Still, it made one hell of a hassle, and the result thereoff is that an excellent Ripperologist practically stopped posting here. (And I was trying to avoid talking about colleagues.)
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John Moore
Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Mr. Evans. Thanks for that. Please also convey my thanks to Mr. Skinner.
Do you have any opinions about the Hurlbert chap? Have you, perchance, seen his hand?
Cheers.
LCSPE
Treat me gently I'm a newbie.
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Quarterly Review, Volumes 150-151, October, 1880, Page 278
The Newspaper Press
The second offshoot of the ' Central Press' is the 'Central News,' in Ludgate Circus, the proprietor of which is Mr. William Saunders. This undertaking is designed simply and solely for the collection and distribution of news, and there can be no question about the energy with which it is worked, though there are, perhaps, some fastidious persons who might desire a little more care in sifting the news before it is sent out. It was, as most newspaper readers will remember, the 'Central News' which gave currency to the report about the loss of the 'Himalaya' troop-ship some nine or ten months ago, and it was on the same authority that the so-called confession of Hartmann was given to the public. Of the part taken by the reporters of this Agency in the miserable affair of Hannah Dobbs and the Euston Square murder, it is not necessary to speak. The matter was tolerably notorious at the time, and did not increase the respect with which intelligence headed 'Central News' was received. One great peculiarity of this office is that it is almost always open. Work begins in it at a little before four in the morning; when the earliest copies of the London papers having been obtained, they are eviscerated by skilled sub-editors, and the results are telegraphed before a quarter-past five to the provincial clients of the concern. An early morning despatch follows, embodying all the news which has been received during the night. Throughout the day at short intervals news is telegraphed to the provinces for publication in the evening papers, and on Sunday mornings a brief summary of Saturday night's news is despatched to subscribers. Parliamentary Reports, Stock Exchange and Commercial News, Court Circular, Markets, the lists of Bankrupts from the Gazette, and sporting intelligence, are all provided by this office, which, furthermore, does not disdain to supply clubs, exchanges, and news-rooms.
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There's an account in the following article of testimony by Hannah Dobbs that she was paid by Mr. Moore and Mr. Birley to write a pamphlet.
The Glasgow Herald, November 10, 1879, Page 5
The Euston Square Mystery
The Charge of Perjury
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New York Times, March 22, 1880, link
Current Foreign Topics
Paris, March 21.--Prince Orloff has left the city.
La Justice publishes a letter written by Hartmann, denying that he made the statement which was communicated to the Central New Press Association of London, and published by it on the 19th inst., purporting to be his confession of the attempt on the life of the Czar at Moscow.
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