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ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1893.
HE’S A
FOUR-FOOT, TIIERIi-INCH
VOI'B-VEAU-OLD BOV.
Blaster Charier Paallt, af Worth C'auu-
tr—Ha i> Only Four Vnnra Old
aad Wont-on No. 7 Hat
and No. 0 Shoo.
From Tuesday's Evening Hkrai-d.
It seems I iicredible t
But it must be true.
There is now in Albany a boy 6nly
. (our years old who is truly a monstros
ity. Ills name is Charley Paulk; be
halls from near Ty Ty, Worth county,
and bis parents arc plain but respeot-
able people, being related to the Paulk
family of that county, many of whom
are well and favorably known in this
city.
Yesterday Mr. Mitchell Paulk ar
rived in the oity with liis son, accom
panied by Messrs. J. W. Paulk, of Ty
Ty and A. A. Nolen, of Atapaha, well-
known citizens, who came along to
testify to authenticity and correctness
of youngiPaulk’s age. I.ast night a
reporter called on the party at the
Henderson Hotel where they are quar
tered. it was then learned that the
boy's father intended placing him on
exhibition, as lie was in very strin
gent circumstances, owing to the fail
ure of his farming enterprises the
past year. He is badly in need of
money, and it has occurred to him that
he might regain his former financial
standing by making a tour of the
State exhibiting his wonderful giant
boy.
Mr. Paulk is an affable country gen
tleman of about thirty years, and was
very oomtnunloative. He has lived all
hiB life In Irwin and Worth counties,
and it was in the former that Charley
was born. There are four children in
the family, all of whom are of the
average size, except the giant boy, who
is hext to the youngest, l'lie eldest
child is a girl, the other three boys.
Charley was a natural child at birth,
but he has grown rapidly since he was
a week old. At first his parents paid
little attention to his wonderful
growth, but finally, when he grew to
be larger and stronger than either inn
senior brother or sister, he attracted,
not only immediate, but general at
tention, and many people asked why
h's father didn’t exhibit him as one of
the wonders 'of the nineteenth cen
tury. But Mr. Paulk felt a dclloaoy i n
exhibiting his child publicly and for
gain, and he does it now only after ex
periencing a concurrence of calami
tous oiroumstanoes that have buc^i dis
astrous in the extreme.
The reporter saw the boy, and he is
oertainly a wonder for his age. He is
a decided blonde with a rioh, healthy
complexion, -which is natural for a
child of his age. He possesses all the
childish ways and whims, is extremely
reticent and painfully bashful. As
stated above, he is four feet, three in
dies high, weighs ninety pounds,
wears a No. 7 bat and a No. 6 shoe. He
is splendidly proportioned^ and would
"iqijireyf spy one as being a youth of
twelve or thirteen years. He has a
full, deep voice, suoh as is always
noticeable in a boy when his voice
“changes” at a certain age r anil when
he cries, which is quite often, his
father says he fairly makes the welkin
ring. But what is more wonderful
still is the faint suspicion of a coming
event on his upper lip. It wouldn't be
exactly right to call it a moustache, but
the soft, downy sprouts are there just
the same. " •’>'
After all, it is not correct to say that
he is a monstrosity. He is not un
natural nor unsightly, and the person
that expects to see something wonder
ful, horrid and abjeot will be disap
pointed. He is simply an overgrown
boy—about eight years ahead of his
age.
Mr. Paulk requests the Hkhard to
announce that, beginning to-morrow
(Wednesday) morning he will have
Oharley on exhibition, and all who
wish to see him can do so for the
small sum of 10 cents. The tent will
be located in the rear of the little store
on Westbrook’s corner. He also states
that if any one doubts the age of bis
child he will prove to them, beyond n
reasonable doubt, that be is only four
years old, his birthday havingbeen the
24th of last November.
Two Wonderful Grapevine**
There is a wonderful grapevine at
Gaillac, a town of southern France.
Although the plant is only ten years
from the cutting, it has yielded as
many as 1,287 bunches of fine fruit
in a single year. There is but one
other vine in cultivation that is
known to excel this prolific shrub,
and that is the historical vine at
Hampton court, England, which was
planted in 17,68. In one year this
noted vine has borne 2,500 bunches.
The fruit from this vine is kept for
the exclusive use of Queen Victoria
and her household, the surplus being
made ipby wjhie for the same pur
pose.—S£' Louis Republic..
’ Bird* OS the Wing.
Perhaps ho birds spend more of
their lives on the wing than parrots
and pigeons, the letter being also
among the most graceful and rapid
of the inhabitants of the air.—Sports
.Afield.
w.H. DENNISON—Dentist.
A LACK OF REPOSE.
A Strong
CharacterIstlo of the Greet
American People.
It is often said that Americans lt^k
repose. Although there are un
doubtedly exceptions to this rule, it
is a painful fact that repose, either
of body or speech, is not a strong
characteristic of the American na
tion. An elderly gentlemnn was
obliged to wait over an hour in a
railway station for a certain train.
The day was warm, and the people
sat about the room in various atti
tudes suggestive of great exhaustion
and discomfort.
“I'm so tired it seems as if I should
dio I” said one woman to another, as
they Bank each into a rocking chair
and deposited their bundles on the
floor. They began to rock violently;
each flushed face grow redder and
redder. They had not strength
enough to talk, but they rocked
steadily on, until “Cars ready for
Squantum and way stations!" smote
the air.
At this cheering announcement the
two women suspended their exercise,
gathered up thoir bundles and walked
lifelessly out to the train.
There was a middle aged man who
came in with his wifo and two hoys.
“Sophy," he said, as he sat down
heavily on one of the benches,- "let’s
all keep still and get rested before we
have to go into that smothering car.”
And Sophy agreed that it would be
wise to do so.
In the twenty minutes that the
group Bat in the station the man who
was going to "keep still” crossed and
uncrossed his legs fourteen times ac
cording to the elderly gentleman's
count. His wife buttoned and un
buttoned her jacket four times and
made five thorough examinations of
the contents of her bag. The chil
dren made a dozen excursions to the
door.
Among all the tired people who
came and went during tho elderly
gentleman’s sojourn in that waiting
room there was not one who kept
perfectly still.
As in a philosophical and pitying
mood he recounted his observations
at supper, his wife said smiling:
“Poor things I They didn't know
the first principle of rest. ’And you
were tired too, my dear; I can seo
that from your forehead.”
The elderly gentleman rose hastily
from the tublo; one glance at the
telltale mirror convinced him that,
while sitting in judgmont over that
railway assemblage, he had been
vigorously employed at his old time
trick of rubbing his forehead the
wrong way.—Youth's Companion.
Bangorous Uuotorio*
All bacteria feast upon organic
matter, and develop in great num
bers in fermenting solutions of it.
Their number is generally approxi
mately proportional to the impur
ity, and therefore may represent the
relative danger of potable waters. A
water that contains a large number
of them should not be used for drink
ing without first being boiled. By
boiling polluted water for half an
hour all the infectious (but not the
harmless) bacteria in it will be de
stroyed. If it is then filtered to re
move the vegetable substances, and
aerated to render it potable such
water can be used with perfect safety
for drinking.
Since the infectious bacteria are
the agents of all filth diseases, it
should be the aim in all sanitary
analysis of water to determine wheth
er they have actual existence in the
water, or, what answers Hie same
purpose, to determine thq conditions
favorable for their development.
Whenever a chemical analysis re
veals the presence of sowage in a
water its use should he discontinued
for drinking. — Engineering Maga
zinc.
Tbo Division of Salvage.
When the engines of the big liner,
the City of Paris, on her way from
New York to Liverpool, broke down
several hundred miles off the Irish
coast on March 25, 1890, the little
steamship Ohio, altnough unable, by
reason of a shortage of coal, to tow
the big ship into a harbor, stood by
hor for eleven hours, until the
freighter Aldersgate, from Galveston
to Livorpool, come along, and made
lines fast to tow her to Liverpool.
In the award of salvage, amount
ing to 840,500, the Ohio received 83,-
000, although she had really rendered
no aid. The balance was given to
tho owners and crew of the Alders
gate, tho owners receiving 880,625,
the crow 81,625, and the master 82,-
250.—New York Evening Sun.
A Fatal Weapou.
The eminent naturalist, the late
Frank Buckland, when a surgeon in
the Second Life guards, was one day
called to attend to a trooper who had
blown his brains out with a pistol.
The man died, and some time after
ward a belief in luck, either good or
bad, prompted Buckland to inquire
what had become of the weapon.
The colonel showed him the firearm
readily, but laughed when Buckland
declared that ho thought it would he
best to destroy the fatal Weapon.
Nevertheless only a short time after
Buckland was called to attend to the
colonel's servant, who had attempted
to kill himself with the very same
pistol.—London Tit-Bite.
Col. Hoke Smith is in It sure enough.
It will be seen from oar special dis
patches that the people of Atlanta
Alerting Ilia Ideal.
•• “It la always said." remarked Scott
Hendee to the corridor man, "that a
man's ideal docs not exist on this ter
restrial ball; that always It is ethereal,
evanescent, and can never be described
nor painted. I am a painter—not
trade, but by choice—and I really th
that I have not only pninted my ideal
woman, but later still found her. For
a long time I studied ovor what beauty
is in woman and endeavored to visionlzo
my ideal. 1 4 partly succeeded in this,
for later I painted what I considered tho
most beautiful woman, measured, of
course, by tho standard of my own in
clinations and choice. Thun I foil to
admiring my work and dreamed of some
day meeting my Ideal. Abont five years
ngo I traveled In Switzerland, sketching
tho glorious Alpino scenery, the natives
and tho pretty women.
“One afternoon I journeyed, or rather
pilgrimaged, to a rich old bnrgher's
country seat, abont seventeen leagues
from Lucerne, to sketch and to visit tho
graves of somo of Switzerland's fallen
lieroos. Whilo there I mot tho owner, a
stern old Boman Catholic, who conld
fluently speak froneb. Ho Introduced
mo to his daughter, tho fair Emily, In
whom I found a majority of the char
acteristics of my ideal. I hod almost
painted her correctly. Whilo these 1
studied hor face closely, so os to be ablo
to catch tho fleoting expressions and the
sentiment that I knew my picture
lacked. Then I returned home and
touched again the face with my brnsh.
After making a very little change 1
found that the plcturo was a splendid
likeness, and I accordingly presented it
to the family."—Sfc Louis Globe-Demo
crat. ,
Ileauty and th. B.aata.
Throo Broadway cars, four tracks, a
mail wagon and a light cart became en
tangled in a blockade near Princo street.
It was bitter cold, and the drivers felt
grieved that thoy had to stand still.
Then a handsome carriago with a
spanking team and old driver in livery
tried to worm its way through the block-
ode. There was a rattle and a bang, and
tho carriage wheels were canght by the
wheels of a track.
“Hah, yo swash faced, lnnk headed
baboon," a oar driver yelled to tho liver
ied driver, "whar’ y’ gaw’n?”
“Gabback out o’ that!” cried another
driver.
Tho air was blue with profanity, oach
driver vying to outswear tho other. Tho
driver of the carriage said never a word,
but his face was a study. Bago, hostility
and ouss words wore straggling thero
with restraint and duty.
Just then the carriage door was opened
from within, and a rosy face appeared,
budding from a hazy mass of light furs;
It was a sweet, bine eyed, young and
very pretty face, only the mouth was
contracted as if in pain.
“What’s the matter, John?” eho asked
plaintively. “Can't you drive on? I’in
just freezing in here.”
The swearing oeased at once, and no one
looked John in the face, bnt the driver
of the oar hacked his horses, the track
pulled np a little, the cart swung slightly
around, and the carriago passed through
and rolled on its way.—New York Sun.
In tb. Day. or Forty-nlno.
After the city and county of Sacra
mento were organized in 1850 the law
ful authorities attempted to remove the
squatters. Over 200 had organised, and
when the sheriff attempted to remove a
squatter he was met by an armed mob.'
Mayor Blglow then called upon the
citizens to aid the sheriff) and-with a
small body of citizens he halted the
mob and ordered them to disperse! His
commands were met by defiance, and the
leader ordored his men 'to fire. The
mayor and his horse were wounded, and
his little hand fled.
I was behind a tree. I heard a voice
rising above the yell of the mob order
ing them to surrender. Thinking that
re-enforcements had Arrived and look
ing from my- shelter, I was surprised and
fascinated to see only a solitary home-
man facing the maddened mob and or
dering them to surrender. His orders
were met,'as were the mayor’s, by ajrol-
ley of musketry. Instead of falling or
retreating, the rider held bis rearing
horse in check, and os the horse came
down on his feet Mr. McDonald coolly
fired both his pistols, each wounding a
This unequal contest continued
until McDonald had emptied bis weap
ons. His last shot brought down the
leader. As the leader fell McDonald was
aided by tbo sheriff and posse, when the
rabble fled.—A Forty-niner in New York
Press.
Kola Nat as m Beverage.
Major J. W. M. Cotton presided
over a meeting of the Royal Botanic
society, at which preparations of the
kola nut were submitted as a bever
age possessing in a marked degree
the qualities not only of cocoa and
chocolate, but also of tea and coffee.
Attention was called to the little uso
made in the economic world of the
number of plants produced in the
world possessing many useful prop
erties which were passed over in neg
lect. '
In the last fifty years enormous
strides have been made in the use of
steam, electricity and machinery gen
erally for the service of man, hut lit
tle attention has been given by com
merce to the utilization of new vege
table foods, beverages, fibers and
timbers. In half a century only one
or two new fibers—not the best—co-
coanut and esparto grass, have been
brought into extensive use.—Loudon
Telegraph.
The Macon Telegraph is to be resold
to-day for the third time. The Tele
graph la a splendid 'property, and
under good management would pay
well. It is hoped that the paper will
recover its former prestige.
New crop stock garden seed Just
opened. JSvery paper warranted fresh
! thin
iim.
and true to name,
dwtf.
r & !Aoah C*.
THE SUNDAY SIDE.
The world has many a Joy to Hire,
Many a tokon of balm and bliss.
Of rofuge and rest for tho troubled broast
We blindly miss.
And In darkness and dullness we grope along,
Lamenting ever tho light denied.
That would noon slilno In did wo once begin
To walk through life on the Sunday slue.
tho weekday trouble and weekday toll
Liko a dark miasma obscure the way.
And the gods we I0V4, os we daily prove,
Aro gods of day.
But better things wo may hope to reach.
If we follow the stops of a butter guide.
For the life is vain that does not eoutaln
A little bit of the Sunday aide.
The houses we build may far exoel
Tho costly (places of the cast.
And Jewels most rare and blossoms fair
May grace the feast
But It is not home in tho sweetest senso,
1 f the doors and windows so long and wide.
And the hearts that within their fancies spin.
Open not out on the Sunday side.
For His all a folly and all a waste
To spend our lives, ns It were, for naught,
Tho good to shun and to have not ono
Uplifting thought.
Ind whore’er In the world ’tls our lot to dwell.
In rnstlo cottage or halls of pride,
There's a chance. I'm euro, for us all to secure
A little bit of the Sunday side.
-Josophino Pollard In I^tdles* Home Journal.
Printers' Peculiarities.
A printer may have a bank nml
quoins and never be worth a cent.
have caps and small caps and have
neither wife nor children. Otluiin
may run, but ho gets along faster by
Betting. He may make impressions
without eloquence and still tell the
truth. Though others cannot stand
and set he c&n Bet standing and do
both at the same time; may use fur
niture and have no dwolling; may
make and put away pi, yet never see
or eat pie. A human being he may
,be and a rat at the samo time; may
handle a shooting iron, yet know
aught of a gun, cannon or pistol. He
may lay his form on the bed, yet lie
compelled to sleep on the floor; may
use a dagger without shedding bleu I.
from earth may handle stars, and hr
may have a sheep's foot and ne-.v;
be doformod.—Chicago Inter Qcomi
Taking Off tholj.t.
If a man is not in the habit of 1. '
ing off his hot to any IT^uu::: <
tainly no Individual wqmtlM nm .
affronted at the omission. But i..
are times when a Won’uVu'lms Vvii"
to feel indignaut—for iustuuoo.«...
a young man is more punutiliou.- I
lifting his hat whon observers ui.
around than ho is when no one is m
sight. 1
The inference is that ho is beit'*>
polite for the benefit of other people
and not out of respect for tho tvooimi
he meets. It is usually tills same
young man who sometimes forgets
to lift bis hat to his women frionds
when they happen to be in rainy duy
costume. Good clothes are evidently
at a premium with him.—Manches
ter Union.
■lame. Whitcomb Blloy.
James Whitcomb Riley owns up
to being thirty-eight years old. He
says he was a painter by trade and
worked at sign writing 9 long time.
Ho served an apprenticeship also az
a house painter, but was never
strong enough to follow the occupa
tion steadily. The greatest drawback
in life as a writer he has found to be
the lack of an education, for he did
not even have a common school
training. HeTsays, "There is not a
rule of grammar that is familiar to
me, and I wouldn't' know a nom
inative if 1 was to meet' it on the
g^rggt,” "
He likes his serious better than his
humorous verse,' and looks Upon
"Bereaved", as his most,satisfactory
“ ork. He derives his' best profits
igland. Tho publishers over
erehAve got out eight oditions bf
ims, and pay him by there
courtesy a larger royalty than ho
gets at home, where he is protected
by copyright.—Detroit Free Press.
Why General Butler Erufd th. Fray..,
I was sitting in the state house
near the governor when he took the
oath of office. He not only has to
take it, hut to sign his namo in a lit
tle leather bound book; where lots of
his predecessors have put their auto
graphs. Ho called my attention to
one page. It was where the solitary
signature of VBenj. F. Butler" ap
pears.
In the oath the words “So help me,
God,” were stricken out. B. F. did it
himsolf. I asked the reason why.
One of the officials standing by told
me that Goverrior Butler remarked
as he crossed out the words, "The
constitution of this state had no ref
erence to God."
The general, however, himself is
devoted member of the P. E.
cjiurch. —Boston Record.
Work Af Flames In Blf Forests.
The mountaineers of our southern
Alleghenies burn out the underbrush
periodically to “keep up the range”
—that is, promote the growth of
grasses—and manage to keep the
fire-under control by.'scraping the
leaves away ail around their home
steads. In fir woods,. however, espe
cially flaring the prevalence of a stiff
gale,. such precautions often become
unavailing, and in '1891, when the
hills around the tributaries of the
Susquehanna presented the appear
ance of blazing volcanoes, the flames
in several instances- were known to
overleap treeless spaces of more
than a hundred yards.—San Francis
co Chronicle
When the chaplain of the United
Ststes Senate began prayer the other
day every seat in the chamber was va
cant, and it was after time, too. Like-
- ^111” else-
A Rural Region Near Now York#
Just west of tho Hudson and above
Woolmwkon is a region os rural and
antique ns any 150 miles from Now
York. Although this region is almost
within riflo shot of Riverside drive it
is sparsely settled and difficult of ac
cess. Its inhabitants are descended
from Dutch settlors, who found tlielr
wuy into the region after better and
more accessible lands lind been occu
pied. It wns part of this district that
was bought up ton or fifteen years
ago by a syndicate including William
Walter Phelps and Rutherford B.
Hayes. The expected developments
never followed, and thoso of the syn
dicate who were not rich onougli to
hold on sold out to thoso who could
afford to wait. Mr. Phelps now holds
a groat deal of the syndicate's orig
inal purchase.
One of the purchasers has held on
to his land amid all sorts of difficul
ties mid nt tho oxpense of much self
sacrifice on tho part of himsolf and
his family. Tho prophecy that a r
gion so near NeW York must in ton
years have a population of ninny
thousands has fallon ludiuraunly
short of fulfillment, as even now the
inhabitants scarcely number move
than they did twenty-five years ago.
—New York Sun.
I we
Had a Long Heard and Despised Doctors.
Matthew Robinson (Lord Rokeby),
a prominent but eccentric English-
man of the last century, became fa
mous for his long beard and his pro
nounced hatred of medical practi
tioners. In regard to the former it is
said that upon ono occasion when
going to an election he stopped at nn
inn where tho country people, who
had assembled from miles around,
took him for a Turk, and through
this mistaken idea almost worried
"me lord” to death.
His dislike for physicians wns 'car
ried to such an oxtreme that he loft
a codicil to liis will which was to
the bffbet that a favorite nephew
was to bo disinherited should he ftho
nephew) in the last illness of tho lord
let his sympathies cause him to send
for a dootor. This having been made
known to tho nephew whon hie un
cle, the' lord, wns th g6od health, it is
needless to add ho allowed that tier-
son’s spirit to take its flight with
out calling in any of the "infernal sur
gical fraternity."—St Louis Repub
lic. ’
Ono of Whittier's Letters.
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, in a papei
on Whittier in Tho Century, quotes
the following extract among others
from tho poet's letters to her:
Thus far tho summer has not
brought me the release from pain and
weakness which I expected. I am
only comfortable when body and
mind aro idle. Time passes so swiftly,
thero is so much I want to say and
do, and this enforced leisure is so
barren of results I I have been read
ing Samuel Johnson’s “Oriental Re
ligions"—the last big volume upon
Chinese ethics and faith, if faith it
can be called. I am more and more
astonished that suoh a man os Con
fucius could lyrvo made his appear
ance amid tho dull and heavy com
monplacenoss of his people. No
wiser bouI ever spoke of right and
duty, but his maxims have no divine
sanctions, and his pictures of a per
fect society have no perspective opon
ing to eternity. Our Dr. Franltlin
was quite, of the Confucian order—
though a much smaller man.
An Aeronaut's Terrible Elp.rl.nnn.
During tha year 1794 Gay-Lussac
made a - balloon ascension' alone in
which he reached a, height of 82,000
feet Th^nspension wasmado from
one of. the,many pleasure resorts of
Paris in the heat of summer. When
he quitted the earth the Fahrenheit
thermometer registered 86 degs. in
the shade; within an' hour he was ip
an atmosphere that-only , showed a
of thirteen inohee on his
etor, while the thermometer
marked 18 degs. below zero I The
lack of atmospheric pressure caused
the blood to flow from his eyes, nose,
mouth and ears, and the.extreme cold
gave him a rigor from which he never
fully recovered.—St Louis Republic.
Dickens' Debt Prisons.
. How little—to toko only one case—of
the sconory of “Plckwiok" remains; how,
indeed, the whole of -the London of that
particular time has boon improved off
the face of the earth, a very enrsory con
sideration of the topography of the book
will amply show.
The abolition of imprisonment for
debt, except by tho side wind of com
mittal for contempt of court, long ago
swept away the, sponging bonsss and
debtors' prisons which ocoupj so large a
space in English fiction from the time of
Fielding and Smollett down to quite re
cent years.
The Fleet, its inhabitants and (he
squalid lives they Jed under Mr. Rokes
and his comrades 'are only known to the
readers of today fiy tho descriptions in
•‘Pickwick 1 ’, and “Pandennis,” and few
people who nowadays pass down Far-
ringdon street havo any idea thnt 1 the
ramshackle pid prison stood very nearly
on tho site of the Congregational Me
morial hall os into as 1864. having sur
vived its disestablishment ns a debtors
jail nearly twenty years.—English Illus
trated Magazine.
—Teacher: “Johnny, where did
George Washington get his educa
tion?” Johnny
other people.”
“He learned it off
bu can get good oak an(l hickory
1 at 82 per cord “
«BAB'H» RKPI.Y
To Ike Hindoo Cnlcchism an
III the course of one of her <
teresting letters, “Bab” has this
Women are funny. Being a wo
appreciate It intensely. I’m
too. I think we women ean bl
and better than anything ols
lives; blit oftenest, I think, we aro
medium.
Tlie Hindoos seem to have th
us out in a decided way. They h
sort of catechism that runs this
“Whafis cruel?"
“The heart of a viper.”
“What Is more oruel than that?”
“The heart of a woman.”
“What Is tlie crudest of all?”
“The heart of a soulless, pennil
widow.”
"What bcwltohes liko wine?”
“A woman,”
“What Is the chief gate to hell?"
“A woman.”
“What are fetters to men?”
“Women.”
“What poison is that whloh app
liko nectar?"
"A woman.”
And nftor this catechism, the
ers arc warned: “Woman is a
whirpool of suspicion, n dwelling;
of vices, full of decoitB, a hindrance
tlie way of heaven—the gate to 1
“That’s a cheerful way to be lo
at. There is nothing half way ah
the Hindoo; ho apparently gives
all or nothing.
Wltjqp A HINDOO CANNOT DO.
There are no end of things a wo
oan do that a Hindoo couldn’t touc
I bet a Hindoo oouldn’t love a
with nil Ills heart, and at the
time spank it With a satin slipper
cause it needed It.
I bet a Hindoo eouldn’t smile wh
the after dinner ooffee resembled 1
and was thick with what seemed
oloves, as many a woman has to do.
-I but a Hindoo-oouldn’t talk a
nothing to a fool of a man, bcoaus
lind been nice to somebody lio
fond of.
I bet n Hindoo ooiildn’t parry
head'up In the air and look
when he was awfully in love
somebody who wasn’t awfully In
with him, and a woman can do'
every time. " 1 ,
I bet a Hindoo couldn't flrit
then quarrel, then sob, and then
and eventually get Ills point
woman could.
I bet a Hindoo could draw to
spot and get the other threo fives
an ace, bet every dollar on tier
and find that the man opposite
four sevens anil another ace, nml
gratuiate him on ills playing,
woman can do that.
'
I beta Hindoo couldn't get up 111
morning with a hendaolie, put a
racing in ills (rook, write u n
condolence to some oue win.
troubled, scold the gas people, give
order for dinner, dress and go ou*
luncheon, and say ho didn't sec
anybody should, worry, and yet
and I have done that many a time
I bet a HlndAo oouldn’t show
other Hindoo whom he lmted ho
lix Ills Imir in a new way, and
woman will do that to a rival.
I bet a Hindoo couldn’t save all
10 cent pieoes, walk rather than *
for the sole purpose of giving so
thing to somebody on his birth
and yet there are thousands of w
who do that. .
Why tho Hindoos oan say all
nasty things they want to a'
women, they don’t compare with t
But what can you expect from a
pie who object to dogs ?
CHANGE BLOSSUtlH
A Ilnppr ltlnmnge In Itl.e.n Ttm
af Interns to Albnnlnna.
Knurl Tuesday’s‘KvXNINU IIZRAl.n.
At 2 o’clock yesterday afternoon
MaPon, the nuptials of- Mr. Harry
Kendall and Miss Titzallen Wri
were solemnized at the Miflb
street Methodist oliurob, Rev. IV.
Jpanings performing tbe ceremony
Mr. Kendall is an old Albany^
having removed to Maoon sev
years ago, where he has since
successfully in business, and has
for himself hosts of staunob fried
bis geniality and general good q~
ties.
The bride is a beautiful woman, «
of Georgia’s gems, and is dearly
loved by all who have been brought
contact with her Irresistible charms
mind and obaraoter. Tbo couple ha
gone for a trip through the Land
Flowers, where they will remain ~
some time, visiting different points
interest.
The wedding was a beautiful
and the feast given afterwards at
residence of che bride’s mother,
Cherry street, was a display of *
and elegance that is seldom see
equaled.
TnE Herald, with other frien
from all quarters, wiah for Mr.
Mr*. Kendall that they may bask on
in tile brightest sunsbiAe during t
lives. ■■■■■■! ■ ’■ Mj
GOING TO AFRICA.
- -
A Colony From Arlinuirns "G<
Homo.”
Special to tho IIcUAl.u.
Atlanta, Feb. 16.—TWO hun
fifty Negroes passed thr
this morning en |f“®