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THE NEW MAGISTRATES

... done their name. Thus the Whig party in this city is absolutely a state of anarchy, and it will irremediably perish ere long some attempt be not made to reduce tbe chaos into order. We speak as lookers-on. We are not of the Whig party, for we are a-head ...

Published: Saturday 17 January 1852
Newspaper: Norfolk News
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 632 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

REFORMERS! PREPARE!

... Will there be another compromise? It is high time that these questions should find an answer. bave reason to believe that the Whigs are not unwilling to unite with the Reform party. Whilst we are prepared to resist most energetically any departure from c ...

Published: Saturday 07 February 1852
Newspaper: Norfolk News
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 435 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

RUMOURS OF PLACES AND PARTIES

... it will be long lived in its effects. It must give us authentic and definite information the opinions and of the great Whig par | Whig party, as to further Parliament Reform, and as to the future financial system « this country, especially with regard to ...

Published: Saturday 17 January 1852
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1007 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

LYNN, July 1

... LYNN, July 1. _ 9 -. Lynn Election. —During the past week the Whig-Radical supporters of Mr. Pashley have had two demonstrations/ iv which their candidate has played the principal part On Thursday, they held public meeting, at which Mr. Pashley spoke ...

Published: Saturday 03 July 1852
Newspaper: Norfolk Chronicle
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 771 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

EAST BARNWELL WARD

... given up the Council as bad job ; but his fitting colleague, Mr. Wagstaff, swears rather profanely that he wont give up. The Whig-Radicals have found colleague for him in the person of Mr. who would be great deal more at home by his own fire-ride than in ...

Norwich Reform Association

... and indeed the very weakness of the Whigs justified expectation that the measure would be a strong one. It was proverbial that drowning men would put forth peculiar energy; and such was undoubtedly the state of the Whig party the present time. He thought ...

Published: Saturday 31 January 1852
Newspaper: Norfolk News
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1403 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THIS CHRONICLE

... far in statu quo. Deception is the order of the day, not only with the Tories, but e'qually as palpable on the part of the Whigs. Lord John llusseli can be as patriotic out of office as Lord Derby and Mr. Disraeli are cautious in office. The question really ...

Published: Saturday 20 March 1852
Newspaper: Suffolk Chronicle
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 897 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

NEW PARLIAMENT, 1852

... Boroughs 2 1 Scotland—( 1 Cities Ireland —Counties Cities 2 ~62 Deduct 41 Ministerial gross gaiu 21 Opposition. I Ministerial. Whigs 136 t Conservatives Ralical Reformers 25 Irish Brigade 330 296 Opposition 315 Doubtful* 19 Ministerial \ 315 Majority) ...

Published: Saturday 21 August 1852
Newspaper: Norfolk Chronicle
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 124 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

The Norfolk Chronicle

... not long since, another Whig-Radical portrait. The Whigs in, he said, are very different creatures to the Whigs out. it is quite notorious, that the rather far-seeing of the respectable class have been willing keep the Whigs in,because they knew that ...

Published: Saturday 09 October 1852
Newspaper: Norfolk Chronicle
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 4182 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Suffolk and Eastern Counties

... principles. The effect Mr. Stuart's successfully contesting this borough on the above principles will to eject the present Whig-radioal member, Mr. E. Bunbury, from his seat. Mr. Stuart one of the leading ootinsel in the Court of Chancery, and was made ...

Published: Saturday 08 May 1852
Newspaper: Norfolk Chronicle
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 151 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

SATURDAY, March 13, 1832

... very successful one. It was graced by the attendance of few of those gentlemen who used give respectability and influence to Whig-Radical meetings. Of tlic long line of Fosters, believe the everlasting Henry Staples, whom the chance of mouthing a speech ...

CLERGYMEN DECEASED

... five. At preseat its history is not known. Cheap and Nasty. *• Cheap and nasty, cheap and nasty, the golden maxim of the Whigs, and their worst eoeroy cannot accuse them of not suiting, in this respect st least, the action to tbe word. At time when tbe ...