' -- - MittMOVOUO Ml= ' . lii, M. QUAD. ~. , ; ' - i .... .4.......i ' ' ! i - `-.Once there was god oltl.manof snob rrietkat4sl?wly dispolsition,Ali at. the po pleAtid.ttt lit tip, a indgi,J,i3lid,t)iey 1? rotight, their disputes to - hitt , to' . :decide. "Ili' s' decisions were ever just, and the people said : • .. "Great is Aboud El Bishen ;• he is nev er- iiiik2f:,', iii:iii.;.i-1: 34'r" i:!., (.,lts li iiTI - i 4 o'detday i,? ii fitialiikwisittil,le 4.0 thltbfrice` of this good man and - said': •\ • ' - - "A Man owes Me a just debt and will 4°t. , )ay,4' ; c '.l .' --. P 1: ; "Does .fie, give retoion l .-r * ! - ' • ` '' . 'lle gives a'dezen k of :,thetti.., He nays mTbillagaiusthim is A ii, blasted , swindle Nand a fraud." .. .: .... I ' ' ?You have : asked ;. him for the ducats ?" 4k l have,, and? her says ,' helli knOck 44 , head off, 114. ask- him again.' ::-: s ; ; \,',..: 1 ' 'rhea the goOd jndge was puzzled - He , chewed at the. ihd of. a :three cent pen holder for along tinie,,andtinally.asked : "Did/ you furnish this . man food 'for hia,calnels or-a, robe, for himself that-he , is YOur"debtorr 4 - 4 ..: i , -', '-', .. ; - "Not by- aingful. . The. bill is . 414 a)ob of plumbiag.", - : • - • . Then the meek and pensive smile which had covered the, face of 'Abeud El Bishen fades' away like a boy slitlinglover,a mill dam. and in its-place came an expresslon of Malignant evil.. .1 . ,malignant yoti are-a- phimb , -r ?" he asked in -a voice as cruel as a cross-cut saw. -, "I Both plumb," answered the - man. The the wise judge Chewed pp the rest of the penholder, .dug his heels into the floor, and in alow, shrill whisper he.in quired : - . 1 ' \ , "Did you, ever know -a plumber to get a, job done within fourteen weeks of the promised time ?" ' 1 - !'No, sir,' I - never did I" proMp4y re plied the plumber f: , "but let me..exPlain; Now stipliGEE' you Want a small -job done at the house—a little Sodering; a faucet put in, or something-of the 'kind. You letive lour order, and' I say day after to morrow., I send the oldest apprentice to' your house, f ind when_ he gets therehe sits down and takes_a book at the ' job.— Then he stands up and, loinis at it. Then he walks all over . the house and.comeS backend looks at H.! . Then he figures . on how much the house costs, wonderi if there is a Mortgageon jit, , sits down acrd" talks with the hired_ ,girl for...a couple of hours. and comes,back and reports. Pay after to morrow comes, and I can't seed a man ep„there because they are finishing another ,jo6 which' ought ,'to have been done a month before. - Something han. pens the next, and it's two ieeks_befori- I can send a man." ' . . -"Or two. months," pu t t in - the wise s 'old iudge. . ''Well split the _difference', and call it 'six weeks," replied the pluinber. "I send two of the ,boys up. , Theywalk around the job, go down the cellar and up..-stairs, Bit down and figore ~,on the cost of the front steps, and _go home to dinner.— When they return they,take anetlit-r Itiok at the job; and Thomas comes to the shop 'after some Budder. He gets it, and then Henry comes after his tobacco box, and then, Thomas . comes,. land wants to kaosi if it's gas pipe or watd l i , pipe. They - knock off` then for the day, and about noon next_ day get around there and dig . a holein the pipet) pit in the , faucet. The next day, they get the , faucet in, and . solie.. times during the week that - job is nicely finished." "And you charged s2o l forit'." exclaim tO the enraged judge. lustabott that' figure, . wise ' fudge I but it isn't my fault. 'l* oldest appren tice says he had to takd ,out 150,, Let of pipe and the youngestatpprentice ,saya,he bad to put in 200 eet, and between - thein they mix me up an I l i have to average it, It isn't us plumber —it's these apprenti ,CES , who.are to Waite." , ' : ~. "But don't - you know they are lying to you r "I sometimes suspect them ,- but how it wouht. look for ine to say Unto -Thoth as, 'Thomas - thou art a liar ,I". ll.ow, tha hoy would feel." , "Don't people, ever ; stop at your sho and.calf you a liar and la cormorant ?" ."They do—some coining almost eviry day—but they shouldn ' t ' do it. When the oldest apprentice says the job isliorth -s2o k and _the; .younesi.apprentice agrpeti. with him lhave to make out my bill sac cordtngly. I. desire, Oh, :judge, toty judge, tha debtors may be fOroed to pay me my hon est due.".:., Then the meek acid.`.peneive sAboud El BiShen .. bobbed ,ups and down in his - ._ -;11.5. , „t11.2 4 f IWI 1.1 . } .0