STRANGLE CONDUCT TOWARDS MR GLADSTONE.
During the dinner given by the Premier to his tenantry recently a man entered the room and quietly took bis seat at tlie top of the table amongst the principal guests, and close to Mr Gladstone himself. It seems that he had passed everybody, some taking him for a tenant and others for a clerk. At dinner he drank plentifully of wine and cheered Mr Gladstone, but before the speaking commenced, lie handed Mr Gladstone a letter, which the gentleman read and took no further notice of. The letter began with the expression ‘ My dear Satan,’ and the writer went on to offer Mr Gladstone his services, adding ‘ if you require brimstone, I can give it to you cheap.’ The letter was signed ‘Old Harry.,’ • After the banquet the man, as he was following Mr Gladstone to Hawarden, was arrested. It appears hois Henry William Wilson, formerly in some employment at Hedditch, near Worcester, from which he had been discharged for misconduct. Since then he seems to have been drinking heavily. When asked why ho had sent such a letter to Mr Gladstone, he replied that this was a Christian country and Mr Gladstone was a Christian, and therefore ought to assist on,e who was a poor young man without friends or employment. He tramped about his cell on the night following his arrest, seeming to be in a state of great excitement.and singing snatches of songs. Amongst; the statements he made was one that he had also been a correspondent of the late Earl Beaconsfield, fo whrn ho wrote on his return from Berlin asking
wh j.iisr peace..li'it'-ujtiouor- had ' anything to do with Pence, the burglar. He has been handed over to the cir« of his friends.
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Temuka Leader, Issue 933, 1 April 1882, Page 3
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293STRANGLE CONDUCT TOWARDS MR GLADSTONE. Temuka Leader, Issue 933, 1 April 1882, Page 3
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