¦ --¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦ - ¦ .5_1__f^ :,:- . -?¦.: ?:: ¦,. .;-¦*-. . , .; vr - . , _ , . . - ¦¦ ' ¦- ¦ :i : ¦¦-- -;:. ¦«— -- ~ ~ ,¦- .:... ¦.. .;¦ ¦ ¦•• -: ' ' ^ S^^ 'rriiwtetW'ti\viJr -.vn^. <,j. j- ts'iy ." -;' "' a~K r— -• ,. .. .- ?l .;.y^>«..ry;vjW ...- . , . TO TBE OIiD GUAEDS ^^^ ^^ Mort gagor, all monies intended to beseeure 'd by tbil within writ ten deed. .:*" Loved and Hoxotjbed Comrades. As witn and hard for, and ess our han ds this day of 18 . , "Wehave straggled long A. B. have contended against every difficulty in the • CD. cause of freedom, and at length our labours . . Transfer of Shares, ¦ ¦ are about to produce an abundant harvest i ?*, ••*" ?' , •*••- ,, ' . heitiff one of the share- holders Of tho National Freeh old Benefit Building Great changes are not easily produced in a Societ ' h many abandoned our y, in considera tion of the sum of . nation ; and althoug sterling paid to me by in the Count y of cause "from hopelessnessand despair, I have ¦ do hereb y assign and transfer to tho often told you that ire would "remain -where we " Said .. '7, 'liis heirs , administrator s rind ' as- signs share of and in the said Society, "were struck down, "until the time arrived for " ¦ ¦ to hold AND the . same^uhtp the- said ¦his ficirs NATTONAT , Tltffcltliiii , , ;ad- that *we -would never : further progress, but ministratoi 's*iih"(l-assigns,.subjeet to the payment an,d, " retreat riiles .of tho Soeiety..']iAnd ; I, the said^yr-.r ^r * ; I told you, fourteen years ago, -when makin g TOL, HI. P. Bit LMBOH 8MBDH, ,do hereby agree to accept the said . share d siibjecfc . MiSllW9. - " '" " - - hrst national tomv that the day of auction ^S ^Sj S ^m. tb the same payments and rules. ; . . my THE LAND ' ' ' pa rties wonld bid CONF EREN CE. . . ;; TO FEARGUS O'CONNOR , ESQ., M.P. [^WOiff pere enU interest shall made to such As witness':cur¦ hands and seals this day of would arrive when all to per annum, which withdrawin g;members , all liabilities ; ¦' :' ¦da y has come. b m d the credi t of those members to on accoun t of subscri ; 18 . ibr ns, and at length that ~ t 3 ^ ? ptions or fines, shall be de- -. A. B The member s of th e La nd Honour ed and Respected Sib, —It is with whoift paey has been ad vanced; ducted from the amount so ¦'¦ ' ¦ I told you that I would neve r join any party Company will paid , and the residupi- . - ¦ . .* ¦ now feelings of the deepest grief and sorrow—though not if any—hande d over to him; ' - * (!. D who advocated mere party politics or part y understand, that the princi pal object or , her. It shall be iti- of surp ise—that we have read of your repeated de- if ciimb'ent upon members.about to withd r concentrate the achieved by the Conferen ce : ThW at ; the . end of a month member shall be, aw from the --' interests ; but that I would so appears , to my termina tion of retiring into private life. We are a jSdciety to ibi'wardvto tbe.vDjrectors in writin g 'EXTR¦ ¦ AORDINARY¦ DISCOVERY-OF- A'' mmd, of vit al m r : s - *-*« * k<& *- subscriptions instal l iwo ¦¦ ¦ ¦ * • •¦ industrious mmd of this countr y, as to place importanc e—nam ely, the mode grieved , because your retirement would destroy our '^JK > i-P . , or .. ^calendar '.'^ot !eG ;?of f - - /• ^MURDER , iv .;? : •;; h b ^montHs . % such intontioff ; and ^ / *positaoh y which memb ers are to be located future. only hope of self-elevation and independence, and 'should /soVeral 'e^Sn^ hand iipoh the the labour CTinhi5le^timate , and to in jho tic to same ' If th ere are leave us as sheep withou t a shepherd , an easy prey ^a ^tl ^ iMfu ^in^of subscri ; - fin Friday afternoon , shortly after one o' clock, makehis class what they ought to be-Jj ItEE- a certain amo unt of allotments to pt iohs, &c, shall take tho nei T be assi to crafty and unprincipled politicians, who have too 'pjace acobfd Un'ijvito 'the . order in which such notices ' ghbourhood. of.;& §w^Westdn-strectj . Ber- MEN, and not slaves. gned, one-third of those allotment s will often used tha industrious niondsey , was' alarmed in ' classes as a means of ob- -sShould the funds in handiat any cbnsequerico of tho muti- 1 wrote several letters to the shop- be assigned to those who have been akeady taining measures *•» %m&f,W sucMfiniw svillMr¦ iS^V^^ y^' lated remaiiia of a man beingi-' * In 1348, for their Own felfish or ambiliou *t , th mmSa.^M ¦time .,.*be;;nbt ,rsufBcient . to meet the : withdrawals 'discovered - in t one of balloted, other purposes—and , sir m «¥ «^^«d . the houses in Miniver- place keeping class, showin g that their interests and accor din g to priorit y ; the , we are not surprised at your de- ^^^l^^^, n of t^e ' notified , , near the new Loather termin ation , te^^^ 8^»»l»«» ho; ^ < market. -•= The House in ' those of the manual labourer were identical third will be ballot ed for by the paid -up mem- when we see the carelessness , the su- fS!&S^^ to- Se c^¦eumstahces," :tKk e'plaee.'V -.' -,. ¦ question is at present un- pineness , and the base ingra titude of many of those ^ occupied, but belongs to Mr. Coleman 'the bers ; arid the other third will be assigned to ffl^sSSSP* *— W¦ -lM^i^ext!payment , * '¦ ' , ia builder , and inseparable ; and " as folly of to-da y ot ' to . :'•¥. \ ;,Dcaikof.¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ * Members. ¦ ¦ ¦ for whom you have sacrificed health, wealth , talents, : their A : :! -. . . . .- .' .£¦...»¦. I ' . ' - I . • - resid ing at No. 1, . About six months ago. ho lot it to PAI D-irP MEMBERS bonus. SSffe?*? .&• P^fefttum may be the wisdom ofthe morrow ," tbat very ONLY, by and domestic comfort. It was surely enough, sir , In case of.fl &cniber dying, the probate of .the a man named Mannin g, a dischar ged rhihvay ser- to be nt .o : class which most persecuted TOTJ and ME This was tho vital que stion which was that in your exertions to elevate the degraded sons b^ ^ ? ^ ^ i iyn of Will or Letters'nf ' Adminis tration must be exhibited vant , who was' dismissed by the dire ctors . , inSfe ^ ^^a ^- * * * " of tho decided, aud i thinkthe plan adopted should of toil, you had to encounter an opposition which a n SIf r reivr 3 hereinb efore provided '. for, to the Secictyi.*when the ,net subscriptions paid by Great.Western Railway Company some tim e has at length discovered the error of their ¦ 6har e ' ago give as it now . confines would have appalle d the stoutest heart—that you ill ^ *-' be in thoj amo prbportibii as such member , together with such other sums as tlie for beimr concerned with Ntah tin-Mle a-nri oth ers m ways, and gained knowledge from my past general satisfaction , cU ' had your motives misconstrued by your own class, f? -JP»«?e>its shall bear to?the monthl y subscri p- deceased member, or members wer e entitl ed lo, shall committing a series of robberies on. that i'me. He the pr opert y to members only. tlon W?hto upon - :yy folly. and were shun ned by them as a person dangerous *i ^ .-an original stiarel ^lU be - transferr ed ; or ' the ^'e'xccutoi ' er administr ator r esided-with his wife in Miniver- place, and the" mur- There was one mistake made by the re- ¦ "-' Old Guards , there are no enemies . so dan- to society, (thou gh many men look up to you as the ;fj ll&-^ ^js -j :• may, upon payment ofall fines' and arrears of sub- dered man was frequently seen at theWliouse, {aiid porter , which it is necessary to corr ect, I true conservator df Society shall ' scriptions c a gerous to your order as vanity, ambition, and society)—that you lost caste , as u *^.^W ^Stir» ^t nl oe held on. , transfer (free from the transfer fee) such espe i lly in the company of Mrs. Mannin g, " -Tho 000 members only remainin g itiWere tne-fc shares to any but as my devotion , to your cause has showed that 30, , among your own order—surely all this was Mg^ member of the society : or should they name of the deceased is Patrick O'Connor , a gauger folly; in the bad enough with out being mistrusted and maligned tors be desirous fo to do they nlay.rirt ain such shares for in the Customs , cks justi ce, I would not Company, and presuming them to be S^defe^mostVb ^venieht;' f o Which a report . at the London Do , where lie has been based upon love of by the very person s whom you stooped . to raise. °f the ^te 'iSoiciety^shall : be isiibinitted and the benefit of tho testator or intestate 's estate , sub-r for some time received a salar y of £300 a year. Ho stand in the four-acre shareholders , each to pay lid. a r ^he r ' allow my vanit y or ambit ion to The bare menti on of such ingratitude makes lis oac ? ject to the same lialiilitjes as other members , and was suppp sed to be in possession of nearl y £4,000 in share, or 66.. a , would amount, not to ' ' way of your regenerati on ; and while I will week shudder at our very hum anity. ; , y?iP ^*W£^ \1; entitled lo t^e^same dvanta ges except that one forei gn rail way bonds and securities, which was £13 •Ml8s®@&cj^ t'' - ' a 1 les nor abandon one ,000 a year, as stated in the report , but to We) Sir, saw in your Land Plan the only redemp- ¦person onl y shali be eatitlea to vote in the affairs of Well known to Mannin g ana his .wifc, ^atKe y never desert your pri ncip ' ^ ; ; £39,000 a year ; a sum of itself s^cleni Tto for our social miseries and lost no time in becoming -rz ; aswr ^-fwflBenttyan-thOrha bitpJ f' ^itingyKim " *-ai? his yonr Chart er, I am "satis fied to leave decweovby a ¦rn : - «*.--'—--*.--^r tx-.— - .- - '-*r ^'" **^»j-!'-i>i»i.C-1 , :• ?,..«-*,.'»=*: t t point of give a members. We have ajon t^fv6tes;e ^ >^. 1odgings,*-'2l," ^eenwohd-6 t' I have create d arid great impetus to the Compa ny, without watched with admiration your be entitled to one Reference pf Disputes to Arbitra tion. : reet, Mile ^endrroa ^-rOn the directio n of the mind vote without reference to the uum- Thursday mornin g, thc 8th inst., calculatin g the amount received from sale or almost superhuman efforts in developing and card- ber of sha'reshe That the Directors for the time being shall deter- ho left thb latter organised, to the discre tion of those who pos- ing out its projects ; and if it may altoge- or she may hold; in case of equality place about half-past seven o'clock, and afc five tho mortgage of th e estates , and every pound of not have of votes the chairman to have the casting vote in mine all disputes which may arise respecting tho sess more Pa rliamentary influence than I do, ther reached your or our expectations , we saw that construction of these rules same afternoon ho was met by a frien d near Man - which woul d be represented by twenty shil- addition to his vote as a shareholder. , or any of the clauses, ning ' s house, where he said he was going. lie was as I shou ld look upon myself as a villain if I the fault was not in the system , or its projector , matters, or thin gs contained and also of • Election of , any addi- not afterwards seen by any of his frionds or ambitio n to stand in the lings worth of property, all of which would be but because of the legal and combined opposition of Officers. tions, alterati ons , hut being allowed my vanity , or amendments which shall, or in the habit of leaving homo for somo hours no equitabl y divided amongst the shareholders , selfish politicians of all classes—together with the in- That Thomas Pri ce, of 293, Oxford-street , and may hereafter arise between the Trustees way of your emancipati on. a , Officers , notice was taken of it at the time ; but not returnin g when the operati ons of the Company were con- difference and want of support of those whom it was William G zely, of shall be the Trus tees and other members of the Society, and their deci- Guards, it does so happen that I am of the Society, on Saturday, handbills were circulated offering a Old cluded. designed to serve. We regret , sir, that so much has and that on every fresh appointment , if satisfac tory, as all sion shall be conclusive : but if not reward of £10 for his discovery. Nothing being obliged to he my own tru mpeter , , save been done and said in trying to get the Company re- of Trustee or Trus tees the appointment shall be satisfactory, I may here be permitted to observe, that the roferonce shall be made to arbitration, heard of Mr . O'Connor for some days Bavii cs, an class, denounce me. But as the time has gistered , gmng our enemies and the press an oppor- signed by the Trustee or Tru stees, three Members pursuant to X. Geo. IV., , your purchase money of theMathon Estate must be cap. 50 and 27; and at the active officer of the It division , was employed to must wholly depend tunity of quibblin g about legal objections , and thus and the Secretary, and duly enrolled as a rule ofthe first meeting of t a er e arrived when your succes s Society. this Socie y ft nrolment of these look after him, and on that officer going to tlie de- of the paidnext month : that there have been deposits alarming the timid. We have at once, without hesi- rules, five arbitrators shall be elected none of whom npon confide nce, let me remind you ; That the Directors shall nomina te , ceased 's lodgings, ho found that his lioxos had beon alread y lodged, representing between 300 and tation , allowed you to reta n the whole in your own a Secretar y and shall bc beneficially interested in the funds of the past and from it I may be enabled to fore- name, satisfi ed in your honesty and integrit y. In two Surveyors , subject to the appro val of the next opened and emptied of all their valuable contents. 400 acres, and that the rem ainder must be Society, cither directly or indirectly ; and in such He then ascertained that Ehadow the future. As to the past , then, I you, sir, we have more confidence than in ten thou- general meetin g ofthe Society. case of dispute the name of the Arbitrators shall bc Mrs. Manning had bacn speedily paid. Man y persons—indeed most of there alone on Thursda y evening, the 9th inst., need merely remind you, that if I have erred sand acts of parliament. Your name is a far more That neither a minor nor a female shall be com- written on pieces of paper and placed in a box or those who have become purchasers ,—have sure guarantee to us than any registry under petent to serve in any office in this Society. which oxcitcd his suspicions. in anything, I was not led into that error by Heaven; glass and the three whose names are first drawn by visited the estate , and have one and all ex- and could our feeble voice reach the Convention , ¦A On Friday Barnes and Burton , active officers of selfish motives; and who is there during twenty- we ppointment of Treasurer. thc complaining party, or some ono appointed by pressed themselv es hi would say " Let Mr. O'Connor retain the whole the M divi sion , proceeded to No. 3, Minivcr- place, political labour , that ghly delighted with the That a Treasurer shall be appointed by the Di- him, shall be the Arbitrators to decide the subject which had been latel seven yea rs of incessant property in his own name — abolish the bonus in dispute, whose decision shall be binding on all y occupied by Manning, when situation and the soil. Before ver y long the rectors in whose care shall bo deposited all funds Mr. Coleman , the landlord afforded them access. may not have committed erro rs of the head , system—and let Jlr. O'Connor work at his own parties. Each of tho three Arbitrators so drawn and , unemployed capital of England will be in- not required by these rulos , to bo placed in the Na- Barnes had hear d that Mannin g in the manag ement and direc- plans in*his own way, regardless of grumblers." Then attending shall receive 5s. remuneration for each had used threats and especially vested in the tional Land and Labour Bank . towards Mr. O' Connor purchase of land in the whole- would the good and true rally round him with that evening 's attendance the costs of thc arbitration to , which led him to suspect tion of a varied mind , that I found scattered Appointment of Auditors. , th at some unfair moans had beon used against him ; sale marke t and will be sold in the retail support which would enable him to do tha t which , like wild heather over the surface ofthe earth , be paid by such party as the Arbitrators shall direct he accordingl y marke t fat Rot as I sell at the wholesale his soul most desires—the elevation of labour and Three Auditors shall bc appointed at tho annual but the party complainin g shall, reviousl to such suggested to Burton the necessity of aga inst every de- it p y digging up the garden . They did so but found no- and which had to contend the comparative independence of the industrious of meeting of the Society, whose duty it shall bo to ex- arbitr ation being proc eeded with deposit 15s. with , price. , thing to excite their suspicions. scri ption of opposition from those who feared all classes. Go on, sir, in your noble care er , and the amine tho books of the Society, arid attest tlieir the Secretary towards payment of the Arbitrators Barhos then More than one agricultur al labourer in the . , looked over the lower part of thc houso , and on its triump h ; while my greatest boa st is, that prayers and support of many who have hitherto correctness hi the quarterl y balance sheets, which should they decide upon his pay ing the expenses. neighbourhood of Mathon, has offered me 161. stood aloof—yet not indifferent it shall be the duty of the Secretar y to prepare for searching the back kitchen he thought one of tho during more than a quarte r of a centur y, I spectators of your PouJ8*'s of Appealing. a year for four acr es of land without a house disinterested exertions—will yet rally publicat ion and circulation amongs t the members. flags had been removed. He consequentl y called Ireland, travelled , , round you. have never in England or in ' I am, Sir, in behalf of the branch here The auditors to receive the sum of 20 shillings each That any Trustee, or other Officer removed from Burton, and procured a shovel and other instru- and to pay a year s rent in advance, while , his ofiico b ments a mile or eate n a meal at your expense ; nor Your devoted admirer , for auditing the accounts each quarter. y the Directors, shall have liberty to ap- , when they removed the stones, and im- th ose four acres will cost the purchaser 1207., peal from their decision to a general meeting of the mediately ascertained that ever accepte d my legal fee for supporting the Robert Milla r. Appointment of Solicitor. they had been recently thus leavin g him over thirteen per cent., as members of the Society, by giving noticG in writin g taken up. On turnin g up thc flag-stones the con- candidates of yourchoice ; in fact, that I have Mtrkinch, Fifeshire, August 8;h. n well secured interest for his money ; and this That William Prouti g Roberts , of No. S, Robert- to the Secretar y. stables found that thc earth was rather loose ; they spent every farthing of my property, and much street , Adelphi, is hereb y appointed ; e c is the way that I am juggling the confiding th Soli itor to Propertymortgage d to Hie Trustee*. consequently called in assistance , and on removing time in prison , for the advoca cy of your the Society, and that he, or any future solicitor, thc earth, they discovered tho body of the mur - of my poor. That every member shall , upon receivin g an ad- cause. So much for the past , and now for the NATIONAL FREEHOLD BENEFIT shall only be changed by a majority ofthe Directors , dered man . He was lying on his face with his legs Fear gus O'Connor. and whenever the solicitor shall be removed a majo- vancement of money upon the share or snares to doubled up, and tied wit li a rope to the hau nches. future. which he or they shall be entitled, execute to tho BUILDING SOCIETY. rity of the Directors shall elect another solicitor. Mr. Lockwood , a medical gentleman counected charac- Trustees for the time being a legal mort gage of As to the future, then , I pledge my SHARES, £15 EAC H. That tlie Solicitor fov and on behalf of the Society the with one of the hospitals, was passing with our re- to prope rty for the regular payment of tho part of his ter acquire d by the past— which is dea rer THE NATIONAL LAND COMPANY. Payable hy weekly instalments of Sixpence shall peruse and examine the title to all property porter at the time, and instantl y rendered his assis- will accept of p , from time to time to bo offered as securit y for any share or shares then remaining unpaid , together with tance. Ho discovered that the deceased had been me than life—that I never lace per Share. the interest provided for in these rules. It shall of the monies and funds of the Society advanced to murdered ; that he had been shot as two slugs were pension, or emolument from any government ; I give the two following letters which I have Directors. also be stipulated for in the mortg age deed as afore- , the members ; discovered near tho temple or frontal bono. On that I never will aband on one point of the Feabc hs O'Cos.s'or, Esq., M. P., and he shall also peruse and examine said that received ; one while the Conference was (sit- the mortgages to bo prepared for securing such , , should thc member executin g it to the turai» » over the body it was discovered tha t ho lia d will allow this Mr. T. Clark Mr. C. Dotle Trustees , fail or neg lect to make good his engage- Cha rter , and that I never ting, enclosing scri p for a four-acre share, and , , Mr. W. Dixon, monies and funds before the same shall be paid and false teeth, which corresponded with the following Mr. M' Grath. ments therein set forth, it shall he competent for political movement of the shopkeeping and a shilling in posta ge-sta mps, and which I read P. advanced ; and should he bo of opinion that tho title advertisement, issued on Monday last. " £10 Ho- Trustees. to any propert y is not sueh as can be safel accepted the Trustees , with the consent and by the order of ward. workin g classes to mer ge into financial or to the Conference ; and the other from Cam- y —Missing: Mr . Patrick O'Connor , an officer Thomas Price, Esq. William Gazelb y, Esq., by the Society, he shall signify the natu re ofhis ob- tho Directors, to seize and sell the property of sueh Glass Legislation ; while I would desp ise my- brid of the Customs, who left his residence , 21, Green- geshire, which I did not receive until my Treasurer. jections to the Directors. defaulting member , and Living fully reimbursed the. wood street Mile-end-road a detest me, if the vain Society and defra all expenses attending the salo , , on Thursd y morning, self, and you should return : and I also give my answers. Fear gus O'Conxor , Esq. , M. P. That the Solicitor shall transact all other profes- yed the Oth inst., and was seen near Woston-strcot , at fivo induced of such property , they shall then hand oyer the ambition to preserve my popularit y, TO FEARGUS O'CONNOR , ESQ., sional business of the Society, for whieh he shall re- o' clock on tho same afternoon. Description—fifty M.P. Solicitor. residue, if anyj to such member or those me to offer opposition to an agitation and ama l- ceive a fair and reasonable remuneration. duty ap- years of ago, five feet eleven inches hi h , fair com- H«sounED Sin,—I have this day read the Star, William Pkowtin g Roberts , Esq. pointed to receive tlie same ; provided always that g gamation winch must eventuall y lead to your and I see resolution after resolution passed. I now That the cost and charges of all mort gages to the plexion , light hair, stout- made , and wears a set of Bankers. Society, or any examination thereof shall be paid in case such property should not realise the amount false teeth. " emancipat ion. send you my resolution , wliich I consider the best Tue National * Land and Labour Bank. , due to tho Society, s e e and borne by the party or parties giving sucli se- the Trustee for th time b ing Later in the afternoon a relativo of thc murdered and only course to be adopted , and that is, havin g are empowered to proceed against such defaulter Old Guards, no conquering General—not Offices. curity or securities ifc being understood , that , man identified the body. the fullest confidence in your honour , I herewith , for the amount of such deficiency. even THE Nap oleon himself— was ever more 144, High Holborn , London. should any objection be made to the charges of such Mr. Slow, the beadle, having been informed of th o send you my certificate of four paid-up shares , with Corresponding Secretary. Financial Secretary Trustees Dying, Resigning, <£•<*. attached to Ms victorious arm y than I am. twelve postage-stamps for aid of Mac namara 's solicitor, thc same to be referred to the Directors, awful discovery, directed the body to be deposited Thomas Clark. Phili p M'Grath. if they consider AndiBow wi^Lyou listen , not to my parting action—uiis is my resolnjon i and all true men will and, the objections well founded , That in case the Trustees appointed as heretofore in the kitchen, where ifc will now remain until the the same shall be submitted to the arbitration and mentioned, or either of them or any future Tr ustee coroner's inquest. adric< -vESTpj irt from yoiz I -never will nnfii I do the same. Yon have been abased and insulted , RULES. determination of one or more attorney or attorneys , or Trustees to be appointed , or the survivor of them, FURTHER rAUTICULAnS. floati ng over the citadel times without number, and we cannot place too see the flag of trium ph Designation. to "be mutually nominated by tbe Directors and during the continu ance of the Society, shall die, be There can hardly be any doubt that Manning ' or tion—but my advice to you is, not to much confidence in one who never deceived any but and of corrup the Committee on the Land Plan in the House of That this Society bc called the National Freehold Solicitor, which arbitration shall be^final con- desirous of resigning, or be dischar ged from or be- his wife committed the murder , as they sold a ll their or the foll of the clusive on all parties the cost of such reference allow the vanit y, ambition , y Commons. Make what use you please of this. I be- Benefit Building Society. , come incapable of acting in the trusts in him or goods to a broker in Bermondsoy-street on Tuesday to be paid by such party as the arbitrators shall them reposed these rules , or be guilty of any last, and exhibited a groat desire to leave tlio neigh- enthusiast to induce yon t» offer any, the hove you love mankind , and that never man circum- Object. by movement direct. gross neglect or impro per conduct of wliich tho Di- bourhood. Mrs. Manning was also afc thc murdered slightest, opp osition to the prese nt ; stanced like you, ever fought the battles of the That the object of th is Society is to enable its ' le with more coura ge honest y and justice. Duties of Of iicers. rectors shall be the judges, or become bankru pt man s lodgings on the dav he left and the day after , and if you have any confidence in me, rely peop , , by a weekly contribution , to raise a Stock I have the youngest nine-years old ; they members That in case it shall be necessary or expedient to or insolvent , thc President of the Society for the when she unlocked his drawers , but no suspicion it that it shall be faithfull y carried out eight sons, or Fund , for the purpose of enablin g each member upon have a that will do honour to bring or defend, any action, suit, or prosecution , in time being shall, on receiving notice in writin g from was attached to her as she was in the habit of doing will, I hope, generat ion thereof to receive, out of the fund of such Society, orignominiouslybroken up if any attempt is your memory. "We are not Chartists , but we love law or equity, touching or concerning the property, any memher of the Society of such death, desire , so in his absence. Tho deceased was possessed of the amount or value of his or her share or shares , incapacity, neglect or improper conduct, bankruptcy near £4,000, chiefly consisting of foreign railway made to deceive you. all good men who strive , as you have done , for the or the assets, right, or claim, of this Society ; or therein to erect or purchase one or move dwellin n " non- per- or insolvency, direct the Secretary to conven e a bonds and shares , besides about JJ500 in cash , tho Old Guards, the great good that I antici pate welfare of the poor. Our best thanks we send you. touching or concerning the breach or house or dwelling houses, or other real or leasehold formance of any of the articles, matters, and things special meetin g of the Directors , who shall hear and whole of which has been stolon . In fact, nothing of movement is tiiat it will destro y that I flatter no man , honoured sir, bnt I speak from the from this , estate , to be secured by way of mortgage to such herein contained , the same shall be broug ht, or de- determine tho subject matter and may thereupon the least value has been left. It is expected that enemies, whichhas conviction of, I trust, an honest heart. Let every a , or value of his or her tho parties antagonism of yonr bitterest who spoke of con- Society until the mount fended , in the name or names of the Trustees or remove any Trustee or Trustees. , being well known, will soon bo in cus- member then, of the Land Plan, y. been based npon preju dice foun ded npon the fidence in Mr.P. O'Connor at once adopt my reso- shares, shall have been fully repaid to such Society, Trustee of this Society for tho timo boing, and thoy & Appointmentof new Trustees. tod , with the interest thereon, and all lines or other The murderer had buried the body in a layer of ignorance of your opp onents ; while by bring- lution, and then , honoured sir , you will have proof or he shall be indemnified for all losses and dama ges That the members of the Society shall appoint a payments in respect thereof, to be by them or him sustained in consequence of slaked lime : upon removing the coat of lime thc ing you toget her in your tho usands and tens of their sincerity. Hoping you will accept this ** new Trustee or Trustees in lieu of thc Trustee or Means. being parties or a party to such proceedings, but no police found the unfortunate man with both his feet of thousands, it will pro ve to those prej udiced from me, and act for me as you think best, I shall Trustees so dead or removed by the Directors ; that a ea Capital to effect the object aforesaid , shall be such proceedin g shall be taken or defended without tied together with strong cord , and dr dful j udgment of the millions be perfectly satisfied if I never again receive one when any new Trustee or Trustees shall he ap- wound in the' classes ihat tiie sound created by the subscri ptions of the 'Members , by the consen t of the Board of Directors. head , clearl y indi catin g that a bullet farthing. Your just and straightforward course , pointed, the Trustee or Trustees so removed, shall had either passed throug h or lodged in thc cra- is not to be perverted , or led ast ra y by the in- which I have at all times seen in you will honoured bonuses upon the advancement of money, and by That all deeds, writings, or securities, to and from , , cease to be a Trustee or Trustees, and incapable of nium. The lime had commenced its work of de- discretion of the few. I told you that my ta sk sir, satisfy your humble servant , fines hereinafter provide d for should any such be tho Society, shall be made and taken in the names acting in the affairs of the Society after the appoint- the time being, and after recei struction on the body, the flesh in several places in the outset was the creati on, the organ isa- R. Sasdi ford. enforced. of the Trust ees for pt ment of such new Trustee ov Trustees has been duly P.S. Tou will perhaps excuse haste as I fear I Number of Shares. thereof shall bo lodged in a box havin g two different being eaten away, and there is^ no doubt, if thc tion , and the direction of th e sound wor king- enrolled as hereinbefore provided , but the continu- discovery had not been made when it was, t hat very shall be too late for the post, and could wish my That Members shall be at liberty to enter for locks and keys, one of which keys shall be kep t by ing Trustee or Trustees , together with such newly class mind of this country ; and that pro per speedily all traces of the deceased 's body would resolution to be laid before Conference, as no other whatever number of Shares, not exceeding thir ty one Of the Trustees and the other by thc Cha irman. appointed Trustee or Trustees , shall have the same have been properl y , have been destroyed. The deceased was in his fif- or ganisatio n never could I fear will do. R. S. Shares, they think proper. That such box shall be deposited with the bankers powers and be vested with the same trusts as.shall , tieth year, was unmarried, and it is understood -understood by our enemies, so long as it was Bolholt, August 4th, 1849. Time and Place of in the names of tho Trustees or with such other devolve or become vested in the said Trustees as the Meeting^ person ov persons aa tho Directors shall appoint held a*a offi-iial sftusvtiwa in thft Exftisc. MwHiing only gleaned from the indictment of That the first Meetin g of this Society shall be held firstly before mentioned , and on request the estate is described as bein-r about thirtv vears of ain the cries of lace attacke d the broke their swords and withdra wn from the socialist press, oil which it has le Presiden t maltrea sed them . One of tnem appears Bande re- i a*..y ; ihey had burnt their villag be- n not a tittle aggravated by the price of salt being Tivejla Constitution. ' Th e otherwise .iFsmgit sttteut genre es and Jane , the journ als of tbat par ty will ' Vive la Repu blique/ ' wounded in the aff ray. At a filled th e welis with putrid carcases bf men and ani- augmen ted from one baj ucco a pound to three ba- rested since however , was; the speech of to have been severely , or at least so man y of their as great event of the day. arrived TIIE WAR IN HUNGARY. mals. No water is to be had , and the soldiers must jo-*chi and four bajocchi a pound for the finer sort , probably reappear Havre , ' which hasi/given enorm ous somewha t late r hour more Danish officers that the base money can afford the cauti on-money and the necessary tlie Mayor of commissioned to make arrange- drink the hot and corrupted water which General hcsitles a rep ort now in general friends of Louis Napoleon, and which from the north, also MO KE GLORIOUS VICTORIES OF THE be immediatel req uisite to keep free from the nippers of offence to the They had taken the Haynau carries along wilh his army. They mix it circu lation will y red uced to bait ; its calmness direct atlacksiipo n the imperial ments with Genera l Pritt witz. These measure* law. M. Sautey ra was unsuccessfu l in an is considere d asla uniforms. Never- HUNGARIANS. with vinegar to make it drinkable. On their weary nominal value . ?, which were not at the press to the /Pre sident. M. Bertm precaution not to appear in their , have excited the t to include the sixth military * division , pretensions attrib uted the house ia On the 3rd of Au-zust tha Hungar ians achieved m t o , as yet, not a trace of the Hun ga- all necessary greatest detestation attem p of guaranteed to ns tha t insurrec thel ess, the excited populace assailed arch hey f und new rul ers , an d are which Lyons is the centre , in the law raising the said :—' You have serious one oi th& greatest sad mast decisive vkiories which rian army , and it is very doub iful whether that army towards the consid ere d by the chance of success. We hope so, You which they were , and subjected them to ecclesiastical party itself to have been a great error. state of 'siege of the firet. M. Dufaure showed tha t tions have no tbe au- has *nar! ;ed the pr ogress of the war of independenc e. will oppose tbem at Sz'-geriin. But if the Hun ga- suffer either that any political party should injuries. Ie was late in the evening before of wpre to attack and defeat General Haynau at Card inal Bemetti , who is one of the cleverest men there might be dang er , in such an extension , on will not Tbe result has been the entire rout and defeat ri ans Lyons in attempt an impossible dynas tic insurrectio n. Be the thorities could restore order. tha t carps which has ts position , guns, Sz-r-gedin, the probability is tbat but few of the Im- in the caer ed college, and who was certainl y suffi- account of the grea t audacity shown at Let , lost i and democrats and social, first regu lar founder of the French Republic . UNITED STATES. store-, with the brid ge over the Dan ube , which can - perialists would live to tell the fate of the battle , ciently despotic when in power as Secretary of June , where cer t ain l y the ultra glory for the love of Fra nce be your crown , and your New* York, July 31.—Th e cholera continues ifa nected thera with the Schutt Their outposts have the Landsturm would rise up in their rear and pre- S , refu sed to take any par t in the pres ent pro- ists acted a much more decided and serious part and rate declared bis will be immort al. Was hington had no other , and is apparen tly on the in- been .l-i vt-n up to "Wieselburg, twenty -five miles vent their escape." ceedings, and intentio n not to come to than they did in Paris. The most important part president ravages amongst us, , in order not to his memory will be eternal. , Long live the crease in this citv. On Monday tbe cases were 189, aab , Gorg o, Acs, and The ' Kolner Z-*Uung ' states , that so great was th« Hom e just now witness the blunders of the sitting, however , was the presentation , by M. that near- * Vi-una than Raab. R of the Republic 1' The Pres ident was so angry with -8 commumca iion ut his colleagues, of which he of two proje ctsof law by which itis inten ded the deaths 81. The greates t anxiety prevails oihf r pl.-e. , have been take n. Tbe terror of the garrison at Pressburg, that barricades expected that the Passy, ,) instead of the speech which he letely cut off. Fina lly, first and the greates t, would be the in French finance. These laws are (the - Debats' says regard to it. As yet few people of note have fallen frith i--*--ih has beea comp were thrown up to meet the first attack of the Hun- ann ulline of the to fill up the gap t , he only said a few «: -.D'----ira5sment that has resu lted from this blo w garians, who it was thought would come to Pres s- paper money. Cardinal Ant onelli is now the all- an income tax of one per cent., and a tax on the con- had prepared for be occasion victims, these b?.ing generall y of the class of emi- the tempore words in proposing prosperity to the town to t h- -.-ar -ison of Pesth, the corps of Schlick, the burg next. The general consternation was increased powerful Secretary of Stat e. The tone of this man's veyance of pr operty, funded or otherwise , and ex grants , and Irish in particular. The poor miserables Havr e. ii Hayn au, and the Russian corps of Paniuti ii, by the mind may be judged of from an answer of t tlieir own countries arm -* hy the news of the occupation of Altenburg he is said to whe ther by gift or purchase. one of the agents of the ex-Tnumvir fly from famine and death in Vo sr.eafc of the forces under Paski ewitch , all of Pott' s have made on being infor med that the M. Lizabe , here. not Hungarians , and of the defeat ol Genera l prisons of Rome A SCENE IN IHE CHAMBER. was arrested on Monday mornin g , only to find graves frhit -i ari there by cat off from Vienna, is so great bri gade, the remainder of which had been driven were so full tha t they coul d receive no more inmates- Legis- Mazz ini , in Paris It is sup- , The disgracefu l scene that occurred in the lad who bad concealed him. The political world is quiet at pre sent. as u. make the victory of ten-fold more importance. back to Neutra. Whether the Hun garians who and wbich I am assured by those who are per . lative Assembly yesterd ay is the topic of comment at the residence of a y if possible, to be the anti- - Reforme * was seized in Paris on Monday. posed Mr , Benton intend s, indeed, part of the garr ison m sonally acquainted with the car dinal is of the The .* irres pective of From -another quarter we have received tbe fol- occup ied Raab were, perfectly in and deserved reprobation from every portion ' slavery candida te for the presidency, HE -APPEARANC E OF THE ' REFORME. '' Comorn , is still a matter of doubt. The Vienna keeping with his charact er : ' If you press this morning . * It is universally agreed that the lowisg communication , which tirows important have no more the ' parties. ,." , ? Kolner Zeitung * t , tha t dungeo ns unoccu pied ,' said this chur chman * '" y the On Monday last ' Reforme re-appeared , we had bro ken ght on ths general affairs of Hungary , corr espondent of the sta es ' you act of M. Pierre Buonaparte is aggravated b From Cuba we learn that tbe cholera li and the position have surely plenty of extract the following from its h ading article :— raging posr.iua and pros pects of the Ru ssian and Austrian the Hun garian General , Aulich , has left his grave s. ' The revela t ion of fact th at M. Gastier , the memher whom he treated out at San Jago , and the yellow fever was march ed such a spirit of cour se the 13th of June the ' Reforme ' fell, under e . on the Platten-lake , and that he has exasperates the people very so shamefull y, is an old man of 72, whose grey hairs ' On terribly at Havana. Apropos to this, I have to state alli s ared at Raab. , and a pries t was of the state of siege ; its offices were Sch*sarzenbur g is gone to Warsaw. He left t h the forest of Bakong and app e much yesterda y insulted and should have saved him fro m aggression , even thoug h tbe violence that our government is likely to have some difficulty hroug Kiapk a vho knocked down by some searched , seals were placed on its doors , its esta- Vkiiaa jsirt in time to miss Lamoricie re at Cosel , Iu other papers it is stated that it is men occupied in reading the he had made use of the term ' imbecile ,' which he with the Captain -General. A :frw weeks ago, a re- railways t thus scours the country ; but t'>a» General Aulich is obnoxious edict , among st whom he pushed his way denies having applied to M. Pierre Buonaparte. Nor blishment was militarily occupied.and for two month s Orleans. Hu •where ihe Austrian and Prussian mee . lain to- fugee from Havana ar rived at New There t!»*y told tbe Austrian Premier that tbe marching up from the platten-lake to join his troops to get a sight of the tariff . Some Fre nch soldiers is the conductof M. Dup in free from blame in this it has remained gatrge -d. We will not comp offence consisted in having liberated fro m prison Frenchm an bad gone to Cracow , whereat he was wish those of Kiapka. pissing down the Cor so at the time touk no notice , t r day, of the savage manoeuvres , . accomp lished - in , it has been matter and free commen s a e made on his causing successive two politica l offenders. Tbis person gre&ily incensed , and said, *• What the devil does he Vienna papers and letters inform us of the con- of th e fra y. the aggrieved par ty, as well as the aggressor , the middle of the night , after two , was made dru nk , or was to be sufficed to the satisfactorily ascert Rined •svant « Cracow P It is thought the Czar will not tinued and painful interest felt at Vienna on the The attitude of the city was indeed so unquiet placed separatel y in places of confinement , a mea- seizures i which ought to have drugged through tbe means of the Span ish consul i either little detour, wbich looss subject of the late successes of the Hungarians. The t ght that the Frenp o ht fi t justice in the case of M. Gastier. government as they secured its vengeance s Events be plfas'-d at this las ni h th ug to fill all the sure very unlike ol put on board a schooner (an American , I am sorry like a lickerish curiosity to know how thin gs wer e occupation of Raab is considered a terrible blow lor piazzas with troops ; artiller y, with teams har- The prime cause that gave rise to tbe affair , was the have since prove d to us the obje ct and bearing , where he will it was desired to turn to to say,) and carried back to Havana goii'g ou further down , and was exactly "what a dip- the Austrians ; indeed, as the lime wears on» tb *- nessfd , was placed at the Piazza del Popolo, Trinita reading by M- Dariste of the artic le publis hed by M. these violent expeditions ; circumstantial evidenc e against Changa rnier , b r be put to death , The lomanst with any tact sould have avoided. O wing dpiails of the loss which they suffered in that de Monti , and Piazza di Ve.nezia, and other import- Sommier , on which was founded the demand to account the jou rnee of M. y c ushing ' ted ,; held to , and consequentl y it was ne- the consul is strong •. he has been arres to this H-fl-s his whole mission may prove a failure , aff air come to light. All the ar tiller y at Aatsh and ant points of the city , whilst very strong patrols of prosecute. This arti j le was as follows :— all tbe public liberties bail , and will be tried for kidnap ping. The people ¦whic5.* noliberalmort al need , w M-jtsha was taken by the Hungarians , who to r-k cavalry and infantry were sent out, an hour before 1 Restora tion of the Political Scaffolo.— sar y, to silence all tbe free voices, and the journa ls occur- ,perhaps deplore hile We know th at the royalis t of New Orleans are in a state of fury at the the pb-icy of the Czh's dear bro ther at Paris ia four batteri es to Comorn , and sp-krd the rest, On<- dark , to perambulate the streets in every direction. They have raised up the guillotine again , which bad of the revolu tion. to ascribe to the same which alone were able to speak during .the rence , and do not hesitate setting nith such a strong current towards absolu- haUaliin of the Regiment Mazucchelli was cap These preqautions , kept up durin g the whole night , been thrown down with royalty by the peo ple in journa ls, influence the death of another exile in that city who mre-i, 40.000 towards Podolia and Vclbynia , which w ere un- sistance , and entreat you to reject the produce of tw o beads to fal l upon the scaffold. Tbey have re- press of the bun-j S -vanty miles on the Vienna side of Raab mained faithful to the good and healthy traditions revolution ? It called inion to the succour covered by the defeat , and which provinces the Em- France. May these words , Roman citizens , which public op No'.v, if there is reall y such a corps as that of peror Nicholas feared would be iuvaded by the vic- have been echoed on other portions of tbe Italian of the monarchy. May that blood never flow back of the insti tutions ; it engaged all devoted citizens to existeace, e t make a pacific but powerful pro test against the General Aulich in I m an some hing torious Hungarians! , fall powerfully on your ears , penetrate your upon tbem. May tbat horrible precedent never im- would te barel y soil and ious war which dishonoured France the «tr .;a-*rhn and Stablweissenbi *r |*, and either crush coldly accomp lished and long premedita ted in the Changarnier intervened. This man of war had one known tbat Georgey bad been defeated by the Rus- ' Refuse , then, in the most deter mined manner , Life and Times or drive ihcm into Buda. Probably the next hundred thousand soldiers under his hand Parr introduced to King Charles I.—(See " sians , and a bulletin announefn g th** defi nitive the employment of the manufactured products , lie silence of the passions and in the security of streng th, , all his , which may be had gratis of all Agents.) * v.e shall hear will be the destruction of those of Thomas L'avi' " oew- t y expected. In a short they wines or books—indeed , everythin g which Ever pitiless , these moderate guillotiners , whose re- measures of defence were take n, all his for es dis tri - The Blood.—To a person who has at all studied the or- 's force , which passed the riumph was momentaril the garrisons. Georgey time, however , it was ascertained that Orloff wa* comes from France. Let there no longer be any venge is accomplished by turns with the ha tchet or buted , all his strateg ic point s guarded and con- ganisation of the human system, the circulation of Thei ss at Tokay, was not more than 35,000 men . the me-senger nected. There was there fore no reason blood will necessaril y appear- one of its most interest ing , not of victory, but of defeat. Paskie- commercial rela tion s with th at countr y ; and when t , prevo tal courts or courts martial ; these to fear a , for an instant , -sll his artillery, Geor gey hud only lost »ileh c t - he dagger and essential principles. When we reflect Of 120 guns, , it is nfidcn ly stut-d, haa been oi'iti rel '. her sons ahull rffer to y»n the various objects of ¦Moderates who, dsaf to the groans of the poor and 15th M ay* or a. battle of June, or an armed attack 6«» the i>slomsWtt ** wwmnr-i"in whieh this crimson current mistake to suppose there was a severe routed . No bulle tin was pub i'hed. and at the time ^ two. It is a their merchandise , poiDt them to the graves of the t , have never shed a tear except on the of any kind in the capital surrounde d with bayonets , shoots fr om the main sprinj r of the heart; -.vhen we consi- battle at Miscclcz any more than at Waitzen. It onr despatches were sent off the details weie still he oppressed der it coursing rapi .ily through its various channels , and ep t , s o s m sfortunes of ths high , who danced on the warm and as full of military posts , as an ' s to« n ; was *a«e!y a repeti tion of the same ar tifice — unknown. R ublican mar yrs and ay to these avarici u enemy branching out into a thousand different directions and com- , ' Your bales are blood-stain ed—they, , bodies of those whom they had massacred , dare bv but-the policy of the government ai*d the glory o' plicated windings , for the nourishment of the frame ; we a «?ecT:--as-.*a!-ton ol his rear guard while he was Etura the western theatre of war we learn tliat men besides the great captain requir e the defeat of the Austrians before Comorn was mo e come from the same land whence at the same time a ing par ts and by leaving to history and lo thei r that there should be a vic- cannot avoid being moved by an involuntary thrill of ast0« g-sn-i---*: ihe Theiss. Paskie witch's last despatch ch ng ••nd more serious than was at first supposed The were bro ught the cannon which have killed our consciences , to brand us, t e , , tory. According ly M. Chan garnier threw himself on nishment :— wis ilit-zd from Bossonneny, ten or fifteen miles to o d fame us republicans the crowd without arms "And we exclaim, while we survey the plan ,— Ma<-yars are swarming th ough the whole country, bro thers , and which ha ve endeavoured to destroy our as drinkers of blood 1 We , who curs e these abomi- , which prot ested pacifically , How wonderful this principle in man !" ihe eort b-west of Debreez iu. Of the dav I am far and wide. They alread y stand between Wiesel- Republ ic. Corrup ted by egotism and love of weal th , nable holocausts—these atro cious sacrifices , consum- in the.name of national honour and violated con - What the sap is to tbo tvoG , the blood is to the amma not svre, but it was one of the last two days or burg and Hocbtr -ss, have occupied .Sz'-rdahel iii France is no longrr of any importance. ' ma ted in broad day , in the name of the law and tracts. The column was disperse d by charg ers frame ; and inasmuch ns the strength and verdure ofa tree y, Yes, Ro- light are dependant upon the moisture derived from the root, July. His iren were dying off like flies ; and it th e Schutt , and northwards by JSTe-ibausel , have mans, when the people of Paris shall have learned t ; , who deny tbat society has a ri g t , and the rumour of these acts of vio- thrown a bri dge over tbe Neutra. A ste.im-r of socie y we ht o I' qfrieaine the health and vigour of the body are indispensably con. is certain tha: if be canno t manage to crash the , with tha t ihe French flae had , dispo se of the life of a man , seeing that it does not nected with a pure and free circulation of tins important tro *-p - and ammuni tion upon heaps of corpses, lence having spread like flame favoured by tbe wind , Hu ngs-ia"*! array before the end of August, , is said to have fallen iuto in ive tbat life and that it would thereb take that some deputies , who were menaced b fluid. It is tliis that must feed the flame of existence ; and his army their hand '. she name of Papal Kina, g , y y them, pro- •will be so reduced by mortality and Eickness as to been hoisted instead of the wbich belongs not to it. , ceeded to the Arts et Metiers unless its replenishments are freely and purely communi. ITALY. fl-*g of God and the people , the security of France is We who have always and , accompanied by a cated , the vital five becomes clouded—burns dimly—and be ibmc up tor this campaign. Tbe Russians and ass died. Strike these avaricious calculators in everywhere demanded the abolition of the punish- feeble escort, to seek shelter against such savage ultimately is extinguished. In this light, and-in this light like cat and dog ; aad PRIESTir TTRANNV. —EXCITED STATE OF HOME. " Aus'riar -s were quarrelli ng •h**ir 'iearest interests. Show them that , men t of death—are we to be called drinkers fury. The judicial investi gation will t e alone , did the venerable Parr , (the messenger of health and on either side at nnt being '. Ginrnale di Roma' of the 1st. announces the sooner or of blood ? soon do jus ic longevity. ) regard the important offiee of this essentia! the gener als grumbled The later crime will always cover its authors with misery Bu t the purveyors of the guillotine are moderates. on all the fabl es invented aprcs coup, with respect . su*".pGr *edt Tbe Russian officers hate-t arri val t!*ere of Cardinals Delia Genga Sermatt t-l. to thin grand attentat , fluid ; and this , as a consequence , led him to atten d, in an pro in-ii? and infamy. Let fai th arid constanc y be our motto. More than ever we congra tulate ourselves on havin g »9 it is now called Jn pelic* especial degree , to the best means for its constant freedom w * the campaign. The climate afiVcts them all dis- Vaun icelli-Casoni , and Altieri. bom his Holines s God will hurry on the fate of those who have tra m- t in common with these sinister and sanguinary language. _ We are without fear in this rej pect , and purity. lays tbe deuce with tbe troops. tbe Pope no hing and agre e&H' y. M alaria p has named members of the Commission ot \\\e& under foot the , ri ghts of humanity. For tbe moderates. Let them go and moun t guard round p iblic opinion will see by the facts on what part y its The extraordinary properties of this medicine are thus Their living was execrable , and no forage was to be Govern ment. disdai n and resen tment shonld described by an eminent physician , who says :— " After Triumvi rate , the scaffold, the red . Republicans are again read y to fall. Such ar e the particular observation of the action of Pabr 's Pius , I had. Srvoral waggons at the Warsaw terminus « princi pal fac ts and causes of the ROME, August 2.—Rome has now de facto re. •Augus t, 1849. Mazzini. ' overthrow it. But what did the President of the joum ee of June ; am determined , in my opinion ,that the folio-tying are thelc frer *- l£d=-n with ship-biscui t, ha ' the re- e that conspirator , tha convict • and if our reader swill examin e true properties: — worse t n turned under the temporal dominion of the church , The ' Milan Gazette. - of the 5th , officiall R public, t amnestied the results and the s biscuit after a voyage,' and in a state of y an- consequenc es, they will " "First —They increase the str ength , whilst most ofhet aamt r General Oudino t having form al l gned the pro- nounces the defeat of Garibaldi what did he when the heads of Lahr and Daix rolled und erstand why the <*ov*rn- medicines have a weakening effect on deeompoiili - n. Several y resi , near San Mariu y, bv upon the system. Let moujdia fs? borderi ng visiona l auth ori ty with whicb he was invested , am! on the scaffold ? The president lay reposin g in ment has displayed so much passion to falsify, ag- any one take from three to . foiu- or six pills every twenty , with ' * the Austrian troops. Eight hundred of his men ' otht ^ *vait-!;--ns groaned ' apothecaries stuff , Cardinals Delia Genga Altieri , , hav- slumber after the fa tigues of the bail of the eve, gravated awl transf orm them into state crimes Has four hours , and , instead of havin g weakened , they will ba and Vanmclli were made prisoners and transported to Rimini. No in * found to have revived tlie animal spirits and to have grr.ai iiar t of which might have been saved by an ini established themselves in the Palazzo della Con- order to prepare for those of the ball of the morrow. it no t behind this victory, and b t state , im- date is mentioned. The ' Piedmontese Gazette ,' of y means of he parted a lasting strength to the body. im-orsved quality of food. sul' s on the Qnirinal. These most eminent, com- He was dreaming of the 600,000f. which the Na- of siege, suppressed the clubs , t ght " Secondly—In their operation . they go direct to tha ives us the fel- ihe 6th , st ates from Rimini that Garibaldi' s troo ps suspended he ri A e-jfres-KHiden t from Presburg g mfcsioners entered Rome on the night of the 31st o' have been disbanded on the banks of San Marin o ; tional Assembly has just gr anted him for bis menus of meetin g, enchained the pres s, decimated tbe disease. Aftei* you have taken six or twelve pills you will Io?.-i:"> s account ofthe occupation of Raab by the in ord-r not to risk an unfavourable reception laisirs.' m y, proscribed the chiefs experience their effect ; the disease upon you will become July, part of his m-*u havin g, taken refuse in the moun- p Asse bl of a party, anrt less and less by every dose you H****«*-s*ia-*s i— w t ghtee n months take ; and if you will pers e- from the populace by dav . having heard no doubt , tains , and 720 of tbem havin g gone to Rimini to This production was dated Sal ins, the 24th of i hin ei after Februar y founded a vere in regularly taking from tliree to six pills every day, »;- as I was standing on the brid ge. dictatorship, b *T. morning, that the Vicar-General. Cardinal Patrizz. had been make their submission . March , and signed A. Sommier. Several parts of it which, y court -martial , rend eis it your disease will speedily be entirely removed from the* I cbw.rv p*s a tumultuous assemblage of officers and tremendousl y hissed on his first appea rance in were applaud ed by some of the members of the Left , enemies sub-set to the execu tioher ? system Accoun ts from Rimini state that Garibaldi , after Wa s it not "T hirdly—Tliey are found soldiers rnshvn***past me, b , others under the shade of these easil , after giving them a fair trial some on horse ack pnblic. having escaped from Cfzanatico , on board some fish- It was immedia tely on the conclusion of the last y gained laurel s tha- or a few weeks, to possess the most astonishing and in. a-fset-- Immediat ely after their arrival in Presbur g A proclamation was published yesterday, an- paragraph relating to the president , it «as able to bring to a favourable conclusion vigorating properties , and they will overcome all obstinate all boats was attacked l>y some Austrian shi , and that the scene the hcrs ^-cen were sent off in directions , t a nouncin g the triump gion by means of the ing ps alr eady mentioned occurred. attempted assassina tion of the Roman complaints , and restore sound health ; there is a return of and i w s h of reli forced to take refu ge at Magnavacca , near Com- republi c to good appetite shortl y clear tr-ai some impor tant event must have hap- Many versions are given of the affair ; suffice it to succeed in the last elections from the beginnin g of their use : devotion of the G-itholic powers , and abusing in th e machio where they escaped into the forests , with of Pa ris, and to group whilst .then - mildness as a purgative is A shor t time afterwards there was anoibe. « say at the feet of'the presid ency a desideratum per *f^- severest terms tbe wretches' who had darf d to set which that part of the country abounds. Several of that all at once a tumul t was heard on the left , a major ity which at greatl y req uired by tlie weak and delicate , particutarW rust - -* soldiers in a pitiable plight—dirty, disarmed , its desire , attacks all the where violent purg ing is ackn owledged -f up a republican form of governm ent.but mentioning Garibaldi 's fishing-boa ts were sunk , and great num- just behind the ministerial benches , and then a most public liberti es ' In this te be injuri ous in. and eshacited—and in a trice the whole town was violent ht be rap id expose we have onl stead of beneficial. neither constitution , concessions, amnesty, nor , in bers of his followers ppyisbed . Garibaldi himsel f scene mig witnessed, The members all y noticed the principal None are genuine , t e « in 2 state of the greatest consternat ion and excite- points of the accusatio n unless h words PARR 'S LIFE fact, any of the poin ts which chiefly interest tbe *as among those who escaped. Troops were im- hurried round an elderly repr esentative , who ap- • for the details we aw ait PILLS " -u-ft in. VfuiTE L-Brr-eas on a Red Obobnt -, on the me:.i. Thoug h the Austrians have greatly ben efitted Oovorn ment public. Ministers ('he proclamation does nnt say mediatel se t o , who succeeded in peared in the utmost agitation , and on whom his the marvels of the judicia l invest igatio n ; but ns to Stamp, pasted round each box : also, the fao- tie place by spending a deal of money e , vet the -ahetber secular or ecclesiastical) will be named i-y y n fr m Ferrara friends were lavishin g aid and consolation ; other the principa l facts , we affir m simile ofthe signature of the Proprietors , " T. ROBE RTS h re takin g some of Garibaldi' s followers , , that the plot of 13th and Co., Crane -court , Fleet-street seotim -Dis of the Hungarian and German par t of tl»A direct ion of the vari ous and among , London ," on the Direc- fte commissioners for ott e-s, the Abhe Hupo Bassi , and a captain of the memb ers rushed from the right . The ushers ran up June i8 wh olly in the pacific demonst ration , and that tions . the po-- -u a.tuHi have been with difficulty repressed— bra- ches of internal a^ministrati -m, whilst the ma- to stop the tumul t , but the crowd had in a momen t no other attentat was committt ed Sold in boxes at ls. lid., 2s. ' nnme of L* hi. Garibaldi is still in flight. than the charges8 Dd., and famUy packets at inde rd ihere were some marifestati ons of public feel- nagement of forei gn affairs is exclusively reserved to -frang become so compac t, that they were unable to f fleet of M. Changarnier. lls.ealph , by all respectabl e medicine vendors through out The • Concordia ' contains the following intelli- the world. Full directio ns are ing. Ft soon it became known , beyond the pos- the most eminent pro- secretary of state Cardina l their object. ' 'A number of members wer e then seen The Droit ' states that given with each box. , gence from Venice :— 'On the ni ght of the 29th ' the resp onsible editor of Sold by all Chemi sts. abiiity -af a dauht , that a parl y of from 5. l pe all stru ggling together —several ,' 000 o Antonelli, who, until be arrives in Rome, will r- ult. the Venetians sur prised a stron g adva nced .post of the left dashed the ! Reform ^ wliich was spizsd yesterda y, ls to be 1-OG Hungarians bad surp rised the garrison of over the seats to reach the scene of confu sion—a prosecuted for its article 10, form tbe du ties of bis office by means of a sub- of the Austrians . attacked it at the point of the on the affair of the 13th Baa' » ; that they had pushed their advanced large stick was handed of PROTECTED BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. guard stitu te. bayonet , killed fifty men , disabled thir ty-seven , and down , but was seized by a J une , for having ren dered himself guilty of the s- lhur g, and that they were within sig member on its passage double ofi-Vnce toWi ht of August 3.—Rom e is this morning in. a state of seized a lar ge quantit y of provisions. About the same , and flung away—the whol e of exciting hatr ed and contemp t for Altrnb -jr j, twelve English miles from Pressliur g. So this time on foot—the ' the government the the grea test excitement and disconten t on account time , a Vene tian flotilla was escortin g a large supply assembly washy confusion of rep ublic , and justif ying acts sud-iei- was tbe appr oach of the Hu ngarians upon of was of the most painful descri which are desi of the arbitrary edicts issued by tbe triumv irate of provisions from the Ionian Islands , a ption—and the Presi - gnated as crimes by t he penal law ! tliat the Imperialis t garrison of tha t place was when it w s The first number of Bas * mist eminent cardinals. Tha t wbich is producive attack ed off the Venetian Gulf by the Imperial fleet , dent pu t on his hat to intimate that the sittin g was tbe • Bibliotheque des Enfans z-^ l «'lb a panic. Thtir flight was general and of indivi- suspended. The struggle however went on, du Peuple has been sel of the most immediate effect un all classes which , a' teramnst obstinate conflict , was obliged to without seized , nnder a charg e of pr o HR. LOCOCK' S FEMALE WA.EERS -3. tre me. The fugitive officers pre - , dist-r. -riv in the ex duals is, the reduc tion of tbe value of repub lican take refuge at Trieste . The fla tilla then triumph- any one at first seeming to know what it was all vocation given to the land and sea forces for the AJ. Have no Tast e of Medicine , sumed - '**at the cities of Raab and Gorgo were taken , which are hencefor th to bec nsiden d as a bout , when , at the end of nearl y ten minutes , the purpose of turning them away And. are the only remedy recommended to be taken b« bank notes an tly en tered the lagoons, to the joy of the Vene- from the obedien ce Ladies. They —innV-d, there was nothing to prevent the Him- sixty.five per cent of their nomina l ushers and some of his friends succeeding which they owe to ^their fortify the Consti tution at all periods of life, bearing only tians , w a y hegua to suffer fro m want of in leading chief. and m all "Nervous Affections act " s" them and with them an enor - " ho h d alread M. Roubiltard , like a charm. Thew gari ss*: r«m lakvn -** , valu e. Tbia measure bas been combated as much prov isions. At pre sent flour , corn, wine, and fresh M. Pierre Buonaparte out of the chamber , the mem- . the editor of the ' Revolutio n remove Heaviness , Fatigue on Slight Exertion , Palp itatio n the whole commissariat of Demopratiq ue et Ot the Heart , Lowness of S irits *moi*i fj-iEMity of stores, as possible, not only by the Romans themselves, of meat are plenti ful . The blockade by land is (says bers of the dense crowd graduall y unclosed their Sociale, nas sentenced by default bv p , Weakness , and alliiy pnin, the 3-a-ierialfst army, whicKhad been concen trated hold , and with disarranged dress the Assize Court of Par is, They create Appetite , and remove Indigestion, Heart , whom a most respectable deputation waited on Gen. the ? Concordia ') as good as raised , the Austrians , heated faces, and on Mondav , to irapr i-on- burn , Wind , Head Aches, t-^o es previous to being sent into tbe in- , Giddiness , Ac. in tbe plac Oudino t. and by tbe English, French , and o*ber havinr r considerably extended its limits, after their exasperated looks withdre w to their places. The ment for three years , and to pay a fine of £6000 In Hysterical Diseases, a proper pers everance in the uses General Hayn au . At Gorg - word imbecile 'had . been used .r having on the lOih of this Medicine will bo found to terior ii the aimy of fnrei an hankers and meichants , who drew up . and fruitl ess efforts of tlie 28th , t , and 30th ult. In , and M. Pierre Buona- of May publi shed a libel ou cflect a cure after alt -**--arians have fonnd two steam ers with 29 h oilier means had failed. the H- . mast srgnpd a remonstrance on the subject . but also by their retreat they have left a lar ge quan tity of pro- parte had given a box on the ear to M. Gasti er. the President of the repub lic. (*•-¦*•""¦ they were intended to " Pull Directions are given with every box. a qua-nily of boats w hich tbe French commander-in-chief himself, who, lam jec tiles behind them. ' The President , acting on one of the arti cles of the Two Socialist paper s, ' Eciair ,' , Note.—These Wafers do not contain f ve 80 000 bushels of of Pan and the any Mineral , and 3ra -j .i \the Quays ¦* ere abo , assured , strong ly urged the necessity of abandonin g, Letters from Rome of the 7th state that the agi regulations, ordered M. Pierre Buona parte at once, ; Republicain du Gard .' have been acquitt edYy may be taken either dissolved in wat er or whole h-i-t enonrs '-us quantities of flour , rice, and present , the prosecution of such an into custody ; bu t, with a partiality which created jury of a charge of sediti on oats at least for the tat ion produced in the city by the first acts of tlie institute d against them W vines?*- .*, and 2,400 head of cat tle—all of which fell proceeding ; thp more unjust grea t surprise , he ordered M. Gastier to ,be also ar. by the Attorney -General BE ARE OF IMITATIONS. impoli'ic and vindictive pontifical commission was very great and was . Unprinci pled1 Persons counterfe it ;i. -- hands of thc Hsngaria ns. The loss of the res ted—the insulted as well as the this Medicine in the inlii as it was not announced immediately on the change spreading to the prov inces. The decree diminishing insulter. This GERM ANY. mode of PILLS , Ac. Purchase rs -must therefore observe a; 1 000 000 of florins , bnt - un toward inciden t termin ated that none are genuin e ImneihlHits is estimated . of government , and as government employe, and the value of the paper money was so unpopular , that the discussion on the MORE PATRIOTS MURDERED BY THE ROYA I. but "WAFERS " and that th<* leali-y the loss is much greater , for the lives of report above mentioned , and the words . "DR LOCOCK'S¦ WAFE RS " are L the Sta Sl in contractors have been paid subsequen tly in repu b- it was thought that , if not recalled, it would pro- authorisation was ¦ •JiRROll IST S, outside each box. Hungary depended on tin* * the iii-p-t ialist armies in lican pap pr, even up to the moment preceding the duce disturbances. accorded by a large majo rity. The r Zeitung' of the OBSERVE—The Counterfe it Medicines now be rep 'Ka lsruhe 7th announces have words on tha safe ty 'j f th»-ir store -*, which cannot laced publication of the edict. The French diplomatists have completely failed in After the close of the sitting, M. Dupin seems to the condemnati on by^ ' court- martial and the execution Stamp so NEA1U.Y besemblis-q these , as to mislead the un. tu iVx*,-* to bhc enemy. At length they consented to do infinitely more than they deserve ;; hut whilst this tbe 4th Hussars have been dismounted , tial at else has failed) an * *g executions took place on the mor ning of the and have Bastad t is pr oceeding fast with its judg- the patients haying been surfei ted with medicine * but even tben the hea rtrending. The diminution is made it must be observed that no " ' '*' * ' been ordered to march on , are d , scene was 8th inst. • . foot to Toulon , ments. Yesterday young - Neft, lighted to meet with so efficient a remedy having such so They means are taken fcr abolishing the paper circula tion to be em. formerl y Struve ' a agreeable taste an poor young fellows moaned and wept aloud. Garibaldi ha s not yet been taken. It is said that barked for Algeria. This measure is supposed to head cashier, and Majo r , von Biedenfeld , who &c.-(Signed) John Mawson , S*^geon iT cried tha t to march against the Hunga rians was to it with coin ; on the contra ry, a new liave been adopted in consequen ce took Mosley-street , Newcastle-on-Tyne .-December 5^1818 * and supplying he has succeeded in again embarkin g, - -and that he of these men hav- upon him the comman d of the mutinous thir d retti- go to -ki'-h. The officers yielded less to their feel- emission of papal notes is promised io replace . the ing manifested extrem e democratic opinions. - ment of foot, ¦ IMPOR TANT TO ALL Wn O SING. has escaped to Cbiogga , and from that place to wer e shot. • From S. , ha t ihey tco parted from their friends and re- republican notes. ¦¦ ¦ ¦ - A l-tler from Strasbur g Pemall Estj ., ofller Majesty 's Concer ts, aud Venice. - • " " > Btate s that a major of DENM ARK AND ' Ylcli ings emotion , It was hoped that notes under a certain valuF Artillery, THE DUCHIES . r mti r*chpral of-Lichfield Cathedra l. lati oiis .vith very evident signs of and then SIGNATURE OF THE TREATY in garrison in that town , had been arrested HAM BURG , Gentle men ,—A lady of distinction having would not ba diminished on acco unt of the distress OF PEACE August ll .-I have.just received pointed out ta harried th e men off. Near the railro ad there was a BETWEEN PIEDMONT and committed to the civil pruon. nstice of serious of 0f Dr- s Wafers , I wa^induced produce AND AUSTRIA. disturb ances which mal e^trw fof -. ^ ^fr ' oni am £ den s*: cro-vd of curiou3 spectators. Here again the it would amon gst the poorer classes, but A Socialist , nam ed Jeroy, was sentenced bro ke out in alft,^> ,f this tria?nd happy SARDINIA. —The treaty hy the the town of Flensburg on tt J t^i - the faV0Ur ta youi" 5 rifl emen tarrie d and bemoaned their fate. the unsparing power has chastised all alike. of peace between Aus- Court of Assize of Paris on the 9th inst., and which ^ l f* aUow-K hand of Piedmon t Saturda y lai fc to iropri. are the more remark able few o^hfwTaf r3.{taken^ m the course' of the^ Th ey i.** i:**g tlie crow d they cried— 'Fare well for ever. pends from their offices all employes who have been Milan . 'A partial amnest y was.proclaim ed: at Milan J e y some^ sympath y clearSS^S, and *the toneV fullS^ and ' e* ,. song called . ' The Ball and the '.Guillotine.' mark evi n " ?£ distinct, They are derideX *We -sha'.l never return !' The efficers intreated appointed since the Pope' , cancels all ou the 5th. This intelligen ce • waslreceived by a kas ced, ofand which was 10 I ^ve ever s departure The penal ty of deat h pronounced against Captain ie ne of under this pret ext SAMuat^Tv'?™ ™ , ^ usedvM sea|S them ia he quiet and resigned to iheir fate. They promo tion--, and degrades all those who took an special courier from Turin , who rea ched Pari s on the l « demar cation PEARsu i.-Lichfie ld, July 10th, 1848. ^ 9th inst . Kleber was commuted into that of ten vears ' impri- SSJthe 9 haS^ Danish? l . On aabmiiie-1 at length. It is stased here tha t oath of Oddity to the republic ; reserving meanwhile sonment and war -steamer arriv ed at Flensb ur g The particulars ' degradation . brin ging ' of many .hundred case-* miv l» »,»j *fiavmu fi-ids the difficulties of his march almost a strict examina tion into the conduct of all govern - PR ANCE. Lieutenant and several Danish officers who -were A and Mrs. Heald (Lola Montez) have mto negotiations to enter sent *«^ 5a« insuiicraale. There are tumours of his having been ment still remaining, in order to decide Paris , Saturda y.—Paris is no lon ger in the aniyed in Paris. with Genera l Prit twitz . as? H^ .tt forced Jo fall employes - ' .. of As soon ^ back upon Ketsbk eraet. His soldier s whether they are worthy of being kept in their res- anamolous state yclept - the - state of siege:' The - y ed an e C-Cm e ^I '^lll ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ . a*** a rapW the : . Journal des Debats' state s that ndfl -^n******- listed ^ ^ ^ are stair d to have suffered poctive offices. The edict also formall y re-establishes pr oject of law regulati ng the the indem. theL nDanish'\ flag, andi as ^ more than auy army ever manner and the cir nity of 75 ,000,000 due by Peidmont soon as.this was observed by MSSSS^^ auia- ffin. Th-jir march from Pesth the judicial trib unals in vignur durin g papal juris , cumstances under which to Austri a, hB8 the people To singers was a weary plod- this exceptional state can already been pa.d by the , great crowds began to assemble, and public speakers they are invaluable , as in din? -:'r*i*ougb the deep burnin g ine what a chaos ! Besides the in fatur -e.be created house of Roth Bchild, hev ren love sand , The horses diction. Imag or- was adep ted by a lar ge majority account of the former on broke.into .the house , and before n»»L, Ta -u?,. a11 hoarsen ess and increase tha ami ihe artillery conW scarcel y. move alon***. With dinar y courts of law and appeal , Rome boasts of no on Thursday, and it was Power. uhe au hor £s flex,blllt y of the ^ce. They have a most plea. immediatel y, followed by the Paris , TuE SDAY. 6 bey de8 ed e er unt taste the exception of Ketsbke raet they did fourteen - exceptional tribnnal ?,, chief ly votin g of another -Th e Pre sident ret urne d from SnbTnSr ' iW ? *thin 8in «. TS not find a sin- fewer than proje ct; restoring Paris and iits his purn ejr to Havr e Danish officers, appeare d on S 1 d ; 2s 05 fie village. There were neither I republican ag.tator s lasUveuing, no the streets in the af ter , a—J**-? *l' * ' ' 9<-! and lls- P« ^J - human creatures ecclesiastical to civil tribun als and the ; or- doubt h2 noon , and one of them Agents , Di Siiviand Co., 1, Bride -law, e , £or animals. The inhabit ants of those p Avgust —Th ii morni ng public diiconteut las dinary appears to have been so in- R aUtreet laces had 4. course of ju tm. Tte ir0n grasp b§ingtaU8 cautious as to irrf ate the tonal Guards the crie* of • Yive ta w < peoplewm by some insult il :¦ _ BEWARE OF IMITATIONS . C **p wm, Thtim^m that _. note.—Full directions are given with ererr box, ia tfe9 CIS.«""i5Wi«, Gonnan , and f rencU lan-fuaseg. August 38, 1849. THE NORT HERN STAR. : ^—^____^_____^MriM11_1______^__—--^— o topics the troth will ultimately make ita Poptr» way, but it tions, do not rise to the THE will not be helped forward by the level of the most ordinary TEN HOURS BILL. dogmatism and mediocrity. His reading has been superficial, and Vmttitt Leicester.—Advance of Waoes.—To the Editor. GOD SPEED THEE, GALLANT HUNGARY 3 pedantry of those wh<» have nothing better to say —Sir,—We havo hia practical knowledge of mankind has been drawn (From No. III. ofthe Democratic Review, now the satisfaction of statiug upon the monetary system thin has been said before from Heroes, that the leading manufacturers havo agreed to ive (From tbe Sun.) « anjntercourse with fashionable debauchees. In August, 1849.) —it were well if there were fewer heroes, g by M. Turgot and Adam Smith and the prosecu- London *¦*?* I scarcel threepence per dozen upon all wrought sham knits ; God speed thee, gallant Hungary ! his life was that ofa roue, and io Paris itis The extensive conspiracy y ever heard of any but did more mis- tion and imprisonment of such men as H. Proudhon. the same; his time of the mill-owners of chief than good. These mortals com- the others that have been seen have kindl y, con- And aid thee in the fight; for extravagant opinions, or an.extravagan , when not occupied with his the north of England (Lancashire to overgrown sented to do t mode ministers or military peratives under the guidance of thc be- worship a 1 town and countv. — Edward ftioliolaon , y the uni- fortune, he was no sooner installed in the Presidency nevolent Richard tempest, and erect a statue to a plague 1 Joseph From tbe far Ukraine's dreary steppes versal suffrage of the whole nation. By this Oastler, and the late inestimable A panegyric liaudford , William Cleaver.—August 0th, 181*.).— , deci- than he had to appeal to his cabinet to assist him John Fielding, pressed upon an earth quake is every jot as From Tiber's deserts -rast ; sion, partly forced up<*n the Assembly with malice out their iust claims on tho at- reasonable as upon such conquests [r.S.—There is still a portion of tho hands on of the embarrassment of a position crippled with reiiuon oi wo public and ¦ has as these. The northern legions' war-whoopswells prepenseby M. Thiers and his royalist friends, and debts. theI legislature It Fire Engines Superseded.—Wc- observe*' that a strike, which , it it hoped , will resume their em- never been objected that their agitation was accom- ployment next week.]—Leicester Mercury. Like thunder in the blast; partly carried through the weakness of M. d- book is advertised under the title of " Homoeopath y Lamartine, whose loiiic in support of panied with violence. An unvarnished exposure of in Acute Youthful Makmaoi*.—In Jefferson comiiy, vir- Presaging woe and death ; where'er the proposi- suNsirrxE and shadow- a tale of the curse of thc Diseases." If homoeopathic globules will Their fatal lances shine; tion was below citicism. the Republic practically factory system," and revealments cure inflammations , perhaps an infiiiitessimal ginia, on the 20lh March, by Elder Sine, Mv. .John THE NINETEENTH CENTUR Y. of its hori'iblo and brutalising morals, dro p For carnage hovers round their patb, commit' ed suicide; creating an imperiumin imperio, effects on of water will put out a fire. —Punch. Lay, u-rod eighty-five years, to Miss Catharine Sar- whHi is now found to BV THOMAS MARTIN WHEELER , health, and life, were the only weapons they used ; The Jews gent , aged seventy-five years and six month*-, ;it':er a Their watchword and thoir sign. be altogether incompatible they were abstain from trading durinjr sixtv-six with the free action of a constitutional Late Secretary to the National Charter Association however all-sufficient to enlist humanity days of the year as follow courtshi p of forty voars. Oh ! theso youthfu l in- And Austria government on their side, and , , namely—fifty-two Satur- * , cruel in her hate, How many calamities, of which no and National Land Company. when thc Malthusians continued days ; two days, new year ; four discreii'iiii- ! Dr. Franklin's letter to "• Jack ," ad- An abject craven thing ; man can fore- their opposition, by days, rnssov.T; see the issue, might Alexis de Toequeville have parading their nostrums of po- one day, Black Fast ; two days, Pentecost ; four vising him to marry young, has done a world of mis- How droops the eagle on her crest ! spared his country, jf Cn APTER XX. litical economy an appeal to facts and figures chief. Look at this now—another youthful victim f in hfe work on the democracy scattered their fa days, Tabernacle ; one day, White East. How cowers his stricken wing! of America, instead She died ; but memory' lacics to the winds, and the world The Chinaman's Wife. saurificed [—Chicago 'Journa l. of glossing over the evils ofthe s wizard power, became convinced that —Not long ago an English The shedder ofthe nation's blood, Presidential election by universal "With its ghost-like train had come, the conflict was " mammon sailor killed the wife ofa Chinaman by accident , an Her own she shall not save; suffrage, he had against mercy ; the legislature probed them to the bottom, and held them up as a To the dark heart's ruins at that last hour, espoused the cause event whieh gave him considerable uneasiness. The TRY ERE YOU DESrAIK . Branded and curs'd, as Europe's Cain, of mercy, and the Ten Hours Bill warning to his countrymen I And she murmured, " Homo, home, home !" of the land. became the law woman's husband, hearing of the circumsutice, HOLLOWAY'S PILLS. An outcast and a slave. And her spirit passed the But in America, although the system is had with its happy dream, law came to the vessel, and, after some talk, oftin-eri to CUKE OF ASTHM A. "Bnt hark ! what strain the welkinfills enough which places Taylor at Like a bird in the track of a bright sunbeam . •?i°L£'^ > or °Penly s<* it at defiance make it up with the man, compromising tho affair Extract of a Letter from Mr. Benjamin Mac*kie, *> vespect- , such men a* General W1 P fty' W th0 of Sonorous, deep, and loud ; the head of a nation, with no other qualification Picken. * n n„i w m n^t consideration the for thirty dollars. The sailor was glad to escape ' so •ablo Quaker , dated Creenagh , near Lougholl. Ireland , mill-owners. . Well knowing that money dated Septe mber 11th , 1848. Sounding triumphant as the voice than that of being " rough and ready," the power of ¦Nearly a month had elapsed since the interview is the ruling easily, and paid the money, when the Chinaman Siiid , power in this country, and having long purses filleu 1{espe-*te0 Friend ,—Thy excellent Pills have etiiocuall j Of lightning in the cloud; the President ia limited by the independence ofthe between Julia and Arthur, and day by day she grew 1 " It did not matter so much, as she was an old wife, cured me of r.n asthma, wliich afflicted me for throe vears their with gold coined out of the blood° of women and in- Hard by the Danube's stream it hursts sevetal states, which have separate powers of weaker and weaker, but her senses seemed to have fant children , they have and he could get a new one for twenty-five dollars, to sueh an extent that I was obliged to walk my room at independent: made the attempt, and we dollars to buy rice." night for air , afraid of being suffocat ed if I went to bed by By vale and forest dim ; ••.wa. In France, where there are no recovered their former vigour, and her mind to be fin d our Wing paternal which would leave five powers ofa Pre- government in treaty Shetland ponies which at ono timo only com- cough and phlegm . Besides taking the Pills, I rubbod And rings out o'er the mountain tops, states, no federal organisation, the more tranquil and assured. Sir Jasper had been with them, and actually proposing , A mi ' sident are those of °an absolute monarch, limited often to visit her, and again terms to com- manded a sovereign in the Hi hland market, now plenty ot thy Oiii tmenti nto my chest night and mi-v-uin g.— ghty peoples hymn! flattered himself with pound a felony ; for it has long been decided that a g (Signed* Besjam-.v AIack i*"*.—To Professor UoLt.oiv.ir. nominally by a deliberative assembly, but not really hopes of her recovery. Seeing that she was igno- conspiracy to evade soil, since the introduction ot steam, at from £5 It soars aloft, and seems to cleave g-tining a ma the law, amoun ts to felonv! That to £10. CUKE OF TYl'HUS FBVER , WHEN SDl»l'OSEl) TO BE limited at all, because the means of rant of the occurrences during the voyage, he this conspiracy exists there " The portals of the sty; hands. Think of the alluded is no longer a doubt, a Mr. Rivers AT THE POINT OF DEATH. jority are placed in his not to them, nor to the arrest of Arthur ; bond has been entered into , of Sawbridgewortb, has cherry-trees The noblestsong in Freedom's ear, power of corruption given to Louis Napoleon by the and Julia, often was she to make good any loss a foot high, that have borne nearly a quart of fruit ; A respectable fcmaltt in the neighbourhood of .' louglmlt about to entrust her hus- any individual mill-owner may sustain in working was attacked ivith typh us fever, and lay for live ilnys with- A nation's gathering cry. patronage of upwards of 150,000 places in the direct band with her ill-fated love, and implore his pardon and plum trees, in fruit, not more than eighteen The spirit of immortal Rome, of out the relay system. Of that system Mr. Leonard out having tasted any description of food. She wns given gift of his cabinet, aud that of the promotion and his protection for Arthur but her fear of dis- inches high. over by the surgeon , and preparations were made .' <«• her Greece, , Horner, the Factory Inspector, in his lately pub- The fire of ancient office rs in an army of 450.000 men ! That such pleasing him, and her bodily weakness, which ren- lished report declares To Take Ink out of Linkn.—Editors' and clerks' demise, Mr. Benjamin Mackie , the Quaker , wh-.v** ease is 2Tow glows beneath St. Stephen's flag, , '' that the law officers of the am! !-::otvinj; powers shonld be entrusted to any one human being, dered any species of exertion painful , prevented" its Crown are unanimousl wives will learn with pleasure, that to take a piecu referral to above, heard of the circumstance , From the Danube to the Theiss ! was ths *l vice of the monarchical system accomp y of opinion that it is illegal of tallow, melt it, and dip the spotted the immense benctit that he himself had derived i':»i a Hol- es-»'nti= lishment. On his last visit she expressed a and contrary to the intention and sp part of tho loway 's Pills, recommended an immediate trial , ami eight lse France aimed at destroying. wish irit of the act," linen into the melted tallow, the linen may then be How oft I've read, with quicken'd pu which the democracy of to return with him to D—— ; she would wil- and Mv. Maud, tho stipendiary magistrate of Man- •".(¦re given to hcv , and the same number was continued And awe-suspended breath, To retain tbem for the Executive, without any ade- lingly die in the place that had first received her in washed, and the spots will disappear without injur- night aud morning for three days, and iu a very UtorL time chester, a barrister by profession, after careful de- ing the linen. The record of thy chieftains' deeds quate security that these powers should not be seized the island, and which habit had endeared to her, he liberation, and consultation with legal she was completely cured. by the dishonest or incapable, was an instance ot would friends, has " Sot a pinch of dust remains of Cheops, says N.B.—From advice just received , it appears that Co' onel In the red field of death! then be always near to comfort and support arrived at the same conclusion ; yet when informa- " l' Oft gush'd uncheckMthe silent tear, philosophical insanity on the. part of republicans to her ; and Sir Jasper, pleased at this display of ten- the Jersey Times,_ " but of some stray pea-seod which Dear , who is with his reg iment in India , the 21st usileers , tions have been laid for a violation of the law, the found their cured himself of a v«r *r bad attack of fever by these cele- Oft rose the prayer for them, which it would be hard to find a parallel. derness, gladly conceded to her wishes, arid by slow way into a mummy-case as old, perhaps, bra ted PiUs. Tliere is no doubt tliat any fever , however magistrates have refused to convict, some, because, as that of Cheops, remains a rich produce, green As Fame's deep clarion rung in praise Consider, fur a moment, what grounds there are and easy journeys did they reach his mansion. as they say, they interpret the law to have a different malignant , may be cured by taking, night and morai ng, co- can and flourishing on a little farm in the little island Ue induced Of Georgey and of Bem ! for the assumption, that six millions of electors Two days have elapsed since her return,—she is in meaning to that ascribed to it by the law officers of pious doses of this medicine. The patient should possibly,by the physical circumstancesof their posi- the r.iom we haye previously described. The leaves of of Jersey !" to drink plentifully o warm linseed tea or barley water. God speed thee, gallant Hungary ! the Crown, and others, because, as they assert, the tion, be •¦roper judges 'if the qualifications of any the passion-flower no longer shade her lovely brow, TnE Bombardment of Rome. — "A horrible CURE OF DROPSY IN TIIE CHEST. So chivalrousand hrave; meaning of the act is doubtful . In the case of poor situation"—so exclaims Louis Blanc in his New one candidate submitted to them, for no matter they have withered and died, and she mourns not, men offending, against any law of the land Extract ofa Letter from J . S. Mundy, Esq., dated Ki .'iiniug- And from the tyrant's hateful grasp , be it one of the humblest, or one of the , the World (Aug. 1st.) — "is that of an exile in t»n , near Oxford , December 2nd , 1818. le save. what office but rather envies their fate ; the water of the silver magistracy exhibit no such qualms of conscience. this Thy glorious peop m- st influcnti il- Suppose the question on which fountain no longer sheds its coolness around its moment of eternal grief ! For to those who sur- Sik,—My shepherd for some time was afflicted witl i water Victory Peacesoon shed , Many of these same conscientious gentlemen, were on thc chest , when I heard of it I immediate ly advised him May and you make an appeal to the people to be one of fact— murmurs have ceased round us, and who ask our-opinion on this war, Their holiest beams o'er thee, , and the heated air from a instrumental in getting up the case of conspiracy to try your Pills, which he did, and wns jjcrftctiy cured , " Is John Smith a white manor a mu'atto ?'' Here stove supplies its place ; the orange sheds not its what can we answer ? Wo can but keep silent, and * ( myself And keep thy altars and thy homes ' against the Chartist prisoners now in Kirkdale gaol, and is now as well as ever he was in his lite. A- is a question npon which no man conld deny the perfumed odours around, but myrrn and aloes dif- and when they were brought before them, hide our face. Oh, my country !" . vccffived so astonishing a cure last year from your fills and Still sacred and still free I people for -fating* (the fixed the TnE Vrry Spirit.—-'The following story from the it has ever since been my most earno.si i.-ndea- capacity of the blind only ex- fuse their fragrance in its stead. Winter hath suc- amount of bail so high that somo from inability to Ointment , Maryport. J. P. Docg-gis cepted) ; and the right of all classes to form an ceeded to summer, and summer will again succeed New England Washingtonian gives the very spirit of vour to make kuown their excellent qualities. —(Skned)— obtain it, were imprisoned until the assizes. Yerily Muxdy. opinion upon such a subject must be admitted to to winter. The passion-flower will again bloom, tlio English law—a man may be innocent, but cosst;* S. —To Professor Hollowat. there is " one law for the rich and another forbe tho must be had out of him. Capt. Slick was a disci- CURE OF A DELIB1TATED CONSTITUTION. be equal. Nevertheless, as six millions of voters and the orange-flower renew its blossom, but there poor. " But even allowing that there mi^ht a plinarian , and kept a weekly account of his niggers' Mr. Mate , a storekeeper , of Gundagai , New South Wales S0CIALISM.-NAPOLEON BUONAPARTE could never have seen John Smith with their own is no renewal for the human heart once folded in conscientious doubt as to the intention of the legis- REPUBLIC. could form no opinion npon his colour well and ill doings. . One Saturday Tony, the hoy of had been for some time in a most delicate state of health , AND TIIE FflENCH eyes—asthey the wintry embrace of death,—no succeeding sum. lature, there is a plain coiirso for tho government his oonstitiition was so debilitntutl that his dentil was but from hearsay evidence — of what earthly value mer can renew its glories all work , had in his account current twent y-live , or give new growth and to pursue ; they themselves have set tlio precedent ' shortly looked upon by himself and friends as certain ; but (From the Westminster Review, for July.) would be tlieir judgment ?—who would receive their vigour to its once god-like frame ; and Julia reclines stri pes for idleness , to his debit , and fifteen , for in- as a forlorn hope, he was induced to try HoUonay's Pills, in a conrt of justice ? in the case of Smith O'Brien and the other Irish dustry, to his credit , so his master was about to The first week 's delibera tions of the Natio nal testi mony on the ottoman , and the arm of her husband pillows state prisoners : " a doubt was entertained in whicli had an immediate and surprising ett'eet upo n his seven millions of voters who took part pay hiin the balance. " Stop Massy, " say Tony, system , and tlw result was to restore him in a fuw weeks AssemWy proved its incompetence to deal with the The six or her drooping head, and with low and trembling quartera entitled to respect," as to whether the in the Presidential election of Decembe r, 1848, could voice she relates to " dar's—you forgotr-dar's.do scorin' of do floor- to perfect hculth iuul strength, to the suiTi'ise of all who most vital question of the moment—the means of him the occurrences of her Crown had the power, without the prisoners' con- knew hiin. He considered liis case so extraordinary timt he not of their own knowledge have declared whether past life—of her childish love for Arthur—its in- old missus say I neber scour as good before."— , restoring employmentto theidleand destitute masses, sent, to commute "the sentence of death for high Soho, you rascal," quoth Capt. Slick ; in gratitude , sent it for publication , to ths Sgducti Hornin g with confidence in tbe mea- the candidate for whom they voted was black or voluntary renewal—her struggles to overcome it, " " you're Herald , in which paper it appeared on the 2ikI " .Juiiuary, -and of impressing them treason to that of transportation for life. A " de- br inging in offsets, are you ? Well now, there I" sures that wonld be adopted for the amelioration of white, an honest man or a knave; and yet, upon tho and the purity of its nature. She then described claratory act" was prepared to meet the case, and — 1848. A few doses of the Tills will quickl y rally th-.- ener- result of their voting was to depend the liberties of her last interview with him here the Captain made an entry upon his book— gies of both body and mind , when other medicines have their condition. The politicians that had most the , praying for pardon hurried through both Houses of Parliament. Why you have a credit of fi ve stri y did nothing bnt denounce the France 1 for them both, and tho tears course fast and " pes, and the balance failed. ear of tbe Assembl not take the same course in this instance ? The must be paid."— Gor amassa, don t hit yet—dar THE EARL OF AI.D110ROUGH CURED OF A LIVER reveries of Sociali-m, the waste of public money in The circumstances which determined the choice hot down her faded cheeks and fall burning on reason is obvious, in the one case the interests ofthe " ' 's of an unknown man. in the person of Louis Napo- sumpen else—Oh , Lord ! please don't—yet sir got AND STOMACH COMPLAINT. the ateliers nationaux (with which the Socialists had the face of Sir Jasper, kneeling at her side, and government and the higher classes were at stake, in leon were the fallowing. Eugene Cavaignac had, as he the unfeeling man of the wo urn now—ketchin' de white boy and fetchin uni to Extract ofa Letter from liis Lordship, dated Villa Atessina , "nothing to do,) and insist upon the necessity of re- , rl d, inured by many the other it is onl y the interests of the poor that are -J 1st Februar y, 1815. we have observed, partly fr<-m the circumstances of years' witness of slavery to human misery, he is not old missus, what throw reck at de young duck."— Leghorn , calling the troops of the line, and restraining the concerned. Sir George Grey has been appealed to That'safact," Sie,—Vario us circumstances prevented the poseiWiity ot classes, his position, and partly from the serious mistake of proof against this woman's weakness, but his tears " said tho Captain, " and I'll give ' licentiousness of the press. The wor king in this matter, and what is his advice ? That "it you a credit of ten stripes for it —- I wish you had my thanking you before this time for your politeness in conceiving themselves befcayed by the bourgeoisie, allowing himself t-i act longer than was necessary as mingle with hers, and at length their hearts beat should be left to the local ma-ristracy to decide ac- sending me your pills as you did. I now take this oppor- brought him to me—now we'll settle the balance." of sending you an order for thc amount , and at the and exasperated b want, flew to arms , with a view the tool of reactionary vengeancet become an object together in unison—his suspicions, his jealousies, tunit y y cording to thoir judgment." What a bitter mockery —Tony grinned. The Captain adjusted his spocta- ame time to add that your Pills have eliected :, car,, of a of taking the redress of tlieir grievances info thei r of intense aversion to the operatives of Paris ; are for ever dispelled—he cannot disbelieve tho and insult this is to the feelings of the working classes, who clcs, and finding Tony had a credit of five stripes, disorder in my liver and stomach , wliich aU the uiiwt emi- own bands . By this they incr eased the desperation although still supposed hy the middle simple tale—his heart bleeds in listening to it—and classes ! It is a well known fact that local magis- and all over the couiiut -iit, sighed for order at any price. George Sa**d, address- worlds would he was not a little irritated ."—" All de credit is fair, nent of the faculty at home , oftheir rosi ion , and put themselves wholly in the give that the love lavished on trates are appointed not for their knowledge of law, massa," said Tony. Yes had not been able to effect ; nay, not even tl>..; waters ol* ing him through the columns of La Reforme, said, Arthur had heen deserved and —" , but" said the Captain , Carlsbad aud Maricubad. 1 wish to have another box and ¦wrong; hut the insurrection happily suppressed} the received by himself. or love of justice, but for their wealth, subserviency, puzzled " You are a man of the sword. Throughout ihe Oh ! it was a solemn sight to see that young and how to give Tony afew licks any how, a pot of the Ointmen t, in ease any of wy family should case was one for sympathy rather than vengeance, or " standing in society," as io is termed. In the " but"—an idea pped into his head— luacre' wholeof your career as chief of the Executive, you beauteous, though fragile form, lean so confidingly po " s my ever require either. —Your most obedicut servan t (liteuad), and the government (now fallen into the hands of manufacturing districts, the great majority of the costs—you incorrigible scoundrel ? Tou want tb ALDnoitoP o n.—To Professo r Hollowat. "Eugene risonments, have shown no perception ofthe moral agencies by on the breast of that stalwart and careworn man, istracy are manufacturers, either actively en- Cavaignac,) hy its prolonged imp mag swindle me, do you, out of my costs, you rascal." These celebrated Pills are wonderfull y efficacious iu the interminable trials, and wholesale deportations of which the human mind may be governed. Not a pouring forth its loves and its errors, and pleading gaged in trade or retired, and living upon fortunes word of sympathy has escaped your lips : not a cry. s i ly " And," added Captain Slick, chuckling at his own following complaints :— thousands of honest but misled operatives—the o mov ng for pardon—a pardon nobly and gene- thus acquired ; if in neither of these positions, they ingenuit Ague Female lrregula- Scrofula , or as coming from the heart, for the sufferings of the rously accorded—and the pure spirit y, " I enter judgment against you for heroes of February and rebels of June—further and of Julia seemed are interlinked by marriage or relationsh ip with the costs—ten stripes," and forthwith satisfied the Asthma ri ties King '.s Bv ii permanently alienated the affections of the masses. working rhv-ses: and do you wonder that they turn only waiting for the discharge of this, its last earthly millocracy, and thus by their very position and in- Bilious Com- Fevers of all Stone .-niiS C-ravel from yon ? " duty, to take fli judgment. plaints kinds Seconda ry Symp- Separating irom the insurrection the plundering ob- ght from mortality and cave, for em- clination are necessarily unfit to decide in a case The Paris correspondent of the Medical The disposition, in town and country, of the bracing her husband, she fell back on Times ob- Pilotches on the Gout toms jects of a few vagabonds from the prisons who took the sofa ; ho where the interests of the working classes clash serves :— Tic-ltol' - -rc-i.*- French operatives, to try as P-esident a new man, imagines her dead, and summonses " In England an honorary distinction con- Skin Head- ache t part in it, the cause of the insurgents of June was her attendants, with those of the factory kings. Very lately a ferred on a medical man is rarer than a black Bowel Complain ts Indigestion Tumu un-. understood to he the common cause of all working was universal ; and the peasantry were sufficiently but a sweet smile again illumining her countenance, mill-owner in a certain town in Cheshire, a leading Colics Inflammatio n Ulcers y of fteir own accord to vote for a Napoleon, shows that her spirit still swan. Strange it is, that the least military nation men. ' Enable us to live hy our labour, or if you read lingers with bim, but con- man amongst a religious sect, also a great Liberal, of Europe should reserve all Constipation of Jaundice Venereal A See- remi>'iscences of the story of tbe Empire, its honours for sol- tions cannot do so, give place to others who will at least from their sciousness is last leaving her,—she softl y murmurs, and a member of the town council, was summoned diers." the Bowels Liver Complaints and from the old rancour of 1815, when the Bour- " Husband—Arthur—pardon, Sir Jasper—father, before the magistrates by tho Factory Inspector of Consumption Lumbago IVorm ** of all show a willingnessto aid us.' Hence ihe popularity An American vender ofa universal medicine de- Debili ty Files kind ". of the question of the amnesty. By many the insur- bons were forced upon the country. The middle mother, dear, I shall again see you—dear Arthur, I the district, for neglecting to have his^ machitnery , h the intrigues of M. clares that, if lis prescription be followed literally, Dropsy llhcumatism "ft' eak ness, from gentsof June are regarded as patriots, by others as classes became divide ' throug come !" " boxed off," whereby the arm of a young woman D ltetcuti on of whatever eause loyalist committee of the Rue de a cure is certain. " This medicine is to be taken ysentery hot-headed enthusiasts- buf it is only is the • salons' Thiers, and the ' " And her spirit passed with it* happy dream, was dreadfully torn and lacerated, the case being is-ternally, ix.ternally, and E-ternally. Er ysipelas Urine Ac, A-c. by whom Louis Napoleon was only sup- Fits Sore Throats that they a«-e regarded as criminals. Poitiers, Like a bird m the track ofa bright sunbeam." clear was easily proved, and the magistrates were Mooltan Prize Money. —Tbe total amount of It is not surprising that ont of the financial crisis ported asa stepning-stonetowards another restora- , Sadly did Sir Jasper grieve over the fate of the compelled to convict, but, one of the Solons on the Sold at tlio establi shment of Professor Hollow ay , 2H , , and this booty is estimated at eighteen lacs of rupees, London , and , by most all respec- we have described and the disasters that followed in tion ; and hence to the astonishment of Europe being now become doubly endeared to him,—time bench exclaimed, " ho was very sorry for it, for he or £180, Strand (near Temp le Bar), a reckless adventurer 000 sterling. Lord Gough, as Commander- table drugg ists and dealers in medicines , tiirnv.g jioul tha its.tr ain, there shonld have arisen a multitude of the humiliation of France, had blunted his sensibilities, and a long residence considered the law a most unjustifiable interference in-Chief on the field , will receive £20 himself elected (10th of December, 1848), in our slave colonies had ,000. civilised world , at the following prices :—ls. Hd., 'is. Od., theories on the functions of money ; hut it has not found seared the fresh and green with capital and labour.'' The Libeval culprit Waste not Want not. 2-Js., and S3s. each box. There la a consider- French Republic, by an immense , —A j-entleman who had Is. (id., lis., "been observed by English writers, tbat what is called President of the( emotions of his heart, but the seeds of love and echoed the magistrates' comments. Why not? put aside two bottles of capitalize, to recreate some able savin g by taking the arger sizes. Socialism, as it exists in France, is infinitely more a majority over his competitors.* generosity, though deeply buried, were still alive, What right'have working men, or women, to con- friends changed and Louis Napoleon , discovered, just before dinner, that his ser- connected with All thi- is now so , and needed only a kindly cultivation and a deep sider tbat their lives or limbs should be protected , vant GENE RATI VE Currency question than one at all himself not the man , a country bumpkin , had emptied them both! ON PHYSICAL DISQUAL IFICATIONS , Communism. The Communists have never been has made such haste to prove stirring of the mould in which the'r fibres were where the interests of capital are concerned ? 'Tis INCAPACITY AND IMPEDIMENTS TO MA1UUAGE. that, he is at " Scoundrel, (said his master), " what do you mean , numerous in France; not so numerous, indeed, asin the peo. le had expected, in the towns, entrenched to cause them to flourish with renewed monstrous impudence, they have no right to have Auatomi. detested than he was before vi by this ?" " Why, sir, I saw plain enough by the Twenty-fifth edition , illustrated with Twenty-Six this country. In fact, we are quite within the mark, the present time more gour. Alas ! that the cause of their revival should either legs or arms, or even life, only as their mas- clouds that it were going to thunder so I drank up cal Engravings on Steel, enlarge d to 13S pages , price agricultural districts where opinion be of a nature to , when we say, {*h=.fc since (he fir-fc preaching of Hc-hart idolised. In the , again blight them ere they could ters please ! This is their true position, and the the yak at once, least it should turn sour, for 2s. Cd ; by post, direct from the Establ ishmen t, lis. Gd,, ** ic Owen on the subject of parallelogrflm., there have makes slower progress) his name has lost its mag expand into maturity. sooner they understand it the better. there's nothing I do abominate like waste." in postage stomps. influence ; and in the army, which had expected Had Julia lived she would no longer have been a There is but one means left to prevent the manu- heen esta' lished in this country, at difierent times at " A Sign .—Modest sign in the town of Mussel-iurg : THE SILENT FRIEND; co-operative societies having in view a nothing else than to be l-.d to victory against the splendid toy, jewelled and bedizened to gratify the facturers evading any law that may he enacted for A a medica l work on the exhaustion and physical decay least twenty the discovery fiat they " Repository of Birmingham and Sheffield goods. communitv of interests, for any one attempt of the troops of Austria and Russia, vanity of an imperious lord, hut a household charm the regulation of the hours of labour, and that is, a Better goods sold here than any manufactured in of the system , -iroduced by excessive indulgence , the conse- descendant great of mercu ry, with obser- Kind that has heen made on the continent. It has have chosen a degenerate of their to warm the heart and recreate the expiring huma- restriction on the moving power. Let tho word Birmingham or Sheffield , and made on a differen t quences of infection , or the abuse and one who would make of himself and nities of an adoring husband ; but she sleeps the clearly defined , from six o'clock in thc vations on the marrricd state , and tli e distmali/ications suited the object of the French Kovalists—that of chief, " day" be principle," twenty-six coloured engra- France another link ofthe Holy Alliance, has filled sleep of death, and he is left alone and desolate, a morning, until six in the evening, with two hours off which preven t it; illustrated by crushing iheir opponents hy the opprobrium attach -d , The Danes exacted an ounce of gold annually in vings, and by the detail of cases. By II. and L. PJ3KIIY to the ideas of a community of gf-ods and the aboli- all ranks of the service with" discouragement prey to repinings and regrets, with none to cherish for meals ; that would be an efficient " Ten Hour Eire (Ireland ), and cut offthe noses of all who did and Co., 19, Uerners-strect , Oxford-street , London. freezing point their late enthu- his awakened sensibilities y tion of family ties, to stigmatise as ' a Socialist,' in and cooled down to , or guide him through Bill,'? and the meaning thereof would bo perfectl not pay the tax. Published by the authors , and sold by Strange , 21, Pater- e's stormy seas to the haven of domestic bliss. this it is argued that GS, and Sanger, 150, Oxiurd-slrcet; the sense ofthe term ' Communist/ every reformer siasm. lif free from all doubt. Against The Jersey Times mentions that the Mormonitcs noster-iw ; Ilannay, * Charles Lou's Napoleon, horn in 1808. is the Oh! how poor and unsatisfactory are all earthly " it is unjust to inter fere with adult male labour , Starie, 2*J, Tichbonie-street, Haymarkct ; and Gordon, H**, belonging to the opposition , who at any time has have opened a place of worshi p in St. Holier. R. Raimes and Co., Louis Napoleon, King of Holland and splendours when we have none left to share them that thc law allows men to make their own con- Leadenhall-street , London ; J. and proposed or supported plans of social amelioration , second son of TnE Paris corres pondent of the Literary Gazette Leithwalk , Edinburgh ; D. Campbell , Argyll- street , Glas- these misre - brother of the Emperor, by Hortense, the daughter with us ; no wife in whom, as in a mirror, we can tracts, upon ter ms of mutual benefi t , and that there and T. Newton , Cluux-h- however, opp-site in their nature ; but remarks of queer title-*: */ There are now publish- gow ; J. Priestly, Lord-stree t, ' fact that many of the of Josephine The eldest son died in Switzerland, see their brilliancy reflected ; no child in whom we can he no rightful authority to compel them to ing in French newspapers romances called ' The Street , ; R. Ingra m, Market-place , ACanchester. presentations do not alfcr th e «¦ lead;ng ** Socialists' are An i-Con -munists . M. and the present man was first heard of in 1836, when can retrace our own features, divested ef all that is labour except upon their own terms." This is true Red Spirits,' ' The Bloody Marchioness,' Tho Part the First -* rasburg, to place himself Is dedica ted to the consideration of the anatomy and physi- Proudhon, for instance , misses no opportunity o* he made an atte-np on S' debasing and impure. Poverty hath its trials—oh ! in theory, but false in - fact. The working man has Bloody Shoes ;" and there have lately boen pub- throne of Louis Philippe. This conspi- how many, and how severe !—but cheered by the he can call his own, but his mental and « ology of the organs which are directly or indirectly er.£aged attacking the Phalanstere associations of M. Consi- upon the nothing" that lished, Digging into the Earth with one's Kails,' , It is illustra ted by sis co- some encouragement fvm the ties of affectio n, and protected from positive want The field upon which those are to in the process * of repr oduction deranl. His own grand idea of the means of social rav.y.which met with , physical powers. ' How are you f' ' The Midnight Blud geon,' and loured engravings. regenerationis. that of national hanks, and a re- disaffection of the army, and their revervnee for it is more endurable than solitary grandeur. be exercised, whether in agriculture or manufac- so on." Our own penny literature can supply Par t the Second. , the memory of the Emperor, would probably have Gentle reader, we have now concluded the first tures, is in possession of tho capitalist, and he dic- Trea ts of the infirmities and decay of the system, produced orga *"isation of public credit; one of the propo sitions para¦ llels. y most of the popular demo- heen attended with some partial succss, but from the portion of our tale ; like our own history it is full of tates what shall be the rate of wages, and how many Lola Monies Whitewashed.—A young cockney by over indulgence of the passions , and liy the jinwtice oi hy the way, advocatedb g-rati tication It shows clearly tiie manner in cratic journals. M. Proudhon, by assamin? for the circumstance that Louis Nap-deon does not bear errors and imperfections ; let him that is perfect shall be the hours of labour ; 'tis true the workman moro accustomed to the pencil tiian the pen, sends solitaiy . resemblanc-** to the portraits of the late judge and condemn them. We have not plunged manufacturer's terms, but the alter- which the baneful consequences of this indul gence operate -motto ofhis paper, ' Le Pr--priete e'est le Vol,' (a the slightest can refuse the us the following impromptu on the marriage of tho on the economy in the impa irment and destruction of the motto now abandoned) very fairly exposing himself 'o Emperor, and that he is totally unlike in person into the world of romance for our characters, they native is starvation, and hungry necessity compels Countess of Landsfelt :— social and vital powers. The existence of nervous and family. He had been beautiful theory, and submi t to tbe imputati -n of being an enemy to the institu tion anv member of the Buonaparte are the ideal representatives of known realities,— him to forego thc " Miss Lola, by her naughty tricks, sexual debility and incapac ity, with their accompanying about -100men , principally of fact of abject submission train of symptoms and disorder s, are traced b the chain of of property in every shape but this was not and is joined at Strasburg by through them we have embodied truths of huma- the stem and unrelenting Her ill-fame long had sealed, y 5 when be was denounced by Col. nity which ever lie fruitful in tho human breast, employer. Indeed capitalists themselves connec ting results to then- cause. This selection concludes not his meaning. What he means is. that interest oi the 4th Regiment, to tbe But, by this matrimonial fix, tlwse effects : impostor. Another officer at the needing only the action of circumstances to start know this perfectly well ,* they speak of the work- witli an explicit detail ofthe means by which money and ren ts, or any cont rivance by wh ch a man Taillandier as an Grows virtuous, and gets lleaVd." may bw remedied , and full and ample direeti 'ins for tlieir the accumulat ions of his same time exclaimed —" I know him ; he is the them into operation . ing people in the same way as thoy 'do of any other Leicestershire Herald: coloured engravings , which is enabled to live, not upon !*" use! It is illustrated by three own labour , but npon the labour of others , are lega- nephew of Captain Vaudrey, and no Napoleon Tho Chartist world is blessed with many an species of property which tliey call their own ; " My Re-Lyino.—At dinner wo put this question to tlie fully display the effects of physical decay. lised forms of robher v. t-> which the State shou ld put The so'dicrs hesitated—looked at the slight figure of Arthur Morton ; and Julia, thou art no creation of men," "My hands, " My work-people," "My guests :—Which is the stronger, lie or truth *? After Part the Third descrip tion of the diseases caused by an end hy wiser institution s. At the head of his the young pretender who had c *rae among them— the fancy, thine image hath often met our gaze; and dog," "My horse," "My mill ," are all in the same a moment's consideration, Mr. Joseph Proctor Contains an aceurate nothing of the hero they vene- though thou art for ever departed, yet many a Julia and in no country in tho world, not even infection , and by the abuse of mercury ; primary and se- journal LePeup le are the followin g lines :— traced in his features category, answered , " Truth ! for you may re-ly on it!"— condary symptoms , eru ptions of the skin, sore throat , in- rated—and finally permitted his arrest. Had the North is still in existence, doing penance to an ill- the slave holding states of America , are the work- New England Washingtonian. "What is the producer? flammation of the eyes*, diai-ru o of the houus , gonorrha ia, attempt been made by his cousin, Napoleon Buona- judging world for daring to exercise, without dis- ing classes more, " mere chattle proj-er ty," than in The Bankers in London.— The oldest banking gleet, stricture , &c., are shown to dej ionu on this eivuse, Nothing. parte, who is a livim* likeness of the Emperor, and sembling, the feelings which nature hath implanted this boasted " free , country." 'Tis therefore all houses in London are, Child's, at Temple Bar ; Their treatment is fully describe d in this section, Tho ef- "What ought he to he ? about whose relationship there could he no mistake, in their breasts. arrant cant and humbug, to say that men do not Iloare's in Fleet-street ; Straban's (formerly fects of neglect , either in. the recognition of disease or in Everything. it is not improbable that the whole of the garrison of Our talc hath hitherto been one of hardship and wanS the protection of the law, ay, and much more ' ' the treatment , are shown to be the prevale nce of the virus Snow s), in the Strand; and Gosling s in Fleet- in the system, whieh sooner oi*late*" will show itstslfin one Stra-burg, amounting to about 5,000 men, would sorrow, tinctured, perhaps, with our own bitter than a " Ten Hours Bill" can give them ; but that street. None date earlier than the restoration of * is the capitalist ? be afforded them until they arc of the forms alrea dy mentioned , and entail disease in its Wha have b°* en sained over. taste of noverty ; but we have still faith in the protection will never Charles II. The original were Goldsmiths—" most frightful shape, not only on the individual himself, but Everything . This incipient revolt having been crushed in the future, aiid should the shadow depart we may yet in possession of their political rights, for until they " Gold-smiths that keep running cashes"—and their also on the offspring. Advice for the treatment ofall these What ought he to he ? hud, the fovernment of Louis Philippe, treated its revel in the sunshine of enjoyment. are politically free they must remain socially shops were distinguished by signs. Child's was diseases and their contequences is tendered in this section , Nothing. author with great leniency ; but t he indulgence shown Wc have been accused of prostituting our talent slaves. which, if duly Mowed up, cannot fail in effecting a cure, known by " The Marygold ;" still to be seen where seventeen coloured engravings. Much good paper and tyre have heen wasted by to him was. as subsequent events proved, but ili-de- for the sake of filthy lucre, how false it is our own In the meantime, whilst tho manufacturers are cheques are cashed ; Hoare's by the Golden This part ia illustrated by t* " Fart the Fourth themembe-s of the Institute, in a demonstration of served. "Louis Napoleon was simply shippvd off to heart can best testi fy ; but we heed not the revilers conspiring, and the governmen aiding and abettin g Bottle ;" still remaining over the outer door : by a simple ap plicati on, to the operatives is be Abate Treats of the prevention of disease the indispensable utility of capital ; bnt, as directed America, and forgiven on condition that he should —truth will yet shine,, and humanity rid itself of them, my ad vice f irm. Snow's by tlie " Golden Anclior ;" to be seen inside ; hy which the danger of infection is obvia ted. Its action is against M. Proudhon. their labours have heen on'y not return to E -rope, lie wrote to assure Louis the load that artifice and custom hath heaped upon not one jot of what you have already won , but and Gosling's, by thc *' Three Squirrels ;" still pro- simple , but sure. It acts with the wiis climnicall y, and thrown away. He does not denv the importance of Philippe of his " eternal gratitude ;'** and then again it—in this hope we will pursue • our career, caring rather demand a ten hours bill for aw. ! BF.sTnio- minent in the iron work of their windows towards destroys its power on the system. This iii!- >v rt -mt part ofthe accumulated products of iring for the overthrow ofthe Orleans naught for the censure or enemies whilst ble3t with TIO*** OF THE MOVING POWER ANH THE ENTIRE PROHI- of the work should be read by every young man entering capital, in the sense sat about consp the street. The founder of Child's house was John into life. labour, but he separates real capital from monied dynasty. the approbation of friends. BITION OF MARRIED WOMEN FROM WORKING IN FAC- Blackwoll, an alderman of the city of London , Part the Fifth Capital, and attacks the system whic'i makes a fe-** The pretext for his second attempt in 1840, when (To be continued.) TORIES. " To this complexion wo must como at ruined by thc shutting up of the Exchequer, in the Is devoted to the consideratio n of the Duties and Obliga- wealthy fund-holders the arbiters of nations. He he landed from a steamer at Boulogne, was the en- last." reign of Charles II. Stone and Martin 's, in Lom- tions of tlie Married State , and of the causes w hich lead to p'oposes, as many other paper theorists have done thusiasm that had been excited by the arrival in A Proletarian Sciverf.r for TnE Charter. bard-street, is said to have been founded by Sir the happ iness or misery of those who have enured , into tha Emperor—removed Thomas Gresham ; and the grasshopper si bonds of matrimony. Disquietudes and iars between mar - before him. to set aside the monied interest, by de- France of the rem-*ins of the ROYAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION. gn of the in the m.-yoHty of in- ing permission of England, at Gresham family was preserved in the banking hoiu-c ried couples arc traced to depend, claringinterest of money illegal, and fay authoris from St. Helena by the Representation of Sunderland.—Mr. Hudson stances , on causes resulti ng from physical imjiej fections the state to issue to the producer, upon adequate the solicitation of the French government. The This popular place of resort has just put forth a till late in the last century. Of the West-end and errors, and the means for tlteiv removal shown to bt , on the part of Louis has " authoritatively " intimated to certain conser- hanking * certa in dis. security, credit notes, rendered a legal tender. In generous homage to talent new feature of attraction. It consists ofa series vative parties who have volunteered the selection houses, Drummond'3, at Charing-cross, is within reach and effectual. The operation ot step, was in itself a the oldest ; and d's, Coutts in qualifications is fully examined, and infelici tous and unpro- this he canies with him the sympathy of the French Philippe, which led to this of dissolving views of. the scenery in and around of a fitting candidate for the representation , in thc , next to Drummon means of ob- an honourable enemy ; and first time on last the Strand. The founder of Drummond's obtained duc tive unions shown to be thc necessary eonsequence. peasant propriet-irs, who have now no fact to have disarmed Rome, and was exhibited for the event of a vacancy this state form an Important Napoleon , in seeking to turn arising, that his present intention The causes and remedies for taining a small loan npon the security of their land* the con-tact of Louis Monday. The pictures display a high order of is to retain his seat in parliament his great position by advancing money to tho Pre- consideration in this section of the work. the week, the old recollections it had life-like, and charac- , at all events till tender, and by the king's consequent withdrawal of and crops, but by bonowuv**the: money hy to a selfish purpose artistic talent, are vivid and tlie commencement of next session. So says tbe THE CORDIAL BAUl OF BYRUCUM. twenty-five per cent., awakened is only one among many proofs ofa beauty and richness of colour- his account. The kind's withdrawal led to a rusli of at the rate of fifteen and , terised by an Italian Weekly Chronicle, and private information leads us powers ol npon a system analogous to that of English pawn- character devoid of any sound pri- ciples of recti- ing which distinguishes that delightful country. The ' the Scottish nobility and gentry with their accounts, Is expressly employed to renovate the impaired ¦ ¦ to believe that this is the course which Mr. * Hudson life, when exhausted by the influence exer ted by solitary hroki g. tude, and indifferent to the laws ot moral obli- series commences with Toulon harbour, followed by desires to take. The and to the ultimate advancement of the bank to its indul gence on the system. Its action is purely balsamic ; system of become notorious question now is, whether the present Coutts's house was founded by We have no intention of defending the gation. Civitta Vecchia, which has electors will allow a man who is stiematised on footing. its power in re-invigorating the frame in all cases of ner- understand upon Boulogne was a ridiculou*** failure, debarkation Middloton , and originally stood in St. Mar- obstinate gleets, impoieney, bar . M, Proudhon, which, as far as we can The descent from the fact of its being the place of every hand with the foulest ithets who dares not George vous and sexmd debility, the currency not unattended with bloodshed. Many of his "friendly visit" ep , tin's-lano, near St. Martin's Church. Coutts re- renncss, and debilities arising from vener eal excesses, has- it, is erode and impracticable, nor but of the French army, on their late face.parliament or thc public, who is charged in journ alist. They have followers fell, and one of them by his own hand. " Next come the Monte moved it to its present site. The great Lord Cla- been demonstrated by its unvarying success in thot is-indj crotchets ofany other French to the " eternal city. official documents with acts of fraud and knavery, of cases. To tiiose persons who are prevcu tcd entering thu been attacked *by the Economists with unsparing Firing a pistol noon a captain who sought his arrest, Mario,, the Tiber, Ponte Mole,. the Piazza rendon, in the reign of Charles II., kept an account and in his nervousness, shot and who, conscious of guilt or indifferen t to charac- s; Dryden lodged his £50, for the disco- married state by the consequences of earl y errors , it is in- sarcasms, and often successfully, hut the argument he missed the officer , , , del Popolo, the Bridge and Oastlc of St. ter, makes no attempt at Iloare' valuab le. Price lis. per bottle , or four quantities iu one soldier, in the act of exclaiming, iving to clear himself of those very of the bullies who waylaid and beat him, at hassometimes heen against them. Here 18 the Sub- instead, a private Angelo, (three different views), the last g charges, to continue to represent them without ut- for 33s, (eonden-*ed from various sources) ot tne reply " "Vive Napoleon the Third."f the grand display of rockets and other fire- Child's," at Temple Bar. Gay banked , at* Drum- TUE CONCENTRATED DETERSIVE ESSENCE stance spared by the French, tering a feud and indignant protest against so gross y Mary Wortley Montague at Child' t* , of Pierre Leroux :— . A second time his life was works discharged on the night of the jrand mond's ; Lad s; puri fying the system from ve- » the Economists m condemned only to a rigorous ,' a betrayal of duty. We know the idea of many of 's; Dr. Johnson and Sir Walter An anti-syphilitic remedy for " Tou accuse us of wishing to re-estabhshaw-^iflfo; government, and he was festival : Monte Aventine, Ancona and Tarra them is to permit the Gray at Hoare nereal contamination , and is recommended for any of the after five years of odour of his name to stink in 's; and Bishop Percy at Gosling' on but you who make the accusation have alrecdy re- imprisonment at Ham, whence, celebrated as the prison of Tasso, and the tomb of the nostrils of his Scott at Coutts s. varied forms of secondary symptoms, such as eru ptions admirers, but it appears to us Thc Duke of Wellington banks at Coutts's; thc blotches on the head and face, enlargement of the established them, and that not upon a sound system, confinement, he effected his escape. Ariosto. This one concluded the aeries. The views that a due regard the skin, rashness to the credit of the borough and Duke of Sutherland at Drummond' ; throat , tonsils , and uvula ; threatened destruction of the bnt a bad one. Copying the English precedent ol Notwithstanding the bair-brained , ap- are acccompanied by a descvipture lecture by Mr. s the Duke of detersive , awl its conspira- its important interests requires some steps to be Devonshire at Snow's, or Stratum's. nose, palate , ic. Its action is purely when your metallic system broke down in 1818 . proaching to insanity, manifested in these James Russell, embracing the most interesting taken -for the benefic ial influence on the system is unde niable. Price lis. 1797, wanting writers, both in events of purpose of showing to the country you authorised the Bank of France to suspend specie cies, there have not been points connected with the late political that Mr. Hudson' connive at Marriage and Jewesses.—The Mosaic law for- and 33s. per bottle. . circula- who have represented Louis exhibi- s constituents do not of Syriacu m or Concentrated Detersive Es- pavments. and you gave its notes a forced tbis country and abroad, which Rome has become the theatre. This his conduct. bids only marriages between Jews and the women The £5 case of —Newcastle Guardian, can only ho had at 10, Berners-street , Oxford-street, tion. The^e notes are assignats, having in them- Napoleon as an educated and well-informed man ; tion will no doubt meet with the patronage Revising of Canaan , not with any other outlandish women. sence you , any one who will Barristers.—The following are the London , whereby the re is a saving of £1 12s., and the pa- selves n-> intrinsic value whatever, and when the truth being, that with some persons which it is so highly deserving, and tne public barristers On the contrary, the latter were expressly per- advice without a fee. which ad- tor tbe world, and has the title of to view appointed by Mr. Justice Cresswell to tient is entit led to receive borrow this money of your own creation, has made a noise in the be enabled, by means of the painter's pencil, revise tho list mitted ; and when Miriam and Aaron " spake against app licable only to those who remit £" *, for a string together a few common- full of of voters for the counties and vantage is use of tbe government, the interest you pay font a Prince, if he can those scenes which have lately been so boroughs on tho 1849 :—South Moses because of the Ethiopian woman whom he not wholly devoid of sense, passes for on Western Circuit! tor ' letter , £1.—Patients ave re-juesteJi 13 a direct robbery ofthe puhliefor the benefit of the place sentences, stirring interest. In the evening, a lecture Hants and Isle North had married, for ho had married an Ethiopian Consul tation fee, if by phenomenon. There is, however, no of Wight. J. Aldridge, Esq. ; minute as possible iu the description of tlieir cases. Bank " - . ... an intellectual " Ancient Minstrelsy" was delivered by Mr. G. Hants, G. N. las, woman, ..... the anger of the Lord was kindled to bo as , exceptingfc tnat foundation for the belief that he is in the slightest Soane; the wanderings and their Oxcnham. Esq. ; Dorset, — Doug Attenda nce daily at ID, Be**ners-stre i>t , Oxford-street , - There can he no answer to this of the troubadours Esq., and — Iloldsworth Devon , J. against them." (Numbers xii., 1, 9, and various to two, and from live palliative of an acknowledged evil degree a person of originative or reflective talents. adventures and songs forming the subject-matter , Esq. ; South Loudon , from eleven to eight ; on the defects of one , L. Lucena, Esq., , , Erskine Esq. ; North sthcr passages.) True, after the exile, it was Sunda ys from eleven to one. of any untried remedy His published writings, and his reported conversa. of the lecture. The music bo and the and II T , Ao not prove the superiority , th to theso Devon, W. "Hodges, 'Esq. ; East Cornwall, C. D. strictly prohibited to marry any foreign woman ; but Sold by Sutton and Co., Bow Church Yawl ; W. Etlw,ivd9, preventing those tremendous vicissi- dissolving views, has been arranged with great taste Jewesses s Church Yard Barclay and Sons Farringiloa - The means of * Bevan, Esq. ; West Cornwall, J. S. Stock , Esq. ; this law can hardly be considered binding. 67 , St. Paul' ; , value to which the producing and commer- * * Xouis Napoleon .. .. 5,53i ,o20 votes. by tlie musical director of the institution, Doctor have always been been free in their choice.—Jewish street , Cor nhill ; Butler and Co., 4, Cheapside ; "ft. .lofen- tades of Eugene Cavaignac .. .. 1,448,302 „ East Somerset, J. S. Graves, Esq., and F. W. *W. King.-- are now periodically subject, and the con- * ¦ Wallis. Chronicle.' son, 03, Corn hill ; L. Hill, New Cross ; 13. Jones , cialclasses Ledru Rollin ...... 370,119 „ Slade, Esq. ; West Somerset, C. Saun ders, Esq. ; J. Tanner "8, Smith Windso r ; J. B. of the action, of the precious att empts , as related by iouis toa ; W. , Egham ; , nexion with them _ f The particu lars of these South Wilts, Ci>R, Dayman, Esq.; Korth Wilts, The late John Fielden. — A subscription has S' , Bromley ; T. - London-street, Gree nwich : momentous perhaps than and of course favoura bly coloured , will tillock Riche s, metals, are questions more Napoleon himself, "I say , Jem, what mechanical work did you first G. Poulden, Esq. ., been set friends of the Ten Hours 'fhos.- Parkes , Woolwich ; Ede and Co., Dorking: ; mid Joh n the ablest thinkers of a work by Mr. Henry WickofF, entitled " .Na- ¦ ori foot by the tne yZllr bnt li-inn which be found in do ?" said one darkey to another. "Why, why, Mast have felt the lash tlieir backs for the Bill, to place a monument in Westminster Abbey to Turle v, High-stree t, Homfor d, of whom may bc had kft the world iu the dark. poleon Louis Buonapart e, First President of Prance," pub- upon flSJFrS h a?e cut teeth, ob course," replied the other, want of a bridle upon their tongues. the late Mr. Jolih Fielden. "SILBNT "fc'IUEHD. " HmreSgfennentetwn of ideas upon these lished by J. Chapman. Al-gust 18, 1849. 4 THE NORTHERN ST AR- —i - , _ ':" . | . . . . ; . '' ^— of unhealthy agents, which- T is constantly going foreshadowed ; we see that our co- -y the future on in a town, may be effectually removed and -n jLTlSH EMPIRE FREEHOLD LAND AND BUILDING SOCIETY, temporary, stiii wishing to T™«r^ j m s Od; B. Reform as the means, ing- classes, which must, * -n, Lviz., Parliamentary CAUbJii . originates, and what is its real nature, the me- So Scsv-sroEs . Snucrro . or RsotoimosFees. —The present Entrance Fee, including Certificate, Utiles, &c, is 4s. T. Brown, 3Irs. Applegard, Cd. end, Now docs sure the success of the GOOD per Share, and 2s. 6d. for any part ofa Share. Price of Rules, including Postage, Is. Jons Lenxox, Preston.—n e havo no room. and Financial Reform as the dical profession have not yet discovered—or, at OBJECTS. •35- Press of matter compels us to postpone the following yze the vague sentences ol all events not until next week our pupil thus anal , yet agreed upon, but they are 1st. —To enable members to build Dwelling Houses. oth.—To give to Depositing Members a higher rate of communications :—ltcport of tho Trus- of Commons ? In- the National Co-operative Benefit Society - the ' speeches in the House CHOLERA. unanimous as to the preventive and removable --> _To terest than is yielded by fOTordinary modes of investment, tees of , toadies PUBLIC HEALTH.—THE na. afford the means of purchadn-; both Freehold of Daniel Greaves, O'Connorville Char- them he grapples ~To eiwWe Parents to make Endowments for tlieii letter ; Mr. Bubb, w« • when he understands powers of tho conjoint agencies we have briefly and LeaseholdProperties or Land. ^rJ- HUrtands their terville ; George Kill, Westminster ; John "Dool'Cr, tno beld es OT fe «*»*¦*. points. In contending lor been enumerated anl we trust that these remark-} ariL-To »te *™ ^-S *^ on Properly by £$£££ ^ * Knaresborough; Manchester Victim Committee's Ad- with the strong CoHsiderablo and genera,! alarm has , alance-sheet ; George declared our greatest jncnibLis. 7th.—To purchase a piece of dress and B Barnett, Hull, Gates- arter, we have often visitation of Cholera to will have the twofold effect of inducing close Freehold Land of sufficient the Address and Money List for of Ch pio- excited by the renewed 4th.—T« enable "Mortgagors being members to redeem Talue to give a legal title to a County "Vote for Members oi head; theningarians consist in meeting the foolish for such attention to personal and domestic cleanliness Parliament the Locomotive Carnage aud Waggon-makers, South difficulty to this country. That valid grounds , "aeir Mortgages. Hallway. to what would result Eastern pliecies of enthusiasts as alarm exist thero can he no doubt, and we are and of producing such a general and vigorous Testimonial to tub Huxgabians.—The following appeared declined giving L—Byjo ining this section every person in town or country can become the from the measure ; we have means desirous of underrating the actual demand for effective Sanitary Keforms, that no Szcnas proprietor of a House and Land in the Sun on Wednesday and Thursday evenings, Aug. it would make by no in liis o.v*- neighbourhood, without being removed from his friends, connexions, or the present means Mmself and family 15th and ICtli :— an opinion beyond this-that crisis, or of deprecating every Ministry—no party of obstructives, however gainUisanTC-lihood. enacted danger of the . may liave of Four contributions, per Julian Harney :— small minority tributary to laws precaution that can be powerful—will he able to withstand it. Sechos IL—To raise a capital by shares to purchase Estates, erect Dwellings thereon, and divide the Land into The Locomotive Carriage and Waggon-makers the possible and necessary upwards in or near the towns ofthe , large and over- allotments from half-an-acre , various branches of the society. The property to be South-Eastern Railway, Bricklayers' Arms £ s. d. by the representatives-of a ted with the view of preventing the spread tma-ijidefreehold ofthe member after a term of years, fi-om Hie date of location, according *o his subscriptions. , Old Kent-road. . ensure cheap adop the Station .. ..12!) whelming majority, and thus disease. Stxnos UL—Saving or Deposit section, in wliich membersnot wishing to purchase are enabled to invest small sums, A few Democrats, Sheffield ..034 l of this dreaded cent per annum to good laws, made for the mutua GRAND METROPOLITAN DEMON- receivinginterest at thc rate ef five per , on every sum of 10s. and upwards so deposited. A few Nailmakers, Merthyr Tydvil.... ., 0 2 6 obedience There is, however, an Eastern apologue Three Democrats, Lynn .. , , ..016benefit of all, instead of expensive and com- licable to all such STRATION IN FAVOUR OF PAR- The above sums for the Hungarians which appears to us very app SAL. £503 wiU be advanced to the members of tlie first Section in November next, when all persons who have and were handed to the pulsory submission to bad laws, made to up- Cairo met the LIAMENTARY REFORM. mav l-rcome members for Shares, or parts of Shares, on or before the ith of .November next, and who pay six months' proprietor of the Sun by Jlr. Harney on the 14th inst, cases. A traveller leaving will be eli ible for an advance. Ebbatoil—Acknowledged last week, hold the privilege of a fraction. sutecii-osions ia advance, or oiherwise, g Kirkdale prisoners, Plague on its way to that city. " Where are Dalton, three friends, ls. should have been Is. 6d. Parties But let us analyse our PUPIL'S theme. The new movement for Parliamentary Re- in Yorkshire and Lancashire desirous that I should iec-i you going ?" asked the traveller. "To ALSO, hia exordium and it turn in their localities must write immediately, and ad- We shall commence with was the answer. " What to do ?" form has taken firm root. At the outset IHE UNITED PATRIOTS- AND PATRIARCHS' BENEFIT SOCIETIES. dress to the care of Mr. Hudson This is his first Cairo " law for their , Dawsou's-court, West- conclude with his peroration. "Some time afterwards the had to encounter the supercilious silence, or a Enrolled pursuant to Act of Parliament Thus securing to its members the protection of the gate, Newcastlc-on-Tyne. Samuel Krm*-, "To kill 3,000. " funds and propertv. Legalised to extend over the United Kingdom, with the privilege of appointing Medical Attendants, sentence— the Plague coming from contemptuous sneers of opponents, and to over- to healthy persons, up to Forty Years of A of joining these flourishing traveller encountered Agents, £ £ s. d. , , the invariable policy of our Whig rulers case reported to the Board of Guardians. Now and moderate ; and will, Ucrabcrs Funeral ...... 20 0 0 Allowance in Sickness, per week .. .. 0 9 0 give an account of my stewardship, and to sur- They s justice of your claims, secure the largest amount of popular support. 10 0 O _ Member's Funeral ...... ay, " we admit the every one knows that at this season of the year Ditto Wife's or Nominee's ditto .. •• 10 0 0 render my trust into your hands if you are appeal respectfully;" The ori inators of the agitation have judici- "Wife's Lying-in •• 2 ° ° , Member's AVife or Nominee's ditto .. .. 5 0 0 but you do not make your there is invariably an increase of cases of or- g Lossb y Fire, from .. .. £-5 0 0 to 20 0 0 , Wife's Lying iu 10 0 dissatisfied with me as your representative ; or the TIME the DAY—nay, the HOUR— ously enlarged then* original propositions, and 0 t 0 : Loss by Fire , dinary dysentery and of mortality from ordi- Superannuation, per week .. .. , from .. .. £3 0 0 to 10 0 0 and I shall also have much pleasure in attend- has not the concessions held out the hand of friendshi p and sympathy Second Diwsio***. j Superannuation, per week ...... 0 -i 0 just arrived for making nary causes, and there can be no doubt but ing the meeting at seven o'clock, to* join with are than Entrance, according to age, from 4s. Cd., to 9s. Gd. j Fifth Division'. you demand—and the justice of which wo that under such a stimulus many additions to those whom they knew to go farther "Monthly Contribution for Sickness and Management, Entrance, according to age, from 3s. to Ss. "Monthly Con- you in expressing sympathy for the brave Hun- prepared to were your cause in GOOD They said to the Chartists, 2*s. 1ay tlie very costs lie abandoned and all the real strength of the case is lost. If people arc in the case of Mr. Strange ; and for doing which he to all, and was satisfied himself; but when enlisted in a causo upon the persuasion that it takes a preventibh and removable disease, The Metropolis to the movement thus auspiciously THE COMMONWE ALTH. was so highly complimented ! the giant enemy stealthily increased in power £54,000,000 a-ycar "to govern this country ;" that the conditions upon which its manifestation and commenced and carried out. During the I have extracted only Queen President of the four items from the extra- and magnitude ; and when the tending of ma- •' can be served as cbeaply as the its virulence, or comparative innocuousness palmiest days of tho League vagant and ruinous bill bf costs the Prince Consort United States ;" that the Ilouse of Commons is composed , , and when all chinery by a man, a woman, or a child, pro- of " military officers , pensioners, and sons ofthe nobility," depends have been generall laid the n's Head Passage Vaternoster has obtained an " order " for me to pay, so that may , y down by attractions that wealthy confederacy could SoM by J. TTatson, Quee , duced as much as two thousand hands in and that " by developing the resources of th« country a row, London; A. Heywood, Oidha-n-street, Manchesterr be seen the great " liberality" evinced by his Koyal those who have written upon the subject. command in the shape of eloquence, rank, and Hi former da working man ought to l-cccit c 30s. or 40s. a-day for his work and Love and Co., 5, Selson-street, Glasgow. ghness. This bill of costs, in relation to the ys—then the first and most success- instead of os. or 0s.," they must, sooner or later, discover The absence of good sewerage and drainage— influence were collected together, we never And by all Booksellersin Town and Country. " briefs," only, furnished to and according to the counsel on behalf of ful speculators became MILLIONAIRES, themselves egregiously befooled, , of au abundant aud constant supply of fresh saw a more magnificent demonstration of pub- Prince All/crt, alone, (the " briefs" furnished to as if period when their enlightenment comes, will either desert by magic, and the displaced operative water—of themeansofmaintainingcleanliness, lic opinion, and the meeting was all the more RUTTUEES EFFECTUALLY CURED counsel on behalf of her Majesty is another afiair) or destroy the guides they have been induced to follow. contains the four following as suddenly became a pauper ; and the shop- How long does Mr. Cobden really think lie could keep com- and providing a copious supply ef fresh air to satisfactory because it was not brought toge- "WITHOUT A THUSSJ!J—Dr. GUTHRET Laving rattier extravagant items pany, on "the great question of labour," with Mr. Fear- ben eminently successful in the cure of Ituptures, now relating to the proceedings on the 1st of June :— keeper by degrees became wise, when he disco- the dwellings of the poor : these have all been ther by mere extrinsic agencies. It depended vered the differen gus O'Connor ? How long does cither of them think a offers bis remedy to the public In every case of Itupture, " Three fair copies thereof [ofthe £ s. d. ce between a good, because a sober-minded audience can be led by such assertions as repeatedly insisted upon, until the ear and the not for its numbers upon tho eloquence or Lowever desperate or long-standing, a CUKE is GUARAN- ' briefs'] and of pleadings well-paid customer, and a pauper-pensioner— were made on Monday ? TEED '.vithout the use of any Truss whatever. It is easy , «fcc , eye are wearied by their repetition. But we standing of tho speakers, so much as it did for counsel, sixty sheets each .30 0 0 an unwilling idler—whom he is now compelled and a,uple in use, perfectly painless, and especially appli- The income tax does press hardly, and very are a strange people. We can for years admit on the thorough, honest, and hearty appreci- cable ibr both sexes ofall ages. Sent free on receipt of Cs., " May 19. Paid fee to the Solicitor- to support. hardly, but not most hardly, upon the veritable the existence of an evil, aud having the remedy ation of its great and important objects. iy Post-office order or stamps, by Dr.HE* fliy GUTnREl', General, with brief on hearing, It has cost us a long life of toil to explain tlie C, Aaipton-strect, Gray's-inn-road, London. At home daily, and clerk . . . . . 27 10 0 middle classes, who have uot the power of iu our own hands neglect to apply it. In local From such an unequivocal and powerful de- Ten till One. distinction between MONEY-LORDS, " PaidfeetoMr.SorgoantTalfourd, who meeting it by increasing the price of their com- and municipal, as in general politics, talk is monstration of the public opinion of the Me- Tj r. <**. has received testimonials from all the most employ labour, and whose whole profits consist eminent of tiie faculty, as well as from hundreds of patients with brief, and clerk . . . 27 10 0 modities or by reducing wages ; but it presses substituted for action. Words are easily found, tropolis of the empire, there can be no doubt ¦who being used at the " Paid fee to Mr. James, with in their ability to reduce wages ; and tho shop- have been cured, mid his Discovery " most hardly upon those whose , wages are mea- but real, honest work costs some exertion. Iri but that the spirit of union, determination, liuspiials in Englaud and on the Continent, is a sufficient brief, and clerk . . . . 22 0 0" keeping class, who constitute a majority ofthe the Health of guarantee of its efficacv. sured by the dependence of an unwilling idle Towns Acts which have received and energy will radiate into the provinces, electoral body, aud who wholly depend upon aud Mating a sum loial for briefs to\ pin. « « competitive reserve—whose horror of the the sanction of the Legislature, there is inva- that during tho recess, and previous to the counsel for one day the fair remuneration of the labourer. We cold Bastile and separation from Avife and fa- riably some hitch or other CURED , only, of J , wliich renders them re-assembling of Parliament, the whole nation EUPTURES EFFECTUALLY have shown that machinery came upon us with comparativel -iVTTIIOUT A T11USS !—CACTIOX.—DB. WALTER mily and home, will compel thorn to submit to y useless. Their framers are will have spoken out its decision upon thc ques- a hop, step, and jump, and that no laws were DS r.qo-5, l, Ely-nlace, Itolborn-lifll, London, still The causes came on for hearing on thc 1st of June. any reduction tho employer thinks proper to afraid of grappling with the" privileged classes, tion of Parliamentary Reform. continues to supply the afflicted with his celebrated (I beg your readers' made to make it a national benefit until its especial attention to dates.) 1 make. who have an interest in maintaining existing The Ministerial journal already perceives CGRE for SIXGLE or DOUBLE RUPTURES, the efficacy obtained an order to defend the suits in forma owners became so politicall of Which established to need comment. 2iau- y powerful—as if The arguments advanced against this present abuses. Hence the tenderness is now too well l>eris, on the 22nd of May. The fees are with which the in the growing proportions of the new It is e-isv in application, causes no inconvenience what- stated , in by magic—that no government could continue ' this bill of costs, expen sive system were not confined to Bishops, monster evil of intramural burials has been movement the gigantic influence it is likel eva*. and will "be sent post free, on receipt of Gs. Gil, by to have been paid to counsel on to legislate lor its adjustment, until at length y Stamps. Dr. D. R. has a great num- the I'M of May ; just three days before I was pau- Lord Brougham, and the illegitimate children invariably treated. Deadly as the poisonous to exert, aud has, therefore, betaken Tosi-offiec Order, ©r ' it has led to an accumulation of S3 much itself her of old trusses left behind by persons cnresl, as trophies perised—thus clearly endeavouring to fix me with of Charles II., but wore legitimately urged exhalations may be which arise from cesspools, to the congenial task of sneering at the of his immense success, which lie wiU almost give away to Mr. Strange' s costs, as well as with my own ! wealth in the hands of so few—aud wealth tfllone morning, Who, agaiust the system. aud the imperfect drainage of large aggrega- motives, misrepresenting the objects, tiiose who like to wear them. Hours—ten let me ask, ever before heard of briefs being de- governs in this country—that it required the and ex- and fi-om four SU ejgbt evening. , ° Tho fact of the President of the American tions of houses, manufactories, mews, markets, citing, as far as it can, jealousy and disunion ~ Ir has Sf *• ^ep usual, at half-past*«««. seven-•<-• i. stmek, it *? What description of Government and indi- SmodifiedS o clock on Sunday evenin" next " nay, paralysed, the monopolists of to pressure does Lord viduals must co-operate propositions of the new ass ciation CniPi'iECAii- SS power wo John Russ^l require make him , and each should un- , . , Golden-lane.~At the memhers' Cojipumext. discover it in the comment ' squeeze derstand their m vei'y gener°usly proceeds to -meet*h^onJuesdavevenin ,£3 Equivocal —One of the toasts drank of our able ? and what phase proper sphere of action. It is t^La n - pro- g £ S SS Si at a recent celebration was*— "Woman ! pil shall the cause assume beyond 0f refora, io the Tictim Fund, and 6s. to the. " She re- of P^pnw to induce, « the power of individuals to control S?u V-T > aTJd t0 P°^ «* Executive luad. quires no eulogy—s/ie speaks for herself. " SQUAREsdt?a-£-? house the Tmrf' to adopt it ? the what it tlnnkS « , upon the glorious -flioetw From the drainage, sewage, flushing, sober-minded" people ought of article W which, w h trapping, and other to be > e av.e commented, ¥Qg?e measures content with ; and having done this, re- by which the continual accumulation iurna l to its dirty work of sowing dissension, .. August 18 1849 ' . . . THE northern s TAR , '¦ '•'•'•'•'"^^^' •'•'•'•'•-•-'•'•'•*-"- *^ *'^MM 1-»*'" M 1 m r» «» 1»« .- !. KTT ^¦• - ' _ - ' * . """ ' '7 ^* ' ^' * '' '''^ ''-^ M an iii r h m ¦ ¦¦ mi W^—**—-* " I' l rt l m -n n . by asking, "How long does air. Cobden RECEIPT S OF time as the Irish had "really think he could keep company on the completely vanquished by Hungary ; but powerless for infs'chicf, the said, " God grant they may bo successful." Some Russia, can never serve THE tho as such . Let the sceptre great question of Labour with Mr. Feargus HAT IONAL LA ND COMP ANY British troops, taken possession of the Hungarians have nothing to fear front her as said that the Hungarian constitution was too demo- depart from Austria, she has Isccn an unfaithful ser- cratic ; others thought it savoured too much of the vant, let her O Cosxon V TYc For the Week Esmso Thubsdat entire country, and were permitted to an enemy. If they re-establish the follies and power be given to another. Make presume the answer of August ' old feudal aristocratic principle; he was disposed Hungary our buhvark-i both these 16, 1849. hold possession without further molesta- crimes of Royalty, their own, n days of old the crescent gentlemen to this question would be, the act will be to believe that it was little understood in this was checked by Hungarian that " The great tion on the part of England ; but that It aviII bo for heroism, let tbo llussian question of Labour" is not SHARES. Kossuth and his glorious com- country ; but one thing was quite certain, that the bear be muzzled by it too. I need not dwell would not bc " immediate recognition." patriots tp in upon raised between them on this occasion. The £ s. &. £ <- d see that no such degradation shall Hungarians had risen as one man, and declared the mode in which this war Las been carried on : Xewlmrv .. 1 19 8 K. T. Ballani Suppose, on the other hand that the dim the favour of a constitution ; and whatever the sove- the cries of scourged sole point is, whether they can agree to co- .. loo , lustre of that triumph, which" I women, tortured children , and Sotting-l-am .. 0 7 10 j.Collinson .. 0 1*> n war was and that pub- reign people willed , he knew of no human arbiter harmless priests have pierced operate for the attainment of a given reform 0 0 still raging in L'eland, fervently pray may be tho issue of their mighty our can. A HnVnau " , J C « • ' 0 2 0 lic whatever who had a right to dispute it. (Cheers.) exists to show the 19th ccnturv what were ' in the composition of the Wfeiiefteldn .. -1V 3 li TV.' Cl' arridae ..' • o s a opinion forced the American Government struggle. the bar- electoral body and of There wero two features in this contest deserving barities of olden times. Our present dutv is the Peterboroush .. 1 19 8 B. JIoss .. 01510 0 to tea immediate recognition of Irish indepen- 2nd. to House of Commons. They have a«*Teed Hodge .. 040 ° — To postpone giving aid to the of especial notice : one of tiiese was the cruelty enable Kossuth to say : Hungarians, the English T- dence, ask ourselves what would be the course Hungarians that they can do this without, in the J. Greenwood .. 0 2 0 y until we have secured " Home with which Austria was carry ing on the Avar, and nation has pronounced your cause to be just?tho slightest iloivl , of degree, committing C. .. 0 10 3rn = the British Government ? Every mau of Reform" constitutes no of my political the other the intervention of Russia. Hc was sure men of Milton 's isle cheer vou on ; and then I know themselves as to the use to T.Hoa-je .. _ - 0 3 0 -±-±J : part that any man who -which either you must be persuaded that the Government creed. I should be postpone in- read tlie proclamation of tiie each arm will strike Avith double force, each board would apply the newly-gained most happy to savage Haynau could scarcely find it in soul not to will beat with quickened glow EXPENSE FUND. of this country could, and would, do no other tervention in fa\*ou month . The praise oftho addition of popular power. But the leading IValsoken .. 0 2 0 B. r of Hungary for a denounce the man and tho government Avho em- English people is no light matter, this then we Biclies .. 0 2 0 than declare war against the United States. to come, if I em- journal in this case has had recourse to an old thought that within that time ployed him, No ono who had any regard for the phatically give, and with equal energy we loathe 0 4 Now for the application t—If Lord Palmer- tW was any prospect Home law of nations, so flagrantly violated by Russia, and condemn Russian tyranny and Austrian trick, and confoimos hvo totally diatinct things, 0 of our obtamiiis: cruelty. stos and his colleagues obey the wishes ex- Ketorm ; but is there prospect ? Is could say that the time bad not arrived when The emperor of Russia is defied , he dreams as ho an the hope of exciting alarm and producing any such Eng MONIES KECEIVED FOR pressed by the people, for the immediate re- thore a prospect of year land should interfere. (Cheers.) Ho hoped will of his " mission"—if hc is to be the saviour division. THE=== obtaining Reform this , that tho news of tho recent victoives by the -Hunga- cognition of Hungary as an independent state, or next ? Mr. of the west it must bc by annihilating- as. (Cheers.) very different is tho spirit in which the PURCHAS E OF Cobden tolls Sir Joshua rians vjould be fully confirmed ; ami that thereby The remaining speakers were Mr. Langford MATHON . Russia and Austria will declare war against Walmsley and (who organ of the ex-ministerial party speaks of the J- B his friends that they have the fate and the triumph of Hungary would be de- was much applauded ), Mr. Mason, Mr. Councillor f£ Fagton !o 0° 0 " *¦"*« JLL? this country. Be not too sure that in those " many years' good " cided. Let England take her stand in time. He Baldwin, Mi*. Partridge, demonstration of Monday and the movement J. S., Sowerby .. 19 10 0 work before them. Mr. Councillor Barnett, £121 10 0 circumstances France would be on our side. When the Poles hoped that a strong protest would at once be made and Mr. Alderman Weston . Tho mceDJng itself. How farthePeelitesmay be influenced rose in insurrection in 1830- called The chances are more in favour of the French 31, those Avho by our government against the intervention of upon the worthy alderman to read fvom the Daily in the tone they have adopted, demanded that England should by the fact that Government joining Russia and Austria take up Russia, and in acknowledgment of the indepen- Aews the latest accounts from Hungary, De at they are " the outs TOTALS. the cause of that cruelly-Avronged Hungary. He believed that in a few days once complied, and the ," it is difficult to say, but Land Fund against England and Hungary. dence of intelligence therein con- this, 9 5 1 Remember people were told to " first secure Home Re- a memorial signed by members of all parties in the tained was received with much at least, must be confessed, that it is per- Expense ditto the assassination of applause. ... 0 4 0 the Roman Republic. form and .tho Poles were Ilouse of Commons would be presented to tlie go- The proceedings terminated with a fectly in accordance with the progressi-reCon- ybti™ mio 0 ^ allowed to perish vote of -~ ... Bear in mind that the infamous Buonaparte in their unaided struggle. vernment pressing upon it the necessity of acknow- thanks to the mayor, who sympathises warmlv with servatism, which is the essential hilosoph Bonus ditto 0 2 0 When Cracow was independence of Hungary. the Hungarians in their p y and his crew are capable of any perfidy—of any " annexed Ave wero seeking ledging immediately the struggle for independence . embodied in the career and policy of the foan ditto ... 0 10 the Charter, and Boyona the highest considerations there were ex- Sew Land Society 10 8 6 crime. The organsof the French Government so could do nothing Premier. for the victims ofthat Im- others, though of minor importance, which made eagerly aunounce every reported defeat of tho perial crime. Now, we arc le a matter of considerable GREAT MEETIN G AT DERBY. Wc cannot do better than transcribe one told by high au- the result ol this strugg or £141 10 7 Hungarians, and every fabulous victory ofthe thonty, that there are many interest to tlie people of this country. In a com- One ofthe largest and most enthusiastic two paragraphs of this significant and years of good work meetings instruc- Austro-Russians. Some eighty members of before us ere the newl mercial point of view it Avas impossible to over esti- over held in the town of Derby to&k place in the tive article. Such statements W. Dixon, C. Dorus, y-projected instalment " are an ample the " Mountain" having drawn up a resolution mia likel mate the advantages that would accrue to England Town-hall, on Monday evening. The li.ill and cor* compensation for T. Clark, Cor. Sec. ° -D> y to bo secured ; and until the j ioco curonle style in P. affirming the recognition of Hungarian inde- thati i Reform if the Hungarians were successful in their struggle ridors were crowded in every part, and hundreds •which the writer M'Grath, Fin. Sec. , or something more sweeping, is for liberty. Therefore did he call upon them in went away tries to exhibit hia own su- pendence, a committee appointed b the secured, Ave , unable to get within hearing. Tlie meet- 3f.B. —The digest ofthe proceedings of the Con- y are to do nothing for the Hunga- the name of humanity, to speak out in this great ing was convcued by the mayor in -perior wisdom, and the air of loft y condescen- ference shall appear next week. Ministerial majority have reported unani- , compliance *>vitll , rians, Romans, orany othorwrongedpooplo—at cause ; in tho name of those noble Hungarians .who a requisition signed by men of all parsies—clergy* sion with wliich he looks down npon some of FOR COSTS OF MACNAMARA'S ACTION. mously, against taking the resolution into con- least, so argues my friend Thomas Cooper. were struggling for their independence ; hi the men and dissenting ministers, Radicals and Tones. the sayings and doings at the great meeting name of the suffering but und ing cause of-liberty. of Keceived by *W. Rn*)-***.*—T. A. C, Go. ; Leicester, per "IV. sideration. Every allusion to the " Hun- I beg his pardon,. Ave may do something for y The object -was to unite with tho citizen* of Loudon, 3Ionday. ° Bradshair -Wimeswould Cd* The B.ev. Dr. ItAriiALL seconded the resolution. and other towns, in an expression of sympathy , 12s. ; 3Ir. Haddoit, . .; Norwich, garian Republic" is received with shouts of our brethren—we may talk for them. " 0 ! ' For our own part (says the Jfornin^ Messrs. R. and J. rainier, and W. and "W. Roberts. 6s. 3d. ; Ho strongly denounced tho interference of Russia with the Hungarians, and to conaidor tho ia at Cftronicle), wehave B. Sandiford derisive laughter by the "Right." These most lame and impotent conclusion. > •no duacnlt^r once sayinstliat we rrigard the nra-sent , Belliolt, Is, ; Messrs. King and Flanders; ' . in this quarrel between Austria, and Hungary. propriety of addressing a memorial to government. inovanentasTKhistoanotmcoi. iffldei'ableexten^agcniiine .Melbourne, Is. • facts show that the majority of the French I, too, say that " Home Reform is the properand Russia was (he said) the incarnation of despotism ; Tho Mayor presided, and tho speakers included Mr. one. Without f ora moment imagining that any large por- FOR WIVES AND FAMILIES OF VICTIMS. Assembly would much rather go to war instant work of the English Democrats ;" but I the knout, the axe, and Siberia, these were the in- Bass, M.P. for the borough, the Rev. C. P. Shep- tion of the classes -whose opinion constitutes "public opi- Keceived by W. Rides.—A few Friends, Swansea, per against, than in favour of, Hungary. The say, also, that to assist the struggling, suffering struments of her goA'ernment. herd, the Rev. Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Alderman Moss, mon" are prepared for the wholesaleand sweeping changes J. Phillips, 10s. ; Nottingham, per J. Sweet Democrats of othnr lands, is also ill Is. ; T. Kerr, fleets of France, Russia, and Austria com- " thc proper," and Mr. T. II. G said, that however enthusiastic Mr. Alderman Mozley, Mr. Councillor Madelev, and indicated in the programme of the new League, we quite Ashby-deJa-Zouch, 60. ; A. Smith, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Gd. ; should be the " instant work" of the people of this and full of sympathy wc mi ht bc, it often happened Mr. Councillor Fogg. Mr. Bass' "believe tliat a conviction "both ofthesafety and the desira- T. Stone, Xe-vburj-, Cd. bined would be no contemptible match for the g s speech excited ; Richmond and Tmckcnham Shoe- country. that between conflicting individuals and conflicting great enthusiasm, which was much increased by tho Dleness of further electoral reforms is entertained by a makers, per Smith andlound, 19s. 6d. ; Norwich, Messrs. naval force of England ; and such a tri le al- From the weak numerousand increasingclass ; and we are not at aU sure B, and J. Palmer, and W. aud W. Roberts, 6s. 3d. p " , washy, everlasting flood" of causes avc hardly knew how to dispose of our sym- speech of Mr. Madeley, who advocated diree!; armed 1*Qat, ifl5ini5ter3muL-h liance of hostile forces might, and not impro- pacific sympathy, which has deluged so many ofthe pathy, and where to bestow our enthusiasm, as in intervention in favour of Hungary. The longer refuse or neglect to take FOR W. CUFFAY. resolutions -measures for satisfying this very legitimate popular wish, bably would, be one of the fruits of England's meetings called to sympathise .with the Hungarians, the'best causes there was generally something bad, and the memorial to the Queen "were unanimously 5t will not eventuallyassume a shape at once embarrassing Received by J. GKAssur.—Glasgow, per Duncan Sher- rington, os. ; Mr. Munday,and Friend, Is. -llr.Po-diill recognition of Hungarian it affords mo real pleasure to turn to the plain, bold and in tho worst something good. But here, hap- adopted. .an d formidable. Por, say what wewill , thereis no denying , Is. immediate indepen- sentiments given utterance to, this week that even the Drury-lane , afc Derby pily, we were in no such dilemma. Austria Avaa so agitators are truer, practically CUFFAY AND OTHERS- dence. and Birmingham. At . the Derby meeting, Mr. wholly in the wrong, and Hungary so entirely iu the 7 si*ea1dng,tome spiiit ofthe age and to lhe genius of the Received by J. G&assby.— land Office, per Boon- In the name of common sense, then, let the Bass* M.P. for that boroug * CARLISLE. coasrirmion, than an impassive and immobile Administra- ham, 4s. Cd. h, almost went the right ; the Austrian government , so monstrously tion. The progressiveadaptation and re-adaptation of our " sympathisers" be consistent ; let them either length of tho Marylobono demonstration, and Mr. aggressive anj wanioid y oppressive, and the Hun- We have veeeived a lettor from Mi*. Kydd, -wliich l*Miealinsfi*arfJons io new circumstances, new feelings, vote for Hungarian independence, and war Cour-cillov- Mmm-ie* said • "He would ask any rea- garian people so calm and forbearing ; the Austrian we are sorry we cannot find room for. Mr. Kydd informs us that a crowded meeting of thc inhabi- and new wants; the correction of mischievous anomalies, TO THOSE WHO EARNESTLY or let them cease to demand the sonable man, Avhether, having to deal with the mode of warfare so hovvibl** savage, and tho Hun- and the removal, as opportunityserves , of gross aud palpa- DE- (if necessary), savage hordes of Russia, the moral tants of Carlisle, convened to sympathise with tho ble inequalities ; SIRE THE TRIUMPHANT force of this garian so gloriously merciful and wojjderfully mag- the gradual extension of politicalfran- ES- former, if they have no stomach for the latter. country Avould have any weight, but for the know- nanimous ; thc Austrian generals Avere so delight- Hungarians, waa held in the Atlicnajum , on JEsn* chise to classes of the people mentally qualified for their TABLISHMENT OF day last. Joseph Ferguson CXerciSB, and eagerly solicitous for their enjoyment—In a HUNGARIAN By their present course thoy are deceiving ledge that it is backed by a galiant fleet and"a fully stupid, and charmingly unsuccessful, and the , Esq., in the chair. word, the theory*and practice FREEDOM. either the Hungarians, or their own country- brave army. (Cheers.)" He ad^ed that English- Hungarian leaders so wonderfully successful and Several excellent resolutions were unanimously of progress—areconforma- adopted , and the- proceedings We to the spirit ofthe British people, to the precedents of men. If they really mean to eschew war un- men should demonstrate, " that we can, if avo wish, victorious, that Ave aro under no necessity of split- were altogether ofa our constitutional liistory, and to the temper ofthe times. most enthusiastic eharactoi-. Feiends, then they are deceiving unsheathe the sword in the cause of liberty, and aro ting our admiration and dividing our enthusiasm by So British Minister, therefore, however skilful and oon- der all circumstances, p d d f d h d and a little bit to sdendous in the discharge of ordinary or Should confirmation repare to e en t e oppresse , not only with our giving a huge slice to Hungary extraordinary ad- arrive of the glad the Hungarians, for to so mean, and at the purses, but with our arms. (Several rounds of Austria. It was all given to Hungary, and given TOWElt HAMLETS. ministrativeres-wnsi bilities, can be said to be fit for his tidings which have just reached this country, same time talk about Hungarian indepen- o2ice if he knows not when and how, by " measures from cheering.)" At the Rirniingnam meeting, that by all classes and parties here—Conservatives, On Wednesday evening a lai-'-e meeting of tlis of the glorious victory gained pacific twaddler Mr. Josem Stukge Whi Radicals. -time to time suited to the occasion," to realise the natural by the heroes, dence is deception and. folly. If, on the other , , having en- gs, residents was held at thc Butlers' Arms Inn , Beth- and healthy popular demand for the extension and im- led by Georgey, over the combined Russian haud, they really desire the immediate recog- tered his " protest against all fi ghting," and even Mr. Joseph Stuiigk next came forward, and said nal Green-road, f or the purpose of expressing provement'of jiopular institutions. If, at a period when conduct of sym- and Austrian army commanded by Paskie- nition of Hungary as an independent state, (according to the report) condemned the Hunga- that he concurred in denouncing tlie the pathy with tho Hungarians, and aiding them" in drcraustances have given an unusualstimulus to these pro- rians lor taking up arms, Mr. Mu.ntz, M.P de- Russians and Austrians towards thc Hungarians ; gressive and reforming tendencies of the national mind, wnsCH, there will be reason for entertaining at the same time that they pretend that such ., their present struggle for independence. Mr. Ilo- livered a speech which I earnestly commend to your he concurred, too, in thc prayer of tho memorial to binson was called to the chair, and when likewise events have smoothed the way to mode- the hope that the Hungarians may of tlie*o> recognition may take place without any dan- and resolutions and rate and rational change by impressing all prudent men attention—by far the best speech yet delivered in recognise tho ind ependence of Hungary, and in ft petition to tho Queen hi favour of Hungarian in- with tiie Conservative efficacy of timely* concessions to selves succeed in winning their independence ger of war, they are deceiving their own support ofthe Hungarians. Mr. Muxtz observed, that denouncing the oppressive conduct ofthe Austrians dependence were unanimously adopted. popularfetfing— $ at -men a period, a "Minister is to con- without the aid of England's arms, and iu countrymen. " If the world at largo desired to bo free, it must towards tho Jews. But as a Christian, he felt called tent himself, year after year, with mereverbal disclaimers, •• ghting ; he ¦Snaliry spite of the wordy nonsense of English moral Amongst other critics of my proceedings in not only acknowledge the indspendence of Hun- upon to enter his protest against all fi •j tihe " " whichhe obstinately practises—andif any " gary, but he read believed that passive resistance was the best .- GREAT MEETING IN WESTMINSTER league or Association, avowing -ultra principlesand extra- force" sympathisers. Nevertheless " y to go to Avar to secure it. . , be sure relation to the Hungarian question, I have -* * * . * Ho hoped that they neither could he concur in recognising all that the -rasant objects, is left to be the only visible representative that that victory will not A meeting of tho inhabitants of Westminster who- sud oi-gan ofthe nation's favourite policy of Progress—itis terminate the war. now to include my old friend TnoMAS Cooper, " might get the government to acknowledge the in- Hungarians did in the way of taking up arms. arc friends to the cause-of Hungary took place The semi-savage on but too probable that we shall one day do in haste, not hordes at the command of who, both on the platform and through the " dependence of Hungary, but he feared they would Mr. Muxtz, M.P., in moving thc second resolu- Thursday evening at the Hanover-square Rooms, only inany thingsthat ought to have been done at leisure. Nicholas are almost innumerable and al- press, has done me the honour to criticise my " do no such thing ; and supposing they Avould do tion , that he regarded this as one of the most which wero filled to overflowing. hut some things tliat ought not to be done at aU. It needs , , said There were zio particular sagacity to predict though they should be " mowed down in doings at the Marylebone meeting. As I know " so, of what use would it be unless thoy Avere pw>- important questions that had ever been brought several ladies present. In front of thc platform , if the only two powers in " pared to back it up ? "What was the use of moral under the notice of thc people of this country. It were hung four small banners the political arena, are, on the one hand, a tolerablynume- masses" by the heroic Hungarians and Poles, only by hearsay Mr. Cooper's remarks at the , bearinir the follow- rous and energetic bod " force if physical force was not close upon it? It was not because of the thousands of our fellow-men ing in large character** - -. "*Bem the Invincible ; y of agitators who "know their own still in renewed masses they John-street Institution on Sunday ' " Tabids, and, on the othe r, a mere "Party of Order" with- will be precipi- last, I will " Avas the fear of physical force that gained for thc who had beon slaughtered, although that Avas bad " Kossuth and Independence -." " Batthyany and out any policy but that of holdingoffice on the easifestpossi- tated against the champions of Freedom, not comment upon information which has '' people the Reform Bill. So, in the absence of this enough ; it Avas not because of the commercial con- Freedom ;" '• Dembinski and Victory ;"'while two ble terms—that itis not the latter that will eventual]* until either the Polish " physical force, he feared they were h that was important enough; others were suspended carrythe day. tragedy shall be re- reached me in a necessarily imperfect form. looking for sideration, althoug from the chandelier at either peated or the llussian empire itself shall I shall confine myself to the article iu No. 31 " something that they would not obtain—a recogni- but the great question was—has a nation that quar- side, bearing the names '* Paskiewitch" and " Jella- The writer proceeds to say : " tion of the independence of Hungary b tho chich" inverted. perish. The Austrian empire has perished. of the Plain Speaker. The article is headed y go- rels with its own peoplo a right to call to its aid We earnestly trust that the author of the "Reform Act " vernment of tbis country. * * * another nation to assist it the moment it-finds itself Mv. L\*SMXCt*DN, M. P., having been called to tho -wiU spend a considerableportion of tlie presentrecess , not Eveu the final subjugation of the Hungarians " Shall England go to "War to help Hun- " Thc fact was, we had not the pluck to interfere. in difficulties ? If that principle is to bo recognised as cli'iir, said it was impossible to read thc public 4n preparing pliilosophical parliamentary replies to "Mr. could not restore the power aud pride of gary ?" and is put in the form of a dialogue " Ours atos an emasculated government. There a just one, then tliere is an end to all the liberties of prints without having the mind raised and delighted Hume, .Mr. Cobden, and Mr. Feargus O'Connor, but in de- Austria. Prom the " was no such thing as heroism left amongst us. lo; because a bad government—and there by the narrative of the noble strugg -dan-' some rational and practical way of meeting an ex- day that thc Kaiser between a Youth and a Septuagenarian. The tlie peop le iu which the treaiely natural and perfectly legitimate popular demand. called in the Russians he ceased to be the " Youth" taking my side of the question, aud " Wc were all talk now. A nation of shopkeepers. are a .good many of thorn—may slay and rob its Hungarians wero now engaged. (Cheers.) He saw money-getters, and spiritless. ifc mentioned in ono of wearer of an independent the Septuagenarian doing duty for my critic. " * * people to any extent, it has nothing to do but call the newspapers that amongst And, aftei" atlvcitingto certain moderate and crown ; and is " * Tho truth was that there was no high in its nearest tyrannical neighbour, and the people 200 Hungarian prisoners taken by the Russians, immediately practicable changes, concludes henceforth, at best, but a satrap ofthe Tsar's. Here I must observe that the tone of the •'feeling loft in England. We might talk of the over whom it has tyrannised has no alternative bnt there were 130 grey-headed old men, and eight boys thus :— If the Muscovites conquer, their empire will article differs widely from those precious con- '• heroism of tho Hungarians ; ifc was a thing only to succumb ,* such a principlo would bo in fact to under twelve years of age.. (loud cheers.) There extend from the Baltic Sea to the Mediter- coctions of Fox and Miall, on which I com- " known in name to us ; everything was lost in the perpetuate thc despot ibm of bad governments in was one point on whicli they might possibly not bo The grand desideratum is, to make a beginning of some " sort—to break tbe ice of Finality—to give tbe country some ranean, and from Siberia to Switzerland. If mented hi my last letter. Not questioning " beggarly pounds, shillings, and pence feeling. A every corner of tho globe. (Cheers.) If the world unanimous. According to his conviction, it was im- •'declaration of sympathy in this practicalproof-tfwt Progress is possible without knocking beaten, not onl sincerity, Mr. CoorER imputes to me a matter might be at large desired to bo free, it must not only acknow- possible to carry their sympathy for the Hungarians the constitution aU to pieces, and tliat Conservatism does y will the Austrian empire be my " all A'ery well ; but> in his opinion, the proper ledge the independence of Hungary, but be ready to too far ; but he observed that, iii a meeting not mean standing stiU witli folded bands while unreformed dismembered, and the actual rule ofthat em- " want of reflection," and tho advocacy ofa " thing to do would be to call upon our gOA'ernmcnt go to Avid'to secure it. (Cheers.) He was not dis- of this description, some who attended it abuses, unredressed grievances, and unappcased discon- pire to declare -war against tents are growing at compound interest be lost to the Tsar : that tyrant's own mistaken policy. *' Russia, if she did not leave posed to throAv cold vrater on the principles Mr. had been carried away by enthusiasm, hc might empire—^ 'torn by internal insurrection, and Of course in the Plain Speaker, the " Sep- " Austria and Hungary to settle the quarrel Sturge advocated ; he had as great a horror of war say by delirium, to express a wish to go to The "appearance of such sentiments in a assailed by foreign force—will crumble and tuagenarian" has the best of the argument ; " amongst themselves. (Cheers.)" Of course Parson as any man, but if a man wanted to kill lum—jf a war. (Tremendous checriusj ; fov some minutes, fol- paper well known to represent a powerful Miall is very wroth with Mr. Mu.s'i**. It may be man broke into his house, and wanted to kill him to lowed by " one cheer more.'"'") Did that mean that polish; " a consummation devoutlv to he bat the parties to tlie argument are not fairly party of able men, possessing practised admi- so, but 1)0 takes very good care to keep his wrath prevent a discovery, hc Avould as soon kill that man they Avould go to Avar ? (The question was answered wished." To win immensely much, or lose matched. I admit that Thomas C ooper may nistra-five habits, affords a much more correct to himself. The Nonconformist ot Wednesday con- as he would kill a dog. That was the position of the affirmatively by renewed and still more vigorous all, is the pre-ordained issue of this war for be as wise a man as any " Septuagenarian" tained not a word denunciatory of Birmingham, or Hungarians just now : their lives, and thoir proper- cheering.) Then they Avould make allowances for indication ofthe future influence and results of Nicholas. Judge you, then, whether he will that ever existed ; I know him to be much its member. Why does not Miall denounce the tics, and their liberties were assailed, and tliey stood him if Jie differed frciii them. They should recol- the new agitation for Parliamentary Reform lo as , not play his last Cossack rather than be wiser than most of the Septuagenarians I Birmingham peop "demented?" Why does ii]) in their own defence accordingly; and a noble lect that they were calling for a reduction of tho he not denounce Mr. Muntz's speech as '' sheer Ho hoped that national expenditure, and that their peace estab- than the coarse and unreasoning abuse and beaten in the mighty game to which he has have known iu the course of my time ;. I stand they had made. ( Cheers. ) opposition ofthe "Ti mes." Itis the vocation and contemptible brag," " as con.pleto a piece of folly, they mi»ht get the government to acknowledge thc lishment already amounted to £50,000,000 a year.. committed himself. He must conquer, or he know, too, that I am very considerably Mr. as downright and stupid a blunder h feared they would (A voice : We should not have any more to pay if tbe habit of that unprinci led journal to calum- , as p ysical-force independence of Hungary, but he " p must fall— Cooper's junior ; still I am not so juvenile, Chartism, or Ledru Rollin Republicanism ?" Will do no such thing ; and supposing they would do so, ivo went to war.") He would say that if thoy urged. niate and obstruct ' every popular movement ia "Xever to rise again." nor so void of " reflection ," but that I can the Dispa tch of Sunday next denounco Messrs. Bass of what uso would it bo unless they were prepared the government to go to war they would rue it for and when it is foiled in the Mad* moral force if centuries to come. (Hear.) its early stages, As long, therefore, as a chance remains of give my " Septuagenarian'' friend certain and elt*v ? WiU "• Publicola " insinuate that to back it up ? What was the use of effort , to turn round and become the heartiest Mr. Muxtz is a Russian spy, or denounce his physical force Avas not close upon it ? It Avas thc Lord Nuoe.vti'oso, amidst much cheering, to movo- the Atj iockat's triumph, I shall never cease answers the unfortunate " Youth'' seems ¦ - •¦ 'Ihat eulogist and advocate of the very principles it speech as " bluster and br.iggadocia ? " fear of physical force that gained for the poople the tlio following resolution :— this meeting, to cry to my counti-ymen to follow up their never to have thought of. The following I In one of his recent addresses Kossuth thus apos- absence of this physical watches witli intense interest the progress of tho has done its best to crash. No doubt us in the Reform Bill. So in the , lip-sympathy by deeds j I shall never cease to understand to be the substance of Mr. trophises this country :—" Thou haughty English force, he feared they were looking for something present struggle of the- Hungarian people for the case of the Anti-Corn-Law League, we shall call upon the people to compel the Govern- Cooper's arguments :— " nation ! Hast thou forgotten that thou bast de- tliat they Avould not obtain—a recognition of the in- right of self-go vernment, whieh they have long and v o not far distant le of non-intervention by the government of this wisel exercised a ri ht to which ha e it some m rning, , pro- ment by the power of public opinion, to take 1st. —That the Hungarians are in arms, not " creed the princip , that thou dependence of Hungary y , g they arc entitled claiming to the world " the Parliamentary " now sufforesfc an intervention directed against country. What had been done in other cases ? by the constitution of their country, and which thoy: , the proper, the honest, ihe dignified course— merely for national independence, but for the and financialKeform Association is a great " constitutional libert y ? Not only dost thou not England had only ventured to interfere Avith some have proved themselves eminently qualified to enjoy the course prescribed both by national duty establishment of a republic also—that if Eng- the holy cause of constitutional liberty, beggarly country, that was utterly powerless. by the possession of moral, social, and political fact ;" to defend its princi- " defend and commencing and sound policy—of launching the bolts of land intervened, her soldiers and officers would " but thou lendest aid to the banner of tyranny by Look at Portugal — Avhat had been done virtues, unexcelled by any other country in conti- ples and objects with as great a command of British might on the side of Hungarian right. not be sent to fi ght for a Republic. That if " suffering this coalition of tyrants. The proud there ? Why, as soon as the people got an ad- nental Europe." He then gavo a brief history of e a famous Queen Hungary, and vividly depicted tho enormous atro- words, and as great a lack of principles, as it That there may be no mistake as to my mean- an English army wero sent to Hungary, it " pennon ot tne israisn mast is uireatenoti witn vantage over the governm nt of th t in now opposes both. During the agitation for " disgrace. God will withdraw the blessing ho has the British fleet interfered to protect thc sove- cities perpetrated by the Austrian army, which ing, I will here set forth my programme, of would be with the understanding that the very, the Keform Bill, when thcmiddle and working " lent it, if it prove untrue to tho cause to which it reign, and the consequence was that the govern- drew forth bursts of indignation. Till lately, " British symijathy." Magyars should re-accept the House of Haps- " ment remained as despotic aud tyrannical as ever. said Lord Nugent, this cause had not been fairly laid, classes were formerl " " owes its fame, y united, the " Times 1st. —The recognition (by the British Go- burg'with a constitution—or some Coburg for And he adds :—" Awake, 0. Peoplo of Europe! Here the question was the princi ple of one nation before the mind of thc English people.. ( Hear, exceeded all other journals in the violence of vernment) of Hungary as a free aud inde- a king ; or if a Protectionist Ministry were in " On Hungarian ground the battle for the freedom being permitted to interfere with , iho other ; was hear.) Tho English mind on this subject had been any recognition of abused and evil dealt with. (A voice : ' The Times," its language, and the intensity of its abuse of pendent nation. power, a war, if undertaken by England, " of Europe is fighting. With this country the free England prepared to support " the opponents of " the bill, thc Avholebill, " world will lose a powerful member. In this na- the independence of the Hungarians by moans of groans and hisses.) It has beon abused and evil 2nd.—An intimation (on tho part of tho would bo for tho restoration of legitimacy. wo had not the pluck dealt with by a calumnious and prostitute press. and nothing bat the bill.-" Time and the in- " tion a true and heroic champion will perish. For arms ? So. Tho fact ivas, . British Government) to the Russian aud 2nd.—Home Reform is the proper and in- we shall fi ght until Ave spill tho last drop of our to interfere. Ours Avas an emasculated government. (Groans.) The most enthusiastic cheers were given creased strength ofthe movement are all that " Austrian despots, to withdraw their armies stant work of the English Democrats. When " blood, that our country either may become a There Avas no such thing as heroism left amongst on naming thc victories gained by the Hungal'iansj under is necessary to convert it once more into tho from Hungary by a stated tune, accompanied that is secured, the Government and the army " chosen sanctuary of freedom, consecrated with us. We were all talk now. A nation of shop- their gallant leaders, and cheers were also advocate of a decidedly popular cause. It '• our blood ; or shall form a damning monument keepers, money-gcttcrs, and spiritless. (Cry of given to the managers and chairman ofthe Penin. by a farther •hiHmation that non-compliance on will then become fit instruments to help on they would snlar and Oriental Steam-packet Company, who lives by s\dmming Avith the stream, and the " to all eternity in token of the manner in which " So.") The timo would come when the part of those despots will be immediately the freedom of Europe ; till then thoy cannot country had not interfered to assist had conveyed ths Hungarian refugees at Folks tone, perception of that fact makes its thunder " tyrants can league to destroy free peoples and free regret that this followed by a declaration of war on the part of and ought not to be trusted with that great nations, and of the shameful manner in which free thc Hungarians in this struggle •, that would bc to their country at a charge involving a decided loss s " harmles , and its abuse and opposition ridi- England. mission, " countries abandon ono another !" Avhen the barrior against an incursion _ from the to tho company. culous. the reader to examine the dialogue Reason and reflection , as well as feeling and zeal, Russian barbarians would be loss than it was just Mr. Wyld M.P., in seconding ihe -sesolution said : 3rd.—A solemn declaration by the British I invite ht be of vital importance to He thought thc time for mere sympathy and speak- As to the course which the JJinistry are and he will find that I have faithfully bid perseverance in the course I havo adopted. now, and when it mig Government, that in acknowledging the inde- himself, unto my Countrymen to do their duty ; country that thc tide of these incursions should ing in reference to Hungary was past. (Cheers.) likely to takewith reference to the movement, substance of Mi*. Cooper's ar- Again I cry this pendence of Hungary, and, if necessary, rendered the side of Humanity and Freedom, no mat- be turned. (Hear. ) And upon whom were we to It was a great question not merely between Hun- tliere can be no doubt that, rather than bo to take the anbrding armed aid to the Hungarians, it has guments. I answer :— ter at what cost, and strike for Justice, all hazards depend ? Was it the French ? Ko. What did wc gary, Austria, and Russia, but ifc was a question of turned out of office, Lord Jons and liis col- only in view the preservalion of the interests 1st. If English soldiers were sent to Hun- notwithstanding. Let not History confirm the ter- do with respect to the recent exploits of the French European civilisation. (Cheers.), Great and noble and looked on whilst and daring as were the efforts -jf the Hungarian leagues will readily try their hands again upon of Humanity, and the guarding of Em-ope gary they might aid, but they could not over- rible accusation launched against us by Kossuth at Rome ? Why we stood by lent aid to the banner of tyranny by suf- th d who had ju st obtaiuod their own people, they were uot fighting tou themselves ••lone, a re-constitution of the elements of popular against Cossack aggression ; aud has no in- awe the Hungarians ; they would be too f ew that we " oso cowar s, fering this coalition of tyrants." rights, .were trampling dowii the people of that small but for the independence of Europe. Tho Russian representation. The extent to wbich tbey tention of dictating any particular form of for that.; moreover, thoso soldiers might for theirs. emperor had thrown down the gauntlet as thc advo- G. JULIAN HARNEY. state who were so nobly struggling will go will niainly depend npon the attitude government to the Hungarians, or at all inter- return (as the French troops returned from was, that thore was no high cate of despotic princi ple?, and ho was convinced ifc ICth, 1S-19. (Hoar.) The truth assumed by the leaders ofthe movement, and America), imbued with sentiments to which, August fooling loft in England. Wo might well talk of the was tho duty of the English people in oonj-iiietion fering with the formation of their laws and P. g.—Thursday night, Twelve o'clock.—1 have the nature of the proposals ihey insist upon at present, they are strangers. It is not heroism of tlie Hungarians ; ifc was a thing only witli America, to take it up. As was said by institutions. just returned from a magnificent meeting in the ; everthing was lost in thc Hudibras : the adoption of. In this respect, the tone of likely, however, that English soldiers would known in name to us If Public Opinion has the power to influence aristocratic Assembly llooms, Hanover Square. beggarlv pounds, shillings, and pence feeling. A " Sympathy without nelief the meeting of ATonday last was excellent. the Government to acknowledge the indepen- be sent to Hungary, wherever else tbey might Mr. Lusiii.a'oton, M.P. for Westminster, presided, in this matter might be all Is like to mustard without beef. Kugext declaration of sympathy Almost every one of the speakers clearly inti- Public O inion could be sent to; the grand blow for Hungary weuld and thc meeting was addressed by Lord , very woll ; but/in his opinion, tho proper thing- to (Loud cheers.) Ho wanted the English people to dence of Hungary, p Lord D-JDi.i*t Stuart, and a host of other speakers, and aiated their preference for the principle of ' struck by England on the seas. It Avould do would be to call upon our governmen t to declare speak in intelligible language to the Austrian - force the Governmentto make, and act up, to be including two Americans : one an "Eniscopalian Austria and Russian cabinets. He wanted them to. call upon "Universal Suflrage, and their opinion that the be optional with the Magyars whether they war against Russia, if she did not leave the " solemn declaration" I have suggested. Clergyman, and the other a Military Ofticcr on his lluno-ary the quarrel amongst themselves. the English government to act towards Hungary as upon the would accept English aid, on " the under- way to Hungary. My reception was ample com- to settle plan of the Association was based The parties who pass resolutions, calling (Cheers.) This was what it would come to ulti- they had done towards tlio- Queen of Spalii, and then supposed expediency of conciliating the more to y acknow- standing " imagined by Mr. Cooper ; if they pensation for the abuse and sneers of the A1»ico)i- Why whore thoy Avould be able to see- whether thciie were not on the Gove^-nment immediatel and the Dispatch. Thc meeting was in mately, and something worse. ( Hoar.) class of Eeformers. The enthusiastic are fi ghting for a Republic, they would not. fonnist , was this sort of thing to end ? Suppose that next many Englishmen ready to join in establishing a tiimd ledge the independence of Hungary, and who, every sense of the word, " up to the mark." Mr. O'Coxxon—the representa- If public opinion can compel the British year Russia wanted some slice of territory or other, powerful kingdom , ( dlhcers.) lie hoped some reception of at tiie same time, set their faces against war, G. J. II. the govern- Government to go to war in behalf of Hun- of course Austria would be bound to assist in ob- strong representation wi-wld be made ^o tive of the Chartists—was an unmistakeable exhibit remark-ableinconsistency. If, indeed, this sort of ment showing that there were many of our fellow- prevent that Government going taining it. In fact they would allow , proof of the feeling of the immense assem- country ives no aid to the Hungarians gary, it could they would be obliged to go to countrymen passim* away their existence in indo- this g for the restoration of Legiti- INDEPENDENCE OF HUNGARY. thing to go on until blage. Lord Nvgbst — whose speech was, during their struggle for independence, but to Avar avoAvedly war to defend their own interest. It was Utopian lence, who Avould gladly take up arais to assist in opinion being omnipotent—as against Rus- as to argument, diction, breadth of view-, merel acknowledges that independence when macy. Public GREAT MEETING AT BIRMINGHAM. at present to talk about doing without soldiers if tho noble struggle of tho Hungarians y case by Parliamen- their own liberty. He sian intervention and Austrian tvranny. (Cheers.), and boldness in the enunciation of princi- there will be but little danger we are daily assured is the On Monday afternoon a public meeting, convened thev wanted to preserve mi fait accompli, orators—could g a y ength to carry out the principle of Mr. RoL\s» Al^os, and the J&v. J. Richmond,. the gem of the night—distinctly asserted ing war in its tary and non-Parliamentary in consequence of a requisition to the mayor, was would o n l ples, of that acknowledgment bring le with inter- economy ; but he would never leave the country to ef the Episcopal Church , in Ameaica , also spoke to and fundamental affair compel the Government to coup held afc tlie Corn Exchange, Birmingham, for the , and upheld the great train ; but that will be a very different hird urpose of adopting bo pounced upon by the despots of the world. He the resolution , Avhich was carri-Qd Avith enthusiasm Mr. Charles " vention, the declaration contained in the t p a memorial to the Queen urging hc had moved, Hungarian gcoplc. principle of Manhood Suflrage. to the imnieiiiafe recognition of Hungary as a the recognition by the British government of the went thc full length of the resolution An address Avas then read to ths programme already put forth in had gone a great deal further. Lord Dudley Stuaut moved; ihe next resection : Ltshesgion, in an equally frank and un- free and independent nation. Lord Palmer- article of the national independence of the Hungarian people, and and he only wished it Letter. , M.A., next rose and said : Somo —" That this meeting looks, witli unmitigated ab- reserved manner, proclaimed his adhesion to sto"X will not dare to open diplomatic relations this to take such other steps upon the subject as might Mr. Dawson. Austrian and* declaration, or no declaration, and be deemed advisable. years ago, Hungary had a party who did for it horrence on tho joint effort* of thc that principle; and, on the authority of the Hungary as an indedendent power, with- Rut Russian monarchs to extinguish tho freedom of a with the motives or wishes ol The Mayor ( Samuel Thornton Esq. ) presided ; what the Whigs did for England in their palmy , denounced taxation with- time preparing for instant whatever might be , gallant nation h the blood »f its brave iph'abitante. great Lord Camden out at the same the kind of govern- amongst the gentlemen on the platform were G. F. davs. before that -party became but a sexton , guard- . robbery !" acknowledgment of the English Government, ghty ancestors, or an Old Mor- That the infamy of the invasion is ouly equalled by out representation as a " war. The immediate would be—and Muntz, Esq., M.P., Mr. Scholefield , M.P., Mr. G. ins; the ashes of mi progress of tho whether they ans war. The ment established for Hungary Dawson, M.A., tality keeping fresh tho annals of olden time, but tho atrocious, cruelties marking the It is for the " robbers" to say Hungarian independence me Hungarians the Rev. Dr. Raphall, Mr. Bray, address jus!-, read, e.wes- to anti-war will be—determined on by the the town clerk adding nought thereto; Hungary, too, had its in vaders, and that the.- Avill reject the modified proposals now made difteren ce between myself and the with- , Mr. Edmonds, clerk of the peace, sivc of our admiration and sympathy be forwarded themselves. If victors, whether with or Mr. Alderman Palmer, Mr. Councillor Barnett, Mr. radical party, and when thc French revolution of them. Let them remember that each succes- " is, that while I would - pre- to the brave men of Bingary with ihe least possible " sympathisers s aid, they are fools enough to Councillor Baldwin, Mr. Alderman Martineau, Mr. 1848 shook Europe, Kossuth and his party pushed that would a w o by augmented de- the natural and necessary out Engli h character of delay ."—He showed- thc advantages sive refus l ill be f llowed pare the people for necks to a 'renewal of tho Aus- Alderman Weston, &c, &c. The attendance was on the greatest reform. Such was the with llujigary, themselves whether ate recognition, submit their reforms, that none need fear that in now sup- arise to England by her trading mands, and it depends on consequence of " immedi o al oke, it will be very numerous, the building being crowded in every those ofthat country, and called upon of the people trian yoke, or any other r y y porting the Hungarians he is aiding thc cause of stated tho produce- the full and complete en-franchisement those precious politicians wouldlead the establishing part. the poople gene-atly to assist, in getting up> a sub- their own work. If determined on Mr; ScnoL-EFiELD/ first resolu- feudalism, religious persecution, or peasant oppres- proceed gradually and quietly, or old into a state of war. To put this 0 M.P., moved the scription on botaJtf of that gaUant nation. He was people shall blindf Republican institutions ^Y I tion. The hon. gentleman said that this was the sion. The question is, what arc ayo to dos In lished at once, in a manner which question in a proper light, let me ask you to ^^theEng'^lish Sturgo and warmly applr-wlwl. be accomp * ™L th« ill-will or otherwise of third meeting lie had attended on this important answering it, I shall differ from Mr. resolution, y possibly injure particular classes by the that an Irish insurrection had been , d from Mr. Muntz. I loathe war, but I cann&t yet Mr. Tnou* seconded tho ma imagine France sent a W«g subject an great as'had been his pleasure in doing Juliax IUrvev, who kid been repeatedly called change. One thing the insurgents had Government. a so, he confessed that it was with oven more infinite say that it must never be undertaken. Many of us rapidity of an extensive so far successful that America, but could not establishcou for by the- woeting, deUvcred a speech in which he themselves utterly 's ops in several battles, army to d satisfaction that he witnessed such a demonstration feel in a strait, and in all difficulties it is best to is certain, they will find hAAten the Queen tro country ; and n^mcre Avar and we- denounced the " lrio»dly relations " of tho English people for finalissue Monarchy in that in Birmingham in favour of those great principles of state the difficulties plainly. We hate , -anable to resist the demands of the and that, although,the J ™ *™ establish Monarchy in hate oppression : we could not go to war, and yet government with tW tyrants of Europe ; and advo- now prospect of the war England's intervention liberty Avhich were being now asserted in . the per- based enfranchisement The battle Which has doubtful, there was every nonsensical to compare le of wo cannot say that a caso may not arise when tho cated armed intervention iu aid of Hungary, a year or Hungary. It would be sons of the braA-e Hungarians. The princip recognition of that country's independence. commenced can have but one termination— continuingfor some months, perhaps Greece and right and wrong was never more strongly marked protection of the helpless, the defence of the weak, on tho circumstances, Hungary Avith such states as Mr. Harney's speech excited tho most enthusiastio I ______. Ton know that in those ¦* hical position than in this dispute between Austria and Hungary may not call ft-c it. God forgive, if I am wifong, but YlCIOKY two Vmtea Portugal both in her geograp tho sword be applause. meetings would be held throughout the her e0 e —for, time out of mind , the Hungarians had had a I cannot say that in no case must tho AND THE imme- and the number and character of V V} > stitution of be careful not to Resolutions approhatory of that portion of TnP COKDWADJEBS OF THE MetBOPOIIS calling on the Government to» which con their own, their own ministers, their drawn. It is said that we should Hungarian and shoe- States, she possesses that strength and power own king ; and ifc Emperor of weaken Austria that we want a strong kingdom, so press which had honestlv advocated tho st TJCiiMS.-The patriotic boot recognise the independence of Ireland led was because the , Tenmsuiar Chabti exhibition of prize hoots and diatelv are altogether wanting in the countries ru Austria refused to swear Hungarian constitu- placed, as a barrier against Cossaokism. Wc do cause, and also of the Directors of tho S£n by their late and his advisers desired to to the thanks was snpported only by their own craft, have If the Rushmssx Otho aud Dossx Maria., Powerful tion, the Hungarian people had determined to de« ¦want such a barrier—we Avant a free state thero, Company, -wove earned. A vote of wc^nd would refuse to acknowledge over by passed meeting separjieo*-; which- after*> deductog ex- avoid war, they land may be courted aa a friend pose tho House of Hapsburg, aud for hia part, ho but Austria ia uot tha -barrier, aad now sold to to tho chairman, and the ^-^3^27, several state, untd such for good, Eng yf z£~iJL ¦/ S^JH ^ded «*¦*** victims StaT »^ independent J . ¦ * now suffering inweerativn.

¦- ¦¦• y¦¦ y)i i.ccA) . • «¦ IfiteJ ^- 'J'Jf **i*luf f ~- t : ¦ -¦ • • - XX^ tV " . . " . August¦ 18, 1849. „ ^wrc xrriPTTT tt RN STAR. - * 300 quar panied—— him, next drove to the Royal College of Sur- o in addi tion to six fat hogs, abou t , . s dau ghter. Tho mag sr str yed, Tho Prince -was received at was termed Scri ps and Others clu- s.on.ofw«f «•<• decease d' to much corn ; 300 sacks ot geons, Stephen' s-green . rattle , and as soon as assistance could be obtained , disaste r commenced " ^ ^"JjffioiBnf grou nds ju stify ters of seed, and perhaps as college by the presid ent, Oe -metro polis tenanted by Charles Ric hard Webb, trat cs said there were s™ s for the London market . the en'rance of the vice- the dr ags were procur ed, when , after searchin g the Firm and was he ^ ^ the seed were dressed ready Gra mpton , &c, and conducted moments, the lifeless body ' Cast le, Gr ays. The flames when The girl' s British school room and some other pre- pre siden t, Sir Phili p OF LOXDOX DURING TOE Week. — The canal for a few of the Esq of Belmont m where he remained some time in IlEA tTn They wer« ra ging in a wheat-rick in the mises adjacent were also destroyed. This makes the to the board-room , e-^stwr-Gen enirs report states that the deaths in mother was also found. were both taken to first discover ed several members of the college. B of St. Giles' ' corner of the stack-yard. An immediate fifth fire whhin the last few months in the compara - conversa tion with dur ing the -week endin g Saturday, August the dead-house s to await a coroner s south -east tiie taf conducte d to the museum , Xondon The unfortunate woman was only twenty- "iven , and an attempt was made to ex- Str ike amongst * tively small village of Bassingbo urn. Mr. Blott ; is The party having been were 1,909. The mort ality is somewhat less inquest . ilirm was ^ ^^ was occupied for some time in an inspec- J lth. four years of age. On Wednesday evening Mr. tinguish the flames ; but such a hold had tliey ob- insure d , bu t considerably below thc amount , the th e Prince tha n it was in the previous week. The deaths from defied the utmost exertions of all tion of the different collections and specimens it in the six last weeks 070, Carter held an inquest at the Marlborou gh-arms , tained that they damage being estimated at £3,000. nil causes were 1, 1,389, speedily they extend ed to the contain s ; he then retur ned to the board -room , and South-street , Camberwell , on the bodies of Mar ia nresent and very ° VhU have always ¦ .-.*. ml ant - 09 of which ms G30 **> -"r I I ¦ MM!" ; J TO » h > -*'0*3'' W J > * aged twenty-two rang e of premises filled with wheat S!at S SSK ^ so pr evious to h s departure expressed himself much * 17-3, 1 30S, and 1,185 were by diseases of Lind say, , and Charlotte Lindsa y, barns , a long 0 hereabo uts harmful to 1 002, 1, . , aged seven months a a the work ot destruction communicated proved! (and^n d WP«Psoecially^V ' ' pleased with his visit. zymotic class. Small-pox, scarlatina , and hoop- , the illegitim te d ughter of tlie from whence ^y-^jnmtnmi the last week a the former and a person ofthe nam e of Rich , bullock-shed s and cow-houses. Mr. Parratt , all the part ies concern ed, •Ereiano, This being the day appointed for the presentation in 333, 673. 733, , and 823. Thc decrease is stra w so that there twelve o' clock until of car in the ' im- the deceased Charlotte Lindsa y, and tha t the wheat , bay, and , was propert y r ^ " ^ nearl y seven long lines four pr ecise ly his Royal High-ess arr ived •T-itifvin T; but it is right to observe that the " of an acre ri ages occup ied the castle. , Top- deceased destroyed herself in a fit of temporary coverin <**upwards of half in a general blaze. aSbout ^ w^er ete ^ resume until leadin g avenues to the private carri age o' the Lord-Lieutenant. Mr. L. £. proveme nt is chiefly confined to West London insjin' t.v ** "" same time mounte d WOrk At five minutes before from the Southwark, ' Xcwington, Caniber- The flames at the so high into ono thc deputation Foot , the honorary secretary read thc address. lar ' 't. Geor ge, light university proceed ed ' " ' The deaths from cholera in the Ihe lath Inq uest in Whitecha pel.—Death tho air, as not mer ely to up the sur roundin g nto on foot from the college, and Prince Albert, in reply , said :- " I thank you sin * we i and Lambet h. were distinctl before tho strike. Taki ng there wasa * commingling " were 20 and 43 in "Wandsworth • 9 of the "Femal t* a*d thb "W itness. —On Wednes- country, but they y visible from every ratio n as existed t of dresses , from the scarlet cerelv for vour con gratulations upon the arrival of two Last weeks Lieutenant now made , the presen robes of the fellows and " 14 in Islington ; 3 and 10 day after noon, at three o'clock, an investigation was part of the metrop olis. Sinclair and account the reduction profess ors to the more the Queen and myself in Ir -land. I havealways felt snd 21 in Pa ncras; 4 and with a strong bod 3d., upon which, having sombr e hues of the academic tha t ¦ lti and 35 in Beth nal-green ; lo opened at tlie Lond on Hospital , before Mr. William Mr. Grecnsill, y of th e artiller y wa-es would be about 2s. had a very strik- a great inter est in the proceedings f this so.-iety. in Londo n City ; instantly started ° ust now get more than effect. The deaths from all causes on Baker , the coron er, touchin g the respec tive deaths and several engines, from Pur fleet hi view that they do not . ing been anxious for its prosperity! becaus e I and 35 in St. Giles. declared It was im- early hour cro wds filled and hare (1 were -39 more of Sarah Crai g, aged 41 years, and Elizabeth Lewis, Bar racks to the scene, and were called into opera- U davs - work per week , tliey Prom an Cork-hill and applying thu most recent die- the "north side the Tham es ,118) and the geiieral .opi- was convinced that in week. The a-red S3 years , the former havinir died in Whitechapei tion, but , notwi thst andin g the great body of water possible for them to subsist, the quays near to Parliament-str eet. Every windo w most fully-tested mecha - thai: tlie death s (1,029) of the previous fl:imes , be that tho masters have made the y-dressed occupants. coveries in science and the been visited must be on Workhou se, and the latter at the Britannia Coffee- scattere d over the they continu ed to pro- nion seemed to had its gail nical improvements , to the naturally fert ile soil, yon pirishes which have not yet without any just causei for do ng accustomed punctuali ty, has par - house in High-street. White cliayel. It will be re- gress, and the light being seen in London caused present reduct ion With her her Majesty, powers of this their ouard. Those in which the epidemic of ill-feeling on the part ot would not only raise tlie productive " pre cautions. membered by our readers that on Friday week lest the engine of the Bri g«de in Wntt ling-strcet , and so There is a good deal accomp anied by Prince Albert and the members but likewise give tially subsided shonld redouble their against those who have the Castle. country . and increase its wealth , three successive an inquest was held at the Grave Mau rice public- also that of the West of England Company, in the those who have " struck" of th e suite , arrived at Her Majesty remunerative employment to its labour ing popula- The epidemic of 1832 broke out in house , their work , and this has been vented a guard of honour of the 7th Hus- commenc ing in Febru ary, was , on the bod y of Mr. J ohn James Watts , one Waterloo-roa d to start in search of the fire. For rema ined at was atten ded by tion , and encourage habits of indu stry. I t is impos- erupti ons : the first , of the ' serious disturbance s have been consisted of two carria ges, and subsided : th e second parochial sureeons of St . George-m-thc-East , some considerable time no direct informati on could ill so many ways that sars Tho royal cor %e sible not to Feel deeply the marks of enthusiastic al its maximum in Anril Bromwich on Tuesday even- were her Majesty, Prince July, and sank again who died in Whit echapei Workhouse from the effects be obtained as to where the fire was ragin g, and the approhonded. At West in the first of which attachment which have been displayed to the Queen row ranidlv from June to " been work ing in a pit belong- Clar endon August ; its course was of po'son. A postmortem examination was made by firemen were guided to the spot only by the glare in in a collier who had by Albert , and the Earl of and my-el f by the warm-hearted inhabitants of this down to thesecond week of to Heath field Company was attac ked a : assembled in St. Patrick s like th at pursued by the present epidemic. Mr . J. Nash and Dr. Lethebv , and it was found that , the atm osphere. Thc London engines at length in^ the The several deputat ions beautiful island ; and I most sincerel y hope that the very much or threo hundred person s-these commenceme nt of the leveo. The deat hs returned by the parish clerks in the he had died from the effects <>f oxalic acid and cor- reached the spot , when a fearful scene present ed it- mSb of somo two Hall previo us to the promi se ofa --lent "ful harvest , of which your fields rosive sublimate . for tho whole of the property except the dwell- chiefly women and childre n—and stoned all been fixed upon for the recep- three weeks from .Taly 17 to August 7. in 1332, were A packet of powders was found self, lieine- One o' clock having be r such hopeful evidence , may be the harHnger of ' was enveloped in The crowd threatened further dis- the Corporat ion and the 963, , GUI ; which , allowing for the defects in in Mr. Wat ts s clothes, and one of them was marked ing-house, and the granary an im- the way homo. tion of the add resses from a termination to those sufferings under which the 793 The whole of tho man 's house, but dispersed on the ht Honourabl the their returns , and for increase of populat ion , are poison. The deceased , Elizabeth Lewis, gave evi- mense sheet of flame. engines turba nce at the Universi ty of Dublin, the Rig y people hav e so lamentabl y, and yet with such exem- , strong body of police. At Dudley almost all the equi valent to 2,333. 1,903, 1,586, or 5,812 deaths in dence before the coroner and jury, and appeared in were kept afc work durin g the night but at nine appeara nce ofa Lord Mayor and officers , attended by plary pat ience , laboured. " good still remain ed thero have been similar , and even i 1*>49, when th c deaths registered in the corre- health. The jury returned a verdict of death o' clock on Monday morning there a and other places aldermen and town councillors, occupied one port on Visit to the Cattle Show.—After leaving the of its outrage s. Two men were on Satur- ; sponding weeks were 1,931, 1,967, 1,909, or 5,807 from poison , but how adminis tered the-*e was no great body of fire , although all danger further more alarming, of the ball. . ... , boa rd-room of the society-house the Prince , accom- evidence to show. All the witnesses were inclined sion was at an end. day broug ht before the magistr ates at Handswor th , wearing the order of St.c* in the three weeks Jul y 21 to August 11. A third exten hbourhood of a The Lord Prim ate, panied by the same distinguished per sonages who to believe that Mr. Watts had died from choler a , but No doubt seems to be enterta ined that the fire on a charg e of lurkin g in the neig and the bishops in their robe s, formed a eruption in 1S32 broke out at thc end of August , and men who had re- Patrick , had arrived with him , then proceeded to examine the Mr. Nash stated positively that he had died from was the work of an incendiary. Thc present is the pit at Tipton , in which were some conspicuou s group. • . - ' extended to the first weeks of September. A four th men out on strn *e. Upon show yards , and from Mr. Archbold , the late member It is satisfactory to find that the deaths of poison.—The Coron er proceeded first with the case fourth fire that has been r aised in tho neighbour- fused to ioin thc body of The Unitarians , headed by Messrs.. Button , , and others of the council, in 1833. one was found to be armed with a for the county O chre 823 person s who died last week of of Elizabe th Lewis , the witne ss at the last inquest , hood durin g the week. Two attempts have been being searched , occup ied another portion ; and near them were the stock, s then examined in Sarah Craig ' s investigation into the cause of these fires , and a much discontent ed. At the collieries of Messrs . may be prevented by improveme nts in the treat- at the end of the hall. brilliant costumes of the several visitors. The police case. He stated tbat he was eal ed to the coffee- handsome reward will be offered for tho apprehen- Morris , of Hor sely Heath , somo oftho men have re- Belfast and other ment, by arrestin g- the pr emonitory symptoms, by The deput ati6ns from , Sligo, arrangements were excellent , and the carriages all ^ house on Wednesday morning. Witness considered sion of the guilty parties. Fortunate ly, Mr. Webb' s sumed their work. _. . still earlier attention to thc general health. Medical places were also in attendance. eoins thro ugh Parliament street afterwards took up that she was suffering from cholera. — Other perty was par tially insured. The Late Turn-ou t at Blackbu kv.—The han ds past men are called when the people are dying, but it is T witnesses pro Her Majesty entered the throne-room at half their company in Dame-street , near the lower Castle hav ng given similar evidence, the jury una nimously During the whole of Monday morning the London of Messrs. Joh n Sharpies and Co. resume d work on and then too late. If the families of the middle and j one, accompanied by II. R. H. Prince Albert , gate. The scene presented to the eye of the specta returned a verdict of " Death from A siatic " with a bod of the royal Sappers and Monday morning, havin g accepte d the five per cent, * higher classe s-were seen at interv als durin g the epi- 1 Cholera firemen , y the officers of state , she was attired in a magnificent peculi ar brillian cy. Hour after <" in each case—The friends of Mr. Watts expressed Miners , and their engines, were kept at constant in fourteen days, and a pro mise of better raw tor was one ofa demic by their medical atte ndants , and a corps o green p «plin dress, figured wth gold shamrocks , hour the long lines of equipa ges succeeded each officers employed by the guardi ans to visit them selves very much dissatisfied at the manner in work ; but at six o'clock in th e evening the fire materi al. Those of Messrs. Pilkington resumed expressly for the pur pose. medical ' The ad- manuf actured in Ireland! oth- r. Ifc literall y appeared as if there would be no short intervals , the present epidemic which the inquiij**was terminated , and requested that was far from being extinguished. Tho property work on Saturday , at the maste rs terms. of St. the poor at She wore the riband and star of the order termination to the arrivals , and the blaze of light jni"ht verv probably be cut short , and a third eru p- the contents of the stomach of all the bodies should destroyed by this disastrous event is very consider * vance offive per cent, has been generally adopt ed on Patrick , and a most superb wrea th of diamon ds from the Castle , the Royal Exchange , and other tion be averted. The precise locality in which al- he analysed that the precise cause of death might be able, and had it not heen for the exertions of Mr by the masters. —Preston Chron icle. , her : last the her head , necklace and ear-rin gs of diamonds buildin gs, wh'ch were illumina ted on thii auspicious most every victim of cholera lived is given in the ascei*ta nsd.—Mr. J. Nash , the sur geon who was Parr att , Sir Thomas Lennard 's steward , and the Th e Britannia Brid ge. — On Saturday adm ired of lifting of this great hair in bands as represented in the most occasion, made every object appear almost as discer- present ret urn under each district : would it not be examined at the last inques t , a;ain asser ted that military , there is no doubt that the whole of the operations connecte d with the her portraits. 100 feet above high nible as if it were clear day. " There 's a go*>d time practicable for the authorities to have all these and -Mr. Watts had died from the effects of poison , and catt le in the premises would have per ished. Owing fabric to its permanent level, Her Majesty took her seat on the throne , the ,. under the super in- coming " was heralded forth in brillia nt gas at the neighbouring localities inspected I If this were that Sarah Craig had also died from poison , which he to tho great number of fires that have been wilfully water mark , were commenced Carabine rs playing the 's band of engineers; and splendid band of th e 6th Andre «s and Co.' s, Dame-street. It formed a lead- done, and proper precautions taken, the tragedies of could prove if he wa3 allowed to make the necessary caused durin g the past few days, Mv. Super inten- tendence of Mr. Stephenson " H. R . H. Prince Albert its way upwards " Nati onal Anthem. ins po'nt. Albion-terrace , Wandsworth-road , where seventeen examination. dant Coulson and Mr. Inspector Bridges , of the Essex the great tube is now making stood beside her Majesty on the left. Two ladies ' aged in try ing to find successfully at the rate of At t welve minutes after nine o' clock the Queen persons died in two weeks in ten houses, could Fike at LnnsnousE. —A fire broke out on Satur- constabulary , have been eng The raising is going on in waiting stood on her ri ght hand . Lord Clarendon , : ' information which machiner y is said to act ad- and Prince Albert, the Lor d-L; eute* ant and Countess scarcely recur. Another case appears this week in day afternoon last about three o clock in the ship- out the culprits , and from certain six feet a day, and the Lord Lansdowne. Lo.-d Abercow, Sir George Grey , rag ing, of Clarendon , entered the Castle gates , the three the note under Hampstead . In the house , Xo. 6, building-yard of Mr. John Brod ic, near Limeh ou t thoy received whilst this latter fire was they mirably. gh officials stood around the icion. The wheat "will bo in the re- and the various other hi sta *e carriages being preceded aiid f-Mowed by a Albion-terrace , fire deaths had been registered—a pier, caused by the overflowing of the pitch pots a pprehended a young man on susp Capture of a Murd erer. —It throne. , and in the month of Decem- squadro n ofthe 6th or Innisl -illing Dra goon--. Cheers , Wesleyan minister 's wife, aged 59; his mother , 80; when boilin g. The yard being well stocked with destroyed was the pr oduce of eighte en acres collection of the public that Previous to tbe General Levee a court was held for ' s growth. Besides whicli there a person of the name of Thomas Kay was long, fervent , and earnest, burst forth on every side, a widow, 49 ; and two old servants. This is all wc timber in a dry state, and a very fine vessel in the was all this year ber, 1847, the purpose of receiving the addresses of the Corpo - learn from the Clapliam registrar. The registrar dock , the John Willes, of London , an express was were three building s, each about 150 feet long, most barbarously murdered on the line of railway, arid tho *-e who occupied the carria ges on the line ground. A spacious store- construction in the parish of ration and the University. which was formed by the royal cortege joined in the of Ilampste ad adds, that during the week, an aged sent for the aid of the floating engine atta ched to entirely burned to the then in the course of Mayor and the corporation was the first t ya , s , filled with wheat, was reduced to ashes, and in the county of York , the particulars Th e Lord < laudits , one common feeling of loyalty actuat ing all man came with a friend to Hampstead for change of he Deptford Dock rd and Mr. Morris , master- hou e South Aston , bod y conducted to the royal presence. His lords hi p air—brc akfa sied, dined wen t to London to attendant , was prom ptly on board to steer the float- several ricks of wheat , clover, peas, &c., were also of which at the time appea red in nearl y all the classes. , transact having been introduced , read the address of the business at the Bank of England , and after his re ing engine, which was soon rowed to the spot . On destroved. newspapers in the country. William Watson , the Shortly afterwards her Majesty, accompanied by its arrival , however the flames were subdued. A person who committed the murder , made his escape ; corporation. liis Royal Hi ghne ss Prince Albert and the officers of turn seemed " pretty well." At six o' clock the next , The Lord Mayor , kneelin g, presented the address considerable quantity of timber has been greatl MURDER AND MUTILATION OF A ClHLD. —An inquest although he was advertised in the Hue and Cry, and state , entered ihe presence chamber. Her Majesty -morning hc felt ill, and had medical ad vice, but - died y to her Maj esty, who proce eded to read her gracious in eight hours . The old minister was apparentl charred , but fortunately the vessel, which was hav- was gone into at Colchester , on Friday week , before every other possible means resorte d to for his dis- was attired in a superb pink poplin dress , elaboratel y y answer which she did in a most distinct , earnest , the last of his family, ing her bottom coppered in the dock , Mr. Churchill , the borough coroner , on the muti- covery , yet he succeeded in evading the hands of , fiijurad with gold shamrocks ; ornamen ts, diamonds for he had seen his moth er, was not in the and emphatio manner. She express rd her grati fica- •wife, and ser vants die before him in Albion-terrace , least inju red. lated remains of an infant , found the previous day Justic e till Saturda y last , when he was apprehended of the most splendid brillian cy. Her Majesty most Tde Hox. and Kev. Baptist Noel of Mr. Winter. by Mr. Martindale Scott the active high constable tion at the reception she hsd met with from her condescendin gly delayed her departure more than an and could not fly from thc poison wliich he carried preached on in the water closet of the residence , trusted that the period of suffer- Sunday morningas aBap tist minister , in Mr. Evans' s To such an extent had the bod y been cut up that it of Penrith , in the county of Cumberland , who found loyal Irish subjects , hour , in order to meet the wishes of her lo <- al Iri sh ia his breast. Such scenes of desolation could ing was now about to terminate , owing to the bles- _ a e p t t a chapel, John-stre et, Bedford-row , the same place in was almost impossible to tell its sex (a eirl. ) It him workin g in a lime-stone qua rry, near tho se- female subjects to obtain the high honour of presen- sc rc ly hap en wi hou gre t negligence on the g , an d hopkd upon hkr part of the people themselves and on the part of which he was baptised on the previous Thu rsda y appeared in evidence that Mr. Winter 's cook, named cluded village of Arkleb y, in a lonely and remote sin s of Divine Providence tation—the number present altogether exceeded NMM VISIT , WHICH WOULD NOT ***** VERY LONG DE- the authoriti es. evening. Jane Simmonds , was suspected of being in the district in the western division of Cumberland. On seventeen hundred . . Distkessixg Death of a Child. Eff ects of Dissipation *.—W. Seu, a farmer, re- family way for some time, and on the previous Wed- Mr. Scott charg ing him with being the per petrator FERRED , THE COUNTRY WOULD BE AS PROSPEROUS The fine bands of the 2nd Reg iment and the 60th —On Saturday an AS THE PEOPLE COULD DESIRE- inquest was held before Mr. H. M. Wakle y, at * the siding at Watford , who visited London on Fr iday nesday it is supposed , from her appearance , that she of the murder he appeared confounded , and on his Rifles performed a variety of splen d id music durin g During the period of her Majesty s reading this ' Arms Tavern , Upper Enrnsbury-street week, bringin «r Avith him a sum of £308 purely as it had given birth to a child . The surgeon who was being lodged in tho lock-up at Penrith , on Saturday th e evening. Drapers , , Islington on the body of Thomas William Messcr would ap pear for the purpose of indulging his bac- examined could not swear whether the child was evening last, after great mental suffering, he burst answer , and at one of its most interesting por tions At a few minutes after twelve 'clock her Majesty , , ihe o aged two years, who met with his death under the chanalian propensities , while labourin g under the born alive, and an open verdict was, therefore , re- into tears , and wept bitterly for a considerable band in the courtyard unexpectedl y commenced , a f &ve the Q, " c e e and the royal sui te took their departure nd the following circumstances. It appeared from the evi- effects of delirium tremens, fell out of one of the win- turned ; but the mother was handed over to the time, but refrained from saying anything whereby to play " God ueen , whi h r ndered h r cheers were loud and long-con tinued Majesty 's voice inaudible. Her Majesty paused , as they pro- dence that the deceased was the son of a master dows of Mr. Sparrow 's beer-shop, near the Euston magistrates , to take her tri al for concealin g the to crimin ate himself. On Sund ay Watson was re- ordered the music to be stopped : and this havin g ceeded to the Viceregal Lodge. bricklayer residing in Henr y-street. At the rear of Kailway Station , and injured himself frightfull y. birth. moved to York , where hc awaits his trial. ;.le were more than usually peaceable been effected after some minutes had elapsed the The peo , and t be house there was a fish-pond, containin g gold and He was conveyed to the Universit y Hospital , wher e Defalcation of a Cor poration Servant at Fatal Accident on the North Kent Kailway. , , Queen again resumed the reading of her answer, the streets orderly in a remark able degree dispite silver fish. The deceased and other children were he lay on Saturda y nijsrht not expected to survive . Oxford. —The defalcation of Joseph Liddel l, who A shocking accident occurred on Tuesday afternoon and the dense masses wbich thronged every available space accu stomed to play in the garden , and on Wednesda y For ged Bank of England Notes.—A few days for many years held the situation of Mayor ' s-Ser- on this line of railway at Woolwich, by whic h one smiled at the momentary embarra s caused by the sudden manifestation of loyalty . that could be occupied. week the deceased wag missing for some minutes, ago a man of respectable appearance presented to a geant , and also collected the borough-rate , city man was crushed to death under a passen ger train. The Queen , after lunchin g at Carton with the respectable The Lord M ayor then introduced Alderman ¦when , on instituting a srarch , the father found him tradesman in Fleet-stre et,, a note pur- quit-rents , water-rate , and other taxes in that city, About three o'clock one of the contractor ' s men, Duke of Leinster , left thc Viceregal Lodge , at five lying at tlie bottom ofthe fish-pond , which contained porting to be a Bank of Eng land note for £10, in is supposed to amount to between £300 and £400, named Mi chael Barry, was observed walking up Kesh an and William Reynolds as the proposer and : seconder of the addre ss. o' clock on Friday, for the term nus of the r ail , West- about eighteen inches of water , appa rently lifeless. payment for some articles purchased in his shop. and not £1,300 and £1,400, as has been reported. the line towards, the Woolwich station , apparen tly land-ro w and proceeded to Kingstown * The Lord Mayor then handed the address to his , , wher e her Mr . Scott, a surgeon , was called in immediately, The note bore so much the appearance ofa genuine No clue has been obtained as to where he is gone. examining the condition of the permanent way. M ajest y and suite embav ked for Belfast. and bc adop ted the usual means to resus citate thc one, that had it been presented by a regular cus- He has left a wife and six children behind him. Arriving near the entrance of the tunnel , he saw Royal H'ghness Price Albert , which he acknow- ledge!. The Chamberlain reques ted that the mem- The voyage from Kingstown to Belfast was a l ode, but without avail , as life was quite extinct. tomer it would have been accepted and changed The Execution of Mart Ann Geebing.—A num- the 2.30 down-train emerging from it, and stepped stormy one. At two o'clock on Sa urday, the doubt the poor little fe without the slightest hesitation , but the ber of contradictory announcements have been made a the up-line bers of the corporation who con stituted the deputa- Ther e is no 'Jow fell in by per son immedi tely on , without looking back Fairy, into which the royal visitors had been trans - acciden t, and the father stated thai it was his inten- giving it being .a perfect stran ger, the receiv er was on the subject of the execution of this murderess , to see if it was clear , which unh app ily was not the tio n would consider them-elves as prese nted , without induced to examine going through the usual formalities , aud requested ferred , arrived at the landing plnceand were received tion to fill up the pond , to prevent a similar occur- it closely. On this examination , but we believe the real facts of the case are as fol- case, for the 2.0 up-train from Gravesend was also by the nobili-' y and local authorities. Tlie usual —Verd ict, •''Accidental death. " and being himself an ensraver , he discovered that The learned jud who tried the case in- coining up. The engine driver blew the Lord Mayor to send in a list of those who were rence. lows- ge the al arm addres ses a nd ceremonies took place, and the Queen , Sosnciocs Death of a Female. — On Saturday the signature , " J . Cann ,^' was, as well as the body tended to consult with Baron Alderson , Baron whistle as loud as it was possible , t then present. bu no notice was havin g kni ghied Mr. Johnson , the Mayor , pro *-eeded Jlr. Payne held an inquest at thc Vestry HaU of the note, an engraving;, and this circu mstance left , taken by tho man who continued between . The deputation from the University was the next , St. Parke , Baron Platt , and Baron Rolfe or such of , the rails on a tour th rough the to wn , and also to visit its ' no doubt on his mind that it was a forgery. The presented , and the add: ess was read by the Lord John s, Horselydown, on view of the body of a their lordshi ps as might be immediatel y accessible with his eyes fixed on the approachin g down-train. leadin g notabi lities. person offering it said he could not brin g himself to Priii - ate. as visitor. public institutions and Among female unknown , between forty and forty-fiv e years on his return to town, and should there appear any In a few* moments the poor fellow was stru ck down them was an exhibition of the manufacture of linen , of age, who was found drowned tha t morning off think that a note so well executed could be a doubt on the objection to a part of the evidence and the entire train passed over his body. He r Majesty thanked the deputati on for thei r When the s' aplc prod *ct nf the town , in all its stages, with Horselydown, with marks of violence on her hands for gery, .nnd ho therefore thou ght the shopkeeper tak en by Mr. Hurst , then the question will be re- picked up life was found to be quito extjnet , both loyal address. She said tha t the universit y which " must be mistaken. also said that they represented occup ied a distin guished position which tbe Queen and Prince Con sort were much and arm. Mr. Wallet, summoning officer, said that He , ha ving no ferred to the court latel y empowered to deal with legs were severed float the bod y, which was other- ' the deceased had the appearance of havin g other money about him , he should go hom e and of this sort in criminal cases. wise shockin g amon gst the learned institutions upon eart h—t h at its iti tere -ted. The royal party re turned at six o clock been in appeals on legal points ly disfigured. The deceased has left a to the pavilion where th ey landed, having oci-up the water three or four days. There were no pr ocure sufficient to enable him to procure his pur- Should their lorashi however be unanimousl wife and fame was to be found amongst the records of the ied ps, , y of lar ge family destitute . about two hours and a half in the visit and immedi- shoes on her feet. She had on black stockings chases, and added tha t he had no objection to leave opinion that the evidence in question was properly Fire at Manchester. —About twelve o' dead , as .well as amongst the works of ihe learned , the cloolc on a tely afterward s proce pded on board the Albert and usual under-dress , and a dark gown with blue spots. the note as a guarantee for his return. He then left admitted , the law will take its course without fur- Saturday night informa tion was received at the men of th e present generation ; and she trusted that Victoria , tbe night however was siormy , and the There was a wedding-r u**-* on the second finger of the shop, but it is almost needless to say that he did ther inquiry. The 21 st inst., the day named , rests police yard , Manchester , that the oil-cloth manu- by tin? manner in wh ich tbey would continue to royal squa dron did not leave Belfast her left hand ; but there was nothm g in her pockets not return , and the note is at present in the hands on the authority of the usual practice on these factory attached to the goods station ofthe Lanca- administer these high function s, they would promote un til Sunday af temoon on its way to Scotbmd to lead to her identity . Thero were two severe of Mr. G. Lees, of 47, Fleet-street , one of the com- occasions. —Essex ' Standard. shire and Yorkshire Railway Company, the course of piety and learning . , and, after a very in Oldh am- _ rouuh ami acras <* wound s across the back of both her hands . Mr. mon eouneilmen for the ward of Farrin gdon. The Fatal Boatin g Part y.—On Frid ay, August 10th , road was on fire: Three engines and firemen were The L-rd Lieutenant then signified to the deputa- stormy passage the Mull of Gallo- ^ way, put into Loch Ryan , on the Scotch coast, at a Phillips, surgeon , Free School-street , stated that note itself is, in the estimation of all who have seen between the hours of three and four o' clock , as speedily on the spot. It was found tha t thc build- tion that her Majesty requested that the members of Inir tn w?¦¦ *ii/* *i A\.'funnfnlir flifl Ai-a nrqcfi/\nflnAil ...na qu arter past five in the evening, where they anchored the wounds across the hands were inflicted durin g it, one of the best executed forgeries ever witnessed , Captain Badcock , of Lymington , was out in the "•fe> ¦ "' ••¦««, .Vl »' " ¦ "- • "UOWHIUIGU HUB the deputation would consider themselve s as pre- «"J» ""V , for the night. life. They were probabl y caused by some blunt and in fact so close is the resemblance to a genuine Solent in his sailing boat , accompanied hy liis only twenty-one yard s long by. twelve , situated at sented without going throug h the formal mode of instrument , for the purpose of compellin g her to note, that not one in twenty would discover thc dif- brother , by Mr. Clayton , and his two sons, aged the extveme end of the Railway Company ' presentation. Dr. Wall and Dr . Sin«er were then At ha lf-past four on Monda y morning the s yard. squ adron got under weigh leave go of something she had hold of. The right arm ference , and it is very much fear ed that a number respectively ten and twelve years, they accidentall y The flames were ra ging furiousl y when the eng presented by the Primate , who kissed her Majes ty' s , and proceeded to tbe ines Clyde where tbey arrived at half-pa st eig -was also bruised. He conld not say whether the of them have got into circul ation. Its number is came in contact with a yacht , by which the boat was arrived ; the roof had fallen in, and very combus- hand . , ht. The royal vachts Fairy and Vivid went skull was fractured . The coroner directed a post Y-K 510(35, and its date October 4th , 1848. Another upset . Captain Badeoek' s t wo sons were unhappily tible materi als which filled the buildin g, consisting fh^ Vioe-Provo st, addressing Prince Alber t, said up some miles through the splendid scenery of Loch tiwrtem examination of the body, and the inquiry forged note for £5 has been returned within a few dro wned , and that gentlem an himself escaped with chiefl y of oil-cloths in various stages of completion , that the universit y had conferred upon his royal Long. was adj ourned. days to Mr. Austin , the proprietor of Peel's Coffee much difficult y, and is at present very ill from the some laid upon stretchers for drying, ch Lomond , alone , the Fatal Accidext at me Artesian Wells, ix Hou se, Fleet-street , from his banker 's with the effects of the calamity. with a quan tity of oil, caused the fire to blaze most same t'tne handed his Roya l Highness the parchment wet and stormy weather bavin s prevented the Queen Ouasge-stk *-et.—On Tuesday, before Mr. Bedford , usaal brand of " Forgery " on it front. This note TnE MuuDEnEn Pulle y.—A few days since a man furiousl y for some time. The efforts of the firemen conferring it. This was gra ciousl y acknowled ged b y from accompany ing him. Emba rking at l arbet , he an inquest was held at St. Martin 's Workhouse , on purports to be of the Manchester branch of thc named Howse, in cleaning a Pool at Brou ghton , wer e directed to prevent the spread of the fire to thc the Prince , and her Maje -ty smiled approv ingly at pro ceeded down the loch to Bal'och , and then the body of Joseph Densor, aged 10 years, who was Bank of England, and the signature , "H. Hogben ,'.' belonging to Mr . Checke tts, found embedde d in the neighbourin g buildings. Two engines were stationed the compliment thus paid to her illustiious consort. throug h the vain of Alexandria to Dumb arton. Great dro wned in one of the Artesian Wells, at thc pre- as in the last case, is produced by an engraving ; mud thc moleskin breeches which the murderer at a reserv oir at one end of the yard , and a jet After the presentation of the enormous number of prep ara tions had been made for the reception of the mises belonging to the engineers , Messrs. Easton but so well was the whole executed , that not one in wore at the time, and made away with after the was attached from thc water mai n, and in about an addresses , th e reception of which might be consi- sovereign , and hpr absen ce caused much disappoint- and Amos, Orange-street , under the following cir- a thousand wonld believe it to be a for gery. Indeed commission of the murder. They were tightly hour the flames were extingui shed , so that all dered good work for one day, the regular business of mene. The Prince embarked at Dumbarton and cumstances. The deceased was the son of the en- so closely did it resemble a genuine note that the rolled up, and contained a brick and a stone. There was comparatively safe. Tho total loss is esti- the levee commenced , when upwards of 2,500 nobi- joined bis famil y at " the tail of the bank ," where gineer in charge of the works, and resided on the parties taking it, whether Mr. Austin or his ser- was a blue and white handkerchief , well known to mated at £350. lity and gentry were pre sented , a ceremony that thty spent the night , and on Tuesda y proceeded to premises. On 3Ionda y night, shortl y before six vants, did not consider it necessary to subscribe thc belong to Pulley, fastened round them. Owing to SrsAiveB Scene at a CriRrsTEi vryo.—At Hudders- lasted several hours. Glasgow , where they arrived at twelve o' clock , o' clock, the deceased was piaying with another boy name of the person they received it from. Tliere is, their advanced state of decay, it is now impossible fie ld, on Sunday last, between the conclusion of Shortly after six o' clock her Majesty left the having been received in th eir passa ge the " up the Clyde named Prestcd , in the engine-house, against the however, one certain mode of detectin g the forgeries, to discover any stains of blood upon them . This morning service and the commencement of the ser- Castle. There was a considerable crowd assembled with the warmest demonstration s of hearty good regulations of Messr s, Easton and Amos, when the and that is by examinin g the reverse side of the affords the only link that "was required to complete vice in the aftern oon, there were , as is frequen tly outside, who cheered lustily as the royal carriages feeling. deceased said, " The foreman is coming, and we note to that where the bank clerk 's signature ap- the proof of hu guilt. The pool in which they were the case, numbers of persons , of both sexes, congre- drove off to Phoenix Park . The Lord Provost , having presented an address Lad better hide unti l be is gone." "He stepped back- pears, when it will be found that scarcely a mark of found is situate about half a mile from the barn gated round the baptismal font at the parish A private concert was given at the Royal Lodge , from the corporation , received on board the honour wards and fell down the well, a distance of about the ink from tbe engravin g will be visible, whereas where Pulley was discover ed by Superintendent church , for the purpose of admitting within the Phoenix Park , in the evening. . of knigh thood. 200 feet. There was sixty feet of water in tbe well when the signature is written with a pen , which is Harris. — Worcester Herald. pale of Chri stianity their juvenile offspring . Among On 1 hursday a grand review took place in Phoenix The deputations from the Lord -Lieutenant , Dpputy * at the time. An alarm was immedia tely raised , always the case on genuine notes, thc ink will pass Execution of Mar t Ball at Coventrt. —The pri- others there was one party consisting of father and Park. Soon after dawn the human tide began to Lieuten ant , and magistrates ofthe county ; from the but the body of the unfortunate lad was not reco- thr ough, and the form ation of the letters will be soner made a confession of her guilt to Mr. Stanley, mother , with thei r brothers and a sister , all of them flow towards the Park , swelling as every hour ad- Presbyte ry of Glasgow , of the Establi shed Church , vered until two hours afterwards in consequ ence of qui te appa rent. The number of this note is M-L the governor of the gaol, on Sund ay week. She apparentl y decent peoplo, with them a brother of vanced , till the streets were one compact mass of men and from the Free Kirk of Scotland , were severally 1846. the difficulty to reach the water. The father of the 65205, date 16th February, said : "I put the arsenic on the shelf, and told him the mother , and consequentl y uncle to the neop hyte on horse and foot, and in every descri pti-n of vehicle. introdu ced, and pre tented addresses to her Majesty , deceased said the men had been inspecting the en- (her husband ) there were some salts on the shelf ; about to bo admit ted into the church by the sacra- Some carri ages had remained all night on the who immediatel y af terwards , in company with Prin ce gine durin g that day, and had withdrawn the stage he might take them , they would do him good , mental rite of baptism. The rev. clergym an pro- ground^ to secure good positions. From eight Albert and the royal children , proceed ed to visit the ' -from off the well, and left it open. Witness had -proutnfc -5. though I knew at the time it was not salts ; bu t I ceeded throu gh th e service till hc came to put the to ten o clock th« scene was one which only the Cathedral and the College, receiving on her progre n •EJjc ht if he took it himself I should not get into frequentl y caut ioned the deceased not to go in the thoug , usual question to tho sponsors— "Name this most crowded portion of the rout e to Epsom on a through the vast and orderly assemblag e the most engine-house, and he went there without his know- EXPLOSION "AND LOSS OF SEVENTY LIVES any scra pe about it, for the people would think he child. " To the astonishmen t of all present , tho most crowded Derby day could at all equal. enthusia stic plaudits. " , ledge. Terdict , "Acciden tal Death. AT ABERDARE. took it in mistake. My husband was in the habit of uncle (a roug h sailor), taking the child , a boy, from Befor e nine o'clock the crash of military musi c re- Shortly af ter two o'clock tbe royal party arrived at A Max "Killed ur a Fall fbom a Scaffold. — going witlx other women , and using me so ill ; no the arms of the mother sounded On Friday week a dreadful explosion of fire , and placing him in those of in every street , the gleaming of arms , and the tu rminus of the Edinb urgh and Glasgow Rail- On Tuesday, before Mr. Wakley, an inquest was dam p, one knows what I hav e suffered ; but had I havo the waving that dread and destructive agent the clergyman , distinctly gave the astoundin g ap- of standard s, were visible in every great way, where they partook of refreshmen t , and then held at the Cock public-bouse , , on the , occurred at Mr. known as much as I do now, I would not have done pellation of "Bun g thorough fare at Highbury William Thomas 's colliery, t a your Eye." The clergyman as the tr oops marched to the ground. started for Balmoral by special trai n via Perth. body of George Moon, a bricklayer , aged 27 years. si u ted at about two for I would rather have left hini and wen t to the At ' miles from the village of Aberdare. The it, started , the clerk stared in astonishm en t, while ten o clock the royal standard was hoisted , as They arrived at Per th at half-past three o'clock , It appeared that the deceased was in the employ of shock was workhouse ; but I hope God will forgive me." The some score or two of other the Queen felt for miles round . Soon after the fatal event a par ties smiled and left the lodge . Her Mnjes'y was in an af ter a pleasant journey, whe-e after takin g a -the new Birming ham and West India Dock Itail- murderess mainta ined her self-possession and firm- most melancholy scene took lace—mothers hurr y- tittered ; many endeavoured in vain to smother opt n barouche, d rawn by four horses, with postilion s hasty drive thivrn gh the towh. they di ned and slept, -n-.-iT Company, On Monda y mornin g the deceased p ness in a remarkable degree to the last. Imme- anil outrid ers. ing in search ol sons, wives m search of their hus- their laughter , but to no pur pose. Again, the rev . She. was accompanied by the royal and started for their own quiet home at Balmoral was at work on a temporary scaffold , when suddenl y diately after ten o' clock on Thursda y morning the gentleman (thinking that the question had children , and attended by the Countess of ' about two ton s wei ht of earth bands , their cries rendin g the air as corpse after been Clarendon. on Wednesda y morning. g gave way, and fell 9th inst. , the officers of die prison appeared on the misund erstood) asked , " Name this child." " Bung Prince Albert was mounted on a magnific ent dark upon the deceased, and hc was buried bre ast hi h corpse , blackened and mutilated , was brou ght to g si ht. Soon sixty s ed platform in fron t, and the prisoner -was led forth , your Eye," was again the answ er. This was too chesnu t charger , and was dress ed in the unifor m ofa between the earth and the wall. The earth was g di figur co-pses wer e brough t ' from the pit ; and then it havin g accompanied by the governor , under-sheriff and his much for human gravit y, and loud laught er fol- field-marshal . He wore a star on the left breast. CAUTI05? TO WORKING- MEM *.-A POLITICAL quickl y remove d, and the deceased was found to he , become fatal to , and the Rev. descend the pit, the brave men who had officer Mr. Sandberg , re adin g the lowed the rep ly, when the re v. gentleman was The tro ops having been marched to the front QUACK EXP OSED , iu a dying state. lie expired on the road to the , in such service for the occasion . She a praiseworth y manner , rescued the few that es- proceeded up the forced to turn round to conceal his risible emotions , ofthe roya l standard flag-staff , near which the roval above house.-—A brother of the deceased attributed steps with little assistance , caped , gave over, though it was believed that there and , as far as we could and recover his suaviter in mode. Turnin g again car riage was stationed, Prin ce Albert took tbe com- [We take tlie following from an excellent jour nal great blame to the superintendent of the works, in observe , uttered no word while thus were a great many others , living or dead . 105 awaiting her to the nautica l sponsor , he asked , " Is ifc your wish mand with Lieutenant -Getieral Sir Edward Blake- published in New South Wales, entitl ed causin g the br icklayers to work too earl y after th e men end , but , with closed eyes and the People ' *- and boys were in the pit at the time of the exp saddened counte- that tho child should be baptised in this nam e?" ney. The fi eld at this moment presente d a b rilliant Advocat e.] struts had been removed which upheld the earth. — losion, nance , stood motionless whilst the rope very few of whom have been broug ht out alive. was placed With the most imperturable gravity the seaman appearance—the extended line of Infantr y, with their Emigratio **,'.—LloyiVs Weekly London Mr. Rowbotkam (the superintendent) said the struts round her neck. In an instant afterwards > Newspaper, Seven horses also were killed. It is confidentl y as- the drop rep lied with an affirmative bow. " Youn g man ," serried bayonets blazing inth e sun—the dense bodies October 22d, in answer to a corres pondent were remov ed on Saturd ay last , and before they fell, and she passed from this life in the ' ¦ , says serted that the cause of this most awful catastro phe pr esence of said the minister , I wish you would bo a little bf Cavalry statiohed at the wines—wh ilst at either " A labourer with no capital , but st out arms were so the earth was carefully examine d, to see if from eighteen to twenty thousand persons. A sub- and a Verdi ct was the negligence of one of the colliers in going more solemn on this occasion. " The reply was, end the Artillery was stationed ; Prin ce Albert and stout heart—not burdened with any ridiculous it was safe.—- , " Accidental Death. " dued thrill of horror appeared to pass over this im- fear s Child Mcbdeb axd Suicide of to a dangerous headin g without a safety lamp. It " How can I.bo more solemn?" The minister Gener al Blakeney then advanced to the front of the abou t blacks . and bushran gers , cannot do.b etter the Mother .— mense multitude as the fatal bolt was drawn , but e e A painful sensation prevailed throu g is scarce three years ago since twenty-eight human th n turning to th mother , inquired if she was line; they ..were accompanied by a brilliant staff. than emigrate. If he can get landed in any Austra- hout the neigh- otherwise there was no manifestation of feeling. willing for her bourhood of Peckham Hyo, in consequence Uvea were destr oyed by an explosion oi the same ' child to be so baptised ? She replie d P rince George of Cambri dge accompanied them. Hi-> lian port—Sydney, for .choice, as the Lond on ofthe of a The victim in this dreadful if cene appeared to die with much simplicity, report being circulated that a female nature , and near the same pit. " Yes, if it is a right name ; I Royal Highness was mounted on a beautiful Arab colony, he is quite sure of good wages and plenty had murdered without any perceptible strug gles or distortions. suppose it must be so. ¦ ' of her infant child and also destroyed We have received a communication , furnished by " The clerk then stepped charge r. ¦His Royal Highness was dressed in a food, with no expense f or fuel, aiid venj her own life. It is eighteen years since the hist execution at Co- forward , and inquired if little for The following particulars connected a corres pondent at Mer thyr Tydvil, by wliich it ap- tho child had been regis- majw-general' s uniform , and also wore a star on his clothes !" Wha t a delightful pros pect with the sad ventry —that of Mary Ann Higgins. tered , and in what name 1 but our afi air were obtained. For some short time a pears that the numb er of lives lost was fifty-four , ? " Yes ; named James breast. The Lord Lieutenan t wore civilian costume ijonaon con temporary has not female , Cha rge of tor ging a Will.—The magistrates of William." On this the , stated sufficient *• named Ann Herbert and not seventy , as stated above. _ clergyman was abou t to and kept generally, through the course ot the review, everybody hero knows well enough , has been residing in Peckham don , on Saturday last were engaged for a con- baptise it in the latter name that sirloins of Bye ; and about six or seven The whole of the unfortunate creatures who were Croy , but the young tar near her Majesty ' s carri age. Shortl y after eleven beef and legs of mutton run after the weeks smce she gave siderab le time in investigatin g a char ge against the positively interdic ted labourers beg- birth to a female child. The thus suddenl y cut off were decentl y interred on Sun- it/ and the ministe r returnin g o' clock , the review commenced. The affair was a ging to be eaten ; that sovereigns young woman was not repute d wife of Jacob King, a man who died at Ad- the child to its mothe r grow upon every , day, at the expense of Air. Thomas , the proprietor very properl y refused to brilliant one, and at its conclusion bush ; th at wood married but she lived under the protection of a discomb e, on the 25th of July last, of cholera. * baptise it under so str the royal party and coal always walk into the of the works, in the variou s burial- places of the It ange and unuau al a name , and was loudly cheered. grate ; and light them selves man. The man and woman , it seems, "wer e in tlie seemed that Mr. King, some hours before his death the christenin g every morning before constant neighbourhood. Thousands of specta tors were , part y left the church amid the Shortly, attertwo o' clock Prince Albert, the labourer or his wife practice of quarrelling ; and on more than asked for his cash box ; but the key could not be laughter of the congregation a accom- gets out of bed ; and tha t one occasion the latter has been heard to say that gathered together , and there was scarcel y a dry eye t th e font , the clerk panied by the Earl of Clare ndon , the Marq uis of the climate is so delightfull y warm presen t. found , and the brother of the deceased broke it advising them to re turn on the following that the people she would before long make a hole in the water. On Wednes- Lansdowne , Earl Fortesc ue, and Mr. Corry Con. can do without any clothes at all. A prelimina ry open . One of Mr. King' s labourers , Amos Gower, day, and have the rite perform ed in a This is the rea- Sunda y night last she quarrelled with the man , inquiry had taken place before the becomin "* nellan, private secretary to the Lord-Li eutenant son why money is so plentiful coroner , and an order was in the room at the time rubbin g the unfortunate manner . It was understood , , why labourer s get and durin g the temporary absence of the parties was grante d by him for the that the infant was drove into the city from the Viceregal Lod lots of "food , and fuel for nothin g buri al of the bodies gentleman with brandy. Deceased asked him bapti sed at another church in the distri ct ge, for the ; and clothes for a from thc house, she took her child out with only its , but the inquiry of most im- the same purpose of visiting some of the public institutions. mere song. The next time our port ance—as to the cau se whether he could write , and on being answered in afternoon in thc name register ed. contemporary hold« night- gown on ; and on a search being made for the of so awful a catastrophe The distin guished par ty first proceeded to the forth upon the advanta ges of —-ffas to commence the affirmative , Mr. King direc ted him to sign the Fires in Cambrid geshire. Royal Australia , we trust he infant and its mother , not the least tidi ngs of either yesterday (Friday.) —About midni ght on Iri sh Acad emy, a most interes ting will not forget will, which was takes out of the cash box, and ho Monday last , the extensive museum of Irish to place those we have abov e enume- could be ascertained. The next mornin g, however, far m premi ses of Mr antiqui ties , where they were rate d in his did so, the other witness being " Dick ," his bro ther. Simeon Sell, of Bassingb ourn received by the Rev. catal ogue, for they are jus t as near the about a quarter past four , whilst a police-constable IMMENSE DESTRUCTION OF FARM PRO- , were discovere d =o be Dr. Todd , the Rev. T. Graves truth as half was This will could not bo found, and it was suspect ed on fire , nearl y the whole of , and Dr. Petrie. His the tales told to . the deluded labourer s passin g along the banks of the canal , his atten- PERT * BY FIRE. which wer e soon levelled r.iyal highness was conduc ted of England iion was attracted ^ b that the reputed Mrs . King had concealed or de- tothe ground ; fortunat -Hy throu gh the building , , to induce them to come out here. y a bonnet lying on the tOVfing - On Sunday night, shortly after eight o' there was no grai n of any and he minut ely p--tli. ThU clock, a stroyed it. On apply ing at Doetors ' Commons it kind in the examined the several curious re- . convinced him that some one must be fearful conflagration , wbich continued to barns. The horse s and other cattle were mains of m the water ra ge was found that ano ther will, dated Septemb er, 1841, got out in time to be antiquity collected there. The inspection , and m the ' course of a f ewminutes , throug hout the whole of the night, occurred - saved , with the exception ofa was strictl near the pl-ice where the upon had been deposit ed there, the witnesses to it being calf, which was y, private , but his Royal Highnessrspent Association of Natio.vs.—-An association of* bonne t "was lyin " he per- the estate of Sir Thomas Lennard , situate at Wen- burnt to a cinder .—On Tuesdav the men ceived the body of a child t wo persons named Tomlin and Church extensivei ' more than , half an hour in the institution , being much of all nations residen t floatin g on the surface of nington , near Rainkam , in Esses, about ei , and by pre mises of Mr. S. BUt, corn and in America , is about to be thewa ter. Havi ng ghteen which the whole of Mr. King' s pr operty was seed intereste d , and expressed himselfhighly pleased with form ed taken the child out, he sp*ran "his miles from London. The be- 0 Rt Plac6 We e found to be iri tfew York city, in ord er to advance , pro- property ia which the queathe d to Emma Church , the defendant T *S ' !" on fire , and all he saw; - -;; .. , , to the ex- the .whole oft Sthem , excepting the house pagate , and aid republican strug gles in every part , were de- His Royal Highness, and the r-oblemen who accom- of the world . * A-d- ' r-st 18, 1849. THE NPRT , ERN H ¦* STAR.•-• ¦ * - * ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ i ¦ ' . Mii- , . ^ _^ ' " "" " ' ' - ' ------« - -. - — - - ^ ii —l rt i 11 ii ii i —~ ^ O A THE CH LER Southwark , cases, 36, deaths, 27; Bethnal Green PARLIAMENTARY AND FINANCLVL REFORM rejoiced most sincerely in th.it exercise of good nature, that at an election, when a show of h-md-* cases, 39, deaths, 20; Strand * Union, cases, 40* sense and raised to meet the obl igations of Ibn' * country, ana Fan-it.—Return of cases of Cholera reported ASSOCIATION. . manly feeling which had produced a was called for, and the people had a majority on the you to deaths, 1; other localities, cases, 207, deaths. 9o! union of must como to direct taxation." it was per- the :General Board of Health :—London and sentiment and exertion on the partof the show of hands, when a poll was demanded, on that fectly true Vici- Total, cases, 517, deaths, 187. England and Wales The first aggregate meeting of this association various sections , ¦ that he had opposed the income tax -oity—Lambeth, new cases, 38, deaths, 9 ; Bermond- of-.the ' community entertaining occasion six men out of every seven were told, you might mid mini —Liverpool, cases, 221, deaths, 76; Merthyr Tyd- wis held on Slonuiiy night in Drury-lane Theatre. different ' , but he had not-opposed a property- sey, new cases, 74 deaths, 16 ; Southwark political opinions, a union whwh.- lie might are nobody—you aro not fre e men, it is only free tax. (Chem-s , new vil, cases, 11, deaths, 6; Dowlais, cases, 19 The building was crowded in every p art ; and upon sately assert ) lie h.,d not heen wld bv the go- cases, 14, deaths, 8; Strand Union, new , not all tlie machinations of tlie ene- men who have a ri-jht to vote—only persons who vci-nmeiit , We cases 7 • deaths, 9; Cardiff , cases. 19, deaths, 7 ; Pl the stage we observed, among many other members mies of freedom will take off the window-tax , abo- Wandsworth-road, new cases, 7, ymouth, , however tliey mi*rht conspire, have a certain qualification. So long as this state lish the duty upon tea deaths, 7 ; other cases, 2?, deaths, 17; Mevagissey, cases, 13,' deaths! of the association, Sir Joshua Walmsley, M.P., the would bo able or tobacco, or ena ble tho localities, new cases, 130, deaths, 45. Total successfully to resist. (Cheers. ) of things continued there could not be peace and poor man to buy his comforts and new 9 ; Newcastle-under-Lyne, cases, 20, deaths, 6; President ; Lord Dudley Coutts Stuart , M.P., Lord me voice of tlie necessaries at a eases, 270, deaths, 90, England and Wales—Liver- ' people, speaking from the wise contentment in the minds of the population ; solonif cheap rate ; but he had heard Leeds, cases, 15, death, 1; other towns, &c, cases Nu-zent, M.P., Feargus O'Connor, M.P., * Mr. C. coalition between as this coi-tinuod ' t hem sav, "We pool, new cases, 85, deaths, 35; Merthyr Tvdvil ' the middle class and the great this country was like a pyramid must have an income-tax of five per cent., " 193, deaths, 98. Scotland—Dundee, cases, 28, I.ushington, M.P., Mr. G. Thompson, M.P., Count oody of the artisans and the population of the standing s po n to meet new cases, 15, deaths, 6; Dowlais, new cases, ' on it i t, instead of on its broad base. thc necessities of the state. ( Hea r, hear.). Let it 32 deaths, 13; other towns, eases, 7, deaths, 5. Ge- Pulszkf, Mr. S. Harford, the Rev. T. Spencer, Mr. country, had proclaimed the approaching doom and (Loud cheers.) There were two deaths, 11 ; Portsmouth, new cases, 9; Portsea' things united to- be remembered that an income-tax was iiot a pro- neral total, cases, 1,091, deaths, 434. W. A. Wilkinson, Mr. AV. Williams, Mr. T. Prout, early downfall of that offensive and detestable ex- gether in this society—Parliamentary new cises, 14, deaths, 6; Warrington, new cases' and Financial perty-tax,* but he believed thc beat thing that could SirF, Knowles, Bart., Mr. C. Wordsworth, Mr. clusivencss, which had hitherto deprived the great Reform. Hut though they were " W, deaths, 3; Plymouth, new cases, 13, deaths 3 • WEuXEsnAT.—Return of cases of Cholera reported two distinct things, be done for the people would be to take off the Miall, &c. portion of the people of tlieir proper in the both were necessary to each other towns, new cases, 105, deaths, 55. Total to the General Board of Health :—London and share other. Just as a man taxes he had mentioned, and establish, not an in- new Sir J. Walmsley presided ,* and he commenced representation. (Hear, hear.) And was not such a might say ho had come to mow ease?, 283, deaths, 119. Scotland—Dundee hew vicinity—Lambeth, cases, 14, deaths, 14 ; Ber- their fields, and in come-tax, but an equitable property-tax, (Hoar, , the proceedings by detailing the order of business. combination required ? Was it not indispensable ? order to do this he had brought cases, 14, deaths, 14 ; Arbroath, 5, deaths 3 mondsey, case3, 24, deaths, 8 ; Rotherhithe, cases, his scythe with him ; hoar.) He believed that the same amount of money , . Total In the course of his remarks he read tho following look at the House 0f or a man might say he was ready new cases, 19, 'deaths, 17. 7, deaths, 3; Southwark, cases,-15 , deaths, 13 *, New- Commons. How were thc to catch the rats whicli was now raised could be raised by less op- General Total, new letters, from Mr. Hume, M.P., and Mr. Cobden, people represented there which infested their houses, and ' cases, 572, deaths, 226. ington, cases, 43, deaths, 21; Bethnal Green, case?, ? [A Voice, "Not at nil."] he had broiifht a pressive means. Reduce the duty upon tea, and M.P., who were unable to give their attendance :— wnere were the people's friends there ? What were ferret and his dogs to do it. (Laughter and cheers.) Satdbdat.—London and "Vicinity—Lambeth new 36, deaths, 24; Shoreditch, cases, 10, deaths, 10 ; the revenue would be equal to its present amount, , • Jlr Deab Sin. JosntJA,—I am sorry to be obliged to their number ? Why, the largest number who sup- They had a fine ferret in the Liverpool Financial case3, 51, deaths, 21 ; Bermondsey, new cases, 17, other localities in London, cases, 261, deaths, 92. write to you instead of presenting myself, as I had in- ported whilst the poor would be benefitted. It had been so t one reform motion was eighty-four. Motion Reform Association—Daughter,)—which had fer- deaths,-!; ISewington, , To al, cases, 430, deaths, 185. England and Wales tended, at the meeting on the 13th. but the packets do not , with coffee. The duty had been reduced , whilst tho new teases, 16 deaths, 5; 1 ot on foi, hberal purpo reted out many abuses, and tliey had now also many Southwark. new cases, 31 * deaths, 13 ; Wandsworth —Liverpool, Wises, 154, deaths, 49 ; Merthyr admit of my being in London until the evening of the 14 tit. ¦ffi n" ' ses and the effectua- revenue derived from it was the same, if not greater. , If ybu will offer an excuse to the meeting for the disappoint- J™*ms w s noKatived majorities, fine dogs—(cheers)—not greedy dogs that could new cases, 12, deaths, 6 ; other localities, new cas Tydvil. eases. 14, deaths, 5; Dowlais, cases, 20, TrTh0 '? bv large So i fc would bc with every other article which the es, ment you wfll oblidge me, as every day 1 live and every- nJy °»«n;ned the details of tl?e representa- never have enough, not sleepy dogs lving down, lov- 132, deaths, 54. Total new cas3s, 259, deaths 103. deaths, 9 ; Plymouth, cases, 23, deaths, 13; New- tion Ih» poor consumed. (Hoar, hear.) How then, were , thing I learn convinces me more and more that there is rio wouId nnd ^At out of 000 electors ing to slumber, but faithful watchdogs known by g a land and Wales — Liverpool, new cases castle-under-Lyne, cases 25, deaths, 4; other towns, chance of efficient financial reform, nor of any other re- tho i ? 850, , they to ur e fin ncial reform ? By revolution, Eng , 74, g °f ! the names of Joseph Hume and — anarchy, and viol deaths, 21 ; Merthyr Tydvil, new cases, 9, deaths cases, 164, deaths, 73. Total, cases, 400, deaths, form, until the House of Commons shall be reformed, and evenS;h ff°/]fle «P™«ntation, only one ence ? (Cries of " No.") Such a , 13; of/hat number^ belonged to the ndus- (cheers)—and with the assistance of the ferret and remedy would be worse 7; Dowlais, new cases, 19, deaths, 11 , Plymouth 153. Scotland—Dundee, cases, 37, deaths, the power ofthe people in that hou3e increased ; and lam S " H than thc disease. The real , cases, satisfied that nothing less than the reform which the bill Surely was an the dogs he had no doubt these rats would in the remedy was parliamentary reform new cases, 23, deaths, 8 ; Newcastle-under-L other towns, Ac., cases, 10, death 3. Total, eou& ^at abuse ;—(hear, hear,) yne, deaths, I propose to ask leave to introduce in the next session will mC ied b ti>e unanimous end be ferreted out. (Cheers.) But he would be —for until the House of Commons was newc ases, 17, deaths, 4. other towns 47, deaths, 16. General total, case3, 877, of\ho / tho -T i S coalition made what , new cases, affordit I trust that the notice I have given willinduce re 0 S eV told that as a clergyman he ought to encourage it professed to be, a real representation of the SO, deaths, 49. Total, new cases, 222, deaths, 100. 354. formers generally to consider the situation of the country ttffW^ * d brrefessed TheXt ? * every man to bo quiet and contented, and not to people, it was vain to hope for any amelioration, Scotland—Dundee, new cases, 28, deaths, 9. St and the helpless condition in which the industry of the that the ™ country is placed by the class reprcsenSoSi,Jt^Vfc ! meddle with men that wero given to change.- Ho in our condition. Tins, then, was what the Andrews, new cases, 8, deaths 8. Total new legislation which has so long was a asso- , , cases, existed. But as the reform is entirely in the power of the mockery. HencehilV, tho people were thwd would be told that it was his duty io preach peace ciation proposed to effect. First, it would 34 deaths, 15. General Total MUTINY ON BOARD THE AMELIA, OF ' extend , , new cases, 515. electors. I trust wc shall find them alive to the duty they "O we in the repi e nnd good order in the country. Well, ho believed the suffrage by .extending the right of voting to any deaths, 218. GLASGOW. owe to SSSS^ryn^V ^ themselves, as well as to thc non-electors. I shall Ul eXercise no control l er the- that this was tho only way of doing it. (Loud man who was rated, however small in amount, or "Bristol.—The cholera at Bedminster is very persevere to urge reform on the government aud on the expenditureexDenSr^ ofnfT the country, fed cheers.) He was never more sure that he was doiuc (F ing and Mercantile Gazette.) House of Commons with- as it was bv thc who chose to claim to be rated. He did not know much on the increase again. In the city of Bristol rom the Shipp ; but unless we have support from " " 3 ™<- inordinate taxation his Master's work than when lie tried to diminish of a daring^ out, and the aid of the elcctore, we shall not succeed.— n o which th£ how far such an extension oftho suffrage might give it was very much on the increase in the latter part We hare received the followingaccount the sum of human misery. (Cheers.) Ofall things resulted in the Wishingyou a goodmee ting, I remain, yours sincerely, universal satisfaction ; but it would be a great and ¦of Friday and Saturday, but was somewhat better mutiny on board this vess-1, which Su- Joshua oSS Wh n ie told thc he was most certain that it was the will of Almighty Amelia wa<* on her Walmsley, M. P. JosErn Hume. • j ™ th"*. ta'"n2 the an important step towards improvement. It would at on Sunday. loss of seven lives. The schooner Eastbourne, Sussex, August 7. 1813. S PeD ?f the nation at flfty^i God to promote the happiness of all mon—lie to Hong K<*ng, ?hR wirf i T ° x millions. be- least effect one purpose ; that, whereas the electoral Southampton.—So improvement has as yet taken passaj -e from tbe coast of Mexico Sib,—"Will you be good enough to express to the com- 863 c?**tribute thirty-two millions lieved it was his will that men should not bo slaves silver amounting mittee my 3H& 111 , body was now only a minority of the adult popula- lace in thc health of this town. having on board specie in {-old and regret that absence from town will prevent my m• Under our present svstem but that their hearts should be filled with and p the sanguinary being present at the next meeting of the Aletropolitan nnd ?I^ ti ^, i^*™-) joy tion and the non-electors a largo minority, places Samsbi*rv.—We are glad to say that the improved to abont £60 000. and which led to tne righr of man not to be taxed without gladness ; and ho believed he was most doing his The Amelia wai com- I'arliamentary Reform Association. Tou have many years his would be changed. The electors would become the state of the public health still continues. occurrences th->t took place. of ^consent was constantly violated. That m-wit will when he tried to remove evil and to promote Scotchman ; good work before you, and it will not, therefore, be large majority, whilst those excluded would ho the Mkbthtr NEiGHBocRnoon.—Owing to the manded by Mr. RobertL. Macnally, a amiss to keep an army ot reserve tor another campaign. man, that admirable statesman and just lord Chan- happiness. When he heard that the powers that he aso Alva, acted minority ; and , after all, if this was not found suffi- number of deaths, and the fears existing among the besides whom a Span-ard , Bon Ranvm In the meantime you are doing battle heroically: and I re- cellor. Camden, enunciated this magnificent princi- were ordained of God, and that they ought not to crew con- '¦¦ cient, it would not prevent the people going workpeople who are flyingin all directionsas fast as supercargoand principal master. The main, Sir, yourobedient servant, .. . pie, eighty years ago, in "lantruaaro that had been resist the powers', he believed that they were only always , , lad* E. Whitty, Esq. RichAbd Cobdes. further. (Hoar, hoar.) Ho had been as their circumstances will enable them to do so, sisted of nineteen persons, only two of whom treasured up and reiterated by a grateful posterity to do so so far as those powers made men happy. for progressive reform. subject-*, namel Long ago he had voted suffici ent coals cannot be obtained for the furnaces about eighteen were Bri'ish y. The honourable Chairman then proceeded to say and the force and truth of which could not bo He believed that it was tho will of God that govern- for what was called the Reform Bill M'Douald ; the re , Sow, he ofthe Dowlais Ironworks, and they have been obliged Thomas Gannon and Charles that ifc was highly honourable to the metropolis weakened by multiplied citation. Dnvinn* the ments should live for the people, not that people o o a e a ho e , French v ted f r wh t h c lled t R form Bill of the to be worked half-time for some days past. It is mainder we**e Dutchmen, Norwegians , that this association had so rapidly developed the American war that great man said :—" Taxation should be for the governments ; he believed it was present day, as proposed by the hon. gentleman anticipated they will have to be abandoned altoge- Spanish, Portuguese, and Mexicans. ThTe were necessity for a large, substantial, and permanent and representation are inseparably united ; Cod the will of God that the constitution of this country in the chair. (Hear, hear.) The next point de- Mrs. Sarah Selina measure of has kept. ther, should not some providential arrest ofthe epi- bes'des, a** passengers, a Mr. and reform ; that in the short space of six joined them together ; no . British Parliament should be to. Now, the powers of this country manded by the association wns the ballot, wliich demic take place ; in which case it would he fearful Cooke, and her female servant. The mutiny brok e months many prejudices of long existence had been can put them asunder. My position is this I re- were the Kings, Lords, and Commons. The King might he called at once the greatest and the least of to contemplate the effects on the place and the in- out about two o'clock on the morning of the 3rd of removed ; that they had been enabled to give confi- peat, and 1 will repeat it, and shall maintain ifc to they did not meddle with—they wove good loyal the points. It was the greatest because the most " habitant-*, inasmuch as they are solely dependent on October last year, and appears to have been whoTy dence to their fellow-men in the integrity of their my last hour—taxation and representation are in- subjects to the Queen. (Loud cheers.) Neither did necessary, and the most • important of all at the , Andres tie works. confin<*d tothveeof the crew, Jose Torres purpose ; and that they were now standing forth as separable. Their coalition is founded on the laws tliey wish to interfere with the House of Lords, but present day ; perhaps it would be thc least impor- Vale of ITeato.—The cholera has broken out in Baldibiza, and Jose Calero. The second mate. men determined, by every means in their power, to of the constitution and of nature too ; for whatever they did say that with regard to the Ilouse of Com- tant after all the others had been secured. Although thebeautifulValeof Neath, and carried off a great Caetano Gomsz, who had charge of the watch, was promote the great and good objects they had set is a man's own is absolutely his own. (Cheers.) So mons there must be some mistake. Tho powers he had voted again and again for the ballot, and manyof the inhabitants. attacked and murdere i b** these ruffians , when Mr. forth. For this efficiency they were deeply indebted man has a right to bo taxed without his consent, that be were ordained of God, that tho Commons should do so again whenever it was proposed , he LiVebtool.—The change of the weather to a Alva came up"-n d"ck, followed by Mr. Co*-ke, the to the able, earnest, and zealous labourers of the either expressed by himself or his representative. should represent the people a fc large—the working confessed he did not like it. no nii.ni'*n ladder. Mr. ing had been found sufficiently capacious to receive and essential to tho constitution. Those were the upon the throne who had no right to be there ? carry away that which belonged to him ; and al- townships of this borough, in which, up to Saturday, Cooke, the passenger, was theii next victim ; he ws the thousands who thronged to give their adhesion words of the great Lord Camden, one of the most Surely that could not be one ofthe powers that bc. though he would much rather not bc put to the cases, and 31 deaths. s'a**bed and thrown ove-board. The mutineers then to the cause of freedom and advancement. ( Hear, righteous judges and enlightened Chancellors ever Or what would tliey say if there were members in expense of building a wall—although he had much there had been 70 'h Hull.—It appears that though the attacks of went forward, called the larboard watch, and showing hear.) But the great feature which distinguished known in the English nation. Now, the incontesti- the House of Peers who ad no right either by birth rather ifc wns not necessary to protect the voter by cholera in Hull have not been so numerous during their bloody knives, told them they had murdered this movement from all others in the history of po- ble fact was, the people of this country were not or by creation , to sit on thc benches ? And so what the ballot, hc was determined that tiie voter should every one aft except or. Macnally, Mrs Cooke and litical agitation was the momentous fact, that the represented. Nevertheless they were taxed. There- would they say when tliey found that tho Ilouse of tbe present week, there has been an increase, ' be free. Thereforo it was necessary to afford the though not a large one, in thenumber of fatal cases. her servant, Marv Hudson ; that thev, the mutineers, link that had been broken between the two great fore, as 'Lord Camden said, they were robbed . Commons was filled with naval and military officer*?, voter protection , and therefore he" voted for the were in command of the vessel and if one of them classes had again been welded, firmly, and he ( Hear hear. ) They were robbed with pensioners, withsonsofthearistocracy, withany- Exeter.—Great consternation came over the city , , , because they ballot. The next point of the association was that refused to obev their orders be would be instantlv trusted for ever for the just purpose of social ;ind were not allowed to exercise body but thc commons of tlie realm. (Loud cheers ?) because the military autho- , that control over the of shorter parliaments. On this point he had al- on Thursday morning, having no political renovation. (ITear, hear.) By means of expenditure which belonged to them There was another objection offered to the reform the 82nd regt., -which had been murdered. The remainder of the crew, , according to ways entertained strong opinions—stronger than rities chose to send had no alternative but to this union the association had alread the rule of nature and every principle of that they desired, and which thev would have. w e a, to Exeter for the benefit of arms to defend themselves, y become a justice. In those of many good and earnest reformers. Nothing infected ith chol r submit ; large stones and pieces of lead were then " great fact." But to be trul powerful for good the House of Commons seven-ei (Cheers.) Lord " change of air. The citizens were alarmed at the y , ghths of the mem- John Russell said, that all thc was more important than to have short parliaments. the banded npon deck For purpose of-lestrovin-r Mr. the sphere of its labours must be widel b bers were opposed to any reform people had a right to having thc disease imported ; and a 'he y and roadly whatever. He was good govern ment. Thev Tho people could not continue to be properly re- prospect of enlarged ; its members must be zealous in support ( Mr. Lushington) had had no right, he said to universal suffrage. They Fore-street tradesmen proceeded to the Macnally, who was still confined to the cabin. At himself been in minorities of presented without them, for if there was all the ex- party of t-> of their opinions, and the principles for which they twenty and even fourteen ; and the hi had no right for every man to have a vote but tliey accompaniedby Air. G.W. Turner, who eight o'clock in the morning it was communicated ghest minority , tension of the suffrage that could be desired, and Guildhall, : -uibmit were associated must be carried out in a fearless they had ever obtained was about 100 had a right to bo well governed, and it was for them said to thc mayor that be represented a considerable him. tbat if be would lay down h s arms and ; but the they were protected both by their numbers and by t- lowest was when the Peop ' to judge whether tho present suffrage or some modi- number of persons connected with the trade of the quietly, they would not take his life ; these rms he and an uncompromising spirit. ( Hear, hear.) Tlie le s Charter was pro- thc device of thc ballot from improper interference, two posed. ( Great cheering.) He held in fication of it, or whether universal suffrage would who thought a wanton abuse of power, bad refused , but said if they would allow bim and the object was worthy of their efforts. They would his hand a , they would have no security that their representa- city, , Hst of twenty-one propositions made secure good government. In his opinion, b c s n a iment infected women the gig, with the necessaries he required he emancipate their fellow men from the state ol in the House he said tives, however fairly chosen, would continue pro- een emmittea in thru ti g reg and would direct moral degradation under which they laboured j of Commons for reform, every universal suffrage would not do so, but a limited " with cholera among a population of forty thousand would give them no furthert-ouble, one of which was perly for any length of time to represent their opin- them the course to steer. After a consultation this they would restore the spirit of the constitution ; negatived by large majorities. Now what was the suffr age would. Now, in the fi rst place, Lord John persons ; with the appliances possessed by the ions. Three years was the time proposed by ey would place property upon a safe and result ? That the poople, as he had said Russell forgot that a great deal depended upon military system ibese men might have been speedily was promised, and having got from him the course th before, association. Some persons might think that too r r ; permanent baais ; and make that a fact" which wero not dul represented; and, who was to answer the question. He, as a member " encamped in some health lace ; or taken to Dart- for Valabrigo, orders were giren to p epare theJboat " y what was more, long ; but he said, "let us try that first. The y p had hitherto been purely a fiction, by causing the they wereleft to writhe in compulsory of the government, thought that a system exclud- p where large publicbuildings are lying empty the vesselwas at this time lying to Trustingto submission fourth oint of the association was, that of more moor, their fa-th wa institutions of the country to live in the hearts aiid to aggravated abuses—abuses flagrant but unac- ing six out of seven men was the best ; and perhaps equal electoral districts. (Hear, hear.) It was not to receive them. The magistrates listened atten- , he went on deck unarmed, when he s , seized and thrown overboard with weights ; the the affections of the people. (Cheers.) At present, knowledged ; iniquitous, but unredressed, the officers of the army and navy, the Queen Dowa- tively, but could give no redress ; the mayor said he The necessary to explain in many words upon that point ; schoon<-r then filled and made all sail. Tbe npxt our political existence was a perpetual turmoil, un- Prime Minister—(groans and hisses)—dreaded thc ger, Lord Brougham, and a number of others in for who could think it right or just that city liko would represent the case to the Board of Health, , a " proceedings of these ruffians were what -miaht be suited to the habits and genius of the people. Th e idea of reform, too ; and what was the remedy for similar circumstances, would think the same. But Westminster should have no more members to re- and iu the meantime would try to induce tbe com- in the masses throughout the country were everywhere this state of things ? They could not rely the question was, what did the people of England present it than a little fishing town such as Har- manding officer to confine the men as much as pos- expected of them ; they dressed themselves r all the sullen and discontented. The middle classesgroaned think ? Let the working men of this country havo wich and other places of no greater moment ? contact with clothes of those they had mu dered ; took upon the House* of Commons—thoy must relv , sible to barracks, and keep them from under the pressure of unequal and unnecessary tax- this question sent to them, and what would bo their then, he agreeed ; and he was in the 82nd gold and distributed it amongst the crew ; destroved upon themselves. (Cheers.) They must secure Upon all those points, the inhabitants. The disease broke out ation. (Hear.) There was an antagonism between the amendment of the elective franchise ; answer ? ( Hear, hear. " All, all.") Yes, their an- anxious to promote their being passed into a law. the 2nd inst., at Devonport. all papers and writings which they considered offen- regiment on Thursday, over- the people and their representatives of a character and they must also have universal suffrage. swer would be : " All—every man!" Because He was also in favour of the other point urtjed by f rom that time up to Wednesday last, there have sive, withm any valuables, which were thrown board more so extraordinary . that no social, or scarcely any (Loud, general, and continued cheerng.) Universal then agriculture, labour, merchandise, arts—all thc association—the abolition of the property qua- been about a dozen deaths in the regiment, and on , and finally got at the wine, and became int the 4th social or political amelioration could be obtained , suffrage was proffered to them by this association, would have fair play : and every member of parlia- lification. ( Hear, hear. ) One word more respect- last Wcdne-day morning, while the men were on or less oxicated. The following day, , J. S wegian ; Frank unless by means of an agitation alike injurious to only purified to a small extent to protect it from ment would study tiie wants and wishes of all, and ing tho association. It had for its object and its p a a o was attacked with cholera ; mit, a Dutchman ; W. Peter, a Nor arade, C pt ia Mo re Geering, of Bor- the temper, the interests, and the means of the abuse, and merely to prevent the intermixture of government would exist for the good of all. The effect to unite the working and middle classes. the report here is that hc was buried at six o'clock of St. Michael's; Jem Bcrenger, country. ( hear.) A glance at our parlia- tho class of common boa-gars and common vaga- honourable gentleman then stated that he had beon (Cheers.) . Henceforth they were united for a next morning. The totnl of deiths from cholera in deaux ; and Joze de Averasturi, a Spaniard, of Hear, " ' Bilboa. proposed a plan to recover the vessel that mentary history would at once show the necessity bonds. [A Voice : Where * is the right of man ?"] in the United States at tho time of an election , and common object. Union was strength ; by union Devonport were 74 in seven days ; and the deaths in for a thorough reform in the representation. Look With universal suffrage they must also secure thc all went on so quietly, that if lie had not been told, they would obtain their object ; and those who w ht. niuht, which they communicated to the rest of the Plymouth 163 do n to Wednesday nig to only at the last session. The only great national privilege of the ballot. (Hear, hear.) There were ho would not have known sueh a thing was going would attempt to sow disunion among them were Monday.—Returnof casesof Cholera reportedto crew, four excepted, whom they were afraid trust. H for their enterprise an adze question which had passed the legislature was the many other points which time would not permit him on. Ho proceeded to i;emind the meeting that there their greatest enemies. '(Hear, hear.) Those who the General Board of Health :—London and "Vici- aving prepared , t p , &c,a" eleven crowning-act of free-trade—the repeal of thc navi- to advert to; but- he could assure them that he was were lately in this country tho directors of certain bound the different classes together, and amalga- nity—Lambeth, new ca«es, 23, deaths, 20; Ber- he pum breaks, some boardine pikes o and Baldibiza gation laws. But this was not the fault of the re- not aware that ho differed very much—although he railroads who snid to tho shareholders—let us alone mated them, as far as possible, all into one, were a new cases, 26, deaths, S ; Southwark, new 'clock Jan Smit despatched Torres . mondsey, who who upon deck and then fell upon presentatives ofthe large constituencies. They had must confess he did in a slight degree—from any —hold your tongues, and we will manage your rail- nation's greatest benefactors. But the greatest of cases, G3, deaths, 18; Strand Union, newcases, 90; were sleeping , struggle. continually brought before thehousc great and impor- of the six points promulgated in the report of tho ways for you, but if you begin to question us we all enemies, in his mind, were, those who, by pro- , new cases, , a , 12: Greenwich, Calero, whom he overcame after a smart Whitechapei 22 de ths thrown over- tant measures of reform ; but how they had been council. Hut let them for a moment examine tho shall resign. Well , for a time the shareholders were moting class legislation , gavo to one class of the new cases, 20, deaths, 10; Bethnal Green, new The bodies of these ruffians were then and Jan Smit took the command with the treated he left the meeting to say. How had that operation of universal suffrage. How had it worked good boys—they did as they were bid—they did not people a right to be banded together in aversion and cases, 18, deaths, 11 ; other localities, new cases, board, " interfere ; but by and b.v they began to find out consent of the crew, the k'1 Gannon being engaged measure of financial reform, ahno-t the only great in America ? Why, ifc had thcre introduced peace dislike to another class, who established in a 215, deaths, 105 . Total, new cases, 470, deaths, subject from which a reduction ef expenditure could amongst all men and universal satisfaction. They that the directors were playing the rogue, nnd then, country discontent nnd disunion, not ns a transient , to navigate the vessel. Their first intention was to 184. England and Wales—Liverpool, new cases but the state of the be obtained—the motion of Mr. Cobden, for placing never heard of any tumult or disturbance in conse- as every man had a vote, tliey took tho matter into evil, but as a lasting and chronic malady. There- 114 n w ea es 35, have returned to Maza'lan, " , deaths, 44; Merthyr Tydvil, e s , prevented this, and the naval and military establishments of the country quence of sedition against the government. No; their own hands. Now the people of England were fore he honoured this association, and wished to , 18 ; Dowlais new cases, 52, deaths, 28; weather, wbich came on to blow, the shareholders—the aristocracy were the directors deaths , the course was shaped for the Sandwich Islands, upon the footing of 1835, after 20 years of profound because the people were they governors, through support it, because it sought to destroy all class Plymouth, new cases, 44, deaths, 24; Leeds, new —(loud cheers)— and they said, leave us to manage loiri slatioii—all legislation for the benefit of one where, after a tempestuous passage, she arrived peace—been treated ? Why, it had been rejected by their representatives ; nnd the would not rise up cases, 14, deaths, 1; Newcastle-under-Lyne, new against their own authority, everything—-don't you interfere. (Loud cheers and et of men in the country and not for tho benefit safely at Honolulu, on the 12lb of Oct., 1848. a majority of 275 to 78. ( Hear, hear.) ilow had or commit suicide cases, 11, deaths, 6 ;.other towns, new cases, 23?, the motion of Mr. Hume for an amendment in the against their own institutions. (Cheers.) Then , laughter.) But the people found out that their of all. deaths, 112. Total new cases, 502, deaths, 233. The preceding part of this narrative has been of a national representation heen received by the House again, let them just look across the water to France. affairs were not well mana-M"Y Stuart then presonted himself, and course of reform. (Cheers.) He had come to tho has been more particularly the scene ofthe calamity, Torre in ten houses of that devoted terrace, during thc letters of advice and instructions from Jecker, , in name only but in reality—the people's house, ing to tho dictates of law, could not be battered was greeted with enthusiastic and prolonged ap- meeting that night without knowing what the con- and Co.. of Mazatl an; one for 150,000 dollars, con- (Cheers.) He should conclude by reminding the down by artillery. ( Hear, hear.) No six-pounders plause, wliich was prolonged by a gentleman on the tents of the report they had heard read were to be: course of eleven days, there were seventeen deaths * , independent of several others signed to Messrs. Turner and Co, of Hong Kong, meeting that tliere were few objects of higher, should lurk in the suburbs of the Horse Guards, platform exclaiming, " Throe cheers for Hungary," but he knew that he should meet friends who had from Asiaticcholera , masse who left then1 Louses infected to die elswhere. In but for account and risk of Messrs. Fin'ey, Hodgson purer, or more ennobling interest than those for the Blues,should repose harmlessly in their bar- when the vast audience, en , by shouts and been linked with him for years in the cause of tho and Co., of London ; another for 120,000 dollars, to which they were associated. It was for the people racks, and the cause of the people would achieve waving of handkerchiefs, testified then- enthusiasm people, and was satisfied that at an assemblage liko one house. So. 6, no less than five persons died of must cholera. The house was in the occupation of the Messrs. Turner and Co., of Hon? Kong, in payment of this country to say whether those objects should complete success, because the sovereignty of the m the cause. the present his principles were safe. But be here announced that Count Pulszk hc could have wished to Rev. T. Harrison, a dissenting minister, and with ibr a cano previonslv ordered for shipment in the be accomplished. ( Cries of " They shall.") Thoy people and their inalienable rights would have been The Chairman y confess that in one point staying prepara- Ameliaon her .v rival in China. Tbe third bill of were of vital importance ; but the cost must be cal- constitutionally vindicated. Mr. L. here alluded to was on the platform, and this again excited the en- see the report differently worded. The report con- ihat gentleman and his wifo were being thrown open to ghton, lading was for 1.379 dollars, in favour of Mr. J. A. culated. ( Hear, hear.) The subject, he repeated, the scheme whioh had been formed in London for thusiastic cheering of the meeting. tended for tlie representation tory to a departure of the whole family to Bri a sort ; but he saw Airs. Henrietta Roseoe a very aged lady, and Mrs. Durran, of Macao ; 16,304 doll-rs were landed, for was a vital one ; and it might be embodied in one obtaining the franchise by the forty-shilling free- Lord D. Stuaut proceeded, at length, to say th t all who paid rates of tho smallest , representation ex« Edwards with a cook and housemaid Mrs. Roseoe which no hills of lading or other document conld be simple question — whether a territorial oligarchy hold qualification. Mr. Fox, an eminent and steady this was indeed a great moment for him. Thc cheer no just limit to tho principle of , . ' not for his own name universal suffrage. (Loud and died on thc ith inst. Mrs. found. We havenow tbegratification to state that should be allowed to pervert and override the spirit friend of the people, had declared, that one county whieh tho meeting had given, cepttng as combined with was"first siezed, . Hungary—(renewed cheers)—would never been able to seethe common who had attended upon her relative, was Jan Smit, of Rotterdam, whose conduct on this oeca- of the constitution'(cries of " So, no," and cheers) ; rescued from the aristocracy by tlio votes of the in- but for that of cheers.) He had Edwards, banks of the Thames to those of sense of what was called money qualification of any next seized, and on Mr. Harrison returning from the -ion is above all praise, has been presented with or whether the people, by the exertion of their dustrious classes, would be the certain herald resound from tho on Tuesday last £1.100 by several of the insurance companies ; and vindicate their majesty, important degree of parliamentary reform. tho Danube and the Theiss ; and he prayed that sort. (Cheers.) All who paid taxes, directly or funeral of his aunt, Mrs. Roseoe, , moral power, should nnd af an in prin- with the same dreadful also with a valuable,sextant , by Ashdown. of Finch- send forth happiness, peace, and contentment to -(Cheers.) they might urge on the gallant patriots—not only indirectly, were entitled to the benefi t of the hc found his wife attacked o - against oppression, bu t. in tlieir hour le that connected representation with taxation. and that lady expired early the next morn- lane, with the following insc iptinn :—" Pres nted to every portion of the empire. (Cheers.) The Rev. " Thomas Rpexckr then presented him- tlieir struggle ci p disease, victory. (Great applause.) But the Every man who ate bread contributed , directly or ing. It appeared that Mr. Harrison, overwhelmed Mr Jan Smii, of Rotterdam, by thc Coporation of the The report of the council having been read, self to the meeting, and was received with loud and of triumphant had not been assembled to discuss any indirectl to the taxation of the country. And w fled the bouse soon after bis wife's death, Roval Exchange, the Corporation of the Lond m, the The CnAinMAN then said it was intended that this repeated cheering. Meetings of this kind , he said, meeting y, ith grief, policy, al though tho enthusiasm ' the odious bread-tax now happily re- with a lodger in the next house. On Indemnity Mutual Marine, the Marine, and the report should be printed and circulated as widely were called agitation ; but they constituted the topics of foreign although in company " their hearts for all who, in what- mained only matter of shameful history, yet so long thc same uioniing that Mr. Harrison left his house Alliance, Marine Insur-mce Cornpa- ies «*f London, as possible ; and hc need only say, that, if so natural, order of things in the progress of a free which reigned in ever clime were struggling for their rights, had as any one of the implements of husbandry, or the Mrs. Edwards died, and the cook was taken ill and in testimony of their Inch estimation of Mr. Smii 's thoroughly approved, as he fancied it was, by .tho country. If they looked to the past,. they- would , fide- burst forth in a noble strain , aud i'or a moment di- laud itself on which corn was grown , was taxed— died the same evening. On the day following, services, and their especial appr cia'ion of the present meeting, they could show to the council find that every great measure which the government which tbey to Mrs. lity and conras-e displayed by him in rescuing the that they really and heartily concurred in it, day had carried was by tlie assistance of the verted attention from the object of the evening. so Ions as thc timber was taxed by Thursday, the three bodies were taken by of the . him to return thanks long, in a ' the return schooner Amelia, of Glasgow ,.end her valuable cargo, supporting the association of which this was the people, given at meetings of this-kind. He had ( Hear, hear.) I fc was not for made the ship that imported corn—so Roscoc s grave, in Kensal-grcen, and on ebullition of feeling. Thc honourable word, as any duty was paid on any article that of the mourners the nurse who had attended Mrs. •-utofthe hinds of mutineer*-, du'insr her voyage manifesto., (Cheers.) He would now call upen tlie attended conferences of the Anti-Slavery Society, for that noble London chairman had announced that there was present'one tended either to produce or import corn , let them Edwards was found dead. The remarkable fact of from Mazatlan to China, in they ear 1848. " , honourable member for Westminister to address aud he had seen slavery abolished—ho had attended rs.) of Hungary's noblest patriots—[at this point the en- not be told that brea d was untaxed. (Chee so many persons in one family dying as it were Aug. 1, 1849." them. parliamentary committees in favour of the penny- the staff of life, postage and he bad seen ; thc penny-postage thusiasm of the meeting was greatly increased by Every man, then, who ate broa d, simultaneously, and the head of the house dying Mr. Charles Lvshinoton, M.P., then stood foi*- , (Lord Nugent) with cheering. Ho said : obtained—he had attended banquets and conferences the chairman pointing . to. Count . Pulszky, who was paid a tax to the state ; and he from home, created an extraordinary excitement, ward, and was received in front of the stage, and accommo- immortal words of Lord Camden, before -- —The Committee of In- Perhaps the meeting would excuse him for advert- on the subject of the corn-laws, and he had seen the forthwith called udopted the which was considerably increased by Mr. Milledge, TEJ.-rn. .Tiox of Mixes. prominent seat]—who before they now brought ing for one moment to thc disadvantage whicli had corn-laws repealed ; and, therefore, by looking to dated with a quoted , to tho effect that taxation without repre- the" undertaker who uad buried the other memhers quiry into this important subject have probably express his feelings at and we are informed accrued to this meeting by the absence of Mr. the past he took courage for tho future. Sir Robert separated would sentation was robbery. (Cheers.) He had no right of the family, receiving the card of a medical jrentlc- their sittings to a termination, isode in so magnificent a meeting. hrase towards any man because ho which has been laid before Iluine, who was to have addressed them first on Peel rejoiced that the corn-laws were repealed, lie this noble ep to use a harsh p xaan at Hampstead and a note from the landlord of that, from the evidence ' (Great applause. ) After the many eloquent speech es did not happen to see a subject in the same light as the committee are not at all fa- this occasion. This privation, however, afforded said, but for that wo might- have Jiad a revolution the Jack Straw's Castle, stating that the Rev. Mr. them, the views of upon the subject of financial and parliamentary re- himself : but ho had a perfect right to use hard system of ventilation now adopted him (Mr. Lushington ) the opportunity of paying a in the country. , (Cheers.) But Sir Robert Peel Samson had died at liis house after having his will vourable to the he had not thc vanity to suppose he could ad- against himself. (Laughter.) collieries. It appears that cordial though inadequate tribute to the transcen- should l-cnicnibeiv-ind Lord John Russell—(hisses)— form, words hypothetically written out by a young man who had accompanied in the midland counties duce any new arguments in favo rof these impor- t ' ''s present opinions, he ever little or no improve- dent merits of that excellent man and admirable should remember, too, that tliere were other things Therefore, if wi h hi him. On Friday the young man who had accom- since the last inquiry, in 1839, besides' tant objects. Every person of reflection in the found himself voting in the House of Commons for in the system of ventilation in statesman. (Hear, hear.) Mr. Hume began his thc corn-laws—that there were other dan- panied the deceased from his home called on the un- ment has been made feel that financial reform was neces- a tax or grant and was not prepared north of England a career of correcting.public abuses at a time when, gers besides the want of free trade—that there were kingdom must public money, dertaker, and wished some boxes of jewellery and these districts ; while in the the means of obtaining it lay through immediately afterwards to support universal suf- improvements is evi- according to the prejudice of the day, to advocate rocks a-head which they should avoid , or elso the sary, and that other property tobe moved out ofthe house, saying sradual system .of scientific hear.) What need he should consider himself a thief and a reform was almost to contend for treason ; but not- country would still be subject to turmoil and insur- reform in parliament. ( Hear, frage, he would take care of it. Mr. Milledge denied him dently being generally adopted. The report will ' ' that financM reform was re- robber. (Cheers and laughter.) Now, he could when facts will sptak withstanding the calumnies of the enemies of rection. (Cheers.) "Th e .danger to this country aud of argument to show entrance to the honse, Then he threatened to use shortly be published in detail, every -school-boy ' was awaro that the understand how property qualification bore upon Journal. liberty, he pursued his course steadily and un- to every country in Europe, was excessive taxation, quired, when force, and Mr. Milledge said if he did, hc would give for themselves.—Birminoham ' the country was ton millions greater the suffrage. It was assumed early in our parlia- dauntedly though reviled by the antagonists of re- and a monopoly of legislation. (Loud cheers. ) The expenditure of -him in charge of the police. The young man then Thk " ITatioi*. " Newspaper.—The question de- , years ago. (Cheers.) The great mentary history that a certain money qualification form in language full of the greatest malignity and country had a national debt and an amount of taxa- than it was ten said he wouldgo and remove the deceased's pro- bated for the last fortnight amongst English and tion which.it could evil of this country was unequal and excessive taxa- was a test, very imperfect, but yet some kind of a as that virulence. Still he pursued his even course,.until scarcely bear, and which was not perty from the tavern at Hampstead, but . provincial journals, whether the government would " • in confer- necessary for good government. • ' tion. The remedy for the evil was parliamentary re- test, of a certain amount of intelligence and inde- had been after a long lapse of years he succeeded " On the contrary. ¦ -was known to he valuable, the landlord interfere with the re-issue ofthe AMon, received on when &ir Robert , form. . There must always bo unequal conditions. pendence. (Laughter.) The intell igence and inde- coming ring on . his country inestimable benefits in the Peel said they; must go to the cautioned not to part with it. These facts Friday week a practical answer. The securities, of na- cheapest , market for their goods, e w d a But we need not have a system of taxation pressing pendence were tiie things therefore to have the vote relatives they istration of the paper, and shape of extinction of abuses, and reduction . h oul find th t to the knowledge of Mr. Harrison's preliminary to the reg therefore, was that was equally, advantageous in tho case of good more hardly! upon the poor than upon tho rich. the money being merely the test ; but now we con- Mr. H^ 1 3 b o e tional expenditure. Their gratitude,. determined upon eommuBieating with ?!? . the proprietor's declaration, were perfected ef r srovcrnment... The (Hear, hear,) Wo might, have a more equitable founded tlio teat with tlio things of which it was the and that emphatically due to that venerable and consistent empire of Austria had an expen- the coroner for the Duchy of Lancaster, the Comptroller-General of Stamps and tho officers sive government United system ; we need not have every article consumed test : we looked not for intelligence and indepen- the and a reformer, Mr. Hume. (Cheers.) In the House of which was not good¦;. the had gentleman appointed an inquest tobody be bolden , of the Stamp Office. Mr. Duffy is proprietor and States had a cheap was a by the poor highly taxed. By tho assistance dence in the voter, but merely for th& test that be made. Tnanager of the Commons a particular seat was allotted to him—(a government, and yet it qualification. ^•^rtcmexamination of to editor ; Mr. Williams, publisher and good one. (Loud cheers.) need of of a league, similar to that which they were ceased to bc so—namely, tho money into at tlie printer; and laugh)—intowhich , when he was present, no other There was no he differed with On Mondav a long inquiry was gone commercialdepartment ; Mr. Delany, . thus a fifty-fourminions ; now assembled to promote, the will of thc people Then , with regard to the ballot, end member thought of intruding ; and lie has to govern the country it would be previously addressed them. William the fourth, and evidence embracing the facte tho journal, we presumo. will appear before tho The present gene- better governed for forty President had been made known, and the. tax upon the staff the noble lord who Imd , Mr. ' public compliment paid to him. millions. The con- that even if human nature was per- already mentioned having been given of the month.—Freeman s Journal. d must look of the United States had' £5,000 a vear, and the Se- of life got rid of ; but there were other articles He confessed , of Clapham, ration celebrated his devotion, an they poor which were heavil taxed—tea , he would have no objection to secret voting. AfDonough, the surgeon to the parish Civil, Libektt under a REr-cuMC.—-La Repub- wane, when nature cretaries of State had £1,000 a year each ; and they sumed by the , y . feet, p ostmortem ex- forward, when his sun should irou-j d Let a candidate ask him what were his opinions and was examinedas to the result of the lique announces the discharge from the prison of La final decree, and they did tlieir duty .as, well , as, -Lord John Russell— tobacco, beer (tl h the malt-tax), and light an that great mflam- should assert her stern and , to avow- them •uiunation he had made. Restated Force of twenty-eight individuals, who have been timo wjion a .(cheei's)T*pi - . .any;., bthe'f ..ministei, -of . stalo in this air, through tlio window-tax. ( Hoar, hear.) And principles, and.ho would b& ready : ena were called upon to resign him, to the , . -he would g : mation existed in the abdomen, stomach, £sc - movement of country. He would not salaries of this he was sorry to add that, in the metropolis, at but if ho asked him for whom ive his He had detained there since¦ the insurrectionary niche would be assigned to him in the temple reduce the his vote was his and tbe heart was very soft. ' is; M. Charles patriotic countryio that amount—(a " I would?')—but least, water was also subjected to a heavy tax—a vote, he would tell him that . pro- and thorax, of the of the 13th of June. . Amongst them public Gratitude, where the memory of voice, administered like every other pro- placed the heart, stomach, and right lobe Expilly, a sub-editor of La Sepubligae,who says (Cheer*.) ho would say that all expenses ought to be reduced. tax which niight not be paid to the collector of the perty, and tobe of examina- deeds was. consecrated and embalmed. - a. for the general Uenc3t. Jle had as much -fiver in separate jars for the -purpose that he has suffered imprisonment --uring fifty-six business of the There was no need to give Queen Adelaide £100,000 government but which was grievance that the perty, his anger ' Turning, however, to the immediate ^ ball in tho ballot-box hail to tion. Mr. M'Donough, who had pricked days for having cried " Vive la Constitution.'" he thought, the a year, (loud cheers) ; there was uo need, unless inhabitants of the metropolis, and of most towns in right to put a as he poisoned it, "was in evening— (Hear, hear)— this was, which' ere his will sealed, till it should be proved and' ad- in opening the body, which had A Bad Leg cceed bt Hotiio-w-Ax's Oisthest asd Pills metropolitan constituencies Lord "Brougham could be brought to do them England, laboured under, and . he hoped, keep whilst giving liis evidence.—The last meeting of the ,,hear.) It was to ministered.-Did thcy not impose an oath of secrecy, excessive pain afteb Twentt years' Sotiemso.—Extract , of letter from which had been visited by the Metropolitan Reform greater service, to give him £5,000 ayoav—(laughter long, would be removed. (Hear said it was highly essential that tliis very Andrew Braclc, blacltsmitli,' Eyemouth, dated August and remove grievances of this sort-that- the association in-order to guarantee the juryman -from corruption, Coroner inquired Mr. Association. " Now, so far from ' considering the cheers)—there was no need to give the extraordinary case should be thoroughly 10, 184S—" To Professor HoUoway -. Sir, I have the pleasure descendants;', ' of had heen formed. It was only hy such agitation as oppression,- or violonce? ^ Apply/that, then, to elec. who would ap- i-Mor-nyouihat l have obtained a most, extraordinary delay that had taken place on the part of the asso- of > the illegitimate < children and the young man alluded to, to Charles the Second year. Be- this association would persevere with that they tions whieh thoy applied to juries ; and let thom'iiofc into m his last cure by the use of your celebrated Ointment and Pills. For ciation in visiting Westminster, he regarded it as a several thousands a have been with the deceased leg, Walmsley sides the danger from taxation, tliere was could effect the purpose ot relieving the people from bo told that it was unmanly or ari-Englishi until wa pear to upwards of twenty years I suffered with a dreadful bad mark of confidence, because Sir Joshua excessive ¦-¦Ifo-had tho moments, must be looked after. and daringthat time I consultedseveral eminentsurgeons , and hiscouncil were sure of them-' knew that a certain source of discontent in everv man not hav- the crushing injustice of unequal taxation. were disposed to strike trial by jurv out of of cases reported to the Gene- . -they Toesdat —.Return but their efforts foiled to do any good. I then had recourse , ing a vote. ' It "Wits! not'iii human nature that 9ix himself been a strenuous opponent of the income- English code, ( Oheera.) Now, the* mwtf*"** M *» and vicinity—Lam- ' pills, which, with the blessing of in Westminster reform, whether prompt or tardy, m ra! Board of Health:—London to your ointment and men Olit of every seven should stand by.and see that tax, and it might be said, -' if you mean to take off avow these princi les—they • had to combine;, Bermondsey, cases, have completely healed my leg, and made it as whether ample or scanty—reform in every shape p beth, cases, 120, deaths, 28; Providence, they were counted not in human taxes mentioned, money must be support of powerful opp» deaths, 11; sound as ever. (S^fneo) Atmasw Bsacs." *- - and measure was acceptable to Westminster. He for nothings It was such as you havo them* in the face of a 40deaths, 10; Rotherhithe, cases, 45, ¦ g^J/ . C • August 18, 1849. fT TT TAR — *o, _._THE TTOi; rTT TT '~ i ii i" ii I ill TTT-r: KIRKDALE PRISO"NERS. . . were all liable to error. But whilehe admitted all land conference. were guilty to the extent of liberty we could not help sympa* " ^Xtional this, he denied that they OF THE NORTHERN STAR. The government—the Whig government— of course absorbed in theatricals. " Mr. Knowles," In the cause established by Mr. Munday. Many of TO THE EDITOR sition. with all in every clime who wero con- sought to be notfairly Dear Sir At a meeting of members ofthe Man- (groans and hisses) — opposed parliamentary said the Yankee, " What's the difference between thisin" THURSDAY, August 9iir. the charges brought forward by them were ,— and Radicals ?" " Not much my tending for the same object :— easiest chester locality of the National Charter Association, •reform ; but parliamentary reform the meet- Whigs, Tories, , voice on every Morning Sitting, attributable to the Directors. It was the d a llow," replied the author, still continuing bis *' There is a wave, mon who had held at the I'eople's Institute, August 5th, the ing "were pledged to their consciences and to e r fe A sound on every sea, this morning at nine o'clock. thing in the world to find fault. with by , work, " all the difference is, that the Tories go to The Committee met and this should be born^ e report of the committee appointed the members their country to stand by and promote; and The watchword of the brave, public duties to perform, dispute between the Kirkdale therefore, they could not act with the govern- the boxes, tho Whigs to the pit, and the Radicals ' ' Watson the delegates. One of the first chaiges to inquire into the cheers and l The anthem of the free : the «B of Mrs. in mind by Prisoners and tho Manchester Victim Committee ment. The government opposed financial re- to the gallery I" (Loud aughter.) And ^¦fK^S?to made by Uv. Munday, was to the effect that on so perhaps it might be to-night, but still, notwith- "From steep to steep it rings be found unoc- and Council was heard. A great many letters were form ; hut the meetins Wm rti» disrretion of the Directors. by the that time I was eovcrnracnt that was pledged against everything saw the dim shadow of liberty and his heart Of broken fetters the case these proprietors did not choose to reside upon " per week; but at labouring under laddened. falling, *$? %5StoU fenfion t° illustrating " the impression that thc Manchester Committee thatcame under the category of parliamentaryre- g And like the carol of a cageless bird, B stock ft them. He would, for the purpose of form. There was one member of thc government, " In his ecstacy he exclaimed—Can it he 1 of Joseph Foster, "" named this fact, take the case of Mrs. Watson, which hail "had stopped some money that was sent from Liberty." The bursting shouts of freedom's rallying ttj SftS amS to however—Lord l'alincrston—of whom he must be And a voice responds—Union and word ! chased a three-acre ^*™fL XSsion that been before them that morning. They had by a vote " London, and that this money that I thought was and who (Loud cheers from all parts of the house.) Were possession of " stopped would form part of thc sum total, I con. allowed to speak in terms of great respect, (Loud cheers.) Let us, however, in the midst of of the Conference given Mrs. Watson kept the character of the government thev, the tainted, odious Chartists, not more than e on the Lowbands estate ; but, then, ¦" sequently deducted something for that, which re- at least had ; the hon. mem- the commotions of Europe, congratulate ourselves s an allotm nt above thc disgrace and degradation of becoming an proud to find that their Chairman not obli ssi-'i-^^^aASsMrs. Watson was going to Edinburgh ; suppose she " duced the above-mentioned weekly sum to aboufi noble lord Nugent, the thai we were ged to resort to weapons for accomplice to the tyranny of the rest of Europein ber for Westminster ; the purpose of vindicating our ri in remained there for the next two years, paying rent ''3s. Gd. per week, as I stated ifc in the Star. My lesbury ; and. George Thompson , the ghts. Let us, could the its foreign policy. (Hear, hear.) ne had never al- memher for Ay our aspirations after a larger measure of political and taxes for her land here, what remedy " reason tor believing that . the money was sent member for tbe Tower Hamlets ; had all voted for hat would or could be the con- lowed hunself, by mistake, in haste, or in any other lause.) power, not be unmindful of the substantial bless- Directors have ? W " from London was, that I was informed that a to call the " lorious struggle that had his motion upon the Charter ? (Renewed app ¦ Directors, under such circumstances ? " Rankin's wife did receive for that week, and I w y, most g them tber-**- that ings we enjoyed. We are thankful that we live in thought ttattterc duct of the been made in the world for centuries past, " an in- Yes, hc too was glad to find I fe CuH. an Mr. Swum* positively do nothing, Now this was " did not know how it was sent, I thought it came said, he (Mr. O Con- a country where such a meeting can be held, whence, compensation, -***1 *• They could surrection ;" but hc had called it" thc war between night, and as their Chairman at least, those rulers could be rebuked waB here no claim for , ™. ° case with reference to one or two houses at " from London. You must not blame me for this delighted to see so many ladies present. who had not most dangerous piceetaft for u» the Hungary and" Austria." (Loud and continued nor) was hearts, sympathised as they ought with the people they be founding a Lowbands ; one house, he believed, at O'Connor- " ignorance, as I strove my best to be informed. I at this very This movement ought to be dear to their future four houses at Minster Lovel. secretary of the Committee cheering.) And were they aware that to savq their sex governed. He hoped, too, that the effect would ville * and three or " wrote twice to the , \**asgoing on, fostered by the because one of its results would be Tho matter was referred to the Directors. that the houses were going out of Thomas Ormesher, to be informed on this matter, moment an intrigue oppressive labour which should follow from this movement in our colonies, where Mr Munday said, " criminals who were ejected from their own country from degrading and the people wero struggling Reports of thc Director s—Allottees. of the neglect of these parties. " but I received no answer. I see from tho sums *.„ ™rf«rm^ %v m™ alone, while tbe wife and to maintain their rights, inspection^ repair in consequence through the revolution which their own oppression pursuits. that they would dismiss from their shores those who * The Committees appointed to make an would come when they (thc Direc- " inserted in the Council's famous letter that there of mother should attend to her domestic the estate now pro- Well the time bad produced—fosteredby the Metternichs the mind ot man, had been billeted upon them to-the exhaustion of of the different allotments on ' demand, that the necessary repairs "is lis. paid to my wife more than I inserted in. intrigue—hc would not say What coHld be more galling to their several reports. It would tors) could Europe—(groans)—an while your pporhouses were their resources. (Hear, hear.) The Whigs, he ven- ceeded to give in should be made ; and then, if the demands of the " my letter, but I did not know of ifc, and if tbo among Lord Palmerston's colleagues, but directed than the reflection that ministering to idle and impertinent curiosity the Directors would be secretavy had answered my letter no such mis- full of unwilling idlers, tender mothers were com- tured to predict, would be prepared with some mea- be only Company were not satisfied , " to undermine his influence with his colleagues, for record the struggles, the unwearied patience, the the allotments to other parties. take could have occurred." You will learn from other foreign nelled to drag their sucking infants from their sure of reform next session ; and if he were not to hone that iustified in assigning " the purpose of substituting some the factory bell, very greatly mistaken they would have to make untiring perseverance, and the unabated , would exonerate the tho above extract that a portion of the dispute has minister of a "Metternich choice—(renewed groans breasts to attend the summons of 1^7 and He hoped that this explanation the tender mercies room for better men. (Hear.) The hon. gentle- carried the allottees through the years this particular. But arisen through a misunderstanding, and in justice and hisse*;)—and whom, therefore, the Mettcrnieh and commit the little infant to the outset to Directors from all blame in cheers.) And yet the man then proceeded at considerable length to refer 1848. Everything was calculated in said, that some of the houses were to Mr. Ormesher we must state that lie was ordered class might think fitter to administer the foreign ofthe hired nurse. (Loud and to cramp their energies. Mr Munday than Lord children thus reared and trained, were charged to the late election at Reading, and from it to urge try their courage going to rack and ruin. He (Mr. M'Grath) was sorry by thc Committee not -to answer the letters re- department in a Whig government There had been great faults committed by some of However, after a lengthened discussion P;dmerston. no might be asked why, then, did with ignorance as a justification for with- the necessity of further reform in the representa- to acknowledge that injury had been done to some ferred to. tion. - He granted that the franchise persons whom Mr. O'Connor trusted to carry resolution was passed :—" That the Lord P.-iluicrsion not throw himself upon the British holding the vote when they arrived at full was an impor- the The land of the houses. It was always the case, that when the following but as in every other country in tant trust, and ought to be used wisely and up- into effect his philanthropic schemes. brought together some excep- Victim Committee he requested to resign, and that people for support. The time was not come yet ; age ; broken into huge masses, which numbers of men were the world, the enlightened mind of the age was rightly ; but whilst it was held that the people-were was in thefirst'place ions could be found to general good conduct, lhe their accounts having been audited are strictly cor- but if Lord Palmerston was what he (Lord Nugent) dried into a brick-like consistence, and the t hoped and believed him to be, the time was not far developing itself. lie should not. mention Hungary too ignorant to possess the power of voting for a the sun privations oflast year had been attended with one rect." " That we elect a new Victim Committee, excitement, and divert- member of parliament once in the course ofa num- ¦seed which had to support the allottees m the first the allottees ; and that the following persons form the commit- distant when they would see the result of the strug- for fear of causinff too much in here. The consequence good effect —it had purified ing their minds from thc object before them, but as ber of years, they were allowed, day after day, and instance, was dropped those remaining through good and evil times tee :—Messrs. Joseph Mawdsley, John Grundy, gle between that able and enlightened statesman and imagined—a total failure. Then came . other individuals of a very different character. he had often told them before, it was the knowledge year after yeai*, to exercise an influence in society may be well who were thoroughly convinced of tho ju s- John Nuttall* William Hemm, Thomas Fildes ; compared with which the power of recording an oc- the potato blight to add to the distress. Yet, not- financial secretavy, and William ( Cheers.) And in the meantime, in that confidence, and not the ignorance of the people they dreaded. and fortitude tice and truth of their cause, and those Thomas Ormesher, parties in this country have held their casional vote was insignificant and contemptible. withstanding all this, with an energy lukewarm or had not energy Shelmej dine, treasurer." The Committee have he would say, " Up with Lord Palmerston and down Political , they set themselves seceding who were , power by the odium created in the mind of the Why, if the unenfranchised were as ignorant and which heroes may not parallel sufficient to bear up against difficulties. The held a first meeting, and appointed Thomas Fildes with the intriguers." (Loud and continued cheer- reverses. They were confident in forget the mental labourer—the shopkeeper—against the vicious as those who supported a< circmscribed suf- to recover these Directors knew that some of the latter class had their chairman, and William Hemm as their corres- ing and waving of hats.) Let them not hold together. the truth of the principles on which tho Land Plan cause in which they had met that night, when they manual labourer ; but the shopkeeper had at length frage represented, society could not been guilty of outrages, such as cutting down the ponding secretary. On an examination of the discovered that no diminution of taxation could re- Not all their policemen, their bayonets, multiplied ball was founded, and in the support of its framer ; and firewood of them and finances we found that there was no money, and Teturned home with the din of cheers in their ears, , tney strug- young fruit trees,and making , compense him for the loss of a good customer, cartridges and sand-bags, would be able to preserve assisting each other where they couw, Directors knew this—they did until some was subscribed the treasurer would have bat let them recollect -that that was but the begin- extraordinary depression, similar offences—the they must carry transformed from a free labourer into a pauper the peace of the country. But he contended that there gled through a season of ifc. But were they in justice to advance money for the purpose of supporting the ning of a great combination wliich not exceeded by any person in not attempt to deny on with an eve that never slumbered—with a heart whom he was bound to maintain. (Loud cheers.) never was a society in the world so prepared for enduring sufferings to be blamed because certain men—from whom men in prison, or else allow them to go upon prison That class had now discovered that the labourer unlimited suffrage as the society to which we had any part of the country, and to their , honour be it that never quailed, and a determination that never uncomplainingly Asser- thev were now haoDily relieved—had been im- fare. 1 hope, sir, that you will uso your influence , , earning a pound, or thirty shillings, or forty shill- the privilege to belong. In what relation was a man spoken, enduring them the Directors your valuable journal for the purpose of paused till they had obtained an entire radical in some journals that the provident ? Mr. Munday said that through nnd universal reform. (Cheers.) He was not one iDgs a week, was a better customer than the man of most importance as a member of society—in the tions had been hazarded had not to experience the heart-burnings which the raising funds to support them. whose wages was reduced to five shillings or six relation merely of the voter in connexion with the allottees had been compelled to ask fpr parish re- of those who was afraid of seeing the venerable in- height of the local secretaries felt from the reproaches of their All communications must be directed to Mr. Wm. overthrown b shillings a week, in consequence of an idle com- State, or as a father and a neighbour in his family lief ; this is untrue. That during the that the Canning-street Bradford-street stitutions of the country y revolution. work for the neigh- members. He could assure Mr. Munday Hemm, So. 49, , , (A laugh.) But there was a class which he feared fietitive reserve ; whereas, if that well-requited and locality. (Hear, hear ?) Why, if there were depression many of them did heart-burnings—heart- Yours fraternally, but was there shame at- Directors had also their Manchester. much more than the most ardent of reformers—hc abour was profitably applied to the developement millions in this country not fit for the franchise, bouvin" farmers is true, burnings arising from the conduct of the members Wm. Hemm. of our national resources, it would create peace and there were millions not fit to be at large. To tell tached°to this ? They had now, however, recovered alludedto the claes of alarmists, which often did mismanage- themselves. Another charge was that there was a plenty, and make the rich richer and the poor rich. him that the man who was a trusty porter, an the effects of bad seasons and original STAK. more to obstruct tbe prosperity and even endanger aid of greater experience in quantity of wood, ifcc., on one of theso estates, which TO THE EDITOR OP THE NORTHEIiN (Loud cheers.) He was ratherastonished that not honest shopman, a discreet and uprightforem an, an ment, and with the con- received a letter thc safety ofa free country than any other section (the world should remember ought to be sold off at once. He (Mr. M'Grath) Dear Ska,—We have this day ofthe community. An old friend of his, Mr. Walter a word had been uttered about our Church Estab- ingenious mechanic, a toiling and thrifty weaver— agricultural affairs it should not be sold off unless it were secretary of the Manchester Victim Com- competent after many of the allottees when they first tended that , from the Savage Landor, in one of his beautiful imaginary lishment, and our gormandising bishops—(great to tell him that such a man was not that a great also intended that the company should be wound mittee, informing us that the Committee has been cheering)—but the day would como when the the candidates had given every publicity to their came on the estate had never used a spade before), dialoguesbetween Newton and.Lockeupon the panic e up. There were materials within the shed, to which re-modelled, and as such is the case, and we find the fc-u-s^of men, had the following :—Newton nurses or the children of those ladies whom he then principles, to say which of them he would have to they were blessed with abundant crops, or, in th said, had been tried se- Mr Munday referred, f or the completion oi f orty new Committee composed of some well tried friends "ilr. Loeke, after all, men Save their panic saw around him would amuse their infants with the represent him iii parliament, was a libel on the in- language of one of them, " they now about to reap the fruits." houses in window-sashes, doors, panels, and so on. of the people, we take this mode of expressing our fears like children. The answer of Mr. Locke ghost stories, the fairy tales and romances of the telligence of his fellow countrymen. (Loud cheers.) verely—they were Another complaint was that the allottees had never satisfaction at the change, and our thanks to the present day. He could picture to himself-—and at But the real secret was, that the aristocracy were It is not the intention of the reporter to go through is, " Yes, Sir Isaac, but with this remarkable dif- It would be been told the amount of rent they were expected Manchester Chartists for their upright conduct. We ference—children fear to be led into the dark, but no distant time—when a nurse may amuse a child not afraid of the ignorance of the unenfranchised the whole of the list of the allottees. laint. appeal to their intelli- all had done well, and to to pay. This was certainly a novel comp trust that our various friends in Lancashire and men fear to be led into the light." {Cheers.) Now, with a representation of pur present system of classes ; they were afraid to difficult to select where The Conference were of course aware that there show the child a pic- gence. ( Cheers.) A man was never ignorant if he individualise the struggles of the past, even for the Yorkshire will now co-operate with the Manchester somcthin***bad been said about the natural aristo- Church and State. She will were many questions to be determined before the Committee, a3 before. We are, yours truly, cracy of a country. There was an aristocracy which ture in the story book, and the child will say, " Who had a vote. (A laugh.) See the candidates go round purpose of showing the heroism which conquered with a white chaw-bacon" men—(laughter)—and the reporter. He was almost uni- rents of the allotments could be severally decided. George White, James Leach, le revered ; and that was the aristocracy of cha- is that old woman, nurse, petticoat amongst the " them, is denied to Donovan*. and bi sleeves ?" " That's a bishop, my dear." then how intelligent and independent they were. versa lly requested not to mention former privations in In an estate of any size, tho quality of land greatly John West, Daniel racter, of reputation, and ability, and of honesty— g varied, and, without a positive survey, it would be P.S. All communications for the Manchester {cheers)—ay. and of wealth, too, combined; and/these (Tremendous laughter.)^ " Well, nurse, who is that Their wives were angels, their children cherubs, and connexion with their names. " You see," tliey added , his the fawning candidate would court the man to-day that the Plan will do ; judg e for yourself—and let impossible to say what the rent for such portion Victim Committee, should be addressed, Mr. Wil- ¦were the real strength and glory of a country. The tall man with the red coat and coalscuttle upon " should be. There could be no arbitrary rule on the head ?" " That's a soldier, my dear." (Renewed whom he would not condescend to spit upon to- every man ivho doubts come here and examine f or him- liam llemm, secretary, 49, Canning-street, Brad- House of Commons should represent and exhibit matter. But the allottees might obtain, if they de- thefeelings ofthepeople. Formed it wasin the laughter.) "And what is that in his hand, nurse ?" morrow. ..The audience that one of these men dis- self also. We can earn a comfortable and indepen- ford-street, Manchester. my dear?" "And what is liked most, was any audience that they might gather, dent living from the land , and while the fear of star- sired it, an approximation to the rental, by calculat- Kirkdale Gaol, August 14th, 1849. ancient times of the constitution, reared it was in " That's a musket, ing four per cent, upon the outlay. The leases had the soil. Its roots sprung from the soil, and were that upon tbe top of it f *" " A bayonet, my dear." if they allowed the people at large to attend the vation is banished from our eyes, we are blessed that "And what aro they for, nurse?" "To shoot meeting, and let them have but confidence in the we call no man master." In every case the allottee not been made out, because, as the Directors were nourished by it, and it would yet grow up the glory aware, the company had no legal existence yet, and and the ornament of thc soil on which it stood. It people, and stick people, my dear.' " Oh deir mo, man who spoko, and know that thoy had an equal was determined to stop, and in the greai majority jSlarfe^j &i> ¦ for what, For a shilling a day, my right to judge of the candidate's political .princi ples of cases they only craved a little patience in the Mr. O'Connor did not desire to grant leases in his wanted now to spread out its toots ; if it were con- nurse?" " own name, beeause if he did so, the press of this fined and cut off from the soil from which it springs, dear." (Roars of laughter.) "Well, nurse, who with any individual in the assembly j and he (Mr. matter of rent, which, in consequence of tbe failure . CORN. is that nice little man so beautifully dressed?" Thompson) was able to declare, from twenty years' in the creps in tho former years, they had got country—which found all to condemn and nothing Mask-lake Monday, August 13, the plant would wither and die. (Loud cheers.) Oh! , —We had a short supply Mr. E. "Miam, "He is an officer, my dear," " Why is he an experience of the working classes of this country, behind in. to desire in his public life—would say : " of English wheat at this day's market, which was taken by considered that every subject of the there, the rascal has thrown aside the mask, he is realm, contributingto the su-ouoxtof its civil -asd officer ? *" " Because he is fit for nothing else, my that they constituted thc very bean ideal of an Mr. Munday, after delivering in one of the reports the millers at Is per quarter lower on last Monday's child." (Loud and continued laughter.) " Well, audience for an honest man to address. (Cheers.) from Lowbands, called the attention of the Confe- making away with the property." (Ironical cheers, prices. Of Foreign the arrival was moderate, but we political institutions, was entitled at least to an and cries of We can trust him. ht cannot note any improvement in the trade, though tlie wea- elementary share nurse, and what makes him so small?" " Why, He was glad the council had resolved upon making rence to the fact, that on several of the estates " ") But ifc mig of political power ; and he there- be said—and was said by one of the delegates ther for the last day or two has been unsettled, and, indeed , fore gave in his humble but hearty adhesion to this my dear, because he belonged to the aristocracy, that a national association, and he foresaw for that there were empty houses, while not less than 390 , he sales to-day eould scarcely be eft'eoted unless at rather -movement. and they confined thebreed to their ownblood, which society the honour of leading the honest and uncom- , and yet •unlocated. believed—" If j'ouvalue the land somo timo heneo, lower rates. Harvest has commenced very generally in our After a few other observations, which mmbm vfftvft balloted for it will not give the allottees fair play for their werodelivered in a low tone, and were inaudible to was not pure ; and, my dear, like spaniels, from promising reformers of this country. He was sure Why should theso houses not be supplied with te- neighbouring counties, and tliere were a few samples of the great body of the meeting, the impatient inter- breeding in and in they run to fools." if they put their shoulders to the wheel during the nants ? By drafting a lot of the balloted members improvements. You should have valued the land as new wheat showing to-day, but not in sufficie nt quantity to (Tremendous laughter. Now that is the on to them they would bo making a move, and res- it was." This, ho begged to assure thorn, would be form ally Opinion of the general qualltj-. Flour dull. Sal-ley ruption of the audience in the upper boxes and ) recess, they should have the country with them. slow sale, and Gd clieuper. Beans rather lower, ami n«\v galleriespreyented "Mr. "Miall from proceeding; and description that the nurse would give in That great movement was but the means to an end. tore confidence to thc country. He did not blame taken into consideration, and no man would have , it in his power to say that his industry had been grey peas 2s to 3s. cheaper. The supplyof oats being mode- after expressing his warm conenrrence in the objects times to come of the Church and State. Whether it was that they wanted to remove that Mr. O'Connor for these things, but from all he rate, good fresh corn was readier sale at last Monday's ofthe association, he resumed his seat. He believed that he had suffered more odium, stupendous abuse—the Established Church of Ire- could learn there had been much left. Ho was free overlooked. (Cheers.) With reference to the quotations, whilst heated inferior samples sold with diffi- charge of cutting out the hearts of the potatoes, he Mr. Feahgcs O'Cosxor oa rising, was received slander, persecution, and prosecution, than any land, or very largely to reform our Established to confess it could not be otherwise ; there had beon culty, liye without inquiry. Linseed caJ-es quite as dear. mortal man that ever advocated popular principles; Church at home ; whether we wished to reduce our who in too many could only say that it was a deliberate falsehood. Carraway seed and rapeseed without alteration. with loud and rapturous a great deal left to local agents, , applause from aU but, God forbid that his vanity, his ambition,-or taxation or equaliso our imports—all those in favour eases, had retarded instead of advancing- the good With regard to the matter of rent, the circumstances Bmus-j .—Wheat.—Mssex, Suffolk, and Kent, red, 3-lS to "parts of the house. He said that the noble lord should induce him to be a of any ono of these reforms would come to that of the allottees would be considered, and no un- 4ls, ditto white, 3Ss to 47s, Lincoln, "Vorfoll-, and York, his wounded feeling, work. (Hear, hear.) After the enumerating of shire, red, 32s to 41s, Northumberland and Scotch, white, (Nugent) had reminded them, of the old proverb, stumbling block in the road of progress. (Loud association which sought to procure a House of other charges, he (Mr. Munday) he felt strongly necessary harshness would be used in enforcing it. 34s to 40s, ditto red, 33s to 39s, Devonsliire and He trusted that what he had stated would show the Somerset- " That when bad men conspire good men combine.*" cheers.) No, he would rather abandon public life, Commons willing to discuss and deal with all these on this point. He should like to see these things shire, red, —s to —s, ditto white — to —s, rye, 22s to 24s, And that night's meeting would teach the few con- and see the cause of democracy progress, than questions on then* own merits, and not leave them remedied and removed, while ho affirmed that delegates that the Directors were not fairlv charge- barley, 21s to 2Cs, Scotch, 28s to 25s, Angus—s to —S, work actively in it, and be the means of arresting to depend upon a costly agitation of ten or fifteen able with neglect of duty. Malt ordinary, —s to —s, pale, 52s to 57s, peas, grey, new, spirators -w thero had been great mismanagement on the part of , ho had so long trafficked upon their dis- its progress. (Great cheering.) And ifc was because years to carry them. He rejoiced to see such a re- Borne persons \vho had been honoured with the con- Mr. Dixon called attention to the caso of John 2Gs to 28s, maple 28s to 30s, white, 24s to 26s. boilers (new), ¦union, that there was now such a combination of and gamation of reformers of different 27s to 30s, beans, large, new, 25s to 28s, ticks 27s to 29 s, he discovered in the combination now formed, markable amal fidence of Ml'. O'Connor; he was sorry to give Kay, who was rated for three acres, although his harrow, 29s to 32s, pigeon, 32s to 34s, oats, Lincoln and good men as would compel the conspirators to still to be strengthened, the foreshadowing of his opinions as the present- meeting displayed ; and he offence, but he could not resist giving expression to property did not quite amount to that. lie would Yorkshire, feed, lfls to 20s, ditto Poland and potato, yield to their just demands, (Loud cheers.) He fondest hopes, tbat he would offer no opposition, congratulated the council on the fact that, with ono the convictions of his honest mind. They could not bring the matter under the notice of the Directors, 18s to 22s, Berwick and Scotch, 17s to 23s, Scotch but, on the contrary, his most cordial support to or two exceptions, all tho gentlemen of the highest on the estate without noticing these things, and with a view to remedying the inequality. f eed, 17s to 22s, Irish feed, and black, 15s to 20s, ditto presumed that that was tbe bespeak of Lord John to potato the present movement. ( Here the cheering and rank on the platform had manifested the most aving noticed them, he, for one, would have cou- Mr. WiiEEtEU said , 17s to 22s, linseed (sowing) 50s to 52s, rapeseed, Hussell—(hisses)—for developing that pressure from Sir , that he had made notes from Essex, new, £25 to £27 per last, carraway seed, Essex, new, waving of hats was indescribable.) But, , con- hearty concurrence in the hitherto despised princi- rage to tell them of it. These things ought never the reports of the committee -without by which alone the noble lord could be tinued Mr. O'Connor, turning to the Chairman, les of universal and unlimited franchise. Let all ,and found thesereports 27s to 31s per cwt, rape cake, £i to £410s per ton, lin- p to have existed ; but as unfortunately errors had most satisfactory. seed, £9 10s to £10 10s. per 1,001), flour, per sack of 2601bs, compelled to make those concessions which the pro- although I have every confidence in your honour, continue zealously affected in the good work ; let been committed, it was time they should be reme- Several delegates having expressed a similar ship, 29s to 31s, town, 40s to 42s. gressive mind ofthe age demanded. (Cheers.) But in your devotion and integrity, I will not abandon them sow their seed in the full assurance that in due died, and it was for this purpose absolutely neces- opinion, Foueigs.—Wheat, — Dantzig, 40s to 53s, Anhalt and the greatest deli ht that he derived from that my post, I will still remain upon the watch-tower, time they should reap, if they fainted not. (Cheers.) sary that the Directors should remember that they Mr. Cleland Marks, 3Cs to 43s, ditto white, 41s to 46s, Pomeranian red , g and will learlessl ive the signal upon the first in- rose for the purpose of explaining 37s to 43s, Rostock 40s to 40s , y, g The CniiKMiN then declared the proceedings of were the servants, and that the Conference stood how it was that a concatenation of circumstances , Danish, Holstein, and gathering was, because it afforded him and his Char- dication of desertion. (Great cheering.) His ob- the evening at an end. to them in the position of masters. , Friesland, 32s to 88s, Petersburgh, Archangel, and Riga, over which neither the Directors nor the allottees 34s to 46s, Polish Odessa, 34s to 40s, Marianopoli, and Ber- tist brethren, with whom he had so long co- ject was notto desire that the poor man should fee Mr. Williams, late M.P. for Coventry, proposed Mr. Smith reported from Snig's End. Generally diansl-i nor that could exercise any control, had, in the first in- , 32s to 35s, Taganrog, 32s to 35s, Brabant and operated, and would still co-operate—(loud cheers)— placed in a position to plunder the rich, a vote of thanks to the chairman for his conduct in speaking the crops were ofthe very best description. stance, marred their exestions and French, 35s to 40s, ditto white, 37s to 42s the rich should plunder the poor ; and if he presiding over the meeting, which was carried b rendered their , Salonidl, 32s to because it afforded him and them the best opportu- y The allottees wero cheerful and contented, and tho industry fruitless. He trusted that these days 35s Egyptian, 24s to 26s, rye, 2is to 23s, barley, Wisinar could help it that should never be the ease. acclamation. only thing required was a little patience to enable and Rostock, 28s to 23s, Danish, 20s to 23s, Saal, 21s to -oity of dissipating those prejudices -which had were over, and that the abundant promise this year 25s, East riesla d (Hear.) He supported this movement be- The CnAiBMAN briefly acknowledged the compli them to bring up the arrears consequent upon a bad would be the forerunner of many F n , IGs to 18s, Egyptian, 15s to 10s, Danube , so long and so injuriously placed mental and cause it did away with all motives for the ment and the assemblage then dispersed. more abundant 15s to 10s, peas, white, 20s to 2Ss, new boilers, 2Ss to , harvest. He for one would be very sorry if any at- harvests. (Cheers.) 30s, "manuallabour in deadly antagonism; and he de- use of physical force, and because it was calculated tempt were made to harass men who had shown beans, horse, 25s to 20s, pigeon, 31s to 33s, Egyp- to develope the power of the country through the A conversation arose about the advantages of a tian, 21s to 23s, Oilts, Groningen, Danish, Bremen, and sired to impress upon the chairman, the council, and themselves so determinedly industrious, and he practical agriculturist. Friesland, feed and black, 12s to 17s, ditto, thick and brew, the meeting, that if this movement had been got np medium of a union between the working and middle UtitiOHtil fLnim (?TompiTiiy thought that a little encouragement only was re- IGs to 21s,: Riga, Petersburg, Archangel, and Swedish, 15s classes. (Hear hear.) Thc Chartists bad been Mr. Doyle explained that his time was fully occu- to 17s for the mere purpose of creating a union between , quired to enable these men to show the world that , flour, United States, per ISOlbs., 22s to 23s, Ham- stamped with the odium of physical force—while it Newcastle-upon-Tyne.—At a meeting of this the National Land Plan could could do all and more pied. He was seldom at home on the Snig's End burg 20s to 22s, Dantzig and Stettin, 21s to 23s, French per the money-lordemp loyer and thelabourer, he should was Lord John Russell and Sir George Grey who branch, heldon Sunday evening, the prooedings of than its founders promised. After reading tho list estate, his duties leading him elsewhere. He could 2801bs„ 32s to 3Gs. have opposed it with all his might, because, what- created alarm through their spies, their detectives, the Conference held at Sni 's End were read from boast of but few leisure minutes for the enjoyment August 17. — With but moderate receipts of English g , of allottees on whom hc had called, and their pro- wheat, factors were enabled tomaintainlast Monday' ever mighthe the consequence to himself, he never and informers, for the purpose of passing coercive the Nortltern Star, and the members of this branch spects for the future Mr. Smith continued, now of domestic quiet, and, therefore, so far as he was s quo- , "I concerned, his position was no sinecure. tations. In Foreign wheat very Uttle business was trans- ¦would be a party to a deception, and because he bills and arousing the fears of their lickspittle sup- were much astonished at the report (as published) crave the attention of the lasses present. The next While on acted, and the few retail sales were at former prices. porters in the House of Commons. (Tremendous his, legs he mightbe permitted to ask them distinctly . -was convinced that no just alliance could be esta- given to the Conference by Mr. Halliwell, that name I haye got is Robert Brande—he i3 a bachelor. CATTLE. cheering.) He stood there that night as the ac- " The parties who conducted the opposition were (Laughter.) He has spent £50 on his land already. to understand—that it had been over and over again blished between the employer and thc employed till knowledged leader of the Chartists to repudiate the stated by Mr. O'Connor, both through the columns SsnTUTOXD, August 13.—Thc arrivals from Ireland by sea men who had bought their shares for thirty shillings, This allottee is cultivating flowers (laughter) ; and direct for this market last week amounted to 31 oxen, hoth were equally represented, and each had the charge, and again to assert that it was the fabrica- and they, acting on Mr. O'Connor's statement, that judging from all appearances I think it is evident of the Northern Star, and afc former Conferences, 278 sheep. and that the rent would be regulated For the time of year, the receipts of beasts from power of making laws for the benefit of both by the tion of their enemies in the hope of arresting that he would give twenty shillings in the pound, and he is laying himself out for a wife." (Laughter.) He to the tenant ac- our various grazing districts • fresh up this morning were better developement ofthe resources of the coun- progress which the mind of the country was now were anxious to receive their money, and receive so (Mr. Smith) was sorry that complaints were heard cording to tho wholesale price of the estate. but -moderate, and of middling quality. As the attendance try. He *was more than proud to find that their making, and which could not be arrested by all the much profit. lengthy discussion how from the allottees of tho manner in which their land Mr. Edwards had a -little to say about ot both town and country buyers was good, and the dead " After a very the rents. markets were Chairman and the other members ofthe association physical force at the command of the government, Mr. Halliwell could make such a statement, it being had been cropped at first. lhe allottees on Lowbands had already been two well cleared of their lato supplies, the beet" trade ruled steady, at prices quite equal to those obtained had seen the prudence of adopting the greater por- for they would soon discover that the voice of know- no part of his instructions, to the Conference, the Mr. Morgan : Some of them say that when the years in possession, the allottees on Snig's End had On Monday last. tion of five points of the People's Charter, and he ledge would silence the cannon's roar, (Great cheer- not. If thoy bore so long A few very superior Scots sold at 4s ; bnr. following resolution was unanimously agreed to: potatoes were planted, they cut out all the middle with the people at Low- •jS 10(1 was the top general figure for beef. There was a hoped that they would at last discover that every ing.) What he wanted was, that a Bmall party in " That the statement of Mr. Halliwell to the Con- and only left the eyes. (Laughter.) nands, he thought they ought to bc consistent and considerable increase in the numbers of sheen comnared one ofthe six points were so dependent upon each the state should not have the power to rule the over- ference, regarding the men who conducted the oppo- Mr. Cleland, an allottee : Oh, that is nonsense to give equal grace to the people at Snig's End If with those exhibited on this day se'nnight. For all breeds ©iher that they would adopt it whole and entire. whelming large party in it. (Hear, hear.) And he sition in this branch , inasmuch as those (laughter) ; but it admits of explanation. The land they pressed for rent now they the demand ruled steady, but not to say brisk, at full rates , is untrue would only drive of currency. (Loud and protracted cheering.) Tes, he would wished to see this earned out by peaceable means, members were the first who paid up their shares in was only roughly ploughed, and when the potatoes them back into the state from which they had just The primest old Downs sold at 3s lOd to 4s show the impossibility plucking emerged per 8ibs. AV e were again well supplied with lambs, in but of a single bristle and hc trusted that the Association wonld not lose full in this branch, and the members trust thai were put in, the ground, being quite hard, prevented , and, aa they admitted, their industry and middling condition. ¦from the animal if their object "was to harmonise which was now revolu- perseverance he did Prime Down qualities sold steadily ; sight of the vital question Mr. Halliwell will make the amend honourable, or the potato expanding, and gave it the appearance , not see that the company would other kinds of lamb slowly, at last week's prices. Calves, legislation . For instance, they were opposed to the tionising Europe, he meant the proper solution let us know from whom he received such informa- described to the delegates. Justice was done in be benefitted by forcing such men to quit the estate, the supply of which was good, moved off heavily, at un- payment of members, while the noble lord—the of the Labour question. (Cheers.) Mr. O'Connor tion, as we believe that statement has tended to the matter of the potatoes, but the fact was that the taking the chance of obtaining others as good in altered quotations, In pigs scarcely any business was member for Marylebone—expressed a hope that he then, turning to the Chairman, said, " Sir ; to mislead the Conference in their deliberations." The ground was not properly prepared. their stead. He would wish to have thc rent, but doing • prices, however, were mostly supported. would one day see labourers sitting in the Hoase ot your honour, you ate the promoter of this holy alli- entire proceedings of the Conference not being pub- Mr. Skevinoion thought it was a matter of im- of two follies he would choose the least. Heab of Cattle at. SMi-rnFiixi).—Friday.—Beasts, 79(5 * ' sheep, 13,280 ; calves, 498; pigs, 3C0. Monday.—Beasts ' Commonsto represent their own order. (Cheers.) ance between the mental and the manual labourer ; lished at this date, the meeting was adjourned to portance that this should be brought forward, be- Mr. Bostock wished to know why it was that the 306 has arrived at a giant 3, ; sheep, 34,240 ; calves, 1§8 ; pigs, 240. Well, but how could that be accomplished without and when your bantling Sunday, August 19th, afc five o'clock. cause to it were the struggles in the first instance Directors had seen fit to change the place appointed Price per stone of 81bs. (sinking the who would otherwise be- g h, mark my words, that those who have not - offiil). -Beef, 2s Sd to paving those labourers, stren t Merthtr Ttdvil.—To the members of the Mer- to be attributed. If the allottees had been properly ior tiie oonierence from that originally appointed ? ton 10d t0 4s U vea] 2s 10d to 3s 8d j come paupers (Loud cheers.) And thus he now the courage to ioin it from apprehension of de- sa d pork, 3s 2d to 4s' Od-?? > - ! ! thyr branch ofthe National Land Company : Hav- secured in the matter of the potatoes, they might ™^. ! » the Peculiar circumstances in _ , lamb, 4s Od to 5s ol thongbt he had snfficienfly proved the inefficaey, feat, will then endeavour to supplant you ; but they ing no channel of communication with the great have been enabled to live on them. The great evil which^CIu the Directors were p August I5th. -\ye are but scantily supplied laced, with the question ^ ^S veek with nay, the folly of attempting to adopt any principle shall- not pluck a feather from the wing under number of members residing afc a distance from seemed to have been that the persons in the ma- as to going on or being wound "?i^ - , but .mth a continu*™ee of fine weather, nor a single leaf from up before them, and fnd uin- !c<"*s *n our country short ofthe People's Charter, to which they must which you have fostered it, Merthyr except through the columns of the Star, I nagement had too much confidence in agents, who the reports that had gone abroad with respect Sn.„ . «* "S P" markets, the buyers when you have accomplished to here act with the greatest reserve," so that the demand is eventually«ome, while he would look upon himself your wreath of laurels, wisb to apprise them that the sight of Snig's End abused it. The allottees had also to contend with the condition of the estates, "had induced the Direc- verj limited17, and prices without variation. asa traitor if he offered any opposition to a move- it." (Great cheering, and waving of hats and and Lowbands is truly delightful, and the crops far the neighbouring farmers, who sought by every tors to call the Conference at Snig's End ~We had a moderate suppl exhibition was not , so that ,i»^S*f - y of beasts, and the ment which, of aH others, was capable of accelera- handkerchiefs.) This theatrical exceeded my expectations ; in fact, they are double means to injure them. the delegates might have an opportunity of seeimr demand has increased ; consequently, in most cases rather ting bis progress. (Cheers.) Nothing antagonistic opened with a prologue, but he would conclude it the quantity produced by the old farmers on the Mr. Dowling went into some points a and judging more money was obtained ; but there little further for themselves how far these report! enough was not advance to theircause had beenuttered b y any speakerin with an impromptu epilogue:— name land. I have brought home samples o£ the than did his friends who had preceded him. Tbe were deserving of credit. toadmit of higher quotations on the average. The ihat assembly throughout the night, and ne should " This land presents a state distressed : number of sheen and lambs was smaller than of late different produce, which may be seen at my resi- delegate gave in his report. There was one case Mr. Skevington thought the explanation not too for them was brisk, at about • trade take care that hc should not be the first to provide Though brave, yet vanquished—and though great, dence by any of the members. On to wliich he wished to call particular attention. It satisfactory, and, Monday's rates. There was a my return home as far as he and others were con- tn to f r calves ; P««*™re stuTforthc a horse for iheir enemies to ride away on to their oppressed; I exhibited them to a number of farmers at Cardiff, was that of Mr. Grey—he was the tenant of Mr. cerned, the reasons adduced were Zlt^ttw. " ° discomStnre. He was delighted with the evidence Its debt, its taxes, and its parsons' store, _ not so valuable as and they were ashamed to call themselvesfarmers Millov, anothsi'' allottee, and be feared that as Mr. M-r. Clark appeared to think them. Many of Arrivals this week ;—Wheat — English 5C0 quarters ¦ •of fratenueation between the middle and tbe work- Have paralysed your commerce, and devoured your d the foreign, 5,270 quarters. when tailors and shoemakers could outdo them in Miller stated his inability at the next term of satis- elegates were not sufficiently experienced in the Barley-English 40 Quarters • in"* classes, which that meeting disclosed ; and he poor ; the first year, fying all the demands of the company, price of land foreign, 480 quarters. Oats-Englfsh, * 430 Ser S - believed that fie more it was carried out without the least experience. A great that he (Mr. to say what the value of the estates foreign, 960 quarters. Flour-1 *"-luaue-s , the But England's day may come again, deal of hardship has been endured by the allottees wey) might be awkwardly placed. Mr. Grey had were, and so far as ,250 sacks ' greater would be the facilities for removing the ob- When you give the vote to each free-born man. this was concerned, they mi<*-ht during the last two years, in consequence of the agreed with Mr. Miller for -612 rent, and to pay the 8 m6t at Mn llam ° FRUIT AND VEGETABLES. loquywhie ahad been so unjustly attached towards Up, then, Britons ! let your watchword be— § ' So f^ ^ his own Coven*-- failure of the crops, but they will be in a noble con- taxes besides. He had taken possession without gratincatSLhSSiSon was concerned, and, perhaps Garden MARKET.-Hothouse grapes, peache-- ihe latter. (Hear, hear.) He himself would have " Union—the Charter—and Liberty !*" consulting , so far as and nectarines are plentiful. Pineapplls are carednothingtohare-fraternised with dition this year if the potatoes escape the disease : the Directors. His land was in excel- the intercourse between the delegates and the allot- chcaner mere wealthy JMr. O'Connor resumed his 6eat amid the most there is not lent condition, and he was quite willing e nUf RirS^«es andcurS money-mongers, or with autocrats, but he rejoiced deafening the slie-htest symptom of it now, and all to pay all Cerned thfy mjght hav<- don?* some areSre TsuufficSitflicient forK the demand.f cheers and waving of hats and handker- the green crops are trul luxuriant. I trust that the liabilities if Mr. Miller would not Sgoof/hfd, but , .her ' Apricots are nrottv wpTl m the opportunitypermitted him of joining a com- chiefs.] y , the company was no advocate of doing evil that supphed. Nuts in general arc abundant." Oi S and all will disabuse their mmds, that the allottees are taking him as the immediate tenant. m1 COme nd lemons are plentiful , and the market " bination of JEdnstry and intelligence. (Hear, hear.) Mr. Thomas Clark, who was loudly cheered, & ,*^V '/u ?e .befor e condemned the continues to be ovei idle or lazy, for a more industrious set of men can- After a few words from Mr. Grey, he was in- departure from the decision stoeked with melons. Amongst vegetables, Sps maJ His object was tbe diseeuragement of the plunder of spoke at some length in praise of this union between of last year. He ob ained at from 3d. to Cd. a be ihe poor and -the rich, "bj carrying out the princi- not be found. The grievances the allottees have to structed to communicate with the Directors. , 8te d f bei g Called the *« bunch. Carrots the ^ame the middle and working classes, and of the senti- complain of must be remedied in , : Mr. Dowling continued: 2lawr?t the* ° ** the Green *¦ ' jle sof this association, as laid down by Lord Sugent. mentsexpressed by Lord Nugent. It was the . future that is . The impression on thc Directors*T? ? ought to be called the violators S4S pSEer bushel..ri PotatoesW^ "*» fetch from is Gd to first the land mustbe cropped in future, and thc allottees minds ofthecommittee , after a careful examination of it, and he ^ are cheap. Lettuces and other (Hear, bear.) The true path of onward progress time, he said, in the history of England when so trusted they would in this respect at salading are sufficient for the demand. Mushrooms was that b go on their allotments about the beginning of July. of all the circumstances, is, that the reports that had least sm no more. from is to ls Gd per fetch y which the intellect of the people was many different elements bad been combined for ob- adopted every man will bottle. Cut flowers conskt ofdeaths de-sloped and their, store of knowled If this is , be able to pay his got abroad ofthe idleness and drunken habits oftho After a conversation in &^™\> U V(M ' ge increased, jects so altra in their character, but it was this rent on the day : however, which Mr. Dixon, Mr. carnationscarnSr^' *™^ *- tl'OpaS, and*f the movement which had these ends nothing can arrive at allottees were false and slanderous, and altogether Plood, and others took part, , fuchsias, and roses. in view combination which ensured the success of the asso- perfection at the commencement.—-D. It. Morgan. unworthy of credit. (Hear Jm lord .John Busseti was not a little afraid; for it ciation. He called upon the working , hear.) - ^- «d m«»ved, and Mr. Saunders classes to Nottisgham.'—On Sunday evening last Messrs. The Chairman : And I may ,, seconded, would .now go forward to the world that the "ism" render it iheir support (Cheers.) add, that the whole '• That sthe present board of Directors be re- Sweet and Bostock delivered in their report of the of the delegates acquit them of idleness or drunken- elected. ° DEATH. of oae«et of Liberals was as good as the " Ism" of Mr. G. Thompson, M.P., had tho satisfaction of p dings of Conference to a another rocee numerous meeting ness, or any other of the foul charges which have The motion was carried un The Chartists of "Preston, have to lament , .and that there was no difference of opinion informing tbe meeting that he was the " last man." of the member**of the Land Company, animously Of James Crook, the donth or purposebetween the middle and working in the lar-re been brought against them. A more industrious Mr. Clark having on the who left his work (being a dTesseS about classes. (A laugh.) He had beea merely called upon to pro- | room at the Seven Stars Inn. At the conclusion of and moral set of part of the Directors hve o'clock on Thursday evening, 9th ilst./ (Cheers.) He had laboured long for the people, nounce the benediction, men I believe never existed. returned thanks for this renewed about and exnked after the solemnisaiion of their address several questions were put and replied (Great cheering.) mark of 3 " one on Friday morning, ofthe .Asiatic cholera? le and he bac siuch experience iu movements like tiie tbis alliance between the working classes and the has left a wife and seven children to to, and a request made that they would visit Car- Mr. Morgan also presented a « deplore his loss jU present, and he told them that if they obtained the middle clataesin the cause of national reform. (Hear, report, which, in its . Mr SMi-rn moved That the Conference h d nd i nder and induJ ent rington on Sundaj evening next, with which they mam features was a counterpart of the rising^ at its surpassedeSim him. Heli r' ;t « SS' none "reforms sought for by thiu association theywould hear.) He eould only repeat what had beea -said promised to comply. A unanimous vote others. do adjourn till tho Company becomes legalisedg ~ had been a teetotaler twelve 1vears He ne certainly of thanks _ Mr. Yates and Mr. Oliver having presented or some great was a paid-up shareholder in the Land Company, aHs to carry more. From the gradual by the last speaker. He congratulated his hon. was given to them for their services. The following necessity occur for caEgTt to e- well and w as -Fusion and fraternisation of parties which was going friend (the chairman) upon similar reports, on the motion of Mr. Wheeler ther again." b B prepared for taking an allotment, having Vua il presiding over what be resolution was proposed by Mr. Smith, and secondeS were thev ~Seeonded and carried diistry and economy on. he believed that great legults wonld spring, must describe as the most- unprecedented assembly received and adopted. Mr. Sutton moved got four good m ldi cows i.ie-s ic ¦yeraaps by Mr. Wooley : " That it is the opinion of this The Conference " That the best thanks of the as he stood uponto Hie boards ofa flieatre, within the United Kingdom. No such exhibition of then adjourned. delegates be given to Mr. his nemigkt^niuitod meeting, that Mr. O'Connorshould be requested to Sweet, for the able and «i«Jr , ,victims, oi^-for sick brethren we could of indulge in atheatricalanec- the cohesion of elements hitherto estranged had give the allottees notice Afternoon Sitting. energetic manner in which he always ca culate on his full mite, -^nstrative the position of to quit, on or before the had presided over the lie died in lis Uth vear «,«£ different parties ever been made. (Hear, hear.) Having expressed 29th pf September next, in order that Conference."-Carried unanimousl A gentleman -came from the allotments t Tlie Chairman took his seat at half-past two y •atr IT* ^S America, these opinions, he must ask permission to retire may be, on Lady-day next, let 0 ClOciL. Mr. Wheeler : it had been mtTO*"*ion to from the platform without delivering a speech. to other members of promised for the last TAnxurasnv;l« to*« -, Sheridan Enowles. the-Land Company, m case the rent of Mr. M-GRArn rose four times, thatthey should have a ghmp8e of English politics, he (Cries of " No.") What must he say ? (A voice, the several to reply to the comments made t meeUtNottingham He *? the Oown anV allottees should not be paid." by someofthe..delegates. hought it time this were carried into *¥ i? -^fS Anchor, " Hungary.") Why, the exhibition of f eelingwith The reports were? he houFd effect , and he whera~w he heard of nothing but acknowledged fair, therefore propose " That the "Whigs, Tories and respect to Hungary, must have demonstrated to ust, and dispassionate ; and in rence neA Confe- Printed "by WILLIAM RIDER, of No. &,-Macdesfield-street ei araauth Sheriasm no dealing wAth the complaints beheld at Nottingham."-Agreed to in the . -ww*tb£rt ? great* £toor was l&wWs house, their Hungarian visitors that there beat in erery . Dbeadf-j-u Want of a Sanitary Bi made by the allottees On the parish ot St. Anno, Westminster, at the Printing, ^•fe concludinff his ceb-4 perfect sympathy iriththose London less than W._There are and m some degree chargeable te the motion of Mr. Halliwell, a vote of ¦"•> •- reat Windmill-street, Haymarket, in the City bratod play British bosom the most 4,072 lawyers £g? Directors he thanks wasgiven to ySiof t' , .'' of thei*,-Chose ,and whose mmd was who, in'Hungary, were struggling' f ortheir rights. ,^ S 1 wowld «dmit Mr. O'Connor and the board S Westminster, forthe Proprietor, FEARWS O'CONNOR, ^ Zthe B^Xoard eArf Hanag*et-vjen^ , '^ it-fchat DirectorS.---Ca-rried with enthusiasm ' . PuWished bJ" tne said WitLUM Rider, at t was ** , •afoa' whichwmcu «!. ni' not iefoiiible-they the Conference broke up. ' .* *»"•« .. the Office , in the same street «nd parish,—Saturday j August 18th; 1849. ' -