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Scotland

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Highland, Scotland

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Inverness, Inverness-shire, Scotland

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IRELAND

... of the extension of their line to Cookstown. Referring to the present visit of the Earl of Carlisle to Ulster, the Northern Whig says— Wherever he has appeared he has been received with marks of respect and affectiou, which betokened at once the loyalty ...

Published: Thursday 23 October 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 932 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

uJan

... innocent to the conduct of those recreant !Lomat. Catholics who had the temerity to accept and seek place* at the hands of the Whig Goverl.ment. As a fitting punishment for these re•cresnts it is semi-officially announced that the bishops sad clergy will ...

RETIREMENT OF MR MACAULAY. (From the Daily News)

... innocent enthusiasm, when Retitle was supposed to have returned to this planet for the express purpose of inaugurating • of Whigs —young Macaulay was every w here spoken Of as the mm of the e l etch. Brilliant, indeed, for many • year was tile dust and ...

MR ROEBUCK, M.P., AT SHEFFIELD

... steadfast adherence to the opinions which I then expressed that has won for the approbation of my countrymen. I was neither Whig nor Tory; but I went into the House of Commons determined to advocate that which I believed to the interest of the people, ...

Published: Thursday 11 September 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1554 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

LITERATURE

... iu 1706, when both the donor and the donee were sound Whigs. Addison remained true to his early (With; Swift deserted the Tories, and became the bitterest satirist and fiercest opponent of the Whigs; but Addison still was sacred in his sight. He never ...

Published: Thursday 17 January 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1932 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

MISCELLANEOUS

... Barebones. So with the Whigs. The only one of tolerable dimensions In the Reform era was Althorpe, who was pretty much of tbe stamp of Sir Francis Baring, or Mr E. Ellice, of Coventry, the only real sample of the old Foxite Whig now living. What with the ...

Published: Thursday 11 December 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2036 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

TIIE INCOME TAX

... ion will be to elaborate a scheme of fiscal reform. For the performance of such a task the present Administration, as the Whigs have ever been, is but poorly furnished; and in all probability the aid of others must be called in before not only any thing ...

PERSIA

... recollect right), his lordship has nevertheless been indebted to the Whigs for his opportunity of making a political figure, and to the practice and support of principles something more than Whig for his popu arity an .access. Appointed by the Russell Cabinet ...

Published: Thursday 10 January 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2357 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

rtfank

... Qn. A !MTh EDUCATIONAL ORANT.—Acoording to Mr Whiteside, there is a gentlem in who says that he received £lOOO a year the Whigs to read the newspapers at his tam, and afterwards £lOOO a year from the Tories to reAd the newspapers at home. Tim NFN UM MILITIA ...

CAITHNESS AND THE NORTH

... when he is coming back again, why he went away without letting the people know what he was is, and is to be; wh e th er h e is Whig, Tory, Radical, Chartist, Peelite, Ministerialist, or Know- Nothing; whether he belongs to Mother Church, Free Church, U. P ...

REPRESENTATION OF EDINBURGH – ELECTION OF MR ADAM BLACK

... the Bailie been left to himself, he would not have stood a single day. What (continued Mr Black) is the meaning of the cry of Whig Clique 4—ls it adhering to the sentiments of Fox, of Grey, of Jeffrey, of Cockburn, of Abercromby, and of Sir James Gibson ...

AMERICA

... represented by Mr Buchanan, and the Free-soil interest, represented by Colonel Fremont. As in this country, the old distinctions of Whig and Tory have been in a great measure obliterated by the influx of new questions and the rise of new combinations; in the United ...

Published: Thursday 16 October 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1190 | Page: 5 | Tags: none