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Manchester Courier

SIR ROBERT PEEL AND THE REPRESENTATION OF ASHTON

... they knew they could not—for tho Cabinet was composed of so-called Whigs and so-called Radicals, and the Radicals knew they had got the Whig party under their thumb, and with tho Whig party they could do whatever they pleased. They saw the Cabinet weakened ...

Published: Monday 07 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 803 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

CONSERVATIVE POLICY WITH LIBERAL SAUCE

... followed out uninterruptedly. They did not take into account the fact that the procedure in question was worthy of Tories, while a Whig Government had actually ordered it. A chacun son metier. When Mr. Gladstone, a Liberal, chose to adopt a Conservative policy ...

Published: Friday 18 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 578 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE PEERS AND THE ARREARS BILL

... gave way on the Land Bill. Some persons seem to be erifted with singularly short memories. What happened was this, that the Whig lords gave way—the Duke of Argyll failing to press, and Lord Lrmsdowne withdrawing, their respective amendments. But the principal ...

Published: Monday 07 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 653 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

The session has come to an end, and the members of Parliament are now scattered over the face of the

... true, reasonably be expected to work well together. The elements of which the Government is composed are inharmonious. There Whigs, and Liberals, and Radicals, and Republicans, and they respectively pull, with more or less determination, their several ways ...

Published: Saturday 19 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1703 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

The Lords' Amendments to the first legislative fruits of the Kilmainham Treaty are to be taken into ..

... SherbrooKß In the Lords nobody hears anything 0 he is, in fact, just as important as Lord Abebdare, Lord CarlinGFOB other of the Whig mediocrities whom gencies have at various times forced stone to promote. But he is still able, and since the House of Lordsaapr> ...

Published: Tuesday 08 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3226 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

CORRESPONDENCE. Letters intended for publication should be written briefly and concisely as possible. The ..

... agitation against every sentence and action of the then Prime Minister. The various leaders, of tho Radical, Republican, and Whig sections of tho Liberal party caught their chief's aim, and throughout the disunited kingdom spread war against the powers ...

Published: Tuesday 08 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1510 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE SESSION OF 1882

... but only that of obstinacy. The division , taken at last, and then finding himself on the first rule by the combined forces Whigs. Tories, and Radicals—of all, in fact, are interested in the maintenance of of speech in the House—Mr. Glad- hung up that new ...

Published: Saturday 19 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 5632 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

The barrenness of the Session has been varied the passage of one measure concerning which has been heard. While the

... differentiates the great class of lies. Speaking of one of the most degraded scoundrels who ever polluted the earth, the great Whig historian says of his mendacity that a man who has never been within the tropics does not know what a thunderstorm means; man ...

Published: Friday 18 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2566 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

diffi * ulties arising out of Suez Canal, yS ' always requiring * a d most >ti«nl management hare intensified

... of participating in one of the most unsatisfactory and futdeof the many futile expeditions into which she has drifted under Whig leadership. All's well that ends well, however. The Indus got safe to Suez with her precious freight, and is this time far ...

Published: Thursday 10 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2547 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

TORY NOTIONS: BY TOM PALATINE

... he pockets the affront, and admits that, his brave words on the Arrears Bill are akin to his senile vapourings against the Whig malcontents, then he makes a most palpable and disastrous admission that his popularity is on the wiine, and that the Radical ...

Published: Monday 07 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2833 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

The whole trutll about Egypt and tbe ntion there probably sever be any single human being. Like the Question, the

... ° er Peace on earth and amongst the nations which they fondly it to be certain to become. Events have the Tory chief of a Whig-Radical Anient —as Palmerston was nickby a recent wi'iter —was more nearly than those of his opponents who scorned Nil and ...

Published: Thursday 03 August 1882
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3089 | Page: 5 | Tags: none