On this page
-
Text (4)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Untitled Article
GATHERINGS FROM- THE LAW AND POLICE COURTS . A singular action for false imprisonment was tried , in the Court of Exchequer on Monday . The plaintiff was a labouring man named Shields , living at Kensington , and the defendant was a master baker , carrying-on business at the same place . One night in July , they had met at a public-house called the Duke of York , -when Shields won 8 s . and a bottle of wine in tossing , which Sheppard , the defendant , refused to pay , and told the other that lie would never toss -with him again , and that he miglit take up the money whenever he could get the chance . On a subsequent night , they met at another public-house , when Sheppard offered to bet Shields a shilling that he would not win a glass of ale from him in tossing , and he placed a shilling upon , the counter . Shields picked up the shilling and put it in his pocket , saying that he should keep it in part payment of what he had won at the Duke of York public-house . Sheppard said that if he did not return the money he would give him into custody for stealing it . All the persons present endeavoured to persuade Shields to return the money but he refused , and said that he would have it tried out . Sheppard tiien fetched a policeman , gave Shields into custody , and , against the advice of the inspector , insisted on the charge of felony being taken . It was Saturday night , and Shields accordingly wa . s kept in custody until the following Monday morning , when the magistrate discharged him . A verdict was now given for the plaintiff ; damages , 5 / .
In the Court of Bankrupt , on Monday , Mr . Lawrence , on behalf of the great Nothem Railway Company , tendered a jiroof against the estate of the notorious foTger , Leopold Kedpath , for a sum exceeding 200 , 000 / . Mr . Lawrence thus stated the circumstances under which the proof was tendered : — - " The bankrupt had forged the company's stock or shares to the amount of 221 , 070 / ., and its dividend warrants to the further amount of 15 , 000 / . Parliament had made the forged stock valid , and the bankrupt ' estate was indebted to the company in the sum of 236 , 070 / . The company , desirous that the bankrupt ' s other creditors should not suffer by a
clerk in their employ having obtained credit by means of appearances which his forgeries had enabled him to assume , hail satisfied all the claims against the bankrupt ' s estate . "With very few exceptions , the creditors had been paid 20 s . in the pound , and in those instances or exceptions los . or upwards of los . in the pound had been paid . Every other creditor having been thus satisfied , the company preferred the proof in order to obtain the sum which Uedpath ' s estate had realized ( about 30 , 000 / . ) , as now in the hands of the official assignee . " Mr . Commissioner Goulburn deferred the proof , in order to examine into a doubtful point of law .
Great is the assurance , infinite the wit , of Israel . A Jew , named Woolf Levy , was examined on Monday in the Insolvent Debtors' Court , and testified , with a face of brassy impudence , to the systematic rascality of his life , lie has passed , at various times , under several different names , and appears to have scattered his rogueries with jv lofty impartiality over the greater part of the globe . Having quitted England in 181 G , when only nineteen years of age , he travelled , tomporarliy resided in Australia , in India , in the United States , in vaiious parts of South America , in Hong-Kong , again in India , in Egypt , in Italy , and at the Cape of Good Hope . Wherever he wont , he appears , according to his own
admissions , to have cheated every one from whom it was possible to got anything ; sometimes by means of obtaining goods , other times by getting- money on falso cheques . "When at the Cape of Good Hope , ho was tried on a criminal charge , but it failed . His most astonishing feat was performed iit America . Ho entered into partnership with a man named Fruser , arid travelled through tlie entire Union with American ' curiosities . ' Hero Mr . Commissioner Thillips asked , "What arc American , ' curiosities' ? " Insolvent : " Wooden nutmegs and sucli things . " ( Lutiyhtcr . ' ) Commissioner ; " Did you sell wooden nutmegs for real spive ? " Insolvent " Wq did . " ( ContinuedInughtei' . ') Commissioner : " And
did you persuade the Yankees to buy them ? " Insolvent : " They didn't know the difference . We sold them in the cities of the West , Indianapolis , and other places . Otliers sold wooden hams , but we did not . " { Laughter .- ) While in England , Levy incurred a debt of ? i- % 8 ta ^ nei T . &c , supplied by Mr . Rodrigues , of Piccadilly . The bankrupt had had his crest and arms stamped on letter paper ! The motto was read in court , and ran thus : — "Auronoh est omnesr The Commissioner said the English of this appeared to be— " Every one is out of cash . " The case was adjourned .
Benjamin Nicholls , a very respectable looking man the proprietor of a genteel lodging-house at 15 , Marlborough-place , Brighton , has been charged at the Westminster police-court with . ¦ stealing a travelling-hag containing deeds , papers , jewellery , and other articles of considerable value , the property -of Mrs . M'Alpin , of 108 , Eaton-square , and Castlebar , Ireland . Kicliolls alleges that the bag came accidentally into his possession while he was in Ireland in the service of a gentleman ; that he made every endeavour to find out the owner , but could not ; and that finally he pawned some of the contents . He has been remanded . "¦' . ' . '
Two fine-looking coloured girls were examined at the Southwark police-office on Tuesday , on a charge of begging . They were found wandering about the streets with a box . into which passers-by put money . On being placed before the magistrate , they said they were fugitives from Kentucky , and that , on the death of their father , their mother was sold to a distant plantation , and they too were about to be separated . They therefore escaped to Philadelphia , where some free coloured
persons paid their passage to Greenock , whence they made their way to London . They had endeavoured to get into service , but had failed , owing to the prejudice against coloured people . They had recently lived with a labourer and his wife in a court in Bishopsgate-street , and had gained a few-pence by selling tracts . They could knit gloves , and , if they had money to buy wool with , they thought they could make a living . " The magistrate gave them four shillings from the poor-box , and discharged them . /
A second-class certificate was granted on Wednesday in the Bankruptcy Court to William Tyler , formerly the proprietor , and latterly the manager , of the Surrey Gardens . His debts are 7600 / . ; assets , 560 / ., subject to a realization . The case of Colonel Waugh came on again in the Court of Bankruptcy on Thursday ; but the colonel did not appear , and it turned out that he is travelling in Spain for the benefit of his health . An adjournment was therefore ordered to the 19 th of January . Robert Balleny , a justice of the peace , was tried at
the last assizes , upon an information filed by the Attorney-General , which charged him with corruptly , and by colour of his office as a magistrate , extorting two sums of 1 / . each from two persons . At the trial , the defendant was found guilty , and he was brought up for judgment in the Court of ( Queen's Bench on Thursday . Mr . Justice Coleridge sentenced him to pay to her Majesty a fine of 200 / . ; to be imprisoned " for one year , among the / misdemeanants of the first class , in the Queen's prison ; and to be further imprisoned till the fine be paid .
Untitled Article
THE NEW CHIEF EDITOR OF 'LA PRESSE . ' We rejoice to hear that M . Alphonse Peyrat has assumed the chief editorship of our Parisian contemporary La Presse . IM . Peyrat has been for many years one of the most eminent aud esteemed journalists in France ; eminent for all the qualities of the writer , and esteemed for all the qualities of the man . A profound knowledge of European history and politics , and a rare faculty of powerful and luminous exposition , a style combining- terseness and solidity with point and epigram , perspicuity and vigour with elegance and refinement , and , above all , an unexceptionable personal reputation , reader M . Peyrat ' s accession to the chief editorship of the journal w hich has
the largest circulation in Franco , and an influence in Europe scarcely surpassed even by the Times or the Dcbcits , a subject of general congratulation . M . Peyrat wns one of the foremost writers in La Pressc when M . Entile deGirardin was its chief writer and proprietor , and when journalism was a power in France . After the events of December , 1851 , he was , wo believe , with difliculty prevailed on to write under the new conditions to which political writing -was exposed . Certain it is that hia nuino rarely appeared in the columns of La Presse , and only at the foot of articles of historical or philosophical controversy : on the public affairs of the tiny lie remained rigorously silent . His letters from
England-in the early p «» -t of the year 1855 were much remarked for their ang-unty unil moderation , and for their intimate knowledge of English public life . When M . do Girnrdin sold Jji Presav , M . IVyrat declined to serve under the new proprietary , although the chief editorship waa offered him 011 his own terms . . An occasional brilliant review « n the < Sikfc is all that has appeared for many months from hi * pen . Wo arc glad indeed to hear that ho lius boon por .-sumled to resume it , at the head of the jnamnl which owes him half its celebrity ; we are perniwidod tlint , in-on under embarrassing political condition * , integrity and sagacity such as his must bo felt in the direction of public opinion .
Untitled Article
nesday , and committed for trial . The circumstantial evidence is drawn about him in a very close and complicated network . He gave a false account of his way home from work on the evening of the murder ; from the time of his departure to the time of his arrival , more than an hour elapsed , and the distance would only occupy about half an hour ; he was observed by a boy on the road to be lame , but did not say anything about this till twenty minutes after he got home , by which time he had changed his dress ; , he attributed his hurt to certain chumps of wood by the roadside having fallen on him , but they were found not to have been removed at all ; the next morning he worked in his best smock ( he had worn an old one the day before ); on being taken into custody , his knife was found to have a spot of blood on it ; his basket likewise was spotted with blood , and between the wicker work was discovered some red wheat mixed with barley , of a peculiar kind , and exactly similar to some which had be ' eu found in the field where the murder was committed ; some buttons had been wrenched off Carpenter ' s gaiters and other garments , and the threads of the missing buttons were stained with blood ; a pearl button was picked up on the scene of the crime ; a button on Carpenter's trousers "Was discovered to be tinged with blood ; and pieces of an old smock-frock , also stained with blood , were turned up by the police at Carpenter ' s residence , though not until some days after the first search , nor until Carpenter had been taken into custody . The accused was generally known to be a person of desperate character and great physical strength . A Ruffia . nly Assault , —John Usher , a private in the Grenadier Guards , haa been examined at Westminster on a charge of assaulting a woman of the town under circumstances of unusual atrocity . Her screams brought another woman to her assistance ; but the soldier instantly knocked her down with such violence as to render her insensible , and then escaped from the house , but was shortly afterwards captured by a policeman . Usher has been remanded . —Henry Williams , a private in the Tower Hamlets Militia , has been sentenced to six weeks' hard labour for a series of savage assaults . lie was found by one ; of his officers drunk , and , on an endeavour being made to get him to the guard-house , he violently resisted . The police were then summoned ; but he struck them with his belt , kicked , and fought , inflicting serious injuries on the constables . It was not until a guard had been fetched from the barracks that he waa overpowered . Mubi > erous Assault . — A Mr . Edward Loveridge , clerk in a mercantile house in the City , left , some few weeks ago , a case of razors for resetting with one Robert RIerritt , a hairdresser in Bridport-place , Hoxton . On calling there ou the night of yesterday week , he found that the work had not been done , and therefore said he would take the razors away . Merritt then wanted to charge him with the resetting , though it had not been done . Mr . Loveridge refused , and , seeing that tlie other was about to seize hold of him , retreated into the street . Merritt followed , arid ' struck- Mr . Loveridge a violent blow on the face between the eyes . A great deal of blood flowed from three distinct cuts ; and it was afterwards found that the injuries were caused bv a glass perfumery bottle . Some fragments of the glass were driven into the flesh ; and Mr . Loveridge has been confined in the hospital . Merritt was examined at the Worship-street police-court on Monday , when he said that he had been much excited , and that he had struck Mr . Loveridge while unconscious that he had Che bottle in his hand . He was remanded . A Murderous Youth . —James Reynolds , a youth of sixteen , has been examined at Lambeth police-court on a charge of throwing a little boy seven years old into the Surrey Canal . There was some quarrel between the boys , when Reynolds deliberately lifted up the child , and flung him into the water . He was requested by a woman , who knew he could swim , to get the boy out ; but ho refused , and , running away , told a woman who had charge of the child that he was drowned . A young man , however , had in the meanwhile got him out , though by that time he was perfectly exhausted and insensible . Reynolds was sentenced to two months' hard labour . Execution . —The man Davis , who killed his wife at Islington while in a fit of intoxication , was hung on Monday morning , lie affirmed to the last that he was perfectly unconscious of what ho was doing , and that ho loved his wife very much . A little before the execution , he said ho wished ho could be shot by a company of her Majesty's Foot Guards , us then he should die like a Christian instead of liko a dog . lie died with calmness . An unavailing attempt to get his sentence commuted had been made by some benevolent persons . ROBHKHY ASD Mt'RDBll AT AsilOVEUIIlLU—A mail named James Simpson , who keeps a farm at the village of Ashover , near Chestcrfiold , has been robbed aud murdered in u wood within a very short distance of hi . s own residence . On the . morning of Friday week , hu went to Alfroton , about eight miles distant , " to sell some butter at the market , and loft to return home , after disposing of his farm produce , a little after thr ee o'clock . Ho proceeded along the high road until he arrived at a wood about a hundred yards in extent , which borders on Ashover-hill , not above half a inilo distant from Mr . Simpson ' M farm . The- road at thia spot is somewhat lonoly , there , being not abovo two houses in the immediate vicinity . Soon after Mr . Simpson had reached
this part of tie road , the report of a gun or pistol , probably fired by a man . concealed in the wood , was heard in the distance , but no notice was taken of this circumstance ; consequently , ten minutes elapsed before anybody arrived on the spot where the noise of the firing had fceen heard . By this time , however , the proprietor of one of the neighbouring collieries passed the place on his way to the works , and he then saw Mr . Simpson lying on his side in the rc-adway , bleeding from a wound in the head . A farm labourer came up shortly afterwards , and identified the wounded man as Mn Simpson . On examination it was discovered that he had been shot behind the
left « ar . He was not yet dead , but quite insensible . Assistance being obtained , lie was conveyed home , and medical aid was immediately called in , but it was of no avail , as Mr . Simpson expired about eight o ' clock in the evening without uttering a word . His porte-monnaie and watch were stolen from him , but some grocery articles which he had bought at Alfreton were found untouched in tlie wood Tvherehe was shot . Owing to the length of time which elapsed between the firing of the shot at Mr . Simpson and the subsequent discovery of liis inanimate body , the murderer escaped , and has not since been heard of .
Untitled Article
No . 400 , November 21 , 1857 . ] THE LEAD | E . 1113
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 21, 1857, page 1113, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2218/page/9/
-