OCR Interpretation


The day book. [volume] (Chicago, Ill.) 1911-1917, November 15, 1913, LAST EDITION, Image 19

Image and text provided by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library, Urbana, IL

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045487/1913-11-15/ed-2/seq-19/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for

giggSggSCTS
pens, to push ihcm apart again; and
there were many friends. Naturally,
all the thwarted maternity of the
woman was added to the wife's love;
and the paternal instinct of the man
(which is, for the most part, only
amusement and the sense of protect
ing and giving joy) was centered in
his wife. So it was no wonder that,
going home on the train, he winced
at the thought of telling her that that J
rooi .Hammond, wno "woum not
have a leg to stand on' had prose
cuted him criminally for misappro
priation of funds as trustee of old
Mrs. Hammond's estate. The trust
had been closed at her death a month
or two before, and the estate handed
over to her son, this same Ham
mdnd, who "thbught he remem
bered" hearing old Smith say, twelve
years before, that he, Smith, had paid
the Hammond estate $17,400 for a j
parcel of land; whefcas Fleming's
trustee r : junt put the sum received
at $14,400.
Amy's husband set his teeth as he
sat there in the train planning how
iniiiNifititiiteu jsiiiiiiiiii
iUHBwJ
? iL4!jrjf$MkwflffiSl
WHEN HE HAD
TOLD HER, JSHE
STOOD DUMB
BEFORE HIM.
HER FACE
N AS WHITE
AND HER EYES
TERROR STRICKEN.
41
..MAttMaAiAaABAAtfttM

xml | txt