Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

21 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

ALLEGED ATTEMPTED 'MURDER…

Newyddion
Dyfynnu
Rhannu

ALLEGED ATTEMPTED 'MURDER AT LLANERCHYMOR. INTENSE EXCITEMENT.—THE SEQUEL. On Saturday and Sunday excitement of no ordin- ary nature prevailed in the neigbourhood of Mostyn and Llanerchymor, consequent upon thn announce- icnt that George Butler, a gardener at Plas Llanerchymor, had been attacked by a man and stabbed. Such was the first guise which the in- telligence adopted early on Sunday morning, and of course as it spread the wounds of the poor fellow spread likewise, until when the police arrived on the scene, rumour had magnified the assault into a dark tragedy, and the supposed wounds into ghast- ly mortal gashes. It appears, or at least it appeared at the time, that the man had been up to the hall to attend to the hot-house fires late on Friday night, and on re- turning had proceeded a short distance down the drive, when in the darkness of the night he per- ceived a figure rushing towards him, and the next moment he felt a stab.,in the reg-ion of the heart. He immediately rushed back to the kitchen of the hall, shewed the cut in his coat, and, no doubt, was about to expire, as some men will do when attack- ed in this way, when ho remembered that in the left pocket of his coat was a pocket book. Placing his hand in that direction lie found that the knife had actually gone right through the book, but had failed even to scratch his flesh. The domestics, thinking, this a natural culmination, cried loudly for vengeance, but,lwe are told none of them ventured to interrupt the flight of the marauder, and so the police constable stationed at Mostyn was summoned to the scene. He made many inquiries and searches, but failed to discover the assailant or traces of his having been in the vicinity (either in Butlers' body or in the grounds of the hall). The news of the assault assumed gigantic proportions at Llanerchymor during Saturday. In fact credence was given to the report that Bntler had noticed a light in the stable at the hall, and, bearing in mind that atrocious crimes on cattle had been committed in the neighbourhood of late, proceeded quitely in that direction, when he was attacked and stabbed for his pains. This and various other rumours were afloat until the evening, when the inhabitants were afraid to venture outside of their abodes, it being suggested that a certain offensive black man who had passed through the village in the afternoon was the perpetrator of 'the crime, and that he still haunted the hedges and footpaths to take, off all the little children and despatch all the big ones. Other constabulary officials visited the neighbourhood during that and the succeeding day, and, thanks to their powers of discernment, they cleared up the mystery in a short time, for it was discovered that Butler's imagination had conjured up a portion of the scene and his pocket knife the other. Butler, when taxed by the police with having stabbed himself, at once admitted that he had, and ascribed as his reason drink and devilment." A man at Whitford was placed in a rather uncomfort- able position owing to the statement of Butler. It was said that the individual to whom wb refer had previously held the position Butler fills, and that as he was in tho neighbourhood during Friday after. uoon, he Wc.8 the perpetrator of the outrage. The ace, however, after waiting in Whitford for some time, left the scene without apprehending the man,

CONNAH'S QUAY

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