Valley of the Shadow
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Page Description:

Many items of war news: battlefield reports, military appointments, national political developments, etc. Remainder of page local ads and notices.

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Fiends in Human Shape

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Dangerous Enemy

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News from Washington

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Make Good Flour

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A Virginia Mother's Appeal to the Soldiers

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Gen. Beauregarde's Report of the Battle of Manassas

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Contributions for the Northwestern Virginia Refugees

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Married

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Died

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Died

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Died

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Died

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Died

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Page Description:

Previously tagged legal notices. Remainder of page ads.

Manassas

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Spies in the Valley

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Camp Diseases - How to Avoid Them.

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Full Text of Article

Soldiers in camp suffer from three diseases--diarrhea, rheumatism, and fever. The commonest cause of diarrhea is bad water, its cure, complete rest and abstinence from every kind of food except plain boiled rice. All ordinary diseases will yield to this treatment in twenty four hours or less. Rheumatism is usually brought on, not by getting wet but remaining in wet clothes. Hard drinkers are particularly liable to bad attacks. To avoid rheumatism wear flannel and keep the digestion sound. Fevers are generally caught after dark in the open air. A man going out on night duty should never go hungry and never stand still longer than necessary. Good food and active exercise will generally keep a man well unless the air is uncommonly deleterious. To cure a case of not very severe fever nothing seems so efficacious as a change of air. It is said that the removal of a patient only a few miles works an immediate improvement in his condition. In scouting along the edge of a swamp at night, there is no danger so long as the party keeps on the windward side of it.--These doctrines are laid down in the writings of army surgeons, and of physicians who have given much attention to the subject discussed and ought therefore to be trustworthy.

A New Weapon-The Alabama Pike

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Distressing Accident

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