Show t Jt 1 A SEV NAPOLEON f JJ r 1 1 tj Madane HenHisat saysthat when I i jl the great Napoleon played ehess her i he-r liked to more the chessmen in anyway o any-way that suited his plans regardless of the established rules governing the i t game If it was of advantage to him t t at any particular stage of the game to f give his king the ualimited movement I of the queen iie > was in the habit of j 1 composedly aetepting that method of playing And the courtiers had to 1 t t submit though not always without protest I pro-test to his arbitrary principles A new Napoleon has arisen Not J famous as a military man A kind of legal Napoleon O ewho insists upon i adopting in the legal erena movements f thatare as arbitrary and irregular in t I rz the practice of his profession as Napo l Jeons were in playing chess heY he-Y finds himself nearly ck kmated he i I makes one of those arbitrary mores in I utter disregard ef the understood rules governing the case and Insists that if it 4 has not been the rule of the past it must be so in the futureuntil he shall E 1 find it necessary to change it to secure 1 some coveted conviction The ways of 1 r our Prosecuting Attorney are peculiar |