hi I V to 1 V A 5 Pf T if f U YELIOWTEV in IITS CHOSE A 7 THE SYMPTOMS Experts Claim the Stego t rayia Species of Mosqui j toes Is the Only Trans I mitter of the Disease Now Ravaging New Orleans i lis Real Origin Is In a Warm Cfl J mate First Recognized Def initely In the West Indies j In 1647 Survivors Be I come Immune From Further Attacks Details of Experiments In Cuba to De termine Cause of the Fever Heroic j Martyrdom of Dr Jesse W La- aear Surgeon General Wy mans Views How Present Epidemic Started w FRUIT ship a bunch of bananas a mosquito and an Italian these four agents according to i tne deductions of tne nealth au- thoritie3 of New Orleans were re sponsible for introducing yellow fever into New Orleans as long ago as last May The first appearance of the dis ease according to the same deduc tions was In the Italian quarter where the Italian laborer who unloaded the fruit ship lived From the originally Infected vicinity the fever spread until there had been several deaths The characteristic pe culiarities of the Italian when con fronted by an epidemic showed them- j XEXIiOW SEVER MOSQUITO selves In Instinctive efforts to hide the fever from the health authorities and the result was that the prevalence of the disease was not known even to the city health officer until the middle of July An attack of yellow fever comes on with severe chills or rigors when it comes suddenly It may come on more gradually with languor headache and malarial symptoms The temperature goes to 105 degrees sometimes higher The fever lasts from three to five days attended with pain in the back limbs land head There is nausea and vomit ing The yellow tint of the skin from rwhteh the fever gets its name begins -on the second or third day Yellow Eever develops usually from three or four days after Infection Sometimes It takes seven days In severe cases email hemorrhages take place into the skin and mucous membrane The vomit is at first white Later it be comes very dark in appearance like coffee grounds when it is known as black vomit There Is bleeding at the nose mouth and gums Delirium usually follows then unconsciousness and death First Recognized In West Indies 1 Although yellow fever has been oc casionally seen outside of the tropics Its real origin is In a warm climate It vas first recognized definitely in the West Indies In 1847 where it prevails as well as on the west coast of Africa Central America and southward along both coasts of South America and northward to the south Atlantic and gulf states It has been brought to north Atlantic seaports by vessels Tho coming of frost generally stops yellow fever Survivors of one attack of yellow fever become immune from further attack The mortality varies In some epidemics it has been as high as So per cent in others as low as 10 per cent Experts seem to agree that the first step to combat the spread of yellow fever is to attack the mosquito lit tirfs connection Dr Walter Wyman sorgeon general of the marine hospital service who Is in charge of the cam paign against yellow fever in New Orleans and to whom belongs the credit of encouraging and urging the experiments leading to the acceptance of the theory that the stegomyia mos jqnlto Is practically the only carrier of Stile poison that causes yellow fever Recently spoke as follows to the Wash ington correspondent of the Pittsburg Dispatch Scientifically it Is not true that tho stegomyia female Is the only carrier of yollow fever For all practical pur poses the assertion is true Until wo know the cause of yellow fever wo cannot truthfully say that that mos quito Is the only disseminator Thero may be other carriers of It but wo never have found any trace of them Mosquito Only Infection Agent Tho best way in dealing with an epi demic or any other thing for that mat ter is to proceed upon known facts We kuow the stegomyia carries tho cause of yellow fever Therefore tho order to all the men in the marine hos pital service is kill the mosquito If the fever persists after the mosquito has disappeared we will know that there Is some other way for carry ing it What have we to show Havana after lDtf yars of annual visitation free from the disease Laredo Tex treated by men believing In the mos quito theory and treated accordingly with only about 10 per cent of tho population attacked by tho disease contrasted with Laredo Mexico across the river disbelieving the theory 50 per cent of the people attacked The stegomyia does not live north of Mason and Dixons line He does not live in all the territory south of it The mountains of North Carolina aro too cold for him Before we knew any thing about the work of that pest ob servation taught us the country was divided into two parts the infectiblo territory and the nonlnfectible After we got to know about the stegomyia we found that the limits of his habitat were coextensive with the limits of tho infectible domain Next to killing the mosquito by making It impossible for him to breed what is the best preventive The screening of every person with a fever for four days Yellow fever is hard to diagnose It begins like many other fevers Screening during the first four days makes It Impossible for the Insect to become Infected from the patient Three days Is the time in which a mosquito can get the poison from a human being but four makes assur ance doubly sure After a mosquito has taken the blood from a patient who has had yel low fever for not more than three days it takes twelve days for the in sect to become a source of infection So you can see that if the first yellow fever case Is caught in time the cam paign against the mosquitoes will be beneficial If It is vigorously prosecuted during the next nine or ten days Aft er that If the Insect that bit the pa tient is still at large the chances of In fection are very numerous It takes five days for the poison deposited In a human body by a mosquito to develop hence the five day detention The stegomyia Is a slow moving Insect After a patient has been re moved to a doubly screened hospital in a doubly screened ambulance it is the business of the doctors to return to the house as quickly as possible and DB JESSE W IiAZEAB burn sulphur there because the chances are that the Insect that bit the patient is still on the premises The fact that mosquitoes convey yel low fever was established by the late Major Walter Reed surveyor of the United States army when in 1900 and 1901 he supervised the experiments with yellow fever in Cuba after the United States came into control of the island says the St Louis Post Dispatch These tests were thorough and convinced the army officer that beyond a doubt the mosquito is the only transmitter of the fever germ Following Is the report of these ex periments and it should satisfy all lay men when It is borne in mind that all the subjects were Americans United States soldiers who had volun teered Special Camp Built A camp was especially constructed for the experiments about four miles from Havana The inmates of the camp were put into most rigid quar antine and ample time was allowed to eliminate any possibility of the disease being brought in from Havana The personnel consisted of three nurses and nine lmmunes all in the military serv ice and included two physicians From time to time Spanish immi grants newly arrived were brought in from the Immigrant station A person not known to be immune was not al lowed to leave camp or if he did was forbidden to return The most com plete record was kept of the health of every man to be experimented upon thus eliminating the possibility of any other disease than yellow fever compli cating the case The mosquitoes used were especial ly bred from the eggs and kept In a building screened by wire netting When an insect was wanted for an ex periment it was taken into a yellow fever hospital and allowed to fill Itself with the blood of a patient Afterward at varying Intervals from the time of this meal of blood it was purposely applied to nonimmunes In camp In December 1000 five cases of tho disease were developed as the result of cuch applications in January three and in February two making in all ten exclusive of the cases of Dr James Carrol and Dr Jesse W Lazear Immediately upon the appearance of the first recognized symptoms of tho disease In any one of these experiment al cases the patient was taken from Camp Lazear to a yellow fever hospi tal one mile distant Every person in camp was rigidly protected from acci dental mosquito bites and not in a sin gle Instance did yellow fever develop In the camp except at the will of tho experimenters The experiments were conducted at a season when there was the least chance of naturally acquiring the disease and the mosquitoes used were kept alive by maintaining them at a summer temperature A completely mosquito proof build ing was divided into two compart ments by a wire screen partition In fected Insects were liberated on one side only A brave nonimmune entered and remained long enough to allow himself to be bitten several times He w3 attacked by yellow fever while two susceptible men in the other com partment did not acquire the disease although sleeping there thirteen nights This demonstrates in the simplest and most certain manner that the Infec tiousness of the building was due only to the presence of the insects Every attempt was made to infect Individ uals by means of bedding clothes and other articles that had been used and soiled by patients suffering with vlru leDt yellow fever Naturally yellow fever Is transmit ted by the mosquito and always and only by the mosquito The harmless ness of fomltes has been fully demon strated by our experiments In 1900 and 1901 in which three young Americans slept for twenty consecutive nights in a room from which mosquitoes were excluded garnished with articles soiled with discharges from fatal and other cases of yellow fever Three and four large boxes were packed and unpacked each morning by these nonimmunes who suffered no disturbance of health from these exposures The room was 20 by 14 feet double walled tightly sealed heated to above 90 degrees F and dark Two other nonimmunes then occu pied the room for twenty nights while additional articles of bedding and clothing were added They slept in the garments and between the sheets that covered cases of yellow fever some of which were fatal The result of the second attempt was nil A third at tempt was then made with two addi tional nonimmunes equally without success Not the slightest indisposition followed close and Intimate contact with this repulsive material In any case Temperatures and pulse rates were recorded at regular and frequent intervals Four of these seven nonim munes were subsequently infected by blood Injections and by means of In fected mosquitoes Dr Lazears Singular Death The first death from the mosquito ex periments was that of Dr Jesse W Lazear in November 1901 Dr Lazear an army surgeon was one of an army board all of whom submitted them selves to the bites of infected mosqui toes The death of Dr Lazear was sin gular He had voluntarily been bitten for the sake of experiment and suf fered no effects Afterward while he was visiting the yellow fever ward at suhgeon genekaij wraiAN Las Animas a mosquito lit on his hand He allowed it to remain there and bite him Five days afterward he was taken ill and died A naval surgeon described some incidents which occurred in Las Ani mas hospital Havana during the height of the yellow fever epidemic in the American intervention days in Cuba when another physician and he ran the institution says the New York Herald Bedlam at Night We managed fairly well during the day but at night midnight when we were worn out the bedlam produced by the patients in their delirium was awful They made all sorts of noises in different languages for there were different nationalities represented The uraemia which resulted from the char acteristic effect of the disease on the kidneys caused convulsions and par ticularly facial spasms The sick would make the most dis tressing grimaces which in the wee sma hours o morn would cause some of the female nurses to tremble and cry and beg for a abort respite in the open air They would go out on the verandas steady themselves then back to business But the most horrible of all was the hemorrhages too horrible to describe And all this caused by the bite of a particular kind of mosqultol A CRUSHED GENIUS The Firm Mimical Efforts of the Composer Grlepr One day I must have been twelve or thirteen I brought with me to school a music book on which I had written in large letters Variations on a Ger man Melody For the Piano by Edward Grieg Opus I I wanted to show It to a schoolfellow who had taken some Interest Jn me But what happened In the middle of the German lesson this same schoolfellow began to mur mur some unintelligible words which made the teacher call out half unwill ingly What is the matter What are you saying there Again a confused murmur again a call from the teacher and then he whispered Grieg has got something What does that mean Grieg has got something Grieg has composed something The teacher was not very partial to me so he stood up came to me looked at the music book and said in a pecul iar ironical tone So the lad is mu sical the lad composes Remarkable Then he opened the door into the next classroom fetched the teacher in from there and said to him Here is some thing to look at This little urchin is a composer Both teachers turned over the leaves of the music book with in terest Every one stood up in both classes I felt sure of a grand success But that is what one should never feel too quickly for the other teacher had no sooner gone away again than my master suddenly changed his tactics Beized me by the hair till my eyes were black and said gruflly Another time he will bring the German dictionary with him as is proper and leave this stupid stuff at home Alas To be so near the summit of fortune and then all at once to see oneself plunged into the depths How often has that happened to me later in life Edward Grieg in Contemporary Review AN OCEAN GRAVEYARD Sable Island Is a MoHt Dangerous Place For Navigators Sable island sometimes and not too extravagantly termed the graveyard of the Atlantic Is set among shoal wa ters that afford the best of feeding ground for the particular kinds of fish that Gloucester men most desire hali but cod haddock and what not and so to its shoal waters do the fishermen come to trawl or hand line Lying about east and west a flat quarter moon In shape Is Sable Island Two long bars extending northwest erly and northeasterly make of it a full deep crescent Nowhere is the fishing so good or so dangerous as close in on these bars and the closer in and the shoaler the water the better the fishing There are a few men alive in Gloucester who have been in close enough to see the surf break on the bare bar but that was in soft weather and the bar to windward and they in variably got out In a hurry Two hundred and odd wrecks of one kind or another steam and sail have settled in the sands of Sable island Of this there is clear and indisputable record Of how many good vessels that have been driven ashore on the long bars on dark and stormy nights or in the whirls of snowstorms and swallowed up in the fine sand before mortal eye could make note of their disappearing hulls there is no telling A Gloucester fisherman needs no tab ulated statement to remind him that the bones of hundreds of his kind are bleaching on the sands of Sable island and yet of all the men who sail the sea they are the only class that do not give it wide berth in winter James B Connolly in Scribners Mother Natures Children One of the most wonderful things Mother Nature does is to teach her children how to accomplish things with means and appliances that seem en tirely inadequate for the purpose A bird will build an intricate and beauti ful nest with no better tool than her beak birds do not use their claws for this purpose a caterpillar can shape a symmetrical cocoon and bees the sharp angled cells of their combs These are familiar instances of this but by no means as wonderful as those shown in the work of some sea animals that live In shells St Nicholas Curiosity Satisfied A woman cycled up to a butchers shop and went in with a smiling face I want you to cut me off twenty five pounds of beef please she said The butcher was incredulous Twenty five pounds Yes please It was a big job and when he had finished he asked her whether she would take It or have it sent home Oh I dont want to buy it she explained You see my doc tor tells me I have lost twenty five pounds of flesh through cycling and I wanted to see what it looked like in a lump Thank you so much Explained An old Scotch lady who had no relish for modern church music was express ing her dislike of the singing of an an them in her own church one day when a neighbor said Why that is a very old anthem David sang that anthem to Saul To this the old lady replied Weel weel I noo for the first time understan why Saul threw his javelin at David when the lad sang for him Encouraging Her Stationer What do you do with all the lead pencils you buy Mr Smith You average about three a day Mr Smith Oh thats all right My wife is taking whittling lessons Columbus Dispatch Few enterprises of great labor or hazard would be undertaken if we had not the power of magnifying the ad vantages we expect from them John eon jmaiiaaamiitmsiitKMM9t03Bmi wgnnmuiwuMisii amm i 1 jTT rr f i trniMwimin ihiiiiiibiwim mm i i i i i WBBHBKSKKBBBBSBBBSKKKBKKKmsp1 a - - Ti m t W MdlWIWWWlIWLWW - - 1- 1 i mini m I in ii illl f Tl -- The Boyuton Furnace Cos celebrated Furnaces and Heaters Have been well known for over sixty years in every town village and hamlet in the country as the most durable powerful and reliable goods made I here have been many changes and improvements made on them from time to time and are now equipped with every well known practi cal improvement Have your furnace installed now Late fall is a very busy time with us when we can not give every little detail of furnace installa tion the care and attention which we have learned by many years of practical experience so essential to the successful operation of a well arranged modern heating plant Our Prices on Furnaces Material and Workmanship are Below All Competition - Polk McCOOK Call and see us Bros NEBRASKA P If AITE k COMPAWY The Hitchell Wagon is without doubt the best farm wagon sold in this mark et today The users of wag ons have learned this hence the unprecedented demand But we are prepared to supply all despite unusually large sales Sewing flacfaines Ranges Furnaces and Stoves We expect this week a car load of furnaces and stoves If you are intending to put in a furnace this fall be sure to inspect our stock and get es timates Dont pay high prices for sewing machines when you can get first class machines for little money There is no better machine made than the STANDARD and you can buy it at a fair price at our store THE NEW ROYAL is fully guaranteed in every respect and we always have it in stock We have in stock the Maleable the Jewel and the Round Oak Steel Rangesbe sides a large stock of Cast Ranges and Cooks Wire Nails We always carry a large stock of Barb Wire and Nails We can also supply your needs in all kinds of Builders Ha rdware and Tools Oils We have always on hand Axle Grease Hard Oil Machine Oil Cylinder Oil and Belt Dressing We also carry Lin seed Oil and Paint I j J Tie Pioneer Earirae Store Barnctt Lumber Company SELL THE BEST POSTS TANKS LUMBER COAL WOOD GIVE US A TRIAL j0v jffit v i m r - T 4 uonsigra Your ssve tosK T i fan I tills 1 STOCK YARDS KANSAS CSTY3 MO We also have our own houses at CHICAGO SOUTH OMAHA SiOUX CITY SOUTH ST JOSEPH DENVER Read our market letter In this paper Write us for any special Information desired