OPINIONS OF THE PRESS ON THE MINISTRV
... favourably contrasts the appointment Mr. Disraeli had made with the spirit of jealousy and exclusion which has usually marked Whig Administrations. ...
... favourably contrasts the appointment Mr. Disraeli had made with the spirit of jealousy and exclusion which has usually marked Whig Administrations. ...
... Ye LIS: 4- :3 • • slur. P.I. p. ,.. -••• • 41 S '' 4s • 6 I PosiwyPsyg • eleas -•••• 30 •-30 • • ' esbeet Ow 4 • - I Whig, pw ha 44 0 CO4. Fs - - -- I .l • •.• ft.mo i••• • •• Lumpol ll 17 5 5 . -. 1 PITe. P..* TALLBIII7. M.. 141 Ca•L pre. ewl : ...
... I V lir w iallhaolo se Oa b =C:a as Alosimil 64 UN al Ma Oa ft* Ow domed olossila Ohmoo ow la amows, at • aTh sr amismor am Whig, al trona Sa Mu 111 ea Oh 11.1.111.4417.1444148 e. ...
... ; i-'ider it, when it will duly sanctified. one can fail to see and appreciate the sarcasm of this fine sentence.—ATorthrm Whig. Tour > >at Toulon*.—A Toulon letter says :—The attention the War Department appears te seriously directed the subject of ...
... con- trasts with the appointments Mr. Disraeli has made with the spirit of jealousy and exclusion which has usuelly marked Whig admiaistrations. THE NEW CHANCELLOR THE EXCHEQUER, The Birmingham Post says “So rapid a rise of so comparatively young a man ...
... the Conserva- tives were enabled, during last session, to pass such a measure of sound Parliamentary re- form as made the Whigs tremble, but which, because based upon the first principles of our glorious constitution, will be the means of ad- ding to ...
... Ministry they will have ' again to sit sullen in the dark shade of exclusion from office, for assuredly Mr. Gladstone, the Whigs, the Radicals, and the Liberals will come in. 11 ...
... considered favourable to the country, and that is in his freedom from all family ties. It was always urged as a gross vice of Whig administrations that family connections hadgreater weight than political services or eminent abilities. A RUSSELL, a GnEY, ...
... —although this also Mr. Stephens had refrained from mentioning,—that the Poor Law, which was scandal to our age, was passed by the Whigs. Before reading the resolution he wished to make one practical remark. The lecturer had asked them to. give Mr. Disraeli’s ...
... eight or nine seats, which would include one for Dundee, and perhaps for Aberdeen. There are several whose party feeling as Whigs, or whose strong political policy as Radicals, induces them to sacrifice their feeling as Scotchmen, and who prefer seeing ...
... wait,' it was said, ' until he has retired, and all will be well with us.' But no sooner has the storm carried away wicked Whig chaff than the heavens are forthwith darkened by new clouds of Tory chaff. That the writer of frivolous stories about ' Vivian ...
... ques- tion upon which they were allagreed. In matters of politics they «differed much,—some of them were Conservative, some Whig and Liberal, and some downright Radical (laughter). Some ef them were for the establishment of reformatories, some for industrial ...