THE WHIGS
... had Well more from Whig than Tory n ...
... had Well more from Whig than Tory n ...
... popular with the mass, Thus the was persistently claimed for the Whigs. game of parties and politics has been played tor many a long day without a word or a warning being uttered by Whig or Liberal in deprecation of Radical democracy and demagogy. But ...
... The old Whig Globe, it is said, is about to change hands. It has been purchased by Mr Wescomb, the proprietor of the Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, for the Carlton Club, and that gentleman is to leave Exeter forthwith to conduct it. If there is any eminent ...
... nal Whigs' opportunity. The moment, however, the Whigs regained their supremacy, by the aid of the people, they forgot their promises and pledges, and when the Reform Bill of 1860 was introduced, by a Liberal Government with Tory head, the Whigs withdrew ...
... Government of which he had been a supporter had departed from the rule of Whig Governments in past time, and instead of taking entirely the advice of certain portions of the Whig powers, had taken advice from that section of the House among whom I generally ...
... night, has caused great excitement in tha political world. The noble earl belongs to so high and influential a sectidn of the Whig aristocracy, that his opposition to the Reform Bill, if it implied that of his family, could not but be exceedingly damaging ...
... our Queen ; unflinching Dissenter, he ha* praise for the clergy of tho Establishment. There used to be a familiar saying, Whig and something more; Mr Cossham is a Radical and something more—he is a politician who has learned how to combine broadness ...
... OUTBREAK OF CATTLE PLAGUE IN IRELAND. (By Electric Telegraph.) A second edition of the Belfast Northern Whig, of yesterday, says:—The rinderpest has broken out in the townland of Drennan, county Down, five miles from Lisburn. Four cattle have been killed ...
... Legislature has just rejected a Bill which proposed to that no man over seventy years of age should make a will. The Belfast Whig says :— * the Belfast daK market on Friday, one parcel of new flax sold at the 1 high price 17s 6d per •tone. ...
... silence of nearly twenty sessions, and delivered a neat little address. In passing, it y be observed that he repre- sents a great Whig family—of which his father, the Marquis of Westminster, is the head—and therefore has a right to take things easy in Parliament ...
... TRANSFER OF THE GLOBE NEWSPAPER. 'Globe newspaper, after a long career as a Whig organ, hencf PaBSed int ° the hands ° the new ro P rietor the 1* advocate Conservative principles. One of atte articles night is directed against Mr Bright's the *° S6n ...
... complete Conservative ; not through any unwillingness, on the part of the Premier, to share power with the moderate Whigs, but the moderate Whigs would not take their share either of that or of responsibility. There is reason to believe, however, that they ...