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THE MURDEROUS ASSAULT

... Postoffice, is said to have read the PC did, evening before, at the Society of Arts, an address no ex- in which be says he can speak and hear one th, den a quarter to five miles off by an electric sal radiant withont intermediate wires. You ought mi to know ...

ALTERCATION BETWEEN TWO ATTORNEYS IN THE COUNTY COURT

... have' to beg that your H'onour,, if .you. please, will. speak to .Mr. Gray. Mr. cray walks up to me and says, .If it were not for your wife you'would be n'the parish,and- thenba goes and speaks to that gentleman (one of the ?? Honour: Gentlemen, it is ...

THE FENIAN TRIALS

... Justice.-We are willing to give you every latitude, but we cannot sit here and allow you to speak of those parties who have been examled'as witnesses . Strictly speaking, youzreonlylto say why sentence should not be passed upon'you,'but at the same time we ...

LIVERPOOL COURT OF PASSAGE

... did go straight with anybody who gave him work. I will havenothgto do with him; he is nothing but a fraud, and everybody I speak to, brewers and all, say the same. Builders won't work with him.' Mr. Curtis informed the plaintiff of these remarks, and the ...

THE HUDDERSFIELD MURDER

... murdered .ey ?? of identification was given by the in girl's unole, who oamne from Flint with her father, !ty who could not speak any English.-Mrs. Brooks, ;es landlady of the hotel, said the deceased was the ,Id best servant she ever bad, being most willing ...

DESTRUCTION OF A COTTON WAREHOUSE BY. FIRE

... being poured upon it. 'rl'e warehouse was com- pletely gutted anid the roof burnt, but the adjoin- ing property was sate. Speaking of the danger which the surrounding buildings had passed through, a gentleman who occupies an important and responlsible ...

[ill] NEWS

... recognise him, asked the prisoner if he remembered seei g him on the previous day, when he (the prisoner), speaking in French, said that he was enable to speak English and was trying to get money to join hi family in Liverpool. He (the Stipendlary) then gave ...

BELGIUM

... results of our harvest are not so unfavourable as it was at first presumed they would be. Abroad the harvests are, generally speaking, Eatlbfaotory in those oountries that export their grain, and the liberal system adopted in Belglam allows it to be said ...

A GREAT ACTOR LN THE DOCK

... my lunlgs. (Roars of laughter.) Mr. Aspinall: Have you anything moreto say.- rr Prso (poung in a theatrical attitiude, and speak- 3. lug in a melodramatic tone of voice)- Yes, sur, I 5 have. Wel!, eur, is it To Leu or uet to be, that is the question. le ...

THE LONDON MURDER

... HutchmgEsshesaid, was quiteright h when shestated inher evidence that ?? fallshle overheard a female voice say, Speak, ieak, nal speak ! Did you hurt yourself when you fell ? Hi for she did use some exelamnation. It was equally true that the dremsmaker's ...

MURDERS

... wvas discovered lying on the floor '.ahaTo, Uleedilg Profusely from a deep cat in the 1 1,,eigh COnMeious, she was unable to speak, t~d to the prisoner, who was present, as the ho d ?? the act. He was remanded. b . a, impwruvinig. °,y into the mysterions ...

THE ALLEGED MURDER OF A FISHER BOY AT SEA

... skipper, `I'm cold; it's too bad, skipper. The accused then began to throw water over deceased. The latter could hardly speak; he trembled. He had fallen, and whilst he was getting up the skipper hit him with a rope. At live o'clock in the afternoon ...