MR. COLLES’S VISIT TO BELFAST
... HANDSOMELY-FURNISHED APARTMENTS WANTED in the vicinity of the LINEN HALL, for few months.—Address,’ 4 * W. Collbs, Northern Whig Office,” stating particulars. High Harrogate, Nov. 9, 1858. ...
... HANDSOMELY-FURNISHED APARTMENTS WANTED in the vicinity of the LINEN HALL, for few months.—Address,’ 4 * W. Collbs, Northern Whig Office,” stating particulars. High Harrogate, Nov. 9, 1858. ...
... next week. HANDSOMK.I.Y-FURNISriRD APARTMENTS in the vicinity LINEN HALL, for k few montlis. Address, W. Col Las. Northern Whig Office, stating particulars. Iligb Harrogu e, >ov. 9. 1858. ...
... ________ HANDSOMELY-FURNISHED APARTMENTS WANTED, the vicinity of th* LINEN HALL, for a few months -Address, “W. Collbs. Northern Whig Office,” stating particulars. High Harrogate, Nov. 9, 1858. CABINET AND UPHOLSTERY WAREROOMS, Not 15 17, Arthur-Street, Belfait ...
... New orm Bill” is destined to be introduced Tory Government. Not that any concession to the people not fuLy as to the fawning Whig as to the proudest of the Orauge-Tory aristocracy. But to satisfy, in any measure, the body of tho people, so to be allowed ...
... finding delusion impossible, our ministers contemplate the came of extreme and impracticable measure to which our constitutional Whigs cannot consent. The measure thro wn out, of course there would i>oriod of confusion, and this confusiou might possibly fatal ...
... Marquis of Lansdownc—venerable old gentleman —is a “great Whig nobleman’’ —a leader of that blessed English faction whom O’Connell so truthfully denounced as the “ base, bloody, and brutal” Whigs. He docs us Irish the honour of spending in England the rents ...
... doubts the experiment will be repeated. Assassination has become familiar idea, a portion of the machinery which continental whigs carry on the war against the order of society, and for the general improvement of mankind. It is perfectly well known that ...
... in the papers, with consoling contrast to the cruel and degrading dt spotism in practice on the estate of the unnatural old Whig peer. The Earl of Kenraare finds it convenient to sell a portion of his vast estates to remove some incumbrances which rest ...
... public platform, and departed with his pocket* well lined with Judas’s gold. And what do the humbugged readers of the insincere Whig, whose paid puffs cheated them out of their shillings, think of this modem Kienzi ?” Wo ask them, as honest men, to put their ...