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ke is but 1y can pence \that is in | the civil except ‘the police of officials fork. One pent is that [court room & police de- be removed artment is lits own and ctime, al- eed to be a will be. le discussion city court,’ fan will go ght to be jstart so that ice trials as d be taken phe proceed- f“ afterwards ta anyway jnecessary ‘to ty court un- 8o disposed. charter pro- p stand, but g law points pf this or jould be any court pro- er the whole slves admit trial is not . that should | to them . one be as MARKET. ik of raising jat is to per- cattle or the venison ere is a bill ich seeks to 1ry-does not 'mation that sion that the a favorably. e decr, how- f the farmers say that the jor damage to they do not jation to make it they would present law kill deer it 1ooks as if he may be re- e. If such a if 1t will open t trespass and imals will Te- erally hunted in the end. b if deer could | or market great [4n some parts le animals are e person can bt them, but it nesticate them pnditions there v oof t is impossible tion of senti- jcause the deer is Jaughter it for lessary to shoot at many d ve necessary p inclosure and uld result that would pleasant sight. me some queer jorea meet in a to peculiar t not subscribe at. htered way In some in large sold, but not necticut. The jeer eating his and sell the perfence some ithin range of ) raising | naturally | "BRITAIN "DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1015. lived in another section 8ood shot ghe deer “and there would sale. It does not seem as gument that deer should be market the same as cattle p will the be done in this state at There be nothing adding another unprofit- uslness to those already known. and between would be soon be much prevail because annot t by would LOOKING FOR REVENUE. fhe Necw Haven Times-Leader is onsible for the statement that fpearances indicate the reporting of P'bill to the legislature will aise the liquor license fee from $450 to $760 and that the state will re- ‘ceive $500,000 from the fund. i5d there is any such report coming the members of the legislature should Le on the lookout for it. At present the state does not receive any money from liquor licenses, ten per cent. going to counties and the remalining ninety per cent to the communitties where the licenses are issued. The law could be amended so that a portion of the money would go to the state, and if there is anything to the Times- Leader story it would seem as if the scheme is to raise the license fee, give the towns the amount they are now receiving and take the balance for the state. There has been some’ talk along this line, but as the towns bear practically all the expense Incident to the liquor business, the fee should go to those places where the galoons are located. An attempt has been made to prove that the state shares in the expense of the saloon, but the argument is of that charac- ter which is so far fetched as not to have any great strength. There has also been some talk the same paper of the state levying a three-mill tax on the towns so as to establish a sinking fund from which the obligations of the state could be met as they become due. State Treas- urer Chamberlain says that he has not heard of any such measure, although he admits having heard of the half mill proposed state tax which the peo- ple have rather expected. There is 1uch evidence that some of the mem- bers of the legislature are making a careful searéh for every conceivable pPlace from which a dollar can be ob- tained with which to meet the state’s indebtedness, and unless a close watch is kept upon them they may take rev- enue that properly belongs to the towns. wnich license in LECTURES POLICE. Commissioner Woods of York is having a series of lectures given the police captains of that city with a view to police training. of the' lectures the spcaker referred to the detection of criminals by means of a half burned match, by teeth marks on a pipe stem and by the finding of a few particles of saw dust on the coat of an escaping mur- derer. It is being claimed that these statements are of great value to po- because they show that searching for criminal clues even the smallest kind may be importance. Tt is safe to presume that in order COURSE = OF row New In one in of of licemen a to be a shrewd detective a man needs to good talker, able to it for hours if necessary, naturally sagacious, to have courage and the ability to keep what he hears to him- self. In looking up a criminal case the important thing is to gct evidence as well as the criminal. This difficult some times doubt but that there number of pcople committed to prison on circumstantial who were innocent of the crime charged. There was one man hanged at the Wethers. field prison for murder and who said upon the fatal that he was innocent. He was convicted on circumstantial evidence, but there were some witnesses who said that the accused was not within several miles of the of the at | time committed. This testi- mony contradicted, but it true condemned be a stay at very and there is no have been a evidence as he stood trap scenc murder the it was was was the would not say as he A man was given in New had i probably just the same or so was about to die. | a life sentence York at one with the time because he been the victim murder from seen before s some hours and because the finger blood. denied but went the He wad liberated because of a feeling that he had been unjustly c under nis nails showed The prison traces of human man just later it all same. to | | convicted. i Service in a police department makes an officer valuable, but a man must also have some natural ficatipns before he can | detective. He length quali- be an expert be taught it, will help cannot { although of service and knowledge of men. before the New | have some value to an The lectures York captains may in directing atten important woerk and by showing that much attention should tion pother farmer, pings | in the way of acquiring acquaintances be given small as well as greater ap- of greater value. importance that turer should o did the police business he probably would not ‘talk about it. It is of still greater of his this Kkind a lec- understand subject. he and was connccted with FACTS AND IPANCI ss Barnes of New York 1s groom- Elihu Root for the republican nomination in 1916 Root began his pelitical career as the friend of Bill Tweed, and has always been the re- presentative of special privilege in one or another form.. His nomination would represent reaction gone mad.— Bridgeport Farmer. It might be more than a wild tale that a moving picture manufacturing concern has leased or is about to lease a piece of property near New Haven for a studio. They say that the cloud- less climate of southern California is the only ideal place to make moving rictures, but there must be some bases of supply, in the present increasing demand, nearer the places where the moving picture shows flourish most mightily.—New Haven Register. There are plenty of ways for ambi- ttous voung people to earn money. Let them offer the world some service that it really wants. Able bodied young men can always way through college by taking jobs on farms, and girls by waiting on hotel tables, selling food, or performing do- mestic service. In such ways they ren- der a real service, and have the self respecting feeling that they are asking for no sympathy, but are standing on their own merits.—Norwich itecord. The people of Manchester' decline to be atttracted by the lure of being known as a city and thereby prob- ably are wise. Manchester, as a cit could do nothing, it could not do ¢ a town and if her people are so mind- ed, they can make their town govern- ment so efficient that every city in the state will want to copy it. 1If Manchester were to pecome a city she would find herself saddled immediately with new expenses which would bring her no returns.— Hartford Post, New York state health authorities have decided on a round-up of tramps in order to make better progress to- wards controlling the hoof and mouth disease among cattle, It has been proven that men as well as cattie may carry this disease, and it fs known that persons working about a stable in which diseased cattle are kept can or stables. It is because or the habits of tramps that they have come to be suspected as carriers of the hoof and mouth disease, and it may follow that all states w- fumigate them in order to protect cattle while danger of infection exists, Gradually the tramp is acquiring a Republican. The Man of Forty. (Providence Journal.) The physical director of the West Side Y. M. C. A. in New Yeork, on the strength of his examination more than two thousand city men during the past year, declares that he finds the type (meaning the typi- cal New Yarker) physically deterior- ating. The average city man, he says, leads a life that results in his growing old before his time. He eats too much, works too strenuous- ly and exercises too little, and by the age of forty he develops many af the symptoms of old age. The man of forty is in effect an old man, frequently on the verge of a physical collapse. To many who do not happen to re- member that they have heard it all Lefore, this will seem alarming talk, But there is some solace in the re- flection that the doctor who writes or talks for publication is quite like- ly to be an alarmist. Doctors have a fondness, seemingly, for the utter- ance of solemn warnings. For some years we have been hearing about the fearful physical degeneracy of the portion of the human race in country. There must be a con- siderable amount of cxaggeration in this medical pessimism. To the cas- ual lay observer the race secems to be getting along tolerabiy well, and there are few indications of a4 marked decrease in the average percentage of health and vigor. There is also a tendency to exag- gorate the detrimental effects of city life. Any comparison of urban and rural habits of living is naturally in favor of the latter as the more ducive to sound health and long life. But it is necessary to remember that bodily health is not dependent alone Jupon merely physical energ) it thrives in part UpON NErVOUs energy, diversion and recreation and a var- jation of mental interests. As a rule [the city dweller obtains this intellec- tual tonic more abundantly than the farmer. His chief danger is over- ulgence in the mental and emo- tional stimulants, while the farmer is more susceptible to the aging ef- fects of monotony and the lack of di- versified interests. Which habit of living is the likely bring on a premature age may be a debatable question. But probably if ten city men and ten country men, all of the age of sixty, were chosen at random and com- pared, it would be found that the men from the v the mare youthful in appe: and general condition, although physical test such as a “tug of war” might show the country men to bhe stronger. The statement that the average city man old at forty ‘s absurd. It is not credible even when applied to the average New YorKker, who may be assumed to find the pace of mod- ern life rather more rapid than it is in any other city The New York doctor must have found an abnor mal number of poor specimens among the two thousand meen upon whoin he based his remarkable deductions. If old age at forty, another five or ten must bring an ad- vanced senile debility, and even with gome provincial prejudice we cannot more to old were inee a o comes yvears pearing matters in the police business pe prepared to believe that this is because they may lead to something typical of New York life. work their | | discussion carry the disease to neighboring farms | 1 seek out the nomads and | mest unsavory character.—Waterbury of | con- | GOOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED IN INSTITUTE’S LIST THIS WEEK Social and Political Questions. “America and the World War.” Theodore Roosevelt. \ . By British “ex-Royal Navy KFrom Within.” avy “‘Cause and Cure of Crime.” e, Henderson. A convenient, clearly written handbook by an authority. Presents ‘an outline of the problems and * * * offers someé' sugestions to police offi- cers, students and members of courts on the matter of jails, influences of surroundings, and lack of education and right home conditions upon the creation of criminals.”"— L. A. Booklist. < By R. Mastery."” > “Drift and Lippmann. “In his incisive, telling phrases, the author attempts to diagnose the cur- rent unre: and the tendency to drift. He formulates a vision of what will come when we learn to sut tute ‘conscious intention for uncon- scious striving”; convinced that ‘the battle for us is not against encrusted prejudice. but against the chaovs of a new freedom."-—A, T. A. Booklist. % Ly Walter “Governments of France, Germany.” By A. L. dent of Harvard univer “An abridgment and revision of the author’s well known study of ‘The governments and parties of Continen- tal Europe.’''-—Publisher’s note. P Italy and Lowell, presi- “Meditations on Votes IFor "Wom- ” By S. M. C. Crothers. “Together with animadversions on the closely related subject of votes for | men.” Delightful, of course, with wisdom and humor which combine to make the reader ‘give pause’ at | least to think over the question.”—A. 1. A. Booklist. “It is delightful experience to find about political equality and democratic suffrage put into such a form that one may read it for pure pleasure of the reading, no matter on which side his convictions and sympa- thies rest.”-—Christian Register. “Modern Army in Action.” By I/Ryan and W. D. A. Anderson. “A good elementary manual the theory and art of war, giving a clear and concise account of all branches of milltary service, princi- ples of strategy, functions of the different arms, descriptions of the German and British military systems, and other information which will make it possible for the layman to understand and follow the operations of the present, or any war.”—A. L. A. Booklist. en J. ¥ on - .. “Modern Industry the Tamily, Health, Education, Mor- ality.” By Fiorence Keolley. The writer has been chief factory ingpector of lllinois, and since 1889, secretary of the National Consumers’ TLeague. N in Relation to * Miss Kelley's book is a plea for . procedure in codi- ! fying a new moral system, industrial, to replace the old system based on the needs of an agriculturally sup- ported community Sun. el “Neighbors: Life Staries Other Half. 3y J. A. Riss. “True stories told by one whp, out of his éxperience has scen the human- ness and fineness in ‘folks’ and wishes ‘the neighbor who lives around corner’ to see them, too -A, L. A, Booklist. . of the e “Police Practice By C. 1", Cahalane. “Of interest to the taxpayer. The author is in charge of the New York police training school. . ox e and Procedure.” “Problems of Power.” Fullerton. A study of from Sadowa By W. M. international politics to Kirk-Killsse.”” Mr. ITullerton has cnjoyed unrivaled op- portunities for familiarity with for- eign politics. He possesses a brilliant style, and traces recent internal move- ments of lingland, IFrance and Ger- many as a means of enforcing h conclusions, prominent among which is his conviction that arbitration of international disputes in the present state of affai is almost impossible. Quite the most interesting and il- luminating portion of the book s his account I'rench internal af- fairs ~A. L. Book P of A, st. “Reducing the Cost of Living.” Scott Nearing. “A careful statistical inquiry into the causes of the increased cost of living, indicating broadly lines of re- form. Among those considered arc the ‘Back to the land’ movement, vo- cational training, greater efficiency in food distribution and the readjust- ment of monopolies and taxation. A useful all-around treatment.”—A. L. | A. Booklist. | By ok ow “Rural Credits, Lad and Co-opera- tive.” By M. T. llertick and R. In- Zall pecially interesting at this time on account of the fammers' loan priy- ileges under the Federal Reserve Act, Particularly useful in agricultural states and communities. Covers rural credit customs and laws in operation | in other countries, and gives a full ! account of the land-bank situation in | America."— Booklist, “Uncle 8am's Modern Miracles.” By W, A. DuPuy. & ‘Desgeribes the humanitarian of the federal government quering contagion, revealing weather secrets, transforming the deserts, ro- compensing the Indians, smoothing the country’s roads, and other duties which are vita] ordinary citizen.” Th A, work in con- to the | Booklist, | “History of Bivik: i Fowl and Shore Birds of Magsachu- setts and Adjacent States.” By E. H | ham. t other sends Avice Drummond, a niece | | antidote to the' usual story of a sep- | brought | ter."—A. L. ! one ancient beliefs, held | from | frequent at the time of ! 0ld teachings regarding the weather. | | And he attempts to prove all he sa performing | s Published by the Ma Board of Agriculture. P Forbush. | chusetts | in the Industrial Werld.” | E. H., Willlams. PR un By R. A. Sampson. | ums up admirably for the gener- ! al reader the present positions of fact | and theory about the sun.”—A. L, A, Booklist. | “‘Science Ly 1. S. and P “Usecful irds and Their Protec- | tion. Containing brief descriptions | the more common and useful spe- ! s of Massachusetts with accounts of their food. habits and a chapter on | the means of attracting and protect- | ing birds. By E 1. Forbush. Pub- | lished by the Mass. Board of Agricul- ture. of “Wild Life | and Practice “Readable plea for the conserva- | tion of wild animal life, based on | lectures before the I'orest School of | Yale, 1914. Purposc to awaken | educated citizens to a sense of their duty and power in the matter. Pre- | sents a general view of the status of | our wild life and its cconomic value.” | A. L. A. Booklist, | x % Conservation W T in Theory Hornaday Fiction. i “Amazing Grace: Who Proves That Virtue Has Its Silver Lining.” By Mrs. K. T. Sharber. | = o i | Greenstone Door.” By William Satchell. “A story of adventure in ind abounding in striking liant description.”—Nation. . “Katy Gaumer.” master.” A story vania Dutch.” New Zea- | and bril- - | By Elsie Sing- | of the ‘‘Pennsyl- o “Maid of the Mist.” By John Oxen- “A good story. of the-desert isle type, some time after the French revolution. One storm | wrecks an English physician and a | sailor on desolate Sable Island. an- the stranded-on- of TLouis XVI. ashore. The arch | villain is furnished by the sailor wha is proverbially removed to his own undoing, leaving the lovers to work | out their problems until their rescue.’ | —A. L. A. Booklist. e ox | “Secret of the Reef.” By Hurold! Bihdloss. T “Those 6f His Own Household.” F Rene Bazin. “A quiet, presented mosphere. drawn; 3y naive story delicately with a lovely Breton at- The characters are well their story makes a good arated their man and wife, reconciliation bout chiefly A. and is by Booklist. oo of Tear.” By the end, | convincing, | their daugh- i | “Valley Doyle. “Malf a is better t A. Conan book of Sherlock Holmes any Knocking Old Notions. (Troy Times.) This is an iconoclastic era. One by in reverence becvause of their age, if for no other reason, are objects of assault, and many of them have been weakened and some utterly destroved. One of the most recent attacks upon notions which have been cherished fondly for generations is that by Prof, Andrew H. Palmer of the weather hureau at Wasaington, The t with a vigorous almost the entire collection lacies, as he calls them, meteorological matters. He says the Wweather is not influenced by the phases of the moon or the positions of ‘the planets; that there nection between weather and carthquakers or n professor indictment is out against of fal- regarding is no con- | phenome agnetic dis- | outnumber | the to maturity. And yet there is some- thing sad in this substitution of scien- Lific It is all very well for learned tlemen like Professor Palmer others of similar distinction. how about ordinary individuals, the “highbrows” by large majority? When it comes “talking about the weather” wha can surpass in interest for the ave age person the changes that are many and decided in our North American sections? 1t is a great deal more fascinating speculate as to the latest manifestations at edicine Hat or the diverting predictions of the Jersey weather prophets than it is to discues the cold figures and im- partial facts furnished the tists. gen- and But a to 80 S0 to [ scier News Irom Hades. (New York Times.) If Billy Sunday's census of hell has been conducted with care and ac- curacy, there is a mixed society in t winter resort. He includes in it P'haraoh. Voltaire, Nebuchadnezzaar, Huxley, Jezebel, John Stuart Nero, Tyndall, Judas, Thomas Paine, Attila, Ingersoll, Louis NIV, Roussean, T.owis XV, Ivan the Terrible Mme. Fompadour, Catherine Medici, Mme. de Montespan and Mme, de de I Maintenon, It is well to have the tled and not have to wait until judg- ment day. Many have won- dered who was going to the place and have felt much vexation at having to Wait so long to find out. Mr. Sun has relieved curio: only part, it true, but every little helps, Later he may get some fur- ther information on the subject and let us know more. men had cxpected to wait a long time before they should hear the words, “Depart from Me, ve cursed, into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and all his ange a2 We hear them ahead of time, not pronounced by the One from whnom we have been taught to expect them, but pronounced by the voice of indubitable though self-as- sumed authorit Upon what principle Mr. Sunday condemned these souls to hell it is not, at first blush, quite easy to make out, He seems to have sent Huxley and Tyndall to hell because of their cientific investigations which he may think cast doubt the Sun- day theology; and Paine and Inger- =0ll because of their infidelity. But nobody could be more orthodox than Mme. de Montespan, Louis XIV, and Catherine de Medici Mme. Pom- padour is apparently sizzling in flames under the Sunday sentence because she carelessly forgot the formality of marriage with Touls XV, and Mme. matter set- of us 1y our ¥ Most now upon clude, is condemmned because she condemnation urged the Protestants, in ity., Or perhaps her is caused by her having king to banish tne | which case it seems that some leni- ency should have been extended to Voltaire for Protestants from the burdens imposed by her Judas, of cours from Judge Sunday’'s sentence, perhaps, might put ir the plea, or at least ask to have the Binet test for defectives applied before sen- tence is passed. If Nebuchadnezzar had been able to get an alienist—he certainly had the price—he might have been able to avert his fearful doom. But, of course, no such de- fense would avail in the case of John Stuart Mill, who had all his about him and trod his evil path with open eyes, Mr. Sunday deserves praise for his self-restraint in leaving out Caligula, Stephen Irado, Napoleon, Dr. Chan- ning, and Alaric the Goth. But per- haps this is only the first install- has no appeal | ment, and we shall get another docket oon. It s to be hoped so, so fgr soon. It is to be Loped so, for are athirst to know these thinge. we Housing Conditions. (By Consul Leslie A. Davis in Harput) Owing to the lack of building stone and almost total ck of wood of any kind in this part of Turkey, all ho in both town and country are t turbances, like those v aurora borealis, and tions of the “oldest weather conditions changed since h not based on fact, All this is bad cnough, but worse remains. Professor Palmer knocks | ‘or attempts to knock—the Medicine Hat idea into a cocked hat, The | present resident of the North Amer- ican continent have been brought up | on that idea. They have been taught | that all cold waves, blizzards and | other extraordinary developments of a severe winter originated in Medi- | cine Hat, away up in the wilds of | northwestern Canada, sweeping down | that point over terrificd and ! shivering communities lying in their | pathway, Professor Palmer there is nothing in it—that Med Hat is simply a way station, speak, in the line of weather move- | ments, which have a regular cours; around the carth, and that the evil | fame of the place is not deserved. He says a whole lot of other thin including denials that storms are more the autumnal equinox than at any other per He declares that “Indian summer is | another popular superstition.” If he correct in all these ertiin ha | does aw at one full swoop, with | Dbeliefs on: which have been founded a great mass of sentimental literature in prose and poetry. | There are other “knocks,” and the | professor’s allegations, if sustained, | leave not a prop remaining for the ch cause the that the inhabitant have boyhood asser- | that | radically | days are | a says *ine | a so to as | | facts and figures, in- | kept records and | which are like- | by an array of cluding carefully minute observations ly to go far toward convincing per- | s of scientific mind. Those given | to literal exactness no doubt will cept the professor’s findings, and the | notions at which the cXposure s imed will be swept into the discard, just as the childish conception that | the moon is made of 8reen cheese is sidetracked when the youngster comes ! ac- | manner. | population | expected that there will much market | for foreign of mud bricks called “kerpitch,” { which is a mixture of mud and straw. The houses are not large and part of them always used for tae stable, one or two rooms only being reserved for the use of the family, which lives | simplest and most primitive Every one sleeps rolled blanket on the earth floor. fuel used by the majority of the manure dried in the people uccustomed to living it can not be in the in The only a is sun. Among manner of goods. The lot of the made worse by uncertain conditions and recent po- litical unr The ecxoneration tax rty-three Turkish 'pounds gold 9.20) levied on those who have excused from military service in the present war represents the life savings of the majority of the people who have paid it, Yet a certain to be noted. Many of habitants have been to the States, They have naturally ack new na sult a mand for certain articles. spicuons the increase in of cheap ready-made and hand clothing. A large these now comes United States, The total imports in 1914 amounted to about $25,000, as compared with $6,500 in the previous year, so a slight demand for metal roofing, the imports of which amounted to §8,800 in 1914, as compared with $750 in people is economic amount of progress the in- United brought re- de- is some ideas, as there is slowly wing Most con- the sale second- portion of from the is goods Vicious Proverbs. | ndeavor World.) i There are some proverbs that used only to bolster unworthy thoughts or words or actions. Here is one of them: Charity begins at home, Of course it does, but no one that to himself, or says it out who does not wish excuse some mean and parsimonious action (Christian are loud, to matter of fact for the old fancies. | Mill, | in | bit | de Maintenon, was are forced to con- | serupulously insisted on that formal- | his efforts to relieve the | Nero, ! insanity | wits | up | 1 and that the | from | had GMILLAN'S ¢ Charming - Spring asi Fabrics More dainty than ever are the mew creations for suimn- mer wear. | We invite display who | Th ~ New ; | & i early spring and you to see this beautiful now while color range AT complete. Many exclusive novelties are being shown now that difficult to | duplicate later on | will be FANCY SATIN STRIPED VOILES (Flowered and Figured Effccts.) 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Business i§ business, To be but no one deems it necessary to state that fact unless he doing or intends to do something hard, cold and unfeeling, or else something oblique or shady. If a cruel lord intends to turn a widow her family into the street, he likely to k he proceeds to do it, “‘Business business.” If a promoter seeks to off some worthless stocks on unsuspecting vietim, he is likely remark tha! “business s business,” and that one must look out for him- If a money-shark forecloses a poor man who cannot pay an exorbitant intercst, he is sure to tell you with much solemnity that, thougn it is hard, yet “business busine We though senée, lance of mention- sure it is rems as is worl an to “ever self.” on | i the used in be game, Thi in a buginess muset play sometimes often means that we must gharp and untrustworthy bad men They | game; and, if wonld must play it, too. Thej science in financial transactions; 3 we must smother They bhow down to thg money €0 must or we shall get left in the dollar GOVERNMENT CLOSES IN PASSPORT CASE pe and 1 menan other are playing not have we lose, wt no con ours | | we god | Richard P. Stegler Denies Emplications | Framed in the Attorney’s Questions 18 Richard I’ BOM Mad with Amers New York, March Stegler, German navi ernment witness against den and Gustave (ool alding Stegler to procure ican port, denied in | nation yesterday implications in the attorney's Several other witnesses the government closed Cutley, for the defensc jury. He said that he that Stegler never saw his life, that Madden ler were never together, had the birth order passport 1 reservist, Richard charged falsc I cross exami amed restion 1ddressed the would prove Madden jn and Steg Madden certificate I for himself certificate had heen stolen Cook that procured to get a him he in own defense said f in a lloboken bar room about three years ago He de nied Stegler's testimony that as early as September, 1914, Cook Had suggest- ed to Stegler that he could procure an American for He dc- nied that ever any eon- versation regard to obtaining an Ameri passport or ever assisted him in procuring his Stegler Cook Airst met him had passport he had with Stegler an very really generous man will, of course, begin his charities at home; such a document He swore that he never introduced Stegler to Madden.