{ title: 'The picket. (Rockville Center, L.I. [N.Y.]) 1865-1870, October 14, 1870, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85025689/1870-10-14/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85025689/1870-10-14/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85025689/1870-10-14/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85025689/1870-10-14/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
VOL. 6. TO Takk} i Leung na ne Lhe The eme | cxanat oust Thal ud mos once d o In Ho on « openied Bont I brtug them, estour, sil ie bhee ae toe apreal Ter bas M. he ur us The 1 vrs, Phe heat 1 amet read A fuithicss wandering thins, An evil heart indeed | wring it, Saviour, new to Ther, Phat fixed and fuitfed \t may Le 10 Thee I bring my owe, Phe care I canner che Thou wilt met only stir, But tks Soul fer im O loving Mariour, bow le [rie 1 Liming Ure load we anes s, I hrhog my wre dee Phe Phearmict 1 race No words chos ecdof ta Thou: knowest ul se we I bring the sorbosw sol et tik, 6 mavfoan, 2 te Phe My jojya (o Thee ) bmiag, The coys Thy leve bas given, [hat encliormary be a w hus To lift me nearer Reason I ther, Mwy mour, all to Thee, Woss hast procured them ali tor tue My life I bring to Thee, 1 would not he ny own: U0 Saviour, let fire « Thine ever, Thine alone' My heart, my fite, tuy all ( hring Lo Thee uns mas and ins King Dumiay Magazine SCRIPTURE NAMES. ---mite-- BY J. Eo Howl *\ am Huz, and ny twin brother is Ruz. I am certain wae should not have chosen these namer for ourselves, if our taste had heen consulte. They are Neripture pames, to be mure, but thuy do not seem to me at all sacred, and they wre decidedly not ngri-GAMN I aim not up in Hebrew, and can not tell what they signify Our full names are Huz Jones and Baz Jones. 'To the latter the ornaments] sppendage of \ Eaq.\ has Iwen for some time atteeched, «ince my brother achieved the dignity of \ justice of the peace and quorum.\ What the \quorum \ may be I can not tell , I doubt if Buz can You will perhaps. ask how we came by such odd, allicerative Christian names as Huz and Ruz, T will tell, as it was told Tee, Hull(1 l hHVe mxii flil’ kwllflv— mg the atory. Our father, John Jones, was of contetnplative rather than nective ; haluts, though nether titerary no «tudr- ous, and as as able-bodied as any nusn in the neighborhood Aw'l‘nrlllflb' to ny recolte tions he spent most of his wak ing hours apon the bench oataide the village grocery om @ammer, wud apon the settle inside the same public institn hon in wintor, wrapt in (pmtet thought, brokom ist interyais by hraefo serapa of conversation with chance comers for ny fathor was a man of few words, as well as doeda. He was, in truth, one of the most passive and amiable of men, wind [ am sure our nother hir virtues, though ashe did some times drop a aml word or a tear at the general untklrif? which distingniahad onur homa- atemil When Aunt Tebitiia, who charitably gave her sarvices to mother as nurse, en tared the kitchen one morning, and in- formed father that heaven had sent him a pair of twin-boys, he was more excited than at any previous or wubsaqneant crisi of life, aud in his amasement and con- fumon he exclaimed \ Oh, - thander '\ This was his only remark, aad he took his hat and walked straight to the | ocery. When wo twins were shout a week nld mother called father into the bed- room, lifted the sheet a littla from our faces, and sid - *What names shall we give them ?\ \ Rome that are short and easy,\ father replied, in the philosophy of life. \ And Scripteral,\ mother, who supplied thug“, we had in the family, sa is the with sot faw mothers Father continuing silent and meditative, mother asked \ Can't you suggest ny ?* fWha say to Lot and Ham?\ maid father, aftar a long pause. Mother only sighed feebly ' rat in Auot Tabiths, in her ind t way, \never do in the world | 's about and Ham ef pain and shame tmfino', lufl moftlirt gently in- ber tE 2 C f frit of his eutablished , ROCK VILLE CENTER, see wihge LfE p we l I®Re fe os ts next shurt ing cerce to And as he over the leaf, and cread the t wets ye seof the y second \il’t!\il‘!|l «18 = Yos, oagnd here they Buz they shal be \ Ajunt Tatitred outed ther an expressing hegye by closing is duor nhnrply rer put het hard kerchief over s as if to shut out the excess of ind said not a wur] Father t'almnfl thl- sucun’l hunk. and returned mecustomed seat ut the grocery. ing wos settled be yond qun-nl, 6 poor uncenserons and guiltless g. worw frou Uint hour Hz ased and dor ever l How sach dfered wimiie buys from these edsk I should mural) enders or to furnisied to the E rough: jekoors A gal text for vess ‘Nim, ud I conld bet- ter bear so tis blows thin the !qimbea and Jihmufl”) Bang at ue through iny indristian Christian < Nvlillt“ep-r or- ! could havo y worge in iny tn t timation. Buz tormented thau 1 -for he was Aqnaitive, but twok all thing» light] carelensly . And Buz har got on by in the world. hives, and whojerves as justice of the pesce, Khat i bidden de- neath the imitta® his name. \dt Jones' Esq ,\ sufem, and they mak no questions. Haz, am of a dif t ferent nature. 0 tive to mndicule, l I dread it, I ant, and am bar- | rowed by it have GUAM untonies from the awkward monos which iulheres to me. It has, 1 been the bane and blight of my T aball tell. When a well-grd of axteen, I | determined to tut from bome and 'name, and went thir town of the ' county, and engh; an apprentice to a blacksmith. shop soon discoviy anfortunate name and bow e«sarld be innoyed by it. As boys wrughtles«ly. not Unkil‘ldly, thi‘y (Inautuhm of my weakners, and @nthemselves by tormenting me. I they had no ides how gent“); Red. \Be- you Hinz, or are you Bus the refrain of an shawl-(mg JL chanted in ; chorus, half the trtemed to me. I | bore it as I could “Mummy crazed, Land then I wont and told my mother 1 was tirolscksmithing, and thonght that go snd , seek my fortune in rld She eaw , no uppnrttmly for tome, and con- aemted, Father wady indifferent. though ha did when I left. and «aid \Cane and see ur, i Huz, when yon feel \ A full account y adventure« would be tedious ag in many «fforta, and the contempt of my niume slingilng every where, [ at ||~1|gth lhlppflli the mast for Indira. J left the + Ceylon, and engaged na clerk in dish mercan- tile house, gwined thdence of my employers, and ever hocame @ member of the firmthirty I was rich,. No one in CP'yl ever aaked ' the meaning of my tf , and I1 waa at peace kt length it becaihily to go to England on businsssa | was wel- named into w and there, nlas' I met the ch» Araminthe. Bhe was all grace itand move- iment, all poetry in in and [peach Bho did not walk ; sad through athor. Nha did not tgppaned har lipe, and «waet little fieppad out. Her taste in fio nbrice wna | tout nxquimd b4 seemed to be a part of aH, # something wut on ; ber 5mm not adorn Lnl’, but she illamin@fem. She either cons art in the display of har charmfhe war in gun?!) aw act harmony turs that ahe unconscionsly sonfto the laws of beauty, in form, c¢apery, and , all that goes to maka nctiveness 'of a well-dremed wo! thonght \ then it was all nature gtruat now it vas carefully studiedfo matter ; ne I saw her, clothes aghe seamed to me too ethareal f§h, and I thought it presumptigme to love her. Rut I sould not a faw in. terviews enghained felt that my life would thencete desolate | upless - Araminths wahare - and ?glnrif it Fhe was og aware of , my admiration, bat toomuch ma a : matter of course, sudo pasdvre : and self- , thatinma «ito, gother mors dificult fto Aetlare myself. A little reaidegom would kare smoothed in, ever- theless, it was a st aho did not attecriy and me, that 1 soospted my some- I doubt whrllw‘wopln where die] It ways so, and 1, her boys in the | : wrtner for huis Inc ch ber present the cm ost ense, and hastened toward hrm Yevsiutioe hngerimg belytd a little, but ear a tough to hear the conversation The old gentleman heard me through, locked - grum a moment, was evidently mental | babsnce wpsitist somme othe else whom he find se- lected for a son in daw, aurd theo asked, abruptly \ And what may be the extent of your resources, Mt Jones*\ 1 told him frankly the amount (f my property und in y vllwctnlh-IH for the futur 1 ceuld see that ther Ayrures an Ine sees ont werghing mus His next question Wig 8 And your natus Maio Josres, as s ° 1° was appalled - The old feeling of shame ud mortification care Lick uport me with ull ats fermer power . but thore aiel 1 said, with all the eninaiess $ould commund » Haz, wir, it your service C 1}.qu repeat {hit not nnderstamd \ < H «air ' ~ lar lisa wtrd heconst i stgmBoant glance ato Aru- mintha, whoo war slowly falling from us witlho a look of dimmay and vex wtron shading her face. - There was an rik ward pause. T looked from one too the other, and read my fate be- , fors at was A rumintha a ns first to break the alence, < Noo miatter. father. T ans sure you wre right - (bood might, Mr Haz Mr [ Jones, I should say \ 1 Then she glided toward the house, , andl 1 cous hear her whispering tm petu- | “ugly to berseif . ; |-- \Mre. Hus Jones' Monstrous ~ Ino , posable! And only twelve thousand a; ' Not the wealth of Ind terupt me\\ My ibu«in was not diapelled by het | words. T only felt that the ewoet, re- fined, poetical Aramintha had received | a fenrful shock frpm my barbarous, cruel, | Christian name | Nhe was lost to me from that moment. | She would not evin i soe due agam. I was going to suggest | , that my name might be chauged by Act lof Parhament for nny ous she might choose, but it wna of no use; \ Huz\ | \had closed the avenues to her sensitive soul, and I was farover cast out. a L weg blighted _ I folt that life had nothing more to offer ime. I did not mturm te Caylom, bet tran«ferred my 'business to my partners, and - truated “ham to make a just settlement with | me 1 returned to m? native village My father bad died, and my mother had been suppurlud by my annus] remittan- cex in more comfort than winle he lived. [ lis» now with my aged mother, wholly excluded from bnamess and society. I ser only my mother and the ost, and by in y flptvl‘lhl ronluunt m y mothar add reamen , me ouly \ My son' J never read in the Oft Testament where father feand my fital name. | My ouly embition ia to cacape Inituen notice, and be allowed to dhe in With fair attractiona of porkon, s kindly heart, and an ample mole ne od cynhie [determined to wouglargg me an his there were wore die emcrfos , # [leg pardon I thiick A very queer mun 1 i 1 could ! prace. fortnne, 1 win a- recluse and a miran- . thrope. _I am hiding from the bane and ( always find a supply \n' potatoms, beans, blight of my Seripture name. - Packerd's | pts and likely you will find all of those ' Monthly 'in the bowl of stew which the Indian-rs , kell Gonpomwider and Goas in Olden Times, Gunpowder was at frat always placed cin the gun« loose, by means ot long ladles and, in spite of the inconveni- ence and danger of the practice, it was three hundred years before any attempt was made to place it in cartridges These were nt first 0#@y usd@ when rapid firing wasa nccesanry, «nd their employment did not become gimeral owing to the danger in serving the guts Winn then. Reng made of parchinant, paper, can- vas, or linen, they wera more or les combustable, and left buruin frag- ments in the hore, which had to le carefully removed betors a fresh charge war put in. The vent« of the gun were «frequently choked, and the pieces rend- ered unserviceable by fraginent« of the ' | cartridge bag being foroed into them,l K was not till 1778 that Sir Charlea Douglas then (Hlptnln of L. M.B Dwi, i suggested serge as a proper material for | cartridgea ; und when his proposals were not treated with the attention they merited, he placed the whole ammuni- tion of his ship in proper cartruiges at , his own expense. The advantages of serge ma a naterial for cartridges, tha principle of which is its total confrump- tion by the flame of the powder, are so , great that its ure moou became univer- | ,_ From instructions laid down for the | | service of the great in the fifteenth , century, it appears that they must have | been nearly as formidable to friends ms . | to foss. The notual dun-T they in- fisted on the enemy probably bore lit- , tle relation to the moral effect pro duced ; while on the other the of loons powder carried about 'in \ spoons,\ and fired means of red- heated in a fire with nmhflmn. must have been a fimtmdmflmh the field At first, the heated spikes moms to have been actually thrust into the vunts of the guns, until the afer experient of \thendrink thebroth. . cherry cordial ; - cakes and drank several cup« of delicious tra- not such meadow-hay stnff ms weaget | (0ll confassion, in which he said that A money -lander out atMeadville, Pa., his guvrernment boads in a trunk mear the bead of his bed, snd Hat awoke st night to hear themdraw interest. N. Y., OCTOBER 14, 1870. Chopsticks ' Pow anior how the young folka of tio ! L rated Muses would get on ®t dunner it they wur to try to eat boiled mee with clhepatoks stead ofs ap on, ur & knife ind fork \~ I should like to see you ate tempt it, my young frieuds. lut in bret 1 hour you wll Mklllg thin * What are chopsticka ?\ Well, Goy are small sticks a little longer than a pencLolder and about as large. Those ' used by poor pouple in Ching are mado ef bamboo, while the wasllhy punpln use those manufsctard from ebony or ivory, <r of silver and geld. They bold them very between the frst amd third ' fimgrers of the rigdit hand, separated by : the sccond finger aud steadied by the thumb. If you wish to gratily your your the maurniet, fust whitte out Iwoestreks, ten inches 11mg wind ass largfl aso peb-holder, and the next tume you have hoaled rice for dinner: see how yon wall get oun , or you bn@y ph k up kernels | ef wheat for prisetioe. The Chinese handle thero just us easily I us we do our knives and forks They wold Luagh to see our ring ' with the sticks, but we whould have the fran earnt side ad Hwy were to wit down | to our dinner table, they would make | awk ward work of it. \Don't they use , knives ?\ Not to ont with. In prepur- rug their food they whip a krafe iruml their pocket aicl use it for eatting up a chicken or in puppy. \A puppy C I don't wonder you stare to hear at, Itas well for your pet, who books up into your fucr, licks your hand and has tul when you ape@k to him, that his maater lives on this side of the globe, im- stead of un the uther inde, for he would not be permitted to enjoy long life in barking at the hens, in showing his teath and putting on airs, but he would come to an inglorious end in a «tew-pan' A Chinaman, though, roight think it glorious. You would see some «lringe things were you to visit the land benesth | l1‘er fect, especially in the esting line. } lating houses and hotels in great cities wre more numerous than they nre in New York or Philadelphis. They have travelling eating-establishments. The peddler of puppy stew walks through the atraet with n broad, shallow basin filled I with the food already cooked, on the top of his bead. He carries a small sheet- irom furnsee on his back, and hie big umbrella on his shoalder He finds n place to suit him where customers sra plenty, set« up bus umbrelle, lights a charcoal fire in his furnace, and in a few tmimutes th. pice of fish, chicken or dog, ; mixed with nee, is warming and ataam- ' mg in the pan. dle talon his howla and chopmatieka from is Imsket, and in a few , minutes in ready to serve the hungry craw, For a cent you can get a bowl | ; falt of mee hot dog stew ' Wikre not to think that all Clinainen | lye on puppies, ata and kitteng it is only the poorest people who are obliged | to live on aneh food. You would pot ho cable to obtain much beef in Gina, but in tha provedon shopa are excellent hama din ks, youse, chickens and fish ; ‘ and in the vegetable markete you can Ta eat aftet the common manner you | must loll tke bowl to your him and; poke the faml into your mouth; but if you would be gentael, you nmuat pick up the bits of moat, the beans and the ker-! neke of mse with tha chopsticks, stud carry thery to your mouth, and If you want some . fin you can have it without going to | China in search of it, but in your own ' home, eating dinner with chopstick«. | Try it. | R {f we were to go into tha house of a | wrarlthy Chinaman, and were invited to } <to dinner, we should be three or four | hours st the table, and hava at leat i threa hundred different dishes containing | fond placed before as' I dined one day with a mandarin-or rather we had only a lunch -and there ware so many dishas, and such a variety of food, that lost all reckoning of the number. First wa had roasted prnmplkin seeds, then drank some then ato some awnot in the United Htatss-but the very best | Chins affords. Then the waiters brought ; in a great variety of dishes Rome of ; the food was avmtmthnmtolndrfl.’ and of other dishes a small ustisfied us. We should have had an uncomfortable time if wa had undertaken to eat haart. y of every Aish. To be genteel in China you must only taste and nibbla a little oi every thing broo waiters. That is no dinner where three bundred kinds The Chinase | This was the first atarg, - alie oww o lov and a Farm. Quite a of odd and alue ued 11 ag soenes frequently occur with who yiut the Probate Court for the pur- pose of securing the necessary mont to legalize theis marriage. But the other day a youg inan, twenty-one, ies umpmnufh opposite sex. equally us young, ascended the main steps of the court-house, and | about y uns of the NCO. 278. | MINCELLANBOUS ITEMS. # The best thing out An aching tooth Beara are troublesome in thqnurtln-rn part of Vermont. Modesty is to merit as shades to fig- uve in a picture, giving it strength wid bosuty, A Down-caster whoso wife had run then, on being directed to the Probate “way from. him revenged Jumuulf by Court, took up the line of march for its | drowning nine pigs worth #72. hallowed precincts. “truohllls, he ores fused to enter. Hie hand did quake, And trembling lke a leaf of aepen gre o, Aud troubled Mosel thro' his pale aren To come ard o, with tkitne from the heart, A- dts nunedog the wenger had Geen The rustic maiden, who was vyory | anxious to see the marrings: programinme ‘ K carried to ao anceessful issus, looked upon him with pleading eyes, sud then, taking hin by tho in the most tonder manner, besseched him to enter the court and obtain the heense. \Oh come along Juke ; upon Jacob's car. ° Melindy, 1 can't. The old man will give me fits if I marry you.\ \ Havent you tub? inc a thousand times that you would murry me in spite of tha old man »\ \ Yes! yee! but there is ° Is what :\ \ Why the farm.\ \ Plague take the farin.\ ~ Ys, but, Melindy,\ reasoned lier lover, \hadn't we better wait till the eld man dies, und then lil have the farm sure }!\ \ Dod rot his old soul, hel} live fifty years yet, there's no die in him. Come along now and git that ore license, I win't u- going to be put off any more.\ \ Tll tell you what TH do, Maliady.\ «* Well, spit her out.\ \If the old man holds out agin my hnving you till Chriatmaa 1'll marry you then, farm or no farin.\ * Hure -\ \ A« surn ss my neme's Janob,\ © Well, let her go then, till Christmas, but if you back out thou, Jako, look aharp.\ \Til We the scratch then, by jingo. if tho old man run« ims off the farm with a (louble-barreleod abot-gun, cortain.\* And Jake looked as if would Thus reassured on being married by Christimas, Moelindy drew off with her Jake, fully sanding: doubtless, with the postponement. But if Jake does prove recreant to his promise, we will wager any amount of nickels that Melindy will go for him, to use the vernucular of the uncultivated, \ like a thousand of brick,\ Induina Paper. Tragedy in Canada - A Boy Murderer, Home two whneks ago, Mr. Joel Dean, of (Goderich, atarted up the lake on a bunting exoursion, taking a youth nemed William Marcer, 35nd about 17 1 years. ()n Monday, the 1¥th, this youth raturned, bringing the news that on Nunday, the 14th inst., the boat was up- sot in a efuell, and that Mr. Dean, hav- ing several costs on and a q shot about his person, sanle y. while ho held on to the boat and was after a time picked up httwo Arshermen. ut to sach per- son who epoke to him upon tha subject ha gave a new version. thess different assertions, suspicion was aroused that all waa not right, and Mar- cer was arrested on a charge of robbery, and uLmn being searched there weafound npon his persom nearly $40 tn tha pocket- book formerly owned by Mr. Dean. On m brought before Mayor Hayss, he p ed \ Not gutlty,\ at the ox- amination stated that Mr, Doan was not drowned, but that he had bsen fnatruct- «d by Mr. Deen to rsturn to (Goderich and may that he was drowned. Befora they parted, however, he said Mr. Deen gave him his m and watch, and ask- face wus | what's the i use backing out?\. fell in dulect tenes | ity of far W Under the head of \Crimes ard Casual- ties,\ a rural papet mentions the fuct that a rival editor has just pablished n ; l)\l\)h‘ Chiengo granted one hundred and one marriegs heonsen Inst wouk. Tho list of divorces will be published «is soon is ! completed, A lage of the Nuprume Order of the nighta of the Nun, to which only me- chanics wre admitted, has been formed |+* Bpriugtield. i_ The most popular song is that pub- | lished by a Chicago music dealer, \Fathur will Buttle the Bii\ All the young wo- men of Chicago sing it. For warranting that a drosa pattern \ would wash,\ when it wouldn't, a Bpringfleld dry goods firm has been muloted in $22 damages. Bears aro ravaging the oat flelda in Usgood and Templeton, Canads, the late fires baving driven thom from tlw ir run« The Ottawn Aree Prem vouobe@ for tho fact that a sagacious old bruty, with her cubs in the rear, walked boldly through the harveat lands and owrried off four sheavos of oata in her fore pews into the woods young man in Greenock, Boot- land, took refuge in a deserted smithy during a shower. One of thom sering a tin box about a foot square thoughtleas- ly struck the box with a hammer. The building, nud sleven of the young men were blown to atome. The survicor learned that the boa contmined nitro- glycorine. A gentle Quaker had two horses, a vory und a very poor ond | When noen riding the latter it turnadl out that his Mimi’s\ liad taken the “0011 une. \What \ said a sneering old bachelor, \ how comes it that you let your wife ride the hotter horse?\ 'The only reply wars \l'riend when thoo be married thee'l! know.\ WK the recently killed on the Oer- man' side is the Duke of Nesau. Ho was picked off, probably by pshoot- ars, while proteading from eima. tr Chulons in company with the King of Prussis. The latter had a narrow escape. The Duke was a General in tho Prussian service, and also commanded a regiment of Westphalian Lencers, * An officer who was wounded at Eylac had s soar reproduced upon the furnhmud of all his children. A \ white lock\ has been noticed in two successive genara- tions of a family begring the apparently | descriptive name of Whitehead. A dog n Carolina mootdentally lost his tail, and for three or four generations his descend - ants bave been taillons. The wth of manufactures in tho is strikingly illustrated by tho neg“, of Lawrence, Kansas, wharo hare ¥re atready two woollen milla, throe f@ouring mills, sight wagon works, s lough factory, a soda fmatory, a aonp Kenny, and a foundry. A ware- On mecount of house, and repair shops for the sale of Racine wagons hes letely been ostal- lished, Milwaukee is the kat in the world. It tore, able to hold from half a million to a millon and a half als. - Yot Inst week five hundred sars were standing in the freight yards and on the traeks tho city, unable to dischargn their whent, This immense glut is from old whoat, and the merchants cetimate that tharn are a million more bushela of the srop of 18690 to come. Has a Mormon polygamist & {fit to tee ? fost grain mar- aix large «leva- ad him particularly to tell tha news 80 | twowns a sitien of the United Mre. Dean. U the evidenes adduced he was rem to jail in order to bave a further investigntion of the matter. Mines his incarceration he hes muda a when Dean was sleeping on a log in the wooda‘ sbout one m nfl‘mn Cape Hurd, he took one of the guns and shot him through the haad. His tor com- mitting the faarfal dand was to get aresion of a large sum of money wm he believed to In this he was dima This is a question which has recently coma up at Halt Lake, and ben decided in the negutive. A Mormon namad Man- born applied to be naturalised before the district court. He sgatel that he had only one wife, but that be believad It right uoonrdinhio the laws of God to marry another while bis t wife in living. and laavs of the 'land forbid, be thought it his duty to M ' obey the laws of God rsthor than man. about Dean's person. P0231 Justice MoKean refused to nati- nied, bat 100k | ralise hiss, on what ofdaw it in “new: watch, leaving | pog but probe t of the a vu on his frfger which he P y on Wm sight-\Jun. mhrfimo‘ m-t’d eto., in s yn \in arena as Ri mci pen prisoner went to scene of , lni'finhdudbfiihnh. h MMhM-w ta the of \ unastisted nature,\ with the body of the murdered man. lorge crowd awaited their the eucitement was intense. much disdin! at: w” LJ “Miliflhuwrflw wt m“ borhood. - Toerents Leader. casus vag andy o on