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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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the evening to their city of refuge , where they have aa establishment for indulgence in luxuries not to be named , bat suitable to their peculiar tastes . A dreadful state of things exists , and , if not curbed by -vigorous and rigorotis measures , the Chinese vagrants will make themselves known to all the world by a horrid pestilence . As £ jtr as his duty and his authority went ,. he would not hesitate to do all in his power to put down such a nuisance , which exists only through the mistaken charity of people at the west-end , who give money to Chinese mendicants , which they expend in the infamous hotxses described by the witnesses . The charitable people at the west-end do not know the incalculable mischief they cause by giving money to Chinese vagrants ,
who onght to be closely looked after by the police . He knew that serious crimes were committed in Bluegatefields . He was not disposed to be lenient to Apoo , although he was a foreigner , after the revolting details he had heard ; and , considering that the defendant was the proprietor of two houses in which he kept women for the especial solace of fifty or ninety Chinese beggars who resort to them nightly , and considering also that Apoo had been most ably defended , and that he was realizing large gains by his immoral and pestilential trade , he did not think he should be treating him with excessive rigour if he ordered him to pay a fine of 31 ., or Jbe imprisoned for one month . —The penalty was instantly paid .
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MURDER IN ESSEX . Chingford Hatch , situated a few miles from Woodford , Essex , has been the scene of a very mysterious murder and robbery . Oh Sunday morning , Mr . and Mr 3 . Small left their house to attend the parish church at Chingford . As they left , they observed a man standing near the house ; but , having previously seen him at or near the same spot , they took no notice of the circumstance . Th « house was left in charge of an old woman of seventytwo , who acted as a confidential housekeeper and . cook . This woman , whose name was Mary White , had previously sent an invitation to her niece , who reached the house between eleven and twelve o ' clock . The niece
passed through a back gate in the lane , and , having entered the back kitchen on the ground floor , found her Mint with her head nearly severed from- her body , the throat being cat in two places , and the wound extending almost from one ear to the other . The body was lying in a pool of blood , and , from the general appearance of the room , there was evidence of a violent struggle having taken place between the murderer and his victim . On the floor were marks of blood , and the clothes of the Woman were torn to pieces . These circumstances were not at first observed by the niece , who thought her aunt was lying in a fit . She therefore called in a woman who was in the garden , when , an alarm having been given , several of the neighbours came to the spot , and the police were also soon in attendance , as well as medical aid . The poor creature , however , was quite dead , but the body was still warm .
The police then searched the house . It would seem that the murderer , after committing the act , must have gone to Mr . Small ' s bureau in one of the upper rooms and taken from it a hammer and chisel , with the aid of which he forced open the whole of the drawers and robbed the place of money , watches , and jewellery . The constables , while prosecuting their search , found a knife smeared with blood in a salt-box , and a claspknife with a buckhorn handle , rather rusty , in a bowl ; and it is supposed that , failing to accomplish his purpose with the aid of the first-named weapon , the murderer had recourse to the second : hence the two wounds in . the throat . The London police were at once telegraphed to , and efforts were set on foot to traco the assassin . An inquest was opened on Monday evening , and waa adjourned .
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Ill-usage of Wive * , —Several cases of ill-usage of wires have come before the magistrates within the last ( flaw days . Isaac Saunders was charged at Westminster with assaulting his wife . It appeared that he entirely neglected her and the children , and that the wife had to find the means of subaistenco for them . He also boat her with great severity . Ho was sentenced to six months ' hard labour . —Mr . George Young , the landlord of the Trinity Arms Tavern , Trinity-street , Borough , was charged with a ferocious assault on his wife , who presented the appearance of being constantly ill-treated .
He could only allege in his defence that he had been in the cellar , drinking champagne , and that he wag very sorry . He was sent to the House of Correction for two months . — -Thomas Ivos , waiter at a tavern in the vicinity of the Southwark police-court , has been sentenced o aix months' hard labour for stabbing his wife in the face . On hearing the sentence , ho exclaimed , laughing , * That's juat what I want . That'll servo her out !"Tohn Snow , a labourer , waa on Tuesday condemned by he Weatminster magistrate to » couple of months' hard abour for an assault on his wife .
The DjcuKOToua of thw Rotal British Bank . — tho directors of the late Royal British Bank alroady in custody , or liberated on bail ara at present fivo in number . Mr . Owen , Mr . Stapioton , M . P ., and Mr * Maoleod nave put in bail for their Appearance ; Mr . Humphrey Brown la af present in the Queen ' s Bench Prison , not fraying cqinpjotfid his bail . Mr . Alderman Kennedy ia pq hja way to thl 4 country , in custody .
the woman , who went about selling small parcels of greengrocery . On Saturday , he had a dispute with her , owing to her refusing to give him eighteenpence he ha'd asked for . At night , she was found by her daughter in her bedroom , lying in a pool of blood , with her head fearfully battered and mangled . She was still breathing , and lived till Sunday morning , when she died . On Monday , Crawley was apprehended , when he observed that it was ' a bad job , ' and that he was going to give himself up . He was remanded . The inquest has terminated in a verdict of * Wilful Murder *
The Murder on the High Seas . —Henry Rogers , the captain , William Miles , the chief mate , and C . E . Seymour , the second mate , of the British bark Martha and jane , of Sunderland , have been committed for trial at the Liverpool Assizes , charged with the murder of Andrew Rose , one of the crew of that vessel . The facts of the case were related by us last week-Murder near Hackney . —Michael Crawley , a labourer , aged sixty-two , has murdered his wife , a woman of the same age , by beating in . her skull with a bill-hook . He was of drunken habits , and frequently quarrelled with
A Drunken Teetotaller . —A tall , raw-boned man , named Andrew Morton , was charged at Lambeth , on Monday , i . with creating a disturbance at the Obelisk . He was lecturing on teetotalism , and was at the same time practically exhibiting the evils of intoxication , for he was himself excessively drunk . After enlarging for a considerable time on the virtues of total abstinence , and calling the crowd to witness how well he could do without spirituous liquors—to all of which his auditors only answered with jeers , laughter , and hooting—he
was taken into custody and locked up . He then abused the police in very filthy language . When asked by the magistrate what he had to say , he admitted that he was intoxicated ; and he was fined twenty shillings . —It was mentioned by some of the witnesses that the Sunday preachings at the Obelisk are an intolerable nuisance . The different partisans shout and howl at one another , abuse their mutual doctrines , and make blasphemous and impure observations . Crowds of disreputable characters assemble , and robberies are of frequent
occurrence . Forging a Countv Coubt Process . —A singular case was heard before the Exeter magistrates a few days ago . A respectable tradesman , named William Downey , of Topsham , was committed for trial on a charge of forging the name of Mr . John Daw , registrar of the Exeter District County Court , to an illegally concocted summons . It was stated that persons travel about the country and make a good living by selling documents in imitation of County Court summonses , which are
printed in Holy well-street , London . These are purchased by small tradesmen , who send them to -tardy debtors in order to frighten them into payment . To make the process complete , it is necessary to forge the signature of the registrar . This Downey did , and posted the letters in Exeter , so that it might appear to the debtor that they came from the office of the registrar . By the County Courts Act , the offence is one of felony . The magistrates committed Downey for trial at the ensuing Quarter Sessions .
Assault on a Husband . —Mary Anne Barton has been examined at Marylebone on a charge of striking , kicking , and biting her husband . She was furious with drink at the time , and , on being taken into custody , she wore she would ' remember' her husband when she came out . She was sent to the House of Correction for a month . Murderous Attack on the Police . —James Harrington and James Waltho are under remand at Southwark , charged with a murderous attack on the police in the course of a drunken row outside a public-house in Kent-street- The officers went unable to attend , being in hospital in a serious state ; and the caso was remanded . The landlord of the public-house behaved very courageously in defending the police , and all his windows were broken by the mob .
ROBBERY THROUGH BETTING TRANSACTIONS . A young man of twenty-one , named Thomns Somerville , was charged at the Worship-street police-court with robbing an alehouse-keeper in the neighbourhood , with whom he lodged , of 4 / . One night , about cloven o ' clock , he suddenly absconded from his lodgings , when the landlord's suspicions wore excited , and lie went to his bedroom , and found that his cas-hbox had been broken open and a considerable portion of its contents abstracted . Ho then prooeeded to Somerville ' a room ,
where he saw some money amounting to 5 s . lying on the bed . Ho informed the polloo of the occurrence , and , about an hour afterwards , SomervUle was brought back to the house , when XI . 15 a . more of the landlord ' s money was found on him . Somorville confessed to the magistrate that ho hod committed the robbery . Ho had done no booauso he was quite penniless , having lost all his money through being persuaded by a mom to go Into a , public-house , whoro probably there was also a bott , lrtgoffico , in Blshopsgato-stroot , and whore ho had . been induced to make beta on the Hampton Cun And some
handicaps . Having lost all these bots ., w < X boing compelled to pay the various sums ho ha . 4 atftked , he gave up every farthing he possessed , and . had then committed the robbery . Ho had only been In England a month , having just returned from a situation which ho held for about fivo months , in , ( ho , office of a Griek merchant in tho Ionian Isles . b , vrt whioh he had boon obliged to to .
hnquish m consequence of being affected with violent palpitations of the heart . Mr . Hammill sent him for six months with hard labour , to the House of Correction . Assaults . —Two Irish labourers named Thomas and James Fletcher , brothers , were charged at the Westminster police-office with committing a ferocious assault on a charwoman named Mary Anne Lawley , and likewise severely injuring a man who came to her assistance . Mrs . Lawley was sitting one night by the bedside of her mother , who was dying , when she heard a knock at the street door , and , on opening it , saw the two brothers Fletcher , who rushed into the house . They then knocked the candle which the woman held out of
her hand , and one of them then struck her on the head with the poker and otherwise , ill-used her . A friend who was in the house , hearing her cries , ran down stairs to her assistance , when he was also savagely attacked by the two ruffians . While endeavouring to force the poker out of the hands of one of them , the other struck him a violent blow with a pai r of tongs . Mrs . Lawley said that the assault on herself was wholly unprovoked , and she could only account for it by supposing that one of the Irishmen ' owed her a grudge' in consequence of her endeacvouring , on a previous occasion , to defend her sister from his violence . Both men were remanded until Thursday , when they were committed for trial . —A Frenchman of the name of Lascelles was charged at Marlborough-street with assaulting and attempting to garotte Pierre Sartori , manager of the Turkish Divan in
the Haymarket . The latter was proceeding down that street about two o'clock in the morning , dressed in Turkish costume , when Lascelles suddenly grasped him round the throat with both hands , from behind , apparently with the intention of committing a garotte robbery . His victim , however , contrived , after a brief but violent struggle , to shake him off , and he then called out for the police . A constable shortly afterwards came up , and took Lascelles into custody . When brought before the magistrate , the Frenchman declared that he never meant to rob the other man , adding that tbe whole affair was nothing but a joke , and that he only intended to frighten Sartori by pinching him . Mr . . Bingham believed this , but , as Lascelles had nevertheless committed a rather serious assault , he must either , pay a fine of 51 ., or be imprisoned for two months .
Card-Sharping . —The man recently taken into custody for swindling two foreign gentlemen on the Windsor Railway has been sentenced by the Windsor magistrates to three months' hard labour . Notice of appeal to the quarter sessions was given , and bail was accepted by the bench . Murder and Suicide . —A Mrs . Corner , the wife of a postman at Wallingford , has drowned her three children and herself in the river . She was a very respectable and industrious woman , and the motive for the act is not known .
Embezzlement op 1000 / . —Mr . George B . Gurney , principal salesman and cashier to Mr . Milner , a manufacturer at Liverpool , has been committed for trial on a charge of embezzling 10007 . from his master . His wife was some time ago charged by a boot and shoe seller with stealing a pair of boots from his shop . The case waa dismissed at the time , and Gurney subsequently recovered damages in an action for false imprisonment . The Late Assault Case at Birmingham . —Mr . Collia , solicitor , has been found Guilty at the Birmingham Borough Sessions of the assault on Mr . Hodgson , another solicitor , which we related in our paper a week or two ago . He was fined 50 & , which was paid .
Betting Gentlemen in Trouble . —A large number of persons were placed before Aldorman Wire at the Mansion House on Wednesday , charged with being found in betting-houses . They were placed at the bar in batches , and some were discharged , while others were fined 25 / . and costs . A Story op Norton-street . —A man and a woman named Osborne , and another woman named Jane Henrick , were brought up at Maxlborough-street on Wednesday , charged with committing a murderous assault
on William Ward , an engineer . Ward , who is quite a young man , picked up Henrick in the neighbourhood of the Haymarket , and accompanied her to a notorious house in Norton-street , whore , fancying he had been cheated of some money , he attempted to leave , but was attacked so savagely that ho lost his consciousness . Tho people outside , hearing his crios , at length made their way into tho house . He was beaten on the head with a poker , and Henrick tried to throw him over the banniatera . The case was adjourned till Monday .
Suiuous Charge against a Butl . br . —Mr . Arnold wait occupied a considerable time in investigating charges of * revolting description against Stephen Fryor , between fifty and sixty years of age , butlor to Mrs . Gordon , 47 , Wilton-orescont . The practices complained of would appear to hnvo been carried on for a considerable time . Tho oaao was adjourned for a week .
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GATHERINGS FROM THE LAW AND POLICE COURTS . At tho sitting of tho Court of Queen ' s Bench on Monday morning , tho Princo of Waios accompaniod Lord Campbell into court , and took his soot by hlfl Lordship s aide His Royal Higlmeas remained during tho trial of the owe of ' Sldebottom v . Adkine / and paid groat attention
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June 27 , 1857 . ] THE LEADE B ,. 609 .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), June 27, 1857, page 609, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2199/page/9/
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