30-10-1849 Freeman's Journal. Condition of Tipperary. Famine and extermination are still thinning the numbers of the once hardy sons of this soil. Greenane House is no longer the residence of a Mansergh; its splendid drawing rooms and extended corridors are now in the occupancy of the outcasts for whom the poor law makes a provision. The baronial walls of Lisheen House mouldering to decay, scarcely afford a shelter to the owner against the storms of adversity. Clune House, Bansha, no longer recognises the claims of a M'Carthy; it has passed from change to change, until its doors at last have opened to receive the paupers of the suffering union, as an auxiliary workhouse. Castle Lloyd has lost its ancestral dignities, and has been turned to a similar purpose. Moore's Forth, the residence of the late Crosby Moore, it is thought will, ere long, become a workhouse. Goldenville, the residence of Henry White, no longer receives the elite of the Country, it is now in the possession of the Tipperary vice-guardians, and the refugium peccatorum of the extermination of Golden. The extensive stores of the late Maurice O'Brien, in the Main Street, in the vicinity of the aristocracy, are also occupied by the wretched and the out-cast, and Nelson Street presents the appearance of one monster workhouse. The Bradshaws and the Bakers have sought the situation of poor-rate collectors and obtained it. So progresses the ruin of the Gentry. Extermination, too, is progressing at a fearful rate. The landlords are employed at Marble Hill in demolishing the homes of the peasantry, while hundreds come into this town from the rural districts to claim protection from Mr. Richards, the humane vice-guardian of the union.