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Newry Herald and Down, Armagh, and Louth Journal

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Newry Herald and Down, Armagh, and Louth Journal

IRELAND

... be occupied without respect to differences of opinion on political or religious subjects.— Protestants and Roman Catholics, Whigs and Tories, surely might unite here. wish put a new and better, a cleaner and a more smiling, face upon things, and with this ...

THE REFORM BILL

... that to pass one-half of a Reform Bill during the present session would be enough by way of redeeming the pledge given hy the Whigs when they were seeking power;, and that the necessity , of carrying the other half in imother session Would he a sufficient ...

I have no fixed residence there.” He therefore reserves himself for the possibility of an aggregate meeting ..

... the agitation, vouchsafes one historical fact, and one niece of contemporary information. This is the historical fact:— The Whig Government, in the revolution of 1848, means of their Consul at Rome, the late notorious Mr. Freeborn, employed “secret se ...

STEAMERS FOR

... aspect J he was the noblest of the modern Whigs. In certain of his speeches, and of his published, but, still more, his unpublished essays, we have truly worthy, vital and comprehensive conception of the Whig Creed. While firmly loyal, to the grand doctrine ...

HOPE FOR THE NEW YEAR!

... statesmanship. His splendid promise of thirty years ago issued in a certain amount of party service, in upholding an unpopular Whig administration, while he damaged his own position by fighting the battles of his friends through right and wrong with equal ...

IRELAND

... artistic swindling carried bn in these places, where ’tis all a cheat; but fooled by hope, men favour the deceit.” —Northern Whig. , THE COURT OF QUEEN’S BENCH. The Queen r. Guardians of Poor, Newtownards Mr Whiteside, Q.C. (with him Messrs M‘Donough» Q ...

1839. 1859

... by the name of Liberals, have lost themselves by contemptible truckling to Irish faction ; and it would be hard say whether Whigs Tories have most discredited themselves in the humiliating rivalry in whith they were both engaged. [I he above sentiments ...

V; .v' ‘

... and we do not know any man out of Bedlam who does. On the contrary, know, and as we know we think it far better to say, that Whigs and Tories are animated mainly the desire they never cease to deny but never cease to feel,' of beating one another at the ...

THE STORY OF FANNY ORFORD. Fann Orford, when of tendor years, became the favourite of certain baronet, whose ..

... Perhaps hasn’t been seated a minute or two, talking unconcernedly about things in general to whomsoever may be at his elbow, Whig, Tory, Radical. Chartist, Ultramontane, Exeterhallitc, it signifies not, all flats are fish that come to his net, when in strides ...

THE REFORM BILL

... educated class the country. “lamafraid/* says Bolingbroke, when describing the accession of the Tory party, after a long course of Whig Government, that we came into power in the same disposition as all parties have done; that the principal spring ofour actions ...

f it-traturt

... repeating until he fancies he has come to occupy some exalted position fer above his fellows: the Tories won’t suit him—the Whigs are worseand as for the Radicals, and John Bright par excellence, they must not come between the wind and his nobility. The ...