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George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 7, 4th edition. | 2 | 0 | Browse | Search |
George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 4, 15th edition. | 2 | 0 | Browse | Search |
C. Suetonius Tranquillus, The Lives of the Caesars (ed. Alexander Thomson) | 2 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Your search returned 86 results in 30 document sections:
Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, has agreed to a marriage proposed between the Princesse Alice and his Grand Ducal Highness Prince Louis, of Hesse.
Don Isidoro Avaujo de Lyra, editor of the Diario de in Marins, of Havana, has been killed in a duel.
German compositors can find lucrative employment at the office of the Squelched Post, Charleston, S. C.
Horse-whipping a Secessionist has been decided by a jury in Wyoming county, Pa., as a perfectly legal and constitutional act.
Further from Europe.the London Press on American affairs.
The advices by the Canadian are to the 17th.
The weather in England has again been unsettled, and there was considerable rain in some parts of the country.
The marriage contract between the Princess Alice and the Prince Leopold, of Hesse, was signed at Osborne on the 14th.
The London Times' city article again expatiates on the financial difficulties accumulating against the American Government, and says the most earnest wish of the friends of America must be, that the difficulties now existing may accumulate with sufficient rapidity to bring both North and South to reason.
France.
From France there are vague reports of a growing coolness between France and Austria, bearing an ominous resemblance to that which preceded the war.
Prince Metternich had taken leave of the Emperor Napoleon, and the latter had gone to Chalons camp.
General Fanti had also left Paris, and was en route to Chalons camp.
A wife for the Prince.
--The Prince of Wales is limited in his choice of a wife to six ladies, unless he should decide upon selecting one much older than himself.
They are: 1st. Princess Alexandrina, (daughter of Prince Albert, of Prussia,) born February 1st, 1842; 2d. Princess Anne, of Hesse Darmstadt, niece of the Grand Duke of Hesse and of the Empress of Russia, born May 25th, 1843; 3d. Princess Augusta, of Holstein-Glucksburg, born February 27th, 1844; 4th. Princess Alexandria, (daughter of Prince Christian,) of Denmark, born December 4th, 1844; 5th. Princess Mary, of Saxe Altenburg, born June 25th, 1845; 6th. Princess Catherine, of Oldenburg, States of the Grand Duchess Nicholas, of Russia, born September 21st, 1845.
Matters in the Royal family.
--A London letter to the Philadelphia Inquirer says:
On the ninth of next month Queen Victoria marries her daughter, the Princess Alice, to Prince Louis of Hesse — provided the King of Belgium is well enough to be present who is to act in the place of her father.
For this event the Queen leaves Balmoral next week and returns to Caborne, where the nuptials are to take place, much to the regret of the fashionable London world and the dissatisfaction of the great body of milliners and trades-people generally, with whom such occasions are usually a matter of great pecuniary importance.
Some talk is to be heard in reference to the Queen's consenting to this marriage before the young lady's father has been in his grave six months, but it is understood that them are State reasons that render it desirable.
Still, some people think that if the Queen can so far forget her grief in this instance; she might otherwise relax the severity of her mourning,