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CONDENSED CABLEGRAMS.

London. Speaking afe Belfast Lord Salisbury said the House of Lords would save England from the black and irrepapable disgrace of selling the Loyalists. The House of Lords was impregnable as representing England and. the Irish Loyalists, and there was no power in the Constitution, which could override the insistence of the Lords. While English and Scottish opinion kept up to the mark the accursed Bill could never pass. They must avoid violence and riot. The country would never allow the i insane, eccentricity, of a single statesman to cut the Empire in two. ; With regard to Ulster's insistence to Home Rule, he entirely agreed with . Mr Balfour. Students with lighted torches escorted Lord Salisbury to the railway [ station. J ■•• Lord Salisbury insisted that Home s Rule was Mr Gladstone's own work, and not the steady growth of public * opinion. The provisions of the supremacy of the Imperial Parlia- \ ment and veto by the Crown were , alike worthless. It was impossible i to amend the Bill. [ The American League cabled that | the Parnellite section possessed i letters reporting that a union between : the two parties had been affected, and asked whether it was true. A reply was sent that it was a deliber- ; ate lie. Frozen mutton, first quality, 4£d * pee lb ; lamb, s|d. 1 The New Zealand hemp market is | depressed ; fair quality, £23 per ten. New Zealand long-berried wheat ! is steady at 31s.' South Australian is weaker at 33s 6d. Victorian also ' is weaker at 88s. The Prince of Wales' hew yacht Britannia has defeated the Valkyrie, Cjllceena and Werna. The Prince 1 \yas on board the yacht for three !■ $w*i •■ ■■ . ' '.•■ "■■".■ The Siamese Legation in London ! ridicule, the chargeij' made l by 'the French press that the B ritish are : inkiguing against the French in "/'Siam. .. : /■";'_ "'. ' ; ;; ; / . ' Lord Onslow is visiting Brussels ! and Copenhagen, and maiking enquiries into the system of marking meat. Lord Salisbury, speaking at Belfast, said Ulster's present condition was masked civil war, but with the i wish for peace. He stated that hav--1 ing witnessed aiS Hbutburst of the general feelling of attachment to the Union, he assuredly had no reason [ to despair. A faction supported by :. foreign gold nourished autonomy, , and. the agitation was ominous, but i the cloud would soon pass away. 1 During his stay in Belfast Lord * .jSajljsbury received 90 addresses. In I tbwn,s he met . with a royal . reception, and at Derry and the wayr side stations thousands assembled to I welcome him. ' At his final address in Derry the Marquis of Salisbury was accorded a . ereat reception. E ( . .The police lowered a Union Jack which was floating over a hotel in ». Derry, on the ground that it was a [ party emblem. ' The troops have been withdrawn , from Hull.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18930530.2.10

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 30 May 1893, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
461

CONDENSED CABLEGRAMS. Manawatu Herald, 30 May 1893, Page 2

CONDENSED CABLEGRAMS. Manawatu Herald, 30 May 1893, Page 2

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