Cleara
1103.
9166
Q.
The Interpreter would see you paying money, wouldnt he
chake Work Tring an
109
9166
A.
Yes. There was none.
gret 20
Then you went and paid Mr Lamble $10, and he pass
your ratruns, didnt he ?
assed
1004167
A
Mr Shelton Hooper:-
968
A.
The Chairman :-
9.69
69170
A
Q.
Yes, when I went to see him, he was very pleasant, and
gave me beer to drink, and lemonade and so on, and
oigars, and he used some words, which moved me, 80
that I dared to promise him.
Do you remember what those words were 1
9168
Well, "good business; you have got big profits." I said
the business was very small, but "I beg you Inspector,
to overlock it, so that I can get rice to eat". And as a matter of fact, he was so pleasant, and 9169
encouraged you so much, that you ventured to offer him
money, otherwise you would not have done so ?
If he had no. been so, I would not have taken it to
give to him.
9170
It was because he encouraged you, that you ventured to
offer him money ↑
A.
Тев,
917 201
if I had not, I would have lost sll.
9171
On another occasion, you say you paid Mr Lumble $30 for
A.
A
1:
doing hooda, and so on, in houses in Bonham Strand.
་། ་། ། །
PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE
Reference:-
mimiimmim.C.O. 537
36
RECORD OFFICE, LONDON
OUT PERMISSION OF THE PUBLIC REPRODUCED PHOTOGRAPHICALLY WITH COPYRIGHT PHOTOGRAPH - NOT TO BE
Did you take the money up to his house, on that
Occasion ?
Yea, took it up to his house, and the second time, I
was soquainted with him.
That is to say you knew you could offer money quite 1/72
freely ↑
It was on this account, I had got acquainted with him.
And it was then that it was first issued out about the
making of those hoods for chimneys. Very few people
know how to do it. I asked him to go and look at th
first. I asked him how large they were to be, and how
they were to be made, and he directed me this way and