The Devizes and Wiltshire Gazette
... .3..48 IURI-l' 1 ' * . } 0..®..3fl 0 OATS. 20 0.. ...
... .3..48 IURI-l' 1 ' * . } 0..®..3fl 0 OATS. 20 0.. ...
... actual place among the nobility. He is the political hero of lite Tories, as lie is lII* military hero of the age. With the Whigs (to whom lie causes great embarrassment) is man --that cannot be attacked—a person whom tlicy neither can or will touch—they ...
... mention of the affair naturally leads remark how much Government gains in strength being true to itself. The great fault of the Whigs has always been their fear of offending their opponents, and their neglect of their supporters. The reprimand of the Ashton ...
... of confidence. On the hustings those persons will support the Radical if they can have one, and if not they will support the Whig, but when comes to the point that tries man's inmost convictions when their own lives or liberties are in jeopardy, they are ...
... often and earnestly delivered, now rat 'ihe aiiti-coru-law party?—a question, strange 10 : tn ,av seem, now agitated by the Whig-RadiVon strength of some rather ill-considered 'irvations thrown out the other day by Mr. (. Dawson (Sir Robert's brother-in-law) ...
... £17,500, or upon the whole quarter £52,500. We shall rejoice to find that the penny panacea, likely to remedy this result of whig finance. Teetotalism appears to have had good deal to do with the chief item decrease, that the receipts of the excise; the ...
... will never thrive till the monopoly (as they call it) of the agriculturists is put an end to. These speeches! figure all the Whig and Radical newspapers; and this is culled great demonstration of public opinion against the Corn-Laws. I'at it is a very different ...
... possess. A well-turned, Compliment.—Among the re®nt to the magistracy, observe the name of Mr. William Gy3e. What lump of Whig rubbish will the lord ••tenant pitchfork on to the magisterial dung heap Cheltenham Free Pre i. In the Central Criminal Court ...
... is clear from his tendering his ser. vices as Lord Chief Baron to the Tories, after he had become the Ex-Chancellor of the Whigs. Since he has discovered that neither party will have any thing to do with him, from past experience of his intractable disposition ...
... nightly fires Kent and other parts the country, during the administration of the Duke of Wellington; and which was the standing Whig argument show the incapacity of his Government (cheers). This was. he thought, a time which the House ought show proper reverence ...
... our Protestant Government would do well to imitate, and erect mass-houses around which converts may gi-1 ther. In Ireland our whig Minister*, out of their exceedingly high regard for the interests of the national church, would fain destroy that church in ...
... the whigradographist, and seems to be a combination the paper-making and printing machines. The procuring of signatures to whig-radical petitions has hitherto been a work of immense labour and considerable expense,- but now, by calling in the aid of the ...