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town talk.. OCR CORK' O’tr renderi frill understcm'l that tee do not hold onrxhdt responsible for our able con ..

... than the Tune*, and in the time of Charles James Fox and the Whigs, an organ great power and influence. Ferhaps it attained its highest literary eminence when Uolland-park House was a great Whig and literary focus, and Tom Moore burst on the world of London ...

POLITICAL GOSSIP

... our readers, is an old exclusive Whig club, where Mr. Gladstone is scarcely as yet more popular—such the stubborn nature of old Whigs—than at the Carlton, of which he has never ceased to member. The device of those Whigs who wished to put away from their ...

A ROYAL CORRECTOR OF THE PRESS

... A ROYAL CORRECTOR OF THE PRESS. M. Aiming Petettn gives the following curious details as to the palatine. putdialitaa and *Whig of the groper°, Napoleon a speech Some days before the opening of the son the director of the Imperial printing office is commanded ...

CROPS IN IRELAND

... CROPS IN IRELAND. The Northern Whig»*ja The fine weather of (be past few days has inspired a more cheerful spirit in the reports of onr correspondents this week. Generally, they agree in stating that tho grain has net, to great extent, suffered irreparable ...

lIIIIINIMINia_ 01114 INKSIV4pIIIIIOIChi habitual t• ABA- a very 144111.11 lira

... begun to dream of an op. =ty sear at hand whet they should be able to the itioems and enter into actual Reform was dead; the Whigs had per- obeequies, sod the country had not gone mourning. They had waited lung enough for decency's sake, but now they were ...

HOW BAD BLOOD IS GENERATED!

... communicated from the adult to the infant! An example, which proves this satisfactorily, is reported as follows in the Northern Whig : The other day, at a vaccination station certainly not a hundred miles from the Belfast Exchange, a woman entered the room ...

TUNNEL BETWEEN ENGLAND AND fr^^

... year since dety ?? fresh copies with the Board of Trade. Up to the o» ' moment, however, the Preaic^nt of the Board of T ? Whig or Tory, haa not been tempted by the visi profit to take the matter in hand. After the laying • telegraph round the world, ...

Published: Thursday 08 April 1869
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 219 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE LATE DEAN OP EXETER

... baffled, and by the Bishop of Exeter, so obnoxious to every Whig, was not to be endured. They tried bluster in Parliament. In the House of Commons Lord John Russell sought for sympathy from his Whig-radical friends on this unheard of interference by the Bishop ...

Published: Friday 25 January 1861
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 658 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

GOVERNMENT DEFEATS

... GOVERNMENT DEFEATS. It was an independent supporter of a former Whig- radical administration who compared the Ministry to a tough beefsteak, because it took a great deal of beating. Certainly the Palmerston Ministry ought to be tender by this time, for ...

Published: Friday 19 July 1861
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 1140 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE CORNISH BISHOPRIC

... enough, whilst Conservative strength is daily increasing, whilst education advances, whilst Whigs blunder and deceive. We glory in the Brighton victory, while the Whigs rave and concoct excuses that a spider could kick overboard. We are told their defeat was ...

Published: Friday 19 February 1864
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 1454 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE MONTGOMERYSHIRE EXACTION

... Of course Montgomery has been kept by the Con- aarvatives, and the majority was satisfactory. On *^day morning however, the Whig-radicals were SSa*!! thC Mommg W™ » their tTL 2 '-™d£ unless all the returns are published, the numbers are a delusion. The ...

Published: Friday 18 July 1862
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 273 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ALLEGED CURE EOR IRISH DISCONTENT

... many land bills which for a period of several years have been brought before Parliament by successive Adminis- trations, both Whig and Tory, the value of this custom has been fully recognised in the proviso which recurs in every one of them, That nothing ...

Published: Saturday 11 September 1869
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 276 | Page: 6 | Tags: none