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Daily Courant Sunday, June 03, 1827 ,
Middlesex

Country Journal Or The Craftsman Sunday, June 03, 1827 ,
Middlesex

English Gentleman Sunday, June 03, 1827 ,
Middlesex

Atlas Sunday, June 03, 1827 ,
Middlesex

Bells Life In London And Sporting Chronicle Sunday, June 03, 1827 ,
Middlesex

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Trades Newspaper And Mechanics Weekly Journal
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Trades Newspaper And Mechanics Weekly Journal

   Trades Newspaper And Mechanics Weekly Journal (Newspaper) - June 3, 1827, London, Middlesex                                K And mechanics vol. No. 99. 3, 1827. THEY HELPED EVERY ONE HIS AND EVERY ONE TO BE OF GOOD 6. TBE SPOTTERS AND PLUNDERERS OF TBE There is but one Sir why need I add the -word There is but one some years when every body read his We now there is but one Joseph one-man at all in good report and up tlhe 4^^PP|M^ti^:i^^: * all row same all huddle together in the same as the Dutchman devil the barrel the filter all are There is nothing new in this the manifestation is People love to love to cheat land are cheated of course by public as Who get into their hands the power of mischief in 180^ the came into they work heartily of the and to plunder the people to the upmost possible The Tories they in and this their love of plunder extent they did their been admitted Age they are their as fast and ai as they can. Mr. are does not his 1^i^toV� will and 4he; places new ones will be Some men will have pensions for superannuated while and it is a again take place ' at no distant eVery be now fix the as fast arid as permanently on as These are because they the treasure of the mated things and cause and and Burmese are neither the only nor the these coalitions of foes and false friends to the inflict on When ari old woman sells her soul to the and be comes a is to do the devil V so it Is they become identified in all those in the slang of the aristocratical in matchless for as Canning it works Well for for the But then the people are and they are every The greatest evils have frequently some good attending them and the present consolidation of the battalions of the well-paid into it maybe tend to convince the people that no reliance can or ought to placed in those were called canting now almost Sir Francis in his excellent Address to the Freeholders of in 1806, Whenever the leaders of contending parties and in a state the history of the world bears that it is in but always at the expense of the renewed and augmented pillage pays price of the reconciliation speaking of the parties which then coa they are the same parties of these parties will descend to and inform you what they have already or will hereafter for What they have done for we know and further they will do we can only Never were truths more pithily and never were these truths more fully exemplified than on the present Not only does the renewed and augmented pillage pay the scandalous price of the but even before the parties have properly become one bone and qpe they prove by their conduct their desire to fortify themselves in by upholding these shameful parts of the which deny to the people the means of hearing of their means of the means of im their they uphold the abominable Six and even entertain a repeal one of that one being so variance with the state of civilization to which this nation has that the time cannot be far distant when men will scarcely believe that such a specimen of barbarous legisla tion could have been in This among others of the was passed in 1819. It was partly provoked by the conduct of the and reprobated by them when it came into the They taunted Ministers with want of not having prosecuted for allowing as they called many writers on pub lie to go on with having set their bull the King's upon them and when taking advantage of. their brought in the infamous they found themselves in a and were com oppose those The Bills were all lessened the people's their fettered and gagged from that day until the present no effort has been made to obtain repeal of any one of them The truth they were as welcome to the one faction as to the in power using them outrage as to and because the of punishments deterred breaking welcome to the faction out of because they never ceased to hope they should into The the belonged to and were not absolutely palsied by the tricks of they were not the courage to move the of these and matter Public liberty is by almost by is mouldered dod f 4htht�?e until they that la truly ' sinks torn the of Che men have aire ready the bat and this their own from the i eed choice; and paltry fallacy suffices as .an bad to to it are What Is the use what 4hfrow of a House of Commons is filled by effort to serve the people 1 ion Mr. M ilon to Ot- assent the Costs of private CASK The ' Lordships to of or his do bring Wakefield to the bar of this House on tn order to be heard against aforementioned ' ' The Earl of presented Petitions against any alteration in the Corn from parishes in the county of and The Earl presented a Petition from a hundred in against the proposed alteration in the Corn as affording no to the also one from a la Suffolk praying that on Foreign might be taken at the time of Earl presented a Petition from persons interested in thd Wool Trade in the county of the to state of the Wool Trade gave that the oC forthwith be Supply of Water in the to wew 5n�8^ the something shall CASE OF Sir will aw of When the prices were and 'Twas very - ' To come for the session to London And Vote for And I loved the Lords of the And prayed for the lauded the name And loathed the - But out upon Canning's false And Huskisson's have bothered Lord out of his Lord Bexley his They have silenced And Mrf And lead the I that my head is very That I'm rather apt to That I've learned but a little of And a. little less of It's well for a knave to talk about His facts erudition But an honest man may Who leads the I don't see the wit which some In the Minister's new-made I never guess what Brougham WOld mean By bundles of I've laboured in vain for a long long week At exposition 5 For Freedom of Trade Heathen To 4is of the Bui the shall soon And startle the mace with Applause shall bj ready for Maj blunders 7V We'll Shiel We'll buni poor Dan's petition And Dr. shall be And How small Whom I shall lay my ' V Backed by smile And a noisy cheer from Burdett with a and Brougham with a rue the And Tierney Will soon be as sick As he was of I'll make the Ministers By asking questions every day reply And as fall I ' Good men shall whisper o'er my ' f Here lies the Opposition of and Lord Chancellor having intimated that the House was ready to hear the - Mr. Adam advanced to the and addressed their Lordships at considerable Nothing to the in his beyond the production of by Mr. Wakefield to Mr. and another party to his in which he stated that he never consummated his marriage with Miss I Evidence was then and the whole facts of the -as on the Miss Turner appeared also as a her evidence in a modest and unassuming was elicited from her beyond the mere corroboration ot the facts with which the public is already Mr. Edward Gibbon Wakefield was then called to the andf was heard in the He did to oppose the passing of the but to set respecting certain facts with were and which he could he were allowed bring ' The House decided that he had mentioned no fact to show that ho could bring any thing forward to rebut the evidence and the was read a second Turner's Divorce went into a and a few verbal | amendments were agreed the The Earl of Winchelsea In answer to a question the Marquess of that his mind as to he should adopt respect ib his Motion on the State; of the Nation lie had ' ' Earl -a speech respecting the Administration oft Justice in the West and - Lord Goderich stated his intention of considering The Earl of Winchelsea withdrew his intended motion ing the New corn The order of the day being the House resolved | a Committee on the and after several amendments proposed and The of Wellington that the words should bo added warehousing no corn in should be allowed to be taken out the price voted for a majority of When of the there was a shout House 1 your quite a new complexion to the measure as the Lords have no power to alter a money eventually thrown Alderman Lord Stanley presented 'a that the House would be pleased to extend the privilege of re ing Members to Parliament to that to other wool Portman presented a Petition a number of  

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