,l^^^:-4iP*i^^ ~ ci^S!^^«t^' '- . ' " -2-' t f j ~' ': ' ij' £LJr ' : - -j Z*<^ S^^§r- : ¦ v ':: ' " :'-: SS^i^vc; ;\-;.;-;j'; .; i'j :!- - 'VTI- ..' - - -- y : r: ¦::~ ~ -. ¦ \ . -'k. -*- *^ t \^A^^§J .i .¦?:;-: ¦ :;- . ¦¦¦ ' -'SH-"^ ^ ;'^.C T - ... rT- : .lf ^ * i .^'€r£j ?+_j *?. S^^m^ r-p ** -

' ' ¦ ¦?; ;¦¦ " ¦ " : : - '; - • : - . . -- ...... - . - --•fc^'J ^ ^ ' ^^ • *'' ^- -- >f -"yj **^^ Hereditary ¦- ¦ ¦¦ " ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ : ¦ ¦: ¦ ¦ ¦ ~ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ _^ " bohdsinen, knovf^ ye not, ¦ . " - "" -:. • " ..•"' .'"*"•" ' : " ' ' ' •! ;^ ': "' " V'Wm " .', . - .. ' ..) ' . ¦! j- '" ' . .. . • . " ' '.. '-.. -'* ' :.'i' ' -' - . . ' " r i HX 's :!>\ 'JF *¦ ," ' .: i T: /;*:/ ')¦¦ '¦ . ¦! \T'. ' - -. ' :' - " " " ' Who vvbuld be -free himself must strike the blow V 0 tr e princi ; ¦ Onward and we conquer ! ^.•Lft " ples .of doiiioewC}', aiid if he . ¦ ; $59£ T.wt*-e;,i^ . Backward and we fall! "»P House oft " ^ ; Tmj .PEOPLE' . . domnions,%he; would bear aristocratic ^t S CHARTER AND SO ' ¦ "¦'¦ ' SURltEXDER!" - S&£-4$&^,;y-^^ Of ,*$> • * fMIife ^y*.-^ TO THE OLD GUARDS. ^-aorotion. (loud.,:hml^c6nrih*oeu*olfeefiiiR) -^";f Loved and c oe*^^tnictii^t:hemM», Honoures Comrades, . jeet£?,! antil ^henY ^ We have fought many and nllf^uld<:t&.; shel{ei*iu3fe many a battle -Moturp^iving, he wouirabandon :, ' ' - . together—and, although some hpjwould accep allbblitical^twfel^- • have deserted t ofnc¦ ither gi-atuitynorSi'e onr standard, others are immured in the dun- AisvsDrvices, .but, like - QUbitiM^ Oiri£Si^^)S««bE^**--'> geon, and some prematurely consigned to tlie .WPii?Wfi!».fJ>;.:.t1>:; !•!» ploygli, - nnd- opeh'-M^ilfel - ^ cold .breast^;|fatu^-chddrcn; lie;w6uld bo -iWlwsm^^1^-^' grave, yet ; l ; ¦ :bailiffbf,-Qi'e- tailing ' ' •iUi,,- AU.-P; - ' '^ nrillio^^vhbTjwould bcdcc^E^^^-'- V'' • -"Freedom 's hattlc once begun, :60&. ' L01DON SiTIIBBAY fflill^ 1849 v 'i^- :::: :^ now barren' land ; w*it!^^ -.- .;,. " Bequeailied by bleeding " ¦ - steads':; be would placc^ffl- at reproductive sire to son, : ' ¦- ¦ ¦ 1 ¦ ~ ' ' " " " " ' * -r- iab%ffif%A?X "# - T----' ' - - - " ¦-•""""'' ' ' ', , ¦ -' ¦¦ ¦ • ¦;¦ ¦ i ¦ ¦ "¦— ' ¦ ¦ m^. | r * _ ' uunisonnison with fl» m.,.i. :„t-n.-x - " r.ro .. -; ,...-. - - ....- . - . :v- . .. - -'^•'"--. . -' " -";^ TSSJjkS i :- :- ¦ . ¦; . . - ¦:" . .'. . - •: . ' •-.•>¦.... ,. . — . ... Tho baffled oft is ever won !" the march of^ intellect and pro- lification to which I have alluded made law* ¦irinkihg 'the' now idle, ppSdiiifers of food .aiid :ce\m0fii gress . ( Hear, and ¦ ! | power ,would\havG its due influence\upom theiru'er ':ah^': ^ I adopt the motto of Daniel than any other people upon the hear.) My indignation grows apace, when I reflect n^?be would inlividualise it. A sumeb of manufactures/ , he:yvqiilU ask n6^re;^4f4r O'Connell, fece of the preventatives.. ( Hear, hoai\ ) : . If, as he had antici- - ; '' * ":. earth ;Avhile upon the great powers of that mi hty- mass of in- Cabiiiei^inistev receives £5,000 . . ward beyond what' : such a lieavchly sight cpuldi^f but do not nse it in the physical. sense, but as , as regai*ds physical force 'and g a^ year; or pated, Fiuan'cial Reform was to b'e'urgcd aii'd.pres' ' 'f- ' ' tellect which is excluded by the present nearl bOO setl bestow ; when 'his heart Svas gladdciJo^a 'thd:si|fiiC' -.- "^ emblematical of the time aims, they differ from all other nations. electoral y aXweelc^ha^^at'llO^iiweek as ofimmediate necessity, he would have hailed' (^ ; because if Labour In a. law. .The GREATEST class of the greatest ^ - it as of cheerful -and domestic .wives, of sober,: indjiS-^'S.i physical revolution in people would sunportatw^ ahd^at a L'corruj^^^ " "- ¦ does not now strike^^ tb.e^lo*,>vmcriisto shake other countries many of in the world are at this very moment nearl ; > :,ti'ious, and contented "husband , surrounded by then??, '^v . v y the only fi ve- to|$£fdmii : ? sure;,*^bnf ;-wh6ri it!;was 'c'6mmir^e"d-;t6Vl;'h%'' ' ' " '¦ ¦ off its manaclesand shacTdes the aristocracy, a portion of the middle persons throughout Europe that are , y ' -d^ p^denee lieaitliy, cheerful; smiling, liiippy; offspring. ,T0$j i' * .-. • , the labourer *wHl without poli-. r; bf .it- Whig Minister,-''bdsdd.Hupom-exp^dicnb '-^H : z ; classes, and tical power. (Cheers.) Why is ?, (Hear,^ ar,- and '" Shaine; '') It^s^nol£&- '' ' yi c^ may-look .lightly upon such ' a'. - prospect, - whic&fie^^l^iv*. .;-.¦% be for ever a pulmg:beggarj looking for doles, a majority of the army, all coa- this Is it bocattse: ;saw t-hrough>th'b- ;j ugg ' you are too degraded to make an shame, >wif .it is'^ shamep v le: ^ had biit 'shadowed' forth 'ih-the distance; but a|pp(g|^^;;:$: and alms,; and cbiHly lesce with the people to^overthrow despotism ; effort to throw oft- thfe*"^ call their ..^attention" : to the" fact—tliatwth' ' ; while, if profitably the incubus that is wei hing ;you- th(3: h:he' e 'pro- all 'oddsiho w-ouldyfcai-lessly struggle-to iturrf^he^f^^Wi loyed while the people of this country g down to the r- ?M?"3§£v°£ %sa upon whose^disuriioii'nt posed- reduction..; of; , ten . millions! a-year would emp at reproductive work, it would make are governed earth ? I do;hot believe it '^EHe present, hell into a future paradise. (Mr. Q'C&nhoivTlH^-S?-© on •^ : ;y6u have liad.tlie ca- ^ts.^»eersy; wbWaHafoous' give six shillings/and ei htpenee.a year to eachVone v the rich richer, tb.c"p(>6r;nch said^the up ^-> ra]^^tin*ee" y'priM pacity tp' "En land . g resumed his seat amid the most enthusiastic-' aM' -ft?5tSf-.':£?- : : , ¦ country m^e g wha1--^a£$& of tho thirty millions of population; or something. - * :": ::: ' ;> - J "'* " ' " ' ' :j - every aristocrat^' every middleriiah ls^-for.clet ho man: think' ' rapturous applause.) . - ...... ' '^ r a Pai*adisi. . : - -;>^.^i- . .. / .. •; . i' ,;every shopr tl*aPthe>potfoi^Bf?ihw ;ii."vonr'uP?n'Hvfl«r"t'i rt*^Si;;U^:^S^^ca.-^ o:^Vi cunder;a farthingia day,;:; liter.) tlie '^^rM^^^m keeper,, wonderful island is " (Lqud^aiig Ay>;.b.ut!>^Mr^ 3itLANTiNB;:m6ved third:resar thousan^-^Eotidi: ^hl^gesJtselt to^roteiilgtttei-and, by evci-y pen ceabh^^ '- - 'M inasmuch as y° shouts tfavyj'K^raha^ '^dlau'hV'ileimenns, 'iijpiri :' i' ; yqa oiapploacTiihg conflicts, and ' "tMaii upon your industry they live, and the toiling; aiid; industrial tpbi'tions;ofthe commu- ; to.e upon; all the -necessitjF;^ [- \- i * ra^ef. of'•,* Sh »| ahd^V TdoW?$M GoyemriientakExpences,;-' as cpmpared>vith:the:"^S8: pfaddp(ing ' ' ' - • - -- abandon thejra^ .-!?™m > your industry is gathered more than nity. ; (Loud cheers.) iWhy, . then, do you not stir ;,byj 1jhe;-un'wprei3ented ;M these principles, as ths basis of a soukd • ' '" yourselves nor,^ |p$feis~ "fo^ ^ustnined . conciliator}" public " opinion, ^by;iwhieh alone all - •.' driven-:to desperation and eyxa all - the Despotisms of Europe and rdfcho ? (Hear/) Europei is up ; dynasties have .cohsyqueht^prqfit^made by. the capitalist. -: . 3?liq.pro- - madness^? ?I: have! faded away-^liavc pevished pt^^^dowrii great abuses in astatecsn bo effectually remedied;'' : '¦ :; : BepnWic of America extract fi'om indusby. f. Despotisms have been pbseii l'Ctluctibhwould "ive you a favthing.a -lay^ - ' taken ""my "lull share of the; consequence.' 'I ^ annihilated '.thrones have beoii hurled into the abyss ' r|;iMr. M'GaATn seconded the iresulution. ile cou- . . . . : >>.OJd; - Ouards, I am aware of the influence oe%"e-^^»|^n|plpnffl ^d^ that-is, if you haa your ftiirshare of it ; anj lefc liini sidered that the warried^ybu' of tie result-of the^gitatioii of of oblivion !—and , amidst all these glprious achieve- canie ujp^p^ ^lritaii^^ l ir time was eminently favourable for a that, /vj ce ask; where was the working^ihWi that room, or ^eteiTnitV'd strug ; 1839, "* *a^ employers have over their slaves. I am ments.vybiij- alone, have been quiescehtS«(Qh'eers;) 1 'the gle; to secure the triumph of Demo- 4ii i-egal syit^^thji^djluicts^t'the -^ in couiitry,;wlio was iioti conijclled to submit to cracy^ in thiscountry:'""(Hear.) To ' be ^ isi to be awaa-e that- at Birmingham, in Manchester,- A French"patriot spoke truly when he uttered; the a graduated scale of^ WhiUevei' part of ; . : - you-^cgdEto forewarned forearmed ; at . ^^ reduction based upon Ldboiir c-intjheiital Europe ihey looked, they beheld and in the Market-pla famous sentence,—'' Forahation to be free, it is ^^^n^f^^^- 'coinpetiti ' 'th6'' ,tbe pep- —of e^reaultofthe present ce of Nottmghim, they ^ qn .ih mai4i:^^ ple.humSin^ despotismi and winniug fer ' • ' agitation. sufficientthat she wills it.".,, FoivEngland to befree,. ons \br:a;sixth themselvo-i • ^ may , array.them in eavage brataLvand " san- - : | l}. , 0^®, ^^ tae of-I :- In 1841 f onr aid was ^sought by the J?ree ,^ it will be' suffi6ieml*!^'t''h^'''cliilaren. have courage TQilcTi. JJ.S .would allow'^ armp ^^f eWj'br-sW- niillibiis 'or.a tliird-br 'th • We^smga tberty. m i i-ance ut I'declaie-^-and v d-^o-)ui§tioh^^ r\om°e w-asa itepub ic-^-anu the day was no far in the . ¦ "?. Traders;':and" when we could' hot be seduced to demand their freedom. I have much pleasure m thousand four hundred families, which the farthing a day, t : - : most solemnly—that I would rather perish in ^, at five arc subjected by this infernal future when Germany would be a Republic. (Ch< ers.) fibrili our allegiance "to* the principles ofthe moving the resolution. (Loud cheers.) to a family, would amount to thirty-two thou- competition ton .reduction of sixpence in the day, of one of those conflicts than be a part Mr. Matthias, in seconding- the motion, said-: But while other nations A'ere careering along in the our y to a de- sand individuals—(shouts; of - —and I much underrate it^-that would amount to progress of liberty and civilisation the • PEOPLE S OHARTElS^somc pro- If the much-boasted British Constitution was " Horrible")— , what wer^ . lusion, the object of .which is to bind you, the a tlni'ty-nine millions a year—(cries of •• Shame ")— people of England d(»in^! ? Ony quietly permitting ' "' fessing friends and leaders; were employed as reality, the sooner they experienced its existence and this, be it observed, in a country from industrious classes, still more closely to the ' and I would be much nearer the mark if I set it their .tyrants 'to'' rivet those chains which, to their lecturers by the League. They preached vio- the better. Man should be represented, and not Avhich the inhabitants are flying, and where down at a shilling ii day, which would dominion of capital. Yes—if I stood alone, I . be seventy- disgrace, th ey have so Jon.' borne. (Il var.) This lence and resistance, and afterwards became bricks and mortar. this representative of royalty can. see his mis- eight millions, or twenty millions a year over and am determined to see the issue of this struggle, Mr. "Wjclmam Dixox came forward to - ' criminal apathy must be no longer permitted to spies and informers. " TvTien they failed to . move the tress's loyal subjects dying under his very nose above the interest of the Isational* Debt, Army, deaden the people's energies. Heaven knew they and that issue depends upon your own .union, second resolution as follows :—" That in the in thousands. (" Shame, 'Shame."), Navy, Ordnance. Regal and Governmental Expeii- hud strong inrcntives to esertimi . Their own daily ¦• cajole us at the Birmingham Conference, in opinion of this meeting, the document known as Mr. ces. (Loud cheers. ) Rut the surrender of your own jealousies, aiid the - put it down at sixpence increasing poverty hould stimufate thein to seek <• . 1842, and when they found that we were, re- ; the People's . Charter contains the most indubit- O'Connor : It is not a shame upon him-. a day, or thirty-nine millions ^ develqpement of your consolidated and well- , and add the poor rate, out i's cause, and apply a proper remedy. Let them solute "and determined, they:-> then changed able recognition of the foregoing.principles ; while (Cries of "It is.") Mr. O'Connoii : It is eight millions, rendered necess.-.ry for the -. support dirocted opinion. ' talc any perioa-in the past and compare th ir then it suggests the most eqiiitable and efficient means not, the shame is upon you. (Cheers.)' But of the idle competitive reserve, and you have forty- their tactics. They held ticket meetings and I have told that there are three ' 1 position with their present one, and thc decline of tea parties, from which you you stages for their peaceable and salutary operation ; there- it is your own disunion—your own base and seven millions a year. . You have drunkenness, profli- "fere excluded. through which public opinion must fore it ledges itself to the principles and objects dissi lewdness their c'-mforta inustbt; manifest, (lleaiy heur.) Our pass. It p servile competition, upon which the system is gacy, pation , , and criminality ; all— senators were most industrious in the fabrication of The Press reported those meetings which were contained in tho People's Charter."—Mr. Dixon one and alt—consequent upon unwilling must be created—it must be organised—arid -hear. ) He would idleness, for laws, and all, too, for the go d id" the people; but thinly attended, and you were paraded as the said his friend Mr. Clark had shown them that the based. (Hear, explain the which the state is satisfied to pay eight millions a it must be directed ; and in the present state nature of that 'competition. , their wretched tinkering in creased, -atlier than di* auxiliary force of Pree Trade, while not a single House of Commons was not in accordance with the Suppose two year, to paupers for the maintenance of that : of Eurqpe all that the mind of this country the British Constitution a a minisbed , the sufferings of the jj eople • And such Chartist demonstration wasreported , and thus theory of , nd th t in rival coaches were running upon a road upon idle competitive reserve, upon whoso destitution be the case till all.took | art in. the construc- requires, is to be brought to bear upon its "ould weaknesswas presnmed. order to make it so, they required ah extensive which there was not traffic to pay the pro- capitalists tralhc, and by *.Yhoso idleness every class tion ofa House of Commons designed' our present representatives measure of Parliamentary Reform. Thero were , to promote the , and that can only , what would be a in the state suffers prodigious loss. -(Cheers.) happiness , Old "Guards, the very same dodge is now present various op as a pictors of both greater plea- , glory, and greatness of the people. be achieved through the Press, and that can at inions to wh t extent Well, think of that, with tho land .of their birth— (Cheers.) Mr. M'G ath then adverted to the de- behig Tesorted to. You are sought to be en Parliamentary Reform was required, but the re- sure to either than to see the rival coach upset more than sufficient to maintain four only be ensured by the constant and unmis- times the plorable circumstance" of Ireland, successfully c >m- ' which , he held in his hand pointed out the and all the . passengers mangled or killed ? population—uncul tivated listed as mere Financial .Reform recruits, and takable declaration of a solution , unproductive, and waste. battinsr the assertion of Lord John 'Russell 'that the lorious Charter is to be once more majority of the people only measure of reform which would meet the case, Would he hot advertise .it in order to puff his (Cheers.) Thoy would understand—and they did . your g in favour of the PEOPLE'S CHARTER; 1 melioration of Ireland was not witlim the scope oflc- and make our representative system sueli as the own vehicle, and increase his own profit ? appear to understand—that this part of his address gislation. "He alluded to the agricultura l capabilities niergad in this question of minor consideration. - namel Old Guards, there has been a lulb^but/I constitution should be, y—that- representa- (Hoar hear.) Well, then, you are referred to the siluiicc of the Press as regards Char- ofthat count y] an i contended that ,- ii'-the idle hind's But upon you will depend the result. So long tion should lie co-equal with taxation; this is , just the trust there is to be neither comprpmise'jior4ur- pro- tism,.while they would be used as an auxiliary force were "given t o'lthe 'idlc hainis to eultiva :e, the squa- looked npon the question of Seduction of vided for- in the- document known as the sariie ; if ten men or a score of men are out of to substitute the Quadruped a e as I render of our principles.;^Oiir Wednesday , : .^Peo- , nd Financial R form lor, ihe mise'y, .; and murder of the last two years Taxation as one that was to be immediately : ple's. Charter, thei enactment'of winch alone can employment, what will give them greater plea- f or the whole animal. - (Cheers, and " .Never!") night I attende^a^eeting^tne\ east end: of ' would have been prevented, lie concluded With a and continuousl pressed, I hailed it as a cor- securer to . 'thc;.peoplc a full,'free,.' and equitable sure than to hear of the dismissal or death of The Quadruped , was a,;political bait placed tti'oi'g appea l to exert every encr-i n e r y Londqna-ghere*^^^ The measure i of - 'i'bpi'dsent'ition. y i th i power Ho was aware that ten or a score of their rivals, whose places they in tho Financial , ; trap, and let , its advo- to secure their just ri ruption-slaying, patronage-destroying mear the name'of theJ Charter made some ' ' ghts, that through ilicm thry spacioiisT.room was not only crammed to suffo- old women may fill T (Hear, hear, cates once secure a. reduction , of . their own ht exterminaic that monstrous system tliat i ow sure ; but when I discovered that it was a mere faint, but what is it after all ? A measure of Par- and " True.") Yes, * mig . cation, but a large adjoining room, the lanes, taxes, and then , like Fox when he achieved developes its baleful influence by brutalising and ca- bait f or the trap, and merely submitted to the liamentary-Reform, which gives to every male ofthe it .was true, and they themselves were to blame power for advocating the Charter, thev will ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ alleys, and street were also crowded, and I for it, because b thoir union and nibalisiug its victims. , consideration of the Minister, to be effected age of twenty-one, and who has a .head and a-pair . y co-operation say " 13c quiet, what""-do you want more ; sure we 'he Avitnesscd an amount of fervent enthusiasm of hands and who, by the honest use of them ' Mr. bTAhhwoim said, just wished to say a word when he discovered its expedieney,I then aban- , , con- the system which tolerated it would pass away only wanted this political power to . nbhicrcfinan- or two iu vindication of the peop !c of I-Vnnc. . Yes- and determined devotion to the OLD ANI- tributes something useful for the commuity,..that ' " as chaff before tho wind. A great struggle cial Reform. Now we ve got it without it, and terday atthe city meefmga Mr. i'iiillimore had de- doned all hope of its accomplishment. You he should participate in all the immunities of a what more do you want ?" (Cheers MAL, Avhich cheered my heart and filled me was now taking'place all over the world and.laughter.) nounced and condemned Universal SuU'rii ge, because, are now again sought to be enlisted in this citizen. In fact, it goes for Universal Suffrage , and with ]oy. , Well, but this wouid be the case if thoy did.not agi- fo'rs'-'oth, they had not returned Lasrai tine to the spurious agitation, and the effect, the inevitable and provides the necessary-details for the effectual he was rejoiced to think that .while that strug- tate for tlie Charter, and propose , it as an amend- Old Guards, need-I weary you by reminding " " gle was a physical ono in other countries it National Assembly. Now he v Mr. St.ilhvood) effect, of such a course would lead to the pre- working of the same, 'by protecting the voter from , ment to every humbug,proposition. (Long .and thoug ht " tliey were to be com 'meaded , and thai it you that in Ireland and England I have strug- all undue influence of either laudlord or continued cheering. rinci- was a moral struggle, a struggle of the mind, ) Heretofore, the. Suttvuge , as spoke loudly in favour of Universal Sufl'r-gc. "We sumption that you had abandoned thc p gled for the principles of Democracy for a employer. The only objection raised again st in this country. (Cheers.) And. why ? Be- at present constituted, was only considered in a com- demand thc Charter in order that «e may effect social ples ofthe Charter for Financial Reform. is- mercial view as affecting quarter of a century and two years ; that I Universal Suffrage, . - the want of intelli- cause, denounced "as they were for i thc purse, but now hc reforms ifcc.,—we want the Land ,—the tt ades have It vou are prepared to adopt that course, you of the. working classes gnorance, would consider it in another and a , . have had to struggle against the most fierce gence on the part .. , bnt he l contended a e still more im- begun to cry out " Homo Colonies." and " Mint.-tcr intelligence is ho test of the fitness of men to vote. proud y .th t th y were the best portant light as affecting the liberty have « right to communicate your intention to and tyrannical opposition , , of the people. " . Well , th: French have got their Ohar* and most especially s;iy instructed people in the world upon the Jja- ' of Labour. aie, as I have a right to understand the hear- Jfo man will presume to that the present elec- Were they aware that thc Suffrage constituted a t-r, and now d- mandid their Minister ot Labour, from the opposition of truculent, servile, and hold the Suffrage because thoy .arc wise bour Question which was the jury, as well as a voting qualification ? . And wore ing of the mind of which I am presumed to toral body , question ol jjamartin had ivluted it: the iwench nation liad speculating Chartists ; and, that lam yet un- or virtuous. No, the system is most ' absurd, and. if questions. . (Hear, hoar.) . 'In 'Franco they aware that the present struggle was between l-ethc -leader ; and as there should be no mis- the la- iejected Lamariine. Was not thi- a jiutttica ion of daunted and unscared : and that, so help me the electors had one spark of English; independence bourers, uninstructed in the Labour jQ. the eight hundred thousand voters who had a the Frcirh lulion hiriiicnlioii of the .prin- to tell you that ' . uestion monopoly of , and a g take between us, it is my duty Con, I would rather perish to-morrow." than within their systems they would not holdHhS fran- power, aud the six millions who ciple of'hcSi ffr.ige ? (Gnat cheering.)' . Tli e redO- " tlay- and accustomed to arms, had recourse to arm's if you are prepared to abandon this agitation consent tothe abandonment of even the name chise by such a tenure for another butyvould legitimately contended for a participation in that utioti was i-ut and ca*Ti< d uDan'mousU*. to achieve their rights; they fought bravely and that the men who tried those Charter for Financial Reform, that 1 at once join the working men, and demand the . Suf- power, looking 'lhe Cii..ium a.v delivered a fair seasonable ' re-' for the. of the Charter. for' ' ¦ ¦ frage, because they were men and not- because iliey and . gallantly, and gained the victory ; but JMi wcr, invariably found them guil ty of riots, mar-sin e! sing. A vote of thanks was moved to : ' ' * ' ¦ am prepared to surrender my commission, Old Guards . . , your cause has been to mo a were in possession of a certain species of property. no sooner did tlio shout of triumph proclami routs, sedition , conspiracy, felony, treason , or liim , for his services in tae chair. - . :• ¦' ¦•- -" -• • •• which J have held since September, 1835, four- Onl look at the monstrosity of the system. A man any charge that may be preferred'against ' them. deep and continuous source of slander, perse- y that victory than the owners of capital and Mr! T. JJnowN, in ntp portinsr it, said , a public =-ifvV : September ; but I am not pre- lnav hbw bo in prosperity and be enabled to p.iy tho (Loud cheering.) Now that was a view of tho teen years next cution, and loss ; but, with your confidence speculators in labour took advantage oi' tiie mecting l'or a similar purpose 'voi-.lii be- held in tlia . "- pared to surrender my principles though all required rent and rates, but before next year ad- question that thoy had not; taken, but bo-. would' and :yiii£vc.9untCT 'herpism Theitri-, :; Milton-struet , ;.on ;ilond?y ey.enjng',.r:^ape^ii*s.- lV^;-. " " versity; overtakes him, and- not; from any immoral people's ,an,d. turned , the .arms.,o.f,;tlio illustrate it for thcm :-rSupposc that he laced ;! " should'desert-me. ' •:. . ', ^'~^:: - .. - : . .'wa' ^p 4th/ -The .vote of tliauks was. ado^ied^by^cela^T^'j' -*; greater gangers which;are now shadowed forth act of his own—not because he /has done' - anything, hired mercenary aginnst those who : had won upon liis triar' tq-inqiTOw, ".with - the: . 'ifft qi'iioy- ' ^' ¦ ' Old Guards, have you not gathered /wisdom * . m«tioh: ; . ' .' - . , '". . , - ,;¦ ¦ . - . ..,.' ;¦.' - . .. - ' . mlthe; distant horizon of , other lands ; and if beneath : the dignity of a man, but because he is Labours-battle. (Cheers.) Well, then, had General' as his prosecutor,'.the learned; gc'utleinan ¦ ^, - from past experience 1 and. have ypa ^ot disj , say - The CnAiRMiV^'rick'iowlet'ged th'l compiiiriciiti / deprived ofthatconfidence and countenance I poorer than lie was last year, he is robbed of his they not had .sufficient proof of the use would mcrclv have to '* Gentlemen oi' the and unnoii 'iic'c'd' tiiut 'd scussiou• were IJcld eveiy Siin- . jury, that is Feargus 0 Connor ' ' covered.tliat the slightest retrogrado^motiori will ' retire into private life, but will" never ri-'lit to vote, and tumbled back into the ranks of that the dominant classes ever made of a , the rotoriou s day cvciiiiii. , and that a Cha- t>t lo'f-aliiy was about to popu- Chartist." The official would then say * njH-.-i your part gives advantage and a victory the slave, and slaves they are who would hold their lar victory, without this recent French illustration " Gentle- be formed (it the house llicy were then meeting in abandon the infant that requires but your , have you agreed to your verdict ?" " , "What nation or what rights upon such a flimsy tenure as that. He, Mr. and with such proof staring them in tho face, were men, " Yes. the liiiidhird bavin; given the use oi' tho room grat ; s' ; to your opponents ? genial breath to nurture it into a gigantic was full aware that so soon as the "How say you , is Feargus O'Connor Guilty or Dixon, y people they again about to surrender themselves bound a d tha t frequent public meetings would be held ; in ehss has ever achieved a triumph except by monster. , not ?'' " Guilty, "all the counts !" (Loiul fully understood and appreciated thc Charter the do- hand and foot, to the keeping of their , taskmasters ? upon fact lie hoped to ¦so - it become the E.-ict-London ' the most pertinacious adherence td popular hter.) Well, a . Loved and honoured comrades, let me find cument would become law. He entreated them to (Xo, no.) Yes, you arc ; you arc now, asked to be- cheers and laug th t was his pride and " Crown aud Anchor Tavern, "' (L-ud chsc s.) his boast, that he advocated principles which were principles ? Once surrender a particleor atom your resolution expounded in next week's think well on this matter, for they might rest assured come an auxiliary cos-win the tax-redeeming army, The -mmeiise and enthusiastic Char ist gat'.ie ing that thero would never be any amendment either in * repugn a nt to tho f eelings of bad men and a damna- an?] your surrender of so much is construed "North'rn Star," and if you adhere " to our and to give up the Charter for the " Quadruped." . then separated. biu¦ all ; - and are the taxation of the country or their moral, social, , never.") lie was ble system ; a system, however, which was tottering the intended abandonment of loved and honoured motto of, (Loud shouts of " No ghd to hear in every country in Europe, and which the league of or political condition, until there was such a reform it, and ho had como there that night for tlio pur- •^ t-ttf't'. sou, now that the convulsions in all other despots could not much longer preserve. (Clieers.) " Onward and we conquer ! in parliament as the one provided for in the resolu- pose of placing the whole animal in all its propor- countries have then* effect upon lie came there not to Hatter, ea e ¦ are about to Backward ami we fall 1 tion. He then said—Working men, what is it that tions before them, well Knowing, but at the same but to sp k th WESTMIK S.TE1L— Steauso a 'W.vroii.—Moira tin- policy of the rulers of this .country—are TIIE PEOPLE'S CHARTER AND NO sweetens vour toil ? What is the uppermost wi?h truth , aud ho told them t ha t n ei ther governmen t, I'inch , a well-dressed woman of tho . tov.-a , was " time disregarding, thc odium to which it woul d sub- master ' nor capitalist was chargeable with any act vou, 1 would ask, at such, a time prepared to SURRENDER!" of your heart when thc labour of thc day is over, iect him ; "hut, as he had struggled in that cause for charged with stealing a gold watch, valin.'. iwenty i- when the prattling pledges of your hive como nea rly a quarter of rt century and two ' of tyranny of which they complained , because il guineas, from the person of iii'. C. Patilk e^ei-, a retreat one single inch from the position you though older than when I commenced thc ag years, and they constituted tho government climbing upon your knee ? Why, this : You hope could say what no living man could say—what none , ov were masters goi itle.'uan residing in V'iltoti sti-jot, l)w--i-avt'- have so long manfully occupied. tation, he will be an active man who will out- or capitalists themselves as selMiitercst consti- that they will be enabled to enjoy-more ofthe good could deny—that in the midst of tho groat aud as- , square.—It appeared from the statement of the Gu;u*ds ours has now become a stride me iii the onward march, Next week I tutes tho basis of human action Old , things of this world than you, their unfortun ate tounding changes upon which others had based their , they would " go prosecu t or, th at he was walking along Piccadilly struggle of right against might—of justice shall look to tho reflector of Labour's mind parent, have ever been allowed to possess. It ' is ; and. do likewise ;" so that what he struggled for eiii-ly on Sunday morning-, afior having spent tho conversion within that convulsive iioi-iod , he had was to destroy that systcm, by making- the i-m.-il! aaalnst injustice—of Joicpledge Against bigotry with some anxiety, but with flattering hope ; this that sweetens life. It is this that enables us to never altered his opinions or princi ples. (Loud evening at the house of a friend , and tw!-; shelter minori ty of dissatisfied tributary to the will ol work iu tho mines, tho mills, a t the loom, and the cheers.) It was not to be supposed that imprudence ¦ from {lie rain , under a doorway, wh ore lie was ar.'d intolerance ; they are strong weapons in and pleased would I be to. see advertisements the largo and., then satisfied anvil. But let us remember that so long ns causes was a thing with which the most consistent majority. ( Loud jo ined hy the prisoner, with whom he foil in to con- tin- hands of a well-disciplined army, and, if and all other matter displaced by.forty-eight may ciioers.). exist so long will effects follow, and if wc do not now not be c but wi th inconsi stency ho defied And then you would havo true religion versation. The rain having abated , iie proceeded and a- double supplement—pro- harged , im!>¦¦](rtish* used, are capable of achieving all columns—ay, unite to destroy the causes which produce our any one to taunt him ; and he t rusted that, taking and piety, based upon pure philanthropy and towards his ivsiduuec, accompanied by the prisoner; tin*: Its forces contend for ; bat take warning claiming the People' s virtue and determina- miserv, but by our apathy allow them to continue, , humanity ; then you wouUf nut have a criminal in but in uon -fiL'qucJ ivc of iim'ther siiowcr thev were " a lesson from the past tliey would become wiser iii the land ; nor would you require, a camion a by t 'u* past. tion to preserve their principles whole, unmuti- then wo may rest satisfied that instead oi their con- the future, and hc ' w.ould now explain tlio most im- , again compelled to stand up. From the time, at dition being mended it will be worse than ours at nius!-;et, a 'bayo net, a sword, or a blud geon , hi 3029 when sis guineas a-week was the lated, and entire. Perhaps the most pleasing portant part of liis mission. Ho invited them to w hich tho prosecutor had first eoi-.versed v;i;n the , present is. Therefore, working men, the work is to preserve tranquillity in a happy, contented , cheer- ' upon gence that I can communicate is, that look at tliat p'atform, and there they would find prisoner, a man continuall y walked up a nd down rcw-.r-l uf patriotism, the Charter was intelli your own, and unless you do it for yourselves it ful, i.nd peaceable society. (Loud cheers.) Here Uolbrc thorn evidentl y with an intention of -jiving esdicc-aer was Thomas SlisgsijtDun- hut one reporter—and tha t one for his own paper— , cvctv banner 5 but vvhe-n the your friend and mine, will ever be undone, l ie moved the resolution and (loud cheers)—wliovons, if thevo had boon 'such a. hc would dif-rcss to communicate a piece of intelli- iiniibyauuc ; and pi-os;:ciit(ir lmviti-,r spojicii to a exhausted our most enthusiastic leaders betook COJir-E, has resumed his place in Parliament. resumed his seat amidst great applause. gath rin gence, which would give his audience more pleasure conismblc, the man disappeared lor a minute or e g, or half such a gathering, for Financial than auvthiug thev had yet heard it was that that ths-mse'lvcs to'more profitable avocations ; they I remain, Old Guards, "When Mr. O'CosNon rose hc was received llefoi-m , , ,the , two, hut shortly returned , and having repealed his Protection or QUADRUPFD , this day ho was honoured with a visit from Thomas wero the loudest iu denunciation of the very Your devoted, faithful , and with loud and tremendous cheering and clap- platform—largo as it is—would bo but too small for offensive.- conduct was given in charge. On their tho stall' minions. (Hoa r, hear.) 'Thoy presumed, Shngsby Duncombe, who would resume his seat- in leaving the station , the mat!, who was i-ct dctaiuosi, scL'-ines and proj ects tlint tbey Lad advocated uncompi-ising Friend, piiig of hands. He said : Mr. Chairman, and parliament to-morrow, (Thursday). (Upon thi* and foolishly, that they were governed by the House was - in company with th'; constable, and the looked for other pay- argus O'Connor. my fri ends, the other House has adjourned announcement thc cheerir.g and waving of hats and 1 in "the Convention ; they Fe of Commons, whereas the House of Commons itsel f prosecutor having proceeded toward - home, parted , handkerchiefs was perfect ly indosurih.-ible.). Le t nir.-i.Ts and found them amongst the . -j i i iaag— for the Derby day, and I am come here to h constituted as it was of all classes but thc with tho prisoner. On lay ing hold of his gold guard ^ r thoug him refer for a moment to the ' proceedings of last wealthier class, and not amongst the im- start you for the labour plate. (Cheers.) ]So*v, friends of Labour, was operated upon by-thcPress. to lift thc watch out of his waistcoat pocket , t o his THE PEOPLE'S CHARTER. night in the House of Commons-:—The first question althnn'-ii -eu c-:use they advocated I am not como here to Hatter you or to talk The people evinced their power outside, and thc - ij -reat astonishment he discovered that ln-vij isl. slaves whose bi-on^-li ' . -oii \v;is tho - ai 'joiu -nineiit cf the House for i iic- chain wn.s perfect :«mi the Hv.- ix-el nt its ..-ml tm as v'lvsical force Chartists when they re- meetings of modern nonsense, I am conic here to explain the La- Press . conveyed the knowledge of that power, and the Derby day, at that discussion 257 members , or One of the most crowded the will of the people, to tho car ofthe representa- oj'.ei se:!, hi s watoh laid ditwppearu-l. lie ha d lu u kud -T. ¦{ violences " Phoenix Tavern," R.it- bour Question to labourers governed b the move than a third of the House, were present : next c-. six guineas a-wcek, but whose times, was lickl at tiie y t ives ; that is, it conveyed the power of that class at it oil the his way to the .station, and it was safe at ' c.ifFc-ci-oss, in support of the People's Charter, on and when I make you thoroughl came Mr. D'Eyncourt's motion i'ov Triennial Pa rlia- au-i practices thoy denounced when they had ' rale of three, y who advertised in it. and supported it, and whose the-..„ time . « he..w v..-- .....-.s there,„....., as... ei.uld-- he- movedJ by,. thc "\VeiSiie.*day cvei-ing, I-Iay 23rd . Sot only was the ments, a nd upon, that only eighty-seven we:.-o present {sh-rusied the poor man's exchequer. * understand it, blame yourselves and not your exclusive int erests it represented. (Hour, hear.) in spector. Tlie man who hau been so troubiesonie re<>n; crowded, bnt every spot within heariinr, at tho division : next came Mr. Shinty's motion to and had no chance of commit- Tills fatality created the first crop of Char- rulers or mc, if you cannot solve it. I will Hut it never did communicate thc will, the strength , went a diitcrciit way, while hundreds went away unable to obtain ad- ov the resolve ofthe woi-lciiis- d.-isse-i -e-icoj-t when consider the means of elevating tlio condition of tiie ting tho robbery, uilil thu prisoner intii-t havo stoltiii tist i>--y>oiioi"l4 and for thefirst time filled ygur ' O' Connor, Esq., iirst ttikc taxation in the iiggregute, nnd then , Labourer, and before ho had concluded tlio Hnust! mi.-?sic.ii. At oi!>hi o clock Feargus tluit will orstre'ifftli was marshalled as thc 'au.xiliary the watch, ns she was the onl y person who could as the mi room and w»s received with the reduce-it to individual receipt, and you , was counted out there being no more than twenty- du: -v'-ns with Chartist victims, ght Jrd.P., entered ihe , I will force of their taskmasteis. (Loud cheers.) What , possibly havo taken it. Although prosecutor had lause. Dr. Brooks was immediately scren memhera present. (Lvnd cries of ""••h ami-. ) oi'ihe f ew ever takes advantage of the dissea- loudest app shall judge of the justice of both as adminis- were they doing now ? Just what they had doiie in sioeu slay ing late at the house ot a U'ieii.i , no was caik-d to thc chair, and said, hc trusted that the Weil, he (Mr. O'Connor) was one of the twenty- Prisoner was taker. •fissis of tJiG -iisany, and makes martyrs of the tered by the present system of representation. the times of Emancipation , Reform, and Free Trade not at ail affected by liquor. , 3-H-ctiu am:-s ' s- 1H42 -when again their mad excitement ot the llr. Thomas Ci- ascendancy of faction, and to subject you to that will he ? Why, it is enough to make John and if yo u ask the gentlemen about Ht. , , ;_«- That inasmuch as the impositions of taxa- fititucnts again , they catered fur support, by si-ha- "—Air. IHu-rell ordered her convulsion of tlou the will and dominion of that faction . (Hear, Bright kick hia mother—(roars of laughter)—to strcoc they can prove it. u!it-nij»lovcd mjllious led to the tion without its correlative representation, is a dowiiig forth signs of veponlaiite ami conversion, to be rciiiaiided till Friilav. hear. ) Now, those twenty-seven millions a think of such a question being placed in tho koop- until aga n elected upon trust, thsy relapsed into 13*2, and a second crop of Chartist victims ; tyranny, and ai variance with tlie constitution of o- of thc .First .»-mister of tiie Crown. Bnt he THAMES.—-Attemi'tku iluuuKit and fr' i.'tcm::.— . year to every man of iii. e b gotry and tyranny. (Cheers.) Could and now this money game is once more the third estate in these realms: this meeting is year would give £27 a would now prove—and it not satisfactorily,.at th ir former i Dani el lloliiiden , a coal-backer , was charged with he give. a more apt illustration • of its truth than enthusiastic of opinion, that it is imperatively required of all one million heads of families. (Cheers.) Next incon trovertibly—the power of the Press ; attempting to murder a young woman , named to he tried, as I find that many burthens, and least , the **fact that upon thc .eve of tho dissolution of for the office of Pinan- who seek to remove unjust put-lie comes army, navy, and ordnance, the expense how the people were duped before, and how it is .Martha tlV.1~ --,vr,n'.-1 111 lIC«.fVlUisif IIT.Jrs.C, lill«.findin " gsr that we are too stitution of political Oit'endoi'S, and was only lost by tho """ "•"uiiple and direct principles of tlie con Traders—knowing that thc masses looked for ve- wi th the prisoner for nine years, and that she had God a sum which would give £23 a year to every Speaker s casting vote being given against it. This ]io«r to sustain them. Uut, thank , the people's House of Parliament." He said : This free trade which the Charter would produce, heen compelled to leave him iu consequence of his " another million of labourers. (Cheers.) ritable act of clemency was urged upon the hustings as full laiowied diffused that even tliis resolution contains truths, with reference to taxa- one of looking for that Free Trade which would vi olent, and jealous conduct. One morning he went gc is now so who were grounds of confidence/but when those philanthro- win yeu tion and representation, which I think will meet Next comes State Church, poor's rates, increase monopoly and preserve competition, did to her lod gings-, and having charged her with being third crop will find it impossible to ¦ ists were again returned not a voice was raised with-the unanimous assent of this meeting. As governmental expenses, and a for a. time seduce the Chartists as co-operators, p , , unfaithful to him , cut her thronnvitli a I'l-sor. Im- from your allegiance to your own principles. regal and not a soun d was heard on behalf of ated the resolution clearly sets forth, tiie British House incidentals amounting in sult was, that this adhesion led to a the incarcer mediately afterwards hu committed a similar act you must be pre- thousand and one , and the re . victims. (Loud cheers and " True") pod This will be the dodge, and of Commons is presumed to be a bonaf.de represen- belief of the surrender of Chartist principles, aud He U- upon himself, and was endeavouring to,-i.-.s.uilocom- the aggregate to about twenty-five millions a nearly alone in that House ; ho had never bartered pared to meet it If you surrender now you tation of the whole British people, and upon the rea- the adoption of Free Trade as a substitute. Ho plainan t a second time, when lie was taken into cus- amount Avould give £25 a year to their principles for place, pension "will cringing, crouching slaves, lisation of that presumption only, can the House of year—that (Mr. O'Connor) was in his cold cull at York , or emolument, tody.—The prissiiev was committed to th6 Oiil perish like ' " the bait aud Ceir-nicr.sriffhtl v nnd constitutionally impose taxes bach of another million of labourers ; and ob- Castle, and saw through thi s suicidal not. It although he was offered hull' tlie patronage of liis Bai ley on the charge of luminously wounding with virile, if you manfully resist have no native county ( Cork), if he would suppor t ministers on the millions, who at the present tunc serve that in these aggregated sums I am him that, while suffering for the cause which intent to murder. b&l-uv rjillv around the standaid of Chartism, , stung u pon his first introduction into the House of Com- ' control whatever over that or any -other branch of of the one thousand and was dearest to his heart, those who nrofesscd to A ' Strax'si*- • Ciiakactek. — A wretched-looking your union that makino-no estimate mons, which he gnantl refused and in return voar strength, your power, and t!--ole Ido' mJt know -vviiaro.' :: t 2i. uxini-^ thirdly—because of our " " (Cheers. ) Nex t came d ungeons victims .pronounced guilty 'by Freo io°b'o plucked from it.s. i:.i:iii e, . lbi- h\t!iey^aw-endejod " «ife, of which their taskmasters other uuaiific.ition could be devised to .which I the powerless slave ? Tradojur ies, (licai and;loud cheers.},;* reil ; i^w ;vs I- jjhotvtho. <^;:een.—^A politic conscaiili: {& 11) : anv .yhear, Yi , " name to-day, its uiuietision s wiuVui' lje , own stronger power ; beyond -maturity of age, and rates, rog-d ' and-gWormnoi'tal " ' evbn tlib' . . said,he had thc .p!:isor,i;rT~v1;hu resided tt: i-iOvc -r: a-lvis to establish their would lend my assent, tithes poor then, was !. not. .that a s.ujiicieiit warning . to -tiiqut gradually minced, until i t- beVaino'- :! perfect' •:o:v- mind cannot be it-would be utility ; and if being of use. to would ask if there would be not to be caught again ? And now tho. was ; .street , ;|i fc.-,-G(.,oi, -j;u 't T iii-t.he-E:ist TT;i*si custod y--a iew ; , •vl*- r<-as flie triinnpn of the salary, expenses,; and he dodge .en titv , a. thing: in wlvich no princi ple could be re- " community, were once established as a qualifica- 'bn' to make them (the Chartists) 'the 'atisilia'r' ' fp 'i-ce' days , preyiouti y ; on ihu eiiai-go «f :.j 'itto:i;p:-ng, lo . . thus -A-rc-ncbed- from the grasp cf the victors, as the piciv, religid-d, arid Chiistianity/ani gst y . cognised , aud used as- Fox used ir, .for..the mcr'o - ^ the exercise of the .elective franchise, how less 5 of Fin ancial - and mock ' -Rcforh.crs—(clic'ers)—and 4'ass ;vsp;;fioi;:- 'ii;Ut -e;-cv,-i*i. !iiiX U;0,pv6sect: '-:v. i:t-rr thoii silences the can- tion for ' satisfied,'' aiid peace-loving ; ' purpose of . achieving: :power for . -faction. • (Loud " ' v " tbo voice of JaioTvledge ».-,','! -woiiW be the -j oliueal- nower of. the - aristo- -t i co^-fortable; thas,'- once more, bury the ' - Charter . -' irr-'ohliviori.- ' e6 .vH :g-i!;::t his iiiiiul " w aii/ u ^ii-iL¦]] ' : dyX::.\ i>i^ 'l t :6 , ' clieeiing,-;ar.-.i waving of hats.) -Jt waVhis hemst-to ' : ' ht becomes a sraVbard ' bi*Keh oi bishops. (Luushtcr and there is noVr to be found among?! 'OlifiVfio. "Mr. " Ti!v}!!w ' 'M' !Kvi!vV p-ii!'stii\i;(1 d *i!a* tt'i- ' nwf s ivi-i" and thoug t-r--v arJ the peo-w thaii ¦ (Cheers:-)- 'df; upon th e ' contWiry/ thoy 'fairly oo\s- say, that iiehher ' hi linglasid no:;. Ireland JiihI- ho — " " " "Ye-v-l-ABGUlUSG alEri—and it..-is . an ' , •dissatisfied, and liiscoh- - would ho .¦Jori'ei', li'tid fihdkig ffe-.t i'iis' t-r'j sivi'i'!* ivere wl.'ej 'y- in for i-v.-rx sword- - - 1-, -1 a \ - s ) an uuVonifortiible tendud fovtht'ir own priiiei plo!-,- the Press, , ever e'-.ten a meal, or 't ravelled a mile, -i t flia ' cx- f ¦• thousand you .are labouring men—I .say ' -iA t , ¦ coheri'iit ; ioi- .Mf. iiiiti.e.-- , t he i;:!!¦ .:•" • • i -l:i:.-e I nvevt it—as I have told you a j.-M-or- tP vou ihat toi"t'--a people? (Cheers.) lie had so f:.i e s-.n- pell' to report their power, their streng h | pease ot' the *n v-Wld'inve no 0i-<-a--'O!i to witeriaiu any uoubts and their resolution , and- "i\ knowledge of tha t of Whitech aj'el. to wliost; care he was commiitcd , t".>- i_l.i- -t tlic -oeople of this country ' povrei-, were the qua- shown them the vice iu the aggregate, nacipbs m nbOUt tUe txcrdse of political tvr mv=;u'-ii fer W adop-fiou of p ¦{ May 26, m$) , ¦ rpjyxi?, STAR . _ "** " ' - ¦ inoy wr *tttiKRN -**x **" ¦ ¦_ ¦ *¦ ¦¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ • .«¦ ¦ - v *- ¦ i. \ * i *. -«*- v\ •*• . , ___ — , . T r„„„„ i, no I themmem bybvuy tlietheu * 0government of India have never been re-re« 2- A «;--»¦ • -- - . - ' - -¦ -. ) - >.¦ .*• -i - - - ;• - . - .- ' - ,„ ' „ the» ¦» Custom« House has \ - *> - - t**-. - -^»^ -\ -^1 ———^———— ' -^—————— ... «..:..:„„ „„ three nni nts. A VOll llgT manIHanan engagedengen aBBgeueil in»» n;iid. position. Quitt.ng. 5*t on three point*——, A voun disturbing the in their custody, for TH E WAR IN HUNGARY . trained the enemy been ar esteS d and is in . The control of the British government , to which turbances have taken place at Montpellier on the oc vigorous assau t, and forced to be detained for a Afsvewi intelligence. Zeitung ' of the 6th inst., contain s they made a ours urn e or , it is pro ba ble, they voluntarily submitted themselves, has been re- casion of the elections. The hotel of the Prefecture The - ——Pest her hurried fli ght. A single company of to a sisted by arms, ¦ ¦ persons have the following news :—' Kossuth in a report to the mile, repulsing W1 -r. . a. •?R.\NCE. wa? attacked, but not taken. Several to pursue him for more than a in the eastern town- Peace has been cast aside. . British officers have weredisorders which National Assembly, in which he terms himself , in ced cavalry, which The%itation still continues •raE EL acnoss.—r aoGRESS of the red been arrested- At Cette tliere almost destroying a squadron of murdered when acting for the State • others ni ht of the 19th accordance with the national desire, President and and ships. All is quiet in Montreal. . been REPOBUC. were spetdilv put down. On the g in despair attempted a charge. «c»teme*ot nc- engaged in the Hke emp 'oymen-fc have treacherously at Lodeve was fired at Governor of Hungary and all the countries thereto had when they Quebec partook of the general Finally, Paris , Saturda y May 19.—The followin g are the Procureur of the Republic Tims it is proved that the Italians, Bill having been been thrown into captivity. thc army of the No further details have appertaining, had appointed the following ministry : ' Italians who con- dental upon the Rebellion Losses whole Sikh people, joined by many the names of the candidates elected for the depart- by an assassin, and killed. fight , conquer-for those only are burnt in State, and the of .. Minister of Interior and President of the Council, sustained a sanctioned. The Governor-General was the Punjaub who signed the treaties ment of the Ssine, and proclaimed , last evening, hy reached the government. for liberty. The Neapolitans made the sirdars in , yesterday afternoon that Barthol Czemeri ; of Foreign Affairs, Count Casi- tend Friday evening last. Resistance was member of thc Regency itself, a the Prefec t of the same department , from the grand Accounts reached Paris killed, wounded , and pris oners : of our effi gy on and led by a h ve recognised the French mir Bathyanyj of tinance, s ; h heavy loss in party who professed ultra against us, and have waged a fierce and balcony of tbe Hotel de Ville:— the Emperor of Russia had Du chek of Pu lic wounded , and still fewer killed. The bv a section of the Irish risen in arms Kisseleo is appointed charge d af- Works, Czanyi; Worship, Michael Hoivath, Bishop men few were and a fig ht ensued , which was war for the proclaimed purpose of destroying ilepublic. M. of lhe Royalist and our loss will be given Repeal doctrines, bloody Totes. Totes. M. Happ secretary of the e^sy. M. of Czanad ; Justice, Bakovics ; War and Commerce particulars police. The military were in the British and their power. "Murat .. 131 S2-5 General Caval faires, and finallv quelled by the Xurie n , gnac 111,505 St. Petersburg for Pans on the 12th. to be named later.' ^" required. One man was The government of India tormerly declared tl-at ifc Lodru Kollin, So- Consid eran t, So- Happ left " averio, Chief of the Staff of Gen. Garibaldi.' attendance, but were not t; states from authority that the ' • d Saturday an at- desired no fur, her conquest, and it proved by its acts cialis .. 130,070 cialist .. 111,241 The - Constitutionel' According to the last report of four o clock on the the Triumvirs for the Liuera- wounded, but not seriously. On Jj agmnge, Soiialist 12S,OS7 Wolojvsld -- 110,G30 still remains in office, and that the resigna- Decree of M'Nab in effij -y, the sincerity of its profession. Ministrv afternoon of the 6th , Ofen had been bombarded PRisoNERS.—In the name of tem pt was made to burn Sir A. has no desire for "Boichot, Sergeant- Ratier , Sci-geant, with the exception of M. L. a breach tion of French prevented it Tlie government of India con- Major , Socialist 327 110.«2 tion of no Minister, during twenty-eight hoars, and already between the but the moderate of the Irish party . in du y to provide f ull ,993 Socialist -- or even offered. It God aud the people, 'considering that nuest now ; but it is bound y General Bedau .. 124,501 Coquerel -- H0,4o0 Faucher, has heen accepted, opened. The Hungarian batteries are planted on nor can exist, On Sundav a mass meeting of the French Canadians and to guard tho interests So- to carry on the ad- French people and Rome there is not, f or its own security, of General Lamoriciere 121,032 Pierre Lerou x, _ adds that the Ministry continues ihe Adlar, Schwaban, and Blonksberg. was held/aided by ihe same Repeal followers, and a its charge. Dnfimre .. 119,376 cialist •• "? » * ' state of war ; that Home defends her own invio- those committed to 5bu; ministration as usual, and that there will be ' no in- The bombardment of Pesth from Ofen had begun a proceed to the seat ol "Morea a .. 118.14C Peuj.in -- ™j ht deprecating any of- deputation sanctioned to To that end , and as the only sure mode of pro- terval in the action of the executive power.' This exceeding ly destruc tive lability as a duty and as a rig , Pass ? .. 117.130 Garacn •• ™>\Z on the 4th inst. , and been republics as a crime against government to present an addrefs to the Governor- tecting the Stite from the perpetual recurrence of "Vi U7,0G9 B<- rectification does not deny tbe existence of a Minis- fence bet-veen the two ctor Hugo - ,S<0*" both to property and life. On the afternoon of the defence and condolence. and wasting wars, the Governor-Gene- TeSsiVyat Socialist llfi lSS F. de Laste vnc .. 10< common faith of both : that the Roman people General, offering unprovoked *, . terial crisis. 6ih the firing on Pesth ceased, an d Gorgey was the assembled but all to resolve upon tho entire subjec- Tavi n 11%013 . ** deceived On Monday large parties again , ral is compelled ^g*B«r mjaB »Le Peuple' publishes the following letter from requested by the government commmissioner do not hold responsible for the deeds of a le whom their own government has oSZf obey their passed off quietly. tion of a peop " SSST* «M« uel HaM Serj eant-Major Boichot:—' Citizen Editor,—After f ranyi to send an officer to Ofen to parley, and stop government the soldiers who, iu fighting, been unable to control, and whom (as events ^ °5 2«* triumvirate decree all the French soldiers There is a talk of arming on both sides, and the long M .. lB^f ^*? having vainly tried arbitrary measures to prevent the continuation of hostilities against Pesth on orders, the have now shown) no punishment can deter from vio- , are set free, and papers in the Canadian interesr talk most loudly. my election, certain reactionaries are endeavouring pain of the garrison being put to the sword on the made prisoners on the 30th April lence, no acts of friendshi p can conciliate to peace. gS2S£*r%&SSSS ToA^ iw^ Roman M\y 4.—News from all over the country still of India has de- by a system of base calumny to raise doubts as to the capture of the fortress. will be sent back to the French army. The ' Wherefore the Governor-General The names of the unsuccessful candid ates who continues to pour in , both by telegraph and mail, of proclaims that the kingdom of thc sincerity of my democratic and Socialist convictions. A letter from Galatz of the 23rd ult., mentions people will great with a fraternal applause and de- c'ared and hereby wer e highest on the list were proclaimed as fol- brave soldiers of the sister French the monster meetings got up to protest against the an end ; and tbat all the territories of I oppose lhe most energetic contradiction to all that General Bem is gone to attack Warsaw. monstration the Punjaub is at - :— ' Indemnity Bill , and to get up petitions Io the Queen Dhuleep Singh -are now and henceforth lows these fables.—Health and Fraternity. Boichot- Republic—May 3.' Maharaj a .. 107,43a Sap. Lebon .. 102,539 . . to recall the Governor. a portion of the British empire in India. Bn-reaud Sergeant-Major of the 7th Light Infantry.' DEFEAT OF THE RUSSIANS BY THE Immediately after the above decree was issued , j krie •• 106,912 Falloiu .. 102,517 arm in arm We have , just received word from Toronto of an His Highness the Maharaja shall be treated with .. 104,777 Ribeyrolles .. 101 598 One of the lately elected representatives of the HUNGARIANS. the French soldiers were seen walking "Boissel , there for the above-named consideration and with honour. -Demav .. 104.609 Rene .. 101,181 peeple for the department ofthe Creuse, named Nad- The - Cologne Gazette' of the 19th (2nd edition), with the Romans, previously to marching to their immense meeting held ucThOTl 103,813 Thiers .. 99 098 Alan M'Nab as The few chiefs win have not engaged in the hosti- rro .- , be seen at work states on the authority of one of its Vienna corres- camp. object , and the appointment of Sir Ji gon Faucher .. 1U3.333 Tidal .. 9S,9G5 land , is an operative mason, and may , lities against the British shall retain their property . The « Corriere Mercantile' of Genoa, of tne Htn a delegate to England. A.Langlois \. 103,137 every day at a house in process of construction in pondents, that Bern bad attached and disarmed a Assembl and their rank. states that General Oudinot immediately em- There was fierce debate in tbe y yester- to all the peo- The list of Les Amis de la Constitution (the - the neighbourhood of the Pantheon. He has de- Russian corps of 30.000 men ; that a great number inst., The British government will leave Na- Frenc h prisoners returned from Rome day evening upoi* a motion of adjournment—bitter Hindoo, or Sikh, th e free l' party) has been very unfortunate. Twenty of clared that he will not abandon his trowel until the of the Russian offi cers had gene over to his side : barked the ple, whether Musselmen, tiona without allowing them to mix with the criminations and recriminations passed between both exercise of their own religions ; but it will not per- the candida tes have been rejected , and those who day of his installation in the Legislative Assembly. that the Hungarians had captured sixty pieces of for Corsica, other troops. parties. mit any man to interfere with others in the observ- owe their election to the /act of their GERMANY. cannon * and that the disarmed Russians had been succeeded On the subj ect of the menaced Spanish attack, Mr. Papineau, the old leader of the rebellion , ance cf such f-rm-s and customs as their respective names having been on the list of the Electoral driven across the frontier. It must be remarked The Fbankfort Parliament.—On the 16th foUowing proclamation has been issued by the made a fur ious attack on the Ministry, charging religions may either enjoin or permit. Union. that neither date nor place is given for these ex- the of sirdars or inst. M. Simon, of Treves, broug ht on a motion Triumvirate :—' Romans ! Spain also addresses . to them with incapacity , and being the cause of all the Thcjagheers, and all the prop rty * Debats' of Monday gives the following traordinary statements, which were also publ ished against the British, The d' urgence, which was to declare , that since the Re- as is its wont an insolent de- disturbances, others who have b en in arms resume of the elections:—Moderates elected, 511- in another Cologne paper on the evening of the 18th . you , in proud words , , confiscated to the State. gent persisted in leaving the affairs without a Mi- word on fiance. Thu s the quire is complete. Austria , France , Mr. Solicitor-General Drumraond replied by shall be Socialists, 217 ; Elections not yet known, 22.— Another correspondent further writes us , The defences of every fortified p'.ice in the Pun- nister to direct them, an executive committee of five to renew old history, responsive to charging" him witli llie desire of annexation to the , 750. the Hth of May, that Field Marshal Parkiewich and Spain , try jaub , which is not occupied by British troops shall Total should be named by the National Assembly -for the the summons of a Pope ; but thai history no longer United States, and of being ihe first Governor of the The following members of the Constituent Assem- with 18.000 men had attempted to enter Transyl- be totall y destroyed, and effectual measures shall be carrying out of the Constitution.' A considerable ma- repeats itself in the same terms, and against ancient new State. renewing who have been Ministers, and members of the vania, but had been attacked by Bem and entirely taken to deprive ths people ofthe mentis of bly, jority declared that the debate should not at present usage stands the new conscience of nations. Be- Sir Alan M'Nab raked up recollections of Ministry, since the 24th. 1848, have not "been r-uted. either tumult or war. take place upon the subj ect. Tbis intermezzo bad THE RUSSIAN INVASION. hind the bayone ts of General O'idiriot stands the murder and outrage committed during the rebel- Over those who shaU live as obedient and peaceful re-elected as members of the Legislative Assembl y, only just ended when a message from the Regent , generous-French people ; behind tbe Imperial sword lions Of 1837 and, 1838. The Ministry deprecated subjects of the State , the British gover nment will likel to obtain seals :—MM. Trouve Cracow, May 11. —Of the Russian troops which and are not y dated tbis day, announced that he had nominated M- of Radetski are the Valiant Hungarians and the de- the cause of the argument as being got up for mere rule witli mildness and beneficence. Marie marched from Poland through Cracow into Galicia, Mau vet , Flocon, , Senard, Gamier Pa ges, Graevell Minister of the Interior and ad interim hidalgo party purposes, and said that at a proper time they But if resistance to constituted authority shall again l'E mocracy of Vienna ; behind the haughty Dapo nt de ure, Lama rtine , Freston , I/eon de President of the Council. I cannot describe the two battalions, with twelve twelve-pounders, re- were prepared to justify the whole of that proceed- be attem pted—if violence and turbulence shall be the who menaces Fiumicino , is a people which has no Malleville. Goudchaux, Recurt , Bastide, Yaulabelle, universal laughter caused by this announcement. In turned to Cracow at five, in the afternoon of ing. The President : of the Council likewise said rene wed—the Governor-General warns thc people of longer the strength that conquered the Moors , nor the time for leniency will then have Tourret, Trelat, Carnofc. the sitting of the 17th the House was informed of 8th, from Makow, in the circle of Wadowice. The that one of the causes of the excitement was the the Punjaub tha t The following members, who took an active part citizens fell into great consternation and terror, fear the gold of the New World. However , be they two passed away, and that their offence will be punished the Archduke Regent having formed his new Cabi- the difference is small, and Rome will not desire of annexation , which he deprecated. severity. in the public business , have also failed in their elec- ing tbat the Russians defeated by the Magyars, or three, with prompt and most rigorous net, and a programm e was read , in which the new , There were no new disturbances in the city yes- Hono urable the Governor- tions:—MM. Bacbez, Marrast , JDiiYergjer de -ELa u- would pillage their town. But the same troops were stir fro m its lofty purpose. These onr visitors found, By order of the Right Ministers declared that they did not intend to exe- terday, but there doubtless would have been if , the H. M. Elliot, xanne, B'-llault, Pagnerre, Jules Favre , Dupont de presently sent off by the railway into Silesia. On the three centuries and a half ago, an Italy in tlie throes General of India. (Signed) cute the Constitu tion of Germany. ¦ from its House had not adjourned at an earl y hou r. Lar ge Secretary to the government of India , with. Bureaux de Pusy, Degousse, e t ei squadrons of Uhlans, poured of death they find now an Italy arising Bussac, Cl men After the readin g of th is pr ogra mme , M. Welker 9lh, fresh troops, ght placards were posted all over the city, unanimously the Governor-General . Perree Ducoux, Berger , o 4 000 in- trance, the Italy of the people. The Roman people, Thomas, , Proudh n, Bu- moved a sweeping vote of want of confidence in the in from the Russian side. To-day arrived , signed by the influen tial inhabitants, urging the ne- (True Cop es.) W. Courtne y, •ngnier Audry de Puyraveau Joly - Chambolle, , t four, which feels the obligation of belying their calumnies, ' , . , new Cabinet ; and , after a short debate, the House fantry, later a re giment of Hussars and a cessity of maintaining peace and order. The ex- March 20. Acting Secre ary to Govern men t. Portalis, Georges and Edmond Lafayette, Bucos, &c three battalions more of infan try. The number of of combating their injustice, of accomplishing its resolved to divide on M.Welker 's motion , which tbe Italy, awaits them , un- citement i< great, and there are rumours that The Expiring Assembly.—On Saturday after Russian troops that have in all , up to this dale , mission by saving Rome and GENEUAT.IVB Assembly accepted (by 191 votes against 12) in the people Upper Canada will rise. A few days will sh«w if ON PHYSICAL DISQUAL IFICATIONS , a long discussion on the stamp duties, -which came passed thi ough Sracow , cannot be set down at less daunted and firm against every trial. A INCAPACITY ', ANU IMl'BUIMB NTS TO MAKKIAG B. following form :—' After having been informed ot the sight of it be true. to no result, the order of the day was read for the than 30,000. They have not yet penetrated into which has a mission to accomplish in the Twenty-fi fth edition , illustrated with Twenty-Six Anatomi- formation of a new Cabinet, and after the reading of justice cannot die. UNITED STATES. cal Engravings on Steel, enlarged to MI S pages , price first readin g of the bill relative to the bill intro- H ungary, bnt are encamped at Jordanow, only ten humanity, and eternal the programme of that Cabinet, the Parliament de- 2s. Od; by post, direct from the .Establishment , Ss. Cd,, duced by M. Iison Faucher for the continuance for miles from the Mag yar outpos ts. The borses , which ' The Triumvirs, Everything in the way of news in the United clares that it cannot place any confidence in the said 4 Ahmbllini Mazzini , Saffi. in postage stamps. three months of the powers conferred on General are only shod in the forefeet, arc said to have suf- , State s is torpid and dull. There are no political Cabinet ; and that, under existing circumstances, ' Rome, May 7, 1849.' movements whatever. THE SILENT FRIE ND ; Changarni er. Several government members con- it considers the appointment of the said Cabinet as fered a good deal from the bad roads. a medical work 611 the exhaustion and ph ysical decay warml that ths question Russian in- The ' Positivo' of Rome , of the 8th inst., pub- The intell igence fro m California presents no new tended y ought to he post- an insult offered to the representatives of the nation.' The following ukase, relating to the of the system, produced by excessive indul gence, thc conse- poned, because the Assembly would not have time lishes a note to the Catholic powers dated the 7 th , feature. People continue to wend their way to the quences of infection , or the abuse of mercury, with obser - In the sitting of the 18th , M. Gravell , President tervention in Hungary, has been published in St. to decide upon it definitively. The opposition , on Petersburg :— and signed by Ruseoni, Roman minister of foreign new El Dorado by thousands and tens of thousands. vations on the marrried state , and the disqualifica tions of tbe Council, in reply to a question from M. affairs. After observing that the Roman question, At Independence, Missouri, there were 5,000 en- which prevent it; Ulustr-ited by twenty -six coloured engra- the contrar y, contended that it should be taken into ' By the grace of God, We, Nicholas I., Emperor vhUfS, and by the detail of cases, liy It. and L. rJEKRX Simon, of Treve s, declared that Hessian and Wur- hitherto a polit ical one, has now assume d a religious camped , waiting for milder weather to start the immedia e considera tion , and that it should not be temburg troops have been concentrated on tbe fron- and Autocrat of all the Russias, declare to the na- and Co. , 10, Iicrncrs-strcet , Oxford-street , Londo n. subjected to the formality of three readin gs. A mo- tion , having, by our manifesto of the 14th of character, and that all Europe conspires to impose a grass on the prairies, and the numbers were daily "Published by tlie authors , and sold by Stengo . 21, Pater- tiers of tbe grand duchy of Baden, not with views noster-row ; Ilannay, Go and Sanger 100 Oxford -street ; tion was the n made tha t the farther consider ation detected power upon three millions of men, who de- augmenting. Many had returned from the Rio , , , hostile to the constitution of the empire, hut to March, 1848, informed our subjects of the miseries Starie, 23, Tichborne -street , llaymarket ; and Gordon , 146, clared it for ever fallen, this documant proceeds to Grande, their companions having died of cholera , and - of the measu res should be adjourned , which was re- take possession again of the federal fortress of Ras- which afflicted Western Europe, we at the same time Leadenhall-street , London ; J. and It. ltaimes and Co., jected by a majority of 294 to 254. This vole pio- made known how we were ready to meet our ene- state that a great people, recalling its old traditions many desire to return from the Isthmus of Panama, Luithwulk , Edinburgh • D. Campbell , Argyll-street , Glas- tadt, and protect the states bordering the grand of lory, has shaken off its slumber and awoke to where death is also busy, especially with those who gow ; J. Priestly, Lord-s treet , and T. Newton , Church- duced a great deal of agitation. The discussio n on mies wherever they might show themselves, and g Ma rket-place Manch ester. duchy of Baden. He then declared that the vicar of the life of nations. If the prince whom Europe have no means to proceed further. In Texas, too, street, Liverpool : R. Ingram , , the bill itself tben commenced. After a storm y the empire, in the hope of an amicable arrangement ihat we should, without sparing ourselves, in con- Part the First debate the Assembly rejected the bill. The num- junction indissoluble with our sacred Russia, defend would res tore at Rome were , like many others , the the cholera has been very fat al, while at New Or- Is dedica ted to the consideration of tlie anatomy and physi- of the differences respecting the constitution of the y or indirectl y engaged here were— mere inheritor of vulgar privileges, the consequences leans, the death s average nearly 200 per week. The ology of the organs which are directl empire, had thought it right to send a courier to bis the honour of the Russian name, and the inviola- in the process ol'rep i-oduetion. It is illustrated by six co. For the bill . . . .210 of the strugg le would be limited to a greater or pestilence is fast travelling up the rivers, and the Prussian Majesty, and tbat the answer to his over- bility of our frontiers. loured engravings. lesser number of victims ; were the task Europe as- victims of cholera at St. Louis were last week forty Part the Second. Against it . . . . 293 tures would serve as ' The commotions and rebellions of the west have Majority against Ministers . 83 a guide to his ulterior conduct . sumes a mere question of independence or servitude , six. Apprehensions are entertained that the mor- Treat s of the infirmities and decay of the system , produced The vicar of the empire, , not since then ceased. Guilty delusion , enticing the by over indul gence of the passions , and l>y the practice of M. Odillon Barrot then end-avowed to iuduce he added had received his it might be loaded with malediction , but stiil the tality will be great throughout the country soon mandate from thc National Assembly, and his power thoughtless crowd with visionary dreams of that solitary gra tification. It shows clearly the maimer in the Assembly to suspend its moral interests of the human race would not suffer. after the commencement of the hot season. which tlie baneful consequences of this indul gence operate sittings, in order to had been conferred on him in the name of the go- prosperi ty which can never be the fruit of wilful- allow time for the preparation of the Hall for the But the actual object of Europe shakes the edifice of An interesting correspondence is published in the on the economy in the impairmen t and destruction of the vernments by the Germanic diet. When, there- ness and obstinacy, has entered the east and the do- social and vital powers. The existence of nervous and "New Assembly, bn t tbe majorit y refused. religion to its very founda tions, an d crush es fait h in American papers between Lady Franklin and Mr. fore, it will be requisite to lay down his mandate, he minions contiguous to us, subjects of the Turkish sexual debili ty and incapacity, with their accompany ing Wednesday.—The National thousands of hearts. The whole state of Rome has J M. Clayton , Secretary of State , respectin g the train of symptoms and disorders , are traced by the chain of Assembly was occu* will only do so in the midst of the Assembly; but as empire, viz., Moldavia and Wal laehia. Only by the pied to the close of its sittings declared the downfall of the temporal power of the arctic expedition. The American government pro- connecting results to their cause. This selection concludes yesterday with a dis- far as concerns his power he will resign it into the prese nce of our troo ps, together with those of Tur- cussion produced by the interpellations of M. , pontiff; and, though under the menace ofa French, mise whi,i alacrity ' that every effort will be made with an explicit detail ofthe means by which these effects Sarrans bands of the governments. As for the ministry of key, has order been restore d and maint ained; butin may bs remedied, aud full and ample direc tions for their to the affairs of Rome and ihe an Austrian , and a Neapolitan invasion , all the mu- to lay the subject before our whalers, and induce relative intervention the empire, it conceives itself bound to remain tem- Hungary and Transylvania the efforts of the Aus- use. It is illustra ted by three coloured engravings , which of Russia in Hungary. The reply of the Minister nicipalities have boldly protested against its restora- them to undertake the work for wliich the British fully display thc effects of physical decay. of porar ily in power , nouuhstanding the distrust im- trian government , distracted al ready by another war Foreign Affairs was to the effect that the conduct tion. Is this the mere voice of a faction ? The government have offered so high a reward.' l'avt the Third of plied in the vote of the National Assembly. with forei gn and domestic enemies in I taly, have not Contains an accurate descrip tion of the diseases caused by tbe government in relation to Some was str' consequence is, that many believers now ask them- We are lost in amazement to perceive how ths ctly in The Assembly then passed to the order of the day, yet been able to triumph over rebellion. On the inf ection , and by thc abuse of mercury ; prim ary and se- accordance with the vote come to by the Assembl selves whether he who represents a religon of peace masses of the people are everywhere cunningly ar- condary symptoms, eruptions of the skin, sore throa t, in. y, that is to say, to the discussion of the propositions contrary, strengthening itself by hordes of our Po- and with regard to Russia the government had ad- has a right to reassert temporal power by force of rayed against each other for destruction. In the ttammatiou of the eyes, disease of the bones , gonerrluea, from the Committee of Thirty, for the formation of a lish traitors ef 1831, and of others, foreigners , out- gleet, stricture , &c, are shown to depend on this cause, dressed letters on the subject to the Cabinets of arms ; and, as it is easy to confound the doctrine case of ihe Roman difficulties , curses loud and deep St. regency of the empire. The discussion was adjourned casts , runaways, and vagrants, the rebellion has de- Their treatment is fully described in this section. The ef- Petersburg, "Vienna, Berlin, with its apostle, many beg in to doubt of the truth are uttered against the French , for their interven. fects of neglect , cither in the recognition of disease or in and London. The po- to the following morning. veloped itself there to a most threatening degree. licy of the government was, he added, to negotiate of religion in consequence of the acts of its head, tion in favour of the Pope. It does seem strange the treatment , are shown to be the prevalence ofthe virus On the 19th, the following resolution was put to ' in the midst of these unfortunate events the Em- in the system , which sooner or later will show itself in one on the subject, and irom that course and cannot conceive how a religion that once re- indeed that this soi disant republic should it was deter- the vote, and carried by a majority of 126 to 116:— peror of Austria has addressed himself to us with unile of the forms already mentioned , and entail disease in its mined not to deviate, as it considered it best suited deemed the world from slavery is now changed into with Austria to restore the government ol' g p , not only on the individual himself ' That the Assembly elect forthwith, if possible, from the wish for our assistance against our common ene- priests, most fri htful sha e , but to the interests of the country. M. Joly proposed an mies. We shall not refuse hira. a weapon intended to transform free men into slaves. spies, and inquisitions. One would think that the also on the olVspring. Advice for the treatment of all these amongst the reigning princes, a stadtholder of the diseases and their consequences is tendered in this section , order of the day motive, which was tantamount to ¦ ' Let Europe,' says the document in conclusion , ' re- discoveries recently made at Rome of the dungeons empire, who, up to the time set forth in the resolu- Having called to the assistance of tbis righteous which , if duly followed up, cannot fail in effecting- -i cure. an immediate declaration of war. Geueral Cavai flect be/ore she proceeds ; the struggle is no longpr of the Holy-office would be enough to arm the This part is illustrated by seventeen coloured engravings. g- tions ofthe 4th of May (Nos. 5 and 6), shall, accord- ent erprise the Alm ighty Leader of Baltics and Lord nac warmly opposed its adoption, and proposed of Victories, we have commanded our armies to between one army and another, nor between one world against such a temporal and religious power Part the Fourth ing to the 3rd section of the imperial constitution, Treats of thc prevention of disease by .1 simple application another, merely calling en the government to use move forward for the extinc tion of rebellion , and class of men aud another ; but it is a struggle that as that which has so long depressed Ital , enjoy the rights and fulfil the duties of the supreme y. There by which the danger of infection is obviated. Its action is the most energetic measures to protect liberty and embraces a whole moral world uf ideas ( and is a serious talk here of raising a protestant fund simple head of. tbe empire.' th e destruction of audacious and evil-intentioned hopes , for , but sure. It acts with the vir us chemically, and the Republic The order of the day pure and faiih that may have an echo in the most distant the aid ofthe Roman republicans. It is destroys its power on the sydtem. This important part The other sections of the resolution provide for men, who endeavour to distur b the peace of our , agitated in simple was proposed. A very stormy scene " generations.' private but influential circles, and Ihough it of the work should be read by every young man en tering ensued. the taking the oath to the constitution on the part dominions also. may be into life. . Many ot the representatives quitted the Chamber to disguised in its exterior it will be not less of the stadtholder and public functionaries, for his •Let God be with us, and who shall be against us ? (From the ' Morni ng Chronicle.') , positive Par t thc Fiftli avoid voting on the order of lhe day, when it was in its object. Is devoted to the consider ation of the Duties and Obliga - carrying out the decision of the Assembly relating 'So—we are convinced of it—so feels, so hopes, Rome, May 12.—Apropos of the Neapolitans , a put from the chair that the balloting urns should h migration is again pouring Us full tide upon us. tions of the Harried State , and ofthe causes which lead to to the next elections and the convocation of the first so aspires our God-reserved nation , every Russian , number of letters and journals have come to hand at the happiness or misery of those who have entered iato the he left open till seven o'clock', when, if the numb er every true subject of ours, and Russia will fulfil her the post-office here , from Naples, directed to the Three thousand paupers were landed in this city in bonds of matrimony. Disquietudes and jars between mar - imperial diet, for the exercise by the present Assem- two of votes was not completed, the sitting shou'd be de- mission. ' superior offi cers of the invad ing corps, in Rome. This days last week. The Irish predominate. How ried couples are traced to depend , in the majority of in- bly of all the rights of the imperial diet until the stance.*;, on causes resultin g clared en permanence. One member cried out that 'Given at St. , was reckoning a lit tle without their host ; things are long is Treland to pour forth these wretched crowds? from physical imperfections latter be convoked, and for continuing the stadt- Petersburgh the 26th day of April and errors , and tlie means for their removal shown to be those who abstained should be declared 7tors la lot. < Is her population larger than th&t of continental holder in his office, even after the imperial diet has in the year from the birth of Christ, 1849, and the not quite come to that point yet. within reach and eftcctnal. The operation of certain dis- A scene of tbe utmost violence both preceded and 24th of our reign. (Signed) Nicholas I.' Siege of Bologna. —The ' Milan Gazette ' of Europe ? It would seem so. The moment these quali fications is fully examined , and infelicitous and unpro- been convened, in case there should be insurmount- ductive unions shown to hc the necessary followed the aunout-cement, the members of the the 13th inst. states that hostilities having recom- people arrive they commence begging. The streets consequence. able obstacles to the conferring of the supreme di Thc causes and remedies for this state form an important Mountain standing on their benches, and shouting g- ITALY. swarm with them. nity on the sovereign of the greatest, or the next menced at Bologna after the armistice , the town considera tion in this section of the work . vociferously . TIIE ROMAN REPUBLIC. has been blockaded , and the waters of the aqueduct INDIA. Consul tation fee, if by letter, £1.—Patients are requested greatest, state of Germany. The last section de- to be as minu te as possible in the description At length something like order was restored, and THE NEAPOLITA NS AGAIN DEFEATED. and the canal ot the Reno cut off, so that the tovfn MORE ROBBERY.—THE ANNEXATIO N OF of their cases. who had taken no clares that, with tbe carrying out of the resolution Att endance dail y at i!>, ]k-;-ncrs-sh-eet, Oxford- sh-eer, several part in the commence- . Rome, Thursday , May 10.—Yesterday there was will have speedily to surrender for want of wate r THE PUNJAUB. London, from eleven to two ment came in and in question—inasmuch as the work of establishing , and from five to eight ; on gave their votes, and also those some sharp fi ghting at Palestrina, about sixteen and provisions. Bombay, pri l l" Sundays from eleven to 011c. the constitution of Germany will be then completed A .—Dost Mahomed and his " who had manifested their intention, not to vote de- miles east-south-east of Rome, the ancient Prae- The ' Corriere Mercantile ' of Genoa of the Hth Sold by Sutton and Co., Dow Church Yard ; Tv. Edwards , —the power of the central executive will cease, and Affghaiis have escaped back t.i Cabool. The war is G7, St. Paul' s Church Yard ; Barclay posited their bulletins in the urn. At seven o' neste, between Garibaldi's division and a Neapolitan inst and Sons, Farriiigdon- clock all Its attributes will be transf erred to the stadt - ., contains some particulars about the renewal over. The Punjaub is British territory. In these strecr , Cornhill ; 1'utler and Co., 4, Cheapside ; It. ,lohn- precisely tbe division was closed, when tbe numbers corps. Without further preface, I will translate " liS holder ofthe empire. of the attack upon Bologna on the 9th. Hostilities brief sentences may he announced the event son, , Coi'iihill ; L. Hill, New Cross ; W. 11. Jones , Kings.. were—for the order of the day, ' pure an d simple,' the two documents, a • bulletin * and an ' official re- recommenced at noon and lasted till dusk. The ton ; \V, J. Tanner , 1'ghinn ; S, Smith , Windsor ; .1. B. The following resolution was also adopted :— which have transpired during the last fortni ght in Shillock, Bromley ; T. Riches , London-s treet Greenwi ch; fif ty-three ; against it, 459. Majority against Mi- port,' which have been published on the subject •¦— Austrians threw rockets upon , * That, in case the vicar of the empire, as threatened the town from the relation to that country to which aU eyes have for a Thos. Parke s, Woolwich ; Kdc and Co., Dorking ; and John sisters, 406. * OFFICIAL BULLETIN . FIRST ITALIAN LEGION OF suburb of San Michale by the ministry, should transfer his powers other- , and cannonaded it from long time past been so nagerl y directed. Turle y, High-street , Hoinfurd , of whom ma*y¦ be had tbe A third order of tbe day was proposed by M. GEN ERAL GARIBALDI. "SILliNT PfilBND. " wise than into the hands of the National Assembly, thc Palaazo Aldini. A combined attack upon the 1 informed you. in my. last of the arrival at AUock Bastide, which was ordered to be printed. The ' Palestrina, May 9, Quarter-past Eight p.m. such transfer be declared by the National Assembly Galliera , Felice, Isaia, and Saragozza gates, tool- of General Sir. W. R. Gilbert and his army, in hot Assembly rose at a quarter-past seven o'clock in a 1 A complete victory. Tbe enemy, 7,000 strong, TIIE POPULAR KEMEDY. null, illegal, and not binding. place at the same time ; all which were repulsed , pursuit of the fl y ing Ameer of Cabool , who, van- state of great excitement. entirely routed. We have taken three ieces of ar- BADEN.—We have dates from Carlsruhe and p while the Bolognese cannon did gre at execut ion quished on the field of Goojerat, was making the D AR R'S LIFE PILLS , The Ministry.—The Ministry went on Sunday tillery two mutilated, onegood. The firing commenced among the Austrians at the i- "Which are ackno vvlegcd to be aU Mannheim to May 16th. Carlsruhe was in a very Annunziata. The best of his way towards the Kh yher Pass , en route that is required to evening last (says the • Patrie*) and tendered their at half-past four, and finished at dusk. More conquer Disease and l'rolong Life. unsettled state ; several thousand volunteers Bol ognese hav e 2 ,000 troops of the line. to his own capital . It was supposed our politicals resignations in a body to the President of the Re- bad ar- exact details shall be sent in an hour. Palestrina rived, and a great number of persons had fled to Fall ov Bologna.—Letters from Turin an- had succeeded in gaining over the Kh public General Bugeaud arrived suddenly in Paris is illuminated. yberies by Wurtemberg or France. The soldiers had proceeded nounce that the Austrians have taken Bidogna by bribery, and that these people would oppose yesterday, bein g called up by government. • Daverio, Chief of the General Staff. the pas- to the election of their officers ; very young men had ' assault, after a heroic defence by the inhabitants . sage of the Dost through the defile of whieh Mo*s»a*»\—The negotiations for the formation of ' OFFICIAL KEPORT. they been named captains and majors. — ITALIAN LEGION, COM- The number of killed on both sides is very great. were Hie self-appointed keepers. Bat if ' a new cabinet have been going on with great acti- MANDED BY GARIBALDI. any monev BERLIN, May 14.—The Prussian government TUSCANY.—Butchery of the Patriots.— was paid , the Dost must have outbid us for vity to-day, but nothin g has been definitivel y settled. • Palestrina, May 9, Nine p.m. their have struck the first decisive blow at the Frankfort The ' Corriere Mercantile,' of the 16th, states, from favour , for he entered the Khyber There appe ares to be little doub t, however, that « The combat of to day could not have had a bet- Pass just as Assembly. The Prussian deputies have been re- Leghorn , that upwards of 200 persons have been General Gilbert crossed the Indus, and bad Marshal Bugemd will be the new President of the tor termination. The Neapolitans, to thc number made called. The decree of their recall appears In the shot there. Persons wearing the national colours, his way to Jellabal before the latter Council of Ministers , and that he will be joined by of 7.000, with 800 cavalry, arrived in the evening of reached Pesh ' Staats-Anzeiger' of this evening, aud is as follows : though perfectly quiet in every other respect, have awur. When the British general arrived at the if. de Falloux and M. Buffet, two members ef the yestprday, at Valmontone; and were annoyed by us capital ' ROYAL ORDINANCE. been shot without a trial. Many houses have been of the province, he fou n d tha t th presen t Cabinet. The other member s of the present during the night with a fire of musketry, pushed up e Affghans had ' 1. The commission of tbe deputies elected in the sacked by the soldiery. At Florence the liberty of destroyed the villages and suburbs around Cabinet , namely, M. Odillon Birr ot, M. Passy, and to the walls. To-day they attempted to strike a , and set Prussian state to the German National Assembly on the press has been suspended. fire to the cantonments, and M. Lac rosse, endeavoured to form a Ministerial com- decisive blow to the former residence the ground of the Diet' at us. Three roads lead from this VENICE.—A letter from Turin of the 13th says : of Major General Lawrence. bination without M. de Falloux and Buffet ; but they s decrees of March 30, and " place to Valmontone, which all meet in cue at two —' A new treason has been discovered at Venice. On the 29th of March have failed. It is understood that it was on the April 7, 1848, and our own ordinance ofthe 11th of a proclamation was drawn musket-shots beyond Palestrina. The enemy divi- An accom plice revealed to General iracy Parr introduced to Times the latter month, are expired. Pepe a consp up, declaring the Sikh dynasty at an end, and the King Charles I.—(See " Life and Italian question that tne difference of opinion oc- ded his forces into two bodies ; one was directed to set fire to the arsenal, and whilst the troops of of Thomas l' avr , " which may be had gratis of all Agents. ) ' 2. This, our present ordinance, is to be set be- Punjaub annexed to the British dominions. This The ex are thus curred which led to the breaking up of the Odillon upon our left , by the road which runs from this to the fort of Malghera should be ied in endea- traordinary pro perties of this medicine fore the deputies by our plenipotentiary at Frank- occup was promulgated the following day, prefaced bv described by au eminen t physician , who says :— '-Af ter Barrot Cabinet. Cave, with a branch to Valmontrone, the other a ' " fort-on-Maine for their observance, and with the in- vouring to extinguish the fire,, the Austrians were hrief notification from the Governor-General particular observat ion of the act ion of PauiVs I'im- *; .* Tcesdat.—Marshal Bugeaud is to be Minister upon our r ight, by Lug . The am determined their junction to abstain from taking any part in the fur- nano. At tbe centre a skir- to make a terrible attack on the fort. General two docum ents run as follow : , in my opinion,that thc following avc of "War and Presiden t of the Council of the new ad- mish took place, in which three of — true pro perties:— ther proceedings the Royalists Pope profited by the discovery. A. short time be- SOtlFI CATlON—T-OM- ministra tion . It is as yet uncertain who will fill up of the Assembly. .1G5* DEPART MENT "First —They increase the strength , whilst most other were killed, without any of our men being hurt . fore the hour fixed for the fire, ' Let tbe subordinate posts, hut it is ' Fre derick William. he arrested the ¦n -ft-rozcpOMr , Mar ch 30, l849 medicines have a weakenin g effect upon the system. probable that M. ' At half-past four the enemy, whose coming we traitors, and having caused The Governor-Generalr. n any one take from three to four or six pills every twenty- Leon Faucher will be Minister of ' Given at Charlottenburg, May 14, 1849.' a large quantity of is pleased to direct, that Finance, and that ardently lon-ted for, appeared. All was ready. The wood and straw to be placed the accompanying proclamation four hours , and , instead of having weakened , they will be M. Falloux will remain in his present post. (From the ' Times.') near the arsenal, he , by which the Pun- found to ha ve revived the animal spirits , and to have im- fire began from our left, the enemy replying with set fire to it. The Austrians thinking that the jaub is declared to be a portion of the The President of the Republic and the moder ate The last advices from Elberfeld and the insur- pae in India British em- par ted a lasting stre ngth to the body. cannon , as well as musketry. None of our men gave arsenal was on fire, as had been agreed upon , com- , be published for general information - "Secondly—In their operation they go direct to the party who counsel him, see iu General Bugeaud an gent districts in the ' Kolner Zeitung' are of the and that a ground for an instant ; but stood nailed to their menced the assault;.but they met with such a re- RoyaUalut. be fired at ever y Kal disease. Alter you have taken six or twelve pills yon will anchor of safety. The army loves him, they say, 17th inst. They inform us of the successful repres- post, like station of the army on P experience their effect ; the disease upon you will " become lions made fierce by thirst of blood. After sistance that they were compelled to retire with theHo receipt thereof and he will thus have sufficient power to put down sion of the insurrection. Elberfeld, Iserlohn and as .hour's firing, the rd l Uf the Rig1 ble ' less and less by every dose you take ; and if you will perse- . enemy made a movement in heavy losses. Several hundred wounded were ri°i ? T r *-°--ra the Governor- ver e iu regularly takin g from three to six pills every tiny, insurrection. This is a bold and desperate step the other towns, have returned to obedience , and in retreat ; a detachment Genoral of India. (Si^ gned) of our troo ps, sent to the left, sent to Padua, and the besiged, profiting by the P. Meivilt! your disease will speedily be entirely removed from 'l" e taken by Louis Napoleon. His new President of the the case of iserlohn only was the interference of the under Under-Secretary to government system shelter of tbe high ground , opened a fire upon disorder of the enemy, sallied out made 800 of India, Council is not liked in Paris. He is the enemy at military wanted. In the combat which took place his flank , pri- with the Governor-General. "Thi rdl y—They are found , after giving the m a fair Wm , well nourished and directed with such and spiked in- once of the Socialists and of the soners, the greater part of the Austrian _, or a few weeks, to possess the most astonishing and Cavaignac party, in |hat town, the 8th Rifles suffered severely, and skill and steadiness that we had the PROCL AMATI ON*. vi obstin-i 6 including MM. Dufaure satisfaction of caxnon. D orma uy rs gorating properties, and they will overcome all ' . and Lamoriciere, and it had some of their officers killed, but the insurgents seeing the enemy yea , in the time of Maharaja Runject complaint s, and restore sound n*t»*'tt ot betake himself to a precipitate NAPLES AND SICILY biiigb , peace and health ; there is a remains to be seen whether, with the numberof par- were at length reduced to obedience. The submis- flight , . friendshi p prevailed between the good appetite shortly from the beginning of their «=e ; leaving many dead and wound ed, with three British nation ¦/mist their 1 tisans these two parties possess in the chamber, be sion of Elberfeld was caused by tbe return of a de. pieces of (From the 'Times.') and the Sikhs. mildness as a purgative is a dcsulcvatw artillery , two of them disabled . He was When Runjcet greatly required by the weak paiticu'.'ny will be able to obtain a working majoritvi pntation which that town had sent to Berlin Singh was dead, and liis wisdom no and delica te, , and pursue d for a considerable distan ce, and , thou gh We have received intelligence of the 9th from longer guided the councils where violent purg ing is acknowled ged to be injurio us in- A grand review took place to-day in the Champ which brought assurances ' of the State, the sirdars stead ot beneficial. of the King s acceptation very clever at running, some prisoners were made. Palermo. The city is now in the hands of the anu tne Khaha army, without de Mars, in presence of the President of the Repub- of the Frankfort Constitution ' provocation and with- , such as it had been Meanw hile another body of tro ops came upon our King s government. On the previous day the out cause, suddenly invaded the British territories. TO PER SONS GOING ABROAD . lic. The object of the review was to ascertain the in the first reading, with only a few slight modifica- left, by 1 heir army 1*' 5C ,! the pathway of Zagarolo, to which leads a citizens had induced the Mountaineers and Free was again a.nd again defeated, Thev These pills are particularl y recommended to all l>< ' f realfeeling of the troops with respect to the go- tions. This news operated track were driven going abr oad cluu'l?8 a sudden change in El- branching from the post-road of Frosinone, in Corps to go outside the town and attack Filangieri, with slaughter and in shame from the , and subjecting themselves to a grea t venraent, it having been so currently reported tbat Un y ot climate. Officers of the Aiuiy asd Uavv, .u'|- berfeld ; the citizens and Landwehr removed tbe the neighbourhood of Lugnano : they were but the moment they had got rid of such unpleasant ° -£ - the? ^invaded, -«"• atthe gates of Lahore 1" the Socialists had succeede d in withdrawin g drawn up t?hei Maharaja. sio-UME s, Emiokants , &.c, will find them an imaluat" . many of barricades, and a troop of rank Republicans who had in mass, with a vanguard visitors, the National Guard closed the Dhuleep Singh tendered to the Go- tative w of cavalry : another body gates vernor-General the append age to their medicine chests, as a preven them from their allegiance. The number of troops partici pated in the rising were induced to quit the of cavalry, against them and refused to let submission of himself and his the att acks of our Coioiih-i deployed upon their left flank, was them re-enter. In chiefs, and solicited those diseases so prevalent in on the ground was upward of 40,000. Their ap- town. They marched into the country, posted in the the clemency of the -Boritishrinsn especial ly in the West Indies, where u small box reccu-'J where they reserve. This body arrived in good order meantime the Neapolit an troop s came up, and a government. kno»» pearance was certainly magnificent. The troops dispersed. Most of their leaders were arrested. at tne point dreadful massacre t sold for 10s. In America also its fame is getti ng where the roads crossed each other, , i is said, took place of the Ihe Governor-General and its causin ; an immc s saluted the President of the Republic with loud cries and exten ded the elemenev of virtue duly appreciated, "¦ ^ ' li Letters from the Rhine frontier announce tbat opened a fire from one p Republicans , who fled on every side ' his government mand for it; and there is no country o -por tin the '0 ' of * Vive Napoleon,' « "vive le President, iece of artillery. Their ob- , and were pur- to the State of Lahore ; i ' and occa- two regiments of Prussian infantry, which had been ject was to repair the sued by the Royal troops. i-ousl spared he eene where it will not speedily become anv alii J nicxten. sionally of * repulse they had received on The king ' s flag was y the kingdom which he had f ' "j Vive la Republique !* The Republican ordered into Bavaria have their officers to death, the other side then hoisted and the jus right awmSSir » traffic and general utility, as it may be nadrec ou«c Guard, which , put , and they attempted to deploy some , city h&9 now made its formal to subvert • and the Maharaja siinpiiclij 'i » ^ was the first that defiled "before the and joined the people. battalions replaced on havS been all cases of sick ness, with confidence in its President on this quarter, but our troops were submission , and the civil war is at an end. the throne, treaties of ffipiXwf in its power to produce relief. , called 'Vive la Republique Democratiqne isKRLOHN. too formed ^ dsnip were «# Sociale !' The —This important manufacturing town, firm at their posts to allow them to pass ; between the states. crowds of lookers-on were very which had been thereupon CANADA. The British CAUTION. cold in their reception of during several days in the posses- they changed their tactics, and attempted to p have faithfully kept their word E the President. Ou leafing lion ene- Montreal , May 8.—The parl iament have scrupulousl ™a None are genuine , unless the words " PARR -» -' of the insur gents , waB taken on the 17th by the was not in y observed everfStiSfiS on ,re the Palace of the Elysee, and again on his return, session to-day } it.will the tr wh ch PILLS" are in White Letters on a KEO Gbovsd , -^ tro ops of the line, who, enraged at the loss of Lieut. - The fire with which convene on Monday next , and eatiesimnosed upon them. ° * 0 Louis Napoleon was warmly rece tbey were met was too keen • Government Stamp, pasted round each box ; •uf. A,,j.-i(Vs ived. Col. Scbrot ter, they hold its sessions m the new buildi ng But the Sikh people and ltu Tuesday. who was killed during the contest tried a last effort, but unsuccessfully. owned by Mr . their clnVfc hj™ simile ofthe signature of the Proprietors , "T. „ir£C —The Frenchgovernment has received in the Our Hayes, called the their part , grossly^ Ss " " on tne u> town, committed great excesses, killing not C Ur ed ceedin Freem asons' Hall , but it is said faithle ^vffid ro and Co., Crane-court , Fleet-street , London, teligra phic despatches announcing that serions dis- less than ™p?' B-y °y "hat had passed , tha t the seat of m by which they were £\° pr°" tions. ten per sons in one house, met them.ho ° with% ardour? governm ent is to alternate four years *f bound. M|,b,iso** nt¦ , and could not long be res- 1 Sold in boxes at ls. l.'d. , 2s. 9d., and fomUy P . „ at Quebec and Tor outO i P^ion whatever has vendo rs tbvo«D at ananvj timet^a TbeenoT paid^"V? U6.each, by all respectable medicine , and Jargo Joan s 8aWd to the world , Full directions are given with each M* Mat 26, 1849. THE^ NORT HE RN STAR. t*n L.u • -i_:_ ' ¦ ¦ —*-—— - ^ f9Qe49n^tr»t a-ld, thattu_i. in thisa parti willmi be f<•ound . . ^ . ^ '-' a sketch of SUJiSHEfE AND SHADOW; A TALE OF the far-famed Grace O'Malley, be n y o^red at the the Graine-ni- THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. shr.£?ine 2 of? a. ^ - a dream worsl"P Vnttttiw. TUV EUE TOU DESPAItt. HUNGARY. Mhaile (Granu "Weale) of Deity enveloped in dim but glorious Irish legend and BY THOMA S MARTIN WHEELER , shad ow, whose HOLLO WAY'S PILLS. outlin e was too vast for contempla - nirnr* /-\ts • nm™** . Forbear , . Late Secretary to the Nation al tion , an d whose, Doctrine of Passive Obkdiej *c!"v— V\?„ r r CURE 0F ASTHMA. fond, foolish lovers of tbe Past ^_ Char ter Association featur es ever appeared to vary with The doctrine c* of bette r "Who scornful the var ying of passive obedience is so repugnant to the genuine m ' -| from Mr. Benjamin Mackie . a rcspeeb . glances on the Pre sent cast !— and National Land Company. imagination . A stud ples i , da cd Creena gh ot thar tism y of the princi a«IL «' . , *, , near Loughall , Ireland , Blind heretics ! the base belief give o' er Mackenzie' s Educational Boohs; Elementary gave form , pro portion , fceling3 of human nature, that it can never be com- oated Septembern, 11th , 1818. tne shad ow ofhis and colour to y acted on. A secret dread that popular ven- That hearts heroical beat high no more, Works, Catechisms, tyc.; CnAMER Till. imagination , and arra yed it in the p letel -T1,:i'?x;celIent ms ¦»«- effectually Murray' s Gram- garb of im- curo Tm7o?^ ^S ' na w That greatness rote with buried right , , and justice. A close and , and nature assert her rights, S?,M? " ; -uch afflictci1 me *» thr ee year * generations , mar ; Mackenzie' s Arithmetical, Commercial Povert y hath a sharp and goading power reason geance will awake to Ll ." ". *¦" s oMI ged - And Histor y only knows of patriot nations. , To wrin g enthusiastic stud y of tho subject soon made him poses a restraint which the most determined despo - S-wfcir ^ •", ,I-V** to milk my room at and Artificer' s the torture cry, 10f s,ltl'oc«ted if I -ven t to bed by "Why shut y Tables ; Wine-office Court and fill the breath perceive that a love for liber ty in nam e onlv tism is not able to shake off. The rude reaso n of SW™ , our eyes to dream some glorious dreams , With frantic curses or despairin g sighs • , with- n' ^ cs,de seen to be app reciated. The maps (with 523 acres ofthe commons' until that ancient law was restored among us. For , the grea test confidence , havin g recommended them in Since 1S01, 3,740, land is sleep to the poor and needy. The beggar want of practical ability to undertake such an office many cases of pulmonary consumption , and they have al- ihe accompanying illustrations), are superb ; have been enclosed by acts of pa rliament , blessing , that while such assemblies arc per- of under its gentle spell can be as comp y —but urg ing in corroboration of his opinion the who sees not ways afforded relief when everyth ing else has failed, and and estimated as before , would be letel blessed mitted to have a longer duration , there grows up a and, alto gether, this is one of the cheapest which the ren tal , half the hours of his existence as he who g , which he had oc- the patients having been surfeited with medicine , are de- vear, andthe profit to labourers during practice in France and Bel ium commerce of corru ption between the minister and lighted to meet with so efficient a remedy having such au "best publications ofthe day. £7,481,056 per the ^ heaps gold in his iron chest ; yea, more so, for no casion to investi gate last year , under instructions , ,810,560 annuall y. the deputies, wherein they both find their accounts, nsrccablo taste , &c—(Signed) John Mawsi ix, Surgeou , 13, if so let to them £74 pandering to a pampered appetit e will bring visions from Sir George Groy . Tho example is a good one. 'i' 000 acres of waste land in Great to the manifest danger of libert y ? which traffic Alosley-strcet , jfeweastlu -oiu yno.—December 5, 1S47. There are 14, . htmare to his couch ,—no fear of robbers at It involves no compulsory powers on the part of the ' "Wei ght Esq., 834 ptain lye' s g would neither answer the desi , IMPOUTAU T TO ALL WHO SIN G. The History of Ire land. By T. , Britain and Ireland ,* this, if let at Ca of ni cloud the br ig inspector. Thou gh the laws and regulations rela ting gn nor expense if his treasu red stor e htness of his —Dean Swift ' From Air. Edward Page XL Lond on : J. , ield a rental of £29, , , Mam mon worshi p- parliaments met once a-year. s Letters , Director ofthe Choir and Organist ALA., &c, &c. Part estimate would y 668 000 and dreams. Despots of the earth ! to mining inspection in those countries 'diite from of St. Peter 's Ca tholic Church , Leamington. give a profit to the labourers of £296, ,000. sinews into gold , to Rope. an d F. Tallis , 100, St. Jo hn-street. 630 pers ! who coin our blood and the decrees of the National Assembly of 1791, modi- One pf the bricks brough t from thc rums of "Nlm- Gentlemen ,—Having frei-uentl y suffered much from re- "What a curious fact to sit down and read a to God , ye have no power in the y subsequent decrees of Napoleon, and although liixiition nf the throat, Llmvc often heen obliged to resort Queen thanks be fied b l'pud , besides the lottor inscribed on it, is marked A poutiox of tbe events ofthe reign of in dreams nt least we are all mining pro perty belongs virtually to the govern- to various preparations ; but since I have had the good for- , yet we have realm of imagination , , which must have run Elizabeth occupy this part, includingthe mur- book of tables as an amusement visions of the ni ht we can for a while , and no person can work a mine without its with tho footsteps ofa weasel tune to try Dr. Locock' s Pulmonic Wafers , I am now but done so with advantage. The statistics ofthe free ; in the g ment over the brick before it had dried , so that the little seldom obliged to resort to them , for ihe extraordinar y rebellion of harsh real ities of the day. So it permission , so that thc method of working may be der of Davels, tlie long-continued lose sioht of the animal nnd tho mi hty Assyrian king have stamped good effects they have produced are mos t surprising. Euro pean powers , at the present time, is in- poor friendless instances g the Geraldines, the massacre of the Spanish was with Arthur ; he was no longer a defined as by the proprietor , , of compul- a record of their existence on the same piece of Even when the throat appears to be completely ex- interestin g. "We sincerel y recommend a haystac k for his bed , his bundle for sion on the part of the government are rare. Mr. hausted , and the voice to be nearly gone , two or three (at adventurers, tlie overthrow and tragical deaths tensely outcast, with clay. these works to all our readers , on account of illow dews of night for his curtain , Tremenheere observes :— most four) will in the short space of half an hour or so, com- of Desmond, , and the damp A shi p to navi gate tlie air has been invented at letel ofthe Earl of Desmond, Sir John a p monarch , surrounded with gold and " I state in my report which was laid before par- p y restore its flexibility and power ; and th ey do not excellence, utility, and price. but an eastern , and the patentee declares that three days actus a mere temporary exciting remedy, Geraldine leaders ; broils and were casting liament last year as follows :—' The law has most Boston nor do they leavo and most of the , which his slaves around carry passengers thence to California. any lassitude after. silver ore saw Arthur will suffice to . battles, murderand misery—the history of Ire- into dazzling type. The risin g sun carefully abstained from investing the inspectors Nat i**{al Advanta ges of a Ruru nnc.—In a wcll- Having felt the great value of the remed y, I feel it a duty and thus passed several with any direct authorit y.' The nature of their in- land is a truly frightful record. _ In the wars A Lesson tor Artisans. —I am a married man , again resu me his journey, , nothing of solderin g, pra ising, to generally recommend it, ;is I urn convinced that all per - children says a correspo ndent days during which timo he lived on bread and 'is best described by , constituted republic sons will find immense benefit from the general and per - •with Desmonds, Captain Raleigh, after- with a wife and five , terposition M. Regnaud in his lace ; the representation severing use of it the the heaven s were his nightl exposition of the motives for thc project of law and pitying, can take p , and 1 shall be happy to answer any in- Builder, who are depen dent upon my exer - , and y canopy, being equal throu ghout the country, quiries.— Edward Pa ge. June 21, 1847. ¦wards the celebrated Sir "Walter Raleigh, and of the water hantom , , and complete — tions for their suppo rt. Being a working mechanic that bright p Hope he at presented to the legislature of France in A pril, , however it may bo arranged into legislative Dr . Loeoek' s Wafer s give instant relief , and are a rapid brought hefore us as but cheered by ham. 1S10 :—' The corps of engineers of mines will dif- in itself Spenser, the poet, are my income is (when employed) £1 10s. per week. length rea ched Birming and executive, they have all one and the same na- cure of asth mas, consumptions , colds, and all disorders in most curious th is mighty empo- gence and counsels , with- actors in thc strife. One of the My parents, thirty years ago, were similarly situ- Header hast thou ever visited fuse everywhere its intelli tura l source. The parts are not forei gners to each the breath and lungs , A-c. worked into every pattern , out imposing directions without exercisin g any To singers and public speakers they are invaluable , as in and interesting chapters of the History is , with about one-third of this income. From rium of iron and steel, , , like democracy, aristocracy, ated device that human ingenuity can sug- i other and monarchy. two hours they remove all hoarseness and increase the abridged re- production of Spen- them I learned a lesson of economy. The gre at , and constra nt whatever upon the mode of managing As there are no discordant distinctions , there is no- devoted to an shape meta l forged tha t the warrior the works. Thoy will enlighten the-proprietors and power and flexibility ofthe voice. They have a most plea- ofire lancL" In question with me is, wha t quantity and qua lity of gest. Here is the thing to corrupt by compromise , nor confound by sant taste. der' s treatise on " The State " battle ' s despe rate strife ; the admin istration ; they will examine and establish the necessaries of life are most conduci ve to pro- wields trium phant in th e contrivance. Public measures app eal of themselves Price Is. lid. ; 2s. 9d. ; and Us. per box ; or sent per extract is described one of the of industry, worn even to , but in no case will they g .' the following , , iness. Guided by here the thimble , emblem facts ive directions , , post for Is, 3d. ; Us. ; or lis. (ill , hy Da Silva and Co., A'o. mote health strength and happ still harder conflict of fe- Again , M. Regnaud states that the object of the ad- to the understanding of the nation and resting on 1 Bride-la ne, Fleet-street London. principal causes of Irish suffering and anarchy, , and by my own experience , the wearer ' s bone in the their own merits disown any flattering application , , the wise in formerages of the world ; , Spenser nearly three I have since come to the conclusion—that male industry against the Jewocracy ministration will be ' to use the ascendanc y of en- •which, denounced by long to vanity. The continual whine of lamenting the ntOTECTED BY KOYA L LETTEttS PATENT. neverthe- man 's real wants are comparat ively few. I have here are wro ught the ornament s which glitter on lightenm ent , not the influence of authority ; to per- burthen of taxes , however successfull y it may be Imndred r ago, has continued, the wealthiest lad in the land; suade,, not to constrain. ' Ot her statements with yea s found , therefore , in past years, that two-thirds of the dressin g tabic of y pra ctised in mixed governments , is inconsistent , "without amendment to the present hour. every tool that pegard to the intention of the law are to the same less income will sufficiently supp ly myself and family and here , , every instrume nt, with the sense and spiri t ofa republic. If taxes are my also or the agricul- oftect. And as respects its working , all authorities XAXDLOBD S ASD TEXAXT3. with the necessaries of life ; the one-sixth of the the pro fessional man , the mechanic , necessary, they of course arc advantageous ; but if " *we quote elegance and in both countries connected with tho subject, " The lords of land and freeh olders, same will meet the casualties of loss of employ- tur ist can req uire. Happy union of they require an apology, thc apology itself implies Long lias the namely, the ministers of public works , the engi- ihe words of Spenser , " do not there use to set out ment ; the other sixth , whieh is os. per week , or utility—o f the arts of war and tyeace. an impeachment. AVIiy then is man thus imposed to their thee fro m the ex- neers or inspectors in chief, and the local inspectors DR. LOCOCK'S FEMALE "WAFERS. thei r land in farms , or for a. term of years , year, s y for sickness or age. vers atility of thy trades saved upon , or why docs lie impose upon himself 1—Paine' x . and some about £10 per i laid b ofte n felt by thy sisters, in all the districts I visited , concurred that the law HAVK NO TASTK OF MHDI CINE. tenant s, bnt only from year to year, This triflin g sum ! with interest and compound inte- trem es of indigenc e, too hts of Man. indeed will the Irish tenan t and Liver pool , Dublin and Glasgow. was carried out entirely in that spirit. " Rig THE ONLY .MEDICINE RECOMME NDED TO BE during pleasure , neither rest , in a few years will make a poor man compara- Manchester - 1. XV.. _1| 4.1,_ Romantic Incide nt. — The Rev. Dr. Stonard , than so long the worm'"s mar «h* .'» "«- - This system , it will be observed , TAKEN BY FEMALES. Or husbandma n otherwise take his lan d rich. jSow, I am persu aded that there are Long hast tho u been contrasts most rector of Aldingham, , who died the y laything of the favourably with any yet urged in the House of Com- near Ulvcrston Price , ls. lid. ; 2s. 9d. ; and lis. per Cox. as he list himself. The reason hereof in thc tenant thousandstivel of work ing men, if they would make an devices of Tubal Cain , from the p other day, has left £30,000, the reversionary ri ght to sham efully man ! Look well to thj - mons. • In June , 1847, « for that the landlords there use most honest statement of what they spend foolishly, the child to the weapon of tlie soon after thc presentation ,000 a year more , with a valuable mansion and them coyne and of swarth-faced and bare -armed arti - of a petition purporting to express the opinion of £1 BEWARE OF IMITATI ONS. -io rac k their tenants , ing upon amount so spent would be more than I pretend to self thou city other property, , Unprinci pled Per sons counterfeit this Medicine in tho lay (besides his parent of Cheap Johns and mock ,000 colliers, Messrs. Duncombe , , to a youth named Scholic whom he livery at p , and exact ing of them , and thev ar e often lay sans -thou G0 Bernal ami hired as a footboy seven or eig , form of PILLS , &c. Purchasers must therefore observe leasure save ing themselves under Saxony will beat thee ht iu a bill by which they propo sed ht years ago but coven ants) what he pleaseth. So that the poor iving twenty per cent , for p au etio ns-or thy rivals in Aglionby broug whom hc subesquentl that none are genuine but "WAFKHS ," and tha t the the necessitv of g ledges s market , but even out of to empower an inspector to direct the owner of a y promoted to the rank of husb andman either da re not bind himself to him for of , when , at the same time they not only out of the world ' friend and companion. words , "1)11. LOC OCK'S WAFEKS" are in the Stamp then* propertv and thy fame will onl y be colliery to alter his system of ventilation as the in- outside each box. term or thinketh hy his cont inual liberty and good mana gement , be re- tho se of thine own land , ' a longe r , might, by resolut ion result of the spector ht deem advisable under a penalty of An Irishman who was talking in rather ambiguou s Obseuve. the rather in awo " Let dre am of the past. Such is the sure mig , —There are various Counter feit Medicines , of chan ge to keep his land lord iving interest for money. a terms about the sudden death of his paternal rela- havin g words on the Stamp so skauly iiesemisling th ese the ceiving instead of g parti af Free Trade , which thy merchants £100 for e eh act of disobedience. But this was , from wrong ing of him. And the reason why these hints be received in the spirit they are given. pXy of tive, was asked if he had lived high? . Well, 1 as to mislead the unwary. Purchasers must . therefore have assisted to bri ng about , and too much for even the most ardent advocates of " landlord will no longer covenant with him, , for Let them excite an honest amb ition to rai se -our- thv shopke eper s can't say he did ," said Terence, "but he died high." strictly observe the above caution. is many of thy artisans have suicidally government interference who . happened to know that he daily looketh after change and alte ration , selves from that stat e of degradation in which too in which too " AVhy, what do you mean ?" " Faith , I mean Trepa red only by the I'roprietor 'sAgents, Da Silva and ¦ we are not writ ing a political anythin g of collieries. So the bill was withdrawn , Co., 1, BrideJ iiue Fleet-street London. Sold hy nil in expectation of new worlds." acqu iesced. But , like the Ilabeus Corpus Act, he was sus- , , and hovereth many of us are found. discontmu e this theme, and an other brou g , with ah additional sponsor that Medicine Vendors. Thc result of this system was naturall y enoug h miles from Driffield , where es*av. and th erefo ro must | ht in " - At a village not many at the per iocj of in the person "of Mr. Hume , which , had it passed , pended. tenant was not encourage d to improve the ," the Birmingham and politics were that th c the schoolmaster seems "not to .be abroad but ron-han d would have compelled the use of Davy lamns for a " , don't say talc , ," said a tale almost synonimou s The d men My dear say narrative • INSTANT EASE-LASTING CURE. land, or build upon it, i thus became less office of sexton recent ly became vacant, and a suc- oir by the Whig limited time, whether needed or not ; and would modest lady to her little son , who was relating a and thathimself. t Spen ser ob- church door, Birmingham, armed to the teeth ^ l'rice Is. per Packet . -pr ofitable to the landlord cessor was sough t by a notice on the of were the also have , very interesting " tale " he had just rend in the man will not thins " A wag , and arrayed in martial columns, empowered (and, in effect required) the ENAMEL " For what reasonable announcing that " a Saxon was wanted. press throne,— Secretary newspaper. AYhile th c little fellow was thinkin g of BRANDE'S , FOR FILLING- serves: ' ¦ hurled Toryism from its ot State to order thc doing of certain DECAYING TEETH that the tenement shall be made much better forthe i jeing this, wrote underneath it, Won't a Dane magic which the old house dog walked in , , and liENDBKI JSG T1IK.M gallant aristocracy in the world,— things relating to the internal management of his mistake, shaking SOUND AND PAINLESS bus , if the tenant may by such good cowed thc most quit e familiarl y attheboy, , y from its unquestionabl e ex lord's behoof do ?" t in the shape of a , neglect of which would have been a misde- his tail and looking when cellence, obtained great popularity at home handsome presented to his master gave the nation a delusive benefi mines make Sancho quit shaking his and abroad means be drawn to build himself some A domestic newly engaged : in ra ising to place meanor if dama ge did not ensue, and felony ifit did. he exclaimed , " Ma, Its curative- agency is based vspon a TUUK TU&OIIY of and enclose his ground , of one of which Reform Bill,—and a real inju ry th * habitation thereon , to ditch One morn ing a pair of boots , the leg narrative. " cause of 'Jooth -Aehe, and hence its great success. U Whig conju rors , for whose especial This bill also was withdrawn ; and in the autumn j to manure and husband it as g/>od farmers iise ? than the other. "How comes it, and pay the most btlwr remedies it is. sought to kill tie nerve ani ^ was much longer hanta smagoria of the Birming ham re- following Sir G. Grey directed the inquiry into the A Female M. P. —AVe have just learned a most , Por when his tenant 's term shall be expired , it will boots are not of the same behoof the p wliich so stop the pain. But to destroy the nerv * is itself a very Patrick , that th ese ht into existence. French and Belgian regulations ^ the resu lts of extraord inary fact, and one , yield him, , 't but what volut ion was broug however amazing painful o-perntion; and »fit«u lends to very sadconsee -uences, in the renewing his lease both a good length? "—"I raly don know, sir, that eventful period which were laid before parliament last session . it may appear , , wc arc assured , literall also a better Tent And also it shall be for stairs Seven years had passed since is y true. A for tho tooth then becoua w a .dead subsU-j sve in the living fine and . bothers me the most is, that the pah down of Birmingham— Accordin g to thc census of-1841, the number - was recentl y buried some few miles from jaw , uuaI who u ; land 's history . The men of person produces the same innount of 'anamination and the "*"OOd ofthe tenant likewise, j such build - fix." in Eng under very singular circumstances. The pain as would re sult ' ° are in the same : :^ England—h ad discovered they had been persons then employed in mines of all. descri ptions h fit-in any other fore ign body embedded In*3 and enclos ures shall receive many benefits ; Mon-J ay.inextraord inary spe- the men of Edinburg ceremonies were duly chro- ma li-ring organ. BIMXDE'S ENAMK V. A Sea Sxakr.—On hands of the Wh igs and their , , , deat h and attendant does not destroy the han dsomeness of his house he shall take recent l made tools in the iu Great Britain was 193 825 of which in 118 283 the. -ttrve, but , by UESTOUING THU first, by cimen of the Gymnetrusj. which has y been defraud ed of all share were in coal , ,449 in iron mines. But as the - The individual had sat for SUELL OF TUB his life, more safe dwellin g, and bourg eoisie . suppo rters , and and 10 nicled in our paper. l 'OGKH, completely protects the ner ss from cold, heat , more comfort of caught off the coast ©f yofthumberJa nd, i ism ; and in miners of iron and coal easil y chan ge some time as a membe r of Parliament for aa English or house neat and cleanl to wh ch the spoils of the dead carc ass of Tory occupations , chesneal or other ag.eMC.v by which vv.m is caused, ' liy fol- his said apellation of Gymnetrus Xortlmmbricus has, in con- of the justice and and in 1841 the iron trade was much depressed and buvh, and was well known as a highly respectable a deli"htto keep commo nly are , rathery, obta in from Whig fear what lowing the dir ections, I NSTANT E&-.K is obtained , which now bein g, as they was exhibited at the Cosmo- ord er to gentleman. i\ow, i; would appear , . 111 : con- - and u sequence; been-given , ¦ it;. granted , they the coal trade in full activit y, perha ps tho number land ed LASTING CURE. tWlows. Full instructi ons chiefest cause of his - - —- - * i - *.^ •^•n '-itiid n should have immediately accompany swine-sties than hou ses, is the rama Regent -street. It is upwards of thir- in the sequence of certain dispute s among tlie . heirs; at law, s^ery packet . • ' ¦ - '" ¦ ¦ ^ Booms, together from nort h to soutli -lrom latter rather exceeded the average. • I y manner of life and savage condition , resem- gad banded They' title of the party to the male- char acter >mns smco l so beast l teen.; feet in lengt h, and bears a striking s End- in one vast. comb - might now, however, y be taken at 130,000, tha t the is r.*T.V.T;" v**-*" »« a packet of BRAN DE'S ' his beast , 'Groat 's to Land ' safel " ' ' fcNAMLL . - lying and living toget her with m one in its principal features , to the sketches and and as "doub ted, and ' that , notwithstanding the difficulties , fci- Filling Deeaye-A Teeth , from vou. ' I am straw blance, John o itate for their politic al rig hts, and had representin g a population of half a million . ajipy tc. - &a$ t)ii3 has in one rSoni, in one bed, that is clean , iven of thc great mari ne mon- natio n, to ag connected with thc peculiar kind of intcrmeatf ji - .compbi^iy answer ed its purpose , hons \ descri ptions hitherto g hts in a docum ent called the Mr. Tremenheere is of op " that a sufficient havin g stood , " been embodied tho se ri g inion is itobe the test fur that; period , and still.i-elitaiiis as or rather a foul dung hill. ster, to which the title of " sea serpent " has ' elected forty -nine system of colliery inspection mi ht be establi shed chosen by the deceased, the body disuitev *^, hard a& am. , SSs Cha rter. They had also g ' ' ' tooth itself, AYiE vou be so kind a;- to send me " of Spenser's given . The Gymnetrus has alread y upon Pa rlia- at about in order to prove tho sex of the (iefnnct M.l\ Wc anothe r "We are sony to say that most been exhibited gates to sit in London and enforce one-third of the cost of factories , namely, packet of the same-, ami oilige, votu-s respectfu lly, m Uewcastle-on-Tyne , where it was inspected by a dele at th s less are familiar with cases of females actin g sai- \N. J.USSON. — Hull reforms were merely schemes for adoption of these views. It was for , , , or much ^* , 3rd. of April , ISiU. — Add ress : W. projected great number of persons : there Is little doubt n Stbe between £3 500 and £4 000 a year and in other c*$plbyments Jaeksnn. care of G. Ciumnell govern- . and hero arrived in Birm ingham ; or- gium. " Wo presum e this esti- lors, navvies, ,\y,tHho , Hull. establishing the sway of the English ; qually attractiv e vmctu re that our than it costs in Bel female member of parliament is CAUTION .—The great' success of this preparation has but that the speculation will be^ e in procur ing immediate em- mate applies to Great Britain. The large r sum , case of a , in ; com- He recom- turie befrien ded him ¦ 1 iuduvvtl numerous persons toiu ' produce!M umM.b ' siui/uiiuuniifuusoi ment, hy force and persecution. and successful in this metro polis. : whosGi pro- t ken-as the cost of partially ensuring tho safety of mon phrase, " . altogether unprecedented . - — n unskilful olovment in a printin g establishme nt T our Edi - .imitations , and to copy ' " Brando 's "KnamSnaine el" Advertise, extirpation by violence, of every Death of Miss Edgewokth.—Maria Edgewort h, princ iples. paym ent of about h iActy^—[AVhweforo should cont emporary *- - mended the , was a strong advocate of Chart ist 130,000 men, woiild represent a ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ burg ment. "I tis needful , therefo re, to guardnl Kgainagainstjist^-uehiicii im-im . :>N the celebrated Irish novelist , died at Edgeworthf- Ecto r - . . .¦ affect a mystery as to the name ; in n, - . vestige of Irish nationality, and a war of ex- fiefd of speculation open to Art hur , 7d, per head per . annum. . case which positions by seeing that the name i!ewciistlo.undc r-L .vno, £ov our -ivm " - motley garb of tho historian part full directions for use. Sent free, by jWtt *»tteotliSft-fifl»i!j'iAU?ssii-4^4» .3 «*; -This month's illustration is a most beautiful native village in tranquillity and peace. nber -or the the subj ect our wo ncvor saw a man who - passed in her the details necessary the collieries ; but this is a part of l^ d . 50 lUtfc 1}! a l;v J. WILLIS , 21, East Twnp ic Chambcr.ube gJi^ p1y*I«fitij.iK^^^ {Hfe;. engraving,representing Richard Earl of Pem- h has sent over £70,000 for the pur- Sever consid ered to ensure and ^ , ts. r*? lord Goug of thc bright goddess. Bu had space will not permit us at pr esent to eater upon. woman,—Momlog Post.] Fleet.'jiroet, I-cmiou, h.HN-UHn for tldi ^r iv^i^^ ^-j ^j !}^ broke taking leave of his brother. "We should chase of an ancestral estate in Ireland. retain the presence May 26, 184 9 THF NORTHERN STAR. .^.—~-~^ -^-"*^^ —. ^——.--^^^^^sr^^ A n_ le ofthe owner of his hovel ? No ! brave 4 ¦ ¦ _¦ ¦ • j nj 1 j JF ^.rryc ^__ll^lL_«^-~-* Hof™5 hu , Char- ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ jw -ys-yws'i i 'W.U W I -• *•»n-w im''-JS *oaw rmn*r *i h.**wtw *i i .^ BW- ^Hqgaa g^a i.tg n^jrj+ *~e — L"r ******' **-A-.'^^4.'• ^^ with JPSi«w^ &-~~i_:. "- *w ' * up Foil ed tical tists of .Eiigfaha*, Jet dwr watchword TO 1515 SOLD , , SO ifff 0 !Tf-3SJGHS*Kt0» , that their lol y be ' ty. our readers rest assured : s a E .iir ijj .>: freehold land asd building socie D Y A PARTY ABOUT TO EMIGRATE, ' to 'catch art auxiharj ''THE CHARTER AND NO Bum is Tubes Sections. Value a all thought of extension ot " As well may thc lamb with thc tiger unite or lite. Cd, per Month. S g ined, , Full Share .. .. i'fcM—pavment of i's. 4Ja/ro ns.—T. S. Dcxcojibe, Esq., M.P. T. Wa kley, Esq., M.P. B. B. Ca , Esq., M.P. Mr. Sinis, 11,- Tothill-street , Little Gra y' s-inn-lane ; Mr. duced the subject, and -who merely asked for M.P. L. J. ILassard , Esq. taking possession, the Directors have led blindfol d, gagged, and manacled, as re- F. 0'Cox.nob, Esq., Allnutt , Dea'dman 's Coftee-house , Clerkenwell-green ; Mr , leave to bring in a bill with that object, thc de- Ncwley, Crown and Anchor ,. Cheshire-street , Waterloo agreed to extend the • time for receiving cruits in the RULE-OF-THREE ARMY. • , benefits to their membe rs. Town ; Mr. Knowlcs Globe and Friends Morgan-s tree t, cision was one upon a princi le rather In the short space of live yearsthese societies toe pa id tlie following , , bonuses till Wednesday, the 13th of June ; life but liberty ? and what is p than Commcrclal-road , East ; Mr. John Arnott , Middlesex- , : What is , any fixed number SCMJIAXr OF CLAIMS. £ S. d. of years. Probably the place, Somers Town ; Mr. George Corderey, .8, Watson ' s and in repl to correspondents asking what but the fullest enjoyment of life ? And ...... 8.4SG 14 7 y liberty, mover himself Sickness and Superannuation .. Mews, John-street , Edgeware-road ; Perry 's Coffee-hou se, and many of his supporters ...... 1,003 0 0 amount of Bonus would he likely to insure lo- how could we enjoy life or liberty—how could Accouchmeuts .. 421, Church-street , Shorcditch ; and of Mr. Southwell , on would prefer Triennial to ' ...... 004 4 9 Animal Parliaments, Funerals ...... the premises. .;, - . _ cation , the Directors cannot fonn a guess, nor we repose by night, or think freely by day- l-ire ...... 55 2 0 but as the decision stands it is merely an affir- Loss by In announci ng the ahove benefit to ' the philantlu 'Opic would it be legitimate for them to attempt one. how could we live without pungent remorse, public , mo committee beg to state that thirty -.vidows, aud mation of the justice and policy of short Parlia- £5,-HU 1 4 fund Every man paying one-third of the amount feeling the sting of conscience, were wc seduced nearl y one hundred orphans arc supported by the , ments, aud'is therefore as much to "be claimedby and they trust that those who have hearts to feel for that the Land and House cost the Company, from our own path by the scoff of the wily, Present Capital funded in the Bank of England .. .. .£2,186 10 5 this occa- the advocates of the latter as by those who sup-, suffering humanity, will rally around them on will receive a conveyance at his own expense, the threat- of tho powerful , or the desertion These Societies are in six divisions or sections , for the Members to receive tlie following Benefits according to sion. John Auxott, Secreta ry. port the former period. The Ministerial organ then: Subscriptions :— which will amount to between £1 and £8, or of the slave ? ¦ on the morning following this decision Finsr Diyjs*oj *. FouuTO Division. rather less, while every man who has paid less Talk'not to us about the promised benefits , tried to according to age, from 3s. Cd. to Ss. Gd. NEW MONTHLY PUBLICATION. throw ridicule upon Entran ce according to age, from 5s. to 10s. Monthly Con- j Entrance , r ttlCE TIIBEEW J SCE. ¦ , it. It was a mere joke Con tribution for Sickness and Mana gement than a third by way of Bonus, will receive a to be derived from the . QUADRUPED.. You tributions for Sickness and Management , lis. id. f Monthl y , which was allowed to pass iv Is. 4d, the largest amount of rave Chartists of England—pawned your " the absence ef On the 1st of June, villi appear No. I. of lease. Those who pay —b the great bulk of £ s. d. j ¦ the members." According 0 18 o; £ s. d. REVIEW Bonus will he entitled to the first choice, and clothes, your little luxuries, your necessaries of Ulowance, in Sickness, per week ,. „ THE DEMOCRATIC to the same venerable authority " upon the Member' s funeral ...... 20 0 0! Allowance in Sickness, per week .. .. 0 9 0 Of BRITISH and FOREIGN POLITICS, HISTORY, so on in proportion to tho amount paid, wbile life, and stinted yourselves-of food to send de- ' 0 0 ' Derby question," (that is, whether the Ditto Wife's or Nominee 's ditto 10 0 0 ; Member s Funeral ...... 10 and LIT ERATURE. four per cent, upon the amount paid will be de- legates—nay hundreds of delegates—from nil mem- .. 2 0 0'Member 's Wife or Nominee's ditto .. .. 5 0 0 bers should life' s Lying-in ...... Edited by G. JULIAN HARNEY. have a holiday to go to the races on Uks by Fire , from .. .. £5 0 0 to 20 0 0 Wife' s Lying in 10 0 ducted from the annual rent. Some have al- parts of England, Ireland, Scotland, and At present no Monthly Advocate of Democratic Pro gress Wednesday, instead of attendiujr to their bu- superannuation , per week ...... 0 6 0 Loss by Fire , from .. .. £5 0 0 to 10 0 0 ready paid as much as £140, but this is no W ales, to Birmingham, in 1842, to save your Second LUyisiox. Superannua tion , per week ...... 040 exists in this country. , siness) there had been a full House and It is therefore proposed to establ ish such an organ , at a guide ; but it should, be distinctly understood, loved and honoured, principles from the machi- a full Entrance , accorcUD io age, from 4S. Cd., tO 9&9. say, from stem to stern." This is really, to and simp it within the capacity of all Rochdale *> 0 -J ing, held in the London Tavern on Tuesday le, as to bring .. 1 10 0 T. Gill .. 0 say the least of it, a strange objection to make Q'GONnOR'S classes. Newton Heath.. 4 0 (' II. Goddin g .. 0 10 0 last '? Hc spoke as follows :— . WORK OH SMALL FARMS. Dalston 019 10 J. Vigurs .. 0 2 G to a speech, and still ad- .. "The productive power of tlie paoplo had been fearfull y stranger the sequence. Published by James Watson, 3, Queen's He Belpcr .. 0 (i 0 Manchester .. 2 S 1(1 ¦ reduced, and the consequence was that last year *{, .50(1, 0011 "We (tho " Times'" ) can only consider the passa ge, Paternostcr-row , London , and said by all Win chest er .. 0 !> 3 . . : — THE CHARTER, ' received parochial relief , and lOO .OO'l were committed to question in one way, booksellers in tbo United Kingdom. Todmorden .. -5 0 0 ' £30 is io prison for crime. Surely, then , if something were not done and that is ralimial ly." If THE LABOURER MAGAZINE. T. Devonport .. 0 5 0 ! . there Price, only Tiiree Pence. : " ' There is no coercion that thc inventive mind to stay the further progress or this downward SJ 'Stoill tliey be any meaning in words, as used uy the Vols. 1, 2, 3, 4, may still lie had, neatly EXPENSE FUND. might live to see a prophecy Sir James Graham , published recondite authority of Pr'm ting-House Square, May also be bad of tbe Secretary, Jjimes GiussBy, of man can suggest, that is not being at- in a • bound, price 2s. 6*d. each 86, Regent-street, Lambctb. Merthvr, Morgan 0 5 0 II. Smith .. 0 1 fl pamphlet thirty years ago , to the effect that when- wo are to infer, that to treat a subject " his- Spilsby .. 015 0 C. Michailwaitc 0 2 0 tempted, to seduce, induce, or intimidate, us ever ihe countr y presents the spectacle of millions wanting No. 4, the Number containing Xe, O'Connor's Nottin gham .. 0 2 3 — to modify our political principles, and reduce bread , then would the peoplo sweep away titles, pensions , torically and philosophically "—to view it by and honours. ' The only remedy for this complication of Newton Heath.. 0 10 0 -¦ £1 IS 3 tho light of past experience—in order to Treatise on the National Land Company ;" TO TAILORS . our demands to tho standard of expediency. was parliamentary reform jus- William Scott.. 0 o 0 mra ^^ . evil* ; it was useless to expect By approbation of Her Majesty Queen Victoria and His financial reform till that had been attained, When Lord tif y the conclusions of abstract, and « pr iori So. 10, the one containing "Mn. O'Coss ob' s Treatise The Free Traders, who based their title to Royal Highness Prince Albert. TOTALS. Chartist John Hassell introduced the Keform Bill, ho made use of reasoning ; in short, to look at thc whole ues- " On the National Land and Labour Bank Now Readv , support in their struggle for cheap these remarkable words : -I propose hy this hill (hat the q Land Fund ...... 30 18 10 tion in a comprehensive and argumentative connection with the Land Company :"— LONDON aud PAEIS SPRING Expense ditto ...... 1 18 a bread upon professions of Liberal principles, peo-ilc shall send to the Common s House of Parliament THE their real representati ves, to deliberate on their warns —to way— •• as sailors -would say, from stem to appl ica- i- and SUMMER FASHIONS for 1S19, by Messrs. UBS- Honus ditto ...... 510 17 1 assured the peoplo that Free Trade ouce Have lately been rep rinted, and may he had on consult on their intoreils —to consider their griuv -uiGus—to stern ' tion. Price (id. each. JAMINR BAD and Co., 12, Hart-street , Hloomsbury-square , Loan ditto 0 12 0 accomplished they would then struggle for the hold the ])urse-strii:g3 of the nation—t o lay the foundation "—is to treat it uiiiA'noSiiiY .' • This London ; and by GEORGE 15KRGER , Holy-vell-street , ts of ' may still he Transfers ... 0 3 0 Ilii'saliitaiT ehaiiires hi the ivi'l'-bein ^ and comfor the conclusion afford s a key to the approval of Imperfections «f the ' Labourer Magazine Strand ; a splendid PJtLST , elaboratel y Anished , aiid su- Charter. To use Mr. Bright's words, de- had at the Publishers. Returned Aid Money ...... 20 0 0 people—aiid that laws shall not be passed tor the benefit of Lord John Russell' perbly coloured , the LANDSCAPE , a correct view in the livered in the Market-square of Northampton, classes by men roused from tlieir slumbers at twelve s opposition to the mo- tiueeu 's liotauical Gardens Londuu , (hy special permis- , " Let us get the one waggon through the gate o' clock r.t night to vote for what they know not. ' " tion. Whatever is opposed to history and sion,) the most magnificent plaee in Europe. This beauti- -t'570 8 11 first and then we will open it wide enoug philosoph y being rat ional in the estimation of In a neat Volume, Price Is. Cd. ful picture will be accompanied with the most novel , good miinnii -;nw nw , h Well, then, have we not millions "wanting Snin;* , and fashionable Dress , Riding, Frock , and Hunting ¦ 'l imes " s "W. Dixon, Doyle for the six ;" but now they have contracted bread now ?' the" , mu t receive its eulogiams. How " The Evidence taken Ly the Select Com- Coat Pa tterns , both double and single-breasted ; Hussar ' s C. , While Sir James Giiaiia.ii looks T. CiiAiiK their sp far it, and its proteges, will receive tiie support mittee of the House of Commons appointed Youth' s round Jackets , plain and with skirts ; single and , Cor. Sec. ace to four of differen t dimensions, as sleek and fat, and is preparing himself as a double-breasted Dress , Morning and .Evening Waistcoats ; P. M'G uatii , Fin. See. wo do not recognise one of our vaus in tlieir of the country, in this crusade against common enquire into the National Land Company." recipient of a larger amount of bread wrung to also the most fashionable and neivest style Ililbit 1'attDl'n ; sense, common justice, aud common ri hts every particular part of each pattern fully explained , and group. from thc starring millions g , is Tills Volume ought to he in the hands of every Member EXECUTIVE FUND. , hy passing irom tho l illustrates the care and an illustration of every thing respec ting Style and Fashion j By this party we are now characterised as another question. of the Company, as it striking y Beceived hy W. Kider Daventrv , per 6. Ashircll , bleak to the sunny side of the Treasury. But wo that have been pra ctised in tlie management of price Ids. Sold hy Read and Co. , I*-' , Hart-street , Rlooms- The whol« of the economy 3s. Gd . obstructives ; while some few—and, thank agree with Mr. Williams, aud full Pkkmier's address was the f unds of the Guinpanv , and ji roves, beyond contradic- hury-square , London ; G. Bergcr , Holywell-strect , Strand ; " ' y, that the " and all 1 Sooksellers in Town and Country. . God, they arcbutafew— cast in the old moulds of Toryism. Disraeli' tion , the i'VuCtk -uri litj of the Pla n which tlie Company was . VICTIM FUND. lick-spittle drivellers, hope of Financial Reform, except through thc s HEAD ani Co.'s new system of Guttin g, just imblislied, most bitting established to carry out. Received at Laxd Office.—Tiverton, iicr Roivcliife, 5s, i formerly tho most enthusiastic Chartists, instrumentality of Parliamentary Reform is sarcasm on Peel was, that he and will supersede everyu iiiig of the kind before conceived. Mr. Wri ght , ls. ; Dcntlbrd and Greenwich Friends , per Mr . had stolon , with particulars , sent post-free. Patent measures , iuspircd by the hope of another mock crusade, ridiculous tho clothes of tho Whigs while they Terms Whitcombc , Ss. . and absurd ; while wc further con- 5s. the set, with f all explana tion ; Patent Indicator , post- ill which they; may bo the paid apostles to wero bathing. Lord John has cried " quits," Just published, So. XIX. Price Sixtesce, of free. 7s. ; Kegistercd Pa tterns to Measure Is. each , post- VERNON 'S DEFENCE , FOR MR. NIXON. tend that no measure of Parliamentary Re- ' , preach another , mouthful' by borrowing the free (Ladies' Paletots same) *, by Read aud Co. , and all Received at Land Ohice. — Mr. Side, sen., Is, ; .Mr. Side of moonshine to the form short of the People's Ciiautek, . will very arguments which wore THE GOM Iu GNVVEALTH. , used against'his own Booksellers in tlie United Kingdom, Post-office ord ers and jun., Is.j ; Mr. Edwards , -Id. oft-deccived working classes, aro pinning ever accomplish that Financial Kelcrm "Reform Bill, " a long will be tlie llcprcsentativ e post stamps taken as cash. Habits performed for the . which '•THE COMMON WEALTH" , FOR WIVES AND FAMILIES OF VICTIMS. themselves to the broad-cloth sleeves of their will of time ago." That Bill, in tho course of some of the Chart ists, Socialist s, and Trades ' Unionists , in the trade. Busts for fittin g Coats on ; Boys' Figures. Fore- . be any (the slightest) benefit to the Received by W. Rider. —Birmingham , Ship Inn Locality, seventeen Monthl y Press. men provided. Instructions in Cuttin g comp lete, for all f uture paymasters, and shadowing forth their workiutv man. or eighteen years, has given him and coxn-yTJ : kind s of Style and Fashion , whieh van be accomplished hi per J. X«-.\vliousc , -£l 5s. ; Hawor th , per W. Greenwood , future his part 5s. 4d. ; Sti-oudwater , per II. Ititc li'ird , as. id. Ko ttiiigliam, hope, derived from middle class patro- Comment upon the hope held out h y somewhere about twelve or thirteen with Ireland I an incredibly short timt. y Lord 3. Wha t Is to be done pw J. Sweet, £1 2s. lOd. ; Davcntry, per (J. Ash well , 3s. nage, based upon desertion of Chcirtist prin- Jon.v Russell when contending for the Re- years of office. "It has worked well : why 2. The Weaver 's Daughter. ISA. ; V. W. B.. Stepney, fid. ; Levi 1' rancis , Cathal Mills, ciples. But, thank God, although the English do you seek to alter things as thoy are ? I am ! ls. ; Sheffield Female Chartists , per Elisuihc lh Hammond , form Bill, would be useless and mere waste of S. Extincti on of Pauperism. ' CIRCULATION—THIRTY-FIVE THOUSAND very well 3s. ; Carlisle , Cham burs' Warpers , per J. Gilbertson , 10s. mind is capable of being caught by H ies, time, inasmuch as wc havo shown a thousand satisfied with them, and sec 110 cause 4. Popular Cause in Europ e. rp HE FAMILY ERIE 2nt ' D NATIONAL VICTIM FUND. which turn out in tho end to be stinging o for change, and as long as 1 can prevent ii 5. Social K-u'eets of Peasaut Proprietorship. -i- A MOXTIILT W-niOlJ ICAL , times ver, that not a single promise hold out Received by John Ahxott. —Totness , per AV. M. Tanner , gnats, and although we stood alone of our by the advocates " of that" there shall be none." Such is, in effect, hod C. Tlie IK-ro. UNRIVALLED IN CHEAPNESS , INTEREST, AND measure, aiid not a 7s ; Helper , per Richard Wheatley, 10s. ; J. D., and a l-' cw order, we have the courage and resolution to •John's argument, In his , 7. Events ofthe Month. VSEFULSES*, Fricm ls. . per & Stallwood, 8s. 7il. ; Crown and Anchor hope of thoso who fiercely contended for it, present positios: 1 " perhaps Price Twopence , Thirty-two Pa ges, beautifully Printed , HaU Locality, per Mr. Alien, as. Old .; D. Is. «., por Mr. resist the bait. has been realised. Have we not alread , it is a natural one. But, on the other and stitched in a Wra pper Clark , 5s. *M , G'oMcn-forii' y ¦ , in neat Ma gazine form. , ; , per Thomas liroiva , 3s. Sid. ; What ! have not the working classes of drawn irom past disappointments a 'sufficien hand, he ought to recollect, and Mr. D'Ey :- *?UBi:ica.*rio"M3. - As soon as tho FAMI' -Y FRIEND appeared , it was recog- Globe and Friends , pur Mr. Knowlcs , "is. lUd. ; Lflc tiive t . isifost&w? ¦En glan d gained sufficient experience from warnin g Court' nised as so-nethin guew in literature. It-: Hull , I'liiip'it-street , por ditto , Is ; Ernest Jones Localit y, for the futur e to place the Chartists s quotation from his own speech on in- " superiorit y to the ' Proceedings of the National Convention, great mass of cheap publications , becam eat onceapparcnt per Mr. M 'Veigh , 0s. (Id. : Land Office , £1 IBs. 2d. ; Mr. the' nothing achieved from the three great upon their guard troducing the Reform Bill , *>vas a timely Rider , as per A'tar, £3 16s G'd._Total against this now recruiting assembled at Loudon in April, 18-18. —and heuce , before the Fourth Xu-iiber was issued , thc . , £17 10s. lid. measures of the last twenty remin which years—-namely, company ? Are they not aware tint of all der of thc tact, that that Bill was iw; two very targe and solid pages : price circula tion rose to THIRTY-FIV E THOUSAND , and is passed into a Thirty still rapidly increasin g. Upwards of one hundred news- EMANCIPATION—RE FORM—FREE horrors the present systcm o f political persecu- law merely that tho Whigs niiul.t •lapers reviewed the work in most favourable DUTY OX ADVERTISEMENTS AXD PAPER. <>ntu Three j ience. term s—al l TRADE ? . tion is the greatest ? And are thev not he enabled to oust the Tories irom eiiicu eoncui 'riiip r in the opinion , that it is a pu'dication which aware Prisoners Jones " the who and enjoy the comforts of troiiag.- Tho Trials of the Chartist , , ' sd 'MUljiud its icuy I j every -«••% iu (he fsinqdom.,*.' On Tuesday evening a general meeting of master Wove not tii-jeo three changes coiisuUvcd as that juries carry these fierce laws into place and pa Every A' uuiber contains a TaJe Ill their stead. It Fussell, Williams, Vernon, & Looney. Twenty , a ti article ufwti pract ical printers, compositors, pressmen, and machinists, essential political changes ? Did not Eman- execution by their verdicts upon Chartist was intended to cnfi-.-mciiis o uy$ and fallp ages: price only Science, an Historical or Scientific paper , addressed to was held at the Mechanics' priso'icrs are composed •1 p ortion of the le the f our very U. Young People, by "Aunt Maiy, " or by " Grandfa ther Institution , Soutliainp- cipation promise the down-trodden Catholic exclusively of our peop , iu order to iar Whi tehead " toii-buildings, Chaiicery-lane, in . pursuance of a foundation Three pe nce. , a mass of Useful Receipts and Prescri ptions perfect rel igious freedom , while he still pays middle-class gradually for a still wider exten- (this department bein g edited hy a Mem-ikr or THE Medi- requisition issued by the Sold I n* J. Watson , Queen' s Head Passage, P.iternoster- committee of the Compo- sion of political rights, in order that tl-eai ca l P«of£ssio.v) ; Original Illustrated Desi tax to the law church, and sees the conquerors' FINANCIAL REFORM .-udon ; A. lleyuood, Ohlha m-street , Manchester ; gns in Taney sitors Society, for the purpose of considering the FRIENDS ? row, L- Needlework (b might be exercised for the promotion of ' the and Love and Co.. 5V, kelson-street , Glasgow. y the celebrated .Mrs. Warkex) ; Instruction propriety of petitioning parliament to repeal the trophy in every church steeple ? Did not the If we required further aud Advice for the GardeHer , Housewife proof of the power of thc well-being Aud by all liooksellcrs in Tom* and Country. , Naturalist , &c , duties on advertisements , and paper of all clases of tlie community. Ac. Various humorous matte rs, such as Anagrams , ,- aa also the promises held out by Reformers excite thc ex- middle classes to rule this country, even under Arithmetical aud other Problems Eni penny stamp on newspapers ; L. J. Hansard,- Esq., When the advocates of Tory ism taunt the sup- , gmas , Conun drums , pectants to arson and revolution ? Aud was Household representation, could wc furnish a ' Rebuses, Practical Puzzles, Chess Problems , &c, &c , for in tlie chair. i porters of political reform, with the crab-liko CHARTIS T SILK FABRICS. Family Pastime. The CiiAimux not the confident hope relied upon by the people stronger one than that which thc Irish' opened the pr oceedings with an Poor progress wliich has been made under nominallv MESSRS. CLARK AND WARREN Already the Work has supplied valuable mat ter upon address of considerable length, in which .ho con- as the realisation of that measure, that every Law system presents ? In that country three pleasing pursuits—such as tlie Culture of Flowers the Pre- reformed institutions, we have an beg most resj sectfully to c;dl llie attention of the De- , tended that the amount of revenue derived man should he represented in tho Houso of years' residence answer readv mocra ts of Gre nt Urita iu to tlie following splendid assoi-t- servation of Flowers iu Wint er, the Preservation of Birds , bv go- constitutes a title to parochial in tin fact ' Eggs , Insee ts, Shells , Mosses , Ferns vernment from the tax on nows'pap' ' , that thc power of tho State has Blfnt Of Seek. xbA Pocket Handkerclnefc -, ISlaek Satin Vest- , &c , and an interest- . ers ahd adver- Commons, leaving the seductive hope of relief, and the tyrants take ing Series of papers upon the Preservation of " tisements, by no means care to eject their been administered pieces,- LadU -S* Clwrd st Coloured Satin and Tabby Bress- Sea Weeds" compensated for the slaves in the spirit of Toryism, for is now going on. Thus it contributes PEACE, RETRENCHMENT, AND every thirty months ; and ouce establish pieces : al*j a s*ileudid assortm ent of Lad fc-s' plain and to make Winter deprivation of the means of intellectual culture the selfish purposes of individuals Fireside Evenin gs and Summer Wanderin gs the and classes ; Neck Ties, which have just come to hand from their , alike a-n-ee- which it entailed on the working REFORM principle of Household Suffrage in this figured able and instruc tive. ° " classes, hy en- power has been monopolised in f e manufacturer at Macclesfield , and it is tlieir intentio n to hancing the price of books country, order that The Work commenced January 1st , , periodicals, &c, and wholl out of thc question ? and then, as we before predicted, you forward them (i-arriage free) to all parts of Great Britain ISM , and a "Sumbev y benefits might be confined to thc holders and has appeared every succeeding month , up to the present. consequently contracting their sale; while it afforded will have two and Ireland nt un> foUowing prices :— £ ">• d. Next came Free Trade, which presented not descriptions of House— their 1 New Sub saribers iirc stro n'-ly advised to order the whole no advantage m respect of elevating immediate connexions and ts, ladies Dr<-ss-pieeM, fourteen yards to the dress , the intellectual H-O-U-S-E to live dependen of the Back i'umbers at ouee (Price 2d.' each), onl tho flattering prospects of , in—and II-O- U-S-E, to and 3s. peryard .. -- .. 220 that there standard or the moral.tone of tho press. He also y ¦;¦ that the people, as a whole !>«¦» - T may he no difficulty in procuring them hereafter . vote out of and no ' , have Gentlemen 's Extra Strong Black Satin A estiu g, showed that the impost was especiall man will be secure iu the looked Lon .-Jon : Published by lloulston and Stoncuia n y injurious-to HIGH WAGES, CHEAP BREAD, AND upon in the true spirit of nristoci-atical per Vest ...... ' 0 10 0 , C5, Pa- compositors and pressmen, by the possession of his domicile for one year much ternoster-row , aud sold by aU booksellers in the kingdom. tendency which PLENTY TO DO, , brigandage, as, merel a] Ditto , JNecfcerchiefe , Rich Oj-orto Ducapes, it exerted to prevent any increase in the number of more for three years; ' y subjects for H Plain and Plaided...... - .. 0 5 C newspapers and periodicals published but the still fouder belief, that, the ultimate ob- plunder. In plain, straightforward despotisms, Ditto, ditto , Satin Ducapes, Plaided., 0 5 0 . The mask would then not NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE. Mr. Edwards, moved the be relied upon hy the people are plundered ; Ditto, ditto j Xapoleon Blue Satin first,resolution , which ject of its advocates was .to insure a " full, free, the owner, for, even with without anv disguise Brussels, Crimson Borders .. .. 0 4 6 QUARTERLY embodied the opinion of thc meeting that the the Ballot, thc 111 this country wo of THE JIEETINCr of tins tuxes and fair representation of the whole people in owners of property would aro robbed under the guise Ditto. ditto , Extra Rich Slack Satin Branch of the NATIONAL LAND COMPANV will be on paper and advertisements, as also the stamp duty take good care that constitutional Turk Heavy .. 0 4 3 the Commons House of Parliament." Well their , forms—homo down to the earth , holde n on Sum-ay, Ju.se 3rd , 1S1U, at Five o' clock in the oir newspapers for local circulation ,- forcibly im- voting houses should only be occupied by "Ditto, ditto , Black Brussels Plain .. 0 4 0 Afternoon , with general and ditto Txi-co- at the Cock Ln.n*. Head of the Side, when tlie peded the.industrial operations of the then, we would ask if a people thus juggled for serfs upon whose local taxation—excluded J/rtt ?, ditto , , Balan ce Sheet of tlie JJ irectors vriU. be read aa d Officers printiii"- votes they could depend , trade , and -were otherwise pernicious to the wel& twoiit y years , and without whose co operation ; and from all and loured Borders -. -- _ -- -- 040 chosen for tlie the result would be contin uous direct participation in legislation ensulug tjuarter. being of the oustiu gs, aud admi nistr ation Ditto, ditto, Green Satin Ducapes, Tri- community , inasmuch as they obstruct ed not ono .of thoso measures would havo boon , an d then mocked with the All Members within two miles not attending will subj ect the mental tho utter suppression of public opinion, as no coloared Borders ...... 040 themselves to a penalty. It is particularl y requested that advancement of the people, and by im- carried, are •again about to surrender empty name of'" imlC Ditto ditto Turn-np Satin Brussels in properl that occupant of a votiug house freemen !" We are " , , as many will attend its possible , and that all Arrears of y raising tho prices of books, publications, would run the risk 036 proud position which will ere long mistaken however l'lS s great variety ...... Local aud Gene ral Expenses will be paid. Parties neg- am» newspapers, prevented make them of being ejected. Wh , , if this state of things * Ditto, ditto llich Gala Plaids . 0 3 0 the maioritv from ob- y, did not the Reform 1 , lecting wUl hav e the amounts deducted from what has taining thei practical knowledge and 'information the real, as they are the legitimate source, of Bill—that great long. Englishmen will not tamely look on at- * Ditto, Pocket Handkerchiefs in great va- been paid. immediatel so Leviathan—promise all hut riety, bom I's. Gil and upwards .. .. 0 2 C y essential to thc happiness and condu- political power, and thus a fourth time be the see the nations of th achieving ty , - The attention of the members will be called to important the Charter, and what has it effected e Continent Indies' Plai n and Figured Neck Ties.. .. 0 18 Prosperity slayers of popular libert for-the extort*- business. Thomas Foebest , Secretary. Sm fh«wt!ho iP 1"1^ . of society, lie y ? millions, who one hound political emancipation , and All communications to he addressed to Mr. Thomas saw that the printing are again to he duped by the re- &4BK Hi business had suffered for The Free Traders, when strugg ing h' e , , High Holborn , London, to whom all Post-office many years from the narrow field ling for the petitiou of a similar humbug "? en masse those suffrages which they ^ ©r-'-'.rs must of labour and the 1T7V », l. " • -. : ' ut fee sent made payable at the Dioomsbury Post- TODMOKDE N. moans of competing with the world in manu- ° been asking \vitlio <*Sce. e ™nibei;of labourers, and the consequence IV lulo all other nations, for in vain - for long years, A DELEGATE MEETING %wasTt thatw during that factures produced by cheap centuries held in !e The trade supplied on advanta geous terms. AH orders OF THE period large numbers of men labour, were servile bondage are taking heart, and endeavouring to copy f' Pa. Chartis ts of Lancashire and Yorkshire will both able and willing contending, for flesh and £n totra and country punctually attende d to. be held in to work, were continually,vu out MORAL FORCE Chartists, audonly required blood and example :— the Char tist Room, Yorkshire-street , Todmorden , on *-uii- of employment. mental right, will "Warren , T-aiing taken out a Hawker ' Free Trade as the first the English peoSe Mr. s Licence, day, June 3rd, to commence at ten o' clock, a.m. (sanctioned ' stepping-stone to cross -.fto foremost of " The wr iest jade will wince when the harness wtW intends -risiting all the principal Towns in En gland, and by the The resolution was seconded by "Mr. all nations in Executive,) to arrange for the annual camp meeting, Baker sun- the political ford. political knot So much into her hide, as quite to wrong lie**- " will risit the fottowinj *; places during the lorthcorair.g ported b Mr. J. Duxcax ed usually held at Blackstone- edge ; the following y , and carried iinanXuX ge-surrender flesh and -Kreek :—»Sandav , Jlay " "Oai , Binuln gliain; Bileton, Tues- reques ted places are Knowing blood, and mind, to And who ave * tosena delegates r—3Ianc *jester, Bolton, OJdliam , A petition to parliament m which the n, ;n..;J, ) that thc people of England attach perhaps, in the long run, those day ; Hud ley, Wedn esday ; Potteries , Thursda y *, New- Uury Heywood , Rochdale, Littleborough objections to these imposts paramount importance* 01 ncks 11101tar Slla11 so anxious 0 castle, iJon-jIeJ-SV Sunday ; and Jlacclesfield, Paddiam . Bacup. Burnley, were briefly and Si . to political equality; ? to maintain the status qtui—^ firidsiy ; , Todmorden, Hebden Bridge, Halifax, Bradford, those who S-SSlrWi S£aX n that MS' milld alld thO*•- «daj"l " .Uu»gly, and surrounding S "-*°Pted , the proceedings S struggle for their own financial evn, n * f S . °- ' ^ * think tliat all political wisdom at the districts. iniSed expression of Jat mind, shall W^\ benefit find it expedien t and necessary to mix he swayed, di- moment is summed up in resistance to v* icctcd , controlled, and governed 6 by the caprice popular will—may find that wisdom to be, W- . - - --- . ¦ - y-jE -"^"Iggftgg'l**^^ ¦ ' ¦v; :' " ^ ¦ " ' ' -"¦¦ ' " '" -i- May " S4Q *^ ^ ¦¦ ¦ w-: 26 1 g—-, - .__ .; ¦ ^' " _^,^U£ ^^^ .^ T HE NORTHERN STAR. * : : -fC/^ the ' rationality-' ofthe " Times " opposed to and independent tenures granted to all tenant LETTERS ., . .. . . the deductions drawn from " history . abjc: members was behind tho scenes kiii-w that tliere' was great angry'indiciiveiie»s or for mriminatnr. purposes 1 ¦ ¦ aud farmers. 5 ": bolted. Still thero remained j-Mlosoph ** " *" — -* - ""-- TO THE WORKING difficulty on any occasion in scraning together nn..n,- — ( .Hit-era)—hut simp as a y. : CLOSES. eighty-seven members to vote on that sham ' ly d . fence for my .0*11 or- bCi'S who had been returned on what w-.-ro called Li- der, ' XLV. D'EYNC nuilT's sliam ami as priipii atury to a bet er iiii dcrs'ai'.di tig in THE BALLOT. motion for sham reform. beral principles, and he . did not not hesitate to say, the future . - .(Loud cheer::.) I wi'!. Im wcvi- r, add , It might have been supposed But of these eight of the eighty members wiio voted with that if that, having " Words are things, and a small drop ' y-seven hard-working mtm that many anything could tend to keep alive the doubts voted of ink bers, fifty-three ' '' " if they had thought that the vote ' ivhi»li of the themselves a holiday on the Wednes- The Falliii}-—like dew—upinuv thought, products ran away • the moment Mr. Mr. Cobden , working clas.si.-s as t-i the designs of the middle question ofthe Ballot was introduced on Tliat wliich makes thousands Slaney attempted thoy were -riving would have turned out the govern- classes, it is such conduct as.was pursued the other day, the members of the House of Commons Thursday , perhaps millions, to bring the condition of evening, by Mr. Berkeley, the think." byron. the working ment, would have stayed away rather than have evening in thc House of Commo' s, by many o " tho "would have do objection to work a whole night classes under tlieir consideration. most Member for Bristol, and, after a languid de- It was not voted at all. (Hear, hear.) Therefore, lie said they influential of thc libera l memoirs, on the mo- on Thursday. Or, had the question they were likely that " hon. gentlemen" could satisfied—that those members li on of .Mr. D.nmmond bate, of about an hour and a half, in which PATItlCIAN RULE AND PLEBEIAN allow, should never rest- , f..r ati inquiry in to lhe .sys- invited to consider, after disposing of Mr. themselves to bo bored with statis- never would do their duty until t hey bad applied to tem and appliedi-ii of our enormous i a-v.tion. not one of her Majesty 's Ministers took part, SUFFERING. tics of the ( Hear, and D'Erj Comrx's motion, been a dry or unimpor- ' condition of tailors and tinkers, them that senile pressure from without which had cheers.) I confess, that I was not only the House divided, when the numbers were THE weavers , but even surprised , but 1 was much tant one. there might have been an excuse for FRENCH ELECTIONS. and labourers ? Tho . clubs, the not only innucncctl imliviiluiil members disappointed to find as For the Motion 35 theatres, the opera ' ministers in this country. •• Thc want of a " Tellers lor the government, for iu that instance their " counting out." That, however, was , and the forthcoming such they were iu effect Against it ...... 133 BllOTHEll Pboletariaxs, races popular party in this country was mainly , the names of Mr. Cobden , not the case. Mr. Slaxet rose a second time presented attractions not to be thrown 's pre- aud Miiner Gibson. (Hear, hear Majority away owing to the conduct of her Majesty , and "Sh ame.") thtssession to call 51 In tbe name of Humanity, what is to for the sake of -f greasy rogues" of sent Ministry, for that government which had I am aware that there were some things said by Mr. the attention of the nominal , who representatives of the people to the condition be done for the unhappy People of Ireland ? artisans , if thoy are starving, are but ful- climbed to power on thc shoulders of Mr. Cobden Drutumond , with which 1 would not identif y myself, How long do our rulers mean to filling their destiny, They arc " surplus," and Mr. Bright were the first to. throw cold water but yet i.e said many good things, and, as Mr Gib- of the working classes, and to propose the ap- TO JOffi? O'COISXELL, M.P. stand by motion of Mr. unmoved, while thousands and tens of and there being no room for them at Nature's on those men, and to make the Cabinet the prero- son himself said, the Drmnmund was pointment of an unpaid commission, specially thou- gative of tlie ' oligarchy which rule this coun try. qui te " unexceptional ." \Vhy not, therefore, take Bbeach or l'BiviLEGB.—Ab-. John O'Connell complained, sands are perishing of hunger ? How much board, it is their proper duty to hunger, _ charged to watch over their interests—to con- tliat m a newspaper called the Times (Cheers.) He had great respect for men in high the motion upon its own intrinsic merits, and not what , tliere had appeared longer do intend to pine, and die ! sider and report from time to time on practical purported to be a report of the proceedim-s of that yon allow those , rulers stations when they exhibited ability and principle, tai- e veimeance upon the motion instead of tho pro- House upon a former evening, and lie observed that to continue in their present state of Such is the comfortable creed of your but he could not sue why they, the middle classes, poser ? ( Hear, and cho. rs.) This, too, 1 ring* me -measures (unconnected witli political changes) Tcport in the criminal of.what Avas setforth as Ms own speeeh on the occa- apath rulers and could see no wisdom except 111 a lord (cheers), and to what has alread y been said by the lummtrable mem- likel sion, all the good y? lawmakers. The fate of Mr. y to improve Ui&r condition—to encourage " points" were omitted, and the strong no probi ty except in estated gentlciuuii. Hc thoug ber for Middlesex, who, in the course of his able argumente of his opponents were inserted ; he I may be told that I libel the Government Slaney 's motion, is another lesson for you ht their industry—and increase their contentment. should, tlie tendency was to make tiie House of Commoirs a speech , pointed out the little union there is at pre- therefore, object to the presence of strangers, aud the and Parliament, in charging them that no good thing can come out of that Surely more laudable, more desirable strangers, including with cri- great burrow for titled rabbits. (Cheers and sen t among the friends of tho people in the House. ob- the reporters, were forthwith obliged minal apathy and heartless political Nazareth—the House of Commons jects than those could not possibly have been to withdraw.— Weekly Paper. indifference to , hiughter.) The House of Commons was in conse- I have no doubt but t e honourable gentleman spoke Giatiano the sufferings of the Irish people. I be as at present constituted. quence nothing better than a taxing machine, by feeli ngl deplored proposed1» a body professing to represent the spenl*s an infinite deal of nothing, more than may y—spoke from experience , when he any man in aU Venice, liis reasons are, as two grains of told, that the Rate in Aid Bill of the present The 'French Elections have terminated in--— which a minister was enabled to raise a greater the want of cordial understanding that existed people of Great Britain and Ireland ! The ne- wheat hid in two bushels of chair. You shall seek all dav all things amount of taxes than ever was imposed by the most amongst the few men in Parliament who are, ere yon find Ministry, the sums of Money voted by Parlia- considered—a glorious victory for one cessity for such a commission, it would have theni, and when you have found them they are despotic monarch of any period, what was the w ay or other, iden tified wit-i the cause of pro * not worth tlie search. Merchant of Venice. ment, and the speeches of *'* honourable Mem- Democracy. The accurate final returns have been imagined mi — conduct of the Whigs in 1830, and what was their gress. As in the case of Mr. Drumraond, it , ght have induced members bers," all testify to the sympathy and earnest not yet reached this country, but it is certain of all parties to unite in Dear conduct in 184S ? The two periods wero very si- appears to me that thero is a childish jealousy supporting 3Ir. Sla- Mr Jonx,—The injustice which the English benev that from two hundred to two hundred revolution- jxex have done ' olence of our rulers ; that they do all and milar, anil each your had produced a hi as to who shall do the people any service, s motion. The friends of the ivorkiu-** to Ireland, through tlieir Press, in cur- fifty Socialist-Democrats France. In 1S30 the' Duke of Wellington's Ministry —(hear)—and , tailing and mutilating those models of they can do, and, that if in spite of their sym- have been elected to therefore, one will not unite to help classes might have supported it as one mode patriotic path the New Assembly. The party of the was turned out on a Whig motion for Financial He- the other. (Hear, and chei-rs.) Now, sir, upon oratory with which it has heen your wont frequently y and benevolence tbe Irish are, neverthe- Moun- of achieving that industrial and political eman- to edif less tain is quadrupled I It is true that the form ; and it was well worth while to ask what had this platform at the present moment there are six y the Imperial Parliament, and the highly , perishing of hunger, it is because it is intri- been the experience of the last nineteen years with members of the ! cipation to which they look forward. The characteristic guers, l'cactioniiairos House, including yourself , a l of retaliation which you have inflicted not in the power of mortal men to successfull y , and Royalist conspira- regard to public economy. In 1831' the public ex- whom profess liberal opinions, fritnds upon the offenders and 1 pu t it to the of the present systcm might also have , have induced me to address you struggle agaiust the terrible dispensations of tors will be in the ascendant in the new Assem- penditure was £54,000,000. But there was a sur- meeting, whether this recommendation from t in this public manner hem supported it, because nothing is so dangerous , and to offer my humble con- Divine Providence. bly, and, if united, will havo a largo plus of £1,711,000. Let them mark that ! In 1848 to u s to unite with each other w e dolence to you majority. , uld not app ar to, and subversive of, established institutions as , as a deeply injured man ! But. that union is not very the public expenditure amounted to £58,000,000— more consistent and have greater weight with us if Things hare conie to a " purty " pass indeed Sham and subterfuge, mockery aud lies. probable, and, "wide-spread poverty, misery , and discontent under any circumstances (shame,} and tbe excess of expenditure over revenue they would themselves, set the example of union by when the " dearest son of his mother," and the The Irish famine is not " a dispensation of Di- , cannot be lasting. —spending more than they got-r-was £3 000. among the people. These are the true revolu- worth On the other hand ,000, acting together upon all occasions in parliament, y representative of the " illustrious Libera- vine Providence ;" , but is—as every being , the union of the Mountain (Shame.) Yet tKe interest of the debt had been re- and opposing every government, no matter tor," (God rest his sowl whether tionisers of nations, not the " good-for-nothing ,) is so treated by rascally possessing common sense well knows—tne phalanx is well assured ; the growing public duced in the mean time. What else had they got ? Whig or Tory, in evety instance, when the interests people" of Lord Bkougham, or the hand- Saxon Journalists ! Not only are your speeches natural op inion on their side is also assured ; and last, An income-tax of£5,000,000, whieh bad been laid on of the people require such opposition. (Cheers.) " abbreviated, but all the consequence of land-lord usurpation, ful of vagabonds and foreigners" " coon foists " are pur- not least, the Army is rapidl ou false pretences—(laughter, and hear, hoar),—for The enemies of the people in the Ik-use are strong according posely left out ! " Thunder and turf!" Sure and British injustice. Ministers and Mem - y becoming Red to other equally sage authorities, who march this bers of Parliament Republican. Indeed there is no longer a they were told at first that it would only, be imposed through their union , and «o would our friends also is more than flesh and blood can bear with ! enough, have not done all they might for three years. ( Hear, hear, hear.) But the tax be strong were they equally united. Mr. Clark into capitals, dethrone monarchies, organise in fact, to provoke you to execute your threat of self- have done to have stayed the progress of the doubt that, in the event of a physical force was opposed by the present government,—(hear),— concluded amidst loud cheering. armies, fight pitched battles, and achieve vic- immolation upon the floor of the Douse—a threat famine ; and they have done nothing—posi- struggle between the friends and the enemies yet when they came into office they turned round, Mr. Josi-pii Sturgi* regretted that physical force tories over the well-disciplined hosts of which I have no doubt -would long ere this have tively nothing—towards laying the foundation of the Republic, the soldiers - would join the and coolly prepared to increase the taxto £5 per cent, principles bad too oft en been associated with the been carried into practice, were it not that j-tur of former against the latter. The enemies last year—(laughter) ;—and if the people had not, name of Chartism. No doubt many who had pro- despotism. This slip-slop style of denunciation " hereditary disinterestedness" a new and righteous order of things. For of and deprecation has suggested that Democracy have hitherto calculated on the on putting their iiands into their pockets, and find- fessed Chartism had been guiity of violence ; but as is very injurious to the par- your services may yet be of use to youv bkedina all that the speechifiers and law makers have ing a deficit , instructed their members to speak out, well might they charge Christianity with the evils ¦ * Army, to subserve tlieir ties whose organs are in the habit of using it. country!" done, or are likely to do, the Irish peasantry impious designs they would havo had an increase of tlie income tax. of tho Established Church , or the" horrors of the J± shuts the eyes of those who are disposed to 2fot only do ihe newspaper people leave out, inten- may perish to the last man, and the"" country against the Republic, but the electoral urn In 1330 the estimate for the army and navy, ord- Inquisition, as to condemn Chartism because some take it upon trust," to the real dangers tionally, all your "good points," but the House itself become a wilderness untrodden bad made manifest the folly of that calcu- nance, and miscellaneous, which nobody could ex- of its supporters were mad enough to resort to " acts towards by human which menace them. It diverts then* energies you as though it were utterly uncon- beings. lation. plain , and nobody get at — (laughter), — was physical forco, ( Hoar, hear.) Chartism was scious of the existence of any such quality £17 500,000. (Hear.) Those estimates founded on into wrong channels, and, at the moment when in your Read—and shudder, as you must Amongst the traitors, trimmers, aud sham , , however, Christian principles, and all that was speeches. No sooner do you rise and commence to , while you included agate at Buckingham Palace, £80,000, and wanted to secure its success was a revival of the they believe they are most effectually suppres- pour ftrth yourmellifluous read—thc horrible revelations from Ireland in Republicans who have been ejected from thc brogue, than there imme- ' £000 lor taking a bishop to Jamaica. It was a gross motto of " Measures, not men." So soon as good sing revolutionary elements, they find them- diately oeeurs a most determined rush of members this number ofthe " Star." Bead the Ballin- National Representation are Maiiiiast and delusion to tell the public that their representatives and honest men were found to carry them out, selves swept away by forces, of the existence towards the gangway, the strife among them for robe Protestant Rector's account of the starv- Lamartine. Every true democrat, every in the House of Commons wore able to control the Chartist principles would assuredly triumph. (Hear, egress reminding the beholder ofa scene at Epsom public purse under tho present system. In 1830, hear.) and power of which they had not the slightest - ing man turned Cannibal, feasting himself and honest man, will exult over the fall of these on a " .ueruy-uay, the outer door of the lobby when the Whigs came in, of course they thought they Mr. Piiillimore remarked that the object of the idea. Mr. Slaxey's exposition of the condi- being, to the family upon the heart and liver of. a ship two men—the two worst enemies of the Re- competitors, an object of great conten- public. must do something, and they reduced the item of the association was to obtain the-suffrage for no less tion of the producers of wealth in this country tion—a kind of " winning post "—those members wrecked human body! Read of other horrors expenditure to wliich hc had referred to £14,000,000, that 3,712,670 of tho peoplo, and surely such a boon ¦—though cut short by the House being counted remaining behind seeming to be regarded by the almost as fr ightful ; and then read the follow- The War of Principles is extending. Bo- taking off -upwards of £3,000,000. But what was it was worth struggling for without objecting that it out—was enough to make the faces of our deserters as the " distanced ones." But what does ing addressed to the " Freeman' s Journal :— logna and Leghorn have been added to the last year ? Why, they would scarcely belivc that it did not go far enough . rulers and wealthy classes blash, and their this treatment prove, John ?—that your speeches number of martyred cities for which a terrible had increased £9,000,000—(shame, shame),—and The Chairman then intimated that tho amend- are not worth listening to ? So, John ; quite the . A famine of four long years and the agonies ef hunger, the present estimate was £23,315 ,852. (Shame.) ment proposed to the resolution was of so trivial a ears tingle with shame. The immense re- contrary. unprecedented in the annuls of our Irish history, together reckoning must and will be enforced. Rome It ir.evidence strong as " holy writ" of with fevers But tho government said " We aro retrenching now," nature, that it had been determined to embody it in the loir , dysenteries, swellings, cold, and nakedness, still holds her own and defies her banded as- sources of modern machinery, and improved grovelling taste of the Saxon members—the and, to crown the climax of our misfortune, a raging and they began by reducing , the number of poor the resolution itself. modes of creating wealth, have been absorbed dogs!—since they have no appetite for thc sublime cholera or plague has set in for the last fortnight. Tlie sailants. It is asserted that the Hungarians clerks, who bad, perhaps, wives and families—they The resolution having been accordingly amended, by the non-producers. The condition ofthe and beautiful. What do they know about oratory ? people are withering with fear and dying in multitudes. have already beaten the Russians and carried caught the small nies and allowed the leviathans to it wa s'put from tho chair and carried unanimously. —they have never graduated at Burgh Deaths numerous, but coffins f ew— buried without coffins break through. Tliey had saved a few thousands by Mr. William labourer and artisan has Jiofc improved—in Quay ! Talk- in dykes and ditches the war into Poland. The Republican insur- Williams, the late member for ing of Burgh Quay, John the - emotitu- , and many—many disfi gured and de- reducing the mimber of clerks were , -which the stroyed by rats. In this doomed and mountainous- parish rection is gaining ground in Gennauy. ; bnt u tliey Coventry, was then introduced to the meeting ns many cases it has deteriorated. Increased mention of that hallowed place excites in me Ere sincere in what they did they must begin at the the mover of the next at this (Partree) upwards of 1,900 of God's creatures fell victims long the French Democrats will , resolution, which was as powers of production have been followed by moment—but, then, it is all over 1—I have applied to ihis devouring famine—more than 700 families are wan- measure heads of the departments. Then, with respect to follows :—" That, in the opinion of this meeting, increased toil and diminished remuneration to the lappel of my coat to my optics and nasal organ, dering without a house to put their heads into. They weapons with the slaves of the Tsar on German their diplomatic expenses, it was enormous, but no the expenditure of the state is characterised by an (you can imagine how they have been are seeking shelter in dikes and ditches. This is the soil ; and one had a chance of being emp o se v extravagance the the labourer. Society, under the government affected ,) and eftect of tlie Gregory clause, five " France will break the sword of war l yed in the r ice most reprehensible ; that to sus- will face the subject Kke a man. years ago tliere were in the breast of the last ofthe Kings I" unless hc were connected with tlie Lord Tom Noddy tain this reckless waste an enormous amount of of " the friendsof order, family, aud property/' The r 1,500 children attending thc several schools in my parish ; eminiscences which are associated with the now tliere are not ten children. Whore are they gone to ? fa mily—(laughter)—no man whose name was either taxation is required , which, as now luvied, presses is a huge organised system of plunder, which history of that now defunct establishment—how Famine and eternity can tell. For thc last week 1 witnessed L'AMI DU PEUPLE Smith, Jenkins, or who possessed tlie patronymic of most unequally upon the different sections of the denies to the great mass of the people the en- they crowd upon my memory ! The rents that have many a disconsolate heart. At Hornahowiia, Peter Flana- May 24, 1849. Buggins. (Laughter.) It would be next to impos- community; tliat so large a proportion of the taxes joyment of the comforts of family or the pos- been received there—the reputations that have been gan, wife, his two daughters, and two granddaughters, sible to send a man with such a name to a foreign is imposed upon the necessaries of life, that no eco- slaughtered—the promises tbat have been died within one hour of each other. A poor sight—foai- court. The diplomatic establishmcntcosts£lS0,000; nomy nor self-denial on tho .part of the poor man session of property. " Order," in the voca- made, corpses leaving one house together . At Gortmora about and the coats that have been therein turned ' , and what did thoy get ? Tiie work could he done can enable him to csc!ti!(j from those-burthens- • that bulary of the brigands who plunder wholesale, , all go tlie hour of midnight, there were seven corpses in the same PUBLI C MEETING. to prove the ability with which the affair was con- house. There is waiiing aud crying almost in every house. for much less. (Hear, hear.) For upwards ofa the effects of such a system are not only cruel, under the sanction ofthe laws they have made ducted. God be with ould times, John, when at At Ballybanane, William Walsh and his son were found year they had had no ambassador at Madrid , who arbitrary, and pernicious towards the industrious and the machinery tliey have constructed— the " Loyal National Burgh Quay," you found an dead, entwined in each other's arms and both nearly PARLIAMENTARY AND FINANCIAL had received £6,500 a year. He was a very amiable classes, but are calculated to produce the wide- means simply the submission of the producers auditory who were capable of appreciating real eaten by rats. Martin Walsh, in the same village, together REFORM. man , but he was withdrawn ; and it was notorious spread demoralisation and those flagrant crimes eloquence, and who, consequentl with liis father and mother, were also found dead. tliat their affairs were going on there much better which are the offspring of poverty and distress ; and to be plundered iu peace—and when they re- y, got speeches Anthony Dei-rig, , The first public meeting called by. tho galore. Jfc was not the dirty in the next field dead under scran's. At Council of because they had no diplomatic interference, and that, therefore whole -framework of parliament you were Drimeggy I found Martin Walsh and his wife doadiu a saw- the Financial Reform Association was held on , the taxa tion sist they are reduced to obedience by fire and talking to then, . Tues- saved atthesametimo£0,500—(cheers),—but if they should be so altered as to adjust its burthens to the John, but to men of " illigant" jut, and near to the place his little child drowned in a day, at the London Tavern . The meeting sword. taste, as numberless stream in the same village. Bnt now tliere are was con- must have ambassadors let tho Smiths, tho Jen- respective means of thoso who are to bear them." noggins of buttermilk, at pre- no villages. vened for ono o'clock ; but long before Twice tbis Session haveMr. Slaney and the sent not extant, could have ampl Pat Shaughnessy's two daughters""*' his mother, and his that hour kinses, and the Bugginses have a chance now—they, They were told that one of the effects ofthe Reform y testified. Those the large room of the tavern was densely crowded working classes been treated to a specimen of were the days when the Press of Ireland, at least, did wife,- were found iu a hut dead together! Tliere are many , he thought, would be satisfied to do the work for Bill would be to reduce taxation ; but what had you justice, similur and equally distressing cases. They are now com- as also was the gallery. On the platform we noticed £1,000 a year. (Hea r, hoar,) The Prime Minister been the case ? the interest v;hich the present House of Com- koine people say, but I don't believe plaining before tlieir God. On whom will we call—to whom Arthur Anderson, Esq., M.P. ; 11. R. Osborn Why, since the Reform 13111 was them, that certain Irish e, might come down to the House and say hc had re- passed, the ta*ses had increased no less than editors were joint proprie- will we make our sad complaints ] Our gardens are Esq., M.P. ; J. Williams, Esq., M.P. ; J. Wyld mons takes in this most vital and paramount tors in the turned into , duced the number of the Horse Guards, saying, £4,000,000, 000 000. The " brass" by which the " tin" was at- graves—our fields strewed witli the sick and Esq., M.P. ; 13. M. Willcox, Esq., M.P and tho expenditure £7, , question. "We trust the fact will be remem- tracted to jour mock senate with the dying—our homes mouldering in dark ruins—our . ; Colonel " See what I havo done—I have taken off some of productive power of tho people had been fearfull , and which enabled you Thompson, M.P. ; L. Heyworth , Esq., M.P. y and them to do so much for people naked, shivering, wandering, and craving for a grain ; George the dead wei hts." Why, the Horse Guards cost reduced, and tho consequence was that last year bered whenever tlie next general election your country, and so of meal or crust of bread. Thompson , Esq., M. P., and others. g little for yourselves. At all events £190,000. lhe present commander-in-chief re- 3,500,000 received parochial relief, and 100,000 were may take place. It would be well that the , of the utter un- The chair was taken, Joshua Walmsley selfishness of all bearing by Sir , ceived £3, 700 a year, with perquisites, whilst Lord committed to prison for crime. Surely, then if •members of the present House of Commons, your revered name there You have often heard of the " reign of ter- M.P., who briefly opened thc meeting, and called , can be no question. I was in the gallery of the Amherst, when commander-in-chief, received only something were not done to stay tho further pro - who may again solicit the suffrages of the elec- ror," but did ever the wildest excesses of po- upon tho honorary secretary to read the report. £1 000. (Hear,, hear.) And with respect to the os th e House of Commons on Friday evening, when you Mr. II. T. Atkinson' then read the : , gr s of is downward syst m they might live to tors, should be q uestioncd why they were absent, pular vengeance create any suck misery, any- report, which perquisites, they were as much looked after as a toe a prop a i enforced the rule for the exclusion of strangers, and stated that— " The council, upon mature considera- hecy Sir James Gr ham publ shed in a when such a question was brought forward heard the derisive laug thing approaching to such horrors as are in- cook looked after the perquisites she possessed in pamphlet thirty years ago to the effect that '* when- hter with which the stupid tion , have decided upon advocating such an exten- Saxon members treated tho suot. (Laughter.) ever the country presents the spectacle of millions Ii Is time that Labour—ihe foundation of all you for your worthy and he- dicated ill the above appaling statement ? Yet sion of the franchise, as will give to every male oc- roic conduct. "But," thought I, '-he will yet be able where are the lightnings and thunders of the " 'Tis from high life high characters are drawn— wanting bread, then would the people sweep away -wealth—should find representatives for itself, cupier of a tenement, or any portion ofa tenement, A saint in crape is twice a saint in lawn," titles, pensions to take ample vengeance upon them for that laugh e , and honours." The only remedy and tliat the present mockery should be put an Press-gang, so readily launched whenever the th right to be registered as an elector ; tlio only The honourable gentleman concluded by urging the for this complication of evils was Parliamen of scorn !" I communicated the thought to a friend condition coupled with that ri ht tary Re- end to. people have reeourse to " the wild justice of g being, not the necessity of tho middle and working classes pos- f orm ' ; it was useless to expect Financial Reform who was at my side, who asked me, " What I sup- payment of -rates, but the fact of heing rated , posed you would do ?" " Why," replied I, "he revenge V sessing themselves of forty-shilling county franchises till that had been attained. When Lord John Russell or having claimed to ho rated for tho roliol introduced Lord Stanley and the Protectionists have will give 1 oticc of motion upon some Irish question , Alas ! my friends, those lightnings and of tlie poor in respect of the qualifying pre- by thc means proposed by tlie council. the Reform Bill, ho made use of these perhaps the ' godless colleges,' and will make a thunders though often hurled against you, Mr. Thomas Clark said: Sir, as the resolution remarkable words : " I propose by this bill that made another strenuous effort to substitute re- mises. The effect of such a measure in strengthen- the people shall send to the Commons speech of two hours upon its introduction !" are never employed for you, or for your order, ing the popular voice in the House of Commons now before us is an invitation to all classes of ltc- House of ciprocity for Free Trade in our shipping rela- True," said my friend Parliamen t their real representatives, to deliberate " , " he con punish them that your interests, your rights, or your friends, b may be inferred from the fact that the present con- formers to co operato with the promoters of this tions with foreign countries. Either his way,and if he does 1 shall pity them." y meeting, in carrying out tlie objects of the associa- on their wants, to consult on their interests, to stituency of the United Kingdom would be increased consider their " whip" was not so good as it was on his first The Times, being the newspaper against which the Press of this country. When Latour, the tion over which you preside, and , as I have thc grievances, to hold tlie purse-strings hy the addition of upwards of 3,500,000 voters. of the nation to l the foundation for resistance to the ^Navigation Bill, or some of you have directed your complaint more especially, Austrian traitor, honour of being a Chartist myself— (cheers)—aud of , ay salutary Tho council seek to invest this extended righ t of changes in the well-being and comforts of the his supporters were disheartened at their defeat has had the conscience to require of you to speak " perish*d by the justest doom , voting with tiio shelter of the ballot-; and, in order belonging to the Chartist party—(loud cheers)— " common sense," as a condition to the publication ' than whom no body of men have, by priority at people, and that laws shall not be passed for the on that occasion. Though tlie division was in That ever the destroyer yet destroy'd, to keep actively alive that sense of responsibility , benefit of classes by men roused from their slumbers of your speeches at length in that paper ! Was which, in the public business of the nation as in the least, so much right to be heard upon th is question Committee—whereproxies do not count—the there ever before such a monstrous absurdity put and again, when Rossi, the arch-mtriguer, bit ofthe suffr age. (Hear, and cheers.) I sm anxious at twelve o'clock at night to vote for what they private affairs of life, secures thc faithful exercise knew not." (Laughter.) Now he hoped when Ministers had a majority of thirteen, which, forth, even by a Saxon editor ? " Wanting—an the dust, a we a a t e to offer a few observations, not only upon the reso- , of po r held in trust, they dvoc te he r turn Lord John Russell saw the report of this meeting witli thc majority of fourteen peers present Irish 2d.P. to utter * common sense !' " And, as if to the old constitutional system of Triennial Par- luti on itself, but also upon what has fallen from tho " Amidst the roar of liberated Rome, in thc public press, he would lose no time in send- io cap the climax, and to make the fellow's absur- liaments ; while another and not less important preceding speakers. Tiie Chairman, in openin g against them on the second residing, counts ing a subscri ption to qualify him a member of the House was dity more complete, this conscionahle overture is there was hardly any termination to the sym- change sought for in our representative system will the business of tbo meeting, seemed to mo to have twenty-seven in their fa. our. The , made to thc member for the " Citv of the violated pathetic bowlings of the English Press-gang. had some dread of opposition and therefore ven- association - but, at aU events, they wanted no more and many of the be that which will give a more equal apportionment than what was hero promised as formerly, well attended, treaty, who, of all other Irish members, is the one of members to constituents District and tured up"n a caution, bidding you to be aware of , and with less they But these precious moralists have no bowels of . periodi- would not be satisfied. (Cheers.) leading members of the House Sat out the who would scorn compliance with sueh a demand ! cal aggregate the influen ce of " Tory gold," which, as be said , compassion for the victims of privileged assas- public meetings will be held , tracts Mr. Samuel Moi-ley debate from first to last. There was not much Is not this very requirement an additional reason had been employed in causing divi sions at other , in seconding thc resolution, not the mercy to will h e distributed , aid will be imparted to the va- sa/d he was connected with a house in the City that ou either side ibr a repe-sl of the union ? Requiring " common sins—assassins who have rious metropolitan registration societies now in ex- great meetings in different parts of tho country, lie of novelty in the arguments , employed upwards sense" from you, dear John,—and this is callod slay with the sword or poniard, but who con- istence for watching over the interests of liberal appeared to me to havo insinuated this remark of 2,000 men ; and as he had though E«iri Gkev threw somewhat more than learned from experience that the wages of lahour " Justice to Ireland !" Is not such conduct^ on demn their victims to the lingering tortures of voters, and important facilities will be offered for againstth o Chartists, owing to tho opposition which his usual bitterness into his attack upon the the part of the Times, proof that wc Irishmen they at one time offered to the Auti-Corn-La w were higher when bread was cheap than when it death by famine. Oh! unhappy people of the acquisition of freehold qualifications in the sur- was dear, he was somewhat surprised to find 4 that Protectionist leader. We imagine that this will never get "justiee" from England—no, not * rounding League, when the same unfounded charge was made Ireland, how much less heart-rending would counties." Mr. R oebuck, at a meeting in Sheffield , had asserted question is nor.* settled. It is possible that al- even an " instalment" of that " justice," the ob- The OiiAinMAN said that meeting was an answer against them. (Hear, hear.) But, Sir. my ol'j -.et be your doom Avould your lords and masters the contrary . Iu several districts, doubtless, wages in its details, but after tsiinmcnt of which was the main object to whiuh to the taunts which had boon thrown out, that in speakina here, Is not to foment disunion not to terations may be made your lamented papa devoted his useful public life ! only deign to shorten your sufferings by the create derision. (Cheers.) -I therefore repudiate were regulated in some respect hy thc price of the two defeats the Protectionists have tho middle classes of tlie city of London did bread, but in manufacturing nei hbourhoods wages if the shades of the departed dead could look down speedy execution of thc sabre, the cannon-shot, not sympathise with the movement for the extension the insinuation of th< - Chairman. g sustained, it is scarcely probable tbey can pre- influence over us poor Sir Joshua Walmsley bete rose and protested to were regulated by the demand for l.-ivour. from above, and exercise any and tbe rifln-bnll. of the suffrage. There wero those amongst them Lo.ngstaff Teut Hie ultimate passingof the meacure with mortals here below," that of your departed sire the meeting that the s-peaker was quite mistaken. He Dr. supported the resolution, and ad- " What has become of our great regenerator, —and he hesitated not to declare himself one—who vocated a svstem of direct taxation. the would, I am sure, he found hovering over Printing- looked oven beyond the princi les contained in tho did not mem the Chartists—he repeat' d th t he did provisions substantially those introduced by are his healing measures ? p Mr. Lawrence IIeywoutii, M.P., did the same, house-square ,- and if it were permitted thorn to as- Peel ? Where report. (Loud and protracted cheering. They n«r. This announcement was received with loud Government. ) observing that at present £35,000 000 wero extracted sume the shapes they graced when npon earth, Tell me not that he is out of office, that be is had cheers, , , however, adopted what they considered the from the pockets of the poor man in thc shape of would not thc .Editor of the Times be honoured with powerless. Were he an honest man, and a best means of carry out the great object they Mr. Clauk continued : 1 am now pcrfcrtly satis- ing direct taxation , whieh otherwise would bo applied— The Duke of EicuMOsn last \* eeu; made an the apparition of the " Liberator," in his favourite hc would never had in view ; namel the greatest extension of the fi ed, the Chairman I avimr assured the meeting that statesman worthy of the name, y, * at least a great portion of it—to the purchase of outcry about agricultural distress. It is, per- and formidable attitude -.is a Tribune of the people ' suffrage. The hon.'gentleman after stating that each he did not mean the Chartists. (Cheers.) I w^u'd j rest until he had forced upon Parli ament the , articles of consumption , t-'nd thus add to tiie produc- that f^or the last with the tip of his thumb placed " significantly" speaker would have l-een much better satisfied with the objects of haps/rather early, seeing adoption of measures calculated to put an end be limited to twenty minutes in his tive powers of the country . If a, direct tax of ten get- upon the most-prominent point of his proboscis, address, a p the assaciatinn , had thc suffrage been set forth two or three years the farmers have been c lled u on 'per cent, were adopted it would induce all t , and his four fingers pointing to the skies ! Such a to the horrors above detailed. Mr. R. Taylor who moved tho first resolution : the'oin as .1 right V> which all men are entitled , and , par ies prices both for com and cattle in , from the nobleman witli an income of £300,000 a- tins hiiih visitation as this at the hour of midnight, would But suffering is not confined to the peoplo —" That, in the between thc advo- wholly untrammelled with rate-paying q* a ificutions. ' failure of the potatoes, present contest yc-itr down to the poorest operative, to sec tha t thc coiSai uence of the not only brinsr the offending Editor to liis senses, of Ireland. On Tuesday evening last, Mr. cates of a . searching. reform in the national finances • Cheer-*. ) "Sri!l, I cannot do- y that the enfranchise- de- ' money was pioperly expended for the benefit uf the. ilsu-div, high prices are concomitant with but would furnish some future Irish Sh.'ikspe-re with and the parliamentary i-eprt-scntatioi*, on tlie one ment of three millions and a halt of tho people is a ' Slaxey brought, or, rather, attempted to state. A'o -sinecures would exist . under .such a sys- ficient crops ; but that was not their case hi excellent material for a Milesian tragedy ; and you, ha nd, and the upholders of a system wliich favours most material consideration, and whilst I uphold the " o bring, under the notice of the House of Com- not a-> a ro-j ij-tcred rate- tem, its it would have the effect of making every at least, Lad good crops, sir, if not exactly a suitable " Hamlet, w uld tlio few at the expense of the millions, on the right ot suffrage to man, this instance, they, " mons the condition of the working classes of " lam not disposed to quarrel man a. watch-doir upon the acts of the government. ways. make a most proper " Grave-digger, especially as other, it is important to strengthen and give effect payer, but as MAN , and therefore reaped advantage in both to wit : pport of a motion for " the witu those rct'ormets who are no' prepared to go the (A laugh.) vou are already provided with divers vests, this Island, in su to public opinion through thc medium of an orga- like the other he jhic from way have " given 1 ntiic length with ma. (Great cheering.) I do not The resolution, , was t n IM fhongU the Dusfi that of iho 'S2 club, and tho one in which you— appointment of a Standing Committee or un- ni.-ed body, uniting i-eforincrs of all grades ; and the' chair and carried unanimously. > mouth" som-nvhat prematurely, there can Hood, loval Irishman—appeared last Saturday at that the establishment of the Metropolitan Finan- only.not tlnnk it advsahle to stop upon the way to paid Commission, to consider and report, from on the contrary, I wish them Mr. D. Wiiik proposed the third and iast resolu- whatever that a great change the Koyal levee. And then how suitable the cha- cial and Parliamentary Reform Association is, quarrel witli them , but, be no doubt time to time, .011 practical measures (uncon- (LMt d cheers ) I wish it , however, to be tion, as follows :—" That in the opinion of this meet- agriculturist In racter of gravc-diqqer, at ibis time, in thc present therefore, a matter not only of expediency, but like- success. ing, the Commons House of Parliament, as at pre is before the British " for whieh yourself nected with political changes) likely to im- most clnarly wide: stood , that myself and those with , price state of Tour " beloved Erin, wise of paramount necessity." sent constituted represents neither the popuuuion- former periods when wheat sold at a low , have suffered so much ! the working classes, to whom Ili -ve the honour to be allied , will never came , and your venerable dad, Ban, prove the condition of Mr. W. J. Hall Seconded thc motion. the property, nor the industry ofthe country that abundant, and the low- * across a skull—say of won-ing l 1- until all ave admitted within the pale ol ; it was when crops were And then, should you drop encourage their industry, and increase their Mr. Elliott, who stated that ho was a t - strimg the election of its members has in numerous instances up by tlie " miscreant a the constitution. (Loud cheers.) And U is be price was iu some measure made Emmett, or Fitzgerald, or that of any contentment." The motion was moderate man , then came forward on the pl tform, to move been the result of bribery and corruption would it not suggest cause I 'hh-k this associ-mon will accelerate that , coercion quantity they had to dispose of. -U they lost rebel of "OS," what reflections h in all conscience. But tben "be an amendment, namely, " That thc association be and intimidation ; that the electoral distributions loyal John 1 But there—I will not enoug called, the Metropolitan Parliamentary and Finan- grand and pa nine- Marylebone, ho understood , was also ill. There classes , .Weymouth, a few accommodate our agricultui*al ballot. The hon. representative for . "Finsbury, who and the Irish to starve was great apath Reformers through the perfidy aiid; tyranny, of the representa- since, in the dusk of the evening, a small dog the Man- announcement of the result was y and distrust among ^ new commercial arrangements of lias not been in the Douse since the swearing in of teen -' The ¦ themselves, and he repeated again, that at the pro- tives of this former in the House of Commons, and belonging fo a person residing close by, jumped chester School of Economists, an entire change the new parliament, appeared-in excellent spirits, received with loud cheering !! !' ' The all- sent time there was no popular party, no leader, and tLerefore, I repeat that the feelings of, the working through the rails suddenly as she passed. She im- about him the traces of ill-health, House classes have not been groun d ess. (Cheers.) - near tbe of tliat svstem must take place. Game -Lau s though he bore inwortant question ol the " Derby-day ' no popular principles will be expounded in the I do mediately walked to her father's house, cou<*hed a little. Hewas shaken most cordially of Commons. cheers.) He who not however mention these things in a spirit of spot, had seven fits, and expired the next day. will have away—new modes ot cul- and been disposed of, most ofthe " honour- (Hear, hear, and to be swept by the hand by several members.—Sun. having ture introduced—and new and more secure May¦ 26, ¦ • • ¦ I849" THE NORTH¦ ERN STAR. _ • — ' 6 - . ¦ ' ' - s--— ' :* , --: ~ and with me nearly the whole time I hareknown p — ., _..._ . : - — ..a --^-s : .. . : pervades—a.^ theC. peop^« ule generall^wdto.y, and haveknowM> ^ of bricks ;' however, if you die, and die you soon of despondency but left me once, about two seasons ago 3 of the disease. Abrbst on a Charge or Murder.—It is probably any way, scrape>up.; l«i«pr P^- t0 emergency and to arrest the progress for your emaciated , famine-striken counten- aU who can in France. He returned in the month of KoveniiS, * £p mmap oli*. for the nek in tho recollection of many that in the September must, the first opportunity:-' ' Every patch • A temporary hospital is to be provided frame, betoken as much, you will, paring to leave same year that ho left. On liis return h -J' to ho adopted of 1847, a bailiff, ofthe name of Jeremiah Grady, ance and swollen side of the country (adds this gen- the D "j and .*ill other neces5ao'Jne-ls"J''esa" as on the outdoor list, be entitled to a coffin from of Sund on this but as he was out of work, and Health of Lcxdox duihxo thk Week.—The was shot by a man of the name of James Wren, who the holders, who, as soon as they with me, had. the relieving officer , though, perhaps, he may not tleman) is tilled by I sent him to a friend of mine 1,033 deaths registered in the -week exhibit an in- ^ readers will remem- had a small farm at Knocksragh, near Clonakilty, flight. ^Sc ™ into my debt, aj i»ftf TnT Chailet MuBDBB.-Our decease till you have become putrid m can lift the crops, meditate ^. he might get emp crease of 70 on the weekly average ; as well as an Assizes Hannah Sandles under the Earl of Shannon, and from which the bai- hear of your unrenaired-they will sei ve in order that loyment, and n, ' ber that at thc last Sussex tell it to you, my Lord, whether be- farm implements are left towards the amount he owed * excess of nearly 90 on the previous fortnight. This murder of her infant child by liff ( Grady), by direction of the agent, Mr. Leslie, the crave ! I are. Though the me something mc \ was convicted of the lieved or not, and I tell to the world at large, and the few months wanted as they a letter, and told him I nntavourahle result is due chiefly to diseases of the it into a well at Chailcy. near Lewes, sought to evict him on the day in question. Having ions of starving then wrote him had bur'J throwing I tell it- to our Father in Heaven (for I beseech re- poorhouses are all crammed, leg in great want of money, respiratory organs. The deaths from hooping ing their verdict of guilty by a succeded in effect ing his escape from tbis country, wretches crowd the streets of the villages and towns, my leg, and was Wlll ?J the iui'-Taccompany dress of Bim), that these are the sufferings of this ight and brought ' cough were G7> or nearly double the average * those to mercy on the ground of the des- nothing was known of his whereabouts until within appealing only by came one Saturday n me a S0Vp recommendation s ite of every entreaty, but not of half the some clamorous, but many more in the preceding week were 48. The deaths from of the prisoner at the time sho committed a few days past, when Constable John Sherrin, of people de p to the reign, and camo again after that and brought Z titution ; who can imagine the thousandth part their gaunt looks and famine-stricken visages bronchitis and pneumonia were 54 and S6, being 17 Shortly afterwards she was respited dur- the Ballinspittle station, in the Bandon.district. ob- people for such ten shillings more ; but I could not get any - ',-,,,, the act. of the misery of those who, in large numbers, are charity of the traveller. Amongst a crowd of and 25 above the respective averages, and also her Majesty's pleasure ; and the governor of tained a clue to his location, which he discovered to creatures surrounding • the hotel door in tiie else from him that season. After that I s»minor 3 The ing preferring death itself to such degradation ? It is a poor showing an. increase on the previous week. Lewes Gaol has just received from the Home-office be the town of Bridge-end, South Wales. Having town of Tipperary, I singled out a young sixteen him, and put him to all the expense I could, cxcJ the ave- ton- burning shame and stain upon the legislature in any girl, deaths from measles -were 32, or 11 above au official notification that the sentence had been provided himself with the necessary warrant, or seventeen , whose handsome profile dark eye issuing an execution. Thc prisoner came at tin! correspond with so-called Christian country." , , ¦¦¦«¦¦ ¦¦ rage; those from tvphus exactly commuted to two years' imprisonment with hard stable Sherrin proceeded to Wales immediately, and rich black hair, thick and unkempt though it time irom .dow , « «"»"»¦-• "¦¦«" •• ••^""n uance " small pox is remarkably labourers The Freeman' s Journal gives the following analysis it. Tiw mortalitv from labour, followed bv transportationfor life. and after a close inspection of the parish was, rendered her still beautiful, though shivering for the purpose, as I afterwards ascertained, 0f Q , after spreading its ravages ge-end, he of tho replies of the Rev. Martin Browne, low : and scarlatina Tue Staxfijeld Hall Murders.—Discovert or working in the various employs in Brid circu- in a few loose dirty rags. Never shall I forget thc in" taken into custody, so that he might get a \>ii\^ throusr'-out a long period, has subsided to near Wednesday. Tuesday last in arresting Wren, priest of Balla, Mayo, to the list of queries ' the Weapon.—Wtmondham, —The dis- succeeded on is one tale of woe that poor girl told of a dying mother for the winter in prison. I know the prisoner fi-0t0 ''Jinarv ainount of fatality. The deaths amongst lated by the Dublin Relief Committee. It the ol covery of the weapon by whieh Rush perpetrated whom he found working in a kick-yard, and three small sisters perishing from starvation. his coming from the same place that I did. from diairliaa and dysentery wore 18; only one hundred men. At first there seemed a of many similar returns received by the committee • the murders at Stanfield Hall has created considera- two or three Never shall I forget the fervent accents of gratitude Mr. Commissioner Maxxe, at the request of tl» was caused by cholera. The deaths of two persons, the part ofthe resist, —"The population has been reduced from 8,250 to . ble interest in the county. The locality in which determination on prisoner to a very little charity elicited, amidst her sobs and Attorney-General, now produced the pistol, and, ij one advanced in life, were accelerated by intempe- tends to show that the but finding himself unassisted, he did not oppose to o,500, being a loss of 2,750, of whom it is com- immer- it was found certainly pre- te!U.s_tears summoned forth by being addressed in answer to the Attorney-General, the witness sai] rance ; and a woman of 77 years died from sumed search made by the county police was at violence to his arrest. Constable Sherrin then pro- puted that over 1,200 died from the effects of desti- bruises received by falling into a a tone of kindness and condolence—tones evidently that the pistol produced was liis property. sion in water, and out in the most slovenl manner. For ceeded with his prisoner to Bristol, where, embark- tution, or disease resulting from it, the remaining when under the influence of intoxi- least carried y she was little accustomed to hear. Oh! daughters • The next witness was Bridget O'Kkefi-.— <<}i;, common sewer, several weeks they, with sixty or seventy hired la- ing in the Juverna, he proceeded to Cork, arriv- loss being in part accounted for by emigration , ana «Irink. Aman of 53 years died of " cerebral of luxury—think how many_ thousands of your sis- said : I am the wife of the last witness. I know i||f. catin" bourers under the personal direction of Col. ing hero yesterday, when the prisoner was fully the loss by natural causes, which, as will be seen y mental anxiety," after an ill- , ters, lovely as yourselves, pine for the bread your istol. On Saturday last, I was going out into tU affectum produced b the chief officer of the force, at a very great committed to the county gaol, by B. Shaw, Esq., by tho replies to the third query, is not being sup- p twelve weeks. And a boy was accidentally Oakes, lap-dogs reject. All hope rests on the coming har- when I saw Mr. Hamilton (the prisoner) n{ ness of expense to the county, were engaged in almost the J.P.— Cork Examiner. plied now as it was in former years—the increase of garden with a rope at the neck, when vests. Should God please to again withhold the bench. He said he was making a pistol, ai; - lulled by suspension Potash "the turning up of Dissenting Worsuip in a Churchyard.—On the tbo species being checked by tlie excessive misery the hei complete demolition of , fruits of the earth this season, the consequences fire a shot or two. He then showc-l engaged in gymnastic exercises. The mean ght of the numerous p question which has been lately raised as to the law- and wasting of the people. The births and mar- was going to land, and the emptying its of will be awful indeed—more so than I dare to con- fixed upon apkw of tic barometer in the week was 20.493. The In fact fulness ofthe dissenting churchyard riages in the parish of Balla in '49, as compared me a sort of barrel which he had water which abound in the district. , to worship in the tin mean temperature of the -week was 54 deg. 9 min. officiating with those in 'ii, ' are in the ratio of one to four,' template. of wood like a pistol. It was made of , anj such an extent wa3 the search said to have been made, of Killdollon, without permission of the Tenantry.—The following case of " The ternperatare was a little above the average of that, "to use the words of one of the officials , had so minister, the law adviser of her Majesty's govern- in other words, the natural increase of the popu- Want of re- seemed to me to be the spout ofa teakettle. I mmfe the same period of seven years, throughout the action," as it may be called, is mentioned by the some remark to him about it, which I do not noy small a thing as a pencil-case been secreted, it ment in Ireland has given the following opinion ; lation has failed to the appalling extent of 75 per whole week ; and the excess, taking one day with pperary Vindicator :—" We understand that in , when he said " Why, Dan has got an old would liave been turned up. It may be stated that which, has been forwarded by the Under-Secretary cent. In one parish alone 400 , houses have been Ti recollect , another, was 2 deg. 6 mia. those landlords who were conspicuous some pistol, lend it to me." I then went to my bedroom the weapon had been so placed after the search by to the magistrate who was present on the occasion levelled through the operation of the Gregory Clare, , CnAKGE OF 2JEGLECT AGAIS3T A P.UIISH SURGEOX. clearing their properties, are now doing " I am of perfor- clause." time ago in and gave it to him out of the window. The prisoner some person, for the purpose of obtaining a large referred to :— opinion that the in their power to proeure tenantry to —On Monday an Inquest was held before Mr. reward, but a. general opinion prevails that that mance of the funeral service in a churchyard, by a op all that lies looked at it , and said it was very rusty. I said it was, Payne ax the" King's Head, Tooley-street, South- State the Skibbereen Union.—This wretched till the land, which in whole districts is waste. In and that I did not think it was of much account. portion ofthe farm where thc discovery was made dissenting clergyman, without the permission of its melancholy notoriety. Ac- I wark on ihe body of Ellen Collins, aged twenty- union Still preserves few instances can tenants bo obtained; and the con- afterwards heard him fire tho pistol about , had not been examined at all. Although the process the clergyman of the Established Church is illegal. tlio Cork Examiner :—" It is nearly three seven ye.-trs whose death was alleged to have been cording to is that these landlord s are in the utmost in the garden.—Was thc prisoner in or out , of ejectment has been served on Mr. James Rush —Dublin Evening Post. for food sequence times of or non-attendance, during her , £7,000 in debt to merchants ; and while caused by neglect, son of the deceased murderer Monday.—State of toe Country.—For the last distress. The land cannot pay poor rates and taxes work ?—I have not known him have seven weeks' O'Connel assistant to the , and the furniture over 22,000 hungry paupers yearn for bread, which - confinement, of Mr. P. , disposed of by public auction; yet he 'continues to three or four months the current expenses of the under the circumstances." And again, to quote work since Christmas.—How did he live ? A young parish-? nrgeon of St. Thomas's, Southwark. The must bo provided for them or they perish, there is from the same authority :— In several parts of the woman who lives with me, bank" upt union of Ban try have been defrayed by of a rate collected " and is in the milk line. Ireland, and had only la hold possession of the farm. It appears that in the not the least probability being deceased was a native of t- course of hist Saturday one or two of the labourers the commissioners to the average amount of -£300 a country from which ienantry have ueeii lately serves a great many persons and collects a good deal She was pregnant, from the farmers and occupiers who still remain in terly arrived in this country. week. The commissioners are now decreasing their ejected, and the lands tilled by proprietors or agents, of broken victuals, and between the two of us we ' named Ring, at 2vo. were engaged in clearing away some muck which thc country. We do most earnestly, and in the aud werii to live with a female, and several deaths by starvation have oc- there is nothing to meet the demands of thc rate- managed to keep him. the lower class of stood near a shed at the eastern extremity of the supplies, name of humanity, call on government to take tho 1, PittV-bufldinss. inhabited by barn, scarcely thirty paces from the back-door of curred there. The state of the district is most collector and county cess man but the growing Edward O'Keefi*, the son of the last witness Irish. On Triday, the 11th inst., she was taken in case of Skibbereen, with its 22,000 paupers, and its crops ; but these they cannot touch ; and the result Potash when a double-barrelled short gun or blun- miserable. ", bankrupt landlords farmers and shopkeepers, into said I am cloven next birthday. Tho prisoner ask&l who, upon , , is that these lands for thc present are so far unpro- fetch him a halfpenny labour, and Mr. O'Connel was sent for, derbuss was turned in the soil. The fact was in- In thc Kilrush union (county of Clare) several of and at once relieve the me yesterday to worth oi born. After applying up immediate consideration, ductive towards meeting the fiscal requirements of his arrival, found the child y communicated to Mr. Rush, who took pos- the evicted tenantry are living in turf pits scooped embarrassment and the destitute from powder, and I wont into Elizabeth-street and bough left the deceased , and did not stantl board from its the country or of the unions in which they are si- the usual remedies he session of the weapon. It had evidently been con- out of the bogs and covered in at the top with some of starvation and death. Tho it, and gave him the powder. He said it was not which is usual and neces- the near approach tuate, unless the owner bo compelled to pay by prescribe any medicine, cealed a considerable period— several months branches of trees'. From these cavities ,the smoko consider that beyond the credit . the best sort of powder. Tbat was about a quarter sary, nor even attended until after her death. The , as it government must summons." was corroded. To more properly describe it, it is at times is seen ascending, and the passer-by would of a single week's food one respectable house— to three o'clock. The prisoner said he wanted the deceased appeared to be going on favourably, and as hc could have some fun. a small doubled-barrelled carbine, about three- hardlv know that the hog was inhabited by a sub- —have refused to grant, and powder —[The witness was attacked suddenly on Friday last with a fit, Messrs. Gould and Co. something similar to terranean population.' In one locality there are as the state here produced a piece of wood cut in the form ofj and died shortly afterwards.—Dr. Ilolding, physi- quarters of a yard in length, that contractors are perfectly justified by DARING OUTRAGE ON HER MAJESTY. the arms carried in former days by mail-coach many as twenty of these bog-dungeons, with fami- Bantry, pistol stock, on which was tied the spout of an ol! cian and accoucheur to Guy's Hospital, stated that it of things in the neighbouring union of guards. It has a spring dagger or bayonet attached lies in them. Your correspondent lately heard one in refusing to iisk tin teakettle, so as to form a barrel. Ho said he was hi* opinion that death was irrespective of the where all seems hopeless ruin, On Saturday afternoon London was thrown into to it which seems to have been added since its con- of the hi hest employes ofthe Poor Law staff give a 's worth of their property on the purchased it of tho prisoner on Saturday last fer one confinement. It had been produced by a spasmodic , g even a shilling consternation by the report that an attempt had struction. The maker' , it is said, does dreadfully graphic picture of the scene he had wit- be they paid or ' penny, and turning to the prisoner, he said , *' Here, aff ection of the heart or by some affection in the s name faith of any board of guardians, been made to assassinate her Majesty. It appears , not present itself. Neither of the barrels were nessed in Kilrush. He had got down into one of or the re- Mr. Hamilton, I can pay you the penny now (ofc —The jury returned a verdict of " Natural elected, the officers of the government, that, soon after tho ceremonies of the drawing-room brain. down. in which a family were lying in ing a penny) ; I had not. got one on Saturday."}, "fie " were charged, and the hammers of the locks were these bog dungeons, presentatives of the people." were over, her Majesty, accompanied by his Royal ' ath, and added that they of opinion that Being without a ramrod the one found in the hall fever, and he succeeded in moving some of them, When did he go out : Almost immediately after. the conduct of Mr. O'Connel was highly reprehensi- , The Central Relief Committee, through whose Highness the Prince of Wales, the Princess Royal, but the odour of the place was so overpowering that years wards. I wanted to go with him, but he said, "}V, ble and tliat he had been guilty of great neglect ; of Stanfield Hall on the night of the murders, exertions so much good was achieved in the and the Trhicess Helen, proceeded, about five , was fitted to the he was compelled to retreat. Part of the county of you must stop at home." and thev also recommended that a memorial should weapon, and was found to corres- 46—7, have recommenced operations, and in an o'clock, in an open landau, for an airing in tho pond in size and make in every particular. That it Clare is now the worst spot in Ireland.—Daily News. The prisoner was asked, as he had heen at tho be sent to the board of guardians, conveying, then- address to the country, issued this day, they call for parks, accompanied by Major-General Wemyss, her belonged to the instrument was proved beyond a Relief for the South and West.—At the them to relieve " the utter de- conclusion of the previous witness's examination opinions.—Mr.Co rner, the vestry clerk, herestepp ed * assistance to enable Majesty 's equerry, on horseback. The drawing up doubt. . Somewhat ofa fracas has taken place be- meeting of the general committee in this city on stitution of 1849—a destitution far surpassing any- of the royal carriage in front of Buckingham whether he had any questions to ask tlie witness, 10 forward, aud said at the next meeting of the board of on handing in which he replied, " So, nothing," tween the police authorities and tho magistrates for Saturday , the Rev. Mr. O'Malley, thing this country has vet endured." palace was a sufficenf indication of her Majesty 's in- guardians, he would communicate the evidence of Law in- Daniel Lamb was then called the possessi on of the weapon. Shortly after the the subscription of Dr. Phelan, the Poor The accounts this morning from Claro and Galway tention, to induce a number of the loungers about , and examined.— the witnesses, and the opinion of the jury. discovery, one of the chiefs of the constabulary spector, said he was authorised by that gentleman He said : About half-past six o'clock on Saturday Accii>j-.\*T os the River.—Two Lives Lost.—On are scarcely less afflicting than those from Ballinrobe the Park to.gather round and to witness her waited upon Mr. Rush, and requested a sight of it. to state that he had traversed tho south and west and Skibbereen. Majes ty's departure. The royal cortege proceeded evening I was on Constitution-hill, when I saw thc Wednesday afternoon , shortly after one o'clock, an not the sli It was produced, and tho officer rather forcibly in all directions, and that there was ghtest Verdict against a Relieving Officer.—On through a portion of Regent' ' prisoner standing near a tree in the Green Park. accident -occurred on the river, near the St. Katha- ' accounts of tlie des- s-park and Hyde- when the royal carriage was seized it. Mr. Rush remonstrated with him as to exaggeration in the newspaper Sunday an inquest was held on the body of a man park and after being absent about three-quarters He asked me, passinsr, rine's steam packet wharf, by whieh two men were aid from volun- , ' the apparent illegality of his proceeding, at the titution, which required all possible named'Patrick Dillon in Kilnaboy, Ennistimon union, of an hour, turned down Constitution-hill towards whether it was the Queen coming. I told him it drowned. It appears that two fishermen were na- ary charity to preserve thousands of lives. was. Immediatel I saw him raise a pistol and and on same time expressing his readiness to deliver it up t who died on the previous day. It appeared from the palace. By this the crowd iu waiting to see her y , "rigatins- a small Peter-boat down the river, to the proper authorities should it be desired Lord Lansdowne's Tenantry in Kerry.—The shoot at her Majesty. I felt something close to my wards the New , when the evidence that deceased held nine acrc3 of land, Majesty return had considerably increased, and reaching the Tower, they made to the officer remarked that Colonel Oakes had re- Limerick Examiner, in referring to the great extent and believed at tho time that it was a bullet. Unity .*rea m tug, which was about proceeding to and that for some time past he was living in great formed a double lino down Constitution-hill, a con- ear, quested him to take it, and he should do so. Mr. of pauperism in Kenmare Union, states that there At the moment before I had turned to look at the Gr-j .ves.-iid, to tow a vessel up into the docks. One destitution, with a wife and two children ; he siderable number being also collected in the Green- Rush then rode over to Mr. Cann and communicated is only one electoral division which has remained , and therefore I did not see the actual shoot- of men in the Peter-boat, made fast bis boat to , offer ed to give up tho land, but the landlord refused park, wliich at that spot is separated from Constitu- Queen ihe what had transpired. In the course of Sunday it solvent all through, whilst, from all the rest, pau- ing. Feeling assured that tho explosion came from the stern of the Unity, for the purpose of being to take it, unless a portion which was held by de- tion-hill by the park palings. Among the groups came into the possession of Mr. Cann who retain, d pers have been sent in shoals to the workhouse, or ' istol, I attempted to get over thc wed down tiie river. The Unity started shortly , ceased's brother was also given up ; the wife cot assembled here, arid nearly in the same spot where the prisoner s p to possession of it till Monday, cast in crowds upon the rates." "But (says that railings to secure him, but at the moment I sa w the aft erwi-i-ds, and the two men sat in the stern of their when the colonel waited out-door relief four or five times, to the amount of Oxford made his attempt on her Majesty 's life in upon him and demanded the gun. At first it was journal) the electoral division in question has park-keeper seize the prisoner. The park-keeper Imat. On reaching St. Eaftuirine's steam packet 1* stone of meal each week ; she afterwards applied 1S40, was standing a young man, stout, and under refused ; some angry words and indeed a scuffle neither sent a pauper to the common receptacle, tol called to me to assist him, which I did, by holding wharf, tlie Peter-boat was suddenly upset by the , , to tho relieving officer and he d her to get a eerti- the middle SJ20, about twenty-four years of ago, it is said, ensued when the colonel produced an nor received a pound of Indian meal in out door re- tho prisoner by the coat tails, the railings of the swell from the steam tug, and almost immediately , •tcate that the land had beon offered to the landlord dressed in a dirty flannel jacket, and having all the order from the sheriff for its delivery. It was ac- lief, because that division belongs altogether to the park prevented me from taking hold of any portion sunk. 'Several boats were put off from the shore, aud she would get relief. A medical gentleman appearance of a bricklayer's labourer, who accosted • cordingly handed over to hiai under protest, Marquis of Lansdowne, and because all the occu- of his person.—Had you noticed the prisoner before but before any assistance could be rendered, the and in deposed that deceased died from protracted starva- a woman near him, and asked if the Queen was whose custody it continues. It will be remembered piers—and this is the secret ofthe solvency ofthe tion. The jury returned the fol lowing verdict *.— he spoke to you ? Yes ; I noticed he had been for men disappeared and were never seen afterwards. tenant right a coming ; and then, as the royal outriders made their that at the trial Emily Sandford said that after district—are in the enjoyment of , " That deceased came by his death from protracted appearance at the moment, asked " if this was her." some time walking about that spot, with his hamj; The watermen dragged the river, but wore unable confers. Rush had returned home on the night of the mur- blessing thc noble marquis habitually starvation, caused by having been refused thc relief Thc woman answered in the affirmative, when im- in his pocket.—Did you notice 111 which hand th' io find the bodies. that the ei-ops ders, she heard bim come down stairs and go out at The Harvest.—All accounts state which he had been formerly getting from the re- mediately, as thc royal carriage came opposite prisoner held the pistol ? In his right hand.—Win genial weather and re- the back door for a few minutes. The finding of the are greatly improved by the lieving officer , Thomas Macmahon. A coroner's him, he raised his hand and discharged a pistol at did he do with the pistol after he fired it 1 i weapon in the heap of soil so near the rear of the freshing rains of the last week. Potatoes promise warrant was immediately issued, on wliich the re- her Majesty. The report of the pistol thought he put it into his trowsers pocket, hut h; Whe i^routnff*5 to appear in caused the premises will fully explain his object in leaving tie well, and the carly.sorts are, beginning lieving officer was committed, but bail was after- royal postillions for a moment to check the horses was taken so soon that I am not positive. I kno*- small quantities perfectly sound. , :r.i-n of a Policeman* at Bristol — The in- house in that secret way, viz., to conceal the instru- wards accepted for his appearance. and tho Queen, standing up in the carriage and ad- he was trying to do so. The witness then depose; ?.fci . Lord Monteagle and his Labourers.—Some y of John ment by which he had committed the atrocious acts. New Barristers.—Seventeen law students are to dressing one of her attendants, asked what had to tho fact ofthe prisoner being taken to the st& quest held on Friday week on the bod a violent outrage was committed upon on the 3rd of May, was so That tbat was his motive for going out there is little weeks sinco, be called to thc British bar, during Trinity Term, happened. -- The man replied that her Majesty had tion-house, adding, that had he not been placed in i Pym, P.O. 206, who, hlin Sharp, a steward of TiolentiT assaulted by two soldiers ofthe 15th Ilegi- doubt. By manyit is supposed that another weapon is the family of Mr. Loug which commences this day. This is a large number been shot at, on which, without making any reply, cab, he believed that the populace would have ton Lord Monteagle, at Mount Trenehard , county of him to pieces. ment and beaten with sticks, terminated that even- yet tobe found, as Rush tired four times. The general considering the gloomy prospects of the legal pro- her Majesty resumed her seat, the carriage drove , belief Limerick. In consequence, that nohle lord sus- Gkorge-Maldi-jj when thc jury returned a verdict , however, is, that he had only one, the one fession in this country. on, and the Queen alighted at the entrance, and was , the park-keeper, deposed tin: ing at a late hour, pended all the useful works upon his property, and ' " agamst the two soldiers, now found. After firing at the elder Mr. Jermy, Wednesday, May 23. — Sale of O'Connell's the first, wo understand to inform her Royal Con- he distinctly saw the prisoner raise his arm as tli< of " Wilful Murder, transmitted an address to the tenantry and labourers, , ew- Italy and John MTetten. he would have had ample time while proceeding Library.—The library ofthe late Mr. O'Connell sort, Prince Albert, of tlie daring outrage that had royal carriage approached, and hearing a loud repon Andr into the mansion p a ly disgraceful to MoRi-irrn," Satobdat. — Committal op a>*o*oier by the servants' entrance to reload de rec ting such outrages as deep was sold by auction yesterday, at Jones's sale-rooms, been perpetrated. ho ran up and seized the prisoner, and took fron the discharged the district, and calculated to prevent all attempts istol which had been •"WirE vow Pcisoxixg her Husband.—Considerable barrel; and again, after shooting D'Olier-street. There were very few valuable or The discharge of the pistol was witnessed by him the p produced. at bettering the condition of the people by produc- exeiteinc-ntprevails throughout the nei hbourhood the younger Mr. Jermy, a few minutes elapsed ere rare works in the collection , which consisted chiefly several parties, and the scoundrel who fired it- made Mr. Rekwick, the sergeant footman to tiie Queea g he fired at Mrs. tive employment. of Morpeth iu consequence of the discovery of Jermy. He went into the dining- of law books, tracts on divinity, pamphlets, &e. no attempt to escape ; although, indeed, if lie had said that he saw the prisoner point the pistol at tb , Dr. Langley, accused of cruelty to his wife, has another supposed case of secret poisoning, and the room, and had time and opportunity to again load None brought anything liko the prices that might done so, escape would have been out of his power. royal carriage, and almost immediately called ti the county gaol of the alleged mur- before he met with the unfortunate lady. The find- been arrested in Dublin, and is now a prisoner in have been expected. Even copies having O'Con- tlie riders to stop, but in thc meantime the prisone commituil i* Newgate. He was first seized by Moulder, one of the park- deress. The circumstances connected with the ing ofthe ramrod in the hall favours the impression nell's autograph affixed sold at prices not amounting: keepers who was stand near him and who in- had been taken. Her Majesty rose to see what wa; Mr. Butt has left for London to bo examined be- , ing , ease, as far as they have yet heen ascertained, that he used it while there. His re-loading would to thc mere intrinsic value, and, in many Instances, stantly secured the istol, which the prisoner was the matter, and ordered tiiom to drive on . account for fore the Poor Law Committee. The Evening Post p appear to be as follow :—Some few days since a the four shots fired. It is somewhat far below the trade price at second-hand ! Ten attempting to thrust into the pecket of his trow- Mr. Otway, inspector of the A division of police. surprising that the police did not after hearing has discussed at great length his " rate in aid", married man about twenty-six years of age, named , the years ago, who could have imagined such a result as sers. A police-constable named Topley, 55 A , and deposed to searching the house in which the prisone "U*ill:.-iiii 'feriisb who resided at Haltwhistle, was admissions of Rush tbat he had buried the clothes pamphlet. The main suggestion of Mi'. Butt is, the sale of O' Council's library m Dublin. The sale resided. He found that he had no property of an; y, that an Irish Board of Trade should be established, a private soldier of the Life Guards, named Stride, taken suddenly ill, and he died shortly afterwards, he had worn on the night of the murders near the is to (ie resumed to-day. who leaped over the k'nd, and that tlie shirt which lie wore had bee: with large and liberal owers of compulsory pur- park palings, speedily came to from what was at first supposed to be inflammation pigsty of thc farm, institute some scarcli in the loca- p Representation of Limerick.—There are two Moulder's assistance. Meantime lent to him. chase of rcclaimable lands &c. the crowd which of the stomach, produced by natural causes. The lity mentioned by the murderer, if only to satisfy , candidates in the field for the seat vacated by Mr. had assembled rushed also to the Major-General Wemvss's testimony was fo tb Emigration by Wholesale. -The extent to which spot, and gave man's death having become generally known themselves as to the truth of the statement. Had -- Smith O'Brien, who, on Friday last, was voted very audible expression to their indignation. Seve- effect that he was attending her Majesty on Satin !: !: ihe- district a report became current that they done so the probability is, owing to the close emigration continues, even at this advanced period civilly dead in the House of Commons. The day last. When the royal carriage had got a ft" throng , is reall marvellous ; and Ulster is ral persons gathered round the prisoner, and were his wife on the day preceding the death had pur- proximity of the pigsty to the place where thc of the spring, y claimants for thc honour arc Mr. Samuel Dickson , about to inflict summary chastisement yards down Constitution-hill lie heard the report d weapon now affording its full quot a. Three vessels, full y upon him for chaser! -ome arsenic, for the alleged purpose of was found, that it would have then come to a large proprietor iri the county of Limerick, and his atrocious conduct, tiut at that moment Major- a pistol ; he turned round, and saw smoke issuiii: lie-lit. freighted, sailed fro m Belfast on Friday morning, poisoning rats. The neighbours and other parties Mr. Thomas Fitzgerald, who dates his address from General Wemyss came up and interfered to protect from the direction of the spot where the prisone; " one for Quebec, and two for the United States. It Merrion-square, Dublin. Neither of these gentle- was standing. He rode over to the spot, saw ths at once luade inquiries respecting the mysterious that the Canadian him ; and a large body of police arriving at the same satisfied them that the poison had not appears from the Nortliem Whig men states what his political opin ions ar c, but it is time the park-keeper had taken the pistol from the pri- affair, which •EreiimD, class that , hc was rescued from the rough treatment stated. Mr. Bird, the emigrants were of the most substantial understood that both profess Liberal principles. soner, and he (General Wemyss) ordered him to k been used for the purpose . One of thc which the crowd were evidently preparing for him. with the have left Ulster for very many years The election is fixed for Friday, thc 1st of June. taken to the station-house. He was of opinion ths eoronc-r, was therefore made acquainted DuBLrs, SATunDAT.—The Gluakaxce System.— £71)0 in gold and ge- The prisoner was conveyed in a cab to the police * that were entertained that the decaased passengers carried with him , station-house ' if the pistol had heen charged with bullet or shot, !; -suspicion- In all directions evictions are still in progress, and, ants took out sums of money be- State of the Country.—The Archbishopof Tuam , , Gardener s-row, in King-street, had noi met his death fairly. The result was, tha't nerally those emigr in a letter to tho Freeman ' s Journal acknowledging Westminster, and was charged would have received it, as hc completely shieldci in some instances, by landlords who have been yond their immediate necessities. before Inspector geiitlen-e-ii ave the necessary instructions for htfld- the receipt of several subscriptions for tlie relief of Darkin, then on duty, with having her Majesty by the position hc held against the car- g hitherto remarkable for forbearance, as well as an Alth ardians are limited in attempted to as- ing an inijuest ou the body, when, after thc exami- ough the poor law gu the destitution in his diocese states tho following sassinate her Majesty. riage. Her Majesty was on the left side, which \v:v anxiety to improve the condition of tlieir tenantry. gration a considerable , Mr. Mayne, one of the f the inquiry was ad- their power to promote emi , *— Commissioners of Police the side of the road tho prisoner occupied. He vs nation o sundry witnesses, At the meeting of the Nenagh guardians, on be sent out to distressing circumstances . " On thc morning of , arrived soon afterwa rds. . io allow time for examination number of paupers are about to The within the Green Park railings. lie (Genera! journe-' apostmortem Thursday week last, Mr. Stoddart announced the and other unions, last Saturday, on setting out from Headford, thc prisoner at first maintained a sullen silence, of tlie .ler-eascd's body to be made, and also for an Canada by the Athy, Baltinglass, corpse of a young man wlio died of hunger on tlie leaning his arms Wemyss) did not boliove the pistol contained ei ther name of Sir. Baron Xefroy, one of the Judges inwliichacertaincbarge is to be made on the rates for upon the dock nnd his head upon of the contents of the stomach. Dr. Glover ball or shot. analybU of the Court of Exchequer, as amongst the and some landlords are liberally contributing. preceding night was seen stretched on tho road-side. his hand. In answer to repeated inquiries, lie at and ano; her medical gentleman have been directed outfit, Several other witnesses M-ero examined, but tliM defaulters of the poor rate; but it was explained by I have learned that passages have been provided in I saw the scenes of eviction and desolation as I last stated that his name was John Hamilton , and proc- with this part of the inquiry, and it is evidence only confirmed thc above testimony. to '-l Mr. Grace that " the Baron ejected all the tenants Dublin for upwards of one thousand paupers and traversed the parish to the shores of Lough Comb. that he was a native of Adaro, county Limerick, indications denoting , At the close of the evidence Mr. Hall, tlie chici stated that they have discovered out of the land, and, after they had been ejected, a y a I could not believe that any one parish could exhibit Ireland, but that he had been about five years in this , the prf-~ence "of arsenic. The magistrate havin g th t man more re to be sent out before tho close so iimny monuments of heartless cruelty. It is no country, ' magistrate, said : Prisoner you are committed on J the collector had nothing to distrain, but the rates of the season. Tiie adoption of Mr. Monsoll's sug- * and worked, when he could prisoner father, had just returned from work, and mously. Colonel Briien, M.P., and Sir Thomas 'failure of the potato is working own personal knowledge), on each day, of hourly oc- " Clarke, London." It was the opinion of General re lly had no" accomplices, and that he VAlis made some observation in a jeering It is thus that the 0! seeing , Butler were in attendance at the board. a revolution in our whole social system. currence. You will scarcely credit that in this Wemyss and other persons who examined it, that it together unconnected with political associations •manner, when Ellis went up to him, struck him in The Leinster Express contains accounts of further Christian country I had myself, within the last three bad not been loaded with anv kind. ACCOUNT OF THE FAMINE am-thin? more dangerous the fa<;-?, and knocked him down. Peart got up evictions near Portarlington and ltosenalis. HORRIBLE IN days, to order tho immediate burial, without coffins , than powder ; and we may ADDITIONAL lURTICULAUF. THE WEST. add here, that it has , again, imi, uuing a wean, man, was unauic to ueieuu Dbpaktuhe of the Lono-LiEUTEXAXT.—His Ex- of two poor wretches, who had died of cholera, and since appeared he borrowed the After the examination at the Home-office lis- " pistol from his land- ¦«> himscl". ¦ Ellis struck his head against a stone cellency left tins forenoon by the Banshee, and will Tuesday, May 22.—-Thc Protestant rector of Bal- whose remains were left to decompose until they lord, and employed one of his children to purchase been concluded, the prisoner,- John Hamilton, wall, ]-.•!¦ » -'-edhiin down again and kicked him vio- k' , arrive in London in time to attend the committee linrobe, in a third letter addressed to the Premier, spread the pestilence among .the unhappy beings for him a halfpennyworth of powder, which was all brought into an outer room in the custody of lently. Ue was put to bed in an almost insensible on the Navigation Bill in the House of Lords. A narrates the following horrifying tale of human around them. I have just seen one good parish the provision he seems to have made for his daring spector Shaw, who took the charge, and police cot- «5 state. A surgeon attended the wounded man till the rrivy Council was held at two o'clock on Saturday misery :—" In a neighbouring union a shipwrecked priest, and he informed me ' that alarming as the outrage. In answer to the inquiries of the inspec- stable Topley, who-apprehended him, when lie | followi.'ii' Thursday, when he died, in consequence for the swearing in of Lords Justices. human body was cast on shore ; a starving man description he had already given me of his diminish- tor, tho prisoner denied that tho pistol was loaded exposed tothe gaze ofa number of persons connate' of the h-jurics he bad received. Ue was fifty-three The State Prisoners. — The Freeman' s Journ al extracted the heart and liver, and that was tho ing flock was, that state has been, rendered more with ball ; he said that he intended no harm to her with the Home-office for upwards of half an l"11-; years of.-ige, and he has left a wife and two children. feast on which he regaled - himself and fearful by the presence among us of tho cholera.' Majesty • and after but not the ' *-«* says :—" Yesterday various rumours were afloat maddening being pressed with regard to slightest change of countenance * When k-iore the magistrates the prisoner appeared through town respecting the removal of the state perishing family ! and; nearer still a poor forlorn Morning, noon , and night is the rov. clergyman en- his motives, he reluctantly admitted that hc did it perceptible. A perfect indifference marked tii tJ quite imi-oneemcs!. Hc did not deny having as- prisoners from Richmond Bridewell ; but, as usual girl, hearing that her mother was seized, with gaged in the administration of the last sacraments, only to be talked about. whole of his demeanour. Upon tho committal saulted IVart ; but merely said, " He called mo a in such cases, these rumours proved unfounded, cholera, hastened to the rescue, alas ! too late, but, and still he cannot reach all the cases. In many Ihe prisoner was then removed to a cell, and on Newgate being signed, an order was also issued, * thief, and wanted to know my affairs. I kicked There was nothing communicated to the prisoners with a deep religious and filial devotion , desiring instances at night tho want of light from candle, being searched, there were found rected to thc governor ofthe above gaol, that tl- " upon his person a him, but did not intend to hurt him." The pri- which would warrant the supposition that they will at least a decent interment for her dear departed bogwood, or fire of any kind, renders it almost im- few halfpence, the blade of a knife, a leather purse prisoner should be kept by himself, and, in acco** soner was remanded. be sent off immediately, but at the same time the parent, was driven to the shocking necessity of possible for him to administer thc last rites ; and and some pieces of paper, but the writing on them ance with these instructions, thc prisoner is pla* Tue Lvxs Bask Robbery.—Sanger, who ab- gentlemen have been actively engaged in packing carrying the corpse upon her own back for three were it not that constant repetition has impressed had n© connexion with tho diabolical attempt with in a room by himself, seeing no person but the <"¦ sconded with a considerable amount of money froin on his memory the which he stood charged. ain inW of up their moveables, with the view of anticipating long miles to this very union, so that she might prayers for the dying, many His lodgings in Eccleston- thorities ofthe gaol, and these only at cert the Ea^: England Bank, at Lynn, has lately re- any sudden order that may be communicated to make her wants known, and simply obtain a coffin would die without their consolation. He also placc were searched the same, night, and some pa- vals. His sullenness still continues ; he speak' <* ceived :t -.-onditional pardon ; tins will enable him to them. They are all in the' enjoyment of the best from the relieving officer . Need I tell you, my Lord , mentioned to me that in 1844 the population of this pers wero found, but containing little ,* and when he adverts to his.offence, licStli' v-.- no allusion what- go to .y part of thc world except Great Britain health, and quite cheerful ." * the dismal sequel ? She herself died of cholera on parish amounted to' 4,GS0 souls ; and during that ever to the outrage. It appears lie had formerly persists that he ha.d no intention to injure tiie i?^* Lvh-3-d. and It is understood he will shortly leave " Mn. Martin's Case. — This gentleman, whose the following day ! Theso awful facts may have year there wore 180 births, or about four anda half worked on the Belgium and Santos "Rnilwnv lmV Strange as it may appear, after the report oH* Fr-* ¦•--•¦ - ' " for . he is at present a clerk on tke penin- health is stated to have improved, we understand been reported, but if they were thoy have been per cent., and that now the people have dwindled had returned to England about a took place at the Home-office on Sunday , a" -If , aiiached to the convict department Van Die- year ago, and he sula , has received an official intimation that the executive cu-hioned and suppressed, for who 1ms heard of down to 2, G80, and during the last winter months the has been out of employment for some pression still exists that the istol was loaded >™» men's Land. months. p do not see auy reason why the law shall not take its them ? I will not, my Lord, dwell at present births were only fifteen , or about one to each 200. Information of the occurrence was instantl ball. To remove this impression from tlie I'r , Cm**** nr to Asimai.3.—On Friday week Mr. course in his case ^ y for- , but no immediate order has been upon the painful subjeet of the workhouse, as the Up to this month in the former year there were warded to the members of government, and Lord mind, it is only necessarv to state that, bv the "'- Joseph il.izelden, a builder, residing at Brighton, iven for his removal. l.^ g " evil has gone far to correct itself, tho inmates about forty marriages, and to this date in 1849, there John Russell visited her Majesty at Buckingham tion of Sir G. Grey, Inspectors Field and ffll r; appeared before the bench of magistrates .-it Uck- "Workhouse Cruelties Punished. were but three. These —The Cork having died off in awful numbers, and more liberal , sir, arc about the average I alace the same evening. Sir George Grey issued were occupied for upwards of two hours on S«»* j field , in Sussex, charged by Mr. Thomas, the secre- Examiner says :—" Two officials of lies being now ot the Youghal supp remitted for tho current weekly data of many parishes in the west of Ireland. Our orders that the utmost care should be taken ofthe in minutely examining the private garden " j tary of ihe Society for the Prevention of Cruelty workhouse have been dismissed under a expenses—alas ! that these uunai grounu a sealed supplies should have , an extensive ono, anu out lately prisoner to prevent him from laying violent hands Palace, as well as the entire range to wide1' \ to Ani-ia-iis, with wantonly and cruelly ill-treating a order of the Commissioners, for their unhappy not t • con- been withheld so long ! J would, however, fix your formed, will bear silent testimony to the rapidity on himself, or otherwise frustrate the ends of jus- by any possibility could be propelled , but i , mare th • property of Mr. Read, a postmaster at nexion with the death of the wretched man 's deepest with which the people are passing and its tice ue/ou" Patrick Lordship attention upon this appalling away ; , and directed that he should be examined in his slightest missile of any description cou ld .: Lewes of whom he had hired it. Mr. Thomas called Conolly, into the particulars of whose melancholv fact, that we have, even at best to encounter three clay will soon be insufficien t to hide the hundreds presence 1*1 , next day. and this is still further con-oboratcd'bv the P !* c several .vitnesses, who described the conduct ofthe case we felt it our duty to enter more than " months more of sore, sore famine ; and in of victims over whom - the grave will have its wine" • once ; , bear it Accordingly, at two o'clock on Sunday afternoon , extreme poverty, for the onlv property defendaiii a3 brutal in the extreme. In consequence and two officials of the Macroom Union are now in mind my Lord, the three worst months victory.' Pestilence and starvation are at , of the year, work the prisoner was brought up to the Home Office possessed was the clothes on liis back. of the treatment the mare received it was unable to custody on a charge of manslaughter, they having in point of home supply—and this, with 27 000 of among all classes of the people ; but , , those who suffer and underwent an examination before Sir George With thc ereat oi "work for some days. Thc defendant was drunk at struck a pauper ofthe auxiliary workhouse, named our population in the Ballinrobe union on out-door most arc thc spirited and industrious poor who have respect to the punishment in the time, aud liad several narrow Grey, Mr. Waddington, the Under-Secretary prisoner being erroneous lmp^ ,". escapes from seri- Kelcher, several fatal blows with a drain-shovel and relief, while the remaining 68,000, minus thc thou- endeavoured to brave the storm, and have clung to ^f found guilty, an % ous injury, owing to the docile nature of the animal •J^Ht ,f- , Homc Department; Mr: Henry and exists to the effect be both p«" ' a stone hammer. Patrick Conolly, it will be re- sands already lost, arc all, with very few exceptions the wreck, and who, trusting to the mercy of Pro- Mr. Hall, the that he can he was t» -uitonty torturing. "When called on for his magistrates of Bow-street, police- flogged and clause oi "¦„ j membered, was confined in thc black hole of the indeed, barely trying to hold on through the dread vidence and the humanity of man, havo sold all they ofticc ; and transported. The ^ defence die defendant admitted having hired the Mr. Mayne, the commissioner of police which is contrary •"•"Va,*- Youghal Workhouse on the 26th ult., for taking a crisis ! The all-engrossing questions with every one, possessed on earth in order to find means with 1 he Attorney-General as follows, will show the , mare, bus denied using also attended and conducted be it enacted the pas*1"-* " jt- her cruelly, and said he had ration of bread, and died in a few hours of star- gentle and simple, are those—' What, in the name which to till their small holdings of land. Hun- the examination that from and after no recollection of being . The prisoner was brought from discharge (f ra_ Uckfield at all on the vation. of Heaven, is to become of us ? What arc we to dreds, who up to this period have committed to the the act, if any person shall willfully day mentioned by the witnesses police-station, Gardmer's-lane, in custody ^- , who must be mis- Murder or a Bailiff. — Two bailiffs, named do 1 The country is gone '.' We must thus again soil, enough (if heaven prospered their work) to Mr. of tempt to discharge, or point, aim, or P^' st*!. taken: Jle had no witnesses buperintendent Mayat and Mr. Insnoctor Otiinv 1 to contradict their evi- Coghlan and Hinsey, arrested a tenant to Mr. and again strive to arouse you, my Lord, for it is raise them above want next year thc near to the person of the Queen , any ?" ,' ^iri'- dence. The bench said the case had , are now each '?a^d table and ol o[ *: been fully and Robert Cassid v, under a civil bill decree, in the not possible that you or tbe English people can be day taking their places in death in that earth, the hehT statedl^rf i, questioned or any other description of firearms or ' ¦ j n sat-isfewrily proved ; he had that his name was James Hamilton shall or . ,,; been guilty of wanton fair of Kinnitty, and conveyed him to Tullamove fully conscious of," or alive to, the true state of like of which their labour crioe rendered life-sup- whatsoever, whether the same cruchy lowards the roare^ for which he must ho i od l 0 n\a ^ -(i pay 40s. gaol ; on their return, about eleven o'clock last things in' the west of Ireland. I grant that there porting. Few will over reap what they have sown. 4'- * w=S-p£ ft contain any explosive or destructive ' m adtliuonto £5, for the damage Sg vo ' '?L r ? ' •" bl , w*^ '-- sustained by-Mr. night, they were attacked about a mile this side of may be, nay, that there is, much of imposition , but If relief from any quarter is to be afforded to the J m!, ? T' -' "" .' ! "' ' *>M-y«" by trado. shall discharge or cause to be discharged eX!) Itead, ihe owner, and in default tfgea. w of paying the £7 the town of Frankford by a party of men, who lay surely there cannot be any in this, that here are wretched and struggling survivors, now is the time. to discharge or cause to be disch forthwith he would he sent to the House of Correc- aivn. oi.lict.,n„n „,. „„*.„„ • „1 „,>.,¦. Ihn pel 4" ^.. :lt' tion for two in wait for them. Two of the fellows stopped the people dropping dead of utter want all around Should Jtns month and the next be allowed to months, and kept to hardlabour. The 1)'sl,i , $ defendant not the car on which they were sitting, while the others in every direction, night and day ; and can we sup- pass away, thc most liberal and 11 prasmtcd Queen ; or if any person shall wJifu' Uh being provided with the money was generous aid will Qj icen ^j- placed in custod - ' . beat the bailiffs with bludgeons and stones, lhe pose for a moment that the astounding fact is be- be of i.o avail for thc future. The grateful heart of aflSS- SW? * •*&* tempt to strike aUhe person of the y. lieved when we see no The first witness examinedtl " was I a •' A -V Viu. Forger; ruffians dragged both off the car, and then the really vigorous and united many a poor wretch is now blossin-r the charity of Danikl 0'Kef.fe. offensive weapeo, or in any otter " "!jL>v or ;• Liberated.—Wo understand ' b *° Attorney-General tm^ that J.jhii Ford, convicted and driver drove off. This morning, about six o clock, movement, except through private benevolence, to tlie English people, and thanking -them for the-life ? v^v , he said : ever ; or if any person shall wilfully ^ sentenced to trans- Coghlan was found dead and stay the progress of death ^cl4* EcclesA^ <>n-place, Bel ' ma v portation some tunc ago for , lying on the road, ? 'Tis poor consolation w-hich makes it beat ; but bitter experience now &h ™vX'h!V, ,™> TO grave-i oad, Pim- tempt to throw any substance, . , nuccn,' ", participating in the Hinsey in to an alread the prisoner tt» C¦ forgery of tho will of the late such a dreadful state that he was unable y moro than half-starved wretch to say shows that had that charity been afforded in time fi ^rf I , fames Hamilton, whatsoever-at or upon the person ot {\^. Mr. Slack, has heen to move. The latter was removed into Frankford to him—' Go and break , , tioro four to five years. The to w-Jl liberated froin the Bath Gaol, at , stones, no matter how un- and aid been given to the le to their lands nri3onGr camo nvfl r intent in anv of the cases aforesaid 'ftllC of the instance of the where he now lies in a profitable for that is peop crop nom Ireland as a bricklayer' ¦ » government inspector, ohaccount dangerous state, under the , the sole tost of your destitu- m season, they would s labourer, and worked son of the Queen , or with intent in »W #«£ of ill health care of Dr. tion, not be again, as they are now, at the business •* f*^63 to a Jarful extent Thornton. An inquest was held this and if thc contractor don't disappoint, you dependent upon others when he could got work. I believe aforesaid to break the public peace, 01 0,it \ n vr '.?- in the day before Mr. James Dillon coroner shall get for for means to support life." the prisoncv has w int *} Lardul L mon ^Workhouse , and a , , on view of your eight or ten hours' labour lib, of A Clonmel neither father nor mother alive public peace may bo endangered ; or tr3(!« , great many deaths the body of Coghlan. Thc jury found a verdict I idian n-eal correspondent of tlio Evening racket and that \\n I have occurred. Means are taken , which costs Id., but we can't "ivo you writes that was brought up at a oharitr school hi any of the cases aforesaid, i-c., every SM* .,,#' to meet the trying of" Wilful murder against some persons unknown." although tho state of that part of Mun- m aml f uel or clothing.' Still you. • must delivcr°tho talo ster is not \ k Avhen ho loffc lreIf *nd •»«»« vecom- offending shall be guilty of a- high mb* so frightful as in Connaught, still a tone , mended, by a cow*- ^ friend to lodge, with me, ue louVd and, being conyigted thereofin due May 26, 1849. ,, THE NORTHERN STAR. 7 ^ 1^ Ja^ at-dMt, di8n^~^ : , , ._ " ¦ . _¦ - , -, --u- ,^L_ ADULTERY AND ATTEMPTED HOMICIDE LOSS OF TWO HULL transported 4 -3 ^^^-^^ * * IN PAltlS. WHALEItS. ¦Jtmp ital from far and near—from every quarter of the na- —with the understanding that there shall be no pcti vears, *?r the term of seven "Bavtfanmu. tion ; he saw a right rev. prelate just or to he bnriL df enter the tions discussed. (Laughter. ) labour, for- ° mth or Sout hard . The null vessels sent to Greenland this year have House (to vole.'he hoped , With the oppositi on)—(a Tlieir 1-jrdshi any 3d „? ' 6 three Several weeks ago a case of adultery, accompa- been MONDAY , May 21; ps then adjourned , at ten o'clock, to and during --1 Tears, nied very unfortunate in their fishing ; but this is 11 ugh)—who had not heard a wo; d of the debate ; he Thu rsday, ftc "periTd of Lnf — ^ by three attempts at homicide, took place in HOUSE publidv h mm'?<»™™t to be unimportant contrasted with the intelligence wo OF LORDS.~FinixGAT-TiiE Queen. siw present the represen iadves of the Sovereign or prSv WhiS tlie house of a gentleman named Caraby, No. SO, have The Maiquis of HOU SE OF COMMONS. -A new writ was or- manner andH U oft n **' *«& Hue d'Anj ou to convey of the total loss of the William Lansbownb called attcn:ion to abroad—come, he supposed', to represent the opinion ?WC0 sba11^ * St. Honore. The three principal Ward and " the unfortunate occurrence'' dered for South Warwickshire in the room of ^ectj ^ ~der and actors in the the Pledge, of this port. The former which had happeiud of their countrymen in foreign parts in opposition to not exSb .S^» drama—M. and Madame Caraby and was a barque on Saturday, when , said his lor M r. E. .T. Shirley, who has accepted the Chiltern ' M de Coetlogon—were of 295 tons, and a crew of forty-five dship, " an odious the opinion of their countrvm'en at home. It would Hundreds. 1 1 8 LC ? that if the arrested, and after an in- men ; the latter , a smack of thirty-one tons .-ind disgusting , but at the same time an absurd and -DOri Sl! " f ? sentence ofteins- vestigation by the judicial authorities , and a seem as if tho fate of a constitution , and not th-* Friendly Societi , were ordered crew of nineteen men. c •nteraptible attempt had been made upon the person es.—Mr. P. Scnor-K asked the for trial before the Court of Assizes. fate of a government, was at stake. He thcu gave hon. member for North Wilts whether fl,ct sucn a necessaiy The trial A letter has been received by Mrs. Gravill, wife ofthe sovereign." The inquiry which had followed the the Friaidly mcnmen--,, thetl,n „^ ; ? punidi- commenced on Monday last. a glowing account of the rise and progress of Societies Bill wliich he had introduced would have court must pass the minimum of Captain Gravill, of the William AVard, which clearly established that there were no circumstances and rational sentence Madame Caraby was the first to enter the dock which would navigation law , and of the mercantile thu effect which was apprehended in some parts of ' contains the further details of the loss ofthat ves- justify in this iustance a commitment marine wliich had grown up and been fostered by it. the country of depriving aU She is twenty-eight years of age, very handsome sel. It for hijili treaso n. He therefore should n t such societies of the MIDDLESEX SESSION'S. with brilliant black ' is dated the 7th instant, on board the Dublin propose On all occasions au advocate of free trade and an management of their own affairs eyes ; she was fashionably of Peterhead, to the House to go up to the throne with any expres- , and of taking pos- dressed Her husband lat. GO dog. X. The writer states opponent of needless restrictions, he was, neverthe- sesion of their funds for the use of SDAr was placed beside her : he is that the loss sion of sympathy for the Queen, or of abhorrence of the govei mnent. T 22.-Th7se sessions of middle stature, with larire moustaches Th. f*w_ of the William Ward occurred on less, with Adam Smith , a supporter of the naviga- Mr. Sotiieron admitted that much alarm had *h£ ™ - ' ^ T commenced the 24th March, in a tremendous gale from the the attack. He should leave the law to take its logon came next ; he is good looking, with course, believing that the act of tion laws,more important by far than wealth—nay, arisen among persons not conversant with acts of taches mou - N.E., amongst heavy ice, in lat. 47 deg. 30 min. X., 1842 would be found more important even than trade itself—was the de- because in ono clause of the , and was attired in black. and long. singu:arly applicable to the case, and trusting the parliament bill the Com- In answer to 10 deg. W. " Everv precaution," ob- fence of the nation. for the Reduction of thc Nation the usual questions, the female serves Captain Gravill, wretched culpri t would receive the degradin g and missioners al Debt prisoner said that " had been used for her Karl FrrzwiiiiiAM remarked on the discursive tioned. and that consequently they feared •^rtanssiiri -aasrc she is twentv-ei-rht years of age safety, having sent down topgallant yards, and contempt iuspiringpunishmonthe so richlv merited. were nun and was born at New Orleans ; the husband said his Lord Stanley character of Lord Brougham's speech, and owned th eir funds were to be applied to that object. It was Ixdecext Assault by name struck mizen-topmast, and close reefed the top- expressed his approval of this himself a a Poucemas, and pPR- is Cahxte Caraby, his age thirty-six, his pasi- sails, course, and Lord Brougham convert upon this subject. "With reference hardly necessary for him to say that thore was no Jour oF 0JfE of uisWiixessk. on the morning of the above day, while it was observed that, under o our boasted superiority at s a he asked if the na- the apprehension. On the contrary, —William Jennin-s -v at of a rentier-> and his place of birth calm. The gale commenced any circumstances, he should foundation for a pohce^onstab c, who, at t l ° ^ew Orleansr?i the other his about three a.m. most- have objected to an ad- tion did not owe more to the Almighty power that was, to give friendly societies he ust sittin 0f fhe ; prisoner said name is terrific, for we had to stow away dress, because the culprit had not been tried and any the object of tlie bill court -was convicted of having committed° liippolytcE. A. all but the close- , had beneficently arrayed our coasts and havens than their affairs, by empowering decent assault an in- de Coetlogon, his age twenty-nine, reefed main-topsails. The frost was very severe, address must assume his guilt. But as to this, Lord proper cmtrol over upon a little girl named WinSove, and was formerly an officer in the army. to any navigation law that ever was devised. them to call for aud examine their accounts whenever was brought up for jud 'nigrove with constant thick weather. The Traveller of Lansdowne said that fin address would have referred gment The indictment set forth that the Carabys were Peterhead to the chara cter The noblo Earl was followed by the Earl of El- they deemed it necessary for the purpose of ascer- The court had deferred was in company. We had all hands on ot the offence , and not to theperson lenborough, who addressed himself to the techni- passing sentence on the maiTied in 1S39, and had four children ; their mar- deck attending to thc braces which of i he offend er ta inini* their solvency. prisoner, in orderthat the polic? mi riage was we could scarcely ; and the subject dfopped. calities of the amendment, pointing out what would —Mr. Reynolds pud ght make in- one of inclination—indeed, it was a run- haul through the blocks for thc frost ; many of the Works of art in Rome.—Lord Brougham said Ballisaslo b Workhouse. quiries as to vvhat connexion, if any, Lad away match.- he its practical operation. some questions to Sir G. Grey on the subject of the C im ess nam«l existed be- In 1813 they went to live with the men s faces were frost-bitten, and although not that be had received a letter from Manzoni, who nd a ^ltn J««a Lane wife s mother at The Marquis of Lansdowne then rose and spoke poor in Ballinasloe workhouse, referring to the al- ^was^ calledn for2 ., , who Chalons-sur-Saonc; but in 1847 above the deck, it was impossible to make the men was in this coun'ry, and who WOuld have petitioned the defence, and who swore that the returned to Paris and took an apartment in the hear without their lordships with all the skill of a practised deb iter. He com- leged fact of cholera and typhus having carried off prisoner was an heentire the trumpet. The ship being amongst if such a course would not have been menced by rever in? to Earl Grey's address, which wasstranger to Mm. SisT eri- Rue d'Anjou St. Honore. Thc husband thought heavy ice, with a tremendous sea. informal, solemnl 1,150 of the inmates, asking; whetlrr the commis- dence wa-^that near thc spot the his about three n.m. y stating, in tlie m-'st positive and had remained entire'y unanswered. He pointed out sioners had received instructions to inquire where .drl wife's conduct in society was not becoming, and hove down upon the weather side of a heavy distinct terms, that the reports in the Frem h and into this 60 committed, having been this led to dissensions between them that there was a wide difference of princi ple between frightful system ? ^tla niece pff v T* ,. to -visit , which ended ' stream' (of ice) with no possibility of . getting English newspapers, as well as in private letters, thai his who lived in Wellington-place m their living separate, though under the t^e bill and the amendment. Whilst the government Sir George Grey denied that there was anything tom-grove. He , Tic- same clear. We were, therefore, compelled to let her go he had brought a way works of art from Rome, was said that he asked the prisoner roof. Caraby did not suspect his wife of being un- into sought to temovo every possible restriction, retain- fri ghtful in the system. The mortality refen ed to who was on duty there, it. Her lar board side was soon stove for e entirely without foundation. He thou ght it due to irg none but such as wera ab olutely necessary, the the way to his residence! faithful to him until the 27th of February last, and aft, and, before we got through, the water M. Manzoni to take the earliest opportunity of had arisen from cholera , and was in no way connected and it was Ly that means the prisoner found when ho heardAnnette Fernet, the cook, say to her was noble lord proi osed to keep up all restrictions, re- with the workhouse Bystem further thin that the after the him , np to the hold beams. Our situation was making this statement. moving those alone from which he was driven by charge was made against him "1 can hold up my head, and you cannot." The now most alarming, The Land Improvement houses were used in the emergency to mitigate the Lispectoi- Tahltox there being no - ship to and Drainage (Ireland) the force of circumstances. The amendments which , If division, said that he liad next day the bonne of the children, Louise Becu, in be seen ; we had lost sight of the Traveller some Biti. was read a seoond time ; and the standing or- virulence of the epidemic. instituted inquiries, and he had ascertained that reply to some observation hc made to her respecting time before the nohle lord had moved were completely at vari- The Derbt DayT— On the motion of she Mar- witness Lane the . Our condition was aggravated bv the ders ofthe House having been suspended, it was also ance with all the princi ples upon this t-ubject whirh had not visited his niece in Welline- his wife, said, "Mon Dieu ! I wish to say something continued severity of the frost passed through committee, bo ouis of Guanby , that the Uouse shoul d not sit on ton-pkice av , and many of our that it may be read he had previously laid down. He wished to satisfy Wednesday (the Derby Day), ail for the last eighteen months, and to you, but I dare not !" When pressed by him to men suffering under its inflictions, but we got the a third time and receive the 'royal assent immedi- that on the Tuesday preceding explain herself, she stated that she had often ca( Canada : he desired that no favour should be shown Mr. Aghosby opposed the motion, and an ani- the trial of seen a ** the pri- i * •y- --- t0 tne eastward , and all hands were em- ately. to the United States. But whilst he entirely failed soner (-who was hailed"" thev were seen torotW in man in her mistress's bedchamber ; and she added, ployed at both pumps. We Navigation mated debate ensued , «hich terminated in a divi- cut away the mainmast Laws —The House then went into in carrying out the first object , his amendment to sion in favour of a holiday, the numbers being 133 the Victoria-groveexaming the locality, and measur- "If you would wish to surprise him there, you to keep the vessel from turning on her beam ends. committee on the navi gation laws. ing the ground, so that must take precautions, the sixth clause would effectually accomplish the to 119. the witness might be able for he is armed 2" Carabv, In this condition we continued until two days after- Lord STANbKY rose to bring forward amendments - to describe it on the trial, l ane was in a state of great agitation, went and purchased wards second. The noble marqiii then adverted .to the Duratios op Parliament.—Mr. T. D'Evscourt also at the , when, in the morning, there was a cry, fove of w hich he had given notice, and the House, which allegation that the sense of the country was against ppliee-court when the prisoner was bailed, and a a brace of pocket pistols, and caused them to be and aft, 'The ship's going down head first.' I was noisy at the time, was immediately hushed into then rose to move for leave to introduce a bill to -very intimate friend of ' loaded in Ids presence. Carab the bill. It was a matter, he said, of history, tbat shorten the duration of Parliament. Ho trusted he his (Lanes) was brother-in- y then went to his fave orders to cutaway the foremast, which being silence. He observe d emphatically that he con- no one measure of commercial reform had law to the prisoner, and was bail for mother's house, and begged his brother Eugene to one eased the ship ever been would not be charged with impropriety if, instead him. greatly, and every exertion sidered " reciprocity" for our own trade ought to be introduced into the British parl iament th.it had itation The learned Judge said the result of the inquirv accompany him home, lie told him his suspicion. w*as made to keep her above water, the men preliminary to any advantages which Great Britain of waiting the result of ag , he thought thc drop- been popular with the cla^s.wliom it specially affected. was to bring this ' o e r was very much like what he had antici "it Eugene went to the Commissary cf Police to get ping off from the pumps daily, through fatigue and bestowed on the trade of foreian countres. The preferable course questi n h fo e pated that It was said that Liverpool was against the bill, but at now. ( Hear, hear,) It was a question would be. The witness it was now proved had com- him to go to the house to obtain formal proof of having their feet frost bitten ; and so we remained, principle of the government was to abandon the na- the House mitted gross and wilful the commission of the adultery ; but from Glasgow, he learnt from a Tory paper, the merchants which at the time of the Revolution of 16SS occupied penary in this case. Sow, , as that func- the 24th until the 29th, constantly at the vigation law and then to retaliate on other nations were called together last Saturday to petition against looking at this fact—that the defendant tionary was not at home, he knocked up the conci- pumps, and with the water sometimes in the His princi le, a considerable share of attention ; and in the Bill of at the time cabin . which did not follow the example. p this b'll , and only 150 persons attended , of whom hts it was declared to be the right of the people he had committed this assault was one ofthe police- erge of his brother's house, and told him to be on On the morning of the 29th we could only muster on the other hand, was to maintain the navigation Rig force, and, moreover the watch. Eugene then joined his brother twenty-ei there were not half-a-dozen connected with shipping. of England that Parliaments should frequently as- , that he was also on duty, and , who ght at the pumps out of forty-five hands, law, but to reciprocate the advantages which othri- Hc then told a good story of the pilots thai he had called a perjured witness at that time had"with hiin another brother, named but, through the intervention of the Tyne, semble. In 1G94 the question was brought more to speak in of an ever-watchful nations might be anxious to extend to us. This dis- and concluded by adjuring their lordships to adopt ,, his behalf, with the full knowledge that what that Etienne. The three brothers arranged with the ser- Providence, a ship hove in sight, and, with diffi- tinction embodied the line of policy adopted by Mr. into shape, and tho Triennial Act passed, though witnesswas about vant the bill and rqject the amendment. as he would afterwards show, unnecessarily re- to -swear was altogether false, Louise that she should watch her mistress's culty, made us out to be a wreck, as we appeared to Huskisson. He denied tha*, without reciprocit^ y, Their lordships then divided- it was impossible, under such a state of circum- chamber, and give a signal when she should see the be like a large heap of ice, but thc mizen-mast being they should surrender no. more than was absolutely pealed. It could not be said that this .question had s , but that the Court lover cuter it. The apartment Contents—lor the amendment •!• 103 been pressed unnecessarily ; on the contiary, he tances shoidd visit the defen- occupied by the sfcill standing, convinced the other ship's crew that required by the exigencies and for the advantages of Non-contents—against it...... 116 dant with a punishment of some severity. The Carabys was on the fourth story of 2fo. 80, Rue it was a vessel in distress. They, therefore, bore commerce. The country cried out to them to take had been blamed for being too lax regarding it. He. sentence npon him therefore d'Anjou , and it had a balcony on which the window down to us Majority for the government... —13 had suffered two Parliaments to go by without was that he be im- , and proved to be the Fairy, of Dundee, this course. All the naval men, all the commercial The majority was considerably larger than ap- prisoned for the period of three months in the of Madame Caraby's room and of two other rooms Captain Robert Ker, who with the " bringing it forward, precisely for the same reason Blouse feelings of a men, and all who were connected with shipping peared to be expected, but it elicited no expression lo had durin g that period not petitioned of Correction, and that before his liberation he find opened. At about a yard from one end of the en- father and a friend, sent his boats immedia tely to throughout were urging them to avoid the that the peop the country of feeling. tlio House on the subjeet, viz., beeause they did not security for his future good behaviour. trance was thc window of a garret, which garret our relief, and took us all from the wreek. The rash step they were at present taking. Ministers Robbery.—William Lang De Coetlogon rented. It was from this weather HOUSE OF COMMONS.-A new writ was or- believe thero was any disposition on the part of ley, a well-known mem- garret that proved moderate that morning, but as the were acting against the sense of the country, and dered for Sutherland, in the room of Sir D. Dundas, ber of the " swell-mob," was indicted for having he was in the habit of passing by means of a gutter, sea ran high, we were compelled to keep to the Parliament to give a favourable consideration to the they knew it. (Loud opposition cherrs.) He pro- who has accepted the office of Judge-Advocate- proposal. AVhether the present Parliament would robbed a lady of the name of Webber, of a purse into Madame Caraby's bedroom. At about eleven pumps up to the last moment, until his boats got tested against the principle.* of " retaliation" which o'clock on the ni General, void by the appointment of Mr. W. G. show a more favourable disposition remained to be containing three sovereigns, a half-sovereign, and ght of the 2Sth of February, alongside for us. We then got all the sick up as they proposed to adopt. It would be a difficult prin- Hayter as one of the joint Secretaries of tlie ihree half-crowns. It appeared that Louise being, as just stated, on the watch, heard "a well as we could a i seen j and therefore, after a period of twelve years, the prosecu- , mount ng to eighteen at that ciple to earry out • it would be an invidious, hostile, Treasury. bring forward as a trix and a femalefriend were walking in bell ring in the room of Madame Caraby, which was time. Some we were obliged to carry on our back ho had doomed it his duty to it the neigh- s anduncourteous policy ; it wou'd be a policy under Firing atthe Queen.—Lord J. RussiaL, hefore question of public right. (Hear, hear. ) By public bourhood of St. John's Wood on the evening of the responded to by another bell in the garret ; presentlv to the side, and lower into the boats, their feet which we must make sacrifices without the power of " she saw a man pass along the balcony into the bed- being moving that the order of ihe day be read, observed right" ho meant that Parliaments should not con- 2>ih of April, and upon arriving at a lighter part of very much frost-bitten , and their legs wrapped > esuming our rights. He left it to the House to de- that it appeared to him to be desirable, in order to road than they had just been room of !ier mistress, and close the window. She up in pieces of blankets. It took tinue longer than was sufficient to secure their the traversing, the the greater part cide, then, between "reciprocity " and " retaliation," allay apprehension in connexion with the attempt re- responsibility to the people. (Hear. ) Formerl y the something immediately informed the three brothers ; they of the day to get us all out, and the Fairy had onl former observed "listen hv her side. She y and concluded, amidst loud cheers, by moving his presented to have been made on her Majesty 's life, enjoyed by practies and habit looked round with quickness waited for abou t a quarter of an hour , and then time to save three boats after we were all on board people of this country , when she saw her amendment to Clause 1. that he should inform the House that, although it sessional parliaments. That habit and practice puree, which was worked with steel beads, in the Carab y, putting on his great coat—in the pockets of The ship (the William Ward) was filling fast, and a Earl Grey commenced by observing that the which were his istols—went by the balcony to the gale increasing, before midni was true that a * pistol had been discharged at her continued up to the time of the Tudors and Stuarts, hand of a person whom she fully believed was the p ght the Fairy was altes a'i n would make nonsense of the whole bill, Majesty, there was no reason to accuse the person prisoner at the bar. As soon as she window of his wife' s room. lie was followed by his obliged to come under a close-reefed main-top- when there took place a gross usurpation on the turned round and was evidentl y only proposed in its present shape who had discharged it of a treasonable attempt on part of the Crown. In 1694, as he had already tlie man ran off, leaving thc purse behind him, but brother Eu gene and Louise ; Etienn e went to the sail and foresail, so that had we not been taken in ihe hope tf catching thc stray votes of noble door of Madame Caraby' s chamber. Carab y saw off before that storm I greatly the Queen's life, and that the crime was more re- stated, the Triennial Act was passed, being intended jicwas pursued hy her friend, and eventually the doubt whether any of lord s who felt the difficulty of again taking a division markable for its baseness than its atrocity. Had the that two lights were burnin g on the table , but the us would have been felt, as the to secure the country from .the disadvantages that prisoner was overtaken and secured by a young man poor men were on a question of principle which had already been attempt been one ofa different character * emotion he felt prevented him fr om distinguishing giving up every hour. Both myself and the crew , he was sure had flowed from the Long Parliament. The pre- who joined ia the pursuit. The identity of the pri- decided. Lord Stanley shrunk from comina to close that he would have had the cordial and unanimous amble of that bill recognised frequent parliaments soner was proved, and the jury thereupon returned anythin g in the room. Eugene , however, saw a will never forget the kindness to the sick, and the quarters. (Ministerial cheers.; He wanted them man lying in bed by the side of Madame Caraby , attention as?ent of the House to an address to her Majesty as warranted by tbe ancient law of the kingdom. a verdict of " Guilty." The learned Judge, in pass- paid to us all by Capt. Ker and his ship's to adopt a princi ple of " l eciproci ty. " But would congratulating her on the preservation of so valu and readin g a newspaper. Carab y ran for his company. I left the able It continued in operation for twenty-two years, and lug sentence, stilted that the prisoner was a well- Sarah and Elizabeth a little " reciprocity" answer the objects of the British a life. (Cheers.) National Guard musket to break open the window. more than a week Her Majesty, under circumstances he believed there were no statutes that more known incorrigible thief, ana was one of those , ago, to come home by the Dub- merchant? By a system of reciprocity , instead of well calculated to inspire alarm, had acted with her On his return , almost at the same moment , he lin , Capt. Mackie. He adorned the statute-book, or had greater regard to whose practice it had been to lurk about dark cor- has about 8,000 seals, about the trade of the world being open to us, we should usual coolness and fortitude. (Cheers.) [The broke two panes of lass and cried " Open !" The 115 tone. He had noble the dignity of parliament and the liberties of tho ners and avenues on the watch for ladies. lie was g , given up all hope of ever getting only have open to us the trade of some particular lord , in delivering this brief address, spoke in a than those passed during this period. But man who was in bed jumped out, and advancing to out of the ice, as it is a heavy - pack ' and there people, very much ioo perfect, and too much accsmplished « , nations, and then only in articles the produce of tone of voice so tremulous as to betoken consider- the Rebellion of 1715 was made a pretext for in his avocation to he allowed to remain in this the window, said, " Give me time to dress myself!" is no young ice' to shelter them. Many ships those countries. The question , then fore, lay be- lie th en returned are stove able agitation. He was loudly cheered while making putt ing an end to the Triennial and passing the conntry and therefore the sentence upon him was to consul t Madame Carab y. The , and those that have escaped consider it a tween absolute restriction or a free system. It we his communication to the House.] husband heard her distinctl say, " Take your is- miracle. The smack Septennial Act, for it was supposed that at the next iransportation for ten years. y p Pledge is lost, but the crew continued to insist upon the former court of policy, Mr. J. O'Connell begaed permission tol and shoot him. " ("Arme toi et tire sur lui .'" .) saved. Some to say, that election an attempt would be made, on thc part of , of them are on board the Dublin. "t was matter of certainty that other nations would if anything could aggravate the misery of his nnfor- those who supported the cause of the Fretender, to Coetlo gon disap peared for a moment behind the I am afraid there is another vessel lost, as I have, follow the examp le, and a grea t benefit would be lost , tunate country, IMPORTANT DECISION UNDER THE curtain, and then opened the window ; but as soon been told of a main it was the reflection that the mis- return men who would endeavour to change the boom that was picked up. It ap- not only to ourselves, but to the world at large. He creant charged with this outrage was an Irishman dynasty, and restore the Stuarts. The passing of FACTORY ACT. as Carab y made a step to enter , he dischar ged a pis- pears to have been a brig. The smack Turk . , Brown, reminded them of tlie fable of the dog and the During the wildest excitemen t of popular phrensy in the Septennial Act, he contended, was a complete tol at him and wounded him in the arm, There- had about 400 seals, but she is stove. 1 know very- shadow, and urged them not to throw away their Ireland A tench of magistrates at Dewsbury, in Yorkshire, upon Carab y little about , he believed that no one harboured the coup d' etat- "an act of revolution ; because, nothing pulled one of his pistols from his the Hull ships, but heard they wero all own trade while grasping after that of others. Lord slightest idea of lave given a unanimous decision against the relay pocket, and dischar ged it full in Coetlo gon' badl personal insult to the sovereign, and could be more outrageous than that a Parliament s breast, y off. The Sarah and Elizabeth had 150 seals Stanley had refrained that night from referring to even now he believe-i that misfortunes would be for- elected for three years should vote its own continu- sy>Um. The adjudicating magistrates on the bench seriousl y wounding him. Coetlogon stepped on the when I left her, but I hope they will all do well. the colonial trade. He had done wisely. His pro- wereIklr. Ingham, ofBlake-haU, chairman; Mr. J. balcony, hut, owing to the darkness Carabv could The Traveller c ve gotten in the general hurst of congratulation at the ance for seven years. He then proceeded to show , is very mu h sto , as are also tho posal with regard to the colonial trade was futile; fact that her Majesty had escaped this base attempt. that thc main grounds assigncd ibr its passing wore B. Greenwood, and Mr. AV. II. Wheatley. Colonel not distinguish him. Presently the latter heard Resolution and many more. 1 am sorry to say He was absolutely going, by his amendment to clause h, West Riding magis- The hon. member's observa'ions were a'so inter- unjustifiable ; viz., that Triennial Parliaments occa- Pollard aud Mr. Ralp both. another report of a pistol, and rushed into a room many of our men have lost the toes off tlieir feet, 6, j o create a protection in favour of the United trates, werealso present, but took no part i-i the pro- and I am afraid some rupted by loud cheers during their delivery. sioned more expense than Septennial, and that thoy to avoid his assailant. Louise saw the man pass of them will lose their feet. Sta tes as regarde d the trade of the St. Lawrenc e. Health of the Metro polis.—Sir G. Grey were destructive ofthe peace and security of govern- eeedimrs. The court was filled wi:h millowners and from the end of the balcony to the garret. Caraby ' s Poor Arthur had lost five toes last time I saw (Hear, hear.) This was not what Canad a wanted. replied t > Sir W. Clay, that there would not be any ment. These were mere pretexts. The Septennial others interested ia thep'.int at issue. The parties brothers findin g that he was wounded , sent for a him. I intend landing at Shetland, as I think we Canada wanted the European vessels which brought public health bill intr oduced for the metropolis during Act, however, became the law of the land ; and, so charged were .Messrs. Wilson and l'iak, cotton-spin- doctor. Caraby, his brothers, and the doctor de- shall be better able to get home. Young Lee, out emigrants to be able to take hack corn and the present session, the first report cf the commis- disgusted did the people of England become with its ners, of Liversedge, and the offence laid against them scended the staircase. On arriving at the foot, a Smith, Tather, and Robinson are with me." timber. And whilst the noble lord permi ted sion having been mainly carried out by the consolida - working, when they found the great difference there was preferred by Mr. Bate, sub-inspector of facto- young man named Bor gogiion, who had been pass- A letter has also been received from the mate of United States ships to convey the produce of Canada tion ofthe Commissioners of Sewers and the general was between the conduct of their representatives ries, who charged them with employing a young wo- ing the evening with an En glish family residing in the Pledge, and is we believe , , , the only communi- to Europe, he afforded no single inducement for survey. He could not say when the final report under it and their conduct under the Triennial Act,, man named Ann Hint, under eighteen years of age, the house, was descendin g the staircase. The wife cation which has arrived from , that vessel. Tlio United States ships to go to Canada to get it. (Hear, would be ready, the labours of ihe commission havin g that a motion for its repeal was made in the House for more than ten hours, on the 27th of April last. of the concierge, on seeing him, cried, " There he is master is still at Greenland. It is dated as the hear.) The noble carl conclude d by expressing his been very much increased by the outbreak of cholera of Comm ons in 173-1, and supported by Mr. Pul- factories for the Yoik- —the assassin !" and Eu gene Caraby exclaimed , above, and, after briefl Mr-Saunders, theinspector of y stating the loss of the belief that the opinion of the country was no' in different parts ofthe country. teney and others , wliich motion was rejected in a tase on the part of the " It is I reco gnise him! " Borgognon was Pledge on the 2Sth ult., skiredistrict , conducted the be I contains the following par- aiains t this measure , and by urg ing the House Agricul tural Distress. —Lord John Russell House of more than 400 members by a majorit y 01 -•rosecution ; Messrs. Wilson andPink were defended immediately roughly seized by thc brothers, and all ticulars addressed to the owner :— I have " Sir, to not practically to rescind their vote upon the second answered M r. Grantle y Berkeley, by sta ting that onl y 63. The Sept ennial Act continued to produce tv Mr "Walts , solicitor , Dewsbury . his remonstrances were disregarded. At leng th inform you of the wreck of the Pledge in Green- " reading. the government had no special measure in contem- so much mischief, and excited so stron g a feeling ilr. Saun ders , in stating the case, said—The se- Caraby, excited to fury at the si ht of the man he land. On the 12th of April it was blowing a heavy g Lord Wharncliffe, from the cross-benches, ex- plation for the relief of agricultural distress , neither in tho public mind against it, that at length a cry commonly called th e Ten considered the accomplice of his wife discharged gale, and we were comp cond section of the act , letely disabled , having no pressed'hi* intention of supporting the government. was it intended to reduce the income tax chargeable was raised for a general reform of parliamont, and shall be em- his pistol in his face his jaw was smashed. ' seam from ice-knees H ours Act, directs that no young person ,- whereby down to keel, no mainboom-, The amendment of Lord Stanley was entirely at the question of shortenin g the duration of parlia- no mainsail on farmers. ploved more than ten hours in any one day, except Borgognon was then dragged to the office of the (the mainsail having blown to ribbons^ variance wi h the whole spirit and purpose of the in that of a l reform two clauses Commissary of Police and was subsequently con- and water by this time iu the lower bed cabins Kaffir War. —The Chance llor of the Exche- ments became mer ged genera in certain cases as provided. There are , , and bill, and it was impossible for any one who had sup- quer , in answer to Mr. V. Smith state d in the representation of the people. The reform respee- veyed to the Hospital Beaujon. It was only the gaining on us. The Traveller of Peterhead , , with res- in the 7th Victoria, chup. 15, to which I beg , being ported the second reading to vote to-night in favour pect to the accoun ts ofthe money spent in the Kaffir wliich was contended for consisted of two branches , fully to call the attention ofthe bench—viz..the 26th next day that his innocence was proved. Whilst m company with us, was under close-reefed topsails. of the nltvration. He dissented altogether from the war, which the Commissioners of Audit had pr o- tlie one being the amendment of the representation words of the information this was passing Madame Carab y had disappeared We hoisted our ensign to the Traveller, and thc and 52nd sections The clause affectin g the Canadian trade 5 and with regard nounced to be unintelli gible, that he had sent them of thc peop le, and the other being an increase of are, " that Ann Flint was employed for more than and followed Coetlogon from the balcony to the captain sent two boats and took us on board . On to foreign trade, Lord Stanley's policy seemed the responsibility of members by more frequent the 28th of April we came on back to the colony for revision, and until the ten hours; such space of more than ten hours being garret, and thence to his residence in the Rue de board the Dublin of to make restriction the rule, and relaxation the , parliaments. The declaration of the " Friends ol The next day she went home to her Peterhead (mate, second mate, cook and rest of tho amended accounts were supplied he could take no reckoned and computed according to the mode pre- rUriversite. , exception. One great evil of the present naviga- further steps in the matter. the People ," with Lord Grey at their head , re- scribed by the said act," and this mode is laid down famify. The indictment concluded by stating that crew), leaving the master and two boys till morn- tion law was its extraordinary complexity : Lord Encumbered Estate s (Ir tsland) Bill.—The cognised this as the legitimate division . Well , in referre d. Thc the char ge against the woman Carab y was that of ing. It was then blowing fresh, and, coming on in the two sections to which I have Stanley, instead of simplifyin g it, would make it House then went into committee on the said bill March , 1831, his noble friend (Lord J. Russell), on adultery ; against Coetlogon of being an aecempliee thick during the ni ht we lost si ht of the Tra- , 20th section provides, " that the hours of work of g , g more complex. some ofthe earlier clauses occasioning debate, efforts introducing the Reform Bill, knowing that the young persons -hall be reckoned from the time when in the adultcrv, and of having on the 28th of Febru- veller, and left the master.—Your obedient servant, The Earl of Harrowby (the brother-in-law of the whole nation expected both branches of reform to per- Henry Trott being made to elicit from the government who the any child or voung person shall fir--t begin to work ary committed an attempt of homicide on the , late mate of the Pledge."—Hull last speaker) combated his argiiments. He thought be embraced by the bill, thought it needful to ex- ' commissioners under the bill were to be, but which in ihe morn ng in such factory ;" and the 52nd sec- son of Caraby ; and against Caraby of an attempt Advertiser. there were many peers who bad voted for the sec rid proved unsuccess'ul. plain that the question of the shorter duration of at homicide on the person of Borgognon. tion provides , "tha t, the time of beginning work in reading who were by no means prepared to pass the The Solicitor General stated the official ar- parliaments had been considered by his Maj esty's notice Iii the course of her examination b the Presi- the moraine , which *hall be stated in any y SURREY ADJOURXED SESSIOXS. bill without modifications, or to abandon the naviga- ran gement to be as follows : a chief commissioner Ministers , but that upon the whole they thou ght it ier or his dent , Madame Caraby admitted that a crimin al in- fixed up ra the factory, signed by the occup tion law in tato , without obtaining some reciprocal with a salary of £3,000 a year, and two other com- would be better to leave it to be brou ght before the when all per- tercourse had existed between her and Coetlogon ; - ai-ent, shall l-e taken to be the time These sessions commenced on Monday at advantages from o her countries. He thought the missioners with salaries of £2,000 ; a secretary , House by any members who might choose to take it l other questions , replied as follows : the sons in the factory, except childp-n beginning to and in rep y to Sessions-house, .Ncwington-causeway, before Tho- " com plexit y" referred to was more in his noble some clerks , and one or two messengers ; the whole up, than to bring it in at the end of a bill regulatin g day sub- Had yon not a signal to summon -Coetlo gon to a work in the afterno on, began work on any mas Puekle, Esq., and a full bench of magistrates. friend's imagination than it would prove to he in expense, which would not be large , to be def rayed matters totall y distinct. (The right hon . member -' This exception rendezvous ? I rang a bell, and M. Coetlogon re- sequent to the date of such notice. IXCREASE OF CRIME ASD AVaNT OP EDUCATION operation. Noble lords ought to recollect the vast- out of the public exchequer. That it was not pro- here road the passa ge in the noblo lord 's speech re- —On the 28th of February .— is important , becaus e it express ly excludes from the plied in the same way. ness of the step they were taking. This was not a posed to create any office for thc purposes of valua- latin g to the subject. ) The friends of short parlia- not ified to him in that manner that he could The calendar contained the names of seventy-nine optration of this notice the on'.y class of persons who you measure from which they could ever re'reat. Once tion under the bill ; and , with reference to travelling ments, though naturally disappointed at the omis- he came prisoners for trial, thirty one of whom could neither mar work as a relay class in the afternoon -viz , come ? Yes, Sir.—What time was it when passed , the v could never d raw back. Who demanded expenses, should such a necessity arise , which was sion of tha t branch of reform from the bill , felt ' clock.—You were in read nor write, twenty read and write imperfectly, children under thir teen years of age wh=i have at- to you ? Half-past eleven o the measure ? The people — the merchan's—the not anticipated , then only thc actual expense incur- much consoled by the prospect of having it discussed two twenty-five read imperfectly, and only three could tended school in the forenoon . He called— bed ? Yes.—By the side of your child , aged shipowners—the sailors of the nation ? Not one of red to be repaid. by itself at a future time. He (Mr. T. D'Eyncourt) which I made read and write well. Mr. B ites, who siid, that he was at Wilson and years ? Yes : he was in the little bed Escape them ! (Oh.) If they did, why did they not say so? On arriving at clause 19, accordin gly brought the question forward in 1833, come. 1 A Lucrt from Transportation.—Henry link 's factory on tlie 27th of April last , and found for him whenever M. de Coetlogon was to (Opposition cheers.) By hydraulic pressure a peti- Mr. Turner moved a proviso, to the effect that again in 1S34, aud again in 1837. The noblo lord —De Lee, 24, was indicted for stealing at Lambeth a coat the notice now pr oduced bung up in the mill. He made this bed with a pillow on two arm-chairs. —The wife of the tion for thc bill had been squeezed out of Liverpool. no order of sale should be made on the application of opposed the motion on all those occasions ; but lie —You hea rd tbe property of William Webb. "knew it again from having put his init ials upon i' - Coetlogon got into bed to you * Yes.¦¦ prosecutor said on the morning of the 21st ult. she It had 143 .*-igna-ures : no more. (Laughter.) They any owner or encumbrancer, the value of whose in* (Mr. D'Eyncourt) had never had tho benefit of the Thev were then thew. He saw there the notice as your hush-uid cry on the balcony, Open, open ! had not established that with safety the present sys- tercst was not equal to the amount of the enoun> noble lord's opinion whether he really thought 0 was standing at the parlour window, when she saw . to die hours of work of all young persons employed I have witnesses ?" M. De Coetlogon had been 2 thc prisoner pass the house several times. The hall tem could be abandoned. They proposed to give brance ; nor unless the whole of the encumbrances seven years a fit term for the duration of parliament " Friday- From six to minutes with me when I heard—(here the accused away a vast fade. Were they to make so great a amounted to two-thirds the value of the estate. or not. All the opinion the noble had given was on that day a? follows: - , door was open, and suddenly she heard some one eidii; from half-past eight to one ; from tivo to paused for a moment, and then, bursting into tears leavin g the hall. She then saw the prisoner run sacrifice witho ut making an effort to obtai n some Thc Solicitor-General opposed the amendment , that hc would not vote for his motion, because it exclaimed)—" But I beseech you, M. President, kalf.-iast five." past with tho coat under his arm. Siio instantly reciprocal advantage ? He hoped that by adopting as it would involve the necessity of a previous in- did not state the term to wliich parliaments should John in the employment of Messrs. to spare mc this recital." The statement she had the amendment their lordships would de ide that quiry as to the respective values of the estate and be shortened. His (Mr. D Enycourt's) answer had Ashworth, ly gave the alarm, but thc prisoner escaped.—Mr. Ro- W ilson and Pink, proved "that Ann Flint worked made to the examining magistrate was according question in the negative. the encumbrances, wliich in the depressed state of always been that he was willing to leave that point Take your binson, on behalf of the prisoner, contended that at their factory ou the 27th of April ; that she came read.—Did-you pronounce the words, " made a discursive speech, in the landed property in Ireland , was perhaps now not to the decision of the House itself, but that, if If M. de the witnesses must be mistaken as to their identity, Earl Granville forced to name a term , lie should of necessity adopt at eight o' the morning, went out to dinner pistol and shoot him ? This is infamous !" as he was instructed to deny tho charge—The ury, course of which he again defended Mr . Porter and worth more than half its amount , as compared with clock in Coetlogon had wished to hill my husband , he might j stone o' clock, came Oak «it two ; worked till four ; ' Lord-Brougham's assaults. the period when th.' mortgages were effected. that which had been sanctioned hy the constitution lie had a four-barelled istol , and after a few minutes consultation, returned a ver- his statistic* from canie hack at hal f-past fi-ur; and worked till eight have done so. p After a conversation, Mr. Grogan suggested that previously. Would tho noblo lord tell him whether bad told dict of " Guilty."—Thc prisoner was afterwards in- Lord Colchester followed , condemnin g the bill , atnisLt mv husband fled before him . Coetlo gon dicted for stealing two coats, the property of Tho- estates encumbered to the extent of " one-half " be he agreed in that opinion ? (Hear.) In 1833 his istols, but that they had no per- but adding nothing new to the arguments in opposi- motion was rejected by a majority of onl Mr . Watts then addressed th e bench at epnsider- me that he had p mas Hawkins, a tradesman in the borough. This : substituted for " two-thirds-" y 49. In cussion caps. I did not see his pistol on the 28th of tion to it. point of fact it was lost by the weight of the Admi- aVe lensith , c-«ten ding that the witnesses ha d proved was a ease similar to the above, and the jury found Mr. Tuhneb. having assented , the committee di- , " February. It is false that I said " Take your The Marquis of Clanricaroe addr essed himself that his clients had employed Ann Flint no more him " Guilty."—Mr. Ivecnc, the governor of the vided, when the amendment altered as suggested was nistration—because, but for the votes of the Mi- Coetlogon asked me what to the statemen t of opposit ion peers that the people tha n ten Lours on the day in question , and that was pistol and shoot him !" gaol said the prisoner had been four times in his negatived by a majority of 57, thc numbers 9 to 06. n istry and its adherents, his motion would have hc was to do. I said " Do what you will. How were op posed to the bill. When they talked of meet- lhe time allowed bv the Ten Hour s Act custody, for re-examinations , but to his knowledge The remaining clauses were then agreed to, the been carried. He begged the House to notice, also, can I tell !" He cried, " Wait the bill , what , t , came ofthe chairman) said—This is a case can I tell !—how had not been convicted. —The chairman told the ings agains t le him ask House resumed, and the report was .ordered to be that his motion was not met by a direct negative, -Mr. Ingham (the " When he went towards the the City, to attend 'which so many Act of Parliament ; and until I am dressed. prisoner tbat he had boen a luck y fellow ; had he great meetings in received 011 Thursday. hut merely by the previous question. In 1834 his as to the contraction of an ' he had the pistol behind his back, and it dukes migra ted from the west to the east and h is not as to whether any person reallyworked more window been only twice summarily convicted he would have noble , The other business on the paper was summarily motion was rejected by a majority of 50, and in 1837 was pointed towards the ground. I heard a report themselv es unsup ported ? The bill came up tkn ten hours, but whether any ? erson working cer- been transported, as there could be no doubt that found disposed of, jyro forma, anil the House adjourned at by a majority of only* nine. (Hea r, hear.) The more than when his pistol was still in that position. I did not recom mende d by a majority of the represen tatives of eleven o'clock. question had remained in that position till the pre- tain hours is to be deemed to have worked fired in he was an old offender. Prior to thc passing of the justices. -Therefore, remark that Coetlogon was wounded. He no doubt would have been his fate, the seaport towns , and was not that a circumstan ce sent moment. The House might rely upon it , how- ten hoars in the-opinion of the new act, such, , t TUESDAY May 22. conviction, it is in the air. warning to him, the court would sentence entitl ing it to considera ion ? , over, that the absence of petitions and the want of if mere is anything false in our M. Caraby io the questions put by but as a ihe law we act as we think the law requires The answers of him to twelve months' hard labour in Brixton The debate had flagged for some time, when Lord HOUSE OF LORDS.-EpiscorAi. Church in public meetings out of doors to urge the question , not us ; President were in accordance with the facts us lido ; we are quite agreed, unanimously in fact, the House of Corretion. Brougham rose to give his reasons, as he said , Scotland.—Lord Brougham presented petiti ons upon the attention of parliament afforded no evi- all Ann Ffiut to have stated in the indictment. for supporting - the amendment. He commenced by from members of the United Church of England and dence whatever ofthe want of interest in this ques- three of us—and we deemed accused, M. Coetlogon, acknowledged ten hours in one day. and there- The thud ridiculing Earl Granville, whose fpeech, he said, Ireland , temporari ly settled in Scotland, involving tion on the part of the public. The question was worked more than till after a long and persevering pur- one upon which interest was al ways fel t, and which fore parties in the penalty of £3- that it was not Pernicious Influence of Privileges.—The hu- made men forget the passage of time, unless they questions of doctrine , as between two bodies and their we convict these suit that he had succeeded in seducing Madame would continue to be urged upon the House at all man character could not have been moro effectually roused themselves to look at the clock. His defence ministers, both of whom professed the episcopalian Caraby. He denied that he had been the first to power. of Mr. Poiterliad only one fault, it was too candid- religion , but who in Scotland were sectarians ; and times of public, excitement, until at length they 1349.—Many news- fired at M. degraded than by giving a man absolute General Fost-Office, Mat, fi re. He declared that he had not and all the extrinsic advantage that, it admitted to? many of his failings.-" - Mr. Porter's who differred with respect to thc use of the liturgy. might be forced to consider it under circumstances I-apers New South Wales and Sew and that his wound must have been Birth, riches, which might be painful to deal with. They would addressed to Caraby at all, without any mental exertion, exalt a man above life had been one of errors, and the greatest error of The arguments in reference to these petitions were Zttdaud, havin"recently been posted unpaid, it has occasioned bv the rebound of the ball after striking all was that he was detected. He was a fallible purely ofa religious and were participated therefore do more wisely to consider it now, before announcement that his fellows, sink him in reality below them. In pro- character, It-come necessary to repeat the the wall. he is played upon by de- mortal, and more especially fallible 111 respect of in by Lord Brougham, the B sliop of Salisbury, any such painful necessity arose. (Hear, hear.) fh " the mails between portion to his weakness, He asked how was it jackets heretofore conveying Witnesses were then called. until he loses all traces of humanity. figures, and most of all in respect of the magician. the Earl of Suffolk, the Archbishop of Canter- possible to ascertain public this countrv dney, Xew South Wales, have the cook, said that M. Caraby signino- men, opinion clearl and satisfactorily unless by means and Sy Annette Fernet, That tribes of men should quietly follow such a ( Loud laughter.) He then adverted to the petitions bury, the Bishop of Gloucester , the Duke of Ar- y of twoi discontinued, and that all newspapers for the had struck and kicked his wife in her presence. Where shall we find against the bill, and to that presented from Liver- gyle, the Bishop of Exeter, the Bishop of Cashed, fre quent elections ? New questions of importance now trans mitted leader is truly extraordinary. colonies above mentioned , being They did not live happily together. in slavish dependence, and ener- pool in its favour. Ten-elevenths of that town had the Earl of Minio, the Duke of Buccleuch, the must always ariso within tke course of three or four «}'private postage of one penny how he was wounded on men who, educated years, upon which there could not possibly have ship, are liable to a M Borgognon described luxury and sloth, will stand forth to assert signed against it; the petition of the one-eleventh Bishop of Oxford, tbe Earl of HAnaowBY, Earl each, whieh must he paid in advance, or staircase of Caraby's house ; but vated by gut up at a hole-and-corner meeting, p Galloway. been any previous understanding between repre- postage descending the the right of man, or to claim the privilege of moral had been u on Powis, and the Earl of the newspapers cannot he forwarded. to the astonishment of the Court, tliat excellence ? which he cast ridicule. The noble marquis said that Brougham, who had originated lhe discus sentatives and their constituencies, and when this Bhj ef he asserted, beings, who should have but one road to Lord Bu> H-urnr tor Twc-rr Ti^-lM3 -H*u *n- bt accused Caraby, but his brother deadly a majority of the members of seaport towns were in it to their lordships, whether they happened, as it frequently did, the consequence was , the Hev. it was not the to monarchs and ministers, whose sion , finally put fl-u .OTaT's Ptui-Extract of a letter from . Servility (Laughter.) that many constituencies under the present system Cam gart, Etienne, who had fired on him progress ofthe human mind, is not favourof the bill. Was the member for Hull (Mr. had not had quite enough of the matter. Wre Prior , curate of ilevagh letterrke nny, I solemnly swear to grasp stops the that an English clergyman were unrepresented, if not absolutely misrepre- - Hoiioway. Dear On this Etienne cried, " Let not men, then, m the pride of Baines) ? On the contrary, if not misinformed, he The real grievance was, In& uia, Ma v *' 1S45-—"To Pro fessor " let instinct. against the bill, although a memberof time in Scotland, could not, on sented, with regard to such questions. If the Sv-Wiflun a my house, resales a smaU Godthat this is not true. imitate the arguments of tyrannic kings and had voted the having resided some short distance of a Dad declared that the power, (Hear , get a licence to preach, being House wished to secure a universal feeling of agree- "fa rmer, whofor mere than twenty years had been in Another brother, Eugene, , and assert that woman ought to be government. , hear.) Where was the Lord his return to England e venal ministers ment between the Crown and people, there was stat e of health , and never got hut a m°ment 's.^J S;,r ^j l" pistol was really fired by the accused. _ man because she has always Tiecn so. Mayor of London ? He was as good a Whig thus worse off than the Romanist priest, ofwhose ordi- no rnw did hun subiccted to means so sure of effecting this as pr wwe-lahoxof vour pnlsfor ra m, ^hich Several other witnesses were examined, but their governed by reasonable laws, enjoys his as any in England, but he had not voted once nation was recognised in the churc^ England. frequent parlia- «"mich say th at for twen^ *r-sK already AVhen man, under such circumstances ments. By these means they would at good that I heard him it so testimony added nothing to thc infoimation let him despise woman if she do with the government on thi6 question. What was The English clergyman , , once increase J«ar *l^riousI y he never ate his food and enjoyed n-ituralfreedbm . the confidence of the people in their Pwoe. given; ; but, till that glorious period the majority ? Last year it was 117; this year it it appeared , being looked upon by certain right rev. representatives, fflm-h as since teldngvour piIh *.-{Sgned ) Geobge and not share it with him church of and diminish the corruption and influence essential to health After speeches from the public prosecutor not, in descanting on the folly ofthe had dwindled down to 54, in spite of ail the prelates as merely a schismatic from the which TuETsmn.—These organs are alike arrives let him wore at present almost unavoidably and aoa i-eant v. It is therefore to he regr etted th at th ey are the counsel for thc prisoner, his own.-Mary Wollstonecraft s exertions of the government, The noble lord Scotland. . _ impercep- he too an other sex overlook tibly exorcised by so haUeto decav. Yet it is a feet wliich cannot The President summed up, and, after about then entered into an argument to show the The petition w«ts then ordered to he on the table. government oyer members. There is seen in a of *Ri ahts» ofJ Woman. was no other country ' "H ** known, that it directly a black speck hour's deliberation, the jury returned a verdict • ' • . IX... A. COUNTRYrtnrrrmv CHURCHYARD.rui ronn -rxti-n. advantage of the " reciprocity" project. He The Navigation Bill.—The Marquis of Lans- in Europe which had so long •Wrth, , the decay will he N EPIT APH parliaments it be ffllea with B-usra -s Esam el " Guilty" on the charge of adultery, and " - ot now, so once was me; begged them to consider what prodigious interests downe said, that at that fate hour he would not as we had. Why should we be behind ¦Crested, pain escaped, and the teeth preserved to ripe old "As you are -with the navi gation bill , but postpone th e others countries ? If the * nenous guilty" as regarded all the other charges. so you must be; they were placing at stake by this ill-advi sed and ill- pr oceed noble lord should say he •*-*¦ If people allow their teeth to decay rata the was consequently immediately set at As I am now, was in favour of fivey ears as a good and wholesome « wholly it cannothe wondered at that they M Caraby prepare to follow me. digested measure. He saw from the appearance of committee. 5?P exposed, the Court condemned Madame Caraby Therefore Brougham : To this day six months ? term, as far ashe(Mr. D'Eyncourt) was individually f"*1 it diffira lt to ease or cure th at terrib le paw, liberty and the wag had witten- the House what prodigious efforts had been made ; Lord *j. .. —and upon dulteiy each to two Below which a concerned he should concur ; «*' ! ar lie. A gjitpjj ra time saves irine " and Coetlogon, for the you I'm not content, he saw that precautions had been taken which were (A laugh.) be perfectly ready to -¦*" " Bha -sde-s Ek-AMtt -anil prove a ^ he latter to l OOOf. " To follow Princi ple, the use of yean? imprisonment, and t . wbicli way you went. more than unprecedented ; he saw peers gummgned The Marquis of Laxsdowne ; To Thursday next but, until he heard some proposition of that kind j **!Mesang to all who give it a trial wheredec ayhasm ada Unless I Know . ** aI-Pearance in the teeth. fine. .. "/• ' ¦ ¦ <' ¦ ' May 26, 1849. ' p isj " _•_—. « THE M-npTTyV S TAR ^^^ - PBISOwbosNeEKS.bs. mj tivmt IitntemulUqmt.genct ITFOR^ TITmT3 SUPPOrvT"^^ OF TIIE KIRKDALE mmvtm May MANCHESTER VICTIM COMMITTEE ex- FRIDAY; 25. 1849. Mrs. Theobald from a high authority, he would not compromise of this House, and that if you made elections so the 31st December, 194 , to the 27th of March, J HASUXODEX.-On Sunday last ( oi proposes, HOUSE OP LORDS.—Tlie Bill for the Pbotec- (From " ' -6 d. the Rights of Man the constitutional demand for Triennial Parlia- ceedingly frequent as my right hon. friend ' EXI'-fiSWiOBK. . . a. Derby, delivered a lecture on ground of public se- t.on of Women was read a second time on the mo- • 1849 Chartist. room ments. The right hon. gentleman concluded hy you would lose much on the INCOME. „ 2—Remitted to Prisoners Post-ofnce . : People's Charter, m # the , in a bill. of habits of business- tion of the Bishop of Oxronp. £ s Jan. and the an overflowing niovino- for leave to bring curity—much on the ground 1848. ' ' d< Order, and Eighteen Stamps - 3 •} -;J whioh gave unbounded satisfaction to Lord P. Stuart said, he had great pleasure in much on the ground of stability of counsels and due Their lordships then adjourned. 0 gam collections ... 1 8 11 Mrs. Loach, printing 300 Labels 0 4 aS seconding the motion of his right hon. friend. He deliberation on measures ; and you would not , HOUSE OF COMMONS.—Parliamentary Re- Dec. 31—Manchester, delegates hold at coun- 9—Prisoners, Order £lXGHAM.-At a meeting of considered the subject as one of the most important in respect of public liberty, anything to form.—Sir J. Waimsley, in reply to Mr. Campbell, 1849. i- op y resolved :- stated. (Loud Thomas Roberts's Family ... 0 £ l> Seven Stars, it was unanimous that could be discussed in that House. There were tervail- the disadvantages I have stated that it was the intention of Mr. Hume to dale, per William Bake ... 0 10 0 the their exertions the subject Jan. 2—Roch 15—Fifty Collecting Books, 2 Cash « That this meeting will redouble few subjects which had been more frequently dis- cheers ) bring forward his motion on of parlia- ... 0 2 0 9 4 and are determined " Ckawfokd said, that in discussing this mentary reform on the 5th of June. 3—Bury, Mr. Jones ... . Books, and Minute Book . ... 0 for the overthrow of despotism, cussed, or upon which more able arguments had Jlr s. 0 2 6 of the prmcip cs con- it was right to know what the constitution Navy Estimates.—Colonel SiMiionp called the 7—Manchester, collections ... 1 19 0$ 16—Thomas Roberts's Family ...... to agitate for each and all "been addressed to the House ; "but it had never been question Borrowed Money 0 10 0 called ' The People .Char- " was—whether that House was to represent tho peo- attention of the House to the salaries of the princi- her-lane, Pilkington, per J. Paid T. Fildes, tained in the document discussed precisely under the same circumstances as 8—Hig Coin ...... 0 10 tho- Government-made at present a h it ple. If that was the constitution, then this House pal officers of the adriiiralty. He proposed to Bad tor ' and further to support , nd therefore he hoped that, althoug people. But Hcrstwood 0 9 0 to Prisoners'Families... 16 0 of our power,in and call had not been carried formerly, it would now ""find on"ht to be under the control of the "knock off" two ofthe lords, and to reduce the Relief victims to the uttermost ten * House did not fairly 8—Leagli, per James Cook ... 0 7 0 Prisoners, Post-office Order ... 2 10 0 declare ^their ions favour with the House, and if the House should the people complained tbat this salary of the first lord by £500 a year, and the sa- upon the localities to feelings and one of the Barker, Cab Hire from Corn with the Democratic body pass it he was sure it would find' favour with the represent their wishes and , laries of the secretary and other officers , making a 9—Borrowed of Thomas Fildes ... 0 10 0 Mr. whether they will act j it did not was owing to tho duration of Exchange ... ¦ 0 1 G meet every Sunday, le at large, (near.) He did not know what causes why reduction in the aggregate vote of £3,550. female Chartists... 10 0 ••• o-enonl/y OV not." " That we peop parliament. He did not deny that evils might arise 12—Todmorden, To Visiting Families ... 0 10 Ba rker-gate might be the state of opinion upon this subject in the Sir F. Barixo defended his own salary modestly, at three o'clock, at the Seven Stars, and did arise from all forms of government, but the , 14—Manche ster, collections ... 3 3 24 Mrs. Leach, printing 112 double send saloons and ball-rooms of this metropolis but he the other salaries with more confidence and re- where all the localities are requested to question they hud to determine was, whether the Ex- crown Addresses ...... 1 13, 0 railroads, omnibuses, and stcani- sisted the reductions, showing the diminution 15—Ditto, collection in Corn delegates. , ,, . . believed that on would public good would be best promoted by keeping thc Posting ...... 0 2 0 hoats, and in other pnlilie places, the opinions which had already been made in this item of ex- change, at Mr. Barker's Lecture 2 14 10 23—Bill Phbffikld.—Tho Chartists hold a meeting Oil Alter House of Commons uuder the control ot the people. Roberts's Family ... 0 8 0 be found pretty unanimous in its favour. pense. . 2 0 3"; Thomas Sunday last, in tho-Democratic Temperance Hotel, the case, the noble He maintained that it could not be under their con- the motion was withdrawn. 21—Manchester, collections ... Prisoners, Post-office Order, glaucin" at the historical facts of Ultimately, 33, Queen-street ; Mr. John Taylor in the chair ; observe that though the term of trol as long as parliaments continued for seven The report having been agreed to, the House 22—Bacup, per James Wilson ... 0 5 .0 and Eighteen Stamps ... 2 19 of Democracy Ford proceeded to ' o when; in consequence of the progress had been enacted to meet an emer- years. It had been observed that this measure had went into a Committee of Supply on the Army Esti- 28—Manchester, collections ... 2 8 10 30-Thomas Roberts s Family ... . 3 0 the present a proper seven vears doors. The on the Continent, and deeming Vliich had long since passed away the people not excited any popular feeling out of mates, when certain supplementary votes were 2 6 Prisoners, Post-office Order, for tlm Charter, it eencv, lis was but one of a series Levensholm, per John Gaskill 0 time for renewing the agitation had never ceased to require short Parliaments. reason ofthat was, that t passed after discussion. and Eighteen Stamps ... 2 12 0 1or that le believed to be neces- 30—John M'Rown ...... 0 5 0 ' was resolved, "To hold a series of meetings The proposition beforethe House was not, like the of measureswhich the peop The House adjourned at half-past nine o'clock Feb. 6—Thomas Roberts s Family ... 0 3 0 will he given. ^ assertion that it was un-English, Siry for the amelioration of their condition. The until Thursday next. - hartists of Salford ...... 0 15 0 Post-office Order, purpose, due notice of which ballot, open to the C Prisoners, Monday week a public meeting known to our laws. If the noble lord at principal of those measures was the extension of the o 10 0 and Ei hteen Stamps ... 2 2 0 BinMis-oiiAM.—On for it was Rochdale, per William Bake ... g was held in the Public Office for thc purpose of pe- thc head ofthe government only reflected on what suffrage, which they looked upon as the prime means 0 Cooking Utensils for Prisoners 0 18 1 of position of their real re- TIIE VICTIMS ON WHIT-MONDAY. 31—Leeds, per Mr. Brook ...10 titioning the Legislature for a full rcpresentatior. had passed for the last year and a half upon the of placing the House in the 13—Prisoners. Post-office Order, and 's Charter ; importance it was presentatives. (Hear.) it was said that the fre- Todmorden, Female Chartists 0 5 0 ... 2 12 9 the people, as embodied in the People continent, lie would see of what, twenty-seven stamps Resolutions and the that thc legislatureshould be thc fair representative quency cf elections would increase the expenses. TO THE EDITOR OF THE NORTHERN STAR. Sutton-in-Ashfield, G. J. Harney 0 13 0 Thomas Roberts's Family ... 0 3 6 Mr. Goodwin in the chair. petition were moved, seconded and supported by ofthe people. One trembled to think what might What those expenses were he could not tell, unless Dbar Sir,—It gave me pleasure to observe in the , • 3 7 0J Twelve Victim Boxes, to Mr. they were expenses for the purposes of corruption ; Star, of Saturday week another appeal to the De- Feb. 4—Manchester collections • ... each ... Mcsssrs. Dalzcli, Ward , Connor, Blaxland, Biggins, happen if they were not so. In a moment Louis , Willake. at 2s. 9d. ( 1 13 0 Bald- Philippe lost'his throne because the legislature of and that was one of the reasons why he maintained mocrats of this country from an Old Chartist of 6—Coventry, per George Freeman 0 5 0 Post-office Order, and Brewster, Rev. A. G. O'ffeil , and Councillor 20—Prisoners, win. The petition was signed by tlie Chairman, France was but a mockery, a delusion, and a snare. that parliaments ought to be more frequent, for Nottingham on behalf of the victims and their fami- 11—Manchester , collections ... 2 11 6 eighteen Stamps ...... 2 19 Although the expenses of elections had increased persons would be less likely ' to spend much money lies, in which he states that one halfpenny per week Levensholm, per John Gaskill 0 2 8 Thomas Roberts's Family ... 0 3 6 and forwarded to G. P. Muntz , Esq., M.P., fer pre- so much under the Septennial Act as to have ruined in corrupt practices when they knew they would be from the Chartists of that county would be more 27—Prisoners Post-office Order, sentation to the House of Commons. per John Turner l 0 o , Birmingham.—A public meeting was held on Sun- e a he did not advocate the repeal of elected for only a short pcrio-'. ~Agai.i, it was said than is subscribed throughout the country. As the 13—Rotherham, nobl f milies, ¦ and eighteen Stamps ... 2 12 0 day evening, m tiie People's Hall . Dalzios in that statute so much on the grounds of economy, as that the representatives of that House should not be Whitsuntide holidays arc approaching, I hope an 14—Todmorden , per Richard Barker 10 0 's Family ... 0 3 6 , Ml' Thomas Roberts when Mr. Ward delivered an excellent that it would be impossible to obtain a fan-, full, and under the control of the people. If that was so, effort will be made by all good men and true to Hull, per George Barrett ... 0 4 4 Post-office Order, the chair, Mar. 4—Prisoners, Events," which gavo evident efficient representation of the people without it. then they ought to have recourse to that which was cheer the captives in their dungeons, by not only : 18—Manchester, collections ... 3 14 li and eighteen Stamps ... 2 1 9 address on " Passing Hon. gentlemen often forgot tbe promises they made the practice formerly in Ireland—namely, elect the sympathising with them in their imprisonment, but "Roberts's Family ... 0 3 G satisfaction ; after which, Mr. GOodwin read two 25—Roehdalo, per William Bake 0 10 0 Thomas of the borough, plcddns* on the hustings, but short parliaments would make representatives for life. But tbat would be the by a firm resolve henceforth to do what each one , Post-office Order, letters from the members 11—Prisoners themselves to support the Chartist petition to their them less likely to neglect or violate their duties ; very reverse ofthe constitution. He did not think has the power to do, always bearing in mind that Manchester, collections ... 1 10 4J and eghteen Stamps ... 2 12 0 undoubtedlv corruption did not exist to such an ex- that frequent elections would give rise to frequent the widow's mite- is as acceptable as others from Mar. 4—Manchester, collections ... 2 13 3 Thomas Roberts's Family ... 0 3 0 utmost;. Carlisle.—-A meeting of the members was held tent as formerly, but no one could be ignorant of changes in the persons elected. On thc contrary, tbeir abundance. Let every Chartist makf* a cal- o—Middleton council ...... 0 6 0 18—Prisoners, Post-office Order, at "**»o. 0, John-street, Caldcwg.itc, at which the fol- the immense power possessed over members by the he believed that those who did their duty would culation what he can do by so small a sum aa one 9—Pilkington , per John Herstwood 0 14 7 and eighteen Stamps ... ,2 19 increasing pa n onage of the government. Some liave a better ehauce of being re-elected than under halfpenny. I will take the true and decided Thomas Roberts's Family ... 0 3 0 lowing resolution was passed :—" That this meeting June 3rd 'clock persons urged that nhort parliaments would inter- the present system, ana that greater harmony and Chartists, those who are fully convinced in their 11—Levinsholm, per John Gaskill 0 3 0 27—Prisoners, Post-office Order, do adjourn until Sunday, , at two o fere with the prerogatives of the crown, but it ap- good feeling would exist between the.representa- minds that the objects sought for in the People's Manchester, collections ... 2 2 4$ and eighteen Stamps ... 2 12 0 in the afternoon , and that steps be taken to sum- mons the members to attend, to decide _ upon tho peared to him tbat thc theory of tbe exercise of the tives and the represented. (Hear, hear.) But he Charter are for the benefit of the whole people, at - .' " 13—Bacup, per James Wilson . ... 0 6 0 Thomas Roberts's Family ... 0 3 0 was not that thc crown should have the did not think it would be worth while to promote a 100,000, and surely it is a small number, when we . . best mode of putting in force the resolution passed prerogative 18—Todmorden , per Richard Barker 0 17 11 In the late Treasurer's hands 2 7 0 means of intimidating parliament when it pleased change, for the purpose of establishing a five years' know that millions have signed a petition for that To twenty-eight Meetings of by thc Conference at Birmingham, respecting mem- by the threat ofa new election, but that when the duration of parliament. Indeed, he hardly thought object ; one hundred thousand persons subscribing Manchester, collections * .,. 1 18 2 the Committee ,,. ... I SO bers in arrears." Edinburgh.— A public meeting was hold on crown doubted if parliament represented the people, it worth while to promote a change for Triennial one halfpenny per week each, would amount to 25—Manchester, collections ... 3 4 7* Postage of Letters received by . it might ascertain the fact by a dissolution. He Parliaments • but at the same time, as Triennial £208 6s. 8d., and at tho end of the year would the Secretary 0 0 10 Monday evening in thc ltcv. AVilliam Reid's was equally satisfied that short parliaments would Parliaments was the principle of the old consti- amount to £10,833, which sum, applied to the pur- Stamps for the Secretary ... 012 10 Church , Lothian-road, for thc purpose of adopting not interfere with the influence of the House of tution, he was willing to take that step. (Hear, chase of tracts and lectures, would disseminate our Stationary ...... 0 5 1 the petition for the People's Charter. Mr. Slenzies Lords—an institution to which he looked with no hear.) principles in the minds of thousands who have not Balance in hand by Auditor's iii the chair. The meeting was addressed by the degree of hostility, and which often, he believed, The House then divided. Thc numbers were,— begun to think for themselves. My present purpose account ...... 2 19 5 Rev. Mr. Duncnhson , the Rev. Mr. Shnen, and Mr. had exercised a salutary power on our progress. For the motion 46 in addressing yon, sir, is that you may endeavour S. Kydd, and the petition and other resolutions ' wero carried unanimously. At the conclusion Mr. With respect to the motion before the Mouse, all Against it 41 once more to impress on the minds of the veritable Total income 47 5 7 _££7 5_7 those who thought the present duration of parlia- majority —5 Chartists that it is their duty to make an effort to ***m>mmmmi ^^Msm Muirhead moved thc following resolution , and that an address be drawn up in accordance with its ment too great should vote for it, whether they be- The announcement of the numbers was followed obtain a sum for the relief of those who are suffering Thomas OitMusiiER , Secretary. Thos. OiWi*sin*n, Secretary. lieved Quinquennial or Annual Parliaments the by loud cheers. for their cause, and I can see no fitter time than on tenor, and transmitted to the pi'opoi" quai'tei' !— is that " That wo congratulate the Roman people upon best, lie did not know what course government The Workixg Classes.—Jlr. Slaxet then moved Whit-Monday. The plan I would propose ADDltESS OF TUE COMMITTEE FOB THE literature. There was, however, a cold selfishness the appointment of a standing committee, or un- one or more p , should take their enlarged views of civil and religious free- would take with respect to it; indeed the noble lord , if the lace required it PRISONERS. and haughty '' doctrinaire " philosophy distilled had altered Ids opinions so much on this question, paid commission, to consider and report from time upon hiinselfto collect one penny each from all who through the alembic of the useful knowledge dom , and in having secured an Assembly ot repre- be for- ' sentatives chosen by Universal Suffrage , ire rejoice that lie might he fairly said to hare " boxed the to time on practical measures (unconnected with are friends to the cause, and let the whole , more intelligent of our working And TO THE CHARTISTS OF GREAT BRITAIX. teachers which the that they havo boldly, determinedly, compass " npon it. (Hear.) First he was in favour political changes) likely to improve the condition of warded to the office of the Star immediately. men detested, and tlio less informed neither knew and irrevo- of Triennial Parliaments; when the Reform Hill the working classes, to encourage their industry, now, brother Democrats, let the enemies of man- We, tho members of the committee elected to ca bly willed, that no priestJy power should ovei* in- " protect our friends now incarcerated in Kirkdale nor wanted to know. _ Tlie Malthusianism of was introduced he expressed himself in snch a way aud increase their contentment. He had not to ap- kind see you are uiiited to support the oppressed, ham had but little In common with the warm terfere with their political rights." The motion was Gaol, return our sincere thanks to all those who Broug following; gentlemen as to hold out an invitation to any independent prehend opposition or contradiction from the House, and firmly resolved to emancipate yourselves from heart ofa generous parent. The mechanic loved carried unanimously, and the them have tendered their assistance lor the support of member to propose such a measure ; then in 1833 at that moment. "What he had rather to dread was, lie thraldom in which you are held. Show his children and bated Malthus. Prudence and law were appointed to draw up the address : Mr. our brethren, but we arc compelled to complain Menzies Mr. Musket. Mr. Muh-' -d Mr. Durkctt. the npble lord opposed the mstion of his right lion, that hon. members would quietly and silently steal tliat you still are true to the cause of justice and and every wise , ie. , city, that subscriptions to a suffi cient amount are no arc very good things in their places, friend iu the most violentterms ; ia 133A he gave forth from that House, and leave him with so small humanity by subscribing throughout every t man practises them dail After thanks had been moved to the managers for adth forwarded*for thfir support in duo timo, and in ac- y, but there is a law older a silent vote against the proposition ; in 1837 he an audience that he should be counted out. If town, and village, through the length and bre taught by the useful know- the use of the church, and to thc chairman for his ' cordance with the demand our brethren have upon and stronger than that said lie thought thc country did not require it ; and such were to bo his fate, he trusted a good cause of the land. Don t forget it on Whit-Monday, and and preach- conduct, the meeting adjourned. would procure for him a hearing on some future you will then cheer the hearts of the oppressed and us, and the Chartist body in general. Wo have ledge school, and their dry teachings Qin' last vear, when it was made bv the lion, member , ings were uninviting. . Our mechanics' institutions Bj-istol.—A public meeting was held in Al s- also to complain that some localities have sent pri- -Wednesday when the for Montrose, hc declared that, sooner than have occasion. But, if he were permitted to proceed, he make the oppressors tremble. " respecta- court chapel on evening, vate donations to our friends, which has caused a dif- are all " respectable, and in this country Trieiiii-d he would have Annual Parliaments. [Lord should observe that the improvement in the con- A Chartist of Twelve Years Abiding. for property. If Chartist petition and other resolutions were ference amongst them. We, the committee, are of bility is another name you are «.SiissEU. : But I said I was against both.] Yes, dition of the working classes had not kept pace with b ; d d wi e adopted. * opinion that if any contributions can be spared, it poor you may e moral an goo and se m n JiritJie noble lord's declaration, tiiough he had no the improvement in the condition of the more opu- e Cnirr-LEGATE Locality.—At a meeting of mem- THE LATEST FOREIGN NEWS ought to come through the hands of the committee, may esteem you , that is the f w such who know dou-.t it was made in debate, aud that the noble lord lent classes. ATith respect to the peasantry, the you but the many will pass you by; even if bers ou Tuesday, Mr. Bentlcy in tho chair, it was who arc determined to support them to the last if , resolved that this locality endeavour to circulate would vote for the longer period, had had a great parliamentary committees of 1S17 and of 1S10 re- , you bo an author of talent, poverty will often effec t on the country. He appealed, in conclusion, ported that abuses prevailed in many of the south- FRANCE. possible. We have Leach, West, White, Donovan , the forthcoming Democratic Review among tho Rankin, Grocott, Clark, and Chadwick, and you will bo tho pretext of the rich for shunning you. In to every Reformerj ii thc House to vote for the repeal ern counties. And the same result was shown from Paris, Wednesday.—To-day the National Assem- their shop'language they say, " He is a clover fel- working classes : also, that an excursion by vans to of tlie Septennial Act, which had been demandeu by the proceedings of tke committee of 1824 on la- bly, after a great deal of noise and confusion, pro- see by our balance sheet that we tire no respecters me-iris O'Counorville, take place on the first Monday in * of persons, ; low, but very poor," which simply , I must thcj -eopU' for Upwards Of 100 years, and which bail bourers wages, over wliich. the noble lord at thc ceeded to divide on the motion brought forward but do to one and all alike but unless not meet him if I can avoid it. I am richer than July, from 28, Golden-lane. Thc tract committee the Chartists generall render us their assistance and ?,Ir been always understood to form a part of cve-y head ofthe government presided. He then refer- yesterday by General Cavaignac, modified by a y , cruel d ac- reported, that . Bishop had presented another that speedil w c must resign, as we cannot act without he, and move " respectable " Oh , , col , scheme of reform which had been advocated by red to the reports ofa parliamentary committee of phrase proposed hy MM. Jolly and Bastille, to t he y, have been a barrier to thousand tracts, making in the whole four thou- " funds, and our friends will have no alternative but cursed vanity nnd pride, you Cliarii.*iui, Pitt, Fox, Romilly, and Mackintosh ; and 1S30 and a commission of 1S33 for additional evi- following effect :—" To take measures necessary to progress and sent not a few of earth's best spirits sand, which had been given to the public. Moved, to subsist upon the prison allowance. Should this , That the rent of thc Theatre being required earl wliich, while it interfered with no other measure of dence of the unsatisfactory and neglected condition preserve thc independence and liberty of nations. " hence, ere they havo reached even thc bloom of y, reform, more than any other secured thc House, of thcagricultural labourers, wliich lie said Jed them General Cavaignac objected to this addition on tlie be the case, the blame must rest on thc whole body, this locality will feel obliged for funds sent to tlie and not upon us. There now remain nearly seven manhood. This " respectability" has closed the and tentj.-d to promote the happiness of the nation to commit acts of outrage in the southern counties. groand that it went beyond what he wished or pro- ' institutions and made them committee anv evening from nine to ten o'clock. months for us to stniia&lc on their behalf nnd wo doors of our mechanics , by bringing the legislature into harmonious co-ope- Then was passed the stringent law of 1S35, which posed. The motion of General Cavaignac was then , course of a week's hope sincerely that this appeal will not be made in middle class Athenaeums. In the rati -ii with the people. (Hear, hear.) had slowly effected some improvement in the agri- put and carried yiar assis et leve: The additional stay in Glasgow, I visited a splendid reading room cultural districts. The evils which that law was phrase was rejec ted by a majority of 34G votes to vain. iKar&etgj &f. Lt-rd -I. Russell considered that the effect of the yours in the cause of in the Trongato daily, newspapers and magazines the duration of parliaments intended to remove had been admitted to exist for 200' , and finally the ensemble of the order of the day, AYo remain , liberty, motk-ii was to shorten Thomas-Mai-docks, "William Daix' in abundance, admission cue penny, but 1 saw no to three years. In dealing with the historical part twenty years before the remedy was applied. That as proposed by General Ca va ignac, was adopted , mechanics there.. Shopkeepers, clerks, and monied cony. . Joseph Boot-t, Fraxcis Haddocks, ' of trie subject, he observed that the grievance could not have happened if there had existed some on a scrutin de division, by a majority of 43G to 184. men were thc constant attendants. Such places do JI.uik-i.ane, Monday, May 21.—There was a small show William Siielmebdixe, Treasurer. " agaiii?* which our ancestors were anxious to pro- government department whose duty it would have The following is the text of General Oavaignac's not roach the necessities of the people, and the peo- of wheat samples from the near counties this morning, and been to watch over the condition of thc working Thomas Mather, Chairman , tlie stands were partially cle-ired liy the millers nt ls vide --v.-:» ihe suspension of parliaments, and the Tri- motion , as finally adopted by the above division :— ple cannot reach them. "Wo havo had the cheap li- classes and endeavour to improve it. What now " The National Assembly calls the serious attention Thomas Omi t'siiER, Secretary. under last Monday's prices. Of foreign wheat and flour we ennial Act contained a clause requiring that a par- All money orders must be sent and made payable terature, the penny magazine, and the three half- had a good supply ; the former ' sold in retail Is cheaper, liament should he called within three years. Twen- was the condition of an agricultural labourer ? of the government to thc events an d the movements penny journal, yet are wc not saved. Wlmt do or ruul the latter, unless ofiiiiest quality, vcut oil" very slowly. "When he attained the a«e of seventv all he could of troops which are taking place in Europe ; and. to Thos. Ormesher, 52, - Bridgowatei'-streot, Man- ty-one, years after the passing of that act, those chester. what can your halls and lecture rooms do for the Grinding barley meets with buyers at previous rates ; but it coni- hope for was to be able to eke out a miserable ex- pre-ddcupied by the danger of . that state of tilings, limiting in less demand. Means scarce, and held at higher who hud licea most instrumental in framing " . Manchester Committee Rooms, starving, depressed and demoralised poor of our plaifevd ef its evii ea*e:-ts, whieh were enumerated iu istence by means of parochial aid. The hon. mem- as well for thc welfare of liberty as for the interior large towns those colonies of want and death which prices. Peas quite as dear. Ilye firm. Tlie arrivals of ber then May 15th, 1840. • , oats, principally foreign , were moderate ; sellers conse- the preamble of the Septennial Act, namely, the proceeded to the case of ths population of and exterior interests of the Republic, it recom- but few enter ? and yet they fatten and flourish at largo towns, of those engaged in manufactures, mends to the ne- quently asked rather more money ; but at last week's cnor. lOi.a and continual expense io which it sub- government to take the measures your feet. They gasp for breath and you stuff their prices there was a good Side. Linseed Cakes unaltered. jectoJ the elected, and the violent and lasting am- mines, and railway construction, and read extracts cessary to protect them energetically, and passes to "mouths with tracts ; tbey ask for light nnd you open Wednesda y, M::y -*.".—IVe r.re fairly supplied with r.iitt from a report of a parliamentary committee oflSlO the order of the day." u inos:' les which it engendered amongst the e'eetors. , . COiDITIOX OF THE PEOPLE. your rich saloons and tax their windows ; there is a this week, and the weather being favourable for the growing The -ja-j .'-tion, therefore, was not ini-reiy one of ab- of the Poor Law Commissions of 1813, of a commis- Paris, Thursday.—Quantities of troops arc com- knowledge surely to be found of more worth than crops, our trade is very heavy tu-day. Trices without sion issued under the govern ment of Sir It. Peel in ing into Paris. The 6th battalion variation. str.», i reasoning aud theory, hut had been tested by ot Chasseurs TO THE EDITOR OV THE NonTHERJ- STAR. your " useful knowledge." 1813 , of the Mining Commission of 1843, of the a Pied left Strasbourg on the morning of tho '20th BREAD. the 'i-Aperi-mct; of our ancestors, who had, after a Sin—In my brief notice last week of the condition I pass over numbers of schemes for tho elevation trial, demanded a change of the law. There were Handloom Weavers Commission of 1S41, of thc inst. for Paris, being suddenly summoned thither. of Glasgow, I endeavoured to be faithful and stu- The prices of ivhen teii bread in the metropolis aro from of df ' , aiid improvement of the poor. Each of which may 7d to 7id ; of household ditto, y..d to Old per 41bs loaf. other considerations of very great weight. If par- Committee on Hail way Labourers in 1S10, and The battalion the Mobile Guards which showed diously guarded against over-colouring the picture. ' thc Sanitary Commission of 1S4:3 to show that as such a Socialist feeling ' deserve praise for good intentions, and not a f ew ol li-uc. »tts w.jrc triennial, it would be found tliat mush , , at Blaye is about to bo dis- The poor and degraded inmates of . the houses I CATTLE. regarded the sanitary, moral and reli ious condi- banded , and the men draughted into divers regi- which are . patronised by rich lords, and speech- time »--*ould he lost ilu-ough the inexperience of new g describecL arc not themselves truly sensible of the making bishops. All these societies may do good Smitiifield, Monday. May 21.—The arrivals of beasts tion of those classes, improvement was imperatively ments:. Nothing is yet positive about the forma- fresh up for our inci.-ii-ers, and in the third year there would be an wrongs tliey suffer , the miseries thoy endure. Wo in their way, bnt thoy seom to ino to be totally in- market this niurnin-r were seasonably good, demanded. tion of General Bugeaud' -* ministry. Grea t efforts and, for thc-nu.-st pj irt, ot'oxc-elk-nt .juality. Notwithstand- ind'.rvos'tion on the part of the House to decide arc all one family, chained together by common ties coinmensur.-ite with tlie evils they c At this time notice was taken that forty members arc being made to join with him both Odilion Barrot try to over ome ; ing- tha t the .•i ttt'ialaiice of buyers ivas xomeivh.-ifc extensive, upo:* giv.it qiie.-tions, which might exert an effeut Of interest and association, but the links are small and I confess that- I have a horror of a state of the beef trade were not present, and thc House thereupon was ad- and Dufaure ; no agreement , owing to the unfavourable state of the wea- upoi: j ! ireiicral election ; so that two out of the , however, has been as and the chain long, and those at tlie extremities ther for slaugliteiinjr. was in a very slugg , journed, at a quarter past eight o'clock. yet come to society, that aims at nothing more solid than stop- ish state at IwreJy tlms.- years would be disturbed by tlieac causes. . have a diffi culty in seeing each other. Let inc illus gaps and charities. It ' cnilic at best a bankruptcy Friday's decline in the quotations. The primest Scots were The debate in the National Assembly to-day wan- : He .-'liiiiued that the advantages attending the irate my meaning in my own way. A workman delayed by bills and promises to pay, and is not at selling at fii>:a Ks Od to Js tVi per Slbs—the latter being an THURSDAY, Mat 24. extreme figure. The numbers of sheep yrc-r-. --:? law would be dearly bought if the opinions dered very much from its original purpose—namely, full y 'employed is not far removed from the work- ail consistent either with national security or tlie were eonsiderably - HOUSE OF LORDS.—Xavigatiox Laws — The an inquiry into the conduct of General Changarnier. man half employed nor is he at a - 011 tiie inert-use ; hence, aU breeds were very dull iu sale, of i:- t-o'isiitueiiey and of the public did not Ifiiiu- . , great distance highest perfection of individual happiness. imd pvices ruled quire HI per 3'ibs beneath those realised on enc-.- tha conduct of die members of that House ; House went into committee on this bill. Amend- M. Ledru-Rolliii , in supporting his demand for a from thc small employer, lhe small employer can We require a government strong enough and wil- this day se'nnight. The primest old downs sold at 3s lUd but "-ss opinion was, that since the Reform Act ge- ments moved hy the JSarl of Ellkxboi-oug/i and committee ol" inquiry, made use of strong language find access to thu merchant—tiie - 'merchant to the . ling enough to put an end to this let-alone per Slbs. Lamb'-, the supply of which was good, sold hea- ncs-**' ;*iU-iiii-*n had been paid to the wishes and Earl Waldegraye having been negatived on a in reference to the President of thc Republic, and extensive manufacturer—tiie manufacturer to the doc- vily, anil the quotations were '2d per Slbs lower. Prices trine that has been practised for so many years. The opi:.. >*;s of the constituency and the public on tha division , by a majority of 13 in one instance and 12 was replied to with great warmth by the President lord : but the lord cannot associate with or know ruled from -Is Sd to Us per SU.15, Tlie supply of sheep and Irish landlord says, " as a freeman I claim the ri ht pari . crln--¦-- tlieir hottest conviction*", and defer to the he would no loager oppose the further progress of journed. ono univorso ; and many of those who are bom in 1 "easts .. -- thousands. Bnt tho government cannot iiitort' .. ,35'j j Calves ..' .. 171. trai.-sSut passions of their constituents. He uis- the measure. ROMAN STATES. thc poor world, live and die in their hun- oro. Sliwp .. .. , 25 1)711 poverty, It is not tho pi'ovinco of . , ! Pigs 310 the position th.it the inlluenee of the Crown Lord WiiAn.vcLirFE also withdrew an amendment The Veloee, which reached Marseilles on the ger, and dirt ; aud those who live in the rich world government to do so. Price per stone oi' K lbs. (sinking the oftiil) puti-> What a miserable beggarl wou '-i in: less felt in -short parliaments than in long of which he had given notice, and the bill went 22nd inst., brought from Civita Vecchia M. Forbiri only examine thc inhabitants of tlio poor world y thing is this that wc call ijeef . - . is id to Ss S.1 I Vea l .. 3s lid to Is 2.1 government. If the government one.- : a-id upon the whole he had come to tiie con- through committee, and is ordered to be reported Janson, French charge d'affaires' at Rome, who through a telescope, as-they would the mountains in want money, Mutton.. 8s 2d..8s iUd|l'orlt ,. 3 2 ..4 2 society must pjty it; if •rovorniinmt make law's, Lamb .. .. 4s Sd to (Is Od. clur ' - .n (ii.'it ihetv was no ivasou why the pi-vacni this day. probably brings the terms of an arrangement which the inoon . society must bo 'ruled by "thym ; but if society re- Per Slb^ . by the carcase. law - -v ihe dur:.;ioii of p.-.rliuineiits should he dis- Ai»joi;**."fME.\x of the JiousE. — Thc Marquis of has boen como to between the Romans and the Glasgow lying contiguou s to Ireland nnd thc K uwcate AS! quire amendment, government ' cannot take the > LHAfiusiiAil, MiMulav. May 21.—Inferior tus-h'-i . "Whether, if the question were open, it Laxskowxk gave notice that he should move that, French. Mean while an armistice has been come to, Highlands, is inundated, with Irish and Highland licui; i's iM to i> s -J-d ,- D-.j dilii.'ig ditto. l>s 0d to L's Sil ; prime initiative. large won-- 5 \>e wise to settle six years (the practical at its rising this day, tlie House do atjourn to and hostilities will cease, no doubt, not to be misery. Irish misery, liko the cholera , is not con- , 2s 10d to 3.s.0d; prime small, jj s OU to 3s *-M : brge peri!"!) ns the precise term for the dmiifion of par- Mondav, the 4th of Juno. resumed. fined to any particular locality ; it travels along the Our workmen-require homes, good clean places [ioi-k, Us 2d to 3s (id ; interim' mutton, 2s 8u to Ss 0d; - HOUSE OF COMMONS. — Yotf. ivr Ballot. banks of our rivers of rest and enjoyment—a sweet word is middling ditto, 3s 2d to 3s fid ; prime ditto. 3s Sd to 8s 10,1 ; lian -:il? it irAs linnecesKiry to. inquire he had at — AUSTRIA. , and finds a location in our cities. home, but veal , -Jil how few know or feel its full worth. It is home 8s to -Is Oil ; small pork, U s Sd to -is -. 'd ; lamb, one rime thought that fi ve years would be better Mr. Hour Bc'skeley moved for leave to bring YlKXNA, May 20.—The Angsbnrgh Ga'zette informs In Manchester" we have a district called . " Little ¦Is lOd toO-i lOd. thp:-. -"i-veu, as a. general question; . but he did not in a bill to enable the votes of parliamen- us that the master of the ordnaiice, Weldeti , has Ireland ,'' and almost every city and town has its and home associations that keep alive a love of riiovisioys "- tary electors to be taken b ballot. After " Little Ireland." Our colonies country and of rectitude. The dens and barracks o; . thin . .eve was -tsiv sitiS-riciiv reason for making a y dismissed a dozen generals from his army. Madej- , too, have their Loxdox, Monday. a v n c s e b s t o " Little Irelands" our poor arc not homo-;, they aro hiding places to —Without animation in market::, busi- clini ; - that would after all merely -iiiiiiiibh ihe d erti g to ths su ce s whi h i mo i n ski, the superior of a convent at Cracow, having —largo nestlings of thc down- , ness iu the past week was slow and limited. Of butter no- tcr': -•_"•" vneyeai*. Froaj I8"i*' lo 1-341, the avc-i-ajrc hail j r.e-i with hist year, he urged upon the been convicted by a court martial of an attempt to trodden children of Krin. Tims English, Irish, and be loathed and shuuntd even ' by their unfortun ate thing worth notice was ¦ ¦ done iu old Irish. The arrivals nf du:- - >* of the P.-iriiani.-j:is had beer, less than House the propriety of following up its vote on that suborn the Russian troops, was condemned to one Scotch misery are aU related , and Irish destitution inmates, and hence it is that the -j iu-shop ami new, consisting mostly o? Lhiu-i-iek and of Cork low quuli- tin.- , years. ( li.-.-ar, hear.) The noble lord con- occasion by now permitting him to introduce a mea- year's imprisonment en the 10th, and conveyed tn reduces Scotch and English destitution to its own tap-room are preferred. The owner of theso hovels ties, were nearly all cleared oft" : the former at 72s to 74s for f irsts thu ci«'' -: in tho following genuine Tory style :— sure to carry that vote into effect. In support of the fortress of Olm'utz. Strzemecki, a vill age level. We must therefore expect but little relief, so pockets las . wretched money, and what caves he who , latter at tiiis fur thiitls ; 01$ to 5fis tor fourths, and 43s to -bjs per cwt fur fifths. Forei IVce lv My /=/:=* hon. friend remarks that wc have a diffe- his proposed measure he reca pitulated the argu- schoolmaster, in the Cracow territory, was shot for long as Ireland remains the great difficulty ; and live or who die,-wh o drink or who are sober, God gn was not and tlio Devil a re a dealt in, and fur the best pvices d«clmcil to to Ss *wv cwt, red -i'lrati'- .-.i of parliament fro m other countries. ments with which he had last session supported his seditious behaviour. the continuance of the difficulty is destined to make ll one to him , if In s rent be paid. Uacon.—There was motion, and quoted Conservative as well as Liberal Our workmen no activitv iu the demand ibr liish miil f i-it, lnoKiflg into oilier constitutions in Europe, England and Scotland great difficulties also. Tho , too, require tlie opportunitv which or American singed sides, and the transactions accordingly we <--- »¦-'Ot fi nd any one which provides for a duni- authorities in support of the ballot. illllUhitr.ilts of those islands have therefore one every man ough t to liave, of earning his bread by weru ot a moderate character, at steady prices, "iikl.iles, Derby Night. ¦lams, fio"i--*i .--.tch rears hi tiie case of n ix*}-re:*-*j *r*i ii»"ts Mr. Joiix Williams seconded tlie motion, illus- Fatal Accident on tub —An in- common interest. thc sweat of his brow. Labour is natural anil and lard presented no nuitQi'iul t''uiii'»e in viiltui or ' honourable ; ' demand. ° ass;-: 'i, and that live and four years are iiic more trating the necessity which existed for tlie adoption quest was held before Mr. Payne, at Guy s Hospital, I wi!I not repeat scenes of wretchedness too com- but men, now-a-days, cannot live by '" ' labour. The ' Lnglisii B-rnTR Makxet, May 21. very freqtic.ii * limits proscribe! for lhe duration cf popu- ofthe ballot, by describing the system of intimida- on the body of Hannah' Cronin, aged 60 years. ; It mon to be unobserved or unknown to your readers. labourer begs for leave to toil, anil —Our trade rales ' steals or dies ' •"'*?''•- ,? *'.-* l-^sciit a downward tendent-v; »ie lar - --i-ail-llcs. "iVIi.Ii .-oat di-f crence to my right : tion practised upon tenants by their landlords, appeared in evidence that the deceased and a rela- I am anxious to notice what tho folks in the rich , , when ho cannot find - employment. plentiful1T Vi i supply ol torer-u " ' tion proceeded on tho ni ht of the Dert.y to witness Free trade and cheap butter, at twenty-live per cent, hoi. -.-., .-id, 1 am not dispose.] to quarrel with those upon traders by their customers, and upon work- g world are doing for the folks in tho poor world. corn mend matters but verv under the rates of lust year, now operates much iiitainst of little indeed cheap labour and tiie sale ot hughsli new •-.••j .siUutionsof other countries. We have seen men by their masters. the return tho carriages from Epsom. TUi'Ve Firit , there are the church building nnd bible-dis- ; cheat neighbours , which will occasion mar.v of our west ' neutralise even t he country dairymen to hold iaoii.*- --ci:v in Prance overthrown. "We have seen Mu. GnAxiLET Beukelet supported the motion, were several thousands of persons congregated round tributing astronomers ; and I give them credit for expected trifling relief, that back tlieirfuture make, although the Elephant Castle Tavern for the same purpose, some but too fondly anticipated from such this course presents a poor prospect, as the article ii ill be the 'visits of the Crown in that country exposed and read a great number of letters from tenants of good intentions—they are to reform tiie poor world mea- worth less when .. and whilst thc deceased was running across the sures. The condition of the people will maAo stale than if sent us in a fresh state. to • •••h-f-t popuhir disapprobation, and the throne Lord Fitzhardingc, to show thc intimidation under with bibles, prayers, and grace. Tho same scheme not be re- Oorset, nne weekly, 80s to S-is mUUllin-.**, which they su&ered road she was knocked down by an omnibus. Tiie medied hastily or easily, but man _ per cwt ; ditto, its>i'ir perish beneath the ruins of ihat general cou- , and from wliich tlie ballot was tried years ago, in hopes that it would Protes- must bo roused to i;«s to _< 0s; ii-esh Buckinghamshire, !!s to Us ner ita'i' rui- - si. But wc have seen, likewise, that the form would rescue them. Amongst those who. voted for driver endeavoured to stop tlio horses, hut before tantise li'claml. The Irish got the bibles—sold ov though t on the subject. , We have been mldiing aittu I, est country-, 7s ("thills. ' with Rome in flumes too of «..--.-rnment which has succeeded has not esta- the ballot in 1842 were Sir G. Grey, Captain Berke- he could do so the oft fore-wheel passed over the pawned them, in many instances—and experienced long. Our speech-making POTATOES. blish. -.1 itself in popular opinion, and that those who, ley, Lord Marcus Hill, Mr. TufnclL Admiral "Dundas, deceased's body. She was takeii to the-above hos- booksellers ot twenty years standing know that the parliament aud pompous parish authorities have not Soothwabk * governed too wisel iVATEKStDi-, May 21.—Tlie continental avri- with ir.c most brilliant talents and the most uu- Mr, Shell, and other occupants of the Treasury pita l, where she died from the effects of the inju- most profitable branch of their business was buying y. Our mathematical sneerers vaU contmue to be- mure than equal ¦ •; ' have had too much to the demand, which qtu?>- -'-*iable fiitegrity, have declared themselves bench. He trusted that the motion would have ries.—Verdict, " Accidental Death." up the Protestant bibles in Dublin and " elsewhere, influence. We require more of has ueen heavy the past week, and with some samples favourers of the form of government thus csta- the support of the same honourable members on this More Accidents o.\ Returning from Epsom.— aud selling them to their customers in England. heart and head than we have yet had. All honest lower prices have been submitted to. The following are this day have fallen themselves within these few days occasion. Another accident happened to a boy named George Bibles are now low-priced, and the temptation to and true men must speak out, and leave the make- s quotations :—Yorkshire Regents, 2l)i)s to Sills ; blisii'-i. Scotch ditto, i40s to un««* ihe displeasure of the same popular opinion . Mr. Fox supported the motion with reluctance, Reed, aged ..13 years, of Kensington-place, West- sell or pawn may not be so.great, but the necessities shifts and smattcrer-j in the rear. If society be not 150a j Ditto "Whites. 90s to WO; Cn t0 U'Js; JLJel! kn 8Us t0 yils l! wliL-ii overturned the monarchy When in other thinking it unfortunate that a matter - hicli formed minster. The ,unfortunate lad was on h is way home of the poor arc greater ; and those who will borrow moved, government will remain in statu quo, taxing bii i lJo ' - : DHtL' ' we see all government disturbed and but- a mere branch ofa greater scheme should be from work, and while crossing the road . near the one halfpenny on a bottle would bless you most anil talking, pensioning and killing, as of collieries ' yore. To COAL. brok-n—constitutions voted which are never put in brought forward alone, instead of in combination Victoria Theatre, lie ran between the legs of a gen- heartily for even a cheap Testament. As for the day a flatterer, to-morrow a tyrant. I do not wish with those other measures which were all tleman' which was returning to dogmatise 0 onaay X i,y 2|.-Tho market verv heavy, force—constitutions which have long existed over- necessary s horse, at a fast rate prayers and the grace, I need say but little. The , and submit that the condition of out ,v i r hmii!:/- ' ', i 1 purification of our representative system. r »)C d0"lg' keft- from last dav, 2!) ; fresh arrivals, 0*. thrown, and cast in the dust—men seeking for some for the f om Epsom, and before thc rider could stop thc bills of mortality, and the return of annually-in- large towns—ay, and small ones too—calls foi mwtotal i, VI, *' ' ...f government to which they em attach them- He trusted, however, that the House, for the sake amimal tho boy was dreadfully injured about the creasing pauperism speak out but too unanswer- immediate attention. form Samuel Kydd (Price of coals per ton at selves—for some leader who is worthy to guide them of its own consistency, would not refuse to receive face and chest , by being trampled upon, lie was ably. the close of the market.) *W S «¦» » Hod no fault with those who, exposed to such the Bill. scon by a surgeon, and aftenv "* &.. ' Utl?-; sp to become Service. Tug Mm \t -.J ,3d ; 1Icdlu-v 13s M; l'ercy. 1** Strii'cU- *-'—may have awakened doubts—may have For the motion ... S5 the way home from Epsom on the - topofafpur-horse moro general; I have visited mo3t of their parks. night was a wet one, and there was 15s * Bel,no 13a' 8d; Braddvll's Hello'', '- hv\t a scanty congregation. If i. ,f "\ . ' "t. ' ma-iV sii-j ii lamentable con&*s« Inevitable ; but I Against it ... 18(1 stage coach, when lie by some means fell from the Ill the forenoon they are deserted ; in the afternoon Among thoso assembled , 1""11,*,- uf, Gd i Hetto». 1U *" n-A - uoBweii , i&s ,»'•; fe i lc, C e that w*c ourselves have long ago passed Majority against 51 roof into the road, whereby ho received a compoun d you find a-few nursery maids, .liring the - however, was-a jolly tar, who no doubt cither !- bwtol. 135 'Jil -, WhitWCll. 15s ; ara*f. r<*ioH- children of Un,it Od,« , If-u ,rt!V'-opooi, IGs Sd- B«'»f'i' _-h su c*ii contests ; and I for one am not pre- So the motion was negatived. fracture ofthe left leg, and such other irjurios that the -middle classes. In the evening thought a church a very justifiable retreat from the , Ilciwh HaU, Us M ; ttirou' . a few ware- lees, Us Od ; (Jowmlon Tees, * ; Denison, ' •'"''t any part of those constitutions GovEnxMEXT of Coloxiks.—Mr. Roebuck then it was deemed necessary to take him to Guy 's Hos- w ¦^•'W-ntMtiorially went there to be Us Go U* ll pared to imitate- housemen a nd clerks, alking hurriedly along. A benefitted . mour lees, Us ad ; Tees, IGs 3d ; West Cornforth. Ms " : whu*-i I see so little, trusted—which are still so im- in a speech replete with 'historica l details respect- pital, where he was placed under the care of Mr. few- groups of shouting schoolboys While the Hcv. Henry Thomas was pre'achino* A\ est Helton Grange- , playin" cricket expatiating and , Us fid ; Cowpeu Hartley. Us (id -. cert-im—which are still so littic likely io endure. ing the principles of colonisation, moved for leave L-uigford, the house surgeon. Several other cas- —not tho children of the poor, but 'ofthe rich. on thc duties of good . soldiers, Jack lis- moutn, li's Ud ; Nixon's Murthvr, iOs Cd ; V,*. E. ESgi". u-"' government of . cer- ualties took place and many wero admitted to '. the tened attentively till the rev. Par from me be the sentiment that it is a-iree.-.bie to to bring ia a bill for the better , . The weary feet.of.tha. -poor toilers seldom tread gentleman had ended ; WOOL. tain of her Majesty's a possessions. borough hospitals, but those aborenaincd are the when, starting up, and holding stand on the shore, and see others Iaboiuing m the coloni l them. Thoy are too far from thoir dwellings, and forth his hand in a Lond"'' * l stating his reasons principal. ucprccaung •itutuHc, Oity, Monday. May 21.—The imports of wool into depth- , to behold the storm without having any Mr. Hawes followed in rep y, they, havo neither-strength nordiabit to walic so far no doubt to arrest attention last part i-i the bf the measure which Colliery Accident. last ' he exclaimed << week included l,;-Wl bales from South Australia. danger:.bat, on thc other side, when I for opposing the introduction , —On Saturday morning even on > Sundays. They are - chiefly the vouthfn l And what do you say fortlursaibis from Odessa. *J«S ov ^ when another distressing accident occurred at Lantwit -do they not do from Spain, Wi) from the Cape sec inns sicruTvising, when I see other barks la- were ground-id on no desire to resist a change, and . better-paid . operatives , that are. to be ¦ found their duty ?" The blood -rushed Hope, and u few from Italy. Tho public sales of '•<'(•(^''' bouring under the effects of the wi-id ,-uid waves I any change .should be found necessary, but on the Vai-dre Colliery, near TrefoVest, belonging to Thos. within their ates. siS - 1 , ¦¦ g Qtir parks are nearly non-effec- ? ? tlie Cl0l'k onod progressing .favourably a*, the Hall of Commerce, a"' " * am not prepared to launch my vessel into tlie same ground of the impracticability of the plan, pro- Powell, Esq.,.; the " extensive. colliery-..proprietor, tive Baths and Suitnthhpnoite, tho«» whole-?T» . "^^ prices have been realised, in some instances. ' wasu-houses are valuable, to those orchestra were in visible Oce-iH ty be exposed to the s uiie pcti's. My right pounded. when five men were killed on tho spot, aiid - others who have the requisite pence agnation, and it was feared the •¦«j*3*"5»>—— *— ho::. fr5<*nd innst, therefor, dreadfull injury. to spare, bu t- arc also organisfwoiiWC not _ excuse me if I am dis- Exclusion*: of SinAxcEKS.'—Col. Tqompsox, after y The men. wore descending about ..on-eneetiye solar as inasses beable to piaythc voluntary aftCi' ' ' '' posed atahv-tiiue, whatever 1 might he at another a short discussion at tiie suggestion of Sir G. Giiey, To'clock, and were about ton yards down,, w'lieii the of the ooor .are oon- scrvice-tl e con- ,. . DEATH. , , u nod, It ,mS oeeu we hinted .- gregation stared-but .Tack eared ' Bied a few days ' 5- rather to cling to the security and to.the advantages engine lost all power over the fl ' V , that- human misery not for the wlrde aj-o, at Rochdale, Itettv Ibiru'rav- , ¦ withdrew liis motion on the subject of the exclusion y-wheel, and the is stronger than the ''.Ta «^fc*>' was ti jjood wife '-h'ifc' !-'-^¦* we j iavej thaa be caughs by the pitis'peut he holds of. strangers' poor fellows wero. itatcd . le of a Tub " t**k-^ , a kind neighbour, uiuf a su- from the House, the proposition being precip to the, bottom of.the . -1- chain* luernturo- <"«• of ind-gnant dofiancb ' ci'ttt,; bhe died, respected y aU who knew her. t« nH*i-;Wlien lie tells mt- tliat otlariiationa have that the ri " , nearly . one hundred < yards ' and mechanic institution- ^Calcutta- Engmmanl b out ght of exclusion should rest with the pit . deep. - The .heay v. f ,( ¦ - " " ¦¦¦¦ • «o 1.. ~5: sr.iiilir tt> those which lie wishes .us lo I House, and cot with an individual member. . chain which suspended the, carri "*? f «r "a •'Special-notice. : Many of i b0"1 i»-=-««=-i«^«^L •' „—"--*?2 2 ' age then fell with tt. i„ ,0 , ei1 ot"f v ' | a-^:H^ on thc ,Tyne. One Cusv*!'-- *}.. I coaclude., as I e-inciuded . uiey tlie 6tiwr-¦-0.f -i*&tta, ¦• pcreha ! l'riated ; i,i iii-? . bjc.o'qiOiSR'iJii.v right li»i-. i'-ie;.-d's.m-..tion. ia the bill for s'lortciiit-g the duration- of parlia- to assist the sitlierers, and it ' start from tho profound .ravina- of t-iu-ja pereha " won - .- * i"- —v by .Vv IJ.LIAit RiOKK. ot No. 5,;M:icelesScl»- -^ : . was not until oim : easv." in the lKu-is ' at '.« '- "'' I ;unsifiMia- the i'-.-i ipi icii .-r, rS'AtW-1 "-* ' *--;¦. :, a: a ve.;- y ca. --.hu a suSlci.-nt iiiilucuce on member.* The House then adjourned , o ttitu anaristoorniiep hilesopi-y, into Westminster Abhev as h- injured, ami thev resolved tuougu tucy were entering Kso. M.L-., and prf,;uhc! by tbe m-W Wi*.» .i a'-i to popularise it by circulating libraries and a the back-door of a p.iv.n- niiti.-'i.---"-^ cheap broKor s instead ofa Poet's-eorner. the Onico, in wa same, sties': au'J May 8<-;*i ISi 'J,