The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, January 17, 1912, Image 5

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Best Food for Babies
If you are having trouble with tbe
Yoy's feod, and nothing seems to
viree with it, you can probably get
%o child to take A. 7" 8. Malted Milk
asain it and thrive on 1, as it is a
pirticularly neurishing, satisfying
and carefully made preparation, in-
ter ded especially for troublesome
itc nachs of both infants and adults.
i* is one of the standard, reliable
Ami rican Druggists’ Syndicace pro-
ducts, and its use is unhesitatingly
advised by the entire :2,000 drug-
gists who sre A. D. S. man:bers, and
know its true value Lerc is
nothing in it to prove "acmful to
the baby-—n. drugs or medicinas. It
Is merely a scientifically <wade arii-
cle or fond, which you can i2'y upen
This 1s the way they speak of
A. D. S. Malted Milk
Mr. V
druggist of Warren, Pa., saye.
‘“‘Centlemen—Enclosed you will
find a picture of my youngest lov,
|

Round Shoulders
A Sign of Old Age
G. Newell, a promineat
|
|
whose LIFE WAS SAVED BY A. D.|
£f. MALTFD MILK.
“That scunds
Rtory, but rere are the ia'rs
“Johr Winston Newell was bora
January 29, 1909, and after the first
week his mother was unable to nurse
him. He was put on a well advertis-
ed brand of malted milk, and at b
weeks weighed only 73 pounds, was
very thin and showed symptoms of
starvation. Then w: put him on
A. D. 8. Malted Milk and he began
to gain at once. At 5 months, when
this picture was taken, he weighed
16 pounds. We cannot recommend
it too highly.”
dke a preuty big |


It is possible jor every wo an
to have that erect, commanding,
graceful appearance typical of the
perfectly formed woman.
SHOULDER BRACES
correct any tendency to b-come stoop-
shouldered, corr pel deep bre thine and
do this without the uncomfortable sen
sation produced by most braces.
These Braces are constructed entirel
of cloth, have no metal parts to bind,
rust and break and may be worn with-
out your knowledge except as you as-
sume ain incorrect position.
Rexall Shoulder Braces, we believe
to be eqully beneficial for man, woman
or child. All :izes—justsend yourchest
measu-ement. -
Price, $1.00

BH. W.GARBER
E. MAIN ST.. MOUNT JOY

THE
Health
WEEKLY ARTICLES BY AN EX.
PERT ON THE SUBJECT
br. David H, Reeder, of La Porte,
Ind, Who Established the Home
Health Club, Has Been Engaged
to Write An Article Every
Week.
Us

Pneumonia: This is the time of
the year when pneumonia——commons-
|ly known as lung fever prevails to
the greatest extent and is most se-
is an alarming affliction
and yet under simple treatment is
readily cured in the average case. It |
persons |
vere. It
is most dangerous to those
who have been addicted to intemper- |
ate habits, of any kind, though the
individual may seemingly be very!
strong and generally healthy. In
cases of persons who are constitu-
tionally frail any disease is pro-
portionally more dangerous, and
pneumonia, of course, is no excep-
tion.
Always the very best advice that
can be given concerning any disease
is to avoid it, which may be done
everything else being equal by stead-
fast precaution, which, for the most
part, is careful living; the avoidance |
of intemperance in all things: not |
only intemperance in the use of |
stimulants and narcotics, but in that |
of heedless and unnecessary exposure |
over-eating, or the
[foods that are notoriously hard on
the stomach: to any sort of un-
| necessary overdoing.
| The Home Health Club method of
| treatment is simple and practical
|and may be used with equal success
(far out in the wilderness, in the |
[humblest cabin, or in the mansion of
| the millionaire. It has been success-
| fully tried in almost all conditions
|of life, and has been adopted by
[ many able physicians, who here-to-
| fore relied often disastrously upon
{the more complicated methods. And
| yet the method of the Home Health
| Club is from the oldest of all the
| school’s, being Nature's simple meth-
|od. This remedy {is Water, Hydro-
(therapy is the big word by which it
is known, scientifically but simple
| Water Cure is a better name,
The crisis in pneumonia may ap-
pear either at the third, fifth, sev-
enth or even as late as in the ninth
|day, and must be remembered when
| treating it, so as to be prepared to
meet it. The greatest danger at this
{period is the liability of heart failure
land nervous break-down. The tem-
perature of the patient must also be |
to bad weather:


R101 TR mu i | carefully watched, because persistent
Entering Over
$3.00 a Year
oi 1 ET 1 a
1 EE

ne 0%
¥
=
HH
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
The Central Pennsylvania Newspaper
19,000 Homes Daily.

The Telegraph is printed principally for the particu-
lar people wholive with in a radius of fifty miles of
Harrisburg;the people who want the news of their
own section first and foremost, and with it first-hand
accounts of events at the State Capital, with com-
plete telegraphic news and intelligent comment on
the happenings of the day.

The only complete encyclopedia of Central Pennsyl-
vania’s State and county governments, business and
agricultural interests is be found in

The 1912 Year Book & Almanac

The Daily Telegraph
216 FEDERAL SQUARE
HARRISBURG, PH.
REE








6 Centg s Week
= water
= | brain-
= | newing it as soon as it
= least bit warm.

roma
¥ 1 & S
fii
F101 1 001) TY 1
Furniture Warerooms
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
— EP ee
DOD HOMEMADE FURNITURE A SPECIALTY
UPHOLSTERING DONE TO ORDER
—— per
Poplar Lumber for sale in lote to suit the purchasers
'
DP Prem
jertaking and Embalming
\
OR No a
li EIN

IE II


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a
8






i
: ing him, is to place a hot water


» Vinegar.

| high fever is a great tax on the heart |
| power, demanding of it extra action,
jane it also increases the discomfort |
of the patient at a time when dis-
comfort decreases his ability to with- |
|stand his other sufferings. If the |
| patient’s temperature is more than |
{102, Fahrenheit, efforts should be
{made to reduce it.
| Previously, certain drugs derived
| from coal-tar were used as the means
of reducing fever temperature. They |
[were known as anti-febrile agents |
| meaning “against fever.” To some
extent these coal-tar products are
[still used, but not nearly so much.
| The best remedy to reduce temper- |
ature in the patient without distress-
bottle at his feet, and when we say
hot, that is just what is meant, HOT.
Then apply a cold compress—a cold |
pack—to the base of the
in the back of the head, re- |
becomes the |
In this manner of |
reducing the temperature « too sud-
den reduction must be carefully |
avoided. This can be done by sim-
ply using the treatment with less |
vigor.

Of course, it is absolutely necess-
lary that those in charge of a pneu-
monia patient must have a clinical
thermometer. The temperature is to
be taken every three or four hours,
while there is any fever, and while

[the treatment for reducing the |
temperature is proceeding, as dai- |
rected above, it should be taken very
frequently. Sometimes it runs to |
108, and even to 110 degrees, but |
from 162 to 106 is the average. It |
is safe to reduce this at the rate of |
two or three degrees per hour.
A highly important matter in this |
treatment is the ventilation of the
sick-room. Keep it well supplied
with pure, fresh air, even at the ex-
pense of the room’s temperature. It
is a great mistake to think that
patients suffering pneumonia must
not be allowed to breathe a particle
of cold air, on account of the weak-
ened condition of the lungs. Cold air
is not desirable, but when it must be
ither cold or impure, choose the
cold and pure by all means. Pure
air, 'nd lots of it,’ should be the
watchword. !
The temperature may, at any time |
third day be found very |
high, and the overburdened heart |
unequal to its task. Unless relieved, !
and that quickly, it will soon become
exhausted and cease its efforts. What
to do under such cirenmstances, and |
before it is possible to obtain the ser-
(vices of a physician, is of vital im-
| portance. The skillful use of cold |
|water is now imperative, and the
| person in charge musi not only em- {
[ ploy cold water but common sense |
land good judgment. First see that
the hot applications have been care-
fully placed at the feet—a hot fom-
entation well up to the knees—
preceded by a sponging with ho
Then have a bowl of co
cloths, ahg
n’s J
afier the


gr handy, and two
| the best results.







BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY,
chief, folding them to about six in-
ches square, Wring one of them out
PA.
press in this way, and
too frequently, but a linen handker-
of the cold water and lay it over the chief is comparatively safe.
heart next the skin. Then place over!
(his an ordinary towel to protect the
clothing from moisture.
Relief
and
almost
perhaps in five minutes, or
sooner, in some cases, after the sec-
is
ond compress is applied, the pulse
beats will be found much nearer
normal. In two acute cases these
compresses were applied every two
minutes for six or eight times, with
There may be seri-
The Best Cars For The Least Money
LARGEST GARAGE IN LANCASTER
instantaneous, |
is necessary to prepare the
changing it lated
After the fever has been broken it
vitality
The patient will probably not
take more than a few swallows at a
time, but it should be repeated every
two hours or so,
The feet should be kept moist and |
(for the collapse that is sure to come. | warm, If they become dry or cold, or
It is very difficult to get
| patients to take
|
finds them so weak as
| to withstand it,
|
| nourisk ment should be
the case 1s serious.
|
|
| cellent
able, because it contains
nourishment.
| caution is not exercised the collap
pneumonia | both,
they should be immediately
[
If (bathed with a solution of acetic acid
ge (and made very
to be unable acid bath should be continued, even
Nothing but liquid [to the whole body, as it will open the
more nu-
ous danger in applying a large com- | triment and is more readily assimi-
NR ANU repre oe rre A rtrmef\re Nf rire freed foremost 3
warm. This acetic
given while | pores and keep the eliminating pro-
Pure milk is ex- [cess vigorous, thus maintaining the
but malted milk is prefer- | general vitality.
|
[ On the whole this treatment may
Ibe simmered down to the following:
—AT THE—
Wednesday, January 17, 1912,
Keep the temperature of the room at
about 70 degrees Fahrenheit; keep
it well ventilated, even at the ex-
pense of heat; keep the feet well
warmed with fiot-water bottles, flat
irons, or flannels, have all the quiet
possible and in no case allow visitors
into the sick-room. Then, when the
fever heat reaches much above 100
apply increased heat to the feet and
a cold compress to the head, being
very careful to reduce the temper-
ature slowly enough. Maintain the
vitality by administering liquid
nourishment. During the convales-
(Continued on page 4)

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——
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