PAGE SIX
Physicians Do IXot Agree
On Lactic Acid Addition
, By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
IN THE ARTICLE published at
the beginning of this series, It was
ntntert that lactic arid should be sdd
•d to the milk. All physicians do
i
m 1 - ■ ■ 1 i
JJr. Clendening
from mo t h e r’s
milk. The purpose of adding lectir
arid has been to neutralize the buffer
substance in cow's milk bpfore It
reaches the stomach.
Many physicians, as I say, do not
agree that this is necessary, and It
should he said that whether or not
it. shoidd he used can he determined
only by trial. If the baby does well
without lactic arid In the milk, let
If alone. On the contrary, If it does
not do well without lactic acid, it
might he advisable to try it.
The method of using It Is to bring
a pint of milk to a hoil and then
allow It lo he thoroughly cooled. The
arum Is removed. One teaspoonful of
lactic acid is added, drop by drop,
while the milk Is stirred. The first
half of the arid may he added rapidly,
Wiley Post Flies to Help Warm Springs
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FAMOUS AVIATOR HELPS PRESIDENT'S BIRTHDAY BALL
Holder of the record for girdling
the globe twice, Wiley Post has
thrown his famous plane, the Winnie
Mae, into the nationwide rnovmeent
to honor the President on his birth
day, Jan. 30, by holding n hall in
every community in the nation to
help raise ar. endowment for the ex
par.sion of the nation wide work of
Starring in CWA Cast
&
Fuller Mellish Mrs. William Faversham
In accordance with the aims of the New Deal, steps have been taken to
provide for unemployed actors and actresses, under the CWA. Two o(
those enrolled, Fuller Mellish, once-famous Shakespearean actor, and
Mrs. William Faversham, wife of the former matinee idol, will appear in
plays tn he produced by New York Board of Education with $28,000
appropriated for the work. (Central Preea)
Bandits Who Led Prison Break
Bob Brady Jim Clerk
Leading five other convicts, Bob Brady and Jim Clark, desperate lifers
overpowered guard and escaped under fire from Kansas State Prison at
Lansing, Kan Ihe two desperados were ringleaders of break at sume
PfTu n ll Memorial Day, engineered by Harvey Bailey and Wilbur
Underhill. Brady is shown after being wounded in capture at that time,
a* (GWialPrejil
but the remainder musr be added
slowly. If the acid is mixed with
two or three ounces of water or with
water and corn syrup. It may he
poured in quite rapidly without form
ing large curds. It is Important that
the milk should he thoroughly cold
before the acid Is added.
Lastly, water must be added ro the
mixture becau.se the infant requires
a good deal of fluid. Most modern
physicians believe that it is not nec
essary to add as much water as was
formerly done. Water used to he
added to the mixture in equal partu
Nowadays most physicians neliev%)
that if half as much water as there
Is milk Is added, it will be sufficient.
This means that with an eight-pound
hnhy requiring about two ounces of
milk per pound a day, a pint of milk
is sufficient, and half a pint of water
should be added. This brings the
total amount of feeding for the day
to 24 ounces, and makes it easy to
divide it Into six feedings of four
ounces each.
When a hnby gets sick, water I*
abstracted from Its body very rapid
ly, and one of the most Important
items iti treatment is to see that
plenty of water is given.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Six pamphlets
by Dr. Clendening can now be ob
tained by sending 10 cents in coin, for
each, and a self-addressed envelope
stamped with* a three-cent stamp,
to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of
this paper. The pamphlets are:
“Indigestion and Constipation,” “Re
ducing and Gaining,” “Infant Feed*,
ing," “Instructions for the Treatment
of Diabetes," "Feminine Hygiene”
and “The Care of the Hair and Skin.”
not agree, how
ever, that this
method is valua
ble, or even de
sirable.
The purpose of
it is to render
cow's milk more
digestible. Cow’s
milk contains a
substance which
n c u l ralizes the
digestive acid In
the stomach, mid
hence retards di
gestion. This so
called buffer ac
tion is almost en
tirely absent
Warm Springs for Infantile Paraly
sis. Post visited several North Caro
lina cities during the week-end, be
ing greeted in Raleigh yesterday. On
the trip wiht him were Keith M. Mor
gan, of New York, a trustee of the
Warm Springs Foundation and Peter
.1 Cusnk, of New York, another nffi
< ijl of Warm Springs.
HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1934
5,000 Birthday Balls to Honor President January 30
Ami to Help Finance Fight on Infantile Paralysis
; 481 l
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GETTING READY FOR THE BIGGEST BIRTHDAY PARTY IN AMERICAN HISTORY
Every community in the nation will honor President Roosevelt when he becomes 52 years old on Tues
day, Jan. 30, by giving a local ball to help endow an extension of the nation-wide work of the Warm Springs
Foundation for Infantile Paralysis in ..which the Presi dent is so deeply interested. Upper left, the President
and his mother, Mrs. James A. Roosevelt, who bought the first box sold for the New York ball in the Wal
dorf-Astoria, upper center, Colonel Henry L. Doherty, chairman of the committee of leaders arranging the
observance of the President’s anniversary; upper right, the official poster .contributed to the movement by
the famous artist, Howard Chandler Christy; lower picture, child patients at-Warm Springs sharpening up
knives and appetites for the largest observance of the President’s birthday ever held at that health center.
The cake, weighing 344 pounds and said to be the largest birthday cake ever made, was presented lo the
children for their party by Chairman Doherty-
Where Presidential Dance Proceeds Go
11.
Where healing rays of the sun are given full play. President Roosevelt
In hundreds of cities throughout the United States, the birthday of President Roosevelt will be celebrated
on January 30 with dances in which every element of the communities will participate. I roceeds of the
affairs will bo turned over to the Warm Springs Foundation, beautiful sanitarium at Warm Springs,
La., for treatment of infantile paralysis. The President is keenly interested ia 0* sanitarium, at which
he was once a patient < Central Press)
As Cubans Acclaimed President Mendieta
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The sixth President to rule Cuba in six months, Carlos Mendieta veteran battler in the political arena, ia
pictured on the balcony of the Presidential P al .f. ce ’ pntanp „ f roup , su PPprters as he responded
Ui the wild acclaim of the populace following $ R f,” i£A h * I ?® ncy ' a favorite of all
parties, it if believed the rise to supreme power of Mendieta marks the end of Cuban turmoil.-
(Central Pr»ss)
Denies Spiritualistic Guide
, ' • Mrs. Irving T. Bush
“Three VuLtures” is the title of this picture which Mrs. Irving T. Hu h,
wife of New York financier, is exhibiting in the metropolis. One of eleven
along the same lines, it depicts two birds of. ill-omen and a money changer.
Mrs. Bush, who paints for a hobby and doesn’t sell her work, denies impli
cation’that she creates her subjects under guidance of a “spirit hand.”
'('Central Prt ss )
IN BIRTH CONTROL BILL FIGHT
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This photo shows Mrs. Thomas N.
Hepburn, left,’mother of Katha
rine Hepburn, movie actress, and
Mr-.. Margaret Sanger, right,
chairman of the Birth Control
convention, now in session in
Washington, as, they- appeared
with Representative W. Pierce of
Oregon, center, at a house com
ifuitee hearing on birth control.
Turns New Page in Career
fiPif r
•••'•'■* ‘
Burton Jacob Wm. Bray Thomas Phillip
Appointed secretary to Postmaster General Farley, proud William Bray,
who rises from the ranks of House pages, tells Burton Jacob and Thomas
Phillip, two pages of the younger generation, of his good fortune.
{Central Cress)
CUMMINGS QUERIED ON GOLD PLAN
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Senator Couzene
Attorney General Homer S. Cum
mings, right, is pictured as he-ap
peared before the senate banking
and currency committee in Wash
ington to explain the legality of
Opposing -Mrs. Hepburn, who ex
tolled the religious and medical
arguments in behalf of a new con
gressional bill permitting dissemi
nation of contraceptive informa
tion to physicians, Father Charles
E. Coughlin, Detroit radio priest,,
led the fight against the measure
in arguments before the com
mittee.
Attorney General Cummins*
President Roosevelt’s n*w gold
plan. He asserts there is no que*
tion of its constitutionality. Sen
ator James M. Couzens, of Michi
gan, is shown, left.