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THE WAR

... Catholic electors are d the to support Lord Derby's government. He says:- The tl 'en- whigs are still your friends; but you have become the v. hey enemy of the whigs-and for what? In your ease for a g I in miserable mess .of'pottage; you have sold your ...

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... while he maintained the rights of the Established Church, to repeal or greatly modify those harsh laws with which Whig Governments and Whig Parliaments had encumbered the statute book. He Was honestly desirous of placing upon a footing of perfect equality ...

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... reform bill was carried; a measure which had been most carefully prepared to re- of tain power in the hands of the oligarchical whigs. Soon VI after it was passed his lordship made a speech in favour of the permanency of the measure, and of its final character ...

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... bill was carried; a' d- measure which had been most carefully prepared to re- of. tain power in the bands of the oligarchical whigs. Soon v, after it was passed his lordship made a speech in favour sdof the permanency of the measure, and of its final n- ...

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... ' triumph to the Whigs was a nt .ly great defeat aid a mortification. The low or Ra- Co sg dical party, in the county forced him lilupoi the £ a * Whigs, to the exclusion of their ow5' candidaite; sa .et anid the aristocratic Whigs of' Yorkshirie have ...

Harddoniaeth

... HuGiaES. CYNRYCHIOLAETH MON. Sylwch ar boen us welwi- Toiaeth Trwy heol Llangefni, Ha I Rbyddfrydiaeth aeth a hi, Er twrw'r Whig a'r Tori. Dewiswyd yn dywysog--Jones-Griffith, Uu sy' graffwr serchog Mon Ian a gan fel y gog O gael hwn yn galonog. Y Foel ...

Published: Friday 02 February 1894
Newspaper: Y Goleuad
County: Caernarfonshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 549 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

REVIEWS

... periodicals. The death is announced of Mr Charles Purtou Cooper, ?? ntho once held a conspicuous po3ition, in the bar and in the Whig party. At Oxford he VIwas t doleble first-class in ?? year in which Lord Westbury and the late Mlr Cousnmissoner Faue each ...

Wit and Humour

... to see business begun With more action, and less aspiring. The historion will write on our funeral stone, When resolved into Whig dust and Tory- They passed not a bill, but they raised not a loan; Be this their sole title to glory l-Punch. Question for ...

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... members, Messrs. M'Laren and Crau- ford, are contending for; and which the leading organ of the Whig party iu Scotland also denounces. We think Blackwood and the Whig organ are right; and trust that changes, which the writer in Maga says, will lower the ...

LLITHRIAD

... gentleman to be duly elected. Mr. Dillwyn, in returning thanks to the electors, told them that he had begun life as a . moderate Whig, and, although in his youth he had en.- tertained rather extreme views, he was a Liberal still. I-le was an advocate for free ...

Poetry

... good men all, Shall rise to blissful peace. Liverpool, Jan. 10, 1863. JoHl B. PEDLER. LAY OF THE BRIGADE. Let Tories and Whigs run their own thimble-rig;, And turn about, take the lead, 0 ! We'll watch all their pranks-aye, and turn their flanks, Will ...

Our Library Table

... respected the venerable champion of Church and State. Whig Liberals might have kept their hands off the laborious patroness of education, the friend of the poor, the advo- cate of the slave. But no. The whigs were like the Somersetshire Squire, who didn't want ...