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Show etin' dat liT chestnut sor'l pony o' mine. Brer Harris!" Then the elder gave it up. Clearly the tenth commandment was against him. Chicago Tribune. GOT THE BEST OF THE ELDER Apt Quotation of Brer Reuben Saved His Mule and at the Same Time Rebuked Sin. Elder Harris was making another attempt to Induce one of the members of his flock to trade horses with him. "Dat pony o' your'n, Brer Reuben," he said, "is jes' what I want, an' my big bay hos is jes' what yo' want. I kin git over de groun' faster wid de pony, an' you kin haul a bigger load wld de hoss. Hit'd be a good trade fur bofe on us, 'ceptin' dat it'd be a leetle better fuh you dan it would fur me. You take de bay and give me de cheB'nut sor'l." "De pony suits me well 'nough, elder," el-der," averred Brother Reuben, for the twentieth time. "I don' keer t' make no swap." "But I Jes' natchelly got t' have dat pony, Brer Reuben." "Elder," spoke the other, after a period of profound thought. "I been wantln" t' ast yo' a question for a long time." "Well, what is it?" "I know w'at one o' de 'postles says 'bout de law beln' done away with, but ain't we still livin' undah do ten com-man'ments?" com-man'ments?" "Brer Reuben," solemnly averred Elder Harris, "we air." "Well, one o' dem comman'ments says we mustn't covet anyt'lng w't b'-longs b'-longs t' our neighbors, an' you're cov- |