| William Cobbett - Great Britain - 1832 - 844 pages
...itself under the banners of one or other of the two parties who have alternately assumed the reins of Government, it is most gratifying to us to be able...and regard may long continue, is the sincere wish of Sir, Your most obedient servants, BF Dun, teacher Jiilin Chadwick James Affleck James Pcntland John... | |
| Great Britain - 1832 - 428 pages
...itself under the banners of one or other of the two parlies who have alternately assumed the reins of Government, it is most gratifying to us to be able...and regard may long continue, is the sincere wish of ." Sir, Your most obedient servants, BF Dun, teacher Jokn Chndwick James Affleck James Pentlaad John... | |
| Gardening - 1831 - 774 pages
...improved the garden department at Chatsworth, and we are happy in adding our testimony to the same effect. It is most gratifying to us to be able to state that the Duke of Devonshire allows all persons whatever to see Chatsworth, the house as well as the grounds,... | |
| William Cobbett - England - 1833 - 276 pages
...itself under the banners of one or other of the two parlies who have alternately assumed the reins of Government, it is most gratifying to us to be able...and regard may long continue, is the sincere wish of Sir, Your most obedient servants, RF Dun, teacher John Chadwick James Affleck James Pc;ntland John... | |
| Gardening - 1831 - 780 pages
...improved the garden department at Chatsworth, and we are happy in adding our testimony to the same effect. It is most gratifying to us to be able to state that the Duke of Devonshire allows all persons whatever to see Chatsworth, the house as well as the grounds,... | |
| Presbyterian Church in the U.S. General Assembly - 1866 - 500 pages
...breaking through the clouds that hung over us ; to no small extent those thick clouds are beiug dispersed. It is most gratifying to us to be able to state, that our churches are simultaneously, and in almost all directions, awaking to the work of the religious... | |
| Canada - 1873 - 940 pages
...few, comparatively, transgress the law so as to deserve again to become inmates of the Penitentiary. It is most gratifying to us to be able to state that the prison is in all respects in a state of efficiency, which in ' ijjhly creditable to the Warden,... | |
| |