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LONDON TO BIRMINGHAM

... be proud— if they can. For what does prove—the constitutional right the people of this country—a right which no Government—Whig, Radical, or Tory dare deny them, to assemble at a seasonable hour and in a proper place to discuss any political question ...

Published: Saturday 01 September 1866
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 838 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

VOttrg. THE GOOD OLD TIMES

... through the crowd, and reeked not *bout they hurt, And taught their Pegasus to kick and splash about the dirt; And every jolly Whig who drank at Bruokes's joined to goad That poor young Heaven•born Minister with epigram and Because he would not call a main ...

Published: Saturday 03 November 1866
Newspaper: Bucks Advertiser & Aylesbury News
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 597 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

MR. BRIGHT AND HIS MISREPRESENTATIONS

... Bright should be a perfect master, for he has been one of its most ardent students, at all events, since his friends the Whigs, whom he would see entombed in Westminster Abbey, with an epitaph of his own composing, failed carrying out a Bill of which ...

Published: Saturday 24 November 1866
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 957 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

KINGS LANGLEY

... drunk by the company. Tbe Webbed's was engnemd, the bells tang merrily, sod a happy day was TlMAT.—Friday (yestard i al sea V Whig the anniversary of Miss Hannah de birthday, the whole of the children belonging to bar ninabering about eighty, received a ...

BY OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT

... practically the same it was announced the Conservatives would bring forward. Earl Grosvenor, as everybody knows, is a Whig, the heir to Whig dukedom, and Lord Stanley who, it is rumoured, will second the motion, cannot be considered a Conservative pur sang ...

THE MAGAZINES

... without a controlling hand to guide them.' 'They are evidently so much at a loss what line to take, and how to take it.' The Whigs are falling off from them; the Peelite3 are used up; Mr. Cardwell and the Attorney-General are all that remain of that clever ...

Published: Saturday 10 March 1866
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1009 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

TO OUR READERS AXD CORRESPONDENTS

... Sltorta SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1866. THE ARMY ESTIMATES. Peace, retrenchment, and reform, have long been the watchwords of the Whigs and Liberals. The latter will speedily occupy the attention of the whole country on the occasion of the Chancellor of the Exchequer ...

6ossip. oca own iltae remarks under this head are to regarded as the ex* ■nation independent opinion, from the pen

... practically the same eras announced the Conservatives would bring forward. Earl Grosveuor, as everybody knows, is Whig, the heir a Whig dukedom, and Lord Stanley who, is rumoured, will second the motion, cannot be considered Conservative pur sang. Indeed ...

Published: Saturday 31 March 1866
Newspaper: Croydon's Weekly Standard
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1511 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

JOHN IRISH TOUR

... the magnitude of his wrath, had held up to the scorn and execration of his countrymen as the base, brutal, and bloody Whigs. The sentence passed by the excommunicator of Mr. Bright's new found favorites was not couched in language the most polite ...

Published: Saturday 10 November 1866
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1105 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ENGLAND'S INFLUENCE

... England's powerlessness, so dire ct of which he is a member, .° nc Pursued B^ 7611 censure the mischievous 3with re suc cessive Whig Administrathe j|j t0 forei affairs, and of which e V STES Was 30 con g en an ex P° the State ? the seals of that de P artment ...

Published: Saturday 12 May 1866
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1128 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

MR. BRIGHT'S POPULAR EXHIBITIONS

... suffrage by arguments applicable to universal suffrage, while the reform which he really demands, to retain the least chance of Whig patronage, must fall infinitely short of manhood suffrage. Thus is found on the same platform with Mr. Beales, the head of ...

Published: Saturday 20 October 1866
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1195 | Page: 4 | Tags: none