PROBLEMS OF DIET.
“SPORTING GROUND FOR FADDISTS.’’ DR. TEWSLEY’S LECTURE. “Dietary is a sporting ground for faddists. Among the warring protagonists one must walk wanly, hut tne wisest course is to allow individuality tor individuals.' 1 'thus Dr- C. H. Tewsley opened his lecture on “now, When ana What to Eat’’ at the Leys institute, Auckland, on Saturday evening.Dr. lewsley said that the human oody could be compared with a furnace. Fuel was burnt only in the presence ol oxygen j if the fuel was excessive, the furnace became blocked; to induce combustion, ashes and cinders had to be removed, and if the oxygen was insufficient combustion was retarded. The human body could be likened to a furnace, and food was its fuel. After discoursing on food values, and describing the digestive system and digestive processes, Dr. Tewsley made some general non-technical observations. “Food should be tom as by a dog," he said, “and chewed as by a cow." “People endure the discomfort of indigestion,” he said, ‘rather than have their teeth cared for. They allow carious teeth to pour poison into the alimentary canal. There is one school which holds that cancer, even lower down, is caused through the poison from septic teeth."
He said that tile choice of proper dieiai.v had a certain relation to the climate in which people lived. In colder climates a greater quantity of fat was required.
“The conservatism of John Bull is strange," he said. “Here, in the sweltering Auckland heat at Christmas time, the same Christmas dinner is served as that in England- It is just custom, and people eat it because their forbears ate it."
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Bibliographic details
Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XVII, Issue 202, 10 August 1927, Page 2
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274PROBLEMS OF DIET. Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XVII, Issue 202, 10 August 1927, Page 2
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