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T gg NEWS. Established 1ST l.
K|g.:. *
Bass Bros.
H
This Week.
IK PRICES OS DRESS GOODS ■I.
DILI, CAPTURE THE TRADE.
The sale will be extraordinary in values on high grade
merchandise.
Imported Patterns reduced very much in price thi-
week.
>vl! classes of Dress Goods will go at cut prices.
Red ani White Flannels, Drew, Selby & Co’s Fine
Shoes, School Shoes for Children.
Miss Snyder has just received her second scock of
Fine flillinery,
which will be ready for inspection to-morrow. Bring
your old hat along and let her make it - new at little cost
Come for Bargains and you shall not be disappointed.
BASS BROS.
Come
TO SEE US FOR OFFICE SUPPLIES,
Staple Stationery of all kinds, new Inkstands, new Penholders, new Pen
racks. See the line of Pencils we are carrying.
SEE OUR-- Bibles!
New Teachers’ of Picture
New Window Shades. New lot Art Material. The prettiest line
Moulding ever shown in Griffin
AT CUT PRICES!
DEANE & AMOSS.
J. H. HUFF’S BOOK STORE
Has'the sale of these Celebrate
Glasses in Griffin, Georgia. Fro*
the factory of
the South ATLANTA. GA
BLAKELY & ELLIS,
Funeral Directors
All grades cloth-covered, |Metalllo and
Wood Coffins and Caskets. Prompt and
osraful attention. Free Hearse. Carriages
•ad all details attended to. Embal min g
os reasonable tfrui Calls answered d*y
or a *h*
I will be at the different precincts for
'“purpose of collecting State and Coun¬
ties............. Oct. Oct. Nov.
Union............. 11 29 * f 8
Jdne Creek....'.'" 12 26 9
Mt. J3 27 10
Om............ Zion......... 14 28 11
Akin........ 15 29 12
Cabins............. 18 80 18
You 19 ....... Nov. 2 _ 16
win find me a t Hasaelkus’ shoe
*r’ wove, re > from all the time exoept dates named
wtn, when October 1st. until December
law makes my books will be closed. The
It my duty to close and Issue
Uw P Ias °n that day and I will do os the
requires T. R. NUTT,
Tax Collector Spalding Co., Ga
arrival and departure
All Passenger trains Kntering
Griffin.
CENTRAL RAILROAD.
Atlanta. .6.16 a m 1 T 0 Macon...9 60 a m
,, , 9.6o».m.l “ - 6.28p.m.
6.»p.m.[ “ “ 9.20p.m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
To Atlanta, 8 40am'ToCoIumbus, 6.51 am
8 00pm! “ “ 6.09 pm
A #- ft H. A. JL *’
wffin, _®*Uf 9.66 Except Sunday,
180 ara’Ar. Griffin, 12 40 pm
pmf “ m {JO
owe !
THREE NIGHTS!
bkgihning
Monday, November 22.
MATINEE WEDNESDAY.
The Character Comedian,
Daniel A. Kelly,
Supported by a First-Class Company in
Repertoires at Popular Prices.
MONDAY NIGHT,
OUTCAST (IF A GREAT CIU
Presented here as seen for 40 consecutive
nights in Boston.
Tickets now on sale at White & Wol¬
cott’s. Prices: 25, 85 and 50 Cents.
Concert at Hampton,
On Friday evening, 19 th inst.,
there will be*a splendid concert at
the Hampton Academy. Prof. Clif¬
ford L. Smith, of LaGrange, one of
the finest violinists in the South,
will give some good violin selections.
There will be fine vocal, piano and
string selections of music, besides
popular subject recitations. All
lovers of music will be well repaid
for coming. The concert is under
the supervision of the mosic teacher
of the academy. Prices of admis¬
sion, adults 25 cents, children 15
oente.
CA.STOHIA.
Have yon property to traded
Write Deveany Bros., McKeesport,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 19. 1897.
Look Out
For Cancer!
Few people are bora entirely free from
blood taint. Thia is often very slight or
remote, and sometimes may not develop
at all in one generation, but breaks out
in a serious disease later.
Cancer, the most dreadful of all dis¬
eases, is often the result of some blood
taint inherited from generations back.
Jt often appears as a mere mole or in*
into significant pimple, which later develops
knows an but alarming that i hat ruling he he condition. condition. be No IS one
ma may subiec t to an
inherited im apurity HBHH_______ in the blood, nor n can
he tell whet' tther or not this may may some
day crop It out is, in the form of destructive
cancer. little therefore, important that
any readily sore heal, or be scratch, given which does
not prompt atten¬
tion, or a serious condition may result.
Mr. Robert Smedley, of Ocala, Fla.,
was the victim of a malignant cancer,
which first appeared in the manner
above described. He writes:
“At first I paid no attention to the
tittle blotches on my face, thinking they
would soon pass away. Before long,
however, they became sore, and soon
began local to enlarge. I applied ordinary
remedies, Dut they had no effect,
and I then consulted a physician. When
he told me I had cancer, I became
alarmed and hastened to obtain treat¬
ment for I knew bow dangerous cancer
was.
“I received the best medical atten¬
tion, but the Cancer continued to
grow worse until the physicians
finally said operation that I performed, would have that to
have an as
was the only hope for me. This I re¬
fused to submit to, as I knew cancer was
a blood disease, and my common sense
told me that it was folly to expect an
operation to cure a blood disease.
“Knowing S. S. S. to be a good blood
remedy I decided to try it, and the first
bottle continued produced the medicine, an improvement. and in four I
mouths have the last elapsed, scab and dropped off. sign Ten
years not a of
the disease has returned.’’
The alarming increase in the number
of deaths which occur as tlis result of a
surgical operation is attracting general
attention, and a strong sentiment against
such methods of treatment is fast de¬
veloping among the most in intelligent
classes. It seems that almost every
case where the doctors’ treatment is
unsuccessful, the learned physicians de¬
cide at once that an operation blade mnst f the be
performed, and the keen o
surgeon is recklessly resorted to. •
The many caustic plasters which are
applied to remove and cancers the danger aremore of pain¬
ful than death, a sur¬
gical operation is as great as the disease
itself. No plaster or surgical oper¬
ation can cure cancer, because it is
a blood disease; the destructive cancer
cells are in the blood, and cannot be
cut ont, or removed by local treatment.
As the disease mnst be forced from the
blood, it is only reasonable to rely upon
a real blood remedy for a enre, one
which goes direct to the cause of the
trouble and removes it.
S. S. S. (Swift’s Specific) is the obsti¬ only
known cure for cancer and other
nate and deep-seated blood diseases such
as Scrofula, Eczema, Catarrh, Rheuma¬
tism and Contagious Blood Poison. It is
Purely Vegetable,
and is the only blood remedy guaran¬
teed to contain not mineral, a particle of mercury,
potash or other which means
so much to all who know the disastrous
effects of these drags. and Blood Diseases
Books on Cancer
will be mailed free to all who address
Swift Spe cific Company, Atlanta, Ga.
DAILY MARKET REPORTS
Cot tun Vat arm.
Nsw York, Nov. IS
open csss*
Juiiuurj’ .................... 5»j ... S. 17
B§| bru&r/. ::: •:!*
a?: :::::::::::::::::::: S K :::
*»•-.......... .....................* »1 ... * 03
July.............
September..... August.........
Ootober........ :::::: :•:»
November......
December
Spot cotton cloned steady at 5 % cents; salsa
iU> bales; Savannah, quiet at cents.
Grain u4 1’rovlaleas.
Chicago, Nov. 1*
OPKX CLOUS
Whsat- November.... .......
___ at—D ecember.....
Wh UK
Whkat—M ay........... wh® 14 il
Whkst—J uly.................
Qoks—N ovember............
Corn—D ecember.............
OouK-May ovember............ . .................
Oats—J OATS-Deoember.............. t
Oats—M ay....................»)4
Pork—D January ecemoer............. ..............• *714
Pork—
Lard—D Uaro—J anuary...............4 ecember............. M
Bl|»*—December.............. as-January................4.8J
*1
Naval states.
Savakh/JV Nov. IS . —Turpentine elpti 1.S71 arm '
‘
window-glass $»
strained WILMINGTON. »1 »; good NO. straatod Fay 1 1*.— >l *1 |l| Wt ttoda - „ reeeiptj re re firm; -
Kgs barrels Spirits turpentine dr* at !♦
1
BLANCO IS VERY BLUE
Reported That He Will Asl
to Be Relieved.
HIS PHEDE0E880B DECEIVED HIM
Captain General W'aylev Milled the Hew
Governor af the lelaad llegerdln* the
intention In C«he, and the Latter *o
Cablet the ewaoliu Cebluet—May Itei
Return ta Madrid.
New York, Nov. 18—A dispatch to”
The Herald from Havana says: There
is no sign yet of the fall text of the
promised reforms, and in oonseqneucr
the hopes of the most optimistio au
CAPTAIN GENERAL BLANCO.
tonomist are dwindling. The fault lies
not with General Blanca There is
every reason to believe that his prom¬
ises on arrival were made iu good faith.
He is evidently deeply incensed at the
false poeition in which he is placed.
He cabled a day or two ago to Mad¬
rid, saying General Weyler had de¬
ceived him aa to the condition of the
army and that the government had mis¬
led him regarding their sincerity as to
the promised autonomy, broadly hiut-
iug that he felt iucliued to ask to be
relieved.
The Herald correspondent has just re¬
turned from a two duys trip through
Havaiia to Artemisa. There the mili¬
tary commander of the town whom he
had met said he had received no orders
regarding the extension Of tile zones of
cultivation. The oonditiou of recoucen-
trades is unaltered. Their sufferings
are appalling. Herald's
The correspondent with the
Cuban army writes;
“Unless Geueral Blanco makes more
headway than he «has done yet, au¬
tonomy will be a dead letter iu the Cu¬
ban issue .''
_
COMPETITOR CREW FREE.
Qa.au af Spain Panlou* Man I'aptarad aw
a vnibuatarlHg Hua.r.
Washington, Not. 18. — Minister
Woodford has telegraphed the state de¬
partment that the Spanish cabinet has
notified him that the queen has par¬
doned the Competitor prisoners. No
Word has yet been received at the de¬
partment from Havana to show that
the prisoner! have yet been released,
and It is believed that the formal re¬
lease will uot be made until the prison¬
ers are safely aboard the New York
steamer YumurL
The state department announces that
the Competitor prisoners were turned
over to Consul General Lee last Mon¬
day and will be sent by him direot to
New York at ouoe.
€ a bat in* Still Holding Oat.
Madrid, Nov. 18 —The Havana cor¬
respondent of the Heraldo of this city
has cabled to his paper saying that in
spite of the concessions made to the
Cuban Autonomists, and in spite of the
appointment of Autonomist prefects in
the different provinces of Cuba, there
does not exist a single sign of the ap¬
proaching submission of the insurgents.
Hlg Savafijl jp^LNov. Is ICuma-t.
Montgomery, 18 —A spe¬
cial from Play Ball, Ala., says the large
sawmill of Peter Wagoner, located on
the Oooea river, has been completely
destroyed by fire. Sparks from the en¬
gine caught in the boilerroom and in a
few miuntea everything was lost No
insurance. Mr. Wagoner will immedi¬
ately rebui ld.
__
Manitoba School Qaastloa.
Rome. Nov. 18.—The papal encyclical
on the subject of the Manitoba school is
not yet completed, and it is stated that
it will not be pnbiished for ten days to
come. Ail accounts agree, however, in
saying that it will maintain the rights
of the Catholics to denomiuatioual
schools.____
Nasally Haraad la a Wrack.
Huntington, W. Va, Not. 18 — Iu a
freight wreck, 20 miles south, on the
Norfolk and Western railroad, Benja¬
min Meyers, fireihau, of Keiteva, was
covered by debris which canght fire.
Hs was so badly burned that he will
die. The othera injured were not fa¬
tally.
_
Caught la Faraway < allfuraia.
Los Angeles, Nov. 18— A man be¬
lieved to be Bob Love, who, it is said,
is wanted at Indianapolis for murder,
has been arrested here. The letters
••R L.” and a star were found tattooed
on the prisoner’s right forearm, also a
ring with the same inscription.
raytr Wualur la Troabto.
Montgomery, Ala, Nov. 18—1* Se-
ligman, wholesale paper dealer, was at*
tached here by the Merchants mid Plan¬
ters’bank, and Gaseeaheimer & Co.,
both home creditors, for $6,000. The
firm has other creditors.
Wbaa* Crag at Walao.
Sydney, Not. 18— The wheat crop of
New South Wales to approximated at
M4M>Q0^bu*htto, M average of 8$
PROHIBITION BILL KILLED.
Senator Gray** Fall* Yfcraa f*U«
tiiiurt mi m MmJmrUr*
’ Atlanta, Not. 18^—Along with the
first business in the boose the West res¬
olution to limit dtoonesiou on the oon-
Tiet Dill from 11 to 1 o’clock eaoh day
came up and, after some discussion,
was There passed.
was some debate on the adverse
report of the committee on a bill by Mr.
MoLarty of Douglas, to prescribe the
duties of electric telegraph companies
in reoelTing and transmitting messages
The committee’s report Was disagreed
to.
The house passed tha amendment
offered by Mr. Hitch of Brooks to the
school oeusus law changing the time PK)3 for
taking the next school census from
to 1902.
At this juncture the speaker an¬
nounced that the time for the consider¬
ation of the couTiot bill had arrived.
Mr. Thomas of Ware then moved to dis¬
place the special order and take np the
bill to remove the DeKalb county court¬
house from Decatur to Stone Mountain.
This brought on a preliminary fight, ikiriuiai'
in this luterestlug which was
lively while it lasted.
Mr. Gray’s prohibition bill oamg. np
in the seuate as the first business, and
after a brief statement by the author it
weut to a vote. The bill prohibits the
sale of liquors in smaller quantities
than 1 pint, and prohibit the driukiug
of liqoor on the premises where it is
sold.
The favorable committee report was
agreed to by a vote of 18 to 18,
The question then caiue up on the
passs^ of the bill and Senator Turner
rose to favor it. It fell short of what
he desired, but was iu ths right dtreo-
tiou. Senator Gray called for the ayes
and nays and the vote was 20 to 17.
The bill lacked only three votes of a
constitutional majority.
The football bill came up and passed
by a vote of 81 to 4.
Senator Turner’s bill prohibiting the
shooting of turkeys and other fowl* for
a prise, with ohanoe* stated ou hitting
the bird, came up on an adverse report,
whioh caused some discussion.
The adverse report was disagreed to
by a vote of 21 to 11 and the bill stands
for a third reading.
WIFE REMAINED FAITHFUL.
Ylrglataa Start. .... HI. Hrldal Trip After
Spamllug Two Year, la Hrt.au.
Richmond, Nov. 18.—Two years ago
Richard fi arris, a prominent business
man of Petersburg, got into a quarrel
with Buck Mallory, a leading sporting
man of that city, and shot and killed
him. Harris was convicted and sen¬
tenced to the penitentiary.
Harris, the day of the commission of
the deed which lauded him In the pen!
teutiary, had been married to a beauti¬
ful girl- The young wife was faithful
to her husband through the month*
whioh be spent in the penitentiary, go¬
ing to see him and cheering him up
whenever possible, and counting the
days whioh must elapse before he woiud
be free.
The wished for day finally dawned,
and when Harris oarns forth from the
penitentiary a free man he was greeted
by his wife. The pair took a train for
a bridal trip, whioh will last for several
weeks.
Harris bae many warm friends iu Pe¬
tersburg, who believe tbst he was forced
to shoot Mallory iu self defense, and he
Will return to that oity.
TRACES O F A BU RIED CITY.
Interesting Discoveries N.ar Trenail Link
Sprlags, In Keniuekr.
Lexington, Ky., Nor. 18.— Dr. M. G.
Backner and Rev. Beujamiu Herr, rep¬
resenting the Kentucky university,
have returned from Freuoh Lick springs,
in Mason enuuty, where they investi.
gated the bones of a mastodon and evi¬
dences of a buried city recently found
there.
The mastodou long; bones jawbone, include: 3 Hip¬
bone. 2% feet tooth. feet
long; a single 51* inches in di¬
ameter, weighing 8 pounds, and a tusk
7 feet iu length.
Beneath the strata of gravel were
huge slabs of limestone, side by side.
Each slab measured 18 inches iu width
aud 6 feet iu length. They were laid
pe: rfectiy level aud were artistically
he own.
At this point the work of investiga¬
tion was stopped owing to a flow of
water.
_
Regular Sehedalee Ue.aiaad.
Montgomery, Ala, Nov. l&—With
the raising of the state quarantine all
of the roads running into Montgomery
resumed their regular schedules except¬
ing the Mobile Louisville aud Montgomery divis¬
ion of the aud Nashville,
which is stilt handicapped by the quar¬
antine regt.iations in the southern
quarter of the state: As a consequence,
business here is becoming actually brisk
aud cotton is coming in from every di¬
rection. It is evident Montgomery will
recuperate iu a few weeks aud that the
actual loos the by reffidp *f of the fever refu¬ will
amount to sum money the
gees spent while away from home.
Richard.oe la the Raee.
Montgomery, Ala, Nov. 18—The
wannest aud closest race for a congres¬
sional nomination that Alabama baa
known for years was in the last conven¬
tion in William the Eighth Richardson Alabama district.
Judge of Hunts¬
ville was after Geueral Wbeel.r’s scalp.
After a wrangle, which lasted several
days, the convention at Decatnr re¬
referred the settlement of several
contested delegates to another primary
aud in this General Wheeler won out.
It is now announced that Judge Rich¬
ardson will again offer for the honor
and another spirited race is promised.
Cel, ,t the Greeeeal City.
New Orleans, Nov. 18—Theooldeet
weather of the season to reported here,
the temperature registering 42 degrees:
There was a light frost in protected
places, the wind preventing general
formation. Cold and frost was geueral
througk hoot the state: Alexandra re-
ported a i temperature of 26 with ice and
frost frost that th killed vegetation. The fever
situation hat otherwise improved, there
being bet one night case and It one death Macs
Wednesday to expected that
the visitation of frost will result in the
yigiRM of thnifl nniriBlinaa writ ink am
SUJI, r
111 FERMENT
la Excited Over the
Noted Dreyfus Case.
MORE LIGHT OH MATTER
le Raw Alle.e.1 That tha VerOBev Cap-
tala af Artillery, Onuvleted af Sal I tag
War Seerata to the Qetaun Baaplra aad
Sealenae4 to laaprleaentaa* Par Ufa* I*
laaaoeat—Saute Manilas St a t e at e a ta.
Farm. Nov. 18— The allegation that
Dreyfus, the former captain ad Ike
artillery, was falsely aooused
convioted in a oonrtmartial of sell-
secret military {dans to agents of ■
CAPTAIN ALBEBT DBEYTOl
foreign government, continues to be
widely dismissed in Paris and through¬
out France. From a person who. Is in
the oonnssla of the family the corre¬
spondent of the Associated Frees learns
that the presentation of the prisoner’s which
case to the French government,
caused the present agitation, reveals a
thrilling romanoe with a gang of so-
called “journalists” and stookjobbers,
which beset ths lats Max Lebandy, ths
millionaire oonsaript.
It is olaimed that the documents
Dreyfus was charged with selling to
Germany were never really sold to the
agents of that country, bat were pre¬
pared in imitatiou blackmail of him, Dreyfus’ wife hand¬ be¬
writing to his himself
ing a wealthy woman aud he
being in good circumstances. The plot,
it would farther seem, was conceived in
1893, when the wave of Jew baiting
swept over Europe. Dreyfus is of He
brow extraction, and "these Jackals of
Parisian society, east about for 4onda,
determined to bleed this wealthy Jew.
A beautiful adventurous, whose house
was the resort of a number of Freuoh
officers and foreign go-between diplomats, is said
have acted as a in these
shady transactions At their invita¬
tion Dreyfus was a of frequent visitor the to
this house. A copy a plan for
mobilisation of the Frenoh army, which
had been drawn np in a handwriting
whiohdearly imitated that of Dreyfus,
was produced and money was demanded
for its surrender. Dreyfus, however, it
to said, refused to pay the sum de¬
manded, knowing that the purchase of
the doouuent would be au admission of
bis guilt and would furnish ground for
fntnro extortion, and being aware of
the fact that be had been intimate with
their woman, who herself was a party
to the plot, wonld form considerable ev¬
idence in the plot to show his guilt.
The attorney for Drey fns explains
that the newspapers who were con¬
cerned in the plot nave constantly main¬
tained a warfare againat Dreyfus np to
the present time, and as a consequence
the prisoner's wife and family are
obliged to keep secluded. Attempts
have been constantly made, it is al-
leged, to extort ad mist tons from them
to be used against Dreyfus, aud it to
also said that advances have been made
to Mrs. Dreyfus, wife of the prisoner, in
behalf of the anti-Dreyfus press, offer¬
ing to cease all opposition to his release
“for a consideration ”
WAR CLO UD BLO WS OV,tR.
The Tarklah Oeverasaeat Aeetdss te the
Deasaade •( A a,trio.
Constantinople, Nov. 18— It was
not autil after midnight that the Aus¬
trian ambassador hero, Baron de Oalioe,
received a note from the Turkish gov
eminent announcing a readiness to
maks a satisfactory settlement of ail
the Austrian demands regarding tbs
maltreatment of Herr Brazzifeili, the
agent of the Austrian Lloyd 8teamsiiip
opmpauy at Msrsina, Asia Minor, res¬
pecting the insults offered to the Aus¬
trian oonsul at that place aud on tne
subject of tee arrears due the Oriental
Railroad company, which is operated
by Austrians, for transporting the Tarn¬
ish troops daring the recent war be¬
tween Turkey and Greece.
Consequently, Consequent! an iudamity will be
paid to Herr BraszafelU, the Austrian
flag will ro aa sainted by a Turkish fort or
warship and the sum of £250.000 ($1,-
250,000) will be paid the Oriental rail¬
road company.
Seaoda! I’aa’I Be Smothered.
New York, Nov. 18—A dispatch to
The World from Paris says: Paris to in
a condition of high excitement over the
Dreyfus mystery, and even if the au¬
thorities had any notion of smothering
np the scandal it would now be impos¬
sible. Public opinion demands insta.J
action of some kind, and it is bintod
that the ministry wonld be compelled
to bow to its impatience. Major Ester-
hazy’s story of how he received an in¬
timation that a plot was ou foot to im¬
plicate him has excited suspicion against
kirn instead of Allaying it
Re Raw Caaae a* Mobile.
Mobil*, Nov. 18 — No new eases,
deaths or recoveries.
Bneklen'e Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for
cute, bruises sores, ulcers, salt
rheum, fever eoree, tetter, chapped
hands, chilblain*, corns and all skin
eruptions, and positively enree pales
or no pay required. It is guaran¬
teed to give perfect satisfaction or
mouey refunded. Price 25c. pei
box. For sale by J N. Harris*
Bona and Carlisle * Ward.
itke fees par*.
...»
I OO., MV TOOK.
■as
COUNCIL ACTS.
ALL SUSPICIOUS CASES TO I
QUARANTINED.
U It is Really Smallpox, CompuUory '
ctnatlon Will be the Order of the
Day la Griffin.
Mayor Dnvis tsallud the
special session yesteriiay to ': f-C.
the smallpox situation. .
Dr. Collier, city physician,
that while all other parties____
to have chickenpox, he had
made a second examination
Fambro’s wife, colored, who
taken sick ten days ago,
her face now looked very n
she had smallpox. In the M
lizzie Buster, another cole •• •
man, both of them *'
southwest quarter of
Eighth street, there were
pustulous eruptions, hut
ably chickenpox. Heed
Alderman
uation as follows:
ago a negro came from
and worked a few day a in
mill and quit, coming
week with eruptions on '
upon inquiry stated
4ck with humors i
From him
(amgiv ;ht ,
.'unalljiox, then.
man who works i
caught it from Oxford’s
to D. A. 1
with whom he be
tended these latter <
became infected. The
all nearly well and Dr.!
a note yesterday had to
stating that he never 1
smallpox and would be
out and fre'i from danger of (
the disease by Saturday
ging to be relieved ‘
veniendes of quarantine.
In view of the division of;
among the doctors, Ale
rick thought it would be
call in an expert and enforce'
dilation,
Aldermanan Blakely
resolution, which was ]_
the mayor be fully empowe
quarantine any suspicions <
to employ an expert to
the character of the present <
and in case said expert, decides i
to be smallpox then eomj enforced ’
cination shall he
penalty of $50 fine or sixty days <
the gang.
It was decided in such case to i
low the city physician v&y 9 i
each vaccination, the city i
pay for the points.
Dr. Frank Johnson was s
to accompany Dr. Collier i
a further examination of the Fa
bro woman, but could not go t
this morning. Dr. Collier
igain by himself yesterday <
•nd was confirmed in his „
that it was actually smallpox.
Such are the facts in the matter,
to a knowledge of which we believe
every citizen is entitled. At the
sane time there is no use in being
exercised the existence of these " 1
over
few cases, as the city will take :e the the
strictest precautions to prevent the
disease from spreading and the dan¬
ger of contagion to most people
small.
Pore blood is absolutely necessary for is
perfect health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla
the one true blood purifier, and
health giver. J
The Matrimonial Lottery-
Jinks—Winks married a woman at
intellect, didn’t he?
Blinks—1 don t know Why? 1
.
Jinks—I notice be never has any bat-
tons an his clothes—New York Weekly.
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effective prevented skin by CunccxA. purifying sod Boat, b
soap in ths world, as well as j
sweetest lot toilet, bath, and na
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