On this page
- Departments (3)
- Adverts (9)
-
Text (9)
-
Chartist 3Eut*EtG;*iue
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
23anurupt^ &-*
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
CORROBOR VTION OF THE INNOCENT YET RELIEVING PROPERTIES OF BLAIR'S GOUT AND RHEUMATIC PILLS,
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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
TO JIR . PROUT , 229 , STRAND , LONDON . Hawley , near Bagshot , Jan . 11 , 1841 . SIR , —It is now twelve months since I mado you acquainted with the very extraordinary benefit I have derived by taking Blair ' s Gout and Rheumatic Pills , which were kindly recommended to me by Major Birch , ofCrondale , near Farnliam , who hu inanely came to my house to take my affidavit , that I might receive my half-pay , being then laid up with one of my serious attacks . I then forwarded 10 you the Garrison Order by which I was invalided home from Newfoundland after many years of great suffering . I now beg further to say , that , within thela 3 t twelve months , I havo had several attacks ^ but have , thank God , with the assistance of the Pills , been always able to ward it off without much pain , and have not once had a return of thosa weakening perspirations which formerly afflicted me . and am now in excellent comparative health . I have also to inform you that Mr . George Maynard , of Cove , near Farn borough , carrier , naving witnessed the effect of Blair's Pills on me , and being himself attacked with Gout , tried the Pills , and obtained immediate relief . If you please you may publish this additional proof of the value of this medicine . I am , Sir , yours , truly , J . Mastees . GARRISON OBDER ABOVE ALLUDED TO . ( certificate . ) St . John ' s , Newfoundland , 12 th March , ' 1838 . Conformably to a Garrison Order , dated the 9 th of March , 1838 , for the assembly of a Medical Board , to take into consideration tho state of health of Lieut . Masters , R . V . C ., and to report accordingly , we . the undersigned , Staff Officer and Civil Practitioner , forming the Board authorized by that order , after a strict examination of the case of Lieutenant Masters , consider him as entirely unfit for military duty . Lieut . Masters has for several years been afflicted with Rheumatic Gout , which has produced serious functionary derangements of his stomach , liver , and other viscera , and finally given rise to infirmity , weakness , and enlargement of the artioula-f tions , especially of the ancle joints ; his general health and constitution is much impaired , and , therefore , in our opinion , he is incapable of further service . ( Signed ) Andw . Ferguson , M . D ., Staff-Assist .-Surg . Edward Kiellt , Surgeon . , Sold by T . Prout , 229 , Strand , London , Price Is . 1 Jd . per box , and by his appointment , by Heaton , Hay , Allen , Land , Tarbotton , Smith , Bell , Townsend , Barnes and Newsome , Smeeton , Reinhardt , Leeds ; Brooke , Dewsbury ; Dennis & . Son , Moxon , Little , Hardman , Linney , Hargrove , York ; Brooke & Co ., Walker & Co ., Stafford , Faulkner , Doncaster ; Judson , Harrison , Ripon ; Fogftt , Thompson , ThirBk ; Wiley , Easiugwold ; ngland , Fell , Spivey , Huddersaeld ; Ward , Richmond ; Cameron , Knaresbro ; Pease , Oliver , Darlington ; Dixon , Metcalfe , Langdale , Northallerton ; Rhodes , Snaith ; Goldthorpe , Tadoaster ; Rogerson , Cooper , Newby , Kay , Bradford ; Brice , Priestley , Pontefract ; Card well , Gill , Lawton , Dawson , Smith , Wakefield ; Berry , Denton ; Suter , Ley land , Hartley , Parker , Dunn , Halifax ; Booth , Rochdale ; Lambert , Boroughbridge ; Dalby , Wetherby ; Waite , Harrogate ; and all respectable Medicine Venders throughout the kingdom . Price 2 s . 9 d . per box .
Untitled Ad
IMPORTANT TO CHARTISTS . ^' . ' This day is published , Pcice onjy One Penny ' . ! mHE RIGHT OF THE PdOR to the SUF-. 1 FRA&E oftlUf PEOPLE'& ^ HARTER : or the Honesty and Justice of uie Principle of UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE established and maintained , by the late William Cobbett , M . P . for Oldham ; together with Mr Cobbett ' s Address to the Farmers and Tradesmen of England , oa their Treatment of the Poor . ¦ ¦ -. < ¦ Reprinted from Cobbett's "Twopenny Trash . " «»• This neatly printed Tract forms No . I ., of a Series to be entitled " The Labourer ' s Library , " and which will comprise the best efforts of Patriotio Authors Hpoff ' the Questions of Government , the Suffrage , Emigration , tbe Question of Population , and general Political Economy . Each Number will be complete in itself , yet the whole may be bound up together , being printed in uniform sizo . Chartists ! Whenever you hear an ignorant coxcomb , or a bull-frog " Middle Man" say you have no bight to the Charter , slip into his hand the above unanswerable argument as your answer , and you close his mouth for ever !! Leeds : Printed and Published by J . Hobson , Market-Street ; sold by A . Hoywood , Old ham-Street , ManoheBter ; J . Cleave , Shoe-Lane , Fleet-Street , London ; and by all Booksellers .
Untitled Ad
EAST INDIA TEA COMPANY . T 3 ERS 0 NS having a little time to spare are J . apprised that Agents continue to be appointed in London and Country Towns , by the EAST INDIA TEA COMPANY , for the Sale of their celebrated Teas . Office , No . 9 , Great St . Helen ' s Church-yard , Bishopsgate Street . They are packed in Leadeu Canisters , from an Ounce to a Pound ; and new alterations have been made whereby Aleuts will be enabled to compete with all rivals . The License is only Eleven Shillings per annum ; and many , during the last Sixteen Years , have realised considerable Incomes by the Agency , without One Shilling Let or Loss . Applications to be made ( if by Letter , Postpaid ) to CHARLES HANCOCK , Secretary .
Untitled Ad
Just published , in royal 18 mo ., cloth , price 3 s . ; and sent in the Country free , by the post , 3 s . 6 d ., MANHOOD ; the CAUSES of its PREMATURE DECLINE , with Plain Directions for ITS PERFECT RESTORATION ; addressed to those suffering from the destructive effects of Excessive Indulgence , Solitary Habits , or Infection ^ followed by observations on the TREATMENT of SYPHILIS , GONORRHOEA , GLEET , &c . Illustrated with Cases , &o . BY J . L . CURTIS , AND COMPANY , Consulting Surgeons , London . Published by the Authors , and sold by Bailliere , Medical Bookseller , 219 , Regont-street ; Strange , 21 , Paternoster-row , London ; Veitch , Chronicle Office , Durham ; Shillito , York ; Advertiser Office , Hull ; Machen and Co .. 8 , D'OHer-stieet , Dublin ; Duncan , 114 , High-street , Edinburgh ; and to be had of all respectable booksellers in the United Kingdom . ' ' ,. The Work which is now presented to the public is the result of very extended experience ini a class of diseases and affections , which for some unaccountable reason have been either altogether overlooked , or treated with apathy , and almost inditltrenco , by the ordinary practitioner . To-enter into the details of these affections , to point out their causes , and to mark the terrific consequences , social , moral , and p hysical , which are euro to follow from indulgence in certain habits , would be entirely out of place in an advertisement . We have no hesitation , however , in saying that there is no member of society , by whom the book will not be found interesting , whether such person hold the relation of a PARENT , X PRECEPTOR , or a CLERGYMAN . — Sun , Evening paper . Messrs . Curtis and Co . are to be consulted daily at their residence , No . 7 , Frith-street , Soho Square , London , from ten till three , and fire til ) eight in the evening ; and Country Patients can bo successfully treated by letter , on minutely describing their cases , which , if enclosing " the usual fee" of XI , for advice , will be replied to , without which no attention can be paid to any communications . Sold by Hobson , Bookseller , No 5 , Market-street , Leeds .
Untitled Ad
. - In the Press , BICHABDSON'S RED BOOK , OR A ' - ' PEEP AT THE PEER ? , Uniform with the "BLACK BOOK , " 100 Page 3 , ' ; ¦ Price : Fourpence , CONTAINING the Titles , Names , and Surnames \ J of all tbe Lords "Spiritual and Temporal , da £ e of their births , to whom married , their connexions , the places , pensions , emoluments of office , sinecures and fat livings , of themselves , their children , and relations , in the Army , Navy , Law Courts , Civil Offioes , Church of England , and Colonnil Departments ; their influence in the Commons' House ; shewing the golden reasons for voting away the millions of taxes amongst themselves and their dependents . This little Book will solve the " problem of the Peers standing by their order . "" Every reader of the " Black Book '' must have one of these companions , in order to contrast the splendour of the tax-eaters with the misery of the tax-payers , and work out the grand social maxim— Knowledge is power ; Union is strength I " Now Publishing , POPULAR BLACK BOOK AND ALMANAC , FOR 1841 ; Which has obtained a higher circulation than any other kind in Britain . Also , VINDICATION OF THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN . By R . J . Richardson , Price Twopence ; shewing their claims to a share in the Legislature and Executive powor in tho State . London : J . Cleave , Penny Gazette office , Shoelane , Fleet-street ; Manchester , Heywood , Oldhamstreet ; Leeds , HobBon , Star office ; Liverpool , Smith , Scotland-place ; Glasgow , W . Thompson , Circular office , Princess-street ; Birmingham , Guest , Steelhouse-lane ; Edinburgh , Duncan , High-street ; Huddersfield , J . Leech ; Dublin , O'Brien , Abbeystreet ; and R . J . Richardson , 19 , Chapel-street , Salford ; Newcastle , D . France ; Suuderland , J . Williams .
Untitled Ad
TO PIANOFORTE PLAYERS AND SINGERS ! Published Monthly , Price One Shilling , rpilE PIANISTA gives all the Popular Songs , X Ballads , &c , with Words , Symphonies , and Accompaniments ; and all the Waltzes , Quadrilles , Galops for Piano , &c ., which obtain , by their ' excellence , great popularity in London . These are given every month , at a price scarcely one sixth of the charge made by Music Sellers ; as , for instance : — No . 1 , for January , 1841 , contains the Elizer d'Amore Quadrilles , ( note for note ,, , the same usually charged 3 s . 6 d . for ;) " The Banks of Allan Water , " popular song , with words , ( sold in the shops at 2 s ., ) and an Original Ballad , words by Miss Costello , and music by Lady Andover ! The whole of these are given in No . 1 , for Is . No . 2 , for February , contains the Royal Christening Solo , ( Original )— "The Old Oak , " with w , ords , symphonies , and accompaniments—and two of Strauss'a Waltzes . All these for Is . No . 3 , for March , contains the whole of the celebrated " Tarentella , " by JulUen , ( now the rage in London , and gelling at 3 s . * 8 d . )—an Original Song , by Thomas Moore , Esq ., with words , symphonies , aud accompaniments —and two of Strauss ' s most popular Waltzes . The whole of No . 3 , for Is . The Morning Herald , of Thursday , March 4 th , says : — " The Pianista ibr March , No . 3 , outstrips our previous commendations . Every page is studded with gems ; and , in a short time , no Pianoforte Player will be witfiout it . " No . 4 , for April , contains Jullien ' s Celebrated Quail Waltzes ; Charles Horn ' s last beautiful Ballad , with words , symphonies , &c . ; a new German Air ; and Musard's favourite Galop . " The Pianista is a charming work , and as cheap as it is charming . "—The Times . Published in London by Sherwood and Co ., 23 , Paternoster Row ; and to be had by order of any Book or Music Seller in the Kingdom . Any NumbeT , sb a specimen , sent to any part of the Kingdom , freo , for Is . 4 d . Address , " Editor of Pianista , 23 , Paternoster Row , London . "
Untitled Ad
EVERY NUMBER NOW IN PRINT . BEAUTIFUL NEW MUSIC . To Flute , Flageolet , Violin , Clarionet * Kent Bug ! e and Cornopean Players . That Celebrated Monthly Periodical , THE FLUTONICON , gives every beautiful Tune that becomes popular . In its pages will be found , for the small price of Eightpence Monthly , not only every Tune that is popular , but every Tune that is likely to become bo ; all new copyright melodies of merit being inserted here . Nos . to 88 are already published ; any of which may be had at eightpence per Number , or sent , post paid , to any part of the Kingdom , by enclosing Is . As a specimen , of the contents of 6 ome of the Numbers , the following is submitted , namely : — No . 1 . liise , Gentle Moon , Meet me by Moonlight , and seven others . 11 . Farewell to the Mountain , and ten others . 13 . Tbe Sea ! the Sea ! and ten others . 17 . The Deep , Deep Sea , and seven others . * 20 . The Brave Old Oak , and eight other tunes . 26 . Pretty Star of the Night , and ten others . 53 . Happy Land , Land of the West , four Quadrilles from Kory O'More , and two others . 54 . The hour before day , I leave you te guess , and nine otbera . .. . 55 . My Beautiful Maid , Cherry Ripe , and seventeen others . 56 . In the days when we went Gipsying , Blue Bonnets , Crusader ' s Waltz , aud ten other delightful airs . 60 . Bless'd be the Home , Rory O'More ; tod nine others . « 9 . The celebrated Echo Quadrilles , Philomel Waltz , &c . 74 . Mr . Moore ' s popular song , The Language of Flowers , Linley ' s Lost Rosabel , and ten others . .. 75 . Mr . Moore ' s Musical Box , Cracoviak , and tenothers . 76 . Where the Bee Sucks , Four Airs by Prince Albert , aud twelve others . 77 . Eight Airs , by Prince Albert and Ernest , Tis tbe Shepherd ' s Evening Bell , and five others . 78 . Oft in the stilly night , Rory Tories ( Jack Sheppard ) , Jock Kodburn ' s Solos ( from Master Humphrey's Clock ) , She Wore a Wreath of Roses , Mr . Loder ' s new song , Down in the Deep , and four others . 79 . The Daaois Quadrilles , Taglioni ' s new dance ia tbe Gipsy , three famous Chinese airs , Mr . Balfe ' s new popular melody , The dawn is breaking o ' er us , two more Solos by Jack liedbun , and five oth er ? . 80 . For July , contains Jack Redburn ' s Gallop in honour of the Derby , the whole five melodies of the Falstaff Quadrilles , popular aivs from Weber ' s Euryauthe , Sphor's Faust , aud B ^ thoven ' s Fidelio . The Number closes with a great novelty—namely , Jack Redburn ' s description ( in music ) of a Horserace . This Number also contains a full list of contents of the whole eighty Numbers , and is a good specimen for those who have not seen the ¦ work . 81 . For August , contains Oh ! God preserve tiie Queen ; the celebrated Tarantella ( the whole six : movements ) : seven Airs from Gluck ' s Iphlgenia ; and three others . 82 . For September , contains My Dog and ray Gun , We all love a pretty Girl , He that loves ~ a " rosy cheek , the whole set ( five ) of the Nightingale Waltzes , and six Airs from Gluck ' s Iphigenia , 83 . For October , contains— 'T was Nature ' s Gay Day , the popular Song ; the whole five of the Tete de Bronze Quadrilles ; the celebrated Doncaster St Leger Race , described in Music ; and six others . 84 . For November , contains Two Melodies from Auber ' 8 new Opera , Zanetta , Lanner ' s Six Spring Waltzes , the celebrated Marseilles Hymn , Claude du Val , and Three others . The whole forSd . ' 85 . For December , contains Six Melodies from Zenetta , I knaw a Bank ; and nine others . To purchasers of No . 85 is given gratis The Royal JvULlaby , tbe words and music printed oh rose coloured paper . 86 . For January , commences publishing Mjr . J&nes ' s Essays on the best Methods of Fingering for the Flute , illustrating bis celebrated Scales . Music for January : —Happy New Year ; the . whole set of ii'EHzir D'Aiuore Quadrilles , by Musard ; Lovely night ; The Days that have Faded ; Fairy , lead them up and down , and others . 87 . Essay No . 2 ; Solo on the Royal Christening : Victoria , and three other Waltzes , by Strauss : The Ice Song ; Love in Idleness ; The Sleeper ; We are Spirits ; the two papular songs of Miss Hawes , I'll Speak of Thee , and Tliou art Lovelier . 88 . Ten ef the Witches * Songs in Macbeth ; Over HU 1 over Dale , in Midsummer Night ' s Dream ; Russian Air by Thalberg ; Ladye mine , Ladye mine ; Merrily goes the Mill ; and others , 89 . For April , ( now ready ) contains three Airs from Mr . Balfe ' s new Opera of " Keolawthe , " fnow bo popular in London ); theSfwhole of Jullien ' s Five Quail Waltzes ; and Six more beautiful Ails from Macbeth . No . 89 is for April , 1841 , and is the last Number published . Every wind instrument , as well aa the Violin , can play these tune ' s . Any number can be cent , post free , by enclosing la . to , the Editor , pre-paid , 23 , Paternoster-row . Gf The Examiner says , No musician , whatever instrument he may profess , ought to be without this tasteful , correct , admirable , and cheap work . \ Such another collection of beautiful melodies does not exist in Europe . ' And the Herald , in a long article upon it , says , ' The Flutonicon is as much a standard work amongst musicians as the Penny Magazine , or Chambers' Journal , amongst readers . ' ¦ . Published in London by Sherwood ' s , 23 , Paferhoster-row ; in Liverpool ,. by Stewart ; in Birmingham , by XJnest ; in York , by Shillito ; in Manchester , by Heywood ; and may be bad of all tho Agents of this Paper ; in short , by order , of every Book and Musicseller iu the kingdom .
Untitled Ad
PABR'S INFALLIBLE LIFE FILLS , I WHICH are now recommended by all who hn I tried them . They have been the means of » I storing to health many thousands who have euffeii I by dire disease and ill-health . Read the follow ^ I Letters to the Proprietors : — I SECOND REPORT FROM MR . DBBRY , L 1 SC 0 L 5 . I Gentlemen , —Whenyou first appointed me to a ! I Old Parr ' s Life Pills , which was August 14 , 1840 , 11 was doubtful of making much sale , there being »] many different pills for the public to please them selves with . There must , however , bemorelejgtl of life in Parr ' s Pills than in others , for I find , oa enquiry , that much benefit is obtained from then , and that they really do good to hundreds & thonante of people—I may say thousands , if all your ideals sell at the same ratfcas I do , for I have alreadysold up to the present time 624 boxes , large and mull sizes . I am now wanting a fresh supply , jriich please to send instanter , or else you will have much to answer for by not making haste to give new length of life to those wanting it ; and you nay dfr pend upon it for truth , that many old people who were going down fast in life , are now invigorated with new life , new feelings , sprightly , and full of activity , and who say they are far better in aeuta since they have taken Old Parr ' s Life Pills , than they were some twenty years baok . Surely there is magic in the pills , to do so much good to the human frame , not only to the aged , but the young as well , and particularly to young females , I am , your obedient servant , James Dbpbt . 224 , Stone Bow , Lincoln , Feb . 8 , 1841 . Mr . Waddington , of Leicester , in a letter datei Feb . 13 , says : — "A man called to day and bongb one lls . packet , and said ho wished he had know ; of the mediciae six years ago , it would have eavei him great expence and affliction . He had beea un able to work att that time—had been under all tni doctors in the neighbourhood , without effect , bu ; Old Parr had cured him , and now he is as etronj and as able to work as ever ha was i » his life , i son of his also has been made quite a new man bj taking Old Parr . Facts are stubborn things . For further particulars , apply to Mr . W * ddii # ton , Bookseller , Leicester . Extract from a letter of Mr . W . H . Ctaf / th - eminent London Bookseller , dated Feb . 16 , lw : ~ " Upon my word I have taken Parr ' a LuVPillj several times , and certainly they have cured ml cold , and invariably done me good . This u a earnest . W . M . CLARK . . " 17 , Warwick Lane , Paternoster Row , London . PUBLIC ACKNOWLEDGMENT . I , the undersigned , JOHN CUBLEY , |» te <* Derby , but now of the town of Nottingham , ner" * fore a schoolmaster , but now out of emplojmeat , ^ hereby acknowledge that I have lately «* «» pounded some pills , which I have sold to diner ?" persons as " Old Parr ' s Life Pills , " by represen" ^ that I had purchased the Recipe for that celebniK * medicine ; such representation was , however , m tirely false , and the proprietors of the genuine ^ Parr ' s Life Pills have commenced legal proceeding against me for the above fraud . But I ha " fh " pressed sorrow and contrition , and given up » w . the names and addresses of each person , to , ?™ , have sold any of such pills , as well w « r «» »« W gists who compounded the same , and agreed wb " this public apology , and pay all the e * P eu ™ t ™ eluding this advertisement , the prppnetoaw wn ., kindly consented to forego such legal Proce * "DK I do , therefore , declare my shame and sorrow ^ having committed such an imposition on , *? f | : J . y and such a fraud on the proprietors of w » f £ L Life Pills , and further express my ackn owle < W » eui < for their lenity . JOHN CUBIEYDated this 28 th day of January , 1 W 1 . # Witness-H . B . Campbell , Solicitor , Nottu # »» In order , therefore , to protect the P ^ l | e f »» such imitations , the Hon . Commissioners ^ "Tj have ordered "Parr's Life Pills" to be eD £ * no ™ the Government Stamp attached to e * " * without which none are genuine . LIST OF AGENTS . This Medicine is sold wholesale , by-f WJJffH by Edwards , St . Paul's Churuh Yard , ton ^ lgif mayako be . had of the fo \ lomBga Ag ^' ^^ mingham , Shillitoe , Chemist , 43 , «« :. " * fCai 8 ti News-agent , Snowhill ; Bristol , Dowhnfc Cg ^ Bath , Meyler and Sons ; Boston , Noble , ? £%£ n , Baveriey . Johnson ; Coventry , MW » ¦ £ ^ Ttttt Derby , Pike , Reporter office ; Dublm , W » W Co ., Chemists , Westmoreland-street ; ^ figok-Blair , Italian Warehouse ; Exeter . Jm «» i H 4 JJ . seller ; Grantham , Bushby : ^'" W " - ^ p Horncastle , Cousins ; Hull , Nobl ^ jTOt er . , ^^ minster , Pennell ; Lincoln , Jam « Hg ' ' ijl } I , h » rdt Rawle , Chemist , Church-strert ?«¦<»? . SJWlv ' Chemist , Briggate , and Heaton , BWtoeuerv ^ Marshall , Printer ; Leicester , Winks , P ^ ead , Waddington , Bookseller ; Manchester , . { JgJKfofr Chemist " Market-place ; Malton , ' . WewMgr tingbam , Sutton , Review , ^ J ^ S ^ t ' Cooke , News-agents ; Newcastle _ 4 n-I 7 " » g ^ . , well and Co ., Printers ; Noitbafflpton ^^^ Newark and Southwell Ridge ; **™» M ^ Clarke ; Sheffield , Whitaker ; Sjourpout ' ^ d So J | Worcester , Deighton ; Wakefield , Jucho ls M « J York , Mrs . Moxon ; Belper , Vickers" I
Untitled Ad
MEDICAL ADVICE . MR . WILKINSON , SURGE ^ No . 13 , Trafalgar-street , Leeds , HAVING devoted his Sindies exflusiTekfc . many years to the successful treatment of t £ Venereal Disease , in all its various forms ¦ alsoi ! the frightful consequences resulting from «¦ i destructive practice , "Self Abase , " voL ^ * Personally Consulted from Nine in the Moraini t ? n Ten at Night , and on Sundays till Two » t li Trafalgar-street , Leeds , and every Thursday &tN » 4 , George-street , Bradford , ( from Ten till fire . ) In recent oases a perfect Cure is completed wtOvt a Week , or no Charge made for Medicine after SS period , and Country Patients , by making onh Sf personal visit , will receive such Advice and Me ? cinesthat will enable them to obtain a permanSl * nd effectual Cure , when all other means W , failed . ^ He hopes that the successful , easy , and ex peditiM mode he has adopted , of eradicating every symptoM of a certain disease , without any material alteratiot in diet , or hindrance of business , and yet presern ^ the constitution in full vigour , and free from ioW will establish bis claims for support . As S Disease is one which is likely to be contracted whenever exposure takes place , it is not like aan » other visitors , once in life , but , on the contrary oil infection may scarcely have been removed , wta another may unfortunately be imbibed ; therefoi * the practitioner requires real judgment in order j « treat each particular case in such a manner as m merely to remove the present attack , but to preset the constitution unimpaired , in case of a repetitia at no distant period . The man of experience & ! ayail himself of the greatest improvements a modern practice , by being able . to distinguish behrea discharges of a specific and of a simple or mS nature , which can only be made by one in dZ j practice , after due consideration of all circumstanei In the same manner at birth , appearance * of £ take place in children , which call for * proS knowledge and acquaintance with the disease , jj order to discriminate their real nature , and whi * may be the means of sowing domestic discord , unl * managed by the Surgeon with propriety and ski Patients labouring under this disease , cannot be Un oautious into whose hands they commit themsehet The propriety of this remark is abnndantly maf . fested , by the same party frequently passing flu ordeal of several practitioners , before he ig ftrtj , nate enough to obtain a perfect cure . The followb are some of the many symptoms that distingnij this disease : —A general debility ; eruption on tin head , face , and body ; ulcerated sore throati scrofula , swellings iu the neck , nodes on the shit bones , cancers , fistula , pains in the head and limb which are frequently mistaken for rheumatia &c . &o . . Mr . W . 's invariable rule ia to give a Card to ea < 4 of his patients , as a guarantee for Cure , which hi pledges himself to perform , or return hia fee . For the accommodation of those who cannot con . veniently consult Mr . W . personally , they m » j obtain his Purifying Drops , price 4 s . 6 d ., at anj of the following Agents , with Printed Directions , so plain that Patients of either Sex may Can ' themselves , without even the knowledge of a bed . follow . Mr . Heaton , 7 , Briggate ; and Mr . Hobson , Times ofiice , Leeds . Mr . Thomas Butler , 4 , Cheapside , London . Mr . Hartlky , Bookseller , Halifax . Mr . DBWHiRST , 37 , New Street , Hnddersfield . Mr . Harrison , Bookseller , MarketPlace , BanisI < j Mr . Hargrove's Library , 9 , Coney Street , York , Messrs . Fox and Son , Booksellers , Pontefhct . Mr . Harrison , Market-place , Ripon . Mr . LANGDALE , Bookseller , Knaresbro&Harrog&ti Mr . R . Hubst , Corn Market , Wakefield . Mr . Davis , Druggist , No . 6 , Market Place , Mat Chester . Mr . Johnson , Bookseller , Beverley . Mr . Noble , Bookseller , BoBton , Lincolnshire . Mr . Noble , Bookseller , Market-place , Hufl . Mr . H . Huhton , Louth , Lincolnshire . Iris Office , Sheffield . Chronicle Office , Lord Street , Liverpool . I And at the Advertiser Office , Lowgate , Hall . I
Chartist 3eut*Etg;*Iue
Chartist 3 Eut * EtG ;* iue
Untitled Article
CHARTIST MEETING AT CHESTERFIELD-( Ahridged from the Derbyshire Chronicle . ) Obs ^ rTlng some large colou red placards on the Tails , calling h niMvag of the Giartista of-Chesterfield and Bnoap ' .-. a ( ot Tuesday evening , in a room on the Hillside , t < j peutiea for the release of Frost , Williams , and Jones , at the appointed hour 'we made oar appearance atthatpiace . By seren ocloci-the number had increj ^ d w sach an extent as to tfrowd both rooms and rend-r the heat quite oppressive . - In one part of the tooni wcre portraits of Feargus p-Connor , Bronterre O'Brien , and other Chartist leaders ; with the words rniTersal Suffrage , and no Surrender . "
Wr . Walsixgham Maiitis was called to the chair . Mr . William Spexceb nioTed the first resolution : " Tint this meeting deeply sympathize with our exUtrd brethren Frost , Williams , and Jones , and the three Birmingham martyrs , their companions in captmiv , and that we , in common with our brother Chartists ' thr ^ r . gbout the nation , are resolved nevtT to relax in our exertions until tbey are restored to their sorrowstricken f-uiiilles and desolate hearths , and all the dungoons of Whig tyranny emptied of our suffering , brave , and Tirtuous leaders . " They were ( said Mr . Spme ^ r all in terested in the s ^ ffsrings of these patriots , aad it was their duty to strain every nerve to rri . ure their restoration to their homes and families . Mr . Jgks Williams briefly seconded the resslntion .
Mr . Otlet , from Sheffield , rose to support it He said , Trht-n William Penn , the celebrated Quaker , was engasM ia that noblu and philar . ; . hrupic work , the establishment of an indep ^ ndect state in Pennsylvania , the sirar ' . e children of nature assembled around him , and V . - . e friend of maakind treated with them in all the simplicity « f that excellent religion which he professe-i . Tne meeting , in all the simplicity of what we call their " ignorance , " sat" on any rude material that ¦ was aeiT them . They were not flattered by fxterual ornaments , or the accommodation of a splendid hall ; and this had always been - the ease , when men have struggled f er liberty and reform : tiiey have been driven out 01 society , and have taksn up with any accommodatisn , however rude and inconvenient And so it was with them to-night ( Cheers , > Here they were assembled
with motives as sincere as those -which actuated Penn , and he hoi > ed with fsx superior motives to those "who persecuted them . Cheers . } It was thus with Methodism in times gone by , when the celebrated Wesley went from place to place , and was happy if he couid obtain a barn in which to teach and preach So it was in the present . dry . If a man stands up Cor doctrines which are calculated to bsntSt mankind—no matter how pure thosa doctrines may be , if he gc » es against profitable errors , he is certain to be persecuv-d . . Hear , bear . ) The cause of the Charter , and the motives of the Chartists , were greatly misrepresented and calumniated in almost all quarters . The oppjsera of liberty were now" greatly disappointed . If it had n-st been for the opposition that it has encountered , Chartism would never have been known so
Well among the middle classes , who have seen men , fired by love of their fellow-mtn , suffer martyrdom in the grrat and just cause which thej had espoused—who have seen that they were actuated- by noble and philanthropic fee'ings , and that their chief aim was to secure emancipation for their degraded countrymen . ( Cheers . - But persecution had not succeeded inputting them down ; it had not succeeded in annihilating the Charter ; on Use contrary , it had tended to spread their principles more widely—and this had given thtm great hope . 'Hear , bear ) True , tbey vrere not creating such a noise through the country as they bad done , but they were effecting their object in a more rational and secure war . They did not assemble secretly to utter their sentiments , but were coming forward boldly , to stave their principles and defend their cause . ( Cheers . i
Moral means were now substituted for violence , and this was the means by which they must succeed . ( Hear , bear , i They could never expect to succeed , except the whole of the British nation was as one man , by any other means than by diffusing their . principles and demonstrating the justness of their cause . ( Hear , hear . ) Ji ir * s then for this they were that night called together —first , to sfgn a petition to liberate those men who have been incarcerated by persons hired for the pnrpose , for they had ample testimony of that fact , and tnew that secret service money , hid been employed to entrap honsst men . A more affectionate , kind-hearted father ihan John Frost , a man more universally esteemed , did not exist " ' Cheers . ) He ; Mr . Otleyi Would admit th » t h « was net led away by spies , but a fellow feeling for those suffering around him led him
into lndiierction . And should they . not have pity on him ? Cheers . ) Look at the conduct of the higher classes . The Earl of Cardigan met a man on a common aad shot him , and what diu they do ? Put their hands upon their breasts and said ' cot guilty upon my honour "—slaughter }—and & pretty sort of honour it Waa ; and would they ( the working classes ) neglect their friends , whose wives and families had been left to pine ? i" Xo , no !") As Englishmen they cju ' . d not do » o . but would pledge themselves never to csase their endeavours until they had procured tb « r release . — ( ChefeTs > He was aware that great prejudice had been raised against the Chartists by late events ; but those Who had been the cause of this were , a very bmall sectiou of the body , and they might as well turn round upon the Whigs and say ' You . are a body of men seeking to cfsstroy the property of otters , " as charge the whole Chartist body with the crinies of a few cf their members . They might ask the Whigs who burn t Bristol ?—who were the cause of the fire at Xottinshaiu ?
And the . > might then turn to the Tories , and ask who committed tlie massacre of Peterloo ? ( Cheers ! Wa ? It not the Tories who committed that offence in the Bight of Gvdand man ? ( Cheers : But they were not to blame the whole of the Tjrie 3 fur this , no more than the whole Chartist body was to- be- blamed for the offenc * s of a few . ; Cheers- ) Therefore he cilled upon thera to procure signatures to the petition in favour of their suffering brethren . Jlr . OUey proceeded to allude to the suffering of those Chartists who have been imprisoned in this country , and said that if the " cruelties" they had undergone had been perpetrated in another country—in China or among ths Cicnibals—all the missionaries in this country would be preaching mercy , anl urging the necessity of sending over missionaries to Christianize them ; but as long as it is iheir fellow-countrymen who suffer they never open their mouths for them : When he looked at the sepulchres in whieh-mar : y of their brethren w ^ re passing their present existence , he could not but believe that the effect utjou them must be to unfit them for
the common offioes of life , ahouid they ever survive their term of imprisonment- Oh ! Ittthein contrast the laws made for the rich , and th * ose made for the poor man ! Men in the higher circles who had been imprisoned for similar offences sat upon sofas and held levels , While the working man suffered the worst sufferings of a felon : and it would ever be so under the present system . Where Ugislators legislated for themselves , they would favour their own class , whilst they heaped indignities and cruelty upon those who have not tho power to mate laws . To put an end to this abominable system , the people must come forward manfully to Enpport the Charter . The people must have a voice in the making of the laws , and thus be enabled to protect themselves from the oppression of the rich ; and so long as they had personal liberty—so lorg as they had wives and
xamiiits , and friends to support—so long as they were called upon to pay taxes , they had a right to send representatives to Parliament to take care that they paid no more th ^ n was proper . ( Cheers . ) That was one of the principles of their Ccarter . The second was , to protect them from the abuse of power—from the tyranny of the landlords . ( Cheers . ) The Duke of Newcastle had given warning to twenty-eight ot his tenants , because tbey did as they pleased with one of the most aacred prerogatives of man , at the last ejection . Not satisfied with having the power of making laws , tbey assume the prerogative of compelling a man to Tote as they please , and to prevent this improper interference , the people want Vote by Ballot ( Cheers } Mr . Otley then made a few cursory remarks upon the other points of the Ca&rter , and the inequality of taxation , and said , in conclusisn , that having accomplished these points , they would see the British nation
rise from her depressed stat « , and see her cit : z-.-ns regenerated—tfiey would see every man-in his proper Situation in society , bringing ap his offspring in usefulness , and each and all happy and comfumble under bis own Tine and his own fig-tree . " ( Cheers . ) This wag the object at which they -were aiming ; and they had come to the determination—let the authorKh s persecute them as they may , let the rich frown upon them as they will—never to rest until they saw the English nation u free and as happy as any other nation on the earth . ( Lon » and loud cheering . ) They did not wish to endanger property or make life inse cure ; they only desired to partake fairly of the werdth Which they created , and to be placed in a true position in Bociety ; and they would then find England as she Wai fabled to be , happy and secar * . free from foreign invasion and internal revolutions . ( The speaker sat down amidst loud cheering ) The resolution was passed unanimously .
Mr . John Ellis , moved , and Mr . Wm . Barker WMaded the next resolution : — " That this meeting is of opinion that nothing short of the People's Charter can erer procure equal laws and equal justice , and that We shall not rekx in our exertions until it becomes the law of the land . " Mr . M'Ketteb . ick , from Sheffield , supported the ZBBolotion . The resolution was passed unanimously . Mr . W . Maetix here read a copy of the National Petition from the Northern Star . It was moved aad seconded , and carried unanimously —" That the petition nor read by" Mr . Wm . Martin be adopted by this meeting , and be tent to the Convention in London when sitting . " Mr . Ga ^ sT moved the fourth resolution— " That this meeting highly approve of th « plan , proposed by Mr . O'Connor , of a Convention to sit in London to wait on Members of Parliament to superintend the presentation of petitions . " - -
Mr . Ellis secended the . resolution , which was Carried unanimously . - j Mi OUey and Mr . M'Ketterick again briefly ad-1 dressed the meeting , declaiming against the > "ew Poor j law , and the Whig and Tory . aristocracy . After '
Untitled Article
which , Mr . Otley moved a Tote of thanks to the Chairman , in doing which he said he never was present at a more orderly meeting , and It lulght with justice be held up as an example to meetings of another description , conducted by men who called themselves " learned . " He could tell them that they had set an example of orderly conduct at Sheffield , and had the use of the Town-hall for their meetings . tCheers . ) The Chairman returned thanks in a brief speech , stating that he hoped their next meeting would be held in a more convenient and commodious place . He hoped the Mayor would grant them the uaa of tbe Town-hall , if in his pewer to do so . ( Cheers . ) After a " rote of thanks to the ladies for the excellent tea which tbey provided , " three hearty cheers were given for the Charter , and three for Frost , Williams , and Jones , and tbe other snffering Chartists . The meeting , which was a very orderly one throughout , then separated .
Untitled Article
CAR . I * I ? I » E . —Public Meeting . —Mr . Geokge Juliak Habkey . —On Saturday evening last , a public meeting was held in a large room , in Backhouse ' s Walk , for the purpose of hearing an address from the aVove-named gentleman , who was on his way to Lancashire , from a long and arduous sojourn in Scotland . Mr . John Armstrong was called to the chair , and introduced Mr . Harney to the meeting , who was received with loud applause . He gave a brief account of his doings in Scotland , where he had been since 1 S 39 , with tbe exception of tbe time when he returned to England , te take his trial at WarTrick . He was first invited by the men of Dumfries , where three glorious meetings were held . The men there were sterling democrats of the right sort ; they treated him
very kindly . He then proceeded to Ross-shire , where he held about forty meetings . He visited Paisley , where the great Dr . Brewster resides , and was well received by the peeple there , who are a very spirited set of men . He then proceeded to Glasgow , wkere the Central Committee deemed it their duty to persuade the people to oppose him . However , he finally triumphed over the opposition . But there was no wonder—they had strong notians against him—let them call to mind the dagger story , and others of . a like na * turs , which were widely circulated through the press , but all of which be proved to be utterly false and unfounded . Mr Harney then went on in a similar strain , giving a minute description of his tour through various parts of Scotland—the state of the people—the
reception he met with , fcc &a It appeared , from his letting England , Uist Be hail travelled npwarda of two thousand miles , and attended some hundreds of public meetings . He gave an account of various co-operative societies , which , it appears , are in a very nourishing condition ; and spoke at great length on the destitute stale of the poor , ami the insufficiency of the relief afforded to them . He next spoke of Dr . Allison , of Edinburgh , and the contemplated > Taw Poor Law for Scotland—censured the clergy and aristocracy for theii unfeeling conduct towards the poor—and concluded by denouncing ; the rural police force , which , it appears , has been pretty generally established in Scotland . Mr . Harney sat down amidst great applause . Mr . Joseph Brown Hanson then proposed , and
Mr . H . Bowman seconded the following resolution : — ' The Chartists of Carlisle and neighbourhood , in public meeting assembled , beg to express their continued and unabated confidence' in tbe integrity , honesty , snd devotedness of Feargus O'Connor , Esq ., now suffering imprisonment for his able advocacy of the rights of tbe poor , to the people's cause ; and while they revere him for past services , they can fully ruly on his exertions , in the sacred cause of liberty and social improvement . They regret to learn , from his interesting letter in the Northern Siaf of this week , that Messrs . Lovett , Callvns , and others , in whom the people have hitherto placed the greatest confidence , both as regards their talents , integrity , and honesty , and more especially as they were amongst the first ta suffer persecution , from an ardent desire tbey eviDced to Beire tbe people , have
leagued themselves with muj in whom the people can place no reliance , and have endeavoured at their dictation to divide and deceive the people . While this meeting tender to Mr . O'Connor their most grateful and heartfelt acknowledgments for p . tst services , they ruvst fervently hope that be will continue to labour in the sacred cause of tiutb and justice , until his efforts are finally crowned with success , and his brow encircled with tbe imperishable laurels of fame and renown , enjoying , as he will do , the greatest of all earthly enjoyments , the satisfaction of knowing he has been the means of liberating his enslaved fellow men ; " which was carried amid / l great applause ; after which a vote of thanks was given to the chairman , and three cheers for Mr . O Connor and other incarcerated Cfcartists , also to Mr . Harney .
BIRMINGHAM . CHAETIST MEETING AT Freeman-street . —A crowded meeting took place at the Chartist Room , Freeman-street , on Sunday evening . Mr . O'ConnoT ' s letter in l& 3 t week ' s Star was rtad to the meeting , and loudly cheered . It was proposed by s ^ Te ral females that a vote should be taken thero Rnd then for the new and old list ; but it was determtntd to defer it until Monday evening's meetisg . The Chairman then called upon Mr . White to deliver an address . Mr . White then proceeded to dissect the fallacies put forth by tbe ' intelligent' men who have condescended to lead the Chartists of tbe united kingdom , and pointed out the difference between real and sham Chartism . A collection was afterwards made towards the Convention Fund , and the meeting separated .
nxs » pofrr > srw . —a correspondent says : —" Let it be known to the world , that there is not one man , within , four miles of tbe parish of Kipponden , who cires one straw for the New Move . ' Feargus O'Connor is our star pilot , and shall and will be ours . " NORTHAMPTON . —The Total Abstinence Chartist-j of Northampton held their usual weekly meeting on W ednesday evening , the 21 st , at their room , at tbe R- ^ chabite Axina , Bearward-street , when , after an animating speech , replete with good sense , by Mr . Juba Clarke , and a few appropriate remarks on Mr . O'Connor ' s letter on Church Chartism , by Mr . M-Fitlaue , tbe
following resolutions were adopted : — " Toat a diffusion of the principles of Total Abstinence amongst the Chartists , will be one great mc-aus of accelerating the establishment of the Charter , and this can best be done by forming Chartist Total Abstinence Societies , and that this meeting considers that the feai expressed by Mr . O'Connor in his letter on Church ChartUm , &c ~ is entirely groundless , as we would not deny even to a drunkard tbe benefits of the People ' s Charter . " The Resolution was moved by Mr . 31-Firlane , and seconded by Mr . Forster , " That tbe above resolution be sent to the Northern Star for
. MONIWOUTH . —I am directed by the good and true Chartists of this town , and they are not a few , quite up to the mark , to say that they view the " New Move , " as Judases seeking who they may betray for as many pieces of money as they can get of the secret semo ; raouey , wrim ? from the blood of the toil-worn English slave . We hereby tender our unfeigned thanks to F . O'Connor , Esq ., and the good and true men chosen by the people . Hoping they will continue in so g ! oriou 3 a struggle , as they well merit the confidence aud support of a grateful people . —Correspondent .
23anurupt^ &-*
23 anurupt ^ &- *
Untitled Article
From the London Gazette of Friday , April 23 . BASKET ; PTS . Peter Harris Abbott , King's Arms-yard , Moorgatestxeet , merchant , to surrender May 5 , at eleven , June 1 , at twelve , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Basinghallstreet . Solicitors , Messrs . Turner and Henainan , Basing-lane ; official assignee , Mr . PennelL John Fisher , Frinsbury , Kent , miller , May 7 , June 4 , at half past two , at , the Court of Bankruptcy , Basinghall-street . Solicitors , Mr . Simmons , Rochester ; and Messrs . Simpson and Moor , Farnival ' s Ian ; official assignee , Mr . Wnitraore , Basinghall-strtet George Jenns , Hoxton Old-town , water-proof leather manufacturer , May i , at half-past eleven , June 4 , at two , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Basingball-street , Solicitors , Messrs . Lindsay and Mason , Cateatons ' . reet ; official assignee , Mr . Whitmore , BasinghallatreeL
Edward Dollman , Church-court , Clement ' s-lane , merchant , May 5 , at two , June 4 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Baslnghail-street . Solicitor , Mr . Fisher , Great James-street , Bedford-row ; official assign | e , Mr . Alsager , Birchin-lane . Francis Nerrison , Dsvil ' s-bridge , Cardigan , hotel keeper , May 7 , at two , June 4 , at twelve , at tha Commercial Rooms , Bristol . Solicitors , Mr . Stevens , Gray's Inn-square ; and Mr . Perkins , Bristol . Adam Walker , Liverpool , drysalter , May 7 , June 4 , at two , at the Clarendon Rooms , Liverpool . Solicitors , Messrs . Willis , Bower , and Willis , Tokenhonseyard ; Mr . Johnson , Liverpool ; aud Mr . Mortimer , Manchester . John Ross , Epwortb , Lincolnshire , sacking-manufacturer , May 3 , at four , June 4 , at eleven , at the White Hart Inn , Gainsborough . Solicitors , Messrs . Tilson , Squance , and Tilson , Coleman-street ; and Messrs . Wells , Kingston-npoB-Hull .
Stephen Nelson , Sowerby , Yorkshire , builder , April 29 , June 4 , at ten , at the Golden Lion Inn , Nortballerton . Solicitors , Mr . Kirk , Syniond ' s Inn ; and Mr . Holtby , York . Moore Hildick , Walsall , Staffordshire , miller , May 11 , June 4 , at twelve , at the Swan Hotel , Wolverhampton . Solicitors , Messrs . Miller and Fallows , Piccadilly ; and Mr . Holland , West Bromwich . William Wood , WalsaQ , Staffordshire , pnblican , May 10 , at fonr , June 4 , at eleven , at the Swan Inn , Wolverkampton . Solicitors , Mr . Hunt , New Boswellcourt ; and Mr . Marsden , Walsall . James Edisbory , Holywell , Flintshire , grocer , May 7 , June 4 , at twelve , at the White Horse Inn , HolywelL Solicitors , Messrs . Smedley and Rogers , Jermyn-street j and Mr . Smedley , Holywell .
William Joseph Warden , Pickering , Yorkshire , wine-merchant , May 4 , at eleven , June 4 , at twelve , at the Angel Inn , Whitby . Solicitors , Mr . Strange way es , Barnard ' s Inn ; and Mr . Peirson , Pickering . Richard Gooddy , and William Edward M'Kee , Kingst 3 n-upon-Hull , millers , May 7 , June 4 , at eleven , at the George Inn , Kingston-upon-HulL Solicitors , Messrs Walmsley , Keightley , and Parkin , Chanceiy-lane ; and Messrs . Dryden and Son , Hull .
Untitled Article
Charles Cross and Barnard Spaull , Colchester , merchants , 3 f » y 5 , 6 , Jane i , at eleven , at the Throe Cops Hotel , Colchester . Solicitors , Mftsare . Sparling and Turner , Colchester ; andMessrs . Wood and Ellis , Corbetcourt , Gzaeechnrch-street ¦ ¦¦¦ ' . ' ¦ . ¦ William Borton , Kirby Misperton , Yorkshire , banker , May 4 , June 4 , at ten , at the Angel Inn , Whitby . Solicitors , Messrs . Dyneley , Coverdale , and Lee , Bedfordrow ; and Mr . Watson , Pickering . William Jones and Joseph Browning Windle , Liverpool , wine-merchants , May 6 , June 4 , at twelve , at the Clarendon Rooms , Liverpool . Solicitors , Messrs Makinson and Sanders , Middle Temple ; and Messrs Lee and Foden . Leeds .
DISSOLUTIONS OF PARTKERSH 1 P . J . Ridsdale and H . Ridsdale , Leeds , stuff merchants H . Cameron and J . Williamson , Manchester , joiners J . Whitworth and J . Nuttall , Hutchbank , Lan cashire , woollen dyers . T . Parker and T . Fidler Cboriton-upon-Medlock , Lancashire , joiners . S Bowell , and J . W . Bowell , Leeds , woollen mer chaats .
Untitled Article
From the Gazette of Tuesday , April 27 . BANKRUPTS . t James James , grocer , Ross , Herefordshire , May i 5 , at eleven , and June 8 , at nine , at the Beaufort Amis Hotel , Monmoutb . Solicitors , Park and Nelson , 11 , Essex-street , Strand , London ; Collins , Ross , Herefordshire . John Lucy , jun ., tailor , Liverpool , May 17 , and June 8 , at one , at the Clarendon-rooms , Liverpool . Solicitors , Cornthwaite , Dean ' s-court . Doctors' -commons , London ; Cornthwaite , Liverpool . Edward Banks , button-maker , Birmingham , May 4 , at three , June 8 , at one , at the Royal Hotel , Birmingham . Solicitors , Chaplin , Gray ' s-inn-square , London ; Harrison , Birmingham . Jacob Granger , grocer , Newport , Isle of Wight , May 26 , and June 8 , at twelve , at the Bugle Inn , Newport . Solicitors , Hicks and Braikenridge , Bartlett's-buiklings , Hoibora , London ; Blake , Newport .
John Rutter , grocer , Stockton-upon-Tees , Durham , May 20 , and June 8 , at the Lion Hotel , Stockton . Solicitors , Smithson and Mitton , Soothatnptoabuildings , Coancery-lane , London ; Barnes , Barnard , Cistle . ( John Warren , inn-keeper , Bolton-le-Moors , Lancashire , May 20 , and June 8 , at eleven , at the Swan Inn , Bolton-le-Moors . Solicitors , Chilton and Acland , Chancery-lane , London ; Hulton , Bolton-le-Moers . John Appleby , groosr , Chester , May 13 , and June 8 , at twelve , at the Commissionera ' -vooiuB , Manchester . Solicitors , Bower and Back , Chancery-lane , London ; Barratt , Manchester . George Worthington , common brewer , Liverpool , May 15 , and June 8 , at one , at the Clarendon-robins , Liverpool . Solicitors , Taylor , Sharpe , Field , and Jackson , Bedford-row , London ; Holt , Liverpool . '
Thomas Pay and Thomas Appleby , paper manufacturers , May 11 , at two , and June 8 , at twelve , at the Saracen ' s Head Inn , Shelton , SuffonJshire . Solicitors , Price and Bolton , Lincoln ' s Inn , London ; Bishop , Shelton-hali , Staffordshire Potteries . Robert Boning , milliner , Bridge-street , Westminster , May 4 , at one , and June 8 , at twelve , at tbe Court of Bankruptcy . Solicitors , Gibson , official assignee , Ba 8 inghall-street ; Shuter , Milbank-street , Westminster . William Lloyd , wine and brandy merchant , Hereford , May 10 , at eleven , and June 8 , at two . Solictors , De Medina , Fitzroy-square ; Lanwarne , Hereford . Charles Lawrence Toombs , oil and colourman , South-Molton-street , May 11 , and June 8 , at twelve , at the Court ot Bankruptcy . Alsager , official assignee ; Solicitor , Pain and Hathtrley , Great Marlboroughstre * t .
John Page , auctioneer , St . Alban ' a , May 10 , at hcvlfp » st twelve , and June 8 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy . Turquand , Coptball-court , official 'assignee ; solicitors , Roche and Co ., Charles-street , Covent-garden . William Knott , wine-cooper , Swallow-street , St . James ' s , May 8 , at half-past two , and June 8 , at eleven , at tbe Court of Bankruptcy ; Edwards , official assignee , Fred « rick's-place , Old Jewry ; solicitor , Gerard , Suffolk-street , Pall-mall . Joseph Hayward , bookseller , Manchester , May 10 , and June 8 , at one , at the Coinuiissioners' -rooms , Manchester . Solicitors , Freeman , Botbamley , aud Bdntall , Coleman-street , London ; Lycelt , Manchester .
Peter Carr , John James Kobinson , and Christopher Bell , fi \ x spinners , Leeds , May 11 , at nine , and June 8 , at twelve , at the Commiesioners ' -roonis , Leeds . Solicitors , Wiglesworth , Ridsdale , and Craddocli , Gray ' s Inn-square , London ; Kichardsnn , Leeds . John Tollitt , bookseller , Liverpool , May 13 and June 8 , at eleven , at the Ciarendon-rooms , Liverpool . Solicitors , Catter , Liverpool ; Taylor , Sharpe , Field , and Jackson , B < -dford-row , London . Joseph Maddox and George Blencarn , warehousemen , Watling-street , City , May 7 , at two , and June 8 , at eleven , at tbe Court of Bankruptcy . Green , official assignee , Aldermanbury ; solicitors . Hard wick and Davidson , Coteaton-street , and Sale and Worthington , Manchester . Richard Thalwell , silversmith , Manchester , May 12 , at twelve , and June , 8 , at ono , at the Conimissionerg ' -rooms , Mpnchester . S-jlicitor , Neild , Boiidcourt-houBe , Walbrook , London .
Benjamin lion nan , pianoforte maker , Blludford Foruiu , Dorsetshire , May 10 , and Juno 8 , at twelve , at the Greyhound Inn , Blandford Forum . Solicitors , Bishop , Sjnthanipton-bnildings , London ; Moore , Wimbourne Minster , Dorsetshire . John Hetherington , tea-merchant , King ' s Armsyard , City , May 7 , at two , and June 8 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy . Jehnson , official assignee , Basinghall-street ; solicitor , Tanqueray , New Bread-street . ' Edward Wright , commission agent , Manchester , May l » , and June 8 , at two , at the Commissiohers ' - roonis , Manchester . Solicitors , Makinson aud Sanders , E ! m-court , Middle-temple , London ; Atkinson , Birch , and Sauntlers , Manchester . Bartholomew Rddfern , gun-maker , Birmingham , May 12 , !» t eleven , and June 8 , at two , at ths Uiiiou Inn , Birmingham . Solicitors , Chilton and Acland , Chancery-lane , London ; Suckling , Birmingham .
James Eastwood , innkeeper , Halifax , May 18 , at nine , » nd June S at ten , at the Old Cock Inu , Halifax . Solicitors , Emmet and Allen , Bloomsbury-square , London ; Bonnet , Halifax . Robert Handley , tailor , Rochdale , May 14 , and June 8 , at elevyn , stt the Commissioners ' -rooms , Manchester . Solicitors , Johnson , Son , and Weatherall , Temple , London ; Lord , Rochdale .
Corrobor Vtion Of The Innocent Yet Relieving Properties Of Blair's Gout And Rheumatic Pills,
CORROBOR VTION OF THE INNOCENT YET RELIEVING PROPERTIES OF BLAIR'S GOUT AND RHEUMATIC PILLS ,
Untitled Article
44 , ALBIOJV STREET , LEEDS . TN CASES of SECRECY consult the TREATISE JL on every Stage and Symptom of the VENEREAL DISEASE , in its mild and most alarming forms , just published , by Messrs . FERRY and CO ., Surgeons , No . 44 , Albion-street , Leeds , Private Entrance in the Passage ; and 4 , Great Charloo-atreot , Birmingham , and eriveu gratis with each Box of PERRY'S PURIFYING SPECIFIC PILLS , price 2 s . 9 d ., 4 s . 6 d ., and Lls . per Box , containing a full description of the above complaint , illustrated b y Engraving , shewing the different stages of this deplorable and often fatal disease , as well as the dreadful effects of Mercury , accompanied with plain and practical directions for an effectual and Bpeedy euro , with ease , socrecy , and safety , without tho aid of Medical assistance * Perry ' s Purifying Specific Pills , price 2 s . 9 d . 48 . 6 d ., and lla . vObaoive none are genuine without the signature of R . and L . Perry on the side of each wrapper ) which are well known throughout Europe and America , to be the most certaiu and effectual cure ever discovered for every Stage and Symptom of the Venereal Disease , in both sexes , including Gonorrhsea , Gleets , Secondary Symptoms , Strictures , Seminal Weakness , Deficiency , and Diseases of the Urinary . Passages , without loss of time , confiuoment , or hindrance from business . They have effected the most surprising cures , not only in recent and severe oases , but whan salivation aud all other moane have failed ; and when an early application is made to these Pills , for the cure of tho Venereal Disease , frequently contracted in a momoM of inebriety , tho eradication is generally completed in a fow days ; and in the more advanced and inveterate stages of venereal infection , characterised by a variety of painful and distressing symptoms , a perseverance in the Specific Pills , in which Messrs . P « rry have happily compressed the most purifying and healing virtues of the principal part of the vegetable system , and which is of the utmost importance to those afflicted with Scorbutic affeetious , Eruptionsonany part of the body , Ulcerations . t Sorofulousor Venereal taint ; being justly calculated to cleanse the blood from all fouJnoss , counteract every morbid affection , and restore weak and emaciated constitutions to pristine health and vigour . v . - ' The rash , indiscriminate , and unqualified use of Mercury , has been productive of inbnito raiscWtf ; under the notion of its being an antidote for a certain disease , the untutored think they have only to saturate their system with Mercury , and the business is accomplished . Fatal error ! Thousands are annually either mercurialized ouV of existence , or their constitutions so broken , and the functions of nature bo impaired , as to render the residue of life miserable . The disorder we have in view owes its fatal results either to neglect or ignorance . In the first stage it is always local , and easy to be extinguished by attending to the directions fully pointed out in the Treatise , without the smallest injury to the constitution ; but when neglected , or improperly treated , a mere local affection will be converted into an incurable and fatal malady . * What a pity that a young man , the hope of his country and the darling of his parents , should be snatched irom all the prospects and enjoymetns of life by the consequences of one unguardod moment , and b adisease which is not in its own nature fatal , and which never proves so if properly treated . It ia a melancholy fact that thousands fall victim , to this horrid disease owing to the unskilfulness of illiterate men , who ,: by the use of that deadly poison , mercury , ruin the constitution , cauao ulceration , blotches on the head , face , and body , dimness or sight , noiso in the ears , deafness , obstinate gleets , noJe 3 on the shin bone , ulcerated sore throats , diseased nose , with nocturnal pains in the head and limbs , till at length & general debility of the constitution ensues , and a melancholy death puts a period to their dreadful sufferings . Messrs . Perry and Co ., Surgeons , may be consulted , as usual , at No . 44 , Albion-street , Loeds , Private Entrance in the passage ; and No . 4 , Great Charles-street , Birmingham . Only ono personal visit is required from a country patient to enable Messrs . Ferry and Co . to give such advice as will be the means of effecting a permanent and effectual cure , after all other means have proved ineffectual . Letters for advice must be post-paid , and contain the usualfee of one pound . THE CORDIAL BALM OF SYRIACUM Is now universally established as a remedy of great efficacy . It is possessed of the most invigorating powers ; : warming and cheering the spirits , and promoting digestion . It is an excellent remedy for nervous , hypocondriac , consumptive , and female complaints , lassitude , and weakness arising from juvenile imprudencies . Sold in Bottles , at lls ., or four quantities , in ono family bottle , fftt 33 s ., duty included . , . Observe—No . 44 , Albion-street , Lcedp . 10 ° Private Entrance in the Passage .
Untitled Article
2 THE NORTHERN STAR . . .... . , :-,,,: .,. * - . ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦ ..: ' _
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), May 1, 1841, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct704/page/2/
-