2-5-1833 From the Times In the County of Tipperary, various offences, partaking more or less of a Whitefoot Character, continue to be perpetrated; for instance, two ploughs were burned on Friday belonging to a farmer's widow, named Haydon, who did not give up her land pursuant to a threatening notice. Minor offences of this class are continually occurring, but the Police authorities have been very active of late, and last week made a wholesale draught of offenders (In Co-Operation with the system of arrest adopted in Wexford and Carlow), by which, 22 individuals were committed at once to Clonmel Goal. These arrests are altogether distinct from those still made on account of Tithes, although carried out by the same constabulary. On the last fair day of Clonmel a great number of Tithe defaulters were arrested on warrants previously issued and placed in the hands of the Police, who only waited for such an opportunity of doing business on a great scale. The defaulters, however, seemed to have made up their minds on the impolicy of further passive resistance in the present state of things (and of thereby remaining "marked men" liable to the operation of imprisonment under the martial law system, and the tithe system too), for they brought with them the amount of the several Tithe decrees against them, and discharged the claims on the spot. The peasantry are frightened at the present aspect of affairs; how long their fight will last is a question yet to be solved. The poor laws, if speedily introduced, may do much, otherwise it is probable the old order of things, will soon be found on operation again,-coercion met by conspiracy, and severity by vengeance, whilst the heartless cupidity of Landlords, and the despairing destitution of tenants, will constantly cut out new work for the constabulary and the Legislature. Mary