Ol* R APTIMN PROS PK«
... public men. particularly tin ae of the Whig - ...
... public men. particularly tin ae of the Whig - ...
... FROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT. The Derby Cabinet to bring a Reform Bill—lts probable Character - Policy op tub Whig Leaders— Loro Russell’s impending Retirement The Social Scr encb Meeti no —Difficult Position of thf. Conservative Rank and File—Louis ...
... was necessary, and gave into it. This estimate of the statesman's charieter is not improbable. Lord Melbourne was essentially Whig. Baruiere (says the Alhenirum) has his )m.«session a scries of letters written Madame du Barry after the death of Louis the ...
... dishonest. The general opinion of the Liberal party and I am not speaking now merely of what some people would call high and dry Whigs is reflected very completely by such men Mr Baines, Mr ItasH, Sir F. Crossley, Mr HeadUm, and others, who have refused point ...
... the country, and has no liking for democracy, and in his speech at Bradford ho showed that a few months* connection with a Whig Government had no means taken the edge off his popular sympathies. thoroughly admits the right of the Tories try their band ...
... politicstlie heads of those branches of administration which have no real connection with politics, which will unchanged whether Whigs or Tories are iu. Let the heads of those departments great officers of State with large salaries and high portions, permitted ...
... question of Reform. As the Bs. duty which the then Whig Government proposed, hut which the Conservatives would not yield, was by and reduced ne- vertheless to total abolition, the 7 franchise which the late Whig Government proposed, and which the Reform League ...