THE FENTUN CONSPIRACY

... -The Noeirth 1iFq contaics the c following zwariing,' which hlis been received at the off5ee of the paper:- Editor of the Whig Callender-strest, Belfast. Dear Sir,-I wish to inform you that you had need to be very careful of your Conceartis as a partv ...

SALFORD HUNDRED QUARTER SESSIONS

... years ago, Men 'of different shades of religion had begun, to think better of each other. He had sat on a com- mittee with Whigs, Tories, Radicals, Protestants, and Roman Catholics, and men of various shades of reli- gious opinion, and he had been struck ...

THE POLICE COURTS

... this town, and who has continued in active service on that body up to the time of his death. Mr. Whetstone belonged to the whig section of the liberal party, but had also the confidence and esteem of the radicals. The re- union of the liberal party, by ...

THE PRESS PROSECUTIONS IN IRELAND

... language against the landlords. He used strong language against the toiled, but he used equally strong language Against the whigs. (A laugh.) No one, however, could imagine that his letter was a seditious libel against the Queen or the Queen's government ...

Law Intelligence

... others before the end of his career. He cha- racterised the strong language in the Beehive, that the English government, whether whig, tory, or' radical, loved blood, as a lie, and observed that possibly it was better to let such language float down the stream ...

WARWICKSHIRE SPRING ASSIZES

... Ivngusge to a member of theHoard. He it never bsoard pflt dihcuseed at the f akehouas.-Sorijant Hayes: Is'n the Politics of Whigs, or Liberals, or Tories, or Conservatlves, but thongs ofalocal di~ntelrbetween-thwos dlaIns, and ditches- (laluitar)-aOh I ...

HORRIBLE MURDER IN AMERICA

... very fond of apples and nloe things. One day he went out for a walk with hls friend Cecil, and passed by the orchard of Famner Whig, when the trees were covered with beautiful ripe fruit. IISee, said Benjamin, what fine apples are tbere: let us climb over ...

OUR DAILY CONTEMPORARIES

... occasion no such moderation has been. observed, and the Premier, contrary to the Conservative tradition, has vied with his Whig predecessors in scat- tering the honours of the peerage. On the whole, the House of Lords has increased inordinately in numbers ...

OUR CONTEMPORARIES

... parties, the tories, when in power, would tabe care the latest intelligence should be very late In reaching the journals of the whigs, and vice versa it goes on to picture the helpless condition of the public with the railway, communication of the country, ...

A WOOL BROKER CHARGED WITH FORGERY

... everthinks of attaoking t her throne, or. of seeling to gain their end through its adestruction.' They may blame the tories or the whigs, or the' parliament, or the aristocracy, or bad laws, or an ex- , pensive administration; and they may assail either or all ...

THE CHARGE AGAINST MADAME RACHEL

... high's family need blush for any part that his lordship had taken in this affair. The proceedings then closed. The Observer (Whig) makes an estimate of the pro- bable result at the general election of the ehanoes effected by the Itefoem Act. G0 seats will ...

THE POISONING OF A RACE HORSE

... Mr. Gladstone, would have been a 4 dishonourable course for the Conservatives, though not with- I out precedent among the Whigs, who on the Irish Church 1 question, hed met the Irish party, and framed a joint resohl- 7 tion on the words whereof both sections ...