PAGB 0 T1IK CITIZEN, AVEDNKSDAY, AUOUST 2, 1011. Decrease of Contagious Disease Unprecedented decreases in com municable diseases In Pennsylvania -were reported by Health Commis sioner Dixon last week for the month of June. Typhoid, scarlet fever and measles show tho biggest decreases. Whooping cough alone seems to In crease. "What makes tho showing all the more remarkable, In tho Commis sioner's opinion, Is the nearer com plete than ever reports received from all parts of the State. Speaking of the work, Dr. Dixon said: " The people of Pennsylvania will bo gratified when they hear that with their co-operation the list of com municable diseases for the month of June Is the lowest experienced throughout tho State for several years, a total of 7,680 cases being reported, a decrease of E.1C2 as com pared with the month of May and a decrease of 2,054 and 1,282 as com pared with the months of June, 1910 and 1909, respectively. " This decreaso Is even more re markable than appears on its face! trom the fact that reports for the present year cover practically every city, borough and township In the State. " The government work, notwith standing these gratifying results, Is criticised by those who have been punished for tho violation of our laws governing these sanitary condi tions of our commonwealth. Fortu nately, the new Medical Bureau of Pennsylvania can consider the moral character of a man 'before granting a license to practice medicine and that same bureau can revoke medical li censes when the holders of the same are guilty of malpractice. " Tho splendid health law formu lated by Dr. Charles B. Penrose and passed by the Legislature of 1905 Is "beginning to show a reduction in the great total of communicable diseases. "The special diseases showing marked decreases are scarlet fever and meas les, tho latter of which has been heretofore looked upon by those In care of children as being harmless, notwithstanding it was so deadly, as 6hown by the report of tho new Bu reau of Statistics. Typhoid Fever. " Typhoid fever, a disease which should be exterminated, remains low er than for previous years, and the only disease showing a tendency to inoreaso is whooping cough, of which disease the State Department, even with the help of all the newspapers in tho State, has not been able to awaken the people to tho enormity of the death rato and to its power to leave In its wake tuberculosis and other afflictions. " Tho decrease In communicable diseases Is not confined to cities, boroughs or townships, but is gen eral all over the 45,000 square miles of territory in tho State. "Tho enforcement of tho sanitary laws only partly accounts for the marked improvement in health; edu cation of our people and their co operation with tho State and with municipalities which are working shoulder to shoulder wth the State Department of Health play their part How to Take Care of the Baby The hot weather of this season of the year Is extremely dangerous to the lives of infants and young chil dren, not only because of the de pressing effects of high atmospheric temperature In general but more es pecially because of the effect of hot Weather upon all perishable articles of food, among which cow's milk holds tho first place. It Is therefore highly Important that cow's milk to bo used for In fants' food should be of the purest and freshest that you can afford to buy. During tho hot weather ice is absolutely necessary for the preser vation of milk, and all milk used for food should be cooled by Ice as soon as It comes from tho cow and should ba kept next to the ice until ready to be used. A little money spent for Ice may prevent illness and Its much greater expense for medicine, nurs ing and medical attendance. As wa ter Is often a carrlor of disease it Is safest to use only toolled water for drinking or the preparation of a baby's food. The following rules will aid you In keeping your baby jvell during tho hot weather: Breast Feeding. Every mother should endeavor to nurse her baby. Breast milk Is the natural food of tho new tiorn baby. Thero is no other food that can compare with it. A breast fed has a much greater chance of living than a bottle fed baby. Immediately after birth do not give any kind of artificial food to the baby, while waiting for the "breastmllk to come. Put the baby to tho breast every four hours and give nothing elso but water that has been boiled. The baby needs noth ing elso and will not starve. After the milk comes Into the breast nurse tho baby every two hours during tho day and two or three times at night. Don't nurse tho baby whenever ho cries, a moderate amount of crying helps to develop tho lungs. Babies who are nursed Irregularly, or when ever thoy cry are likely to get indi gestion and then cry the harder from pain. 'Nurse regularly and tho baby will soon learn to expect its nursing only at the proper Intervals. Give the baby a little boiled water several times a day. After tho baby Is two months old lengthen the time between feeding to 2 or 3 hours, with only one or two feedings at night. Do not wean tho baby as long as he is gaining and never do so except ly advice of your "doctor. Do not follow tho advlco of friends or noigh T)ora about weaning. If the baby re mains well but after a timo stops gaining In weight, do not think that your milk is of no value, but consult your doctor about adding one or two bottles to help you out. Never let the baby nurso from the remains of a bottle which ho has not finished at once. Take It away from the crib, pour out tho milk, and cleanse at once. Stale milk curds sticking to tho insldo of a bottle nf tor a few hours become poisonous ! and may cqntamlnato fresh milk' coming In contact with them. It is' better to have as many bottles as the number of the baby's feedings, so that all tho bottles can be boiled to gether before the food Is .prepared In the morning. Nipples. Tho simpler the nipple tho safer for the baby. Do not use complicated nipples, and under no circumstances buy a bottle with a long rubber tube attached to the nipple. It cannot bo kept clean and will certainly cause bowel trouble. After the bottle is finished the nip ple should bo removed at once, turn ed Inside out over the finger and scrubbed with cold water and a brush kept only for this purpose. After use, always boll the brush. The cleaned nipple should be kept in fresh borax water (1 teaspoonful of borax to a pint of water) In a covered glass. Rinse the nipple In boiling water before using it. Do not put the nipple Into your own mouth to find out whether the milk Is warmed enough. Let a few drops of the milk fall on your wrist; If It feels too hot to your wrist It Is too hot for tho baby's mouth. No general instructions can bo giv en about the preparation of a milk mixture for your baby. Each baby needs a combination suited to his digestion. The mixture upon which some other baby Is thriving may be too strong or too weak for your baby. Let the doctor tell you how to mix the food. If it is necessary to use cream in the mixture do not buy cream it is likely to be stale but get It by pouring off half a pint from the top of a quart bottle of milk, af ter cleansing the lip of the bottle. During the summer tho bahy's food should be brought to a scald af ter It Is prepared. It should thon be poured Into the clean bottles, corked with baked clean cotton wool and kept next the ice until needed. Do not heat a bottle when you go to bed and keep it In bed until nursing time because you do not want to go to tho ice box for it and heat it when the baby needs it. This is a certain way to make the baby sick. Vomiting. A bottle fed baby should not vomit If Its food Is pure and properly adjusted to Its needs. If vomiting occur It is usually a sign of approaching Illness, either of one of the serious diseases of childhood, or more commonly in hot weather, of summen diarrhoea. Vomiting due to this cause may tie the first sign of trouble and the bowels may not be come loose until several days later. If vomiting is repeated, stop milk feeding, give boiled water, cool or of the temperature at which tho milk is given, and consult your doctor at once. Clothing. Do not put too much clothing on the baby in summer. During the hottest weather, remove most of tho clothes; a thin loose shirt and a diaper are sufficient dur ing the day and on very hot close nights. Never use clothing made with tight waistbands. Petticoats and skirts should bo supported by straps over tho shoulders. Eruptions of the Skin. If the baby has an eruption or breaking out of the skin, consult a doctor. Do not think that every rash is prickly heat; it may be some serious dlseaso like scarlet fever, measles, smallpox or chlckenpox. Tho Way of a Woman. "She passed me on tho street yester day without speaking." "She did?' "Yes, the stock up thing." "I wouldn't say that Perhaps sb didn't mean to snub you." "Of course she meant to snub me. You see. I had on my old hat." "That wouldn't make any dUtaBcnce to her." "Oh, wouldn't It? Onoo before when 1 happened to have on an old dross she didn't speak to mo, either. Now I'm through with her. If she doesn't care enough for mo to spook when I'm In my old clothes sho noodnt speak at all. I wont spoafc to her whon I'm dressed up. That's an tbero la to it." "Did you speak to her?" "I should say not. It's her piaoo to speak first Do you suppose I'm going to attract attention by yelling my lungs out for tho like of her? I gueeti not" "Perhaps sho didn't see you." "See me? Of course sho did. I saw her, didn't I? Then why dldnt sha see mo?" Detroit Free Press. When the 8ho Pinches. "My own common sense and tho shoe clerk permitting, I shall never wear another pair of tight shoos," said a wo man, "but if I should .be inveigled Into making myself uncomfortable 1 know what I shall do to allay the pain. Too ministrations to the aching foet of a man who called on my Italian cobbler for relief showed me a remedy. Tho man's shoes pinched in three different places. Having located tho painful spots Rafael dipped a loug strip of can ton flannel Into boiling water and held tho cloth stretched tightly across tho man's shoes. When tbo water began to evaporate be dampened tho cloth again and repeated tbo process soveral times. " 'Now,' said be at last, 'your shoes are set to your feet No moro hurt' "Tbo man. gavo him a quarter, which I thought a small price to pay for re lief from a pinching shoo." New York Sun. Light Men. At a certain hotel In Idverpool an Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman wero arguing as to which of their respective countries bad the lightest man. Tbo Irishman led tbo argument by saying: "We huvo men of CorkH "That may b" eald tbo -Qootsman; "but wo 4Vo men of Ayr.' "WeH," sold tho cocknoy,.'tnai la very light, but we have lighter' men on the Thames." HINTS FOR THE BUSY HOUSEWIFE Rollers Wash Fine Linen Without Injuring Fabric. Tho washing of .linen fabrics with out Injuring them Is not so easy as some people think. To get the soap suds properly Into tho goods somo vig orous rubbing is required, and whether a brush or only the bands are used there Is apt to be damage. A French man has designed a little apparatus that is said to solve the problem ad mirably. This Is a pair of grooved wooden rollers set into n metal frame, with a handle at the top. Tbo linen Is first thoroughly soaked In soapy water and is then placed on nn In clined board. The washer Is then rcJl ed ovor the fabric, with not too much pressure, but Just enough to work the soapsuds Into the goods. This op eration distributes the pressure even ly and smoothly and prevents undue strain on any one part of the fabric. Salmon Cutlets. One can of salmon, one cupful of white sauce, one tablcspoonful of lem on Juice, one egg. Pick over the salmon and remove skin, bonce and oil. Mix the salmon and lemon juice, then stir In tho thick white sauce. Turn out on plate to cool, divide in small portions and shape like cutlets. Bent tbo eggs slightly, roll cutlets In It, then cover thoroughly with flno breadcrumb. Fry In deep hot fat till brown. Gar nish with parsley and serve. Thick white salmon sauce for sal mon: Four level tcaspoonfuls of flour, two tnblespoonfuls of butter, one cup ful of hot milk, one-quarter toaspcon ful of salt and a pinch of pepper. Melt butter In saucepan untlj It bubbles, add tbo flour, salt and pepper, mix un til smooth, then pour tho hot milk in gradually, stirring and beating each timo. Cook until it thickens. Pork Cake. One teacup of finely chopped salt pork, one cup of boiling water, one cup of molasses, four and one-half cups of flour, half a pound of raisins, one cupful of currants, half a tea spoon each of clove, nutmeg and cinna mon, two teaspoons of baking pow der. Put the chopped pork into the mixing bowl, ponr over It tho boiling water, add the molnsscn and ono cup ful of brown sugar. Stir until well mixed. Put the splcoe into tho flour, also tho baking powder, and sift nU together. Stir in one-half of tho flour, thon add tbo raisins and currants, then the rest of tho Hour. This keeps tho fruit from sinking to tho bottom. Bake in loaf tins, putting greased pa per on tho bottom. Milk Soup. Two fair sized Spanish onions, four to six potatoes, according to sizo, a little celery and about three crusts of stalo bread. Cut the onions, potatoes and celery up and boll with tho bread In about a quart of water till thick, stirring and adding more wator if wanted. Boll slowly for about an hour, then rub all through a wire slovo. Add about one-half pint of boiling milk and pepper and salt to taste. Do not boll after tho milk Is added. Fresh Pork Pie. Take about a pound of lean fresh pork, grind it in food chopper, take threo or four raw potatoes, grind those up with an onion, mix all together with Just enough water to cook, put In a kettle and boll It till It Is dono. Make s pie crust as for pies. Lino deep pie plate, fill with the meat mixture, salted and peppered to taste. Put top crust on and bake until crust is brown (de licious). Add butter If wanted. Sour Cream Cake. One egg well beaten, add ono cup sugar and beat very light. Into one half cup of thick sour cream dissolve ono-half teaspoonful of soda. When dissolved add egg and sugar. Into two scant cups of sifted flour sift one tea spoonful of cream of tartar, one tea spoonful of cornstarch and a pinch of salt Add to first mixture alternately with one-half cup of sweet milk. Bake In quick oven. Deviled Onions. Mince six cold boiled onions fine, make a thick sauce of ono teaspoonful of flour, one tabIesioonful of butter and two-thirds of a cupful of milk. To this add the minced onion and finely mashed yolks of two hard boiled eggs, one tablcspoonful chopped, parsley and a Boasonlng of salt and paprika. But ter scallop shells, fill with the mixture, wrinkle with breadcrumb? and hmwn. CONGRESSIONAL SCANDAL MILLS 1 BUSV. Whatever other Industries may. have been Injuriously nffected by tho talk of tariff tinkering which has filled the air, tho Congressional scan dal mongerlng mills are working overtime. Having secured control of tho House of Representatives, tho Democrats have gone into tho muck raking business on a wholesale scale. It Is a way they have. They do It whenever they get a chance, and the recurrent disappointments which they experience have no ef fect in restraining their eagerness or dampening their hopes. The man who thinks that every one elso Is a rascal Is apt to be a good deal of a rascal himself. Ho is inclined to Impute to others the delinquencies of which he is conscious in himself. That may not be why the Demo crats are always so keen on starting investigations at the rare Intervals when they attain to power, but they always are and tho fact that they seldom succeed In finding what they are looking for, and never succeed according to the measure of their ex pectations, does not discourage them from repeating the attempt. They are hard at It now to an ex tent of which tho public had only a faint conception, and the Indications are that most of the clues they are anxiously following will lead to the accustomed mare's nest. It Is a fact that no fewer than twenty-four sep arate and distinct Investigations are now proceeding before special and standing committees of the House, and no one knows how many more will be instituted before the session ends. Unfortunately for the scandal mongers and smellers-out, the amount of grist which has been de rived from all this grinding has been lamentably small. One of the most disappointed of tho muck rakers is Representative Cox of Indiana, chair man of the Committee on Expendi tures in the Treasury Department. He has been doing his very best to expose the hypothetical misdoings of those rascally Republicans, but the paucity of his accomplishment is driving him to despair. "I don't believe there Is anything much wrong In the Treasury Department," his special muck-raking preserve, he plaintively remarked the other day, and then he sighed for some more fertile field. 'His experience Is typical of the rest, and if others were as frank as he they would repeat the same ob servation. There has been no scarcity but rather an over-abundance of defamatory reports, for scandal flourishes luxuriantly in an atmos phere of suspicion and credulity; but all the crop tho investigators have harvested has not been worth tho pains. They have discovered a few irregularities here and there, as in the case of tho payment made on account of the Day portrait, which no ono attributes to anything else than a loose system of accounting, but nothing of any real consequence has been unearthed, nothing that can be used to effect in the cam paign which all this investigation has in sight. As for the effort that has been made to discredit the per sonal Integrity of tho President, it is so dastardly and contemptible that It is certain to hurt much more than to help the personal and political am bitions that Inspired it. It may bo questioned whether the servlceableness of scandal as a politi cal asset is not very much overesti mated. Tho great majority of men are honest themselves and are ready to assume honesty In others, and certainly the Amorlcan people will be prompt to resent any unsustalned imputation on the honor of their Chief Executive. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. Notice is hereby given that an application will be made to tho Governor of Pennsylvania, on tho 4th day of August, 1911, by W. J. Hopkins, W. J. Cramer, R. Wonna cott, Z. A. Wonnacott, F. R. Var coe, W. W. Plerson, and D. W. Hull, under the act of Assembly approved April 29, 1874, entitled "An act to provido for tho Incorporation and regulation of certain corporations" and the supplements thereto, for tho charter of an Intended corporation to bo called the "Waymart Improve ment Company," the character and object of which Is the purchase and sale of real estate, for holding, leas ing, mortgaging, selling and improv ing real estate, and for these pur poses to havo and possess and en Joy all the rights, 'benefits and privi leges of the said act of Assembly and its supplements. E. C. MUMFORD, Solicitor. Honesdale, Pa., July C, 1911. 55t4 ARTEMAS BRANNING. DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR COADnSSIONER. DR. E. F. SCANLON, Only Permanent Resident Specialist In Scranton. TEN YEARS' SUCCESS IN THIS CITY. CURING VARICOCELE Vnrlcoceleimpairs the vitality and destroy s the elements ol manhood. I dally demonstrate that Varicocele can be posi tively cured without tho organs being mutilated: they are preserved and strengthened; pain ceases almost Instantly: swelling soon subsides; healthv eirrulatlnn 1 k rapidly re-established. Dr. E. F. Scanlon. uuu every part, oi me varicocele special organism affected by the 1st. disease Is thoroughly re stored. A written guarantee with every case I accept. Write If you cannot call. Consultation and examination free. Credit can be arranged. Ofllce Hours: 9 a. m. to 5 p. m and 7 to 0 p. m.; Sundays, 12 to 1 p. m. Offices 133 Linden St., SCItANTON, PA. (Opposite Postofflco.) JOSEPH N. WELCH Fire Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second floor Masonic Build ing,.over 0. 0. Jadwin's drug store. Honsdale. M. LEE 8RAMAN EVERYTHING IN LIVERY Buss for Every Train and Town Calls. Horses always for sale Boarding and Accomodations for Farmers Prompt and polite attention at all times. ALLEN HOUSE BARN tttttttttli MARTIN CAUFIELD Designer and Man ufacturer of ARTISTIC MEMORIALS Office and Works 1036 MAIN ST. HONESDALE, PA. tunmmjtnmami Wo print bill heads, Wo print pamphlets, A Matter of Color. "Why do you refer to your youngest son as 'tho black sheep?'" "Because he paints the town red." Toledo made. DHMOCItATIO CANDIDATE FOIt COUNTY' CO.MMISSIONEK. I cumestly solicit your voto for tho lirllllnrv plwdnn Sunt fin W. AV. AVOOD, Candidate For the Ilepublican Nom Inatlon of COUNTY TltEASUnEIt, Solicits tho kindly consideration of tho voters at tho primaries. FARMER MECHANIC THE BANK FOR ALL CLASSES M, E. SIMONS, President C. A. EMEU" . Cashier The Farmers and Rftechanics Bank Cor. Main and 1 Oth St., HONESDALE LABORER MERCHANT $1 starts you with an account Open a savings account in your name and then see that you deposit some of your spending money in the bank at intervals. Once establish the saving habit and gratifying results are certain. With the latest improved vault safe with time lock, fire proof vaults, modern methods, and assured courteous treatment We Solicit a Share of Your Trade Bring your deposit In person, send moneyordcr, express order, draft or send It with a rlend. LAWYER DOCTOR KRAFT & CONGER MM HONESDALE, PA. 1111 ReoresBiit Reliable Comoanies ONLY FO R RESULTSI ADVERTISE IN THE CITIZEN