The Marlboro democrat. (Bennettsville, S.C.) 1882-1908, April 10, 1908, Image 4
Uley Are Called Operators by
Their Employers.
THERE IS LITTLE LEVITY
Tho Great Switchboard is Like a
Vast Network of Nerves Over the
Human Body-Sensitive and Alive.
Queer Questions They arc Asked.
Since girls have been the connect
ing link between lines In tho tele
phone business, they have boen the
subject ol much levity, ami in many
instances of uncanny jokes, anecdotes,
and witticisms, until tho world at
large has conceived the idea that "Thc
Hello Girl" is entitled to little, if
any. consideration, and that she uses
over the telephone language which
would he coarse even on the Bowery.
To set aside ibis impression one
bas but to visit one of the exchanges
In this or any other city.
The telephone operators are. per
haps. Hie most distinctive (lass of
breadwinners in the whole category
of wage-earning girl?. Hut to get at
tho very uniqueness of tho profes
sion of the telephone operator it is
essential to journey as it were,
through one or more of the telephone
company's huge OIUccs, where, in
stead of being at once brought imo
touch with the "Hello Girl" of the
world bul who is accorded the more
digi) i lied lille of "opel.lier' by her
employers--ono is usuallv first shown
a numb?r Of great lead covered ?all
ies, made np ol' Insulated win s which
enter ihe building from the companys
Underground system. These ra? dos,
each containing hundreds of pairs of
wires, spread out, and each pair
liasses through lite wonderfully intri
cate apparatus where the testing ia
done, and finally pass lo lue operat
ing room, where tiny terminate in a
hugo horseshoe-shaped switchboard.
And there like th, men behind the
guns, an found the tcp phono girls,
WOl'kjng like beavers. No time for
any levity. No time tor the fur,
which is ii('Credit.ed io them hy the
unthought ful. The gr?ai switchboard
is like a vast network ol' nervis over
the human bod> sensitive and alive.
This switchboard has all the lines
multiplied throughout, each line num
ber appearing on the lac?1 of tho
board every six feel in order to enable
..~ ,,, .o,,,.?, ov??rv MMb??HI?e?'
house--lil is ......... .
hook,' a pair of cords, willi accom
panying lamp ', io pla. e lim subscrib
ers together, ind ringing keys io in
troduce the cur roil i on iii,- subscrib
er's lille IO l int; the (? lephoiie hell.
A "position'' in telephone parlance
is the pince bi i tipled hy an operator.
Kat h operator is in ci,urm. of a posi
tion, ami hhs le i own individual
transmitter and receiver, The posi
tions an dividid into groups and are
under thc immediate charge of a
"supervisor." who is held responsible
for tbf service in her section, or di
vision by (be i llil i operator.
To lake care of requests for all
kinds of inform?t ion a separate,
switchboard is provided, and is pre
sided over by from live to ten attend
ants in each exe hangi- Tilla is known
as "information." There all things
pertaining io direct communications
of aifbscribeifl are rod erred. .Am.
among linse questions are. round
many whh h are peri incut, and loreign
as well, to the telephone company's
business.
A lon.;: list of some ot" these ques
tions was given the writer. Hero are
some of them.
"What ls the nearest way to get
to lockington without paying two car
fares? 1 am in Georgetown; also at
what corners will I transfer? How
many minutes apart are tho locking
ton cars at G Street ?"
"What is the I it li of February?"
"H. w ran an bpera?pT tell when a
linc is bus;. ?"
"ls there skating at the parks?"
"Tell mo a few places and give mo
the phone numbers ol' them abo, that
?bll foreign souvenirs."
"When is the new city hall to be
occupied ?"
"What ear erin I take to go to Ta
koma Bark, and how long will lt take
to gel lhere?"
"What are the hours of worship at
the cathedral?"
"What is the postmaster's name at
Baltimore?'
"Why is the city hall's flag at half
mast ?"
"Why do 1 receive 'Information' ev
ery time I call a lill m ber?"
"When is Lincoln s birthday?"
Tho man who wears s.de-whiskers
?lld a white tie may be honest, -hut
appeal a nee s are against him.
Yon can go from New Vork (han to
Pittsburg; bul yoi) (ant coiiie au ay
that way.
South Mond ami the Grecian Bend
Uro in nb way related, for .South
Bend is Straight.
Stage money ls also taint if money.
A well-bred man doesn't brag about
Arl? donall.
Tillman on tho Nominiitlon.
In Bpeaking of tho action of the
National Democratic Convention
Senator Tillman says if the Republi
cans nominate Secretary Taft for
President, tho Democrats will and
probably should nominate Bryan,
who, he believes, would beat the
Secretary at the polls. If, on the
other hand, the Republicans should
get into a tangle, out of which
should come the nomination of
R oosevelt then the Democrats
would do well to put Mr. Bryan aside
and select some other candidate who
could oller opposition to the Presi
dent in his policies. This view is
based on the argument that Mr.
Bryan has so fully endorsed the
Roosevelt program that he is inhib
ited from joining issue with Mr.
Roosevelt as a candidate.
Thc Charleston Post thinks there
is a good deal in this view, and says
"if Mr Roosevelt should be the nom
inee of the Republicans thc Demo
crats will have to get away from
Brvan and Bryanism and they would
?do best, in all likelihood, with a con
sorvative candidate, of the type of
Judge Gray, of Delaware, or of Jud
son Harmon, Ohio. Mr. Harmon,
by the way, with his record of the
I recommendation of the prosecution
of Paul Marton and other oflicials of
thc Santa Fe road, as rebaters,
which recommendation was rejected
by the President, who had appoint
ed Mr. Harmon to follow the trail
of the railroad offenders, would
make a very good anti-R( bsevelt
candidate."
The Post says "the probabilities
are very strong that the Republi
cans will nominate Mr Taft and
?the chance of Mr. Roosevelt
again heading the ticket is growing
less each day. Senator Tillman's
view that Mr. Bryan would be the
most available candidate against the
present Secretary of war is, there
fore, thc mest practical estimate of
the situation, lt will likely come
out that way, and we believe that
he is right in his belief that Mr.
Brvan would, in that contest win at
thc polls."
Monument to (jen, Lee.
Representative Scott Ferris, one
of the youngest men in the house
and representing the youngest state
in the union, Oklahoma, has intro
duced a joint resolution providing
for the erection of a monument to
the memory of (ion. Robert F. Lee
in Washington.
The capital city as is well known,
is so arranged that numerous parks
are formed by the intersection of
streets and avenues, and in many in
stances, where as many as three or
four thoroughfares intersect cir cu
ttle parks are lilied to overiiowiiiK
with nurses ahd children, thc latter
forming probably thc happiest ole
cment of the capital city's popula
tion.
In the (enter of almost every park I
is tho statue of sonic eminent Amer
ican, or of a foreigner who was a
friend of America, such as La Fay
ette and Rochambeau. The resolu
tion of .Mr. Ferris proposes thc erec
tion of such a statue to tho memory
of Lee, who is now regarded north,
south, east ?ind west as one of the
greatest of Americans,
While it is not?t all likely that
anything will bc (lone about it at
the present session of congress, which
unfortunately happens to be "before
the election," the sentiment set in
motion by this resolution will in all
probability result in the erection,
sooner or later, of such a monument
to the memory of the Confederacy's
great chieftain.
I Teddy's Bet coat.
"In other circumstances," says
The New York World, referring to
the program of palliation recently
put forth by Mr. Roosevelt in the
form of a message to Congress, "it
might be difficult to believe that the
hand which no longer ap;o than .Jan
uary .'il purposed to 'cut out rotten
ness from the body politic' is the
?ame hand that is now so gently mas
sageing all the sore spots in the ele
ments of political influence." "The
message." cont mues The World
"fully confirms the report that a Re
publican national convention will be
held .lune 1(5, and that there will be a
Presidential election in November
at which my policies are to be sub
mitted to tho people." Thc World
concludes that "if anybody who
votes or contribution to a campaign
fund was overlooked in thc prepara
of this tionspecial message it was not
because Theodore Roosevelt does not
aim tO please." We agree with thc
Charleston Post that "it is a sad com .
mensarv, indeed, on the manners and
nuirais of our times that the loudly
hailed and vociferously proclaimed
discoverer and champion of right
eousness in politics should presume
to become a timeserver in the expec
tation of satisfying thc people of the
United States that he is qualified to
direct, rule and govern them, lt is
not astonishing that Theodore Roos
evelt, moralist, should expose Iiis
true character thus, because he has
done that in ?1 hundred dill'crcnt in
stances, truckling to influence which
he could hot beat down, but it is a
bit startling and and exceedingly de
pressing to lind Theodore Roose
velt, master politician, concluding
that surrender of principle and open
concession to adverse interests will
preserve his dominance. Will he
disprove Lincoln's theory that it is
impossible to fool oil the people all
tho time*'
Quoting Scripture
. Thc New York World has publish
ed a pamphlet against William J.
Bryan, and heads its list of reasons
why Mr. Bryan should lay down the
party leadership with this quotation
from First Samuel:
"And every one that was in dis
tress, and cverv ono that was in debt,
and every one that was discontented
gathered themselves unto him; aird
he became a captain over them; and
there were with him about four
hundred men."
Tho Kort Wayne, Ind., Gazette
says the personage mentioned in thc
question is, as everyone knows,
David, the son of Jesse, and just why
thc Now York World should hold
him up as a warning to Mr. Bryan is
past comprehension. Indeed, thc
prophets of Bryanipm could lind
nothing from cover to cover of the
Good Book that so aptly fits Mr.
Bryan's case, nothing in thc wide
range of literature or history, sacred
or profane, that forms a more strik
ing parallel, or, what was more,
justifies more sanguine hope of Mr.
Bryan's ultimate triumph.
There a good many people who
aro in debt distress, millions who
arc in bedt (and going broke every
day), millions who arc descontented
under trust rule, and they have in
deed gathered themselves unto
William J. Bryan, and he has became
a captain over them.
But the World should have pur
sued the subject further, and have
j ecounted what the captain and bis
four hundred did. It's all in the
book of Samuel, too. Like Brynn
touring the world and returning
welcomed as no American had been
welcomed, David returned from bis
wanderings, and boro is what ho and
his four hundred did.
lloro it is as we hud ii recorded in
tho First ao.d Second Books cf
Samuel:
And David smote (hom from the
twilight oven unto the evening of
the next day.
And David recovered all that the
Amalekitcs had carried away.
And David took all the Mocks and
the herds which they drove before
those other cattle, and said, This is
David's spoil.
In the second book of Samuel, we
read:
And tho mon of .Judah came and
they appointed David king over thc
house of Judah.
Now there w as long war between
the house of Saul and the house of
David; but David waxed stronger
and stronger and the house of Saul
waxed weaker and weaker.
Thon came all tho tribes of Israel
to David into Hebron and spake,
.-.,,.;?.? K,a.,.i,i .??? . ?.
/
I'iuU niit ? pi Opuv.V? , OJ ?VUO?U i Uli
lillment thc American pi opie yvii
bcar their uart ru xl November.
Al' that is necessary i<> carry out
the simile is to lei tho World play
tho ride of Saul, and no witch of
lindor is needed to foretell the re
sult Of thc coming batt le.
A Monster Trust.
"Ono of the hydra-headed mon
sters that have been tightening
their hold upon the people," was the
way Representative Watkins, of
Louisiana, referred lo the paper
trust, during a speech In the bou.se.
when he advocated tbe removal of
the duty on wood pulp.
The newspaper, ho argued, was
one of the main civilizing agencies
of the world, and in this country,
"sheds light in 15,000.000 homes"
while to-day, he said, inc newspaper
industry was working in harmony
with organized labor "its operating
expenses are higher, because union
labor is more expensive than
unor gan i zed labor was a few
years ago."
There was. he charged, a tariff on
everything that went to mane a
newspaper. "This," he said, "is
purely and simply a donation to tho
[taper trust and a tax on the news
papers and other printing interest
)f the country." The newspapers,
lie declared, had been patient and
long-suffering. "As tho moulders
>f publie opinion," ho said, "they
L'ould almost cause a revolution ii
they would."
If the government continued to
perpetuate monopolies, he said, "we
.viii bid farewell to state rights, to
individual liberty, to tho equality of
vii mon before tho law, and humble
>ur-solvos tn suck cloth ami ashes
before the plutocracy of tho coun
try, and, as supplicants, bow down
leforo tho throngc <?f our riders."
Will Obey tin- Rosses.
News comos from Washington
[hat William Dulaney, the Presi
lent's colored messenger, whose
linly duty it is also to shave the Pres
ident has been transferred from
those lowly dui ies to tho navy de
partment and placed In the omeo of
thc auditor of thal department tit a
alary of $1,400 ii year. President
[loosevolt oxpoois to go to Oyster
Kay for the summer about .lune 'Ji>,
uni when ho leaves tho city, Delaney
viii lay aside his razor anti will take
ip his pen as ti clerk In tho auditor's
tfliCO. Ho succeeds a white clerk
y ho was reduced from $1,(100 to $800
i year to make room for him.
THU president of a Chinese bank
vas requested by a large number of
lopositors who could not got their
noncy Lo commit suicide as tin aol
rf expiation for stealing thc funds
)f the institution,
Too Nour (ho 'I Yon tn.
The awful charge ?a now made that I
at the recent session of the Ohio re
publican convention Messrs. Roose
velt and Tatt aided by Congressman
Burton "tried to insert a real dem
ocratic tarili' plank in a republican
platform," General J. Warren Kei
fer, a ?land patter, is credited with
na. m;; i wi icu tho attempt. Thc
charge put out is that Mr. Burton,
with the approval of Roosevelt and
the Roosevelt candidate, tried to
have the Ohio platform charge the
tariff with fostering monopolies and
trusts. Bryan never had unkinder
words than these for the Dingley
and McKinley laws, so the republi
can reactionaries say.
A Washington letter says the
Ohio platform's history began in
conferences held in the city of
Washington in which the presi
dent, Secretary Taft, Congressman
Burton, and Attorney G?n?ral Wade
H. Ellis took part. When the rough
draft they completed was turned
over to the convention committee on
resolutions at Columbus that com
mittee struggled with it fora bit,
according to the dispatches, and
then turned tho problem over to a
shb-committee of which Mr. Burton
was chairman, and several Ohio
congressman members; General J.
Warren Kcifer was one of these.
The platform as adopted had this
tariff plank:
"A revision of the tariff by a spe
cial session of the next congress,
insuring the maintenance of the
true principles of protection by im
posing such customs duties as will
equal the difference between the
costs of production at home and
abroad, together with a reasonable
profit, to the end that without ex
cessive duties, American manufac
turers, farmers. producers and
wago earners may have adequate
protection.' '
The story put out is that Mr. Ba
ton offered a plank which followed
tho sentence demanding revision by
thc next congress willi the words,
"To the end that the further fos
tering of trusts and monopolies by
the tariff shall be prevented;" lt is
said he assured the sub-committee
that he had consulted with the par
ty leaders most interested on his
plank and that it had their approval.
This was accepted as an assurance
that the president and Secretary
Taft had approved it. Nevertheless
General .1. Warren Kcifer offered a
prompt and warm protest against
talk of fostering trusts and monop
olies in connection with the tariff
plank of the Ohio republicans and
enough of the sub-committee took
his view to chloroform the Burton
in the family of -lohn G. Capers,
internal revenue commissioner,
brought action for $0*,OOO damage
against Mr, ('luise, alleging that she
was ejected from thc theatre at last
Saturday's matinee when she pre
sented a ticket for an orchestra seat.
According io thc petition Hied by
the plaintiff she had accompanied
Commissioner Capers and his two
children, aged 8 and ll years, res
pectively, to the play house. Mr.
Callers did not. intend to see the
performance and left the two child
ren in tho care of the nurse after
buying tickets for the party. Tho
doorkeeper refused to accept tho
ticket and. it is alleged, told the
nurse to stand aside, whereupon Mr.
Capers pushed his way through the
litii" tind demanded an explanation.
Tho doorkeeper, it is asserted, in
formed Mr. Gapers that under the
rules he was powerless to admit the
woman ?is negroes were not allow
ed to occupy seats in the orchestra.
While vain protests were being
lodged, the nurse, it is alleged, was
a victim of "rude" treatment at the
hands of one of the theatre employ
es. Gapers is backing the woman
in her suit. In fact he is said to be
the inspiration of it. Gapers intends
this as a grand stand play to fool
tho negroes into beleiving that he is
;i real negro lover, but it will fail.
It proves however that a renegade
white man can fall pretty low once he
starts down the hill.
Living at Home.
Under the above caption the Jef
ferson Citizen says "suppose every
farmer in the entire South should
make up his mind to live at home?
That is lp say suppose he should de
termine to raise till that his family
required tis food, all tho corn, fod
der, peas, hay, cotton seed, ami
ot er supplies and produce nccces
sary to carry on his business an a
farmer, What would be the result?
Try it ono year and wo venture tin?
assertion thai you will try it again.
Raise what you need to eat, plant a
small cot lou crop, and lot your cot
ton as far as possible represent what
you will spend for clothes and those
things that you cannot make or
raise on your farm. If you will do
this you will soon sec away in wkich
you may become independent, Far
mers who have tried this plan have
succeeded and you eau ?lo the same
Think of tho successful fanners
around you and you will find they
h?i/e already adopted this plan."
Evrtr'y word of thc above is as true
as preaching, and should tho sug
gestion of Tho Citizen bo carried
out we would in a few years have
the richest country on tho face
of tho earth. Our farmers could
thensel?or hold their cotton as it
suited them.
I
WHEN HAUY SLEEPS.
Some Littlo Points of Vant Impor
tance.
From the time he ls two months
to two years old baby should have
Rt leaBt from twolvo to fourteen
honra sleep In the twenty-four, the
.mount of coutse docreaslng as he
?rows older From two yours until
four he should have two hours Bleep
durin?; tho day, besides what he has
at night.
To koop an Infant or young child
up late at nlgYit ls abominable, for
the nervous habits he develops lu
the st limitation of lights and being
among peuple at tao time he should
be (juiet may never be overcome.
Baby should be asleep for the night
by seven o'clock, and not later, if ho
Is to have the rest necessary.
lt la not well to rock him to
Bleep, for tho motion ia bad, In
spite of what our grandmothers
thought and did, says The New York
Evening Telegram. It may bring
on cerebral eongostlou, as a result
of tho enlarged condition of the
brain vessels, and tho best way of
fixing him for the night is to put
him in his crib on cool Bheots and
lot him go to sleep alone. It may
Lake some time and trouble at first
to train him to this, but it can aud
should bo done, both for hie sake
and that of ti 1B parent?.
Lingerie Is Simple, But Fino.
The vogue for figured materials
hos Invaded the province of lingerie,
and although white holds Hs place
ot prominence in tho best models,
L-i > aie. ....? .,...>?.. .?..,..?, ?.ic?ives tire
trimuied bi tho .-ame way. Where
they ar? divided they are eau g lit
with b?wR of dainty wash ribbon.
A gen ii I no high necked go wu ls
rare th. ste dtiys, and some of the
best Lingerie designers adi. Ugly,
but. a conti t omb c ls often elfe, le I by
giving a mo lei a high back lind a
semi-decoletto front pf those the
tupiare cul models are decidedly the
m st becoming as is shown in tue
model.
Don't Cross Your Legs.
A most injurious habit, common
alike to men and women, la thal of
sitting with one lng swung over be
knee of the other. Headaches, cold
feet, varicose veins, ulcers and many
other discomforts attendant on au
Imperfect circulation of the blood
are direct I) traceable to this habit
When the right leg is swung over
the lett knee the whole weight 1.
sustained by this knee, placing al)
the pressure against the under part
ul [he righi leg between the calf and
tho kine cap. At this very pla.e are
a great number of large vein.--, ar
teries and nerves; the pressure ou
them crowds all the tissues logothei
und materially interferes witt) the
circulation of the blood, and the
disturbance of nature's processes
manifests Itself In many bodily evils
and Inconveniences. Many who
would ?ol be guilty of crossing the
'e^s In public often surrender to thc
tempor?r) comfort of the position lu
the seclusion of their own tooms, ft
lu wrong and Injurious, says Hu
Delineator, because it defies nature
whose laws are more Imperative than
th i se of society.
Offenders, Beware!
There's a new hatpin that's bound
not to conn- out, under any provoca"
lion of wind or speed. Where provo
cations of this sort uK>st abound,
na nn ly. In an automobile, this hat
pin gets In Its spolal Innings. It I*
In fact, expressly designed tor "mo
.oriug" ladies who will not war the
I luless hood, and whose more beau
tifving hals are not to be kept OU
by ordinary straight pins. The new
pin ls a long spiral affair, tortuous
o behold and getting a {wisted grip
On the coi If eur which nothing short
of a dynamite explosion or thc
clever hand that put lt In- can loos
As fl weapon of defense for un pro
teeto I fehl!nines this corkscrew bat
pill beal, anything yet put on the
mnrkc i.
As an encouragement when things
MC at sixes and sevens itt the busi
ness end bf tho hour.e. one woman
lins had n board burned with the
legend, "liven this will paRs away,"
and hunK over thc kitchen sink.
LUCK WENT BACK ON HIM.
Ho Did Nut Count tho Other Sido In?
investin/: His Money.
"Yes," said Mrs. Taft. 'Tm.
afraid Abner's going to bo the un
lucky kind." 'she gazed after her
BOU'B retreating figure, and sighed BO
deeply thnt thc new glimmer boarder
looked at her Inquiringly.
'"Nothing awful lu thal line " M^s.
Taft hastened to say. "I don't mean
that. Unt in lit Ho stinging ways,
that kind o' take the heart out of
?ihn nud touch his pocket at thu Shine
time. I'll tell yon. Most a? soon
as ho wont to Boston to work Ab
ner fell In love with a glr? that work
ed In the sume atoro." "That may
have been good, not bad luck," ven
tured the newcomer.
"In Itself you couldn't say lt waa
one ol' tho other," Mrs. Taft said.
Impartially. "But the girl lived in
one of the towns a little \VR>B out of
che city, and soon as he made up bia
mind he'd like to koop company with
her, Abner up and bought a flfty
trlp ticket to her placeT"
"Yes, and - "
"And got turned down at tho sec
ond call," concluded Mrs. Taft, with
a wan smile, "und the tlokot loft on
his hands."-Boston Ideal,
Caste.
"Tho late Francis Murphy," said
a Pittsburg man, "was perhaps tue
greatest temperance reformer our
country has over seen. Over 10,000,
000 people thanks to his labors, took
tho pledge.
"Mr. Murphy. a plain, sincere man,
lnilcd snobbishness hardly loss than
drunkenness. At a dinner In Pitts
burg I mice heard him rebuke, with
a little ahoodoio, a snobbish million-,
aire.
"Ne lhere was a rich and
snobbish Rngllsh woman living in
the country. Her husband put him
self up for a political placo, and In
order lo help his campaign along the
vvoinan gave ?1 garden party to which
every voter for miles around was In
vited.
"Among the humble guests was a
very independent grocer. The grocer
made himself quite at homo. No
duke's manner could have been easier
and freer. Indeed, tho man's total
lack of subservience angered his host
ess extremely, so that In the end.
thinking to take him down a peg. sh?
said to him significantly:
" Von know. Mr. Greens, In Lon
don shopkeepers don't go into tho
best society."
"The grocer looked at her, and
nodded and smiled.
" 'They don't lw?r<? plthoi" nui'ain *
.woli,ci, sn.tn 1 .-5.i.< in) pruyor or
nurse's prayer?"
The nm! her. not being aware that
I ho nurse ever said any morning
prayer, became curious.
"Say nurse's dear," she answore
Whereupon the lillie fellow beg!
solemnly.
"Lord, O Lord, have I got to g
tip?"
Bumping (bc Humps.
Digby- How long did lt take you
to learn to run a motor cur?
Bkorchor O! live or six.
Digby -Five or six what? Weeks?
Skoreher No, motor cars. Cath
olic Standard.
Billiards Dclined.
John Horgan, the champion pool
player, told at a dinner In St. Louis
u billiard Htory.
"Hilliards ls a taino amusement /
beside pool," Mr. Horgan began. '
"Two Hindoos were once discussing
the game In Calcutta, and 1 think
that their Idea of lt was pretty near
tho right one.
" 'What is thia white man's gamo
of billiards that 1 hear so much
about?' Bald tho llrst Hindoo.
"'Don't you know?' said the sec
ond.
" 'No, Tell me.'
" 'Well,' said tho second Hindoo,
'hilliards ls a very simple game.
Two men armed Wi til long sticks
poko at a hall on a green table, and
one says "dam" while the ?thor saya
"hard linos." '
Tho Painless Dentist.
"My work," remarked ihn bald
headed dentist, "ls so painless that
my patients often fall asleep 'n tho
( hair while I am operating. '
"ililli, that's nothing, r"tor ted
his uval. "My patients nearly jill
tt.slst on having their pi ?toro taken
Willie I am at work, in order to
catch tho expression of delight on
their faces."-London Tit-Ult?.