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Argus, or, Broad-sheet of the Empire

NIMROD ON THE CORN LAWS. TIIE LANDED TO THE LANDLESS. TO THE EDITOR OE THE ARGUS

... question will not be rashly decided. We have had, I think, a sickener of experiments within the last few years. The Catholic Emancipation Bill, demanded by the people, was to have made us all comfortable—the lamb and the lion were to lie down beside each ...

THE PUSEY TRACTS

... individual, be his station what it may. Was it not for the pressure arising from the debt we should never have heard of Catholic Emancipation, (that bane to England's prosperity—that Pandora's box without hope,) the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, ...

PAMPHLETS

... endowed. The voluntary principle, as it is called, has no footing among them. But the Catholics here, as in all other parts of the world, are the common disturbers. The Catholics of this State are in truth the sympathisers, in chief with the Papineaus, Mackenzies ...

MR. BRUEN'S RETURN FOR CARLOW

... associated with a stern repugnance to that foul and pestilential tyranny which, in Ireland, since the fatal act of Roman Catholic Emancipation, has gradually blasted, with the shameless acquiescence of successive Viceroys, the purest principles of justice, policy ...

CORRESPONDENCE

... caused the disabilities nude which they laboured to be removed? Was it by patiencei and resignation that the Roman Catholics obtain& emancipation ? Ay ! That's the precedent. that fatal day, when agitation was put in place law, we have only gone on from one ...

THE ARGUS

... newspaper called the Harlequin, the oppressio n h as been absolutely disgraceful. It was said in this paper that the Roman Catholic superstition was the most detestable on the face of the earth, as, indeed, it is; and for this libel, which of course could ...

CLERICAL INTELLIGENCE

... by L or d S TRA N GF O R D, (pc ?MELBOURNE replied that the notice of motion given by Mr. Ch ai n neil for making Roman Catholics eligible to the office of Lord e nntient lc enor, was not given with the approbation of her Majesty's Go bvTlnle Eq . rl ...

THE ARGUS

... Pitt, who left-the great questions of RefoTm and Slive-oWning open—as did Lord Liverpool the' great qmstion of Roman Catholic Emancipation. We happen to have our own opinions on the value of these grebe a' quegtions ; and, in spite of the odium to which ...

THE ARG-TUS

... juries is hostile to all principles of justice or equity; that perjury and popery are prevalent in all trials where Roman Catholics are concerned; that any outrage on a Protestant is of no moment in the eyes of the jurors now chosen—in short, that jurors ...

GENERAL INTELLIGENCE

... Prussia has been petitioned by some parties to use his. m t fl• uence, in conjunction with the other great ;powers, for the emancipation of the city and district of Jerusalem from the control of the disciples of Mahomet. What the Crusaders could not accoihplish ...

ENGLISH LAWS respecting LANDLORDS,

... appear that in Catholic times every thing was done to make the lives of the poor easy and happy, but now, thanks to the reformation, we were a miserable people '. that :all the liberty we enjoyed we owed to the Catholics; that, Catholic Monarchs had ...

GENERAL INTELLIGENCE.

... occasionally stopped to gratify heretical curiosity, wended its way through the streets of Huddersfield. A c l a use in Emancipation Act inflicts a penalty of £ 5O on r a pists displaying the ceremonies of their religion elsewhere than in their chapels ...