DANGERS TO HEALTH.
EAT tN G BETWEEN MEALS. | SIR TRUBY KING'S WARNING. i A. and N.Z. MELBOURNE. Oct. 7. | Speaking at the annual congress of the Health Association of Australia, Sir Frederick Truby King, of New Zealand, said the frequent taking of food and drink between meals, and the large quantities of cane sugar in sweets,in every form was to be deplored. The| whole community suffered from an excessive temptation to eat sweets. | Sir Frederick asserted that the cinema i was the curse of Saturday afternoons. | When children ought to be out in the | open playing games they went to the pictures and left them tired, jaded and stimulated in ways in which th?.y should not be stimulated at all. Touching upon the risks associated with motherhood. Sir Frederick said that if a woman only kept herself in fit condition she would have all the advantages of the primitive woman.
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LXII, Issue 19143, 8 October 1925, Page 11
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150DANGERS TO HEALTH. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXII, Issue 19143, 8 October 1925, Page 11
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