THE CITIZEN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1913. PAGE SEVEN HEALTH CONGRESS WILL BE AN Discuss Pernicious Con ditions In Public Schools of the United States. 1 THE most important health con ference that has ever been held iu the United States will take place In Buffalo, N. 1., Aug. 25-30, when the fourth International congress on school hygiene meets In that city. It Is the most Important conference, because educational ex perts have come to realize that the most potent factor In dealing with the health problems of any nation Is the education of the people to know and understand the laws and Influences which govern Individual and public health. Many important public health mad hygiene conferences liave been held In this country and abroad, but hereto fore all these have dealt principally with adult or infant life. When the individual has reached adult life ho has attained an ago when health edu cation has to bo forced upon him, while iu infant life the individual Is too young to receive a lasting impression. It is with the school children, tlien, that the most effective and lasting work can bo accomplished in dealing with the health problems that confront humanity. Therefore tho assertion that the fourth international congress on school hygiene will be the most im portant hcaJth conference ever hold In the United States will find few to con tradict it. The Importance Bealized. The congress is being conducted un der the patronage of, the president of the United States and Is being support ed by practically every civilized govern ment in the universe; showing thut at last we ore coming to recognize the value of haTing a proper foundation upon which to build and support tlie health of the individuals who form or support the various governments. ' For the period of time within the recollection of any one living at Uhj present date the liealth of tho armies and navies of tho world has been pre sided over by the most effective coi'iw of medical and health experts possible to secure. It is but recently, however, that the governments of the world have begun to learn that those who are to be their future citizens should receive the same care and considera tion that is given tho armies and na vies. Tho boalth of tho school child is, in deed, far more important to the nation than that of its fighting men in tho next generation at least. Many governments, like our own, mala it compulsory for children with in certain ago limits to attend school, but until tho recent post little tliought or consideration woe given to the con ditions which surround tho public school children of the country from the health standpoint, except that which" was exerted by the boards of education hi the different communi ties. Tuberculosis In Schools. It Is only when such startling reports as the following from the Michigan state board of health become current that the governments, municipal, state and national, become active In dealing with these problems: "In making a study of the occupa tional relation to tuberculosis one can not help being impressed by tho fre quent occurrence of tuberculosis among EUGENIC MARRIAGE FAILS. Husband Accuses Bride and Compan ion of Kicking Him Out, "Eugenic marriages are a failure," accordiiHj to Edwin Ferron of Lynn, Mass., the first eugenic husband in Massachusetts, who nursed a bodly bruised face while ho denounced his assailant and his wife. Perron was married about a month ago, both par ties producing physicians' certificates as to tlielr fitness to marry. Tcrron told tho pollco that he re turned homo to find his house in dark ness. Do said that when ho entered his room a strange man who was with his wife leaped at him and hit him, knocking him downstairs. His wife and tlie stranger lfcd, according to Terron. Perron said ho and his wife had quarreled frequently. "I thing eugenic marriages are a failure," reiterated tho eugenic hus band to tho police. PREPARE FOR NEW FLOOD. Natives of Panama Are Building an Ark, Imitating Noah. Word lately arrived In Panama from Penonome, a town In the interior of the republic, that Sogu:ido Sanchez, a native of that section, has proclaimed himself (ho Messiah, Ho has predicted tho destruction of tho world by a deluge in a short time, and soma of his eighty adherents are engaged tn building an ark, while other's aro busy collecting in pairs ani mals of all species found- In their re gion. His followers also have armed them elves, and In view of this fact the Panama, government is taking steps to avert possible trouble by tbem. AT BUFFALO . IMPORTANT EVENT Conference Takes Place Aug. 25-30, Under Patronage of I President Wilson. schoolteachers. A careful study of tho following table will give a very com prehensive Idea of tho sltuntion: "Over n period of years 52.4 per cent of the deaths among schoolteachers between tho ages of twenty-five- and thirty-four were due to tuberculosis, while only 23.8 per cent of the deaths among nil persons in Michigan be tween the ages of, twenty-five mid thirty-four were due ' to this disease. Among schoolteachers of aH ngcs27.0 per cent of tho deaths were duo to tuberculosis, while among all persons of all ages only w.4 per cent were due to this disease. "This is a matter which should en gage tht active attention not only of teachers, but of the patrons of the pub He schools. It would appear from our data that tho conditions under which public school teachers labor are condu cive to tuberculosis. This is, in a great many Instances, an easily ostablislied fact. Now, this ought not to bo. The schoolteacher, who should be couHkler ed as the most valuable factor iu the establishment of an efficient citizen ship, should not bo required to work under conditions which are relatively more conducive to the occurrence of tuberculosis than other professions. Precautions Necessary. "Extreme precautions should lie ob served by school commissioners and boards of education to prevent teach ers "who are affected with tuberculosis from continuing in the service. This should be done in the interest of the teacher and in tho interest of tho pu pils. Tho solution of the situation, however, should not rest simply with the attempt to prevent Infected teach ers from being employed. The school officials" and the patrons of our public scliools'should be united in nn effort to remedy the existing conditions, that the public schoolroom can in no sense bo considered ns a place In which one's health is subjected to unfavorable conditions. A more active interest In considering tho principles of proper construction, warming, ventilating and lighting of school buildings will go a great way toward remedying this sit uation." Mouth Hygiene Instruction. Tito alwve Is one of the strongest pleas for teaching mouth hygiene tliat has been published by the health de partment of any state In tire Union. The writer lms also contended thfit the public schoolteachers of tho country are not paid salaries which are com mensurate with tho obligations that are placed upon them In the fulfill ment of their duties. If practically three times as many schoolteachers ore dying from tubercu losis in this country as are people in other walks of life, because of tho con ditions which surround tho teachers, what must be tho effect produced upon tho schoolteachers of this country by the various other germs which ore Jnst ns readily transferred from individual to Individual as are the germs which produce tuberculosis? And wlvit must be tho Influenco upon our bays and girls who ore compelled by tho various governments to attend school from six to twelve years under the saino condi tions and surrounded by tho same In fluences that surround tho teaching profession? VENISON MAY REPLACE BEEF. Possibility of Using Reindeer In Alas ka Is Being Investigated. It may be that tho purchase of a reindeer steak or roast will be possi ble not very long henco in almost nny meat market In tho United States nnd that venison, now" -reserved for the wlalthy, will bo within tho reach of every family, Ilelndoer are multiplying so rapidly on government lands In Alaska that T, N. Conway, manager in tho north west for Armour & Co., has gone to Alaska to investigate tho possibility of shipping tho meat to tho United States. Deforo going Mr, Conway said tho suggestion of using the reindeer as a food supply was ma do hy govern ment representatives to J. Ogden Ar mour. Mr. Armour believed that, with tho existing transportation faculties, it would not bo possible to sell the inont at retail In eastern cities for loss than 75 cents a pound. Ho referred tho question to Mr. Conway, however. Mr. Conway is investigating along tho arctic circle and along the shores of tho Bering sea north of Nome, where tho herds aro rncrcnslng very rapidly. It Is his opinion that rein deer, caribou and other animals thriv ing in tbo great open regions of north trn Alaska nnd Canada will become an important factor in America's meat supply as soon as railways have boen extended farther Into that territory. Appointed Ten Policewomen. Mayor Harrison of Chicago has np PVlutod ten" policewomen in ocoord anoo with a recent order passed by the city council, Tho policewomen will be assigned to daty at public bathing beaches and dance halls. Their uniforms have not vet been decided, unoa. (Conducted by tho National Woman's Christian Temperance Union.) WHAT INJURY ALCOHOL DOES Overworks the Heart, Stretches thi Blood Vessels, Injures the Lungs and Paralyzes the Nerves. To the Heart. , Overworks it. aiaKca it tired. Voads It with fat Sotteria and destroys It Blood Vessels. Hurr!j tho blood through them. Stretches t,ho small arteries and makes them unflt lor work. Poisons the blood in the hairlike blood vessels (capillaries). Lungs. Wtakcs them work too fast Heats and inflames them. Hardens the walls ,of their air cells. Keeps tn the poisonous gas. ICeeps out tho good gas (oxygen). Weakens them and makes them diseased. Nerves. Tates away their moisture and paralyzes them. Takes atray thetr power to control tho muscles. Makes them nrtlt to carry messages to and from tho briMn. Brain. iFilts or congests the blood vessels with Impure blood. Collects tn It and paralyzes it Hardens the albumen. So hurts ft as to cause Insanity and death. ENGLAND'S BIG DRINK BILL Increase of About $25,000,000 in Year 1911 Over That of 1910 Cost In America. The drink bill In Great Britain, ac cording to the statistics assembled by tho secretary of tho United Kingdom alliance and published In tho London Times, was about $25,000,000 greater In 1011 than In 1910. It amounted to about $800,000,000. For the United States, It is reported In tho American Grocer, the cost of alcoholic beverages In 1911 was very nearly twice that of the United King dom, being estimated at $1,508,470,514. Very nearly $1,000,000,000 was paid for boer alone. Prom 1871 to 1880 tho average per. capita consumption of beer was gallons per annumj In 1911 It had risen to 20.06 gallons. The total value of tho nonalcoholic stimulants consumed in America dur ing 1911 is estimated at $256,549,C34. Tho per capita consumption of coffee is 18.B6 gallons, or very nearly that of beer. STARTLING FACTS ABOUT BEER" Beverage Made From Malt Has Be come Extinct and Now Manufac tured of Deleterious Matter. Who ever saw a beer advertisement which did not claim beer to be the product of barley alone? Yet the brewers themselves, before tho Joint committee on food standards of the Association of State and National Food and Dairy Departments de clared: "Malt beer has become ex tinct tn America, so why esarrect It?" "Beer," says the National Consum ers' league. 'Is often made of glu cose, sugar, rice, rotten corn, starch, preservatives, boer-colorlng. etc" "The uso of coloring matter and preservatives in beer," says the Na tional Food Magazine, "Is rapidly and steadily Increasing." FLAVOR OF ALCOHOLIC DRINK From House and Lot, or Horse and Cow to Little Children's Tears Are Quaffed Over Bar. Some queer things are drunk over the bar. Sometimes It Is children's drosses and wives' bonnets; some times it is a horse or a cow; some times it Is a house and lot; some times even a good-sized farm is soaked up and swallowed at the bar. Often It is a man's truthfulness, his sobri ety, his good sense, that goes Into the cup and Is gulped down; yes, the manB very Mfo may bo In the fatal glass. Little children's tears, a wife's heartache, a mother's heart-break these aro quaffed with tho whisky and boer passed over the saloon bar. Who fancies the flavor? Lee 8 Drinking, Less Crime. It would appear to be difficult 'for publicans In tho Bakewell district of Derbyshire, England, to get a living through soiling Intoxicants, The town, which Is the center of a popu lation of 35,000, has undergone a great change with regard to tho drinking habits of Inhabitants. Local landlords are complaining bitterly of tho lack of customers, and lately at one public house It was stated that not a shill ing's worth of liquor had been sold. For the past several weeks there have boen no oasee of drunkenness before tho local bench, and serious crime is almost unknown. Train Temperance Teachers. In tho great city of Birmingham, England, a course of Saturday morn ing lectures 1b being given by profes sors at the university for tho training of school teachers, who give instruc tion to children in tho common schools on the subject of alcoholism. Blmllar Instruction is also being given In Cambridge, England, under tho aus pices of tho Cambridge County Coun cil Both these new departures are an advance along the right lines In pro moting the cause of temperance la gland. GEXUIXE ECZEMA REMEDY. New Remedy That Heals Eczema Quickly. Pell, the druggist, has sold hund reds of jars of Hokara, and although he offers to refund the purchase price to any dissatisfied purchaser, not one jar has been returned. While this is surprising in itself, yet the most marvelous thing Is tho reports of chronic cases of eczema that have been cured by this simple skin food. People who have suffer ed with scales, scabs and even bleed ing Itching have found relief In Hokara. No matter waere the eczema, pim ples or other breaking out occurs, whether on the face, hands, legs or body, the application of Hokara should give quick relief, and even the worst or most chronic cases should be cured in a short time. a You can buy a liberal-sized jar to day at the very low price of 25c, and with every package goes Pell's guar antee to refund the money If It Is not satisfactory. NOTICE. The Commissioners of Wayne county will receive bids for carpen ter work in toilet room at the Court House. They will also receive bids for plumbing work In toilet room. Bids received up to noon Tuesday, September 2, 1913. Plans and specifications for above work can be seen at the Commission ers' office, at the court house. JOHN MALE, EARL ROCKWELL, NEVILLE HOLGATE, Attest: Commissioners. T. Y. Boyd, Clerk. Goeoi3 AUDITOR'S NOTICE. Estate of John Kuhbach, Late of Honesdale, deceased. The undersigned an auditor ap pointed to pass upon tho exceptions to account and to report distribution of said estate, will attend to the du ties of his appointment, on Thursday, Sept. 11, 1913, at 10 a. m. at his office in the borough of Honesdale, nt which time and place all claims against said estate must bo presented, or recourse to the fund for distribution will be lost. E. C. MUMFORD, Auditor. Honesdale, Aug. 9th, 1913. G5w3 NOTICE is hereby given that the partnership legally subsisting between W. K. Hlttinger and Wm. H. Ham of White Mills, Wayne county, Pa., under the firm name of Hltting er & Ham, General Insurance, was dissolved on the 31st day of July, 1913, by mutual consent. All debts owing to said partner ship aro to be received by Wm. H. Ham, who continues the business and any demands on said partnership are to be presented to him for payment. Have -rhe Citizen sent to you. SHERIFF'S SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. By virtue of process issued out of the Court ot Common Pleas of Wayne county, and State of Pennnylvanla, and to me di rected and delivered, I have levied on and will expose to public sale, at the Court House in Honesdale on SEPTEMBER 12, 1913, at 11 A. M. All the defendant's right, title and interest In the following described property viz: All the surface or right of soil of and In all that certain piece or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the town of Urowndale, Clinton township, Wayne THE OLD RELIABLE Always Your Friend It is a pleasure to assist our patrons in every way possible' with reference to business matters as well as financial transac tions, A depositor often finds that a recommendation or a letT ter of introduction from his bank is of greatest value. You may be in a quandary over a contemplated business change, or an insurance policy, or an investment, or the selec tion of a competent lawyer or agent. We are always apprecia tive of your confidence, and glad to confer and advise on any matter of importance to you. Our depositors' room is at your service for private conferences. , First time you pass this way drop in and have a talk with us about opening a savings account. Let us explain how much more it means to you than you think it does. You can start with one dollar. OFFICERS : HENRY Z. RUSSELL, President, LEWIS A. HOWELL, Cashier, ANDREW THOMPSON, Vice-President, ALBERT C. LINDSAY, Asst. Cashier HENRY Z. RUSSELL, HORACE T. MENNER, XOUIS J. DORFMNGER, OPEN SATURDAY County, Pennsylvania, designated as COxSO feet of the westerly portion of lots No. 9 and No. 10 in Block No. 16 as de scribed on the map of building lots of the town of Browndale, being eighty feet on the easterly and westerly boundaries and fifty feet on the northerly and southerly boundaiies and bounded easterly by por tions of lots No. 9 and 'No. 10, owned by Joseph Scublx, southerly by lot No. 8: westerly by lands ot the Hillside Coal & Iron Co.; and northerly by lot No. 11; be ing fifty feet on the westerly end of lots which Gregor Scublx granted "and con veyed to Joseph Scublx by deed dated Aug. 1S0S, and recorded in Deed Book No. 99, page 12. Also a free and unin terrupted use, liberty and privilege of a passage in and along a certain nlley or passage six feet in breadth by fifty feet In depth, extending from the Bouth-east corner of land herein conveyed east fifty feet along the southery boundary of land still owned by Joseph Scublx to land of Anthony Drashler, where connection Is made with the alley to the stree.t Ex cepting and reserving as excepted and re served In the hereinbefore recited deed to Joseph Scublx. Being the same land granted and conveyed by Joseph Scublx to Frank Koenlg by deed dated Aug. 31, 1910, and recorded in Deed Book No. 101, page 305. Property above described Improved with a two-story frame dwelling house. ALSO all the surface or right of soli of and in all that certain piece or parcel of land situate In tho town of Brown dale, Clinton township, Wayne county, Pennsylvania, distinguished as 100x80 feet of the westerly extremity of lots No. 9 nnd No. 10 tn Block No. 16 as described in a man of building lots of H. W. Brown in said town of Browndale, being eighty feet on the easterly and westerly bound aries, and bounded easterly by portions White sheep give more wool than black sheep there are more of them REMINGTON stenographers do more of the world's work than other stenographers there are more of them. Nature only knows why there are more white sheep than black. All the world knows why there are more Remington operators than others. REMINGTON is the machine in which the most operators have confi denceand the machine which gives them the confidence to make good. 12,500,000 Remington letters mailed in the United States every business day in the year world. Iionesd)l.e. l DIRECTORS: nOMER GREEXE, JAMES O. lmtDSAIil, EDMUND B. HARDENBERGH, I'IIUjW 11, fllUKUAX, LEWIS A. HOWELL. .EVENINGS FROM 7:30 of lots No. 9 and No, 10, sold to Anthony Drashler; southerly by lot No. 8; westerly by land of the Hillside Coal & Iron Com pany; northerly by lot No. 11. Being tho same property granted nnd conveyed to Joseph Scublx by Gregor Scublx by deed dated Aug. 18, 1903, and recorded In Deed Book No. 99, page 12. Excepting and re serving as excepted nnd reserved in last mentioned deed. Also excepting and re serving therefrom a lot 50x80 feet which was granted and conveyed by Joseph Scublx et ux. to Frank Koenlg by deed dated Aug. 31, 1910, and recorded in Deed Book No. 101, page 305. Improved with a two-story frame dwelling house. Seized and taken In execution as tho property of Joseph Scublx at the flult of E. A. Bloxham. No. E3 June Term, 1913. Judgment, $1700. Attorneys, Gardiner & Mumford. TAKE NOTICE All bids and costs must be paid on day of sale or deeds will not be acknowledged. FRANK C. KIMBLE. Sheriff. Adv C3 3w NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION, Estate of Warren Akers, late of Dreher town ship. All persons Indebted to said estate are notified to make Immediate pay ment to the undersigned; and those having claims against said estate are notified to present them, duly attest ed, for settlement. H. M. JONES, Administrator. Newfoundland, Pa., July 15, 1913 REMINGTON is the machine in which the majority of good business schools have confidence the confi dence to turn out competent, efficient operators the thing on which the very life of those schools depends. REMINGTON is the machine in which business men and business houses have confidence because the big majority of good sten ographers are Remington trained and "go to work the first day without breaking in." Isn't that the answer to the question, "which ma chine?" for your office ? 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