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TREATMENT OF A CHARTIST AT BOWi STREET.
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THE CHEAPEST HOUSE IN ^ THE ZINGBOM IOB OHUDBEK'S PEEVES 01 ALL BE8CBIPTI0m . Trik flH Sf, dPTMlT TTmTS"D! TV TTTEP. fTTW/lTin'W T?A"D rtUTTTYi»-i?-\r>c
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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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
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SPLENDID SWISS AND SPANISH SUITS , CONSISTING OF FROCK COAT , "WAISTCOAT AND TROUSERS , FROM Us . 6 d ., NEATLY BRAIDED . BEAYERTEEN AND CORD DRESS FROM 5 * . 6 d . SUPER CLOTH , HUSSAR SUITS OF JACKET , WAISTCOAT , AND TROUSERS OF ANY COLOUR , FROM 21 s . TAILORING , WOOLLEN "DRAPERY , AND OUTFITTING ESTABLISHMENTS TO ALL PASTS OF THE GLOBE , -
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TJ 1 OR the Cnre of Scrofnla , Scnrvy , Scorbutic J ! Affection , Ernptions and Pimples on the Face , and o&er parts of the Body , Swelling , or Ulceragons of the Neck , Sore Breasts and all disorders attended with painful Bwellings , or with morbid and irritating Ernptions of the Skin , open Wounds and Sores , Contraction of the Limbs , Enlargement ef "file Joints or Glands , Lameness , Morbid Secretions , General Debility , Nervous Affections , Lumbago , Lobs of Appetite Indigestion , or wnere the eonstitation nas been injured by excesses , or diseases of any kind , Mercury , or other injurious treatment and in all those cases in which Sarsaparilla , or Tonics are of any avail , the following Pills have Invariably proved iar superior to any other Medicine .
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STBANGB'S HJCiTJSTRATED "WTOKKS FOR THE PEOFSB . LUTE OF NAPOLEON , TO BE COMPLETED in SIXTEEN Monthly Parts , with 500 Engravings , after Desiens by Hobace Vebnet . ROBINSON CRUSOE , To be completed in Ten Monthly Parts , with 400 Beautiful Engravings , by eminent Artists . Parts now Ready . NAPOLEON . Par t 1 . Tfith 40 Engravings ! Part 2 . -with 21 Engravings ! Part 3 , with 19 Engravings 2
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YOLAffD'S SPECIFIC SOLUTION TDIOBspeedily curing gonorrhea , gleets , strictures , JJ irritation of the kidneys , bladder , prostrate gland , and all diseases of the urinary passages , pains in the loins , stone > n the bladder , gravel , lumbago , and local debility , &cv
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PVBUC TEA PARTY , ROCHDALE . ' : npHE Female -Radical Asiooiajiion of this •^ own ' X intend commemorating the Birth-day of the 1 ^» H . Humt , Esq ., by a RbHc Tea Party in the Theatre on Wednesday , November 6 th , 1839 ,- upon which occaeion the following patriotic Gentlemen are invited to hononr the Company with their Presence—Messrs . O'Connor , J [ ones , Taylor , Deegan , Chappell , and the Rev . J . V . Jaokson . Tea on the Table at Five e'Cbdt . —Tickets , h . each . To be had at the following : place 8 :--R . Holt ' s ^ Hark-up-to-Glory ; J . Sharp ' s , Grocer , Redcrossstreet ; Joshua Haigh , MiEty-BuildingsrMr . Bake . Richard-street ; James f Wilkinson , Grocer $ na Mossj and Mr . Wrigley , Printer ,-Yprklhire-street . ' The Doors for -the Public Meeting ^ will be thrown open at Half-past Seren o'clock ; N . B . The Radical Band has kindly offered their Services tp enliven the Festivities of the Evening on this occasion . : : TUBUCTEA wuw 7 : niiimjis : ' ^
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IMMEDIATE BENEFITS OFFERED TO THE PUBLIC . T IFE aud Fire Insurance Rates reduced 30 per xJ Cent , per Annum Lower than any other Office . Life Annuity Rates calculated on Equitable Principles !! i—For example—for ^ every £ 100 deposited , this Association will grant the Annuity placed opposite the Age of the Party depositing ; from £ 50 and upwards in proportion . Agc 30 to 40 to 45 to 50 to 55 to 60 to 65 to ^ 5 £ . s . d . £ . b . £ . a . £ . b . £ . s . £ . a . , £ . s . 80 0 8 10 9 0 9 10 10 10 12 10 15 10 pr . cent pr . ct . pr . ct pr . ct pr . ct pr . ct pr . ct . 75 to 80 ~ " £ . 8 . £ 8 . ' ' -. .- -. 20 0 25 0 - - - pr . ct pr . ct ,
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CHflT . T . KWGE TO CUBE BUITONESS . - - - " 1 * ¦¦ ¦ ' - ¦ - " ' MR , BAXTER , kte of Hull , ( please to observe the name , ) who has restored to sight so many hundreds of individuals , many of whom have beon blind for a number of years , begs to announce to his friends in Scotland , that in consequence of the many invitations he has received that he intends to visit Glasgow early in October , and will make a tour through most parts of Scotland , and vrill pledge himself to cure all external Diseases of the Eye , Dimness of Sight , &c . without blisters , bleeding , seton , issues , or any restraint of diet . . Cataracts I cannot cure , as I make no use of an Instrament to any Eye . In cases of Amaurosis , I can tell if there be any hopes the first application that I make to the Eye , aiia I will hot detain any patient longer than one hour . .
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TO THE SUFFERERS FROM BILIOUS AND LIVER COMPLAINTS . Price Is . l ^ d . per box . JTIHIS exceUent Family PILL is a Medicine of JL long-tried efficacy for correcting ' all Disorders of the Stomach and Bowels , the commonfymptoms of which are Costiveness , Flatulency , SpaBms , Loss of Appetite , Sick Headache , Giddiness , Sense of Fulness after Meals , Dizziness of the Eyes , Drowsinessand Pains in the Stomach and Bowels . Indigistion producing a Torpid State of the Liver , and a constant inactivity of the Bowels , causing a dis-
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^^ - . iiiVW ^ : ^ A ^ w- W ^ rW L ^^ fiEOEQE STRA ^; Tailfe Draperi and Clot hes W DealW ; No . > 7 , ^ Jtho jisef £ ahe , * KuU , announces to his Friends and ^ thePjabKoVthaVhe has ou hftftd a large ABsortmentof Men ' s and ! Boys' Clothes , also a large Stock of ^^ Superfine West of England Broad and Narrow Cloths , Kerseymeres , . Pilot Cloths : and Beavers ;; also a apleiidid eele < 5 tidn of Buck and Doe Skins , rich Silk YeWet , and "Satin Vestingei ; dthe Whole of which rare stock he is now offering as- worthjthe attention of purchasers , andone triaFofwhich will not fail to eeoure their future patronage . ^ 11511 , 8 ^ . 24 ^ 1839 . v ( Hr Observe the Shop . No . i .
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THE ASTQNISHI ] S [ G EFFECTS OF PAXTL ' s DB ^ BAILLIE'S ^ ILLSi ^ PAUL'S DJt . BAILLIE'S FAMILY APERIENT ; PILLSj for both Sexes > -An effectual remedy for indigestion j bile , giddineiS » f thf head , pi 1 * * gpntj &o ; , acting mildly but effectually , without griping the inside ! . They destroy worms , cleansefthe system ^^ and eradicate all external eruptions , and restore to the skin a beautiful and healthfulappeararice . For females these pills are trul * wbiiderfaU ' - . . . ' ¦ - ' ¦ . ' - . ' ¦; '¦ "' , - ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ . '¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦' . \ ' - ¦ v-v ' ¦ ' ¦ $£ Intemperance is deprived of it « pernicious effect ^ by these ; pills ; they regulate : the bowels , improves th > digestion , and ward off disease .
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MOKISON'S PItLS . OF THE BRITISH COLLEGE OF HEALTH , ¦ ' . . ! LONDON . / :-P ; : 4 ^ i ^; v : \ :- ' -v WHEREAS gpuriousimitationsi of my Medicines are now in circulation , I , Jajuss Moribon , the Hygeist , hereby \ give notice ; that I am in nt > wise connected with the following Medicines purporting to be mine , and sold under the various aames of ¦ ¦« DrMorrison ' s Pills ? "TAeHygetan Pills , " " The Improved Vegetable Universal PiUs , r " The Original Morison't PiUs , da compounded by the late Mr . Mocttj" " The Original Bygeiah Vegetable Pills ? ' <¦ TkeOrigmdlMmson ' sPilU ^ &c ., : &c " : .: ' ¦ ¦¦ . . ; ' . ' •;¦ . ¦ . . ¦ ' : ¦ " . ; ¦ - ¦ ::. ; ¦ . ; : ;• ., ¦ That my Medicines are prepared only at toe British College of Healthy Hamilton Place , King's Gross , and sold -by the General A gentB to the British College of Health and their Sub-Agentaj and that no chemist or druggist is authorised by me to dispose of the same . ' ¦ ¦' :: ¦
Treatment Of A Chartist At Bowi Street.
TREATMENT OF A CHARTIST AT BOWi STREET .
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To the Editor of the Times . ^ Sib , —As the TeportB in your and other papers of the circumstances connected witji my recciat arrest contain somemisstatements which I have reason to know have injured me with a portion of the public , I will rely on your impartiality for the publication of the following correct version , both of the circumstances of the arrest land : my grounds of complaint against the Police establishment at Bowstreet : — ¦ . ; . ¦ ¦; . ; : .:. ¦ " ^ \ - ' \ ' ; ' v ' . : ' ; ¦ .. - \' , ; I was arrested between the hours of eleven and twelve o ' clock on Tuesday night , wliile returning home from a friend ' s house ^ where I had passed th e evewng , accompanied by my wife . -The arrest took place at thoentrance to Palsgrave-place ( within a i
ew yaxaB oimy bouse , ) and was effected by Serjeant Kerr , " assisted " by two constables . At the moment of arrest I was . , suffering front illness , having taken medicine that day , and was hurrying to nay home for a purpose not necessary to ' mentioni I stated the circumstance to Serjeant Kerr , requesting him to accompariyme into my house for one minute , is it would otherwise be physically impossible for me to walk to the Station-house ; This Serjeant Kerr peremptorily refused , ; alleging that his instructions were to convey me direct -to Bow-street . As a matter of course , my wife , who knew the state of . my health , remonstrated against such barbarous and unnecssary harshness , . when the two : fassisting " policemen , immediately threatened to drae me off bv
iorce , and to treat Mrs ; O'Brien , inthe same manner if she interfered . Serjeant Kerry however , inter ? posed , and ; after some parley , during . which the neighbours began to appear , he consented ( upon my asauiance that there was nobody in my house ; not even a servant ) to accompany me to the watercloset . Delicacy , Sir , forbids me to : mention the parley which took place within the hoiiise . Suffice it to say that had it not been for Serjeant Kerr , it is my firm belief that the '' assisting" constables would have g ° n ? the " whole hogV of barbarity and brutality . While in the house , Ireminded Serjeant Kerr that when he arrestedme before , on the 12 th of August I was locked up all night , aud till one o ' clock next day , m a dark cell at the Station-house ; that I was not allowed a pillow to lay my head upon , not any
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covering to wrapf round ine ; tha | I yraa not suffered to see or commufticate vrirh anybody , noteveniny ; wife , and that , consequently , I was m a great measure deprived of the means of getting bail , although biworel left iny house I ^ as promised very different treatmenit , In reminding bin * of these mattera , I expressed a ; hope that my' present state of health , taken in coujunction with the advanced period of the year , would inducei the officersi at Bow-street to treat me differently on . this occasion . Serjeant Kerr said , ' . ?• No doubt you shall beproperly treated , and if ydujwere not so- before , it was -because there was then no- superintendent at the Station , Hut there is one there now , and youshall have what you require . '' In plain Englishj I was giveric to understand that A ^ -j _ ^ ^^_ _ S- _ Lj ^_^ --..: V ^__ _ .. « . ;_ .
would have , if not a bed ; atleast a pillow and a blanket ; but , to my aatomshment , I found , upon arriving-at the Statiori-hbiise , that the inspector pn duty there would not hear a word on the subject . He would neither accommodate nqie-Himself , uor suffer my wife to do ip , but beckoning with his hand , ( without uttering a word ) pointed to the passage which leads to the cells in the yardl . > : ¦ I was immediately hustled off , and , as before locked ui > for the night m one of those dena of infamy to which pickpockets , prostitutes , and persons accused of felony , are taken before committal . :: Now , Sir , I ask is this fair treatment for a man who never committed a crime-rrwho never did a diahonourable acfr ^ who -had neverinjured a . human
being since he was : born 1 I am now , Sir , iii the 34 th year ofmy ago , ' and never until these two Government arrests was I before a magistrate , either as complainant or defendant ; never was I inside a prison nor even a polico-offlce , except to visit and relieve ' some unfortunate brother in distress ; arid although more prless a public man for the last nine years ; never 'did factious calumny -I itself whisper aught to my disadvantage , or accuse me of anythiHg worse than an overweening -zeal to work out the liberties and happiness of my oppressed fellow-sub ^ jectsr-the unrepresented working classes . . ; ¦ ; ' Now , Sir , either thei Bow-street pfficershad , or they had not , a legal power to treat me in . the manner described , Ifthey had not . t demand redress
at their expense from the Commissioners of Police . If they had , then do ,: I complain of the law which authorises or cdiinives at ; such barbarity . A convicted felon is allowed a bed or a ring to lie down u > . an & no debarred fromallintercourse with his friends . I have been denied these common neces ^ saries , although simply accused of what our Whig rulers caU- ^ patridtismV at one :, tinrt , and " sedition ' at another , according as the language uttered is for or against themselves . For , be it observed , the accusations against me come from two Whig Corporations , the leading members of which ( including Fif e * the mayor of Newcastle ^ and Potter ; the mayor of Manchester ) have uttered more"sedition" ( according to the Attorney-General ' s
definition of that term ) in one week during the Reform Bill ja gitation than I have uttered all my ? life . If by ^ sedition' , is meant language " calculated to alarm Her Majesty ' s peaceable snbjectsi" language having a tendency to incite to breaches of the peace : to acts of outrage ; &c ., all I can say is , that I have during the last six months addressed upwards of 2 , 000 , 000 of people , including at least 80 , 000 of the present electoral body , and , as far from having alarmed those peaceable subjects , I was uniformly , applauded by them , even to the extent of unanimity ,-and in no one instance has a breach of the peace , or disorder of any kind , resulted from my harangues . Had it been nay fortune to come into contact With 2 , 000 , 000 more , I doubt not that the result would have been
the same . What right , l then ; have Messrs . Fife and Potter to call mylanguage seditious \ True they accuse me of" exciting disaffection against , the existing laws and constitution of Parliament ; " but have I not as good a right to be p ^ saffected against a ^ oneymdhgering House of Commons whose laws afford me no protection at all , as they had to be . disaffected against a boroughmongeririg house which yielded them a great deal of protection , perhapsmore than they deserved ! Andy if a man is to be indicted for mere words , why ; were not Potter and Fife indicted at the time of the Reform Bill , or why were they not subsequentl y indicted when they joined chorujg with O'ponnell against the very existence of one integral branch of the Legislature
—the House of Lord ? 1 Is it right or just , Sir ; to arrest and treat me in the brutal manner I have been treated for simply exhorting the people to demand a constitutional reform of the House of CoJnmpnSj whilst such persons as O'Connell , Fife , and Potter are passed by unscathed and unnoticed , notwithstanding that they have used language by miany degrees more , violent than mine , and that not to promote constitutional changes , but with a view : to render one House ofParliament worse than it was before ; and to upset the other alj » gether , after the Cromwell fashion ? . 1 trust . Sir , . to' your impartialitv
for the answers to these questions , not doubting that howoverprejudiced you be against my Chartist doctrmesa ^ opinions , you will , at least , do nie that justice before the tribunal of public opinion , which it would be vain for me . to expect from any other existing tribunal ^ the justice of being publicly condemned and pilloried in ' company ' with greater offenders than myself . In plain English , Sir , if you cannot conscientiously acquit me , do , at aUetentSj what you can to rescue me from the dishonour of being trampled up ^ n by such fellows as O'Connell , B 6 tter , und \ Fife , andletnie have , the just consolation . Of / appearing in the same dock with these transcendant culprits at the next assizes ; -
. Your reporter , Sir ; has made me say , when before the magistrates , that" the institutions of the country had stripped me of property to the amount of £ 1 , 000 a 4 year , ' < fec . The tendency of this report is to make me appear an impostor , it being well known that I never possessed property to that amount , nor anything like it . What I did say was , that the institutions of the country had deprived me of the means of acquiring property to the amount of at least jEI 000 a-year , < &c , an assertion which I can easily make good . Your reporter also makes it appear that bergeant Kerr had some difficulty in finding me that he had " atteaaed five or ^ six ; public meetings for that purpose , and at last succeeded in capturing me , &o ? &c . All this , Sir , is ¦ incorrect . Sergeant Kerr knew welt where to find me ; having before arrested me on tne 12 th of August , in my own house , where he niight have done the same again at any how of ^ the day , had his employers thought proper tp Send hun ^ I amjiota man , Sit , to keep out of the way of the Jaw ; as Sergeant Kerr ' s employers well know . But it ; suited their- base purpose , " instead of arreshngme in the morning , and at my own house , to arrest me at night , and away from my hou ^ e , in order to have me locked up in a dungeon for thirteen nours , to alarm my wife and famil y by my Bon-appearance at home , and to cut me off from the chances of having baU before five- o ' clocknext day , whenl should necessarily be sent off to Lancaster , perhaps handcuffed like a common thief or felon . For these mis-statements , however , :. ¦ I do not . blame your reporter , who , doubtless , had his information from the Bow-str « et gentry . : I am , Sir , yours , &c . V '• James Bronteriib O'Brien . 6 , Palsgrave-place , Temple-bar . :
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THE WQRKING 0 F THE ^ NEW POOR LAW •¦¦ ¦ ¦ : ¦ - - , '¦ ¦ ' : ¦ ¦ 'IN , CHESHIRE . ¦ ¦ ; ¦ - ¦ - ' ¦ ; ,,: ; . _ Warrington , Monday Afternoon . —This morn-; g > a coroner ' s inquest was held at the Bridewell in this town , before Mr . John Hayes ; one of the coroners for Lancashire , on view of the body of James Hopewell , a pauper , aged 74 , belonging to the parish of Lymn , who died after being set down m the public streets at Warrington , by directioh of an overseer who had undertaken his removal . ? Henry Harding , a weaver , living in ; Scotlandr road-, Warxingtou , deposed to haying known the deceased for the ' . last five ; pr sis : years . He had not seen hijn for some time prior to last Wednesday . When witness eame home from his work that eyeningj he found the deceased sitting in his house
by the fare . Thought he had had some : drink , but such was not the casei he wa ^ very much agitated Witness eent tq Mrs . Thompson , the landlady of the Britannia public-house , who , witness had been given to understand , had sent the . deceased to him , to say that he must prpcuro hint a bed . She desired , ¦ witness to make him as comfortable as -he could , and she woujd see that he was removed to Lymu ; his parish , in the morning . Witness had rio ; bed , so he tnade him up one as well as he could by putting some things on the chairs before the firel He said he : was very bad , and witnessgot him . some gin and Water and spine warm ale . He leftapprtibnof both Witness went to bed about twelve O ' clock , and soon ' fter that time
a he was roused by hearine the de ceased moaning ; Witness went down to him ^ stirred ^^^^ . aa ^ pu ^ the , chairs , straight ,: as ^ he had shifted them . He then went to bed again AW minutes before six o ' clock witness went to him and S H - ' * f"d fpun ^ th ** he was dead and fflri . -I fr ^? MttlP « "P , ^ one of the chairs . It wa ? hag-past seven o ' clock whea witneBS ^ anie home . . He asked him ^ where he came froin , butdid ?^ Hf ; f ?? f' P ^ ed Baid he had cometheie JH C 3 Xt ^ s * Mcely ^ wderstand what he said , £ fe ^ w ^ t nei 8 asked if he S S ^^^ v or ^ h eea there ,. Imt got ? o reply . About ten o'clock in the evening PetW Ingham came in , and asking htta If ^ Sad ^ S ¦ W Jfawa . Ms hand in his ^ ocket ^? S ^ in
« oa . silver and 7 d . in copper ; Pefer w ^ itT %°$ ?* ™™*!« brought ^ old xKix ^ niiW worth of gm . He returned the rest of the montov m ^ MM ilflttllli
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ahoemaker named Hewitt , of High Leigh , to Lvrt « His masters iahaye H . for iSe job . $ r . ij S * the overseer , who is no relation to the Jodeini * housekeejperj put the deceased into the cart i £ was well , covered with straw , and law down in it Mr . Hewitt Walked along with witness by the sido of the cart . They Went to Lymn , and called at a lodgitig . bpuse kept by Mrs . Kinsev . They could nc * take himJn , as they were , full ot lodgers engaeed hi potato getting . Mx * Hewitt then took the deceased to Lymn workhouse , but the governor would not take him lip , without an order . T ^ ey then went oh to Mr ^ Lpngshaw ' s , the orer teer of Lymn , who lived in Cherry-lane , . about two miles distant . Itlx Lbngshaw told the deceased that he might go to the union workhouse at Knutsford , ^ but he re fused . T saT-- ,-. . * , s :. . ^ - ^ -.. .. - .-:,.. ,..
inp . that when he was there before he was covejed with . filthy verinih . (¦ ' : > . ; : v ; ; . The Coroner inquired whether it was really tru » . that the new union Workhouse was in the ' nltbT state described ! ; - y ; ' - -S- . " , '¦ . ¦;;¦ ¦ . " :: . ' ¦ :. ; ' - . ' i \ ' . ¦ ¦ . : ' \ . . ¦ : ¦¦' ¦' . Mr . Jones ,, the deputy consteble of Warrington , said , from the enquiries he had made , he bellevod that it was truth . The governor had admitted such to be the « ase , to the relieving officer . . The Coroner observed it was caused by great noglect . Surel y they ^ might ^ keep > the place , which v » a « a new building , free from vermin . : ' . The witness Bowlandaon . fnrthef stated , that at the overseer ' s of Lymn , Mr . LongshawV , a' shandry was procured , and the deceased was shifted intft it
Mr . Hewitt , the High Leigh overseer , then gav « witness ! a written paper , and greeted him to take him-tb the Britannia public-house , Warrington , and leave himthefe , whe&er they wotdd take him in or not ,: When Witness got to the pubh ' c-house . th « people said . they would not have him . Witness got two boys to assist him , and they together got the old man out of the cart , and left him on the pavement by the side of the Britannia door . On the wayio Warnngtonj'the old man said he was very bad two or three times . He had some gin and water at th « Thrashers ptiblic-hbuse , which Mr ; Hewitt paid for > . Witness got into Warrington by dark . It was two o clock when they started froni . HighLeigh . The deceased ; did not want to come ; andVhenna got to Lymn he wanted to stog there . As soon aa he : was placed in the cart he said he was verv ba « L
and that he should like to stop until the morning to see if he was iahy betteri Hewitt ' s people said ha must go , as the cart was come for him , and that the ; would have given- a deal of money sooner than have had him there , as he had filled the place full of vermin . Hewitt , the overseer , went to a ^ Jerry shop near Cherry-lane , and stopped until witness returned from Warrington with the shandry . Wednesday was a very fine day . The old man complained of being cold when in the cart , and asked witness how far he had to go . ; He could walk a , little , but n ^ nuch , Hewitt ^ the overeeer i was tipsy . Mrs . Kinsey , the lodging-hous * keeper at Lynm , saxd the deceased had lodged with her before he went to the uniPn wbfkhouse . ; When he left her house he waa quite clean and free ; from vermin .
'Dr . Davis was examined as to the immediate cause of the dfeath of the deceaaed . He stated that jt arose from a chronic disease of long standing , and that he could not hayeiiyiad any great period under any : eircumstances . - ¦ rhe jury returned a verdict of "Died by the ToatationofGod ^
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• ANOTHER ^ PRESENT TO HER MAJESTY . A few days since a email hamper , the contents of which / were secured by a , linen cloth being car * fu lly ^ sewn over the top , arrived at . Windsor , by coach , from Yorkshire , and addressed as follows ^—¦ - . ' ' ..: ¦ .. '¦ . ¦ " With Care . : ¦ : " - : '¦'¦ ¦¦ '¦ -. ' \ : ^ Totter Majesty "Queen Victoria , f < At Briton Palac ^ "Or Wherever she may :. - ' : : y ¦¦¦ : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦> : ^ Bee . "Withspeed . " - - ¦¦ _ Upon the porter at Moody ' s coach office taking thenackage ( thecarriage :-of which was 4 s . 4 d 0 fc tm tastle at Wmdsoy , it was refused to be received ^ The proprietor of the coach office , however , tMnkiig there might be some mistakesent it a second tinw
, to ^ the Castle , when it Was again refused , by th » orders ( as ; we are informed ) of .: the Master of Ui # Household ^ the Hononrable a A . Murray . Jnth » cpurse of the same afternpon a curious squeakiiur noise ( as the package was- lying in the coach ^ office ) w ^ as-heard toproceed from thejiamperi reseinWiag the stifled cries of a child ; and . as it was clear the 5 was something in it alive , it was judged expedient , under the ^ ^ circumstanceSj'tO open ^ ^ the package , a thousand rumours ^ ^ haying gorabroad in the meaa time , as to the real nature of its contents . At length the hainper was ppened , and then tbeia were discovered , crouched beneath some hay , a couple of very beautiful- guinea pigs—a male and iemaie ; . and a note addressed to her Majesty , of which the following is a true and veritable " opy *—v 7 . ¦¦ ' ' - . . -:- < . ¦ : ¦¦ : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦•¦ - ¦ ::: ¦ - . ; :, ¦ : ' < .- , ' ¦ ¦ .:. ¦ ¦ : ¦ .. ¦ ¦ :, . ;
«« * ^ 8 hton -m- % M orthem , ' near . Rotherham . ^ A i ^!^ n of 2 G «« nea Pigs ; To her Magestj from A little Boy 5 years old , that come in one day fronvPlaying in the Street , Says : Mother , Ilbv « the ( Aueea because she ; is A Good Queen . I wish I knew ; ware : she Live ; I would send her my two ^ Thexhild . would hot Rest tiU he had sent th « ttueen the only Treasure , he posses . He shed a teer over laPigSj and tohLftem they was going wait they , wquldjiave mi 9 j (| to | enty than he conld hav « torthem ., ^ Ho-is ftuite ^ llappy at parting with them . : ¦ ¦¦ l am . Afraid your Royal Highness will be displeased at a Poor womaa taking the Liberty to send them to . your Magesty . - ; ' 'v '• ¦ ' ; "Your Majesty ' s Most Hmnbie Servant , ^'^ . ikL'i ^ W ^ S ^^^^^
-ir ! P ^ authpnties at the Castle still refusing to admit t h | pigs ^ -notwithstanding \ Master EIridge told them before they left Laughton , fof "Briton Palace , " that they wasgoing ware they / would have more plenty " --a gentleman in Windsoi ' paid the carriage of th « hamper . from Rotherhami andthl ^ igs ^ hicL hS hasj ^ hristea . ed . Albert and Victoria ( the latter of wnjoto ^ rili shortl y introduce some new acquaintances tphrs family circlel are now comfortably domiciled ma spacious ^ hutch , in the stable attachendhk residence , m Gloucester-place ^
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Cto ^ T ^ Eit ^ SovEMiGNs . —Large numbers of counterfeit Boyereighs are in circulation inthis counvq . . ; they correspond insize audimpression withthe faS ^ " * - ^ do , aot 3 ng 5 they ^ bave been ascer-¦ ffl ^' " 5 « ^ ab , out ; fo « rteen shillings worth of goia . ~ Bath Cnttmtcle . - ' , ;; vS ^^^ - ^^^^^^ ^ teld ^ MAir ffi' ^^?^ MoRNtKG . ^ -Mr ^ O'Connell entered r ^ f Y * aboat ^ ree o ' clock , having been received * M } £ * S multlt ? ® & persons at some distance upon thejCork road . On his arrival he briefly addressed-the assembled multitude , who amounted to nwn ^ thousan ^ r The dinn er tookplace ia the ballroom of the Kins ? Arms Hotel ; nearly 300 persons were present ^ and the gallery was occupied by ladies . &oon atter seven , the ctoir was taken by Mrt Daniel S ^ °$ ^ # ^^ O'Co nnefl , Mr . G . S . & ? . % »© fr ; RBeamish , M , P . ; iaud on UnS'S *?' * < " » , Bart ., ^ P ., Mr . E , & SaS ?'» % h * $ - P ^^ ^ aanretand ^ almost only Swigffi ^^^ . ^^ ^ ^ MaEibran not T > EAD . ^ The -: following story is ffil ^^ T * ° ^ " Press :- « % offig i ^ talked of m the musical and medical -world but the ariScv ^^ T ^^ ?^^^^ ^ E ^* aristocracy eno of its mbst influential inembers ^ It maybe remembered that ^ Lord M ? wen ? Safter ||^^ sto ^ val , inC on S e ^ enceO faS one 6 f ' V&i& ^ 'lFi P Iace d under the ; care of one ot the mpst ; celebrated ohvsiVlanH nf p « = w
madS ^^^ t ^^^^^^^ P ^^ Garc ^ SfevS" ^ % . . * # * Q * ° ct ° r that sh « SfSA ^ recovering the lost Si } ° . M - His ; Ldrdship was ^ therefor * g » W « tothe Odeon , and great was his ^ UOire , and the surprise of the habitues was no Sff ™ ^ serving-two strange-looking men fef ?) ^ ding the outside of the box . It the ¦? SS ? ° ^ Ri sdem ° naj Lord M . awoke t from his leinargyj but the effect was marvellous in the prayer S '< r ?? - V ^ » and with tears ¦ -. in his eyes W ¦¦ - ¦ £ J ^ new ^ she Was not dead ; ' and from thai moment he flas been completely restored to reason . v * l $ ev ^? ^ tane * that his LordBhip has offered . Pauline ^ Mcia his hand . '' v iiij % ^ AOiibJj ( ART ' Change of ^ Fortpne . —Mr . John Mobb 8 , \ whp ; , died ai JiUngton about the year 1789 , oy His Will bequeathed a large and yaliiable estate , tnen known , aa the Wenlpck FarmV to executors WQtttrnstibrthe benefit '' of his ; two sons , then of the ageg of toee and four years , who " were to have Proper ; schpolmasters , to ; be qualified to beconrt ornamentsjp Society , and to be brought up to the Uiurch of England . '' The executors , in violatipn of JP trustsvreposed in them , at a proper age appren-Vjp ^ v hei boys to shoemakers in the neigbbpurhpod . ° * vhoreditch , and they have lip to the present time iunderione , mapy vicissitudes ^ totally ignorant of--the fjyendid patrimohy to which they were entitled .
Peen considerably improved , comprised about 200 a « res of land , now nearly all built uponi and several oW ^ tablished and first-rata public-house ^ f woxtpn-Old-town and its vicinity , aniong whicn tne following houses are particularly mentioned in tn » Wilh-TaeX ) ld Ivy ^ House , the Queen ' s Heady tht Cock and Greyhound , the Rosemary Branch , tw King of . prjassiaj the Britannia , the Bacchus , m P ou « h , the Green Man , the College Ho use , m Whrtemore ' s Heady ( he Robin Hood , and Noah ' sArk . The will of Mr . Mobbs , after liaviDg been secreted by the Sifferehtparties in whose iamw it has been until within the last few weeks , : f * £ * . . come into the possession of his sbns , ^ 'izS ' proved in Doctors' Commons . The P « : . at the present time be Worth at least £ mvw .
The Cheapest House In ^ The Zingbom Iob Ohudbek's Peeves 01 All Be8cbipti0m . Trik Flh Sf, Dptmlt Ttmts"D! Tv Tttep. Fttw/Ltin'w T?A"D Rtutttyi»-I?-\R≫C
THE CHEAPEST HOUSE IN ^ THE ZINGBOM IOB OHUDBEK'S PEEVES 01 ALL BE 8 CBIPTI 0 m . Trik flH Sf , dPTMlT TTmTS"D ! TV TTTEP . fTTW / lTin'W T ? A"D rtUTTTYi » -i ? - \ r > c
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Nov. 2, 1839, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1081/page/2/
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