Singular Cases of Recovery of Hair, AFTER EIGHTEEN, TWENTY-FIVE, AND TWENTY-SIX YEARS' LOSS

... S1ngular cases of Recovery of Hair, AFTER EIGHTEEN, TWENTY-FIVE, AND TWENTY-SIX YEARS' LOSS. A few attestations (selected from numberless others, received during the last forty years) to the virtues of ROWILAND'S AlACASSAR OIL, the originals of which may be seen at the Proprietors'. So Messrs . Rollsand 4, Sons 20, Hatotn-garden, London. Hummums' Hotel,Covent-garden, Feb. 2t, 1842. Gentlemen, ...

JURY COURT—SECOND DIVISION

... JURY COURT-SECONID % vt t t s . A . e I . .. X . WVien the firt couse WasR Call (jar tllyu., onl Tuesday, before the Lord Jiti ie Cr ~~i sel stated that lie wvas reqitesto to teu c two Counsel for the de~eriders Wvetesr ti engaged in the Lethendy case, fur th5~or thst caUSC. rt,, The LoRD JUSTICr CrFRKa said, 6i co5N Austain that excuse, and wao glad to ?? ?. his reasosi. lie had fiten nastel ...

STRATHBOGIE CASE

... JUDGMENT OF THE COURT. Edinburgh, 10th March 1843.-The Lords baving re- sumed cetnidetation of this case, having heard Counseol ns appointed, and received the opinions of the consulted Judges-in conformity to the opinion of the majoriry of the Judges, adhere to the interloctitor reclaimed against and refuse the desire of the reclaiming note, and find the deferidlre iialle in additional ...

ANOTHER EXTRAORDINARY CASE OF DELUSION

... or r I 1 n o- I ?? ilr John Shepherd, chlaiged wvith having, at S- l R. temlpted to Pick Dir-. Homne's pcickt in tile pa I te /ri a 1,1 of the Houise Or Covilinions, arid who was renmanded R'ejn li that Pv idence inighi b e produtedt tI prove his licetliar hocit stat of indwasbrotglt t 1ip Botw inteet vwbtie lie se.'oniitxanljatiniton, Th inl '1he Prisoiner had a very wvild] appearance, and ...

Singular Escape from the Queen's Bench Prison

... At Union Hall, on Tuesday, Mr. Chester, the Deputy Marshal of the Queen's Bench Prison, applied for a warrant against Mr. Frederick tudford, a gentleman of property, confined for debt, who made his escape from the gaol under the following remark- able circumstances:-Mr. Ludford had been an inmate of the above prison for about six months, and on Monday, February 20, lie woo missing from the ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... LAW' I.NTI MilNo. C;URT OP BANKRUPTCY-I 4t4Ac 20. I*&.-eltkelavEy TucrsTT.-Thiofday.e . ae fixed for the final !djic'iedroam -ination of the ?? se' Cardigan and blaoL bottlernotoriesy, deorribed as a wir~lmbeerea aJt, and ?? of the.firnaof;Ilnctett, Gbrdon, and Co: rsnri g on ?? in the Pditzyp-. !&te partnership rwas dissolrd$ lt'h the eourseiofrlast year when.,it appeared that Gordoh ...

ASSASSINATION OF MR. DRUMMOND

... ASSASSTNATIO??I OF MR. DRIJMMOND. CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT, Friday, March 3. This day havisi been appointed for the trial of the as. sassin Daniel M'Naughten, every avenue leading to the court walS at an early hour thronged to excesaby numbers of well-dressed persons of both sexes, anxious to hear a case, the excitement of which has not been surpassed by any of the extraordinary events of a ...

THE COURT

... TIESE : COURT. 'The returrn of Ilt Court to B1uckiughamn Palace has broeght all accession of public business to the Queenl. Her Majestv held a Court onl Monday; at which the Prince of Thcrmn and Taxis, was introduced by the larou deCottleo, the Bavarian Mlinister. Count de Pollo1, tihe Sardinian Minister, and Sir George Shee, the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary from the Court ...

LAW OF LIBEL

... Iktt iberp0 I ?? SALUS POPUIX MsPREMA FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1843. Whaekrejoie in the important fact that Lord C bl haf takien ip the subject of our absurd leel ao i the ec- House of Lords, and if his purpose be, Ans we bel Pit topaetematter on a commoni-sense bosiswe froh his Lo cci as uc success as he will derive oorfo Lod iptt an mutil fit h raml hud e ot theu the attempt. Thirty years' public ...

LORD MAYOR'S COURT—YESTERDAY

... LORD MAYOR'S COURTr-YSTrfRDA1Y. Dwyer against Rowe. In this case the parties were apprentice and master, and the summons charged the defendant to show cause, firstly, why the indentures should not be cancelled; and, secondly, why he did not pay the plaintiff the sum of 9s., wages due. The plaintiff, a healthy, rosy-cheeked young man of rustic appearance, when called upon to state his case, ...

OFFENCES

... THE MURDER 26 YEARS AGO.-The paragragh stating that a man named Holden recently deceased at Egypt, near Chowbent, Lancashire, had confessed before his death to two women that he was one of the perpetrators of the horrid murder at Pendleton in 1817, is entirely a fabrication, no such confession having been made. We have seen a lett or trem John Pemberton, the constable of the place, who, alter ...

Published: Saturday 04 March 1843
Newspaper: The Examiner
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1882 | Page: Page 12, 13 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

POLICE INTELLIGENCE—TUESDAY

... POLICE INTELLIGENCE-TIUESDAY. CLERK hN WE LL. The case of a young female, named Caroline Haymard, came on for re-examinkation. At previous examinations this young woman stated that she had lately come from Jamaica, that she was niece to Captain Macpherson, of the British Queen; and that she was highly respectably con- nected. H yr story was so circumstautial and affecting that the sympathies ...