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The Huron Expositor, 1930-09-05, Page 3
,:t * ; I �., r .c, r r, "., •°k I d i 1"" ,a¢a'ki •,1 V �j . �.tYt[ -i 1' 0"it' ITT n4}1-111-1115 ii t G r �,5r1 � Jt , �" rj) llmnv i'1�` ' �;3r:lpa ., �1 '' 1 a'':�kYisC�1t, ,>~ 1 �• . .1 } t 4_f'; f :'Y 1 '.. a• .1,:. itix �' E, 1 , 4V,y ,I-KIIIVfI �•j r�. ,-, , .34 ,, a +,t ,RR , i � �4_ " rt, 11 � .. , I �, .. :: : . ,,, : � .. . - . � - � -, ,, 111 4�t t 'Ill I } N "4 I, I'll y' • 101-;,,, it + ' 1 11,.,.,�,,,c.f 14 3 t' hI t : , 6�: w .: I �" �{qr . � - worst: .'In anY' 'event; it pmved eve7n- ' Jw`" •`uu1,N tua�ly';fabal. +He chose fav,apnun�sslloir- ><i�t fox' t1 e of 'tibllc works xn'an na, ie -I rTAa fox some. u t+}Y '4G� ?- t f _r. ; r�,:. 14�, '?l A iA7 ^" dV�r tn,n'i� yr'" s5 4.I�Y YtF•r,+i:�'�#}.,,Jr� Ig " 'i7.f•-•II yrlt wry, . J { wa's •A) YA4f. a i #hl 1 i5� , y' �etrthileys ''. , , 1 A , + y p 4 r *�y . ` eq'uently X� r:1. ` , i •,. aha i ut a 1. ; e ; ' Inp Qn b . i ,comer �. ,,. a' t , ��' ' 4-. yAt L - 'n s. r: ox for hi e ",. d' ou L��,q®® ) , 1. Y lus nt>r. s g £ ,: ,Y : r� c, , 1■yp■• (� E:C'ie ho� �n�a/y..w�]in' F1'a �I"'. , 1. IR1. 4 -_• I N. YAl1Y.M •i, : wM.Y`*�u I! - 1� A-01'., J R.., R r J ' p'areCaStln'g the robalile. res ells .v } ex, w'as t1lOrou'ghlk,' dlitrl seed: by, the' 1,' + Charles Paddock, .mer sprizitin.5 'I.� , � 4 . public and who ,bad 'been cttl?liz�ted to' ;' t , :^f champi'on,'says tha:.rhe United -States '' ;:.ry , , A` resign tl}'e police pgmriliMonersh in, v 8- X , i<K .. w 'a Fi a,..;,i6!y ., should win a1I th Jield events with or l' lv 3 a former administration to save, hds .� � n ` �,r: 4 Business 1t11en appreciate the. possible eacce , ,�tA of the hammier, �ao � E,, chief, the mayor, from def -eft in re- throw, and a cauplo of relay rices,.,' : tike competent se vice Wath � � � "� election,. . k rs thus winning the championshil,. He i she- es, ` lr . w "I IGillespie became immediately �recog- ,, ;a which bus.'<ess accounts are nized as the power Ibeha.�id the mayor made this ct>q even on the as_th .' , ��, t s ,predi ? handl�d`by T}�'e Dominio>a , and was known as '0coininissioner af' sumption that tyre itish Stara whom yr'f* ' i U . /"" „ we (have mentioned; would be comped- P'j7e e r ; ,, ' , the works The 'fawn continueri. to I' , I 1.Barak• 1...- run pretty'.mucli as it liked. William toms. , ,, ? �. Riibled e, :police coaninissioner, who Paddock naturally,„ views the meet, t�-'e V g from the paint of vj w of an t��iieri- Knickers , 4,k T"E0 when Bowles was elected for Bowles can. B'at'he does i%ot hesitate to bei. ` I ' t'}' had risen from .the• ranks resigned , S p Bloomers �' ", had ealrnpaigned on the issue that the high arse u :an m taw pr some British " athletes 'and we . remember that he '6.� �' DOMINION e �T '' force needed reorganizing. Several +` .[fly said' that Percy 'WnXliams was the other veterans were refixed and �i �' P greatest competitive sprinter in the I. .L ours; ? Bowles appointed Harold H. Emmons IBoy, , EST`'ABL:ISHED 1871 eomrnissionex. This appointmeit, ad- 'world. In an article in the New York I .1 Horeemald Tribune, Paddock pays' tri- ; SEA'FQRTH BRANCH �'� hetaddlventgoaof Gii' woes andat'bute to Eric Liddell whom he calls. a or `s• } ` request of an informal corrtnnittee of unique sports eh'asracter. He studied ° s ' R. M� Jones - - iVIana er influential citizens. Emmons at ones Lon Pants P g for the mini�s'try and after the Paris .. proceeded to take action against, Olympics went to the Orient as a 5 �I P g gam' mitsslonary. The faith that led him oC t© ��' o q ' YOUR voicE IS YOU 1ve surely have been biers,' bootleggers and' other criminals, to the heathen was not stronger than A �lendi'd range Of hose ' Y grievioualy but when Mayor Bowles returned with the faith which enalbled him to win _,__r___ 'Science has made thel:'re roductiom misinformed by the old school nabur- Commissioner Gillespie from a .visit P alist who told us that a rattlesnake 'to the 'Kentucky Derby he promptly the greatest quarter mile race in the New Patterns O specially adopted for wear. of the human voice so faithful, so would. give worning before it struck. fired Emmons and replaced him with history -of amateur sport. Before the with the new suits,— ' u1tS, --' p'erfec't, that one identifies a distant' Our recollection' is that a rattlesnake a' man 'named 'Wilcox, another futility, Paris Olymlples he was generally sup- \ checks plaids and plain friend at once' ower the telgphane. would posed to be the fastest sprinter in. New ,Styles ' That is 'why greetings by telephone ' give. warning 'before int struck. However, ' against x made ,blood -curdling the British Empire and was believed passible we ,have that confused with threats against the ,gangsters an'd P ] COlOTS. All B1Z8S. are so welcome, so satisfying. Why the belief that a drowning man sinks then lapsed into inactivity. The city's to Ibe a likely winner of the one hun- New Colors //_ �• not send your greetings by Long three times. 'Dr. Ortenburger says newspapers continued a crusade a- ',red metres. But it happened that a • , Distance? that from personal ,observation in the gainst the law violators .but Fowles the 100' metres was run on Sunday'' i Y�,_ ��i i Pr�ees 5©N to $1.00., , ' Arizona desert he can affirm that only did nothing, with the result that many and Ldddell's Scottish Presbyterian , (I -' ��� 4 per cent. of rattlesnakes rattle ev- of his former supporters drew away scruples forbade his participation. New 'Low • BELIEFS ABOUT SNAKES MAIN- en when disturbed. Nor is one to from him. There were confused mur- Fomtunately for Great Britain another • suppos v because he 'hears a rattling murs of disapproval, and soon the English sprinter named Harold Abra- Prices LY SUPERSTITIONS. _ noise in the grass and sees a snake one distinct word that .began to be hams was not hampered by any doe- 11 x „ trine of predestination or infant gliding sway that he has had a ha heard among the hubbub was re- Boys' . ' Practically all the stories we have p- g damnati'an and he ran• and won the .• pt' adventure with, a rattlesnake. The call. There is no better clothing Alade q ever heard about snakes are untrue race. Liddell entered the 20'0 metres • + truth is that many snakes vibrate Presently a recall committee was at so we might as well heave them over- and finished third- , l� board and Bryce and their tails rapidly, and if this hap- 'Fork collecting the necessary Signa. pp School p garnish' •aux pens among dried leaves or similar tuxes. The subsequent fight was wag. It was supposed that the distance 1. minds for a cargo of fresh supersti- was too lop for Liddell was a s rin- tnaterial the noose will be like that le with unparalleled bitterness, Gil- g P anywhere than these f affious tions, for it seems aloin that man ter and nothing more. Therefore when which legend associates with a rattle lespie ,was the chief champion of I cannot live without them. The auth- he announced that he 'would run in snake's warning, It is not possible BoWle�s, and former commissioner Shirts oxity for the statement that nearly all the 4ad metres nobody supposed that to tell the, age of rattlesnakes by the Emmons was his chief critic. The ra- papular conceptions about reptiles are ,, had a chance, ~Says - idxk:— PrinceBrand Clothes number of their rattles. These are dib was invldked and thanks to 'the erroneous is Drr. A. I. Ortenburger, of ,,His running form was the most awk- QQ n the University of Oklahoma's zoolo frequently broken off. If ill are march of science. the disputants were 75c to $1.2 5 Y gi- ti ward 'ever seen on anybody's track present they merely tell the number able to liar each other 'several times cal laboratory, who has contributed and was certainly not adapted for so • of times -the snake has shed its skin. a night and in the hearing of hun- Y P , v an article on the subject to School long a distance, 7dr •'Liddel. had a li'F Science and Mathematics, ebvi.ousl Ortenburger reports seeing a dreds 'of thousands of people. It is habit o£ starting at full speed and X11 the new style ideas are here made of attractive Shirts and blouses are ,� y large rattlesnake lose half its -rattles said that when Gillespie came to pay p• g P , 6 patterns in materials, are specially designed t0 g y rather a curious vehicle for such dis- merely b P P y keeping it u all the wap throwing here in big variety. Hand - ft y y pulling its tail from under- the bills of the campaign he -v as re- 1� p y closures. The reason so many false. his head farther and •farther back g neath the weight of its own body, quired to produce the sum of $100,- resist wear and tear of the averse health oun Some colors and designs' I stories have been told about makes How How many times have we read 000. He then resigned, saying that the longer he ran. He checked his cb" y y g 4 is that men regards them with feel- I about the hero in the snake country wind„ lost the power of •a body lean, Canadian. Sizes from `43 ears to 16 ears. Come in in checks or stripes, good. ins different from those which he he was sick of the whole mess and y q g , i taking his horse -hair lariat and coiling admitting that the people's verdict cut down'the length of his stride— and see them. r wearing material, colors regard's any other of Gods creatures. and• continued to run faster the far - it about his bed, knowing full !well had endorsed the charges against P„ , Moreover, comparatively few• people ther• he went. 'So to everybody's as- guaranteed. Sizes 12 to 14 • have been trained and persistent ob-I that no ,baleful snake would cross him. Buckley had been very active ton•ishmen't Liddell woii the 400 metres . ' this barrier, any more than if it had in the campaign as a radio comments- • servers of them. Certainly the aver- and set an Olympic record. But Its PY'l�`�s$7.00®$12400 Pr1eeS 1 5c to $1•�5a e man when he comes uuex ectedl been a charged electric wire? Often tor. The son of a horseshoer, he g P Y enough, no doubt. But this too is fie- worked his way through college' and greatest quarter was to follow in the upon a snake is no competent witness tion. Snakes will cross such ropes. became distin�.tished both as a stud- .British -American games. He ran the of what immediately takes place. He g last lap of a mile relay for the Em- A:or do snakes commit suicide 'b hit- ant ar,3 an 'athlete. He was a s ori is half frightened, half fascinated, ting themselves, despite the stories to foe of gangsters and racketeers, an e, starting under a 50 -yard handi- and his false ideas about snakes pre- th,) contrary which we have read, Fin- 'said that his work in the social ser- c p against Fitch'of the United States Kim pare him for the reception of false who had run second to him in Paris. ally, they do not lirve at ecce with vice department of the Ford in'dus- impressions. For example, he sees a P His task was from the outset impos- biacksnake moving at high s'pearl over r; `'ria dogs and gophers and awls tries had earned him their enmity. Bible, and American and British spec - the tops of 'bushes, his back forming tators sank back in their seats cov- in the prairie. The learned iconoclast tion night he had three bodyguards swift arches. The beholder is ready vinced of the 'hopelessness of the attacks the belief that human' beings standiSTEWAR"m BROS, - SEAFORTH ng near him while he was at to go home and testify that he saw a work. chase which Liddell had undertaken. KKKE- 1W hoopsnake. are instinctively distrustful of snakes. t 'But," says Paddock, "the little ile says that his own youngsters and His work done', he went to the, lobby , The truth it that there is no such minister still :had his faith. He start - the children of several of his friends of the hotel where he was staying and - thing as a ho'opsn'ake, despite the fact ed out at tap speed to catch the have never exhibited fear of an took his seat in one o£ the two chairs that the word has entered into the Y smooth -striding Fitch. He gained on —. ___.._._._..-_.__.. _.._ _____. . _. _ __.-__ _..... ____.--...._ _--._ __ __.__... __.._.._ • language, and that even in books pre- snake of arty kind or size at any time. Placed peculiarly and consptcously every step until he was less than ten If a.child has never heard abt together. The other chair was unoc- tending to be educational we have seen oua ' red. Buckle began to read a a Yard's ;behind in the middle 'of the back ' cu realistic drawings of these fabulous snake and Sees one for the first time, g Y g pap- stretch. He swum' wide on the turn was that which condemned John Lee still. Frantically Berry jerked the that the rain which had beesr falling its instinct is to regard it as an inter- er and three men entered the lobby d to wait for more than half an hour, lever back and forth but the trap re- steadily all the ni ht before the exe- creatures, with their tails n their estin playmate. Contrary to tha One stood aside while the other two and caught the American as they mouths, rolling along the ground. Our g P Y Y came off the last turn. The crowd sometimes 'on the trap door of the mained immovable. Then, at angther cation had warped -night before the boards_ general idea, a snake does not feel drawing revolvers went bebind Buck- scaffold and sometimes in his cell, sin from the overnor, Lee's legs recollection is that a haopsnaice could was in a frenzy and the Scotch 'hag- g g g and this was accepted as the explana- slimy to the touch, but glides caress- ley and pumped streams of lead into while hangman and ail attendants were unstrapped and he was marched tion -of the failure of the lever to grroceed in this unorthodox manner Pipes screamed in the centre of the gr' J pie p p , p, y years lat- ingly through the hand like a fine him. The next Detroit heard s the tried to make the mechanism work. back to his cell. The prison car en- spring the trap. But man pretty nicely as fast as a mustang field for their gallant countryman. silk stocking. Try it and find con• murder and was almost st much Lee has been known as "the many ter was summoned, and he, with as, er an old convict told the whole story. could gallop. Nor aro there any tivhich ,- shocked to read in the Hearst -owned Wise mien of the track, however, still milk cows. There used to be a ver or on' on of this interesting a di;^overt', they could not hang,"and seemed si'stin warders worked franticallyAt the time that Lee was in Exeter y g saw no hope for Eric Liddell. All this general belief in farming districts or on second thought, ask someone Times, which. had re, that neutral time Fitch had been saving himself rather to rejoice in e notoriety he underneath the scaffold to repair thjail awaiting execution he was serving' who has already tried it. Are birds through the campaign, that Buckley had attained. His sentence was com- trap door. They tried it anti it fell. a -prison term. Hb was one of the where snakes were plentiful that if a for this final sprint. 'He was fresh and small animals upon which snakes was also known as an associate of un- muted to life imprisonment but he Lee was marched back and again his convicts chosen to build the scaf- cow suddenly ceased to give its ac- while Liddell ,was exhausted. It was P g re fascinated or hi notified b cheer ld racketeers and had been ac- lived to emerge and even to have les were strapped and again the fold customed flow it had preJvlious:y been them? Do snakes charm their vie cussed many times of using the radio impossible to believe for a single g g PP g ,and being a carpenter, was en - milked by a snake. The outraged ex- ? g moment that the fading Scot, who drinks with Berry the hangman.. Na- trembling chaplain began to mumble trusted with, the most important part tiros. They h not. The birds ars for blackmail. 'In the opinion of and turall he was quite a celebrity and the words of the Lords prayer. yaressian on the cow's ,face strengthen- had alreacky sprinted 400 yards, could Y q Y p yen. Baerry of the work, namely the setting up paralyzed with terror when within Player, this was a cruel slander, and managed to live for several ears pulled the lever, but again nothing of the trap door and its connection -ed the belief -that it had been the vie- ( outdrive a comparatively fresh com- g Y g g reach of a snake and are thus makes it the the effect t adding uncertain without doing any work apart from moved. with the lever, Deliberately, with the 1bim of 'a kind of lacteal rape. The petitor who was the second fastest g P Y, truth is that snakes commonly feed able bi making an escape. Do snakes to the tragedy. It remains uncertain tellinghis story.Eventually he ,from There was a groan and then a idea of giving trouble to the author - on Some ins to live young hatch? Both. who murdered Buckley or why, though quarter -miler in the world. But Lid- ed with a married woman who had thud. One of the warders had col- ities, and forgetting the agcny to on mice• and rats, and that mice said dell held on, racing his opponent Some snakes are oviparous and some there can be little doubt that his ac- become iritere,sted in 'him, and they lapsed under the horror of the scene. which he might be condemning the rats frequent cow. stables. Therefore, tivit +• stride, for stride, oust throwing him - go even further and are ovoviviparous. yin the election was at the bot- went to Australia where he died in The governor was white-faced and doomed man, he had made the trap snakes might be more commonly seen self with a Inst Herculean effort in- The former lay eggs. In the latter tom' of it. In the meantime there has 1921. Details of that testi morn- could handl stand. Once more Lee's door with a slight slant, cousin the in sow stables than in other outbuild- to the tape—inches ahead. No man ghastly Y g g ings, not so desirably stocked from the eggs remain .inside the hotly until been renewed police breakers and hun- knows the time of that quarte -r. But ing at Exeter jail have been recalled legs were loosed and once mere he edges to fit together so that pressure they hatch and the young are born dreds of petty law breakers have been by an article in the Empire News, walked back to his cell. Again the from the top would wedge them. The this paint of view. It is also possible no one who' saw it questions that it > that now and then a snake has {been,' alive. Drr. Ortenrburger does not ex- arrested and their dives closed. Says and they may be accepted as consti- carpenter shaved off part of the un- greater the weight, the more firmly plain this apparent discrepancy but he Mr. Player, "Detroit seeks to -day a was the fastest in the history of foot 1 g observed to drink milk from a saucer. racing. The effort was not human, toting the true story of what occur- ,•ensile of the trap. Warders with the door would wedge. It therefore has told us enough for one le.son. big man, to take up the burden. Under red, and of which so many for,tastic axes loosened some of the 'boards, and happened that when the trap was • These ingredients are enough for the but rather the result of an inspired the state recall law Mr. Bowles is a accounts have been given, The ex- for the third time Lee was brought sprung after Lee had been taken braces milk -snake xxryth• Practically all the man who had Bono 'gl'oriousiy mad. candidate unless he withdraws. He And on top of it Eric Liddell had wind planation of why the trapdoor refus- back. For the third time the hang- to his cell it worked, but when he once snakes have numerous little teeth as may do so. If he does not a split P ed to work is also given, and also man pulled the lever and for the third more stood upon the trap it r•.:fuse3 sharp as needles, and these would pre'- GANGSTERS KEEP PACE WITH field carries the usual hazzards. But enough left to preach a corking' good vent any cow from standing still while the people are so alert so determined sermon in a London church the fol- why since that day there have been time the trap remained fast with the to budge, Ever since then no execu- it was being drained. It is q•>"estion- DETROIT'S GROWTH P lowing day.'' no more executions on Mondays. doomed man standing firmly in his tions have taken place in the ,fail on able if snakes have the m'usetilar that it seems probable popular Mr. Paddock tells the inside, story John Lee was tried and epnvieted place. liwo or three other warders Monday in order that the hangman p equipment necessary for sucking.In. For several years asst Detroit has strength will be solidly behind the one the last Olympic for themurder of a young woman had fallen dawn and the jail yard pre- may be able to test the trap before of the 400 metres at aiiy event no snake could drinkenough grown more best bet offered." rapidly than any other games in which Ray Barbuti of Syra- named Emma Whitehead Keyse, of rented a scene of terror as those who the execution. Hangmen are only milk seriously to interfere with the large city in the world, thanks large- cuse won byI inches over Jimmy Ball The Glen, Babbracombe. She is said still retained their sense stared wild- human and are opposed to doing such normal'y'ield of a milch cow. ly to the automobile industry. A of Winnipeg, who had the race won to have had many highly -placed ly at each -other and at the hooded work on Sundays, . ',l'y has been the case in other large ei?- GREATEST QUARTER MILE and then tossed it off 'by turning his friends and this is given as one rea- figure on the 'trap. Then the warder -*- . - ies, indeed we might say most large head, ,It appears that Barbuti myon son why the recommendation to mercy motioned keepers to lead Lee back to cities dr even all large cities, the RACE IN SPORTS HISTORY the race in the Amemfcan Olympic made by the jury which convicted Lee his cell, and rushing to his office tele- To emit musical sounds, even if o4 quality of its public officials has not tests at Philadelphia, but only because and concurred in by the judge who graphed to the home secretary at poor quality, is a portent of good i In Chicago a picked team of British tried Him was ignored by the Home account of what had happened. That health and good spirits.—T. Lester• correspondingly increased. Hence the he 'ran in the wrong fano and shut P and American amateur athletes met Secretary. Lee, who was 20 years official telegraphed back: -In "view of r recall of the mayor and the murder off. Herman Phillips of thet Illinois Jones. ffy for the fourth time. Their first meet- old, was sentenced to be hanged on the mental torture Lee has suffered of the radio announcer which sho'eked Athletic Club. Phillips did not pro- „ •A the whole commurrity and revealed ing was under the auspices of the test since he was chosen on the the morning 'of February 23, 1845. At- grant him a respite. This way pres- M1 ". v "►"�' _ ^ ,, Achilles Club in. London, and the re- tended b the chaplain, he marched entlyr followed by the reprieve, +%' .' Made of pure iV4ftr- the ,presence of murderous angsters, Olympic team and hoped to win the Y P ,•' P cult was 'a draw. Next they eompeh- from the cell to the scaffold his arms A modern nation is one that boasts sale frill mo�%tia sunlit:,factodee: organrzed rackets and ori established international event, But a few min- Lee was kept in prison for ,jghtly NC$ eitpease'spdi od to have it ttndexworld hardly less sinister than utas before the finals were to be de- Pmt°ned. He was plated upon the more than twenty-three years, or °f labor-saving devices and deplores lea ,wico17 1". attitifiiliE9avored: those of Ohicaga, and N'ew" York. In tided the track coach went to Phil- scaffold and Berry, the hangman, longer than most life prisoners are unemployment. —Thomaston (Ga.) V, , the New.Repulblic, 'Cyril' Arthur Play- 11, .- lips and told him that in Barbuti lay quickly strapped his legs together. , g Times• immured and again the theory ac- yl 5 er, an Oxford graduate now on the the only chance of the United States Inc prayer went on and at a signal cepted was that the highly placed __ x }' staff of the -Detroit Nelwaj explains winning an important first. I3ie asked frorli the governor, Berry pulled the friends of his victim had made their — what lies blehind the killin of Gerald lever. Nothing happened. Lee stood g Phillips to ina'ke a victory fbr Bar- influence felt. It was also said that and seslt"fid }fee " iWper. E. Buckley'. The inurdex was, as a buti possible 'b',y going obt at the Lee, who never ceased• to protest bis 4'. and as when, #t,ltdbts lurid• to a matter of fact; the 'eleventh gangtster � start and running the first three - innocence, had made threats against Relieve L� g killing in' Detroit within a fortfiight; hundred'metres as fast as he could one or two persons. This, too, he do- W�c1�'s iis'6o>tncl to be the.hest- • of Buckley happened to be, thei First j Ei `. to kill oft ear ac tha(C atilt, tttt"!, W� „ 1 early ,pace and dna Bar- Hied. He did not know at the time, o . nim. • : . "white mare assassinated, the other r .� along with it, because he was nor for long afterward, why the trap bitti' o The delieidto pep�t niut ,1 `v3ctrms 'being more or fees disreput. not a last starter. It meant that had not sprung, but he always main > &esheas tlte`itiottth,: ,tl� 1'oeigners slain'by other foreign~ , Phillips had to give up his ,own chane P' tamed that despite the horror of that ,� igest dtl "' erg #4,6gib4ackda they were interrtfpi ► of winning the race 'which he had rea- ll �ls8est thirty-five Minutes waiting, sorne in - I*, xttg+ 1'0 agsaamns are In tlq 'ititl- j ton to be eve was ji bt as- good as w •inn You per voice assured him that ire would , I �Q1vF'' is t uirlI itiurders..mlay Frave, been. Barbuti s. IBizt he sa'ia ifsced his own 'L" $Bob goo+ not hang. As a matter of fact he W11iy `th-A, outeoii b of a votdatta lin» .�,�y� y •probabl was the most co osed man arYub$iii'an and did exactly as he was �" Y H ort { f+grnr 'S,1011 '. But it seta's ,th6 told, with results that had been fore- t of the company assembled the jail �`'` i. " ; , ,y I" 2PP .. , i . l ri� toy murder t11ht r seen. But for Ball'' ;la•pse th4b plan yard that winter morning. s•I ah'a11 C 4 i"'. n ,,, .- , , , +. ': i' •ah"C; the .0b, n •and' lei to aiti ii>r yt►d will -..,krill lies air day Bila would have failed. BABY S never forget, he said,. the .hcrrilble '4 Sri r, , . I'' tent dit4 �,'t'hnt, the city ire purg4 , ..,'rpv6 dsy'rtat#' llhiroe weeks. 91g when I could feel the boarda t 1. > ..J " " , f 2 "' �i1 ' ''ky,.y,'&,j,� 'fMet '*ill , c. r� y, � , �„ y! � s .. tremblin . -beneath' may} feet as the � zIF k 4 t n. r. w , :Y" � , ..,,. v 'pde., itf ,a O'nelfei. :s!'•,i Z, {. , : j;4 L I iN, g bhtl t` t1 " nd t ' 4111.9 .id hamrn Brod at them wit'n their , . , �. 1 :,, a � ''' warders • , Y tyNN.., y" tr ' �- ';: c'A M1� + ; .,x :, x..e 1VIt;1It ' SAVDII', TRAP s a+ f . #*A +.,:r..: '-r yy p ,,,,. �, •' . 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