LORD STANLEY
... takes his name off Brooke's. However, the apswer has proved not quite accurate. Lord Derby has ceased to be a member of the Whig club, Mr. Gladstone remains a member of the Tory. ...
... takes his name off Brooke's. However, the apswer has proved not quite accurate. Lord Derby has ceased to be a member of the Whig club, Mr. Gladstone remains a member of the Tory. ...
... takes hie name off Brooke's. However, the answer has proved not quite accurate. Lord Derby has ceased to be a member of the Whig club, Mr. Gladstone remains a member of the Tory. ...
... my Conservative friends that the rejection of the bill will be moved by a Whig peer, and in that case it will, they say, be seconded by Lord Derby. They believe that several Whigs will support them, among them the Duke of Somerset (for whom no place has ...
... Times, whereof Maj o r K no x, the unseated Conservative member for Sligo, is the proprietor, declares that the indifference of Whig statesmen (exemplified by Mr. Gladstope's t rea t men t of the Irish rail wa y s que stion) is convinci ng a ll th oug htf ...
... my Conservative friends that the rejection of the bill will be moved by a Whig peer, and in that case it will, they say, be seconded by Lord Derby. They believe that several Whigs will support them, among them the Duke of Somerset (for whom no place has ...
... where o f M a j or K nox , the unseated Conservative member for Sligo, is the proprietor, declares that the indifference of Whig statesmen (exemplified byMr.Gladstone's treatment of the Irish railways question) is convincing all thoughtful men.of the necessity ...
... taste of to-day would think intolerably fulsome. Some coolness sprang up between Mr. Barnes, the editor, and certain of the Whig chiefs. One day while Brougham was sitting in Chancery he received the following letter from Lord Althorp :— Dear Brougham ...
... Senator from Ohio, in which State he had long been settled. Mr. Wade was always Radical in his sentiments, but he was called a Whig when he commenced his Congressional career. It is interesting to note those with whom he was associated. Mr. Fish, now Secretary ...
... Senator from Ohio, in which State he had long been settled. Mr. Wade was always Radical in his sentiments, but he was called a Whig when he commenced his Congressional career. It is interesting to note those with whom he was associated. Mr. Fish, now Secretary ...
... shown tact, judgment, and business capacity, and has succeeded in amassing a large fortune. Politically be was an old-line Whig, contenting himself with a determined opposition to the Democratic party, and especially devoted to the principles of protection ...
... shown tact, judgment, and business capacity, and has succeeded in amassing a large fortune. Politically he was an old-line Whig, contenting himself with a determined oppoition to the Democratic arty, and especially devoted to the principles of protection ...
... eager, for personal reasons, to expose the inexperience of Lord Brougham as Chancellor. Lord St. Leonards recounts how the Whig and Tory Chancellors, long opponents, if not real enemies, shook bands, and he looks with displeasure on Campbell's life ...