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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1888-3-30, Page 2_., i' Ir ..", t 2THE HURON SIGNALV FRIIAY, YABICH 80, 1888. .----.t1______ -ir-.-T_..____I of t•Mytbntt<g bed I. to tract M M •11 the pewtabstMl. Nt.lmtu ri) atauDssa esu aslant �ltpia vant %on:swi m $aruau ie w ow f ses•s•w.l us )Mir ►ow ' t I witted have bee eyftleteut tui this {bet was aajestly •d /rhuseatly mein so hr son the Plast if Cameo w vee ee I., areewn.e• AU I use say le, 1ba1 ! ver vilest Grimes in euotety -the plonk hem thea. poor people while they were oersted (Irish .Mie} Itemewb.r •lb if that trawmaetu•a, monad elowing sub i � breed sed water diet, twenty -tour defenceless, cad bas beau obliged to pry ways that the Plan ti Campa.ge as the matted to a tabula) .1 readout t,tags- I hoerof solitary ounbu.meat, deprived every shilling of the cut• of 150 eject- inmost sediment of the loth diftioulty. testes •t (Mite ielstusat-,1 shit .incase- '4 Welts, of coma* 11$11i*T1111111, 11 nuts, newts (Clasen ) No.. ear, tete is It is • mere roujb sad reedy way to oust "'ad w wbuIttod 'bell (..iv. $,d eo1urth •r. -lust perfectly •eleselle Lord Derreyue'e tmpsrt.al ("intuit as to core the blunders of your legiallatwo, m Lugli.bee to sty je ery est teeter so imp every material caw physical dee hoe the eel is jsepieg u between the aid to cars your folly iu slut sliming scan ort •ud prletes a upon ea, it that is Oriues Act end tee Phut of Campaign. with the Bill of my hon. friend the year ateuen.w stud chivalrous treatment , after sa w•.utba. (Laughtu.) hvw, 1 m.wber fur Cxk jlnah vises). We of puhllosl prisoners. You will neve. wiVquote another iuel•nee-lie famous, an the mete Uhler* sod vedettes of herr a murmur or a word of oueopluut "tete u..ogem.et id Itudyke, which n.illeuns of Irishmen who take nook fr .m mar lips if toe pick to that, but the buries) Englaud last wormer, and under the staudard of my hog. friesad moment lieu yo farther sue treat w as for which her Majesty's Government (chess). Lo me fur • moment ea• Gal• tie worst eximimosb 'eller a aoerety prorirnl no rewady wln•t*ver ( What Ali toe the statement of the right hon. whaddym you Ro tertbot god try end suohect u theJresult f lust year Cul O'C.ha- emote'sau. We heard it stated over w to ghee, our of the meet hardened rack and over attain in the most wnaNM ute 1rotAL 1oan�rt maters, and of the meet desperate baht manner that the authority of the Hati.m- iug seen b..iJ.., iu Ireland, refused to •1 Leave •std that elf her ALajesty'o accept fro to corer 1} yea's rent of 57 Government scudo nut -run 'o !n- tenants. He bas now soupiest !3.000 land -that one or the nt either must psek to wipe off two years' rent of 72 tenant., up aid to ilauelater) is the National after incurring some 000 is legal ea- League 'Meg t Deas it allow the .bgbt- Douses. Cheers and laughter. Ther est'sign ..i going 1 (Irish t uerel. There is to coy, atter losing all his m. wry, and e,• 1,800 branches of a Nautical after c.wtiug the British taxpayer over ±:1.000 f,,r expenses for his evictions, (bear, hear), he has nowt c to the eeuclusten that the Onuses Act is "nu ' and be has struck his deg to the it. 1 will paw on to the results, and 1 i Plan of Campsigo upon tar eerie terms will ouly say that if any one hu rumen to hon than he would have hot before to blush for them, 1 do not think it i. the Crimes Act was passed. (Cheers.) cow )hear, hear) I hops 1 ant not de- Let use read • letter which caws this the public to ate isle tea worms taming tbt House (bud Home Rule eery day from the principal man on the than they would tee any cut throat for 41bstn'• The only excess I can plead is tattle of my hon friend, the member fix swing my a pie, L r savioq lay con. met I do not think I shall have an Etta Maya The Rev Father 1'.br atitsehta, a f..te which the ie., opportunity very coon of claiming their jMutphy says - t i •'Aly dear Mr Dillon -A thousand thanks for cheque. You have acted nobly by us, and we have reason to thank and be grateful to y,u, Whit pleases tae moat of all u that our victory over C•donel 1) Cal hen is complete, 4 1,�fa'� yy� �' • Y.�.. � L'; a �'�.- .. t. '� , �t[lr"1'l�ft` Eogls.hie,M 4r"ss ton to son_ 1 ti. o 1 bink rte at 1 misett Y hay. tory much to fear , nor 1 Mee 1 eV bars ••t s guilty nommeses in /acing {h.,.. mea (cis). I shoed rather think Ilia' 11 then se ssybody W whew the cry o1 Amour applies In lite trausnhun-1 should think that if there is anybody .h„ rwatgs to bleak at the rams 1f In ►stone, sed to l.rMitcawl- siow •pert altogether from the b.uud that as shed there, 1 should stank it M her MMjeal • Guvwtntseet r near Mar), who bled neither the hwwuitr •Y forbid t`w, sietw•e not. tb. Douro• t•, perse- 'hety (loud Otptrr.••u ch..r. tit intended cud saMt$oo.d it N there • a n'' prwl>ect absiet ntd them -. de to ateiadon them they threatened to bsoonte iuconreniettt t•. a Tory candi- date hear, bear), and they bad the in- credible meanness while my kande were o mod in pprison- t o 1roseut s story to the English people under a false and *i 'ruthful gwsse in oder to reco.oile h bl- h treated v•re i T sly %leu. Guist' had -the for Inset' 1 from whit► criminals are altogether exempt-whes you ask us to make tome and active and velentary •ckuowledt mein of our kinship and egoistuy with criminals, lbws we Nay; ow : we will die fico (hear, hear And y, m will have to learn the deliriums bet... n your creat sal classes and Irish political prisoners, even if you have to fall back on the soroose • jury and their verdict to es - overlain that distinction loud Oppositwa therm). I will ley outhiug more about which the Lind t n'iteiuut-n, and now mitt"° (renege cheer. ;bre .. •:slat setrybudy n this earth school,- should hk. to ask before I sit gown -- Ie would hate 'wen ascot unmerited, a ben is ell this to end 1 what object is and a most awf olamity of it had bap s000mpdelor f If this is to go us for - *ver sail forever, what object can tt ever poesibly accomplish except misery to a week people rod worry sod eternal •ud approved by all w o understand the shame to yourselves? (Chem . Is It matter fully. He did his utruust to get the object of the right hon gentleman to convert the Irish people sughter), or is it to dragoon there laughter) -to dragoem them out of aspirations which are as deeply lodged in the hearta of • mi111o1 mall as the blood in their seiner (Loud and pro) ,nged cheer Dors the right hon. gentleman in his wildest hour imagine that he has made n• single convert throughout the loogth and breadth of Ireland by kis coo I I ceded to the different degrees of poverty Guppies the right hon. '*Dalen n will were lb per omit upwards to :.i, 30, 40 reply by-•iuc-bye. 1 ask on ma he The clouts of evictions were £450, and mast as much as one aingi other costs in legal proceedings were whit. he has *tempt i .. est flak He mid he should pay grvd•oe ten single man sm.oka the egoist £;'0 out of the £1,000 given whom be has really frights „osmee re him, and that he was paying 5 per cent sult ref all the terrific powers hash he for moneys borrowed besides. 1 have received s very great number of letters congratulating, us en our .access. We have succeeded wonderfully, thank 4 and e11 our (thole, and you amongst chem. (Geeta) This is the way in which the hoer. gentleman has beaten the of the plan of campaign. These twtis0ts have won in spite of him, ..wont adhering to that plan of amfr} What . • t her I rubella 'has he taught them i The tan- ks* woo, and every man who was Or possession et his holding of the Crimes Aot, and h.a „lding ever since (cheer.. .wenn the right hen gentle- tnumpbant Cromwell- has t6thst, thanks to ILL . r t to the right or they are I .,.I! Y.o0E1Tl•u4•. imped (cheer.). Now, ler, 1 won't weary Out House, I promise you, by going into a!I the sieer*ble tustaooss of fool play )hear, hear), Ube vile sets of indecently that were re.•xted to against m. in the omit way, 1 aright say, for unfortoaate- ly they are commonplace, every -day oas/Nencee is Ireland under the iw- faass.s tribunals that you have set op obese and call them justice. I wuu't go kilo that matter : and as to TREATVENT, RA I certainly am not going intc any raked of the tniserable little prison tor- tures ar.1 u.dignitie• that were eniploy- i4 to gire us pain and humiliation, and what is much mute important, to be- smirch the character of the Irish repin- e rotators in the eyes of the people of Greenan' and elsewhere. I think we cab slturd t„ pass these things by. Loud sheen I belie s that our oppoueuts are not soion 1 renerytbing that is man- ly nese. bear) as not to feel rather ashamed non eery exultant about the right hunt gentleman's prison exploits. (Near, hear. Dec there is another order eVoppauents. I am serry to think that t one ere sten who are capable of derir- z.g • pill keeorr pleasure in wetter that torments ears told and is seeing us .mut under their effects But I shall .t 'ratify them. And for the simple • non that 1 don't feel . ,unded tl.,ud the tenants to purchase. and he would, 1 think, sell on any terms rather than yield to the plan, but we •txulutely re- fused to purchase as long as the nape re whined around our Becks. We wusld not entertain the idea of purchase at all until restored to the holdiogs, and free as the mountain air to newt "el elual terms. The neat gale is sot t' be asked until the end of June ; red:outina con- bas ue bas been wielding in irelsru(dosses the Iaet six months 1 1 pat to gentlemen opposite to tsar what shouts and what 'wash t pawed this Crimes Act with`., h trample over us. I res.mbttll,Tell yell of delight with which t b the declaration of the C Exchequer I think at w to be A DIEL To Thin between the Notices( ehwere;, and i didn't feel u, the least de- Government, apt -t g mama. (Laud cheers.) 1 rather sus'i"Ileng;,,_ • tttisults 1 ( , pita that the rig:it hen. Reolleelf-eillft put it to the 114111 der s:1 bis jaunty bravery carries les ould they • euwteien*rs oe net quite se easily as eppehave I som'w I dad feel eery keenly when in •htmmn if the res. octant !e a letter which the rightham. net fem•o puba,hed to a Mr Arnet� 1Iawitch, not wailing •any broad•pOw honest charge against me, he comely .4146nl� jet, f� • 'Trvorn ' AND L'AT11.sO*1 1111 .CA N, SOP" I the lcehsome insinuation that 1 shelter- weal n eel myself under the plea of ')deres from the infulcemeut of prison diaespline-a statement as to ethic challenge richt here. �ut:emau appeal roe of t!ie three , !!.,i• dnctors who ex. canned me fur one tittle, 1 won't soy of foundation, but eves of countenance h r such an assertion. Loud cheerio. (Hod'1a Mule cheers,. epi a- Ilen we are Dow fade to fees, :load and ti ,n of Irish lamilorda who waited on cele • c"napit•cy on whose :r,ntinued Opposites cheeringo, and I Lord $ahcbury the o, her day with • beg 05 hare heard m many h challesse Ism, in defence of his own ging letter chef and laughter,. Mk right hon. gentlemen op chased t-ior it ler after e11, his own !them how man- them would 'be .il are at this moment only seareet r that it et stare -I challenge ling to try a . ill the Plan of Cam great estates In Ireland hint to a; peal soy ane 01 those three plugs t„mor:"s (renewed cheers). The ! landlords are offering any uaoaJs -,on. : them the prison de tor, fact is the ('tan i,f t'd,n,Tsign has never •Dee. One of Ghon a the a Pro/retool t ;;enileman, And son of a had so widen') mot unbroken a mares of in the county of W.zford, bndlord and the 'ther .m member of •ictuses as it has had during the last ria fain Hamilton i•emwrten the Proms s Board and the thirst a gen- I months cheers•. The greatest number I lesion, The N11 n Lord Qe; t lemon .h' se nem: even tee this hour I ' of the important struggles in which we property, where tete •q Gripcf neo e 't know') t lullemro him to appeal I were engaged when this act was passed � eMrgencymen by prof I . au► Siegle ma or to e11 of these gen- , helve been brought to • conclusion under third a 'he estate mf, Lo the •ter', t•. ,rive the slightest countenance the very mouths .of the right hon. gentle- ' It must fk • proud thing for that ',famous imputation. Loud I ma1t's guoa. And upon what terms 1 I I to know that on the tai .beer. : god I •i. rather 'Reimer on could keep you anyjhour giving moan. I ret hon• gstbmen is the sui fret than I w t.1* t.. be. I hate . ces ; bet thus I say- that the ems thing I wet Wad abominable s said that I was angry about the letter' that applies to them all is that in every per'eeuuons that ever while I was in prison, but I have come single instance at least the original dc- : order to strife down out of prix's, and bare bad an opportu. mends of the tenants have bean conced- these pear people, to a coy if @gain readu.g that letter, I am led. every evicted ten.nt hoe been rein. lead to tie their hands story no_onger. (Hear, bawl). 11 .1 - ms a nasi greater man than I am I treat it would he ample vengeance for me to find that any statesman who had ail reputehoo to lass should have pinned meth a letter -a letter conveying without any Crimea Act at all. I will the slightest imputation coon a men just give one or two iostane” .1 ton whose mouth was closed, (hear, hese) right hon. gentleman's administration in tut I must say al., that there breathed Ireland. I will just take in every sentence the temper of a beaten ; THS Calla Or LORD DR PRtY!1, and an angry msu, (okapi-, and I was I Ron c t, say of an angry woman, 1 m county Rri*comm.on. Jut as this Aad ua CND roOreAND+ OF rcorte TO JAIL, t of agile'' ...t 1 in at this moment , Metall, aware that and gladly would they go there rather to eine of the hoses on sureral estates where that struggle u than glee you one tittle of information. .Bata.... a desbt rill reseeding the landlords are brain rine as �L 1 g i(ith all your resources and your terrors their hopes and ere tpening lith negro it i one of our proudest boasts that, wuth tlrahinq w tenons, not with the right hen. gentle an organisation of over 500,000 mem- '.•Ls" or e•ttriIiw man or Dublin Castle, but w the seam- bis, you snout find smcog them one Ask the da / len of League in Ireland (cries. "More' ) There are rather more, the Gor eminent has added more 1 bra by it. eat (Irish cheers). No us thea two hesired and thirty bre have stet been nominally grappled . There are 1.500 brunettes. Doti like five - sixths of the whole hon, on which nut a linger bas been (cheers). Why t L it because right hoe 'Gentleman hes ooso•ired • too affect tion Lr the National 1 is it M- eause the breeches are echoing in ',ewer ..r have altered r principles b..:ause of this Ace of meat I No, it is because the Gov ret have mads such s disastrous and se luta mesa in attcusptteg to supper" At branches that �;g�,,��� THEY DARED NOT roust THE aIDICI'LE, the colossal collapse, that would result from any attempt W crush the whole of the organisation (Woo cheers). Every - owe who knows the suppressed counties of Kerry. Own, and my own aunty, knows that the branches bold their meetings just as usual. We knew by the figures sod the cash that collie in that the subscriptions, instead of falling off, have increased, that the resolutions of the League are gassed in the usual way, and that tkq are regarded with more manedn, a and eftia:_- than usual by the whole cosmouity. I have told yAI that the branch meetings are baisg held. I will read,ou a report )f one at Dunhsllo•, whish appeared in Ceded Ircian•f- "At the mutt* lir Pomeroy was in the chair. Banning for officers to go on the committee for the print year took place, with the following result Mind you, there was a most rigorous competition atad Noose voting for office, the only emolument of which, as the Chief Secretary for Ireland knows well enough in his heart, will probably be a couple of months on a plank bed. (Loud cheers. ,The hen member, amidst much merriment, then real the names and number of relies pilled by the can - mime wild sod desperate than ever, th deletamidst much es the 0•mmhtee, finishing up, feeling against the right bun. geotleman laughter, by the usual an - 'n Ireland has been steadily amain "the hest are elected." This is how the matey "1 the .*girt hen + down from a passionate and almost un gentleman affects the people of Ireland. °"ntrota is e.nbb of itndignatiorm�to •feel - Cheers The whole of your Act de- 1 Ing sat utte Aattennp�to the ht hon pended uiann first daze -the power : geatlesao • vanity, though perfectly re to eli_it ,ecrrf evidence. That is a very I essunw to hie friends who surround him rffect:re piece of machinery. Why do you u.: pet your power of secret inquiry or did leu tsw/Y( r• n. rent' mere u in his int. fere* for suppressing the branches row eco Treasury Bench (cheers I of ti's National League t Why, her Ause '• geatleo .` of 1:11414! nOwe It is the same way with lila know youwill Gave to e ♦ I. fVec.:..e we have had to deal with. Campaign eves with Minnels ovef Gish heads (o, .peecbes that they delivered 1'n the people. l )rub cheers) Again. per- haps, I may be giving the lleisf t3ests- tsry • top (las.gbt.r), but I n t r.pjeot W h • bit My Iwtt basic r iwembaf for South Tipperary, .i away morn furseadsble persue 1 so 1 oil in the Plan of l ampsago iiegsnuatiou (es the Murbelswwn seat.. but beusu.e he happened to be • man of few words M coil b. ruti.iq with us is the lubby lomortu. ntgbt suss sed u( repratet evil • plank bed iu Tells.iurs, sa he would if ke had &pukes rat his mind at the mar- ist ovule ,ohear. I d it. t noted Sings it tither, 0110 char his worth's desae viotoeissesIy. Thou ail right hos- galla-u's gtott.•w ex A.rarsa woe. I won't say • good deal, though i sight, about the mea.in..a ut this policy of sub- j.c-lsr juurualuts to a bread and water diet for the simple offence that they re- eurded the right hal. geutleuue a failure from week to week tool cheers . That is chiming of their offence that these meetemre aro held oil .Fite of him (hear, hear). H. aught as well lame • pude. manna sepgve•siag the spa is the kear- ens. and thea go about smashing the faces of the sun -dials fur recording the fact that the sun coos sbuntue as wart (taughter and eheenl Worse still a the miurabls querills war too the Mwavuud- on and the bullying sad intiuIsdetine of litt:e ohildreu ibear. holt). The Chief 13'tootle, might have remarked that the right hon. gentleman who sits next to bon w a person who in former years might so easily hart come under that same category i Hoene Wide cheers). The right hire gentleman soli ('wideOf/Amid 1n his day. I make so reproach to him, fur he was an extremely loud customer (IAegh:er). if he bed not ported with his blah buaincsa, as he did in • most timely manner im view of subsequent legislation. the tight hon. gentleman would be liable to three months ou a plank bed ,Nome Rule cheers and some Ministerial interruption:,. The right hon. gentleman bee not saccteded iu burying one single newspaper report. Ile hu not daunted • noels newspaper, and I promise you he never will Irish cheer.., even if he proo.eda free' the editors to the printers, and horn th printers to the printers' devils, as be probab y will do. There u absolutely ONLY ON1 t*bt1)INU FEATURE of the right bon. gentleman's policy in Ireland, mid that ie us colossal and monumental failure, and that is the en thing that mottoes the 'Weds of the Ire people against the deeds he has commit- ted. Nubia the hest few weeks -proba- bly in view of the sitting of Parliament -the right hon. gentlemen has made a more prodigicus show of eoerry than ever, striking oat right. left, and centre, outraging the feelings of the Irish, peo- ple. and insulting and meltre•ttng rnen of humor and courier.. Notwithstanding that for the last few weeks he has been -- _ sowsto he mars •ecoemful 1 1), any of the r tbt hon. putler•su's bit friends seas that he is • better wean or a heaver Mail than Mr runner. or that V is the demoir .tetuusee el the owe I No, s,r ; the right hou. usetless•u i., so doubt, to • petite/et 1. ; inflict enure open oar people misery and untold sefferittg. We acknowledge that the met• seder. Ones 1e prison are oily • part, and very small part, of the friebtfel su(ert/� calamities, •ud troubles the huu. getotLnuan Is bringing egos ribuy an humble family no Inland. A BRUTAL r•tonprrrlo) is anew s at the hands of every vil- lage cousteble, every brutal oouatabie wee hue quarrel with the people ; bet lbs blab Iw..ple, you may depend wpm(' it, will beer the .train. (Opposition cheers W. have n.,w tested the right hon geutl.utan s strength' sod oar own, and we ere es of cowed, (Iriab ohsers), we ere sit disheartened. (Hear, beer.) We •r. not even embittered, Th• right i bon genuernan, the w.taber for lllidlu- tias, bas acaompliehed within two years what seven hundred year. of co- ercion have not accomplished, (Op. p.rsition t: hew.), sad what levet hen. dr.1 years more of Oo.reson w111 leave e nact omplul ed still (.mud Opposition cheered. HD hu knitted the hearts of the two peoples ; he his knitted thein of a more seared ani enduring bowl than • bond of terror and .,f brute tures. He has done that, and ear gaarral with England, our bitterest toward. UT - land has g -ow Opp eitn.n cheers), and n .ill be your fault, it will he yoar whew if it ever retgras, s crime for which bi•- t,.ry will stigmatise you for ever (loud Opposition cheers). t )O alt TIER *1r..RATtr a TODAY (t tion cheers). Wei are for pesos and for the happiness and for the broth- erhood ..f the two nations (cheer.). I1 you are for eternal repression and eter- nal dimmed and steroid misery for you as well as for us, we are for appeasing the dark oss.ions of the past (Opposition cheers). We shall be amply ocmtwnsat- ed ff we should be destined, as I hope, please God, we may, to be the last of the long and mournful fiat of mesa who have had to fight for it, and ushers epos the day of victory we will grant an easy• o amnesty to the right hon. gentleman op- posite for our little troubles at Tulla- mon, and we .ill bless his policy yet as one of the most powerful, though en- oonscious, instruments in the delivery of sur country (loud and prolonted cheers), - h For three onkel was suffering from a seven cold to my tad, sccuuupanied by • pun in the temples. I tried some of the many camera remedies without any relief Ely's Cream 13s1w was re- commended to me. Atter only sic ap- plications of the Balm every twos of say ould was rewuved.--Henry C. Clark, tat Dlewou New York Appraisers' Otte,. 1 was troubled wua catarrh in my head to au annoying extent for three e years. After twos one bottle of lily's Clam Balm I was entirely cured. -Wm g J Cline, Victor, N. I. - - this criminal and ill cinapir• single informal. if you go all through ah,.•esty Ireland, (loud cheers), though I have le. from no doubt that the market price for the tee There article was high enough. Irish cheers.) vee really i want to ask the right hon gentleman to which the tell us here tonight what it is that he has eat resist - •o by p^'' got by his wild,and vicious at the . ke estate life sed liberty of unfortunate Ireland 1 erre Cap - (Hear, hear.) What has he gained by It r I bare no patience with those who lasereen, a talk about crime in connection with a err also country like Ireland. outside Kerry n : godthe there is none, and the M.nntsghtete and Clanriarce. the Government hare had Kerry to F,nghahmen themselves for the last eve (1. six years. roperty the We rwuld only stand by. Itetween them thing nae of be it, and let them divide the honors. nisi "f petty (Opposition cheers and laughter.) The pncused m right hon gentleman tells us, indeed; defescee of that the number of _• persona partiallythe,er rag'le knboycotted has what local poliWell, policemen may be pleas- e aim law ed to stall "peewees partially pet pa ll y boycotted. •' (Hear, hear.) I am sure, however, teat the hat would go up and down a000rd- ing to the requirements of the Govern- ment. (Irish cheers.) The real tett is this --lit the right hue gentleman Owe us • lint of the land grabbers who have taken farms, ,Irish cheers. and let him love us s list, and i only wish be would, of the land grabbers who, even 'Mee this Act ha. been in force, have dropped (heir neighbor's goods like hot peewee. (Renewed cheers.) Boycotting? I say Wet, so far as unjust or wicked boyeot- tiot u ooncerned, I claim that more has bees done to suppress it and pot it down by my bor. (needthemember for the Har- bor Dirision of Dublin, the eseretary of the Natitnsl League, than the right hos geotleman coule: do in a century. ;Irish Ann ) 1 shall always as Ina' ea I live, bold that there is • perfect nit' in ton community to exercise ite Iethimata in- deence on mea who for their owe hese end *reedy porposee are Tont Ptr71 or soonot. sheers I admit that there are two &eases of vietime at the right hon. gen- tlem•n's mercy - p.hlie spsakns sod public newer•pers. Public speakers are the nearest appendages of ear weenies - tion ; but why are they et bra teensy 1 Simply because we whim to ila► drives from the daylight, sad '.MSM wit oboes* to try this gaieties b rib& M«isgsr m Mr. Wilfrid Blest ( 11 these to go shoot aidm sur apesebea Is print., w dlsal gala a o welt end 1omr through or of this act with the nut s ies- stated, coil every ahinisg of law suede ie- I with ra ms0_wa im ton curred in the struggle his been borne as courts ba. bees bran an indemnity by the 1adlilnrda cheep •WON"TER nr car and laughteo. Surely the landlords (1051 cheeMrs). we" could have dome as well as that or Netter w,her sj.sty'. the credit that the holy alliance with I with Lord Clanri rents he vire get (chests and laugh -there is no use of overthrowing t but w,s passing Lord Ile Freyn.'a agent,Mr the right hon. ge !an titer, and cries"( "Hier. hest •1, 1 d' u t %Ant t., say it, because it would ' MacDougall, wrote -- it more @scan • to " tip.t the men in your district who driving era to du !are able to pay rent and won't. We publicity. The We now been that w* Oad t teat* is eafdoi the whole nom to tattle the re mon sadists thus any arm (awn). It method.and succeeded in out last .i all. and to who talk • twinafity (cheers) . right bon. tsaity of throat if vim to er of art of Osus (lead ch oma haw, asy lei try to IoW *sae is A GRP IA IIPEL I will see, now that the Coercion Bill has upon that gentle and tender sex to ass,- booms law, whether we won't make cute it with the production of meth a them honest men." letter as Glut in inch a spirit. 1 pass (Leughter. ) It turned nut that the di. - that by without further comment I honest men were Mr MacDougall and .e been glad to learn since i left pris- on and 1 Cul that it is no longer ne- cessary for us to defend ourselves in the eyes of the English people, and i believe that there is not a Tory of the fifth mag - 'wade also really in his hear: believes for one instant that we are such creat- ures as to cry out against • men sen- tence of imprisonment re its cones- 'luences, except those like the hen gen- tleman the member for Knuth Tyrone, who stated that we attempted to set up a distinction between member, of Pendia. meet and peasants our comrade", our tree patriots, who have been onn,ieted under the Ad. Sir, there is not a shad- ow, nil a tittle of foendatios for nkat best, hear). We have eheiwied nothing for eurealses as mambees of Parlia.esmt that w• du mot alarm equally for every swan who is eosvis.d ester the 1551- s7 classes el the AS. If that maw s • enmimal there is se taw's why be ohne d est he triad Were to ordinary trammels and •svistd (bear, heal) Tale in the only thing isi1a11 soy spam the matter-tbal 7w w pet etly hie master. (Chews.) Mr MeolMwtall had confidence in the Crimes Bill and is the right hon. weitleman haat autumn. Where is Mr M•eikoagall today 1 He is pew. (sheen), he is dismimed, and everything that the tenants were then demanding has been enneeded. (Ra sewed cheer*) it was the very day after i come eat of prisms that 1 learnt that the new agent had had an inter- view nterview with two of the moot prominent of the campaigners of the estate, and that M nut only Weed to the tenant's hareem het that be agreed to ?Wend a sem of over £1,700 which Mr IldeDoterse had dbhow qtly extorted from thous on a ppooreffkw of the estate before the Plan of Qai'rigm yes started (Cheese) Thie mossy wee yraElg from the busts 117 sheer terrorises by serving 150 write of ej.stesewt jsgeMst the beasts before tory bed the prILMien of the Plan of ampal'. , and w, seek hi the (orae of the P1.n, ot•with the Cels.. het in hill vigor, tin this hodtsod hes not truly hew Allgood to weasels the tamest.' ttl505, bon b. bas Mew hie bion m ANG+ •T•Iti •E 1y my that I mens joy of .1l get out of their Clanric•rd., and joy of all the 01 hie tenants The fact of it is Mime it -instead n of Oampeign, an has only made ore irresirtthle by business with Is.. nary of the Plan .d t.' such a degree ne single campaign keep the peseta of ty cheers) - -ay, and f s whole mommonity y and more honestly Lend Ceunmissionere he s rough and ready ooht it is, but it has ass out of 100 throegh threat an straggle at this we eball.nte those the dishosesty or the sri • Ilan of Campaign challenge them. The Osman will have an ripper- inv vet wards down my wast, and i dlallemgs ay Sage deed of seteat, tis towable to the Plea from ed le end et Indeed i uWlsste y.s to moot is ',blob the duan' we have hese dsalaeed Gay eomseries is t1 . esus nr szaigtees ed, and es addwse say true sieele ton right hem. g.etMnta5 with alt his poyps sad all is bresk4g cop aeriabi velem (Irish thaw). 1 tWk PEAKY Mar hear)). /f,��ftisldy ton ttwbas for East Cisse's01 Won Oark, were for menthe and .aeitlm etr�rtgM1 r the booker of the P1mm h as�elAm, •d also my fiend W tms.b.r Mr 0.1wwy�y. Thtt They bare esaHy beat Mr sosfM oaths burner rf ton !YO with detectives -a feeling ---well I won't twee particularly describe it than say that the hon. member for Cork very aptly illustrated it the other night by the apologue of the lion and the cat Irish cheers). The right hon. gentleman has the dietincti o of haying developed an entirely new department of the Irish damwlty •moat; her Majesty's soldiers (shone) When my frieud Alaederillt and myself were hurried away 1n a spec- ial train of the middle .,f the night to T.11amore I felt it rattier keenly, but was considerably consoled when 1 learned that the neat elle the right hon. gentle man had to make of special trains was to ship her Majesty's soldiers away from Tullamore for cheering Mandeville sod se ;Irish cheep I ; and do not let them ride on upon the statement that these were mete Irish soldiers. The Chief Secretary was understood to my that they were Irish soldiers. Mr. O'Brien -They were undoubtedly, bat there was a Scotch regiment there, • regiment of his own countrymen, the Seettieh Fusiliers, sod by some unhappy mandate they ale. had to be driven away by special tratn for awkward manifesta- tions at Mitcheletnwn (Irish cheers and laughter'. He had to employ pollee patrols to watch the prison ellinth rah cheers). Yee, the police patrol in ollamore jail was not between the outer world and me, but between me sod the jail udiaiala, and not oily that, but to my own knowledge -the right hoe ietitlemsn cannot even must on the Royal Irish Constabulary -to my own knowledge be bad to employ policemen to watch policeman (laughter and ( )p position cheers) That is what the right hon. gentleman calls ho!d,ng his own in Inland i ironical cheers). He has done one thing, and really Dow I re- member it is about the ,only thing he seeceeded in, and he botched that (laugh- ter). or nearly succeeded in -kinking about • number of bonfires that were lighted through Ireland on the occasion of our release. lie did that in many instances, and had the heeds opened of the miscreants who Int bonfires and who cheered for os and for the right boo. gentleman the memter for Midlo- thi•n. He has Licked net a few bonfires of Irish Nationality, but the sprit that lighted them is beyond his power (Mud lneh and tlppsition cheers). Th. late Mr Fnaesr-and I do not recall the cir- eumetanees for the purpose of inanities his memory-- the late Mr Pester went down to Tellamnre and addressed the people from the hoes! windows, Maier the Q jinn of a noisiest W polies, end he vans bock to (bb Howe, mod there are many mess is this Neese who w still mneme., the triumphant se- swot o-test he Rave of his eipeneaes@ at iwll- snere, mead the pethetre, the train ski - mirky with .hieb he aseur.d this Noma Nat be was winning, tat the people sere with him, and that the fnilewers of my bee. (rimed were • min peek of Wass nem lend reckless boyo. if they sok gate hist I The Jees.y casae t. aeay. I expressed Gose weeks ago my fund. otos her the jersey, and my hope that all persons of the worthy sex who know that they have hoe figures, or fear that they are too lumpy for gracefulness, will go on patronizing it. I am glad to find that the Grand Duchess Vladimir thinks es I do. Her feeling on the subject is that the jersey'is the highest effort of the dressmaking art. She has it thin, and she has it thick, with a plushy in- side ; she hos it high, and she has it low. Of the low kind I have this week been shown • specimen- It is in salmon Stk. The upper edge is trimmed with • ruche of raveled silk set on an elastic band, - which is feteoed on at short distances. Nothing can be softer or more fluffy. One would think that with the tint zephyr the whole thing would fly off like thistle -down, which in texture it re- sembles. There are no sleeves, but the riche forms a shoulder hand, and • pair of downy tassels falhi from the middle of this part. The mesgr.-cheeted should .not weer the low ; but the plump, should adopt and cling to it obstinately. What, yoteses, that Mao objectionable tomodest parsons in • ball -room, is not the strip- ping of busts, but this forcing up of roundness toward the neck. Tont fron- tier line which Miss Rose Cleveland spoke of in her letter about low -eat waists, and which, unfortunately, she did not define, is displaced in the sense of uphesvaL This is done not by the Dorset if it be all well made, but by the eon's. A jersey, low ,r higtt, forces ncthiog, and lends itself to *easy undu- lation. For this rumen the stout and unstatuts-like should wear it both in and ant of the ball-n,os•-London Truth. A tiTTta rill, este Me Perster, for its gAith lye. knead, it weeld matoar. o hie de That wee ems —, Iw ttifhlest mesa ie Nfis'611 tbel eaa.and •opedneut M i. "Mere Tnsbee3Tay be LLDeesee. If you do not heed the warnings of Da. tare and at onoe pay attention to the maintainance of your health. How often we see a person put off from day to day the purchaas of • medicine which if pre- cured at the outetart of • disease would have remedied at almost immediately Now if Johnston's Tonin Liver )'ills had been takee wham the first uneasiness made its appearance the illness would have been "nipped tet the bud." John son's Tonic Bitters and Liver Pills are decidedly the beet medicine on the mar- ket for general tonic and invigorating properties. Pills 25c. per bottle. Bitten 50 cents and $l per bottle, sold by (hiede the druggist, Albion bloek, sole wen (b) If you place the ate gear the stove for Skeen minutes it will tat better and not be so apt to break Wong the edge, Wee ysswtaem Rao no rut in haying s•dtmne, but try the thele Cidery sad Liver regale - tor, insole by Dr. Asa, author ret (Cees'. reeeipes. Try Ohm's Inver Owe for all dsf.ssss• et the Liver. Kid- "Wmy% fit`s mob and Beira*. field by all aist ThIw•__g pidesive.m eftes ob- served is Towmg eels sad women. is dee is a trot taastere to a heat of the ted eerpwles is aha blend. To 105.4 Vide requires • ssedielwe wttieb rondos** dime new awry little Wood errs.titueet?, mud the best yet dt covered is Johnson • Pewit Dieters. Prise 40 tants, NOi1 radeSt 1sb)iae.Ni.se w NA