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Cfcartfsi ZttttTligctnte
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TO THE CHARMSTS OF LONDON.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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A CONCERT and BALL will be held at tho J Political Institute , £ 5 , Old Bailey , on Easter 1 Wednesday , March SOth , at Eight © 'Clock ia the 1 Evening . ' Tickets Threepence each , to be had of the Com- n mittee , and of G . Wyatt , Secretary . '
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Just Published , the 12 th Edition , Price 4 a . in . ' . a Sealed Envelope , and Bent Free to any part of the United Kingdom n the receipt of a Post Office Order , for 53 , . THE SILENT FRIEND , A MEDICAi , WORK on the INFIRMITIES of thy GENERATIVE SYSTEM , in both sexes ; icing an enquiry into tho concealed cause that destroys physical energy , and the ability of manhood , ere vigour has established her empire : — with Observations on the baneful effects of SOLI-
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J 1 1 ' n ¦ v : r :: ;; - - ' ) . ;¦ } : ; health . ¦ '¦ ^ v y // How lovel y the dew-drop that hangs on each flower—¦ The gems iu the ocean , the buds on each bower , But these beauties of nature are lost on the eye , 'Neath the chill of a cold and a wintry sky . There ' s a smile in the eye of fond beautv and youth , A telltale inspiring with honor and truth , Beit alas , how these charms are expos'd to decay j By sickness and death they are withered away . ¦ 'Tis to health then we turn for our permanent plea-. ' sure ¦ : ¦ ' ¦ :. . : •; .. / . ¦ ¦ ' ' ; ¦ '' ; . '¦ ¦¦ '';¦ , . ¦ : ' : ¦¦ , - , ; . : ¦ . ; . ¦ ¦ ; ¦ Our Bpring-itime extended , and bliss without measure , And guided by wisdom our true , Polar Sfcarj These treasures aro found in tho Pills of Old Parr .
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, LEEDS BOROUGH SESSIONS . N OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , That the next General Q , iarter Sessions of the Peace for the Borough of Leeds , in the County of York , will be holden before Thomas Flower Ellis , the younger , E quire , Recorder of the said Borough , at the Court House in Leeds , on Monday , the eleventh day of April' next , at Two o'clock in the Afternoon , at which time and plaoe all Jurors , Constables , Police Officers , Prdseoutors , Witnesses , Persons bound by Recognizances , and others having business , at the said Sessions are required to attend . ¦
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Satisfy the mind first , before you draw upon the pocket , and you will neither be the dupe nor victitn of professional quakery . EEADER , if you wish to understand the natural cause and cure of disease , read and study M « D 0 UALL'S MEDICAL TRACT , published by Cleave , 1 , Shoo Line , London . Price One Penny . ' ¦' ¦ ¦ ' : '" ¦ ¦¦¦¦ .: ¦¦ . ¦ : ¦ : ' " ' : ¦¦¦" : ¦ ¦ ,.: : ' : ¦ If you with to remove successfully and naturally the diseases thara ; described , purchase : M'Douall ' s Florida . Medicines , prepared by P . M . M'Douall , and Sold Wholesale and Retail , at 1 , Shoe Lane , London ^ to which plaoe all applications for-afceucy , & . C , must be forwarded . N . B . Wholesale price most liberal to all Agents . Retail pricey per Box of 35 Pills , One Shilling , and Three-halfpence for the Stamp .
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ELEGANT EASTER PRESENT . Second Edition , 2 yols . post 8 vo ., 17 s . T ETTERS FROM ITAL TO A YOUNGER Ju SISTER . With Sketches of History , Literature and Art . By Catherine Taylob . "Tho simplicity , disinctness , and earnestness of Miss Taylor a manner , the extent and accuracy of her information , and the activity of her information , together with the moral qualities indicated by her reflections , render the execution of the work worthy of its design , "—Morning Chronicle . London .: ¦ John Murray , Albemarle Street .
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BXOBJSON'S PILLS . TTP WARDS of Three Hundred Thousand Case 3 U of well-authenticated Cures ^ by Morison ' 8 Pills of the British College of Health , having , through the medium of the press , been laid before the Public , is surely sufficient proof for Hygeianism . : Sold by W . Stubbs , General Agent for Yorkshire , Queen ' s Terrace , Roundhay Road , r Leeds ; and Mi-. Walker , Briggate , and Mr . Heaton , Briggate ; Mr . Badger , Sheffield ; Mr . Nichols , Wakefield ; Mr .
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CHARTIST PILLS . IMPORTANT TO THE AFFLICTED . MR . J . HORSON , Northern Star , Office , Leeds ^ haying accepted the Wholesale and Rfitail Agenoy of thoss Pills , is authorised to give Twopence out of each Is . J ^ d ^ ox j * ° he divided between the Executive and the Families of the Imprisoned Chartists .. ; - ¦ ¦ . ''"¦ . ¦ • , ¦ ' . ¦ ¦; , ; - ' : ; . / .. "' : The many Medicines lately offered to the public would have prevented tho proprietor fromadyertjsiDg these Pills ( althoMgh convinced of their efficacy ) , did ho not feel it his duty to give his suffering fiellow Chartists ail opportunity ( by their affliction ) to forward the cause of Democracy , and assist the families of their incarcerated brethren .
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VALUABLE WORKS . Just published , pri ^ e & 12 too . bonfad in cloth , FIFTEEN LESSONS ON THE ANALOGY AND SYNTAX OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ^ for the use of adult persons who nave neglected the fitudy .-of Grammar . BY WILLIAM KILL . The Lessons , in this Work , are intended solely for the use of natives / They are divested , therefore of all those hair ' s-breadth distinctions and tinnecessary subdivisions in Analogy , whick , if at all usetni , can only be useful to foreigners . The science of Grammar is disentangled , in this Work from the folds of mysticism which have so long enshrouded it . The absurd and unmeaning technicalities , which pervade all other Works on Grammar , are exchanged
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MEDICAL ADVICE . TO THE AFFLICTED WITH SCURVY , VENEREAL , OR SYPHILITIC DISEASES , BHEDMATISM , AMD NERVOUS OR SEXUAL DEBILITY . MR . M . WILKINSON , SURGEON , &c . 13 , Trafalgar Street , Leeds . And every Thursday , at No . 4 , George Street , ; Opposite East Brook Chapel , Bradford , HAVING devoted his studies for many years exclusively to the various diseases of the generative and nervous system , in the removal of those distressing debilities arising from a seoret indulgence in a delusive and destructive habit , and to the successful treatment of
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; ; ; : . ; .. "¦ ,:. ? VPAllk'SyLIFE . pi ^ rnHE ainazing Cares performed by this Medicine X are truly » stbni 8 jiirig . Instances are occurring daily of persons who ^ were almdst at death ' s door being restored to sound and vigorous health , lha following are selected front hundreds of a similar nature . Forwarded by' Mr . Motterahead ; Chenust , Market-plaee , Manchester . ^ X ; * ^ ^ : i ' Tothe ^ Proprietors ofParx * B LifePins . " Gentlemen > -I feel it my duty , for , the good of suffering mankind , to Bend yon this true statement of the astonishing effects which Parr ' s , Life Pills have
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fiELPAST . —One meeting * in this place ftTB TO ] > - tinned weekly , and , considering the deter ^^ j Bitioa which we receive , our principles ^ nuking jjaid progress . Some indivicuik are j ^ a ^ ng qqj society every week ; and thousands -who stend apm -fam iu are deeply interested in ovj ^ vreRai , and heartily praying for the ultimate . au& x » taplete trftiiaph of out measurea orer both Vhig and Tory . The papers of Belfast which pro '« s to be liberal are banded together to beat us dow ^—not by meeting our arguments , but by vilifying our our motives and pouring their -vile vituperations af ^ ainrt us , because -we will not descend from the Jeftj -position we now occupy , and nnite with them for a iuere repeal « f the Com Laws . We contend for the Charter , and nothing short of the Charterand
, hence those professed liberators of the people hold as up to public Tiew as the enemies of mankind , rebels against the Government , and disturbers of the peace of society ; while the Tory papers nse ns as tools in their hand * to beat down the Whigs , and in * Bort of illusive gibing , represent the Chartists as being able to convert the Cera Law repealers to embrace the doctrines contained in the People ' * Charter , which t £ e Tories "very justly say , the Chartists " represent as containing more healing virtnesthaB all the Whig-Radicals ever possessed , and better calculated to alleviate the distresses of th « mechanic and labourer than all the freetrade nestrama that had ever yet been propounded . " Thus it will be seen tb&t we have to contend every inch of advance we make against the united opposition both
of Wiig and Tory ; for it u clear that the object ci the Tories in giving us the preference to the Whigs is merely to show that the power of the Whigs is eo little that it is not able to stand the resistance of the Chartists , and therefore the aristocratic Tory faction have nothing to fear ; but the fact is they do fear us ; they feel the corruption in their own citadel , and . they behold their ranks thinning every day , and they perceive also that ours is constantly en lbs increase , and fill the bostte , cot fosloii , and banter TvMch they are at present making just reminds us of the cheek of consumption in a dying patieiit , it often flushes and looks healthful for a moment ; or it is rather like the powerful and convulsive pulsations of the heart , after every symptom of life has left the extremities . The
class-leeislatoTS have lost the confidence oi the people , and hence theyrageand fomefrointbepress . theirfaeadquarters . and pour out their Blander upon those who would instruct the people in the way cf legally making themselves tLe sopisme law-mxkers in our Commons' House of Parliament The Corn Law Repealers advertised for a public meeting to beheld in the town of Newtownards , in the county Down , on the 21 st ult . This was the first meetting of the kind held in Ireland since Sir R- Peel introduced his sliding scale . I repaired to the place of muster , and remained a spectator till their resolutions were read and a petition moved and read , which was to be presented to the House of Commons by Sharman Crawford , Esq ., M . P ., praying the Government to blot on ; and for ever from the Statute Book cf England , all
taxes upon f jod . Before this was put to the meeting frem the chair , I ascended the platform and requested & hearing , but the Chairman and most of the platform gentry refused to suffer me to speak , although they had been railing all day against intoleration and all monopoly . I insisted upon having a hearing , and a very great bustle ensued ; the assembled multitude cried out "hear him , hear him 3 " I was , however , forced from the platform , and compelled to takomy stand on a let cf Umber which was piled up on the side of the large yard where the meeting was held . The whole multitude turned from the platform to hear what I had get to say , and left the platform gentlemen to carry their intended petition to the lower House , without giving their consent or dissent to the measure . I commenced
to shew the people the inefficiency cf a repeal of the Corn Liva to satisfy the distress of the nation . I read abstracts from the National Petition , and explained to them the nature of the People ' s Charter . I shewed them that a repeal of the Corn Laws only gave the people a small por&en of that debt which the Government jusf . y owed the people , and after a long address , ¦ which was received with avidity by all present ; I moved as an amendment to the business cf that day , " That the whele Charter be contended for by the peeple , and the National Petition adopted for signature , " and my amendment was carried ntm . con . ; before I left the place , I received invitations to go to Bangor , Grey Abbey , and Postoferry , to give lectures on the Charter , and the whole people declared it to be the best measure
which had ever been proposed for the good of the community . I entered into arrangements that day with the people of Newtownards to return to that town on Saturday lsst , the 5 th inst ., to hold a public meeting , and take with me petition sheets to receive signatures to the National Petition . Reporters from the several papers of Belfast , were at tie above meeting , and the Vindicator , which professes ta be the most liberal , sailed against me in a paragraph cf peifect libel , bat after conKiderable exertions on my part and the part of my friends together with the fear of a prosecution- for iibel , the Elitor published a letter of mine last Wednesday week , contradicting the false statements contained in his journal of that day week- I went to
Newtownards , on list Saturday , according to appointment . J was a stranger and alon- % and the authorities combined to prevent me from holding a public meeting , but I persevered , and in defiance of all opposition , I did hold the meeting , and this was the first public meeting ¦ which has been held in the North cf Irelaad , . except our weekly meetings which are always open to all . After my return from Newtownards , I wrote the following letter to the Editor of the VixdiccJor . b ' nthe refused to give It insertion in his columns , and I went io the office and requested my manuscript to be returned from the file of his dead letters . - I hereby send it to you just as I sent it to him , and request its insertion . After this the public will sea how the liberals of this place treat us ;—
To the Editor of the Vindicator . Sib , —In compliance with the request of the people cf NewtDwuinis , after tiie Anti-Corn Lav meeting held ih&ra on the 21 st ulL I went to tfcat town on Hst Satnr * ay , and having , previous to that t me received a letter from Mr . Matthew Mayesj informing me that my * ' address on last Monday week had been misrepresented and my motives belied to a wonderful extent . Not only the papers but the tongues of envy and slander had been very busy ever since , and he concluded therefore that 1 could not obtain a peaceable and respectable hearing ; " and , said he , " I am credibly informed that if you would come ii harangue the people , the police have orders t ^ apprehend you . " Ij consequence of this 3 ir . Mayes refased to take any part in convening ¦ a public meeting .
I . however , on Saturday last , repaired to Newtownards , went to the bellman , engaged him to give publicity to my intention tf holding a public meeting ic the Market-Eqaare , precisely at f . -. n ? o cloclr . I had made all the preliminary arrangements which I considered necessary before I took any steps to convene the meeting . I had , on ray arrival , waited on the Chief of the Police , in the News-room , and obtained his liberty to call a public meeting ; but , to do him justice , I mast say , he Tefu 5 ed t : > grant me any protection , and told me that ; he would tike care to " have sorae person there to wstah what 1 would say , and if I should commit myself he would immediately bold me resconsible . "
While the bellman was publishing the mating , the police authorities came asd told him that he was acting ill = § aUy , andr « . quested him to appear in the cfiice cf Lord Londonderry . la one hour ' s notice , I went vith him . and some discussion ensued , which ended in jny unalterable drterminsfori t ) h * ld a public meettDg in the Market-sqaare , at four o ' clock , and : f the meeting should torn oui to be illegal , I was willing to abide by all the consequences . About ten mir utespast four , multitudes cf people from all quarters of the town began to assemble themselves in the Market-square , and some individual whom I know not , kindly provided me vrith a large table , on which I placed myself , and began my address by soliciting the assembled multitudes to Vehave themselves
"WTtn becoming decorum , and listen to me till I had tola them of some of tbs grievances under which the people laboured , and if I should differ from any individual present , in my descriptions tf " Ireland ' s wrongs an 4 the remedies for redr-ssing those -HTongs , " I wouul then patiently hear the objection < f such individual and then reply to his speech , and put , it to the vote of the people who was considered more correct , me or my opposer , and should the people decide against mo 1 would silently ant iz-to the minority , la the course cf my address I sfeowed the people that we , < the . people , of Ireland j laboured under mistaken notions of the trreat mass of the English people , and often charged the whole of the English people with a crime which was perpetrated only by the privileged order of that people ; and that in carrying into effect those laTvs -which taxed the food upon tse consumers , end all tbe other bod . laws nnder which ths nation groaned , they were aided and abetted by the aristocracy of onr own land ,
and thai ; it was therefore unjust to charge tbe whole people of England with the infamous needs cf a , f = w individuals , who esred no more for the misery of the mechanic and labourer of England than they did for the fame order of individuals in our own couEt-y . I stowed them also that it was the determination of the gre : t majority of the English people t © aid and assist their Irish brethren , in carrying into a law those measures which would give Ireland her rights as well as Ec ^ land her righ ts ; and I showed them that Diniel O'Connell at a recent meeting in the Corn Exchange , Bablin , had advocated Manhood Suffrage , and other four points of the Charter contended for bythe English radicals , which would most unequivocally indues honest measures from our legislature . To be brief , I contended for the peopla to have the supreme power in appointing members to represent them in the Commons' House of Parliament , and to mate those la ^ s by which the whole empire was governed .
1 will not . intrude farther , because the limits of a ktitr would not contain a tithe of the address which I delivered . I spoke upward * of two bouts and was received with rapturous applause . I read the " . National Petition , which was adopted for signature , and hundreds volunteered to Eign that PetitioD . In short , the people of Newtownards evinced a manly and heroic determination to have-Ireland her rights in despite of all the machinations of Tory despotism and aristocratic bigotry , . . ¦ After I hai concluded , I challenged discussion , and no person seemed disposed to dispute ought I had advanced . I- then concluded by putting it to the vote
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' . * the meeting whether it was their wish that I should retnra to address them again on Easter Monday » assuring them that I did not wish to impose « y services , unless it was their desire ; andlTwlieva every Individual present hailed the proposition with delight Three cheers were then given for the Chief of the Police ; three cheers for the people ' s rights ; and the meeting calmly and quietly dispersed . .-. -.- " By inserting the above in yonr journal you will wafer a benefit upon the advocates of liberty to all Becta aad parties , and would assuredly place under further obligations , Toar most sincere friend in the cause of justice , Hugh Caklile . P . S The Chief of the Police did come to the meeting and bring hla men with , him , who were Btationed , round the multitude in readiness , providing any annoyance should be given .
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DUBLIN . —Ibish Universal Suffrage Associatiox . —At the usual meeting on Sunday week , Mr . Rafter in the chair , the venerable chairman , { who may bo justly entitled the Nestor of Ckartisin in iTeland . V observed that il was with great delight be presided over them on the present occasion . When all looked gloom and difficulty , he and a few others had endeavoured to keep alive the emberB of true liberty in their city , which had been nearly extinguished by the venal breath of time-serving and place-hunting demagogues . That smouldering tire bad since been fanned into a flime at once bright , intense , and increasing , by the energies of their worthy , prudent , Mr . O'Higgins Many of those who bad come to revile , to mock , vai sneer , had their convictions reached , and
understandings pierced by the arrows of truth in that room ; and , however unpleasant and painful the friendly wound at first , they had found that Chartism was the true political inoculation , which would prevent society from suffering under the dangerous virus of faction , and bearing on its countenance the foul stains and indentions of unreasoning pattizinship . ( Cheers . ) He had also to cbngratnlata the meeting on having secured the -valuable services of Mr . Dyott as tneir secretary —( hear , hear , and cheer * . ) That gentleman was now well known to them , and equally well known to their enemies—( hear . ) He did not merely confine himself to the reutine business of his office ; but when occasion demanded , he feared not to enter tbe lists with tbe political Croliaths of the Cern Exchange . The Lord
Mayor's clerk , and hi 3 "head pacificator , " had lately heard from him in a manner they would not readily forgive , or lightly forget— ( hear , heat ) He need not enforce upon them the necessity of decorum aad order ; they had got a Bounder political training than to interrupt any gentleman , whether he differed from them or not—nor would they lend themselves to the disgraceful violence resorted to by their " non-physical" force assailants—( hear . ) After the minutes had been read , and several new members admitted , Mr . Dyqtt , in an eloquent and powerful appeal , drew their attention to the late brutal proceedings of the deluded Irish Repealers in Manchester , who are paid blood-money by the Corn Law Leaguers , to attack and murder the Chartists . Three hundred of them , armed
withironciowbars , hatchets , bludgeons , and paving Btones , in compact and captained order , had fallen on a dense and unarmed crowd , severely injured Mr . O'Connor , mutilated the Rev . Mr . Scholefleld , and dreadfully injured numerous others of the Chartist party Here was physical force with a witness ! Will that indescribable nondescript , Tom Steele , now denounce his brother pacificators for their bloody intentions and deeds ? Not he , indeed ! What will Mr . O ^ Niell Daunt say to this attempt at massacre ? Not a word . Will Tom Arkins glory in the fact that it was a cast clothes man who headed the onslaught ? To be sure he will ! How could a Repailer do wrong , and « f what value were the lives of poor Chartists ? He concluded by submitting the following resolution to the meeting : —
" That we , the members of this Association , have heard with less of uirprise than indignation of the recent inurderous attack on Feargus O'Connor , E « q ., and the Chartists of Mancheitar . For the wretched agenta in this disgraceful af&ir , we express pity and sorrow ; we blush at the fact , that the majority of them are Irishmen , and deplore the besotted ignorance in which they must be steeped when they thus blindly raise their hands against their true friends , the advocates of the rights of labour , and the assertors of the political and social privileges of the poor , and we hereby offer our strangest sympathy and support to tbe numerous victims suffering through the ignorance , and by the violence of our misguided contrymen . " Mr . O'Higgins seconded the resolution . After Mr . Dyott ' s
speech , he had only to ask them if a few Englishmen bad attacked the repealers' idol thus in the Corn Exchange , what would have satisfied his . adherents ?—immolation , and nothing short of it , of their assailants . Had the Chartists arisen in their might , what would have become of the handful of repeal ruffians ? Butnotwithstanding the lying calumnies ef their enemies , the followers of Mr . O'Connor were better instructed and more rear sonabla than their ignorant and vicious traducers . The resolution was carried by acclamation . Mr . O'Connell ( not Dan ) made a very sensible and fluent speech ; he said , as a working man , he had the best opportunity of observing the current of the common people ' s thoughts , and he could assert , from experience and observation , that ths people were now pre-dis posed to adopt the Charter . It was like the
temperance movement , they looked on it first with suspicion , because it did not proceed from their immediate leaders ; but the moment one in whom they had confidence took it up , it progressed with miraculous speed . The Irish acted more from impulse than reason . They were siore volatile than reflective ; but as reading was diffused , thinking would become general ; and when they would tbiuk , he had sufficient reliance on the good sense of his countrymen to believe that they would think justly and adopt as true the principles which gave every man the birthright of freedom—^ cheers . ) Af ter several other excellent observations from several members , the Chairman - received the usual vote ef thanks , and the meeting adjourned till the 10 th of April , in order to allow the more religiously inclined au opportunity of closely attending to their religions duties during the residua of this ulemn
season . TRTJRO , Cornwall—This locality has sustained a loss in the services of it j active and zealous secretary , Mr . Longmaid , whose consistent adherence to the Charter , as the only efficient remedy for national evils and eschewiDg of Whig nostrums , has marked out as an object of persecution by the liberal middle classes—the parties with whom Messrs . Philp and Co ., would now unite the people—that he is compelled to leave the neighbourhood in quest of employment elsewhere . Mr . E . Rowe , of No . 1 , Castl « -street , Truro , has been appeinted secretary , to whom all communications must hencefoith be addressed . I > A"LBX 1 TH . —Mr . Lowery lectured in the Freemasons' HUl , on Monday in last week , on the necessity of union between the middle and the working classes .
BANNOCK BURN . —The National Petition was adopted here at a public meeting , on Wednesday in last week . The Scotch Petition was proposed for adoption . In the discussion , eloquent and convincing speeches were made in support of the great National , by Messrs . A . Dancan and Jenkins . The NATIONAL wps carried almost unanimously . SHEFFIELD . —At a public meeting on Monday evening in last week , after the unanimous adoption of strong resolutions on the subject of the Manchester outrages , and Mr . Harney ' s leuer to the Chartists ef Sheffield , and Mr . Otiey ' s reply were read , the
fjllowicg resojution was moved by Mr . Elwm Gill , seconded by Mr . Evisson , and carried unanimously — " Ttat this meeting having heard Julian H : irney ' s letttr to the Chartists tf Sheffield , and Mr . O : ley ' s reply thereto , and considering the charges that have been s-anderously circulated against Mr . Harney , are contemptible , because ucfjonded and uatrue , we hereby express our perfect confidence in that gentleman , hoping he will pursne the same eonsiiteni course he has hitherto done for the attainment of the rights of the people , and we pledge ourselves , that while he agitates for the Charter and nothing less , to support him , despite of open enemies or covert foes . "
BIRMINGHAM . —Delegate Meeting . —At a meeting t . f the council tae following resolution was nnaninicu ^ ly agre ed to : —Resolved , " That a dtlegate meeting of ti . e trades in Birmingham be called , for the purpose of uniting tbe n . any thousands that are favaurabie to the principles of the People ' s Charter , and that e ^ ch manufactory be if guested by circular to send a delegate to tae forthcoming meeting , to be holden on MonUay , the 21 it of March , at the National Association Room , in Aston-. -treet , the chair to be taken at seven o clock precisely . " Brethren in political bondage , the time is at la < t corns when it behoves you and every lover of his country to stand forward and aid in rescuing the land of bis Mith from degradation and ruin . A nation that could once boost of being * ' tbe admiration
of the world , and the envy < f surrounding nations" is rapidly on tbe decline , and threatens shortly to become like Tyre , SidoD , Carthage , Babylon and Rome—known only by name . At the late meeting in the Town Hall , ten thousand working men declared themselves Chartists , and if pubiic opinion is so favourable to our views —and we know that nothing can be done without unity —we hope that you will nse your utmost exertions to unite with the men who have laboured so long and so hard iu the cause of liberty , and who are determined , so long as public opinion sanctions their conduct , to stand by them for the Peoples Cnarter to the last Fellow working men , in 1832 you made the
Government give you a Reform BUI , which was but a bill -, you have now tbe Charter , a means to a real reform , surely you b . 3 ve not lost that moral courage you possessed in . 1832 , ii you have not , arise , and demand justice for yourselves , your wives , and your children . We therefore earnestly request you t > send a delegate to mett the Council of the National Charter Association , at thsir room , three doors below the end of Moland-strett , Aston-street , to make such arrangements as wiil estab-H&h , a strong union amongst , the working msn of Birmingham , and for the purpose of obtaining the People ' s Charter . Signed on behalf ef the Council , Frederick Corbett , Chairman .
Fbost , Williams , and Jones—We are requested by the committee appointed to devise means for the restoration of these patriots to . their tomes , to call the attention of the country t the recommendation of this committee on the subject of forming district committees in conjunction with the general commit : ee of BirmiDgham , for the restorati&n of Frost , Williams , and Jonts ,
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2 ______ ' . ¦ ¦ - - TH E 10 RTHERI &TlR ;;^; i ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^ ^^^ ^ ^ ^ ¦ ' " - ¦ . - . , ' ¦ ¦ : ¦ :. vt ^ i :: v ¦ ¦ ¦^¦ - ¦ r - - ^
To The Charmsts Of London.
TO THE CHARMSTS OF LONDON .
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CAUTION TO LADIES , JT 1 HE PROPRIETORS OF KEARSLEY'S 1 ORIGINAL WIDO W WELCH'S FEMALE PILLS , find it incumbent on them to caution the purchasers of these Pills against an imitation , by a person of the name of Smithers , and calling herself the Grand-daughter of the late Widow Welch , but who has no right to the preparing of them , the Original Recipe having been sold to the late G . Kearsley , of Fleets street , whose widow found it necessary to make the following affidavit , for the protection of her property * in the year 1798 : —
AFFIDAVIT . first . —That she i ? in possession of the Recipe for making Welch ' s Female Pills , which was bequeathed to her late husband . Second— 'That this Rocipo was purchased by her late husband of the Widow Welch , ia the year 1707 , for a valuable consideration , and with a view for making the medicine for public sale . 7 y »>< f- —That she , Catherine Kearsley , is also in possession of the Receipt signed by the said Widow Welch , acknowledging the having received the money of the said Mr . George Kearsley j for . the purchase of the absolute property of the said Recipe . C . Kearsley .
Sworn at the Mansion House , London , the 3 rd Dap of November , 1798 , before me , Anderson , Mayor . These Pills , so long and justly celebrated for their peculiar Virtues , are strongly recommended to the notice of every Lady , having obtained the sanction and approbation of most Gentlemen of the Medical Profession ; as a safe and valuable Medicine , in effictnally removing Obstructions , and relieving all other
Inconveniences to which the Female Frame is liable , especially those which , at an early period of life , frequently arise from want of Exerciseand general Debility of tho System ; they ; create ah Appetite , correct Indigestion , remove Giddiness and Nervous Headache , and are eminently useful in Windy Disorders ; PainB in the Stomach , Shortness of Breath , and Palpitations of the Heart ; being perfectly innocent , miy bo used with safety iu all Seasons and Climates .
Sold , wholesale and retail , by J . Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; and by most respectable Medicine Venders in Town and Country , at 2 s . 9 d . per box . N . B . Ask for Kearsley ' s Welch ' s Pills ; andobserve , none are genuine unless C . Kearsley is engraved on the Government Stamp .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), March 26, 1842, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct423/page/2/
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