T hursday , J anuary PAGE THREE » 5. 1922 11--------------- ------------ —_____ _________ THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT m rum - ’ - 1 Another Chiropractic Achievement! DEAD AND DIVORCED-AND DOESN’T REMEMBER And Now, After Undergoing the Most Extraordinary Experience a Man Ever Had, George L. Fish, Capitalist, Is Honeymooning With His Fiancee of the Days Before the ‘’Cloud” ___ Three whole years have slip­ ped from the life of George Lea- ander Fish, the California capit­ alist and inventor. Three whole years have been drawn into the mysterious caverns of hia sub- conscious mind. But not only are those three years blotted from his memory, but they contain a story of ro- mance and adventure amazing to all who hear it—and most of all to George L. Fish himself. For in that now-forgotten lite Mr .Fish was pronounced dead, was miraculously resurected on the embalmer’s tabic, was married and divorced. His wife com­ plained of his obsession for ank­ les. He not only recalls no ob­ session for tinkles, but he cannot •even summon the faintest recol­ lection of his wife. Mr. Fish is now married again —to the woman to whom he was engaged when his memory first passed under a cloud. He is very happy—but a doubt of these three dark years of amgiesia is always in his mind. “What sort of a man was I?” he constantly asks himself. “What all did I Jose. The word "killed’’ is used ad­ visedly, for Fish, after being pick­ ed up and carried to a hospital at Garden City, was officially pro­ nounced dead and a certificate to that effect made out. A Remarkable Experience. His body was pitifully mangled. Twenty-two teeth were knocked out, his nose smashed, his collar­ bone fractured :n three places, his ipine dislocated, reven ribs, both arms and leg) broken. Physicians who examined him after he first reached the hospital said that life would be extinct in 40 minutes, but he was not actually pronounced dead until two days later. His body was taken to the mor­ gue and funeral arrangements made. The mortician started the process of embalming by making a deep incision in Fish’s arm, where­ upon he discovered signs of life in th0 body. Following a forlorn hope the body was rushed back to the hospital and tlte fight for life re- newed. Three months later Fish was dls- charged as cured. He was cured, in a sense, That is, the wounds of his fleh had healed and his bones, to not known. Fish, of course, recalls nothing of them and Virginia Burns Fish, who has been sick for a long time, has been reluctant to discuss the affair. Whether she married him knowing that the greater part of his past was a blank she has never said. But Fish, according to her bill of divorce, was not a good husband in the accepted sense of the word. She charged that he "judged wo- mqn’s characters by their ankles." The divorce that she asked for was granted her and Fish went hla way again. Through Justice Langdon of San Francisco, a friend of the amnes­ iac. scientists at Afodesto, Calif., heard of his case and became inter­ ested. Fish was persuaded to go to Modesto and submit himself to certain chiropractic experiments. The chiropractor who examined Fish discovered that several of his vertebrae were misplaced. He placd Fish on an operating table and began an ordinary chiropractic manipulation, with the result that his backbone was suddenly made straight. The efNct on the amnesiac was miraculous. The response of his mind was like the action of an electric light system when switch is thrown on- Old memories flood­ ed his mltad. He instinctively took up the life from which he had been torn by the automobile accident of Just before three years previous. the automobile wreck Fish had ____ _ _____ been, adding figures. He awoke from the’sbock "of the operation and took up his addition where he had left off. The psychological explanation given by Dr. Charlea ’S isst <. z ^'.'4 . • Ml • V® •-Ù .. # Mi •• wit The former Mra. Virginia Burnz-Fizh - » t '. ' « GEORGE LEANDER FISH do? Will some forgotten act one day rise up to tear my life to pieces? For ” the present, at beast—Mr. Fish can only take what others tall him—as the true story of that other UN. Nrs McCloud all appearance, hod knitted togeth­ er. But his memory was a void. George L. Fish, the man who had been struck by the automobile was gons. In hie place was another man who faced life In full o n es t e ■ion of bin powers, but who background of memory. was he I Only through documents George able to establish himself ss L. Fish. But depite this handicap, he started in business, built up new relationships, and was rapidly making a success of his new life. This new George Fish lived very quietly bnt hi« affairs prospered exceedingly. He was very fond of -dfsiffh ----1 exceeding1? ”T a