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June, 1926 The Health Buixetin 25 Have you thought about why children should obey their parents? Some parents obey their children. Such children are apt to grow up to think the world is going to give them everything they want. When they learn differently, it is bitterly hard for them. Some never learn, and in taking what they want, become the people whom the law has to take in charge. Some children obey their parents too well. They are not allowed to think for themselves at all and grow up to be helpless men and women who always need some one to tell them what to do. Is it not a far better thing to teach children to obey the right? For a while they must trust you to tell them what the right is (and you must be very sure that your commands are right and fair and for the child's real good), but as they grow older they ought, each year, to be better able to know what is right for themselves. Are you giving your children that right? {PuUic Health, Mich.) HYGEIA—MAY, 1926 Hygeia is published under the direction of the American Medical Association, and its purpose is to disseminate information about matters of health. The following reviews are of articles appearing in the current issue.— (Editor,) Output is Greater When Factory Hands Drink Milk Sauce for the gosling is sauce for the gander. Since school children have been found to thrive and gain weight and do more efficient work when they have a mid-morning lunch of milk, many factories and several business firms have tried the same plan for the adults in their employ. The results have been most encouraging. The workers no longer get hungry in the middle of the morning, slow down in their work and watch the clock; nor do they sneak down the fire escape for soda water. They use less tobacco, the working day seems shorter, and the work is more efficiently done. Greater productiveness and less sickness are results that will appeal to the executives, even if the altruistic motive of promoting greater happiness through greater health fails to touch them. VThy Cod Liver Oil is Recommended For Baby Almost every one knows that cod liver oil should be given to babies to prevent rickets and insure proper growth of the bones. However, the question of which cod liver oil to give is perplexing many. Investigation has shown that Norwegian oil is no better than the oils from Newfoundland. Oils from the livers of such fish as pollock and haddock contain as much of the vitamins as oils from cod liver. Vitamins have not yet been isolated in pure form. The codfish get their vitamins from the smaller fish they eat, which in turn get it from another sea growth, the plankton, whose diet consists of microscopic bodies which have the ability to create vitamins. Specialist Tells Method of Taking Cinder from Eye Don't rub your eye when you get a cinder in it. It may feel better if it is rubbed, but the cinder is apt to be worked deeper into the tissues of the eye, and it will be much more difficult to get it out. The cinder may lodge on the conjunctiva, the delicate membrane lining the inside of the lids, or it may stick to the tissue covering the front of the eyeball called the cornea. In the latter case, its removal is difficult and should not be attempted by any one except a physician. There is great danger of infection entering through the hole made on the cornea by the cinder, which may result in impaired vision or even loss of the eye. Therefore the only
Object Description
Rating | |
Fixed Title * | NCHH-04: The Health Bulletin [1914-1973] |
Document Title | The Health Bulletin [1914-1973] |
Subject Topical | Public health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Public Health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Contributor | North Carolina. State Board of Health. |
Publisher | Raleigh, North Carolina State Board of Health. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1926 |
Identifier | NCHH-04-041 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 41 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-04/nchh-04-041.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-b; nchh-04 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-04-041 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-04 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb1296443 |
Description
Fixed Title * | Page 25 |
Document Title | The Health Bulletin [1914-1973] |
Subject Topical | Public health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Public Health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Contributor | North Carolina. State Board of Health. |
Publisher | Raleigh, North Carolina State Board of Health. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1926 |
Identifier | NCHH-04-041-0159 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Page Type | all; report/review |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Filename | healthbulletinse41nort_0159.jp2 |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 41 |
Issue Number | 6 |
Page Number | 25 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Full Text | June, 1926 The Health Buixetin 25 Have you thought about why children should obey their parents? Some parents obey their children. Such children are apt to grow up to think the world is going to give them everything they want. When they learn differently, it is bitterly hard for them. Some never learn, and in taking what they want, become the people whom the law has to take in charge. Some children obey their parents too well. They are not allowed to think for themselves at all and grow up to be helpless men and women who always need some one to tell them what to do. Is it not a far better thing to teach children to obey the right? For a while they must trust you to tell them what the right is (and you must be very sure that your commands are right and fair and for the child's real good), but as they grow older they ought, each year, to be better able to know what is right for themselves. Are you giving your children that right? {PuUic Health, Mich.) HYGEIA—MAY, 1926 Hygeia is published under the direction of the American Medical Association, and its purpose is to disseminate information about matters of health. The following reviews are of articles appearing in the current issue.— (Editor,) Output is Greater When Factory Hands Drink Milk Sauce for the gosling is sauce for the gander. Since school children have been found to thrive and gain weight and do more efficient work when they have a mid-morning lunch of milk, many factories and several business firms have tried the same plan for the adults in their employ. The results have been most encouraging. The workers no longer get hungry in the middle of the morning, slow down in their work and watch the clock; nor do they sneak down the fire escape for soda water. They use less tobacco, the working day seems shorter, and the work is more efficiently done. Greater productiveness and less sickness are results that will appeal to the executives, even if the altruistic motive of promoting greater happiness through greater health fails to touch them. VThy Cod Liver Oil is Recommended For Baby Almost every one knows that cod liver oil should be given to babies to prevent rickets and insure proper growth of the bones. However, the question of which cod liver oil to give is perplexing many. Investigation has shown that Norwegian oil is no better than the oils from Newfoundland. Oils from the livers of such fish as pollock and haddock contain as much of the vitamins as oils from cod liver. Vitamins have not yet been isolated in pure form. The codfish get their vitamins from the smaller fish they eat, which in turn get it from another sea growth, the plankton, whose diet consists of microscopic bodies which have the ability to create vitamins. Specialist Tells Method of Taking Cinder from Eye Don't rub your eye when you get a cinder in it. It may feel better if it is rubbed, but the cinder is apt to be worked deeper into the tissues of the eye, and it will be much more difficult to get it out. The cinder may lodge on the conjunctiva, the delicate membrane lining the inside of the lids, or it may stick to the tissue covering the front of the eyeball called the cornea. In the latter case, its removal is difficult and should not be attempted by any one except a physician. There is great danger of infection entering through the hole made on the cornea by the cinder, which may result in impaired vision or even loss of the eye. Therefore the only |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-04/nchh-04-041.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-b; nchh-04 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-04-041 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-04 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb1296443 |
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