The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him by Paul Leicester Ford
page 85 of 648 (13%)
page 85 of 648 (13%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
proceedings. The examinations were purely formal except in one instance,
when Peter asked for the "name or names of the owner or owners" of the National Milk Company. Here the defendant's attorney, a shrewd criminal lawyer, interfered, and there was a sharp passage at arms, in which an attempt was made to anger Peter. But he kept his head, and in the end carried his point. The owner turned out to be the proprietor of the brewery, as Peter had surmised, who thus utilized the mash from his vats in feeding cattle. But on Peter's asking for an additional warrant against him, the defendant's lawyer succeeded in proving, if the statement of the overseer proved it, that the brewer was quite ignorant that the milk sold in the "district" was what had been unsalable the day before to better customers, and that the skimming and doctoring of it was unknown to him. So an attempt to punish the rich man as a criminal was futile. He could afford to pay for straw men. "Arrah!" said Dooley to Peter as they passed out of the court, "Oi think ye moight have given them a bit av yer moind." "Wait till the trial," said Peter. "We mustn't use up our powder on the skirmish line." So the word was passed through the district that "theer'd be fun at the rale trial," and it was awaited with intense interest by five thousand people. CHAPTER XIV. |
|