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ALBANV WEEKtV HERALD: SATURDAY, JULY a, 1892.
: ,
DROWNED.
A NBOMO BOV KTBICKKK WITH
CHAMP
AH Dro.ru* While Ilnlhina la a I’nud
ee the Keatea Plaee Tn-Dnr*
A NKiV CAPTAIN,
Mr.
B. K. Smith la Char|e of the
• Mleaaier “Cllf al Albnujr.”
"Bolsy Wallace, sonof John Wallace,
•was drowned, in a pond out on the
Keaton place at noon Tuesday.
He was In bathing with some other
’boys, and took cramp in his limbs and
:sank out of sight and was lost before
tils companions realized that he was in
meed of help.
The body was recovered soon after
the boy was drowned, and his arms
were drawn and perfectly stiff from
tfche effeots of the fatal cramp.
The unfortunate boy was twelve or
fourteen years old, and lived with Ills
grandfather, Mose Wallace, the well*
"known one-legged mnu who peddles
•ohiekens and eggs.
The old man was In the city when
the news of the boy’s death readied
him, and his walls of grief were piti
ful.
A Picture ef the Third Purtv.
There Is a photographic cartoon In
the oigar case in the offloe of the Al
bany Inn that ought to make the per
son who got it up Immortal. It’s title
is, “The Third Party Marc’s Nest.”
Standing on the shore of the rolling
•sea—and It looks like It might bo the
•dead sea—a mule is represented. The
heavens are o’ercnst with blaokness
and the ground seems boggy and un
even. The solitary beast is merely a
raok of bones, covered with a hide that
can’t hide the hide-bound condition of
the rickety structure, and there are
large, clean spaces of skin where no
hair appears. A pair of large, slecpy-
iooklng spectacles are over the eyes,
and a long corncob pipe lends enchant
ment to the hungry looking mouth.
One foot is encased in a very dilapi
dated boot, another in a broken oream
pitcher, and the tail that has been cut
off close to the root has had its place
supplied by a flag bearing the stars
and stripes. An ugly looking revolver
is stuck in a slit of the sorry hide, and
an umbrella that was new years ago is
tied to one leg. To another leg is
chained a sad looking cur dog, that
looks in vain for a bit to eat. And Inst
of all, seated complacently on the poor
mule’s baok, Is a happy-looking turkey
of the buzzard species, that signifi
cantly holds a fork in one olaw, and is
patiently waiting ’till the decaying
specimen on which it is seated gives
its last gasp and goes the way of its
predecessors, Into .
Adlai Stevenson’s onreer Is being
looked up by Republican spies who
Are in need of Campaign matter. Rut
they fail to find any Haw in his ohar-
.acter as a man of honor and worker
for the public good.
The Republican politicians at the
North would be glad enough to see
the force bill In operation and havethe
South Africanized, but the conserva
tive business men will not vote for the
candidate of any party that is commit
ted to such an outrage.
Another instance of where the bl-
chloiide of gold remedy proved fatal
has come to notice. It is in the case
cf Henry Drayton, of New York,
cousin of J. Coleman Drayton, of llor
rowc scandal fame. He died in Wash
ington Friday evening from an over
dose of the “gold cure.”
Near Valley Forge, l’ennsylvauia,
an old oak tree was recently chopped
down on which was found about six
feet from the ground, this legend: “G,
W., Continental Army.” The inscrip
tion was two inohes from the surface,
underneath the bark, and it is believed
was placed there with a knife by
George Washington when he wintered
at the Forge during the Revolutionary
War.
A lki'kr who had been confined in
tile county house at Lima, Pn.,
slipped away and Indulged in
drunken spree on Saturday last.
Naturally he was given right of way
as soon as his identity became known
and a muscular blacksmith of Chester
Pa., who undertook to take hold of the
man was badly bitten by him. Reports
rot lepers in different parts of the coun
try who are allowed to associate with
otter people are getting too frequent
,to give one a comfortable feeling.
A movement is on foot to have the
future inaugural addresses delivered
from the west front of the Capitol
Congress lias appropriated $1,260,000 to
build a terrace on the western front of
the buildlngiSO that that side will pre
sent less of a back door appearance. It
js argued that the President, in deliv
ering his Inaugural address, should
turn his face toward the great mass of
the people that have elected hint, in
stead of standing on the east terrace
of the Capitol with his back turned on
the great empire that he represents.
Maybe he ought, but this seems more
like a foolish whim gratified to the
tune of over a million dollars.
A writer recently undertook to
show that what is called geuius is
merely a form of insanity, or the in
tellect warped into a particular direc
tion. H this be so, it is best to keep
1 an eye on those men who have shown
such marked genius in party organi
zation.
For several days past the Herald
has been hearing rumors of a split be
tween Capt. M. H. Rouse and the own
ers and directors of the steamer City
of Albany.
It will be remembered that the Her
ald published, about ten days ago, a
telegram whluh came from Capt.Rouse
at Bainbrldge, in which the steamer
was reported disabled. Later Capt.
Rouse oame and had a conference with
the directors and reported that the
boat would have to be taken to the dry
dooks at Apalaoblcpla and overhauled;
that it was leaking so badly that he
had to keep the pumps running all the
time to keep the boat from sinking,
and that he feared nothing short of a
new bottom would put it in good re
pair.
Meantime the directors had sent Mr.
Bolly Hall down to Bainbrldge to in
vestigate, and upon his arrival there
he was greatly surprised to find that
the boat had gone off up the river
after a load of naval stores, instead of
being tied up as lie had expected.
And it nppears that the boat lias
been running right along ever since.
O11 Saturday the directors sent Mr.
Bolly Hall baok to Bainbrldge with in
structions and full authority to take
such steps for the protection of the in
terests of the owners of the boat as he
might deem best after further investi
gation.
Mr. Hall evidently concluded that
Capt. Rouse was either incompetent
or had acted in bad faith with the
owners of the boat, for ho put Mr. B.
K. Smith, of this olty, in command of
the craft and told him to go to work
with It.
For the present the boat will con
tinue to run in the lower river, where
there is good business for It just now,
nnd later It will probably come baok
to Albany and resume her former
schedule between this olty nnd Bain
bridge. .
om of jrnil.
News reached here Wednesday that
Barney White, one of the lynchers of
old man Nix, in Mitchell county, broke
jail last night and made his escape.
Mitchell county has n new jail, too,
run explanation of cle V*
LAND’S STBENUTII.
IT WAS NO FAKE.
BOIMV WALLACE WAS BBOWNBD
ON THE KEATON PLACE
1 VSSTEHD.IV,
Anil the Pitiful Walls of OM Mna Mose,
Wore Wnlls of Uenolae
Morrow,
All of us seem to understand some
things better now than wc did before
the Democratic convention at Chicago
was held, and all loyal Democrats are
united in support of the ticket.
But what was the true cause under-
lying the demand that went up from
every section of the country for the
nomination of Grover Cleveland?
What was It that made Mr. Cleveland
seem the natural oandidate to turn to,
for every delegation that found the
nomination of a “favorite son” Impos
sible? “What," asks the New York
Gazette, “lias so endeared Mr. Cleve
land to,the party led by him to defeat
four, years ago? What has given liiin
In Ills private station Ills tinapproacli.
nble popularity, while other states
men, sound and tried Democrats, have
been at the front, In position t-o take
advantage of every new opportunity
for distinction—without an olllco 111
his gift, with all the obloquy cast on
his former administration by those
who failed to get office yet unremoved
without any superficial graces of line
presence, ready wit and courtly de
meaner? Those who teach that deni
ocracles are fickle, and especially those
who delight in ventilating pleasing
fictions nbout the ‘unappeasable bun
ger for spoils’ and ‘hunger for free
silver’ which they affect to find In our
party, should ponder well.” And then
proceeding to answer its own queries,
the Gazette says: “Is there any escape
from the conclusion that Cleveland lias
the standing he lias because he pre
eminently represents private and pub
lic integrity? Defeat easily kills the
mere self-seeker; the man sustaining
and sustained by principle rises from
it unscathed.”
The editorial columns of the es
teemed Thomasville News of yesterday
were devoted entirely to the Herald
and articles from this paper. A few
days ago the News addressed some
pointed questions to the Herald, and
we endeavored to answer them, but
the answer doesn’t seem to suit Editor
Winter, and he comes at us with more
Interrogatories. We like to aid those
who are seemingly honestly trying to
pass from a--state of darkness into
world of light, but there must be
limit to all things. To keep up with
Editor Winter in all bis verbosity in
the discussion of Second district
politics would force us to bring
out a supplement. Our esteemed
neighbor is evidently very unhappy
with the yoke of the Alliance political
machine about bis neck, but wc don
see wlmt more we can say to him than
we have said until he gives some evi
deuce of sincere repentance.
The hydrographic bureau at Wash
ington for two years lias been trying
to learn something of the character
istics of the Atlantic ocean as a great
moving.body of water by means of
bottles. As a result the whole Atlan
Yesterday’s Evening Herald re
ported the drowning of a Negro boy,
Bolsy Wallace, on the Keaton plaoe, at
about noon yesterday, and Incidentally
alluded to the faot that the wails of
grief that went up from old man Mose
Wallace, the grandfather of the
drowned boy, who was in the city
when the news of the drowning
reached him, were pitiful.
And all of this was true. It Is true
that the boy was drowned, and that
the “pitiful walls” of his old grand
father, with whom he lived, were gen
uine.
And yet the News and Advertlserof
this morning oame out with a “four,
decker” denounolng the whole tljlng
as a “fake.” It deolares after “Invest!
gating the matter” that no boy was
drowned, and that Mose’s lamentations
were due to the effeots of too tnuob
whisky, and that he feigned grief over
an imaginary death merely to “escape
the clutohes of the polloe."
Our morning contemporary devotes
half a column or more to exposing a
“fake" that was not a fake, and to
spoiling a “good sensation," that was
not a sensation, in the sense it would
have the publio believe. It was a gen
uine item of news as reported by the
Herald.
Several persons called on the Her
ald this morning to furnish proof of
the reality of the reported drowning
and of the correctness of our report,
Mr. J. S. Whiddon, from whom we got
the particulars, and who brought the
news to old man Mose, being among
them. Mr. Whiddon had been out to
ills plantation, and, while he did not
see the body of the boy, drove within
a hundred yards of the pond In whioh
he was drowned, and was hailed by
some of the Negroes who had just re
covered the body, and was requested
to carry the sad newB to old man Mose.
Mr. Love Wilder Informed us that
he sold a coffin to the boy’s father,
John Wallace, and showed us a writ
ten order for It from Carter & Wool-
folk.
Grandlson Winn, the oolored County
Coroner, informed us that he had been
out to the Keaton plaoe and seen tlie
body of the drowned boy, and that he
wns “aho’ dead,” but no Inquest was
deemed necessary after inquiring Into
the clrouipstanoes.
No; this was no fake. The Hebald
doesn’t deal in fakes. Upon the con
trary, It has broken up the “fake”
business in looal journalism, whioh
was being so extensively worked on
the people of the community for a year
or more previous to the commence
ment of the publication of this paper,
TALK OF NORWOOD
Ah a Possible Third P.’lr Candidal*.
The Atlanta Constitution of to-day
prints the following. The IIiIrald
doesn’t take much stock in it, for It
believes Mr. Norwood to be n Demo
crat; but we publish the story for
what it is worth:
The Third Party people are talking
nbout nominating Hon. Thomas M
Norwood for Governor. It comes
pretty straight from Col. Peek, one of
the controlling spirits in the Third
Party, that the ex-Senator will he
their oandidate.
“Mr. Norwood’s famous book, “Plu
tocraoy,” brought him to the attention
of the Third Party people, very much
as Ignatius Donnelly was brought for
ward by his book, “Caesar’s Column.'
The position of both, men wit-li refer
ence to the labor movement Is unique
and striking, and Mr. Norwood’s is
hnrdly less so than that of the erratic
Shakespearenn student. His book and
his pliillippics on the old leaders made
him a prominent figure before the Al
Iiance Legislature when Gen. Gordon
had to fight so hard for the Senator-
ship. From his contributions to tho
press it would not be surprising to see
him accept the Third Party nomina
tion. Financial relief on the line of
the Third Party movement has oecu
pied the ex-Senator’s serious thoughts,
and lie worked out tils theories so as to
embody them In a plan for legislative
reform. It was got the sub-treasury
scheme, but was evidently Intended to
be the “something better,” to which
the Alliancemen constantly referred
With Mr. Norwood and Torn Watson
on tliu stump and the ex-Senator'^
caustic pen In workingorder, the com
Ing campaign will be anything but
tame. The result of the Third Party
nomination;will be awaited within
terest,
The bl-cliloride of gold cure is get
ting into trouble. The Indianapolis
News tells of Mr. J. J. Brooks,,a well-
known attorney of Memphis, Tenn,
who died at the Southern Bi-Chloride
of Gold Institute last Thursday. The
first hypodermic injection of bi-chlo-
ride of gold made him a raving maniac,
and it required four strong attendants
to prevent him from injuring the
other inmates. Thursday night he
THE PREACHER 8LIPPED HI8 HOLD.
Banged If Be Didn’t Believe Re and
Drowned the Denr Old Soul.
A Newton county local Methodist
preacher, who worlra for himself
during the week and labors for the
Lord on Sundays, was called upon to
baptize an old lady by immersion.
He tried his best to get Brother
Bridges and other preachers to do
the work, but failed, so he went forth
in search of a good plaoe, and found
a washed out hole of calm water in a
spring branch, but was forced to
cross a shallow run of tho river in
order to get to the branch. Tho main
run of the river was too swift for
baptismal purposes, because the old
lady was too heavy and clumsy to
hold against the current.
The banks of both streams were
lined with people, and aa the mourn
ful melody of a “Hark from the
tomb” song went over hill and dale
the preacher proudly led the happy
Bister to the water's edge, and as her
feet oame in contact with the warm
river water she exclaimed, “Oh, how
nice this sweet water feels," “I
thought to myself," said the preach
er, ‘Old lady, when you strike that
hole in the spring branch you’ll
change your tune.’” And report
said she did, for when theoold water
began to dose around her she went
to piecee, as it were, for her form
trembled and her teeth chattered,
while the preacher showed that he
was freezing about the body, no mat
ter how warm he felt around the
heart. At this point his foot struck
a log in the hole, and he ‘‘got on it
with both feet, "in order to have a
leverage, so as to let the old lady
down and bring her up Bafely, while
his brother stood by her side to aid
him if necessary.
Everything was now ready and the
minister began, ‘‘I baptize thee I” and
both feet flew out from under him,
ns the log was round and slick, and
sister and preacher disappeared un
der the water, the log diving them;
but in a moment both came up and
the brother caught the sister by tho
hand and led her gently to the bank,
while the preacher wiped the water
from his eyes and ears with a red
handkerchief and looked up and
down the branch to see what hod be
come of the old woman. As he be
held her Bhouting on the shore and
shaking hands with the multitude
who thought that the baptism hail
been administered according to the
custom of the Scriptures, be raised
both of his own hands and exclaimed
‘‘The Lord be praised, for yonder
she is safe and alive on land. The
fact is, Hawkins, ”■ said the tender
hearted preacher, “hang me if 1
didn’t believe for the time being that
I had drowned instead of baptized
the dear old soul. ’’—Covington Enter
prise. '
Why a Hnlloil Lobator Is Bod.
In all crustaceans, as, indeed, in
almost everything in nature, there
is a certain per cent, of iron. Upon
boiling, the lobster is oxidized; the
effect is largely due also to the per
centage of muriatio acid whioh exists
naturally in the shell. The chemi
cal change which takes place here Is
almost similar to that which occurs
in the burning of a brick. In boil
ing a lobster its coat ceases to be a
living substance, and to a certain ex
tent it takes a new character.
It is as a brick would be after burn
ing. This effect con also be produced
by the sun, but necessarily not so
rapidly, as the heat of that luminary,
although more intense, is not con
centrated .sufficiently to produco the
result. The sun also exercises
bleaching influence which consumes
the oxide almost as fast as it
formed, leaving the shell white, or
nearly pure lime.—Gloucester Times.
tie is shown to be slowly circulating
round ami round, like, an enormous | displayed all the symptoms of hydo-
pool. phobia and died In convulsions.
A Vuluabls Cares...
A poor peasant in a village of the
Odenwald fell into such reduced cir
cumstances that he resolved to sell
his only cow. He took the wretched
and scraggy beast to tho butcher of
the villago, who said ho could not
give him more than sixty marks for
it. So the peasant determined to
slaughter the beast himself, and try
to sell the meat among his neighbors.
In the stomach of the cow he found
seven gold coins of twenty marks
each, too silver thalers and two small
keys. The cow thus brought him
double the sum which the butcher
had offered for her. The cow must
have swallowed a purse at some
place or other, but where or when
her owner could not guess.—London
Tit-Bits.
Prodigious Seaweed.
“There is much that is wonderful
to bo told about seaweeds,” said
naturalist. ‘ 'Some of them are giants
in size. One species, common in the
North sea, frequently grows to the
length of thirty or forty feet, devel
oping in the shape of a long cord
about the size of a quill, attached at
one end to the bottom and the rest
supported by the water. This is
nothing, however, to tho prodigious
‘macrocystis,’which attain 1,600 feet
in length. Another variety found in
the tropics reaches a length of twenty-
five or thirty feet, with a trunk os
thick os a man's tliigh.”—Washing
ton Star.
Thumb Bins. In Queen Anna'. Tima.
In' the days of Queen Anno the
feminine thumb ring was tho badge
of widowhood, and women tired of
single blessedness were wont to don
it, and as “jolly widows” achieve
conquests denied to them as spin
sters.—Irish Times.
SWINDLED HIS OWN WIFE.
B. Let Her Into . “New” Schama and
Beat liar Out of Fifty Dollar..
It was a mean advantage to take
of a weak, trusting little woman, and
he knew it, but the fellow actually
gloried in his utter depravity and
shame.
It all came about over one of thone
startlingly realistio money making
machines that you see in saloons and
other places, and this is how it hap
pened!
He paid fifty cents for one, loaded
it with ten new dollar bills, and, with
malice in his heart, set coolly to
work to “do” his weak little wife,
who he knew had Borne money set
aside for a cold day.
When he reached his home he
locked all the doors, closed all the
window shutters, acted mysteriously,
spoke in hoarse whispers, and of
course his wife became interested.
“Henry.’’ she gasped, “what’s the
matter!”
“H-u-s-h,” he said, with a stage
shudder.
But she would not hush.
“You haven’t killed a man,” she
whimpered.
“Keep quiet, now,” he murmured,
“and I’ll let you in on one of the big
gest schemes ever struck.”
And from an inner pocket he drew
the infernal machine.
And then the villain ground out
half a dozen crisp new dollar bills.
“But those are counterfeit, ”■ she
said.
"Counterfeit nothing,” ho con
temptuously remarked.
But she would not be convinced.
She argued and he argued. He
dared her to discover any difference
between tho money he made and
some she had. She said that she
could not see any difference, but then,
she said, she waa not an expert.
“Now, I'll tell you," he said; and
as he said it ho nover oven blushed.
“This money is ns good os that
turned out by Uncle film. All (hero
is to it you must keep dead quiet
about it. Don’t oven talk to yourself
about it Bo as still as the yawning
graveyard. Do not even think hard
about it Now rll let you In."
And he explained how the (1
machine cost $50, the $8 ones $100
and the $50 over $1,000, and so on.
She hesitated—and was lost
All night she thought it over. She
woke him several times to bd assured
that the scheme was all right. And
in the morning sho allowed him to
swindle her out of $60 that she had
laid aside out of her pin money.
He took the machine away with
him, told her that.he had to keep it
In a safe deposit vault and now he
goes around telling his friends, with
a chuckle, what a "“soft mark” his
own little wife is on a “sure thing”
deal.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
Notbrjftty nnd Literature.
Notoriety is in England so much
considered a pass to commercial suc
cess in authorship that if a man (who
might never have tried his hand at
literature before) oould manage to
stand on his head on the point of
Cleopatra’s needle for say twenty-
four consecutive hours, ho would
very probably be asked to write for
some of the most important maga
zines, and as probably would receive
offers from enterprising publishers of
books.
In America he would be asked to
undertake a series of lectures. In
France, however, the "best he could
hope for would be an engagement
either as waiter in some brasserie' or
cafe, or as a "number” in the pro
gramme of the Folies-Bergeres. Lit
erature in France is considered as
much a metier, requiring training
and apprenticeship, os the croft of
the locksmith or the Jewe"
Author.
Why Our Women Fide.
Many grievous reasons confront
me as to “why our women fade,”
but I shall touch upon only a few of
the strongest I look at the many
women of my acquaintance; I see
lines on brows which can only he
brought there by worry, and “worry"
I take to be one of tho greatest foes
to a woman’s youth. There are dolls
to be sure, who never think, work
or act; I do not here discuss such
creatures, but woman in her voca
tion as a sentient being. In this
country, as in no other, do women
have to struggle in the effort to keep
up an appearance of great wealth'
they do not possess.—Felicia Holt in
Ladies’ Home JournaL
Plant Lore*
It was generally believed in Mans
field, O., many years ago that the
seeds of the Job's Tears (Coix lachry
mal, if worn about the neck, would
cure goiter. In Portland, Me., and
Boston it is thought that children
teething should wear a string of
Job’s Tears. They are somewhat
commonly sold for children to wear
■at this critical period in Philadelphia
and Cambridge, while in Peabody,
Mass., they are generally kept ‘for
sole at the drugstores, not only for
this purpose, but also as a prophylac
tic against or cure for sore throat
and diphtheria.—Folk Loro Journal.
A Wonderful Hebrew Diamond.
The Pontiff Aaron wore a diamond
of astounding virtues. It became ob
scure, almost black, when the He
brews were in a state of mortal sin.
If tho guilty deserved death : it be
came red, but in tho presence of in
nocence it came back to its original
purity and brilliancy.—Paris Figaro.
The New VerU Hun
The New York Sun, In its is;
the 24th Inst., flares on the from
in fan simile the protest of the t
ty-two New Yorkers against
land’s nomination, wldeh wa
seated to the recent Chicago c
tlon. Then under the signntu
Sun prints In large heavy type t
lowing declaration t “Every
the seventy-two signers of this 1
ordinary protest and warning
Democrat, and every man of the s
ty-two will now do his whole
a loyal Democrat In tho battle i
success of the Demooraoy of the I
States.”
On its editorial page the Sun I
“double-leaded” leader whioh 1
the following!
“There la one question depemlin
the election of the next
whioh in Its momentous impor
and vita! imperativeness must s
every philoaophio observer to
every other politteal question th
people are now oalled upon to
mine.' » • • We mean the qu
whether those Southern States
have Inherited a Negro popu
surpassing the number of their -
citizens, shall, by t’ederal lav
Federal military force, be sub
the political domination til
groea, to Negro legislature
Governors, and Negro judges ii
courts, or whether they shall
to be governed by white men r
• There will become mnvilli
ness on the partnf a patriotic min
among the Republicans, who v
volt at the consequences of
measure, but their opposition
avail. The necessity of the
will suppress all such rcsl
foroe bill Is the first and the ine
result of a sweeping Republic
tory In November. On the "i her 1
and by the nature and neoesslt;
ideas involved,the success
moorsay is death to tho foree-h
ect. Killed in tins election,
never be revived. In tills vie
content, what conscientious
oan hesitate about his duty
vote for the liberty and tin- -
eminent of the Southern
If the candidate) were tin-
self, rather than consent to 1
tlon of respectabio Benjamin 1
with a foroe bill in his pocket
TO.tA.HO nilOWINL
TOE I
Draws
Experiment. Thnf
Will, the New Or
(leant f.
INDSTINCT PRINT I
-
mssmaw
A gentleman who lias
serving eye on the vary 111
of the crops in Dough
surrounding counties, in
questions propounded b
reporter, said yesterday
portion to tho amount plant
money expended, no crop
such a profit ns the tobacco 1
Last winter, thequestlon 1
tobacco wan discussed at I;
planters around Albany,
oases it ended in talk, 11
of fnnnora preferred 1
railing of props that
to, and take tile risk
taken before rather Hi
they-knew not of.
However, those who v
experiment find that, so f
riment bids fair to turn 1
“The tobaocp crop, wii
it in this part of C
informant, “Is one of th
islng crops there is.”
Cotton merchants«
price of cotton is
until there Is gene
throughout tlie country
raised.
Rut in the question of
ing there docs not
possibility of overli
for, in the words of a j
has traveled all throu
States and given I
able attention, “the
ing tobacco in I
which Southwest (
are so ntuoli greater t
Virginia and the Ca
it becomes a gem
Georgia planters
tlie raising of It, they .
compete with us in I
If this be true, and
reason fqr placing
informant, the outlook i
of this vicinity is
one.
linked Biniusi 1
- South Americans say 1:
are an excellent substiti
They travel, fisb and 1
n banana diet. For
meat, or unable to eat it
weather nenfly all o
do without it), il
the baked banan
cured, being 1
and requiring no'y
for the table,
oft", the jackets t
fruit is washed.
utes are needed for b
placed upon tlie.ti “
and pno served
of his usual
They shot
and biitte ,
proves the flav