SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1886

... repre| sented Renfrewshire we Liberals hoped that by a just | and generous policy we might conciliate Irishmen, | and make us in truth as in name a United Kingdom. | I have elowly and reluctantly abandoned that hope. | The injustice and impolicy of centuries ...

CONTEMPORARY OPINION,

... enable him to hold his own. Granted that a struggle ,’ is inevitable, is it not obviously our first duty to en- ] list as many Irishmen on our side as possible ¢ That J is the case for Home Rule.” ‘ At Berlin the English elections and the uncertainty of the ...

SANDY

... other Secretaries of State, also an Under-Secretary, with salary of £l,BOO per annum (more or less).” Both officials to be Irishmen, if possible. llT.—The present Lord Lieutenancy of Ireland to be abolished, and in its place a Viceroy with no political ...

with Mr. Stead, of the Pall Mall G

... Ireland “is not yet inhabited by a perfectly concordant and homogeneons people,” and to intrust supreme power to one section of Irishmen would be to fire the mine of civil war. The immediate and the imperative duty of the Government, which Lord Salishury recognises ...

Published: Saturday 14 August 1886
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 792 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

NOTES AND NOTIONS

... ““is not yet inhabited by a perfectly concordant and homogeneous people,” and to intrust supreme power to one section of Irishmen would be to fire the mine of civil war. The immediate and the imperative duty of the Government, which Lord Salisbury recognises ...

Published: Saturday 14 August 1886
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 5539 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE BEDFORDSHIRE TIMES AND INDEPENDENT, SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1886 et eet – LX o AUG U

... Lord Salisbury should venture on offering any concession to Nationalism he will be promptly deserted by the Conservative Irishmen who represent Ulster and English constituencies. The meeting was adjourned until the 19th inst ‘ According to the Daily News ...

HORNCASTLE AUGUST FAIR

... Monday last For centuries past Horncastle great horse fair has been regarded as one of the leading events of the kind in the United Kicgdom. If we read history aright, the fair was established by Royal Charter in the reign of King Henry !11, and this charter ...

Published: Saturday 14 August 1886
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2248 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

their commencement possible—the desperate condition of the santry. Contemporaneously with the ont-bmr}:f the ..

... repression instead of reform. For several yearsa society, at first a public one and afterwards a secret ome, called the *United Irishmen,” had been in existence. Begi ning with a few men in Belfast in 1791, it numberefialf a million in 1797, of whom 300,000 ...

MR. PARNELL'S BILL

... tenants, and that if the tyrants of the , | National League would permit they would be | paid in nine cases out of ten. All Irishmen . ’ are not ‘‘ rogues and rapparees,” though Irish - | American patriots are doing their best to make - | them both, and ...

Published: Saturday 18 September 1886
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1288 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

NOTES AND NOTIONS

... NOTES AND NOTIONS The current number of United Ircland is adorned—or otherwise—with a cartoon bearing the titie of ¢ The Kerry Bull and the Kerry Buller,” bearing the sigaificant epigraph, ¢ Since General Buller’s arrival in Kerry it is remarked that ...

Published: Saturday 02 October 1886
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2776 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

MARRIAGE or VISCOUNT STOPFORD AND MISS MILLS

... political life it was now no | strengthened form, They might regard themselves | B “but as the humble units, but it was the aggra,. . of the humble units that would make up g, .img.xuo,, iml!on:{ of the I.ub.eml par?, and very soq’:en}w believed, that majority ...

CONTEMPORARY OPINION

... these promises and K]edges the agricultural labourers might be satisfied that unless they were closely organised and firmly united they would never get such a measure from the Conservative party. There had not been a greater obstructionist to a Liberal ...