On this page
- Departments (2)
- Adverts (9)
-
Text (6)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
BMWIlFUh HAIR. TS'HISKEltS. <tc, versus BALDKESS, VfEAK, AND GREY. HAIR.
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Ad
R OSALIE COUPELLE'S celebrated PARISIAN : POMADE is universally acknowledged as the only , preparation for the certain production of Whiskers , ' 'Eye-brows , Sic , in so sliori . a . time as six or ei ght weeks , reproducing lost hair , ' strengthening , and curling weak hair , and cheeking' grey ness at any time ef life , from whatever cause arising . It has nerer been known to fail , and will be .-forwarded ( free ) with , full instructions , < fec , on receipt of 24 postage stamps . TESTIMONIALS , tiC . Mr . Bull , Brill , says : — "I am happy to say , after everything else failed , jours has had the desired ett ' ect , the greyness is quite checked ;; '" ' Dr . Erasmus Wilson : — It is vastly superior to all the clumsy creasy compounds now sold under various mysterious titles and pretences , which I have at different times analysed , anil found uniformly injurious , being either scextkd or coio » RED with some highly deleterious ingredient . There are , however , so many impositions afoot , that persons reluctantly place confidence when it may justly be bestowed . " .
Untitled Ad
GllAVJBL , RHEUMATISM . LUM 11 A . G 0 , STRICTURE , DEBILITY , kc . DR . BARKER'S p U R i F I O P I L L S * - have long been lvell known as the only certain cure for pains in the back and kidneys , grovel , lumbago , rheumatism , gout , gonorrhoea , gleet , syphilis , secondary symptoms , seminal debility , and : ill diseases of the bladder and urinary organs generally , ' whether the result of imprudence or derangement of the functions . In every form and variety of eruptions of the skin , scorfula , scurvy , and rheumatism , gout , < fcc , the greater part of whicli arise trom diseased urine ( the painful and fatal results of which are too well known , ) , these Tills are eminently successful . By their purifying action they have a salutary influence on the system , thereby preventing the numerous ' ills that flesh is heir to , ' arising from impurities of the blood . To all classes of sufferers they are confidently recommended , as they have never , in any instance , been known to fail . ; The Purific Pills may be obtained through most respectable medicine venders . Price Is . lid .. 2 s . 0 d ., ami 4 s . 6 d . per box ; or will be sent , free , with full instructions for use , on receipt of the price in postage stamps , b y Dr , Alfred Barker —A considerable saving effected by purchasing the larger boxes .
Untitled Ad
BROTHER' CHARTISTS . RUPTURES EFFECTUALLY SECURED by Professor Sahbett's newly invented , lijjht self-adjustiuir , elastic truss . J . Gaiuiett , Practical T ? uss Maker , of 38 , Wardour-street , Oxford-street , LondOll IS tlie inventor Of a New Truss , pronounced by the faculty to be the most efficient one extant ; . Every variety of trusses and bandages , ean be had at the lowest possible nr ' ces : —Best plain truss , 5 s . ; Ody ' s expired patent , Ss . ; bolea ' a exp ired patent , 10 s . ; Eggs , or German truss 15 s . ; Sus pensory bandages—cotton , as . ; silk , JS . bU . J . Ix , af-cr twenty years' experience , guarantees to secure every ca ? e of rupture of however longstanding , and earnestly solicits a trial from those' who have found every other
Untitled Ad
NEW EXmA-G-IUBtNAItY ! SUCCESS OF THE NEW - . j' ^ : $ :- ? v -rbjI 4 edth > ^ | m W f ^' ih € Uf /^^ l > emhko ^)^ isiU . — . A ' eure effected . ' ' " ¦' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ., or tht monty " r * tvm td . ! ' ' D E ., © Bt BOOS' CONCENTRATED 'Or / IfEE VIT / E has , in all instances , proved a ifipeeay / jana . ' pefmonentcure , for every variety ef disease arising torn solitary liabifcs , youthful delusive excesses , and 4 nf « ofion , such as gonorrhoea , syphilis , < fcp ., which from neglect or improper treatment by mercury , ' copaiba ; . eabebB , ; und other deadly poisons , invariably end in some of the following forms . of secon ' dary , symptom 8 , vjz ,, p ' ajns and ewellingsln the bones , ' joints' and glands , skin eruptions , iblotcheeand pimples , weaknes of the eyes , loss of-hair , disease and decay . of the nose , soro throat , pains an the side , back , and loins , fistula , pi ' es , &c ' , diseases of the ¦ kidn « j * , ' and bladder , gleet , stricture , seminal weakness « er « us and sexual debility , loss of memory , and finally « ucli 4 « tateof drowsiness ; lassitude andccseral prostration of strength , at unless skilfully arrested , soon ends in a miserable death ! , ; ¦ . . ' ,. . •¦
Untitled Ad
ON THE PREVENTION , CURE , AND General dmi-ncter of SYPIHLUS , STRICTURES , Affections of the PROSTRATE 6 I . ANI ) , VENEUEAL and SCORBUTIC ERUPTIONS of the face and body , Mercurial excitement , itc , followed by a mild , successful " and expeditious mode of treatment . Thirty-first edition , IiLwtrated . by Twenty-Six Anatoaiical Engravings on Steel . Nsw and improved Edition , enlarged to 196 pages , just published , pric » Us . 6 d ; or by post , direct from the Establishment , 3 s . 6 ci . in postage stamps . " THE SILENT FRIEND , " a Medical Work on Venereal and Syphilitic Diseases , Secondary Spmptoms , Gonorrhoea .
Untitled Ad
C ! i £ "i £ = BROTHER CHARTISTS ! DO N 0 T IffilaS ^ 5 ; ..,. BPPTUIIES . ' iRUPTHIESI RUPtE ' ^ TIE . DE , ROOS' astonishing Sp . XJ the treatment and cure of averv y J i ! ess TURB iB . ample prttf of the unfaUin g ^ ffiMcv ^ W covery , when must ere long entirely banish \ llis <*«? hitherto so prevalant . AU persons' aml ^ hmt without delay , wnte , or pay a visit to nT £ 5 ° uld may be consulted daily from / 10 till l ; and * tin . < W days exeepted . ) . ¦ : 4 tul 8 .- ( Sun This remedy . is perfectly free from danger „ cenvemence , may be used- without confinement ^" ' orinable to male and female , of any ace and wiiii ? Is aPPHc ble , « n receipt of 7 r . in cash , or by Post nm "" I ^ si pajabl 8 at the Holborn office , * m Ofllce orders :. A great number of Trusses have ieen left h . v ' ions cured as trophies of the immenseT su ^ " " ^ ?«• rowGdy , which will be readily glven " o * CCeS ! of «>» tor them lifter ono trial of it . an J one ren ^ Letters of inquiry should contain twn « . Address , Wter De fioor . sRiaWft ^ * London . j -. - ^ face , Xiolborn-hui In evory case a cure is guaranteed . '
Untitled Ad
RUPTURES PERMANENTLY ANTV *^ " ' TUALLY CURED WITHOUT A TRlS ^ nR . HENRY GUTIIREY'S <* t . w U ' success in the treatment of all virirt- dinar S and Double Ruptures , is without a pSV , SinB « tory / ot mgHnajae / . In evory ease , however i . , 'I lc h « - standing , a cure is guaranteed . The remedv or ' ( "if ! and perfectly painless in application , causini-t "' eas y nieuee or confinement whatever , is free from i Inc ° nveapnlicable to male and female of any age Uan ger and Sent ( post-free ) to any part of the world „¦!„ , struetions , rendering failure impossible on 4 » ful 1 '"• shillings by post-office-order , or cash ' bv t »» P J ° s « GUTUttBY , 0 , Ampton-street , Gray ' s im rovl " t " 8511 * Hundreds of testimonials and trusses Im-i' ndon - behind b / persons . cured , as trophies nf th < - i , » 0 Gn 'eft remedy , which Dr . Guthuev will willing'S" ° f l ^ who require to wear them after a trial of it n ""•» orders must be made payable at the ^ rinn-ma nB * Letters of inquiry should contain tno postal for the reply ... In every eve a cure is Eiai'am ^ mp 3 home for consultation dail y from two till f 0 1 m At Sabbath exeepted . ) * - ( Th& Address , 1 IB N 11 Y GUTIIREY , JL J ) ,, Jf 1 ! r e „ Ampton-street , Graj ' s-ian-road , London u > lJ- » ., C ,
Untitled Ad
Mead this , and judge for yourselvvt GOOD HEALTII , GOOD SPIRITS A \ n rnvn LIFE , . SECURED BY THAT IIIGIU . Y v ? TEEMED POPULAR REMEDY S ' PAIR'S LIFE PILLS . THOMAS PARR .
Untitled Ad
CURES FOR TIIE UXCURED ! HO LLO WAY'S O INTMEN 1 . An Extraordinary Cure of Scrofula , or King ' s ' Evil . Extract of a Letter frwn Mr . J . II . Alliday , 20 J , Iligh-stfMt Cheltenham , dated January 22 nd , 1850 . Sat , —My eldest son , when about three years of age , was afflicted vyith a glandular swelling in the neck , which after a short time broke out into an ulcer . An eminent medical man pronounced it as a very bad case of scrofula , and prescribed for a considerable time without effect . Th * disease then for four years went on gradually increaiingin virulence , when besides the ulcer in the neck , smother formed below the left knee , and a third under tlie eve , besides seven otlieis on the left arm , with a tunipiir between the eyes which was expected to break . During the whole of the time iny suffering boy had received tl « constant advice of the most ' celebrated medical gentlemen at Cheltenham , besides being for several months at the
Untitled Article
FIULNCE . INSTJLT TO THE PRMIDKNT .-The E ^ ng of the Assembly was the scene of a tumult on Wednesday the 3 rd inst ., in consequence of M . Mioispplying to M . Danjoy the epithet of police ageut . M- Den joy in the course of his explanation of the cause of disorder , referred to the outrage commits against the President of the Republie at the entrance of the Faubonrg St . Antoine , on his return frotnYincennes Great agitation followed this aUusioa , in the midst of which General de Hautpoul rose and protested against the statement oi M . Denjoy , adding that he himself was present , and no insult had been addressed to the President , This contradiction of a
fact which is well attested by many other spectators , ¦ was received by the Left with jeers . The fact is , that several thousand workmen met at the entrance of the Faubourg St . Antoine . A yell of ' A has les tyrans !' was set up . One workman mounted the carriage and Shook his fist in the President ' s face A footman was so illtreated by the mob tbafc he is laid up vt ' nh the contusions he received . The escorting cuirassiers either would not act or were ordered not to act . At all events they were quite passive . The party in the carriage consisted of EdearNey , Hautpoul , and Lahitte . Changarmer was not nresent . It is considered highly fortunate that the military escort preseiced a passive attitude . Had they charged the mob , the probability is that the whole party would have been torn to shreads . This affair has made a deeper impression in upper
Circles than I can express . Another account says that General Cbangarmer was also returning from . Vincennes by the same route . He was hooted and apostrophized by the coarsest names , to which he rep lied with military energy , hut observing a soldier in the crowd ohich insulted him , he seized him on the instant , and made him pertorm a military salute ; the same night that man was despatched to the ontpobts of the French army in A'rica . The only speech of any -value in tbe sitting of the Assembly was a v-oles . t attack by Jules Favre upon the police system of the government . XI . J . Favre
took occasion of the chapter of the budget relating to the secret service money be ' ina brought forwaid , to review the conduct of the ministry ; and . in the midst of the excitement produced , some words took place between M . Duche and AI . Cnastaigne-Goyon , which led to explanations from the tribune . M . Baroche then replied to M . Jules Favre , and eventually an amendment of this latter gentleman , proposing a reduction on the chapter , was rejected by 440 votes to 3 75 . M . Fould nscended the tribune at one moment of the sitting to present the budget of receipts for 1851 , but the agitation was so great that he postponed his statement .
The' Presse' of Thursday morning has a singular look ; its first page resembles a posting hill , for it contains in large characters the prospectus of the Republican Club , which nsed to meet at the Palais Uational , and of which M . Guodchaux was president . The object of the Presse' ia this publication is to hold up the past of the Minister of the Interior , M . Baroche , who was one of the vice-presi dents of this dub . The ' Presse' places at the foot of the prospectus of the club some remarks on the apnstacy of M . Baroche . ?
The Patrie' says : — 'If we are correctly informed , tbe government ha 3 resolved to cause to be executed the police regulations relative to persons without ostensible means of existence ( gsns sans men ) or without domicile , who abound in Paris , la tbe COUTSS of Wednesday fifteen hundred persons toelongisg to this category were expelled . ' In the sitting of the Assembly on Thursday , Dupin was re-elected president by a considerable majority . Friday . —In the Legislative Assembly the discussion on the Transportation Bill was continued , and after a rather animated debate , in which M . Victor Hugo , the Minister of Justice , and M . E . Arago , were the principal speakers , the first reading was carried bv 431 votes to 217 .
Satokdat—The ' Union Electorate ' has published an address to the electors of the Seine declaring M . Fernand Foy its single candidate , and calling on all the friends of prder te support him wiih their votes on the 28 ih of April . Lahitte and Bor . jean have retired . A democratic meeting has taken place in the Roe Rambuteau in order to settle on a candidate . Goudchaus and Girardin were unanimonsly rejected . It is said that Dupont de l'Eure will be put forward by the opposition . Shvijay . —Tn the sittinor of the Assembly Yes-Suxdat . —In the sitting of the Assembly yes
- terday the two vice-presidents elected were Leon Faucher and Jules de Lasteyrie . The latter resigned in order to give the legitimist party , which has as vet no representative , a chance . The debate on the " elections of the Haut-Rhin was resumed . The election was confirmed by a majority of 420 over 209 . Eraile de Girardin has , according to the 'Napoleoa , ' promised the' "Voix du Peuple ' to pay the caution-money for that paper , even if it should be raised to lOO . boOfr .
The Committee en the new law on the press held a long sitting on Saturday . It was resolved , finally , to reject the proposition to increase the security lodged by the proprietors of newspapers . A long discussion took place on the subject of the proposed Stamp daty , which was adjourned . The Napoleon * of to day says that if a Republican should be elected for Paris , Universal Suffrage should be reformed , for that 'though the Constitution has laid down the principles of election , it is the law which fixes the conditions and manner and the government would have a right to demand precautions and guarantees against such surprises . " It adds that Universal Suffrage ia now on its trial ; or , in other words , that Universal Suffrage will cease to exist if it should not support the acts and deeds of Louis Napoleon .
Mosdat . —The ' Moniteur * announces that M . Proudhon ' s journal , the ' Voix du People / has been seized by order of the Attorney General , for an article , entitled tbe 'Budget / calculated to excite hatred and contempt against the government of the Republic . Tuesday . — At the close of the sitting of the National Assembly the President announced that M . Jules de Lasteyrie had been elected Fourth Vice-President of the Assembly by an immense majority . M . Vatimessi ) , the legitimist candidate , obtained only forty votes out of 391 .
The Prefect of the Seine has issued a notice relative to the approaching election of Paris , ordering the preparation of a table in each mairie , correcting the list of 1850 , and comprising the changes effected in execution of the disposition of the electoral law . This table is to be published on the 22 nd . Bv other decrees will be made known the days on which the cards will be distributed , the localities for voting , and the days and duration of the ballot . The committee on the Mayor ' s Bill has heard the Minister of the Interior , who declared that he could not accept the modifications proposed by the committee . M . de Laboulie was appointed reporter . The' Voix du Peuple' was seized yesterday for three articles in its weekly supplement .
The committee on clubs and electoral meetings has deferred , in accordance with the ministry , the presentation of its report until after the Paris election . The copyright of the * Reforme / of which M . Flocon was formerly editor , and which has been in a state of suspended animation for the last six weeks , in consequence of the government fines , was sold this morning for the minute sum of 4 , 000 f M . Bnvignier , formerly a representative ol the Bed party , is the purchaser . "Wednesday . —The * Patrie' Btates that some of trie most influential advisers of LoUJ ^ Napoleon baVC counselled him to charge M . Dufaure with the task of forming a new ministry .
The electoral meetings of the Socialist party have recommenced . Assemblies have taken place in the riding-school of . Triar , in the Champs ElyseeB , and in the great Salle de la Fraterniti , in the Rue Martel . The announcement that Dupont de l'Eure would be the candidate of the Socialist party at the Paris election is confirmed by the ' Voix du People , ' which proposes the veteran president of the provisional government in opposition to M . Emile de Girardin . The Momteur da Soir * says the committee <\ n the bill on the press appears to have postponed any decision unfd the elections of the 28 th inst . The majority of the delegates propose to leave Paris , and to return when the discussion shall recommence .
A letter from Rouen states that serious disturbances took place in that town on Monday night last , in consequence of the Mayor having forbidden the representation of the Juif Errant , which had given rue r oanot . An immense mass of people having j oined the noters , who had been expelled from the tfeeatre , the troopa were ^^^ wii xhe cavalry
Untitled Article
having charged ; the ^ crowd , the peoplefflsd , and a number of the leaders werewrestedv ; " v AccountB from Lim 6 us , - Aude , state >« hat the troops were calledout there oa Saturday oight , in consequence of alarm created by a tumultuous crowd parading the streets , singing reVolutieaary songs .
BELGIUM . The BelRian government has jusfc-taken a commercial measure of high importance . A ny * ™ ° ™ permits the « ntry of lineu thread * f every size on condition of 'its being re-exportea when made up into cloth . . _" SWITZERLAND We learnfrom Berne , 1 st inst .. « t f ttjjteri Council bas ordered the expulsion ^»^' " ™ of the members of the associations of «™« * £ men established at Geneva . Lausanne , Vevey , La Sux ? e ffonds , Lode , Fleurier Friburg , Bale , Zurich , Berae , Porrentrury , St . Inner , Berihoud , Thouue , Wintertouer , and Sehaffhausen , and ba * ordered that * hose of Aarau , Lucerne , . Claris Coue , and Herkan shall be provisionally placed under tbe snrreillancs of the police . _ _
The grand council of Geneva has jjust deprived General © ufour of a pension of 2 . Q 08 fr . which bad been awarded to him , lor thirty years' service as cantonal engineer .
ITALY . TUSCANY- —A letter from Leghorn ., of the 24 th ult ., in the' Nationale' of Florence , states that on that day a greet number of persons bad gone to the new cemetery to place crorvnB on the graves of those who had fallen for the cause of Italian independence , and that in the contiguous church of La Buona Morte part of the congregation having sailed / or a Pater aad JJoeto the mem « ry of those who had died for the cause of Italy , a great disturbance ensued , which called the uolice to the spot . A letter from Leghorn to the ^ 9-h ult ., in the ' Statuto' of Florence , adds that fourteen persons bad been arrested on account -of the disturbance .
ROME , March 24 .-On the 21 st the Austrian arms were replaced at the Palazzo di Venezia , the residence of the Austrian embassy . The head of the police , Monsignor Savelli , wh <> is also Minister of the Interior , and the municipality of Rome , in their carriages , went to the palace to compliment the Austrian authorities . About 500 men ( Roman troops , ) with a Roman military band of music , were present ; there were neither cardina ' 3 , nor French officers or troops , the latter having been ordered to remain in their barracks . Tbe Roman population showed a mixture of apathy and sulkiness , and no sign of applause or displeasure whatever was evinced by them . From intelligence received by the Papal Nuncio at Paris , it appears that the Pope win have left Naples on the 4 th of April .
Mention has been made of his intention to visit en route Alatri , the only city of the pontificial states in which the Republican flag was never hoisted , and of his remaining for a shorter or a longer time at Terraclna- and Velletri , but these arrangements appear to have be-n modified . General Baraguay d'Hilliers will go out to meet the Pope , and will accompany him to the "Vatican . Letters from Rome of the 31 st ult . state that ths authorities were making extensive preparations for the reception of the Pope on bis entry into Rome . All Italians who are not natives of the States of the Church have received orders to quit Rome forthwith : and even the Pope ' s subjects who are not natives of Rome have had peremptory orders to quit' the capital ,, and to return to their own countries .
A considerable sensation was created in Rome , by the escape from the Castle of St . Angelo of Monsignor Gazoala , the editor of the ' Contemporaneo , ' who had been condemned by the eccleasiastical commission to confinement in tbe galleys for life , for having written against the infallibility of the Pope as a temporal prince . Soon after the entry of the French into Rome , Monsigaor Gazorla was thrown into prison , but it was only recently he was sentenced to the galleys . He had appealed to the Pope for a revision of his sentence , and the news of the rejection of his appeal had arrived on the day of his escape . It is supposed that the doors of his prison were opened by tbe connivance of the French military authorities : others say that he was rescued bv a ladv .
Civita Vecchia , April 5 . —I have this instant received from M . da Riyneval , and from the commander of the Vauban , intelligence that the Pope left Portici yesterday at one e ' clock in the afternoon for Caserte , on his way to Rome , travelling by short stages . '
GERMANY . BERLIN , April 2 . —Dr . Zimraer , an Austrian literary and political character , earning his bread by his pen here , was arrested on Friday last , on the demand of the Austrian Ambassador . Zimraer is an enthusiast for German unity . In the Vienna and K emsier diets he was one of the chiefs of tbe German Bohemian party . His principles were of the deepest red . They procured his election to the Frankfort Assembly , and he was one of the few Austrians who emigrated with it to Stuttgart . He has roused the ire of the Austrian ministry by some of his political pamphlets ; hence his arrest . He was escorted to Prague yesterday by rail , where he will be given over to the tender mercies of the Austrian authorities .
The ministry in Mecklenburg Schwenn have resigned ; the cause is not yet known here , but it is supposed to be connected either with tbe processings before the central federal government in Frankfort or the approaching union of the two duchies , Mecklenburg Scbwerin and Mecklenburg Strelitz . April 4 . — Intelligence has been received by the Prussian government , and by the Danish plenipotentiaries , that at the secret sitting of the Schleswig Holstein Chambers , the day before yesterday , at Kiel , it was determined by a large majority to refuse the forced loan of eight millions of marks demanded by the Stadtholderale , unless the latter consented to employ tbe money for the purpose of invading Schleswig so soon as military arrangements to that effect can be made .
Reports from Erfurt announce great dissatisfaction at M . de Radowiiz's proposition to hold over the 10 th article of the Constitution , and thereby to neutralise the unqualified right of the Union Executive to make war or peace . M . Blode , a Saxon lawyer , accused of treasonable offences , but allowed to go out on bail , has been condemned to ten years ' , hard labour , but has fled , and is notified in the Dresden 'Hue and Cry . ' April 6 . —A new postal treaty has this day been concluded between Austria and the states of the Zollverein , upon the basis of the plan drawn up by the Conference held at Dresden in the course of
1848 . * ; The elections to the Upper Chamber have just taken place ; in those towns from which reports have been received , the former members have been returned . BAVARIA . —U becomes daily more evident that Bavaria has hostile intentions , for it ia continuing to contentrate troops on the Baden frontier . Tbe ' Cologne Gazette' says that Baden will be occupied next month , and that this determination is so positire , that the present minister of war , who opposes the occupation , is about to give in his resignation .
AUSTRIA . VIENNA , April 1 . —One of the most remarkable circumstances connected with the recent events in Hungary , was that the higher clergy , almost wilhow exception , took part in the revolution . A clear proof that this was the case , is the number of vacant bishoprics . No less than nine are Bnd bave for sbair time been vacant , nor does there seem much probability of any appointments soon being made , for the dignitaries inferior in rank to the bishops were quite as deeply inculpated in tbe revolution as their superiors .
The Hungarian Leaders Sentenced to Death . —The leaders of the Hungarian revolution were three months ago summoned to surrender ; as the period of ninety days had elapsed without bring ing with it such an act of folly on the part of the Hungarians , they have all been sentenced to dead , in contumacium . Among them are Kossutb , Perc zel , Batthiani , Madarass , Teleki , and others .
SPAIN . Madrid . —The « Heraldo ' alludes in tbe following terms to the expected arrangement of the differences with England . It says—' According to the ' Nation' and the ' Pais , ' our differences with the English government are about to he arranged . Although we ourselves had some antecedents of this subject , we did not wish to publish them until we knew the final result ; but now that the subject Las been spoken of , we feel no inconvenience in adding that , according to our information also , there an : probabilities of an arrangement mutually satisfactory , and that no one will see it with greater pleasure than ourselves , who have always lamented a disagreement with so little cause , and so contrary to the inclinations and the interests of both nations . '
Untitled Article
The same jjcmroil has an article in praise of the royal decree f respecting the future arrangement of the debt * r * uft H considers an answer to all the accusations which have been made against the Spanish government for .. neglecting . their creditors ; intimating . 'as'is also done in tbe ministerial exposition , that but'fe- the suspension of the Cortes ) the government would have presented a plan for the settlement of the . debt in the last session , ,. „ . ^
MALTA ; .- . - ,- ¦ , ¦ - The ( Ottoman steam . ' frijjate .-Taif , Captain laet Bey ,-arrived here on the 27 th ult ., from Varna and Constantinople , with 124 Polish Refugees , who had formerly served in the Hungariaji army . These refugees . are bound to Cogliara , and will proceed in the s&arae steamer , the King of Sardinia having offered to admit them into hi * armv .
• , TURKEY . There is news from Constantinople to the 25 th of . March . General Dembinski , who was among thei Poles . on board of the ship that carried some eighty ' Polish refugees to Malta , would not abandon his friends in distress ) but took ship for Broussa , ^ rom i whence he went of his own free will to join Kossutli and his friends in misfortune who havebsen sent into i the interior . There were still 600 Polish refugees
at-Bchumla . They had feeen divided into classes , comprising severally those who have consented to sewein the Christian battalions about to be formed in Turkey , those who are willing to serve in the civil administration , and those who desire to stay in Turkey and support themselves . The latter will receive passports for whatever place they may . wish to go-to . . Ahmed Effendi had gone to . occupy his post inthe Principalities . . -. . ¦
MiL . Chandor , Teleki , and . Count Bethleftrj who bad succeeded in making their escape from Arad , had passed through Constantinople . . The-official relations of Austria with Turkey had not been resumed . .
. CAPE : OF GOOD HOPE . . . We have received , by the ship fillenborough , Captain George Lambert , intelligence from , the Cape of Good Hope to the 17 th February . The intelligence of the intentions of her Majesty ' s government with respect to the convicts on board the Neptune had atlast arrived , and'had been received nith ' the utmost satisfaction . The destination of the Neptune has been changed from the Cape to Van Diemen ' s Land . A meeting of the Anti-Convict Association had been held on the 14 th , when congratulatory resolutions were unanimously adopted ; and a general illumination was to take place on the . day of the Neptune ' s departure from Simon ' s Bay .
Untitled Article
. A ; SPEECH DELIVERED BY GERALD ' ¦ MASSEY , \ " At the meeting held in tho Hall of Science , April 3 rd , for tho purpose of resuscitating the Chartist Agitation ia the Borough of Pinsburyi Mr . Chairman and Working Men , —We meet this evening to revive the agitation for tho Charter—to g ive new heart and energy ; to our cause . And what is our cause ?—not alone tho Charter , working , mon —not alone a "fair day's wage for a fair day ' s work " —but wherever suffering humanity is pleading for freedom and right—wherever one human heurt is bleeding beneath the lash of the oppressor—wherever a people is fighting the holy warfare of liberty , or yearning to c ; iso off its old and execrable tyranny
there is our cause . We may ' not be able to lend a helping hand , but our hearts do' battle with them , and all our feelings fight for them . ( Cheers . ) Whose heart did not beat quicker at the thrilling words , " Fatis is in Revolution ? " Who did not utter the cry of . triumph when the glorious men of Rome arose , under that second Rienzi—noble M ; izzini—and rent asunder the blobd-cementeU despotism of Popedom ? Who did not feel it was tlieir cause when the gallant Magyars arose , and hurled back the tide of war from the shores of their fatherland , witha crash that shattered the Austrian empire rotten to its core ? We knew it was our cause ; and our . hearts bled , when the heroic land of the Magyar was trodden under foot by the . hordes of
the grim giant of the North—Nicholas . Aye , and thousands of Englishmen are yearning , with beating hearts and brightened eyes , for the great day of thefuturc , when the peoples of Europe shall once again join bands , arid march to the overthrow of . their oppressors : —sternly resolved to fight out their mutual redemption , or die together ; and that day is not far distant . We tell tho tyrants they have as yet caught but one horrifying glimpse , across the barricade of St . Antoine , of the Giant of tho Revolution—the power that shall destroy them in the future ; and the mistake that was committed last time will be remedied next time ; such rarlets as Thiers , and Guizot , and Metternich , Ac , &c , will not be let loose in society again unmuzzled , to
bribe , cajole , intimidate , and tamper with the despair of the misery-stricken . They could not appreciate the meaning of those touchingly-sublime words , uttered by the noble buvriers of Paris ;—" With so much of hope for the future , we can ajfonl to forgive the past ; " and who said likewise : — " We have fought and bled for the Republic , and will give six months' of misery to consolidate the Republic . '' They could not appreciate magnanimity like this . It has borne bitter fruit ; but let us not be dismayed , working men . Though the bark of freedom has been run ashore , aud left hi g h-dry for a time , the tide of democracy is coming up , it ascends—ever ascends ! and soon the bark shall be afloat again ; bounding merrily to tho happy haven of a glorious future : —
Never despair ! oh ! my brothers in sorrow ! I know that our mourning is euiled not—yet Shall the vanquished to-day be the victors to
morrow , And our star shine on when the tyrant ' s sun ' s set ? What though the army of martyrs have perished ? The Angel of Life rolls the stone from their grave Still live the love and the freedom they cherished , And their trumpet-cry stirs the spirits of slaves ! Hold on ! still hold on ! in the world ' s despite ! Ifurse the faith in thy heart ! keeepthe lamp of God bright ; And my life for yours it shall end in the right ! Think of the wrongs that have ground us for ages
Think of the wrongs we have still to endure ! Think of our blood red on history ' s pages ! Then work ! that our reckoning be speedy and suro ! Slaves cry to God ! but be our Ood revealed In our hearts—in our lives—in our warfare for man And hearing—ok home upon—victory ' s shield , — Let us fight—let us fall—in the proud battle van . Hold on ! still hold on ! in the world ' s despite . Nurse the faith in thy heart ! keep the lamp of God bright ; And my life for yours , it shall end in the right .
I know it needs a high heart and a lofty faith , to hold on , but it is only cowardsgo back . It is quite true that thousands of glorious martyrs have fallen in our cause . It is , quite true that Mazzini , Kossuth , and Louis Blanc are in exile . It . is quite true that Ernest Jones and others are being tortured to death in a prison cell ; and many more will fall in our cause 1 Many more tears will fall to earth , —many more groans will ascend to heaven , — and yet will the day of retribution come , and vietory . will follow . Let them persecute the champions of democracy . They may build their scaffolds and gibbets , and gloat on the mangled forms oi murdered infants , bleeding and palpitating on the real point of the Croat's bayonet ; they are only haseninjr the day of bloody assize ,, and we still bid
them defiance , proudly conscious of our coming triumph . They murdered Robert Blum , — but Robert Blum ' , lives in the hearts of millions ; and . the sound of the coming battle , his spirit shall leap forth millions of Robert Blums ] They ' murdered the brothers Bandiera ! but the brothers Bandiera are not dead ! They never die who fall in such a cause ; their names may be " branded with infamy , and their dust scattered on every wind , but their principles , and their unflinching advocacy of thoso principles , shall outlive timo and torture in defiance of despot , doath , and dovil ! Mr . Dickens may sneer at tho " Bastards ' of the Mountain , " and the " Red Cap , " but if the glorious doctrines , enunciated by the . Christ of Nazareth ,
have a . resting-place in this world , they arc nursed and cherished by these same " Bastards of the Mountain ; " and the maligned " red , " which we bear as our banner , shall yet wave triumphantly throughout the world . According to tho showman ' s account of catching and taming " sarpents , " they extract their teeth , -at the bottom of which lies their poison , in the following manner : —They show the serpent a piece of red cloth , and tluserpent does'nt like red at all ; red puts it into a fever of fury—it flies at the cloth , and seizes it with such tenacity , that it will suffer to have its teeth torn out—poison and all—before it will leave its hold . Thus by the aid of the " red , " will we •¦ xtract the teeth and the poison from every , yiper of ^ priestcraft and every serpent of statecraft in
the world , if they will but bite . ( Applause . ) But , working-men , it will avail us little to cry out against the tyranny of others , unless we are determined to ceaso to victimise ourselves , We have been , and still are , our own tyrants . We spend every year nearly as much in the ale-house and the gin palace , as the cost of the imperial t'ixati « n . It may bo a . lesson hard to loan , but it is cheap at any price to know ,, that no vicious government can exist but by virtue of the vices of the people . Slaves are but tyrants in the grub , and tyrants are slaves turned inside out . And with all the degradation and ignorance that vxists among us , are we prepared to use the Suffrage , not only as a right , but as a means of duty ? The great mass of the people nvn sunk in ignorance , and are a dead prey to canting knaves ,
Untitled Article
who pmbh < G&ri 8 fccruci 8 eilftsa mean ' s of cmioi | W them ^ . -. Ana among this mass , the grinding . om-Kania ^ y s recruit / fer labo ur ; , aM 'tlhua , by an infernf , Uompetiti <« a , - reduce the wages * t the industrioHs ! If we wer expect to . mnlke the XXthe law of the tod , we > must *^ m the strong-holds of vice and ignorance in ;; the agricul ^ turaldistricts , '> and the manufacturing ¦ itoww ,, and SeWp «? ple'f ^ 4 ! to , « Lutoh of th «»; baWe ^ dash ^ olsterers of rotton creeds ! These men . who are-Bhouting sabbath after sabbath , 'Gffd save the Sn ' and all tho t-oyal - fanUj . " < G *< 1 save the People—not Thrones and Crowns , but men ! 1 he pernicious influence of sthe priests by men—free and eavnestmen , who will bravely league , together to hreak tho bonds that bind the jpeople to the ^ -- ^~^^
chariot wheels of . Despotism , and start them on the noble race of mind 3 I know thafthoy who will become soldiers in thearmy of the spoor . must suiter . persecution and the jpaags of martyrdom . Well and so have all the good and great spirits that have stood in the advanced guard of the world through all ages ! There is not a path we , tread ' smoothly tor day but has been beaten out of tho thorny waste and tho" rugged rock by the bruised and bloeding feet of the ihai'tyrs . Courage 3 , niy br-othor . . workers The organs of the FiniirieM Reformers Jmvobeei ) telling us that Ohfii'ttsin is dead—they have put forth their own " Little Charter ; " but he not ( leooived . working men , it is but the Reform Bill of
mockery , offered once more to tho people under a now guise . The , mon of the Reform Bill promised SJnivorsal Suffrage to the people , if they would lend a hand to | gct tlieni into power ; but no sooner had they mounted frbih the shoulders of the people—¦ the ladder of'their ambition—than down they kicked . tho ladder , and coolly told their dupes , that it was '' STo use knocking at the door . " These men do not fight our battle , they arc only'the exponents of the middle class liberty , which means the most cold-blooded individualism and unlimited co ' mpeti * tion , sothat capital'may be fetterless in its mur-( id'OUS warfare with labour . ' Competition , which means everything for those who have power to take , and nothing for those who have nb power to' defend . ' Competition , which drives little children' from the arms of their mothers , . to :
earn their own dear bread , by eternally cheapening of flesh' and blood . They simply seek a political change which , would prevent tbo corning social revolution ; we ldok ' . to tho . Chai'tei as ! i means of working out the social revolution which niust follow . ' !; These Financial Reformers'do ' not fiffht our battle , " we knowthatour redemption does not lie in possessing merely the twenty-millionth part / ofa voice in the ' national palaver . We look to the Charter , as something more than that ; Wo claim to be recognised as men . We claim for each ftnd all , the ' equal right of developing their uuequsil faculties , arid the equal right of each to satisfy the moral , intellectual , and physical needs of their natures ; in ' short , we claim to , be recognised as sons of tho same ' father , brothers of the same Christ , and childrenin the same human fiimily !
Untitled Article
The Bishop of Exeter's Chaplain has followed thn example : of hb chief , and has created much iinj > ry controversy ' in his parish on religious matters . The Rev . W . Maskell , vicar-of-Man-church ,.. in which the Bishop of Exeter resides , has rendered himself so obnoxious by his sevmons and Gcolesiastieal practices , that at a meeting of liispiirishionei's , publicly convened , tho following resolution iwas agreed to : — " That this meeting is of opinion that the doctrines preached at the parish church of St . Mary , for some time past , have been contrary to the word of God , and contrary to the ' views of the Church of England . That this meeting considering it unchristianjikoto go to law respecting religious belief , they will build for themselves a place of worship , which shall , as far as possible , be approved by all evangelical Christians . The Bishop of Exeter has declined to interfere . " —Weekly Chronicle .
Untitled Article
Untitled Article
¦• '•/¦ : - ' '¦ " - - ¦¦ " - . - ,.. . k V- .,- ffE NORTHERN $ f Aft . ; : ^ > , ^^ krA W : ----- ' ' j A ^ April 13 , 1850 ¦ - " — ¦' - '¦ - . m : ^ f - .. , ^ - . - _____^ ,,,. ^ il n - ^ == NEW BROTHER C HARTISTS ! 50 . N 0 T i £ "i £ = EXmA-G-IUBtNAItY ! SUCCESS OF THE NEW ? 4 edth BROTHER CHARTISTS ! DO N 0 T IffilaS i
Bmwilfuh Hair. Ts'hiskelts. ≪Tc, Versus Baldkess, Vfeak, And Grey. Hair.
BMWIlFUh HAIR . TS ' HISKEltS . < tc , versus BALDKESS , VfEAK , AND GREY . HAIR .
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), April 13, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1569/page/2/
-