THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1M, 1011. MAD DOG SCARES Hydrophobia an Uncom mon Disease WHAT TO DO IF H1TTHX; TJIKI I1U1SSOX THKATMKXT; WAHM. 1JATJIS ESSENTIA Ii. Mad dog scares recur with a de gree of regularity suggesting delib erate promotion. By some singular process the public has been led to believe that hydrophobia Is a most common malady, when all authori ties agree that It Is quite the most uncommon disease known to science. The vital statistics of the city of Philadelphia, covering a period of more than twenty years, do not show a single death from hydro phobia, and thousands of active medical practitioners have gone to their graves after many years of ac tive practice without having ever seen a case of hydrophobia. Without discussing the merits or demerits of tho Pasteur tratement for hydrophobia, It Is important to emphasize the fact that the records of tho Pasteur Institute prove that less than 15 per cent, of those treat ed by the method required any care beyond the usual dressings for an open wound. It Is of vast importance that all persons should know that a dog bite is not of necessity a serious Injury, however painful it may bo. It is very important that all per sons should know that hydrophobia Is exceedingly rare, and therefore little to be feared from an ordinary dog bite. It is well to keep In mind the fact that all dogs running amuck in tho summer season are not afflicted with rabies, and that the state of mind of the person bitten has much to do with tho success of the sub sequent treatment. Authorities worthy of considera tion disagree as to the best method of final treatment, but all concede that the first thing to do is to clean the wound. It is not at all difficult to accomplish this early treatment anywhere and at any time, as noth ing is required but clean cotton cloths and hot water until a physician arrives and assumes responsibility for tho after-treatment. There is 'no occasion for excite ment. There is but a very remote chance of serious complications. The patient need not anticipate the worst by worry. In eighty-five cases out of one hundred the wound re sulting from a dog bite is no worse or more painful than a wound coused by any other agency. There is more real peril in the mental at titude of the patient than in the physical aspect of the wound. A cheap and most effectlvo cure for hydrophobia has been perfected by Dr. Dulsson. The Buissou vapor bath treatment Is free In England and In all the colonies where It has been established by tho Crown, and It can be most successfully given In any home with but little expense. Xo special or costly apparatus is re quired. A foot-bath, a cane-seated chair, and an oil stove or spirit lamp Is about all the equipment required, in addition to a number of blankets and Ice water for the cold towels to be applied to the head. An or dinary cabinet or box bath is the ideal apparatus, but the makeshift proposed will answer very well, as there Is nothing to the treatment but a process of sweating. In the course of treatment follow ed. lug It will be noticed that tho use of a box or cabinet bath Is assum Tho head should be well bathed with warm water uefore getting in to the box. Assuming the patient seated on the chair with tho feet In hot water, a cold wet cloth should be placed frequently on the head. The duration of the sweating process may extend to an almost unlimited time; geenrally from twenty to for ty minutes are sufficient, and during this time the patient should be sup plied freely with cold water to drink. Regarding temperature and dura tion of the bath, the most rational mode is to give as much heat as can be comfortably borne, and to keep the patient sweating profusely, but under no circumstances should he be given a higher temperature than 130 degrees Parenheit in vapor; that is, with the head exposed and breathing the ordinary air. A bath of thirty or forty minutes would be attended with greater benefit than, say, for twenty minutes; that is, if the patient can bear It without any nervous upset. After the sweat ing there should be a cool or warm ablution as the patient can best bear. The frequency of the bath entire ly depends upon the period of time that has elapsed after the supposed Infection from a bite, or symptoms of hydrophobia developing. If the patient Is subjected to the bath on the first day of hydrophobic symp toms, probably the first bath would prevent its development; but it Is advisable that tho patient should take the sweating bath every six hours for forty-eight hours. If the patient Is not subjected un til the second day of the develop ment of the symptoms, It is recom mended that the patient should take the bath In bed (with apparatus) without after-ablution, plenty of clothing heapon on, with a cold cloth to the head and a hot bottle to the feet, plying the patient with barley water (adding a teaspoon ful of cream of tartar to a quart), to be drunk through a cane or straw tube; on no account use glass. If the patient Is calm, repeat tho bath In four hours until thlllo pain ful svmntoms are relieved: and even after the patient Is apparently well continue tho sweating uatu tnree i times a dny for a week, followed by a watery nblutlon; the duration of the sweating process being from twenty to forty minutes each time. Give tho patient freely light fari naceous and fruit diet, as he must be kept going well with nourish ment. The Tyranny of Speed The motor-car nuisance is evident ly quite as great in England as In this country, and in some respects conditions are worse there because tho country Is smaller. Nor has more progress been made than in the United States toward checking excessive speed, though the problem Is engrossing much attention, and some steps have already been taKen. It may be that England will be in advance of America in this respect, for as railroad regulation shows, the English are more careful about risk ing human life. But just now the excitement of speed has upset nor mal conditions, and no way has been found to curb the reckless automo billst. If police traps are set, the offending motorists combine to give each other warning. The case Is the more difficult because, the sport, be ing expensive, has fallen largely In to the hands of those who should be, on the old English theory, the law makers of the nation, being the peo ple who have "a stake in the coun try." Quis custodes custodiet? as they are fond of saying in Parlia ment. Who but our old friend Pro Bono Publico of tha fourth estate? Hero and there Is already to be found a village Hampden like E. H. Hodgkinson, whose book, "The Tyranny of Speed," is published by the John Lane company. He writes like a sturdy whig squire and he professes himself a moderate motor ist. As for his remedies they are drastic. It is nonsense, he says, to fix a legal maximum of 20 miles an hour, and then allow the use on them of vehicles geared to 50, 60, even 100 miles an hour. It is not in human nature to obey the law when a mere touch will yield an acceleration as exciting as It is illegal. Even those who mean well are forced into com petition by the reckless speed of others; It Is not pleasant to be vir tually standing still all day in a cloud of dust, running a bare 2u knots while others are roaring past at double or triple the speed. So the highways of England are virtual ly being turned Into race courses, with many distressing accidents, much damage to the highways and adjacent property, and great discom fort and risk to the nonmotoring public, all of which conditions Mr. Hodgkinson demonstrates from the records of recent years. It has be come so bad, ho says, that motorists I expect pedestrians to get out of the way, instead of turning out them selves, though a foot passenger on hla own side of the road has as much right there as a vehicle. As an ex ample of the absurdly egostlc view which high-speed motoring' encour ages Mr. Hodgkinson cites the com plaint of an English motoring Jour nal; "Why people will persist In walking In the middle of the road at night without carrying lights has often been a puzzle to motorists." To remedy this state of affairs the author with Draconian severity pro poses to make It an Indictable of fense to sell cars capable of brack ing the speed law. For this there Is some precedent In tho police reg ulation of motor omnibuses In Lon don, one clause of which reads: "All cabs must be so geared that their highest speed shall not he In excess of the maximum laid down in tho lo cal government board order." This proposii has often been made, and is highly unpalatable to motorists, who declare moreover that such a provis ion would not guard against reck less speed In descending hills. To meet this latter point, Mr. Hodgkin son proposes to add an automatic signal, a sort of burglar alarm, so to speak, which will go off as soon as the legal rate Is passed, whereup on the driver would be compelled un der heavy penalties to proceed to the nearest police station to report and get the signal reset, reporting also to the first constable met on the road, who would ask for the driver's card carrying the address and the number of the car. The fee charged for resetting the signal would act automatically as a fine, and the au thor adds grimly: "As to tampering with the signals, Imprisonment would seem to be a suitable punishment, or impounding the car, if necessary, would prabably prove sufficiently ef fective." In. short, tho motoring laws would be made serious like the laws regulating railways and ship ping, so that a motorist would no more go on the highway with an Il legal machine than a skipper would sail without his clearance papers. Racing cars would have to be taken In tow. The results hoped for from tho proposed reform would be that no one could go faster than a speed within tho power of all, and that therefore the Incentive to racing would be lacking. The author pro poses to grade cars in eight classes. Small cars would be allowed 20 miles per hour, and taxlcabs and large touring cars 12; commercial vehicles would range from 4 to 12 miles an hour, and for public service there would be special vehicles cap able of as high a speed as might be needed. Such restriction, thinks Mr. Hodgkinson, would draw the fangs of the viper, and defend the right of the public to use the road In safe ty. He says with much justice: "Motorists should remember that although they are occupying more of the highway than the pedestrian or the cyclist, they are not neces sarily more important to the state. Worked the Visitor. "Speaking about visiting English men," said a hotel manager recently who had been reading about one in tht newspapers, "reminds me of one thai came to the Talmer House In Chicago some years ngo when I was room clerk out there. He and nnothcr had been paying n visit to the Rockies, and thch last stopping place had been Cheyenne Coming cast they had fallen in with some Americans who made themselves ngreenble, with this result: "After they had put their names on the register one of tho Englishmen leaned over the desk. " 'I say, ho whispered, 'I am expect ing President Cleveland's son to call this evening to return 50 which I lent him on the train. Will you plensc put tho money in the safe for me if 1 do not happen to be in?" "I promised, for I hnd not the heart to shntter his confidence in human na ture. President Cleveland didn't hap pen to have such a thing as a son at that time." New York Sun. NOTICE 0 ADMINISTRATION, ESTATK OF LEE CALVIN SMITH. Lntc of Lake Township, All persons Indebted to said estate are noti fied to tunke liutuc-dlato payment to tho un dersigned ; nml those hnvltiR claims against the said estate ore notilled to present tbem duly attested, for settlement. MINNIE TOWNSEND, Executrix. Ariel, Pa.. April S. 1011. SOeolB German-American iiome w i Men Womcn.ToiinR old. I F631I116nt. " Sntlrrl.r 'l I'nrooVl Fftflttd, ltff.l?d or llobhri! Inn, Don't Jndr. kll ftll.o. The GERMAN AMERICAN TREATMENT. Strirtlr MettoliUfl CombUfttloo 8l.rf.fl a ComMied oil O, 6000 lmttrtnt Drorl. to tuit tith A ff.r, lodltld'ul Ckiv, Upoillllr tho Only Cure, no nnlttr whnuoc.or yoar Atltntot or DUonle nnj ht, roaio or origin, no m.tfcir who tailed. Writ, rut yoor Coin In Mrlet fonfldrnrn. A Cur(inAHANTi:ni. iddrow OLD GERMAN DOCTOR. I'Qit llox !8S0. 1'hlUdelDhla, fa. A Cook -In Need. Ilusband Did the cook you hired show up? Wife No. Wasn't It fortuuate? An other one rang our bell by mistake looking for Mrs. Glllet next door, and I've kept her Instead. Pittsburg Press. Intensive Farming. They used to have a farming rule Of forty acres and a mule. Results were won by later men With forty square feet and a hen. And nowadays success wo see With forty Inches and a bee. Wnsn. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. rn9 Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature mmmH:5:mn::j;:::::::!:t::H::n:5:K:: 1 WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS in your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't stop at that; nave his prescriptions put up at a reliable pharmacy, even if it is a little farther from your home than some other store. You can find no more reliable Btore than ours. It would be im possible for more care to be taken In the selection of drugs, etc., or in the compounding. PrescripJ tions brought here, either night or day, will be promptly and accurately compounded by a competent registered pharmacist and the prices will be most rea sonable, O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Opp. D. & II. Station. Hoxesdale. Pa. Do you need some printing done? Come to us. If you need some en velopes "struck off" come to us. We use plenty of ink on our jobs. KRAFT & CONGER H I MM HONESDALE, PA. Reuresent Reliable Comnanies ONLY - WHAT WE ACH Adverlslng Man Show-Card Writing Window Trimming Bookkeeper Stenographer Civil Service Exams Commercial Law Banking English Branches High-School Math. Teacher Commercial Illus. Electrical Engineer Electric Lighting Electric Railways Heavy Electric Traction Electric Wireman Electric Machine Designer Telegraph Construction Telephone Expert Architecture Contracting and Building Building Inspector Concrete Construction. Carpet Designing Architectural Draftsman Wallpaper Designing Monumental Draftsman Bookcover Designing Bridge Engineer Ornamental Deslgn'g Structural Draftsman Linoleum Designing Structural Engineer Perspective Drawing Plumbing & Steam Pitting Lettering Heating and Ventilation Stationary Engineer Plumbing Inspector Marine Engineer Foreman Plumber Gas Engineer Sheet-Metal Worker Automobile Running Civil Engineer Refrigeration Engln'r Surveying and Mapping Mechanical Engineer R. R. Constructing Mechanical Draftsman Municipal Engineer Machine Designer Mining Engineer Boiler Designer Mino Surveyor Patternmaking Coal Mining Toolmaking Metal Mining Foundry Work Metallurgist Blacksmltblng Assayer Navigation Chemist Ocean and Lake Pilot Cotton Manufacturing. Poultry Farming, and Languages: Italian, French, German and Spanish. THE I. C. S. WORK 1. We teach unemployed people the theory of the work in which they want to engage. RESULTS: Positions easily secured, days of drudgery shortened, and sometimes avoided al together; quick promotions. ft 2. We teach employed people to do their work better. RESULTS: More responsible positions; better pay. 3. We teach dissatisfied people how to do what is more congenial. RESULTS: Prepara tion for new work before leaving the old ; rapid progress in the new field. HOW WE DO IT 1. We furnish all necessary preparatory instruction. 2. We explain facts, principles and processes so clearly that the student quickly compre hends and easily remembers. 3. We illustrate our text-books thoroughly. 4. We give concise rules and practical examples. 5. We grade our instructions. 6. We criticize and correct our students' written recitations and send him special advice regarding his course whenever necessary. OUR LOCATION FOR DOING IT We occupy three buildings in Scranton, having a floor space of over seven acres. We employ 2,700 people at Scranton. We spend $250,000 each year in improving and revising our instruction papers. We handle about 30,000 pieces of mail daily and our daily postage bill is about $500. We issued about 63 million pages of instruction last year. We received and corrected 849,168 reci attions and positively know that 1,180 students have their wages increased. -f 4- f -f J