The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 02, 1921, Image 8

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    Doneg:a +
Gramma
geries of
6¢rs-of
was he
Saturd
the us
time
“Rev
toue’
hav
M:
m
Sta
co’
la’
5 (\7} vie
W lolent Violinists
bo
By GEfE| FOWLER
A White Hou fymphony lasts four
years of actual p} ring, with an encore
of four more for § od, bad and indiffer-
ent behavior. T
rest of the time to
is spent bj he audience in pay-
fiddler. ¢
come
ing the
Two aspiring| Asicians are bi iding
for the job of of
Hard and]
entries,
“Ysaye”
the
to right and
jert-meister
Cox are
from Ohio to
that
Rome
{eeping theory
list
burned, gove rament ar hitects are
ting plenty pf
buildings
while
put-
new
bow on his
al virtu-
which
billiards,
. bridge
osos have
makes it la game of Indian
Piute tenni » whist
combined.
T'he Presid al is
coming
gar-
nished two
in and going adminis
out
ified tl music
Som¢
tration wer
has che
went tol the Peace T
stolen and came charm.
It wap jour harmony ith
voices
sweet
1 comes the
of “YS¢ re’ H: i 1 2S
lele. | But it
catch! the
basernents of the nation,
blissful coma
that
over-
Fro |
twang chin uku-
ting to
the
interes
mteres
noise iat rises from
where the
voterrs are drifting into
vhille warming up f the shock
travels with the White House
turd
iron lears
Croheus made the cast
Mito’ 1
luto’s cheek.
trickle down I It was the
metal that ever escaped the steel
But the
wnism when he looked backward.
Democratic, with
only
trust.
mech
Orpheus gummed
This proved he was
reservations. If he
and then gone backward with
strides,
had looked back-
ward
arrived at, it
open oper
wouldn’t have been essary for
“Kubelik” Cox to bring more music to
the scene at this la
that
Cali
iis violin to the pet
Immediately after heard
“Kubelik” Cox expects “take
fornif”” by playing
seals of the Pacific Ocean, the ex-
It was the final
thirst.
Kaiser made his will.
stray that broke the
|
It rdminded the former Emperor-ol all-
camel's
croaked
take Bi-
rack he
will
chlgride with an article X chaser.
the
is tips out of
the-Bock-Beers of the
about taking Paris. He
Wall
the
i:
Flischer, the prophet of
Street tremor, got
air] “Kubelik” Cox is grabbing his out
of /the hollow candle of a League of
Najtions chandelier, where they pump
noighing but laughing gas distilled from
It all contributes to the
Brazil nuts.
nd dance, but the dance
is! named after St. Vitus.
Harding claims the ct
ggneral ong
{“Ysaye”
|
from pa ying a hornsR the village band
to rubbing the G =A on a Presiden-
tial violin will be like growing : (
after you get used to €s breakfast
food without cream
Mischa
Both candidates declare that
Elm: Debs hasn't a look in for
chair of the first violin. They clai
}
}
he can't read the notes beyond the firs
few bars.
“Kubelik"”
that -tenths of
didn’t print the
example the failure of some to
piped in California
the
He cit
Cox
nine newspapers
ews. d as an
publish
hi acceptance of the nomination. But

that wasn't news.
He was looking in the wrong column
fiddler's violin was strung with
starters in San diego
not
that
doors of
didn’t mention the “Family Entrance,”
or
choose
“ygaye” Harding
composer
enough for him to strum along with.
from
called
phia on
that
were
trator of Pennsylvania, and Frank B.
McClain,
sioner.
amount.
reduction in price embrace virtually
to Easton,
risburg and Altoona.
be the
freight rates would enter into the sell-
ing price.
b. to these places will be the same as
compromise, as
ces
Association, in the Heed Building.
Producers’
against a
cents.
crops were
prices
wre and
iready
declared
and
yoliey
public. A
Clain
aid the
now
It was an obituary.
Playing the tune of “Prohibition,
Wehre Is Thy Sting?’ the Democratic
bung-
He said it was
until he become Governor of Ohio
the
and front
closed. He
the “back doors
saloons were
side door, which is double-jointed
n the sign language.
violinists
pet
Monroe,
Each of our violent
the master
works of a
thinks
of “Doctrine,” is
the
good
“Kubelik” Cox will choose something
the
He will saw a
“The Le: » of
“It’s the best
British school of jazz brew-
sour rhapsody
Nations.”
thing ever composed,”
cracks Cox.
“Composed?” No!
“Decomposed.”
Two-Cent Cut 1s
The retail price of “B"” grade milk
will fall two cents a quart in Philadel-
December 1. A decision to
effect was reached last week at
six-hour conference of milk ypro-
ducers, dealers and manufacturers of
dairy products
Participating also in the deliberation
Dr. Charles L. King, milk arbi-
price commis-
State fair
The drop represents the exact differ-
ence in price which the dealers will
pay to the farmers. The dealers agreed
to let the public benefit by the full
Other areas affected by the
all of Delaware and New Jersey, and
in Pennsylvania the charge will extend
Reading, New York, Har-
It was said that in other towns and
cities the price would not necessarily
game as it is to be here as
But the farmer's price f. 0.
is here.
The decision was reached at a closed
session, but it is understood the reduc-
tion agreed to was in the nature of a
many of the dealers
urged a much more drastic reduction.
The conference took place in the offi-
of the Interstate Milk Producers’
Willits, president of the Milk
Association led the fight
reduction than two
PB
greater
argument was that grain
put in last spring when
His
wore highest oll duc 53 +tilin
labor. Wheat and corn have
broken in prices, but it
should
was
that milk not come
down at this time.
the milk dealers
that the
the break in cur-
The arguments of
producers was sensible
was to follow
nt prices ¢ : demanded by the
tentative plan was lo re-
one cent a quart on De
Wd to follow it with a simi
Mr. Mc
not a ee to that
must
without
milk
reduction on January Ll.
would and
entire reduction Come
That was agreed to
nuch dissension.
will |
“The farmers willing to
their losses in the face of a deciding
are
demand and in the interest of an early
readjustment back to normal,” said
Mr. Willits. “Milk is an
commodity and we are going to place
it in the forefront in the voluntary
cut in prices.”
essential
Dr. King said the new price would
make milk in the market here approxi-
mately five cents cheaper than it ie in
that in
the
eighteen
cities. It is said New
City and Cleveland
eighteen cents,
other
York
was
and one-fourth cents, Pittsburgh, Bal-
price
Boston,
timore and St. Louis sixteen cents.
Predicts Big Drop in Milk
Omaha—Prediction of what he re-
ferred to as a serious drop in milk and
butter prices was made in an address
at the Chamber of Commerce last
week before Omaha business men by
Wilbur, of Maryville, O.,
executive committee of
George M.
head of the
the Ohio Wool Growers’
us a
Association.
serious drop
because
“There is facing
and butter
Danuish will
in at the rate of pounds a
month,” Mr. Wilbur said. At the same
time,” he added, “more than $50,000,
worth of American evaporated milk is
piled up in New York. It cannot be
lack of export demand and
factories closing all
in milk prices
soon be coming
500,000
butter
sold for
condensing are
over the country.”
By Damon Runyon
In Which Mr. Mugg Shows How a Man
May Be Deceived by a Lot of Noise
I am reading in the papers the other
day about how the Republican ¢ carry
the State of Maine by a terrible plu-
makes a lot of
with
ality, and I will say it
noise in political circles, what
will
cure
saying it means they
rest of this
the big election comes off.
everybody
the
pop when
Personally I hope and trust there is
carry country
much truth in what they say, because
Harding will win
along
I bet a guy five bucks
and I that
about election time as
next man, but I never take much stock
can use five bucks
much as

in noise since the time my friend Jeff
Rambo sells the bull frogs.
This Jeff Rambo is a stock
or some such,
positive guy I ever see in all my
He will never admit he is wrong about
makes it all
exasperating to and all is
right, when they
anything, and w hat
more one
that he is generally
are figuring him to be wrong.
Anybody can stand for a guy al
ways claiming to be right if they know
sure to be wrong, but naturally
claim
he is
everybody hates to hear a guy
he je right, "nd then have him prove
it.
Well, anyawy, one
eating
Jeff
fine eating ¢
this
Rambo and I are dinner
joint uptown, and orders
legs, which are ver)
times.
When Jeff
finds out that they have charged him
the ek ¢ sg along
a bucl yits for these frogs’
lees. which is a way of saying a dollar
wenty-five, and he lets out a terrible
roar about the matter.
H ether too much, |
le says it is altos
|
and he will be dumbed 11 he will yap |
call
joint, and explain Jeff's squak to
| 1
t. in the guy who runs |
the
So they

Girl Scouts’ Ten Golden Rules To Be
Pulpit Topic For Ministers Of The Nation
FA MERRY little girl in khaki is
‘A appearing on brick walls, fence
posts, and si nboards in every
corner of the United States and her
territories. She is the Girl Scout
poster girl and she smiles down on
Americans from New York to Cali-
fornia, and from Alaska to Hawaii
and Porto Rico, to remind them of
the Girl membership cam-
paign, November 6th to the 15th.
The Girl Scouts are asking for
$1,033,400 to take care of the thou-
sands of girls who must now be
turned away every month. The cam-
paign is to be a Dollar Membership
Campaign, and everybody who be-
lieves in training girls in home-
making, citizenship and health-build-
ing is asked to become an associate
member. ¥%
Girl Scout Week
one for every town and community
where Girl Scouts are organized.
THe first day the Girl Scouts will
have a service parade, after which
they will visit children’s and babies’
wards in homes and hospitals to
carry harvest offerings of fruit and
flowers to the little patients. One
of the features of the campaign will
be Daddies’ Day, a special day set
aside for men to become Girl Scout
Daddies at the bargain price of $15.00.
A Girl Scout pageant written for
the campaign will be staged by every
Girl Scout organization throughout
the nation. Even the Lone Scout,
that little girl who is the sole mem-
ber of a one-girl troop in some iso-
lated corner, will try to put on a
show and get associate members for
the Girl Scouts. The pageant de-
picts a week's calendar as lived by
Girl Scouts, and the symbolic figures,
Youth and Uncle Sam, will be repre-
sented, with Youth showing Uncle
Sam how she serves him day by day.
Monday is wash day for Girl Scouts,
as for everybody else in the world;
on Tuesday, they cook; Wednesday
they sew; Thursday is the Girl
Scout's day for community service;
on Friday she camps or hikes, Sat-
urday is baby-tending day; and on
Sunday the Scouts go to church.
In New York, Marguerite Clark,
the famous film actress, will take the
art of Youth, and Williara R. Cor-
motion picture actor who took
thi" part of Uncle Sgm in “Uncle
of Freedom Ridge”, will play
e Sam for the Girl Scout
Scouts
will be a busy

a
Bd with rel
Dia.
Logan,
BC pisey
\
128, 1.
Hates on

Thousands of Posters Tell
which the Girl Scout movement
stands. The Scout laws are:
Girl Scout's honor is to be trusted; a
Girl Scout is loyal; a [Girl Scout’s
duty is to be useful 3nd to help
others; a Girl Scout is friend to
all, and a sister to eve
ules on cuts a Gil Scout is
ue
Xe 5 Le ap
rough was well represented
Arm Products Show at Har.
|
Dyer an i
yor and wife of Florin
guests of relatives in the
ood attended the
rr Mrs. Sara :
alebach an
atives and friends
pnry Heisey and
3 sey sz daught
the guests of rel i]
e week-end.’
1 Market Hall
Ct, last evening,
as been appoin
Nyman at the Be ln Zed
+ South Poplar street.
Raffensberger, of Balti-
’as the guest of her par-
affensberger and wife,
pcond degree on a num-
=
. Zerphey
ar
BR
W_ Main
The
If you'are
HEATER,
h funeral of
ah Good at Mil

d wife spent a
atives at COOK
the cartoonist,
on South
elsewhere and I will
M # Tne
C. 0. F. con-
Thursday even-


of Girl Scout Campaign
Girl Scout is a friend to animals; a
Girl Scout obeys orders; a Girl
Scout is cheerful; a Girl Scout is,
thrifty; a Girl Scout is clean in
thought, word and deed. On Girl}
Scout Sunday, the uniformed Girl
Scoute will attend church with their
captain i
take ! him, and the guy
tells Jeff that he has
to pay eighty cents a pound for these
frogs’ legs in the market.
So then Jeff says to the guy like
this:
“Why,” Jeff says, “there is a pond
over abeck of my house in New Jersey
which is alive with bull frogs. I hear
them hollering at night ,” Jeff says,
“and,” he says, “if you are paying
eighty cents a pound for frogs’ legs
I will get rich off you.”
“That is fair enough,” the guy says.
“I will just as soon pay you for frogs’
legs as anybody else, and,” he says,
“the price for your frogs’ legs will
be eighty cents a pound.”
“All right,” Jeff will be
backing a wagon up to your joint in a
few days. And,” he expect
you to settle at once.
Well, a week or so goes by, and the
guy hears nothing much from Jeff, but
I am keeping tab on what comes off,
and I hear Jeff hires all the farmers
around his joint in Jersey and sends
them out to the pond to spear these
says, “I
says, “I
bull frogs.
He pays these farmers several bucks
a day apiece to do the spearing, be-
cause naturally Jeff figures with bull
frogs selling at such good prices in the
market, he afford to be liberal
with the farmers.
Well, one day
later, Jeff shows up at the restaurant
with a bucket in his hand, and in this
bucket is a pound of frogs‘
they are not such good frogs’ legs, at
that.
Naturally the restaurant guy wants
to know where are the rest of those
can
a couple of weeks
legs and
frogs’ legs which Jeff promises, and
Jeff says like this:

and
the |
broker,
as he is about the most
life. |
the
| of telephone
{ which is
j cent of
| paratus is
| conduits
ROOM SUITE, CARPETS R
etc., call and see me :
Wm. Darrenkamp
must admit I
“1 figured,”
Jeff says, ‘from the noise these frogs
“Well,” he
am deceived in the noise.
says, ‘1
are making over in that pond abck of
my house that there must be millions
of them, but,” he says, “it seems a few
frogs can make just as much racket
as a lot of frogs
“Anyway,” Jeff says, “I am
you can charge what you please
for your frogs’ legs as far as I am con-
cerned, because I know they are]
scarce.”
Phone Plant in
Day Uses 272 Tons
of Lead
In an effort to increase the output
the
responsible for
lack of
the
materials,
mainly
| present inability of the telephone com-
| panies to supply new subscribers with
the Western
brought its
Electric
number of
service,
pany has em-
factory at
the
Week,
main
Chicago, to
ployes at its
thorn 22.000
mark during :
3 a year ago. Virtually 95
the
per
world’s
manufactured at the Haw-
The
area of 210 acres.
thorne plant. factory
ended
material that
During the year which June
ymount of raw
collected was transformed
finished telephone equipment
The essentials included 3,500,000
pounds of copper, 18,000,000 pounds of |
steel, 100,000,000 pounds of lead, 1,000,- |
000 pounds of antimony,
pounds of brass, 9,000,000 pounds of
paper and 2,000,000
cotton yarns in addition,
vanized iron and steel
12,000
silk and
10,000 tons of ¢
tons of pol
feet
feet of
strand,
line hardware, 24,000,000
1
wire and
yer products, 12,000,000
and 10,000,000 glass insult
the
he Western Electric Com-
tors were purchased in
months by
pany for its telephone consumers.
On one rush day last month 272 tons
lead while the
.onsumption for a week was 1200 tons.
that
into
was used, average
C
Figures also show 71,000
wire were made
single week.
Europe Underbids |
U. S. in Argentina;
|
“In September,” says a report to the |
Corn Exchange National Bank from |
its Argentine representative, “the |
American dollar was at a premium of |
22 1-2 per cent and practi rally bronght
American business to a standstill. Va-
rious firms were badly hit as large
quantities of goods are arriving from
the States, long past due and the mer-
chants are raising quesitons as lo re-
ceiving them on account of the late de-
liveries. The fact is that they have
overbought and the American dollar is
too high to make the purchases profit-
able. They buy the same
goods in Europe at a lower price.
also can
“Furope’'s competition in hardware
and
strong at
cotton goods,
this moment
and their prices are under those
quoted from the States, even if the
American exchange was normal. With
reeard to the steel industry, plain xal-
vanized wire from Germany is being
quoted at $146 Argentine gold per ton,
steel bars from Belgium and Germany
at $95 Argentine gold per ton, steel
specialties, wool
iron, is very

wrong,
Com- |
Haw-'
against |
transmission ap-|
covers an
into |
10,000,000 |
pounds of |
of Tum- |
clay |
twelve |
miles |
cable m a |
plates, beams and shapes at $92 Ar-
gentine gold The above
prices are all c. i. f. Buenos Aires
land per ton of 2240 pounds. American
{ mills are not quoting prices which will
per ton.
|
|in any way compare with these and the
orders are going to Europe.
“The Obras Sanitarias de la Nacion
have just placed an order for 19,353
| tons of cast iron pipe with a French
firm at Pont-a-Mousson in France, in-
| volving an outlay of 20,638,722 francs.
| This pipe was bought at 1050 francs
per ton of 1016 kilos, ec. i f. Buenos
Aires, which is equal to $84 Argentine
gold. The firms in the United States
were exceedingly out of line in their
quotations of approximately $110
American gold per ton, which at to-
day's rate of exchange equals approxi-
mately $130 Argentine gold.”
A letter from a prominent United
States merchant in Valpariso, Chile,
dated October 16, says that there have
been a number of local failures there
| recently owing to speculation in such
rice, coffee and local
lines as sugar,
agricultural products. Encouraging
the Chilian situation are
{the election of President Allessandri,
| good agricultural prospects and good
nitrate Nitrate heen
| sold rv cently at the highest prices on
| features of
shipments. has
| record. Current shipments are larger
.{than current production.

|
|
|
Thusly quoth Farmer McRice—
“Hunters nowdays are not nice,
For yesterday one
Loaded his gun
And shot it off at me twice.”

v ”
“Oh, wifey, dear wifey,
Come » home with
Pled the new husband
On his bended knees.
But she would not go, though
He pleaded and pled—
“Wait’ll I bowl a game.
Harry,” she said








in need of a good
STOVE, BED
UGS,
before buying
save you money.
8%
BUT (OU HAUG THEM IN
BATTALIONS.
THE FAMOUS SLOGAN


wee,

~ LT IAD 8 Swi FUIGS IM A
RESTAURANT CAN'T BE HELPED,
YOU HAVE HEARD
[THE FLY,” HAVEN'T YOU 2
= OF A NEW ONE —
SWAT THE w
= PROPRIETOR
HERE IW
“SWAT
LZ
1'VE THOL GHWT





-~er
X = starting, light
X mour ind seasons of
/
Liquor an’ Sociability
Tell Binkley addressed our local
cider makers at Melodeon Hall last
night on “Th’ Relation o Liquor t’
Sociability.” Mr. Binkley told his
hearers that he did not want t’ be un-
derstood as bein’ o neither side o' th
wet and dry question—that he wuz
not in the pay o’ any league or society.
He said further that it wuz neither his
business or his ambition t’ purify any
community, an’ that he proposed t’
speak o’ liquor as he knew it jest th’
same as if he wuz t’ discuss tornado
insurance or any other subject with
which he wuz familiar. He also said,
“We're fortunate t’ be livin’ at a time
when th’ world is bein’ made over as
th’ result of a terrible conflagration
that has taxed th’ resources o’ many
nations. Millions o’
been turned back int’ th’ peaceful
channels o' life; great factories and
mills are: turnin’ ther energiies t’ th’
manufacture o th’ triplements 0’
peace; great international problems
lookin’ toward lastin’ epace are bein’
discussed. Great as this overturnin’
is—great as will be th’ changes we'll
undergo, whatever comes t’ us as a
result o' th’ war ’ll be puny an’ in-
significant compared t’ th’ awful jolt
which awaits sociability when th’ last
carload o' whiskey has been stolen
from th’ Kentucky Fer
a great many years it has been a gov-
ernment offense t’ give a Injun liquor.
Our government held that liquor de-
stroyed a Injun’s usefulness, that it
interfered with civilizin’ processes.
Our government has held that a Injun
under th’ influence 0’ liquor would
often buy buggies an’ bicycles when
he didn’t need ’em. That he would
sometimes kill. Yit our government
has not worried about how much liquor
th’ white man guzzled or how many
red vests an’ autos he bought while
stewed. A Injun should have th’ same
right t’ spend all his government pay
fer Stetson hats as th’ white man has
t’ fritter away his weekly pay fer beer
an’ cloth top shoes. But we'll take
up th’ social end o’ th’ booze game an’
talk about th’ temperate
drinkers’ that have t’ load up t’ be
affable. Some time ago 1
banquet. This banquet wuz timed fer
seven o'clock. At six-thirty th’ guests
men in arms have
warehouses.
thousan’s o’
attended a
begun t’ assemble in the hotel lobby.
Nobuddy was smilin’; nobuddy seemed
t’ know anybuddy else; all chins wuz
up; ther hand shakin’. It
looked like a convention o’ door men.
Ever’buddy wuz ill at ease an’ nervous.
I saw several fellers I thought I knew,
but I wuz afraid t’ approach ’em. At
door t’ th’ banquet
an’ we all filed in an’
By each
wuz no
seven sharp th’
room flew back
took our places at th’ table.
plate wuz a Kentucky toddy an’ a box
minutes th’
o’ cigarettes. In two
whole one broad smile;
then the
laughter an’ slaps on th’ abek.
room wuz
recognitions begun; then th’
A tall,
pombous feller with a pink head culled
feller” had
been introduced to fort)” years ago in
A little round feller
cognized me
me by name.’ He was a
Joplin, Missouri.
in nose glasses re across
an’ knocekd four tables over
gittin’ to ‘You
but I know you,” he said. He turned
out t’ be a feller 1 started t’
with forty-five years ago, an’ he'd lived
Island, fer th’
last $ After they
quit pourin’ wine an’ th’ pincipal ad-
th’ room
me. don’t know me,
school
in Providense, Rhode
thirty-eight years.
evenin’ had started, four-
10tel
wuz
dress o’ th’
fifths o th’ quests repaired t’ th’
where several quortettes
It finally developed that ever’
cuest there knew me. 1 couldn’ recall
them, but I glad t’ sec
an’ t’ learn that they wuz
abr
formed.
any o’ wuz
‘em all agin
all prosperin’ beyond th’ dreams 0’
avarice. Several days after 1 got
home I received a barrel o' applies,
four fountain pens, three neckties, an’
four boxes 0’ cigars.
Teacher—“What is a synonym?”
Boy—“It’s a word you can use in
place of another when you don't know
how to spell the other one.
rts
Bar Veils
According to English law, a woman
witness must raise her veil and expose
her face, so that the jury may judge
by her features as to her truthfulness.
Black Cat Held
Safety Symbol
British Cou
The wives of many English fisher-
men keep a black cat in the house, in
the belief that doing so assures their
husband’s safety at sea.
Mexicans Use
First Names
In Mexico men and women in the
same social circle call each other by
their Christian names.
Wise and Otherwise
Little Freddie—*“I ’spect I ought to
tell you that this ten cents is counter-
feit.”
Car Counductor—“What makes you
think so-”
Little Freddie—“Well, papa said
money talked, and I had this a whole
day and it hasn’t said a word.”
Young Hopeful—“Papa, you'll let me
cut off a lock of your hair, won't you?”
The Pater—“Certainly, my boy! I
am delighted to see that you have so
much affection for your parents as to
ask for a lock of hair by way of re-
membrance.”
Young Hopeful—“You see, papa, my
tail, and 1
wanted to make it a new one.”
rocking-horse has lost its
“My boy,” said the young man’s
father, “I am afraid your hard-up con-
dition is the result of your idleness.”
“Idleness!” was the indignant reply.
“And this after I've walked fifty blocks
today, trying to borrow ten dollars!”
Ephraim!” his
the’
gentleman in the hallway, “you
“Dear
niece
Uncle
exclaimed,
me,
as she met
know how surprised I am to see
Did you travel all the way from
alone?”
“Naw,” he replied deeply
mont
offe
at the question as he put his cg
“There were forty or
people on the same train.”
bag down.
thorough in his s¢
asked Bosbysh
“Is my son
work, Mr. Pedagog?”’
“Yes, he is,” said the teacher. “h
shows a tendency to go to thels :
of everything.
ss»in a few days.”
Mr. Bouncer—“You should remein-
ber, my son, that there is nothing at-
not
tained without labor. You need
to get something for nothing
Willie—“I get lots of
nothing,
expect
lickings for
anyhow.”
In the
Teacher—“Bobby Smart, give me the
second grade grammar--
feminine of friar.”
Bobby (briskly)—*“The feminine f
friar is cook.”
Fred—“What do
argument?”
Will—“Sound most
Fred—What else?”
Vill—“Nothing else, merely sound.”
you think of my
certainly
“Come, Herbert, I expect your uncle
today, and you must have your face
washed.”
“Yes,
come?”
ma: but s’posen he don’t
“There, mamma’
as he gazed at the dromedary, “that
the that had the last
straw put on his back.”
must be camel







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