CHAMPION MEAN MAN.
ABERDEEN’S BEST JOKE. Aberdeen is laughing uproariously at its own latest joke—the story of a man who resorted to bigamy in order to save 50s a half-year on washing. Here are the facts of the case in brief: the humorous narrative comes at the end. When Henry Smith, a farm servant, pleaded guilty to bigamy, th* prosecutor (Mr Thomas Maclennan) said Smith asked the woman to marry him because if he had a wile it would save him £2 10s in a halfyear for washing. When Smith’s first wife died he married her daughter by another man, but she left him.
Describing the case as a comedy of errors, Sheriff Laing fined Smith £lO with the alternative of four day's imprisonment. The story as told by the prosecutor, threw a lurid light on social conditions in the local countryside. He said that Smith’s first wife was living peaceably with her illegitimate , daughter when Smith went and proposed to her, and she married him. She lived only three months after the marriage. Her daughter was only 3 7 years of age, and Smith induced her to marry him. One day, Smith (said the prosecut- j or) turned up at an auction mart at I Turriff, where a number of women j were plucking fowls. Among them 1 was Annabella McWilliams, who had been in the same farm service with him 12 year before. He asked her,
and she replied, “ Ay I’m Annabella. Fit (what) are ye seekin’ me for ? ” He said, “ I wis wonderin’ if ye wid come an’ be my housekeeper.” “ Na, I dinna think that,” said the woman. He stayed with her for about an : hour, and said he would came back and see her on the day of the cattle .show. On the cattle show he came back, but, instead of asking her again to be his housekeeper, he asked her to be his wife. The woman said she would think about it. He visited her regularly every fortnight after that, and later they came to Aberdeen to look for the “ Mar- ! rijxge Buroo:” They were directed to ' a lawyer’s office, and the sheriff (added the prosecutor) did the rest of the work. They then went home to Turriff, where the marriage feast was wait-
ing them, and next morning it got about the neighbours that “ Harry" was married already, and that his wife was actually living there in Turriff. One of the neighbours went Into the house and said to Annabella, “ They tell me that Harry is married already.” “ I dinna ken that,” said Annabella, "but I will need to speir (ask) at him.” She “ speired ” at him, and he said be had been married, but his wife was dead. The police made inquiries, and had no difficulty in tracing Smith’s second wife. The sheriff observed: “The crime of bigamy necessarily various in degree, according to the circumstances in which it has been committed. I confess that I cannot imagine circumstances which would more justify my taking a somewhat lenient course than those which have been disclosed in this case.”
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PUP19300403.2.13
Bibliographic details
Putaruru Press, Volume VIII, Issue 332, 3 April 1930, Page 3
Word Count
516CHAMPION MEAN MAN. Putaruru Press, Volume VIII, Issue 332, 3 April 1930, Page 3
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Putaruru Press. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.