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Even my grandmother knew that raw milk was dangerous


To the editor: The recent article on raw milk reminded me of a 1937 letter my grandmother wrote to her sister about a trip she took from Los Angeles up to eastern Oregon, where her family had lived from 1898 to 1908 (“More than three dozen bills supporting raw milk are in state legislatures,” May 3). Here is an excerpt:

“After miles of desolate sage desert, having a weird beauty all its own, we stopped at Tom’s Camp for lunch, [run by] a cantankerous old fellow who didn’t know the Civil War was over and who still sold milk by dishing out each [serving] from a large container with a pitcher. Had I been the one who went in, I wouldn’t have bought any for fear of typhoid. However, [my husband] Ray did not know how prevalent it used to be in that part of the country and didn’t tell me how the milk was handled until we had used it (luckily no one had any bad effects).”

I find it extremely sad that people today are rejecting science. In my years of genealogy study, I have seen that before the 1930s, almost every family lost at least one child or young adult to diseases or infections.

Alex Magdaleno, Camarillo



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