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n drill dress in his bundle, with his great coat? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Your husband made an affidavit, and you made an affidavit as well yourself? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Had you seen any body on the subject of that affidavit? _A._ No. _Q._ Had you seen Mr. Tahourdin? _A._ No. _Q._ How soon after or before making that affidavit, did you see Mr. Tahourdin? _A._ I saw Mr. Tahourdin a few days after. _Q._ Did you know for what purpose your affidavit was made; how it was to be used? _A._ No. _Q._ Do you know to whom it was taken; what did your husband do with it; do you know of your own knowledge? _A._ It was put in the papers, I know. _Q._ Was it put in by him or by any body else? _A._ I believe it was put in by him. _Lord Ellenborough._ Did Mr. De Berenger ever wear whiskers? _A._ Yes, sometimes he used. _Q._ How long before the 20th of February had you seen him wear whiskers? _A._ I do not know; I was so little in the habit of seeing my master, that I do not know whether he had whiskers or not. _Q._ You saw him come in at the door, did not you? _A._ On the Monday morning. _Q._ At times you used to see him? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Were you so little acquainted with the countenance of the man in whose service you had lived two years and a half, that you did not know whether he was a whiskered man or an unwhiskered man? _A._ I never attended the door when my husband was at home. _Q._ You used to go backwards and forwards; just before you did not know whether there was a green coat in the bundle; and then when I put you in mind of what you had sworn, you say positively there was? _A._ Yes, there was. _Q._ And now you mean to say, you saw so little of your master, that you do not know whether he had whiskers? _A._ No, I do not know. _A Juryman._ You say you did not make your master's bed until his return on Monday? _A._ No. _Q._ Did you see it before his return on Monday? _A._ No; but he was not up stairs, he was in the drawing room. _Q._ You did not see the bed till after his return? _A._ No, I did not. _John M'Guire, sworn;_ _Examined by Mr. Richardson._ _Q._ I believe you are ostler at Smith's livery stables, at the Cross Keys yard, Chelsea? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Were you acquainted with the person of Mr. De Berenger? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Was he in the habit of frequenting your master's stables, or that neighbourhood? _A._ Yes. _Q._ Were y
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