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Your results for: civil resettlement unit
TUE EAST END NEWS, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1890
... Philadelphia :irm is the largest ever given to a single yard in the United States, the amount aggregating 8.765,000. The vessels are to be atloat by I nl)3. When finished the United States will possess a modern navy consisting of 1:i armoured vestels ...
dusted from Williams College in 1836, and afterward studied law. In 1857 he waselected to the Massachusetts ..
... elected a trustee of Williams College, an office which held at the time of his death. Rear Admiral Oliver S. Glisson, of the United States Navy, retired, died at his residence in Philadelphia November 20th. He was born in Ohio in 180, was appointed midshipman ...
?? \„f BIRTHS. MARRIAGES, and DEATHS is FIVE -^TTiN'GS EACH INSERTION. These announcements SW*_7s_» ..
... EDGAR SHAND. General Manager. Victoria Steam-boat Association (Limited). Victoria House. Laurence Pountney-lane. City, E.C. UNITED STATES, Canada, Australia, N. Zealand, S. Africa. S. America, India, and all parts of the world, siling bills and full booking ...
THE JUBILEE OF THE KING OF ROUMANIA
... future for the proposed resettlement in Palestine. Certainly not one of them would himself dream of taking his capital for invest- ment in the new colony. One of these gentlemen candidly remarked, if all the Russian Jews were re-settled in Palestine how should ...
Y, JULY 13, 1891
... company's territories was bound to give an undertaking that be would uley . the but that was • coodrtion which was usual all civilized countries to require from Broth who sought to be domiciled in them. (Hear, hear.) In uncivilized countries, where there was ...
PARLIAMENT
... Government ol refused to take over the colony until they that eo Charge would fall upon the • Exchequer for either the military or civil I , ..cjiAsarots of the colony. The transfer was not pi the Goeernment, and only made in the of the colony itself. The colony ...
THE PEOPLE, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1891
... will be limited to • o&rate &Rowenw for the futon Dookece, adequate aortas in of her kinghood dyiag before the Civil List hoe been resettled. It aye:able to heave that say serious opposition will be dread to 0 nuonoblean arragemest the shove, although ...
274
... at the Treasury, or elsewhere, as they would be simply invaluable when the time cornea for the House of Commons to re-settle the Civil List. So the Tories of the Eastern Division of Worcestershire have had to eat the leek, and to accept Mr. Austen Chamberlain ...
IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT
... minutes past Three o'clock, Jlr. ?? iv the Chair, and proceeded to consider excesses in the Civil fcervlce Estimates. On the Vote for 2071. for excesses in certain Civil Service Grants, Mr. BUCHANAN drew attention to the excess in respect of Police-court charges ...
BCiT'SE
... went into Committee of Supply, Mr. COCBTNEY iv the chair. On the vote of £907 to make good excesses in certain grants for the Civil Service, Mr. PICTON drew attention to certain grievances of British merchants on the West Coast of Africa, and said that complaints ...
411130 •••2'=1.11---is Swedislatenruits of . OUB SCANDINAVIAN ' ClTlcoenr; rper cent were unlettered. It ii ..
... exhibits aavealed 18,000 Scandinavians in the United wally 10 per cent of illegitimate births—in she States; ten years later there were 72.000. Due. city of Stockholm for 1884 the proportion of the civil war very few came hither, but in illegitimate births ...