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The Gadsden Times from Gadsden, Alabama • 2

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The Gadsden Timesi
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Gadsden, Alabama
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ALAB4AA SKITS. 111 CHOLERA. The New York World on Farmer. Railroad Aaiit. The Connecticut Legislature has TffSKALOOSA FKtf a 7 ReT.

B. LaKRaBEE, Pt0pr nesdaj the First Uy of October! The reports from Huntsville have The corn crop in Colbert is very Something go.nl to eat is such actually passed au act puuishiug 01,1 Hat exaggerated as is fiue. From the Gallatin, Tennessee. Examimr King.Cholera. During the prevalence of the epidemic here our estimate of the; population remaining is 1,500.

In this we are sustained by the opin ions of the citizens. The deaths by cholera, strictly within the corporate limits to this writiug, he (fiadsdeu (Times. i TnUHSDAI JULY 17. Ih73 V. 71 irlor JOH PRATT, Editor.

1IIBLUIKB WBKKLY. The crop prospects in Lee county are not very encouraging. Another grange has been organised in Pickens county More than one farm in Russell (Wednesday, July 2,) have been au a 1 lav till a 1 .1 A tliAKvfiveo abandoned the therefore, Thie the leading Female 1 1 In the State of Alabama. 5 Persons wishing to send their will find it greatly to their JLtN make anungements earlr, which uT to do by applying to Gen. D.

C. Tan-L8 Gadsden, who has leen Agent for this portion of the full anthority to sell scholarship very low. Tuskaloosa, Ala, jP, 3m R3. an unalloyed benefaction, that it with death the placiug of obstruct evidenced by the billowing report does not easily occur to ordinary lion on railroad tracks provided from the Democrat of the 5th inst. reflection that there may tie too death is caused by ho obstruction.

hrom the report of the City Sex much of it. The prairie corn fields In other wonts, it is not the demo- Vubi, Vbe re were 49 burials Tn ot the oil It west have shown that nine design to destroy life by whole-, jjjy Ometeries, of which 45 from the farmer's staudioint, at sale, which makes the crime, but jiersons died in the city. Of the OF least, there may be too much of success in executing it. The statute 45, 25 are reported as deaths from SLOUNT even such an undeniably good also inflicts a mild, philanthropic ''holera 5 yhitis and colored. From Jnly 1 to July 3, inclusive, lllllill.

Him KnrtliAnnnM (KmaltV Oil tllC tlllSgUllletl mail, WllO 5 nr thing as com. Furthermore by a have been 13 deaths. Of JOURS AL OFFICIAL ETOWAH A COCX TIES. very simple process ot reasoning; 1 from thia fact, the astouishing cun Asiatic liolera. so far forgets the little amenities of these, only one or two are supimsed life, as to throw brick bats into i to have been cases of cholera.

Ten railroad trains as they pass, is a slight improvement on This them were colored, of which six were colored children. Two were accidental white one from injury, own laws. Ills astonishing with the other from disease of the lungs what gentleness great crimes are and liver, of long standing. So treated by law makers uow-a-dnys. Is it because men are becoming new cases have come to our knowledge, for two davs, after diligent This terrible disease urns imknowu elusion is reached that there may in America until 1831, although for Iks tia many farmers in a comma years before it had been known as nity.

Wo are glad to sec that a casual visitor in liven in some rather heterodox-seeming Kuroie, however, it is compara- reflections, on this head, which tivcly a recent acquaintance. It is; appeared in our columns a short in the hideous marshes of the. time since, are not without their. Se.cr merciful, is ttl gauges, swarming with every form couutenmrt in papers of greater that the universal corruption lias t0 abatcd, and, probably, of miasma and infested with tern-; authority and circulation. The New dulled our moral sense I Let us ceased altogether.

even hundred. We have, lost one in every fifteen, or six and two-thirds per cent. This is an appalling figure, and shows a larger mortality iu Gallatin thau elsewhere. It goes far beyond that of Calcutta, where iu the sickliest year it is only two and a halt per cent. At Nashville from 1833 to 1834, after the advent of cholera, it was 4.56 per cent.

In 1806 it rose to nearly 6 per cent. This above is the total mortality, inclusive of cholera. If au inhabitant of Gallatin coaid have foreseen on the 1st day of June last that one person in every fifteen would be lying in a grave, he would have been appalled at the fearful picture; and yet it is true. And we are glad that our absent friends were not here to witness the terrible scenes of the past mouth, the deserted streets and closed bouses the general gloom that shadowed the entire town the almost painful silence that brooded over all, and broken ouly by the rumble of the hearses over the stony pavements, or the lamentations of the stricken survivors. FARMERS! Look to Your Interest! BUI SPOOE'S PATENT ABM GATS The best and Cheapest Gate ever ed.

It will cost yon only 75 cents to the Gate, everything added. IIjIjIAMs has already introdnood them in and Gadsden. In addition to Farm he risen Township Rights, on which the I chaser can make from 500 to 800 per cent in a month. No other business nav. well.

All farmers will use this Gg! soon as possible. Over 900,000 now in nJ A District Bight at $35 to $75. l-J. Rights $5 to $10. (Tennessee and adjob-ing States all $10.) He will also liberal per cent, to Agents to sell to their neighbors.

Write to or call on him at Gadsden, a and take a Farm or District Right. Thoa who buy first will get better bargains. C. F. ILLIAMK, Proprietor N.

3. The Gate is on exhibition at the Court House, and will be for some time Come and seo for yourselves. C. F. julylO A Card.

try if wo cannot iuduce the next Legislature to make suitable provision for this social evil. The Isluuaelito who makes wanton war ou the human race should be bio and the man eating tiger, that thu cholera has its settled aIkhIc. There it is perpetual, lurking in the jungle, only abating, never ceasing its destructive sway during the so-called healthv sea. lork WorM quotes the usual coins I plaints of formers at a recent con-! vent ion that their boys wont stay at home. Says an Iowa farmer: One of my boys is twenty-one, county has been by freed men.

General Law organized Allenton Grange, No. 13, at Allenton, il-cox county, on the 2d inst. The Southern jEgis predicts a heavy corn crop in St. Clair county this year. The planters of Bullock comity have but very little grass iu their crops.

A negro man and his wife were killed by lightning near Newberu about teu days ago. The Xem Journal estimates the cotton crop iu Marengo county at abont one-half that ot last year. W. T. Webb, of Talladega conn, ty, hauled a ton of clover hay to Talladega and sold it for $40 cash.

R. H. Rearson reports to the Birmingham Seim that the crops in Barbour and Bullock couuties are good. A man named Guarinan, living in Calhoun county, is one hundred and three years old, and his wife ninety-eight. Tho oat crop in the neighborhood of Greensboro has turned out much better than usual this sea-sou.

The Southern (Ozark) Star says All the reports from the crops that reach us are flattering except trout the low lands. Willis Cox, of Henry county, has two hundred acres of corn planted, and would not give fifty dollars to have it made better thau it is. A very considerable improvement Las been made in tho cotton crop in Sumter county during the son, and swelling the numbers of and is clerking in the town, getting the victims of the leprosy, the nionili niv next boy is tiger, llie cobra di capillo and the ighteen, and he told me the other that he day meant to look out for a place, because there was no ou iiiui dcroas Tliugs. Once every ten or eleven years the cholera visits com agement for a boy to stay ou a Europe spreading terror and death farm, for produce enough could not pay taxes, and farm deeper and deeper year. thus comments below it.

Tho periodicity of its visitations having been found to correspond in a very surprising manner with the revolution of the 1 10 situation sun on its axis and the regular lie raised to ers are gelling in debt every The World Wise We copy tho following from the Birmingham News of the 8th The cholera is prevalent mostly amongst tho poorer class of onr population. Those who are unable to procure necessary medicine, nursing and comforts are the greatest sufferers Our people are not wealthy. ecu in Birmingham is inhabited In consequence of protracted illness, I have closed tho exercises of Gadsden College and Etowah Male and Female Sem. inary, for the present session. Tlio duties i nt (twelfth) session of this insti.

I tution will be resumed, Deo oltiiit, on th principally by men who earn their firstdayof September next, with an efficiat bread by their daily labor. A aud full corps of teachers, number of those who have died of cholera have been buried by etiari-1 ty, aud in some instances widows tli GmMnl to a generons public and to mj friends for their liberal patronage, I would respectfully solicit a contiunance of their favors. H. IV. HEATH, LL.

julyl0-2w President and Proprietor. Nashville, July 6. Only four deaths from cholera to-day. Memphis, July G. Ouly two deaths from cholera.

Cincinnati, July 7. Five cholera cases yesterday. Seven deaths from cholera reported to-day. Memphis, July 7. Twenty-two o-day.

Ouly three July 7. Cholera reported here to the City oflioo for the ending eight P. M. today, other causes twleve. outside of the report to Physician, three deaths and three from other Among the deaths from Colonel John C.

Gillespie, Clousen, of Gillespie Policeman, J. D. White total deaths from cholera forty-eight hours fifteen, fifteen. O11 the third had in twenty-four from cholera alone. are returning and are spirits.

July 8. Seven cliol inlay. None Monday. July S. Five cholera and only ouc past thirty-six hours, noon to-day.

July 8. Six all cholera. No new Julj 8 No cholera oclock yesterday. Bock, July 9. Several cases of cholera have appeared here among the poorer classes during the past week and there was one death from the disease to-day.

Memphis, July 9. Three interments from cholera were reported to the Board of Health to-day. The Storm in Kentucky, Ohio and Illinois. Cincinnati, July 7, 1S73. Advices from Mayesville, Kentucky, state that there was a se vere storm iu that section yesterday, unrooting many buildings, uprooting trees, blowing off chimneys, and doing great damage to the crops.

The flocking Valley in Ohio was inundated, the water being higi.cr than was ever known before. Six miles of the canal is gone between Athens ami Soline. The damage to the crops amounts to over a million dollars, and the salt works and other commercial interests are sulk-ring greatly. The repot ts from all quarters more than confirm danger by tho storm of the past few days. The calamity covers too much ground for telegraphic detail.

In Hancock county, Illinois, barns and farm houses were blown ind two children killed ati Augusta. The Christrian Church UOt was leveled and tho steeple of the Presbyterian Church was prostrated. A grain elevator was blowu over, houses were unroofed, and interments from cholera. Chattanooga, deaths Physician's eight hours twelve; There were the. City from cholera, causes.

cholera, is Mr. and ex This makes in last other causes instant, wo hours sixteen The people in better Nashville, era deaths 8 Birmingham, deaths from new case iu ending at Chattanooga, cases, Cincinnati, cases since 3 Little ast two weeks, and the planters I a11 orphans have been left wi out any means of support. Our physicians have acted nobly, and tho City Council have douo all in their power to aid tho sick and suffering. We need more than this. We appeal to the benevolent and charitable throughout the State to aid us! We do not need much and if the citizens of our neighboring cities and towns will send us small contributions, they will receive the thanks of all our people.

Contributions can bo sent to Rev. Thus. II. Davenport, Treasurer, or to Eugene McCaa, Secretary, of the Birmingham Relief Club. lf are more hopeful Tho Stato Journal says it is estimated that Montgomery would have been worth 2,000,000 more if her people had never speculated iu cotton futures.

The Eutaw Whig ami Observer says: Well informed planters are of tho opinion that not more than half an average crop of corn will bo made in this county. The Prattville Citizen says: Our esteemed friend, Capt. Abney, has just returned from a trip through the couuties of Autauga, Bibb and Baker. He reports the crops looking finely, notwithstanding the boy If farmers were as wise they would act as wisely. If they could not get oil' the farm us ithe boys do they would at least change their system of husbandry so as more nearly to conform to the 1 demands of the markets.

No farmer ought to desire his boy to continue in a business already over-burdened with producers of staples for which there is no demand no consumers. Every boy who leaves the farm ceases to be a producer and continues to be a consumer of its pro-, ducts; hence he helps just so milch to enhance the value of farm produce. I What he earns in other employments must be taxed to pay for the bread and meat he eats, and the wool, cotton, leather, lie wears. This is so much gain to those who do produce. Then why complain that the boy leaves the farm It is not wise lie should stay when it does not pay him to hire another man to fill his place, and when (that man can be hired for far less money than the boy earns in another vocation.

The chief lack, it1 seems to us, in the discussion of I these problems, is a little good! common sense that will enable! those who are most affected by them to get at the root of the mat-; ter and lay the axe ot reform at. that root. lint in tho meantime since farm-cannot conveniently make much other damage done. A ladys child and the lady's sister were also killed. THE STORM IN WISCONSIN AND Tli.i OFFER Second Distribution.

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Specimen copies, particulars, sent free. MINNESOTA. MiLWAUKIE, July 7, -11c- Birminuuaai, July 9. Iu the continuous heavy raius. recurrence of spots on its disk, it is beginning to be tho received opinion amongst scientilie men, that the periodical increase and spread ot the cholera, as a plague, is in some unknown manner dependent thereon.

The present visitation does not altogether confirm the eleventh year theory, as its last period was 18GG, which should have postponed the next visitation to 1878. Last year was however notable for solar perturbations. Another theory propounded in the London Timm in 1800, during the prevalence of cholera in that city, attracted a good deal of attention. This hypothesis atrributed tho disease to excess of carbonic acid gas in the atmosphere. It relied mainly on three facts.

First, tho extraordinary resemblance ot the symptoms to those attending poisoning by that, gas; second, that the disease prefers places but little elevated above tho sea, always creeping along coasts and following the course of rivers and low vallies. Carbonic acid being a heavy gas about fifty per cent, heavier than atmospheric air always seeking tho lowest places, being usually found in wells and caves, this fact corresponds well with the localities or habitat of cholera. Finally, tho theory is further supported by the comparatively recent development of the epidemic. The disease was but little known in Europe until the invention of tho steam engine caused the vast coal beds of England to bo partially reconverted into carbonic acid gas. If the last theory be one, what will become blooded animals when beds of the whole world veiled once more into the tlio true of warm tbo coal are gas from past 18 hours there have been three deaths from cholera aud eight new cases.

Many eases ot diarrhoea are here. Chattanooga, July 9. Total! deaths here to-day, four, one only from cholera in the oily. One from cholera 19 miles trom here in the country, and two from other causes. No uew cases reported for two days.

Tiie Eufaula Times, 9th says There is not such geueral news of tlio caterpillar iu this county as prevailed a few weeks ago, yet his presence is undoubted, amt the last tew days have given evidence of his increaso. Conecuii-Escambia Star, 10th says Tlio crops in this county which looked very uu- ports from Fond ulac state that the storm damaged grain throughout Green Lake, Foudulacand Sheboygan counties to a great extent in its course from the Northwest to Southwest, and was about five miles wide, along which space grain, trees and fences were thrown to lie ground. In Fondulac city many buildings were unroofed, a vast number of large shade trees were uprooted, and hundreds of acres of grain were prostrated along the course of the storm. The reported loss of lile on Elkhart Lako proves to be false. Aside Nashville, July 9.

No deaths i IR'oiniuiug a week or teu days ago themselves scarcer, let them combine and make some regulations for preventing a glut in the market of their ruling staple. The great Agents Wanted raveling. in every at home ot Large cash pay and war, a curse in all else, was the from the disaster at Greeu Lake, it golden age of the farmer, although Gs il remarkable fact that no lives were lost so tar as heard from. The damage to telegraph lines is being rapidly repaired aud commu ideation is now open to St. Paul.

A heavy storm passed over Minnesota yesterday, but no damage was done. LIRE It A PR EM IV 8 for getting up clubs. Tho best outfit. Send at once for Terms and particulars. Address WATEKS Publishers, Chicago.

junelO Iig Iron and Protection or new cases in past 24 hours. I Birmingham, July 10. Past I twenty-four hours there have been six deaths ami a larger number of new cases umler treatment than at any time previous. It is not now fined to any class or portion of I the place but attacks those who are using every precaution. The town is nearly deserted.

Fever is increasing with more rapidity than the disease. Some hopes are entertained for tho recovery of Mr. Frank O'Brien, although he is very low yet. If weather becomes favorable no doubt but what the disease will be conquered in a fow days. Chattanooga, July 10.

Total deaths here to-day number eight, of which only two were from cholera and both of these were colored. Four deaths yesterday. Memphis, July 10. Ouly one cholera death to-day. Nashville, July 10.

Thirteen funerals yesterday but no cholera cases among them. Birmingham, July 11. The are now in a much better condition. Every farmer we meet acknowledges the fact that things dout look so bad after all. Tho reports now reaching us con-; corning the crops, especially cottou, are hopeful, and with favorable seasons during the present month a sufficiently large crop will bo raised.

Tho past two weeks have entirely changed tho crop status. Selma Times The Ashland Times learns from a gentleman who has lately visited tho Horns Valley section, of that county, that the wolves have become so daring that farmers have to pen their sheep at night to protect them from the ravages of the pests. A splendid place for wolf hunting. Tiie Hayneville Examiner, 4th distant, says The crops are" growing off quite satisfactorily in Lowndes just at this juncture. They cauuot recover from the riblo effects of tho protracted wet weather, but the season at this 1 Cl The Souf hern Canal.

Propositions and suggestions for now routes for water transporta tion to multiply. Here is one briefly described by a correspondent of the from the Northwest continue i con-j which they were originally formed, and civilized man, as the crowning! achievement of his development, Scicntijio American, which in point has literally restored tho carbon- 1 iferous era A good many scientific of alleged cheapness throws all tlio We observed recently, says tho Montgomery Advertiser, statements iu tiie Northern and Western Press to the effect that the English rnuii-ufacturers were importing pig iron trom this country, aud to our surprise the fact seemed to be regarded by tlio Protectionists as one calculated to give strength to their monstrous plan of National robbery That England should resort to the United States for a supply of iron is of course, a circumstance of very great importance to completely in tho shade. tlio correspondent: Has your attention ever boon to the fact that lie head wa- i I is fa a others I Says called The New Orleans Times makes the following comments upon the effects of partyism. It says In the West the people look to their Granges fur the accomplishment of their emancipation from the tyranny of party rule. Here in Louisiana, where this rule has been intolerably oppressive and corrupt, tho people tiro casting about for a similar emancipation, i They are tired of party rule, ol party frauds, aud of party plunder.

In the hands of political schemers what has been called self-government has proved to them the basest client imaginable. This condition of tilings is no longer to be endured. The pioblem of pacification and union is now up lbr consideration. ijriuTe ns. Cholera is reported iu Florida.

A Farmers Grange has been organized at Rome, Ga. Three more Modocs have surrendered. Tho Missouri river is higher than ever known before. Brownsville, Texas, received a bale of new cottou ou the 4th. Six thousand immigrants arrived at New York week before last.

Two men, two women aud a boy went over Niagara Falls ou the 4th. Young Walworth was sentenced to the State prison at Sing Sing, N. at hard labor for life. At Fioehe, Nevada, ou the 7th, a man named Harrington shot and killed five men iu a street fight. The steamship Washington was wrecked the 6th, near where the Atlantic went aground, but her passengers were all saved.

In the duel in Paris between M. ltance, the Communist, aud Paul DeCassaguae, the famous duelist and editor, both were wounded. Cassaguac seriously. Iu tlio Louisville lottery drawn the 8th, 20893 drew 100,000, 5630, drew $50,000, G4170 drew 25,000, 21764 drew $20,000, 98,743 drew $10,000, and 10550 drew $5,000. Rev.

A. G. Hughes, a prominent clergyman in Orange county, N. gave out his text ou Sunday evening of lust week, then stink back speechless, and, before members of the affrighted congregation could reach him, was dead. A house iu which ten persons wore sleeping was forced from its foundation at the loot of a cliff iu Montreal, a few days ago, by the lull of a lingo rock, and was pushed out into the middle of the road, without any injury to the iumates.

men have been much troubled to know what new motor must be substituted for the steam, when the coal beds shall be exhausted. If f-H I i a a fa to 3 to V. 50 us but that tho British mauufac-! Physician's report for tho past writing is propitious. We fear 7 iiii ii. 1 luuir: i iloutKu ...1 it twenty-four hours, is three deaths r3 r3 eS a a A a eH fa a I ft fa O' I fa a I fa cholera, and but few uew cases.

The weather is clear and warm. Frank OBrien is a great deal better and the crisis with him is considered over. drouth now. The cholera reports in Alabama are getting better. We learn by letters from Huntsville that not a case has appeared there since last Chattanooga, July ll.

There Thursday. At Birmingham the were six deaths hero to day, reports are far better than wo could Im 5 ft If. A a ft 3 a ftg go L. fa 5 (j CD fa fa fa fa CD A fa fa fa a CJ a A CO fa fa 7 flmm from the 'cholera, Jave expected after the excitement have been no new cases olj ab Inwk. 111 tho lllst seventy-two healthy July 12 Throe inter.

The editor of the News Journal meats yesterday no cholera. who has been on a tour through Nashville, July 12. Fivo Marengo county, sums as follows deaths yesterday, all colored; no on tho crop question Our esti- agita-! ad-' i turers should bo able to run across the ocean, paying freights and all other charges for American iron, then manufacture it, and undersell heavily the American manufacturer, reflects no credit on either tiie intelligence or industry ot this country. It also shows very plain uf is admitted, too, that Iron Masters iu the United States can ship iron to England and sell there with a profit at $10 a ton. For that same iron, however, they require the taxed people at homo to pay $51 per ton.

The St. Louis Republican has the following pointed paragraph on this subject When the American Iron Master ships iron to England at $40 a ton, he proves that he can make aj j1 profit at that price 1 of hSftho1 Sc Ire Sirs immense tariff in tavor of man-1 actured iron in this country. YVI.v fliwn l'f III 0) a fa 1 fa fa we are all dead by cholera, or some I ers of the Tombigbee are only 8 other agent of coal gas, we can miles from Bear Creek, a large snap our fingers at that catastro-1 stream that runs into tlio Teunes-jiho I see The writer was in London during tho cholera of 1866 and will never target the sadness and gloom which enveloped that mighty city like a pall The visitation was not so severe however as had been feared, the death not exceeding six or seven thousand a week, it wo remember rightly far less in pro-1 portion than that of Nashville at the present time. There was one striking fact connected with that visitation olten adverted to at the time. The Jews though inhabiting the east end of the city to which the epidemic was principally confined enjoyed an almost total exemption fiom its attacks.

This naturally calls to mind the wieril legend of tho Wandering Jew whose footsteps are believed, by many of tho ignorant in Catholic countries, to be a sure forerunner of the cholera aud oit this wild popular superstition was based, by the way, that morbid but exciting fiction The Wandering Jew. Tiie following is an outline of this tradition As the Saviour was on the way to tlio place ot execution, overcome with the weight of the cross, ho wished to rest on a stone before the house ot a Jew, named AliasUerus, who drove him away with curses. Jesus calmly replied: Thou shult wander on the earth until 1 return. The astonished Jew did not come to himself till the crowd From Fulton, Atawmnba county, to i Ion Creek is only 8 miles, over an undulating country from thence to the Tennessee river is 15 miles, down a creek thnt is nowhere less than 50 feet wide, with from 2 to 3 feet of water in the time and no fall worth mentioning, Flense look at it. We are ting it now down here; and if the! West wants as great a market fori her productions as tho Georgia canal would give her, at one tenth; the cost, let her turn her eyes this way.

By this route, too, corn could be laid down in Montgomery (or 16 cents a bushel. All the vantages that would accrue to Ala Imina by the other route would also be afforded by this. This canal would supply the) richest part of Alabama (the canej brake belt) with a direct line to the West. It is also to be noticed that. Bear Creek enters the Teimosse below Muscle Shoals.

Tim estimated cost of the Western and Atlantic is about thirty millions; accordingly the route would cost not, more than three millions. If tins be so, it is too insignificant in point of to interfere with the former project. In fact the construction ot all the three Alabama cauals is only a question of time Let the l'utrons of Husbandry set their energies to these works and cholera. Birmingham, Jnly 12. In the past twenty-four hours one death and only one new case have been reported by tbo Board of Health.

All the old cases are doing well. The weather is hot and cloudy, and W0 liaV0 1,0 rail iu tll ll0xt taxed $7 hours it is belioved few, if any, I of thu nipsont, will prove of tho present cases will NOTICE. Tho account books of Wm. L. Ecbola mate for tho crop for this county, judging from what wo have seen and learned from planters, is that the cotton crop of tlm present year will be littlo it any more thau equal to half of last years yield.

Tho production of corn will full considerable below tho crop of 1872, but it will be more generally distributed, the poor lands turning out bet; ter than usual. Tho Birmingham News of the 9th says During the past twenty hours there has been great improve mont iu the health of tlm city. Up to 7 P. m. yesterday, there were only two deaths from cholora a child of Mr.

Augior aud a negro woman named Florence Baker. No new cases have been reported. Several persons are still sick with the disease, hut the physicians say should the people be Tomhig-beo expen-siveness tou for his protection very manufacturers I When Masters sell irou to $11 a ton less thau their own conutrymeii Ouondaga Salt Company salt iu Canada for a barrel less thau it home market and sewing machine against the lie is underselling American Iron foreigners at they exact of and tbo sells its thirty-live cents asks in the the Bostou manufacturers sell fatal. Chattanooga, July 12 There were six deaths here to day, but none from cholera, and there has been no new cases reported. The disease is considered over.

Four deaths here yesterday. No cholera The Birmingham News says The doctors of Birmingham deserve not only tlm thanks but the prayers of all tho people, as they have been unwearied iu their at having been placed in onr hands fo lection, wo hereby notify all persons mJ that unless they come forward within 3 days and settle their accounts, we wi compelled to bring suit. MARTIN DlSTdlT, Attorneys for W. I. p.

l.tijrnley, No. 3, Choice Hotel, Broad Street, Rome, Or. Has resumed his former business as DR ua a 1ST and APOTHECARY and would be pleased to have his 1 a eall when they I811 i i jolted may I ly IJUING YOIIR JOB OBK T0TJ 1 Times Oeeice, it you want it in the latest and most approved style, uttlic lowest price. their machines in Europe lor $2- less than the price they compel us NEW ADVERTISEMENTS ItttlCK MUCK LIME! A large lot ol new hard brick, nml several humlred bushels of lime for suio by the undersigned nt low figures. AIkj, auy aud all kinds of brick work and plastering ilone in good style on short no-tioe.

li MILLER, Gadsden, Ala. julyi7 tlm luqm of rewuid. able lo find grave the general health of our people..

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About The Gadsden Times Archive

Pages Available:
19,063
Years Available:
1871-1955