SlR—Observing an advertisement in the papers of thi day, and having also been informed from other sources, that a subscription has been set on foot to pay the expences incurred in the election here, and to resist the means by which the contest has been fruitlessly protracted, we
March 17, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England
a TO THE ELECTORS OF THE BOROUGH' OF - SOUTH W ARK. tiNTTLEMEN, —W i thin a short period you must ° t s u„talP"oned to sit again in judgment upon the conduct 444 4 ', neP resentatives. Having acted conscientiously, I I , 30 5 y present myself before your tribunal, and should t w
February 7, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England
. , ~,A . •, . ..k - lf, - , • I;i,, . , i W ' 't. yiih . f. _'•-.-=.. ()i; - iLtZIO;;F: . , , :i 0 1 ..r . ' , , 1 1 tre , ....„. 4 ..0 bb .. . . ~ , rPrice, • This day, at noon, Sir Charles Stewart, the Eng. lish•Ambassado'r, had a private audience of the King, which lasted an
February 7, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England
FIRST DAV . The Craven Stakes of lOgs each, for all ages. One mile and a quarter. Mr. Rirbv's b. m. Shadow, by Phantom, 3 yrs old I Mr. Braddling's b. c. by Orville, 2 yrs old The Barton Stakes of 25gs each, h. ft. for colts and fillies. One mile and a half. Sir M. W. Ridley's b
March 30, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England
On Feb, • ; JOSEPH YALIAOW4EY ' Esq. in the Chair; it.wai - Unanimously Resolved—l. That, induced rather by principle than personal attachment, and reg arding exerctse of the Elective Franchise as a duty stupor, tit to themselves, and to their Country, the Liverymen of .I.nndon
February 26, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England
( Abridged from the Durham ,Chronicle, March 11.) • Mr. Lambton arrived at Darlington on Monday morning. Expectation was on tiptoe for his entrance long before . he appeared. At last, about 12 o'clock, the carriage came in sight. Numbers of persons had proceeded miles to meet hi
March 13, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England
After the conclusion of the public ceremony of lying in state, and the vi , itors were all excluded from the Castle, the Lords' in Waiting and the other attendants still remained with . the Royal Corpse till seven o'clock, when his Royal Highness the Duke of York, as Chief Mourn
February 17, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England
than we published yesterday, brought by an extraordinary messenger. The letters and Madrid Gazette are of the 24th. The correspondence from Bayonne, of the 29th, confirms what has already been said of the Malaga affair of the 19th, between the royal troops and the rebels, the re
March 10, 1820 - Cobbett's Evening Post - London, London, England