The Parliamentary Debates

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Reuter's Telegram Company, 1898

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Sir T Esmonde Kerry W
25
4 The expenses incurred by a sanitary authority whether before
33
DISCUSSION
39
66
65
FRIDAY 20TH MAY 1898
73
RETURNS REPORTS
77
FRIDAY 20TH MAY 1898
109
Commons Regulation Runcorn Provisional Order BillTo confirm
113
Leicester Little Lever Gloucester Hornsey Nottingham 3 Don
115
Question proposed
125
Mr Dillon
129
TWELVE OCLOCK RULEMotion for Suspension Mr A J Balfour
131
TYPHUS AT PORTMAGEEQuestion Mr J Dillon Mayo E Answer
133
and 4
135
Abraham Wm Cork N E
145
AclandHood Capt SirAlex
147
152
151
Healy Cork
153
Amendment negatived
165
Mr T M Healy
189
Amendment proposed to the Proposed Amendment
197
Mr Tully Leitrim S
199
216
215
Motion made and Question proposed
227
Page 28 line 8 at end insertProvided that where it shall appear
235
DISCUSSION
249
Amendment by leave withdrawn
251
That clause 53 stand part of the Bill
253
Thanet Gas BillRecommitted to the same Select Committee to whom
261
Diplomatic and Consular
263
279 284
281
MONDAY 23RD MAY 1898
291
Act 1898 Edinburgh Merchant Company Act 1898 Norton and Hal
293
Blundell Colonel Henry
307
Ayes 89 Noes 178 Division List No 115
309
Edinburgh and District Water Bill H L Morley Corporation Gas Bill
311
the Bill be read a second time Tomorrow
313
Mr Gerald Balfour
319
SANITARY CONDITION OF KIRKTON INVERNESSSHIREQuestion Mr Weir
323
ARREST AT CANDIA OF SERVANT OF BRITISH SUBJECTQuestion
329
LITERARY SEARCH DEPARTMENT PROBATE REGISTRY Question
333
IRISH MUNICIPAL TAXATIONQuestion Mr M Healy Cork Answer
341
TELEGRAPHISTS WAGES
389
OMAGH LAND COMMISSIONQuestion Mr Murnaghan Tyrone Mid
419
Mr T M Healy
425
DISCUSSION
437
Ascroft Robert
443
ONeill Hon Robert Torrens
445
Question
449
Amendment proposed
467
Carlile William Walter
469
Mr Gerald Balfour
473
DISCUSSION
481
BadenPowell Sir G Smyth
497
OConnor Arthur Donegal
499
June 8
501
Page 33 line 25 at end insert 1 A person registered as a freeman
505
7
519
TUESDAY 24TH MAY 1898
521
Local Government Ireland Provisional Orders No 2 BillReported
523
LARNE POST OFFICEQuestion Colonel J McCalmont Antrim E
525
Pauper Children Ireland Bill To make further provision with respect
529
MURDER OF YUSSUF YUNNANQuestions Mr Hedderwick Wick Burghs
531
STRABANE CANALQuestion Mr Serjeant Hemphill Tyrone N
533
LUNACY SCOTLAND REPORTQuestion Mr J G Weir Ross
539
Answer The Financial Secretary to the Treasury Mr R W Hanbury
547
FOURTH SERIES
553
FRY COMMISSIONQuestion Colonel Waring Down N Answer
559
Mr Jordan Fermanagh
563
Mr T M Healy 573 574
573
Collery Bernard
579
Smith Samuel Flint
581
Amendment negatived
583
DISCUSSION
585
NEW CLAUSE
591
Mr Vesey Knox 594
593
Amendment agreed
601
Mr Atkinson
603
Page
627
NEW CLAUSE
629
632
631
708
707
NAVIGATION AND SHIPPINGCopy presented of Annual Statement
711
PIER AND HARBOUR LOANS IN IRELANDQuestion Mr Field Dublin
713
SHELLFISH AND SEWAGEQuestion Mr Loder Brighton Answer
721
June 7
737
AclandHood Capt A
739
Wallace Robert Edinburgh
741
Colonel Williams Dorset
763
SCIENCE BUILDINGS AT SOUTH KENSINGTONQuestion Sir F Powell
767
Mr J G Talbot Oxford
777
Dr Tanner Cork Mid
797
821 824
823
Captain Pretyman Suffolk
841
Hon William Ewart Gladstone be interred at the public charge and that
845
Grocers Licences Scotland Abolition BillIn favour From Cowden
849
From Haddington to
851
BRITISH WARSHIPS OFF FREETOWNQuestion Mr Pickersgill Bethnal
853
LIGHT DUES ON BALTIC SHIPPINGQuestion Mr Doughty Great
857
PALMISTRY Question Captain Phillpotts Devon Torquay Answer
863
NEW INFANTRY BATTALIONSQuestion General Russell Cheltenham
865
Wyvill Marmaduke DArcy
973
Balfour Rt Hon A J Mancr
977
Milford Docks Bill H L Reported with Amendments Report to
985
Trade Foreign Countries and British PossessionsCopy presented
989
CHANNEL MAIL SERVICEQuestion Captain Norton Newington W
1001
Bayley T Derbyshire
1011
Mr Broadhurst
1061
Balfour Rt Hon G W Leeds
1069
Williams John C Notts
1071
CampbellBannerman Sir H Lea Sir T Londonderry
1073
June 9
1077
June 10
1083
Cambridge on 26th February 1898 altering Statute VI of
1089
Gas Light and Coke Company Bill
1093
Mr Stuart Shoreditch
1107
COMPANIES BILLQuestion Mr Begg Glasgow St Rollox Answer
1113
Dilke Rt Hon Sir Charles
1117
Balcarres Lord
1119
Woodhouse SirJTHuddsfld
1121
Blundell Colonel Henry
1141
Ellis John E Notts
1143
From Lee Bath Ware Putney Lough
1145
From Goonbell
1147
TELEGRAPHIC DELAYS IN CORKQuestion Mr Smith Barry Hunts
1151
THE NAVY AND THE MARINESQuestions Sir J Colomb Great Yarmouth
1161
Mr Gerald Balfour
1167
DANGEROUS INDUSTRIESQuestion Mr Tennant Berwickshire Answer
1187
LABOURERS COTTAGES IN THE CORK UNIONQuestion Dr Tanner Cork
1197
Mr ArnoldFoster Belfast
1203
Question put
1221
TENDERS FOR CORK MILITARY BARRACKSQuestions Mr Patrick OBrien
1243
Bullard Sir Harry
1247
TELLERS
1249
ROBBERIES IN THE EUSTON ROADQuestion Captain Jessell
1251
That the Bill be now read a second time
1259
UNCERTIFIED DEATHS IN SCOTLANDQuestion Mr Weir Ross
1261
WEDNESDAY 8TH JUNE 1898
1265
631
1271
The Lord Chancellor The
1273
Water Orders Confirmation Bill H L Report from the Committee
1275
EDUCATION SCOTLAND TRAINING COLLEGES Copy presented
1277
Viscount Sidmouth 1279
1279
WathuponDearne Urban District Council Bill H L Also a Bill intituled
1285
ARMY CLOTHINGQuestion Mr Jeffreys Hants North Answer
1293
NAVAL AND MILITARY PENSIONSQuestion Mr Jeffreys Hants N
1295
SUGAR BOUNTIES CONFERENCEQuestion Sir Charles Dilke Gloucester
1299
POLICE AND THE KILRUSH NATIONALISTS Question Major Jameson
1313
BRYANT AND MAYS MATCHESQuestions Mr P OBrien Kilkenny
1351
Mr J Morley Montrose
1401
Dilke
1429
Mr Broadhurst and
1439
DicksonPoynder Sir John
1441
HUNTQuestions Mr Patrick OBrien Kilkenny
1443
ABBEY MANSIONS FATALITY
1449
Sheffield Central Answer The First Commissioner of Works
1463
TECHNICAL INSTRUCTIONS IN LANCASHIREQuestion Mr Rutherford
1483
536
1489
QUESTIONS
1491
PIER ACCOMMODATION AT DROMODQuestion Mr Tully Leitrim S
1495
LONDON MUNICIPALITIES BILLQuestion Mr Whitmore Chelsea
1507
373

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77 ÆäÀÌÁö - That an humble Address be presented to her Majesty praying that her Majesty will be graciously pleased to give directions that the remains of the Right Hon.
85 ÆäÀÌÁö - Soand-so had not the manhood to say that." It was obvious from all he said and from all he did that that virile virtue of manhood, in which he comprehended courage, righteous daring, the disdain of odds against him — that virile virtue of manhood was perhaps the one which he put the highest. This country, this nation, loves brave men. Mr. Gladstone was the bravest of the brave. There was no cause so hopeless that he was afraid to undertake it ; there was no amount of opposition that would cow him...
85 ÆäÀÌÁö - Gladstone always expressed a hope that there might be an interval left to him between the end of his political and of his natural life. That period was given to him, for it is more than four years since he quitted the sphere of politics. Those four years have been with him a special preparation for his death, but have they not also been a preparation for his death with the nation at large ? Had he died in the plenitude of his power as Prime Minister, would it have been possible for a vigorous and...
85 ÆäÀÌÁö - These remarks were the offspring of ignorance and not of knowledge. The faith of Mr. Gladstone, obviously to all who knew him, pervaded every act and every part of his life. It was the faith, the pure faith, of a child, confirmed by the experience and the conviction of manhood.
121 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... service who realise how much of public prosperity is involved in the maintenance of the worth of public life, and how perilously difficult most democracies apparently feel it. to be to avoid the opposite dangers into which so many of them have fallen.
85 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... with the elder Pitt — in spite of his tragic end, of his unrivalled services, and of his enfeebled old age. It was not so with the younger Pitt — in spite of his long control of the country and his absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable not merely to the man, but to the nation. My lords, there is one deeply melancholy feature of Mr. Gladstone's death, by far the most melancholy, to which I think none of my noble friends have referred.
79 ÆäÀÌÁö - They had nothing to do with it. Whether he was right, or whether he was wrong, in all the measures, or in most of the measures which he proposed — those are matters of which the discussion has passed by, and would certainly be singularly inappropriate here...
85 ÆäÀÌÁö - It was obvious from all he said and from all he did that that virile virtue of manhood, in which he comprehended courage, righteous daring, the disdain of odds against him — that virile virtue of manhood was perhaps the one which he put the highest. This country, this nation, loves brave men. Mr. Gladstone was the bravest of the brave. There was no cause so hopeless that he was afraid to undertake it ; there was no amount of opposition that would cow him when once he had undertaken it. It was,...
119 ÆäÀÌÁö - There was one of those preliminary parliamentary debates — or series of debates — which preceded the main business of the evening. In this Mr. Gladstone had to speak not once or twice, but several times, and it was not until hour after hour had passed in this preliminary skirmish in a House hostile, impatient, and utterly wearied, that he got up to present his case with that conviction that he was right, which was his great strength as a speaker in and out of the House. I never shall forget the...
85 ÆäÀÌÁö - Gladstone is gone, to that solitary and pathetic figure who, for sixty years, shared all the sorrows and all the joys of Mr. Gladstone's life ; who received his every confidence and every aspiration ; who shared his triumphs with him and cheered him under his defeats ; who by her tender vigilance, I firmly believe, sustained and prolonged his years.

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