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( Or sent free to the most remote parts of the Kingdom , in a sealed envelope , on the receipt of a post-office order for 33 6 d . )
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tion to him the remainder of hia existence , by afflicting his . innocent but unfortunate offspring with the evil eruptions | of the m&ignant tendency , and a variety of other complaints , that are most assuredly introduced by the same neglect and imprudence .
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O GRIMSHAW and Co . 10 , Goreo Piazzas , Liverpool , are the sole Agents for Second Cabin and Steerage Passengers by the "OLD" or '' BLACK BALL" Line of Packet Ships ; -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 , 13 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 is . 6 d . and sent free , "enclosed in a sealed envelope" on reoeipt of a Post-office Order for 3 s . 6 d . MANLY VIGOUR : a Popular Inquiry into the CONCEALED CAUSES of its PREMATURE DECLINE ; with' Instructions for its COMPLETE RESTORATION , addressed to those suffering from the Destructive Consequences of Excessive indulgence in Solitary and Delusive Habits , Youthful Imprudence , or Infeotion ; including a comprohcusive Dissertation on Marriage , with directions for the removal of Disqualifications , and Remarks on the Treatment of Ghonorrhce , Gleet , Stricture and Syphilis . Illustrated with Cases , & 0 . BY C . 3 . LUCAS , &C 0 ., CONSULTING 8 UBGEONS , LONDON ; And may be had of the Authors , 60 , Newmanstreet , Oxford-street , London ; and sold by Brittan 11 ,, Paternoster-row ; J . Gordon , 146 , Leadenhallstreet ; G . Maasell , 3 , King-street , Southward ; C- Westerton , 15 , Park-side , Knightsbridge ; H . Phillips , 264 , Oxford-strect ; Field , 65 , Quadrant , Regent-street ; Huett , 141 , High Holborn , London ; J . Buckton , Bookseller , 50 , Briggite , Leeds ; J . Noble , 23 , Market-place , Hull ; W . Lawson , 51 , Stone-gate , York , and W . Barracloagh , 40 , Fargate . Sheffield ; T . Sowler , Courier Office , 4 , St . Ann ' s Square , and H . Whitmore , 109 , Market Street , Manchester ; W . Ho well , Bookseller , 75 , Dale Street , and J . Howell , 54 , Waterloo * place , Churoh-street , Liverpool ; W . Wood , Bookseller , 7 & \ High Street , Birmingham ; W . & H . Robinson & Co . 11 , Greenside-Btreet , Edinburgh ; T . Price , 93 , Damo-atreet , Dublin ; and by all Booksellers in the United Kingdom .
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Just Published , the 12 th Edition , Price 4 s ., and sent Free to any port of toe United Kingdom on tho receipt of ft Post Office Order , for 53 .
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THE BEST MEDICINE IN THE WORLbJ READ 1 AND JUDGE FOR TOtrHSELVES !! f IT 1 HE following statement of foots has beeiihft JL municated to the Proprietors of PAHb LIFE PILLS :- Tl Messrs . T . Roberts and Co . m Malton , Jan . 30 , 1843 . M Gentlemen , —Though it is bnt a very shortiS since I lastroote for a supply of Part ' s Life Pi ^ ffl fiad that owing to an astonishing increase mm sale of them , I am again compelled to request y ^^ send me twenty dozen of the email , as also a txiMm of the large size . I should wish you to forward )§|| by railwav" to York , thence by carrier , as eatlMj
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DUBLIN . —The Ii * feh TJerrersal Suffrage Awodafipni&jH ? ho ^ r ^ n « r »» j -weekly meeting » t tf **** g ***' lOOMLjfo . 14 , HoraiAnneSfcreeL at « x o ' clock on
SanclayiMt Mi . BenryClflikTrss called tottediaif . TheCHAxaiLo begged leave to xemaik , before the xegnlarlmsinbES cf £ gb meeting eojameoced , that owing to BomeirregnlMi ^ r aiiliB post-office , or tnnanal fleUy of Ore ISverpooI inaa , tlie SorOemStar , -wcich shonlQ lave been eefirasa to 3 H- Dyatt at eight o ' clock IeeI Jfleht , did not arrive till eleven o'dcfck that morning ; and" even & £ n the letter carriers did aiot deliver the parcel alleging as a reason that it "was too heavy . Perhaps ^ ir . -Godly , tto Scotch gentleman , who acts as secretary Iiers , gave iireotiens not to deliver any more newspapers . However , an application to the Post v . iit eT General can , and no doubt "will be made ; and in ihe event cf getting n 0 « dres « In that qnarter the sabject can be brought before Parliament ( Hear , hear . ) 2 tvas ndTartised in three of the Dublin papers , on
Saturday , that the Xorihern Star -would contain the BJrrEsponaent » T » tween Mi O'HijfginB and lord Eliot , ¦ which -vras pnWiahBd ia the , daHy Freeman ' s Journal , of IThmsday . the 2 Otb , tort suppressed bv . all the wtttly papers , least theiionnfcry people should see it , and see fn it that the Tile calumny calculated and repeated otct and oyer azain , hy the plena liberator and his followers , Teas unfounded . Tbey -would see tbst 2 S . T . O'Hig-JJ IU ST 2 & not an Orangeman , altliocgh this pious old gentleman , "who goes to Westland chapel every moming , bad given currency to the slander , and never yet made the least atonementf or it There was an Immense crowd about Mr . Dyott ' a bouse at eight o ' clock last ¦ nl gh ^ j samB ot Tcboin jsaid that sooner than sot get the paper they tronld give a shilling for it He hoped that their JBnglish Chartist brethren would send the paper containing this admirable correspondence to every part of Ireland . ( Hear , hear . )
iltDTon read the znlea and objects of the last day ' s proceedings ¦ which-were confirmed-Mr , obigges said that he had sevtral letters to read , -which te "was sore "would be very gratifying to the steeling , one « f ir&ca "was from an Irishman 'who resided in Bristol , and-with -whose admirable and truly patriotic "writings a » readers of flie ' Northern Star "WerBlong -faTriYHaf . "Who was it that did not read tritb pleasure ana profit the letters In the Slar , signed alter-3 jafa 3 j"y « itas - and "W . H . CBTtonr »—{ hear , hear ) . fEhareadingol these letters in the Star -were a scores of great gratification to him , and he derived considerable information irom th&m . Sir * -Glifton is an Irishman , and it 'sQl bs gr&telol to his Irish heart to learn in his temporary exile the genuine "vsrmtb -with -wbien hia name has been hfliipfl by his countrymen assembled here today . Mr . O'Higgjns read Mr : Clifton ' s letter , vrhich ¦ was loudly cheered , and concluded by moving bis admission .
Mr . SEMOS T 0 BI 5 seconded- the motion , and said ttiatss anlriKaman , lie -was proad of Mr . Clifton . It ¦ was plowing toxee how men of talent and integrity Tallied ronnd the standard of real political liberty in Ireland , CiurtiEm—( cheers ) . There is no liberty except in the Charter —( hear , hear ) . Where does the poor bonesfc man find the least hope of fedxees for ioa manifold ¦ wrongs and grievances bnt in the ( Sorter alone ? 3 Ehe Charter is thB poor man ' s mainstay—his last plank —Ms only hope . I ** us Irat gfct it , and every blessing -Bill follow —( cheers ) . He -ras proud of having had the opportunity t > f seconding thB limlaaion of Mr . Clifton —then , bear ) . -.
~ mv- O'Hjggess had the pleasure of proposing Mr . Christopher Byrne , » tnbtantial and "wealthy former , tor » uTnriiBrifm- He had some dealings -with Mr . Byrne a few days since , ; -when he expressed a \ cish to be Informed a little upon Chartism . He had ieard so za&ch-said against it that lie "was very smdons to inov ? the msMiJTig cf It . Some people told him that Uie Chartiita were a set of unprincipled men irho had combined together for the purpose -of depriving other people of their property , overthrowing religion entirely ,
and annihilating the Catholic religion —( hear , hear ) . He { Mi . O'H . ) explained the real principles and c * jecta of Charidsm , toTphiehMr . Byrne replied , lj Well then upon my consdencs , I have been a Chartist all my life , though 3 never knew it before —( hear , bear ) . Propose me at yonr next meeting , and send me ray card by post . I will shew it at the chapel next Sunday , and maybe 7 O& -wont have Chartists enough from the county of "Wicklowin aahorttirca ** Here is a convert for yon . Ifever mindire ahaB tavs plenty of them . Tmth will itQjyjul a 4 last
Mr . Edxthi > Sottekb seconded the motion . He look that opportunity of Btatlcg that some time ago » hfin ha inqt&ed fos tbeae Tooms be ttm told by a man of the same of BJslIy , a Imtter fector , set to-come in hare ; that you were all OrangemBB ^ hear)—that tha 'was an Oraage lodge . There is also a ™ nT < of the same of JKsary , a porter in the Linen Hall , who has often told persons coming here to take care and not tmter this place , as 70 a were all Orangemen ; and that 2 £ r- OXJonneU said that yon were to get BO much a bead for all yon « onld betray —( bear , hear ) . Now it is Tery probable that this Keary is in the pay of the Corn "Rxchsjige 1 < g else -what interest wonld he have In thns telling lies ? There i « also a « ort of bedge-schoelmaster in the neighbourhood , whose name , I thfair , is Kavanagh , and -who also tens people away from this place by rteffins lias atKmi . yon . There were some Kildare men here a lew days ago , and while waiQns in
the street to get in "with their cars , some three or four fellows came ons of King ' s , the ahoemakers , and told theee poor men to titecsie of - ihemselves , as they vere going into the hon » e of one of the bloodiest Orangemen in IDoblm —( shame ,-tfcame ) . It is true ¦ sr&at I ssy—( hssz , hear ) . TbeEiig ' s are religions men ; and ! therefore hope tliat they are sot sailty of the vorst of crimes , beEemg , backbUang and vilifying their Beigbbonrs . JLs for Rielly , and Ms son , and Keary , the linen Hall porter , and Savanagh , the schoolmaster , they are too Tgnoran t , too aelfish , and too stnpid to be LeW resp <) naible for anything they say ; yet they do a great deal of iarm . They go about to barbers shops to eircalate their xalnxunies ; but tJod is just , and lie "Will protect the inxwee&t ; their poisoned shafts "will all recoil iipon themselvea . Indeed they are not so Trnifd ) jo hlame a > tliose "who employ tfrpfw Mr . Byrne was admitted .
lie H'Miggixs moved and Mr . Kattkr seconded the admission of JTr . Jobs JBdvard Bounds . Mr . SoiraDS rose and said that he felt very proud and very thankful for the kkid manner -with which he "was admitted a member of the Assodatien . He had been an attentave observer of their proceedings doting Ib&last twelve montba , sad it ~ was not t&l after the most mature eon ^ deration that he had made up his mind to join their isnts . lake many dUiers he was lead to believe that the Association -was unlawful ; bnt he knew by experieace that this -was false . When the "Wlognrereia power evtry tfFvrt -was made to crash them ; ibey-were called Tories , and sow , when the Tories are in power and iorhrangjtheix ingecmty to pat them down , they , are still called Tories . Mr . O Connell had stated xeptatedly that Ibis was a secret society ; that yon were > ound together iy unlawful oaths . Now , he ( Mr . Bounds ) was a Protestant , aad Daniel O'Consell is a Catholic ; and had he ( Mr . Bonndi ) said of an ; other
society or indiTidnals half what Mr . O'CoBBell had aaid of this society and some of its members personally he ahould feel bound to make lestitotion : bnt perhaps Mr . . OConneQ has a carle Vax&e from his private Chaplain to belie , vilify , and cahunniate the members cf this Association . He ( Mr . Sounds ) admired the Catholic BeKgion for one of its practices , which is that of matingle&ntationjznd this subject -was often spoken of anuinrst bis friends ¦ with TeBpect and EdmiiE . tion ; bni "when they looked upon O"ConnelTa public eondact ; bis vile calumnies against all Tsho would sot join him is his devions political wanderings , he and his friends arrived at the conclusion that this admirable system of restitution was only made to apply to the poor ; the rich and fite great were evidently exempt from its -wholesome operation . At sD erente Nr . U'ConneU is exempt from It Pertapa lie is so on tbe principle of BriiiBh law , "that the King can do so wrong . * ' ( Hear , hear , and ^ eers . )
Mr . O'Higgiss rose and said that he had waited till then for the purpose of being enlightened by two influential members of fbs Sepesi Association , who had signified their intention of coming to the meeting that day , aDd who undertook to prove that Mr . O'Connell was taking the wisest , most prudent , and most effective meaia to tffect an immediate repeal of the Union ; and that the ejection of the large sums of money . &s Sepeai reut , and Xka appropriation of it , afforded ample proof of the p&tnoSsm , the -wisdom , and the integrity of Daniel OXkameH , and those -who acted with him . He tMr . O"Hig ^ nB ) jegretted the absence of those Enlightened members of the Itepeal Association . He ffiSsred ve ^ widdy from them- Had they come , the discussion woaldhaveb&en carried on cood-fcnmouredly ;
ttkere -would have heal no angry feeling , no personal aaimtwity , no abuse x » vttnperafion , bnt a fair and honourable disnasion npon quesfions of public sotoliety . tHear , hear . ) He had no had feeling towards Mr-t ) -Cormell ; on the contrary , he wished him a long life * nd every happinea Ihat this world can afford . He admitted that Mr , O'ConneH was the greatest lawyer of * ho age—the greatest orator ef the age ^ -thB most aoone-1 man of the age : to po-arerftil-was the infinence of that eloquence , that lie ( Mr . OH . ) wonld not Name any msn for bang led astray by it . He atadtted his great and raparalleled popularity—he admitted that he had at one period , from 1830 to 1834 inclusive , three kingdoms at bis back . Be admitted that from 1834 till 2839 Wsfrie :-d 8 the "Whigs had conanaadingmEJorrtiesin fiie House ef ComHJons . Bnt with all Una legal knowledge ; witt all fids * lDquene »; with all this popuwith
larity ; ms friends in power , to whom he repeatedly voted the eternal gratitsde of the Irish nation , -what US hB « ver do , or propose to < lo , in 2 us place inRsrijBinent , foithebentSt of hb connby ? it may ie ^ aa tbatths ^ Tory Hokb «! Ixnrds . -wosia thwart his measures ; bat rarely a man , -wi « h ferce Magdoma at his tcck . ihouM have lad the moral coinage to have prcpostd aanething or other . "What « Ha he fio ? "Soaan » ? Tbea asTie did nothing of what -nse -was Ee in ParJament ? He did a great deal He solfi thB ronnty "DahliD to . ja -ncn-Sepealer for a place Jbr nis Eon in-BTP , ^ Corislcsher yiteamonl He sold the coafi ^ Mesth to a ? iOB * Bepealer for a place for his son , Mn Morgan O'ConneH . He sola the coanjy Kerry to a aon ^ epaia'loi ajteee for t \ a aon-in-lsw , Ki , Ciarles -O'CanuielL ^ He * sold Hhs conn ^ of Carlow to s r ion . Bepealer , one '^ pbael a Jew , and ronseqaently tc SSHolJ ^ r iKar-Bspealei . He ca-csed M ? . "R . £ . Ctstf . forfltol ) stsnife 4 cBi o ! BaaSalk , bsq got a ten-Be-
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pealer in bis place .. He sold BongArron for a place for his son ^ ba-law , ' French ^ - He got Whig places for six of his nephews ; and , at the election of 1837 , signed a plaeardL-sUiingJthat the-maawwho sboald put aay otter-pledge to the candldatei than that tt supporting ttie MulboarueiAdmlnlgtraUon matt be in the pay of the Tories ; that the man - who should naaie Repeal mnst be a Tory or in Tory pay . Tithes were then to be adjusted , not abolished ; and the Whig adjustment was a tithe rent charge . He supported the Whigs throngh thick and thin . He ^ stood before the Trades political Union in-too Aiena ia Abbey-street as the Government candidate , threatening with loss of place every unfortunate clerk in office who ahould dare to vote against the Government : Daniel O'Cunnell , thus putting
tee very worst of Tory practices , { corrtrption and perjury ) into active operation . The late Major Sirr -was « bligB 3 to go to the hustings upon this occasion , and declare before God and his country , that Daniel O'Connfell represented his politics and interests in Parliament better than his Tory opponent ) Did any believe that ? no net one ^ This was very pleasing to those who took a scort-slghted view ot the subject , bat to me at any rate it was thorongbly disgusting ; so much so , that I refused to vote for Mr . O'Connell , imd ] expressed , publicly expressed , my disgust &t and abhorrence of hi 3 conduct Why did he support Whigs ;? Was it because they passed , the English Poor Law Amendment Act ? Was it because they declared that they -tronld prefer a civil -war trithaa its horrors to a Repeal of the tlnion ? Was
it heeansfi they passed the Irish ; Coercion Ldl ? Was it because they passed ; the Rural j Police Act "which gives the most despotic power to tb ^ Loid Lieutenant for the time being ? Was it becanse they passed the Irish Municipal Reform Bill , and helped to degrade the great leader of the opposition to support tath . es and miniBt&iB ' money , by enabling him to « it aa Lord Mayo ; , and actually disfranchise those who followed hia advice by refesingto pay the nnfeoly impost ? What a picture of political infamy was O'Connell , dressed out in all the gewgaws of civic chief magistrate , striking off the Burgess roll every man who had followed bis advice by refusing to pay minister's money 1 he who a short time before raised his hands to heaven— " Here note , in the awful presence of thai God who is to judge me . and before
my assembled countrymen , J cow never to pay one JarOiing of ifflie , or Hamsters '; money . " Here was a ¦ vow registered in heaven ! And after this , tbesamo man swore to disfranchise , and did disfranchise , all his fellow citizens who adhered to their oath . There is a sample of Whiggery for you ! Was it because the Whigs passed all those base laws , that Mr . O'Connell 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 clutches he would have had no more chance ,, of escaping than the ill-fated Caspar , had not the Chartista turned out the' perfidious Whigs and thusEaved the " Liberator' - ' fronipolititical damnation—( treat cheering ) . It is now a long time since he ( 3 dr .
O'H . ) had told his countrymen that Mr . 0 Connell was not a Repealer—that he did not desire the Repeal —that the object of the Repeal Assodatien is the restoration of the Whigs to power . Had they been in power we should sot have heard one word of the Irish Arms * SQL 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 cat by a friend . « Take away public liberty hit by bit , *» « y the Whigs . " We are your masters , and win remain bo as long as we can , " say the Tories . The difference between Whig and Tory is jnst this . When the devil put * on a smiling face , Presses like a gentleman , hides his tall in his breeches pocket , bis cloven foot in a -well made boot ; tells the unwary that he 1 b their real
friend , invites them to dinner and champaigne ; gets them into his dutches , and secures them , he is then a Whig : bat when he stands up boldly and tells yon he has cheated and oppressed you , and -will continue to do so as long as he can , and appears before von openly with his cloven foot , < wcked horns , red wide month , barbed tail painted sky blue , and a fork in bis dexter paw , than he is a Tory ; and he who will trust eith ^ ' - Whig or Tory will be equally deceived , and deserves »¦ > ^ deceived . ( Great cheering . ) The Irish people are dtceived , duped , and plundered , by both Whig and Tory . The preas has joined the two accursed factions to make sport of the people for their mutual advantage . The Catholic : clergy , formerly the polar stars oi the people , their friends and guides
tixreugb every difficulty , are now misled as well as the poorest individual . But their eyes will soon be opened . Let them but look at the official report of the Corn Exchange , signed ThomasM . Ray ; and if that does not open their political eyes and ! let is the light , the Almighty is blinding them for his own wise pnrposes . Here is the official report ; read It ; see bow your Repeal money has been appropriated— £ 10 , 600 cf it given to the enemies of Repeal . This money—this money , I say , -wfll surdy « bedivil youi darlint" . £ 10 , 000 Repeal rent regularly handed over to Wellington and PeelJ Good security to keep the peace , and help to » end over more troops to Ireland l ( Daniel , yon are the " darlint " : it Is yourself that knows bow to save your own bacon , and cheat your supporters , priests , bishops ,
laymen , and all , even your friend the Archbishop of Tnam J Daniel , " a vic , you told the people at Galway and at Cork , and other places too , that you woujd cripple the Tory Government , by causing the funds to become almost valueless . It is clear , then ; that yoo know how to do it ; and equally dear that yon have Vested £ 10 , 000 Repeal rent in the very funds which yon intend shall become -valueless , in the event of that Government , to whom yon have given the money , refusing to concede your d » rlipg object , the Repeal 3 "Ton may tay , by way of excuse , and in order to deceive those who do not understand the nature or investing money in Govern * ment securities , that you can get the money back ; bnt this is sot true The money can neves be got back from the enemies of Repeal . They had a bad stock of old goods on hand , £ l 0 , 000 ' a worth of which you took off
their ""»*» This bad stock mnst always remain oat ; some one must take it off you hands ; bat not the enemies of Repeal , the Tory Government , to whom you have given the money . The ease stands simply thus : —A has cheated B ent of an estate . B collects as much money from his friends and supporters , ( some of whom are the tenants of A ) as he considers necessary to insure success in a court of iiw ; but finding that bis proceedings have embarrassed his opponent A . he gives him two 3 hirds of tha money upon 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 ifl the official return . Let every Ctiftrtist in the empire keep a copy of it . Nothing can equal it for barefaced nnblus ' mg villaay . Report from the official organ of the Coin Exchange : : " Mr . O'Connell begged to make the following refozt ; — ; " Loyal National Repeal Association , Corn Exchange rooms . " 1842 . 26 th July , 1843 . " Received from 5 tb April to 4 th July inclusive S 99 9 7 " 1843 . Beceived from 4 th April to 3 rd July inclusive ..... ,. 15 , 798 11 3
• ' Increase on the quarter ...... £ 14 , 799 1 8 3 y order , " T . M . Rat , Secretary . " On Saturday next j £ l 0 , 000 of that wonld be funded . He would hand the scrip to Mr . Ray for £ 10 , 000 . " Is this the -way to Repeal the Union t Well , Well ; for cool sheer rascality this stands unrivalled . But what has become of the remainder of the Repeal rent ? Is this : the only account the public shall have ? Where are the auditors of last year , -whom every body knows are whally innocent of the least v ** ticleof fajowledg © of as account current ? Will Lord Brougham be satisfied with this report of the quarter's Repeal revenue ? According to [ the official weekly annoucements of the sums recived at the Corn Exchange from the nth of April , 1842 , to the 5 th of April , 1843 , distinguishing each quarter separately the sums receiTed stand thus : —
1842 . £ S . d . Quarter ending 5 th Jnly ... 999 9 7 Quarter ending 4 th October ... 3 , 763 11 io £ 1843 . Qnsrtex ending 5 th January . « 13 S 4 O 2 s Quarter ending 4 th April ... 15 , 167 13 * 4 J
? £ 33 , 870 17 1 The public should be fsDy satisfied as to how this vast sum of money has "been appropriated . Has Mr . Ray been handed scrip for this ^ £ 33 870 17 s . Id . ? If so , just he so good : aa to let ths public know the fact . Bnt add to this * nm of £ 33 , 870 17 a . Id . the balance of the last quarters * revenue not given as yet to P « : el and Wellington , £ 5 , 798 Us . 3 d ., and we have a sum total kept in the back ground amounting , according to their own statements , to £ 39 , 669 8 s . 4 d . What have
yon done with all this money ? You have got a great deal « f 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 country . It is a crying sin to cheat a psor curate . ! Perhaps it is all for their good . But when and how is the Union to be repealed ? He ( Mr . O'Higgiiis ) would jnst say in conclusion , tint he regretted very ninth the absence of his two learned and enlightened Repeal friends—{ hear , hear ) . !
Mi . D-sort said he regretted it had not fallen to his lot to second the admission of Mr . Clifton , whose letters he had with . pfogrriaT pleasure pernsed in the 2 forihern Star . Soctl men &s Mr . Clifton were an honour to Ireland , and calculated to " raise ^ character of Irishman in the estimation of their BagPah fellow , subjects . The notions of ^ . X ^ ton ' regarding liberty were broad , comprehensive , and TinfacUpu 8-- ( hear ) he did not limit the gift of freedom to a " particular nation or creed ; but taking the whole world for the fiejd of his exertion , Be would" einancifat ^ Man , Of whatever colour , dime , or creed—ibear ^ hear ) . These " W 5 TB the sentiments congenial to his ( Six . D ? s ) feelings . He could soV see how any clans or section of the people Mouidbe defrauded of what he considered * natural inalienaMe , right—the right of ehposing tfiose who anouw make the laws and regulations to which Uifcy , asnembersof the stxaal commtoify , were fconnd " oabmlt—( hear , heir :. He < Mr . D . . ) did " not kao-w whether an . Clifton went as far as to advocate the
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; ^ ^ y right of women to the franebUe—3 &w CnM * i « ta as a bojiy didnrtgofdtttieextouaion ' -of tbeSan ^ etothe ladles . ' He ( Mt ^ D . ) thoaght himseUi and had no heri-UBoain avowing Oa opinion long held . and not sow for tHe first time put forward , ^ tiiat whatever show of teason there id jSDt'be fwwiti ) h 6 idingUievota from the feme covert , there was none forkeepingit from femeble but be never wonld go the length of asserting thatfemales q 2 one Bhonld form the electoral privilege . He was no favoorer of Gyneocraoy , or petticoat government—< h ear and-laugater ) . That woald be as ODjasfc- aaithe system that would shut out the political influence of women altogether . But what would they say to ithe fact , that Mr . O'Connell , who had so often fallen fout with the phrase *• Universal Sarfrage , " which ] he
scoffed at because he would h 3 ve it that , the words included the fair sex , after exhausting tha fertility of his prolific ingenuity—after rambling through w Complete , ' Manhood , ' » Household , ' and a dozen other suffrages , had at lost coma to the conclusion that none \ but women should posseBB the franchise—< Oh , oh ) . They might smile and ety ' Oh , " but the fact was aubs | jantiaUy so . Mr . O'Gonnell had declared that , co-eyal with the Repeal of the 'Union , It would be made constitutional in Ireiand that ail married men should vote—( hear , hear ) . And had further declared that no idle and unwed goroons should have the privilege—( hear . ) Thus it would be necessary to be bound in the'fetters of matrimony before a man could abate off his political chains , and the entrance to the Temple of Liberty
would be through the porch of Hymen—( hear , hear , and loud laughter ) . Yes , my bachelor friends , f Repeal of the Union will settle your hash—( loud laughter ) for | no man ean vote , saya this Governor of the Catholic Emigration Society , unless he has a wife . Now Emigration presupposes a surplus population ; and yet here ia a bonus held out to induce early and improvident matches , and to stock the country with hosts of little existences for whom there is nothing but starvation and misery provided —( hear ) - He ( Mr . D . ) would not ; go into all the bearings of this 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 , it least produced provision * and commodities necessary and useful to hia fellow beings ; besides paying bis just proportion of the taxation of the country . In fact this popo<lon Was aa complete a blunder as the "manhood" suffrage out of which they had so completely bantered Din , that tie nowj never dared to mention the word—( hear ) . Thta new / verbal bantling would likewise fall still-born from his lips ; for It was Impossible any people , however proue to nasiductlon , could stand the attempt to transfer all political power to the wives of men , many of whom supposed their partners already exercised too much dominion . They all recollected the laughable case put by Franklin regarding the jackass , out of which the man voted , to -wheta Neddy « Soxde 3 a forty BbAUing 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 Dmiel the
profound ? Why when the wife died , the husband- lost hi 8 vote : freedom was buried in her grave . Who thian substantially would possess political power under this new ! regulation ? the women and they alone—( heat , bear ) . 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 he 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 hia country , to the possession of the 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 lond cheers .
Mr : George Manden was admitted a member , after which Mr . Rafter was called to the chair , and the cordial thanks of the meeting were given by acclamation fa > Mr . Clark for his gentlemanly conduct in the chair and his untiring zjal 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 ot Universal Suffrage . '¦
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Untitled Article
THB number of cases decided by the Tribunal of Commerce of Paris , amounts to forty thousand annually . '
In the Sheriffs Court last week , a , verdict for the Crown for £ 3 , 954 , Is . 2 d . was obtained , against Messrs . Candy and Dean , silk importers , fer duties unpaid . The affair is one of the Custom-house frauds . ; AN iEMPLOtK of the Parisian post-office , of rather high standing , has 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 the guilty couple after the elopement . : It is Said that the head of an eminent fancy goods firm In the City , lately excb . eqn . ered for participation in the ' Custom-house 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 Gemgses . —Filial Affection . — * Jim ,: how ' s your ma 2 "— " ' s fat and etxong—h . oW « 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 goin' errands , and doin" chores about home , like you used to ?"
Jnst Pnblished, Price 2s 6d.
Jnst Pnblished , Price 2 s 6 d .
Untitled Article
t THE KQRTHERN SlA-B [ . '
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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-ncseproduct943/page/2/
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