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TUAM PETTY SESSIONS—LETTER OF THE REV. MR. WELDON

... coclusicao their d expect more justice from the Tories than 'r that we are to with all their mock professions of liberality. O the Whigs 'forward conduct leads us also to the convtn' Thi Straight- , sent Lord Lieutenant, if in office, pending the coette b re- ...

REMOVAL OF THE LAW COURTS

... of being adopted to the extent of providing the full duty paid stamp; but the right of appeal was not to the taste of our Whig officials; and when the bill was for the first time printed it appeared without any such proviso. But Mr. Mullings was not ...

LORD CAMPBELL AND THE IRISH BENCH

... with due encouragement' from his patrons the Whigs, who as a party will yet reap a full and plenteous harvest ,from the hatred of them, which their conduct has implanted in every Irish heart, whether Whig or Tory, Catholic or Protestant. The following ...

THE RUSSELL PENAL LAW

... Catholic Church than this proposed by the Russell Whigs. Any man of ordinary judg. ment, having the opportunities possessed by a mem her of Parliament, must have seen that no other statesmen but these Whigs could be found, in the temper which the penal law ...

Legal Intelligence

... NORTHOIlN WfIfl. Lindsay v. Finlay and Others. Ma. JELA.ETT, on behalf of the defendants, who are the proprietors of the Northern Whig newspaper, applied to Jodge Perrin tor liberty to extend the time For pleading till the first day of next term. The action ...

ALLEGED PARRICIDE IN IRELAND

... ALLEGED PARRICIDE IN IRELAND. AN EXTRAORDINARY CASE. The Dundalk correspondent of the Northern Whig ?? hba reached hero of a shoeking and extraordinary tragedy ouacted at' a rather out-of.the-way place called Rillark, some five wiles from Carrickmlacross ...

THE IRISH BENCH

... effeetia~llYculreduA of our illlnes. ' ioept~ Mr. Snuivan and' a few 'othiY Irish taki-I clal, all IrishJwyers and, tbtitiiaciw, Whig cand Torya . ?ro'sJ tant uand cstlkjlc, insist on 1ke~inqthepresorve of Ifes~iOna ptiteen-i a~e untouched. lb is not probable ...

CORONER'S INQUESTS

... up strife, but the result was dis. astrous to the Tory party, for it bad excited the Nationalists to opposition, and now the Whig Solicitor-General was being returned unopposed for Derry. The Nationalists had deliberately ab- stained from putting forward ...

THE SESSION OF 1851

... the Whig Ministry falls. But it will not be advis- able to wait for this contingency. There is plenty of time to heal d0fferences, and combine for a mutual purpose; and we shall be much disappointed if, when Parliament meets again, the day of Whig ascendency ...

BELFAST POLICE COURT—YESTERDAY

... Thlree compositors - William Walker, Johnl M 'Keever, and Joseph F. Brook-were summoned i by F. D. Finleay, eq., ?? of the Whig, t for having absented titecselves from his employ. ment without lawful cause. The summons was as ,followse-- Whereas a complaint ...

THE LISBURN ELECTION PETITION

... several years as Mr. Byng. He sat for Tavistock from July, 1 852, until September, 1857, and belongs to what is called the old Whig party of which Mr. Byng, M. P, for Middlesex, his great-uncle, was long a prominent and influential member. Viscount Eadeld ...