Monday, Jul. 30, 1951
Capsules
P:In Picayune, Miss., a 7 Ib. 2 oz. boy was Dorn to an unmarried mother, 10; had a twice-married grandmother, 23.
P:In U.S. medical laboratories, 1,342 workers have caught the diseases which hey were investigating; 39 died.
P:New Haven schoolchildren, "protected" against germs by ultraviolet lamps, got sick as often as "unprotected" kids.
P:Fed up with conflicting theories on infant colic, two Manhattan pediatricians ried grandma's remedy on 28 babies: a rubber pacifier. It pacified all but three.
P:Pathologist Robert P. Morhardt told the American Osteopathic Association: doctors should not try to prolong the life of a patient with an incurable ailment.
P:Chicago gynecologist found a new use for the pain-killing drug Edrisal: to kill the despondency which besets many mothers after childbirth.
P:A Manhattan doctor asked the A.M.A. Journal: "Is there any harm in wetting the hair daily...? I have done it for years and have all my hair..." Said the Journal: go right ahead.
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