I IOCTOBER MONTHLIES
... Persano, a Light Business requiring no Capital, and Studying the Land Question of Ireland. Under the heading of A Great Whig Journalist, the politicallifG and writ- in ...
... Persano, a Light Business requiring no Capital, and Studying the Land Question of Ireland. Under the heading of A Great Whig Journalist, the politicallifG and writ- in ...
... The Prince arrived at Edinburgh at a quarter past ten last evening, and was to leave this morning for Che5ter. The Northern Whig hopes that a Government Commission of inquiry, which it believes will soon be issued, will do something to tranquillize the ...
... Conservative now to keep the advantages obtained, and to prevent law from de- generating into mob rule. The distinction of Whig and Tory will disappear, and parties will re- solve themselvesinto Moderates and Revolutionists. To guide this movement must ...
... tax-cart. Harrnessinlg tilde anisiil vas as best lie could, he drove off to the station to muece 1,- blst master; and thus the Whig Lorl-Litenazit of ins ' Li- hiS- eitial cointy ?? received. Behig a great walker lie lp'- I of Initted the butler asid the ...
... Cox, another of the. Commis- i sioners, who appears to have been as despotic as his chief, may be remembered as a partisan Whig D writer, who has made some bold efforts to make D hlack white, and to give credit, not to Mr. Disraeli and the Conservatives ...
... million of money has been spent for Church purposes whilst the present Bishop has held his See. A correspondent of the Northern Whig states that Mr. Nicholson, of Balrath, who was fired at in his carriage some days since, when his. coachruan and fema1e relative ...
... the time-bonoured names of Whig and Tory 1 in the Parliaments of CHnARLs and JAmES II., m of WILLIA1 and o lANNE. Lord DErn vwas the h, last oL the Tories, as Lord PALMEsnEBONn might r, be considered the last of the Whigs. His son and n successor typifies ...
... Society, is to he the candidate elected by the Labour Representation League. He is to be put forward without reference to Whig or Conservative interests, and it any cry be raised about dividing the Liberal interest, and letting in theTory, such cry v-ill ...
... consequently in his seventy-first year. His father, who did not succeed to the Earldom until thirty- five years later, was a strong Whig; but his tastes lay rather in the direction of natural history than politics. He was president of the Linnsean and Zoological ...
... as Sir CHARLES HAN- uld uY WILLIAMS and others, during the,last half uld of the 18th century, were ranked -not amongst unt Whigs or Tories, but, enjoying a special de- ine signation of their own, were styled the Id ?? servants. The rule in force amongst ...
... statement again tue speaker fortified with an oath—there would be such an uprising of the people that no Government, whether Whig or Tory, cuuld resist it. The chair- man at this meeting read a notice that on the occa- sion of the Queen's visit to the City ...
... in 1851, the resignation of Lord J. Russell brought the Conservatives to the very gates of Downing- street; and after the Whigs had retained their offices for a year longer, in February, 1852, the Conservative chief, who meanwhile had succeeded his father ...