TUE WHIGS TOO STRONG AGAIN
... qualification, remain quiet if they are denied the right of particii in parliamentary elections, while they see it conceded t ...
... qualification, remain quiet if they are denied the right of particii in parliamentary elections, while they see it conceded t ...
... eternally engages them ml-chirvona r- nii>inati ...
... formation lias been received, that the advantage of , the admission of British vessels into lire indirect trade , with the United Stales, consequent upon the repeal of the British Navigation Laws, is beginning to lie felt in the orange trade from the Azores ...
... 'mrst«-w»rt’» of Interior the House u majority , bnsiutroUucuiunt, of the senutor. mirouoc e.l» bill extending the U-. .lJ United Buaee oter C. .lon.i^t.d of the public luivl* res l:ul I-c*ce between white, .ml the been taken in the Home, coodenuiin* the ...
... departure for the American mails. This, coupled with the failure, through whatever agency, of the' experi- mental-trip of the United States'steamer from NewmYork to Galway, has given a tone of great acerbity to'the Dublin papers. Already it has been suggested ...
... weaki tin power the law aml. disparage: t'-tlmgKmt principle of religious freedom, bonds of concord and good a ill which it to unite nil classes and p. rsua-tonsof her Majerty The Marquis Lord H. a»e, a.iU Mt. AUKKK ( J . tli the bill, because, trom ftr-t ...
... ofBallingray, va- cant by the death of the Rev. James Greig.-Fifeshire Journal. The Rev. H. Renton, Kelso, deputed by the United Pres- byterian Church to visit the missions of that body in Caffraria, has arrived in this country from the Cape of Good Hope ...
... Devonshire has accepted an invitation to be present on the re occasion. D THE ARCTIC~ EXP5D5TION.-By the latest news from the pi United States, we learn that the position and wants of the wy Arci ships in 'sdarch of the long-mijssing expedition of Sir bi John ...
... dimension* of murder. There not the stuff whole Popish county to stand against company marine*. Were we dealing with nay hut Irishmen. «e might ask them to recollect that t'uc.r very best rebellion” began and ended in a cab bed but they are already bouncing ...
... believe that there nast be good grounds for the hopeful position it take* and enforces. Englishmen and Scotsmen, wril as to Irishmen, the symptoms of present improvement and future prosperity on which it dwell*, pwes* * deep interest. Already hundreds of ...
... daughters. Richard O'Gorman, Esq., one of the oldest and most tespect- able merchants in Deblin, has left Ireland for the United States. Apart from the fact that lie has carried out with him a capital of over £20,000, the sterling qualities which marked ...
... war, thould n»l from regular aroiy, but, at the eatne time, It »-« ...