Newspaper Page Text
Ninety-four and Three-tenths Per Cent Effec
tive for Duty at All Times—Facts Give Tes
timony of Efficiency of Medical Corps.
i PARIS, May 24.--<Way back in the
sixteenth century the court coiner of
sing Louis XI, of France, having
)cuvmulated a substantial rake-off
through the unethical treatment of
the edges of Louis D'Or, built him
jelt a pretentious dwelling in a mod
pst quarter of Tours and settled down
n retirement.
The years passed and so did the
filner. But the house remained stand
g, as if waiting an opportunity to
Mface the memory of its shame by
jlendering service to nobler tenants,
That opportunity has come; the
mber walls, which once looked
wn upon the miser fingering his
id, today re-echo to the clattering
t‘h:;ltra.-modarn machines whose
echapical fingers register the very
Jsebeat of the A. E, F.
Here are the sick and wounded
¢ Ecotds of the American army-—4,300,-
0 cards that show its health, its
ounds and diseases, its deaths and
{ecoverles. It is all here, the entire
istory of the work of the medical
Epartment in France. And it is all
crder, thanks to the automatic tab
( ating machines and a diligent staff,
Ecmding members of the French no
lity and a Russian countess. '
There is one yardstick with which
P measure the work of an army’s
hedical department. What part of the
prrmy did it keep on the “effective”
ist? High and clear above all mis
lakes made, shadowing almost into
pbscurity all defects and blemishes,
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Why go limping around with ach-(draws the soreness and misery right
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ppur tortured fecet? torture.
“miz” makes your feet glow with Ask for “Tiz.” Get only’'“Tiz."”"—Ad
pmfort; takes down swellings and!vertisement,
—_—
N CEw %
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* J. W. Perkins of Atlanta, Georgia, : //, YRI
i writes: “I was afflicted with a very bad case * B -;/_‘,r':;,
of Eczema for 25 years, which was in my feet, 2 Qit i
legs and hips. Through all this time I tried N ‘7 P g
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Ayt
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Remember Hunt's Salve costs you nothing If you are not gatisfied,
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i. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Tex
Y Sold Locally by Coursey & Munn.
the record of the medical departmentl
of the American army stands out in
bold rellef as one of the great accom=
plishments in medical war history.
Healthiest in War's History,
Ninety-four and three-tenths per
cent of the American army was ef
fective for duty at all times, and of|
the 5.7 per cent on the nnm\l‘fovtlvv]
list only 3.4 per cent of them were SO |
rendered by disease.
This means that the American
army was the healthiest army in the
history of warfare.
But while the work of the medical
department, including as it does
both the ounce of prevention and the
pound of cure, is best reflected in the
general health of the army, its
capacity is put to the hardest test
when it must follow that army int
action, take up its maimed and
wounded, and then with all its re
sources of skill and science rostnro|
every possible man to the ranks. The
195,000 Yanks that the boche succeed
ed in one way or another in wounding
represented certainly the most direct
challenge that came to our medical
corps. It came straight from the en
emy’s guns and it was to be met in
tynically American fashion.
The medical corps is a noncom
batant organization, but it waged the
longest, hardest, . biggest = battle .of
the war—a battle for the lives of
those 195,000 wounded Americans.
And it is an American habit to win.
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, MAY 23, 1919.
British Cold
Bath Fetishl |
a CLISn IS |
$
Ended by War
y <
ONDON, May 24—The Brit- )
{sh fetish, the cold bath, has !
lost its attraction for sol- |
diers returning from France, The |
occasional baths they got in rest ¢
billets during the war were hot, )
and they soon acquired the hot- !
bath habit along with a distaste |
for cold water. One soldier who
used to be a cold-bath enthusiast, Q
says: {
“My experiments with cold ¢
baths since returning from the ;
front have made me wonder ¢
whether the habit is not really ¢
a pernicioug fad, and to (‘nm-lude)'
that I sur\svml it only because 1|
was broken into it when young ;
and resilient,
“The first cold bath I had at
home gave me the ‘blues’ all day.
the next gave Jne a stiff neck
and the third day 1 developed
rheumatism. They say the Brit
ish are a Class 8 nation physical=- ¢
ly. I wonder whether cold baths ‘j
have anything to do with it.”
Wives and servants are oppos- |
ing the new ‘hot-bath habit of re- 3
turned soldiers. Hot baths mean
the consumption of more coal and
require more work in preparation. %
B e
The lives of 182,000 were saved.
For many of those lost the battle
| was very close. In the days to come
| young America will hear very few
stories of the empty sleeve, because,
thanks to modern surgery and mndi-i
cine, there are very few Yaanks only
| with mpty sleeves or wooden logs,!
i but all America will read the history |
of the splendid work of the medical
corps in the 182,000 O, D. sleeves en
titled to wear wound chevrons.
72,723 Deaths to Date, !
The health and wound record of an
army meet in its vital statistics. To|
date there have been 72,723 deaths in|
the A. E. I, of which 32,392 were out
on the high field rendozvous, 13,420
of wounds and battle causes, 22,205
of disease, and 4,806 of accident and
other causes.
It will hardly fail to be recorded of
the American army that it was a sin
gularly clean fighting force. Its ve
nefeal rate has been decidedly the
lowest of any of the Allied or enemy
armies, varying from 57 to 34 a year
for each thousand of its men, and av
eraging less than 40 as a whole.
Typhoid, which used to be the great
scourge of armies, played a very in
cignificant part in the battle between
disease and the American army.
There have been only about 1,000
cases altogether and less than half a |
hundred deaths. Pneumonia replaced
it as the most dreaded of diseases.‘
At the time of the armisfice there
had been about 8,000 deaths from this
Gisease and influenza in the A. E. .|
Epidemic dysentery, although caus
ing only a very few deaths, at one
time pervaded our fighting forces to a
serious extent. |
This is the history of the A. E. F.
meical department. One can pry and
prod into every chapter, every page
of it, and spread details, many of
them of interest and importance, over
entire issues of papers and magazines,
tut the cold, bare facts unanswerable
remain.
Personnel of 146,750,
How was it made? That is a story
of the 15,690 officers, 8,587 nurses and
122,473 enlisted men of the medical
corps, of the 153 base hospitals, 66
camp hospitals and 12 convalescent
camps operated by them, of first aid
stations, of mobile, field and evacu
ation hospitals, of light ambulances
that sneaked up under the enemy's
fire and gathered in th ewounded, of
great hospital trains and river barges
that distributed them to all parts of
France, of great hospital cities wait
ing in the rear to take them in and|
nurse them back to health and happi
ness. |
The most obvious necessity of any!
army after food, clothes and guns, is
| Hospitals. When the A. E. I\ arrived;
|in France in sizeable proportions the
question of hospitals at once became
acute. France and England, with
their hundreds of thousands* of
wounded and sick, seemed to have
taken every available building, to be‘
using every apparent facility for hos
pitalization., By no means the least
creditable of the accomplishments of
the medical department was the
gradual expansion of a program of
hospitals designed to keep fully
abreast with our movement of troops
to France, until on November 11, 1918,
twe had 193,000 beds, capable of an
emergency expansion to 276,000 in
case of need. '
All Kinds of Edifices.
More than half, of the sick and
wounded of the A. E. F. were
housed in French buildings—casernes,
schools, public and private; libraries,
hotels, chateaux, .monasteries and
nunneries. They ranged all the way
from choice residences of imperial
foundation down to the more humble
municipal halls and common houses.
Perhaps the best known building in
France that housed d¢n American hos
pital was the Ecole de la Legion
d’Honneur, at St. Denis, five miles
from Paris. Here were received many
of the wounded from Chateau Thierry.
The great Haviland-China factory at
Limoges was first operated as a hos
pital by the French and later by the
Americans.
One hundred thousand volumes
were removed from the municipal
library at Orleans by hospital corps
men in order that cots might be set
up for wounded Americans. Many of
these volumes were of original parch
ment and written t? illuminated seript,
dating as far back as the sixth cen
tury. The library was one of the
buildings which the city of Orleans
and the French Government placed at
the disposal of the A. E. F. free of
rent. In the town of Vichy A. E. F.
hospitals operated in eighty-seven
hotels of that famous watering re
sort, while seventy more were em
ployed in and around the villages of
vittel and Contrexeville.
How Plans Were Expanded.
In those early days of the A. E. F.,
when everything was on paper, and
only a few thousand American sol
diers on French soil, we scurried about
to find 73,000 beds to take care of an
“For ten years I suffered severely
from stomach trouble. The doctors
said I had cancer of the stomach and
nothing would do but an operation.
1 took my last round of Mayr’'s Won
derful Remedy 2% years ago. Since
then I sleep well, eat what I want
and feel fine.” It is a simple, harm
léss preparation that removes the ca
tarrhal mucus from the intestinal
|tract and allays the inflammation
which causes practically all stomach,
liver and intestinal ailments, includ
ing appendicitis. One dose will con
vince or money refunded. Jacobs’
Pharmacy and druggists everywhere.
~—Advertisement,
army of 200,000, At the same time a
policy was approved which was to
provide hospital facilities for 10 per
cent of all troops and an additional 10
per cent for all combatant forces, The
chief surgeon, however, on June 1,
1918, recommend, and the commander
in chief approved, a procurement and
construction program based on a 15
per cent basis for all troops, not in
cluding mobile units of crisis expan
gion, with an additional side program
of 90,000 beds for good measure, to be
lprnvldod in monthly installments of
16,000, - (
| Two of the outstanding featvres of
American hospital work in France
have been the great hospital centers,
veritable cities of sick and wounded,
like, for instance, Mesves; with 25,000
beds, developed by the medical de
partment, and the special so-called
“rype-A" 1,000-bed hospital, a work
able model so planned as to simplify
and standardize all American-built
hospitals in France,
The Medical Department, like a
number of other services of the army
complains of lack of personnel, and
a lack so keen that at times it is said
to have threatened seriously the
functioning of medical work, It was
estimated at the time of the armis
'tlv.- that the department was short
3.604 officers, 6,925 nurses and 28,025
enlisted men. At that time there wags
a grand total of 147,157 officers, nurs
es and enlisted men in the corps in
Kurope.
| Speedy Arrival in 1917,
The Medieal Department was, per
haps, the best prepared service of the
army when the war began, due in part
to the general high plane of medical
and surgical development in the
States and®to the organization of
many university and medieal college
hospital units for Red Cross service
before we entered the war.
Jixactly one month and one day
after our deelaration of war an Amer
icam base hospital sailed for France,
and between May 8 and May 25, 1917,
six of these base hospitals left on
‘their mission of mercy. It may be
remembered that two nurses lost their
lives by the explosion of a defective
shell on board the Mongolia during
target practise on the way over in
May, 191%.
. On September 4, 1917, the first
| Americans wearing the American uni
form were killed by Germans, wnen
three enlisted men and one officer of
‘the Medical Department, serving in a
British hespital at Dau Camiers,
‘wero caudg\st in an enemy air raid.
L The transportation of sick and
wounded from the front was a prob
lem that followed closely in the wake
of the provision of hospitals and the
tporsonnel to run them. The use of
3,805 light Ford ambulances in the
There's Only One Genuine Corn-Peeler.
That's “Gets-It.”
There’'s only one happy way to get
rid of any corn or callus, and that’s the
painless-peel-off way. “Gets-It"” is the
only corn remedy in the world that does
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%2 drops of ‘Gets-It'~Corn is doomed.”
it that way—effectively, thoroughly.
Why get down on the floor, tie yourself
up into a knot, and have to fool with
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that rub off, sticky tape, and digging
knives and scissors, when you can peel
off your cocrn or callus in one complete
piece, peacefully and surely, with magic,
simple, easy ‘“‘Gets-It?”’ It takes 2 or 3
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M'f'é¢ by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago,
Ill.—Advertisement.
S
Nothing Like Plain Bitro-Phosphate to
Put on Firm, Heaithy Flesh and
to Increase Strength, Vigor
and Nerve Force.
Judging from the countless prepara
tions#and treatments which are contin
ually being advertised for the purpose
of making thin people fleshy, develop
ing arms, neck and bust, and replacing
e ugly hol-
P lows and
s R angles by
W the soft
A our Vel
¥ lines ot
i B . health and
y % beauty,
R ] there are
A. % % evident I y
'* A B, A % ousa
Noaßarnl =% 7Y ’ o anmds
R e 4 and chen
¥ ¢ ¥ g P and wom.
¥ én whop
. xd ia e | kcenly seq)
R their ex
g ¥ cessive
i ‘ “””,",“;SS
. 11 n-
R “f'»*‘sk and
T R # weaknes s
e m,j are usual-
GEORGIA HAMILTON. ly due to
starved
nerves, Our bodies need more
phosphate than is contained in modern
fogds. Physicians claim there is noth
iné that will supply this deficiency
so well as the organic phosphate known
among druggists as bitro-phosphate,
which is inexpensive and is sold by
Jacobs' Pharmacy stores in Atlanta and
most all druggists under a guarantee of
satisfaction or money back. By feeding
the nerves directly and by supplying
the body cells with the necessary phos
phoric food elements, bitro-phosphate
guickly produces a welcome trangfor
mation in the appearance; the increase
in weight frequently being astonishing
This increase in weight also carries
with it a general improvement in the
Hhealth. Nervousness, sleeplessness and
lack of energy, which nearly always
accompany excessive thinness, sgon
disappear, dull eyes besome bright, and
pale cheeks glow with the bloom of
perfect health. Miss Georgia Hamilton,
WI{O was once thin and frail, reporting
her own experience writes “Bitro-
Phosphate has brought about a magic
transformation with me. 1 gained 15
pounds and never before felt so well.”’
CAUTlON—Although Bitro-Phosphate
is unsurpassed for relieving nervousness
sleeplessnes wind general weakness, 1t
should not, owing to its remarkable flesh
growing properties, be use inyone
who does not desire to put on flesh,—
Advertisement,
battle areas, organized in companies
of twenty each, proved to be the best
solution of a part of the problem,
These were supplemented by the re
lay work of 3,070 G. M, C, truck am
bulances, The long distances back
to the bases were covered by hospi
tal trains. o
The Medical Department is the one
branch of the service for which the
war will end very slowly. On that
bright November morning when ring
ing of bells and happy voices pro
clabmed an nxgnimlce. 184,421 Yanks,
about one iA every ten in the A, K.
1., were sick or wounded in the hos
pitals of the A, E. F.
Thiaucourt, that once distinctly
uncomfortable home of brigades and
regiments of the Second Division, is
still an American town, but that is
because on its outskirts the cemetery
for the St. Mihiel area is being made,
each day witnessing the arrival from
the field of truckloads of coffing into
which the hastily buried dead of last
September have been gathered,
Still Life in Vigneulles,
Vigneulles, the little town in which
the converging American forces met
at dawn on General Pershing's birth
day, still boasts some road menders,
and from the desolate heights of Hat
tonchatel you can see American
guards supervising the work of our
prisoners who are quartered in the
old quarry behind the town.
But St. Benoit knows us no more,
and only a few French folk are left
to peer curious at the ruins of the
once sumptuous chateau which, to the
great horror of all the properly econ
stituted authorities, was occupied by
Brigadier-General Douglas MacAr
thur as his headquarters when it was
in the front line.
F POSITIVELY REMOVED
by
Venus de Mile Freckle Cream
A toilet requisite beyend ecompare,
acts as a skin tomic, assuring beau
tifu} complexion under xll conditions
Harmless, efficient and highty pleas
ing. Satiefaction assured in all ‘
cases. At Tollet Counters, or by mall |
65c postpaid. ‘
MILO LABORATORIES |
SAN ANTONIO, TEX. ‘
'
0 TR |
Many People Saved From the Grave by‘
Simple Treatment, 1
Read What BAUGHN'S PELLAGRA
Treatmeng Did for Mississippl
Woman,
Aberdeen, Miss—Mrs. Harriet Lowe,
of this place, writes: ‘I am more than
grateful to you for your valuable
Baughn's Treatment. 1 am doing fine
and can't say enough to your credit. 1
am quite sure 1 would have been in the
grave without it.”
Don’'t you suppose this letter made us
feel good to know we had saved a life?
Many, such lives have been saved by
Baughn'’s Pellagra Treatment. So sure
are we that it will cure Pellagra that
we supply the treatment on the basis
of refunding the money in case the cus
tomer is not cured. Your worst enemy
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with sore mouth, inflamed lips and
tongue, indigestion, nausea, diarrhoea
or constipation—the usual symptoms of
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American Compounding Co., Box 3103,
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booklet on r{f’”xlmam‘t\d\'(‘rti!if’”“‘l]‘
A Good Habit to Get Int
:—————_—_s
How much of this paper do you get full benefit from?
There is certain news which interests you. 'There are %
' special articles which you find valuable. But do you read
ALL the advertisements REGULARLY ?
Here is a source of opportunity for all our readers. These
merchants are sending their business messages to you
through this newspaper. And they want YOU to know
what they have to sell. .
Always look over these “messages” carefully whether
you want to buy anything at the time or not, Keep track
of what the stores and manufacturers are offering and
when some need does come up you will know just
where you can get the best value for your money.
Save the time and energy required to shop around from
one place to another. Know where you’re going and
what you're going for before you go. To know the best
stores, start now to get the habit of reading ALL the ads
in this newspaper every day. ;
The Atlanta Georgian and Ameri
Clean, W holesome Newspapers for Southern Homes ,
When Punished at 84
. .
He Commits Suicide
(By Internationnl News Serviee)
DAYTON, OHIO, May %4 - James Plers
pon, aged eighty-four, was confined, to
the detention ward for infraction of the
rules of the county home and he commits
teds suleide His only eapthly possession
wasa a watch and this he left to a little
boy who he said “furnished the only joy
he had" by playing a harp for him
—————————
Unsightly Hai
nsig y rair
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Only genuine DeMiracle has =
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ods No cutting and no detention from business. In treating these troubles 1 wil!
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. 2. as
Are You Contented to Remain a Tortured Victim of Disease ?
Hundreds of despon dent men, women and children that suffered agonies for months
and even vears have found health and happiness through my method of treatment. 1t
DR. SCHIRMER you ard suffering from Chronic or nervous Disease that does not respond to methods
used by others it is no cause for despair. Your case if properly treated should result
in a permanent cure, and I can convince you by the results obtained from the first
treatment or I will make no charge The opportunity to become healthy and strong is offered to every man
or womdn It costs vou nothing to investigate and have a thorough examination, First treatment free if you
are not convinced that 1 can cure your trouble
No Time As Good As the Present :
If you are weak and debilitated, no ambition, lifeless, tired mornings, memory gone and easily fatigued
excitable, irritable, lack of confidence or energy. If you have pains between the shoulders or small of the
back. If vou have specks before vour eyes, or are suffering from spells of dizziness. If you are nervous,
weak or unstrung, or if there is a drain on the entire system. If you suffer from indigestion, or are a victom
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It will pay you both in time and money to consult me and learn the truth about your condition before placing
yvour case with any one,
It has been stated that when all else fails CHIROPRACTIC is a sure refuge. Why wait until you have tried
everything else under the sun? Would it not be more economical, safer and surely more satisfactory to try
CHIRPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS first.
My scientific stimulation of the nervous system has become recognized by many prominent specialists as the
most scientific treatment, for resulls are noticeable in a few #reatments, a permanent cure is certain.
I have testimonials on file in my office showing where 1 have successfully treated hundreds of cases of Ca
tarrh, Asthma, Bronchial Trouble, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Neuralgia, Neurasthenia, Epilepsy, Chorea (St. Vitus
Dance), Paralysis or any form of Heart, Stomach, Bowel, Liver, Kidney or Bladder Trouble, Gall Stones, Varicose
Veins.
. . . {
Consultation and Examination Free.
407-8-9-10-11 Silvey Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
TELEPHONE IVY 7254.
Hours: 901;3to 7. Sundays, 9 to 2. Holidays, 9 to 2.
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