li! V ri - ., . ,,.. K liBaJ ibbbl unsure if i m f - -j JmmMHM sVJsssVA fJ-v Jt;"A'PvU WmJ IHPNJ MXmx T r f m mt MfT'' " rr- ' ' " ZT I "rfjLLJBHmJAdHHsBWKBHHHHHH mv, sx f1 I j MMainHHyanHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH" , - s ?yTMt lllrf'M jyssHHKyHHP!rtt. x. .BHVft$'BHwHwEVHv9LHv?- ssk PISUHwHwEbWW Lm. ( I ar'-Pf2yai L Hpipi J hsbl Bssssrrf sMSBBBBBBBVEk I ibikk I HiBBTyv bbbf & . .&hsbw II Ur ;HHHHHHHHsbbsV v II, HHHHHHiHHNiKa9iHiBsHHHsBBvil I i HI? crnntPRt nntl.flv crusade that tiX4flkBsW?lBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB 1(1 I BBBBlBBBBBBBBBM3BBBK3eBii..lr, ' (WlJSMM w" I 0 tho world has known is now got- ,. ...,A. MBHQsSIB IjSJ IBHMiXH I ting under way In a multitudo of . r SssMssHHHHHtyilj ImBKBSWU I I American cities and smaller com- 3BR SJsiHlrW luHli)wnM I H munltlcs, reaching from Seattlo 'fHJ I SSekH and Snn Francisco to Boston. v ""j HHHBhS I During recent yeara physicians, ? i t . '' j IKB9i'WKfX1'WHMl Hi bacteriologists, sanitary engineers, ilHwjBBHHmWvWjgflME n,i nti,nr mnnprno,! with niinq. avo been traced in many cases directly Into sick HHsBHHHV&Srt& lgSl& ssHHHslBH&V&Wa? K$5S9 iBMhI i i RE AT ANTI FLY CRUSADE HI? crnntPRt nntl.flv crusade that "H tho world has known is now got- ting under way In a multitudo of I American cities and smaller com H munltlcs, rcnchlng from Seattlo and San Francisco to Hoston. I During recent years physicians, Hi bacteriologists, sanitary engineers, ' n t 1 nMintin nnMfinnni1 nltli mint). iiiiu uiuuia i;uui;ciJJi:u nitii utn- tlons of public health, have mado ceaseless effort to arouso tho American people concerning disease and death traveling in tho tracks of tho common housefly, or "typhoid fly," a tho United States government does not hesi tate to call It in its official printed documents. Little by little the country has become ac quainted with tho danger, and now entire com munities hamlets, villages, cities alike are un dertaking systematic and complete extermination of tho Insect. Tho fly has been recognized us a carrier of disease, for many generations, and somo authorities, like Jean Dawson, tho Cleve land biologist, feel satisfied that it was bo recog nized even in Dlblo times. Dut never beforo haa practically an entire great nation awakened to the absoluto necessity of fighting the fly to the death; of driving it out of existence. Moreover, It was left for a Now York patholo gist, Dr. Ferdinand M. Jeffreys of tho Polyclinic Medical school and hospital, to formulate a reply to the old question, "Of what uso is tho fly?" According to Dr. Jeffreys it has a very important uso in acting as a danger signal which cannot be disregarded with impunity. , "Wherever you find tho ily," he says, "you also find filth. And whero you find filth, you find dis ease." Not merely typhoid, but other highly danger ous Intestinal diseases aro now known to be spread by flies, and germs of tuberculosis, chol era infantum, spinal meningitis, lnfantllo paraly sis, are llkewlso carried far and wide by the same llttlo pests. State boards of health, county com missions, municipal health departments, private organizations of men and women In all stations of life are printing and distributing pamphlets on the subject, having lectures delivered before audiences of children ns well as of adults, ex plaining various methods of poisoning, trapping, and "swatting" files. In many cities prizes ot money have been offered for the largest number of flies killed in a given period. In other cities and towns prizes are offered for the beBt essays written by school children as to the dangers ot files and how to got rid of them. North Dakota has Issued two Important health department bulletins, spread broadcast through out the stato, one entitled "Fly Habits" and tho other "A Fly Catechism," in which aro answered In simple language questions concerning flies which tho youngest child may understand. Tho United States government, through its Farmer's Bulletin No. 412, makes out a complete caso against what It terms "the typhoid or house fly." Virginia's stato board of health 'has Issued at least three bulletins and circulars devoted wholly or In part to the subject. In addition to quarterly publications, one well Illustrated," Iowa Issues shorter folders telling Just how to deal with tho fly nuisance. The Chicago board of health, through Its school of sanitary Instruction, publishes and distributes articles and cartoons on the subject, as well as a conclso list of "Hints to Householders." Tho Ohio stato board of health has also been busy In tho matter and has roprlnted largo num bers of Dr. C. O. Probst'B practical paper, "The Fly as a Disease Carrier." Michigan's state board has come out with an Important quarterly document on "The Anti-Fly Crusade." Pennsylvania devotes an entire issue of Its largo Health Bulletin to an essay easily under stood, which Is callod "Tho Common Fly: How It Develops, Why It Must Ho Destroyed, and How to Destroy It." South Carolina, Texas, nnd almost all the other states In the Union havo been doing their utmost to cducnto the public concerning tho dangers ot permitting tiles to exist, nut with tho exception of a single four-pngo circular tho stato of Now York hns dono nothing in tho matter that has been pressed so vigorously by tho country gen erally. TIiIh circular Is a brief document entitled "Tho Filthy Jly," and Is Issuod by the Publicity and Education Department of tho State Hoard of Health. It Is said that by means of a red powder scat tered over piles of garbago and other filth fUes havo been traced in many cases directly into sick rooms, as well ns to markets and fruit stalls whero foodstuffs wero displayed, without being screened. Ily such means as this flics were traced during nn outbreak of typhoid fever In Pittsburgh, N. Y. Tho local authorities thought that drinking water, or milk, or Bomo like sup ply was Infected, but an Investigator from Now York went to the Saranac river, Into which tho sewago of Pittsburgh was carried, and from there ho traced flies as they went Into a moving plcturo show attended by a large audience, and ho traced the flies as they went from the "mov ies" back to the river. Countless Instances of the spread of various diseases have been recorded all over the country, nnd as a result, instead of being regarded merely as a harmless, though annoying little pest, the house fly Is today considered one of tho dead liest enemies man has to contend with. Far more dangerous than war, for the fly is every where every summer, excepting In enlightened communities, like Cleveland, Ohio, which Is rap Idly becoming pretty nearly a flyless city. Last year experiments were undertaken In a number of places to exterminate files. Newspa pers of Worcester, Mass., offered money prizes for tho largest qunntlty of flies caught, nnd tho results wero astonishing. One enterprising Ind ot twelve years won tho first prizo of $100 when ho do! vered nincty-flvo quarts of flies. Put It was found out later that In order to succeed he had actually gono into the business of breeding flics In heapB of fish offal. Altogether tho city of Worcester caught and killed forty bushels of flies in a few weeks. For obvious reasons those interested in fly extermination aro not offering prizes In the same way this year for dead flies. In a good many communities, prizes nre offered for flyless blocks of houses or for farms or barns that havo no flies on or in them. Organizations like tho Woman's Municipal Leaguo of Boston aro paying for steroptlcon lec tures delivered beforo all sorts of audiences, and nre getting Boy Scouts, District Nursing as sociations, school children, and others nt work in tho effort. One of the scientists most actively interested Is C. F. Hodge, professor of biology at Clark university, who has accomplished, re markable results by screening houses to keep files on tho outside, by killing winter files when they awake in early spring and crawl out of cracks, plcturo moldings, nnd other dark places where they spend tho cold weather, and by cntch Ing In traps of his own design millions of young flies before they can get to kitchen, dining-room or restaurant. One of the most effective steps taken in the campaign of education Is due to Mr. Hatch,' who sent a man to London, at his own expense, and there had made microscopic photographs of files nnd their dangerous activities from which a mov ing plcturo film was constructed. Tho film, shown all over tho country, Is believed to havo done more than any other one thing to bring millions of people to realize how great Is the danger from flies, and how necessary to romovo It. One of tho most Ingenious methods for teach ing children facts regarding files Is Been In a Bmall pamphlet prepared by Jean Dawson of the Cleveland Normal school, who has adopted the question and answer plan of instruction. After explaining, In this way, why flics are dangerous, how they spread dlseaso, whero they spend the winter and what they do In spring, tho llttlo book tells about their breodlng, their food, nnd haw they carry dirt as well as disease. The closing questions and answers aro as fol lows: 20. Can a family escape tho dangers from flies by screening them out of tho house? No, not If they use food over which files have swarmed or fallen Into. 21. Do files carry sickness and death to many people In tho United States? Thero nro nearly five hundred thousand cases of typhoid fever yearly In the United Stntes, and nearly 50,000 deaths. Much of this distributed by flies. Forty-nlno thousand infants dlo an nunlly of enteritis or summer complaint, tho germs of which aro probably all carried to tho milk by files. Files nro now known to be th,o most deadly onomy of man. They kill more peo- tiMiumjcmWM'MJrhmfn'itttmjimciimr pie than all tho lions, tlgors, snakoB, nnd oven wars. 22. Havo flics always been such an enemy to mankind? c Yes, but a great many have died. About four out of Ave chlldron in Clovoland live to ho live years old. Many of these deaths aro duo to files carylng dlseaso germs to tholr food. 24. How Is It posslblo to protect ourselves more from flies than wo already havo? When wo thought files wero merely annoying, we could afford to hide ourselves behind screens: now that thoy have boon proved to bo our deadly enemy, wo must como out and fight them in tho open. 25. How can this be done? In throo ways: (a) By killing nil tho wln'or flies that havo been hiding in buildings as fast as thoy come out. (b) By cleaning up nil manure nnd filth In which flics may breed. (c) By keeping traps sot in covers of garbage cans and on porches whero tho flies nro thickest to cntch them boforo they can enter our homes. 26. What particular good would como from killing winter Hies? Killing tho flies that llvo over winter menns killing the mother flleB beforo thoy can lay eggs In the spring. 27. If wo did clenn up all the mnnuro nnd filth from tho neighborhood would not files swarm In from other parts? A fly seldom travels over 500 yards from Us breeding place. 28. With what nro the traps halted? If used In tho cover of a garbago can tho garbage Is tho bait. If used otherwlBO. bread and milk is nn nttractlvo bait. 29. Will nil tho flies go Into tho trap? Yes, If thero Is no other food nhout. 30. Has any ono over succeeded in keeping his houso frco from lilies without screens? Yes, a -number of peoplo havo used tho method above Indlcnted, and havo dono away with screen wlndowB nnd doors. 31. Will the city of Cleveland ever be free from flies? Yes, just ns soon ns evory ono does his part in his own house and yard Cleveland will bo a city of flyless stores, markets and homes. Ono of tho most Interesting experiments mndo last summer waB a highly successful effort to teach children (ho truth about tho necessity of exterminating tho typhoid fly. Among tlloso furthering this Bpoclllc plan ot educntion wns Mr. Hatch, who offered two sets of prizes In ench of n number of cities, Including Now York, Milwaukee, Kalamazoo. Salem, MasB.: Wichita, Kansns, City, Kan.; Memphis nnd St. LouIb. To chlldron In tho seventh and eighth grades of public schools ho offered a prlzo of $10 and to pupils In tho fifth and six grades ho offered a first prlzo of $5 and n second prize of $3, In the nggregnto ho spent in this way some $700, many thousands competing. One result Is that nn army of children havo acquainted them selves with tho fly nnd what It docs to man. This, of courso, was tho ninln object sought. Secondly, tho fact that n New Yorker was offer ing his own money In this campaign, nnd suc ceeded In arousing tho spirit manifested among children all over tho country, caused local news papers, health bodies, educational Institutions, nnd othor Individuals In many plncos to go Into tho matter on their own responsibility. This year It Is not nocessnry for Mr. Hatch or any ono elso to offer prizes to tho country In general. The loaders of public opinion and public spirit in ono city after another nro offering prizes themselves. As n result of all tho ngltntlon, this year boob a Ily crusade throughout the land such ns was probably never scoa Wrforo In tho history or the world. MEMORIAL TO THE REV. WHITE Orast Tablet on Church Porch In Southwest England Lauds Man Who Aided John Endlcott. Salem, MaHS. In tho church porch of n small town In southwest Knglaud thero Is a brass tablet to tho memory of a man who has never Htiftlclently emerged Into tho llmullght of publlo regard, for tho groat part ho plnyud In speeding John Kndlcott and his gal lant band to tho homo of freedom. Tho hidden romanco of Now Eng land colonization nppears ns soon ns you begin to uxnmluo tho Dorset ar chives of tho seventeenth century. Clonr for nil to sou nt tho present dny Is tho memorial tablet in tho south BSBHnB !Bff fbr 9S9iBSSBBBBBBSU hbtJ5bbsV?,w " v!k!bbbbbbbT BUBSHBSbW BSSBBBH 9t ' flBBBBB2sH SSSSSSSSSX SVSSISVI ii mm m BSSSSFSSSSr tSSBBSSSS Si! "1 ?mSBBSSSSJBSBP In Old Dorchester. porch of St, Peter's church, DorcheB tor, read year by year by many Amer ican pilgrims. It runs: "In this porch lies tho body of tho llov. John White, M. A., of Nuw College, Oxford. Ho waH born nt Christinas, 1575. For nhout 10 yearB ho was rector of this parish and also of Holy Trinity. Ho died hero 21st July, 10 IS. A man of great godliness, good scholarship and wonderful ability nnd kindness, ho hnd a very strong uway in tho town. Ho greatly set for ward the emigration to tho Massa chusetts Bay colony, whero his namo lives in unfading remembrance." Glimpses of tho Interest taken In tho now world peep out In 1C21, tho year after tho landing of tho Pilgrim Fa thers. Tho Mayor ot Weymouth (Eng land) then wroto to tho Mayor ot Exe ter Inquiring "whnt thoy of Exeter in tend to doo touching Sir Fcrdluando Gorges projoct about tho plantation and ffyBsshlngo att Now England." A prlvato company formed chlotly ot Dor chester peoplo, from 1C23 onward sent out flBhlug vcBBcle to tho Now England coast and had landed mon at Capo Ann to establish a station for the benefit of their vessels. This was abandoned, but subsequently It formed tho basis of John Whtto'u enterprise NEW FINE SYSTEM A SUCCESS Installment Plan Employed In Kansas City Court Nets In 8lx Months $2,122. Kansas City, Mo. Six months havo elapsed slnco Judgo Ewlng Blnnd of South Sldo Municipal court an nounced nn innovation In collecting fines from offenders on tho install ment plan. Since tho system became operative, $2,122 has boon paid In In stallments by 1G4 persons who took advautago of tho system. Tho amount Is the aggregato of payments of GO cents to $3 weekly, according to tho earning capacity and expenses of the payor. "Tho monoy wns paid by persons who would havo been unablo to pay tholr fines all at once nnd must havo served sentences In tho workhouse," said Judgo Bland. "It 1b monoy tho city would not havo gotten If there bad been no Installment fine plan." But to Judgo Bland's way of think ing, abovo all, It represents a saving to those who tako advantage of it of tholr manhood and womanhood. A term In a workhouse, Judge Bland ar guod, lowers one's self-respect, and there 1b no corresponding gain to so ciety. Only ono out of evory twenty of the mon trusted with the credit system of paying for an offense has dofaultod. All the defaulters havo been re-arrested and aro now at the workhouse, according to tho report prepared by tho clerk of tho court. 'FORGET PAST AND FUTURE' When Load of Tomorrow Is Added to Burden of Yesterday Many Men Falter, Says Scientist. New Haven, Conn. Sir William Os lor, In addressing tho religious meet ing at Yalo, outllnod new rules for practical dally life. Ho said: "My method Is the freshest, oldest, simplest and usefulest. Forget tho past, forget the future. Llfo Is a hab it as burd or as easy to acquire as any other in llfo. "I'm no genius; my friends havo found that out, but tako no thought for tho futuro nor tho past. Wlion tho load of tomorrow is added to tho load of yesterday many men falter in tho way. "Tho first two hours of a day deter mines that day. Quit tobacco and liquor. Bright eyes nro tho thing. "Tho control of tho mind as a work ing machine is tho end of all educa tion. That can bo accomplished with deliberation. Tho most striking thing about America is its hurry. Euro peans accomplish Just as much with out everlasting rush." TftKES ODD JOURNEr tn the Gloom Above Houses of Parliament. Writer Felt That Dark, Noisy Corrl dore Were Nearest Approach to Hades He Should See While Alive. I hnvo just had a curious expe rience, writes a correspondent. I wai invited to tako a walk over tho upper part of tho Houses of Parliament, nnd having boon through otico, I must confess that I never want to repeal tho experience. - Wo wont In through tho door In tho corner of tho centrnl hall. After n llttlo wnltlng, our eyes grow used to tho gloom, and wo ventured to move n few yards forward, only to stumblo nn wo went over tho motnls of a tiny railway laid upon tho floor nt our foot. Someone somowhero n long way off switched on n light which sprang up at tho end of n corridor that scornod miles and mllos uway a llttlo flicker of light nt tho end of n tunnol of gloom. Wo could sou tho motnls of tho railway going on nnd on over bo far, and I was not nt nil surprised when 1 wna told that it wont ovor tho Hiitlro roof of tho Houbch of Parlia ment. Its uso Is tho mere mundano ono of carrying coals, which nro put In trucks and wheeled to whorevor thoy nro needed In tho building. Another light Is switched on for a moment to point us to whero a llttlo flight of stairs leads ovor tho domo to a dark, gloomy room guarded by a heavy Iron door. Wo go through tho Iron door nnd find ourselves In a llttlo shnmber, from whero, leaning over a balcony, you can look right down on to tho floor of tho centrnl hall Itsolf. Wo pinergo ngnln nnd mount nn it her flight of stairs lending a llttlo way ncronH tho domo nnd hero for tho first ttmo wo notice a pccullnr notso. It Is llko tho roar of n hugo traffic, so crushed togethur that It Is Imposslblo to distinguish tho sound of any wheol or tho tnp ot a horse's foot. This nolso is really tho nolso of nil tho winds of nil tho world which rush Into this tower through tho openings and rush round nnd round again In tholr efforts to got frco. Even on n mild dny tho nolso Is so much that conversation In ordinary tones is dif ficult. What it must bo llko on a wild day can easily bo Imagined. Tho wholo placo Is eerio boyond un derstanding, and I could not help giv ing a llttlo shudder as I Btopped gin bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbWmHE JIsHHbbbbbbbbbbbbb HHHHWWBIinClHHt jHhb!E9VhvVVsbbbm3C3 2hhhh2Sh 'v.Ti'.iw- y- " British Houses of Parliament. gerly down the narrow, open stairs. Wo went cautiously along the endless, corridors, their blackness accentuat ed rather than relieved by the occa sional switches ot light which my companion gave me, and ever as we walked thero came with us the volco ot tho Imprisoned winds, moaning and moaning for their freedom. "Steady," says my companion, sud denly, and I pull up short, feeling that I had dared too much In taking the lead, whllo ho fumbled along the wall In the darkness to find at length a light "Click!" the switch is down, and as the light comes I step hastily back. Before mo yawns a chasm, and If I had gono forward another step I should have boon over. I look again. It Is not so deep as I bad thought; In fact not much more than six feet deep, but tho hole Is long and broad, and looks like an empty swimming bath. Hero, In this abyss of gloom, the police keep the roost Important night watch ot the Houso of Commons. The chief task of tho policemen In this homo of tho sparrows 1b to guard against tho danger of Are. Though I had climbed to get there, I felt that I was In the nearest ap proach to hades that I shall ever see alive. Tombstone Crushes Boy. South Norwalk, Conn. Lloyd Cave, a choir boy in St. Paul's church here, was mortally injured recently when, In playing In tho yard of the church, ho ovorturnocLji tombatono. It fell on him, pinning him to the earth. Cave's companions wero unablo to, remove tho stono, and it was only af ter tho Rev. L. B. Howell and other men had arrived that It was lifted. Tho boy was unconscious. Dr. W. J.i Vracoy found that bis skull had been ,'ractured and his back Injured, per '.aps broken. Ho was removed to Nor 'ilk hospital. J 5.1 liSI I'UI m J J VI ; M U i i u X s 1 1 J 3 l : 'i . ? I ?3A