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The EUERTON and RUTLAND PLATES did not fill

... m. Conductor E. Pettier Johnson's Sign N'iue Hiils, 4 yrs. Post, yr*. j Capt. Little's Phoebe. 6 yrs. Mr. W. F. la*e's The Whig eon. Mr T. Cattle's Commotion, Cy. Mr. K. Gray's Surplusage, C yn. .Mr. Smith's Ducal, aged Mr. R. lane's Master , Mr. Wardle's ...

THE AMERICAN MARK

... Petersburg, Septembers, Night. Moscow the principal silversui-.hs are now preparing presents for King .John of Abyssinia, whig*' sent him by his representatives who are now in St. Petersburg. These presents consist of ikons, images, and church ornaments ...

THE NEXT GENERAL ELECTION

... they could not count on the mechanical support of their newly found friends. Lord Hartington may argue as he likes — the old Whigs may fret find fume because their dictum is not accepted by the community generally—but it is all in vain. Public opinion is ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1888
Newspaper: Leeds Times
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1231 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

(XJTTUN,

... li- Crtu tcue during lb* pwi day*, and lia* rui«d vu/ throughout, it generally reported that o.nruk-rableae.liQ* order* were Whig American account. the iput the detnaa-1 ha* b**o ilu* lor American. and only a limited business has 1 Seller* hate offered ...

MR. ARTHUR ARNOLD AT STOCKTON

... But, for the present, we need not go beyond Ireland. Lord Hartington's enthusialsm for symmetry was quite foreign to the beat Whig traditions. When the battle has been won; when, by a ?? of Parliament, we have set the final seal upon the sins, the sorrows ...

Published: Monday 22 October 1888
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 905 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

LORD HARTINGTON AT IPSWICH. IPSWICH, Wednesday Night. At the invitation of the Suffolk Liberal Unionist ..

... now constituted, for the extremest Radical as well for the most moderate Whig(cheers) so h»ng neither the one nor the other consent give their adhesion to tliat which Radicals, Whig?, and Conservatives alike but very short time ago thought to a demand ...

THE QUARTERLIES

... this statesmani is. mpotke,'of ~as: a in V between the Tory Administration~s ofth'e lend of ithe last PB D and the Whig Opposkitinsand the Whig XMuistries of th f begnnngof the -present~ century. tut we have bunm e il ~further, described as an adivanced Ifbewl ...

Published: Saturday 20 October 1888
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1539 | Page: 12 | Tags: News 

NOTES ON THE WEEK'S NEWS

... and for the last eight years in the Upper House, entitled him to the gratitude of the country. His lordship was a typicil Whig, but a politician of broad popular sympathies. The stepson of Lord Palmers ton, the politician, and of Lord Shaftesbury, the ...

Published: Saturday 20 October 1888
Newspaper: Leeds Times
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2619 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LIBERAL MEETING AT MIRFIELD

... both parties in the State were steeped in a, polic of repression. There was nothing to choose before April, 1886, between Whigs, Liberals, and Conservatives. Thioy wvere all clamouring in 1881-82 for coercion; but the Liberal party found coercion to be ...

Published: Saturday 14 January 1888
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 885 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

CiDamtt’Mlba ika Mto tmitii OOHRESPONDENCE

... and it was follows 1 not with strong hostile vtows to tbs Qsvonumnt I tfeougtit when I eotarad PsrUaaaat wo had had soougb of Whig rule You hate named acre from the Conaarvaliea la impost to mstti toe work nr awo than libsrals could over daro moMd.-nufford ...

MR. GLADSTONE'S GRIEVOUS ERROR

... simply maintaining the view held by the Liberal party down to 1886. Lord Harrington reminded his audience on Wednesday, neither Whig, Radical, uorLiberal doubted the wisdom that view, and in refusing to carry out the grievous error committed by Mr. Gladstone ...

MR. HENRY CHAPLIN, M.P., IN LINCOLNSHIRE

... future manage. mont of couutv business than the turning of these elections into poitieal contests. Whether a candidate were a Whig, a Tory, or a consummate Badical, he would vote for the best man for the purpose quite regardless of what his political opisoxs ...

Published: Monday 22 October 1888
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 909 | Page: 3 | Tags: News