DISCOVERY OF SUPPOSED GREEK FIRE IN BELFAST
... tho druggist’s shops about this inflammable fluid, with the view of having, if possible, the mystery cleared up.—‘’Northern Whig.” ...
... tho druggist’s shops about this inflammable fluid, with the view of having, if possible, the mystery cleared up.—‘’Northern Whig.” ...
... iivervaiives list.-ned with that acquiescence which sh* fed that they hud made up their minds mure to help Mr Disraeli * *dish the Whig* i if the achievement could repeated. I iim Kind die appnmching visit of the Prince of Wide* to In-laud seen * causing aucli ...
... RADICALS. The ‘ Herald ’ r ...
... the means it t'*>k vindicate the honour of the country, an of the c* urago it displayed in undertaking a responsibility which Whig Government dated n*-t accept. Wo congratulate the friomls and relatives of the priaoners upon their lilxtruiion ; and we heartily ...
... I imagine, may be a tolerably sound Whig, yet have very serious doubts the exi>odicncy of Iffr Gladstone’s measures. The case of the Irish Church doe# not, as far 1 cau see, come ncceswirily under the head of Whig or Tory politics, unless Ton?- ism simply ...
... little of what really definite ; for after all must be profound philo* sopher who can say where is tho line that separates the whig from the tory. For this reason I generally peruse with feelings bordering impatience the political lucubrations of one of your ...
... greeu ; 10, maroon and deep bine ; 11 , claret and buff ; 12, black and warm green. PboposeuTunnel between Scotland Northern Whig* says—* Two gentlemen—L Liv.ngston Mscassey, C.K., and Wm. Scat, C.E., and IVl'.ow of the Royal Scottish Society of Arts—have ...
... mo the will there it is in Belfast ibad letter from Scotland man that seed it the papers.—E K near C Cumbcrlaud.*—Northern Whig.’ Frogs from Babyhood to Full Age.— What multitudes of frogs aro just showing their heads above tho waterhow earnestly they ...
... not yet emancipated from the Tory trammels big ear lier y .urs appealed with soccess Protestant bigotry of England ; and the Whigs were turned out mainly because the O'Councll hud caused tho loss of their English popularity. From that day dated tlm wild ...
... who had given to many noble elector the privilege ! of slightly overdrawing his little account, Ac. To crown all, he was a whig, a man who wonld swear by Gladstone, who would never fail to inquire whether a measure submitted to the j House wa* called ...
... yet this farce has been carried on for some generations. Whig and a Tory ar« returned for the borough of Eataudswill. The Tory member on taking bis seat finds a petition forwarded from the Whig party for inquiring into the lawfulness of his election. ...
... d a gentleman who could not sven consider Mr Touug in all respects the man for Uelstoo, iossmnch while sound enough in his Whig principles, wee '‘inconsistent in the of temperance and sobriety.** But here again there was diamond to cut the diamond, for ...