And after that he became dissatisfied?—​Yes.

Do you know the Norfolk Dining Rooms in Exchange-street?—​No.

Have you ever been to some dining rooms, near the Market-place, with the prisoner?—​Yes.

Alone, I mean?—​Never alone.

Never alone, you say. Call in John Wilson. (Witness called in.) Now look at that man. Did you ever see him in those dining rooms?—​Not to my knowledge.

Do you remember being introduced to that man by Peace?—​I never remember seeing him before.

Look at him again.—​I have looked at him. I will swear I have not been to some dining rooms with Peace on several occasions. I have been to some near the market once. Then we were not alone. There were two children with us. They were my own little boy, and a child of Mrs. Padmore’s. I had refreshment there. That was at the time of the Sheffield fair—​the same fair at which I was photographed—​the same day that I had been photographed with Peace. And these children went to the dining-room.

What had become of your husband?—​He was away from home.

Was he not at the fair?—​Yes. I saw him there and met him in the evening after the photograph was taken. My husband did not come into the fair until evening.

Do you know a music-hall in Spring-street, Sheffield?