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150
The Gazette of the Incorporated Law Society of Ireland,
[NOVEMBER, 1910
Belfast, was admitted in Michaelmas Sittings,
1885, and practised at Ballybay and Castle-
blayney up to the year 1908, when he retired.
MR. STANISLAUS M. J. O'FARRELL, Solicitor
died upon the 6th October, 1910, at East
London, Cape Colony.
Mr. O'Farrell, who served his apprentice
ship with Mr. Michael C. O'Meara, 20 Upper
Ormond Quay, Dublin, was admitted in
Trinity Sittings, 1900.
MR.
CHARLES P.
J. DOWNES,
Solicitor,
Cahirciveen, died upon the llth October,
1910, at his residence, Cahirciveen.
Mr. Downes, who served his apprenticeship
with his father, the late Mr. Thomas Downes,
Skibbereen, was admitted in Hilary Sittings,
1907, and practised at Cahirciveen.
MR. JOSEPH GALLOWAY, Solicitor, Dublin,
died upon the 24th October, 1910, at his
residence, The Priory, Monkstown, Co.
Dublin.
Mr. Galloway, who served his apprentice
ship with his father,
the late Mr. John
Galloway,
35 North Cumberland Street,
Dublin, was admitted in Trinity Term, 1860,
and practised, under the style of J. & J.
Galloway, at 55 Upper Sackville Street,
Dublin, in partnership with his son, Mr. J.
W. Dyas, who continues to carry on the
business.
Commissioners to administer Oaths.
THE Lord Chancellor has appointed the
following to be Commissioners to administer
Oaths :—
Thomas J. Deering, Solicitor, 12 Lower
Ormond Quay, Dublin.
Richard W. MacNeice, Solicitor, 12 West-
moreland Street, Dublin.
Alexander D. Orr, Solicitor, 5 Foster Place,
Dublin.
Labourers (Ireland) Act, 1906.
In the month of July, the President re
ceived a letter from the Local Government
Board requesting his attendance at a consul
tation with the Board relative to a new Order
which the Board desired to make under the
Labourers (Ireland) Act, 1906. The object
of
this
proposed Order was
to
amend
the Labourers (Ireland) Order, 1909, so as to
provide that the words " owner "or " lessee,"
where used
in
the Order of 1909, should
not include a judicial tenant, nor a tenant
from year to year, nor a tenant who has
entered into an agreement to purchase his
holding under the Land Purchase (Ireland)
Acts. The Board desired to make this new
Order in consequence of the decision of the
Lord Chief Baron, in the case of Elliott and
another
v.
Stranorlar Rural District Council
(reported in GAZETTE of May, 1910, page
109), in which it was held that the word
"lessee 1 '
included a judicial tenant, and,
accordingly, that the solicitor for a judicial
tenant should be paid for shewing title the
remuneration prescribed for a solicitor for a
lessee under the Labourers (Ireland) Order,
1909.
The President, in the month of July, laid
before the Board very fully, both verbally
and by letter, his reasons for dissenting from
the terms of the proposed Order. The letter
of the President was acknowledged upon the
26th July by the Board, with an intimation
that it would receive most careful considera
tion.
No further communication was re
ceived from the Board by the President, but
upon the llth October the Order, as origin
ally drafted by the Board, appeared in the
Dublin Gazette
as having been made on 6th
October.
The Order is in the following terms :
THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD FOR
IRELAND.
THE LABOURERS
(IRELAND) ORDER,
1910.
In pursuance of the powers vested in Us
by the Labourers (Ireland) Acts, 1883 to
1906, and of all other powers enabling Us
in this behalf, We, the Local Government
Board for Ireland, after consultation with
the President of the Incorporated Law Society
of Ireland, do order, and it is hereby ordered,
that the following shall be rules under the
said Acts, and shall have effect and be
observed in regard to the several matters to
which they relate :—
1. This Order may be cited as "The
Labourers (Ireland) Order, 1910," and shall
be construed as one with the Labourers
(Ireland) Order, 1906, and the Labourers
(Ireland) Order, 1909, and these Orders, and
this Order may be cited collectively as the
Labourers (Ireland) Orders, 1906 to 1910,