Singapore Chronicle and Commercial Register, 19 July 1827

Total Pages: 3
1 3 Singapore Chronicle and Commercial Register
  • 26 1 SINGAPORE CHRONICLE NO. 87 THURSDAY, July 19th, 1827. Public Notifications appearing in this Register, and signed by the proper Authorities, are to be considered as official.
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  • 200 1 Thursday July 19th, 1827. The William has arrived from Madras the 12th June, We have not received a single Paper, but have had an opportunity of seeing a few which have reached the settlement, the latest being of the 7th of June. The H. C. S. Inglis Capt. S.
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  • 162 1 On the 6th instant the Raffles Club gave their anniversary dinner, at which Mr. Prince, our Resident, presided. This being the first meetting since the melancholy decease of Sir Stamford Raffles, the founder and vigilant friend of our Settlement, whose services and exertions for its welfare must ever
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  • 3240 1 Among the articles of import by the Chinese Junks and also from Siam is a dyeing drug, bv the natives, called Kasumba It is red in colour and made up in small lumps rendered very hard, apparently by manipulation. It yields two colours, namely, yellow of a very imperfect
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  • Europe.
    • 481 2 THE COURIER,— February 12. The Paris Papers of Friday the 9th Feb. with the Etoile, dated Saturday 10th Feb. have arrived sines our last. If we were disposed to credit what appears in some of them, particularly the Quotidienne, we should say affairs in the peninsula had again changed
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  • 992 2 The following are the particulars of the caption of the partfes [parties] now in custody, and who have undergone several examinations at Hatton-garden, charged with being entensive manufacturers of base coin In consequence of information which had been received, a party of the Thames Police, and
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  • 758 3 A Committee, we understand, lias been formed in London, of which Mr. Brougham, Dr. Birkbeck, Sir James Mackintosh, and others, are members, for publishing cheap elementary treatises on the various branches of science, art and general knowledge, at such a price as to place them within the reach
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  • 508 3 The work people others engaged in this undertaking, as well as the whole neig hbourhood of the spot where the excavation is proceeding, were thrown into great consternation and alarm on Monday morning, by a violent report which proceeded from the mouth of the shaft succeeded
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  • 294 3 ARRIVALS. JULY. 6th Dutch Schooner, Fattal Game, Said Hoesin, from Samarang, 21sth June. British Barque, Mari Anne Sophia, A. Henderson, from Tatas Borneo, 29th -uue. Malay Cutter, Tringanno, from Tringanno. 12th British Brig, Margaret, J. A. Corbin, from W. C. Sumatra, 14th June. Brit. Ship Isabella, M. M’ Neil,
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