FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE
... to about borne aflstn. (Laughter.) You Whig* hare bad power 1832, You pledged to and but I'have seen oarl7 it out. The expend*tore 1836 amounted little mare than £40, ...
... to about borne aflstn. (Laughter.) You Whig* hare bad power 1832, You pledged to and but I'have seen oarl7 it out. The expend*tore 1836 amounted little mare than £40, ...
... directors, to Lord Derby’s Government for a subsidy” (hear, hear). The subsidy to the Liverpool line. had been granted by a Whig Administration. I said, that bein g the case, I suppose it liberal mea- sure, and Iam out what my liberal friends approve. ...
... oonduet of the water committee, who seemed desirous of acting contrary to the wishes the whole town ; and said, what between Whigs and Toriee in the Council, the ratepayers got pretty well robbed. To show how injuriously present system of rating operated ...
... council. (Hear, hear.) It was, however, the ratepayers' own fault, they had sent men into the council mer ...
... af -kbe Hotel, Aintree, near Liverpool. 7517a9 LIT. Furnitoei. good Family HOUSE, oriati entertaining rooms, Are bedrooms, whig-room. ana aod.«ood kitchens. mod«rn and rood kitoben garden, ic.—Apply Lightbody and Boa it. Derby-sqaare. Caatfe-st. LET, ...
... And, not to mention many other revolting enactments, we may well sum up our brief catalogue by an expressed extract from a Whig writer, professed admirer of William the Third : In his History cf the Civil Wars of Ireland” thus speaks Dr. Cooke Taylor— ...
... Council.—(Hear, hear!) It was, however, the ratepayers' own fault, as they had sent men into the Council merely because one was a Whig and another a Tory, and between both they were getting jolly well robbed.—C' Hear hear!' and laughter.) He hoped the ratepayers ...
... the hirsute peer to their Absolomonish crispiness once more, for they b e d been deplorably damped and uncurled by the anti-whig coc k sc omb in question. Respecting the composition of committees, electoral and -otherwise, Sheridan has also struck a s ...
... Macassared uirsute peer to their Absolomonish crispiness —ure, for they had b een de p lorabl y da mped and uncurled by the anti-whig eecksconab in question. Respecting the composition of committees, electoral and otherwise, Sheridan has also struck a sympathetic ...
... guardian their rights and Interest)—instead which it now have the mere instrument or tool .of the tWe'greai aristooratic parties, Whig and Tory, bv turns—must either resolutely blind to abuses of the grossest character in almost departmental the State, or personally ...
... Lord Macaulay, as may be verified bv reference to the Fifth Volume of his History of England, are canvassed actively on the Whig side!’ —Punch. Fair Remark.—A middle-aged young lady is so angry with the Government for asking her how old she is, that she ...
... mutual jealousies and of divided counsels, to an extent that would inevitably fatal to their chances of success, even if the Whigs and Kadicals together represented, as they certainly do not, a clear majority of the constituency. The Chairman of the meeting ...