It this place the criminals prisons the debtor's prison and the Magistrate's Court are. Surrounded by one one inclosures having always in it two gates which are shut at night. The criminal prison has also on two sides a wall of its own, and in the wall another gate opposite to the front of the Court, at twenty-four yards distance, and within the general enclosure.
There are six cells attached to the Court for the temporary custody of prisoners. When a defendant has been convicted at the Court he is at once conveyed to the criminal prison and afterwards detained there by a Magistrate's warrant. The wards of the jail are in fact used for the same purpose as the cells usually attached to a police Office, the buildings having been thus arranged in proximity to avoid the expense of constructing cells.
A short time ago a defendant was convicted under a local Ordinance of an aggravated assault, and refusing to pay the fine imposed was sentenced to a month's imprisonment. The sheriff and jailor of the Court thereupon conveyed him without written warrant towards