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Irish News and Belfast Morning News

FATHER JOHN MACAULAY

... FATHER JOHN MACAULAY. ‘‘He died, full of years and honours;” The old phrase was never more appropi lately used than in connection with the peaceful end of the long and saintly career sketched in our columns to-day. The Very Rev. John Macaulay’s life was ...

n ,11,,.nation of the language used this lh>toric occasion, I

... Flood was the idol the Volunteers, and Grattan that of the rarliameut. I: were noil that (hope two men had sunk their clifferenees ami co-operated for the cowl ami welfare of their country. With reference to Grattan's Parliament itself, it contained members* ...

DAY BY DAY

... awaited the decision of the people (.rear Britain on its claims. the morning of that memorable day 1 y Volunteers were under arms at an early j, nl ir Their artillery, under the orders fi limes Napper Tandy, was stationed on quays, and commanded all the ...

AND THE STORY OF ITS CAREER

... formation of those armed associations the long-established distinctions between the Protestant and the Catholic could not be altogether forgotten. Many of the penal laws were still in full force. Catholics were prohibited statute from bearing arms in Ireland ...

THE PUBLIC FORUM. The O’pintons of Our Correspondents are not Necessarily Our Own. To Ensure Insertion, Letters ..

... claim for these Protestants absolute freedom within the law, and, when occasion offers, do not hesitate invoke the secular arm in vindication of their rights. Why should we expect these things for Protestants in Ireland and deny the same liberty to the ...

ORDER’S SPLENDID PROGRESS

... National President of the Ladles'’ Auxiliarv; Rev. John W. Cavanaugh. C.S.C., President the University of Notre Dame; Rev. John D. Kennedy, National Chaplain'; Rev. M. O'Flanagan; of Lough Lynn, Ireland; John T. Keating, Chicago, former President of the Order; ...

DAY BY DAY

... success was his—and ;er-increasing success. became oue of toe leaders of the brilliant hand of wits -talesmen, which included Grattan, liarlemont, the elder Emmet, Daly, ™nv. and many others. His “charters 'iL' as “ Prior” of the Convivial Asso- ”iturn called ...

DAY BY DAY

... manifested. But on the close of ihe proceedings a circumstance not less mnarkable than . disgusting unexpectedly cwurred. Mr, John Fitzgibbon, whose indigenous lostilnv to the libertios of his country had never omitted any opportunity of opposing its em ...

DAY BY DAY,

... u pamphlets to pen upon social and law, And Parliaments hold, as themselves old, exclaiming ‘Hear, hear,' for Caw cawl’ Mr. John O’Connor,, the 1 gunt, who was named in the House the •’ night for referring to an honourable lumber (Mr. Clark, of North Belfast) ...

THE HEtFAST NEWS, MCWDAT, AtTOtTST 3,

... implies' as the ideal to striven for. , I nave somewhere on my file a rfport of speech delivered in Newcastle in support of. Mr. John Morley in the early ’nineties, iu which he denounced the I.L.P. in general, and myself in particular, being in the pay of the ...

TO THE EDITOK

... ls comrade was of an entirely different He knows a great deal about Irish history; ho argued the policy of fe Tone and of Grattan in ’9B with me, ‘l'd sec mod to display knowledge of dtairs, lioth before and after, that simply I'irprised after ray observation ...