£26,000 A YEAR.
A VOYAGE FROM AUSTRALIA. STRANGE ALLEGATIONS. A strange story was related to Mr Plowden at Marylebone Police Court by Mrs Mary Elizabeth Foote, of New Zealand, now living at Glenloch road, Hampstead, N.W., who prosecuted Mrs Ethel Campbell, aged 28, of South Side, Clapham Common, S.W., on a charge of having bv false and fraudulent pretences obtained £l5O with intent to defraud. Mrs Foote said she and her daughter left Melbourne, Australia, on April 18. At Adelaide the prisoner, her husband, and their child and nurse joined the ship. On the voyage she and the prisoner became friendly, and the latter told her that her father was Sir Richard Hunter, of Horley, Surrey, who was the Lord Chief Justice of England. She was coming to England to take over property which she had Inherited under her father’s will at Horley. The prisoner represented that she was coming into an income of £SOO a week. When they arrived at Plymouth, said the witness, the prisoner obtained a newspaper and pointed out to the witness the names of some of her horses that, she said, had won race*. Mr Polwden: Did she say where her stables were? The Witness: She told me Mr Horatio Bottomley was looking after her horses.
‘n June 11, added the witness, she and her daughter stayed with the prisoner at the Hotel Metropole at Brighton. They all went out for a motor car drive, and 10 minutes after their return the prisoner rushed into the witness’s room and said that during her absence her room had been broken into and a great deal of her jewellery and other property had been stolen. She showed the witness a suit-case, the lock of which had been broken’. When they returned to London, continued the witness, the prisoner reported the robbery to Scotland Yard, and next day left for Brighton. Subsequently she called upon the w'itness at Hampstead, and said that there had b.een a second robbery at the Metropole ,nnd she had lost £l5O and all her remaining jewellery. Among the things stolen w r ere her husband’s watch and chain. The prisoner said she was unable to pay her hotel bill, and asked the witness to lend her some money, offering her motor car as security. The witness stated that her son, having her money matters in hand, saw' the prisoner, w r ho in the end obtained from him a cheque for £l5O. A week later the witness asked for the retui'n of the money, but the prisoner had never paid it. Later on, said the witness, she visited the prisoner at Clapham, and there saw Mr Campbell wearing the watch and chain' he was supposed to have lost. The witness called attention to it, and the prisoner admitted then that she had told her wrongly. Since then, added witness, she had found that the prisoner’s father’s name w’as Hallett, and that she had no interest in property at Horloy. The prisoner was remanded, Mr Plowden offering to admit her to bail in two sureties in £IOO or one of £250.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19111014.2.88
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Gisborne Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 3348, 14 October 1911, Page 10
Word count
Tapeke kupu
517£26,000 A YEAR. Gisborne Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 3348, 14 October 1911, Page 10
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
The Gisborne Herald Company is the copyright owner for the Gisborne Times. 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 the Gisborne Herald Company. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.
Log in