20 NOVEMBER 1880, page 2

An Irish Land-meeting Was Held At Thurles On Sunday, Which

was addressed by Mr. Dillon, M.P., in an even more than usually inflammatory tone. He declared that the Land Act of 1870 never had put the smallest check on rack-renting, nor......

Lord Kimberley, We Regret To See, Is Determined To Adhere

to , the old lines in South Africa. On Thursday a strong deputa- tion waited on him, to urge that the British Government should. again assume the control of native affairs in......

Mr. Gibson, Formerly The Tories' Attorney-general For...

a very moderate speech at Bristol on Monday, in criticism on the Liberal policy for Ireland. (He referred, by the way, to the assassination of Wheeler as if it were an agra-......

The Ferry Cabinet Has Given Way About " Priority," And

is driving the Magistracy Bill through the Chambers, perhaps with some idea that the Senate will reject it. The Bill, as de- signed, authorised Government to reorganise the......

There Is Absolutely No News From Dulcigno, Except That The

Sultan has promised, for the five-hundredth time, that it shall be given up, and that Dervish Pasha has drawn a cordon round the town.......

Lord Randolph Churchill Broke Out Very Violently Against...

at a Conservative meeting held at Portsmouth on Thursday night. We have said enough of the chief lines of his speech elsewhere, but may add here, that besides launching at Lord......

Lord Ripon Is Said, In A Telegram From Lahore Of

November 15th, to have addressed to a Durbar of Punjab Chiefs a speech which " was a manifesto." Unfortunately, the compiler of the bull letin occupies himself with rubbish......

The Feeling Against The Land League Has Been Exasperated...

week, without much justice, by the murder of a man named Wheeler, son of a land agent in Limerick. The murder was a very bad one, Mr. Wheeler having been shot in a field by an......

The French Government Just Escaped A Defeat In The Senate

on the question of the dissolution of the Monastic Orders, by a bare majority of six votes (143 to 137). The interest of the dis- cussion centred chiefly in M. de Freycinet's......