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~ .-.-t-.-t.- FRAJiCE... ' :- 2: . ' •j-...
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The Rev. Dk. Wolff .—Captain Gvover has ...
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Crate? Mobtmnte
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. NATIONAL TRADES CONFEREKCE AT EASTER. ...
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\ Miit InttUimxit
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¦ •' MANSION-HOUSE. . ' • Wednesday. — H...
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¦¦.-—--„,. ¦.„ ,_; ~—„^...^ .ri.Jp. x o ...
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' « T the llepubhi on a foundation that ...
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€oto &iti(m
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' WITH •SATURDAY'S .NEWS, ! POLICE, LEGA...
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i ... f -.. • .s'.y.'Si.'r: ."•'—~ ' f t...
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Si-ioiuu j-uom Bistress.—Yesterday (Frid...
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Di'iiuvsinnE MiirERs.—Ou Monday last,.-t...
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tfovfywwins; ^^^ S% lij
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Cut or LoxDo.v. —The'-public discussion*...
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• -.. -•- - .. - '. .-' ¦: •' .-r ¦ ;'• * JmtPublished, Price Three-haljpenceEaeh,. . ;..,.. -.ra
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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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Fmim ^Mtefciir?
fmim _^ Mtefciir _?
~ .-.-T-.-T.- Frajice... ' :- 2: . ' •J-...
~ _.-.-t-.-t .- _FRAJiCE ... ' :- 2 : . ' _j-jst is a complete dearth of political _nevvs , in the _a _iss- _'K'etfwhiehwenraysfo _^^ __^ _sjt _-ir » engaged iu fei _* retuuj out the hordes of _^ sa ieMt 8 , " murdci _* cre , and thieves with which Paris 5 , _notor iously overrun . Oh Saturday last a _oon-^ _J _oraule military force , placed under the direction ofthree _^ commissaries _ofpofice , 8 U _* rroundedtwo _puljlic _gjta _luTshments on the Boulevard du Temple—the Gagid " I _' _ly- _" _-- 2 _tDouicand the _Caveau—the-haunts _ofp _^& _oTa an & Teecivers of stolen goods . Upwards _^^ I _ncUvidiials were , arrested and _marched to tie _pjefectare of Police , inbands of twenty , aiiil thirty at _lisaC ' ' " ' - . " # . . . _;!• _"
,. , - V" ' J ' -- _PORTCTGAL . ; -- " ' : . ~ ' _-TissK _/ _FEmcAB * s ' 4 . _^ I _^ to _^ .-i _^ ri the per-493 who has of late made sueh a stir in _' the island of _Mtiuaw . as a Bible Society Missionary , arrived here _ia- ' _& hfrow . "iunclaL The object of hisvisit I _pj _^ _ersiand , Kto make perana ! " application to Lord _"Haward OU the _SUUJOCt Of Ms _' _tlaim for compensation fn- the _imprisoimient lie _suffei-ed . That claim , there : every reason to believe" lias fallen to ihe ground , _-jthe few-officers of the Portuguese Crown , and' ihe sWreine Tribunal , of Justice , have decided tliat the ¦ _^• n _** 02 _m _*» _tu' _^ l _^ cc % Je _^ , _seTcnd overt acts a-ianst _thecsttiblishedi _* eli _^ ion of the country ,. such - , _= _ttraing its principal doctrines , pnbliclv into
_derisc *! . Saving been niliy prored against hhn . Setting _^ _jTelfeiou * cor _^ ideiations apart , it is a fact _Miueli lo be deplored—and I have it on the authority ofper-£ ors _# ho have lately come from Madeira—that Dr . K . 7 ? _Interference there has gohefai * to destroy all the _jVcadfyfcdings which ihe people of that island _ckeris Vi-a towards England . " Duron _Suai-ee . ' a French _oSiff , _^ ho laid ii rvcd in Don Pedro ' s army , _dsiins _?*•< _--Mi _^ acliie _t-in twt _, was last . week ' arrested by _w ' _-l-r K the Goveiiiinent , _svad very _uueeix-mMiIo _** _:- ]; . _- _« : > pe _« ' pp ? for England on board the Hoy ; . * Tar . . " M . : _« j . _JUvSilva _Can-alho _, a peer of the re-fas , and _orn-i-v MinJiLrof Fwunec , died ia ? i ul-Ad . ' after * _-cVi _^ llmes'S cav . s-.-i . V * _indJL'c-iiticji .
. / _v- 'EST INDIES . ' _r- _^ _inzAisi'in _:-, _jIu- sslvt . —Tiie i / cv . - JRoyaf niaii v _:- ' . _* _ui' > Ulp , Cnpt . _ilcawley arrived this < L / . at oue ¦ / ..... > ., froiu ii" - West ladies , _vvuh-the _iisu-tl mails _^ _jiu . _Jhe _cxtvpliiiU of tSiuse- from the . Interior ot M _.- _sitG- _-TLi-st .-, from soiiu ; ' cause or oilier , Lad net a _***" = _* f « d _rt-hfi ; _th-i- _lh-c left Vera Cruz > m ihe 2 m oi J . _^ _ar . ' " - . There i _? no news « f _iiuptirlaucc from tht Wc : * . Iwlics . Tho reason of the delay in ibc _ai-ri va ; t . ' : ' j *; I'ce is , thai on lhe 22 _ud ult . she _wuiHintertil ; . _fci'O tnh _fix _. m ihe W . _N . W _., which _ct'tiiiiuied lai tlr-o » iavs- A en ?? . - sen struck her and tarried awav * _.- ; 5 i ; :: iiic-fio ; iU . VATfED STATES .
. _I . _irriU'OBL . . _Satikhav jk . ves . txg . —The packet ship VwasUav , under the command of Captain Bailey , ' . us arrived here ihis evening from New York , whence ihe s ailed on the _lbih ultimo , and by her arrival we bvvr heen put in possession of _jiapers from that city tv -ij thy . * later than those received on Saturday last L-- _racSiepheK "Whitney , bnt tlie news they contain " _iiscs _? and uiiinipoilaiit , in a political point of view . \ yxt sot so with miumcrcial _mattei's . _Ti * Q . _UESHOS OF THE AxXEXAUOX or Texas _cscUa'Jf d flit * subject engaging the" almost exclusive _aticatinu of Consrress , with about just as luuch pros-5 _« . ( £ the ' natter l _» ein * settled as on ihe day it . was _Sra _sjit _oted . The question appears to liave _resolvetl
_Hietf _iiao the simple proposition whether Texas shall be _fidaiilted zs one of the United States for the _purfibsc oi perpetuating slavery , or whether she shall be _aoaittedt aud after admission her ter . itories be eaually _divitied between slave-holders aud freemen . _Frerlous to the loth , many attempts' had been made _tofir ing ihedebate to a conclusion , butiwitliout eftecf , j _^ c (& that day Mr . _Bi'own _, of Tennessee , offered a iolst jssolutioii , declaring the tei'nis on which Texas cay be annexed as a atate , and it was read tirice and cemwitttd . The house then went into committee ofthe whole on th ? _. ioint resolution i _* eported from the _eoaaniliec of _fureign affairs for the annexation of Texas .
Ws learu with _i-cgnct the death of W . F . Havnd _? n _: of the finu of JJarudcn and Co ., who died at 3-Kton . He was the founder of the popular system of _expressing , aud was mnch esteemed . _CoHSSBUCiii _iiATTEasin the States were drawing rapidly to a crisis . The New York Herald gives the _foSownijt as the tradition of the comnicitial world : — ' •' Th * : recent laovcmcnts in the eommemal -world , _beii ! in Europe aiid America—the fall in the price of cotton , _thetraculationsin the position of tlie banks , _i-jdthc enrrcnts and counter-currents in . operation , _preheat _rveiy indication to the philosopher and the _ititicsmin . that a storm is approaching in the _comlacit-i ? . ! world , partial , perhaps it may be , but spring _iv- _* r from" the - same causes , and _prouueing similai _w _^ _ilis as tlie _"roat revulsions of 1 S 37 , 1 S-39 , am !
I ? itV T _^ here is uo rise _mTniaeuis tliftTnatter . when _aangeris-ahead , and the only way to get _iiiroug ] ' tie _difEcalty is ' to meet it folly in the face . Let lis cciac to particnlar ? . Onr money market reports , ft ; a & 2 _ie t ' . aw . pa * st . _liavejaveri evidence _^ , by their daily cccor d of events , in Watt-street , that fhci * e were at work , hi the connaercial world , sonic .- great aud _prtiisiry tlcmc-nis of disturbance . These symptoms fe . vb sow developed _themselveijin suclf a degree that ye are able to trace them to their _oHghi , _anHtosh ' ow ' the- _\ n _* 6 « s of aivticipated daiiger-. From the ' _gr-aal _^ _- _.-slsion of 1837 , up to the year 18-13 , eilbrts weix siade to revive tlie trade of this couritry , hut com- _acriiai affairs were so mixed apvvftli . . political mattes , ini the conduct of public bodies in the _rcnudlKti ** _- ? sfcitcs was mnch as . to _prcvciit . aDyreal m In
_js _^ ne _convalcH-eiice _from-taking place . 1842 , duifcg _aci-rtais condition of thc ' Eiigiish market , * _.- _iara aambcr ofthe speculators and merchants of _Lccdcn . Liverpool , and Bavre entered . _vciy _lai-gcly Isle tbe- export of " specie from " _tliose - ' _cpustiies iutc th ? Ui'ited States . By this la _* rge export they were er * _= ll _:-i to _e-jinc iuto the American _uuirkefe , and , iii a drvai measure , to niohopolfee them , "to in _«* ease the _rarrfit jiriwsof ihe day , and _thns'realise _iiniwyi _« \< _-f : u During tliU " _mbrcuieat _iheyavjuled _tSeni _sth-es ofthe riscof * nriecs ]! roi | uced by flic very specie ** M"A" they exported to tins ' cofiwiy to " get rid of the s & z _' _s which they - iar 3 ? essed in ' tlic old world . Thi-Cii * r . crc ! inary rise iu the cotton markci , prodaeed by tit _-ij'iijifatiosi of _irusiense _piaissGS of specie exported fe : 5 i = r ** _ouritrj' , created life ' and activity throughoht Ii ? — iioic -touthcrn . western , and northeni _caunti-jv-2 _« ts _K inipidse io the nankins * institutions , aud
* : d * icc-itku itfc io convince T _» _ersons in coniinercia ] SS d'at " good times" had again _rcturaeil Undor _als impulse" the merchants of tliis country , of all el « ieVentered into the sime movements : ami _b-rlit-T _^ ig that the country was bare of goods , they e _& _asi & ied : si vast import of foreign -merchandise , e » cr . h > tur face ' of an _mcreaiod _tai'ilF , which laid the _fmmibtton of maay of the _sBlscqent _eftbeis that are cj-b- _cennning to oc felt by many of our commercial G _£ *' . The extraordhiarr increase of onr foreign _uaj-irJ _? _diiriny the _ivholeof 1 S 43 , tegethe ? with the _JS'irasH product of cotton , _occasioned by the high _prk . ' _cs'tf * 42-44 lu' immense aiaouut of specie still _res _^ lr ; - » _j in the country , and ther eby enabling the _feis to extend their circulation—all eoncurring _to-SstL-a _'' _. _prodnccil a slight over-action in trade and _ttiJsssprciaV affair _* , generally , which has been the 5 ?~ u _^ . Tjoai'f the > re ? cnt re-aetion . '"
_Ziitx _. . <¦ + * im : aspcauc—ihe _ahzsiiias
iiei-okmehs—. a . _zae -eem . _•? t . * . _ts e ;? the rlEriBLie . —Weliavc _bceurequested _iopv-I'cath the following letter ( extracted from the - _' -: ;• T _' . _^ NariiStalRefohairy , - addressed l > y a citizen oi Vvw i ' ork to a friend iu _Ntwcastle-upoii-Ty-. ' _.-x _o' _^ Iird _;—Y ' . i _ba-t aa _notk-ii of the _spi _.-i' - of _vlvalrj—1 will iu _> t -: _' 7 _?;« _-v _ ihs * exists _araons our yolitH-i . -i . us . Alinost « - " _.- ji ' . e of theia enters tlie neld witli a view- to est- » l > _lL-*>« "Tf . indi-. idii . ' _*! greatness , _rathertUasi the _i _-ioipeiity ot ii _'^ _" . - . _imblic . "She reason is obvious , rir . t-c- _uiid-iwr-I' _^ iti _jrv within _liic reach of all : _lience their incessant it r _^; _* _,. fa _tber . i . In England tlie _Iiontst Itc & nucr is - ; ' 1 : cs ! H to tfce i » rd « _tl _<> f uo such temptation . " _^ _"sv h , as you have doubtless seen by the late numbers _li- _' _-it > : _/ rtl < ru Sie ~ . s- _« nch wrong and " out o * joint . " JJ ' _"ftiie-own- . The two iwliiical _pardes are amusing the i _^ _-yjin _-itliiisniS'jf rh _jni _^ tfirhrolousnature . The iuaiu •' e . _-s - ai . -aow thr * ist _usid-a * tiie public nest ' _. _* _, whether wc ¦ _< - ! . ' I :-. ? r _.-ii-iid-rj-i-r _losaiio'iwith a view tv _i-eccmi' : , or
- ; - ; :- T £ _T 3 t .- . v * _llftli jiartles agree that indirect taxation _¦** _-ifi ! _ Vdr _jsyste & _j of griudinff , as it is " tlie _system of i _^ _Gair _tlaoiibout old despoiisnis . . The only _qiies-^ } h * ' _-i _uSenM . _" _^ . j _iKive _seated above . Five iidllions of : * -- > _= A v _^ _av-aotildicujmoita _Governcieut -r . eh as ivorJd ; _* : _~* p-. _i ' ul . T . _luit between _extraragaace in our dc'* : _"tr : *!' _:: > - asi ! ..:-j : _se x . _ractit-al _^ bounties to our cotton and t" --- * . _i : .-iafac _furiTs . swr _^ rp lanters , & c—and a bite out of ' -- _t-t - _^ e _suiatKlt-r whenever he can get in his mouth _i > ai !! i _vur laa > i : _iEd water frontier of fifteen thousand _^ - _** -isn iLaj _-A jj , aU these appliai . _ces il . e _j-cople of j- * " * " _^ _- _- _-luuie par _aii-ar _everrannualswui _? ofthe earth in _»^ -ii > * - » c- _Ii _' _uiiarcUmullonsof dollars . Instead of five _^ C _:-: _a _> . " V _^ _riht _Wian ' ce—the _nincty-nrcijjillions—they r : _^ _Edfiirs _* . smn *~ ling , corruption , _jupe-laying—• row-J * -= vfr _« , in tlie _lowest to the 3 ii « hest in _degree—flcggica * _•'^ _s' -.-andhnn-jr _uijthein at thevard-ann without judge w 3 * mv . V ot _u . - sa } . u _word _-jfowxi lynchinc by wholesale " _' - " _~ ~ -A \ , _Avuu- _i . _0 . Tebellion .
_i _SHjoiviir _. _- _a't- are _goins down , dotni , to social and V _' _-- _* _njs-l perdition : aad , like other descendins l > odies , our _*' r _•¦? r ~ -.-ii _, n L > _ECuionieaL A voung female cannot in * _« r /• rk earn , vifl , her ntcdle / what would pay tor her * _a » _ap ia ai !? _^^ loiglliss . _Suiddes from this ¦ _^•^ have taken-iilace , and seductions innnmeraWe . llic 'he arc crowded _tosether—not fully _eundotred _atihe _*; 3 . . _^ - _Aues-vfciisr _& . _winter a full half of them arc _^ _i-SSl . _1 _dstituttofemployment . _ThepauiiercstabluhxlT J _^ _X-= _'' _^'» r _5 i « tv is now _douhflMB as _largeai . was _¦* 'We _]« _aj . er cstahlishment of the United Stato # rhu _* 0 _-rlZ ! ' * boss manufacturers tthe machiuep i - _^ - _" j _aremaldjiicaartiialdiwdena & of 30 to 40 pa _** _ent-* - ' _?^ - ' *? * 5 _ent _fundsof dean profits ,. whilst- tneopera-_ _ir « scEduw their rail of _lamentation from one-end are
_•^ _i i ' _^ - _^ ' * _* he other . Prison _«* s murdered in xiX _A 1 a lack wood-lands . Lieeries are _imwwg _Jr _^ _iT'eariiace in open dav in our cities . Society . * * . _«« tiKm ) E an _exclusivi stinking , repulsive thm _^—coiluig : . _M _^^^ ' -aau _pnsangjis a leaden wigut upon s _»« , _*^* f _*^ _**» * _appmchlng each other for m * - _- _* t _^? _^ - _^ _tokSowwheflier they belong w the _^ i' _^^^ _- ' y freelyi _^ uver _^ tosether .. I _«»«¦* _S-^ _-Wu " _^' _** _™ are _goihs" _oown into perdition , and _iOSh _5 - _* _^ _irctrilraDlv " ovner if _*>™ _""S _^ - _^ _ttm-uot iiiterposeands _^ _youravalsmt _* ecM * Cr _^{ -k * * xf , _j- * ¦ _- - - S" •* . - A ) * _i _^ , 6 started a movement in Sew .. % _wnxW _* . » _ovM stav our downwardca -nd _establish
~ .-.-T-.-T.- Frajice... ' :- 2: . ' •J-...
the _llepubhi on a foundation that could never hu * shaken _UuUucprogress of that movement is ' sloiv , _wliile tlie career towards ruin is rapid and -ovenrkclwin _' ir / However we may succeed ; and , if we do , if will be the _ereatest success tliat ever was achieved _since-Uje _^ _-ivorld" ' besaa . ' It will close tut aecoinit of slavery and the past . It wiU open the account of freedom and the future . What the Americas Reformers TVaxt . —Krap rr before the _PuBLic— -We extract the _following _fi-om the _JS'ew York Working Man ' s Advocate - —\ The public lands ought to be ' made free , and all further traffic in them prohibited , as proposed bv the _national Reform Association . Tliis would provide for all who might be thrown out of emplovmeiit-bv _, the _llepublii on a fouiidi ' lio ' u that could never he shaken- _llnf * _l ,.. _™„ m . n rr . _„* _.- _! . - _»_ __ : _ :... _ ¦ _- . . r- . . . - " ¦ 'i - ¦ . _' : _A *? _- > .
_theothermeasui-esnecessaiyto be ' carried . * 2 . Tlie expenses of government ought to be reduced to ten millions a year , by abolishingor greatly-. rcducin « the navy ( keeping up , however , the fortifications ) ; bv _entiiely abolishing ihe army ; by reducing about three _fourtlus the 9 , 000 dollars outfitv and 11 , 0 * 00 dollars sa - laries to foreign _niiaistei-s ; l *» ' _aliolisiiiiig the Westi _' oiiit . _Uursciy ; by _j-educing _£ _* ' « , ¦ salaries of members of Congress , and all other cyiicers to what the same talents would acquire in _orJv- _** ary business , _,-nid bv a general econoinical regulation of ' all tW departments that would tenil _, in connection with the first-named measure ,-to put an end to oliice-seekihg . 3 . A _' mode " of keeping the public money in the hands ; of public _oJiii-ers should be devised , and all use of it _foVoil-ei
than government purposes should be * prohibited . Ii til ? public _isioney is-loaned ' it is _inarcurc . nad , what j- woreo , it gives tlie borrower a privilege at iiie _expense of the- _inibh ' c . 1 . As the 'reduction ¦ . '' the army ami navy ' should be gradual , ' -as _« _-njj » orary measurer- , the cruel ami aiiti-repiibii-ai ! prdftice of Hogging should ' be abolished : the pay of privates and officers should be more - ¦ ¦ _jiniliseil ; the pay " of _ulncci _* - * as well as-privates should lie stopped when off duty ; and ofiicers should in all cases be promoted fromthe ranhs , or elected by the men . The tariff should be abolished , or a gradual abolition of it should be commenced , but not unless the laud provision is made for the workmen engaged in trades fostered by it , and who misfit be thrown out of employment in consequence . If the
land was free , a tariff between one nation raid another woidd be just as absurd as a tariff between one family and another : but free land must precede free trade . If the tariff should be reduced below the expenses of Government , the deficiency should lie made up ( as * 1 ir whole amount should be when the tariff is entks _' v _alioHsbed ) by a direct tax ; . every man paying in proportion to what he is worth , clear of the world . If forty _mulions arc raised liy the tariff tax , and if domestic products arc raised In price for eighty millions more by tlie " protection" afforded , that is eighty millions , or about twenty dollars for every iainily in the union , and as the tariff taxes the poor man ' s goods nigher than the rich , the probability is that the poor man now pays about
twenty-five dollars a-year oy the tariff tax ; whereas if the fax was direct .-on property , the poor man would contribute lus mite , and the millionaire possibly his liundred thousand dollars . Government is | for . the protection of pr operty , and why should not property pay the tax 1 Mr . Khett , of South Carolina , is the only member of Congress who has made a common sense speech on the subject ; though , doubtless , others besides him have advocated directt axatibn . Direct taxes , too , might be collected by the same officers as now collect the State taxes , and thus a most expensive and troublesome class of tax-eaters , the Custom House Officers , might be entirely dispensed with . 7 . Last , though not least among the measures thai I think ought to be earned by the _coming Congress , is the adoption of such means as may
be in the power of Congress to abolish slavery . I am fully aware that it is * just as inconsistent for the northern land monopolist to ask _theaouthern slaveholder to give up bis _elaves , asit is for the slaveholder to ask the monopolist to give up his land ; for land monopoly is the root oi all slavery ; but the spirit of the age requires that something should be done towards the suppression both of land-selling and _body-* ellihg . If abohtioiiists have been imprudent ; if they have shut their eyes to the white slavery around them ; ij they have actually upheld white slavery _, Uy iflftnopolizmg awl trafficking in the soil , that is no reason why their sinsshould be visited upon , the blacks . Congress has power to arrest the land traffic , which was the parent of slavciy ; ' and if it has any power to prevent the traffic in kuniau flesh , between States or odierwise , it ought no longer to lay dormant .
THE Aim-BEjVTERS . Some weeks- ' ago we gave" a brief account of the doin < g 8 o'f the Anti-Renters in the state of New York . We nave now to " report progress ; " and our readers " will see . that this question ofthe People versus the Uuul _Llohhere , is assuming ; _asSt ' ious -aspect . On the -3 th of-Iteeember a large Anti-Rcnt-Meeting was held »> the-county of 0 tsego' ( _N-Y . ) . . The meeting was _aldressed-bi'iMnjOr ' _.-B . ;]) . ¦ North , J .-. W . Reynolds , K » q ., and B . M . Kemp , Esq . This hist gentleman d ' _-dimed . a truly _elotjuentr speech in- vindication , of iiiaii " _^ natural ri ght to the soil ; and the meeting , k-iving imosen a . , committee * of nine ' ,-adjourned-to . 'licet again on the 21 st ' of _Deeemlier , at the village of Lodi . The correspondent of the Working Man ' s
_Advocate prefaces his report of the meeting with the following remarks : — " There now ; appears to be a gcueiv < i upheaval of the toil-worn producers of Otsego aud the ! adjoining counties : aud they are now casting about tbr -. ar £ uments and measures , to doivn _imththc rent . There are many lease-lands in these counties _, aud of the worst kind , too : three life leases , which in many -instances are expiring . - George Clark , a _yo'iaginan _, lately of age , and a descendant of-Licutemmt-Goveraor Clark in / this state , in 1742 , claims to be the owner ofa great portion of these lands ; and as he claims ; his - title from - a grant from George-II . ; Rinsr of England , & c ., he is not unfreqiieatly called King George II . The people -here say , - * That , as' the patriots of 177 <> , having gained their independence ,
inadvertently left landmonopoly , as a thom m the Sesh , to-bear down and oppress _-theii' children , the same spirit and love of liberty , which impelled our forefathers to action , now calls upon tiiMr descendants to expel this blighting relic of feudal despotism fi-om our common country . '" ' ¦ ' . ' . ¦ The JLlbanv Argus of the 17 th of Iiecembcr gives the following _fi-oni a correspondent , announcing that resistance to " _. the rent _^ ' had commenced in CoJumi ) ia . county : — . ' On the 1 st of October the _lin-t rent became diic , and about , that time several emissaries came from Rensselaer to preach rebellion among the people of this county . ' This alanned no one , as it was supposed thatthe condition of tilings here was too satisfactory on all hands to be disturbed . About thirty days passed on , ' aud no rents being- paid , _distn _^ warrants were issued by the guardian , and put
in the hands of the sheriff . The sheriff made the distress without auy opposition , and subsequently the _appraisd , but he was . then informed that the rents would not be paid , and that the sale would be prevented . The-sheriff probably did not believe these _threate , as lie made no provision to repel any opposition , but went- with a single attendant to make the sale . He was met . by a body of-Indians before he reached the place , escorted , to the place of sale , arid there , under a threat of personal violence , gave up all liis papers , ' and . they were bumed in his presence ; The sheriff-reports that there were on the ground over 200 men in Indian dress , and 1 , 500 citizen spectators _, called there by the novelty of tiie occasion . When the papers were burned the whole assemblage gaye three cheers , and the sheriff left the ground without anv adiournineat of '" sale , and there ends the
distress . - ' , _•"" , _« - Another correspondent of tne same paper writes as follows : — "Delhi , Dee . 10 , 1814 . —Dear Sir , —The anti-rent excitement has been on the increase since the election . Under various pretexts it has been started in more than half the towns in this county , and in nianv of the adjoining towns in Scoharie , Greene , and " Ulster . The organization is most effective for mischief of all kinds . It is highly important tliat our new executive should be correctly informedas to the real nature aud extent of _^ the eviL If he should shrink fi-om the duty of acting energetically in this matter , it will be impossible to foretell the end of the aimed aud organized rebellion that is now committing outrages and setting the Jaws at defiance in many parts of tlie State . "
_Anr . E « _= T of " Ixdiaxs . "—On tlie 18 th of December , two of the " Indians , " "Big Thunder" and " Little Thunder : " were arrested and lodged in gaol The Tory Budoet of December 20 th , has the followin ,, . _ " A partv of thiity of the ' Anti-Benters , * dressed in Indian _disguise , yesterday assaulted Mr . Eliian Smith , of the town of Grafton , in this county , notffar from See-place , took rumfromhis waggon * , and wantonlv shot Mm . We Lave learned lio _parbeotoiv bevoud these , except that Smith and the Indians have had difficulties for some time past . "
Lath * News fboji the States . _—Livzktool , _Tntjas-» at _Mowsrse . — The . steam-ship Caiuhria _, Captoii . Judkiiii , _^ rivei here this morning , aud brings us news from KcwVoric tothe 1 st inst " , and from the various other quarters '" !© the usual late periods . The American House of Eepresentotives , ' a » d also the Senate , are busily occupied in _discussmg the Oregon _. _territorj . question , and _« c £ nd thaiiu _bofli houses a _hUn _» as been _broug ht in . for _theictual estabiish ' mcht of . a territorial goyernment over that ' co iwtrv . ; The " bills ; hi . the Senate , and hi the . JIou _? e _offteiiiesentatives areof a similar , character . - The toll in _% _^ tt . S 5 _* ccasion ' ed much . debate , . in . which , among _oJiers / Mr . John Quihcy Adams has taken * pa * _t . _^ . . „ . ;; i ' Ahsexmioh or Texas . — The proceedings in Congress M uaint us with the important fact of a joint resolution
~ .-.-T-.-T.- Frajice... ' :- 2: . ' •J-...
bj . the Lnitcd States House of Representatives , _auuvAug lexas tothe ruited States , fhe debafeou' th ' issiibjeJt Uaa continued with * little ' intermission' " for tliree" weeks ; The debate was Drought to a close tin Saturday , January _^ pursuant to the understood _dctei'iiiiriat ' ion of tiie ' demueiatic members composing a caucus on the llth- Tlie resu ) t of the trials of strength ofthe different propositions ' was the passage , by - a _nrtajority _' . * of-twenty _^ wo votes : of he joint resolution introduced some days previous by the , Hon . M . _Bi-own _, a Whig member from the . state of _lennessee , with an amendment , _accepted-bv him , Uwitmg the extent of slavery in T exas ' to the territory south of the _Missouri coriiproiniseUne . The resolution , iiiidci * tlie title of " Joint -Iteiolatjon for _annexing Texas to ' _- ' the Lnited States , " as amended , finally passed tl . eHoiise of Bci > resensatives by a vote of 120 to 98 . _AVe" defer _piiblishiuff : the resolutions lit " present , " as"it is estrShiel _> doubtful that the Senate wUl sauctiow thftm . " _"Snwslif they he adopted . by that body we will * then-publish them . '* _- « ,. _| _. _r . , -, r - - - ; - _-.-,, .-by tho United States _Ilmic _.-. _m-n _™ ....,. ; . ' « -V _.-:. __ - ¦ ¦ •' -::. . *
A- bill lias passed both houses directing the election of President and -Vice-President " of Hie United _Statesi hearafter , to be made in all-the states in " theUnioii on'oiic and the same dav .- - . - _.-.- -, ' . " , ' ¦ . •' ¦ ' . •'
tiM * - _* .- • • mexi oo : y . _* . _*•; _j-- _" --i news .-from Mexico ; supplied bv the ' arrival * _oftiie-Oambria , is most important ¦'; but there seems to bc _.-sonie little doubt . as to its correctness -in-some " points . Santa Anna is said to have been defeated and captured , by Bravo and I ' _-aredos , andi _' some accounts state positively . tliat he has : beeu-. shot . _Ona _cai-eful exaniination of the _Yarious-jifcttmite ,- we . have'littledoubt but that the news of his _ilefeatwillturii . out ' _eorf _rw-t . Tliis _iitteUijieiicc first reached . New York byway of Tampico and New Orleans ; but similar news wiis afterwards received via Corpus ChristiGalvcston . and
, New Orleans .. It is -stated' thaUetters from Mexico , ila-tedtlie 9 tli \ ilt ., amved ' at Tampico by express on the _iiiglit of the _I-Sth , giving tlie important . intelligence that- a . desperate battle had been fought oil the plains of Appaii _, between Santa Anna , on the one side , and Bravo and Paredes on the other , whicli ended in tho total rout of the former , who was captured while trying to malie his escape . Five hundred men are reported to be killed , and Gen , Paredes had booh despatched by Bravo in pursuit of the routed troops of Santa Anua . Bravo himself was on the march back to Mexico , with his august prisoner :
The Rev. Dk. Wolff .—Captain Gvover Has ...
The Rev . Dk . Wolff . —Captain Gvover has received intelligence of Dr . Wolff to the 10 th January , at which date he was at Ei _* zeroom , ehdeavouriri g _^ to recruit his strength for the journey over the _moiuitains _to-Ti'ebizondo . At Tehran the Doctor ivas received in the kindest manner by Colonel Slieil , her Majesty ' s envoy , who sent a government , _golam to meet him . He left Tehran in a _tuckrawan ( a sort ofa litter ) , and by easy stages reached Tabris , Here the judicious" treatment of Dr . Casolani enabled him , after some days' repose , to proceed by . a similar eonve 3 _* ance towards Erzerqoin . On reaching the
Turkish frontier , owing to the immense accumulation of snow , he was obliged to proceed on horseback , and after great bodily suffering he reached Erzcroom on the 4 th January , completely exhausted . . As soon as her Majesty ' s Commissioner , the kind-hearted Colonel Williams , R . A ., heard of the Doctor ' s approach , he rode as far as the last ! pass tomcat him , and escorted him into the town . ¦ ' Dr . Wolff is too ill to write to any one , aiid cannot move from the sofa ; it is , however , hoped that the kind attentions of Colonel Williams , which have been really beyond all praise , vrill enable Mm to proceed in about a fortnight to Trebizonde .
Crate? Mobtmnte
Crate ? _Mobtmnte
. National Trades Conferekce At Easter. ...
. _NATIONAL TRADES CONFEREKCE AT EASTER . - NEXT ; ' " - ¦ _: _* .. ' The adjourned meeting of the . preliminary Conference was resumed at ; the Bell Inn , Old Bailey , on Wednesday evening ,. February 12 th . .. There was a very numerous attendance of delegates ; ' Several additional representatives , handed in their credentials . ; Mr . J . _Beny , the . representative ofthe Lancasliire Miners , was unanimously called to the chair . The Secretary read letters from the Joiiieis of Hull and other provincial Trades , announcing their deter * miiiation to send delegates to . the proposed Conference , He also stated . " .-tliat lie liad '' seen .. ' Mr . Diincombe that day , Jihd' had . asked him ,, jf . the Trades wished-it , would he attend their Conference , and _woulddiedothenrthe _honoui * of presiding over their humble deliberations ? To which Mr . Duncombe
replied ; that ' as far * as visiting the Conference was OTflecrhed ; he . shouId : be luippyto attend as _^ . a , listener . ; but he knew very little regarding the practical workings of the several Trades . He added that as far as his humble-abilities would permit ,- they anight command his services * , nud if the Trades thought it would _seiTCtheii'cause ( although he was of _Opinion that many mechanics , from their practical experience , _w-cre much better qualified for the office ) , and tlie Conference at its assembling made the-reguest , he- would preside over-their delioeratii > 7 » 3 . The announcement . was received , with marked applause . The meeting then proceeded to the election of a ' sub'' committee of seven persons , to make- the necessary arrangements for holding theI-Conference ; The following individuals' were _- . _un-inmiously _'clioscn _\ - _Messi-s . Dunning and Rbb _& tson ( Bookuuiders ) , ' . Messi's . ' Bush * and vl _> rtiiab ' j _^ . ( _Cai'pe * . iterii ) ,. . Mv . Wilson ( Boet and Shoemaker ) ,-: Mr .: Allen ( Tin-plate Worker ) , and Mr .-Cox : ( Silk Hatter '} . -
The Election of Seeretary . —Mr . . T : Barratt- ( Corkcutter , and secretary 'to ' _. the Central Association of Loudon Trades ) , was proposed , ' but . declined ' , oh . tlie gromid of ill-health ana a pressure of public business ; Messrs . Bush and Dunning were .-tb . en-placed . iii nomination , but from the great feeling of respect" in wkic Afr . Barratt is heldhy the Trades , fie was again placed _Tn nomiiiation aud uhaminou _^ ly . eleeteu iii spite of himself . " Well , " said Mr . Barrett , " asyou have forced the "honour on me ; _Ijwill- not back out ; _butw-ill do my best to carry out your intentions . " ( Loud cheers ) . Mr . -Wakeham _i Shoemaker , ; moved — 'That the best thanks of this Preliminary-. . Conference of Trades are . due and-, are . hereby given to the Proprietor , Editor , and Reporter of the Norther n Star newspaper , for the able services rendered to the
cause of Labour , not " on this occasion only , ' 'b iit : on every occasion . "' He observed that when he found the parties engaged in the Star taking such a warm interest in Trades . aflairs he thought it the . duty of himself and-his brother , tradesmen to notice the mat-• ter , and let them see that their labours are appreciated . Mr . J ; Berry , Miner , who had previously left the chair , : and was succeeded in that office by Mr . Robertson , Bookbinder , hoped that they would allow hiin the privilege of cordially seconding that motion . Mr . Stewart , Shoemaker , said that as vce-arded the Proprietor and Editor / for the service they had rendered the cause , tiie best return that could bo made them wia _, to circulate tlieir . very _useful iournal as widely aa possible . ; ( Loud and he
cheers . ) As regarded the Reporter , could bear witness to" the great service he had rendered their trade ( hear , hear ) , / he was of opinion that their thanks to him should assume a more substantial shape . ( Hear , hear . ) ' _MivBairatsaid he most cordially concurred with the motion , and as for the reporter , Mi * . Stallwood , he had opportunities of . knowing that lie had rendered the Trades a-service , not only as reporter , but as an individual . ( Cheers . ) "The motion was put and carried unanimously . Mr . Stallwood , ' . in the name oi the proprietor ,. e * ditor , ' and reporter , said , that . he was hapDv that their humble efforts in the . cause ot labour , wcreappreciatcd . . They . _' would'Continue in thesanie course , zcalouslv and fearlessly advocating _righ- _^' and exposing and denouncing wrong , without other fee . or reward than the good , opinion . of their _feUotymep _.,
( Loud cheers ) . -A resolution to , the effect— . ihat the Conference ' be held on Easter Monday _nexfem . London , at ten o'clock in the forenoon ; and that : the delegates on their arrival , be requested to _^ _pro'ceed direct to the well-known Trades ' house , the Bell inn , Old Bailey , from whence they will be conducted to the place bf meeting , " . was unaiiiniously adopted . A vote of thanks was passed by acclamation to the _Lancaishu-e Miners , for their promptitude in taking up the matter , : and sending up Mr . 'Benj _, to aid an "" assist in arranging the necessary preliminaries . ,-H was also resolved— " That those Trades who intend sending delegates to the forthcoming Conference be requested to communicate with the Secretary ,- ' 'Mi ' . . J Barratt , 20 , Greeiificld-street , ' Commercial-road , East , " at their earliest convenience . " ; A vote ol thanks was given tothe Chainnan , and the meeting dispersed .-
* Buev . —The iron trades of this town still continue on strike , agamst the introduction _^^ of the " quittance papcre . They have now been out several weeks ,. and . ; ii * e . as _. detennined . as ever never to submit to . the _ilegradation to . wliich the' masters wish"to reduce them . Nor . is this the only war that is . raging between the' employers and employed . Therp - have been several strikes , for advances in wages arnpngs _^ _tbe'Powerlpom . Woweraof and we are happy to say that iii a . uumbei * of ihstanqcs the just aeinands .-of . the . Weavers . taye leen . acceded to by ; tn e roaniu " _aclurei's ., _^ bere ! are some , noweyer , vVhoV notwithi 9 tanding they ! have , the same market for their ; _goodsyrwill _not-give . _thesmi-e _wages _ as their neighbours ; in consequence of _^ wbiOh _f _aMut- _' _-W ' _lian-ds-aw-walking the _» streets _without mplo _^ ment _*^; _" Framework-Knitters' Delegate * 'MEETisV . - _^ -At * a general three counties meeting of delegates , held ax
. National Trades Conferekce At Easter. ...
the _sign-ot- _'tife _li-iiig Cfeorge" on ' Horscbacl _*'' NottinJ _» - ham ,-1- ebi'it uy Sth , ' 1845 , for the purpose of _takim > mto _coiisideiitcion _t _\ ni I _' ranic . Reht * Trial—tlie Go _° - _vernmciital inquiry—and' the' furtherance of the _ptg-uuzation _,.. the following ; among other resolution ' s _ivei-e . passed . _';; . ; P opo 3 ed : by William- 'West ; " and seconded by Thomas Emmerson—That a committee ¦ _J . _5 PP ° i utpd to . amalgamate the Nottingham -and Leicester . .. . . suggestions * , ; and that . tlie followimr compose a committee for that . _purpose-f-Humphries and V _\ inter , for Nottingham : and Nottinghamshire ; ihomas ;) Vuiters ' _a ,, a John Wilford ,. for Leicester and _Leicestei'shire ; SamuetOordeii , for -DerbvandJDerby-| l _?^ _- D _* .: p _i PP ? ed by B . . . Humphries , and ' seconded bv batnuel . Corden — That ; when -the suggestions have . _ ' _...-..- _^ . _-...-....,,. -.. _--. ' - ,-. . . > . ... -- . - .
Y _^' . _KW'lJ ' . aiTanged . and approved * thev shall be printed * for distribution . Proposed bv John Key wood aivA smmueii by SaimiolBo . oker _^ _-Tliat the number printed be two thousand copies .: Proposed by Joseph Moor , and . seconded liy . "William- "West —That the delegates pi c ' sc ' nt ihfbriii : their- constituents . that local _leetum-s _; havo ; been-abpoiiited , _vaud that " any loc'ility wishing for ., their _sprvices must . give " one week ' s notice to ' the general -secretary . The following _, _-pci'ioiis .--were .- thisi : ; _-reappointed ¦ _Icctin'crs ,: — Williain'W eat ,: josc ' i ) h . I , _iixto'i _,- aii . _dlVil ] iaiii Felldii . ' Proposed-. by . Michael Lcv ' _eriiv-l'Vaintimith , and scconded li _^ B _/ I-ljiiaplinea;— That the -Kramesimfchs . _Se'ttci-s _opy Sinker and iVceiiie . . Makers ,-do * iohi-the
_FramcwOi-k-Kiiittet _' s in putting a stop tothe spurious prod uct _^ _ttt _f . ' solicited . to . join in-union-with the : . Ivnittcrs . _Proposed by Samiicl Bookev ,. and seconded by Samuel Wiutoi _' - —That in the , opinion of-this meeting ,-. the stoppage of Fraiiie-lleni under auy circumstances is oppressive and unjust , kit more especially , so , when one emp ' oyer . has the , _eilVoiitei-y . to charge from sixpence _, to niii ' _epeiicc , per . week more than ¦ a nother ; and . ' ive , the delegates , assembled , pledgo ourselves to assist ; the Framework-Knitters of Mansfield anil Mansfield Vroodhouse in their struggle to put down so iiifauious a system . The accounts . were -then brought '" before "" t he meeting , . _aiul passed , and tho delegates . separated at half-past eight o ' clock .
\ Miit Inttuimxit
_\ Miit InttUimxit
¦ •' Mansion-House. . ' • Wednesday. — H...
¦ •' MANSION-HOUSE . . ' _Wednesday . — _Happ-t _EsotA . NB !—A man , uamed James Oliver , who had genuine symptoms of _( UstresVabout him , was charged with ' ' having stolen tv _.-o shawls , —The . _lll'iSOUer Wlllked up to a policeman in _Clieap'side _, at a quarter past eight in tho _evening , anil said , "Have . your eyes upon me . " He then .. went into a shop , and , taking hold of two . shawls , returned with them , aud-was taken into custody ;—TKe prisoner declared that lie was in the deepest distress , and that he had resorted to the expedient of visiting the sbopiu order-to obtain relief by being put in prison . —The Lord Mayor . asked , the prisoner who and what he was ?—Tho prisoner replied that from consideration for others he must decline uttering a word _-aliout-liiinself . au he would say was that he never committed a robbery In his Hfc , and lie did hot consider what he had done the night before was any oifcncc at all Tlie Lord Major regretted to have such ' ii case brought before liim , but said he was bound to commit the prisoner , for trial .
SOimiVfAHK . _MokdSt , —Datoc'Robbeht . —William Abbot , a powerful looking young man , was placed at the bar before Mr . Trail , charged with . being : concerned , with two others not in custody , in stealing from the person of Robert ICobcrts _, a shoemaker , residing iu lied Cross-street , Korough , about ton shillings in money , a letter , aud a _laeiliovaudiuu-bcioh . —Prosecutor , ii thm . le looking young man , stated tliat about twelve o ' clock on Saturday night ; lie was _returriirie towards-home , through Castle-street , Southwark-bvidge road , after having partaken rather too freely of gyog . AV'hon near Vi _' orcester-ttrect _, two men . and tie prisoner seized his arms the former picked his right-hand pochet of his money , While the latter held his left arm , After they had robbed liim tliey ran . away , but lip pursued the prisoner , who wis stopped by _, ai poUcenian , and taken into custody . —Tlie officer said that the prisoner was ' an associate of _weU-kuownthieves . _—Hemamleduntil Friday . ¦
. •• ' ¦ _CLEKKEffw-ELL _* . Nosdax . —A _Paope ' ii ' _s Life : — Au able-bodied young man , nanied Cre ' an _, was- " charged with breaking-sixteen panes of glass-iu the Islington workhouse , of which he has been au inmateijfor years . -. . The offence was clearly proved , ' and the "damage-, done laid at ,- £ L , Serjeant Allen _,-21 N , deposed , that on _Satuvday evening , soon after the prisoner was - locked np , the constable , 911 going his rounds , saw the prisoner hanging in the cell . " He at 01160 cut him downa . moment , later , and'life * would have been extinct , ne contrived to hang himself by _fastcuingllis ' iicckclotli to the tup of the cell . He was . closely watched all day on-Sun * day , " aud on Sunday _nighttivpothorprisoners were placed in the _ceU with ' Mm . . _'Wlien he . supposed they were slumbering -lie niade another attempt to liaug himself _withius braces , but failed in it owing " to the timely interposition of his comrades .. Committed for six weeks . ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦'¦ ¦'¦•'
, ¦ - .- ¦ - ' . _' _' _BOIV STREET . ' ' : ' • _. _Ti'ESDAr . —Tub _PonTi . iKD Vase Case ;— -Theyoung man nanied "WilliamLloyd , who . was . brought before-Mr . jar dine on _I ' riilay evening , . was . _ngahvplaced at the bar for final ekiiuiinatioif , charged with : wilfully and maliciously destroying with a Stone , the inhu ' itablo . ' vase in ' the British Museum . Tlie vase ;* which was ' . * valued at £ 1 , 000 and upwards , _was-desci-ilicd . as'being'flie _' properry of- ' Tiis Grace the Duke of l _' _ortlohd . - In reply to'tlle _ijuestion , what lie liad to say to . the charge , < tl'o prisoner said—Only tliis , that I had heen . indulging in intemperance for some days , from the _ef & cts of which I had only partially recovered when I entered the' Museum , and being consequentlyiii ' _-a state of nervbus excitement ; I was afraid of eVerytluiig _' f mot with , and under-: such impression I acted in the manner I have doiie , and-Jbr which I was then : taken'into custody ; bdt J did not commit the act through any design or evil inteutiou ' wha ' cver , towards any person . —Mr . Bodkiu said lie
liad'tlio , Ii 6 udu ' r ' to appear on behalf of the tmstecsof tho _Ihitish'Museum , upon whom ' the _principaldut ; . devolved _in-prosc'cutirig-in the case on the part of ins ' ' Grace the Diike ' _of-. _Poi'tland / Who had kindly permitted the property in question' to be placed in the Museum for the inspection aud . gratification of the public- It was- much to be regretted that such was the . defective state of -the law upon such offences ' , "' that it _tyas diftieyit to .. nicct the pi-usent charge by ' anything like an ' adequate piiiiishmcut ; liowever , it was'provided hy the 24 ' th _section of the Wilftil Damage Act , " that if any person shall unlawfully or maliciously . Commit any-daniago , injury , - or spoU to , or upon , _iiiiyreai . oi'perspiial . propw'ty whatever , either of a public or private nature , for whicli no remedy or punishment was therein before provided , every person being convicted thereof before a ; justice of the peace , shall forfeit and pay sueh sum of money as should appear to the justice to bu reasonable _compen-satidn for the damage , iiiiury , or spoil
so committed , not exceeding the sumot £ 5 . " * —Mr . Hawkins-proved _, that the shade , which was worth about £ 3 , the '" fragments of which were lying on the floor with the fragments of the vase ; wag-the _property of the trustees ol the Museum . —Mr . Jardine said ' that-ivasthis most perfect and legitimate course for the trustees to pursue , and called upon the prisoner to pay the amount of the glass shade , having wilfully and m'diciouslydestroyed it . —Mr . Jardine I cannot , help , in my humble capacity , observing with the Learned Counsel , tliat , the Act of Parliament-providing for such offences is very inefficient , whicli prevents my entertaining the case respecting the destruction of the vase against yi > u -jot _tiifcyvcswrt ¦ - , "but for tlie destruction of the glass shade I shall put- the law in full force , arid order you to pay the sum of £ 3 forthwith , and in default be committed to hard labour in the House of Correction for two calendar _monthi :. —The prisoner was then removed from the bar .
_Wj-dnesimv . — Di . 5 T't £ a « NG Cask . ~ A * fine looking _V'ouug man named James Veruou , agud 18 years , was placed at tlie bar , supported by two o f his shitpmatos , _wh-j hald hiin by the arms to preveut ! ihu from injuring himself , charged with attempting to commit _auicide ' -hy _hangintr himself . The defendant ' s- father ; who is a - printer resid ing in Ooram-street , St . Pancras ,-on entering the witnessbox , was deeply afiected . He stated that his son , who had as sisted InHi in hia bosiucss , * kept oompauy for sonic timc ~ witlia yoiing female to v / _hoin he . seemed much attafched , aud to all _appeariwiccs the * feeling was . mutual ; _biit- ' on Sunday night last , for some cause , _respecting-vi-hii-h ho had / 110 means of obtaining any'hiformatioii _/' she' threw herself Into the river from tbe parapet of _Vr ' atcrloo-bridge _, wlien she was carried away . I > J , the current , and the body h ' as _noj . since been ' found , . alt » Vugli Uic usual means were resorted to . ' , ' The . _* occ uiTencu ; was sliortiy after cbminunieated to the _defendant'ahUsuchvAis Hie ehoeli produced lipon his- mi ' ndi ' _tha't-he ' was almost immediatel y deprived _ujreMon ! to : suoh ' . Mi'exlont _' _' ' thafr _^ _fehvatch ; his movements ; but , " notwithstanding tlie
_vis-i-laBce , 0 }; hi & frjeuds _, he , , continued to evade themj and luade ' . ' _sevci- ' at attempts ! ivpon his _l _^ e _^ the lirst _. of which wiis' b y a . _fchaipTpstonment , of which he ' was deprived , " and on the iiext occasion by strangulation . '* _Ywtci-d-iv , "being engaged -with' his _^ sh ' opin ' iites , he- was suddenly missed from . liis woDk , and search being made , he was discovered ip ' _thepri-vy _, the , door of which the men * were obliged to break , open , . . suspended , and being cut down it was . with difflcuitj- _aimnktion was restored . Mr . Jardine asked the detenuaut ' U'hat _explanation he V ' o _* jld give . vf ' tlie " _gjwi account given _by'liisffiitKer ? -The defcudant _* , ' without * _utteringa word , staved at-each of liis companions , - who still continued to hold his .. hands , in a-wild idiotic , ' manner evidently unconscious of being addressed by the magistrate , qr . anything that . transpired from tho ' time he was conducted iuto the c < Juvt ' . "Mv . Javd _' mc directed that he might be _immediatel y bom-eyed to St . ' Giles ' s workhouse , and in tlie course of the day . Mr . Tucker , one of tlie overseers , waited on- the magistrate to say that the case had been entertained , and that ; the-unfortunate- vouth _' s comforts sho-ahl he attended to . ,
: T _* _u- _* iW > Ai- . —S £ stiioctiok o ; the Pokhand Vase . — L 1 BEBATI 0 . N OF-TiiE . DEMNe . DUKT . —This day a letter was received by Mv : Javdine , enclosing him the sum of £ 3 , he ing the amouiit Of fineiuflieted . upon the young man who gave the ' name of William- Lloyd ,. for- wantonly destroving the Portland Vase . The Uiiigistvate immediately . handed tlie nioiiey to the * under " gaoler , with directions that he would jil'b ' ceed to Tothill-fielils _-I'n _' son arid communicate with the governor ,-to whom the fine was to be paid , upon tliis receipt of which the prisonenras liberated , and walked with the _Officer-to ' 1 tlibvieiility ' 6 f the cburt , _Hvhen he left him- _" _i-aiid returned . to'the ' EUropeaiv ' _-Cofiee-liouse
iii I * _ngT « cre , . * where :: he _statremains , _-- ft _' appears from the _iuquiriesmade tliat : tlie , delinqueut ,-who gave a wrong ndiiie , is . a , . _udent . iri . t ! i ! e , t nirersity - of Dublin . _wlWl'ehe _u ShorttlUiebuCk _OnteV _wlas ilBensloncr ; under tlie tuition " Off Mr . ' _-atKiiiii , _** bfie _* ' _« f ' tl \ e ' _jttliloV'fellow-s , ' aiid ' has also a " brotherw some ' _sta-nmttg in the ' s ' ain ' e" college . ' 'IIe had no' business in London but to spend , the -Vacation and visit tbe principal places jn the metropolis until the approach , ofj his next _exa & _inatii-m _^ vibos towludi be _slioiildT write to 'his " _'friendS'for means ' ' to _, _^ ahehim back ; as , all his . 'money was * exhausted . _^ _- * During hisshort confinement he exhibited a degree of obstinacy , which was immediately repressed hy tlie turnkeys , for on
¦ •' Mansion-House. . ' • Wednesday. — H...
his being ordered lit seven o ' clock in the morning withtuV other prisoners to undergo the usual ablutions , he appeured dogged , and was about to refuse obeying , . which caused the person in attendance , to , move him . on , wheii ' he ' suddenly turned round and struck the man under the , ear , ih consequence-of whiciriic was immediately placed in solitary confinement , aiidvvas accommodated with a pair of hand * - ' _cufti-. . in . this conditio n _Ut was , found when . tho'money ' was sent tyr his , . liberation , aud had not . his benefactor _, been so ' prompt ;' his hair would hare been cut off iu the course ' of the day to * undergo ' the punishmcut awarded-hini by't he" court . ' . He makes no hesitation m declaring that , liad lie "been obliged to remain m the same . state hi - prison till * the time allotted to him had expired , he would : have _;• taken the _earliestpjiportunity to put an end to his existence , not only , ou account of the severity ofthe puiiishiueiif lichadto liudor-. go , but the reiilbrse hci felt for having . ' committed an . offence for which ' _' ndeq ' unte ' reiiaration could be made oii
hl 9 part , the . cause of-which was his-intemperate habits for . several days , ' . without tlie participation of-any companion . JTe is of the Roman Cathulic-persuasion , aud while tlie examination was going on , the only _circifm-Staiitv . tliat gave liim uneasiness was "liming observed-a person iii the court taking u . sketch of him , . whieh he apprehcmlud was . intended . lor . publication , and might _ultimnteh-lea'd to his ' expiilsiou fro ' m' _* c 6 Ilcge , _altlwugU he had coucealed liis right " niime . " ' _The'destfuctimi of the vase is another subject -which seems to caiisogreiit uneasiness , final though he lias been cony ieted . of breaking the glass shade , bo tears he t-: m again be- brought up ioi ; the greater of-\ _Z \ WK _, illld bC SCllteueed to a longer imprisoiuiiuni . and lie bas c-ug « ge ( i . Iu " inscIf : aI 14 he' afWnoon in writing to liis fronds fix , liubliu . to remit- hun . - . uicaus to enable him to quit Loudon . Am . to che amount _sunt " to . the prison for lus liberation , lie " . declares liis total ignorance of ( be . person who remitted-it to . 'Hie magistrate , and the persons with Whom lie lodge . ? seeni ' _bimallv surprised at the becurruiice .
; LAM BET II . ! Wednesday . _—Attumi-t to Commit _Sliciiik . —Sarah Freeman , a . woman about 40 years ' " of age , apparcutly indev the influence of nervous excitement , ivas placed at the bar _hefijiv Mr . Norton , charged with creating a disturbaiieeiu Arlington-street , Watcrluo-rond . and with attempt - _ing , to . commit suicide by . strangling herself in the cell in which she was confined at . the Tower-street station . Surj . eant Evans , of the L division , said that the defendant was now under bail forhavin ' gattcnipted to commit suicide b y jumping- off Waterloo-bridge . In answer to _ijucsthms put tb her by Mr . Norton , the wonuiw , who tvcwWed violently ; ind wept , ' stated , that her husband , who was a waterman , ilnd . to whom sho had been married four years , was in the
habit of ill-using her . She had been to fetch liim from a IHlblic-liOlise hist night , and had some beer with him . On their return home lie knocked her ahout , and she ran . out of the house for protection , and unless she had done so he vj'ouldliaye murdered her . —Mr . Norton : But how could you think of such a' dreadful thing , ' as to commit suicide ? —Defendant : I wa _' s ' not in- my right senses , Sometimes I ; do not know What I am about . ¦ My husband does not give me his . earnings . Frequently-I _do-not get more than Is . ( 5 d . a week . I aumitenueavouring tojump off Waterloobridge . My husband ' s bad temper drove me to it . —Mr . Jforton directed the oflicers to obtain the attendance of lier husband , and remanded tlie defendant until he could b _. e brought before him .
WORSHIP-STREET . Tuesday . — Tire iate _Muimun at 1 _* etusaik . _orken- Jamet Tapping , who stood committed for the alleged wil . fill murder of Emma Whiter , was brought up in order that the depositions which had been previously taken might be read over to him ; whieh being done tha prisoner was fully committed to Newgate for trial . , _ilARVLEliOSK . I ' limAV . —Attempted Child Mokd /; r . —A very considerable number of persons congregated in tlie vicinity of this court , in consequence of its having been the day appointcd forthe re-examination ofthe female , Anne Wilson , who . 011 Saturday last was charged before Mr . Long with attempting to murder her male iufaut , two _mo-nths oW .--Air . Long , iu a most fueling and impressive manner , endeavoured to make the prisoner sensible of the enormity of her ofleuco , and told her that , from the evidence which had been adduced , he was bound to seud her before -a jury . — The prisoner , who declined saying anything , was then committed .
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' With •Saturday's .News, ! Police, Lega...
' WITH SATURDAY'S . NEWS , ! POLICE , LEGAL AND GENERAL . i •¦ " - - ¦ ' i MANSION HOUSE . ' _ISiinaDAV , t ' EiiRUAav . 15 . — Signs ok _Katioka-c " _lPaosPEBrrv . ' _"—This day . at twelve o ' clock the court was surrounded ' by a number of poor , . miserable , wretched looking beings , of the female sex , who appeared to be waiting with -the . hope of . obtaining some relief . At length , their patience being no doubt exhausted , one of tbW commenced smashing the glass iii the lower win . '
_AOvis ; at the same time exclaiming to the bystanders that she was not going to walk about the streets starving : it \ v | s . s btitte io be in a prison . than to starve .-, ; A police onHcer wlio was near the spot , said the woman had very repently been released from Bi'idewell , to which , prison she liad . been ' committed-. for ! a similar , offence . The _pdlleeinan . immediately " took , the delinquent . off to the Station-house , followed by her wretched conipanioas , to bu brought up ou . Monday , when doubtless some " Alderman Cute" will try liis hand at " putting down" poverty . The wretched woman ' s hand ¦ H _* as _ _-o _^ _uchjMerated _ jyith the brolie ' n glass . ¦ ¦
' — •;'¦ :. . BOW'STBEET . :.. . •' . - _- .. . ; _Sati-rdat .- _—CunEt-rr to , a . Hokse , — -Henry . Coates , an ill ' _lookiug _fellovv , was charged ' by Gibbins , one of the oftiers ofthe Animals' - Frleiid' Society , with cruelly illusjng a horse _v The officer . first m , et with tlie prisoner in ftiay's-iiih-lahe , ' where ho was ui ' iincrcifuliy beating the head of ahorse With the butt-end of a tbick-li ' andled ivhip _* . Tho officer followed him to : Blo 6 _msbui'y-s ( uiare , and finding that he . ' still * persisted hVhis brutality , - he called-a police-oiiiecr and . gave / him ? into -custody , -: _T _? _itVQ _« . _l five _sliilhngs .-
i _; . ' _-... -QUEEN _SQltARE . - / _•'•¦'¦ * ¦ ' * _' ; S ati'iida v . _^ -A ¦¦ " Labk . _"—Joshua Warherwas charged with , assaulting- ' , one of-. the _^ * division , OU- 'the previous evening ; - about six o ; clock ;—The > : prisoner was with-a WOmail . in ' , tli ' e . uelghbourliood . of Graycoat-place , and , being rather the worse for liquory thought he would have a "lark" withitlieconstable . ' _- * Actuated by _this-idea- _; lie went up and seized the constable by the neck , threw his legs rouud him in true bearish . fa _jliioii ,, _' _5 tV ' r i * lihUTl _vie--, lentl _yln thc'facc _, ' and tlien ' tprc . the . _' stQclcoff his neck in the scuffle ; which ensued 7 . _Immcdrafc _^ ble came ' up /" oh" whom' the prisoner endeavoured to expeh 6 _VIiis wrath . At last the refractory defendant was safely lodged- in' durance vile .- _^ _Tlie-Sefeiiddntj ' . as' his apology / said lie was so drunk'he didnotktiow what ' he was doing . —Coutmitted for fourteen day ' s , ' - ¦
¦ ¦ Final '' . ' Examination and . Committal of Sik Jous Osboen £ ' s _IJaoghte ' k _, for Jf . Ei . oNT . —At one o ' clock this day , Miss Osborne , ' daughter of Sir " John Osborne , who hitd been out on bail since ' Thursday wcelt , was brought up for final _exauii-aation before Mr : _-fiuvrei , the sitting magistrate . . The court w ; as . crowdedto suffocation at an early hpiir , aud _gt'eat 7 nwnbers . were , refused admission _. On' Miss Osborne being calieil on , Mr . BiiiTcl asked if there was anyfur ' thei ' _^ pvidencc to . be pftered iu support of the ! charge i-r _^ nspector Moran : -None . —Mr , _Ifui'iel said he . was fnuy . ' _satisficdithiit there . was quite enough of evidence to _acndthe . ' c _^ Clarkson said _beiori-r that was" done 7 , he wished to make a remark or two . An impression _ha-jl ' gone abroad that there werefamily circumstances which had operatedto induce his client to commit the offence with which she stood
oluwgcd . Now he begged leave to state that there was not ihe least foundation whatever for this 'impression . She had received a religious and moral education , eiual to the'best oi'her class ; had had every attention - paid to tier by her fricuds , and . abating curtain eccentricities of character , her character up to the present time had been perfectly irreproachable ' , : . He . ' made these remarks in . justice to his client , who was a lady in education and man . ners , and ou behalf of her family whose feelings from the ¦ p resent unfortunate affair had been so severely wounded . The prisoner was ' then . ' fully committed for trial at the next Middlesex sessions , which will . be liokleii on the 25 th instant . The pvisouer was subsequently , liberated ou bail , . _*' ' "' .. ' .. !
SOUTinVARK . - _^ _ai'itbda ; . — _21 s £ AEiNO A Window . —Mary Ityau , a native of the " green isle , " was charged with wilfully breaking two panes of glass ; value 40 s „ in the window of the King's Arras , King-street , Borough , and also with assaulting Mr . Vousden , the _laudlovd . It appeared that abput twelve ' o'clock the preceding night she entered the house , being in liquor at the'time . The landlord told her that she coidd not remain , as she was drurik _; and that he would not serve _hei-. at the same time _rcquestingher to leave _thk Uowie . . _She immediately struck him ou the head with her clenched fist , and completely : _stunneclhim . She then deliberately walked up to the'window and broke the glass , _—r Prisoner : Oh , yer vagabond , it sarved " yer right for illusing _a-definceless famale . —The * constable said that be
sajiv the prisoner , break the windows . She was ' _-so very violent that it required six police constables to carry her to { the _statiou-house—in fact , she had the strength ,. of Sampson . — -I _' risonev . ! You ' re a poor lazy _., set , all- , t ] _b , e w _^ iole lot of you peelei' 9 . I could wliop ,. you all with , my right hand . —The magistrate said , that . ' from her . yip _^ eiit conduct in that dock , ho was . convinced ' slid' was' ! a dekiiera . te' ( vouia . n ..: ' He asked the lvalue of the _dsuioage _^ _TTMp . Vousden replied ' about f p _^ . 7 _si > iU |? fes- _—TlmL _^ _ajjrjs trate said that she must pay ' the ddma _^ e doue _, ' aud find bail for her future good conduct . _; 4 Pris ' ouer : The devil of : a farthing ' h ' av ' e'i ; I must go to . prispn . —The magistrate _ordeved ' her lobe imprisoned twenty-one days . default ' of pk _^ iuf ' thG damage j at the Gxpiratipn of that term she _qtMW fihd bail . "The _pnSoner : was accordingly locked _Vm . TO'T ., ' .. ; rf ! n ' " : ;; :: . _' ¦ ¦ : >¦"(¦ _- _^' y - ; _* * - _''* _— :
I ... F -.. • .S'.Y.'Si.'R: ."•'—~ ' F T...
i ... _f - .. . s _' . y . _'Si . 'r : . _" ' _—~ ' _f _tATESr . 'SHIPP _^ ING pS TELLlGENCE , " , y _bBEApiui . _SlIIPWHBCES , JjpSS OFLlPK .--Lloj'd ' 8 , _Friday" Night . —The late snow storm * was , _sattende , d with the most melancholy disasters along tfie coast . The wrecks that it occasioned were trul y dreadful
I ... F -.. • .S'.Y.'Si.'R: ."•'—~ ' F T...
i * .. ' _-COi *! A / SA-k _S . _Aiii ' _A . _i-ilct _i-X _' _-yJH > "ii . T many having foundered " _vTitu _/ _tli _^ _haploss crows , all of whom perished . . .. Along , the coast , . to . the north ; _wardj ' - _'frontihg the 'Geravan' _^ cean _,: ' the ioa 8 e » werh vcrv _iiunierous" _At'about- _' ' _-half- pa _^ fc ' _^' - ' _6 _y' * l _^ P & Tuesday morning , the Preventive ScrYiccbeiongini fd the _Southwold station received _littbhhatioiv-of a vessel bcingyvrcckcd near the _BaniaroY _Sailed ; _nhd that the cfewwere clinging to the rigging . ' * . * ' ihev in _? stanflv started off in "the direction , aiid . _' sucC ' eeded _. _in _resting the' crew ,, who > vero brought _ashownu _shoclcing state ' _;' in ' any of thein insensible ,. _'' _. m _^ hetf clothes' covered with ice . The vessel was the-i , ni _* j raid , of t 6 ndon , " Charles Harrison ,. master _^ bound W Abenleeni—At Whitburn , near Sunderiarnd , a vessel
called the BctsV , belonging'W that _^ rt , got oa ttt « rocks and became a total wreck , 'il _» o crew sav £ _themselvesiby tlie boiits .-The schooner _hinily , bh _^ w _ihasteiVbelonging to Wisbeacli , _wWe . on ' . h _' 51 :. _^ , 1 _? _Middlcboi-ough _lor ' cbals , was . lost under . _randta-dir _' cumstuitces on the coast , ubout " a mile'to the soum or Scarborough . —Another vessel was lost'at ; Montrose . Ifc / iras the . _bi-ig St . Andrew ' s , of ' Arbroath . '" 'lhe lifeboat was launched , anil . the crew were saved ' by it . - _~ The'True- Blue , of London , Mr . Fleming master ; "was wvecUed ' off llcdcar during the si ona . "It is' _supposed that all on . board perished . —At 'EiuiiahbWen '; _' * h ' e ' ari Loiidondorrv , aiiothev _fatalsliipwreekliap-oened . " The _, _ill-fofcdcrai ' twas the Ifanuonyof _liiuris ' ey , ' , _'i » _i _* aydc / r , _" _luaster : she struck on . a sliotUcalled . GlaslijSaUy , _SLta-j ate itboiit half a mile oil' the beach ' .. The . ' niber 3 ,
lost arc reported to be thirteen . —lo be added to the above , " are those-ol ' _-the- Victoria ; of ¦ ' -Newquay ; _-an _American-paokct-ship ; the Villo de Lyon ,- on _* _hei coast of -JJariicur , * the Bee , wrecked at-Camber , near / Rye -land also that of . a * "Dutch , vessel , _thc'llopclideV _^ of . _Rottci'ilain , lost lieai ; . the South RqckLigh ' -t . ' . f { iev * crew of the Bee were savctl by the Coast-guard b 6 abi _< 1 _'liC American packet was a very fine vessel ,. and her ' J loss is ' gimi out at £ 50 , 000 ' . The i \| _ail'tv & n \ New _, Yoi-k _^ wliich arrived at _Livei'pool on _TlJiifoilar JH _^ _ii _^ coiitai _^ iutelligciicc of the loss of fourteen vessels , ' tho _grejttfi ' _portion-bcloiig _' ng . fco Eiiglinidi ; . -. Amoiig fch . e . ui'Wiis the following : —On the 19 th of just , month tho wreck of a large barque , supposed . to _' bc the 1 _. 01 _'d _Scatoti , Ot ' . St . _^ . Andrew's : waft discovered Oii tlie _castvi-n" _jioilit _of'tll ' O ' Isle of _Iliint , in J . ' _enillescot- - Bay . -Two bodies v _^ _ercfound aboanl . ¦ _* ..,.... ..
Llovh ' . s , _Siati-rpav . —Tlie Trewartha arrived _yeatwuHy at _Livt-rpowl from Cork , iviUi xiamage _, ' lutviug bcou iii cont _.-ict oil" Tu ' shar with the Tit ; iniii ,. ' bmiud r to Smyrna , since put into Watcrlwil . _"—The Sir R . A . _i'Vi'oiison .-11 bode , from Clyde to Malta _/ i ' _m-hik-rcd oil' _Tuskar , llth instant : two nieiiiirowiict ! , having been in _i-oiitact with tlie Hopewell , _bmilitlto M ; _nviilham , _aince put bfick . —A ship , name . unknown , \ va _3-5 _parti'iliy" disniaftcd _, Dec . 1 . off Agulhas Bank , during .: ; a . sm ' _iioii squall , in sight of ' the Athol , . _'tirivcd in the ' - . ; Clyde . —Tho'lloniet , _" Shiok , from Middlesbro . ' . to Yarmouth , was dismaslud ' off Flamborotigh , IIcad _, ; _, _- 5 th _iiiKt ., aud subsequently wrecked on Siind Ilalc ; ' _" _) ftvew saved : . _..--. > ... i . t-
Si-Ioiuu J-Uom Bistress.—Yesterday (Frid...
_Si-ioiuu _j-uom Bistress . —Yesterday ( Friday ) - Mr _.- ' _i BaUor held an inquest at the Barley Mow ' , Blue ..- '' Anchor-alley , Bunhdl-row , on -William _Lettiau _, aged . ; - fifty , a printer . Deceased lived in . a small ' , house in ; Bnnks-uourfc , of which he" was the tenant .. He . .. out of work , and had become responsible for _SCprai persons-accommodated with money at , loan societies , and who were unable to pay their instalments .. ' .. These ' circumstances preyed upon Jiis mind , as he'had'bceii in a desponding- state the "last-Tew days . Wednesday morning , as he had * not been sc 6 n , ' thedobr of'Mi bed room was broken open , when he was discovered lying upon his bed quite dead , and it was , found he had taken a quantity of laudanum . Verdict , Temporary insanity .. ** - '" ¦ " - ' '" - ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ ' _rM- " _- ' . Ut - _"S
ACCIOEKT OK IHE NORTH _MlMASO RAlLW . tt!—On Monday morning last a serious accident happened on the North Midland Railway , whicli might haye been attended with fatal consequences . As tlie first up train—which is due at . Win _^ ield Station at tw enty minutes past eight a . m ., was proceeding at a moderate speed near the Bump-mill , about a mile and ' alialf north of Southwingfield Station , one ofthe axles ofa second-class carriage broke , and a great destruction of carriages ensued . Fortunately , however , no one received an injury beyond the fright .
Death of Mr . Lamak Blanchauo . —It is . our . most - painful duty to announce the sudden death pf _IVfr ,. _LamanBlanchai'd . He had lately suffered , a . severe * domestic affliction , and his-unceasing anxiety during . the progress of the long and harassing illness in hia family , which terminated fatally , had so injured hia _., own health , that fits ensued , which finally . to liis death . He died about halt-pastone o ' clock this . ( SaT . : l turday ) morning , and has left four orphan children to- ; _i lament his loss . ... ....:, ; _.- :. _^ i
Di'iiuvsinne Miirers.—Ou Monday Last,.-T...
Di'iiuvsinnE MiirERs . —Ou Monday last ,.-the _^ Oth _** inst ., a delegate meeting ofthe Coal Miners was held-, i at . the White Bull Inn , Newthorpe , Derbyshire . ; a .-. a working Miner , named John Mprley , was appointed „« chairman , and William Duro secretary . . A ; _discusaioh ,. ! i took place respecting the fines levied on tlie ; men , at ; _-. f Bahington colliery , when it was unanimously _agreed-. v that the men should return to work until ,. the . finsir .: were repaid . "" - _.-.-:. ' . . ; .. _¦( . _« Yokkshirk . —The next general delegate niG 6 tt »» _'o _?* _- - 'i Miners will be held at the King ' s Arms Inn / Gilder- " - * sonic-street , near Leeds , on Monday , February 2 ith ) !' ' ¦ to commence at eleven o ' clock in the forenoon - ' ' * ¦ ''
Tfovfywwins; ^^^ S% Lij
_tfovfywwins ; _^^^ S _% _lij
Cut Or Loxdo.V. —The'-Public Discussion*...
Cut or LoxDo _. v . —The ' -public discussion * will be' *' iosunied at the Hall , I , Turaagain-lane , ion . Sunday morning . next , FebruaijlQth , at . half-pas ' t . ten .. In ... < the afternoon , at , three precisely , _the'Meti'opolitattu * : _' District Council will assemble ; and inthe evening ,-at seven , Mr . C . Doyle . will lecture ..... " . ' _ ''' ,.. ' . ' ! . ' _) , .,,, Somers ToSvk — . OifSunday evening next ,. Mr . . _G-.. s * Doyle will 'deliver a . _publie lecture , to commence at .. t _^ liiie . jjrecisely . a _* _S-fhe Bricklayers' Arms / _. _Tonbridge-.- _^ M street ' ,, Ci'omer-sti'cct . , , .,- : -, . ... -. ' _..-. ; . _» ¦ . ! _* , - _« ' The _MBMBEKs-of thcSomersTown locality are ' re " - _'•''' ' ¦ ' iiHiV . ted to meet- -on- Sundar evening next , -at Mr ? ¦ _*
_Diuidrulgo ' s ,. lonbridgc-streety New-road , at ' seven" " o ' clock precisely . _- : - ¦ _' ¦ ¦¦ * — " ¦ '» . ' _-f- _' * GAMiiEUW'E _* ti .-ANn _Walwortit . —A meeting--will belielil-at the Montpelier Tavern ,- Walworth , on'Mbu- ' _* ' •' day evening next , Fcbnwry 17 th , at eight'precUely . ' -7 * ' ' „ H . _VMMERSMITH . —A ' meeting will be held ' at thc ' _Duu' t tow , Brook Grreen-laiie , * on Tuesday eyemh g next , " , ' . " _l- ' _ebi'iiaryi 8 th , * . it _eightprdciselj ' ... "'' . _., ' , ' * !„ '' -. ' j M . \ _uyi . "KiiosE _IiocAUtv . — . _Attieiubeva' nieetuig wiJl _-s be licl'l on Wednesday evening , Feb . . il ) , afc ; . the . C _' oacliinakerg' Amis ,, _Gircus-strect ,. New road , : iit _* half-past seven _b _' _cloct ' 7 . . _* _.-.-,.. ¦ . ' -,. ¦ , * _i-i
Chelsea .. —Mr . _Mftirath -will lecture-: . at , the _¦•*» Cheshire Cheese Grosvenor-row , on Sunday _.-ovening * -i next , Februai _, _' )* 16 th , at eight o ' clock precisely r * - ¦ ¦ ¦ - _<* _-.-. . _LucDs .- _^ -M r ; C . Doyle will lecture iii'thc . 'B . _aziiar _. ' _iJ Briggate , oh Sunday the 23 rd . inst . ' 77 "' . ' " 4 " ' . ' . _Z-.. . ... _Sbi'fu _LAscAsuiiii' ' _MiiE'iiKp . —The next .-meeting ' -. < i of thc ' _. _-i ' . oiith L ' _aiii-ashire ' 'Delegates , will & Q . Ji $ d :, oU : . . _^ Sundiiy _/ _'I'Hrimry , 23 rd , in the Chartist , . , ropni ,-i . j 'Gharlcs ' iown ' , Aslitoii-undc-r-Lyiic , at ten o ' clock , in -a " the liiorhiiig . ' ! : .., . ; .. . ¦/ _.-: id lliiiiniiiy ~ i ' _Bipiiu . _—Two lectures-will b ' _extclivered-i ' _-i in the _Associattoiirvpoiu on Sunday . _eveuing-. nbxt , ' at ! _-. v . 'i two o ' clock in the . afternoon , andsix in the ; evening , _f- 'f bv Win . _Dixou , of-Manchester .. ' - ¦ - ¦¦ ¦ _* r _. _* i _«( * ; t - ¦* -.. ' _NotTixb ' nAM . _^ -On Sunday evennig n ' cx _^'! _* i " pulj lfc .. _^ _ivceting will be held inthc . Democi'atic Chapef _, ' at ,,. ' . j six o ' clock , in the . evening . — -The ' Operative Hall _,.., . Building Committee ' will" liieet . . the Pheaj ? ant , ' .. " Charlotte-street , ' licit ' 'Simday ' iiftc ' riioo ' ii ; . ' at fivft .., o ' clock . * _' * . - ¦¦ ¦ '• ¦ ¦ " - ¦ ' ' _*•;•' ... ' . .. ! . . . . . - " ,
• -.. -•- - .. - '. .-' ¦: •' .-R ¦ ;'• * Jmtpublished, Price Three-Haljpenceeaeh,. . ;..,.. -.Ra
• _-.. - - - .. - ' . _.- ' ¦ : ' _.-r ¦ ;'• _* _JmtPublished , Price _Three-haljpenceEaeh ,. . ; ..,.. -.
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_VT OS ; land 2 , _; for January andFebrdary , of TUB DAY * "; _- " _iN AND SUNDAY SCHOLARS' MAGAZINE '* , being ; ° a Monthly Publication , containing" easy arid- _^ _leagiBg " * ' _* 1 articles on Morals , Science ; Words , and _Objec ' _tB '; ''' Edited by a Schoolmaster * . ; _^ ¦ ¦ ' ' _.- . _!!" . _- ' - ¦ . *; - ' " ¦ - • ' ¦ ' ¦» « ' " _VTe _havti _' _-not named one-third of * tlie ' 'dcl _ji _^ ii fuV _conV _...., _^ ten ts of the numbers , which must be read to _^ e apnrcciate ' d ! _^ . No school , no father of a family , sliW'd ! be '' _witiiput . th ' e ... work ; by Its aid the humblest labourer may _instruct his ' children in that real knowledge wliich thegreat . majority _^ oi our fashionable world fail to supply tliem ' _with . "— " Northern Star . " O _.-l ' _- ' _*¦ V \ ; " _(? A _•'*•" . _? V . X London : Cleave , 1 , Shoe-lane . Manchester ! _i-ArWy "' - . rood , Oldham-street . Glasgow ?* _ratOU ' -aud ¦ Ii < ITC '" Ner- " ' son-street . _Birminghain : _'( 3 ue 8 t , - Huddersfield : JiHofc - ' 1 > ou . Market-walk .-.: - -. _** :. ¦> ¦ _¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ : _-j \ - ¦ •¦ _- _-.. » . i-M _'*
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WEST RIDIM'OF _YOKKSIIIrlE . ' ' ¦ ' ¦ i ' . _- ' -- ' " ;•( : ¦ ¦ _- . ' . ' ., ¦ ' •' _.- ¦ * ' : ; ' . ¦»! ABJOUBHMBSI 'Oi' THE CHRISTMAS 6 E 8 SIOSS _< FOB , . > _"fPS : j '• ' mAh oF vyiow , Ate . ' ' ' _. " , * " _. _^ NO ' TI CB is 'Hereby * . Given , ' _th _' _aVJtilelCHa _' _•«^ _k _4 _p _. _. _. _i _3 _lBK _^^ _, _g ¦ BAtQUAnTER _SEwioNS of the ' _P _^' ace , for tiie , _7 est . ' _, . ftiding of tlie . County > f York , " will be holden hy adjq ' ura- ' . 1 } fnenViit ' Sheffield , On . T . iic & _bda'v _, ' the 87 th- . dayj . pf " Fe- ... j Bllu "k "* k ' T' instant , at lialf-past ! Ten o ' clock in the foreap _^ n , ( _,, a " iid 'by ' rU ' rthei' ' adjournment fr 6 m ' . tlieuoe ' _wJM . _^ B ' hpiden _^ .. ii ' t _"Wakefiki . d , on Monday ; . the . 3 rd " day of . Mabch . _neif . ' _^ - ' sit Ten ' o'cioek in ; thc forenoon , ' poa tbe _y iiit or pe _^' oks * ., _-.-asiypEasdNS _indicteo _voii _MisDEMEiNoWs , _wUeii all jli « . 7 vorg , Suitors , Persons who stand upon Recognizance , and " " *'
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Feb. 15, 1845, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns4_15021845/page/1/
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