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IRISH SECRET SOCIETIES. SOLAMINATION OF THE BELFAST PIUSONERS

... IRISH SECRET SOCIETIES. SOLAMINATION OF BELFAST PIUSONERS. The Northern Whig of Friday evening supplies some information touching the legal proceedings at Belfast against the alleged conspirators. The inquiry into the case of the sixteen prisoners arrested ...

Summar'

... feeling noted in the newspaper reports indicate a sympathy on the part of the unenfranchised with the Radical rather than the Whig. Mr Moncrieff got loud applause, however, when he spoke of national education and sanitory reform, and rightly, for his exertions ...

Cleaning*. Two wealthy Hindoos generously liberated all the debtor* incarcerated in Bombay gaol on the day when ..

... bank deposit receipts for about £3OO, in addition to which, believe, deceased was the owner of some house property. —Northern Whig. Voice Rbvtored by a Fright.— A Correspondent informs us (Birmingham Poet) of the following carious ciroumstance:—A respectable ...

Literature

... Burghs” we have another of Professor Aytonn’s sdmirable sketches. There is an immensity of jokitig at the expense of the Whigs, but the rich humour wi everybody. In the succeeding story, “ First and Last,” the utmost bas been made of slight materials ...

Published: Thursday 06 January 1859
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1347 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LORD PANMURE AT BRECHIN

... own particular principles. Essentially—however unpopular the expression may be—essentially, say, they are those of a Whig. The old Whig principles I understood from the life, conversation, speeches, and character of the man whose name I bear—Charles James ...

Published: Thursday 13 January 1859
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 861 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

FROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT

... are miserably ill-written— slovenly to the last degree. Lord Stanley has shown his disregard of mere party ties by appointing Whig to high office. That indefatigable worker, and upright, though somewhat tiresome official, Sir Charles Trevelyan, is promoted ...

Published: Thursday 13 January 1859
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 8992 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE JOHN O'GREAT JOURNAL ON THE SHIPPING TRADE

... to the sammons sent forth by Lord Malmesbury, or, as most of them seemed to prefer putting it, in sheer animosity to “ the Whigs,” the ical papers of several of the seaports have been writing on the sub- ject in utter disregard of which all Liberals had ...

Published: Thursday 13 January 1859
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1165 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

CAITHNESS, ORKNEY, &c

... Sir Thomas Dick Lauder to the vacant Secretaryship; for, whatever might be said in favour of Sir Thomas's services to the Whigs, his appointment could not be justified either on the ground of his own fitness for the office, or of the desirableness of ...

Published: Thursday 13 January 1859
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 489 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

/14 VERNESS ADVER'

... contradiction of his friend, depend upon it, England at the present moment is better governed than any country in the world. The Whigs have been reticent during the recent reform discunions, and people will naturally turn with interest to a speech on politics ...

From our Edinburgh Correspondent

... political faith in the and yellow is now at rather a low ebb. It is just possible, however, that some hint may be given as to Whig tactics. There is a question which, if second, is only second in importance to that pf Parliamentary Reform, and which has ...

L Mt EDWARD MALL

... difficalty, and to the Course which he (Mr lionman) had taken since he had shaken off the livery of the Whigs in 1856. The fact was, before 1830 the Whigs were the only leaders of the Liberal party, because they were the only Liberals of the governing class ...

tr•DTID PANMURE AT MILICRIK,

... basis, from which they might enlarge as much as they pleased. The noble Lord stated that his own principles were than of a Whig, as he understool these from the life, conversation, speeches, and character of that great man whose name he bore, — Charles ...