ILLUSTRATIONS
[DR. CHARLES HARRINGTON, SECRETARY OF THE MASS STATE BOARD OF HEALTH]
[DR. THOMAS DARLINGTON, COMMISSIONER OF HEALTH FOR NEW YORK CITY]
[DR. CHARLES V. CHAPIN, SUPERINTENDENT OF HEALTH IN PROVIDENCE, RI]
[DR. JOHN N. HURTY, SECRETARY OF THE BOARD OF HEALTH IN INDIANA]
[DR. GEORGE W. GOLER, HEALTH OFFICER OF ROCHESTER, NEW YORK]
[DR. J. MERCIER GREEN, HEALTH OFFICER OF CHARLESTON, SC]
[THE SCAVENGERS OF CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA]
[CAROLINE WALKED AHEAD, HER CHIN WELL UP, HER NOSE SNIFFING PLEASURABLY THE UNACCUSTOMED ASPHALT]
[YOUNG GIRLS ... CANTERED BY; THEIR LINEN HABITS ROSE AND FELL DECOROUSLY, THEIR HAIR WAS SMOOTH]
[THE STANDING CROWD CRANED THEIR NECKS, AS DELIA SAT UP STRAIGHT AND HELD OUT HER ARMS]
['WHO—WHO—WHAT IS THE MEANING OF THIS?' HE WHISPERED HOARSELY]
[HENRY IRVING AS CARDINAL WOLSEY IN "HENRY VIII."]
[ELLEN TERRY WITH HER FOX-TERRIERS, DUMMY AND FUSSIE]
[AUGUSTIN DALY AND HIS COMPANY OF PLAYERS]
[JOHN DREW AS PETRUCHIO IN "THE TAMING OF THE SHREW"]
[ADA REHAN AS KATHARINE IN "THE TAMING OF THE SHREW"]
[JOSEPH JEFFERSON AS RIP VAN WINKLE]
[CABLE THE PRESIDENT! WHAT A JOKE!]
[THE CIRCLE CLOSED IN AS THE SEA SURGES UP UPON THE LAND]
[HE GRINNED AND WINKED AND FRISKED AND CAPERED]
['OH, YOU DIVVIL, YOU! YOU OLD, BLATHERSKITING DIVVIL']
[HE SAT STARING INTO THE BLANKNESS OF THE LITTLE ROOM]
[JOHN POTTER STOCKTON, THE DEMOCRATIC SENATOR FROM NEW JERSEY]
['I'VE BEEN FOLLOWING YOU EVER SINCE YOU LEFT YOUR OFFICE,' HE SAID]
['IT'S A DESPICABLE LETTER,' SHE TOLD HERSELF]
['HOW DO YOU SUPPOSE I FEEL, BEING IN THIS POSITION—TO YOU?']
[SECTION OF A REDWOOD FOREST IN CALIFORNIA, SHOWING WASTEFUL AND DESTRUCTIVE METHODS OF LUMBERING]
[THE EFFECT OF EROSION ON A HILLSIDE FROM WHICH THE FOREST COVER HAS BEEN REMOVED]
[THE SAME HILLSIDE AFTER TWO YEARS OF CAREFUL AND SYSTEMATIC GRAZING]
[HERD OF SHEEP GRAZING UPON A NATIONAL FOREST]
[KITSAP, THE CLERK, DONNED THE TRIBAL FINERY OF HIS ANCESTORS]
[ON ALL SIDES THE HOP-PICKERS WERE MAKING MERRY]
[PICKING PROGRESSED TO AN END, AND THE INDIANS HELD THEIR LAST FEAST AND DEPARTED]
[STOOD THERE LEANING AGAINST 'DADDY'S' SIDE]
[IT WAS SWEET TO BE CHAFFED, TO BE HEEDLESSLY YOUNG ONCE MORE]
[SHE CREPT OUT UPON THE LANDING OF THE STAIRS, AND SAT THERE DESOLATELY ON THE TOP STEP]
[SHE TOOK THE PISTOL FROM HIS RELAXED HOLD]
['THEY'LL GET FULL OF EARTH AGAIN,' SHE PROTESTED]
Copyright, 1908, by The S. S. McClure Co. All rights reserved
Copyright by Arnold Genthe
GUARDIANS
OF
THE PUBLIC HEALTH
BY
SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS
John Chinaman is the logician of hygiene. To his family doctor he says: "I pay you to keep me well. Earn your money." Let him or his fall sick, and the physician's recompense stops until health returns to that household. Being fair-minded as well as logical, the Oriental obeys his physical guardian's directions. Now, it may be possible to criticize certain Chinese medical methods, such as burning parallel holes in a man's back to cure him of appendicitis, or banging for six hours a day on a brass tom-tom to eliminate the devil of headache; but the underlying principle of "No health, no pay" is worthy of consideration.
This principle it is which, theoretically, we have adopted in the matter of the public health. To our city, State, or national doctors we pay a certain stipend (when we pay them at all) on the tacit understanding that they are to keep us free from illness. With the cure of disease they have no concern. The minute you fall ill, Mr. Taxpayer, you pass into the hands of your private physician. No longer are you an item of interest to your health officer, except as you may communicate your disease to your fellow citizens. If he looks after you at all, it is not that you may become well, but that others may not become ill through you. Being less logical in our conduct than the Chinese, we, as a people, pay little or no heed to the instructions of the public doctors whom we employ. We grind down their appropriations; we flout the wise and by no means over-rigorous regulations which they succeed in getting established, usually against the stupid opposition of unprogressive legislatures; we permit—nay, we influence our private physicians to disobey the laws in our interest, preferring to imperil our neighbors rather than submit to the inconvenience necessary to prevent the spread of disease; and we doggedly, despite counsel and warning, continue to poison ourselves perseveringly with bad air, bad water, and bad food, the three B's that account for 90 per cent. of our unnecessary deaths. Then, if we are beset by some well-deserved epidemic, we resentfully demand to know why such things are allowed to occur. For it usually happens that the virtuous public which fell asleep with a germ in its mouth, wakes up with a stone in its hand to throw at the health officer. Considering what we, as a people, do and fail to do, we get, on the whole, better public health service than we deserve, and worse than we can afford.