SIR F. TREVES ON MEATEATING.
Princess Christian presided at tlio twenty-third annual meeting of the National Health Society, London, and distributed a number of certificates and other awards. Sir Frederick Treves, in proposing a vote of thanks to Her Royal Highness, said she was an expert in the matter of sanitation, as was evidenced by her excellent model home at Windsor. She bad made valuable suggestions to the society, and among those which had been taken up in a practical manner was one that had relation to food. H a non-meat-oafng being could visit this planet from another sphere, and see the way in which meat was thrown about, handled by dirty hands, and expr.scri to dust and germ contamination, he would never dream that it could pocsibly be an article of diet. The only ingredient that could not legally be added to milk was water. Other ingredients wero not forbidden, although tbey nvjrht conceivably contain the germs of typhoid fever.
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Evening Star, Volume 12869, Issue 12869, 19 July 1906, Page 8
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161SIR F. TREVES ON MEATEATING. Evening Star, Volume 12869, Issue 12869, 19 July 1906, Page 8
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