G- TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 19, 1920 j) j i How Prof. Dandy Located it " U', o Wfi the Aid of a Brain ' V S;VI-: Chart. and Cured Two p- f r leptics Simply by Removing I 1 !'. N f ) (l J ) the Offending Bubble from ( ' V ' ( :: the Brain. 1 J if' M y 1 The skull la trephined over the spot wk ' "" tlie bble U kn ' ' SyS' II - SgSs"" rJ"'"" '"""'''i "'li a Km soon the (koll bone la opened the X 1 II , "J i ' f v) WaywZr' exact location of the babble can be seen "V ' I ' J f -J,ja;vV :. 1 M ( ''SSfcw''lS. under the mrmbrinroai covering of the con-. j r.fjf 'i j irpJ t - yv -v' . Sines the recent announcement at I Johns Hopkins university. Baltimore, of the discovery of a cure for epilepsy, much anxious Inquiry nas been made to the uni versity authorities regarding: the nature and merits 5T the cure and eepectally the after-effects upon the patient. This was to be expected when we consider that ac cording; to the latest medical satlstics there . are almost 104,000 epileptics In the United States to whom, until very recently, prac tically no hope of a cure could be offered Dr. Walter B. Dandy, one of the surgeons attached to the universtty staff, operated on two epileptics several weeks ago with results which now are declared fully to have established the curative efficacy of his discovery. What Dr. Dandy did was, after all; very simple. He opened the skull of each of his two patients at the precise spot where as he knew, he would find a very little secretion of matter. This secretion had formed a pocket between the top surface of the brain and the Iove-llke covering, otherwise the membrane, which fits tightly over the brain itself. A section of the membrane surrounding thle secretion, which for want of a better term may very aptly be called a bubble, was tnrown back, exposing the brain itself and the tiny bubble to which the epilep tic's condition was attributed. The bubble was carefully removed and the affected part treated with Iodine. In each case the patient's skuli hea-led very quickly and no a synvptom of epl lepecy has been manifested since. On this page today Dr. L. K. Hlrshberg of Johns Hopkins university explains in detail the important stages In each of these remarkable cases. Dr. ' Hlrvhberg was one of the privileged spectators when the operations were performed and he had an excellent opportunity to study the prog ress of each case. It may be asked how Dr. Dandy knew that he would find the tiny bubble at some exact spot on the brain's surface. The accompanying sectional view of the upper portion of a head will aid in answering that question. The figure Inside the brain serves as a guide to the physician In locat ing the bubble. Epilepsy does not affect all alike. Sometimes It can be traced to ' the head, at other times to the feet or the hands. And the head, feet and hands of the figure Indicate relatively the par ticular portion of the brain In which the offending bubble has formed. BT DR. LEONARD KEENS HIRSCHBERG. A. B . M. A.. M. Tt. (Johns Hopkins university, j Q PASMS, or epileptic attacks, have now been apparently cured at Johns Hopkins hospital. You need only Imagine what might have hap pened to change the map of the world if Napoleon had been cured of epilepsy. Numerous other famous historic characters were afflicted throughout their lives with grand mal or petit mal, different stages of epilepsy, or convulsions. mere are so many epileptics In the world that several states, notably New York, have established colonies lor them. Epilepsy In popular speech Is called "spasms," "fits," "seizures," "attacks,1 "convulsions," "onsets," "grand mal, "petit mat," and similar names. oo-cauea attacks ot hysteria, or cysteric convulsions, are sometimes true epilepsy. when they are not appears to be when they are due to some disorder of the glands such as the thyroid. v pituitary, adrenal, or gonads. True epilepsy is divided into three varieties, all really degrees of "the same malady: 1 With muscle spasms and uncon Bciousness called "grand mal." , 2 With muscle contractions and. no unconsciousness. 1 J With a fleeting moment of un consciousness and no muscular fits, petit mal. While there are many differences in each individual's form of epilepsy as a rule the grand mal or majo epilepsy begins with some muscle . twitch of a particular member, finger, ankle, eyeball, or a spot, which if carefully sought can be found. Thence, almost instantly, the twitch lag spreads, like the eddies from a pebble In a pond and becomes vulslon of all the muscles. This is accompanied, or followed, with exception of the type - called Jacksonian epilepsy, by, loss of con sciousness. Then come hours of sleep, coma, or drowsiness. At this time somnambu lism and other acts not recalled in more wakeful, alert hours, may take place. Martin Luther used to throw ink wells during this time of his spells, and some epileptics have thus shot and injured their best friends. The tongue and lips are bitten, the saliva becomes a froth and the eyes may roll in uncanny fashion in the midst or an attack. Petit mal has all the signs, ex cept the fits or spasms. It is more a yss of consciousness for a fleeting. asaing moment. Remedies, treatments, method, of relief and operations for the Improve ment of epilepsy have hn .,., lnce the time of Moses and i,rnr. It was known in days of old as "the falling sickness." However, the law of medicine, which - 4 I'icie are many cures a disease, there is none." holds as well for epilepsy as for "colds." rheumatism" and cancer. That I it hold until Professor Walter E. i for did anay appeared before the Johns Hopkins hospital medical society and announced, as the bulletin of tn Johns Hopkins hospital says, "The rresentation of Two Cases of EdI- lepsy Apparently Cured by a New norm of Operative Treatment," by Dr. Walter E. Dandy. The announcement in simplified English instead of medical phrase ology means this: The two patients were presented to the Johns Hopkins medical society order to demonstrate the results of a new treatment for epileDsv. From observations made at nu merous operations upon the brains of epileptics , I have come to the conclusion that epilepsy Is due to a definite Injury of the brain and am encouraged to a hopeful out look for its treatment." The first patient cured In this way is a miner, 34 years of age. Until the onset of his present illness, epilepsy, he had always been quite well. Briefly his illness may he stated this way: Six months ago, without any warning, he was suddenly seized with a convulsion, which began in the right half of his tongue, the right side of his face, thence passing down the right arm and leg, and soon spreading to all of his muscles as typical fit or spasm. '. He was unconscious for probanly a few minutes, and after he recovered his. speech was affected, his leg and right arm weak. Thereafter, these had disappeared and he had many petit mal attacks. These have been many and frequent. After he came under the care of Dr. ijunay, ine ins continued and were often only three minutes apart. in fine, he had about 250 attacks In the 24 hours, because they wer maintained even in sleep. It was finally decided to "trephine, or open the skull and explore the left half of the brain because each hemisphere controls the opposite side of the person and look for something wrong over the part where the fibers are most closely crowded and which go to the tongue and speech muscles. There, sure enough', it was discov ered that the bag or membrane which fits the brain like a glove, was thick ened, opaque and bulging as if fluid were present. Beneath this thickened spot there was a considerable accumulation of lymph or jelly-like fluid with a pale lemon-yellow tint. When this membrane called the "pia-mater" or meninges was pricked and the liquid in it allowed to es cape, it was entirely plain to the sur geons that the underlying brain spot had been softened much as a spot In the skin of an orange is softened by a mold. Around and below this tiny area of brown softening it was evident that the brain was all right and in all respects healthy and normal. The entire affected area of the brain and the membranes which cover it, might, with the fluid In it, be called a cyst or sac two Inches square or so. The sharp and easily discernible de lineation of the area diseased or in jured in this epileptic could be made out even by the inexperienced eyes of the nurses and others present at this ingeniousoperation. "There could be no doubt." says Dr. Dandy, "that such a sharply marked out spot, so precisely located must have a causative connection and bear ing upon the production of the fits or spasms. "A sore of this nature on the brain is to be found in most victims of epilepsy." . It is frequently localized, although the sore involves serious epileptics, the entire surface of the brain may be damaged. The figured diagram of the brain which amides the operating snriceon In locating the brain babble before he commences to cot through the skull. 8 The membrane Is hlnsrcd back exposing the bubble which la Immediately removed. It seems probable that direct Impli cation of the brain' fibres is re sponsible for the convulsions and epileptic seizures. The fluid and its pressure may Incite the attack. Dr. Dandy worked on this plan and ob literated the cyst. From experiments n animals he found that iodine efficiently ob literated the space. ' In this patient the fluid areas were opened-with a sterilized needle, the fluid released and the spaces injected with iodine. The action caused ad hesions in a few days and - a permanent healing up and closure of the cyst. The day after the operation the patient had his last epileptic -fit. Since then, three months and more, he has had notthe semblance of any. He Is well. s Some time ago Dr. Dandy used this operation for the first time on a boy, 8 years old, afflicted with fits. He had had four or five attacks daily for sev eral years before the operation. He has not had one since. Here then, at last, there Is a cure for some sufferers of epilepsy. All that is needed is a correct diagnosis and localization of the spot on the hrain affected. ZORN RISES FROM PEASANT TO MASTER OF PORTRAITURE As Boy in Sweden, Great Painter Used to Carve Animals From Wood and Color With Berry Juice While Tending Sheep. A deln. Kansas City Star. PEASANT boy used to sit among the white-stemmed birches in the province of Dalcarlia, Swe carving horses and dogs out of wood, glancing up occasionally to see that the flock of sheep he was tend- ng did not stray far away. He col ored the little images with huckleber ry Juice. A friend of the boy'a father saw the ! wooden statuettes and said the boy shrould learn to draw. He should be a sculptor, said the friend. But the boy had other plans. After studying for a while at a small art school, he decided that sculpture did not lend itself so readily to his needs as, the purple- hued horses and cows he had carved out ot wood while he watched the sheep at home. Anders Zorn was only 1$ then, but in the untaught peasant bdy was the same spirit of independence and- the same love of color that made .him the greatest portrait painter of his time well as a pathfinder in the field of color, a valiant figure in the world of art, able to stand alone and to fight tor the new ideas he brought into it. Beauty of Color Tanght. When he died a few days ago 'In Stockholm, Zorn may be said to bave completed his life work, for he had made the world rtcher by such a vision of color as nobody dreamed of SO years ago. His pictures form a pageant of such brilliancy that it has dazzled the eyes of one generation and taught the eyes of another to de mand color. Born in 1860, his genius found ex pression and recognition so early that by the time he was 22 he was away on his travels, stopping in Spain to paint dark Castilian beauties and in England to render in water color bright-cheeked Anglo-Saxons. He re turned to Sweden and married. Up to 1887 he had painted exclusively In water color. After that he painted al together in oils. He was painting in the United States in 1893 and exhibited anentire room of his pictures at the Chicago world's fair. The portraits of society women did not create such a stir as. a certain Parisian scene in which a woman was about to step from the curb Into a waiting omnibus. The cross-currents of light as they fell on the persons in the vehicle and on the woman's bright raiment startled by their Intensity and realism, but they were admired, as were also tbe dar ing nudes which many predicted would not be admitted to an exhibition in a land noted for its puritanical attitude. Ideas Are Vlgorena. Zorn was as vigorous in his ideas as he was in his drawing. He was in duced to talk a little about America when he returned to Sweden. He ad mired Wlnslow Homer for his land scapes andsea pictures, Simmons for his decorative motifs and Cecilia Beaux in portraiture. But he had no faith in women as artists. "Wom en." he said, "can never be quite in dependent in such work. They must have something stronger to lean against. Why? Dear me, are you not content with the statement of the fact women are women?" Once, while painting old King Oscar of Sweden, with whom 'he sometimes went yachting, the monarch,' who de lighted in verse writing, asked Zorn whether he would be disturbed if some original poetry were read to him. "Not at all." replied the painter. Whereupon the king read some of his verses and concluded by asking: "Well, what do you think of it?" "I think It is a lot of rot," said Zorn, without hesitation. "But it was I who wrote It," re torted the royal sitter. "How could I tell that?" answered Zorn without the slightest concern. In spite of the disappointment he must have felt, the king remained one of the painter's constant admirers. For years he maintained a studio in Paris, where he made an extraordi nary etching of Ernest Renan and painted the bright world as It passed, sometimes in the form of portraits of great personages, but oftener in the vivacious faces of women who seem to have been glimpsed casually. Returning again to Sweden, he painted the lovely northern types, chiefly peasant girls with their bright eyes and dazzling complexions and their kerchief head coverings. The originality of his style made every subject exceptional. By a great num ber of seemingly random lines In his etchings and by a similar method in the use of color, he obtained effect surpassingly luminous, spirited and unfailingly interesting. Whenever any dispute arose con cerning his work, Zorn displayed a vigor of speech and a capacity for fighting that never failed to win a victory. One such dispute arose over a picture of King Gustavus Vasa, a j portrait at the University of Upsala, believed to have been painted in 1542,1 and the only authentic portrait of! that Swedish hero. It Is on the Swed- lsh banknotes. Zorn was employed to restore it. Ontery Follows Restoration. After he finished his work on It a great outcry was raised in the Swed ish press,' which alleged Zorn had completely spoiled the picture and that the restored Gustavus Vasa is nothing like the old Gustavus Vasa. Zorn explained that the old picture itself wasn't the genuine one, as he discovered in the process of restora tion that it had been painted over and the true original appeared under neath. This happened to show an entirely -different face, so that the Swedes apparently had for centuries been under a delusion as to how their great warrior king looked. The artist was a great admirer of the American nation as proof of which he gave $25,000 to a fund to enable Swedish scientists to pursue their studies in the United States. He became immensely wealthy and retired to a chateau which he built near Stockholm and filled with treas ures ot art. There he occupied a lovely woodland studio and from there he dispensed numerous benefactions. His gifts on behalf of poor children were always princely, one of them taking the form of a children's home in his native village, built at a cost of $50, 000. TURKS WILL RAZE ST. SOPHIA TO KEEP MOSQUE FROM GREEKS Nationalists Have Mined Structure Is Rumor Moslems Fear Foes Will Take Church by Force and Restore Christian Character. Big Pearl Harvest Expected. PAPEETE, Tahiti. Pearl diving opened at Hlkueru. Paumoto islands, on the first of August. Practically every boat here has sailed for Hi kueru, loaded with articles which will be traded for the shell and pearls of this year's diving. Divers this year expect to reap a big harvest as the oyster beds have not been molested since early in the war. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. IS Pass ports are now demanded of visitors seeking to enter Saint Sophia, and any Christian who cannot establish the fact that he Is neither a Greek nor an- Armenian is not ad mitted. Since the Greek advance eastward into Anatolia and the boast of Greeks that they will recover Saint Sophia within a year, Moslem authorities bave doubled the guard about the great mosque and take Bpecial pre cautions to prevent Greeks and Ar menians from entering. There are many rumors in Constan tinople, probably all of them ground less, that Greek troops will take the church by force, regardless of peace conference rulings, eliminate the Mos lem alterations from its Interior and restore the Christian character im parted to the historic building by the Emperor Justinian when the present building was erected under his direc tion in the sixth century. Turks havedeclared they will dy namite the mosque before they will permit it to be , desecrated by the Greeks, and spice is added to life in Constantinople by recurrent rumors that . the Turkish nationalists have mined Saint Sophia and many other important buildings preparatory to razing them before a Greek advance Into' the Turkish capital. Such an advance is not regarded as improb able. The ability of the Constanti nople government to enforce the terms of any treaty Is questionable as long as Mustapha Kemah controls practically all the remaining frag ments of the Turkish army and re fuses to take orders from the sultan. Greece has the only troops which could undertake further punitive measures and might reasonably be expected to demand Constantinople as the reward for additional military operations. In spite of the boast of Russians in Constantinople that the Turkish cap ital and Saint Sophia will eventually fall into their hands as a result of the dissensions among the entente pow ers, the Turks show no disposition to bar Russians from their most historic mosque. Every afternoon hundreds of Russians frequent the great shrine Cossacks in their fantastic long skirted black coats embellished with rows of Ivory-tipped cartridge cases: Caucasian princesses, gay In bright colored Parisian gowns: tight-belted Tartars, with their quaint curved swords; peasant women In their cheerful hand - embroidered head shawls and aprons, and Denikine's wounded soldiers all mingle freely with the Moslem worshipers. The Moslems treat Russians with the same indifference displayed toward British and French soldiers and American sailors and relief workers who wan der through the majestic mosque and are shown by nojsy guides how the Christian angels' and the mosaics of Jesus and the Virgin Mary were cltfm sily concealed by the Moslem artists who turned the Christian sanctuary into a house of worship for Islam. The Turks do not love the Russians. Neither do they hate them. No Chris tiau is loved by a Moslem, but the power of the Turks to hate is ex hausted on the Greeks and Arme nians. They .regard Russians as -a lesser evil than the Greeks. Any Turk one meets in Constantinople frankly says he would accept Russian .control of Constantinople in prefer ence to Greek domination. And he says it with a full realization that Russian domlnationV would probably mean bolshevik domination. Mother's Sweet Boy Explains. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. "Freddy, do you know what became of that piece of cake that was left on ' the tray?" asked mother. "Yes. mother." replied Freddy in the sweetest of tones. "I gave it to a little boy who was so awfully hun gry." "That was good of you. Who was It?" "It was me, mother." Flaked Fruit Is Latest. KELOWNA. B. C. A new industry is being started here for the manu facture of a product known as flaked fruit, which is claimed to be superior to the evaporated article.