THE NEWSPAPER. | or 
nk f lute necessity of treating Ire’ 
vag atta wr a conciliatory and 
ven oes n ere’ pte a e te pean pa ene spirit.—Mr. Sergeant ie A = teams just 
ere i It was pA this ground that it had decided aa t A and po pema to bf felt that Fig gepen] crimination 
shou! ar te moat ho: nonea utral gros un » and had pate to look at the measure 
his own 
tion, and also to make two proposals of 
boson tie tha promt should bë perma and the other er hemi 
College zepa be free jian the ceremony of visitation.—Sir 
d not, he s better that the people of Ireland ; ; 
REMANTLE cordially supported ase Bill, He coul n professors of no religion at all. came ja it the p and prosperity oF Ireland 
= perceive how ie ropos vi ager te costed on | Ca Catholics ta r, F soli be diabolical : but the People of ‘eladi | | of Trinity preia ‘Dublin, on equal conditions, wine opening > 
the ground of religious s uples, because whe li t degree ect Gavel convinced of the truth of the doctrines t they | o, in lieu of other educational institutions. But this being oe 
greed to or rejected, it could me tholic rematon eland. believed. In Ireland, there was a church of $00,000 soe | | re! fused a mer ea ee to Maynoo' yen and felt themselres entities +m! 
encourage or discourage the Roman z ply justified by principle | witha grea ment; and bey the Wesley Jenok o Ben | pekes ti pare gh e plac n a decent footing. Mr. a 
He considered the proposal as one ey yesd a eti fectly | on principle to the small grant to the millions o f man aule s note X = Ge mt, an testifying teen Pox 
ut by sound policy; expedient, and, at the Jl as in morals, | C lic Ch they were to show, king an | pearance of comfort presented by the accommodations and 
ast. There were obligations in politics phate i that could nalogo , that they Boneh fourteen millions out | of the students at Maynooth. But to show this Scotchman’s 
more binding in honour and i Spoerri pre hh aynooth | of their sixteen millions f the population of England, and mup as an authority, he read fi Random Recollections of as 
be established by mere force of „a t should not legislate | that endowments left by John esley were taken fr t House of — s, y the 2 , teas : 
eo th m, The Imperial Partana sho sentatives of | the by f Parliament. t hole history of the se exceedingly merry by the style of the descriptions of pi 
ae inana be an OI ah gestion Pon the medium | world furnished no similar example of a case by whicb, | dress and app tegeg Sir R. Peel, Colonel Sibthorp, Mr, Soe 
e Gwe foctings slone. es reeked t tne the table | as in Ireland, =~ majority were subjected to the minority. | Hawes, and Mr. Fox } aule himself—all of whom were present 
of their own feelings alone. He remarked tha’ Change oe e d| But while he suppor the measure, he admitted that | and joined in the laughter excited. Turning to the question 
a ns England an in proposing it ona others, public men, whether in office or i before them, he warned them that whai might ae 
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phoig emula te the papira of Scotland, and then he would be 
willi wE to repeal still further the Mort ate Act in their favour. 
That would be the wiser and the more respectable mode of po 
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had become of Lord Stanley’s Registration Bill, which had 
z aaee Son pA bens Spe ed pressing and se necessity? 
Cas O’Conor Don suppo: boa the _ 
‘und the latter ‘ceed ris i taitasi to be that of ‘ih xed g 
titude towards the Sestig, for having pr eee sed s = fra; 
generons, and unrestricted a measure.—Mr, obje: 
to the Bill, because neither a ‘contract ak a sicanamaky had b 
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i iti this, containing the thought fit, other honoured 
td to printao oe on tee ti eens d He saw no reason to trust thi 
assembled Sovereign, Tonie and Commons of the United King- 
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ORD r ipati 
7 h i pation ; be 
e E Borage yp pom qonan; a A ed Pa limits to concession. Measures like = e me to fear lest 
ir ht come when th ime Mini gr: y 
ofthe Roman Catholic clergy. He entreated Sir R. P i 
taken credit to himself S aia ea i take a ibe Ee i a! niet le ramit peA scien of the revenues uon 
“ aving taken the House | Establishment, in order to endow the priests whose condition 
by surprise as to this measure, to exercise equal candour in he had elev ate d, and whose tastes he ya improved. Roman 
og] he ait, ne he intended to pay iia po man Catholic clergy ; | catholics Seen were encouraged, while ~ Aimane shed 
x on, member s Miro = we oe > ries or hag gla Church was oe cou by in every way.—Mr. G professed 
against th Bil: wis, that be “did not conscientiously consider kinsa a EE wich hi = principles of of slitical but 
hry the e party, to gorani hich hehad been sent to Parli aE on religious grounds.— Colonel VERNER opposed the E th 
on ing f re o ie to Mage question. The p n his | sround that it interfered with the Protestant character of 
e Honse had chosen to abandon—either beatae i it was | the constitution. Mr. Hume supported the Bill on the 
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rty wes to be | of Ireland.—Mr. NewpeeaTe treated the principles 
A e = a ciples of Roman 
found wth gene sg rhage at Phat : mae green aay Catholicism as adverse to civil ar religious Hapland. and re 
Tefer to the past; but if they looked to the acts of that arty for Sale a en the creo nay pecially ot nt regretted 
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nin Catholics of England evinced that there beh oak te fiada 
they thought of those batts about the municipal corpora- | for the zealous phaea and e sion of their establishments 
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and in his garan goreny aame the Lichfield-house com- to him was to support the policy hand, argon pire ag n od neil j 
pact—afte e made fòr in 1 ca al- | tory on the other. The effect of such a measure might not 
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manent grant as involving an important principle, eit 
adopted Maynooth as one of the sank institutions rs the 
country, and ne — ed from Bar t perpetual = 
ic is 
ned agai opery. Res ectin iz 
Roman Catholics : individually, we sr rt the Tomin to be 
derived from the liter: y great names amongst them, 
he could not depart gril “that great Protestant principle 
and 
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himself to the ls 
feelings of the country ?—Mr. Wynw and Mr. C mae a E us by the Reformation and the Revolution 
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re pa that it should i have bri 
of ret ties, that z could tell 
pes ag mee lyons and st Maynooth, he is ing tbe re = airs fea se a seer 
aan on crag kerei hed conetened | | rasa the mage opposition to ig bill, but Lampe he 
aang aa to grant 9000/. to this establishment, he could d| sira resins = RTF aist. : Ta aiene geen jakas E S 
aar misajoe] lias to (portage igs the same | previously recurdied opinions, he would ss caput Mr. Ward's 
a. that the Church of Rome taugh nd that si | Su taschitchauent tie a oc ke ae 
‘were not justified in contributing to the pois tion of at we | Irish establis E A E a 
He dene = a that raiki Yi error. | gr tep ateit the conciliation of the Roman Catholics of 
p p — Bod, ave rescued the Charch of | Ireland, whom we had hitherto alienated from England an 
y d n doctrine ; cone rg ong by refusing: = or Sa affections of the people 
eir priesthood, The 
H i z pegan i z 
piwa oe a Doe beatin and Sir R. Peel, by following their example, would 
to ome of them, and if s0, | sec im ts, wi dan Es ish "obstin A” ledged 
phapa money get into into hogie ds nd those who. „in Chara corse p aie aare ger to the Ea = vars = we ackno = = è at 
gi ple on which fia hd 
Ee twas och Talo |S a E es 
