3 OCTOBER 1835, Page 7

At a meeting of the united parishes of Kileolman and

Robin, in time county of Mayo, the following resolutions, directed against the landlords who have made themselves responsible for tithes, were adopted- " 'Dint we have heard with pity and surprise that some landlords have been so dead to their own interests as by an unwise association of rents and tithes to expose one to the same jeopardy as the other ; and that, the more effectually to succeed, tiny have resorted to the insidious scheme of keeping, on account of tithes, a portion of the money which was exclusively and bond fide paid on account of rent by the tenantry. " That we should incur the just reproach of HIM, as well as of our own con- sciences, were we to suffer ourselves to be cheated of our rights by such dis- reputable artifices, after the glut ions struggle by which a united people have neatly effected the ruin of the abeininable system. That we shall therefore use every engine which the law allows us to de-feat this overreaching system, and that we shall proceedings for unjust detention of our goods against any who shall attempt to appropriate our rents to the unhallowed account of tithes." That worthy member of the House of Beresford, the Primate of Armagh, held his triennial visitation at Dromore, on Friday last. His charge, which was the same as that delivered by Min the day before at Lisburn, was a sort of political harangue in the genuine Beresford style. He attacked the Irish Church Bill, which he considered inju- rious to the interests of the aristocracy ; represented it as calculated to favour Popery, to the prejudice of the Church; and, in the most amiable manlier, exhorted his clergy strongly to manifest the Christian virtue of patience under suffering, aril to remain united in brotherly affection. He then collected his fees, and drove off to dine with Lord Downshire, leaving his clergy to digest the advice they had received, and to scramble home through the mud as best they could. It is a piece of bitter and cruel mockery on the part of a nian holding a sort of principality, and enjoying his twenty or thirty thousand a year. to call upon the clergy to persist in suffering, in order that the political views of himself and his party may be upheld. Christian patience, indeed ! Let the Lord Primate, if he be so great an admirer of this virtue, and if he really look upon the question at issue with such apos- tolic intensity of feeling, let him make some little sacrifice, in proof of his sincerity. Let him pay 10,0001. at year out of his income in aid of the poor parsons whom he so magnanimously calls upon to endure.— Pti:rthcrn Lord Stanley has returned from a visit to his estates in Tipperary, where a formidable resist:nice to the payment of tithes to the Reverend Mr. Coote had been organized. It is stated that his Lordship has taken up the subject wf,rnily, and has expressed his detertnial.tion to have the claims of the incumbent duly satisfied. At Cork, on .Monday, after most uproarious procced:ngs, Mr. Peter Reward was elected Mayor, instead of Mr. Robert Deane. Mr. Moylan was placed in nomination by the Liberal party, but the Mayor peremptorily. refused to receive him. Messrs. Ballard and Rogers were reelected Sheriffs. Against both proecedings the Liberals most vehe- mently protested. We imagine the fork case has not yet fully closed. The members of the late Privy Council who refused the Viceregal sanction to the Mayor and Sheriffs elect of Cork, are Lord Plunkett, the Bishop of Kildare., Lord Cloneurry, Mr. 1). Browne, M.P., and Dr. Radcliffe..—Evening Post of Tuesday.