Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries

... dropping of a day on the completion of each century. FROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT. Londn, We&n-day &Mis The consternation in the Whig camp increases every day. They seem now fally sensible of the deplorably weak state to which the ministry is reduced, and every ...

Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries

... declining age, and that whilst a new penal deode accompanied the oblivion of his glorious intellect, the fear of his friends,;the Whigs, to arn Ireland, lest the breezes from France should fan the Irish oak into verdure, brought about the termination of their ...

BY OUB USUAL EXPBESS

... this subject—(loud cheers). Now, as it has been said that Mr Villiers is the brother of Lord Clarendon, and that he may have a Whig object in bringing forward the question, I may as well state, once for all, that it was at our instance—at the instance of ...

MR MONCREIFF AND HIS CONSTITUENTS

... made great subject of accusation against our y that after Lord Derby’s explanation in Parliament a meeting was held of the Whigs to see how the opposition could be best carried on. I want to know what ground there was for such a complaint, for Lord John ...

USTICE TO SCOTLAND TO THE EDITOR OF THE CALEDONIAN MERCURY. Edinburgh, 12th April 1852 in am induced, by seeing the

... humiliating coaxing, doled out to us from the procecds | of our own taxation. In pursuance of a settled line of policy, on | which Whig aad Tory are alike agreed, to strip Scotland of every vestige of her separate nationalily, aad merge it in that of England ...

Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries

... cattse as it was tteti almtost emnbodied in the itersizu of Fox. 'flers were fow, Scotch coittties at that titut itt which a Whig cetididtute had aity chance, of' sutecess, but tite aiiatuture itiflitetce, whichl hail swayed Atignts for tioure than ictlf ...

CITY ELECTION

... the origin of thing that they might know how they stood. Tere had been a good deal of idle and foolish talk about “the “the Whig Clique,” the « Parliament-house Clique,” but it all meant hear). They all knew that when a bad charge could not be brought ...

On the 26th Bit., in

... the Presidenoy, had been well received by that party throughout the Union. Fillmore Webster, or Scott, was expected to be the Whig candidate: The American papers contain the usual amount of disaster by fire, steam explosions, and railway collisions by which ...

Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries

... Mr Clay remained in the United States Senate until 1842, when on the 31st of March he rcsigned his seat. In 1844 he was the Whig nominee for the Presidency, heing defeated by Mr Polk. In December, 1849, he again took his seat in the Senate, where he remained ...