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PERFECT SAFETY. BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. //WHIG. McDOUGALIS' non-poisonous SHEEP and LAMB DIPPING COMPOSITION. ..

... PERFECT SAFETY. BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. //WHIG. McDOUGALIS' non-poisonous SHEEP and LAMB DIPPING COMPOSITION. Sheep can be dipped or droned with safety, and without effects on the wool and animals which are by the nes of poisonous dream. IT FREES TEE ...

Published: Saturday 08 August 1868
Newspaper: Hampshire Independent
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 135 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

18 GETTING BUY NOW. PHILLIPS & CO., TEA. MERCHANTS, SING WILLIAM STREET. CITY, LONDON, E.O. 4rs 'Whig STRONG ..

... 18 GETTING BUY NOW. PHILLIPS & CO., TEA. MERCHANTS, SING WILLIAM STREET. CITY, LONDON, E.O. 4rs 'Whig STRONG BLACK TEAS, I/10, SO. VERY LXCELLENT BLACK TEA is now only 26 per lb. RARE CHOICE GENUINE ooFFICE.I/.1/ 1 , 1 1 ,1 / 3,1 / 4 T lb. • PIICS CORIENT ...

Published: Saturday 22 August 1868
Newspaper: Dover Chronicle
County: Kent, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 147 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

REVIEW OF THE PARLIAMENTARY SESSION OF 1868

... carried by the Whigs, the Bill has proved absolutely destructive of Whiggism ! Whiggism, as it has come down by hereditary prestige or traditional repute, has no longer any existence, except in the weak concei of Earl Russell. The old Whig families coquetted ...

Published: Saturday 08 August 1868
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2786 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

good deal of scandal has been created this week by the publication of an unauthorised summary of the Irish Church

... responsibilities of the chief of a great colony. Mb. Gladstone and thb Whigs.—We hear a rumour founded on a substantial basis, that some of the leading or Constitutional Whigs, as they are called, are grievously offended with Mr. Gladstone —more ...

THE BRIGHTON GUARDIAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1868

... more than two centuries; and he eared nothing for reputation for political honesty which he avowedly sacrificed to dish the Whigs.” Mr Disbxili boasted at the Mansion House on Wednesday, “of the aeries of measures had carried to complete the great enterprise” ...

Published: Wednesday 05 August 1868
Newspaper: Brighton Guardian
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 269 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

CortrtivonDrnrc. THE MALT-TAX

... suffrage, and now, in order to obtain the support of the lower ten thousands, every artifice is practised by Whigs and Tories to get up a cry. The Whigs raise the cry of a free church for Ireland, by disendowing and disestablishing the Protestant Church in ...

Expenditure of the Country

... Gladstone. 1864- 66,508,265 Palmerston and Gladstone. 186.5—66 67,434,760 18 1 Russell and Gladstone. Thus showing the Whigs have expended in excess of the Derby administration in the last seven years average of upwards of £4,000,000 a yeai. Income ...

Published: Saturday 22 August 1868
Newspaper: Oxford Times
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 417 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

PARLIAMENFARY INTELLIGENCE. FIUDAT

... so remain, whether the Whigs like it or not. Apropos of this point, however, we quote the following extract from a letter to the Nottinghans Journal by the Duke of Portland, which expressed forcibly and pointedly the Orthodox Whig view. That there is grave ...

WHAT WILL HE DO WITH IT?

... called the traditional old Whig adherent as its basis; except so far as, like the Duke o Portland, others have withdrawn, who, like him have been alarmed by their new formed alliance with ultra-radicalism. To these older Whig sup. porters have of late ...

Published: Saturday 29 August 1868
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1626 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

SITTINGBOURNE

... surprise, and that some high priest of politics will make known to the eager world some profound policy, confusing to the Whigs and delightful to the Conservatives. There is one thing worth noting, that while Mr. Disraeli has been educating the Tories ...

MR. DISRAELI

... which will be read with great interest:- - • - • • • • • • • •• • There arose a school of which it pleased scioliets, both Whig and Tory, to speak lightly as Young- Englandism. Of this Mr. Minch soon not only a member, but a balder. • • • The principle ...