DEATHS
... 21 years. —To be interred at Crosthwaue Church, on Friday, sth inst., at 12-10. At Poplar Street, Keswick, 17th ult., Grace Greenwood, aged 47 years. At Abbey Town. on 28th ult., Jane, widow of Mr Robert Mamma, aged 74 years. ...
... 21 years. —To be interred at Crosthwaue Church, on Friday, sth inst., at 12-10. At Poplar Street, Keswick, 17th ult., Grace Greenwood, aged 47 years. At Abbey Town. on 28th ult., Jane, widow of Mr Robert Mamma, aged 74 years. ...
... spent 28} years with the during the greater portion of which tinie he held sergeant's or warrant reek. He married Miss Grace Greenwood, a daughter of the late Mr. Thomas Greenwood, Keswick, and their earlier married life was spout in India. where Sergeant-Major ...
... merit far some years past bave come from the pens of females—Mrs. Stowe, Miss Wetherell, Miss Cuinmings, Mrs. Mowatt, Grace Greenwood, and Miss Willis, the author of Fern Leaves. Mr. Alexander Smith, the poet, is editing selection from the published ...
... years. At Crummock Hank, Waterton, 15th inst.. Joseph Latimer, aged 46 years. At Poplar Street, Keswick, 17th inst., Grace Greenwood, aged 2 7 years. At Castle lodge, Berrowdale, eyrd Kr John Birkett, Faris labourer, aged Sprats. ...
... dull season to manufacture portentous potatoes and tremendous turnips, must feel their occupation gone when they read Grace Greenwood'. letter to the New York Times, giving an account of what she saw at Denver autumn fair. Elsewhere she bad seen se gr ...
... lph Waldo Emer-00, Rev. Mr Chapin, Wendell Phillips, Frederick Lloyd Garrison, Theodore Tilton —sod uoble women like Grace Greenwood and Anna Dickenson, speak out ir bought. to crowded aed enthusiastic audiences. There is room in the West for skilled ...
... only son of the late Thomas Fearon Taylor, of Cockermouth, aged 21 years. In Poplar Street, Keswick, on the 17th ult., Grace Greenwood, aged 47 years. At Orton, Westmorland, on the 26th ult., John Addison, grocer, formerly Barrow Moor Farm, near Appleby ...
... pay his WIJ. When asked if didn’t feel bad and sore over It, rcp.ied, Oh, no, I only felt little put out about it. Mrs. Grace Greenwood, in lecture on children, taya; •• We know crying lor the moon, that beaten is than to us. Mothers bear this mioj, ami ...
... an organ grinder in her purest accent, but was astonished at receivirg the following response : I no speak Inglis. GRACE GREENWOOD, in a lecture on children, says : We know by babies crying for the moon that heaven is nearer to them than to us. Mothers ...
... eye-glass in a state of doubtful balance on the bridge of his nose.—London cor. of Manehtster Examiner. A GOOD Iloosawian. — Grace Greenwood, who has recently been on a tour in the far west of America, give an account of the wife of a member of the Arizona ...
... endeavour to raise sum of about f3OO for the purpose of building a Manchester house in one of the Siberian settlements. Mire Grace Greenwood gives, in an American magazine, an autobiographical account of how happy she used to be before she was put into stays ...
... amouaUag to miUiuwa. Sinageut orders have been given the police to prevent the earn peed the thieves,” A Good UocttwirE.—>** Grace Greenwood,** •bo bu reoeeUv been on tour in ibe Far W«t Amcnee, firee an aeoouat ol tAa wife ol a the Ahnana l*gi*l»Mro, bonar. ...