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ELECTION INTELLIGENCE

... through the principal street On arriving at Mr. tlealy's hotel Healy thanked the electors, saying his return was in the face of Whig prosecutors. A jury Irish people had brought in a verdict landlordism, and decreed its eternal doom. the impotent menaces ...

THE STATE TRIALS

... This was the first time it had proved pos- c .sible to maintain an Irish party in spite of the ( deiroralisation which . the . Whig:,; party l had :always endeavoured to use. He did not believe 1 in the permanence, of an Irish party in the EnglishI . Pariament; ...

FOR THE DESPATCH OF BUSINESS

... just dead, and the new King tad his new Parliament, which was still more pmarkable from the fact that it brought back the Whigs to power after twenty years' pandering in the wilderness of opposition. The lories had gone out the question of Parliamentary ...

A VERY CRIMINAL INFORMATION

... We rather like the prosecution, as evi- dence that the Government does not see its way -that between the desire to please Whigs by up- holding the law, and the desire to serve the people of Ireland, the Government has to serve two masters, and that we ...

THE EXAMINER

... man or not, he was certainly pitch- forked into and held a strong position. He may not be the last of the Whigs, but he is the last of the Whig Party ' managers. For many a long day, ever, indeed, since By Whiggery, trickery hot, Lord John a majority ...

THE STATE OF IRELAND

... supplemented by an advance of money to farmers to buy their land, and told the people to avoid those false'beaeons of the Whigs and banish land- lordism utterly from the country. nr. Mitchell Hency's letter, in which he declared to a Galway land meeting ...

POLITICS AND PASSING EVENTS

... trust ? Was he, a; represeutative ! of the Irish people, to leave their whole fate to depend -' .upon this fact, whether the Whig Hartington or fthe t Radical Chamberlain would win' in the division of u parties in the present Government. The'issue'could ...

THE STATE PROSECUTIONS

... truet 7 Was lie, a representative of the liush people, to leavo their whole fate to x' dependi upor this fact, whether the Whig Ilarting. e tou or the Radical ChiltsUberlaiun wourI vidu in ?? at divieiror, of partier. in the prweset Government. it L- ...