Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 25, 1890, Part III, Page 17, Image 17

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY
NINETEENTH YJEAR. OMAHA , SUNDAY MOKNING , MAY 25 , 1800-TWENTY PAGES. NUMBER 335
r Boys' and Children's Dept Boys' Knee Pant Suits. Boys' Knee Pant Suits ,
GRAND BARGAIN SALE , Prices Unheard of , and a Wholesole Stock to '
Beginning Monday , May 25. Select From. $4 and $4.50.
v : ,
Owing to the backward season we find ourselves overstocked in
many of our choicest lines of cassimere and cheviot suits. We have We will offer several lines of Knee Pant Suits at $5 , manufactured This line will embrace a number of styles of pure wool fab
decided to name prices on some of the largest lots which will tured this season to sell for $7 and $8. They are all new , fresh rics , and cannot be duplicated for less than $7 per suit. This
close them out quickly. Come on Monday if you want the best.
Remember the snme quality . of goods always sold in this depart goods , made this season in our own work rooms and cannot be price , $4 and $4.50 , makes them the best values we have ever
wo ment cannot , will characterize honestly recommend. this sale. We never sell any gc rment which duplicated outside of our store. sold.
: ' Long Pant Suits. WASHABLE GOODS.
Boys' Cheviot Suits AHWOOI , $8.
In Fancy Combination Kilt Styles , $1.75.
Boys' Cassimere Suits AHWOOI , $ S.
In Pant Suits , Washable , $2,00 ,
Boys' Fancy Plaicl Cassimeres ; $ IO
Novelties in Flannel and Jersey Blouse Kilts and Knee Pant Suits , the
Don't Buy Until You Have Seen These Lines. best styles ever shown , Prices $4 to
Boys' Knee Pants , Men's Department Hat Department
Opening of our new spring styles in straw goods
SO Cents.
. '
Special Sale of Men's Sack Suits. on Monday. The largest stock ever shown.
Monday and Tuesday , 200 pairs boys' Prices $8 , $9 and $10. The Best Variety at Jobbers' Prices.
odd Knee Pants at 50c. SEE SAMPLES IN OUR WINDOWS. Men's genuine Mackinaw Straws at 78c and $1.
CUSTOM DEPARTMENT. Special sale of $35 suitsmade in our merchant tailoring department , reduced from $45 for this week.
For this week , orders will be filled at $35. See samples in our corner show window.
H \ | Hi ' H I * H 11 T" I d D , & CO. , OMAH
THE LAWYERS OF CONGRESS ,
Statesmen Who Have Mnilo and nro Making
Fortunes at the Bar.
PAID HIGH TOE HIS GEESE
All IiK-ldont in the Career of Senator
Milolioll How Stanford's Hnrned
v Ijilirary Made HIsKortuno
A $5OOOO Retainer.
jii/i foif ? , IfflO , tin Fmnk G. Canunttr. ' ]
May 21. [ Special to THE
Bi'B. ] The lawyers of congress I
Their name is legion. They popper the
house anil the senate. You llml them on
every street corner in Washinton and after
they lenvo public life they settle down hereto
to practice. Of the 412 members of this con-
RIOSS i-'bS .are lawyers. The speaker is a
lawyer. A'll .tho leaders of the house uro
lawyers .nid moro than three-fourths of the
men who hold down those soft live-thousand-
dollar cushions In the senate are or were
limbs of the law. It has been" so since the
beginning of the government. The law Is a
stepping-stono to politics. Clay , Webster
mid Culhoun were all lawyers. JolTorsonwas
making $ . > ,000 a year at the law when ho mar
ried. Madison and Monroe had each studied
law before tlioy got Into politics. Tom Beaten
ton practiced In the Tennessee courts before
ho went to Missouri. Presidents Arthur ,
Hayes , Johnson and Lincoln practiced law ,
mid so did I'lcrco , Tyler , Fillmore , Martin
Van Duron , Andrew Jackson and James
Buchanan. Buchanan made $9iS ; the llrst
year ho practiced and ten years later ho had
jiin his fees up to (11,000 a year. Ho dropped
the law when ho ( jot into politics and this
Is tlio cuso with some of the public men of
ilay 'John Sticrman was admitted to the
bar ut twenty-one. Ho studied law in his
brother's ofllco In tlio little town of Mans
Held , Ohio , and borrowed ? 50 to go to Colum
bus to bo admitted to practice before the
buprenio court. When ho caiuo back his
brother took him lute uavtuerbhlp uud the
two had a very fuir collection business. John
was soon able to save JuOO a year , and these
Mivlngs well Invested formed the foundation
of his fuituuo. It was about ten years after
this that ho was elected tfl congress ami
dropped his practice. Ho has not taken it up
6 1 nro and is u statesman pure ami simple.
It is different with other members of the
8CimUI saw George F. Hdmunds shaking
the few locks of his b.ild head and spouting
out an argument at the rate ofTen
Ton Dollars a Word
iu the supiemo court yesterday. Hols said
to mnlcv $ , V > , ( KX ) a year at the law and I don't
doubt it. William M. Kv.uta niakos llvo
times as much as Chief Justice Fuller out of
his law practice and Senator Mitchell of Or
egon has scores of gilt-edged cases from the
northwest before ihosupremo court. Ho
charges for all of them and docs not act like
f Ale.Mindcr II. Stephens who used to try the
A cnscs of his constituents for nothing , yotli
riny and Webster got good fees for all they
Uld and u United States senator once told mo
that Webster used to take fcos for making
i.ficUn'3 on ouo sulo or the other of the bills
uliiih caino before the senate He made tuts
of money but btivcO none and was m debt all
llie time ho was In Washington. The fees of
that Uino were uotliiub' lu cQuiparbgu viith
this and Ben Butler and George F."Edmunds
innko tens of thousands where the statesmen
of the past made one. Hamilton made ? 10,000
a year on an average it is said and William
AVirt thought ho was doing well when his
yearly fees amounted to $ 'i,000. Alexander
Stephens got a single fee of ' 0,000 , and it is
said that Aaron Burr made 510,000
out of a single ciso. Koscoo Colliding
received a cash retainer of $ TX,000 ) for advo
cating the interests of the Apolllnaris water
company before Secretary Folger , and Benja
min II. Bristow received $ "i,000 for a short
speech on the bill organizing the bureau of
engraving and printing some years ago.
A number of cx-cabiuet ministers arc now
practicing law hero. Their high standing
gives them a wonderful influence In the de
partments and they can get immense fees for
their work before the house and senate com
mittees. Ex-Secretary George Boutwoll has
been practicing hero for some years. Attor
ney-General Garland has an oflleo hero and
ox-Secretary Bclknap has a good practice.
Ex-congressmen as lawyers are as many as
the leaves of Valambrosa , and ox-sonators
are everywhere. Joseph E. McDonald Is u
regular practitioner In the Washington
courts and at the capltol. Jeremiah Wilson ,
once a member from Indiana , makes $50,000 a
year as a Washington lawyer , and the fees of
Judge Shellabarger , who was a noted Ohio
congressman In the sixties , amount to ten
times a congressman's salary. Phil Thomp
son of Kentucky Is practicing in Washington ,
and as for ex-bureau lawyers , you llml thorn
by the dozen. I understand tliat Ben Butter-
worth will drop the unprofitable Held of poll-
tics to go Into the more prollt.iblo ono of the
law at the close of his term , and ho could , if
he would , have a bigger patent business than
any other man In the country.
Of the lawyers now in the United States
senate Dan Voorhocs Is perhaps the
Host in Criminal Canes.
Of the murderers among his clients none
have over been hung , and ho can bring the
tears to the eyes of the Jury In any case ho
pleads. lie defended oao of the mumbors of
JohnBrowu's raid at Harpers Ferry and ho
gets the biggest fees of his kind. Senator
Spooner was nmkln ? $10,000 a year as a rail
road lawyer when ho was elected , and ho Is
said to have one of the clearest legal minds
iu tUO United Statea. Allison was known as
a good lawyer in Ohio before ho wont to
lown , and there aw few bolter lawyers In
the country to Jay than old Sauator Joe
Brown of Georgia , Brown Is a self-undo
man , made from the ground up. Ho drove a
pair of steers to tlio South Carolina academy
where ho w.us educated , and got the master
to take the stoeis in payment of his bo ml and
tuition. It was hero that hq got the rudi
ments that on iblo 1 him to l > 3gtn the study of
the law , mid ho tauijht' school after this and
studied law at the same tlmo. Ho borrowed
enough money to glvo hlai a year tit the Yale
law sohool , and Improved hU llmo so well Unit
ho was able to make $1 , 00 during the llwt
year Of his practice. Ho pushed lib oarnlnijs
from this steadily up until they reached
f'1,000 , and ho liu'tutoil all hU savings well.
The llrst $150 ho nudu went Into a pleco of
land with a coppir mine on it , and ho sold the
half Intercut for this later on for SJ.I.OOO ,
which ho invested iu farms , and which
fanned the batis of the Iiniiwuso fortune
which ho now owns. Ho U worth $ > , OOJ,000.
Tom Kced studied law while ho was to.ich-
lag school In California , uud ho would have
been a rich man if ho had stuck to the prac
tice. Lcland Stanford om-a told mo that ho
made iu',000 the lli-Jt year that ho practiced
law lu Wisconsin. Ho had one vf the liucst
law libraries of the northwest and was doing
well when a lire broke out and at3 up this
and the thirteen mortgages which then con
tained the bulk of his accumulations. The
result was that ho was reduced to $ < 00 , and
rather than rebuild ho decided to go to Cal
if oru It. Ho there became involved in busi
ness and railroads , and instead of becoming
a rich Wisconsin lawyer ho has become the
millionaire United States senator. Senator
Ingalls studied law In Massachusetts and as
soon as ho was admitted to the bar started to
Kansas with $ " 0 in his inside pocket. Ho
opened an ofllco near Atchison. His law
library was
Made Up of Three Books
and the whole of his furniture was a chair
and n table His first client was a carpenter
and his fee was paid in kind. I to got a table
and a high desk for his legal services and
this desk , painted green , is kept in the In
galls family today as one of its most precious
pieces of furniture. It belongs to Ingalls'
son Ellsworth , who carried it with him to
college and who probably now uses it as a
part of his ofllco furniture In the starting of
his law practice.
Senator Ingalls1 ofllco furniture recalls a
story which Senator Mitchell told mo about
his early legal experiences in Oregon. Mitch
ell had just $ , " 1 in his pocket when ho reached
Portland , but ho registered at the hotel as
thouuh ho was a millionaire and engaged
rooms which cost him $10 a week. Ho tented
a little 6x10 ofllco which had no furniture
whatever in It , and ho spent his $3 for a vol
ume of tlio statutes of Oregon and this con
stituted his whole library. Ho found ho could
got trusted for his board and his rent but ho
was at n low as to furniture. A friend of his
gave him two chairs and ho went to a carpen
ter and asked him to make a table for him on
tick. The carpenter coolly replied that ho did
not do business that way , and Mitchell
finally obtained the use of n desk In an ad
joining ofllco. Ho put out his shingle and at
the end of that year ho had twenty-six out of
the fifty-two cases that came before the
court. His practice grow steadily , and citi
zens of Portland tell mo that ho was soon
making $10,000 u year. Ho had ono client ,
Bon Halliday , who paid him $10,000 , a year
for a number of years , and ho still makes
some of the biggest fees of the country.
Ono of Mitchell's first cases became famous
In Oregon as
asTlio
Tlio "Oooso Cnho. "
A poor German owned four gecso which
were killed by a wealthy but unscrupulous
cltUcn of Portland. The German retained
Mitchell and tlio wealthy man employed
"Laundelet" Williams. The damages claimed
were S20 , but the rich man , by perjuring him
self , got n verdict in his favor. The Germ in
was lu despair , but Sjmitor Mitchell , knowIng -
Ing the character of the rich defendant , n.1-
vlsod his client to take a backseat In the lead
ing saloon of the plauo that night to see If the
man would not acknowledge that ho lu-1 shot
the geese , hi the presence of witnesses , an lit
ho did so to notj tholr name ) . It turned out
as no thought. Tno rich man m ido anight of
It and celebrated his victory by treating his
friends. Ho told them that ho had shot the
Dutchman's gco3o , but "th it blaukod ll tlo
PltUburg lawyer of a Mitcholl-coaldn't provo
It. " Upon this Mitchull domindeil a now
trial and won the case. The rich man carried
It to the supreme court and Mitchell again
won and the result wai that the nnn hail to
piy for the gecso ami to foot a bill of f IOJ fur
the costs. The gocso thus coat lio.'i uploco.
Nearly all the southern senators tire law-
years. The late Senator Beck hud a good
practice iu Kentucky bcfcro Uc cauio to con
gress , and Blackburn can make a splendid
speech before a jury. Bates of Tennessee
was practicing In Nashville and left his la v
oftico for the United States senate , anil Gov
ernor Vance is ono of the loading lawyers of
North Carolina. Butler comes from a family
of lawyers , mid ho studied in the ofllco of his
uncle , the Hon. A. P. Butlor. Senator Bustis
of Louisiana is a graduate of the Harvard
lawschool _ , and ho has > bocn for years professor
ser of civil 1 iw In the university of Louisiana.
Ho comes from a very rich family and ho has
n number of noted lawyers among his ances
tors. Senator Gibson is also a lawyer and ho
is also rich. Gcorgo of Mississippi is not
only a good lawyer but ho Is a legal author
and his frowsy head Is packed full of legal
facts. General Wultuall was getting $10,000
n year as a railroad lawyer when ho was
elected to the United States senate , and ho
was at ono time a partner df Justice Lamar.
Lamar himself has paid moro attention to
books and literature than to low , but ho has a
good legal mind and he is n hard worker.
Lamur's first case wo.s the defending of a
man who had whipped another , but feared
that ho could not do so again , and ho wanted
his rival bound over to keep the peace.
Lamar succeeded in doing this and received
as his fco two jugs of handmade whisky.
The lute Sunset Cox got $ 5 for his first
law case and
Henry Clny'H First Pco
amounted to Just fifteen shillings. Represen
tative Ilolman , the noted economist , learned
how to skimp the government by skimping
his stomach to fit the slzo of a country Hoos-
Icr's legal salary and John Allen , the funny
man from Mississippi , made his first jokes
before the bar. Speaking of the investments
of legal earnings some > of the big fortunes
have come from fees' In kind which have
grown into millions. The late David Davis
died a millionaire. The bulk of his fortune
cnmo from some lands about Chicago which
ho was given for legal services which ho got
when ho was a young man and when the
lands wore supposed to bo worth practically
nothing. Ho held to them and tlio city glow
and the lands grew with it until they brought
him in hundreds of thousands of dollars In
stead of n few hundred dollars. It is so with
many of the coses that como before many of
the Washington courts and before
the departments. Patent lawyers accept
sometimes interests In. the patents they se
cure , and ouo of the rich men of Washington
Is a patent lawyer named Anthony Pollock ,
'who manages the Goodyear rubber patents.
The land claims that como before congerss
amount to millions of dollars , and when n
lobby lawyer gets ono through on the condi
tion that ho Is to receive one-half or one-
third , ho makes n big strike or nothing.
When the electoral commission was settled
there was considerable talk about the big fee
that Senator Evarts'received for his argu
ment before tho. commission. The people
supposed it to bo thousands of dollars and
the truth Is that Kvai'ts did the work for
nothing. Zucli Cluuidler , who was then
chairman of the republican national commit
tee , called UJKJH him and asked him to take
charge and' select . his own assistants.
Ho then asked him what ho would
charge , saying that the republican
committee was poor and It could not
offur him a very large retainer. Kvurta 10-
pllcd that as the matter was u public ono he
would make no charge , and Mr. Chandler
told him ho must ut Uatut ullmv linn to pay his
hotel expenses. He was ut WuslmiKtun tit
the time Chandler cann l < an l.inutidvvus
stopping ut Wormier s liuu. Ho ifm.uiicU
thirty duj to try tuo casu uml ha uiu for
this time amounted to $500 , as ho had had a
number of friends to dinner. This was pre
sented to the national committee , but Chan
dler was not present and
It Was Not Honored.
When Evarts was told this he said ho
would pay the bill himself , and ho did so.
Xach Chandler wanted to make it right , but
Evarts would not hear of it and the result
was that ho got $ oOO less than nothing for
making ono of the greatest legal arguments
of history.
One of the most constant practitioners before
fore the supreme court ut Washington is Bon
Butler , and ho probably makes more money
there than any other lawyer iu the country.
Ho docs an immense amount of * tlmnk-you
business and is always assisting some poor
young man or some poor woman for nothing.
Not long ago the boy of oao of the brightest
widows of the interior department was seri
ously injured in a railroad accident. The ac-
cideiit was due to the carelessness of the offi
cials and the railroad company was asked to
make some compensation. This they refused
to do and the woman was in despair. She
called upon Ben Butler at his oftico hero and
stated her case. Ho took it , tried it for her
and got her heavy damages and would not
accept one cent of pay. This is an instance
that came under my personal vision but it is
only a sample of many others of which 1 have
heard.
It was the same with Hoscoo Conkling. Ho
charged the millionaires , but ho worKed for
nothing for the poor. A highly cultured
widow of Washington , whoso property was
tied up uud was being unjustly appropriated
by others through a supposed legal technical
ity , met Mr. Conkling in Now York and pre
sented her case. Ho offered to take It up hut
she told him she could not pay him. In the
gentlest manner Mr. Coukiliig told her ho
would do it for nothing , and ho then set the
machinery of law in motion which gave her
back her little fortune. It did not cost her u
cent.
FlIANK G. CAIIl'UNIKII.
A Boy'H Kstmy on Brcntlilnj ; .
A Kentucky schoolboy , of twelve
years , recently wrote the following essay
on brouthing : "Wo breathe with our
lungsi-oui' lights , our kidneys and our
llvoiw vif it wasn't for our breath wo
would die when wo bleep. Our breath
keeps the life ageing through the nose
when wo nro asleep. Hoys who stay in
a room all day should not breathe. They
hhould wait until they got out In the
fresh air. Boys In a room make bad all-
called envbonicide. Carbonicido is as
poison na mad dogs. A lot of boldlors
were once in a black hole in Calcutta
and carbonleido got in there and killed
thorn. Girls bomot lines ruin the breath
with corsets that squeeze the diagram.
A big diagram is best for the right kind
of breathing.
*
* You vlll have no further use for spectacles
If you use Dr. J. H. McLean's Strengthening
Hyo Salve ; It removes the film and scum
wnich lUTuimiliitr.s on the eye balls , subdues
hillumimillon , cools and soothes the irritated
nerves , strengthens weak und fulling sight.
Co a box.
Mlro I ) rd nl ; iho
Christmas Mrs , Judge K , F. Law on ,
of Waynesboro was presented uitha
case f ohampagnu and it was carefully
btowed away , bays the Maoon ( tin. ) Tel
egraph. A few days ago Mrs. LUWBOII
opened the ease and out jumped bover.il
mice , fat and sleek. Ono by ono she
drew out the bottles of sparkling fluid ,
until to her Mirpi'isu thn ooinpt > bottles
VWTU fn ind. the MMtiiig busing ln n
tiiki n ull and 11 n < > hn1' hull Him i in
I'MIJ . ttlui tlio ' l' > uiiia | iiu { i"JH > /
CH JijnLni , ilmUij'n uv. ial3.
AMONG THE MERRY MAKERS ,
Bright Shafts Shot from the Bows of the
World's ' Jokers.
SOIENOE IN SWEET CHAPTERS.
Tlio Aiinronclilnj * Advent , of I lie Girl
Graduate A Feminine Paradox
A IleartlcH Kxplanntion Jones'
Wife Kvldcntly It new.
A" u > Yurie Ilcrnltl.
Soon tlio sweet girl graduate ,
On science will expatiate ;
With eyes alight and cheeks aglow ,
Will toll of things she does not know.
And this , I ben ho kind , O Futol
Beginning Their Vacation.
Now York Sun : "What is tluit sing
ing ami rejoicing wo hciir'i" '
"It is the oyster and the griddle-cuko
celebrating. "
Spare UN n Mltlo.
Now York Herald : Chicago Yes , wo
tire going for the fair with hoth 'cot.
St. Louis Don't do that. The public
will want to bee eonio of it , whatever
it is.
An Alarming Outlook.
ClikntinViidij / f'ovt.
Strikes are Increasing every day
At very rapid paces ;
Even the lightning , so they say ,
Has struck at several places.
An Illinois Philosopher.
Whitcsldo (111. ( ) Herald : The man
who put on his Hiuniner underwent" hist
wcoK WIIH Bnillling around with n hud
cold after Tuesday morning's frost. Thin
is in iierfcot harmony with the universal
law of gauze and ollect.
A Good Nnino.
New York Sun : "He's n good ball
plnyor ; hut why do they call him
{ Spider ? ' "
' Becuubo hois death on llics. "
Gold Spectacles Are Morn GonoronH.
Jeweler's Weekly : Little Kthol Don't
peoples wear specs to tickle their oycs ?
Ascetic i'apa Yes ; plain ones. Gold
rimmed ones are worn to tickle other
people's eyes. _ _ _ _ _
A Kcmlnlno I'nrndot.
Whitcsido (111. ( ) Herald : It is one of
the inexplicable paradoxes of humanity
that the woman who wears a No. 5 shoo
in variably Fends her husband to the store
when she wants n now pair , whllo bho
who wears nlJ ! is always able to visit the
shoe dealer's herself.
Not Very .SatisOioiory.
Detroit Free Press : " 1 think I will
htivo to return the dog I bought of you , "
she said , as she called at iho fanolor's
the other morning ,
"Anything wrong , nm'nm ? "
"Why , IIO'B bitten the bain- .
"Oh , that's nothing. Ho , , . . . . . ,
took tlio child for another dog. He will
outgrow that if you give him Uino. "
oo IH a ( jood J'onolior ,
.iowoltirs' Weekly : Installment jeweler -
elor "Lot me sell you a scarf pin. ICIo-
gant carbuncle betting and only } 1 a
\\0oll.1
Bivwi'i "Vull , I t-'uies > i' ' iloii't du
nuit.ngb of dvr land .Minu I n < u 1'iU i
Lad \uu ( jl deal giirtiuuvlca uu u tunifj < f
ho didn't boon lanced , mine grand mod
dcr said , ho vas an angol. "
She Kvldcnlly Know.
Merchant Traveler : Jones' was not a
very bright woman , but she sometimes
said things which wore worthy of a wit.
One day after doing or saying something
silly her husband nipped out :
"Well , you are a little the worst I
over saw. '
| "Why , what's the matter now ? Have
I done anything wrong ? "
"I should say so. You don't know the
difference between ahorse and a donkey ,
I don't believe. "
"i didn't say you were a horse , did I ? "
she replied meekly , and Jones baid no
more.
Ho WIIH Allowed.
Detroit Free Press : lie stood in a
doorway with an umbrella in his hand ,
and as a young lady came briskly trip *
ping along in the shower ho stepped oui
and said :
"Aw allow rno , miss. "
"Oh , certainly. " she replied , and tak
ing the umbrella from his hand she con
tinued her trip as far as lie could be
without once looking back.
"Aw sold again , you know ! " ha
sighed as ho made a skip for Iho shelter
of an uwnlng.
It Changed Him.
Detroit Free Press : A man got info a
side yard on Adams avenue the othetf
morning to find himself surrounded by
three largo dogs , each ono of which
boomed perfectly willing to take hold of
him , and UH lie blood there in nnxlouo
frame of mind a woman opened the dooi
and asked :
"Want anything ? "
"Y-yes , "
"Vietmils or clothes ? "
"Neither ono , ma'nm. "
' . 'But you came for one or the other. "
"Exactly , ma'am , but oireumstnni'CB
have worked u grave and important
change in my wants. 1 think my pros-
cnt suit will last mo for the next llvo
'years , and I don't euro "If I don't have
anything to eat for a month to como U
you would only bo so kind IIH lo '
She culled 'em oil' and ho skipped.
Couldn't Ktand Annie Itoonoy.
San Francisco Chronicle : " ( Jo over
and arrest that follow for mo , " was the
rcriuost of a mild looking man named
Houorts of a policeman last evening on
Koarny street , near Montgomery n\o *
nuo. Hoborts pointed to the open door
way of u saloon , inside which a lusty , ,
lunged steam beer consumer wan bawl'
ing forth tlio well-worn ballad , 'hullo
Annie Hoonoy , " to a piano aeeon.paul . *
ment.
"Arrest him ? What for ? "
the olllcer.
" \Vliy , isn't that singing enough to
ehnrga him with ? He's boon shu .t i y
out that pong for over an hour. "
The policeman turned on bin ! ) < ' IH.ll
told Hoborts to move on if ho duln t KG
tlio music ,
"Yes , " put-slated the complainant fol-
lowing the olllcer , "hut I've hounl tl.nb
bong today until I'm tired of it. I iuit t
escape it. That last line , 'My tutot-
lieurt , ' is.haunting mo tnwywln
heard it at the park today , on th. uliu
HnoH , in Chinatown every wheiv , u
"Put him down for plain drimii.
the olllcer to the sergeant , as I ad
KoberU up to the desk at the uij
ten iiiliiut'- ' 1 iti-r.
Now Coaios llonso , Kan. City
A If "lilt * ' ' Hi jiiuuf Fiui' i m l lii'i'f'il
tiutc ! in Kuii u. . Lily LJiUXkUiluU lu lU uy