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sleep in the parlour? _A._ Yes, we have the two parlours. _Q._ What is your general hour of rising in the morning? _A._ Between seven and eight. _Q._ Mr. De Berenger's time of trumpeting is not so early as that I suppose? _A._ I have heard him at nine o'clock. _Q._ He did not alarm the neighbourhood at seven o'clock? _A._ No, I have heard him by eight or nine. _Q._ Not so soon as that I should think in the month of February, not being very warm weather at that time? _A._ I cannot speak to the time. _Q._ If a person went out at eight o'clock that morning, you had no particular reason to know of it? _A._ No. _Q._ You had no call to look after him on the Sunday, or Monday, or Tuesday morning? _A._ No. _Q._ And whether he slept at home or did not, you cannot take upon yourself to say? _A._ No. _Re-examined by Mr. Gurney._ _Q._ My learned Friend has asked you as to your husband observing upon Mr. De Berenger's going out on the Sunday morning: in what words did your husband make the remark as to Mr. De Berenger's going out? _A._ He called out, our lodger is gone out with a new great coat on. _Mr. Germain Lavie again called._ _Examined by Mr. Gurney._ _Q._ Who was the Gentleman that Mrs. Davidson pointed out to you? _Mr. Serjeant Best._ I object to that, that is a leading question. _Mr. Gurney_. I beg pardon.--Did the last witness point out any person to you at the Crown-Office, at the time of striking the Jury? _A._ Before she came into the Crown-Office she saw Mr. Cochrane Johnstone getting out of a Hackney coach at the Crown-Office door--she then told me---- _Q._ Did she point out any person to you as having seen him before? _A._ No, she did not then. _Q._ Did she afterwards fix upon any person as having seen him? _A._ No she did not, unless I can speak to what passed before. _Q._ Did she mention having seen any person get out of a Hackney Coach? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Who was that person that she observed upon? _A._ The person she pointed out to me as having seen get out of a Hackney coach was Mr. Cochrane Johnstone--she staid the whole time of the striking of the Jury, he struck the Jury himself. _Lord Ellenborough._ Then the whole of it is, that the person who was striking the Jury, was Mr. Cochrane Johnstone? _A._ Yes. _Mr. Gurney. (to Mrs. Davidson)._ Was that person the person that you believe brought the Letter? _Q._ I can
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