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WHY IS MEAT SO DEAR? "W"HT is meat so cl...
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AFTER LOUIS NAPOLEON—AN EMPRESS REGENT? ...
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TRADES UNIONS. We pxiblish, in "Open Cou...
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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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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Protestant-Popery At Liverpool.. The Spi...
Printers could not print without misprints unless they were superior beings . They have all been moral persons ; there is no instance of a compositor employed on any page of that volume who has gone astray in fife . The publishers have been persons of irreproachable character . The shopkeepers that sell it never make mistakes . The banker " who comments on the Bible must of course be perfectly strict in all his transactions with his neighbour . The opponents of Mr . Ma cn aught must must sustain this thesis ; for if they admit of any qualification
of the statement , " where are they to draw the line ? " Admit that the banker commenting on the Bible , as one John Dean Paul has done , could be incorrect in his accounts , and they may admit the possibility of human error in connexion with the volume . Admit that the publisher may possibly cheat even in the price of selling the volume , and they must admit that the printer as well as the publisher may be liable to error . Admit that the printing-press can err , and how can they vouch for the pen F But if the pen can go astray , may not the penman ; and if the
penman "We will not pursue Mr . Macnaugkht's Very natural inquiry further . The Clerical Society cut it short by two modes : they expel Mr . Macnaught from their body , and in order that he might not go forth to scatter his doubts upon an injured world , they send Him out with a mark upon him . He had had
his doubts , had he , of the infallibility of the text ? "Well , they avenged doubt with doubt . The Hev . C . E . Tittebton , curate of Sfc . Augustine ' s , called on Mr . Macnaught ' s curate , " saying he thought Mr . Macnaught had been very ill used , but that people had great doubts as to his moral character . ^ Some insurance-office would not take his
word ; and something is said about a disputed church paving bill . That is the usual form , in which the avenging angel of Calvinism executes his doom . If some unfortunate man , too earnest for the regulation piety , confesses a doubt as to the construction of texts , his fellow members at once conceive a doubt as to his " moral character . " It is
doubt for doubt . If be doubts the infallibility of Stephen , as Mr . Maonaught did , they doubt the infallibility of his commercial morals ; and surely , they may say , the commercial character of the Reverend John Maonaught is unimportant , compared to the character of Stephen , or of the whole of the Sacred Volume .
In turn , we have our doubt . We doubt whether this mode of meeting a polemical opponent by the trick of backbiting will any longer serve the purpose . On the contrary , the effect is decidedly injurious to faith . The vulgar are beginning to think that truths which need the expulsion of the inquirer , and are supported by the device of backbiting , are not of the kind which are " great and v ill prevail . " The true traitors to Christianity are men like those who travesty the inquisition in Liverpool , and supply the place of the rack with petty calumniation .
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Why Is Meat So Dear? "W"Ht Is Meat So Cl...
WHY IS MEAT SO DEAR ? "W " HT is meat so clear P Every housekeoper is asking the question , and answering it with anathemas against " the butcher , " whoso " lijbtl © bill" has swelled to formidable proportions for those that can pay ; whilo for those that have just bo much to spare and * no more , the daily meal grows more scanty . ! , IVhy is meat so dear ? For a very simple wfea ^ n . The butcher has little or nothing to 'jjJoVith it . Tho reason is excessive speeulatidii amongst those who deal in tho whole-« alQ > animal . When the dealing was conducted at Smithfiold market , there was a rule
to check this kind of stock-jobbing in the daily food of the people . There was a rule which forbade beasts sold on one day to be resold there ^ before an interval of three weeks . No doubt this rule was evaded , and sometimes directly infringed ; but it did tend to check the propensity of speculating . When the market was removed from Smithfield this old rule was not carried with it ; it was forgotten amongst the ancient furniture , which is sometimes left behind in moving ; and hence the new practice .
This practice is carried out more actively and extensively than the public supposes . Not only do the cattle-brokers speculate , but graziers themselves have entered into the market , as the cotton-manufacturers entered some time back into cotton broking for the Australian market . The manufacturers burned their fingers , and we suspect that the stock-jobbers in beef and mutton will not always get entire profits . The practice has descended even to the drovers . A man who can amass a little money , will buy stock on its way to London , and enter the market prepared to share all the operations of the " Bulls" and " Bears" of Copenhagen-fields .
The object of these people is of course to keep stock out of the market , and to realize as high prices as possible . The butcher is here but the agent for the consumer , and he is almost treated as an enemy by the combined jobbers . To him the high price of meat is a nuisance ; it checks the trade , it subjects him to the reproaches of his regular customers . His only protection is that his neighbours in the trade are as badly off as he is .
There is no denying , however , that the high price of meat is in-part artificial . It is not caused by scantiness ; it is caused by the jobbing . There has been nothing in the grazing trade which , threatens any scarcity of meat . If the high price , therefore , occasions great numbers to economize , they need not make up their minds that they must pay high prices , but they must reflect that the economizing in meat tends to bring down the price . Indeed , if all meat consumers could , like the Yankees when they began
their disputes with England , enter into a non-cdnsuming league , they would put such a pressure upon the butchers as would soon bring the jobbers to their senses . The butchers would be not displeased at such a combination ; they would , indeed , co-operate with the consumer , for they have been now for several w eeks continuing their business with a palpable loss . At any rate , however , it is always beat that the real cause of any general difficulty should be as generally understood as possible .
After Louis Napoleon—An Empress Regent? ...
AFTER LOUIS NAPOLEON—AN EMPRESS REGENT ? Is it pretence or self-deception that induces Louis Napoleon to trent France as though it were entailed in his family ? Does he actually believe that the Crown of December will pass down a dynasty of Bonapa ' iitb Emperors ? That the French nation will forgive its betrayers ? That his throne will stand threo days after ho has left it ?
Nothing but a most unnatural combination of circumstances has preserved his authority during tho four years and a half that have elapsed since tho coup d 6 tat . It may be , indeed , that XVanco is doomed to be governed by an Incubus during the life of Napoleon III . ; but no man who comprehends French history or French character , or the state of French opinions , conceives for a moment tho possibility of an Imperial House established permanently at the Tuileries . Louis Napoleon governs tho ignorant part of tho population by delusion ; the venal
part by bribery ; the virtuous part by terror . Let us relate a story—not of . feudalism , but of the nineteenth century , in France . A retired prefect of police in Paris , employed * as clerk , a very respectable young married man , who one day , about ten weeks agd , was missed from his home . His wife came to inquire at the house of the ex-prefect , but he had not arrived . Several days passed , and , as it was known that he was habitually steady , regular , and cautious , his
disappearance caused the utmost surprise . At length his employer , anxious to relieve the distress of the young wife , determined to carry out an inquiry , and , knowing something of French habits of government , commenced his investigation at the Prefecture of Police . The prefect saluted Ms dear predecessor , expressed his serious concern , called up an official , and directed an immediate investigation . The investigation appeared an easy affair , for he soon said ,
" Tell that her husband is perfectly safe . " That was not considered satisfactory . " Tell her not to be alarmed , for her husband has only gone abroad for a short time . " How could he tell her this ? That would be no consolation to her misery . She desired to know what had become of her husband ; she would not believe he had left her . " He has not left her . He did not go , he was sent . The truth is that was a little
of a tattler , and to keep him safe , he has been sent out to Cayenne ; and now , my dear predecessor , I sympathize with the lady ' s distress , but I need not advise you how to take this matter , for you know—we are a despotism . " That is the Empire ' s commentary on itself . We give these facts , pledging ourselves to their accuracy , and are ready to furnish any one who has a reason for inquiring , with names , dates , and verifications . Now , this is the system by which France is governed . Louis Napoleon succeeds in . retaining
power , because every political and social right in France is , for the present , at his mercy . He reigns as if the French nation did not possess one statesman , one nobleminded soldier , one man of high culture and spirit , any class of patriots , any set of men preferring law and morality to violence and corruption . If France were in that abject state , an Empress-Regent might nurse the crown until an Emperor of Eighteen should be ready to wear it . But when Louis Napoleon affects to settle the succession of the Imperial line , « fcFrenchmen laugh , for they remember that France still survives to resist the perpetuation of her shame .
Trades Unions. We Pxiblish, In "Open Cou...
TRADES UNIONS . We pxiblish , in " Open Council , " IV letter from the Secretary of" the National Association of United Trades , in reply to Mr . Campbell ' s letter from Glasgow . The " papers" referred to consist of communications from Scotland , on tho subject of Mr . Maokinnon ' s Committee . In February last ,
tho Central Committee of the National Flint Glasamakers' Society of Great Britain atod Ireland , which has ' its seat of operation in Glasgow , hearing of Mr . MacKinnon ' s proposed inquiry , offered tlieir co-operation . The London Association at onco invited thenVto state their views , and they expressed , without reserve or delajr , tlieir opinion ¦ : — - bene
That Courts of Arbitration would be - ficial , both to employers and employed ; but that tho great difficulty would be to insure , in these courts , an adequato representation of tho working classes . „ . Tho Flint Glaasmnkors had , for a considerable period , acted upon the principle ot
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), June 28, 1856, page 13, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_28061856/page/13/
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