Show Warm Corpse Too Much fer Nerves of Ghouls About one hundred years ago go a gentleman well ell known for lie mad pranks In which lie he delighted ell was past In t a n lonely In Midlothian when hen he saw V a well appointed pointed horce horse and trap standing unattended un unattended unattended attended before the gate te Curious to t kno know wh this might mean mem lie he crouched in the ditch by the wall walland wiland and waited united In a few fen moments two tao t 0 men came ont oot of the kirk ard carrying In asack a sack a long object which they the propped up on end nd on the spit sett elt nc next t tto to the er c Then they said ald about tools and PI cent ent back bick Quick as thought ht the watcher atcher pulled loan down do n the sack cock emptied Its Us grisly contents Into the ditch climbed Into the trap kot fot ot Into the sash sack nod and braced himself elC stiffly t Into position posit had he done so ro P I when hen the thet t two 0 men I and find threw some come tool tools Into the trap after fter which one got up In front and the other on the back Sent seat ud 1 ud as ns lie he wis nos l our adventurer now b began an to repent of ofhie his hie hn ha hastiness t ne reflecting that one corpse e ea was a as good is s another on the dissecting IlI table tahle where here in those tho e drys dl s questions were ere b by bno no means ns mensal al asked Suddenly the driver er turned to his Ills mite mate and In accents or of cr crIm crawling Im horror gasped a Mon lon the torp corps s I The fhe corp had presence of mind enough to moan n in a n hollow hollo tone tone 1 e a re all warns warm where here I come corne from There w were ere ere tw two to o w wild lid lid y ell ells the springs s of the trap hap bounced furl the horse horce broke into i a gallop and alien hen he lie got Jot out of his sack the gentleman n found himself elt lone alone helding head he hedIn In lag for at a great pace p The hor horse e trap harne harness g md nd tools tooh cen served d him well aUl ell for miny mn and no one e ever er er chimed them them-Edin them Edinburgh burgh Scotsman |