(©dfliiral rtspomlfi Iff? oannot undertake to return rejected eommumeat Correspondent* mil oblige, ter ring one ..
... observe,'’that, j.rocrediog-* are against him, 1 refrain from entering it, ...
... observe,'’that, j.rocrediog-* are against him, 1 refrain from entering it, ...
... hot we are nnaware whether Lincoln's company bad opportunity to distinguish Itself. On his rstorn be was pnt forward by the Whigs candidate for tbs Stats Legislature, but was beaten because the majority of electors consisted of democrats. Lincoln now went ...
... find that they had put the one feather too much upon those shoulders - - (hear, hear). But it had always been the failing the Whig Government tii.il they could not manage their finances ; for they never had had a Chancellor who dared to* say to certain classes ...
... dying, saith, Mount high on the sacred hill.* In whisper, spoke once more. While his life was ebbing fast: * Soul, whom my whig has wafted o’er Some billows of all the past, I have brought thee nearer that tranquil shore, Whore both must meet last. ‘Therefore ...
... the eon- North Western w M 20mail-clad steam gunboate tuiii», ri s:,| ; .| . w ., 2- 5.5 w,:,:k, traffic «• The Richwmd Whig, in alluding the sinking of veai J held *l 1110 Discount Company, ■seism Charleston harlmur, says :-Tlie North ha. taken pel ...
... General Stevens is pusae.ssi.m of the mainland near Beaufort. The Federals had brew socccsssful in in Western Virginia. Richmond Whig, referring Mr Sewards* » patches on the Trent affair, thinks England will renew her deraami for apology and such avowals as ...
... Mament on the passing of the Reform Bill he came forward as a candidate for the North Riding. spite the opposition of the great Whig and Tory families, who resented his independent opinions, be secured his election by the organisation of the small holders ...
... Par- • linmi-nt on the passing of the Reform BUI he came forward an candidate for the North Riding. the opposition the great Whig and Tor) liuwhen. who re(CTited hie independent opinions, hiaeloel.n()T the organization of the email holders, and from that ...
... did not think .J .inving it vrerel, die must have gone the rocks leeward, being » higher tone into this journal, We (Northern Whig) Shores. I I back. It more in the way when coursing, than otherwise. nearly low water. have reason to know that it has some ...
... serious disasters; but, in the heart of ]>eiiple resolved to free, disasters stimulate to increased exertions.” The Richmond Whig thinks Jefferson Davis’s Gov.-m--ment the most lamentable failure in history, and think* ihr helm shotdd surrendered to abler ...
... The Murninj Chronicle was first published in 1770, and was for long period at the head the press of this country, and the Whig side of politics. .About IS its palmy days were passed, and ten years afterwards—in 1850—it had got a very low ebb The I’oelitc ...
... R;i h-rw(,• .led l.j- , ~t., lie., .dlvttu.funmch . ...