4
Poor Laws KILMACTHOMAS UNION. TUIE Board of Guardians of the above Union JL will , on TUESDAY the 26th instant , re- ceive proposals from competent persons for the supp l y of the following articles of Bedding and Slothing, &c , required for the New Workhouse jf Kilmacthomas , viz. :— 40 Suits of Mens ' Clothes , 100 Suits of Womens ' Clothes , ) Viz. : For SO Suits of Boys' Clothes , > Boys and (in 3 sizes), J Girls—from 80 Suits of Girls ' Clothes , } 9 to 15 ; (in o sizes), £ i' rom 5 to 9; 3 from 2 to 5, 10 Infants ' Suits , 150 1W of Blankets , 150 Pair of Cotton Sheets , 150 Rugs, 150 Bolsters , 150 Bed Ticks , 40 Pair of Mens ' Shoes , 100 Pair of Womens ' Shoes ,, NO 1' air of Boys ' Shoes , (in 3 sizes) SO Pair of GirL' Shoes, (in 3 sizes), 4 Churns for Milk , 12 Buckets , 300 Tin Pints , S00 Tin Platters , 3 Gross of Spoons , 200 Chamber Utensils , 10 Cradles , 24 Oak Chairs , and I Aim Chair. To be delivered at Kilmacthomas Workhouse an or before the 20th December , as the Guar- dians may direct. Sealed Tenders addressed to the Chairman will be received by me up to 11 o'Clock on the ibove-mcntioned day. By order of the Board , WILLIAM HUNT , Clerk of ilie Union. DUNGARVAN UNION WORKHOUSE Master Wanted rpiIE T5oa-cl of Gusinlians of the above Union JL will , on tl' .o 21st of OCTOiSKIl instant , receive propolis from competent persons to fill flu- Office i-l ' Workhouse Matron , at a Siilary ol £G0 per Annum , with first class llations and A partments. None need offer themselves but those fully eonwr?r.:it with Wo;k' nouse accounts and disci- pline. A pret - -rer.ee will he g iven to Candidates who may h-'vo hail experience in discharging the duties of I he Office. Sealed Prc;.osal? accompanied with Testimo- nials must be loik'fid with me on or before Five o'Ciock , P .M ., Wednesday, the 20th instant. The personal attendance of the Candidates v.iil l .c ^ruquiifd on the day of Election. Secu- rity will b 1 - ' required to the amount of £200. li y onlvr , JOHN B AKRON , Clerk of Union. Board Room , P' .h October . l S-f'2. THE KARI.Y CLOSING MOVEMENT. We arc l;af'f - to be enabled to rqiort progress. A very larpe number of t ' lo shopkeepers arc closing at ei ght O ' CI OLI- ; others , of los? oiicrjrv , at nine ; we would TC nir.il O.i' i . -c litter gentlemen tliat the educational pro- cco'lings of the Trades' Society take place at ei ght. We <Jo trust tint there is c-nnu^h of spirit among the mer- <-li. > .:it- -of one city ( 0 cimire gener.il closing at eiglit o ' clock ; ;o tli-v-e jrontU'men who have already so done we re con i our thanks on the ]«rt of the People and the Press. 'Hi 1' ii ' ilic should not forget TIIEIH duty : to buy sotl- .ln? u all n:\vr c-i yht o' clock , _ V. e wi'i :ij.i. i :il for :ts-i.-iance to sr. iv auxiliaries : To 'tie L'uiics or Kilkenny i- > ur^u^ the c-iiisu with the re- CIISAU ' S. :ni'i to suffer no purchasing after ei ght o' clock. His a m.T.ier of lv noviilcneo , airl we nro sure of aid hnre—nni!. jii'l . iln^ f.-nm tost experience, such aid is T ittory. A i/U-n ;i u Journu I. J iii:ATni:-cr .!NG IV 1'AHJS .—The aggregate of space provided in Paris is calculated to ac- commodate thirty-four thousand play-goers , one in thirty-one of the whole population , from the pnat grandfather—if towns contain such things—clown Jo the babies. The largest of these places of amusement , the Circus of CLan)j )«--Kl ysees , affords space for three thou- sand live hundred visitors. Next in size are the National Theatre (th e old Ol ymp ic Circus), which will hold two thousand two hundred and fcfty-n::ic . :;iid t he 'I heat re of Porte Saint Martin hokr.n_ ' about two hundred less. The Oppra Comiquc has space f' .r an an- 'iencc of two thou- sand , bnl the Grand Opera of Paris will not ac- comrr.odite more tl.an ei g hteen hundred a-id elevc n . The Ccnn. '<iie Franeaise and the Odeon are within tvu -fi ciit ' s of equal size ; one able to accommodate fifteen hundred and sixty, the other fifteen hundred and frty-oi»ht. Two of the theatres which hold more than a thousand (Beaumarchais a>v) Saint M" a»ccl) were closed in I8o 1. hfi\ c.i .\. ti theatres hold numbers va- *yin!c between :i : ' iousand and six hundred : and °ne (th e S peiiacle d' Arcole) is calculated to admit not more than two hundred and fifty visitors to each of its entertainments. To the theatres of Paris there must be added a hundred and fifty-six places of public amusement ' ; namel y, twenty cafes offering the charms of s °ng, six offerihg dramatic entertainments , con- cert and dramatic halls , public ball-rooms and gninjue ites. TLese are frequented dail y b y an average of about twenty-four thousand visitors. |f we add these , therefore , to our former calcu- at\on , it will appear that there exist means in fans for affording ni ghtl y public entertainment , !? l ° e Wa >' of drama , dance , or song, to no less "•an one in every eighteen of the inhabitants of a "s, which number of course includes the IV r the sick > tte infants , and the destitute. P ublic Notices PRINTING, ! PUBLISHING' , ; Bookbinding, > AND ; MACHINE RULING EXECUTED AT ; " THE NE WS" OFFICE \ WITH NEATNESS AND DESPATCH TOE LIBRARY Is constantl y Supplied with ; NEW WORKS. I I1BRE IS YOUR RE3IED¥ ! HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT. A WONDERFUL CURE OF A DANGEROUS SWELLING OF THE KNEE. I Copy of a Lett er from Join Forfar, an Agricul- turist , residing at Ncwborougb, near Ilcihiini , dated Hay loth , [831. i To Professor II OI .LOWAY , ; SIR ,—I was afflicted with a swellinpr on each (jUle of the le<>, rather above the knee , for nearl y two years ,-which increased to a great size , I lia.il the ailvise of thre^: emi- nent Surgeons here , and was nn inmate of the Newcastle Inlirmnry for lour weeks. After various inodee of.treat- ment hnd been tried , I was disclinrped ns incurable. Having heard so mucli of vour Pills and Ointment; 1 de- termined to try them , and ' in in less than a month jl was comp li'tely cured. What is more remarkable I was cn- g:iged twelve hours a day in the Hay Harvest , and al- thoug h I have follows'] my luhorionnocrupiilion through- out the winter , I have had no return wliateter of my coru - nlaint. (Signed) JOIIX FOUFAK. AN INFLAMATION IN THE SIDE 1>KHFECTLY CURED. : Copy of a Letter from Mr. Francis A mot, of Vrcahoiisc, Lothian Road , Ediubro/ dated April 2iHh , 1851. i To Professor IIoLi.owAy. j Sin ,For more than twenty years my wife lint been subject , from time to time , to attacks ot influuimation in the side , for which she wns bled and blistered to a : great extent , still the pain could not be removed. About lour yeurs ago she taw , in the papers , the wonderful! cures eftecte.i liy your I'ills and Ointment , an -l thought sbe wiiuld p i\e them a trial , To hor great astoni»htneat and deli g ht she got imrnedigte relief from their use, nnd ul ' fer persevering for three weeks the pain in her side xvn * completel y cured , and she has enjoyed the best of health for the lust lour years . (Si gned) ; FRANCIS AKNOT. The Fills should be used conjointly with the Ointment most of the fallowing cases :— ' Bad L<-gs Clii ^o-foot FisKilns Sore-thront Had Ercasts Gout Skin-<lisea«es Hums » Chapped hands GlnndularSweJIings Scurvy Bunions Corns (Soft) LnmliBgi Sorci-heads Bite of MnsrhetocsCiiiu'eis 1'ilet and Sand-Klies Tumours Contrnctiid and Rhumntisin Ulcers Stifl" JoinU Coco-Jtny ]ilep hH»lia«is Pca]i> Wounds Sore Ni pp les Yaws. Sold by th« Proprietor , 244 , Strand , (near T.mip la Bar) London , and by all respectable Venders cf Patent Medi- cines tliroup huut the Civilized World , in l' ots and 3oxe>i , Is. I I.I., 2i. Oil., 113., 2i!a.. ami ' S,h. each. There is a very considerable paving in tnking the larger shes. N.B. —Drection a for the guidance of Patients &<:. pre- fixed In each Pot or I!ox . MOST MIUACuLorjS CURE OF LEOS 1)A A ITER 43 YEARS' SUFFERING , j Extract of a Letter from Mr . William Galp hint of 70 Stint Mary ' s Street , W' rymouth , dated Mat; \oth 1851. : To Professor I I OI . F. OWAY , : Sin ,—At rliK nye ot " 18 tnj wife (who is now 61) caug ht a virdtnt enlil , which settled in her legs , and ever since that lime they have bren more or less sore , nnd greatl y inflamed. Her agonies were distracting, and for months together she was deprived ntirely of rent and slcp. Jivcry remed y that medical emen advised was tried , but without L'tfect ; her health suffered severely, and the state of her legs was terrible. J h.ive often read your Advertisements , and advised her to try your Pills and Ointment ; and as a last resource , afte r every other remedy h.ul proved useless , she consented to do so. : She commenced six weeks ago , and , strange to tel-te , is now in good health, jler legs are painless , without acream or sear , and her sleep sound and undisturbed. Could yon have witnessed the sufferings of my wife during the last 43 years , and contrast them with I K r pre- sent enjoyment nf health , you would indeed feel deli ghted in having been the mean* of so greatly alleviating the sufferings of a fellow creature. (Si gned) I WILLIAM GALF1X. A PERSON 70 YKARS OF AGE CU11KI) OF A HAD LEG , 01" THIRTY YEARS STANDING. (. ' u]iy of a Letter from !tlr. William Abbs, Builder of Gas Ovens , of HushcIilTe , near Hudtlcnilichl , dated , May 31st , 1851. : To Professor IIoJ.LOWA y. Slit , —I cuffcri id for a period of thirty years from a bad lee, the result of two nr tlnee different accidents at Gas Woiks ; accompanied liy scorbutic nymj iUmis. 1 bail recourse to a variety of medical advice. 'williO ' ut tle- riving any benefit , nnd we3 even told that the leg must be auipiilntcd , y«:t , in opposition to that opinion ,.youf I'ilU and Ointment have effected a compK-le cure ' iii.' sn hurt a time , that few who had not wiincrsid . it wonld credit the fact . (.Signed) AViLLIA M AllliS. The truth of tlii* Htatcment can be verified by Mr W .l\ Kiiy lDiid , Chemist , 13 , Market Strtct , Ik.ddcrs - firlll. : A DREADFUL KAD BREAST CLUED IN ONE MONTH. ; ztract of a letter from Mr. Frederick Turner, of i' cnsliursf j Kent, dated December I!Wb , IS51. To 1'rolV-ssor IIO I.LO WAY , : Dr.M( Sue , —M y wife had suffered from Bad IRrensis fur I .i-r than six months , nud durinc the whole period hai! "I ¦¦• best inn.lienl atti ridani'e , lm' all to no use . II a\- ing ' •¦ .- ¦ire healed an awlul wound in my own h-fr l'. v your unm.ill'*d m^iicinc , I deiermined again to u«o yciirPilU and Ointment , and Ilicrulbn; gave ll.om a trill in her case , and fortnnate it was I Hid so . lor in lesj than a month a perfect cure was effected , and the benefit lhat varioii3 olhcr lirniichiM of my f.imily have derived from ther use is rcnli y usloiii-hing, 1 nnw strunti l y roponi- men— them to all my friends . (Si"rticd ) l itEDEltK K TLJINEH . EXAMPLE TO LANDLORDS. K ENMARE , OCT . 7 A rate for the relief ol the poor of the Kenmare Union having been struck in the past month of tlx shillings in the pound on the entire Union , with the exception of two electoral divisions , icduced a trifle from their poverty by government aid , and being now in process of collection , Richard Mahony, Esq., of Dromore Castle , an extensive proprietor within the union , has come forward and paid the entire rate for his tenantry, and thus rescued them from the ruin which the payment of so heavy a rate must bring on them . On a former occasion , a tenant or two having lost their stock by disease which spread among them , and being leducfd in their means , Mr. Mrhony had the loss valued , and gave to one £60, and to a se- cond .£70 to purchase stock. Would to God the remaining proprietary would follow the examp le , and thereb y stop the torrent of emi- gration by relief cf their people . Cork Exa- Public Notices Tiie New Organ IN ST- PATRICK'S . ON SUNDAY, the 17ih Instant , the New Organ of S T. PATRICK ' S Catholic Church will be opened with the usual Solemnity. Solemn Hi gh Mass will commence at Eleven o'Clock, and the Sermon will be preached after tho Gospel. The Music will be of a superior order ; and Mr. H. BJBVINGTON will preside at the Organ. OLD Dr. JACOBTOWNSEVIVS GENUINE ORIGINAL United States Sarsaparilla. THIS COMPOUND SARSAPAniLLA OF OLD DR. TOWNSEND HAS nothing in common with prnpnratlons bearing the name in England or America. Prepared hy one of the ablest American Chemists , having gained the approbation of a Rreat and respectable body of American Physicians and Druggists , universally approved and adopted by the American people , and forming a compound of all the rare st medical roots , seeds , plants , and flowers that grow on American soil , it may trul y be called the great and good American Remed y. When received into the stomach it is di gested like the food , and enters into the circulation precisely as the nu- triment partof our aliment does. ITS FIRST REMEDIAL ACTION IS UPOX TUP, BLOOD , and through that upon every part where ii is needed. In this way it purifies the blood of excess of bile , nrids, and alkalis , of all foreign and morbid matter , nnd brings it into a healthy condition. In this wny it is that this medicine is conveyed to ths liver , where it allays inflammation , or relieves congestion , removes ob- structions , cleanses & henls abcesses , disolves pimmy or thickened bile nnd excites health y secretions in this organ. In this nay, also , is this medicine conducted to the lungs, wherein it assuages inflammation , alloys irritation , re- lieves cough , promotes expectoration , dissoNes tubercles , and henls ulceratioti9. In like, manner it acts on the tomach to neutralise acidity, remove flatulence , debility, heartburn , nausea , restore tone , appetite , &c. In lli e same way this good medicine acts upon the kidneys , on the bowels on the joints , bones , nnd the skin . It is by cleansing, enriching, nnd purif ying the blood that Old Dr. Tow tisend's Sursaparilla effects so many and wonderful cures . Ph ysiolog ical science lias demons!rntc^ the truth of what is asserted in Holy Writ , that " the blood li the lifr ." Upon this fluid all the tissues of the bod y depend for their maintenance and repletion. It replenishes the wastes of the system , and gives to every solid nnd fluid its appropriate suostancK or se- cretion—earthl y and mineral substancp , gelatine , mar- row , nnd membrane to the bones—filbrine to the mus- cles - cells to the lungs—linings to all the cavities—hair to the heiiil —tiiiils to the fingers and toes—urine to the kidneys—bile to the liver—gastric juice to the stomsch ; tenrs to the eyes ; saliva to the month ; moisture to the skin , and every necessary fluid to lubricate the entire framework of the svstein. When earned by the circulation to the bones , the morbid matter destroys the animal and earthly substan- co» of these tissues , producing necrosis , i.e., dco-iy or ulceration of the bones. When conveyed to the liver , all form of hopatic or bilious diseases are the unavoid- able product. When to the lungs It produce* pneurno, nia , catarrh , asthma, tubercles, cough , expectoration and final consumption. When to the stomach the effects are inflammation , indigestion , sick headache , vomiting, loss of tone and appetite. When it seizes upon the brain or nervous system it brings on tic doloreti.x or St Yitus ', dance, hysteria , palsy, and epilejisy. When to the eyes optlmlmiii ; to the enrs , otlorhcea ; to the throat , bron- chitis , croup, ic. Thus all the maladies known to tin! human system are induced by a corrupt state of the blood With no general remedy on which implicit reliance can be placed as a Punil'lEit oi> TIIK ItLoon , disease and stifleiing, nnd consequent want , stalk unchecked and unsubdued in every land in all the world. If there is arrest of action in any of the visrera , immediatel y they begin to decay ; if any fluid ceases to circulate , or to be changed for fresh , it becomes a mass of corruption , and a ma'ignant enemy to the living fluids and solids. If the blood stagnates it spoils ; if the bil» doe* not pass off and give place to fresh , it rots ; if the urine is re- tained , it ruins bod y and blood. The whole system , every secretion , every function , every fluid depend for their health upon action , circulation, change , giving and receiving, and the moment these cease , disease , decay, nnd di. -uth begin. All nuture abounds with the truth that every nclive sub- stance lias its opposite or corrective. All poisons have their antidotes , and all disease* have their remedies , did we but Unow them. U pon this principle was Dr. Town- send guided in the discovery of bis medicine. Prepared nxprpsil y by the old doctor t) net upon the blood , :l is culctiluled to cure a vinii'ty of diseases. His the very Best Spring Medicine to t.leanse the blood , liver , stomach , kidneys , and oflen In the spring the blood of most persons is apt to be more or less impure , ihc head heavy, the skin yellow, skin toVcrcil more or Jess with eruptions , pimp le*, blotches and the pcncrnl system deranged or disordered—but , however aU' ected , this searching puritier sweeps out all impurities In roughs , colds , bronchitis , weak or ti ght chests , pal - pittiticn ol ' the heart , and lung consumption , the Old Doctor ' s S:irs[.:irrlln is without a rival, In KI2M AMCnnd Nervous Diseases this superior remedy s a great Ti'NlC , fives strength to weak organs , wpnk twrve? , weak stomach , and debilitated muscles und . joints , and enriches the Ijlood , nnd all the fluids of the bod y. It is a mcdicitiR which has been used hy hundreds of thousands—born recommended by moat numcroustti' .P- I'Ht'TAlti.i: itiu.ui.Ait PIIYSICIAKS to the sick. U pon (. •very tNsue nn I fluid of the bod y ; up«iii tu-ry organ, fibre , nnd nerve ; upon every gland nnd cord muscle and membrane; upon till the circulating di gestive , nutritive , ami secreting organs—so it urou«es ' pure and healthy, action throug hout the whole ccona omy—cleanses tiol morbid mutter , ntrurigthcus weak orgnns , throws oft burdens nud ohstructions which loud and oppress it. nnd imparts v.tulily to every ruinule part of the whole struc hire . Its virtue is unsurpassed—its success unequalled—and its prunes arc echoed from iill parts of the luud. 1'OMKIIOY , ANDREWS , & CO., Sole Proprietors . GRAND IMPERIAL WAREHOUSE , 37!) , STRAND- LONDON. (Adjoining Kxcter Hall). C/M'TION. —Old IJr. Jiicob Townseml is nnw over srven 'y yoars of age , nnd has long been known (is the ttiilhnr niiil disrovpicr of the (irnuiiic Ori ginal Townseiu! SnrsapnrHta. To guard ogiiinu deception in the purchase of , this silt :rli" , the pnrtruit , family cunt of arms (the emMein of lim Lion , nnd thir Eag le), and the signature of the pro- prl> tors will be found on every label ; without thcte none is gemiiiii". P II ICE: Pint? , 4s. ; Small Quart j , 4? . (id.; Imperial Qiinrtn , 7s , (id. ; Mammoths , holding Two Quarts , 11s. 8ix Mammoth s (•ent fiee to any part . oi the King dom for 69s. In thin reduction in Small Qnart9 and Mammoths , there is nn immense gain to the purchaser. A OKNTS ' N AMES .—Denis Harrington , 4, liarron- strind-stri-et. Waterford ; RI'Martln fc Co., 121 , ChnpeN street , Dublin ; S. Boy d , 40 , Mnry-slreot , Dublin ; p.. Kiti3l«g h ,| 00 , Orafton-3trect , Dublin ; Cerry Victoria-street , lielfast ; Gnntt and Co., 10, & 12 Torn- MarkC , " elfast ; G. Bylield , 132 , Georges-street , Lim- erick ; D. Vernor , Sliip-itreet , Drog beda ; Burgeon CVConnnr , . Vewrj . SPOKTJNO LEAP , A gentleman belonging to Ayr- ghira , no less distinguished as a feiule.ss horseman than as o man of Utters , made a daring leap a few woeka ago , which deserves to be recorded. When exercising in a field a eelubrated steeple clnise mare, his mvn property,5he found it necessary to null her at a hi gh hedge , to save himself being run away with. The mare bold l y roso at the hedge , and took it , the height of the leap when mea- sured , being found to be no less than eight and ahalf feet , the rise being about nine feet , and the fall on the other side about seven feet.North British Mail. Royal Insurances ATLAS ASSURANCE.COMPANY, 02 , CHEAPSIDE , LONDON. ESTABLISHED IN 1808 , AND EMrOWEHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT 54 , GEO. III., CAP 79, DIRECTORS : John Oliver Hanson , Esq., Chairman. Wm. GeorRe Prescott , Esq. Deputy Chairman. Sir WIP Baynes, Bart. Moses Mocatta , Esq., Arthur E, Campbell , Esq., Capt. A. L. Montgomery Thos.Chapinaa , Esq.. It. N. F. R .8. James Wm. Ogle , Esq., Donald Maclean , Esq Arthur A. Resell , Fmj., Samuel E. Magan , Esq. Josep h Pulley, Esq., A UDITORS Francis Bli gh Hookey, Esq., and .Josep h Grote , Esq., A CTUARY Charles Ansell , Esq., F.R.S. SOLICITO R Thomas Browning, Esq., SURVEYOR Thomas Hopper , Esq. In the Life Branch . The essential qualif ications of assurance, combining perfect security and the hi ghl y favored bonus system are united , thereby giv- ing immediate benefit to the pelicy holders , as exemp lified in the result of a practice thoroug hl y developed and established. Policies may be effected for the whole term of life by payments yearl y or half-yearl y, also by a limited number of yearl y payments , a mode of assurance which ori ginated with this Company in 101G. 111 the Fire Branch. The rates for every descri ption of assurance will be found to assimilate to those of the most respectable and best conducted offices , with the periodical division of surp lus premiums and other advantages hi ghl y favourable to the as- sured. Renewals fulling due at Michaelmas should be renewed within fifteen days hereafter. A detailed statement of the terms, &c. , on which the business of the Company in its various brunches is conducted , may be had at the Head Office , and of the Agents of the Company Great Britain and Ireland , or will be sent by post , on application by letter. HENltY DESBOROUGH , Secretary. Cheapside , London , September , 1852. A GENT FOB WATERFORD : M R . JOHN FARRELL , King-street , and No. 20, Beresford-street. ROYAL INSURANCE COMPANY. CAPITAL , £2, 000, 000 , in 100,000 Share s of £20 each. TRUSTEES. John Shaw Lei gh , Esq. R. 13. B. H. Blundell , Esq. DIRKCTORS . Charles Turner , Esq., Chairman. Joh n Camp bell , Esq., and J. Bramley-Moore , Esq., Diputy-CIiairman. A CTUAIIY AND ) „, _ SECRETARY \ P "cy M. Dove, Esq. pedal" \olice. ASSURANCES (with participation) effected on or before ' Mst Dec. next , will participate in the First Divis inn of Profits , to be determined by the result of the Comp any ' s life transactions to the 31st Dec 1804. The Company, therefore , offers special advantages to l' arlivi A ssuring during the p resent year. Future Division nf Projiis every Five Years. Payment of Li fe Claims never disputed except in Cases of Fraud. ¦ ¦ MIX . J. W. COKDELIi , A gent lo the said Company for M' alcrford anil its vicinity, Bp.as leavF to inform lii. t Friends and the Puhlic , that he coiitiuuesto receive orders for Fi re & Life Assurances and' desires to draw their attention to the remarkable proofs of the sound pri ncip les of the Establishment for uhrch he acts , and of its ample resources, as exhibited in the extracts at the foot of the presen t Advertisem ent The Company will ever distinguish ilself by its promptnes s in the settlement of Claims. No charge made for tl:- Poliry. LIFE Blt .VMII . G UARANTEE OP AN A MPLE CAPITAL , MODERATP. I' ll KM I V MS , LAflOB PAMTICIJ'ATION OP P R OJTIS BY TUB AS&U11 F. D , AMOUNTING TO TWO-THIRDS of its NKT AMOUNT , SMAI.r. CHARGE FOR MANAGEMENT , the Expenses of the Offict. being borne in dun prop ortions by the two liranches. PERCY M. DOVR , Mnnnger. EXTRACTS FROM THE " POST MAGAZINE. " We know of no oilier Institution for transacting Tire Assurance hus>inoS3 started since the passing uftho lie- uUlrutiou Act , ' lhat can be at all compared with it , cither in respect of the extent , or the suecess o(; its operations. —The full exposition of recei pts , expenditure , profits , dividends , and accumulation , furnished in the Annual Reports of the ' Ho ' jal affords unerring evidence of the atatp of prosperity which we ore de«iroua to offe r as nn illustration of what can be. accomplished by energy, good management , and high reputation. LonUiupr at the aciiori of the Society from its forma- tion in 1840 . we find that at the end of I8-1S the accu- mulated profits amounted lo the enormous sum of _CIO8 , 0!l Ms. lid. Of that amount it was deicimined In appropriate £8y ,-8() an n hontts addition to flie nrifcirm l p:iiil-up c.ipjtul of . ¦£ 178 , 500— bcimr a clear realised profit of . r >0 pur cent , i" ill y ' vars. EXTRACT FROM THE " KEPORTKR. " Tiie report, licforii us prp-rmirvnlly justifies the op i- nion \vu have prcvi' iis ' y expressed lhat the Royal Assu- rance Company ranks at the head of «Was»urance enm- jjouic.H projected , und got into working order during the last half-dozen yenrs . niid has trnnsuctcd , and is transact- ing, an ainoun ' t of business which very many of the " elder " office have never approached , and are not likely to do so for somtf time to come . In both the life and lire branches an enormous, we confess an almost in- credible , increase of business i3 exhibited , as compared with thnt transacted in former years. The life branch hail also progressed most satisfactorily. The strange immunity from claim 's by death is perfectl y ictnarkohle and speaks " trumpet tonpned" of the diligence and care exercised by the medical uflicers and the directors ill'the election oft lie lives. A GENTS AT . Ballina .Mr. ThomasM'Andrew , Solicitor Clonmel... .. JiMr. Thomas Hug hes , Old Quay . Cork . Mr. Walter Eonan , South-mall. William Kivwan , the husband of the lady latel y drown- ed whilst (as was alleged) bathing on Ireland' s Eye, has been arrested on a warrant , nnd committed to Kilmain- ham gaol , for further examination. •Great efforts aro being made in furtlieranco of the railway to 'Wwfonl. Calendar of Operations PLANT DEPABTMKNT. (Fro m the London Gardeners ' Chronicle.) The preparation of plants to bloom at Christ- mas should be taken in hand forthwith , that no hurry ing at an after period may be necessary, and which general ly proves unfavourable to a show of bloom. Begin with the eariieet rested plants first , and those which take the longes t time to bring into flower. The common and Otaheitian Orange and Daphne , if the wood is well ripened, will soon show bloom under a gentle heat , a little extra warmth may be neces- sary to open (heir flowers. Chinese Azaleas and Gardenias take a longer time , and should imme- diatel y be put to work in a house or pit whert^ a little artificial heat can be applied and in- creased as the buds swell. The stock of ttove p lants previousl y prepared for winter flowering should likewise be p laced in a warm , li g ht part of the stove, where they will soon commence flowering. The different varieties of Ejnp h y l- lum truncatum are very useful at this season , and if they have formed their buds may be p laced at the cool end of the stove , to expand their flpwer. Another useful plant for the drawing-ioom is the well-known Calla aethio- pica , which when in bloom forms an elegant vase plant ; a few at a time should therefore bs potted in rich soil and placed in a warm pit , as likewise a few of the earliest potted Koman Nar- cissus and Van Thol Tuli ps. Mi gnonette , Nea- politah Violets, and Chinese Primroses snould be placed in suitable situations to forward them into bloom , and the reserve stock kept secure from rains , but with plenty of air , in the cold frames. Give seeding Calceolaries ana Cinerarias another shift , and keep down green fl y ; they should be kept in a medium temperature throug h the winter , that their growth may be progressive. In the stove let a drier atmosp here be kept as the days decrease ; ani ght temperature of 60 ° will be puite sufficient to carry plants through the winter , but g ive air every forenoon , if possible. O RCHIDS . —The princi pal part will be at rest or approaching that state , and agreeabl y with previous directions should be placed in a cooler and drier house ; or if no such can be afforded them , at the coolest end of the one they are in ; if a perfect show of bloom is desirable , pre- vent their starting into growth at this season , which some kinds in vi gorous health may at- tempt to do. Laelias arc now in full beauty, and , with other kinds in bloom , should have a comparativel y dry atmosp here , to preserve their flowers in perfection. Aerides , Vandas , and other species repuiring more ' . heat, should be kep t at the warm end of the house. Attend punctuall y to cleanliness in every department , and look closel y after cock-roaches , crickets . and woodlice , which are troublesome pests in Orchid houses ; the ni ght temperature should range from 60° to 65 ° . FORCING DEPARTMENT. PINERY . —With those Pines intended to fruit throug h the earl y part of next summer and au- tumn , nothing can be done further than keep ing up the top and bottom heat , and gradually re- ducing the moisture of the house , which , for Borne time to come , should be kept compara- tivel y dry ; this treatment , combined with a regular ventilation , will produce the best effects on strong growing plants , by inducing a state of rest , and enabling the plant in the meantime to organise the peculiar secretions necessary to obtain fine fruit next season. We do not re- commend a less bottom heat than 85 ° at any season ,being satisfied that Pines require their roots to be kept in a growing medium , when even the top heat is not so hig h by several decrees. If the thennometor indicates 58 ° or GO ° in the rjnorning, it will be sufficientl y hig h , but fires sufficient to raise the temperature 12 ° or 15 ° should be made ; this will allow for a liberal supp l y of air , which , during sunshine , should be considerabl y increased. The iibove treatment will answer for the younper stock , keep ing up the top heat by frequent additions to the linings, where that mode of heating is practised. Water , if required at all , should onl y be given sparingl y, using it in a tepid state. To Pines swelling (heir fruit still continue a most atmo- sphere , which will now be obtained with less difficulty, and which in some houses or low pits it may even be desirable to moderate. Admit all the li g ht possible b y washing the glass and re- moving anything which may be growing over them. Air each day must not be neg lected , or a loss of flavour will be the result . Moderate waterings should be given , using li quid ma- nure ; but be careful to keep water from coming in contact with the flowers of any Pines in bloom for reasons formerl y adverted to. Me- lons , unless when growing by fire-h?at , will be useless after this , and may thertfore be cleared away. Those in houses swelling their fruit should be kept growing by a good beat. Keep the air , however , somewhat dry, that the remain- ing fruit may not be deflicient in flavour. The Dampsha h y brid , and some others , will keep in a warm room a considerable time nfter being cut , for which purpose they should be allowed to get quite )i pe on the plant. VLOWETl GAUBEN- AND SHRUBBERY. As frost may be expected dail y, time plants which it is desirable to save should at once be taken up and potted. A number of plants for (lower garden decoration , blooms better when of a certain rjc , and such , with others which H is desirable to save frr pi opogation , should be first attended lo. Last season ' s late struck cut- tings of scarlet Geraniums , and most of the other bedding kinds , should be especiall y re- served ; as when carefull y potted and grown they bloom earlier and finer the second jear. The " Journal du I-I avre " announccsthattho French shi p JMinos , from Panama to Havre , was on the 5th September last , in latitude 13 north and 27 west long itude , fired into by an English ihrce-masWd shi p, supposed to be a transport with convicts for New South Wales. The n\nsts , sails , and rigging of the Minos hove marks of the Eng lish Vessel ' s shot. The captain of the Minos says that he was the more surprised at the unprovoked aggression as he had spoken with the commander of the unknown shi p in friendl y terms , and had informed him that he was a Frenchman a very few minutes before the shots were fired. Alderman Daniel Smithwick , elected, by ballot , sis Mayor of Kilkenny for 1852, dec'ines to serve. Enniscorthy has subscribed a largo Bum to the New- man Indemnity Fund, •i«:?'«£j £st TTaterford Quarter Sessions On Tuesday morning these sessions were opened by James Bessonett, Esq. assistant bar- rister ; also on the bench, his Worship the Mayor, Mich ael Dobbyn ; Thos Meagher , M P;. Wm Morris, Captain Newport , and Robert Carew. The following gentlemen were sworn on the GRAND JURY. Joh n Hughes, Esq , Foreman ; H umphry Hughes William Aylward, John Blake, Henry Whitney, John. M'CIellaEd , Trevor Lani gan , Nicholas Fortune, Johtf E. Jb' eehan , John Hnt , Richard Condon , James Thornton , Anthony Cadogan , Peter M'Auliffe , Simon Kent , David Kcogh , Philip Hanrick, John Hewion, Hugh N. Neyins , Henry White, Jbhsua Barton, Thomas Hill, and Thomas R. Cherry, Esqrs. MARKET JURY. The firs t twelve gentlemen , with the exception of Mr. Whitney, who served during the last quarter , were sworn as market jurors for the ensuing quarter. His worshi p charged the jury very briefl y— he said there were onl y tsventy-two cases for trial , all of which , except one , were of the usual class of petty larcenies. Crime certainl y was not on the increase , but rather diminishing, in the city. One of the numbers on the calender was for issuing base money—the jury should be satisfied that the money so issued was false, for many a good shilling looks bad , while many a bad shilling looks good—the jury, therefore , should be perfectl y satisfied on the subject , be- fore finding bills. The barrister and mag istrates then proceeded to dispose of the app lication for spiri t licenses , of which there were sixteen. Dr. Mackesy said , in a sanatory point of view, it was of great consequence that the magistrates should not grant license for any house except it had good sewerage , and other necessary ac- commodation. It was an established fact that those who drank freel y were more subject to epidemic disease than others , consequentl y—and he spoke on general princi ples—the mag istrates should not grant a license , or even a transfer of license , to any person who has not proper and well secured premises , as regards sewerage, &c. The bench full y agreed with Dr. Mackesy, and said they would strictl y adhere to his sug- gestions. J —Martin Denn , 5, Little Barronstrand-st. (no appearance.) 2—Martin Daniel , 86, Barrack-street , (do.) 3—Andrew Hoban , Glen (granted). 4—John Hayes, 20 , Ball y bricken (rejected). 5—David Keogh , 7, Blackfriars (granted). 6—Alexander Lindsay, 130 Quay (do). 8—Laurence Murp hy, 17 Broad street (do). 8—Jolin Magrath , Lower Yellow-road (rejec.) 9—Maryinne Phelan , 15 Hi gh-st (granted). 10—John Power Orp han-house lane (do) . 11—Edmond Power , Michael-st (do)i 12—John Power , Broad-st (no appearance), 13—John Rogers , 1 Hanover-st (granted). 14—Michael Sullivan , 2 Quay-lane (no ap.) 15—James Sinnott , 24 Barronstrand-street , (granted). The following petty jury were then sworn : John Hudson , Patrick Fanning, Patrick Buggy, Dan Doy le , Robert Fitzg ibbon , Patrick Kinehan , Nathaniel Mortimer , Wra. Power , Laurence Phelan; J. T. Power , Henry Roche, Wm Thomas. At thi3 time the dock wr.s literall y full of young persons—p rinci pall y females—all of whom were arra i gned for petty larcenies. Ellen Clancy , Mary Kennedy, and Margaret Murp hy were placed at the bar , charged with having on the 4th of Sept. last , stolen a quan- tity of Indian corn the property of Messrs Ri- chardson and Strangman. Mr. Josep h Strangman sworn—Remembers the 4th ef Sept, when prisoners at the bar stole about a barrel of Ibraeli Indian corn fro m the store of the above-named firm ; the value of the corn was about 15s ; it was taken off the loft next the stairs ; discovered it the morning after it was stolen ; the parties who stol e it forced their way in throug h the windows ; had seen prisoners lurking about the place before the robbery . One of the prisoners asked witness was there no other corn in town like lhat which he lost? Witness said there was ; but yet he thoug ht he could identif y the stolen corn as being a part of his property. John Canty, watchman , on being sworn , de- posed that he arrested prisoners at the bar on the nierh t of the robbery, and within about 40 yards of the place at which it was committed ; they had the corn in their possession at the time. Prisoner (to witness)—Now , on the varth of your oath did you see us out at all that ni ght ? Now for it ? Witness—I saw you late and earl y, if that ' s all you want to know (laug hter). The Barrister , in addressing the jury, said they could not convict the prisoners unless they were satisfied that they were the same persons who stole the corn from Mr. Richardson ? The jury retired to their room , and after some consultation , returned a verdict of—no t guilty. Mick Tttomy was indicted for stealing a blan- ket , some stockings , and several other articles of wearing apparel. A witness got tip on the table, and identified the shirt , which was well p ieced. Prisoner—How many p ieces were in your shirt , when yon lost it 1 Witness—FiVe, but you took two of them out of it (laug hter). Prisoner—On your oath now could you not get tbe same stockings in any other part of Waterford ? Witness—You got your breakfast in the house before you stole the stockings (laughter). Barrister—What brought you here ? Prisoner—I came fro m Kilworth to work at my trade. Witness—That' s robbery, your worshi p- prisoner was sentenced to two " months ' impri- sonment. COINERS. The following prisoners were placed at the- bar , convicted , and sentenced for keep ing a small min( " against the peace and statute " in Patrick- street , in this city :—Michal Moran , transported for trto years ; Catherine White, imprisoned 4- nionths ; James Barron , acquitted;. "Anastatia Barron , 6 months ;. Maurice Philips. 'acquit^i^ v ' . i Constable Pallas produced several. foli;|itjinjf ; and sixpenny pieces of the ^ base coin^-VtwliMW^^

Poor Laws Public Notices Royal Insurancessnap.waterfordcoco.ie/collections/enewspapers/WNS/... · Poor Laws KILMACTHOMAS UNION. TUIE Board of Guardians of the above Union JL will,

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Page 1: Poor Laws Public Notices Royal Insurancessnap.waterfordcoco.ie/collections/enewspapers/WNS/... · Poor Laws KILMACTHOMAS UNION. TUIE Board of Guardians of the above Union JL will,

Poor Laws

KILMACTHOMAS UNION.TUIE Board of Guardians of the above UnionJL will , on TUESDAY the 26th instant , re-ceive proposals from competent persons for thesupply of the following articles of Bedding andSlothing, &c, required for the New Workhousej f Kilmacthomas, viz. :—

40 Suits of Mens' Clothes ,100 Suits of Womens' Clothes,

) Viz. : — ForSO Suits of Boys' Clothes, > Boys and

(in 3 sizes), J Girls—from80 Suits of Girls ' Clothes, } 9 to 15 ;

(in o sizes), £ i'rom 5 to 9;3 from 2 to 5,

10 Infants' Suits ,150 1W of Blankets ,150 Pair of Cotton Sheets,150 Rugs,150 Bolsters,150 Bed Ticks,40 Pair of Mens ' Shoes,

100 Pair of Womens ' Shoes,,NO 1'air of Boys' Shoes, (in 3 sizes)SO Pair of GirL' Shoes, (in 3 sizes),4 Churns for Milk ,

12 Buckets ,300 Tin Pints,S00 Tin Platters ,

3 Gross of Spoons ,200 Chamber Utensils ,

10 Cradles,24 Oak Chairs , and I Aim Chair.

To be delivered at Kilmacthomas Workhousean or before the 20th December, as the Guar-dians may direct.

Sealed Tenders addressed to the Chairmanwill be received by me up to 11 o'Clock on theibove-mcntioned day.

By order of the Board ,WILLIAM HUNT ,

Clerk of ilie Union.

DUNGARVAN UNIONWORKHOUSE

Master Wanted

rpiIE T5oa -cl of Gusinlians of the above UnionJL will , on tl '.o 21st of OCTOiSKIl instant ,receive propolis from competent persons to fillflu- Office i-l ' Workhouse Matron , at a Siilary ol£G0 per Annum , with first class llations andApartments.

None need offer themselves but those fullyeonwr?r.:it wi th Wo;k'nouse accounts and disci-pline.

A pret --rer.ee will he given to Candidates whomay h-'vo hail experience in discharging theduties of I he Office.

Sealed Prc ;.osal? accompanied with Testimo-nials must be loik 'fid with me on or beforeFive o'Ciock , P.M ., Wednesday, the 20th instant.

The personal attendance of the Candidatesv.iil l .c^ru qu iifd on the day of Election. Secu-rity will b1-' required to the amount of £200.

liy onlvr ,JOHN B AKRON ,

Clerk of Union.Board Room ,

P'.h October . l S-f'2.

THE KARI.Y CLOSING MOVEMENT.We arc l;af'f - to be enabled to rqiort progress. A

very larpe number of t 'lo shopkeepers arc closing ateight O'CIOLI- ; others , of los? oiicrjrv, at nine ; we wouldTC nir.il O.i'i . -c litter gentlemen tliat the educational pro-cco'lings of the Trades' Society take place at eight. We<Jo trust tint there is c-nnu^h of spirit among the mer-<-li.>.:it--of one city (0 cimire gener.il closing at eiglito'clock ; ;o tli-v-e jrontU'men who have already so donewe re con i our thanks on the ]«rt of the People and thePress. 'Hi 1'ii 'ilic should not forget TIIEIH duty : to buysotl-.ln? u all n:\vr c-i yht o'clock ,

_ V. e wi 'i :ij .i. i :il for :ts-i.-iance to sr.iv auxiliaries : To'tie L'uiics or Kilkenny i- > ur^u^

the c-iiisu with the re-

CIISAU 'S. :ni'i to suffer no purchasing after eight o'clock.His a m.T.ier of lv noviilcneo , airl we nro sure of aidhnre—nni!. jii'l .iln^ f.-nm tost experience, such aid isTittory. — A i/U-n ;i u Journu I.

J iii:ATni: -cr.!NG IV 1'A H J S .—The aggregateof space provided in Paris is calculated to ac-commodate thirty-four thousand play-goers , onein thirty-one of the whole population , from thepnat grandfather—if towns contain suchthings—clown Jo the babies. The largest ofthese places of amusement , the Circus ofCLan)j )«--Kl ysees, affords space for three thou-sand live hundred visitors. Next in size arethe National Theatre (th e old Olymp ic Circus),which will hold two thousand two hundred andfcft y-n::ic . :;iid t he 'I heat re of Porte Saint Martinhokr.n_' about two hundred less. The OppraComiquc has space f'.r an an- 'iencc of two thou-sand , bnl the Grand Opera of Paris will not ac-comrr.odite more tl.an eighteen hun dred a-idelevc n . The Ccnn.'<iie Franeaise and the Odeonare within tvu -fi ciit 's of equal size ; one able toaccommodate fifteen hundred and sixty, the otherfifteen hundred and frty-oi»ht . Two of thetheatres which hold more than a thousand(Beaumarchais a>v) Saint M"a»ccl) were closedin I8o 1. hfi\ c.i .\.ti theatres hold numbers va-*yin!c between :i :' iousand and six hundred : and°ne (the Speiiacle d'Arcole) is calculated toadmit not more than two hundred and fiftyvisitors to each of its entertainments. To thetheatres of Paris there must be added a hundredand fifty-six places of public amusement ';namel y, twenty cafes offering the charms ofs°ng, six offerihg dramatic entertainments , con-cert and dramatic halls, public ball-rooms andgninjue ites. TLese are frequented daily by anaverage of about twenty-four thousand visitors.|f we add these , therefore, to our former calcu-at\on , it will appear that there exist means infans for affording nightly public entertainment ,!? l°e Wa >' of drama , dance, or song, to no less"•an one in every eighteen of the inhabitants of

a"s, which number of course includes theIV r the sick> tte infants, and the destitute.—

Public NoticesPRINTING, !

P U B L IS H I N G', ;Bookbinding, >

AND ;

M A C H I N E R U L I N GEXECUTED AT ;

" THE NE WS" OFFICE \W I T H N E A T N E S S A N D D E S P A T C H

T O E L I B R A R YIs constantly Supplied with ;

NEW WORKS. I

I1BRE IS YOUR RE3IED¥!HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT.

A WONDERFUL CURE OF A DANGEROUSSWELLING OF THE KNEE. I

Copy of a Letter from Join Forfar, an Agricul-turist, residing at Ncwborougb, near Ilcihiini,dated Hay loth , [831. i

To Professor II OI.LOWAY , ;SIR ,—I was afflicted with a swellinpr on each (jUle of

the le<>, rather above the knee , for nearly two years ,-whichincreased to a great size , I lia.il the ailvise of thre^: emi-nent Surgeons here , and was nn inmate of the NewcastleInlirmnry for lour weeks. After various inodee of.treat-ment hnd been tried, I was disclinrped ns incurable.Having heard so mucli of vour Pills and Ointment; 1 de-termined to try them , and 'in in less than a month jl wascompli'tely cured. What is more remarkable I was cn-g:iged twelve hours a day in the Hay Harvest , and al-thoug h I have follows'] my luhorionnocrupiilion through-out the winter , I have had no return wliate ter of my coru-nlaint. (Signed) JOIIX FOUFAK .AN INFLAMATION IN THE SIDE 1>KHFECTLY

CURED. :Copy of a Letter from Mr. Francis A mot, of

Vrcahoiisc, Lothian Road, Ediubro/ datedApril 2iHh , 1851. i

To Professor IIoLi.owAy. jSin ,— For more than twenty years my wife lint been

subject , from time to time , to attacks ot influuimation inthe side , for which she wns bled and blistered to a : greatextent , still the pain could not be removed. About louryeurs ago she taw , in the papers , the wonderful! cureseftecte.i liy your I'ills and Ointment , an-l thought sbewiiuld p i\e them a trial , To hor great astoni»htneat anddelight she got imrnedigte relief from their use, nnd ul'ferpersevering for three weeks the pain in her side xvn *completel y cured , and she has enjoyed the best of healthfor the lust lour years. (Signed) ;

FRANCIS AKN OT.The Fills should be used conjointly with the Ointmentmost of the fallowing cases :— '

Bad L<-gs Clii ^o-foot FisKilnsSore-thront Had Ercasts GoutSkin-<lisea«es Hums » Chapped handsGlnndularSweJIings Scurvy BunionsCorns (Soft) LnmliBgi Sorci-headsBite of MnsrhetocsCiiiu 'eis 1'ilet

and Sand-Klies Tumours Contrnctiid andRhumntisin Ulcers Stifl" JoinUCoco-Jtny ]ilephH» lia« is Pca]i>Wounds Sore Ni pples Yaws.Sold by th« Proprietor , 244 , Strand , (near T.mipla Bar)

London , and by all respectable Venders cf Patent Medi-cines tliroup huut the Civilized World , in l'ots and 3oxe>i ,Is. I I.I., 2i. Oil., 113., 2i!a.. ami 'S,h. each. There isa very considerable paving in tnking the larger shes.

N.B. —Drection a for the guidance of Patients &<:. pre-fixed In each Pot or I!ox. •

MOST MIUACu L orj S CURE OF LEOS 1)AA ITER 43 YEARS' SUFFERING , j

Extract of a Letter from Mr. William Galp hint of 70Stint Mary 's Street, W'rymouth, dated Mat; \oth1851. :

To Professor I I OI.F.OWAY , :Sin ,—At rliK nye ot" 18 tnj wife (who is now 61)

caug ht a virdtnt enlil , which settled in her legs, and eversince that l ime they have bren more or less sore, nndgreatl y inflamed. Her agonies were distracting, and formonths together she was deprived ntirely of rent andslcp. Jivcry remedy that medical emen advised wastried , but without L'tfect ; her health suffered severely,and the state of her legs was terrible. J h.ive often readyour Advertisements , and advised her to try your Pillsand Ointment ; and as a last resource , afte r every otherremedy h.ul proved useless, she consented to do so.: Shecommenced six weeks ago , and , strange to tel-te ,is now in good health , j ler legs are painless, withoutacream or sear, and her sleep sound and undisturbed.Could yon have witnessed the sufferings of my wifeduring the last 43 years ,and contrast them with IK r pre-sent enjoyment nf health , you would indeed feel deli ghtedin having been the mean* of so greatly alleviating thesufferings of a fellow creature. (Signed) I

WILLIAM G A L F 1 X .A PERSON 70 YKA R S OF AGE CU11KI) OF A

HAD LEG, 01" THIRTY YEARS STANDING.(.'u]iy of a Letter from !tlr. William Abbs, Builder

of Gas Ovens, of HushcIilTe, near Hudtlcnilichl ,dated, May 31st, 1851. :

To Professor IIoJ.LOWA y .Slit ,—I cuffcri id for a period of thirty years from a

bad lee, the result of two nr tlnee different accidents atGas Woiks ; accompanied liy scorbutic nymj iUmis. 1bail recourse to a variety of medical advice. 'williO 'ut tle-riving any benefit , nnd we3 even told that the leg mustbe aui piilntcd , y«:t , in opposition to that opinion ,.youfI'ilU and Ointment have effected a compK-le cure' iii.'snhurt a time , that few who had not wiincrsid . it wonldcredit the fact . (.Signed) AViLLIA M AllliS.

The truth of tlii* Htatcment can be verified by MrW.l\ Kiiy lDiid , Chemist , 13, Market Strtct , Ik.ddcrs -firlll. :A DREADFUL KAD BREAST CLUED IN ONE

MONTH. ;ztract of a letter from Mr. Frederick Turner,

of i'cnsliursf j Kent , dated December I!Wb,IS51.

To 1'rolV-ssor IIO I.LO WAY , :Dr.M( Sue ,—M y wife had suffered from Bad IRrensis

fur I .i- r than six months , nud durinc the whole periodhai! "I ¦¦• best inn.lienl atti ridani'e, lm' all to no use. II a\-ing '•¦.-¦ire healed an awlul wound in my own h-fr l'.v yourunm.ill'*d m^iicinc , I deiermined again to u«o yci irPilUand Ointment , and Ilicrulbn; gave ll.om a trill in hercase , and fortnnate it was I Hid so. lor in lesj than amonth a perfect cure was effected , and the benefit lhatvarioii3 olhcr lirniichiM of my f.imily have derived fromther use is rcnli y usloiii-hing, 1 nnw strunti ly roponi-men— them to all my friends . (Si"rticd )

l itEDEltK K T L J IN E H .

EXAMPLE TO LANDLORDS.K ENMARE , OCT. 7 A rate for the relief ol

the poor of the Kenmare Union having beenstruck in the past month of tlx shillings in thepound on the entire Union, with the exceptionof two electoral divisions, icduced a trifle fromtheir poverty by government aid , and being nowin process of collection , Richard Mahony, Esq.,of Dromore Castle, an extensive proprietorwithin the union , has come forward and paidthe entire rate for his tenantry, and thus rescuedthem from the ruin which the payment of soheavy a rate must bring on them . On a formeroccasion , a tenant or two having lost their stockby disease which spread among them , and beingleducfd in their means , Mr. Mrhony had theloss valued , and gave to one £60, and to a se-cond .£70 to purchase stock. Would to Godthe remaining proprietary would follow theexample, and thereb y stop the torrent of emi-gration by relief cf their people.— Cork Exa-

Public NoticesTiie New Organ

IN ST - P A T R I C K ' S .ON SUNDAY, the 17ih Instant, the New

Organ of ST. PATRICK'S Catholic Churchwill be opened with the usual Solemnity.

Solemn High Mass will commence at Eleveno'Clock, and the Sermon will be preached aftertho Gospel.

The Music will be of a superior order ; andMr. H. BJBVINGTON will preside at the Organ.

OLD Dr. JACOBTOWNSEVIVSGENUINE ORIGINAL

United States Sarsaparilla.THIS COMPOUND SAR SAPAniLLA OF OLD

DR. TOWNSENDHAS nothing in common with prnpnratlons bearing

the name in England or America. Prepared hyone of the ablest American Chemists , having gained theapprobation of a Rreat and respectable body of AmericanPhysicians and Druggists, universally approved andadopted by the American people , and forming a compoundof all the rarest medical roots , seeds , plants , and flowersthat grow on American soil, it may truly be called thegreat and good American Remedy.

When received into the stomach it is di gested like thefood , and enters into the circulation precisely as the nu-triment partof our aliment does.

ITS FIRST REMEDIAL ACTION IS UPOX TUP,BLOOD , and through that upon every part where iiis needed. In this way it purifies the blood of excess ofbile , nrids, and alkalis , of all foreign and morbid matter ,nnd brings it into a healthy condition. In this wny it isthat this medicine is conveyed to ths liver , where it allaysinflammation, or relieves congestion, removes ob-structions , cleanses & henls abcesses , disolves pimmy orthickened bile nnd excites health y secretions in this organ.In this nay, also , is this medicine conducted to the lungs,wherein it assuages inflammation, alloys irritation , re-lieves cough , promotes expectoration , dissoNes tubercles ,and henls ulceratioti9. In like, manner it acts on thetomach to neutralise acidity, remove flatulence, debility,

heartburn , nausea , restore tone, appetite , &c. In lli esame way this good medicine acts upon the kidneys , onthe bowels on the joints , bones, nnd the skin.

It is by cleansing, enriching, nnd purifying the bloodthat Old Dr. Towtisend's Sursaparilla effects so many andwonderful cures . Physiolog ical science lias demons!rntc^the truth of what is asserted in Holy Writ , that " theblood li the lifr ." Upon this fluid all the tissues of thebod y depend for their maintenance and repletion.

It replenishes the wastes of the system , and gives toevery solid nnd fluid its appropriate suostancK or se-cretion—earthl y and mineral substancp, gelatine , mar-row , nnd membrane to the bones—filbrine to the mus-cles - cells to the lungs—linings to all the cavities—hairto the heiiil —tiiii ls to the fingers and toes—urine to thekidneys—bile to the liver—gastric juice to the stomsch ;tenrs to the eyes ; saliva to the month ; moisture to theskin , and every necessary fluid to lubricate the entireframework of the svstein.

When earned by the circulation to the bones , themorbid matter destroys the animal and earthly substan-co» of these tissues, producing necrosis , i.e., dco-iy orulceration of the bones. When conveyed to the liver ,all form of hopatic or bilious diseases are the unavoid-able product. When to the lungs It produce* pneurno,nia , catarrh , asthma, tubercles, cough , expectorationand final consumption. When to the stomach the effectsare inflammation , indigestion , sick headache, vomiting,loss of tone and appetite. When it seizes upon the brainor nervous system it brings on tic doloreti.x or St Yitus',dance, hysteria , palsy, and epilejisy. When to the eyesoptlmlmiii ; to the enrs , otlorhcea ; to the throat , bron-chitis , croup, ic. Thus all the maladies known to tin!human system are induced by a corrupt state of the bloodWith no general remedy on which implicit reliance canbe placed as a Punil'lEit oi> TIIK ItLoon , disease andstifleiing, nnd consequent want , stalk unchecked andunsubdued in every land in all the world. If there isarrest of action in any of the visrera , immediatel y theybegin to decay ; if any fluid ceases to circulate , or to bechanged for fresh , it becomes a mass of corruption , anda ma'ignant enemy to the living fluids and solids. Ifthe blood stagnates it spoils ; if the bil» doe* not passoff and give place to fresh , it rots ; if the urine is re-tained , it ruins body and blood. The whole system ,every secretion , every function , every fluid depend fortheir health upon action , circulation, change , giving andreceiving, and the moment these cease , disease, decay,nnd di.-uth begin.

All nuture abounds with the truth that every nclive sub-stance lias its opposite or corrective. All poisons havetheir antidotes , and all disease* have their remedies , didwe but Unow them. U pon this principle was Dr. Town-send guided in the discovery of bis medicine.

Prepared nxprpsily by the old doctor t) net upon theblood , :l is culcti luled to cure a vinii 'ty of diseases. Histhe very Best Spring Medicineto t.leanse the blood , liver , stomach , kidneys , and oflenIn the spring the blood of most persons is apt to be moreor less impure , ihc head heavy, the skin yellow , skintoVcrcil more or Jess with eruptions , pimp le*, blotches

and the pcncrnl system deranged or disordered—but ,however aU'ected , this searching puritier sweeps out allimpurities

In roughs , colds , bronchitis , weak or ti ght chests , pal-pitti t icn ol' the heart , and lung consumption , the OldDoctor's S:irs[.:irrlln is without a rival,

In KI2M AM Cnnd Nervous Diseases this superior remedys a great Ti 'NlC , fives strength to weak organs , wpnktwrve? , weak stomach , and debilitated muscles und .joints ,and enriches the Ij lood , nnd all the fluids of the body.

It is a mcdicitiR which has been used hy hundreds ofthousands—born recommended by moat numcroustti'.P-I 'Ht' TAlti.i: itiu.ui.Ait PIIYSICIAKS to the sick. U pon(.•very tNsue nn I fluid of the body ; up«iii tu-ry organ,fibre , nnd nerve ; upon every gland nnd cord muscle andmembrane; upon till the circulatin g di gestive , nutritive ,ami secreting organs—so it urou«es ' pure and healthy,action throug hout the whole ccona omy—cleanses tiolmorbid mutter , ntrurigthcu s weak orgnns , throws oftburdens nud ohstructions which loud and oppress it. nndimparts v.tulily to every ruinule part of the whole struchire.

Its virtue is unsurpassed—its success unequalled—andits prunes arc echoed from iill parts of the luud.

1'OMKIIOY , ANDREWS , & CO., Sole Proprietors.G R A N D IMPERIAL WAREHOUSE , 37!) , STRAND-

LONDON.(Adjoining Kxcter Hall).

C/M'TION. —Old IJr. Jiicob Townseml is nnw oversrven 'y yoars of age , nnd has long been known (is thettiilhnr niiil disrovpicr of the

(irnuiiic Original Townseiu! SnrsapnrHta.To guard ogiiinu deception in the purchase of, this

si l t :rli" , the pnrtruit , family cunt of arms (the emMein oflim Lion , nnd thir Eagle), and the signature of the pro-prl> tors will be found on every label ; without thcte noneis gemiiiii".

P II I C E :Pint? , 4s. ; Small Quart j, 4?. (id.; Imperial Qiinrtn ,

7s, (id. ; Mammoths , holding Two Quarts , 11s. 8ixMammoth s (•ent fiee to any part . oi the Kingdom for 69s.In thin reduction in Small Qnart9 and Mammoths , thereis nn immense gain to the purchaser.

A OKNTS ' N AMES .—Denis Harrington , 4, liarron-strind-stri-et. Waterford ; RI'Martln fc Co., 121 , ChnpeNstreet , Dublin ; S. Boyd, 40, Mnry- slreot , Dublin ;p.. Kiti3l «g h,| 00, Orafton-3trec t , Dublin ; CerryVictoria-s treet , lielfast ; Gnntt and Co., 10, & 12 Torn-MarkC , "elfast ; G. Bylield , 132, Georges-street , Lim-erick ; D. Vernor , Sliip-itreet , Drog beda ; BurgeonCVConnnr , .Vewrj .

SPOK TJN O LEAP ,—A gentleman belonging to Ayr-ghira , no less distinguished as a feiule.ss horseman thanas o man of Utters , made a daring leap a few woeka ago ,which deserves to be recorded. When exercising in afield a eelubrated steeple clnise mare, his mvn property,5hefound it necessary to null her at a high hedge, to savehimself being run away with. The mare bold ly roso atthe hedge, and took it , the height of the leap when mea-sured,being found to be no less than eight and ahalf feet ,the rise being about nine feet , and the fall on the otherside about seven feet.—North British Mail.

Royal InsurancesATLAS

ASSURANCE.COMPANY,02, CHEAPSIDE , LONDON.

ESTABLISHED IN 1808, AND EMrOWE H ED BYACT OF PARLIAMENT 54, GEO. III., CAP 79,

DIRECTORS :John Oliver Hanson , Esq., Chairman.

Wm. GeorRe Prescott , Esq. Deputy Chairman.Sir WIP Baynes, Bart. Moses Mocatta, Esq.,Arthur E, Campbell , Esq., Capt. A. L. MontgomeryThos.Chapinaa, Esq.. It. N.

F. R .8. James Wm. Ogle, Esq.,Donald Maclean , Esq Arthur A. Resell , Fmj.,Samuel E. Magan , Esq. Joseph Pulley, Esq.,

AUDITORS —Francis Bligh Hookey, Esq., and .JosephGrote , Esq.,

A CTUARY — Charles Ansell , Esq., F.R.S.SOLICITO R —Thomas Browning, Esq.,SURVEYOR —Thomas Hopper, Esq.

In the Life Branch .The essential qualifications of assurance,

combining perfect security and the highl yfavored bonus system are united , thereby giv-ing immediate benefit to the pelicy holders, asexemplified in the result of a practice thoroughl ydeveloped and established.

Policies may be effected for the whole termof life by payments yearly or half-yearly, also bya limited number of yearly payments , a mode ofassurance which originated with this Companyin 101G.

111 the Fire Branch.The rates for every description of assurance

will be found to assimilate to those of the mostrespectable and best conducted offices, with theperiodical division of surp lus premiums andother advantages highly favourable to the as-sured.

Renewalsfulling due at Michaelmas should be renewedwithin fifteen days hereafter.

A detailed statement of the terms, &c. , onwhich the business of the Company in its variousbrunches is conducted , may be had at the HeadOffice, and of the Agents of the Company ™Great Britain and Ireland , or will be sent bypost , on application by letter.

HENltY DESBOROUGH,Secretary.

Cheapside , London , September, 1852.AGENT FOB WATE RFORD :

MR . JOHN FARRELL,King-street, and No. 20, Beresford-street.

R O Y A L I N S U R A N C ECOMPANY.

CAPITAL , £2,000,000 , in 100,000 Shares of£20 each.

TRUSTEES.John Shaw Leigh, Esq.

R. 13. B. H. Blundell , Esq.DIRKCTORS .

Charles Turner , Esq., Chairman.John Campbell , Esq., and J. Bramley-Moore,

Esq., Diputy -CIiairman.A CTUAIIY AND ) „ „, _ „

SECRETARY \ P"cy M. Dove, Esq.

pedal" \olice.A S S U R A N C E S (with participation) effected on or

before 'Mst Dec. next , will participate in the FirstDivisinn of Prof its , to be determined by the resulto f the Comp any's life transactions to the 31st Dec1804.

The Company, therefore, offers special advantages tol'arlivi A ssuring during the p resent year.

Future Division nf Projiis every Five Years.Payment of Lif e Claims never disputed except in Cases

of Fraud. ¦¦

M I X . J . W. COKDELIi,Agent lo the said Company for M'alcrford anil

its vicinity,Bp.asleavF to inform lii.t Friends and the Puhlic , that he

coiitiuue sto receive orders for Fi re & Life Assurancesand' desires to draw their attention to the remarkableproofs of the sound pri ncip les of the Establishment foruhrch he acts, and of its ample resources, as exhibitedin the extracts at the foot of the presen t Advertisem ent

The Company will ever distinguish ilself by itspromptnes s in the settlement of Claims.

N o charge made for tl:- Poliry.LIFE Blt .VMII .

G UARANTEE OP AN A MPLE CAPITAL , MODERATP.I'll KM I V MS , LA fl OB PAM TICIJ 'ATION OP PR OJTISBY TUB AS&U1 1F.D , A M O U N T I N G TO TWO-THIRDSof its NKT A M O U N T , SMAI.r. CHAR GE FORMANAGEMENT , the Expenses of the Offict. beingborne in dun prop ortions by the two liranches.

PERCY M. DOVR ,Mnnnger.

EXTRACTS FROM THE "POST MAGAZINE."We know of no oilier Institution for transacting Tire

Assurance hus>ino S3 started since the passing u f t h o lie-uUlrutiou Act ,' lhat can be at all compared with it , citherin respect of the extent , or the suecess o(; its operations.—The full exposition of recei pts , expenditure , profits ,dividends , and accumulation , furnished in the AnnualReports of the ' Ho 'jal affords unerring evidence of theatat p of prosperity which we ore de«irou a to offer as nnillustra tion of what can be. accomplished by energy, goodmanagement , and high reputation.

LonUiupr at the aciiori of the Society from its forma-tion in 1840 . we find that at the end of I8-1S the accu-mulated profits amounted lo the enormous sum of _ CIO8 ,0!l Ms. lid. Of that amount it was deicimined Inappropriate £8y ,-8() an n hontts addition to flie nrifcirm lp: iiil-up c.ipjtul of .¦£ 178 ,500— bcimr a clear realisedprofit of .r>0 pur cent , i" ill y'vars.

EXTRACT FROM THE " KEPORTKR. "Tiie report, licforii us prp-rmirvnlly justifies the op i-

nion \vu have prcvi' iis'y expressed lhat the Royal Assu-rance Company ranks at the head of «Was»urance enm-jj ouic. H projected, und got into working order during thelast half-dozen yenrs . niid has trnnsuctcd , and is transact-ing, an ainoun't of business which very many of the"elder" office have never approached , and are notlikely to do so for somtf time to come. In both the lifeand lire branches an enormous, we confess an almost in-credible , increase of business i3 exhibited , as comparedwith thnt transacted in former years. The life branchhail also progressed most satisfactorily. The strangeimmunity from claim's by death is perfectl y ictnarkohleand speaks " trumpet tonpned" of the diligence and careexercised by the medical uflicers and the directors ill'theelection oft lie lives.

A GENTS AT .Ballina .Mr. ThomasM'Andrew , SolicitorClonmel... .. JiMr. Thomas Hughes, Old Quay.Cork . Mr. Walter Eonan, South-mall.

William Kivwan, the husband of the lady lately drown-ed whilst (as was alleged) bathing on Ireland's Eye, hasbeen arrested on a warrant , nnd committed to Kilmain-ham gaol, for further examination.

•Great efforts aro being made in furtlieranco of therailway to 'Wwfonl.

Calendar of Operations

P L A N T D E P A B T M K N T .

(From the London Gardeners' Chronicle.)The preparation of plants to bloom at Christ-

mas should be taken in hand forthwith, that nohurrying at an after period may be necessary,and which generally proves unfavourable to ashow of bloom. Begin with the eariieet restedplants first , and those which take the longes ttime to bring into flower. The common andOtaheitian Orange and Daphne, if the wood iswell ripened, will soon show bloom under agentle heat, a little extra warmth may be neces-sary to open (heir flowers. Chinese Azaleas andGardenias take a longer time, and should imme-diately be put to work in a house or pit whert^a little artificial heat can be applied and in-creased as the buds swell. The stock of ttoveplants previousl y prepared for winter floweringshould likewise be placed in a warm, light partof the stove, where they will soon commenceflowering. The different varieties of Ejnphyl-lum truncatum are very useful at this season ,and if they have formed their buds may beplaced at the cool end of the stove, to expandtheir flpwer. Another useful plant for thedrawing-ioom is the well-known Calla aethio-pica , which when in bloom forms an elegantvase plant ; a few at a time should therefore bspotted in rich soil and placed in a warm pit , aslikewise a few of the earliest potted Koman Nar-cissus and Van Thol Tulips. Mignonette, Nea-politah Violets, and Chinese Primroses snould beplaced in suitable situations to forward them intobloom, and the reserve stock kept secure fromrains, but with plenty of air, in the cold frames.Give seeding Calceolaries ana Cinerarias anothershift, and keep down green fly ; they shouldbe kept in a medium temperature through thewinter, that their growth may be progressive.In the stove let a drier atmosphere be kept asthe days decrease ; ani ght temperature of 60 °will be puite sufficient to carry plants throughthe winter , but give air every forenoon, ifpossible.

ORCHIDS .—The principal part will be at restor approaching that state , and agreeably withprevious directions should be placed in a coolerand drier house ; or if no such can be affordedthem , at the coolest end of the one they arein ; if a perfect show of bloom is desirable , pre-vent their starting into growth at this season,which some kinds in vi gorous health may at-tempt to do. Laelias arc now in full beauty,and, with other kinds in bloom, should have acomparatively dry atmosphere , to preserve theirflowers in perfection. Aerides, Vandas, andother species repuiring more'.heat, should bekept at the warm end of the house. Attendpunctuall y to cleanliness in every department ,and look closely after cock-roaches,crickets.andwoodlice , which are troublesome pests in Orchidhouses ; the night temperature should rangefrom 60° to 65 ° .

FORCING DEPARTMENT.PINERY.—With those Pines intended to fruit

through the early part of next summer and au-tumn , nothing can be done further than keepingup the top and bottom heat, and gradually re-ducing the moisture of the house, which, forBorne time to come, should be kept compara-tivel y dry ; this treatment , combined with aregular ventilation , will produce the best effectson strong growing plants , by inducing a stateof rest, and enabling the plant in the meantimeto organise the peculiar secretions necessary toobtain fine fruit next season. We do not re-commend a less bottom heat than 85 ° at anyseason ,being satisfied that Pines require their rootsto be kept in a growing medium , when even thetop heat is not so high by several decrees. Ifthe thennometor indicates 58 ° or GO ° in therjnorning, it will be sufficiently high , but firessufficient to raise the temperature 12 ° or 15 °should be made ; this will allow for a liberalsupp ly of air , which , during sunshine , should beconsiderabl y increased. The iibove treatmentwill answer for the younper stock, keeping upthe top heat by frequent additions to the linings,where that mode of heating is practised.Water , if required at all, should only be givensparingly, using it in a tepid state. To Pinesswelling (heir fruit still continue a most atmo-sphere, which will now be obtained with lessdifficulty, and which in some houses or low pitsit may even be desirable to moderate. Admit allthe li ght possible by washing the glass and re-moving anything which may be growing overthem. Air each day must not be neglected , ora loss of flavour will be the result . Moderatewaterings should be given , using liquid ma-nure ; but be careful to keep water from comingin contact with the flowers of any Pines inbloom for reasons formerl y adverted to. Me-lons, unless when growing by fire-h?at, will beuseless after this , and may thertfore be clearedaway. Those in houses swelling their fruitshould be kept growing by a good beat. Keepthe air , however , somewhat dry, that the remain-ing fruit may not be deflicient in flavour. TheDampsha h y brid , and some others, will keep ina warm room a considerable time nfter beingcut , for which purpose they should be allowedto get quite ) i pe on the plant.

VLOWE Tl GAUBEN- AND SHRUBB ERY .As frost may be expected dail y, time plants

which it is desirable to save should at once betaken up and potted. A number of plant s for(lower garden decoration , blooms better whenof a certain rjc, and such , with others which His desirable to save fr r pi opogation , should befirst attended lo. Last season 's late struck cut-tings of scarlet Geraniums, and most of theother bedding kinds , should be especiall y re-served ; as when carefull y potted and grownthey bloom earlier and finer the second jear.

The " Journal du I-Iavre"announccsthattho Frenchship JMinos , from Panama to Havre, was on the 5thSeptember last , in latitude 13 north and 27 westlongitude , fired into by an English ihrce-masWd ship,supposed to be a transport with convicts for NewSouth Wales. The n\nsts, sails, and rigging of theMinos hove marks of the English Vessel 's shot.The captain of the Minos says that he was themore surprised at the unprovoked aggression as hehad spoken with the commander of the unknownship in friendly terms, and had informed him that hewas a Frenchman a very few minutes before theshots were fired.

Alderman Daniel Smithwick, elected, by ballot, sisMayor of Kilkenny for 1852, dec'ines to serve.

Enniscorthy has subscribed a largo Bum to the New-man Indemnity Fund, • • • •i«:?'«£j£st

TTaterford Quarter Sessions

On Tuesday morning these sessions wereopened by James Bessonett, Esq. assistant bar-rister ; also on the bench, his Worship theMayor, Michael Dobbyn ; Thos Meagher, M P;.Wm Morris, Captain Newport, and RobertCarew.

The following gentlemen were sworn on theGRAND JURY.

John Hughes, Esq , Foreman ; Humphry HughesWilliam Aylward, John Blake, Henry Whitney, John.M'CIellaEd, Trevor Lanigan, Nicholas Fortune, Johtf E.Jb'eehan, John Hnt, Richard Condon , James Thornton,Anthony Cadogan, Peter M'Auliffe, Simon Kent, DavidKcogh, Philip Hanrick, John Hewion, Hugh N. Neyins,Henry White, Jbhsua Barton, Thomas Hill, and ThomasR. Cherry, Esqrs.

MARKET JURY.The firs t twelve gentlemen, with the exception

of Mr. Whitney, who served during the lastquarter, were sworn as market jurors for theensuing quarter.

His worship charged the jury very briefly—he said there were only tsventy-two cases fortrial , all of which , except one, were of the usualclass of petty larcenies. Crime certainly wasnot on the increase , but rather diminishing, inthe city. One of the numbers on the calenderwas for issuing base money—the jury should besatisfied that the money so issued was false, formany a good shilling looks bad, while many abad shilling looks good—the jury, therefore ,should be perfectl y satisfied on the subject, be-fore finding bills.

The barrister and magistrates then proceededto dispose of the application for spiri t licenses,of which there were sixteen.

Dr. Mackesy said, in a sanatory point of view,it was of great consequence that the magistratesshould not grant license for any house exceptit had good sewerage, and other necessary ac-commodation. It was an established fact thatthose who drank freely were more subject toepidemic disease than others , consequentl y—andhe spoke on general principles—the magistratesshould not grant a license, or even a transfer oflicense , to any person who has not proper andwell secured premises, as regards sewerage, &c.

The bench full y agreed with Dr. Mackesy,and said they would strictly adhere to his sug-gestions.

J —Martin Denn, 5, Little Barronstrand-st.(no appearance.)

2—Martin Daniel, 86, Barrack-street, (do.)3—Andrew Hoban , Glen (granted).4—John Hayes, 20, Ball ybricken (rejected).5—David Keogh , 7, Blackfriars (granted).6—Alexander Lindsay, 130 Quay (do).8—Laurence Murphy, 17 Broad street (do).8—Jolin Magrath, Lower Yellow-road (rejec.)9—Maryinne Phelan , 15 High-st (granted).

10—John Power Orphan-house lane (do) .11—Edmond Power, Michael-st (do)i12—John Power, Broad-st (no appearance),13—John Rogers, 1 Hanover-st (granted).14—Michael Sullivan , 2 Quay-lane (no ap.)15—James Sinnott , 24 Barronstrand-street,

(granted).The following petty jury were then sworn :

John Hudson , Patrick Fanning, Patrick Buggy, DanDoyle, Robert Fitzgibbon, Patrick Kinehan, NathanielMortimer, Wra. Power, Laurence Phelan; J. T. Power,Henry Roche, Wm Thomas.

At thi3 time the dock wr.s literall y full ofyoung persons—principall y females—all of whomwere arra igned for petty larcenies.

Ellen Clancy, Mary Kennedy, and MargaretMurp hy were placed at the bar, charged withhaving on the 4th of Sept. last , stolen a quan-tity of Indian corn the property of Messrs Ri-chardson and Strangman.

Mr. Joseph Strangman sworn—Remembersthe 4th ef Sept, when prisoners at the bar stoleabout a barrel of Ibraeli Indian corn fro m thestore of the above-named firm ; the value of thecorn was about 15s ; it was taken off the loftnext the stairs ; discovered it the morning afterit was stolen ; the parties who stole it forcedtheir way in through the windows ; had seenprisoners lurking about the place before therobbery .

One of the prisoners asked witness was thereno other corn in town like lhat which he lost?

Witness said there was ; but yet he thoughthe could identif y the stolen corn as being a partof his property .

John Canty, watchman , on being sworn , de-posed that he arrested prisoners at the bar onthe nierht of the robbery, and within about 40yards of the place at which it was committed ;they had the corn in their possession at thetime.

Prisoner (to witness)—Now, on the varth ofyour oath did you see us out at all that night ?Now for it ?

Witness—I saw you late and early, if that 'sall you want to know (laughter).

The Barrister , in addressing the jury, saidthey could not convict the prisoners unless theywere satisfied that they were the same personswho stole the corn from Mr. Richardson ?

The j ury retired to their room , and aftersome consultation , returned a verdict of—notguilty.

Mick Tttomy was indicted for stealing a blan-ket , some stockings, and several other articlesof wearing apparel.

A witness got tip on the table, and identifiedthe shirt , which was well p ieced.

Prisoner—How many pieces were in yourshirt , when yon lost it 1

Witness—FiVe, but you took two of them outof it (laughter).

Prisoner—On your oath now could you notget tbe same stockings in any other part ofWaterford ?

Witness—You got your breakfast in the housebefore you stole the stockings (laughter).

Barrister—What brought you here ?Prisoner—I came from Kilworth to work at

my trade.Witness—That's robbery, your worship-

prisoner was sentenced to two" months' impri-sonment.

COINERS.The following prisoners were placed at the-

bar, convicted , and sentenced for keeping a smallmin( " against the peace and statute" in Patrick-street, in this city :—Michal Moran , transportedfor trt o years ; Catherine White, imprisoned 4-nionths ; James Barron , acquitted;. "AnastatiaBarron , 6 months ;. Maurice Philips.'acquit^i^ v '.

i Constable Pallas produced several.foli;|itjinj f;and sixpenny pieces of the base coin^-VtwliMW^^

Page 2: Poor Laws Public Notices Royal Insurancessnap.waterfordcoco.ie/collections/enewspapers/WNS/... · Poor Laws KILMACTHOMAS UNION. TUIE Board of Guardians of the above Union JL will,

IRELAND AND THE IRISH-CAXNO.V-ADI N VJTHE COCKNEY'S THE COMING SIIA1U ' -SHOOTINQ AT ST. STEPHENS'—Til l! LOSTCOLLIER—O'MEA QHER IS AMERICA—CELTSAND SAXONS.

Stonpyliatter , 7tli Oct., 1832.Tor oulil aoqnainlnnoe sake, !I 'twas notl.inp; cNe , T

declare, onli) slock , I'm preuri tliat that "model Knglisli-lruii ,'1 Midteer Cannon , the London sweep, lutsn't beenknockiu' you down and datici u' on your carcase aflher-wards.

In the rolllckin onl<l times , when bealin was chape nn«lwhiskey plcnty. it used to ne customary for a qimrrel-Boine boy to say to a friend , in allusion to a third party—" Knock him down and I'll leap on Mm"—lint , lieilsi! ,Jlisllier Cannou ecorncs the divia ion-o-lHho ur principle,ond does the upsettin ' first and juinpin ' afthcrwards ,¦without reqiiirhi ' the least assistance in life.

The great gun o' the Times , I persave , has lieon open-ing upon him—and tisonly an admiration the sume paperdidn't find out that, like St. Patrick,

Ilia aunt was an O'Shnug hnesay,His mother was a Hrsdy ;

for of course, 'tis only Irishmen that slap lailies acrossthe face with stinkin' fish , and then half murder the jin-tleman that comes up to protect 'em. And now, there'sone thing pretty sartin , and that's that he's " a Cannon"shouldn't be discharged in a hurry.

lieteune you and I , Thady, and I don't think I'mgiven to cruelty , I'd like to be teltin 1 day light through achap of that description , all's one aa I would through »rnnd dog—that's not a responsible: animal st oil, andmakes no distinction between well and badly-dhressedpeople , when, it takes leave of its senses, and a toothfulout o' tlioie that come in its way.

What a beautiful electioneerin ' agent Mislher Cannon•n-ould make! Just imagine him pitchin' in to the oppo-sition candidate—firs t hutting the wind out of him withhis head , and then ticklin his ribs with a pnir of stoutancle-jacks ! He'd be the obstinate man, whig or Tory,that wouldn't be reduced to silence , by such powerfulrciaonin'.

By the bye, the deer-tUlkin', and grouse and poth-ridfje shoolin' must soon give way to the grand pnrli'i-mentary battoo—when one set of the knowin' shot* Ml bethrying to " persevere 1' their placet , and another to popin and pay I he,' poachers. Up gets the big bird, " wanto' confidence," that has flutth ered the nerve* of many aeportiu' ministber; and bang goes both Misther Disraeli'sbarrels into it .

Then "religious equality," a pigeon from the Irishtlirap, fluttliers across Lord Derby, and down it dhropsthick and fast flocks in the giirne, " free thrade ,"" French invasion ,1' " foreign policy ," rufflin' their fea-thers with " election petitions" " American fisheries"and " tenant right"—and the blaiin' grows hot andheary, till 'tis time to rest and wasli out the guns atBellamy 's.

Why then , I often wondher if a session o par'ymintever opened, but what theie were hundreds o' people surelo prophecy , with a knowing' shake o' the head, that itwould be the roost important oue that ever assembled.As long as I can remember, and fulx that's no foolishlimit , I'm hcarln' the same predilection , tho' the majo-rity o' the results turn out afterward s to be as like astwo peas!

I walked out last Sunday to the lighthouse at the endo* the pigeon-liouge wall , and 'l / ras a poor sight to seethe hull o' the collier Iosi on the prayvioui Tuesdaynight , ly in ' close enough to be touched by a wnlkiu'slick , hard by the same buildin'. I think , nnself , there'ssomething doubly desolate in people's perisliin' so closeto land. We can imagine loundhcrin ' lit sen, or goingto pieces on an iron-bound coast undber cliff*, or on alee-shore : but we find people quietly anglin' on a sunnySabbath , within a few yards of where stout men strug-gled vainly for life a Bhort time before, when piercin *cold and dnshiu' spray told terribly against tl.em—itmakes the scene more dhrearily impressive -if one evenhad not undber their eyes shattered spars tangled rig-gin', and other residences of death, and desolation. As] sat one of the huge stones , placed as a barrier lie-ten ne the sea and Ilia li ghthouse , I couldn't help study-in' the faces o' the sight seers that , like myself, wan -dhered out in search of a little melancholy excitement .There were artillerymen from the fort—young fellowsoff duty—who took the opportunity of being so, to sub-ttitnteopen shirt collars or loose handkerchiefs (designed" a double iebl to pay"), for the USUH I regulation ofetocks. Then came short, stout , well-to-do-in-the-worldmen, with their wive9 and children— " people in busi-ness," who had a car waitin ' for them within a legiti-mate distance of thebatthcry , and who appeared to havequite enough on their bauds , between looking svrapathiz-ingly at the wreck , and callin' to little " Julias'' and" James?*" without number to " keep away from" oneparticular point , and to be sure not to go near another.

Old fishermen from Ringsend regaled one another withstories of " shipwrecks ond disasters at sea;" and young-vagabonds from town smoked their pipes , and wonderedat the '' b y lot of cols that was lying about." Ingliort , Thady, 'Twas a pag<?, though a short one, out o'the great book o' human life—curiosity and indifference,sorrow and heartlessnejs—and , God hel p us, hurried overto kill time and give something to talk about .

Take it all in all , '(isn't an easy world to get on in, myclear O'Donohoe. Only look at the amount o' discrimina-tion , i f 'twas nothing else , that you're dhrawn upon forjn ordher to arrive at a proper perception of tliim time-honoured commodities , " things in get.eral ?" Sure'twas only yestherday I snw an uccount in one o' thecountry papers, of a chap that arrived latel y at Gort , and¦was buyin' up all tho sloes in every direction .

Some say 'tis to adultherate port wine the berry iswonrin'; hut who can tell ? Maybe the man is bringin 'out a blackin ' that '11 surpass Kelly's o' College-green ,or else going to di p the fruit in some composition , and topass it off as an unfailing remedy for all cutayniousdisayees.

Erra , bul telt me, did you throw up the bat , and kickall semblance of a crown out of it , when you seen theaccount of how tranacindantly O'Meagher is getting onin America 1

Why, tare-a-nekurs , man, 1 wouldn't wondher if theflny came in our own time, when he'd be fignrin' as theUnited States Aintms-adhor at the Coort o' St James'sand givin ' hints about revolvers and revolutionary Irish-men , clustering undber the ''' stars and stripes ," tillthe very wardhers in the Tower o* London found them-selves in the shakin 'ague.

Isn't it a murdher, though , that he can 't go to Parisand hould a confidential communication with tho presentPresident and future Imperor ? May be there wouldn 'tbe " wigs on the green,'" afther they taking a ilhrop o'drink together, and studdyin' the map o' Europa—allilen !

But there's no use in bein' too full of expectation be-'forehand. Vou can't go against tliecoorseo'nature. If

^tis to be 'twill be, as Mr. Moran said when they wereraggin 1 the river for hia second wife, and couldn 't hit

her off by any means—she was bulky and dbropt inafter a weddin'.

Them that could afford to live out o' town tire rowlin'back to it fast enough, now that an unomtakeahle tingeo' winter shows itsel f on the tops o' houses in the morn-ing', and of noses throughout the day. The Missis falksof a " warm gown," and I whistle " The Rakes o' Mal-low," by way of changlin ' the conversation.

Yours,TERRY DRISCOLL.

Mr. O'Donohoe , St. Gile 's, London.N.B.— By the bye , for the honor of ould Ireland , and

to spile the Times , be sure to pad yer calves, dye yerhair , belt up your stomach tightly ; for as you may per-eavu by the Belfast man's lettherto the " Icadin 'journul,"the •' Saxons" are a lether-headed , spindle-shanked ,long-backed , boorish set o' boobies ; while we're warm-complexinned, well-limed , peaceable, injaynious , intelli-gent , and irresistible. That's a man of undoubted dis-carnment , that same Dr. M'Kleran ; and I wouldn 'tmind drinkin ' bis health this moment, if the ma'eriabwor convaynlent I—Thady, you fcorn babo o' grace, hur-roo for our aide.

THE CHURCHES OP ENGLAND , FRAX CE ANDBELGIUM .—The incomes of the leadin g membersof the episcopal bod y in England are thus : —

Archbishop of Canterbury . £15,000Archbishop of York - - 10,000Bishop of London - - 11,700Bishop of Durham - - 8,000Bishop of Winchester - - 10,500Bishop of Ely - 5,500

The highest ecclesiastical functionary in France,the Archbishop of Paris , has £l ,G00 per annum ;the other fourteen Archbishops have GOO perannum each ; and the bishops , G5 in numberhave £400 per annum each . In Belgium thenet income of the Archbishop of Malines is £840per annum , and each of the bishops £588 perannum. Such was the state of things in 1846.Louis Napoleon has caused the income of theArchbishop of Paris to be raised from 40,000 to50,000 francs per anuum. Fourteen other arch -bishops arc augmented from 15,000 to 20,000francs. Sixty-five bishops spring from 10,000 to12,000, and the lower grades of the clergy incorresponding degrees. The sum of 180,000frans is appropriated to cathedral choirs . Thiscould hard ly be expected to be the " issue ofuniversal suffrage."

The city of Waterford contains , according to thepoor law returns , 4,255 houses.

drovemn NcfogTHE PRESIDENT'S SPEECH AT BORDEAUX.

The following is the President's reply to thespeech of the President of the Chamber ofCommerce at Bordeaux , which we copy from asecond edition of the Times :—

" The initiation of the Chamber, and of theTribunal of Commerce of Bordeau x, which 1have accepted eagerly, give me the opportunityof thanking your great city for its cordial recep-tion , and its magnificent hospitality, and I amhappy at the close of my journey to convey toyou the impressions it has left with me." Theobject of my journey, you know, was to becomeacquainted with our fair provinces of the south—to stud y their wants , and it has produced amore important result—(applause.)

" In fact , I say it wiih a frankness not mixedwith pride nor false modesty, never had a peo-ple testified in a manner more direct , more spon-tanec us, more unanimous , the desire of gettingrid of anxiety about the future by consolidatingin the same hand a power which has all its sym-pathies—(app lause.) It is because they nowknow the deceitful hopes which cajoled , ond thedangers which menaced them. They know thatin 1852 society was near its ruin , and that eachparty consoled itsel f before hand with the un i-versal shi pwreck—(cries of Vive I'Empereur .)Disabused of these absurd theories, the peoplehave acquired the ' conviction for thosepretended reformers were onl y dreamers , forthere was always a disproportion , an inconsis-tency, between their means and the promisedresults.

" Now, the nation surrounds me with itssympathies because I am not of the family ofideologues. In order to do the country goodthere is no need to apply now systems, but toimpart above all confidence in the present andsecurity in the future. It is for these reasonsFrance seems to return to the Empire—(yes ,yes 1 bravo ! vive I 'Empereur !) There is oneobjection to which I wonM wish to reply. Cer-tain minds seem to fear war , and certain personssay " The Empire is war !" but I s;iy the Em-pire is peace !—(sensation)—for France desiresit , and when France is satisfied tho world istranquil—(bravos !)

" Glory may well be left as an inheritance ,but war cannoU Have the Princes who arejustly proud as being the descendants of LouisXIV. recommended his wars ? War is not madefor mere pleasure, it is made by necessity. Andif at this epoch of transition , when on all sides,and side by side so many elements of prosperityare found so many causes of death , it can besaid with truth—Wo ! wo ! to him who thefirst should give the signal of the collision ,whose consequences would bo incalculable—(sensation).

" I admit that like the Emperor I have manyconquests to mftke. I wish, like him , for theconquest of the conciliation of .dissentient par-ties , and to bring back into the grand popularstream the hostile parts , which must be lostwithout advantage to any one—(app lause.) Iwish to win over to religion , to morality, to com-fort,, thai P81* stM numerous, of the populationwhich , in the centre of the most fertile land inthe world , can scarcely enj oy the produce ofprimary necessity.

" We have immense and uncultivated landsto reclaim , roads to open , ports to dig, rivers torender navigable, canals to finish , our railroadsto complete ; we have, opposite to Marseilles ,a vast kingdom to assimilate to France ; wehave all our great ports of the west lo bringnear the American continent by the rapidityof the communications which are still wantingto us ; we hove, in fact , ruins to build up every-where, false Deities to pull down , truths to ren-der triumphant—(prolonged applause.)—It is inthis manner I understand the word Emp ire—ifthe Empire be re-established—(cries of ViceI'Empereur.") Such are the conquests I medi-tate, and you all who surround me, who wish asI do the good of your country, you are mysoldiers!"—(" Yes ! Yes!" continued applause.)

The following telegraphic despatch has beenreceived :—

" CIIALAIS . ONE IN THE AFTERNOON .—HisHighness has just arrived at Chalais ; he wasreceived at tho station by the Prefect of theCharente , the Deputies , and the Council-General.All the populations of the nei ghbouring cantonshad assembled to salute the Prince. On hispassage only one cry, a thousand limes repeated ,was heard , that of " Vive /'Empreur /' "

" ANGOULEME . THREE IN THE A FTERNOON .—His Highness has made a triumphal entry intoAngouleme. The whole way from Bordeauxwas an ovation. It is impossible to describethe enthusiasm of the populations. The inha -bitants of the country districts , to the numberof more than 80,000, pressed on the line of thecortege, which was greeted with the most ardentacclamations. At the door of the Cathedral theBishop, at the head of his clergy, felicitated thePrince, who replied with the greatest kindness.The Prince's health is excellent.'*

The President has sent 12 magnificent armchairs, from the manufactory of Benuvais , tothe Cathedral of Bordeaux ; and he has given5.000f. for repairs to the belfry . &c., of theNotre Dame de Verdelais, near that city. Hehas also promised a magnificent painting to theChurch of Saint Geronce, at Bourg.

The Journal du Pay de Dome says it appearscertain that the arrests made in the departmentof the Haute Loire are connected with the plotdiscovered at Marseilles. It is said that lettersof a most compromising character have beendiscovered which had been exchanged betweenthe two parties whose arrest has been men-tlonprl. '

The clergy of Notre Dame at Douai conveyedpublicl y a few days ago the Holy Sacrament toa dying person. This was the first time thishad been done since 1830. As it passed alongevery mark of respect was paid to it by thepeople. In the Grand Place the soldiers of theguard-house turned out and knelt down. .Thepriest gave them his blessing, and two of the menaccompanied him.

ITALY.Letters from Rome of the 30th ult., state

that on Michaelmas-day the Pope proce ededfrom the Vatican to the church of St. Michael ,where he assisted at Divine Service. He wasreceived there by the Cardinals Tosti and Roberti ,and by General Gemeati , Commander-in-Chiefof the French ftrmy . Having heard mass , hisHoliness ascended the gallery of tho churchlooking on the Tiber. He gave his benedictionto the assembled multitude amidst the firing ofcannon from the shipping in die river .

The Neapolitan government has added to therigour of its passport system, since the 1st ofOctober , in the case of British and other travel-lers wishing to proceed southwards from Home.The Right Honourable Mr. Nichol was refusedthe visa to his passport by the Neapolitan mi-nister a week a.no , because the passport , a Fo-reign Office one, had not been signed by theNeapolitan ambassador in London. The ap-plicant had , therefore , to get a new passportfrom Mr. Freeborn , with which he wa? allowedto proceed to Naples.

To A dvertia era

"We have been favoured with the followingGovernment Return from our Local Distributorof Stamps, by which our readers and advertisirgfriends will perceive how steadily the Hews isadvancing :— >••Advertisement Duty Paid by the Waterford

Papers for the last Sixteen Months tMail. NEWS, . Chronicle.

1801— £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d.January...G 14 0 4 11 0 3 Q 0February. .5 8 0 3 4 0;...';....! 10 0March ....0 12 0 3 8 OiV 3 G 0April. . . .7 8 0 3 11 01 2 10 0May 7 7 0 5 5 0'. 2 13 0.Tuno 5 1 0 '3 13 0 2 1 0July 5 11 0 3 2 0 2 5 0August...5 9 0 2 8 0 2 4 0Sept 5 S 0 2 4 0 1 17 0October.. . G 10 0 4 2 0 3 1 0Novcmber 7 18 0 4 1 0 2 it 0December 5 13 0 3 15 0.. 3 7 0

1852—January..0 7 0 3 13 0 3 5 0February 4 5 0 2 17 0 1 1 8 0March . .7 2 0 4 8 0 1 16 0April . . . .5 11 0 0 5 0 2 14 0

Total 98 4 0 59 7 0 . . . . 40 8 0

NUMBER OF ADVERTISEMENTS.News (once a week.).. .. 1187CHRONICLE (once a week.) .. 808M AIL (twice a week.) 1964

" THE N EWS" is taken in all the News-Kooms andPrinci pal Hotels in this and neighboring counties.—Also at the Reform Club and Imperial Hotel , Dublin.At Peel's Coffee-House. London ;

at the .leading

Newa-Rooms in the three kingdoms J/ an/d by our NewsA gents in London , Dublin , Liverpool , Puris, and NewYork , &c. ice.

" THE NEWS" is Published at tbo General PrintingPublishing, Bookbinding, Machine-Ruling, Lcnding-Library, and Wholesale Stationery Establishment,

Ko. 40, King Street , opposite the Provincial Bank .Every Friday Evening, in timo for the Mail.*.

B3JT All communications, &p. to be addressed toCORNELIUS R EDMOND , at the oflicc aforesaid

PARTICULAR NOTICES.J313 Advertisement!! must \>o sent to this Office on Friday

Morning at furlhest. If not, they will be too late for thegreater part of our Country Kdition.

¥Jf* Unair.hcntiealeil or un-postpaid communications ,will uot IJSntfemteri to. ">

DUBLIN STOCK EXCHANGE— WEDXESDA T.GOVERNMENT FUNDS.

3 per Cent. Consols 99Jfl] per Cent. Stock Shut 103 j \Ditto for Account 13th Oct J02J

MISCELLANEOUS.Hibernian Bank 32National Bank 19}Mining Company of Ireland (for account) 10 lnjDublin Consumers'Gas 83 x d

RAILWAYS.Dublin and Droghedn clDublin and Urog lioilii (New Slirs. Thirds) 1?.}Great Southern and Western (fora^count) 47JIrish South ami Eastern (lor account) 0Killarncy J unction <U

" nr. JUST, A M D FE .» H NOT."'

FRIDAY. OCTOBER I OTII , 1852.

THE " WATERFORD MAIL" AND THEDOG FIGHT!—A NEW SET OFF AGAINSTAN OLD NUISANCE.

Oua cot emporary the Mail is exceeding itself ,and running far a-head all its near relations of thesame ilk , in it& recent attacks on the people ofthis country generall y, and the Catholic Clergyin particular. The greater part of its selectionsare of that character , and about three-fourths ofits late articles have been manufactured out of simi-lar material. Well , what lmve we to say to this ,if it keep anything at all within the bounds of fairdiscussion. But it does no such thing—for in-stancej whilst denouncing as wo da—and asthe Catholic Clergy have always heen doing—thevery disgraceful and barbarous system of dogfighting, the Mail most indecentl y and most un-becoming ly, we say> " takes a fling at the characterof our venerated Bishop, the Clergy. 'the Brothersof Mount Sion School. &c.

This is the first time in our lives that we haveever heard the getting up of a dog fight attributedto the heads of religion—to men who have ex-pended countless hours of their time—to men whohave laboured , and are still labouring incessantl y,to prevent such scenes. If the Prop hets andSabbath-preservers of the Mail had not beenasleep on their post , or dozing in their rostrums,why did they not forewarn the authorities of thisdog fight ? Wh y did they not like men—or likeapostles—or like ministers of the Gospel , whodread a breach of GOD'S holy day—go out , withbook in hand , and read GOD'S hol y " word" forthese un-hol y and misguided people ? Did theyeven apprise the Police of the circumstance ?No, they did not ; but when it is over—" like thefair of Ath y"—they make accusations againstmnn who know no more about the occurrencethan those who live in America.

Ah ! but we know the drift of tins croakingand fury, and special pleading—these paltryefforts to cast ridicule on the Catholic Clergy,who , after all , desp ise their tricks ; and who, fromthe truthfulness of their acts, and puri ty of theirlives , are proof against such feeble but spleneticassaults. " The Church Estab lishment" is atthe bottom of all: this— " it is," as the Freemansays, " doomed soon to perish , and it is no wonderthat fat sinecurists should tremble for the fate ofthe loaves and fishes ." Public opinion , whenproperly gathered , will batter it to pieces ; and theparsonic gentlemen of .the Mail may believe us(if they like) that the d.iy is fast approachingwhen a better argument than a dog fight will beincumbent to show the utility of a bloated alienChurch in Ireland. The Church itself may live ;but the revenues must die ; they cannot last. Adog fight is only a subject for a day, or a week,at most ; but the bloated Establishment is a pro-lific subject , whose life is a shame, and whoseexistence will continue a degradation so long asit derives its nutriment from the sweat, and flesh ,and bones of a people who own it not ; and whoknow it , only to despise it.

THE ESTABLISHED CIIUKCU

Here is a pretty state of things which we copyfrom the Kilkenny Journal :—

Coming nearer home, let us see how church property isdealt with in Kilkenny. We take a few extracts fromthe table of references on beneflcea in Mr. SergeantSlice's book on the Irish Church. Of tho vicarage ofAfchadoe we find that the Rev Thomas Harpur is patron ;that the Church Revenue from Glebe, Rent Charge, &c,is £475 ; cost of Glcl>o House £1,338 ; statute acres ofGlebe, £'229 ; cost of Protestant Parish Ckurches,£401 ; number of Protestants in benefice, 55G ;number of Catholics in benefice, 5,787. Adding thoseitems together we can easily find out the immense costthat the support of the Established Church is in thisvery County. And the men who presume to have juris-diction over 5,787 Catholics find tbemselve with the mi-sorablo congregation of 550, for the cure of whoso soulethey are paid BO enormously. In tho Vicarago of Ag-navoe the coat of spiritual consolation for each Pro-testant is considerably more than £1 ft bead; and if wetake into account the cost of Globe-houses and ParishChurches, and apportion it regularly for any one yearover the whole Protestant congregation of that Vicaragethe expense would not bo £1 , but near to JE6 for the sal-vation of each Protestant soul. '

SALE OF DUCKSPOOL PROPERTY INDUNGARVAN.

(FROM OUR DUNG ART AN CORRESPONDENT.)There has been a large number of gentlemen at

this sale, from Dublin, Waterford, Tipperary, &c.The bidding was carried on very spiritedly, and theproperty was; divided into ten lots, to meet the con-venience of purchasers, which was most efficientlyand ably conducted by Andrew Brennan, Auc-tioneer.

Lot I.—Bantiglasses, containing I7a. lr. 25p.,was divided! into 4 lots, at the annual rent of£1 9s. 7d. each lot, and a lease of lives, renewablefor ever, at6d.,.the tithe rent charge being 17s. 8d.,and vicarial 8s. lOd. John Bagge Hearn, Esq., pur-chaser, £100., Lot 2.—Knocknasala and Loughanunna , contain-

ing 22a. lr. 2p., producing an annual rent of£27 3s. lOd. Purchaser, Edward Orme, Esq., for£525., the tithe rent charge of this lot being£1 17s. 8d., vicarial 18s. lOd.

Lot 3. Parts of the lands of Abbeyside, 8a. 3r. lp,,producing an annual rent of £46 12s. 5d. Baker, Esq.,. Dublin; purchaser for £520., the titherent charge £1 11s. 8d\, vicarial 15s. lOd.

Lot 4.—Skehacrine, containing 16r. 2a. 37p., pro-ducing an annual rent of £35 GH. 10d., the titherent charge being £2 2s. 6d., vicarial £1 Is. 3d.Purchaser, Mr. J. Doyle, for the sum of £475.

Lot 5.—-Skehenard, containing 29a. 2r. 12p., pro-ducing an annual rent of £34 13s. 10d., the titherent charge £2 2s. 6d., vicarial £1 3s. 3d. Pur-chaser of this lot, Thomas Foley, Esq., £660.

Lot 6.—Clonmore, containing 17a. Or. 34p., pro-ducing £30 yearly rent. Surgeon Anthony was thepurchaser of this lot , £560.

Lot 7.—Gortecn , containing 30a. 3. 4p., producingan annual rent of £52 10J. 2d. Baker, Esq.,Dublin , was the purchaser of this lot for the sum of£750.

Lot 8. (1)—Ballymullalas, containing 84a. Or. 10p.,producing an annual rent of £46 7s. lOd. Tho-mas Foley, Esq., purchaser, £750.

Lot 9. (1)—Ballymullalaa, (West) , containing115a 3r. 30JK , producing an annual rent of £92 18s 4d.

Baker, l'.sq., Dublin , was purchaser, £1,230.Lot 10.—Duckspool , nnd a part of Tottrnmore,

containing 140a. 2r. 8p., producing an annual rentof £239 16s., and subject to a lease and chief rents,£-1.) 8-i. (id., leaving a profit vent of £194 7s. 6d.Patrick Codv, Esq., purchaser of this lot, for thestun of £2,230. This lot indemnifies lots 1, 2, 3, 4,5, 6 and 7.

(1) This mark signifies that those lots are held infee simple.

CALIFORNIA NEAR DUNGARVAN

On Tuesday last there wore sonic men diggingpotatoes for a poor widow of the name of Airs.O'Brien , Abbeyside, Dungarvan , and about twelveo'clock, some of them dug up small round things,resembling large size buttons , (as they have stated)passing no further thoughts on them. In the courseof some time the widow came into the garden topick the potatoes, and meeting with some of thosesupposed buttons, she took up one or two of them ,cleansed them quite free from dirt, and found theyappeared like sovereigns ; she then called one of themen who could read the inscri ption , and he said theywere gold coins of the value of about 20s. She thencame into town and sold them for 40s., and on herreturn found severa l more, with two doubloons , tothe value of £3 10s. The labourers found some ofthem ; they were coins of the reign of George 2ndand William 3rd. The doubloons were Spanishcoins. As soon as the people heard the facts of thecase, large numbers assembled on the ground , seek-ing for the precious metal , but were soon put tofli ght by the police , who are taking care of the pro-perty, and will continue there for some time.—Ibid.

PROSPERITY OF THE UNITED STATES.

We copy the following from the " Boston DailyJournal" :—

Crowded Streets.—Our streets have never been socrowded , week in and week out , as during the pre-sent season. All the princi pal thoroughfares appearto be almost constantly filled with people and vehi-cles. Carriages ond drays are frequently broughtto a dead halt , and at times many of our public ave-nues are almost impassable. These things, thoughscarcely noticed by our citizens, do not fail to at-tract the attention of strangers. They are amongthe signs of the increasing population, business andgrowth of the metropolis .

Increase of Chelsea.—There has never been somuch building in any one year in Chelsea , as at thepresent time; nor was that town ever in a more flou-rishing condition. They are now extending theirimprovements over towards North Chelsea and Mai-den , and it will not be long before all the interveningspaces will be covered with houses and factories,gardens and cottages, stores and workshops.' Severalnew streets have been laid out during the past sum-mer ; they are to be followed by others, which welearn , are to be built, in ample season for the newlines of omnibuses and railroad cars now about beingestnblisbpd in this section of tho environs of Boston.

[Contrast this with the condition of our Irishtowns and Cities which appear, on the whole, to beover-built.l

NATIONAL CATTLE SHOW INWATERFORD.

We are very happy to learn from his Worshi pthe Mayor , that Waterford has beon decided on asthe host and most fittin g place for holding theNational Cattle Show for the year 1853. This isanother favourable sign of the prosperity ofWaterford.

TRAMORE EMBANKMENTWe learn that on Tuesday an English Company

commenced operations on a portion of this strandwith the view of reclaiming it. A similar straudat the harbour of Wexford , some time since re-claimed , is no w considered the best and mostfertile land in the whole county.

THE BOSJISMENSMade their appearacce in the Town Hall on Tues-day evening before a respectable audience. Theyare miserable specimens of humanity, whose ap-pearance may be interesting to those who havebeenreading of—but who have never seen— " the wildmen of the woods." The bush though , and nott'ie woods , it appears , is their ncitive domicile ;and , assuming this to be the fact , we cannotwonder that they have been so negli gent abouttheir wardrobe and their toilet !

IMPORTANT TO FARMERS" At a meeting of the Iverk Farming Society,

held at Piltown on the twelfth instant , the follow-ing were appointed a committee to collect infor-mation with respect to fairs, markets , &c, in orderto assist as far as possible the investi gations ofthe Government Commissioners , viz. :— J. H.Jories, Esq., Mulinabro ; H. W. Briscoe, Esq.,Tinvane ; T. Lawlor, Esq., Cregg House ;Thomas Elliott , Esq., Rathcurb y ; W. 0. Bris-coe, Esq.,, Garnanea ; and Samuel Jones, Esq.,Glenraore. All persons having inforraat iontoafford will do well to communicate with these gen-tlemen. "

WATERFORD COUNTY JAIL

The County Jail was inspected on the 7th instantby J. C. Connellan, Esq., Inspector-General , whomade the following note in the visitor 's book : —

" I have great pleasure in recording niy^ satisfac-

tion with the management of this iail , in which everyeffort seems to be made compatible with the want ofdue accommodation.

(Signed)" J. C. CONNELLAN,

" Inspector-General."

To the Editor of the Waterftrd News

EARLY CLOSING ASSOCIATION.Ludgate HU1, 14th :bclober, 1852.

Dear Sir,—I ani desired by the Board of Manage-ment of thi? Society to request that you will be soobliging as to insert the annexed letter on ." emigrat-tion and the home labor market," or a portion thereof,in your influential Journal ; and you would greatlyin create the favor by kindly drawing attention tothat- communication, should it comport with yourviews to do so.

In the event of your inserting the letter, we shouldbe much obliged by your giving instructions for acopy.• With many thanks for valuable past services,

I have the honor to remain, "Dear Sir,Yours greatly obliged and obediently,

JOHN LILWALL, Secretary.

EMIGRATION AND THE HOME LABOURMARKET.

" Can ye not discern the signs of the times.'1TO THE SHOPKEEPERS OF GREAT BRITAIN.

Gentlemen,—In advocating a curtailment of thelong hours of business, I have ever done so underthe conviction that such curtailment would greatlybenefit "you" as well as your assistants. Had itbeen otherwise, that is, had early closing involved" injustice" to employers, I should not have beenfound identified with that movement ; for, obviously,that were a terribly false, spurious philanthropy,which would seek to advance one section of societyat the expense of another.

Actuated by these views and feelings, I amprompted respectfully to draw your attention to the"great fact" of the present time—I refer to the cir-cumstance of so many thousands of persons leavingus every month for a foreign land. By means ofthis movement, the United Kingdom is being drainedof her population. Over-peopled as the country wasuntil recently, no doubt, had the movement beenrestricted within certain limits, it would have proveda blessing, making it better both for those who emi-grated, and for those who remained at home. Suchlimits, however, judging f.tm present appearances,will shortly be exceeded, and that to a serious ex-tent. And, not only is there a prospect of ourlosing a far greater number of persons of " all"classes than can be spared, but by it Great Britainis being deprived of the most enterprising, intelli-gent, and heroic of her sons; of the very nerves andsinews of her people.

Already, at its very threshold , as it were, the in-fluence of the movement is sensibly full. Labourers,for instance, were so scarce during the present sum-mer, that in some cases, money not being able tocommand enow of able-bodied men for the purposesof the harvest, recourse was obliged to be had topoor worn-out paupers, and even to soldiers. And itwas only the other day that the " Times" newspaper,in a leading article, referred to an individual eminentin the Money Market, as complaining that he had topay a £100 per year for clerks actuall y inferior tothose whom he had previously secured for £60. Noris the inconi'enience arising from the growing scarcityof liana's confined to the field and the counting-house,out is largely shared by many of the metropolitanshopkeepers. I write from personal knowled ge whenI state that in the case of several of our first-class re-tail establishments, considerable difficulty is beingexperienced in keeping M M the necessary s'taft" of effi-cient assistants. And if such ba the case "now,"what think you will it be when those who have goneabroad come to write to th eir relatives and friendswhom they have left behind '! Although no alarmist ,I yet cannot but view the ultimate result as appallingto contemplate. I quite believe, however, that" some" young men who emigrate, from one causeor another, will suffer disappointment; but dependupon it that if Australia does not meet their expecta-tions—with a "handbook for emigrants," and a fewpounds of their hard earnings in their possession,—they will not readily return home. The same spiritof enterprise, the same laudable desire to improvetheir condition , which prompted them to qui t theirnative land , will not fail also to prompt them to trytheir fortune, in America or some other portion ofthe globe, which to them might seem more attractivethan that from which they were originally " driven "—in a host of instances most reluctantl y."

The practical questions suggested by these consi-derations for solution , ere it be too late, is, how isthis "fever," as it is designated , to be assuaged ?It is clear that nothing which coul d be done woul dwholly subdue it , were such even desirable. Butthe extent to which it will for the future rage willmuch depend upon circumstances. As long as four-teen and fifteen hours of drudgery are imposed onthe underpaid grocer 's assistant,' nnd the still worseremunerated assistant cliemist ; as long as the assist-ant draper is (which is still the case in innumerableinstances) denied the opportunity for improvementand needful recreation enjoyed by 'the mechanic nndthe artizan ; as long, in fact, as young men of "any "branch of trade are continued the serfs of an oppres-sive, grinding system—of u system which exactsfrom them far more labour daily than is imposed onthe felons at the hulks, or than the very beasts ofburden are required to undergo ; as long as this cruelsystem is permitted to remain thus rampant , " solong, " rest assured, young men will be found wrest-ing themselves from its clutches, and in shoals leavingtheir native shores. On the other hand, were theperiod of employment properly reduced (say to 12hours per diem, including the time occupied bymeals,) one of the great, indeed " the" great griev-ance now endured by shop assistants, would be re-moved, and, as a natural consequence, contratamongst them would , to a large extent, be diffused.

I would suggest, therefore, with much deference,that the large and highly influential section of em-ployers throughout tho length and breadth of theland , who are favourable to early closing, shouldforthwith meet in their respective districts, so as toeffectuate tins much to he desired reform ; and Iwould venture to express my earnest hope, that theywill not allow their efforts to be frustrated by anywant of compliance with which they might be metby that "small minority" of unenviable men towhose previous selfish , unchristian opposition , theawful sacrifice of life, and other evils entailed by thelate-hour system, are mainly to be attributed , andfor which they will hereafter be required to renderan account. Depend upon it , these persons willsoon be reduced to the alternative of capitulating, orof transacting the whole of their business " them-selves ;" and I feel sure that in the meantime theright-thinking part of the public will see that thoseshop keepers who close early are more than protectedfrom the temporary pecuniary loss which their con-scientious conduct might otherwise entail upon them.

I have the honour to remain , gentlemen , yoursvery respectfully,JOHN LILWALL,

Secretary of the ilvirl v Closing AssociationOffices , 32, Ludgate-Iiill,'October 14.

To the Editor of tbe Watcrford News

THE POLICE OF CARRICK-ON-SUIR.Sir,—We have in this town a stipendiary magis-trate, a chief of police, a head constable, and twoconstabulary barracks, one at either side of the river.\V ith all this force it is impossible to walk the streetseven during the day, without having our pocketspicked. Thieves, young and old, assemble everytwo or three hours, at the Cross, to divide the spoilwhile a fine fat peeler looks on with apparent indiffe-rence, quite heedless of the « petty larceny act," or" vagrant act." . ' 'Should these Blight-of-hand companies get up asham fight to collect a crowd, no policeman can beseen there to bring the combatants to bridewell. Theonly places our gallant constabulary attend regularlyare the suburbs of the town where they amuse them-selves "sending" honest females from the paths of

virtnp. r

Nearly all our street prostitutes have been firstruined by the police. There are three of the force'• protecting" a Protestant Parson, at Mothil, since48, and they have bastardized that locality so muchthat they were denounced from the altar of the parishlast Sunday week, by the Catholic Curate the Rev.Mr. Fogarty. What does Colonel M'Gregor think ofthis immoral conduct?

VERITAS.

AVnterford butter holds its place in the market. AtLiverpool, on Friday, the prices were 80s. to 82s.

Waterford Quarter Session— Wednesday

IContlnued from f irst Page.]The following jury .was sworn :—John Ho»re,iaMio Veech, James Ward, M Gsale,

Win Kearney, James Cuddy, Philip Grant, C Duno, MFarrelL James Nolan, John O'Shea, David Hoare.

. ANOTHSB CHANCE.Thomas Sullivan (otherwise " ef tmce ") was

indicted for having on the 28th Sept. stolen onegallon of oil and some lead , which he obtainedfrom the store of Mr. Purcell , as messenger forthe Waterford union.

.The Barrister having waited for some time,told the prisoner that he escaped transpor-tation owing to tho absence of a witness fromTipperary, where he had been twice convicted , itbeing rendered necessary by a late.act to havetwo previous conviciions in order to pass sen-tence of transportation for the third offence.

A LEGAL DIALOOXIE.

On this subject the following dialogue lookplace :— ' :¦ . . , . . „ .

With reference to the production of a wit-ness the identity of the-, prisoner, as theperson who had been previously twiceconvicted the Assistant Barrister observed , thathe deemed it most unfair to keep the prisonern torture. A lengthened argument upon the

construction of the law of the case ensuedbetween the crown prosecutor and his Worship,the substance of which we subjoin.

His Worshi p observed , that , in cases oflarceny no person could be transported , unlesstwo previous certified convictions were produced .

Mr. Baj tbn—I wouUL respectfully draw yourworship's 'attention to the act of parliament .

Assistant Barrister—I care for no act of par-liament , until the legislature specially direct meto sign one certificnte 1 shall exercise my ow;idiscretion in refusing to do so.

Mi. Barron—But your worshi p—Assistant B .inister—Mr. Barron I beg your

pardon—1st me speak—the act specifically pro-vides that t i o certificates of previous convictionsare indispensable in larceny cases to transporta -tion for the third—here you produce, it is true ,two certificates ; but you have not your witnessin attendance to prove the identity of the partyaccused ; and therefore I will not sign the certi~fieale of the second conviction , nor (he certifica teof the f irst. The law affirms that two certUficates must be sigmil by the Assistant Barristerto ju stify a sentence—here, is but one certificateproduced , which I mi ght authenticate , but I willnot act upon it. I never will.si gn Jamas Besso-nett to a singln certificate ; and unti l JamesBessonett is dire cted by the legislature to do so,James Bessonett's name shal l never be attachedto what he cannot sanction. I am, perhaps aman of stunted understandin g, and of poor con-science , but stunted as may be my understandingand impoverished my conscience, I shall everexercise both to the best of my humble ability,and I peremptoril y refuse affixing my name toone certificate , two certificates being required, oneis here—the other is not. Your witness is notforthcoming to prove i lentity ^ Identification ofthe party impeached , in the second instance ofciime and conviction , is, in my opinion , abso-lutel y demanded by ths law ; and until I am ofan opposite opinion , James Bessonett's nameshall not be signed to any certificate when thereis no identification. 1 well know that clerksof the peace are not paid , but that is no concernof mine. It is a matter which lies entirel ybetween Mr. Barron and Mr . Dennehy—whereis Mr. Den-ieh y ?

Mr. Denneh y, your worshi p, when a certi-ficate is demanded of ire , who is to pay ?

Barrister—I shall not enter into that question ;I have alread y said , that you are underpaid ; butJames Bessonett will not pay Gs. 8d. to MrBarron or to Mr. Dunneh y.

Mr. Dennehy—your worshi p is right.Assistant Banister—I think so, (a laugh).Assistant Barrister—gentlemen once a gain

I say that the Clerk of the 1'cace is not sufficientlypaid ; but the fault lies not with me, and I re-iterate my determination not to sign m y nameto one c2ilifir! ateto produce a sentence of tr ans-portatiou. There must be two—one onl y isbefore me, the ssrond is tenderad ; but I willnot sign it , and never will , in any similar case,when the identif ynj; party is not present toprove that the person 'accused is the person certi-fied—I will not sign it , gentlemen ; and let thatend it.

Sentence—Six months ' imprisonment .Prisoner—Thank your worshi p, and I'm very

much obliged to you all , gentlemen.Tim Mullins was sentenced to six months

imprisonment for stealing a coat from EdwardDorney, in Stephen-street.

Eliza Fitzgerald was sentenced to 2 monlh k *imprisonment for stealing a muffler from MrsW. Kdlv , Quay .

COUNTY COURT.On yesterday twenty larceny cased were dis-

posed of in this court.To-day his Worshi p is engage:! in the hearing

of Civil Bills, of which there are 230. Thereare seven ejectment cases to be tried , and two.Insolvent cases.

HARBOUR COMMISSIONERS

The meeting of the Harbour Board, held on Wed-nesday, was attended by Messrs. Barnes (in thechair) Thompson , Davis, Ardagh, Reid, Phelan,Nevins.Application was made by Mr. Albert White, for

£287, balance due of £887, cost of buildin^ thepilot cutter, " Falcon."

A letter was also read from Mr. White, expressinghis satisfaction at the manner in which the contractwas brought to a close—his thanks for the prompt-ness with which the various instalments had been 'paid, and his conviction that tbe cutter, as regatds.'the stability of her construction, the convenience of^her fittings , and her general efficiency, would prove "creditable to the Waterford dock-yard, and mostuseful to the pilotage of the harbour.

A resolution was passed ordering payment of the-.'£287, provided the Pilot Committee were satisfiedthe contract was completed. ;

The Secretary suggested that, as the cutter wasnow ready for sea, the Committee and the Boardgenerally could make an experimental trip down theriver and to sea, and thus satisfy themselves uponthe subject. He was authorised to say Mr. Whitewould give all facility, and had requested to get afew days notice of the time appointed. :

It was then agreed the Commissioners would take-the trip, on Thursday, the 21st instant.

The Board then proceeded to open tenders for the-building of an iron hulk. The following tenders, teain number, were read in order of arrival :

l._Wm. Simons & Co., Glasgow, ... £17002.—Denny & Rankin, Dumbarton, ... 16903.—Neath Abby Company. ... 14304.—Taylor & Co., Birkenhead ... 1635 ¦'5-—Gnnden & Co., Drogheda. ... 1950 M'6.—Frederick Barrington, Ririgsend, 1300 ¦:; -^ ^7.—H. Goodfellow, Dublin, a wooden hulk, 250v- •':8.—Reidy & Co., Cork, ... 1040 ' ,., • VNeptune Foundry, Waterford, ... 950 - , >Albert White, Waterford, ... U4O . - . ;/*The Neptune Foundry tender was accepted oh -?icondition that the hulk be completed within -afci- jmonths. • "¦¦&&A pension of 13s. Cd. per month was granted to.#/-

the widow of Maurice Lyons, pilot. ¦¦•&$%

The Board then broke up. ' , / (••*$[We are glad to observe that Waterford is not obly^lable to compete, but to , beat so many ' towj» r2^$eight in number—in iron ship building."! Wtf}i1M*|ij§jyou now eight gentlemen ? ] . ' v ' - }-l3%Mff i

Page 3: Poor Laws Public Notices Royal Insurancessnap.waterfordcoco.ie/collections/enewspapers/WNS/... · Poor Laws KILMACTHOMAS UNION. TUIE Board of Guardians of the above Union JL will,

BOARD OF Gl'ARDLttS-Ycsierdnj

The usual weekl y meeting of the guardians washeld on yesterday.

M ICHAEL DOBBTN , Esq., Mayor, iu the Chair.Also present—William .Morris, C. Cotton , Wm.

Woekes, J. Moore, Michael Tracey, Capt. Newport ,Thomas Dillon , R. Hunt , T. C. Spencer , D. Kell y,T. O'Reill y, 1'. Kavanagh, T. lilliott , 1$. Grant , 11.(.'rant , J. I)\vvei\ T. Mcaghev , M.I1., V. WMtncv ,J.Slu'ii , .1. Delaliunty, A. Cadog.'m , J, Murphy, J .A mL'ison, Capt. Anthony, J. Carroll , S. Woods, H.l'lii'lan , Col. Snow, X. A. Power, Charles Newport , W.Hallv. M. Murphy, T. MenehiTry, W. Christinas ,T. 1'. Dt-vereuw I\ M'Ouire , J. Lnlcu-, .1. KeeJI'c,J. Nowlan , J. 11. J IV.IPS, .1. l»ogan , Ahk'iniun IMiulau ,])r. Mai-kesy , Richard Cooko.

A letter was read from Mr. Hunt , clerk of Kil-inacthiMnas union requiring to know what sum wasline lo Wati 'rfiml union , hy his union .'

Aisu llie fullowiiiir, with other doeiunenis :—roov Law Commission Oflice ,

Dublin , Octubur !).Sir. — I am directed by t lic Commissicinors for the

relic/ of the 1 on- in ircUml , to request that you willI'unii .-li from the •'Treasurers Loans' nejoyment Ac-wimit 1' umler t ';o Irttli Vic:, cap. 15 , sec. ~> , an abstractshewing the total lod iineats in:iele with the treasurerj'rior to and during llie ;iti-iod fiom tlie VSth August ,18V.!, incUiVive, in rc-'pi-ui ol'iiates made on an}' e'.ectu-ml ilhisimis ot the union , situc llie day fixed for thejci VIM rut ci f tiic rivjnd instalment of the Annuities enthe s.-veml Klctin-.il eUvi-imH ; the amount reservedol'sueh lo,l i>niunt. J and [iLiced to the credit of the Loansliepiymetit Accuuut ; o:i iiexouut ief the seroail instal-ment of the aimuitie.-, anil the accounts thereof {ui 1 overintu the Liiuik of Ireland to that account.

Tlie particu'iii r.-i i-ol.e!i:i ~ to the first instalment of theAnnuities to be exclmk-d IVo m this return.

Tin (Jumuiissiuiiers desire that you wil l give notice tothe Treasurer oi tiie Luioi ; of the dates on which any:ivw rates may be. 111 :1 1-.-, ;;i-.

A .M OORG , Secretary.

A\aierAi rd . October G, 180-2.•Ocontlemen. —1 I.-ail ihe honor to leoeive your eomsuu-

riioition , dated ;"»lli iusf , Imad'uig the resolution of tlioinmi'l uf (.uKir.li.uis ivsjnrtiu;; my sUitenuiit , reiativc10 the rejection tf l' my tender lor Indian t orn , and tlieacceptance ul" <'ae oi" ntair!y similar (juality :vt ft dispro-jo itionatc hi gher 111 te. hi rej>l y i I K:;; to suite that I:i Ihere to iny i.'ri ;/n:al statc'utnt. and shoiill you deemthe matter of suilwicut iiuyiortaucc I am prc\v\vol tosubstantiate it . A!:o that the price iu the market at thetime (and :< present j of liot 'i samples , was A"? !s 4 1JUT ton. J»y piu|iorf:tl 01 t / h-j I onismere I a Miliici 'j ntmargin to cover tlie carriage to the house, an I th-.1 chance•J :' an advance 10;- the 3 iiumthj ; but that at .£S Is fre,manother party was accepted. It may not be oat of pl.iooto mention that their conduct on the occasion in (juestinniiai had the effect of deterdu^ uiliei\s in tfi-e (rale fromsending in tenders for the supply of me.d a.id fiour ,althoug h twice adveriij c l fjr since, and thi-y are now<i!i |i . cd to purchase iu the market as required—a prao-iice ojjfn to serious ol«jec !ioiis in any ptiMio l.oJ y.

I have ie,The IVor Law CuixmisMJiicra J OHN Pon'iia.

A smvnv ix Tin-: noAit n IIUCM ,Mr. Ca loL-a-.i denied the last nssoriion in Mr.

I'ower '.s k'tti r, wi ih regard to contravtors refusing totender.

Mr. Klliotl raid I:'1 h«:l l>eon tol d that merchantswoi'.Id nut contract (hear. !n ;ir).

Mr. Spuieti-—M r. Whitti was liadlv treated:iiear.)

[Ar this stiiiro <;( the proceedings there was a good<!i ;:l uf noise and nlh-.T interruplii ins. j

Capi.- i iu Noivpnrt—We can 't tiu .-.nythinc; whilepeo}de are.' j(oin<r alimi! in this way : this ir.tt.Tru pt 'oiishould he put down.

Mr. Cadoj .m—Veil ta '.k more than any ten menYoursel f (laug hter;.

Captain Newport— I don 't mind what \w says ;let the Commissioners send their inspector , and in-vesti gate the matter , if ihev like (hear. )

Mr. Cadoj ian—(ilium lmu- h noise)—li they thinkit worth their while let them send their inspector down ,when everything can be proved on oath.

Mr. O'lieill y '(to Chairman)—It is heeter that you ,sir. should leave the chair , a:id that Mr. Cado^ansliAtild take it , (hear , hoar, and murli intemiption l .

Captain Newport—1 don 't undevtand the merits ofthe ca-v M - C IMI beginning to the end (confuMon).

The Chairniiti! said the princi pal business th? hoardhad now to consider was, how were they to cet breadfor the house, for the ensuing year ! Mr. White hadsent siHiii ' Hour to the house, hut his man would notleave it without first getting the money (hear).

Mr. N. A. l'ower—We must borro w more moneyfrom the bank ; he (Mr. P.) was lc:l to believe thatthe hank would jr ive it , if the hoard came forward andasked for it in a proper manner (hear, hear).

Mr. Di -lahimty— We ouirht to call on the Commis-roners to put us in funds .' (hear).

Captain Newport—The fact is, we have (juarrc-iieawith our contractors.

Mr. Ciido^iin—The less you say about thai tin-better (<lisuppro!i<ilio ;i).

Mr. J)wvt-r—There.1 will l.e a lapse of a f-irtnightbefore we f«'t the sanction of the Coinmissioncrs ,and lie wo-.il.l thi-refore move that sonic-thinj ; be doneto fret contractors (hear , hear, ;::id interruption.)

A Guardian—I move that a vote of censure bepassed 011 .Mr. Cadogau (hear, haos , iii '.d great con-fu-ion.)

Mr. i {o;>an—If you move it I will second it [lu'-ir,hc-:i-. ii 'id cries of :> yes, yes."]

Mr. i:ado^;:ii—You may move what y;-'.i like ; thatwon 't prevent me from expressinj i my oj iiuioiis .

Tin- ChairM ian rose iVom his sc;it , ttii .l .';cid he wouldadjourn the board , if Mr. Cadogan would not sitdown (l iiud cries of " adjourn, adjourn," let us alls;o home. ")

licit: about throc-iourths of tlie (iuardian.s roseto}heir k-^s, <;oi tli '.'ir hats , and seeme.l devenninedt'i h.ave tin- l;c ,::vd , when

y .v. li liiot! (who s'.-r.uid to act as pacificator ontl:e occasionj .i.iid , lie; v.ould undertake that Mr. Ca-dtj'_'an v.oul ! in-; iii!i 'rrii]>t the hoard (hear.)

Mr. N. A. Fi/wcr—Oh , go on v.ith the bu.Mness(hear , le <- ar , from Mr. Dwyer.)

Mr. l.i'.vy er—I move that llie board ;"i on Cur thesake of the paupers (hear , hear, a:id cries of "goon.")

Mr. X. A. Power—1 second that.Mr. i ;ii i <itt—IJusincss , business.Mr. Di -lahuutv proposed that the (!::nid!ar.s stand-

ing should sit down (hear , hear.)Captain Newport—What we want now i*, to get

some way of Nisj . - iJ irt! !! ^ tlie house.Mr. Spencer—There.: is no use in try ing to get

flimr if MT have not monev.Mr. Uelahuntv— J he best thing to do, m my opi-

nion is,^to ask " for leave to borrow more money(hear.). Attd 1 am satisfied, with another, to besecurity"ibr. such, sum as may be necessary i'n- themaintenance of the house for this week (hear, hear,and cries of " vory good.")

Mr. Dwver—And 1 am satisfied to pay my partfor the supp ly of flour for the week (hear, hear.)

Mr. Carroll moved , and Mr. Cadogan seconded ,that Messrs. Mark Anthony, Dwyer, Delahunty,and Spencer , be appointed as a Committee to seek afurther loan of £1,000 from the bank, as the boardcould not get credit from the Hour merchants till thenew rate be collected in , there being at present noflour in the house. Passed.

Mr. Jones—I would throw the onus on the Com-missioners who placed us in the "fix " (hear.)

Mr. Dwyer—I move that we advertise for the sup-ply of flour for one, two, or three months (hear.)

Mr. Elliott—1 secr.id that motion.Mr. Spencer—I think there is no use in adverti-

sing from the feeling that 1 believe exists in thetrade (hear, hear.)

Mr, Dwyer—1 am of opinion that they wil l con-tract (hear.) Agreed to.

Tin; coi.i.v.CTOns.A letter was read from Mr. Samuel Jones (collec-

^r) to the effect, that he would resign if the board

did not increase his poundage (now lOd. in the £) asW« duties were greatly increased of late.

Mr. Cadogan—If you increase this poundage, youmust increase all the collectors' poundage (hear,hear.)

Colonel Snow—Vie could not consent to it at all.The Clerk said the duties of the collectors were

How very onerous, as tbey had to revise, attend integistry courts , &-e. Mr. Jones, he was bound to••J'I was a most etlicicnt ofl'ieer (hear , hcur.). Mr. Jone.5 was then called in , and , after exp lain-'Dg the varied duties of his otiice , said that , as itWas suggested to him by Mr. Dillon , he would

withdraw his former resolve, and continue to fill theofhee. However, if lie had but sixpence in thepound , when he undertook to perform the duty, hewould do it as well as if he were paid ten times thatsum (hear.)

A letter was read from Mr. Maurice Walsh relativeto the insane pauper who was sent home from Ply-mouth , not being in n fit condition to proceed on her

j ourney to Australia ; she had no symptoms of in-sanity before she left Waterfo rd.

A letter was also read from the Commissionersstating that they had given directions to have aguardian elected in room of Mr. O'Beirne who hadresigned.

A letter from th.i London Guarantee Society re-quiring somo information relative to the amount ofsecurity, S:c. necessary for a poor rate collector.

.EI.KCTIOX OK oor.r.i 'croHS.Ihe election of a collector for Xo. 15 district then

took place. There were three candidates for theofliee—namel y, Richard Gamble (who holdsO'lacresof land at ls.' hl. per acre), Kdward Carrigan (KiUmacow, farmer), and John Can- (relieving officer.)

For Carrigan 18-Carr 15-Gamlilc 9. As Carriganhad not a clear majority of the board , another di-vision took place between Carrigan and Carr, whenthere appeared ,

l'or Carrigan—Thomas Meagher, M.P., CharlesNewport , Grant , Cadogan , Plu'lan , Hall y, O'Shea ,Tracey, Maguire, Murp hy, Moore, Kell y, Kavanagh,Nolan , Dcvereux , Hcnelieiry, O'Keei Se , Hunt , Car-roll , J. Murphy, Dwyer, Delahunty. Whclan—2:i.

For Carr—Dr. Mackesy. Wm. Morris , Anthony,S. Newport , \V?ekes Woods, O'Reill y, Snow, Grant ,N.A. Power, Lalor , Elliott ,Spencer, Cotton , Whitney,Anderson , Christmas , JJeiga n, Jones, Dillon—20.Majorit y for Mr. Carrigan .'{.

The Chairman tl c 1 declared Mr. Carrigan dul yolprti'cl.

C I T Y Cni.LKCTOn.The election of a collector for No. 1 district of the

City of Waterfurd then took place. There werethree candidates in the field—via. : Nicholas French ,[securities , Mr. P. A. Power, 'J'. C. and Mr. D.Keogh]—Mr. Simon Camp ion [securities , Mr. A.ll yan , and Mr. Ilartry , Kilbarry,]—Mr. EdmundKearney [securities , Mr. A. Ryan, and Mr. Mar-chant Artlagh.]

Fur Kearney.—Dr. Mackesy, Captain Anthony,Captain Newport , Weekes, Woo»l «, O'Reilly, Hallv,Snow , N. A. Power, Tracey, Mairuire, J. 'Murphy,Kavanag h , Nolan , Devereux , O'Keef ie , Hunt , Uo-gan , Anderson , Christmas , Dillon , Lalor— '22.

For French — Grant , Cadogan. K.Phclan , 15. Mur-phy, Moove, Kell y, Grant , O'Shea , llcneberrv ,Dwyer , Elliott , S. Plielan , Cotton , Spencer—I I.

For Campion.—C. Newport , Jones, Mta-'h 'M-,M.P., W. Morris , Whitney, Delahuntv— C.

I ne C nairman then declared Mr. Kearney aselected by a maj ority of 8.

Moved by Mr. Meagher, M.P., and scironded hyMr. C. Newport , that no poundage be paid any col-lentortill his collection be iinishe 'd to the satisfactionof the Guardians. ¦

T le (¦' a man then had the new collectors calledinto the bo .ird , when ] iC jrow t ]ieir attention to theal:ove resolution , a.,d enjoined on (hem ihe noccs-=,ily <> fi ts i\iHiinif ir. Adjourned. ;

" No. of Peisons ^'° receive relief in the Union diningt!.e sweti days itcce ling Saturday the; -Jtli d-Jy of Octo-ber, 1852. !Waterford 1017 Kossinan I (if/i % 1.. _ 1 A nr]i<li ....... .¦-'. . . 1 -Kilbarry • Aglish :•'• • • 1-Killo '.teran 1 UHM > • • • • 1"rV.thlegg 24 Portnascully...: 4Woodsiowa 19 Polhoae i 1-'Killea li> Killahy .: ISIiallir.akill 13 Kilbcacon > . . . . aKi'.macleaiuc 5 Farnoguc ! 1Katlnuoylm 1" Killhrido > 10Dramcannon i Kilmakevoguc • > :5Tramorc •- Killeollum .; 8Jslaudktauc IS BiUlincrca 3I'embrokestow n <> Union nt large , i 4'.(l]> ci;U 21 Kibeiacth oinas -••• ... 101Kilmeadeu 13 In deaf & dumb .insti-Newcastle N tution ; 1j iathiKitriok- 1- i Dunkiit 10 Total . . . . . 1 S 0 1

STATE OF TIIE HOUSEIti-maiii 'ins 111 tie." JJneiseJ last wick . . ' 19715AJiuiucil tlurin^r llec week - ¦'>!

rnl:,l . . . 1JJ7U

Discliargcil - !.i.htcd U

Total . . . 107

Ilrmaiiiiust on his-t Satur.Uy . . . ]>(;:)So. ol'iimiatcsou tieat day liiauntln - lf'-VJ

Increase - - I t

Onl iljor relief (coses) - • - - Us. (KJJ.Co*t 0s IU..\u. ill Workhoiis.: . . . - fins., „ Micliacl Stroot auxiliary - 'Mi '„ „ Ili'iiu«s.soy'.4 Hoacl auxiliary • - o(3„ „ WI II I C- 'K sloro auxiliary - - x.. „ l'i rn;r.ii'.nl Uuil. t in^ - - 01'„ , 'l'i iii|i::r:iry clii . - - - Ili-i., „ I-'cvcr S-leccJa . . . . I TU

Total - - 1.SU3

Rcccivcil liv Treasurer iluring the wctV £(«! ( < > 0I'ai.l ' .|» do - - M "iii U 11lJalaiiceauain.sttl ei ! Guardians - - am 0 4

C.i '.Ve-to.l .liirliitr '.hi! wick . . . II 0 0Avi ra -c: cost olWoil-leoi's; Ilos .iilal • ( 1 0 0Cun.rat •!o 0 0 01-V\vr llosj>ilal - - • - 0 0 IIIn Uiclary I hill ( 1 0 0Now ra'c rcuuiiiiii^ t'» lie coll-.*t'tcrl - 7*21 0 IOld ililU ) ehlto - l-«) U i

T.ilal JK-J11 I fi :;0: ! Ralo co:iecl«'l l.y .Mr. Miirnlsy - 0 0 0

]?oni !F.uy—On Tuesday ni ^lil the window of ahouse was broken open in Lad y-lane by somenocturnal robbers ; aud were it not that the lad yof the house heard the noise , ;ho whole concernmi-j ht have been rifled.

»*i25~ A few days ago three calves were stolenat liallincrea , not far from this oity -

KS° Tl'e interesting articles rela t ive to thefoundation of Melleray Abhny, we copy from ouresteemed cotenij / orary the Limerick Reporter andV iiirhrntni ' .

Poc FIGHT .—We hope that those persons whohave taken a leading part in the late dog fightwill be detected , and prosecuted by the police.

IJ U R X I X G of HAY .— On Tuesday three cocksof Hay, the property of Mr. K ENT , of R ill ycan-v:m, near this city, were destroyed by fire, sup-posed to be the act of an insendiary.

I RISH GRATITUDE .—A private soldier , nowstationed in India , has sent this week, throu g hiilr. DA N M E L COMA .V, Step hen-street , i;hc sumof £5 2s to his poor mother , who is, we haveheard , an inmate of the Poor-house.

(@" We omitted in tlie Kilin octhoina H Union adver-liit-meri t , in our liru |inge , the words " that till artiit l c-sare to be delivered at the wurklicmse carriage free. "

Her Maje sty and his Royal Highness PriaceAlbert went on Friday to the Balloch Bhuie DeerForest. The Ri ght .'Hon. Spencer Weil pole hasarrived at Balmoral ,' and will remain in attend-ance upon her Maj esty.- - The younger membersof. Sir. FarquliarsonVj^amily came over firbjaInvercauld on Fiiday afternoon , to spe;nd "iheevening with the Princess Boyal and theRoyal children.

LONDON MONEY MARKETTUESDAY.

The market for Public Securities has been gene-rally firm this morning, the pacific tone of LouisNapoleon 's speech at Bordeaux having given satis-faction. Consols have been done for money at; 100} {,bat have since receded to 100J J. For the Novem-ber account they have been steady at 100$ |. TlieTliree per Cents. Reduced have been sold at OOf J ;the Three-and-n-qunrtcr per Cents, at 103) t {, bothex dividend , nnd Bank Stock at 224. Es:chequerBills have been done at 72s. to 7f)s. for the March,and 70a. to 72s. p.m. for the June issue, being an im-provement of fullv 2?. upon the premium ratej .

The Railway Share Mar!:?t has, on the whole,b;-en barely so firm , except for Fre:ich share i, whicharc in nearl y nil. cases decidedl y higher.

Consols fo;- account , 100j '.

To the Editor of the Watcrford NewsYouglml, 14th October, 185S.

Sm,—I am going to treat your readers to remarks," iutercstiug, arousing and sarcastic," on the speechesmade at tho banquet given to Mr. Butt, on the 22ndultimo, at the town of Youghal. The chair, on the oc-casion, if not ably filled , was faithfully occupied by agentleman true , to Conservative principles, RichardSmyth , Esq., of Ballynatray. I was not a little amusc-.lat the perusal of the speeches, to see that the Tories ofYoughal were at the necessity of going to Kent for coalsto warm the Conservatism of their conspicuous chairman-Youghal has been the se-ond Bandou of the South. Someof the speakers remind me of a line in a Satira, byDryden ,

iMaiure , in dulncss, from tender years.1'The toast or sentiment " Constitution in Church and

State," was respnded to by the Rev. Mr. Drew, Rectorof Youghal . I think the car is placed before tho horsehere. The Church is the creation of tho State. Theystand in tho relation of cause to effect. The Earl ofDerby has given proof that the Church can be amputa-ted with safety to the Slate , iu the instauce of the sixbishops. Tho Protestant clergy of this country fancythe State is iu danger, if there is even an allusion madeto a cumbrous establishment . Tho Rev. Mr. Drew hasmade an abl e speech in favour of the tompral power ofthe Pope. The Kmpcror , Constantino , he tolls us, " whenhe became a Christian , united the Church and State.'1That Christianity was not the religion of tho Rev. Mr.Drew. His authority, 1 presume, is Euscbius, in hislife of Constantino. Bossnett, iu hU history, informs methat this Emperor died ful l ofjoy and glory. The l.'ev.Mr. Drew feels persuaded that the united Church of En-gland aud Ireland is a fair portion of-' Christ's Catholicand A postolic Church." A bigoted archbishop of thebayonet Church was told by a great bishop of myChurch that his claim to the mark Catholic wa* as wellf iiinded as his " dukedom of Leeds." The Hev. Mr.Drew will, some line day, claim tho Dukedom of Wel-lington. I met, one time, a journeyman ; he was whatthe Greeks term a rcng-imoa, newly-married. " Youare a Roman Catholic, Sir , said he to me. I am a Ca-tholic. I will not concede that to JOH said I. The wordC.itho'.ic means universal. Your religion to be universalshould re-mount to Apostolic times. It is a historic fact ,it had its origin in love like your mnrriago with your' nobler part ,' ns Dryden terma woman (a laugh .) "TheHer. .Mr. Drew began his speech gallantly, " ask mymamma ." lie is not only Protestant Rector oi' Youghal,but "Catholic Protostaut ," in that oranso town. ' Nonj uvidco lex , &c.' I am now in the field of Mars. Thereis a figure in rhetoric called npneopc. If you apply it tothe tone of Chattcrto n you will have a chattering idea ofhis speech. _ He qualifies the verdict at Six-milc-] !ridgeby ' priest-ridden anil ini quisitoi-y.' Arc we to under-stand that the jury committed perjury to gratify thepriests ? I have a deep horro r of perjury. It is one ofthe blackest sins In the catalogue of crime. Whence doyou tal ;o your definition of perjury Mr. O'Conncll ?asked the good Baron Pennefather , at the trial of theDoueraile conspiracy. From tho Catholic Catechism, myLord, was the reply. I think this country is morerector-ridden, rent chnr^e-ridden than priest-ridden." May our hatred tn the rcut-clm-go be as lasting as ourlnve nf justice." Is a priest the only man in tho com-munity not at liberty ?

—— ''To spur Ids fiery steed."With goring rowels to provoke his speed.'1

1 have been , for some time , a partial admirer of Coun-sellor Butt. His speech , at Yonghal , has not raised himin my estimation. lie is fond of quoting Ihe great Ed-inun el Iiui-kc . Tlie following passage is from his speechon Amevio.in _ taxation, l i e was bred to the law whichis, in my opinion, the first and noblest of human sciences,a science which does more lo quicken and invi goratethe understanding than all the oilier kinds of learningput together ; but it is not apt , except in persons veryhapp il y lorn to open and liberalize the mind in thesame proportion." It m:iy not bo amiss for Mr. Butt totest himself hy this extract. The Hon. If. Ilutchin-on ,at Youghal , complained of the undue influence of theRoman Catholic Priesthood. The Protestant rector wasin his favour. He hel ped his honour to a plumptr. Thoadjective " undue" conveys a harsh mcauiug here eitherillegal or not , in accordance with duty. Their conductwas perfectly legal, more legal than the conduct of thelandlords and agents, supporters of the hon. gentlemen.The voters were forced at the pint of the bayonet to votefor him. They had oven to resort to the low contri-vance of scheme. I demand your vote becauso I amyour landlord ; I agreo with Mr. Butt that this u esta-blishing a tyranny that would crush all civil and reli-gious liberty. A landlord has a3 much claim to tho vote ofa tenant as ho lias to my horse Tho tenant's ri j-ht t Jthe vote is as well founded as the landlord's ri^ht to thefee simple. Dining the 78 years of the rei ^n of thethroe fi rst George's, no Irishman Oi'tho Catholic religioncould vote.—I am, Sir, yours,

AN IRISHMAN.

STEAM TO WATEHF0RD.WE are pleased to perceive that the new WaterfurdSteam Company will have on the line, in a few days, oucof the most magnificent steamships at present crossingthe channel—we mean the " A D M I R A L . " Tiiinvessel will be a great boon to AVatcrford , and we congra-tulate the Company on their spirit and enterprise. It iacheering, however, to observe that the " OSPRET " (who3eboilers will bo renewed in tho meantime) had, sines herarrival in the port, more work than she could perform.This we do in a great measure attribute to the activityaud probity of her local agent, Mr. MICHAEL DOWKET .

•••iCCP We this day lengthen our columns by from 20.1

to 30D linos, and introduce a quantity of uew type , moreof which we shal l have receive".', by our next publication.

F R A N C E

(FrOm the Evening Mail and Globe)Tlie disgusting blasphemies that signalise the

utter degredation of the French peop le, and pre-pare tlie vile mob of Paris to shout in the emp ire ,still form the most p rominent features in the newsfrom France. The Mayor of Sevres lias worthil yfollowed in the steps of the estimable official whoparap hrased the Lord's Prayer in honour of hisHighness the President , and lias formall y pro-claimed the sariour, the sent of God, the electedof France to be emperor , by the sty le and title ofNapoleon the Third - The Pope too, it wouldappear , is about to bless " the marriage of Francowith the envoy of God ," if re liance is to be placedin the following extract from the private corres-pondent of the Globe :—

" I can now state from the best authority thatthere is no truth in the statement of the Popehaving refused to come to Paris to crown the newEmperor. His answer vraa nearly to the followingeffect :—' Tell the Prince that I am entirel y athis service ; I can never do enoug h fo acknow-led ge what he has done for me , for reli gion , andfor society. I would observe , however , that itwould be necessary for me to take with me a por-tion of the sacred college , and some of my cardi-nals are old and infirm men , to whom a long jour-ney in the winter would be disagreeable and dan-gerous. I hope, therefore, that my presence willnot be required before the spring. " This was the.answer of the Pope ; I offer DO op inion as to it»sincef ily. Rome never sayaT ytt <br no. Thereis always something which may be constructedinto a reservation , and it is possible that Pius theNinth may bo desirous of ascertaining how theEmp ire will be received by the Powers of Europehnfor Q he commits himself."

To the rest of the world this mummery mattersbut little , except in so far as it is degrading tothe common nature of man. Nor do we attach anyimportance to the declarations in favour of peacewith which H.' Bonaparte favoured the merchantsof Bordeaux , who , we have private opp ortunitiesof knowing, place uo faith.whatever in him or his

P°licy ' : 'V '

NAKED BOYS .—On yesterday " two boys," w i t h o u t . i sti tch on them " but their trousers ,were taken up and sent to the Poor-honse byMr. Hearn [Relieving Officer.] It is suppose!that the young urchins undress ed themselve s fcrtlio purpose of appearing the greater objc.ts ofchar i ty .

mkWATERFORD UNION.

N O T I C E .That Rate-Books are Open for Inspection of

Kate Payers. .NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,

RATES as herein' undermentioned, a re about toto be made, on property situated in the under-

mentioned .Electoral Divisons, in the above Union,Rateable under the provisions of the Acts for theRelief of the Destitute Poor in Ireland , namely:—

Electoral Divisions. Rate at per £.

Island Kcau - - Is I0dl'cmbrokcstowii - Is 5ilReisk - . - Is 4dnm Castle - Is 4dKilmcaden -¦ - Is 2d

Andjvhercas Annuities have been charged upon dcertain Electoral Divisions, Townlands Denomina-tions, or places comprised in the said Union underthe provision of the Act , 13 Vic, Cap 14, additions tothe above-mentioned Rates will be made for thepurpose of providing for the payment of such Annu-ities in accordance with the provisions of the 'ith See.of the said Last Mentioned Act.

The Rate-Books are deposited for the inspectionof any Rate-payer at the Board Room, AViiterfordUnion , and will bo there open for suoh inspection ,between the hours of 10 in Forenoon , and 4 in theAfternoon , during the fourteen days next ensuing thedate hereof exclusive of Sundays;

Signed this 14th day of October, 1852:RICHARD BURKE,

Clprk of thn Union.

WATERFORD UNION.rplIE C.'UARDIANS of the above Union will ,JL on THURSDAY , the 21st Instant , receive Ten-

ders for supplying the Workhouse, with the followingarticles for ONE, TWO, or THREE MONTHS.Best Flour, 1st Quality; at per Sack," " 2 lids do nt per do" " Srds do at per do" Indian Jlenl, at per doThe above articles to be delivered at the Work-

house, free of expense, at such times and in suchquantities as may be ordered by the board.

Tenders stating the names of two solvent suretieswilling to join in a Bond for a sum to be fixed by theBoard , for the due fulfilment of the Contracts, willbe received by me on any day up to Eleven o'clockon the above-named day when Contractors will bedeclared.

Persons , proposing to supply the above articlesmust put on their samples some private mark insteadof their names or initial s of their names.

The Guardians will not entertain any Tender thatis not in conformity with this advertisement.

By order of the Board ,RICHARD BURKE ,

Clerk of the UnionClerk's Office , •

October 14, 1S52.

TO BE SOLDThe Interest in the Stock and Co7icerns of

I'cniston'gCHINA, DELPH AND GLASS WAREHOUSE ,

92 Quay, Waterford , Established 1805,

r M HIS is a very desirable opportunity for any per--*. son of Capital wishing to invest in business, asthe House is well established, and at the present timecommands a Large and respectable Share of Custom.

TlWfJttoprietor is retiring from business.'• 'Oct&er 15. 1S.52.

LIVERPOOL & WATEUFORD TRADERS'

STEAM PACKET COESPAWY

€SBS&3«ci3 il-%£%?

IT is respectfully announced to the MercantileCommunity of Walerford , and to that of the In-

land Towns connected therewith, as a Stean PacketStation , that this Company have determined [diningthe lay up of their Favourite Steamer 'Osprey,'fbr newBoilers], upon placing the Magnificent Steam Ship

"ADMIRAL,"Of 1000' 2'ons Burthen ; and 450 Horse Power,

upon the Line.Whether this Celebrated Vessel be ' regarded as a

CA TTLE, GOODS , OR PA SSENGER BOA T,[ She is unrivalled.Tne "Admiral" will arrive in Waterford on or

about WEDNESDAY the 20th , and Sail for LI VER-POOL, on FRIDAY, the 22nd Instant.

Application for Freight or Rates of Passage to bemade to

MICHAEL DOWNEY,Quay Waterford.

Or to IIAYMAN & SON,12, Exchange-street, East,

Liverpool.

$o*t "Netog— Wwf tmtARKIVEH

7th-^-Mnria , 227 , Goodsir , maize, Constantinop le ; PI.vtina, SO, Jones coula Chester j Osprey (»), 228,Forrest , c.e., Liverpool.

8lh—Lnrne , 50, Lnwry, slates, Bnngnr.OlU—Victory, («). 250, St.ieey, g.c, Iiristol ; Mary, 77 ,

Power , con Is. CarditT ; Fail! Uuhany (s), 198 ,Brown , ballast , Kinside, Glasgow ; Brothers, 29,Williams , iro n, Cardiff.

lOih—S peedwell, 30, Williams , slates, Bangor.Iltj l .-Sain.li Jane , 27 , Cnrren ballas t , Dungnxvnn ;

'Anna Mbrin , 77 , Bennett , eonl.» , Chester ; Gracej'Gibb , 53, Hejnolds , herrings, Wirck ; San (fRrtano ,.' 300, Monaco, maize, I brail ; Eliza ic Ann , 58 , Coolte,

?} coal?, Cnrdilf ; Gleaner, 94, Grey ditto , Troon ;• -}MuM of Mnsiyn , 101 , Reny, ilitto , Cardiff ; Lady

. Steward, 56, Guy, ditto , ditto , ditto : Gulseiino Ni-: cole, 215, Uielicli , wheat , Mnrianople ; VesiilixasarAmaltn , 150, Oliienntissii ", mnize, Galalz; l>evon-j filii re , C-J, Wlielun , con Is , Newport.

Vim— Citizen (»), 100, I'enn , tr a, London ; Eliza Jane,• 132, Power , culm, Llnnnelly ; Elizubetli , 108, Jonea ,; coals, Fort Talbot ; John Miller , 05, Sullivan , ditto ,•' ditto; Collector , 103, Pdrle , culm, Swansea ; Hope,

/ 117 , VVnlsli, coals , Cardiff ; Lady Louisa , 5> , Davis ,ditto , Llannell y ; Trial , 160 , Thompson, di:to ,

'' j lilto.13<!4-Biibonn , 42, Thomas, coals , Cardiff ; Enterprise,

i - < r52ti\Villiains, ditto ; Graoo Darling, 87, Edmonds,.jtonli Neath ; Mars (s), 373 , Clarke ,i/.c., Liverpool ;^Cleveland, 1(17 , Furniis, coals , Cardiff ; Taffevalo,'«(!, Gfifiitlis , nalt , Gloucester ; Francis Grifliths , 6!),^Croxon , railroad iron , Ipawieli ; William & Mary ,¦,24 Parry, Blates, Dangor : Jane , 45, Muliony, coals ,'tjnrdiff ; Orion , 171 , Valdar, wlieat , KprteJ j Os-I/I-'W (')> 128 , Forrest , g.c, Liverpool ; Flura, 112 ,-Klcboils , con Is , Cardiff; Rival , 01 , Williams ,.ditto ,[Setrport ; Valentine , 70, Williams , ditto , ditto.

13thr*-Aoll*e , 6<J, WUIiums , coals , Newport ; Flora , 07 ,<£«riigan ditto , Neath ; Speepy, (SO, Powlor, ditto ,vert Talbot ; Kinrua Laura, 704 , Uarrett , coals ,,'Qfyeitcr ; Murquisdc Pnnibal ,705, Comcalucescouh ,j iiWarpool; Citizen , 700 , Penn , g.c , Dublin ; Se-

; "'n»«or, -7B7, W. Robinson, wlieat , O'Dessa ; Norry'.Rirw«n , 708 , Whelan , culm , Swansea ; Klizo , 79U,lYViiMi . coils, Newport ; Alerclmiit , 800, Davis dittoCkrtlff ; Snrah , 801, Hazlefcuri t , salt, Ituneom ;ElrMb«tb;, 802. Murphy, ballast , FeiWd ; Mal-

I Colin , 809, Edmonds, coals and bricks., Uj-idire-water;-, and| Neatj i.Mlfr—lHwBri Jj-804 , Denver., culm , &-c. Llanelly.

SAILED.7th-Rit'liaril, Borker , outs, Newport ; Pr inc ess R oyal ,

; ftiftj iolas, T>mo , Uit to ; William, Clement?, I'oits-j rootftli , <!ilfb j Mary Oollins , Clunakiliy, coal*.

6.h-AifIia , Biirr.v , Cuiditf, oa!» ; Mars (uJ. CIa ike Li-

: ? uX"-' •' . ¦ ¦ ¦- .- . ' ; > • .:¦ V;.il te:i&

TEETH !

M R . . J O N E S ,SUROE0N-J>ENTIST,

BEGS to Morn hrs Patients and Friends tliat bis Pro'fessional Visit must be limited to

SATURDA Y EVENIN G, the 23rd Instant,and may be consulted upon all Cases incidental to the

TEET H, GUMS , AND PALATE,At Mr. Ardagh'S, Matt, Waterford.

Mr JONES 'S system of supplying ARTIFICIALTEETH embraces all the Important improvement of thepresent (I HJ- , and insure to bis Patients' accuracy andbeauty of construction , rendering them both useful andornamenta l , «n'l requiring no unpleasant or painful ope-ration in tl ec -ir iidieptnii 'in.

Reference-? ei veil to llie most eminent of the Fneultv.Decayed 'IVeih fi'lrd with Golei and Incorrodible Ce-

ment , prepared only hy Mr. J ONRS , preventing necessityof Extraci MI , irliieh will not discolour the ftfetli ; parti-cularly adiipte-c l for l-'roiit Teeth.

PJ§j" Ev«ry Ca>c confided to the treatment of Mr.J ONES , will receive strict care and attention , and mostModerate Charges will invariabl y be adhered Io , consist ¦ently with liesi Material and Workmanship in the Mecha-nical Depnrf 'i icii 1.

Mall Wnierfortl , V.th October; 1852.1

z\n itmkmWATiCRl -'Dl iO MARKETS .—Tins D.vr.

Small markets of farmers grain during the past week ,and prices arc :)d. to 0d. per barrel dearer on wheat,aud 2d. to 3d. on o:iis

Indian corn has udvancc-1 3d. to Cd. per barrel in theweek ; GalaU," new, hold at 18s. 3.1. to 18s. 6d. perbarrel.

«. d. s. d.Mill Wheat , (red) 23 0 to 24 0White do., 23 0 — 24 3Shipping 21 6 — 22 aBlack Oats 9 0 — 0 7White do. 0 0 — 10 QBarley, (malting), 12 0 — 13 0Do., (grindin:,'), 10 < > — H QBore 0 0 — 10 nuciCi. ( «' \J — ¦ v nBran , per barrel 3 3 — 3 QOatmeal , per cwt., 10 0 — 10 j.Indian 5i:al , prrdo 7 0 — 8 nIndian Corn, Gtdatz, per barre l,.. 17 0 — 18 gFlour do, »2 0 — 3-2- 0Seconds(supfifine) per sack '-7 0 — 23 „Thirds 23 0 — 2G "Fourths 10 0 — 18 "American Flour , per bar). (Mat) 20 0 — 22Means per brl., 13 0 — 14 JBeef, per lb.; 0 3 — 0 4jMut t o 0 4J — 0 52Veal, per do 0 4 — 0 "Fork . per lb 0 5 — 0 "Butter , per ewt , 82 0 — 83 «Dacon Pigs, per cwt 42 0 - 4 3 »Scalded do., 42 0 - 0 0 0Offal , do. (fresh) 20 0 — 23 0Feet , 8 C- 0 0Newport Coals , 13 0 — 00 OCardiff do., 1-1 0 — 00 0Scotch Herrin gs , per brl. 24 0 - 2 5 0Potatoes per Stone 0 G — 0 8Whiskey (Wholesale), 5 0 — 6 0

Do. Iletail 7 n — 8 0

Firkins weighed for the past three daysWednesday. - • — ~"Thnr3i 'av. — — "•*'Friday. ' _ _ 13

LIV'ERl'OOL CATTLE MARKET- W EDNESDAY .Our market this day was pretty fairly supplied with

stock , and there was no falling off in prices. Muttonmet a quick and early sale. Good beef remains un-ohanged from last week.—Few beasts loft unsold.

Number of beasts at market—25-20; sheep, C4G7.Eecf sold at 4d to 5d ; mutton , 4Jd to Gd; lamb, Ud to Odveal, 4d to 5d per lb. Tigs, 4Gs to 48s.

LONDON CORN'-EXCUANGEi- W EDKE SDAT..Wheat—English supported Monday 's prices. Foreign

firm, with a fair demand. Floating cargoes—None offthe coast. The trade healthy; prices tending more toimprovement for all descriptions.

Indian Corn — No arrived cargoes on salo—tlie latoadvance firmly insisted on for distant and future ship-ments.

Oats—New go off very slowly at previous rates; oldcommand a reaily sale, the tnru in favour of the seller.

gMITOFIELD CATTLE MARKET— W KDSESEAT.Tho suppiy of beasts moderate, being about as large

as on this day week. There was a good demand, bothfor home consumption aud export, at fully former quo-tations.

Tho supply of sheep small with a fair demand, at {dpor I b. advance.

Tho priunest heifer and bullock beef 43s to 45s per cwt,sinking oIlUl ; second-rate and coar<e beasts—38a to 40sper cwt, do. —The best wedder mutton , Gd per lb insink ; inferior and ewes, (i.Jd per- lb, do,.

Veal—Cd per !b, in sink.Limbs—from 18s to 20s eack.The market was all cleared off.

2$tvtTt& fttftro'ftge*, & ©eatfts*BIRTHS.

On the lltli instant , in this city, Mrs J. Kelly, ofa son.At Cloncoskoraei , county Waterftml , the lady or Sir Nugent

Humble, Bart, of a son.On the 7th inst , <jlouccstcr-placc, Dublin, the wife of Rodolph

Scully, Esq., of n son.Oct. 7, at hU residence, Stephen's-jfrcen , the lady of Felix

Nu?cnl , Ksn , of twins—son and daughter.Oct 0, at her residence, Blackrock-roael, Cork, the la.ly of

George R Lawrence, 15st|, ofa dau^litcpOct 1, nt Wlii 'jslioro' King's County, the lady of Captain J A

Croeii;ht , of a daughter.Oct 7, Mrs James Malley, of Upper Sackvillc street , of a

son.At White Hall , the lady or J C Dolmc^e, Esq, of n daughter.Oct 5, in Limerick, the lady of JDr Vcrupii llusscll, of a

daughter.Oct 4 . Mrs D Bcatty, of Borodale, Wexford, of a son.

MARRIAGES.On Sunday last in the Roman Catholic Cathedral , by the

Ri ght RCT l)r Foran , Lord Bishop of Watrrfocd, 1'icrscJ Cox,Esi|, T C, to Miss l'eniston , both of this city.

At Providence , United States, Mr James R Barry, second sonof Dr David Harry, Lismorc, county Watcrford, to Bessie Anniedaughter of JaensR Cotter , Esq, Rocklands , county Cork.

AtCnlcutta , at the house of her uncle,Dr Wm O'Shanghnessy,Capt llawcs, of the East India Company's service, brother of theDeputy Sccrclary-at-War , to Arna , second daughter of the latoPatrick Cussen Esq, of Limerick.

Sept '2, in New York , Joh n Mahony, Esq, of Coik, to MissMaria Quinlivnn , latu of Bullyroughnn , co Clare, and sister tothe R-v Michaerl C{ u i e i van , Catholic curate of Euui*. i

At the Roman Cniholic Church , Mil town, by the Rev. Wm.Measlier , Parish Priest , .Miclme'l Francis Uwyer , Esq, Barris-Icr-at Law, to Lciui.in Clam, daughter of Krciericlc WilliamConway, Ksq, (" Evcnini; l'eest. ") St Kevin's, Rathmines.

Oct 7, at the Roman CatlmUc Chapel Cadogan- tcrraco. by theVery Rev Monsi^nor Eyrj Mapgiore Constantino Razelti ,Comtnandate il Battasliono K II. Vehti (in the service of hisRoyal and Imperial Ilislmess the Grand Dnko of Tuscany), toMargaret Letitia , sreond daughter of General Sir Colin Ualkett,G.O.B., G.C.IT., and Gownior of Chelsea Hospital.

OctcJ, at KilliiHlicrna n Church, David Leah;, Esq, son or thelate John Leahv, Enq, of Snuth-liill , county of Kerry, to Jane,widow of Captain St John Miincl cll . iHntt regt, and claughter ofJohn Bouchicr, Esq, of Kuskvnlley House, county Tipiwrary.

DEATHS.On Monday morning, at his rciidencc, in Thomas street ,

Henry Downes, E.iq, a highly respectable citizen and inercbmi r.Fora number of ycors he occupied a high position in ""ere?"-tile life. In private circles he was esteemed lor his anabilityand kind-heurtcdneMi , nnd ia universally regretted by nilclasses. The funpral of Mr Downes took place on Wednesday,and wa3 attended by a vait coucourse of citizens of all pcrtua-"o'n Thursdny, at her mother's residence, Tramore, Miss KateO'Neill ilaught«r of Mrs O'Neill of the Strand Hotel , in thuttown . Tho deceai-ed young lady was much anil deservedlyesteemed by the numerous visitors to her mother's establish-ment.

In Clonmel, Mrs. Sutton , much regretted.At his residence, Canada Place. Mr. Humphry Myers, aged

70, for many years accountant in tne Bank of Ireland.In Trnmorc, of consumption, Mrs W Wall , shn has left a

youns family to deplore her loss.—May she rest inpnace.On Monday night 11th inst , nt his house Dungarvan , Lnwforil

Miles Phelun, Esq. sincerely regretted by a numerous circle ofrelatives and friends.

On Saturday, in High-street , Kilkenny, after a protractedillness, Mr Richard Lnnnan.

Sept £3, at an advanced age, Mr Patrick J Kelly, musicalcomposer, formerly of Cork. He was more than a quarterofa century Professor of Music in St Mary 's College , Bal-timore, U. S.

At Toronto, Lpper Canada , on the 15th nit , Mrs C'Graily,wife of John \Vultcr O'Giady, Esq, late of Fort Etna, in thecounty IJmcrick.

Oct 7, at Enton.piace, Rear.A'imirai Sir Thomas Troubridge fourteen days next onsumg the date hereof tx-Oct. 5,'the Rev. John Bravor Webb, Rector of Dundorrow , elusive of Sundays..

ofa ten clay (ever, taken in the discharge of his duty. Sio-npil this 8th llnt> nf Optoher 1852At Gnrey Mr. John Webster, of Baliyrahen', parish of Kil- Signed.tills 8til Oay Ot UCtOOer, 180-S.michucloguc , mul diocese of Ferns, at the advanced ai?c of 100 .. lilLhlAlvU DUnt\EJ,years. He was the oldest man in tlic parish, the Inst surviving Derh nt TTninnmember of the Irish Volunteers in that part of |Ireland. This ¦ f"

ol m»°"«-venerable patriarch was twice married—he had ISBUC two aon» : —rr-. rr -. —,- —. ——smd three danghters—liesides which he had 22 grandchildren, 10 ; \ldennan Daniel Smitbwick, elected, -by ballot, ItsRrcat grandchildren, 18 nephews and nieces, and 43 grand- 'Mayorof KilkennyW l852, d«dinea tbiwre.itaZ'Z *" ¦mak g m mem e" 8prang Enniscorthy haaWjeoribed!alarg«sum' to. tho New-

A M ISM .—Died nt Bellaghy, on Friday, the 1st inst, Rachael man Indemnity. Fundt. . ¦.' ., ;¦¦• ¦ . ; ¦ " • • - ¦• • : •M'OurtnKy, age'l rixty-ieven Through carorul doalins and . . __ v .e ¦

±+, ¦ - • • .wrctcbedly penurious hnbits she managed to sars a considera- ' SCARCITY^ OF MECHANICS. ,, .hlo sum of money. A short lime before her death st e swallowed . r*~~*nt*ra ¦ miiwii ;nai»<fc<feuiriftvi>U <t*".''f'1'*'lltty notes or one poiini ruch, and also wnne «over«isn§. nrpentera, lummuy m

^^Jffyy/^ l gyy..,.?^^„-Rarely has them hc^n such an instance df tha ." uri' lacrm. 'every tatt Ot ineon^MM agiiPMBgBiWeMeKiiBgBg^nnie s," •< the rulin g passion strong in death. In hei wretched i 2:<nd .fitting ai>r«lllMttMIHHnfln^sJ^BEl«.llet anJ on lierpcnon were foustl, •Jtor dMtfa,- Urgo ¦u^;

^^^l^M'Ui^S^CiiliBl^^^^^HlM^H

THE TEETHM R . F R E E M A N ,

SUB GEON-JDEIiTIST,Resides Permanently in WatcrforJ,

And may be ConsultedAt 8, Beresford-strreet.

October 8, 1852.

W A N T E DA Capitalist with £400.

TO join Advertiser in the purchase of a FirstClass Ship. Advertiser will guarantee a very

largo yearly profit.Apply by Letter addressed "Navis," News Office ,

Waterford.October 15, 1852.

latest From America

Liverpool , \A ednesday.The UnileJ Ststes mail steamship Pacific,

Captain Wye, arrived in the Mersey at 8 o'clockthis morning, with New York advices of the2nd instant., 126 passengers, and upwards of400,000 in specie on frei ght.

The Hermann arrived on the 28th ult. at NewYork. . .

Our advices by this arrival are four 'days laterthan those received per the Eitrop a on-Monday.and they contain a fortni ght's later news fromCalifornia.

There is very little news of importance. Thepresidential campaign was engrossing.more at-tention every day. All parties were activelyengaged , Whigs, Democrats,. Free Soilers,Southern Rights men , Barnburners, and Unionmen , were stump ing it everywhere throughoutthe different states.. The Webster and ScottWhi gs held-meetings in Boston on the 1st inst.,the former is reputed-lohave been^vell attended ,while at the latter there were only about thirtypersons present. The friends of Secretary Web-ster .ire represented to be forming clubs, holdingsmall meetings, and otherwise getting up theenthusiasm to the highest pitch.

In an article in the New York Herald on thepresidential election , that paper says " Tliefigures of thirty: years past indicate that GeneralPierce, by the present combination and compli-cation of parties, will be elected President overGeneral Scott , by a probable plurality ohiinely-ihrcc thousand votes in the several slates, and onehundred and eighty ttvo thousand eleotoral votesin the unionf

The news of trie death of the Duke of Wei1Hngton had not produced such a sensation in tliestates as might have been expected. Only asmall minority of the papers had leaders uponthe occurrence, .and those not of• a very unani-mous description. The New York Herald says r

" While there- can bo no-question as to thehigh position occupied by the Duke oi Welling-ton as a warrior chief, k is an equally well esta-blished fact that he was almost as poor an oratoras General . Scottr-a. miserable, unsuccessfulstatesman, contracted-in .his-views, and disposedto rule men with a-, rod of iron, or just as hewould rule an army.. It is not , however, grantedby. the gods to any man to be great in all things ;and few, indeed,.ia the history of the world ,have combined'trie qualifications of a great states-man and a great general."— Freeman.

CATHOLIC CHURCH—NEW ROSSOn Tuesday the 5th instant , the beloved Bishop

of this- diocese admininistered the Holy Sacra-ment of Confirmation- to the unusually large numberof 1200 children, ami adults in the Catholic Churchof this town.. His-- Lordship • expressed himsel fhighly gratified at tlie good answering of the chil-dren , and comp limented the good' and pious pastoron the high state of moral training exhibited byhis flock on- this interesting.occaslon.— WexfordIndependent.

TUSCANY.FLOIIEN*CE. — Sir Henry Lytton . Bulwer is

still at Rome. The affairs of the embassy areheing- conducted ,.during his absence, by Mr.Drummondi Wolff."

&H-IP NEWS

R APID PASSAGE .—Ihe barque Ann Kenny;Capt.. Hayes,, with* 198 passengers, from thisport , arrived at New York on the- 30th of Sep-tember , having made the voyage from P assagein twenty-three days. Passengers all well.

The government snrreyor has tested , the;waterfordand! Limerick Railway Bridge over - the - Suir, anJJpro-nounccd it to ba perfeotlv- safe for traffic , and all otherrailroad purposes..

Thirty carpenters irero Brought up from Galway byMr. Dargan, to assist in getting up the frame work of thoNational Exhibition in,Dablin, for 1853. .

WATEREORD UNION

N O T I C EThat Rate Books arc Open for Inspection of

Rate-Pavers.

NOTICE IS HEREBY. GIVENRAPES as herein undermentioned , are about

to be made; on property situatad in the un-dermentioned. Electoral Divisions, in the aboveUnion , Rateable under the provisions of the Actsfor the Relief of the Destitute Poor in Ireland,namely :—Electoral Divisions Rate at per £."

s... d..Killoreran,, ••• 1 6Faithlegg, ' ••• 1 6-BallinakW, . ... ... ••« I 3Wnndhtowfl. .... 1 8:

Killea ,. ... " I 8iKilmacleflgue.... ... ... 0 10Rothmoylan ... 1 0Drumcannon .-.- ... ... 1 3Trnmore,'. ... .... ... 1 8

And whereas Annuities have been charged!upon certain Electoral Divisions, TownlandsvDenominations, or- places comprised in the saidUnion under the provision of. the act, 13 Vic,cap.. 14, additions- to the above-mentionedRates will be made, for the purpose of providing:for the payment of such Annuities in accordancewith the provisions of the 4ch Section of the Said-Last Mentioned Acti

The Rate Books are deposited for the inspec-tion of any Ratepayer, at the Board Room,Waterford Union , and will be there open forsuch inspection, between the hour»-of 10 in the~Forenoon , and 4 ia tbe Afternoon) during tbe-fourtcen days next onsumg the date hereof tx-

Page 4: Poor Laws Public Notices Royal Insurancessnap.waterfordcoco.ie/collections/enewspapers/WNS/... · Poor Laws KILMACTHOMAS UNION. TUIE Board of Guardians of the above Union JL will,

«**¦

Selected Poetry.ON THE DEATH OP TITE DUKE OF

WELLINGTON.Time in an hour, a lengthened lesson told; .

Aud England stood aghast, and held her breath ;And it seemed wondrous, even to tho old—

They who were wont to think and look on death :For lie had conquered nil things—crushed—displaced

As some proud vessel throws aside the wave :And he had passed the era of the grave

So long, that Death seemed left behind , outehased—And he appeared the embodiment of Peace—

Peace! which from hideous battles had been earnedAs waters gathered from the fierce salt seas,

Distilled in heaven to softest rains are turned.Oh Time! now victor , ucver cease thy song,And Fame shall swell what nothing can prolong

CHARLES PHCENIX

O C T O B E R

0 the misty, bright October .'Jtisty bright on the brown hill-side ;

Setters hunt the stubble over—Scream the crako and the golden plover,

Through the moorland waste and wide

0 the golden-crowned October ,Golden gorgeous in decay;

Through the woods the leaves for everFall in the sluggish river,

Yellow aud browu they drift away.

0 the chill and pale October!Colder winds are whirling now ;

All the champaign wide they deaden ,Will not suffer the leave* to redden—

Hanging lone on the wintry boogh.

0 the merry and glad October !Ileap the hearth with loads of fuel ,

Blaze away both log and splinter ;Hail to the coming of healthful Winter—

Hail to tho festive joys of YuleUniversltj Magazine,

\N ADVERTISEMENT

Wanted—a hand to hold my ownAs down life's vale I glide f

"Wanted—an arm to lean upon,Forcover by my side.

Wanted—a firm and steady foot,With step secure and free,

To take its straight and onward pace,Over life's path with me.

Wanted—a form erect and high,A head above my own ;

So much that I might walk beneathIts shadows o'er me thrown.

Wanted—an eye, within whose depthWine own might look, and sec

Uprisings from a guileless heart,O'erflown with love for me.

Wanted—a lip, whose kindest smileWould spenk for me alone j

A voice whose richest melodyWould breathe ailection's tone.

"Wanted a true religious soul,To pious purpose given,

With whom my own might pass alongThe road that leads to heaven.

A GEORCIA. LOVE LETTER.—Dear Mary Jtuck the andvanteg of this un hapey momen an-sering your kind leter witch com tu han to dayan it arforded me grate pleasher to get a leterfrom one that wos one so der to me you sede itsemed lik it has ben 2 yere sence you sede meit seams lik it has be.n ages sencc I hav sean youone that I loved so fondely as My Der Mary Ihave c ft times in my sleap that I was with MyJlary But ar las I weaks an fin it not so I thenf eil like I wos sunk in the loist depest of sorowoh tu God that I was with my znary to spen afew of them well none Happey times witch Ispent with my onely one but I Am gone for re-var is the last hope that I so fondely Chureshed

.in this doten bosom of mine when I think of onethat I love so der an to be so fur off it rockesthat this brain of mine an leades me to despra-tion oh Mary I love you as women never wasloved to be for an if it is Not returned by you Ihope you will pitey me an let me don with peaceand pleshor you sed brother told you that I wascomen over thar son well I did have a Notion ofcomen but I am now in good bysnes3 and I amgeten on fine tho I could be so mutch happereif you wus her with me if you dont com her 1dont think that we ever will meat a gain an ifwe nevor meat a gain on this erth I hope thatwill meat in heven and May God gida you anproject you thru life that will ever be my prarefor you an I nevor will for get you no nevor¦while time livers open its Axces, I will everthink of one that I love so der tho I now it isnot returned by you Mary I loved you as I lovedMi life an wood of don for you what I wud ofi;ot don for eney other beu on erth I was tornfrom you like a blosom from its branch wellMaTy I must bring this bad composed leter to acloeae as My trembling han can not exprs thefelingea that croses this ever doten bosom ofmine no tung could exprs it let a Ion pen Maryyou must ancer this as son as you get it youroust give all of the boys my respects and tacka dubel portheon for your self wel ne Mor atpresnt so far as you well oh that word far wellMakes me fell lonly it is like sepration of solein bodey

Adlou then ever far theo wellOur hapest drcms is over

We have loved a lone how fond and trueYet we must love no more.

ORIGIX OF NEWSPAPERS.—Mankind are in-debted to Queen Elizabeth and Lord Burleighfor the first printed newspaper, which was en-titled the English Mercurie. The earliest num-ber is still in the British Museum Library andbears the date of July 23, 1588. During thecivil wars, periodical papers , the champions ofthe two part ies, were extensively circulate J, andwere edited by such writers as Feedham, Bir-kenhead, and L'Estrange, all men of consider-able ability. In the reign of Anne, there was butone daily paper, the Daily Courant. The firstprovincial journal in England was the OrangePostman, startedj in 170G, at tho pride of a penny,but a halfpenny was not refused. The earliestScottish newspaper appeared under the auspicesof Cromwell, in 1G52.

TIME .—Nothin g is more precious than time !It is given us to glorify God , and to meritheaven. It is a talent which is entrusted to us,in order to profit by it , and for which we mustone day rentier a strict account to our SovereignJud ge. It is even more precious as its durationI? equally rapid and uncertain ; it passes awaylike lightning and vanishes like a dream. Allthe moments of our life are recorded , and therei, not one which does not increase either thetreasure of our merits, or ihe measure of our8ins. The trus Christian is avaiiciouB of histime ; he fears to love i t ; he divides the wholeof it between the duties of religion and those ofhis state. This is what the Scripture calls »• fulli'ays, days of salvation. '1 Nothing is moretbused than time. How is it employed in thev orld ? How do ths greater part of mankindspend it ? In useless visits—in criminal , dan-gerous, or frivolous . conversations , endlessamusements, dissipation , idleness and sloth.I'seful occupations are always the briefest andiha most neg lected ; we complain of the time

at we arc forced to bestow upon them. Doot suffer me any longer , 0 ! Lord, to mispend

N«e precious momenta which ought to be em-^4 in loving Thee, and purchasing a glorious

Spirit of the Journals

(From the London Weekly Paper.)

While obscurity and mystery envelope theintentions alike of Whig and Tory, of Liberaland Conservative , in the approaching Parliament ,there is one party which proclaims its designswith ridiculous loudness. We mean the IrishCatholics, who have just issued their programmethrough their mouthpiece, Mr. G. H. Moore.By dint of coercion and brutal violence, the Ca-tholics of Ireland have got together a strongbrigade to send into the House of Commons , astronger one than they have had before , andprobably as Btrong as they ever will have. Weshall have in the ensuing session some forty re-presentatives of the frisli priests, bound to followslavishly the dictates of those who have sentthem. To be the political representative of anIrish priest it is necessary to be a demagogue,in the worst sense of the word , and we knowthat Irish demagogues have always been greatboasters. Let us hope then, that when the Irishbrigade gets into respectable company at West-minster, it will perhaps not look quite so terri-ble as among its own priestly constituency, sur-rounded by pikes and blunderbusses.

And what is it that the Irish priests now de-mand through their representatives ? Tolera-tion they have long possessed ; equality of civilrights, relief from disabilities, indul gencies ofevery description , these have been given to them.No : they go much farther than this, and theyare not ashamed to avow it openly. The Irishpriests of tho year 1852 demand nothing elsethan the plunder of landlords for the gratifica-tion of their deluded followers, and the plunderof the church for themselves. This latter sub-ject is the theme of Mr. Moore's circular. But,like all proposals from Papists to Protestants,this demand is made in an insidious manner—it is covered and screened with a falsehood.Ths tolerant, disinterested, patriotic priests havesuddenl y become " the friends of" rel igiousequality ;'' of course they would not take allthe revenues of the Protestant church to them-selves, but they would like to have the lion 'sshare ; and even , as far as we understand theirmanifesto, if it cannot be managed otherwise,they would not object to waiving their ownclaim for the moment , on condition that its re-venues were taken from the Protestant churchaltogether , confident that in this case they wouldeventuall y obtain possession of the whole. Butsuppose the Pailiament of Great Britain shouldventure to see the matter in a different light—it may not feel disposed to sacrifice the Protes-tant church at the mandate of Rome ; it willprobably resist the impudent demands sent overby the Irish priests, and it is not impossible thatit may examine too closely into their commis-sion. Ti:c priests, in anticipation, tell us thatthey know our weakness ; that they see we areso divided we can hardly govern ourselves ; thatwe cannot get a strong ministry without thealliance and support of the bri gade ; and thatif we don't knock under, they will so embarassthe Government in every possible way by theiropposition that »ve can have no permanentministry at all. When the Irish Catholics werefettered with restrictions and disabilities theypromised all sorts of obedience and good be-haviour—they would be tho best of subjects—ifrelieved from then ; they have no sooner beenindulged to the full extent of their petition, thanthey become more turbulent and clamourousthan ever they had been bsfore, and threatenwhat they will do unless we yield them themastery.

{From (he tablet.)Mr. Bri ght went over the old questions , upon

which the Irish Liberal members gave help tothe Liberal party in England , and was anxiousto make out a case for the possibility of futureharmonious action after the former precedent.But the list of measures upon which this actionis to be based seems rather limited. The church,of course, affords a tolerable groundwork ; but ,if we leave out the land question , what remains ?Mr. Bright enumerated two, and only two lead-ing measures—Free Trade, which is alreadysettled , and Parliamentary Reform , includingthe Ballot. Parliamentary Reform with theprotection of the ballot is a measure for whichthe Irish Liberal paity would fight to the death ;but they would do so only or mainly with aview to getting into their hands the power ofhaving enacted a sufficient protection for thetenantry of Ireland. This is the fundamentalquestion ; and it is idle to think of any firm orcoherent union between the English and IrishLiberals except upon the greatest of all reforms—the reform of the relation between landlordand tenant. Unless this is granted , and untilthis is granted , they will and must stand aloof.They may lend their aid to the passing of this orthat measure introduced by Whig or Tory as thecase may be j but unless there be an explicitunderstanding on the land question as well as onthe Church—on those questions, in a word ,which are essential to the hopes of Irish pros-perity, there can be no cordial or compact unionbetween English or Irish Liberalism. In thecourse of a very short time Mr. Bright will bethoroughly convinced of this, if he does not un-derstand it alread y, and, for the present , wemay leave the subject with this general but em-phatic protest.

(From the f reeman).The two questions upon which the heart of

the country is set are Tenant-right and religiousequality. The recent Conference of the friendsof Tenant-right ha? pointed out with precisionthe course to be pursued with reference to thatquestion , and we confidentl y antici pate thatthe approaching Conference of the friendsof religious equality will, with equal precision ,equal unanimity, and equal firmness, put forththe demands of the Irish nation with respect toreligious freedom , and point out the means ofsecuring their concession,

The earnestness with which the question hasbeen taken up has naturall y attracted much at-tention from friends and from foes. If we areslandered by the Times, scolded by the Herald,and denounced by the Standard, we have a com-pensation in the support of the intellectual andgood which every day brings to the cause.

(From the Catholic Standard.)What rig ht we should like to be informeJ ,

had the Allied Powers, after the fall of Napo-leon, to hand over four millions of Catholics asso much chattels to the petty Sovereign of thepetty Protestant State ? Lord Byron speaks ofa union nearer home as that of the sharkwitJi its prey. But the shark in that case wasthe larger and more powerful animal. In thecase of Belgium and Holland, the lesser wasmade to perform the astounding feat of swallow-ing the greater, and a league of foreign poten-tates at the head of a victorious army, commit-ted the ini quity of making four millions of Ca-tholics in a magnificent country, subject to thenewl y-manufactured Soverei gn of a small Pro-testant State , containing little more than twomillions of inhabitants. Still, had the King ofNetherlands acted with a tithe of the prudence,the liberality, and the justice " for which theMorning Chronicle gives him credit, the Belgian

Revolution would not have occurred. Havingbeen long tossed about from the German Empireto the Spanish Crown , and then to the FrenchEmpire, and having suffered so severely for cen-»turies by being the battle ground of Europe, it isprobublo that tho Belgians would have soughtrepose and acquiesced in the monstrous arrange-ment consequent upon the battle of Waterloo,had they not been .goaded into insurrection.But they were not sufferd to enjoy rest. TheCalvinistic sp irit was ever at work , teasing andtormenting them. Their religion was inces-santly assailed. Their clergy were constantlythwarted in the performance of their sacred du-ties. The Dutch language was forced upon then.,and the laws were administered by Dutchjudges in a jargon which the people did not un-derstand. Van Maanen waged a fierce waragainst the Belgian press. There was an inces-sant obtrusion of Dutch interference in everyaffair of the Belgians. Belgian interests weremade subservient to Dutch commerce ; andprivate enterprise was ruined by the scandalousconduct of the king in becoming the largest ma-nufacturer, iron-founder , ironmonger , and traderin his newly-acquired territory. Centralisationwas carried to excess in every department ofthe state, and a gully-hole could not be repairedat Brussels without an authorisation from theHague.

(From the Times,)It would now appear to be beyond doubt thai

the manner of proceeding with reference to th festablishment of the empire (which may now beregarded as a/ait accompli) has been decided on.Committing with certainty on the ready assentof the Senate to the projected changn in theform of government , the President or his minis-ters will not be under the necessity of makingany formal communication to that bod y on thesubject, the princi pal condition of whose institu-tution is the maintenance of the constitution,will of themselves anticipate all such advancesand declare by perhaps an unanimous resolutionthat the ' fundamental code.' as it is called ,is defective or vicious. The Senators will,in all probability , form part of the cortegeon the entry of the President into his • bonneville de Paris,' and: that act of early acknow-led gment of the imperial soverignty of LouisNapoleon will be followed without delay by aSenatus Consulte, inviting him in the most re-spectful terms to do a gentle violence to hisfeelings, and yield gracefull y to the popular will.The Senate will, in all likelihood, ullow no idletime to pass by ; in familiar phrase, no grasswill be suffered to grow under their feet. Theday for that body to meet will perhaps be theday after the return to Paris, and I am still moredisposed to believe that the wording of the de-cree for summoning them together , as also themotives for the Senatus Comultc, will be finallyami irrevocabl y decided at Tours. A decreewill follow the adoptton of the resolutions of theSenate, making an appeal to the nation for itsconsent to the change ; a Plebiscite will be forth-with promulgated for that purpose, nearly inthe same manner as that of the 2nd December ;and the Imperialists even now declare their con-viction that the total number of voters will ex-ceed those that followed the coup d'etat. Whe-ther the actual constitution will undergo a tolalor a partial change I am not aware. It is con-sidered probable that it will only sufferthose modifications 1 necessary to adapt it to theimperial reg ime. No substantial change couldindeed add to the absolute power alread y pos-sessed by the ruler of France ; and the Presi-dent may not be disposed to incur the risk , orthe trouble , of an act of mere supererogation.Thus then the name of republic, as its substancehas alread y, will before many days have passedaway—comp letely vanished. The proclamationof nn hereditary imperial regime in Francewill be quickl y followed , it is said, bya protest from the Count de Cham-bord addressed to the European Powers, andthere is reason to believe that the document iseven now prepared 1. This was to be expected ;but so confident do the imperialists feel, thatthey affect not only to attach no importance tothe act, but even to wish for it. Some would gofurther , and demand its publication in the Moni-leur. And in official quarters assurances aregiven that the establishment of the empire willof itself produce no unfavourable change in thediplomatic relations existing between Franceaud other countries. On the day the Presidentreturns to Paris a conncil of ministers will beheld , and arrangements have been already madethat none of them shall be absent. Iu the meantime the petition movement , under the inspiringaction of the Prefects, is going on as rapidly asthe most impatient Imperialist coul t desire.Letters from Metz state that the signatures ob-tained in the four arrondissemen'8 of the depart-ment of the Moselle, as transmitted to the officeof the Minister of the Interior, demanding theestablishment of the empire, amount to 56,174.They add that there still remain some com-munes, and that when completed the names willamount to 65,000. The Prefect of the Herault ,on the President's arrival at the Prefecture, de-posited in his hands 294 addresses from muni-cipal councils, demanding the establishment ofthe emp ire.

THE MEN OF THE AGE AND THEIPvAGES.

It is notable that Ireland never had so youna body of representatives, most of them beingin the prime and vigour of manhood, and somein the flush of youth ; men , in fact , who will" stand no nonsense."

It is a parliamentary axiom that a man entersthe House too late who goes there after forty,but in general thei new men from Ireland mightdefy a much stricter rule. For example, Cap-tain Bellew, and Mr. Esmondc are about six-and-twenty ; Mr. Cogan and Mr. P. O'Brienbarely thirty ; neither Mr. Ball, Colonel Gre-ville, Mr. Higgiiw, Mr. Keogh, Mr. Cecil Law-less, Mr. J. D. Fitzgerald, Mr. Maguire, Mr.Duffy, Mr. Fox, or Mr. F. Scully exceed forty—two of whom, have been five years in theHouse—has passed his six-and-tbirtieth year :Mr. M'Mahon , Mr. Roche, Mr. Sadleir, or Mr.Urquhart , is not forty ; and Mr . Lucas, DoctorBrady, Mr. Monsell, Sheriff Swift , Mr. Mooroand Dr. Bowyer are barely forty ; Mr. Bland,Mr. Hinch yi Mr. Vicent Scully, Mr. Kennedy,Captain Greene, and Mr. Sergeant Murphy, aresomewhere about half-way between that epochand fifty ; while Mr. Potter , Mr. Townley, andSergeant Shee, Rre still on the safe side of thehalf century ; and Mr. Fagan , Mr. Devereux,Mr. Corbally, Mr. Dunn , Mr. O'Flaherty, andMr. M'Cann , have but just passed the line.Clare has sent the popular party its only vete-rans—Cornelius O'Brien and Sir J.F; Fit zgerald.-r-Nation.

The Earl of Roden arrived in London on Thurs-day mornine, and proceeded next day to Italy.

The Lord Primate left the Palace, Armagh, onSaturday morning last for Dublin, and returned inthe evening of the same day. His Qrace's health is™ ™

PcFearanC<5> as g00(i aa h lias bee* for ten

Jm^GM has lcft Knockie' *T*

The Marquis and Marchioness of Normanby Webeen spending a few days at Glammis Castle, on avisit the Earl and Countess of Strathmare. -\

FOUNDATION OF. THE ABBEY OF MOUNTMELLERA.Y,_CQUNTY WATERFORD..

(rnoti A CONCISE BISTOBT OF THE CUTERCIAN ORDBR.)

Sir Richard Keane, a : Protestant gentleman, hadlately made over to Father Vincent, for s mere no-minal rent, about 600 acres of barren, mountainousland, near Cappoquin, in the county 6f Waterford.At the commencement of the year 1832, FatherVincent sent five convent brothers to begin the greattoil of its enclosure and cultivation. They werewithout any means, and .without even a dwelling toshelter them from the inclemency of the -weather.But charity immediately came to their assistance.About seven acres had bepn already broken up andput into a state of cultivation. Upon this small plotstood a cottage, which was inhabited by a keeper ofthe moorlands. Sir Richard gave this cottage to thereligious for their immediate use and residence. Nosooner was the destitution of these victims of Frenchfealousy and liberality made known to the neigh-bourhood, than the vigilant pastors raised theirvoices, and the people, unable to afford any pecu-niary aid, volunteered their physical strength in thevictorious cause.—The Rev. Mr. Qualey, of Mode-ligo, set the first example. At the held of 300 able-bodied parishioners, he volunteered in their name aday 's labour, during which he remained with them,animating and encouraging them by precept and ex-ample, and at the conclusion led them home in themost perfect order. Next came the Rev. Mr. Walsh,of Cappoquin , and his curate, with 2,000 of theirparishioners, each man being provided with a spadeor some agricultural instrument. In like mannermany others. A body of labourers came from a vil-lage in the county of Cork, a distance of sixteenmiles. These latter set out at eleven o'clock, p.m.on Sunday night, and arrived at the temporary cha-pel at three a.m., on Monday, assisted at the firstMass, and then went to work, at which they con-tinued till an advanced hour in the afternoon , -whenthey retired to their homes, where they arrived aboutthe hour of midnight.

When the last-mentioned company were enteringtheir village, they were met by another party whowere then setting out on the same heroic errand. Infact the whole country around was animated by thesame ardent charity, so that no labour, no sacrifice,seemed too great. In each of the companies wereto be seen many respectable farmers' wives anddaughters, many good matrons and delicate girls,who emulated each other in carrying stones and ma-terials necessary for the construction of fences intheir aprons.

By these generous exertions, the fences were sooncompleted, and twenty-five acres of land preparedfor cultivation. A building of 119 feet long, bytwenty feet broad, and two stories high, was in ashort "time erected and made ready for the remainingportion of the brotherhood. Tho waste land aroundthe enclosure of the monastic domain was quicklypurchased and put into a state of cultivation ; sothat property which had been lying for years dor-mant, found a ready and profitable market, and isnow conferring the benefit of subsistence upon thou-sands of peaceful inhabitants.

In a short period after this humble commencement,Father Vincent began the erection of the presentextensive and handsome monastery, designated outof respect to the parent house in France, Moun tMelleray. Father Vincent , through the mediationof Cardinal Weld, obtained from his Holiness GregoryXVI. briefs which raised the new edifice to the dig-nity of an abbey, and appointed him first mitredabbot, wi th jurisdiction entirely independent of themother house. The consecration of the first mitredabbot in Ireland, since the fatal period of the Refor-mation took place in the private chapel of Dr. Abra-ham, Bishop of Waterford, on the 7th of May, 1835.A filiation from this Abbey was established near Du-buque, in the United States of America, in the year1850, under the appellation of " Our lady o£ LaTrappe, New Melleray."

VISITORS TO THE ABBEY OF LA TRAPPE—JAMES II, AND HIS QUEEN.

(FHOM A CONCISE HISTORY OP THE CISTERCUN ORDER ).Among the illustrious visitors, we must not forget

our own unfortunate James II., and his amiabl equeen , Mary of Modena, during the days of theirexile. James bore his reverses with dignity, andhallowed his sufferings by patience and enduringfortitude. God chastens those whom He loves ; andbetter may have been the crown'of thorns which wasgiven him to wear, than any that earthly monarchever wore. It was on an autumn evening in theeventful year 1690, that James rode up to the gateof the convent, attended by a few friends, LordDumbarton nmong the number. He was kindly re-ceived by the Abbot, and after partaking "of hishospital i ty, attended evening service in the chapel .After communicating on the following morning, andinspecting the different occupations of the rel igious,he visited a recluse that lived some distance uponthe mountains. His solitude was never interrupted,save by an occasional visit from his abbot, and hespent the greater part of his time in prayer. In therecluse James recognised an officer who had formerlydistinguished himself in his army. He asked him atwhat hour ire the winter mornings he attended theservice of the chapel in the convent, and was an-swered, at half-past three. " Surely," said LordDumbarton, "that is impossible. The way is dreary,and at that hour is highly dangerous." " Ah !"said the old soldier, " I have served my king in frostand snow, by night and by day for many a year, andI should blush, indeed, if I were not to do as muchfor the Master who has called me to His service now,and whose uniform I wear." The afflictedmonarch turned away his head. His attendants re-marked that his eyes were filled with tears. On hisdeparture the following day, he knelt down to re-ceive the abbot 's blessing, and on rising he leant forsupport on the arm of a monk who was near him.On looking to express his thanks, he saw in him ano-ther of his followers, the Hon. Robert Graham. Hetoo had been an officer in his army, and lost besidesa splendid fortune in his service. His maj esty spokea few words of kind recollection . Even the soli-tudes of La Trappe were filled with the ruins of hisgreatness.

When James had mounted his horse to St. Ger-main , he said to De Ranee, " We must come hereto learn how to respect God. I will endeavour, asmuch as my situation will permit, to imitate you insomething ; and if God Bpares my life, I will returnand make a retreat with you." The king kept hispromise and. returned every year to La Trappe aslong as he was able, and joined in all the religiousexercises of the community, and sometimes, withuncovered head, attended the spiritual conferences.

AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL AND MODEL FARM

The following communication has been received byCol. BEAMISH :—

" Education Office . 7th October." SIR,—The Commissioners of National Education

have had again under consideration, the' subject of aModel Farm in the vicinity of the city of Cork, asbrought under their notice, early in the present year,by ft memorial forwarded by you." Wo are now directed to inform you, that if the

whole sum of £4,400, which the Commissioners under-stand has been promised by Government, in aid of theproposed Institution, can bo procured, and devoted to theerection of the necessary farm buildings, residences forthe Agriculturist and agricultural pupils, purchase ofstock, implements, &c, the Commissioners will be pre-pared to contribute such further sum as may be necessaryto put the institution into proper working order." The Commissioners will further agree to tako 120

acres of land, at a yearly rent of 30s. per acre, upon atatitfaetory lease ; and they •will afterwards carry outthe farming operations and the arrangements connectedtherewith, at their own riak and expense, in conformitywith the regulations laid down in the sixteenth AnnualReport of the Commissioners." It is also a portion of the plan of the Commissioners,

that n school-room, for the purpose of affording LiteraryInstruction capable of accommodating at least 100 pupils,should be erected on the farm, at tho expense of the Na-tional Board.

" We have tho honour to be, Sir," Your very obedient Servants,

" MAURICE CROSS, \ «M" JAMES KELLY, S M3>

" To Lleut-CoL N. LUDLOW BEAMISH," &o , &C, Cork."

— Cork Examiner,

The Lord Chancellor and Mrs. Blackburne havereturned to the Castle| Rathfarnham.

The Duke of Leinster has arrived at Carlton-hou8e-terraee, London, from Ireland.

Earl Minto about to leave England for Italy. Itw said liia lordship «m poss the winter at Genoa.

1>HE JSSTXfinGflSHE D CHURCH

(Ftom Sergeant Shea's Net ? Work-)The church by law established .is the church

of a community everywhere considerable in re-spect of property^ rank, and intelligence ; it isstrong in a prescription of three centuries, and inthe support which it derives from the supposedidentity of its interests with, those of the churchof England. Nothing short of a convulsion,tearing up both establishments by the roots,could accomplish its overthrow. The notion ofdislodging it from its temporal pre-eminence,in order to clear the way for three national es-tablishments, among which its property shouldbe equitably distributee!, is surely too primitiveto be realised in our time. Nor is it by anymeans clear that sach an adjustment would bedesirable. Better , we say confidently, that theunion of church and state in Ireland should en-dure for ages, than that the state, by a divorcefrom its present spouse, should be at liberty tocontract or intrigue for a new alliance. The truepolicy of the Roman Catholic church of Irelandis that its ministers, as respects their means ofsupport, should be wholl y independent of thecivil government , and mainly dependent uponthe people. It is the interest , also, of the Pro-testant church and of the state. Ours is thefirst government in the history of the worldwhich has found any difficulty in dealing wiihmen who ask onl y the means of being usefulto their fellow-subjects , and nothing for them-selves.

We cannot admit that , £100,000 per annumof church revenue , appropriated by law to a Ca-tholic Ecclesiastical Commission, to be by it ap-plied for Catholic purposes, in the same way asthe funds at the disposal of the Protestant Eccle-siastical Commission, are now applied for Pro-testant purposes, would Tegard being had to thedifficulties of legislation for Catholic objects,throug h the medium of a Protestant parlia-ment , deserve to be considered as of alightaccount.

Wo are confident that a fourth of that sum ,devoted in magnanimous recipiscence, for recentmisconceptions , to the establishment and en-dowment of a Catholic university, for the educa-tion of the Catholic youth of Ireland, under thesupervision of the Catholic hierarch y,would do morefor the strength , the harmony, and real union olthe Queen's dominions than all the acts whichhave received the royal assent since the acces-sion of the house of Brunswick . This were in-deed a boon ; but the provision of the materialmeans of public worship, and of religious paro-chial instruction , is an object of extreme urgency,and of not less momentuous concern.

Should the question of appropriation again bemooted , as it must be if the Established churchis to be maintained , three things will be stea-dily kept in viesv by all true friends of Britishconnection and just governwent in Ireland.

1. That there are no endowed schools or col-leges for the religious Catholic education of theCatholic laity—none to which , as to the col-leges of Eton , Winchester, and Westminster, toTrinity College, to the University of Oxford andCambrid ge, and all the colleges and houses oflearning connected with, them, the privi lege oflegal perpetuity by incorporation , and exemp-tion from the statutes of mottmain , has buenconceded.

2. That not Is. of public money or ecclesi-astical revenue has been applied to the purposesof public worshi p or religious instruction fcr thegreat body of the Irish people, since the day theact for the uniformity of divine worship receivedthe assent of Queen Elizabeth !

3. That a great part of the parish churches ofIreland are endowed with glebe , which wasviolently wrested from the old proprietors bythe ini quitous execution of the acis of settlementand exp lanation.

RELIGIOUS LIBERTY IN FRANCE.{From the Evening Packet.)

It was, perhaps , only to be expected that thefor feiture of every vestige of political freedom inFrance should be followed by the surrender ofreligious liberty. Indeed th :s might be ex-pected. The Roman Catholic Clergy had noidea of supporting the pretensions of the Presi-dent without having their, quid p ro quo. Theyassisted in the establishment of the despotismthat now exist, and which, so far as the Presi-dent is concerned , was intended from the com-mencement to lead the way to the assumptionof Imperial dignity ; but in aiding the views ofLouis Napoleon , and bringing the influence ofthe Church to his aid, it was on the under-standing that they should, in turn , be able tocommand the services of the civil authorities inmaintaining their system of religious tyranny,whenever it should be considered expedient tcresort to such a step. It was* palpable from thefirst elevation of the President that the Churchwas regarded as a trump card which he couldplay in any case of desperation. Hence theoccupation of Rome by the French army, andhence, as an equivalent , the readiness withwhich the ceremonial observances of the Churchwere available to give eclat to the demonstra-tions which have been so liberally provided bythe Government, with the view of at once blind,folding and amusing the people.

CATHOLIC CHURCH

{From the Limerick Reporter.)The Rev. Mr. Nieve and Mr. Buckle, converts

from Anglicanism to the Catholic church, have beenin Limerick for the last few days. Yesterday theyvisited several of the public institutions, accompaniedby the Right Rev. Dr. Ryan and the Rev. JamesSynan , P.P. The Rev. Mr. Nieve visited the Con-vent of the Good Shepherd, and delivered a mostpowerful and persuasive address to the penitents.He and Mr. Buckle subsequently went by boat toTervoe. I.

The R.ev. Michael Ryan of Glasgow, has been ona visit wit" the Right Rev. Dr. Ryan for the last fewdays. We are happy to see the rev. gentleman ingood health.

IRISH ELECTION PETITIONSDirectly the new parliament opens, petitions

will be presented from the following places,praying either for a mew election , or that thepetitioner may be declaredjthe sitting member :

COEK CITY.—Colonel Chatterton, petitioner,against W. F. Fagan, M. P., on the groundsof intimidation.

CAKLOW COUNTY.—Captain M'ClintockBunbury, petioner, against John Ball, M. P.,on the grounds of personation of voters.

CLARE COUNTY.—Colonel Vandeleur, peti-tioner, against Cornelius O'Brien , M.P., on thegrounds of intimidation.

LOUTH COTJNTT.—Major M'Clintock, peti-tioner, against Tristram Kennedy, M.P., on thegrounds of want of qualification.

WATKRFORD Co.—Hon. R. Hely Hutchin-son, petitioner, against John Esmonde, M. P,.on the grounds of personation of? voters andintimidation.

NEW Ross.—-Henry Lambert , petitioner,against Charles Gavan Duffy, M. P., on thegrounds of intimidation and want of qualifica-tion.—Saunders's News Letter.

Mr. Fitzmaurieo, master of the Dungarvan workhousehas been elected master, of the Coik wjrkhouse by amaj ority of 16 over tir° other candidates-

IRISH ENtERPRiZE^MEisRsVBEIDY & CO. .

¦ ¦. . : ."rOOOjiKi .:-

¦-¦,.„.. , „ -•

We are happy4ff find/that" the enterprize, talentsand industry of Messrs.1 Reidy Sr Co'.;' are : meetingtheir, just, deserts.' Since they;completed lightingthe town of Enniscorthy, they have been'declaredContractors for .supplying several other, towns /withGas. This speaks well'wr. their a^ilitie>,and perse-verance, and we should; be happy to.see.many likethem in'Ireland who would apply themselves to theimprovement of the country by carrying out workswhich would shape their own fortunes and give em-ployment to the artizans and labourers who arepining away in misery. We have just seen that therespectable firm above named have entered into ar-rangements for lighting the pretty little town andthe magnificent Castle oi Lismore—the princely re-sidence in Ireland of the Duke of Devonshire—anobleman who has contributed largely to the embel-lishment and improvement of his Estates in- theCounty of Waterford. We understand that it is thehydro-Carbon or Water Gas principle, that is to beadopted in Lismore—which has lately been success-fully introduced by Messrs. Reidy & Co., into theirWorks at Enniscorthy. Operations will be com-menced immediately, as they have nearly completedthe erection of their Gas Works in Cavan and someother places, where they have been engaged forsome time past.

[Gas is considered too dear in Waterford—10s.per 1,000 cubic feet , we believe. We know manypersons who would be disposed to get it but for theexpense. Wexford has only half our population,and it is sold at 8s. per 1,000 ; and in Clonmel, welearn, it is even less. We would like to know whatMessrs. Reidy and Co. could afford to supply gas tosuch a city as Waterford for ?]

StowttusNEWMARKET RACES—MOMDAT

Sweepstakes.MnriH Caloric

Bay Rosalind broke down.Handicap.

Catilpa ltunnymcde

Mutch—Glenluce beat Flirt.Plate.

Pelion Pugorrock

I'lale.Scandal St . Fabian Lascellea

Match—Plirypia beat Diomedia.Sweeps'akes, for two yrs. oldi , fcc.

Bel gravia Hetraan Plantoff filly.,

£00. Plate. A.F.Kingston 1Joe Miller 2Conmore 2

Match—Jemima filly heat Pensioner.

IRISH METROPOLITAN STEEPLE CHASEThrse races will corae off on the 8th and Otli or No-

vember, over Confy Castle Course , which hai undergoneconsiderable alteratio ns and improvements.

On the firs t day there will be Garrison Steeple Cliaieaand Flat Races, the particulars of which will be dulyannounced.

On the eecond day there will be the metropolitan Plateol 100 sovs. in specie, added to a Handicap Sweepstakesof 5 sovs. each. h. ft. Three miles. To close and nameon Saturday, 23d of October. Weights to be publishedon the 27th , and acceptances duclarfd on the 30th.

Steward s1 Stakes of 2 «ovs. each . 20 added. Wt. forace, wiih selling allowances and penalties on winners.Heats — ttvo miles, over steeple clmse course.

The Tyro Stakes, half a sov. each , with a purse added,Heats—two miles. Po3t entry. Caleb weights.

WESTMEATH STEEPLE CHASEThe Weatmeatli Steeple Chase Races are fixed to come

off in tlio neighbourhood of Mullingar , on the2d and 3dof November, 1852.

Stewards—Sir Percy Nugent , Barf , ; Sir RichardI.evinge , Bart ; W II Magan , MP; John Molone , Ejq. ;Colonel Caulfield , James W M Berry, H«nry Murray ,Richard W Reynell , Joseph M. Tuite, and Charles Le-viuse , Esqrs.

The Westmenth Handicap Stakes and the WestmeathSelling Sweepstakes are (or the f inl day. and for thssrcnml day the Mullinirnr HaniJiciip -Stakes, and tbeMulliiiga r Wt.-for-uge Selling Sweepstakes.

NAVAN STEEPLE CHASES.These races will come off on the 2Cth and 27lh inst,

Weights for the Navan Cup, value 100 sovs in specie.Three miles :—

Mr J G Murphy's ch m Lamipnne, 10»t 121b.—Cnpt.French's br b Ciasher, lCst—Mr Hudson'* b ra Poll,lOst 21h.—Mr N Balfe'g ch p Ringleader, 10«t.—MrHanlon's g g Don Juan (late Gridiron ,) 0st 81b.—Mr.Irwin 'u b m Daphne , 9sr. 51b.—Mr Blake's b.m. WildGirl, nst.2lb.—Mr F Russell's b h Jacob, Faithful , 9»t.—Mr. Smith's b g Highlander, 2st.—The MarqnessConynjfharo's b g GanymeJp, 8st 121b.

Acceptances to be declared on Monday, the 18th inst

HUNTING APPOINTM ENTSThe Palraerston Harriers will meet on Wednesday,

October 13, at CUR tie Baggot ; Saturday, 10. Tal laght;Wednesday, 20, Barberstown Brid ge ; Saturday, 23,Ninth Lock, Grand Canal ; Wednesday, 27 , ConfyCastle; Saturday , 31 , Palmerstown. At eleven o'clock.

The Derry Hounds will meet on Thursday, October14 , at One Mile Stone , Letterkenny road. At teno'clock.

The Tlppera-y Hunt will meet on Saturday, October1G, at Thorny Bridge. At eleven o'clock.

THE NAVY CONTRACTS

P O R K .Those contracts were declared on Friday last in Lor

don, and are as follows :—ALLEST AMD AXDBRSOV.

1,300 Tierces of Pork £i> 18 10700 3 IU 4

100 3 17 0JONES BROTHERS (London).

300 Tierces Pork .5 17 0000 Barrels do 3 19 11600 Tierce* (Hamburg cure ) 6 5 0

JiUGE.VE M ' S l V I N U Y ( I.DIl.inn).100 Tierces 5 2 9100 do 5 17 9500 Barrels 2 19 2

I 1 E E F .A LLEN A N D A NDERSON .

l :o00 Barrels, (half Irish,holf American) £3 19 U100 3 10 8

J ONES , BnoTHERe.3,000 £3 12 0

M R . SIMM S .1,450 Tierces £5 13 5

CLARE .30 Tierces jC5 11 7

BAKK W BLL .600 Tierces £S 6 8450 Barrel 1 IB"195

KNOWALI.400 TJercea (Hamburg cure) £5 fi .- .ft .-About 1,000 Casks of tbe above beef and pork btve

been taken for account of Messrs. P. Murphy fc Son,and S. Clare, of Cork.

SCRAPS FROM "PUNCH."DEATH IN SPORT.—In a report of the proceedings

of tho British Association Dr. J. D. MaratoUstated, on . exhibting a specimen of " Bonaparte^Gull,1' that it was " the only one hitherto shot in Europe.The learned doctor has forgottoa that several hundredspecimens were shot in the streets of Paris on Deft 2.

How TO "FINISH" A DAUGHTER .—1. Be t&mptelling her how pretty she is.

2. Instil into tier mind a proper love of dress. .,3. Accustom ier to so muchjpleasure abroad that sne

is never happy at home.4. Allow her to read nothing but novels.5. Teach her all the accomplishments, but none of »»

utilities, of life. . _6. Keep her in the darkest ignorance of the mysteries

of house-keeping'. ,. ¦ >7. Initiate her into the principles that it is vulga* *°

do anything for herself.8. To strengthen the latter belief, let her Bft« ,»

lady's maid. - •••*?.-9. And lastly having given her each an «dacati0Oi

marry her to aclerk in the treasury upon £75 «J«Mi to an ensign that ingoing out to India. {' '

If, with the abovo corefnl training, your daughter .»not finished, you may be sure it U no fault of youWj *»*you must look upon her-escape as nothing'!abort w.*miracle. .

Lady Naas received at a ball on" Friday. :ewan»irlost, at the Chief Secretary's Lodge, PhenlxPH*their Excellencies the Lord Lieutenant .ia«d' Cot w^;teas of Eglington, and 200 of the nobflity '.anCgqjrptry' of Dublin and the surrounding cbaptryv-.': ¦ : '/$M