THE CORN BILL
... . _ 1 XETIONG oF P'OTrCTiONIuxr8.-Yesterda7 week thin was a great gathering of protectionist at wi;s's, tete to make further opposition to the corn bill no isnns Rouseof Lord. Deputiean ...
... . _ 1 XETIONG oF P'OTrCTiONIuxr8.-Yesterda7 week thin was a great gathering of protectionist at wi;s's, tete to make further opposition to the corn bill no isnns Rouseof Lord. Deputiean ...
... Ir1 g;a] - - - . _ P - T_ (Crewe is in Cheshire, 166A miles from London, and, has eight years ago, it had not a dozen houses in it: at pre- for. sent it contains 500 at the least, and there are ...
... : Mefrcua'i office. Friday, Twelvil, X00st, May ?? CORN BILL IN THlE LORDIS. son TRIUMPHANT MAJORITY! to TzruRsDA Y, May 28. rep Theltisjeorned debate Was resumed by Earl GREY. wtho e ...
... TSOWN COUNCIL PROCEEDINS. Ig- TUbESDAY, Mfay 19 - A special general meeting of the CotmSil wee held this day, fer T. the purpose ef receiving a ecommuciration from the Yiayer as to li-~ the inteadei v ...
... RAILWAY INTEELJ.IGENCE. ?ARtLTAMENTAU3Y CoMrotrrza BUsrNxss.-The follow- SIl iagr bills have been disposed of in the various committees 'u ef both Houses durinax the week. Those mnarked thus § tr were ...
... tote ip bd) Sourmal. 'hie great experiment of a free trade in corn is to be tried. The house of Lords has decided by a majority of 47 that the British farmer shall be henceforth subjected to the competition of the foreigner-thatntither thegrest amount of taxation in this country, nor the peculiar local burthens affecting the agricultural interest, form any ground for protection against ...
... THdpbn ERA. [LATEST EDITION.1 PUBLISHED AT FIVE O'CLOCK EVERY SUNDAY MORNING SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1846. I' ll give thee a wind Thou art kind. Dr. REID is a modern, not an ancient, Athenian. Had he lived amid the groves and pillars of olden Greece, he would probably have constructed quite another version of the famous structure we are accustomed to talk of as the Temple of the Winds. Or perhaps ...
... PICKINGS IUP-UPON FPSOM DOWNS. .j BY OUR OWN TOUT. Our own Commissioner bath as yet gathered but little from the denizens of Leatherbead, Mitchell Grove, andt thebangers-on,'touts, know-alls, and cunning-ones, }who, thereabouts do congregate, linger, lurk, and lie. The system of vanning, and the multiplication of rail- wavs, offer facilities of easy, rapid, and unfatigaing trans. xcission of ...
... EVENTS OF THE WF. MURDER OF ANr OLD MAN BY ama SON. On T ing the village of Kirk Bramwith, about sever ?? . town, was thrown into a state of consternationby the rot this y~ tereport tha an old man, named William Knowlson, had beet, tuhe victi Of a most savage attack by his son Robert, the result i of that his life was in great danger. Mr. esult Of which was ?? KnowIson Wt is about 70 years of ...
... T H: 1 E R A. [LATEST EDITION.] PUBLISHED EVERY SUNDAY MORNING AT FIVE. SUNDAY, MAY 17,1846. l The usual May munminigs are in fall swing at Exe- ter Hall; the theological Jacks-in-the-Green are in high caper, and the ladle is every day sent round for stray coppers, destined for the erection of bricken tabernacles in unheard-of suburbs, or the purchase of moral warm- ing-pans for benighted ...
... JOSEPH MASON-A petition from Joseph Mason, who re returned from Norfolk Island, has been forwarded, with a ce- tificate of a character from the superinteadent of agricueurr that colony, to her Maicsty's secretary for the home departmcrt and the subjoined communication in answer reccivetl Lord M1orpeth begs to acquaint Mr. Isaac Wood, thlat hoe lhas sca Sie J. Graham and given him the ...
... Iii** ; oti I 07 - i- .i ' - 7 |A . Mthe. gl. Grdhii .bnB, I Esq,, and Messrs. M. Satterthwaite, P. Dobson,:,Phn 'Nobile Jame ,{Carr, ?? n,1tichiar~d- lfbb rtey' Wv' Niclikqop wftrigh ?? !octrphl P~niberton; the &eeieraf ?? their Ebookg, when iper cd there had been expended; in Outdonr rliat'4 16s;. 6d. In-door relief £39 2s. 6d. ?? £11,a Consutied'6OQ' 1. ?? I'iAt4eA ?? 9ber of | p$T~NoQ1 ~ ...