THE CHARTIST TO THE MEMBERS OF RECEIPTS OP THE CHARTIST CO-OPERATIVIT CO-OPERATIVE LAM) SOCIETY. jfc^Jf^ LAND SOCIETY ' . .^Tlk , -. -jLief- - ' ¦ . * iC^^J- PER MR. " Mr ^ ' O'CONNOR. Dkab Fbikhbs, SECTION No. 1. Oa an estate that _ . SHARES. . ' £ . 1. d. Thnisdayf last, I went to see Birmin gham Gibbon, near , per "W. Thor n .. „ „ 0 18 C was advertised to be sold at Marsh Chelt enham , lier W. l caQh „ ,. „ 1 i6 3 sumler laiu] Bicester in harashire, and as the capability , per H. Hain cs ...... 0 10 0 BucMng Leicester, per Z. Astill...... 2 0 0 of the soil has matter much disputed by per- Georgie Mills, per W. Median .. .. 2 0 • been a Ki< dermuis ter and as , per 6. Holloway .. ..5 0 0 sons who know no more about it than idiots, Olilham , pfer W . Unmer ' 1 17 S It is a subject upon which of all others you should Alva , per J. Rober tson „ „ ,. 13 8 i AM) Ashton-un der -Lyne, perB, " '' , UobSO n MTIQNAL . 0 11 6 TRAD . . is worth ES' one fact JO be thoroughly informed, and as URNAL Manchest er, per J. Murr ay .. „ ~~ " ,. 12 16 9 a thousand arguments and ten thousand ?ague as- , pei'.J. Arnold „ , t ] 0 4 9 facts which I saw and; VOL. IX. NO. 470- LONDON , SATURDAY, OCTOBER . 24,¦ 1846 »™i«« «,. sertions, I shall recount some • " : Five Shilling*^'^ a.tn | Sivi>cuc« \n\v 4(tin.vie £28 18 J3 " ' drive from Aylesbury toft " " — ¦ ¦ ... —; some that I learned in my SECTION No. 2 will plained the land plan, and how each cottage was on an usurper, and may bo familiar with the leadin g turesquely situated on the Bandon river, in the mMst . Bicester, a distance of seventeen miles, and you GLORIOUS REVOLUTION IN SWITZER- : SHARES. the land, and the lease for ever, given features of their reign, and such characters as the of green and beautifully undulating hills, that mine are facts, unlike the fabricated and the bonus once, as 1 LAND. Maidston e, per TV. Corner ...... 0 11 8 understand was informed to commence. O, said he, if I could only get that cynic or panegyrist may think proper to paint , the seat of the Adderleya, but now the To comprehend o e Clackmannan , per G. Patterson 14 « conversations of the League, manufactured between this m v ment, it may be necessary T. Potter -^ « chance I'dejump for joy, WHY I'DE BE A GEN- them in; he may be acquainted with the battles property of a Jew, who became possessed of the whole Stock port , per steam-boat passengers and free traders, and not one to remind our readers that the introduction of the , per W.I horn I]- „ TLEMAN. fought in their time, the name3 of the Generals, family estate by feeding its Jatc indolent , per W. Leach 2 l. 0 which ever really occurred. I have the vulgar , but yet Jesuits into Lucerne, and the expedition of the Free Cheltenham « « of disposition of their armies, and their victories and worthy proprietor Sunderluml, pw K. Haines * I had gone so far with my letter, when Mr: , until the proper time for fore- .Corps, have created in Switzerland a rarkling ani- Bagshaw •• •> habit of picking up information from any source, closing the Norwich, per A. •> •• ££ 'clock at defeats ; he may be familiar with the manners and mortgage and becoming the purchaser. mosity between the Paisley; per J. Lithnow and as 1 went in a gig and found my driver to be a Wheeler arrived at Herringsgate, at eight o Protestant and liber il cantons « •• 5 *is--o customs of the court, and the fashions and cabals of Prom Innishannon to Bandon, tlio road for three Dundee, per Jt. Kidd .. - | g shrewd fellow, I will recount the informa- night, with the advertisement of a farm of one on the one hand, and the Catholic and Conservative Peterborough, per E. A. Seoley .. » f J 2 rerr the age ; but, surely, I am not so much more igno- miles, the whole distance J hundred and ei hty-eight acres that was to be sold , is one unbroken level, with cantons on the other, The liberal cantons have, Alva , per Iloburtson .. •• •• " * . * tion that I gathered from him and through him. g the Bandon J\slitun-undcr.l,ync, per B. Hobson .. » * « rant than other?, that what I have Been should bo river running on one side, and an im- since the expedition against £ U e Turnham he is boots and in Oxfordshire on the following day but one, aud to Lucerne, elevated to , per J.' Murray .. •• •• ° , 2 His name is H nry , a startling novelty to ME, and so familiar to OUR pending wood of oaks upon tho other. - » ? hour At nine pre- office some of the most renowned leaders of the Broylsden, per Do J { « second turn" at the White Hart Hotel, Aylesbury. inspect which I am obliged to start at an early of cisely we reached Liverpool, per J. Arnold * i0 ° RULERS AND AUTHORS, and the majority Bandon, and stopped to breakfast Free Covps. ! The Canton de Vaud lias consummated is chapter and to-morrow morning. at the There verse for the curious. I asked well informed mea as to make repetition superfluous, Devonshire Arms, where, as I purposed re- the most ultra-democratic £41 1 6§ reforms. The Canton of H^ K^^ a^ mna what the usual rate of wages was in the coun- I remain, maining for the day Jim and surprise a just charge of ignorance. to attend the Couvt of Quarter Berne has had a peacef a Your faithful friend and bailiff, s s ul but democr tic revolution, PER GENERAL SECRETARY. fxv district; he told me it was 8s. a-week, and was Ses ion , I took, up my abode. After breakfast , 1 which has invested the Fjj ah gus O'Connor. people with the sove- SECTION No, 1, in consequence of the ii iro faction of agricul- My fellow-passengera and the passers by, I ob- asked the waiter if there were SHAKES, Jow such a thing as a news- reignty and masterdom of the state. While P.S.—I should tell you that I did not purchase served, took no heed of what to them appeared to be paper to be had, when £ S. d. £ 8; Dublin and provin- Mr. J. Smith - - 0 1 0 Fcrshore - had been dreadful. At that ti ne there were so , vative cantons have been busy in forming a LunoEnd - - 0 G G Brotnsuvove - -10 0 good land ; secondly; the best half of it was flooded to spare from attention to the various turns and ob- cial yapers ; and, as natural in my present character G l asgow - . 0 11 G Leamington - - 0 10 0 many labourers in prison, that ti;y were obliged to , league defensive (and intended to be, if necessary, in winter b th fl i a brook which could structions, Isaid, "Pray is what I have seen in the the first information that I looked for was the Eng- Sudbury . - .200 Newton Abbott - 3 9 2 send to the gaols in the mori; ag >o pick out those y e over ow ng of. offensive), against the dreaded attack of the radical Camberwcll - . 014 0 Leeds - - - 4 0 0 streets a usual occurrence?" " What's that, your lish version of Itacliael RowaU . 016 was least against to n-ilk the cows." I'm not be lowered to a considerable distance ; thirdly, . the Irish famine, and when I found cantons. The Radical party throughout Switzer- there " honour ?" ho replied. " Why,- the multitude of there was no sand to he had within three miles; the Times disengaged, I took it up, and, to my land demand the dissolution of this confederacy ;oi £2-1 10 9 sgnytber did not allow them 10 milk them them- starving and, fourthly, it was very swampy and unhealthy, creatures that I saw in the streets." surprize and mortification, I found its columns —»—¦ selves; but you see they can't do even so much without the Conservative Cantons, and during the last ses- SECTION No. 2. i t guard "Ogh." he answered, " you saw nothing ; if you replete with the most ridiculous editorial comments 's what I say, not what the driver said* a thing that I am particularly anx ous o sion of the Diet four animated sittings were occupied Lam beth - - 0 1 C Thos. Lee - - 0 10 0 them. That were out about an hour sooner y 'de see them in .486 - -190 against, and, beyond a fascinating advertisement, , ou as well as approval of the eonduct of the government with discussions on the right of the seven Cantons - A first cousin of Ms, "William Turnham, I think was Teiijiimouth - - 2 17 i Westminster- - 0 15 2 earnest ; but by the time the coach passes, the poor being regulated by the strict ' of political eco- * you will see the necessity of minute inspection aud rules to form a private confederation within the great con- Silverthowe - . 020 Keniltvurtli , Wan . one of three who were transported, they were made cray there that's naked are flit, and its only them that - 2 12 i enquiry before working men are located for life. nomy with regard to the price of provisions, and federation—to constitute a new Btate within a state. Carrin gton - .1 2 4 uerton - . an example of because they carried guns. He was has some rags on them that you see." " "What," I further, that in comp Mr. Harney - . 010 J. Manii - - 1 . 0 0 Now I will briefly point out the requisites for a liance with its harsh and mys- The decision was rendered null by the vote of the Sir. Goddnvd- . 0 1(1 0 Perslwre - -018 a capital workman, remarkably quiet and very much asked in amazement, " and do you mean to say, terious principles, that the price of provisions had R. Harris and Son. 0 10 0 Perth - - -10 0 Chartist colony. Firstly. The land must be good Deputy for Geneva, who remained neutral. The 0- 5 liked by his employers, he got fourteen years, and that there are others more miserable and destitute been raised by government in deference to the luvr J.Piitterton - - U 10 O Sliiney Row - - 6 and digaWe, and the sHuationhealthy. Secondly. great Council of that Canton having been called on Mold - - - 0 9 G Leamington - - 2 8 6 returned from the thieves' colony six -weeks ago than those we passed." " Ogh, then, I'll engage but by which speculation Lane End - 0 G 0 Newton Abbot t - 4 10 10 markets for the is regulated. The Morning p , pronouncd a decree in favour of the - with eight hundred pounds, (I wonder how long he It must be within reach of good if you were coming down with me when I comes to ex lain Camberwcll - - 0 10 0 Somers Town - 2 .0 0 Chronicle having a character for more liberality, F. York - - - 0 2 6 T. R. Kodbu rn -030 sale of produce and for labour, if those with two hat you d hink seven ultramontane cantons. This bold measure would be making that among the honest gentlemen to the stables about five, t ' t 1 hoped to reap some consolation from that source, - - 0 2 0 Finsbwy - - 1 13 8 1 acres have families so large that they would feel nothing of what you see was, it is said, suggested by the French Government, - - 0 13 4 Sleaford- - -050 at home].) and was now about taking one of , as there's scores of 'em but was still more mortified to find it advocating ' , to work for hire. and was adopted in order to diminish the influence B.Jackson , Calais . 5 4 0 Brass Founde rs the farms of two hundred acres where the machines disposed, at seasons of the year scampering home, with hardly a tather to cover 'em, .10 0 Anns - - - 3 10 2 Malthusian principles, which, if realized, would which is about to become BouluiiRe - Thirdly. Bricks or stone, lime and sand, must be before they'd be shamed be the people going to work. of Berne, the directing Tlios. Baug han - 0 10 8 - had been destroyed. Yon see how money makes endanger tho Jives of many, and jeopardize the peace canton. This resolution of the Grand Council within a convenient distance. Fourthly. Water " And where " said I " is their home ?" " Wisha " of Ge- the man, and how its influence covers the law's con- , , , of the country in deference to the laws of political £43 8_ * neva caused an immense excitement amongst the po- ¦MHMMUM^ is a great object to save the sinking of said he, " wherever the poor craythers can ffnd demnation, as well as a multitude of sins. When economy. I had now in three days eeen and heard pulation. The Radicals appealed to the peop wells. Fifthly. The roads should be good, a bit of shelter ; but I often wonder, myself, what be- le. Im- we got to a village called Wadsdon about six miles enough of Ireland, and the evil genius by .which mense meetings weve held, and a protest couched TOTAL LAND FOND. ai y a o , so much the comes of them." " But," I asked, " have you no poor Mr. O'Connor, Section No. 1 ... 28 18 3 from Ayleshnry,I saw a vast number of men work- and if near a r lwa st ti n her destinies are swayed, to induce me to write a in the strongest language was unanimously adopted. better; and last, but not least in importance laws to provide for the destitute ? " " Ogh, we has Mr.:Whce!er „ „ ... 24 19 9 ing as if for their very lives, in a very Jarge field , faithful history of that unhappy but gifted country The Government ordered the arrest of the printer immediate possession must be had, I have, poor laws to be sure, but all of them that you see has and in their shirt sleeves. I said, " That's a proper and people. 1 had seen enough of Irish middlemen, of the protest, and also the parties whose names £53 18 0 recently had expensive trips to visit ^land that childcr, and the poorest of 'em would rather starve barristers, and solicitors, and of the feeling of En- farmer ; he digs his land and employs plenty of were attached to it; the storm bow became a hur- ... 41 1 8$ gift for [our purpose ; for nor give 'em up." " Well but," I asked, " are they glish officers and the English, press to convince me Mr. O'Connar, Section No. 2 men." He smiled, and replied, " Sir, those are all I would not accept as aj ricane. On Monday, the 5th, the popular assera- Mr. Wheeler, „ „ ... 42 S 4 two miles of the prostitutes, and have they no fathers ?" " What's that those powerful agencies, respectively and col- forming for themselves; that' instance, I never got within blieshad resolved, with cries of " Liberty or Death !" s a large piece that ? " he asked. " Why," said I, " are they bad £83 10 01 estate in Devonshire that I travelled eight miles be- lectively, had been misused and [mis-directed, and to organise the armed people for resistance. Oh of ground that the clergyman, the Rev- women." " Ogh, no, notone of them I'll be bound, the jmmmmaiaam yond Exeter to inspect For the last three miles we out ol their abuse had arisen the national character, Tuesday, the Cth, he e p s p Mr. Larimer, took from a farmer that was H00RS is better off, the devil a oneof THEM 'ii beg, t att m t to arre t the rinter climbed a rugged mountain side, like the bed of a which all would deduce from the evil propensities of the popular proclamations was resisted—blood EXECUTIVE. letting it get bad, and he let it out to the poor at but their husbands is out in sarch of work, and can't PER MR. O' CONNOR. rapid river; and when I got within two miles of and barbarous habits of the people. 1 saw that this flowed, and the revolution began. the same rent as the farmer paid. " God Almighty get any, as the praties failed, and they trya to get A. Watson, Walsingham ., .. .. 010 the farm, I learned that the expense of bringing character was made for them by circumstances over bless that clergyman," said I. " Well, and does it a morsel for the childer." " 0 then " I observed , bricks from the only place where they could be had which they had no controul, and as many writers Geneva is divided into three districts. There is RECEIPTS OF NATIONAL CHARTER ASSOCIATION. produce more tow ?" " More, sir," said he, " aye " it is not a usual occurrence, but merely temporary have favoured us with the history of monarchs, the Upper Town, -which consists of the large and PER. GEN EKATi SKCRET ART * ged to dig even, to that point, was over £2 a thousand, being poverty, consequent upon the . - 0 5 « J. Allert, J. White, more than six times as much ; they are obli failure of the potato warriors, , and divines, I resolved upon handsome hotels of the burgher aristocracy. There hton - .030 Robert Lawsou , more than the prime cost ; that the road from that statesmen Brig it, and it's the cleanest and best bit of land for miles crop." " Why, to be sure," he replied, " that writing a history of the cottage, uninfluenced by is the Lower Town, which is the seat of trade and Iferthyr, per Mor- J. Hole, Leam- point was impassable ; and that the farm, when 1 gan - - .020 ingtou- - -040 round. makes it worse, but upon my word, in all 1 1 " " Well," said I, " are they fond of the parts I go, tear, favour, or affection , so the reader may expect, democracy, with itB streets narrow and its houses ¦VETEBANS WID OWS , AND OltPHAN ' S FUNDS. got there, was an unreclaimed mouutain ; and 1 , clergyman." " Yes, they are, I often drive him- at all times of the year, I sees plenty of them, but at least, a faithful if not a fascinating history of Ire- lofty. Finally, on the other side of the bridges, Bri ghton - - O 5 9 Edinboroug h- -0* 7 often said to my friend Mr. Wilkinson, who accom- then this is the time when all ERRATA. and he's as nice a gentleman to speak to as ever 1 would have work and a land and the Irish, from an unadorned narrative ot there is the Faubourg St. Gervais, the seat of the from Lituehouse last week panied me: wonder what a set of Lancashire bit to ait Tho sum acknowled ged sat alongside ; he says he's rery much pleased with "1 , as the praties does be digging, and plen- events as they strike me, allowing all to draw their manufacturing and labouring population. should h ave been , second section. £2 13s. 3d., firs t section , operatives would say of my judgment while they tiful." By this time we had got as far as the o y Gs. Gd.; the 5s. acknowledged from Littleton for National his flock. I used to go to his church, and he has C unt own conclusions from the facts I shall state ; facts On the evening of the Gth, the inhabitants of St. Charter Association should have been for Victim Fund; their furniture up this mountain-side, Gaol two for one now on Sundays, and they're so respec- were dragging , a magnificent cut-stone edifice, approached by which will illustrate and account for the Irish cha- Gervais barricaded the bridges. On the 7th, early the sum of 15s. Gd. acknowled ged Oct. luth in the name and when they got to their destination ,to find them- a splendid entrance, and the land in its immediate of Firth should have been Perth. table looking. Indeed " he continued, " you may racter ; facts unnoticed by historians, while they these barricades were attacked by the militia, and N. B. From several important places 'I have not yet vicinity was the most green and they see the people running in all directions in summer elves in a wilderness, without a town nearer than rich-looking I had constitute the very essence of nationality, but unfor- carried after a heavy cannonade ; but the militia received returns of the number of their members , ever seen, with a river running through it and must be immediately sent. time, when they've done work for the fanners, and ten miles. I beg that all persons sen ding advert se , tunately, now-a-days, the monaich is the nation ; failed in their attempt to make good their footing in T. AT. Wheeler , Secretary. which appeared to be covered with thistles, docks, going till dark and almost before light to work for ments will make as much enquiry as possible rela the ministers are his panueis, parliaments arc his the Faubourg. They were, however, still in pos- ragweed, and all sorts of filth. Alas, said I, if the themselves." " Well," said I, "if there was a dis- tive to the above requisites. F. O'C. bankers, and the people are his paymasters and hone. The Lower Town joined the insurrection . inmates of yonder prison-house had been allowed to turbance again would they attack their clergyman?" slaves. I was informed that sessions business would An auxiliary Radical force from the Canton of Vaud expend their labour upon the glorious soil within Co $eatrers & Coros#oifiittit& " No, indeed,'' said he, «? but they'd fi ght for him— not commence till 12, and precisely at that hour I circumstances, on the 8th the Government—the IRELAND. two miles of the metropolis," and if the amount ex- and gave in their abdica- I don't say the farmers would, but all the poor of entered the Court house to witness the administra- Council of State—yielded, pended upon the prison had been applied to the erec- ol' J. L. T.—If fourteen months ago you were " blamed for a the parish "Wadsdon SABKATIVE OF MALCOLM M'GBEGOK. tion that sacred thing called justice. tion. bastar d child and run away from " a certa in town, would, and the shopkeepers of tion of cottages, what a much better protection it ," ( To be continued wetkly.) The heroic working men of St. Gevvaise fought in consequence , it is pretty strong pro of you are con- ought, for there's a great improvement in their NO. II. would be for the properties of those, for invading bis appoint- most nobly. Two hundred cannon shots were fired scious that you were rightly blamed. You now want shops." " Now," said I, " do they pav more atten- Captain Burford was punctual to which many a poor creature is now a branded, and to go back to the " certain town " and think that be. sir be ment, and from 9 till 12, the hour at which he bade against the barricades before they were overthrown ; cause you have been absent mi>re than 12 month s, you tion to what he sajs on SundayV" " Yes, , to perhaps irreclaimable thief, in yonder ONLY RE. The Shutting up op Highland Passes..-—We of Ire- then , however, the militia found the hottest of the are safe against being mad e to p;iy for the support of snreihey do, when they know that he's for their me good night and adieu, 1 lad learned more FDGE FOR THE DESTITUTE. I also marvelled are glad to see that the illegal attempt of the Duke natural feel- fight was only commencing. The moment the the child. We hope you will find out your mistake . good." It was half-past ten when I passed, and on land and the Irish from a soldier, whose why the merchants' side of the city, to a distance of of Leeds to shut up the pass to Glen Lui Beg, amid been the Cairngorm mountains, has excited so much at- militia attempted to enter the faubourg, they were As we never had to run away for bastard children my return they were all working away, and to my ings of humanity, right, and justice, had not many miles, should present such a striking contrast we don 't know the law ol' such a case, but we should slavish, profession, tention throughout England and . There received with a deadly and unceasing fi re of small sorrow, as I was driving to catch the train, I could surrendered to the fashluu of a with the interior ; and, upon putting the question has been a growing disposition for some years, 011 bo sorry to know that the law could not reach you. p g s, or arras from the windows, house-tops, and every spot not go amongst them to cheer them, and join in than I had gleaned from my fellow assen er to the coachman ,his only reply was, " O, the quality the part of the great Highland proprietors, and the A Chartist , Glasgow.— We cannot publ ish your nnor.y. gathered from political writers or prejudiced tourists. English sportsmen to whom they let their shootings, to from whence musket or rifle could be fired. The oc- mous attack u pon " A Glasgow Chartist and Police thanksgiving to a minister of God's religion. I have all lives on the river on the other side." " What, I have alwayB been averse to the usual mode by exclude the people from the mountain paths, to whiuh cupation of the faubourg was attempted on two Commissioner ." Accuser s should have the manliness often said give me, a thousand times give me, the then " said I," do the merchants and quality culti- the people have as clear a right as any landlord lias to let the people fee who and what themselves n«pe to bespeak their respec- points, but at both the militia were driven back with are . which,ill-bred strangers vate the land so much belter than the larmer?" to his estate. Fortunately, this last attempt ofthu The "Editor 's box" at the Northern Star Office is city with its church steeples, in preference to the great loss of life ; the militia were, therefore, com- not tability, by an eternal pulling at the bell, rowing the " 0 no, I'll engage the divil a hands turn ever they Duke of Leeds, and the odd defence made for it by a Venetian " Lion 's mout h." dry with its long ehimnies. When did you ever the duke and his eccentric friend, Mr. Gramley pelled to retreat across the bridges. Finally, as waiters, and abusing the fare; and, therefore, my fir«t does, but they buys all the T. Eveieiou , Loug h borough. —It is preposterous to ex. hear of a cotton lord letting land to the poor. The dung in Cork, and spreads Berkeley, have jmt matters in such a train as will above s a ed mjjht at an hotel in a straage country, was divested t t , the population of the lower town rose pect us to look through three or four months copies of intri- it out on the lawns, and keeps it all in meadow and bring the question to a speedy issue. The JDukc of wav to the farm I was about to inspect was g meet en masse, and the aristocrats, menaced with certain the Northern Star to find an obscui'ft paragraph of of the usual incidents that the more bustlin for sheep." We had now arrived at the foot of a Athol , imitating hia southern compeer, has, it seem*, cate, and ]av through bye-roads, and when within determined to close Glen Tilt, which he has no more destruction had they longer resisted, were compelled news respecting a drunken soldier. We beg to assure with, and not unfrequently fabricate. The route steep hill our corresponden t that wo don't know about a mile and a half of the place I stopped and , when the guard hollowed out " pull up, Mr. Smith or Mr. Jones of Lon- what " waite y my friend imposed upon me the neces- right to do than any to surrender. time," or " spare time" means. pointed out b , Tim, the gintlemin would like a walk this fine morn- don has to take possession of the best bedroom or called at a cottage on the roadside, where I found a by six the hour at which Our readers will understand the important conse- sity of being ug and ready , ing, to stretch their legs;" and very shortly drawing-room of Dunkeld house. These great Nim- Ir Ant One of the Stab Readers would forward me strapping looking fellow between thirty aud forty, Captain quences likely to result from this popular triumph, a Northern Star of Saturday, the C th of June the Western Coach started, aud by which the passengers had all alighted, when I counted rods have yet to learn the great fact, that in the eyes , 1810, 1 with a charming smiling countenance, and dressed in Burford had recommended me to travel the first of the law their fondly cherished deer are not from the following letter from Berne, of the 9th inst. should feel grea tly indebted to him , as I want it for twenty-two, most of them, and especially vermin, —a fact which was very a very particular purpose ; I wou ld return the value a blue smock frock , who answered and offered to ac- my day's journey to the residence of the " game," but " " published in the Constitutionnel:— few milea of the inside passengers, respectable looking clearly proved, not many months ago, to the greaD of the same in postage stamps , if required. company we to the farm. And now you shall have Rev. Mr.O'Farrell, there being nothing much worthy well dressed persons. When we again took discomfiture of a Itoss-shire laird , whose deer were One hundred and one rounds were fired this morning With am . Chables Fish, to celebrate the triumph of the Libera l party in Geneva. his history from his own lips. The farm was a of my attention till I reached Bandon, a town about our seats, I asked the coachman what descrip- very summarily despatched by a lowland farmer, now Wigan.—John Lenagan appeals to the working men of settled in lioss-shire, in whose turnip fields they Par ties foresee in the chang es which have just taken common, recently enclosed. My guide's name is 15 miles west of the city of Cork ; and from whence, tion of persons his passengers consisted of, when he , Wigan and its vicinity, to rou se again and rally for the of had made depredatiuns more extensive than wel- place in the riche st of the cantons important conse- Charter. Thomas Cater. Before the common was entirely after the arrival of the coach, I could comfortably replied, '," why, your honour, they're^ most them have yet to learn au equally indispu- qtiences for the whole Confederation. They are con. come, They A Suggestion.—Allow me throug h the medium of your stolen the farmers leased it out in small lots and iitst day's inarch. Upon ordering my vinced that the half voice necessity to complete the , manage my attorneys going to the sessioas of Bandon, and them table fact, that no landlord has any right of exclusion inTal uabl e journal , to mnke a suggestion as to if not free for majority of the States required to sanction the expulsion the Thomas Cater took four acres in the rough, with bill, I was much astonished at finding the call re- inside ia counsellors, the sessions is on to day," This over the wilderness. Waste land, formi ng of Youths Society in London for the purp jsV the plough and the spade, is free for the foot ; at of the Jesuits and the dissolution of the Ultramontane of advocating the glorious princi ples of the People's furze and all sorts of rubbish ; (F give you his own sponded to by " mine host" himself at so early an was a welcome piece of intelligence, as it promised will now be secured to them. On the one side least, there are very good lawyers who maintain so, League , Charter. Youths' Societies have been formed and hour of tlie morning, and I was still more astonished generatio n which words), he took the f ouracres at a rent of £5 a to afford me an opportunity of forming my own opi- and any doubts that may exist upon the question will Basle-city is agitated by the youn g , carried out with grsat energy in the teetotal more- year, or £1 5s. an acre—he breast-ploughed and at finding hia charges as extravagant, if not more su nion of the administration of Irish jastice, of which soon be sec ;it rat. The right of way is in England u has abdicated tlio prejudices and rancour of the old pos- ment; and I see no reason why they should not be right most dear to the people—a right which the sessors of the can tons ; on the other side, the existence burnt it than 1 bad been accustomed to at the most expensive I had heard so many conflicting accounts, while the formed iu connexion with the Chartist Association, , and in two years and a half he made it SO common law has ever enforced. One Joha Lewis, of the present orde r ef things in the canton of Priburgh , for .ill must admit , when the present generation ham abroad but as the fare and comfort ' where the French Liberal part y had a decided majority, GOOD that the FARMERS TOOK IT FROM HIM hotels at home or , class to which my fellow passengers belonged.solvod a bre wer, 01 Richmond , tried this ri ght against the pmed away, it will be highly necessary that a youth- 1 holds to a thread. Finall y, even at St. Gall , the was quite equal to what I had a right to expect, the riddle of so much mirth and joyousnes3 in the influence of tho whole Royal Family of England, only ful generation should be ready to take their place to -4S HE'D TVORE NOWHERE ELSE— he had Grand Council onl wants one vote to I discharged the bill, and satisfied midst of so much general suffering, as from their and beat it truimpbantly. The Princess Amelia, opposition in the y obtain, or if obtained to defend, the liberty of their the best crops in the parish and when they took i mat.e no remark, and enable the Federal Diet to settle the , daughter of George III., was ranger of the Royal turn the scale, country. Trustin g tbat the Chartists generall y will the numerous applcants, even to the beggars that jokes, light-heartedness, and laughter, they, at least, important questions which have been pending during he would gladly have given £2 10s. an acre, or double Park nt Richmond, and thought fin to shut up a lout- take this suggestion into their considera tion, I re« swarm of com- appeared to have escaped the national calamity. We the last tyro years to the satisfaction of the popular rent for it, surrounded the coach, like a perfect way that had been used by tlie inhabitants from time main, your obedient serrant , N. Hobinson. that is double what they charged party. petitor3,mounted the box,and at the word " allright," had now reached the half-way house between Cork immemorial. Her father and all his court sup- We received, on Wednesday evening, a post-office order him, which in its then state was much ported her. The brewer, backed by the people of given with a rich Irish brogue, we started. Even at and Bandon, where we changed horses, an operation Glory to the heroes'of St. Gervais. Glory to the for the sum of fis. fro m llexbam , bu t we are at a loss more than it was worth. He built a Richmond, resisted the opression ; and after a long to know from whom, or for what purpose it is to be that early hour, every street had an appalling amount of so much importance in Ireland, and which took qusly defended, won the cause. Tno patriots of Genera. Glory and triumph to the de- louse, but luckily foi| him not on the common, as suit, vexati applied. of the most squalid and miserable looking creatures some time, and during.which the coach was literal]v Scottish law is not less clear and decisive. If there mocracy of Switzerland ! that would have gone, but a mile and a half away Thom A6 Stbetch We have forwarded your letter to. that ever my eye beheld, who with anxious look sur- surrounded with masses of famishing, perishing is not public spirit enough in the few Highlanders Interesting intelligence from Italy, Greece, Rus- the Central Committee of the United Trades . from his work. Now make a sum of this return yet left amid the magnificent glens and mountains of veyed those who were wending their way to their females, -who, with infants tied up in the skirt of an sia, and the United States, and glorious news from Peter Grey , Dumfries. —Received ; shal l be attended to from 4 acres of common for two years and a half. He Perth and Aberdeenshire to resist these autocratic T. Gordon desires to let his friends know that al though several daily avocations. The groups for the most old garment, and,in many instances, one in arms and dear preservers, there is sufficient amongst the freedom's fastnesses in the Caueasus, will be found in a member , lived and supported his famil lie is not secretary to tlie Glasgow branch y and built a house, and part consisted of half-naked lemales, the majority ol another or more standing shivering by, solicited tourists of England and other parts of the world to our seventh page. We have no room for comment of the Chartist Co-operative Land Society; and that he would not give his four acres for £10 a year, that try the point. It will not be diffi cult to found an whom had an infant tied up in the tail of a tattered charity in the following manner :—"Ogh wisha then and none is needed to induce our readers to pray for his address is No. 45, Taylor-street, corner of stirliug- Js £b a year for ever over and above the too hi h association for the preservation of the rights of way, road. g garment, and fastened round the neck, while they may God powr down blessings on your honours and to depute half-a-dozen sturdy pedestrians next, the continued success and glory of the brave Cir- rent ; £f> a year at 4 per cent, is worth £125, so groped in the ashes and rubbish thrown from the heads, and give something to the poor craythures seasou to force the passes, if need be. We fancy the cassians, and the continued ruin and humiliation of gamekeepers will be rather shy of besides living and building a house, this man had houses in the middle of the streets, for such fragments that' s famishing with the hunger , and niayyou never dukes and their the Muscovite miscreant and his slaves. Bonkem Y4K ce Lctes.—Bftuftwd oft Svmd&y. tn& earned JG125 , or .£50 a year for two years and a been know what it is to want. God knows but we haven a laying forcible hands upon any pedestrian sent upon 27th of September, by the Rev. Mr. Thompson , Peter of food as mighthave escape d the notice or have 't such a mission ; and we would advise the instant O half, while the wages he could earn, aud out of and as a bit this blessed day to put into the childer's mouths Paul, O'Connorville, Bon of John, and Margaret Paul ; beneath the acceptance of the cat or dog, , formation of a society for this very purpose. It will both sterling friends to the Charter asd the Land. which he should live, but never could build a house, crust or bone was discovered by the anxious groper and but their crying with the cowld and hunger ." be well supported, and funds will not be wanted for LATEST FOREIGN NEWS. was 8s —and to work every the infant^ This touching appeal was responded to by a vulgar a cause so noble. We invite the ca-operation ot a week, or allowing 10s. it was wiped and thrust into the hand of , Bight-seera, of the admirers of day joke the grand and tlie Northern Stab Office, in the year—.626 a year. Again, the two years ffitb. a smile and some endearin g expression, which from one of the outside passengers, which beautiful in nature, as well as of the frieilda of popU- CniLD Stolen by its own Father. A novel and and was returned by a excited general laughter, and by the insides by the iar rights, in this cause- Such Saturda y, October IV. rather anuising case was brought under the notice ot a half was all labour and expense, every the ear could not catch, but which a society would soon Madrid papers of the 10th instant, received this — petty sessions, other year it would have been twice thankfulness by the raising of the glasses. When I had exhausted what bring the dukes to reason, and show them that what the magistrates of Glossop at the last , thrice, aye ten ^ook of something more than .Royalty could not do for a lew morning, are full of the details of the ridiculous which presented several knotty points, which rather sympath y, change I had, and in return for which I received an acres of ground in ceremonies connected with the Royal marriages. times as productive. Xow who vrould work for a child. My heaxt now becam e brimiull of Surrey, aristocracy shall not do for whole counties puzzled the bench in their desire amicably to arrange master, when he can work mendicant population of ample share of blessings and prayers against want, in Scotland.— Glasgow Argus. The Eco del Comercio has been sentenced to a new the matter between tlie parties, who stood in the re- for himself. Well, ex- as 1 surveyed this twilight fine of 2,000 reals, on a prosecution for having sold to cower before the gaze the appeal to the more hard-hearted was renewed Appeal Case.—Masikr and Servasx.—At the lative position of father and mother to the object of actly opposite the farm, at the other side, I saw a a wealthy city, who appeared some copies of its numbers, of the 7th , the sale of illegitimate child , with increased and more piteous implorings as the conclusion of the Perth Circuit Court, on Thursday, dispute. It appeared that the the man and two children, of about the respective ages of comparative respectability, and were preparing to their Lordships met to hear which had been interdicted by the Government. son of the parties, but who had not been affiliated, coach wa9 about to start, and as before was met with appeals. The only one The Political Chief of Madrid has ordered tlie direc- of 6 and 7 working away, when Thos. Cater said make for some pauper haunt to wither as we of public interest involved a question as to the duties had been living with his lather and grandmother for heartless jokes, until all hope [from further prayers of tarm servants. tors of the theatres to suppress all allusions against two or three years past, but that the mother had Sinuingly, Look at them. Who are passed further on, and as the day advanced, they ap- The tenant of a farm adjourning and which arc so frequently found they, said I. Why, the Loch of the Lowes the French nation, latterly laid claim to the boy, and had removed him where that fellow-feeling having failed, and as the disappointed expectants , betwixt Dunkeld and Malree, in Spanish farces. From Switzerland we hear that said he, that's the 45 acres that 12 of us took there peared to fly in droveB, had been wont to cut the grass growing on the banks frem. the paternal care. The father, after enduring would level distinc- moved out of the way, they joined in a general howl the news of the dissolution of the Grand Council the separation for some time, could no longer sustain at 30s an acre, and that man is working on his own, which makes us wondrous kind of, iiud to some distance in the loch. For this pur- and of the installation of a Provisional where they ot execration ; " Wisha bad luck to your strols. vo\i psse the persons of Geneva, its pangs, so he stole the boy nway. Tlie anxious mo- and the youngsters are picking couch grass tion and relieve them from scrutiny, and employed have to wade into the Government, was celebrated at Lausanne by salvos and upstart crew, but I'll be bail as long as there's a bit water up to their middle ther forthwith " fetched law," us it 13 termed in tbia observed until their hour came for , and remain in that state of artillery. The Journal de VAin, a Conservative TOeds to burn ; and they are so used to it, that may remain un e lor some hours daily, uutill tho locality, and brought the father before the worship- the merchant's to be had y es'U not want, but yees are going to whole is finished. newspaper, has the following in a letter fr om Geneva ful bench. The Unlucky swain pleaded they'd do as much as the man. Are they another grope in the ashes from The servant, hired at a previous term, according to very patheti- ever sick ? Bandon to rob the poor, and the divil go along with of the 11th instant :—" To-day the militia have been cally to have the boy consigned to his saying SINK. When we had passed through the city, my the practice of the place, fell to perform this duty ; duty of the city is performed by charge, said 1 ? Sick, he replied with a laugh, not they in- yees, but may be it may come to your own turn to dismissed, and the it was such a " comfort" to him and his mother. bent upon what 1 had seen, and which ho did one day, but having been informed an urban guard in the costume of '93 ; blouse, caps, i te]! you. There can upon the joj by the population-, his reception was, on a small and Joan ftshion i but we un- pourtraying them as monsters and ruffians rch of work siderable length into the question , and tint Ininier scale most approved Darby "e 110 oifference, said he, between the two sides of the went in sea , and constituted the droves , a repetition of his triumph at Rome on the derstand they had afterwards a trilling dispute, the other hand, thus making some envv virtues which appended a long note explanatory of the pi-minds 8ih of September. upon having the boy 'M ljut tlu: of beggars that everywhere assailed passengers for upon which he On his return to Rome tho road father claiming and insisting farm you're on is the best land ; this few possess, and others practice vice which most arc sustained the decision in favour of was thronged with multitudes and the entire popu- Manchester paper. 3 tar be some relief ; in many instances tramping six and seven the servant. , the first month.— Lad tfcree quarters of wheat to the acre, and prone to. Surely, said I, the best read historian lation of Rome went out to meet him. The Aix-la- the hope of avoiding the police At the Masciikstrh Quarter Sessions on Monday, A Porte r at the Imperial Hotel , Liverpool , " E HAD 5 AND OVER. I then explained the dis- miles in and of getting Chapelle Gazette of the 13th inst. has a letter from never could conceive such a state of things aa I have the recorder expressed his regret to find a very Gallicia was fined £3, a«d costs iov an assau-l6 tlPon .a res- advantage of a penny from a coach passenger or a casual traveller. .reat (Poland) stating that Communist printed wh» drove late at night to living a mile and a half from his land, ust witnessed from all that lie has read ; true, h mcre.iee in the average number of prisoners for papers have been disseminated among the people, pectable married woman, ch lie We had now reached Innishannon, a lovely village, pic- trial. that inn and applied for a bed-room. ^ appeared to understand ; and I also ex- may be able to trace the Jin t >j i >«>ii >,i : Jih t.- ' inciting them to revolt, ^ ^ v ^ ^ ^ : ; ^ v i^ . ¦ ¦ OoTOBEK 2.1; THE NORTHERN STAR. .^-___^—^—^ - m ^ i -» _ ~==^= ah ill IJl^L r —— —.^^ ^^^^^ —— i^ ,^ = ^_-.«# nrfliA lirf a still soundanimn bearfioav fU~ ;_ - j • ¦ _ as many of the lids the initials of ths CONTIC TION OF AN INNOCENT MAN. him swear—he only d—d them a little ; ha slapped gUffoente,- 0Sntc& & h\(W$te* deceased person and the date marked out in metal ASTONISHING BF?ICACr Webb a time or two in the face. Witness was not pre , nails. Many of the coffins would seem to have been Mre On the 27th of last month , a poor man , named Thomas sent when old Webb was lugged upsta irs by the cord- originally covered with some dark coloured cloth f^tn3'2 simplejrecautions. 'ORD—WehavB to record aa HOLLOWAY'S PILLS. *nd » ^ ; 3u aware .f; f.r it must be Nott, a tailor , was convicted of felony at the Clerken- but heard speak of it as soon as it was done. Masslauohter at Siran the remains of some such material are still attached . to the credibility deatii Irom that brutal and Tha Testimony of a Clergyman Touching to Ster«n Cases is Polluted, the streams well sessions, and sentenced to three months ' imprison- In the course of some conversation as the recurrence of another country to them. Se mbK SK S3- "* the Assistant Commis- aanguinary raode of fighting for which th.s of Cures by these wonderfu l Pills. cannot be pure. ment and hard labour. His innoc ence has been since of the evidence against Slater , labourer Poor Law MuBDBRS.—On Tuesday, police const*. i»t flow from it sioncr said it was clear that his conduct roust go before is so notorious, in the case of a youSg |arm Estrad of a Letter fttm the Xn. George Prior, Curate of SPECIFIC PILLS made app arent under very singular circumstances. , who ex- ble G 118 was called to the house INo. 3, Pear-street PERRY'S PURIFYING , The evidence on which he was convicted was given by ano ther tribunal: Anything tha t could shake the testi- named John Royle, residing at Stret>^d Mstagh, LetterK*my, Cirrigart, Ireland, 10ft Jan. 1846. 4s. 6d., and lls. per box, last, frem court, High-street, Spitalfiel ds, and on proceeding to Price 2s. 9d., Ann Evans who is onl 14 years of mony against him might be given there. pired at the Royal Infirmary on Saturday intelligible to a girl named Mary , y or a room on the ground-floor, the door of which ha d lo Professor Holloway. With explicit direc tions , rendered perfectl y and in the service of a Mr. Still, upon whom the A woman named Ann Clerk , stated to be ninety years the dreadful injuries inflicted upon him by kicking Sib j eni all knowa throughout Europe to be age, neia been brok en open, he discovered in one of the corner ^ ,—T ' you s crud e list of tome eleven cases, every capa city, are well was called but her evidence only amou nted to " On Monday, the borough coroner, u robbery was committed. She swore that on the night of age, , " purring. dead body of a woman, covered with eared by the use of your PUls. I canmot exactly give y° the most certain and effectual remed y ever discovered /or that she had never heard Slater swear or use bad inquest on the body, when the following was there the filtK this precedin g the apprehension of Nott , she saw him in the this, an. was no furniture in the room, a professional name to the various complaints , but gonorrhoea, both in its mild and aggravated forms , by im. langua ge. The Assistant-Commissioner thoug ht her from those present at the time of the fatal and rags. There a this yard in the rear of her master 's bouse, and after he had elicited old rags, mixed with a I know , some of them baffled the skill of Df«J and mediately allaying inflammation and arresting further and she was not o e, Heaton portion of dirty scraps of little as gone a quantity of children 's l'nen and wearing apparel , testimony neither direct nor material , occurrence : — Deceased , Dennis L w discovered, County. In a previous letter this gentleman states prog ress. inmates of the house were four other farm servants of Mr. Thomas straw, was all that could be and upon. a hung out upon the lines to dry, were missing, and tbot ques tioned; two other male Brown, and fellows;—Withia a short distance of my house resid es Gleets, strictures, irritation of tho bladder , pains of the in which the body was then Jying, The decease d, whose Decn a portion of them was found in an adjoining yard , which also called, but they were too imbecile aud unsound Warburton, farmer, of Stretford, were getting pota- small farmer , for more tha n twenty year * has loins and kidneys, gravel , and other disorders of the urin- about half-past five o'clock on Monday name was Ann Lovell, forty-five years of age, having !*• a box oi the thief must have passed over, on the same night. She mind for their evidence te be taken. toes in a field at she in »tad state of health ; Mrs. Pri er gave him ary passages, ia either sex, are permanently cured in a the guardia ns. 5th instant, when they began to throw f reqaently been heard to exclaim, th would tka t l him also stated , th at on the following morning, when she got This seemed to be the end of the case of evening the workhouse thePflls , Whlch aid him 8o .»nch g.od hearo ^^ shor> space of time, without confinement or the least ex- The other witnesses were called b Mr . Jackson , solicitor at eaeli other in play, and one of them hit starve herself rather than go into a , and .te lus food or e-joy- up, she aaw the pris oner standing close to the parlour y potatoes day or two, her door wag say.for twentj yeaw pa.itlie never posure. window of her master 's house, immediatel y re- for Well's family. deceased. Deceased became very angry, and, gather- having been missed for a *nd f body was found as above . drawn likewise by three engines. The length HIS FATHER AJfD HIS BROTHERS ticularly candid." Now if the book ia tuasp ish and They threw their pens down in ing, to the effect that the dietary of 1S43 be restored, ot the first , are broken down into meanness, prevarication, and divine disgust— tr ain was upwards of a quarter of a mile. 5AT1YE MOUNTAINS. uncandid if his estimates of contemporary talent a-e frau d." The page was so besmeared with blood and dust, was rejected by a majority of 11 to C—majority • be received as circumstances aro understood to have transpired conn trj inthj not to gospel, why single out the por- The following extract introducing the lines of a This by the against reverting dietary, 5. which Heaven «peed thee, son of Scham vl, to thy way ; 'tis not mine to record to the former leave no doubt that ere long the large amount tions relating to Byron as trustworthy and praise What vestry, held on - poet honoured by the readers of the Northern Star, angels shrink from : even the very devil At a meeting of the Marylebone of property stolen from the banking-house of Messrs. for the worthy ? Gilfillan represents Leigh Hunt as now On for Rogers and aid Mm h »1** , may appropriately find a place in our columns :— this occasion his own work abhorr 'd , Saturday, a resolution was passed unanimously Co. will be recover ed. • That the whole ThaHntu mavert f* " smiling pity over the dishonoured dust of Byron So sur feited the appoi ntment of a committee to investigate the ot tho notes, to the (magnanimous smiler !) and over the « GIVE BACK THE MONET .' with Hie infernal revel ; amount of £40,000 are still in come «*¦**« - *• insolent but TllOUgh he himself numerous complaints of the inefficiency of tlie police existence, has been Analog CirmsSa'sipa^s retracted ridicule of had sharpen 'd every sword , satisfactoril y proved by the fact Moore." Moore's " retraction" A FAMILIAB BOWL IN THE NORTH. It almost quenched his innate in this parish. that a few days since a £1 note is news to us ; one thing thir st of evil. , the number of which vultu res let the Muscovites lay is certain that in the latest Here Satan 's sole good work deserves insertiou — In consequence of the long-continued rains the does not appear m the printed As foS ' for wolres and edition of Byron's works list published and Mr. Murray has appended Another reading of tbe text , ' Peace on ear th and 'Tis , that he lias both generals in rever sion. whole of the marshes and low lands on the banks of circulated, but winch was stolen he , loW- . ,, amongst the foot-notes to the the Rtver Lea at t time was wert earne d far " The Vision of Jw'g. good-will towards men.' Lei's skip a few short years of hollow peace, , extending from Hackney to Totten- forwarded to the banking-house , the par ty sending it 11Aoneh when them wert an infan t thon ment , '' Moore' s castiga'.ion of Hunt , which casti ham ga- [When the disru ption in the Scoteh Church took place ( Which peopled earth no butt er , licit as wont , mill those on the Essex side, are under requesting the receipt of it to be acknowledged in iion iriimian calls ' , WftfcfiF * ^here the Czar insolent ridi cule." In mer cy to deputations from tb« Free Church -went to the United the newspapers, and stating the whole of the notes Iro m ihj tor Home in the mountains , to Leigh Hunt we will not co And heaven none—they form 'd tho tyrant' s lease Norwich | py Moore's verses. | . States (as also to England and other places), to raise With nothing but new names . ft Police Court, a youth, named Frede- would be restored upon the payment of £10,000, the hoWsswaj ; . Leaving the " Pease-blossom subscrib'd upon 't ; rick Cutting, was such trea son might " (why not pease-pud- subscrip tions. In the United States mosey was ac- 'Twill one day finish : mean time they increase remanded on a charge of havine acknowledgment to be to " II. F." This request was Thou ghhetrafoe atheeforKs armies, ding|?) poet and , set fire to his father s pre mises. The essayist, we must have a few more cepted from the slave as well as from the free states. Iu " With seven heads and ten horns " and all in ' cause of this accordingly complied with ; but, as to the compro- words with Gilfillan. This cold-hearted calumniator Scotland a demand was made to ' send hack the money' desperate act was anger at having been been entertained ; and from a of Sehamyl's son forb ade to fightvagainst the front , compelled to mise, that has not The soul dares to scoff at the last and most glorious of the to tbe slave states , which lias grown into a national cry. be at home at an early hour in which have tra nspiyed, b ut free. Like St. John ' s foretold beast ; but our s are bora the evening He variety of circumstances acts of Byron—what he calls " his chimerical and in- The Glatgow Examiner says—'" Send back the money," would not obey, and remained from present highly injudicious to , may nought e'er stop less formidabl e in the head than hor n. home on the which it would be at Xhou h3st left the Russian ; oh sincere expedition to Greece^;" he adds: "an incident meets the eye of the traveller in every part of the city. Monday, luesday, and Wednesday nights. notice further that the mere assertion, no doubts career, In the first year of freedo m' On the , thy brave no more deserving moral approbation,Hhan the con- It seems to be qui te fashionable to couple the " send s second dawn I hursday night he spent nearly his last, halfpenny are now entertained but that the whole of the stolen yataghan , and grasp the Died George the Third althou g in n&l niavest thon wield the duct of the prodigal, who in his desperation enlists." back" with names of ministers and elders , and even ; h no tyrant , one purchasing a box of lucifers, with the same time such ; Who Shiolded tyr ant which ho set fire notes will be recovered, and at shining spear He go2s on :| " exhausted in intellect and bruised ladies are not exempted from tlie unenviable notoriet y. s, till each sense withd rawn to the out-door premises. evidence will be adduced as to lead to the conviction the ir shadow, no rest or ease to know, left him nor mental Be to them as in heart he threw himself into tlieJGreek cause." "Send back the money, John Thomson ," "Send ba ck the nor external sun : DABi.sa BoRGLAnT.—A robbery was has occasionally ap- dream they are safest, then work thou their A better farme r ne' committed on of the offender. Paragraphs •Khen tney The contemplation of tbe " bruised heart" of Byron money, Mrs. Jameson," ' • Send back the money, Dr. Caven er brushed dew from lawn, tlie premises of Mr. Little, draper notes have A worse king never , Oxford-street, peared , Btating that some of the stolen overthrow . Beenis to afford pleasure to Gilfillan . The reader dish," flou rish at every corner. ' But amid all this furor left a realm undon e! Gloucester, on Sunday evening last. Tlie whole of been circulated on the continent. This is incorrect, He died—but left his subjects still behind , Teach tk°n °P°n tfle monntaiBS , to the slaves of Bnssia' will judge of the exhausted intellect of the poet by against receivin g black slaveearnin gs for the churches , no the family had left tbe house to attend chapel , leav- for the steps taken by the solicitor for the prosecu- Obb half as mad—and tfolUer no less blind. Czar, turning to "The Island," " The Age of Bronze," one seems to point out tlie inconsistenc y of accepting white ing the tloors, it was thought, securely locked. Dur- tion, who sent over to the continent a most intelli- died the cause of right must conquer , when despots go to and the last five enntos of " Don Juan." all written slave wages. Yet what else are the contributions , He !-.his death made no great stir on earth ; ing their absence, however, the door was opened by gent gentleman , who visited every banker, money- Xhat His buri al war- within the last fifteen months of his life. On this wrung by mean piety in every possible way, from our mad e some pomp; there was profusion means of picklocks, and the house ransacked from changer, hotel, and cafe between this country and the snows of many years, may rest upon each question we will answer Gilfillan out of the mouth of credulous and r eligious poor , by the collecting ageats of Of velvet, gilding, brass , and no great dearth top to bottom, desks and boxes broke open , drawers Russia, render the negotiation of them impossible, Xbouiih Of au ght but lint— hia own countryman, Byron's great " contemporary, Church and Dissenting:, Missionary and Bible confed. tears—s ave those shod bj collusion ; turned out, and even a bed searched, aa if they -were and it is, iherefore, ¦well known that the whole of Sip For these things may apparently ^jjjj -jfcnngiiilie years roll on, your land is independent Walter'Scolt." ";As various In composition as eracies ! In many of the manufactories of England tbe be bought at their trus worth aware that there was money in the house, the stolen notes are at the period secreted in the Of elegy there was though ignorant still. Shakespeare himself (this will be admitted by all who work people ar e compelled to leave something for the the due infusion- of its place of deposit. The most metropolis. A few days or weeks may, in all proba- Bough t also ; and the singular part of ttend thee mountain or are acquainted with his Don Juan,) he has embraced 'Missionary Box' or they become marked men. And torches , cloaks, and banners, the affair remains to be related The bility, elucidate this extraordinary and hitherto mya- then success a , true one, on the , every topic of human life, and sounded every string in Scotland , as the poet records , the last farthing of the Heralds and relics of old Gothic manners , thieves had ransacked two out of three drawers in terious robbery.— Globe, the plain, on the divine harp, ihe kitchen dresser, Circassia's warriors meet, their freedom to from its slightest, to its most pauper is eagerl y carried away. The view of the ' Send Porm'd a eepulchur al melo-drame . 0/ all hut left the third untouched. Phincu Aibbiit has bestowed the vacant brother- TOiE rever powerful and heart-astounding tones. n this drawer was £70 in cash, which maintain ; * * Back' ques tion taken in the 'Familiar Howl' is as just The fools who flock'd to swell or see the show, thus escaped hood in the Charter-house on Mr. Corueliin Webbe. His genius seemed as prolific as various. The most as it ii striking and appropriate . Who cared about the corpse ! The funeral their clutches. Tho robbers carried off a quantity of This is the second nomination of je thon always where a son should be—at thy brave The lines were writ- literary men which prodigal use did not exhaust his powers, naif, seemed ten by request for property, valued together at about £20. his Royal Highness fath er's side, unpopular aud influential jpape r,*which Made the at traction , and the black the woo, On Saturday has made to the same charitable rather to increase tlieir vigour. Neither " Childe however , taking a somewhat differen t view of the sub- There throbbed not there a thought which pierced morning an accident occurred at the foundation. ind leaf ingon a fiery band of warriors in their pride. Harolde," nor any of the moat beautiful of Byron's ject from the poet, they were not inserted . But inas- the pall Camden Town Railway Station, to a carman named Ix 13 said that . a new company is about to be attend thee true one ; confusion to the 7ben success , earlier tales, contain more exquisite morsels of poe- much as they express valued sentiments J. Mills, lne unfortunate man, with others was started for the purpose of establishing electric tele- , I solicited,,and And when the gorgeous coffin was laid Ion, engaged in moving Czar, try, than are to be found scattered through the can- was favour ed by Mr. Thorn with them, They now for It seem'd the mocker y of hell to fold luggage, &c. at the station , and graphs along the streets of the metropolis. all brave spirits who resist him in the war ; whilst so employed Saw-as to tos of ' Don Juan,' amidst verses which the author tbe first time appear. Ed,] The rottenness of eighty years in gold. , he by some unaccountable means As Lebches are at present somewhat scarce in this jbvthey conquer as brave men should do upon tte battle got jammed between two trucks, and country, appears to have thrown off with an effort as spon- Another gsst—another jet received such it has been proposed to import them into plain* taneous as that of a tree, resigning its leaves to the So mix his body with the dust! It might injuries as to render his immediate g d Spurts from the yellow removal to the En lan from Madras, by the overland route, or even QhJ better far gnch death to die, than live in Russia's wind." GilfiHan's scoffing sneers at Byron's chi- tide ; Return to what it must far sooner , were hospital necessary. It was ascertained that the un- round the Cane. chain. valrous adhesion to the Greek cause Dividing yet—devisin g yet The natural compound left alone to fight fortunate victim had sustained a severe , excites our Howyet they injury in the [There is no necessity for going so far about for Alfred Feknell. heartfelt disgust and abhorence. No doubt himself may divide. Its way back into ear th , and fire, and air ; abdomen, besides other internal injuries, so as to "leeches," as plenty may_ be found at the Banks and incapable of generous and heroic actions, he judges 'Give back tbe money !' well, give it hack , But the unnatural balsams merely blight render his recovery doubtful. Stock Exchange in Cornhili.] The last blood-min gled mi te ; What nature made him at bis birth , as bare Wholesale Poaching. A DREAM. of others by his own standard. We will again quote —The trains of the White- Mr. William Graham, late house surgeon of the Sir Walter Scott, who knew Byron something better Or be it scourged from a slaving black ,— As the mere million's base unmummied clay- haven Junction between Workington and Harring- Lincoln Lunatic Asylum , is in custody, charged with Afltr reading the Archbishop' s pragerto attrt famine . than Gilfillan can have known him ; that great Or wrung of a starring white. Yet all hie spices but prolong delay. ton destroy numbers of hares, which get upon the stealing a gold watch from the institution, and £20 Oh the people were raising their voices on high, writer after remarking of Byron that " no man had Heaven wills it not, His altar stained He's dead—and upper earth with him has done line from the adjoining preserves of Mr. Henry Cur- from the cash-box of the matron. It is said that Mr. And calling on God with a pitiful cry; ever a kinder heart for sympathy, or a more open By the wretch' s narrowed ghare ; He's buried; save the undertaker 's bill, wen, thus enabling the gatekeepers to participate Graham is the son of an Irish clergymen, and that he fer tile fruits of the fields, had been stricken with band for the relief of distress, andna mind was ever What , from hun gering heart all strained , Or lapidary f crawl , the world is gone in the luxury of an occasional dish of hare soup — has two brothers in the church. deart h. more formed for the enthusiastic admiration of Had never welcome there . For him, unless he left a German will ; Whitehuven Herald. Sir Georgk Mackenzie, of Coul, according to the And famine was etalking ab road through the earth . noble actions," concludes withithese words, " It is O, we have seen of labour wan, Bat Where 's the proctor wbo will ask his son ? The Short-time System.—The mill operatives of Ketso Chronicle, has instructed the tenants on his And tbe people were groaning, with hanger and pain , a reflection solemn and gratifying, tbat death found Yon solemn croucher seek In whom his qualities are reigning still, the> various manufacturing districts, after submitting estate to deduct from their Martinmas renta the pro- , Excep t that household virtue most uncommon to Mr. Charles 7lK>r ware kneelin g and praying, but kneeling in rain our Byron in no moment of levity, but contributing The lonely dole of a withering man , , , Hindley, M.P., at Manchester, the portion due for the land they may have had in TiU the flag of Rebellion, at length nag unfurled , his fortune and hazarding his life in behalf of a peo- Abr care for bis sunken cheek. Of constancy to a bad , ugly woman. present position of their trade, have determined to )otatoes. ¦RTien thethnnderof Heaven broke over the world ; ple only endeared to him by their own past glories save the king!" It is a large economy work short time, aHd at a meeting of delegates held Employment on Railroads. —It is computed that ' "We' v marked the wake of a whinin g few,— " God AsdsToice from the clouds, to the people below, and aa fellow-creatureasuffering nnder the yoke of a In God to save the like ; but if he will last Sunday, a memorial on the subject to the em- there are 200,000 navigators employed on railroads : Their prim and pious look, whj do ye suffer , from wantand from woe f heathen oppressor. To have fallen in a crusade ployers was agreed upon. an aggregate that shows the immense quantity of fried Stride off with a vert; farthing too Be saving, all the bet ter ; for not one am I fcsre poured forth my blessings, Tritfa bountif ul hasd . for Freedem and Humanity, as in olden times it Of those who think damnation better still: Great Britain.—It is said that Captain Hosken employment which railroads afford , especially to a I From pauper in his nook. proprietor O'er the length and the bredth , or King Adam's fair would have been an atonement for the blackest I hardly know , too, if not quite alone am I is a to the extent of £30,000, and there- class of men who would either be a burthern to their , may, in the present, be allowed to expiate Ah! then—all this, yea more and more,— In this small hope of bettering future ill fore the underwriters, under the idea that he will respective parishes , or, by competit ion in labour , de- land, crimes The groan-earned sin give back Sot baa men have blasted , the fruits of tbe sod, greater follies than ever exaggerated calumny has ; By circumscribing, with somo slight restriction, leave no means untried to save Me T«88e), will not prive others of the means of living. 'Tis murder ' interfere with his The; bare famished the people, then charged it oa God, propagated against Byron." s wages, O! restore The eternity of hell's hot jurisdiction . management. Mr. Braium, the vocalist, is said to be about to re- , to lie idle all day ? Gilfillan tellshis readers that the public," after To the white slava as to the black. More Convicts for Van Dxkmbn's Land.—The tire from professional life ; though, previous to doing Bid I give ye strong arms " I know this is unpopular ; I kuow Arabian , Bid I give ye broad fields, but to waste and decay ? several and opposite changes of opinion, have at last But who have sundered the sister 's heart,— Government transport has refitted at Dept- so, he will make a tour of the provinces. The death 'Tis blasp hemous ; I know one may be damn 'd ford Victualling-yard, and is ordered of his daughter 's husband , the Earl of Waldegrave , Come rise from yonr kneeling, let every right hand come to the conclusion of writing on Byron's bust,— Bade parent fondness cease,— Tor hoping no one else may e'er be so; to drop down And all life's loveliness depart to her Majesty 's Dockyard Grasp the sword that brings blessings, the spade till the *' A traitor to his own transcendant genius." Gil- I know my catechism ; I know we are cramm 'd , Woolwich, to receiva 300 without issue, renders it no longer necessary that he Our lowly homes of peace % ot these unfortunate beings on Una, fillan himself awards to Bvron the doom of " eternal With the best doctrines till we quite o'urflow ; board , who will be should pursue his labours. blessings of life will abundantly grow, silence." Modest—very ! We tell him he libels the Sid Bethlehem sent down from the Penitentiary, for a passage to Among the persons apprehended on account of the Then the 's star bode strife below. I know that all save England' s church have Van Diemen ° Andiam ine w01 skulk, to the regions below ; " public." Even if he spoke trnly of Am " public" Ton night the seraph sung !— 's Land. recent bread riots in Paris are two young women, shamm'd , No less than 300 made And woe to the man , who, when willing to toil, —ignorant, jealous, and sybarite aristocrats ; Or spake its ray of want and woe, And that the other twice two hundred churches informations were laid last week who were disguised in male attire. These fdr ls IFr&holds R'OJn a brother , his right to tbe soiL thimble-rigging money-jugglers ; tape-measuring, In Mammon 's poisoned tongue ? against the owners of tenements in Liverpool, for themselves remarkable for the virulence with which And synagogues have made a damn'd bad purchase. cellars which were either defective they excited the mob. M.M. T. treacle-selling shopocrats ; canting, hypocritical Give back you may—or you may keep,— as respects venti- priests: envious authors, snarling critics, and mo- God help us all! God help me too ! I am lation or were of insufficient size for human dwell- '. Tbe King of Prussia, it is said , intends to devote 'Tis mockery evermore ; God knows, as helpless aa the devil can wish, ' rality-mongering writers—even if this public, with The jewels ' rgaved ings. It was proposed to dispose of this formidable the sum of £120,000, out of his own private purse, to ACROSTIC. from hearts that weep, And not a whit more difficul t to damn array by hearing 50 summonses per diem. the formation of a covered garden , of extensive in in the neighbourhood of Rug y cowardlyassaultsupon thedefencelessdeadwillnotbe 8th.—¦'IsaliveLJChaifstchorus." 9th. "B!ack- tions. Ic is pleasant to answer tlie sympathising river overflowed its banks to such an extent on Sun- tion — entire consumption was onl> 30,50S,810 buxhels, or tolerated on this side of the border ; and we ques stone Edge " is no dishonour to the air to which it It is some relief to turn from this abominable trash enquiries of friends concerning Mr. Davenport. On only 1 bushel 6 gallons 2-3ds per hoad. It was re- day evening, as to completely flood the meadows, if it wil] meet with much toleration even on the other is written—" The Battle of Hohenlinden." Tenth. of the " rancorou s renegado ," to the racyl satire Saturday a relapse came, which threatened the solved :—" That this whilst the turnpike road was flooded to such a depth side ; the indignation, Tait's meeting form itself into a com- therefore, which Air. —"0'Connorville "is a vision of the future, which ef the glorious Byron. worst consequences, but on Monday he revived a mittee with power to add to its nunibes, asa branch at St. Thomas's Cross, as to render travelling a contributor cannotfail to excite against himself, may we the friends of the Chartist Co-operative Land Scheme St. Peter sat by the celestial little. All copies of the Life by himself, which district of Anti-Mult Tax Association. matter of considerable danger. be fijared by the magazine. But to the points at Eleventh.—" The Coming Day " is a gate, been sold—but their re- Mineral Wealth of this Countrt —In the course will cherish. H is keys were rust y and tho lock was recently announced, have 'I he people or Wigan complain of their bread being issue. match with some of the best of Ciiarlks dull Davenport's Life, Writing?, v of a lecture delivered to the general classes of King's poem to So little trouble had been givenof lato • mains about 100 of Mr. ad anced to 2d. pur pound , and of its its inferior geology, Our readers, who may not know the fact, must be Mackat's. Twelfth and last.—" Onward and Up- Not thatthe place b and Principles of Spence the advocate of Agrarian owing to its being adulterated with an ex- College, by Mr. Tennant, on mineralogical informed h Hunt is y any means was full , quality, that, amongst the works of Leig ward " has recently appeared in these columns. But sineo the Gallic ei-a' Equality, which can be had at our publisher's, ( Mr. quantity of India meal and potatoes. Typhus the lecturer stated that the annual value of the mine- erne— entitled " eighty-eight ," cessi vo country amounts to about twentj " damned to everlasting fame" — We hope to see more than one seriesof of these The derils have ta'en a longer Watson, 3, Q.iieen's Head-passngc, Paternoster-row) very rife iu the town, and seems on the ral produce of this - '" Lord an;! ; which seeing , stro nger pull tever is £9, 100,000 ia from coals, Emm his Contemporaries " poems ; indeed we do not^despair these And " a pull altogether ," as they say ' and at Mr. "Wheeler's, 83, Dean-street, Soho—price and some precaution is necessary to pre- tive millions. Of this, *nk , , proves increase, , £1,200,000 from copper according to GilfiUan's admissions pages extend to a volume numbering ten times At sea, which drew most souls threepence. disease from spreading amongst dense locali- £S 100 000 from iron , Jjunt ingratitude" and anot her way. vent the £920 000 from lead, £i00,000 forsalt, £390,000 from to have been guilty of " sixteen. SSfr-The readers ties, but there can be little hope wnilst the staple food . " v;o!ated confidence" towards his deceased protec- The angels all were singing out of tune of the Northern Star will note that 000 from manganese, £35,000 from silver, , the " Life of Spence t, population is mixed with diseased ingredients. tin. £60, tw, %»n. GiifiUan acknowledges tbat Hvnt And hoarse with having little else to ," noticed in last week's Star, is lie 000 , £S.000 fr om zinc, and £25,000 do, now ready. Friends in the neighbourhood of Wigan , that somo £22, from alum had lxjen treatedby Byron with great liberality ;" REASONER. Part IV. Edited by G. J. Excepting to wind up the sun and moon, , send your orders. It is said various other metals, , bismuth, THE corn law repealers have bought up large quan- from the as antimons and tbat he had " admitted to his confidence ;" London : Watson, 3, Queen's Head Or curb a i uuaway young star or two, ot the , Aam Journal. pitiful beggars at the door of Republicanism. our ragged millions of Ireland the henomenon of nature , the war of elements, the of his battle is,—HE WHO IS NOT FOR US at them, because we have often told titute and blame To be had in Parts at Sixpence, and in Nos. at 3d. The p Here, then, is a conundrum ; solve it who can. Tolney's Lectures on History, cloth boards ... 1 6 various changes of the animated world , the feelings and rulers, that to be great abroad, we must be great at of causing their own wretchedness, is completely passions of man, and the at tribntes of immortality—upon IS AGAINST US. The Times and the Free Traders never calculated Ditto in a Wrapper ...... 1 0 Item has the author of the Wood-Spirit founded his tale. home. We merely reiterate the facts then, to con- upset by such facts as the following, quoted by the ¦Volney* 0 4 It has cost us eleven long years to destroy the s Law of Nature ...... Wild, vet beautiful concentious!—HuR Packet. upon such a contingency as the requirement of four taught them in Chronicle ;— Sketch of the Life of Volney ...... 0 2 weeds of Chartism and to fallow the field of promise, vince our readers that we have not million quarters of wheat for any one year, or of their Two miles from the little town of Kileullen Hies Wright's Popular Lectures, 1 Tolome, cloth and now we have sworn that those seeds shall not error, or led theva to a miscalculation , in boards and lettered o 0 IMPORTANT TO PHOTOGRAPHISTS. that the harvests of the whole world would be con- to enlighten Kildare, is a tract of excessively green land, dotted ...... strength, but that we have been the first over with brilliant white cottages To be Lad in Parts at 6d. each, or in Nos. at 2d. app lication was made on the 22nd September , to again endanger the full growth of the ripening crop, siderably below an average amount : so what are we , each with its AN the Vice-Chancellor of England , by Air. Beard them upon those collateral subjects which, though le of trim, acres of garden Miss Wrights Fables ... O 3 but that like gcod farmers we will make manure coup , where you see thick — (who, acting under a mostextraordiny delusion , considers to do? We said, that the richest market being imperceptibly, yet incipiently, affect their interests. potato ridges covered with blossom, great blue plots Biography, Notes, &c. of Frances Wright Dams- liimseif the sole patenteeof the Photographic process !) to of their rottenness to fertilize the harvest and fill requirement of other countries comfortable cabbages and such mont ...... 0 i restrain MB. E&EBTON , of l, Temple-street , and 148, opened , that the We shall dismiss our foreign relations with this single of , pleasaut plants of tbe poor man's garden. Two Political Letters , by ditt o ...... O 6 Fleet-street , from taking Photog raphic Portraits , which the grain of Chartism. If 1839 and 1842 were would become the medium of speculation , without result of the marriages or three years since entirely different from and very observation, that whatever the the land was a marshy common, which had Essays on the Formation and Publication of he does by a process characterised by illegal prosecutions, and if we were reference to their domestic necessities , and either never 3 vol. cloth boards aad lettered ... 3 0 superior to Air. Beard' s, and at one-half the charge. of the girls of Spain be in other respects, it is sure to since the days of the Deluge fed anything better than Opinions, His Honour refused the application in toto. asked to point out a single distinct triumph that coun- PAKE'S WORKS. this must be the case or the people of these lead to an intermidable rupture between the two inno- a snipe, and into which the poor people descended No license required tu practice this process , which is Chartism has achieved in those its former struggles draining and cultivating, and rescuing Paine'a Theological Works , 1 vol. cl. Ms. «fc let. 3 0 taug ht by Air. Egerton iu a few lessons at a moderate tries must starve before August, by which time the cent females. If the Queen,a usurper by the way ,should the marsh To be Sad in Numbers at Twopence each, and in charge. with faction, we answer—That the LAWS of libel. from the water, and raising their cabins, and setting Thunderer tells us that wheat will probably reach have heirs to the Crown of Spain , the intrigues of up their little enclosures of two Parts at Sixpence each . All the Apparatus , Chemicals , &c, to be had as usual _ _ _ or three acres upon conspiracy, and sedition have undergone no change hint to the i. v 1 1 „ .!. !. 1. it v 1 i i. . • . •«. t Paine's Political Worts , vol. 1, cL bos. and let. 3 O at his Depot, 1, Temple-street , Wliitefriurs. JE5 a quarter — a much stronger France will not be confined to the tender solicitude of the land which they had thus created. There are Ditto, Tnl. 2 ...... 3 0 since those times, and yet no government would now speculator in famine to dabble in human food, than now two hundred flourishing little homesteads upon a physician, selected as her poisoner and the destroyer this rescued land, Tole haAJn' separate pamphlets,at fdkws:— LITHOGRAPHIC ENGRAVINGS dare to strain them as before to suit its own tyran- is furnished to the Government not to dare to be- and as many families in comfort Paines American Crisis, in a wrapper ... 1 6 OP THE of her offspring ; but the Duke de Montpensier and and plenty. Now, if two or three acres of reclaimed ' nical purpose : is this, then, not a triumph to have competitor in the corn market. ———Rights of Man, ditto ...... 1 3 DUNCOMBE TESTIMONIAL. come a his rival brother-in-law, and the Duchess and her marsh can furnish plentiful subsistence to one family, Common Sense, ditio ...... O 6 still be had at the Office of Messrs. M'Gowan weakened the oppressor's power and.to have broken , we are justified in in- 600,000acres would do as much .for 200,000 families ; MAY As food is the staff of life royal sister, are placed in eternal enmity, confusion —letter to the Abbe" Baynal , ditto ... 0 6 and Co., 16, Great Windmill Street , Haymar kct, his staff and last remaining crutch ? Now, in 1846, that is to say, for one-fourth part of the Irish pea- London ; through any respectable bookseller iu town or troducing politics when they serve to illustrate its — Letters to the Citizens of the United States the land is once more redolent of Chartism the and strife, by the laws of primogeniture. Upon the santry, which is as large a proportion as can well be 0 4 country ; or at any of the agents of the Northern Star. , value, and the means by which it may b e comeatable supposed unable to procure a competent livelihood. of America , ditto ...... The engraving is on a large scale, is executed in the other hand, if the Queen should have engeudered an. Public Good, ditto ...... 0 4 supine forces have been once more recruited from Monarchies, which are controlled by class legisla- According to the most recent accounts, there are most finished style, is finel y printed on tinted paper , and hereditary complaint from her prostitute mother, —-— Decline and fall of the English System of gives a minute descrip tion of the Testimonial , and has John O'Groat's to the Land's End—no more does tion and the laws of class monopoly, are now, for considerably more than six millions of acres of Finance ...... 0 3 the Inscri ption , &c, &t; , engraved upon it. which should render her sterile, she will look with land lying waste in Ireland, of which about three- PRICE FOURPENCE. Scotland dissever itself from England upon some the most part, depending upon the United States of Agrarian Justice, ditto ...... 0 2 envy, loathing and disgust upon her more fortunate, fifths are acknowledged to be improveable. 1 ¦ — Dissertion on Fir st Princi ples of Govern - abstract question of mere national prejudice or America for their supply. That supply must be because prolific , sister, upon whose offspring her Mr. Nicholls states that most of the recently re- ment ditto ...... 0 2 A GOOD FIT WARRANTED. pride. The petition that has been adopted by the surplus after a hearty consumption , as the Yankees Letter to Camile Jordan , on Priests, Bells, So much for our forei claimed bog. which he saw in the western counties, up a Convention has been all but universally approved by royal crown must descend. gn and Public Worship ...... 0 1 UBSDELL AND CO,, Tailors, are now making would precious soon kick up a bobbery if they learnt was recovered by small occupants, who drained and complete Suit of Superfine Black , any size, for £3 ; the nation while the fanatical schism, by which relations and positions, to those who are wont to —Reply to the Bishop of Llandaff , ditto O 2 , that increasing exports were likely to reduce the na- enclosed an acre or two at a time ; knowing all the —— Discourse to the Society of Theop nilan - Superfine West of Eng land Black, £3 10s. ; and tbe hear annually of our pacific relations with all the very best Superfine Saxony, £5, warranted not to spot or pedlars hoped once more to disunite us has been as tional store even to the doubtful point. Here, then , thropists at Paris ...... 0 1 monarchs of the world ;—and now for a word at while, that they would only be permitted to hold it change colour. Juvenile Superfine Cloth Suits, 24s. , universally rejected and laughed at. Our chief, is a nation of individuals ——Life, by the Editor of the National ... O 6 with a controlling power on sufferance, and until the landlord , to whom it be- 1 0 Liveries equally cheap— at the Great Western Emporium; strong—aye, rivetted—in our affections needs no mis- lorae. Portrait , Proofs ...... ••• , in their own hands, however it may be casually or longed, chose to drive them Ditto, Plain ...... 0 6 Nos. l and 2, Oiford-street , London ; the noted house for The Irish press generally, and especially the from it, and enter upon and tives to keep himself or his triumphs green in our capriciously delegated to others, who, we pledge our- Address to the People of France on tbe ;oud blackcloths , patent made trousers. Gentlemen Woy-ld , took us to task for denouncing the Whigs possession of the plot on which they had squatted. Abolition of Royalty ...... 0 2 can choose tlie colour and quality of cloth from the memories, be too recruits his strength for the selves, will not allow traffic in the food required for On these facts the Chronicle lar gest stock in London. The a. t of cuttin g taught. and praising Sir Robert Peel. Our says :— TRACT S BY ROBERT DALE OWEN. coming campaign, while his army is being mar- domestic purposes, and who recognise the mer- One would think the most Popular Tracts in 1 toI. , cl. bds. and let. ... 2 6 All-mighty Peel obvious idea which shalled for his service, and ready to obey his word of chant's right to traffic only in surplus, after con- could present itself to any one who wished, to vise the or in separate Tracts at the following prices. TO TAILORS . drove some of our own friends into convulsions, and waste lands as an instrument Tracts on. Republican Government and National command, and in passing we predict that such an sumption. If we require four millions of foreign for improving the con- dition of the peasantry, wonld be to make that which Education ...... 0 3 LOND ON and PARIS FASHIONS FOR AUTUMN entertainment was never seen in England's metro- corn , even at £i a quarter, we were reviled when we styled him as the pilot who it will lake at least thir- already takes place on a amall scale take place on a Influence on the Clerical Pr ofession ... 0 3 AND WINTER , 1846-47. as that which awaits our hero upon the eve of alone could weather the storm. The Whigs were a large, by giving to the Sermons 0 3 Hart-s treet polis, teen millions of our specie to pay for it; and we peasantry the inducement of on Loyalty, Free Inquiry, &c. ... By HEAD and Co., 12, , Bloomsbu ry god-send to the Irish place-hunters, and conse- property in the soil reclaimed by Hopes and Destinie s of the Human Species ... 0 2 square , London ; the next session, when we shall be able to gladden draw largely upon manufactures when we allow the them, and by af- fording to them, from the State, sueh assistance Address on Free Inquiry ...... 0 2 And G. Berger , Holy well-street , Strand ; hi h p d s r quently every glib scribbler of the Liberal press was aB m wit our improving pros ects an a su e difference in price, £3,000,000, to be made up from may be needful. The assistance required would cost Darby and Susan :ja tale of Old England ... 0 2 May be had. of all booksellers , wheresoever residing . loud in laudation. Peel's legacy to Russell upon his ... O 2 him of our continued affection, demotion, and that source; and take away £ 13,000,000 sterling.even, less to the State than the most moderate sum ever Wealth and Miser y ...... NOW BEADr , by Situations : Lawyers, Clergy, Physicians, Men, approbation of her Hajesty Queen Victoria regard. Duncombe is the master-quill in the wing leaviug office was matter of high promise and hope to voted Parliament tor Irish distress. By , anO from your vast amount of gold, and what becomes and Women ...... 0 2 Iiis Royal Highness Prince Albert , a splendid print those who supposed him capable of profiting by the of Chartism ; his unswerving and manly course gives of your railway bubbles, and your credit, and your It would be necessary to buy up the rights of those Galileo and the Inquisition ... O 2 richly coloured and exquisitely executed View of Hyde advice ; but, alas and alack a day,so much is required Lecture on Consistency ...... 0 2 Park Ga.-dens as seen from Hyde Park , London. With an impetus to the cause, while of old the democratic national faith, and your stability, and your fun ds. who are now the nominal owners of these lands ; for , ings there can bsfto more Prossimo'a Experience , &c. &c...... 0 2 this beautiful Print will be sent Dress , F rock, and ranks were ever trembling in apprehension lest the Not taking casualties into cal culation—as we were to arrest the march of famine, that the scrap than nominal ownership of that Moral Physiology; a brief and plain trea tise on the Riding Coat Patterns , the n west style Chesterfield , and from patronage are insufficient to soothe the agonies which has never been used since the country was in- altered policy, or treachery of a leader, should not bound to do—have we not invariably said, that the habited, and cannot be used now unless the Population Question ...... 0 6 the New Fashionable Double-breasted Waistcoat , with and allay the anger of the disappointed expectants ; State Neurology. An Account of some Experiments in weaken or altogether sacrifice the party. THE key-stone once struck from the rotten arch of faction, supplied the means. Having become the proprietor Skirts. The method of reducing and increasing them of the whole or a Cerebral Physiology ...... 0 2 Wales, at Is. each. out preference to either statesman , this is great con- tract of country, tbe State can as , and in Numbers, ever beset with brambles and pitfalls, while that of is a welcome guest even with all its train of desola- easily do this for the peasantry , as Lord BesborougU To be bad also in Parts Theamount may be sent by cash, post-office order, or solation to us, as it verifies our prediction and un* Palmer 's Principles of Jfato re, doth boards, let- post stamps. Busts for fitting CoatJOn. Boys' figures. the honest man is clear, and unimpeded , save by tions. can now undertake to do it for the landlords. The 2 0 work, during its execution tered...... Foremen provided. Instructions in cutting as usual. those obstacles which the superior strength of an We must not fall into the error of judging of the fortunately realizes our very worse anticipations. , would provide food and Ditto ditto , in a wrapper ... .,, 1 6 A.B. employment for the famishing people in the one way —The Patent Measures or System of Cutting, m enemy, or the treachery of the friend may interpose. ultimate result of a Repeal of the Com Laws from True, the Liberator, who has his eye to patronage as as effectually as in the other, To be bad in Nine Numbers, at Twopence each. (like tbe Fashions ) le sent post free, by li. extra , and the State could be Now then is the hour for the revival of Chartism. the present scarcit y; but , upon the contrary, we a substitute for the tribute , still deals in excessive indemnified bj an additional quit-rent, payable from Bailey's Monthly Messenger ; a repository of in- ent. the new peasant formatio n, a vol. cloth boards ...... 3 0 must keep the mind fixed upon the inevitable flattery of the Whig lord lieutenant, and cunningly proprietors. The enemy is weakened and stricken by ven- By this plan one-fourth or one-third of the Irish Carpenter 's Political Text Book, 1 toI. doth bds .26 reality. Our readers endeavours to draw a distinction between the official Clark' s Letters to Dr. Adam Clarke , on the Life, CHARTIST POEMS , geance. We must take advantage of that weakness, probably have not forgotten peasantry would, in two er three years, be not only Miracles, We must eo t0 them and° bri them quiet. There SOCIETY. MR. DOYLFS tion of the Reform Bill. They had promised if we to ^' v • - "B The political world is remarkably " MISSION. would support lection, PUBLIC MEETING In BERMONDSEY TO them, if we would strengthen them are a few rumours of changes at the next e SHARES, £2 10s. while they had got their pet measure—till tJicy got ^.r™™::r' ,s,;;i;r ,, ! forth ADOPT THE NATIONAL PETITION. LANARK. and intending candidates are already putting The first section of the above flourishine Institu- Oil fuestlay the the wedge in—that they would, when they had got tion, consisting of 6, 13th, a numerous and highly re- the wed puffs and feelers. The Registration 000 members, is now complete • A Public Meeting in support of the Central Reg me ge fairly in, take care it should be driven preliminary the members in it hold, among them is- t I1? wa9 held in the Town Lanark, ™y ; but when j^^ira KEfc&a , little attention , , nearly ten tration and Election Committee, and also to adopt ?5S??Mr r ?iCh™t»iji her. Doyle """. »f they got in what did they do? as Courts seem to have attracted very thousand shares, upon which 1^ nf 'T expound the princi- Why, they gave the T5£^ :* they have paid the National Petition, was held in the large room of ples of ^the Lund Society. people bullets and cold steel, h certainly have excited no interest. It is felt £13,000. and to Ireland a Coercion Bill. could2j^ find employment their ' £::sri!- and the Ship Tavern, Long Lane, Bcrmondsey, on Mon- Mr. James Scott lilled the chair, and opened It wa3 the duty of wages are not sufficie nt J theham- The second section advances rapidl the every honest man to oppose provide food for those dependin g everywhere that the whole machinery of y towards com- day, October 19th ; Mr. James Knight was unani- business in a brief but impressive speech, and then the Whigs ; for his own on them. n e was him pletion, it numbers at present four thousand part, he would oppose them self working for 5d. a-daj ; but " Reform Act is cumbrous and useless, mem- mously called to the chair, who in a few brief em- called upon Mr. Doyle to address the meeting. The t-> the death. We ought lie would give thit ud bng called the bers, who have subscribed upon ' 0 e UP the atlvocacy He got a bit to eat , to be sure ; but what ' their shares £2,000. phatic and appropriatesentenccs introduced • lecturer s speech occupied an hour and a half in the «ho.,M -i^ + M , of our opinions if lit could an, ,„.,,, ere long, even the lawyers and agents to whom ¦Thus, although the society has delivery, fcl e dun f: the who had a wife and children to provi de for and, been hut fifteen Mr. Samuel Kydd. to move the first resolution, aa and was listened to with carneat attention • rightST. of«?— *• . K! °n ™d scaffold. The do with 5d iven em- months in existence, it has enrolled at the eitjzeu»hip ought not to be witl.hni,i fmm a-day, particularl y ns prices were now \ ' the system of chicanery created by it has g ten thousand follows •— conclusion he received the hearty applause oi' .uiy man membera, and created a capital of £15,000. his hearers. It we are deprived of the right Cap tiii n Dyer.—\ ou say, my frieml , that you have onl will find the game " no go/' People will " That this meeting is of opinion that the present We believe Mr. Doyle's addreus will be ship , of citizen y ployment, lhe following are the benefits which the society p we have no right 10 be called 5d. a-dny . Now, I ;im haji py to tell you that , after a fuw system of registration is exceedingl y unjust to the work- roductive of much good in the town of Lanark. upSn to perform not par for so dull and wretched a performance guarantees to its members ; holders of one share, a citizen 's duties. He would now read " days more , we will be able to give Is. fid , a-d ;iy to evci y ing classes, inasmuch as it entails on them great trouble 1 here was given three cheers for Mr. O'Connor and op.n.ons . to them th which usually takes place before Revising house, two acres of land, and £15 ; holders of a share three for ot tho judges of the lm in reference man who is able to do a good day 's iior k. The gover n- as that and loss of time , as well <\s exposing them to the con- Frost, Williams, and Jones. s to the and a-half, a house, three acres, and £22 10s. ; hold- People Charter. Mr. Sweet here read the ment are doing all in tlieir power to provide fur you ; and Barristers; tradictory opinions of barristers , whose dictum so far HAMILTON. opinions ers of two shares, a house, four acres, and £30. ot Baron Rolfe, Judge Alderson, and others if you have patience only n few days, you will have as they are concerned is final , whilst Paroch ial officers , Mr. Doyle , com- Leases for ever will be granted to the occupants. delivered a lecture on Monday the 12th nientmg on them as he proceeded ; and plen ty of employment , and n t good wages too. and the more wealthy classes, havin g funds at their insfc. tea most lastly, the The societ enabling members to respectable audience on " The Rise opinions of O'Connell, who said The man said it was hard for them to have patien ce y affords facilities for command, employ legal talents , r , that one who vas purchase their allotments, and thus become free- thus escaping person - "I? ! the Oliarti«t Co-operative Land not a Ghiirtist was either a knave or a fool, lie be- while they were themselves starving, an d saw tlieir wives ally such petty annoyance , and if needs " l»bocicty. -Jl " f holders. The rent of the allotments will be moder- be gets a case llie koturer elucidated the principles of lieved that twelve months was long enouuh to keep and children starvin g arou nd thorn. They exiieetodth.it and thus obtains a decision in the superior courts , this the above society, a bad servant. Colonial antr f ovtisixStobieto* ate, asit will be regulated by a charge of 5 $ cent in a masterly and eloquent man- As to Payment of Members—why the gentlemen would have done something 'or them that meeting, therefore, empha tically calls upon the working ner, shewing upon the capital expended upon each. it to be the only plan under existing it any one, when we had got the Charter, could clo day ; bat now they were told they must wai t longer. classes to csmbinc , end by their Co-operation circumstances The society having been called into existence for enjoy those for bettering the condition of the without his salary, he could give it to the poor of the How could they wai t ? Gentlemen who knew noiliing of A terrific hurricane at .Newfoundland, which has advantages , now monopolised b industrious parish the benefit of the working clssses, the rules enable y the middle and upper classes. The lecture occupied nearly two , it there should be any poor at that time, lie hunger might easily tell the hungry man to wait. Hut if classes." Hours, at the would advue occasioned a great destruction of life and property, the poorest to avail themselves of its advantages, as close of which several questions were the people to rally round the nmrnhRr* he waited in hunjj er , it mus t bo only fur denth. They put aud answered tor 1< insbury. farther account of the continued sufferings of the shares may be paid by weekly instalments as low Mr. Kydd said, the resolution put in to his hands in the mostsatisfactory manner. Let them support them. Let them would no t ivait. The gentlem en oughi to liavo done some- and a send at the next as threepence. complained that the present system of registration EDINBU RGH. general electiou twelve staunch men thi ng for them before they went awav . the Cape of Good Hope colonists, and the continued to support their own Meetings for enrolling members are held as fol was unjust—true, it was. There was no House so Mr- Doyle addressed Diuicomoe, and then lie ima- Jxr. Fakrell ,—.The gentlemen are doing : «H in their jjhmSeta of their incapablegovernors , constitute a large and enthusiastic gined we should be able to do something lows :— lax in its mora lity or more profuse in words , tha n meeting of the Edinburgh Chartists on Monday in the House power. We are doinR as much as we are able , anil moi a intelligence of the ot Commons ; then we should be able than you are aware jlte colonial week. As regards SUKDAT EVESTSO. the present so-called reformed House of Commons, evening last, with the best results ; a «reat many of to drive in the of. Thai »(mf,lems,n (Captv.iii Dyer) of wedge ourselves Our Duncombe, neither wunt to boil the Capef ^e have some hopes being in a position SoutliLondon Chartist Hall, 115, Blackfriars-road: (hear, hear,) and the consequence is, that Acts ol the democracy, old and new, having joined the with his gallant nor closed his eyi-s the night before band, would be aWe to stop ail business last , and I slept but two at half-past six o'clock.— City Chartist Hall, 1, Turn- Parliament are so mystified that no one can under- Chartist Association. We have had the promise of a , if the Go- hours this mornin g. We are to announce, in a few moaths hence, the commence- vernment did not attend to the desires of the people, doin g everything that again-lane: at six—Somers Town:at Mr. Duddrege's stand them. The Reform Act based the Borough lull report of this meeting, but up ti the time of ihey men can do for you ; and , if you jnent of a better state of things; the incapable go- Bricklayers* at franchise on a rental of £10 a year , but the taxing would be able to move amendment after can onl y have pat ience forune week or ten daj Arms, Tonbridge-street, New-road, going to press, the report has not come to hand. amendment; s, you will clauses, and the want of clear descri each speaker might occupy six or get both work and wages to suppor t y,y vernor having been superseded by the appointment half-past seven.—Tower Hamlets: at the Whittington ption as to what teven hours . and Cat, Church-row, Bethnal-green, at six o'clock constitutes " Douse or other Building," so mystified , aud it the other members did not A Voice.—II " we wai t fort en ilnys there will not be a Sir Henry Pottinger to the Governorship of the like it they might go to of precisely.—Emmetis Brigade : at the Rock Tavern, it, that an appeal to the Barrister became necessary ; MESSRS. M'GRATII AND CLARK'S TOUR. bed. He advised the grain of corn l eft in the country ; all will be sent to Wex- ape of Good Hope. ; people to keep out of the alehouses, and buy land ford or Castlebri O ge. C Lisson-grove. ateighto'clock precisely.—J/aryfe&OMc and what was law and equity with one Barrister was wnu the anything but law and equity with another money—to join the Nat ional Chutrist The man wlio hud spoken first exclaimed that they journalsseem to be at length tiring at the Coach Painters' Arms, Circus-street, at half- , (hear, CHATHAM. The French ' s Inn Hood Mason's Arms r hear,) consequently amendment after amendment Uo-opcrative Laud Society, and then we should soon would not ullow tile corn to bo taken out of the country . past seven. Grant , , B i- The Land ! The Land ! !—On Thursday be in a position of the Spanish marriages' question. The concluding tannia-street.—Hammersmith: at No.2 , Little Vale- was proposed, until it reminded him of the childish evening, to bid defiance to our enemies. Tiled—I a grain n-oulil they let go: and they would go a public meeting of the inhabitants of the three Mr- Tophara briefly seconded acts of this infamous drama we have reported in place, at ten in the forenoon.—Newcastle-upon-Tyne : story of " The House that Jack Built," so imbecile the resolution, which no w to look for footl where it was to be had. If they towns of Chatham, Rochester, and Stroud, was held was carried unanimously. grot woi k they were willin g to earn ; another column. We may take leave of the subject at the house of Martin Jude, Sun Inn, Side, from were the laws that were formed. He could not help but they must hare seven till nine. Leicester : at 87, Church-gate, at thinking there was a purpose in all this, for if laws in the l arge room of the Five Bells Inn . Rochest er, Mr. Souter then came forward to m-ve the adop- footl whether they g&t work or not. the following of Louis Phili — to consider the objects and means of the tion ot the petition. lie by copying portrait ppe, six. Bradford : Woolcombers' Arms Inn, Hope- were plain and simple, as they ought to be, no Bar- Chartist had made a solemn vow T hey all then left the room. ¦ — Co-operative Land Society. At the hour for nover to petition again ; but from Tatts Magazine — , Westminster at the Assembly Rooms, risters would be required—(hear, hear.) Those law- com- circumstances com pelled It must not be supposed that tlio.se incitements street at five. , mencing business, Mr. Paine, a working man him to petition once more. to Louis Phili ppe is a roi bourgeois in a very different S3, eet, Soho, at half-past seven.—Red yers forcibly reminded him of two dogs quarrelling . was The Barons of Runny- discontent are only to be l' Dean Str unanimously called to preside, and after making mede petitioned with mind in tho letters or sense from what his flatterers atttri bute to him. Be Cross Street City, at Cartwright's Coffee House, at over a bone, they did not appear to care which won, a their swords in their hands ; he speeches of the priests ol' , few prefatory observations, introduced Mr did not wish to advise Mayo and Cork. In pre- I« its upon France as 3 farm , upon his kingly office as a eight o'clock.—, Ireland, at Mr. Walker's, 7, aa grist came equall y to their mill—(hear , hear. ) . P. the people, to do likewise. cisely a simitar spirit is oonceivefl an article which, M'Grath fie believed that lucr ative appointment; lie is bonperedefamiUe; he will Bradley Court Shankle Road, at ten o'clock in the He repeated, the laws of a country should be written who explained the nature of the land plan the people could gain their object, appears in tlio Cusllelav Teltyraph . . in n clear lucid and eloquent manner without any auch do nothing that can bring him to rob shoulders with forenoon. Winchester, at Air. Sturgess', Hair so plain that everybody could understand them. He , , , and much to means. The bishops and parsons the satisfaction of the numerous meeting.—Mr. T. told them to put their trust in God Lord John Itusstll , your advent of power is indeed an the gallows ; he will m ike money or every means that Dresser, Upper Brook Street, at seven o'clock. would have them like the notices to vagrants, stuck , while they un happy one for poor Ireland ; far different was ths Clark followed , and proved berond the possibility of rooued. The press could do much for them <30 not make him incur the risk of being sent to Coven- MONDAY EVENING. up at the entrance of provincial towns, and these , if it tre atment of your rlear -siglitvd predecessor , Sir Robert ttHI settle bis daug hters well, and set up bis sons - were so comprehensible that you never or rarel a doubt that the Chartist Co-operative Land Society were hunest ; if the press would advocate the cause try he liodiester . at the Victory Inn, at 1 alf-pift seven. y of the Pei l. II • sought not the aid of 11 party in the time of way of business. His every thoug ht centres in Caml&wdl; mendicancy wasqnitcequal to the accomplishment of the object, people, we should not be long withuuS tho in a goo3 — at the Moatpeliei* Tavern, vValworth found carried on within the reach of a Charter. Ireland' s starvation In tlie yearjust past ; he saw at once aad in his children , because they are part of himself. at eight o'clock precisely. Kensington: at eight beadle, constable, or policeman. (Loud cheers.) which io contemplated—He quoted some of the most self) — Mr. Woodward that , as the first adviser of his Soverei gn , he must meet differs from a tallo w-chand ler in having to do o'clock, at the Duke of Sussex. Limehouse : at the The resolution spoke of the system being an injus- eminent agricultural authorities, showing that the then asked, whether the petition He onlj — , which the society proposed emanated from ttie crisis lik e a man , and, though upon (eveiul occasions frit h ministeria l portfolios and national accounts , instead Brunswick Hall, Ropemaker's Fields, at ? o'clock. tice, it was unjust ; for time was money to the amount of land to give a National Convention, or from only was amplysufh'cientibr the'maintenance of a moder- Uo f tlle eo le' we took exceptions to his procteilings , still we must do country orders. Petersburg invoices, and the ledaer Leicester : at No. 17, Archdeden-lane, at seven working man. It was also a rude annoyance to ask »7 j 1 ? P P 8 representatives. Mr. of ate family. Both speakers appeared to give W oodward also made him jus tice by sayhiir he sent us food , and he kept the datbook of Melt, Drip, and Co. He has put off a o'clock. — Chepstow: at the Temperance Hotel, you, do vou pay a rental of £10 per annum ? have the . some observations relative to and highest satisfaction. some remarks made by Dra goons to himself! Lord John lluiseli, you liavo ghter on his neighbour the King of the Belgians ; he Bank Avenue, at eight o'clock.—-Armley: at the you paid your taxes ? It was literally a turning Mr. Barber about the Stoek- dau ingers Ticket Bill of last ac ted a far different part —influenced by such men as las got one son a footing in Brazil ; and he is bent on house of Mr. William Oates, boot and shoemaker, out of your cupboards, and shewing to the world that SECOND MEETING. session . Mr. Barber, in endeavouring to show the hurrying sort of legislation Lord [iucan , a bigotted Tory, to grati fy them , you send setting another in a way to get npon the throne of Spain. Armley Town-gate, at eight o'clock.—Liverpool : at you have neither jam nor jelly, that you are in ADOPTION OF TUB NATI ONAL rKTITIOJf. us tho dragoons; but yuu keep the food from the starvin g s Temperance Hotel 4, point of fact a {mere brown bread sort of man. lor the working classes, made remarks about the bill louis-Phfl ippewith Ms homely, friendly wajs . uas the eight o'clock, at Mr. Farrell' , On Friday evening, at eight o'clock, a second and its inefficiency. people. Wh at are the Irish to think of that governmen t of a mercer or man-milliner showing off his Cazneau-street. Helper : at the house of George (Laughter and great applause.) The present state smirk — meeting was held in the same room as the previous Mr. Barber, in reply, said who prearh plenty to the poor while they close their ¦wares; and , with his plain pot-luck dinners to all who Wigley, the Dusty Miller, Field-head, from seven of things was well adapted for keeping colonial , that if the petition did night, and was more numerousl y attended. Mr, not emanate from a Convention stores upon starving millions ? What are we to think comes across him, of a Xord Major who thinks a good till nine.—Bristol: at No. 16, Horse-fair, at eight offices , church livings, and all other slap up pick- of the whole people Paine again occupied the cliair. A resolution con- it waa their own faults, as they might Have of those who have leftths country dependent upon specu- feed is every thing. No wonder that he;is such a fa. o'clock in thei evening.—Darlington : at John Moss's, ings, for the younger branches of aristocratic fami- sent lators for food while they demnatory of class legislation , was agreed to, hav- delegates it they would. The petition was no less a , permit food to be carried oft Tonrite trith the Lord Mayor of London ; he is, in fact, No. 24, Union-street, at half-past seven.—Chorley lies. (Leud cheers.) Labour deserved protection , ine been ably and eloquently supported by Mr. to France and Holland , and by this suicidal act raise ths Wood Common : at Mr. Barbor's at seven o'clock. seeing that it is the most valuable of all property, national one on that account. It was before the the Lord Mayor of Paris. — M'Grath, who was rapturously applauded during his whole people ma rkets in the very depots from which our merchants finding that there were invincible ob- Richnansworth: at the Cart and Horses, at seven producing, as it does, and rendering useful every , and therefore was, in the truest sense, Louis Philippe, lengthy address. ;v national petition were to draw their supplies ? Pshaw! the Whi gs wmu to the marriage of bis son with the queen , so o'clock.—3Iilc End : at the Golden Cross , at seven other descri ption of property, (Great app lause. ) : the whole people had the power gUWes The National Petition was proposed by Mr. if they had the will ever the enemies of Ireland—and evi r will be, no matter cards that he has forced her into a marriage o'clock Wolvefhotmpton, at Mr Allen's, Russell The Reform Act was, from beginning to end a mere , to sign it, With respect to the plavedli is . . Willis, master tailor, seconded by Mr. Williamson , licket Bill—if what their profession may be. Of two evils we would and ma. , a 'clock. farce, but he remembered the time, when if you had the Government had received proper trim a man who can have no hope of offspring, Street, near Merridale Street t seven o and supported by Mr. T. Clark, who propounded the information choose the least , and by all means give us Sir Robert , the next TUESDAY EVENING. ventured to doubt the Patriotism of its authors, , it only showed the more their incapa- SMUvres lo mrrry his son to her younger sister theory of Chartism in a manner -rvhicli convinced city to gov..rn. l'eel, a statesman of courage and action — a statesman , There is a callousness of Greenwich: at Mr. Paris's, Cold Bath, at eight Lords Grey and Russell, you would have stood an Tho Ticket Bill was like all other in the order of succession. all present of the benefits which would result from laws, it required hundreds of lawyers whoknows how .to take the nation out of its presen t ditfi feeling in this procedure , a moral filthmess , a reckless- o' clock.—Chelsea : Cheshire Cheese . Grosvenor -r ow. excellent chance of being ducked in a horse pond, to explain it. culties —a statesman who will not Keep the luoa 01" «iu its embodiment in the form ofla>v. The petition If the people had the power to make laws he had no ness of consequences , that is revolting in the extreme. at eight o'clock. Wldtechapd: Brass Founders' or being tarred and feathered, (hear, hear,) but the , poopla under look and key while the poor aro left to dia was unanimously adopted. After winch, three doubt they would be plain and easy, and would not All the moral abe rrations which doubtless await the un- Arms, Tuesday evening at eight o'clock. delusion was now manifest, the errors of the Reform by the ditches along the highways, or el se ha ve recourse cheers were given for the Charter ; three for Mr. require any vampires, such as lawyers are, to ex- fortunate young woman who has been the victim of WEDNESDAY EVENISG. Act was acknowledged on nil hands. (Oeers.) O'Connor and the Northern Star ; and three foi plain them. to plundering their neighbour;, by killing their cattle to flhes eplots, may fairl y he charged npon Louis Philip pe. Aberdeen: the office-bearers mec-t at half-past The principle on which the Reform Act was based, uso them for foor1. Such tinkering as fhis was noo Brighton : was the vicious one of money ; thus a wealthy shop- Messrs. M'Grath and Clark. There wa3 the greatest good feeling towards Mr. Sis conduct is tainted with some profligate abus e of seven, at No. 1, Flour Mill-lane Hall.— Woodward. known in Sir Robert Peel's days—i t was reserved for the same disregard of the sanctity of No. 2 at No. 3 Charles-street, at eight o'clock. Old keeper might at night go to bed comparatively SWINDON. natural impulses ; , , A vote of thanks was then Lord John and his co-partners. We regret being obli ged and no- Kent Road Sumy, at the Eagle Brewery, Neat wealthy, and consequently an Elector, but during Glorious Meeting.—On Monday evening last, given to the mayor for the marriag e connexion that stained the Court , the use of the hall , and one to the omake these remarks ; they 111 a forced upon us by be- before the Evolution , Louis Philippe Street, Coburg Road, at eight o'clock. the night a barrel of turpentine or oil takes fire, his ihe " Odd Fellows' Hall," was crowded to hear Chairman ; three blesse of Fr ance cheers were giveu for Frost, Williams, and Jones ; holding the poor ac tually staggering in our streets for is a moral man ia his femil y circle, after the fashion of THURSDAY EVENING. shop or warehou-e is burnt down, his property is Me3srs. M'Grath and Clark deliver addresses on the three for F. want of food, and crying for work , which they are not ' House Church- destroyed, and with it his intelligence, for the benefits to be derived from joining the Chartist Co- O'Connor and the Northern Star; and old George III. His queen is a pious lad;; fastidious Shoreditch: at Chapman s Coffee three for Dunoombe. -stting ; while we behold Sappers and Miners (hurried ; a great street, at eight o'clock. Old Kent Road, at the Bee- morning finds him poor,and consequently too ignorant operative Land Society. Mr. Clark first addressed on the score of her female acquaintances The greatest enthusiasm prevailed t rom Engl and at the dead hour of night , so pres ^iug was missions to the Heathen,—ice to sensual Hive Tavern, Cobourg Road, at eight. to give a vote. (Great cheering.) The resolution the meeting and was listened to with breathless at- during the pro- he emergency considered) walking up and down our patranness of ceedings. We never had a meeting better attended affections, of a seraphic glow of devotion. The young called on them to combine, co-operate, and '' centra- tentipn , all seeming anxious to learn the particulars str eets, as if they had no other business but to divert the the Haslet as» Sheltow—The weekly meeting of lise" their power, but in the letters of Richard of this labour redeeming Institution. in this place, though only addressed by our own Duchessof Montpensier will be brought to a home of Society will be held townsmen. hunger of starving Paddy by gazing on them as they pass of the V:carage of TVake- the Chartist Cooperative Land Oastler in the Northern Star of Saturday last, he Mr. M'Grath supported his colleague in one of his by. Again purest sentiment,—a facsimile in future on Friday evenings, at seven o'clock, at , we are favoured with the presence of those £eld. She will there be taught, in Christain charity, to perceived that the principle of" Centralisation" was usual and effective speeches. line men, the Enniskillen Dra goons, who have been sent their usual meeting place«. The shareholders are re- condemned, now he told Richard Oastler, and them, At the close of the proceedings several questions hate her sister, as that pattern-woman, her mother-in- directors and local ex- here by the Whiggoveniment to assist tut. .armers to eat and to be equally un- quested to pay their levies for thai, it was not " Centralisation" that was bad, but were put and satisfactorily answered. The Great Britain.— All the attempts which up their grain law, hated the Dnchess de Bern, peneea, that the secretary may make up bis accounts crop . They are brave-looking men, and scrupulous in the means she takes to lay bare that sis- its misdirection. (Hear, hor.) He would illustrate Mr. D. Morrison proposed a vote of thanks to both liare been made to float the Great Britain having we fancy the heroes of Waterloo , if any of them still -when with the directors. his arguments; under the New Poor-law, wealth and speakers and in so doing challenged any man to Failed, the general conclusion seems to be that tho grace the troops in Mayo ter's weaknesses to the world. Aad she and her the members of the , we find it not altogether the from which her sister has Bradford.— On Sunday, power had " centralised" for the oppression of the come forward and discuss the question with him. total loss of this splendid vessel is now inevitable. part of a noble bearing on the duty of men who shed husband mount the throne Chartist Co-operative Land Society and Chartist been—remove d, Louis Philippe and his queen will say, poor, this was undoubtedly bad—(hear, hear)—but The vote of thanks was carried by acclamation and Lieut. Gabriel of the Royal Navy, is, however, dif- lustre on Eng land' s banners on the 18tl of June , to Association will meet in their rooms, at Butterworth- on the other hand, the Operative Coal Miners of the the meeting separated. Icrcntly impressed. He thinks she may be released with the unc tion of a brace of Tartuffes , Thus God re- buildings, at two o clock in the afternoon. stain their blades with the blood of a star ving populace. \fards purity and continence. And, perhaps , the pair of ' North, had combined and " centralised" their power, BATn. from her present position. Having taken an active Agai n , we behold troops passing throug h ouv streets , and Nobth Brieblt. —A public meeting will be lu£d y been enabled to employ their at- part hi the rescue of her Majesty ' shams may not have enough of nnperverted conscience room of the Faint and had thereb On Tuesday evening last, the large room of the s steamer Gorgon, billettcd upon the inhnbitauts , on tlieir route to othe r in theJar^e Revived Inn, North torney, Mr. W. P. Roberts, who by his legal acu- the opinion of this officer is entitled to respect. left to feel that the whole shame and criminality of the Brierly, near Horton Bank Top, on Sunday, (to-mor- " Porter Butt Inn," was crowded to suffocation to localities in Mayo ; this warlik e preparation while the transaction is theirs, and that their motives have been of men, ability, and perseverance, had thrown down •' There can be no doubt," hesnys, in .1letter to the agents on estates are holding ottices in the town for the row,) at five o'clock in the evening. Mr. (Thomas trampled on injustice and upheld the hear the Land plan of the Chartists explained by Northern Whi the lowest and most sordid cha racter . Theirs is th e oppression, , Messrs. Clark and M'Grath, two of the directors, g, " in tho minds of any scientific collecting of rents ! And all this, as we before hay the decorous mistress of Mann, the proprietor, has kindly offered the use of juat rights of Labour ; this was undoubtedly good. men , but that she may be saved, and that without stated , while the people are kept idle! While the people true morality of a Genlis, the lodge room, on Sunday evenings, to the Chartist who had come from London for that purpose. Both family with his wife, teaching (Immense applause,) Again, the Clmraists had trusting to the treacherous spring tides. Every per- are left to die! Oh, Egalite, who lived in the and Land Associatiens. The Northern Star, O'Con- gentlemen delivered lenghty addresses which were fatal humbug—oh, unstutesmanlike moral precepts aBd be externally " centralised" their power in the Chartist Co-opera- son who has visited her has expressed his doubts as delusion ! his children to mouth nor's Work on Small Farms, will be read every Sun- pence, loudly applauded. A second meeting is to be held decorous. Prance never can tolerate a king with a Pa re tive Land Society, they had subscribed their to-night (Wednesday) for the adoption of the Na- to her ultimate fate ; and the genera l opinion ap- day evening. Mr. Smith and others will attend the which grew to pounds until in its aggregation it now pearing to prevail is, that she may The Lvmenck Examiner sings to the same tune, mi Cerfs; but neither can that dynasty be permanent , tional Petition. be give imp as a though in notes somewhat le:S harsh than its western with meeting. Lectures on various subjects will be de- amounted to the noble sum of £16,000—the result of total loss. From the fiisfc moment which is mere ly moral in externals , and tampers livered during the winter. I was made contemporary :— of the former one, not from passion, which was the pretty state " O'Connorville," and acquainted with the exact position of the Great the voluptuousness Carrisgtos Co-operative Land Society.—The However unpalatable it may he, we are beund to repeat mercantile speculation. the once degraded, despied Chartists, were now ad- GREAT MEETING AT NOTTINGHAM FOR Britain , I stated that she could be got off; since but as a members of the above branch are requested to at- proprietary of which our loudest condemnation of the manner in which the awfully mitted to be a portion of the landed THE ADOPTION OF THE NATIONAL PE- , my opinion has not boen altered one iota ; We agree with the writer in Teat,t hat the tend, at the New Inn, on Saturday next, October this great empire. (Vehement cheering.) Believ- and the more I see, the more I am convinced , that it emergency of the moment has been met. The firs t ex- the at- 24th, at eighto'clock, on business of the utmost im- TITION. traordinary baronial ses.-ions under the 10th of Victoria, critical state of Ireland much more demands ing that the adoption of the measure asked for in the On Monday evening a meeting was held in the it is the general wish of the parties concerned in her portance. "We meet every Saturday night, at eight she may be again afloat, for the county of Clare held at Broadford on the iention of English statesmen than do the filthy in- resolution, would tend to the comfort, convenience, Town Ha'l of this town for the purpose of adopting fate, My plan of proceeding o'clock, for the purpose of enrolling members. and happiness of themselves, their wive3 and families, with respect to thi3 ship is founded on purely scien- Xith of September , now one month ago ! At triguesat Paris and Madrid. Bradford.—The members of the National Char- the National Petition. The Hall was crowded to those sessions it was considered necessary i.i pass a num- he had much pleasure in moving its adoption .— excess- tific princi ples." The ordinary session of the Dutch Legislaturevas ter Association are requested to meet, in the large (Great applause.) 1« ber of presentments , amountin g to £'40,000. Up ta tho Hope-street, • On the motion of Mr. Sweet, Mr. Charles Roberts Storm in rakce.—The Marseilles mail of the lGth opened by the king in person on Monday last. The room of the Woolcombers' Arms, on Mr. John Gathard in seconding the motion related ar rived in I'aris one day later than usual . beginning of this week not a man had been set to work of great was called to the chair. He opened the meeting by There in that district , and when 3 few were employed they merely Sunday next, at five o'clock, on business the trite anecdote of the musician and the organ * was a violent storm on the evenings , speech contains nothing Tery remarkable, the Land Society reading tlie handbill convening it, and requested a of the lftli and tu rned outagainAtthe 8il.a--day the iWaths from tion of their principles he would venture to enter of for those who used it to oppress them, and then cessity for the national committee in Dublin, which or impurity of any atmosphere in which he miuht be Land Society meet every Monday evening, at the , they could force their claims upon any Government. starvations, of one man in Skibberten , of t«» in C.istle- placed. The varietiesof eudiometers were all care- same time and place, to enrol members, and receive into an exposition of those great principles. Mr. he regretted had not been taken up by the landlords; liavcn. of one in Maerooni, of one in the county of Ciare, principles of This was a land of Bibles and parsons. There were and gave the usual cut at the Young Ireland party. fully explained by the learned gentleman, and the subscriptions. Stallwood then lucidly explained the whole armies of parsons going forth to teach man and the letter of the Rev. Mr. M Hale , detailing accounts •proper formula;for the People's Charter, evidently to the satistaction The Hon. Mr. Lawless then defended himself,, in Where calculating the amount of oxygen Glasgow.—Forthcojiixo Confbrehce.—A public his duty to his fellow, yet the greatest amount of of numerous dea ths from alike cause in Mayo . , as well as a watery vapour and were and deljght of the meeting, as evinced by the atten- reply to certain charges levelled against him by Mr. are the i-uporteil pro- carbonic acid meeting of the .'inhabitants of Glasgow, will be held misery and destitution existed. If the parsons were in the name-of God and humniity, most simply communicated. The principles of ven- 27, St. Andrew s- tion paid and the applause elicited. O'Neill at a former meeting. After which Mr. visions for the peop le—the wages of labour to feed tho in Murdoch's school-room , No. sincere, why did they not set about in real earnest to O'Neill made a speech,.declaring his perfect satisfac- tilation, recently so warmly contested, were also purpose of nominating delegates to Mr. Ernest Jones then addressed the meeting at crying wretehes in their -dark hovels, wlio li ft tlieir frar- Tery carefully square for she bring about a better state of things ? why did they tion with tho explanation of Mr. Lawless. The two for Sl;j>t mercy tlenifd and philosophically explained so as to represent them at the forthcoming Land Conference. considerable length, setting forth the necessary ten- not Bet about remedying the social condition of tho ful and eadave rous &ees to heaven Meet the com worthies then went through the farqe of shakmg and na tnruL jjunn luMs and pro- prehension of the most ignorant among Members are particularly invited to attend. [Our dency of class-government, as leading to the gradual people ? They preached against worldly riches ; but them here by their rulers the audien hands. sink of listening t» all the details of a ce. We trust these lectures, so well correspondent does not say when the meeting will be declension of the working and shop-keeping classes, they take the, " dangerous stuff themselves, and tectors r We are adapted for the The rent was announced to bo MM.] that is to be , for procu ring food— nf non-inter- instruction of the numerous class of held.] and establishing a numerous body of rich paupers, leave the heaven tor you." If the- people had politi- tnichisery, visitors who visit this truly admirable Institution will meet living on the industrious, while it fills the work- cal power, they would not have bishops with their P02CLAR DISCCWUKJJT. ference with free -trade in pvovisious—of the slang of cn- be of Gorbaw are requested to masfcincts— 1^ roving commissioners who i2o continued for some time. The Chartists houses with daily increasing numbers of their vic- tens of thousands prayers for the Dublin, Oct. 15. —-The proceedings of a baronial ginsening , Great Clyde-Terrace, on Tues- a-vear comwiHin? ignorant or inettu -ient boards who write at the Wheafaheaf tims. Mr. E. Jones then expatiated on the form to avert a famine sessions held this week in the countiy. of Wexi'ord nothing—o f clock. people to offer np to Almighty God, letters—and tho qti/ickery of governmen tal day night, at 8 o' of government best calculated to ensure a just sys- they themselves had created. It was said that pro- furnish another instance of the difficulties which voluminous every Wednesday individual wisdom, whiu li , stt down in good set terms , Besevolesce op the Late Premier. The fol- REABixo.-Meetings are held tem of legislation, and proved that the Charter was perty would be- insecure if the people had the fran- beset even the best intentioned proprieters, and isr — Mr. Turner'a, Temperance Wexford can boast of a more than a\*arage share meet the public -eyeanil engage the public ear every day ; owlng instance (says the Suffolk Chronicle) of Sir evening at8 o'clock, at in the document best calculated to produce sueb a re- chise, Tlii3\vas all nonsense. In democratic states fiobert Peel's unobtrusive benevolence was men- SCs, WesVstreet when a te.on sult. Mr. E. Jones then set forth the advantages property was as secure as in England. He thought of such, in thair endeavours to atneliovatft the con- while all the timo rain and stavvntton sire allowed to run lace, to which the among thcpop.ulntiwi , am\ death in its most hideoua tioned by Mr. Wilderspin, in the course of his connexion with the land takes p which would follow the adoption of that measure as that if the people had politica l power all classes dition of the peasantry* At the'sessions in question riot 1 respectfully invited. the law of the land, and demonstrated by the clearest a sum of 130,000 was passed, half of which far forms liiys low its victim. lecture at the Ipswich Mechanics Institution, on public are would be banished. 1 Tuesday evening. We give it in the speaker's own meeting'of Share- argument that it would heal all those wounds under the resolution. He said, works calculated to aford immediate employment, Under tho head of " State of the country/ " and Masciiestbb.—The adjourned The Mr. Gregory seconded and tho remainder for- drainage. Liberal wages words;—" Some of you have heard of Haydon, the ' Institute, will be held on which our body politic was now suffering. that truth was mighty—it was all powerful; truth was tho first in order of a series of extracts detailing tho holders of the People s lause was bestowed on. the speaker wore promised , and all went off satisfaotorialy until painter, and, eo doubt, yon have heard that Sir Sunday, (to-morrow,) the 25th mst, at two o dock most marked app making rapid strides, and he was confident would progress ol' distress in tho j .rovinecs, tho PlLOT Robert Peel, the late Prime Minister of England, during his address, which he concluded amid the ultimately prevail. The peop le were becoming more the day 's business, had concluded, and magistrates gives the following instance of tho effoeis of the in the afternoon . meeting. and otber gentleoien assembled had gone away, when, sent that man £30 in his distress. It ought te^be instruction class has been reiterated cheers of the sober, more thinking ; a better spirit existed among famine : i nown, b L1VERP00L.- A mutual unanimously. wisked they would forsake the public- says tho report in tho local paper,— Phillips-town Tuesda y, O ct. 13.—This day I was :'l« y my moving about the country in this formed here. Mr. Win. Jones will lecture on Sun- •The resolution was put and carried them. He , manner—and house. He did not like kings, but he should like to A number 'ji poor men who remained became loud in severa l crcdiblo and respec- I never thought of self, for I always day evening. October 23, at Mr. FarraU s, Tempe- Mr. William Hkwitt read and moved the adoption formed , ou the authority uf lad faith that my countrymen would not allow me to Chair to be see Feargus O'Connor king for one month, in order complaining, of tlieir privations, and desiring to know t abl e persons , of a fact which strikingly man ifests the rance Hetel, No. 4, Carzenau Street. of the National Petition. well as die in a union, and that the Almighty would not that he might level the " gin palaces." from ther/ublic officers what had been done for their re- awful destruction to which the food of man , as taken at seven o'clock. , in a few words shewing the ad- the neigh- allow me to ask for the commoa necessariesof life— Mr. SrRATioN Mr. Sweet proposed the second resolution :— lief. O-.io man spoke at some length, mingling menaces of the birds of the ai r , has been subje cted. In Ross from London, vantages of united efforts, seconded its adoption, and this town and Eden- *hat 1 had spent all my money. I -was at last re- Htodebsfield.—Mr. David That it is the opinion of this meeting, that the BUI en- with expressions of disappointment. They were not, he bourhood of Ball y Wney, between will deliver Science, on Sun- it \f aa carried unanimously, large trees winch *«. *.. duoed to the utmost extremity. I wanted a crust of a lecture in the Hall of titled the People's Charter is an embodiment of thoprin. s«.idt in a condition to wait any longer for employment. berry, there is a grove of day evening (to-morrow), 25, 1846. Snbject— re Sti«gplace •' •» »«««»• oread, yet I kept the secret within my own breast. Oct. A committee was then formed. ciplcs of equal representation, with details for securing 1 liey had no food for themselves or for their families. immen oriai has bun the The Land. ni ht the people of the locality I set out for an obscure village, where I thought I Chairman, and mooting therefora agrees They were honest men, and were willing to earn the numbernumoe r uof "crows ; last g A vote of thanks was given to the their beneficial operation ; this a^.in.0 « h cont i,,uous cne a would end my days. A friend called npon me. And The sext General Delegate Meeting op Lanca.- , earning. But, if they were alarm ed aim kepi .> v vj the meeting separated. to the presentation of a National Petition, praying Par. price of food, if they could get it for and at day,inmbrwtxsvuRii | Y5J J "when I le shilling in my house, when I shtbs Misers will be held on Monday, the 2nd of ttaoy must take it where they and screa ming of these birds ; o^ !&, |3Ai had not a sing liament to render the document aforesaid a statute ol could not get it for earning, repaired to lace lad , for 1 felt I should degrade Nov., at the housB of Mr. , sign, of tt.e morning (Tuesday ) many people tfiep ^™- nothing to offer him Jamea Ormrod this reahn. could fiud it. The gentlemen were now gone, without when my when my poor dog Four Gates, Westhoughton. at ascer afn the cause of the disturbance, 3$f{&b/ MM cause by running into debt, Chair to be taken 11 He said,—-We have met en an important occa sion havingdone anything to afford them support for this day large^numberft-of was , £50 came from the o'clock in the forenoon. There OLDHAM. and tell them astonishment and alarm , they beheld 7» as tain as my children will also bo a p' iblic a very Petitioning is the only means by which wo can mak< or the next. But they could follow them, *;being Prime Minister , Sir Robert Peel. Thus meeting (should the weather be favourable) 'which On Sunday last, Mr. Robert Wild delivered in one way or another— dead crows lying upon the ground, whioh,Yon,; _ - ,;.^V of England of the our cause known. All understood the 7.'eople'i that they must have support reduced^O Bkelatons : " 5ou see there whom he has benefited. will be addressed by W. P. Roberts truth telling address, in the school-room , they must Have exnmined , appeared to have been . jfe are two men , Esp ., ar.d seve- ; the address was listened te Charter ; but if there should be some who did not that, unless they «ok it for their labour '" One is now in and the ether Is the ral other gentlement. Chair to be Working Man's Hall gone, by hunger, ana to have been actually starved to-d«atJ»,'j '^H the eternal world, tvken at three satisfaction. he trusted they would before they left tb/j meeting it at all events. Mr. Doyno was now humble individual who stands before you." p.m. with great attention and general .^< * r^fe) mf " OctobM 24, 1846 , . THE NORT HER N STAR.

¦ ¦ ¦ ^ — .:Z ! — threat the time my eyesight was nearly gone to put me KEIGIILET. mother and sister he would hare carried his in a way and to signify the urgent necessity there is for TIIE TURN-OUT AT nearly to get my living ! Tonx-our of iabourers. "Fcrgus , the r- sidence of Mr. Hugh Painter HicUman , de- dition, into execution, After abusing the man with immediate employment ; yet after the sessiors sittings Billingsgate Mr. Bell then goes on to relate certain transactions puty lieutenan * , and son-in-law BRITAIN. every term and title to be found in the On SaturJay all the labourers employed on the , late high sheriff of Clare for two days, but little has been done—delay is the order TO I'HE TRADES OF good and which took place at a meeting for the " Ten Hours Bill new Munpct-road, in Limerick, struck for an of the Lord Bishop of Meath. Having first placed senti- vocabulary, he at last lamented that their ," ad- enter ed the of the das, and the people die for want of tho means to that had bitten and torn so many at Hey wood, and says that my excuse for not meeting him •vance of wages. The sum paid was lOu* ., nels on the domestic s of the house, they WoBKMEif -ATinany of you may be still trusty old dog, but the commenced a procure food. It wouldbe naturally supposed that there Fellow- . was not present, or otherwise he swore that he would was that I had thrown the matter into the hands of the •workmen estimated their services at nearly double dining room , and calling for fire-a rms, had been sufficient' time since the first meeting ainted with the cause of our present struggle - Hickm an, who "- to make unacqu have worried him to death on the premises. The South Lancashire delegates, and deliberately states that ¦value, or Is. 6d. The latter k paid in several dis- mostfurious attack upon Mr. •^jj all the necessary preparations our employers, we, the woolcomberci ot fteij>h- complete ^powered ; yet another adjourn- with attention to conduct ot this ruffian proves amongst other things, " to this arrangement I hava never been asked to be & tricts where incn are put at task work. The Cork fused to deliver uphUm unta fea ment has been made till Monday, and 'tis feared ley moat respectfully beg to call your correspondence will show head , when Mrs. n.ckma n, r- still grievances. that it requires a Keighley manufacturer and a bull- party." The following how- Constitution says :— by several blows on his further obs'aeles will be thrown in the way of expediting the following brief statement of our this is true and also show that Mr. Bell was aware ful of the result, pointed out «^f" thousands of men dog to worry a woolcomber. A correspondence be- far , of Thursday morning the ring leaders of tlie labour ers who *££^£ the works. Our business, which employs many Trades and the combers has com- the fact, when he sent the deputation to me at that time,. part of Yorkshire in the manufacture of wor- tween the United had turned out at Yonghal for increased wages, again o{£ IMPLOTSIEST OS BBATSAOE. in this menced, and it is hoped that the whole body will In the letter which appeared in the Star of the 10th inst, musttre J , newed™^S£ their brute i a S2 ^££brea king ^ one hig goods, has been gradually growing worse for this and refused to work for tlie pre scribed wages, ^ sted very soon be united with'that association. Mr. Bell says "I have also prevailed upon the Chartist 1OJ. per flay- They marched thro P that this outrage upon the per. It is stated that the government are endeavouring number of years ; partly owing to the un protected ugh the town with ItTs feared to obtain the valuable assistance of Mr. Smith Council to write to address the same request." By this it their spades and shovels, out to the rLr ^ ^ in the midst of his own , of nature of the business, but more especially to the country, and halted "a country gentleman, Deanston, in superintending the vast projects for would appear that Mr. Bell had put his case into tho near Gartroe. Their object was to fofo" the first of a series m the coming method of late adopted by the manufacturers of to make the necessary induce thi: labourers, J?" -, drde. is but drainage now in preparation in all parts of the skill and labour hands of the Heywood Council from tbat parish to accompany them iato th« town for which the general avidity to possess fire-arms mixing wool, requiring additional arrangements for the final settlement of this matter, Itt winter nnd country. giving proportionate wages. These causes the purpose of intimid ation , fimiins thev could n.-t ruc- will embolden those parties to follow up. without coro*jwiflmw» consequence of which they sent the following :— ceed tluy slunk back into MEETING IN FEKM0I. combined have injured our trade so far as to "-educe small parties. Oh Fri day The limerick Chronicle, from which the above is were Heywood, August lOtb, 1846. xnorn insr, Mr. Curtin , the overseer of the Board of Works The Cork Examiner says :— our earnings to about one-half of what they taken, also wntain9 the following :— a good workman AN IRISH REPEALER'S DEFENCE OF THE Dear Sir,—We are sorry to inform you tha t the asser - met a large number of them on the Korih Commons, " We are happ y to announce that a most important , twenty years ago, and it now takes CHARTER. tions that you and others made at the Middleton meeting from "A tro »p of the 8th Hussars from this garri son pro- per week by working extremely and sho*v«l ti«at it was impossible for him to depart and , we feel convinced , valuable meeting will be held in to earn ten shillings have caused much uneasiness amongst the members o£ bat that lie c«ek. Tlie .M., , agitated work , the navigation of the Blackwater . This, corobers , but have always told us that nothing docks assembled at 3 o clock, -nrben Mr. Hugh Palliser Hick- ¦ EDIT OE OP THE NORTHERN BXAB. your assertions or retract thrm, or be will placard the labourers have =dso consente d to wor k, mm the ' ro far as we can glean from some private letters now be done for our relief till the passing of the Corn T» THE win , Leyne, and other magistrates, ad- town of Hejwood setting you down as a public liar. trill \K cleared ia a proptr manner , as over 103 meu man D.L.. Captain before ns, is to be the principal object of the meet- Law and Free Trade measures. Sir ) The following is a copy of a letter which I sent an J sangwaj *. All dressed the multitude, exhorting them to peace and for. all-impor- but that worthy who professes Signed on behalf of the Committee, be placed there, with suitab le wages ing, besides appointing a deputation to proceed to On the settlement of these mighty and to Duffey, of the Nation, James Butterwo hth , Secretar y. orderl y, if more wor^ be hoarar.ee, and assuring them that in a very few days they employers, re- free discussion" would not conde- bow promises to beqaiet and Dublin to lay before the authorities the opinions and tant questions, we waited upon our to be a stickler for " James Milne , Treas urer. unem ployed. would be all «-raployed under the Board of Works. Ever- of the meeting. While tho object them of their promise, and moat respect- it insertion nor even to acknowledge its pr ovided, as several are still off resolutions of the minding scend to give , —Please to let us know if you will meet Jfr . Bell thin ^ passed quietl y, b"t the murmurs of the destitute requesting them to advance our miserable Please to find a place for it in the columns of F. S. TrrrEiUKT.-Ata presentment sessions held for meeting may be thus defin ed, it is not to be supposed fully receipt. in this town and make gsod your assertions or retract labourers , as they reluctantl y dispersed , evinced much entertained during the day halfpenny per pound upon some kinds of tbat bas strictly advocated tne pure the barony of Clanwilliam. Air. Hunt, tiie stipen- but that the subjects will wages to a the only organ them. tbat he had to inform the dissatisfac tion at the delay of relief measures. A horse embrace the present deplorable condition of the coun- wool, and to three farthings upon others. They all, principles of democracy, since the Northern Star, the dary magistrate, stated morning. Last night two but lamented that we put down in Ireland, On the receipt of this 1 acted as I have 'always done in ofthe stewards, whe had heen was shot at Blackwater this try, and the nature of tko remedies provided to meet as usual, pitied our condition, Press, and the Union Star were magistrates that two sheep, the propert y of Mr . Standish O'Grad y, of Land- soon tho Free Trade measure not 1798 by ths infernal all questions of a public nature , consulted with the Char - plaosd in the charge of public works in this barony, it," were rather too , previous to the insurrection of . attacked. One was tired at openly ; scape, were killed in the field, and the carcases taken bavin" got into full operation. We again waited upon government of that day. It is nonsense for the work- tist body, who thought that as the statements were wade Ii i d lately been corn buyer named Ilogan was FABM LABOUR —THE POTATO CROP. when three of them very or young x.ne oiher where he lodged, at Donehiil ; there away. The horse of a , , them m a few weeks after , ing people to expect justice from either the old before the assembled Chartists of South Lancashire , and fired into the room where he was shot at Ballyvally, near Killaloe, for having brought corn The same paper states : " As the time of early readilvcomplied, partially, with our request, by grant Ireland party ; In a word they are " rogues , all." not before any particular locality, that in justice to both •were foar shots a horse belonging to Mr. Robert , the cottier and tenant halfpenny, and promising sleeping. to murket. Saturday, sewing approaches farmers in in" a farthing instead of a Yours respectfully, parties the South. Lancashire delegates should be called le they MIOIIAEL SEGRAVE. THE XATIOSAL TRIBUTE. Frost was fired at and wounded. this part of tho country appear to have aroused that if the others would fellow their examp together as soon as possible , I, therefore, wrote to the ULSTER. from their late inactivity. Within the last few days give nstheremainder. The othermanufacturers OF THE NATION. Heywood Council to that effect. The Cork Constitutionasks , 'Is it true that Mr. would TO THE EDITOE the process of digging and cleansing out the potato to imitate the example so honourably set by On the "26th of August the post br ought me a letter O'Connell mil not this year sanction the custcniarj Distress is increasing in the Northern province, reftisine body, Sir , I rejoice to learn tha t you have succeeded bo far fields, to prepare for the next year, has become ge- three of the most respectable of their own from Mr. Bell and one from the Council. collection ? And adds :— which, in nrdinarv seasons of scarcity, had been com- left; ; in bearding the despotism ofthe Loyal Aristocratic Re- adopte d neral." compelled us reluctantly to adopt the only couras This is a copy of ifr. Bell's :— This disinterested determination is because Of paratively free from suffering. Empmtment labour till they com- peal Association. As you are on the side of free discus- fob tiie PEOPLE.—The circular road namely, that of withholding our letter Mills Lane, Heywooa, i^e popular inabilit y to pay, aa