THUNDER STORM AT BELFAST
... completely tora off his foot A third man, belonging to Belfast, wa: struck on the head, but received no materi | injury.—Northern Whig. ...
... completely tora off his foot A third man, belonging to Belfast, wa: struck on the head, but received no materi | injury.—Northern Whig. ...
... organs as their hero and their champion.’ The Irishman js._The flag of reform has been fairly unfurled in England, and by the Whig Chancellor of the Exchequer. It is, in reality, the banner which Bright and Cobden have long and so gallantly borne;’ and adds:—* ...
... ground, lost heavily in wounded. On the evening of the 9th, the Federals attacked I tt,l ll %inia Court-House by their right whig, kilivock, which was vifformiLlY r'- with a heavy loss. On Tuesday, the at noon, the Federal centre, advana,„-4a the whole ...
... offended the Tories, he has not been able conciliate the Whigs. The man whose solitary pre-eminence is living monument of the fact that there arc not, nor have been for some time past, any rising Whigs capable of leadership, cannot well lie popular in the ...
... woman on the head, passing thence down her breast, her hair being singed and her breast scorched and blackened. The Northern Whig of Friday says :—` This morning, about eleven o'clock, a farmer belonging to Saintfield, in the county Down, when standing ...
... involved in the meshes of a somewhat marauding warfare which never has end ; and. if ended, is only to the rum both litigants—Whig and Tory. ...
... woman on the bead, passing thence down her breast, her hair being tinged and her breast scorched and blackened. The Northern Whig Friday says ; —* Thia morning, about eleven o’clock, fanner belonging Saintfield, in the county Down, when standing in the ...
... and his life seemed to ebb softly away. Fatal Accident by Lightning. —Belfast, Friday. —Tbe second edition of the Northern Whig says :—This morning, about 11 o'clock, farmer belonging to St Field, in the County Down, when standing in the cattle market ...
... stituencies which are supposed to resent Lord Palmerston's Italian policy. On the whole, it seems probable that the reign of the Whigs is, for the present, drawing to a close. There is not the smallest reason to suppose that their successors will be abler, or ...
... county members, the balance of gain is likely to iodine the Opposition, and on the whole it seems probable that the ■ reign of Whigs is, for the present, drawing to close. Our cotemporary, in another article, comments the curious fact that present Germans ...
... Canning was too strong in the Commons, and too stern in his own resolve, to be bullied or cajoled; and though certain renegade Whigs actually coalesced with the Tories of 1827, in order to crush him, he defied them both, and took with a firm hand the lead ...
... e registration societies throughout the kingdom should not, upon the next electoral contest, convert the present irregular Whig majority into permanent and secluded minority the House of Commons. Since the year 1850 there has been an increase of twenty-five ...