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On Thursday the 29th day of November last 1716, about five of the clock in the morning, he going to his shop to work happened on John Fish, Robert Warnes a Baker and Robert Warnes husbandman just by Ingledon's house in the parish of Dickleburgh, and Fish asked this deponent to go and see whether the whore and the rogue Mills and Ingledon were in bed together and then Fish and the two Robert Warnes went into a room called a parlour in Ingledon's house where Ingledon and Temperance Mills wife of the producent were in one and the same bed together, and this deponent looking through a broken quarrel of the window saw Ingledon and Temperance Mills in the parlour in one and the same bed together, Ingledon having only his short on and Mills only her shift, which he plainly saw for that Fish turned down the bedclothes a good way, and Mills owned and said she had only her shift on, and being asked what she meant by it, she made answer, Now we have done something to be talked of. And farther this deponent says that on the same day in the evening, he being constable took Ingledon by virtue of a warrant from John Mallon Esquire, one of his Majesty's [Justices] of the Peace, and brought him by the producent Samuel Mills, and that he carried Ingledon to the White Horse Inn in Dickleburgh and kept him there that night in a parlour or low room where Ingledon got a bed laid on a mat on the boards, and this deponent do verily believe that Ingledon and Temperance Mills did lay there together in one and the same bed that night, for that Edward Warnes and John Fish aforesaid who sat up that night in the parlour or low room to look after Ingledon lest he should make his escape told this deponent that Ingledon and Temperance Mills laid together that night, and further this deponent says that the next day the thirtieth day of November he went with Ingledon before Justice Mallom of Wackton, who upon hearing the matter committed the said Ingledon to Norwich Castle Prison, where he now remains. And this deponent has heard the producent Mills, husband of Temperance, say that on the Saturday, Sunday and Monday nights, viz. the first, second, and third of December 1716, Temperance Mills was with Ingledon and laid with him in the key-turner's bed at the Castle.