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800 THE LEADER. ^S??! _^^!_? A : TURI)AY...
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OUR CIVILIZATION. — ¦ * — THE DOUBLE MUR...
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MURDER AND MANSLAUGHTER. A trial for mur...
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An Escaped Convict.—Alfred Richard Benne...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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800 The Leader. ^S??! _^^!_? A : Turi)Ay...
800 THE LEADER . ^ S ??! _^^!_? A : TURI ) AY
Our Civilization. — ¦ * — The Double Mur...
OUR CIVILIZATION . — ¦ * — THE DOUBLE MURDER NEAR DOVER . Dbdea Redanies , or Bedanius , as formerly stated , was ex amined last Saturday at the Sessions House , Canterbury , before the sitting magistrates . He was supported into cou rt in a chair , propped up with pillows , and attended by medical men : his appearance was extremely ghastly . The evidence was the same as that given before the coroner , and he was committed for trial , weeping bitterly . A packet of letters , addressed by Redaniea to Caroline Back ( one of the deceased girls ) , has been handed to the authorities . They all express the strongest attachment towards the poor girl , and also to the family . The correspondence commences in January , and ends in July . The following are copies of three of them : the first is without date , and runs thus : — "My dear Caroline , —I receive your portress ( portrait ) and letter . I am glad happy unto death . I am glad that you me not forgotten , and I beg you rit me every week one letters . I have since that time than I from you to depart must , no happy hour to live to see can , and I thanks you for yours truth love . I hoppe next month to see you . I do wish God spead you well . Me complaments on all familie 6000 tousend kisses . Good bie mi dear Caroline , you truth , " Mi not forgotten . " , __ " Dedea Redanies . " 28 June .
" Dear Caroline , —I complaments you , and petition you to rite me wherefore you of me letter not answer reply , write to me warm . I you to offend and I do no wherefore you to me grief are . I hoppe that I you in a while ago to see , to be home dear Caroline me portress I sen < l—yours me send when readi it is dear Caroline . I am you not to ferget you bist me eternal joy . I kiss to you and to continue you truly Dedea . I mek me complaments on all familie . Good bie dear Caroline , " Dedea Redanies . " Four tousend kisses for you , my dear Caroline , all sestees and broders and vatter and mutter , and me little broeter Alexander . " The last letter written to the deceased by the prisoner is as under : — " Aldershott Camp , July 13 , 185 G .
11 Dearest Caroline , —I com ; lamezits you with many kisses , and rite you the I to come to Shorncliffe next week , and will come to Dover on an Sunday to see you . Dear Caroline , rite me no answers to my last letters . I cannot go for walke , I must stay in the room and bin syth a little . Me complaments on every familie , and stay your eternal true-hearted " Dedea Redaniics . " I kisses you many tousend . God spead you well . "
Murder And Manslaughter. A Trial For Mur...
MURDER AND MANSLAUGHTER . A trial for murder at the Liverpool Assizes on Monday terminated in a most awful and heart-rending scene in court . The charge was preferred against James Bracken , labourer , aged twenty-four , and Andrew Bracken , also a labourer , aged twenty-one , brother of the first-named . William Bates , the man whom they were charged with murdering , was going home in Manchester on the night of the 28 th of June , in company with a man named Taylor . Both had been drinking all day , and were not sober . Passing by a beer-house , they saw the two prisoners ( who were drunk ) fighting a man , and one of the Brackens made a blow at Taylor , who went away to fetch a policeman . " While gone , James Bracken , apparently without any provocation , fell on Bates , and knocked him down . Andrew Bracken then kicked him
several times on the back and head , swearing that he would let his brains out . A woman who was passing raised the poor man , but _ ho was again knocked down . On the woman saying he would be killed , Andrew replied to the effect that he was determined to put an end to him . The people then called out , " Murder , murder ! The man is killed—the man is killed ! " Bates was taken insensible to the police station , and there died . These facts having been made clear by the evidence , the jury , after an hour ' s deliberation , gave a verdict of Manslaughter against James Bracken , and of Wilful Murder against Andrew Bracken , accompanying tho latter with a strong recommondation to mercy .
The scene that now ensued ( say tho reporters ) enn scarcely be described . A kind of groan , as of pity , was raised in the densely crowded court , while three women in the gallery , at tho back of the court , shrieked in a dreadful manner , and one of them was seized with a fainting fit . They were all taken outside tho court , and It' was stated that they were tho mother of the prisoners and their two sisters . Tho prisoner James fell back into tho dock , and fainted , but in two minutes revived , when , kneeling at the bar , ho raised Ida hands , and cried , " Oh , m r J Lord » »* v « mercy on my brother ! " Tho prisoner Andrew literally tore his hair , and , firat kneeling and then standing , e * clfttmed , " Oh , my Lord , I bog mercy !" His Lordnhlp sobbed andlbly , and appeared to bo quite overpowered by the scene . Proceeding at length to pass sentence , he condemned J « mM to transportation for life , and Andrew * o death , adding that he could not hold out the lqaat hope that the recommendation to mercy by the
jury would be attended with , any effect . At the conclusion of the address , the prisoner Andrew again fell down in the dock and begged for mercy ; but , being raised by the turnkey , he was escorted from the dock , ejaculating , " Oh , mother , mother , that I should be hung ! " For a few minutes , the court seemed paralyzed by the shocking scene which it had witnessed ; and his Lordship , having raised nis head from his hands , slowly rose and left the court in the midst of a solemn silence . Several women were carried out fainting . It was rumoured about that the prisoner James Bracken , if acquitted , was engaged to be married next morning .
An Escaped Convict.—Alfred Richard Benne...
An Escaped Convict . —Alfred Richard Bennett , a young man , is now under remand at Guildhall , charged with being a convict unlawfully at large . He had been to the Fleet-street station-house , and given himself up . Sir Peter Laurie asked him how he managed to escape ; and the man replied , " I put on a workman ' s coat and a pair of trousers made of a towel . " lie added that he had made these trousers himself , having learnt the art of tailoring during eighteen months of his sentence . It was stated to the Alderman these escapes are of frequent occurrence now that the former practice of chaining the men together has been done away with .
John Cole , a gardener , has been committed for trial , after several remands , on a charge of shooting at Emily Luker , a servant . The young woman was at length enabled to appear . She is completely blinded in one eye , and her face is greatly injured . The particulars of the case have already appeared in the Leader . Open-air Pp . eaching and Open-air Thieving . — John Nicholls was condemned at Lambeth to four months ' hard labour for picking a pocket at the Obelisk near the Surrey Theatre on Monday evening , during the delivery of an open-air sermon . It was stated that three or four
persons often preach at once at the Obelisk , and that it is not at all unusual for the partisans of one preacher to cheer him on when in controversy with an opponent , with the expressions , '' Go it , old fellow , give it him !" " Serve him out ! " " Stick to him ! " & c , and altogether the proceedings are of the most unseemly character . Mr . Norton , the magistrate , nevertheless , repeated an opinion he had expressed on a previous occasion , that open-air preaching in proper places is productive of much good ; but he added that such scenes must of course be injurious , and should be suppressed by the police .
A Reckless Profligate . —A bearded young man , who gave bis name Anthony Vanbevon , and who said he was an artist at the Royal Academy , was charged at Clerkenwell with assaulting Mrs . Amelia Stevens , a married lady . She was going home about twelve o ' clock at night , when the man Vanbevon accosted her in the Hampstead Road , saying , " Where are you going , my dear ? What brings you out at this time of night ?" She walked on , but he followed , and again spoke to her . She told him to go away , and , continuing her walk , was surprised to find that he had tracked her to the place where she lived , which was about a mile and a half from the spot where he first addressed her . Again he spoke , but she ran from him . When close to her home , he
seized her by the waist , and -wanted her to kiss him ; on which she screamed out , and a policeman came up , and took the scoundrel into custody . In answer to tho charge , the man said that he accosted the lady civilly , obtained permission of her to see her home , and asked if she would eit aa a model to him , and have her portrait taken , to which she assented . This was solemnly denied by Mrs . Stevens ; and the magistrate fined Vanbevon 51 . or , in default , two months' imprisonment and hard labour . The prisoner , in a whining tone , and placing his hands together , called upon tho magistrate to bo merciful . He was very ill , and if he was sent to prison ho should : most certainly go mad . This appeal , however , was disregarded , and he was removed .
A Would-be Suicide . —Catherine Thompson , a woman who has been frequently remanded at Guildhall for attempting to commit suicide , and who has obstinately refused to bring forward any of her friends to take charge of her , was again placed at the bar last Saturday , when Alderman Chnllis said , " Do you still refuse to givo any account of who your friends are ? " The woman said she did . The Alderman rejoined that ho was very sorry for it , but that , having done tho best ho could to find out those who would take care of her , and having failed , she must be discharged . She accordingly left the court in great triumph . SicizuitK of Unwholicsomk Wheat . —Messrs . Thomas England and Co ., corn-merchants nt Leeds , have been summoned at tho Court-house on a charge of exposing for sale a large quantity of Egyptian wheat in a fitat . o unfit for food . It was shown that tho wheat was
in a filthy , decomposed , and offensive state ; but tho firm contended that it wau only warehoused , and not " exposed for sale ; " nnd on this ground the summons avos ( lismitiHed . Tho magistrates , however , thonght that tho inspector acted very rightly In seizing tho wheut , and that tho owners ought to state at once , under such circumstances , that it is not intended for food . Railway Station Rohiikkikh . — Pocket-picking at railway stations has become recently quite n separate branch of tho groat art of thieving , and Waterloo station has been one of tho most notorious haunts of tho ingenious practitioners . Ladies aro generally tho victims ,
and women are for the most part the offenders . Two pleaded Guilty at the Lambeth police court o n Saturday to a charge of this nature , and were sentenc ed to six months' hard labour each . —A lad , ten years of age , is under remand at Southwark on a similar charge , the scene on this occasion being the London Bridge station of the South-Eastern line . A Wholesale Swindler . — William Kaberry ,. genteel-looking young man , has been apprehended * the nefghbourhood of Leeds , on a charge of having swindled several hotel-keepers and tradesmen of that town to a considerable extent . One evening he went to an inn in Briggate , where he had tea , and afterwards indulged himself with a large quantity of cigars and
brandy . As the house was full , he was obliged to sleep at another hotel , but he returned to the first on the following day , and then told the landlord that he was the son of an extensive linen manufacturer at Pateleybridge , and that his father had sent him to Leeds to collect some accounts . At the same time he produced several invoices on some of the highest commercial firms in Leeds , whom Kaberry said owed his father altogether 220 / . This giving every appearance of truth to his statement about his occupation , the landlord permitted him to board at his house for two days . One morning he went out for the ostensible purpose of collecting accounts , when , instead of going back to his old quarters , he went to the Stamford Arms Inn at Leeds , and , after introducing himself to the landlord , he told him that he
was going to begin business in the drapery trade , and desired to look at a shop which Mr . Baliffe ( the landlord ) had to let , and which Kaberry thought would suit him . He then took up his residence at the Stamford Arms for a couple of days , on one of which he received the key of the shop , and went out , as heetated , to look at it . He did not return however , and , being seen in Briggate the same afternoon by his former landlord , he was given into custody . It afterwards appeared that Kaberry had also swindled a great many shopkeepers of Leeds , from one of whom he had received , under false pretences , a quantity of collars , shirt-fronts , & c . Kaberry ' s statement as to his father ' s business was found to be quite false , his father being merely the owner of a small farm in the neighbourhood of Pateley-bridge .
Bigamy . —A case of bigamy has been heard before Alderman Cubitt at Guildhall , where a respectable-looking woman , named Ann Burr , was charged with the offence . Her firat husband stated that he married the prisoner about twenty-four years ago , but that they were separated six years afterwards , since which time he ( Burr ) had travelled a good deal abroad , and had only seen his wife twice , the second time being about two months ago . She might have supposed him to be dead , as he had a brother drowned some years since . John Gleeson , the second husband , said that he was married to Mrs . Burr about six years ago , and they lived
together on perfectly amicable terms until the woman heard that her first husband , George Burr , was living , in consequence of which news ( as Gleeson believed ) ahe absconded from him . As he had always felt a great regard for her , he did not wish to press the charge ; bnt he desired to be relieved of all future liabilities on her account . Alderman Cubitt having told him that it was impossible that this could bo done unless the charge was proceeded with , so as to convict the woman of bigamy , Gleeson finally decided on adopting that course . The accused was then remanded .
ATiieacherous Friend . —A young man , twenty years of age , named John Green , was tried at the Liverpool Assizes for a criminalassaulton . AnaHigginson , agirl of sixteen . The girl ' s father had married again , and he and the new wife treated her with the utmost cruelty , turning her out of the house , and telling her to get her living how she could . For some time , she resided with her aunt , and got some work in a factory ; but the aunt being unable to continue this aid , the girl returned to her father ' s house , only to be driven out into the streets . For two nights , she slept in the lobby of a house-door . On the night of the 14 th of July , she spoke to a policeman , who said he would send the policeman on the beat to her .
While away on this errand , Green came up , and , seeing the girl crying , and being informed by her , on making inquiries , what was the cause of her distress , he offered to take her home to his " missus , " who would give her a supper and a bed . She gladly accompanied him to a house in a court , and , after partaking of some refreshment , was shown to a bedroom which tho young man said waa next to that occupied by him and his who . Left to herself , she undressed and went to bed ; but Green speedily reappeared , nnd twice committed the offence with which he was charged . At length a kn ° was heard at tho outer door , and Green got out of boa and went to the window to neo who was there , when a
policeman said to him , " Let the girl out ; what are you doing with her ? " Green denied that any girl w m the house , but Hi-rginson cried out that there was . As tho prisoner refused to open the door , the policeman went to got assistance , and on his return he found the girl crying outside the door , where eho had been put Dy Green . Tho defence , as usual in , these cases , was that the girl was a person of bad character , and had been a consenting party to tho alleged offence ; but the mun was found Guilty , nnd sentenced to two years' imprisonment with hard labour .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Aug. 23, 1856, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_23081856/page/8/
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