iThe Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Page ITCIWPEPLE A1E aOWIMCi DEAF , ' sT X Z" V4i V V I X J Is. III ' WW ' II 7 ' I 7 - I I , Min n Drim. Anvil, Haw. IT X'l 1M i I ' l , Wit lilt III III ., '.'i? :.. .-. 1 ? II I rircol.r Cnh. Tk Vcrttbal. ; ) r " : 1 i UK" RECENT sdentllo experiments have made certain the dis tressing fact that the men and -women ot the present da? who live In the great modern cltlos are , steadily losing their acutenesa ot - hearing. It cannot precisely be said that a man must (hear to live. It Is cer tainly truo, however, that deafness Is a dreadful handicap In the battle of life hard enough as that battle Is in general for those of us who hare no physical or mental Impair ment . We are all very sympathetic with the maimed, the halt and the blind; but. we have comparatively little sympathy for the many thousands among us who are becoming deaf and this so Insidiously, so grad ually, that the affliction is hardly realised until It has reached a stage where relief Is possible, but full restoration of this precious sense absolutely Impossible, for those among us whose efficiency is lessened in proportion as their hearing loses Us acuteness. The most serious and patletio cases of all are those whose men tal activity becomes dlmlnshed by reason that they come to hear the voices of their fellows less and less until they cannot hear the comforting human voice at all. Hence the progressive Inability of the deaf to engage in business, the trades and in human affairs gener ally, so that they bt :ome either wholly "undesirable" or have their earning capacity reduced. In pro portion tottae extent ot their af fliction. To keej up In the twentieth cen tury struggle for existence, one has to be active and In full pos session of one's faculties. The strain on the nervous system la constant, -especially on the organs of special sense, the eye and the ear. The overstrained eye gets at tended to promptly enough; the proper glasses are usually the ade quate remedy. But for deafness once estab lished there is alleviation ot the affliction possible, but no euch rem edy as glasses afford the strained eyes. And yet most people pay no attention to their defective hear ing until they find, usually by ac cident, that they cannot hear the tick of the watch, or of the family clock, or until there Is a sensation of roaring in the ears; or until dlriiy spells send them to the doc tor for an examination, not for their bearing, but of their "constitution." The hearing of even the best en dowed ot us is not nearly so good as was that ot our forefathers, who needed this sense to be acute In or Done by the Noises of der to enable them to bunt, and to detect the prowling Indian. But to-day the constant use of the tele phone bell, the strain of hearing eo constantly that maddening "the line Is busy" call; the demoniac blast of the motor horn; the thou- sand and one horrendous noises of civilized life, have, by the nervous fatigue they Induce, brought on a blunting of the hearing sense. There has followed a degeneration and a hardening (fibrosis) of the amat ingly delicate mechanism in the middle and internal ear, on which acute hearing depends. There Is also thus caused an atrophy, a wasting away of the auditory nerve, the office ot which Is to transmit to tne brain the im pressions of the world outside as, which we get by our bearing sense. Once these delicate and labyrin thine tissues are destroyed, once their adjustment to one another Is broken, the damage is beyond rem edy; It Is not possible, as In other machinery, to take out the broken down material aaid put in new works. Such facts as these were actual ly demonstrated by Dr. Bleber mann ot Berlin, who gathered to gether a number ot perfect ears of healthy rabbits, placed those ears in kettles and then subjected them to different noises, after which be f-und extensive destruction ot the cells composing the tissues experi mented on. Dr. Slebermann found especially that the "Organ ot Cortl," and the terminal filaments of the auditory nerve in the labyrinth ot the In ternal ear, suffered most In these experiments. Cortl's organ Is an extraordinarily delicate mechanism in which are some 8,000 pairs of mlcroscoplo pillars, the rods pt Cortl leaning as It were against these pillars are minute cells which end In hairlike processes. In close relation with these rods and cells and hairs are the flla . ments of the auditory nerve, to which the strands of a spider's web are about as the hawser of an ocean greyhound would compare with well, with the strand of a spider's web. The organ of Cortl shows a remarkable resemblance to the keyboard of a piano, and the observer finds himself likening the rods ot Cortl to the piano keys, and the filaments of the auditory nerve to the piano wires. When we bear in mind that all hearing is by means of sound con duction and that the sense of sound is conveyed to the brain entirely by the auditory nerve, we can readily understand how Injurious to the hearing faculty is the dis ruption of these most gossamer like structures. Dr. Slebermann, in his experiments on guinea pigs, found the most serious destruction Pigs' Ears Battered by the.Pound ing on Tin Boilers-Reveal Damage to follow" a single blank cartridge shot close to the ear. Cortl's or- ; gan and the .auditory : nerve fila ments were thus severely injured at one stroke. Conditions resem bling those in boiler making were realised by' automatic hammering on the outside of a big iron tube, with a guinea pig Inside. Slebermann found, and here Is a very practical point, that In order to ward off harm from long-con- . tlnued loud noises the air waves , can be kept from striking upon ' the mechanism of the internal ear. The experimented animals whose ears were plugged with oil-soaked cotton or 6ther free mass, dldnot suffer Injury ot the internal ear from long-continued exposure to recurring loud noises. . "Thetransmlsslon of sound by other routes than by the external and mid dle ear, has slight, If any, injurious action on the labyrinthine . struc tures, and in human beings practi cally all harm can be averted by protecting the auditory mechan ism against excessive sound waves, by an alr-free,tlght-flttlng, isolating plug in the external ear. Such a plug must absolutely not be used, however.by sufferers from ear ab scess or catarrh, because then the discharges resulting from the in flammation would be dangerously pent up. Buch discharges, thus pent up, have been known to bur row their way even to the brain. Such substances as thick felt have been used under foot by work men to deaden sound. Dr. Sleber mann could however find in bis experiments no preventive or at tenuating or beneficent influence in this procedure. Dr. Slebermann intended to have presented bis valuable researches on protection against Injury of the bearing before the contemplated international congress for occupa tional affections. It Is an odd conf luent on how widespread and world pervading Is the baneful in fluence of the present European conflict, that bis humane Intention was by this fact ot war frustrated. And the Information here set forth Is derived from his contribution to a Swiss Journal Another very Important cause of deafness, perhaps the most impor tant of all. lies In inflammations, colds, catarrhs, not only of the ear, but also of the nose and throat. Any such trouble Is bound to bring on swelling, congestion of the mucous membrane; and any such conges tion in the course of time, and through constant neglect, results In a thickened mucous membrane. These incentives to deafness did not operate so strongly with our fathers and grandfathers. Observe in the accompanying diagram bow the Eustachian tube Conrrlsbt 1815. Rabbits Kettles I Life in Our How the Tonsils and Adenoid Growths Dreed Germs Which Spread Into the Tube That Extends Into the Car From the Back of the Nose. passes from the throat to the mid die ear. Catarrh la this tube, re sulting from catching colds one after another many times, eventu ally thickens this tube so that it becomes closed up. The result Is increased tension Jn the ar drum, often to the bursting point For good bearing the Eustachian tube has to be open, in order that equilib rium may be maintained between the air within the ear drum and the air outside the drum. In the ex ternal ear. Besides, the open tube renders sounds clearer, Just as those (-shaped openings in violins do. Adenoids and enlarged ton sils, obstructions In the boss and chronic catarrhs, have the effect gradually to clog up this Eustach ian tube. Worse still, the many germs that lodge in unhealthy throats the germs of grippe, pneumonia, tuber culosis, quinsy, mumps, scarlet fever, meningitis and many an other dreadful infectionare likely to travel along the Eustachian tube to the middle ear; all of which leads not only to deafness, but also to the development of such diseases in the body, possibly Indeed to meningitis and brain abscess. The fact is, most cases of deafness are brought about by chronlo catarrh, or habitual cold In the bead or other Irritation ot the nose and throat; and the trouble all Has in that by the time people conclude to get these nose and throat troubles attended to, the ear condition has become so far advanced that no Improvement in the heating is pos sible. Practically, then, people with chronlo deafnesa bave got to be bv lha Star CamDany. Orcat Britain Experiments on Shut Up in and Guinea A 1 Great Cities content, as philosophically as they may, with the motto, that "what cannot be cured must be endured." Dr. D. Harold Walker, ot Boston, makes a very good point with re gard to the rather fashionable and up-to-date belief that our children cannot live too much la the open air. This would be well enougn If Just How Hair Turns White in a Nirfht T HB sudden turning fray ot hair tinder the Influence ot great emotion is a phenome non so remarkable that it has al ways aroused cariosity. The well known historical instance, such as the ease of Marie Antoinette, who Is said to have become gray In the night before Her execution, are open to some doubt, but several well authenticated cases have been noted by medical observers. At a recent meeting ot a Parisian medi cal society doctor, Leber reported the case of a soldier, aged twenty three years, who was In a trench In Argonne which wss blown up by a mine. He was projected Into the air and fell, covered by a mass of earth, from which he bad difficulty In extricating himself. The detonation was such that he immediately became deaf. The flashing of the powder produced su perficial burns of the face, and there were several bruises on the head, which were greatest on the left side. He was taken to the English KlghU Rsasrvtd. AliV't'! - ' The Delicate Mechanism of the Human Car Exposed to View Under the Anatomist's Knife. our human race, as It exists la civilisation, bad been accustomed, as the savage Is, to living out-doors In all weathers; but in children sleeping exposed to the raw winds of Winter, and then spending their waking bours in generally over heated rooms, tavorable conditions develop for future ear troubles. Such children are like to suffer in time from obstructive adenoids and enlarged tonsils, which are bound in turn to affect the ear and the bearing. As to chronlo deafness in the adult, although something may be done In the way ot relief, there Is, as stated, little ot enre to be hoped for. Wbat must be dons Is to pre vent comparative deafness from becoming absolute. And not only the ear, but the nose and throat also must be looked after, and the general constitution as well. Es pecially must constipation bo avoided, as this tends to conges- Hospital at Are-en-Barrois, where on the following day he noticed, to his surprise, tufts of white hair on the left side of the head. Those formed four "islets," separated from one another by normal balrs. The loss of color was complete from the roots to the ends ot the hairs, and the longest hairs were just as white as the shortest. There was not a brown balr among them. The gray balrs were solidly Im planted and could be pulled out only by strong force. The rest of the hair of the head was dark brown, and there was not a white hair in his beard or mustache. The patient was an intelligent man, and the truth ot his story was confirmed by the fact that his hair was described in the description of blm made when he enlisted as deep chestnut Just how the hair can lose its color so suddenly is not yet clear. It might be suggested that in this case It was due to bleaching by gases generated by the explosion, but thla was negatived by the fact that the parts ot the hair under neath the skin turned gray like Je rest "The hearing of even the best endowed of us is not nearly so food as was that of our fore fathers. The constant use of the telephone, the blast of the motor horn, the thousand and one noises of civilised life hare brought on a blunting of the hearing sense. There has fol lowed a degeneration of the amazingly delicate mechanism ' of the ear." r 9 ' i " t, :,' ' don; besides, the absorption, of toxins from the intestinal tract is sure by transmission ot these tox ins in the blood and lymph chan nela, to affect grievously the ear mechanism and the auditory nerve. Another cause ot congestion lead ing to deafness is the inordinate use of tobacco not only from the absorption of the tobacco toxins, but also by reason ot the irritation the smoke oocsslons. Alcohol also should be cut ont Jt Is of course ' hard to persuade the average man to give up the habits ot years; but the facts should be explained fully to him. and then the problem is up to him. The deaf should be encouraged to go among their fellow men and to use their ears as well as they can. The tendency of these suffer ers is to hibernate, to "go by them selves alone"; they get to imagine (themselves a nuisance to their fan illes and their friends. The studies ot Professor Metch nlkoff on the whitening of the hair due to age throw light on the ques. tlon, says a writer In the LanoeU According to him, when a hair be gins to whiten there appear in it round or oval cells with prolongs tlons which gradually come into relation with the cells containing the pigment granules and absorb them. These "ptgmentophages." as he calls them, then descend toward the root ot the hair to scatter In the skin, of which they are, according to him, the pig mentary cells. The ptgmentophages, which origi nate In the marrew of the hair, dis appear completely when the hair finally loses its color. This theory explains the slow and progressive whitening of the hair In old age, and also applies to the rapid loss ot color In cases like that ot this French soldier. The rapid mobilisation ot the cells in the marrow ot the hair appears to be provoked by a ner vous disturbance. The place of whitening seems to be determined by the points on the scalp whlchj V been the seat ot lnjurjr, - v