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The Odd Fellow

THE ODD FELLOWS OF LAMBETH

... THE ODD FELLOWS OF LAM BETH. t A statement appeared in the last Tuesday week's 'Morn- ing Advertiser,' that the landlord of the Tankerville Arms, r Lambeth, was summoned for keeping his house open after . the hours prescribed by his license, and allowing drunken s and riotous persons on his premises till two o'clock in the f morning. In mitigation of the offence it was pleaded that a 8 society ...

BARRINGTON, TIHE PICKPOCKET, AND Mrs. SIDDONS

... One York assizes, after the auditors bad left the theatre, Mrs. Siddona. who had only to go from thence to the Black Swan, in Coney-street, was waiting with her female friend at the stage-door, for Mr. Siddons to escort then home. A gentleman of elegant appearance was waiting opposite the house, and observing Mrs. Siddons, crossed over, and ad- dressing her by name, said he feared she might be ...

COURTSHIP AND MATRIMONY

... It is remarkable that there should be such a plentiful harvest of courtship before marriage, and generally such a famine afterwards. Courtship is a fine bowling-green road, all gallopping round; and sweethearting a sunshine holiday in summer-time; but when once through matri- mony's turnpike, the weather becomes wvintry. Court- ship is matrimony's running footman, but seldom stays to see the ...

ONE WITNESS

... O \ Al' I T N r. s S. tte within the wvalls of the prison, slb e found her 1 b n the midst of a reckless wvretched sot of men, ple hInt, the issues of life and death. Their ented her for some time from coianiudtcat- J' bhia and at length a ribald just uttered by one i , l >Ties to such a degree, th;at withe his fat- h feled him to tbe ground. A geueret uproar *td t turn1;keys interfering, ...

Published: Saturday 28 May 1842
Newspaper: The Odd Fellow
County: London, England
Type: Crime and Punishment | Words: 1797 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

THE PRESS-GANG AND ITS VICTIMS

... TIlE PRESS-.GANG AND ITS VICTIMS. TIME MORNING TNIERIAJLD. This Christmas grand mammna has been denouinc- ing the Rural Police Committee, a majority of wvhic h are the Poor Law Commissionlers of Somierset llouse. Shc gives ont that this committee and tle establisliment of the New Poor Law are inseparably linked together ; anld for once we folly believe her. She eomninisserates, or affects ...

THE ODD FELLOW

... Iim ODD FELLOW, St. leg ei I?%t*,DA1 JAIWARYA t8, tm4o. 5y tht . VU i032,ASIAL BY XuflY. e. Tria y has long been the toasted bosiot of be0 T ngbe Vill )g EnglfsihW l. It-is at 198tItiUtion the best that could be devilsd to secure its much justice as we can have IdmL nstered on.his side tbegtate. 4t is to to both a right and a priIlege, and seems to overm'tcl ut men w4ith Be tigmuh seourity ...

THE CAVE OF DEATH

... In the early part of the French revolution the prisons of St Lyons were filled with thousands of unhappy victims, gi Seventy-tw oprisoners. vhbo were condemned, were thrown into the Cave of Deat, on the 9th of December, there to pl wait the execetin of their sentence. This could not be hi the next day, because it was the Decadi. One of the go prisoners, of the name of Porral, only twenty-two ...

CAPITAL PUNISHMENTS

... CAPITAL PUNI5HMENTS. Thes following aneldoxes, frop an article in Tait' faga. T sinl, wvill more ably assist the great cause of abolition, than all the raciocination of the most fervid plilantcropists, as tbey paiptbly itpugo the ?? of legal fiunctonaries, i who rarely stop to look beyond the dull and cruel formalities of law : A half-witted serieseial of a manor court in Galway lately ...

THE MURDERER'S CONSCIENCE

... THE MURDERER'S CONSCIENCE, H 'I have bad no peace nor rest these two years; ever since that night I have been a miserable fellow as ever lived,' said he; I that Wilson has appeared before my eyes many times.' The parson told him that was his evil con- science; but Bob told him again, he did not know what he was talking about, because he had not seen it. Says Lowe, I If you bad seen it, as I ...

THE POLICEMAN'S MEMORANDUMBOOK

... mess POLICEMAN'S MEMORANDTTM- BOOK. - ?? HORATIO STEVENS. the ,,,e 1ftue~~lovedid never yet runm 8r Vth-SHAKrrma. iit eyer occur to your imagination, renderwh-ether brol ,,,dswvains destroyed themselves for love or vanity - him 10 which of the two causes have preponderated its I w :dJ i I know not how long a heart will bold out brot ~ ,first crack, nor am I aware if the character of Ij :e i ...

ASSIZES OF BANKCHYSARAJ (CRIMEA)

... ASSIZES OF BAKTCHYSARAJ (CRIMEA). | AN~ ADOPTED SON. I By 3M7.. Ro1iin, Professor of French and Latin Literature. ar w We borrow from One Of the last numbers of the Karani b! Viedonnwst, weekly paper of' Kasani, the following recital of a1 criminal lawsuit lately brought beforii the high court of thle Crimea, andl whose romiantic incident's are taken from the inqu~est (Sledztwo) of the Captain ...

THE TURKISH POLICE IN CAIRO

... BY ATMxAN'DER DUMtAS. They hlavc not in Cairo, as in other large cities in En rope, a troop of policemen to prosecute every thief, and they would be of littleservice. Without the ivalls of the city the thief would immediately be in the desert, and the T.'urkish minions of the law are as afraid of the sand as they are of the water. It was necessary to devise some- thinirg in want of this, and ...

Published: Saturday 28 May 1842
Newspaper: The Odd Fellow
County: London, England
Type: Crime and Punishment | Words: 1319 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: Crime and Punishment