-~ Bellefonte, Pa., May 7, 1920. HEALTH SCHOOL Pennsyiv.nia State Department uf Health, ere me —e — _— Questions. 1. What is the purpose of quar antine? 2. Why is early quarantine im- portant? 3. How is disease carried from one who has it, to a third party, by one who hasn’t it? 1 THE HEALTH OFFICER Because the doctor reported that “Jenny Maguire had Scarlet Fever,” the Health Officer came to placard and quarantine the house. Mrs. Maguire was hostile. ‘When me man, Mike, comes home from the St. Patrick’s parade and sees that yellow sign on the house, he'll be after lickin’ the man ‘hat put it there.” The Health Offifficer told her that the color was not meant as 2 taunt to Irishmen, but was used because it could be seen at a distance, and in- dicated the presence of contagious disease and the establishment of quar- antine, ; “And phwat is quarantine?” asked Mrs. Maguire. “Quarantine,” answered the Health Officer, “means that no one but the doctor and nurse may leave the prem- ises until there is no further danger of carrying the disease. The law fixes 30 days as the minimum period for scarlet fever.” “A foine law,” sneered Mrs. Ma- guire, “that kapes a strong man home frum worruck fur a month, an’ the rint due on the fifteenth.” The Health Officer continued: “For scarlet fever, only modified quarantine is required. If Jenny be kept in a room by herself, with +he doorway covered with a sheet; if you hang a wrapper and a sunbonnet, or other covering for your hair, just inside the door, which you can put on when you | the fixed price and make a profit, that go in and take off as you come out; if you wash your hands with soap and water every *ime you come from her | : ! | make a profit on it at 20 cents, I see room before touching anything else; if you boil her soiled clothing or what- ever she touches, scald her eating utensils as soon as she is through with them: keep Mike out of Jenny's room and keep him from handling anything she has touched until it has been dis- infected—he can go to work.” | ! - An hour later an ambulance took ! AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAL AAAAAAAAANAAAAANAAAAAAAAN the boy to *he hospital. His room was sealed and disinfected; thereafter it and all the furniture were well scrub- bed with soap and water, the clothing and sheets were boiled, the mattress 1 and blankets wiped with soap and water and sun-dried, and the room thoroughly aired. Nine boarders, none of whom had been near the boy, were released for their work on the railroad. Six, over twenty years of age, who worked in the stone quarry, were also released. A young school teacher and a postal clerk who had looked after the boy that morning, were ordered a Soap and water bath, including the hair, a sponging with disinfectant, disinfec- tion and airing of their clothes, and were allowed to return to work the next day, providing they were kept under medical supervision. Three children, who had had scar- let fever, were given directions for a clean-up and disinfection and were allowed *o return to school. The Health Officer finished his morning work by leaving on the steps of their suburban shack, a basket of provisions provided by the Poor Au- | thorities, for Mose Johnson and his wife, an aged colored couple, absolute- ly quarantined for small-pox. Quarantine (quarante-forty, the number of days which contagion carry- ing ships used to be cut off from shore) is useless unless it is thorough- ly carried out. As a rule, acute dis- oases are most transmissible in their | early stages. Therefore, early quar- | antine s necessary. i The main spreader of disease is the | | i | person who has it. When the disease is carried froin one who has it, by one who hasn't it, to a third party, it is usually done hy the hands. Thorough soap and wa‘er washing will prevent this; washing afterward in chlorinated lime water, a teaspoonful to the quart, is an added precaution. Community safety demands that quarantined persons obey the imposed regulations. Failure to do so may spell DEATH to some one else—us- ually a child. | The same disease may be mild in one person and fatal im the next, | ter | Sugar Profiteers Warned About Price. Fair Price Commissioner McClain has issued a public warning that any merchant demanding a price higher than 20 cents for sugar will be sub- ject to arrest for profiteering, not- withstanding that he may have pur- chased the sugar at a higher price from wholesalers or brokers. His statement is as follows: “The legal refiners’ and wholesal- ers’ price of sugar is well known to | all retail dealers, and any one who | buys sugar at higher prices does so at his own risk as 20 cents is the estab- lished price to consumers. If the re- | tailer wishes to buy sugar at such a | high price that he cannot re-sell it at | | is his lookout. «Under these conditions, when a re- | tailer buys sugar knowing he cannot ' no reason why the fair price commis- i | i | 3 i «Can Maggie and Mickey kape on | goin’ to school? They've never had the disease.” “You can give them a hot bath, including the hair, put on clean clothes, send them to some other place which iS free from the disease and where there are no children who have not had it, and if they do not get it in fourteen days, they can go to school.” “And phwat if they do get #7 “The modified quarantine for another minimum period of 30 days counting from the beginning of the latest case. If they get running ears,’ it may be much longer.” The Health Officer told Mrs. Ma- guire the reason for quarantine and gave her a scarlet fever pamphlet. Mollified by this, she promised to obey, but said “Mulligan’s boardin’ house has the same thing. They didn’t have a doctor for fear he'd shut them up.” Mulligan’s boarding house was fill- ed to capacity. Putting on his cap, gown and overshoes, strong with anti- septic, the Health Officer was lead to a room in which lay a fourteen-year- old bootblack, with scarlet fever. When the Health Officer came down gtairs, as he thoroughly washed his sands at the kitchen sink, after hav- ing sprinkled with antiseptic his gown, head covering and overshoes, which he packed in his satchel, he told Mrs. Mulligan that “it must be the hos- pital for the boy, or absolute quar- ‘antine for the house.” sion should uphold or protect him in’ charging a higher price in order to get his profit.” MEDICAL. Act Quickly Do the right thing at the right time. Act quickly in time of danger. : In time of kidney danger, Doan’s Kidney Pills are most effective. Plenty of Bellefonte evidence of . their worth. Mrs. Elmer Yerger, 306 N. Beaver St., Bellefonte, says: “About ten' years ago I had kidney trouble in its worst form. My back was so weak 1: could hardly get around. My kidneys acted very irregularly and I was in! constant misery. Dropsical swellings set in. I tried different remedies, but | received no benefit. Doan’s Kidney | Pills were recommended to me and I | at once began their use. In a few | days the trouble was relieved and 1] continued their use for about three! months. i They entirely removed the ! distressing kidney disorders. My back was strengthened and I had no | further trouble with my kidneys. 1 think Doan’s is the best kidney medi- | cine to be had.” (Statement given April 22, 1914). On October 18, 1918, Mrs. Yerger | said: “It is a pleasure and a great privilege for me to again speak a! good word for Doan’s Kidney Pills. | Others in my family have since had | the same good results from Doan’s as | I had. I confirm all I said in my for- | mer statement.” | 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn | Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 65-19 | | The Omega Watch WE have acquired the agency for the celebrated Omega Watch— a Watch of character. We will be very glad to explain to you the unusual merits of this time piece. EET TT EE ERE F. P. Blair & Son, Jewelers and Optometrists AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAIAAS Bellefonte, Pa. 64.22-tf Building Your Wealth A bank works for you night and day, week after week, adding cents to dol- lars. Little by little the amounts grow till each addition is a respecta- ble sum. Where does the gain come from? Not from your pocket. Nor from ours. It is the result of production. Money placed in a bank is given an opportunity to work and to produce. Thus a bank builds your wealth. Start with a small deposit if you will. Add to it when you can—regularly if you can do so. It will not be long till vou can fairly see it grow. Let us earn wealth for you. CENTRE COUNTY BANKING CO 60-4 BELLEFONTE, PA. Bellefonte Trust Company Bellefonte, Pa. Why You Should Make aWill To protect your loved ones. To safeguard your estate. By making a Will you can appoint the Bellefonte Trust Company as your Executor or Trustee. Vou can thus assure to your heirs the business manage- ment and financial responsibility which this institution affords. Vour wishes can be observed in the distribution of your property, for if you do not leave a Will the law may divide up your possessions in a way that you might not desire. How Have You Made Your Will? Do not write your own Will. ““Home-made’’ Wills are dangerous and often cause law-suits, because, when drawing a Will the law must be known, both as to wording and terms. Consult a lawyer today about the making of your Will and have him name the Bellefcnte Trust Company to act as your Execu- tor and Trustee. C. T. Gerberich, Vice President J. L. Spangler, N. E. Robb, 65-3-tf President Treasurer RO “ Ten m 4 AR 5 , ANTES ; is WR GEAR NA RR er NA 5 SCTE] AN Eb 1 Pe Ramana — ge les used to be along way HAT a difference in these motor-car days, when every point in the county is hardly more than bil 1 86: People’s ideas are chang- ‘ing, too. They’re beginning to fig- “ure out how much it is cost- ing them to keep a car. And the man who is doing the greatest amount of figuring is the man with the moderate- price car. n There still seems to be a notion in some quarters that any tire is good enough for a small car. That’s not what the man who owns it thinks. In recommending and sell- dng U.S. Tires we are trying to see his side of the propo- just around the corner.” sition—finding out what he wants in a tire and giving him that. Large or small, U. S. Tires are built to only one stand- ard of quality—thec standard that produced the first straight side automobile tire, the first pneumatic truck tire. im Select your tires ace cording to the roads they have to travel: In sandy or hilly cocun- try, wherever the going is apt to be heavy—The U. S. Nobby. For ordinary country roads—The U. S. Chain . or Usco. For front wheels—The U. S. Plain. Every tire that bears the name “U.S.” is built the best way its makers know how. 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