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TO COKRESK)NI)ENTS

... its proper reward by intelligent and free people.” All the religious sects, and the best portion of the old democrats and whigs, are uniting in favour of Freemont everywhere in the No them and Western States. His election is earnest v wished the friends ...

LITERATURE

... parents, but had attached himself to the Established Church, and studied at her hall, though he never took license. Pollok was a Whig and Aird a Tory. Pollok plunged at once into the arms of glory and death. Aird has had a long career, and has for nearly thirty ...

Published: Thursday 09 October 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3086 | Page: 2 | 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 ...

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

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

MR LAING, M.P., AND HIS CONSTITUENTS

... public affairs. Mr Laing first touches on the late war. After describing the feeling that pervaded all classes of the people, Whigs, Radicals, and Torie«, with regard to Russia, he says— On the other hand, a small and unpopular minority believed these views ...

Published: Thursday 23 October 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2401 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

—— SAFE PREDICTIONS. WHENP'ER you hear a“ patriot” spouting nce@ssan Of vice assured, of Virtue doubting. Tn ..

... should fate capricious Deny you bread, Your rich good friend, grown avaricious, Will “* cut you dead.” Whene'er a statesman, Whig or Tory, Talks loud and jong Of serving country for glory With yearving strong Needing no Sovereign to regard hin; ook in his ...

Published: Friday 24 October 1856
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 265 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE SCOTSMAN'S OPINION OF MR LAINO

... taken by him- elf and by other in the questions of the war, ind the peace He says that, “with a rare unani- nity. Tories, Whigs, and Radicals vied with cach { in crying out that war should be made upon Russia freedom was secured for ‘the Polea, the Hungarians ...

Published: Friday 24 October 1856
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1732 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE PERSIAN EXPEDITION

... to freedom; while, at the sametime, it answers very well to hold out respectable Umon-lovmg Mr Fillmore as a bait catch any Whig State, specially in Empire State of New York he may have a hotter chance than Buchanan; but we may he pretty sure that in any ...

CONTROVERSIES OF THE DAY

... Rome and the Protestant Churches. The Archdeacon is an influential family—brother of Mr Evelyn Denison, M.P., and also of the Whig Bishop of Salisbury— but all his tendencies are in an ultra direction. It is, of course, as to his merely theological tenets ...

Published: Thursday 30 October 1856
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1799 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE REPRESENTATION OF THE NORTHERN BURGHS

... ” and Mr Laing’s political opponents could, I am sure, desire nothing more than his pre- sent manifesto. Does he start as a Whig, Tory, or Liberal, or is he all three, or neither / He com- mences by admitting that Russia was a power con- | sidered universally ...

Published: Friday 31 October 1856
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1645 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

MR LAING'S ADDRESS TO HIS CONSTITUENTS.—OPINIONS OF THE PRESS

... of time. Me Laing was sent to Parliament as a Radical Free Trader, superseding Mr Loch, who was supposed to be too much of a Whig. Fora time he supported the coalition Government, was a warm advocate of the war, and, as he himself reminds us, supported ...

Published: Friday 31 October 1856
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3437 | Page: 3 | Tags: none