THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY, JANUARY LM, 1000, 3 DAIRY PEOPLE UNDER HOT FIRE WOMAN'S CLUB MAKING AN IN SPECTION OF MILK SUPPLY. Eleven Divides Visited Awful Con diton Noted In Some Cases Filthy Stables and Utensils Prolific Cause of Disease Dr. Helmer Beads a Paper Filled with Valu able Information and Suggestions. Bepoits of Committee on Inspec tion The economic section of tlie Oreen lllclRe Woman's club held a, lcgular meeting yesterday which was largely attended Mrs. II. L Hurley presided. It is Just possible that few present drank milk at their evening meal. The sights seen by the committee in n re cent Inspection tour were not of a character to promote a craving for milk In Its natural state and us Mrs. Horer declare It to be almost In digestible! when boiled It offered small advantages as a poitlon of the menu for last night at least. The main fcatute of the piogiamme was the etcellcnt tjaper by Dr. Hel mer This n followed by u report of the . ommltti-e on dairy Inspection, in which it wus stated that eleven dairies had been visited and while some were In a condition which left little cause for criticism, others weie unspeakably unclean in methods The. following details weie Bubmltted In one report The milk In the maJorlt of cacs was shipped from fauns ileal Nichol son, Clark's Green, Chinchilla, t te. Thli milk was either dipped to cus tomers or peddled from wagons If 'dipped," the dipping was done In stole or house, as the ease might be At one "depot" furnishing, tho com mittee Is glad to saj. only forty quarts, the can, not tightly covered, stood In a vegetable cellar twelve feet square, with no ray of light, the odot of whlcn compelled hastv exit. A second depot furnished a vast amount of material for Inspection. Bottling was done by hand. The cans and bottles weie washed In a kitchen which was the living room of the fam ily The odor signified clearly that the one window In this kitchen, din ing loom, nursery, bottle wash er), had never been opened. The proprietor earnestly denied ever scalding the brush, w hlch rost 20 cents, also remarked that he kept his cans uncovered because milk would spoil otherwise There was no Ice. A third kept his cans of milk In the yard and peddled from a wagon. Five dairies visited gave the following results First kept no Ice, washed bot tles with "Oold Dust," bottling room not clean kerosene oil cans about, had used preservatives. Third showed nothing worthy of criticism. Bottles and cans clean, scalding rags clean, shop also Fourth, supply depot, ice plentiful and cans kept In running water commendable Tlfth, blanch to above, same DESCRIPTION OF OTHEIt DAIRIES. Another report of a different district stated In the llrst place visited the milk hon.se was clean and quite satlsfnc torj but the large barn, where thlit) four head of cattle were kept, whs de cidedly dirt), with a foul odor, show-, ing that it had not been cleaned fo some time The next place Inspected was a den it where large quanttes of milk aie ! celved from the countrv. Here ev-rv thing was quit clean except It in U lit have been suggested that the water 'u the tanks for cooling milk should bo hanged oftener, and no Ice his ken which v is necessary during smli warm weather as prevailed last week One milk dealer merely rinses his ans and leaves the washing for the farmei to do home thiitv-slx hours or so later How It Is completed will have to be Imagined. The dirtiest place visited was one where the stable Is about as filthy In side and out as the Imagination can make It Daik and with no ventila tion we held our bieath until we could get Into the fresh alt. Here six dirty, seraw ny cows are kept w 1th a plentiful supply of sour mash fiom the brew ery Coming out of the stablp our eyes were met with a placard of diphtheria upon the house ncross the alley The owne'r took us into the kitchen, which Is also the liv ing room, where he caies for and keeps his milk The 100m Is small and decided! odorous. Heie, too, we un derwent the suspension of respiration ns much as possible The surround ings are composed of compactly built ..ithy outhouses. It is not a wonder that there Is not a wider spread of disease where said disease is sold for Horn 5 to 8 cents a quait Let eveiy housekeeper mako It her business to inspect personally the source of her milk supply. In report ot another district visited the demising of liottles and cans was described as most undesltable. One proprietor disclaimed any accusation of ever having washed either cans or bottles, ven In hot weather. "For," explained he. Ingeniously if not very lucidly to the committee, "I don't want to be to blame for anything that hap pens, so I don't wash them at all, then I am not responsible nt all, whatever," with which remarkable logic his listen ers had to be content. The street car committee jeported that Manager Silllman expressed him self as favoring the fumigation of cars Dr Helmer's Interesting paper In full follows. THE STANDARD OF OUR CITY'S MILK SUPPLY In a paper which I recently had the honor of reading before this organiza tion, standatd milk was defined as possessing three distinct qualities: First, It must maintain a constant standatd of nutritive value of known chemical composition. Second, It must be free from specific mlcro-oiganisms that dessemlnated, through Its medium may cause infectious and contagious diseases. Third, It must be capable of resisting fermentation, at least a few days, without the use of presena tlves. Judged from this point of view, how much of the milk dally and annually consumed In this city is a standard milk"' One class of consumers may teply we are not particularly Interest ed In milk Inspection, because we have milk from our own cow or herd. We know what food and drink are given, tho condition of the surroundings, tho care UBed in milking, the way the milk is handled, and we know when our cow Is sick or well. That people so fortunately situated In this respect are exempt from Bom degree of danger we do not doubt. They know the milk has not been watered or skimmed, that it contains no chemlcalB, it Is fresh milk and clean, because the attendant Is sup posed to tatte proper care of both cow and milk. These conditions are re garded as sufficient to guarantee a pure and wholesome milk supply. Some families procure their supply from neighbors who may have a tine cow and mii to spare. The amount of milk purchased under those condi tions, or from people owning a small herd, Is considerable. Milk produced in tho city by cows of friends or neigh bors Is especially regarded as excel lent for the boy. because It is the milk of one cow. In 1894 the assessors' hooks showed about 600 cows In this city. Today probably twice that num ber would be a fair estimate. Theso cows furnish milk not only to the fam ily of the owner, but to many In the vicinity. To families having their own milk supply, not particularly Interested In milk Inspection wo would say you must be quulllled to judge milk fiom a scientific basis. The study of milk from a sanitary point of vluw Is both fascinating nnd profitable, since there are many facts of recent discovery that shed a Hood of light on matleis that were formerly unknown. Unfor tunately, today those facts are little understood, nnd the Importance of them not sufficiently realized by the majority of the people. For tho good of every family In this lit) the rows, pilvate or otherwise, whether located In the city or country, should be Inspected, where It has not already been done. Such an Inspection should be made nt least once a year It would determine freedom from a number of chronic diseases and ali ments common to cows, some of which the animal may be allllcted with pel haps a long time without showing am sjmptoms. Again, people In the city should as certain the compatabillty of the sui louudlngs of the cattle with a pure milk supply They should know the value of foods and dietaries In refei -Mice to the health and diseases of cut tle How to pioperly aie for the milk lioiu the time It Is drawn fiom the udder until used. Milk pioduced for sale in the returil p.uts of the till and under ceitaln existing conditions Is comparatively unfit for use The more densely popu lated a city the less aie the chances that milk pioduced In It for distribu tion Is wholesome. Naturally, milk from the countrv Is better as nieas ui ed by our standard than that pro duced In the city In the latter thete Is not loom enough for cows. In many Instances a number of animals are kept in a space not large enough for one cow. It Is Impossible to keep the stable clean and sulllclentlv well ven tilated and full of light. The cows aie liable not to lecelve propel exeielso und in their wanderings in the open spaces of the city will drink contamin ated water and pick up unwholesome food, often poisonous food, causing their sickness nnd death. In the city animals are subject to many existing intluences which have a detilmental effect upon the milk pioduced. PLANTS REQUIRE LIGHT You have obseived how Intimately life Is associated with Its enviionment. Remove any element from the natuial "nviionment of a living oiganlsm and It at once begins to act unfavorabl) upon that bod.v In the cellar the po tato sprout Is white. In the Held it is green. It must have the sun. All plants require light to develop Into healthy, vigorous conditions What house-wife who adorns her home with plants has not learned the dlffeience between the vitalizing power of the morning compaied with the afternoon sun It Is equally so with all foims of life A a canary blid living on the western exposure will not be as heal thy, will not sing as much or as sweet ly, and may pine uway and die, where In the vigorous sun light of the eastern exposure It would have been a heal thy, happy bird Weakness exists just In proportion to the decree ot shadow. A cow housed most of the twenty-four hours In a small, dark place without sufficient exercise, air or light Is less vigorous and corres pondingly below par In even" oigan and function The milk produced by such a cow will lack vital force. It Is poor food, and expensive, and tho In nocent bab icaieil upon it is robbed of nouilslnnent at a perioJ of life when such nouilshment should be lavishly bestowed. In the city the death late Is higher among cows than In the countr, because the environment Is less suited to the natural lequlrements of these animals. In the clt we find all the diseases and otheis that atlllct cows In the country Rheumatism an J digestive dlsordeis especially predom inate. Consumption always exists Some of the worst cases In which the disease may affect every organ In the bod and no less the udder, have been found In my practice. Fiequently the milk of the diseased animals Is .sold, people do not seem to realize that such milk Is unfit for food. Some people are not quick to discern sickness in a tow The food Inspectoi may apptehend a carcass of meat about to be sold, saturate It with kerosene and order It to bo destio)ed. but what became 'of the milk pioduced by that emaciated cieature whose meat Is now unfit for consumption Who destroyed that milk'' Who consumed if Babes speaking from the grave might truly say, in a country where learning Is so easily achieved "I died fiom Ignorance, lawlessness and neglect." Why teach so much in our schools people can live happily without knowing, and neglect the study of subjects, that furnish knowledge necessary to sustain and complete the fullness of life. INSPECTION OF MILK. In this city we have a form of milk Inspection that contemplates the dis covery of two tilings. One is whether any of the fat has been removed, an other, If any water has been added to the milk. It Is good as far as It goes. Rut did It ever occur to you that milk produced In tho citv and carried out for sale in little palls Is not even sub ject to this form of inspection'' It is Impossible fot one man, no matter how faithful he may be, to Inspect as often as necessaiy all the milk that Is sold In the city through dairy com panies and the hosts of milk dealers that enter the city from four points of the compass, to say nothing of that sold as above stated. But milk lnspei -tlon does not cover his duties He must, as food Inspectoi, attend to vege tables, fish, meats and all kinds of food. The food Inspector Is engaged In a woik ot great consequence to the health of the community. His woik Is preventative of disease. It saves life. It fosteis health It gives secui Ity to the pleasuie of eating It Is i woik, the practical importance of which la second to none done by ony member of our communlt) Hut since this work Is so Impoitant vvhj Is it not more thoroughly done than on man can do? If the milk you consume Is Inspected and fulfills the first pun clple of our standard, viz; that it must maintain a constant standard of nutri tion of known definite chemical com position, wli) Is It not at least equally Important that it should be pr.'lu l from healthy cows fed on proper food, given pure water and kept in hyglei.lc surroundings with cleanliness p'tend lng every step of the process o' lis pioductlon, In order that the other iwo conditions may be fulfilled.' vi that tho milk must be free fiom rpeelfls mlcro-oiganlsms that dessemlnated through its medium produce contag ious and Infectious diseases, and that It Is of such a quality as to presnve Itself at least a few davs without tie use of drugs or chemicals Why Is It not as necessaiv that It should be clean and free from dirt, which may be so frequently found In the bottom of the milk pltchei where milk has not been properl) strained DrBull'sN Cur It Throat and Lung Affeclloni. COUGH SYRUP tv Get the genuine. Refuse substitute. M Vis sure -'a' loforsc or filtered? Why should It be allowed to carry the germs ot contagious und Infectious diseases, such as typhol 1 fever, scarlet fever, anthrax, tubercul osis nnd diphtheria? Why should it carry poisonous ptomalns, especially In the summer time, thit kill nio.'i babes than all other diseases com bined? Dr. M. P. Ravenal, bacteriologist at the University of Pennsylvania, In Philadelphia, who has had great expe rience! with the bacteriological side of milk, asseits that a sample of the or dinary city milk Is an piegnant with microbes ns sumples of city sewage that have been brought to him for ex amination. Estimates have been made In n few other American cities. The number of bacteria In tno milk In dlfTcient cities varies widely. In the city of Boston in tho spring It wus found to have un average of about 2,300,000 per cubic centimeter. A cubic centimeter is about fifteen drops. Tno number of bac teria varied from 30.500 to 4,500,000 Milk should not contain more than 10. 000 microbes per cubic centlmlter. When It exceeds this number it is coi responding!)' dirty milk. The num ber found In the mlk of a number of milk men fiom Mlddleton, Conn., var ied from 11,000 to SOO.CO per cubic cen timeter. Russell found 35,000 to 275,000 In April and ....0,000 to 2,000,000 per cu bic centlmcto- during May und June In the city of Mudlson, Wisconsin To show what may be done to dimin ish the number of bacteria per cubic centlmlter In milk thiough the use of s)8tematlc cleanliness and dean sur roundings I w ill read you a report for one week of the number ot mlcro-oi-ganlsms found per cubic centimeter dally during the week beginning Sat urday, Jan 6th and dosing Friday, Jan 12. 1D0O. Saturday. Jan. 6 2.G..0. Sunday. Jan. 7 ".-iO Monday, Jan. 8 1.025. Tuesday, Jan. 0 lfi'lu Wednesdav unit. 10 4,600. Thursday, Jan 11 4.225. Friday. Jan. 12 875. These results weie obtained fiom fresh cows milk, which had not been cither pasteurlllzed or sterilized. The examination was conducted ut the Pep per Laboratory of Clenical Medicine, of the University of Pennsylvania. The number of bacteila found varies accoidlng to the surroundings of the cows, the way they ure piepared for It and are milked, also upon the utensils, tyelr cleanliness, the cleanliness of the attendants nnd the wav the milk is handled and shipped To my knowledge examinations for bacteria In ordinal y milk in Scranton have never been made Like the ma jority of American cities we do not have a bacteriologist, whose duty It would be to study such questions nnd lender a report on the sanitary condi tion of the dairy from which this milk came, without having seen the daliy. SUBJECT OF SANITATION. A competent Inspection of the fountain-head of our city'H milk supply, that Is, the dairy, would result benefi cially. It would cause the subject of dairy sanitation to be carefully studied The Stute lve Stock Sanitary Board of this state and the Bureau of Animal Industry of the United States Issue bulletins to the farmers on this and kindred subjects. No doubt great gooi results from this source of reading, but such reading is more Incidental than s)stematlc, because there Is no Incen tive to leading and to tho pinctlclng of new Ideas, except for curiosity. In cities, ptoducers of milk for sale ns a rule read little or nothing. If they would they are not so apt to re ceive It from the government, as the farmer Is. because the latter Is the owner of the Ualiy and the recognized source of the milk supply Milk Inspection at the daily would have the effect ot stimulating Inquii) as well as s)stematlc study of the milk question; nnd the dessemlnatlon of knowledge which must result in the right production and pioper handling of milk, which is the ke to a pure and wholesome milk supply A milk inspector at the beginning of his woik would find some cows crowd ed In dark stables, too small for the number of animals herded together. The walls and ceilings coveied with dirt, dust and cob-webs, the accumu lation of years. There might be no drainage. Cattle, especially on wet days, found standing above their ankles In mud and manure Their bodies plastered with manure nnd dirt, especially in the winter time. Not only cows, but other animals, hoises, sheep, sw Ine and poultry might also be found In the same apartment The milk cans might be allowed to stand, with covets off. In a tub of water in the same loom with the cows, nbsorblng gases, ml ciobes and odors, without having Itself been properly aerated In some cases the milk Is kept In cellais. where It Is surrounded with various egetables, decaying and otherwise, various kinds of moats, and everything that may be found In some people's cellais. The successful milk Inspector would practically start a school, for In places where, milk Inspection is not In oguo few people understand how to handle this most susceptible article ot diet To Implant new ideas while weeding out old ones, to Inculcate cleanliness, to teach tho relation of many species of bacteila to milk would be some good tesultlng from his labors. He would inspect eveiy cow, the character of the food, and the water, the stable, as to Its area, the number of cubic feet of area space, the ven tilation, drainage, the location and character of the milk house, the health and habits of those who handle the milk, the feeding, the bedding and cleaning of the cows, the manner of milking, straining and cooling the milk. He would examine and Inspe t each cow In the heid. Animals with tuberculosis would be condemned, ulso those having cancels on the jaw or neck, enlaigement of the uddei, or anv other physical condition which would contaminate the milk. He would pass no cow with nny Injury, disease or lameness m would lequhe the walls and ceilings to be frequently swept and white-washed, the Ilooi.s and gutters to be cleaned befoie milking. The cow to be cleaned around the Hanks and thigh as well as on the uddei. In ouler to pi event dust and dirt from falling Into the milk These paits should be wiped off with a clean, damp cloth AVetting the lingers while milking Is unclean The milker should wash his hands before beginning and should put on a large clean apron oi a suit of out er ganuents used ut no other time. The attendant upon a sick child or person having any contagious or In fectious disease should neither milk nor have anything to do with the cows during the time the disease Is at Its height. If It Is typhoid fever great care should be exercised about the wat er In cleansing tho milk utensils. If It Is on Infectious disease, like scarlet fever and diphtheria, everything should bo done at the milk house, and no one exposed to tho disease should handle the milk, or have anything to do with It. FATS AND SOLIDS What matters It If the specific giav Ity of milk Is right, shows the proper amount of butter fats and total solids. If It also contains dust nnd dirt from a filthy barn particles of exctementl tlous matter from tho caw, as well as the germs of a loathsome and, per haps, fatal disease. Tho production of milk as an article of human food may well be given the first place of Importance In the cate gory of foods. In a pure state milk Is a perfect food. It contains all the proximate principles to bupport human life. It will sustain llfo longer than nny other kind of food taken alone The child begins to grow upon milk and much ot Its futuie health nnd strength depends upon the quality from a chemlco-physlologlcnl and patho-bacterlologlcal point of view Aside from the child, milk is consumed by the adult. The Invalid may sub sist upon It. It haB been estimated that tho annual milk supply of the United states Is neatly six billion gal lons. In Greater New York about 750. 000 quarts nre consumed dally. If the Inhabitants of this city consumed one halt a pint a dny on an aveiago, which is only n fair estimate, the total umoutit consumed dally would aggie gate 6,250 Quarts. While so much money Is spent upon other piojncts, which, no doubt, are useful nnd tiecessui), umountlng to thousands and even millions of dol lars, how much is expended by our city per year to secuie n puio and wholesome milk suppl) What does It accomplish In the way ot protection to Its principal aitlde of food, nnd upon which the life of many of the younger members of the community al most entirely depend? Is not our standard of milk lust what It happens to be? What the pro ducers make it. according to theli knowledge mid habits In Its pioduc tlon? Do our people sulllclentlv un derstnnd the alue of pine milk'' If the standaid of milk Is not what it should be. Is it not laigely the peoples fault?. one thing Is ceitnln Milk is too cheap. Competition has reduced the pi Ice, making It difficult to pro duce the nt tides with any pioflt, and poorer and cheaper foods will be fed The lower the prlre the poorer mil cheaper foods will be fed the cows, the greater the tendency to watei nd skim the milk and also to preset ve It, not by caie In Its production, but b th abundant use of chemicals There is nothing worse than cheap milk. Again many a fnrmei Is blamed for deliver Ing Impute milk when the Ignorant Rnd careless seivant or house-wife is m tliel) at limit Want of knowledge oi lack of appreciation as to the Impott tance of absolute cleanliness In the care of milk, not ony when ready fu sale, but after delivery, its well Is one of the greatest, though, perlnps least leallzed difficulties that health authorities will have to contend against ARTIFICIAL SUBSTITUTES The fanner should lecognle the fact that arming the health officers of the city to which he sends his milk with authority to satisfy themselves tint the held which pioduced the milk Is fiee fiom disease and that the milk It self In the piocess of production an 1 delivery Is fiee fiom dangerous con tamlnntion, Is to accomplish mote for the peimnnent and Increasing pros perlty of daliy farming than Is posl ble In any other wa). He must know that the market Is full with eveiy de scription of aitlficlal food foi Infants nnd invalids, some of which have prov en themselves to be fair substitutes tor cow's milk, especially when the latter Is poor or has been carelessl) handled. Most experienced ph)slclans und many Intelligent laymen know that a good aitlficlal substitute Is fin piefeiable. Then, again is the ever constant anxiety that the milk ina) be Infected. Once lemove permanently these well grounded objections to i milk supply and the demand must con siderably nnd peimanently lnciease Therefoie, we say to the funnel, jou have a strong motive to join wlfh the health authorities in their attempts to secuie legislation to protect the milk supply from Infection, adulteration and other Impuiitles, whther In Its pio duction or in its distribution and sale You theieby are suie to protect and peimanently improve your present In terests and at the same time deserve the name of public benefac tors In Intimate connection with this subject of the city's milk suppl) an vital statistics of the United States, exhibiting the number of deaths if ported fiom each of four diseases in persons under 5 years of age and In each year under 5 years. Cholera U 1 1-2 2-2 3-1 4-5 Total Infantum . 202G". 5C90 1139 2S1 121 271.r 11571 200S 716 277 117 1 "M1 Diarrhoea .IGOin 7023 2S3J 123C 2J6 27'm Debility and Inanition 20670 Df. Henry Hakei, secretaiy of th state board of Michigan, comments upon theso statistics as follows: My belief Is that all the pilncipal causes of Infantile mortality aio most ly tesults of Ignoiance Ignorance ot the practical application of bacteriolo gy and mycology to every day affaiis particulaily to food, water and fuod materials, on which human exlstetu depends; Ignorance of the effects of exposure of that sort of knowledg which Ileibert Spencer chaiac teiie.l as of "most worth" Knowledge vvhnh tends dltectly to pieserve life: knowl edge which It should be the function of the public school system to mak paiamount, because the llfu ot th people Is the supiemo law. Taking up the causes of Infantile mortality somewhat In order of tin li Importance: Convulsions. One of the causes of greatest Infant mortality is repotted a "convulsions." Some of these are un doubtedly due to piimniy disease of tho bull, or net roils S)stem; but It seems to be geneially believed, b) those who have investigated the sub ject, that the gi eater pait of the deaths thus lepoited aie leallv due to dlairhoeal and other disease of tho di gestive tract. This Is especially tiue of those who die of convulsions In or following hot weather Infant moitalit) fiom convulsions is, theiefore. mostly due to Ignorance of mothers, and others who caie for In fants, concerning the pioper food foi Infants, and the piopei guaiding of that food from changes due to fei -ments, especially In hot weather. Cholera Infantum- No one supposes that cholera Infantum Is vvilfullv caused by mothers or pet sons whi have Infants In charge, .vet In some places a laiger pioportlon of all chil dren born die of th it disease That it results from causes which aie pre ventable Is shown by seveial facts: First, among tho higher classes of peo ple the moitallty Is veiv much !4ss than among the less Intelligent and less piovident. Second, Infants who aie nouilshed whollv by mothers milk aie almost wholly exempt fiom cholera infantum Thlid the disease, Is un doubtedly c aliped bv changes In the Infant's food or elilnk, due to bacteila. fungi, or some sou of inlcio-organ-Ism.s. On this subject much has been lenined by Professor V.iughan heie In thlH laboratoi), and It tho mothers and those who have the le.spnnslbllity of cailng for the children In Michigan could all have a couise of study In this laboratory, cholera infinitum and most of the Important disease of In fancy would not slaughter the Inno cents ns Is now pennltted DUE TO IONORANCE. Dlairhoea. What is truo of choleia Infantum is, In great part, tiue of dlat ihoea. Either the poisons geneiated by the mlcio-organlsms nie not so concen trated, nut so convulsive in their ef fects, oi in some othei way differ from those In cholera infantum. But this gieat cause of Infant moitallty is laigely duo to Ignoiance and caieless ness on tho part ot those who have caie of tho children. The remedy Is education In such branches of sanitary science as bacteriology and mycology, especially such educutlon of tho girls, who are to bo the mothers of tho next generation. To tho girls at this uni versity the use of this laboratory of hygiene should be In gieat part de voted, because of the very gieat Im portance of the subject to the life of the people, xne State Agricultural college has voted to admit girls, and to have a department ot domestlo sci ence. Let us hope that domestic sci ence will include several branches of sanitary study, as for Instance, bac teriology, mycology, sanitary climat ology anu the modes by which the most dangerous diseases nre spread, and how they may bo restricted and prevented. A Human Match Factory. The body of the average man contains phosphorus sufficient to make 483,840 matches, enough to fill about G.ooo boxes, allowing eighty matches to the box. Phosphorus is one of fourteeu elements entering into the composition of the body. It is divided among the bones, flesh, nervous system, and other organs. Without phosphorus the brain would be weak, the body feeble, and the bones would disintegrate, leaving man a squidgy invertebrate squirming in the dust. The icrfect health of the human body requires a perfect balance of the constituent elements of which it is composed. The carbon, iron, lime, sulphur, sodium, etc., must all be replaced as they are used up in human energy. Take all the iron from the blood and the circulation stops. That's death. Change the proper proportion of these substances to each other, destroy their natural balance in the body, and you destroy the balance of health. Where do these essential elements of vital force come from ? From the food we eat. How are they extracted and distributed to the several or gans they sustain ? They are extracted and distributed by the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. What happens when the stomach is "weak?" The food is only partly digested and assimulated. a.i Hi w1i.it? Then the balance of health is destroyed and there's blood "trouble," nerve "trouble," lung "trouble," heart "trouble or some other "trouble" with the vital organs of the body. 1'am is tlie Hunger 1 cry of the starved organs. What then is the logical first step to health ? Put the stomach and or gans of digestion and nutrition into a condition of sound health. That is just what is done by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and that is just the secret of the many marvelous cures effected by this remedy. No medicine can make fat or flesh, i'ooct alone can mage mem. uniy the stomach and its allied organs can extract from the food the elements that make flesh and fat and sustain life. "Nerve foods," "blood making" medicines, are mere fads and fallacies. The nerves are fed, the blood is made by food, not by medicine. The stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition prepare and distribute the food. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is not a cure-all. It does one thing. It cures diseases of the stomach and organs of digestion and nu. tritiou. The rest Nature does. Nature feeds the nerves, enriches the blood, heals the lungs and restores the failing vital powers. "Golden Medical Discovery" only removes the obstructions disease has put in Nature's way. There is uo alcohol in "Goldeu Medical Discovery" and it contains neither opium, cocaine nor any other narcotic. 1 ym vs v mi BSB &) am j if Mw UNTOLD AGONY, "It is with a glad heart that I wrjte you a testimonial such as few can write with the clear conscience that I do," says Miss Sallie Ikjggan, Rich (Rich Hill), Spartanburg Co., S. C. "About nine years ago I was taken with what our best phy sicians called neuralgia and enlargement of the heart, dvspepsu and indigestion. I suffered uutold agony in both mind and body, and at times my mind would become cloudy so that I would not care to see anylxxly. I would sit down to the table to eat, and eat a few mouthful9, but my stomach would not retain any kind of food, and I ivould have to leave the table. Last fall I spent about ?25-tx with our doctor but grew worse all the time. At last, when I was about to give up in despair, a friend advised mc to write to Dr. Pierce. I did so, and he advised me to take his 'Golden Medical Discovery' and 'Favorite Prescription.' I bought one bottle of each and also one vial of his ' Pleasant Pellets,' and began using ns directed In n few days I could tell I was getting better. I have taken four bottles each of the 'Golden Medical Discovery and ' Favorite Prescription' and two vials of ' Pleasant Pellets, and I am a well woman to-day. Can eat an thing and work hard all clay in the field or house, or anywhere else, and can sleep as sweetly as a baby. Many thanks to you for your kind treatment." LIFE WORTH LIVING. "I was a sufferer from torpid liver for over a year," writes Mrs. Nora Willis, WheatGcld, Jasper Co., Ind., "and could not sleep, nor eat but ery little, and then it would cause me great distress. I tried several doctors but got no relief. Was JrgrS?? advised by a friend to write to Dr. Pierce, pf5i which I did, and in a few days I received a letter, advising me to take his 'Golden Medical Discovery ' and nlso his ' Pleasant Pellets.' After 1 had taken only half a bottle I was greatly improved. I only took three bottles of the ' Golden Medical Discovery' and two vials of the ' Pellet9,' and, thanks to Dr. Pierce and his wonder ful medicine, I am as well as ever in my life, and feel that life is wortli living after all. " Last winter I took a severe cold which resulted in pleurisy. Tongue cannot tell what I suffered. For two nights and two days I could not move without it nearly killed me. I told my husband I could not endure another night of suffering. The weather was so cold and stormy that it was almost too bad for anyone to go six miles to town, but he went, and got a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Extract of Smart Weed, which gave me instant relief. I can say that for all pains that I have tried it for it has worked like magic. We keep a bottle of the ' Smart-Weed in the house all the time. I cannot thank Dr. Pierce euough for what he has done for ire." w In tho past year It has cost Dp. R. V. Pioroo ovor $28,000 to mako good Ms promleo of a froo copy of tho Gomcncn Sonso Medical Advisor. This book containing WOO pages and hound In strong and durablo cloth covers Is sent froo on rooeipt of 31 ono-cont stamps to pay oxponso of mail ing ONLY, Address Dr. R. V. Pioroo, Buffalo, N. Y. WW: AMJi tzs$s a uti?' In Ui tol . r IMil the readei pr sent ed .1 i 1 h Ini a funnels Institute held In Iulmn entitled ' Tubi-n ulosls InCittli I niu suv the subject was leginlid with iiuiosltv l.ithei than sei Inus nppit heifioli Since that time manv imliviluil uwneis f heals in that ei tlun hive hud the hi ids tested with tubeiculln The tesult was that while In some herds no tuberculosis was found In others ns high ns fiom 2.", to 7" per c 1 ut of this disease exist ed Occasionally an entire herd was sucilflced The disease was found In uv iv clegiee of development from In clpienc) to the broken down victim of gincializod tuberculosis Only Inst spring we tested six bundled head in thi (iilnclillli and Ablngton dlstilcts, and i he test was wlioll) confined to cows producing milk for tlie Scranton Daiiy compati). This company, desir ous of furnishing as pure milk as po slbli hid this woik done at tin h own 1iensis, and the State Live Stock Saultaiy Uoaid assumed the lespousl blllty of the number of cattlo de stio)ed. In this test we found about 2 per cent, diseased. In cai h case a complete! lecord was made of the con dition of tho herd and ot the surround ings fiom a sanltmy point or view. 1)1. inks for this purpose weiu furnished bv the st.Uo boat el. Ownen of heids, who had the pilvilegu of having their lift Us tested weie- requited to sign a contiact that they would disinfect the pumlses and obsurvo tho lules of the board to prevent the ic-lntiodm tlon of the malady. The Inspection Included examination for every other disease and a certifi cate of health was presented to each owner, stating tho results of the ex amination. In addition to this the Scranton Daliy company officials visit ed tho premises of the producer nnd Inspected the nrovalllng method of feeding and caring for tho stock ami the milk. A set of fifty dairy rules ob tained from tho daliy department of the Kuieau of Animal Industiy was tacked up In each stable to guide ami Instiuct the producer In' the manner of perfecting tho milk. It was an education upon all points to owners of theso excellent herdB. Hald owners I found to bo nn Intelli gent, progressive and well-to-do class of people. We beenmo convinced that If tho city would do its part such peo ple would not lack in doing all in their power to furnish pute und whole 'Mine milk to the clt) I am convinced that with what woik we have d'ine b. sid s what has been a 1 oiiipUsln d bv sum vetoilnarlans, liibeuulosis i pi.uti cillv e indicated In that se. tion of oui milk suppl) .M.in e itv nus luiv been tested for tubi l ulosls u in d an I kept by families for tin Ir pilvate use only. Theso inspections have been made b) leciuest of owneis who We-ce Inteiested and anxious ubmit the elK ease. In conclusion, tubeic ulosls .isis among our clt) cows and in eounti heids thut suppl) milk to tlie clt Some heids aie- fiee fiom the cllsias , otheis contain one or two cases and lu some the peieentugo ot the disease i vciy high I5ut If only 3 pi r cent, ex ists among only G.000 cows and Hi number that pioduce milk for this 1 lu is laiger. It would mean ono bundled ami fifty diseased cows from tuli culosls alone, furnish milk for con sumption In the city of Scianton. But cows have other chronic ail ments und diseases. They nro also vic llms of ft number of acute maladies. Scaicely a held exists that does not contain a milk producing cow that Is affected In one wny or another Occa sionally a held Is a hot bed of disease. Again, t)phold fever barilla have been founu In milk. Hart icpoit llftv epidemics of typhoid fever, with l,.10i) cupcs, and Dr riuinan, of New Yeuk, collected lecoids of llfty-three epl dcnilcs, with J,'.'2fi cases In all of these cases the typhoid barilla Wei distributed b) milk Infected with ihat geim. Diphtheria Is nnothei cllsens transmitted by means of Infected milk. Dr Halt collected statistics m seven epidemics of diphtheria, with 500 cases. Dr rreeman of Xew Yoik, obtained a leeoid of eleven epidemics, with r.Ol cases Of these, eighteen epidemics weie transmitted by melius ot infect ed milk An outbreak of typhoid fever ic ceiitly In the clt) of Plttsbuig was liaced 10 milk Infection As well as such Us-tiHes being Introduced from the eounti), why may not the Infec tion be spread by means of tho milk of the city 11m located In the neigh borhooil of an outbreak Again the llrst lequlslte of pine milk Is cleanliness. Have we nny light to clnlm our supply Is more clean 01 pure than that furnished In Boston, Mudl- If "CI MADE ME A AE1 AJAXTABLUI&IU3U1V1 ux. Ul i r T. ma., It. ,mtrfi 1 jilllnt. rii . ory,Impotency, Hlper I sno , fitr , cj.n J by Abaso or other J !e,.!i cjiJ ,iju crotiom, lliru ? lu anil u 1 lectoro ix vuuiuy i'i uiuorjcunir. ,ue fltnmnaforBtudj, In. U'aoriur, . . Inwanl. Itw.tnltv KIlll (XntllllDtlOn f tnkeu'io Hue. Thoirimj eihoni itemed intj fnpr -mcntr.nil cBcl3 a c UltE vrhi.ro all ml er full,,. -fist upol hnvlnz tho crnnlre. AJji InbloU 1 ImTecar-ilthouswCdinniwlllcurjiuu. WnpijoQi itivomittouc-ui rmlcotooaeaucuro CftfSTIJ ' web. caw or rjfuaJtho raoacy. !r.coyMli racUKO, or cis 1 1.1 ls lf-11 trs.trMntl for t-U. ! y till, iu rl-la wriprT. nponreecrii tol rrtrp. c m 1' AJAX REMEDY CO., &Th. ' Tor sale In sSiranten, Pa , bj ji .11 I Bros, and II C Smdcrsm, t)ruik,.i BO To PATEST Ceod Kks may be Mcura! I our aid. AcJUrtuc THE PATENT hECOHD. Baltimore, VJ. son, Wisconsin, Middle low 11, Conne il c ut, ot Phlludelpni? If a tiv"! coining from the latter city Is iouii l as teeming with mlcioblc life ns a sam ple of city sewage, with no bett r safeguards than possessed by tlv" c Hies mentioned may net the milk sup pl) of oui liy be tho s.uno. Laws incited lug cunsumera again- u adulteiatcel inllh by uso of pieseiv . tlves evlst In thlH as well us otb 1 il.ii. Hut Is sullldent help provld 1 to eiifoice tne law? Should wi i have a dt) c ln-mist und luc tcilologi r as well as a lood InspeetoV? .Milk Inspection lit order to bo effc -time must jcgln at tho fountain In 1 I uiiel lu) 1 mphasls upon tho health the cow, tho condition' ot her sunounci lugs, tho production nnd cares of Ui milk und tho handling nnd BhlpiUn,: of the same. It nppropi lately ends With the clniu-leo-physlolnglcal test which Is now mi plo)ed bv tho local food Irtsrtedor 1 detetmlne the fat content and it amount of nun-fatty solids nnd uat 1. It should also include u ilgld exumin atlon for vuilous pruseivutlvetf, whl 1 aie undoubtedly used by some wh bundle and sell milk since their facili ties are not perfect enough to ke i milk successfully without the use ,t drugs.