!)X A New Dairy Industry. 



We have proof that this principle has been known 

 and made use of in antiquity, hundreds of years 

 before the advent of Christ. The physicians, Eury- 

 phon and Herodikes, living at the time of Hippocrates 

 (460 to 387 B. C.) had published a method of curing 

 dyspepsia, making their patients take woman's milk 

 from the breast, direct. If we are, therefore, able to 

 manufacture normal milk in exact imitation of 

 mothers' milk, then, we produce a liquid nourish- 

 ment which does not remain in the stomach but a 

 very short time, and does not put any strain on its 

 functions. Buttermilk and whey have the same pro- 

 perty, only they are deficient in principles of nourish- 

 ment. A special indication for normal milk is to 

 diabetics ; the milk is then specially prepared with- 

 out the addition of milk sugar. Most successful 

 treatments are on record with this classs of patients, 

 thousands of whom are taking the normal milk 

 regularly, up to three liters per day. 



