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- Jul 27, 2010
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I am suffering from writers block or else this novella would have been sent off to publishers to be....rejected multiple times. Such is the life of a writer....lol
I have combed historical newspapers for almost all of the information I will tell you about. Some of it was verified through family legend, or the distorted version of it was passed down through the generations.
The first one dealt with a many-greats-aunt and her prosperous farmer husband's bizarre suicide. This was the early 1900's when quackery mocked desperate people looking for medical relief. The man suffered from a bad back and was in constant pain and he travelled away from his farm to buy this potion or that one, none of which worked.. Finally, a travelling medical quack spoke of his miracle machine that was a sure fire cure for back pain, but to purchase it was prohibitively expensive. After being turned away in one town, this man sought the same salesman in a different town, imploring him to take less.
He said no.
This relative by marriage was in such despair over the hopelessness of relief, he waited for his wife and children to leave him alone at the house, and then chopped the heads off 101 parlor match sticks and swallowed them all. He didn't want to be stopped and so he told no one, until the phosphorous poisoning wracked his body. He finally confessed to what he had done, but it was too late for early 20th century medicine to deal with. He went through such agony for two months before he died in a hospital in Omaha, for he was an otherwise strong man. Yes, they pumped his stomach early on, but the phosphorous had already been absorbed.
I have combed historical newspapers for almost all of the information I will tell you about. Some of it was verified through family legend, or the distorted version of it was passed down through the generations.
The first one dealt with a many-greats-aunt and her prosperous farmer husband's bizarre suicide. This was the early 1900's when quackery mocked desperate people looking for medical relief. The man suffered from a bad back and was in constant pain and he travelled away from his farm to buy this potion or that one, none of which worked.. Finally, a travelling medical quack spoke of his miracle machine that was a sure fire cure for back pain, but to purchase it was prohibitively expensive. After being turned away in one town, this man sought the same salesman in a different town, imploring him to take less.
He said no.
This relative by marriage was in such despair over the hopelessness of relief, he waited for his wife and children to leave him alone at the house, and then chopped the heads off 101 parlor match sticks and swallowed them all. He didn't want to be stopped and so he told no one, until the phosphorous poisoning wracked his body. He finally confessed to what he had done, but it was too late for early 20th century medicine to deal with. He went through such agony for two months before he died in a hospital in Omaha, for he was an otherwise strong man. Yes, they pumped his stomach early on, but the phosphorous had already been absorbed.