Saturday 26 Jul 1845 (p. 2, col. 7) MORE PENNY-A-LINE-ISM.-We took occasion, a few weeks since, to correct some penny-a-line-ism, in reference to cases of suspected poisoning at Kirkandrews and Grinsdale, which had found its way into the London daily papers. We have again a similar duty to perform. The following paragraph appeared in the Times and Chronicle of Saturday last, and has been copied into some provincial newspapers:- "THE GRINSDALE MURDERS, NEAR CARLISLE.-It will be remembered, that about a month ago, two important inquests were held at Carlisle, by several adjournments, on the bodies of Mr. John GRAHAM, a respectable yeoman, of the village of Grinsdale, and Margaret GRAHAM, of Kirk Andrews, his daughter-in-law, who were suspected of having died from the effects of poison. Mr. John GRAHAM, of Kirk Andrews, farmer, the son of the former, and the husband of the latter, was the person on whom suspicion fell as being the guilty person. The jury returned a verdict of wilful murder against John GRAHAM for the murder of his father by poison; but with respect to the charge laid against him as to his wife, he was acquitted. He is now a prisoner in Carlisle gaol, and since his commitment a quantity of arsenic has been found in the pockets of his clothes, and it was understood that he would also be indicted for the murder of his wife. However, on Wednesday last, he made a full confession that he was the murderer of wis [sic] father and wife, and there is no doubt now but that he will undergo the extreme penalty of the law, shortly after Carlisle assizes in August next." The latter part of the paragraph, which we have italicised, is a fiction. The facts are these:-John GRAHAM was first committed, on a coroner's warrant charging him with the murder of his wife: on Thursday last the borough magistrates, after hearing evidence, committed him on a charge of murdering his father; and he will be tried at the assizes for both offences: but he has made no confession whatever, either with respect to one or the other. Another waistcoat of John GRAHAM's has been discovered, containing arsenic in three pockets.