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Ctmrtfet 3Eittnttscttc? : i * THE NORTHERN! STAB I ¦
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( Or sent free io the moBt remote parts of the Kingdom , In a sealed envelope , on the receipt of a post-office order for 3 s Gd . )
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tion to ; him . the remainder of his existence , by afflicting his inaboent but uafortunate offspring with the evil eruptions of the malignant tendency , and a variety of other complaints , that are most assuredly introduced by the same neglebt and imprudence .
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O GRIMSHAW and Co . 10 , Gore © Piazzas , Liverpool , are the sole Agents for Second Cabin and Steerage Passengers by the "OLD "; or "BLACK BALL" Line of Packet ShipB , from Liverpool for New York , sailing punctually on the 7 th and 19 th of each Month ; they have also other first-rate American Ships for New York , on the 1 st , I 3 th , or 25 th of each month , and occasionally to PHILADELPHIA , BOSTON , BALTIMORE , and NEW ORLEANS . TO QUEBEC AND NEW SOUTH WALES . Applications , personally or by letter , will be promptly attended to , and the lowest rates and every information given .
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Just Published , price zs . 6 d ., and sent free , "enclosed 1 in a sealed envelope , " on receipt of a Post-office Order ( for 3 s . 6 d . M ANLY VIGOUR : a Popular Inquiry into the CONCEALED CAUSES of its PREMATURE DECLINE ; with Instructiotts for its COMPLETE RESTORATION , addressed to those suffering from the Destructive Consequences of Excessive indulgence in ] Solitary and Delusive Habits , Youthful Imprudence , or Infection including a comprohensiTe Dissertation on Marriage , with directions for the removal of Disqualifications , and Remarks on the Treatment of Ghonorrhoe , Gleet , Stricture and Syphilis . Illustrated with Cases , &o .
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Just Published * the 12 th Edition , Price 4 s ., and sent Free to any part of tho United Kingdom on the receipt or" a Post Office Order , for 5 s .
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THE BEST MEDICINE IN THE WORLD !!!
Ctmrtfet 3eittnttscttc? : I * The Northern! Stab I ¦
Ctmrtfet 3 Eittnttscttc ? : i * THE NORTHERN ! STAB I ¦
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DUBLIN . —The lAh TTeiversal Suffrage Association Jala tbeir vmal vreekly meeting at their gnat joomv 2 fo . 14 , North Anne Street , at sx o * ck > & on gnnflsylMt . Mr . Eenry < JIsri wss called to thesehslr . The Cw MRV a-5 begged leave to remaik , before the regular cosiness of the meeting commenced , that owing to some srregiiiKiiy a 5 fi » ik * t-Gffiee , or mrnsnal deUy of tbe iiveipool naH , the ISorOem Stor , which should have been delivered to Mr- 3 ) jott * S eight tftfoek last rognt , oia Sot arrive tin eleven * o'clock fliat morning ; and even aien tbe letter earners did not -deliver the j > arcd , alleging as a reason th&iit -was too btavy . Perhaps Sir . GodIy , 1 Sie Scotch gentleman , -who acts as secretary iere , gave direeSens not to deliver any more newspapers .: XEowbtbt , as application to the Post 2 iaater General " can , and 3 K > doubt ' ¦ 311 be made ; and in the event cf setfing » o redrest In that fl . narier the
snb-} e& can be tronght 'belore Parliament ( Hear , hear ) Jt -sraa advertised in three of the Dublin papers , on Saturday , that the Horthem Star vonld contain the correspondence between Mr . O'Bi ? Kins and Itsrf Etiot , which * ss pnoHshed ia the ^ < iiil 5 Freeman ' s Journal , vt Thursday , the 2 Otb , fcnt mppressed by &U the wifely papers , least , the conniry people should Bee it , and see in it that the tQb calumny circulated and repeated over and over again , oy thepicus Liberator and his followers , iraa nnfonnfled . They -would see that Hr . O'HIggTn « was sot an Orangeman , although this piona old gentleman , "who goes to Westland chapel every morning , had given eurrenev to the slander , and never yet 3 nideth 9 least atonement for It There was an immeEsa cro-tpd about Mr . Hyott * house at eight o ' clock J $ st light , some of -whom jnld thai sooner than not get the paper they-wonld gire a ahilliBg for it . He hoped that their * "Rrglbih Chartist ^ brethren wonld send lbs paper containing this admirable correspondence to every part « f Ireland . ( Hear , lieu . )
Hx . Dtoti read the inles and opjectB of the last day ' s proceedings "which "were confirmed . Mr . 0 H 1 GG 13 S said that he had seTeral letters to lead , "wbitfe hs trassaxe "wonld be Tery gratifying to ihs anfip-tf-ng , -one « f v £ cb -was fiom an 7 r ? - * hTian who resided in "Bristol , and wiHi -whose admirable and truly patriotic ratings the leaders of the Northern Star -were long familiar . "Who was it-Qai&ia not read with pleasure aid profit the letters in the Slar , signed alternately "TeritaB" and "W . H . Clifton "—{ hear , hear ) . The reading of these letters in the Star were a source of grea £ gratification totem , and Tie deiivBd eonsidisakle information from them . Sir . Clifton is an Irishman , and it mil be gratcfnl to his Iriih heart to learn in his temporary exile the . genuine -warmth -with which his same has bees hailed by his countrymen assembled hers today , ilr . O'Higgins read Mr . Clif ton ' s letter , -which was londly cheered , sad condnded by moving his
ad-Mi . Saos Tobis seconded the motion , and said that as an Irishman , he -was prond of Mr . Clifton . It * vsb pleasing toaee how men of talent and integrity rallied ronnd the standard of real political liberty , in Trfflanrt , Chartism —( cheers ) . There is so liberty except in the Charter—( hear , hear ) . Where does the poor >;*««>«» - tthcw 3 in 3 tlie least Itope © I redress for his manifold -wrongs and grievances bnt in the Charter alone ? The Charter 5 s the poor man ' s mainstay—his last plank —his only hope . 2 * 1 us hut -get it , and every blessing ¦ will follow—( cheers ) . Hbttm proud of having had the oppartnnity of seconding the admission of ilr . dif ion —jhcsr , hear ) .
Mr . O'Higgirs had . the pleasure of proposing Me . ChriBtophEr Bynie , a znbtantial and -wealtky fanner , for admission . He had some dealings " with Mr . Sytne s few days since , when he expressed a -wish to be informed a little upon Chartism . He had heard so much said against it that he was fery anxious to know ff » Tnpwinvg oj Jt . JSomB people told him & •* .+. the ChartiBtB -were % set of nnprmdpled men -who had eomiined together for the purpose of depriving other people of their property , © Terthrowiiig religion entirely ,
and annihilating the ftftholiti religion—{ hear , hear ) . Be ( ilt O * H . ) explained the real principles and objects of Chartism , to which Mr . Byrne replied , ** Well then upon my conscience ,, I barre jbeen a CJiartist all aty li te , aou ^ h 1 dbtbt knew it "before—lhear T hear ) . Propose ibb at yonr sexl meeting , and send me my card by post I win ahew it at the chapel next Sunday , and maybe 70 a wont have Chartists enough from the county of "Witklow in a short time . " Here is a eonTert for yon . yf »» CT tmn ^ ^ m kTmiH Tvn ^ o J > le » ty <* f ihfim . T nT * tl Will prerailatlast .
ttz . Ebmtxd Boitsks seeonded the moton ; He look that opportanSy of ataUng that some time ago when he ioojdred ^ fbr these zooms hs was told by a manof the iiaiM efJiieUy , a Datter factor , net to come in here ; that yon "wer * all Orangemen—( hear)—that this was an Orange lodge .. There is alao s man of tiie nameofSeiry , a porter in the linen Hall , who has often told persons eoming iere to take care and not ester this place , as yon "were all OraBgemen ; and that Mr . OConnell aaid that yon -were to get so much a bead for all you could betray—{ hear , hear } , Now it is ¦ TEry probable that this Keary is in the pay of the Corn Sxehasge , or else what interest ^ rosld ha hare in thus telBng lies ? tEbsre is also aaort ofhedge-schoslinastes 3 b the nejgbbonrhood , whose name , I thmk , is Ksmnsgh , and "who also turns people sway from this place by telling 3 ie » abont yon . There -were some- KilfliraEienhsa a tew ^ ay » ago , and while -waifew In
lbs street to get in wnh their cars , some three or four fellows came out-of iBaig ' s , tts ahoeznalcezs , ** rui told these poor men to tike cue of themselves , as they vere going into the house of -ora of the bloodiest Orangemen in DnMin— ( shame ; rtame ) . It is true -wkatl ^ ay —{ hear . hear ) . The King ' s are religious men ; and ! therefore hope that they : aw not imlty of the ¦ worst of crimes , belieing , backbiting and-rilifjing tteir seighbosra . As far Bielly ; and his « m , and Keary , the linen HaB porter , and KaTsnagh , the schoolmast » . they axe too ^ nasst , too selfish , aid too Stupid to be heldrespnTnoblflforaayadngtheysaj ; yet tbej doa jreat d £ al of harm . They go about to barbers shops to erenlate thsir wJumnies j but God is jnst , and he Trfil protect the innocent j their poisoned shafts will all recoil upon Jtheajselyes . Indeed they are not so mneh to blante as those who employ tTirnn . SLr . Bjxne * a » admitted .
Mr O'Higgibs moTed and Mr . Bafxkb jeoonded JJie admisBion of 2 ix . John Bdward Hounds . Mr . Rousds "roee and aaid that he felfrery prond and rery thankful for the kkid manner with which he was admitted a member of the ' jLsabdatien . He had been an attenHre obserrer of their proceedings during Hie last twelye months , and it waa sot till -after the most BHtfrrm congifteratios that he had made lip his mind to join their ranks , like many others he was lead to believe that the Association was snlavf ol ; bnt lie knewl > y . ezperleace that this -was false . WhenJJie "Whigs were si power erery effort was made to cn&i them 5 they T » ere called Tories , rand sow , -srbes the Tories are injpower ^ " ^ i ^ rHiwtigjtftptr ingenni ^ r to put them down , they are still called Tories . Mr . O Connell had stated repfcaiedlythst this-was a secret socaetj ; that you -were ioimd together iy unlawful oaths . Ifow , he q&x . Bounds ) was a Protestant , and Daniel O'Connellis
a Catholic ; and had he iMr . Boundi ] said of sny other aodcty < s indmduala half -what Mr . O'Connell had r A ^ of this society and some cf it » menibers persocally lie should fed hound to make resfiraiion ; bui perhaps Mr . OConnell his a carte iUatchs irom his pnr&te Chaplain tobeHe , vilify , and calumniate the members of this Association . He { Mx . Bounds ) admired the Catholic UeHgion for one of Us practices , which ia that ttf making r 6 sutution ; and this subject was often spoken of amongst his friends "with respect and admiration ; hut ¦ W hen they looked span O'Canneirs public conduct ; bis Tfle calumnies against ail who vonld not join Mai in his fieTions political wandezingn , he and his Mends arriTtd at the conclusion that this admirable system of restitution "was only made to apply to the poor ; the rich and the great "were evidently exempt from its wholesome operation . At all events Hi . O'ConneD is exempt from it Perhaps he is * o on the principle of British law , ** that the "K ^ ng can do so wrong . " { Hear , hear , and
cheers . ) 23 t O'Higgxss rose and add tbat he had waited £ 31 ibr a for the purpose of Ixang enlightened by two influential members of the Bepeftl Association , who had ¦ K ^ gmftpfl -thPTT-foit ^ pEipn nf coming to the meeting that day , andwhb-nnoertook to prove that Jdr . O'Connell ¦ was taking tke wieert , most prudent , and most effsctxre means to enact an immediate repeal of the Union ; and that tike jc"lli « 5 ina of *^ i «« large xassa vf money , as Bepeal rent , and thBipprojaafcHoa of it , afForded ample proof of the patnoSsm , fi » wisdom , snS the mtegrity of Paniel OComnell , and those -who acted with him . He IMr . XJ-Higgms ) regretted the abBenee of those en » irhtPT > pft ^ nembers « f the Bepeal Association . He « fEsred very widely from them . Had they come the
fiMcnssicjn wouldhavebeen carried onsood . humonredJv - there would have been no angry feeling , no personal ajunusnty . us abase *> r * It « rpers * ian , l > nt a fair asd ht » DOurable ^ i&eozsion npon qat ^ UmB © i poonc note lieu , t&ar , heat ) He had no bad ^ eeW towards Mr-OGtmnell ; onthecon . trary , he . wishedijTaaioMlife and e-rery happinesa that flus world can afford . He admitted that Mi O-Connell -was the greatax lawyer ol the aite—the greatest orator ef foe age—the mort elogu&-t mm of the age : . so powerlnl was the infinence of that eloquence , aat he iMt O"H-3 -would not blame « ny iDan for Iseing lBd astey by at . He a&nltted his
greseand uuparajlfled popnlariqf— - he admitted that he lad at one period , from 1830 to 1 S 34 inclusive , three kinedoEis at his back . He admitted that from 1834-tni 1839 niafrie ds the "Whigshad commanding msjaniies in &e House ef Commons . But with all this legal knowledge ; with all this eloquence ; with all this popularity ; with his irSends in power , to whom he repeatedly " ? 6 ted the-eternal grstirBflt ) ol the Irish nation , Trtat < 5 d na « ver Co , OT propose to do , in bis place inPariiaaenVfwibeXreQefit of his country ? It may le said tiit tie Tory House of JjordswoaM thwart his measures- but sorely a man , -with three kingdoms at hislttk , ihonW cave had the moral ccurare to have
proposed scmethisg or other . VVBat did he do ? Nothipj ;? Then as cetiid nothing ol what nse . -was he in 3 > ariiament ? He did a great deal . Ee soid the ccnDty Dablin to a ncn-Bepealer for r plaeB for his £ on-ialaw , Cbiistcpta yitaimoiL . He sold the county 23 eathto a nnnrBepealerlor a place for his son , Mr . Morgan O'CcnnelL He scld the county ~ Kerry to a ro » -Kepealer lor a plaes for has «> n 3 n-la- » , ' ZAx . Ghcrles CConnelL He *>!
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right of Women to the / franeblie ^ toe ' C&artfsts as a body did not go for the eiiensi 6 n of the ' Bufl&age to the ladies , rHe CMr . D . ) thought blm » eU , aid had nofiesl . UUqn in avowingaa opinion long held ,, and not now for 4 iie first time put forward , that whatever show of reason there might be for witbholohig the vots from the feme cowrf , there was none forkeeplngitfrom / eOT « 5 o /< r .-bathe never wpnld j ; b thelength ofasserting that females aZpnc should form the . electoral privilege . He was no favourer of Gyneocracy , or petticoat government ( hear and laughter ) . That would be as unjust aa the ystem that would shut cat toe political influence of women altogether . Bat what would they say to the fact , that Mr . Q : Connellr who had so often fallen oat with , the phrase " Universal' Suffrage , " which be
ecoffed at because he would have it that the words included the fair sex , after exhausting the fertility of his prolific ingenuity—after rambling through " Complete , ' Manhood / Household , ' and a dozen other suffrages , had at last come t » the conclusion thai none bid women should possess the franchise—( Oh , oh ) . They might smile and cry Oh , " but the fact was substantially so . Mr . . O'Connell had declared that , co-eval with the Repeal of the Union , it would be made constitutional in Ireland that all married men should vote—( hear , hear ) . And had further declared that no idle and unwed goroons should havo the privilege—( hear , Thus it -would be necessary to be bound in the fetters of matrimony before a man could shake off his political chains , and the entrance to the Temple of Liberty
would he through the porch of Hymen—( hear , bear , and loud laughter ) . Yes , my bachelor friends , a Repeal of the Union will settle your hash —( loud laughter ) for no man « an vote , says this Governor of the Catbolis Emigration Society , unless he has a wife . Now Emigration presupposes a surplus population ; and yet here Is a bonus held out to induce early and improvident marches , and to stock the country with hosts of little existences lor whom there is nothing but starvation and misery provided—( hear ) . He ( Mr . D . ) would not go into all the bearings of thia ridiculous proposition now , because he intended to bring forward a specific motion on the subject , on Sunday evening . He need scarcely advert to the injustice of excluding the bachelor who , if he did not produce consumers , which
unfortunately were too numerous , at least produced provisions and commodities necessary and useful to his fellow beloga ; besides paying his just proportion of the taxation of the country . In fact this poposition was as complete a blunder as the " manhood" suffrage out ol -which they had so completely bautered Dan , that he now never dared , to mention the word—( hear ) . This new verbal bantling would likewisefall still-born from his lips ; for it was impossible any people , however prone to nasiductiou , could stand the attempt to transfer all poll * tical power to the wives of men , many of whom supposed their partners already exercised too much dominion . They all recollected the laughable ease put by Franklin regarding the jackass , out of which the man voted , to whem Neddy afforded a forty shilling beneficial interest The doctor asked ] when Neddy died , and the vote died with him , was it not clear that the vote appertained to the ass and not to the man —( hear and a laugh ) . Well , how stood the sapient proposition of Daniel the
profound ? Why when the wife died , the husband lost bis vote : freedom was buried in her grave . Who then substantially would possess political power under this new regulation ? j the -women and they alone —( hear , hear ) . Now he ( Mr . D . ) was just gallant enough to share this power with them , but he would not consent to transfer all to them— " he that gives all gives none , " was an old saying- —( laughter ) . He therefore gave notice that be would next Sunday bring forward a resolution , protesting on the part ef that association , against the proposal of Mr . : O'Connell , and declaratory of the natural and inalienable right of every male aged twentyone years , being ; of sound mind and unconvicted of felonious offences against the laws of bis country , to the possession of tbe electoral franchise—( hear ) that was the well-considered declaration of the first item in their political creed , and they would not part with it easily , even at the request of Mr . O Connell himself . Mr . D . sat down amid loud cheers .
Mr . George Maxsden was admitted » member , after which Mr . Rafter rwas called to the cbair , and the cordial thanks of the meeting -were given by acclamation to Mr . Clark for his gentlemanly conduct in the chair and his untiring zasl in the cause of real political freedom . The meeting separated one and all crying out against Houshold Suffrage , Wife Suffrage . Manhood or any other Suffrage short of Universal Suffrage .
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pealerin his place . He Bold Dungarvon f or a pbee for his son-in-law , French . He got "Whig places } for six of his nephews ; and , at the election of 1837 , signed a ' placard , stating that ^ the ' man , who shouldj > ut any other pledge to the candidates than that of supporting tbe Melbourne Administration most , he in the pay of tbe Tories ; that the man who should name Repeal must be a Tory or in ^ Torypay . Tithes were then to be adjusted ., not abolished ; and the Whig ad juatment was a tithe rent charge . He ' supported the Whigs through thJck and thin . He stood , before ; the Trades political Union in the Arena in Abbey-street as the GoTernmerit candidate , ^ threatening witti loss of place every inf ortrmateclerk in office who should dare to Tote against the Government : Daniel OtJannell , thus putting
fee very worst of Tory practices , ( corruption and perjury ) into active operation . The late Major Sirr was © bilged to go to the hustings upon frh > occasion , and declare before God and his country , that Dwriel Q ^ Connell represented his politics and interests in ; Parliament tetter UisnaisHory opponent . Difl any believe thai ? no net one . This-was very pleasing to those who took a stort-sichted view of the subject , but to ma at any rate it ttas thoroughly dismasting ; so much so , that I refused -to vote for Mr . O"Connell , and expressed , publicly * expreEfed , my disgust at and abhorrence of his conduct Why did he support Whigs ? Was it because they passed , the English Poor law Amendment Aci ? Was it because they declared that ' they -would prefer a civil ¦ war -with all its horrors to a Repeal of the Union ? Was
it because they passed the Irish Coercion Act ? Was it because they passed the Rural Police Act which gives the most despotic power , to the Lord lieutenant for the . timebeing' Was it because they passed the Irish Municipal Reform BUI , and helped to degrade the great leader of the opposition to support tithes and ministers ' money , by enateing him to sit as Lord Mayor , and actually disfranchise those who followed his advice by refusing to pay the unkolyimpost ? Wbat a picture of political infamy -was O'Connell , dressed out in all the gswgaws of civic chief magistrate , striking off the Burgess roll « very nan who had followed his advice by refusing to pay minister ' s money ! be who a short time before niBed his hands to heaven—•• Here now , ia the axe / at presence of that GvZwho is tojvdot mt ' i an& Wore
mp assembled cotmttymm , I vow never to pay one Jarthing of lilhe , jar ministers' pixmey . '' Here was a vow registered in heareal And t&vst thi , the same man swore to disfranchise , and did disfranchise , all his fellow chillis who adhered to their oath . ' jThere is a sample ol Whiggeij for you . Was it because the Wbigs passed all those bass laws , that Mr . O'Csuceii gave them his indiscriminate support ? No ; but because he sold himself to them for pelf and ephemeral power , as Caspar sold himself to the foul fiend in the Wolfe ' s Glen , and from whose dutches he -would have had no moro chance of escaping than the ill-fated Caspar , had not the Chartists turned out the perfidious WhlgS and Ihns saved the "liberator * from political damnation—( treat cheering ) . It is now a long tiae since he ( Mr .
O"H . ) had told his countrymen that Mr . O'Connell was not a Repealer—that he did not desire the Repeal —that the object of the Repeal Association is the restoration of the Whigs to power . Had they been In power we should not have heard one word of the Irish Anns' Bin . it would have passed snugly and quietly as it did when they were in power . O it is a mighty fine thing to get a man ' s throat cut by a friend . " Take away public liberty bit by bit » say the Whigs . " We are your masters , and will ^ remain so as long as we can , " say the Tories . The difference between Whig and Tory is just this . Wnenj the de-ril puts on a smiling face , Presses like a . gentleman , bides kls tall in his breeches pocket , his cloven foot in a wbU ma «? e boot ; tells the unwary that he 1 st their real
friend , invites them to dinner and champaigne ; gets them into his cratches , and secures them , he i s then a Whig : but when he stands up boldly and tells you he has cheated and oppressed you , and -will continue to do so as long as he can , and appears before you openly with his cloven foot , cecked horns , ; red wide mouth , barbed tail painted sky blue , and a fork in his dexter paw , than he is a Tory ; and he who -will trust either Whig or Tory will be equally deceived , and deserves . ¦ > deceived . ( Great cheering . ) The Irish people are deceived , doped , and plundered ^ by both . Whig and Tory . She press baa joined ithe two accursed factions to make sport of the people for their mutual advantage . The Catholic clergy , formerly the polar stars of the people , their friends and guides
thrcugh « very difficulty , are now misled as well as the poorest individual . Sat their eyes -will soon be opened . Let them but look at the official report of the Corn Exchange , signed Thomas M . Ray ; and if that doss not open their political eyes and let in the light , the Almighty is blinding them for his own wise purposes . Here is the official repert ; read it ; see how your Repeal money has been appropriated— £ 10 , 000 of it given to the enemies of Repeal . Thia money—this money , I say , will surely « bedivil yonr darlint " : } £ 10 , 000 Repeal rent regularly handed over to Wellington and Peel } Good secant ? to keep the peace , and help to send over more troops to Ireland 1 Daniel , you are the "darfinf i it is yourself that knows how to save your own bacon , and cheat your supporters , priests , bishops ,
. laymen , and all , even your friend , the jfrchbishop of Tram ! Daniel , " a vie , " yon told tte people at Gal way and at Cork , and other places too , that you would cripple the Tory Government , by causing the funds to become almost -valueless . It is clear , then , that yon know how to do it ; and equally clear that you have Vested' £ 10 . Rapes ! rent in the very funds which you intend shall become valueless , in the event of that QoTenuaent , to whom yon have given the money , refusing to' concede your darling object , tbe Repeal ! You may aayi by way of excuse , and in order to deceive those who do not understand the nature of investing money in Government securities , that you can get the money back ; but this is not true . The money can never be got back from the enemies of Repeal . They had a b * d stock of old -goods on hand , £ 10 , 000 " s worth of which yon took off
their hands . This bad stock must always remain out : some-one most take it off your : hands ; but not the enemies of Repeal , the Tory Government , to whom yon have given the money . The case stands simply thus : —A has cheated B « ut of an estate . ! B collects as much money from his friends and supporters , { some of -whom axe the tenants of A ) aa ha considers necessary to insure success in a court of law ; but finding that his proceedicgB have embarrassed his opponent A . he gives him two-thirds of tb . 9 money npon his own security which he knows right well , will never be paid ; hut on the contrary will remain as a mortgage upon the shoulders of the very parties who subscribed the' money . "Daniel you are the darlint" Here is the ; official return , let every Chartist in the empire keep a copy of it Nothing can equal it for barefaced unhinging villany .
. Report from the official organ of the Coin Exchange : — Idx , O'Connell begged to make the following report : ; " loyalNational Repeal Association , Com Exchange rooms . " 3842 . 25 th July , 1 S 43 . " Received from 5 ih April to 4 th July inclusive 999 3 7 " 1843 . " Received from 4 th April to 3 rd July inclusive „ . 15 . 798 11 3
" Increase on the quarter £ 14 . 799 1 8 " By order , " T . M . Rat , Secretary . " On Saturday next £ 10 , 000 of that would be funded . He would hand the scrip to Mr . Ray lot £ 10 , 000 . " Is this the way to Sepeal the TJnion ? - "Well , -well ; for caol sheer rascality this stands nn-Tivalled . But "what has become of the remainder of tbe Repeal lent ? Is this the only acconnt the . pnblic shall have ? Where are the auditors of last year ; whom every body knows are whslly innocent of the leist par * tide of knowledge of an account current ? Will Lord Brougham be satisfied with this report of the quarter ' s Repeal revenue ? According to the official weekly annonoements of the sums recived at the Corn Exchange from the 11 th of April , 1842 , to tbe 5 th of Aprils 1 ^ 13 , distinguishing each quarter separately the sums received stand thus : —
1842 . £ s . d . Quarter ending 5 th July ... 999 9 7 Quarter ending 4 th October ... 3 , 763 11 10 ^ 1843 . Quarter ending 5 th . January ... 13-340 2 : 3 Quarter ending 4 th April ... io , l € 7 13 4 j
£ 33 , 870 17 1 The public should be fully satisfied aa to how this vast sum of money has been appropriated . Has Mr . Ray been handed scrip for this £ 33 870 17 s . Id . ? "i If so , just be so good as to let the public know the fact . Bnt add to this sum of £ 33 , 870 17 fl- Id- the balance of the last guariera * revenna not givaa aa yet to Peel and Wellington , £ 5 , 798 lie . Sd ., and we have a sum total kept in the hack ground amounting , according to -iheir own statements , to £ 39 , 669 8 s . M . What have -you done with all this money ? You have got a great deal of it from poor warm-hearted Catholic curates who perhaps deprived themselves of many a good meal in order to enable them to subscribe their dearly earned mite to the regeneration of their eonntry . Jt is a crying tin to cheat a peor curate . Perhaps it is all for their good . Bat when and how is tbe Union to be
repealed J He | Mr . O'Higgina ) would just say in conclusion , that he regretted very much the absence of his two learned and enlightened Repeal friends—{ hear , hear ) . ¦ Mr . Dtott said he regretted it had not fallen 1 to his lot to second the admissian of Mz . Oifton , { whose letters he had with singular pleasure perused in the Xorihem &ar . Such men as Mr . Clifton were an honour to Ireland , and calculated to raise the charactoi 01 irishman in the estimation of their English fellowsw > jacte . The notions of Mr . Clifton regarding liberty
r ?^ * roaa > ^ PKhensive , and nnfacHous—( hear)—he did not taut Ha gift * f freedom to a particular i 'S ^ z&ttzsi&x \ fSisaasffisaa jswes 1 SiSfii £ 4 T £ T ? y clans or section of the people ! i ^^ JSSSSR l ^ Sfi suDmlt- ( bear , htsr ; . He , Mr . D . ) did not know whether Mr . Ciifcon wciu as far as to ¦ dvSatfSa
Untitled Article
Thb mwber of cases decided by the Tribunal of Commerce of Paris , amounts to forty thousand annually . IN the Sheriffs Cotjbt last week , a verdict fo * the Crown for £ 3 . . la . 2 d . was obtained against Messrs . Candy and Dean , silk importers , f » r dntiea unpaid . The affair is one of the Custom-house frauds .
As iiiPLQiE ol the Parisian post-office , of rather high standing , haa been suddenly arrested ; the charge against him is said to be the having aided another individual in seducing a wife from her home ; and sheltering tbe guilty couple after tbe elopement . It is said that tbe bead of an eminent fancy goods firm in the City , lately exebequereti for participation in the Custom-houee frauds , has absconded after many futile attempts to obtain a compromise from the government , and for which he is said to have offered a very considerable sum .
Precocious Geniuses . —Filial Afpection . — Jim , how ' s your ma ;?"— " She's fat and strong—how ' s yours ?"—" Feeble enough . I've got so that I can lick her now , and have every thing my own way . You don't see me gam' errands , and doin' chores about home , like you used to ?"
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Aug. 5, 1843, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct813/page/2/
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