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corner of page torn awayatching and begged me not to sell torn cornery more liquor. If first I promised that torn cornerm broke the pledge. Again she plead torn cornerith the most persuasive eloquence that ever fell from a womans lips that I would not [make her] [a] murder her husband with rum and send her a friendless with her fatherless children to the poor. I told her if I did not sell him liquor others would and thrust her from me. Her little daughter came and plead with tears that I would save her dear fathers life. But I wanted his money to support my family and bid her be gone. 8 of my customers now fill drunkard's graves. 2 signed the temperance pledge and began to prosper finely. 1 in an unguarded hour when tired and clold and hungry I persuaded to [break the pledge and now] drink a half glass in soda water for his health and he [is not] with 5 others are poor miserable drunkards [with] wandering about sleeping in barns and by the way side. 8 persons have I [sent] caused to be sent to the poor house and 3 to the states prison, and I have at last come to keep them company. Go with me to younder gallows. Listen to the confession of the trembling culprit, just ready to be launched out into eternity. He too was the victim of alcohol. Rum made him enraged at his own beloved wife. Rum sent him out to the woodshed for the ax convulsed his arm to deal her a deadly blow. He never intended harm to his dearest bosom friend Rum crazed his braine and did the dreadful deed. But rum [escap] and the rumseller go escape unpunished he [died] is hung as their substitute a martyr to alcohol. My heart sickens when I look abroad and behold the vast amount of sorrow indolence poverty crime & death occasioned