ABOLITION OF THE IRISH COURT

... the fashion in which it has been taken up by our esteemed correspondent, either wise or prudent. Holding out the hope to Irishmen, that if their court be now abolished, it may lead to the obtainment, instead of a Viceroy, of a Queen and parliament for ...

THE NEWPORT MURDER

... THE NEWPORT IURDER. The conduct of Maurice Murphy and Patrick Sallivan, the two young Irishmen charged with the robbery and savage murder of the poor infirm old woman, Jane Lewis, in a wood near Bassalleg, has been marked by a degree of levity extraordinary ...

INQUESTS

... to join, as a connexion, in the fietee crusade that has been directed against Ecclesiastical Establisbiments. Wesleyana are united, as a conoexion, for pssrposes strictly religiouss, and for these only. To political questions isrdividual WVes. ieyans attend ...

CONFLICT WITH THE LEEDS POLICE

... teamed Alawson went into crop r. the Lloyds Arms Inn, Duke-street, having a bay spade iii age q his hand at the timeo. Some Irishmen, who were drinking thoaq ,ore in the house at the time, quarrelled with Mawson, end one last y idly,I of them struck him ...

Ireland

... emigrants, imprisoned paupers, and dismayed inhabitants; united also by a common desire to apply their powers and faculties to the discovery of some po- tent remedy for this national affliction; united by a common belief that this remedy lies in a careful ...

THE NEW CORPORATION—ABOLITION OF THE IRISH COURT

... country to sell. And yet this ai corporate body, representing, as it will, the commercial inte- rests of the second city in the United Kingdom, might, if directed by the pervading influence of earnest and honest wv patriotism, be on the citadel of their capital's ...

NATIONAL PROTEST AGAINST PENAL LAWS

... the Prime Minister of William III. We who, by being united, wrung Catholic Emancipation from the Duke of Wellington, ought, by pulling together n6w, be able to restrain Lord John Russell. We should unite and make one great effort. in support of freedom of ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... because Lord John Russell lad seen the Protestant Dissenter and the Catholic in this country united by one common bond, and that he feared this union of Irishmen, that he had flung this apple of discord amongst them ? Too lung had the people of Ireland ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... praying the rijec- tion of the penal measures at present before the legislature, directed against the Catholic church in the United Kingdcm. There could not have been lees than 10,000 persons present, and the greatest enthusiasm was manifested by the vast ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... Catholic church (loud cheers)? WVill you not so rally (cbeers) ? Yes you will, and as becomes Irishmen and Catholics, and more especially Irish Catholics, you will unite in oneserried phalanx to rally round the treedom of the church, which the invader found ...