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Argus, or, Broad-sheet of the Empire

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Argus, or, Broad-sheet of the Empire

TRIAL OF THE EARL OF CARDIGAN

... TRIAL OF THE EARL OF CARDIGAN. The Parliamentary records of the past week afford a very signal exemplification of the old story of a mountain in labour. The Committee of the Lords appointed to inspect the journals of the House and report about the trials ...

London: John Churchill, Prince's-street, Soho

... cabin, all the arms of the vessel, threw a 12 and an 8-pounder overboard, cut all the sails and rigging, and then retired. The Concepcion reached the Bay of Gibraltar with the greatest difficulty. The captain, who had been wounded in the arm, which was obliged ...

lANTHE

... ult.,by Mr. Henry Grattan, and then say if we are not justified in concluding our remarks by the following trite truism : If on food, bad and worse and worse still, you would batten, Swallow Handley and Wallace, and Young Henry Grattan! COUNTERFEIT PRESENTMENTS ...

ELECTION AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY

... the indictment against Lord Cardigan, to the House of Peers, from the Central Criminal Court, and also the return to the certiorari. The bill against Lord Cardigan returned by tbe Grand Jury was then read. The Sergeant-at-Arms then said, Yeoman Usher, ...

HOUSE OF COMMONS. MONDAY.

... session some hon. member would move for a court of inquiry on the conduct of the Horse Guards in reference to the Earl of Cardigan. He also contended that the insurrection in Canada was provoked by the unjust( treatment that colony .received from this ...

SUNDAY, MAY 16, 1841. HER MAJESTY, the QUEEN, we are happy to say, is in excellent health, and during the

... of canvass! We would ask was this pure patriotism on the part of the handsome Dowager?—or was it the old Gordon arms new revived —arms to which, in days of yore, the party was wont to have recourse on many a well fought election field. The Whig candidate ...

LAN THE. 4 Fol Pm's countenance, with raven locks, ma*ngin4eath on.heaven from those wet rocks: Shelley. Lo! ..

... sayers and doers of things which tlteY had falsely laid tm the charge of the Whigs. He then, to prove .his case, instanced the Arms (Ireland) Bill ;.which he very properly, (and therefore by some mistake), denominated one of th e mos t as bavip & ,beeti ...

bairodel republic in rather an awkward situation, especially enforced by a few hints of similar tendency to the ..

... with bloodhounds, and hanging and shoot:Lit g Without regard to age or sex. A very little money J2diciously expended in fire-arms and powder and shot soon bring on a very amusing and exciting contest tetween Sambo and Chingachgook on one side, and Uncle ...

HATTON-GARDEN

... of canvass! We would ask was this pure patriotism on the part of the handsome Dowager ?—or was it the old Gordon arms new revived ?—arms to which, in days of yore, the party was wont to have recourse on many a well fought election field. The Whig candidate ...

THINGS IN GENERAL

... but we very much wish that our contemporaries of the ioress would tease, by their insane and intemperate abuse of Lord Cardi.gan, from making it necessary that we should enter upon the subject beyo n d merely reporting the facts. But we owe it to justice ...

THE GAZETTE OF FASHION. THE COURT-THE CABINET-AND ON DTI'S The Lords of the Judicial Committee of her Majesty's ..

... Sir A. Campbell, Bart., of Succoth, 251., Lady Carnegie 10 guineas, towards the erection of St. John's Church and Schools, Edinburgh. The Countess of Cardigan has caused to be distributed warm clothing at Deene Park, to the children of the schools on his ...

THE ARGUS. SUNDAY, JULY 5, 1840

... merely upon its own merits ? still less as a triumph on the mere grounds of party, when we find that even common decency forced John - Russell, coerced as he is under the lash of the Tail, to vote against the mendacious manceuvre of O'Connell himself. - So ...