The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
I 1 $ ONE OF OOP’S LITTLE HEROES. A T rae lecM sat. . T ta patter of feet « u oa the stslr, ' As the editor turned la Ills sanctum ehsir, And saU—for wosry the dsyh»d been; . *•Don't let another Intruder to." .. But scare* Lad ho uttered the*words, before A lsoepeered in a t the half-closed door, And *child sobbed out; “Sir, mother said I should ooms sndtell youth s t Dsa is dead,” •'And pray who Is ‘Dsn?’"—The streaming eye*. - ‘ ■■ ■ Locked questioning up, with a strange sur prise: , —“Not knowMmT—Why, sir, all day ha sold ' The papers you print, through wet and cold. " The newsboys say that they oould not tell Thereasoq his stock wont off so well: £ knewJ—Wlth his vploe SoawA t and low, Could any ono hear to say him ‘No ?1 And the money he made, whatever It be, He carried straight home to mother and me: No matter about his rags, he said, i ’ If only he kept us clothed and ted. "And he did it, sir—trudging through rain andcold, Nor stopped till the last of bis sheets Was ", sold: * 1 ■ . • v- ■ ■ But he's dead—he's dead! andwe&lsa him '■SOl , . •' , ' . ■ Ahd mother—she thought you might like to know." , .■ .. ■ . —In the paper, next morning, as "leader," ran * * . *- ■A, paragraph thus: “The newsboy, Han, One of God’s little horoes, who Bid nobly the duty he had to do— . Fpr mother and sister earning bread, By'patlent endurance and toll—la dead,’" —Margaret if. Preston, In Youth's Companion. LAWYERS’ EMERGENCIES. Some instances W hen They 'H ave to Be Quiok-Wltted. Althotigh the processed o f law are ‘proverbially slow, there are many Oeca- sions when lawyers m ust.act' with promptness where a lack of promptitude or knowledge of the law may result dis astrously to the interests of. their clients. ' This Is’notably the chsfe in the drawing of,wills I t oftenhappensthat a lawyer is roused out o f bfed late a t nightlxiigd to the bedside of: A dying person ^ndperfeet a will, disposing of large amounts of -property. To do this 1 with expedition*. complyingwith ali-the requisite formawhile deaR ia literally waiting a t the door, is a task that re quires aman of cool head and self-pos sesion. Surrogates’ courts bc&r testi mony to the frequency with which the wishes of testa tors have failed to he carried out because of thegfalhire to complywith some‘almost trifling detail, Inimcease the lawyer was BoeTovHn making out the paper that Ahe testator died, before ‘the requisite formalities wore complied with, in another case b quick-witted lawyer, who saw that tbefo Was, pot time, to complete, a will in Acase where the property, consisted of money in bank, adopted the. expedient Of making out checks for the heirs; ‘ which wt*rc duly signed, ahd acknowl edged, and the heirs got their money * the next day, without being Ohligedfo Wait a year for executors.’ a Inicommercial crises lawyers have to do a good Seal of quick work in patting . business affaire in shape to meet an emergency. The -bankrupt generally desires to s&v* parts of the wreck for this or that creditor, or for relatives* or for himself, tand the papers must be drawn in due form to elude the vig ilance of the unfortmftte creditors who get left. Bankruptcy has become a special branch of law, and there are some lawyers who hare become very expert a t it, to that upon short notice and with brief time in which to work they can arrange the affairs of a .hank* rUpt fifnJ SOas to dUpflSs of the assets according to the wishes of their client*. There iAroom and need for quick wit in toe actual’trig! of eases in court I t is one thing to prepare a case with care* ful consideration of the facta and due 9 application, of the law to those facts. I t is quite another thing to be able to handle a case In open ootrrf under the spur of competition with sharp oppos ing counsel Ora testy court. In every larga tow firm theWork is divided like tha t in a factory, and to each is as signed a particular part of the case. The Ohe who tries it must be a man of rapid judgment and retouroes. He toast he able to meat surprise*, to discern ° men; to divine hidden motto**, to map a t th e BtojwHtoi Of jdrt *n i r Judge# and the advaato f s« mi the jno- meart. Them , k no *»d Of nesd tor quisle Witte question# of idmittyi , Ik m tertratitiota «**e/ WhSR depended' * eatiridy M U tosrattty, to* defondaat '; lmd toe* tolly Uaotified. Th* defend ant's oe*ra##I idyly get hi* attest to. ehnafeldaocat to to k t with ouoRer tomi o i nfatitoreppsuran**, mud. wMkto » Jlw minute* the wite*#* wa# tod toUDy to itootlfythe wrouf m ^ > 4- qoMcwiteeduad dartogWestera lawyer o»#« raved* gnDto m m i kwm W&fQQ9mTWOOtl OB w OBBC^P <PK jKBBinr Ing. i t mm proved that ttopoteowtng hod beet* done by inemw m ewrtato t alma** portion of whteit wm produssd : 4u mm/wmfL iVkdrai d^itliAttl fe# tfUl sneu a —e *am > rmsvws# wuevp vmee^eewsw ws . n itJ i IU mb 4 ww »' toe aemerof the aUefed potaoned tokea.: ‘-Jh air sna a ^. hAiutov AimBuadLJLmismAuU' ■SuM ^ •ytP mNVBWHnmtr® wB® mautom -whj-— *- touudtuamJldajlAeajiaJumsAJAAk Jw*y*VIB®BiMHHSBT p BOVVQIMNHNI OtoBBfc ; Thry ms*aalmiKhmutolte*aseverware; ' Hit ' weutPtop^ti wtoWadehi■wm* gE p ^ . Jwfyp lv BH f O w JfilH9MB 9PMP9, OTMBiRl Wmm■' ntotpoiecnmd* I w ii amt one of th*M1 tifp n iiMis fn jam jpcwpji ®®* And tot' did mm Ohe> Bo toofc good 4#*it dm^AOMeaitolim toJ^ ’ 9MPnMJMWBPrBTdWJBBwla9W® WmwHnwmWBm line for tot aSjtobttMf w&m where he Bltoild, t jMt tdt . ■ jKWmf 9BM dBPI^Ma wMBm the emetic or the antidote until the law- yer’o client had been acquitted. On another occasion a witness had been detailing with great minuteness certain conversations which had oc curred several years before. Again and again the witness testified to names and dates, and precise words, and it became .necessary for his cross-examiner to break him up. Tills was dond by a very Simple devices, 'While the witness was glibly rattling off his testimony the cross-examiner handed him a law bool* and said: “Bead uloud a paragraph from that book." “What fori?" inquired the witness. “I will tell you after you have read it," said the lawyer,' and the witness ac cordingly read aloud a paragraph of most uninteresting matter about lands, appurtenances, and hereditaments. Then the lawyer went on and askedhim a few more questions abont his memo ry, and the witness was positive that his ,memory was very good. Suddenly, the lawyet said: “By the way, will you please repeat .th a t paragraph you just rend about lands, appurtenances, and heredita ments?” • “Why, of course I could not do that,*• replied the'witness. v “You must have a' queermemory,”re torted the lawyer, since “you can re peat things that yon say occurred years ago, and you can not repeat what yov read a moment ago." ■The witness was nonplused, and the jury was obviously amused at his dis comfiture. . A. quick-witted lawyer thinks on full gallop. JMtany successful cross-examin ers have been men who could keep up a running fire ofjakek and comments and never lose sight of the main point, who could-lead a witness along by suavity and politeness and acquiescence and ap parent obsequious deference’ into pit falls of contradiction. Such men will le t A smart Witness talk on until he drops some unfortunate expression that subjects him to being pounced upon and demolished a t one fell swoop. • A loading codnsel for-" the" defend an t in an accident damage case, where the injury had been occasioned by a jet of steam scalding the complainant’s back and neck as. he was driving past the defendant’s place?, argued to the jury that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence and should have.looked up to avoid the accident. The quick-witted counsel for the com plainant retorted; “Oh, no! If he had looked up, instead of siting for damage to the back of our headwe should have had to charge you for the los* of both .eyes." .> .. * ■>. ■ ■ ■ In a trial for murder, where the killing was done by shooting, the Counsel for defendant made a good deal of fuss and introduced a quantity o! medical testimony to show that the wounded man .had been nnskillfnlly treated. At the close of a confusing cross-examination by defendant’s conn- \sel on the length of the probe Used to find the ball, Redirection of the wound and the danger of probing, the district attorney put the question very tersely by. asking: “Doctor, was it the prob ing or the BhoOting that caused death?" In the trial for burglary the people’s witness showed th a t he was on watch in the hall when he heard some one fumbling with the lock of the door, and that he Ren slyly turned the knob so that the thief could come in easily. The glib-tongned lawyer for the prisoner at once said: “Why, your honor, this witness was the real burglar, for it was he and not my client that really opened the door.” The result of this timely remark was that the prisoner got off with a light sentence for an attempt a t hnrglarv. A good deal of quickwork is often re quired of lawyers in the filing of liens on real estate or other property, in oases Where the obligations are many and R e assets few, mid R e first comer Is the only one who gets,served. Agood deal of Wit is often displayed in the method of making a levy. Benjamin F. Butler,when he was a young lawyer, got a wide reputation for sagacity by attaching the water Wheel of a mill in an action for debt, It used to be a com mon Ring for lawyers obtaining judg ments against the city to attach Re pictures in the Governor's room of Re cityhsll, A good deal of quick wit was dis played by the late Samuel d* Tilden and hi* oo-laborers, who traced R e frauds of William M. Tweed and his followers so as to put the evidence to clear shape before a jury. Bach work oould hardly b« don# by any hu t greet corporation lawyer# to the habit of grasping Subjects oompreh«nsiT#ly and of handling great Interest# Involving ljurge amounts of money and intricate details a t bnsinese.—K. Y. Ann. —An Aberbeen widow, who called npmt tbo minister, seemed desirous of relieving hermind of something which oppre—sd Her, at which Re reverend gentleman, Wkfetog to hurty matters, exotoimed: “tty good woman, yon sec I cambeof no sendee to yon Mil you toll me whntttisMiattronblse yon." “Well, sir, Vm titfedda* of gettto mettled again." “Ob, R e tie it! led me eeeithetls pretty freqwtot-Hieittiy. Mow many haebend* have yon hedf*. “Well, etr,” R e replied, to n tone lees of sorrow Ret* m bitten****, "this is the tomtit; Bto mu* there's nee went* seen been wm tormented wi" * arte* dseto'mefc* ,., —The Wit#—’"I leave yonr food to-' mortow." Mnsband (R*A mt extesva- g**»o#)—‘•Thanks. Brngied yon tows tie*toea*thtog."Mtodomfk3 lew*. 1 PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL, —A, Philadelphia Italian, who has used Re stiletto on three or four differ ent men, says he prefers it under any and all circumstances to atom. In nine cases out of ten, he says, ne will give the holder of a pistol^one thot end then kiU him before he can fire another. —lfc is said R a t sonic few fashionable women in this country are trying the luxurious rekt of the Japanese block pillow, the same, it is said, so support ing the head that wrinkles do not de velop in Re face. '•The pillow is placed under the neck, which is inclosed by Re pillow’s semi-circular cup. r-Oac of the interesting men of Can ada is Dr. Oroniigatcklia, of Toronto, Me is an Indian who in his youth was chiefof the Mohawks. The Prince of Wales urged him to go England to he educated at the royal expense, and he was subsequently graduated from Ox ford and from a Londonmedical school. He is a good-looking, broad shouldered six-footer. —The. Czarina enteredupon her forty- fourth year recently. She has not the same capacity as the Princess of Wales to look considerably younger- than her years. The chin begins to double, and Re checks have long since taken on a comfortable expression. Her figure also grows matronly, Rough she still, as an indefatigable dancer, continues to merit the name of “La Sauterelle." —Mrs. William Aster has a gold din ner service valued at $ 50 , 000 , and this Service in lion and unicorn repousse work, is set always upon R e finest of white linen cloths, wiR no sashes or fluff of silk. The cloth is bordered with broad white lace, revealing a tint of pink through its meshes of the exact shade of (lloire de Paris roses, which forms invariably and a tf all seasons of the year tho table decoration. .—Among a large collection ’of old curiosities left by the late Herr Leopold Ettel, of Innsbruck, there was found a large cupboard partitioned into lookers, filled wiR instruments of torture of different countries and different pe riods. The topmost locker was in scribed: “Moderp instruments oftorture of Re pineteenR century;" and .on be ing opened was found to contain rate papers, dunning letters and summonses. —Some New Haven' smokers have started a tobacco moderation society, members being limited tothree cigars a day. They have to deposit daily a sum equaling what Rey had been accus tomed to spend on tobacco, minus the value of R e Rrce cigars. And in case n member smokes more Ran three cigars on any day, he forfeits all Re money he has deposited. Those .who adhere to the agreement for one year will share equally in the fund created by tho forfeitures.—N. Y. Tribune. “ A L ITTLE NONSENSE.'* —LUlle—"Oh, Minnie! I havo such a dear, unique fad. 1 havo stuffed a pit* low with all Cliolly’s love letters” Min- nie—*“IIow soft your pillowmust he." —The wickedest youR often turns out later oh as a good, respectable citi zen. Not every young man who essays to learn the cornet joins a brass hand, —Indianapolis Journal. —“My wife," B*Id Hcnpcek, dolefully, “Her romper never loses; Scold? Well, 1guess,but then I Say She never loses it—Oh, nay— Bttt lias It when she chooses!” —Boston Traveller. —“Perhaps, papa," said the financier’s daughter, ‘you would like to read some thing nice. Here is a volume of select quotations." “ Great heavonsl" ex claimed the old man, wearily, “can! never get away from business.’’—Wash ington Post —The Course of Unman Events,— Customs*—“Ayear ago I paid 8150for an engagement ring. Shortly after that I got a wedding ring for025, NowI want some plated safety pihs forbaby." Clerk —"Yes, sir. Will you pay for them?" Customer—“No; have them charged."— N. Y, Sun. —Tenth Street Housewife (to her help)—“I wonder where the leaf of that extension table ha* disappeared to.” Help (wiR a beam of satisfaction at her superior knowledge)—“Now wasn’t it too bad, mum? The fire went out and It went for kindling. What else could I do?"—Philadelphia Record. —In Som* parts of Texas the people litre to be very old. An old man of ninety, living quite a distance from the neatest town, requiring some family groceries, Sent his son, a manof seventy odd yean of age, When the son failed to show up with the proTkton# on tirae. hi# father reproached him by saying; “That’s what comes from Sending a k l d . " ‘Demorest’«Monthly. —Mrs Watts—“I know, and yon know, and every one knows that there wasn't a prettier baby Ran Ethel at the Show, and yet Rey ga** the prige to tha t Wilson baby.” Mrs. Po tt* -“B tt yon must remember, dear, that the judge# were all men. I t wn« not the seyerior beauty of theWilson baby R a t detoatod ERel. I t tree R e good look* of its mother.”—Indianhpoli#Journal, —Dog* are wonderful tor their totsb Ugeaee, and owners of dog* are per haps equally wonderful tor their faith aud vsrsatiUty. Eveiyooe of themhas anew tossy. Here is the latest: “The aRsr day," toy*Hr. GoMfen, “I forgot to fit* Bruno Ids dinner, tind in my preoMUpatten pstonosttenllon toldat whenhebegnatobeg to* it- He want away nttosLtokl was gone tor some time. Thanh* ****** from R* me* dsn, bringing aomeRltqrBi hismoiR. AndwlmttoyouRinkltwasf A m RI v i to«g*t‘me'noti"—TMR'sOim^toun<tt., TEMPERANCE NOTES. . THE WHISKY JUG, The following poem tak’eu.trom tho London 3 uu of Juno IS, 179 J, vliotra tbattbo ooateuta of the wklaky juij were known a hundred years »ROS Wlthlntheseeurlhen walls conflnol Tbs ruin lurks of poUonoas kluil;' Moremischiefs hero united dwell Anil more diseases bnunt this cell Tliuu ever pluguedBjyptlun flocks, Or over cursed'Pandora's box. Within these prison walls repose The seeds of rnkny • bloody nose. Tbe cbstterlng tongue, tbe horrid ostb, The fist for fighting nothing loth, The nose with dlstnonils glowing red, . The bloated oye, tho broken bend. Forever listened be this door 1 Confined within, # thousand more Destructive fiends of hateful shape * E'en nowareplunnlng #n escapol ' Here, only b / s cork controlled. And slender walls ofearthen mold, In all the pomp of death, reside Revenge th#t ne'er was satisfied; The trees that bear the deadly fruit > Ofmercenarymurder anddispute; Assaults that Innocence assails; The images of gloomy jails;. Tbegullty thought onmtsohlof bent; The evening hour In folly spent; . All these within the ]ng appear, And Jack the hangman In the rear I Thrice happy howho, early taught By nature, ne'er this poison sought t He, with the purling stream content, Tho beverage quaffs that nature meant; Inreason's scalehis actions weighed, His spirits want no foreign aid. Long life Is his, in vigor passed, Existence welcome to the last I ’ ' ' A spring that never yet grew stale, Such virtue lies in Adam's alp. A PROHIBITIONIST 'S STORY. The AwfUl Visions That Reformed a Prinking: Man. ■ In August, 1887. Xwont to New Yprk City, and wandered up and down R e streets of that great metropolis, wiR its ten thousand saloons, a man alone without God, trying to get sober and keep sober. I wont to bed hungry many a night I knew a great many people in R e city but never went near Rem. ' I was winning the fight very well; bu t one morning I got up wiR that awful feeling of restlessness -Rat is cidled “appetite tor drink." 1 knew I was to drink .that day, yet? I made a struggle, I remember I would look at my Watch and Rink: “Now it is seven o'clock, I'll’ not drink till half-past seven." Then a t . half-past seven I said: “Not till eight," and soon through the weary hoars. 1 spent R e forenoon walking up and down from Harlem toward R e Battery and back again, hesitating a t every saloon door, yet passing every one, living desperately half an hour a t a time. ' finch an ex penditure of nervous energy could have but one ending;. I knew it, but would not yield. . I t was nearly noon. I wm walking upBroadway and I heard a band of music coming down. As it came near I stood on the edge of the sidewalk to look and to listen. Back of the band there was a long line of splendid carriages wiR flags and banners, and in the carriages, were well-dressed, well-kept, comfortable-looking men. I t seemedsome delegation ofdistinguished visitors. What was it? The saloon keeper of New York and Brooklyn out for a holidayI If yon had been there you wouldhave **en nothing hut the band and the car riage* and the men; hut I could see such sights as language falls to picture. Yon know the way of industrial pro cessions Is to cany samples of their handiwork in their parades, and Re sa loon business is an “industry,” men say. In this lino there were no samples car ried openly, but I could see chained to R e carriage wheels a countless multi tude of men, shrieking and struggling, reeling, staggering, stumbling down Broadway to celebrate the triumph of the drink. Back of Rese anoRef multitude, more pitiful—of women, sM-faced and heavy-hearted, dragging on behind, with little walling children clinging to to their skirts or tugging at their bar ren breasts, starving, though It was a holiday, and from thereback the misery of the pageant shaded on into the light laughter of the tippling boys and the thoughtless gir/s who laughed at drunkenness and wondered a t despair. Farther than the eye could reach, the long procession stretched away through the great city, over R e Harlem river and was lost to sight in R e pitying wood* of Westchester County I could see a t every revolution of the wheel* the idol of some Woman's heart crushed h«yond recognition. Broadway seemed paved wiR the bodies of the hundred thousand men who died drank in America in R e year. And Re wheels went crushingover their upturned faces inR# sumta«r noon. I Could aee in the dotidng •that Rese men wore silver threads torn from the heads of suffer ing mothers, along wiR many colored threads •draw* from the tresses of die- spirited and broken-hearted wive*. I oould see my own wife among Re tot- lower* in th« lla*. I oould see my own children traaqded beneath Re wheel*. 2 thought Riag* Unutterable. When the mutoc earn* 1 we* about giving np R e .struggl*—wheh 1 turned frtoaRle apsotetoe I felt I had grown. tt y b*4y was erset, any-' lip* eet*- presMd, my heart firm, aad l knew 1 weald not drink tha t day; and then, there toco*, Rough jostled by a then- sand mea.1 msds * flew resolve, tt y own childrenmightUve to benspcetatoc Insntot *proasmfon to the eye* of other men. What should I do? Wait till th# juggernaut had passed o*** them, then gather' up their mangled term# and serty thim I* their mother and cay: “Hera arethe bewa?" . The thought drive me mad, p d I said; "Never another Instant of nW*ih ing, hqt here and now l join the"men, he they called fanatics or philosophers, who have the bravery to. cry aloud and spare not, and to lay their hands upon the horses' bits and stop Reprocession, Rough they be sneered at and Rough they die for it.” That’s the way I became a Prohibi tionist.—John G. Wooley, in Exchange. •WHISKY DID IT. A Hesrt-Keiullux Fictaro of the Results of Drluklnx, . .. ■ I was sitting at my breakfast table" one morning in my room at Douisrille, Ky., says Colonel Alex! Hogelandi “Re newsboys' friend," when ,the door-bell rang, My son opened R e door and came to the dining-room and said: ' “There is a lame boy on crutches at the door wants to see you. He has been crying, I think.” - .. •I stopped to the door, and in a flood of tears he asked me to go and see his father who Was in jail, fiald the hoy: “My father 1 b to be hung to-mprrow. The Governor will not pardon him. He cat my mother’s throat when ,he was drunk. He was a good mati, and we Were always happy only when father got drank. Won’t you go and talk' and pray with my father, andRen come to~ our house when Re body is brought to us?" ■ \ I went as requested and found that the demon drink,was R e sole cause of that family’s ruin and desolation. The faRerwas hung, and when, the body was taken to that home I was there. Six worse Ran orphaned children were curled upon a bundle of straw androgs, crying wiR a grief R a t would make the stoutest heart quail. The crippled boy, but fourteen years old, was R e sole support of this little family. Tho father’s body was,brought in by two officers. The plain board coffin was rested upon two old chairs, and tho officers hurried; out of the room, and away from the terriblo scene. “Come,” paid the crippled boy, “come and kiss papa’s facebefore itgetscalfi," and all six children kissed Re face of that father and smoothed the brow, sobbing in broken accents, “Whisky did . it; papa wsa good, hut whisky did .it" Since that day I vote as well as pray, for R e destruction of this arch enemy of Re little children of the land.—Issue. TEMPERANCE TOPICS. Tax order of Rechabites, a large Tem perance society of England, rejoices in the returns given at its late annual con ference, showing mmincrease of 10,810 members during the year 1800. This is ail R e more encouraging as it is a ben efit club, am well as a total abstinence . society. T hat Temperance women have won derful adaptability is shown by a some what recent division of their labors in the West so as to especially look after ranchmen 'and cowboys. Mrs. Eliza beth Houghton of Texas ia making a successful effort to gety each one to mark a calf with R e initial* “W. C. T. U.” and to give Re proceeds to atd tho evangelistic work among themselves D ays the London Christian World, referring to England: “Temperance is becoming not only respectable, but popular. Never before has the cause found such support from a lord mayor of London- The lord mayor of York is a total abstainer of thirty years' standing. The mayor of Birmingham is a life abstainer, as also Re mayor of Ripon. The mayor of Stafford has a teetotal experience of fifty-three year*, and Re mayor of Sheffield forty-nine' years*" a A xA tivx resident of Berlin h u said that a t Re MedlcAl College banquet last summer, fifteen thousand bottles of wine and large quantities of beer and spirits were drank in a few hours by four thousand persona Much “roar ing drunkenness" was Re oonaeqnrnoe, and some of Rose in highest position among the physicians were most promi nent in this way. One of these? wss obliged to send a note of apology to a lady in extremely high posltkxttolr hte behavior and words to hcr sa ttis pre ceding evening. - AVRixxntY correspondeat Writes to propose Rat Christian young women organize themselves to writs kia«Uy ex pressed dissuasive* to ssloou-keepwrs, urging them to abandon tits liquor traffic. Far be it from tds to discourage any sincere effort to do good. But, a* our friend observes, no generalorgaai- xatkra la needed. Let such a erwsado beattempted to some one town or vil lage. finooea* thsra would sheer om, Rose of other ptoses who might ha. minded to ‘follow their example. Th* evidence of oneOrtwo suoaeasfto move ments would be a oogent argument for aflextonskn. of th* process, iBudeavor,. more than otfaakatiou, is what w* naedon all linesof Christianusefnlnaas.■ —The Watchman. . . Thera k a barkeeper on. Broad way who i# a T«up#raaes reform er. Ha kas bean known to remon strate against over-indulgence In liquor at hi* bar; He ha* bean known, while passing R e hotel* mcom th* ootmtor,tow*raa*ratem*rofth*d*n*. **Vof pouring too much fattebtotwnitt. ler. Bt*he*heeaknowntoanpr<**antis toetinnwith the eowrae ot a. youthful tippler who gav* up Re habitof drink- lair. Tfihaim fiiesdla fmtoahare#!1 to amastwhc wM alraedy under IteraSbi* UMlIi 9tebi4raukiy^t AtymjtttJHIntoyys,' .|L^| under all torsumi teinsi, not It*mewnsi over the ftotool Roes who era «Mha*« w isssysthehsa stood bsMnd W rtttt tor mmy .yetes.—H, L Hum ’ ( #
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=