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Antrim, Northern Ireland

Access Type

83

Type

83

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THE MURDER OF MR. BATESON

... reverse; and if it can give the Northerns any satisfaction, it is well they should hear that, in my humble opinion, no class of Irishmen ever laboured more incessantly, or more suc- cessfully, to injure, if not to annihilate, a demand for any article of native ...

THE STOCKPORT RIOTS

... too great an extent between certain classes of Englishmen and Irishmen who might be re- siding in such places as Stockport; hut he must remind them that, as Ireland was a portion of the United Kingdom, the Irish had as great a right to take up their residence ...

HOLYWOOD PETTY SESSIONS—SATURDAY

... who stated his name to be Johtn M' G1cthy. MIr. M'Carthy, for his own amusement and benefit, was acting the dummy. He United in propria persona the busi- ness of a mendicant, a seller of note-paper, and a fortune-teller. The constable tooic him into ...

LAW

... to youl cause; That ' union is strength,' which ?? gathers: Your sons to stand firm 'gainst tyrannic laws. Come then, ye Irishmen-determined and steady, And free-and unshackled my foremost will stand, Resistance, my last, let all then be readyi To ' banish ...

LAW

... tions. The flrst step to heo taken in this work oflovo and mercy is the formation of a band of Christian rnen, who shouild unite and ec-operate in founding the reformatory to be at once a place of refuge and a training school forijuvenile convicts. Th ...

COURT OF BANKRUPTCY AND INSOLVENCY

... being prepared for sea at Cherbourg. The Prince, it is said, intends visiting in the Cassard the seaports ih Canada and in the United States. The Lord Mayor has fixed Saturday next, at one 3 o'clock, for the presentation of the freedouli of the city ?? Leopold ...

KILLEAD FARMING SOCIETY'S ANNUAL PLOUGHING MATCH

... fighting. for-(appla'use)'-and it was; and if any foreign invader attempted to set his foot on the soil, it would be found that Irishmen were ready in i thousands to repelhim.' (Great applanse.) As to the prosperity of IIrelnnd, it was rapidly improving, and ...

EXTRAORDINARY CASE OF FRAUD

... other 1 poor persons. since his last ?? 21st- James Pollock, seventy-five years of age, a native of Dublin, was sent from the United States of America, where he had been for thirty-five years. He was sent by the authorities of Bridgewater, with many others ...

Assize Intelligence

... of Assize or by a common jury of the county; because lie wouid like-os lie lied the greatest respect for aill classes of Irishmen, and particularly for the noble aristocracy of hisI native country-thiat they shiou~ld [lct not even I for at moment, either ...

NEWTOWNARDS QUARTER SESSIONS

... Was the evidence not p clear enough, however? Was it not shown that the defendants had acted most nulike Christians and c - Irishmen? He never hci&ad of such an attselk in all h his existence, and he had in the course of hlis profes- sional career defended ...

Assize Intelligence

... defied i anvone to contradict him, that Belfast owed its first To impetus to the Vlolnteers, whose successors were the n United Irishmen, and the Whigs of Belfast were the 'I sons of the latter. These were the men who made el Belfast what it was. To them ...

COURT OF BANKRUPTCY AND INSOLVENCY

... proceedings of the 1 Fenian Brotherhood. It seems that this society numbers now 1,200,000; they have 1 Centres all over the United States; they have 200,000 enlisted soldiers to deliver Ireland from the oppressor. As soon as the time comes, steamers will ...