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Police Intelligence

... favour of their validity. s Mr. James Eyton, who, it wvas understood, had declined to Y hold a brief ole the revision, on the Whig side, however sog- r gested, as amiicus Cecriro, that the 7th Section of thie Registra- s ?? Act governed the case, wvie,, ...

CHESTER ASSIZES

... duty, whilst advertisemellts in news- Wot C papers are heavily taxed. But we suppose this is in accor- £ 34 dance with the Whig notions of Flee Trade. TI ...

WHAT THEY ARE DOING IN THE GREAT METROPOLIS

... of' tile l'eelites, Whiigs, Philosophical Radicals, Man- chester men, and the Irish brigade; and the coali- tion between the Whigs and Peelites was open and avowed. 'Ihe terms were signed, sealed, and ra- tified, at the Luke of Bedford's seat, Woburn Ab- ...

APPALLING FRAUDS AND FORGERIES

... in the person of Mr. John Sad- lea eir, When he first launched his political bark, he appeared in e- Parliament as a pure Whig, supporting the Administratiou of Lord John Russell, even to the length of advocating and voting 'F for the abolition of the ...

FRAUD AND ROBBERY OF THE CUSTOMS AT BELFAST

... thief or thieves, anad the tea tr .i carried off after hours. The following additional C particulars are from the. Northern Whig of Satur- I d l:% da .- . I. .. pi A painful feeling was excited on Friday in comr- emercial circles in this town by the discovery ...

COMMON LAW (JUDICIAL BUSINESS COMMISSION

... CoPpocic.-We learn that Mr. James rt CoPpock, the well-known Parliamentary agent of the ,e Reform Club, in the interests of the Whig party, died on a Saturday night of an attack of bronchitis. Mr. Coppock, e wvho was about fifty-five years of age, was only ...

SPIRIT OF THE PRESS

... the clique known as I l the servile Whigs. Tt is rather strange that the Radical , party, which has numbered so many reputations in modern l Liberalism, should have obtained such little official power. E The Whigs still insist on retaining the Cabinet ...

MURDER AT NEWCASTLE

... named Swinburn, turned 01 to June Whigham, anothsr neighbour, and exclaimed, le Mrs. Anderson is killed. On hearing this, Whig- U1 ham directed her observation to the sad spectacle which A presented itself, and at that moment she saw at the 1, head of ...

MR. MILNER GIBSON ON PUBLIC AFFAIRS

... office. Mr. Seeley's statements were contradicted; his results flouted, and his enquiries disconcerted at every turn by the Whig Admiralty; but the present Doard, in a frank and manly manner, accepted the statements of a political opponent as correct, ...

THE SESSION OF 1871

... quite true 'that there were several agrn indications of an approaching break-up of the infr hitherto unassailable' phalanx of Whigs and Radi- En« cals, who had been kept together not so much by beir any internal principle of cohesion as by the out- beei side ...

ASSASSINATION OF THE GOVERNOR OF INDIA

... at one time as a eort of victim in a then famous, now almost forgotten, political seandal. A Tory leer made an attack on the Whig Gevernument for; having appointed to office an Irish member who was reperted to have talked some- thing of a rather in'flammatory ...