Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 100, 7 March 1913 — Page 10
THE RICHMOND PAMiApiUM SXJX-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY 3IARCH 7, 1913.
VA Q E TEN.
win taitc aninn I
hill innt nuuuii OH MATTER AT ONCE County Society Secretary Wants Tubercular Hospital Established.
MEETING IN A WEEK
At Which Plans Will Be Formulated For An Educational Campaign.
v
As a result of the passage of the
Senate bill by the House yesterday
afternoon, authorizing counties to establish hospitals for tubercular patients, the Wayne County Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, will hold a meeting some
time next week at which time immediate action will be taken in the matter of arranging a (campaign to educate person as to wjia,t is needed in this city and county? Dr. S. Edgar Bond, secretary of the society, asserted today that the organization had only been waiting until the legislature took action on the bill. That a tubercular hospital is absolutely necessary here i3 Dr. Bond's statement. He says that the city and counjy should build a separate hospital from the hospital for contagious and infectious diseases. "If people could see wnat we see every day," they would all be with us in the attempt to secure a hospital here for the treatment and care of tubercular patients. At present we have one tent, to the north of the Reid Memorial hospital, where patients can receive some treatment. However, nurses from the hospitals cannot be expected to care for the patients, as the nurses would suffer from exposure. "I know of one patient in this city who has infected from five to seven individuals with the dreaded dise .e. This is because tubercular persons cannot be segregated. Our society has done what it could and we intend to do eome good work now." Dr. Bond says that the city and county could erect a hospital where persons suffering from tuberculosis and others having contagious or infectious diseases could be treated. He says that such an institution could be under the same management although he prefers separate institutions.
Visits Zoo With lrrGrs
I ft
PRISONERS TO HAVE READING MATERIAL
Card Playing Will Be Prohibited in Accordance With Recommendation. y
FRIEDMAN!! GIVES FIRST TEST HERE
with instructions to return three weeks hence; Dr. Fried mann promised to treat them again at that time. Surgeons to Watch Progress. Meanwhile the medical board at the hospital will hare the three under constant observation and as soon as re
sults are observable, it was announced
Alleged Discoverer of Tuber j a statement wm be issued.
culosis Cure Inoculates
Three Patients.
Card playing will cease at the county jail. Sheriff Bayer after thoroughly
considering the matter and after an j organization of the East Main Street
Friends church had agreed to furnish
National News Association) NEW YORK. March 7. The ftrst I demonstration in America of Dr. Fried- ! rich Franz Friedmann's treatment, i which the visiting Berlin physician de- .
was
the prisoners with mazagines and oth- j gJven fey Dr g himself yes-
er reading material.
terday in the presence of rhjsicians
It has been the custom for years at . reDresenting the citv, the state, and
the jail for the prisoners to be allow- tDe 6taffs of hospitals of several cities, ed the recreation of playing a friendly j Three patients, two men and a womgame of cards. It is not uncommon for an were selected by Dr. Friedmann prisoners to be committed to jaH who from fifty tuberculosis sufferers gathare unable to read. No special provis- i ered from all parts of the city, all
ion can be made for their amusement ; hopeful they would receive treatment, i the demonstration, or entertainment. j The woman has been ill three years. I Kcspital Invites the Tests.
Moses Greenbaum, president of the
I People's hospital, discussing Dr. Fried--1 mann's demonstration, said the opin- ! ion of physicians who were present j was that criticism or praise of the cul
ture and of Dr. Friedmann's methods should be withheld. He said the Berlin physician during his demonstration appeared "nervous, excitable, and irritated." He used an ordinary hypodermic needle and made the inoculation in the ordinary manner familiar to physicians. The New York County Medical society which had protested against Dr. Friedmann giving his treatment as an individual practioner because he has no state license, did not interfere with
Last month the sheriff had not decided to act according to the recommendation of the grand jury that card playing be prohibited. He believed tnai the men might plot mischief if thi3 were done. Heading matter must be supplied prisoners of the jail according to the laws of the state.
Her's is a chronic case of the disease ! It was explained: ir. i-Tiearaann was at the knee and was the most serious ! working at the hospital's invitation in of the three chosen. j a sense as a resident physician. Only The two men have tuberculosis of patients and invited physicians were the lungs. Their cases are not beyond gathered, since Dr. Friedmann had re-
the incipient stage, according to the quesiea ins! newspaper reporters aim
authorities of the People's hospital,
Cily biatisiics
ANNA MORGAN TALKING TO ANIMAL KEEPER. NEW YORK, March 7. Miss Anne Morgan, daughter of J. Pierpont Morgan, has consented to the request of the members of the Yacation Girls' Committee that she continue the'rogular Sunday excursions for working girls whifih she inaugurated last Sunday. Miss Morgan and about fifty working girls visited the great zoo at the New York Zoological Carders. Tho party made a leisurely tour of the lion, monkey, elephant and bird houses and conxluded the day's outing with a 15-cent lunch in the lake boat house.
Colonial Fireplaces. The early American fireplace was merely a cheap provincial copy of Eng lish models of the same period. The application of the word "colonial" to pre-Revolutlon architecture and decoration has created a vague impression that there existed at that time an American architectural style. As a matter of fact "colonial" architecture is simply a modest copy of Georgian models, and "colonial" mantelpieces were either Imported from England by those who eoald afford it or were reproduced in wood from current English designs. Wooden mantels were Indeed, not unknown in England, where the use of a wooden architrave led to the practice of facing the fireplace with Dutch tiles, but wood was used In England and America only from motives of cheapness, and the architrave was set back from the opening only because it was unsafe to put an inflammable nvaterial so near the fire. Exchange.
EXAMINATION ENDS IfJ VEREGGE CASE Plaintiff's Attempt to Prove That Woman Was of Unsound Mind.
Births. ! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brown, 607 Sheri- j dan street, boy, third child. I Real Estate Transfers. Catherine Romey to Charles E. Moss, Pt. 92 of the M. & P. addition to the city of Richmond. Consideration $1. Henry Meyers to Addison Parker,
Pt. 34 of the E. S. addition to the city of Richmond. Consideration $1,250. Warren B. Harris to John E. Cope-
land, Pt. 21 and 21 of the W. R. and S. R. addition to Cambridge City. Consideration $2,200.
Bernard Rottinghaus to John J. Sittloh, section 9, township 13, range 1. Consideration $2,000. Transfers 4; consideration $5,451. Building Permits. Henry Holzapfel, South Fifth street near Tests Mills, frame building for cald storage, $1,000.
SU3GERY ON THE SKULL.
The
Was
Operation of Trepanning
Common In Ancient Times. While the medical profession is agreed that some roujrh form of surgery must have existed from very an cient times. It has always been a matter of wonder that so complex and delicate an operation as trepanning should also be one of the oldest. There is authentic record of this operation dating back to the time of Hippocrates, who wrote treatises on frac tures. dislocations and wounds of tho
Examinations of the witnesses in the case of the protest of the will of the
late Eliza Vcregge was completed late head- therein he described the method this afternoon. The number of wit-1 of Procedure to be followed in the case
the institution -where the demonstration was held. Dr. Friedmann Selects Patients. Each of the men patients has been showing improvement and gaining weight since beginning, several months ago, the best recognized tuber
culosis treatment of the day, it was stated.
Physicans who were present brought forward a dozen persons Buffering ' with the disease in all its stages. The , medical history of each was available i for Dr. Friedmann's use. Statistics j
had been prepared at his request. The Berlin physician declined to treat any of these cases, however, but made his own selections. Each of the three whe wore treated received a double injection, in the muscle and in the vein. Dr. Friedmann explained to those who attended the
clinic that thefirst reaction might be j
expected to be observed after seven
days. The patients went to their homes t
ether laymen be barred.
It is expected that the coming demonstrations from one to four injectiens may be necessary the public will be invited. Dr. Greenbaum said.
LATE DETAILS : OF TRAGEDY
- (National News Assaclation) BALTIMORE. March 7. Bs sides the four killed in the explosion today forty others on the collier Jason had legs, arms and ribs broken and many of them may die. At 2 o'clock this afternoon more than fifty of the injured.
many 01 tnem baaiy mamjiea, had been brought to Sparrow's roint. It was impossible to learn the cause of the disaster as the story of survivors differed widely, but one account told of fire aboard the barge for twenty minutes before the blast came. Over 300 tons of dynamite exploded.
There to nedicLie so iffc at a at (be sas rsm to pleasant to take a Dr. CaiiU'a Sm" tba poalttve ears for all diaaaeee an in etsmach treat Ta srtoe ta wtim
Iron Jawed. He Ever notice what a heavy face Mrs. Strongmind has? She--Yes. What n thump there'd be if her countenance fell! Boston Transcript.
resses on the stand was approximately 100 and the case has taken more than a week. The same questions were asked all the witnesses though various conversations were related to the jury by the witnesses to prove that the woman was of unsound mind at the time the will was made. William Torbeck was one witness called by the plaintiffs. Torbeck testified that on one occasion Mrs. Vereg'jfr asked the witness if Winfield Veregge
lived at a certain house in the vicinity
of a fractured skull. His idea was to
cut away a piece of bone so that the pressure on the brain might be relieved. The annals of this era also show that a file was used for this purpose, which, at a time when modern anaesthetics were unknown, must have been, to say the least, painful. According to Holmes, the operation of removing pieces of bone was performed long before bistort, times. The effects on the skull are easily seen after
death and are visible as long as the ! H
bones are preserved. From inspection
of certain skulls of the later stone age f'
How She Jogged Memory. Little Marjorie was taking her first lessons In dancing The teacher noticed that Marjorie always failed to pnt out her left foot when command ed to do so The teacher wn patient and thought Marjorif would learn in time, but a number of lessons did not
seem to make her know when to put.
out her left foot Marjorie would put out that foot when the other children were placing their right feet foremost. Finally the teacher asked Marjorie for an explanation. "Well, you see." Raid Marjorie. "I've got a hollow place in a tooth on the left side, and I always have to find that hollow place with my tonsue to find out which Is my left foot.'- lndi ana polls News.
A Physician's Faith in Tube culosis Medicine "Have used Kckuiuo's Alterative is Revernl cases of tubercular glands of the neck, with eieellent results every time. In out case It coat me I."pO. for the girl nns put on it vm !y nntll she could arrange to be opiated. aud In n short time an oprrntln wan not needed. I suppofte your -reords are just as fine as of old. YoiyVnlw uiy faith In It." lOriirlual of RhV physician's letter on file.) Kcknian's Alterative I effective In oth--r form9. Read what Mrs. Carvln says: I d;i ho Falls. Idaho. .
I hare gained twenty-two
February una my bahy
ilth. I have been waltlna;
rn to ae how I would
iow doing- all my work, ice she win four weeks
ldlly enlning. I do not
lytbtns at all. I bellere
"Gntleni
pounds si
Is In perb
since whe wa ETPt nlons. I
hnve been ere
o!d, and I am
coufth or rais
i .re Vast
i-rt ti
r rv
lmi
V.P.J
mv lunar trouble Is cured.'
(Sworn Affidavit) MltS. M. H. OAItVIN. Note Mrs. fJnrvin has seven children. Frkman's Alterative Is effective In Rronrhltls. Asthnin. Hay Fever; Throat and l.unic Troubles, and in upbuilding; the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or bablt-forminE dm. Ask for booklet tellliT of recoveries, and write to Ki ininn laboratory. Philadf lnhln. Pa., for more evidence. For sale hr i iodine druggists A. G. Luken and Company.
HALF SOLES FEEE Saturday Only
BRING A PAIR OF f SHOES WHICH NEED RE-SOLEING BUYANEWPAIR A 1 PI AND WE WILL 11 HALF-SOLE YOUR OLD V ONES FREE 7 OR GIVE YOU A REPAIR J CERTIFICATE
Good on Demand Saturday Only Tecplc S1tio2 Co
of Torbeck's home. Torbeck inform-! ,n ancient Britain there has been de
ed the court that at that time Winfield Veregge was dead and Mrs. Eliza Veregge was his mother. . The case may be argued tomorrow.
rived the conclusion that some of these
had undergone the operation, which must have been performed with a stone implement. Harper's Weekly.
RE
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