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TIIE LABOU4 LEADER

... The lost will all be found, The liquor will go round, The last, the first. Odzooks ! and likewise, bab ! Long live the Persian Shah— By hie own toil ; May we by tongue persuade Royalty to leave its trade To shoulder pick and spade, And till the soil. ...

Published: Saturday 11 August 1894
Newspaper: Labour Leader
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1734 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

CONSTANTINOPLE ILLUSTRATED: IN FIVE PARTS-- PART III-- THE MOSQUES AND RELIGIOUS LIFE; STAMBOUL

... treasury are to be seen sabres, scimitars, daggers, matchlocks, coats of mail, a throne of beaten gold captured from a Persian Shah, a barbaric display of jewels, Sultan Murad's damascened suit of mail, china vases, bowls, ewers, tiles things of the greatest ...

Published: Saturday 04 December 1886
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 2726 | Page: 20 | Tags: Illustrations 

CIRCULAR NOTES

... offerings were all of the highest class. Turkestan horses so punchy, so large eyed, so velvety of coat, so clean of limb, the Persian Shah does no possess. The heads of the Yarkhundis were long as their pedigree; when they arched their necks superbly they could ...

county grabbing, „ _ tended demonstration,

... could ___ them monasteries of Next came an inquiry by Harlequin ..Labouchere about a tobacco concession obtained fel= the Persian Shah without any apparent *moon, by an English Major, the brother of the Political Resident of the Indian Government in Persia ...

Published: Saturday 28 May 1892
Newspaper: Clarion
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2057 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

FASHION AND TABLE TALK

... magnificent Cashmere breed, peculiar in England to Windsor Park alone, and part of flock sent her Majesty present from the Persian Shah, be torthwith presented to the gallant 23d. to replace poor Billy’s loss. Febbaba. —Melancholy this city looks now, every ...

Published: Monday 09 March 1846
Newspaper: Globe
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2042 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

MARITIME DEPOSITIONS

... country and his whole suite will be the guests of the Sultan. This the first occasion since the conquest of Bagdad that a Persian Shah has made bis appearance on Turkish soil, and there some talk at Constantinople of taking the opportunity tor proposing ...

Published: Thursday 17 November 1870
Newspaper: Shipping and Mercantile Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2047 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

UOYAL

... well with programme which has remained unaltered for over the last fifty* nights. TheOt’EHA Comiuve, with its “skit the Persian Shah is prosperous still, and this handsome house looks wonderfully well now that it is tilled nightly with happy faces. The ...

Published: Saturday 27 September 1873
Newspaper: London and Provincial Entr'acte
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1935 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Now Ready, price ys,

... the increase of claimants. Since then the institution of orders has been largely on the increase. Amongst Orientals, the Persian Shah was the earliest to follow the chivalric example of Europe. Then came Turkey, later on in the present century, until the ...

MYRA'S JOURNAL

... the Player is to roll the black, white and red balls into special holes, to secure the highest possible score. In the Persian Shah two black balls have to be fitted into the eye sockets of a cat's head engraved on the bottom of the box. The i dotting ...

POLICE INTELLIGENCE

... thewiaon infirmary, suffering from nervous deWUty. A verdict was returned the effect that death was due to test cause. The Persian Shah has blotted oot All his realms about. »aw> w. wboss mlseloß Tls bj«a which IwcS •tannic ctcta body bw and to now fc-cttlnf ...

INTERESTING FACTS Abort' CHEM

... the only game sanctioned by priesthood& of all beliefs. The principal piece in the game derives its name, king, from the Persian Shah. or ruler. Many men whose names have gone down to prederity. such as Charlemagne. Tamerlane, Frederick the Great. Charles ...

Published: Thursday 13 December 1906
Newspaper: Bromley Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2175 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

(FROM THE MORNING _CHRONICLE.)

... whole century, inasmuch as the Danube and Balkan have ceased to be impregnable in the palsied bands of the Moslem, and the Persian Shah exists only by Muscovite sufferance ; and in the west, she has lent her ready hand to a band of adventurers, whose sway ...

Published: Tuesday 22 October 1833
Newspaper: True Sun
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2357 | Page: 8 | Tags: none