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ON THE LIBERTY OF THE PRESS

... take coiupo-lo:s, pressmen. devils, ties. What means th:s change! The suzn of ll the story's, 'onres deprest are Whies, and Whigs in p-w'r are Tories. -Newcaeste Courant, November 4, 1732. ...

MILITARY INTERFERENCE

... ed a or peaceable expression of opinion had prescriptive right of Englishmen-at least. to ail Whig authoritie.' Still less did :i possible, that undera Whig government force would actually surround a peace. ,bly ; interrupt its order and its proceed. ...

LONDON IN THE JACOBITE TIMES.*

... held; and the injudicious manifesto of the Pre- tender, which many of his adherents sought to disavow as an invention of the Whigs, was followed by a crowd of libellous pamphlets, the hawkers of which, with the ap- proval of the new Secrefary of State, Lord ...

LITERARY GOSSIP

... delightful book, but they will not lead to the ht appointment of the octogenarian Whig as Leader of the Liberal party-although it must be ad.] ermitted that, old as he is, Whig as he is, and deaf a as he is, he would be a better leader than Lord po to HarLington ...

Poetry

... smere vrictor's mrnsyrpal end stuen The ertrile and the vain, snhb mies shal t ie A watchwvord till the hutore shalt be free I Whigs I-that is the dlitinuiton, that makes the difference. ...

MAD JACK HALL OF OTTERBURN

... George for the Whigs, raised the cry that the Church was in danger aud excited a spirit of disaffection through- out the realm. Riots were continually taking place in all the large towns, Dissenting meeting houses were pulled down, noted Whigs were threatened ...

A MAN OF ACTION.*

... see how in this a game of crose-parposes Godolphin's Whig Cabinet insinuated that the commander it had chosen I Yy wasl an impostor, while the Tories hotly upheld I. the heroism of its grmat a Whig as could be found in the kingdom. The assailed met the ...

FEMALE'S DEMOCRATIC FESTIVAL

... cherished the Whigs might in' vain talk about their P D10 franchise in the counties. Nothing would go down Iwith the working men but. Universal Suffrage.' (Loud cheers.) In proposing this 'eatension to the counties of the £10 franchise, the Whig landlords ...

Poetry

... forbidhim beinglaughed at For paying so dear, For bilueezing his dear. THE CHARTisrs v. WHIG ANiD ToRtY.-The Chartists have placarded the town, challenging both Whig and Tory to open discussion on any, or all, principles of' Chartism, nd those of Wtigisa ...

MAD JACK HALL OF OTTERBURN

... Forster, a member of P erlia- ment, and a T Mr Fenwick, s ?? uat far off, the one a Whig and the other a Tory, their loud words breathing defiance a- eacl other, Queen Anne's Whig Ministry had obliged her to follow a precedent established by Wlliiam LnUd Mary ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Bright. In mother political article, headed What is, and what may be, the Whig party pur et simple get very hardly rapped on the knuckles. The reconstruction of a purely Whig Govern- mient is declared next to impossible, and its continuance in power ...

PUBLIC MEETING IN NEWCASTLE

... agitators were paid. by the Carlton club. Now, was the Dulke of Welling. ton'who sought to screen the Whigs in a position to assist the movement, or were the Whigs likely to be the instigators ? The expression that this was a Tory movement was a base fiction ...