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THE PROVINCES

... beaten with the most unnatural and brutal severity. The poor little fellow had been often seen by the neighbours picking up and eating garbage to satisfy his hunger, and even going to the pigs'-trough, and devouring eagerly such refaseas the pigs had not ...

ASSIZE INTELLIGENCE

... sixteen days they wandered on, e exposed to all the inclemenices of the weather, and with nO e other food than the garbage they picked up in the bush, i, They then met another party of the natives, who were out y hunting, and who offereod to conduct them ...

MISS KNOWLES AND THE HAWK

... to be a translation of a French publication; but the counsel did not see that men were entitled to go and gather up what garbage they could across the Channel. The defendant's oence w as one ac aiist decency and against Miss l ...

POLICE INTELLIGENCE

... PICKNcGs PeczeTS.Ellen, Thomas, and Mary Fitzgerald were old hat brouglet up by detective-olllcer lt'Culloch, charged with Picking Pro Iby the pocket of a young lady named W~ilson, of her purse en UP' ion. 2i. lid., whilst passing down Ileld-street, oul ...

THE POLICE COURTS

... and ing lads werer variously sentenced, at the New Bailey, on Toes. om day, having been detected in the act of attempting to pick of pockets at EBodes races. Morris and Littler, two men, resid- da- tog in Cleester-street, Manchester, were sentenced for ...

POLICE COURT

... for offettder. fr a'saulling Emmia, AnssshoIury. end sitealinglia shaswl 'I I Of from her ?? Pssctll ased John Atherton, for pick' cb- red Iog Ittehetsast the revioew, on Tuesday. ihi( sild AeSAULTINGe -ire POLICE.-On Wednesday, Willism Hoare, Iat the a ...

POLICE INTELLIGENCE

... It wae clear she bad been starved, .a for ase need to go about begging bread from the nieigh- fII ~I bours, and eating any garbage she could find fits the street; I d and her present state of health was produced, according Y to the medical evidence, by ...

POLICE INTELLIGENCE

... bite them. The other risonear thea iiterfered and tried to pull Higgs away from the ficerwho had apprehended him, and Rogers picked up a large tone end hurled at the constables, whose heads it narrowly missed. It was proved that they had done damage to Mr ...

HULL POLICE REPORT

... and flab, at the request a fof Mr. Gleadow, Customs tide-surveyor. Between fi verytubt andforty atonies of this unwholesome garbage had Cit. Mytonigate, for the trij~iny sum ofyfer shillirrgs, '1the ?? iday price of rmanure, as it wvas aptli remarked by ...

THE LAND ACT

... wives and daugbtera of these poor men I could be seen prowling in the grev ot morning! about the streets of Limerick to pick up garbage i to take horne to feed their cattle, living therneelves in a state of filth and misery which lancuagel could hardly describe ...

POLICE

... aiy s~plicaationi. Shte then. proceeded tos relate that she subsisted, en,- tirelty up:-n time cold potatoes and. garbage that alto picked up in thme streets, and that sending her to gaoil woiled be conferring a 1 heothr-por wmanage mplredto he sent to ...

LAW, POLICE, AND CRIME

... him'upstairs chained b yof the leg to a staple in. the waill. He was in thle habit Of th wandering about picking up herring boned'from the. PI .gutters, garbage, and other refuse from, ash, pits, afidt th devouring them, greedily. The body presented one of de' ...