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LENE OF PACKET SHIPS. FOR NEW YORK. Jtmi^aJfc ^ ^
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LOCAL MARKETS.
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^m '^n $@ Ufozmtnt$.
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3Tf)* |£©n?£ntrugton |0obcmfnt.
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THE " REBECCA" MOVEMENT SOUTH WALES.
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THE NEW AGE, CONCORDIUM GAZETTE AND TEMPERANCE ADVOCATE. A
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Leeds :—Printed for the Proprietor, FEA.RQUS
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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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Monthly Journal of Human Physiology , Education , and Association . Printed at the Concordium Press , Ham Connnon , and Published the 1 st of every month , by J . Cleave , Shoe-lane . London—Price Twopence—of whom may be had " The Healihian , " stitched , containing fourteen numbers , price One Shilling . Contents of No . 10 , for tbe present Month : —On Association—The Truth on the Sabbath—On the Necessary Co-operation of both Sexes for Human Elevation—Concordium Reports—Effects of Cold WaterDrinking ^ -Frait Rooms—British and Foreign Society for the Promotion of Humanity and Abstinence from Animal Food—On Charity .
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SHIP CAPTAIN . TONS . TO SAIL . HENRY BLISS , Cummings , 7 0 * 5 th October FOR BOSTON . EUPHRASIA , . Buntin , 500 5 th October FOR NEW ORLEANS . ESPINDOLA , - Barstow , 700 10 th October ¦ Emigrants about to embark for the above ports , will find the accommodations on board tbese ships of a very superior description , in Cabin , Second Cabin , and Steerage . Families or parties desirous of being select , can bave separate rooms . A sufficient supply ef Biscuit , Fiour , Oatmeal , Rice , and Potatoes , are found by tbe ship ; and one shilling per day allowed each passenger , if detained , according to Act of Parliament . Apply to FITZHUGtt , WALKER and Co ., 12 , Goree Piazzas , Liverpool
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Just Published , Price Twopence , A LETTER TO FEARGUS O'CONNOR , ESQ ., Farmer and Barrister . By John Hdmpfbets Parry , of the Middle Temple , Barrister-at-Law , on the PLAN of ORGANIZATION issued by the Birmingham Conference , September , 1843 . London : H . Hetherington , 40 , Holywell-street , Strand ; and to be had of all Booksellers and News Agents .
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CHARTIST RE-ORGANIZATION . NO . 137 of the CHARTIST CIRCULAR contains a correct Re-priat from the Northern Star of the New Plan of Organization of the "National Charter Association , " adopted by the recent Conference . The Minutes of the Conference ( as furnished by the Secretary , Mr . R . T . Morrison ) . Correct List of Delegates , and of the places represented , See This number of the Circular contains twice its customary quantity of matter , and is printed in a beautifu lly clear and new Nonpariel Type . PRICE ONE PENNT ONLT ! !
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AMERICA . Liverpool , Satubdat . Mokhikg . —By the arrival ofl the Britannia Royal Mail steamer , Captain Hewitt , at this port , xim morning , -we have received Kew York papers to the loih , and Boston to the 16 th September , making the ~ royajje in eleven days and a half from Halifax , and twelve days and a half from Boston . ; The steamer Caledonia , which left iere on the 4 th September , armed at Ha li fax is twelve days . ' The Britannia has brought aboat thirty passengers . The following are extracts
brought by this wmveyance : — Ustted States . —In poUtica nothing new has occurred , except the meeting of a great political SSate Convention , held in the interior , which has t&entip Mi . Vaa Bu-ren as the candidate of th « ^ amocraey ,-and has instructed its delegates to supliwr t him is the National Convention . This cuts off -fia hope vfeterj other candidate bo fax as this State is concerned . In other respects the political iorizon presents the same aspect as when we last described it .
The yellow fever alarm has passed away , and no fnrther apprehensions are entertained . We have liad a wholesome change in the temperature of the -weather , which mu 3 t have an effect to stop the creation of the miasma . Business is reviving toan extent beyond onr hopes . Both in New York , Boston , and Philadelphia , it is admitted , there is much doing , and upon a basis ¦ whi ch is believed to be sound . The cotton crop of the South is defective . The wheat crop of the Xorth is most abunJant , There had been a disastrous accident on the Susquebannah Hail way , occasioned by the breaking of toe front axlefcree of the first passenger car , by which that and the two following cars were thrown off the rails . A considerable number of persons were seriously injured .
Forgeries to » very large amount have been committed at 2 s * ew Ynrk , bj which the banks had been defrauded by false cheques , of £ 29 , 000 , by a person named Henry Sannders , a youth of eighteen years only . He made an unsuccessful attempt to board fiie Great Western as Bhe left If ew York on her last Toyage , but missed her , and went to Albany and Boston . At the latter place he was taken after having taken his passage to New Orleans ; subsequently , about £ 25 . 000 of the money was recovered in the hands of Mr . and Mrs . R&ggi , in whose possession lie had confided it .
T-XTBAOBDINABT BlTBGLABY AXD RoBBEBT . —The extensive jewellery store of Messrs . E . and S . S . BockweH , of No . 9 , Astor-house , has been burglanonsly entered , and Talnable watches , silver , and jewellery , estimated at about twenty-five thonsand dollars , was stolen therefrom . All the elegant gold watches in the large case near the door were taken , and all the valuable diamonds , one of which was estimated at 1 ^ 200 doEars . Gold chains , diamond lings , and breast pins were removed , and a large quantity of silver , tea , and table spoons , were taken smofcg other valuables . It is strange that with such & Talnable stock of jewellery , no person was kept to sleep in the store ; but is still more strange , that such a robbery should take place in one of our most public thorougfares , and the rogues escape detection . They will quickly melt the" available gold and slver for immediate Jpnrposes , and retain the predons stones and other valuables until a chance to
send them for disposal to some European city . The Messrs . Rockwell cffer a reward of 500 dollars for the recovery of the property , which if extended to « s many thousands , wi ll probably be the means of restoring a large portion and arresting the thieves . Canada . —The "Wheat Crop am > IWbatheb . — We are iappy to hear from all parts of the-country around , the most favourable accounts of the wheat crop . Indeed , we have ample proofs of its being abundant in quantity and excellent in quality . We see daily arrivals in town of new wheat , and Borne lots have appeared in excellent dry condition , weighin as high as sixty-four pounds per bnshel . The millers report the yield of flour as being large and good . In the memory ef the oldest inhabitant there has not been known sc loog protracted a time of 3 ry harvesting weather . Merchantable wheat inonr market brings from 4 a . 3 d . to 6 s . 6 d . per bnshel . — Bylown Gazette .
Sraibfe B . I 0 H 56 has occurred on the Brantford easal , in Canada . The ringleaders have been arrested . In Miramichi , toe , at Chatham , New Brnns-¦ wick , there has been rioting , which 13 not yet suppressed , but only smothered by the exertions of the troops nnder Captain Grant . Ono or two lives are said , by the St . John ' s papers , to have been lost . It is right to add that that these riots are of a local , lather than » political character . The British schooner Arannah has been wrecked near Chaleur Bay , and seven liveslost . The steamer Adventnre , ninety-eight tons , arrived at Quebec from Toronto a few days since , being the first steamer that has ever ran down all the rapids , and made the whole voyage . The pardon of several Canadians , implicated in the insurrections of 2837— 38 , has created quite a sensation .
Sib Chabies METCAXFr , the Governor-General of Canada , has been visiting the Eastern t ownshipa . Be appears to have been warmly received by ihe population . Bastebx Fisheries . —A letter from Captain Stephens , the cammandtr of one of onr provincial revenue cnrisew , published in the last Acadian Recorder , states that the seal fishery oat ol llsrgaree , ChetteaHip , and Sydney , has been -rery successful during the present season ; a fleet of fourteen sail from these parts hsving returned from the ice with about 10 , 600 aealB . The mackerel fishery in the spring proved remarkably unsuccessful , not more than 5 CO barrels having been taken-where Tip-wards of 23 . 000 barrels were obtained last year . The summer herring , it is stated ,-have been pretty plenty about Tsrbay and the coast outvards . Prom the cod fishery only a limited supply may be expected .
The Iahrader fisheries promise welL The salmon fishery , in particular , has been very successful—upwards c ? 1 , 1 DO tierces having been already taken . The cumber of vessels that have passed through the Chambly CinaL , this season , up to the present date , amount to about one hundred , and of these only two have proceeded direet to New York without unloading at St . John ' s . Sawed timber and salt form the bulk t » f their cargoes . Texas . —The steamer Sarah Barnes arrived at 2 Jew Orleans from Gal-resion on the 26 th , with Gal-TeetOTi dates to the 22 d nit .
The Commissioners on the part of Mtxico aid Texas , respectively , are to meet at Loredo ! -one time during this month , and upon a satisfactory adjustment of the point 3 there to be discnssed being accomplished and ratified by the negotiating parties , Comn 3 ' srioners are to be appointed to settle all existing difficulties between the two countries , under the friendly mediation of Great Britain , France , and the "United States . Colonels Williams and Hockley are appointed Commissioners on the part of Texas . Ah a arawback to this , however , Santa Anna has stated to Elliott that *• he will not entertain any proposition having for its object the separation oi Texa .- from Mexieo . " This we should suppose -Would be proposition No . 1 , on the part of Texas .
Captain Elliott has made a formal requisition in ihe name of his Government for the restoration of 3 , 000 , 000 acres of land , designated on the old maps as Cameron ' s and Beale's grant—a grant from the Mexican Government to these parties . The plea of Texa .- for resisting the claim is , that it was cade -with the Mexican Government before the revolution , and that fhat government is alone responsible for its infringement . Commander Moore has been " dishonourably dismissed" from the Texan Navy . Texas is in a very disorganized state , The President , Houston , is Btateo Jo be Tery unpopular .
iJjxico . —A friend at Mexico wites as follow ? : — B "We jire on the eve of the elections , and I will beforehand announce to yon that Santa Anna mnst lose tbtm , and h * will have another congress to dissolve . The Yucatan Commissioners are not likely to come to terms wixh Santa Anna . Disturbances of a serious nature for the Government are , I think , to be feared in Tobasco . " A new theatre i 3 constructing in Mexico , to be called El Gran Teatro * de Sania Anna . The papera contain full descriptions of th 3 > magnificent edifice . It will be one of the *** *? V IEd most spltndid in the world . It will contain •_ » jo ? eats . Its ornaments , pillars , paintings , ana oi : cr decorations , are to be of the most gorgeous cnaracrer . There was no prospect of anv immediate arranj-ment of the existing difficulties between Mexiro and Yucatan .
Bti > O 3 A-rars .-The war between Buenos Ayres % v S'tJ ^ ? ***« BaDd * Oriental , of wr . ith Monte Yideo is the capital , still continued , j >*« ^ carried on sluggishly , as we infer from the fact . sat there had been very little fighting . A boLeua was i ^ ued at Monte Yideo . June 20 , annonncingthat President Kivera had gained 3 . victory OTeribBnenos Ayrean division of Colonel Flores , but the ( Buenos Ayrean ) British packet says the Tepofi . was without any good foundation . Mo > tb Yn > EO .-The Monte Yideo Government was endeavouring to obtain * loan of 500 , 000 dollars < m a pledge of the 1 Custom House duties for 1544 alley bad Bold the Government House for 80 000 dollars . ¦ '
AB * ffakiadoccHrr ^ at . Monte Yideo between Mr . GanbaMi and the Brazilian Charge d ' Affiiires ¦ which threatened the interruption of peaceful rela- ' Haas between the two countries . Senor Regis , the -Charge d'Affaires , had withdrawn from the town , and gone on board the Brazilian squadron , which is formed in line outside of the harbour . A steamer -was despatched to Bio Janeiro , with communications for the Brazilian Government , the result of which-is anxiously awaiied . Bbazcl . —The British packet confirms the report received by a late arrival at this port , from Bio Janeiro , that tLe insurgent chieftains Canavarro JBJft J < ieto , in tbB provinoe | of . BJt > Grande , BrulL
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had been defeated by the Imperial troops , under the Baron de Caxias . According to the packet , the insurgents had a great number of men taken prisoners , and lost upwards of 1 , 000 horses , all their artillery , baggage , Jte . Gbeecs—We stated in our last that a revolution had occurred in Greece ; press of Chartist and other intelligence prevented ns giving the details . We now lay them before oar readers ; premising that they are somewhat abbrevated ; rendered necessary by tiie many demands on our space . All the leading features of this triumphant popular movement will be perused with interest . The revolution was begun on the night of the Utn , and effected before noon next day . We take ihe narrative of the Greek
Observer" The hoetilfi attitude assumed by the Government against those -who sought to enlighten it , the extraordinary dispositions adopted within the last few days with a view to assail the liberty and the Tery lives of the citizens ( a military tribunal had been established ) most devoted to the national interests , should necessa rily tend to hasten the manifestation of the contemplated movement . Last night at two o ' clock a . m ., a few musket shots fired in the air announced the assembling of the people in the different qu&rters of Athens . Soon afterwards , the inhabitants , accompanied by the entire garrison , inarched towards the square of the Palace , crying , * The Constitution for ever ! ' Oil reaching the place , the entire garriBon , the artillery , cav&lry , and infantry , irew up under the windows of the King , in front of the Palace : and the people having stationed
themselves in ihe rear , all in one voice demanded a constitution . The King appeared at a low window , and assured the people that he would take into considaration their demand and that of the army , after consulting with his ministers , the Council of State , and the representatives of the Foreign Powers . But the Commander , M . C&lergi , having stepped forward , made known to his Majesty that the Ministry was no longer recognised ; and that tbe Council of State -was already deliberating on the best course to be adopted under existing circumstances . Shortly afterwards , a deputation from tbe Council of State presented an address to the King , comprising , among other things , the following requisitions , which it described as measures emanating from the -wants and wishes dibtinctly expressed by the Sreei
nation" Tour Majesty -will consider it expedient to appoint a new Ministry without delay . The Conncil of State recommend to the approbation of your Majesty , as persons competent to form it , because of their enjoying public esteem and confidence , Messrs . Andre Metaxa , for the Presidency of the Council of Ministers , -with tbe Department of Foreign Affairs ; Audi * Londos , for tbe Ministry of War ; Canaris , for the Navy Department ; Bhigas Palamidis , for the Interior ; Mansolas , for the Finance ; Leon Melas , for Justice ; and Michel Schimas , for Public Instruction and Ecclesiastical Affairs .
" ' Tour Majesty -will be pleased , at the same time , to sign an ordinance , whkh will impose on the new Ministry , as its first 4 uty , the convocation within tbe delay of a month of the National Assembly ; which will deliberate upon the definite Constitution that is to be established in concert with the Royal authority , as the ss ^ s under -which th « throne and the nation shall hereafter be placed . The extraordinary circumstances ef the country rendering the convocation of the National Assembly an urgent necessity , and not admitting of a new law of election being previously framed , yonr Msjesty will parmit yonr Ministry to convoke that Assembly , agreeably to the spirit and provisions of the last law ot election in vigour before 1833 with the sole difference that the electoral colleges shall elect th « ir presidents by a majority of votes .
" The xew Ministry , invested -with the full powen accessary to conduct the Government in accordance with the gravity ot the circumstances which led to its formation , shall render an account of its acts to the National Assembly . ' " Whilst his Majesty was reading the propositions of the Council of State , the representatives ef the Foreign Powers presented themselves at tbe Palace , and were told by the Commander that nobody could be admitted at that moment , the King being in conference -with the deputation oi the Council oi State . The latter came out two hours afterwards , with the consent of the King . The new Ministry then repaired to the Palace , where they held a long consultation with bis Msjeaty ; who shortly appeared on the balcony , surrounded by his Ministers and other personages , and was received with acclamation by the people . The cry of " Long live the Constitutional King ! " resounded , together -with that of ' Tts Constitution for ever I The new Ministers
entered immediately on the discharge of their functions . Tbe military revolution -was directed , on tbe part of the regular army , by the Colonel of Cavalry , Dametri Calergi , and on that of the irregular army by Colonel Macryasy . At three o ' clock in the afternoon , tbe garrison , after dtfiiing before the Palace , re-entered their quarters , preceded by their bands , amidst tbe acclamations of the people . An hour afterward * , the city , in -which order had n » t been an instant disturbed , resumed its customary aspect " Next day the King issued a decree convoking a National Assembly within thirty days . The Council of State issued a decree , thanking the people and the unnj , exhorting them to continued order , and dictating to the army an oath of u fidelity to the country and to the constitutional throne , " and of attachment to the constitution to be settled by the Assembly . Tbe Council also decreed ihas the loth September should in future be a national festival .
Similar movements took place at Chaleis and Nanplia . Letters from Athens , of the 17 ih ult , say that all foreigners who held offices under Government were to be dismissed , with an exception in favour of the veteran Philhellenes . It is said that the King yieldtd with bad grace , when he fonnd resistance on his part would be unavailing . It was eleven o ' clock a-m . before his obstinacy was subdued . The military bands were then playing the "Marseillaise " and the " Parisienne * ; which gave him cause to suppose that affairs might proceed to unpleasant extremeties . On the 16 : h King Otho took his customary airing ; and was saluted as he passed along the streets , with cries from the people and soldiers of " Long live the Constitutional King I "
Intelligence from Athens , of the 1 / th instant , adds nothing of news to the account of the recent revolution , but gives some interesting traits of its most extraordinery moderation . Tzinos , a minister , who had ordered the infliction of torture on several occasions , was hidden for a time in the King ' s palace : he was forced out ; but his only punishment was to be banished , and to be guarded by the troops of the new regime from the fury of the mob . Vlahopulo , the old Minister of War , indiscreetly presented himself , and ordered the troops to withdraw : Calergi merely said , " Take the Bavarian away , and shut him np ! " and he was put under a guard in his own bouse .
Herat . —Letters from Erivan announce the important fact of the death of the King of Herat , Kam ram Schah , whose throne has been usurped by his Vizier , Tar Mahomed Khan , who has expelled the sons of the late King . The usurper has been acknowledged as King of Herat by the Schah of Persia to whom he sent his submission . Extraoedinaby . —The Heraldo of Madrid of the 2 lst says— rt Yesterday a woman died at St . Andie at tbe age of thirty-three , after having given birth to five bovs , who all died Ehortly afterwards . '
Russian Ttbjlsst . —The Commerce gives the following to show the rigour with which the police of Poland is conducted : — " A foreign merchant arrived at the frontier with post-hoiseB . His passport sta ted that he was to travel with his own . From thiB circumstance alone be was taken into custody , and sent as a prisoner to Warsaw , and it was not without the greatest difficulty , and through the mediation of many kfluential friends , that he obtained his liberty . " Bo . GiA ? f Railway . —The Belgian and Rhemisb Railway will be opened on the ? 4 tb iret RoHE ~ The two bandits who , about three yearB 8 £ 0 , attached and robbed Don Miguel while be -was out shooting , were executed at Rome on the 12 th inst ., having been condemned for various robberies and murders .
[ If ail * robbers" and " murderers" were treated in the same way , Don Miguel would have been " executed" long since . ] MrsDEKS is Pabis . —Amongst the malefactors who have bees lately arrested on a charge of street robberies in Paris , attended with violence , is a man named Teppaz , who at first gave important information ; but it was at the same time evident that he conceal * t a great part of the truth . On Friday , after ha-ring been permitted to receive a Titit from his mother , he demanded to be brought before the chief of the police of safety , to whom he " I know that I am about to commit myself beyond a possibility of escape ; but I promised my mother to tell all , and 1 shall keep my word . I have committed many robberies , and assisted at many atrocious deedB ; but there is one act the recollection of which haunts me night and day .
"In 1836 I was enrolled amongst a band of assassins by a man named Poildeyache . When I showed any hesitation to commit violence , my companions kicked and beat me to give me courage , as they said . One evening that I was watching near the canal of Martin , in company with two others , a man of about thirty-six years of age passed by . One ef the band , Rampa illenx , having judged by his dress that he had money , seized him by the throat and threw him to the ground . Poildevachs then ran forward and seized the le § 8 of the victim , whilst I , by order of the others , searched his pockets . As tbe victim was making great exertions to escape , Rampaillenx drew Mb knife , saying , ' Wait , and 1 will give yon the police seal ' , and he stabbed him several times . He then took the dead body on his shoulders , whilst Bernard held it by the legs , and they then flung it into the canaL
The murder having been committed we went to snp , when Raimpailleux used his bloody knife to cut his bread , which made me sick , and 1 was unable to eat . " To this dreadful confession we shall add , that RampsIUeux is at preset under the hands of jus-
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tice . He is only twenty-seven years' of aga , and Bernard , who has likewise been arrested , is not older . The police have since arrested another of this hideous band , a man- named Piednol , twenty-nine years of age , ten of which ha passed at the gallies . On Saturday , says the Nationa l t appeared before the Court of Asejzs of the Seine Henry Salmon , twenty-one years of age , born at Joigny , and accused of murder committed on the person of John Seichepine , in the wood of Vinoennes . Henry S&lzaon confessed his crime . His sole defence may be ¦ summed up in these words : — " wished to possess his papers , aud I lost my head . " Having been found guilty , he was condemned to death . He heard his sentence without betraying the slightest emotion .
Belgium . —Hobbiblb Mbbder . —An inhabitant of Lommel , in Belgium , suspecting that hiB wife had misconducted herself with an officer of the customs , a few evenings ago , reproached her with her infidelity . A violent quarrel ensued , and the woman became so exasperated that she went to the room of the custom-house officer , who lived in the same house , and , taking a pair of loaded pistols from his table , retained with them , and discharged one of them at her husband . Having wounded , but not killed him , she deliberately fired the other into his breast , and completed her object . The reports brought several persons to the spot , and she was at once secured and committed to prison . Tbe next morning , she attempted te destroy herself with the sharp edge of the cover of a pot , in which some coffee- had been brought her . She made a
severe and ragged wound in the throat , but did not accomplish her purpose . The custom-house officer was not at home at the time of the murder , but has nevertheless been arrested , and committed to prison . Cologne . —The Wat to cure Duelling . —Lieut . Pelzer , who lately , in consequence of a dispute at a ball , fought a duel with M . Hain , a bookseller , and shot him , was sentenced by a court-martial to be beheaded . The King has commuted thiB sentence to fifteen years' imprisonment in a fortress . Lieutenant Peizer has accordingly been conveyed to-day to the fortress of Ehrenbreitstein , as well as the two seconds , who are condemned te ten year . / imprisonment . The other two persons implicated in the duel are said to be sentenced to five and two years ' imprisonment . No doubt is entertained that the imprisonment of the two seconds at least will be considerably abridged .
Hamburgh , Sept . 28 . —The brandy distillery of M . Schot , on the Green-dike , was destroyed by fire last night . Fhasce—La Refoi me states that five of the persons arrested as participators in the the Communist plot of the Rue Pastourelle had been set a ; liberty . Other warrants howevir had been issued by the Attorney-General , but the charges against the accused were not of a very serious nature . M . Henri DouriHe , a literary man , lately arrested as an accomplice of theirs , does not , it appears , belong to that portion of the Radical party . Ho always strongiy condemned the principles of the Communists . Jaras-e , a political convict , attempted to commit suicide by swallowing varnish used by carpenters , Boudin , who was condemned in the affair of the Republicdn Monitor , had become insane .
[ Such is the treatment given by the infamous son of the infamous Egalite , to the men who blindly raised him to a throne , on the strength of the pledge that that throne should be "surrounded with Republican institutions . " One patriot swallowing poison and another driven mad I Such ara the " legitimate" fruits of middle-class treachery . How long—How long ?] Pa . his . —Murdbe and SuicmE . —M . Pamel , a performer at the Opera Comique , having lately Jost
his voice , and consulted several physicians without deriving any benefit , the calamity bo preyed upon his mind , fearing that he would lose altogether the means of supporting his wife and four children , that in a fit of delirium he mortally stabbed his son , ten years of age , stabbed another boy in the loins , wounded his wife dangerously ; and finally , the police coming to arrest him , he escaped into another room and there plunged the poignard into his own heart up to the hilt , and expired immediately ,
The Wjpb of Gaudet . —Madame Gaudet , the widow of the celebrated Giroudin , lately died , at a very advanced age , at St . Emilion , in the department of the Gironde . Another distinguished female , Madame Sirey , niece of Mirabeau , wife of the wellknown juris-consult of that name , and mother of the unfortunate young man who met last year so deplorable s fate at Brussels , died at St . Germ&in-ea- Laye , on Thursday . Serious Accident at Marseilles . —A Russian
vessel having appeared a few days ago in sight at Marseilles , a number of persous assembled on a drawbridge communicating with the mole , and commanding a view of the sea . The weight of such a crowd , amounting at least to 150 persous , proved too much for the timber work , and the bridge gave way , bearing with it tbe living mass into the water , and on the quay below . Strangetosay , however , this terrible event , which would seem likely to cause a great loss of life , passed over with only five fractures and about a dozan contusions .
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Indications are visible that the "far North" is about to prove as troublesome to " the powers that be" as Wales and Ireland have been for some time past . The Non-Intrusionists have left the " kirk ;" and if there their hostility to the existing order of things had stopped , government would have cared veiy little for the change ; inasmuch as there are not wanting plenty of " waiters on Providence " ready to clutch at the " loaves and fishes , " aban * doned by Chalmers , Candlish , and Co . But ( as in the ** sister kingdom ") the violont orations of the chiefs of the Is ' ou-Intrusion movement , have not been without their effect . When Macgill Cricbton , the noted Don Quixote of the movement , talked about "unfurling the broad blue banner of the Covenant ; " " unsheathing the claymore ; " and
taking themselves to the " hill-sides there to emulate their martyred sires who died for the faith ;" people—at any rate the simple working people of the far north—thought all this was in earnest ; and that the worthy knight-errant meant what be said . Accordinely we find the flocks of tbe seceders disposed to take a step beyond that of their shepherds : not only have they left the kirk themselves , but they seem determined to allow no one else to enter it . Thus in different parts of the North where the heritors have attempted to " Bettle" new ministers in the vacated churches , they have been met with open physical resistance . And no little damage has already been suffered by lords and ladies , sheriff * and procurator-fiscals , ministers and elders , in their attempt to " settle" ministers in parishes , to which ministers the people were opposed . Here is the latest M pronunciamento" of the Highlands : —
" NON-1 NTBU 51 ON RlOT AT ReSOLIS , NEAR CROmatry . —Thursday being the day appointed for the settlement of the Rev . Lewis Rose , presentee to the parish of Resolis , vacant by the secession of the Rev . D . Sage , ihe rev . members of Presbytery , Colonel Hugh Bailie , M . P ., of Redcastle , and Lord-Lieutenant of the county , Sheriff Jardine , and other gentlemen , accompanied by ladies , set out from the residence of Sir Hugh Frazer , G . CJBm at Braelangwell , in vehicles ; but on arriving within a short distance of the church , they found that the church , which occupies a rising ground , was surrounded by a numerous party of males and female ? , for the most part under mature age , and that a few minutes previously , on perceiving the approach of Mr . H . T .
Cameron , procurator fiscal of the district , and a sheriff ' s officer , they had at once forbade tbeir approach to the church , by greeting them with a volley of stones , although Mr . Cameron is a celebrated non-intrusionist himself . The lord lieutenant , Colonel H . BaiJlie , M . P ., and the sheriff , and Sir H . Fraser , being present , it vius hoped that respect would be paid to them by the riotous party surrounding the church ; accordingly , leaving the ladies in the carriages ^ the members of Presbytery were accompanied towards the church by the above , among other gentlemen , and parties amounting to 100 . They were not , however , permitted to proceed , for on coming within reach , vollies of stones were hurled at them in such a manner as to oblige them
to retreat . Matters having now assumed a most alarming appearance , an officer and three or four revenue-cuttermen , who were in the neighbourhood , were hastily brought up , armed merely with their cutlasses and pistols . One double-barrelled gun and a few pistols were all the arms that could be distributed in addition among the maintainers of the law ; otherB being obliged to provide themselves with sticks . Having formed is as good order as possible , with the four cutlermen in front , the Presbytery and escort , preceded by the sheriff , again advanced towards the church , and were received , when within reach , by volleys of stones . The sheriff then read the Riot Act ; but , before concluding it , would have been brought to the ground by a stone , which he only avoided by bobbing his head . One woman , more bold than the rest , advanced 60 near that Mr .
Cameron , the Procurator Fiscal , seized her ; Bhe resisted ; however , so vigorously that it was not nntil they had both fallen and rolled upon the earth that she was secured , placed in a gig , and driven off to Cromarty gaol by a messenger at arm 8 . Scarcely a person had sot been struck by Btones before the order was given to fire upon thtrioltrs . One man was apparently wounded in the ieg , but , befog on an elevation , the pistol , although loaded with ball , did not do much apparent damage , and , n » t possessing further ammunition , the revenue officer ordered ihe party to charge with their cutlasses and with sticks . At this juncture , and while leading his men on , he was knocked down , and it is said had a rib fractured by a blow from a stone , and , unfortunately , about the same instant , he received a severe wound on the b-: ek of the neck from a missile , which covered him with blood . The force being clearly insufficient for effecting an entrance into the church , under each
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circumstance ? , and especially as it was asserted that there was a large party lying in wait in the wood above the church , the Presbytery were deforced , and retired to effect the settlement ina private house . In the evening the shertff ' a officer who had conveyed the female to prison was waylaid , seriously maltreated , and h \ s vehicle destroyed . A mob also Burrounded the gaol at Cromarty the greater part of the night , and an attempt to rescue was anticipated by the authorities . Under these circumstances , and as similar outrages are expected at Knockbain , and other places where ministers hate to be settled , it is said the Lord Lieutenant of the county has applied to Sir Nevil Douglas , the Commander of the North British Foreesi f for troops , there being only a handful of men for garrison duty of Fert George . "
A precious sight this ; the reverend members of the presbytery , skulking behind " revenue officers , " and trying to smuggle their ; contraband wares into tbe kirk under tbe legal protection of " pistols" and " bludgeons . " And then the valorous Mr . Cameron with his triumphant capture of one woman , after she had well-rolled him in the mud ! Why , Lochiel is fairly put to shame by this valorous exploit of his namesake ! But " waitawee" ! Since the above was written we hare received the following : account of more "routs , riots , and tumults"in the "far North" : —
" Further Rioting in East Ross—thb Minister of Looie Deforced , See . —It is with no small mortification and pain we have to record a recital of additional disturbances in the eastern part of this county . ' The Rev . Mr . Mackenzie having been in * ducted by the presbytery at Dingwall , proceeded to preach at Logie on Sunday last ; but found a vast collection of peoplo congregated at the church , in the utmost state of excitement . The entrance was barricaded , and a lawless , desperate mob hovered round it , resolved to prevent any person whatever from going into the church . Lady Ross , Balnagown , drove up to the church , and was assailed with the moat virulent Billingsgate . Not only so , but a woman actually struck at her ladyship with a sticks , and she received a blow in the arm . Lady
Ross then withdrew , amidst a shower of atones and blackguard abure . Shortly after this , Mr- Ross , of Cromarty , aocompanied by his son , Mr . George Ross , arrived at the church . Access was denied them , and the most scandalous and impious language uttered . The ohurch bell was toJJing , and the noise and clamour of the crowd was at that pitch so as to threaten the most awful consequences . Mr . Ross repaired to Tain for Mr . Sheriff Cameron , who aocompanied him to Logie . The Rev . Mr . Mackenzie had by this time goae away ; but as there was st ill a large crowd at the church , the Bheriff used the utmost exertion to restore quiet . We understand that some of the people said , if a site were given to them for a church they would desist from further annoyance . The crowd shortly afterwards disappeared , without further violence .
" At Rossken , on Sunday , a mob collected , in the expectation that the Rev . Mr . Mackenzie was to preach , ' and of course prepared to obstruct his entrance . Having been made acquainted with the actual state of matters , Mr . Mackenzie did not appear ; and having collected , the mob could not but perpetrate some mischief . The precentor of the parish church , Donald Fraser , having been recognized , was immediately assailed , aud the mob would have torn him to pieces , had it not been for the interposition of Lieutenant Mao ' eod , who , having been on that part of the grounds near the ohurch , ohecked the rabble that pursued Mr . Fraser , and in a manner rescued him from their violence .
" On Tuesday morning , four officers arrived at Invergordon , from Tain , with warrants for apprehending two individuals connected with the riots . On this being known , the bell was put through the town , and an immense crowd immediately collected , who rescued the prisoners and ordered the officers to go home , under the penalty of being stoned to death . The men took the hint , and their prisoners are still at large . During all Tuesday crowds surrounded tbe ohurch of Rosskeen , the people ignorantly expecting that the Presbytery would appear that day , to go through again with the settlement of Mr . Mackenzie . "—lioss shire Advertiser .
So . so ; the '' moral and religious" people of Scotland are now a " lawless and desperate mob , "—vomiting " Billingsgate , " " blackguard abuse , " " scandalous and impious language , " &c , &c . Such ace the libels heaped upon the noble peasantry of the Highlands , by miserable , lying , quill-drivers . The people are termed w mob" and " rabble" too , because the patrons of this lickspittle thing , the Ross-ihire Advertiser think proper to trample upon the conscientious feelings of the peopln , and the latter think proper to' shew resistance . Verily the newspaper press is almost universally the very sink of iniquity . Mark too what the people want : " if a site were given them for a church they would desist from further annoyance . " Now we have not nauoh fellow-feeling with the " big guns" of the Nou-Intrusion movement ; for wo can understand their motives , and therefore despise them . But we do sympathize with the people , —the conscientious honest people : and
they having left tho " kirk of their fathers" because they could no longer conscientiously worship therein ; what more reasonable than that at their own cost they should seek to build churches olsowhf > T « t Bat no , this must not be ; the " lords of the soil" say the land is ours , and we will "do what we like with our own , " and acting in this spirit they have refused to let or sell a solitary foot of ground on which tlie people might assemble for religious worship ! Tais is not all . The Scottish aristocracy in general , and the Duke of Sutherland in particular , has been guilty of most gross tyranny towards the seceders . Is there any wonder then , that tho people should exhibit the spirit they are now shewing ? We see by the Aberdeen Herald that two hundred troops have been ordered to Ross shire , and 'vere on their march there the latter end # / last week ! If Douald ' s blood is once fairly roused , there will be work for them .
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< From our own Correspondent . ) So , so ; " the truth always tells the best ! " for our Welsh newspapers , which were bo lately lost in admiration ot the gallantry displayed by our rural police , have at length made the-discovery that the conduct of that force haa neither been of such a laudable or praiseworthy nature as they had led their readers to suppose . Even the Swansea Journal ^ that roost contemptible of all puerile publications , has now , at tbe eleventh boar , communicated tbe astounding fact , that the gallant Captain Napier , his four full-privates , two sergeants , one inspector , aye and even the magistrates wb » accompanied them , have a reasonable chance of figuring
where better men bvre stood before them , and obtaining the unenviable title of " the prisoners at the bar . " True the editor or reporter in noticing the circumstance gives it as Mr . and Mr . ; but we all know wbo accompanied the police on tbeir memorable excursion to Pontarddulais ; and this paltry effort at concealment is of a par with tho cringing cowardice which that newspaper haa ever shewn , when the conduct o ! " tbe authorities" was under review . However , every man who took part in the attack on the rioters , on the above occasion , is , according to these authorities , to be brought to trial on the charge of not having proceeded according to " the statute iu that case made and provided ; " and if so brought to trial , there is little doubt that a jnry of Welshmen will do them tvmplo justice .
Agreeably to tbe promise contained iu ray last , I attended a public meeting on Weduesday , which was announced as a meeting of the inhabitants of five parishes ,, with most unpronounceable names , and to be held on the Alt-Gyn-Adda mountain . The place of meeting was about seven miles , from Carmarthen , and in tbe Immediate vicinity of the burgh of Eidweliy . The hour was fixed for elnven o ' clock , but it was nearly twelve b e fore the business commenced . On the ground there could , not be less than a thousand persons , generally of the class of small fanners , with here and there
a sprinkling of the " higher orders of society . ' * It was bitter cold upon the mountain top ; but notwithstanding both wind and rain , the great bulk of the meeting remained firm to the conclusion , although the proceedings occupied nearly six hours . A whole brigade of reporters were present representing tbe four local papers , tbe London Times , Chronicle , Herald ; and last , though not least , your humble servant of the Northern Star . Every accommodation was afforded to the scribes , but tbe labours of most of us , excepting one or two who could hieroglyphic the Welsh , terminated on the conclusion of Mr . Williams' address .
On the motion of Mr . Williams , Philip Howell , Esq ., maycr of Kidwell , was called to the chair . Hugh Williams rose and said—Gentlemen , amid the grievances which we long have Buttered , it is a source of some satisfaction to &ee such a respectable assembly gathered together , in order to make these sufferings known , in the hope that some means of redress may be applied . We have already had large meetings to lay our grievances -at the foot of the Throne , the first of which wan held on Mynedd Selen , and the next on Mynydd Mswr . The first of these was a glorious display ; but tbe scenes of outrage which were daily occurring , threw a damp over the second . Yet still the people mustered in their thousands , determined to make their sufferings and their crievancea known . I then bad the honour of submitting certain resolutions to these meetings , which I am happy to say w . ere
adopted ; and subsequently we held a meeting at Trelearch , in order that onr common grievances might be generally submitted to our common country . The meeting at Trelearch was burked in consequence of imperfect notice hating been given , and a slight attendauee only took place ; but although few were present , yet I bare bo hesitation in toying that they represented tbe feelings of the great body of the community , as we v ere unanimous in our views , unanimous in our sentlmenta , being truly actuated only by one mind , and having only one object in view , the alleviation of the condition of our fellow men . This agitation hai engaged the attention of all Bugland ; reporters ore present both from London and the provinces , who will disseminate the sentiments which shall this day be delivered all over the countrynay , all over the civilised world . I gladly bear testimony to the service which baa been done to us by that
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mighty engine , the press ; and we have all reason to be grateful to tbe press for advocating the cause of tbe poor Welsh . It has been objected to these petitions to our Queen that they are too long ; but a long list of grievances require a lengthy petition ; and my own opinion is , that they ] are rather too short The first subject which it notices is tbe tolls ; and I may take aome credit to myself for being the first who called pnblie attention to the crying grievance of turnpike tolls . This is a little work which I issued from the press bo far back as 1839 . You all know our national
anthem , " God save the King , " which , to suit the altered circumstances of the country , was transmogrified into " God save the Queen ; " but I then considered , as I do sow , that the rhapsody and rant therein contained are a disgrace to a people who claim to be free ; and the sentiments of ; revenge which are there inculcated cannot consistently be entertained by any individual having the slightest claim to Christianity . In the little work I have just alluded to , I introduced & piece which I considered to be free frem these objections , which I entitled "God save oar native land . ' " I shall now read the first staozi in that poem : —
" God save our native land ( YoucBBafe tby fost ' ring hand ! God save the land—From tyrants , tolls , bastiles , Barracks , and cat-nine-tails , Game laws , excise , and jails—God save tbe land !" In tbe notes appended to that stanza , on the subjects of tolls and bastiles , I j have said : — * ' TOLLS . —There isjno country where legal plunder , in tbe shape of tolls , prevails to bo great an extent as in England and Wales . The several corporation , port ,
ferry , fair , market , and town tolls , are grinding and monopolizing enough ;) but tbose collected at turnpikegates , or common-road-plunder-bars , are still more grievous . All tolls impede traffic and intercourse ; and , beside tbeir impolicy , are a clumsy and corrupt species of taxation . Highways should be under one general and responsible direction , possessed of talent and scientific skill . The amount of our turnpike-road tolls might be made alone to defray the cost of a moderate government ; as it is , but a small portion is applied to the actual improvement of tbe roads , while the greater part diaapjmars into a variety of dark channels—in peculations , jobs , ami patronage . "
" Ba . stii . E 3—This is the only country in the world where the reduced middle classes , and all the producers , composing tbe great majority of tbe national voice , are reduced to worse than savage life ; where they have no prospect in poverty aud old age , but imprisonment in union workhouses , there to be treated as impostors or criminals ; separated from their wives and children , and subjected to the caprice of a host of officials , living on the poor rates in ease and luxury : thus steeped in poverty to the very lips , to have their best feelings outraged , aud their most sacred engagements h « ld in scorn . " Such , continued the speaker , were my views in 1839 , and such they continue ! unchanged to the present day ; and I am glad that the recent destruction of the turnpike-gates , though unlawful and indefensible acts , have yet succeeded in drawing the attention of the press of England to the subject ; and this grievance is rapidly disappearing . I contend , moreover , that the New Poor Law is thoroughly inapplicable to tbe rural districts , as
farmers cannot devote a sufficient length of time to the investigation of the complicated accounts of that board . For my own part , I have no hesitation in saying that I , a professional man , who , from habit and experience might be supposed to be better qualified to e \ ft and examine accounts than you who devote your lives to agricultural pursuits ; yet these fellows have become so expert in cloaking over the inaccuracy and incorrectness of their books , notwithstanding that jugglery and insidious jobbing are as ] conspicuous as the sun at noon day , yet woro an angel from heaven to testify to the fact , the determined i vagabonds would swear him out of it Tbe speaker next adverted to the -various other points mooted in tbe memorial , which embraced the better regulation of county Btock and legal fees , fixity of tenure , aud assessment of rents ; each of which topics were dwelt upon at considerable length , and were listened to throughout with the greatest attention . I
A number of other speakers followed , who addressed the meeting in tbe Welsh language , all of whom were enthusiastically cheered , and tbe speechifying continued until five o'clock in the evening , when the meeting broke up and the Alt-cyn-Adda mountain was left alone in solitary grandeur . Kumoura are rife that South Wales is to be placed nndpr martial law ; but if we get more " martial" than we are , Heaven only knows where our " martial" course will end . Every town and village is swarming with troops ; the very apple-wives have their stalls capsized , and tbeir wares scattered along the street , by charging troops of cavalry : scarcely half an hour elapses bu , t bugles or trumpets are ringing forth their " cills "
through our streets ; and many of our magistrates have tbeir mansions garrisoned by soldiers , in order to protect their worshipful persons from harm . We also hear many stories of " drillings" of Rebeccaites among the hills ; but whether these stories are true or false , they have raised no small alarm in tbe minds of many . But , be this as it may , Rebecca has been quieter this week than usual . Some , who fancy that tb » y possess correct means of information , jtell us that the present lull is occasioned by the anxiety of certain parties to get their friends admitted to bail ; and if their present endeavours in that matter are unsuccessful , tbe calm will be but the prelude of a coming storm—a storm to which all that is past will be but as the gentlest whisperings of the infant breeze . ¦
She has , however , been having a " lark" or two with the myrmidons of the law ; one bailiff , wbo was in possession under a warrant for distress , having received some not very tender remonstrances from the whips of her daughters ; and another having obtained a lodgment in the farmer's horse-pond . There is n » w no possibility of executing distress-warrants in the couutry ; and tbe lawyers are getting laughed at whenever they attempt it An attorney in Carmarthen had been trying this method of " raising tbe wind ; " and he was accordingly waited upon by the party against whom he had commenced proceedings . The farmer told him that he could ' nt pay ; and the attorney replied that he
must distrain , as his injunctions were imperativa The farmer rejoined , that if such steps were adopted , he must apply to his old mother for aid . " D n you and your old mother , "! said the lawyer ; " you must remember that you are in Carmarthen now ; and if you begin to talk about your old mother here , we shall clap you into the big house at the end of the bridge . '' " Well , well , '' responds the farmer , " if you have a big house in town , my old mother has & big house in the country ; and if you clap me up here , sh 6 'H clap you up there , the very first time you shew your nose among the bills . '' Ss saying , he tore the summons to pieces , and coolly walked out of the office . He has heard no more of bis law-suit ¦
The spy-system is carried on to a great extent One person , representing himself as a clergyman from Manchester , took lodgings at a respectable inn . He had remained there for some days , and was very particular in his inquiries about 'Becca . But as this is the common topic of conversation , these enquiries excited no suspicion . Circumstances , ! however , arose which called particular attention to ! this gentleman ' s motives ; and an open letter havinejbeen accidentally left by him on the dressing table , afforded a clue to his real character , although it Was Written in cypher ; but as Capt . Scott ' s name and Captj Napier ' s were often repeated , the " peepers" were at no very great loss to judge of his clerical profession ; and the pump being conveniently located in the stable-yard , a plentiful dose of the " cold water cure" was administered to him on his return , when he was advised to shift bis quarters .
The trustees having resolved to re erect ihe Minka gate , preparations were accordingly made . Bat'Becca resolved to spare them the unnecessary trouble ; and accordingly assembled her forces on ! Saturday last . At her former visit she had spared the gate posts , they being of iron , and possibly too hard for her to digest ; but on that night she shivered them to pieces , and broke up all the materials whieh had been laid down to build the tollhouse , resolved that tolls sheuld no longer be levied there . ] Some time ago the gate at Pen-y-Girn was broken down and a farmer named Davies was apprehended on
suspicion . Evidence was heard against him and be was fully committed for trial . Bail to any amount was tendered and refnsed ,. They also refused to hear any testimony in the prisoner ' s behalf , stating that they bad heard plenty to warrant a committal . The prisoner ' s council applied to the ] Queen ' s Bench for a rule nisi ; which was granted , When they found the turn affairs were taking , they wrote to Mr . Maule , solicitor to the Treasury , enclosing him a copy of the depositions . He wrote back saying they ! had no ground for committing him at all . After hearing this , the parties who refused bail to tbe amount of £ 3 . , accepted the same in £ 400—Such is Welsh justice .
Victoria versus Rebecca . —Pkoclamation . — Bt the Queen . —A Proclamation was agreed to , at the meeting of the Privy -Council , held by her Majesty at Windsor Castle , on ] Monday last , strongly reprobating the " tumultuous assemblages" in the ¦ " counties of Pembroke , Cardigan , and Carmarthen" , and calling on all " juatices of the peace , sheriffs , undersheriffs , and all other ] civil officers ; " to repress ail such " tumults , riots , outrages , and breaches of the peace" : and offering j a reward of Five Hundred Pounds , to any person who shall ** discover and apprehend , or cause to be discovered and apprehended " , all persons guilty of incendiarism , or outrages against life : and Fifty Pounds for the apprehension of all other offenders !
More New Magistrates . —At the recommendation of Lord Dynevor ^ the Lord Lieutenant of the county of Carmarthen , ! the names of twenty gentlemen have been added to the commission of the peace by the Lord Chancellor : —Mr . Chas . Philipps , of Coedgwyn ; the Rev . IT . Evans , of Maesgwynne : Mr . D . Pwtheroe , M . D ., of Blyne ; Mr . T . G > L . C . P . Gwyn , of Glyn Abbey ; Mr . J . Roberts , M . D ., of KidweUy ; the RevJ J . Jonea , of Westmead ; Mr . A . Timmina , of Llan ; the Rev . T . Bevan , of St . Ishmaera ; Mr . J . Davies , of Llwynhebog ; Mr . A . J . GulsUn , of Tygwynj ; Mr . G . B . Jones , of Gurrey ; Mr . E . Wood , of Neyf Inn j Mr . J . L . Thomas , of Caeglas ; Mr . J . Lewis , of Llandilo ; Dr . J . Picton , of Iscoed ; Mr . D . H . IT . G . Williams , of Llwynhebog ; Mr . W . Morris , of Carmarthen ; Mr . J . Jones of Peirypark j Mr . Wi . Jones , of Cruglas ; and Mr . O . Owen , of Cwmgloyne ,
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Two men , who it seems have'been levying " black mail" upan tbe farmers , wider pretence of being Daughters of ** Rebecca " , were on Friday last apprehended by the London Police , in the neighbourhood of Pont-y-b » rem . and brought to Carmarthen for examination . They are remanded . These are , by no means to be considered as the real daaghters of our Welsh heroine ; bat simply interlopers , who wish to turn the disturbances to their own advantage .
Lene Of Packet Ships. For New York. Jtmi^Ajfc ^ ^
LENE OF PACKET SHIPS . FOR NEW YORK . Jtmi ^ aJfc ^ ^
Local Markets.
LOCAL MARKETS .
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Leeds Corn Market , Tuesday , Oct . 3 rd . —The arrivals of Grain to this day ' s market are much the same as last week . There has been a very limited demand for Wheat ; in old very little alteration , but New has been Is per qr . lower . Barley has been sold from 32 s to 34 s fine 35 s per qr . Oats and Beans full as well sold . THE AVERAGE PRICES OF WHEAT , FOB THE WBEK ending ocr . 3 , 1843 . Wheat . Barley . Oats . Rye . Beans . Peat Qrs . Qxe . Qrs . Qrs . Qre . Qr * 4484 227 263 — 374
—£ s . d . £ s . d . £ s . d . £ s . d . £ s . d . £ 8 . d 2 14 7 | 1 13 9 0 19 3 * 0 0 0 1 10 1 0 0 6 Leeds Woollen Marketts , Toesdaf , Oct . 3 . — The continuance of improved trade in other districts is operating most favourably here , the demand for manufactured goods increasing nearly every market day . For some months trade has been gradually , but slowly improving . Bradford Markets , Thursday , Oct . 5 , —Wool Yarns—There is a good supply of all kinds of Wool , which causes the consumers to be less disposed to
extend their operations , and daring the week hardly an average business has been done . In prices we do Dot hear of any alteration . Yarns—The buyers for both export and home consumption are still free to purchase , and late prices still maintained . Piece—The demand for Goods continues very steady , and the fine weather cheers the prospect of the home-trada houses ; this , with the favourable accounts from America , tends to confirm the opinion , that Goods have seen their lowest point ; and that ere Jong the Manufacturer may expect to be better employed and remunerated .
WAKEFIELD CORN MARKET . Friday , Ocr . 6 . —There is a large supply of Wheat to this day ' s market , and a good attendance of buyers . The millers purchase with great caution , and even at a reduction of 2 i . per quarter , take only for their immediate wants . Barley ; sells slowly , at last week ' s prices , but the supply is not larger than the demand . Oats and Shelling continue to meet a dull sale , and rather decline in value . Beans must also be noted a little lower .
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O'CONNOR , Esq . of Hammersmith , County Middlesex , by JOSHUA HOBSON , at his Print ing Offices , Nob . 12 and 13 , Market-street > Briggatoi and Published by tht said JOSHUA Hobson , ( for the said Feaegds O'Connor , ) at Mb Dwelling-house , No . 6 , Market-street , Briggato i an internal Communication existing between the said No . 5 , Market-street , and the Bald Nos . 12 and 13 , Market-street , Briggate , thus constituting the whole of tbe eaid Printing and Publishing Office one Premises . All Communications must be addressed . Post-paid , to Mr . Hobson , Northern Star Office , Leeds . ( Saturday . October 7 . 843 . )
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THE NORTTTBkN STAR 1 ¦ m ^^^ m ¦ „ j ¦ 4 W _ _^___ '* _ ... . . ^ .-. _ . _¦•¦ ¦• ... _ - - -
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The " Rebecca" Movement South Wales.
THE " REBECCA" MOVEMENT SOUTH WALES .
The New Age, Concordium Gazette And Temperance Advocate. A
THE NEW AGE , CONCORDIUM GAZETTE AND TEMPERANCE ADVOCATE . A
Leeds :—Printed For The Proprietor, Fea.Rqus
Leeds : —Printed for the Proprietor , FEA . RQUS
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 7, 1843, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct822/page/8/
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