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Exeter and Plymouth Gazette Daily Telegrams

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Exeter and Plymouth Gazette Daily Telegrams

THE GILCHRIST LECTURED. To the Editor of the Exeter and Plymouth Gazette. Sir, quite endorse the feelings which ..

... to Exeter will be of little avail. I must say I was disappointed both with the lecture aud also the after-remarks. As Old Whig I disapprove of any political remarks being made at a science lecture, and were I the chairman would repudiate anything of ...

MODERATE LIBERALS AND THEIR FUTURE

... the abolition' daises whose, tastes whose convio^ns, tTwhose interests prescribe complete unity. Ratting bad thiug, but the Whigs will shortly have to °hoSe ratting from a party and ratting convictions ; between ratting from a name Ir on SfS the realities ...

B l y Ministerial splendour which Sir Dilke has adoptee since his Foreign Secretaryship gracefully borne, Lut ..

... short speech on Sir W. Harcourt's Dill, expressed or intimated feelings which are widely prevalent amongst Mr. Gladstone's Whig adherents or allies. Every lar and every sportsman, whatever may tie his political opinions, regards with profound distaste ...

CONSERVATIVE ORGANISATION NECESSITY. To the Editor of the Exeter and Plymouth Oazette, Sir, —My letter in ..

... ponder over the warnings uttered by two eminent men of opposite parties—the Duke of Argyll and tbe Marquis of Salisbury. The Whig Duke denounces his party leaders, in that, for the sake of unity, they have compromised justice truth. The Marquis exposes ...

THE TRANSVAAL MUDDLE. A NURSERY RHYME. Who caused the Boer rebellion I, says the People's Willy, Witk speeches ..

... spoke against it I, says Cairns, profoundly, I gave it tc them soundly, I spoke against it. Who cried shame upon it We, says Whig and Tory, All who cired for England's glory, We cried shame upon it. Who approved it strongly We, cried all the Rads, And mear ...

THE GOVERNMENT AND THEIR EGYPTIAN POLICY

... exclusively Liberal, for the three Home Rulers in this lobby—Sir P. O'Brien, Mr. M'Coan, and Mr. E. Collins—belong to the Whig section of the Irish party. Mr. M'Cullagh Torrens and Mr. Pender are among the Independent Liberals voting with Ministers. ...

THE COMING LIBERAL GOVERNMENT

... Radical, and that left centre at which, according to M. Thiers's image, the heart of the country beats, is pretty sure to be Whig, and not Radical. There have been no signs of Radical enthusiasm the elections. The farmers expect something done for thsm ...

THE WOMAN SUFFRAGE DIVISION

... 31 Liberals, 8 Parnellites. The majority, with Ministers, counting the tellers, was made up of 211 Liberals, including some Whig Home Rulers, 27 Conservatives, and 5 Parnellites. Of the leading Conservatives, Sir Northcote, Lord J. Manners, aud Sir H. ...

THE VICTORIA HALL, To the Editor of the Exeter and Plymouth Gazette. Sir,—Winter is coming on, and the Victoria ..

... Minister !” Little minds lavish of language so big) ; Factions insanity, Aping humanity, Rant of the Radical, wail of the Whig. Turkish atrocity, All Lowe's pomposity, Girdings of Gladstone, and wrath ef Argyll ; Every stump orators ghastly jocosi Hurled ...

THE RADICAL MILLENNIUM. LINES SUGGESTED A BECENT SPEECH 818-UNGHAJC. Wonderful will be the future When our ..

... the creeps ! Murk the gentle soporific ! fee how placidly he sleeps Swall iw yours and then we'll steer you, Moderates, Whigs, and all that ilk, Oh, so gaily to the rapids On the raft of Jo and Dilke December 19th, 1883. J. H. D. ...

Exeter Gazette Daily Telegram. THUESDAY, NOVEMBEE 1880. The state of Ireland becomes worse and worse, as daily ..

... remedy. There is no merit in this assertion, save its extreme audacity. It will not bear analysis. As Lord Arthur Russell, a Whig nobleman, pointed out when speaking at Tavistock recently, force is a remedy for anarchy. It has been again and again proved ...