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THE RECORDERSIIIP OF MACCLESFIELD

... Chancellor, before their eyes, or a second visitation from Mr. Commissioner Hogg, rejected the whig imagine--whether Mr. Cottinghain. How this c h anc ed we cannot the whig part of the electors for once began to think, or whether the passing scene had opened their ...

THE HOUSE OF RUSSELL AND THE CHURCH

... countenance are far from being abandoned or changed by their successors of the present day. Moreover, they are such men as the Whigs are now endeavouring to make: , all the men of the next generation, by a system which will edu-cate them without religion. ...

1 , , JANUARY 3, .1834. THE LIVERPOOL STANDARD. 911111, - nave succeeded in placing all the revered institutions of

... China, it cannot be without interest to note, so far tic contentions, And they ha've entangled the web of our ilt i s for the Whigs to rush into a war; but Heaven-I out inter es t :--.,. F or a f ew d a y s , th e citizens were put in great as published accounts ...

tI atbton. LIVERPOOL: MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1834

... attribute all the evils which have, of late years, befallen the Tory party, and, of course, the country. While abusing the Whigs for,having 'courted the people, they, with admirable consistency, blame Tories for having first despised and then lost the ...

Published: Monday 06 January 1834
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1292 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

-J-. FRASER'S MAGAZINE

... more enter office: The Church may be sacrificed. The peeragenay, evert the monarchy, may follow; for there is nothing that a Whig will not sacrifice, if only he may retain his place; and there is nothing an economist will not destroy, rather than give any ...

Published: Monday 06 January 1834
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 844 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

LODGE'S PORTRAITS AND MEMOIRS

... extracts week: in the next we shall make a few. Meanwhile, the following copy of the fly-leaf will interest the reader: The Whigs refuse to Put down the Corn Laws. They say they are convinced the robbers do not benefit; but as the robbfrs are not yet convinced ...

Published: Monday 06 January 1834
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 491 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

ON THE EVILS OF PUBLIC-HOUSE DISSIPATION

... to the interest of the leaders of the faction of the great Whig families; and all further attempts were abandoned.--: : -Vol. i. p. 216. And we already forgotten the accession of the, Whigs to Mr. Canning's cabinet, the very leading principle of which ...

THE HUDDERSFIED ELECTION

... attacked the whigs and the reform bill, and proceeded, in conclusion, to assure the electors that as in his former career he had not been a mere party man, but had voted for several measures of reform and retrenchment, some of which the whigs, now that they ...

have been suggested by reading a little work, published within the last few days at Edinburgh, and to which we

... standard of Don PEDRO by the splendid promises held out to him by his agents, and from being imbued with the notion, which the Whig press has zealously inculcated, that the drummed-out Emperor of Brazil was an honest but an unfortunate man, engaged, by parental ...

CONTEMPORARY PRESS

... impress upon our commercial readers the necessity of examining the Whig deficiencies, and then of determining in their own minds, whether such deficiencies, and par consequence—whether such Whigs ought to be continued mnch—or even any—longer. It must not be ...

rbe ILiberpool iztanbatil. FRIDAY MORNING, JANUARY 10, 1834

... deplore as appertaining to our own times, and as being prosecuted under the sanction, or at least the connivance, of the present Whig Government, is a system of inveiglement under which the subjects of the KING are transported to a foreign country, not to suffer ...

who cannot boast of a beard at all. I have no desire to make any comments upon the gentlemen who

... his wife, he is attacked in his pocket, and his dear won money must pay for his folly—for the quackery he has gathered in the Whig field of literature, and at the Mechanics' Institution. He pays, aye, to the last farthing —he grumbles but pays—and who pities ...