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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

THE PRINCE OF WALES v. THE EXAMINER

... ROSA M.TIL.DAS ! Ansi this delicious rcunpnssusd is to I give consequence' to a SoCiety, r~csisting of the most respeciable Irishmen in London, _ ith rink and talent aI their head !-HeCIP us, blensevolent Compon ttitrs, to s'oae mnarl( or of her-some significant ...

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 ...

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 ...

POLICE

... knew any thing of the union existing between these Irishmen. Drury. There are a lot of labourers united together, and because we won't enter, they're all against us.-Mr. Rawlinson. But what do they unite for ?-Drury. There's a whole body of them meet at ...

ACCIDENTS, OFFENCES, &c

... to his bed several weeks. His speedy dissolution appeared certain. Nevertheless, on Monday evening lie determined on being united to the object of his affections on the ensuing morning. Accordingly, about nine oclock, lie was with difficulty dressed, and ...

ACCIDENTS, OFFENCES, &c

... and after Trafford, wasf yards- fell down-and expired. 'Severed of the Eng~ishrea received dangerous gunshot wvounds. Two Irishmen are a present in tihe Preston infzrmnarr; one named. Cas5idy, n the other Cavanaghi. One of thlem~had both .his serms br~kta ...

STATE TRIALS

... the endeavour to persuade my countrymen whom I love to cast aside past differences, and, whether Catholic or Protestant, to unite in one endeavour to make the land of their birth great and prosperous. (Continued cheers.) Mr J. A. O'Neill, of Bunowen Castle ...

STATE TRIALS

... which her independence was founded. No Attorney-General was found hold enough to prosecute Flood and Grattan for a conspiracy Irishmen then felt that they had a country; they acted under the itfluence of that instinct of nationality atich, for his providential ...

IRELAND

... the purpose of beseeching Heaven that justice might be done. In this devotion it seems that all the Catholic traversers had united. Upon going to the prison I was informed (says the Chronicle report) of a very kind and generous act which had been just performed ...

IRELAND

... It was most painful to a man's feelings to go into a club-room in London, and hear them speak of the inconsistencies of' Irishmen. ' Look, they say, how their representatives act; and there is Mr O'Brien chaired to-day by the people of Limerick; and in ...

IRELAND

... indictments be tolerated except in this country, where the liberty of speech and of action was the right of every subject in the United Kingdom. But that liberty of speech and of action was regulated by law, and had its necessary limits. In our free country ...

IRELAND

... sworn before him, that Mr Mitchel had committed felonies under the act of 11th Victoria, by writing and publishing, in the ' United Irishman' newspaper, certain articles on the 6th and 13th of this month, addressed to the Protestant farmers, labourers, and ...