GREAT WHIG MEETING
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... I WHIG.RADICALIBME; or, WHO'S WEIo p I -- - -9~ .. ?? it ?? Startling and strange as are the eccentricities occasionally deve- loped by Members of the House of Commons, we are not yet of those who are inclined to believe political honesty so degenerated ...
... THE DISOXVFITURE OF THE WHIGS, 1 AND THE DECAY OF WHIGGISM. TO THE EDITOR OF HEYmqOLD8 NEWSPAPHB Su,-Lord Palmerston's Ministvyxnow exists only by sufferance. At the termination of the last session it a could command a bare, scant, and precarious majority ...
... Uncultivated Land Great Britain.— The Northern Whig directs attention to the faot that a war with the United States may produce at least one good result in this kingdom, by forcing upon us the neoesslty for cultivating the millions of acres of land which ...
... 1I859, at Willis's Rooms, a reconcilia. tion was patched up between the whig leaders (then out of office) andthe various sections of the opposition. Ib Was then understood that the Whig magnates should forego theirmonopoly of place, and consent to the in ...
... Conservative demonstration took place Colchester Wednesday night. Major spoke vigorously favour maintaining the old distinctions Whig and Tory. Captain Jervis made somo remarks war in America. Ilia speech was in favour of the right of secession, and the duty ...
... political opponents. The political battle that is looinihgin the distance is not one between Whigs and Tories, for these parties are one in opinion; but between Whigs and Tories combined to oppose the advance of the Indepe ident Liberals who represent the ...
... matters of finance and to the economical management of public affairs, the financial Reform Association oommends itself alike to Whigs, Tories, and, in fact, to all who value good and cheap government. There ought be Urge attendance the meeting to-day. ...
... fear that his confede. rates, if not his fellow Whigs, have already inverted that cry, and that with them there is, even now, to be heard a mutter of Down with the Lords I Let Sir James and his Whig brethren beware. They are not in weak hands. The ...
... the whole Hlouse is Conserva- di tive-the other half consists of Whigs, Radicals, advanced t, Liberals, and Peelites. ti By a combination, resting on no principle whatever, tl the Whigs and Radicals have hitherto continued to hold N place. We are disposed ...
... that the time may come when the Peelites will refuse to be of the Whig tail. Mr. Gladstone is not a man to pass his life, and waste his splendid abili- ties, as the servant of the effete Whigs. Mr. Cardwell and Sir Rober;, Peel wilt not always he content ...
... Lord Derby has cheered his mtn, whose inirits flag, with the hope that they shall have nice little victory, and tease the Whigs Into some sudden fit rage, wherein they will, as good Sir Robert did once upon time, the reins, even when the team has just ...