What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

Eva Osborne
A range of stories feature on the front pages of Irish newspapers on Tuesday.
The Irish Times leads with Israel and Iran issuing evacuation orders to residents of both countries as the conflict escalated on a fourth day, underlining the potential to trigger a broader war.
The Government is being urged to admit to a national infrastructure crisis, according to the Irish Examiner.
Local representatives in Cork have expressed disquiet at a recommedation that the planned new N20/M20 linking Cork and Limerick be tolled, The Echo reports.
The Irish Independent's front page features a piece on the scope for tax cuts or spending increase in October's Budget not being known until talks on a new trade deal between the EU and US are revealed, but uncertainty caused by Donald Trump's threatened tariffs are "complicating" coalition negotiations, government sources have said.
The mother of murdered Annie McCarrick no longer expects anyone to be prosecuted for her death and just wants her body found, according to the Irish Daily Mirror.
The Irish Daily Star reports that a court heard Cork hurler Anthony Nash's car was "half off the road" after a crash where he was "drunk".
Extra child benefit payments for lower-income families are being discussed ahead of the October Budget, as Cabinet ministers have been ordered to bring forward ideas to alleviate child poverty, according to the Irish Daily Mail.
The Herald reports on a lack of space at the State's main youth detention centre resulting in two Dublin teenagers accused of being armed with a machine gun during a burglary being freed at the weekend.