ANGEL AGNES:
Or, the Heroine of the Yellow Fever Plague in Shreveport.
The Strangely Romantic History and Sad Death
of
Miss Agnes Arnold,
the Adopted Daughter of the Late Samuel Arnold, of This City.
Wealthy, Lovely, and Engaged to Be Married, Yet
This Devoted Girl Volunteered to Go and
Nurse Yellow Fever Patients at
Shreveport, Louisiana.
After Three Weeks of Incessant Labor She Met with a
Painful and Fatal Accident.
_She Died in the Hope of a Blessed Immortality_.
Her Intended Husband, Who Had Followed Her to
Shreveport, Had Already Died, and the Two
Were Buried Side by Side.
Terrible Scenes during the Plague.
by
WESLEY BRADSHAW.
Issued by
Old Franklin Publishing House in Philadelphia, Pa.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1873, by
C. W. Alexander, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress at
Washington, D.C.
* * * * * *
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Geo. Woods & Co's Parlor Organs.
[Illustration: Organ]
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are capable of the most beautiful musical effects.
* AEOLINE--A soft or breathing stop.
* VOX HUMANA--A baritone solo, not a fan or tremolo.
* PIANO--Which will never require tuning.
Few are aware of the perfection the Parlor Organ has reached, the
variety of musical effects of which it is capable, and how desirable
an addition it is to the parlor.
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