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1016 THE LEADEB, [No. 3U > Saturday ^ >—...
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Beware Of Sausages !—A Butcher, Livingin...
till night , when it partially recovered , but still remained in a very wretched state . The matt made the ordinary excuse of drunkenness ; but Mr . Jardine very properly said that a person who would da such a thing when drunk would be very likely to do so when sober likewise . He was committed for a month . BuBor-Airr . —Pftilibext Pish , a young man well known to the police , has been apprehended under suspicion , of being concerned in a burglary committed on the night of the 17 th irist . on the premises of Mr . Edminston , a waterproof manufacturer in the Strand . Inspector Checkley went on Sunday night in . private clothes to Fox-court , Gray ' s-inn-lane , which is near Fish's lodgings in Holborn-court , and waited , till'he came that way . The officer then stopped him , and said , " Phil , I want you for the robbery in the Strand . * ' Fish protested with
a fearful oath that he knew nothing about it . a he inspector replied , " That won't do for me , Phil ; I must search your lodgings . " Fish then led the way to his lodgings , which they entered , accompanied by Sergeant Chown , who had been posted there to watch the house . The room door was locked , and there was no key ; but Chown forced the door and searched the room , where he found two railway rugs and a strap , identified by Mr . Edminston . On reaching the street again , Fish made a desperate attempt to escape , in which he was aided by a crowd of his companions assembled , from the neighbouring alleys . Chown , however , mastered him , and Inspector Checkley overawed the mob by producing a pistol from his pocket . They ultimately got him into a cab and drove to the station . On ' being brought before the Bow-street magistrate , the accused , was remanded . .
Assaults onWokek . — -A savage attack was made last Saturday evening , and again , the following morning , on Eliza Lloyd , by a shoemaker named Samuel Lane , with whom she had lived for sis years . This woman had discovered that Lane was a married man , and that his family were in the workhouse . Having taxed him with the fact , and told him that under the circumstances she could not think of remaining with him , he struck her two violent blows on the ey « s ^ and on the morning of the next day renewed the attack , kicked her till she was insensible , and cut her severely about the hands
and arms with some sharp instrument . He was charged with these offences at Worship-street , and was remanded . —Thomas STeale was sentenced by the Lambeth magistrate to six weeks' hard labour for a murderous attack on his wife , followed by an attempt to cut his own throat . The outrages were committed on the very day on which a term of five months , during which he was bound over to ke « p the peace towards his wife , expired . At the police court , tbie husband said he was perfectly heartbroken , as his wife had left him to live with another man . —Charles Paillack , a costermonger , has been sentenced to six months' hard labour for
heating his wife about the head with , one of hia heavy nailed shoes , having previously outraged her by bringing a loose woman home with him , and misconducting himself in her very presence . A Revelation of Whitecr # 8 S-street Prison-. —A Mr . Sutheren , who had been shut up for about a month fox debt in Whitecross-sfcreet prison , has applied at Guildhall for a warrant against two of the prisoners , who had violently assaulted him as he was leaving the gaol , because he refused to submit to an exorbitant charge for the use of some sheets . It seems it is the custom among certain disreputable inmates of the prison to levy various taxes upon new comers , and to annoy them very seriously if they do not acquiesce . Aldermen
Laurie and Copeland said they had understood that the Whitecross-street prison is one « f the worst of debtors ' prisons . The latter Alderman observed : — " It is a notorious fact that there are fellows in the prison who neglect to file their schedule , though having ample means to obtain their discharge , and that they live upon the money extorted from the other prisoners , in defiance of Mr . Burdon , the Governor . " The Aldermen were of opinion that it would be useless to grant a warrant against the offenders ; and Mr . Burdon said that , in the case of any complaint being made to him , he had power to pnuiah the evil-doers by confining them in the strongroom upon the prison diet , broad and water . The warrant was thereforo refused .
Death from Destitution . —Mr . Wakley haB held an investigation , at the board-roo-tn of the Strand Union Workhouse , respecting the doafch of Louisa Regan , aged twenty-five . She was found in the streets at nine o'clock in . the morning , in a-very feeble , state , It was raining hard , and a policeman , seeing that she was very ill , took her to King ' s College Hospital . She was carried into the surgery , and placed upon n , table , and about ten O'clock was fleen by Mr . Way , the house physician , and Another medical gentleman , w \ ho decided that she was
Buffering under consumption , and could not . be admitted int ^ o , . the hospital , as there waa no accommodation for consumptive patients . Accordingly , ehe was removed from the hospital , in a cab to the Strand Union Work * house , whore euo received very little attention , and died th ^ isame afternoon . . The post mortem examination snowed that thftluoga w < jro , nuich , diseased , but there was no appearance Buf ]& cl « nt to account for death . The verdict o £ the jury , w that the woman died from disease and deatitutoon ,, a . nd that , ; th « jr wero , unanimously of opwon , tliat a great deal of , blame attached to the
authorities of the Strand Union , Workhouse and King ' s i College Hospital for not showing that attention to the deceased of which she stood in need . A Fight-with a Bijrglak . —Robert Bertram , a returned convict , with a ticket of leave , was charged on Tuesday , at Bradford Court-house , with having committed a burglary at an early hour that morning . Mr . William Ingham , a shopkeeper in Caledonia-street , Bowling , Bradford , locked up his premises , and retired to rest at eleven o'clock on Monday night . At a quarter past two on Tuesday morning , a policeman named Holmes was on duty in the vicinity , and heard the tinkling of the shop bell . Bertram then came out of the shop , and was followed by Holmes and another officer ( Eiley ) to his brother's house in Bloomfields . The police demanded admittance , and after some delay the door was opened . They charged Bertram with the robbery , and attempted to effect his apprehension . Bertram seized Holmes by the throat with his left hand , took up a butcher ' s knife in the other , and was in the act of making a murderous onslaught , when Riley , by a welldirected blow with his stick ( for the Bradford police are allowed to carry a weapon of this kind ) knocked the knife from his hand . Bertram caught up a second knife , but it was wrested from his grasp by Riley . A desperate struggle for the mastery then ensued , and , with great difficulty the burglar was conveyed to the police-office . He lias been committed for trial . Embezzlement . — Charles Ash ton , ex-clerk to a Copper Miners' Company , was charged at the Mansion . House with having defrauded his late employers of the sum of 95 £ . Mr . Frewen , secretary to the company , stated that the accused was book-keeper to their , iirm in January last , and was in the habit of receiving money daily , for which it was his dutj' to account to his principals . In April , he left his situation , at which time he was deficient in his accounts to some extent . Nevertheless , he paid 207 . to the company ; but they did not then know that he had received 95 J . from Messrs . Thomasset and Co ., merchants in Great St . Helen ' s—a sum which was due from that house to the Copper Miners' Company . This last fraud \ yas not discovered until several months afterwards . One of the partners in the firm of Thomasset and Co . said that last January he paid the sum of 957 ., by a draft upon the Bank of England , in exchange for a receipt which was given him for the money . He believed Ashton to have been the person who presented the receipt , but he could not say positively . One of his clerks , however , swore that Ash ' toii was the man to whom the cheque was paid . The draft was in course of time returned to Messrs . Thomasset through the Bankj as having been duly paid . After hearing some further evidence in support of the charge , the Lord Mayor committed the accused for trial . —William Rose , who had been remanded but admitted to bail , appeared again on Tuesday before Mr . Alderman Wire , upon a charge of embezzling several hundred pounds belonging to Mr . Hunt , a miller residing atStanstead , in Hertfordshire , to whom he had for the last eight years acted in the capacity of traveller and collecting clerk . He was committed for trial ; but bail was again accepted . ¦ •—Edward Williams , a commission agent , arid member of the Society of Friends , who for years has resided in the Bristol-road , Birmingham , has been charged before the Mayor and the stipendiary magistrate of that borough with embezzling 438 A ., the moneys of Messrs . Johnson , soap-boilers , of Runcorn , Cheshire . He was engaged between eight and nine months ago as a commission agent for the Runcorn house , in Birmingham and the district , and during that period had embezzled various sums of money . The investigation terminated in the committal of Williams for trial . A Candid Thief . —John Freeman , late a private in the Tower Hamlets Militia , was charged at WoTshipstreet with robbery- At . two o ' clock in the morning , a tradesman named Simmons was on his way home through the Whitechapel-road , when he saw Freeman advancing towards him with a very large bundle . He thought it suspicious , and wa 3 looking at the bundle , when the man walked boldly up to him and offered to sell him the contents . These turned out to bo a bolster , pillow , and bedstead furniture ; und , feeling now convinced they formed the produce of some robbery , ho immediately seized the stranger , and , in spite of a stout resistance , firmly hold him till a constable came up , who took him into custody , and was conveying him to the station , when , while passing tho shop of Mr . Harris , a furniture broker in Goulston-strcet , lie saw a large piece cut out of the corner shutter , so as to admit of the introduction of an arm to draw back tho bolts . Ho therefore handed tho prisoner over again to Mr . Simmons while he knocked at the door and alarmed tho inmates , at the same titno observing to Mr . Simmons that a burglary had been committed there apparently , to which Freeman , who had given no account of himself before , said , " Why , yes , of course there has ; that ' s where I got in . " On the appearance of Mr . Harris , the thief again acknowledged liis guilt , and said ho bad taken the things because ho was sorely in want of clothes . He was committed for trial . Tins Cask of Death from PnocuutNtt Abortion . —The adjourned inquest on the body of Elizabeth Gaylor , who died from taking a largo quantity of sulphate of potass , administered by her husband with a view to procuring ; abortion , terminated on Tuesday ,
when the foreman said that the jury had unanimously agreed to a verdict of Wilful Murder against William Gaylor , and also a verdict of Felo-de-se against Eliza beth Gaylor . The Coroner then issued a warrant for the committal of the accused to Newgate , to take his trial at the ensuing sessions of the Central Criminal Court ; and a similar document was placed in the hands of the summoning oificer of Hackney for the nndmtrht burial of the body of the wife , which was performed without the funeral service . Dr . Letheby , in the course of his evidence with respect to the post mortem examination , said : — " Sulphate of potass is not much used as medicine in this country , except for the preparation of a composition called Dover ' s powders ; but on the Continent it is a very popular medicine for producing abortion and has often been the subject of legal investigation . " '
A False Character . — -A-young man , named William Wheeler , has undergone examination at the "Westminster police-office on a charge of obtaining a situation by means of a false recommendation . Mr . Johnson the prosecutor , a gentleman living in Wilton-place admitted that he had no fault to find with the man during the time he retained him in his service . Wheeler now appeared on remand . Ou the previous examination , it was shown that the letter of recommendation , purporting to be written by a Mr . Austwich , bore the Croydon post-mark , and Mr . Arnold , the magistrate , ordered that inquiries should be made into the matter ; but itWw appeared that two letters directed to Mr . Austwich had
been intercepted at the Croydon post-office , and taken away by a young man to whom the postmaster delivered them up . Mr . Arnold said this was highly reprehensible . Wheeler was convicted in the penalty of 20 £ ; but , being of course unable to pay this , he was committed for three months with hard labour- He then asked , what was to be done about his wages for the time he was with Mr . Johnson . The magistrate said he must refer him to the County Court , where he had no doubt the Judge would hold that , as he entered the service ly fraud , he was not entitled to anything . Wheeler then turned to Mr . Johnson and said , " You ' ll" find I shall trouble you as you have troubled me . I am much obliged to vou . "
j Lhkft upon Theft . — -Eliza Taylor , a -woman well known to the police as a notorious thief , has been tried at the Middlesex Sessions for stealing a purse from the pocket of a Mrs . Wilson , as that lady was coining out of the Adelphi Theatre at the close of the performances . A policeman observed Taylor moving about among the crowd , and , suspecting she had robbed the lady , he followed her as she was walking off . Perceiving that the officer was on her track , , she threw the purse into the gutter ; but it was pickeaup by the constable , who took the woman to the station-house . Mr . Gent , who appeared for the prosecution , said , in opening the case , that it vra & rather an extraordinary one , inasmuch as he should be unable to produce the purse , which had been stolen from the policeman who had charge of it after it had been produced arid identified by Mrs . Wilson . The prisoner had
been defended by a person , known , in that court and also at the Old Bailey , who acted as an attorney , although he was not one ; and he obtained an order on the police , who had charge of some money belonging to the prisoner , directing that it should be given up for the purpose of her defence ; and this was done . . In a few minutes afterwards , the police sergeant who had charg * of the puree missed it from a desk at the station-house where it had been placed , and , as he would swear that it was safe a few minutes before he was waited upon by the prisoner ' s friends , there could be no doubt that it had been stolen from him , so that it should not be' produced in court Evidence having been adduced in support of the facts , the woman was found Guilty , and sentenced to p « nal servitude for four years ; and the Judge directed that inquiries should be made with respect to the persons who are supposed to have abstracted the purse .
Floggino Iouno Men at Eton . — -In the Coventry Herald of the 17 th October ( says a correspondent of the JJaify News ) , is a lettor from Mr . Morgan Thoinas , describing the dismissal of his son , a young man of eighteen , from Eton , because he refused to be ilogged for the ofl ' ence of smoking , alleging at the time that bis father had forbidden him to submit . It appears , too , that there was no proof of tho fact but his own confession , forced from him by his tutor . Mr . JUuy ; and that
tho tutor , perceiving a scent of smoke about the young man , deemed it necessary first to extort the confession by questions , and then to reveal the fact to tho judicial executive authority , Dr . Goodford . Th « Provost has since written to the father of the young man , stilting that the flogging is a part of tho * system' at the school , and cannot be abandoned , and that hia second Bon ( aged fourteen )' can only be retained on that condition . The writer in the Daily News is justly indignant at this wretched aud degrading tyranny .
State ok Crime in Norfolk . —Tlie Kev . J . I * Brown , Chaplain of Norwich Castle , tho county gaol wr Norfolk , has just presented his annual . report to tUe magistrates . Ho observes : — " I have again much p leasure in being able to notice a decrease in tho number of prisoners committed , the numbers for tho yearB 1856 ana 1850 being respectively 519 and 477 . I doubt not but that the discipline of your gaol , very distasteful to those subjected to it , is ono cause of this decrease , as the
1016 The Leadeb, [No. 3u > Saturday ^ >—...
1016 THE LEADEB , [ No . 3 U > Saturday ^ >—¦ ¦ — »^—¦ . ^ ^ p ^ " ^ " ' " ^—^^^^^^^ . _ . . _ . , _^_ M _^_^ J ^^^_^_^^_^^^^^^_^_^^^^ M ^^^ M ^^^^^^ fc ^^ M ^^^ MM ^^^^ a ^^^^^ MM ^ M ^^ M ^^^^ MM ^ JM _^_^^^_^^_^^_ — — ' " ^ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ .,, ¦ | . | ; < J -
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Oct. 25, 1856, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_25101856/page/8/
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