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Leamington Advertiser, and Beck's List of Visitors

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Warwickshire, England

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Leamington, Warwickshire, England

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Leamington Advertiser, and Beck's List of Visitors

LEAMINGTON PRIORS COMMISSIONERS

... tyers in the keeping of Committee who might pledge them selves to new Bill before any individual had had the opportunity speaking upon it.—Mr. JsrraaY said that the only way of meeting the detic! pointed out Mr. While, was to exercise that public liberality ...

LEAMINGTON PRIORS COMMISSIONERS

... their accounts, anti if they run the town in dent for two thousand pounds for one would never be silent lon,' was allowed speak.—Mr. MtntEDlrn thoujrhl it was • that an opportunity should given all of them investigate the acounts.—Mr. o. itE did not. ...

TI'KSDAY

... wish’d they’.l cut it diorler, 8o that irnghtb. olf t!.c -arucon’# 11. ad, For our gin, and on. pipes, and our porter. Lightly speak of the pirry tJut's gone. Now all due re-peel has been paid him ; Ah ! little he reck'd of the luik that went on Near the spot ...

FRIDAY

... after he had seen Mr. Blenkinsop, in which he might have told her that the child had taken blue vitriol, but he could not speak positively.—Mr. Hilton also, aftenvards admitted that it was the Saturday night, and not on the Sunday that he had the conversation ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... Our countrymen the North have recently been dt-lighud with the performances of the charming and •'ted Countess. The Mtrntry speaks thus in icing her recent concert in that town s—” Some twenty years » ...

AND LEAMINGTON RAILWAY. On Thursday morning last a public meeting was held the Town Hall, lor the purpose of taking

... they woe highly prejudicial to the town of Leamington, am. particularly to the occupiers of property m the viciaity. He could speak on that score for himself. He had a house immediately contiguous to the railway, account of which he believed he was losing ...

literarp (Cftracts

... of merely returning thanks; when Chantrey replied, How many persons you think where in the room who thought a fool for not speaking ? and how many would have thought a fool if 1 had spoken.— lbid. The Sublime and the Ridiculous. —When Mrs. Siddons first ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... the pen of censure or praise, when Ghiki and Malibran were in their zenith, and wht‘u we were accustomed to hear our ciders speak of how Son tag rendered this aria or executed that cadenza ; and now find her resuming her vacated throne, and hailed again ...

that were (he Legislature once to establish it law, the propriety of the practice would silently, though it ..

... avocations were great, and demanded so much time that attendance at the bank was inconvenient. The total amount of defalcation, speaking from data which have been collected, is about £10,090, or rather, wc should say, that sum will clear it, and it is believed ...

COLONIAL SUM MAR Y

... winch had never job liuished with greater waul judgment, or a ter w of money and material. Chairman wished Mr. Tompson would speak to the question. Mr. Tompson continued. In completing that culvert, the Surveyor had shewn that lie had never been engaged ...

THE LEAMINGTON ADVERTISER.—JANUARY 19, 1860

... milpKid surveyor than ikl office of surveyor of such a tow - rose order.—Mr. : ii you to rise in that *»rl of way. You allow Mr speak in your favour, but you won't bear You bear one person sjieak in your favour hut voum put down another who rises say you.—The ...