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Elgin Courant, and Morayshire Advertiser

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Elgin Courant, and Morayshire Advertiser

A correspondent writes: -,\s you from ramp I-- camp yon roiistantly catcli the cry. Cnarlton liav*- you iicard ..

... come into power, or endeavoured to retain power, perpetual reductions Hie army and ravy. That had not been matter of party. Whigs, Tories, and Radicals had bad the same end in view, and among them they had done , their best this gn nation utterly powerless ...

THE MINISTRY

... on her Majesty at Windsor. The Timet repeats the chance of Derby Administration may at present summarily dismissed. A pure Whig Cabinet impossible; and the Times revert! with increased confidence Lord Palmertton. It fears that Sir James Giahsai's illness ...

THE ELOIN AND MORAYSHIRE COURIER. FK 15. 2. 1855

... Aherdi-en would have >loivd Hffore the country having preferred service# of the Duko of Newcastle those of tho head of the Whig party. la any view of tho case, it must admitted, that there is au air of hasty pettlshness about the conduct of Lord John ...

THE MINISTERIAL CRISIS

... not speak with entire certainty of the fact Ibst Lord Clarendon, l»rd Oraneille, Lord Cranwoith, and Sir George Grey, four Whig members of the late whose character is entitled the utmost respect for their high sense political duty and honour, declined ...

Dl ItATION OF ENGLISH MINISTRIES

... was initruiuenial cat rying the for the reform of the representative system the resignation Earl Grey, in August, 1034. the Whig Ministry was modified, and Viscount Melbourne was rai-ed the office First Lord of the Tte.isn. y. This Ministry was dissolved ...

OP PARLIAMENT

... a eurions coincid* nco It happened that, the very time when Gladstone and hit frio were severing their connexion with their Whig remarkable scene was sctnally taking place in the Tory having direct and significant ref.renco to theo>. Great dissatisfaction ...

THE CRISIS—THE NEW MINISTRY

... little chance of the Pce’.ites coalescing with the Tories; nnd meantime there seems no probability of an early union with the Whigs. In the present position of parties in the House, this is Car from being pleasant state of inntters, to those who look for ...

Lhanbryde. F. T. (Our correspondent would confer boon soc ety if persuade a few of his neighbours to bow more

... the Timet.) TTt« Timet says, Lord Patinerston has endeavoured extract the materials of (Jovemuient from the remains of the Whig party, with some addition of men new the ranks of official lifo. The first and most difficult office to fill of those now vacant ...

■ OTICE OF RCHOVAL

... House of Commons to pass resolution which first drove Lord Aberdeen from office, and then split up the coalition between the Whigs and Peelites, but has failed to secure its consent ucrtt committee. On Friday last he appeared in his seat in Parliament, and ...

sertETinv or state roa bcotuisb

... or two ago got Urge additions from the Government at Venezuela that British subjects .k.tftninrfr’-- It was just a gigantic Whig job. Uewoald should have the same tkcOiUcs of obtaining that article. , t i against the bill, which might accorded the subjects ...

LORD BLLRNBOROUG : a MOTION

... now * deploring dodged our arms through a long series of * years, though Ministry after Ministry was changed, * and though Whigs and Tories tools their turn blunder and misfortune.'* The disasters of the last war arc then introduced in tha following passage ...

ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM

... into tire Cabinet, was immediately anhjeeted to such inffoences. that could not carry out his own convictions, and became a Whig cited Macaulay, Sir W. Moles worth, and Sir Tl. Hall, a' inatances point. If ever any minister was carried into power the voice ...