to do with the case. newspaper men. They do not mean any ill, and prob- I did not think of doing anything so dreadful." through will do so under the impression created by the by the police, told a consistent story, which was corrobor- entitled to no respect. It is a habit they have, our of beer which no one got. lines will get the impression that here is a murder doing. But imagine the thousands of items every day ably do not realize the harm and injustice they are my face until I became angry and threw a brick at her. ated by neighbors. because a reference to beer in connection with a fight days ago mother began to feel badly and now she is dead. makes good reading, and the brewer is an outlaw and As a matter of fact, beer had nothing whatever None of us thought the accident serious at the time. A few "I said I would not go," the girl said today. "Mrs. Os- wald insisted and I ran out into the back yard to get away lines represent the matter in that manner? Simply from her. She followed me, pulling my hair and slapping Now, why did the copy-reader who wrote the head- "She dodged and the brick struck my mother in the head. Many a reader who merely glances over the head- The girl and her father, Herman Denlow, when questioned caused by drinking beer. Those who read the item headline that the whole trouble was due to the can