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of the book was actually swallowed." _Lon. Pa._ _Boston Palladium._ ------------------------- Here is a clever mode of punishing a wife-beater without the aid of counsel:-- A woman in New-York, who had been beaten by her husband, finding him fast asleep, sewed him up in the bed-clothes, and in that situation thrashed him soundly. _Salem Observer_, April 24, 1827. ------------------------- Conviction of a common scold, Sept. 11, 1821; sentence not reported. _Common Scold_.--Catharine Fields was indicted and convicted for being a common scold. The trial was excessively amusing, from the variety of testimony and the diversified manner in which this Xantippe pursued her virulent propensities. "Ruder than March wind, she blew a hurricane;" and it was given in evidence that after having scolded the family individually, the bipeds and quadrupeds, the neighbours, hogs, poultry, and geese, she would throw the window open at night to scold the watchmen. Her countenance was an index to her temper,--sharp, peaked, sallow, and small eyes. To be sentenced on Saturday week.--_Nat. Adv._ ------------------------- _Women Gossips_.--Among the many ordinances promulgated at St. Helena in 1709, we find the following:-- Whereas several idle, gossiping women make it their business to go from house [to house] about the island, inventing and spreading false and scandalous reports of the good people thereof, and thereby sow discord and debate among neighbors, and often between men and their wives, to the great grief and trouble of all good and quiet people, and to the utter extinguishing of all friendship, amity, and good neighborhood: for the punishment and suppression whereof, and to the intent that all strife may be ended, charity revived, and friendship continued,--we do order that, if any woman, from henceforward, shall be convicted of tale bearing, mischief making, scolding, drunkenness, or any other notorious vice, that they shall be punished by ducking, or whipping, or such other punishment as their crimes or transgressions shall deserve, or as the Governor and Council shall think fit. _Essex Register_, 1820. ------------------------- IMPRISONMENT FOR DEBT. The following scrap from a Boston paper of 1819 has reference to an old method
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