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Hampshire, England

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PORTSMOUTH LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY

... not removed within a few 5 hours, disease particles would produce zymotic diseases. nobh as fevers, cholera, diphtheria, small-pox. Well, e the usual method with them was to get rid of it y instantly and convey it away, more or less rapidly or is elowly ...

A DARK DESTINY

... should leave Gravesend, in which town heri husband's property was situated, was because . there had been a serious epidemic of smallpox l there. He himself had been stricken with the disease, but had managed to escape with his life. He had not wholly recovered ...

PORTSEA ISLAND SOCIETY FOR THE CULTURE OF SCIENCE AND LITERATURE

... diseases; bult it was certain Portsmouth ocon- enpied a lo v position with reference to infectious diseases. te. They knewy that small-pox bad been lately raging in Lou. .b, don, Liverpool, and other parts; but with the exception ia- of a few imported cases, they ...

OUR PRIZE STORIES

... more of the omelette, Sally, please. Ing i icet- H'm ! said Fritz, Isolemnly. But it's a like'I case of small-pox. that I I to- .Small-pox! shrieked Mrs. Westray, jump- hross we ing up, and tipping her cup of coffee into Bessie life. 'gain Sal-p ...

A DARK DESTINY

... Frank was a mlass rather above the average ielghtrand wvell proportioned. His face, which B was now sadly disfigured by small-pox, to which it he had so nearly falless a victim, had been a IN haudsonle one, through there was a cruel look sbout the mouth ...

A DARK DESTINY

... con- ,, cerning her. If alive, she was no doubt still as mad as when Lt she quitted her home at Christchurch, and as the small-pox had greatly altered his appearance he In had lithe fear that she would be able to recog. aise him. It was most improbable ...

LITERARY COMPETITION

... little to eat bht black bread, aw! were wretched in the extreme. Fevers ofte, broke out amongst them, and many died, T e small-pox was their greatest scourge. It weae a disorder little understood, from which few ralhei, and which disfigured everyone who ...

OUR SHORT STORIES

... atter-of-course woy, fl tells of a higher courage than even charging th ay, boom would have done :- ?? 3 .-Nineteen cases of smallpox. Took red surgeon with me to the admiral and ot perris sion to land oet a small uninhabite i i1d baild'h ts. 4 .to April ...

NAVAL AND MILITARY NEWS

... the intermediate is o ports. She ' was' under orders to ornize afterwards S n across the Gulf of California to La Pays. Small-pox: had 5 s entirely disappeared tromp on board, and the health of the, S r- officers. and crews was.stated to be very Dood ...

HISTORY OF PORTSMOUTH

... L:-i ri ?? ing on the filthy nastiness of this place, I s 'ts- unpaved, undrained, and enduring an Ir 26, epidemic of small-pox. The town must have II ans been continually fall of suffering men, since t y's for two months alone of 1654 the cost of the ...

HISTORY OF PORTSMOUTH

... Middleton, 1Wavy Commissioner at the Dock- yard, says: 11 Portsmouth is at present free from the ii plague, tlhough fever and small-pox abound. Ele dreads the appearance of the fatal dis-1 temper amonlgst ' so crowded and miserably poor a Population. 1 ;t ...