"SEEMED TO BE MAD”
MAN CONFESSES MURDER A WAITRESS SHOT By Cable.—Press Association.—Copyright SYDNEY, Tuesday. Th'e reported confession of Norman Clyde MacPherson states that he had been drinking heavily for five weeks prior to the tragedy. He seemed to be mad, and did not realise what he had done. When the realisation did come to him, through reading the newspaper reports of Miss Quin’s death, he decided to return to Sydney and clear the matter up.—A. and N.Z. The young- woman, a waitress, was shot in the street while on her way home in Sydney on Thursday night.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 77, 22 June 1927, Page 13
Word Count
98"SEEMED TO BE MAD” Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 77, 22 June 1927, Page 13
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