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A STORY OF CRIME

... A STORY OF CRIME. On Tuesday, Mr. Dixon, an American detec- tive, accompanied by another officer, arrived in Dablin, from New York, furnished with a transmlt warrant for the arrest of a German named Ziezen. meyer, charged with having murdered and robbed ...

THE CHILDREN OF POVERTY AND CRIME

... THE CHILDREN OF PoVERTY AND CRIME. REFORnMAToRiES, Ragged Schools, and similar institu- tions, Iave been called oceiaBridgces The title is a happy one. God's blessing, writes Longfellow- God's blssing on thle arclitects who build Tile bridges o'er ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... separately for every crime laid to his charge he would enjoy a long life passed in the dock, and pro. bably be prosecuted by Liberal and Con. servative Attorneys-General during many changes of government. If his series uf crimes were to be spread over ...

TEMPERANCE SOCIETIES

... strain, ToR-Rgon's overthrow , ?? round, pnsh-srnnd, in quickest time The lowest frop be spent lw Aone lotd reund, ?? and Crime, And Crime's Just punishment I ,Fil, fill again ! fill to the brim To-Loss of honest fame! - Quaff, deeper quaff! whbile now we ...

THE JAIL OF NEWGATE—PERNICIOUS LITERATURE

... ry evidence surely established the fact that certain literature was anduoing respect- able lads to contemplate and commit crimes, and was a great and serious evil. Ete wished again to sound the alarm, that it might enter the minds rand engage the serious ...

``CEASE TO DO EVIL—LEARN TO DO WELL.''

... land- If thou has spent thy summer as thy prime, The serpent brood of bigotry to quell, Repent, repent thee of thy hideous crime- E Cease to do evil-learn to do well 1 TX. If thy great heart beat warmly in the cause Of outraged man, whate'er his race ...

THE FORSAKEN TO HER FATHER

... others do; But if we blame him, we in turn Have learn'd that hateful lesson too! Desertion of myself, his worst, His only crime perhaps may prove; Shall he of all men be the first Condemned for being false in love? The world has never yet denied Its favour ...

LITERATURE

... defence. T'is is a description of crime which no v tean with one generous droll of blood in his veins can think c of without shame aud indignation., Unhapiuily, however, e for the security of human life, every crime of the kind re- a sults store from ...

UP PROTESTANTS, UP!

... that kind heaven or earth can afford, By religion and laws, and bytorture abhor'd, By base superstition, and priestcraft, and crime. Up, Protestants, up !-'tis the crisis of time. By wife, home, and children, by kindred and King, By the one sacred triumph ...

Poetry

... linger, Pausing ol the brink; Be your purpose worthy, Utter what you think. Sometimes a word will save, Then silence is a crime; The best thoughts lack a use ]l\ot ?? in time! Act in time! reflect- Noneo Caln the past renew; To think and spealk are vain ...

SELECTED POETRY

... SELECTED POETRY, TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF ! 'TAteR care of yourself il'-hvat's tbe wrorldl to yon, With its sorrow, sin aud crime ? If you wvant to be rich, find somuetiling to dlo- The poor are seldom sublimie. To swim in the stream of wealth that flows ...

THE GAIETY THEATRE

... and discovers that it is Ravillhon7, who had S dropped his real name. This leads to the dis. r closure of quite a group of crimes. The first hus- e band of Lucy Steade is not dead, but turns out SI to be Ravillions. He had cruelly treated and I; abandoned ...