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THE NORTHERN STAR SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1S5O.
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Co (izovvewQMWMb.
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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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Transcript
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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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Untitled Ad
AN EFFECTUAL CURB FOR TILES , FISTTOAS , & ? . _ ^ J ) N T » ABERNETHY'S TILE _ Jj ^ tftte affllctod hareteen perma-XI What a painfiil and noxious disease is the Files : and , compara tively , n < Jr * r ? £ . of powerful aperients too Bendy cured bj ordinary appeals to medical skill ! This , no doubt , a ™ es ^ JJrJja always be avoided in all cases fttquentlv administered by the profession ; indeed , strong internal me dicines bu ~ . ^ placed himself under the of ttiU complaint . The proprietor of tho above Ointment , after years ox i ° ~ r ^ j , ea lth , and has enjoyed it ever jreaiment of that eminent surgeon Mr . AbErnethv ; wasbjMm restoreawp ^^ wh ^ ma gam 6 ^ bernecince without the slightest return of the disorder , over a period of fifteen 3 ™ " ^^ ^ in and out of ^ proprietor ' s , thian perscription has been the means ot healing a vast numher otuesy ^ of them for a very considerable time , circle of friends , most of which cases had been under mediew care , » u many who had been perfectly healed by its Abernethy ' s File Ointment was introduced te the public by tne oeia Md and w e even the medical profession , application , and since its introduction the feme of this Omtn ?? eaic £ ne net prepared by themselves , do now freely and mlways dow and unwilling to acknowledge the virtues or any ™ .. ^ roijaraiion , but a never failine remedy in every frankly admit that Abernethy ' s File Ointment Is not only a vaioauw ui » i ? itage and Yariety of that appalling malady . . . n ; ntment a trial . Multitudes of cases of its efficacy might Sufferers from the Piles wiU not repent gmng " I , "J-,. those who have been cored , unwilling to publish their 1 * produced , if the nature of the complaint did not render uw name » - ts ^^ f « , rpe" 4 s . 6 d . pots in one for 11 s ., with full directions for use , SoldincoreredPotsat 4 s . 6 d .. or the qnanb ^ ot inre ^ anl > g churcll . yard . Butter , 4 Cheapside ; Kewbery , St . l > y Barclay and Eons . Farringaon-s treet ; EdwaMs ^ au ^ 1 S 9 Oxford-Street wmoU ghby and Co ., 61 P * al ' 8 ; Sutton , Bow Charcn-yard ; J ° J £° "? ™ na ^ Seet , Burton-crescent ; Eade , 39 Goswell-street ; Pront , 229 Buhopsgate-street Without ; Onr | % ® ^ PrentisTV Edgeware-road ; and retail by all respectable Chemists and Strand ; Hannay and Co ., 63 , uxiora- sircei ., * Medicine Vendors in London . _ , „ pltE oijjtSIENT . " The Public are requested to be on their guard V Be sure to ask » f . *™ ft low Prices , and to ouserve that none can possibly he genuine , unless tho name against noxious Co ^ P ^^^^ nVnt Stamp ^ ffixed to each pot , 4 s . 6 d . ; which is the lowest price the proprietor ^ Sl ^ eUhirowiDg Tthe great expens , of the Ingredients .
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PU BARRY'S HEALTH RESTORING FOOI THE REVALEXTA ARABICA . pATJTION . —The most disgusting and in \ J jurions compounds bemg sold by unscrupulous specu lators upon the credulity of the Public , under close imita tion of tiie name of DV BAUBY S REVALENTA ARA SICA FOOD , or wtih a preteace of being simpar to that de licieus and invaluable remedy for Indigestion , Constipa tion , Nervous . Bilious , and liver Complaints , Messrs . DI BARRY and Co . caution Invalids against these barefacec attempts at imposture . There is nothing in the wholi vegetablekingdom that can legitimately be called similab t < Du Barry ' s Kevalenta Arabics , a plant which is cultivatec by Da Barry and Co . on their estates alone , and for the pre paration . and pulverisation of which their own Patent Machinery alone is adapted . Let Corn Chandlers sell theii pease , beans , lentil , and other meals under their propei names , and not trifle with the health of Invalids and In . fiats , for whom DU SAURY'S RBYALENTA ARABICA alone is adapted . j * u Barry and Co ., 127 , Sew Bond-street , London .
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this two ten-pound canisters of your ' KevaleHta Arabica Food . ' I beg to assure you that its beneficial effects have been duly appreciated by , dear sir , yours most respectfully , Thos . Kiko , Major-General , Louisa Terrace , Exmouth , August 17 th , 1849 . I now consider myself a stranger to all campaints except ft hearty old age . I am as well as ever I was , and even quite free from the vexatious and tronblesome annoyance of an eruption of the skin , of which I had suffeielf or years , and which my medical attendanthad declared incur , able at my time of life . About sixty years ago I had a fall from my horse , hemiplegia was the consequence , my left arm and leg were paralysed ; also my left eyelid and the eye was displaced . From 179 S these dilapidations have
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THE MINER ' S CONFERENCE AT NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE . TO THE M 1 KEKS OF GREAT BEITAIN . Fatow Mk » , —At a Conference , held in May last , at Wi <» au , in Lancashire , to consider the propriety of reorganising the Miners' Association , it was resolved to convene another Conference in Newcastle-on-Tjue , to perfect the arrangements thea entered into . This notice is , therefore , to app rise the miners of every district , that the said Conference will be held on Monday , October 14 th , at Mr . T . Graves , Cock Inn , Head of the Side , Newcastle . Business to commence at ten o clock . There will also be held , on Saturday , October 12 th , a general public meeting of the miners of Northumberland and Durham , on the Town Moor . Chair taken at twelve o ' clock , noon . It is particularly requested t ? iat delegates to the conference will endeavour to be present at the public meeting , held as above noticed . There will be likewise a delegate meeting after the public meeting is over , for Northumberland and Durham , at the usual place of meeting . M . Jude , Sec .
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A stbaw-bon-vet maker of London has sent out a man dressed in a straw hat , straw coat , straw waistcoat , and pantaloons , aB a puff to bis shop .
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FIRE AND LIFE ASSURANCE , AND-ANNUITIES FOR THE INDUSTRIAL CLASSES . ENGLISH AND CAMBRIAN ASSURANCE SOCIETY : FOR FIRE , LD 7 E , ANNUITIES , AND ENDOWMENTS , &c . Capital £ 180 , 000 with power of increase to One Million . ( Incorporated by Atl of Parliament . ) CHIEF OFFICES : —No . 9 , New Bridge-street , Blackfriars , London . District Offices . ¦ No . 65 , Sun-street , Bishopsgate-street , City ; No . 67 , Cbarlotte-Btreet , Fitzroy-square ; No . 6 , Trinity-street , Trinity-square , Borough ; No . 12 a , Cannon-row , Bridgestreet , Westminster . Ifedicdl Officer . Daniel Wane , E 6 q ., M . D ., 67 , . Charlotte-street , Fitzroysquare ( on Monday ) , and 6 , Trinity-street ( on Thursday ) , from 10 to 3 .
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Glasgow proposes to erect a large hall , and dedicate it to music , painting , &c . Bradford is raising £ 16 , 000 , Leeds £ 17 , 000 or £ 18 , 000 , for a like purpose . . The Sheffield Times modestly estimates the capabilities of Sheffield . it £ 4 , 000 or £ 5 , 000 . We put down halt the Bum for Gateshead . —Qateshead Observer . .
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( An Historical Romance of the lleign of Henry VIII . ) By Thomas Coopbb , author of the ' Purgatory of Suicides . The re-issue of this Romance will also commence on Saturday , the 8 th of October . The Trade can be supplied on Tuesday , the 1 st of October . Eighteen Penny Numbers ( or three Sixpenny Parts ) are already published . No . 19 will , of course , be the number issued at the beginning of October . —T . C . Published by James Watson , 3 . Queen ' s Head-passage , Paternoster-row .
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NATIONAL CHARTER ASSOCIATION . . Office , H , Southampton-street , Strand . qiHE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE X . hereby announce the following meetings : — On Sunday afternoon , October the 6 th , the Democratic Conference will assemble in the Coffee ltoom oi the John , street Institution . Chair to be taken at three o ' clock . On Sunday evening ( same date ) a lecture will be delivered at the King and Queen , Foley- treet , Portland-place . To commence at half-past eight o'clock . On Monday evening , October 7 th , a public meeting will be held at the City Hall , 20 , Golden-lane , Barbican . Mr . William Davies , and a deputation from the Democratic Propagandists , will attend an 1 address the meeting . Chair to be taken at eight o ' clock . On the same evening , Mr J . Bronterre O'Brien will lecture at the South London Hail , on the propositions of the National Reform League . To commence at eight o ' clock . Admission One Penny , to defray expenses . On Tuesday evening , Ootober 8 th , a public meeting will be held in the Temperance Hall , Broadway , Westminster , for the purpose of exposing the horrid and cruel treatment the Chartist victims have been subjected to during their imprisonment . Messrs . G . Julian Harney , Bronterre O'Brien , John Shaw , John FusseJl , John J . Bezer , James M . Bryson , and George Shell , will attend and address the meeting .. Chair to be taken at eight o ' clock precisely . Admission ( to defray expenses ) Boxes twopence ; Pit and Gallery one penny . Signed , on behalf of the Committee , JounAbnott , General Secretary .
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TO TAILORS . By approbation of Her Majesty , Queen Victoria , and H . R . II . Prince Albert . NOW BEADY , THE LONDON and PARIS FASHIONS for AUTUMN and WINTER 1850-1 , the most splendid and superbly-coloured PRINT ever before published by Messrs . Benjamin READ and Co ., 12 Hart-street , Bloomsbury-square , London ; and by G . BERGER , Holy well-street Strand . This exquisitely engraved Print will be accompanied with Riding , Dress , Frock and Shooting Coat Patterns , all of the newest and most fashionable style , and every part fully illustrated both for Cutting and Making-up . Also the registered Cape and Cloak-Paletot for persons of all nations , the most convenient garment every before introduced , and will admit of great variety in cutting and making-up ; evfiry particular explained , Registered according to act of parliament , by _ Read and Co ., 28 th August , 1850 . All persons purchasing the Fashions are at liberty to make and sell the same ; and all other persons not purchasing the fashions , by sending 3 s . for the Pattern and printed information , for that and all other particulars respecting Sty le and Fashion for the presentseason . The beautiful and richly-coloured Print is exhibited in the Royul Exchange , London . Price , with all the Patterns and informations complete , 10 s . Sold by Read and Co ., 12 Hart-street , Bloomsbury . square , London ; G , Berger , Hplywell-street , Strand ; and all booksellers in the United Kingdom , READ and Go ' s . Patent Measures now become universally adopted , price 5 s . the set , -with every explanation respecting their utility arid use . Registered patterns , of any description , sent to measure , Is . each , post free . ( Ladies Paletots same . ) READ and Co ' 3 . New System oi Cutting will supersede everything of the kind before conceived . Terms and all particulars sent post free . Instructions in Cutting for all kinds of Style and Fashion , so that any person may perform equal to having forty years experience in a few hours . Habits performed for the trade . Busts for fitting coats on . Boys figures , &c , & < s . Post-office orders , and post stamps to any amount taken as cash . N . B . —Foremen provided .
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HEALTH WHERE 'TIS SOUGHT 1 HOLL O W A Y ; S PILLS Cure of a Itisordered Liver and Stomach , when in a most hopeless state . Extract of a Letter from Mr . Matthew Harvey , of Chapel Hall , Airdvie , Scotland , dated the 15 th of January , 1850 . Sir , —Your valuable pills havo been the means , with God ' s blessing , of restoring me to a state of perfect health , and at a time when I thought I was on the brink of the grave . I had consulted several eminent doctors , who , after doing what they could for me , stated that they considered my case as hopeless . I ought to say that I had been suffering from a liver and stomach complaint of long standing , which during the last two years got so much worse , that every one considered my condition as hopeless . I , as a last resource , got a box of your pills , which soon gave relief , and by persevering in their use for some weeks , together with rubbing night and morniDg your Ointment over my chest and stomach , and right side , I have by their means alone got completely cured , and to the astonishment of myself and everybody who knows me . —( Signed ) Matthew Hae-VEr . —To Professor Hollow ay . Cure of a Case of Weakness and Debility , of Four Years' Standing .
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Kew Act to Shortbn Aots op Pakliambni . — Among the statutes of the late session was one " for shortening the language in used Acta of Parliament . " It contains eight concisely worded sections , and , according to the provisions , very considerable improvements are expected to be made in future acts . Subsequent acts , it is expected , will not contain a provision to alter or amend . They will be divided into sections , without any introductory words . It will be sufficient to cite the year of the reign of a former act ; the word " expedient" will become obsolete . There will be no need of interpretation clauses , nor of others respecting repealed provisions , and all future acts are to be deemed public acts , unless expressly declared to the contrary . The act is to commence and to take effect from and immediately after the commencement of the new session of parliament .
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_ . _ p _ , < n TX * \ XfL' T T » THE VICTIM ROBEttt CROWE'S FAREWELL TO ENGLAND . A MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT , under ll the auspices of the APPOLONIC SOCIETY , who hav « given the aid of their valuable services , will take place in the Hall of the LlTEBABY AND SCIENTIFIC InsTTTUTIOK , JoHN-SlBHrf / FlTZBOY-SftOABI , Ov TUESDAY EVENING Next , Octobbi 8 th , For the Benefit of Robert Cbowe , one of the Political Victims recently liberated from Tothill-fields Prison , who is about to emigrate to the United States . Waltm Coopeb will preside . From the great talent engaged , a rich musical treat may be anticipated . Admission - . —Hall , Sd . ; Gallery , 4 ri . Doors opened at Eight , commence at half-past Eight . Friends of Freedom , Humanity , and Justice attend .
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Education for the Millions , THIS BAY IS PUBLISHED , "No . XIX . of THE NATIONAL ^ INSTRUCTOR . " PRICE ONE PENNY . The objeot of the Proprietor , Feargus O'Conwob , Esq ., M . P ., is to place within the reach of the poorest classes that Political and Social Information of which they are at present deprived by the Government" Taxes on Knowledge . " SIXTEEN LARGE OCTAVO PAGES , Price One Penny .
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WEEKLY JOURNALJW ROBERT OWEN . On Saturday , the 2 nd of November , will be published the First Number of ROBERT OWEN'S WEEKLY JOURNAL , PRICK OHB FBNMT . A Periodical intended to instruct all classes in the principles and practical measures by which alone the poverty , injustice , and misery of the existing system can be peaceably superseded by universal wealth , justice , and happiness . To be had of all Booksellers in Town and Country , THE REGENT WORKS H OP ROBERT OWEN May be had of Effingham Wilson , Royal Exchange ; Watson , Queen's Head-passage , Paternoster-row ; and Vickers , Holy well-street , London .
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THE PORTRAIT OF SIR ROBERT PEEL , And the Magnificent Historical Engraving , of the PORTRAITS OF THE AMERICAN PRESIDENTS , Are now ready . If any of our subscribers have not received them ; application should be made to the agent who supplies them with , the paper . Agents are requested , when ordering Prints , to state by what means they are to be forwarded .
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The Polish Refdoees . —G . Julian Harney has received and paid over to Captain J , B , Uola BartocbowBki , member of the Polish Committee , the sum of £ 1 10 s . 4 d ., Bubscribed by the democrats of Kilbarchan , per JameB Gibson , for the Polish Refugees . Mr . Sowebbt , Dalston . —Mr . Watson does not send direct to Mr . Fishburn . YT . P . Lee , Clerkenwell , —We do not see that any advantage will arrive from the publication of your letter under the circumstances stated b } yourself . It is decidedly for the members representing the borough ; and while we sympathise with you under what appears to " be agrosa persecution for principle's sake , we doubt the propriety in the present aspect of the case of making it a subject of newspaper discussion . Pomi . —The "Proletarian ' * Hymn" is respectfully declined . John Moss . Derby . —The "Irishman" newspaper is not now published . Several correspondents have asked us to furnish them with the address of Mr . Bernard Fulharo , and we should feel obliged if that gentleman would send it to this office .
The Northern Star Saturday, October 5, 1s5o.
THE NORTHERN STAR SATURDAY , OCTOBER 5 , 1 S 5 O .
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ABUSE OP NATIONAL PROPERTY . The Whigs are dangerous friends t © Royalty , and are doing far more to bring it iuto disrepute than any laboured attack of those who oppose the " Institution'' upon abstract principles could possibly effect . John Bull is eminently a " practical" animal , and little given to theorising , ThingB must
be made tangible to his senses before he fully comprehends them . Thus , the most eloquent and forcible exposition of the moral and political evils inherent in . hereditary monarchy will fall upon dull or deaf ears , when a visible royal encroachment upon any of his accustomed enjoyments or privileges will at once raise a storm of disapprobation and disaffection .
During the administration of the late Sir R . Peel , the Sovereign and the people were kepfc upon excellent personal terms with oach other . Acting with the same foresight , knowledge of his countrymen , and true friendship for the Throne , which induced him to vote for cutting down to 30 , 000 / . the extravagant Whig proposal of 50 , 000 / . a year to Prince Albert , that astute Statesman
never allowed the ( Sovereign to be placed in an ungracious position towards the Country . We firmly believe that the personal popularity of the present occupant of the Throne is , to a very large degree , owing to his sagacious policyin this respect . Her Majesty ' s present advisers are rapidly destroying that popularity , audas far as in them lies , producing the same alienation and ill will between the
great bod y of the people and the Monarch , which greedy , grasping covetousness , selfish personal extravagance , and : disregard of public opinion gave rise to in the case of some of her immediate predecessors . The pulls made upon the public purse during the reign of the third George , in a variety of mean and stealthy ways by Ministers , who sought to preserve their places through Court
favour , rather than popular support , produced a spirit of sulky , grud ging dislike which " was transformed to bitter hatred and execration in the time of GeoKge the Fourth If the Whigs are long the Minis ters of the Crown they will provide as large an amount of obloquy and unpopularity for the Dresonr Prince of Wales , JWp ^ &ETS store up for the selfish voluptuary they we e E u ? ope '' Ca | lmg " ^ &St * - « --
Indications of this alienation are already palpable and abundant . The stables added to Windsor Castle , at a cost of 70 , 000 / . ~ when , mthe same year , 30 , 000 /* was with difficulty
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granted for educating the people ; thn front added to . Buckingham Palace , at L ^ iay of 150 , 000 / ., and the aswfitebW at J % borough House , for the boy-heir to the TW to be used some , eight or nine years hence- ^ ' all remembered and enumerated with gr ^ dissatisfaction . People cannot hel p e on ^ ing the disgraceful ni ggardliness which gram ^ first 251 a year , and then , upon strong r pufeion , 15 / . more , to the widow of LieSenfl I WaqKORN , who had spent life and fortune j the service' of the public , and conferred oue t the most valuable boons upon the country with the infamous and preposterous la viahnij that gave 12 , 000 / . a year to the Bake Of Cambridge , because Jie was the son of a father who had , during his long life , receiv e d hundreds of thousands from the pockets of «___ x — J r * * • a !__ . * ^^ w __
the over-taxed , straggling xndasjnous classes , Just at this moment—and white the public were exasperated by that most transparent job—the Woods and Forests seized the . oppor tunity of perpetrating another , which , thoagfc loss costly , is certain to produce even greater discontent and resistance . The Parks of Lou . don are truly styled its " lungs . " Looking at the way in which , year after-year , the levJ ! athan Metropolis , like some huge mons ter spreads its feelers in every direction , for many mileB , and absorbs into its vast bulk of bricka and mortar the green fields and villages which
even a quarter of a century ago , were genuine rural resorts of the town-dried and exhausted Cockney , it is no wonder that they are re . garded as precious possessions , and the slight , est encroachments upon them viewed with the greatest jealousy . Under pretence of improving St . James ' s Park , and making a few slight alterations required by the addition to Buckingham Pa . lace , the Government smuggled through the House , at a late period of the Session , . a vote of 11 , 000 / . for these alterations , which , though not very clearly defined , were understood to be simply for the completion of the Palace front . The Government were pointedly asked
by Mi \ Osboknb , if they intended to carry out a p lan prepared b y Mr . Wjesfield , that was to cost 28 , 000 / ., and cut off from the public park a slice of ground for the private use of the Palace ? Sir Charles Wood answered evasivel y , but still in such a way aa to give an impression that the plan waa given up . No sooner , however , were the membera fairly out of town , and everybody of any influence away for their accustomed recreation during the recess , than the Wbods and Fo . rests broke ground on a large scal e , and committed the most merciless havoc on the grounds which belong to the people . Having paid 150 , 000 / . to build a Dew front to what
was from the first a miseraWft aWM ™ u was from the first a miserable abortion , it seems we are now to pay 28 , 000 / . more to enable Lord Seymour and his colleagues to rob us of a large portion of the upper end of the public park , and appropriate it to the exclusive use of the royal nursery maids . The act , odious in itself , has been rendered still more disgusting , by the deceit , trickery , and falsehood , which has characterised the whole proceedings . Such conduct is certain to produce a lasting distrust between the people and their rulers . If good reason can be
shown for any alterations , let them be made by all means . If the proposed arrangements are even not generally satisfactory , let us at least have the good old English maxim ; " all fair above board" carried out . In an open and manly struggle , the people , howeverrelucfcantly compelled to resign , would still have the satisfaction of having endeavoured to protect their interests , but wheu they are filched from them by stealth in a swindling underhanded style , worth y rather of the " swell mob , " than the rulers of a
great empire , it is not wonderful that indignation should be mingled with disgust . In truth this department of the Woods and Forests seems hopelessly incurable , and irredeemably bad . The exposures of its malversations , its extravagance , its carelessness , its permissionbfj . or connivance with the robberies of the National Property , upon a large scale , by Lord Duncan ' s Committee , have not led , as was hoped , to any radical improvement . The new commission is as oblivions of the inte .
rests of those for whom they are nominal trustees , as their predecessors . Instead of protecting they plunder . The national domain appears to be considered as a safe sporting ground for aristocratic and royal poachers . The public estates have been most scandalously jobbed . At one time for the pleasure of a monarch , at another for the convenience of private individuals , portions of land have been alienated , and large revenues resigned . A few d
ays ago we walked through that beautiful , r ich ,, and picturesque stretch of country , the New Forest . Mansions , villas , farmsteads , villages , rich pasture and arable lands , and magnificent sylvan scenery , gladden the eye of the traveller on all sides . What revenue did the nation derive from that magnificent estate of 66 , 000 acres , according to ° the last returns ? Positivel y worse than nothing ! We had to pay 5 , 000 / . more than it produced , for managing it !
Another robbery of the public by this department has just been announced . For many years Parliament has voted an annual grant for the erection of suitable buildings for the National Museum . They are now completed , and it was expected that when the old wall of Montague House , which shut out the public from the view of the Ionic facade of the Museum , was removed , it would be thrown open , and the space in front left as a promenade , something after the fashion of tho Royal Exchange , or Trafalgar Square . That is a mistake . The old
wall is to be succeeded by a new one twelve feet high , in order to give certain officers of the Museum the same privacy and seclusion which the Commissioners want for their Royal Mistress at Buckingham Palace . It is wonderful in what contempt and disgust those who live upon the people ' s money hold their paymaster . How they turn up their noses , when there is the slightest chance of their coming " between the wind and their nobility . " Insolent exclusion is the ordar of the day , and even such " small deer" as the principal librarian , keepers , and secretary of the British Museum , must ape royalty in their hankerings , after what they consider a dignififld seclusion .
On the Continent , the Palaces , Museums , Galleries , and Public Institutions are generally freely and fully thrown open to all classes , without any su « h ridiculous and offensive assumption . The opening of Kew Gardens aud of Hampton Court , was a move in the ri » ht direction , calculated to inspire the hope that iu time the public would be allowed to have the use and the enjoyment of its own property . It appears , that under the rule of the " liberal ' Whigs a retrogade movement has commenced , In order to carry favour at Court , they are ready to pander to any whim or prejudice . Gonscums of having lost the confidence aud of
support the people , they seek to compensate tor it b y the acquisition of that back-stairs in ' liuence which , in 1835 , forced Lord Melbourne back into power , and gave them a renewed lease of office for five years . When Sir Robert Peel , upon that occasion , muufully maintained his own position against Court whlieB , he may have neglected fine op » portunities to cultivate " camarilla" influence ; but , besides guarding the nation ' s interest , be also served the Royal interest in the best wa }'» by keeping the Sovereign right with the People . The Queen may be pleased at ptf " sent that sho has a more subservient Minister ,
but the accommodation may cost her dear . These outrages on public opinion , thsse repeated mean and stealthy robberies of tno public property , accompanied by equivocations and falsehoods , which add to their enormity cann fail , if persisted in , to lay the founuftS
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the norther * star ; _ - _ - - - ¦¦ - ¦ - -OcTOWSB 5 ' 18 *<^ n _ _ r ¦ ¦ ^——^^^—^^^^^^^ ... . ¦¦¦ - ¦ - Kii i m ¦ ¦ _ . _ p _ , < n TX * \ XfL' T T »
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 5, 1850, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1594/page/4/
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