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FROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT

... next, Mr Clay followed Baxter in the same strain. House and the country were tired of the old Whig clique and his solution of the difficulty was that the Whigs who follow Lord Palmerston should shake hands with those who are attached to Lord J. Russell ...

THE REFORM QUESTION

... In the first place, how will it be composed ? In these days, it is needless to say that the old Whig team is out of the question. Are we, then, to have a Whig-Radical combination, in which Lord John Russell °and Mr Bright are to have the joint treatment ...

Published: Wednesday 16 March 1859
Newspaper: Dundee Courier
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1673 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BELFAST LINEN TRADE

... BELFAST LINEN TRADE. (From the Northern Whig of Saturday). Linen Yarns —The demand for yarns during the week has been dull, and this day it was better, though the contrary was expected. Prices remain still firm, but as weavers mil be henceforth largely ...

Ireland

... old woman named Ann M'Cormick, was sent here from Rothesay, though she was perfectly helpless and going on crutches.—Northern Whig. Antedeluvians.—There are now living on the Foils, a short distance from Belfast, seven individuals whose united ages amount ...

Published: Wednesday 02 March 1859
Newspaper: Dundee Courier
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 304 | Page: 2 | Tags: Classifieds 

Ireland

... exploded, shooting a mass of burning coals into the carding-room, and caused the ignition of everything around. The ' Northern Whig roughly estimates the damage at £10,000, and nearly 2000 people will be deprived of employment. One poor fellow, who had gone ...

Published: Wednesday 28 December 1859
Newspaper: Dundee Courier
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 304 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BELFAST LINEN TRADE

... BELFAST LINEN TRADE. (From the Northern Whig of Saturday.) LINEN Yarn.— We can note no improvement in either the home or the foreign demand this week ; prices of heavier numbers of yarns remain firm, whilst the finer numbers of wefts are in favour of ...

BELFAST LINEN TRADE

... BELFAST LINEN TRADE. (From the Northern Whig of Saturday). Lixex Yarn. —In prices we have no change to note. The home demand is steady; the foreign is, however, limited, consequence of navigation being many places closed. Stocks of wefts, say to 75 lea ...

Protectionists attribute the eclipse to the repeal of the Corn Laws, and watched it angrily through smoked ..

... some government offices at the neighbouring town. This embryo politician was condemning one party for coalescing with the Whigs, and another for too highly favouring the Democratic party. It would, moreover, astonish some of our respectable elderly men ...

Snlaitt

... at a low rent in 1807. Happily there are some schools not quite so improperly managed. Thirst and Indignation.— The Northern Whig gives an account of the melancholy sobriety of the North- Eastern Agricultural Society of Ireland's public dinner. The unfortunate ...

Published: Wednesday 05 September 1855
Newspaper: Dundee Courier
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 313 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

BIRTHS. At 15 Paton's Lane, Dundee, on the 13th mat., the wife of Mr David Sydie, inspector, Dundee New Gaa

... rather have seen Mrs Fletcher in a box at the theatre than have seen Mrs Siddons on the stage of the same theatre. She was a Whig, and long a widow. She married for love of what marriage is said seldom to give—liberty. Her husband, Archibald Fletcher, an ...

DEATH OF SIR JAMES GIBSON CRAIG. This venerable baronet, who has so long and worthily been associated with our ..

... array youthful as- Pirants cast their fortunes, or as Was then thought the sacrifice of their professional hopes, with the Whig party-when Harry Lrskine, Clerk, Gillies, Cuthcart and others, were joined by Cranstoun, Jetfrey Moncrieff, Cockburn, and Murray-we ...

ANOTHER BLOW AT OUR MUNICIPAL FREEDOM

... genuine Whig, and intent as all the Whigs are from their youth upwards on multiplying places and extending patronage. The real motive for this Bill, we have no doubt, is the prospect of having a score of Inspectorships of Police to give away Whig nephews ...