pr ER MAjESTY'S BAL COSTUME.- 1, We understand that the Perfumes patronise dat the Queen's Bat Costurn4 were ROYA,I O pOUQUETS. 'Twas hard to say what scent MS uppermost Nor this part Must or Civet mild we fall, Or Amber, but a rich reault of ill." DELCIUMX and Co.'s ROYAL BOUQU
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
Ilardinge, Sir It Gough, and the other generals, officers, and private soldiers, European and Native, for their ability, valour, and intrepidity displayed by them in the battle , of the 10th of February last, alluded in terms of warm panegyric, to the gallantry exhibited by Prin
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
them, stormed their intrenchments, and drove them - into the river. The loss of the Sikhs is estimated at 10,000 men, killed and drowned. The British lost 2,383 killed and wounded, including Major General Sir Robert Dick. The army in Scinde was moving up from Roree to Ilhawulpor
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
CUSTOM HOUSE.—Commendable expedition is now displayed in clearing the luggage of passenger from foreign parts at the Custom house. Sir Thomas Ftémantle, the new Commissioner of Customs, and his colleagues, visited the St. Katherine's Dock Steam packet Wharf on Saturday last, and
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
CLERICAL WIT.—" if we go tlwar, father," said a bright-eyed boy the other day to his clerical parent, " from what part of the Bible shall you get a text for a new sermon?" The good minister, being taken by surprise at the question, thought a moment, and then smoothing the locks
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
It is somewhat remarkable, and we are not aware that the idea has been before advanced, that Popery in Parliament led the way for Popery into the Church. There was no symptom of the subtle malaria in our Ecclesiastical Establishment till the Roman Catholic Emancipation Bill was
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
LIBEL.—^SIBLEY v. CHAPMAN.—Mr. WhiteharSt, Q.C., and Mr. Hayes were for the plaintiff. Mr. Humfrey, Q.C., and Mr. Miller for the defetice,—The plaintiff is a coach and omnibus proprietor, and, on the occasion of some steeple chases that took place in Southern, in February last,
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
and Pletinoas, worth on the average £25 each. The date of the manufacture of a portion of the violins was 1500, and of the remainder 1721. They were condemned as contraband, on the ground that they have been imported as passengers' baggage, instead of being inserted in the ship'
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
1 which it appears will place the Punjaub, for the purpose of military occupation, in the hands of the British, a security for the payment of one million and a half of money, to indemnify us for the expenses of the late war. This stipulation, to which it appears that the Sikhs h
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England
M.P. T. L. Peacock, Esq. T. Baring, Esq., M.P. S. E. Magan, Esq. A. Macklew, Esq. .1. Reynolds, Esq. M. De Kalergi M. De Krehmer It. Johnson, Esq. M. Pandia • M. Stomata Zizinia The Lord Chamberlain M. De Berg A. Bradshaw, Esq. M.P. —Bevan Esq Joseph Arden, Esq Baltazzi H. Reay,
April 4, 1846 - New Court Gazette - London, London, England