The London ladies petition : To have the chusing of able and sufficient members, instead of their husbands, that may stand stiffly by the church.
| Corporate Author: | Gale (Firm) |
|---|---|
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
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The Petitioners monitor: being a collection of several petitions, &c : To the Honourable House, shortly after the grand meeting, viz. I. The ladies petition. II. The batchelors remonstrance. III. The widows petition. IV. The poets proposal. V. The chaplains petition. VI. An act drawn up by a Committee of Grievances. With a preface, and a catalogue of above forty petitions, ordered to be drawn up and presented to the Honourable House at their next sessions.
To the reverend moderator and remanent ministers of the Presbytery of Edinburgh. The petition of Isabel Law, daughter to the deceast William Law burges of Edinburgh. Humbly Sheweth, That your petitioner having been first cited before the session of the New Kirk, and now before this Presbytrie, at the instigation (as the believes ) of Henry Boig Drammer in the Earl of Portmore's regiment.
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From the safest, and most advantageous Office of Insurance on marriages, births and services, at the Carv'd Porter, over-against Jack's Coffee-House in Kingstreet near Guildhall. Proposals, for insurance on servants, at a certain charge by a weekly dividend.
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The Ladies cabinet, or A companion for the toilet : Consisting of letters, essays, tales, elegies, odes, songs, epitaphs, epigrams, &c. serious and humourous. Design'd for the use and entertainment of the fair sex, by the author. To which is added, the character of a true gentleman; intended for the perusal of every lady before she enters the holy state of matrimony.
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