The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, February 19, 1897 Page: 2 of 8
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H(X)D’S BRIGADE.
Trinity Navigation.
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A WKKKLJ NKWSVAl-UK 11Y
fjlLLARD, Editor and .Proprietor
Posi|Min(d l'mi II
(cioi^ivtllr.
Houston, Tex , Jan. 28.—Fol-
The directors of the Trinity
River Navigation company have
re-eleeted the old officers to serve
THE TERRIBLE AlGUE.
VAIRI' IELt), Piuckktpnk Co.. TKXA8
The couqty site election in East-
land county resulted in favor of
Eastland.
Willie Hell, son of the sheriff of
Natives ‘Dying by Scorn «nd ThOr
Hod Ira Lie Along Ihe Roads.
t * . $
Bombay, Jan. 25 —If the plague
lasts until Feruary 1 every mill it}
the city will be closed. The mill
r.cc ... „. hands held a meeting yesterday
To Griffiths; secretary, Leo Wolfson. [ and decided to petition the owners
lowing in an order front the presi- another term. The officers as re-1
dent . or Hold’s Texas brigade, elected are : President, C. A. i
changing the date of their reunion: I Keating; vice president, T. W.
J Griffiths; secfretary
the mendters of Jibuti's Texas bri- The directors are : C.
Houston, Tex., Jan. 26. —--------, „ , — . ------- . . , - . ~r-M
- — - ~ — ■' U A. Keating, | tcyelose tho plants on the first of
gade : Owing to t|ao fact that j S. W. S. Hunean, W. O. PaclgiU,jj*o month. If the owners revise
Brown county-shot himself in
call of -the leg -Monday,
wouau'is painful, but hot serious:
Postmaster Williams, of W^xa-
hachie, .is going to figure up the
money receipts.of ,ol his office and
see it Waxajiachte caneol set-lire a,
free deliveay system.
John Baker, a funner, was
found half frozen and in a .dying
condition in a small cabin in the
outskirts of San Antonio Tuesday.,
lie diet! a few hours afterward.
At San Antonio Mrs Louis
Gray has just recovered Jiujgnien
against the Southern Pacific rail
•way in the sum of fdo.ooo for the
killing ot her husband May 1894.
Toni Kirkpatrick of Cass county,
was shot in^.Jefferson Saturday
night and "Tli^d - Sunday night.
many of the members of Hood’s I F. G. Moorfe, J. H. TrAylor, Si-
the hands will quit work.
the Texas brigade, Confederate Veter- mon Philp, T. W. Griffiths, Jas. -T&e natives are-.rio was tort by
The mm, are desifous of attending the. Moroney, Philip Sanger, D. II. starvation that they have po power
ous: grand reunion of Confederate Vet- Morrow and Thus. E MeLnnis; ^ to resist the pjague, mit Muo
It is stated that it is the inten- stricken, fall a prey to a' horrible
tion of the management of the/ death. In the outlying districts-
company to exert every effort to (bodies are numerous in the roads
bring tiie question of navigating On the banks-of the (iangkse,
the*Trimty river beftWe the state, where all the* ghats are loualeu,
legislators and congress in a tan- j hundreds of coqises are lying
gible form in order that an oppor- j waiting their turn to be buried,
tunity may Ik> once more afforded I The ghats are stmtll, raife&ffbHni-
thenj to enact laws ami make ap-1 mg plies made of stone. - Ihe death is divided equally among
propriations favorable to the pro- tim is brought to the Gangese all his BODB an(j tbj8 „'oeB on for
ject. In this connection it may
be also stated again that a com-
1
in
Felberf’Brande, a 16-year, old boy,
was arrested charged with the1
shooting.-
The .postmusieJi general will
. ’ send an inspector to Greenville to I
* examine the condition of thC^ide-
walks on the 5th of February, and
if-fuupd sail^factory free mail de-
'"’HfBVy tlylTne Inaugurated at oth%. ,
, Justice of the peace, J. W. Lang-,
ftird, -while holding court at Gates
ville on the 24th inst., was stricken.,
with.rheumatism of the heart, trdiii
which died within a Tew hours We
was an old Confederate -eldier.
erf't. Glass of tile i i.itt ieship
Texa,s has notified 'Secretary Her-
bert that hjs ship "will be ready to
go to sea out F>. b. 8th, which will
give her a week to reach Galveston
where she is to icceive the siivei
•service trom Uie citizens ol '1'exas ,
'eriinsat Nashville, Tenn., and uw
mg to the recent change of dates
tif the Nashville reunion from May
5, *1 and 7, to.Junq 22, 28 and 2-4,
wlnqh conflicts with the dates of
the reunion at Floresville, Tex., op
June 28 and 24, of Hood's Texas
brigade, therefore, the reunion of
Hood’s Textts brigade has been
changed to June 80 and July 1,
to take place at Floresville, Wil-
son county, Tex. This change
was made to enable hH to attend
both reunions. " •
By order of. J.E Anderson,
President of Hood's Texas brigade
association
Geo,. A. Braftnard, secretary.
President Anderson also appoint-
ed the following, committee on
transportation: Geo. A. Biarinaid
■ chairman, Houston; 11. Brahttn,
Sugarland, and J. B. 1‘olley, Flo-
resville, to look after transpora
ti<«i matters in connection with
the reunion *
Sheriff . Hawkins eft Denton
cmi;iv arrested Jetrx Anderson,
colored,, at'fsanger tins week, on tiler , ,V(,S
charge ofljuiglary. Anderson gave j j(j
bond ;n,i!ic --um'of $,y>o. H
charged \v-th burglarizing a In -use • t.uj j% im(]
at-Sanger. , ,
Gr< -en Carter, 'a'colored porter 011
the H, 58 T. C. uad his liafid* cut
off at, Sh'.rni'atj J'uesday. Hv a
misstep he failed to gt-t his ioofou
the >latform step ' and tliryw his
left across the rail.. Tin? coach
ivhee. ran over it severing it at the
wris"
C. L Raymond, a Denison hack
driver, has tiled suit«ngainst tlTe
Missouri, Kansas and Texas rail
The Philosophy of Suicide.
It is related by Montaigpe that
in former times there was kept
in the city of Marseilles a poison
prepared ■ out of hemlock at the
public charge, to be administered
to those who desirt-d ti> hasten
their.end, on the . condition that
they should ffWt’fgWw. satisfac-
tory reasons and motives for their
purpose To the legal authorities.
1'nfortunately, he does not tell us
how often' the permission to die
was thus granted, or what causes
were considered sufficient to-justif,y
it; I >ut it is safe to say that if such a
rule prevailed ir> tips country at
the present time, a few or none
would get leave to end tffieir own
The reasons assigned for
. .- Mtieiue 111 most instances >are
ft Mi — ioiisly inadeipiafte, both logi-
\ and morally.' They pertain
usually to tlyi.se slings and ar-
rows fortune which- are a'part
of the general experience .of*life,
and which countless- thousands
of peoj.le aVo constantly endur-
ing witliopt a thought" of self-de-
structTTiffi There'- are -emergen*-
cies,, of course, in which it may
easily seem to a man of sensitive
or melancholy organization that
he has ontliveil his usefulness,
and thyt the best thing he can do
is to quit the world where he has
way foff If I2..500 alleging that an j superfluous, if not bhr-
employe of the company threw dens*-me; but the. darkness of
him out of the union ytatibn at
Denison when he had a ticket in
I such situations is apt to be ex^g-
, , . . , . . jerated aven in the ^orst cases,
his pocket for k poihtinorth of that If Submitted to a jury of intelli-
place, and in the act of putting him gen{ and. diuioteresttdd perspns,
out broke one of the bones in the j tbo TeciHkm would invariably be
right leg.
hat tie victim pf a misfortune
at he thinks unltearable is not
entitled to the coveted poison,
but owes to himself and to society
the duty of Survival. *
Those who read newspapers do
a
mittee of active workers has been
’appojnted to go to Austin and.-also
to Galveston for the purpose" of
meeting the river and harbor com-
mittee of the national house of
representatives, which is to visit
Texas shortly. These gentlemen
„will go before this committee
thoroughly posted on the subject
and carrying many valuable tracts,
pflmphlets, etc., and endeavor to
present the need of an appropria-
tion t*i clear out, canalize- and
mkke navigable the chiganel of the
river. * ' ■
Bo wanes, that connot be helped,
and they will not tolerate any in-
terference with their -religious
rites. "
Deiflal from Judge Clark
mail Tumigated.
k New York, Jan. .28.—The mail
from India which was distributed
ar-
YVaco, Texas, Jan. 2t> -—(To the
Nows.)—In your issue to-day I
notice a card from Judgd John B.
Rector, Uflitedjitates judge, nor-
thern district of TeifaS; * touching,
the pressure" brought to (kwh- uppq
him to resign his office and accom-
panied with an extract from the
Houston Post of Jan. If, IMG, iff
which there is a plain intimation
that Hon George B. Zimpleman
of Austin had visited Dallas with a
view to inducing Judge Rector to
resign his office in order-that I
niight secure^hls jilace.-
This is thetk-st time I "had seen
the articles from the Post, though
1 Ipul heard of it while in- attend-
ance upon the t'intod States cir-
cuit court at Dallas about the
time of th«f publication and jptjik
occasion then to say tbat (he story
with a fabrication I have never
solicited Major Zimplfeihatfs ser-
vices in. such behalf, ami have a
letter from him, in jvhicb he as-
sures me that he .never /went to
Dal Ins on any such mission. As
friends of J udge Rector we assisted
'him originally in securing the ap-
pointment, and my <luty to-w
friend in njjsfortune as Well ait the
higher duty I owe to myself and
river, if possible 'before death,
that he may die by the sacred
river.. Then when he dies his
body is dippecTIn the stream, taken,
out and laid cm the ghat, with a
pile of wood under and above' it,
and soon reduced to ashes, which
are a4veflb off into the river.
The natives look upon the plague
as a scourge of their goddess,
Thursday in this city, having
rived from Liverpool on the stt
ship Teutonic, has been thoroughly
fumigated by order of Health Of-
ficer Doty, to guard against any
possibility of danger from the bu-
bonic plague. This fumigation
marks the first official recognition
of Kim existence Si the scourge.
A,-—-CASKS AT KAMAKAN.
St.,Petersburg, Jan. 28 —Two
cases'pf the Bubonio plagfie, which
is raging in, Bombay, are reported
from Kumar an, an island off the
West coast qf Arabia in the Red
Sea 'itis a British possession and
one of the leading stations near
the, City of Mecca. A severe
quarantine bus been, established by Christ,
the Russian authorities.
bw mpe are cultivated in the sum-1
mer. AU these crops have, failed
since last ^ nne. t
THE PLAGUE SPREADS.
The people have in many- cases
eaten tneir l
seed grain. The Small-
er rivers and the tanka are dried
up, making irrigation impossible.
Without help from outside doath
is inevitable for these teeming
millions. J * , * -• -
India is the most overpopulated
country in the world. *_ _____ _
An agricultural district in India tower classes,
is often found to be more thickly
populated than an area of the
same extefaC in tho great English
manufacturing coqnty of Lan-
cashire.
Of these agricultural workers
the majority are land owners, and
these are said to lie the m6st dis-
tressed part of the population.
A man’s little, piece of land at
laAriai »d DmlaUoa C.axd kf Ik.
Ur«»t DtSM/ir la India , * .
Bombay Jan. 27.—The corres-
pondent of the Associated Press
whft. is visiting the distressed
provinces* of India, has arrived at
Bijapur,. about 245 miles south-
east" of Bombayt> and finds in this
district the keenest distress, espec-
iaflfy among' /the people of thq-
•------wa (, v
These are on the verge of star-
ition and only saved Irom i
the giifcrnmem relief work, v
enables them to earn enough
:
generations. . . < ,».
In consequence of this system
man mfty own a sixteenth of
.. mon-v
,ey to at least keep body and soul
together while waiting the brighter
state of affairs which recent rains
are expected to I provide later in
tb^-yjaah. ' 1/
It is estimateth' that fully, one-
tenth of the cattle in the district
have alrewly perished from Ia6"k
of food. /The loss from this cause
will undCmbtely be considerably
V
- s
aCre of millet growing soil in one
place and a sixteenth c5f an acre of
rice land four miles away.
As long 83 a -Hmdoo can keep*
•kin and bone together he will
hang on to his mite of land. He
will work for another man at in-
fintecinml wages for four days of
the week in order to be able to
scratch his own ljttJe piece of Soil
for the remaining three.
Rice and" millet are tho etaple
foods. A Hindoo can live well on
a half pound of rice a day. This
quantity is in native measurement
on the steam- .Called a pow and costs less than a
cent. That is, in fact, the average
living expenditure.
an. increased betWeen" noW knd the
growing oLthejnew crops.
In the fields can tye seen
numbers qf carcass
being devoured by
There are many
lying.
of animals ^
the vultures.
teen
* //
f
id pillaging grain stores whenever
an oppurtunity arises, and the
prisons are full- of thieves /who
A A
prisons
nave be<
ave been capturdd while stealing ]n
1 atteiiiptir" An ^
grain, or in
Among the m
to do so. .
there are many *
cases of illness^ arising from lack
of proper nourishment and eftiach- /
ation, and it ft regarded as certain
that pbolera will'reach this district
sooner or later, owing to the care-. vv
letsness of the people when dead
*
TLApufi IN BIBLICAL'TtftKS.
^AshiwgtBn, Jan 2$-— Surgeon
Geneaal Walter Wyman of the Ma-
rine hosp able service thinks -the
bubouic plague is mentioned in the
fourteenth chapter and eighteepth’
verse of Zachariah. / The heathen
who did not keep the feast of the
tabernacle were threatened with itf.
“There is a record of a plague,”
said General Wyman, “supposed to
be ot the same character as the
present 911c/' before the time ol
The first k(?own of the di-
sease in Europe was in Jpg four>
t6es
TT -
certain to die in a for t nightjfthey
enter a hospital.-* Beyond doubt"} /
the.utmost resourcesof the govern-
ment will be taxed *l>efore"long in
the efforts which will have to vbf
made to cope with increasing dis-
tress.
'/f « HC «.<|J
>
f,
A DEPLORABLE AOCIJ
Mr.. W L.
V •
J t
Hull Sevrrrly
Wedn^nlaji
India.is the scene pf one of. the
.most awful visitations in the,
World’s history. • I,
teenth century and in
Seven-
The most thickly ^populated j visitation to England in 1665, when
country .on the* gloliwis oeing de- the mortality was very greftt. The
populated by two scourges, both celebrated Iplague of London began
teetiMi-CcirKffyx in
Was pfevdleat
Various parts of'El
1364 anH 1665,
in London and
ngland. The last
my own self-respect would forbid
me to basely "Schfime for the dis-
lacement of a friend in order that
P
d I freely own
dace. I may
1 might secure his
have my faulty an
ta some, but 1 could not stoop to
an'ttct like this. \ v {
Apart from this, I have never
asked President ^Cleveland for
place, and would not-havei^ccenfc*
ed an - appointment at his hands.
My cordial support erf-dbe presi-
dent rested upon higher .grounds,
not need to l>e- told that suicide, I H"<1 I wmiId 1« unwilling ^place
like insanity, is steadily increasing. '\in tlre enemies to
This is due in a large part to the f”ar«C m® ^ a raotlv.e ln
the earnest sUpport l have given
“of which are beyond the power of
man and moderq.science to resist..,
Before many months are past it is
possible, according to . ho Sensa-
tional forecast, that 70,000,000
bodies will be rotting in/the cities
and fields of India. A population
equal to that of United States ex-
terminated in less than, a year.
The wide country, Bombay is
the capatil, is dev acted by famine
The city is depopulated by the
plague.
Four hundred thousand inhabi-
tants of Bombay have fled to the
surrounding country. Of the re-
George Stone, who is charged
by.com plaint with" false swearing,
has been held by Judge Blffis to
answer toJtbe grand jury in a (Kind
Of $300. - The allegations are that
he came to Shernmn from the 1 it-
-OlaiJ A CXI 1 IDiy auu lit <iu v imaaaL al I m,. , ,
fidavit to the age erf a young lady | * ls (*he in a large part
- with the partv who secured license I ”Overe strain of our methods of j £ administration
to marrv her The case came up Ilfe- We do everything at hrgh I » “S afS
on a writ of habeas 'corpus. pressure, and with little relaxation. no1 Hn w
, , ‘ .(Ihe struggle for Wealth and po-
Thik is .from an vVrkansas ex (sition is so tierce and exacting that
change. Tt apjiears tbat the Me- the strongest are noUalways equal
to the test; and so it isnnot to be
mainder half ha ve jierisheil "by the
plague. ,
All business has ceased in Bom-
bay. The courts of justice- are
closed. The muncipal«servioe has
been practically abandoned^ and
ill 1665, but there has been appear-
ance of it f^ere since that time. It
has been confined to the East dur-
ing the last century, chiefly 1n In-
dia and China. * ' "*
“It is a germ disease. Its
nature Was never known until 1864
when the bacillus was discovered by
•Sirs. W. L. Hall came very near,
mectihg a horrible, death by fire, > ‘
at her home, 261 /Ross avenue,
Dallas, "last Wednesday morning.
She is an invalid, ami was standing
.with her back to an mien grate
when a live spark caugnt in her
dress and ignited her clothing.. *
She screamed far help and witn
fare presence of mind seized a
comrfrrt from the bed’and w'rappfedV
hen-elf in its folds. - A servant
girl rushed in an - adjoining
room and theb ran to the kitchen,
whore she grabbed a bucket of
wat«r. "Returning, she dashed the
. ■
true water upon the burning garments
and then secured a second bucket.
. "/
*/♦*■
a Japanese scientist, Dr Kitiasatio.
tn 1894 it was imported into Cat
n-
ton from northern India and from
Canton was conveyed to Hong
Kong. A steamer"’voyage from
Canton to Hong Kong is but eight
hours, but during the height of the
epidemic it was the daily occur-
rence for. people to die en route be-
tween the t.wo cities. No reliable
estimate can be made of the mor-
tality in Chiba at that time * as it
was very* great, but the United
States consul ar Canton reported
She drenched Mrs. Hall from h4d
to focR in an effort to extinguish
the blaze. Medical aid was sum-
moned afld it was asc ertained that
the victim of the (ire was (severely
burned about the left, shoulder, ’
left side, and also on the left arm
and hand. .Her condition is said
to be precarious. •
- 1 ■ — *
'-I,
]■
i *
there are not endugh to bury the- under date of July 10, 1894, that
At Greenville, some tig^
Len Johnson suffered an it
his leftsMye, which/-.!
sight. Theinjbrep
moved-as‘it was af
•Kinlriy wave of prosperity prom
ised jtbe'country hasn’t-yet reached
his section : “It is said that a New
York girl knoacls biewl with her
gloves bn but.that is no news to
us. We need bye ad with our hoofs
; oh ; we need bread with our pants
on;,Jipd if those suliscrrliers whq
_ 'are so much in arrears. don’tv pay
1 ifp soon," we will nKxjd bread With-
^“^out anything on.'’ ,
* Jim Harbolt, -who* is charged
with the murder of Kneriff McG^e
at Canadian recently, gave him
sell up te a mart named Isaacs near
Armorillg, Mr. Isaacs turned him
Over to. the authorities.. Harbolt
Was qnite sick and said he Could
not travel after his escape ou ac-
count of the heayy snow. It is un-
derstood Jje- told the. officers who
gave him tools to effect his escape,
but it*is iiq^ known who the parties
are.
wondered at that weakened brains
frequently Ipse their balance and
leave men at mercy of irrational
impulses. Moreover wg» cannot lie
sure What the reason given for
these self-killings • are the only
moving considerations. The heart,
knowetb its own bitterness and
cfyes not always reveal the whole
rdory of trial, defet^and misery.
dead.
One day this wee Id while seve
boys were skating on "a pond ni |
Lorena, McLennanJcouuty, the-ice
broke in and two of the boys, Jim
Bruce and Geb^ge Hatch, were pre
efipitated-into eight. feet of water.
a telegraph post near,
caught the post and pulled
up. .’ The ether, after some
Thej;e are secrets, ana mysteries in’ showered
the matter that we' cannot umlef-
stami. But the supreme fact re-
mains that a.surrender to sinister
fprcea.in any stress of misfortune
is a grove mistake aifil a violation
of solemn duty. Things arebappa
pirant for United
Hlates district (juilge, nor indeed
for any , other office, nor have I
directly or indirectly sought the
aid of any one for the purpose of
securing' that office. My hope is
that Judge Rector may soon be
restored to.bis usual health and
live for many yearp to -adorn the
position he how.holds.
, George Clark.
Bodies lie in„ the streets,
making them impossible pf habi-
tation.
The region .most general af
fected is'the broad belt
feong the base of the Himatay&s,
from the northwafest corner of In-
dia in a Southeasterly direction, in-
cluding both the headwaters of
Upper Indus ancl the tributaries of
Kiss Him He is Living.
$he kissed tbe'^old, iffian; she
and teafsq she
told all the people how good he
mak. 'I though^ say^ J. Tl Wood-
head in the Northwestern Advo-
cate, that if she-lbad only given
two of these kisses-quarter «for
ly po ordered hi the scheqie "of
the uniyenw that there js Anoth-
er ch
It is t$i
»o tha
for everyone wbo~ fails.
eTlbessary to give up be-
fate refuses to be propi-
in out favor at a particular
time or for a particular purpose..
We Are "pot obliged to y iel(( .i^ur
right of existence Us cause it; is
i>cked by interposing diapater
sorrow. The true and ^njqh-
ly course is to go on trying for
sImmjcbs, ip spite of all drawbacks
kbd disap|M)ihtments. Tbat - is
what we are placed hens for, and
we cannot afford to do otherwise.
The plea of d,
.the last ten "years, hoMfheftemiei-
smiled throi^gh his tears!
hearted old gentleman wor
a valid
have
RmA
now be tok it all cqplly. He was
dead. HeiwaS old fhd poor; she
g an^ rich- She had ten.
wasyoun;
n((> room for father 1
I ___1 _ _____ m 1 i nnr in u/nffa1
the Ganges!" Tl
an almost entii
wheat, rice and.
crons.
The famine
the drought distjk
rise in prices
Bnought starvatj
entire populatii
t has lieen
failure of the
lllet and other
not confined to
ict proper. The
by ;it b
in
Bombay
between tbat time and March I, .of
the same year, the total number
of deaths was estimated at b- twefcn
50,000 and 100,000, and not over 5
per cent of those attacked recov-
ered. It should J>e remembered,
Ijowev*!, that thy‘sanitary condi-
tions of CantoprtM-e very bad.”
Speaking of the manner ip which
it,' Di.
hile it
erm is
The
prevent
in the east,, to (the newly acquired
territory of BuXman: in the west
from Oudh, in "the north,, to Mad-
vaa in the south, famine is supreme.
rt says Mhat the"
Iprly great in
it j priovincep and
1 provinces, Ra
bay, Bengal^ - Bur*
Qehtral Iqdia and
This prder begim
icti in which suffe/
An offic
suffering,
Ondb, the
5 put
mnh,
the Jr lhinjat
the disease is brought a
Wyrnqn said:
“It is a filth disease/Jai
.is extremely virulent, thi
readijy killed by disinfec
same methods adopted" fc_ r______
e "spread of cholera are appli-
yr*. ./•*> «Boi*-»^.«.-to the pli^ue, although the
to almost the' diseases are quite different in their
From Bhmbay f\uattfre. CholerS, is a disease that
ust get into the alimentary track;
n 'other words, must be swallowed,
hile the plague may infect the
body through abrasions or cot»
tacfNplth the mucous membrane.
It begins with a high fever and the
earlywappearance of the enlarge-
ment pL the glands of each groin,
the axilar and the back.
straying the oiliei eye.
Pendleton, Boll count
new paper called the "
» *
Phone
•V
A ' NEW TRIUMPH.
ade room for- her
nly two. . The “old
ot educated ( she war
-nse. He had fed and
4|pr twenty years at
hon^ rfhd at college, until she had
risen ipto. more ^‘refineil and cul-
tured society” and married amopg
them. The old people's dress and
dialect were-too coarse. She kissed
of i
ing is worst.
The gove
according
iment of Bengal
the - last const:
*•
•=• - ., a
(stpulation of over 74,000,000. tn
j'j the Northwest provinces and Oudh,
'With a territory of 107,503 square
• mjles, or a iittiq" larger than thq
.State oh Colorado; nave 40,906,-
,rT ----* "th an area of 110,-
20,766,947,
ttioned have
buncles «)oj appear in various/
Th»us of the body, ft is esse^i
a disease of blood poisoning..
r-
'tially
■hil»
the sanitary conditions
places in thre country an
they should be, it sho
that the .intelligence and
cleanliness of the American
would prevent such conditions
would bring abobi such a begin-
■jjT The'din-
ning and ra,
ease
1 ranttHidvance 6f the
in riie Eastern countr
Eastern countries
kt Georgetown 1
The Dreaded • Con-
sujnption<Can Be
'Cured.
I. Hliijm
T. A.
m, the Greet Ckrmlit end
Sciential, Will heed to Ku^lterkrs, Three
Bottlea of Hie Newljr Dleeovered 1
RihirjfUel to Cate t ananmptlon
Kyi L«n« Tr-ohla |
Nolh'lntf Jiulil b«C fairer, more philanthropic
or .oarrjr more Jojr to the effllottd, .than'
the - tensions offer of ‘the .Honored;, and
dittlnttulthed chejhUt, T, A. Sinoum, M. C,
oINew York City. *
.|U‘ Ime Jiecovered > reliable .and abtolufe
aure, tot oontuijipUob, and all bronchial,
thrnht, ,luny ar-d pheet dleeaeM, oatarrhal
affejetione, genefal drfline odd weaknees, lose
of doth a-d all oondttoni of wasting away;
and to make lusreat merits known, will lend
three free bgttlhs of bis jnewly dbcovered ,
remedies to ant smieied reader of this paper.;
Already hts/C new nrientlflo system of medi-
cine'* ha« permanently cured thousands of
uppsrpntly bofieles* <
h
The Doctor considers .It"1 not only b!» pro-
^esslcnnl but his relltrlousduty-s duty wrhlqh
not all
be said hd owes to Mifferln* humanity—to
Infallible cure.
He tins proved the
to bg a ou rabid
olimate. and has
European l '
felt
' ■' $ C
1
grown
I
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Lillard, L. D. The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, February 19, 1897, newspaper, February 19, 1897; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1126267/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fairfield Library.