Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), No. 455, Ed. 1 Friday, December 29, 1893 Page: 3 of 8
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P
LIVE UNDER THE OCEAN.
or Kuvalunble Service In Treatinz Cases
(From
Dr. Edwin DeBaun of Passaic. N.
$
Egypt, £4 of
drachmas of
Men are rescued from the water after
TART A
)
and while :
dragging them
with
They fished for everything
pesos of Venezuela.
Baun. misdirecte 1.
ma
WISDOM.
present
when viewed under
—Colton.
has been the practice in such cases
and the jaw
was
authorities was the importation of this hastily improvised apparatus,
room
TWEGREN
The money was to have been
An absent minded groom in Rome,
the other day, and when the time for
May, 1893.
(
I
i
eameme
depths
dredges.
Used Also in Martine Respiration In
New-Born llablew.
of typhoid
and a read
cases,
seems
i dis-
many soldiers of grenadier stature.
More than 300 of her volunteers were
above six feet three inches in height.
—Massinger.
Influence is the exhalation of char-
acter.—W. M. Taylor.
Mediocrity can talk, but it is for
genius to observe.—Disraeli.
Subtlety may deceive you; integ-
rity never will.—Cromwell.
The mother’s heart is the child’s
school room.—Henry Ward Beecher.
Next to acquiring good friends the
Many si
the ranks
constitute
Lewis D.
Hulmevilleos
that it squeezes a good deal of
terial from the pores.
has invented several valuable surgi-
cal instruments and devices.
fractured when the doctors tried to
I force it open.
in a laudable rivalry to raise funds
•0
+1
an effective application of this wealth dalers' or
of air, but without satisfactory re-
Amieted W
Years —
w.
THE R ER.Y.:•m. --A- AlS---rom
OF F-A bean overflowing with grate
48 me, to write you. Twelve long
a man has died from lack of breath
that if breath was all he needed he
should have lived.
From time immemorial physicians
have directed their ingenuity toward
ing his ext.
suffered inle
ships he h X
din said; I
“I was bl
in 1841. anJ
private, set
in Compa"
Volunteers
AN INVENTION FOR PRODUC-
ING RESPIRATION.
QUEER NEIGHBORS OF THE HA-
WAIIAN CABLE.
Brazil, 2 condors of Chili. 36 rigs:
_______I Denmark. 400 piaters of
lungs filled with water, the life's ac-
the first thing done is o empty the
lungs of water by rolling him on *
rabts this, give my name and
» eincerely.
MRS. MALVINA WILSON.
__ experiments and observation is a
best acquisition is that of good books, method of internal respiration which,
tury, Venice, after an immense
amount of correspondence, succeeded
When a man is rescued from the princes
water, says the New York World,
be of 8500,000 to Harvard college to build,
i equip and maintain a reading
was the late Fred L. Ames of Boston,
process has been kept up for hours
with ultimate success, hut, consider-
ing the possibilities recognized in
artificial respiration, the results have
been far from encouraging.
Dr. DeBaun has worked on an en-
tirely new line, and the result of his
than chrysanthemums have petals, J., makes the announcement regard-
and starfishes range all the way ing the time-honored statement that
Excellency is now applied to am.
It was formerly a royal
or Gas —
was not
showed
apologized, but the father of the bride
refused to accept him as a son-in-law,
and the engagement was broken.
Mrs. Rowena Hasty of Parrott, Ga.,
was eighty-three years of age the
M . WAFER
My kidney J
efforts to solve the problem have
been unceasing, but, says Dr. De- j bassadors.
some elaborate distortions
E. P. Whipple.
Persons extremely reserved are like to force air into the lungs of the in-
old enameled watches, which had fant by breathing into its mouth,and
glass.
The Albatross scientists and Mr.
Agassiz, the younger, have been
classifying and labeling some of
these queer things of the sea. and of
course the queerer the fish the
greater the struggle to select a fit-
ting name for it. These names are
as queer as the fish in many in-
stances. but there is a root or founda-
BRINGS BACK BREATH. thpaungamasgsrstbvannettedunce2 A
It is not patented, as Dr. DeBaun is
a strict observer of medioal ethics,
which declar- that the discoveries of
' a physician belong to the world. He
I is treasurer of the state board of
medical examiners of New Jersey.and
tion and expansion of the chest walls in obtaining it for her ambassadors.
understand her,
--------- the tube from a rubber bag, inflating : jaw while trying to make a telephone
A vehicle for saving the lives of peo- the lungs, then releasing the press- - ” • —---
pie forced to jump from burning ure from the mouth- found, as he ex-
EEGHES
paratively freILLE, INDI
Relief followeERT PAIR WARE)
tonishngrapeeececce.
H-SiPP-c- , LUC gzycv
got to work up-KE L3
death for treason because they as-
ofmrtroubiF CARDUz.$
Germany, 45 rupees of India. 103 lire
_ ---- ------- , of Italy, 20 yens of Japan. 50 scudi
a hard battle with the waves, their of Malta, 103 lei of Roumania, 50
guilders of the Netherlands, 27
rubles of Russia. 8 tomuns of Persia.
of Asphyxiation by Water
a magnifying
a stowed only on the ambassadors of
3 monarchs and denied to those of a
Reive FErS.
Enterprie, Tuytor
w. Va. f
; and since then it is applied to all
Terrible Things With Terrible Names—
Animals That Look Like Buttonhole
Rouquets, and a sponge That Wears a
Cross— Dred ging-
barrel or lifting him from the ground
The busy have no time for tears — head downward. Then he is laid on
Byron. his back, the arms raised to expand |
The overcurious are not otherwise, the lungs, and a rhythmic eontrac-
WIT AND
the ceremony arrived he
In the Cascade mountains is the
instances restoration of animation 251 piasters of Servia, 32 ticols of
cannot bo effected. The lungs may Siam, 103 pesetas of Spain, 200
be emptied of the water, the life- gh of Tripoli, 7 tillas of Turkes-
giving air, so abundant is at hand- , tan, 21 patacons of Uruguay and 25
and if it could ony be forced into 1 —
the organs and respiration started
effected by alternate pressure and
relaxation. Sometimes the forcing
suits. Cases of suspended animation
come under their notice every day.
life could be renewed. Physicians’
tion for the name in all
Scientists’ greatest trouble
ALL SORTS AND SIZES.
to be in
tinctions
nepublic. but in the seventeenth cen-
end of the house the crab makes no
protest, even though it gives him
the appearance of being in a per-
petual state of somersault.
The chief of the deep sea worm
tribe is the buskiella, which builds a
large tube around itseli as it grows,
leaving half a dozen holes to sprout
branches through, which branches
are foot catchers or paddles, as the
crawler elects. Sea urchins have
more forms and variety of spikes
painted covers that hindered your see-
ing what o’clock it was.—Walpole.
To believe oneself more cunning
than others is a mistake. The fox is
more cunning than an ass: but there
are more fox skins in a furrier’s store
than ass skins.—Puck.
weary i
sumered grewt-
ly. from Utr-
Ine Derauge.
—mud, rocks. coral, fish, crustace-
ans,animalcul, worms, vegetable
specimens, and, in short, everything
that could possibly have habitat in
the saline depths.
The dredges for capturing fish and
animals are equally simple, consist-
ing of trawl nets, canvas bags opened
- by rectangular frames, and long bars
' hung with large swabs, according to
the depth to be fished or the sort of
specimens desired. Then there is
a surface net used to catch pelagic
fauna, visible and invisible, and they
The Titie -Exoellency."
A Mansage Stone.
A “massage stone” is coming into
use in England that is made of un-
glazed china and provided with a
sort of dorsal lump for holding in
the hand and has the rubbing sur-
face slightly undulated, not to say
ridged. The stone is white and even
when used on recently washed skin
it soon becomes darkened, showing
American Money and Ite Equivalenta
tive organs n f r Kfemvev
of food. In at ‘Ii4Y4 1
ailments, rhey vvor’rz,.
SHITS. 0DWINCLOTHIKG CO,
from the tiniest of “five-fingered
jacks” to immense comets with tails
and eyes and legs galore.
Professor Agassiz says that the
stalked crinoids are among the most
interesting of the deep-sea animals,
because their paleontological rela-
tions run back to the Jurassic and
Silurian periods. A dude could wear
the average crinoid in his button-
hole with much satisfaction until
somebody told him it was an animal
instead of a flower.
then contracting the lungs by pres-
sure upon the chest. But this has
been found not only intensely dis-
agreeable. but highly inefficient.
Dr. DeBaun decided to try a new
expedient. He passed a small rub-
ber tube through the nose of the in-
fant and down into the throat. Clos-
ing the mouth he forced air through
death’s door by asphyxiation from
gas and water. In l ba latter case “Don't fail to play on the alatel"
sumed this title. It was first lie-
determining the
tion suspended. In the majority of
ment and at
last was given
up by my phy-
Milan to etc.
besides spend
ing almost
we bad. Anter
nve monthe"
treatment noLU
your Doctor
Pierce ‘s Favor-
ite Preserip-
AXDCMILD. tioneInorci-
Joy most ex
I would, to day. have been
ad my little children mother-
been for you and your med-
ecommend your medicine us
he claims, cannot possibly fail. His
ting in my chan
I felt a curioi4
foot. Upon itr I
had flexed, or, P
movable, andX
that time on 4
steady, and it wN
walking arouncK
or no discomfoi.5
before taking t^y
been able to us W
time. My hea^^X
and I feel sur$s
done me more gF5
and all the medgn8
Sworn to befd
A politician weakly and amicably attention was first directed to the
right is no match for a politician ten- subject by a case of suspended ani-
aciously and pugnaciously wrong.— mation in a newly born child. It
Great Britain. 103
Greece. 84 marks of
Swiss watches packed in condensed and finds that animation may
milk cans. often restored within fifteen minutes.
Indianians are tall as a rule, and The apparatus is as simple as it is । Mass.
during the war the state furnished ingenious. It consists of a long paid in installments, but the papers
rubber tube, near one end of which had been signed at his death.
is a piece of soft rubber with which 0
to cover the mouth and nose. At „ , , ,
the other end are two rubber bulbs. I Ga ” forgot that he was to be married
After the tube has been inserted be-
tween the teeth and the mouth and
nose covered tightly- the lower bulb
is compressed, forcing air into the
that he had overslept himself. He
were sometimes put to
second bulb, which acts as a reser-
voir. This second bulb is much more
elastic than the other and main-
tains a steady pressure of air through
the tube. It is covered with loose
netting, which acts as a sort of a
safety valve against overpressure.
The tube is fitted with a stop cock
that may be used to lend force to the
first few respirations.
A few compressions of the lower
bulb are sufficient to fill the lungs.
Then the pressure on mouth and nose
is relaxed and the lungs are emptied
by the natural elasticity of the
muscles of the chest This elasticity
remains even after death, and with
this instrument it is quite possible
to make a dead man breathe regular-
ly as long as the application con-
tinues. In some of the doctor's ex-
periments on dead bodies this simu-
lation of life has been absolutely
startling.
It is not for dead men, however,
that the “insufflator,” as it is called,
has been devised, but fo’ men who
have been brought apparently to
from the extreme
trawls, drags and
A contemporary has figured out
that the American double eagle of
<20 is equal to 20 patakas of Abys-
sinia, 30 kwans of Anam. 24 piasters
of Arabia. 20 pesos of Argentine,
about 44 florins of Austria. about 103
francs of France, 36 milreis of
present. An examination
■ title. and during the middle ages
other day. She is the mother of
Great Sunken lake, the most deeply-
sunken lake in the world. It is fif-
teen miles long and four and one-half
miles wide. It is 2,000 feet down to
the surface of the water, but the
depth of the water is unknown.
Relics of much interest to antiquari-
ansere in the possession of Lemuel Y.
Singleton of Vineland, N. J. Among
the treasures are a sofa, table, decan-
ter and glasses used by Lafayette dur-
ing his last visit to this country, and
a portrait of George Washington,
painted by Rembrandt Peale.
In South Africa ostriches have been
successfully employed in finding gold
deposits. A drove of the birds are
turned loose to feed in the territory
where the precious metal is supposed
to exist. They are then given an
emetic and the ejecta carefully exam-
ined for nuggets, and if any ore found
the trail of the bird is followed until
the diggings are discovered.
The costliest mile of railroad is a
mile measured on the steel portion of
the Forth bridge. The length of this
portion is a mile and twenty yards
and the cost of it was considerably
over 810,000,000. The most expensive
railroad in the world is the “Inner
Circle” line of London, which cost, in-
eluding the purchase of land, from
$3,000,000 to *5,000,000 per mile.
Professor George Davidson has
completed a profile of the cable
route between California and Hawaii
surveyed by the United States fish
commission’s steamer Albatross a
few months ago, says the San Fran-
cisco Examiner. This is the route
that the officials at Washington, who
received the Albatross’ reports, have
decided is most economical and
available.
While the Albatross was surveying
the cable route the scientists of her
crew went fishing. They fished in
all kinds of ways, from scooping
things on board from the surface to
envoys.
ALL KINDS OF PEOPLE.
Wisconsin has 8,707 women farmers.
England’s army of unemployed now
numbers 2,000,000 of people.
England has twenty-seven dukes,
Scotland seven and Ireland two.
The number thirteen, it is said, can
not be found as a street number in
J^yank fort-on-the-Main.
Salem, Mass., iavs claim to one of
the oldest persons in the country in
Mrs. Bridget Connery, who is over 106
years of age.
Conductors and motormen on the
electric road running from Newark to
Irvington, New Jersey, are compelled
to wear white neckties.
A meeting of 2,000 persons over
seventy years of age is annually held
at Leicester, England, and of these
over 400 die before the next anni-
versary.
A woman in Dover, Del., got loek-
between the inhabi-
tants of deep water, the mid-
dle depths and the surface
strata. There are many imperfec-
tions in the best methods of trawling
and dredging, and the naturalist in
sorting his fish after a haul in mid-
ocean is often at a losa to know at
what depth his various captures have
been made. Many deep-sea fish lead
an active existence despite their soft
bones and feeble muscles, and the
enormous pressure under which they
live, but still peculiar specimens
may have come from the bottom or
may have been entangled in the
meshes within a few fathoms of the
surface during ascent or decent of
) the trap. If a fish has no eyes at
J all or huge eyes that pop out of the j
> sockets when pressure is removed at
• the surface, it is probable that it is
) from the bottom or a great depth.
' but deep-sea eyes are so varied that
they are not a sure test.
Among the deep-sea beauties is
the sternoptyx diaphana, which is
very much head and eyes and com-
paratively very little body. It has a
friend in the monolepe atrimana,
which is blessed with four eyes, and
another in the ugly-headed bara-
thronus bicolor, which has almost no
eyes at all, and another in the
aphyonmus mollis, which has only
rudimentary eyes that art hard to
discover.
The macraroid family is the most
extensive of any below the 100-
fathomdepth—characteristic abysmal
forms the scientists call them—and
seventy-five per cent of the fishes
brought up from the depths are next
of kin. They have eyes of great size
and luster, and saw-like fins along
both top and bottom.
The greatest gourmand of the
ocean is the black chiasmadon, or
great swallower. It possesses teeth
to chew with, but the teeth are out
of all proportion to the stomach,
which is the boss feed receptacla
pure and simple. The chiasmadoK
is a cannibal, and a fish half as large
as itself is only a moderate satisfac-
tion for that terrible stomach.
After getting through with the
queer fishes the deep fishers turned
their attention to freak crustaceans,
one of which is a curious compound
of polyp and crab. Catapagurus
they are called, according to the
labels on the glass jars. The cat-
apagurus builds up a house by the
base of a suitable polyp, and forces
it to expand so as to enclose the ani-
mal in a brodd cavity. If an anem-
•ne chooses to bloom on the other
buildings, embodying the principle of pected, that the elasticity of the
the outstretched blanket. muscles of the chest caused immedi-
A skeleton crust supporter for pot- ate contraction of the lungs, forming
pie pans, the support extending over a complete respiration. This was
the pan and provided with means to kept up for forty-five minutes, when
prevent it from shifting laterally. natural respiration had been re-
The neatest swindle ever per- stored and a life had been saved,
petrated upon the French customs Since then Dr.-DeBaun has perfected
this finally i
ble which 1# 1 No printing offloo
vice. In 17 r newspaper ex-
with an hoi Qerienee necesvory.
_ . _F -ompletely printed
tered the •5 ldcal Peoples' Party
Philadelphi Papers furnished in
ated two ye. any county having
but did noti no Reform paper,
was living 5 best of all plans for
after I hadp the party. These pa-
a sofa at myued “ndertheauspices
r fplt a col? eform Press As-
.. . , nd thematter contained
limbs asthodited J w s .Morgen,
ly left themf the hiational Reform
them I was ciation, and J. T. w.
that I was P Texas’ Reform Press
my toes. T Any • mount of local
and a pin or advertising inserted,
no pain. I ‘ra’ samples and ful
v rii J • addlress,
I called in
Philadelphia. W. LOE,
exhaustive e:__: Dala”,Tex.
sounding ancm-emmmmummom
seventeen children, eleven of whom These pills ec DIS 3,
are living, and has eighty-seven grand- form all the 120*200*0*48
children and twenty-six great-grand- new life and riwvunp
children and has lived within four restore shatterev N naM
miles of Parrott sixty-one years. She unfailing specie ad
married at the age of fourteen years locomotor at axivad
and has a feather bed given herby V itus1 dance, SM s
her mother seventy-five years ago. matism. nervous
She draws a pension for the services affects of the gr . I E
of her husband in the Indian war. heart, pale and
In a country town there lived an tired feeling rem
Irishman who spent most of his time prostration a I
and money at one of the many public on vitiated umim
houses. In consequence of this and are alsoa sp< « 1 I E E
the small wage he earned, he had run to femals in Im
up a rather .long score on the slate, cal cure in a cai
One day a fire occurred at this par- tal worry, overm
ticular puttie house, and the fire whatex erpna Ure:
brigade was called into requisition. n-heseam29Mm
Among the first at the conflagration Dr.WilliamsyMed
was the Irishman. Above the noise nectady - -nim
and din of the people assembled he and areassodoxom
was heard shouting vociferously, box,° 1X00X5m
- — sever sold in bula •
ANTE
to pay off a church debt, prominent
residents of Cross Keys, N. J., may be
seen peddling gingercakes, candy,
pepper hash and cottage cheese on the
streets.
It is learned that the secret donor
prove of the ) I
“One day 17 ,~ \
to try Dr. Wi fs
| People. I ser~ }»
been troubled^ J-
after my firEBna
such an exte 22 1 g8Ye 2
my bed my 2218
had difficulty
falling. My ====}
SCKSKINi
I. W. Gross a
son College,
same result. I
house, of Ph,---
no amount <T FITTING, I3EST WEARING
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Forster, William & Halcomb, H. A. Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), No. 455, Ed. 1 Friday, December 29, 1893, newspaper, December 29, 1893; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1581064/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .