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I was jest comin' in off dog-watch when I happened to see what was goin' on here the crowd an' everythin'. I ain't goin' to stay!" "Well, 'phone in then and get somebody," advised Carroll testily. "Somebody's got to be here until we can look around more." "I'll stay for a while." said Haliday. "I'd like to look about a bit myself. I'll probably have to get the case ready for the prosecutor."

A small quantity, it appeared, had been secured, but not a drop of fresh water had been brought off. The master now ordered some of the men to get into the lifeboat, and we were pretty evenly divided among the two. "How far off are we from the Australian coast?" asked Mr Haliday. "Four hundred miles at the nearest," was the answer.

Charles Reade and Andrew Haliday became zealous friends. It was to the latter that he owed his introduction to the Savage Club. Here he soon made himself at home.

Haliday Pamphlets, Vol. 74. An answer to a paper called "A Memorial of the Poor Inhabitants of the Kingdom of Ireland." Same Vol. "Answer to Memorial," signed A.B., March 25, 1728. "Letter to the Duke of Newcastle." Vol. I., p. 166.

Haliday, remarking on the opinion of Linnæus and Schrank, who referred Campodea to the old genus Podura, says with much truth, "it may be perhaps no unfair inference to draw, that the insect in question is in some measure intermediate between both," i. e., Podura and Lepisma.

I was very curious to learn who the person could be who had been necessitated to take such a long journey through the wilderness alone. The second day of my journey, my curiosity was gratified by seeing the name of the person written in large characters in the snow. I stopped and read it with much interest: it was that of a Scotchman I knew, one James Haliday.

He looked more than usually self-contained, not to say ironic, and only remarked: "If you're going to ride you might take this note for me over to old Haliday at Wippincott." By his coming she knew that he was saying all he ever meant to say about that dark incident.

By A. Shafto Adair, F.R.S. London: Ridgway, 1847. Haliday Pamphlets, Royal Irish Academy, vol. 1,992. Mr. Adair is a landlord of large possessions in the County Antrim, who exerted himself very much to alleviate the sufferings of the people during the Famine. He was raised to the Peerage in 1873 as Baron Waveney.

The Abbe Bourlet, Templeton, Westwood, and Haliday have published important papers on the Thysanura; and Meinert, a Danish naturalist, and Olfers, a German anatomist, have published important papers on the anatomy of the group.

Then he telephoned for Haliday of the prosecutor's office, and also for the chief electrician of the police signal system, and all three spent some time looking at the wires and testing them. "What do you think about it?" asked Mr. Kettridge of the colonel, when the store was again dim and quiet. "What do I think? I don't know!