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Daily News (London)

The appointment of Mr. Shaw Lefeyre to the office of First Commissioner of Works in succession to Mr. Adam is

... is of excellent augury for the. completeness of the pending Land Bill. In the discussion of the subject he will be able to speak with the authority which oomplete knowledge of the whole question gives. It is believed that his successor in the Secretaryship ...

THE IDENTIFICATION OF HABITUAL CRIMINALS

... simple matter, 4 the production of this list; but there is ' whole I world of complexity bebind it, for the warder has to speak 4a to facts and to faces that may have been all but dead recollections to hin for over a dozen years, The' question is, How ...

Hallo, my fancy, whither wilt thou go ? is the refrain of a famous old song. Hallo, my

... Maclver's motions about the injustice of the competition to which British interests are subjected. But it was not so. Mr. was speaking on a motion about the care of the insane. The connection the argument was maintained. If the care of the insane were an Imperial ...

Our New York Correspondent in the telegram which we publish this morning reports the probable collapse of Mr. ..

... violence in America. It is one thing to address meeting of Irish tenants in a time of suffering, and quite another thing to -speak to prosperous Irishmen on the other side of the water. It is satisfactory, however, that the money which is being collected ...

THE SOCIALISTS AND THE POLICE

... certainly think the public have a right to know who' is responsible for the instructions to the police in tbi matter. You speak of the indiscretion of Mr. Morris, but I should hope that every lover of freedom would echo his cry of 4Shame!I It should ...

THE MURDER OF M. GOUFFE

... UT 1yraud is tbougbt to have gone to some-oountry vlace in &mera. He speaks Portuguese, English, Spaniab, and Italian, which he learned qwhle * comneroisl traveller. F~rench hA speaks ID less well. He was educated at the Christian 01 Brothers' School at ...

EXTRAORDINARY TRIAL FOR SLANDER

... the plaintiff. The defendant's counsel had argued that the very at violence of Campion's expressions when, for instance, in speaking to the magistrate, he called Strevens a scoundrel, only proved the sincerity of his feelings; but he (Mr. Macdonogh) contended ...

SHOCKING MURDER IN CANADA

... was hold' ing her down to the floor. Upon seeing Mrs. Mord entrt the room, the woman endeavoured to call out, amnd ded to speak to her but the only words which could be dwnotoly heard by the landlady were 'Neighbour's' and, murder' and almost immediately ...

The Whitechapel Crime

... something as a eijuV eV al U - - crime, though it is of course far too early to speak with certainty on that point. Even if that were established it might still be too early to speak of it as a clue to the whole series of Whitechapel murders. There is, as we ...

THE POLICE COURTS

... out of the house, returned to his bar. He was followed down by the defendant, who, before he (the landlord) had had time to speak of the oc- currence to his wife, rushed upon him with savage violence, and struck him, at least, ten or a dozen successive ...

THE CATHCART CASE

... I'he Master of the Rolls ?? you dlo not be quiW I ahall dii net the risher to remove you. Mr. Hlood lars again pi oceeded to speak. The Master sf the ftolsis-Uslers, remove him, if ht does not lhe quiet. The ushers lose, and were moving towards Uir. BRoe ...

MIDDLESEX SESSIONS

... ly has it been bcought within the reach of the poorest class of the Ljopulation. Plain speaking with regard to acts of the grussest immorality-the sort of speaking which, as I read this morning, the Bishop of London deprecated before women aud children-has ...