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... MARRIED. On .’.ird ult . J»ru«-» Church, Clerkenwell. o«or*c Oilf, Holt •vaf, Emm-*, d>UKbtez Mr. Henry Bamford. of Myddelton-s>ti.-Cl ken well DIED. th« J9‘h nit, Mr William Pitt* Lanrawi'l. of Gray’* lon-toad and R. F’-ntonville, fu. wi.l please accept ...
... THE MARRIED SOLDIER. “One who will never rejoin” writes to the and Navy Gazette to give his reasons for adopting that determination and that signature, and cogsnl reasons they* ore. He is a private soldier who has served long and well in India and elsewhere ...
... “married Clerken- ...
... questions pat bp the prisoner through iotrrprefer, the prosecutrix sliowed that she would livo with tbs prigonefe would marry him if ba woald marry bar. She further i«ply to the jadge, that the prisoner when sober was a vary good and kind man, waa war iodustrioas ...
... MARRI %QB9. O t the June, «t S'. John’s, Htckney, the Rev W. M.A., John Alexander Jopp, of Southgate, road, Isliugton, Clarissa Amelia Appleb-.e, Southgate ruad, daughter ot the late 11. J. Applebec, , of Or. the 3rd in*t., at Mary’s, Tslingtoo, by the ...
... CHEAP BIBLES. “married ; - ) ; must be married s . Lo live o pre; | W AN e it esemers, we Dt Tegret the iact, but we A 7 cutting proferec o WAL oR PRI o sreen. 2| M Shoitaie. 35 and 37, Monkweli-st., B.C. — w 4 barlly complain. But If, in the abseuce ...
... greater proportion of women are married than men; but after that ago more men are married, and a much greater proportion old men between 50 and $0 than of old women. During three yean question there were 78 girls married at yean of are, but no males; and ...
... THE PROPERTY OF MARRIED WOMEN. There were on Tuesday two questions before Mr. Justice Brett, the judge at Chambers, touching the property married women, in one which, Martini*. Lambert,” had taken time to consider his judgment. Mr. Herrick, the sheriff’s ...
... would show how theroughly the legal doctrines relating to married women's n‘”fiy had been broken into fragments, and how di ted the whole fabric of the law had become, since the El-l‘ of the Married Women's Act of 1870. He had found it impossible to lay down ...
... FOR MARRIED SOLDIERS. There are obvious retsons why unauthorised marriages should not recognised or encouraged in the army, but much has been done of late years improve the condition and add to the comfort soldiers in the Guards who have married with ...