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Cirencester Times and Cotswold Advertiser

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Gloucestershire, England

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Cirencester Times and Cotswold Advertiser

TOWN .7.• .A. I_3 K., PT OUP lIPICIAL 001111ZOPONDRNT. nadirs will staderstuad that rod° •et hold minim rows. ..

... masters could pay would soon be ascertained, and strikes be mitigated, and, to a great extent, discontinued. Mu. Brum), the Whig whipper-in, has made a Eprelth to his conatltutlnte, in nhicir lie assumes ...

THE HEALTH OF LOYDON:

... at Is. I A. per bottle. EXCELSIOR VRIES MEDAL Esau.? :!1LW21 , 11 ew perfect), ow ens thickness of materiel. Pries, 4:6 fa-. WHIG= & iss. 143, Holborn-bW. LoLdeeto—Lists Frew Toothache may be ibsteutly mired be Net.. which .JBO f o rms &stopping. Babes ...

POLITICAL GOSSIP

... brother of the present Sir 11; illiam Drummond Stewart, of Snottily. Mr. Drummond was returned by a majority of 45 3 allot his Whig opponent. Mr. Drummond was a I %Ago-valve of the Peel school, and supported Sir Robert Peel in the abolition of the corn laws ...

TREATMENT OF BREEDING PIGS. .% writer in the Kai/ gives the fullowing valuable Buts upon pie. * breeding:— The ..

... may be taken as the rule. If young sows be well done, they will be fit to take the boar when eight months old, and will thus Whig their first litter at a year old. If allowed to run mach longer, especially if highly fed, a dilliculty is eeperienceil in ...

TOWN TALK. IT OUR BPECLU. COCAMPONDiNT. Maar* will undirrxtand do net koLd *imam et:Affor err CorrenaltaltAt's ..

... natural and necessary thing to do, though not very cheerfuL Pr Ls a curious thing that the late Joseph Parkes, known as the Whig Attorney-General in the days of the Reform Bill of 1832, and whose whole life was so active and political, should have had ...

PARIS IN THE KNOW

... that Reform Bill, which had been in the main salutary, formed the principal argument in favour of another dose of the same Whig medicine. But, though a does of six drops of . streng medicos per day might bene fi t • palest, it suet kill him to take • ...

TEE COURT

... candidates for the representation of Chelsea. Me. Keen, member for Downpatrick, has announced his intention to resign. The Sodhera Whig says that Mr. Keoun IConservativel, brother-in-law of the new Bishop of Derry, will be returned without opposition. Me. E. ...

THE COURT, LITERATURE AND ART, dm

... London thoroughfares, Bow, wow, wow, &c. He once accused Sir Robert Peel ('Twas thought a good and gay thing) Of stealing the Whigs' clothes away The while their Lords were bathing : But bettering the example, he Now turns worst theft to glory— The Radicals' ...

FACTS AND FACETI2E

... candidate, had himself put a ball in the fatal No side. Brooke's and Whitd's were rival clubs, the Erstmentioned being the Whig, end the other the Tory Club. Richard Tickell immortaliser the liberal troprietor of the Whip establiehment in the followire ...

lASSELL'S MAGAZINE. Illustrated

... attend the Reform Banquet, although it has not pleased the prominent reformers, has gained Lim praise from many members of the Whig party,•who more than one e had reason to vote „salad him in the recent Parliamentary campaign. It is strange that a man who ...

AGRICULTURE, GARDENING, SPORTS AND PASTIMES, FACTS AND FACETIIL

... people, as the leaders of the Opposition never have and never would have exhibited. He has taken tho very instruments by which Whigs and Liberals helped to win their brightest triumph; and has male it the means of their discomfiture. He has raised. his patty ...

THE TRAGEDY AT LDJEHOUSE

... has been excitement in l'Atlianient. In the llouse of Lords the v ery principle Um Reform Dill has been attacked, ;id the Whigs have been Untied the idistruetives. • Earl Grey tried very bard to eany an amendment which would have tong letely upset the ...