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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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TO be disposed of with immediate possession , for £ 45 , the good-will and School Furniture of a day and evening weekly School , numbers averaging from seventy to ninety scholors , being an unequalled opportunity for so 6 maU an outlay . The locality oue of the most flourishing market towns in South Staffordshire . Age and infirmity the only cause [ or the owner leaving . For particulars address ( post-paid ) A . Z . post omoft , Bilston . Staffordshire . N . B . None need apply that cannot command the above in cash down .
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BOOKS Published by JOHN WATKINS , and Sold at No . 9 , BELL-YARD , TEMPLE-BAR . MEMOIRS of the TALENTS , VIRTUES , and MISFORTUNES of JAMES M YERS . U . SCARBOROUGH TALES . 2 s . 6 d . LETTER to the LAWYERS . 6 d . ' This is a very spirited expose . " LAY SERMONS . 3 s " A book of ability aud laudable purpose . "— Tatt ' s Magazine . " You have dedicated to me one of the most beautiful books I ever read . The first sermon is a fine poem , all the better for being in prose—and such prose ! With the exception of a fevy passages in Rousseau , I scarcely remember to haveread anything finer or more eloquent . "—Ebcnezer Elliott . THE EMIGRANT . A Tale . 3 d . MEMOIR of CAPTAIN COOK . 6 d . MEMOIR of JOSEPH BOWER . Gd . PADFOOT . A Satire . Sd . LIFE and CAREER of GEORGE CHAMBERS , Marine Artist . Written for the Benefit of his Widow and Orphans . Price 5 s . JOHNFROSr . A Play . 6 d . ADDRESS to tha WOMEN of ENGLAND . The FIVE POINTS of the PEOPLE'S CHARTER SEPARATELY EXPLAINED and ADVOCATED . Id . " Every -working man should read this tract . "Northern Star . Preparing for Publication . WAT TYLER . A Play . Written before the Author read Southey ' s . 6 d . THREE LETTERS to the Archbishop of Canterbury , on the Benefit of the Clergy . 3 d . THE TOWN . A Poem , or Picture of the Present System . 6 d . The PROGRESS of LIBERTY in ENGLAND ; from the Earliest Period down to the Present Time . 3 d . The GOLDEN AGE and the IRON AGE . With Minor Poems . 2 s . 6 d . NARRATIVE OF MY OWN IMPRISONMENT . 3 d . An ESSAY on INTEMPERANCE . Id . An ESSAY on EXCLUSIVE DEALING . Id . The POOR LAW MARTYRS . A Drama . Cd . CHARTIST PRAYER BOOK ; with Hymns . ls . Gd . N . B . —Chartists who desire little books with much matter , will find in the above list an armoury of short and double-edged weapons for the Cause .
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TO THE UNREPRESENTED , AND THE ELECTORS OF THE WEST-RIDING OF THE COUNTY OF YORK . p ENTLEMEN , —I am called upon by the unanivX mous voice of a vast portion of your body , to offer myself a * a Candidate to represent your Interests ia Parliament at the approaching election . I bad not anticipated that you would confer upon so humble an individual as myself bo high a honour . I had hoped that this preference would have fallen to the lot of one of those Gentlemen , who , possessing qualities so superior to my own , are willing to serve you . But as you have thought Stto place me in this proud position , you may fully rely upon the exercise of my best exertions , if elected , to regenerate our Einking , our falling country . Gentlemen , your choice has given the lie direct to the falsehoods propagated by the Times and Mercury , the two Whig organs of Leeds—namely , " that you had discarded me for the part I took in the late Election at Nottingham . " It hag proved that I still live in your confidence ; that you have not changed your principles , as has been charged upon you by those calumniators who seem to regret exceedingly that you have thrown off the trammels of their party ; that you have commenced busine ? 3 on your own account ; that you have opened your eyes to their duplicity ; that you cannet forget the promises made and broken duriDg the period of their oppressions , and especially those during the agnation for " the Bill , the whole Bill , and nothing but the Bill , " that it was only a step , and that bO soon as by your aid they got it they would go on to the completion of reform , and to the consummation of Universal Suffrage . How did they redeem their pledge I Why , so soon as they obtained their pet measure , they turned round upou you and declared that reform had i ^ one far enough ; charged you with being in poverty and rags—said that yoa had not a Shilling of your own ; that you were never satisfied ; that the Reform Bill was a " final" measure , and that you would rob those who had property . With a bold front they informed you that you were too ignorant , and consequently unfit , to possess the franchise . You were v * ise enongh and prudent enough while lifting the Whigs into power ; but as eoon as they were up , they kicked the ladder down , and there below you must remain , until you erect a ladder for y ourselves and apply it to your own elevation . The same faction , by a new cry of " Cheap Bread , " and "Monopoly or no Monopoly , " intend again to delude and betray you into their meshes , in . order to proceed onward in lowering your condition still more , that they may compel you to continue to compete with foreigners , who , by comparison , are untaxed , while we are taxed to an unparalleled degree . They have unhesitatingly declared that their sole aim and objects are to lower the price of our goods , which can be done by no other means than lowering wages . A leading Member of the body , in his report of wages on the Continent , states that at Bonn , on the Rhine , the wages are only fourpence halfpenny for twelve hours' labour ; and before we can successfully compete with them , wages in this country must be much lower ; because onehalf has to go in'taxes : and when t"hey can make no profit by your labour they may give you a few days or a few week 3 grace in the bastile before sending you to rest in your graves . The Poor Law Act was passed with the positive intention to compel the poor to live on a coarser kind of food . Continue the Whigs in office , and you will soon have none at all . Aud why this yell of" no monopoly" now ? You must be aware with how small ceremony the Whig Government dismissed the mighty delegation of the Corn Law League , who were treated with scorn and indignity by the very men whom they are now , spaniel like , raising such a tumult from the " Land ' s End to John O'Groats" to keep in office . And have they given any public pledge to repeal the Corn Laws ? Noiio whatever . They do not intend it ; they are themselves landed proprietors , and areas much opposed to the repeal as any of their more honest oppoueats . Their end and their ainii g to enforce the New Poor Law , the Rural Police , and the full measure of continental centralisation ; in fact , to uproot the last vestige of the small remnant of liberty remaining to us . Had they been honest in any beneficial declaration , they would have commenced the work of economy , retrenchment , reduction of monopolies , and the eradicating of every oppressive measure , when they took the reins of Government . Had they , instead of making puny red actions of caxes , par t of which had lately been imDOsed by themselves upon principles of the highest refinement , viz ., of taxing the taxes ; had they then commenced and carried out real retrenchment , when they were backed by large majorities , instead of making -false professions when their " occupation ' s gone , " when they have sunk down to a minority and can effect nothing;—in short , had they been virtuous and honest men , they would now , iBStead of being held in scorn , contempt , and derision by every benevolent and intelligent being in the country , stand upon the proudest pinnacle of fame , enjoying the prayers , the blessings , and the gratitude of all , and would have been handed down in the pages of history as the greatest benefactors of the humaa race . What a mockery it is now to tell ns what they would do for us ! and how deplorable it is to find so many who endure so much from their misrule , from ignorance and self-iaterest , following and supporting the vilefaction Jmoreespecially as it ispelf-evideritthat what it has promised would constitute an evil—as injury instead of an advantage—to themselves . Those men ( the Whigs ) gave twenty millions to themselves and others , as the price of our fellow-creatures—as a , remuneration for the restoration to liberty of those human beings , whom they had stolen from the coast « f Africa ; and this while tens of thousands of white slaves remained , and still remain , in a worse condition than those black slaves who have been emancipated . They have added largely to the public burdens during their period of office , and that , too , while we had all but perfect peace ; the almost only foreign skirmish being against the inoffensfre Chinese . And for what ! To compel them to pay for that prohibited intoxicating article opiom , -which had been smuggled by our merchants into their ( the Chinese ) country . Certainly , war upon i" < uch abhorrent pretensions never took place since tLve creation of the world . While tens of thousands werestarvi"g , they gr . vited to the Queen Dowager one hundred thousand po . inds
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a year , and two or three palaees to reside in , making the old lady ' s income above above £ 2000 a week . Thanks to our stats they vrete not permitted to giva to the Queen ' s husband more than ^ 30 , 060 a-yeax ; they were resolved to give him £ 50 , 000 . They paid within a short period , about £ 2000 to carry through the country an army of blue unconstitutional troops to irritate instead of conciliate tha oppressed people , who were seeking their rights in a more legal and constitutional manner than they themselves agitated for place and power ; and for less grave offences than they themselves had committed , they imprisoned , tortured , and murdered the people ' s best friends . They gave £ 70 , 000 to build palaces for the Queen ' s and her husband ' s horses , £ 30 . 000 to educate a whole people , and between £ 60 , 000 and £ 70 , 000 i . o support three Commissioners , with their minions , expressly for the purpose of eradicating every constitutional principle , in order to oppress , degrade , insult ^ and Btarve the unfortunate poor . Had their course been as rapid and progressive onwards to right and justice , as it has been backward to merciless cruelty , W 6 should have been tha happiest nation upon earth ; we should hare been vieing with each , othe * who should add most to the happiness of the whole , aud every ono might have lived under hia own vtee and fig-tree , none daring—none desiring to make him afraid . Instead of this , their accursed system of legislation has inspired only irritation , party rancour , envy , malice , and over-reaching of one another ; and while the poor are in terror of tho Bastiles aud Rural Police , the rich are alarmed for an approaching crisis , in which life and property will bo endangered , and which may result in revolution and anarchy . While our best artisans are being engaged by thousands to remove to the Continent and other countries , where they can produce goods much lower than hero ; while many thousands are leaving our shores on speculation , to find a home and a restiug place for themselves and families , and are employed in many instances upon machines of our own manufacture which have been sent away by licenses granted by the Government ; —this Government have , on the very eve of a dissolution become advocates of , not a Repeal of the Corn Laws , but of a fixed duty on all com imported ; while the Leaguo are for a total and immediate repeal . The consequence is that our trade and commerce are moving as rapidly from us into other countries , as they formerly moved from them to this country ; while the middle class who are rapidlysinking down to bankruptcy , seem as blind as beetles to taerealoause ; and like Bedlamites , are pertinaciously workiDgout their own destruction . They adhere to the greatest monopolibts . and cry down with monopolies while to all discerning men it is quite evident that skimming the surface will only add to our misery . We must commence at th « root , and make a perfect cloarance ; we must take the Crown Lands from the hands of private individuals , and appropriate them to their legitimate purpose . The Church propetty , which , since the Eighth Harry dispossessed the Catholics of it , i& , to all intents and purposes , publio property , would , under any honest Government who advocated liberty of conscience , have been appropriated to public purposes , and all would then have worshipped in their own way unrestrained and untaxed , to support any other . The standing Army and Rural Police must be abolished in time of peace ; salaries , pensions , and places , must be economized . The debt contracted by the Whigs and the Tories combined , and mainly augmented by the same parties , to support the war of extermination in France , and miscalled the national debt , ( but which in reality is the debt of the Aristocracy—of those who pledged their property and their Iive 3 in support of the war ) , —this incubus must be removed , and we must prove our superior intelligence by lowering tho amount of public expenditure below all other governments . Whenever this is effected , and not till then , can we have an advantagsous free trade ; then may we safely call for a clear stage and no favour ; then with the essential accompaniment Universal Suffrage can we addto our own and to thehappiness of the world ] Much as the labourers of thiscountry have been abused and calumniated they are more virtuous than any other class in the country , and unequalled in ingenuity and industry , by any people on the face of the globe ; and as soon as justice is extended to thorn , they will riso in morals , possess comforts of which they have been debarred , and a new era will be commenced . Then let the faction which uow governs be driven from power and we are safo ; none other can carry out their treasonable plans—none else can carry into effect the continental system ot ' eoercion and centralizitiou . Put them again at the head of a majority , aud the most perfect system of slavery is established . Reciprocity is the great and fundamental principles of freo trade ; henco , when it is established , the whole of the protective import duties must be abolished , as well on foreign manufactured good . s as upon foreign grown corn ; and with our present burdens , may I ask what would be the consequence ? I beg to give you a short list of a few of the many articles of manufactured commerce , and the duty which must be paid upon them on being imported . Wood turnery 30 per cent . ; tiles SO do . ; pack thread 25 do . ; starch £ 9 10 * . per cwt . ; snuff 6 s . per lb . ; crown glass , £ 8 6 s . 8 J . per cwt . ; blacking £ 3 12 s . 6 d . ; bricks £ 1 2 s . 6 d . per thousand ; sheet glass £ 10 per cwt . ; paper 9 J . per pound ; calf and kid tanned skins , 9 d . per pound ; clocks 25 percent . ; watches 25 per cent . ; worsted yarns 6 d . per pound ; baskets 20 per cent . ; women's boots and shoes 30 s . and 3 Sa . per dozen pairs ; men ' s shoes £ 2 14 ? . per dozen ; hats and bonnets of straw , from £ 3 3 s . uto £ G Cs . per dozen ; hard soap £ 4 10 s . per cwt . ; iron bars 3 < ls . per ton ; straw plat , 17 s . per pound ; books 253 . per cwt . Were these articles and others to bo allowed to be imported free , we should be inundated with foreign goods , and the home manufacturers and workmen driven to starvation . Now , many can only see cheap bread , but they must also nave cheap imported goodp , often ready to fit on to the body . The most splendid furniture , gilded frames , gloves , silks , ribbons , hardware , cutlery , < fec , are being imported daily with these heavy duties ; let them come free and vro aro done . Women's gloves pay 4 s . and men ' s do . 5 s . per dozen pairs ; millboard , brown paper , and scaleboard pay £ 3 s 8 s . per cwt . ; gold leaf , 33 . per hundred leaves ; and whited brown thread 18 s . per dozen pounds . Throw off these and we become importers instead of exporters , r . nd our workmen must seek shelter in foreign countries , or starve at home ; while those who are the most noisy brawlers for " no monopoly " would be the first to suffer ; and uuless they will take council and go to the root at once they must be involved in ruin . Give every man a voice in the election of his representatives—establish universal right , Universal Suffrage—it has existed in this country ; we ask for nothing new—establish equal laws and equal rights —and i u' uition . will again flourish—our industrious population will speedily possess every means of comfort ; their love for their dear , their native land , will then return ; esteem and respect for one another , and good will to all , will abound in every ¦ class—ia every heart—and replace animosity and rancorous feeling ; while party spirit will vanish from the land . We shall riso from the existing system of devouring ono another , not only to live who can , but . to the good old plan of live and let live . Gentlemen , should I bo returned to Parliament as your representative , my best exertion 3 will be devoted to the great cause of universal redemption—to that line of action which , in my humble judgment , is best calculated to ensure the greatest possible happiness to all . I shall oppose any Government who does not extend the fullest protection to every human being within their dominions . I shall oppose , In every' ^ possible way , every attempt ' to establish monopoly in trade and legislation . My cause is the cause of the whole people . My only aim is universal good . I am , Gentlemen , Your devoted friend and humble servant , L . PITKETHLY . Huddersfield , June 22 , 1841 .
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TO THE ELECTORS AND NON-ELECTORS OF THE WEST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE . Friends and Countrymen , HAVING been solicited by the delegates of the unrepresented people ( assembled from all parts of the Riding ) in Dewsbury , this day , to allow myself to be put in nomination as a candidate for the representation of the West Riding , I have deemed it my duty to at once comply , and in responding to the call made upon me , see the necessity and propriety of making known the principles in support of which I claim your suffrages . I appear before you as the humble advocate of of that great body of our countrymen excluded by the present legislative system from all participation in those rights and franchises held and exercised by the other classes of the community . I see around me the men of my own order ( the working class ) creating ( under God ) all wealth yet enjoying none—earning that bread in the " sweat of their brow , " which they themselves do not eat , but which is devoured by the drones , the schemers , and plunderers of society . From personal connection , correspondence , and communication , I can speak to the universal spirit of discontent existing in the breasts of the labouring many . I know that disaffection toward all existing institutions pervades the mass of the working classes . I kuow that they regard with scorn and contempt the miserably delusive measures of Reform lately propounded to the country by the present Advisers of the Sovereign . What will the proposed trilling reduction per pound in the price of Sugar ; the proposed alteration ( for the worse ) in the Duties ou Timber ; the proposed alteration in the Corn Laws , intended
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solely to bolster up a decreasing Revenue ; what will these changes do for the wretched hand-loom weaver existing upon 2 = s . 9 d ., 3 s 6 d ^ and 4 » . 6 d . per week ? For the miserably-paid agricultural labourer ! For the tens of thousands of the destitute of England , Scotland , and Ireland willing to earn by labour their subsistence , but unable to findit * , * ,. •¦• ' A change is required , not to keep one faction in and another faction out ; but a change that will socially benefit the mighty mass—that shall guarantee to him who toils the fruits of his labour . _ How is saoh change to be effected ! Will titled Aristocrats or wealthy Commoners do that for you which would ameliorate their class-usurpation Not they indeed . How then £ s such change to be brought about ? By the destruction of class-legislation and the representation of the oppressed wealthproducers . , Seeing , in the present system of legislation , the cause of the political debasement aud social wretchedness of the working class , I seek for the enfranchisement ( politically and socially ) of that class by tho recognition and adoption of the principles of the Peoplo ' s Charter . , ¦ „ _ I demand tho extension of the Suffrage to every male that shall have attained the years of manhood . First , on tha ground of right , believing that" all men are born free and equal . " Second , on the ground of protection , that labour may legislate for labour , and that the rich , through class made laws , may no longer grind the faces of the poor . Opposed in principle to secret voting , I would nevertheless give my support to the Ballot as a means of protection to the weak against the tyranny of the strong . Annual or Sessional Parliaments I would most cordially support . A more equal division of Electoral Districts i 8 absolutely necessary to avoid the gross anomalies of the present system . The Property Qualification at present required on the part of English and Irish Representatives is a gross insalt to every principle of justice , the people ' s approval should be the only qualification of the legislator . Each Representativeshould receive wages for attendance , that he may be truly the servant of the people , they ( the people ) having the power to dismiss him from their service when failing to fulfil the duties of his mission . Only when the people are represented will legislative measures be adopted for the good of all . But , in the meantime , it is perhaps necessary that I should state briefly my sentiments upon certain great questions connected with the welfare of our common country . I am sternly opposed to the New Poor Law , both in principle and detail , and will seek its immediate and total repeal . Regarding with horror and indignation the wholesale muiderof the children of the poor in the manufacturing districts , the Ten Honrs Bill shall have my hearty support ; and I will seek by every means in my power to promote a complete reform of factory labour . Seeing in local government the best palladium of national liberty , I am opposed to all schemes of " centralisation . " I am hostile to any scheme of Rural Police , and consider that the complete controul over the police of towns and boroughs should be vested in the hands of the inhabitants . I am opposed to all restrictions upon knowledge , and will seek the repeal of all laws and taxes fettering the prees . The advocate of religious as well as civil liberty , I contend against the existence of a state church , or compulsory exactions for the support of any sect or creed . I will support a total repeal of the Corn Laws accompanied by such a reduction of taxation as will allow the British farmer to compete with the foreign corn grower ; and give to the manufacturing population , the benefit of such repeal without inflicting injury upon the agricultural classes . I am for the repeal of all ' ' monopolies" by the repeal of the " monopoly" of legislation . With respect to Ireland , I am decidedly in favour of a Repeal of the Legislative Union , believing that it would be for the interest aud welfare of both countries that Ireland should constitute and legislate for herself . If elected as your Representative , I shall use every exertion to procure the liberation and restoration of all those suffering in prison or in exile for their advocacy of tho rights of man . Electors , —I have briefly but explicitly stated my principles—the grounds upon which I hope for your Suffrages ; in you is repo 3 ed a weighty trust , see that you exercise that trust for the good of all . We are on the eve of a change , which no earthly power can avert , it is For you to say how that change shall be effected . W 5 are on the very threshold of " Revolution , " it is for you to decide whether that " Revolution" shall be peaceably brought about with your assistance , or whether the disfranchised many shall bo compelled to right themselves in spite of your opposition—in the latter case the consequences are frightful to contemplate . Believe me , mere brute force cannot much longer stifle the voice of the oppressed and the enslaved . Nou-Eieetora , —The principles set forth in this address are no new principles adopted fer the occasion ; for years I have struggled tor their triumph ; my first services in your cause entitlo me to look for that support of which I feel confident . Frieuda and Countrymen , —No . v is the time to assert your claim to the suffrage ; long disfranchised —long enslaved , cease to be the willing serfs of faction . Attend in your thousands and tens of thousands , on the day of nomination , and once , and for ever , set aside the odious and wicked distinction of the " privileged few , " aud the " subject many . " Demand your rights , and practically assert your demand . I am , Your devoted Friend and Servant , GEORGE JULtAN HARNEY . Dewsbury , June 20 , 1841 .
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LEEDS BOROUGH SESSIONS . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , That the next General Quarteu Sessions of the Peace for the Borough of Leeds , in the County of York , will be holdeu before Thomas Flower Ellis the Younger , Esquire , Recorder of the said Borough , at the Court House , in Leeds , on Wednesday , th « Seventh Day of July next , at Two o'clock in th « Afternoon , at which time and place all Jurors , Constables , Police Officers , Prosecutors , Witnesses , Persons bound by Recognizances , and others having business at the said Sessions , are required to attend . And Notice is hereby also Given , That all Appeals not previously disposed of will be heard at the , opening of the Court , on Friday , the 9 th day of July next , and that all Proceedings under the Highway Act , will be taken on the First Day of the Sessions . By Order , JAMES RICHARDSON , Clerk of the Peace for the said Borough Leeds , lOtli June , 1841 .
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OLD PARK'S LIFE PILLS . MORE PROOFS that this noted Medicine will restore to health the afflicted , and continue in sound health the recovered . Read the following from a soldier , discharged from her Majesty ' s service as incurable , after having the advice of the most celebrated physicians : — " To the Proprietors of Old Parr ' s Pills . " Gentlemen , —I feel it a duty I owe to you and to the Publio at large , t * acknowledge the astonishing benefit . I have received from taking 'Old Parr ' s Pill 3 . ' I was for nearly nine years in the 52 nd Regiment of Foot , but was discharged in the yeai 1839 as incurable , after having the best advice her Majesty's service afforded , being pronounced consumptive ; I then returned home to Hinckley , where my attention was attracted to Old Parr ' s Pills . I was induced to purchase a 2 s . 9 d . box , and from that moment I date a renewal of my life ; for on taking one box , I immediately began to recover , and two 2 s . 9 d . boxes more completely cured me . " I am , yours most obediently , , . _ "John Osbobn . " Witness—James Burgess , Bookseller , &c . &c , Hinckley . The following extraordinary case of cure has been communicated to the Wholesale Agent for Parr's Life Pills , at Nottingham : — Mrs . Joseph Simpson , Church Hill Close , Old Leuton . near Nottingham , has been severely afflicted for the last thirty years , with a violent cough , and difficulty of breathing . The affliction has been bo severe that ahe could not fulfil her usual domestic obligations . She took cold when only fifteen years old , and the cough never left her till she tookParr ' e Life . PiUa . She had tried almost erery kind of medicine , and had taken laudanum in large quantities , but nothing afforded relief . She heard of Parr's Pills about last Christmas , and as sopa as she had taken about half a box , ahe found ^ herself completely cured , and was never affected m the slightest manner during the Bevere weather that followed , and is now better in health than she has ever been in her life . This cure does indeed appear miraculous , but for the satisfaction of the most incredulous , Bhe has feindiy consented to answer any inquiries , either by personal application or by letter , addressed " Mrs . Joseph Simpson , Church Hill Close , Old Lenton . " Two remarkable cases ( selected from many others ) communicated to Mr . Noble Bookseller and Printer 23 , Market Place , the Agent for Hull . """ !
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Mr . Plaxton , of Cottingham , fire miles from Hull , had long been afflicted with a most severs internal disease . So dreadful were the paroxysms that he frequently expected death was at hand to release him from his suflerings . For a great length of time he had been unable to sit down at all , eve a being compelled to stand at his meals . _ His next door neighbour having heard of the virtues and unprecedented success of " Parr ' s PiLs , " purchased a small box for him , and en his calling for a second box , he told me that such had been the astonishing effects produced by one box , he was able to sit dozen , and on taking two other boxes , his pains hate left him- ; his appetite is good , and ho is able to follow his vocation nearly as well as he has ever been in hia lifei Mrs . Sbaw , wife of Mr . Shaw , yeast dealer , had been for a great length of time afflicted with a severe internal disease . To use his own expression , " paying doctors for her had beggared him , so that at last he was compelled to send her to the Infirmary ; there she received no permanent benefit . Having heard of "Parr'a Fills , " hfi purchased & small box j she began to mend immediately oa taking them , and two more boxes have cured her . She is as well as she ever was in her life . Sirs . Stephenson , of Cottingham , five miles from Hull , has been severely affiicted with a bad leg for more than ten years , and during that period has tried all kinds of medicines , but without any permanent relief . After taking four small boxes of Parr ' s Pills , she is able to go about her day ' s business in a manner which for comfort has been unknown to her for above ten years . Signed , Edmund Stepuenson , her Son . Witness—Joseph Noble , Hull , May 8 , 1841 . " To the Proprietors of Parr ' s Pills . " Mrs . Ann Lamb , of Haddington , in the Parish of Auborn , bought two small boxes of Parr's Pills , at your Agent ' s Medicine Warehouse , Mr . James Drury , Stationer , near the Stone Bowf Lincoln , for her son Jesse , who was suffering very badly from Rheumatism in the hands , knees , and shoulders ; he is seventeen years of age , and in service , but waa obliged to leave his place from the complaint . The two boxes completed a cure on him , and Mrs . Lamb bought a third box of Mr . James Drury , last Friday for him to . have by him , aiid to take occasionally . He has now returned to his place , free from Rheumatism . " This statement , by Mr . Robt . Lamb , and Ann , his wife , parents of the youth , is given that others maybenefit by those invaluable Pills , Old Parr , and they will willingly answer any enquiries , and feel very thankful for the good they have done to their son . " Lincoln , April 17 , 1841 . This Medicine is sold by most respectable Medicine Venders in the United Kingdom , in Boxes ai 13 . ljd ., 2 s . 9 cl ., and lls ., duty included . The genuine has " Parr ' s Lite Pills' * en&raved on the Government Stamp .
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Just Published , RICHARDSON'S RED BOOK , OB A PEEP AT THE PEERS , Uniform with the " BLACK BOOK , " 100 Pages , Priee Fourpence , PONTAINING the Titles , Names , and Surnames U of all the Lords " Spiritual and Temporal , " date of their births , to tyhom 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 Offices , Church of England , and Colonial Departments ; their influence in the Commons' House ; shewing the golden reasons for voting away th « 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 thes » companions , in order to contrast tke splendour of th « tax-eaters with the misery of the tax-payers , and work out the grand social maxim—" Knowledge is power ; Union is strength !" 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 ia the Legislature and Executive power in the State . London : J . Cleave , Penny Gazette office , Shoelane , Fleet-street ; Manchester , Heywood , Oldhamstreet ; Leeds , Hobson , Star office j Liverpool , Smith , Scotland-place ; Glasgow , W . Thompsoa , Ohxular 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 ; Sunderland , J . Williams .
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MEDICAL ADVICE . MESSRS . WILKINSON AND CO ., SURGEONS , No . 13 , Trafalgar-street , Leeds , and 34 , Prines Edward-street , Fox-street , Liverpool , HAVING devoted their Studies exclusively for many years to the successful treatment of the Venereal Disease , in all its various forms ; also , to tha frightful consequences resulting from that destructive practice , "Self Abuse , " may be Personally Consulted from Nine in the Morning till lea at Night , aud on Sundays till Two . Attendance every Thursday at No . 4 , Georgestreet , Bradford , ( from Tea till Five . ) In recent cases a perfect Cure is completed within * Week , or no Charge made for Medicine after that period , and Country Patients , by making only one personal visit , will receive such Advice and Medioines that will enable them to obtain a permanent and effectual Cure , when all other means hare failed . Theyhopethat the successful , easy , and expeditious modethey have adopted , of eradicating every symptom of a certain disease , without any material alteration in diet , or hindrance of business , and yet preserving the constitution in full vigour , and free from injury , will establish their claims for support . As this Disease is one which is likely to be contracted whenever exposure takes place , it is not like many other visitors , once in life , but , on tke contrary , one infection may scarcely have been removed , when another may unfortunately be imbibed ; therefore , the practitioner requires real judgment in order to treat each particular case in such a manner as not merely to remove the present attack , but to preserve the constitution unimpaired , in case of a repetition at no distant period . The man of experience can avail himBelf of the greatest improvements in modern practice , by being able to distinguish between discharges of a specific and of a simple or mild nature , which can only be made by one in daily practice , after due consideration of all circumstances . In the same manuer at birth , appearances often take place in children , which call for a proper knowledge and acquaintance with the disease , in order to discriminate their real nature , and which may be the means of sowing domestic discord , unless managed by the Surgeon with propriety and skill . raUents labouring under this disease , cannot be too sautious into whose hands they commit themselves , too propriety of this remark is abundantly manifested , by the same party frequently passing the ordeal of several practitioners , before he is fortunate enough to obtain a perfect cure . The following are some of the many symptoms that distinguish tttis disease : —A general debility ; eruption on the head , face , and body ; ulcerated eore throats , scrofula , swelling in the neck , nodes on the shin bones , cancers , fistula , pains in the head and limbs , winch are frequently mistaken for rheumatism , otC . « C . Messrs . W . and Co . 's invariable rale is to give ft Card to eaoh ot their patients , as a guarantee for Cure , which they pledge themselves to perform , or return the fee * For the accommodation of those who cannot conveniently consult Messrs . W . and Co . personally , they may obtain the Purifying Drops , price 4 s . 6 d ., at any of tlje following Agents , with Printed Directwma , so plain that Patients of either Sex may Cure themselves , without even the knowledge of a bedleuow . Mr . Heaton , 7 , Briggate ; an * Mr . Hobson , 7 Vm « s offie « , Leeds . Mr . Thohas Butler , 4 , Chsapside , London . Mr . HABTMsY . BooksellervHalifax . Mr . Dewhibst , 37 , New Street , Huddersfield . Mr . Hakbison , Bookseller , MarketPlaee , Barnsley Mr . Hargrove ' s Library , 9 , Coney Street , York . Messrs . Fox and Son , Booksellers , Pontefract . Mr . Harbison , Market-place , Ripon . \* ¦ »? i Dij ; B » , ° okseHer , Knaresbro&Harrogate Mr . R . Hurst , Corn Market , Wakefield . Mr . Davis , Druggist , No . 6 , Market Place , Manchester . Mr . Johnsom , Bookseller , Beverley . Mr . Koble , Bookseller , Boston , Lincolnshire . » ir * ft ?** ' Buokseller , Market-place , Hull . Mr . H . Hu&ton , Louth , Lincolnshire . Iris Office , Sheffield . Chronicle ojice , Lord Street , Liverpool . And at the Advertiser Office , Loweate , Hull ,
Ctjartfgi Dtttteuwreut?
Ctjartfgi dtttteUwreut ?
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BRIGHTON . —The following was omitted in our last for -want of room : —A public meeting of the Chartist electors and others of the Borough of Brighton vras held at the Artichoke Ian ; Mr . John Good in the chair ; for the purpose of receiving Mr Charles Brooker , as the Chartist candidate for Brighton . Mr . Brooker delivered an address full of sound argument , and feelingly energenc . I he following resolutions were then adopted : — _ That , in the opinion of this meeting , it is highly desirable , that in the present election as many casdidates in the -working man ' s interest shonld be obtained as possible , and Charles Brooker , Esq ., by his uutiring zsal in the cause of the poor man merits our entire confidence ; and that we pledge ourselves to support the said gentleman in the contest for Brighton . "
u That thi 3 meeting earnestly call on all really independent electors to co-operate with the Chartist elector ' s committee op behalf of iir . C . Brooker . " Mr . Brooker , in a printed addre-s to the electors , gays : — "As to my political principles—should I have the honour , through you , of a seat in the British Parliament , my design is , respecting my Parliamentary procedure , to advocate—believing their adoption would tend in a very great degree to the benefit of the nation and realm of Great Britain—the prillciples contained in that which i 3 denominated the People's Charter ; namely , Universal Suffrage , Equal District Voting , no Property Qualification for Members , Annual Parliaments , Payment of Members , and Yo-. e by Ballot . At the same time , I trust I should advocate the cause in the same manner , relative toeverv measure I considered would benefit
the Briiish nation . And , respecting Universal SaSrage , I consider it a sound maxim ; and , as to going to that point—that in proportion as you extend the S'dSrage yon give security to Property . And , as from ths state thi 3 country is at present in , I cannot thiiik ; hat property in the nation is alto- gether siife ; I do earnestly entreat ail that possess property therein ;—be it much or little- ^ -closely , and for " themselves , to think over , or investigate the soundness or unsoundnes 3 of this maxim . " aiOTTRAIff . —Mr . Butterworth , from Manchester , lectured at the Chartist Meeting Room , Hoi- ' lingworta , oh Thursday , the 24 in instaut , and ! entered at great lecgth into a discussion of the U ! 3-iarbanees that was taking place in this and o £ her parts of the country , showing in a clear and lucid Hsanner the interest , the Whig and Tory faction ? had in keeping the working class at variance with each other . He concluded a very animated and spirited lecture by exhorting the working class to join heart and hand together for the Charter ,
andno surrender . LOKBOK—The I > emocrats here complain of havingbeendupedbysomepersonrepresentiDg himself as a Chartist in distress . They passed i resolution at their meeting , last Sunday evening , not in future to \ relieve parties under such circumstances , without i first having satisfactory proof of the truth of iheir statements ; and they recommend a like course to \ all other Chartist Associations . GAINSBOROUGH . —The corn crakes , after ' cackling here till nobody would listen to ihem any longer , rounded off the the period with a petition , ¦ whieh they procured to be signed by ail the little j boys they could prevail upon , and all the pot-house tipplers whom a pennywor ; h of ale would purchase , i and then pnt it forth as the petition of " 800 of the aost respectable tradesmen of the town of Gains- ; borough / ' A printed protest against this " enormous j lie" hasbetn issued , signed by a large number of chief merchants and tradesmen of the town .
STOCKPORT . —On Sunday evening , a numerously attended meeting iras held in the Association Room , Bambei ' s Brow , Mr . John "Wright was called to the cbair , who , after staking a fe « r remarks apon passing eTents , called upon Mr . Grifnn to read the instruc tions given by Feargus O'Connor , Esq ., in the Star of last -week , to be observed by the electors and nonelectors in behalf of Chartist candidates . Daring the reading of the letter he was interrupted several times by the plaudits of the assembly , and at the conclusion they showed their approbation of the -writer , and tne BenSmentB contained in the article , by cheers hearty leud , and long . Mr . Chappell was nest called upon to address the meeting . He commenced by remarks npon the bonesty and integrity of Mr . Biirstow , tie Chartist candidate for this borough , an 4 iSvx passing Ml
fculogiam npon him , proving that be was decidedly the best in the field , hoped the working classes and tee Chartist electors would do their duty in the coming week , in rendering him that Eupport which his ( BurEtow ' sj candoct towards the working classes had merited . iCbeeri ) The speaker then went on to show what he conceived to be the real cause of the -poverty and misery every ¦ where abounding in Great Britain- ilany supposed , said he , thit it was ia consequent of there not being a sufficiency of employment , whilst others attributed it to the operation of the Corn Lvws ; another set of q ^ ack politicians said that it was brought about by ever population ; and a fourth party would say that the great evil was the improvemtnt in machinery supplanting manual labour . Well , then , he would proceed to tximine the above propositions , and see if
possible whether the cause of distress c- ? uld bs traced exclusively to either of them . He alwajs contended , for Ms part , since he knew anj-tidug at all about tte public affiirs of this mighty empire thzi the foundation , the root of the evils was class legislation , and thit all other evils of which the working classes tad to coinp '^ in , emanated from and were the effects of , that mon-EtrotiB , and all engrossing fertile scource of corruption . ( Hear , hesr . ) He ( Mr . C . ) believed that so 1 jag as the ¦ working classes remained in their present helpless condition—so long as the capitalist had protection for hu capital through the medium of laws of his own making , and so long as he had the power to grasp and grind as much as he could from the blood , bones , and smears of the labouring portion of the community—so long as it was in the povrcr of a cotton lord or landlord to tell
his hands that he was abont to take two shillings off their wages on a Saturday nigbt , and they jtfce hands ; having no power to lesist it—so long as the capitalists could take five shillings from the "working man by reduc ing his wages , and eo long as the itsnit would be if the same person only took one ounce of stinking cotton from his employers , that he would be sent to prison for a month , in a word , eo leng as the foundation of every frying Talaable in society namely , labour , was unprotected 80 long wonld the same effects continue more or less to show their foul and demoralising character through the length and breadth of the land . Misery and starvation was not ca ! y the lot of the unemployed , but tfeere were , sorry was he to say , and ashamed the Gaverumsot oaght to be to give him cause for saying it—thousands , nay , tens of thousands , who had as much
work as they could possibly do—thousands there were : likewise who were actually overworked , bo much so : that their lives were no pleasure to them , having to be ' tied to one system of slavery and drudgery from Mon- day moraing till Saturday night , and in that same way from years end to years end , thongh they did ' . work in that manner , yet they could not earn enough to supply the cravings of hunger , cr cover their naked- ; ness . He could go into districts where there were . men who had never had a new suit of clothes daring . ' the whole period of their lives—familiea , out of whom j there were three or four workers , whose wages put ; together would not amount to more than ten Ehilliags . per week ; therefore , the misery , pDverty , and distress ' , of those people were sot caused by the want of
einployment , but , on the contrary , they wera worked too much , and eat too little , and wore too little : the real easse was their not bcicg half paid for -what they did do ; so that it was starvation , slavery , and hunger , ] when in work , and net much worse when out of -work ; ' bo much , then , for the fallacy of tiie Corn Law re- ' p ^ alers , ia ststing , that the Etarvatioa cad distress was caused by ths want of employment . The second ¦ proposition upon which he intended to treat was , the ' operation ef the Corn Lsws Thousands upon thou- sani 3 were in the greatest distress imaginable in \ ha year 1319 , and complained of the Corn Laws , and j assisted ia thsj agitation of their repeal Bat what , pirt did the maaofacturers take at that time . ' Did : they take the -working man by the hand and lain in the
cry for a big loaf ? ( Ko . ) But most of thnn called them disafftsct ^ ed and rebellions , and persecute . ! poor Hunt , sad massacred the people on the field of Peterloo . ( Hear , hear . ) "Oh , " said they , '" we c ^ a compete ¦ with the world . " But that , said Chappell , was in their days of prosperity— -when they ware caflding thsir stately mansions and splendid palaces ; that was When th ^ y were erecting their large factories and filling them with machinery ; that was -when they were adding hon « to house , and field to field ; that was when they could attend the race-course and gambling hells ; that ¦ was when the cotton manufacturers of Cheshire and Lancashire realised profits to the tone of £ 15 , 000 , » 00 in one year , the s * nnd of free trade was never heard from the months of the mushroom politicians -who are bow ahoutiBj ; so lustily against the Corn Laws . . Fre *
trade , in tie way the Plague were advocating , was one I of tke greatest humbugs that was ever brought before ' the public . Here the speaker contrasted the expences of the governments of those cointries , the national debts ( if any ) , the wages of the operatives , < fcc , against i ¦ which this country had to compete ; and sines tiiey had ' tlie same opportunity to manufacture , and could work j their mills by water , and save tea pounds ont of every £ i 2 io « ., that ia , that the same power which would j cost £ 12 10 « - by steaa in England , wotdd only cost £ . 2 10 s , by -water , on the continent , or in Germany , Austria , RUKft , Of the United Stales of America . The , expenses « f freightage were less ; and the wages of the { operaSraB irer » a » t more than 2 * . S ± in many places ., Then , again , tbe QoTenaieat expeneas of America did i
not moaat to £ 20 , 000 per axnum , and the President , did not receive awe than £ 6 , 0 # 0 a year . Tee Queen of , England had for her disposal £ i ~» . 000 per annum , which to ai nmeb . as would pay ' the President of AmerKS for more than two hundred and fifty years , ' to say nothing of the local taxes , the State Church the : If Atioaal Debt , the Pension List , tie secret service ' money , and the paupers and pensioners , which had ts , be kept by the industrious people of G"eat Biitain . ( Hear , hear . ) Mr . Chappell said he w-u favourable to ires trade ; bat it was all hombug , so loi . » a * th-re ' was no reduction of the great saUriea sa i ^ csioos of the vagabonds and idlers , who f-M up-a the labour of others . He would have free trade with tb « - lords , dukes , and squaes—he would carry-
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ont the Scripture to the very letter— nwaely , " the labourer is worthy of his hire . " And h « that will not work ahould not eat . ( Chofcrs- ) Mr . CbAppell said he thought a great many of the free trade brawlers ¦ w ould not fall in with tint doctrine . The speaker then showed by figures , according to the authority of the repealers themselves , the small amount of the manufactured goods that were exported to foreign countries when put in comparison with what was consumed at home , and asked whether it would not be more prudent for ma free traders to encourage the home market by giving better wage * to the labouring classes , and enabling them to purchase and consume the goods He ( the speaker ) said , the present standard of what was
1 e&nsnmed in this country was no fair criterion to go by , | and argued that if the people had better wages , nearly i double the quantity would be called for . ( Hear , hear . ) > He then asked his hearers how many chin < z dresses I their wives had had since they were married ? he i weald be boand there were none in his presence whose j wives had worn even one since they were married , and i they were the very goods which paid best the work-| man , the Government , and the shopkeeper . The ganibj ling and speculating propensities of the cotton lords , . and their competition with each ethea caused them to : pnt more machinery into wort than was required , and i the C 0 DseQUPnc 6 was that they glutted bath the foreign I market , threw thousands of people out of employment , ! and ruined the home market , ; hence it was when tht-y saw the gulph into -which they had fallen , that
; ¦ : ' : ; j | they raised tLe cry of repeal of the Corn Laws . There j were now power to the amount of one hundred million . ( These powers which lay dormant , which could at any ; moment be brought into requisition , if there should | be a greater demand for goeds . Then again . machinery was being improved every week , both . I at home and abroad . Then who would say that if the ' : cotton masters to-morrow were to have orders for a ! l the goods thty could make for the next month , that ¦ they . wonld not use every effort to bring all the rcachineVy they could into play , to save manual labour , ' and deprive the working classes of any benefit Mr . ; Chappell then fully entered into the subject of the Re-; peal of the Corn Laws , and exploded the fallacies ¦ which have been so impudently put forward by the ! exporting manufacturers . He was for the Repeal of the
! ' ' i ! \ i i ; j , \ \ i Corn Laws when there was some guarantee for the j working classes receiving the benefit of fuch repeal . \ At the present time , even admitting that the tax upon i each man was Sd . per week , which V ? 43 as hi ^ h as it , could be , allo-wing each man to eat 2 s . v-. orth p ^ r Week , ; what benefit would the -working classes receive if the | masters took two shillings from their wages , as they j ' had done a ghort time back ? ( Hear , hear . ) Cheap bread uieaut cheap labour . Earl FUzwilliani , Munts , Yilliers , Greg , and others of the most respectable ad-: voeates of repeal , declared that the real objeet of repeal j was to reduce wages to enable them to compete with i foreigners . He contended , therefore , that the repeal i of tke Corn Laws would not be a panacea for the i evils which afflict the working classes . Having ex-; pressed himself upon that part of his subject , he would
say a word or two in refereEce to those Malthusian rascals who prate about our population . All he had to say about that , there was plenty of everything both to eat and to drink for double the number yet in existence ; the warehouses and shops were full of clothingtha granaries were full of corn ; there are pknty of hats , shoes , coats , ic ., only they were not come-at-able , and when there was any danger to be anticipated from over-population . If he could rule , he would send those who had fed themselves fat out of other people ' s earnings to the bastiles . He would send all those who were too lazy to work there ; and these who had robbed the people of their lar . d and prevented it from being cultivated for the sustenance and comfort of God's sons and daughters , for whom it was Bent . He would likewise send all the advocates of the Malthnsian doctrine and
let them taste the sweets of a bastile , by having their food weighed to them—by being sbnt up and installed like felons—by being parted from their ¦ wives , —and when they had been there a considerable time lie would go to them and ask them whether they liked the system ? He would be bound , their zeal would be a little cooled i they would be of a different opinion , and their language would be , " Let all the iand be properly cultivated ; let all the appliances possible be put in full force ,- let there be a proper and equitable distribution of wealth ; let all means ba tried to produce enough of food and clothing , and let it be fairly and justly dealt out" And then if they found there was not enough for every human being in existence , then , and not till then , would , it be time to think about bastiles , or disturb thtir brains about over-pepulation . ( Hear , hear . )
Then there was his last proposition—namely , machinery , Some said that machinery was one of the greatest curses ; while others , who did not extend their view so far , said it was the only evil . As it was at the present applied , instead of ita being a benefit to the working classes , he would rank it as one of their greate-st enemies ; bat , under a proper system © f society , it might be turned to a blessing . Oa that point , he trusted he need not Eay much among a manufacturing audience . Machinery was tupplanting manual labour and sending the people into the streets to starve , banishing thousands to seek refuge in a distant country , reducing the wages of th ? operatives , who are employed , consequently bringing misery and starvation to thousands of families , taking or rather preventing the money from coming to the shopkeepers'till , and in proportion as trade demand and exoorts increase in tb . e same ratio ,
have the wages of the operatives decreased ? It had injured cottage property , and he 3 ides doing many other things alike iDJurio : is to the nation . It had put it out of tJ ~ e pjwer of the labouring classes to purchase taxable articlas ; and it had caused the Chancellor of the Exchequer , to find that there was s screw loose . He had touched upon the four pool ' s which many say was the cause of the distress prevailing in Great Britain ; and , he thought , he need not take up much time to prove that they were only effects which sprung from class legislation . The argument lay in a nut shell . There is as plenty of food and clothing , and work too , if every one did his share ; but in the present strange anomaly of thing 3 many were worked nearly to death , while others were wholly idle , and it would do them more good than the physicians were they compelled to work .
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From the London Gazette of Friday , June 25 . BANKRUPTS . George Aldred , Southampton-row , Bloonisbury , bookseller , to surrender July 2 , at eleven , Aug . 6 , at twelve , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Basinghall-street . Solicitor , Mr . Bridger , Fir . sbury-cireus ; official assignee , Mr Cannan , Finsbury-square . Joan Shury and James Shury , Ch 3 rter-house-street , engravers , J uly G , at one , Aug . 6 , at two , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Basinghall-slreet Solicitor , ) lr . Lloyd , Cheapside ; official assignee , Mr . Whitmore , Basinghall-street . Martin Hyppolite Bellemoise , Pomroy-street , O 1 J Kent-road , mannfactariEg chemist , July 1 , at one , Aug . 6 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Basinghall-street . Solicitors , Messrs . Willoughby and Jaqnes , Clifford ' s Inn ; official assignee , Mr . Green , Aldermanbury .
William Mead and Jacob Stower , Thorney , Somersetshire , merchants , July 8 , Aug . 6 , at eleven , at the Langpor t Arms Inn , Lang-port . Solicitors , Messrs . Stone and Symonda , Dorchester ; an £ Mr . Stone , Chancery-Lane , John Wrigglesworth , Leeds , che » 39 factor , Jnly 7 , at ten , Aug . 6 , at two , at the Comniissioners" Ivjuiiis , Leeds . Solicitors , Mr . HeaLl , and Messrs . Dunning and Stawman , Leeds ; and Mesas . Bell , Bi&iiitk , and Bell , Bow Churchyard . Maria Louisa Jones , Tredegar , Monmouthshire , victualler , July 8 , Aug . 6 , at eleven , at the Westgata Hotel , Newport . Solicitors , Messrs . Simpson and Moor , Furnival ' s Inn ; and Messrs . Morgan and Batt , Abergavenny .
Henry Sidebotham and Thomas Lewis , Manchester , cotton-manufacturere , July 10 . Aug . 6 , at ten , at the Commissioners' Rooms , Manchester . Solicitors , Messrs . Walmsley , Keightley , and Parkin , Chancery-lane ; and Messrs . Hmnphrys , Cualiffes , Charlewood , and Bury , Manchester . John Parker , Manchester , cotton-spinner , Jnly 15 , Aug . 6 , at two , at the Commissioners' Rooms , Manchester . Sohcitors , Mr . Smith , Chancery-lane j and Messrs . Shuttleworth , Holgate , and Roberts , Roehdale . ' Benton Dawes , Asbby-Qe-la-Zauch , grocer , Jnly 6 , Aug . 6 , &t twelve , at the King ' s Head Hotel , Laughborough . Solicitors , Messrs . Fisher and Sherwin , and Mr . Dews , Asbby-de-la-Zouch ; and Messrs Parker , Taylor , &ad Rooke , Rayniond-builaicgs , Gray ' s Inn .
John Calverley , Knaresboroueb , corn-miller , July 6 , Ang . 6 , at eleven , at the Guildhall , Yerk . Solicitors , Mr . Fiddey , Paper-buildings , Temple ; and Mr . Richardson , Harrogate .
dissolutions or partnership . T . Tickers and W . Senior , Shaw , Lancashire , wheelwrights . J . Ainaworth , J . Schofield , and J . Stanley , Oldham , Lancashire , coal-miners ; as far as records J . Ainsworth . J . Greenwood and J . Smaliey , Chorley , Lancashire , corn miller * . H . Snulley and W . Carus , Blackburn , Lancashire , grocers .
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From Vie Gazette of Tuesday , June 29 . baskscpis . TaoaM CoffinBon , boa . fc-baiiaer , "WaJrefield , to surrender July 10 , at twelve , and Aug . 19 , at te » , at the CommiMioners' -rooms , Leeds- Solicitors , Adlingtoa , Faulkner , and Folltt , Bedford-row , London ; Wilby , Wakeficld . Thomas Snowden , grocer , North Shields . Northumberland , July 23 , at eleven , and August 18 , at two , at the Bankrupt Commission-room , Newcastle upon-Tyne . Sclicitorg , Muans , Fencburcb-buildingj , London ; Medcaif , Xorth Seields ; Silmon , South Shields . Charles Batt , merchant , Somerton , Somersetshire , July 14 , and Aug . 10 , at twelve , at the Swan Inn , Wells , Somersetshire . Solicitors , Yenning , Naylor , and Rjbins , Tokenhouse-yard , London ; Chitty , Shaftesbnrr .
Luke P&lfreyman , scrivener , Sheffield , July 2 , and Aug . 10 , at tffeiva , at the To ^ n Hall , Sheffield . Solicitors , Tdttersuall , Great St . James ' s-street , Bedford-row , London ; Smith , or Hoole and Marples , Sheffield-
To Schooximastexts, Tradesmen, And Others.
TO SCHOOXiMASTEXtS , TRADESMEN , AND OTHERS .
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o THE NORTHERN STAR . \ ' [ ' .. ¦ ¦¦ ' ; " " / : "" - " "'" ''
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), July 3, 1841, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct713/page/2/
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