Many older folks
remember taking cod liver oil. The following includes information on the dosage
for children. “A Woman’s Touch or What Club Work Means to N.C. Farm Women” by
Jane S. McKimmon, N.C. State College, Raleigh, in the January, 1938, issue of Carolina Co-operator.
Cod-Liver Oil
Infants are first given a small amount of cod-liver oil when
they are about two weeks to a month old and during the first three months this
amount is gradually increased until the baby may be getting two or three
teaspoons a day. This amount is continued at least throughout the first two
years.
Many children above two need cod-liver oil during the winter
months but normally they get enough sunshine in the summertime to supply them
with Vitamin D. Pediatricians advise from one to three teaspoons a day for
children depending upon the section of the country in which they live and the
potency of the cod-liver oil. This of course must supplement a well-balanced
diet.
Cod-liver oil must be given regularly every day. When the
daily quota is three teaspoons a day, this may be given a teaspoon at a time
after each meal. Or two teaspoons per day may be apportioned one teaspoon after
breakfast and the other after the evening meal.
Tribute to Mrs. Effie
Vines Gordon
On Achievement Day in that same Rocky Mount building where
so many women from the country had met and supplied the tables of Rocky Mount
families with delicious food, the member of home demonstration clubs gathered
to unveil and present to their beloved leader a bronze tablet bearing the
following inscription:
“The Rural Women of Nash and Edgecombe Counties present this
tablet in grateful recognition to Mrs. Effie Vines Gordon, beloved home agent
of Nash County, through whose efforts this market was organized in 1923 and the
present building was erected in 1936 for the benefit of rural people.”
The Rocky Mount home demonstration market is the largest
farm woman’s market in size and sales in North Carolina, and it is one of the
most outstanding and successful in the United States. Its organization is good,
the number and quality of products sold is high, and the spirit of friendly
cooperation of the sellers is apparent everywhere.
Mrs. Gordon has been the guiding spirit of this market since
its inception. She has seen it rise from a simple beginning and a small income
to its present commodious building and income of more than $40,000 per year
today.
Keeping Baby Quiet
Mrs. Paul Rhyne of Gaston County has found a unique method
of keeping the baby amused. Recnetly it was necessary that she be in town a few
days, during which time she left her baby with the two young women hostesses at
the Community Center in Gastonia. They were delighted to keep him and he
received so much petting and was so highly entertained during his stay that
Mrs. Rhyne found it hard to get him back to his old routine when the week was
over.
As a substitute for all the attention he had been receiving,
his mother tried making him comfortable in his high chair, pulled up to the
radio. She then tuned in on a conversation and it worked perfectly. The baby
was entertained and Mrs. Rhyne could go on with her work.
Apple Treatment
Don’t forget to keep a box of apples where children can
reach them before you resort to the medicine chest for laxatives.
Keeping Up With Farm
Women
Welcome to Anna Carolyn Rowe from Catawba County, who
recently became district home demonstration agent for the mountain district.
Camden home demonstration club women are working on their
home beautification program with a vengeance, according to Miss Mary Teeter,
home agent of the State College Extension Service.
Ten new club houses have been erected or remodeled from
other buildings in Caswell County since home demonstration club work began
there 27 months ago.
Mrs. John Woods, president of the Purly Branch Club in
Caswell County sold $298 worth of home products on the Danville, Virginia, curb
market in less than a year. Mrs. Woods also realized a nice profit from flowers
which she makes.
A net profit of $237 from her garden during the past year
was reported recently by Mrs. Wilbur Davenport, garden leader of the Swain home
demonstration club near Plymouth.
The six 4-H Club girls who represented North Carolina at the
National 4-H Congress in Chicago in 1937 were Helen Whitlock, Stanly County;
Ada Braswell, Anson County; Louella Dickerson, Vance County; Mary Frances
Thompson, Durham County; and Sarah Amelia Gainey and Pearl Simpson, Cumberland
County.
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