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2 THE NORTHERN STAR. MARCH I5 ' l85L
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FRANCE. The elections of the officers of...
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^ A skeleton, * in a complete suit of ru...
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Tub Largest Cotton Mitt in Lancashire ov...
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CURBS FOR' THE TJiVCUltED I
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Transcript
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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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2 The Northern Star. March I5 ' L85l
2 THE NORTHERN STAR . MARCH I 5 ' l 85 L
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France. The Elections Of The Officers Of...
FRANCE . The elections of the officers of the National Guard of fh * Seine have been postponed until the organic law shall have been voted . The National Guard of Sirasburfi is to be dissolved . Tha ' Echo du Midi' gives the following account of some disturbances which occurred at Meze , a little town of the Herault , on the night of Shrove Tuesday : —A masked ball having ended with cries of ' Vive la Sociale !* ' Vive la Renublique R-mge !' the commissary having in vain auercpttd to restore
ord ^ rordered brigades of gendarmes to clear the room ; Three or four hundred people present then assaulted the commissary and gendarmes , and some wonnds were givea with knives . The commissary having sent for troops to Gen . Rostolan , 300 men , thirty horse and one cannon were sent . This force seems to have uicceeded completely m ttstwiw order . Domiciliary visits were made , arms seized , and men arrested . The prefect , proenreur of the Republic , and other authorities who accompanied the troops ' , were expected back at Montpelier on Thursday . . , . „ . Th * r- was some slicbi disturbance ia the Champs £ Jvsecs " ( m Sunday afternoon . The President was
takinz his usual ride , when a small group of workmen surrounded bim and cried'Vive l'Empereur . ' This cry was immediately responded to by a deafening shout of . ' Vive la Republique , ' to which mvriads added the dreaded words of •« Democratique et ' Sociale . ' The President put straw to his horse , and galsopped off , but the rival factions supported their poetical opinions with their fists and feet , and a fhht ensued , in which some few heads , and still mote shirieswere broken . The Socialists are a $ aiu making great exertions ia Paris and the provinces . The Lyons papers say that M . Imbert , who bad been arrested two months hack for being concerned in the Lyons plat , expired two days ago in the
prison of Roanne , where he was confined . His funeral took place there on Sunday , and not less than 5 , 000 parsons were present at if . ' Everything passed over with perfect order , no address being delivered , nor any manifestation made . M . Imbert , who was long remarked for his democratical opinions , conducted , under the monarchy , the 'Penple Souverain ' of Marseilles , an extra-liberal journal for tnattime . After the funeral of M . Imbert , about 1 , 200 of the persons present proceeded to the Croix Rousse , to attend to their earthly resting-place the remains of M . Cdandra , another Socialist . There also ereryibing passed over quietly , the authorities refusing , " as in \ be preceding cise , to allow any address to be delivered .
GERMANY . The following is , verbatim , the address of Gen . Havnau ( a near relative of the Austrian Haynau ) to " the Hessian offic ? rsf on . the 4 th of October las ' : —' Gentlemen , —I have summoned you here to tell you that 1 have been commissioned by bis Boyal Highness to crush under foot that pernicious gang that threatens the welfare of the state . S ' -rs , —tile question is , who is to role ? This Godabandoned , Godless , pernicious gang , or the government which God bas sat up . We shall soon decide this question here in Cassel , sirs , in this little slate . The throne is in danger , and » H
thrones in Europe look here , and upon us , upon this liUle army . I ask you not if your will obsy ; it is not for that I have called you together . You must obey ; for he who obeys not shall have his soldier ' s coat pulled off his back , and have a blouse put an him . Itisnothvag to you whether the orders given you , sirs , are constitutional or not . His Royal Highness bas sworn to the constitution , and I have full powers from bim . I am the constitution for you , sirs , I . If any of you prefer the smile of that gang , or the hand of traitors , to the favour of your Prince , whom God bath set Up , I will pull bis coat from or ? his hack , and put a blouse on him . Gentlemen , your servant . '
Letters from Cassel state that the Elector has expressed great dissatisfaction at the reception the public gave the 1 st Regiment of Infantry when it re-entered the town ; the people cheered it loudly . Oathe following day the Prince sent for the officers to the palace , and censured them severely for allowing or tacitls accepting such a demonstration . The cheer ? , be said , we meant for the officers , for their rebellious conduct . They ought to have ordered the men to reverse tbeir arms , and' stopped the months of the bawlers with the butts of their muskets ' . It is added that the enraged Prince even spoke of the possibility of an abdication .
HOLSTEIN . Our Hamburg correspondence is of the 7 th inst . It is stated ttiai part of the Austrian ttOOpS Will leave the cities of Hamburg and Lubeck , and that these troops will return to Austria . A further reduction bas been decreed in the Helsteiu army .
PRUSSIA . The pamphlet written by Deputy Harkort , the publication of which was prevented the other day by the government , was nevertheless printed by an enterprising bookseller of this city . The police got wind of it , hosevar , and ere the whole impression was finished , the police forced their way into the printer ' s premises and se ? z-d the whole , manuscript and all . This proceeding of the police is , equally
with the first interference , utterly contrary to the spirit and the letter o { tha constitution ; and if the independence of the judges be not entirely broken by the new disciplinary law bow before the chambers , no judge would venture to acquit the police of an illegal act . It is the intention of the author , Deputy Harkort , to bring the case before the law courts , not Auhstamling the public prosecutor has Sanctioned the seizure .
On the 6 : h of March the Second Chamber was not a little amused by a communication from Herr Mantenffcl , to the effect that the Austrian government desired to have a copy of the reports of the proceedings of the Chamber , and promised to send ia return one ot the reports of the debates in the Austrian Diet . The Chamber , amidst much laughter , acceded to ths demand , although it is not likely to receive , for some tisae to come , the exchange copy , the cenvoca ' sion of the Austrian Diet appearing a very remote event . In the Lower House Baron Vineke ' s motion for a committee to inquire into the state of the nation has been rejected by a large majority . The numbers were—for the motion , 41 j against it , 228 .
ITALY . AccqU 5 * s from Bologna represent the Pasmtore as still holding bis mountain positions against lite corebinwl ifforts of the Aus ' riau and papal troops . On the 23 r « i uit ., near Casula Valsenic , the dead body of a brigand , who had fallen in one of the recent skirraishes , was discover ? d , and the soldiers were ia *> n following the bloody track of another wounded man . The extermination of these bands appears to he a most hopeless affair , since , whatever their actions may be , their organisation has a uecidfdlr pBis ' s . ical character , and resemble ? not a little tfe ' at of the chouans in ihe revolt of La Vendee .
"Wbi ' stnot a recruit can be found to swell the ranks of the '» a t-al army , the secret agents of the brigands find * .: o dtfikuUy whatever in enrolling men for ihe . service of the Passatore , and in order to prevent- treacheiy , the greater part of these men are unacquainted with each other , and oniymeel at a zenera ) rendezvous , when some important ex . pedition is decided on , distrain j- again , and reluming lo their customary avocations as soon as it is cor ap-gteu . It is stated on good authority that the brigand ? receive regular pay , wbether in action or at their own home , aud form , in fact , an armv
which Will become very formidable so soon as the politic ;! chiefs , who secretly dirset their operations , shall give the signal for a general risiny . No enteller ss allowed to enlist more than four men , who , after fczriag Jseen tried in action for some time , become entailers in their turn , each of them enlisting four rsora , and bringing tbem to the rendezvous , and sa on , like the successive links in a feudal chief ™;^ li ell Y army , until the chain stretches over tin whole country . To keep up such a system of course rtqu-res a considerable command oi nioaev , sun strengthens the supposition thai the wnoio agnates in a political feelin g
NAPLES . Tlwpdiiicddrama of court revengn cenfiaws no vhvt a * u « fcrn-V--,. , n ir ons . £ ,, ££ «? ; wared * , « . two eUier ^^ £ « - paut rponrdK of olf ^ c s than »& £ ?& hav , « o a , ured at the eta ** ^ . " all c ^ v r * , bfi puuufced for their cogitation , opinio :,,, tbe ntefc tnu ^ cti ™ must bn re , ^ „ the urrviBS out of astern . Fortv- ^ . vn , I are accused in the « 3 e 5 Called th « Sffltbo , Jsnnarv and forij-six'sn . those whic ? . are -n'iU . d i < i ~ 5 S t Sepieaibrr . Most of the accused are w , * k : B » " „ £ and soa * iieiosg ev «? ta the class ca !! ed fo ^ T ? They Kae . faffrfsesied nearly two years iiaclmdZ thafoUowinj circumsiancs :--When the Kinefeh strong enough to defy his constitutional oath the
France. The Elections Of The Officers Of...
court party organised lazzaroni mobs , which were regularly headed by a capo , and , as circumstances dictated , issued forth with white flags , shouting ' Vive il Re ! ' The official journal designed- these mobs as men whose ' candid and spontaneous feelings dictated their expressions of loyalty . ' Now , on the days above named ; these . hirelings ofvibe-court were met bv a mob of men from another part ^ o f : the cry , who ' shouled ; 'Lang live the constitutional King . ' A fight ensu ? d , and the ' candid and spontaneous' were all beaten ; thereupon the government threw tbeir ^ opponents into prison . These unfortunate men are now accused of having shouted sed ' nious words on these occasions , and are to be punished accordingly . The trials , like those of the ? Units Italians , ' will simply register the . means employed by the court party to get rid of the " constitution , and heap fresh infamy on all concerned .
The ex-minister , Poerio , has been removed to the island , of Ischia , still chained to a fellow-prtsoner . His removal originates , it is said , from the governor of bis late place of confinement having shown some pity for his sufferings . Letters from Palermo and Messina state that , in both cities the government had ordered the people to be gay during the carnival . The Messina letter states , 'The carriages with masks were protected « n either side by soldiers and mobs of boys employed to follow , shouting ' Long live the king . ' The people didhot and could not join iu the forced festivities , although every effort was made to induce them to da so . ' The whole island remains in a state of
siege ; after nine o ' clock every one is challenged by the militare guard . The additional taxes weigh heavily on the people , who are described as bent to the earth by fear and made desperate by oppression of all sorts .
ROME . A letter from Rome , in the ' Opinione' of Turin , of the 7 th , announces the occupation of Terni by the Austrians , and adds that 10 , 000 Austrians are expected at Peragia , Assisi , Folignoi and other places in that'quarter . At the same time the King , pi Naples is sending troops towards the frontiers of his territory . Hence the writer is led to conclude that the Austrians and Neapolitans are going » " tn'rn single continuous military line . :
SPAIN . : The committee on ths government bill for the settlement of the debt have made their report—a report , on the whole , favourable to the government measure . The provincial papers are , as usual , full of accounts of robberies and assassinations ' . Three of a band of seven thieves were killed on the 1 st inst . in a fight with the mountain patrols . Near La Matiat , and at Montnech , a noted freebooter , named Flotje , v * ho has long beim the terror of the country people , has been killed by the officer of a detachment sent in bis pursuit . I ^ ow that the novelty of railway travelling has passed away , the crowd no longer hurries to the Aranjues railroad terminus .
TURKEY . A telegraphic despatch from Agram of the 6 th inst . announces the occupation : ( by assaul' ) of the town and city of Banjaluka on the part of the Bosnian insurgents . They occupied the city on the 26 th uH ., and procseued next to storm the citadel . Although exposed to the fire of artillery from the works , they descended into the moat by means of scaling ladder ; , and eventually succeeded in mastering the place . The Yiziei ' s lieutenant took flight . As for the Turkish garrison of Banjaluka , it is stated that the iusurgeats liberated them on parole . -
UNITED STATES . By the Royal Mail steam ship Africa , Captain Ryrie , which arrived in the Mersey shortly after eleven o ' clock on Monday morning , we have advices from New York to the 26 th uit . Our accounts received from Washington and New York by the Africa are not unimportant . From t :, e departure of the Canada up to the 20 th uit . little business of note was transacted in Congress . Numerous petitions in favour of steam to Liberia and from San Francisco to China were presented ; the Lieuienant-Geueral Creaiion Bill was
sanctioned ; and the Postage Bill received the assent o < the Senate . On the tariff question nothing of interest occurred . On the 14 th , however , a serious riot occurred at Boston in connexion with the Fu gitive Slave Law . A mob , irriiated by the arrest of a coloured man as a fugitive slave , surrounded the Courthouse , seized the prisoner , carried him forcibly away , and afterwards secured his retreat so speedily that all attempts at recapture proved futile . Subsequently , in the Senate , Mr . Clay moved a resolution calling on the President for information in regard to the infraction of the law . On the 20 th uit , President Fillmnre responded ,
addressing to the Senate a long and resolutely worded message , expressing his determination to enforce the law , and proposing measures for the purpose ; such as empowering the Executive to call out volunteer state troops in aid of the authorities , without a previous proclamation , as now required , & e . For the Message our space is quite inadequate , and equally so for the sharp and acrimonious debars which ensued upon it ; the southern members , of course , being irate at the injury to their interests by the infraction of the law . Subsequently , the message was referred to the Judiciary Committee to report a bill in accordance with its suagt-sttons .
General Henderson has again escaped trial at Ne » Orleans on the Cuba charge , the second jury being , like the first , unable to agree . Jenny - Liud had ' ereated a ^ reat / urore in New Orleans . For the first ticket of the first concert 240 dols . were paid by a hatter , -who previously had won Power ' s Statue of the Greek Slave at a raffle ; and the proceeds of the first , five concerts were about £ 20 . 000 sterling . She was shortly to leave for St . Louis , & c , having refused to visit Mobile . Measures had been prcseniedto the Legislature of Pennsylvania , calculated to realize 500 , 000 dols . per annum towards paying off the State debt . Our New York contemporary ' s lists of articles for tlie Great Exhibition extend
over three columns in leng'h ; but one of the most interesting appears to be the model bale of cotton intended to bu presented to Her Majesty by the grower , Mr . Merriwether . of Montgomery county , Alabama , weighing 4801 b ., and said to resemble silk in fiaeness . From Springfield , Massachusetts , we learn that Mr . George Thompson , M . P ., had again fallen into rou ^ h company , and had been conjpelted , by mob demonstrations , to abandon his mission . On the 12 th uit . upwards of HO free coloured men embarked from New Orleans for Liberia , under the auspices of lbs Louisiana Colonisation Society .
FroaiSan Francises , Cahfnrma , we have accounts extending lo January 15 . Fe « v features of importance are to be found among the details . Great esciien-efit is said lo have been caused by a reported discovery that the sands of the coast near the mouth of the Klamath river were , rich in gold . Great numbers of adventurers were departing far the spot eager to join in the harvest , which was said to be at the rate of a dollar to each pound over a tract of coast twelve railts in extend . Similar statements are made as regards other parts of the iutevior , and the miners are said to be doing well . The Legislature of the State assembled oii the 6 ' . b of January for the first time .
Accounts from Oregon , dated January 2 nd , state that a steamer had been purchased to maintain steam communication with San Francisco . On the 25 th of December a steamer was launched under the auspices oi the'Governor , being one of the first launched in 'hat territory . On ihe 21 st of December ths first clearance of a merchant ship to China direct was recorded . Floaling docks , bridges , & c , were being rapidly constructed , ai : d Orngon wa ? fast advancing to material prosperity . From the Sew York Tribune we learn that a communication from Kossuth , the unfortunate
Hungarian general , was received by the Secretary of State on the 13 th Feb ., which represents that he is in durance in the Turkish dominions , and earnesfJr entreats the good offices of the United States government to enable him to obtain his release , with the view of emigrating to its shores . The Secretary of State has expressed his intention to transmit immediate instructions to t ! ie American Minister ' Constantinople , Mr . Marsh , to open negotiations with the Turkish gorannicnt ; , looking to the release of the prisoner , and comp li ance with the terms cf his entreaties . The communication v ,:. s
transmitted by Dr . Frank laytor , of Pennsylvania , who has just returned from Turkey , aud from -. » visit of thifc weeks to the nobis Hungarian . Kossuth ' s residence is fixed in a miserable aud sickly locality , apparently with the object , on the part of tha Austrian and Russian rovernna-nts , who desig-7 ist- "d if ., of < rr-tiinjr rid of l .-iai by tho slow i-raceis of disease , " lift is foriy six years of ngo , aud much broken in constitution , thouirh represented as being even now a man of the noblest aspect , physicaliv and intellectual ! v .
Another dV «» atoh was . received on the IStU uit ., from friends of Koisuth in Constantinople , r » ho represent that all hopes of his liberation , without the intervention of the United States or England arc at an end . The dispatch comes through Gov . Ujhazy ,
France. The Elections Of The Officers Of...
who has translated it into German , and transmitted it to the government . The following intelligence , relating to the Icarian Community , taken from the same paper , will be found interesting : — "We havo received the first number of the Popular Tribune , a weekly paper in English , iust commenced at Nauvoo by the Society of French Communists , established under the direction of M . Cabet /^ Ve learn fr om ; it that the Community is in an encouraging condition . It now numbers three ' hundred ^ and forty persons , of whom one hundred and fifty arc menrahd eighty-six . wo men . It begun two years since with less than 20 , 000 dols . ; it now is in possession of a steamniill for both corn and wheat , a saw-mill ' for its pai >
ticular use , and also to execute work for tho public ; and a whisky distillery for commercial purposes ; It possesses workshops , containing . thel following trades : —tailors , -shoemakers , smiths , engineers , tinsmiths , clock and watchmakers ; wheelwrights , carpenters and joiners , coopers , tanners , bricklayers , wooden-shoe makers , & e „ < 5 sc . The surplus products of the industry of the Community are sold at St . Louisj wherelt keeps a store for tho purpose . The Community has eleven cows , " which provide milk for the infants , the sick , and , during , summer , for the women who drink coffee . It has its own bakery , slaughterhouse , gardens , and kitchens , the latter employing two head cooks , three assistants , three women , and three women extra for washing the utensils after supper . ' ' ¦
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^ A Skeleton, * In A Complete Suit Of Ru...
^ A skeleton , * in a complete suit of rusty armour , has been discoverad in the hollow trunk of a secular willow , near Perigueux ,. The fashion of . the armour is as old as the 13 th century . ' ' ' ' 1 The cholera has disappeared iri Havana and in St . Jago de Cuba , but it still exists in some districts in the Island of Cuba . -Letters from Guadeloupe of the 8 th uit ., state that the cholera was still raging at Cayenne , although not so violently as before .
A severe shock of an earthquake was experienced at Carthager . a onthe Titrof February ; two hoiises were destroyed i many severely damaged , and several lives lost .- The export duties at this city are now abolished , but the authorities insist that all specie shipped shall pass through the Custom house . ¦ The Court of Cassation in France has just rejected the appeal of the ' Siecle , ' tbe . « Evenement , * and the ' National' against the decision of the Court of Appeal of the 9 tb of November last , which declared
the ; Courts of Correctional Police competent to try infractions of the law of thelO . h of July , relative to ^ si gnatures of articles in newspapers . This decision of the Supreme Court , confirming , as it does , the sentence of the inferior . courts , establishes a point of jurisprudence relating to the press which had been hitherto left undefined ; and also establishes that the infractions of VheTraguy law being ' simple contraventions , and not Mits , can he brought be / ore the correctional courts , arid not the jury .
The MonUeur' has published a-decree of the President of the French Republic ; dismissing eight Prefects , and making numerous changes among the same class of functionaries and the' SubiPrefect * of . various departments . ¦ This measure will ; it is said ; not stop here . : ' •<¦ ¦ = ¦ An acquittal in a press'prosecution is announced from AUsnaasa ' phenomenon . ' A printer , iiaraed Kohner , has '" been pronounced not guilty : by the Urper Tribunal on a charge of publishing a painphletbv Jobann Range , catifid ' Europe cannot be Cossack . ' Part of the contents , gave offence to the StatthaUerschaft , and the author being beyond its .
reach , the printer was prosecuted .- The court decides he is not responsible , The case , however ; could not terminate without a victim . The prisoner ' s advocate , M . Carstens ; of Altona , having in his defence sharply criticised the . proceedings of the Court against his client , I was fined fifty thalers , or £ 8 sterling , and threatened'WitU suspension fl'OPJ practise if he ever carried his professional zeal beyond the point of discretion ' again . "" As the Court itself gsts up the case for the prosecution ; it is not quite safe to ' abuse the plaintiff's attorney , ' and a barrister of excitable temper may under such a system easily be ruined by a little increase , of business .
Whilst all Europe , nay , all the world , is looking forward to the approaching Exhibition with intense interest and anxiety , Neapolitan . subjects'have been refused passports to England ; and ' the children of this world are wise in'their generation , for not more antagonistic are the principles and practice of the Neapolitan government to everything that would be seen and felt and heard in the land of freedom than is darkness to light . Doubtless , too , the Holy Catholic Church would be most unwilling
to expose her children to the mflaence of the eloqueuce of a Gavazzi , whose * words , that burn' have found their way even into ; Naples ; - spite of custom-housfs and JVsuits . Que class of men , however have permission to attend—they are " the infamous hireling spies ; and it it said that London will teem with thsiia . They will , however , be known by al those who have an interest in avoiding their loathl some contact , as many of them are known at Naples .
An interdict has been laid upon a peculiar kind of broad-brimmed brown bat , and upon a Republican song setting forth ' the merits of Mazzini . The cunning Lombards have , however , managed to ev , tde the latter prohibition by substituting ' Radetzsky ' for the name oi the Italian patriot , and they now chant their favouritu Jay with impunity . On the 27 th , a journeyman baker was shot on the Campo di Marie , at Venice , for showing a revolutionary programme , published in Lyndon , to an Hungarian soldier .
Tbe last Munich ' Nachrichten' contains an advertisement of a new article , specially manufactured for the thirsty population of that city ; it is a ' beerwaich , ' which registers how much of that fluid tbe wearer imbibes ; the maker recommends these assistants to the frequently failing human memory for the ' solidity of tbeir mechanism ' and their cheap , ness ; tbey cost three florins thirty kreulzers each . Another advertisement in the same paper announces a' dumpling hair . Tor tin : last night of the Carnival . The . 5 th being the . third anniversary of the ¦ promulgation of the Constitution in Piedmont , there was a Grand Mass cakbrated m the Cathedral , - alter which the National Guards , to the number of 4 . 000 , were reviewed . At night the public buildings and most of the private houses were illuminated .
Corporal punishment is again introduced . 88 . 3 le ^ al penalty in Mecklenburg . It ' was abolished in January , 1849 , according to the article of . the German ' Grundrecht . ' The decree of the 4 th inst ., which re-cstablishfts it , states that the abolition of corporal punishment without .-exception has been proved by experience . lo be impracticable . According to the new regulation , prisoners iu confinement , and persons detained for trial by the judges Of tile police , ¦ must' be flogged for the maintenance of discipline ; youths , hardened offenders , vagabonds and wood stealers , may' be punished in the same man ; ner . One of the reasons given in the decree for ap . plying tbe stick to p .-rsons under confinement and
trial for offences is literally ' as follows > : V As all other means of correction , in the greater part of the prisoners , make no impression whatever , the constquence has been , as shown- "b y experience that the obtaining of their , confessions of crime ' s is become much more difficult and seldom than before the abb . litioti of . corporal punishment .: As the prison is , under the present system of preliminary inquiry , the most important , - and , for certainly iu awarding the punishment of death , an indispensable means o ; proof , the ' abolition contained i : t ihe ' orderof 11 th of January , 1849 , has endangered the proof of crime in all inquiries tao much to allow of proceeding fur
. ' . her iu this manner . ' The stick is therefore restored in the prison as partof the judicial process ; a" means of extorting cohesion ; torture in one of its forms is thus re-established . As justification of the punishment for youthful offenders , it is added , 'it is . the shortest means of ¦ correction . ' For vagabonds \ t is urged : — The majority of these men belong to the most derailed . part of hutuau ; society , and such a punishment is the more adapted ta them : as ' i ' ts-adroinisiration costs the taut , outlay of time ana" expanse . : Foreigners are by it sent quicker out uftbe territory , ar . d av < -. move erfictusliy discouraeed'from ajaiuentering it . ' ' ¦ ¦¦; »
Tub Largest Cotton Mitt In Lancashire Ov...
Tub Largest Cotton Mitt in Lancashire over i mV ? ' ? ilmt > ' 'I I yil id , hiisrece , ltl ybeen - erected by . Mr . John . Mayal , of Bottoms , Mossley - it j s 187 yards long by twuty-six and a half wide , inside « ie isurc . It ; will give etuplovmettt to many ' hundred hands . , ihe miH is-forty-three window ' s in length and mx stories' high . The engine is upwards ' o ^ lOO horsepower . CtllLDRKK are . inquisitive b « dl « s : for insrinnp " What does cleave mean . Pa V" « jy Sfjl unite together . "—** ]) oes Jbhn unite wood when be cleaves it ? ' «¦ Hem ; - well it means' to- sepSe » — . Well , l'a , does a man separate from his wife when he cleaves to her ? " ^ Hen , hem ; don ' task so many foolish questions , child . ; A CAUTioN .-Never nod to an acquaintance at an auction . We did so once , and when ' : the sale closed we . found fourbroken chairs , six cracked flowerpots
Tub Largest Cotton Mitt In Lancashire Ov...
and a knock-kneed bedstead knocked down to us . What we intended as nods to a friend , had been taken by the auctioneer as bids for the kitchen lurniture .
Curbs For' The Tjivculted I
CURBS FOR' THE TJiVCUltED I
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HO Ltd WAT'S : OINTMENT . [ An Extraordinary Cure of Scrofula , orliing n O ; ' , Evil . Extract of a letter from Mr . J . ' II . Allid ' ay , 209 Iligh-atreet , Cheltenham , dated January 22 ud , I & jO . Sib —Mv eldest son . when about three years ot age , was-afflicted with a g landular swelling in the neck , which after a short time broke out into an ulcer . An eminent medical m « n pronounced it as a very ; bad case of scrofula , fZI Ascribed for a considerable time without effect . The disease then for years went on gradually increasing in vnilenee- when besides the ulcer m the neck , another formed below the left knee , and u third under the eye , beiides seven othert . on the left arm , « itha tumoftr between tWaves ; w " iich-was-e » pected to break . During the whole ot rL '» wni > mv suffering boy had receiy . od the constant advice
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DEAUTIFUL HAIR , WHISKERS , D EYEBROWS , . & c , maj be ,-with ct-rtainty . obtained by using a very small portion of ROSALIE COUPELLE'S PARISIAN POMADE , every morning , instead , of any ' . oil or other prepar-ation . ^ fortnight ' s , use will j ^ irx-piost'lnr stances , show , its surprising pi'opertiei ~ in '' p ' roduciiigand curling Whiskers , lluir , iSsc , nt any age , tYom \ Wjjlirtevtflf cause deficient ; as also , cliealunggreyness . ic . " - ' iSent free by post , with instructions , < 5 sc ., on receipt of twenty . four postage-stamps , by Miss COUl'ELLE , . Ely-, place , Hoibornihirj ^ London ; who may be ' consulted W these matters dailj ; from 2 till 5 o'clock . . . ••"' . " .. TESTfHONULS ., . " ' ' ' " ' . ' Lieutenant . Ilolroyd , R . N ., writes : ^ - ' Its effects are truly astonishing ; it has thickened and darkened my hair very hiuch . ' ' ' ' • • • . : ' Mrs . Buckley , -SUplefbrd :- 'Y our delighttul Pomade has improved my hair wonderfully . '
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MATRIMONY MABE EASY ; 011 , HOW TO WIS A LOVER .- - MADAME MAXIV ' EIiL , ' . 33 , Groat Percy ¦ Street . Pentbnvillc , Lomlon , continues to send free on receipt of thirteen uncut postage stamps , plain directions to enable Ladies or Gentlemen to win the devoted affections of as many of tbe opposite sex as their hearts may require . ; Tlic , proc « ss : is simple ; but so . Cfiptivatiin ' and enthralling that all may be married irrespective of age " appearance ,, or position ; while the most fickle or coldhearted will readily bow to its attraction . Young i > nd 0 } a , peer and peeress , a ? well as the peasant , are alike subject to . its influence ; and last , though net least , it can be arranged ' - . with such ease and delicacy that detection is impossible . •'¦ ¦ :. ¦¦ N . B . —Beware of numerous ignorant pretenders .
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TlON OF HAIR , WHISKERS , < fcc , in a few weeks ; a most beautiful LIQUID HAIR DYE , which may be applied in three minutes without assistance ; also certain and safe remedies for SUPERFLUOUS HAIR , GREY HAIR , BALDKES 3 , & C all medically . attested ^ ahd unfailing in thereffects . . " ' .. .. - •'' - "'• ¦ * ¦ Address , Madame Maxwell , 33 , Great Percy-street , Pentonville , London .
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¦ Matrimony made easy ; or iiow to win a Lover . MISS * ISLLEN DAWSON continues to send free to any address , on receipt of thirteen nostatre s tiimps-and adjr . eqteiT envelope , plain directions to enable-ladi i-s or gentlemen to win the affections of as manv of the opposite sex as their hearts may desire . The wonosal is simple , but so captivating and enthralling that ¦ ill mav be married , irrespective of age , appearance or position , young and old , peer and peeress as well as the peasant , on subject to its influence , and but , it can be arranged with such ease and delicacy that detection is lmpos-8 N . B . —Beware of ignorant pretenders . Just Published , Third Edition , ¦ f TIQUETTE ON LOVE , J 2 J ¦ ' . ; : ¦ ob ¦ .. _
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IMMENSE SUCCESS OF THE NEW KOBE OF TREATMENT . 9 , 211 CURES LAST YEAR ! I ! As adopted by Lallemand , Ricord , Deslanda , and others , of the ilopitaldes Veneriens a Paris , a . id wou uniformly praelised : in this country by WALTElt DE EOOS , M . D ., 35 , Ew Piacb , Howorn Hill , London , AUTHOR OF r PHE- MEDIC AL ADVISER , X improved . edition , written in a popular style , devoid of technicalities , and addressed to all those who are suffering from Spermatorrhoea , Seminal Weakness , aud the various disqualifying forms of premature ., decay resulting from infection and youthful ahuse , that most delusive practice by which the vigour and manliness of life are enervated und destroyed , even before nature . has fully established the powers and stamina ot the constitution .
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Maybe obtained with directions . & e „ at Is . l } d „ 2 s . 9 d . i and is . 6 d . and lis . per box ., through all Medicine Vendors or should any difficulty « ccur , they will be sent ( free ) on receipt oi the price in . postage . stamps , by . Dr . De Uooi , 35 , Ely-place , Holborn- 'hilly London ; -
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HEALTH FOR ALL . Amazing Success of Dr . Barker ' s Treatment in . Thousamls of Gases . DK . BARKER , 48 , Livevpool-strcet , Kw Cross , London , ° Having had a . vast amount of practice at the various lm « pltals in London and on the Contment , is enabled ? treat with the utmost certainty of cure , every virict . of , disease arising from solitary and sedentary habits indiscriminate excesses , and infections , in all their varinS forms and stages , whether primary or secondary which owing to neglect or improper treatment , invariably end in gout ,. rheumatism , skin diseases , gravel , pains in tne wi neys , back h and loms . 'nnd finally , an agonising death i All sufferers are earnestly invited to apply at once to lir ' Barker , as he guarantees to till a speedy and perfect nZ ' aud- the eradication of every sympton , whether urimarv « £ witnout tne
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nN THE FEEYENTION , CURE ; AND \ J General character of SYPHILUS , STltlCTtJJlBS , Affections of the PROSTRATE GLATSD , VENEREAL and SCORBUTIC . ¦ ¦ ERUPTIONS of the face and bodv , Mercurial excitement , & c , followed by a mild , successful and expedi . tious mode of treatment .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), March 15, 1851, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_15031851/page/2/
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