Show ty ina IRY TALI 49 ady grahm 4 admer 01 MASTER my family said blaster alaster moulton mention canne came front from sat sardinia deinla for we are known as is the wild sheep of sat sardinia attila sly ay mother was brought from tile the mountains of sardinia when hen slie she was very young tind and so was my illy father how handsome my illy father is w with fill his beautiful color coloring lug hj his two exquisitely curled horns borns ile he Is a vely fine looking fellow and lie he knows it there is nothing modest about my father ne he certainly knows lie Is handsome lie he Is quite willing to admit it lie he will even boast of it wilen when given a chance gut but lie prefers to be admired rather that than to boast of ills own beauty lie ile says ile he would rather have the admiration coming from someone else that is really perfectly natural anyone would rather have someone else admire one than to keep admiring ones own oin self all tile the time well well avell well I 1 shall grow up tip to be like my father I 1 too will want to ie be admired I 1 feel it now I 1 feel that I 1 long to be c cared ared tor for and ant to lo have my horns admired and also my lily coloring colorin I 1 want to tell people that I 1 ins born in the zoo and that it itself Is very interesting tere te aln 1 I like to tell people that here I 1 was born as I 1 just said and that here I 1 am being raised and that here I 1 live im like a child of this country with foreign parents but I 1 dont mean that tile tho coun Is parent I 1 mean that I 1 was born in this country I 1 am frien friendly lly just like my father I 1 want to have everyone as my friend my itly father says his friendliness lias has often been spoken of and even written about so that many would know what a friendly soul mr Alou flon was and still is and lie was very proud for lie he heard that many folks said they knew how sirs irs admit ed him all and that it was a fine tiling thing to have lots of people know how bow ones mate admired one he said it was more of a compliment to have ones mate admire one than anyone else with the possible exception of the keeper for he be said tb that at ones mate saw one all the time when one felt well or poorly when one felt cheery or sad or happy or cranky ones mate saw one when one was getting up and when one was going to tc bed and ones mate knew it if one lot got out of bed on the right or the wrong side 1 I was very much puzzled when he said tills this to me but now I 1 know what he meant for he has explained it to me since I 1 want to tell him at first that I 1 did not understand but 1 41 t jav knows he Is handsome I 1 really think it Is always better to admit when one tinder understand stand everyone cant know everything and the only way to know more Is to find out more well my father told me that of 0 course we sleep in beds and so go we get out of bed on either the right or the wrong side really but he said it was just an all expression IT ne e said that sometimes people would say that they had gotten out of 0 bed on the wrong side when perhaps they 0 only Y had one side of their bed to get out of the other side might be up against the wall the expression meant though that when one got out of the alie wrong side of the bed it meant one got up feeling cross and cranky and thinking c everything was upset and wrong and not lit at nil as one would have it and it if one got out of the right side of the bed it ft meant that one got up feeling pleasant and cheerful and feeling that everything was fine lie ile said that a mate knew always just how her mate felt and whether he was pleasant or not and so the opinion of ones mate mea means US S so much tor for ones mate was always about whereas visitors visitor only saw one when one had ones company manners with one I 1 so I 1 nm am going to grow up to bo be like my father I 1 shall want to be admired and I 1 hall look after my health with lite lie at aid of the keeper for health call means beauty they tell me and I 1 shall be friendly tor for a cross thing could never be admired for ion long neither a cross thing nor a cross moli flou he ended |