DRIVEN TO VAGRANCY
CARPENTER’S COMPLAINT
WORKLESS AND HOMELESS “I have got to be idle and disorderly,” complained George Ross when charged with vagrancy at the Police Court yesterday. "I have no work and no home, and was wounded at the war.” Ross, a carpenter aged 55, was said by Constable Henry of Newmarket to be sleeping out. He had arrested him about midnight in Broadway last night after the man had told him that he had nowhere to go and no work. Given an opportunity to make an explanation, Ross said that he wanted his soldier’s pension. "That is not a question for me,” replied Mr. W. R. McKean, S.M., as he sentenced Ross to three months’ imprisonment.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 586, 12 February 1929, Page 13
Word Count
118DRIVEN TO VAGRANCY Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 586, 12 February 1929, Page 13
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