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ATTEMPT TO ASSASSINATE LOUIS PHILLIPPE

... TTE1 TOM.E Lzoui IA T10 1~ ed Paisi, urss'd* vA ing, Nine o'aock. n- Another attempt has been made to assassinate the es King of the Frinch,'at six b'clook this evening. As, s theroyaleriaeOWa5 leavn PthTuileries, returning to Si;nt 'Cloud; Ihe was fired at; but neither he nor u any perton' of hiS suite *as ivfounded.' 'The ?? rnwas instatly seized;- an. tihe Kinge, who displaye, his ...

THIRD EDITION

... t. SECOND COURT.-FRIDAT, M1ARCH 20TH. (Before Mr. Sergeant Atcherlcy.) Benjamin Wisenao, So, Reoort Jenkinos, 28, and e- Clayton, were charged with thaving, mn the 20th 1- of August, at llipley, feloniously stolen a horse, be- le longing to Mr. John Wilks, jun. Is Mr. B&ANES and Mir. HILL conducted the prosecu. 10 tion. Mr. COTrINGOIAMi, Mr. WILKINS, and Sir to GREGORY LEWIN were for the ...

Proceedings in the Hull Police Court

... vrofer2binp in thWe Full 4olfe CcQurt. TUESDAY, OCT. 13. ITEAL1NG A WIVISTLE.-A boy, iamaned TV Pownsbury, was charged with stealing a vwhistle from a stall in the Market-place. The prosecutor not appearing, the boy a%,vs dismissed. PrICKING POCKETS.-Janzes Smith, a young man just liberated from gaol, was charged wvith trying to pick a gen- tleman's pocket at the fair, on Monday night.-Police- ...

Published: Friday 16 October 1840
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 406 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

DREADFUL MURDER OF A GAMEKEEPER

... _._ D . F A -A:E-EE:ER: I DRFAD)FUL MURDER OF A~ GAMEK-EEPFER.' § (Fro ilhe BlackbIr Sandard.) It is not often 'that our neighbourhood is. agitated by accounts of murders committed within it; but this week we are called.u'pon, in the painful discharge of our duty, to tacquaint the public with the particulars; o~f. a tragedy, .by which an estimable and respected young man has -met waith an- ...

Published: Friday 03 January 1840
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 615 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

WEST-RIDING SESSIONS

... Si ii rlI It IT it 0I The follow ing is a summary of the result of the ac several criminal cases, few of which possessed any general interest. All the sentences were to hard labour, except it Ahere otherwise exepressedl. T~aSripoiTRr TEN YRAeis.-Jaoseph Macdonald (28), g. X1iej, lfrom Urlaih Batt~ye, at Kirliburton. Elizabeth Archer (2ri), and I Sal Anti Wright, alias Walker J22), for Stealing ...

IS THE NATIONAL DISTRESS CAUSED BY DEAR BREAD OR BY OVERTRADING?

... f WE had neither time nor space to notice last I week a commentary in the Manchester Guardian on the r argument submitted by Mr. EDWD. BAINES, Jun. to the r Anti-Corn Law Deputation in London relative to the national distress and the state of trade. As our con- temporary, however, differs from us in some degree, and as the authority of an Anti-Corn-Law journal has been l eagerly quoted by the ...

STATE TRIALS

... No. 8. hlim, Tiss P~Utltiet of Right COntlained. rathtr! 5 torrobo- ha ration of ancirlit liberties, than a Creation of now .to I and unictul privileges. rorced loansbonevolences, ttakes wdthout the consent of Parliament, arbitrary itaprisoanments, the bitletings of Soldiers, martial T Jaw;- these were the grievances complained of, and ta ~agetst these an eternal remedy was to be provided'.01 ...

THE PRIVILEGE VICTIM

... THE 'PRIVILEGE VICTIM. I ~ , 1, L . IN states wherein despotism ,of tbe most perfect Ohiaracter has been most fally stretched'to its abuse, we hove sometimes heard of prisoners, at the pleasure, ?? the tyrant, being barbarously treated;- lut we fnuch question if any despotism which the.world 'has yet seen,, be able to surpass that of the Reformed House of Commons,in referene to its ...

STATE TRIALS

... No.6. it WIToIcIurT, conjuration, enchantment, or E orcery is a crime of so extraordinary and dnlbimls I that few, at this day, will fed I ;tq - - - fearful and significant glances. Norarethese doubts confined to the unlearned alone; many, Who have th devoted their lives to stndy-especially to that fio of metaphysics, have not hesitated to declare their ti firm conviction in the truth of ...

COURT OF QUEEN'S BENCH

... COUR7T OF QUEEN'S BENCH. eonday, April 27. This being the day appointed for Mr. Feargus O'Connor to attend, and receive thejudgment of the Court, for the publication of a libel, of which he bad been convicted before Mr. Justice Coleridge, at the last York Assizes, the Court was, crowded long before the Judges had taken their seats, and great numbers of persons, who were unable to gain admit- ...

BRADFORD

... DawDIoun. COVUT H lUSEWENT, Aug. J. ?? NwelofAwlo; esr.Banrs and Co.,of Horton; ind Dvd Ba dadl of Bpw. ling, coal-masteis, -were ~innmonbd for sefling o~als by measure, instead.of by weight, as.-required by law, which, as the Chairman of the Justioes very properly observed, was passed for the protection of ' M°Clarkson was eigaged for the prosecution: the defendants appeared in person. W. ...

Hull General Quarter Sessions

... ITCI-A W1111 GOMM (9,UaTttr *fSfID)IS. | Owing to the inusually-heavy state of the calendar, there being 60 prisoners for trial, the court opened yesterday morning at nine o'clock. The proclamation against vice, profaneness, and immorality having been read, the Re- corder proceeded to address the Grand Jury, which con- sisted of the following gentlemen :- Mr. Joslirni JONES, Foreman. Mr. John ...

Published: Friday 03 April 1840
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2017 | Page: Page 5 | Tags: Crime and Punishment