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-_??_?_T,__ SJ jo ,tvati >ir\' ?; i.r.i. ? . fl??^J O?R HOiktES; XpEElSr OXJR STAtE; EINAJLLY THE 1 mm* i aut, > 'HO ? Jr9! ....... ":.. n , '. ? . : - . . :, ???r ATION j THESE CONSTITUTE OTT?, SATURDAY MORNING, IHECEMBER 21, 1867. 1<1 A3? NUMBERr*fc 0BAN6SBUB6 NEWS, PUBLISHED AT ORANGEBURG, S C. Every Saturday Morning. MULL DIBBLE, Editor. tyDIBBLEi JssociaU Edit* MAMUJLL DIBBLE, Editor. y^^^B^Xm ^miaU Editor. *>! dip. ? ? i -i-:o}? TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. On* 4,'epy for. on* year. $2.00 ... - ? 8U Months. 1.00 ? ' !?*?: ?? Three " .60 A?y; one sending TEN DOLLARS, for a CJnb of Wtir,.Sub?cribcjra, .TfUl .rcceivo an EXTRA COPY, forON K . YE All, free of charge. Any ono Bending PITS. DOLLARS, for ft C lab of New Subscribers, ?will re^We ah EXTRA COPY for SIX MONTHS, *.5;*f>harge, ?frSOi? ? W RATES OP ADVERTISING. 1 Square lot Insertion.....i..^......... $1.50 " " 2d m. 75 A'SquaroconsietB of 10 lines Brevier or one inch ?f Advertising apace. Administrator's Notices, If'accompanied with the * ?aitiV....:............$2 76 If not accompanied with the cash.$5 00 Contract Advertisement* inserted upon the most lib?r?l terms. ? ? . ?#5fi$?r ;tt m-.\ Vk \<sv -r 7~:o:" MARR1AGE and FUNERAL NOTICES, not ez ? osding one Square, im*rtcd without charge. ?:o:? **?r Terms Cash In Advance. nfct \i??2sLv ??(?.: Ca \l <h iy CARDS. ,? Attorneys and Solicitors. Will Fractico in Courts of the State, and also of ftio United States, especially in tho Courts of BANKRUPTCY. 0;iS^lSrGEBXJIlGr, 8. G. JAMES?. 1ZLAR. SAMUEL DIDDLE. . ?>*? ' : , ? - 1 Attorney at Law and BoIlcHor In EQUITY, Hv?>A Offico in Public Buildings, CO V RT ' H O U S K SQUARE. i? ! - ORANGEBURG C. iL, So. Ca. _?????.->???,? .. . ? ?_ MAL0NE, A!TiT?0 B N E Y AT LAW. .?9?? - ? W-ALTERBORO, 8. C. ? Will praolioo in the Courts of Orangeburg and &jfetbii, and attend promptly to ?11 business ?n ?t^bUA to kli oar*. . ?&y 11 tf '; E. C. DEISTAXJX, VATCH MAKER AAD JEWELLER, Work Neatly Repaired and ojt \ WARRANTED, . RUSSELL STREET. '(OPPOSITE CORNELSON, KRAMER A CO.) : ,? c ! ly ;liLL ?fc SOOVILL, tu",". ;"A<iENT8PPRTHB; g^ai?iblo Xife Insurance Company v , OF NE W YORK, POLICIES NON-FORFEIT ABLE, Diridend Declared Annually to Policy Holdem fo?2S id FIRE! FIRE! FIRE! INSURE YOUR LIFE AND PROPERTY. N Cornelson, Kramer & Go., ARE AGENTS FOR JEFFERSON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. Chartered Capital 9250,000. : JAMES' RIVER INSURANCE , COMPANY. Chartered Capital 81,500,000. Picdmctnt Real Estate Insurance COMPANY, FOR LIFE ONLY, \ Chartered Capital $1,000,000. ALL SOUTHERN COMPANIES. ' eef25 ly The Cotton Tax. PT1HF. UNDERSIGNED HAS BEEN APPOINTED iL an Agent of Hcrohel V. Johnson & Co., of Georgia',' a Company formed for Ute purpose of ret towering the Taxes already paid, and which may, hereafter be paid on Cotton. Those who have sold ration sinoe tho war would do well to call upon me And present their claims AT ONCE, ns the first pre ?flented !imy have prppcdfiicc over others. No ck fens" will be incurred by claimants, Any information wanted may bo obtalnod upon application to W. W. |,EG ARE, .; ...... Attorney and Solicitor. gt?~ Ofilco in Public buildings, Court House ftquarc. not . - ' lm ?TORSTER 1IOORS. Children's ITtI; j.r Worsted Saeks and Fancy Goods, ?o., just ?eeeiTcTl ut * MRS. M. E. HALL'S nor 2u tf 1 PO E TRY. ?Highr,? a FABODY OK lOROrELLOW's "excels toi?.." J ,?ii ; tiffiiii,. -..fr r.rl'! Tb? shades of night were n-comi'n down swift, And the dasilin' saew lay drift on drift; W When through a Tillage n youth did go . A-c*rryin' a flag with this motto, ??Higher." Of er forehead high curled copious hair, Hia nose a Roman, complexion fair; O'er an eagle eye au auburn lash, And ho never stopped sbeutin' through his mus tache, "Higher." He saw through the windows as ho was getting up per, A number of families sittin' at supper; Ho eyed the slippery rocks very keen, And fled while he cried, and cried while a-fleeln', ?Higher.? "Take care, you there !" said an old woi.,nn "stop! It's blow Id* gales up there on top; You'll tumble off on t'other side!" ' Dut the hurrying stranger loud replied, "Higher," 'Oh ! don't you go up such n shocking night! Gome sleep on my lap !" said a maiden bright, O'er Iub Roman nose a tear-drop come, But still he remarked, as he upward dumb, "Higher." "book out for the branch of that sycamore tree, ' Dodge roll in' stones if any you see;" Sjiy in' whioh, the farmer went borne to bed, And the singular voice replied overhead. "Higker." About quarter past six the next afternoon, A man accidentally goin' up soon, Heard spoken above him as often as thrice, The very same werds, iu a very weak voice, "Higher." And not far, I believe, fron? quarter of Heven? He was slow get tin' up, the road belli* uneven? Found tho stranger dead in the drifted suow, Still clutch in' the flag with the motto, , , "Higher." ^ Yes, Hfcless, defunct, without any doubt, The lamp of Inn bein' decidedly out. On the dreary hillside the youth was a-layln', And there was no more use for him to be uayin', "Higher." SELECTED STORY. Extraordinary Nerve. While the French Marshall, Murat, was in Madrid he wna anxious to communicate with Junot in Portugal, but all the roads to Lisbon' swarmed with guerrillas, and with the troops composing Castano's army. Murat mentioned hia embarrassment to Huron 8trongonoff, the Russian Ambassador to Spain. Russia, it is well known, was at the time not only the ally but the friend of France. M. de Strongonoff told Murat that it was the easiest thing in the world. "The Russian Admiral, Sinaivin," said he, "is in the 1 port of Lisbon; give me the most intelligent of your Polish lancers ; I will dress him up in a Russian uni form, and entrust him with dispatches for tho I, Admiral. All will go well even if he should be taken prisoner a dozen times between this and Lisbon, for the insurgent army is so anx ious to obtain our neutrality that it will be careful not to furnish a pretext for rupture." Murat was delighted with this ingenious scheme. He asked Krakinski, the command ant of the lancers, to find him a brave and in telligent young man. Two days afterwards the commandant brought Murat a young man of his corps, for whom he pledged his life; his name was Lcckinski, and ho wasjbut eighteen years old. Murat was moved at seeing so young a man court so imminent a danger, for if he were de tected his doom was sealed. Murat could not help remarking to tho Polo the risk he was about to run. The youth smiled. "Let your imperial highness give me my instructions." ho answered respectfully, "I will give you a good aocount of tho mission I have been honored with. It thank his highness for having ohoson me from1 among my comrades, for all of thorn would have courted this distinction." Tho prince augured favorably from the young man's modest resolution. The Russian Ambassador gnvo him his dispatches ? he put on a Russian uniform and sot out for Portu . gal. The first two days passed over quietly ; but on the afternoon of the third. Lcckinski was surrounded by a body of Spaniards, who dis armed him and dragged him before their com manding officer. Luckily for tho gallant youth it was C as tan oh himself. Lcckinski was aware that he was lost if he was discovered to bo a Frenchman, consequent ly ho determined on the instant, not to let a single word of French escape him, and to speak the Russian and German, whioh he spoke with equal fluency. Tho crios of rage of his captors announced the fate that awaited him, and the horrible murder of Gon. Rene, who had perished under most dreadful tortures but a fow weeks bofore, as he was going to join Juuut, was sufficient to freeze the very blood. suWho are you f" said Castanos in French which language ho understood perfectly well having been educated in Franco. ! Lcckinski looked at the qucstiouer, made a sign,.and answered in German, "I do ho* un dersUnd you. , Castanos spoke German, but he did not wish' to appear personally in the matter, and sum moned one of the* officers of the staff, who went on with the examination. The young Pole answered in Russian and Germau, but never let a single syllable of French, escape him. Ho might, however, easily havo forgot ten himself, surrounded as ho was by a crowd eager for his blood, and who waited with sav age impatience to havo him deolarcd guilty? that is, a Frenchman?to fall upon and murder him. But their fury was raised to a height whioh the General himself could not control by an incident which seemed to cut off the unhappy prisoner from every hope of escape. Ono of the Caslanos' aides-de-camps, one of the fanati cal patriots who were so numerous in this war, and who from the first had denounced Leckin ski as a French spy, burst iuto the room, drag ing with him a man wearing the brown jacket, tall hat, and rod plume of a Spanish peasant. The officer confronted him with the Pole, and said: "Look at this man, then say if it is true that ho is German or a Russian. He is a spy, I swear by my soul." The peasant meanwhile was eyeing the pri soner closely. Presently his dark eyes lighted up with tho fire of hatred. "Es Frances! he is a Frenchman," ex claimed he clapping hands. And he stated that, having been in Madrid a few weeks be fore, he hud been put into requisition to carry forage to tho French barracks, "and," said he, "I recollect that this man took my load of forago, and gave uie a receipt. I was near him an hour, aud recollect uini. When we caught him, I told iny comrade he was the French officer I delivered my forage to." This was correct. Castanos probably dis*" cerned the true state of the case, but he was a generous foe. He concluded to let him pur-r suo his journey, for Lcckinski still insisted that he was a Russian, aud he could not be niado to understand a word of French. Rut the mo ment he ventured a hint of the kind, a thou sand threatening voices wore raised against him, aud he saw that clemency was impossible. "But," said he, "will you thou risk a quarrel with Russia, whose neutrality we arc asking so anxiously for ?" "No," said the officers; "but let's try this man." Lockinski understood all, for ho was ac quainted with Spanish. Ho was rouioved and thrown iuto a room worthy to have been one of tho dungeons of tho Inquisition in its best days. When the Spaniards took him prisoner he had eaten nothing since tho previous evening, and when his dungeon door was closed on him he had fasted for eighteen hours. No wonder then, that with exhaustion, fatigue, anxiety and the agony uf his dreadful situation^ that the unhappy prisoner foil almost, senseless on the hard eoueh. Night soon closed in and loft him to realise in his gloom the full horror of his situation. He was brave, of oourse ; but to die at eighteen?'tis sudden. But youth and fatigue finally yielded at the approach of sleep, and he wob soou buried in profound slumber. He had Blept perhaps two hours, when the door of his duugeon opened slowly, aud sotuo one entered with cautious step, hiding with his hand the light of a lamp ; the visitor bent over the prisoner's couch, the hand that shaded the lamp touched him on the shoulder, aud a sweet and Bilvery voice?a woman's voice?asked him: "Do you want to cat?" The young Pole, awakened suddenly by the glnro of the lamp, by the touch and words of the female, rose up en his couch, aud with his eyes half opened, said in German, "What do want ?" "Givothe man something at once," said Cas tanos, when he heard the result of the first ox perimont, "and let him go. lie is uot a Frenchman. How could ho have been so far master of himself? Tho thing is impossible." But though Lcckinski was supplied with food he was detained as a prisoner. Tho next morning he was taken to a spot where he could sec tho mutilated corpso of tho Frenchman, who had boon cruolly massacred by the peasan try of Truxillo, and he was threatened with tho sarao death. Rut tho uoble youth had promised not to fail, and not a word, not an ac cent, uot a gesture or look betrayed him. Lcckinski, whon taken back to tho prison, hailed it with a sort of joy ; for twelve hours ho had nothing but gibbets, and death in its most horrid forms, before his eyes, exhibited to him by men with tho look, and passions of do mon8. lie slept, howevor, after the harrassing excitement of the day, and roundly, too; when, I in the midBt of his dcop and deathlike slumber, the door opened gently, some one drew near his couch, and the same volco whispered ia his ear: : "Arise and come with me. Wo wish to save your life, come." tie answered still in Ger man, "Whai do yon want ?" i Castanoi, when he heard of tbia experit?ont i and Us results, said that the ijwil was? ao I * young msn 5 lie saw t&e trao"state of the case. .. . . The next morning early, four men came to take him before a courfc-martial, composed of officers of Castanoa' staff. During the; r?alk thoy uttered the most horrible threats, against him; but, true to his determination, lie pre tended not to anderstand thorn. When he oame before his judges ho seemed to gather what was going on from the arrange ments of the tribunal, and not from what he heard said around him. and he asked in Ger man where his interpreter was. Ho was sent I for, and the examination commenced. It. turned at first upon the motive of his journey f.-om Madrid to Lisbon. He answered by showing his dispatches to Admiral Sinirivin and his passport.5- Spite of the presence and vehement'assertions of the peasants, he persist ed in the tsamp story, and did not contradict himself1 once. "Ask him," said the presiding officer at last, "if he loves the Spaniards, as he is not a Frenchman:" The interpreter pnt the question. "Certainly," snid Lebkinski, "I like the Spanish nation, I esteem it for its noble char acter ; I wish our two nations were friends." "Colonpl," said the intrcprotor, "the, prisoner says ho hates us because we make our war liko banditti; that he despises us, and his only re gret is that he cannot unite tbo whole nation as one man to end this odious war at a single blow."' ? WhiloJit was sayiug this, the /eyes of the whole trSajBal wore attentively watching the sliyhtcsfeB?venieut of tho prisouor'a couuten anco, inJBjr to see what effect tho interpre ter's " trdHjcry would have upon him. l?ut Leekins^Had'expected to be put to tho tost in somcH^iy,-and So u'ia determined to bu?lc all thcirVltcmpts. * "Ccutleincu," said Castanos, "It seems to nie that thiayoung man cannot be suspected; the peasantliust be deceived. The prisoner may pursue lps journey, aud when he reflects on the hazard of our position, he will find the severity we have been obliged to use excusable." Leckinski's arms and dispatches were re turned j he received a free pass, and thus this nob Jo youth came victorious out of the severest trial the human spirit can be put to. VARIOUS. A Wonderful Story. The following wonderful story is snid to have been taken from the log book of a vessel which arrived in New York ! In tbo course of the voyage, that dreadful disease the ship fever broke out among the crow. One of the sailors, among the first vic tims, was accompanied by his son a lad of four teen years who was strongly attached to Iiis father, and remained with him day nod night, and never could be persuaded to leave him for | a moment. A large shark was seen every day following the vessel evidently for the purpose of devour ing any ono who should die and be committed to tho deep. After lingering a few days, the sailor died. As was custom at sea he was sewed up in a blanket, und for the purpose of sinking him, an old grindstone and a carpenter''. r?xo were put in with him. The very impressive service of the Episcopal Church was then red and tho body committed to the deep. The poor boy, who had watched the pro ceedings closely, plunged in after his father, when tho enormous shark swallowed thorn both. Tho second day after this dreadful scene as the shark continued to follow the ves sel (for there were others sick in the ship), one of the sailors proposed as thoy had a shark hook on board, to make an effort to take him. They fastened tho hook to a long ropa aud baiting it with a piece of pork, throw it into the sea, aud the shark instantly swallowed it. Having thus hooked him, by means uf a wind las they hoisted him on board. After ho was dead they prepared to open him, when ono of the sailors, stooping down for that purpose, suddenly paused, and after listening a few mo ments, declarod most solemnly ho hoard a low guturnl sound, which appcarod to proceed from the shark. Tho sailors, after onjoyiuga hearty In ugh at his expense, proceeded to listen lor themselves, whon they heard n similar sound. Thoy then proceeded to open the shark whon tho mystery was explained. It appears that the sailor was not dead,' but in a trance; and his son, on making this dis covery when inside tho shark,| had by means of a knife, ripped open the blanket. Having thus liberated bis father, they both went to Work and righted up the old grindstone?the boy was turning, the father was holding on to the old ship carpenter's aze, sharpening it for the purpose of cutting their way out of their Jonah, like prison, which occasioned the noise heard by the. sailor. Ah it was the hottest season of the year, and yery littlo sir .stirring whero they wore at work, thoy were both sweating tremendously. Time at Hfa Work. I saw a temple, reared by the hands of man, standing with high pinnacle in the distant plain. The streams beat about it?tho God of nature hurled his thunderbolts against it, yet it Btood as firm as adamant. Revelry was in the halls ; the gay, the happy, the young, the beautiful were there. I returned?and lo!? the temple was no more. Its high walls lay in scattered ruin ; and at the midnight hour the owl's long cry added to tho deep solitude. The ybuug and gay who had reveled there had passed away. I saw a child rejoicing in his youth, the idol of his mothor, and the pride of his father. I returned and that child had become old. Trembling with the weight of years, he stood the last uf his generation, a stranger amidst the desolation around him. . ?> I saw an old oak standing in all its pride upon the mountain ; the birds wero caroling in its boughs. I returned, and tho oak was lcsf less and sapless, and the winds wore playing at their pastimes through its branches. "Who is the destroyer," said I to my guar dian angel. "It is Time," said he. When tho morning stars song for joy over the new made world he commenced his course; and when he has de stroyed all that is beautiful on earth; plucked the Bun from his sphere; veiled tho moon in blood; yea, when he shall havo rolled the heaven arid earth away as a scroll, then shall an angel from th? throne Of God come forth, and with one foot upon the sea and one upon the laud, lift up his hand*towards heaven, and swear by Heaven's Eternal, Time is, Time was, but Tune nholl be nO'lonROr.t* 'Every Day Philosophy. Hans Patrick G. Conner, formerly known by the nom tie plume of "Beau Hacket," con tributed tho following to the St. Louis Uome Journal: Never insure your life for the benefit of your wife for a greater sum than ten thousand dollars. A widow with more money than that is a dangerous legacy to leave posterity. The "game of life" is very like a game of cards. Time deals, death cuts, and everybody is waiting for the last trump. I think men drink in crowds because they are afraid to drink by themselves. It requires a good deal of courage to stand up alone and pour a glass of whiskey down your throat. There arc sonic inconsistencies in this world that I don't exactly understand. Everybody is anxious to go to heaven, but nobody is in a hurry about it. If a man is without enemies I wouldn't give ten cents for all his friends. The man who can please .everybody hasn't got sense enough to displease anybody. Whon an acquaintance says, "How are you ?" and rushes by you without pausing for a reply, I wouldn't if I was in your place, fol low him more than a mile to tell him I was well. A convenient way of testing the affect ion of your intended is to marry another woman. If she don't love you, you will find it out imme diately. Do unto other men as they would like to do unto you, and they won't have enough money in two weeks to hire a shirt washed. Tho song "Dear Mother, I've Come Homo to Die," always struck me as a happy illustra tion of American assurance Our young go abroad to spend the hard earnings of tho old folks, and whon thoy are dead-broke return home to be buried at the expense of their im poverished parents. ""??asw Horrible Barbarities by an African Kino.?The latest news from Abyssinia dc vclopcs King Theodore in a still moro blood thirsty aspect. He had mado an expedition to the small Island of Met rata, in the Lake Tana, and put cvory inhabitant to death by fire; then he made a trip to Ifag, a flourishing town in Fogfjara, seized 1,500 peasants, placed them in five large houses and burned them alive. It is said there is now not a single man, woman or child, alive, betweeu Dobia Tabor and EmfraB, on tho borders of Dombca. In tho camp, his Majesty lms been pursuing tho samo game. Having heard that 2,000 of his troops wished to desert, he had them surrounded by tho oth ers and their throats cut liko cattle ; tho moth ers, wives, children and nearest relatives of the men boing pistoled by tho soldiery. 2G5 chiefs of districts havo had their hands and fect cut off and have been left to starve. The majesty of the law was vindicated on, Friday, 6th inst., by the execution of Nat Fra- (. the murder of young licnm sure, colored, for the murder of young cut. His accomplices, five in number, go' to the Penitentiary for stated periods, the' longest'! tefeni of which for December Gadsden ia." five years.?Picken* Courier. A terrible tragedy has occurred in Austrian - Tyrol. A farmer after effecting a heaVy eJn** >- ft smrauco on his house and barns, set fire to the ; m latter, bnt Was discovered in the set by ono of hb shepherds. Ho therefore killed the shep herd and murdered his wife and infant son, finishing by cutting his own throaty , , The- New Orleans Picayune is (opposed, to ,.f ((procnring white labor." It says : "We want white men here to go to work themselves and not procure labor. Tho system of mercantile farming which so long cursed the Sbuih,'and 'j bred debt and idleness, must cease, or our de- ' eay will become ruin." ;ii;*l'. Decapitated.?We learn that under or^Le of General Howard, Gilbert Pillsbury, (white and R. C. DeLarge, (colored,) of Charleston; S. A. Swaiis, (white,) of Kifigstree; J. jn.,,r> Wright, (colored,) of Beaufort, have heenMis^ charged from further service in the'Freedmen'p Bureau on account of having been elected to :.. the Convention. .o" . HUMOROUS. "Owed to Lake Ontary.? ? > ? . V'cv ,>A " Grxf.sb air thy waters, Lake Ontary, > Green as bottle-glass! Behold 'em. stretched thar J , ., ^ Fino muskfllonges and Oswego bass Ts chiefly kctched thar. : < W.jw t v Tlmr onct tho red man ? Took his delite, . ^ Fisht, fit, and bled; ? \ Now most of the. inhabitants . ? ' Is whites, ? . ?? i u iiii y~ . Wi*nary?d! ?./ ' ^??$S i I ?j>g j SION8 'ppk'HANDKEBCHlEF $XIBTATi6i<8. . ?Drawing across the lips?Desirous of getting : Taking by the centre-~Yoti are too - wtlIF?|fr:"? _ Dropping?We will be friends. ;y Twirling in both hands?Indifference. \ ..;*r Drawing aoroes the cheek?I love yon,( ?(,, u i -t Drawing through the hands?I bato you. Letting it rest on the right cheek?Yes.. ,, ..jf Letting it rest on the left check?No,, 'i?m Twirling in the left hand?I wish to get rid of you. ..;.? , Twirling in the right br.nd?I love another.^ Folding it?I wish to speak with you. ' y Over the shoulders?Follow me. Opposite corners in both hands?Wsif'?r me. .. j : < Drawing across the forehead?We are watch ed. Placing on right car?You have changed. Placing on left Car?I have a message for you. Letting it remain on the eyes?Yon arc cruel. ??".-..; ict Winding round the forefinger?I am epi, gaged Winding round the third finger?I mn.mar ? 4 ?? ? ?? ??? /r.a e?avv ned. N. B.?Practice makes perfect. Saved from Drowning.?A little man, in the west of Maryland, rushed to the Potomac river last summer, swearing that he would drown himself. > When he had waded in to the depth nf his waist, his wife, who had followed him, seized him by tho hair of his head, and then, as n spectator describes it, "she led htm' back until he hod reached a place where the water was about two feet deep, where she pulled him over backwards, sousing his head under, and then pulling his head up again, 'drown yourself, (down he went,) leaving me to take caro of the children, (another plunge,) get druuk I (another souse,) and start for the river. (Another dip.) Bettor uso the water instead of the rum. (Another dip and shake of tho head.) I'll learn you to leavo me* a widow !' " .After sousing him to her,, heart's} coutcnt, she led him out a wetter if not a wiser man, and escorting him to tho house, shut the door. A Joke on "Court."?A short time ago a lawyer, who rejoices in a largo share of work house patronago, came into the City Court drunk. His Honor addressed him thus : '?Sir, I nm sorry to sec yon in that situation; It is a diFgrnce to yourself and tho profession to which you belong." "Did yom Honor speak to mo ?" I '??Yes. sir. I said that in my opinion you are n disgrace to yourself and your profession/' "May it please your Honor, I have practiced in this court ever sinco you have j>roic>?j)<>ri\e? in that scat, and permit me to pay, your Honor, this is tho first correct opinion ever I know you to give." ; "r>f<mi In less than an hour frbm that time ? Alnnxo was picking rocksMthe corporation.nursery.