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WOMEN ANALYSED

LONDON DOCTOR'S VIEWS LONDON, March 24. Dr. A. W. Bourne, principal surgeon of Queen Charlotte's Hospital, declares that the happiest times in a woman's life are her earliest adolescence, when she begins to see a little beyond the threshold of her narrow home life, and the first five years of her married life. "Women are more emotional and more, temperamental than men," he says. "They love more, hate more, and fear more. They also are more dependent upon their parents. "Women aren't nearly as much given to addictions as men, a great part of whose diseases are due to too much food, smoking, and alcohol. One of the most serious handicaps for women is their lack of physical exercise after middle age."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19380405.2.140

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19601, 5 April 1938, Page 10

Word Count
124

WOMEN ANALYSED Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19601, 5 April 1938, Page 10

WOMEN ANALYSED Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19601, 5 April 1938, Page 10

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