_^ _ff _oney _ffomnmw
... _highly apoken of . _JCVe regret to add that at home _this is _not _too _rule , rather the _exception _. _^ _. _yort _fKrn _Whig _, • . , : . ' . - . - . \ ...
... _highly apoken of . _JCVe regret to add that at home _this is _not _too _rule , rather the _exception _. _^ _. _yort _fKrn _Whig _, • . , : . ' . - . - . \ ...
... were against tlic Government . Mr Johnston declared that it was time for Orangemen to have _done . with political _parties . Whig and Tory , Liberal and _Conservative , had ' alike betrayed and _trampled upon them . • His _advice : was that they should ...
... was _ready to lay a [[ _manner of failures and crimes t _ ...
... ought to be more _reluctant than _has _friends to have _it _forgotten that in one other _case _besides the _Reform _Bill of his Whig _and youthful days he may _claim something of the appearance of a success . And that case _happens to be the present case ...
... worth _remembering in connection with the _tmtliless babble habitually used in some _quarters about _the proneness of the Whigs to create paid commissionerships . The Tory _Peers _insisted that all the Commissioners _should bo paid , and also that their ...
... _leading facts in the history of _the ill-starred _Argyll , and described his _affecting death . _He _closed by _depicting tlie Whig ' s Vault in Dnnbar _Castle , where , _lie said , one of his own _ancestors had _been _immured . He _promised in his next _lecture ...
... vindicated Mr Wormald with reference _to' _the'Broughton-Ward _requisition' _and stated that a great many of the _leading-Whigs in St Stephen's Ward were _favourable to that _gentleman ' _s return _. ';; . ' . \ ; . ; . _' -1 _- . • • - ' . . _i After ...
... will all _unite to labour to bring peace , and concord , _and prosperity to the land of our common love . The _Northern _. Whig is less _enthusiastic , but _earnest _in expressing its pleasure . In _the _course of an able article on-the subject _the Wing ...
... _Stanley took—or rather in the ono he _followed—in _. _tho _sessions of 1866 and 1867 . The word had gone forth to dish the Whigs , and to that end many things had to be done to which a _really earnest politician would not have consented . So one believed ...
... an _Church . His _death is regretted by all his professional brethren , and by a large circle of _acquaintances — ywthern _Whig . Iitisn PEOTESTAXTS A «« -D _> THE CHnr . cn _BILL . _ The Dublin _correspondent of the Tilnfs , writing _on the 1 st inst ...
... above what is necessary for feeding tlie fire ; and it may be hoped that , in his resolve not to go _along at the trot _of the Whigs , Mr Craufurd will not similarly come to grief . He has not _been so very _successful with the Poor-law inquiry which he set ...
... to the reputation of _Edinburgh ; and record his _vote for _Sir Black , and his friend Lord Advocate Moncreifi . . He was a Whig in politics _we need scarcely say ; but he was so little of a political _bigot that 'his most intimate _friends were two • ...