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Liverpool, Lancashire, England

Access Type

160

Type

3

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CHARGE OF CONSPIRACY

... brmwing: Second advanced, Edwin C. Cartmel; pass, William Smellie, Sylvester Horn, George W. Heugh, Thomas Downie, George Meikle. Building Construction: Second advanced, R. Collins, Vincent Wrigley; pass, Ernest W, Cowden. Mathematics: second in stage 6, John ...

LIVERPOOL POLICE COURT

... the prisoner before, but soon got intimate with him, for when they reached the land- ing stage at Hirikenheul she took two gold rings from her Hingers and showed them to hin. lnstead of returning them to her lie put them isto his pocket on soum ipretext ...

Lancaster Spring Assizes

... he (Rigby) knew the first wife and her children, and also thie second wife and her children; that Thomas, the eldest son, was born rof tise first marriage, and *Mary Tracers of tite second. f Now this Mary Travers was born on the 20th of June 1786, just ...

THE DARBYSHIRE DIVORCE CASE

... and in 1884 he found employment on the stage, and became an ator, takng part in many Ieesw In 1886 he becae acquainted with h ife Ms.. arbyshite, whose maiden name, , which se presetped as an actress on the stage, was Agnes Hewit The petitioner was in- ...

LIVERPOOL POLICE COURT

... att mpted to seize the prhsoaer, who. turned round and asruck him with the knife In the chest, Inflit- Dog a deep wound. The second mate then caught hold of the prisoner, who stabbed him twice. Immediately afterwards he was secured and put in ?? Gray Of ...

BIP?KENHEAD COMMISSIONERS

... steamer, and £25 for the second best of each class. From the ferry aooounts it appeared that the reoeipts for the month ending the 31st amounted in 1800 to £2385 155., and in 1861 to *2907 12i. Bi. The receipts from'the 24th April October were, in 1860, ...

WIMBLEDON POISONING CASE

... John Tulloch, medical student at St. John's Wood, said he did not see prisoner, whom he knew, before April and December last. He saw I him on the second of that month, and he said he was going to Paris in the evening. He helped to pact the luggage, and ...

THE MANX BREACH OF PRIVILEGE CASE

... offences shows the number of crimes committed during the year to have been 439; number of apprehensions, 2000. of whom O66were committed for trial, the remainder being discharged and disposed of in other ways. The larcenies, which number 235, show a large ...

THE ZIERENBERG CASE

... at an embroidery establishment at :2 lOs. a, week, but an examina- tion of the bohas showed that for the frst year she obtained 13e. 4d. a week, and in the second an aer of a giea wee. In 1866-7 they by ng let s, ttbmaledefendant bu~gs swoe3eand pmgthe ...

THE BELL-COX CASE

... prison, Liver- pool, to bnng up the prisoner that be may be dis- charged from custody. The circumstances were e as follows :-In April, 1885, a suit was instituted It against Mr. Cox under the Church Discipline Act, e charging him with certain violations of ...

THE CASE OF THE LATE EMPEROR FREDERICK

... ical, controversial, snd statistical. It contains 21 tb illustrations, showing the condition of the late Emperor's larynx at different periods, the canula used in the later stages of the case, Z measurements made by Mr. Hovell with the view Ue of proing ...

THE CHARGE AGAINST A THEATRICAL MANAGER

... and fraud had been goinz on since April, 1S64, and the total deficiency was about £1700. Mr. Carl Rosa, the proprietor of the Royal Court Theatre, said he purchased and took posses- sion of the theatre on 1st April, 18M The pri-l soner was employed as ...