28 APRIL 1838, Page 7

IRELAND.

received as subscriptions towards a registration fund. A committee of 31 persons was appointed to attend to the registries. Mr. O'Con- sell abused Lord Maidstone, and the English Radicals— He had never spent a pleasanter week, and that pleasure was much enhanced tato reading the English newspapers. There was or old Daddy Burdett eDg shout in the hands of his strait.waistcoat.keeper, Sir George Sinclair. ;I..kre was also that whelp, Lord Maidstone, who was the descendant of a 'inch dancing-master. He had been paid the compliment of having had him. nif made a lion merely because he snarled at him. In that speech which Lord Maidstone made in the House of Commens, there were, he could assure them, DO len than four or five errors ofgramar. l H Mil undertake to find a . C would undertake in the National Educathai Schools who could siwIl better ; and that lord was grown great because he sii-i, lt d at him. But he supposed Lord Maidstone bad finished him, and tbat he could not show his face in England after that re- primand of the dancing-master. • C• The English Radicals never did any good for Ireland. They proved their want of sympathy when the Coercion Bill was passing ; fur, had they raised their voices at that time, the atrocious Coercion Bill never could have passed. They should there- fore depend upon themselves—they should tear down the last remnant of the Orange flag.

[ Who were the authors of the "atrocious Coercion Bill?" Mr. O'Connell's dearly beloved Whigs ; for whose sake he has thrown his Radicalism overboard, and become their most devoted bumble servant. Who did give opposition—perhaps the only honest opposition to the Whig Coercion—Bill but the English Radical Press, and some Eng- lish Members in Parliameot 7] An official notice of the expulsion of Mr. O'Connell from the Ma- sonic order has been sent to every lodge in the kingdom.--Limerick Chronicle. [And very properly sill—Globe; one of dlr. O'Connell's Whig friends.

On Saturday, a numerous meeting was held in Dublin for the obeli- tion of Negro Apprenticeship.

In the Court of Queen's Bench, on Tuesday, Mr. O'Connell ob. tamed a conditional order for a quo warrant°, in order to ascertain by what right the Corporation of Dublin admit freemen by birth and servitude.