[A Handbook of Health by Woods Hutchinson]@TWC D-Link book
A Handbook of Health

CHAPTER IV
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The whole gospel of the care of milk can be summed up in two sentences: (1) _Keep dirt and germs out of the milk._ (2) _Keep the milk cool._ [Illustration: WASHING THE BOTTLES AT A MODEL DAIRY The inside of the bottle is thoroughly cleansed by the revolving brush.] Besides the germs of the summer diseases of children, which kill more than fifty thousand babies every year in the United States, dirty milk may also contain typhoid germs and consumption germs.

The typhoid germs do not come from the body of the cow, but get into the milk through its being handled by people who have, or have just recovered from, typhoid, or who are nursing patients sick with typhoid, and who have not properly washed their hands; or from washing the cans, or from watering the milk with water taken from a well or stream infected with typhoid.

It is estimated that about one-eighth of all the half million cases of typhoid that occur in the United States every year are carried through dirty milk.
[Illustration: BACTERIA IN CLEAN AND IN DIRTY MILK] [Illustration: DANGER FROM DIPPED MILK The milk that spills or spatters over the hand drips back into the can and may seriously infect the main supply.] The germs of consumption, or _tuberculosis_, that are present in milk may come from a cow that has the disease; or from consumptive human beings who handle the milk; or from the dust of streets or houses--which often contains disease germs.

The latter sources are far the more dangerous; for, as is now pretty generally agreed, although the tuberculosis of cattle can be given to human beings, it is not very actively dangerous to them; and probably not more than three or four per cent of all cases of tuberculosis come from this source.

The idea, however, of allowing the milk of cows diseased from any cause to be used for human food, is not to be tolerated for a moment.


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