The Huron Signal, 1886-12-3, Page 22
THE HURON SIGNAL. FRIDAY, DEC. 3, INK
JUSTIN MCCARTHY• by he � ;; b, h teras
t bone
in Loudon. Now we come to a dues*
—
ilogntltat Lecture on 'The Cause rat Ia Irish history, to whish I ter
of Ireland " t• call your careful attention, for WSW up whoa (&Coupon's health was fathom. awake by shaking and
s►es1&e jolt
—
you see and consider this you eaahot From dllseent reason* the Irish people Bell would ansa give it his etteat,oe and
under•ta,d both hsMory,aad the attempt were hegiaairig to Ise all heart ter an*• his support (Hear, hear) Aud uu
•• wraNrteai Mad mLs&erlra/ Treat a a,w being made to Rive Instead her atitatimee) movements on the hero( the ensue have hese justieed by the results
Large tedMwre Greets the L.eAerer sa rights Them agresag up in Ireland • English House of Commons. I want to they hews bronchi about. We were
seet•vsh, «.ei•ty destined to embrk Irish htaLiwy. tell you, by way of episode, one little very *doqueet in thus* days ; we uaad
-- - -- the society of Unibtal Irishmen. (Ap- emelt of Irish history to make trashiness ismay •peash s. (Loftin/sr) A dilemma
The following is a report, specially ' ionot, of the brit- plsues.) Thera azo lo ormolu Intel- despair of any stood b.ise deem on the u take'. by one side n down the
.at In other res di miming taken down for .., .. INI respects o thought that floor u( the HeLas of Grnaaoa•. About lobny nue way, and the other priming
society was formed for the purposes of thirty years ago then npten Itish up a little down the other way. The lobbies were
T
There wee that wean enamel aanemfst (Laughter and impieties ) We had to
led by the distinguished cueallNtlwal- deal with:an IL.,gllsh public fast a.l.ep
Ian Mandel O Cue sell (Chew) That hard of hearing of our 'nal rs
•ae, a
artier of England, and t'iear-d•• out 11
an
saw roleaav varied property in didareat
d parte .4 the 'smutty : mud when you
show me so artisan 111 E .,tlau.l who has
lid side succeed Nicetiesit was taken we tbi uvbt if wa amid may vet him
0 111.111.11L!.111.111.11L!.111.111.11L!..011/044,..i mi. .te, 1 Mali .how yo
ou ne
who has a castle lid the country and •
✓ 'iamw1MI
nn rid .Tar. it/guar... Laugh-
ter and ■oplau.•.) Nu ,•widen has be-
gun to that way thM has not cooled io
• the triumph Uf demoarateo principles in
Eegleud. Arid s. we usual knurl at the
door of the Uaperial Parliament twenty
rr
Impuauknock, t reform must knk, and we
w►11 knock Iona enough to make the
adopt.om 4f HaM
,s ule as certaino.
as the reino of tuo,rr•w's sun.
(eat cheers.) 1 .l n not want to rumn
the risk 4,( beteg c0e.eted with ■
- failing prophecy, but 1 will venture to
sal that withuo few y»ars ,he iueiwbers
01 the National ILrty who• ria) br ab
: sent from the Homes .1 Comm els wi.l
be hurrying haute t . ru ike preparations
to take their seat• its .our omit 'unheated
Grimm.on College • 1'ureultuoui ap
please.) And when th..r d.y comes, it
will be a great day for Ireland, and ter
Euglatrd as well ( Hear, hear.: Ours
isso.•n
the cause .4 pr.ty, and law, and
order and peace I re.wmeisr • speech
'mete a few years ago I.y John liniht u.
fever ..f acuity Namely England sodFrance, and he said it would be "A
measure ..f justice to Entice end mercy
to England." And 1 will paraphrase it,
and say that Hoene Rule wilt De a mea-
sure of justice to Ireland acid of merry
to England. it will close that stet chap-
ter of b.treii, and sedition and enmity P
1.
between the two nations whom r.vi-
deecs designed to e brothers. but sub
legislation has for .o Ions a time meth.
w 0e enemi5, and hated foes. hear.
hear.It will be a measure .4 mercy.
for it will enable Enloe.'w d. some•
thing for her own puttering and strut;
glint people in the lanes and on Mel
hint lecture mm "The Case of Ireland,"
turthenov ..o•eaioa and rebellion. It snot of mew who told the
papIe t able u bold sheen Mx or seveie hundred
d.Lver.d in leaferth, on Tuesday even- was gut up, however, by Protestant gen- they had found ap Ian W masks k Ireland
At Area 40057 eight were 4111 our ode
deniers, and l -got up in the Protestant heard. They were to go into the Eng- always went with them at some rick I
to
. !
gut Y ID Belfastnd
Dr. Campbell uoeupted the chair, and DO other purpose that to assist the Irish they gut 1(410 place, we their twtluence bee, net uow its public litet an user
introduced the lecturer In a neat parliament to the Irish R • to get the rights that the Irish people in the Hussars, who would twine up he
speech. He a1r. read en original poem .1 man Catholic* of Ireland Cheers it wanted. Our so called patriots tried fore w and cry out in mock heroicsnon •ele
by Mr Jacob McGee, of Eo• had no purpose but one of loyalty, sad their Tuck. Every one of them suoceed- "Here, boyo, Imre we are by thou -
as organisation was to bring about no ed in getting into paean. a, and in Ret- canis'" (Laughter ) Or again hr
w•.uld cry out as 1f in greet e>..ateunent :
"Keep hack, boys ; don't keep cruchmtg
00 us in that way ; there'. plenty .1
roe for us alt Dunt crush us minium
the doors ?" Renewed laughter ) 1
thought of our Mooed of late. l thought
of hint. whom that division was taken in
the nave of Ireland in which a number
ran the risk of being creahed between
the down --in that great dsvtaion taken
not long ago, when I had the honor 44
passing +loot that lobby not one of
seven 4x eight Hume Rulers, but one of
• body of 311 Heine Rulers, led by the
foremost statesman and twat. of Creat
Britain, the illustrious Wiliam Ewart
Gladstone. (treat cheering) Yes, we
had done our work. We bad shaken
by the shoulder
until he got ep ; we had shouted in his
seus
r until he listened. (Applause.) We
had obtained first his hearing, then his
gym thy, and next his support. The
•nz, November 23n1, under the auspices 1
••f the M•chaoire IuMrtute of that town pewees of interApplause) It was bele Nouse of Common, het tote parka- myself. As our seven or eight went out
P , • it was gut up for emelt end get into place, and then, when the door fur the count, we had one utero
Mr McCarthy was greeted with loud other end than the ene°cipatu.n of Inch
applause. He surd he was extremely human Catholics. It was led ny noble
pend of th.. ktudiy and peculiar mato,++ 1.(01 Wants, young wets lake Theobald
in which he had been introduced to the Nulfe Tone. (Applause,. rheic was
o .tice of t`.is large assembly. It was not theu in Ireland a Viceroy whom Lame as
always the fate of a public man to be •nil held in honor by the Irish 4f all
welcomed to an audience like that by a classes, L Ftzwillisn Cheers Ile
bocci so enthusiastic and beautiful as the was seeking t.. help to pass this measure
one just read by the chairman. After of Cathcl.c emancipation. For doing
paying a neat t 5.. the enter- this In* was summuued hone to England
prise and standing of the Seaford% 111x- under amditm,ns of deep humiliation
amo's Institute, the lecturer said : and disgrace. He was treated Y one
he subj_ct that has or,ught us together charged with some act of treason, a.td he
toui;ht, as yue tome. is the "National era puntabed for gluing his sympathy to
cause of Ireland.' What is the demand Roman Catholic emancipation. Every
that Irelaed,thr. uglu her tree., student .1 history knows that everything
make. ref parliau,ent, makes of the em- that followed was the result of the parse-
p•ru,and makes of all the civilized world, cotton and disgrace of Lord Fitzwilliam.
That demand summed up in two words Up to that time the people were Loyal
,s 'Home flute And what is Home they were then driven to despair. And
Rule 1 Home Rule as simply to obtain this society of United Irishmen, led
for iteland that measare .t Local, inde- mainly by Young Protestants at that
pendent, domestic legislation that is
possessed Y a birthright by every prey -
find salaries trout the Bntr.h treasury.
There were four of them. They
sere great for getting up j..int stock
a11, as they put i', for the
benefit of Ireland. Now, 1 want t.. tell
you briefly what these four men did for
the lout. cause The first was a forger
and swindler, and committed suicide on
Hampstead Heath. His brother a1s..
committed forgery. The third actwrea
all the money he could in the collection
of income tax, and Hee with it There
was a fourth, sod what to do with him
was a puzzle o. the British C t.
They had out enough evdeuce to put
hien in the criminal duck, and so they
made him a judge on the Irish Bench.
The English people and the English
press were peefeetly fuel
that the Irish people had so little con-
fidence iD the administration of law in
Ireland. laughter,' You all know
period when young men are ardent in what happens t.. every people whoa pub- ppe•
their hopes, keen and warm in their Iic agitation and parliamentary agitation Bogluh democracy and all that was
ince in this Dominion of Canada, and by sympathies, and impetu.sw in their ac is mistrusted by popular opinion. You beat in the great Liberal party made
every state of America. applause We lions plc into rebellion ; sod that lower what occurs in every• and sea
ase that we night be ellowrsl to govern rebellion broke out as surely from the re- when there is a grievance, and there • is supported a claim for Home Rule.
ourselves as you here govern yourselves, call .•f Lord Fitzwilliam by the king just no of meeting it on the I want to know if in the history of poli -
without any Interference from any con- as surely Y one event can be brought on 11 mor of parliament or on the platform. tics there is an example of the same
trao,zed parisam«nt acting in London. by another. (Applause.) This was the Invariably, in whatever country, this success achieved in so short a tune by so
(Hear. hear.,! You ohte ,.ed Home Mule mine king by whose obstinacy the Amer- will find its utterance in organized secret small a means to carry it on. We had
for Camomile rot without • struggle, not lean colonists were driven into rebellion
wlth0ut sscri6ce. 1'ou were once • Jiv and brought upon England the *opera- --. • But there •n Ise asmallbsnd for our leader to carry eut that policy •
of men who believed they could revive men who at one time was the meet
ided and distracted people, with class teen from that great people who should , agitation, and win back abused man in England, but whose
arrayed against class. You were justly ever be one with ber in spirit. (Ap- the trust .of the nation, and inspire the name today is more welcome at a Libe-
cotaplaintng ajainat a government -a plause 1 To carry out the king's abject people t4 put them into parliament and ell or Rashest meeting, than any other
minister -sitting far away in Downing they had simply to get a majority of close forever a chapter of organized con- name in British politics except, perhaps,
Street in London You &pogo and toot, votes in the Irish Reuse of Commons. •piracy in Ireland. That was a small Mr Gladstone'•. (Cheers.) We tound a
up cause against that, and in compliance The Hou.e of L.'rda was, like our own. body st first. The for tit leader in • young man who joined
with that request there was seat 1o01 • • very subservient body. Applause and Inland was then only 1St but many the movement at an early stage, while
statesman who sew there wee lust one kiloliter.) At that, potions bad no o l• on, and the be was fresh from the English univer
measere measure ea•
to suit you, and that mease t in Parliament were I men who sat in parliament were sent city 4f Cambridge. Mw WW1 unknown
was-11epocket 1 ha Hut 1 ...h....... or toe vre►oas. and the land- to the movement ealillee came into the
That was granted, and Ilan maple you numbers of members of the Irish Par. owners. And when that small body of House of Commune. And yet those
strung from being weak ; h*. made y00 Bement whom it was impossible ti buy men entered they found not who that struggle of Grata
united from being divided ; orderly from or terrify ; men like the illustrious Hep- only the E - against them, tan's against the Union, and
being disturbed ; contented from being re Grattan, and his trusted right•hand but th-y 1fand n-
aa.0 n
nety or more ofthe name of that friend who stood so
dtscr.ntented,aad profoundly loyal;and n man In the L ht solemnsolemnUnion. Sir John the Inst re;,r.weetatives sn yed against faithfully by (:rattan, might have found
has also made you satisfied with that beat Parnell. ( Loud cheers. But other them. They adopted a policy founded hope for the cause of Ireland from the
oat t away in England. The members could be bought, and England upon what they learned to their expri- fact that the new leader was • descend -
same result. that Home Role have Ment out to Ireland • Viceroy to du encs in the British Homs- of C
u us. an n Ir John Parnell, and bore the
wreucht for you we are convinced would anything by which he could •bring a The British House of Commons under- family name. (Applauee.) W. thought
be worked out for u• in our own coon- majority of votes for the Union. They took more work than it was able to got that 1f we could get a bill passed that
try. Applause ) We ask that within sent over a soldier whose name is not through. It undertook to manage the would extern.' the franchise it would
the ciree of the era that washes our noted on this side of the Atlantic fur any domestic affairs of England, Scotland, help us to give Ireland her rights. Well,
shores Ireland may de her own legisla- great t ; • man whose name Wales and Ireland, and to arrange for a that time came. The English and Irish
tion, and attend to her own domestic is seanciated with • certain capitulation. colonial policy, but it took upon itself working classes were admitted to the
affairs. That is what we ask fur, and (laughter.) If he could not put down also to interfere in all, or nearly all vote, and we swept Ireland except in
with anything short of that we never George Washington, it was thought he the local, parochial, and municipal some place. where English influence was
can be, never will le contented. (Loud could put down Ireland. But, luckily, concerns in almost every county, city tee much for us, and the University of
applause. Now I tree t.. tell you how although he was an old soldier, and town and hamlet of Creat Britain. It Dublin, the latter of which does sot
11 was we were deprived of the right of would obey any order of his superiors, may surprise you to learn tb*t there is pretend to resect public opinion. With
conducting our own affairs in the Nation- yet he was so true a soldier that be haidlyany private bill,aa•gasbill.a.treet I these exceptions every constituency sent
al Parliament in Dublin. You are to, hated anything like injustice and op- paring bill, that is not brought before a man to speak up Home Rnle and fol
Lew a colony to have any in premien, and in his private 1- the Imperial Parliament as if that rat 1 .w tl 1 d rah
as could sera a began only four or five
inept. We had a National Parliament, loathing he felt in with his! the people of the community themselves. members from Ireland for Hume Rule
letting in Dublin for generations and for work in Ireland. If we need any proof , The great measures that concern the and have become eighty-siz. , Applause. )
centunes. Almost from the beginning !of the ill-treatment of the Irish people' comfort, the health and the well-being Even in Protestant Ulster itself which
plains, and also those in the crowd
ed tithes whom cry o 1 distress is now
letting the world chat their resat .111
threaten England soon if stttesnen can
find no meets. of satisfyirry 11 And u
will be • measure of justice, because it
Grill enable England to do justice to ail
in with her. it will enable
her 1 . steak favorably with the enemy
at the gate, because she knows that she
no longer has an enemy within the gate,
but a friend and a brother. l Lud and
long continued applause. 1
The vote of thanks was moved by Dr
!Smith and **minded by M. Y. M:Leao,
I std was warmly given.
I Justin McCarthy replied briefly, and
im the course of his remarks replied to
two questions to the f4.tl"wIDg edsst:1
First, there was a majority of Catholics
among the representatives from Ulster:
and second, Cheraw Stewart Parnell had 1
not evicted any tenants; hie brother was
• Tory. (Cheers
Smith had made
they made that
Nationalist leader.
had been made
SCROFULA
1 ds tie believe that
A, ere Yerea i*11Na hi.
. o ss a remNy
ter icon Hs -
anon. It is plenum
to take, gin
and vigor
limners,
and prestressssealh a mere
seat dm sayperpi +tae
se
I ever reed. -E.
Haim.., Ifo. l.iadete, O.
1 have used AyMs
lia, in my hes-
Ilyf • � Serwttrla, and
know, if It L t�
falthtully, h tr1M
borough!y et`.m.ai.
Wu terrible disease, —
w' . 1'. Mower. Y. D.,
(.resatilla. Tena.
For forty yeas I
have suffered with llry
vlpelea. 1 have tried
all sorts of r'eaedlen
for my hut
Gored no wed I
coma•aeed using
A e r'. Afrslpeel`,
u n sawed.
ties et Ws ~ I
Mary Aamberv,
Rockport, lie.
I have arlfirsd,l1.e
tears, frau Catarrh,
',ditch we se were
that It dsalreped Nov
appetite sad weakened
my system. After try-
ing other remedies,
and menus so rsllet, I
hetes to take Ayers
'arsapatill•, and. 1a a
sew months, oar eersd.
!tun L. Co,,k1Oi
1 jetty at,, Bohlen
lltghlanda, Mw.
Avers fhrsepartfla
.'upp►►rlortoas blood
l•nrlffer that 1' have
..ter tried. I Moe
tat en it .or Scrofula.
canker, sad Salt-
Itheum. and receivr.l
mob benefit from It
Ir 1• rooal, also, for a
0r. ak .tomarb.—]1.111.•
tang (*.free, South
Kradforrl, Yea.
Erysipelas,
Canker, and
Catarrh,
Can be
cured by
purifying
the blood
with
Aysr's Sarsaparilla
Prepared by 1►r J.C. Aver a Ce..lwwegrirs.
Pelee St : ala aejSge• OIL
IN The )ear NM.
Em better re's, 11 ion .411 tea made than
to ream 1051114 amy of the wti.titutes
offered es •'141.1 as yowl as the great
NNW- pop eorr. cure - 1'ou13'U a l'uules*
Cure Extractor 1t never toils t•• gate
satisfaction. Beware of posnn,us flesh
eating substitutes.
men She Seeeturd Ser Frie54.
1 t)r Kaoe and Mr
A misstatement when
charge against the d
The same statement
he 4..... of Poli.
An e.tim.hle lady. wh'• Iain hien go-
ng throa,th thecure *t about Dory, we.
eirribir.g the syst«m to a fnerid. and
wishing to **plebe that she first visited
meat, and had been promptly dented by the bath sod sR•rwsr i t,..•k Aer glass ..t
m1.•rrsl water M th Im 1
D. Mc(tlhcudd f ,;, step'+ ; you take your hath fret, and
y, o dmch, said is then you drink the water afterward."
was well that th second gnwnon was Her frtr,,d •s• h. retied --Ex.
asked, although he had not askec 11 him -
Mr Parnell, It was never *gala made sprat.[, s sea '
in Partiameat (Loud cheers
1 "Mv dear, the treatment bre is very
self. It was well that the slander au
semmated by Messrs Kane and smith \teieraer•s Luria
should ne contradicted by such an Harr y .0 . had ('•.mgt,, . Ch..t e
authority Y Justoo McCarthy H.rrrenea., a fowhnl .,( Ttibtnwm in the
The meeting then dispersed Chest, week Lungs, or any similar aim -
plaint r If sat, buy at once a bottle def
Post Albert.
mu government In a national pant'- once he refers again and again to the body could judge of it as well g Id Ch W
Met:rotor s Lung Co...p mud "it will
ore y ,u. ' it cental,,• entirely weer
.peeitica, ..f which en.s door is mre'dfec.
nal than a whole bottle of the old time
remedoes. it is pelt mp n, i,t1- and $1
j bottles. told by G Reyhas, druggist.
Try it, and you will never have reason
'In complain. ( 4
e ea a ip of Mr Parnell.
4 our connection with England we had 1 at that time we have only to turn to
our parliament sitting in Dublin, just as Litrd Cornwallis'• account of the work
the English people had their parliament ! he had to do and his feelings toward
sitting in Loudon. it used to surprise 1 that work. (Applause.? He was seat
me some years ago, before we had made j Itl/terrify, to use force as welt Y to buy,
our question quite al well known as the and he used force. Any man in place
public now have it, I was astous•hod,atthe why I to stand out against the
tittle knowledge Englishmen had of this ; Union was deprived of his position
of the people of the towns and cities you are told by some people who maul
were brought in with every session, and think you very ignorant is dead against
dropped for ten, twenty and forty years, the cause, even in Protestant Ulster we
because the Imperial Parliament oculd have • majority of representatives as we
find no time to attend to them. This have a majority of votes. Tremen
furnished the key to the policy of the dous cheering.) If this que.tiun of
New Irish Party. They saw it was like Home Rule was put to Pieter alon
e,
(lur trustees have again secured the
services of our present teacher ells.
Grace McGregor, ter tare ensuing per,
Lesko Carrell, and I.ifs, .4 81,
Catherine*, are visiting at Mrs Mcbrids,
mother of Mrs Curvet!.
A. E. Hawkins, who has been laid up
with sciatica during the past throe weeks,
is now on the inroad, mrd well soon be
himself attain.
a large body trying, to rush through a and Leinster, Connaught and Munster j James McGlynn, and (leo
majority o the .r
" by are you not content to allow I iApplause•) If any man could be through --there wY nothing but crush grown men of I'bter would proclaim: week.
things to be as they have been Wh f �oliJrht laird Cornwallis paid A' :• oma Rule for Ireland Renewed • Owing to the illness, o(� � >�
do you want to Dome buck to tint princi- It was • continued call for "more the wrucge sad grin
eublect. Englishmen have asked me : ' Among these was Sir Jilin Parnell. siogi• puhhc gateway none couldget were silent a
W great t f ft for the Michigan I
Ti H
Ye puree. end 1 � ass. v. r ,
grievances of their conn- cheer our movement is � not and ;Carrie there has [meta nn service
het O
hest '
held to
incessant d712
ebate
plea I England and Ireland haveso long money,"'`more money." If there was try the subject of In has never been sectarian. The question the English church during the page 1 t
been used to this sy.tem, why cannot a man who was too wealthy e. sell his the House of Commune, to bring it on in . is this : "Come with is and help us to ; month.
you let things go ..n as before r' And principles for gold, Lord Cornwallis grave season and out of season, until it tilled re -organize and make Ireland brilliant Mr M h ff h 1
many thought the union of the twoc'un• hoew peerage., apd to this day the name
'nee was as 413 as history. Up to IIIW � "t noon Peerage'' is held in contempt,
Ireland always had a National Paths- because it mato• • man who sold his
, lent in Dublin. That Parlament sus1 country for the paltry bribe of a peer-
ust as 1, just as national, ea a.m. 'Applause. There were men who
the omit then sitting in London. It ! were poor, and were not prepared to
was not as independent as all parliaments! •'•te against their country , and these
the mind not only i f parliament bot and ha again. We desire to know' a a y a• •gang of workmen I
also of the English people outside. The no sect or creed. In that t debate engaged in building an additional storeytO'sa to hi• grist cull.
Irish Pa sew that nothing could be mietherfar this mefter asurer ofot Horne Rue. and Ftait --We haven't any fire brigade
done in parliament ex i
a platfornn to make known their policy for Ireland alth•.ugh • Presbyterian Ion
but the way our villagers turn out !
b the outside world, when the public and "1, though • MethrdtM,vwte for it.' Ion the alarm of tire wield do credit to
would ask, "What is this question that In the south of Ireland they have voted I a regularly »rttsmiaed fire or nt.
for itnon lde tting depended English atomics ars. 'away,
s1, d nut f theirseatsand got stops the easy of legislation in the Howe for Protestant after Protestant to more -
and i n gen1 litie was nett t etc residence be,n Pref
Pen good deal upon theput bis 1 of Commons ! Int us ask ourselves if sent them in Troland. We carried rhe
ctrpno. of the king. Cel, indeed. dud friends in their places, and so they noted 1 there is not something in this quern- Protestant cityof Belfast for m el.- and although the flames tad g+mrd tun-
tl..English t. The Irish par away the ie of the country, tion that they le are riskingso . uent friendThomasSexton. • Applause
sideheadway, •great portion of
Lament and the English t were I And thus Lord Cornwallis voted away much for, and let us see if their clims I knew aumething of Ulster, pselL the roof being is a blows, rt suss, after a
both made victims of that arbitrary pow- the union of Ireland et the beginning are nut just ?" if we ei.ued only get the (Laughter.) I happen to have • son I heroic anemia by the trend which had
er .1 the Crown. In every other respect 1 of the preaoat feMtlur1. Lord Plunkett English, Scotch and Welsh people to 7 7 p 1 s""
we were jet as independent an instils. 1 warned the English a, about
' h re ( �
t;v(� its is the English eerliamaet ait$ieo' . danger they rat. • �learoateej thew R
('i tt The Irish psrhamoat 1
in e1..luent words : "As well might red 1 p ply y thanks to all those h :;]
t had carried reforms thirty years before' a maniac think that by his
"Activity." t1' b
the parliament 4( treat Britain had the poor perishing hody, he was destroying h y� 1 oocasiun lull
r .urage to adopt them. The Act of ! bring
-lam member for Derry cut Cheers 1, .�
hie immortal soul.' And so, today, the th fact f Ireland's w,
Min
f1! Inion dates back no further than the Irish (enol live and tlourishes Y It did
beginning of this century ; np to that the day that Plunkett gave his warning foreign policy ora gas hill we would .es ol,cs have always elected Protestant f porton fr oro this will Frith b
6o u a •e devoted follower of Perna n gathered, entirely subdued. The
rad she is ysember for an Ulster cit l originated mm r defective stn his
to peered+.) )tba t na to be m eer pipe.
iKe g ;wo
re. tr, express his
the member for that historic city that ha.;,de o t' raluxbie •s-
often been 1 in ltaumeo .inerts was rendered to him o(4 the
Our Home Role party, repre.entir{ • otmot -It was a very "amo•sen'
people, fire out of six of whom are Cath !he'd InterespnA sight to witness the de-
rc ° ( age, ony last 71
Q
0 ci)
N
A
look into our claims, we felt that from
sumer wauld"bi iii
•ured. e called our policy • policy of
e thought e at no matter
what the quest. was, we could
• o grievance inn) it
PO matter whether it was a question of
time we had sur Nanette! Parliament. to that b'gotted parliament, and from what we could bring into it of Irish leaders. (Appause r The first was Dr
T►uw1w1�
an*, a res ytanan . end the third a o shrine Of corruption,
A]ent even in Its heat lays was not M parliament and pleaded for to rotators- hide one oppons,. irna_rd cpm calf-! Pndwstani also, an Episcn hen, 1t tee
E and Treachery bo hater 0 1 1 Q S
nentative in � o •
0 the fes remaining Torre. who still
I tel y o why we have ceased that day t., this the Irish people have Laughter and applause) Isaac Butt, an Episcopalian ; next Mr cling M their good's ur ether, who still W x
to have it. Thr Inch National )'anis• protested against an extinction of their N'. called it • hr ..f "Activity,"
$h P h worship at th h
thegeese which we attar t.. thin. The Irish people have not for a I lav 1t a p,hcy of ''Olestruettnn ' We
&t.
e word "\at?tonal," The Irish Single hour, ..r week, or year given, said we would not q 1 over names ;
National Parlament was exclust5e- even by their silence, a semblance of I they could c.11 it • policy of "ob.
ly .,f Protestant menthols. 1t was elect- 'consent. Never since the Act of Inion tructitm" nr of "e»nstruction," or of
e:1 exclusively by Pel intent coots a. The has there panned a single day that some' "i or of '' date rection" -we
law declared that none but a Protestant Irish voice has net been raised to cry didn't mind. (Laughter and cheers.)
e,mid Mt as,or vote for.* member of that out *falnst a p'licy that has extinguish- That was the posey we Intended to fol.
parliament. And yet so .V1t' J in nil the lriah parliament. if i were .d- how, and i tell yeti we kept Our word, I would not deserve to win s000ssa if it
spirit, so fair, s. blend was that parka- dressing 0'110 English *talesman today, (Renewed laughter) We were denounce 1 went merely • sectarian and not • tweed -
turned
• that one of the works 10 which it i would say t.. him, "There is one way, by the members of the H0.nse .4 (`,ern- iji1 ly National cause. (Cheers.) Our cause
turned ire attention was the egmncipa and ,me way alone by which England mons and through the English press. ' hos made go..d program, and we invite
teen of its fellow countrymen the Cath- can ant rod .4 this demand for an Irish Rrery man'* hand was against us, and I the civilised world to admit that we who
sides. (Appiatrse.) Ws arta i4id by parliament, and that is by the eztirpa- am free t.. admit that our hand w
person of Charles Stewart Parnell (Con-
tinued cheering.) Never he deceived for
a mi•ment by those who tell you that the
province .1 Ulster n not with as ion this
quest of home Rule. Ours is a na-
tional cause ; it always was and It always
*hall he. We (meld not win •urieees,•ad
e ntice that so the Mvtalattne of that teen 44 every man, woman and child who ' agaiuet every man. (Ianghter.) i re.
h Ay was not .4a satisfactory char•c•er. boasts of Irish parentage --when the ! member a lady who was connected with
Whatever errors they m ay hay. corn world is free from them -then, and not ; • great English name, who had no inter-
mitted, there remains in history the till then, will the demand for the Irish ! est to our pokey, hut yet gar0 11 • ties -
nobly act of thew protestant gentletitea parliament he silenced. (Loud cheers ) 1 caption end • name that anyone of us
setting themselves to work to bring We of the inch people are a. thrifty and , might well adopt as his own. it was in
*boor the complete icn of their growing race. We have many branches. the midst of our atrogele. f happened
!Ionian Catholic bothers in Ireland. of our race all over the wend, and + to meet this lady at • dinner table and
(Cheers And there was no Catholic wherever an inch colony is settled there' the torsed on thio
sat this bell rolling had some patriotic
and national purpose when firs! we gave
it t (Applause.) We have
already achieved sumo •mato.. At the
late election. Ireland, Sentland and
Wales voted s.hdly for Home Rale. A
majnnty of the voters in these countries
were with ata In Engl.cd and Ireland
trwbes and votes .n not the seine thing.
gnwnom la Swgland every loan of property nn*
tot, then to mtln«nce them. Well, they o mea • new demand for an Irish par that disturbed the Now of English bum- ally hes more than now vote. Meeh of
succeeded to pas -,,.g the Art to aline 'lament that was taken from w without noes through the bringing of it up in the property owned has been divided
their Roman ('atholuc fellow• i,... It. urn consulting the will of the Irish penpie, 1 seasu .m and ort of •.aeon. "i think 1 into uwore than one dieision,•nd in those
the Yeo terms so their Pndestant now •ant to sketch for yeti in rapid understand your Italie'," maid .b.. cases • mar -vt have a vote ire each bit
br.thret., end they del this thirty yeses cutting. the kind of polity that "Yoe think you hive to deal with amen of property. W. do not hold nor .let mi Ir ll'•s.t.
teeter. the Krigl•sh parliament sew the In retreat day. has brought this eh.) is fast asleep and hard of hearse, tine ,e the seam day. and a man les. Tffwre I• n.. teroohle ie *seertainitsg
way clone to do the mine thing for the question .n near the trent. fo within and you want to .!:oke him by the shoal. plenty of time to get around and giro all frwo „, nrnvgi.f lAe 1r.e virtu.• 4,f
('atA..lita in England .tpplwu.e. And what Mr Headstone won!d mill "• der end ahont in his war ; and he dn.e hie votes. Some'is.y say. "Dwan't this ad11,4,„,j.
ire � ellen Oil for for ail painful p
.Asn they made np th«rr Honda se that, messurahte &mance .4 enemas. " We not think that chattily hi.w by the ah.rol• apply to Mr (nehmen. .6. r' Well, sad IrAa^.ato.ry trneMes, rAwwwm 1510
arbor' that was 1 as their est here had other movement., het helm der and sheutrne ne los ear is • pn.per in law it deem, lima Mt✓tealc"• urnhwg,,, f et
r fiction , a , a .r other t i elle,
to the leading 'pints of the Boodle !Sri- (j)
gado, at D,tngamnon. Time was when ,
• considerable number of the ''loyal and
patristic party' could have been must -
together for a like occasion, but r 'tet G
that tame has long since gone by. and `r s CI goeici we cincerely hope, never to return. n 4
y
1
a
1
Koine eight if ..r nine, in all miserable
remnant of bygone greatness were all
CChet could. after the meet , oniuent H
drumming up. he gathered together to f"1
attend the menti Fr. �l••�
quite d L
R
ng .m what we can 7
g*;her, the entertainment •IthouQh m
q up to the Tory standard,wa. • very H s
erediahle exhibition. Sir John, we are ^ --
informed, was rather • dieapniniment. `1
•
hut his treaty lieutenants, Ed. Meredith, r {
particularly were in capital l� 1
(nig, and
U
performed some extremely daring and Q I am
r Meredith's lofty
egbfa, and body eoatortson. were •�
joyd by all present. Al the close fully
V O °•
diMeult feats. M Y
J
one third 4f the intim audios.* some to IA
their feet end yelled, sad yelled ss one
man.
w die tf the frisk N Mmeest Ade d rel re.f * . M
frbtT"u'"�' h they haus failed formal method of rolling his attestors.- libidinous... totes cafes heed a1mMg fir ~fie' �"^•• erintraetsd cords waft
-
jobb, echos, pales and soreness. !
5,
-,111116111.