use and the abuse of the good things of this earth. the rational use and enjoyment of their faculties and of ties it would be possible to go all the way past the supplied the metal for making the machinery, and the iron ore in the ground and bade the tree grow and he dismissed the suit as to the brewers and confined the liability to the retailers who sold to the intoxicated chinery used in making the beer, and to the people who trying to the best of our ability to bring up people to the brick for the walls of the brewery and the man who felled the tree for the lumber used in its construc- To a certain extent the absurdity of these laws be- Yes, sir, and also to the man who furnished the ma- to the court, "by the procedure of the Kansas authori- placed the clay for molding the brick and caused the barley to grow and the malt to sprout. And when you source of all the good and the evil that flows from the man. As one of the attorneys in the case submitted came evident to Judge Day, presiding at the trial, for and then get the farmer who had raised the barley." have reached that Power, then you have reached the tion. And so on all through, to the Power that put the 87 brewer to the man who had sold the brewery the malt people who dug the ore. Also the people who made And I propose that we let the responsibility rest there, The Rule of "Not Too Much."