ARMAGH

... pro-popi3h member into the representation of the county. RIDICULOUS HOAX., ON Tuesday morning last the readers of the Northern Whig were treated to au ably eon• cocted piece of intelligenc, which, to persui residing at a distance from Lurgan, would appear ...

DISTRIBUTION OF PRIZES

... and the Church, the Constitution and the Queen, the Altar and the Throne. We fear not the sue of the conflict. The days of Whig rule are numbered. The decree has gone forth ; it requires not a prophet's favreejog I eye to read the handwriting in the ...

SCHOOLMASTER

... their timid, though well-meant admonition, as the Protestants of Ulster were determined to try conclusions with the expiring Whig Governntent, and see if, after permitting the law to be broken by the sympathisers with rebellion in Dubl;n, they would have ...

nothing else from the son of such a father as the late Mr Harris than the high honour and impartiality

... it Wall not between individuals that the contest ley. It was a contest of principle, and Armagh been reecned from becoming a Whig tercugh. (Cheers). Ile alluded to the progress of Armagh, and more especially to the improvements introduced by Mr Jacob Orr ...

THE PROTESTANT WATCHMAN IND, LURG-AN' GAZETTE, SATURDAY, .JULY 22, 1835

... who rushed and separated the ccmhatants, the affray was ended. Mr Rea retired bearing marks of very rough handling.—Harthern Whig. A Fienrixo Parsox Some carbineers of the Viechio Station, near Florence, inspecting those neigbourhoods, lost their way, and ...

AND LIIIKIAN GAZETTE

... the suicidd policy of Radical Reform, to the sceptical policy of Mr. Mill, and to the overthrow of the I , ish Church. The Whigs shall no longer be permitted to get all the place=, and the Radicals all tee promises, The contest, instead of a party fight ...

mistaken; To reckon without tint consult-

... opinions of the men ranged under the appellations. Conservative sad Liberal will ere long become as obeelete as the old terms Whig and Tory. We have every reason to believe that in the new Parliament will be found a powerful Protestant party, gathered from ...

RELIC OF NELSON

... arbitrary and illegal opposition of Bishop Lloyd to the re-election ot Sir John Pakington. Lloyd and his son were furious Whigs. Singly or in concert they published manifestoes against tsir John, denouncing him as a vicious fellow of a vicious stock, ...

AND LIIRGIN GAZETTE

... called the base, brutal, Whigs; for the utterer. of them r warded by pineemen who preferred principle, and who thought they could fie agitators to silence by cot erring on mug Government appointments. liut sts and the Whigs are both now be. ,g to find ...

LURGAN MARKET

... likely to offer themselves—Viscount Powerscourt in the Conservative interest ; and the Earl of Listowel and Lord Fermoy in the Whig interest.—Erasing Mail. ...

EDW ARE SINGI; ULSTER RAILW

... picked the cards for a nice little game of their own, the obtaining of a charter for a Popish University iu Dublin, which the Whigs bad promised to aid them in procuring ; but the American Pat-rioters in their precipitancy have ez. posed their hand too soon ...