A WORTHY OF SNOWDON,

... was always ready to help inquirers of all descriptions. J. H. Froude, F. W. Newman, Charles Kingsley, Tom Hughes, Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, Bishop Owen .and Sir John Rhys were a few of the eminent men he had known in boyhood or had accompanied later ...

Published: Saturday 23 April 1927
Newspaper: Northwich Chronicle
County: Cheshire, England
Type: | Words: 187 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

WOMEN AND THE LAW

... the plunge and appoint women to one of the few spheres which they have not yet invaded. A writer says that it was Lord Chief Justice Coleridge who first suggested that women would make excellent judges. But the reasons he gave did not. appeal to a rough ...

Published: Friday 18 July 1924
Newspaper: Coventry Evening Telegraph
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: | Words: 159 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

OBJECTS

... support of scientific cruelty. I do not hesitate to support the absolute prohibition of Vivisection.”—The late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. horror of Vivisection cannot be too strongly expressed.”—Lord Brampton (late Mr. Justice Hawkins). You must settle ...

BALLARAT

... BALLARAT. Arthur Coleridge, who asserts that he is brother the late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge England, was sentenced three days’ imprison* meat at Ballarat (or drunkenness. Our readers may remember that not long ago there was accident through carelessness ...

Published: Thursday 07 January 1909
Newspaper: The Cornish Telegraph
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 125 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

“WHO IS ME. CHURCHILL ?

... Judicial humour ie often flat, stale, and unr profitable. The famous question Who is Connie Gilchrist?” asked by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge a good many years ago, set the fashion which Mr. Justice Darling followed yesterday in seeking enlightenment as ...

Published: Thursday 30 April 1908
Newspaper: Nottingham Evening Post
County: Nottinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 161 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

MATRIMONIAL TROUELES

... Fortune, for the defence, submitted that there was no case. It was a mere family squabble, and he cited the dictum of Lord Chief Justice Coleridge in a case in which he laid down that any matter of this kind could not be dealt with criminally unless a breach ...

Published: Saturday 06 August 1921
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 218 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Lord ModipisllL

... present Lord Coleridge, now one of the jestiees of the King's Bench Divi- Pion. who. on the death of his father, Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, in 193 4 , continued a peer to practise at the English Bar; land of the present Lord Nineties, who, on his to ...

Published: Monday 20 April 1908
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Telegraph
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 151 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

New Year Society Weddings

... her husband, who was tho Black Watuh, was killed at Magersfontein. Mr. Guy Coleridge, R.N., grandson of tho late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, to be married to Miss Dickson, and the same date is fixed for the marriage of Mr. Guy Guillum Scott, of the Inner ...

Published: Friday 24 December 1909
Newspaper: Western Times
County: Devon, England
Type: Article | Words: 143 | Page: 16 | Tags: none

Coleridge's First Cigar

... Cigar. The symposium of eminent men an their first smokes reminds a correspondent of an incident in the career of Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. Only once in his life did Coleridge taste tobacco. It was on the occasion when .Master the Prince of Wales (now ...

Published: Friday 25 January 1907
Newspaper: Cotton Factory Times
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 150 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Death of a Noted Snowdonian

... archaeologists, denominational historians, and others. J 11. Fronde. fe W. Newman, Charles Kingsley. Tom Hughes. Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. Bishop Owen, and Sir John Rhys were some of the eminent men he had known in boyhood, or accompanied later in their ...

Published: Thursday 21 April 1927
Newspaper: North Wales Weekly News
County: Denbighshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 197 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

LAUGHS IN COURT

... one of them received the following reply: My dear Eve, whether you wear silk or fig-leaf, Ido not care—A dam! Lord Chief Justice Coleridge was fond of telling the following story against himself. He was addressing a large number of 'Varsity men at Oxford ...

Published: Saturday 17 July 1915
Newspaper: Westerham Herald
County: Kent, England
Type: | Words: 203 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

(Continued from previous page)

... shall be given, and “Thou has conquered, receive it.” Below is written the Epitaph (which is thus translated by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge) My worse part lives, my better buried lies, Death is my life, that he may live he dies. To earth I trust these ...

Published: Friday 18 March 1932
Newspaper: Wells Journal
County: Somerset, England
Type: | Words: 163 | Page: 3 | Tags: none