32 
posi posed line from Swinton, vid Doncaster, Gainsborough, | | the political intemperance imputed to’some ecclesiastics | members ought to pursue with regard to their eis 
in 
Lincoln, Boe, spag to Wisbech was 124 milesin |in this country, on statements anfonai; perhaps, or 
Ten: gth, and wo wae 3 n the Eastern Counties at March. aes exaggerate and which, if true, would be a sub- | 
It 
uld cost 1.61 0002 atl4 pte 
Pa attendance ja 
Aft 
7 to the Holy Father, | nell BE the repeal iae for the we a pe 3051 pes 
‘ Catholic | 38- 5d—Th s 
iť they w would be enabled to travel quicker by 
line proposed by the Manchestér and. Leeds pes 
people of Aier 4i T Me. ian of a coanth Galw 
t ae 
the Rev. M M meeting of Roman Catholic clergymen of i 
read a letter fro om ev. Mr, O'Malley, his s parish cese of Dublin was held, when a zmen o the archdio 
They had then a branch from Swi nton to Wakefield, 
and onto Sheffield and Rother Kim this line a dis 
tance of 40 d with the Lon- |F 
o t Legis 
Franzoni. “The writer said that the Roman Pontif could la tare was adopted; urging the total repeal of the Chari- 
don and York line. After ent ering into 
of the merits of the [ae gran London and York line, 
hinh th 
‘the cape A the C ving ie 
th 
ver receive the heje of | in 
t 
1d table Bequests Act, and also the repeal of th 
tained | clauses in the er rege Act, affecting the Fou 
he pp 
give him his “ quietus.” All t 
in this epistle, whičh were decidedly. aa nepal ie 
leaps applauded? Rev. Mr. Hop ee was underst 
Ereland. 
Dublin.—Mr. O’Connell has a engl A, letter to | 
Piram Cřolly in which he ro erg: , and un- | 
equivocally, any assertion of his that may sent, or ape | ke 
to apply, to fho goers nt published by the Primate, a 
bei 
Mr. eens ELU ‘ai I freely avow that the document 
given by’your Graseetihe public by oe, canonical; and, 
even rif my private opinion had bee se, I would atonce 
yield it to the authority with wich gy ype. ent is now 
ni that the letter aila de . ae conical to att empt a description of ae The follo owing re aan : 
th lation, agreed to at a meeting held in Dundalk on Sas 
day week, pre sided Very Re 
ocu me sant e saii 
Rev. i OM alley and the rev. arti whom he Co Vie Gen tee A P » Mr, 
had taken the liberty to interrupt, had a aright to | OYne, „y 10- eral of Armagh, appears to embody 
that th the spirit which-animates the democratie section of the 
ran ion 40 hem, | aa n Ce ere laity and Leys od :—“‘Resoly 
the na a y Catholicsy we are determined to respect 
iio cae fidelity of submission the? legitimate author 
bib 
3 
5 
P 
fl 
ow 
oe 
d 
S 
Sa 
E 
M 
B 
r 
= 
oo 
a 
et 
mE 
a, 
e Holy ne ns all sirita matters, we ari 
-a 
+ 2E 
Seaaraa= 
ar h x aed as loyal. subje a es tishmen, to repudii 
4 £ A and resist any Td oe stem of the Po e, or ofar 
5 a Chat foreign potentate whatever, als 
Ziotħed. I, however, never did intend to express the idea that | man begged to remind the reverend gen ni that | i p 
such a document as that really in question could be uncanonical. | there was then no question before the meeting:: Mr. tical concerns of this kingdom.” A ‘meeting has al ð 
¥ you ene me tò eter tamy J letter you will at ya setai Steele handed in some subscriptions which he had col be to Pire = rea i, the county af Galway, at which 
misinformation, which made me conceive tha - il 7 J ac i 
ment treated of ‘matters of a temporal nature, or matters lected whilst on his tour. He said that in pong he Lor reaR pisen i and resolutions violentiyó pposed 
relating to the political rights and liberties of the Irish people.’ | had organised rac Ge morn staff” ud as wou uld not | fail Ter a 
Such a document would plainly be uncanonical, and directly | secure the peace of that c Sl p 
ir yir on er authority inthe | Cavan and Mona ghan on ‘his , and he Se = 
see mein matters purely temporal. ‘or’ e appear- i x 
nce of your Grece’s letter there was, naturally, great excite- | nounced ,them. to. be po a panel In Du sa Ik ‘an cre eg aah ss jae. oy a Teac, Ltn Ol 
<> ep cr oe en ape ee in ‘es Suplo here were some ribbon a ‘but they had been | terrace, Stoke, Devonport, the lady of R. uate 
ri FA — 
tin Rome-—the shout of triumph which emanated fro a repressed by a number of volunteer peace ‘ta ae ghter—20th inst., at Putney, the tady of A. Beiris, 
Tory press on the completion of the commission unde preservers, Mr. 0'Co onnell reprobated the ri ribbon on-con- | "yr BRI’ $.—On the 12th ult., at St. George’s Chaney | 
quests Act, containing a similar avowal of an agent pret, tt thi Basseterr Beda: co s; R. M. ES Esq., Colonial Se 
the present Government in Rome— these, comb Repeal combination. He n ext adverts to the | cretary, E Lo RawLins, third daughter of toa 
sinister reports—confirmed, as they a fo, bé, by a i y Hon. William Wharton Rawlins, Member of Her Majesty's | 
letter published in the Globe, —filled the publi mind with Couneil i in that Island. x 
admitted, however, tha . Aubin had 
Minis! me. I consider that agency as con- 
e p of a temporal nature in the Roman 
States ; but, that b being over, Aubin still contin 
t Rome, though, according to the tend bev: he had 
ing to do there. What is sufficiently cui s is, that the 
roceeds to state that Aubin had dhcp pr rset d by Mr. 
EATHS.—On the 17th inst., at Richmond-hill, the Dowe? 
seen EA atris ORSHEAD, aged 87— h Sunday aoe SE pax 
St. Germains, Cornwall, the Right ua 
nced his a a 
He said he ES arsa agita! Nothing 
would mA Nkembo t Rem pai Nothing had ierrited inem; The R. Ke 
apn eioh be ery: Service—19th inst., at Bri 
Seymour, the actual ambassador at Florence. Aubin s applied o Ta Bo ri ER 
the place of Seymour; and the Glode telis us, that on the ran pec Lay nets ; oe ther be vous aaa epeal, pes Ae i ers 20th Anais ie yds Ears ete 
Aubin, Petre was Supolted to the sit is is The a he F 
“ananomal —— ;” but Petre, besides being inan an: oom on of Henry John Baird, 
lous position at Rome, is rie atlaché to the Bom Anete atend alivi E: to be engaged i ul al aaa 17—16th Sept., at Rome, 
bid = Jt is stated, that his salary is very trivial, “ W aces RTORISKA, relict of the late Prince Jo 
exceeding that of or ataché. He has, tien, a that the press, ent r d : 
i —doing what? It is said—and it be e. It would be base. to shrink, ‘as the chairman 
were said, that the affairs of the English Catho- į- y But Ireland would bë true to hevselt, eS aS ee ee SO 
lies require any such agency at Rome. Itis plain ci > hi $ 4 gs eth IMMEDIATELY, a Quantity of TWO 
nly relate to Ireland. Now these, ‘ceiyes, are AR TRANSPLANTED THORNS. Any Parties a pe 
issions of an underhand agency byt art of Engh can su; Berra e above, and will send an offer stating aa 
ang pareo cod Eelbior wil please address, F. C. Bats, Nurses 
, Taw —Ja “ 
with profou Hl irera and without any species of flattery, 
wo mer chen ile th once ot aka. as 1 deniad the thet inazaa ey ‘he TED, A 
, and, and, the y . 
only document gosia hom Rome, and in taking the trouble the Maca sso i one os eer erar will be =e +» Post Office 
of repeating the pledge which the bial Prelacy have given, to r sei n n 
use every influence in their pow: prevent any such in- | municipal refor WAN ne Peek 
sidious ghee as the concordat, $ "which (I use your Grace’s | that the Irish would * 2 anderstanding i 
words) w would, Sei destructive of the purity and independence gli uit Trees, and the a 
give up Repeal; bi he E 
ae ot boone He. Nid not doubt that the Queens speech 
words 
in Dublin, the obje t of hich is to facilitate the Repeal G 
e Union, to secure the establishment of sla- a hew ral Collectio 
tive independence of Ireland, and as a means for the ei ig hamia rundown po: letter post, paid, stating terms, references, &¢ 
attainment of these ends, to encourage Irish manufac- | Paddy. He might venture to assert A s eryman, Kingston, Surrey. 
art, and en and to diffuse ociety uld t i i d in that even i + paide 1 
anational feeling. club is to dine together on the WANT PLACES.—All Letters to be post-P 
niversary of the te Renee ti of ere med S PROPA GATOR 
ence in 1782, andt m are i $ FOREMAN. 
Mr. O’Connell is the President, Lord Firench, Messrs. ipt hay e from | testimonials = to ability, b —Direct to 2. 
S. O’Brien, Grattan, Roche, and M‘Loughlin, - an ewi ied he Clark, Seedsman, Bishopsgate-street Within, Lo 
ts.—The weekly meeting of the Repeal Associa- is subs SFT CARER. —A single Man, aged 
‘tion pre age o r. Smith O’B: A fectly gr sna the cp tire of Pines, the 
in the chair. The proceedings were opened by a : speech y ing of Grapes, Strawberries, Cned oth Kitch 
ge Jobn Oc onnell, who — to his long | adopted by the rege vee etica ex tionab‘e,—Direct to A 
absene rom their meetings. He said that he had i ich was eff H on, Ess 
i eep u 
he g 
amou unted to 55 volum mes, is was a n token of the 
expan ‘intel- | r 
Ject of Ireland. Repeal must su 
i first-rate înstruction: 
prevent it, The English press. exercis l re instruction; 
qig infiuence ageinst them, bat ie woul ald feo oxy th EAA weet dy on gag pees wantiog a 
Ta avail, t this- moment Mr. O'Connell entered the | meetitigs had been already held, and hundreds more would 
hall, followed by Mr. O'Neil Daunt, and the most vehe- follow, and it was ae that not a.single lay. meeting “had Castle ; o 
lowed b: , 
mënt shouting immediately ensued, which lasted for seye- | 2S Yet taken place in favour of the bill. There was not even an | (this aos 
g mua à 3 be “fos O’Connell res a AS 3 GARDI 
Gaee eu eet | yt ost bi 
ted oh -of mtempdrihce would d destroy all hope of so 
incum sor ge he 
3 ended the Catholic — Treland to | experienced in ‘all eng d one 
čall upon the a hikes pe had taken office under the Bequests eluding arly yh yer Hg all kin T- pirect t 
Bill te gore ein addresses to those prelates, calling upon them No pae “i d place accepted. 
wee Rane so a ri ye flocks as to resign n those offices, and to 
= hi ass that such a course 
g Man, ¥ 
Hays, Rent. ——_—_ 
S GARDENER. —[A y 
eneficial results. 
o desi 
5 wi 
rom d ofa 
fear or craven gae e did not doubt in the aa, ae =< e Man, aged, 
Teast of their ultimate pee for they would rely upon m in their peaceable exertion s (in co > 5 RDEN na Hothous ; 
themsel ‘and i e in thei eir struggle. Mr. O’Con- with their Prothane felow.countrymen) to cheatin a rest A ago eats 
tion of their domestic | f w Can ha r week 
aye = rear a geen ature. He would take it on himeel L ne ges Poirect 
O proc he 
omer as his companion: “ater some remarks on the AND. 
aid he would tmeplare e of K SALESMAN, a 
REHOUSE: ah es 
wledge of naracter 
i "excellent 
be directed to the same end. S. M. 
ing aioe fonber ions, he concluded by moving that it be ly left. — Direct | 
ites to tie auc ie ait ake t the Repeal i = cla ii 3 
