OLD BAILEY SESSIONS, Friday, May 8

... brllers through my Counoel or Attortney-it is Is nt lit to'le ;atd lieie' It .Mr., Jrutice 2 3uis.iie Your, Counsel cannot speak f for you-they atil uiy. examine such, witnesses as you may hlaveto cill, and uoti is the 'time for you to address t the Court ...

SCOTS BOROUGH JAILS

... atmosphere of pestilence, from which they have no .pwaer.to ebeape. Wlhfeyer ivisits the Jails in Scotland will',, generally speaking, be forcibly struck with thiat destituion, which: Hooker declares to be such an inipedinient to virtue, as till it be removed ...

LAW

... be construed into disrespect, has beelau caused by the plaintiffs or their Counsel. Tie LoRn CHANCELLeR.- nia sor, V tiat I speak so untinselli--. gibly ohft I cacnut be understood. It is impossible that the husit- ness oftais Court chlo proceed regulerly ...

DREADFUL CASE OF WM. SMITH

... return no more ti6 his house, neither shall his place kilow him any more. Therefore I will rnot refrain my mouthi: I will speak in the anguisehof my spirit; I will complain in the bitterness of my soul. This unfortunate man breathed his last on the 27th ...

LEGAL QUESTION

... swear to disclose or speak the whole truth, but merety that ivhat he es please to say shall be the truth. Ii} answer to this I will call Archdeacon Paley, who, in his Moral Philosophy, chap. 17, says- The witness swears ' to speak the truth, die whole ...

CRITICISMS UPON THE BAR

... a faculty of bringing to bear upcu oeneptott all ile remources of of jtet. kct atadj kiov ledge0 they are wistflicl h llwy speak from tormer experience, let from presenuzrt obhmrvauion- irrag3 r leCeticxa1 Of wat they ha~o witu ed at ant K t1V tofe, without ...

ARREST OF GENERAL GOURGAUD

... nor oien b would break it open. The servant immtdiately ween into the behl-room and told the Genera.l a person wisl: ed to speak to himi. The General toldt her to shoe him in, if lie would excuse his being in bId. ?? gentleman went in and spike a few words ...

CRITICISMS UPON THE BAR

... Member of Parliament, but I do uot recollect ever hearing hias speak Ithere or seein g his naine in the newspapers excepting in' lists.of rnajorilies. To this circumstance, perhaps, (tor. I speak hezitatingly), may be attributed the pectiliar ad-. vantage ...

THE MURDERS AT GREENWICH

... her a person at the door wanted to speak to her, and lie had no doubt but Betty Clarke toldlher it was Willialm Aitchiwanted her. In about five minutes after his daughterwent out of the room to go down stairs to speak to William Aitch: he heard a noise ...

FORGED BANK NOTES

... negative the hand wtiting, it is vlot that fact, either alone or primarily, which the wit- tess is called to prove, but he speaks with absolute certainty to all the other parts of the fabrication, which iender it impossible that the note should be genuine; ...

A SON MURDERED BY HIS FATHER

... Itmd - e hIad also- a stic k under ris i'iglit arnt. lWhenlme fired isle pistol the d(C'eased cailne forward, anl' without speaking, fell -upon h is hnee in the midlle-of the shop. 'Iae fa'tbier ialt-ed throuigh the shop, looked rouind, and emxelaimnel ...

CRITICISMS UPON THE BAR

... efoquence inl ihe ordinary sense in which the word is 'understood, and int which it is used by one of our best poets, when he speaks of the Power abnve Powers, ?? eloquence I That with the strnng reign ofcomrian'diagwnrds Doth) manage, vuide, eind master ...