MYSTERIOUS CASE OF DROWNING

... portion of his money was in his, waistcoat-pocket. CAsE OF STABBING, AT CARDIFF.-It appears that early one evening some- Irishmen and Norwegian sailors were in Bute-street, and a quarrel having taken- place be- tween them as to-a girl who Nvas in heir ...

YORKSHIRE WINTER GAOL DELIVERY

... and THOMAS OSCROFT (24) were charged with having, on the 23rd August last, broken into the counting-house of the Sheffield United Gas Light Company, and stolen therefrom a mahogany box and a glass naphtha test. Mr. JOHNSTON was for the prosecution; Mir ...

THE POLICE COURTS

... sit e-r Mande remarked on of thtiges atr ftecr umsanes. He said there the wa Ino people on the faee of the earth, except Irishmen, who tedawoud go, and, without the slightest ljrovocation of any kind, f by or sort, set upon Mel], maul them, end knock ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... MURDEROUS ASSAULT BY IRISnMEN 1N WAKE. IEELD.-At the Wakefield petty sessions, the ch ef-con- stable reported that a number of Irishmen had become a complete terror to the inhabitants of the borough. Their cosdact, especially on Saturday evenings, was of the ...

GREAT RIOT BETWEEN THE POLICE AND PEOPLE IN NEW YORK

... six members of the police, while passing througih Jd ksso-street, tear Cherry, weere surrounded by two ol three hbittdred Irishmen and boys occupying the teneiiret houses in the vicitity. No violence was offered furtlwer thm, keeping the officers benumed ...

IRELAND

... depart for the United States, and the question is whether it might not be well to afford them a fair opportunity to serve their country by joining the ranks of a corps to be com- posed, if such be the national desire, exclusively of Irishmen i Tui PRIESTS ...

HULL POLICE COURT

... money, and the al defendant, having paid the expenses, left the court. so SATURDAY. id James Murray and John MacGowen, two Irishmen, of were charged with committing an assault upon Mr I 'Jackson, musician. On Thursday evening Mr Jackson Se was standing ...

Law Intelligence

... as serious a charge as could well be made against a luau in Mr. Gough's position There were two temperance societies in the United Kingdom tween whom an unfor- tunate difference existed-the National League, the prin- ciple of which consisted simply in ...

THE MURDER OF A GAMEKEEPER NEAR COVENTRY

... but they thought it was a man siooting a rablbit. Riagroe then said, after they left MIr Hi. Ehbone's Hill, they saws three Irishmen coming towards the Bull and Butcher. I-e afterwards related about the man he saw in the act of shooting. lie described the ...

CORONERS' INQUESTS

... deceased and another man in Boldon-lane, after which the party, consisting of several Irishmen and the de- ceased, went into an ?? field, where one of the Irishmen named MoMann, stripped to fight the deceas- ed, and an encounter ensued. The.deceased was ...

WINTER ASSIZES

... g him, said he believed that Irishmeu met forg with as much justice-be was going to say as their own the oountrymen, hut Irishmen were their outit coeuntrymenm. For mes his own part, he never saw ai cise where ut muan sustained any ams prejudice because ...