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NOTES OF THE WEEK

... the Liverpool demonstration, that the P-Conservatives, by their conduct in office, had dissi- he pated the notion that the Whigs enjoyed ' a monopoly or, of Liberalism ? tZ, The returns of the Revenue for the quarter and the n year ending on Saturday ...

Published: Wednesday 04 January 1860
Newspaper: Derby Mercury
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2295 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

THE REVENUE

... rib’s success, and that of a still greater man before him, Sir Robert Walpole, who kept the Hanover family the throne and the Whigs in office for many years. ...

HIS CAREER,

... resignation of the Secretaryship at War by Mr. Canning, L ad Palmerston took the vacant place, and filled it until 1828. When the Whigs came into power, Palmerston became Secretary of State f-r Foreign Affairs, and represented South Hants, and ultimately the ...

TO W N TAL K

... marked change of ministers: Lord Derby gave way to Lord Palmerston, with broad-bottomed following, for it included, with old Whigs, the best remains of Peel and few decided Radicals —indeed, one Quaker, professor of peace principles, not in the Cabinet, ...

MEETINGS OF THE WEEK

... (a certain well-known mason in Belfast) he will tell you all about me. The swindler has not been heard of since.- Northern Whig. y. sI to or I's id )n he m 0- y, ly a Ig Dd t, d, et ? it et THE DUKE OF NEWCASTLE. On Thursday afternoon, at a meeting ...

Published: Wednesday 11 January 1860
Newspaper: Derby Mercury
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1542 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

ROC ESTER

... recollection of them will, 1 have no doubt, make you more cautious for the future. Hones of the Poor im Belfast. —The Northern Whig has been sending its reporters into the poor places of Belfast, and it gives very terrible descriptions of the Mato of the ...

town talk. OUR VOIfDOS CORRESPONDENT. t that do not hold VUf na opmum..) Although a little late, some remarks the

... brother, George IV., made him for a short time Lord High Admiral. But some of the same sort of influence that made that devoted Whig, experienced turfite, and aristocratic leg, General Anson-who had never served with any regiment since, a subaltern, assisted ...

isuuomrot Xcws

... and Lord John Russell and Reform. In little while the leadership of the Whigs was placed in Lord John Russell’s hands, and a hard time of it had. The reaction came, and the Whigs were unpopular ; Lord Stanley bad forsaken them, Sir James Graham had done ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... between England and France, in I P, consideration of NAPOLEON'S code a la Free Trade. f el Commercial treaties, as even the Whig Economist )n reminds us, are difficult bargains. England will in be expected to give an equivalent by reducing duties S ...

Published: Wednesday 18 January 1860
Newspaper: Derby Mercury
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4776 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

APPALLING SHIPWRECK

... Denison, who bequeathed to him the bulk of his immense wealth. In politics Lord Londesborough was a staunch l supporter of the Whig party. He is succeeded in his r title and extensive landed property by his eldest son by his first marriage, the Hon. William ...

Published: Wednesday 18 January 1860
Newspaper: Derby Mercury
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2308 | Page: 8 | Tags: Commerce 

MISCELLANEOUS

... even tenor of human conduct, and which Mrs. Poyser felicitously describes as “summat wrong in its own inside.” —Northern Daily Whig. Peerage Titles.—There arc several duplicate titles in the British Peerage, eg., there is a Duke of Devonshire and an Earl ...

Published: Saturday 21 January 1860
Newspaper: Derbyshire Courier
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3711 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

TOWN TALK

... money. le was then about forty-four years of age, with strong taste ft* applause, patronage, and public life. His wealth| and Whig connections made him a peer, and earned his honours, for he patronised everything, subscribed to everything, and became president ...