The plaintiff testifies that she did not sign this typewritten document introduced in evidence containing the clause in question, but admits that she did sign a paper presented to her by Mrs. Freese. A careful perusal of the plaintiff’s testimony however shows it to be evasive, contradictory and uncertain; and in view of her statement that she had since been offered $50 a month for the store, her testimony must be accepted with great caution and qualification. On the other hand, the testimony of Mrs. Freese who attested the document, is that of an entirely disinterested witness. She had been requested by the defendant as his former Sabbath School teacher to get the plaintiff to sign a typewritten paper to the effect that he and his brother should have the use of the place for twenty dollars a month and that she would not let any other Chinamen have the store. The plaintiff was unwilling to sign that paper claiming that she ought to have more rent in the spring if she agreed not to let any other Chinamen have it. Thereupon the plaintiff made a counter proposition to let the defendants have the store until spring for twenty dollars a month and thereafter for twenty-five dollars a month; and Mrs. Freese states that she understood from the *184conversation that the plaintiff was willing that the defendant should have the place as long as he wanted it at that rate. Mrs. Freese accordingly went to a lawyer’s office, had the document in question typewritten by a stenographer and in the evening presented it to the plaintiff and read it to her, and Mrs. Kelleher made no objection and signed her name on it with a lead pencil, but at the suggestion of Mrs. Freese signed it with pen and ink. She then took the instrument to the defendant and his brother and they signed their names to it and she subscribed her name as a witness. She gives a clear and unbiased account of the transaction and appears to have had no motive whatever to prevaricate. Her testimony is corroborated by an examination of the original document which shows two signatures of the plaintiff written in ink, one in the first line of the body of the instrument under which lead pencil lines are plainly discernible, and the other at the bottom of the instrument, above and beyond which are traces of pencil marks.