Article clipped from London Emigrant and Colonial Gazette

ve with success, and classed him amongst the most valuable-3t- settlers in our colonies.Jrs Innumerable have been the nostrums propounded by political empirics, for the cure of this Irish disease—a malady which has infected the country since its conquest by Eng; nt land, and which has raged with unmitigated fury since the e- reign of Elizabeth, but without success, and the reason is c* obvious—-the disease has never been probed to its core; pal-: n* liatives and emollients have been applied, but in vain—the ne gangrene yet remains uneradicated, and as yet no state phy-11- siciun has been found sufficiently bold to apply the caustic. Jts The Ireland of the Reformation is the Ireland of to-day—, t0 her moral and social condition is precisely the same—the . °f same beggary, and tiie same devastation were Spread overthe country then as now.irl/» 1 1 •
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London Emigrant and Colonial Gazette

London, Middlesex, GB

Sat, Oct 13, 1849

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