THE FAILURE OF A CIRCUS PROPRIETOR
... another Mr J. Davis at the bar. It should be as tnder, yours obediently, ELLIS J. DAVIS, 1, Elm-court, Temple. December 5th, 1881. ...
... another Mr J. Davis at the bar. It should be as tnder, yours obediently, ELLIS J. DAVIS, 1, Elm-court, Temple. December 5th, 1881. ...
... wvhose face was banda~et and who was apparently in a weak condition, deposed that'she was married to the prisoner in June, 1881. For some e prior to their marriage be was engaged on the stage, ?? wa manager of several theatres. She took to the theatical ...
... the piece; that the defendant appeared in the piece; and that the play was registered by the proprietor on the lst November, 1881. He supposed Mr Thomas would admit that uno charge was made for admission. Mr Thomas-Oh,no. Mr Clegg farther admitted that ...
... from the 1nsolvent Cone and in the New Bankuiptcy Bill it was proposed to deal with the matter. y the New Bankruptcy Act of 1881 all the poweirs of the Insvolient Debtors'C Coit Itiorsere vested in the Court of Bank. ruptoy. C nderctha t prov eon Mr Cook ...
... had lived in England since he was five years old. He first saw Miss Cameron in Mlanchester, and became acquainted with her in 1881. He was then carrying on business in the city, and bad an income of over 2,000 a year. They were married in 1884, after a courtship ...
... The actibn was brought to recover dareqoges fqr a libelons asr'ticle publiehed in the'' Examecer 'on t~he 13th of December, '1881 In which the writer commented ulp6u the connexitoh of Lord Ciarendon7 with the plia~ntiff as, proprietor of the Werlei'aa diselesed ...
... cavatina from Sonnamiscla, by Bellini. It was tried before the present Lord Chancellor (then Mr. Bacon Rolfe), in Hilary Term, 1881, and the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff was not the proprietor of the composition, and that there was no subsisting copyright ...
... the disease, and doctors had told him that the excitement of the stage was good for him. He first went on the stage in July, 1881, when he was engaged by Tlt Wyndham to play at the Criterion Tneatre in Flats, at 6 a week. The plaintiff then recounted his ...
... s for a settlement of the cause were soon after commenced, which were only completed on Saturday, the loth day of January, 1881, when his (the deponenr's) costs were paid. There is no statement or imputation that this settlement has been made, either ...
... did not ask for the prisoner's sommittal to the common gaol and hard labour, under the 102d section of the Bankruptcy Act of 1881, for his contumacy, but would for the present be content if the Court adjudicated the prisoner a bankrupt. Mr. Commissioner ...
... not discharge me in June, 1880; I resigned. I advertised my celebrated burlesque lectures on natural history at Cork, in 1881, under the name of Mr Lambe, of the Imperial Theatre, London. I had played in She Stoops to Conquer at the Imperial Theatre ...
... knew his handwriting, and no expert could distinguish. But the defendant said-and that was the extraordinary thing-that in 1881 he came into contact with a person named Wilfred Murray, and that this man wrote a handwriting exactly similar to his own. ...