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DISAGREEABLE MENTAL TRAITS.

" ' Are nothing lesa than of ner.,*ro*M_eßVjx)rn'of dysDepßiß. 'iWolie'e : ( ''mm^-^tabliMUt'i digestion, {and V " the aero*

1 vaged around them, > The capl the handkerchief was knocked i by an Orangeman, iwho was i with a blow from a stick by a ■•• person who had failed his ra to the mast, so to '-speak, by ting his piece of greenjrilbon to >at. In lees than a minute the wftß raging fifty yards, away, he anoient maxin, " Whenever eea head hit it," o^me into inoe With the automatic simpli--1 a natural law, Many persons had been lured into feathering ils of early wattle had > oause to t their devotation^to,- [the Austn bloom, for the golden wattle wed unpleasant associations in amds of the wearers of tbe „ and there were bjows and bin plenty. (In political botany attle and the blackthorn cannot side by side. 1 all sideß there were gut heads deeding faces, but as ; long as i and stones were jfihe .• only ins used the damage seemed to omparatively unimportant. A however, arose that J someone trmed with a knife) and a soene tense ezoitem«nt ensued, several 3 crying out, "Ly4oh him, b him." Tbe orowd made a and a young man namM James ,nd, who had been making himjspeoially oonspiououajj was ari by the police and dragged into . It looked long od^js of the yer getting., to the wajtohhouse, ie police formed up ropnd it so minedly that the attempted resas abandoned, and thej prisoner July lodged in the ojlla on a c of riotous behaviour, where is afterwards joined {by JereSlattery and samu^l Doyle, vill have to answer to a similar c, ■•- •- ■• 3 pleasing feature amid tHe general rbahoe was the bebavionr of the Father Luby, the popular parish i of UrunßWiok, who endeavoured fill the force of his eloduenee to ide his unruly flock ffom conig the disturbance, Mounting ntof a cab Father J^uby ded an extempore address of warmth and power, imploring aearers, in the namfl of the jhty, to disperse and go : peaceto their homes. A few of his re shamefacedly : dropped the r pieoes of blueatone, wijh which oality was ' Well provided, and ■ed their priest out of the throng, ie greater number, sad po relate, itiffened their- necks anjl took a grip of their blackthorns, itrary to the expeccati ins of all law the battle of the 00l )urs, the Ity room at the Melbou -ne Hobwaß not filled to;ove flowing, i was not even one app ioant for amon bandage. All 5 the in* —and' there were many—preto seek their family physioian ist in home surgery. The only whose injuries werej serious h to neceßsitate immediate ion was Mr Michael O,\ nllivan, cc of the itoyal Hotels Viotoria , Oarlton. Ha was daz6d with a Da the head at the out let when )rangeman's buggy wsreceiv--986 attention. Hia friends took > Dr Miller's surgery, ia Sydney and when he had been bound ant him to his home. His 1 was of small oonsequfence, but vertheless cijueed a sensation get his friends, who turned up soreß, even hundreds,' (it hiß to learn how he was getting on. ,s late into the might when the ac had paid his call. 1 O'Sullivan is a big^ broad-, dered powerful Irishman, but he ;he story of his wound ib a mild self-deprecatory fashion. He to Brnnswiok, ha explains, y to see thefua. He had no tion of interf erring with anybut—and he smiles-r-he did se to submit himself to be y trampled upon. If Ihe were 1 to defend himßelf he preto see to that he would acquit ilf well. Merely that' and no When he arrived at Park he joined the great < crowd assembled, and later, \yhen the >nt of the buggy commenced, he oarried by the crowd— quite st his will— right alongside the le. Then, before he had time to ly thing at all, somebody; hit him c head with a loaded stick, and ihare in the proceedings was He regretted that he had been c down so early in the day. was all. The wound was y an incident, an interesting mt in a lively day, and had 1 a useful purpose in showing how many friends he possessed, .bourne Argue."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18960805.2.22.2

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XXX, Issue 183, 5 August 1896, Page 4

Word Count
707

DISAGREEABLE MENTAL TRAITS. Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XXX, Issue 183, 5 August 1896, Page 4

DISAGREEABLE MENTAL TRAITS. Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XXX, Issue 183, 5 August 1896, Page 4