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RUSSELL, "THE TIMES" AND O'CONNELL
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THE MARTYR FROST.
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Co *\eaau*£ $c Comsfeonimttsfc
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Xou-riady. THS SkCOSD EDITIOS OF MY LIFE, q£0UR SOCIAL STATE, Pari I..
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Suicides. — Eialitv-iivein^esandtliu'ty.fivefeinalw
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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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- - a Poem , _ . / ty EKNEST JONES , Barrister at I \ w . Itsontaics more pregnant thou ^ iits , more bursts of Ijlic pon-er , more , Iu fine , of the truly grand and beautiful , than asiy poetical work , which Uas made its apin-arance for years . We know of lew tilings more dramatic callj intense than the stenes between l'hilipp , Warreu and Clare . —Sine Quarterly Review . Full of -wild dreams , strange fancies and graceful images , interspersed with in : iiiv briglit and T > eantifal thouglrts , its clasf dufeet is its brevity . The author ' s in . spirations seom to j ^ ish fresh and sparUluig from Hippocrene . ne will want neither readers uor admirers . -MorniagPost . - ¦ ¦¦ " * .... ^ _ . _ , _ the pubhc to
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EUGENE SUE'S NEW NOVEL . MARTIK THE " : FOTJSBLIXG ; OH TnE ADVEN TUBES OF A VALET-BE-CHAMBRE . appears ' ngularly in the FAMILT HERALD , the most popular Periodical of tUa day—a successful attempt to blend wisdom withjcli <*? fu ! nrss . and utility with , entertainment . The Family Kvrald is a universal pai-lour favourite , -well adapted ' fw leisiir . ; iuonsents . Order Xo . 168 . or 1 'art 39 ; the former One Penny , the latter Sixpence-. All Booksellers and JTen-s ^ geuts sell the Family Herald .
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DAGURREOTYPE AND CALOTYPE . mnE-APPARATCS , LEXo , CfnSJIICAI . 5 , rii \ 'CE % J . CASES , and every other articl-uscii in making and xieuuting the above can be ! ia . i o T . E ^ erton , ' Sol , Twnjile-street , Wliitefrinra , L « ador .. descriptive Cata . logucs gratis . LEBEBOUnS' ctlehrated ACHROMATIC TRIPLET LE 5 SE 3 ibrthe-MICU 03 C 0 P £ , sect io any part ol the couurry at the folUrain ;; i « ic « : —D « p Power , 60 s . ; Low Power , 25 s . 'Everyarticlevrarraaicd . Prccticalinstruc tions , Three Guineas ^
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Sill . O'CONNOR will attend the tea-party oa MomJny the 3 i d of August '—wiil address the ptop ' . e of Hudt ' . ersfitld at the . PbiJosopbical ilall on 'jVsAiy the 4 th of Augustand will attend » Le Leeils Dcinonstracian on Wcdncs"dav the oth of August .
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t a ^ MWy ^^ y /^ yy ^^^^^^^^/^/^/^ yyi // - /^/^ , THE COiTfiNTIOX . . As the CLaviist Exulieqeer is empty , it is most earnsstiy reqaeste ;! that ih > : C : iariiats of the Empire . will forvf&ri tht-ir mive u > sui-pzri a ^ oo / j cause , by Post-office order , payaU ' c to Mr . O'Connr-r , and addressed to London Miri : ;^ usxi week , aud payable fo Mr . O'Connor , atisl o , J < lh * 533 d to him , Pust-OfficcLccds- during thegitiing of tbe ConTentJon
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A great problesn to be now solved by all classes is , whether such a coaiuion as that standing at the head of this article is either the promised fruits of th ' e Reform Bill or t 3 » e tribute due to the acknowledged Improvements of the age . it was natural that the five years ' electrif ying policy of Sir Robert Pcci should have so galvanized the public mind as to reconcile even adverse opiaious to a temporary ces saticn of political dsslcresices for ibe purpose of testing some of the novelties of the great statesman . To tbis circumstance , and 10 it alone , can we ascribe the toleration accorded to the experiment of the new
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Whig Premier . In this triple alliance Lord John Russell figures as a mere puppet , sustafoedjffjhe Times ^ id WO'CSnndil ~ tfifc doubt much his power to preserve his ascendWmy ftirJa single week if deprived of the pliancy of the one , ; or the servility of the other . It was easy to reconcile the party who ousted Sir Robert Peel ' from office to a mere occupation Government , however distasteful , until their pique against their old leader hnd subsided ; but we doubt much that , i ' reflection , even the Protectionists will rest satisfied under their present humiliation ; —a humiliation the most degrading to which any
nation lias ever been subjected—a- humiliation that will not . be tolerated even b y the affrighted respectable classes upon the presumed necessity of subduing Chartism and checking democratic principles . If the proud Lords of England , who confessedly accepted Sir Robert Peel ' s commercial policy upon the plea that Her Majesty and the circumstances of the age required a Btrong Government , and if the phantom of that which has now been enthroned upon their weakness had _ been fore-sliadowed in the distance , we much doubt that the hereditary peers of England would have made so large a sacrifice to insure so humiliating and degrading an insult ,
The nation has notyetroused itself from that lethargy and surprise into which it was thrown by the eviction of a minister boasting of his large majorities—the strength of his government—the countenance of his Sovereign—the confidence of the monicd classes , and the respect of the industrious . We would ask , however , whether even , the liberal constituencies of England ,, the parties who alone can eke even the semblance of a triumph out of Russell's position , are satisfied with being ruled by a
finality minister , an Irish placebunter , and the salesman of a corrupt and venal newspaper . It is not two months since these worthies , now fraternized . as a government , were ranged one against the other , in deadly hostility . Not a meeting atConciliation Hall , where tile villainy of the 2 Y ? nesand the treachery of the iiase , bloody , and brutal Whigs , did not furnish the Liberator with a stock for his trading speech . Not a number of the rimes appeared that did not teem with denunciation of the Liberal landlord of
Cahirciveen , and reflections , upon iheincompetency of the present . Prime Minister , if called upon to succeed Sir Robert Peel . And yet , notwithstanding the fact of this recent disunion staring us in the \ face , we now find a perfect brotherhood established between those heretofore adverse elements , and society is told to rest satisfied with their sway . We know not how the country gentlemen may feel—how the liberals of England did feel—before Lord John Russell ' s new declaration of principles ; but we do know that the working classes will rise
as one man , in the majesty of their moral power , and hurl for ever this trinity of humbug , corruption , ami treachery , from office . We have thrice before been asked to give the Whigs a fair trial . We have seen them tottering and ignominioiisly hurled from oftice , for rclvine hiuw > tto . fcircd support of an Irish raction , rather than upon that party and those p rinciples by which they had achieved power . And now we are asked to give our old enemies , our bitter and irreconcileable enemies , ANOTHER FAIR TRIAL . This is the question which we are called ^
upon to solve , and upon which the country will shortly be tested ; and although our broad sheet receives no favor at the hands of authority , although it . is not to be found upon the table of the Club House or the tavern , although it is not patronised by the upper and middle classes , we yet unhesitatingly state that it is the dial t ) : at governs the millions ; it expresses the sentiments , which at a general election can overthrow the preparations of the Times , the hopes of the Whigs , and the anticipation of the Irish place-hunters .
Our policy then is to snap and break up every Whig government professing other , principles than those propounded by the reformers , and relied upon by the Whigs . Our policy is to repudiate all connection with the Irish placehunters ,, wno n : ve created a prejudice , unacr false pretences , against the English Chartists , and whose chief value to the Whigs is their professed opposition and hostility to Chartism . The coalition attempted to be formed by Lord John Russell , with the most able of the Tory party , can leave no doubt upon our mind as to the lengths to which the Whig Minister is prepared to go , rather than make those TIMELY and PRUDENT CONCESSIONS so
prominently set forth ' " in his Edinburgh epistle . Russell ' s invitation to Lord Dalhousie , the Earl of Lincoln , and Sidney Herbert , three supporters of the Irish Coercion Bill , will'be a ready hustings answer to the Liberal scouts who shall henceforth charge Chartisis with a preference for Ton' over Whig candidates . The cry of "Tory Chartisms" must now cease for ever . Cobden saved Peel from eviction , and Russell appealed to three Tories to sustain him in power . We shall , henceforth , therefore , turn a deaf
ear to the ravings ot the Liberator , the revilings of " Old Bloody , " and the taunts of the liberal scouts ; and when the nest opportunity presents itself , regardless of slander or vituperation , we shall be found marshalled in battle array , and dire hostility , against the English renegade Premier , the Irish place-hunter and betrayer of his country , and the bloody old Times . Neither shall we be nice , or over scrupulous as to the weapons used in action—we shall take up JANISSARY , or PROTECTIONIST , or whatever
cudgel comes nearest to hand , to aid us in the warfare against the " base , bloody , and brutal Whigs " —the betrayers of their principles , the murderers of Holberry , Duffy , and Clayton ; the transporters of Frost , Williams , and Jones , and the Dorchester Labourers ; the coercers of Ireland , and the starvers of the English people . And it matters but little , whether the cry is Cheap Sugar , though we like it ; Cheap Timber , though we want it ; or Cheap Bread , though those who grow it will shortl y be unable to huv it .
The League took a leaf out of our book , when they adopted the motto , "One thing at a time ; " we can accommodate ourselves to the same rule , and , without neglecting the Land or the Charter , direct our immediate energies to the overthrow of the enemies of both , and our motto is— "The Charter and No Surrender , " and , when the struggle begins , our cry ¦ will be " Down with the Whigs , " whether succeeded by Tories , Conservatives , Janissaries . or Protectionists . Where we can ' t secure a Chartist , we will endeavour to beat a Whig . ;
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11 ia . ii ¦ BUNCOMBE . We feel assured that every true-born Englishman ; every honest Irishman , every independent Scotchman , and all who are subject to British rule , must have read Buncombe ' s speech of Thursday , the 16 th instant , with surpassing pride . The occupation Ministry hail , no doubt , presumed upon the support of a venal and corrupt press , which , as if by compact , all rallied to the aid of the finality Minister , while the little gentleman himself and his Irish Janissaries had calculated upon sufficient repose and Chartist non-interference , to allow him to mould his
cabinet to the existing necessities of middle-class money-mongers . Buncombe , however , lias drawn him from that calm retreat iu which he hoped to shelter himself frnm public scrutiny , and from the confessions , the degrading and humiliating confessions , wrung from the Free Trade Mini ster who promised us those PRUDENT CONCESSIONS due to popular requirement , will any honest man say that we were hasty , intemperate , or premutuve in having drawn the sword against tbis unhol y coalition of Whig treachery , newspaper venality , and Irish delinqucncv .
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We were tb . eiirst , ( to-announce the .-adhereuce !? the Times ^^^ y ^ i ^ V ^ MtjkM ^ JP ^ Russell , nor cairwe forget the withering effect produced upon Sir John Cam Hobliouse ' at the disclosure bf Russell ' s invitation , to the three juvenile Tory statesmeii of which he begged a loan from Sir Robert Peel . Who that saw Lord John Russell bid for popular support—who- that read his celebrated letter , declaring the . necessity of PRUDENT CONCESSIONS being made to growing opinion , could have been prepared for that declaration of finality policy wrung from him by the hon . member for Finshurv . It was not a sufficient answer to Mr .
Buncombe s question that he would resist the five points of the Charter , as reminded by Mr . Duncombe , that was foreign to bis question . The question was not whether he Would aid in carrying the Charter , but how far he would extend the suffrage beyond its present inconvenient limits . ' No doubt , had the finalty Lord anticipated a general election , he would have taken care , whatever the realization might have been , to have provided himself with a good and sufficient CRY—such a CRY as would have hampered the movement party—such a CRY as might have enabled his Irish coadjutor to denounce the English Chartists , as foes to Ireland
and enemies to progression . We care but little , as to the question upon which the present Administration shall be destroyed ; whether it shall be upon Sugar , or Murder in the Array—upon Timber , or the Irish Church—upon confidence , or no confidencewitli whatever parliamentary character , they next come before the country , they will be met by the registered principles , by the damning stand-still , or retrogade policy of the finality Prime Minister . :
However he may have anticipated ' a sufficient calm to insure the harmonious moulding ; of those incongrnous elements of which his motley , Cabinet is composed , he has roused a feeling in every British heart inimical to the insulting sway of a hired Newspaper , a place-hunting Patricide , and . a Maithusimi clique . That repose , upon which the noble Lord so firmly built , could not be securely based upon temporary dislike to Sir Robert Peel . The government
of that great statesman , though shattered fora time , will be rallied by the pressure from without . There are Tories , as well as Whigs > Janissaries and Protectionists , as well as Free Traders , who are jealous of patronage , and feel insulted by Whig dominion . And with ' none of these parties : will the Working Classes unite , for any other purpose than thatof the destruction of the most cold-blooded ; Malthusiau middle-class Government that ever attempted to blight the hope of industry .
In Ireland , the enemies of progression have trumped up the old phantom , not of physical force , but of passive obedience and non-resistance , as the rallying cry of the place hunters . We have read the declaration of Mr . Smith O'Brien at Kilrusli , so much repudiated by the old women of Conciliation Hall ; we have read the allegories of the YOUNG GENTLEMEN about physical force , and we defy the most mauHling or fastidious old woman to ascribe to them any desire , or any inclination , to resort to . other Jhan ,. moral . and peaceable means for
the accomplishment of their object . But how nice and hypocritical tlie senses of the patriots , who plead Ireland's cause against the Saxon oppression , must be , when they . „ see fire in warm expression , and daggers in the pourtrayal of wrong . If that harmony , considered so essential fdr tlie accomplishment of the Repeal , shall be destroyed by this hypocritical distinction between moral and physical force , between hard , and soft words , between submission , loyalty , and just resistance to oppression , then the crime of disunion will be justly . chargeable upon the ' hypocritical Liberator , and his fastidious moral force old
women . No doubt can exist , that Russell , looked to Irish subserviency as the mainstay of his Cabinet ; . while , notwithstanding the fearful odds of patronage , and despotism , against the aspiring hope of liberty , we yet calculate upon the triumph of Irish principle over patronage and Saxon misrule .. O'Connell will endeavour to govern bv those nripsts Avhn nave tang M lowed in his train , and who have preferred following
him in error to-turning him from his wayward path : But there is yet some Milesian blood running in the veins of the young priesthood of Ireland , and they whose fatherland was despoiled by the fire and the sword of the usurper , whose estates where confiscated to the physical force conqueror , will noither . s . blusli nor tremble at the presumption of liberating their country , and regaining their lost rights , by tlie same means by which they were transferred to a foreign foe .
Again , we ask , \ i \\ y all the blarney about Irish s trength , Irish valour , and Irish love of country , if two-fisted Irishmen , are taught to shudder at the bare mention of resisting tyranny by force , and regaining their rights by the same means by * phtch they were robbed of them . It is impossible to witness the sale of Dungarvan to an anti-repealer and a Whig placeman , and the sale of Dundalk to a Whig official , " without coming to the conclusion that Ireland ' s battle must be fought upon English ground , from which despotism and religious
prejudice have been banished . All difference has now ceased to exist between Whigs and Tories , Freetraders and Monopolists , the ground is now cleared of these political distinctions which made Chartists tremble at the charge of being allied to the one or to the other . " A fellow-feeling makes us wondrous kind , " and mayhap that the English landlords ; now stripped of THEIR privileges , may assist the working classes in regaining THEIRS ;' and therefore whatever may be the result , our . CRY upon the next general election shall be—a CHARTIST IF WE CAN , and no Whig if we cannot . :
We must erase the odious name of . Whig from memory altogether , and trample for . ever upon ^ the base , jmital , and bloody coalition of newspaper venality , Whig delinquency , and Irish profligacy . Our crv is—Down with the Whigs '! ' ;
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PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW . The new Premier has lost no time in attacking the Sugar question , and has thereby exposed his Cabinet to a strong chance of a defeat by the combined forces of the West Indian and Protectionist parties . The general impression is , that his plan is likely to be lost , so that he will be forced to a . Dissolution immediately . Perhaps this is his object , in introducing the question at the fag-end of a .
session which has been distinguished for its eventful and laborious character . He needs " a cry , " and something definitive to go to the country upon ; and as he has neitLer the political honesty , nor courage , to face any of the great Questions , iu office , which he supported when but of it , he must be anxious to securetbe support of the shopkeeping and trading classes , by the proposition of a measure , which , at all events , squares with their notions .
As to the plan itself , it seems a fair and judicious settlement of a question of considerable importance . Borrowing a leaf from "Peel ' s" book , Lord John proposes a diminishing scale of duties on foreign , free , and slave Sugars , for five years ; when the same Duty as that now levied on British Colonial , ( 14 s . per cwt . ) will be levied on all Sugars , indiscriminately . His Lordship intimated , that further reductions might then be made ; but that would depend on the state of the revenue at the termination of that period . The existing prohibitory duty of 63 s . a cwt . . ' on slave grown sugars , is immediately to . be abolished , and the starting point for all foreign
sugars is 21 s . Of course , Exeter Hall will be in agonies at this proposal , and the proprietors of West India estates will fiud in the foolish , but sincere , anti-slavery party , capital allies . The cry raised against the importation
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qfslave grown sugar , by that crotchefcty and impracticablepaftylnmy . be . respected . inJh . eirvca 5 e , on account of its earnestness , but when raised by those , who , while they were slave-owners themselves , opp osed to the utmost the efforts for emancipation , it can only be scouted as a piece of transparent and shabby hypocrisy . . 'The cry itself is on every ground untenable . If the principle that we are not to use slave grown produce , is to be carried out , why not apply it to Slave grown cotton , tobacco , and many other articles winch enter largely into general consumption . If it be wrong to sweeten your tea or coffee with sugar raised by slave labour , it must be equally wrong to wear a shirt or smoke a pipe coming from the same
source . ,. . , The Protectionist party , however , in renewing the fight on this ground , shows the sincerity of their belief in the principles of protection itself . The Free Trade party asserted that when ( he landlords' monopoly in Com was abolished , they would join in knocking down all other monopolies ; on the first opportunity which has been afforded them , they have falsified these predictions . They adhere to their principles . On the other hand , the free traders seem to be not particularly sanguine about the results o / their long fought battle . It is quite wonderful to see the
abatement which has taken place in the triumphant and glowing promises of the blessings which were to follow the abolition of the Corn Laws . These blessings are growing " small by degrees and beautifully less" as we" approach the time when they should be realised , and we fear on closer proximity , they will vanish entjrely like a dissolving view . In the factory districts the masters have caused their hands to make holiday , in order to rejoice over the 11 great victory ; " but the work people who had their wages , docked oh that account by their free booting employers , would , . we dare ; say , have rather been without the " play . ''
The horrible and revolting case of murder perpetrated by the lash on a private of the 7 th Hussars , was the subject of a question in the Commons on Monday night .. That . solemn and ; sleek saint , Fox Maule , tried to explain away the damning fact , and attributed the death . of . the soldier to natural crises , instead of the brutal and monstrous flogging to which he had been subjected . With a callousness and an impudence which' only a Whig official could exhibit , lie assured the House that " the punishment of the man bad nothing : to do with his death , " . and having adduced- the authorit y of the
parties implicated ; in this murder for that assertion , he proceeded forthwith to , rebuke with pertness the conductors of the press for their ignorance and their exaggeration . How far these qualities are ascribable to himself , and not to the press , our readers will judge after referring to the blood-curdling accoun in another column , ' of the beastly cruelties of which the murdered man was the victim . On the same evening , the punishment of flogging in the navy wa discussed , and we had again the spectacle of Whigs defending in office practices which they denounced out of it . < ¦ ¦ ... , ; '
The abominable practice of flogging in , both the army and navy is ' one of the disgraceful indications now left among us of the iron rule' of the aristocratical classes . It is a standing memento of the subjection of the working section of society to the tyranny and cruelty of the few . It is vain to boast of liberty or enlightenment while such revolting and horrible barbarities are coolly perpetrated amongst us .
We say coolly , for though they made some of the private soldiers who witnessed them faint and- fal down , tlie same witness tells us" none of the officers fainted like the mm ! " They are : amateurs who delight in such spectacles , and have no dread of the cat being applied to their own' backs . Shame on the Legislature and the people which allows its soldiers and its sailors to be treated worse than tbev
are in other nations confessedly behind us in political freedom . : The other topics in Parliament have been of little interest . On Tuesday -night , Lord Jobn permitted another " Count out , " in order to avoid facing a motion of Mr . Buncombe . This , in conjunction with tlie damaging exhibition of the previous-Friday , betokens that the Ministry is , in . a most ricketty condition . Its chief speaks and acts as though it was under the deep conviction that his official career-is to be a short one , and that he and his co-incapahles will be shortly relieved from the responsibilities of power .
To that end the exposition forced from them , by the indomitable courage and manly frankness of the People ' s Champion , will mainly conduce . If , by opening the eyes of the country to the . hollow truckling and . time-serving nature of the new Ministry , Mr . Duncomhe does succeed in driving so shabby a set of pretenders from power , it will add one more important benefit to the long list , for which his fellow countrymen have to thank him :
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TESTIMONIAL TO MR . O'CONNOR FROM A NUMBER OF THE CHARTISTS OF LEICESTER . On Thursday last we received at this office a present from the Leicester Branch of tho Chartist Land Association , addressed to Mr . O'Connor , consisting of a splendid model of a Chartist cottage , enclosed in a beautifully wrought case . The skill and workmanship displayed in this minature cottage , reflects the highest credit upon the talent and ingenuity of those engaged in its construction ; in fact , it far transcends , in those respects , many of the products of art exhibited to our sight-seeing neighbours in those repositories of science with which this metropolis abounds . And why should it not lie so ? seeing that honest Chartist operatives are the only men of sterling : skill . A Whig , or a Tory , might as well attempt to pluck the sun from its orbit as compete with Chartist ingenuity . . . :: The model cottage consists of ii building two stories high , th « entrance being in the centre , with a room on each hand . Over the centre door is a tablet bearing the following inscription in letters of gold;—CHARTIST COTTAGE , FOUNDED BY F . O'CONNOR , ESQ ., A . D ' . 1846 . On the right and left , and a little in the rear , are two wings , uniform , in the . tastefulness of their exterior decorations , with the . principal building . Parallel with the wings are a range ot fruit . trees , bounding the limits of the homestead , and there is a lovely , flower garden , . and a luxurious grass plot in front ' of the whole . . ' '; . " ... ' . Tho model , of which we have , given but a brief description , was accompanied by the following address : — " . ..
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TI 1 E CONVENTION . In reply to several correspondents the Executive hftve to state , that the travelling and other expenses of delegates to the approaching Convention , will be defrayed from the funds of tho Association , but at the same time , it must be understood that the funds Wre very low , and the Executive therefore rely upon the various localities sending in their contributions at once , so that when the Convention terminates its sittings , the accounts of the Association may present a balance , to enable the Executive to prosecute whatever course may be agreed upon by the representatives of tho people . Thomas Martin Wiiegler , Secretary .
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Madame Laffargk . —The hereine of the romantic cause eclebre , so notorious a few years ago , has for some time been in a . state of ill health that prevented her quitting her cell . On Sunday last , however , she wont , in the penitentiary dress , to hear mass in the prison chapel . Madame Laffarge , having asked as a favour , to be allowed to devote herself to tho service of the sick , she has been charged with the superintendance of tho infirmary . hfMENse Fire . —The village of Quinceret , in the airimdia ^ ement of Tcnncrrc ( Yonne , ) has been entirely destroyed by fire ; ninety-two houses became a prey to the devouring element . It is added , that several persons fell victims to the flames , among whom weris a young woman of 22 , an old man and woman , and three children .
Russell, "The Times" And O'Connell
RUSSELL , "THE TIMES" AND O'CONNELL
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FEARGUS O'CONNOR , ESQ ., Dzpvtx Trbarukeb , in account ^ with the rrea 9 urer . , .
March 28 , Amount received to the 26 th or . I . ; , March as acknowledgedanthe .. ,: ... . . . . Star . * .,.,..., V : ; : . - .. ' =: ¦ .. i £ 5874 3 7 „ ,. • •• Jit Sect . 2 nd Sect . . April , 4 . Cash £ 319 C 11 } , . : - ¦ 11 352 10 8 . 18 . — 108 14 6 . . 7 16 8 25 . — GL 17 1 . 2 12 0 May 2 . — 90 0 0 7 14 . 9 . j- < j . _ 87 0 8 20 7 11 1 G . — 97 G 5 1 G 12 . 8 28 . — 75 G 0 22 18 6 SO , 133 16 10 58 18 7 Juno 7 . — 77 12 7 J . 19 U 3 : 14 , __ . ., 87 3 6 48 6 0 ¦ . 21 ,. t— ' : 156 18 3 r 58 5 0 28 . — 137 12 8 34 10 9 July 4 , __ , 158 6 2 , 65 9 9 11 . — . 176 3 11 70 0 4 18 .- — 204 ' 2 9 36 fD 4 £ 2 , 323 18 7 £ . 169 7 6 2793 6 ' 1 , Cash per General Secretary ... 1165 4 11 Received from Treasurer for depo 8 it on Calender ' s farm ... 000 0 0 Profit of Snle on Calender ' s estate , less £ 5 10 s . lOd . for expencea ... ... ... 1345 9 2 JE 11 . C 78 3 9
ms . ' £ * i . July 18 . CaBhpuid . toTreasurer ... 175 * " fl : Sept . 4 . Ditto lodged to Treasurer's account 7 * g w " Nov . 1 . Ditto Ditfo ... 8 fll t ' 184 C . , ^/ ijr . :: .::. -. V f . / ¦ Jan . 31 . Ditto -Ditto ... 1 , 669 4 „ April 9 . Ditto Ditto ... 1 , 920 H n Deposit on lnndHerringsgate ... 372 0 0 , . Expences within . this period ... 77 , * g 2 ' -, ' . ' :, Returned £ 20 sentupon conditions " . " . " . . that could not be complied with 20 . 0 0 July 18 . Cash lodged to Treasurer's account 3 . 021 17 j Paid deposit on Carpender ' a Estate . - ... , 500 . 0 0 May 23 . Expencea at Ilerringsgate ... 47 2 g 30 . Ditto ... 96 1041 June e . Ditto ... 106 w jj 13 . Ditto ... 119 . 0 0 20 . Ditto ... 294 4 4 27 . " . Ditto ... 284 . il l \ July 4 . Ditto ... 326 0 o 11 . Ditto ... 311 . 0 0 18 . Ditto ... 336 : 0 0 Ejtpenco on account of Title , Cun- . veyance and Stamps ... 74 :, 0 0 Surveyor _ .... 15 2 3 Pearcy . on account of ranges .... 10 0 0 Adrertising in Sun and Times for ; . Contracts , ... & , sfi 0 Cash in hand to pa ; current expences ... 269 16 . 1 J * 11 , C 78 3 9
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The above account does not include about £ 80 paid by me , and for which I have receipts ; nor does it include the cumbrous quantity of postage stamps which I have received for a year and a quarter , and all of which I still . possess ; nor : does it . include monies paid into the severaUianks , and not yet drawn out ; nor does it includts ' post-ofiSce orders , which I have had for several months ^ and know not yet to whom they are made payable ; but it does include all the monies received by me up to Saturday last , and . all of which will appear paid into the bank , to the Treasurer ' s account ; according to the dates standing opposite each amount . You will observe , that the last lodgment was made on . Saturday last , before , this week ' s , ' . subscriptions had been- paid . Now ; ihen , let Mr . Cooper and Kia Meads pat that in their pipe and smoke it . This is not the revision of humbugged auditors—this is the attestation of the Joint Stock Bank Company ' s Ledger . Still I have . a
good deal of trouble with thepost-officeorders . assome secretaries continue to have them payable to Mr . Wheeler , Mr . Roberts , and . myself . Now , what I request is , that ALli post-office orders , whether sent to Mr . Wheeler ' or to me , may be made payable to me , at : the LONDON OFFICE , St . MARTIN'S-LEGRAND , and then I shall be able to turn them into cash and bank them at once . Nowy my friends—members , of the Chartist Cooperative Land Association—when did you ever see an account of so many thousand pounds accounted for without a large column for " sundries ? " It would be useless to tell yon of the money I am out of pocket , in one shape or other , by one means or another , but it is my glory and pride to ; be able to fnmish all -rriio dabble in the people ' s money with a plain , straightforward account , and for every farthing of the expenditure of which there'are receipts .
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RECEIPTS OF THE CHARTIST CO-OPERATIVE LAND SOCIETY . PER IfR . O'CONNOR . SECTION No . 1 . 8 HABE 8 . £ » . d W . D . Purry , Dowlais .. ' .. .. 2 10 0 Elland , per J . Kinnesloy .. ' ¦ .. .. 5 14 1 (; Blackburn , per W . Sutcliff .. ... .. 10 7 2 Brighton , Sussex-District , per TV . Ellis ¦ .. ¦ ¦ ¦ ' . 3 . 13 0 Bishopwearmouih , per W . Dobbis ,.. .. . » 2 5 11 Alva , per J . Robertson ....... . . 4 15 i 2 Exeter , per i ., Clark . ' ... ' .. .. . . 4 3 ; 6 Girvan , per J . Clark ; .. .. » . '¦' , 8 12 0 Ovundoh , per G . Ashworth .. .. .. 2 0 0 Sowerby Longroyd , per J . Wilson .. .. 4 10 0 Stockport , per T . Woodhuuse .. .. 31 . J <> Hyde ,, per J . Hough . . . . .. . .. .. .. . 3 17 0 Carlisle , per J . Gilbertson .. .. .. C 14 1 Wigan . perT . Vye .. .. .. .. 4 17 2 Bury , per M . Irelend .. .. .. 7 2 4 Dudley , per W . Rankin .. .. .. 5 4 e J . Fuke , SJinftesbury .. .. « . I ) 5 0 Dewsbury ' per J . Knuse .. .. .. 7 17 10 Carrington , ; perJ . Ley ,. , .. .. .- 30 15 1 ' jfott > . fi n < iII 1 fP er , J' Sweet .. .. . » 11 19 c Ne . narlf , per W . Walton .. .. .. 17 8 Bam 5 ley , per J . ' Ward ' .. ' .. .. 15 0 0 Halifax , per C . W . Smith .. .. .. 14 15 C ipivmouth , per B . Robertson . . .. 9 18 , 0 Lancaster , per J . Harrison .. . .. .. . 2 „ > Thomas Dee . Llanelly . ; ,. .. 2 11 6 " Addingham , per S ., Widdop ' - .. 0 12 Q ¦ Norwich , per J . Hurry .. .. .. 5 0 0 Worcester ' per M ; GiifiSths .. ... .. 14 j- « Salford .. ¦ -... ; - '¦ , ¦ .. •• -.- ¦ 18 : 0 0 Badford . per J . Saunders .. .. .. ISJS 2 Swindon , per D . Morrison .. ¦ .. 5 0 0 Oldham , per W . Hamer .. ... .. f . J KocHdale , per E . Mitchell .. •• ,,: ? Sunderland , perH . Haines .. .. .. f 1 * * Preston , per J . Brown- .. .. .. H * J - Luke Lock , por W . Humphrey .. ., , . 0 lb 0 Leeds , per VT . Brook .... .. .. . 50 0 Bradford , per J . Alderson .. .. » i 0 u i . Bolton , pev E . Hod'jkinson .. .. .. 1 * ^ 0 Lynn , per J . Scott .. .. .. . .. J in n Birmiughiim . per W . Thorn ... ... 3 10 0 Todmorden , per J . Mitchell .. .. ? ? " Hebden Bridge , per J . Smith .. .. 14 I U Hamilton , per J . Branagam -o-ii 0 Leicester , er Z . Astill „ .. .. 17 1 " P Newton Abbott , pevJ . B , Crews .. .. 10 0 0 Newcastle-upon-Tyne , per M . Jude .. 4 10 U Ratcliffe . perJ . CardaU .. .. .. 5 0 0 Athton-under-Lyne . per E . Hobson .. 38 Jl t > AJw » ndria ( perJ . M-lntyre .. .. 4 1 £ o Manchester , per 3 . Murray .. .. .. 49 i » Liverpool , per J . Arnold .. .. .. ° ' £ 51 ! 0 JG C
w ^ mmm * ^™ ' SECTION No . 2 . 8 UABE 3 . Blackburn , per . W . Sutcliff .. .. .. 9 13 2 Brighton , Sussex Pistrict , per w . Elhs .. a 11 0 Alva , per J . Robertson .. .. .. ° 1 „ Stockport , per T . Woodhouse .. .. 10 0 Carlisle , per J . Gilbertson .. .. .. 1 19 f Bury , per M . Irelane » .. 116 « Dewsbury , per J . Rouse .. .. . .. I 13 4 Nottingham , per J . Sweet .. .. .. 9 lfi 11 Newark , per W . Walton .. .. .. 0 10 0 l alifax , ' per C . W . Sniith .. » ., 12 11 C Norwich , per A . Bagshaw .. .. .. 3 1 J f ) Hebden Bridge , per J . Smith .. \ . 2 18 0 Worcester , per M . Griffiths .. .. " 2 16 . 0 Salford . ; - .. .. .. « * ., ? - ? Radford , per J . Saunders .. , .. .. 0 . 18 ( i Oldliam , per W . Hamer .. .. .. 110 0 J . Ra ' wlinson , Manchester , per Mr . O'Connor 5 4 4 Rochdale , per E / Mitchell .. " .. ... 3 18 0 Sunderland , per H . Haines .. .. .. 0 5 6 Prcstonjper J . Brown < . » » 12-6 Luke Lock , per W . Humplirey .. .. 1 1 . 0 Bradford , per . r . Aldersou 5 0 . 0 Leicester , per H . Burrow .. .. .. 5 10 6 Do .. per Z . Astill .. .. .. .. 10 0 ¦• Newton Abbott , per J . B . Crews .. .. 0 0 0 Neweastle-upim-Tyne , per M . Jude .. .. 9 6 10 Manchester , pur J . Murray .. .. ... 24 , 1 , 0 Liverpool , per J . Arnold .. .. .. 9 17 , 2 £ 129 17 11
. SECTrON No . 1 . ; ER GENERAL SECRETARY . : SHABE 3 . £ s . d . £ s . d . Wootteri-under- ' ' Longton - - 0 0 6 Edge ' ( . - 2 11 0 Worsbro'Common 5 0 0 S . Clark - - - O 8 0 Derby - - 4 18 1 Jivcrton * . . 10 0 0 . Burnley . - 2 10 0 Manchester - 1 11 8 Cheltenham 16 0 J , Smith - - 0 1 0 Holbeck" - - 5 0 0 J . Morris , NewMills 0 ' 5 0 Old Basford - 7 8 6 Lewis Waller - 2 -1 !> 2 Bath - - 3 13 0 Greenwich - 113 0 ; Merthyr . per Morgan 1 5 6 Crayford - . 340 Cockcvmoutk - , 500 Collumpton-, 0 18 2 . Whittington& . Cat 5 4 2 Farriugton -. 4 2 G Mr . . J MiteheU , do . 2 GO Westminster - 12 8 0 Reading - - 8 1 G G l ) o . - - 2 19 10 Sir . Hitchins , West-Chas . Witham - 1 C 2 minster - - 1 G 2 J . Barnett - 2 0 0 Bradford , Mr . Chesr . 1 6 2 R . Frith , Chelsea 5 9 Staleybridge . - 5 0 0 J . Smith - 2 11 0 . Pershore . 6 0 0 E . Wright .. - 3 19 0 Hohnfirth - 3 G 8 J . LeWis , Greenwich 1 0 0 Scarborough - 7 2 9 Northampton , C . Lambeth - - 7 0 0 Willmer . .-646 ¦ £ 145 14 _ 3 SECTION No . 2 . Waahpouud - 0 2 11 Burnley - - 2 10 0 Lynu , per Butitou 15 0 -Biirnstnplo - 0 8 0 George Duke - 0 0 G Cheltenham . 0 7 G Greenwich - 14 0 0 Mr . G . Brooks - 0 10 0 Mr . Nailor - 3 4 0 J . M . Kelnworth 2 12 4 J . Ovenden , Maid- E . B ., do . - - s 12 4 stone 1 - * 5 4 G Bath ... 040 J . Jackson , SwanseaS 2 G T . Garnett , Kingston .. "¦ J . Pemn , Stanley Deverell- , - - « * Downton .- 3 18 6 Whittington & Cat 4 5 0 nnwlev . ' - 0 1 6 Joseph Pattison 0 2 6 Westminster - 1 10 0 Mr Oaperen . 0 1 0 Mr . Allen- - . 2 12 , 4 Readiug - - 6 114 Mr George Taylor 0 14 G Do .- - - J » » WesMer . M . William Smith - 01 4 Thomas- . 02 0 Hull - : ¦ - b 15 0 o a Fishar - 0 12 Butterly - - 4 0 10 Mr Owen - 2 0 0 Hammersmith - 1 1 10 ThomasMoore . 0 2 6 JohnSavage . 0 2 6 Longton - . 486 . £ 78 4 _ 11 TOTAt LAN ' FOND . r O ' Connor , Section No . 1 ... 520 16 C Mr . Wheeler „ „ - 145 14 3 JE 6 B 6 10 9 Mr O'Connor , Section No . 2 ... 129 17 11 Mr . Wheeler , » . » . «• J 6 14 3 £ 20812 2 NATIONAL CIIAUTElt ASSOCIATION . PER MB , O ' CONNOB . Oldham , per W . Hamer .. .. .. O IO O RECEIl'TS OP NATIONAL CHARTER ASSOCIATION . PER QENEBAL SECEETARV . Moulin . a Vapeur ¦ Alencon , J . Kidd 0 8 C Boulogne - 2 5 0 B . Cooper , Somers Lille , France , a Town - 0 0 11 few Friends - 0 11 0 Duudee - - 0 10 0 FORTHCOMING CONVENTION . Marylcbone and So- Dundee - . 0 10 0 nieis Town 1 2 G MB . JUOUBDS . Somers Town - 0 5 0 Thomas Slionfiold 0 10 G . H . Cliatwin , City 0 2 6 VETEBAN FATBIOl'S' FUND . W . B . -. 00 6
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• FOB MB . FBOST . Colin Hill , Boulogne ( i 2 0 Northumberland Uilston - - 0 24 0 Flax Mill - 0 3 6 Bath , Mr . Shrews- ' Do ., J . Stobart 0 19 bury . : 0 SO Do ., G . Usher 0 1 0 Xswcastle-on-Tyne , Do ., R . Currv 0 0 G .-. - Thomas 3 [ abtinWueei , ek ,. Secretary . NATIONAL * . 1 STI . SUUTI » . ASBOCIiTWN . PER MB . O ' CONNOB . iiottingliam , per J . Sweet .. .. . ... 0 3 6 > 6 ft" MR FROST . Tliree Friends , Sudbury , per J . Wood .. 0 10 Leitbj per T . B . Emerson .. ... .. 0 15 C T . Dodsoii , Roden-lane , Prestwiteh , per Mr . O'Connor - .. .. „ .. 050 Bolton , per E . Iloclgkinson .. .. ... 0 15 10 HB , RICHARDS ' Bui ton , perE . Hodgkinson .. .. .. 0 4 2 N . B . —The sum aclcnowledged from Nonyicli , July 7 th , should have been £ 3 9 s ., not £ 5 .
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Mr . R . HAWtEi , Corhridge . —All right . Notice . —Those Agents who have neglected sending their past quarter ' s accounts will not be supplied with th » Northern SUtr after this notice , should not the balance be immediately remitted . , , The Land Societt . —A Correspondent asks , — " When do you think a Ballot will take place for the 2 nd Section } " —Jnthe course of a few weeks . The Directors are now looking for a suitable purchase . Kiddebminstsx—AH communications for this branch mustbe addiesged to . cGeorge Holloway , Nag ' s Head Inn , Bewdley-street . .. n . Robinson , Edinburgh . —Received . " Hope , " should notbe in such a hurry ; "Hope" has usually to wait a little . iiWg had no time to look at your lines last week , and therefore could not notice them . We have ; now read and must . respectfully decline to insert them . . "Hope" must try ngaiu , and hope on . : Bishop Auckland . —A Chartist—your district shall be atttended to as soon as practicable : ' Notice . — If Mr . Bairstow will sent to his frieuda at Sutton in Aslifield , as he promised to do , they will feel obliged . Alfred Fenneh . —The lino * shall appear as soon as we can find room . . . R . S . Heed . —We are obliged for your warm-he » rtei rhymes , their insertion would however savour teo much of egotism on our part . " The Factobv Maid" may find a place iu our next " Feas ' tof the Poets . " -- - . T . It . Suabt . —The song shall appear as soon as we have room . Jamis McIntosh . —The story is a " pious fraud . " Dead ¦ people are not in the habit of advertising' in Newspapers and delivering Lectures . We know nothing personally of Mrs . Martin , we only know that she advertised iu this paper a week or two back , and is just now delivering a course of Lectures , at the Johu-street Institution , London . ' The story of her " recantation " is , we believe , as true as lhat of U * Jf death ! ¦ , : NoncB . ~ Mr . Richard Omerord , of Rouen , Prance , hav-. ing taken out a second share , has declined . the acceptance of his two-acre allotment at " O'Counorvilie . " Mr . Charles Smith , of Halifax , is therefore entitled to take his place . :, ; -.- . . Thomas Mabtin Wheeleb , Secretary . TnE Suoemakebs . —Of late we have received several accounts of dissensions amongst the London shoemakers , secessions from the Mutual Assistance Association , and the formation of new societies . : We have given some of these communications divested , however , of the personalities with which they were sometimes in-¦ ' . terlarded . : We have received another report ftoini the same party which as it contains nothing really new or important we must decline inserting , The latter end of last week , too late fer notice , we received a report of a meeting of shoemakers at Cheltenham , from which it appears that the shoemakers of that town have separated themselves from the Mutual Assistance Association , on the ground that the Association had not fulfilled its pledge of support to Cheltenham . New law * were adopted for the guidance of the ^ new society . ; A . letter was read from Birmingham enclosing an order for 203 . on loan . The Cheltenham letter very strongly censures certain parties connected with the Mutual Assistance Association but we must decline publishing these personal matters . The communications on this subject we have already published have given offencs to the " opposite side . " Now once for all , we beg to say that wu are not partisans of this or that section of the shoemakt-rs . We deplore these misunderstandings and think that they will be best settled in the meetings of the trade without bringing them before the public .
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out t . f ji million , appear to be the average number »< suicides per annum . Among the males the EMaioruj are found ; to be bachelors ; among the female * , ni arruu women . —QueuUt .
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Continuation of moneys received on behalf of John Frost , the exils of England , by George Ross , Glasgow . Amount reeeived ,. publi 8 hed in last . Star ,. ... ... ... £ 35 11 8 J John Duriitison ... ... 0 . 1 0 Reid ' s Mill ; Anderston ( Book No . 81 ) per Andrew King ... ; .. 0 , 9 0 George Ruy , Esq . ... .. ' . 0 5 0 James Kay , Esq . ... " ... 0 5 0 Miss Elizabeth Ray ... ... 0 2 6 From Charleston , by Paisley , balance after defraying the late petition fiirProst , 'Williams , and Jones , - per Archibald Crozier . ... ; 0 . 3 2 } Felix Cunningham ... ... 0 . 1 0 Mechanics in tho employment of Mr . Wm . Robinson , Gateside ... 0 11 3 Andrew Cherg , Neilson ... 0 2 6 Williain Robinson , Gateside ... 0 , 2 6 DaniclM'Farlane , Gateside ... 0 1 0 Cosan ' sFactory , Barrhead .,, 0 8 3 R . Hislop ... ... ... 0 1 0 Hill street Factory and others ( Book No . 13 ) perMathewCullen ... 10 0 A . M . C . E . ... ... ... 0-10 £ 39 . 5 11 Subucriptions received per Mr . G . Rogers , Acting Trea . surer to the fund up to T / iursday , July 23 rd , ISiS ;—.. - . - £ . s . d . Already acknowledged ... 233 " ¦ ¦ 5 0 PER THOMAS COOPER . Collected at Harwicli ..... . 0 14 1 Collections at Leicester ... 2 3 0 Thoma 3 Thompson , Esq ., ... 0 10 0 John Hill 8 , ; E 8 q ., ... 0 10 0 Collections at Brighton , per Mr . ' Moore . ... 13 0 Collections per Mr . T . M . Wheeler 2 nd amount ¦ ., 9 2 9 Total ... ... £ 247 T 6
The Martyr Frost.
THE MARTYR FROST .
Co *\Eaau*£ $C Comsfeonimttsfc
Co *\ eaau * £ $ c Comsfeonimttsfc
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4 . THE NORTHERN STAR . ¦¦¦ - " - > TULY 25 > 1 R /| fi
Xou-Riady. Ths Skcosd Editios Of My Life, Q£0ur Social State, Pari I..
Xou-riady . THS SkCOSD EDITIOS OF MY LIFE , q £ 0 UR SOCIAL STATE , Pari I ..
Suicides. — Eialitv-Iivein^Esandtliu'ty.Fivefeinalw
Suicides . — Eialitv-iivein ^ esandtliu'ty . fivefeinalw
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 25, 1846, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1376/page/4/
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