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Nurse De Kiriline Concludes Her Own Story of the Quintiu}zal;.i"fi' qlfl-'rirrkstfiYrear“:w PN
iving Five Years in Twelve Months
Progress of Dionnes, Says Nurse, Proves That Any Baby in America
" Can Gain Health if Given Proper Care
e ————————
+ pictures which
| elv in The Ban
mpPe- is obvious that
ne quintuplets are
€ { happy. In this
e rticles, Louise De
lA= ho was the head
K : the five famous in
puls® . their first year of
i ; . the correctly
pe ndling. which - was
P . the little Dionnes, and
P! Gk ery baby every
"" s have the same care.
gy LOUISE ()lfi KIRI}_INE
right, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.)
‘C‘,irv:' will vou do when all your
‘ tart teething?” 1 used
hing we won't even
e are doipg It N T AIwRE
kVM lidn't either. Naturally
L .41 long before noticed little
..« on the gums where the
' cere to appear and we were
f ¢ ce each come up
Lon its little bed. But I be
[+ there need be no other sign
: ng Sure enough, we
: 1 watched the babies.
wine happened, and I mean lit
i nothing ivery child was
ppy and as well as ever.
) so-called teething troubles at
|
Then one morning Annette was
. ming, laughing and kick-|
on the scales, and I thought of .
. 1 put my finger lightly on
[ lower gum and nearly scream
| A sharp little incisor had
boked mv examining finger. An
ite had a tooth!--even though it
§ mall that one could hardly
itt T rang every bell in the
ce and called madly for all to
me and view the wonder. ‘The
Is ] hed in and displayed
i n enough to satisfy even
\nnette preemed herself
d enjoyed the center of the stage.
e didn't know what she had done,
i she realized our approval and
Mrs. Dionne Not Excited ‘
mediately sent the orderly
oss the road with the good news
Dionne, hoping that she
] I t once to see and ad
re. 1 1e -did not come that
y. 1 s she, having had so
I es before, did not think
muc f the occasion as
Dr. Dafoe, however, was|
jted, out of his good morning |
ey take part in the rejoicing.|
Annette @ not long to hold
ew titl for the very mnext|
ming Yvonne followed sister’s|
ample. Her first tooth jingled !
the s 1s she was fed. A/
ek or two later little Marie got|
tooth and then they came thil‘k:
d last \nd during all thisg
lod we never had any trouble |
ih crying or freting. The Di-|
€ bables cut their teeth as the.\'i
W their hair and fingernails. It |
is natural for them as it!
1 puppy to open his eyes,
1L never need be any nthm"
Mothers are all too prone to
[ 41p upset to teething. That is
WV unfair, The .trouble may be |
tgestion from careless feeding
latigue from careless handling.
! eat danger there is, how
hat every person connected
i the ¢ of a baby must rec
v upset to teething. That is
T must shield a baby from
I If you let him slip and fall, it
0t the moment’s hurt that is
;‘. L. It is the sense of inse- |
‘s that comes from the child'’s |
s allowed to slip in the first%
% all the Dionne babies Yvoxmev!
$ the only one who ever defi- |
| Sloved fear. We never were |
; cide what had happned!
MPlant in. her this complex. |
- Urled to deal with it care-i
. \
e T ‘
e Was Ccared |
b <€ the babies were set- |
. tone for the night,
. °san to cry. We knew no
L, but we went back |
M and carefully inves- |
e 9 inything could be
£ ts nothing but she |
k. 00N as one of u_\;‘
k the room. When we went |
© Pegan to cry again. |
k L came in and sat down |
: ¢ distance from her
i g frit I noticed that a !
: apping in the wind and |
‘ enever this happeed, |
b . 20 look © towsrd the
¢ . Irightened eyes. then |
b nxfous inquiry with
k r throat, |
e nothing,” 1 n"u‘.i
e . "ost casual toneg as
il blind so that it
Hap. T talked to her for
(e voosuringly. When she |
A v - lelt- the ‘'yoom. Shel
\ \‘ I v‘u‘ ame back and talked ;
- l, more, and again |
TR el ]wacefullyl
ber 1, DBht and the thing!
We 1. . ned-again, '
e 1L "" ost no dont’s for the |
the ’ I'can say truthfully |
. ~ o oF cried unless there
: 4 hing generally Wl‘OnE:
. -3nd never, never ail |
. Duce. 'The heut way to
at ‘,"‘_“m nt,l think, is to
hole .- leved in prevention. |
R : was to look ahead |
fore “verything was done |
& Th ld_cry for it to be|
had o ar . DOt ery. hecause |
¢, TNE to cory for. A :
of “stance, they were |
ptort . sed for complete |
4 we ad drinks of water |
k Dlenty, .2w to it hikt they
e dry 3 CTeShoalr, that .they
h ,"W" :‘Y they were neitherl
eringace 00 COld, that thete |
e Ix Weigh them down.'
YIS time ¢ . KNOW that when
966 D, Mhe o e€D, they were
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- Feilgens 4 (COPYRIGHT, 1935, NEA SERVICE, INC.
————— e ————
The first tooth! Nurse De Kiriline points out Cecile’s tooth making. another important milestone of
her first year. .
down and they were left alone.) it as a warning and investigated bed when they are ill. That is non-
They were never given toys, when, carefully to find out what was | sense. The place for a sick baby is
it was the period either for rest or| wrong. Then we treated it pre-|bed and it will stay there well
sleep, | ventatively and usually succeeded|enough if it has been accustomed
—_— |in forestalling any threatening |to the right kind of treatment. Of
Whatched for Trouble Sign | ailments. | course, if it is used to being held
If the baby did ery in the mghri I have heard women say that|constantly in an adult’s arms, that
or was fretful in the day, we took' they cannot keep their babies inlis somehing else. Our babies were
; »lZ tis th dstick
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or a cigarette . . .
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. ; Chesterfields are milder —not flat or
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- insipid, of course, but with a pleasing _
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N csterlt & Ctgnrc e that i Wi
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
picked up only when there wag a
reason for it, They were handled
as little as possible. And they were
never played with when it was time
for them to be doing something
else —to be eating, for instance.
That is very important,
I cannot repeat too often that
each person in charge of a baby
must use her intelligence and com
mon sense, I do not think, for ex
ample, that you can set down a
rule for feeding all babies. Dr. Da
foe worked out the diet that best
suited our babies. They like some
of their foods perhaps better than
others, but there are none they
don’t eat. If they refuse anything,
it is casually taken away but given|
another time. f
- Every baby should have these
things—a balanced diet, fresh air,
sunshine, freedom of movement
and clothing that allows his body
to become conditioned to all kinds
of weather,
| Proves Good Care Possible
Dr. Dafoe and I used to discuss
the problems that arose with our
babies from day to day. He al
ways ended by telling me to use
my own judgement and I think
that it usuvally was his judgement,
too. You see, I'd known him so long
in health work that I was familiar
with his ideag and principles, He
was the head, and we nurses were
' the hands with those babies.
‘ There certain principles and
logical fundamental laws in infant
‘nursing which must be carried out
or the baby most healthly at birth
may quickly turn into a sickly
child. The Dionne babies are the
most vivid and convincing proof
that these laws and principles are
not only right but necessary in a
practical way. Of course they can
more easily be carried out in hos
pitals and clinics, where they have
all modern equipment. Nobody de
nies that.
But the great point that the
case of the Dionne babies and thejr
first year proves is that any baby
any where in America with the
correct handling can gain health.
Five prematurely-born babies in a
small unequipped farm house in
Northern Cntario during the criti
cal three and a half months of their
lives got the simple proper care‘l
that every baby born can have,
The End. l
‘BILIOUSNESS
alot'al:)s
CONSTIPATION
~—
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WASHINGTON
NATION'S EYES TURN TO MAIN STREET, WARREN, PA., IN
WAR OVER UTILITIES BILL . . . MORE SENSATIONS BREW
ING . . . DRAMA AND COMEDY BLEND A 8 SMALL TOWNERS
GIVE EVIDENCE ON BURNED TELEGRAMS,
BY RODNEY DUTCHER
The Banner-Herald Washington Correspondent
| WASHINGTON — Current hot
lweather battles - featuring spiders,
lsnakes, tarantulas and other -un
‘pleasant forms of animal life are
‘tame stuff alongside the grinding
tests of strength between the ad
ministration and the utility holding
companies which stil%oes on,
No one recalls any parallel for
this attempt to change the fate of
a 4 major bill, gone tnto conference,
of the big “power trust” lobby
which defeated Roosevelt in the
house when it persuaded a big ma
jority of members to vote against
the so-called death sentence.
Seldom has a’ rising pitch of ex
citement here seemed more dra
matie. ‘
Will congressmen feel that they
have been browbeaten and bam
boozled by a flood of telegrams—
many of them signed with names
taken from city directories or gath
ered by telegraph messenger boys
and other canvassers?
‘Will they feel revulsion against
high-pressure tactics of lobbyists
who flooded the capital, bringing
personal friends from their dis
tricts to exert their influence and
claim to represent widespread
sentiment?
And will the net effect be g re
pudiation of an erstwhile “mas-
ter's voice” which will turn Roose
velt’'s smashing defeat into vic
tory?
More Sensations Coming
Sensations continue while pro
administration conferees hold off
action until the evidence is heard
and has time to sink in. Privately
“power trust” foes are predicting
that the conferees—perhaps after
another vote by the house — will
eventually produce a bill satisfac
tory to an administration which
insists on reducing holding com
panies to regulatable size, ‘
If half the underground reports
you hear are correct, you haven't
heard anything yet. ‘The billions
of dollars behind the holding com
panies could command the highest
priced talent available,
Notable Names Pop Up
Wass J. Bruce Kremer, former
Democratic national committeeman
from Montana, lobbying for Public
Service of New Jersey? Was Ar
thur Mullen, former Democratic
national committeeman from Neb
raska, working for Associated Gas
and Electric? Where was Robert
Jackson, that other prince of lob
byists who, with Kremer and Mul
'len, did so much to put Roosevelt
lover in 19327
- How much did Joe Tumulty ,for
mer wartime secretary to Wilson,
figure in the lobbying? Who was
ex-Senator George H. Moses of
New Hampshire working for?
And how about such ex-congress
men as Beedy of Maine and Me-
Keown of Oklahoma?
e e |
Main Strest in Limelight |
Main Street came before the sen
ate investigating dommittee—Main
Street in Warren, Pa., with its|
Western Union office, its barber‘
shop, its Kiwanis club and its Sav-l
oy case. Tragedy, high comedy,
and human interest drama camel
along with it,
It was plain eonugh that Con
gressman Driscoll had been bom
barded with anti-bill telegrams
signed with names taken from the,
city directory and gathered by
yvoung messenger boys who asked
people if they “wanted to send a
telegram.” |
The wires were written and paid
for by the Associated Gas _and
Electric company, according to the
evidence, And the eyes of the na
tional capital were turned on that
little cellar under the Warren tele
graph office where the originals
were said by witnesses to have been
burned.
But who burned the messages?
The manager and the telegraph
operator, two ordinary young fel
lows who seemed to suspect each
other, had been suspended from
their jobs. As if that weren't
#nough, here they were with sev
eral other Warren folk—not for
getting messenger boys — flash
bulbs exploding around them, be
fore a committee of high-powered
senators. No wonder some of them
tended to get a bit mixed up by
the questions,
Elmer Provides Comedy
One recalls John S, Bayer, portly
middle-aged undertaker, furniture
man, and Kiwanian, whose name
had been signed to a wire he knew
nothing about. Moty MeClure,
president of Kiwanis, had come to
him saying that “Fisher was an
the spot about those phony tele
grams” and couldn't he fix it up
with Driscoll? :
But Bayer, though he insisted
to the committee that Fisher (the
manager) was a Kiwanian had al
ways stood in high repute, replied:
“Two wrongs don't make a right”
and refused.
,|
|Month of July Is Noted
For Many Commemorative
Days, and First Events
S ocn oyt
(Continued rrom Page One)
Ivlce was officially created July
118, 1914,
’ The first lighter-than-air airship
flight across the Atlantic was
made by the British dirigible A
ER, which left Secotland July 2,
1919, and arrived at New York
July 6, with the first aeronautical
stowaway aboard.
On a 2 hot' July 19, 1848, Miss
Amelia Jenks Bloomer introduced
as a costume of the pristine “new
freedom” in America a garment
which was ‘named, in pluralized
form, in honor of its sponsor. The
first bloomers were displayed at
the first Woman’'s Rights conven
tion, at Seneca Falls, N. Y. ;
And only last year, in addition
to Dillinger's death, three tremen
dous headlines were written dur
ing July: The assassination of
Chancellor Dollfuss of Austria, the
fatal illness of Germany’s Marshal
Von Hindenburg and the drought
in the midwest,
New York City licenses approx
imately 1,000,000 chauffeurs and
operators of motor vehicles.
The huge German plane, DO-X,
which made a trans - Atlantic
flight in 1929, has heen placed in
a Berlin aviation museum. £.5
And no investigation audience
ever laughed harder than when
blushing Elmer Danielson, the
messenger boy, who said he was
“just about 19, described how he
had “explained” the Wheeler-Ray
burn bill to his mother, boy friend,
and neighbors, became 'all mixed up
on whether the bill gave the utili
ties to the “big men” or took -it:
away from them, was converted. tg
favor the bill by a local merchant
named Epstein, and finally, after
several hectic days, reached the
comfortable position where he
could announce to the committee:
“I'm nentral now!”
BC
Eases Headache
In 3 Minutes
also neuralgia, muscular aches
and pains, toothache, earachey
periodical and other pains due
to inorganic causes. ?No nare
cotics. 10c and 25¢ packagess
PAGE FIVE