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... e whigs BOOTH & FOX’S i e 4w REAL DOWN déJILTs e ston lete ano DOWN CLOTHING ...
... e whigs BOOTH & FOX’S i e 4w REAL DOWN déJILTs e ston lete ano DOWN CLOTHING ...
... from the time of Pitt, in 178, and showedl that the Couservatives aided to pass the preseut measure. It was only wh n the Whigs and the Liberals found themselves in difficulties that they brought in a Reform Bill to take the attention of the Eeople from ...
... ”” went on to say the Whigs would ruin England, and ho had always said so ; they used to get over the backs of the Radicals, now the Radicals jumped over their beads. He then adopted a quotation of Daniel O’Counnell that the Whigs were ‘¢ base, bloody ...
... century the Tory, who believed in the navy for our defence, advocated peace and the reduction of the standing army, while the Whig not only advocated the keeping up of our own standing srmy, but those of other countries. MmflvhxuhmnvhduukH.yd Parliament during ...
... abstainers at Liverpool, said a Sunday Closing Act was as certain for England as that summer would return next year. He was neither Whig, Tng. nor Radical, because it seemed to him a Catholic Bishop ought to have wider g‘olitlct, and, under the shelter of such ...
... course, this will have been accomplished, and because he believes that the Tories will be more likely to yield it than * the Whigs,” he advises his countrymen to vote for the Tor candidates at the next election. We believe {im to be mistaken. Discreditable ...
... '8 effectual. Sold only in fins, 6d., 18 ...
... late baronet :— He was a grandson of the first and nephew of the second Earl Gray, snd when, after the long exclusion of the Whig: fmmli&c. of power, Lord Gray found himself located in wning-street, there could be little doubt that once in Parliament the ...
... incoming ' Cabinet would have much encouragement in the fact that for a long #eries of {::n successive Ministries, ' whether Whig or Tory, have been happy in their selection of the Queen’s representatives, each in turn distinguished by rank and personal ...
... Scotch Conservative members as it is ” ‘' About fifteen ; but most of them will go, Ireland will nearly balance ; and there the Whigs will suffer most, As for England, we can count on not losing more than ten or twelve net,” “Y.;udtm'm.(,m_gu ** That will ...
... greatest in Whig policy and traditions. It may be admittedand such a life, if honestly written, will not conceal it—that Lord Russell illustrated aiso st times some of the weaknesses of the Whig school. But thevalue and services and theories of the Whigs greatly ...
... folded it upon his knees. * What makes it the more lamentable is the fact that Major Septimus Heard is sole propriotor ~f the Whig. That is a secret, gentlemen,” he aidad a moment later, looking around him with a ~-untenance of added distress, ““which I ...