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HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

... John said to witness, Deny, deny. ifirss said, am I going to deny the notes I gave to C nmy neighbours. While they were speaking, Johli a Baird, the town officer, separated them, A little af- ter this, he saw M'Neil give the officer some money.- o The ...

POLICE REPORTS

... to-morrow. We have to correat a mis-fltemen:, copied fr(m another Morning Paper, whicil ampeared a few dav: ago refpeding the Speak!er's fervie of jilate. It wias faid inshbe paragraph aliudcd to, Piat ,osol. Vwas the furn a~lowed upon this occa ion. ahis ...

NAVAL COURT MARTIAL

... the ship ; this was tallied of in their bl, ?? six of theirmessniates. Fitzgerald tol# 'she hid no occasion to be afraid to speak. On 1.diy evening Taylor wrote a letter under the ant, Is uhieh Cross, Cooke, Loekyer, Ward, Jones, rld, Collins, Cbestutmna; ...

NAVAL COURT MARTIAL

... Paid of him was highly favourable. Allen, Taylor, Simmonds, Conlayne, and Dixon, Cirafterwards called Lieutenant M'alfh to Speak to their he character, and he fpoke of them as before the mutiny, i attentive, trufty men, hlt he added that Taylor was Ig ...

TRIAL OF THE MUTINEERS

... hoped they would be able cl to carry their point without committing mur- !Y der. lle heard Taylor call himself a delegate, and speak of Chesterman as anotiher. v f7olhn Anfrrr deposed, that on Saturday the 5th II of December he heard Allen say t-erStevenson ...

MURDER

... the leaji hint of their nature. !p. 'Bitnllos A&uthor, in a late Publication, has made il15 reemark on the National Debt: Speaking of ear t f 79(; wen it amounted to 360,100,0001, quei, Laid li, (to pay it off), 47,265 pounds T101. L-ah NoteLi, having ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... he migit eb,00imn elF hopyptlty of ajo lsgi{tQ~ ?? ~it= o~ciiWanutlittsS of the nar`at&a, .'Wijt ib t he.- falien-intvihi speaking of him, I fotik dfie trouble o' calling at the bidstor s for -is ?? ?? wainotfir- tunate enoug -tQ-btain- t brek,, efore6 ...

Edinburgh, Jan. 10

... he saw Captain M'Do- ge nough that night, who had his hat off harangu- r- ing the mob, and although be did not hear him es speak, lie thinks by his appearance and gesture ?? lie was doing every thing he could, and rather more than became him, to please ...

HIGH TREASON

... prisoners, who, aftei tied hands and legs together, were thro . ;- : the sea. Another letter, tated abo)ut tl-. it'1 Novemrber, speaks of a scenie mich mo ?? cious, and attendedt with. ?? U! :i, more barbarouis cruelty. In one day . ILs th.n600oo. blacks are ...

HIGH TREASON.—SESSIONS-HOUSE, BOROUGH

... refreshments. A deep) conversatin was e;ti ted into, but the strangers were 'lot allowed to over- hicar it, though they can speak to the traitors beig as. tmi- bled in consuL ation logcthcr It was agreed that next nighit a granid ?? shaild take'place at ...

DOMESTIC

... that sanguinary monster? When Marat deanaded 5,o0oco heads in the convention, must We have contemplated that request without speak- ing of it in the terms it provoked ? Whntr Canrrer placed eoo children in a square at Lyons to fall by the musquetry of the ...

Sittings at Westminster, February 17

... his situa- tion would ever be guilty of; that witnesses did not ?? there to. answer for the ?? of their past lives, but to speak to the iss~ue in question; that he vas bound to tell the jury, that the refusal of the witncss to ansiver tlhat question, threw ...