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LOCAL MARKETS.
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THE THEATSe/xj^T'^
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Leeds —Panted tor the Proprietor ?? A | « O COS NOB, Esq.. ol Haminersaa^ M
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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TS NOW OPEN FOR THE SEAqrm 1 there will be Performances on e ^ vM * ^ Tuesday , Wednesday , Tirarsday , . "S P ^ evenmgs , danag ifcs months of Jane JnV ^ August , under the Management of tbe Kew fj ^ KB . 3 . t . PSiTCSaBD , ^ Late of * e Tkeaires RoyaL Coveat ' r Edinbro % and B » wfeia-sawf j £$£ , S ^ Lessee oj the York Theatre and cKs ? ' ^ tbe New Drama of tas FACTORY rnA announced for Mondsy nex ^ is pu ^ tparjr ^ TarssDAT , as the New Scenery S ifik . ^ cannot be completed earlier . " ^ ams j
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THE SIIAKSPEARIAN CHARTIST iijg ; BOOK . PBIC 5 THBEE PE > CE'T'HE Public ar « respetvjfaiJy informed tbsi X . First Eaition of ihe Ch . ir . Ui Hymn Bootf si « tiag of two thgcsasd cupjss , caring mei w rapid sale . a SECOND EDiTION , in a neatag bett-er printed , and cuuiainius Thietees New fiS in addition to the farmer ncaiber—bearing theiS ti-tU— : s Now Realt , iud may be bad , oa 01 ^ Mr . John Ckave , Wholesaie Agent , and ofasS ! Ca&nist $ * 77 i A ^ eats . Edited , at Mr . Csa * Kquiss , by WiRiim J ones , of Lsicester . w K . B . —Agents are pariw'iiarly rtqsesi ed ^ k ward Remittance ptrOraer . Addresg—Wiiuam Joaes , care of 3 Ir . Bsisa 11 , Church-g 3 ££ , Lcic *? cer . ^^
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MaRiIN 1 NDE , ( LATE OF BYKER-Gilt , PUBLICAN , RESPECTFULLY informs his Friends » d& f ^ aohc i , n « he has takes tiie THREE Wii LNN 31 AN 0 R CHASE , NEWCASTLE , aadfc « &y k&epiug every arsicle , in his line , of the lat qailiiy , to meri ; a sisaie ef Public Paa ^ meeji a ^ pport . SL L wiD have a Teat on the Town 5 Iaor dna » the R ices , where goad Accotomodarfoi : may be bi and every article of genuine quality .
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Now Publishing in Pec ay Naiaaers and Foarpaaj Paris .
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isixaito . ~*~~~ " ~ " i PBGGKESS OJ THE REPEAL MOVEMENT . DEHOSSntiTiON AT . ATHLO 2 EB . j OnSsndaylast , » demonstration in fevenr of the BjoTsceni so prcenr © f = > r IrabiHi a Parliament of i iercirr ^ Trxsinsce s . ^ Athene . TTse meeSi > £ took place in lie cxtenavs larra facing Ml- Murphy ' s : Ttadccc © ai-CHHaE ^ uii ( three miles frose Aihlone ) . i Ta 3 t jmsni-eis , issued bj iheir cter ^ jEiea , came :
from < 5 st 3 Bt places . The ground adjoinins ; tha * p ! a » fom < tfs 5 © ceEpIed by * deas » body of frkie- 1 « oa £ ed Sssesars , « io vfets packed { . t- > "B 5 e » saniie of ihen-own ) ss closely-as ~ herriii £ s ia a barrel" i Oosioe these -were a Eassbsr of horseman , and i * b eat £ &yor asy priva ^ ichic- * e = called "cars . Scattered « ver she issi of tfca iLdd were several : flionsaais aore . A eoEsidarsMe psrdsa of licse i were irczsen , -irho bensg for ike eo 3 part asdi ^ d in ajsfcj-caloaree gowns and sea shswig , gave ftrihe seeae SMcer an uapssosg
aspect-Mr , © 'Csanrej } arrived abcni xen o ' clock last ni ^ ni fiom Eeiqs , sod hiring slept at Mr . Murphy ' s , came in to AsHose Shs icomicg to hear mass , afser which lie repaired io sa . opea part of tiie town , called the Sso ^ eh Parace , where ier ^ eived itoq the Hades of At >? T *? ttg an adores as grsiiiade ** for Ms giant straggles £ d rcsore ibesT robbed Parliaffieni , and Discs lueJsad pmsdlj amer ; : ihe cations of the eanh . " Mr . o'CansS , s » seiE ^ ia- - -iee by Tom S ^ ele , came from A jian = to San : Tnt = rhill . ai ihe ^ bsad of s precession « f she tra-i ^ , who carried 3 ar ^ e bsHEers , a 5 < i were precedes and iodcwed by bands-of ruse- T * s * y cia t ^ jS arrive ss the »! are * f Bieeang asdl ne _ r iisrte o ' clock . Oe the triumphal ares piseeti aere = s ; nc read , E £ sr ihe eE-raufe to
Saeinerbiii , was Us folkrwia ^ inscription : — The Jlsve-jsaasr esv brasdish his whip , bat vre are desermiaed so i « frta . Beware ! Physical fores is a daiseros ^ erpcrinieiit 10 try upsa tie Irish peeple . Sepeal >^ H coi be pat c « j 5 * ti by tee bayonet . " ! Ehere "srare ivo T ^ &JSoraes—out for . ^ ntleEiea , ihe other for ladlca . * Oa the former were iufcribe-d . "Gedsxe tkr Q ^ eea . " " A &s » sh Monarch , cut an Ii ^ L PariiaiEeaJ- ' ** Ths n » aii wbo _ coiEmns s ensie s ?^ es straiptli to the eseffij . " Aid en toe latter , ihe deciirstka of the J /« r&in < 7 Gxroniae , thai ** a popolanon oi 5 . OO 0 . O& 0 is too gr& « to b = digged ai the tasl ef axjisher DaporL . " Taere -BFcre praent as the maeiisg up »» aiti 5 of ltt ) Koasa CsxboBc ser ^ vmeau Gn die esmm d Mr . R D . Bstrsrss . 31 . P ., so
. Xrfsd Ti ^ KNca sock J&c cbsir , and oa coh >^ said Ihathe accepted ssriih pleasure ibe bisb hecour opresding -qtct ss a-sstsibiy diaicgia-hed as "was the pressu by ereiy ateibcte caicnlsicd t « gire ii iiBiEEiss iapcnaBe ., aad hallowed by tlie sacrtd eaosa in irnich it was eni , ige 4 . Wbere-wastbelriijjanaii- 'syEOT ? cale farcgo Ms eoBEiry tor s . edzrso ^ ou of the pease—ica ^ sis >— - * r Sad a cr-aalsrpoise to b = r iHterefitsin « fe . ^ l disaiisaoa I { Oheess . } AroTj = c-d lyiheir 8 Silfisda CPCc £ Eea —( cheer ?)—ihsy Trculd gjadlj doff off vhe may of tbi Saxon rnler * . ai . d dad in il » SEipla dre == cf IrishiseB , they woaid l « ar to be diTesie-J cf rank and cosseqneaee , wbiis ; Sbejlo ^ Ed forward io u » e joyoas day of IrdaE »; * = xaarreeaoE—icbsas . > Tsey were there that csy
lorree thar coasirj rraza ^ ralsisiB , asa resore ntr 3 oihe mjjmiy of aniiiDu ; to sisafc ? eff the y&ke ot alieo irjnsiice aad oppresaoa , asd acquire -wkai 4 hey lid bz&ntsze posass-d , and as free-bom = ni ~ jeeEs -H-grstoticcS ^—She blcssia ^ of self iesri 5 * £ - tioa . Ii was al ^ lrd to ssppose Uia ; an Imperial J ^ trSjKa esiirwoaid do cieia justwa ; and they Tfouid do loagex be decerred by proniises to that effeci-£ a ^ £ s « l had nerer 3 c * isade eocoesaons of jasice 10 ihe people m Ireland , except "when they- were extcrted froHi be ? ia b « ir EKunents of weaknes ? . AbJ if cozc&as&s ifer = ££ axD exiorted hso . * -t sicaiar oreninsaaces , irsas = £ scriry was there ibai she wenid rot pcrjast » n = ij < ior iar cb ^^ cto was
inscribed in letters * f blood with ptrSa ? towards Ireland ) xcroke ssotc conc _ - £ aons , and renor tie ; r o ^ rsssons i—iGbtcrsO Is "was d ^ , theu , thit there iras « o reaedy zzsszsl EsgiiHi monopoij aad tJpprt ^ fisn bos a tioi 2 cf * ic Leeisaiare—eo other rejc = cy asa&zt tQg sll-anpoTer ^ mis grieTaBee sf asseaaeeirHi , TsiiSb drew frora the cosmiry , £ S , OOU , OGO a jcar So be sqnauderei ie foreign coantrias—no oitsr ataus by w ^ ieb . their comstry « oi ^ d be Te ^ asd f ' rea shai frigbtfnl poTtrty aad abjres degrad&doa to vL ^ eh ahe had beta retmced iyihe ems ] *; . ^ opjffessiTe jais-iegislason of the muted ParSaEie 5 . Aa united Parlramait wx 3 an 3 n 5 Qjnng m ^ ckeiv xA TepTsaenTit » ii to the people of Ireland . TLeir ^ iiesiifc- 5 © c »> n for ciTil ¦^ s ? ; ibf-J oigrtss bsicg spoSaaoix asd niiSsa ^ re , aaa 10 ke ? p Ireiayi as the a ^?« slave of En ^ asd . Let them fiolstc ao law . yj- ? -.-a » H eo -rrrm ^ ajid obey the voice ef tbeir Lfber ^ iur , &ad tLey -would di ^ ppoint , ba 3 s , aaa or ^ wKae tcosa bloc-dtkirstw eo ^ Eies , { CSiees . ) As fer ihe lar ^ e EHitary force Trhic ^ had ieenses ; iaa > IrtSaiid , « : * y r ^ jvieed zz the erent , as ealeaiased to scaf *< T a liide sce ?? as ? OE $ 3 them , ffhieh "was « ry eucL wsrtiig . { Gieers aud lansbter . ) Tnsj sh ^ aM not miiirnsi tb ^ e * brav ? soidiers . < HakT , hear . ) Ic their raaks th * y beheld ihe *? relatiTes s&d friejiua , az . 4 seocid leerefore rectiTe them inib . khfd £ c 5 £ , ccrdblny , ard friendship , Three cheers for the bra ^ e 5 eldi £ r ? . ( . Load cheers , and cries of Bsey ' re ^? eicei 2 e , & . ? V How coaW ^ BsJsnd , Triih a dealssson of ^ 3 UQC » A = 06 ia rha JEiciicquer , keep up = cJi a Tsas arscamest in Ire-IumL He iroaM say - ^ st ^ 1 ? coald do so , icdeed . irat ior a tetj ihon siise . Tae resoJre of rfie lush people u > keep fnthxx : tlie co-isiirniirii zai Ti&late no law d € S 3 ODStraied tie absiiidrrr of snch a moTOBeni , sod Shewed thai its direct ^ Seci TroaLd be to accelextte tha Sepeal ; -wiae £ ng 2 i ^ vee&ksess vmuld tonsnue to be their best sec-wcity , nnlB they ebcoeeded in «; taiisii ! g the fostering preieerion of a moare PariiaEepi . ( Dieers ) 3 dr . D . BsoiF 7 £ , M-P propped ihe first resolotion , io t > w jgfft B ^ jal the union was obtamed by ecrmps and ernel jntans , and onsht lo . be repealed /' Peel aad Wellington ign&ns ) had fcythsirTajad ihrsais ecdesTcared to mcsudaie the people of Ireland , andeheck tie progres of Bepeal ; bat he wished they were there , acd he would shim them 500 . 0 G 0 Sgluing atsa—tload and reterated < Jieerin £ ) —men ta oaslr bearii ^ and irreastable attitudepeacefol , EKrai , and sc-ber , bes deterBained ccneini-BonaSy to Repeal the LegisiauTe Union—resolved iobe gniliy of no inciscrtrica . to spill not a drop of blood —( h ^ r , iH » r)—so conanh not a single act sgainsi the orsi £ a » ses of society or the laws of && country , bet at the f&xse time re ^ clTed to sand ripon ike threshold of the eon&dtntion and resist invasion .
The uon . Mr . SVapsCH ( soa of Lerd Prencb ) in seccnQir ^ the resoimian , addresed tb * meeting at eonsidarafcle 1 <* ag : ' i He eaasdered ii net ohJt legiL be ; ther Sheresl xigh ; to sssmble for the parptse 'A peiitioniag the Le- ^ isbr * nTe to Efpeal ice Union , which bad betn fonsd = o epire ^ Te to Irel and , ar . d of sneh vast advaniaze to England . 1 s < a ¦ wuhstanding the thr ^ aia of their present xalrrs to ercsii theexpresscc of public opinion and keep from Ireland a iesk Parliament , i ; was the firm deter minaaon of the people to persevere rsmstirationsDT and energc ieaily toobtan it ^ tcheers . ) They had outgrown , the tyranny of vheir oppressors—Ifasy had roerea ? ed acd anlaplied nntS no chain conld 5 ur-TOQnd them . Their masers conld not forge manacles as nDEsrons as tiiar tnifeaered arms ; and ib ^ v de £ ad aadaeions Britain 10 awe their manly soni ~ - ^ Qoud cheerins . )
Mr . O'QHntELL thsn presented Mmself . He was , Ia 2- d with the m ass deafbuag cheers , fie c ^ tgrateiazed then upon the fact that Irishmen . n < sith ., sonic , es * , and ^ raS , were tip and sdrring on the qn € » d-. E « f whether Irelsud ^ ioald sJong to the Irish or tie Sixoa scai-gcr . In ihe irhole coarse of ids politic *! career he cerer ieird so vi ^ orons a 11 hcrrah ^ ss tfca people nowgare for ihe R . peal of Ihe Union . O 1 they were certain of it—( cheers . ) Their ecEmles &si tried ibe effect of treadBg ibem and the qcesdon with contempt ; tLen the ; tr * d the ferceof vuuperaiiGDSDdcalBiaDy . Boihfsiiedand the ^ sgiish sewspspers be ^ an to egress a ^ onisbment at the detencinadon cf die people to have a Parliament of tl » ar own . * Tfeen came Weiii 52 ton ef
"Wsterioo npoc than—( grcans ) . Was it on th 18 a ^ nnethey wcoId ^ reanMaj in that way !—; laaghiti ) Bat Wellington -wtSl inert ihaxii "was cot Jbered coat tiat sa&de tke solcieT dsriBg , "btu ihe native : t > raTEry of the Irishman , wbo was as br&ve in a frieze coai as he wscld be in a red one—( chrsrs . ) He began by thratcsii ^ * sem with ernl war . Then came Perf whit the sims threat . Honest Booby , iowerer , told a lit npen tb * & cision . He said '< ~ tr *\ the Qo ? en < fee 1 a ?« i aeainrt Rep ^ - He knew that ibey wonld ^ d = spi ? e rts tnreat of crrii war ; and he fc-ew that tfcer beld in Tcaeration scs excellem JndgmeEt asd the Kssiaised charaeier of their beloTed Qneea . Haise ihe introcoction ofher nane . J * ow , heixdil from a oerscn who ccold not be
ce-CGTed , and who heard sosee onesay in s tcm * raifeer Eke die Qne € n * =, » liat she sever mideany sachdecla ration , arc tha : aie coEpisined tiit Sir B . Ped had Eisrep ? eseEUdb ,-r —( cries &f ° Godb 2 essher . " ) The threatsof avil war coisqsaiiqrsoodalone . Bat the papfe of Ireland woold Ticlate no law . wonld create ™ = » t or djstnrbaase of act kind ; and he had tofore dtfied the G ^ Ternaeij to prc ^ diritha ' ^ rars ^ epeaiSng ^ a a red coat dH Sofmate I SSSSL ?^ ^^ » _ eowatd . Cheers . ) ^ BjdeSanee had caosri the Ihiks t © draw in his hoaz , and ¥ M to shrink « rt of ^ fiscrap ? ^ S- * ^ ms ^ Jad sau f « Sr Edward , irho ^ SUd ?! t s « aiag itaK-lDB f « Uj * nd absnrdby , Terf probaWr * ^ TO lO MffllBlaclt again . {* 'B ^ he ^ g ^ nfl ! fctma : TCB » Jli ^ cr owao Then the , were attack * and abased by 7 ^ ^^^ newspaperwritt ^ Bi ! emtoa by a set of the ao ^ ontrageons soonndrds flat « Ter stood inihoe-Ieather . tAiangb . ) A more ' dipiaved , a more creedless , a more eonsekneekas I set of blsckgnards were never etsgregaJed togedter ! B » y pabSshed a manifesto stodng thai Ireland was ' < auatist in ablate of rebe ! fioi >; that the remnant cf ' fce Orange faction © nght to-be armed % and thatJ ttrongh thaa "War oo ^ it inaasdiattly to be made
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| npon the Irish people . He was a 4 Mallow when he received-the newspaper containing that sentiment . It bronght istelH ^ ' ce . at the saaie time that the Msnbtry had inade no Honse on the preceding Thursdaj , being . bBsSyEm ployed forging chains for Ireland . Knowing that the people of Ireland wsnld Tiolata no law * / they were threatened to hare their throats eatl » jpioo | ffSaiXon ^ -li 8 would not gire thsja afcadnaiae-rbnt again lie set them at ^ ena&ce . ( CSpars . ) He had now the pl «^ nre of informing the p . opls of Ireland that those who had the hardihood to issne snch threats had gone npon anether tack , that of eondlliation . if that meant a Repeal of ifee Union , he wenld be satisfied , bnt no conciliation wonld Eitisfj him Ehort of a Parliamtnt in
CoQpge greei : —tchrcrs . } Ministers had a great lEsjority in Parliament , bnt tney were not a bit the stronger for it . They were janxions to attack Ireland , faii feey wonld not , for it would noi be good for them whi ! e there were funds in the market . A mair gaTe JE 95 for \ fisai was called £ 100 in ike rands . It was down to £ 92 nowv and if they made war tmjcstly npon Padoj , that which wa ^ wor : h ££ 2 io-dsy wanld not be worth £ 35 to-morrow . So m ^ cB f or the Tories , whom they set at defiance . As for Brcngh ^ m , be was not wonh talking of ; he was 3 despicable and aseiSsli mountebank—a man who betrayed his friends azd fawned npon his enemies . He woald allow them to groan him—( groaasj Taeu eame ihs Whig < 8 , saying , that as : they had already
bcneSted Ireland , and kept her qaiet , the Qaeen aau only to tare ont Sir Roikri , ana bring in Lord Jv > ha . The Wbiss had eprtaTiiy proniis » d mocb , and ondertaien to do ntn'h ; bnt the people placed a confidence in them which they did no : deserve ; and he 3 ptt told them that no change of that kind would drive th * people of Ireland from iheir determination 10 h ^ ve a Repeal of the Union —( cheers . ) He would put Whigs and Tories imo a bag . ehake it w « U , loss th- m out , and fr ^^ n first to last were would be foniid r . o friead to Ireland amonESt tbt-cj . Ireland had bst one frietid , and tbas was b ^ rself—( cheers : ) The Mt-ming Chnmcie ^ the organ of the Whigs , said i ; was qaHe troe that it might be useful to Jr ^ ianu to have a seoarate Legislstnre of her own , bui that it
ttk sld no » bs Eisefol to Easlan ^ , and tsax tbereicre tb * y :-honld sot have ii . vS ' onid they abandon their afi ^ a ion for Repeal on tb 3 t gr * , ucd I—( cries of ** ^ o . ^) The mw paper said if the people continued their straggle , they were likely . 10 obtain ail : bey wanted in tie moment of England's weakness . He ihanked tne Chronicl * for tee hint . It contained a siraagtempiaiion to them u > pray of an afternoon " may EnirJand soon " be weak that we may carry Repeal . " Wna regard to fixity of teenre . he sisonid like to eirlain that by it he meant that no iandjord shoaid be entitled to recover rent anles he made a ltase of twenry oneyears at least . Xo lease , no rent—( choer ^) Tiitn the poor man vroald boi be afraid of being inrsed out of his cabin next May . It mLjbi be said
• has the landlord wonld pui t&o much rent in tas leise . For that he was not withont a cere . The Orcaancs Sarre' ? bad made a vaination of lsi-d , jQd he would not allow the Tent to be ; any huarr than tiffit valnsbon . If there was no' Ordoaaes s ^ a'Tsy , he wonld give the tenant the tesi rfqmed npoa re ^ i-tenn ? his vote—namely , what a soiveai tca ^ n ? vbuld give for the land . " That would be iried by th ° afsisiant barrister , with an appeal to the judge of s > ije and a j- ± ry , who wcnlo ascertain wLii would be the fair reat , and ihat rent tb * tesacs wouH have : o pay and no oth » r . He was a lindlord , and uici not want to take away their right , but that they shc-nlu perform their diilne 3 to the ¦ occupying tensmts and cot hnet them J'ke wild beasts . In tte coumy of Qare , a mkb ? gotten . " * feliDW ooamed Wyndbam was tcming out family after family , A iiniiibu were now under notice to ^ uh , and trembled for their esSstesce . He gare soaie of them mon ^ y
to co to America . The miscreant 2 were thy not Irish 1 Were not the graves of their ancestors in Ireland ! Was not Irelano thtir bine-place , acd that of their children 1 An 4 who -Kculd say that a little ino ^ y to send them to Ansaic * was a reempenee ior driving them from the iacd of their Others , frcm their al ^ trs , and tfefcir homes I—( bear . ) H- wbold give power to cTery occupying tenan ; wi-o laid cnt money or labour in improvemeEts , to register tisosa improvements in the Ckrk of the Crown ' s ofSee every year ; so that when the tw < nty- oce years lease had expired the landlord should toi ap and and paj to ihe tenant in mouf y the price of bis improvements , or gract h ? m a new iease of the farm . Tsey might in tb&t case build a better house fcr thor pig than ? hey now lived in thtmsdves . These were ihe solid and lasnng fruits be anticipated from Sepeal . In civ ? liz 3 iioii Irraami exeeeoed every o-her cc-ziEirj 02 the face of tbf ? globs . The virtue cf her dsngh : £ Ta and the rtli ^ 'en of her sons were of the highest order of dva z-irion ; and these he cls % ; ed for them . If their -monies attacked them , he knew who would have the worst of it . Why , they were enough to take them in their arms and throw ti eai into the Shannon . But he would carry Rf peal ss he carried em&ncpavidn , without violating the law , committing = n oStcce against morality , or shedding cpe drop of feuinsn blood . Would they not meet him sgsia , if he wanted them ! ( Loud ehters and cries of * ' Ye-. **) He mixhi wantth « m a ^ ain ; bnt he did not loiak England would be mad enough to refuse their demand . She was the weakest Power in the world at the present moment , by reason of the dissatisfaction existing : b Ireland , and if > he wanted strength she bad oniy to do justice to Ireland . After advising the people to peace , and recoirmsnding tha . co msa in the Repeal ranks fbodd iVtr return a blow , bnt bring his assailant , H he met wim one , to the pet y sessions . The Hon . and Learned Gentlemen concluded with a giowmg eulogy npon the btanues of the Shannon , wcich he wound op by saying s Ss . xo » r . ver was no more 10 be compared than the water of a dunghill to a living vrelL He retired amiust several rounds of pnttimaagtif * applause , THE SIXSEK . Abont 300 persons sat down to dinner at seven o'clock in a marquee erected for the purpose in a field adjoining the town . Lord Ffrench was in the chair . On the cloih being removsd his Lordehip gsve the usual loyal toasts , and after them the "People , ton whose good alone sovereigns reign , " to which Mt . D . Browne , 31 . P-, responded . Letters 01 apology vrexe read from Dr . M'Hale , of Tnsm ; Dr . Higgins , of Ardagn ; Dr . Cantwell , of Mcath ; asd Dr . Burke , attributing their absence to professional duty or HI health , but rot to any abatement in their enthusiasm for the R-peal . " O'Connell and Rapes ! " being the next toast ,
ilr . O'Coxszii said that they had met not to advance a psriy , but to turn a province into a nation , to mkke serfs freemen , to give liberry to their faioeriand , to strike eff the shackles of the slave and let man walk forth in th ? majestic dignity of his creation , equal with his felloe iaan , and pqnal t « the management of all that belonged to human beings , and amongst those mighty concerns ihe nacieaal concern was the first aad greatest . It was oeiu ; hifnl to address them on an occasion like the present , when thair difficulties were jani * hing , and * s ; : cn it had pleased Providecce to nnx timidity in the councils of their enemies with the certainty of strength in the cause of Ireland . They bad ccme there to be free or die . ( Here' the the company rose ,
waved their hats , and cheered for sozne time . ) Bnt he thought they might put dying out of the question . He always preferred oae hvisg patriot to a dozen dcid ont = —hsaghier ) . He talked of dying in the fine frenzy oT an orator who Saw ihe possibility of an attack , and showed ihe enemy th » y were ready for them , bni whose solid judgment convinced him there flcuid be no dying &i aiL They were not the less resdy for the congest abould it be forced upon them ; aad * very hour taughi nim that there would be less peril m it—Hi « ir , hear . ) He believed they had been brought there by one great principle and one unanimous deiernuBauoa . He believed they had come there one and all to say— " Ireland is a province , and she 6 hallbe a nation . " < Here the
company again rose , and cheered in as enthusiastic manner . ) As for the Uuion , it was nothing but a parchment Union . It never w-s a real Union j bnt even if it were made of adamant , being nrjust , they wonld rend it asunder— ( cheerj ) . Tne lion . Gentleman then referred to the disabilities neder which the Roman Catholics laboured from 18 l » 0 to 1829 , during which time ihe mass of the Irish people , he said , were in a state of practical servitude . But ever since then , what portion of public liberty had they go * equal to England ? They had not the same franchise , for in the coch ? y of Kerry there was a rural population of 720 , 000 , and they had just 2 , 000 voters , while Wales , with only 800 , 000 inhabitants , had 36 , 1-00 voiers . England and Scotland f , corporate Kefoixo- Ireland ; got a limned aad restricted corporate Reform . W ^ s thai a Ui , ion ? { "Ho . " ) God forbid that it was , for if it were it would be much more difncuU to break it . The Whigs < iid a Ikde for theia , and the gratitude of the Irish people was great . ! Lord J . Rassell had admitt&d the generosty of tha Irish pec ^ Jfc , but he ( Mr . CConneil ) wonld not tlrow back ik& complinitnt , for he £ iw no generosity either in him or his colleagnes— ( langhttr ) . They certainly put some deserving Eiea into office , and kepi out some scoundrels , which was still better—men , however , who were immediately thrust in when Peel became Misister . Bnt eTen during the ; Whig regime the burden of the Union : pressed heavily upon them . A fiendish cry was raised against them in England . The ?«»« called the people of Ireland a filthy and rebellious multitude . It called their priests eutplieed xamans aad sanguinary tyrants—( groans This was the language which was , day after day , employed towards Ireland , and it was not employed in Tainl It inspired the "Rn | rBf 8 > mind with an hatred and in ulipath ; that told tnimpet-tongned » tat last electioni . There was , added to that , the interests of ihe landlords ; the interests of any class was never so potent as when' envenomed acd sharpened by a bigoted and fiendish spirit of rfcHgionsani inosity . The Times succeeded , and the consequence was that they had now a Parliament which was , f erfi » Pa , t ^ e most degraded ; that ever at in England . Gas interests and kigotrj of feeling were openly manifesting themselTee in unrestricted ^ iv ^ V *? "was admitted I on both sidea . Peel alkedof fl » exten * aad groeEnes of bribery , and
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Lord J . RasselUinptniieT accents , admitted ii . It was that : bi £ otry and that bribery by-which Ireland was sow governed . What chance , then , had they of the Jc * st mitigation of any of their grievances from an English Parliament ! Even the small fragment of their rights which they still possessed that Parliament wasattempting to filch away . By the Poor Law three-fourths of the guardians were to be elective , bat that was too ^ much for Ireland , and one-foarth ex offinj , guardians had been turned into one-third . The number of ex ^ yffido appointments had been augm-. sted , and that was the Government ' s amend-| ment of j the Poor Law . ' The people complained of I the tyranny of the Poor Law Commissioners , and Lord Elliott ' s remedy was to doable their power .
What csance had the Irish people of resisting it Some of bis friends whe had done themselves the ; high honour of attending in the Saxon Parliament divided , and muBtered just eighteen against it , while ¦ 205 Englishasen , who did not hear th ? debate , cams down from Bellamy ' s smoking-room , acd threw out i the only mitigation of the law that had been moved by a glorious majority of 187 . He was blamed for distinguishing between Englishman and Irishmen . Mr . Ross , of RosstreTor , said i ; was a folly to make a distinction between Saxon and Celt . But who began the distinction I Ii was not he ( Jlr . O'Con neii ) . It was Srst made use of as an instrument of tyranny . He himself heard Lyndhurss describe tbe Irish as aliens in blood , in language , and religionl ^ roan ?^) He it was who began the battle : bnt ii never slsosld ecd until Saxons governed England and Irisbxcen Ireland ; for , if a coolest should take placi between them , they would die before they yielded—( loud cheers ) He would
av . end these mulutu ;* incus meetings until all Irelan-4 had spoken with him ; and tben he would take his nvxtstep , recciiecHng aJways that the Unicn , in point of cons ' . itutlouai principie , was a lu ' . ity , and that Mr . Saurin , who was Attorney Gnerai for twenty-two years , and Chief Justice Bufhf > had said so . NoidiLt ; had taktrn away from the Q- een the r > ijht of issuing writs . She required only a statesman to advice her to th&t siep , and , asa m&iter of course , t&e Irish House of Commons would start into life . To obtain that end h ^ thouiti Lave 300 of tbe sentry 10 ffitei Dia in Dublin , uieh wiih £ 100 from his own locainy . The enduing day he would request them to m «» him at a public diauer ; and ihtra was nothing to prevent iL ^ ta from meeting a ^ ain , and calling npen the Qa -en to iss-ua b < r wriis . Oh , they would carry repeal wub the greatest facility , backed as he was by the millions , and supported as as would be by the geniTj . ( Cheers . ) Mr . O'Connell concluded by pTopDsiag the hf-alth of
Lord Fpbsxch , who briefiy re ! urned umnks , and proposed "" the Cau . i » : ie Hierarchy of lre » anii , " to which toast . The Rev . Mr . Dawson responded . Mr . G'Consell apoiagizedior leaving tbe company early ( a qaaner btfore ten o ' clock ) , having , he s * io , to be atiho association next cay at one o ' clock . Tfce Han . and Learned Genitcaan then retired amidst the cheers of the assembly , who followed in abcu ; an hoar zfi < T . The Tboops at . Athlone , dcring the Demosstbatios . — In adii-. &n to two tioojy of the 4 th Dr » iC-&n Guards , and a dero ; of the 45 xfa and 90 : h Regiments , three compact « f the 69 th , from Mullingar , and another tr » opof the 4 ; h Dragoon Guards frc-m Longford , arrived in Athlone on Saturday .
] 1 ' REPEAL ASSOCIATION . —Mosdat . The Association me ; to day , Mr . O'Mahony in the chair . Although Mr . O'Conneii was not exacted to be present , having attended the Repeal meeting anu , dinner at Atinoae yesterday , the room was very 1 much crowded . 5 Jr . JOHifO'CoxsELL . M P , announced , amid loud cheering , that the sum of £ 1 , 008 i 9 s . lOd . had been received from the county o : Ciare , and that a larg « sum was expeeied from ihe same quarcer . From tne county of Limwrick it' 52 7 j » - 6 d . had Wen received , being the product of ifce recent meeuug at Murroe The gnnis of £ 105 irom Kiikenny and £ 74 froin Ulster Tvere ai « o anaotinccd as naving be « u sent 10 , the Association , and a ereat cumber of members were 1 proposed and admitted wuose subsciipuoua were
| j ] ' lncluaed in tsese sinas . I Sooa alter 'wo o ' clock Mr . O'Codqc'I arrived at the Corn Exe-iJings in a travelling carriage and i-our , having posted ap - . 0 town from A ' . hlone , in order to I attend : the Association . He w-aa received by the 1 meeting with Sops continued cheering . The Hon . G-inrleinan procetded to eo&gratulatK the Association OQ the maj ?< uc progress of the R ? peal cau-e . . Sinre he last saw them lie had attended several meetings of great laainittude—ihe iast , in fact , always appeared t « bici to be the grca ' . est . H « proceeded to describe the meetings at Kiikfnny , Mallow , and Athlone . The assertion of Lord Uaancel ! or Sugdec , that in these meetings ibere vrss an "inevitable tendency to outrage , " was met by
the fact thai at none of them was there used even an uncivil word by one person towards artwrbtr .: Tbe d * ni » "an < nir of ih ^ people was peaceful and ; loyal , but determiner!—drear ) It seemed almost the result of magic thai so many ihousanus could cougrega ?« wiihout ev > . u tbe occurrence ot an accidental i . DJiary ; in short , he would say that in ihs bestmanaged assembhes of the notiiiiy and gentry , there was no instance in which the regulations of CiviilZrd society were -batter < Shs « - * v » J- ilo had » d ~ . dressea 2 000 , (> 00 of persons at those meetings , and , every individual , from the joucgest to tfce oldest , wasthotonahly C 3 KV j 3 ced that any breach of the peace ; assault er offence of auy kind , was dcstruc-g tion to the ciuse . He next had k > congratulate
thfm on ihs late Ants-Repeal meeiing , and he was delighted to perceive that no one opposed in opinion to those who held tbe meeting had interfered with them . Th < y had the privilege of being Anti-Repealers , as the Repealers had theirs , and having met to exercise tbe ? acred nght of petition , it was quite right that they shonld not be interfered withr He had anxiously looked over the reports of that meeting , in the hope of finding some arguments in favour cf the Union ; but he was disappointed , for tbe -speakers did not even attempt that species of rhetoric called a lie , to prove that the Union was a benefit to the country . They had abu » ed him 'to , b 6 sure , but he hopc ^ to earn much more of their abuse as he Trent along . They had also abused
ihe Catholic religion ; but he would not be more ready to give it U P * because half-a-dozen fellows cried oat ** no peace with Rom ^' and attributed conduct and objects to them which never entered their minds . What had Rome to do with Repeal !—it was not a Roman , but an Irish question —( hear , hearJaEd the endeavour to make it a no-Popery question ? ho < ved that its opponents had not a single argument which they could advance . The Evening Mai ^ to which he returned thanks , as one of hia bes > assistants , had lately eaid that Sir Robert Peel must know tr . at Kepeal would do much good to Irelandj ,. and would prove exceedingly usefui —( hear , heaxir And further , that is could be carried without ofdangering Protestantism , because nineieen out of
every twenty of the Lords would be Protestaofe-f-( tear , hear ) . Having commented at some length on the proceedings of the and-Repeal meeting , the Hon . Gentleman proceeded to advert to the late affray aJ Carland , and stated that it had been ascertained that the fellows who commenced the riot by an attack on several Protestants who were quietiy proceeding along the road were not Repealers . It he cjDalc ascertain that any of them bad been enroiled , he would feel it his * duty to move their expalacn . The drum by wh : ch these Protestants were preceded had been breken , and he would pri f po ~ erthat a better one be supplied to them from the funds of the association . A man named Morrow had been beaten on the same occasion , and he shouk . move that a sum be given to him out of iheir funds ,
to compensate him ior the lo ? s of tune he had suffered . These petty conflicts were mosj disgraceful , snd , in fac :, were almost the only thing that could , retard the progress of the cause . What he wanted j was to restore Ireland , not to a particular party or 1 section of the people , but to all Irishmen . That was the true meaning of the phrase " Ireland for the Irish "—( bear , htar ) . Why , seme of the highest 1 Conservatives were joining them . In Clare one young gentleman , a decided Conservative , caae Iw their meeting at the bead of 600 horsemen . He meant Mr . John Malony , of Graig , a genflea ? an of family and furtnne , acd a magistrate of the county . He W 3 S one of the magistrates who attended that meeting to protest against the conduct of the ^ Lord Chancellor .
, Mr . O"Coxsell concluded by moving the resolutions to which ce referred , and they were carried unanimously . A letier from Mr . Buggy , the editor of the Bcifast Vindicaior , was resd , in which he slated it » l secret societies were spreading in Ulster * Mr . O'CossEti said , that if be had time , ! be woaid write an address to tbe people of Ulster , on the subject , but he feared that his engagements would not permit him to do so . To-morrow ) he should gp down te Cioumel . and the next day ; ne shonld be in Skibbereen . On Friday ht should pass through Limerick on his way to Galway . 0 n Saturday he should be in Kilgorey , and , after mass on [ Sunday , he would enter Gal way . On Monday there was to be a meeting there ; and on Thursday he shonld be in Dnndalk . It was then scarcely possible he fchould bare time to prepare this address . He should , therefore , content himself with moving that the Association condemns illegal societies , and oaths of all kinds , and implores the people of Ulstei to be on their guard against persons seducing them into such practices , and , if possible , to bring tbeii tempters to condign punishment by exposing tteii machinationB . After handing iu several large , suau of money from various parts of the counter , { the the Hon . Gentleman proceeded again to congwitnlate the Association on the advances which Repeal was making , fie had not jet had time toreadjSii j . Grahsm ' s silly and impertinent 6 peech through bat he had seen enougn of it to glean that it was not intended to do anything for IrelancL ( Hear , hear . ) He congratulated them on this candid avowa of Sir James Graham . They should now loos U themselves . They had inscribed on their banners peace , law , and order , but were at the same tin determined not to continue the abject slaves of Gre Britain , The feeling was ascending to tto highest
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places , as the vast accession of respect able persons 50 iba ; Association BhOwed . He had had dlfficalty in convincing some people that tbe Repeal waa the only hope for Iruland ; but now . Sir James Graham had come to his assistance , to show them that every other hopa was denied them , and fae ( Mr . O'Conneii ) thanked him for having doas so—( bear , hear ) . A Whig newspaper had lately stated that an enlightened despot would b ^ the beat gov ernor for Ireland . In reply to this he would say , that if such an a ; t < : mpt were made , they would stand on the law and tha constitution in defence of their liberties—they mi ^ ht deprive the people of Ireland ot those , but only with their lives —(! oud and protracted cheering . ) The Secretary proceeded to read a er ^ at number of communications enclosing subscriptions , amon ^ s : theta were £ 40 from South Carolina , and fifty francs from some parties ia Paris . . At the terminatiou of the proe * . edings , Mr . O'Coneli . announced , aoiid great cheering , that th ^ Repeal rent for tbe past week amounted to £ 3 , 1 ^ 3 7 s . Ckl . The largest stfin received in one iy «; k by the Catholic A ? soc : a « . on Tras £ 170 t ) , aud that was during the height of the agitation tor the Ciare election . In general the average o ; the receipts did not exceed £ 350 . The meeting then separated .
The Abut . —The second division of the 5 'h ( or ^ orthumbbrlaiid ) Fusilecrs , und * er the co-tsmand 01 Captain Spence , arrived in Cove , in the Boyne tranport , on Friday , after a pSf-sa ^ - ? of 18 days , iroai Gibraltar , They vr « r& itnuioaiait-ly c-onvcyed 10 i . orkin theTugs' . fcamer . The fir ? t d ; viiion of this highly dist'iiEuisned roc " ment arrived in the Pestvojee Bomaajje , on Fridav , the 12 ' . h of May , r > om th ? sune quarters . Tr . ; s dirHon (; r , i 2 : sd ) m irched on Saturday for Fe-rm&y , to jiin the head quarters . The Note cf Pheparation . —Two more war steamers have ariived at Cove rrtm Portsm&uLu . The Meteor , 2 « un « s , Commander George Butl- ^ r . and the Myrtle . H « rMajesty ' s ship Tyne , 26 gun ^ , Captain W . N . Glasscock , is also added to the strength of
the squadron in that arbour , wbichj if rumour is tp be credited , is to be further increa ? fcd by tha addi'ioa of several vessels of war , first and second raie ~ . R- ^ ar Admiral Bowie ? is hpuriy expected in the Sham . on river by the Lightning War steamer , for the purpose of inspecting the several forts and batteries in the iLower Shannon , which are to be garrisoned by detachments of the Marine Artiiiery . Furiher not-3 of preparation is thas aunounoed by ihe Limerick [ Chronicle : —'" Several loads of timber hare bcec received into the yard of the new barracks for the jpurpose of erecting : stockades and o ; her def-ncea inside the wall ? , and ; two pieeea of heavy ordnance are to be planted iu the old Castle of Limerick , as a matter of precaution before the county of Ciare side of the rifer Shannon . "
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Gbarter ? W&at sense is tb » re , in pestering oar&lva g ^ < l others about what we csU oar rigLU , . when the ro $ d to prosperity and fottace thus standa to as ? " Bat / *» amtold , tout scheme is not to supercede oxrr Mitatiott & * tbe Caatteri Indeed I Why , this schema we are asSJrt'd wQl bo 3 remedy for oor distress ; aad we satsif li ?* & n < A *** rea »^ ie »; m are not , it is to be hoped , ^^ OEwasonabfe dogs as to met to be doublyJcaredL T&s Gnarter we bare found is Bomewlat d'filcnlt of Rcn-^ vement ; ; and , altbocgb 1 am persasded I that the time for winning } t if we do bnt keep togetlier and singe in our purpose , Is now pretty near a »| hand , yet sbooH I , and I thick ail sensible men , lit what lie says of it have any true foundation , prefer the more immtsdjafc ? " nodrunf of Mr . O"GonnoTr [ wiiicfa he says can be adopted and earri&d into effect witaoat delay , sa ; d vritb iittle or no difficalty ; ana which Is not mere !? to relieve distress , but to raise no to ptospf-rity and fortune .
The putting forward 0 ' thia echense , or of any other , as a remedy fcr tbe prevailing distress , save tfeat for which we Cbarosts have been contending ; the pn ' . tln ? forward of anything , as a remedy , ia dearly pliving into tbe handsj of our oppTPtacrs . To admit tbai there ia mere than ene remedy ^ t 3 to admit tbat there ma 7 be 2 . thousand ! &r . d then what would become of <> nr icteg * rity of purpose ? what wonid become of our sole remedy , the Charter ? It is lost auioosst the BibeJ of pr ^ jicta , and we become srlii-up , divided , and scattered .
Wewantno ^ t TWO r ^ medir a , did two exist , v ' rAch , however , I stoat !? deny . Bat however Ehi ? it . jt c > e we want to be sa . 4 ed "nly or . ee . We want onty one rci ^ e- ' y . It is dangerous to iiitcn to I wo—if tra do so vf * s zre sms to be split into two or thr <» e parties , aone for oce some for the other £ fh&w * , na- ! s-me for both . Bsmenibfer tiiat " BttvrecU two e ' . ixjIs , &c , '' and stick to the Charter aloae . I remain , Yours fsithfo'ly . Tuoiias Shiih . Liverpool , Jane 19 . 1 S 4 Z .
P . S . ^ If any more be to be said of this pn ject' airon * tb » land , I should mueh like to oc « ap ; a sinjrie co : ania with what may be teraied the Statistics , and Ihe'rationale of the scheme j iirespcctive of its bfeariti ^ on Guartista . M . aj I hope tdai tte E nun will yield me a column for the purpose ? > +
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HOUSE DF COiiilONS . —Tcsoat , Ivsz ¥ k At she hoar u ; uilly devoted 10 private b ^ saes , ilr . J . W ^ ril- ? y sic-T- ^ d the s «*> Ea jeii ^ si -. ¦ " ¦ sv * i euti' . lea " Ap A : i io dec . are ifec- liuigiiiSMr ^ vl certain per .-ons all * g *» J ur ciiimafLg » o Dc cii-cr-ra - > r VC 16 M-. s ; Hon . GvDr ^ Ferrari , J » iirqa ^ os I ywzsr hend . " The bill i .. * o bet ^ i seas < iowa » o ik-ra irsin . . be House jot" Lords , wtere is h ^ a ssdergvoe ~ . cx fa' " . est liiv ^ iigitioa , and vr » s infe £ < led 10 fecarto ihe purtits proaioiiDg is the hoao « Lr * » aJ pr \ Til * g # of the pssrage 10 which , taey c-L » iai *< i so ce ecvit ' -ed . j Mr . C . 3 eu . KR moved , that the bui i « read a R ^^ ond time that dav six months . He ibxew
overboard all ithe : a <* : s mentionad by bos noDle a ^ d learned irienc opposite and proved Ofcivri the Hou ^; of Lords ; laad argued the impropriety o-r possuij such a measure upon general priiictpies . He admitted that ] those facts involved a moeswrous hsrd-? nip oa tb « Tovrusbend family . He syinpatbrsed with the fc'jiings at' Lard C . rormiaicad , wno saw his succession to the aereoitary honours ot his family endangereui ; tut he sympathised also wiili the
unfor : anxte Marchioness of lowuscend , who had been bound by Saw to a man whom s . > e could not bus loathe , and frem whom l&at very iaw prevented her from obtaining a releAs ? e . He was therefore not surprised thatJ 3 he , who had ac ; ed the part of a fiuhful and afft-ctionate coasori to Mr . Msr ^ eti's ,-shuoid at fast determine that . " tbe law , tvkich hid mide htr children ille ^ itima ' . e , should aiso make them legi : imat * , and ihat tne law which made tne ila .-q-iis of Townshend her husband shcuid also make him the
father of those children . Admitting , hotvcv < r , the tnon ? r 6 us hardship which such a deienainatioii m gat iiit . ci up > jn the Townshend family , iia objecud ; to the present measure , as being a partial remedy 1 for it . Wty should it be introduced for tbe beut&i of the peerajte alone 1 Wty not introduce a geaeral law , affecting not only peerages * bat aiso the estates 1 of private individuals ! The House divided , when there appeared , —
¦ For the secoDd reading -153 ' Againgt it ~ 49 ! Majority ... ... H 4 The bill jwas then read a second tim ? , aai ordered ' to be committed to a committee of salecuoo : Mr . Pa ^ ixgton gave notice , on the part of Lord Ashley , that on the 4 . h &f July , he woold move far leave to bring in a bill for the improvun nt of ike condition of the industrious classes by the establishment of th ' e alletmcnt system and oi a general io-iii society . } A * talk" then ensued on the " Danish Claims " brought forward by Mr . Hawes , who wished to get tome £ 22 i > , 000 for " compensa ; iou" to " our merchants" for losses incurred b y them during the war with Denmark . He was resistwi by tae GaanceLor of the Exchequer , who told him thai he had no such sum to spars . * |
SEFTKKMAL ACT . Mr . Shj . bman Crawfor » then rose to move for leava to bring in a bill to repeal the ac ; of the IS ^ h year of Geo . L , statute 11 , c . 3 S , for est-encmg vhe duration cjf Parliament to sevea years , ^ foe Hon . Gentleman recapituiattd the various acts which had been passed to reguiate the duration of Parliament , aod expressed his opiuioa that , so long a- ParliamenLs exi ? ted fol seven years , there couid bs no security tor public liberty and the rig hts ot the people . As to tne duration to tveten he should propese to return ,
he was willing to accept she period fixed by 6 Wm . and Mary | , c 11—^ namely , three years , though in ms own opinipn a much shorter period v > ould be fairer towards the public . If he iiembers of that House had been more subjected to popular opinion , by a shorter t 4 nure of tneir seats , a great part of thai unjust and misciievoas legisiatiou vrhica had so oppressed alaii injured the ptople would never have been ventured upon . Dr . Bowrisg seconded the motion .
Sir James Graham considered it decidedly beneficial to the public that a somewhat extended duration shcuid be givvn to Parliaments- The w * iola experience of years past proved that the av'rage duration of Pariistnents was not more than four years , a period which , in hi 3 opinion , auswerwi eT ^ ry purpose of making members respcc = ble to « . he pubifc , while it gave them time to acquire that practical experience which was so essential 10 sound iegi- ! ation . ¦ Tiie Hbuse tbea divided , — F «^ r tbe mation 23 Against it 46 j Majoriiy against the motioa —23
Lord Gljsme . nts renewed bis motion tor tae productioa ' pi the correspondence connec , ie ; with the disbanding of the yeomanry corps in Ireland , to which 1 Lord Klict gave the same reply as on a former occasion ! namely , that he waa wiiiiag to furnish copies of all orders for the disbanding of the yeomanry , with some selections , omitting from the correspondence whatever was of a personal or superfluous nature . ; Lord Clements accepted the offer , and the returns were ordered . ' , . The report of the Princess Augusta ' s Annuity Bill was brought up , and the other orders being < us- , posed of , the House adjourned .
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Depabtcbb of thk Great Western Strim-Ship . —Livebpool , SAiURDAY .-This ornamens to the steam nisSine of Great Bri . ain sailed about noon to-day from the Cobourg Dock , for New York , hhe is , we Understand , in most spieaid order . or the votageJ and is likely te make a Temat ^ bie short passap , the weather being most propiuuus . Her passengers number between sixty and seventy , and thewces ow a TaluaWa cargo of fine gooos .
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1 . . . . _ , , . Leeds Coas Masset , Jcsb 20 >—We haTe pot ; arrivals of grain to this day ' s market . Toewafet has be * -n very fine since last Tuesday , and iiield its effwt on the market . Wheat has btendofsS at a decline of Is . per quarter . Oats and flaasraj : little atteration . 1 THE AVERAGE PaiCIS OF WHEAT , FOB THX lRtt ! sxdixg Jess 2 = > , 1843 . Whtat . Barley . Oats . R * e . Beam , fa 1 Qrs . Qrs . Qrs . Qrs . Qrs . fy j 4461 31 415 0 22 S l . i £ > . d . £ s . d . £ s . d . £ s . d . £ s , £ Jvj ' 2 9 3 114 1 M 1 2 33 0 y 0 1 ft UK 1 1
i Leeds Woollsx M _» j . kei 3 . —Tnere wRM slack markets toiji oa Saxariaj and Tussisj ^ oa the latter day panieai ^ riy . Tm . enqsJT 1 *^ manufactured goods was izmiced in the esutB ;? some of the small maaofaciarers from the WK ? were load in the ; r coispUiats , not onJy oni ««|| the lack of busineis la - at the rery lowpies ? w were offered f * r ihe better kind 3 of goo& ¦« ; recent revival , of wh-. eh SingBiaary ho " psf ^
trade to have again reapsed into a slate of sap * " ** York Corn Mabkst , Jcxe 17 . —A e ^ ^ and bruefieisl change in ihe weather t 00 =: ? Er the rar ' y part cf rhe we * k , which has ^ * ' ^? raer * to " work t ^ eir ' . and , and proceed ^ * "S sowing , we hsv ? , corsxquently , a thin ai « si ^ to-day's m »* -ket . a «* d bat ii : tle Graii offrrh ;? . **? must be quotes iu ! . y Is , per qoarttr iov ^ erj ^ and Oats dull sale ; Barley nominal . At wg of last weeks market , millers advaii < : ed Fifi 3 sack .
Newcastle Cckx ii arket , Jcne 1 ,. —Tks ^ since Xuejcray ba ^ bee n &n& , and aliboiigb ^ only a small supply U wheat at market WFc ing , both fro ^ i tne ' connvry and the coast ,-1 * ^ rultfd dull , and ust week ' s prices were B * ffe % ported . On TaesJay , there was a £ *» " $ business done in foreign WnsaS ,- but to day ^^ not much passing ; « ii ^ sales made , howcTer »^ g tbe same terms Rye is in request , and && M full prices . Barlv-v is sfiarce , and fnllT j ^ S ^ ialt : s again Is . ptr qiisrter dearer . " ^^ wiui more enquirv , bat for Beans the deaaS"" w linked . Tne snow of Oats from fae tensfZi was small , and they rust a brisk demafia w ^ rf q-areer ov ^ r the ra ' ta of lias day se ' anig * ^ Flour n-ade is dulL J
State of Teapb . —There was s very 9 ° ^] yessteroay . betalng-w ^ s and yam ; with a ^ ciine of pri « : ? in soin- ^ descripiicus of reei **|^ Manchester Guardian , of W ^ incslay . ^ ¦; . AiALTON- Coas Masket , Jcxe 17 . —Ai ^ tnarkee there was m > . an average suyM 5 ; - £ ih * farmers sail showm * s dirposinon 1 o £ ¦ & * % cous * qu « ice of the dutoss of Abo W a » eS *» g tiev coui-i uoi obta * a mach sdvancs on u- ^ ori ^ -Whcat , red . fron : 46 s . to ab * ^^ iOstonts . Barley 40 * per -qoarwr . O *> ± . r .
lud . p-er s ' . oce . . J „ tvv _ ) 7 _ v >" & onlv bad a v& % Richmond , J ^ V £ t ^ v . ' Wheat * 6-M ^ J : g ^ M ^ i , to 4 s . per bushel . ,-
Untitled Article
TO THE CHARTISTS OF GREAT BRITAIN . ©> THE LAND SCHEME" AND "THE CHAKIt-B . " " B ^ tw etn t'WO stools jua come to the rr ¦" . & •' . " ' . OldP . overb . FhIj LOW CoCME 4 'up , —We have beencoBt » -a' ? irg for oar freedom ; . fcT tbe emancipation . of om-ei ' -rs and of our tuS . nns , telicw-eouDlrjmen , from a » yif ? rn of tyranny » nd pilia ' ^ e . which ia m -re 6-xacTin « : , wore grinuing and opprc-ssive , than almt'St a y olher pevp ! e in the world ever ensured ; our unfonu ^ ute brethren in Ireland alone exce&jcd .
The poverty ami c ^ n 3 ' . quent misery ex-e ^ -aicr ^ a by this system , ha ^ e I « ng been a source , nvi cn . y of reproach , bot also of serious alaim , even to car e- ' . fi = h and greedy opjne * s . wra theuiseivts ; * tti scben-f . ' ! " : ertfore , cf sll soils aa . t siz ^ a , s ^ vs 'liv plain a- : hncst one of ata ^ insj the p ' . ' . Usje , hiie bsen Muvi 3 « i a-vi carried into operation c >} them . It ia noturtuo& that fur full fifty ye-rs p ' . st . the rr ^ sa . the vartons places of ¦ worafajp , aiiii it- H osts of Parliament have ' . een » t-d with prc-jrc ' . a of rtrhwt ; ard . > n ; - country baa abounded ¦ with bectvoIeLt a ^ d cb _ iri : itie iostilaUona ; yet have the poverty aad Ki : 5 erv continued to i » crei » ef and thtir aatunJ ccii ^ qns-nc ^ j criai * * , dxseass , and t ' eath .
A&d why ; way is tins ? Wcj , but ' . ^ e ^ . a : e tbfe aufuily contiived , tbe mnltifari «> us , the s ^ srrhirs system of tixuiwa to > wbich we have beta .-ulj ^ tcti j otrsisted in ; beoanse the fruits of hones' > r iu * sry are filched from the workiiu pe > p ! r- It is b ^ ciusw tbe rail uoas of labouring people are th ^ rt . f Ibc Bf jrSianes of life ; ami becr . usc the cL . * 5 e 3 :- ^ xt ih-j-re ihtm , the tradesmen and cle-ilers ac « prr " 5 >> n 3 l nif-n r «? nersliy , aresUag « un 8 t » g < j ^ er to aToiQ : ne J _ iac fiia of destitution an j u » is : r / . It is not that out G iVferument is , or tms been .
Iodiffervait , oirejjaTditss of tha conditic ; : if tbe pe » p !* . It iathepriiie . as . tevtr has been the u ^ fre' -. t of Governments to bavt > th * -Lr subjects prosper us , « eU-providtvi , healthy , aori coatentfrd . Tyranny , v-hatever may have bt « n its freaks in M ^ cieat days , ar A in other ntsiocs ; tyranny , in modern Europe , and mi ^ t esp ^ -cially ia our conatry , has taken this shape ar . a do otter whatever : it ia a tiling of searching , of . ^ riadi ' -g exaction . It is a system « f taking , —some tittle by open anti direct nitar . s . bat cbitflj by certain round-abuut . indirect , ani u .. J « irband contrivances , — ' -be frails of industry from tne miilions .
Not that our Government has bean in « . Uff * ren : ta the pove rty and eoffericgsof the p ? jote . Oa the ojntrary they have encouraged and carried iu : o tffrtt f-li syris ca schemes fot repparing the evils they iiiLct by their everlasting exaction . And yet , as we all see and fe « l the evils for th * reawdy of which these schtmi-s have been devised and pstronised have continued to increase until they have reach _ -d their present intolerabia and alarming extent . And , why is tkls ? Again I ask , why ? but becanse the proper , and the oniy remedy has never been tolerated , much lea applied . Tbe remedy -which W 8 have agreed on , the remedy ¦ which alona we bad resolved to listen to , vras the same as has been steadily recounts aded by M : Jor John Cartwright , by Granville Sharp and other worthies , for about seventy years last past It is that which we have embodied in the People ' s Chnter . ''
This remedy is no other than the possession and the free exercise of our rights , as men , in check . ci ^ or controlling the measures of too Government ; and especially in controlling the band of taxation . F ^ r i : is clearly the numerous and heavy taxes ; it is clearly the numerous pillages committed on tbe honest and icdaatrious millions of the people , thai causes their poverty , their degradation , and their misery . In favour of this , oar remedy , we Chartists , who bad loni ? seen the frmVi « aness .. th « folly , acd the fraud , of all other schemes ; in favour ot this , we cad unanimously come to a resolution that we ¦ wou ld neither countenance nor listen to any otcer scheme ; thst setting ourselves a ^ aicst all olhsr projects , and coafinrru ; oar ener « i ~ s to the sttairjnent oi this one , Wt wo «> id concern uurselves ic the furtherance of no other public measure , " until the Charter efaall become the law of the land . "
• i . Thia was wise and good ; and to this resolve wo were constantly exhi » rt * d , and enjoined , by our leaders . f But , behold , now a scfeeme of quits another com-, plection , f « r enriching the labouring D ? opi » . for making j them prosperous , and even powerful ; a scheme which ws are told can be carried into tfFect imai 6 diately , j without waiting fcr the Charter ; aid ail this pro- ! pounded and unred by eur chitfest leader kimself , with ail his conatituaonal z * al and sccivity , and threugh all his extensive channels : ' publication ! 1 "The general distress of the worticg classes , " 1 says Mr . 0 Connor , in one of bis recent laiters in the Northern Star , * ' : is admitted on all hands , whiie each has his peculiar nostrum for Uieif relief . MINE IS THE LA >* D , " And , accoidi ^ gly . Mr . O'C . proceeds , as you have seen , with the retails of his plan , and with descTiption of the spl endid results to ha derived from its iuoption .
iDto tbe particalars of this scheme , or as Mr ., O'Connor haa chosen to call it , " aostnuu ;' into the particu ' ars of it , and the ( to me ) manifest futility thereof , bo ' . h as to the practicability and promised results , I may not here be pennittei to enter . Ai present , I tako le ; ive only to point out to you , ruy brother Chart usu , 1 &o « t to Mr . O'Connor , if he have overlooked the fact , j tfcat if what be has said of his echfcme be correct i j if he have a remedy , and especially so very efficacious a j remedy as he pronounces this of hia to be , for " the ;
general distress of the working classes , " aad this remedy be something other than that prescribed by © or Charter ; then hav 6 * e Ctartists been ail in the wrong -, as , indeed , are all oth # r political reformers . If his scheme on the land be euch as he tel ls us , then is there , clearly , no occasion whatever for the Chsrt * jr , nor for any other reform of the Parliament ; and we who have busied ourselves in demanding such reform , have been a factious and senseless set ofagitaiors , vrvil meriting ail the odium , expense , and suffering that we have tndured . Let us proceed , however , yet a little closer iiuo
the matter . In hia letter in the Northern Star 0 ! the 15 & of April last , Mr O'Cocn&r , in announcing his scheme , says that his " chief aim and object is so to locate the honeat working man that he may tminterrnptedly enjoy the proceeds of hia natural labour . " In the same letter he also tells us that " he hopes to prove irrefutably that the people have it now in their power to present a large practical illustration" of the result of hia plan ; and then he proceeds to assure us that hlfl ia " a scheme in support of which no Isw beyond that already in existecce , shall to required ; " adding '' that in thia scheme ^ every farthing raised will go to the benefit of the aodety { of labonrert ) iteelL "
Need I quote more in order to show , that according to this new light of Mr . O'Connor , all onz efforts to obtain what we have called onr rlgnts . all out " agitation" in behalf of the Charter , now prow to have been but supeifluous and mischisvoua impertinenee ; seeing that" we have it now in our power , " as he tells us , even "before the 12 * h of May . in next year , so to locate the honest working man , " that " every farthing" he earns shall be secured to his benefit ; and that hia earninga shall be three hundred , two hundred , or at the T « ry lowest , one hundred pottsds sterling a yeai ? If this be so ; if we can indeed thus immediately enter into such splendid results ; " so fascinating and so n&E , - m Ur ; CC . » ys , thai , what need of tbe
Untitled Article
TO THE EDITOR OF THE UaRTaEaS STA 3 . Sir , —The Hyde Chartists are detenninfed to awake fruji their iqn ^ alember , and show the plundering , ty . anicai , AtiU-Com Law Leagae , that Chartism in Hyde is neither dead aor sloping . Although tha Whigs raccaed ^ d in depriving them of the Hull that cost the poor operatives £ " 00 to erect , yet they are determined to k . rp up a peaceable asd legal agitation until they see their country what sb * ought to be—" great , glorious , and free" During the last strike , the men cf Hyde stood forward maEfaUy in demanding tfcie Charter ; and , although they were . scven w . eks without doin § a hand ' s strofee ot work , during
wbica prjTi ' - ' d they extferienced ex ' jreme p ^ varty and distress , yet wiio can say that thvy deszroyed one p ^ nfijaTortbpf property ? Tee League vtry "liberally" rolled out in Uk- cubSic streets barrels of beer to iurfuce thttu to drink ia ordtx tu jastify their mahcio&s desi ? i ^ To the hoacar of the Hyde men , nobody w ^ aid drink jit , txve a few drnnfca hauvies , ' who cared not & straw about their chai-cvers . The L ^ agaa h ^ ve carried th ^ ir m&ctiags tb ^ ir own way since last S ^ pttmber . j This was joat what th ^ y wanted , and sought for , by th » " strike" But I am determined to meet ihem at ] tLeir own threshhold , and ttiow ap thetr fatUcic * and knaviah d «« ns . Yes ! she " red cat" of
Hyde will still discharge the duty he owes to bis God and to his country : Uut ia , to bring truth aad err rr into confl . ct and competition , that the minds of men msy ba capable < A stxiug what is wroa ^ and what is right . The Wfeigs of Hjde laid evary pio ; , used ^ very scaceie , to procure fjr me baaishia « int ; acd for what ? Fot endeavouring to ttep tbe p-cce , and preatrve Hyue fr'nn thfeii revolttlidtSLTV designs ! I htve rtcorued a T 3 » : to keh-p to the Caar * er . and work on public . pmion , urtii a majority of tLe people &f Ea ^ Uni dc ^ iands ; t- J Then , a < : «> riiiEg to a < r Ftederitk Poticct hitas-lf , the Cf-arttr ran » S kcc ^ ait ite Uw si the country . Hurrah ! fcr the Chsrtir , and no surrender : I remain y « urs , in tt = good eax ^ n , j J- ii . LZ . X . CO . Hjde , Joes 15 ih , l » -t 3 . i , . Tfc -
Local Markets.
LOCAL MARKETS .
Untitled Article
Middlesex , by JOSHUA HOBSO > , * %£ m iag Offices , Nos . 12 and l 3 , Mariet-st « A ^^ and PuWisbed by the said Jo ^ jupfl ( for the said Feaxgtts ° * Go > soSi ^^ j H ling-hoBse , Xo . S , MarketrStreet , B ^^ g internal Csmnnmiratiim oastiag bst *^» ^ m No . 5 , Maiket-Etteet , and a » ^ ^ S ^ H 13 , Marfcet-streeU Brf ^ ate , thus " ^^ jffl whole of tha eaid Priitins aJrii ^*^ . gl * - one Prenuses- p ^^ ffl All Comniimicatieaa mast be « - jfii « s * a' ^ < J Mr . H 03 S 0 S , So .-Oern Star 0 ^ « vSatoda ? , Jane 21 , lslW - ffl
Untitled Article
£ ; j THE NORTHERN STAR .
The Theatse/Xj^T'^
THE THEATSe / xj ^ T' ^
Leeds —Panted Tor The Proprietor ?? A | « O Cos Nob, Esq.. Ol Haminersaa^ M
Leeds —Panted tor the Proprietor ?? | « O COS NOB , Esq .. ol Haminersaa ^ M
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 24, 1843, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct938/page/8/
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