Grand Junclton Railway.—On Wednesday se'nnight a meeting of the proprletors of the Grand Junetion Railway was

... LIVERPOOL. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1834. Grand Junction Raiulway.-On Wednesday sennight a meet- ingof the proprietors of the Grand Junction Railway was bald in the Cotton Sale-room, Exehan :buildilngs, John Moss, Esq. In the chair. The chief object of'the meeting was to h Uanction an application to Parliament. for au Act to amend the Act of last session in some important particulars, and also for ...

Published: Friday 21 February 1834
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1731 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: News 

To the EDITOR of the ABERDEEN JOURNAL

... I To the EDITOR of th AsannDEE Jou;;rAL.Q ON THEATRICALS FOR CHARITABLE PURPOSES. Stn,-Gon a lati visit toflnif, I til'nd that it hod there become the fashion to encourage the young i0en of tbe towr, to act plays forcitrity, ani masny were I giving the highest praise to titeso amateuLrs, tbo, by their swilling exertions, Itavecontribeted veryliberally to thecothifortsof ithe locr. Many, ito ...

Published: Wednesday 05 February 1834
Newspaper: Aberdeen Press and Journal
County: Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1053 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: News 

WEDNESDAY's POST

... rtlt l-n Tx ?? V-1 Lorndon, Tuesday, Feb. 11. el CITY, TWELVE O'CLOCK._-*We have no foreign A arrivals this morning of the least impor:ance, and tlhe Money lqarket is in a much more tranquil state, althoughi of considerable business has been transacted sinc. the opening. b: Consuls have been at 89Yi, but are now at 8911 for the of account. The letters from Paris are not of much interest, ...

Published: Wednesday 12 February 1834
Newspaper: Derby Mercury
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 738 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: News 

BRECONSHIRE

... KEPPEL t'. BAILEY.—COURT OF CHANCERY.—In this case the appliOMiOtl was to dissolve an injunction granted by the Vice Chancellor. The injunction re- strained the proprietors of the Beaufort ironworks from using a railroad which they themselves had made, on the ground that it was against a covenant which their predecessors had entered into, binding themselves to use a railway belonging to the ...

THE Cliunctf, Dl^SENTEitS, Ire. .

... THE Cliunctf, Dl^SENTEitS, Ire. THE ESTABLISHED Cli utteil. -Monday, the Rev. Hugh Hunter and Mr. Win. Howitt, the gentlemen appointed by the Nottingham Dissenters to present their memorial on Church Reform to Lord Grey, were introduced to the Premier by Lord Duneannon, and a conversation of about a quarter of an hour took place. Mr. Howitt said, the memorialists prayed for the separation of ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... (Continued from our last page.) HOUSE OF COMMONS. -WED-, r..SDAY- MORNING SIfTIXG. Mr. WARBURTON presented a petition from Charles Hatchett, Esq. of the Belle Vue House, in the county of Middlesex. The hon. member stated that the petitioner had a beneficial interest in certain funded property under a deed to which the late Henry Pauntleroy* was trustee. On the conviction of Fauntleroy, that ...

TO THE EDITOR. OF THE GAZETTE$GUARDIAN

... Sir,—Wifh biography I have nothing to do.—Yet as an attentive reader I may be allowed to bear testimony to the railing accqsation mixed, indeed, with a few honeyed words to individuals—brought against the body of the Clergy by a writer who has lonsr prac- tised 011 the public credulity. Every one who turns to the Cambrian of the lIth of January, will perceive that lie really did employ the ...

[No title]

... CORN LAWS.—The members of the Anti-Corn Laws Society and their friends, met this day, at the Crown and Anchor Tavern, for the purpose of peti- tioning Parliament for the immediate and total repeal of the said laws. The Chair was taken by Col. P- Thompson. Mr. Crawford, M.P. for the city, rose to move the first resolution, but had not con- cluded his speech when our reporter cam away.- The ...

[No title]

... FRANCE—The French mitiistry,dulyconsiderillg the low state of their influence in the Chamber, have agreed to alter their budget for 1835 to tlie same amount as 1834 j a saving to the country 36 millions of francs. The attention of the Court of Assize is engrossed in the trial of ten persons for forgeries ofEnglish Ijauk notes, to the amount of 800,000 francs. SPAIN.-The intelligence from Spain ...

[No title]

... THE CHURCH.—On Tuesday week a highly respectable and numerous meeting of the Clergy and Friends of the Establishment, convened by circular, took place at the Diocesan School-room, Nelson-street, Bristol, for the purpose of concurring in a public de- claration, expressive of'heir determination to sup- port the National Church in the integrity of her rights and privileges, and in her alliance ...

[No title]

... WOOL TRADE.—This article has obtained a verv high price, and,is now little abort of what it was at the highest period of the war. Coarse moor wool, such as is generally produced in the higher districts of Dumfrieshire, and in Galloway, is now selling in the Liverpool market at 16s. and 17s. per stone of 241bs-, which three years ago would have scarcely brought 55.; while the fine qualities of ...

[No title]

... AGRICULTURAL INTEREIT.-The Speech from the Throne alludes pointedly to the, distress among the proprietors and occupiers of land. When the House of Commons afterwards met, Lord Althorp, in reply to a question on the subject, distinctly said, 'hat Ministers do not intend to propose any alteration in the Corn Laws, and that a proposition of the kind coming from any other quarter wouldnot have ...