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ANTI-PROTESTANTISM OF THE WHIG

... opinion of others, to the commission of perjury? Let it do so, and then wve will be able to understamid the claims which the Whig possesses upon the confidence and respect of any genuine Protestant in this psrovince. And notn, to show that it is the grossest ...

Legal Intelligence

... the same extent. However, his practice was, when the Whig boy delivered a Whig, as the Mercury was not worth stealing-(laughter)-he left a Mercury in the houses of the subscribers, and stole a Whig. (Laughter.) Mr. John Kelly was examined, and entered ...

ENCUMBERED ESTATES COURT

... Irish steam- ship question underwent a long discussion. Messrs. Tabor and Morgan (Whigs) advocated special acts to organise the Galway Steam-ship Company, while Mr. Babcock (Whig), and Mr. Cooley (Democrat), went for a general law. The first-named senator ...

DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH ROME

... the Tinies admits that it was ohving to the objections mane by the Conservative party, in both Houses of Parliament, that the Whig bill for | establishing diplomatic relations with Rome was converted into a stunibling-block and a nullity. We therefore ...

AN ARTFUL LODGER

... Amazons on my right hand were Whigs, and Ithose on my left Tories. Another writer of th Iday describes the unpleasant discovery made by a lady at a bell in a nobleman's house, who had in hlr hurry placed a patchi on the Whig side of her face, Iwhen she ...

THE CRIME AND OUTRAGE COMMITTEE— OUTLINE OF MR. NAPIER'S BILL FOR THE REPRESSION OF RIBBONISM

... and Sir James Grahatin. A majority, he says, of ten to three, declared that the re-enactment, for twelve months, of the Whig Co- ercion Bill, and the amen dment and consolidation of ?? acts, were unnecessary anduncalled-for; but, continues the writer ...

POLICE INTELLIGENCE

... turn must accept the position of a doge, content to reign but not govern. That the leader of the Whigs should now be forced under the same yoke which the Whigs themselves were so fond of imposing upon kings is a curlous illustration of the irony of fate ...

THE ARREST OF MR. DAVITT

... League rooms, anid groaned the Government and Gladstoue. Groan - were also liberally giveu for *- Bucksehot Forster- aind the Whigs. Mr. )illon, MI.P., who caine specially from London. appealed to the people to pre'erve a peaceful attitude, iio matter what ...

THE LATE LIBEL ACTION

... think it our duty to lay a fewv facts in connexion with the trial truthfully before the public. In the last publication of the Wh/ig there is a lachrymose complaint that Mr. Lindsay did not allow his pro- secution to abide the verdict of a Belfast Jury. For ...

TOWN COUNCIL.—CASE AND OPINION EXTRAORDINARY

... newly-enfranchised voters, who as yet have not identified themselves wvith either party-loose fish, in fact, ready for the Whig-radical net. Perhaps, too, Ias the municipal tax-paying period is approaching, this may be only a dexterous move to stimulate ...

THE DERRYMACASH TRIALS

... over Ireland, and to wring from its unworthy hands several additional constituencies. That the Armagh trials have given the Whig Ad- *ministration a mortal wound, we have only to read the frenzied utterances of its organs to discover. ...