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MR. BRIGHT CARRYING THE FIERY CROSS OF REFORM

... millennial reign of Liberal Administrations, under which the only changes will be such as flow from the gradual overthrow of the Whigs, and the steady growth of Radicalism. _An historian ha; remarked that lo popular movement ever succeeds unless it be headed ...

Published: Friday 05 October 1866
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 936 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

THE GREAT STRIKE OF IRONWORKERS

... been wound up or are undergoing that process. ?? Dnintersitx fa eperthantoef T then RePRACth. -Rye are far from blaming the Whigs for the importance §they have attached to the social intimacy between the re- l public of letters and the party chiefs of a ...

Published: Monday 29 October 1866
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2449 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

NEXT MONDAY's DEMONSTRATION

... to- prevent the people from going to Leeds ir large numbers on that day, and the opposition to the movement by | Tories, Whigs, and timid Liberals notwithstanding, | the number of Yorkshiremen intending to taks part in the proceedimgs does not fall shortiof ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1866
Newspaper: Leeds Evening Express
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 519 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

_£caai»g;& Ux ihe £ixtsi&t

... nevertheless it has had its Whigs and Tories, Uke other pro- fessions ; and its eminent men have been divided between the parties pretty fairly, as elsewhere. Just as Fielding was a Whig and Smollett a Tory, Burke a Whig, and Johnson a Tory, so the V\ ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1866
Newspaper: Huddersfield Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3243 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE YORKSHIRE POST AND

... have for them. (Hear, hear.) Now that the matter was fairly before the ountry, they must demand from any Government, either Whig c»r Tor*, settlement the Reform Question ; and if till nought forward, they must judge it upon its own merits, without any ...

HOTELS. Ac

... refers the decline of thelrish population not to the 44 three l»ad harvests, but 44 twenty years almost unbroken Whig rule. The purpose of Whig Cabinets was, said, be thus expressed: 44 Drive the human beings away America, send in cows and oxen ; make Ireland ...

THE HULL NEWS. HULL. SATURDAY, Om. 6, ISOS

... bill was nessesary, and he donned it to be brought forward. It was not for him to say that there were very great evils in °Whig for a bill so grimily that it should be presented ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1866
Newspaper: Hull Daily News
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 1208 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1866. OtKSHIRE POST a PUBLISH DAILY, UxsraanrßD, ONE PENNY. „ TWO PENCE. TO . PM TUB (OMHT)

... in being critical. their eyes the political world was in a state of dreadful degradation. The Conservative was a bigot; the Whig was a humbug ; the Radical waa anob. The stupidity of the first, the hypocrisy of the second, the vulgarity of the third, were ...

METAL MARKETS

... the days of Queen Anne the Whigs have beaten the Tories this ground. Any time during these last thirty years, the moment a young talent burst his shell, lie was seised upon and carried off to one or the other of the great Whig houses, and if his ]>olitical ...

POSITION OF POLITICAL PARTIES

... happy in being critical. their even the political world was in state of ifreadful degradation. The Conservative waa bigot; the Whig wis humbug ; the Radical waa a snob. The stupklitT the first, the hypocrisy of the second, the vulgarity of the third, were ...

MR. FORSTER ON THE REFORM QUESTION

... the Tone he be too closely etched. Mr. h next geg . defies Lord Derby Jestion, to do sio n in ing „ LVnot brStlld either by Whigs or Tor es withou fbP consent of the advanced Liberals. Without their and have for ever disposed of the excuse founded on the ...

Published: Saturday 27 October 1866
Newspaper: Leeds Times
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1307 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE FRENCH PRESS AND MR. BRIGHT

... ai6plicablc to ?? ,suffige, and yet the reform he really demands, to retain the least chance of being patronised by the * Whigs, must be far short of minhood suffrage. The same reform platformexhibits men of very advanced :opinions, such as Mr. Beales ...

Published: Friday 19 October 1866
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 1104 | Page: 5 | Tags: News