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General and Armory
General Armory Two.
The player begins the game with a limited number of items on a town level of six shops: a General Store, an Armory, a Weaponsmith, a Temple, an Alchemy shop, and a Magic-Users store.
Buell Armory on the University of Kentucky campus in Lexington, Kentucky, is named for General Buell.
Arms of the Baron Monk Bretton. Shield: Argent a fesse nebulé gules between six fleurs-de-lis sable ; Crest: Two lions ' gambs in saltaire gules ( from Bernard Burke | Burke's The General Armory, 1884, p. 290 ).
* The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales ; comprising a registry of armorial bearings from the earliest to the present time, by Sir Bernard Burke, C. B., LL. D., Ulster King of Arms, London, Harrison, 59, Pall Mall, 1884.
The station also serves the D. C. Armory, a popular venue for shows and entertainment, D. C. General Hospital, D. C.
: Burke's General Armory ( 1884 )
The Ohio Military Reserve serves under the Governor as Commander in Chief through the office of the Adjutant General of Ohio ( Major General Deborah A. Ashenhurst ) and is headquartered at the Haubuch Armory in Columbus, Ohio.
The Achievement in Arms of Sir John Perrot, redrawn by the P-rr-tt Society from the description in The General Armory
According to Burke's General Armory ( 1884 ) and Burke's General Armory Two ( 1974 ), this basic coat of arms, sometimes varying in one detail or another, accompanied by various crests or none, was used over the centuries by the branches of the family, who, by the similarity of their descriptions, claim descent from a shared origin in the same Sussex locality, Earnley, from which they derive their surname.
( From Burke's General Armory, 1884, p. 312, col. 2 )
( From Burke's General Armory, 1884, p. 328, col. 2 )
It is the 18th Century Armory, and was the dwelling of General Miguel Gerrero.

General and England
John Wesley consecrated Thomas Coke a " General Superintendent ," and directed that Francis Asbury also be consecrated for the United States of America in 1784, where the Methodist Episcopal Church first became a separate denomination apart from the Church of England.
Virginia Code section 1-200 establishes the continued existence and vitality of common law principles and provides that " The common law of England, insofar as it is not repugnant to the principles of the Bill of Rights and Constitution of this Commonwealth, shall continue in full force within the same, and be the rule of decision, except as altered by the General Assembly.
Where it is not necessary to be so urgent, or where indirect contempt has taken place the Attorney General can intervene and the Crown Prosecution Service will institute criminal proceedings on his behalf before a Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales.
During a visit to England he complained of dizziness and had to have his blood pressure checked on August 29, 1959 ; however, before dinner at Chequers on the next day his doctor General Howard Snyder recalled Eisenhower " drank several gin and tonics, and one or two gins on the rocks ... three or four wines with the dinner ".
Defoe being a Presbyterian who had suffered in England for his convictions, was accepted as an adviser to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and committees of the Parliament of Scotland.
The Massachusetts General Court overruled them and named the town after Dedham, Essex in England, where some of the original inhabitants were born.
Her sister Millicent recalled Elizabeth ’ s weekly lectures, “ Talks on Things in General ”, when her younger siblings would gather her while she discussed politics and current affairs from Garibaldi to Macauley ’ s History of England.
He served both as Attorney General and Lord Chancellor of England.
Category: Attorneys General for England and Wales
In the Church of England, the General Synod, which was established in 1970 ( replacing the Church Assembly ), is the legislative body of the Church.
One of the earliest formal registries was General Stud Book for Thoroughbreds, which began in 1791 and traced back to the Arabian stallions imported to England from the Middle East that became the foundation stallions for the breed.
He was promoted acting lieutenant-general in July 1940, and appointed the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief ( GOC-in-C ) of the Southern Command, which was responsible for the defence of south-west England.
The Court of General Gaol Delivery is the criminal court for serious offences ( effectively the equivalent of a Crown Court in England ).
The then Attorney General for England and Wales ( Sir Thomas Inskip ) is reported to have warned the then Attorney-General of the Irish Free State ( Conor Maguire ) that Ireland had no right to abolish appeals to the Privy Council.
Category: Attorneys General for England and Wales
* 1655 – England, with troops under the command of Admiral William Penn and General Robert Venables, annexes Jamaica from Spain.
* Measure of the Church of England is a law passed by the General Synod and the UK Parliament equivalent of an Act
It was never formally instituted in England, even in much later times relying instead on more discreet individual figures, like the " Witch-Finder General ".
An early 6 kW version, built in England by the General Electric Company Research Laboratories, Wembley, London ( not to be confused with the similarly named American company General Electric ), was given to the US government in September 1940.
* 1992 – The General Synod of the Church of England votes to allow women to become priests.
Ernest Pollock, the former Attorney General for England and Wales said " May we not as lawyers regard the establishment of an International Court of Justice as an advance in the science that we pursue?
In 1856, under the direction of Postmaster General James Campbell, Toppan and Carpenter, ( commissioned by the U. S. government to print U. S. postage stamps through the 1850s ) purchased a rotary machine designed to separate stamps, patented in England in 1854 by William and Henry Bemrose, who were printers in Derby, England.

General and Scotland
The General Register Office for Scotland ( GROS ) conducts its own census, while the census in Northern Ireland is carried out by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency ( NISRA ).
It was into this atmosphere that General George Monck, governor of Scotland under the Cromwells, marched south with his army from Scotland.
The talks were ended in 2003, when the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland rejected the proposals.
George Monck, realizing the military stood to lose power ; secretly shifted his loyalty to the Crown but as General George Monck, who had been Cromwell's viceroy in Scotland, began to march south, Lambert, who had ridden out to face him, lost support in London.
In 1905 the position was given some official recognition when the " Prime Minister " was named in the order of precedence, outranked, among non-royals, only by the Archbishops of Canterbury and York, the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and the Lord Chancellor.
This congregation / presbytery / synod / general assembly schema is based on the historical structure of the larger Presbyterian churches, such as the Church of Scotland or the Presbyterian Church ( U. S. A .); some bodies, such as the Presbyterian Church in America and the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, skip one of the steps between congregation and General Assembly, and usually the step skipped is the Synod.
The high point in a British General Elections thus far was when the SNP polled almost a third of all votes in Scotland at the October 1974 general election and returned 11 MPs to Westminster, to date the most MPs it has had, although its representation was reduced significantly in the 1979 general election.
The First Minister, the Ministers ( but not junior ministers ), the Lord Advocate and Solicitor General are the Members of the ' Scottish Executive ', as set out in the Scotland Act 1998.
* November – The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland is summoned to Glasgow by King Charles I of England.
Category: Moderators of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland
* December 16 – General Monck demands free parliamentary election in Scotland.
Then, in December 1965 and March 1966, Nature and The Lancet published the first preliminary reports by British cytogeneticist Patricia Jacobs and colleagues at the MRC Human Genetics Unit at Western General Hospital in Edinburgh of a chromosome survey of 315 male patients at The State Hospital outside Carstairs, Lanarkshire — Scotland ’ s only special security hospital for the developmentally disabled — that found nine patients, ages 17 to 36, averaging almost 6 ft. in height ( avg.
Under the recent constitutional reforms, the Lord Advocate has become an officer of the Scottish Government, while the United Kingdom Government is advised on Scots law by the Advocate General for Scotland.
The Lord Advocate is assisted by the Solicitor General for Scotland.
Notable bands that Scotland Yard opened for are Lenny Kravitz, Lit, Berlin, Missing Persons, Dave Wakling ( General Public ), Gene Loves Jezabel, John Easdale ( Dramarama ), and Martha Davis ( The Motels ).
While merely informing others of the new name is enough for it to take legal effect, those whose births are registered in Scotland or have been legally adopted there can optionally apply to the Registrar General for Scotland to have their birth certificate amended to show the new name and have the respective register updated.
** General Assembly of the Church of Scotland
** Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland
The ranges were named in 1836 by Surveyor General of New South Wales Sir Thomas Mitchell after the Grampian Mountains in his native Scotland, but are also known by the name Gariwerd, from one of the local Australian Aboriginal languages, either the Jardwadjali or Djab Wurrung language.
In 1569, Adam Bothwell, the commendator of Holyrood, informed the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland that the east end was in such a state of disrepair that the choir and transept should be demolished.

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