Health and Beauty : A Book for Girls

1939-10 1939 1930s 27 pages ; illustrations of starchy foods, such as bread and potatoes. The sensible course is to drink sufficient at meals to help mastication and to make the meal enjoyable, and to drink more copiously in between to quench thirst. The glass of water on rising will clean the stoma...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Foley, Elizabeth (contributor), Cocker, Edith A.
Institution:MCR - The Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick
Language:English
English
Published: London : The Health & Cleanliness Council October 1939
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10796/337B8474-659D-4480-B8A8-F179ABB21BF3
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/6E0FB85F-C2C3-45AF-8A09-8D8F424BDF83
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author Foley, Elizabeth
Cocker, Edith A.
author_facet Foley, Elizabeth
Cocker, Edith A.
author_role contributor
description 1939-10 1939 1930s 27 pages ; illustrations of starchy foods, such as bread and potatoes. The sensible course is to drink sufficient at meals to help mastication and to make the meal enjoyable, and to drink more copiously in between to quench thirst. The glass of water on rising will clean the stomach and help the bowels to move the accumulated contents out of the body, and the bed-time glass will help internal cleanliness during the hours of sleep. The presence of roughage (fibrous material) in vegetables keeps the contents of bowel moving — that is one of its valuable properties. Milk, for instance, has no roughage, and so is liable to cause constipation, which is a polite name for stoppage of the body-drains. Every human being — except a baby — needs to eat some indigestible material as a stimulant of the larger bowel to healthy activity. For most people this is found in the fibres of green food and fruits. Rich foods, riding about in cars and trams and buses, sitting about in easy chairs (and sheer laziness!) are apt to bring about an inactive bowel, and microbes seize upon the stagnant food and manufacture poisons which are absorbed into the blood stream. The result of this poisoning is seen on the skin as blotches, pimples and rashes, and a general upset of the body. To such poisoning half the ills that girls suffer from is due — headache, liability to "colds," tonsillitis, influenza, lumbago, "bilious attacks" and the blues! Keeping the inside clean will save many a doctor's bill; and the best way to do this by natural means and not by chemical means — drugs — is by eating foods that keep themselves on the move, such as oatmeal, green vegetables, salads, wholemeal bread and fruits; specially figs, dates and prunes. These foods will give the large bowel aid from within, and exercise will give it aid from without. Good and regular habits are essential, such as 22 177/5/8/4
geographic UK
id HEA-617_658fbad835244911bc3a4f9adf55f5be
institution MCR - The Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick
is_hierarchy_title Health and Beauty : A Book for Girls
language English
English
physical TEXT
publishDate October 1939
publisher London : The Health & Cleanliness Council
spellingShingle Foley, Elizabeth
Cocker, Edith A.
National Association of Teachers of Home Economics and Technology
Pamphlets of the Health and Cleanliness Council
Health care
Beauty ; Hygiene
Health and Beauty : A Book for Girls
title Health and Beauty : A Book for Girls
topic National Association of Teachers of Home Economics and Technology
Pamphlets of the Health and Cleanliness Council
Health care
Beauty ; Hygiene
url http://hdl.handle.net/10796/337B8474-659D-4480-B8A8-F179ABB21BF3
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/6E0FB85F-C2C3-45AF-8A09-8D8F424BDF83