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LIGHT, VENTILATING, FLEXIBLE VELVET HATS, 139.
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TO THE CHARTISTS.
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THE NORTHERN STAR. SATU1VDAY, AUGUST 2/1815. '
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co mp Mts <k €mxm^mn: • ,
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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¦ DEMtIXG' 5 ratcntYer . t-iati :. s , r 2 esiUcnats maybe X obtained in Scar .. * , Silk , ami Velvet , from 8 s . Cd . to 2 te , taapwirisof cue hundrea flifierentshapes , to suit contour . Also the best livery Hats at los . ; \ outl . s and GenU-mm's Hats and Caps of every description . —CECIL HGC 5 S , 85 , SSraaO , and 251 , K « gent « treet 5 « " Copy flic aaaress , aud tnj \ ihac jou caalje well used .
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PAXKURAXOX IRON WORKS . rTtllS LARGEST STOCK IX ECKOPB . —PUJHflSn . X 1 XG IHOSSOSGEKY , Stoves , Grate ? , Kitchen Eaugcs , Fenders , Tire-irons , best Shefiitltt Plate , ornamental Irca an-J Wu-e Work , Gavdc-n Kusincs , Jlollurs . £ c , Jajiaa Tea Trays . Baths , &c—l'ASKLIBAXOS IHOS WORKS , acjoiasssHadaine Tussaud ' s , 5 S , Bakcrstraot , 1 ' orUnaa-scuare . U . S . —Every arsitls is marked iu plain figures at the iDwest cash prices .
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B . EMIXGTOS'S LINE . T OSBOS AXD 3 IASCHE 5 TEH DIRECT ISDEJU PEXDSXT RAILWAY . —Tiie acUag Committee of 3 Ianag « aeiit crunot allow the present opportunity topass ¦ uitlieut cor . gratu 3 a ; ics t ' . ia uumsrous friends of tills Line oa tlie fai leer rccojirition oy Parliriuient of the principle ofDIrcctluappKsus ^ tLiiiis of Hailway iu their decision in favour of the l'rcaml-le or the Loailou and York project . By order , H . W . MATTHEWS , loard Eojn 1 , July 21 , 3845 .
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REMIXGTOS'S USE . T OXBOX ASS MANCHESTER BIRECT IXBEPEXJj BENT HAILWAY , v . i& aUrancb through the Sbifibrdshtre Poiterissto Orevrc . —The Committee of Management have the ideasnre to announce , as on-3 instance among xuanj of the great puttie advantages likelv to result from the carryii-. g out of this Railway , that certain Iea 3 in £ coaliaasU-rs of Staffordshire have proposed to this Company that , in the event of the Line liDini established , they will guarantee a clear auunalprofit of £ 50 , 000 for the conveyance of coal to the London market alone , aud they assert , tliGujii it forms uo part of their present proposal , that another £ 59 . per snnxn may he realised from other markets . la tlie event of such contract being accepte 3 , Qter propose to deliver tlieir best coals in the London jaarket at 15 s . ( id . per ton , which would ensure to tlie metropolis a supply of coal at a price most materially T ) clow fiie present cost . The Committee feel it right to make this announcement , kranse it is one of the early practical illustrations in proof of the great public utility winch the Committee most confidently anticipate from " the establishment of this important national project E ? order , HESSY W . 3 IATTJIEWS , Secretarv .
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THE niSIORT OF TDE CONSULATE AND EilPiilE OF FRAXCE . 2 » OW PCBLISniXG , In WceKy lumbers , price M , and in Tarts , pries Gu ., milE HISTORY OF THE CONSULATE AXJ ) X EMKKS OF TRAXCH , tsnfler Xr . poleoi ! , by sL Tdiess , AuUicr « : the " iustury of ihe f reneb llcvoluiion , " iaic I'rcsiucat of the Coaacil , and 3 Tamber of the Chas&cr of Bc jitUiss . CoxDiTia ;;? . —The woric -a-ill ba neatly printed in two colanuis , royal octavo , froas a near and beautiful type , ami caliao paper . Also nnifojin vnSi tie above , in "Weekly Xambers , price 2 i , a = d la iSac : S : ly Parfe ,-jriae &L , "TKF . l'EOi'LS'S 2 DITI 0 S OF VH 12 HS' iilSTOHY 0 ? T 3 IE FHSKCH SSVOICTIO : ; , " fonaia o togcCser four ' IianCsomi ; Tolasnss . Oa ths coaip ^ clicn of ihe Work , a general prefnee , introductory tv tiic KistoiT »; f I-Tapolcou , wiih Titles , Ixdtx , &c , will iw rf . vcn , thus formuss a cosii > lcic siandanl clasacal lsoo ^ i of gcasEl rcfeience , a :: d intc-restii : ^ pans-iL Of tharsst interest concectod with the important b : itional events wl : ieh took ]; laca during the consular u : n iaipennl rn 3 a « jf Z < : iiioli ; ua tlsere can L-a bo question . la "usdertsk ;; : ; to nt-ord Uia cveats of il : ls myiu ^ tous paiofi , 31 . Tr : zr . 5 , £ -oa ! liis higli i ^ osition irt t ! : c stale , led lie good fic-iuaa to flitaic j . 'osscss : o : i of a lnuIiipUcityof orisiaaJ rjii c-Ssia' do' . iuuran , wl : kli cinl . ur . es the aar . utisl ili ' . ulis of all tlie i . e , order . ! , &c . < 2 i : ia : c : i by ICar . ufcoa Maiseif to l :: s 3 Iia 5 s : ers of State , Privy CsaariUr-is , i ' rcficJs , Jlnrsii-li , ar . 'l oihsrs . Oi tiie sa ; reAs « ' ir . s uafia tSKin ; . - , tie tcjiLI ssle of t-: c flirss fcst Te ! tta : 2 S , v . -3-Jrii irors iscusa at Tarls « a ¦ & lS : hoi 3 jsrc 2 i , a : ro ' ,: ; 5 tj ! : ; . ; ; . » l'j . : ; 88 m o :: e day , ami : he r . anu-i « us caiticas r .-lfea lp-2 iu-cii raliisiscJI at i ' -riissd ? . Ltijs-c , and oijsr v ' ac-s , tiiibv-ls tiie •• nun s / . cnaia il-slV . r . ony . lo : ; U « ji :: G . TiCiiliKS , ll-jlyivilx-Sircit , Straail .
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A BOCK FOtt THE MILLION ! Xow pnHidd-.-, tc Tjj crr . r-jT . cir 3 . in asiy iskcIjk-s , at Q 1 [ One IV-nsiy , A XEW ASJ ) 2 LEGA 5 T PSRIOSIGAl , r Co ^ slstias- tii ilstcea dorely-inriateu p = ses , douUe-n-oim . 5 , sad eaK-iiisbisi w : » Ji ssvoti ! su-jc : b Si ^ j-avhitrs i > i C Z Lasi-JdU :: u-i u'Jitr . ; , e : i : JJ ] eu " ' J ^ IJ 1 A 1 S 3 or Snil'WIISCK ? , A ! -: !) AETEXTUr . KS "') JU AT SE . V , eastaiaias ' . alented rtwtciits of lie sea sin aa *! saaiaca , -ain ! irrsltSaX v . asrativss of iWir . vwclcs , Sri-s , coi aiutir . ies . fesiiaos , : «• : ! every < :: ¦» - «• o ; ' tii-s life cf peri-, of reiCsifc S & iVj I : £ u 5 £ or . u > f . Jw ^ st , and best pt-r . ijv- coi ivcrih uva- « rv-r ? u to iho j .-ul . ^ c . Vsris 1 and 2 , how i ! k T « adr , t-a :: ^ :: r .: ; i ^ a ; : r .-arcs o : ' t i :: rty ivm csgKivin ? s , aad of : onehanurtd- ; : d : ' o :-= v r : ^; sof 3 e : tir-pres 5 , i ^ cssiii ; ciice ] carh . iia Tie Ps . -ot-. Vs SC-eca t-f ihe comjiste woris cf 7 i . ul :: In .-rt-ns Su * . l ' ir : s 1 to 7 saw ready , pries sixpence fie : each . ^* j — Tca « f , price tvro sliSlaso aisfi dijience , l ) K » atifa 3 ! y r jn-iate ? , in reaiy orfsn ,, on ilv . ^ icjv . r , and iilustrateij ~ - vi ' ui twa ; iy-v . r « c- ^ -rjivI . - . jry . co : i : £ : i :-.:::- fonr 3 : nr . drtu ' 1 yugw . «• fi ; U } u .::.: rca ro :: ; :::: is . clor ,.- !? vriat-rf it-si ^ r- rr ^ S , 'J : v r « , . ! v ' s ; : u ::: o : ; o : the 2 iyst = ri « of r :: rK by *' Si . Snrcna : iu . % srl :: ; -1 ::= ( . u : : vci-rt-c-I ti-aaslatica cstalt , U 1 * i 31 C : ii the i&Et Vs&s . k&Shz , ivvi « cu " o . - tho ai : 4 i : or , V . Iili CE ^ iaa l ^ rr :: r .-:. - ; . l : y t ! i . - tr-xv : l atov , : a « T . rodnetiou oi ®" r . l 5 ! csi lsxs -Mi : & :-c y . roj-vkioy f . - . T ^ vOs of on » tl-oi := aj : » J lioasds . : 3 Sssslss-s 11-j ; of T !> 3 Waau-riaj * Je ^ r are v . ow rcsdy , :: 1 3 'wieetlir ?; l : r . l . "] -: r . ;^ tsea . Toll-.- coinr . lctedintv . tiiiv- m iono nu : r .:-.- ! 5 . Or : " ! - .:- ' ! T ; : e i ' s > .: : ^ t ' j ; Es { it !< a . " r « i , r - £ 2-. l : ifco . orcs .-o : « r - sSc ' . -i- ; £ . Sai-hSovsl , cca- SteiniB- ; -. vi-::: - rt ^ ravia :.- ? , cuiirik-. t foy oao slii-u ; :-, and comprise Cwitlluaias : — * c r Tail 1 . T « e IT . ot . j Part 5 . T ;; e Pionaers . " 2 . ThsSf ^ . I G . Ti ; . .-Vi-: i ! ric-. : ' 3 . Lr .:-Tc : ifiO " o ! uc . X"E . I 7 . I ' .-. a i \ a-iUovtv . \ ' i . Ui :: si i . £ 2 ? oia . ] S . The- "» Tat « . « ' . Viicj . j V ( i •' * AVl o :-. U-rs sa-: a-d - ; -. r ; rr «• VccUlii'n jioiiion . " j . * ' Alicviit ; ru : Crr . n-j--. vr . tci 'Cin ? , ;^ V . us ilia ntwre , price i - / OU 3 fhiill :-- !> lA siv . ;^^ Or the to ^ rr . T . r hi }; nd in I ' ,. . oas -try hs ^ usnass Toltaa ** , priej ! cn sldUiuys , eeRsisJiag I ( - < of nsraly < -iu- lUousnvI tv . -t ;\ - « ^ : r * cs , aaO tv . : o l-uudrcil I ;• cajraviars , ticuti ' u-ly pi luted i : i iicapsrell type . OH- j . £ ir . aliy yuUishsd ia tr .-c-r .: y-fo « r - . olcmcs , " at twehs i € TT : i' * . "lC ' i o*— **—— . Iuiiro 1 ;^ : ' 25 O ! n ? c ? SaT 3 Tolniaes ,-nr 3 eetivelres 1 i : K ; : igs , 1 1 iBasln > . t ; d-. r- . t : ioael : ii : i « -:- « i :: aii : « nti - -fiv « aa ^ ravifijis , j - Ta-23 of Tr ; : vt-lkvs ; or , A Yk-. r cf the Worts , jjiyi-. ^ r , . 1 A coaals of vrca .::-s : '; u iat-I'Icas ? , i-.-traor ; i : n : irv asnutivos I stran- ndva-::-rt =. : ; uu -a-. e :- ^ , a ? .. * pass ^ sis in tiis iires ! * of i--dtl ' r : iivii trivtllvrs . ! 1 Jast 3 aM . r -j-. si . i . i . ; -j 3 vo . Ts : 32 , octr . ro , liaadsoiiiclT i : 1 l > oaiid , lc 1 .. -1- ! i . - . - ^ r . r ; V !^ -iTil ! :: v .- ; : r : y £ c-vu : ; ve : ^ -r . >; - . i-s j c en catir . - v - .. « r c ^ o ::, reiif .-fi , ^ " ^ usarly rc--v . - . i : tci ' ., " cf i : ! tic vw- ^ - -ar y- ^ a-. K-c vi JZk iunui :, tie : 2 > . vaymau , ! - ' Ojh ! ::. T 7 V . Volts . jl la !> :: ¦ _ vohase . acat-y lw .: r . a . price five sailUai-s , a vc-w \ lllstoriviu K « ::: ^ ucc , ior :: J-. i ^ hly papriav ivriwr , ii : ; is- j ? feslei ! -vi ; :: iins « 8 crrariai * . ibaadtd cu fcet , rstitlid i Wiil V , - :. / . cli ; A Tult- o ; ' : hc Coast . Tinslar-i . ; - . - iU ; c-: sfi- ii : j-iv ... rl : 2 s i « aadc-d .. i : ] v : isiIrriicls , sad alJuaustvi'jJ ( £ CiBts z- > . ¦ ' . : n :: ^; : : s < . ' . tl : e njcst thrfliinj Uiserl-- ;} ..- ! . ' r pcr . r » . Vi--.:::: aL > yIdaa « l ! :: as : ci-ly . ' ::, v ! a . * ' I ,-la ft / . is v :. ' i = - . u .. TS-ivi Uis-cc- £ i . iUi-t-c ar . d sis 5 » eiwe , v .: ta \ i -, St ; i 7 . zr ~ h Vs , Tm T ^ s f . f r-rsfes : or , LIvts o : Sac ! . sU 3 ! " / ^ :: -:: : *' ¦ "" * * ' - " -= i ; f l >' -- ' i ' 10 - - " ' : j irf ! -UT .-, s ,-w ' =. s 5 : ;• : •;; ; : uifor : ! i ! y Lora ;! ¦• : clntl ' ., ; Kl .: ta-i ? . I .:-..-.- c : g ::: ; s ; :. v , cr , ] : o = E frc ^ . - ; : o sliiHia ^ ' ¦ - , t :. ri :, 4 Tr .-- -.-. ; : i .-s-. M vr . - . h :: ; , onlineensravia . ; o . " :: ^ . mvA \ asii vlij ^ rs , C-aiVs C-rsi- ' sstv-rL * 1-aisubooli , Cictssaiii !; ' ( lilt 2 :: s :: i : T ::: i . ? > . rurb .-: ; hat zzis » U snino , ; : ;; : ; cco : ; nr of i coji-lratcti layers . ! : 5 i-: r .-.: i : ! :-ks ! , ! enwU . ij C ; ; :: s ! ru-. ! io 35 \ i tn your : ; crk : ; v : v > , r .: » -l ike new lavs oi cricket . — I 'Vr . i-h . y a :: d l \ -iif : r ^ Um , v ~ :-i fa 1 hxinviu-as iu ; TR 3 c : r .- ; ;; j sul * . - sj ^ rtsaa ^ iv : i .-n- ; ses , xti&ta ^ iv-ngs . | jisd .- ; r . j ? ii ; :-. -.:-, c . » r / . aai ; a _ - t !; a lilstcrv : ; :: !• 3 > :- ;;; -i : i-v- cf j im-.-iii «« . sK ; wt ; -a :-. l v .- ] -jj na : u « ous cagravir . ps . —^ ..-Art . \ j ag fi ..:: ; j .-. c ^ : ; . I .-: h-. -.:-: v . t .: as of oas llV . Usircd Cf t ! l « \ 1 UO 5 C f : 'iiu- j < i--l - - -M-t : ; : - saa ~ tstr . nr . i Jast j-u ^ -iici . iTice si ^ aw , Evfry Man las Oto j Lwvjva- ; •¦ :- . fyv :: lei . . Iaa-5 ! .-ra a »« l Twiaat \ r . -i fci ristvr , r « r . i :.:: i-:, . 4 : rt : ^ i iastruciioss ibr s ; 2 reKnca ^ , ¦ l-. r . ? e =. ;; : •• . -:: ! ¦ ; -.:- . . cc ., d-c . ] l ' =-A-y '< K ^ a-asc io ? ISs- " . —P-rlev ' s ?~— u- -w s \ CiTtri-i ::- 3 ~ .-r isia . —i'ajicyV rcrget-JIc ^ Ot ?¦ -.- ¦ J'" | al _! Sad : oi .: ¦ ^ ! -: L-. i « ro r ; , l ffifs « iH U 2 tori to cmiJaiii I tl ! re ? Vr : » ur < , t V .-. c g : rasof sao-lcra literatar ^ . •>•••• n--serks is 2 .:-irel . ! v « . ^^ a i ^ r pri ^ o-toois ai : d prtscnts . Cae s : n : ;; :: ¦ :. - . ; u iisj-ssst-e in ? ::. ! Clsrk-a Abstract U ; : 3 W ; . > . 7 ? OOr law Act , j-. rica sis- j pjasa . ^ tSark ' s : ;? - . r nr . ? fsr fy Act , price skper . ee . Willi f ; ul ' tareslMon } -,,-. r to -.: ¦ .-. In this tiao-ener . iSsLur .: :. « :. ic ! i ; a V . n :-I : of t !; e isiost linmorocs ciia . rai-U-r , < :-. - -: ; . aC'i t ; . 5 Ca ? irats lisa various cosrfUrtJnjr intbosks v . h :. « h . ^ : . ra ; : ? 3 -. r .:.. jj .,. of 3 , . . ud ^ , s io : a i « 3 u , l ; v IU ; ny Co-jLioa , a-itlwr of TaieatinoTos , Sft ;^ ' ****" ^ *** - »¦ ^ v , ^ JJe Jft 2 ! aiit S m 3 Sta , 2 : ^^^ ^ psniy . The f . HYvnt . T £ cJtr , nuepen-y . " = ¦ $ & " c r " W ' ^ C riEr ' ^ « one «**• ^• Jf 0 : ifiKin : 1 SS ' *»*» * '« *• ««| te ? SrS ^ j&a !! ^^ &ctl w » i . a . ttAI , s <} 1 , , \ , arKidt-Jass ? , City . S 0 | ¦ J Cau sheer of the of 3 fieiil X One :: nin Si j re | !• I rP ! r ' | ia 7 ± a ai v S > : ; ; | j ! i I j J j j '
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LESSORS IN JIILLINERY AND DRESSMAKING . MADAME GALLIOS , U , New Boad- ^ treet , continues her superior method of teaching the art of Drcss-Maldag . She andcrtalccs to make persons of the smallest capacity proficient ia Cuttiag , fitting , and Executing , ia tlie most finished style , in Six Lessons , for One Pound . Her superior method can us fully substantiated by references to pupils , and has aevcr l > ceu equalled by any competitor . # 3 " Practice hours from eleven till four .
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EDWARD WALTER'S Fourth Letter to the Bishop of Worcester . —Just published , price Sd ., by post sis postage stamps , "What is blasphemy ? ' "Has maa a free will ! " "Is there an intelligent first cause V and , " Who takes care of the souls of the clergy ! " Questions asked ia a letter to the Right Rev . Father in God the Bishop of Worcester , by Edward Walter , of Worcester . "He aloae can discover truth who dares to investigate all things . " "He alone can be free who has truth for a guide . " Worcester : Baker , bookseller , Mcalcheapenstreet;—London : Hetlieriagton , Holy well-street , Strand ; Watson , Paul's-nlley , Pattrnoster-rowjandall booksellers . The following also by Edward Walter : — s . d . Thoughts on Education , Customs , Opinions , Trade , Politics , and Religion ... ... 0 6 Parts , ditto , ditto ... ... ... 0 6 Is the Bible true ! A question asked in a letter to the Eight Rev . Father in God the Bishop of Worcester ... ... ... . ... 0 1 IIow is man ' s character formed ? The question answered in a letter to the Rev . Dr . Redford , of Worcester ... ... ... ... o 1 A reply to "How is man's character formed V by thc Rev . George Redford ; with a . reply to the same by Edward Walter ... ... o i Why does not the Bishop answer the question , " Is the Bible true ? " A letter to the Right Rev . Father in God tlie Bishop of Worcester 0 14 Does the Bishop of Worcester believe in Christ ? 0 11
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CHEAPEST PERIODICAL IN THE WORLD . THE WELCOME GUEST OF EVERY HOJIE . HpHE FAMILY HERALD is not only the cheapest but -IL the most amusing literary miscellany ever published . It consists of interesting Tales ; extraordinary Advenveaturcs ; wonderful Narratives ; remarkable Events ; moral , familiar , and historical Essays ; select Poetry ; instructive Biographies ; comic Sketches ; amusing " Allegories ; the wisest Sayings of the wisest Men ; important Facts ; useful Advice for Self-improvement ; salutary Cautions ; scientific Discoveries ; Sew Inventions ; Ilints to Housekeepers ; practical llt-cipus ; diverting Sports and Pastimes ; ingenious Puzzles and Riddles ; facetious Saylags ; humorous Jokes , &c , affording agreeable aud harmless recreation for all the members of a family . Wisdom and cheerfulness , mirUi and propriety , are here pleasingly blended . together in a manner sever hitherto attempted ; and , while morality is inculcated with the attractive case of fajnijiar conversation with an old friend , useful lessons are taught without tlie aid either of austerity or a stem countenance . This wonderfully cheap Supplement to every Newspaper is adapted for all classes , tastes , and ages—grave or gay , rich or poor . It coutaius something of everything—Facts and Philosophy for Gentlemen , Hints and Entertainments for Ladies , Questions and Problems for Youth . A publication combining knowledge with gladness lias long been -wanted ; and as a proof of the ' great popularity of tlis Fahilt Herald , it lias , in a very few months , become a general favourite and the most extensively circulated of the English Periodicals , having met with a hearty ivelcouu ! in every nook of the empire—bang equally encouraged iu the Mansion , the Cottage , the Play-ground , i ' . uil the Workshop . No politics—uo party spirit—no controversy—no perssaaUsits— -aoinbalfiry . Sold iu WeeMj lumbers at Oxe Pinner , in JToutnly Tarts at SreraxcE , and in Yearly Volumes . May be had uy order of every Bookseller and Dealer ia Periodicals . VoL IL , just published , price only 7 s . Cd ., is the only English Periodical that contains all that hasjst appeared in Paris of S'igsna Sas ' s wonderful romance of the U « iitUrhgJeis , ::: id upwards cf ahuadred other highly-interesting Tales . Tic T . muUiinr ! Jew appears in Parts la to 57 , stitched iaiieat cover . * , price fls . Gil . ; or in Xuuibcrs ( G 3 to 117 ) , price 5 s . nsboaad . A ec .:. iSi : ; pcrarr , in reviewing tlsls popular periodical , says : "It is certainly a very well-selected miscellany of r . i : M-t entertaining slid instructive reading . We warmly rccomnuiid the faaily Herald . It is—what we can say of so few of the cheap periodicals now-a-dnys—it is a safe book to admit within the sacred preeincts ' of the family ch-do . - " ' Part 23 , being the first of a Xaw Volume , v . as published in Jur . e . The present is a . uivonrable opportunity to commence . The Public are earnestly solicited to THY A SINGLE KUaBEU / Loiiiloa : Pul-l-shcd by G . Bices , 421 , Strand , and may Ik had of all Booksellers .
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Q 1 [ r 5 , C J ^ . "') sin coi of coi i ! k of : ] iia ul :: fie : LOTS OF FUN FOR ALL CLASSES . 0212 HUNDRED AND FIFTY C 02 IW AND 1 IUM 0 ROVS CUTS FOR OFE FENNY !! InSumbc-ruof | pLBAYE'S G . VLLEKY OP COiilCALITIES . —So . IS ¦ J coataias the " Connubial Experience of Mr . andMrs . Cau'lle , " :: s faithfully depicted iu a series of beautiful e ' agraviass . Endj aaniaer of this " Gallery" is a full-size : ! newspaper sheer , sued Arfth laughter-provoking caricatures and comic His . The cost of tlie collection has been upwards of One Thousand Pounds , and tiia Proprietor looks with confidence for a . very extensive circulation to reimburse the outlay . Tht- Kwabt-rs alread y out comprise a Volume of jlh-th act to be surpassed in the world . ' Londoa : Cleave , Shoe-lane , Pleat-street ; Hey wood , 3 iajit-l : estsr ; Love , KelsoE-streot , Glasgow ; Guest , Biri » :. " . ? h .- . si ; Pontey , Kirkgatc , Leeds ; iobson , Huddersfieiil ; and all booksellers . . .
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r ~ - ' 1 *' U 1 * i ®" : 3 t :: 1 m Sc " : ' \ ' V ( i •' * j . * ' i - / I ' ,. . . I ( - < I ;• THIRTY-TWO PAGES FOR ONE PENNY . rpKE LOSBON EXTERTAEflSG SIAGAZINE ; or , X LIBEAKY OP 11 OSIAXGS , published weekly , contaiaisg novels and romances , ivitli gravities and gaieties , uuesaaijiJssi in interest and pries . i-o . 41 iviil ha pubVisl-. cii or . Satnr . ' ay , August 0 , price One Peaay , aadwiilcomawaoB v . UU "THE EEGEXrS DAUGHTER , " Sewiy translated from the Trench of Alexander Dumas ; :: work niuc 5 » sought alter in France and on tha coutinint . T ';> . rl 8 5 > jnst piibljslicQ , aafl contains 1 G 9 pages , price Sisiiauce . Vole . 1 snd 2 are now ready , jirice Tines Shillings each , csfga-ifiy bouad . Tiic-se vulumes contain the boautiful aovelcf ' JIaii-da , " by Sugene Sue ; al ? o several other Novels s : nl Romances , by celebrated authors , besides an j re-. r . wr . sa vavhty oi entertaining and useful matter . Each | Tolums contahis nearly COO pages of closely-printed lcttcrrcess . It is : !;? cheapest work iu the weri'J . !• The Losses Esteetakiso M-vc-iziss is published I rP . ^ Uiai'ly ii ! weslrly limnb el's , pi'jefc 0 : > c l ' onny , and-in ! r- ""'« , Pi'ico Shpeace , by 1 ) . 3 ) . Cousins , Duke-stvcet , Lin' coia ' s-jaa-aclfls , London , avid may \ se liai of all \> ooaseVieiia tov . ii or country .
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1 - A : l * 1 : : 1 c : ! - ' ? ( r ,-i . ' : ; - , . ( ¦ ¦ i . COLOSSEUM . 7 Z 5 ATHOXIS 3 T ) and visited liy her Sfost Gracious ± HAJESTY and his Royal Higlmcss Priaco ALBEPiT . 0 P 2 X DAILY from Ten till Six . Proanuiical by the Press , and couf ; - .- : ned by every visitor io be the most perfect triumph of Art * Jn i' . s * various liraaelws , both by Bay and-Sight , tl :. it Juts evev been ai-3-. icvcd . Uqr . al to six esldbitions . The Glyptothcca , ccataining v / orks of the first artists ; 5 ! ont Blant : v . v . <\ Mountain Ton-ents , Superb Conservatories , Gothic Aviary , Classic Uuir . s and roiintains ,- Panorama of Laadon , rc-paiatcd by Mr . Pan-is , ivc . Adasittance , S =. Ckildren , half-price . The Stalactite Caverns , the saest magaiScent of all tiie teisjv'bs v . hjch nature has bailt for herself ia the re . qions of night , Is . cstra , EVEXiMC EXHIBITION , O ?? a from Ei ^ lst till Eleven , consists of nn entirely new pMorsnw of London by night , eivcfed ia front of the day Vwiavo , t ' . ie largest iu tha wai-Ll . eompvisjag 40 , 000 sunnre fret , projected and carried cut hy Sir . Vf . ] 3 radivcll , and > 5 :- . i ::: < -a by Mr . i ) an <; oa and ' At . Telbai . " Tiie Caverns , :-ii > :: t ? . hno , and Torrsr . toy v . ' . ^ lit , ths G' . ypioilieca and ri-irt-shcieat saloon , brilliantiy illuminated , forming a Vroauansle jiarfcct ' y unifjt : ^ . The whole crhibitioa < : efi ; jueil !> y Ilr . Sra < 2 > rsll . Admission at tlie door us . cadi . FaiaiSy liekds to ailrait four persons , at -Is . each , ; tobelistl at Use Sovfii Lodge , Colosssam , from Ten to Sis ; au ; l a : ail the principal Libraries and Husicsc-llcrs
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| j \ \ i j M ¦ ] \ ! I - ! j ' | 0 ^ i 4 i $ ! ilMr \ AMERICAS EMIGRATION OFFICE , : SS , XVatcrloo-road , Liverpool . ; nnilE Siibsci-ibers coal ::: ' . ' . * to despatch first-class ± Packets to NEW YOU-C , BO' JTOX . QUEBEC , j H 0 :. 'TilSAL , PHILAUSU'IIIA , i"ST . r OllLEASS , and ! ST . SOHS'S , 1 U 3 . i They are also A » eali for the New Line of New York I Packets , comprising tlie folhr . virg inajniiiieent shijis : — Tons . To Sail . Qcees of the TVxst J ' - 'sO fith July . j llecuEsrES 1000 Gth August . Il 0 T 7 ! SGC 2 a 11 D 0 Cth September . Liyehpogl 1150 Ctii October . Who have also , ¦ ¦ ¦ FcrlCewYorti St . Patrick 1159 tons . ' „ , Ri-pu ' olic 1100 „ » „ Umpire 1200 „ „ „ Sheflield 1000 „ „ Boston Laaia 1000 „ „ Philadelphia ...... Octavias 900 „ „ Suv Orleans Gco . Stevens S 00 „ „ . Tfcos . II . Perkins ... 1000 „ Passengers going to tlie TVesrcra Statt-s and Canada can ' c :: o-. v tl « stihia ! outlay to rcacli any impel taat point on J the Lake ' s aud Hirers by obtaining one of Tapseolt's Einij graat ' s Travclliag Guides , which caa be had by sending jl'Ostaga stamps for the same to Goorge Eipp-ard aad Son , ' and ^ Yiliiam Taprcott , f . s above .
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^ MMgMMMMMmMMOMMMl ^ i ^ aHMMaMBtfMi CO-OPERATIVE LAND SOCIEXY . I hereby direct tnat all monies payable tome , as treasurer to the Chartist Co-operative Land Fund , must be transmitted as follows : —Either by Bank order or Post-office order , to the " care of FeargusO'Connor , Esq ., 340 Strand , London ; " and payable to me , " W , p . Roberts . " That is , that niy signature shall be required to each order . This direction is plain . lor instance , say ' that Edward Hobson , of . Ashton , lias £ 10 to transmit lie is to transmit the same to Mr . O'Connor , by Bank letter or Post-office order , made payable to W . P . Roberts . That order I can sign when I go to London , or when a pared of them are sent to me . The two only tilings required to secure the triumph of Labaux- ' s battle avc , union among the working classes , and undeviating honesty aud punctuality on the part of those who have the management of their affairs . I therefore adopt this plan , that we may have upon each other as many salutary checks as possible . This is advisable , as much for our own mutual satisfaction , as for the satisfaction of the subscribers . I therefore request that these p lain and simple instructions may be punctually attended to in all cases . To save additional postage , each letter containing a money order , may also contain a list of the respective sums , and all other information necessary for the general secretary , Mr . Wheeler , to have ; which letter Mr . O'Connor will duly forward to him . This done , there can be no puzzle about the accounts . W . P . Roberts , Treasurer . All orders should be made payable at 180 , Strand , London . — W . P . R . [ The above mode has been adopted at my suggestion , in consequence of the endless trouble I have had , owing to some parties sending me Post-office orders payable to my order ; and some to Mr . Roberts' order . Obsemnce of the above very simple rule will insure uniformity , satisfaction , and protection . There is a difficulty at the branch Post-offices about getting monies , when the orders are not signed by the persons to whom they are made payable . Fearqus O'Consob . ]
Light, Ventilating, Flexible Velvet Hats, 139.
LIGHT , VENTILATING , FLEXIBLE VELVET HATS , 139 .
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ANDREW JACKSON AND EARL GREY . THE REPUBLICAN AND THE ARISTOCRAT COKTRASTED .
Last week we drew attention to the fact , that the Globe , in the course of its observations on the chnraetci * of the deceased Eam . Gkey , had drawn an invidious distinction between that statesman and Asbkew Jacksox , the latter of whom it pronounced to have been " the representative of a later and worser school of statesmanship than that of the
English . Minister of Reform : " and wo also promised to contrast the acts and characters of the respective representatives of Aristocracy and Republicanism , that the English working classes might have an opportunity of judging of the " schools" to which they respectively belonged , and of the nature and worth of . the " lessons" taught by the examples of the two schoolmasters . That promise we have endeavoured in some measure to fulfil in another part of this sheet ; and what is there left short we purpose hero to supply .
It was our intention to have given a compilation from the "Life of Axdjikw Jackson" published in England by William Cobbett ; for in that little volume will be found most of the facts we desired to have known , told in the simple and forcible style of which the author was so rare a master . During the week , however , there fell in our way the accounts ' we have given of the manner in which the People op America have testified their regard for the memory of Andrew Jackson ; and particularly the eloquent oration pronounced by Mr . Baxcroft at Washington , in which he traces the General , the Legislator , the
Statesman , and the Governor , from the cradle to the grave ; and we have , for reasons hereafter set forth , preferred inscitia « those accounts to the matter we had originally laid out . There is an interest attachable to these proceedings , from the circumstance of their having been engaged in . by an entire people , th . it would not attach to a mere narrative " of facts , theugli they did relate'to the career of one of the most extraordinary and one of the bc . H of men that the world ever gave existence to . The tacts detailed by Mr . Bancroft arc mainly the same as those set
forth by Mr . Cobbeti in the history we have named : bat taking into account the occasion on which utterance was given to them ; taking into account the fact that a whole people were assembled to honour the , remains oUiim who had been to them " a father and a friend "—of him to whom those facts related ; taking into account that the occasion and the scone that presented itself to tlio orator ' s view , —with the consciousness that in alL the large towns tlivouglurat the Union a similar secne was being enacted , —inspired him to speak
" Thoughts that breathe , in words that burn " : taking into account all this , the history of Jackson ' s life which , we are thus fortunately enabled to give possesses a freshness and a poetic interest which will make it doubly acceptable to the ravAcv , and much better calculated to answer the object we have in -view in instituting that contrast between the English Aristocrat and tlie American Republican which the Glulc has provoked .
Following the narrative of acts anil deeds which have endeared AxDmv Jackson to the people whom he served , will be found a narrative of the acts of the English Minister , Lord Grey , and his colleagues , from the day they entered on office to the day of departure therefrom . The bare recital of the respective acte of the respective men is all that is nsccssary to enable the reader to judge between them , and of the value , of their respective " schools . " On the one hand he will see the man of principle ; of devoted patriotism ; of unbending integrity ; of mighty genius , both for war and ih
peace—able to uc&nd his country with raw and undisciplined troops , when even not half armed , against the flower of the English army led on by a Sit Edward Pakknium , Comman . ler-iii-ehiof , and brother-in-law of WjiiuNOTOx himself—which , said Sir Edwaxd Paeeniiam and his two Generals , Gimsand Keaxe , were left dead on the field , besides many others of his most valuable and distinguished officers , and thousands of Ins troops , whilst the raw backwood farmei j who had committed this awful slaughter in resisting invasion , had but thirteen in "killed and wounded !"—a centos too that
could govern in peace , and conduct his country Ihraugh'tliat most perilous of all changes , —a return from an unsound and depreciated currency to a healthy one . He will sec too , unaffected disinterestedness ; a pure life ; a seeking after retirement , but a prompt obedience to the call of duty : in short , he will see the MAN—the Patriot , —the Statesman , — the Governor—the DEMOCRAT . On the other hand , what will ho find ? Will he find love of country ? Say rather love of " my ORBELl . " XiiW ho ii ' nd stcvp . and unbending integrity in the execution of the laws ? Say rather an attempt to stretch law , and act
with "VIGOUR . " , ; Will he find the patriot , alive to the evils of tho / J'TJovcramcnt of lib . country , placing , himself at the' head of the people , and perfecting those changes necessary to give full and free expression to the public will ? Say rather an attempt to dim the people with the sumbunce of Reform , while the real work of RECONSTRUCTION was so carried en as to perpetuate and add to the very evils tiiat" Reform" was to cure . Will he find disinterestedness ? Say rather a NEPOTISM never equalled by the most mercenary and hungry Minister that ever held power . Eahl Cugy had relations of every rank and degree stuck into ofliccfastened on the people — until tho whole country rung with the cries ' of complaint , and compelled
the iallaa Minister , when he left ofricc , to try to justify his conduct . He had one son in the Ministry ; he had a relation , Mr . Ellice , in one of tho "departments ; " he had his brother created a bishop , to whom was also given a " stall" in Westminster ; he had a brother-in-law created a bishop also ; and he lad two sons promoted in tho navy over the heads of tnousmyls of officers , a great part of whom were at sea before these said sons were barn ! Contrast aty , this with the conduct of General Jacksox . Do we find thai man thrusting his hands into the public cof&rs , and quartering his relations on ths public puvso ? Do we find him with a large ' . ' retiring salary" after lie had " served his country" in the field and in the senate ? Do we find' this in Jackson ' s ease , —though wo do find " services" that
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would name him i ana now only to . . reprobate him He was at one tim e the nation ' s Iiope . He migflt had he dealt honestly with the people , have secured their undying regard and even love . lie deceived them ; he spurned the hand that ministered to Ids greatness and power ; he persecuted where he ought to have sustained ; he perpetuated evils that lie had promised to annihilate ; and he goes down to tlio grave unlionoured , save by the toadies of the arictocracy , whose praise is poison to true fame .
Here is the manner in which he wa 3 disposed of . We give tho account just as we find it in a paper published in a spot subject to the influence of the "family . " We let it have all the benefit of that feeling which exhibited itself in Alnwick , which led to the shutting up of shops . Tradesmen in tho vicinity of lordly " castles" know what to do to secure custom ; and such , places are not the most favourable in the world fop asserting and maintaining the independence of the press . However , such as tho account is , we give it : —
The remains of tliis amiable and deeply lamented nobleman ( Lord Grey ) were interred in tiio family vault iit Ilowick Church , on Saturday the 2 Cth inst . The cevemoiiy , iti compliance , with the known wishes of the deceased , was strictly private . This celebrated man was followed to the grave by his son tho ' present Earl , by tho Earl of Durham , by the Right Honourable Edward Ellice , II . ? ., brother-in-law to the late Earl , and by other members of the family , on foot ; the only mourner not related being Dr . Wilson , tho medical attendant of the deceased Earl through many years . The tradesmen of Alnwick by on 9 consent closed their shops between the hours of twelve and two o ' clock , and every tribute ot respect that circumstances permitted was paid by the entire neighbourhood . What a contrast to the " end" of HIM whom the
Globe has placed at a discount , when compared with Earl Giiey ! One paltry town , mainly depending on the custom of the " castle , " " shutting up shop , " and "looking foul" on the one hand—and a whole people engaging in paying homage to talent , worth , and patriotism on the other ! Gret sleeps at Ilowickalmost unnoticed—shortly to be ail-but unknown . " The Valley of the Mississippi , the theatre of his youthful valour and his meridian renown—the sanctuary . of his declining ' age—folds within hev bosom the ashes of hoi- Jackson . In the centre of that
young but vigorous State , whose destinies , once Ins . anxious care , were long the objects of his satisfied regard ; on the sunny banks of the Cumberland , where tho strong verdure of the West begins reluctantly to yield to the luxuriant beauty of the South ; embosomed in a sacred solitude , stands the tomb of the Hermitage—henceforth to divide with Mount Vcrnon the respect , the admiration , and the reverence of mankind . The simplicity of his life , the calm dignity of his death , arc exemplified by the humility of his grave . Ho rejected the imperial honour proffered to his bones . ' I cannot permit my remains to ko the first in theso United States to bo
deposited in a sarcophagus made for an emperor or king . I have prepared a humble depository for my mortal body beside that . wherein lies my beloved wife ; where , without any pomp or parade , I have requested , when my God calls me to sleep with my fathers , to be laid ; for both of us there to remain until the last trumpet sounds to call the dead to judgment , when we , I hope , shall rise together , clothed with that heavenly body promised to all who believe in our glorious Redeemer , who died for us that we might live , and by whose atonement I hope for a blessed immortality . ' This was the answer of Christian nieekncs ? , of Republican simplicity , of American
patriotism . Catching the strain from the lips of tnc dying Hero tho people echo its lofty inspiration . Sleep sweetly , aged Soldier , Statesman , Sage , in the grave of kindred and affection ! It matters little where Ms body is laid , whose memory is enshrined in all our hearts ; the monument of whose fame is the country that he served ; the inscription of whose greatness are the praises of tho world . But if there bo any solace in memory ; if p . ny virtue in tho contemplation of heroic deeds ; nny purity in the lessons of sublime example ; to the sepulchre of Jackson let the pilgrimage of humanity bo made . "
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" !¦' ¦ ¦¦ none but himself could boast of ? No : wo find , on the contrary , a single determination to act as became a man and a patriot . We find him organising a state ; instituting Government , and law , and order , where confusion existed ; we find him sent to the Senate , to act on behalf of his brother citizens ; we find him on the bench dispensing justice in equity , ' and making the law respected , without fitful appearances of "VIGOUR , " or without having to "hang ly the neck till ha was dead" poor Cook of Mitcheldever , for having struck at Bixghasi Bamxg , but without doing him any harm :
we find him performing all those services ; and we find him also retiring to his farm , contenting himself with tho results of his own skill in tho cultivation of tho soil j depending not on the people ; taking nothing from them ; but living on his own means . Nay , wo find him , when unsuccessful in business , through the misconduct of a " partner , " insisting on " paying every obligation that had been contracted ; and , rather than endure the vassalage of debt , instantly , parting with the rich domain which his early enterprise had acquired , with his own mansions , with the fields which he himself had tamed to the
ploughshare—with tho forest whose trees were as familiar to him as his friends—and chose rather to dwell , for a time , in a rude log cabin , in the pride of independence and integrity . " Ah ! Mr . Globe match that if you can ! Go through tho whole ot Loud Grey ' s career ; take him . from the first hour of his political existence to the last hour of his life ; and show us anything that can at all approach the picture here presented of a man who acted for his kind as if he knew that country had claims and he duties to perform , which were not to be satisfied with , or bartered for , drossy gold . '
But General Jackson was no aristocrat : Lord Grey was . Jackson couW not recognise in Nature ' s " ordering" any provision for hereditary rulers . He saw himself sprung from a pair of poor Irish Emigrants—forced to quit their native land in search of the means of existence ; and he saw George the Third , —the monarch that claimed the homage andsubjection of the people of the new world , —a half idiot when he begun to reign , and aconfirmed mad man before he had done . He saw the " men of the Rcvolntion "—those who built up the powerful fabric of the States , sprung from the people ; and he saw the aristocrats of England unable to retain their grasp of the Colonies they had presumed to legislate for ,
and to tax . He saw himself at New Orleans , with a mere handful of country farmers , with only one rifle for every two of them ; and he saw " Sir" Ed " wardPAKuxiiAM , legitimately descended from William de Palccnliam , of Edward the First ' s reign : and he saw also the representative of aristocracy , although cominander-in-chicf of the English forces , laid dead on the field , with thousands of his troops , and the rcstabsolutcly driven into tho water , by the sturdy democrats of the back-woods , who only had " ' thirteen killed and wounded" ! Asdhew Jacksox saw all this , and much more to the same purport : asd he iugiit-FULLY DESPISED AX AlSISIOClUCi" OF BIUTII—wMle llC bowed the knee in reverence to the Aristocracy of
MIND . The Globe says : — Tho strongest sign of tho progress of " ochlocracy" * in the Greek commonwealths , was ( lie multiplication , and , as i t were , public scramble ibv petty « nees , and the adoption of a system of rotation instead of election , and of vapid succession in these * oliices , intended to gratify the universal thirst for an actual slmro in power . This idea of rotation lias been put furl inn the late General Jacksun ' s Messages , precisely from tho same niutive at
prompted it ( though lie probabl y knew nothing about that ) in tnu States of Greece . And General Jackson eari'ieu out into actual practice the same princi ple , so far as it consisted in making all places change hands , for the gratiiication of the humblest ambitions , by carrying farther than ever had been done before him , on attaining power , a clean sweep of every holiler of even the lowest public office . In like manner the downward movement of demo " enjoy in ths several States lias tended to abridge the duralion , and change the holders , even of judicial offices .
And well was it , for mankind , that General Jacksox did inculcate and act oat in practice tho principle here condemned ! It was not well for the mere holders of office ; it was not well for the jobbers ; it was not well for your Bosiiams and your Boldeiws , who pocket the profits of " sliavas" for their official and legislatorial " services ;' ¦ ' it was not well for these , and suck as these , that such a principle should be established : but it was well for the people , whose interest it is that no parly should be fixed on them for tyV-bufc that all the offices of state should be open tO all , MAT JIAXY MAY . BE TAUGHT TUB AM asd my *
teiiy op governing , and the people not left at tho mercy of a mere handful of greedy officials . The reasons that prompted Jackson ' s conduct it is not for the Globe to understand . Ho can only look to the scouring oi tho aristocratic principle and the perpetuation of aristocratic sway . Jackson laboured for a people ; laboured for freedom ; laboured for his race . Jacksox sought to teach the people—to render them si'lf-sustaining—to free them from all extraneous and deteriorating influences , lie wished to pass them out of tho 3 tnt 3 of aristocratic childhood into tho manhood of Democracy . Aslkx . croft eloquently says : — " It was for the , welfare o f the labouring classes llmt he defied all the storms ol '
political hostility . Ho longed to secure to labour the fruits of its own industry ; and ho unceasingly opposed every system which tended to lessen their reward , ov which exposed them to be defrauded of their dues . Tho labourer may bend over his grave with affectionate sorrow ; for never in the tide of time did a statesman exist more heartily resolved to protect them in their rights and to advance their happiness . For their benefit he opposed partial legislation ; for their benefit ho resisted all artificial methods of controlling hbom- and subjecting it to capital . It was for their benefit that he loved freewmimaW its tans—freedom of'tho individual hi personal independence—freedom of the Statos ns
separate sovereignties . He xkvt . u would lisies to couxshls which tkxded to the 'CENTRALISATION o ' t' rowjsn . Tho true American system presupposes tub diffusion of fkeedom— organised life in all ikepartt of the . American bod y politic , as there is organised life in every part of the layman system . Jacks s was deaf to every counsel which sought to subject general labour to a CENTRAL will . His vindication of the juafc principlcs-of the Constitution derived its sublimity from his deep conviction that this strict construction is required by the lasting welfare of the great labouring classes of the United
States . To . ihiii end , Jackson revived the tribunicial power of the veto , and exerted it against the decisive action of both branches of Congress , against the votes , the wishes , the entreaties of persona : and political friends . ' Show mo , ' was his reply to them , ' shew mo aa express ckuso in the Constitution authorising Congress to take the business of . State legislatures out of their hands . ' ' You will ruin us ali , ' cr . cd n , Ui-in partisan friend ; ' you will ruin youi party and your own prospects . ' ' Providence , ' answered Jackson , ' will take care of mo , ' and I 13 persevered . "
Herein is the great distinction , between the patriot and the selfish maintaiuer of class ascendancy : the one works for the people—seeks to make them truly free by making them fit to enjoy and appreciate freedom—and the other seeks to " stand ly HIS ORDER . " To each does posterity do justice ! The one it rewards with und ying fame : the other it cither sinks ir . to ctter forgetlV . Incss , Or sets the name up as a by- - . vord for reproach and v / aruhi- . It needs no fovcsiglft to tell whatplaw Jackson will occupy in the estimation of men . Tho "history" of his Vets , and of the homage paid to his memory by those fur
whom he has toiled , and bled , and thonrfit , raid dircctcd-- , vhicli we this clay give-speaks pkiaiy enough that Ihosa acts arc recorded ifc theheartsoi ' tho peoole ; and generations to come will learn to iis / lke name of Old Hickory with admiration and regard : and his deeds , as related by the sire to lus ^ o'V will swell the youthful bosom with emulative d < 4 ' c ' How long will Lord Gbey ' s name remain mncp » st ««? If it was not associated with that most eiorinpus seeennen o £ spceiousne : s and . deceit—the Reform Wand that usonstrbus embodiment of cruelty and devilism-tko New Pooi- Law AcUwho amon « sb va
To The Chartists.
TO THE CHARTISTS .
Mv Djup . FniEx&s , —The Trades Conference , and matters of information connected with the Odd Fellows , has caused such demand upon our space , that I shall not be able to say much to you ; but what I do give you , slmll bs all plums . I will begin with poov Jack Watkins , whose ravings his friend Carpenter is shoving out of Lloyd ' s by a graduated slid " ing scale . They have found their way from the first to the last column , in a less respectable portion of the paper than they were wont to appear in . If he writes this week , his letter may bo reinstated in its former prominent place ; as Carpenter will road this before ¦ W at-kins' " lot" is fixed , and he wUlliave to thank me for enhancing his value . I have only one extract to give from-the " . Poou jus ' s Philosopher ' s " last ; and hero it is : —
¦ What , then , shall I do ? Shall [ join a co-operative society and subscribe weekly out of my earnings in the hope that , by association , I may do more than I can individually , and get a chance of having the bit of land and the franchise at some future lime ? No . I have seen enough of co-operative societies to distrust them ail . I will save what money I can , and buy u frcc-hoUl for myself . I Up . ovv a district in liugliuid where I can get lunu cheap enough ; so that if I do but lay by 10 s . a-weck out of" my 0 O 3 ., 1 could , aye , in ui \ e year , buy suflicient land to givo me the franchise . >
Now what think you of that ? Our scheme must fail because tho thing ' pronils-jil cannot be realised ; while John "fewios « dhlricl in England where lie can get land cheap enough . " There ' s a secret worth know ing for you ! I have heard of a district in Ireland where the pigs run about with knives and forks stuck in them , crying , "come eat me , " " come cat me ; " and I know of districts in Ireland where you can get laud for asking for , and thanks for taking it . But even that h not tho exact question , the question is , that Mm "Wat-kins assures you that you can save 10 s . a week for a year , and that the £ 25 so saved would purchase a 40 s . ireohold . Come , that is very nearly eight per cent , io begin . But ever ,
that is not the whole question . John tells you that you can only do this in your individual capacity ¦; that he has had enough of " co-operation . " In faith / think ho has ! Ho " co-operated" nearly £ 17 worth of Stars out of me : and says he paid me in "fai-. y T' jtla . " Kow that is John ' s whclu question . This maniac lias boon hired to write fur the League ; avid their object is to try to prevent the very i-liing they have always dreaded—tho union of tho workiuj ; classes . Just think of working m-in , each upon his own acccui ' . t , looking into titles , and dealing separately with landlords , parsons , and lawyers ! Lufc then think-of the valuable admission , that even individually the people can get eight per cent , onayui ' - chasc . But John only knows " whore . " Isuspeifiitis that part which , in Ireland , wo call the back of Godspeed , whore the Devil foaled the fiddler
I nnw come to a very ranch better authority than ¦ John Waikiiis , —the Time 3 newspaper . Thero has ; beau a Ilepcal JJeriinnstratioii in the County i ; f j Wextbrd lately ; vsA i : appears that it was the i-: ost j respectable ever held in iho cdunty . Tho ibiiov . iii ^ : Is the reason assigned by the correspondent of the : " Times , " who you nisy be sure is no fool ; a <\ d ftsv ; this simple -reason , because tho managers of that ! paper iuvariiibly Cinnlov the pursons most lit ted ; - ;< d i best quaiilicd for tho work to bo clone . They Luvu , the means ; and they stop at- iiotliln * r for the best and '' catllcst intelligence . Hove is ths cxtvati from thu ; Times : — i ; : i ; ; ; : ; ; i | , ! ,. J - ;
It wiil bo scou , upon a psnisal of the foregoing liwcs . ! cavilv hasty «!; a ; cji , that the proecudiuss diii ^ d Hit : ? , it' . at all , from those oi ' r . uy of the large muc-tiii ^ s w ! : io :: :. \ v . I J O'Countll has lardy aUcmlw ! . Its . isasniiKiio ccriah-. lv ' . constituted ono poi . it of ilit ' wreneefiw . iri'Ci'ttttUspl . T . s for a similar purpoK . ' , lor tins opinion oi ' pevsons whu was - present at ali tiie monster meetings of 1823 was that tiw ' gathering of to-day outnumbered them ali , wiih the 1 : 11 a exception of Tara . Atiutasr iaausre by which the as- ' semblllgc of to-day was distinguished frum others was the ' J . ¦ . ' j ' : S
superior appearance oi personal decency , comfort ami vigour displayed by the pcasa-. stry who attended it . Taken as a whole , I have never seen any body of the labours ^ " classes in this eov . v . try whisii would not suffer by a cou ° uarison with tber .:. Th ,-ir superiority in this respect is accounted tor by the fact , that there are very few uc : > .-resideni ; landlords connected with the county , and tl' » t tho system ot' siliyttir . y small hohliugs is adopted to a co '" sii' . erubio extent . TIw i »« 08 ce « iu s passed 0 / V without Ihe occurrence ot' die slightest accident or disturbance ' ,
Isow , reader , what do yon say to thc Small l ' arm system being the ruin of Ireland ? . [ ' know the co :: ntv of Vvcxibwl well ; and I know that the above extract is traa to tho Idler ; and I further know , that :
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" " * " . » - , __^ * ^ *^ 0 wBm such information is pickcd ^^ T ^ H pondent of the Times poling K 8 n ( L r «* it " Q corner , a-omthc . peasant ' spigstyc . totho' ? ° H room . Again-1 ask you what you say \ ' , S ( ll % JM have written much upon the subj- * fc Of j , ' I 9 | and Trsh management ; and tho gL { . S » H tivo of all I have written . I tdl Tou J , 1 ^ & < M large farm system , the vanfe of tenure ii , f 4 s H tion of capital by way of fine , the ^ ZfS H lords to strain the % , the " middle" v * fHi actual premium for idleness , —and not 'S ^ IH Farm system-arc the great and erviu * <* ,, ' : ^ IM land . Pray read the above extract Jk- IM . asain . "" ^ feW
The only other extract that I slia ' snlnp it llii is the following , upon the importation oi ' liw HH and agricultural produce . both bearing aw !^ ' ^ p immediately upon the question of Simli v ^ % &m This is the extract :- U h * \ * M Impohtation of Fokeigs Cattle , &n .-. T |> t ^ wS tation of cattle and provisions for consu ' nintio ' !"' ' *¦ : * ' ' ^ ffi ^ country , from Holland anil mliev parts of ih ' c ^ ,, « ' ^ " " ' ^^^ has been unusually extensive this week . The ^ ' ^ m steam-ship lititnvicr , which arrived at St . ]{ . . ^ i : | j | steam-wharf on Wednesday evening , from U ^''!!''^ V 3 am had on board 73 oxen and cows and SO sheep , alii ,, '' '"'• ^ H lent condition , and which were in consequciic ' clanifcf * ' ' 1 ffl delivered immediately for the markets . This vcsp ' i " 'siHf ' hrought the large number of 1 , 009 baskets of dm- ' yjfflm besides a quantity of yeast , poultry , melons , cucbJ "' ^^ S and other articles of Dutch produce . The General S- ' " ' ^^^ Navigation Company ' s vessel Ocean , which arrived a' ^" " 11111 Branswick-whavf , Blackwall , on the following d-iv ' f . Wm& the same place , had 40 oxen , 33 cows , 11 calves , vC ^ ^ K and 10 lambs , altogether 1 C 0 head of cattle , oiil ,, " Wgm She had also nearly 400 baskets of currants , a qu- > -: Hfli of yeast , and other articles of Dutch produce . Tlie ^ Wlmi company ' s vessels , Earl of Liverpool from Ostend \{ i , W § m bow from Havre , and Tourist from Calais , on the si , ^ S day also brought a large quantity of poultry , butter e <> ^^| and other . articles , liy a recent regulation , cai tVar ' ^^ P riving from the continent in the night , on or after tlie u 11111 partm-e of the landing officers of the Customs , are not i ! llillia tainetl on board all night , as formerly , but aftw the wm hSU inspection on the part of the veterinary surgeon njijioi-i > ^® to examine ' them , are delivered immediatel y In- tl ' ieru , ^^ officers of the revenue , who are on duty at all ' hours , „ , I ^ P duty being subsequently paid by the importers . ' lli . SsPf prevents their deterioration by heat of tho holU ov otiu ' [^ sg iS 1 wise , consequent on their detention on board , l rom tl c . ' ^^ fact that a great quantity of the fresh fruit which \ Pyfl brought to this port from the continent is fonvartol 11 k ^ ll mediately per railway to the north-midland countk-i , i Ksli would appear that the metropolis is almost coinplttili W supplied from the neighbouring market-gardens , and tli foS the large quantities almost daily brought from abroad ) rf& principally for the purpose of meeting the great dem L ' ' ' vst of tho population of the great midland mnnufactu i f ^ ra districts ' . The same remark will apply to the consm < . * 'f | s tion of animal food , and lr . ay account in some mea : n - ^ B for the enormously high price of meat , notwitlistan mi Jk the large quantities of cattle brought to this country 1 Oi Wtf the continent . iK ^ fe
You will bcaiy n mind , that in my letters upon' l \ » l , , ' ^ TarifF , Igave him till the autumn of 18 iC for iu ear , a ^§| deodo 2 ) ment . You may rest assured that at or aliv , > t r * * & that period the effect of the Tariff will bo felt by tin $ M labouring classes , as the wages ofall will be moavii c > ' ^ f by the price of provisions : and further , that agrL ' . ^ tural labour will become a drug in the market , 'llic * $$ j former must not derive too much hope from ( lie « h | co-existing high price of meat and increasing nn IU ^ portalion of stock : because all that foreigners lit $ as yet to spare will not make any visible impress j > j | upon the homo stock , as long as all classes are able n i % buy so much as they now arc ; but wait till three i ^ f " every ten pots cease to boil , and till the exnorta it i * jf of foreign , cattle simultaneously increases , and tli , - * * when the candle is burning at both ends , the t d [ t |^ of the mcasiwe wi \\ be Mt . Yost , in tho decrea o l' ^ agricultural wages ; second , by the coinpetitiw m > t /" the arlifieial market oi the " superseded" ; u * f % cultural labourers ; third , by the failure of iUrnu , - ££ fuurth , by the failure of landlords ; fifth , by * lf attack ur . cn the ' ' imius" wul the c ' . mrcV . ; and si , ? H by a crash among the large chimneys . Kov ; t <¦ ? B serve ; that is tiie cahimit-y against which la m tryingtoprovide ; for , wlioevei'liashisSmalll ' .-irii ' i ¦ $ cottage , will be iiulepcndimtoi' alleasualtios , ami 1 T f laugh at the shock he l-. tiscscapcii . I will now .- o ¦ > you why the exportation of foreign cattle is ine ' ing . It is because the foreigners have found cut t' ( it has become profitable to take calves , from two - > n' j three years old heifevs , as a substitute for old t > ! that arc fatted for the English market . In \\ m ' nutumn of I 84 G you will see how tho untsxed ctu nental beasts will make the English brutes , — \ h national debt , army , navy , church , poor rales , i n rates , constabulary rates , county rates , civil list , . in royal prerogative unon their horns , —slave . ¦\ Vhea I return from my tour I v / ill writo ^ 01 ' vl on the mode of . applying tho £ 25 advanced L > : tic i Chartist Co-operative Lund Society to the occup nl « , and about the stock and first management : «> ( when I visit Belgium I will give you a full accent ( of the modes of living and of culture in t' t <¦ , country . Your faithful friend , 1 ' jjakous O'Cosxon { P . S . —My letters in the Stereo so complete 01 ( if the many questions put to me in j . vivatc letters , tl I . must refer the writers to them . I really cnut answer letters privately . V . C'C *** R > wit ^ JUM * mjim MLiwi * » i « wimi ! w JV » : TXrw-3 * t * i ! v * - \ rti : K . jm ' v ? - rm-Tf r ~*
The Northern Star. Satu1vday, August 2/1815. '
THE NORTHERN STAR . SATU 1 VDAY , AUGUST 2 / 1815 . '
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RiciiAUD Hadvoud , ITcLSiE . —The reason why the , J in iiavA-hcster he names , wore sliovt . of ihch i : \ f ? o : Stan was , we presume , that on Saturday ' . ' ;• « , an extra demaiwl i ' or it , on account of its nolica ) il ^ OilJ iVilov . -s' ruiiture —[ we Icavu fnis i ; ict I ' v . i- . u > SCiirciS ] . ill ' , lloi'wooil Hoi having mason to : i ; . ' ; .- ' j . tho ii ' . iireasp , w is liot prepared -, viH . more than hi ' K ' number . On the prinei-.-ie , ( heietbre , of ¦• ! :: ¦ .- < J ' iirst served , " those who were late in their ajijili v , V woiiiil ncctssavil y bfi short . The best way ton jj £ tl ' . is is to jjive positive orders for a covlaiu nw l ! l % Mr . Ifeywotid iu suUiwauttiuie foriiim \ oo . Vm l & £ iVom the oitice . [ : 5 ince tho above was penned , \ « Wfc that , through a mistake of tho paukc-r , 'ilr . Hi . fe >; liiui sixty U-ss than ills usual number : ha wiyi : i K ioiv , v . 'dl he short . ] S Y , ::. li . ' .: i S :-ii' ? s : > . m , Woolcomher , supposed to !« i p *? j ttv ! u 1 lvvvl , "iorV : sWve , will . liearoi" stmietjiinj ; toil ' * vantage by ilirwai-ding l : is auiirc-ss to ilr . jjuuts o >¦*¦>«/ Sews Agent , Uoosb Gate , 1-, ' ottiii-Iiam . I " Ti .-o . v . AS Skai-kletos , Baccp . — 'i'ha papes-s wo f r i IVom our osilco in duu time . Tins fault is not h i A II . l . —The Uirmingiiam Hull-ling riols occum-u V « - month of July , \ % W . ^ | n . II . Dyoit , ] Jf « i , iN ' . —Vt ' e will see what can be C <¦ y i with his conv . mmk'ation next v . cck . A . V > ., Ku' , 7 ua 2 t :. e . —Of course the landlord can icloi , < ili that is tin' .-. f II . i '/ . fii ; , Una . —It will bo batter to take no notict <> ^ j Silly ai'ticla . All that the Knjjtish Conhv .: i : ! c lusu v j do is to c :: crt l .-is sl . ili in " thu lii-lier brajicia-, o ' i I art , " and he way safely laugh at hi ! attcmiits to "p i j oit ' the iiruducU'ji > ii ut' his I ' rcv . v . U ncitd' . liov . v : p 0 t ' ^ more especially p : > , if tho EnjiUth worUiiiesi wiU i Q j o : i su « h an r . ojusv . r . i'nt o !! taxation as will ir > 1 > ' state burilon- j i ijual wiih those of other cow . itvi " JZv . > . & i ' l . ' . l . " . I 5 . VSSSI . EY , is not 3 ustii ; eclmeo :: i . ! , o 1 i coiu-iiisioM his Ittt ' . r betokens . ' Tiiu Eiar is < c 1 " i disposed to expose " persecution , " "tyr . wn , ' , * ! " wrong '' than it ever was ; bat with every disi .. | to do this , His not fooHMi enough to run its h il i ' j t :: u timer ' s wouihol ' llio law . lV Xtv . iDalvha- ' 1 1 ' r i pay £ 000 fur merely iuseninfj a letter frp ' . ji ' :-. •' , i ¦ « -s ] io ! ulcut , " as the proprietor of tiio Star lia h t iIis , v .-e l ' iim-y lio too would have deeHne-. l to in ? i iHl tpistie us he sent to us , m tht- sw . i-wssrtio ' n i he ii !» v I'onipiains . Ifumay h-voik-ne " ovum ' " - Ins power- ty iorward ' . he intevesls , of tV . o ¦?{ . . !»• , ' ^ ' does i . o ; give him a "daiV . i 0 have a 1-jttir l w ' ssich woul d involve oilit-i- vnnk . i in ruinous io . , aainas « s . The admission of such " a ci-a ' ui" v u " t any tia-i- but " serving ths interests of the SI u ' < ^ tuat si'ouuJ , anil that ground only , was his K . <¦ " ^ chut'il . ilis other j-cquwt caiiiio ' t li ; co ; nii ! i-tl « '' trf we ilo not preserve rejected corsv ?! w : ivlt-nce . ? . A . ' s poetry is snadmissil-l . wJtliiiikhehas » o f » ^ groana of cotiiiilaiat against his eliavmcv , l « - " lU- | she n not , as he would have her , always the i s ' ' i j Storiis anil sunshine exist throughout ; j ' afure : » 1 : i :: 1 | i-. a ran find parfeeiion in the weather ( ov inbiii : sv'l ) i !; : 1 liini v-spect i : : n noman , and not beibro . I The KsAKEsaoiwuGii Strike . —YviTetrucsttheattw ii ° | of our EradSn- il and SiaftbrdsisirmvatScvs to : il « ; 1 grapli from the Knaresborouirli Wtavers in o : ir Tri > ' I iMciliXSUM . " I
. ¦ ilr . itouKSTs' Abokess is—vr . i \ Kobc-rts , Esq ., - ' " j Uob .-rt-stivi .-t , Adtflplii , London . . ! Ab 2 e » cks Ass-. * c ! . vnos ov 1 ' iioorcF . ns , —Tr . tovi : « : ' | coacoriiir . 'j the Aberdeen Association cf Vroii ^ | ia « y ba ha : ] by applying to Hubert li'Iutosli , - ' - ;" " I ilu : ciicon . s ::- et ; t .- I EAKssLKY .-E-L-r . Ns ' Toktry . —We caunct af . br : ' r ^ : 'j 1 jast now ' / urihs discussion of tlia ([ Ues ' . ioi ! . vrc * " 1 ^ I notice the subject in our " Poast of the l ' ucts , " ia * $ ' j tenibir next . n , I J . -M'K ., Lamkeo . —lleceived : shall appcr . r in a ( * ' two . ; j D . VV . J ) lltio , l !» oLocsE . ~ : i ! q « in- shall la r- ™ - r ! . '' " , | tho XI ; ; md \{ not applied us uiveclou , it s '" - ' - " -. ( . > the Executive . tf 11 . PlNDUT , A ' DSUDEEK . ' will fiud it tl . 1 : JS S '' / ' ; ' ' ^ , :. j . ; ive the tups of his potatoes to edit !' .- , i-s ;>' "ra - ' [ Ijo They will ba so much food , and sooner f-nv . •¦ r tt ' [ lcamire ilsau if he threw them on the Iie : iL » , o *' - 1- * J to wither and dry ou the suri \ ic . \
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th . ^ say ^ sas *^ ' to ^^ . ««»
Co Mp Mts ≪K €Mxm^Mn: • ,
co mp Mts < k € mxm ^ mn : ,
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l 1 !»—— 1 > ut ^ WAirrTii MvSTAU . r ^ ,. ,, August a . n ,. m
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Aug. 2, 1845, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1326/page/4/
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