" It seems," says the London Star. " now more perilous to be an Irish member than a tramp or a pick-pocket. Mr. J. J. O'Kellymada a speech a month ago. On Tuesday night, after the rising of the House, he was seised by policemen and put in custody. The procecution of Mr. O' Kelly might have been right or wrong, bat there was not the smallest necessity for the mode of procedure. Mr. O'Kelly could have been summoned to Boyle to answer the charge brought against him — he is not the man to shirk any issue be has raised— and he could have gone to Ireland and stood his trial without tbe degradation and inconvenience of arrest. But this would not have suited the policy of Mr. Balfour. His first pleasure and purpose seems to be to degrade his political opponents, and thea to torture and starve them in gaol. " I DON'T WANT THAT STUFF," Is what a lady of Boston said to her husband when he brought home some medicine to cure her of Bick headache and neuralgia, which had made her miserable for fourteen years. At the first attack thereafter it was administered to her with such good results, that she continued its use till cured, and made so enthusiastic in its praise, that she induced twenty-two of the beßt families in her circle to adopt it as their regular family medicine, That " Btuff "is Dr, Souls 's American Hop Bitters. " Standard."
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18881019.2.41
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Tablet, Volume XVI, Issue 26, 19 October 1888, Page 31
Word Count
243Untitled New Zealand Tablet, Volume XVI, Issue 26, 19 October 1888, Page 31
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