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... /Whig As for the agents. R. E. Watkins, Grubb of East (Winstead, they are hoping for police action. We have taken wltst action we can, a &pokes- Meanwhile Mr. Lockyer continues to seethe. Why do I pay rates. what do we have for? he asked. 11 I to ...
... WHIG CLUB. most respectable meeting of this Cl » yesterday held the Freemasons' Tavern Whitbread, Esq. in the Chair; where, regular constitutional toasts of the a \ interesting recollection Mr. Fox, G Lloyd Esq. was proposed as a cadi|' tor admission ...
... these the Whigs laid their hands, the following statement of the expense of collecting the revenue, under the Tories and Whigs, will shew : Cost of collecting the revenue, in 1829, £4,875,009 Ditto, ditto in 1839, 4,042,000 . Yearly saving the Whigs £833.000 ...
... WHIG CLUB. Tuesday the Members of this Society dined together at the Crown and Anchor Tavern. The usual toasts, and the healths of a great number of Gentlemen, were drank.—ln returning thanks for drinking his. health, Mr. Fox said, he thought this time ...
... WHIG TRUTH. Two instances have come under our notice, on authority on which our readers may rely, of the kind of statements by which votes Were obtained for Mr. Bkthell the recent Aylesbury Election. One instance occurred at Stone, where a number of Dr ...
... WHIG ECONOMY. The Times contrasts in a tone of apparent triumph the Whig Budget of 1841 with the last Conservative Budget 1830. The Conservatives, we are told, left a revenue of 50,430,0001. which their incapable successors have contrived to reduce 48 ...
... WHIGS AND TORIES. Members the Liblral Members of the last, and Government. piiubable Members of ANY FUTURE 1 ORY GOVERNMENT. I.ord John Russell, Sc- Sir Rolieit Peel, proximate cretaiy State for the Co- Tory premier, and leader lonies, and leader of the ...
... THE WHIG CLUB Held their monthly meeting ytfterday the Crown and Anchor Tavern, Mr. Fox in the chair. After the toafts. Mr. Fox paid a handfomc compliment to Earl Thaner, whofc health was drank with great affection and The Duke of Norfolk having propofed ...
... WHIG WEAKNESS. Nearly two months have passed—the House of Commons has gone a pleasuring, and nothing has been done by the Government worthy of record. Time has been wasted, night after night, in the old style ; all the complaints of last session have ...
... WHIG POLITICS. (from the Standard.) The late Lord Ormathwaite, better known at one time as Sir John Walsh and the father of the House of Commons, in a work published several years ago, examined the probability of a fusion between the Whigs and the Co ...
... GOOD-BY THE WHIGS! A SONG (From Blackwood'* Magazine.) Air— Tatty this Brown. Jag. n Good-by the Whigs departure's hand-— the cry o'er the length awd the breadth land; rc-eeho'd gladness from mountain sad glen, And sounds like sea- 'mid the dwellings ...