ; and that the Charter is the only remedy ! What
grievance other than class legislation are we to look for the redress o ?! What remedy can the House of Commons offer for any peculiar grievance of which the working classes complain ! If , then , Mr . Crawford and his party cannot expect to achieve success by any less measure of demand than that which was made by 3 , 500 , 000 petitioners ; and if he eaanot rally that amount in favour of his new scheme , how could the people give him support 1 Again , if the Chartists have already resolved upon looking for the Charter , and for that alone , as the means of redressing all their grievances , and if Mr . Crawford and Mt . StuTge only seek to stop the sapplies as a means of redress , vhy not at once boldly , manfull y , and honestly , join Mr Duncembc ^ tcith the nation at his back , in a demand for the real redress ofgrievances !
I care not what other men may think ; but I look vith suspicion upon the profession ! of all who teould vainly attempt to direct the mind of a great nation , from the pursuit of a great national object in search of a far more unattainable thing 1 There is no part of England less tinged by , or captivated with , this stop-the-Eupply-icheme than the metropolis ; where , hitherto , fanciful notions of a like kind have been most favourably received . I took an opportnniry last night of testing one of the largest and most important meetings ever held in London . The meeting took place in the new Chartist hall , in Blackfriars Read ; and although the charge for admission was twopence to tbe body of the hall , and threepence to tbe platform , both were inconveniently
crowded . 1 laid my policy before that meeting . I put several questions to a show of hands . Not a hand was held up for the snpport of the Tories , or for the restoration of the Whigs ; while the proposition to join the League was met with groans , and that to stop-the-supplies with laughter and derision —not a hand being held up for either ; while every hand in the meeting was held op for the Charter , and the Hepeal of tne Udjod as tbe principles under which the working clashes of both countries England and Ireland , should unite . But , my friends , there is Etill & more powerful reason why we should rot now join any party save those who are engaged in a struggle for labour ' s rights . 1 contend for it that we have no power
other than to ensure a fair representation of public opinion-in the approaching Convention . Parliament will sit for four months after that Convention will have assembled ; and ihen it will be in the power of &bj delegate to submit to the Convention tbe piopriety of recommending to the people the necessity of joining Mr . Crawford , or Mr . Anybody ehe , for aBy sectional pnrpose . I do not know that any man of the Chartist party can give a better or more satisfactory reason for his conduct upon this subject than 1 can . It shonld be borne in mind that the policy of connecting the question of the Land and the Charter was dis-puted by manv good and honest Chartists ; and from the moment that I discovered this fact , and notwithstanding tbe unanimous vote
of ihe"Birmingham Conference on the snbject , yet ansious to withhold any irritating topic upon which angry discussion might arise , has any man seen a line under my hand upon ibe subject of the land from the moment that this difference of opinion was communicated to me ? On the contrary I have devoted my attention to procuring a fair representation of the working classes in April next , to whose discretion ail disputed points mav be fairly submitted for decision . When I am satisfied then , to place a project in abeyance which has received the absent of a large majority of ear party , rather than offend an honest auc well-intentioned minority , urn 1 to be to weak as to take up a new and silly project , acd to recommend all to support it ?
In conclusion , then , I have only to add that in eleven days more I shall have been eleven years before the English public ; and by its guidance and tuition , I have become too wise to waste the short eight weeks that are now allowed to us for eDsnrmg a fair representation of our own principles in following a mere " Will-o ' -th ' -Wisp , " or in giving sectional strength to aBy other party at tbe expense of that to which I have the honour to belong . I always foretold that ibe day of anction wonld come ; and that the people would be "bid for" according
to the value they sst upon themselves . It is my duty to increase that vsiue , not to diminish it ; and I think I beit accomplish tbe object by netting public opinion up to auction " in one lot , " rather than divide it into convenient parcels to suit the ability of individual pDrcbas-trs . When the Charter is * " bid , " 1 am ready to be " knocked dowii" as one of the " lot " . Bni however foes may condemn , friends may censure , and boih may denoance , 1 will irmsni firm to the last , determined , in Fpite of all opposition , to die as 1 have lived—a pure lover of liberty . I am , your faithful friend and servant , F ^ abgus O'Connor .
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FBANCE . —The Moniteur Parisien states that letters have received Irom Gorii 2 of the 9 ih , announcing that the illness of the Duke of Augouleme was no longer of an alarming nature . The Monjteur publishes a despatch from Marshal Bngesnd , dated Algiers , tie 4 ih instant , announcing that on the 22 d ult . ibe ex-Emir . Abd-el-Kader , had presented hiitseif between the fort of Zebdon and Tlemecen with about 300 cavalry and 200 infantry , where he was rect ived by General Bedeau with a sharp fire of musketry , when he fled with a precinit&tion towards Mfeaamen .
The Cbaxslbs . —The discussion in the Chamber of Deputies , on Thurf day , was entirely on the subject of the commercial and financial state of the country , which on examination oo not appear to be quite so nourishing as the paragraph in the King ' s speech , and the glowing staument or the Minister of Finance , led people to believe- One of the Depnties , il . BeihEont , spoke at some length upon tbe depression of various manufactures , and particularly of linens , and entered into a lively picture of the misery of the lower classes at various periods on account of the periodical decline of different manufactures .- It was of this state of things , he said , that the Government ought to occupy itself more fully and deeply . Be called for publio institutions miserable classcSand
for the support of the working j for a law regulating and improving their position The institution of the PrudhdmmeE , as tt existed at Lyons , he considered , in spite of the difficulties presented by the organisation of such an institntion 3 onjihito he established in Paris- The orator then continued by supporting the wording of his amendment . The agriculture of the country * he said , aid not rely upon the solicitude of ihe Government . It had no mistrust of it ; but certainly do reliance , and , on the contrary- * badieason to . complain much of its indifference . The progress in sgricuttw © was not in proportion to that it made in all other conntries ; and this inferiority in France he " attr ibuted to the want of any -wise direction given by the Government to the already existing iaBtitntions in . favour
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of the agricultural inttrest . The speeches geneially were not sufficiently interesting to induce us to occupy our columns with the report of them . It was only on Thursday evening that ibo first paragraph of the address was finally agreed to , the whole of the amendments proposed having been rejected . On Frida y , the discussion was continued , and the second and third paragraphs wtre adopted . The first of these in that in which it is stated that the equilibrium between the receipts and the expenditure has been re-established , and the other , that in which French sympathy for Polish nationality is proclaimed . The oebate then commenced npon the
fourth paragraph , or , in other words , on the affairs of Greece and Spain , and on ihe amicable relations between France and Great Britain . The general debate upon there subjects was dull enough . It was entirely confined to three members of tbe Opposition , MM . de Lastejrie , Girnier-Pages , and Ducob and so little impression did their remarks make , that none of tbe members on the Ministerial benches thought it worth their while to answer them . The gist of all their fpeeches was to show that in Spain , as well as in Greece , the objects of France and England must always be different ; that England was not sincere in its apparent friendly relations
and that its object always was , by means of commercial treaties or otherwise , to gain some advantage over France . In the latter part of the sitting the assembly became more animated , when M . Billault rose to move an amendment of which ho had given previeus notice , and which it is understood that the different sections of ihe Opposition have agreed to support . Ti . e object ol M . BiIIbuH'h amendment is , instead of the " entente cordiale " which the King ' s Speech Bays is the state of the relations between the Governments of France and England , to substitute words of & more reserved and less confidential construction .
Satubdat , Jan . 20 th . —The President took the chair at a quarter-past one . The attendance oi deputies was unusually great , and the public tribunes were crowded . A number of ladies occupied tbe front FeatB . At a few minutes before two M . Guizot entered the Chamber , and a short time having bei . n occupied in procuring silence , the Present called on the Chamber to decide on the validity ot the election of M . C . Laffitte . A scents en ; ued which was rather more like » " row" than a " debate , " and ended in the expulsion of the deputy on the i round of him owing his seat to corrupt means ! M . Guizut then addressed the Chamber in reply to Bdlault . He commenced by saying that M . Billault had said , at the beginning of his speech , that this ¦ was not a question they had to examine of
Ministerial policy , but anatioual question . He ( VI . Guizit ) would not adopt that distinction it was the houom , a 3 well as the burden of Ministers , to be reipoiiMb ; 'i for the management of the affairs of the country . He held that the ministerial policy was above ail things a national policy . The speech from the throne said on the subject of Greece and Spain that a sincere friendship existed between the KiDg of the French and the Queen of Great Britain ; that the cordial relations which were established between the two countries gave a hope that the events would turn to the advantage of both . M . Billaulr require * the house to ( fface all adherence to such facts—all marks of satisfaction for the good understanding , for the good intelligence , and for the " entente cordiale ' re-established between Franco and England . M . BUlault would not believe the facts—he did not
wish for them , for he thought them too dearly purchased . Let them examine if he wa 3 in the right . Ministers had established good intelligence between Frauce and England on the subject of Spain and Greece . At what price had the cabinet gained this good intelligence ! that is the whole question . The orator proceeded at great length to discuss the var ied qnestion of " foreign policy , " particularly with reference to Spain and Greece . AlIudiDg to the newspapers he said : — "Now , he would teil those wb . 3 disbelieved those truths that they ought to cross the straits and visit London , and then thty would see that the newspapers there held the same language in respect to the English Government that
in France was held in regard to the Government of thatcouufry . They eaid that the British Governmeet had completely abandoned the national interests—( ob , oh ) - They said that the English cabinet had given up English policy , and given way to the French— [ A voice—They are very good ] . What was said in London was said equally of the respective Governments , but neither in the one nor in the other was there a word of truth . He concluded ey eloquently defending the friendly alliance with Ea ^ - land , pointiDg out its beneficial effects in the accord of the two nations not ouly in Europe , but also in Africa , the Pacific Ocean , China , &c . &c . Did they know to what extent they owed that spectacle ?
They owed it to the good intelligence—to the good understanding—to the " entente cordiale" between France and England . Let . that good uuderstaading be destroyed—let the " entente cordiale" bs diminished , and he would ask if the world would produce this spectacle—if any of these events would be possible ! If , instead of a spectacle , pacific , satisfactory , moral , for the happiness of man , for the liberty of the people , for the progress of general civilisation—you would not Bee througbimt tho world confusion and war t— ( loud cheering ) . When one great line of policy had in so short a time produced such it worth while to with
results , was opt part it lightly—( cheers from the Centre ); It was worth while , in a few words of an address , to give it a mark of adhesion—of satisfaction . It remained with them to confirm or to compromise the results already obtained by tbe policy which had been followed during three years . As for the Cabinet , they remained faithful to that policy ; they believed it the only rational policy , and the ; only poiicy which would be beneficial not only for ; France , but for the world—( loud cheers , and calls from all parts or " Yes , yes , it is the true policy . " ) M . Billault replied . The debate was adjourned till Monday . L ' ohDAY , Jan . 22 . —At two o ' clock M . Saozat ,
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the President , took the chair . The Chamber shortly afterwards resumed the discussion on the fourth paragraph of the address . M . Thicrs , having been called to the tribune , said , that notwithstanding the reluctance be had felt for the last two years to address the Chamber , he nevertheless felt it his duty to come forward at present and state his opinion to the country respecting the utility of the English alliance . That alliance had
been sincere from 1830 to 1836 , but since that year it bad erased by degrees to become less intimate , until 1840 , when'it was nigh degenerating into war . In 1044 , the renewal of that alliance being on the tapia , be would examine if tho sacrifices which it imposed secured to France a suitable compensation . The orator then traced the course of the Frenoh Government's relations with England from 1830 down to the present time . With rthpect to Russia , he remarked that the situation of Poland was a permanent obstacle to her engaging in war , and Bhe would not draw tho swoid until she had completely pubdued that nation . The other Powors
of Europe were tired of war ; the people , who now were of some weight in the balance were averse to war , and entirely occupied with their material interests . Hostilities wero not consequently to bo apprehended , and ho felt justified in saying the English alliance was no lender a guarantee of peace , or that peace would continue to exist with it . M . Thicrs , in concluding , maintained that , however anxious he was and had always been for tho alliance with England , he did not think that it could ever bo as cordial aud efficacious as provious to 1836 , and recommended that the Government should in future observe the great * , st reserve in its relations with Great Britain . M . Guizot replied .
SPAIN . —Madrid letters of the 12 th state that the Progressistaa had beaten the Ministerial party hoJlovr in the Madrid elections , and the example is one which it was not doubted would be followed in the provinces . The final result is not yet known , but from what is known , it is evident that tho triumph of the Progressistaa id much more complete than they themselves ever expected . M . Coriina has left Madrid for Seville His intentions are uot known ; but the Government arc ui great alarm that he may head another pronunciamcnlo . i M . Martinez do la Rosa has left Madrid for Paris .
Letters feom Madrid of the 15 th state that great excitement reigned at Seville . A meetiug called to con ^ der the illegal actB of the Ministry had been forcibly put down , and the greatest agitation prcvailf d . The Moderado papers admit that another revolution is meacning them ; but they only call out lor inert vigour on the part of the Government , and uevtr appear to consider that it is their own arbitrary and illegal aots that are provoking a revolution , in spite of the thorough weariness of tbe people of these violent changes .
Lettern from Madrid of the 16 th state that preparations are being ( made to excite a Carlist insurrection in the province cf Biscay . The object , it is said , of the Cariist party is to effect a marriage beweeu the eideet son of Don Carlos and tho Queen of Spain . The Castellano invites the attention of Government to these facts . G-hseCE . —Private correspondence from Athena , of ilio Si-a ult ., announces the dismissal Irom the Ministry , by the advice of hig colleagues , of M . Rhi-Kas Palamides .
Much difference of opinion still continued to exist n Jativo to the constitution of an Upper House of Parliament or Senate , some partits desiring that the senators should be appointed by the King , and othf rs insisting that they should be chosen by the people , on the plan of the Belgian or Spanish Constitution . PORTUGAL . —Lisbon , January 17 th . —In the
Chamber of Peers the Quecn ' d speech and the proposed address to her Majesty have been tho principal subjects of discussion for some days . On the 11 th instant the Vitcount de Fonto Arcada moved the substitution of an address , setting forth the general discontent , and bt&ting that the people had no hope of obtaining justice at the hands of the present ministry , and that their only resource , the legitimate one , of addrestnitf their petitions to her Majesty , had been ircpnitc by ministers , in violation of a right conferred by the constitution . The finances of the coun / ry had been throwa into disorder , new taxes had been levied on the people , vexatious and
necessarily unproductive ; a large portion of the ordinary revenue of the future jvar had been already anticipated illegally , iuas-niuch as the supplies had not been voted ; . a measure had been introduced proposing to invest the Chamber of Peers with functions odious and unconstitutional , and whiou , if passed into law , would effectually abolish tho liberty of the press , and bring down the execration of thd community on that Chamber . The Chamber negatived the motion , re / iL-ing to admit of its discussion . The address to her Majesty was carried by a majority oS twentj-six . The proceedings in tbe Chamber of Deputies on the subject of the address were of a similar character to those in the House of Peers .
FOREIGN MISCELLANY . Portugeese Cruelty . —An act of barbarous cruelty ( of a description of rare occurrence in this country ) has lately been brought , to light in this city . A young lady , the daughter of the late Admiral Rosa , w . ho commanded the squadron of Don Miguel , was discovered incarcerated in a private dwelling house , in this city , in which she had been kept in solitary confinement for nearly two years . Ttiejoung woman who is about twenty years of age was found shut up in a room on tho ground floor the windows of which were secured with iron bars . The girl was . lying on a straw bed , without clothes or other covering than a shawl . On being interrogated j she said she had been put in confinement by her mother two years previously ; she was freqututiy beaten by her , aud she showed the marka of uokneo on her body caused by severe beating the
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day before . The Minister of Justice being informed of the circumstances , gave orders to have the unfortunate girl removed to an hospital ; and instructed the magistrate to institute criminal j proceedings for the infraction of the law which prohibits the use of private prisons . i It appears that the girl is the step-daughter of this baroarous woman . ; Murder of a Banker—The Journaldes Debuts states that during tho last two days the inhabitants of Pontoise have been in a state of excited amazement , in consequence of a murder committed on the
person of M . Donon Cadot , a wealthy banker , at his residence in that towu . The assassin or assassins , for the crime is still enveloped in mystery , carried off a largo sum in cash and bank notes , together with a number of commercial bills and plate , to the rake of 800 , 000 f . ( above £ 30 , 000 British ) . A singular circumstance ) has added to the mystery of this tragic event . At the moment that the authorities of Pontoise were preparing an advertisement to stop the payment of the stolon bills of exchange , a letter was received bearing tho post mark of Poisy , which contained the entire of the securities .
Ctonritet Fotteluamc?.
Ctonritet fottelUamc ? .
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Mr . Clark ' s Tour—On Monday I lef . Torqua , for Totn . ss . On my arrival at the latter place I found i . impossible to gut up a meeting , owing to tbe -want of due notice . I tboref ^ ru mounted the' night coach and made my way to Plymouth , where I expected to lecture on the following evening , but I discovered that could uot be tbe case , as the publio halls were all engaged by different parties . That iu which 1 was to leotur . was occupied by the League ,, fur a lecture by A . Brown , Esg ,, " On tbe Evils of the Cern-Iawa . " Having nothh j to do , I acceded to the request of my Chattiat frten a , and attended Mr . Brown ' s lecture , which wss cet siniy a talented one , but , like all others of the same school , he escribed effects which owe their origin to ' ar different causes—to the " murderous
Corn-Laws . " At the conclusion of bis lecture , the chairmnn , on i ehalf of the lecturer , invited discussion . Tbe working nen present knowing I was in the hall , called upon : ae to accept the chairman ' s invitation , which l immediately diU , evidently much to the mortification of the chairman , who , as his after eonduct proved , gave tbe challenge a-la-Cobden , expecting none would dare accept it . 1 bad notibeen on ray l » gs above five minutes , wheu 1 was interrupted by aim calling " question , " the meeting shotting " he is to the question . 1 again attempted to proceed , but the chairman and a little knot <> r " respectables" by whom be was surrounded kepc up a incessant yell to drown my v . kc . At length the chairman propoaed to put it to the meeting , whether 1 should be heard or uot : to
this I cordially assented : he put it , and above threefourths af the meeting decided / should goon : all was silence to hear bis decision , which was " Gentlemen , I dissolve this meeting . " This announcement was met by the moat dlatual groans for the League , and cheers for the Charter ; amidst which Mr . Blackmoor rose and proposed a vote of censure on tbe chairman , which was carried ly loud acclamation . Oa Wednesday I lectured to an immense audience , on Machinery and thu Corn Law a . A great uumber of be middle classes were present- I spoke upwards of two hours ; and , at tbe close , a gentleman ! of the Complete Suffrage party argued in favour of machinery ,
attempting to prove that it had bettered the condition of the working classes ; as a proof of whick , hu instanced the fact that gloves , which was formerly a luxury enjoyed only by the f . w , were now worn by working men . I replied : after-which Mr . Smith m « v _ d , aud >! r . Blackman seconded , a resolution eniWvacing tho views I bad advanced , which was carried uninimoHsly . I bad the pleasure of receiving tbe thanks of thy meeting , and likewise enrolling several mt-mbers . On Thursday I took my final leave of Plymouth ; tmd oa tbe afternoon of the same day arrived at Exeter , where I had two meetings , on Friday and Saturday evenings , of which I shall speak in my next . T . Clark . — P . y . On Monday nest I visit the friends in Wales . i
Mr . M'Grath ' s Tour . —On Monday evening 1 arrived at Nottingham and was met at tho station by aevoral friends . At seven o c ' ock = we repaired to the Democratic Chapel , in which a' good audiouco was congregated . Mr . Dormau had bee ., appointed to the chair . On entering , 1 found Mr . hweet urging on the meeting the propriety of taking immeciiat ^ steps to organize the Chartist electoral strength of the town , a duty Whioh should bo rigidly attended to by every locality in the country . Having addressed the meeting for about an hour , the meeting separated , apparently satisfied with the cvoning ' s proceediags . Tfaero are in the town seron loonlitios ; that is one in each tuunicpal ward . During tho week 1 attended several members' meetings . Thu
Chartist feelina hero is genuine , and when somo trifling local difT . rouc . s are adjusted , & i-trong impetus , I doubt not , will be given to the movcaiont . Tne forthcoming Conferenccis spoken , of here with much interest . Great important :-is attached tu i ;; 1 rejoice at this , because it augurs that so far as Nottingham is concerned , th « Confereuco will lie an efficient one . It is time the peopio began to direct attention to this vitally impor ; _ ni ; subject , as matters of the greatest impottaue . will ho . brought under the most serious consideration or ' ., »• next delegation . On Sunday evening we had a crowditd mooting in the large room of the New Ism , ac Carriugton . 1 addressed them for upwards of an hour . Three years ago the working men oi thin place opened by
shares a co-operative btore which - io prospering beyond their most sanguine expectations ; ai Arnold , three miles distant , there is a similar establishment . This is a practicable plan « or bringing the profi :-mongering middle-class man to his h-iises , of which the working classes should universally avail themfelves . On Monday I addressed a crowded meeting in the Democratic Chapel , Nottingham . Mr . Curry in the chair . At the conclusion I was honoured with an unanimous vote of thauks . S-ver , al members were added to the roll of tbe Associatiou . On Tuesday evening I proceeded to Arnold . Tno principal business of this town is storking weaving ; irom various inquiries which 1 have mad . I have ahCenairied ihe fact that tho average earnings of the stecitiiiger
throughout the year d « es not exceeed 5 u 6 . 1 . per week , and were it not that families here arc lor tho most part in possession of little plots of land the direst misery must be their lot . We had a crowded meeting in the large room of the Flying iioi ^ e . I spoke upwards of an hour ; we then commenced the work of enrolment , and thirty cards pf membership were taken out . That Arnold is thorough democratic is evident from the tact , that lust March the Tori's brought forward a candidate for . he office of Assistant Overseer , the Chartists put one of their own body , Mr . M . llor , in nomination , auJ , notwithstanding the Whigs and Toriea combinod against them , they carried their man by an overwehni-jg majority . Philip M'Grath . Nottingham , Jan . 24 .
OLDHAM-On Sunda , y Jasfc Mr . John Crowthcr delivered a lecture in the Chartist Room , Greaves-Btreet . : TODJHORTJEN . —The samp placard that gave notico of Mr . O'Connor ' s visit to Todmorden also informed the public that the Rev . T . S . Baker , baptist minister , Millwood , would deliver an address to the middle and working classes on Thursday nighc , the 18 ' , h instant , on 4 v Tho moral beannps of ti . o Peopie ' a Charter upon ail olasses of theiCommunity . " Tho room was densely crowded . There were a
great many there that had never been before—nearly tho whole of ihe Rev . Gentleman ' s icougrc gat ion being present ; and thorc is not the least doubt but a great deal of prejudice was removed from their minda . The Rav . Gentleman took his card , and went through the wboio or" tho points contained therein . At the close of iho Rev . GentlrniaM ' d address a vote of thanks wag given to him lor his argumentative and eloquent discourse . A collection was th « ii made for ine National Tribute , aud 17 s was obtained .
More Tyranny . —It will be remembered that when Mr O'Cannor was at Todmorden be exposed tho infamous reductions made in the wages oi Mr . Ormerod's spinner .. Ou Saturday , one yf tha spinnors was discharged , and told to go to the Chartists , and desire them to keep him . : Mr . W . Bkll , of Heywcod , delivered two lectures in the Cnartist Association Room on Sunday last . ! Bolton . —Mr . Leach delivered a lecture to the inhabitanta of Bolton , on the 23 rd insfc . ; in the Charti-t Association Room . At seven o ' clock , the doors of the large room were beset with anxious expectants . The room was crowded to eAc _ s _ , and- scores went away unable to obtain admittance . Mr . Leach
delivered an argumentative and unanswerable speech of nearly two hours , and sat down amidst enthusiastic applause . After the lecture , Joseph Cook , Esq ., a very large manufacturer , rose aud endeavoured to answer Mr . Leach ' s arguments ; but , alafl ! alas ! how short he came . He was replied to by Mr . Leach in a most triumphant manner . After a vote of thanks to Mr . Leach , the meeting separated , Rochdale—Mr . M'Cabe , of Oldham , delivered two lectures ou Sunday last , in the Chartist Association Room , which gave general satisfaction to his hearers . ! On Monday evening last Mr . Wm . Miller , of Old .-ham , delivered his first lecture on Phreaoiosy , for the benefit of the Chartist prisoners ii . 'K irkdafv .
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Manchester . —CARPEirtEns' Hall . A lecture was delivered in the above Hall on Sunday evening last by Mr . VVm . Dixon . Salforp—The towa was placarded last week announcing a lecture to be delivered by Mr . James Leach in the Chartist Association Room , Great George ' s-streef . . and challenging the Corn Law Repealers to come forward and defend their infamous placard that had been posted on the walls of Manchester and surrounding districts on the week previous . Before the time announced for the lecture , the room was orammed almost to suffocation Mr . James Craig was called to tbe chair and
introduced Mr . Leach to the meeting amidst great applause . Mr . Leaoh proceeded to address the meeting in nis plain and argumentative style . When about the middle of his lecture an alarm was given that the floor was giving way . This turned out to be correct , but the usual evil consequences were averted by the coolness of Mr . Leach and other friends ; the people departing quietly , no one was injured , though the lecture was , of-course put a stop to . Tho Irish Repealers room is underneath the Chartist room , and had the floor wholly given way , the consequences would have been frightful , ob acoount of the Repealers room , as well as ours , being crammed to suffocation .
Stock-WI . —Mr , Donovan lectured here on Sonday last , to a numerous and attentive audience . His discourse gave general satisfaction . Ltb Waste ; weah Stourbbidge—Mr . G-O-Tellow addressed a meeting of the Chartists of this place oa Monday evening . Chartism is in a healthy state here , and the good cause i _ likely to progress . Birmingham , —At a meeting of Chartists at the Ship Inn locality , SteelhoHse-lane , on Tuesday evening last , a letter , of the mo 3 t heart-rending description was read from John Fussell and James Mowitfc , of London , who had paid a visit to poor Joaey Liaey , who now lies in the Millbank Penitentiary , under an imprisonment of One Year and Nine Months , for
daring to assert his own and fellow countrymen ' s rights . After the reading of the letter , which called forth the utmost disgust at the present system of things , it was resolved , " Thaf . a delegate meeting be holden on Sunday , the 4 th of February , at Bilston , at two o ' clock in the afternoon , to take Liney's case into consideration , with the intention of getting upa memorial in his behalf . Mr . Mason will accompany the delegation from Birmingham , and deliver lectures at Wedcesbury and Bilston the same day . The Chartists of Bowling , near Bradford , met in their room oh Sunday evening , when the sum of 4 * . was collected for the Tribute , by Jeremiah Rhodes . The meeting adjourned to Sunday , at ten o ' clock in the morning .
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Drowning at Leeds . —On Wednesday last , a lad , six years of age , named Joseph Byron , who lived with his grandfather , Mr . J . Byron , milkman , Holbeck Lane , whilst filling a can with water at the dam of Mr . Roberta's Mill , Holbeok , fell into tho dam , and was drowned . An inquest was held on the body of the deceased on the following day , bpfore Mr , J . Blackburn , Coroner , and a verdict of " Accidentally drowned '" was returned . Faial Accident . —On Tuesday forenoon last , a
young man of the name of Thomas Smith , employed at the worsted mill of Mr . Wilkinson , Accommodation-road , Leeds , whilst engaged with two other young men , in removing half a bag of wool , accidentally fell against ; some part of the machinery . A spindle entered his ear and having penetrated his head about three inches , he expired instantly . Oa the same evening , an inquest was held on the body of the deceased , before John Blackburn , Esq ., Coroner , at the Court House , and a verdict of " Accidental death" returned .
Shipleit . —Strike of Power Look Weavers . — This contest has ended by Mr . Hargreavos signing the list price of the weavers . An advance of 6 d . in some pieces , aud 3 d . in others , has been obtained those that were reduced are brought up to their former price . Mr . Hargreaves , in order to bring up some of his loss by this advance of wages , has reduced the wages of the wooloombers in his employ , some a farthing in the pound , and others a halfpenny . Brapford . —Woolcombers' Strike . —The woolcombers in the employ of Mr . Varlev , of
Stanninsley , are on strike against a reduction of wages Early in November last , Mr . Varley reduced his hstiids ; but seeing tho men resolved to withstand the attempt , he compromised with them , taking a fanning off the top sorts , and putting a farthing on . Jiu lower sorts ; this was agreed to . But no sooner done , than the lower sorts were disused / the demand being for the top sons . To prove hib sympathy for his workmen , he liberally subscribed £ 50 to the League Fund ; when , lo ! the inferior sorts of wool were reduced a farthing in the ponnd , the demand having changed to the low sorts . The men are oa strike against this latter reduction .
ToDitoRDoN . —Rather Ominous . —The Bellman was employed on Saturday ni ^ ht la st , to perambulate the streets of Todmorden to intocm . the inhabitants that a great quantity of the Leeds Mercury newspaper was on sale at a reduced price ! This is some satisfaction , to know that tho " great liar " has to be cried . The fact proclaims the intelligence o / tbo people of Todmorden . Bahnsley . —On Monday , the 22 ad iustant , the rtgular weekly meeting of the weavers was held , in Mr . John Pickering ' s large room ; Mr . Thomas
Butterfield in ' tho chair . The speakers were Messrs . Grim-haw and Shaw , who addressed the meeting on the importance of the weavers uniting their ( iforts , in order to prevent Mr . Pecket . s , and every othev unprincipled employer , from robbing them of the due reward for their labour . A vote of thtink 8 was unanimously given to the Editor of ihe Nor / turn Star , tor his able advocacy of the rights of labour ; also a vote of thanks to the shopkeepers , publicans , &o ., for their very liberal support of the weavers .
Bradfokd— Universal Regeneration Society . This body held their usual weekly meeting at the Cross Keys , Wharf-street , on Sunday evening . The room was crowded with visitors . Several letters wer « read , one of them from Mr . Stollmeyer with instructions , and one irom Glasgow , requesting instructions , and stating that one hundred members were already enrolled . A number of new books was ordered . One pound wm voted from the fund to pay for them . All communications for the a-bove Society to be addressed to ths Secretary , John Greenwood , Nx > . 8 , Reform-street , Westgate , Bradford .
The Rothwpll Haigh and Robin Hood Collieries . — We havo received from the men on strike at the abore collieries v . lengthy communication in reply to certain alle ^ at * -ns conta i ned-m the statemnt of Mr . Charlesworth , tho proprietor of the t
2— f hat it is not true that the pit 3 are safer under the new eystem ; on the contrary cne of the pits , cailtfl i ' asiure Pi :., which is worked and veutilat"d under the new system fired only about four months ago . 3—It is not true that the men employed in the pit have been paid for building tho columns . The columns were originally built by somemen brought from near Rotherham , who were paid from Is . 4 d . to 2 ~ . 2 d . per dozeo , in adddition to their railway farrs ; but the men belonging te the pit were not p . ii '_ , though tbt 3 ' had all the inconvenience and extreme hard labour under the new system . The Rofhcrara men' have now left , and Mr . Charlesworth w iahes to impose their work , upon the pitmen , at the rate of fourpence halfpenny or fivepence per d . zan . 4 th . —The Colliers doubt the truth of the state-BUii ! - - made by Mr . Headley that the new system h . i . s Deen worked under hia management in Earl
fcuz ^ ilhan- 's Collieries , having enquired of one of the Earl ' fi agents , and received for answer that no such person had been so employed for the last forty years ; aud apparently Mr . Headley is not more than lorty-fave years of age . Tlie men add that " The strike is not an unreasonable strike . It is not altogether a peouniary strike , out ib one for the safety of our lives , and against a furthn reduction of our low wages , wages that have been &o low lor the last two years , as to have rereduced us to beggary and starvation , had it not been for our parishes' affording relief ; and low as they are , tho new system would actually reduce them , as we have before state ., 9 d . per day , or 4 s . 6 d . per week , beside the all-important fact of placing our lives exceedingly more in j-opardy . " In concSusion the oj . n say— " We make ona offer to our employers * that we find a scientific and practical Colliery viewer ; that we meet Messrs . Charle-wotth s or their stewards ; that we ail descend into and
examine the mines together ; that we have a full and fair opportunity of explaining our views of bad ventilation , and that we each of us abide by the viewer ' s decision . If our terms are accepted , Messrs . Charie . worth ' s can certify the same in this paper next Saturday , or otherwise , as they think proper . Signed on behalf of ( he body of Miners John Kendrew , President ; Josh . Westmoreland , Secretary . Miners' Committee Room , Black Bull Inn , Rothwell . January 25 th , 1844 . " - _^_
To The Imperial Chartists.
TO THE IMPERIAL CHARTISTS .
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MONIES RECEtVED BY MR O'CONNOR . FOB EXECUTIVE . £ a . d . From Colne , per Joshua Watson 0 25 0 CARDS . Coventry 0 0 4 D . iby ( omitted in former list ) o 8 4 Bnrhley 0 8 8 Arbroath 0 0 10 Greenwich 0 l o CONTRIBUTIONS . Coventry 0 3 8 Hebdei ) Bridge ... 0 S 4 Heywood 0 7 1 Paisley . 0 5 0 Arbroath 0 6 2 Stockpoit ( Youths ) ... 0 4 2 -UTIONAL TRIBUTE . CHtheroe , per J . Heaton 10 0 Kennelworth , per Mr . Towes 0 5 0 Coventry—Mr . Parker , per Mr . Gilbert 0 10 _ . Wiles , ditto ... 0 0 6 « . Dcbwn , ditto ... 0 0 0 _» Williams , ditto ... 0 0 6 _ . Gilbert 0 0 6 A Friend , ditU ... 0 10 Mr . Hemming , ditto ... 0 1 0 Work Shop , [ per Mr . Parker 0 0 6 Mi Garlic , ditto ... 0 0 3 Total from Coventry ... o 5 9 Bebden Bridge ... 1 2 9
A number of ill-paid labourers , per Samuel Bntterwortb ... . ... 0 14 10 . $ Collected by a number « - Chartist . ... ^" ... * 15 11 York 0 10 0 Hall 0 9 6 Hammersmith 0 7 10 Working Man ' s Hall ... 0 9 9 L . ver of Justice ... 0 1 0 VICTIM FUND . Hull 0 0 C James Hunter ( postage stamps ) 0 2 0 Redd-tch 0 10 0 Waisall 0 2 0 Joseph George , Windsor 0 14 SUBSCRIPTIONS . Carrington 0 12 4 Preston 0 4 9 RECEIVED BY GENERAL SECRETARY . NATIONAL TRIBUTE . £ B . d . Cbilwell , Nottinghamshire , per Sweet ... 0 1 6 Mr Mogg 0 10 Louqhborongh , per Skevington 0 2 7 Ditto , Mrs Renals ... 0 1 0 Ditto , Mrs Dixon ... 0 1 11 Enemy to Tyranny ... 0 1 0 Mount £ > orr . l 0 6 6 Nurmanton ... ... 0 0 6 Butterley 0 6 0 Mottram ... ... 0 10 6 Do . J . R 0 2 6 New Radford 2 3 0
CARDS . Coalbrook Dale ... 0 2 0 SUBSCRIPTIONS . New RadforU 0 2 6 Mansfield 0 5 0 Mottram 0 3 6 Coal brook Dale ... 0 0 3 Mri Henna , 13 weeks ... oil Somers'Town 0 4 0 VICTIM FUND . Mr Henna , 13 weeks ' subscription 0 2 l FOR MR . OASTLER . A Lover of Justice ... 0 1 0 NATIONAL TRIBUTE . Sn tton-in- A-hfleld , Forest Side ... 0 7 6 Chartists , Sutton-in-A-hfleld 10 0 Preston 0 11 0 Bamber Bridge ... 0 3 0 Carriugton 1 0 0 DEFENCE FOND . Sutton-ln-Ashfleld , Ferest Side ... ... 0 2 6 VICTIM FUND . Monthly subscription of 20 Chartists , meeting at White Horse Chapel 0 18 Preston 0 10 0 ErhaTa . —The £ l 5 s lid acknowledged last week from Etmria , Staffordshire Potteries , should have been from Hanley .
;[Famcr,N $Boi≫Emettt$.
;[ famcr , n $ Boi > emettt $ .
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Fjridat , January 26 \—There is ohlSfcai supply oi Wheat to this day ' s market ! ^ jSJi do not purchase freely , but the holders ar ^<* fclt in demanding last week ' ^ prices . SeleM ipaffl of Barley arc taken off at full wefe- * secondary qualities met a dull sale , and tufcHip ported their former value . Oats and SfcJjgrjj more hi demand iho-n of late , s r&tlgttaSNfil prices . Beans u ... - ' ' .. ...- vv-. ^ A i . > w 1 ^ Q''c ^ i
Wakefield Corn Marinm-^Jfe
WAKEFIELD CORN MARinM- ^ Jfe
The Irish Trial.
THE IRISH TRIAL .
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Y 0 L- YIL NO . 324 . SATURDAY JANUARY 27 1844 ™ CE POTOPENCB hamjpbnhv or , A vx . A / iii j jiixi u-i-wx / Wf } AUyiyj , Plvc . umingB per Quarter .
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AND ^ LEEDS GENERAL ADVERTISER .
New Woollen Cloth And Tailohs' Trimming Establishment, J 57, Briggate, Leeds, And Market Place, Darlington.
NEW WOOLLEN CLOTH AND TAILOHS' TRIMMING ESTABLISHMENT , 57 , BRIGGATE , LEEDS , AND MARKET PLACE , DARLINGTON .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Jan. 27, 1844, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1249/page/1/
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