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FOUND HIDING

... I tried to grapple with him but he broke free and escaped from the house. Charles Frederick Groves. editorial assistant on the Star. said that four days after the robbery a package addressed to the 'Editor was delivered at his office. It contained ...

Published: Saturday 25 October 1947
Newspaper: Kensington Post
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 480 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, TONE

... will his lordship. CHARLES DICKENS. circumstances the face and figure Charles; Dickens were always unmistakably conspicuous. The same prominence of individuality was curiously manifest in Mr. Leslie's well-known picture of Mr. Dickens the ...

AND CEREMONIAL

... including, however, a gignificant Ballad of B',.‘w §mu}. By One of the Force, concerning A CASE OF ATTEMPTED ROBBERY respecting which Charlce Dickens gave evidence as a witness. The verses open shus :— There was two litterairy gents Which harm in harm did ...

Published: Saturday 17 April 1920
Newspaper: Eastern Post
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 509 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

But PUB PLUNDERERS SENT TO PRISON

... Road. The Earl of Warwick in Golborne Road and the Bridport Arms in Avondale Park Road. These included robbery and malicious damage. A fourth man. Charles John Canavan. 32, steel erector, address unknown, who pleaded guilty to larceny was jailed for nine ...

Published: Friday 18 October 1968
Newspaper: Kensington Post
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 568 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

eFor yesterclay's Parliament see pays 6.)

... satisfaction, are :about to give a performance for the benefit of the widow :and family of a deceescd brother. Messrs. Charles Dickens, Blanchard Jerrold, Planehe, Talfourd, Byron, Buckingham, 'Halliday, Draper, Falconer, Palgrave Simpson, W. H. Wills, ...

Published: Saturday 08 June 1861
Newspaper: Saint James's Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 600 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

CHINGFORD

... Gillispie. Mr. E. H. Livermore in the unavoidable absence of Mr J.W. Clarke, read Bob Crotchet's Christmas Dinner, from Charles Dickens' Christmas Carol. ALLROZD By • Boy.—At the Waltham Abbey Petty Session on Tuesday, Thomas Sluice, a boy, living with ...

DEATH WAS DUB TO POISONING

... she said, and had been robbed on the steamer coming over, of important documents which she received from the Duke and Charles Dickens. She had also lost the Invaluable ledger she intended to produce in the Drums CAW. he detective-inspector took the matter ...

his neatly got-up little volume contains several views of old and new Dundee

... Messrs. Macmillan and Co, :-- A Tale of Two Cities. By Charles Dickens. Ilustrated by H. K. Browne.—lts clear print, substantial paper, and neat tasteful binding, make this issue of one of Dickens’'s most popular novels a most dssirable addition to any ...

Published: Friday 07 March 1902
Newspaper: Bookseller
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1028 | Page: 23 | Tags: none

Messrs. Chapman & Hall's New Books

... people, as Mr. Renton well remarks, think of John Forster as simply the biographer of Charles Dickens, mainly because the personality and national reputation of Dickens overshadowed all others. So far, however, was this from being the case that Forster ...

Published: Wednesday 25 December 1912
Newspaper: Bookseller
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1342 | Page: 50 | Tags: none

TIN THIEVES OF LONDON

... himself so communicative said that he had seen members of the more aristocratic class chuckle over a robbery, committed upon the poorest—a robbery more barefaced and less justifiable. Men boast of murder, he continued, where they have passed their ...

Published: Saturday 09 December 1854
Newspaper: People's Paper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 600 | Page: 5 | Tags: none