stated to the electors previously to the last “election that hat if 
the late Administration should ER 0 did not 
b ig ene GIBSON, Preside 
e 
think that any other ae tee would be satisfactory 
did not co; 
Mr. 
nt 
Board, at his re- eap for Ashto s E X Poor lay 
the followin € remarks on his ae accep Tow NN 
“Tt m aid by many that I o 
8 irm gd em: especially a Govern 
with whom 
othe — et i h 
es the E ors and non-e 
I must tell y: 
ir at I 
5 a a fte a Sick ofa t * 2 
the support of the country, and consequently (sr M $ h Liberal party o veu — > th 
the House of Commons. A eges are two | them in opposit Bb ba d - inilio nopu fenat. —.— and so disseve pu p^ M Md 
* Eus Ne ture et RE the * x Bifold ountry in 8 —.— us we rennen be, Wë ablaa miwa 
S 4 rrying on rnment of th 
for 1 he aga and being Miet with that Rtn t repeatedly taunted wit h our —.—— 
when ther — peet of union ai 
the administra! », while I feel the difficulty and responsibility 
not to 
— ted w ithou ur — ent, and it is called 
I sa y it is no — Soe nci. 
unde t d u 
ir 
me 
Ms have told you on Me 
ag as the deep-seated cause of - oan 
the present wat, that it was ot t $ ambition of one man, or 
— es m n E Ks — men; but that it w ms the e grievous | principles, not ipae act hcm them when possessed of pow 
12 i had lasted for h ns now agitating e publi ty sh 
s, That wasnot the 
throw off should have been happy had r ~ ssi 
which I thought . 5 been og arliamentary Reform. d h 
had. the l together with France that n present Government would, at the earliest time which 
and . Austri able 
arrangement ia the subject. was n 
these three Powers—Austri France, and 
Ses as 
principle: an eir 2 cordi: 
order to give effect to the general principes of che together, i 
party of this country, that m ned to mec > 
the administration of affaire at nat them 
party have been wh 
There were two ques 
Reform Billand the state ofour foreign relati 
ce or the m nt to enter i 
nclin 
in wh 
he lace the dovoraudetit of t the ces Ami — jn a more satis- 
SN factory and and less afflicting position than we have witnessed for 
some 
Sir pu Woop, at his re-election for Halifax. 
y and the forth- 
1 comin g bu udget :— 
condition. Such being i i , th —— 8 have been made of late upon Lord P — 
e must Gov. bib a having neglected the defences of the country. 
Gentlemen, — me there is no truth in such an — — 
Lord D Derby sty ted the other day that when we left office the 
navy was state of i im 
orators are apt to indulge 
€ y to be able to quote $ thé vidence of the late Gov 
self, f, not i = 2 burd in scis, to eg that Rate er they. did 
es to power they found the in efficient state. 
We had a — — orit pe o 
ioe rr — — of steam po 
han t 
first igila 
every move that takes place and consider what 
may pe * ed douce In the next place, 
time shal nd I I hope it may so 
of those en support ‘the 11 bern 
m 5 rmed wi ‘th a 
Parlia! — 
a fair 
the Dareum. m y be —— wen fairly on its leg 
have an s toe 4 yet se its policy. When 
had that opportunity b for one, ask no favourand no 
tter hopes for th. 
Such, gentlemen, [^ ry eri 
great body of the —— We sh = oubi 
the late Gov. —— felt = obligation do. — 
duty, to deal with the que of Parliam 
endment of the tion 
I| Moe be, "told y ou that in my ich w for the f the 
n the ad f oo Kn Ta they have 5 — that if they “had it: thoughit 
of the fra: ma n o doubt not that that . — 
people NN hat insufüci u^ Could they have spirit. I don’t say that all will 
— strengthen the 8 E pos Son le re Ifa number e — 
by placing th upon a broader and safer fou nå, cimi How provided they n 
far that extension pant mp» whai resentati — C they ed: — he means whi ny e had ared | of those chat ue always 3 
coss PE m e smaller pers large i ey th our means insu n Th good thing, without at all c 
ting e ES — of Ac mee with i t . True it is =~ were launched i in their time, as 
the C: Cabinet,” 3 believe they will Led that q uestion felix ilt in o ft ps which have been 
2nd I trust easure they ma; — 1 wil be satis add h 
to the coun RT 1 cannot at A Abe t tim qum any | eight were built b 
further development of the mer of the terns. In a fact of adding is true, but credit is due not to those give groa 
very few days that Government will stand before the House of j te in AeA to those hi —— 11 — thought it right to E polaris 
Commons. be sufficient to & rvations, e I think I should not have ird will — its cre uer m 
x — P y dug to Dr 2 tine s im eres f 
10 pr 
Xm my duty to — country, 
hic vas — 2 from my own lips the er to those accusa- 
1 return thanks to you u for th the confidence tions, wiih a are as unjust as they are ore Now, gentlemen, 
laced in me—a confidence which I * I I piy other question of importance is the question of the Reform 
s, as I have not forfeited it o vo Tt ds that s 7 yaa vou 
s possibi 
n Bill during the pres rdi of Parliame — 
We are now, 8 — — — for wish: on are not account- 
able, begin ^ 25 n the Ist of July which usually 
be d — Tue whole of the * 
We Gxoncr CORNEWALL Lewis, the Home Secre- 
r Ra dn nor made the . 
th 
psr ; to oted, Yin 2 — and financial measures to proposed 
10 An objection lid. end made to the course taken by the | and — Í tell vou that the mrs is nearer 5 000,000, 
- the late Government, and he really beli ered it thats 4, um 000/.—that is the 1 that o om have arae —5 
was the only objection oe ad any appearance of plausi- | left to that is — — ficiency which the ya created, and Lees the; ey 
— — it—that a party move.’ This might have | which — have to make good you will, I think, “admit that it | give p 5 ise principles in the 
— out o 
P hop thai 
great weight with perso 8 ainted with the real worki h 
of politics, and who mi ht think badly of men who could fol | a6 2 ine uc vamus tei have She estimates : he M bodia — 
im a party move. Well, he admit without the smallest — VE ordinary times leted before 
— galt nere that it was a party move. He months after the aes bn of Parliament. Two months five 
j : in it the full belief and knowledge it was so— ms ng of —. 4 and it will probably be eee — «M upon you p 
— — ed combined tion of the Liberals in opposi- of A ugust before can have completed t I ask to itted to stan 
— purpose of expressing a want of — financial — — of the be session, Ido not think that i it — Mr. Car L, Chief pee? for oneal 
that our oe ga Oxford made the following remarks 6 
<r s reland :— 
* carried b mo 
it was only by them we could hope to d 8 
the — and the move on this io: an o; be the object 
— — ce with the scheme and system of con- who compose the present Cabinet. That Cal binet com 
stitutional governm: ich it has always hitherto been » —— Mr. 
worked, and by which, so long as it ts present most 
Dy A. 2 m ust eger be work cds It is only ll will n 
when vn inet e d personal obje . itis be so 
voe — object ‘ot — — party, which is the xo promoting popular power, 
prom 0 Jie objects b mber of men combined in in f those, at least, to 
RA Ape tee same pol —— is a eh — whom we think 22 
— n ar pues that SIR GEORG: 2 ut, teda of the Duchy of Lan- 
— toe 3 twas usod, as "he easter, at his re-election for th referred bli 
o n on thts — for a worthy purpose, 0 a Morpeth referred to public 
—— with the opinions of the combined in | affairs in the follo ing terms :— pr 
i then, he contended, it was a tutional and Parlia- Me et vele Mi er t must be to endea: Th sod for its 
ary move—one — end by the 88 * — ers rab — pa from any pex tie pation in the war, re — not P in not Lng Peeti — dug. e 
great f which our form fs he war 
ment renders the men mai unless ms ie ie mM Hand — Wowie ngland, is 
nis Re ch en adverted to th 2 — of the honour 2 ROT I fs 
e - t and the clear interests of this coun If 
—— duct of the. rA Govern ment — M — he uet 8 A Phe bons TUE „ mits en 
e | no dou at no occasion whate d 
rved, who soeasily sh ft ther opinions who blow hot or cold implicate us in it. Their n ext duty: would T M a» avail — 
obse 
jg ail t i 
E — their political con conduct ^ ct merely to the temperature | selves of any favourable . that might o offer rto obtai which I trust — alle 1 
are cold when the eee 75 6 nd snd irony e of tho: pease which had — apone will be fostered and in 
à h A 8 Steer- | sioned hos k w i 
‘he by eres mer see will bethe probable number of votes on | meet ay "emergency, exer his co sott ho =e at 8 - per 
— ppa = p» 5 d n mit mmm be 8 — = — of financial matters in the — session would be 
SCENO ntry. wernment — — te De wit 
if they] — — me — they professed in Opposition — meri of — and political importance in whi ich t the House of h. 
— — oei onsistently what they were in name, a real | Commons would be much more gladly and usefully engaged. — the — islands 
MM dn y ieri confi his objections would | But, whatever might be the course of business during the pre- mblance sho uld be 
rte ep ow a titi "y were under existing circum- sent session, he hoped and trusted an nd beli hat a —.— y t th poet—n hot a Sese 
Cp Trai we voted against those measures which | earliest period consistently with their duty to the — the | family Proh cac which pripa At 
2 — re ut he should have reposed confidence in | Government would be prepared to deal hood—* Two lovely insta Ro 
r — an fenis od n the present divided state of | Parliamentary Reform. He t that m iti Fo 
mtn they knew that the Conservative party | conceived in ‘a spirit which, while i i ue pre- | out the N nich our fore ipm n p 
totheprinciples they. the House of Commons, and would act up | ponde: one class of the com i union of this people within 25 me ‘i “afet 
— p pl x hey professed befi re the late official episode, — he basis of our gems system 80 and 55 — other island, may ca wate e higher 
1noment aed ns which for the convenience of institutions and ex - — interest of their maintenance | and c: of our Pil vereiqn to e the — 
ed—he quite admitted that what seca among many w. wee o, had o direct share in the representa- amid ‘all t ee ond cts which may shake 
— could not be formed. But there tion of the people of the world.” 
