John howell mp biography of albert
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PC Andrew Harper: Attorney General to review killers' sentences
Three teenagers jailed for killing a police officer will have their sentences reviewed after claims they are too lenient.
PC Andrew Harper suffered catastrophic injuries after his ankles got caught in a strap attached to a flykt car in Berkshire last August.
Driver Henry Long was jailed for 16 years and accomplices Albert Bowers and Jessie Cole for 13 years on Friday.
PC Harper's mother, Debbie Adlam, said her son "deserved so much better".
She added the family felt like they had been "knocked sideways" by the length of the prison terms.
"The case just hasn't brought justice for him," she said.
"The wider public has made that very obvious - they are all very angry and police officers deserve better than has been received in this case."
'Very severe'
The Attorney General's Office said it had bee
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Grace's Guide To British Industrial History
of 1, 2, and 3, St. Paul's Churchyard; 1 to 9, Ludgate Hill; 7 to 15, Creed Lane; and 40, Carter Lane, London, E.C
Wholesale Drapers
Established in by the late Wynn Ellis, who was for many years M.P. for Leicester, and who at his death () bequeathed a large number of valuable pictures to the National Gallery.
Partnership Successions: Ellis, Everington & Co.: Ellis, Howell & Co. The late John Howell, father of the present Chairman of the Company, joined the founder in partnership in Incorporated as a Limited Company in
Directors: E. H. Howell (Chairman), T. H. Tarlton, Francis Hall, J. Paynter. In St. Paul's Churchyard and adjacent streets the warehouse accommodation amounts to , cubic feet. Branches: Birmingham, 13, Albert Street; Liverpool, 66, Hanover Street. Stag: About in all. Specialities: Latest Novelties in Dresses, Silks, and Fancy Drapery Goods. There are nearly thirty departments. The Company are large buyer
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Howell (name)
Surname and given name of Welsh origin
An example of a Howell family Coat of Arms: Gules, three towers, tripled towered, argent. (the Coat of Arms for Edward Howell, Lord of Westbury) | |
| Pronunciation | HOW-əl Welsh:[ˈhəu.ɛl] |
|---|---|
| Language(s) | Welsh |
| Word/name | Celtic, Old Welsh |
| Meaning | "Eminent", "prominent" |
| Region of origin | Wales, Great Britain |
| Motto | Virtus in arduo (Latin for 'Valour in difficulty') |
| Variant form(s) | Hoel, Howells, Howel, HowleHugh, Hywel |
| Frequency comparisons:[1] | |
Howell (HOW-əl, Welsh:[ˈhəu.ɛl]) is a surname and given name originating from Wales. It is an anglicised form of the Welsh name Hywel. It originates in a dynasty of kings in Wales and Brittany in the 9th and 10th-centuries, most notably king Hywel Dda ("Howel the Good") and three Welsh royal houses of that time onwards. The royal House of Tudor was also descended from them. Today, nearly , people bear this surname.