Word: sopers
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Federal Judge Morris A. Soper interpreted this to mean that the home juicemaker was exempt from the arbitrary definition that ½% alcoholic content makes a beverage "intoxicating." For beverages on sale, he held that the ½% criterion was legal and unassailable, but within the walls of a man's home what he made exclusively for his own use was not to be so strictly governed...
...Judge Soper therefore charged the jury that, for the purposes of this case, "the question for you to determine is whether these articles were intoxicating in fact. . . . Intoxicating liquor is liquor which contains such a proportion of alcohol that it will produce intoxication when imbibed in such quantities as it is practically possible for a man to drink. . . . Perhaps I might interpolate here that the intoxication in this law means what you and I ordinarily understand as average human beings by the word 'drunkenness...
...Middleton Manigault's modernistic painting of an International match; a series of Robert W. Chanler's decorations on Polo Through the Ages; George Wright's Grooming Polo Ponies; two water colors by Ivester Lloyd of a game in full tilt; spirited etchings by Morshead and George Soper...
...Allen, R. A. Aubin, B. W. Boyden, A. E. Chambers, G. W. Caner, T. C. Denton, J. Gaston, W. J. Hoose, J. F. Lautner, A. H. MacIntyre, G. G. Monks, P. S. Parker, J. H. Robb, G. A. Soper, N. Thayer...
Report at headquarters at 8: T. V. Bullard, D. W. Bailey, M. Buffington, J. M. B. Churchill, O. H. Coolidge, C. F. Havemeyer, J. F. Lautner, C. N. MacDonald, C. A. Page, Haven Parker, A. W. Rhodes, P. Salter, G. A. Soper...