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THE IRISH NATIONAL JOURNALS

... the service of Ireland. It calls upon them to reject the Whig candidate, a boy scarcely out his teens, son of the member who has just got his reward for years of servile following from the Whig Government. The People of Ireland, on the other hand, sees ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... Russell and the old Whig Rump who can see little administrative ability beyond their own charmed circle. A sentiment of this kind Mr. Gladstone can of course have no share in. He is of that aristocracy of intellect which the Whig aristocracy birth have ...

The Irish Harvest.— An interesting survey of the Irish harvest is given by the Dublin correspondent of The ..

... but of all classes, regarding the crops. every part the country the tone the press is desponding. According to the Northern Whig.- -The disastrous continuance of wet weather is filling the minds of the farmers with aloom and disappointment. The hay has ...

The death is recorded, at the age of 65, of Professor Hengstenberg, of Berlin, who for 47 years was intimately

... possession, but this did not materially increase his income. Sir Robert succesf ully contested Nottingham in 1861, against the Whig party, who adopted Lord Lincoln (the present Duke of Newcastle) their candidate ; and again in 1865 ; but he was afterwards ...

THE CHINESE NEWS

... vehemently opposed, and the present Premier was compelled to fieht losing battle upon the subject. The damage that was done to the Whig-Radical cause by that battle could not be repaired by any success which was afterwards obtained by agitation and clap-trap ...

meeting the Central Chamber of Agriculture held in London, on Tuesday, a resolution was passed condemning ..

... participation in matters of controveisy. He very seldom speaks in debate, and he has never been inclined to take office in Whig Administrations. The nan Mr. Whitbread has likewise been mention-d among others for ths pott which he declines. Hollow ays ...

We observe that a bazaar for the benefit of the Blind School Home will be held in Easter week. Of

... that will come forward' at the proper time, and, meanwdiile, Colonel Boyle, who formerly represented the borough in the Whig interest, has been here, endeavouring by his personal influence, as the representative of Marston House, tokeep up tbe fast ...

SPEECH OF MR. GATHORNE HARDY

... never intending its objects to carried ? Who but the Whigs (hear, hear). They held out hopes to the working men who banded themselves together as Chartists, leading them to imagine that under Whig rule they would enjoy a Utopia and we know these men were ...

The Earl and Countess of Cork are to entertain succession of visitors at Marston House. Sir A. Slade, Bart., has

... in the opinion of the geologists, show that a considerable subsidence of the earth took place there at one time. The folio whig grants have been made bythe Gloucester and Bristol Diocesan Association :—St. Gabriel's, Bristol, new church, £200. Churches ...

Varieties

... into ridicule for being the son of a hairdresser, made answer : I am, and I am come into the House to give a dressing the Whigs. Archbishop Whateley asked a pedantic schoolmaster, who applied to him for post, and who appeared to have a high opinion of ...

Deaths of Note. A Waterloo Veteran.—The death is anuounced of Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Sowerby, one of the few ..

... word, who made many friends, and never made an enemy. He did his best to be good, honest, open-hearted Whig, according to the fashion of his time—a Whig who, with aristocratic tastes, had a keen sympathy with the populace who, loving ease and the refinements ...

MR. GLADSTONE AND REFORM

... contained in any bill that had been read a second time. On the other hand, the idea of any compact between Parliament and the Whigs who sat behind him never entered into Mr. Gladstone's head. Still more marked was the tenor of his arguments. To some extent ...