DEAR CONVICTIONS
PRISONER’S COMPLAINT HE MEANT NO HARM “I never meant no harm,” said William Walker when he was charged at the Police Court to-day with assault. Ernest Langdon said that accused had followed him last evening brandishing a hammer. Sergeant Flannigan said that accused was drunk and abusive when interviewed. The magistrate (to Walker): Will you take out a prohibition order? Walker, however, demurred. The magistrate: You’ve got a good many convictions for drunkenness. “I know’," replied Walker, “and they cost me a lot of money." On the assault charge he was ordered to costs, and he finally consented to the prohibition order.
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Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 302, 13 March 1928, Page 15
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104DEAR CONVICTIONS Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 302, 13 March 1928, Page 15
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