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Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent

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Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

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Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent

REDUCTION OF PUBLIC SALARIES—PROFES

... member, and is resisted by the entire strength of the party now in power. One of the most proralnrnt arguments advanced by the Whigs in 1830-31, in support of the Reform Bill, carried with a high hand, and apparently to the delight of the advocates of Cheap ...

THE even™ PACKET, TUESDAY, 2ft MAT, lftr.ft

... admitted that the project was under consideration, though nothing of definite nature has yet been arranged. Thus is that the Whigs are stealthily carrying out the centralisation principle for provincialising, and ultimately pauperising the Irish metropolis ...

MAKHIAUKB

... should not presume oven to suggest to the pcop' ■ of Drogheda choice between truly popular candidates. But when we hear that a Whig canvass is proceeding, it is our duty to inform them that there nill be wont of a popular candidate.—/rcentan. ...

TBU QOBBH—TUI

... principle of universal suffer e. Thirteen years ago, when it should be supposed ibe Reform Bill had a pretty fair trial, and the Whigs, tempore Lord NoaHAHor, him of the M honoured name,” Mr. Damibl O’Connell, bad done all in their I power, by the successive ...

THE EVENING PACKET. THORSDAT, 2 MAY, 1850

... Effronteryisseldom known to be fastidious, and enormous lying has, in modern times at least, been the stock in trade of the Whigs. There is, however, another argument against retrenchment, and this too was pressed into the service on Tuesday evening. The ...

CLERGY

... Tht fi pr..r. .live, a-i «.4 .cardo.l Mr. Alexander Cunnell; second to Mr. «. G.-tty; third Mr. WU.iui H. Hasle.t Sort hem Whig, ...

ENGAGEMENTS

... Settlement, hare occupied the Throne. It was not from any particular attachment to the person of the Prince of Orange that « the Whigs had invited hi>n over from Holland and offered him the English sceptre in 1688. On the contrary, the repnlsiveness of his manners ...