TENT TREATMENT FOR TUBERCULOUS INSANE Superintendent of Large Eastern Hospital Has Demonstrated Its Efficiency A E Macdonald L L B M T medical superintendent of the Manhat tan State Hospital East gives a graphic account of tent life as tried under his direction for a large number of insane consumptives The follow ing extracts are from his paper in the Directory of Institutions and Societies dealing with Tuberculosis in the United States and Canada That consumptive insane patients may be kept and treated to their ad vantage and incidentally to the ad vantage of their fellow Inmates in canvas tents and throughout the sev eral seasons of the year has been demonstrated in the recent history of the Manhattan State Hospital East The experiment upon the success of which this claim is advanced has cov ered a period of forty months In all hospitals for the insane the in mates are classified according to the form of mental disturbance To take from all these classes any suffering from tuberculosis and put them to gether in one tent was a serious prob lem This however has been very successfully done The original plan was to use the camp only about five months during each summer The camp first established consist ed of- two large dormitory tents twenty by forty feet each containing twenty beds with smaller tents of different shapes about ten by ten feet for the accommodation of the nurses the care of the hospital stores pantries and a dining tent for such patients as were able to leave their beds and tents and go to the table for their meals Running water was se cured by means of underground pipes arid the safe disposition of waste and sewage was also provided for As has been said it was expected to continue the camp only through the summer and as far into the autumn as favorable weather might render justifiable But when in the late au tumn it was found that the favorable experience continued it was decided to attempt to carry the experiment on a moderate scale into or even through the approaching winter The camp as first established had been placed upon an elevated knoll adjacent to the riverside and purposely exposed to the full force of the summer breezes For the winter experiment its site was removed to the center of the island where trees and buildings interposed to act as a wind break to the severe storms from the east and northeast which are to be expected in that locality The number of patients was reduced to twenty those in whom the disease was most active being re tained and the others being returned for the time being and much against their will to the buildings One large tent suffices for the housing at night of the reduced number of patients and one was set apart as a sitting room for day use with the accessory tents before mentioned and large stoves wrere placed in them here and there with wire screens surrounding them to protect the patients and a liberal use of asbestos and other fire proof material and arrangements for the prevention of fire To make a long story short it has remained in continuous use not only throughout the first winter but through the two succeeding winters and intervening seasons up to the date of the present writing The scope of its employment has been gradually enlarged until all patients in whom there are active manifestations of tuberculosis an average of forty three out of a total census of about 2000 are isolated therein and there has been parallel enlargement of the elements of the plant The isolation of the tuberculosis pa tients has reduced to a minimum the danger of infection of other patients and of employes The patients them selves have suffered no injury or hard ship but have on the contrary been unmistakably benefited This is shown among other ways by a decrease in the death rate from pulmonary tuber culosis both absolute and relative and by a marked general increase in bodily weight amounting in the case of one patient to an actual doubling of the weight from eighty three to one hundred and sixty six pounds in four teen months of camp residence Mental improvement has as a gener al rule been the concomitant of physi cal not only among the patients in tae tuberculosis camp but also in the others and in the former class this has been somewhat of an anomaly My experience and I think that of others has been that when phthisis and insanity co exist they are apt to alternate as to the prominence of their several manifestations the mental symptoms being more pronounced whilst the physical are In abeyance and vice versa Under the tent treat ment we have found a general dis position toward accord in the manifes tations improvement in both respects proceeding concurrently and sme of the discharges from the hospital which gave -most satisfaction to us at the time and most assurance for the pa tients future were of inmates of the tuberculosis camp It was apprehended that not only might the patients themselves resent their transfer but that similar objec tion might come from their relatives and friends since innovations even progressive ones are apt to be frowned upon by those who constitute the majority in the clientele of a pub lic hoepltal in a cosmopolitan city Even at the outset however the pro tests whether from patients or their friends were surprisingly few and latterly they have been more apt to arise if at all over the patients re turn to the buildings when that be came necessary The question of medication may in the present writing be dismissed with a very brief reference It has been found unnecessary to extend It great ly and it has been limited mainly to the treatment of symptoms Stimula tion alcoholic and the like has been found of but little demand or use and the quantities consumed always un der Individual medical prescription have been insignificant On the other hand the dietary has been made as liberal as the imposed restrictions of the State Hospital schedule have per mitted both in the way of regular diet and extras and in the leading es sentials milk and eggs private do nations have supplemented the regular supply But dependence after all has been mainly placed upon the rigid Isolation and disinfection and upon the unlimited supply of fresh air As an interesting incidental fact it may be mentioned that not only the pa tients but also the nurses living in the camp have enjoyed almost complete immunity from other pulmonary dis eases Not a single case of pneumonia has developed in the camp in its ex istence of over three years though it causes 131 deaths in the hospital prop er in that time The common colds so frequent among their fellows living upon the wards or in the Attendants Home have been unknown among the tent dwellers The popular idea that the consump tive is a doomed man unless he can at once abandon home and family and business and betake himself to some remote region would seem to be nega tived by our Wards Island experi ence The Wards Island camp is but a few feet above the tide water level its site is swept in winter by winds of high velocity coming over the ice bound waters of the rivers and the sound which surround it and it suf fers as much as or more than any other part of the city of New York from the trying changes of tempera ture and humidity which are so char acteristic of its climate If in spite of all these drawbacks what has been done can be done and that for insane patients what may not be hoped from the extension of the same methods to the ordinary consumptive of sound mind anxious for recovery and capa ble of giving intelligent assistance in the struggle SOME HEALTHFUL RECIPES Soup Cream Barley Entree Saory Lentils Vegetables Mashed Potatoes String Beans Lettuce with Nut Butter Dressing Roasted Sweet Potatoes Breads Salad Sandwiches Corn Puffs Dessert Bananas in Syrup Cream Barley Soup Wash a cup of pearl barley drain and simmer slow ly in two quarts of water for four or five hours adding boiling water from time to time as needed When the barley is tender strain off the liquor of which there should be about three pints add to it a portion of the cooked barley grains salt and a cup of whipped cream and serve If pre ferred the beaten yolk of an egg may be used instead of cream Savory Lentils Take equal parts of cooked brown lentils that have been rubbed through a colander to remove the skins and bread crumbs Moisten with a little cream season with salt and a very little powdered sage pour into a baking dish and bake in a moderate oven until well browned A meal prepared by rub bing chopped English walnut meats through a colander added to the sa vory lentils in the proportion of one cup of nut meal to a pint of lentils just before putting into the oven to brown makes a very palatable dish When the nut meal is used water may be used to moisten the lentils When done slice and serve -with the following Cream Tomato Sauce Rub stewed or canned tomatoes through a colan der to remove all seeds and frag ments Heat to boiling and thicken with a little flour Add a half cup of very thin cream and one teaspoon ful of salt to each pint of the liquid Lettuce With Nut Butter Dressing Prepare the lettuce as for salad Rub two slightly rounded tablespoon fuls of nut butter smooth with two thirds of a cup of water Let this cream boil up for a moment Remove from the stove add one half teaspoon ful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice Cool and it is ready for use If too thick it may be thinned with a little lemon juice or water More lemon juice may be added if de sired Pour over the lettuce and serve The Spring Pageant Have patience still Spring yet shall all her joyful tasks ful fill She tarries long But all is ready each bird knows his song Each flower has got by heart Its fair or fragrant part And given the word Each bud and bird Will proudly bring the lovely pageant on Have patience sweeter sweeter far Long-hoped-for treasures are Than any we may have without such waiting won Ella Fuller Maitland THREe YEARS AFTER Eugene E Lario of 751 Twentieth avenue ticket seller in the Union Sta tion Denver Col says You are at liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver papers about Doans Kidney Pills in the summer of 1899 for I have had no reason in the interim to change my opinion of the remedy I was subject to severe at tacks of backache al ways aggravated If I sat long at a desk Doans Kidney Pills absolutely stopped my backache I have never had a pain or a twinge since Foster Milburn Co Buffalo N Y For sale by all druggists Price 50 cents per box A girls idea of a crazy young man is one who doesnt attempt to kiss her when he has a chance Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time because it never sticks to the iron but because each package contains 16 oz one full pound while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in -pound pack ages and the price is the same 10 cents Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals If your grocer tries to sell you a 12 oz package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures 16 ozs Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick ing Defiance never sticks DONTS FOR BUSINESS WOMEN Dont always nave a headache Dont speak in a listless voice Dont act abused even if you feel so Dont affect a mussy style of hair dressing Dont accept social civilities from your employer Dont wear your wornout evening blouses to the office Dont wear long skirts to the office even on pleasant days Dont wear overtrimmed and fussy clothes Wear plain clothes with ap propriate blouses Dont try to be mannish either in dress or manner The mannish busi ness woman is out of fashion for tunately Dont forget to pay debts even the most trifling ones If you borrow car fare from other girls note it and re member to pay back Dont complain of- your health II you are too ill to work say so and gc home So long as you are able to work keep silent about your ailments and you will gain more sympathy and ad miration by your courage than by any amount of groaning New York World ALL TRUE A wise man has the money he aceds but a fool never has enough He who has never traveled has ead but one chapter in the book of ife There is no hope for a man who wastes his time arguing with women md babies Many a man after laying down the aw to his wife is compelled- to pick limself up When some men meet a creditor hey either tear up the street or turn own an ally FEED YOUNG GIRLS Must Have Right Food While Grow ing Great care should be taken at the iritical period when the young girl is just merging into womanhood that ihe diet shall contain all that is up building and nothing harmful At that age the structure is being formed and if formed of a healthy sturdy character health and happi aess will follow on the other hand jnhealthy cells may be built in and a sick condition slowly supervene which if not checked may ripen into a chronic disease and cause life long suffering A young lady says Coffee began to have such an effect on my stomach a few years ago that I was compelled to quit using it It brought on headaches pains in my muscles and nervousness I tried to use tea in its stead but found its effects even worse than those I suffered from coffee Then for a long time I drank milk alone at my meals but it never helped me physically and at last it palled on me A friend came to the rescue with the suggestion that I try Postum Coffee I did so only to find at first that I didnt fancy it But I had heard o so many persons who had been benefit ed by its use that I persevered and when I had it brewed right found it grateful in flavor and soothing and strengthening to my stomach I can find no words to express my feeling of what I owe to Postum Food Coffee In every respect it has worked a wonderful improvement the head aches nervousness the pains in my side and back all the distressing symptoms yielded to the magic power of Postum My brain seems also to share in the betterment of my physi cal condition it seems keener more alert and brighter I am in short in better health now than I ever was before and I am sure I owe it to the use of your Postum Food Coffee Name given by Postum Co Battle Creek Mich Theres a reason N EBR ASKA STATE NEWS NEBRASKA BRIEFS Steps are being taken at Humboldt for organization of a swimming club Wood Riverites have decided to have a good celebration on the 4th of July Columbus is planning to do honor to Independence day by a grand cele bration County assessors of Otoe county find an excess of 25000 over that of last year The saloon element has won out m Table Rock and license to one saloon will issue There Is talk at Fremont of taking steps for the suppression of base ball games on Sunday The order of Eagles Nebraska City are making arrangements for cele brating the Fourth The city council of Columbus has reduced the pay of policemen of that city 5 a month all around News was received in York of the drowning of Clarence Page a former York boy while out in a sail boat near Eugene Ore The ministerial institute of the east ern Nebraska conference of the Uni ted Brethren church will be held in Beatrice June 14 to 18 Charles West who was knocked off the Union Pacific tracks by the west bound flyer one day last week died in Schuyler from the effects of his in juries John Steele who has been flagman at the Randolph street crossing in Weeping Water for more than ten years was run over by a switch en gine and killed last week The summer school will open in Broken Bow under the direction of Professors B B Hawtorne and C I Mohler Many students are already in the city The school closes July 21 Robbers entered the meat market of William Stah at Beatrice blew open the safe and secured amout 200 Bloodhounds were put on the trail of the robbers who escaped James E Rickard a farmer living near Mariaville in Rock county died at his home from the effects of an in jury received while playing ball at Mariaville a few days before Robert A Hook has begun suit in district court against the Lincoln Ice and Cold Storage company for 10000 damages for injuries alleged to have been suffered by a fall into a ditch dug by the company in an alley State Superintendent McBrien said that the awakening in rural school matters is one of the most remarkable things in the recent history of the state He estimates that fully 2500 young people will be graduated from i e country schools this year About two thirds of them are girls and the average age is 15 While playing about a farm home Helen the little daughter of Mr and Mrs Charles Behrens of Grand Island was severely bitten by a dog The little one strange to the country saw a dog kennel and looked in The an imal within though never before vi cious was aroused by the procedure and dashing out bit her in the cheek and over the ere The state board of public lands and buildings has awarded a contract for the lighting of the Norfolk asylum for the insane to a private corporation The state now lights some of its own institutions but at Norfolk there is no appropriation for that purpose The contract was let to the Norfolk Elec tric Light and Power company for a period of two years Ex Senator C H Dietrich of Hast ings expects to enter the hotel busi ness He is one of the incorporators of the Hastings Hotel company which has filed articles of incorporation with Secretary of State Galusha One of his associates is John Mines the own er of the Bostwick hotel lue other incorporators are Irene Mines and Gertrude Dietrich The capital stock is 75000 Governor Mickey has honored a requisition issued by the governor of Kansas for the extradition of A Smith who is under arrest in Fill more county on the charge of dispos ing of mortgaged property Smith is charged with borrowing 7750 from a bank and giving a chattel mortgage on some horses and then selling the property without the consent of the money loaner George Holden a farmer living across the Platte river in Butler coun ty is suffering from a snake bite which he received in a very peculiar manner He was plowing corn and stopped to remove a bunch of morn ing glories which had clogged one of the shovels He at first thought he had pressed his hand on a wild rose briar but he withdrew his hand and found clinging to it a small green snake about ten inches long with its fangs deeply imbedded in the lower part of his right palm and also found that it was dead It had been cut in two by the shovel and had bitten him in its death struggle The body of Gothard Beckstrom who was drowned while boating on the Mississippi at Moline 111 a week ago Sunday arrived in Oakland and was interred in the cemetery at that place Mrs W J Bryans offer of 500 of a fund left under the Philo S Bennett will was accepted by the board of trustees of Wesleyan university Mrs Bryan has a fund of 10000 left to her for distribution under the Bennett will and the money is to be distrib uted among various educational insti tutions She offers 500 to the Wes leyan university ATTORNEY GENERAL BROWN DEFENDS ELECTION LAW LINCOLN Attorney General Brown assisted by five lawyers has sub mitted a brief to the judge of the su preme court supporting the biennial election law He argues that the Perry Warner act in no way contravenes the con stitution He assets that the terms of office are not extended to violate the organic law He was assisted in the preparation of the brief by Lysle Ab bott J J Sullivan F I Foss Roscoo Pound and W B Rose The biennial bill was designed to do away with the odd year elections Recently O B Polk for the purpose of testing the law sought to compel the secretary of state by mandamus to jlace his name on the ballot for re gent of the State university This chal lenges the constitutionality of the law and Attorney General Brown filed his brief defending the position of the legislators The biennial law will be come operative July 1 LINCOLN ASYLUM CROWDED Hospital Has 148 Sufferers More Than Capacity of Building LINCOLN According to the state ment of Dr J L Greene superintend ent of the Lincoln hospital for the In sane the conditions of the patients In that institution is deplorable in the extreme There are 148 more patients In the building than the space at the disposal of Dr Greene and his assistants will accommodate For a time at least there will not be any relief by the re moval of the patients to the Norfolk institution Dr Greene said Its a good thing that all the pa tients are not disposed to be seated at the same time We havent enough seats to go around Because a greater or less number are standing when not asleep those who want to be seated are accommodated Twenty three women patients now sleep on ticks and mattresses laid on the floor for them in the day rooms They have no room for beds and in the company of attendants who re main with them all night long are as comfortably camped and well cared for as possible There is no other way said Dr Greene Such as they are the floor beds are very good The patients do not complain but the condition is get ting serious If the Norfolk institution is ready in a month it will give us great relief by taking 150 patients That is its capacity at present and we can well spare the number When the proposed wing to the new institution is completed which may be in Janu ary the number can be raised to 226 For this we are grateful we have not been compelled to deny any case Somehow we make room The patients now in large number eat from tables set in the halls while some including the help on the premises eat in the kitchen for lack of room Prehistoric Relic Unearthed PLATTSMOUTH An interesting relic of prehistoric times was unearth ed by Henry Timmermann a farmer residing on the Iowa bottom near this city It is a pipe bowl that no doubt belonged to some aborigine of quality Mr Timmerman had plowed over his field for twelve years before he dis covered this relic Will Go to Penitentiary RED CLOUD Samuel Erwin the man arrested in Clay county for horse stealing pleaded guilty before Judge Adams and was sentenced to a term in the penitentiary of four years WORK SOON BEGINS ON IRRIGATION CANAL H G Leavitt according to advices from Scotts Bluff county will inau gurate work on the Farmers Irriga tion canal within a few days despite the recent report that an effort was being made to compromise the differ ences between Leavitt and the Inter ior department by effecting a deal to supply his land water The farmers ditch will supply nearly 100000 acres with water Found Some Gudgeons BEATRICE A pair of well dressed and smooth swindlers visited Blakely township the other day representing that they were soliciting pupils for music lessons and that the music books etc were to come from Dal las Tex They explained the necessity for collecting tuition in advance and in this way succeeded in getting 35 each from two residents of the town ship They tried others in the same neighborhood on this plea but their scheme wouldnt work so they took their departure presumably for other fields Farmers Protective Association AUBURN Farmers in the vicinity of Peru and Brownville have decided to form a farmers protective associa tion as a means of ridding the neigh borhood of petty thievery and horse thieves For some time past the farm ers of this particular locality have been greatly annoyed by frequent rob beries and several horses have been stolen The bluff regions along the Missouri river affords protection tc the guilty parties and pursuit is al most impossible owing to the ease of u ossing the river GAS AND WATER fS ONE AS NECESSARY AS THE OTHER Citizens of Large Cities Say It Is New York June 13 In the recent agitation here about the price of gas the demand for lower rates was sup ported by the argument that every resident is as dependent upon a sup ply of gas as upon a supply of good water It has come to pas 3 that the day laborer uses gas as his only fuel for cooking because of economy and tho rich man uses gas on account of its convenience Gas for lighting with modern improvements in burners- is cheaper better and more satisfactory than any other kind of light Gas sells at 100 per thousand cubic feet in large cities and from that to as high as 300 in smaller towns The consumer of gas in the country uses Acetylene pronounced and each user makes his own gas and is independent of Gas and Electric Companies Acetylene is a more perfect illuminant than the gas sold by the big gas companies in tho cities and the cost to the smallest user is about the equivalent of city gas at 85 cents per thousand Acetylene is the modern artificial light the latest addition to the many Inventions that have become daily necessities The light from an acetylene flame is soft steady and brilliant and In quality Is only rivaled by the suns rays If water and a solid material known as Calcium Carbide are brought Into contact the immediate result is the making of this wonder ful gas The generation of acetylene is so simple that experience or even apparatus is not necessary to make it If it is desired to make it for prac tical lighting and to keep It for im mediate use then a small machine called an Acetylene Generator is employed There are many responsi ble concerns making acetylene gener ators In practice this ga3 is dis tributed in small pipes throughout buildings grounds or entire citie3 and towns In the same manner as ordinary city gas Acetylene is the only satisfactory means of lighting isolated buildings located in the coun try or suburbs at a distance from city gas or electric plants Habits of the Salmon An English writer Mr Hodgson who is by no means convinced that salmon fast during their sojourn in fresh water thinks they take the min now for a wounded fish and dash at it owing to the impulse which makes most animals attack a cripple RAILROAD RATE LEGISLATION Testifying before the Senate Com mittee at Washington Inter State Commerce Commissioner Prouty said in discussing the proposition to give to that Commission the power to regu late railway rates I think the railways should make their own rates I think they should be allowed to develop their own busi ness I have never advocated any law and I am not now in favor of any law which would put the rate making power into the hands of any commision or any court While It may be necessary to do that some time while that is done in some states at the present time while it is done in some countries I am opposed to it The railway rate Is property It is all the property that the railway has got The rest of it3 property is not good for anything un less it can charge a rate Now it has always seemed to me that when a rate was fixed if that rate was an un reasonable rate it deprives the rail road company of its property pro tanto It is not necessary that you should confiscate the property of a railroad it is not necessary that you should say that it shall not earn three per cent or four per cent When you put in a rate that is inherently unreasonable you have deprived that company of its rights of its property and the Circuit Court of the United States has jurisdiction under the four teenth amendment to restrain that I have looked at these cases a great many times and I can only come to the -conclusion that a rail road company is entitled to charge a fair and reasonable rate and if any order of a commission if any statute of a state legislature takes away that rate the fourteenth amendment pro tects the railway company For Hoarseness For the young woman who sings and who occasionally finds hersell hoarse at a critical moment the rem edy used by a famous prima donna is suggested the white of an egg beaten to a stiff froth This is much better than the oft prescribed lemon juice the effect of which is but tem porary Pisos Cure is the best medicine ttc ever used for all affections of the throat and lungs O Eitdslet Vanburen Ind Feb 10 1900 Where the Editor Scored A subscriber who complained to tha publisher that his paper was damp received the reply from the patient and long suffering editor that perhaps it was because there was so much due on it Ask Your Dealer for Allens Foot Ease A powder It rests the feet Cures Swollen bore Hot Callous Aching Sweating- Feet and Ingrowing Nails At all Druggists and Shoe stores 25 cents Accept no substitute Sample mailed FREE Address Allen Olmsted LeRoy N Y An ounce of action is worth a pound of threats 11 f 1 8 fi k ft i v Tjr if ife sm V r I L I a