POLICE

... POLICE. BOW'-STREET.-WAR AMONG THE TAILORs.-Yesterdsay six journeymen tailors, most of them without employment, all of them Irishmen, bately imported from Cork rrnd Kerry, were brought to this Office, charged with committing a number of desperate assaults ...

[ill] IN THE POLICE

... within the short space of a twelvemouth. In comparing this ac- count of the shipping of Franee with that of England and of the United States of America, we both discover the great dispropor- tion between the extent of the trade of the latter two countries ...

EXTREME SUFFERING

... decease s was buried on Saturday by the Kirk Session, and that his funeral procession, fortoie- of police officers, ragged Irishmen, and idle boys, was as r painful a spectacle as we ever witnesecvl. Ills nwife had the I hardihood to claiw the money subscribed ...

POLICE

... ill-treated by the latter; he and two other Englishmen c (now in the Hospital) went to assIst the deceased, when a body a of Irishmen, armed with pitch-forks attacked them, and they d narrnwly escaped with their lives. Lkarsley was armed with a i scythe in ...

ACCIDENTS, OFFENCES, &c

... was no doubt intended, have five yoang,, children, but none of ihem par- took of' it, Abouit three weeks back, a numuber of Irishmen came to the village of Wembley, near Harrow, in search of work, and were engaged by a farmer named Read, anid allowed to ...

HORRIBLE MURDERS IN EDINBURGH

... liqiuir and sleep, he thlrow Burke eiff nud got to hrs feet, uhen a despe rt- rate strugigle ernsued, Jamie fought with the united frenzy c-f the ttiadresa and despair, arid BurkIe was ahout to be overpowesrerd, st, it when lire called our ferrriously to ...

THE LATE MURDERS

... and bearing of which lead directly to this in- act ference. But the matter cannot possibly be allowed h to rest here. The united voice of society calls loudly inl for further, deeper, and fuller investigation ; and if all the Public Prosecutor refuse ...

CRIMES OF INFORMERS

... 1,~tl slaughter, forlhalf that sum; that he did not succeed, makes nomorastj. tinction in his offence. Had the three poor Irishmen have died o the gallows, would Vaughad and Co. have been more delinquent? Whareare we to look for the superlative atrocities ...

COURT OF COMMON COUNCIL

... conduct of Government; but this, bethought. he was the moment wben tile question should be carried, because ten Government were united upon it. Besides, it was supported a at by the greatest ?? and Fox, Canning & Wind- the h han, and all our great Statesmen ...

BRISTOL ASSIZES

... been lonq desirous of a,- telipt ing, a nlrellexteOi iegi and eflici t di~clisarae of teire pastoral situ parochilal ditties. unit of' pirovidintg a Mto'e ge titral and syatelatutic visitatioin oft'tle pa~rish, wiflh a stie% to itsa greater nornil and rid ...

POLICE MEETING—MONDAY, 30th Nov

... -next. We itdersttrnd thmt tire lion. Colonel Grant, of Grant, has arpointel the l7ev. Jamnes Grrttrt, Ahlitistur of tire united Pa- rishes of Cromniale, Inverallan, and Adhie, ii room of the lie, . G3recor rramnt, deceased. Air Lindsay Carriegic, of ...

RECORDER'S COURT

... froeS the counties of Deobtgh and Flint, passed through Chester on their way fol Liverpool, iwhere they will embark for the United States oft America. They vwere accompanied as far as the canal by-many' friends and relations, who, on bidding them farewell ...