Refine Search

Newspaper

Cheltenham Journal and Gloucestershire Fashionable Weekly Gazette.

Countries

Regions

South West, England

Access Type

478

Type

339
138
1

Public Tags

No tags available
More details

Cheltenham Journal and Gloucestershire Fashionable Weekly Gazette.

DiartteD

... perilous times; not that he Indulged In millenniums fear from any attempt at papal aggression, because he had the deep end *Whig cons let ion that truth wouW finally prc•all. (Near.) Let them not be nil.- talteu—let them not misunderstood the genius of ...

lunatic asylum, with their cost in the workhouse, was noi a taists,and paying otte-sewenthor ohe-eiglitlsof the ..

... Mr. Porter, (the governor), the superintendent of the workmen, proved the eau. On Saturday, finding that the prisoner wan Whig his time, he was directed to proceed with his work ; be then became very abusive, calling the ruperintendent fool names, and ...

STROU D,

... benevo- lent Edward Colston, the collection was—Dolphin Society (Tory) £376. 121 ; Oratetol Society (neutral) g. 570.; Society Whig) (from whicb the coat of the dinner Is to he deducted,' fees. 17s.—total, he The total ammo' :01- keel last year (Inchsding ...

01111. ANNUAL GIFT i

... pecuniary prospects of Dr. Phillpotts, the rectory of Stanhope was clutched from his Fresco, and bestowed upon a clergyman of Whig principles ! Whenever, as in the Hampden controversy, and in the present case, we see the Bishop of Exeter bearing hard upon ...

dense array of priests and deacons in the library of the university, the freeholders of the great county of York,

... of the Church of England. (Cheers.) Here we have in language, the terseness of which reminds us of the best days of the old Whig school, the question put in its only true and proper light. His lordship states his conviction that the object of the Pope ...

Tim BISHOP OF EXSTSA ♦ND ME Ray. A. WATSON.—We assure the minister of St. John's that we have no desire

... pecuniary matters, and he consequently silently admits that Dr. Phillpotts was disappointed, and grievously chagrined, at the Whig arrangement which snatched Stanhope and 15,000 a year from him, at the very moment when his lordship considered the bishopric ...

Wheat. 3Ps. 11. ;

... exhausting itself upon Cardinal Wiseman and the Tractarians. must take new, or rather an extended direction —is mutt include the Whig Cabinet. Rejoiced alionld we be to find the rumour without foundatiOn, but we have it from such a source, and it carries on ...

THE CHRISTMAS MEAT SHOW

... one else. They asked ma if was hoot. I was bruised, bet forget *bather I told them so. After tiers I and my sun walked, bat Whig so aid ankh way we were going Did red Me dying mat on the red. I arid my sort came to Tewigsghwrenes Did mit ewe any man that ...

her to the station-Amuse. This was Oa first appeereect of the prisoner in the dock. She reprimanded arid ..

... to be unmistakeable, however !Wilted might have Leon his oral advocacy of them—that, it fact, h. bad always voted with the Whigs ; and we urged at the sense time that, compared with Lord Itcdesdale, the Earl of Chichester was unfitted—by absolute want ...

MISCELLANEOUS 1

... Its wings, whenexwouled. measure lest from tip to tip. It said to be the golden species.— Won. I Meier A Etnerte Calvert (Whig) has bees returned far Aylesbury. Muaostt AT Pi.rMoUTß.—Two Irishmen named Donovan and Herrington are in eustody of the Plymouth ...

Doe. 211. Ragby. Jos. I.—Cl•arlbar7. Lakinftr. ••—Breasysnl, Martin tiontkr

... Protectionists played their cards badly. The Whig candidate to succeed Lord Nugent was Mr. FrederieCelvert,the parliamentary barrister, and brother of Sir Harry Verney. Mr. Calvert was supported by the Whig aristocracy of the district, and it was unaerstood ...

STOW-011-THE-WOLD

... fifteen yews deioted himself. like Lord to the private bail• nine of Parliament. We therefore rejoice to know that several Whig peers bane rebated to Join In the oppoeitiee which an• wanted to his election by Lord Wharbelldre. .'against the character ...