LOCAL NOTES
... ar.d the contractors will fulfil their en ...
... ar.d the contractors will fulfil their en ...
... these two generals has never been very well appreciated in the House ot Lords, and now at length open rebellion has set in. The Whig Peers find it hard to stand by Mr. Gladstone ; they will refuse to submit to Mr. Bright. Lord Russell has led the way of secession ...
... deserting the clergy by consenting to the abolition of Church-rates, but it was generally the case with all statesmen, whether Whig or Tory when Church matters stood in the way of politics, the Church had to suffer. The giving up of Church-rates only whetted ...
... first blush of the arrangement there dqes not appear to be any ground for satisfaction beyond that alluded to by the veteran Whig statesman. Peace is good thing ; but that too high price has been paid for it in this instance many will inclined to believe ...
... as deputation. In his last paperlet he broaches a scheme for selling the forfeited pledges of statesmen, remarking that the Whigs would realise largely by bringing them into the market. Hogarth is biographised in the historical sketches of George 11. reign ...
... preventing the passage of these measures under the auspices of the Conservatives. There was time when the Whig party, or those who stood in the place of the Whigs, did some good for their country. They broke the neck of Papacy on the English throne by bringing ...
... with the Tories ; aud experience has taught us that that respect the Tory was far more honourable opponent of labour th .n the Whig. are so far complimented by tha adnii-sion of superiority, but must deny the implication that Tories are opponents of labour ...
... forgetting , ' that more exciting sensation, their political differences, ready to act up to the refrain Conservative, Radical, Whig are we ; But all of us Tories in protection o£ thee, Our British Association visitors have generally acknowledged that we gave ...
... fundamental change V'hlev. Part °f constitution should be definitely t ,°f the Radical programme, it is not only liable that the Whigs and a large section of V u a i als mi iftlesce with the Conservatives L ' 'T ''°nservative coalition Lord Stanley leade C of ...
... consultation Whig lawyers to'aaSetfaS? whether it was libellous. But if any serious idea of its author was ever entertained, it was abandoned and a malicious and scurrilous attack upon the clergy in » rL Chronicle seemed to the infuriated Whig, the hSt ...
... the interests of the Church, aud that disregard of the religious welfare of the people, which have been so discreditable to Whig Administrations. The arguments in support of the division are unanswerable. No one attempts to answer them. Even the genius ...
... CORNELIUS O'DOWD. Forfeiting Paradise,—Persano.— A Light Business requiring Capital.—Studying the Land Question. A GREAT WHIG JOURNALIST. CHARLES READE'S NOVELS. W. Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh and London. amusements. THEATRE ROYAL, EXETER. Under the ...