HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1888-11-02, Page 711A.GINA ,,DISEASE.
.11,14 INTENSEPIED AN MORBID TAN-.
ctp HARD T Cline
thefterings of trae CoalIrve4 Ilypoehon-
Oleo—Calmer 4m0 heart Itsease h* the
Cace in a tie Oirie Hospital,.
Cured In Einem elm
• ' • The writer called on a number of prom.
N
bleat physicians and asked, them if, among
. their patients, they had many who hoax -
d ned they had diseases which they did not
le
O. Some very interesting information
tr' obtained. The doctor) odd it was
fon id to bo a very common trouble, and
thatithe chief diseeses these people im.
Keine they haw aro caucer, heart disease
and 13eight's disease. In the language of
the pretession, the complaint is 1mM'). OA
la claondriaas.
,
It was found that the disease is often,
epidemic. At the time of Gen. Orantte
sickness and denth from cancer of the
thinat, and during the illness of the late
nothing eerious at all the matter with
them called upon Dr. Sheedy, who attend-
ed Goo. Grant, and told him they had can-
cer of the throat coming on and wished
to be treated for it. . .
Ono celebrated physician, who mado, a
epeeial study of tho disease, said that it,,
was worthy of note that in all these cases
the patient reasons correctly—that is, ho
draws just inferences from the error.
Thus the Prince of Bourbon, when ho
eupposed himself to bo a plant, reasoned
justly when, ho ineleted upon being
watered with tho rent of the plants every
day. In like ina.nner, the hypochondrion
who supposes himself to bo dead reasons
with the same correctness tylion he
stretches his body and limbs ei the bed
or a board and assumes the stillness and
silence of a dead man..
The following is from the records of
one of the New York hospital's. houso
. surgeons:
"It was on July 0 that a roan of small
etature, who was found afterwardo to be
o shoemaker by trade, who was apparent-
ly about 40 years of age, escaped from his
home and was running at large in the
streets of the city, lacerating his flesh
and beating his head against the sides of
houses. A number of citizens manage&
to capture him, and they brought him to
the hospital, followed by a big crowd.
With his arms tied behind him, and in
the greatest aglow, his face bruised and.
ewollen, his lips tom to pieces and
streanthig with blood, ho was ushered
into the hospital by those who had him in
charge. I mot them at tho door and in-
• qtdred into the ca,se. The men was eagee
to toll his own story, but with di -acuity
• collected words to cont-ey it. lila lan-
guage was copious, but his agitation so
• groat that he could hardly utter a sen-
tence, being interrupted by constant;
efforts to tear his lips to pieces. Those
• withhim knew nothing except that they
had prevented him from beating out his
• own brains. At length he conveyed the
information where his distress was, and
upon which his mind was deluded. In
his upper lip ho said them was a worm
=owing his flesh and penetratiog iota
his body, and maces ho could tear it out
the worm would' soon bo beyond his roach
• and inevitably destroy him. This was
the eauso of his misery. no was assured
of tho possibility of relief, and with a
emilleg countenance I patted him on tho
• shoulder and bade him no longer bo tin -
easy, for I would rut trot the worin. Ills
oyes sparkled, and in an instant he re-
plied, 'Will you? Do it then. Do it,
• qui*, for God's sake.'
"De was urged. not to despair, for I
was now ready to remove the insect prey-
ing upon his fiesh. liecordingly, we went
tothocells of the Mania". When being
Eezted he fixed himself for the operation.
• • I paraded six lancets on the table before
ham. Dy making a display of this and
other preparations and sending for aesist.
once he became compoieel, waiting with
patience the result. In the meantime I
had. sent in search of the worm. The
• parson sent, being. unoucceseful, stayed
too long and I hurried out tho door and
- picked from the ground one of the largo
•-worms or caterpillars which infested the
.
poplar trees et that time and had fallen
from the trees by the door. One and of
the insect had. been trodden upon, and it
was nearly dead. This I got, and on re-
turning found my patient's uneasiness
• increased. But upon seeing mo take the
tit, instruments he fixed himself in the choir
and requested my aseistarats, the apoth-
ecary and the orderly man, to hold his
hands lest he should start while -under
pain of the cutting instrument.
"With alancet the operation was 'begun.
I pricked his lip with it, which made him
ilinch a little. Ile ticeerdingly leaned
back his head firmly against; the .person
who stood behind him, aud ehut his oyes
tightly, and thus fixed he bore the re-
peated pricks of the instrument with
steadiness and fortitude. After pinching
his lip with one haul and wounding it
With the other, I cut off a portion of the
upper lip which ho had torn -with hie
nails and which was pendulous. I new
aesurcd hitnthat the operation was nearly
completed, for tho head (if the worm could
be seen. The bystanders cried out: "Them
it isthere it
it Ho rid eyes to see,
but was cautioned to be still for ono min -
lite longer, at which he again shut his
oyes. I then gave hira a eovero pinch,
drove the edge of the lancet aeroes the
lacerated lip, and exclaiming, 'Poo got
him,' opened. my hand and exposed tho
great worm.
"The ream rose from his sent and gazed
kit tho *worm with asteniehment beyond
utterance. At length he %Doke and ro-
'e' rao to preserve it, for, henheetved
with. tranquillity, his friteade had Said. he
was crazy, but this would be. ini evideuce
bran' , either by Avalcal wear er meatal Teeth re:011ex by reiectrecity.
worry. Disappobitment, bad habits, Boston people nowadays have their *i -
want of proper mental ondapation, often periluoua teeth, drawn by meana of oieg,
en,t460 the trouble. Tho teeatment. eon. trieity. Inaeranch aa all now ideal) in the
arts ankl ROiellee.4 are spread from this egie
lightened metropolis °Moonily, mid. from
halm) eitendfal over the ntry, there is
littlealoubt that sooner or later tide new
method will supersede laughingtgas end
ether in other big cities of the Union.
The poem in question is very Simple,
seaveo any apparatus being required be-
yond an ordinary twe cell battery, with
vibrator attachment. 'This attachneent is
a thin strip of metal, fastened at the ende,
which is made to vibrato a thousand or
more times per emceed by the eleetrie cur-
rent. At each vibration the circuit is out
off 0.1411110Wed. again, the effect being to
give a perfectly steady flow of the lave-
terious fluid. lu order to make. sure that
the floe, is quite satisfactory the -operator,
tunes- the maehine—aseisted by a little
reed. tuning pipe—until the etrip of metal
shags "A." So far, so good.
Now to the battery aro attached three
wires. Two of theta have berates at the
euds, and the third is hitched to a for.
ceps. Tho patieut in the chair is given a
haudlo to hold in eaeh hand, and the cur-
rent is tureed on gradually until it be-
comes painful. Then he is told to grasp
the handles as strongly as poeeiblo, the
olectricity—havires been switched off. for
a moment—is turned. on again suddenly,
Lind the dental surge= applies his forceps
simultaneously to the tooth. The instant
the molar 14 touched, it, as ae'the
parts myrrounding, becomes electrified and
absolutely insensible to pain. When it le
withdrawn from tho Heckert, the subject
of the operetion. feels not the slightest
dieagreeable sensation. A jerk and the
tooth is out, the peticutdeerpe the handles
reailethe affair is over.—Boston.Cor. Globe-
Demoineett „ .d
eiete it measuree to improve the geneed
health, espeoially full diet, carefully
eeleeted; hydro-therapentice, headange,
gyuniastics, horseback riding, walking,
rowing, abundant and agreeable exeretio
in the open air, and the managoraont of
the pationthk surroundings so as to lighten
the mind aucl relieve from worry, perhepe
by travel or ism voyage.
Argument is commonly worse than use.
loss, but there ehould. bo a decided im-
pression given that the generally morbid
etato is due to ill health. The risk of
euteide is so emelt that restrietion of lib-
erty direoted to its prevention does more
laarta than Henry Hawley
in Boston plobo.
esoadun rine Grade candies,
The process of =king the "cream" 13
identical in both wholesale and retail es.
tablishments. Confectioner? augur is '
first boiled until it becomes a thiels and
waxy syrup. It is then. turned out •on
Plebs and allowed to partially cool. In
the retail establishments it is then worked
with. wooden paddles until the grain is so
stretched that the mese is resolved into a
soft, snowy entripound, ready for the
flavors or to be mixed with fruit or nuts.
In the wholesale factories 100 pounds of
clear syrup is turned out on a slab at ono
time. When it has cooled enough to work
candymak.or stations himself at either
end. •Ho holds a, cieeera011 garden. Keado.
Together the two workers turn annum
the hardening, seigar until it is white.
The3a. it is packed deva_y '.`eig iron rceep-
tacles and. covered with limey, .wot cloth
to keep it from hardening,
This cream Is the basis of all the fineekt
grade candies in the market. It is hi the
THE,BITSSIAN CAPITAL
A SAD CITY WITH A STRANGZ
I-AOK QF LIM,
riret Imprefcione a St. Petersburg -4N
"Unhealthy L'esition—CoasTAveal of the
Lower Chr,seo--The Dream end Its nev.
orent Driver—OM church. .4
MOtiOnj tenting, proetrating them,selvee,
Mon both walkers ewe rtaerii.
There is no nation reolrobly re devoted
to religions forme the Itneeiazi—oer-
tetuly none which bellovee implicitly •
in the value of eigne and genuflexions.
It it) strange enough to wateh the crowd,
which fills- the etturch during eervioe
time. nein aro never any Seats; all,
Melt end peer, :stand together; but in
pleco of Cite:dime quietly, or, at Mint,
'metal:kat like the congrega-
tion in a CO:hullo church, the whole body
f i-lerre in a Greek, church are in
Thd first impressloo of the traveler on waving tile arids up mid down, continue
approaching rt. Petersburg is of wonder ally ntei hoc the mein 'of the croce do-
nt its rite and its poeition. On every side tic:Abed needy°, they reeoralele a garden
etretelies of what is apparently a low, flat t.94, h".f ti. vont whid--"Cer* "jell
marsh, eaver.eil -with innumerable build- .
Mote the e.trangeet piece for city ever
• MY GRAYS..
chosen by the obstinate will of man, seek-
ing to dispense with all natural advane
viten I lite, i must be buried, let
twos. Peter the (.1reet, chose it, it ie said NO eonlerry engulf me: nO lone gra
as being "o wirdeve lookirig out upon Where tho greet palpitating world comes not, t
Europe," but surely a site might have Save wiam, with heart 1)(WeLl (1°Wn' eYQUas'
Wet,
been fatuldwith on egitid outlook and nine xt pm it, Ina roe mieeneeeee debt
detalate and fatal petition. *Unlike Stows -
holm, which io likewise surromeled by
water, but -which Hits on. her rocky thanes
like a queen above the deugererei element,
St. Patcrsburg, lice helplecely ite
mercy. In aaturan,, when the is.feva is
rough and retoriny, and in spring, When.
the ice is Invoking up, the danger is
TO some out joureee ing pdgrun.
I ir.,y my lot
ro rathor to Ile in some much wri spot,
Where learanu life w.th 411 its noise and fret i
'Throbs on about Ivo.
Let the roll of wheels,
With all earth's somals of pleasure, commerce.
0 e,
greatest. The waves mce to the level of
the streets, the uumeroue cmaals overflow; Even. ti _ e
And 1'1'141 of hurrying feet, surge o'er xny head.
guns from the fortress are constantly my grave I sball Oa one who tems
fired to were tho poople of their peril, Close kinship with, the pulsing world above
And too deep quiet would distress me, dead. ! ,
while the inhabitants seek the upper —rale Wheeler wileox in ontsbure Bulletin: '
stories of their houses and the pollee pro-
queues of this mushy situation is its un- The .11hambra's "Court of Lions,"
pare boats for memo. Another eonse-
heathinees, The sewage is not properly The Court of Lions far exceeded my =-
carried o2, the water is undrinkable, and _
pectations. It is warble paved., a proral1olo—
ayreatery and eireilar disc:tees proVail gram in shape, and has the far finned'
whenever- sup -
+1, triendly frost in not present fountain, with its alabaster begins d by twelve 'quaintly carved lion,
manufacture of this cream that dealers . e.
have revolutionized methods and brought remoy Leothera of to turn everyteang to leo. Petal e standing in tho center. On certain fete
that of America to the highest standard ! The morocco leather of coro.heierce is Great did not build Lis capital in ignoe. days, or upon the °melon of royal visits,
in tho world. Candy is not medo socla either goat or sheep skin. GoaiNeitins anee of what he was doing, laid its tho water leaps over the basins and sports
vast quantities in any other land. Tho are treated diVerently from tho sleteo, foundation upon human lives. For many f frOM tho mouths of the statues, as it did..
f Inoue confections of the Orient aro not Nviiich melte the thicker leather, being' veo,re 40 id° teen. were annually &witted
in the goldet days of liloorieh pride end
to be compared, either in quality or quan- Mooed with sumac, and ell t.alelmeeees
tity, with those of the -United States. of the leather being used. The skins of
Eastern compounds ars largely oti the wool beeeing animals, like the sheep, aro
nougat order and made in small quanti- commonly soft end epongy, and therefore
ties.Armenian Greobs offer Turkish unsuitable for shoes designed tor rough
pasta along State street every day for wear, so tiro sheep ohms are genera y
actly as it is cooled in the pot. It is sold sheep skins wo are indebtekfto Australia, ties to raise the leeml of the pite`3, eret i architecture of Will& Seems almost to ba-
eeth late tho collet, the light, fragile.
sele. It is turned wat in a hig 00110 tut- used for facinge and liuine's. For our , Soil was aaso br6ght in m great qua et
t j
in Bikes. It is after this same fashion and d'outh America, and they come to ns maceive grenite qufi' .-1101ilt along the t„
that the confections of the east aro all by the way of England, where tho wool rapid rivor; but netting h-., v I.
made. French bonbons de not suit the is taken from them and the skin shipped prevent dleaatroue iralkIldailOnS, env
American palate. They aro not distinct to us as raw reeterial. Thew:riots fancy eight of which ere particularly men
flavors as a rule. Instead, they aro a eau- leathers, such as alligator, seal and tho SLICt3 0.10 founaltions NVCS-13 laid in.
edomeration of flavors so mixed as to like, are very often sheep- and goat At one time the river rose thirteen.
make subtle but intangible flavor that leather stamped aid pressed to imitate Peet it is not ouly the want of ole
can bo attributed neither to fruit nor the genuine article, and kangaroo leather, and of picturesqueness that ie depr
flower.—Chicago Herald. so far from gracing the back of the to the veiltor; it is no loss the wid
kangaroo, generally has no higher origin beton of tho vast open spaces of tb
Berne end Its Dears. than the Spanish donkey.—hilobe-Dem. From the buoy moving- multitud
Every ono immediately associates the ocrat. crowded veers of Stocithelm w
enention. of Berne with. bears, The coat i
of arms consiets of one of these aninaals, lgisio Commodore's Chief COI1COIM. come to quaet and deserted. squire
1(553 rows of immense building:
.
and eveeywhere. and on everything th.ey Commodore Vanderbilt was driving one In:tenons ferandeur read reg
appear—in stone and he -wood, carved and • day in rierlein lano, end as usual took tho evident that there aro not, Snough people
painted, and alive in the pits, where they reed, turning out for nobody. A. very to fill its streets, and. ie is a pceitive re-
lieve been ineintained. at tho eieponee of fast teen: eame behind him, and tho lief to enter tho few thorough -films whore
the goVernpent from, time immemorial. -, driver called on Lira to giro room. Van- bush:nes and lifo is centered, such as the
Fountains are ornamented with bears; if derbilt urged his horses forward and Neveley Prospect. Of coure, in v.inter,
the fountaire . itself is not a brain, ono is wont straieedut on, belicevneet he could not when. the collet is here and the richest
sure to be found hi the vicinity. A statue be pawed. The other wagon dashed by, citizens coene in. from their summer homes
of Berthold von Zohringen. surmounts a taking hire on the wheel and throwing, in Finland and the ielands, when. the
trateeiiig, trough, e,nd by him stands a him out, on his head. 11e wr.s picked up slelghiag• is lively and all the gayeties of
sraall bear with a mord hanging by its insensible, It was feared at first that his the season in 'vogue, St. Petersbar,g would
side and meting. the part of helmet bearer. nook might be broken. Dot no recovered show to much greater alnrtmtage.
Sunday afternoon the entire populave, old in a few' minute.) and inquired of the We had. been told that tho contrasts of
and. young,. dress in gala attire and visit anxious bystanders: "Did any of yea luxury and poverty on. the etreets would
the pits. A double row is formed around boys notice whether -that 'ere Imes was ' be 7:10St painful, and we expeeted to meet
the railing: -each person purchases caerote trottin' or rtraidn"1" Me chief concern beggary on every baud, but euch has not
or bread to throw tho pets, whose elo- was to know if the horse that had gouo proved to bo the case. There are always
phantluedlite gambols provoke shouts of by him had kept his gait.—Paul IL Clove- beg -gees at the church dews, but seldom,
laughter from the surrounding multitude. land -in Cosmopolitan. etweitere, and poverty 13 by no means so
• They really aro most arousing aulmels.
A deep tank is in the center of the den, —
flow Ow She Wes.
. almost brutality, in the lower °lenses that
obvious and distreseing as in many cities.
It is not the poverty, but the coarseness,
and while we were present a regular Old Friend (to old maid)—Didn't 1
wrestling match. took place between two understand y(Al to.sny you were se years imleraseas you mast vivIL111-• Tho MOU
old?
hoary old follows, in which tile great . that you rac.et in their Eurid nags or
undressed sheepeltine seem not to
struggle was to throw ono another into Old Maid (indignently)—No, Cr; you did ' their
the water. At last 0110 succeeded in giv- not. I never said it. need nor desiee any better raimeut. It is
ing his opponent a thorough ducking, and ' Old Friend—Never I suitable to them. - Wild of face, with.
then. sat Oil tho brink eyeing his defeated i Old M.aii—No, eircrerver/E . long, tangled hair, and inexpressibly
adversary, his head on ono side, and Yob, . Old Friend (persistently dieggreeable)— dirty, eiten half drnnle, but never scring-
bing his immense paws, apparently with Think a monaent. Don't you remember hag, yon shrink. from rather than pity
the greatest enjoyment. One of tho one morning, just fifteen years ego, you th'era. The pictures drawn by Toletm awe
lookers on declared that he grinned and told it to mo in a moment ofeeonfidencel— seen to be fearfully realistic. The women
chuckled, but serious doubts may be en- weeningten (iritic. are less forbidding, but with little intolli-
tertained as to the veracity of that state- . . wince or geed humor. Actuolly I have
ment—Baltimore American,
1 nower, On ell four sidoe of the court aro
fleem all portions of his empire to work in
th-1°‘` "is°u`ras mall:'h' Ivory e'vrt and l ihandsome arcades of open stucco work,
N
, and elegant Moorish aroLes supported by
vesse euteriug the port was obliged to i I
bring a c etain number of stones to ptive I slender white marble pillars, sometimes
its streets. bit hundreds of thousands of I single, sometimes in destom •
wooden pileiNingro buyied m its depth.s. 1 At each end, a portico or pavilion ppo-
never seen a smile nor heard a laugh in
the streets since ive have been
Not the Case Now.
hre. Nobody understands or wishes
Newspaper eeaterririse "Out vue.ste, 1 Mts. Suburb )(reading)—"Tiao really' ef-
ficient laborer, ' eve Thoreau, "will bo to =floret:aid you; the poor are
Tho successful western newspaper is, found not to unduly crowd his day with sullen, the well-to-do careless or in -
above all things, enterprishag, and this work, but will saunter to his task sur- eolent. And then Micro is so much that
quality, now so wonderfully developed, is rounded by a wide halo of cape and is straneo and utterly foreign. For rome,
a legacy from the pioneer press. The leisure." . tons, nnhexelained reason the days of tho
special telegraph wires of today from Mr. Subuth—ifitomiti Thoreau never month aro changed. You thought it was
Cinolonati and Chicago to Now York, • lived where ho had to catch trains.— the 20111 of Ane;ust—you find it is the
Washington and important nearby cities Philadelphia Ilecord. 8th. The Ihmeicei alphabet is very dif.
and. special mossengere of tho pro -railroad 1
There Won a Little Bey. ferent from ours, P.17ti the names of the
streets and the signs over tho shops
had thoir prototypes in the pony expreeses
(mired more courage and pluck to send " Tommy is fond of sugar and. asks his might OA well bo written in Ennio. • As
and ante -telegraph. times. And it re- 1
out tho latter than to put in the former, mother for some to eat wits bis bread very few of tho.. natives, however, are
This enterprise dieplayed itself in many and butter. Sho refuses. Ile epicene re- . better ofE than yotteself itt thie reepeet,
startling ways. as it does today. It ad- signed, but adds gravely: "You know, the slibpkeetors do not trust, to the al -
anted itself to stureaudingcireumstauces. marina, -what heemened round the cor- plutbet for setting forth their WASCS.
When Denver, in. 1859, was but a collo°. net. There was a little boy, and his ' 1 heve ter:mil:lima a the went of life ill
Mon of tents, rude shanties and corrals on mother would not give him may sugar on the eireeta I must make nee exception
Cherry creek, and the nemost United his bread and butter, and—and—and next in favor of the droekao. riliese little air.
Stetin treat:dice was at Fort Larami, 2e0 day ho fell into the well."—Chicooro Jour- Magee ty about in every, direotion, for
1, eh. evie.e, when tho mails =rived but nal. elm:Thoth: Titles. You • lona down ono of
tea: ir twico a month, and were uncer- . the long Zittaye perliere and sea no walk.
tain. at that, and 'news from "the States!' I Tho rrenehmati's Compliment. .ers, no loungers, but you are sure to see
come only at long and irregular intervals, - A Frenchteum of this city havieg re. droshas. They tire email, low vehicles,
the editor of Tlio Becky Mountain News ceived tho photograph of a lady asked a eateli holding two pro:Ranters, with a
was the one who sent a ineaSenger to Port friend what wan customary under the eir- driver on a high scat is front clad in a
Leirmaie to being back, in spite of the suf. curastances. "Compliment it," replied long blue bionse, with a leather gladle
fering and leardebips the joueney entailed,. the friend. "Tell her its beenty is very Mid v. pectliar eqp on his head. The
a naulo lotul. of lettere and eastern news- rave." "I beg to melee zeo acknowledge harem>, with their liege r.rehed eel-
e;entlo and
papers. And his teenier% with that gen- raorg, madam, ' he said to her at their 1"3. aro •11.04zivo tmd•
eroaity that hits always distinguLfhed next meeting. "Zee beauty of madam is apparently well treated, and if eou
'western nevenpaper constituencies, showed vain searce."—Binglianiton Itepublic,an. know enouesh linesida • to make a bar.
their appreciation of his enterprie,e in a • gain, von will find this method. of trim -
substantial manner.—Z, L. Siihito in ; Where Ire Gotat. Bit P., e•Itenp• and convenient ono. It is cer-
Vence's Mar.:eine. 1 Mereistrateou say your narne is No,- tainly cooveneent; you have only to
video your haul 0.11J dro8lin,41 SWeep dovn
Stremethening the nseinory, • lies, sah. Magistrate—Where did you viPe" you 111" vnil.'"" on ' tiAlli. 1."'Y'''
e Inlet:noes jostrnig each other in. their co-
-' ! nole'on 13ono.parte Paneko? Witness—
Among tho aims whieh 611 the metal got that name? Witnese.--1 wuz named
— Immo Ives detier,or to reach e-ou this filet ; is as limo
td Inc contrary. "Thei.o is 110 hotter Ivey to kArenathen the de seem ae mine. Napoleon Bonaparte, I• of II.° e'rh"21":1°Nv a we -1'd et .anYtill'el%
hitt itues'an von now nat fled it very
eolumus of 11. Weekly journal is one at arter my poo' ole fakider. ado;
"The result ot title deee.ptive opeta. tion ; memory then iy spec ' g h - .t .t V.' et sahe am a family nome.—U•tica eh- cosy to' t"nteiee annin'enieineini;titet waea.e.
change was affected hi lelie than fifteen ; have a' good memory." The editor has a , .... you want to go. mis difilotilty Overeonts
was. a ported. cure, and this remarkable i tenth " end ankether thet " 4. liar ohould savor,
, . ...
„ however) you wM soon. be Spinning at a
minutes after the patient entered the 1 ,clecided- taste for ranemordea.—Shoo and I Wan 'nth* times OM iklritil MO over the beelly paved streets..
101ve tiiimere young ladies were tacitly Yon will prob.:lily soon notice the driver
taught in the middle of a long railroad match off his ef.411, =Wet l'i lit ilICI mr, n 1 ,
Oellre, WhiCh lover the tete of the replacing it, Make a hinty deli of the)
Are disease lie ia ,.....A.tlit.f.ollti tortially ob- , Nobody lute invented a entitle:time bridge by a paSS011ger train and forced to
%eh health or depress the vitolity of thg.
gall* ' whereby a man at the theatre. can drop a jtteeri twonty feet into tho water tO EDAM
eent in 'the Wit and got a clove. themselves. It would also he correet to tech elioul tier in eutession. Thio le N.,11.011.
croes. by touching the forehead, brettet Dila .
Terreesatenetaneedreielatatia,t•
thnies
ni ie.E1
SI .4 t
When L.ill tlergo; 7 -1P? -t ,
e,51.3 tl)cm end thee eepoe:yienatie
omn crein. eizas A
linVe 3,aco:e tho dIueit of
if1•11qo long T. r.r..•,-,.!r,•,7i,3y, to
••0r; ay: •
eine ee ‘144,2t.f,••:`‘
tr'.111. CV21.'"
'T to beet doctors say that tho came.%) of
laretwell lieptn el.
Ife ifeente 'ireenee. Dan
•
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OANLDA'S LEADING PAPER° ,
e'entwatereenteetand-)
II 110.10••••t
itn 13.111"111,....
Met Wiit • ' :1;‘,J1,1y
vtends 10 the -
3m110011 4u CaN.11 I. „... :113a,A, •
raanf.-9,. :15 1., v.• r: tbi>
Diet sI. • Pall, 11,v.,
prova7vd a 7011Lt.:
t."91.0 .T01:111' ......t:htiletrg..4
To ae P.; ten to ovvr% . •.• ": •
it.0.1111:A111; P.1111r1C;
tied 7C:CS _ Th¼t hi 'mm 1Octr,nteRati , •
state that it was a jump of ten feet. , ehureh rn end sheik reeoonition
t tit tr.ertli ?Ilad slIrittil (553j.
05 .
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