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G- M- Jones & Company
Corner Commerce and Warehouse Sts. COhrr^s. GA.
58 <3
_-headquarters for all kinds of
General Merchandise at Bottom PrieeS.
I^-We sell the NEW HOME Sewing Machine. BSSU We keep all kinds of
HaT-SEWINO MACHINE NEEDLES.-yg®
Headquarters For all School Books adopted by the Board
ofScbaol Commissioners of’.his county.
-BY
£ W IaANQFOHD m *
Carriages Wagons, Bugies, MV
own make.
^Ikeep ill WAi ANTED TO BE FIRST-CLASS IN REVEY PARTICULAR
also a GOOD LINF^ ofWes^ern^ Carriages and Bug
Repairing of Carriages, Wagons and Bugg es, Fa.ni.ng and Trimming
*( all iivades done on short notice.
ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE REPAIRED AS GOOD AS NEW
have now on hand the largest, and best, stock of waggons, of my own
Jake, bogies bargains homemade bad ana better of western call. build All wh that I have ever for work carried. I
ou wan t you > owe me are ear
jestly request to come forward and settle promptly. I need the money and
must have it. These who do not pay promptly will be given but short,
time. So you will please settle promptly. f
It should be rememberd that My establishment is
HEADQUARTERS UNDERTAKERS GOODS
COFFINS and CASKETS of all grades and sizes, and COFFIN HARDWARE
in fact everything tha is kept in a first class Undertaker.
Jg’COFFINS 'DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN CITY OR COUNTY
Most Respectful!v.
.1, W. LANGFORD.
OB&&2* S.
POPULAR—-- Jfiir TOiuTOBlL®*- ii ms. I m I * aSTTVoduction—One EUROPE Largest The
OJR r ryru:. ■'£: w.\ every OR
CE> ■IE.!, ;<• a o eVo 8 : q' |, e I ten Organ
MOST i m a a !§ if . minutes. AMERICA!
-THE -M m Factory
1
I 7 I v in
fholseale Southern Depot for ESTEY ORGANR, Steinway
Weber, Decker Brothers and Gate City PIANOS.
—DEPOT OF—
382M&P SB-4PS3®S.
-IMPORTERS DIRECT PROM ETROPE OF
Fiolins, Guitars, Harmonicas Etc
iiRINGS, AMD ALL KINDS OF MUSICAL MERCHANDISE i
•^Nobody Ljn underbuy us, Nobody can undersell us.
Estey Organ Company Atlanta Ga
W,H. LEE, Agent.
JOHN NEAL AND COB PANY J
---WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALERS IN
SOS, 7 and 9 SODTH BROAD STREET ATLANTA, GA.
:o:
Special inducements offered to DEALERS and others in all grades ot Far*
hare. A share of the patronage ot Rockdale and adjoining counties ernestly
elicited. Be sure and give us a trial before making your purchases.
THE OLD RELIBLE FIRAM OF
)
-dealers in
I beral Merchandise Etc.
RAILROAD BLOCK
CONYERS, GEORGIA
Jiving and been most established complete slocks for 18 in years, eoutry, and carrying sell one goods ot the as largest lou a
the we can
baud we guarantee satisfaction. When you want
MY GOODS, NOTIONS, CLOTHING
Call 7
on &C „ ^
J.H. ALMAND&S0
THE LIFE OF A COWBOY.
X Western Editor tells ns how He Feeds and
Tends His Flocks.
[From the Cheyenne Leader.]
In a roundup party of cowboys there
;re all sorts of men, some careful enough
h* their living, though the liveliness and
dash of the work may make all alike seem
recklet*. In one. respeet there is a
strong good re^mblanee in all—their perfect
hum»r and good fellowship.
Among the bojg this year are a good
many te nderfee. some of whom have
come on the rangy to get an insight into
the stock business, with a view to follow
ing it. Besides several young English¬
men, disguise, who, we all knev, were dukes in
there were vitli one of the
roundup parties I spent s. few days with,
a son of a prominent New York" Judge,
two graduates of the Chicago University,
a law student who had keen eighteen
months in Roscoe Conkling’s office, and
a, Texas gambler after the boys’ money.
As I have said, some of the boys were
careful to get their creature comforts
even in a country where it was raiBiug
every day and the nights were frigid
cold. While watching some who seemed
to have the best of it, aud not to mind
the hardships, I saw they did it because
they knew how to take care of them¬
selves. One old campaigner gave me
the particulars of his daily life. He
never took off his rubber coat while it
“chaps” ■vas raining. all daylong. He wore his leathern
He wore shoes,
not boots, bnt also wore leggings. In
the evening he was dry from head to
foot, even if it had rained all dav. He
was especially careful to keep liis feet
dry. His bedding was not nearly as
nuiky as that <. some others, but he
thought it ample. Some men carry
with them heavy coverlets, and eves
make up a kind of mattress. This man.
however, had three woolen blankets, a
rubber blanket, and a large piece of tar¬
paulin.
In making up his bed at night lu
spread the rubber he blanket on theground
hist. Next laid his tarpaulin so that
its top was even with that of the rubber
blanket. Then he stretched the tarpau¬
lin out fiat, and it Hvas perhaps twenh
feet long and eight wide. Next he put
a coarse woolen double blanket down
over the rubber and tarpaulin, leaving
the lower half of the blanket rolled up
at the feet. Another was placed in the
same way. On the top of these he laid
another blanket. Then the half of the
other two blankets which had been roll: d
up was drawn upon the rest. In this
way a bag bottom was made at the foot
of the bed, protecting the feet, Tin
lower part of the tarpaulin was then
turned up over everything. It reached
a foot above the sleeper’s head. Last
of all, the sides of the tarpaulin wen
doubled under the bed. The man worked
his way down into this sack from the
head, and no cold could penetrate it. I
should add that before making his bed
lie dug away the ground to conform t<
the curves of the body, and he said it
made him as comfortable as if he were
in a feather bed.
On the roundup, there is an abun¬
dance of canned fruit served out to the
boys. The rest of the food is fresh
meat, bacon, dried fruit, beans, soda bis¬
cuit, tea and coffee. But little can be
said to the credit of the average cook.
In crossing the plains fifteen years ago 1
thought the surely race of bad cooks then at
work must die out in this age of
progress. But some of the same school
are on the roundup this summer. I
spoke to the careful chap I have men¬
tioned, and asked why it was that fine
steaks were spoiled by being cut up in
little bits and fried black in grease,
when they could be j ust as easily broiled.
He said he doubted if the cooks knew*
what a broiled steak was, but that if
steaks were broiled a cowboy might walk
off with a whole steak, eat of it what he
could and throw the rest away, just as,
when loaves of bread are baked, he
breaks off a quarter of a loaf, munches a
portion of it, and flips the rest at some
fellow’s head. This man said he always
kept a piece of wire about the wagon
and cooked his own steaks on the end of
it over the coals.
Soda biscuits are perhaps a necessity
of camp life, according to the dim light
let iu on cooks’ minds, but they are un¬
wholesome. Common crackers would
prove in time better for the stomach,
and would taste quite as good to one
having a healthy appetite. From the
sight of fried bacon good Lord deliver
us. The canned fruit is often good, but
occasionally it tastes of the can. I have
no donbt that if an enterprising firm of
fruit eauners were to paste on their cans
the date when the contents were put iu
it. a hungry public would not only for¬
give them if they were to do away with
the high art chromo work that usually
adorns fruit cans, but would buy up
those dated within a year. The subject
of fruit absorbing the solder and tin of
cans has already received attention in
some of the Eastern States where there
is an ami-adulteration law. Wyoming
is greatly interested in the purity of
canned fruit, a fact attested by the piles
of empty cans that fringe every camp
ground.
A lot of Metal.
A man would hardly dare Federal attempt metal to
compute the weight of
hurled into Vicksburg, from first to last,
says M. Quad in a letter from that city,
biit he wiio would visit the place, and look
for what he may consider legitimate re¬
sults, will be* greatly disappointed,
"here are not six builuings in the city Not
showing signs of bombardment.
more than two or three buildings were
fired and destroyed, and the citizens do
not remember a case where any one was
killed in a house. Cannon balls and
pieces of sheli and grape-shot were thick
enough in the streets, the bullets could
be picked up river, everywhere, from first and yet to last, the
fire from the
amounted to little more than throwing
away ammunition. Upon one occasion
an iron-clad steamed slowly along a dis¬
tance of two miles, throwing grape into
the town as fast as her guns could be
fired, yet only one house was hit hard
enough to ;eave any scars. That house
is there to-day. and so are hundreds of
people who passed through it all, and
dodged death so often, and in so many
different forms that they come to con¬
sider themselves bullet-proof.
HOW WE PROGRESS.
THE WAY MAXES WERE RTN' DURING
THE LAST CENTURY.
Searclty ol Correspondence In Those Days
W hat was Necessary to Guarantee a
Trip—Mode ol Travel from Boston to
New York.
The newspapers and the inventions
for transmitting mails and intelligence
have worked a marvelous change, among
other things, in letter-writing. Few
men have now time or inclination to
ctrry on correspondence with their
friends in distant cities, and when they
do write, their letters treat of some
matter which is disposed of in the few
estpossible words. Then it was differ¬
in’., and the men who had fought to
geiier at the Bradywine, who had stood
shudder to shoulder at Trenton end
Germantown, and had shared each
otler’s rags at Valley Forge, took
plasure in communicating with each
otler as often as possible. Their letters
coitained many items which now are
fouid in the papers under the head of
geieral news. The nrices of various
articles of use, the cost of living, the
las election, the current opinions of the
da;, were all found iu letters simply be¬
cause they could be gathered from no
otler source. Practically there was no
sudi thing as mail. Leas than two
hrndred years ago a patent was issued
crating the office of Postmaster for the
cohnies of America, but nothing came
of t, because there were not enough
letters mailed to justify the establish¬
ment of a service. About 1720 a tine
of riders extended from Philadelphia to
several points in Virginia, but the ser¬
vice was extremely irregular beemse with
the post rider was never sent out a
mail until enough letters had been
gathered to pay the expouse of the trip,
rnd no one could, therefore, tell when
uis missive would be forwarded. The
speed was usually about thirty miles a
day, and when, at the first of this cen¬
tury, the rider, by changing horses,
made 100 miles in the twenty-four
jionrs, the achievement .vas marveled
it. More mails are now received in a
.single day in New York than were then
in six months: and more letters there in
pne day than then in the whole country
during n year. The mail then between
Hew York and Boston was carried in a
single pair of saddle bags, and when the
quantity increased so that two pairs had
to be used, the carriers remonstrated so
loudly , that the matter , , became ol , eo.i
siderable consequence.
To receive a tetter then was a great
event m a neighborhood, since le.ter being years
sometimes passed without a
brought to a country town, and when
one came, it was a signal for an die
neighbors to come m and hear it read.
Letters often look six ueeks to go from
Philadelphia to the country towns of
Massachusetts, and during this time the
carriers had abundance of leisure to read
them and get their contents by heart,
an opportunity they were not slow to
use There was no law forlnddn g them
to do this, and as they enjoyed telling
the news they bore, and the people
liked to listen to them, this arrangement
was very satisfactory. This practice,
so abominable to those who corre
sponded, continued for many years un
til the number of letters and greater ex
pedihon in then- carnage prevented the
carriers from reading them. For this
reason the majority of the public men
corresponded in cipher of some kind or
another, a habit which has been mis
taken for evidence of oralt, when, in
fact, it was merely to render corre
spondenee private. Bad as the system
of postal facilities service was for traveling it was so that superior few
to the
were disposed to complain. In those
days the man who, for any purposes
attempted t os. art on a joitiney from
Virginia to Massachusetts, called his
friends together, gave them a fareweh
dinner, made Ins had prayeis
for liis safety offered up m . the church,
and made his general arrangements as a
man now would if intending to go to In
dia or Africa or a term of years. In
.
Washingtons time two stages carried
all the travel between Neu YoA and
Boston, posting eighteen hours of each
day and reaching their destination in
only six days. Wnen they stuck m e
mud all the passengers turned out, as
they do now out of a street car, got
rails and helped the driver. When
New York was in sight the w etched
passengers were sometimes compelled be to
wait for ten days, if there chanced to
a wind, before they could cross the
river, and not infrequently, when ice
was running, a ferryboat would be
crushed in the floes and the passengers
forced to clamber out on the cakes,
where they would float for hours at the
immediate* danger of being carried out
to sea.—.SV. Louis Democrat.
A Grain Speculator.
Phil. D. Armour, one of the grain and
pork speculators of Chicago, is of sturdy
Scotch Presbyterian stock. New Bom York, in one
of the central counties of on
a farm among the hills. It was the
highest ambition of his boyhood days to
eam money enough to buy the farm ad¬
joining his father’s. When the gold
fever broke out ho was still a mere strip¬
ling; but, full of youthful enthusiasm,
he started for California, driving a wagon
across the plains and mountains. He
remained there three or four years, and
in that time saved a few thousand dol¬
lars. He had cash enough to buy the
farm and settle down. He had no sooner
reached home than he experienced a
sudden revulsion of feeling. The streets
of the village looked narrow, cramped
and dull. The house appeared mean
and dingy. He only remained on the
farm two or three days, and then took
himself to Cincinnati. Later he drifted
to Milwaukee, and at the close of the
war he sold a great lot of pork at #40 a
barrel, and bought it in again at #18 to
#19, realizing a profit of about a million.
To-day he ranks as the wealthiest man
in Chicago, being rated by those who
know something of his business at
3*25.000,000 to 330,000,000. Hi, W
sactions are colossal. His firm employs
between 5,000 and 6,000 men, and on his
pay rolls are about fifty men who re¬
ceive salaries of #5,000 and over. He
is not yet 55 years of age.
When are watches easily stolen ? When
they are off their guard.
-----—
A War Incident.
A New York TYibune correspondent
says: The ex-Goufederafce General Gor¬
don told me an interesting story about
two interwiews he had with General
Barlow. At Sbarpsburg, Barlow was
apparently mortally wounded and fel
into Gordon’s hands. Gordon took a
liking to him and asked if he coaid not
do something for Barlow.
“I think not, General, ’’said the young
man; “I shall be buried here, no doubt
I do not expect to live. But you can do
one tiling for me; here is a package of
letters from my wife which I wish you
to destroy before my eyes.”
Gordon, who was then a young man
also, took the letters and was about to
destrov them when Barlow, with a bub
ble at‘ his throat murmured:
“Would you take the trouble to rend
me one of them first? Anyone will do.”
Gordon opened one of the letters and
read it to the dying man—his last
friendly words, perhaps, from home.
Then the letters were destroyed. But.
the incident touched Gordon so that he
made special exertion to have Barlow
sent through the lines or to have his whe
admitted to him. This being done, the
two armies fell apart and these men saw
?aeh other no more. Gordon considered
Barlow to he dead. Barlow hail also
seen that a General Gordon had been
killed somewhere. They met again at a
friendly table in Washington, but did
not know each otlier through the changes
of time. After some lapse Gordon said:
“General Barlow, are yon a relative
of that Barlow who was lulled at An
tietam ?”
“No,” said the General, “I am the
same man. Ave you any relative,” in
quired Barlow iu turn, “of that General
Gordon who was recently killed on the
‘
. Confederate side?”
“That was my cousin; I am John B.
Gordon.”
Then at the request of the persons
who overheard, Barlow told the tale
amid tears and emotion on everv side.
Peek’s Bad Boy.
“There is nothing pa likes better than
to go out on a farm and pretend he
knows everything,” said the bad. boy.
“When pa’s farmer friend got pa and
ma out there he set them to work, and
ina shelled peas, while pa went to dig
potatoes Liu dinner. I think it was mean
for rhe deacon to send pa out in the
cornfield to dig potatoes, and after he
kad du „ a whole row of corn without
finding anv potatoes, to set the dog on
, atK ] tree him in an apple tree near
tke 1)ee ] 1 i VCSj ml( q then go and leave pa
- n p. ge w jth the dog barking at him.
p a sa i<i he never knew how mean a dea
c(m coldd i 3e until he sat on the limb of
thftt Je tree all tho afternoon. About
j.; mc Jo chores the farmer came and
fonnd and cn iled the dog off, and pa
came down, then the farmer played the
meanest trick of ai ], He said people
d j t ln’t k v,ow bow to milk cows, and pa
gaid he wiahed be p ad aR man y dollars
M he kuew ll0W to milk cows. He said
jpg B p ec hulty was milking kicking cows,
aud farmer gave pa a tin pail and a
mdk j n „ s fooi, and let down the bars, and
. )0 u d<J( ] ou t to pa ‘the worst cow on the
pj ace y p a kHt >w his reputation was and at
g f ake aud [ ie went up to the cow
£ hed it in the Hank and said, ‘hist,
rafotmd you.’ ' Well, the cow wasn’t a
hfeti h co but a hurting bull, and pa
kne , y it was a buI] as qnick a8 he se0 it
dovnl its head and beller, and pa
dr0 p ped the pail and stool and started
f nr the bars, and the bull after pa. I
don ’t think it was right in ma to bet two
f w ith the farmer that pa would
^ . t( the 1)ars 1);fo ro the bull did.
^ h sho WO n the bet. Pa said he
kne it was ft V mll just as soou as the
horns got tangled up iu liis coat tail, and
^ j u> s t, }llck 0 n the other side of the
alld ilis nose hit the ash barrel
wilere t hey make lye for soap, pa said
f saw mo re fireworks than we did at
^ ^ Soldiers ’ Home . ra wouldn’t
ce leb ra te any more, and he came home,
after thanking the farmer for his courte
sj i JU ; he wants me to borrow a gun
, uld g0 w ;th him hunting. We are going
g , loot ft j m j] and < t dog, and some
maybe we will shoot the farmer, if
keeps on as mad as he is now. Weil,
we won't have another 4th of July for a
„
'
A Strong Way of Stating It.
The Toledo Blade says: As a matter
of course, the beer drinker will have
beer. He knows that the fresh and
lively beer, made a feiv weeks ago, and
full of yeast, which ferments in liis
stomach is constantly congesting his
liver. He knows that liis kidneys are
becoming will horribly diseased, The condition but never¬
theless he have it. ot
his liver and kidneys does not cheerfully appal or
deter him. He comes up
with his liver and kidneys in his hand,
as it were, and lays them a willing sacri¬
fice upon the only altar he knows any¬
thing about, the saloou bar.
There is no help for this and never
will be. Each man is the sole proprie
tor of his own liver and kidneys, and he
has an inalienable rigiit to congest the
one and enlarge the other at Lis own
sweet will. This is his privilege, and no
one can prevent him.
Bnt what an ass the man must bo who,
having dedicated his entire inward or¬
ganization to the brewer and beer seller,
goes any farther than that. What an
idiot he must be to howl for the “protec¬
tion” of a man who is selling him beera.t
a profit of #4 a keg. What an unac¬
countable dunderhead he must be who
does not know that the brewer and beer
seller has protection enough and to apart
in him the tape Can’t worm appetite that is eating
up. he understand that after
his liver and kidneys get into certain
conditions he cannot stay out of the
saloon, and that the brew'er and beer
saloon people have a mortgage on his
stomach that is just as binding as though
It were written upon parchment and
witnessed and sealed.
Scene at the base ball ground: A ball
was knocked sidewise and caught on a
«£ SLiiS ejaculates: H&XS ,, “Ah, ,
girl looking at the game
really, how can it be a fowl ? I don’t
see any feathers J” And she turned to
her attendant with an inquiring look.
“Well—oh! Yes, you see,” he stam¬
mered, “the reason yon don’t see the
feathers is because it belongs to the
picked nine,”
A SISTER'S KISS.
THE VALUE A BROTH KK. Pl.ACKO
UPON IT.
Why a YotinK Han Refused n Friend’s
Invitation to Otiuk—He Haifa His Rea¬
son* and W ins llis Friend Over to the
Temnernnce Cause.
“Now, Tom, what will you have to
brink?"
“Nothing more than I have, Boland,” .
and the speaker raised a glass of water
to his lips as tie looked toward the corn
panion with whom he was dining at a
first-class hotel.
"Nonsense, Tom; surely glass you with will me?” not
refuse to take a friendly yes.”
“Of anything stronger than this,
“But, Tom, you do not mean me to
understand that you never touch it ; that
you have not. sufficient self-respect to
touch it as only a gentleman should ?”
“IT land. I have known stronger men
than 1, with just as much self-respect,
I who have yielded to the tempter and
gone beyond the limits of the. social
i glass, but even the knowledge of that
might not have kept me lrom indulg
mg.
What w,i« it, then?”
“A sister s kiss.
sentimental nonsense! Did
die bribe you with a kiss?”
“No; but listen. I have a sister just
•orniug into womanhood — one of the
purest, lovliest women I think God ever
made. I have always had, whether I
deserve it or not, a largo share of her
warm, young heart, and Cvery evening
when I enter the house she puts her
arms about my neck and kisses me, with
a glad look of welcome in her eyes.
Roland, there are many things I prize
in this life, but 1 would give them all up
rather than that evening kiss. I
thought, as yon did once, that I could
1 take a friendly glass and let it go so tar
and no farther, and I even had the glass
in my hand to carry it to my lips for the
first time, when the thought of the kiss
1 would have that evening came into my
mind. Could I take it if I drank the
wine ? "Would not the odor of it still
cling to my breath and poison the kiss ?
I knew then that I must give tip one or
the other, aud the glass was put back,
for I could not give up tlio other, mid
than I registered a solemn vow that, if I
could help it, no stain of that kind
should ever soil my sister’s lips. A few
where" !V cnings after that we were out together
the social glass was handed
round. Now, there was no one there
who did not consider himself a gentle¬
man, and who would not. under any
circumstances, have kept within bounds
before ladies, and yet I saw my sister
shrink from any she had seen touch tlio
wine, and when we went home she spoke
of it, and, laying her head on my shoul¬
der, said, sadly: feel for their
. 11 It makes me so sorry
sisters, Tom.’
“Then I made another vow—that I
would never take to the house one who
took even a social glass. Perhaps I think was
wrong to go so Jar, but I did not
of its being so hard. You see yon are
one of niv oldest friends, one of the
noblest aiid truest fellows I know, and
one I am proud of knowing, aud when I
heard you were coming hero to live I
made up my mind that our house should,
be like a home to yon.” companion, soberly,
"Tom,” said his
“you have not gone too far—no. not
even iu excluding me from your home.
I think I will like, you all the better for
it. I am glad you have told me what
von have. If I had had ft sister—”
“Would you have done the same?
Then do it now. Stop for the sain: of
some other fellow’s sister. Surely, the
time will come when you will want
another’s sister for your own.”
"I don’t know, Tom,” wan the hesitat¬
ing reply. “If I did stop for the sake
of'any other other fellow’s fellow. sister, What you would have
be that you
said makes mo a little envious. Suppose
I were to stop and then grow so very
envious—” companion, look¬
“Roland,” said his
ing up, “I must give her up to some
one, I know, aud there is no one to
whom I would so willingly give her as
“Then, Tom, you have my word for
it that I will not touch wine again so
long as I live. Your sister’s kiss has
saved me as well as you—from what?
God knows.” sisters
Young men, there are other in
this world like the one I have told you
of, and such sisters make wives such
ns a man may he proud of having won.
For the sake of the one you may meet
who would make your home so bright
and cheerful you would bo glad to go
fo it, sure of a welcome—for her sake, I
say, stop ere it. be too late; bring no
shadow of that kind info her life, but ba
strong to resist, that the time may coma
when she will put her hand in yours and
tell yon you have made her life a very
Liappv one.— Arthur's Home Magazine*
The Country’s Wealth.
Mr. Mulhall, of the Royal Society of
London, who writes bo acceptably Kingdom, ou
the wealth of the United haa
given some attention to the growing
wealth of this country. In his opinion
the wealth of tho United States in 1880,
as represented l>y houses, furniture, bul¬
manufacturers, railways, shipping,
lion, lauds, cattle, crops, investments
abroad, etc., was #12,000,000,000, which,
adding roads, public lands, etc., valued
at #7,700,000,000, gives a grand total oi
#49,770,000,000, or about #1,000 for
every human being in the kind. While
the aggregate wealth of this country,
according to Mr. Mulhall, is #9,000
000,000 in excess of the aggregate
wealth of Great Britain, the wealth per
inhabitant in that country is #1,16<V
against #995 in this.
A Cholera Factory.
Sir Samuel Baker, writing to the Lon¬
don Times with reference to the out¬
break of cholera in Egypt, says:—“Da- of Oriental
mietta is a disgusting example long,
neglect and filth accumulation. A
narrow street runs parallel wiih the rive*
at the back of the dilapidated rise houses, frona
which for a distance of a mile
the level of the stream. This street is
without drainage, and is a miserable
channel of communication, deep with
poisonous mud after a- heavy shower,
and full of pest holes emitting germs of
pestilence during hot and sultry weather,
f cholera could be manufactured, factory.” there
ould not be a more elaborate