Within the Law by Marvin Hill Dana;Bayard Veiller
page 10 of 359 (02%)
page 10 of 359 (02%)
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example must be made. The girl was arrested.
The crowded condition of the court calendar kept her for three months in the Tombs, awaiting trial. She was quite friendless. To the world, she was only a thief in duress. At the last, the trial was very short. Her lawyer was merely an unfledged practitioner assigned to her defense as a formality of the court. This novice in his profession was so grateful for the first recognition ever afforded him that he rather assisted than otherwise the District Attorney in the prosecution of the case. At the end, twelve good men and true rendered a verdict of guilty against the shuddering girl in the prisoner's dock. So simple the history of Mary Turner's trial.... The sentence of the judge was lenient--only three years! CHAPTER II. A CHEERFUL PRODIGAL. That which was the supreme tragedy to the broken girl in the cell merely afforded rather agreeable entertainment to her former fellows of the department store. Mary Turner throughout her term of service there had been without real intimates, so that now none was ready to mourn over her fate. Even the two room-mates had felt some slight offense, since they sensed the superiority of her, though vaguely. Now, they found a smug satisfaction in the fact of her disaster as emphasizing very pleasurably their own continuance in respectability. |
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