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Show I Catest Irisb I2ew$, Fr u'tST-- I In Belfast Lough a young, rtian named 5 Hunt"", a resident of Bangor, while i ! jn a boat for fowling purposes on I Thursday accidentally discharged his ull He was shot near the heart and V died almost immediately. I on Sunday, at Ballinacurra, Midleton, f lT tne mate of the steam barge Puffin, I i ramed Reynold Matterson, was found frowned underneath the' vessel. The 1 ' neineer, John Kearns, his companion, ) I stayed on Saturday at Midleton with I friends, and, missing Matterson next juoi nhifr. search was made at the quay, i Ballinacurra, when his body was found um.-i neaih the Puffin as the 'tide was pins ut. Deceased was a native of f Glasgow, married and aged 50. It is j cuj.j.nscd he missed his footing on i iioard during the night; falling into h- w ider, there being no lights in the j yj.inity. i '. 'Hie lord lieutenant and party, who fuvivi-,1 at Queenstown on Tuesday rv ruing from Berehaven, traveled to ; tii.-. - hibition in the afternoon, and ' l.nii.lus were placed at the disposal I ; tV viceregal party for the journey, j : he tri.n up the river past the j (iu,. s and bridges was viewed by large , i"(is. who. from their demeanor, ap- j to be attracted by the novelty j v ih- scene more than anything else. Tilt- visitors were conducted through "i exhibition by the lord mayor and members of the executive com- r. I At a special court of petty sessions, in Rallybay on Wednesday before ; Vjr. Carson, J. P., a girl named J. L' Lvnih of Rebane was charged by Dis- ti'ict Inspector M'Auley with having (m the night of the 9th or on the raorn-) raorn-) nc of iho 10th inst., feloniously broken the dwelling house of Mary Gor-ir.an. Gor-ir.an. i;t Doora, and stolen therefrom a j. -hni bag, a pair of scissors, a pair ; ( f ii.K.ts and some other articles. Mary , ; c.ii nian. Peter Lynch. John Lynch. Swoant Tipping. Acting Sergeant Harasan and Constable Creghan hav- I i!i been examined, the accused was I i. turned for trial to the next Castle- Mayney quarter sessions, bail being ! al'."ed, herself in 20 and one surety I N1 small sensation was occasioned in ('la re by the news of the arrest at 1 Manchester of Mary Costello, formerly employed at the Clara postoffice, on the ! tharge of larceny. The larceny is al- ' ,ged to have consisted n the appro priation of the contents of a parcel i or parcels which passed through her i hands in the course of her duties as sorter at the Clara office. j The corner stone of the new church 1 nt .Moyne will be laid by his grace. Most Rev. Dr. Fennelly, archbishop of t'ashe, on next Sunday, the 2d of November. No-vember. The ceremonies will commence ; at 11 o'clock. Moyne is a small village five miles j front Thurles and seven from Temple-; Temple-; more, at the eastern side of the railway rail-way line. It has the honor of being the archbishop's native parish. The r.rtv church will be very little, if anything any-thing at all, less beautiful than that of the sister parish, Templetuohy. Both are Gothic. Templetuohy has nave and side aisles. It was designed by Mr. Ashlin, and is considered one of the prettiest churches in Ireland. Moyne has nave and transepts, and was designed de-signed by Mr. O'Malley of Limerick. The Moyne people are making great preparations to celebrate the event in a proper manner. Mr. J. F. X. O'Brien on behalf of the executive-of the U. I. L. of Great Britain, Brit-ain, has formed a committee to provide pro-vide English electors with literature dealing with the coercion administration administra-tion in Ireland. The committee consists con-sists of Messrs. MacVeagh, Hugh Law' and J. P. Boland. The Sheridan scandal scan-dal is the first of the series of leaflets, and Mr. Redmond's "Coronation" speech, delivered at the meeting of the party in Dublin, will form the second. sec-ond. The third will be devoted to an account of the Mulranny case, and other leaflets are also now in hand. The Sheridan case is stated with admirable admir-able clearness in the first leaflet. The i true facts of that typical example of Dublin Castle methods have probably never reached the mass of the English people, for, with very few exceptions, the story was either garbled or su-pressed su-pressed in the English press. The leaflet now being circulated presents the facts in all their naked horror and enormity, and it cannot fail to be of service in opening the eyes of many Englishmen to the kind of thing that ls being done in Ireland in their name. . John Breen, a butler employed by Major Fortescue of Stephenstown house, Dundalk, on Monday night killed Alice Moore, maid to Mrs. Fortes-cue, Fortes-cue, with a revolver, and then committed com-mitted suicide by shooting himself. The tragedy is attributed to jealousy. The inquest was held on Tuesday by Dr. J. Sellars, coroner, and a jury, of which Mr. T. Soraghan, R. D. C, was foreman. At a meeting of the Westmeath county coun-ty ..council committee of agriculture and technical instruction, the Rev. Dr. Gaffney, bishop of Meath, in the chair, the. following resolution was adopted unanimously: "That we, the members of the Westmeath county council technical tech-nical instruction committee, protest against the action of the government. in proclaiming ,a portion of our crimeless County under the coercion act, and we call for the immediate withdrawal of the proclamation." S- On Sunday last a great fire broke out at Woodlands, Raheny, the residence resi-dence of Mr. Thomas O'Malley, J. P., when two big hay sheds packed with hay. oats and barley, were completely . burned out and property to the value of over 2,000 destroyed. Mr. O'Malley is convinced, and so are the people of the locality, that it did not originate in any malice towards him. as there is no more popular and generous employer in the entire county. coun-ty. . It may be that some drunken fel- low went to rest in the farmyard, and, carelessly throwing away a match after lighting his pipe, set fire to the hay, and then, having found the disaster which he caused, disappeared before the conflagration was discovered. |