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Jt)e . -
^ Griffin
vs?
J, GEORGIA, U. S. A.
Griffin in the beet and most promising little
ity in the South. Its record tor the past
gnauEdsastti business statement and not hyper-
0 tea a
bolieal description.
Daring that time it has bnilt and put into
most successful operation a |100,000 cotton
actor? and with this year started the wheels
of a second of more than twice that capital.
{<t>as put up a large iron and brass foundry,
a fertiliser factory, an immense ice and bot¬
tling works, a sash andj blind factory, a
broom factory, opened WMie finest granite
quarry in the United Stain, and now haa
our large oil mills in more or less advanced
stages oi construction, with aa aggregate au¬
thorised capital of over half a mfflion dollars.
It it putting u£ the finest syftem |f electric
fa SuftteA tot stfeft raflWsy*. %
has secured another railroad ninety miles long,
and while located oif the greatest system in
the South, the Central, has secured eonnec-
Cl»t
taoooga and the West, and willbreak ground
in g few days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With its tvs white and four colored church¬
es, it has recently completed a $10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It has increased itspop-
ulatiom by nsarly one flfth. It has attracted
around its borders fruit growers from nearly
PUt up the largest
ItfkWfciHsae
of the grope and its wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
seven yews curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply ishows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
oi having tbs finest climate, summer and
-ansa
aome if they bring money to help build up the
own. There is about only one thing ws
need badly Just now, and that is a big hotel.
We have several small onss, but their accom¬
modations am entirely too^Unjjfed seeking Ijaour
business, pleasure and health guests.
If you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion tor a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin.
-asftean&u^ ate
‘mBtUMXSSU™
d fflgftiMQQ - ■ .......... he
filFWJfWSKNIA DUtiXrllJKY.
HENHY C. PEEPLES,
t - attorney at law,
HAMPTON, OEOBOlA.
,H 3 ITIIDME
JOHN J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT L>Fi»t
* OBOBOIA.
. OBIPPIN,
Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. I
% White's Clothing Store. mar22d&wly
-------- ------C .........-
ntos. It. MILLS,
A tf Lit,
Anfc Mte* 2 U
nov
roans atHWAHT. » ROBT. T. DANIEL.
STEWART it DANIEL
A X 8.0^RAR.Y-|L--JLI-.-—L-A..W,
Over OeorgaEHartnstt’s.Griffln, Stats” Ga.
Will practice in the and Federal
■ ■oArt a. *>A .pr^r » - . jnlylPdri
CLEVELAND & GARLAND,
« * « •» •* DEHTIlTf,
GRIFFIN, i : GEORGIA.
m r r
WOODBVBT, OROBBIA.
!■ rpracUrein^ai prompt attratioa 1iowB towtoew!
Wii l th« Court*, and where
Collection* n »peeialty.
LISTEN! MONEYRtSEI
' tf . ' I
the J fiTrooks Farm
■*' •k *»5l: .far Sale!
' 'KS5
Rent ««*’
sees* bfifisa, fi*.
«4
BRANCH COLLEGE l
WHAT GRIFFIN MUST WORK
H?H I FOR NEXT.
Teh University! Trustees to Report
Favorably Upon It—The Result
of the Athens Mission.
week very pleasantly spent among
old cUuuuaatea and associations.
The Judge is one of thefew graduates
oltbe State University in this county,
and was honored tp being called up¬
on to deliver the pritea to the Soph¬
omore declaimers, which his friends
report that he did in his usual grace-
f" d P “ d ™i*» St.wart
W«n* t© Athens for the purpose of
making that the Board of Trustees
of the State University recommend
the establishment of a branch college
at Griffin. After Judge Stewart
had done all that he could, Judge
Beaks remained upon the ground
continued his efforts.' Bespoke
before the board, and argued with
bhe members MouturaspermmaajF) personally*, and ouu while nmw no uu
official ial rej report has been made public,
he is i satisfied that the committee on
branch tchcolleges colleges willreport willreport faVorably, favorably,
and that their report will be adopted
by the board.
It is thought that the board will
recommend the passage of the bill to
be introduced by Dr.Felton, fcherep
resentative from Bartow county, at
the i csming session of the legislature,
which proposes to give half theStpte
road rental, about $180,000, to com
abon schools; and the remainder to
higher education, so distributed be¬
tween the University system fcJT all
the people. Only,.,#30,000 is pro¬
posed for the University proper,
while $54,000 is to be divided among
branches in ten districts, $21,600
appropriated, to the Technological
Institute, the same to the Experi¬
mental Station, the same for a Girl’s
Industrial school, and $30,000 to
be given in an annual prize scholar¬
ship in every county in the State.
If the Felton bill is passed—and it
has a strong backing and is gaining
every day in popular favor—then
the presence of the Experiment Farm
here will naturally draw the ^branch
college to this district, and it is
thought that this print Wilt be made
in the report of the board. But
whether the Felton bill becomes a
law or not, it is believed that the
board will urge the establishment of
a branch college here in connection
asfih the.
i oveLf*tour offered a 4o#tio|i In 6f the a
ams
heart of town, and done everything in'
the power of the citizen# to encour¬
age this project; and from the above
it will be seen that the chances of
success are very fair. Now let our
senator and representative, as
well as the representatives of the
surrounding counties, Which will all
tted, take hold of the mat-
con¬
clusion.
Pimples, boils and other humors are liable
to appear when the blood gets heat ,ted. To
enre them, lake Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 10.
Ljgv -'V ' / A Rumor.
The Newnan Herald publishes the
folowing rumor:
It is rumored that Pfesident Wil¬
liamson, of the Chattanooga, Rome
and Columbus road, has been in New
Yor* for several days past negotiat¬
ing with the West Point Terminal
road. The report comes from a
prominent official the former road,
and the fact that President Alexan¬
der, ol the Central road, went to New
Y^ork about the same time and has
not yet returned would seem to give
j credence to the rumor. The further
postponment of the case of the mi¬
nority stockholders of the Savannah
Griffin and North Alabama road
against the Central Railroad and
Banking Company from the 11th to
the 25th inst. is also regarded as a
significant circumstance by tbgse in
Wsrefited I n the easa
>‘Mr father, at about ths age trf fifty, lost
an ttorfiafr from the top of his head. After
one month’s trial of Ayer’s Hair Vigor, the
W began coming, and, to three tocutos, he
X■* « ,«K Tmsifin.Dy W IN • ■■...
What fish is most valued to a lady ?
ler-ring. Let her nag the glad news
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 23. 1889.
unearned increments.
Xnuonw of Artists and Doctors Enacted by
the Higgling of the Market. , v 7
Whatever a painter makes by paint¬
ing, from one' point of view, it is ob¬
vious that he earns. So much skilled
labor exchanges for so much money.
Now let us suppose that a poi
painter, when his skill *
sSsffiWSSS ££00, and this of things continues
ateni&sEras state
painted, we will say, one portrait a
month, and his annual inoome has
deny, skill just that what the painter his skill earned by worth. his
was
The world has known what he could
produce, world, which and in the these judgment is the of the ul¬
cases
timate court of appeal, has settled the
value This of applies, the product I toe flat ten
say, to
years during which the world has
known him. At the end of this pe¬
riod. develop however, themselves.". certain changes A begin
to new art
critic has arisen, who has educated
the jjgiblic taste; a considerable num
her of immense fortunes have been
made, the possessors of which have all
of them ariistio tastes; and all of them
want The to have their is portraits that the painted. pointer,
consequence formerly
instead of having as twelve
commissions a year, has He now sixty.
He cannot execute than asL cannot ex¬
ecute more twelve. The conse¬
quence is he has to raise his price, and
instead portrait he of finds receiving that he £200 literally for has a
a thousand thrust upon him. Thu#
his income rises from ££.400 a year to
£12,000. There is an increment of
£9,600. What has been the cause of
this increment! Has the painter been
the cause of itt How can that bet He
does nothing more than housed to do.
He is able to do nothing more than he
usedtodo. He works no harder and no
longer. He has no more skill. And
yet there is an increment in his in¬
come of £9,600.
equally A similar familiar, phenomenon, shows itself and in one the
case of doctors. A doctor at some
spa has a certain recognized skill in
dealing with a certain class of com¬
plaints. His fee is a guinea, and his
time however, is fully occupied. increasing As years number go
<>n, an
of rich people overeat themselves, and
come to the waters over which this
doctor presides. Perhaps he happens a king is
among them, stomach whom ache. He at to
cure of a is once
beset by patients from every quarter of
doubles Europe, itself. and his This fee increment consequently is
no
more due to the doctor than a similar
increment in the painter’s case is due
to the painter. To quote them Mill’s “worked" words,
they have neither of
any harder they, have neither of than them
“risked,” “economized.” they have The neither increment of in
their incomes has come to them, “as it
were, in their sleep.” It has come to
them in the natural course of things
—that is to say, in the doctor’s case,
from an increasing number of rich
men gorging, increasing in the number painter’s of case rich
from an in
men affecting a taste for art, both
from enough people follow in general the fashion.—The being geese
to
National Review.
artificial Flower*.
Artificial flowers are now made so
perfectly that they are fac-similes of
flie natural—so much so that the most
critical cannot detect the difference.
It is the rage now for ladies to wear
flowers, and the poorer girls, the wealthier who are
equally cannot as ambitious afford to as replace flowers
ones, day, twice day, fashion
every or a as
demands; so they get a bunch of arti-
sad, cial violets or out a cluster the effect of of pink perfect" roses,
to carry
ly natural blooms, a few green leaves
are obtained at a trivial cost from, the
florist and twined about the artificial
flowers, The mult is perfect and true
to the original effect. Many of the flow¬
er# you see on the corsage of belle and
beauty are artificial ones. Flowers
are considered by some to be
a very laudable extravagance and
by others are regarded the as in- a
sinful extravagance extravagance when when
diligence ulgence is is too too lavish. lavish. For For instance,
the who late Mrs: Drexel, pious, of and Philadelphia,
and who was had very all the wealth to generous, gratify
her love for flowers, considerea them
In her scrupulous owing to their soul brief as an existence. extrava¬
gance, So when she wished to present flow¬
ers to decorate the altars she ordered
quantities hands of artificial of the House ones made of Good by
tne deft
Shepherd, and would present these
baskets «f exquisite copies from na¬
ture, instead or the real ones, which
would only last a day or so.—St Louis
Globe-Democrat
Quito a* Wall.
A series of than “railrpad fiction, notes” and stranger
and truer might ranging
from grave to ga f, easily be
made has occasion |y toy observant be much fravaler the road. who
to on
“Where be you goto’, Mis’ Steele!” in¬
quired a farmer of an old lady, as he
took a seat beside her to a oar.
“Oh, I’m goto’ to see Josiah’s folks,
and Surprise ’em,”returned let she, 'em beam¬ know
ing up at him. “I never
Tmcornin'!! I like to drop to on ’em.”
“Le’s see, Josiah lives in LoweHf ’
“No, in Great Falla It’s Maria that
lives in LowelL"
“Thai, you’re Whatever on the wrong flunk¬ train,
Mis’ Steele 1 was you
in' of to get aboard this, instido’ the
9301" ,
For an instant Mrs. Steele looked , at
the
a* well one SB the
!-:-
Literature. j j
essays which has
’ would be very
pleasant ra for the foot notes,
which al-e numerous, occurring
page, and greatly ip-
’ venture to say, to
of the read-
ba * - we believe, few
like to up every
moments by k or them some sma¬
ll to turn
s sort of thing,
uure. u.jaa.u* authors Have*been
ked to observe—is so ex-
into tile notes.
sJiwttartf&rK
they are inclined to say, the vague
and even the inexact It is not the
historian or the essayist with the foot
notes who attracts. Rather is attraction
deas with a directness which calls for
—i work with extraneous stuff.
of foot notes to illustrate its obscurity
or suggest qualifications. But tl
may well be left to the small numb
fondne.., phistic!
and the entire the unfettered absence flow of all of foot thought— notes
whatsoever.—London Globe.
Opium In France.
.What can be done or attempted to
check the dangerous and ever spread¬
ing tendency in France to drown dull
care or provoke pleasurable recrea¬
tions of an ephemeral kind by the use
of morphine is a question that has
been frequently raised of late, and to
which no satisfactory answer has been
Statistics on hand point to
prophecies of what the coming gener-
consulted on the matter, how s
shake their heads with the rei
that it is next to impossible to cure
confirmed morphia maniacs of their
passion, and that if they are for a pe¬
riod placed under treatment ip a mai-
son de sante they are no sooner outofit
suggested that greater restrictions
than at psesent exist might bo placed
on the sale of morphia, and notably
that a doctor’s prescription for a cer¬
tain Be available, quantity of the drug occasion, should never
save on one un¬
less it be signed and dated afresh by the
medical that man. demands The attention matter is and certainly study
one ti<
for, as a French paper remarks,
toted number of suicides in France ii
of relatively small, who succumb compared to with the abuse that
of persons morphia.—London Standard
Oddities of the patent Ofiteft
Ooeupytog to the a prominent aisle position the model in
a case center is
of a boat for lifting vessels over shoals.
It was patented to Abraham Lincoln
in 1849. when the future president
thought to make a reputation as an in¬
ventor rather than president a statesman. Ido*
coin is the only who ever
Beftured a patent.
The first Massachusetts shoe was patented to 1811
by two men. It is of
undressed difference leather, between and the there workmanship is quite
a
of that and tb& present machine
stitched shoe. So well was the work
done, however, that it yras impossible
to tell whether it was pegged or sewed
until some sacrilegious clerk cut the
sole and ascertained it was
In the class of perpetual motion ma¬
chines tho patent office is deficient It
which he would tend shortly,
\u some few alterations, he
down.*°^Len said, eh as a governor fast and to keep it
the G machine machin running arrives'
it will be given an entire case by itself.
There are in the neighborhood of
200.000 models to the patent office,
and haditnot been for two destructive
fires the number would be hoar a half
Beta' Blood. | * W, f
M. Mosso, of Turin, haviag carried
out a series of experiments with tho
blood of eels, finds that it possesses
marked poisonous properties. Even to
Haifa cubic centimeter injected be¬
neath the skin of a dog weighing t
„
S^and1t e W S
its toxic propertfes ss when heated.—!*ew
York' Telegram.
— freeb In
t b» raw flesh
MODEST CRAVINGS.
SMALL LUXURIES WISHED FOR BY
SOME REFINED WOMEN.
Why Otanaond* Are Worn—They KxUlto
tho Kurjr of Other Women -Some Cnrt-
on* Opinion, of Wlwt True, femhilne
Luxury Moan*—XarkUli Hath* ami Maid*.
Curious, isn’t it, what queer ideas some
vrotoen have erf luxury f Probably most men
•oppose that all women think alike on the
luxury question. If asked, they ;wou!d very
likely say that to women luxury with a big L
means horse*, iatass, diamond* and nothing lorn
to do. This 1* looking at it entirely f tho
outside and taking a general view of it; a
wrong:way to Judge, for there are many de¬
tail* to be considered. Doubtless to many
women horn*, lace*, diamonds and nothing
to do doe* mean luxury; but not to all, for
all women do not think alike on this question.
• A group of women were talking together
the other day, when One of them started the
question, What is your ideaof luxury I With¬
out a moment’s hesitation a very bright wo-
nffia answered: “rite possession of something
I don’t own." A silence had fallen on the
group when the question was asked, but" Ibis
answer w«a received with applause. And
then they.entered into detail. They were all’!
clever, dlstended refined women, They but none generally of them
owned purses. wore
pretty gowns, stylish hats and neat gloves
and boots, but aa a whole they did not swathe
themselves in lace, nor did any of them own
horses; there were not snore than a dozen
diamonds among idlers, -them did all, they and wish they were be.
bone of them nor to
One of them, noted for her extreme neat¬
ness of dress, said that her idea of luxury
meant clean linen twice a day and a Russian
bath once a week. She declined to say how
often she indnlged in clean linen; but no
member of the group had ever seen her when
her ruches at neck and wrists were not im¬
maculate, nor when there was the tiniest
speck on her snowy petticoat that managed As to the
Russian baths, she said she to
take two a year, instead of fifty-two. They
are expensive luxuries to a woman of small
means who has her own bathtub wherein
she may splash by the hour without extra
charge.
The next woman, who was the envied pos¬
sessor of a magnificent quantity of hair, said
that she wanted a maid to take care of It;
that would be luxury to her. The care of
her hair required time and strength, and
quite exhausted her. But she met with no
sympathy. Sbe was promptly told by all
the women present that if she could acquire
go much hair without a maid she did not need
one, and should be wUKi*g to undergo any
amount of fatigue to be able to possess her
“crown of glory.” Tho unlimited supply of
clean linen and the baths appealed to every
woman present, but they seemed to think
that women with hair did not need a maid to
take care of it, only women with scant hair
needed one to brush and shampoo, and so im¬
prove what little they had.
Woman number three said that her idea of
luxury was having plenty of pocket money;
not money for household exprases, nor for
gowns, boots and bonnets, but money to
spend on little things. For instance, if the
went into a shop and saw anything pretty—a
picture, vase, scarf or glove box—she would
like to be able to buy it without stopping to
Can I.afford it! And without stopping f
to say, I will give up such a thing that need
for this thatts so beautiful; I must have it
She cared neither for diamonds nor horses,
but she did enjoy spending money, and spend¬
ing it on pretty things. It was hard for her
to pass by all the beautiful things in the shop
windows, bul her limited purse compelled her
to do so more than half the time.
BUS MET WITH SYMPATHY.
The next woman said that she wanted a
maid all the time. Shoe buttons were trou¬
blesome; dusty dresses played havoc with her
temper; neck ruches were refractory, and
mending kept her nerves in a constant state
of irritation. She said that she could face
a great and terrible trial with calmness mid
courage, but that these little things made her
qnaiL She openly confessed her cowardice
in these matters, and said that she wore a
pair of shoes until all Jibe buttons were off
and then pnt on another pair, and soon until
all of her‘shoes wefo buttouless; and so on
with mending and brushing. Sbe did not
caro anything about that stitch in time that
saved nine; she never had the timo until she
was reduced to a state of almost nudity, and
then she. devoted a day to putting -things to-
rights, and it was equal to a surgical opera¬
tion.
This woman met with a great deal of sympa¬
thy; there are very few women who [enjoy
these small details of the toilet; they pnt up
with them because they must, but there is
hardly a woman who would notjhavo a maid if
she could. There are, of course, a few examples
of total feminine depravity who have de¬
clared against maids; but such cases are tare, rich,
and they are generally women who are
buitoo Mingy to part with sufficient money
to pay a maid. Often, too, the strong
minded declare themselves quite independent
of any such help; they would scorn to have
done for them what they cannot do them¬
selves. But the average such woman dearly loves
to have a mod; it is a relief to get rid
Of one's back hair.
TWre was another woman who said that
her luxurious soul would only be satisfied
with an opera box; she was passionately fond
of music, and she desired an opera box for
every operatic performance during the sear
•on. And yet another woman wanted a sad¬
dle horse. She did not care for driving; it
was tame work;T»ut she liked the excitement
of a swift canter three or four times a week.
These are modest luxuries enough, but they
represent the ideas of the average woman of
refinement. All women do not crave dia¬
monds; they are baubles, and do not add
materially to one’s oomfort; they excite the
snvy of other women, however, and that is
why they are sometimes worn.—New York
Star.
Signs and Then* Meaning.
The following incident, although it is hard
to believe it, actually occurred. A Harvard
Annex girl, who came from the country not
long since, had a question which bothered
bar, and happening one day to be in the city,
the taw tho sign “intelligence office? 1 before
her. ft was tome intelligence she wanted;
she walked in and took her east with a few
ctbecs on a settee, and only realized what the
place was when a lady came up end asked fifcr
if tee wanted a situation as a chambermaid.
She testily^left, making up bra mind that not
: ; The street Acslast fee Weak.
S^^ffiprisoner tto Mr Rten »w*a eminent
. as-nUed
cm?«i
| |
«■ t hree . jjfflS.
An Old Farmer Tests mi. Jtey. t* »«<i4s
Which Shall Uswe the PW -
Onco upon iL'tetbTdusk n <“
three sobs to Wri Hm
and in a fahmriag voice said to them:
a zmitre j
it. Now, I 1:
form, upon w
there are three Dree of t you !
plated mt to whfoh should
Imtkiag fti i if^l tes li p—-R|RR.
ijiq to-xiiorroYr
dess you all. ” ¥ i; v
On tho following evening tb© t
(mu bled before thoir father. “ ,
said the latter to the eldest, ‘’what
purchase with your two dollars!"
■■■
money, and at lost I bought a pair of 1 .
thoos.” ,:K».i
"Well done, well done; too journ ‘
Bfo is rugged and hard, and tho
thick upon the way. You have i
deuce and forethought and I love ya
better for ii And what did you buy,
latusf” -- ’ 1
*<
“I too, thought long mid deeply,"!
tho second son, “that I might not
anything trivial or foolish. Sinw
that I wear is worn and ragged, I bought
hat with a wide brim, which I show to yo\
(
The .. old j man - J*—? regarded him with a glance of
in uua woriu. mo
raysbeat fiercely
upon tho aching head, and your hat will com-
tort you. I rejoice that my mm are so filled
with wisdom. And you, Theophilus, what
did you buyf* ..si ,
“My father," answered Theophilus, “I didn’t
ponder worth a cent. A* soon as I left you
sb evening! blewta my stuff for five tickets
.the baseball games," * "
With tears <X joy streaming dawn tester
>wed face the venerable man embraced
Theophilus, and murmured in a voice hoarse
with emotion i “Had I a farm aa large aa
Texas, with a windmill cm it, it-would be
And then Reginald and Augustus moved
sadly while the away into the gathering gloom, and
one tried to keep the flies off him-
self with his hat the other other kicked kicked himself
severely with his boot*.—Nebraska State
Journal ■>-. ..
A Magical Tree.
color Sho Titians was a charming loved paint, tirade, with, moiling hair the
to and blue
eyes that seemed to invite inspection, and.the
closer the better. Turning the big bronze
knob of the door leading into the main cor¬
ridor of tho Wtete House, the fair unknown,
in tones of liquid silver, inquired! "Fltese,
sir, can^ypu tell me where the wishing tree is
For an , instant the history maker was Irf a
quandary, but, in the course of a brief con-
venation, ascertained that tho visitor was in
told arnest her about her question. —--'wiP tr jNHP4HBPi Some e
that there was a » tree in a direct line
from the White »i House, ” J ’ in in - front --------------* of *> Jackson .-•- e*
,
square, which susceptible Susucpj, maidens Were in
the babit of touching uchiug and making a wish as
they did so.
Close scrutiny of the neighborhood showed
that snehatree exists, but whether it po*.
sessed the qualities ascribed to it remains to
bo seen. Tho meridian rtf Washington, an
imaginary line from which longitude wax
formerly reckoned for toe United States,
runs through tho crater, of the White House,
and In the there grounds near tho Washington
monument was until a comparatively
recent period an old sandstone column, prob¬
ably throe feet.in. The height, known question as thenar
fid tan stone, tree ip stands
directly as tho meridian line in front of the
horse balanced on its hind feet, which Is so
conspicuous windows. looking north ,v ‘; from the White
House ‘ -• ;
evidence of numerous visits by the fair sex
who desire to tempt fate.—Washington Post
A Kentucky bad Suicide.
Andy Bolling was a ritbsen of Jackson
county, and had killed half a down of |is
fellow citizens. One evening Bolling killed
his seventh man in Clover Bottom. The next
clay a coroner’s jury was impaneled to in¬
quire into tho affair. The testimony was that
the deceased had called Bolling “a Uarjp and
that Bolling immediately drew his pistol and
fired, killing the man who had insulted
at the first shot ?
Tho jury went out to deliberate, and after
a short time returned the following verdict:
“We find that the deceased, Henry Jones,
committed suicide."
The coroner was amazed, “I shall not
ceive tho verdict,” ho said; “the testin
was positive that Andy Bolling did the
ing." “Yes,” repiied foreman,
the “and the I
moay was equally positive and uuoqdv
that the deceased was of sound mind sir
full possession of all Ws
ou* to his death, and that while in this
destruction he would not have been so rash,
Ho knew what the conseottenoes would ho.
and he evidently wanted to dte." ”
So the verdict olsafoide
CouricreJournal
, iiiuten., swsuss
Tho fact that flour mills have been ast
fire by the combustion of thepartida of
floating within tho mill is conefotfve;
that bakeries are liable to the s
we have not sera reported before
“That finaorganlc particle* a
the atmosphere will form
as dangerous as fire damp or coal gas
again illustrated," say* The Chemist and
Druggist, London, “recently Petite in a Paris
ery, at 46 Rue Croix des Chatups,
the Banque de France. Thereof da i
bakeries, a doth shoot was employed
bringing the flour from the storeroom up¬
stairs down to the kneading troughs.in toe
bakery. Somehow a movable gas jet came
into contact with toeefoth, and burned a hole
blowing’out the front windows, and m
too whole shop a perfect rial wvecic. Unfit)
lintel y hpriiipa ma te tho $
<lont scvt3*o ©crsonRtl injuries to
ouo & joui*neyman baker, whose :
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