LIFE A MISERY
SOLDIERS' INTOLERABLE EXISTENCE CAUSES DESERTION. A sentence of twenty-^eight days' detention was imposed lately by an Aldershot court-martial on a soldier who made an extraordinary statement to the court. The soldier was Ernest William Matthews, of the Royal Army Service Corps, and he pleaded guilty to desertion. He described how, after having been previously tried by court-martial and honourably acquitted on charges of stealing Government property, his life had been rendered intolerable and a misery. "As soon as I returned to duty," Matthews said, "the stigma of the offence of which I h'ad been acquitted was brought to bear upon me by my comrades. Whenever anything was missing suspicion fell upon me, and I was regarded as the thief. My life was a misery, and things became intolerable. My mind was becoming aff'ected, and I decided to get away and try and forget everything. I deserted on July 2 last year, giving myself up on August 15 this year. "I obtained employment, and then fell in love with a girl. Just before we wer'e to be married she had to go ' to hospital for an operation. She was i ordered luxuries for which I had not the money to pay, and to enable me to provide them I stole a ring — my first theft. I was arrested, but a London magistrate, after hearing my story, gave, me one day's ixnprisonment only. "When my sweetheart left hospital she begged me to give myself up to the Army authoriti'es, and then she would stand by me and marry me. I gave myself up, and when I have served my sentence from this court I will try and redeem the past, marry her, and become a good soldi'er."
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Bibliographic details
Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 376, 10 November 1932, Page 7
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288LIFE A MISERY Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 376, 10 November 1932, Page 7
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