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PROSECUTION OP MH. O’CONNELL

... title of the Brunswick family to the throne. A cotemporary has expressed his astonishment that should refer to the Protestant Whigs of the Revolution, as authorities in favor of Mr. O’Connell. should humbly hope, that the unhappy circumstance of that Gentleman ...

ATTORNEY'GENERAL

... inconsiderable prize. Sir John has worked for his honours. At a period of great political ferment, he made a transition from Whig to Tory politics, At Derby he was of Counsel for the Crown; he was Solicitor-General against the Cato-street dupes he was obliged ...

soetrj>

... of the first order, and of princely fortune, has twenty years in Parliament. He has been uniformly %nd zealously attached to Whig principles ; yet upon the accession of the Honse of Bourbon, he advanced loans to the struggling Government, which he greatly ...

%t)e g>oHtt}etn iStnattcr. anfl CotU ganiatettid CojWiec

... eminent Counsel. Mr. Wetherell intimated bis readiness to undertake the task.— Mr. Sergeant Copley was probably solicited as a Whig, leaped in the law. Never did Counsel assume higher'-lolte'towards the King’s Counsel and even, towards the Court, than Mr ...

CONTINUED FROM FIRST PAGE

... patronize, at the ensuing election, the only man in Galway, who, in the year 1812, refused to sign the Catholic Petition. DEVON WHIG CLUB. The following communication was read and received with considerable applause:— Tiverton, 14th January, 1825. 'So,—Conformably ...

X|)e&ottt|>etn Reporter, attP Cork Commercial Courier*

... is tantamount an acquiescence in our views, of the peaceableness and security of society in this part of Ireland.—Northern Whig. Steam Boats in Switzerland—lt is stated in the German Papers of the 3d instant, that steam boats will placed during the present ...

FAIRS

... devoted to the study of the dead, as not to feel some respect for Bring Whigs, soon to be in power. Lord Henry Petty was the favourite. Once more he tried bis fortune, when the Whigs bid long adieu to all their greatness,” end then he was Lord the ascendant; ...

TO BE LET,

... of the If name has been mentioned with approbation, as connected with the Whigs of Scotland, with much more propriety may we regard that Noble Duke as at the head of the Whigs of Ireland, who have exerted themselves in endeavouring to restore, or, more ...

CORK AND LIMERICK RAIL-WAY

... which their postesrity have happily reduced to practice. venerate the true protestant principles of religious liberty—the sound whig principles of civil liberty, established the Revolution in 1689—in these I have lived, and in these I hope I shall die. In ...

■ V- .. COXTT.VUED FROM FIRST PAGE. pecially appointed by bis sovereign to keep watch and ward in that country

... Emancipation, but I can’t get any one else like it—or, at least, I may suppose him to say, I like it, but I can only get the whigs to like it. (hear, hear, hear.) I ask, sir, whether it would not be more far, more liberal, on the part of the right honourable ...

(W.) I think not; hnt the answer the supporter I of thU will be—“ While you retain any I thing—while

... bo sgmnt the is of his own class and religion. How would the tones j ft* or adorataoa tbo Virgin Mary, tike to be told the whig*, if the latter should chance «»* ■ncnfie. rf the m •■‘‘We relmsto opinions know hat it leads to and spoil sllegianceor will ...