The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, September 21, 1882, Image 1
~
-
I
1. !• wril
|l»*
F\»i
1 Ra*>nfn Ifilttn and ot>niinnolr*-
lloaa to publlabod »hould bo writua
on 10cante aheeU, ood tbo object of each
deaiij indicated by neooaaary note when
required. >
S. ArtidM for publication ahould bo
written in a dear, leRible band, and on
0 ily one aide of the page.
wQt ■ ' ft.' '•'vi*-''
4, AH o'iaugea in adTertleenfbnti mart
narh n* on Friady. 1 * ■
WILLIAM BROWN, OF
0BEGOK
%
They calfed him BHI, the hired mao.
But she, her name was Mar>' I me,
The squire's dauifhter; tetd to reitrn •
Thu belle fntm Bui -ehe-br t6 Dim.
Her litpe game. How lovers nisfi
Out mittens at the ■pelllnir-scboolt
Hftw many a ohs fool
Wrote rhyme*and sighed anddved—mustac/i*/
The hired ra.m had loycAhor Ion?,
Had loved her heft and tint and lh8<r,
Her very garments as she passed
For him had symphony and song.
So when one day with brow afrown
She called him “ Bill,” he raised his head,
. He oauifbl her eye and, falterinir sold:
“ I love you; and my name is Brown."
She fairly waltzed with rage; she wept;
You would have thought the house on
She told her sire, the portly squire, r
Then 'melt her smelling salts and slept.
Boo? Wdliain did what could be done;
He swung a p at I on each hip, —
He gathered up a area' os whip,
And drove toward tbo sotting stua J.
He crossed the fT. at back bone of earth,
He saw ih. sansryia *iatalp« roJrti
I.ihplhhratr h.liuw*; MW t|-
l*f awfMI •uomAs: saw the birth
Of sudden dawn upon fbc plain,
«Xu>l cry aixht wma'd, WlUl»at I
■P pork itel he ns, and th -n lie Jowa
And dream sweet dreams of awatta ■
Are.
THE
VOL. VI. NO. 3. BARNWELL, 0. H„ 8. C„ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER '21, 1882.
$2 a Year.
credible, but the moral of them all is
substantially the same.
One story is this: There was a very
naughty l>oy named Han, whom his
mother used very often 1 'to whip with a
rattan, but without making him shed a
tear. But oneway, after being fli
he
Wolves hunt la pacha.
> pharW a
But one flay, after being flogged,
cried; whereupon his mother asked
r him why he did so.
“Oh, mother,” he answered, “you
used to hurt me when you Hogged me,
but now 1 weep because you are not
strong enough to hurt me.”
The Chinese author who relates this
remarkable tale, adds, bv wav of com
ment, that “it makes one weep even to
read it” '
Some pf the stories ''arc more like
truth. There was once a little boy who
bore a name which, being trai.jdated
iota} Knif^ a ^. woukl
land. be was six years of age a
gentlea^Ui aaiued Z* gwv# bi*i Owo
oimngea which, iastsad <M oatift/r, he
put into bis bosom, and bowed his
thanks. As he bowed, the oraqges fell
out, aad raUUd along the ground. Ze
wxdal—d: s - ■ _
“Here’s a pretty voting \1kl»f>r. to
bide his orangres and eairr t
without eatiag them'. What doo*
-mean**’
. TWo little I^odable knelt down
■li:
• My mother
ami I
are awake aud of the faults of others KtLIUIODS AND EDUCATIONAL.
when you are asleep*” ‘ _
“Better be an hOTest'•beggar than a —The English clergy bet omtama
dishonest miH ouaire.” 26,000 names, boing a gain of 6,000 m
“If a man has not committed any . the last tweiity-two years,
deed that wounds his conscience, a - The Christian Advocate claims that
knock may come at dead of night and ■ itjs as easy to maiutain a large oongre-
gation in the cities in the summer as in
the winter, provided tho services are
b pwrOrulartr foo t <rf
wtak to keoo them tor
he will not be startled.”
“ However enraged, don't go to law;
however poor, don’t steal.’’
The people of China are like ourselves
in more than one particular, but they
resemble us most in not living up to
their own sense of what is right. In ! course of study. Including
this trait of character, if in no other, all ! cheese-making, and dairy in
men are brothers —James frirton. in N. j branches.
kept up to the standard.
—The Agricultural College at Hano
ver, N. H., will admit women pupils at
its next term, who willbe given a .special
of study, including hut cr and
g aad all its
Y. Ledqcr.
Dog Fat.
tafcwaatam •
maeipaa^ flhp wom aw wm(m mama
xXzszS-j&zztrT
■w* «w-
/• wee sarpneed. aad let him gv boose
wrthvml Wpeaaf,
TWe these Is a Mary of a mam earned
Lee. whoa* mother wee always very
mark IrtwWood la a Umader worm
At leal, me dUd aad w«e bw*d <m a
••■d. had. as aftaa aa a thwadrro.wm
Ifc etrard. Laa tea ta hm mother a
a mar tea Am‘t he eftnad.
Thar* is a rwaSeaa alary ef e hay of
^gda earned Moo Mmg oh«h mi sum
!■••• ead 1 eteeam Me * e* o> m! »r-
The attention of a reporter of the
World was attracted yesterday afternoon
while at the dog-pound by two boys
who were carefully shinning and dress
ing a dog that had tost been drowned
according to law for ragAncy.
“ What are you doing that for I” was
asked. • ,
"For consumption.” replied one of
the bays. “Tar a two-dtdlar
the oAMw/ 8 a -—v- C 3
finally esplnined that i
of the east side of the city
hrke.s that dog (•' Uan lo/allUrta
cure
•• The boys told you the troth,” ••od
I>r Kaaeeer. the retpriamry rtotr.ned u
the paoad. who »a» seat qoort'-•ood.
“A great maaj people bclietc that dog
fat, ead eeen the fle»h of d> g. Is a mes
core ktt wnmmptwm. and ue aa *»*r-
ego erne 4ng a week u tahee from here
wa«
rirmto hr
earelori
—The Bishop of Hong Rdtig says he
has been repeatedly stopped while
preaching, aud a:ked if he>ie not an
Englishman, and if his Is iiorthe ewm-
trr that sends opium to
when he admits the fact* thyWnimn
to go back and stop the npinm, and
Uien they will talk about Cknetianity.
■ — Thr /ntt rtor.
I —The tuptil RVeWy sars: “It should
j make ( brietiam Moshjo knew that the
,. u ..klng boner thaa^the ebursiic* el aM
fl*** irnoniinatloae in raMaf mower for mis-
stons. The rslim of (h< how crvf>
cersj* Ft.isk',***# aaaaallv, while eun-
tritwf on« fi <r f »rotgs NlMdnw* sme set
Im Irm thaw t ’..vrviOO ’’
- -The nx mtorehip ef the tre InrgoM
Frr.i v irrieo rbershee la the o.j.irr
are girew m fefhiw. 1T T aim age S
1 ahoramk t hysh. Brnufer^ 3.4*1
■n iah»ri DTTnstlrr’ • Iw’s- mv A roam
tesa Tfch4
.Ik Halls
Lm
Worshiping Account-Books.
Occupation nnd Longevity.
“Woo to them that are at ease!”'
says Carlyle, but his anathema dees not
prevent the English village parson
from outliving any other class of his
countrymen, not excepting the British
farmer, whose peace of mind can not
always be reconciled with high rents and
low price of American wheat. Where ^... j —
agriculture Is what it should be—a con- I hammedans, or Hindoos
tract between man and Nature, in tho ; purposes the new year cc
United States, In Anstralh, and In some
K of Switzerland—the plow-furrow
i straightest road to longevity; in
here Nature is rather a hard
iaa
Canada, where Nature
taskmaster, the probabilities are In fa
vor of such half-indoor trades as car
pentering and certain branches of bor-
ti ul?nn> .nmnier farming, as the Oof-
mans eaU It. Cold Is an antiseptic, and
the best febrifuge, but by do means a
panacea, and tho warmest climate on
earth is out aud out preferable even to
the border-lands of the polar zone. The
average Arab on til res the average Es
quimau by twenty-live yean.
The kygienio beoefl: of saa-voyafia,
too, has beaa amazingly eaaggarated.
'•■afariag keaot ooaduotiswIwMMUTUi;
the advantage of the svsreisa la the rig
ging w more than uniwMghsd kf tho
Mtuvia of tha eonkpia, kg lha ptokM
dMAtka
A correspondent writes: “Dewalee,
the fkiwt of lanterns, has often been
de-cribed in your c damns. 1 proceed
to describe the interesting ceremony of,
Vahee Pooja, which I 'Vas invited to
witness at the olHce of a diatiupUheil
native Arm. Among the native* ot
li.dia, whether they bo Parsecs, M<i-
oa, fui* prac ic »l
purposes the new year commences with
that of the Hindoos.- Tho ceremony of
Vahee Pooja, as its name denotes, is
the worshiping of the aocoont-book for
the new year. It tallks place.4pav be^
fore the Dewalee, and is performed not
only by every merchant and trader, but
even by private pMneoas. In sh-wt, the
JU!W ywar trmong na’ives of India,
whiXber for budness nr iHMHkOlft eA
fairs, eommeaces with the new year of
the Hindoos. This neorndtatss tha
closing of old accoants and opening of
new ones, aad for the Uttar purpose
new books are nskd, but before tnev can
ha so atihsad they must bs wurdti, «d,
and each aocordiag to his means does
this. Tbs wealthier asuva Arms a rad
to la vita
The
Who *
aP»r
Ouarrh. t.Tdt; Hr hi
(Imwv^ Ch>aama kss 1.7 vv tk
lllth Avesswe Ckmcrh New Fork
aad Hu Cpahy a ahwpc^ t .Fkk * A T•
< 'rntract advertUing Is
days altar first Insertion, aa
wise stipuUtad.
No coamaulaatton will bs pobltahad
ualem accompanied by tha asms aad ad*
dress of the writer, not aoomsailly for
publication, but n a gusraaty of good
fa ih. /
> AJdrets, TJE PEOPLE, ;
Bara well 0. H., B
uusionops.
■ —-Don't you think I have agoor*
fnum for the s!flge?” asked a young Indy
with histrioni.* aspimtior.s “I don’t
know about the stage,” rt p icil her gal-
ant companinu. “ but you have a love
ly lace for a ’busi”—A. V. Commercial
.uivrrtis r: ' i
—You never wmtlil suspect that tha
(ire look ng membbrof lh** horsegnunte,
vim uliows oil to'snch advantage bn
inradcdsys. la the identical roan who,
I Middles uibk and iLasUps the scrvact
girls, would ton 1 f , uch 1st' e fact, how-
eter. - -Yew flic, n t:etfl.4er. ' "
— “I tell yer wor, b>ys,” axdainwd
j?d Ben. the roughest rawam the camp;
wOMJlajpM SUM, tapaudfiSkada a
thar tfke an aanl
dMary
or lunthui ar that sort.
‘.JMf leeH
the lady, m aci
irally. 1
S it rwl
wbUskasa
esrla'UMher
fraakae-s of ia>aa«y
i't \ up look HB HHTWPWTWkea y
IV I if away i» MgmP* — W&m*
Ziizxzagutixtm
w* la mu
UsmAmTI
sot *as was,
ta) thi
afa»an
Ousb.’
fiSKtiiaM*
.Iwfi.s-BfchaliOl it. ami i«
stsrmSti
in
TWy thaw pmas aak
OMM
aavk at asarke lha aaN
lha a
•has wav
«<
OTw
■nri
Mm* sawartad.
v»4. wad
M * ■
dwswakwwOT kw aw
m OTW
MU at m
wha M* a <
tha Im M aha ww
tha* Arnas ■ im kau jm«
mha k Mm* ot w>M
hww aw aakwa SO tMW w
as m
flfia ml
• kS
• Sawwas «kww>
•SDot awwOT.MlMi
i
»# MhsmMk
>«s«»f«^ *w
a *kwf «wMh“
1 • MMMh • Mi
hgh*
sa a • i <kw
■ a* kawwd aa
im aw
s« kaas mwI
«mi aMOTg f OT
♦sa ' % ' *•
-!%■%■* ‘ -IMM
s»a
£
jwsmp Mms
»igk ami smot
m tm
l SOT awMhae s-|— kaa ^ MOTOT I
• ka* M kOTgsa, tha dmd ^ ■
• mm w*
CX^BS^STs I M rw^*W. U*t» fOTaMk**^'to»
■M
m0 (MM
Haas* otsm» 4M
Hm mm
k mm i • m4
IP fcfcii > f
VW» li Ap mH mm m m%m% I
Mv# •!*»*
mmm m*mm
■ om-Ui OTwy «d agOTas
i tea jausaft w»i*»
m m 4 •
P f%*e mm
* mmi *%• •
• mm* mmmmm • ■
II# • MM m* £* Pa» VdM 4ks» |
tlv l<4 « atol • l» 1
I M fear nmu
All
Wfe..,
jl
Ur CUW-l.q . >fe J
I s. tfe nwfet abted.
♦rv-n 4r ias anSUui
!• lajin. WllllSi Hrwwnl'
Wl r U ,1. r. few* Awn
A CHINESE ( HII.DUE’S BOOK.
Every nation api>can taave a favor
ite virtue, which it endeavm to Impress
upon the minds of its chilrcn. Turn
over some French books t children,
aad you will oliecrve tbathe moral of
moet of the stories is: Be go tie and po
lite; be considerate and agreeable;
seize every opportunity to e obliging.
- The typo ot English bsks of this
class is Robin-on Crusoe, rhich incul
cates courage, fortihide and self-
dependence, ino virtues wlch conquer
the world. * •
\Yhat is the favorite vtue of thei
United States 9 If I shouldjudge from
the pieces 1 hear oftenost sclaiined in
our schools, I should say itvas love of
country, a preference whir displayed
itself in a remarkable mann* during the
)&t43 war.
In Chinn, for twenty oeuiries past,
the great object of pioral hebing has
been to inculcate reverent tor ances
tors, devotion to parents ad kindness
to brother* and sistera 'ae popular
stories ot China mostly tunupon fam
ily afTec ion It‘an onitor hould wish
to move a rhinese aud'enceo tears, ha
could aot do hqtlew lb«n pl%tc aouae
affeeting instanor of lilial imv.
The most popular l»ook py t'hineao
childicn is a collect on of «u bundrad
twwOT'.oriak. amk illuralad by a
MM
#Mrt pmbm mmm9m% (M ipimm wt§ bmm f*
aovsh Sv Maw* wha *ot Ml
Tkaas was
f-*« a i *■ . z kwh^ps
to. fewrk aw wsl A—a»
•4 <few g .'A**, aw L a*v
adkwfy *OT’. MM awrf f
tk- ago af awa hwMrwd
lhaw woa awaShar gv
• aoMar kralkOT. aamM
u i r .to* aAlwsad to drtwk. amd. owa Jav.
ta a drawkaw M shot to* toxrtfear * aalv
wtfa aM bkwt. and otm!
“ rvnrana kaa sho4 yaw ok ”
II* wa« wot •! all dwiurhad by this iw-
laM gear a. awd asked lor wo lalormw-
ilon but sbupty said;
•• Well, lot tb* ot ba cut up for food.”
Having said tkia, ke sal cidaUj down
to read, when bis erile
“ Prrvrr-c has tho(
this Is no light matter.
“I ana aware of it,”
anti kept on reading
even changing color,
willingness to be mo'
misconduct.
Brotherly love, in
the Chines* as only
filial duty.
There Is a story of a Mandarin,
mimed Soo. before whom some broth
ers brought n suit about the division of
it tra-’t of land. After mnch lit gation,
continued at intervals for ten years, the
Mandarin at last < ailed the brothers
before him, and addressed them thus:
“It is difficult to get a brother; it is
easy enough to get land,
gain your fields and lose your
now will you feel then?”
Upon this the Mandarin wept,, and
not one of the bystanders could keep
back hi» tears. Instantly tho brothers,
perceiving their error, bowed low to the
magistrate, asked bis forgiveness, amt
after ten year*' of keparation, took up
thetrabode together in the family home
stead. t "
Th* work H filled with such tales as
a «ww ww •mmOTtwvw'
■a mawf «4 tow 4*
Ms ot ow to top.
' t
OT Wtok
MMUMVi
Ito
as a 1
#•*
t f‘v a
DOT
Mot Marska
ml *
v •*<
surely
r husband.
without
was his un-
y a brother’s
is regarded by
important than
i »•
was dams' k—a aa a saw* tov
Taw 4m mot* bw >to-
-V Wkaa tkw awimsl fe* r4 ot w Is M4
ww wwttowg bwt Ika Mw^*w4 ksavs af
AJtov^kat If tk* pat Mat w awl ewasd ha
Is wertvetty awwrvd that kt* pwtaa aa4
ar* attnbaiabta to sowm otbar
H
ot Mt yawn avur HkOUO
kwv* baas drowned at tk* poaad.
So far this year 1,1*17 barabaaa rvcelred,
2,(74 drowned, M redeemed, .1 returned
by Ofdau of tk* aatkoritie* and f.12 are
now awaiting death.—A. F. Worid.
rm* # f**
% u
sa
Mvto
A curious cave reiati
ng to the marriage
status of former slaves has
Suppose V!
our brotlu
ou
ther,
these. Family duty appears to bo tho , together and lecogniaingonca
religion of th* A hiuesc people. If wo , husband and wile -hoaM bold
mar judg* from the narrative* of M , Jatj,*, un der tkei lam •. The
may ju’tga
Hue ami ol
other missionaries, both Prot-
t atWto,
•ff
just been de
cided by the Supreme Court of Ala
bama. 'The controversy was between
two Women, each of whom claimed to b*
the widow of tins Washington and en
titled to dower in his estate. One
named Edie had boou married to hits in
1847, when both were slaves of the
> ame master. The cermony was per
formed by a colored minister, with i ha
consent of the master,' Tie two lived
together as husband and wife till the
fat) of 1886. At that time tho husband,
being, then, of course, a freedman, took
out a license and married another
woman, with whoiy he Ijvod till his
death. Under these circumstanced the
Court was called upon to decide which
of the two had been the lawful wife. It
has been decided in favor of the one
claiming by virtue of the slave marriage.
It holds that slaves were not competent
to enter into a valid marriage contract
or bojd tjve legal relation of hukbfnd
un 1 wife, liut ik-Soptembcc, 1865, the
C onstitution of Albama iloclarcd that
all freemen and irecwouiun then living
one another as
that re-
gupreaie
Court decides that this waa ratification
of th* marital re'atiooa then existing
(ots sod Edwi Washington.
_ with
void.
•••>*. amA •<** kaa awto kawton
rto Dae* m Mot* parwMn aa* *4
a. kp drwM^Mi Maaa
w 9 totowW Haw
eg toly aasaMfMsksM
• few* otm* af Ma
I r mM t M
aMsa Ufeaa wa ea* sav fiha
*e -saad ot4otw4 WA* • nwOTOTaOTl
■«r«togtk Mot MarttM fTlOT th* as-
dSawpat. otw t lady twrtig OTtoftod '•-
m ~tti tka aaaak wtoa* aka bad laiM*.
aad tbrsals«i»4 wttk Mot. 1
So a vuuag maa. wko srs
idly hy at am
h at to imam
rang to nak. my UM to save any
*•*, ’ otot tk*
Mt-I Martha thea,
hands extr cated the viclim. who
proved to ba * married lady, and
dragged her to a place of safety. But
it w as at thr e \pauw of seriau* Injury
to haiaHf, an she tabeiiid IwuiMs frasa
which this youiur l*'ly was far some
time delirious. Nobly did she continue
the work until tk* 4tot persan
rescued from tho wreck, when
Annie eet to work and carried backet
sfter bucket pf water, until the last
spark was uxtlngwieMK! In the engine.
It must bo remembered that this hero
ism on the part of Miss Martin was per
formed in the fac* of Imminent danger
UxLersclf, for after the Excitement the
young lady was discovered lo have her
arm dislocated in two places, her side
badly scalded, besides serious bruiaes ou
her body. Had she repaired to a place
of safety as soon as released from the
coach, instead of returning to the scene
m «kn
^ TaTdOT
tea* <wa ax
tod I*
’ M wHfe ki*4r»4 dra,L
•f >Hi
Bask
from a
to join hOT hi
** mato m —
Li
**vi
of danger. Mias MarttB would have
raped without a scratch.—Atheiii (oa.)
Banner.
Peter Cooper’s Charity.
A New York correspondent of tk#
Boston Gazette relates the following
stoly about the venerable Peter t cop
er Nearly every day ha drives down to
his office, and stays there for • few
houfl* As ks oouiss oat to his ounce
■nrrounded by * b*vy uf seedy-
hack in turn
"Good day. Mr
* la kis
tack a xulTarer that op otes were noort-
ad to in brdar to allaripta pain. Whan
her laeovary was deapdred irf th# hua-
band was telegraph’ d lor. but wss un
able to reftfru hoxne JnuDediataly. He
arrived the latter part of last week,
when andPfeineiU^ fur U* (iD«\ buriai
were milk.
When the casket had been taken
from the vault the husband expresed
the desire to look fei the last time upon
his beloved dead. The attendant re
moved the outer Ed so that the face
could be viewed through the glass. The
at thdbodv and tlis-
of the
changed position
arranged condition
cnoe excited die
that * living b<xly ha
among the ’land. The
ranged hair had been torn from its
fastening and laid qyer the shoulders in
“ ” ‘ “ ’wki
> thing
>0*d
___ o ci-ectual devise was made, tbis
disorder,
placed on
JL*
The flowkrs that ha 1 been
her bosom were scattered.
The folded hands had been wrenched
asundeY, and the palms were open and
lingers strained apart, and the eves
were started frpm their sockets. The
changes Which would natnfafly occur
after a lapse of eleven days from death
might account for some of the altera
tions which hkd taken place, but the
disheveled hair, the appealing expres
sion of hands and features, create the
horrible fear that the unhappy lady
sunk away into that counterfeit of
death—suspended animation—and re
vived to had herself eoffin«d end so
up to I tombed as dead. — WmaiungUm Car. De-
— ” 1 trod Frtt Prtm
by tk*
■aw tk* karmaa Hay Is
From tka hour of kls btrth until he
kas reached tk* mature age of six year*
h# Is usdar the constant sure ’ i- on *F \
kis parents or Us nerse. He play* sa
children play all the world ovyr, hat his
games and pastimas are aot rough
From the momant his *aa«itiva nua4 is
aapzUe of bkilg tr^iaod k* laams oba-
dtom s aad politeOaaa . Jie is
year* old era he will bid,*
good-day or good-evening, raislnii
nttla hat and mnking h:s Buie oow at
the same time. Between four and six
be is allowed to mingle tre-ly with the
cliddreji of the neighborhood, but his
play-ground is always circumscribed ac-
cordin; to the size of tho garden in the
rc&i* of the block. At six the law com-
puls his parents to send him to school.
From that t me on he is a person of
some re-ponslbllitv, for Ms lessons
must not be neglected under any cir-
cuuHtanccs, unless b)is health proves
him to ko Unequal lo the taste. His
school hoiu» for the lirft year are not
long, but um must be in bis place
promp'ly at eight o'clock in the mor
ning, remaining until ten, and atl:8C
o’clock in the alternoon. remaininguntll
2:50. Then he brings home his lessons
fori the morrow, wtdeh, with the as-
sisfhnce of his parents, he must be pre
pared to answer for on the next day.
The second year of bis school-life is a
little more severe The sch’wls open
at six in the summer and seven in the
winter, and long before children of
hU age are awakened In America, tb*
str*w’« am iuli of hltle aaas knm ing to
th- diB-raat •ehoal* This aari v olas*
is ffisadOTad at a^gkl and nina a’daak.
tka < kltdrsD srs than expected to
a*s« A their m-Aksen ar, as Is max*
tan jranrsal
npwasd. tkay g* to tka
wash ‘no,d wkaOT that
•fed Irwxw a toad* t*s
ifts kw4 kkto» srs a»ad Mms anr y li
that i|m
in
IS
■wH
devise
JcweMLan eight council learnc
Lw appeared he ted* -ted.W
lor pn Wednesday, Aug. 2, v...
supported the valid ty of the
quoting Pope’s well known likes. Ik
which the poet says that a testator may <
•• endow a collar or a cat,” and seek
ing to draw therefrom the {inference
that Mrs. Burdette was entitled to dis-
po-e of her own pre iscly as she likefl.
even though her tcstamenrwy in’unc-^
tions were of the most capriciously £tv>-'
tesque nature. Sir dames Bacon, how
ever, very cogently pointed out that kt
the case before him, the testator had en
dowed ne themcat noraco'leie; and bo .
directed the trustees to unseal and re.
lease all this hitfierto useless pro
which must be distributed as tfier 11
posed residua af real and pemoaal es
tate.—London TeUqruph.
- Tl,- pompi^ijir fho ■npo*’ '
himself la be very sarcastic, said to the
keeper of an apple * aud: “It seems to
met hat you should quit ’his busmastaa
go at somatkiag wkmk is net aw waa
fngon tk* hnda. v * -41k. 'taint bus
arm.” aaM tk* appM totMr. "U M If
ituctfci mm +1+#