21 NOVEMBER 1835, Page 5

About seven hundred Orangemen of Cork and the vicinity had

a grand entertainment in Cork on the 5th of November, the day chosen to present an address to Mr. Deane, whose election to the Mayoralty was not sanctioned by Lord Mulerave on account of his notorious Orangeism. At this dinner, all the brethren wore the collars and badges of their lodges. The Bandon address was presented by a depu- tation headed by the Earl of Bandon ; who read the address, and ex- pressed his delight at being the person selected for that office. His Lordship also presented the Royal Nassau Lodge address. In both of these documents, the conduct of the Government was impugned in no measured terms. In the first-named, this passage occurs-

" The wrong which has been done you is a public wrong : and while we fed that those who condemned you unheart have violated Me first principles of constitutional law and justice, we are yet happy to perceive that it has only tended to elevate you in public estimation, so that your name will go down to posterity," &c. &c.

In the Nassau Lodge address, the refusal of Lord Mulgrave to sanc- tion Deane's election to the Mayoralty of Cork is designated as "an unheard-of arbitrary exercise of authority." In that refusal, the ad- dressers said they discerned

. . . . "too plainly, as in most other measures of policy pursued by the present Irish Government, a concurring share in that I:if:au:m.4 policy which, if not happily intercepted by the awakened loyalty of the Protestants of the United Kingdom, would appear to overwhelm the Altar and the Throne in one common ruin-to erect Popery in their stead-to separate the sister countries, and to reenact, perhaps, the horrors of 1641, amidst the orgies of a besotted laity, an intolerant priesthood, and the fraudulent practices of a self-convicted am( mendicant Agitator."

This Lord Bandon is a Deputy-Lictitenant for Cork county; and the Morning Chronicle very properly calls upon the Lord-Lieutenant to dismiss bun at once from that office.