I and NATIONAL .'^^^^F^Mi

I and NATIONAL .'^^^^F^Mi

¦ • IRE LAND. ^ / te * ' . ' r^*; *• ' ' MmUMngg the middlemenSystem, but he though t by four or five childre n oh the same land as the father ,', OF MALCO LM M'GREGOR. they would introdu ce worst feature of thatt SiBBA-n*E j the very ' SO. TI. •system. He would use the words of ' the *late Mr. for J "Gobbet, and 'tell- not legislate 6h.it myself a short timej or them that they could .r nntr amm el ,] ¦the ' ' ' the fathers ^ j subject , the refore he said let ,, not desire entire or even long re- ' of the *- \ \ sav, I do thei natural protec tors , ' be the guardia ns propose d by • tbe witch ing influence that I feel Kathleen children. If they passed the resolution from iVIr. M'Grath , not a father in England would tako ) ^ affrises over n,v er<-17 thouSbt> 1 wil* f - up a share for his child. ' ... the unado rned narrative of " THE Mr: Shaw O'Conno rs motion. -f lhe reader would support Mr. Mr -'Cu O'Connor 's i ¦" -SE-X/' for such " mine host" turned out to FFAYji aid he would support Mr * •fv motio n; " - * " read er must picture to himself a stranger AND . Mr. , that any NATION Ui-koiy fhe I said wrong AL he thought it was 1 . -**' . stomed to all the comforts of a happy '^^^^f^Mi, man should obtain the of twenty acres of .{ acCO ~ tee-simple io***'- - . i.:„i, i\.a. f.«.«. * land , but the mora which the best hotelsi.n«Aic. canaov. furnishr..«. <.i., more he considered the case the or th ose ____OJ,77. LONDON . ]*ATUtoAY, DEC E^^ «». ^^2%tZ~ he was lost in it. society from the Tanks of the qm,ur ^l the fbosen gay, Mr. M'Grath said they inust not forg et that the *-* and Bbe never would tell me th e would always of th 'e .-grtinc an (- we^ "*forined , as Ms companions , reasonof her laving, ballot took place, it happened to turn up a prize ; Mr. Iwsb said , 'he represented. Borne fourte en tbe motion of Messrs. O'Connor and Ross declared to pr operty remain the property _ ' ' but I believe she tould " the person to whom it was transfer red held other allbpposed to the selling of the Land , Company, until such time as they had . bought it- wtcd wiiu all the dissipation that courts and her mother. , towns , under be carried . share B at the time he thought fathers were bound to suppor t their chil- " , but immediately transferred any ciroiiibstancet . His constituents +in France The next portion of the programme was introduced '" *f iri of lively fashion afford, sitting in the " Yes, said Ph elim, " The villain, and I'll hav e tbem ; this question had been dren on their allotments. • ' * . - tf0I submitte d to the board , would J uttdeitake f to deposit some seven hundred by Mr. O'CoRnor relative to his life. decided on its merit s - Mr. Burrell said he believed it was quite consis- - ncv corner of an Irish cabin, with au aged and and to be a strictly legal tra ns- pounds.-^ .... action. PLACING ONE FAMILY ON THB SAME ALLOTMENT. tent with the laws of the country , that minor sshould peasa nt, and his two peasant children , as "What , then ," said 1, no longer able to Mr. Cotfay saU he had receivejl ho instruction s i tiered restrain Mr. Smyth thought thecountr y He submit ted the following motion :— hold. He thomrht it would be the father 's part to ' was of opinion that ns regards the Baijk, but he was instructed to oppose companions. Yet, stran ge as it may my indignation , " did he insult you ?" no man could legal l ' would likewise be the host and y transfer his share after having the »ale of the;li ind , and henco he would support That in order to locate members of the same family look to his children, but it the property and and cloyed as I supposed my appetite for Kathleen wept ; and with a deep, deep sigh, obtained his allotment by ballot. the motion,, and trusted great caution would be upon the fame estate , tbe ballet in future shall be taken duty of the Trustees to see thnt ^ar. Mr. T. M. Wheeler said such thin gs were of daily observed. ^.* :• -.- , V . tha t is to say, suppose the riehts of the Com pahv were duly secured. enjoy ment to be, I found a chord answered " No, sir, I'de kill myself first , but he as follows:—In such cases, i mra ble o-currence. A man held sha res , Mr. SjiTTH' one ballot Mr. Holloway sai d he thoug ht it Mr. Clark pro- he became depressed ^ a hstructions was to support the members wishing to hazard their shares on f till now had remained mut e caught me and asked me to—" in circumstances from . : . '. ' • ' • " ' would crea te diaaatid tnc- afned. ffbich and slackness of wor k or other mbX- mot ion.. j . _ :.. .. .,, ; shall amount to four snares , and suppose the number to poatt ion was not adopte d, it " Enou g " ' fortunes , and thus was compelled tion amon g were favourable to ama lga- within me; 1 felt a mixture of honest delight h, enough, I ejaculated hastil y, " He s a to dispose of them ; Mf- T. M. W-gsi-LER would support the establish- be ballot ted for be fifty, in such case when forty-six shall all those who tel such was the case with found Mr. O Con- villain." Mr. Mills. ment ot a bank of deposit , but he thought branch be drawn , all chances of such members then resting their mation. And again , if fathe rs astonishment , mingled with no small share of j would imme- d Mr. O'Connor thought there was no cause for banks would be to anweildy for them to manage at chance upon one ballot f hall cease in that ballot. nor 's proposit ion was adopted , they jr , for having spent so many years of the O'Donnell resumed his narrative. alarm ; he had offered ei present. He diately tra nsfer their shares to other persons . _ .ienmac h ghty pounds for a four acre thought a redemption fund was an ab- Mr. Buook seconded the motion . t " 1'* al lotmen t at Herrin gsgate de- solute necessity, r Mr. said if Mr. O'Connor ' s prop osition my We in search of what is termed polite lite- Well, sir, he Continued , "I ax you, is not it , and his offer was ' Mr. Donovan thoug ht the resolution would he un- Donovan jgttof clined. Mr. to the inte rests O'Co nnor vfeuld be sorry to see any lar ge and called upon a family to make too many was adopted , it would be detrim ental piareand a knowled ge of the world , while I left un- a hard case to be in dr ead of being sent to the road just / rfe' ' ital waspaid Mr. G. Cavil moved that this Conference agrees capit alist or meneimonger deriving benefits from sacrifices. It was an intricate question ; they had ofthe Company, thr .ught when cap " that ited and was ignorant of the sphere and circle in my ould age, risin g slowly from the bench and , with the decision made in this case by the Directors , the results of his labou rs. As to the slims to be paid y in by one person , and ci rcumstances compelled discussed it much in Manchester , and t he more the whom knowledge with great care believing it to be strictly legal. m, he w«uld say any sura , as they had threepenny person to tran -fcr it to ano ther , the person to t(| lffC valuable may he acquired and pure , pullin g an old leather bag from discussed itthe moredifficulttheyfoun d it. He thou ght The Mr. Gilbertson seconded the motion , which , after instalments he cdj ld not " see why they should not it was transferred could not feel tha t interest in it, enjoye d. O'Donnell , a muscular looking his breeches pocket , " look there , your honour " he " it would be beneficial to locate families together ; a^jjht , a few words from Messrs . Cuffay and Donovan , was pay threepenuy de/osits to the' Redem ption :Fund , they would be better calculated to work together than and the paying up of shares would decline in pro - it would enab l? aa a of nea ily four-score years , -with his snow -white continued , taking a roll of old papers ont of several carried. and the members to place the money strangers. portion . ' old banda ges of leather and Mr. O'Cohxor in earrying out the programme of in banks instead; bf the publ ieatils store. He was Mr. VVnBELBR thought Mr. O'Connor 's proposition AFTERNOON SITTING. •Otis stre aming upon his brawn y shoulders , with linen , " look ther e, them business, brought forward the question ofa decidedly opposed to loans . If they mortgaged , tbey was decidedly unjust as it would do away with nine Mr. Cuffa y prese nted a petiti on from Glasgow blue eye that seemed to read my inmost is the papers ofthe lands of Crief and O'Donnells ' , ^erri ng HANK 0F DEP081T AND I88UB. 8acr ificed,-?nd if they sold, they must do it in a way chances out of thirty. against the return of Mr .Walker , signed by William freshness that fru gality aud content - Town, that was in onr famil for hundreds tha t wouldjiDsure a, profit.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    8 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us