SIR JOHN PAKINGTON ON AMERICA
... the agrlculturlst were In-a poSpeoS _ t o 1laeut would do wshat they couidtea e.late~te The Biht liou. Gentlema colued by w~hig fo the Wou0 giutg Ilce~is B & lon1g ecaano. ?? pro ...
... the agrlculturlst were In-a poSpeoS _ t o 1laeut would do wshat they couidtea e.late~te The Biht liou. Gentlema colued by w~hig fo the Wou0 giutg Ilce~is B & lon1g ecaano. ?? pro ...
... SOUTBERN ACCOUNT OF THE GRE&T BATTLES, ?? .+A -t2 An_ J It ^A (Jirok ?? ?? Whig, Sept. 20.) We are kindly permitted by Governor Letoher to ?? the following extracts; from letters received by him yeiter. d a y : ?? Tuesday, Sept, 16. After the advance ...
... Shepherdstown. An engagement Islrmpend Iag. The Confederate General Lee hs made preparations to meet the enemy. The 24ichmond Whig' has information that the entire don. federate los In the battle at Misnawse was 5000, and In a&I the engagements in Maryland ...
... with 3M4lellan, we may expect the next arrival to bring us news of another bloody battle like that of Antletam. The Richmond Whig estimates the Confederate loases In Maryland from 5000 to 7000; but con- sidering the dreadful battles fought, and taking also ...
... rascal, and vicever3a, If you were a Tory, and wanted a place, it was the duty of All good Tories to stand by you; if you were a Whig, your chance was small; but Its feebleness was all the more reason why you should be proclaimed a martyr, and all your opponents ...
... bitterness of party spirit, engendered during the reforming times, Is becoming softened byyearsandexperience. Thirty years ago, Whigs and Tories regarded each other as the enemies of the State; but time has modified these opinions considerably, and convinced ...
... money found upon thems. Ths Case excited great surprise at the hearing, and was not concluded when our report Ieft.-Eorthern Whig. Tnx A usTRnaII JACE S trzp~inD. -The cele- brated bushranger, Gardiner, is still at large. The last that was heard of him ...
... probable object which they bad In view. I say only what the present Government and their supporters admit, when I say that the Whigs, single-handed, standing in their own shoes, are not a match for the Conservatives ; that their tenure in office depended ...
... condurct.' And, referring to one of its members (Dalzell), he says, The General Is sad to have struck one of the captive Whigs, when under examination, with the hal; of his sabre, so that the blood gushed out. (.,Vtes to Old Mortaity, chap. 28.) II ...