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Reynolds's Newspaper
CONSERVATISM IN ESSEX
... influence of Whig tyranny (hear); whereas in the county of Essex they had at this moment, Sir Thomas WVestern's son representing the borough of Mal- don; and during the time that he (MIr. Beresforo) had been connected with the county he had seen two Whig minem- ...
A GLANCE AT THE ELECTIONS
... A GLANCE AT THE ELECTIONS, I TO THEF EDITOR OF REYNOLDSS NEWSPAPEBE. SItR,-Lct not the Pallmoretonian Whigs be too cock_ a-hoop at the result of the el0tions, but rather let thorn take hoed lest their epponents prove stronger thmu is supposei within the ...
THE GREAT ENEMY OF REFORM.— LORD PALMERSTON STOPS THE WAY
... furious competition between the established rival firms of Whig and Tory in the vending of reform nostrums. Each of these the working classes were asked to accept as the only genuine article. The Whigs charged the Tories with trying to sell a spurious species ...
REFORM PROSPECTS
... measures of reform. .hess would almost certainly desert a Ministry decdedly resolved on carrying a strong reform measure. Soch Whig families as the Grosvenors, Filz- williams, Foleys, Beaumonts, and Ojintons would all probably lend their votes and influence ...
THE LAST SIX YEARS OF WHIGISM
... iecascreS the party in- -i. . a relorm rnrute i- 'tribly con- .- niocut di-h in thl Whig bill of ?? ?? t i., .rs ;i~ad, an~d ' Liberal * , , ; '0g ...
THE DEFEAT OF THE BALLOT MOTION
... but surely considerable English towns, such as Penryn, Hertford, and even Tewkeebury and Tamworlh, will be able to call their Whig members to account if they persist in refusing not secrecy, but pro- tection to the voters. The small band of Conservative ...
EARL RUSSELL AND REFORM
... many of its superior members being in th( House of Peers Is a fatal weekness. Like other rotter and decayed substances, this Whig Adiministration provided It be not too violently shaken, may oontinu to exist In its present unseemly entirety. It the Radicals ...
THE DISSOLUTION OF PARLIAMENT
... ministers resant their Protectionist doctrines. Lord Derby had come into office through the weakness and -mischances f the Whigs, and he appealed to the country to discover whether he really possessed its confidebco. The answer was in the negative; he ...
THE PREMIER AND THE PARLIAMENT
... find it difficult to give s atiosfatory reply. Bat we may judge by the tenour of his and other Whig discourses, that neither the present or any other Whig Government would view with favour a ?? Reform Bill. GIRQACOHUB. T'm Lord Chancellor' rectory of ...
FRIGHTFUL STEAMBOAT COLLISION
... volving a serious loss of life toon- place in Lough Foyle, about fifteen miles from Londonderry. A correspoudent of the Norf1ern Whig, writing from Londonderry, gives details:-' The steamer Garland (screw) left this city, and proceeded all well until about ...
EARL RUSSELL AND MR. GLADSTONE
... v both were to introduze a Reform Bill, I suspset that of the Tories would be more democratic: thtr the on( hatched by the Whigs. In justice, however, to Earl Rassell, I should state that he has endeavoured to exculpate himself from th, Oharge cf birog ...