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Lady's Newspaper and Pictorial Times

EXTRAORDINARY PROCEEDINGS. A correspondent of the Northern Whig makes the following singular statements: — ..

... EXTRAORDINARY PROCEEDINGS. A correspondent of the Northern Whig makes the following singular statements: — Havingjust arrived here from America, I consider it right to mention a circumstance which, I think, merits some attention from the British public ...

general aperture or a window into frequently subdivided vertically by a torlzontally. Excepting in very Milli r ..

... general aperture or a window into frequently subdivided vertically by a torlzontally. Excepting in very Milli r,,thie windows, Whig in fact absolutely zing Was practised than that of small stub strengthening support, the strong wind. The window above a Om ...

I Pr/ Whig in four more GAM: CCXLVIII WITITH (lur. —). BLAOK (LA 1. K P 2 K P 2

... I Pr/ Whig in four more GAM: CCXLVIII WITITH (lur. —). BLAOK (LA 1. K P 2 K P 2 2.K8P2 P takes P 3. KKttoß3d KK#PL 4. Kllto Q B 4th Kt 1 5. Kt to K sth 4 checks 6. Kto his Beq (lambit P 1 7. Kt takes KBP QKt to li 8. QP 2 B. K lit 24 9.QRPI K to 1134 ...

Tkw, Jan., 1847

... was beeeinie Naturalised wit oder, thee, that the you . out a compass or 'ruild satisfactory.—TVestini4 merely a pietionary, Whig, at the same time; ...

Rises IST. llii

... Banaa.—Thomas Dogget, an old actor of celebrity, was so attached to the Brunswick family, that Sir R. Steele called him a Whig up to the head and ears. In the year after George T. came to the ...

it Journal AS we 1 NP.li

... we , aper than I mem' lewspapers Premier—the lady who presides with such peculiar wary in a dignity over the reunions of the Whig aristocracy whc in the salons of Cambridge House. Her Ladyship, according to the Peerage, is the eli two daughters of Sir Peniston ...

THE LATE MRS. FLETCHER

... rather have seen Mrs. Fletcher in a box at a theatre than have seen Mrs. Siddons on the stage of the same theatre. She was a Whig, and long a widow. She married for love of what marriage is said seldom to give liberty. Her husband, Archibald Fletcher, an ...

very a of a few- of Noierc r. Lamb 11805, v former s 1 to the dissol of the ?osition

... Lamb and other Whig s b e tamp. Under Mr. Canning, according th° ed the office of Chief Secretaq 0 4 eutenant of Ireland, and in that of Roman Catholic party hailed the tea Ham Lamb with triumph. The gr. rary alienation from the Whigs underwent during ...

MORNING

... MORNING Psalm —exix., verse 31 to v. 72. First Lesson—lleuteronomy Second Leeson—Matthew axiii. ata? p z c-r- B Q-7 - 0 4 ,14 WHIG& Is LNCOS?OSBTSD VictoriaL _- _ , ~,,, ~ _, ''i I I I r .0 11 2 • 'l;F=%f 1, H 10 \,o, I \ -- I . I H 1 ; IA- 'III / I I , ...

NEWSPAPER

... the re presentation; its real object was the consolidation Whig p ower . Si n ce that period two other Whig neform Bills had been introduced by Lord J. Russell; but both were rejected by the Whigs themselves, and t hey were withdrawn. Another had b een p ...

of July, 1797

... At that ' Dorougn In low anti 1151 period of his life he, like most young men brought and again in 1820. He up among the Whigs, was a great admirer o f Mr. t owar ds the political vi Fox, and an acknowledged disciple of his political the single exception ...

ROYAL HANDKERCHIEF

... his father, assisted the Whig party by his influence and his silent vote in the House of Lords more than by other means, for he never spoke in that assembly on any of the great political questions advocated or opposed by the Whig party. His Grace was more ...