Typed as
spelled and written
Kay Cunningham
THE MARLIN DEMOCRAT
Fifteenth Year - Number 23
Marlin, Texas, Thursday, August 4, 1904
HE WAS DRUNK AND DOWN.
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USUAL TREATMENT PRESCRIBED BY CITY
AUTHORITIES.
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Considerable attention was drawn to a
stranger at the hot well early Friday night, who appeared to be suffering some
internal pain that caused him to emit occasional groans and moans as if he was
about to "pass in his checks."
Parties in the crowd sought to alleviate his misery by
the application of various remedies but to no a vail as the diagnois seemed to
be eroneous.
Pretty soon Drs. M. M. Coleman and Frank B. Sewall
arrived on the scene and held a consultation over the postrate form of the
stranger, whose sir-name was Evans. The doctors diagnosed the trouble as an
aggravated form of john barley corn's disease.
Dr. Coleman prescribed a treatment of ten hours in the
"city cooler" and it was accordingly so done. The patient had recovered
sufficiently to confront the mayor at 9 o'clock next morning and receive a
statement of fees due for his treatment.
Evans was here as a witness in one of the railroad
cases pending in the district court.
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Copyright permission granted to Theresa Carhart and her volunteers for
printing
by The Democrat, Marlin, Falls Co., Texas