Rensselaer Republican, Volume 12, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 June 1880 — Persecutors of a Poor Old Woman. [ARTICLE]
Persecutors of a Poor Old Woman.
Mrs. Delia Little, an aged woman who had amassed a fortune of $15,000 in San Francisco, has been for two yean striving *o Obtain Justice in the courts of New Yoik against her nephew and his wife. In 1878, when Mrs. Little was 65, she was taken Tery ill, and her nephew, James E. Williams, was sent for, when he came and look charge of her business. In her weak state she signed papers making him her agent. Becoming better, she was induced to come tp New York, where she lived with her nephew and his wife. Bbethen found that Williams had Axil control of her property and she was pannflem. She was also UMreateq, and demanded to be sent back to San Francikco. Williams accompanied lier'fti a carritte, burinstead of going to the depot She found he*’ self lodged in the Toombs, and committed forsix months to the Island as a habitual drunkard. She served these six months and afterward took refugee with a colored laundress. The poor old woman sued Williams for the theft;of valuables from her tmnk, lathe.was acquitted rut a.tech> nicalily. Tbe nephew and his wife are now sued for conspiracy spikperjury in •wearing that Mrs. Little' was a drunkard. Sougk WI SS£ 101116 con t™ 1 7, inesa with hS. I
To keep milk clean while in the act of drawing it, the cow must be clean, her bag and teats washed and wiped before •training and setting, see that no foul air ly careful, for such is often borne on a fttODg breeze fully a mile off or more |h>m the place where tt originated. It is, of course, presuppoeedlthat all used for holding the milk al#kept clean nd entirely clear of every sort of odors. ,s*jr tsz isss jouse, and, what is foulest of all, a dirty •ig pen. No wonder where this is the JttJrssgSgtetW
