Trades Newspaper And Mechanics Weekly Journal (Newspaper) - January 8, 1826, London, Middlesex NEWSPAPER AND No. JANUARY 8, 1826. PRICE 7rf. helped every one his and every one said to his BE OF GOOD Isaiah xli 6. Corn 4�Wb them as with the people on this Bread and backed as they are sure to be by the we can fee no temptation they can have to do otherwise than push the sound liberal principles of policy which they have adopted as universal operation as they Parliament consisting of these very and appointed by Jan. 1, 1826. to the working the principal obstacle is in the very construction of this no man ought to be The House of Lords consists wholly of one class of and a considerable majority of members of the Mouse of Commons are either nominated by gnd tit as their representatives for the rotten or are by their Add to this that the county members are the representatives of the and it will be seen at that interest of. the must be the predominant interest In parliament From the our form of Government intended to be for the benefit and advantage of the King and the it could not Formerly there was no in the political sense in which we now use the and whatever power Is possessed by excepting the the en the encroachment which the growth made oft the old it bat reasonable to that class of persons into whose will use that power for their own they persons to their real ot or this has always been and probably will always be Let tie not then waste our and be put aside from oui by declaiming and abusing those who act as any other set of. persona situation would but let us shew them that it will not be their interest much longer to resist the reasonable demand of the people for the repeal of the most extensive and most oppressive of all our heavy Let us shew them that we and do distinguish between a necessary rax for the support of the and an and unjust for any state purpose but simply for- the private advantage of a comparatively few who have no and can have no claim to the sum of which the are robbed by their under the specious name of put into protection to secure in the hands of the receivers that of which the have been If the people but make the knowledge they possess on this subject apparent by by such other as may the monopoly must be and it can be abolished by these means It is hot enough that the people should cry out when bread is unusually and then when the price has fallen cease to demand the repeal of the obnoxious Their efforts should be and if they mean to succeed they must be In a matter of such great and including such powerful in. we ought not to expect that the object can be obtained all at For no reasonable man can expect that the laws will be repealed in the ensuing the last of a however dare not go the even in speech they might desire to They arc as to this question very differently at the close of an old to what they will be at commencement of a new and consequently too much should not be expected from them in the session about to but this should not prevent a single petition from being prepared on the be made that in no and under no will the people relax In their demand for justice in respect to the corn The and their thr a great advantage over the body of the which they never neglect to Tikis is the perpetual which exist among means of those they can at alt times make the welkin with their while the what is every one's business it no and accordingly not only neglect to do justice to but submit the injustice inflicted on them by the combined quiescently as a flock of sheep to the The to make this nobody's business somebody's and consequently every body's business among the working sW some one man to propose to hit or to his fellow to petition Nothing can more easily t a few sheets of and the of a or a win hardly exceed three and at a penny subscript ion will pay There can be no difficulty in London in. these into the hands of members will be to present lA the members are that present and then let them their petitions to these if put into the at both addressed to any Member of with the worda Petition to the House of or to the of ral agreed td to be active in petitioning Parliament to on every man's loaf of bread and this ought tp for exertions among the and matt especially among the working whose when generally expressed on will they may be he It custom among the working people to rely on and to consequence has been what it must inevitably have that much has from rime to against and very little for They should always remember the Jup iter and the n The called to pall out of the mud shoulder to said and help The moral of fable help or none will assist shew a determined and then others will help Put the said then if ymi eail upon me J Take then this affair of the or into your own the Parliament and then others will assist you by - to neglect your own your shoulders to the and the that you desire to eat dear for if you did not fail to petition against the law which makes it Some one who signs himself that the can does not increase the rent of He can hardly be i but it he he has only to by sound that rent is not creased by the bread and then we shall have the assistance of thau