23 AUGUST 1834, Page 7

that he ought 'to go the whole bog,' as the

desperate Yankees say, and become an Orangeman. He was accordingly next day Initiated at a special meeting of the Grand Lodge, together with the Earl of Bandon and a few others to keep is idtitTanratd.

tion you have given to the business of Crockford's. and of the ardent support you have general purposes of the Conservative Society, and bold it forth as an exemplar afforded to the whist-table at the Traveller's, as well as to the more inmortant parties to all good Protestants, who are requested to ' go and do likewise.' Into that at Graham's. I rely with entire confidence on your judgment and zeal in maintaining fund all subscriptions will now fall, as a matter of course, for the benefit of the the cookery of our excellent kitchens. .u. cooling to the established principles ad Ude. jobbers, who can draw them out as easily as their own lodgments in the " I continue to receive most faro,' rattle accounts or tile White-bait dinners at Greenwich Bank of Ireland, by going through a few necessary forms; and it may safely be anti Blackwall ; and it is with great satisfaction that I have observed the two great predicted, that the Clergy will never be allowed to touch a penny of it, though parties in toy Pailiament, encouraging those entertainments so peculiarly national, and showing agreement in a matter ot taste so important to the fisheries. they were half or entirely starving." The agitation or rather the attempt at agitation, by the Tories, is obedient humble servants at command; awl it is with sincere pleasure that I find to be of a twofold character. The Conservative Society is to renew myself held bv many in high consideratiou. its meetings this day, and the Orange Institution is also to resume ope- .,As the autumn ads ances, there is reason to apprehend that the days will shorten rations. The object of both, as announced by the Mail, is to make win bless us aim length of days and restore vegetation. "a demonstration that will work upon the fears of Ministers," and to .. The Thames continues to run through London. and the Monument stands on Fish present " the most formidable array ever yet exhibited in a civilized Street Hill. The prospects of the Regent's Park are improved; aud my people wilt be partially admitted to the paivilege of taking the air without swallow Mg the dust of ths world—a whole people determined to resist oppression and reject infi- road ; but to guard the sudden privilege of walking on the grass hem ficeutimoneso delity." What superlative nonsense! The formidable array of the will be the anxious object of my Government. whole people in Mr. Tiins's snug parlour in Grafton Street ! lira can " The insanity or the dogs during the summer solstice has long been a subject to nos the people afford to laugh at the loud talk and fancied importance of 'or the prolimudest gi id f and concern ; but I trust that the Committee which has devoted itself to the prevention of Drunkenness will discover a method of removing the prejto the contemptible remnant of the anti-Irish faction.—Dublin Morning dice or delusion or my faithful dogs. and reconcile them to water. Register. " I have seen w ith a just indignation. the rating or omnibuses, by which hundreds of The troops lately employed in protecting Mr. Whitty and his tithe- my faithful subjects are pulverised, so that not even thew names are left behind them_ Persons living and well one instant, are run down. ground to a powder. and flying in collectors in Wicklow have received orders to return to Carlow, as all dast the next moment These horrors are not unknown nor undeplured by me. and their efforts have proved abortive. your attention will naturally be directed, early in the next session, to the adoption of In consequence of instructions from Government, a general disarming some plan by which all my subjects will be enabled to ride in their own carriages. "Gentlemen or the Ilouse of Commons—I thank you for your supplies. Moro money of the Enniskillen yeomanry has been ordered. Several members of and less need of it is the anxious wish of my heart ; and be assured. that whatever you that body have refused to deliver up their arms ; but the law-officers grant is well laid out, and that the profusest expenditure of wit ch circumstances will are about proceeding against the commander of each corps whose men permit is the wisest economy. The same course of trugality which has lk,e11 proposed in my speeches and those of nty predecessors for the last fifty years. will be steadily are contumacious, for the penalty of 500/. pursuant to the statutes in that case made and provided. pursued ; but while it is pursued. it is nat. in the nature of things that it should be pos. Olt Thursday week, Lieutenant Hiern proceeded in command of a "My Lords and Gentlemen—It gives me great satistactieu to believe, that in return- strong party of the 36th depot, from Nenagh to Killibeg, to aid the ing to your seseral counties you will find all at home well; and I rely with confidence Sherrff in executing a writ of Habere, by which he had to turn out Possession thirty-two families! The duty being finished, the party re- Uniess some unforeseen cause should arise, it is said in the political turned to Nenagb Cite same evening, having perforated a march of circles, that Parliament will not be called together until the end of h th th party next January, and that all e great Ministerial measures will be laid hirty-three Irish miles in one day. This is the twenty-eight before the House soon after it assembles.—Morning Chronicle.

of the 36th depOt, which has aided the civil power during the last six

months. Sir George Grey, M. P., is to be Under Secretary for the Colonies, At the Tyrone Assizes, a man was convicted for giving "three cheers in the room of Mr. Lefevre, who is to be one of the Commissioners for the Kiug and his declaration to the Bishops." The Court directed under the Poor-Law Act. him to be acguitted—Limerich Chronick. [This paragraph reads very Mr. Milne kissed hands at the Levee, on Wednesday, as one of the

like an Irish one.] 1.014

for their rights should not resemble the agitati[oi of their oppresmrs. The The cholera is again pier:dent io Dublin : 1:o fewer than 158 neve People knew the course by which they %l' 011 former victories, awl their future cases were reported on Saturday ; and the'Aletropolitan Cholera Hos.. struggle avould he marked by peace and petseverance. By these means they pital in Grange Gorman Lane has been reopened by orders frons would have a total extinction of tithes. The legislative independence of neland Government.

T

the queshree young Irish gentlemen and a boatman were drowned in Strang.; tion of Repeal was brought Airward, he, heaven help him ! made a speech Of five ‘nours; but he had to introduce topics to prove the right of Ire- ford Lough, on Tuesday week, by the upsetting of a boat in a sudden laud to independence, which it tvould not he necessary for him to do the next squall. There were seven altogether in the boat ; and perhaps on!, time he should loin,' it forward. Ireland never forfeited her rights—the Union three would have been drowned, had not one of those who had swan was not 4 compact Cetween two nations, for he could well prove the Union was to land—Ala John Miller, of Portaferry—again plunged into the wates brought about by fraud and blood. The People were goadA to violence and to save his friend, a son of Colonel Barr ; %Amu he succeeded in saving, rebellion ; and, when weakened by their divisions, their rights were wrested but perished himself. The names of the two other gentlemen were from them, and their eottntry enslaved. The People should make arrangements M'Clintock and Beirne, both of good families and numerous connexions. to give him three millions of signatures to petitions tot next session—be would M'Clintock was the son of a gentleman lately Member for Louth not take less. ( Cheers.) Ile was one of the best ft iends the Clergy of the county, and was tbe last surviving child of his father, who has lost sit Established Church had : he used every exertion to maintain vested rights: his

children during the last twelve months.

Bills, payable at every Customhouse in the country ; and while was the landed A soldier of the 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards, shot himself at proprietor who would not feel happy to have his rents so well secured ? And the Cork Barracks, on the 1.2th instant, in the stable loft, dressed for when it was proposed that the Clergy should pay back to them the million parade. Ile placed the muzzle of his combine against his side, and advanced to them last year, he opposed it. All this he had done 3, a Catholic— with a string ohich was attached to his foot pulled the trigger : the bait and he was a sincere one ; but all that would not conciliate the Protestant passed through his heart, and his death was instantaneous—Cork Clergy. Therefore, as they could not buy them, they should fight them : they Constitution.