23 AUGUST 1834, Page 7

ditional Ministeralist," eulogizing the conduct of the city Members, A

public dinner is to be given at Edinburgh in honour of Lord Grey; Dr. Baldwin and 31r. Callaghan ; and asking for fire millions of signa- and amongst other personages whose presenee there is anticipated, we tares for Repeal. This looks as if O'Connell would become just such have read the Millie of Lord Brougham. Having notoriously caused a Repealer as Sheridan was a Reformer. The latter used to say, Lord Grey's Ministerial downfhl, the learned lord goes to celebrate his " We'll have nothing less than A linual Parliaments and Universal Sul- own %vork. Him whom be has slain %aid' his own hand, be ploceeds frage—let us stick to that." Sheridan thought this the best way of to bury with ostentatious honours, ad fire a volley over his victim's preventing every species of Reform. Like O'Connell, he demanded grave.— Times. what he knew he could not get, as an indispensable preliminary to The early resignation of Sir D. K. Sandford as Representative of

moving the question. Paisley, is still confidently talked of by all classes of politicians ; and

The formation of an extensive Banking establishment is among Mr. it is affirmed with equal confidence, that the candidate to be brought O'Connell's projects ; and a meeting was held last Saturday, at Water- forward in the Tory interest as his successor is Ala Kirkman Finlay. ford, to take measures for forming a branch in Waterford in connexion No choice coonl be more appropriate than this for the party whose with the new National Bank of Ireland, in which Mr. O'Connell and interest Mr. Finlay will represent. The Paisley Paper mentions that his son Maurice are Directors. The monopoly Bank of Ireland, as Mr. Crawford, when in that ancient town last %week, was asked whether the chartered bank is called., is charged with favouring political partisans in the event of an election, he would stand. Mr. Crawford declared his in its discounts ; and the new bank is intended to counteract this in- willingness to do so, provided he was invited by a majority of the lobo- fluence. If the project succeed, it will be no slight addition to O'Con- bitants, in public meetings assembled. —Glasgow Chronicle. [We

nell's power. should think it must be rattier awkward in Mr. Finlay to oppose Mr. Crawford, inasmuch as at the last Glasgow election both his sons were

account of the revival of the Irish Conservative Society, and the On Tuesday week, in the Jury Court, in the trial of a case connected manner in which that angry simpleton Lord Wincbilsea has been with the Fife Bank, Mr. Dalziel, writer to the signet, who was cozened out of his .5001. subscription to advance the interests of examined as a witness, stated the following singular circumstance. Some