Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

19 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

LOVE'S ELOQUENCE.

TO ELLEN'S EYE.

THE PILGRIM IN SIGHT OF JERUSALEM.

Caerieon Antiquarian Association.…

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POLICE INTELLIGENCE.

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POLICE INTELLIGENCE. NEWPORT TOWN HALL.-MoNDAY. Magistrates present-William Evans, Esq., mayor, and Thoma Hughes, Esq. Catherine Edwards and Harriet Jones were charged by P.C. Price with being drunk and disorderly.—Edwards was fined 58., but Jones was discharged. William Morgan was charged with stealing fruit from the ear- den of Mr. F. Justice, Betlvue.—P. C. Turner proved finding the prisoner, with another boy, stealing apples, gooseberries, currants, and strawberries, in the garden of Mr. Justice, on Sun- day motning last. They ran off as fast as they could, but he pur- sued and captured Morgan, while the other escaped. A consi- derable quantity of unr:pe fruit was found on the prisoner.—The youog rascal now said the policeman had eaten the strawberries. (Laughter.)—Committed to the House of Correction for three months' hard labour. This should prove a warning to other garden robbers. TAKING TOO MUCH CARE OF HIMHLF. Timothy Rearden was charged with being drunk and disor- derly, and assaulting several people in Commercial-street, last Saturday evening.—Mr. Superintendent English proved finding Tim in an upioarious state, kicking respectable persons, and running a great risk of receiving a sound thrashing for his im. pertinent and drunken conduct.—Tim Why, sure, thin, it was the middicine that did it.— The Mayor: What, the medicine! —Tim s Yes, sure, now, it was the middicine I took. I'm an arly riser, and I was sick on Saturday so I called on the doctor, and says he, Why, thin, Tim, you had better take a couple of glasses of whiskey and a couple of brandy, and then it's all light you'll be from the sickness!" (Laughter.)—Mayor: And rs that medicine did you harm, we will try what another kind of medicine will do for you, we fine you 10s., and 8s. costs, or one month's imprisonment. Catherine Kennedy, an old offender, was charged with drunken and disorderly conduct.— Fined 5s. and costs, or fourteen days imprisonment. Thomas Regan was charged wilh disorderly conduct in the street, and insulting a female, on Saturday night last—This pri- soner had not the excuse of being drunk at the time he exhibited his unmanly conduct. He quarrelled with a number of Irishmen, and then turned to and kicked and beat a female. Prisoner de- nted the charge emphatically.— Fined os., and 5s. 6d. costs, or fourteen days' imprisonment. IRISH FASSENGEtl CAPTAINS, BEWAHE! Robert Travers, master of the Two Friends, trading between Ireland and this port, was charged with having made default in not fixing up in some conspicuous part of his vessel an abstract of the Passenger Act Mr. Woollett, for the defendant, took objections to the form of the information, which the magistrates overruled, and the case proceeded.—Richard Trew was sworn. He said The defendant is master of the Two Friends, with which he arrived in this port on Friday last, from Kinsale, and had thirty adults and seven children, twenty horses, and four cows on board; the vessel being under 200 tons. Defendant is in the habit of blinking Irish passengers heie, having a license to do so, which he showed me. He is licensed to carry fifty-six passengers. I did not see any abstract of the Passenger Act on board. I asked him f..r the abstract, but he said he had not got one. There was not a cnpy of a license hung up nor any state- ment of the number of passengers he was licensed to carry.— This was the case; and Mr. Woollett then assured the Bench that his client had eired entirely through ignorance of the law. He was duly licensed, and it had been shown that he had not carried more than tbe number allowed. The learned gentleman further stated that he had advised his client to give up the pas- senger trade altogether; as there were so many rocks,quicksands, shoals, &c., in this act of parliament, that he or any other cap- tain must be a skilful navigator, who could find his way safely through it.—The Mayor The advice you have given yourctient is very good.—Mr. Hushes: You cannot stop the trade: these vessels, when licensed, will still bring passengers; and the only thing for the authorises to do,is to see that every pailicular of the act cf parliament is complied with.—The Mayor Robert Travers, this charge is very clearly proved against you, and you are fined £10., and 15s. costs; and if there is not enough 10 satisfy the distrass warrant on board your vessel, you will be committed to prison for two months. WANTON ASSAULT ON A POOR MAN. Thomas Frankham was charged with violently assaulting Wm. Hill.—Complainant stated thst the defendant came up against him, while driving his coal cut auout the town, and continually mocked him, and called him names. Complainant repeatedly pushed him away, when he came up and struck and cut him very severely. He bled much.-Defenda.nt: I did call out Chal" as he passed but he called me" Phillips's bull-dog" in return. —Dr. Stack proved that the complainant came to the surgery last Saturday, with an incised wound above his eye, which might have been cut by a sharp stone, or by the assailant's knuckle.— The complainant, whotabouishardtoearna wretched living, by selling coal from door to door. said the defendant and even some respectably-dressed men, called after him nicknames, and tried to prejudice his customers against buying his coal, by crying out short weigbt.Mr. Hughes said the case was very clearly proved.—Fined 20s., and 12s. costs, or a month's imprisonment. A NICE COUPLE Jane Davies, an interesting, but rather vixenish-looking young wile, with an infant, in its night-clothes, in her arms, was charged with assaulting her husband, John Thomas Davies, letter carrier. —VVile I am not guilty he beat me first.—The Mayor Can't you settle this matter with your wife, Davies? [t will he very discreditable to both of you, to expose your domestic differences in a public court.—Davies: Why no, gentlemen, I can't live with her it's no use to tiy.—Wife: And I can't live with him. He came home last Saturday morning in one of his tantrums, 9od beat me shamefully.—Husband Last Saturday morning, at half.paSt nine, when I went home to breakfast, she threw a cup of coffee at me.—Wife, sharply You struck me first—you know You did.—Husband When 1 went in, she began to insult me. She siid Here I'll sit in this "humble cot," and make you "•aiotain me, at six shillings a week.—Wife No such thing, you bad)fellow you beat me first; I'll swear it.—Husband: Oh, you II swear anything, and that the gentlemen know well.—The *ayor: You are both pretty well acquainted with swearing, I Sh fl—Riband She smashed the looking-glass all to pieces. e flung the kettle at me. I've tried her four times, and it's all no use. But she shan't hobble me any longer. No, I won't s and it no longer. I give her every indulgence a man could give a wi e; but it's all no good.— Wife: Oh, you bad fellow; it's no such thing. Here am I and the blessed babby, and you 3C 'h* '°U ^°" '• Husband Give her as much drink 3»S 8^e r 1 s'le w''l s't down all day, and do nothing, in- stea ot earing my linen go to rags. Then she left the babby, when i was only a fortnight old—why, the beasts of the field woulan o so bad a thing. (Laughter.) Let any gentleman consider w ether he could walk fourteen miles a day, on ten shllhngsa week. I only get 14s. a week, and can't afford her more than is. a-week; but I'll cheerfully give her that, to get iid of sac a *«s.—Case dismissed, Davies promising to allow the rib 4s. a-week. A GOtD CHAIN AT LARGE. John Hamilton, watchmaker, was charged with unlawfully disposing °' a c"fa'n, the property of Edwin Whitehall, watchmaker an stated that he sent a gold chain to e e endant to clean, and defendant acknow- ledged its recetp • n sending for |)e saj(} ,he had sent it fo Bristol to be ^°.je; ■ ant at length went himself, and de- fendant then told ^ile.n ^5 chain into the acid, it went to pieces* bei g y gi >land not gold. From information he received, complain n 1,11 that the chain had been pawned in Bristol, at the shop °f Mr. Cde, Maudlin-street—Geo. Cole, pawnbroker. produce tl I aID, wlllch he had received in pledge for £ 2, 0° lir July, from a per- son who gave l^e,narn. e ,ek,Complainant swore lhat the chain produced, was t e same as he had missed.—The pawnbroker said, l'?.^lun].ef «M,parWf(? P"vate mark upon the chain, it would be difficu it, as the pattern was a common one.-Defendant said this was not the same chain. The one had received had, a much larger snap.—Complainant, to defendantReduce the chain 1 gave you-can you do that ? If J0'' caD'd,°l?0i and s° P'°ve this is no? the chain -Defendant: You w 11 find you have not the °sbl chain Ihe-e.-Mr. Fox, the cU* bas become of Ihe chain placed in Yr"'r ihy'L[,r- Wh" J?" ™Dht°,t°e: been any fraud in^ .be ?.id he iS f j". •"« va'ue »' «» County Court.—Case remanded.

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