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Glebe Street is one of Inverness's key central roads, running along the banks of the River Ness.
In recent times it has been fondly remembered for the late lamented Glebe Street pool, where generations of Inverness folk learned to swim.
Dramas have subsequently ebbed and flowed over the future of the site, now occupied by a new hotel.
More than a century ago it was the scene of a sinister drama.
On May 11 1911 at 8 Glebe Street, Russian immigrant and pedlar Isaac Lazarus Silver cut his wife Chano's throat with a razor, then tried to slit his own too.
Silver had married Chano in Russia in 1902.
About nine months later, Silver arrived in this country and went to Orkney, followed about a year later by his wife, who lived in Glasgow for three months before Silver joined her.
The pair then spent time in London before moving to Inverness in about 1907.
But it seemed Scottish girls had caught Silver's eye and he longed to be rid of his wife.
The Silvers' neighbour at 1 Glebe Terrace, 45-year-old Maggie Gray, testified before Lord Mackenzie in Aberdeen High Court: "Mrs Silver told me that he was tired of her. He told her that he got plenty of Scotch ones in the country, and wanted a Scotch girl."
Several neighbours testified to 37-year-old Chano Silver's difficult life with her husband.
She complained she did not get money to support herself or her children while Silver was away for a few months.
When he got back her complaints were met with...