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Show B PE-NATAL AND YOUTHFUL IMPRESSIONS. B , m- "JThe story runs that Speaker Gannon asked jB'' llil i ,T$n Snarp Williams (the Democratic leader In E " IP Ul4 House) why he was so bitter a partisan. To B ' mmi wMch the brilliant Mlssisslppian gravely replied: wKk 'fjfjj, i "To tell the truth, I never saw a Republican un- BH T tilI was 21 years old, and I can't get used to H ,& , th'tm somehow." H Jjjf , That reply is really the elucidation of a great BB l,'M" I trrith, which is first, that ignorance is the bane H; ' y j of' the world, and second, thai it is the hardest BH' f M I task in the world for a man to break through BB 1 his environments, especially if they were drawn LB ItH) I awund him and welded there in his youth. Mr. BB 'iffflli I Williams is described as a most loveable man, as H!lTi ii loveable as he is brilliant, but he grew up when H n$mi , the men, and especially the women of his native Hi 'H f stale made it a part of their religion to hate BH illfi Republicans, so that was an article of faith with BR IB ' Mr' Wi,,lams unt11 ne reached his majority. He HKJm, j is row older and wiser, but he is in the same Kyiif t mqoa that a man is in who, having been brought Hr Wm 1 up in a church, but who is no longer a member BH .,ip or believer, stih if he hears anyone else speaking B Hare lightly of that particular creed, wants to fight HB fyWfc in a moment, and justifies his wrath on the IsR'AwL I ground that he will not hear the religion of his BHsBBJ j mother spoken of rlightlngly. IIHsf |