t t-x&M "-"- ..!... - V 4ftf' i JJ.V ;ji i. w'fnvffcivsfca , ivoji .fiftMMtMimurwAt. , MvisfentawoAfwsJl lrJl3!;r.'!!!!?i!rt,,TTJr , 5 bfi&iisfaiWiftrW ;k- s.. ; H'JT.i.i, mmK wts . ....HV -.-W1'Wj,(J,)nrAl A . ' J f' Infant! JJ AjEdwin Morri 4 Jjj pi copymm ar PSAfoofl puq. ca. VERY ton seconds, eomowhoro In the- world, a baby dies. A blinking red light nmdo this statement to those who attended the convention of tho American Association for tho Study and Prevention of In faiit Mortality at llaltlmorc, laat November. In one comer of tho room was an electric light, en cased In n red bulb. Six times a minute 7.C40 times n day tho light went out; and, every time tho light faded from tho bulb, BOUICWhorn In thn u-nrlil tho lli.l.f faded from a mother's eyes. So fast do our chil dren die. Sometimes they dlo fnstcr. They died faster last summer. If babies kept diaries, Inst summer would go down in tho annnls of tho survivors bb tho "black summer of 1910." In tho slnglo city of New York, 873 died In n single week. Every little poor street had Its littlo whlto hcarso. rVM11, durln gtho courso ot o summer, 8,000 children died that ought to havo lived; that AunBy' they dIcU from loventablo causes. Cnlldron die from two kinds of causes; those that aro preventable and thoso that nro not. This Is news. Your grandmother and, possibly, your mother belloved that every child that died could not havo been saved. Everybody thought bo. Preventable causes of deaths were not recognized. It wns taken as n mattor of courso that women should bear twice ns many children as were re quired to maintain the population, because half of them wero bound to die. Wo still let half of tho chlldron die, but wo km better. Wo know they need not dlo. Wo know they wero born to live. Wo know that thoy do not have a chance to livo. Wo havo even exploded the old supposition that tho children ot the physically wenk must of necessity bo physical ly weak. We now know that the chlldron or tho physically weak are born almost ns strong as the child of tho strongest. Every Intelligent physician knows this statement to bo true. However, lot some eminent physician stand for It. Caleb W. Saleoby, one of tho most emi nent physicians In England, Is such an an authority. Kead bat ho says on tho subject In "Parenthood and Kaco Cul ture": "Most of the babies born In the clums are splendid littlo specimens of humanity so far as physique Is concerned bearing no marks ot degeneration to correspond with tho deterioration of their parents. In a word, heredltory works ... so that each generation gets a fresh start." , In another part of tho samo book, Dr. Saleeby estimated that the number of children who are born so weak that they havo littlo chance tor life docs not exceed ten per cent.; and ho attri buted tho weakness or these to tho effects of alco hol and certain lmpollto diseases upon one or both of their parents. Having now somo fundamental facts that meet' with general acceptance among the enlightened, wo may proceed to seek an answer to tho ques tion, "Why aro children 'pormitted to die from preventable causes and what are those prevent able causes?" We need not go far. Millions of children that nro born strong enough to live under favorable circumstances aro killed by their mothers. Tho rest that die from preventable" causes nro killed by tho community by you and by me, if wo help to keep things as they are, and by everybody else who helps to keep things as thoy are. Wo will first consider tho mothers who kill their children. Every mother kills or tends to kill her children who does not tako tho trouble to Inform herself concerning tho proper methods of child rearing. It Is not that such mothers aro lazy. It Is not that they are Indifferent to their children's welfare. Thoy nro simply ig norant. Some of them are steeped 'In ignorance. Somo of them arc half-steeped. Hut thoy are all ignorant. Thoy don't know that fllos, by carrying the germs of diseases, kill more children than all the elephants, tigers, lions, automobiles and street cars in the world. Therefore, files are considered mere Inconveniences. They aro regarded as un ornamental in the soup, but bb not detrimental to the health. They Ewarm in the kitchen, the pantry and the dining room, painstakingly deposit ing their filth upon every particle ot food that the family, including the children, cat. Sope of this filth is not .deadly; some of it is. But no such Ignorant mother ever connects In her mind the going of her baby with the coming of the flics. Nor docs any such ignorant mother have any conception or tho care with which she should feed, not only her baby, but her half-grown chil dren. If Bho doesn't nurse her baby' she doesn't reallzo that any milk she Is likely to Und for sale is more likely to be poison than food. Nor, does sho reallzo that such milk will bo precisely as poisonous for her baby' after it has been . weanedr Such mothers usually buy their milk from the nearest grocery store. The number ot "bacteria in milk, when It exceeds 600,000 to the cubic centimeter, makes the milk unfit for use. Yet, some analyses of New York store milk, the other day, Bhowod bacteria as high as 38,000,000. What wonder that every summer is a "black sum. rner" for the bablos of New York's poor? In many other ways, the Ignorant mother kills ber children with the food sho gives them. Many a baby six months old 1b nibbling crackers, bananas and pickles, while putting In the rest of He time at an "all-day sucker" or a stick of candy. Mothers who want their children to live should know that the prematura giving of any kind ot solid food to a baby Is exceedingly dangerous; that after a child 1b weaned It should be given solid food only in accordance with the Instruc tions of an intelligent physician; that moat and fruit (except orange Juice) are like so much poison, even if they do not produce death as quickly as strychnine would; and that all during childhood, the food should bo simple, with cereals, milk and vegetables as a baBls aud a little meat not oftener than onre a week, But, as a chlld-klller, tho community exceeds In destructlveness even the Ignorant mother. Uy this is meant that the community maintains con ditions that sometimes prevent even lutolligont persons from ta'.ing proper caro of their children. Tho community maintains conditions that create pr.veity and slums. The community even main- I ' ' ' ssl In " " I 1 ItsBMWl JO 0 1(11(11 lX(NsMBVWiUinoM)iWIM I IsFlnM MlM I 1 1 1 IliiwDn I Oil 'ST IIMiiSIIIHRf IT n S fTTI IMmBsJ JW RfBltiSkVl ffil ex M 1Avi u'2HflH AXlBllMlt A J fMV'V lfriW(KSM0()hxBBllBBfl JSPs2spmI!HB " 9 Bawbt. & jfeSj jfflil l! YmBIKSftiiJ)si xlr 4rmm iatniA L iBL frilBsyHlsslllHP,,,r" SsSr Wkisfizzpy 6 1 rvSHHsHssHiMJ gfaMtf U ln N bK Ms i dt V YJUbbB) a W AAhsf 1 , H UP l K " I AX,b I 3 .M ' afm tains conditions that foster Ignorance. What chance has tho poor mother anywhere In this country to inform herself with regard to tho rear ing of children? What chance has tho poor mother in New York? Sho has no money with which to pay a physician for consultation. Ie sho went to a physician paid by tho city, sho would hardly know what to do with her children while she was away. Sho might leave them at a day nursery, it is truo; but did you ever think how many more day nurseries nnd how many moro city phyBlcians we should havo to havo if every mother who needs to know how to rear her chlldron wero to adopt this plan? Wo should have to havo thou sands and tens ot thousands moro of each. And, If the community wero intelligent enough to de niand such conveniences, It would bo intelligent enough not to need most of them. Therefore wo who know enough not to need them nro re sponsible for the slaughtor ot tho children of those who won't And, is not that a pleasant thought? How caif intelligence prevail against tho neglect of communities to keep their water supplies pure? Almost every city claims to havo puro water. Almost every city is a liar. So long as we havo typhoid fever, we shall know that we havo not pure water. Tho water supply of nearly every city is bad part of the year. Ono city drinks the sowHge of another. The contamination could be prevented, of course, but It Isn't. Detroit, for Instance, will have anothor outbreak of typhoid fever next fall. Scores, if not hundreds will die, and, the following autumn, there will be another outbreak. Careful parents, of course, can give their children only boiled water to drink at home, but they cannot be sure what their children drink at school. They can only hope for the best and be thankful if tbey get it The most deadly disease that threatens chil dren this summer is infantile paralysis. In June, reports came from the south that the disease had broken out in several widely separated places. Dr. Simon Flexnor, director of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, says it doea not follow that the disease will again be epidemic In tho east, and the middle west, but he cautions physicians and parents to be on tbe look-out. Infantile paralysis Is caused by a living organ ism bo email that it readily passes through a gerro-nlter of the finest porcelain. It Is believed that this germ enters and finds lodgment in the noso, and that children whose noses are not clean are most likely to become Infected. From experiments made upon monkeys at Rockefeller Institute, it is known that tho average period of Incubation is a little less than ten days; that Is to say, definite symptoms of the disease appear ten days after the germ enters tho sys tem, though illness has sometimes followed In four days. Tho first symptoms of the disease appear to vary somewhat' with the Individual. Also, no individual has all ot tbe symptoms. Restlessness and irritability sometimes mark the approach. At other times there is apathy. Also there may be a low fever for a few days. Dr. William Palmer Lucas of the Harvard Medi cal Scbool, who Is (one ot tho leading Investigators of tho disease, offers this general advice: "Headache, general or frontal, is not infrequent ly met with In children old enough to locate tbe pain, and this Is often accompanied with rigidity of tbe neck. If with any ofv these nervous mani festations, thero should bo trouble in the upper air passages, such as bronchitis or sore throat, sus picion should bo aroused." But even If the dwlBeaso, early in Its progress, be correctly diagnosed, tho best physician cannot stop it. Like scarlet fever, monsles and all othor germ diseases, this ailment must run Its course. A physician enn only put tho patient in a condi tion to weather tho storm bb well an possible But whllo littlo can bo done after tho dlscaBO bns developed, careful parents can do much to prevent their children from tnklng ,tho malady. The children's noses can bo kept cloan. Dr. Flex ner regards this as most Important. Also, certain disinfectants, If used ns a mouth nnd noso wnsh during tho summer danger period, nro effective. A ono por cent, solution of hydrogen poroxldo will kill tho germ ot Inrnntllo pnralyslB. So will plain menthol. Enchof these statements 1b made upon tho authority or Dr. Flexner. Yet tho germ thnt cnuscs Infntnlle paralysis Is more virulent than tho germ or rablcB. Dr. Flex ner discovered that tho paralysis germ could not even bo weakend by drying It tor weeks ovor caustic potash, nor by keeping it trozen ror weeks. But hydrogen poroxldo nnd menthol kill It Dr. Floxner Is now, and has boon tor somo time conductlug experiments to learn whether files carry tho germs nnd spread tho dlscaso. He has already definitely lenrned that Hies do carry tho germs, but ho has not demonstrated that tho gorms, when carried, got into tho system and produce tho dlseaso. Infantilo paralysis camo to 'this country from Scandinavia. Prior to 1907 it hnd seldom occurred horo. Since then it has been epidemic from tho Atlantic to the Paclilc. Now York and Boston, where so many Immigrants gather, havo suffered most. Minnesota, to which so many Scandinavians remove, comoB noxt. Tho dlseaso flourishes dur ing hot, dry Bummers. It Ib sort of a Bister dlseaso of cerebrospinal meningitis and, years ugo, was probably often mlstnkon for thnt disease. A conspicuous point ot dlfferenco Is that the for mer malady comes In late winter or early spring, while infantile paralysis comes In summer. In fantile paralysis is moat likely to attack children lesB than four years old, though adults are not immune. But one attack most likely makes tho subject Immune for life. Dr. Flexnor's expert mentfl upon monkeys Indicate ns much. But harking back to tho causes of preventable deaths ot children, this much more may be said: Mothers are too prone to buy medicine from doc tors and not enough given to buying information from them. Mothors who do not know how to care for their children should not wait until a child is sick and then call tho doctor to dose tho child. They should call tbe doctor when the child is well, and pay him his regulation fee for sitting down half an hour and instructing them with regard to the care of the child. Most mothers need Information moro than their children need medicine. Doctors, when called, often give harm less 'medicine, when none is needed, simply be cause tho public feels that it must have something for its money. The public Ib not wise enough to know that it can spend its money In no hotter way than to buy certain Information that tends toward tho maintenance of health, Diarrhea, for instance, which kills more babies, porhaps, than any othor single cause, Ib solely a disturbance of tbe digestive tract duo to wrong feeding. Milk containing thirty-seven million bacteria to the cubic centimeter or even a million will causo It. Cow's milk not properly modified Is certain to upset tbe stomachs of Infanta. A hair-hour with a good physician will cnablo a mother to get In formation that mny prevent hor child from sicken ing and dying. In the meantime, tho responsibility for the avoidable deaths of chlldron must largely rest with tho few who, knowing bow to take care ot their own, do not, for one reason or another, take effective measures to pass on this knowledge to othora. A fow nien control every government national, state and municipal. Those men, U they wanted to, could compel government to dlssoml nate tbe vast amount of information concerning the prevention of Infant mortality, Franco moved when her blrth-rato became so low that she had to move. When children become Bcnrco, govern ments are sometimes as careful of their health n- they aro at other times of the health ol hogs A Psalm of Deliverance SafcySctol Uttm tm Oct 2t, 1911 SpteWllr Arrtnftd for Thl Ptpr LK880N TBXT-Psnlm K. MEMonr VEnsEs-im. OOLDEN TEXT-"The Lord hath done great things for us; whereof wo are glad." -rsa. 1M:3. PliACB IN m8TOrtY-Juiit when this Faalm was written la unknown, but in Its spirit It belongs to the return from the exile, the times of our last two tenons, raalms 121, 123, 128, ISO are among the Pilgrim Psalms. "Psalms of Deliverance" camo as a vivifying power into tho hearts of the returned cxIIcb, who in tho midst of tholr Joy wero overwhelmed with diffi culties, nnd hardships and discourage ments. Tho rcnllty wns far differ ent from tho Ideal pictures in tholr minds. Thoy had soon Victory glori ous In tho dlstanco, but wero not plunged into tho turmoil and smoke of battle. Thoy wero tempted to say to tho prophots thnt Pllablo in the Slough of Despond, angrily said to Christian who had urged him to go on tho pllgrlmago to tho Celestial City: "Is this tho happiness you havo told me all this whllo of?" But songs of deliverance keep the celestial hope over In view. They point out the way to tho things hoped for, and show "the evidence of things not seen." I "Thou has been favorable unto thy land," shown by bringing back the captivity of Jacob. This was a most marvelous event and not even to be hoped for in tho natural course ot things. "When tho Lord turned again the captivity ot Zlon," caused tho stream of captives that flowed to Babylon to turn back and flow to Zlon; "like tho streams in the south," in suddenness nnd overflowing fullness. The loving klndnesB of God proves that he has forgiven tholr post trans gressions. "Thou hast forgiven the Iniquity of tby people." Canceled it, as an, account of debt is canceled, or taken away as a heavy, crushing burden. Covored all tholr sin. Blot ted out of sight, covered It with a mantle, so that thoy wore in God's sight as thoso who had never sinned. Wo neod forgiveness as wide as tho sin. And we find in tho Bible as many terms expressing forgiveness as we found for exprcslng Bin Forglvo, Re mit, Send away, Cover up, Blot out, Destroy, Wash away, Cleanse. The returned exiles nalnod a new knowledge of God's Word, a new jworld experience, they lost the inde pendent nation, but gained the Inde pendent church, from which blossom ed the Messiah, the Saviour of tbe world. The old, eternal law of sin jand death was irrevocable, never iceased; but the changed character (permits a new law to override the consequences. In tho words ot Dr. Uohn Thomas of Livorpool: "Every man who knows anything knows that one law can be neutralized by anoth er. There is a law of gravitation jWhlch keeps this Bible here upon the desk. That law cannot be altered, it cannot bo stopped; it will draw, and draw, and draw, whatever you may say or do, but it can bo neutralized by the law of my will. I can lift tbe book and make tho law of gravitation to appear as though it were not That is exactly what wo say about the par don of sin and the arrest of its conse quences." God has done much for them, but thoy longed for more. So many evils remained, tho nation was yet so im perfect, so far from what it might be. Illustration from Dr. Chapman's ad dross to tho Harvard students "Re member, friends, that It is God's standard your life and mine must come up against A friend of mine went to see an old washerwoman, and as he entered tbe house tbe sheets hanging on the line In front of the house impressed him as especially white, spotlessly white. He went Into the house, and was there for some time. It had commenced to snow In the meantime. When he came out, he noticed that the snowflakes bad been falling on the clothes, and that the sheets did not seem white at all,' but yellow rather. He spoke to the old washerwoman. Why, what's the matter? They looked so very white when I came in, and now they don't look white at all.' The old woman said: 'What can stand against God Almighty's white.'" There is a charming little booklet called "Expectation Corner," an alle gory on prayer almost as good as "Pil grim's Progress." A poor man in Redeemed Land mourned over his pov erty, and was taken at last to see the Lord's treasure houses. There he found a room called the Missed Bless ings Office, full of blessings marked for him which his weak faith would pot expect, so that his door was closed when they were brought He saw another storehouse, called tbe De layed Blessings Office, full ot good things for which the receivers were hot prepared, or which were not fully ripened for their best use. They were growing and would be sent In fullness pf time. : Truth shall spring out of tbe earth, from men on earth, as plants grow from the ground. They seek God "in sincerity and in truth," and such pray ers receive the answer of righteous ness from heaven, a right heart, a right life, Inspiration to righteousness, and guidance in tbe right way. "They that sow in tears" of sincere repent ance and toll, "shall reap in Joy." As Haggai told them that drought, and mildew, and meager crops were the punishment for their sins and lire ligion, so now the blessings of pros perity are promised as tbe visible re ward and sign of God's favor. TOWN IS BEING REBUILT Mas Not Taken Black Flood 6f Walsrs . Prom tho Map. River iti, Wlf , "' absolute- Moro Ihon k million' foMr -io of? ly disappearing In the short tiw two hours wns tile1 fofl collected by U wntors at Black ftlver Falls, Wlscon- sin. Even the roaldonts of tho towst could not reallzo what it meant until tho lako formed by tho Hntflcld darn was dry, and tho rush of waters had passed on to tho Mississippi, Just out of reach of the flood thd business men nnd residents ot tho placo wntched tho waters carry away tho bullillngn that represented tho homen of business enterpriser which It hnd taken years of effort to build. Among tho larger Industries seemingly wiped out within n fow minutes wan tho plant of Colon Carbollsalvc. This plant, nlong with others that Buffered ft llko fato, la today being rebuilt, nnd tho btmlnosn mon of Black River Falls promlsn that a better town shall ro placo tho ono destroyed by tho raging floods, nnd thnt Just ns rapidly ns men nnd material can put It together. It la cntastrophlos llko tho breaking of tho Hntflcld dam that demonstrato tho American spirit Not In Vain. Noah sighted Mount Ararat. "At last," he cried, "tho mountain resort with an ocean view I " Horewlth he felt tho voyago was not In vain. Puck. Tho noblest work of God Is man, but you can't make somo married women bellevo It. i Constipation cautc nnd Aggravates many ftcrioii diieRMen. It in thoroughly cured by Dr. Piorcc'n l'lcnmnt l'cllctn. The favor ite family laxative. A woman is apt to regnrd a bachelor na a man who Is too much ot a coward to get marrlod. Smoker find Lewis' Single Binder So cigar better quality thnn mont 10c cigar. Somo of us are apt to tako advice thnt doosn't belong to ub. STOMACH WEAK? Too much depends upon the stomach to allow this condi tion to continue. You can tone, strengthen and in vigorate the stom ach, liver and bowels by the use of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS TRY IT TOtAY ALL MUCGISTS Nebraska Directory AMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM WXWWWM Krister's Ladles Tailoring Collegi r1. lal offer and booklet. 1648 O ST., LINCOLN, NKB, DRINK HABIT MS Latest, Rnfeat and Burcnt method. Nerer fall. Tobnrfo and Drug Habits also aurcess fully treated lr tbe latest nnd shortest meth od. No physical or mental sutTerlng. Call or send for literature and endorsements. INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE COMPANY 601 So. 11th Street Llnctln, Nseratfcs HEART DISEASES I limk my practice to Heart sad Grculatorjr ailments, Thirty years experience ought to awaa audi to such patiest. Eipsfunsrtiai aad aoglect it costly sad bad. Writs J. 3. LE0NHA1DT, M. K Heart Specialist 172 If Street Liacsla. Nebraska AUCTIONEER Aootlonsen are not all auks. Boms ars moch txt tar than oihsra. Tbe batter the anetlonsar ta larnr roar check. Tbs best Mill ns ssnrlce oasts jou no mora than tbs poorest. Titers front, security and satlsfae Ion In dolna business with Z.B. BRANSON, Urn lusk ss4 ! falsi IntteMT, It Issra kifirimi, UICOU, MS. Hides ad Fnrs Tanned Let ma make yon a coat or robn out of your cow or bors bide. Kt system of tannin will leave tho bid soft and pliable. Wind, moth and waterproof. WB1TC FOB rSXB OATAXOO. 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