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SECRET SORROW! CBRTAIS HELP J ' ^ hmenstSiKcew <jf tie New Mode offrtatment nhioh _-J ; 'l has never failed.
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THE NORTHERN STAR 8ATUIt»AY, AUGUST 33. 185It
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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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TVR . ALFRED BARKER , 48 , Liverpool MJ Street , King ' s Cross , London , from many years' experience at the various hospital * in liondon and on the Ceatiment , is enabled to treat wtb the utmost certainty of cure , ereiy variety of disease ariBing from solitary habits , excesses , and infections , such as gonorrhoea , gleet , stricture , and syphilis , or Venereal disease , & * & & < & stages , which , ovdng to ' jeglect er inproper treatment , invariably end in gravrjl , rheumatism , indigestion , debility , skin diseases , paipja in th « kidneys , ¦ bark , and loins , and finally , an agwising death ! The lLs . entaWe neglect of these dkeasef , by medical men ia general is t ? ell known , and their fr 4 tUe attempts to cure % y the use of these dangerous Medicines—mercury , co--paiba , cubebs , &&s have produce ^ verj distressing result * AU sufferers are earnestly inritf . d to apply at © nee to Dr . Barter ,-who guarantees a speedy and perfect care , * nd « f every gympton , whether pnmafy or secondary , witfc < m * any of the aboTe medicines , thus preventing tie p « ssibiesta
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HEALTH WHERE 'TIS SOUGllT ! HOLLOWAY'S PILLS . Cure of a Disordered JAver and , Stomach , when in a most hopeless state . Extract of a Letter from 2 Ir . Matthew Harrey , of Chapel Hall , Airdrie , Scotland , dated the 15 th of January , 185 C Sm , —Your valuable pills have 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 irii . it tiiev could for me , stated that they considered my case as hopeless . I ought to saj that Iliad been sufleriag from a liver and stomach complaint of loug standing , which during the last tiro 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 hj persevering in their use for some weeks , together with rubbing night and morning your Ointment Over my ch 6 St andStOinach , and right side , I bare by their means alone got completely cured , and to the astonishment of myseli and everybody who knows me . —( Signed ) Matdiew ILuu YET . —To Professor Uoiloway . Cure of a Case of Weakness and Belility , of Four
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wrfecthj succeeded ; Bend me another for a case of Scrotal Hernia , '—John Armstrong , Navy Surgeon . ' We have witnessed the cure of three cases of Rupture by Dr . Sah&ek ' s treatment , which confirm the remarks we made some time since on . the utility of this discovery to those suffering from Hernia , '—Ifebical JocaNAt , 'Ycur remedy has cured my Rupture after everything else had failed . I have used violent exertion since , but there is no sign of its coming down . '—Miss Symmonds , Bajswater . . , A fair time has elapsed since I used your remedy , and moreover I have been examined by asurgeon , ¦ snodeclaiea it is quite cured . '—Mr . Potts , Bath . lettersand
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THOMAS COOPER , Author of ' The Purgatory of Suicides , * &c . DjEIlVBBS OllAT . 'ONS ON THE FOLIOWIKG SUBJECTS ' . — The Genius of Shakspeare , as displnvcd in his ' Hamlet ; ' with Readings and Recitations from the Play , the . Music of Ophelia ' s Songs , < tc . The Life and Genius « £ Hilton , TRUb . Recitations from ' Paradise Lost , * &C . The Life and Genius of Burns ; with the Music of some of his Sings , Recitations of ' Tani o'Slianter . ' ie . The Life and Genius of Byron ; with Readings aud Recitations from his Works The life andgenius of Shelley , with Readings Recitations from his works . Civilisation : What it was in the Past—what it effects for Man in the present , aiid the universal Human Happiness it must produce in the Future . The English Commonwealth : Founders of the Struggle-Coke . Selden , Elliot , Pvm , Ilampdcn , ic—Despotism of the King , and Tyranny of Laud—Civil War-Death of Hampden—Battle of Naseby—Imprisonment , Trial , and Execution ot Charles 1 st . The -English Commonwealth : GovernmentT
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For any numner urauuus , on successive uights , Thirty Shillings each . 5 , Park Row , Knightsbridge . Londen . N . B . —When the distance from London is great , and fl special journey has to be made from the Metropolis—of course , some allowance for extra travelling expenses will be expected . [ I can only accept Invitations from Yorkshire and Lancashire to the end of October . My friends may addresi me for the next fortnight— ' Care « f Mr . Barlow , hookseller , I , Nelson-street , Newcastle-on-Tyne . —T . C . ]
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THE CRYSTAL PALACE . The following Engravings of this unrivalled edifice , ate now ready , and may be had at this Office ;—I . —View of the Exterior of the Building ; a magnificent print—two feet long ~ exquisitely engraved ; from a drawing furnished by Messrs . Fox and Henderson ; and consequently correct in every respect . Pbicb oklt Sixpence , II—Proofs of the Same Print , printed on thick Imperial Drawing Paper . Price Ohe Shilling . Ill—The Same Print , Superbly Coloured I on extra Drawing Paper , and finished in the most exqui site style . Prick Two Shillings and Sixpence .
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THE PORTRAIT OF SIR ROBERT PEEL A few impressions of this Magnificent Portrait of the late great Statesman are still left , and may be had at this Office . . -
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Just Published , IN NOS . AT ONE PENNY EACH , THE EMIGRANT'S GuioTfo THE 60 LQEN LAND n a l i p o n n i a \ J ITS PAST HISTORY ; ITS PRESENT POSITION ; ITS FDXUUE PROSPECTS : WITH A MINOTE AND AOTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF THE DISCOVERY OF THE GOLD REGION , AND THE SUBSEQUENT IMPORTANT PROCEEDINGS .
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In A os . at One Penny each , splendidly Illustrated , A HISTORY OF THE DIFFERENT EXPEDITIONS ENGAGED IN
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JHbiv Publishing in A ' 03 , at One Penny each . By the Authoress of The Gipset Girl . ' Each Pessy Nuhbeb of this Novel will contain Sixteen Pages of solid print . THE TRIALS " OP LOVE OB , WOMAN'S REWARD ; nr Mrs . II . M . LOWNDES , ( Late HANNAH MAMA JONES , ) Authoress of ' Emily Moreland , ' Rosaline Woodbridije , Gipsey Mother , ' Scottish Chieftains , '' Forged Note , ' 1 Weeding King , '' Strangers of tlie Glen ,, ' Victim of Fashion , ' 'Child of Mystery , ' etc .
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The Couussy Extlcsion at Washing ton . —Mr . Favell , the coroner , held nn inquest upon the bodies until a late hour on Wednesday eveu . ' g » when the inquiiy was adjourned until that day jveek . Tho bodies wre interred oa Tuesday .
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__»»«^^^^^^^^ ' n the matter of " an Act to dissolve « aie National tandj Compos' awitaaiEpoMbof theLanflB and property belonging to the Company , and to wind up the under , taking , " ana of the Joint Stock Companies Winding-up Acts , 1848 and 1849 . T JOSEPH HUMPHRY , ESQ ., 1 » the Master of the High Court of Chancery , charged with the Winding-up of this Company , hereby give netico tbnt I shall , at my chambers , Southampton-buildings , Chancery-lane , London , on Thursday , the 4 th day of September next , at twelve o ' clo .-k at noon precisely , or at such adjourned time or place aa I may then , or afterwards fix , appoint an Official Manager , or Official Managers , et this Company . Aud I give notice , that all parties interested are entitled to attend at f uch time and place and to nfbv nrcmoBals or objections aB to anj such appointment .
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In tho matter Of "an Act to dissolve 'the National LaHd Company' and to dispose of the Land and property belonging to the Company , and to witd up the undertaking , " and of the Joint Stock Companieg' Windine-un Acts , 1848 and 1849 . e v NOTICE is hereby given that all partieB claiming to be creditors of the above-mentioned Company are to Cfme in and prove their debts before Joseph Humphry , Esq ., the Master of the High Couvtof Chancery , charged with the Winding-up of the said Company , at his chambers , in Southampton-buildings , Chancery-lane , London , And that until they shall so come in they will be precluded from commencing or prosecuting any proceedings for recovery of their debts .
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NOTES TO THE PEOPLE , An Organ for TRADES GRIEVANCES . A Systematic exposure of the Fkaod , Ikjcstvce , asd Oppression of The Ehploted ot the Emm . oyeb . Published every Saturday , containing forty columns Of close prim ( besiueB wrapper ) for Two Pekci . si ERNEST JONES . Read Number Seventeen ! !! . ( Publishing this day , ) For an exposure of the atrocious treatment of the Welsh Miners , and of the Operatives of Stock port and Droylsden . Published by J , Pavey , 47 , Holfwell-street , Strand , London .
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NATIONAL CHARTER ASSOCIATION . Office , 1 * , Southamptan-street , Strand , fPHE EXECUTIVE GOMMITTEE X hereby announce the following meetings : — On Sundaj next , at three o ' clock in the afternoon , tne Lambeth locality will meet at the South London HalL wearoi wStiwt thesub ' Becretar y ' win be in attendance On Sunday evening next , the late Crown and Anchor locahtywiUmeeUU te White Horse , flare-street . BeSQVvBJX * hr ? 7 » f * £ evenin & 3 t th 8 Bricklayers' Arms , Tonbridge-street , New-road , a lecture will be delivered On Sunday evening at the Literary a . id Scientific Insti-• i . 'i , ; stri : et ' Mr > Kobert CooPer will lecture . Subject : The Monster Nuisance of the Age—What is it V the
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NOTICE ! TO READERS , SUBSCRIBERS , AND FRIENDS , We have this week issued a circular to all our agents , intimating that , on and after Saturday , the 30 th inst ., the publishing arrangements of the ' Star' "will be placed on the same footing as those of all other metropolitan weekly journals . From that date no papers will he supplied except for cash .
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" ~^ 3 » - „ ., 5 To ® ort P 0 jjouuei » f » . W . MuLFIOLtANU Cambnslang , Scotl ( . ml . —U <; ce ve ( 1 ihe suigeet shall have oar attention nosiivcck VWl D Catku l ' wsbnrv .-TJie procci-dinRs of the Demoei-itio Association w ? re noticed oa each of the ncviods % ,, a a » . » i ? a : s £ « s S jas . i * iB atissftiiSK for tier object tlie well hoin of t ) nj norki l ^ Vi . S emmtent irfdi the Bpace ot tt ° irccU J ff ™« ™* n , cannot , in justice to numerous COTw poEdinte « rf ~ SonVoK thc ^ * ° ™ * k 8 5 W 2 Z mi ££ , ^ r » oT ^ f ° S ° * « tliey shall appear ,, " tu . ' r 'i Vea l 00 ht ^ Wnkvlio
Secret Sorrow! Cbrtais Help J ' ^ Hmenstsikcew ≪Jf Tie New Mode Offrtatment Nhioh _-J ; 'L Has Never Failed.
SECRET SORROW ! CBRTAIS HELP J ' ^ hmenstSiKcew < jf tie New Mode offrtatment nhioh _ -J 'l has never failed .
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MR . O'CONNOR . No man in this country ever sustained a more arduous and protracted contest with successive hostile Governments , or so resolutely encountered the prejudices and the persecution of the ruling classes , as Mr . O'Connor . Fora period of nearly twenty years he has occupied the front rank of the Chartist battle , and borne
the heat and burden of the fray . Prosecution after prosecution has been instituted , in accordance with the advice of Lord Melbourne—• Ituin him with expenses ; ' and not only has he suffered in purse and person from these direct attempts to ruin him , but he has , at all times , been called upon to contribute largely to the defence and the support of others in the day of trouble and adversity .
Nobly and courageously has he borne himself j but there is a limit to human endurance and individual power . Even Mr . O'Connor ' 8 Herculean frame , sanguine , temperament , and capability of enduring fatigue , anxiety , and hard labour has succumbed unto the buvdens thrown upon him in connexion with the popular movement . During a considerable portion of the late Session of Parliament , his health was so enfeebled and shattered that lie was not able to take any very active part in publio business ; and he has now availed himself of the recess to visit the Continent , where , we understand , he will remain for some time , with the view of restoring that health and energy which the labours and the anxieties of the last few
years have so seriously injured . It is , we believe , not only for personal , but pecuniary reasons , that he has been compelled to take this course . The affairs of the National Land Company have latterly entailed upon him endless trouble and annoyance . In-Btead of benefiting by ihat Company , as his slanderers have calumniously asserted , thousands of pounds of his own money have been
sunk in its operations ; and he has injured , to ft largo extent , his own establishment in endeavouring to meet claims connected with it , which had no more right to fall upon him than the Man in the Moon . The result is , that until the affair is wound-up Mr . O'Connob will unfortunately suffer much more from its failure in a pecuniary sense than any of the thousands who embarked in that well-meant experiment for the improvement of the labour ing classes .
Ill health and the circumstances to which we have thus briefly alluded , have combined to induce him to retire for a wUilo from . tlia arena of active public life . In the interval he will , we trust , be able , with renewed strength and energy , to arrango his personal affairs in such a manner ft 8 will , when ho returns , enable him to give to the People ' s cause the same powerful and disinterested advocacy which has characterised his long public career , and we are sure that we but echo the cordial and heartfelt wishes of thousands of his admirers and attached disciples when we wish him a speedy restoration to health , and an end of the difficulties in which his liberal and great pecuniary sacrifices for the cause have placed him .
We trust that we shall have , occasionally , contributions from his pen , explanatory of his views on home and foreign politics . And we hope that during his absence the Old Guards' of Chartism will rally round and support the ' Northern Star , ' which we need not say will continue Avhat it has ever beenthe faithful and uncompromising advocate Of the People ' s Charier , and of every measure calculated to elevate and improve the condition of the masses , politically , socially , and morally .
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THE LYONS PLOT . ' ' A secret plot for the wholesale destruction of life and property ' is one of the most hacknied devices of oppressive and unpopular governments for prolonging power . ' A bloodthirsty and extensively ramified conspiracy , ' is an approved method of frightening the ' comfortable classes' into fits , and enabling the tyrants , for the time being , to trample , withimpunity , upon' law and order , ' in the name of both . Plots which have been hatched by police invention , and matured by the infernal
ingenuity of hired emissaries , are always duly ripened , and discovered just at the nick of time , to suit the purposes of their originators . The miscreants , upon whom the infamous duty devolves of carrying out the scheme , seldom fail to seduce some sincere , but impatient and short-sighted haters of tyranny , into complicity with them . This giveB au appearance of reality to the concoction ; and when the spies aud informers have succeeded to that extent , the mine is read y for springing . The contrivers of the so-called conspiracy from the commencement have taken care to keep the whole affair entirely in their own hands , and
under their own control . They have , during its progress , lashed the public mind into a fever of anxiety and alarm , and , at the convenient moment , the dupes and victims of the plot ; are duly assembled to be pounced upon by the police , —their trials take place before panic-str ickea jurors and partisan judges , who receive , with eager aud uaquestioning credulity , the testimony of the perjured and conBcienceless wretches , by whom the whole nefarious plot has been ' got up , ' and exile for life , or death on the scaffold , is the appropriate finale of the coolly planned official conspiracy and judicial tragedy .
The city of Lyons is , at the present moment , the scene of one of these police hatched dramas . For many months the French papers in the pay of the Government , and the roac tionary parties , have boen engaged in stimulatiug the fears of the neutral and eaBY-going classes , by affectedl y mysterious , and halfwhispered revelations of an extensively ramified plot of the Eed Republicans . The Assembly has separated for a short vacation , and it is thought the time has come for the
denouement of the carefully prepared and long hatched Government conspiracy . It will , during the recess , prevent the people from coolly scrutinising the conduct and the policy of those who now hold the reins of power ; and it will help to deter m » uy well meaning people from allying themselves with the constitutional aud popular party , by associating it with deeds of violence , bloodshed ,, anarchy , and spoliation . " ¦ - How cleverly tlie affair has been managed by the official plotters against the well-beiug and peace of society may be judged from the following facts .
According to the con stitution , the offenco of those engaged in what is termed the preat Lyons Couspn-acy is a political one , and ought to be tried by the civil tribunals and juries . That course of procedure would , however have g , ven the accused a chance of escape however , snml ] , not to be thought of . Hence the scone of the drama bus been laid in Lyons Ss ^ ss Sw ^ firtfst . ^ et i ^^ i ^ jr ^^
fn such 5 ° ' ^ 1 Ice " ^ ossavily involved bS , ? n \ - r gat 10 "' The IwnBtltalion of J . tl * UD . alls , ° >? M » proof that the prisotW M gnCd ) C ( OVC { i are Pre-doomed ; and and tT i \ ' itfl tlle u W Vtival of the "Wdlr num « a " , » Ju c ° nsequenc 6 of the artful ZX ? vvhioh tho pIofc has been «<>* « p against them , ft \ B a | je | rea that affer ih i
events ] of June , 1849 , which led to th ^ and dispersion of many of the ] W ? 6 fct leaders , the Red party fell back ? n ^ provinces , where they organised n ,, ^ democratic associations for political v " ° « under the pretence of charitable purno < ° most powerful of these societies , it ui « 5 ^ that in the South-Western deparfm * as France , under the title of the Kew jS 5 * f The . members of this bod y , it la alW , ^ ' - divided into decuries , or sections of ten "if " which was commanded by a sergeant of corporal . The funds were raised by ^ bution of twopence to fivepence a inon thf ' " each member . Each department had ^ sident and a committee , which it is said * ^ " tained relations with the directing comi ^'" " in Paris , Lyons , and London . % D hir ee of members was accompanied by wrm ? ' . somewhat similar to those which led t ' transportation of the Dorchester UmW ? ^ this country some sixteen or Seventeo ' 3 t 3 itl ago . The candidate for admissirm .. f s
himself upon a bare dagger to tho foil ^ I , M—— -, a free man , swear in the name of tl , tyrs o / liberty , to arm my hand against tyranny i ? , ' > ' - tical and religious , and this at all times anc ill , i !*• swear to labour for the propagation of i 1 m »« Ct 5 ; 1 Socialist principles ; I swear , o L ™ my b " . « " ¦« ever it may bo necessary ; 1 swear topu {„ V vhcn - traitor if it fall to my lot ; I suear to divuW dca ! 1 ' a which may be said or clone in this society , „! r rtlil V ? myself to an infamous death if I betray tiiis oath Kml & Having pronounced these words blindfold the bandage was removed , and the now mem ber found himself surrounded by co-conspir tors , with their weapons pointed at him /* nifying that they would defend him if ' t , 8 " and kill him if false . Tiiese theatrical acc ^ saries are as stale and worn out as tho w 0 * ! effete stage-tricka of a Victoria melo . drania . and , we all know , have no more effect in til , '
serving secrecy than a proclamation by t } , town crier . TJieir only effect ( if ever \ w aro resorted to , ) is to betray the silly p ^ who go through such ceremonies m ^ thoroughly into the hands of the vile police emissaries , who have batched the plot . It is alleged , however , that the Association organised by Buch means , extended jn ^ fifteen departments—that it had clandestine manufactories of gunpowder , co ucealert stores of arms , and a leader in the person of Alphonse Gent , a former representative of
the people in the Constitutent Assembly The plans attributed to him are at least suffi ! cieutl y comprehensive in tl \ e \ v aim and scope The Association under his direction vas t 0 rise simultaneously at different points , and secure the whole of the South Eastern < le . partments , together with the frontier oi Switzerland and of Savoy , as a means of aa < sistance or retreat ; having thus seemed u footing in this part of France , other measures were prepared to mako the insurrection mil versaU All the machinery was said to bo complete—the day was fixed when Gent was
to have given the signal for the Republican rising by watchfires on the mountains , u-lieD ) as usual , the police came out with a list of tho parties implicated on the 7 th of November , 1850 . Some arrests took place—fresh papers , most probably fabricated by the police spies , gave colour for additioual arrests , which were said to lead to more extcusivo disclosures , as a matter of course ; and at length , after the lapse of nearly a year , Gekt and those accused with him , are on their trial before a Court Martial , for an alleged political conspiracy .
The excitement caused by the mock trial , and at the manner in which it is conducted , is intense . The working classes in Lyons aud Us immediate vicinity , are roused into madnesa by the proceedings , and it requires an army to keep them down . Nor is that army entirely successful . Eecent intelligence shows that , in various places disturbances have broken out , in which the gendarmes and the soldiery have suffered severely , and tho authorities have interdicted all fetes or meetings of any kind whatever , so much do they stand in iwe of thewide spread and deep popular discontent excited by their proceedings .
But the issue and the object of these proceedings are not problematical—the constitutution of the tribunal , the nature of the evidence , and tho character of those by whom it has been coacocted , point but to one conclusion—the accused will be found guilty , aud condemned to undergo the tortures and the indignities , which for some years past hare been heaped upon other genuine republicans , by the conspirators against tho Republic . The twofold object of removing dangerous oppo « nents , and frightening the public into
submission for fear of worse treatment than they experience at present will have been gained , and the raw head and bloody bones , dressed up so hideously bythe police nurses , will once more save a deteated ' government , Slid a band of political tricksters and jobbers , from condign punishment and political extinction . Do we , therefore , despair of the future of France ? No . It is not by planned conspiracies and secret oaths , and all the jugglery of skulls and cross bones , and naked dagger ? , that nations are to be freed from a detested yoke . Such proceedings have never—or but seldom—produced that result , and in Fiance
there is less need than ever for havingrecource to them . The Republican party have but to bold fast by the Constitution—to use such open and legal means of association as it provides—or , if denied their use , to make that denial a source of even greater strength , by their protests against the illegal and tyrannical subversion of the Constitution , by those w ho have sworn to ' execute it , in o rder to secure a victory . If the perjured men who now hold power dare , at the last moment , to resort to force for the purpose of carrying their usurpation to its ultimatum , the Itepub « Hcaii callj "aux avmes , " will be responded to by the nation , and faction crushed for ever .
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THE 'HOLY WAR . ' Ireland has been selected as the battle field on which the Roman Catholic hierarchy »™ the Government arc to figUt out the battle commenced last session . The meeting at * 'ie Rotunda , on Tuesday last , was an open declaration of war on the part of the Roman prelates ; they have boldly thrown dow the gauntlet , aud it remains to be seen whetua tllG Government will take it We suspect
up . that if it rested with Lord Joily Russell , tlie statute which expressly forbids , under spccine penalties , the assumption of territorial title--, would bo suffered to remain a dead jc » er But ; the powerful party which succeeded ffl making that measure much more string ?" than he intended it to be , will not allow WJ » to let it remain inoperative ; while itiscevu ^ that any attempt to enforce its provision * ' " stir up a n agitation in the sister island such a has scarcely had a parallel during the preMM
century . .,. It is deeply to bo regretted that the po » iffl ; lit yofa political and social regeneration ' that unhappy country should thus be destroys by the renewal of those insensate sect ^ 'ia . animosities and squabbles . The long an « »* vere trials through which it has passed dui'i «» tho kst three or four years had cleared aff »; many formidable obstructions to its 0 ^?\ progress and substantial improvem ent . ) * V over may be thought of tUQ enOlTOOUS aim" tioa of tho population in a moral aud ponp » sense , or of the causes which led to it , ^ cau be no doubt that it reduced that A ®» . competition for land , which was one of Irc ' , greatest social evils . At the same time , t « wholesale transfer of thn land bv the knew * "
bered Estates Court from the impoverish debt tmd mortgage-fettered landlords to a nc race of less burdened and more active o « M » gave promise of the introduction of a supen system of industry and employment . . These prospects have been blasted by l demon of religious discard- Rival ?
The Northern Star 8atuit»Ay, August 33. 185it
THE NORTHERN STAR 8 ATUIt » AY , AUGUST 33 . 185 It
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Aug. 23, 1851, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1640/page/4/
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