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'Sfc.AV
THE GEO R G I AF ENT E R PRISE,
Vol. VIII.
Breakfast Baron.
Siurar cured nnd Canvassed, Better nnd
s |,t,|.r lli 11 a'nDKItSO ji'jl DiLANEY.
Brooms.
.TfeANKt,
F. Burnham’* New lTnrbinc
P WATER WHEEL Jjj
To 1)0 the Best Ever Invontcd.
JL Pamphlet. Free Affilrre*, York,
Wc Mean Business !
i t TNEN Dusters, Sacks nml Punts worth from
'.♦ro to five Dollars Ht 7* cents to three dollars.
Sheeting* 10-4 worth 7") cents at $3 to 40 cents.
A Good line of Hosiery at COST,
Umbrellas fVein HO cents to $3.00
Barge Lot of Palm leal Fans.
WE MEAN BUSINESS, So come in and we will
prove what, we mean when wc say we will sell
i 'lotluntt. Hats, Shoes, and every other article
Usually kept in a first class Dry Goods House at
COST FOH CASIL
LEE & SON.
New Sale,
Feed & Livery Stable
COVINGTON* GA.
I AS9ENO*RS CARRIED FREE from the De
pot to the Hotel. Persons wishing to procure
conveyance*, can Do accommodated at all times,
gpcelal atteiUion paid to the Feeding and taking
•care of stock.
Omnibus will meet all Trains, and carry citizens
at 25 cents each. __
CARY COY, Proprietor,
Lee & Hightower’* old stand, Cor ington, (la
FOR, SALE, IJY STORE
ANl>
TO ARRIVE.
]OD nhds. BACON SHOULDERS.
t'o llhds, Clear Rib Bacon SIDF.S.
500 Boxes Clear Rib Bulk SIDES,
100 Hhda. Rc hoi led MOLASSES.
20 llhds. Cuba MOLASSES.
20 Puncheons Remora MOLASSES,
200 Barrels Ifaboiled MOLASSES.
00 Barrels New Orleans MOLASSES,
40 llhds. New Orleans PflGAllS.
35 llhds. Demarn SUGARS^
M Barrels R fined SU 3 Alls.
150 Pierces RICE.
150 Tierces Choice L°af LARD.
150 Regs Ciioioe L-*af LARD.
150 Boxes Rale SOAP.
150 B. xc-S and Half Boxes Adamantine
CANDLES. „
lull Bags Rio, Java, nnd L iguyra COt e Eh.
Brooms, Wi.i'dwnre, Spices, Starch, Maich
es, Chtiwilig and Smoking Tobacco. Twines,
Wrapping paper, at lowest wholesale prices,
WALTON, CLARK A- CO.
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.—2S,3m,
Fine Billiard Table.
I offer for sale a No. 1, Four Pocket Billiard Ta
ble. In use but a few months. lerms easy.
Apply to _[• N 111 ra -
French’s New Hoi el,
Vomer of Cortland atul New Church t>'ls.
NEW YOHK.
ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN.
RICHARD P. FRENCH,
Son of the l.ite.Coi.. RICHARD FRENCH, of
Crenel)’* Hotel, has tukeu tins Hotel, newly fitted
up nnri entirely renovated the b'nie. Centra ly
ZZdinthe BUNIN ESS PART of the Citf.
Ladies’ & Gbntlembn’s Dimxa Booms At-
Tatched. rfllt
New Cabinet Shop.
r AM NOW READY to furnish the pulAic with
kinds of
* fuiuvituhe.
and do all kinds of work in the Cabinet line. My
work is warranted, and sutisiaetiou guaranteed.
WOODEN BURIA ASKS and CASKETS.-
A Large and Select assortm Fine Rosewood
offins just received, which will oe sold at the
host reasonable prices. sizes kept on hand
ALSO
Coffins Made to O^der.
And General Repairing done at prWes to suit
ae* tfrrfcs. J. L. GR EER.
OovinMon, Ga., Jan. 41, UK3. 1,11 f
“Fine whiskies.
THE finest end best and purest Liquors in the
market, Can be found at the store of^^^
Covington, Ga.
Fine Syrup.
WE HAVE Just received fCTcral varieties of
lino Syrup. Call and examine, .
AN I)ERSON & DeLA NET.
F I o u r.
Kennesaw and Marietta Flour at Atlanta prices,
freight added, to be found at LEE & SON.
Success the best test of superiority: the won
ileriul demand for SIMMONS’ Ll\ I K RE(,I LA,
’l'Oll is one of the convincing profs that this ar
ticle is appreciated above everything else of the
kind. However much its jealous detainers may
throw their sliatts, truth will prevail, and so will
this medicine. lmb.t
H I Nlt 1 D. CAPERS
Alfornc£ and Counselor At Law.
COVINGTON, GEORGIA.
WILL Practice In the Court* of tho Flint nnd
Ogmnlgee Clrc l“, the Supreme Court of
Georgia, and elscwherei under special contract,
Having perfected arrangement* for the prosecu
tion of Claims against, the United States, I will re
ceive such and forward them to my correspondents
n Washington City.
Purest and Best
CTTAMPd GNE C 11) ER.
I HAVE Purchased the Bight to manufacture
Jersey Champagne Cider, in Newton County,
for fifteen years. This i* a. excellent drink and
will bo furnished to families cheap. Come and
try it, and yon will he satisfied that it Is as good
If not better than any brought here. I will sell
by the glaB, gallon or keg, and warrant it as be
ing pure and treeh. HARRISON KEttlit.
ICE AND ICE CREAM,
nri keep always on hand plenty ot pure Lake
and Manufactured Ice. Icecream kept on band
during the Summer. Families or individuals will
he famished with any of the above articles at
short notice anil on cheap
Covington, Ga.—35.3m.
Hams.
The best Sugar Cured Hams in Market.
Call and try them.
ANDERSON A DeLANEY.
Look Here !
TACRSON’S Magic Balßam. a Frc?h supply of
Morphine, Mustang Linament, Tntts, Ayer .
and Railway’s Pills, Just received at the More or
K2TOLD WHITTEN.
CANDIES, PLAIN AND FANCY
A Large lot of Fresh Candy -Plain nnd
Fancy, just received at "Vi 111 TIEN S.
Stationery.
Just Received a select assortment of every
variety of Stationery. Call and examine the
quality and price. BRASH AM A JONES
New Barber Shop.
o"<>OD CUTS soil Ciena Shaves. Give me a
trial and I will guarantee satisfaction. My Bliop
is in the Old Express Office, Covington, a.
T am hotter prepared to give satisfaction now
than ever, as my shop is newly fitted np.
Itt GEORGE JOHNSON, Colored Barbel.
Buffalo Beef.
A fresh Lot Just received hv
ANDERSON A DiLANEY.
NEW CLOTH ING.
For Men and Boys.
All Sizes, Grades, Style and. Prices,
Just Arrived fit LEE sSr SON.
Pay UpF
PERSONS Due me will please come forward imd
settle. I SELL FOR CASH—not longer limit
30 days, over 30 days I charge Bunk rate <d In
terest. 1 . ii iI- ■
T. D. Frierson,
DEALER'IN
White Pine Doors, Sash and
r*v Blinds, Mouldings, &e.
3m2fi Broad street, At'nnta Ga.
Nails
OLD Dominion Nails at 71-4 cents
per pound. Lee & Son.
Greene & Rossignol,
SUCCESSORS TO
Dr. Wm. H. Ttxtt,
Wholesale Dealers in
Drugs,
Medieinpet,
Cl loirii cals',
Perfumery,
Druggists’ Sundries, -
Paints,
Oils,
Varnishes,
Glass,
Brushes, &c. &c.
Largest stock in the cit v.
GREENE & ROSSIGNOL,
264 Broad Street, Augusta.
~'brmhXmTjonss -
D T!U GG-tSTS
COVINGTON, GA.
WE KEEP a well selected stock of PURE
DRUGS, Medicines, Chemicals and Patent
Medicines of all kinds, always on hand. Our
Paints, Oils, Colors, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass, Putty
COMBS, BRUSHES, SOAPS, PERFUMERY
AND fancy toilet articles,
Will be found COMPLETE.
Wine Brandies, Wines, Whiskies, niuf
Champagne, For Medicinal Use.
We will sell Drugs as CHEAP as they can he
Ought in Atlanta, at retail.
ALSO, FINE TOBACCO 'AND CIGARS.
jTr Physicians’ Prescriptions careAtll.v com
pounded,
E. A'. BRANHAM, M. I).
W. TANARUS, JONES.
0
t)r. BRANHAM
OFFERS his Professional Services to the citi
zens of Newton and adjoining counties.—
Oltiee at the Drug Store, where he will he found
day and night-—4Ltf.
(jar Load of Bran.
.ARRIVE THIS WEEK.
| LEE & SUN
COVINGTON, GEORGIA AUGUST 1, 1878.
An Instant with an EttrlhqiMkr,
Full details liavo been received in
London concerning tho earthquake in
Italy on tlie 2i)th of June, Mr. W,
Stark writes from Venice lo the Fall Mall
Gazette that as ho was sitting up in bed.
and awake at the time, lie was able to
observe ail the phenomena attending it.
lie noted tho hour ot the morning, the
exact time tho undulating movement ol
the earth continued, its direction, and
tho duration and inclination of each
wave, and his statements arc exactly
borne out by tho Royal Observatory in
Venice, their nnthority resting on the
self-recording instrument used in tJiat
establishment. The sensation produced
by the earthquake itself was most extra
ordinary. The solid earth seemed for a
time to have been converted into a liquid
one, and the houses on it were tossed
about like ships at sea, moving up anil
down to rapidly succeeding waves.
There were fourteen movements in
all, seven forward and seven backward,
and each movement occupied a second,
as regular and even in their brat as the
pendulum of a clock, and with the last
backward movement there was a sudden
and instantaneous stop in its centre —the
earth was firm once more, and the build
ings on it remained upright. If the
waves in the earth had followed each
other with more rapidity, and had not
been so slow and regular, Mr. Stark
thinks tho whole of thp Venetian States
would have been one mass of ruins and
the Joss of life prodigious. Happily,
the waves were wide enough and slanted
sufficiently to carry the houses with them
without any extraordinary strain on
their masonry and woodwork. The
movement in reality was so great and so
prolonged that, not being a good sailor,
Mr. Stark felt land sick, not fancifully,
but really and simply from the undulation
in the earth.
Mr. S. Baring-Gou'tl writes from Bel
luno that the sensation was as if one were
0 i board ship and the vessel had been
struck midship by a wave. The house
staggered, reeled, and then seemed to
right itself. At Acqua Bona, three miles
south of Cortina, cabinets were thrown
down. At Belluno a part of the town
was ruined, nine persons killed, and
many injured; the greater part of a
clinch tower, with three of the bells,
was thrown down, a fragment of the
tower and one bell was left standing.
The Uriels of Childhood.
These bitter sorrows of childhood'.
wticri c. I- -II - X
when hope has not yet got wings to fly
beyond the day and week, and the space
from summer to summ r seems measure
less. “Ah, try child, you will have real
troubles to fret about by'and by.” is the
conso'ation we have almost all of us
had administered to us in our childhood,
and have n p ated to other children since
we have been grown up. We have all
of us sobbed so piteously,' standing with
tiny bare legs above our little socks,
when we lost sight of our mother or
‘nurse in some strange place; but we can
no longer recall the poignancy of that
moment and weep over it, as we do over
the remembered sufferings of five or ten
years ago. Eveiy one of those keen
moments has left its trace, and lives in
us still, but such traces lmvo blent them
selves irrecoverably with the firmer tex
ture of our youth and manhood ; and so
it comes that we can look on at the
troubles of our children with a smiling
disbelief in the reality of their pain.—
Is there any one who can recover the ex
perience of his childhood, not merely
with a memory of what he did and what
happened to him, of what he liked and
disliked, when he was in frock and
trousers, but with an intimate penetra
tion, a revived consciousness of what he
felt then—when it was so long from one
midsummer to another ? what he felt
when his school fellows shut him out of
their game because lie would pitch the
ball wrong out of mere willfulness ; or on
a rainy day in the holidays, when he
didn’t know how to amuse himself, and
fell from idleness into mischief, from
mischief into defiance, and from
defiance into sulkiness; or when
his mother absolutely refused to
let him have a tailed coat that “half,”
although every other boy of bis age had
gone into tails already ? Surely if we
could recall that early bitterness, and the
dim guesses, the strangely perspective
loss conception of life that gave the bits
tefness its intensity, we should not pooh
pooh the griefs of our children. Child
hood has no forebodings; but then it is
soothed by no memories of outlived sor
row.—George Eliot.
The last rumor bearing upon the
short crop of hay is that the farmers
have lo hither their meadows to enable
them to shave oil any grass. —Rochester
Union.
——a—ii
One morning, recently, a Chicago
woman borrowed S2OO of her husband,
and in the afternoon fluttered under his
nose a divorce that had cost precisely
that amount.
The negro who was hanged at Suffolk,
Virginia, the other day, ieuiurked us lie
was going to the gallows ; •“! wish dev
had put it ofl till afterwatermelou time.”
I’ie-Nics in the North.
We lnvo published, under a New
'ok late, a lamentable statement of the
efiuVncics of our region in the matter of
duatipn. VYp don’t hear the Northern
res bewailing such deficiencies at home
p ny great extent, so we judge that
be have plenty of education there,
DC as it is; what it is we have a right
b other from their press, under the np
fliltion of tho Divine rule “Tty their
jt'iß ye shall know them.” Such fruits
nsho Walworth case grow high up,
vrl the lower branches bear the New
At Herald thus exemplifies:
h, if we could only have the picsnic
pu and simple, ns Adam and Eve
rnitliavo held it ere Eve picked the
ap: to make Adam a turnover! We
wnno green groves demoralized; no
gLvorin’s glen of chastity made infa
nte. Childhood and wild witod are
mil as well as literal rhymes—the one
is * patrimony of the other, and we
pote this fair inheritance every time
wanction a party of brawlers among
it iler the name of a pic-nic. Possibly
tie were errors in tho old-fashioned
f-sal, but there are crimes in the new
fanned one. For every accident then,
wave anew vice now; for every cas
ua, an outrage. The modern pic-nic
is numerous cases only an excuse for
liciiotts brutality on the part of one
send a semi-iriebriated collusion on
thipart of tho other. More than
hajonscious of the passionate denoue
mu to which tho flushed transition
st;s that she yields to will lead, tho
ruß girl may almost be said to connive
wilier tempter. Parents, guardians,
nvrs, mistresses could if they behaved
witravery and tact, do a great deal
ton! reducing the evil, and perhaps
wijafcc the effort after having suffered
ale longer from their supineness,
co’dice and neglect. —Mobile Daily
litter.
Grant anil the Grabbers.
'President's demand that his culpable
C ij'ssionul adherents shall restore their
batay to tho Treasury, provokes a sardon
ic. rot fanrcasticil’’ grin from the Boston
Pol It Si vs:
fls nit often given to a President to show
suqushrig unselfishness as this. The wi 11-
inojjrifi* by Artemus Ward in (he cause of
Wvfian|ired country had no such touching
eiemoj, j;t as tin's. Nothing but the inex
orab'iAuhinders the President himself from
returned* larger personal share of the
voted nder IT., t, tv--' —T™Vio l ~h : p
i accept it with what equanimity
'cV banding back their crab to the
Tte> y hum which they took it, lie advises
\ o to repeal the unpalatable law itsclt. Ho
,tnrally sorry that such a repeal will not
;b his own case but that is no reason why
nav not urge it on those whose ease it does
h, and urge it with all his official mflu
n f„ r the goo! of the Republican party that
jngages his personal solicit" 10. The sequel
I put the President in just this posiuon : if
[rrress were to respect the popular demand
I repeal the law, while the members had
hived themselves so deeply and got nothing
1!iow for it, ho would take the credit of ad-
Hie repeal, while the benefit of it to
isolf remained undisturbed,'’
fa. Da,is and ms Forme* Slaves.—The
Louis Advocate relates the following inci
it among the many pleasant ones of the
ont visit of ex-President Jcffrson Davis to
it city :
lAVliile Mr. Davis was being called on by
iwds of respegtable citizens, and receiving
infestation of respect from hundreds of the
Rt prominent and worthy ladies and gentle
n of the city, there occurred a little episode
a very pleasing character. One night, du
g his stay at the Planters’ House, he was
rnaded by some colored people who were
tnerly his slaves. After their dulcet strains
I ceased, Mr. Davis called them into his
an, where, after cordial greetings on both
cs, and a little chat about old times, he
le each a handsome present. At another
te during his stay he was called on by an
c aunty who had been the nurse of his old
(,child. The affection that the ex-slaves
uni Tested for their former master, and the
jprest which he manifested for them and
ttir future welfare, wore really affecting.
I'hcre is a girl at Marietta who extorted a
tfession from her lover that he was \7orth
one hundred dollars and some clothes, and
vs too poor too mnrry. Now this cruel crea
te looked searchingly into hia brown eyes
id said : -
ti And is this the reason you have postponed
I often our marriage?”
‘•Yes,” he replied.
“Then it shall be so no longer—we will get
tarried,” slio replied.
And thus the poor young martyr was cut off
j t h e prime of youth and single blessedness.
Inis are tho weak oppressed and the cruel
Hade strong.
Highly colored social item: A Lexington
tpenue man, in a fit of anger, threw his wife’s
iLolden hair fluid” out of the window. It
fies the whole chignon and the exposed por
(ons ol the natural hair of another man’s
l ife, in "the street below. Both husbands are
p Canada. _
Perform a good deed, speak a kind word,
hvstow a pleasant smile, and you wilt receive
one in return. Tho happiness you bestow
others, is reflected back in your owu
L use r.i.
Guard Well Thy Lips.
0 V MISS ELLIOTT.
“Ho that koopotli his mouth keepeth his
lifo,''—Prov. xiii, 3.
Guard well thy lips; none, none Can know
What evils from the tonguo may fliw ;
What guilt, what grief, may bu incurred
By one incautious, hasty word.
Bo “slow to speak look well within,
To check what thero may lead to in ;
And pray unceasingly for aid,
Lest unawares Miou be betrayed.
“Condemn not, judge nut’'— not to man
fa given bis brother's faults to scan ;
One task is thine and ono alone,
To search out and subduo thine own.
Indulge no murmuring*, oh, restrain
Those Ups so ready to complain!
And if they can bo numbered, count
Of one day’s mercies the amount.
Shun vain dismissions, trifling themes ;
Dwell not on earthly hopes or schemes ;
Lot words of wisdom, meekness, love,
Thy heart s true renovation proved
Sot G id beforo thoo ; every word
Thy lips prnnounco by Him is board ;
Oil, oouljs't thou realise this thought,
What care, what caution, would be taught I
Think on thy parting hour; ore long
The approach of death may chain thy tongue,
And powerless all attempts ho found
To articulate ono meaning sound.
“The time is short’’—this day may bo *
The very last assigned to thoe:
So speak, that shoulds't thou! ne’er speakl
more,
Thou mayst not this day’s words deplore, t
CLESAIUSM.
In a lengthy article on this subject the New
York Horald of the 11th inst., calls attention
to the rapid approach of the federal govern
ment toward imperialism. This may indicate"
the discovery by the masses of that section of
the truth which led the South to seek-safety in'
secession. Tho party of fanaticism is incapa-'
bio of comprehending liberty and consequently
tho tyranny and usurpation manifested in
rule, clearly indicate the wisdom of the
of withdrawing from the falling fabric. Ilav j
ing failed to escape by that course, howevei
wo are involved in the common ruin which it,
now imminent ; of which the Herald speak;
thus earnestly : 11
This is tho dominant issuo. Shall we havc^'
Caisarisiu OF.lfftnuy MV" tiro- \>fvuiftftm, ‘*AG HI If
nominate himself if he chooses. Thero is no
power in his party to break his control of it 1
AVhether he does or not, tho issue remains.—
If he retires then we owe to his mngnanim*
ity relief from a great danger. While wt°
should honor him for doing so, ns he would'
be honored in all time, we should feel thn 4,
that constitution is imperfect which leaves the 1
people’s liberty at tho mercy of any maa’sf
magnanimity. What we want is a purer, no ‘
bier public spirit. Cie-arism does not res*
with Grant alone. Perhaps of all mon in his
party he is tho freest from it. But on th J
giddy height on which fortune has placed hir*
one knows not what dreams may come, epc ,]
daily if one sleeps under the incense of flat!
terers. Wo had Caesarism in the Credit Mo
bilier—Cuesarism in its worst form; and all
though that arose before the time of Genera 1
Grant, in the evil days of Andrew Johnson
the men involved in it—Garfield, Dawes, II iE
son, Bingham, Kelly, Patterson—wen
the mainstays of tho President a administra
tion. Chief among them was the unfortunate
Colfax —a man who left the Vice-Prcsidcncy.
under n cloud as great and n9 deserved as fcha {
which enveloped Aaron Burr when ho retiree
from the same office. Men of this class
Caesarism possible in Rome, and they have low
cred our public tone. When we sco the Pres
ident covering Mr. Colfax with his endorse
ment and sending another of the unholy com
bination as Ministor to a foreign Court, wha
can wo say ? Bow art thou fallen, 0 Colum
bia, from tho days or Jcfforson and Adams
when men like these rule the State and com
mand the respect and affection of the honest
simple, straightforward soldier,Grant I
The man who can bo nothing but serious,
or nothing but merry, is but halt a man.
[Leigh Hunt.
A Cure for Low SrißiTs.— Exercises for
the body, occupation of the mind, those are
the grand constituents of health and happi
ness, the cardinal points upon whioh every
thing turns. Motion seems to be a great pre
serving principle of nature, to which even in
animate [things arc subject; for the winds,
the waves, the earth itself is restless, and the
waving of trees, shrubs and flowers is known
to bo an essential part of their economy. A
fixed rule of taking several hours’ exercise
every day, if possible, in the open uir, if not,
undercover, will bo almost certain to secure
one exemption from disease, as well as from
attacks of low spirits, or ennui, that monster
who is ever waylaying the rich and indolent.
Throw but a stone and the giant dies. Low
spirits cannot exist in the atmosphere of bod
ily and mental activity.
A young lady in Wisconsin, while at
tending a p;c nic the other 1 day, neatly
lost her reason by stepping on the body
of a suicide in climbing over a fence.—
The body was (hat of a man who had
out his throat with a razor and had lain
undkooYcrsd for many days.
Sikhhk the Declaration.'
Tho following gossip about the Declaration
of Indopcndonoo is from Wood’d Household
Magazine, and is by the Uov. J. B, Wake
loy
In looking at tbe signatures, not one U
writton with a trembling hand except Stephen
Hopkins.’ It was not fear that mude him'
tremble, for ho was as true n patriot ae any of
them, but was nlfticted willi the palsy,
But ono of the residences of tho signers it
attached to his name, and that is Charles CtN
rol, It is said that ono was looking over hit
shoulder when he wrote his name, and sail)
to him, “There are several of your name, tnd
tbey will not know whom to arrest;" Ho im
mediately wroto, “of Carrolton," at much at
to say, if thero is roproach connected witb<
this, I wish to bear ray share; if any danger,
lum ready to face it. There was genuine pa
triotism.
It was rather amusing, after they had signed,'
their Dames, to hear Benjamin Franklin my tti
Samuel Adam*, “Now, I think we will all
iiang together,’’ ‘Yes,’ said Mr. Adams, “or
we shall Imng separately." Many have tup- 1
posod that all the names were signed on the
4th of July, 1776. Not so. It was signed on
that day oniy by the President, John Han
cock, and with his signature it was sent forth
to the world. On tho 2nd dey of August if
was signed by all but one of the fifty-six sign*'
ers whose npmes v are appended to it. The
other signed in November, tbe pen used by;
the signers is preserved in the Maiseehusetts’
Historical Society at Boston. What tales that
pen could tell if it oould speak 1 What •
connected with it 1 ' ,
some'timo to | I
amusement of these gooa friends of mine when ,
they understand tho truth ; but understand it,
they never will,
A knowing Radical paper out West
regrets that the expiration of the frank"
ing privilege will deprive the freedmen
of the South of the only means by which
they could obtain valuable political doc
uments free of cost. This is a deplota- *
bio deprivation indeed. How often have -
we, in traveling through the South, seen
thousands of freedmen sitting on the tops •
of ten-rail fences for milos along the •
highway, their black heads looking like
tho high notes in a bar of music, road"
ing tho half-dozen,volumes of the Ku-
Klux report with all the intense eagerness
displayed by Silas Wcggs when he read
the Decline and fall of the Russian Em
pire to Mr. Boffin.— Courier Journal.
When a crowd of jayhawkers started
a disturbance in a Texas church, the
other day, the preacbor .raised up a shot,
gun anil said: “William JDello, sit
down, or I’ll make it painful for you.” .
William sat down and was as quiet as a ‘
lamb. . /
No' 4ti