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DANGER JN A SHAKE.
A LEARNED DISQUISITION ON DIS
EASE TRANSFER.
- ■> •
Microbe. of Every Kind Find Lodgment
In the Skin—Contact Even of the Clean*
ly May Spread Contagion—Serious Ee
ralts From Hand Clasping.
Is it possible for one man to commu
nicate disease to another by the shaking
of hands?
If this question be true, should the
custom be abandoned or Should it be
modified under medical instruction so
as to minimize the danger?
The existence of micro-organisms
inimical to life and health has been es
tablished beyond dispute. Dr. Breiter
founds his thesis, recently printed in
The Medical Record, on this hypothe
sis. But his leading point, insisted up
on with much force, is the danger which
is hidden in the apparently harmless
and sometimes pleasing custom of shak
ing hands. He says:
“That the surface of the human body
is a very hotbed for the propagation of
a great variety of micro-organisms
Fuerbinger, Mittman, Bizzozero, Ma
giora and Welch have elucidated most
conclusively. It is certainly beyond the
shadow of a doubt that in the presence
of a predisposing factor and sometimes
even without that the microbic diseases
are ushered into existence by their indi
vidual prototypes, this being essentially
brought about by contact in some way
of the two contingent forces. Modern
surgery is founded on this principle.
The carefulness with which we prepare
“ our hands and surgical instruments be
fore and after a surgical operation well
exemplifies the importance of a famil
iarity with its dangers in every sense.
“We recognize that many of our mi
crobio diseases, especially of the exan
thematic type, eliminate their toxic ele
ment very largely through the medium
of the skin, which undergoes extensive
exfoliation, disseminating the poison far
and wide. Isolation is resorted to and
enforced most rigorously, thereby check
ing the spread of the disease, and then
disinfectants lavishly used cause the de
struction of the offending armies. In
the era of scientific prophylaxis conse
quent upon the introduction of the mi
croscope, bacteriology and antiseptics
we find a steady decline of epidemics
either developing in the outer world or
in our hospital wards. Yet accidental
inoculations of tuberculosis, smallpox
and vaccinia, as well as more horrible
diseases, still exist and are but demon
strations of either an unavoidable cause
or a faulty observance of established
data.”
Dr. Breiter gives a thorough discus
sion as to what may be the result of con
tact of the hands. He declares that with
men who are of.cleanly habits, but who
have acquired disease and such as they
would wish to hide from their fellow
- * men, the specific bacillus of this disease
has been found in filth collected from
the hand. He has found tubercle bacilli
in the dirt taken from the hand of the
man suffering from tuberculosis, the
Klebs-Loeffler microbe among cases of
suspected diphtheria and had no doubt
that the specific germs of every microbio
disease may and would be found in mil
lions on the surfaces of the hands if
proper experimentation were made. He
proceeds as follows:
“Many victims of scarlet fever, both
in the early and desquamative stages,
especially the latter, are walking the
streets of every large city ready to in
graft upon the moist hand of any chance
acquaintance the prolific virus of the
disease. The same may be said of per
sons with pulmonary tuberculosis,
whose hands and handkerchiefs, through
constant wiping of the mouth, are foul
and saturated with the bacteria laden
expectoration of the disease. Tubercu
losis of the hand, the lesion large or
small in area, often painless and un
recognized as such for a long while and
perhaps untreated, is by no means an
infrequent occurrence. Scabies, we
know, has a marked predilection for the
hand. Need I mention others? Now
whether these conditions are the result
of hand to hand contact or not does not
matter. The conditions themselves are
dangerous elements, and it is the con
sideration of such factors in the causa
tion of disease that we are studying. ,
“Os course the mucous membrane
serves as a better pabulum for the inva
sion and development of micro organ- ,
isms, but. the skin is not absolutely neg
ative in that respect, and if it were it
would make little difference, as the
two, skin and mucous membrane, are ;
very often in close apposition with each ,
other. We know that the hand has car- (
ried bacteria to the mouthy disseminat
ing contagion in that way. Typhoid fe
ver, Asiatic cholera, diphtheria and oth- j
er diseases are known to have been pro
duced that way. Why search through ,
medical libraries for similar and per- ,
haps more conclusive evidence? The (
subject has passed the stage of novelty. ;
So while we professional people are by .
reason of our profession farced to invite
and then to battle—-for we have antisep
tics-—with these enemies, there is no
reason why we should unnecessarily and <
under the cloak of custom invite them i
and then leave them to do their harm. j
“Some may look upon this subject (
with derision. Nevertheless the truth is i
this: No matter how small the percent
age of evil consequences arising from c
this universal- handshaking, the total
number, in view of its extensiveness, i
mjust necessarily be great The subject <
is deserving of serious consideration. (
Conscientious physicians and surgeons f
will accord it. ”
Freddy's Fear.
They pass a plate of cakes to Freddy
at dessert He puts out his hand, hesi- <
tates, then draws it back and begins to i
weep.
I 1
“What ara.you crying for?” asks his
mother.
“Because you are going to scold me ;
when I choose the biggest one.”—Fi- j
garo.
AN EVERYDAY HEROINE.
T»ie Country Maiden, the Wicked Stare
Company and the raijor Mad . olrl .
Four reckless persons had clambered
into the stage, an old man, a middle
aged woman, a young man and a tailor
made girl At Fiftieth street a dress
maker's little girl struggled in with a
huge box. Town life was evidently new
to her Her rosy cheeks announced
country air to the least observing She
held her money in her band.
Looking dubiously about, she finally
spied the money box and dropped in the
coin. After this she waited expectantly
Nothing occurred, however, and she
began flushing and paling with nervous
indecision. At last she resolutely stood
up, attracted the driver’s attention and
called to him:
“How do 1 get my change? I put a
quarter in the box, ” she asked.
“Yese oughter a-handed it up, ” said
the man. “Yese can’t git it now.“
“But it’s all I have, ” protested the
girl.
“Git it off the new passengers, ” yell
ed the driver and turned away.
It was all the money she had, but
'how could she “get it off the new pas
eengers?*' Every one in the stage had
become interested, but no one volun
teered any advice. Two tears rolled
down the rosy cheeks.
The stage stopped, and an old lady
scrambled in. As she took out her mon
ey, a 5 cent piece, the tailor made girl
leaned over to her
“Willyon give me that for this little
girl?" she asked. “She dropped ih a
quarter by mistake, and the driver said
the new passengers might make it up to
her." ,
The old lady beamingly handed over
the nickel She felt that the stage com
pany was being rigidly but justly dealt
with at last - .
Then a man got in. This was harder
for the tailor made girl, but she made
the request again and handed’a second
fare to the grateful young person from
the country The whole stageful was
now interested watching for a new pas
senger as a spider watches for a fly. A
woman waved desperately from down a
side street for the stage to wait for her,
but the driver passed on unheeding and
exclamations of disgust arose. Another
corner, and another smartly dressed girl
got in. The new arrival did not seem at
first to understand the request, and,
flushing, the tailor made girl repeated
it and secured one more of the precious
5 cent pieces.
The little girl had reached her desti
nation.
“I am so much obliged, ” she murmur
ed to the heroic maiden who had been
taking up fares in h*er behalf. “I ought
to get out here, so I guess I’ll let the
other go. ”
“No, no, you must not,” said the fair
conductor, opening her purse. “Take
this and I can get it from the next one
who gets in. ”
“You are awfully good,” murmured
the unsuspicious little one with new
tears in her eyes, and one of the men
took the big box and handed it down to
her when she had stepped out
The stage rattled on and the tailor
made girl looked unconcernedly out of
the window. The next passenger was
allowed to drop his fare unmolested
into the box, unconscious- of the little
comedy that had brought the others to
gether in a common interest for a mo
ment, and the stage company was still
ahead of the game.—New York Sun.
AN EVENING WITH DICKENS.
How the Great Author and His People
Can Be Studied by Literary Clubs.
“For an evening with Dickens, ” ad
vises Fannie Mack Lothrop, writing of
“Evenings For Literary Clubs” in The
Ladies’ Home Journal, “one of the
items ’of the programme might be a
sketch of his life condensed into about
200 words. The Dickens drawings by
Charles Dana Gibson might be cut from
The Journal and bung up before the au
dience and the story of each character
and incident illustrated told. The trial
from ‘Pickwick’ could be arranged for
individual reading or for a number to
take part in it. A bright paper may be
written on ‘The People of Dickens’
World.' In Dickens’ works there are
1,550 separate characters, enough to peo
ple a whole village.
“Some of Dickens’ poems have been
set to musio—notably ‘The Ivy Green’
—and would make a pleasant feature.
Anecdotes of Dickens might be given by
ten or a dozen members, each giving
one. These might be interspersed
through the programme. A member
with any cleverness in photography
might make a series of Dickens’ lantern
slides from pictures in standard editions
of the novelist’s works and give a magic
lantern entertainment. .The death of
Paul Dombey would make a pathetic
reading from ‘Dombey and Son.’ Mrs.
Jarley’s waxworks, as described in ‘The
Old Curiosity Shop,’ could be given
with some of the members grouped as
characters in the famous show and des
ignated, as Little Nell did, with a
pointer.”
The “Gallery Gode."
The frequenters of the lofty gallery
of any theater have a good deal to do
with the making or marring of any new
play. Yet that is not how they acquire
their title of “gods. ” As a matter of
foot, the origin of the expression is this:
Years ago Drury Lane theater had its
ceiling painted to resemble a blue sky
with clouds, among which white Cupids
were flying in every direction. This
ceiling extended over the gallery, whose
occupants thus appeared to be very near
heaven. Hence the expression arose of
“gallery gods ” —London Answers.
All Quiet There.
“I’m glad to know, ” remarked Miss
Cayenne, “that Mr. and Mrs. Jinkies
are living far more happily than they
were formerly “
“Indeed?"
“Yes lam informed that they have
not spoken to each other for weeks. ”
London Tit-Bite.
A BULLET in his heart?
-
Churtaa Mellon Hm Thn» Uvml Stnoe July
1, and Ha May Bac >ver.
Charles Nelson’s heart wil cany weight
to the end of its race with th ie. An ounce
of lead is the handicap, and the moot dar
ing of surgeons would shake his head if
the South Side cyclist were to aak to be
relieved of bis burden and allowed to run
•ut his race like other men.
If three skiagraphs of the injured man’s
chest ean be trusted, the bullet which
pierced his breast on the night of July 1
in Washington perk lodged in the septum
of his heart—the fourfold partition of
muscular fiber that divides the interior of
that organ into auricles and ventricles,
right and left There it throbs up and
down 100,000 times a day, bidding defi
ance with every pulsation to the law made
of doctors that the touch of hostile metal
to a man’s heart brings death. For Nel
son has gone back to his boarding house,
and except for the pain attendant upon
the healing of the wound in the outer wall
of his thorax, be has nothing to remind
him of his excursion up to the gates of
death.
The three negatives all show the same
dense, black spot, which, according to Dr.
Otto Schmidt, who made them, marks the
location of the bullet which crashed full
into the sternum and lost itself in the
masses of muscle that lie just beneath.
The spot is not sharply defined and clear
in outline as are the shadow records usual
ly made by bits of metal when subjected
to the X rays. The Irregularity, experts
say, is certain evidence that the leaden
pellet is imbedded in muscular tissue,
whose movements blurred the image. In
two of the skiagraphs, the front view and
the back view, the shadow of the Bullet
falls in the same place—almost exactly in
the center of the thorax and almost mid
way between the ends of the fourth pair
of ribs.
In the profile view of Nelson’s thorax
the location of the black spot shows
that the bullet penetrated 2J< inches
of cartilage and muscle before it was
stopped. Where it entered the thorax,
the pericardium, which incloses the heart,
touches the sternum, itself less than an
inch in thickness. The only conclusion
that can be drawn, the surgeons say, is
that the other inch and a half of its path
was plowed through the fibers of the heart.
The extreme thickness of the ventricular
walls of the heart is one half inch, while
the walls of the auricles’are even thinner,
so that unless it lodged in the fibers of the
heart it would be impossible, the surgeons
say, for the lead to plunge forward an
inch and a half without puncturing one
of the cavities of the heart. That it did
puncture the wall of the heart at any
point in its flight Dr. Hall of the Chicago
hospital thinks unlikely because of the
relatively small hemorrhage Nelson suf
fered after the shooting and because of the
position of the bullet in the skiagraphs—a
little above a lateral line drawn through
the heart.
The theory that the bullet lodged in the
pericardium fft equally untenable. Dr.
Hall thinks—and the fact that the bullet
did not puncture either of the lungs, which
approach within an inch of the hole in the
sternum, proves—that it did not encounter
either of the side walls. About the only
place that it could have pushed even an
inch into the organ without rupturing the
wall beyond repair is at the junction of the
septa which separate the four chambers,
and this Dr. B. 11. Babcock, the heart spe
cialist, is inclined to regard as the proba
ble point where the bullet lodged. In the
normal heart the point where the septa
join usually flutters up and down midway
between the ends of the fourth pair of ribs,
just where the bullet plunged into Nel
son’s chest.
Dr. D. J. Hamilton, the Scotch surgeon
and pathologist, cites more than 50 cases
where rupture of the heart walls did not
result in immediate death. The most re
markable of all and the one that approaches
nearest to Nelson’s case is that of the prize
fighter Poole, who was shot In the heart
in New Jersey while battling with Baker
in 1855. He recovered, to all appearances,
in four days and wanted to finish the in
terrupted contest, but 12 days later he col
lapsed suddenly and died without recover
ing consciousness.—Chicago Becord.
The Union Jack.
Hoisted at the mlzzentop of a ship at
the same time as the flag of the lord high
admiral at the fore, it signifies that the
sovereign is aboard, white - an admiral of
the fleet hoists it at the main. It is then
property called the great union, as also
when displayed ashore. When flown from
a staff (hence called the jackstaff), it bo
comes the union jack, a name under
which the great union often passes. Again
it forms the jack of the seamen, which is
a flag bearing the colors of the union sur
rounded by a border of white, one-fifth
the breadth of the flag, and which, hoisted
at the fore, becomes a signal for a pilot,
and hence is often called the pilot jack.
The origin of the word “jack” is un
known. The meaning, as understood to
day, is “something shown,’’ and in" this
sense the application of the word is now
limited to the union flag. Some have
supposed it to be derived from the jack or
jacque, the tunic worn in early time by
meh at arms, those of Englishmen being
decorated with the cross of St. George,
which jackets, when not in use, were hung
in rows, side by side, thus displaying the
blood red cross which was at once their
banner and their shield. Others regard
the name as coming from that of the sov
ereign James (Jacobus or Jacques), who
was the first to hoist it as a national em
blem. Whatever its derivation, its mean
ing remains.—Good Words.
The Marechai Nlel Rose.
The Empress Eugenie gave the name
Marechai Niel to the lovely rose which
is so called. When General Niel returned
from the Franco-Prussian war, where he
had signally distinguished himself, a poor
man presented him with a basket of lovely
yellow roses. To perpetuate their beauty
the general had a cutting struck from one
of the blooms, and when a rose tree had
grown from this he presented It to the
Empress Eugenie. She was delighted
with the dainty gift, but was much sur
prised to learn that the rose was known
by no distinctive name. “Ab,” she said,
“I will give it a name. It shall be the
Marecbal Niel.” Thustbeempressachlev
ed two ends—named the flower and ac
quainted the general with the fact that he
had been raised to the coveted office of •
marshal of Francer— Philadelphia Ledger.
The Smiling Book Salesman.
A customer dropped into a bookseller’s
the other day and asked for a copy of “ The
Lady of the Aroostook.” The clerk seemed
to be in some doubt about tho title, but
after a moment’s consultation with an
other salesman he came forward and said
blandly, “So tony we haven’t got ‘The
Lady or the Booster, ’ but we can give you
‘The Lady or the Tiger.”’—Bookman.
FraaSM
A TALE,
r .
Aa Individ sal Who b Not a Kloodlkor
Tells a Story.
,“I*ve been hearing a great deal about
the cold weat ier that will drop down ou
Klondike miguty soon now,” remarked a
western editor tn Washington on business
of his own, “and I am sure they are going
to have a dreadful time of it, some of
them, before the spring freshets, but I am
•uro not a man among them will have a
aadder expert* neo with the cold than I did
in the winter of 1870. I was a printer in
St. Louis in the spring of that year, with
a little experience in editing a paper, and
there waa a chance for roe to go to a new
mining town that started up about 60
miles from Denver and start a paper, or,
rather, keep the one going that had been
started there by the chap who wanted me
to oome out and join him.
“There was adventure In it, and I was
younger then than lam now. So it waa
that in May I was the editor in chief of
The Blue Gulch Gazette, a weekly journal
of civilization, as we proudly announced
in our motto line, We did nicely all that
summer, and I enjoyed It, though I was
told It wasn’t so pleasant climatically In
winter. One of the attractions of the
office was a ‘devil’ that we had got from
the newsboy gang -lu St. Louis, and be
was the sharpest and brightest little cum
in the state of Colorado. He was about 14
years old, and be wouldn’t weigh over 60
pounds, but he was all nerve and muscle.
“Well, the first snowfall was in October
early, and the weather whacked around to
all points of the compass for the next six
weeks. Then it settled steady, and the
week before Christmas it looked as if we
were going to have a nice holiday Week,
but we were doomed to disappointment, for
three nights before the day the snow be
gan falling and a terrific blizzard swept
up through tho high walled valley in
which our town was located. Thirty-six
hours later, when we got up in the morn
ing, the town was snowed under, and
there was no getting around at aIL I sent
Snips out to see if he could bore through,
and he came back in half an hour with
something hot for us to eat, Snips and I
occupying a back room in the office and
boarding around. He told me he bad seen
two or three people at the restaurant who
had burrowed through a block or two, as
the snow was light, but how deep it was
none of them knew, as it was above the
roofs of the tvso story houses, the highest
we bad.
“Then a brilliant idea came to Snips.
“ ‘There’s our smokestack, major,’ he
said. ‘lt’s 47 feet by the measure and just
about the size for me to pull myself up
through by them wires inside of it, just
like I did when we fixed that guy. Lei
me swarm up to the top of it and see
where the snow comes to. I can do it
easy.’
“Well, gents,” concluded the western
editor, “I let him go, and he never came
back. I guess he must have fallen off of
the top some way ahd got smothered in
the snow or frozen to death or something.
Anyway, when the snow thawed down in
a rain that followed in a couple of weeks,
we found tho poor little fellow In the pure
white snow and as black as the ace of
spades from the soot that he had got on
himself climbing up in that smokestack.”
—Washington Star.
Turkish Artillery.
Artillery, which was very numerous,
was excellently horsed and gunned, but
poorly trained. Six cannon, 80 men and
60 horses were the complement of a bat*
tery. The guns were 7% centimeters (8
inch) Krupp-Mantell, all in first class con
dition, cased and clean, the limbers and
gun carriages of the ordinary, pattern.
The shell weighed 12 and the shrapnel 14
pounds, fired by time or percussion fuses.
The horses were for the most part from
Bussla or Hungary and ran bigger than
those of the cavalry. The men, recruited
from all parts of the empire, did the man*
ual part of their work well, but there was
very little technical skill, and a battery
had rarely more than one trained artillery
officer. Three batteries of horse artillery
armed with nine pounders were attached
to the cavalry division. These, however,
were short of spare horses, so the gunners
sat on the limbers and carriages. Accord*
ingly the speed was not very great. There
were also three batteries of mountain guns
on mules, first class weapons, but the gun
nets very slow. Eighteen howitzers came
up to Serflje, but were never brought any
farther, as there was no need for them.
Taking it all round, the artillery, un
like the cavalry, was a very strong arm,
but like the cavalry it was never made
sufficient use of—the best work being done
by the corps artillery, which acted under
the orders of Biza Pasha, who frequently
used to borrow divisional batteries when
he had need of them.—“ With the Turkish
Army In Thessaly,” by Clive Bigham.
Charles A. Dana.
Charles A. Dana, the editor of the New
York Sun, is on the high road to complete
recovery from his recent severe illness,
which was the result of overwork on his
return from Bussla. He Is now 78, and
bls father lived to the age of 87. All his
life Mr. Dana has taken intelligent care of
bls health, exercising and living well, but
on plain and wholesome food. When he
lived in New York, over 20 years ago, he
used to visit an up town riding academy at
very early hours, even before daylight in
winter time, when he could have the arena
altogether to himself, and ride furiously
until he had tired three or four horses in
succession. He would jump off a horse
going at full speed, run alongside and leap
into the saddle again like a circus per
former, and oould even stand upon the
saddle while going at a gallop, and at that
time he must have been at least 60 years
old.—San Francisco Argonaut.
His Answer.
A New Orleans man who wanted to be
a policeman and made preparation for ths
civil service examination found that he
had studied along tho wrong lines. He
determined to make use of his newly ac
quired knowledge, however, when be
came to a question that struck him as
absurd. The question was, “If a bullet is
dropped in a well and it takes five seconds
for it to strike the water, how tax la it
fiom thetopof the well to the surface of
the water?” The candidate answered:
“Heathen mythology says that when Jupi
ter kicked Vulcan out of heaven it took
him 47 days and 9 nights to fait If ao,
' bow far la heaven from Kosciusko, Miss.?”
—Exchange.
A Sensible Folleeman.
A St. Louis policeman, who had a war
rant of arrest against a woman for alleged
assault and battery, refused to imprison
her when he found it was directed against
a lady in the eighty-sixth year of her age.
He took her to n friend's house and secured
bail for her, and the prosecuting attorney,
when told that she was too old and feeble
to assault anybody, said he would revoke
tho warrant.-*-Xxchange.
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EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER, ■ a
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GKET YOUH—
JOB PRINTING
DONE JLT
The Morning Call Office.
w————
-
We have Just supplied our Job Office with a complete line ol BtationcTv
i kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way or
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Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained roe
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With Neatness and Dispatch.
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prompt attention
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MIL fl GEORGM DllW CT
Schedule in Effect Jan. 9, 1898.
"No.4~No.iz *>.»
Dally. Dally. Daily. era nows. Daily. Daily. Daily.
TsOpm 406pr0 710 am Dr Atlanta «.-...Ar TSpm u»am
8 pm 447 pm 898 am Lv.JonesboroAr Sftpm lOMam
• 15pm 6 30pm 912 am Lv Griffin Ar SlSm 90am
10 Is pm 881 pm 10 Uam Ar*.". Forsyth..7.7/1 6Mpo> 810 am
1110 pm 790 pm 1110 am ArMaconLv 415 pin 890 am
1219 km 810 pm 1208 pm ArGurdoaLv 804pS TMiam
7850 pm tip P-n ArMllledgevUle.. Lv MMarn
Basfe7--:7aeaak-:::::::-“W9a IMS
•Dally, teyoept Sunday.
Train for Newnan and Carrollton leaves Griflta at 9’5 am, and 1 s® p ® exeept
Bondar. Neturalmr. arrivea in GrlHn 620pm«ndl94tpm dally except Sunday. For
farther information apply to "
. 2TR. H. HINTON. Trefllo Manager, Savannah; Ge.
'7 ..