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Judge, 1930-12-06 · page 14 of 36

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Judge — December 6, 1930 — page 14: Judge, 1930-12-06

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ST JUDGE though it is filled with whiskey Shuttl rth v. State (1860), 35 A VotstTEapIaAN Accipent S. P. Flickinger accepted from a friend a cocktail containing wood alcohol; and soon after his relat were suing to collect on an accident insurance policy he had held. “We think,” said the court, “there can be no question that the death of the insured resulted from accidental means. «++ Insured intended, it is true, to drink the cocktail which he did drink, and which caused his death, but he did not intend to drink poisonous wood alcohol.” The fact the liquor was “boot as held to consti- tute no defense.—Zurich Gen, § L. Ins. Co. v. Flickinger (1929), 3: . (2d) 853. NOBLE Nort Even py Crnis- TIAN Sctentists “Imprisonment in the penitentiary is a reality. It cannot be taken by absent treatment.” — Mor- gan v. Ward (1918), 248 Fed, 691. Jupician Knowrevor “The fact that he was not given to much conversation in and about the home may be traceable, as it often is trace- able, to the superior qualifications of his better half in that sphere of human activity.”—Baker v. Baker (la. 1915), 151 NIV, 459. ; Drpenps on Tite Skint—or Tie Man “A witness who can see skirts... through the wall of a vestibule with the naked eye possesses a very penetrat- ing and phenomenal vision.”—Hopkins v. New Orleans R. Co. (La. 1923), 90 So. 512. DECISIONS comicbooks.com