1845.] THE ee R. 
a 
—— eee 
at which it was determined to carry out their London | it may be proper to take, with a provid t P F that they would promote the extension « 
and Exeter project, by Yeovil, &c., as already stated in | the expected searcity of provisions from an the rn of po publie wo works, and that they would facilitate private - 
_ this Paper, and likewise to confirm™the ment re- | the Potato T ut expectation had been n disappointed. Had the 
; * = agree: crop. he selection ns to form the sugges 
" lative to the Bristol and Exeter Railway. The Bristol Jaid bef age ctope os bene te etat session wat 
pi p rdim s betw and tenant 
Exeter proprietors, however, at aed meeting y pateren and we hope that, in in | adopted, an ampile ari the paai aan ot 
ee a Tead Bohai few d nt labour could nes oa in draining and other im- 
better terms, leading, r certain pon to an ag pee responsible d h provements, (Mi f tang was a representative of the 
equalisation of the stock of ie two companies. The ale ani rapo aan nosey they wili bata oof eb rien of Com a dies Ppl aieri son 
meeting was almost unanimous on this peter of Dublin, has directed that all the clergy | te Government would commit a sin against God and a 
the confirmation of the agreement being negatived | of the arch-diocese shall offer in prayer a pastoral col- crime against. man unless, "they called Parliament together 
an immense majority, only 20 or 30 hands being | lect, beseeching the Alm ighty ¢ h ns ee take the state of the county no consi- 
d up in favour of it.—The 1 of Wh treaty for an | the awful visitation of a famine.—The a ppointment t of | length to advert to he Fe pore ons of ane st an cyte 
= raged of the Leeds and Dewsbury, the Leeds | Dr. Kirwan ¢o the pr laa of the New College at mented upon the many dangers which threatened 
d Manchester Rail- | Galway has raised a a perfect storm of controvers y against Comat and upon s seeders art meee bbe ing i 
y 
j altho e time promising so favourable a | the Government from the papers of all The conduct of the vari ernn pra 
Bren a and catty would have been beneficial w the which censure Sir R. Pett rh food nag jaen of | her. The conduct of the various governments of England since 
West Riding of York, fi Shek 
r. Kirwan as | i 
_ terests of these important lines of eraon eang and | unequal to the rd of the office. This latter |E —an 
i ngland look? He would tell her—te Ireland d to Ire- 
T their cont frente branches, has iets failed.—The | statement appears to be mere prejudice, since it |laud alone, Let not England then talk of coercing Ire! ma 
conversion of the Regent’s Canal into a railway will, |is well known that Dr. Kirwan obtained honours | He did not say all this to excite hostility to England. Noi 
said, be opposed b ite Continuation of W Seg a z: he only ime = < show the ee that England was under 
Ee = des ppe gre ners c oods at Ma: nooth, and took his degree of D.D. with great | to concilia and. This hey poseaawen alk the ehaaeaie 
an 9 g ) credit s amak Fiippeomay The oppos ition, however, of natio “oy Joa el and ifa the aristocraey would but join 
to the ornamental waters and villa pro- | to Dr. ceptance of office is not Siod them, they would soon have all they needed. Measures which 
ce m Bh 
e Park.—The Board of Or mance have | to B Sanas or either party. ishop O'Donnell were boasted as being those of conciliation, always came alloyed 
a o ar 64 persons hitherto employed in that | and the priests of the diocese of Galway have | able. He adverted to the Colleges Act, and though a wes the 
en who have left the same for the a ot | come out with their a “ ' prota against the Go- | friend of mixed education, he censured the Government for not 
n the survey of projected railway line , jus aft > ne aar sc 
i possessio. Kineton | one of their own ie to "All the most Powis post | Mr, O’Conwent said, that a more useful si am Gens A 
. į peech than that just 
: Berts piei the Board of Ordnance, enabling them m for | in the Ministerial gift. It is also stated that Dr. Kir- | delivered be: never heard. The gentleman who had spoke it bad 
ffici t into that re he would 
annot officiate as preside the College without | Come into that room most popular, but he was su 1 
t being deemed trespass The ard give notice the seba ress sanction of his ecclesiastical superior, Arch- leave it still more so, The manner in which the executive 
that these persons, cas le ta i employed by bihor ee or Tuam, and it is more Tai doce a Progress ot yt rca rot vi ‘iad hed no Pere 
e Depa: rtment, such ere ryt iehapopne can- if that pare will be granted b to address the me minister the ject, which 
led e bitrinan ilit rag Co le D DERDE ts i aaa uld nan on him the entire Aeri e Ay Pi Irish 
tari airina S it lapan were asking for bread and they received 
and bitter, yof arie is xed pe or at a stor He (Mr. O’Cownett) feared that some tanks 
g Inne aflat Din esis oe e a B year. e Dublin p papers Bishop | would be the rool of the presen: nit aoasslte. bait Ra Viet ta 
a penalt, l 
app pementa te be presented are A ta e detain Murphy, c of Cork,and Bishop pee of Kitten have | People against resorting to violence, He then drew a compari- 
ae tics for ae same to the Secr to the | arrived at Rome to obtain the sanction of the Pope to | Arthur Young, and their present situation, showing that the 
pan dance the Charitable Bequests Act and the Provincial Colleges | population of Ireland was the most miserable on the face of 
F eae SEH ne Act, and to ascertain by appeal to the Vatican if there rp gt wk J. O'CoxxzLL, in reference to the expressions 
3 AND Trarric, by permission, from the List of Messrs, 3 Kani mney 1 faith and morals” in one or |° Sal ar cast, nai Soe 
at 
Pant, Fawcert, & RILL, in the Rail map iaae of this day. Tee that iad Berwick, > tad oe xm nts against that e pronouncing % 
e Racmersor | 6 Mos. | k PE and nephew to the late Right Hon. saggy tae ica gam pas! fra aie Nhe ai er observa- 
| Naus or Ranway, |___Tearvic. _| Divi- Price, | Henry Grattan, has accepted the appointment of vice- | fons, > ashe es arini Raees sky sabiai VAN A 
e marked thus * are po president of the New College at Galway. It is also might prove ara Sees hon, gentleman,—Mr. O'CONNELL 
not yet opened. *orclock- | rumoured that Government, on the recommendation of | cons dered th observations did not bear the 
issi jalsins ion put upon them by Mr. J. O'Connell. While on 
SAs A ee at eer rye for eae that subject he could not avoid referring to the adhesion of 
2 ` ge, an r. Henry, of Armagh, r. Kirwan to the system. Thatrev. gentleman was hìs 
ingham, Glo’ster brandi ia 124-6 been appointed i wo he could searcely believe he would have countenanced a 
i PP prin y s 
ol — mos The weekly esis R of fie Repeal Associ was held scheme which had been unanimousiy condemned by the hier- 
Bristol, Glo’: 52:4 Monday, in Conciliation Hall. aptae s of Ca Carric’ “Ws archy, God help the people of Ireland sland <oeaneel Mr. Connell) ; 
eir 
mateo Hı 
U; 
y en, 
j rigen 
= vehement cheering.—Mr. O’ConnELL having handed in remit- | that Dr. wae oak Bare taken a situation under the 
63-72 tances, observed e t with zoaza g the differences existing nea a wh ee have said I ioe soon believe that a 
ion. > 7,782 |2 10 Fh between the Repealers of Wate he yimed is to be under- rm som to its source.—The rent for the week was 
| —_— = i= | stood that those stoi who po yin e karsi anguage to the Soot 17 
re E agin pem 17,521 07 |3 ‘ ra |100 7 oo a bishop of the Aion and certain clergymen, should not, be al- aeons — We regret to state” (ea Aas Galway 
h. 2 
; = s sit - $ 5 
50 
' a153 |1 5 
39-21 lowed to rema mbers of Moat Association, unless they re- ercur t on Monda 
E aas asata their gro: ainne Within the ensuing fortnight M y)“ 7 
it w: 
25 50-2 
hi by the 
era a to Waterford, for the purpose of | last, a8 the engineers and ——* employed 
asoortaining, in person the actual state of things, buthe would | Midland Extension Company wi pearl. ee in taking 
mee that neither Mr. W. ee ee ae the eae besa tog Art at panei 
odie poat aen; Waterford i in the next j ra raih t.—Mr. SMITH es the friends of bee —_ ive every 
r M.P., had hoped that he might have iadi i in his a ” ond aaa ie 
r to meet them under egr rane e tanees of a cheering obstruction in " their power, 
tare ; ; but, unfortunately, he wi compelled. to to tell them | professional gentlemen off the ground.” 
that he shared Beg p are a tae ples as felt poss Enniskillen.—We regret to state that Mr. — 
m 
mag See who las b 
peer 
988 
Fess: 
: ti = vie eugene a ted į lent, still menei in a: ve cartons 
“Seer 00 100| al thing but the mereiful rere t Providence could pro- | condition. One of the balls has penetrated his right 
le, Darlington .| 3 | tect them from the most disastrous consequences resulting from * i 
ci ee eo a axe he. ail of the potato crop. He did not allude > Oa topic chest, D st excitement, remarks an Ennis 
| espai istrict, 
a view to enc 
ati who has ev 
themselves wory of the high sexe ap they were seeking himself the poor man’s friend, and who, 28 a grand juror 
nations of the earth, He called on then to h x 
: note a se sa fone K ONDAR a pr ei of determination, of one stg ant always anxious to keep down 
s the pe ence of the e: p akak a tide and he congrat eoun! iy 
Dak ‘that the ee versal sentiment hi exhibited upon that | venience. As a landlord, Mr. Barton has been 
pay lees er SS tha + fes would ees "of no English eT. solicitous fake oe tamble _farmer, iiras resident, 
e n ai nm erat fe res i eare bot, secant of agricultural im 
ey 
ard them as ungrateful if they did not abandon the efforts crop, h a tn th preparat: of storage i 28 
they povan -mE pw tts le aquest dies, maroc something about 2001. worth of corn for ou benefit of bis 
dase liua sane? calamities might arise, in the spirit of men con- | locality; and no later than the very day SEES 
tending for freedom, and relying on Providenee and Sson oceurrence—aswe learn from a gentleman who spent the 
That Association basn been censured a not having taken 2 | previous night and part of that day with him—he 
i i eren ege: ike nd é 
justifia aape part, he did not | Visited several farms in c examinin 
hesitate to say that he fi felt there would bends danger in their the potatoes in the course of digging out, and, during 
e tar ee th apama- reer cay rang A did | pote orgies rong | his visite, distributes gerd ba Pecan va ‘ian 
e, j 
R etan der pa inion on the subject u until sono by vent vemade | 1 — to p suffer from ‘ad lure. From every 
what t 
the Poito Pere ETE ANN that's 2 net anes cocated the propriaty of oaerime «prise or the | landlord our heett sickens st the ‘barbarous act, and 
o Sir Robert Peel, best suggestion having in view prevention of the extension of the most heartily do we pray that the guilty parties may 
that moment. It wi ver, brought to a d speedy ment, 
i orts issio ly prove efficacious at n ould, _ 
ing the p for the adm m of | scarcely s i — : a 
vanci oan i be the duty of committee to wate! at sul i 3 1 
>a pa Hina } for uasbal pubis works for most intense anxiety, and to adopt from to week and | alarm reach y g i mty. 
ent of the people during the prevalence of | som day to day whatever course appeared most conducive to Enniskillen on Tuesday mep “6 the 
ta tani ug eh at hoe pagar agar eas nor’ ner ere rt aceon: magistrates of the county, when a plan of active mez- 
rT i would no! e i r 
exportation of Qats from Ireland should be pro. prae of being the friends and advocates of the Trish people. | was adopted, both for the apprehension 
i ioe Thee at the rapid id decay of the Po tato He had himself arrived at the conclusion that remedies were y rties, and the estrac of the as of 
ay thi almost useless, and that they should trust im Providence for lly Mae a syste > ae 
siey z, 
e Sir B. Peel’s a: In this documen thb averting the consequences of the calamity. It was on the pre- ri miss “po aa so are res Ni 
mier acknowledges the gy Z "the terme ton aed cock sand id cali into acti Pongo ae ae aa eect, ee oi 
egi: 
of miti th aw 
B maa d rae ne mn bam EER cc Whe | ene! ee ct 
adds that er tote ro of the Government ? | A deputation, headed by the chief magis- Fipperory—The A e 
te resida eon | (a te of y, and formed of the leading d gen- | attempt of ¢ asih 
eo that “ged ient to ace ti a vend pa ofthe country, waited upon the Tend iiien ant for the | which ited tn hr pag ana of ee rend k get a 
P 
purpose the — there ex- 
mgt ge isted Fag bed cay gh espn pag st the famine to | few days ago ~ Lloyd, of Frost; ss n ple- 
pie which they were exposed, ec waa was ihe depetation received? | rom behind a rough wal 
ten It was received with contumely and centem Itwas suppesed | hear his sot eta whilst riding quickly Pere 
of intelligent | that Parliament would have pb called together, and thatsome po aly cause to which Mr. Lloyd tan atribuie this 
conser toe ‘measures which | means might be devised whereby the people would he enabled | tfe oniy 
