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POLICE

... POLlC&B~ MANSION-HOUSE.-A man, named Jou~j'CniLD, was brought before the Lord Mayor by Thomas Herdsfield, one of the City Officers, charged with having robbed his em- ployers, Messrs. Daly, MacMurdo, and Co., wholesale druigists. The prosecutors had, it appeared, discovered that they had been plundered to a considerable extent by some per- s6n's in their service, who used a great deal of ...

STATE PROSECUTIONS

... STATE PROSEC.TIONS. IIt' rimOU THE D INMORNING EITJ Ior . Is ot because on dlcflinctinaryhIask~. e anothier wastreading in the le ootsmatepo usat x o the t because both had coalesced in rendereng lof Usrption but'ns af'fxr sy~gtig atio e d ?? jus Itice to a sufo nrneigin- them odr ious ointeg aio, that the ftitht was made to render uscn w rn tea sgto the En~gli'sh' ?? t an these Vil8Cpeat, e ...

POLICE

... P-: FOLICE. MANSION-HOusE.-Yesterday the greater part of the day was occupied in the disposal of applications from paupers for relief, and in granting orders for removal of the poor from various parishes to which they had impro- perly become a burden. As the business proceeded, Mr. HOBLER said he trusted that something -would be done during the next Session of Parliament to amend, or at least ...

IRELAND—TITHES

... IRBLND-T.THES. An adjourned Mlectiiig of the Parishioners of Hillsborougl Was held, pursuant to appointment, for the purpose of con- fiming the agreement regarding tithe, entered into by the Commissioners, with Archdeacon Mant. TIhe Marquess of Downshire in the Chair. It will be recollected that Arch- deacon Mant had agreed to accept of certain terms, which we specified a few days ago, for the ...

SHAKSPEARES TRAGEDY OF MACBETH

... SHAKSPEARES TRAGEDY OE'MACBETHj. ..-Every body is acquainted 'withlithe -story of the witches in the tragedy ?? -those wlhe know anything of the localities of the North of ;cotlamd, are awarv that the -spot at which' M2cbeth mnet with the witches is almost :uoiversally supposed:to have been on .the estate of B~rodie, beit'weenlithree id. fou miles on the other or west side of, Forres. Such is ...

STATE PROSECUTIONS

... .STFATTA PROSECUFION5. . TE SCOTS, AN.] A good Government cannot be degraded or broibght into Contempt. Government is impersonal. 'It conisists of institutions, rules, and principles.; A Governmenit is not free if' these cannot 'be subjected to the test of reason and it woulndbe tinsulting to cormon sense' to maintain that freedom 'can .exiit without the' privilege of proclkim- ing, examining, ...

ACCIDENTS, OFFENCES, &c

... I I _ AFF LICTING CASE.-A poor wandering Irish female was found dead in a shed belonging to a farmer, at the village of Crick, near Chepstow, on Wednesday morning, having lost her life from the intensity of the cold of the preceding night. There were three children with her, the eldest about eight, and the youngest about two years and a half old, from whom it is found that their father died ...

Published: Sunday 03 January 1830
Newspaper: The Examiner
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2248 | Page: Page 11, 12 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

POLICE

... VOL ICE. -: = C V 0 [SATURDJY. MANSION-HOUSE.-A6young mn'ann..hned THos.TAY Wn, was charged with having robbed Mr. David Grant, of No.`2, Philpot-lane, of a diamond pin.-Mr. Grant- stated, thatsat about two' o'clock 6n- Friday afternoon, as he'lwas going down Fish-street-hill he ,was shoved aboutin a crowdby some persons, of whom.,the prisoner was-one, The pri- soner took hold of hirlmby the ...

CURIOUS CASE IN THE INSOLVENT COURT, DUBLIN

... CURIOUS CASE sH ToE INSOLVENT COURT, DUBLIN. Charles Walsh, late of Borris-o'-kane, in the county Tip- perary, was opposed by John O'Brien, a creditor for 2061. Mr. O'Brien's lawyer said, lie could not proceed in his case in the absence of a material witness named Poe, who had taken the benefit of the Act in 1827, and had then returned a debt due to him by the insolvent as a bad debt, but had ...

POLICE

... i POLICL. MANSION-HOUSE.-A Naval Officer, named OLI- VER SMITH, was brought before the Lord Mayor, charged with having assaulted a constable for having act- ed with much kindness to him. The Constable stated, that on the preceding night he saw the defendant going through the City in a state of intoxication ; and, as he had the appearance of a man who might have prolerty about him, the witness ...

POLICE

... FOLICE. MANSION-HOUSE.-DUTIES OF THE MAYOR- pi ALTY.-_Some people have formed a very erroneous m estimate of the nature of the duties to be performed by ci the Lord Mayor. This has been sometimes very much ni complained of: but the public have, in fact, fallen into tl the mistake in consequence of observing those Civic ra gentlemen, who are determined to cut a figure in the A Chair, often ...

POLICE

... POWCE . MANSIONITWoUSEINCOMAIODIOUSNESS OF THE JUSTICE-ROoMX-Sir PETER LAURIE, yesterday, at the Mansion-lHouse, took public notice of what has been long considered a very great nuisance-the incommodious size and construction of the room in which public busi- ness is transacted. Merchants, and parish officers, and constables, and witnesses, and thieves are frequently to be i seen all huddled ...