Article clipped from London Sunday Herald united Kingdom

auogtmicr ill puiiiL u 1 »p*cuf sircugui, cuiijutuuioutintrsst ^ana uccont-modation, the vessels are to exceed any yet on the river.N*vlt;ember Fogs.—After pleasure cometh pain; so saith the proverb. After the clear bracing month of October, generally the finest in the calender in England, we have the dark, thick, foggy, murky month of November, when the only way to set the elements at defiance is to stick one's toes into a good fire, and console one's wounded spirit with a stiff glass of whiskey toddy. Such as may he procured of Messrs. Pye and Co., of Mark-lane, will gratify any thirsty soul, and a glass neat (it is ten degrees above proof) will thaw the heart of any half frozen Christian.At the Philosophical Institution, held at the Pag and Tinder Box, in Liquorpond-street, a letter was read by Sawney Suck-Egg, JEsq., on the possibility of extending the realms of space,
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London Sunday Herald united Kingdom

London, Middlesex, GB

Sun, Nov 09, 1834

Page 5

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Anonymous

CA 12 Apr 2024

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