OLD BAILEY, JAN. 11

... 'His friend inquiring what Was the matter, or what had hap- pened, tile prisoner imnmediately replied' I have hilled . sy Sail ; and, on being: again questioied as to, what he meaht, and if the child was dead, declar ed, Yes, I have cut her head half ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... wa.s ready to sail, and was not taken of' till the August following ; that the ship might hAve niade helf'vage, gope back again,. and again returned to this country, withiin that peried and that in fast, ivheri she To asallowed'to sail inmAugust, sheIwas ...

COURT OF KING's BENCH March 2

... either on board or in port until tne 30th of thalt-inonth. It wt not until the 7th of Ebruay hjowever, teat the plinitif` sailed fdnally from England. The ividesde wvould m;4'E appear, thwe, aaerthe30tb ofianuaryA Ie'ltild hlve no iftersurse with 'her ...

COURT OF COMMON COUNCIL

... ts Ii es os ibulin. of our fehlow-svubjesits were to bu- oaiict d to t'- lay the clwisses. tics, or ifihe-y were-to 1he hr sailed vish' odious 'ism-leanA taught to consider their interest .sa isipas ,ible cc be re--eficiled. to ourown? And it ,Jstoa hf ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... her sails, when she ar- rived i tlie&2Susiedl fuois the West-Indies, was verv 'ratifyiaeg to ainualsotrl o spedo:eaors onl tele -oe, as tele tine takenl by tills %s li disciplined ship's coml1paly, frorm gaoig slslI to ferl and tlissa uthi sails, was ...

LONDON—JULY 12

... eenym53 jad 'gtreetglit, being ?? they had remained a fortih, en sic (,adere Jst proceeded, as we supposed, .ic Trndad, withl 18 sail of telnvz ?? rree)aaac anish, eight large frigates and cfretc I I , cludin- the Cayenne sloop of war, rolture they had made ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... view of a trading ad. veLnture to the West 'Indies, had got quanItites of e goods from different merchants arid dea Hrs. 'I e sailed and was taken by the' enemy, by which means all the property which he had taken with him w~as lost'. -In . the mnean timie ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... Plaintiff came on board.- By his skilful and seamanlike nmansCvres the vesselwis re- lieved. lie cut a spring cable, filled her sails, and threw her on her beam unles. By these operations .she- was lifted up, and floated into deep water. The Defendant pid the ...

EXTRAORDINARY TRIAL

... from the evi- dence-of Capt. Kerr,-that be sailed in the Diana, from Newcastle, for.London, on the 4th January. ' When hegot near Yarmouth roads the weather wasso bad he was obliged to reef all the -sails.. The sea ran so high that it made a clear passage ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... Eoswell (the Commodore of the three), had returned to Guernsey to get water, when they wereolles. Sailed the Saracen sloop, Capt. Prevost, on a cmrize. Sailed the Hardy, Locust, and Daring gun-vessels,; on scpz- rate criizesa;Came hmo'harbour the Viker ...

LINCOLNSHIRE

... independently of four others who overe stationed at the oars, got on board thle vessel, pro-' ceeded to Chelsea, aod from thence sailed down the river to Greeniwich. The form 'of this raft resembles two wherries laid alongside, but separated by means (sf a platform ...

Published: Tuesday 03 September 1805
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1064 | Page: 4 | Tags: Crime and Punishment