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Northern Ireland, Northern Ireland

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19

Type

19

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FASHION

... father's barony of Hoow- land. The late duke during his pnhlic carcer in the Lower House, voted on all occasions %with the Whig party, and although an unfrequcat speaker in th'e House of l'ecrs, invariably supported the views aad measures of the Wliig ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... to such shifts and pretexts in order to assail the Church in Ireland, there can be no good ground for his attack. That the Whig-mRadicals intend to make the Church in Ireland their great battle-ield in IParliamuent is certain. In the mean- time, it is ...

Court and Fashion

... considered hopeless. Lord Breadalbane, by his energy, his talents, and his vast, possessions, was long a valuable member of the Whig party in Scotland. As Earl of Ormelie, before his suc- cession to the peerage, he stood, in 1832, a contest for the representation ...

FASHION

... Gieale, and widlow of Sir Marcus Sonmerville, Bart.- The de- ceased nobleman had for many years been a zealous supporter of the Whig parly, and had done good sel-- vice to his political triemids during his long cai-ou- in time House of Commons, more rspecially ...

FASHION

... Macaulay, as may be verified . by reference to the fifth volume of his History of England, are:- Canvassed actively on the Whig side! Mamma- Dear! dear I dear! What a pity it is. a you can't agree! Small Boy- Well, mamma, we should agree, only she's ...

Literary Notices

... he does not see any probability of an immediate accession of the Conservatives to power; and he thinks it better that the Whig-Liboral party should be permitted to die out of itself. An A hedge dying out at bottom, and getting thinner and thinner every ...

FASHION

... always identifies hiimsellfawithl his party. But let ldin shift his quarters. lie hiis left the Tory paper, aid gonie to the Whig o' the Radical, when lie no sooner l becomes acclimatised than he is just as ulehi It Wlig or a Radical, as the case may ...

FASHION

... Postmaster-General should be itvoked b to put an end to a contract solemnhy entered into by n the English Executive. But as the Whig Alinistrv hi have, from their accession to office, directed their (ns- ?? inity against this line, on the simple ground that ...

FASHION

... his maternal uncle, Mr. W. Joseph Denison, who bequeathed to him the bulk of his wealth. His lordship was a supporter of the Whig party. The deceased was a patron of the turf, and lad a princely racing sttd, He is succeeded in his title and extensive landed ...

DRUMBO AND DRUMBEG FARMING SOCIETY

... different opinions held by each Church, yet the common principles of Christianity. Tey all assembled there, not because they were Whigs or Tories, but because they were honest Irishmen. (Applause.) He held, therefore. though their meet- ings, strictly speaking ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... tender regard; Mr. Bryden, equally doubt- less, feels it his interest to be faithfal and useful to his party. The temporising Whig is the most despicable and unreliable of mortals, and where the f interests of the most flourishina community in Ire- land ...

MISS FARREN, THE ACTRESS

... Fitzgerald, the Earl of Derby, Mrs. Damer, and others. At the same time she became acquainted with the celebrated gambler and Whig statesman, Charles James Fox, whose attentions to her in the green-room were very frequent and a matter of a good deal of buzzing ...