Newspaper Page Text
VOL. 3.
H. H. M'OQNALO,
DI3NTI.3T*
Will be found at bit Office, Boom No. 3 White
h,-ad House, Conyers. Ga.. where he is pre
to do all kinds of work in his line. Pill,
in./ Tenth made a speciality.
rSTMI work Warrant*! to give SafisfaefionjJPf
thankful for past patronage, he re
sentfully solicits a continuance of the same.
Wrj,LMMS&Qmc
SEVEBOTH and JEWELER,
CONYKUS, GKOKOIA
watcnes, t ’oek, rml Jew lry of every de
scription repaired. All wo k done neatly, and
in order, at lowest prices for cash, and warran
ted to give satisfaetion. Shop : neat door to
Post Office. aug231876-ly
ff&WJVS *
Li&teFO*u>
BOGGY 1M I AGO* DEPOSITORY,
COWERS, OEOKGIA.
DK.It.ERB IN AND M.VNCPVCTVRERB OF
HAND CASTS,
WHEELBARROWS,
and VEHICLES of all kinds.
HARNESS, from the Cheapest to the
Renrcst. both Hand and Machine Stitch
<■,!. We keep the he9t
lUMDB lIKNBSB.
in Use, for CARRIAGES
BUGGIES, or one Horse WAGONS.
Can supply any part of HARN ESS on
short notice.
Also, a full stock of
LUMBER
n "real variety always on hand, for
house building purposes. Carpenters
and Contractors would do well to see our
special wholesale rates.
Mouldings, Entices, Stops, Strips, etc.,
a speciality, and made of any width,
thickness, or shape. Window Sash—
primed and glassed—Blinds and Doors,
either white or yellow pine.
Also suitable lumber tor Coffin*. We
always keep in stock Burial cases and
Caskets of various sizes and lengths,
from infants to adults—all at very low
figures. Coffin Hardware generally.
With our facilities, we propose to make
Coffins of any style, from the plainest to
the finest, cheaper than we possibly could
by hand alone. Give us trial and
set!
PATENT WHEELS.
I ful>s Spokes, Rims, Bodies,
Seats, Shafts, Pole* Dash Frames,
Springs. IRON in great
variety. Screws and Bolt* of hest
make. I’.itent and Enameled Leather,
Knarnelod Cloths, Moss and everything a
Trimmer needs. Full stock of best
t'mi age Paints, Varnishes, Oils, Colors,
Om ni cuts, and Paints generally. NEW
CARIJIAGES, BUGGIES
ami WAGONS always on hand, iu great
v arii ty. and can make to order any style
fr mi lily desired. Old ones Repaired,
Painted and Trimmed at short notice,
ami at living rates. We buy the best
material, and having suitable machinery,
are able to turn off work with neatness
and snatch.
Will constant devotion to our Bust
ness, Honest Dealings with our Custom
ers, Experienced Faithful Mechanics, and
the manufacture of Reliable Goods in
tour line, we hope to merit a liberal pat
ronage from a Generous Public. Thank
ing you tor your past favors, we will be
glad to see you again at our office on
Repot Street, near the Geo Ii R.
Respectfully.
Downs & Lanoforo
If, M. Lem M, #.
i : DRUGGIST and APOTHECARY.: j
Centre Street,
CONYERS, GEORGIA
—Dealer in—
DRUGS.
MEDICINES,
CHEMICAL. 4
1 erfumery and Fancy Toilet articles,
t. .. , PURE WINES & LIQUORS
lor Medicinal nsc.
d*p"p"’ oa *’ Varnishes. 4c, Trusses and shoui
t n r ? Bh Garden Seeds. Paten
"crintiraf 8 Uf aU kinds ' Pm
compounded..^®
mi m sjArgimnsi,
Pto tt. information as to best root,
sorts o r or to any Summer Ke
hotild ad ,'rcl ° t ler P oint i" the county
B W ‘ WEENN,
ntral * M#en ger Agent Kenneaaw Route,
Atlanta, Ga.
®te gichttate Jfatfislcc.
Sweet and Twenty,
*V OOBDON CAMI’BELL.
Maiden, thou art passing ivmt,
Sweet and twenty, fond and fair:
Joy and love before thee meet.
Tear* may bring their load of care.
Joy* are few and woea are plenty,
Then, come kiss me, sweet and twenty.
Honey-bees teach thi* to man,
A* each sweetest flower they taste—
Gather honey while y.i cun ;
What yo gather net ye waste.
Joy* ar few and woe* arc plenty,
Then, come kiss me, sweet and twenty,
A the bee the lioaey sip*.
Let me, folded in thine arms,
Sip the honey of thy lip.
Taste the sweetness of thy charms.
Joy* are few and woea are plenty,
Then, come kiss me, sweet and twonty,
autumn leaves.
"Come little leaves” said the wind one day—
Come o’er the meadows wirh me and play •
Put on your dresses of rod and gold;
Sommer is gone and the days grow cold.”
Boon a* the leaves heard tha wind's loud
call.
Down they com* fluttering, one and all:
Over the brown flelds they danse and flew,
Singing the soft little songs they knew,
“Cricked, good-bye we’ve been friends so
long !
Little brook, sing as your farewell rung—
Say you are sorry to see us go ;
Ab 1 you will miss us, right wre know.
"Der lille lambs, in your fleecy fold,
Mother will keep yo* from horm and cold:
Fondly we’ve watched you in vale and glsde;
Ssy, will you dream of our loving ahade t
Dancing and whirling the little leaves went:
Winter had called them, and they were con
tent.
Roou fast asleep in their earth y beds.
The enow laid a coverlet over their heads.
Georgia Cooper,
A Baptist Brother Gives His
Opinion fibout the Pres
by f erians.
Alady correspondent of the Indepen'
dent give* a sketch of a sermon she heard
in Georgia nearly a century ago, from
which we give nn extract:
The preacher wag apparently about
fifty year* of age, large muscular and I
well propotioned. On ent< ring the pul
pit he took off his coat and bung it on a
nail behind Rim, then opened hi* collar
and wristbands, and wiped the perspi
ration from hit, face, neck and hands.
He was clad in striped cotton hornespnn
and his shirt was of the same material.
He had traveled several miles that, mor
ning and seemed almost overcome by
the heat.. But the brethern sung a
couple of hymns while he was fanning
and cooling off. and when he rose he
looked comfortable and good natured.
He had preeched there once oi twice
before, but to most of the audience he
was a stranger. Hence he thought it.
necessary to announce IcmseH, which
he did as ‘Old Club Ax Davis, from
Scriven county, a Half Hard and Half
Soft Shell Baptist.’
‘I have given myself thrt r.ame,’ said
he, ‘because I believe the Lord elected
me, from eternity, to go ahead in die
backwoods and grub out a path and
blaze the way for other men to follow.
After the thickest of it is cat away, a
good warm Methodist brother will come
along and take my trail and make things
a little smoother and a good deal noiser.
And after all the underbrush is cleared
out, and the owls and wolves are skeer
ed back, and rattlesnakes is killed off, a
Presbyterian brother, in black lroad
cloth and w hite cravat, will come along
and cry for decency and Older. And
they,ll both do good in their sjiere. I
don't despise a larnt man, even when he
don’t dress and think as I do. You
coulden’t pay me enough to wear broad
cloth, summer nor winter, and you coul
den't pay a Presbyterian brother enough
to go without it in dog-day*.
‘God didn’t make us all alike, my
brethern; but every man has bis own
spere. When God has a place to fill he
makes a man and puts him in it. When
he wanted General Jackson be made him
;o fightin’ Injuns and the English ; when
he wanted George Whitfield, he made
him for to blow the Gospel trumpet as
no other man ever blotved it; and when
lie wanted Old Club Ax Davis, he made
him, and set him to grnbbiu’in the back
voods.
‘But my shell is'nt bo hard but I can
-ee good pints in everybody ; and as for
tie Presbyterians, they are a lonr; way
ihead of Baptists and Methodists in some
liings. They laise their children better
tian any people on the face of the earth.
>nly a few days ago a Methodist class
i ader said to me: Brother Club Ax. I
vas born a Methodist, I was raised a
viethodist; aud by the grace of (iod, 1
ope to die a'Metlrodist: but, thank God
L've got. a Presbyterian wife to raise my
GA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 18707
children.' And I beleive my brelhern
it the Lord should open lh. j way for me
to marry again, I,<l try iny oesi to find
a Presbyterian woman, and run my
chances ol break in her Into the saving
doctrines of feet-washing and immersion
afterward.’
Just at this point he was int rjpted
by two spotted hounds that had been
continually running up and down the
pulpit-stairs. One of them jumped upon
the sent and began to knaw his coat.
tai 1 , in which was something he had
brought along for lunch. He turned
slowly around and took him hy the ears
and tail and threw him out of the win
dow behind him, as eas'ly as if it had
been a young kitten. The other took
warning and got out as rapidly as pos
sible, though not ithoul howl'ng and
y elping as if it had been halt killed. lie
then turned to the audience and said,
smilingly j ‘St. Paul exhorted the breth
ren to beware of dogs. 1 wonder what
he would do if he were in my place this
morning! It appears like I am com
passed about with dogs, as David says be
was.,
He had scarcely commenced preaching
again before there was a 'cirible squeal
ing and kicking among the mules and
horses that were tied to wees close by.
He put his head ou*. of the wmdow, and
said: ‘No harm done, my brethern. Just
a oreatur with a side saddle on has brok
en 'oose. Will some brother head the
animal! for no sister can wa ! k home
this h*t day ’
Quiet being restored, he continued :
‘Well, my bret.'rern, I will now try t.o
say what I allowed to about the Presby..
tcrians.
‘As I said before, they raise the chil
dren a heap belter than we do. They
behave be'ter, in church, and keep Sun
day better, and read the Bible and ! arn
the catechism better than ours do. I
declare, my breibern, their children are
larnt that Westminister Catechism by
the lime they can begin to talk plain.
‘lt ain’t three weeks since I was out a
cattle hunting—for two of rry yearling’s
had strayed off—and I stopped in at n and
brother Harkey’s, on Mud Creek, and
toolr A;.,— .. .tracon in me I'iVS
pyterian Church over thnr. Well, as
true a* I st ind here, mv brethern, sisier
Harkey had her little ga> standing right
before her, with toes just, even with the
crack o’ the floor, and her hands was a
hangin' down by her side, and her mouth
turned np like a chicken when it dunks
and she was puttin' this question to her
out o’ that Catechism:
‘ *What are the benefit* which in ti"*
life do either accompany or flo.* fr nn
justification, adoption and sanotifiea
tion ?’
•Now, the question itself was enough
to break the child down. Put when sin
had to begtr to say that qtmstkn ah
over (for that’s the wav it wa- in the
book) and then hitch the answer to i'.
and which, all pu together, made l*i
‘The benefits which in this life do . it her
accompany or flow from justification,
adoption and sanctification are peace ot
conscience, joy in the Holy Ghost, in
crease of grace, and persevorenee therein
to the end,—l thought the child was
the greatest wonder I had ever seen in
all my life. She tuck it right through,
too, without balkin’ or iiiiscin the fi'si
word. And she spoke so sweet and she
looked so like a little angel, that before
I knowed it the tear* was arunnin do.vn
mv cheeks as big as buckshot. I’ve
seen the day when I coulo have matt Id
and split a thousand rails quicker and
easier than I could larnt that Ihir.g and
said it off like she. dub
‘Now, my brethern, that child didn’i
understand or know the rneapiil ot one
word o’ that. It put me up to take it
in inyse’t. But just let that Presbj twin
young tin grow up and every word of
that Catechism will come hack to her
and liar character will stiffen up under it
and she’ll have the liackbone of the rna*-
ler'in her for lite.
‘Now, I can’t put things into my chil
dren that way. Nothing don’t stay
somehow. It's like drivin a nail into a
rotten log.’
This last remark I never forgot. For
thirty years afterward, a9 I would stand
at the blackboard trying to fix rule* and
principles in the mind of a dull pupil,
this remark would come back to me
with its peculiar pertinency.
‘I tell y ou,” my brethern, he continued
“if oar chidren had a little more Cate
chistn, aid the Presbyterians a little less,
it would be beiter for both
‘Then we don't pray in our families
like they do. I know their prayers are
mighty long, and they pray all over
creation; but after all, it's the ri Hit
wav. Its better than prayin’ too lit
tle.
‘Now’, roy father and mother was
good ’Baptists, and raised their children
to be honest and industrious; but I never
heat’d ohe of thorn (gay in my life, and
I was most a grown man before I ever
prayed a prayer myself, aii(J it was on
this w ise :
'Ther'* was to be a big meet in’ over in
Elbert eoun’y, and I kno wed a pretty
ga 1 over that-that I wanted to go and
see. So I borrowed aIIt ie Jersey wagio,
which was a stylish thing in them days,
and went over to her Lou so and stayed
all night, and engaged her to i ide ‘ o
ic tneetin’ with me next day, which was
Sunday.
‘We went, and had a glorious lime—
and I may as well say right lore tint
she was afterward my wife—but a com in
home I met with a powerful accident
that I've never got’ over to this day.
As I was a cornin’ down a steep 1011,
some part of the gearin' gave way and
let me and the wa 'in on my oretur's
heels; and bein’ young and skerry and
not touch ust*d to wheels, she wriggled
and kicked and tore from one side of
the road to the other, till A was pitched
head foremost as much as ten foot into a
deep galley, and it s a miracle of mercy
that my neck wasn't broke on the
spot.
‘Expectin’ t )be killed every mint!. I
thought I ought to be ask the Lord for
mercy. But, as I had never prayed in
my life, I couldn't think of the first
thing to say but the blessin’ ny father
used to ask before eiiin' when v,*e bad
company, and which w-<s this: ‘Lord,
make us thankful tor what we are about
to receive. -
‘Now, my brethern, do your ‘spose
any Presbyterian raised boy was ever
put to such a stiail a* that for a prayer?
No. lie would have prayed for him
self and gone off after the Jews and the
heathens whilst I was a. huntin'up and a
gettin' i 0 that bkssin’."
The Inhumanity of Man Illustra
ted in a Sad Story of the Sea.
A terrible story of cruelty and inhu
manity was told ill Commissioner South -
worth's court yesterday. John Lacoque,
Captain ol the ship Texana, was before
tiy and cruelty on the high sea*, to hi*
time Lewis Teosso, an Italian. The
-lor , as aodueed in evidence, showed
that while the -hip Texana lay at anchor
in one of the Mexican ports, Teosso was
taken s'ck and lay in great agony upon
tie deck of the vessel. The Ca| tain re
fused to lielievc in the sickness of hie
mate and ordered him to duty. The
ma e was unable to obey and the Captain
became violently angry and brutally beat
and kicked him. The mate dragged
himself to Id, cabin, hoping to escape
further puiii-hmeut from the Captain
Lactqni* broug’t a doctor on hoard with
a viciv of securing an opinion from the
•nan ot seiene.- ibat Teosso was not ill.
' lu-doctor, bowt-vei, pronounced him
very sick uuii prescribed for him. 'I his
seemed o lin t her incense the (’apt in
against the helpless mite. Tile ship
sail' and soon fr this port, and when at
sea the Cap ain ordered Te sso to be
carried from li s cabin and thrown u on
deck. This was dove. Lacoque’s cruel
ty was not ye> K.-itisfii and. He stripped
him ot his rank and ordered him before
the mas-. Teosso was unable to perform
his duty ; he was >oo weak to move
Then the last ac* ot cruelty was inaugu
rated He was depr ved of all nourish
ment. He begged he s‘ewart lor a lit—
tie tea, but. even this was refused ilie
dying sailor by the Captain's order.
Four days he snff red with siv kites*, ex
bosire and the pains of the starvation,
and I he sh p reached the quarantine sia
tion below '.his city. There the quaran
tine physician gave him food and med
icine. On reaching this city comp aint
was made before Commissioner Soii'h
werth anil the • oininissioner having
heal'd the story, held Lacoque4o bail in
the sum of $2,500 for his appearance at
the next term ot the United Sia'es Cir
cuit Court to answer tin charge prefer
red against *‘ini.—A r . O. Times.
On ihe floor in a I anbury home iies a
little pile of sewing. Fiv<- months ago
the head of the house warned a chair and
seeing but one handy he dumped to the
sewing which lay oil it. t.is wife asked
hitn to pick it up. • He said he wou dn't
do it. She told him as he threw it there
it rnitld remain iinlill he got ready to
take it up. !-he would never touch it.
And there it remans, a immoral >o indi
vidual spirit- and un'ted folly —Danbury
News.
Rubbing the hands with cologne be
fore putt mg on kids, keeps them from
getting clammy.
Why is a blush like a little girl? be
cause it becomes a womoti.
More Dogs Than Ho Wanted.
An editor in reading, Pa., advertised
•he other da\ that he 'would lake a good
dog in pay m i:l ol one year's subscrip.
lion lor his paper. The in xi day forty
three dogs were Bent to the office. The
day afterward, when the news had spread
out into the country, four hundred farm
cis had sent two dogs apiece by , xpre>s,
wiin right baskets fail of puppies, all
marked C O. I>. In the iiniintiine the
ofl'e. found its way into neighlioi ing
|-States, and before the en 1 of the week
there were eight thousand dog* tied up
with ropes in the editot's front and luck
yards. The assortment included all the
kinds, from the bloodhounds down to
poodles. A few hundred broke loose
and swarmed on the stairways and in
the entries, and stood outside the. sane,
turn and howled, and hud fights, and
sniffed under the cracks of the door us if
they Were hungry lor some c ditor. And
the editor e’imbed out the window, up
the water spout and out on the comb of
the root and wept. There was no issue
ot the paper for six days, and the only
wav the triends of the eminent journalist
could toed him was by sending lunch up
to him in balloons. At last somebody
bought a barrel of arsenic and three tons
of beef, .md poisoned the dogs, and the
editor came down only to find on his
desk a bill from the Mayor for £8 000,
being the municipal tax on dogs at one
dollar per head. He is not offering the
same inducements to subscribers now,
and dosn't want a dog.
The Lazy Man.
A lazy man is always good n.itnred
He never flies into passion. He might
er:*;vi into one end, it iliat where possi.
b’e, but l!i" idea cf flying into one is
pro paste rous.
Wlio ever heard ol a lazy man break
ing into a bank where a crowbar had to
be used, or drilling into a safe? Not bn',
that lie might covert lii n< ighbor’s goods
contained therein, but, the horror of
handling a crowbar and drill wculd al
ways deter him from ac* nally committed
burglary. He n wer run* away wi.h his
negnoors wife, simply on account oftne
honor of running. It lie is ever known
ti run, it is to run to seed.
He rarely lie* about a bar neigh! or*,
tor it would be t- o much exertion ; b’>t
he beg about a bar room all day.
He is ot inestimable service to a bill
iard saloon, keeping the chair warm and
watching the game, for few would care
to play when there are no spectators.
The tact, that, lie does this without, pay
day in and day out, show* the unselfish
ness ot his nature.
The lazy man never gets up revolu
tions, insurrection* or other popular
excitement, and don't make a nuisance
ot hims.lt by tramping around the coun
try making incendiary speeches to pro
mote public discontent,
In his own neighborhood he is never
a busybody in o her people's affairs, for
t!ie ve y idea ot being a busybody
would drive him out of his head.
N > lazy man ever ran mad- If be
went crazy, it was because he couldn’t,
go anywhere else without walking.
Lazy men don't <1 slurb the quiet of {
p. ac-tiil neighbors by putting up, facto
ries, niniaces and other abomination'.
NO GBIT.
It was midnight The young man
. mo tareweded himself out of the house,
-n.d Eincline had locked 'he doer and
.vis untying *er shoes, wlu n her niotli
er came down stairs and said :
‘Wanted to creep up s airs without
my fienring you, oh? Didn't think I
knew if was an hour after midnight, did
you ?'
Tin girl made no reply, and the
j mother continued: ‘Did he propo-e
this time ?
‘Why, mother !’ exclaimed the dang' ■
er.
‘Y. ii can ‘why, moiher?' all you wai I
to, bin don't I know lie has been c lin
ing here for the Inst,year? Don't I know
that you've burned up at least four tons
ot coal courting around here ?'
The girl got her shoes off, and the
mother stood iu the stair door and
asked:
‘Erne ine, have you got any grit ?’
‘I guess so,'
‘I guess you haven’t, I just wish that
a fellow with Iplse teeth and a mole on
lii* chin would come sparking me, Do
you know what would happen, Fane
line ?'
‘No.”
• Well, I’ll tell yon. He’d conic to
time in sixty days, or he’d get out of
this marsion like a goat jumping for sun
flower seeds.’
Erie line went to bed to reflect over if-
A DOG AND MONKEY FIGHT.
Side Shew at a Nevada Race-*
Track-The Monkey Vic
torious.
[£n>tn the Virginia Chrom'd*,]
The i ace track was yesterday enlivened
by a very attractive prngrtiruinc, in
which a light between a dog and a mon
kvy was 'he lending speciality. While
the amusement was progressing a at run
g-rhove in sight with n small black
dog. and saimicml up to a post upon
which the monkey was basking in the
sun. Jo all oiitwa.nl appearance the
monkey was dead, and s a mod to have
been hung np on tl o post to keep out of
ihe way of the chickens. The stronger
moved up to the monkey and poked
'he lifeless animal with bis cane. At
ilic touch ot the stick the animals legs
swung back and forth without volition
on it Impart.
‘When did this monkey die?’ asked
the stranger of a small boy.
before the liny could luruish nn ex
planation of the monkey's taking off, the
black dog came np and sniffed the uni*
mals tail. 'I he next thing anybody
knew was the fact of the monkey sitting
astride the dog, and the dog howling and
squealing like a neglected candidate.
The monkey had fallen on him like a
cloudburst, and immediately the wildest
excitement prevailed. The crowd wa*
on hand at once, and Daggett, rush ng
about and flourishing an immense cane,
acted as master of ceremonies, and Joe
Stuart, pulling out a handful of twen
ties, wanted to lay od Is on the ntonkov.
As soon as the dog recovered from his
surpsise, and realized lbe somewhat im
portant tact that the monkey was one of
the quick instead ot tho dead, lie rose to
the situation and uudo a vigorous de
fence. Tlit* monkey, however, got the
dog hy the collar, and then winding his
tai' about the post, held him with a pret
ty subst: mini grip in one hand and onffed
him vigorously with the other. Under
this treatment the dog howled for mercy
mMrOwMw
hack yard with the tip of his tail curled
under his legs like u orescent. Tho
stringer who owned the dog stood hy. n
passive snd asfonbhed spectator ot the
s •'•ne. mid when the dog disappeared and
the monkev resumed h s state of topor
on the ‘.op of the post, the boy simp'y
remarked, ‘Don’t act like lie was dead.’
A Fearful Suicide Off the St. Louis
Bridge.
The bridge is fnst gaining a repulu
'ion as short cut to eternity. V e linv*
had i wo or three sensational affairs there
already, and yesterday added one to the
list. About ten minutes after two o'clock
yesterday afternoon ilie jiedestriatf* in
the vicinity of the seat pior, or at the
point win re the central span begin*,
ere horrified to see a man spring from
a position which lie had taken on the
outride i 1 the railing, a id tlnn gy firing
in the air ns he passed swift’y through
the gn at distance from roadway to wa
ter, strike the latter with a loud splash,
and disappear. Instantly several person
rush'd to (be spot whence lie had leap
ed, and watched :he water mstently in
expectation of seeing him come to tl r
surface. Bui there was -i stain of blood
on the water, caused hy t'm treiucm'f us
rccusttion, and that was all. If the bod
y rose at all, it was so far down as not
to lie visible from lliobridgCertain it
is that the poof wretch was dead before
he had stopped descending. Ho was a
goodlooking young min. about twenty
five years o'd, of inid iim height, light
hair, goatee and <•< tnph xiot, aid well
dressed. Near the p ace tia in wl icli ho
jumped was fotm- 1 a 1 trii.il t.ew over
coat, that probably led been v< in hut
a few hours. In its peek, t was found a
large lent her poel.it-book, indicating
that the owner was a mail of business.
It contained s>2-17 08 in bills of various
sezes. if also contained a copy of she
Chicago 7 ic, of the 15th, and a copv
•f the I’hiladclphhi Ho use hold limes of
of i lie Ist. On the inside margin of ono
of these papers were the words‘St. Louis
Kansas City and Northern.’ Tills was
i the only writing of any description that
J was fouud, and there is nothing by which
! a stranger might go to woik to establish
j identity.— *5/- Jjcuh Republican,
Burlington Ilawkoye; In all ages
painters whose genius has transit'red to
liie dull canvass pictures of soulful life
and glory, and who have made the dumb,
cold marble eloquent wilff beauty and
thought, have died of despair in vaiu at
tempts to catch the expression of a man's
face whin tm turns in speech lets wrath
to look ili" answer that his tongue can
not frame to his wi.'V- ‘I told vpu so.'
NO. 18.