A Threatening Letteb.—A bailiff namcn Robert Clarke was, on Friday last, brought up at the Clogher Quarter ..
... intricate character. The prisoner was allowed out on bail—his own recognisance of £50 and two sureties of £25 each.—Northern Whig. ...
... intricate character. The prisoner was allowed out on bail—his own recognisance of £50 and two sureties of £25 each.—Northern Whig. ...
... client admitted to bail. Mr. Miller and Mr. Alexander agreed in refusing bail. The investigation then terminated. —Northern Whig. ...
... IRISH SECURITIES. Under the head of Irish Securities, the* Northern Whig has ths following home have had a quiet year. Our stocks have not expi-rienced the fluctuations of tho English market; our railways, on the contrary, show in most instances improvement ...
... profess to seek no complete political severance from Great Britain. But they demand what all the statesmen this Empire, both Whig and Tory, have unanimously refused, and what tbe English people, however, ready for what is called justice Ireland,’’ will ...
... feeble Whig Ministry, e-nred on Radical clamour. are tired of Mmistres that learn everything from the outside, ami wake every morning to see first what the Times says they ought to do, and then whether the says they may it. A Cabinet of feeble Whig peers ...
... and fess to seek no com- plete political severance from Britain. But they demand what all the statesmen of this Empire, both Whig and Tory, have unanimously refused, and what the English people, however ready for wliat is called to Ireland,” will be little ...
... retired from active service at the War Office, sad il bs crested Field Marshal, MB. MAOUIRB ON THE IRISH AMERICA. I th» Northern Whig), | Mr. Maguire has given Mi interesting, though occa- I •ionally diffuse, account his recent tour in Canada and the United ...
... perish priests and eleven Catholic curates, her published • declaration, in white, denying that they have any alliance with Whig, Tory, or Radical, they that disaffection In Ireland has never been so widespread and so determined es in 1867, and is nearly ...
... Belfast improved, and the popular idea of unreasonable profits dissipated, if, has been alleged, it has no foundation.—Northern Whig. William Wright (Member of Tattersall's), Sport ing Printer, Publisher, and Racing Express Agent 16, York-street, Covent Garden ...
... HEIGHT OF TIDE AT THE CUSTOM HOUSE, a .. 20 feet 6 inches. fijjf Inntljtrn Htpiidfi. CORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1868. TheAVMmi Whig has received a threatening letter from the Fenians. The Times notices with satisfaction a meeting at Bolton, at which, it is ...
... FENIAN'S. The Northern Whig has received the following warning:— ** Editor of the Whig Callender Street Belfast. Dear Sir,— l wish inform you that yon had need to very careful of your Conce a party has set to Destroy your primises I hs friend Wish to ...
... always ready gsre to just rule, the bulk of the Irish people thus wantonly estranged. —« MAIITIAI, LAW IN IBELAND. Northern Whig, commenting letter of a Briton” in the Tiinet seye : -Nothing has been more remarkable during the Fenian alarms in England ...