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Date

1850 - 1899
26 1890-1899

Newspaper

Lisburn Herald and Antrim and Down Advertiser

Countries

Ireland

Counties

Antrim, Northern Ireland

Place

Lisburn, Antrim, Northern Ireland

Access Type

26

Type

25
1

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Lisburn Herald and Antrim and Down Advertiser

; i A DISTINGUISHED LISBURN MAN

... MULHOLLAND. Regarding this distinguished Irishman (brother our well-known townsman Mr. J. R. T. Mnlholiand, J.P.) (Northern Whig) observe that almost daily is being oomplimented by the Press Philadelphia for the manner which he discharging the duties the ...

THE LISBURN HERALD, NOVEMBER 21, 1891

... will with much interest by all the tenants who wish to purchase, and it will be warning to some who wish to sell. —Northern Whig, MASONIC HALL LIS B THK KOITOU Bite—Masonry and around Lisburn has incr«*ftM«cl within the last few y«*arK, ati-l b*«uiB to ...

Till! TWO ADUHKBSKS

... based on rather scatter-brained philanthropy, and cut down to suit the views landlords like Lord Salisbury and laissezfaite Whigs like the Duke of Devonshire, is hardly a promising development. It contrasts in particular with Sir William Harcourt’s effective ...

SPECIAL SITTING IN LIBBUHN

... capital that I know of. The partnership was dissolved about year ago. 1 t tell what became interest in the paper. I think the Whig got good deal it. I got sum for the plant. 1 gave nothing for the machinery—it went back the owners Sheffield. We got it on ...

THE LISBURN HERALD, JUNE 24, 1893

... S. Hamiil (Evening Telegraph J, Alexander VPMonagie (Editor Ulster Echo). James M‘Kee (News-Letter)t John Britton (Northern Whig), vV. G. (Editor Bangor Gazette), J. W. (Ulster Echo), Wra. Church (Editor Lisburn Standard), and James M Carnson (Lisb rn ...

SIR WILLIAM lIARCOUETB SPEECH

... liable from pure Toryism and class rule. That has always been the danger with Unionism, which should never have allowed the Whig element, as Mr. Chamberlain has allowed it, to permeate and even dominate the core of healthy Radicalism which stood out against ...

TEETHI FIRM IN THE CITY

... must fight, we can’t fight in a better cause than that of a free Parliament. If we lose that we lose everything, and the Tory-Whig drag the democray doubles its force straightway. Mr. Gladstone is proposing the same interval between the first and second ...

LISBURN PETTY SESSIONS

... always obeyeu the law since 1850, would have obeyed it. (Cheers.) The present Government, who had great trouble in getting the Whigs out, and are most anxious conciliate the Catholics, and all other people ol Ireland, would be actually obliged to the magistrates ...

PLEASANT PARAGRAPHS

... great amusement of the audience, he. played •* God save the King.” At meeting of tho Fife Magistrates some year* after 1745, a Whig gentleman gave a toast “Tha Duke of Cumberland.” Daviu Beatonn, of Kilcon quhar, a zealous Jacobite, immediately after proposed ...

RUPTURE CURED

... a great hero. William was stern, cold, and unconciliating but firm, high-minded, broadminded, and generous ; hated by the Whigs because he stood between them and their revenge —haled by the Tories because he stood between them and their destruction—hated ...

A PROLOGUE

... struggling farmers. He went to say that long the were governed and dictated from Dublin Castle, it does not matter whether Whig or Tory, they can be outvoted, so that it make* the whole thing farce. Some years ago ! spent 2 years in America, and made ...