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IRELAND

... aselected; t} e | ETHE NATIONAL LEAGUE. ISeveral'correspondents, writing to United Ireland, a, eu tggest, that- to appease the thirst of the: Govern- Y ment for the blood of Irishmen. one hundred ,n s innocent Nationalists should offer themselves as victims ...

THE DYNAMITE TRIAL

... within the United Kingdom or without, composa, ismagine, invent, devise, or intend to deprive or ievose our Most Gracieus Lady the Queen, her heirs, or successors from the style, honoar, or itoy~d name of the Imperial Crewnr of the United King- don, or ...

CROSSHILL POLICE COMMISSIONERS

... s but whets locked a at a little more closely the absurdity and the folly were at nunse seen of chess two olilces -beiing united in One person. A qluestion having arisen as to the po~wer of the railway company in opening thec scr~ets and diveriting thle ...

GENERAL NEWS

... interesting botanical curiosities e had collected. I Tax arrivals of live stock and fresh meat at Liver- pool last week from the United States and Canada -were, of live stock, in excess of the previous week's imports, but of fresh meat a falling off, the total ...

IRELAND AND THE CRIMES BILL

... determination of some of the leaders n of the Irish people to prove to Ireland that govern. i ment by the Parliament of the United Kingdom is tl an impossibility, and the attempt which is now being r! made to discredit both the remedial and repressive v' ...

THE COUNTRY AND THE CRIMES BILL

... The Fvmenoamas Journalf publishes the onbj ioned I iextract from a private letter recoived in Duliebn j ?? a merchant in the United States - -I e ?? Joseph, Mo., March 209. If this bill for coercion pos,3cs P'arliamecnt anad Ir ini enforced, there will ...

LORD ROSEBERY IN GLASGOW

... 1kh raote to 11 .oil for~. ti' 01tC 'main who :3; a 'bet.ter. ?? an etie.1 ii, the h. place; Ne have ?? .xt''iI t ii ud unite ti-, \Ve huee ?? t'! an! adll mie to r'air, rhIS lise ci ia' :liiltii c ai to Irelanvi. In the ne.r Dac'_, th~at 'oln' i- ...

THE SITUATION IN IRELAND

... allowed forsuch a, rurnoFe, it appeared to him (Mer Leiovre) that the r-i t of public sneeting in Ireland bad fallen Ialtoo'tser uniter the controll of the police and the - I co-rn- ititisnal righi of the people of this countrv to hd a public rmeeting for the ...

LORD RIPON AND MR MORLEY IN DUBLIN

... they now found was needed. (Cheers.) No stimulus was needed on the part of Irishmen, and no encouragement was needed on their part, but both of them would he the better-Irishmen for the a stimulus, and Englishmen for the encouragement. Let them rest assured ...

THE ARREST OF IRISH M.P.'S

... it he prefaced what he had, to t say by a slight reference to procedure generally. 1~ I (Hear, rear.) Hie considered that Irishmen had a ] .~Special interest in these days in facilitating the business of tire House generally. (Hoaelr, hear.) The Irish ...

THE PARNELL COMMISSION

... ,d intimidation. Several were specially named I 54 referred to-the frisk World, the Chicago Ci.:een, the Bost Pilot, and United .releand. s l~ would :be part, of his task that day to I iedicatc to their Lordshipl the evideoce a ,,thlwhich he proposed ...

In the High Court of Justiciary, Edinburgh, yesterday, Jessie King, or Macpherson, was

... the prisoner almost fainted. -Mr Bayard has stated to some newspaper reporters, apropos of the Samoan question, that if the United States wanted to go to war they must get another Secretary of State. He advocated the extension of international re- lations ...