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LATEST FROM SPAIN

... notwithstanding the speech of Lord Stanley in reply to Lord John Russell, they fear that the views of the latter noble lord may seem not very un- reasonable in the eyes of the prime minister. As Lord John Russell thinks that the Irish repealers, although conducting ...

Published: Friday 23 June 1843
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Mail
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 3643 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE DUBLIN EVENING POST, TUESDAY. JUNE 13. 1843

... eland, The following correspondence has taken place betw them- Lord Chancellor and Mr. H. Grattan :— m that Stephen's greea, 3d June, hat his My late Mr. Grattan supported and pres pinions parliament petitions for the Kepeal af the act of Union ve the ...

Published: Tuesday 13 June 1843
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Post
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 10109 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

EDWARD LITTON

... he said that a great number of arms we tered in Ireland, and a great number seized ; but u present law the police were not able, if they met a n arms in his hands going to commit a murder, as the; ed, to ask if his arms were registered ; they bad no put ...

Published: Thursday 29 June 1843
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Post
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 7700 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... cheering). In theEnghsh Arms Bill no penalty whatever was inflicted for the possession of arms ; in your Arms Bill, an Irishman can be transported for seven years for having arms in his possession (great cheering). But although the English ...

Published: Friday 02 June 1843
Newspaper: Cork Examiner
County: Cork, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 20024 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

HOUSE OF COMMONS—Tin rsday, June 15

... to the ultima ratio of an arms bill. If the people of Ireland were resolved to be in possession of arms, it was not such a paltry measure as this which would prevent them ; it could no more deprive the people of Ireland of arms than the one-gun Martello ...

Published: Monday 19 June 1843
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Mail
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 9675 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THK CORK SOUTHERN REPORTER PARLIAMENT

... THE CORK SOUTHERN REPORTER PARLIAMENT > rue ARMS BILL. ‘We do not over estimate or over describe it, when we say that the Debate on the Irish Arms Bill, which spreads over eo many columns of our number of this evening, is the most important that it has ...

THE WATERFORD CHRONICLE

... while leaving the management of Irish interests to Irishpien, upon Irish soil, con yet preserve this country as the right arm of the empire, and such a system, in place of weakening and dismembering it, would but strengthen and consolidate it, and fix ...

Published: Saturday 17 June 1843
Newspaper: Waterford Chronicle
County: Waterford, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2815 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

BETWEEN

... one gun and two pistols. 11. John Whelan of Ballyroarlin, parish of Ardcavau, and barony of Sbilmalier, one gun. 12. Thomas Nolan, of St. Peters College, Wexford, parish of St. John s, and barony of Forth, one gun. 18. John Sinnott, ofTacumsbane, ofTacurasbane ...

Published: Saturday 24 June 1843
Newspaper: Wexford Conservative
County: Wexford, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 3895 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... of arms; and I may embrace this opportunity of expressing my conviction that-an amendment Iof the present arms act is impera tively called for. There can beno question, from the information I have received, that vast numbers of unregistered arms are ...

Published: Thursday 01 June 1843
Newspaper: Freeman's Journal
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 21731 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

£ l,»nt or Il is useless to reason with men wlio have proclaimed their entire disr-gard of the constitution, and

... late Mr. Grattan and the iQ.-mury of 1782. which hope to see maintained, as the British Parliament ha%® totally failed in their attempts to legislato for •hew nothing hut ignorance and injustice. I am your very obedient servant. HENRY GRATTAN Messrs. ...

Sir -ni l. if the Ireland i was what Mr. Roebuck h.ol described it. this hill ouirh* to Ibe passed

... whom the people had cnnfi lence, the oroh ability was, that the present bill would tend arm flic Protestants and disarm the Catholics. He would op; pose any arms' hill, whether proposed Whig or Tory and could not conceive that this atime forsnch measure ...

Published: Saturday 24 June 1843
Newspaper: Waterford Chronicle
County: Waterford, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 5804 | Page: 1 | Tags: none