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Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, England

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29

Type

29

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MR. BALFOUR AT GLASGOW

... along with them the EM bulk of the intellect and intelqigence of the Liberal party. = The Liberal Unionist ?ny embraced both Whigs and Radicals, and when he spoke of their leaders a prefound regret came over his mind that two great men had been removed from ...

LORD HARTINGTON AT NAIRN

... respect. I acknowie(?e that I am still proud of the name of Whig, and notwithstanding anything that may have happened in recent times in my political life, I profess still to maintain and uphold true Whig principles. It is therefore a source of no little sa ...

NEWS NOTES

... elect men to do the work who are most likely to do it well for the public, utterly and entirely regardless whether the man is Whig or Tory, Liberal or Radical.” We hope so too; but at the same time we are not exuberantly confident. It is, if not an inherent ...

NOTABILITIES OF THE DAY

... The Barings have worked hard for them, it is true, but probably they owe most to the marriage of a Baring with a niece of the Whig statesman, Earl Grey. The appointment of Archdeacon Watkins to the Bishopric of St. Asaph is an excellent one. Lord Salisbury ...

NOTABILITIES OF THE DAY

... of Sir Alexander Cockburn, he secame Lord Chief Justice of England. He was at one time a pretty frequent contributor to the Whig yuarterly, the Edinburgh Review. Mr. Hiram Maxim, whose quick-firing gun was exbibited and explained to the Shah, is a typical ...

NOTABILITIES OF THE DAY

... bulky in appearance, and his igure was a very familiar one in the Lobby a year or two ago. He comes of a Whig family, but has sdvanced beyend the Whig traditions. Sir Arthur Sullivan and Mr. W. 8. Gilbert are moe more * collaborating.” Sir Arthur Sallivan ...

THE CROOKED STICK ‘“ And took the croeked sticked at last *° ————— ‘““Even sO.”

... duties as M.P. for his native county with zeal and independence. Wonderful to say, he neither ratted nor sneaked ; and yet Whigs, Tories, and Radicals treated him with deference and respect. He had long been the husband of her who, when our sketch was ...

OUTRAGE ON AUSTRIAN OFFICERS

... to a revolution I do not intend to beg the question by using that term. There may be good as well as bad revolutions, and no Whig politician would certainly ever be ashamed to use the word revolution, and to admit that he was a traditional supporter of ...

NOTABILITIES OF THE DAY

... illness. By the way, Mi. Talbot is threatened with opposition at the General Election. He entered Parliament asa young and ardent Whig, and at the present moment is a Liberal Unionist at heart. He has been three times offered a Peerage—twice by Mr. Gladstone ...

THE CROOKED STICK. 4 And took the crooked sticked at last ?” ——— ** Even so 0.”

... duties as M.P. for his native: county with zeal and independence. Wonderfu! to say, he neither ratted nor sneaked ; and yet Whigs, Tories, and Radicals treated him with deference and respect. He had long been the husband of her who, when our sketch was ...

NOTES

... undoubted abilit{l. Sir William Harcourt has ripened with the times. In days gone by he used defiantly to boast that he was a Whig. As Home Secretary, he was a Saul to the Irish. But he has now got salvation, and is | a very Paul breathing fire and vengeance ...