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June 14 - 21

10:18am Monday 16th June 2008

100 Years Ago:

At the city police court on Wednesday, JF Willis Ltd, boot manufacturers of College Street, Worcester, were summonsed for employing four young girls on overtime at the factory. EF May, factory inspector, said that on March 9 he had found four young girls, clearly under 18, working on overtime at 8.50 pm. This was totally illegal. Willis's said that the girls were quite willing to work overtime. However, the firm was fined five shillings in each case with costs of £2.12s.

150 Years Ago: Joseph Nash, a little boy whose head scarcely over-topped the handrail of the dock, was charged at Worcester police court with stealing a pair of shoes belonging to Samuel Boulcott, servant of W Haigh of S. John's, Worcester.

PC Berridge stated that while on duty in Broad Street on Friday he saw the boy wearing a pair of shoes which were clearly too large for him. He arrested the boy on suspicion of theft. He had known him for two years as an associate of thieves. The bench committed the boy to one month's imprisonment and to be whipped and, at the expiration of his prison term, to be sent to a reformatory establishment for five years.

200 Years Ago: James Protheroe and Thomas Edwards of Worcester have been committed to our city goal by the mayor for unlawfully combining with others in demanding an extravagant increase of wages from their employer, Mr Garner.

Upon their examination, it was proved that industrious boot makers can earn from 30 shillings to 50s per week, and the injustice of their request was therefore manifest. It is certainly highly necessary that examples should be made of such men. It is a maxim never to be lost sight of that wages should not be raised so as to injury the manufacturer nor depressed so as to deprive the workmen of those means of comfort which honest industry has a just claim to.

By his death the literary world is deprived of one of its brightest ornaments, his diocese of a judicious, benevolent and exemplary Christian bishop, and society at large of a truly religious good man. We understand his lordship's remains will be interred at Hartlebury.

250 Years Ago: LAST week, a salt officer at Droitwich and another man, having laid a trifling wager who could drink most neat rum, the officer, after he had drunk a quart, dropped down and died immediately.

If the owner of the said horse does not fetch him away within three days from the publication of this notice and pay all the expenses of keep and advertising, the said horse will be sold, agreeable to law, to defray the expenses as aforesaid.

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