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+Project Gutenberg's The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28
+ The Independent Health Magazine
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Charles William Daniel
+
+Release Date: February 5, 2006 [EBook #17682]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HEALTHY LIFE, VOL. V ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Feòrag NicBhrìde, Laura Wisewell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Transcriber's Note: In preparing this ebook I have corrected a small
+ number of obvious typographical errors, including the two which are
+ mentioned in the September issue. I have not interrupted the text by
+ marking each, but they are marked in the html version of this text.
+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ _The_
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine
+
+
+
+ VOLUME V
+ JULY-DECEMBER 1913
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+ GRAHAM HOUSE, TUDOR ST., E.C.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+VOLUME V.--JULY-DECEMBER 1913
+
+
+Ballade of Skyfaring, A, S. Gertrude Ford, 490
+
+Book Reviews, 532
+
+Breathe, On Learning to, Dr J. Stenson Hooker, 630
+
+
+Camping Out, C.R. Freeman, 438, 480
+
+Care of Cupboards, Florence Daniel, 530
+
+Castles in the Air, E.M. Cobham, 582
+
+Cloud-capped Towers, E.M. Cobham, 626
+
+Correspondence, 504, 533, 580, 658
+
+Cottage Cheese, 658
+
+Curtained Doorways, The, Edgar J. Saxon, 561
+
+
+Doctor on Doctors, A, 637
+
+Doctor's Reason for Opposing Vaccination, A, Dr J.W. Hodge, 597
+
+Doctors and Health, 633
+
+
+Fasting, A Significant Case, A. Rabagliati, M.D., 458, 492
+
+Fear and Imagination, E.M. Cobham, 510
+
+Food and the Source of Bodily Energy, 507
+
+Fruit-Oils and Nuts, 659
+
+Futurist Gardening, G.G. Desmond, 451
+
+
+Health Queries, Dr H. Valentine Knaggs:--
+ About Sugar, 540;
+ Bad Case of Self-poisoning, 502;
+ Boils, their Cause and Cure, 498;
+ Canary _versus_ Jamaica Bananas, 579;
+ Can Malaria be Prevented? 466;
+ Cereal Food in the Treatment of Neuritis, 619;
+ Correct Blending of Foods, 655;
+ Concerning Cottage Cheese, 617;
+ Deafness, 615, 616;
+ Diet for Obstinate Cough, 618;
+ Diet for Ulcerated Throat, 575;
+ Dilated Heart, 653;
+ Difficulties in Changing to Non-Flesh Diet, 655;
+ Dry Throat, 653;
+ Eczema as a Sign of Returning Health, 613;
+ Excessive Perspiration, 574;
+ Farming and Sciatica, 575;
+ Faulty Food Combinations, 536;
+ Giddiness and Head Trouble, 468;
+ Going to Extremes in the Unfired Diet, 543;
+ Long Standing Gastric Trouble, 470;
+ Malt Extract, 539;
+ Neuritis, 538;
+ Onion Juice as Hair Restorer, 651;
+ Phosphorus and the Nerves, 577;
+ Refined Paraffin as a Constipation Remedy, 652;
+ Saccharine, 653;
+ Stammering, 654;
+ Severe Digestive Catarrh, 471;
+ Sciatica, 651;
+ Temporary "Bright's Disease" and How to Deal with it, 576;
+ Ulceration of the Stomach, 541;
+ Unfired Diet for a Child, 467;
+ Water Grapes, 619;
+ Why the Red Corpuscles are Deficient in Anæmia, 654
+
+Health and Joy in Hand-weaving, Minnie Brown, 591
+
+Health through Reading, Isabella Fyvie Mayo, 517
+
+Healthy Brains, E.M. Cobham, 448, 474, 510, 546, 582
+
+Healthy Homemaking, Florence Daniel, 495, 528
+
+Healthy Life Abroad, D.M. Richardson, 559
+
+Healthy Life Recipes, 462, 571, 610, 641
+
+Hired Help, Florence Daniel, 495, 528
+
+Holiday Aphorisms, Peter Piper, 508, 527
+
+How Much Should We Eat? 442, 477, 513, 563, 593
+
+Human Magnetism, 505
+
+
+Imagination in Insurance, E.M. Cobham, 546
+
+Imagination in Play, E.M. Cobham, 474
+
+Imagination in Use, E.M. Cobham, 448
+
+Indication, An, Editors, 437, 473, 509, 545, 581, 621
+
+
+Learning to Breathe, On, Dr J. Stenson Hooker, 630
+
+Letters of a Layman, I., 633
+
+Lime Juice, Pure, 534
+
+Longevity, A Remedy for, Edgar J. Saxon, 491
+
+
+Mental Healing, A Scientific Basis for, J. Stenson Hooker, M.D., 456
+
+Midsummer Madness, Edgar J. Saxon, 454
+
+Modern Germ Mania: A Case in Point, Dr H.V. Knaggs, 638
+
+More About Two Meals a Day, Wilfred Wellock, 487
+
+
+New Race, The, S. Gertrude Ford, 601
+
+
+Ode to the West Wind, Shelley, 555
+
+
+Pickled Peppercorns, Peter Piper, 464, 570, 609, 660
+
+Plain Words and Coloured Pictures, Edgar J. Saxon, 622
+
+Play Spirit, The, D.M. Richardson, 602
+
+Play Spirit, The: A Criticism, L.E. Hawks, 628
+
+
+Quest for Beauty, The, Edgar J. Saxon, 523
+
+
+Recipes, 462, 571, 610, 641
+
+Remedy for Longevity, A, Edgar J. Saxon, 491
+
+Remedy for Sleeplessness, 533
+
+
+Salads and Salad Dressings, 462
+
+Salt Cooked Vegetables, 506
+
+Swan Song of September, The, S. Gertrude Ford, 523
+
+Sea-sickness, Some Remedies, Hereward Carrington, 484
+
+Semper Fidelis, "A.R.," 526
+
+Sleeplessness, A Remedy, 533
+
+Scientific Basis for Mental Healing, A, J. Stenson Hooker, M.D., 456
+
+Scientific Basis of Vegetalism, The, Prof. H. Labbé, 549, 584
+
+Significant Case, A, A. Rabagliati, M.D., 458, 492
+
+Symposium on Unfired Food, A, D. Godman, 486, 648
+
+
+Taste or Theory? Arnold Eiloart, B.Sc., 643
+
+Travels in Two Colours, Edgar J. Saxon, 605
+
+To-morrow's Flowers, G.G. Desmond, 451
+
+Two Meals a Day, More About, Wilfred Wellock, 487
+
+
+Vaccination, A Doctor's Reason for Opposing, Dr J.W. Hodge, 597
+
+Vegetalism, The Scientific Basis of, Prof. H. Labbé, 549, 584
+
+
+West Wind, Ode to, Shelley, 555
+
+What makes a Holiday? C., 557
+
+World's Wanderers, The, Shelley, 625
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V JULY
+ No. 24. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+Some laymen are very fond of deprecating the work of specialists,
+holding that specialisation tends to narrowness, to inability to see
+more than one side of a question.
+
+It is, of course, true that the specialist tends to "go off at a
+tangent" on his particular subject, and even to treat with contempt or
+opposition the views of other specialists who differ from him. But all
+work that is worth doing is attended by its own peculiar dangers. It
+is here that the work of the non-specialist comes in. It is for him to
+compare the opposing views of the specialists, to reveal one in the
+light thrown by the other, to help into existence the new truth
+waiting to be born of the meeting of opposites.
+
+Specialisation spells division of labour, and apart from division of
+labour certain great work can never be done. To do away with such
+division, supposing an impossibility to be possible, would simply mean
+reversion to the state of the primitive savage. But we have no call
+to attempt the abolition of even the minutest division of labour. What
+is necessary is to understand and guard against its dangers.
+
+Specialisation _may_ lead to madness, as electricity _may_ lead to
+death. But no specialist need go far astray who, once in a while, will
+make an honest attempt to come to an understanding with the man whose
+views are diametrically opposed to his own. For thus he will retain
+elasticity of brain, and gain renewed energy for, and perhaps fresh
+light on, his own problems.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+CAMPING OUT.
+
+IV. THE FIVE-FOOT SAUSAGE.
+
+
+The question of blankets and mattresses may be taken as settled. We
+can now sleep quite comfortably, take our fresh air sleeping and
+waking, and find shelter when it rains. But that same fresh air brings
+appetite and we must see how that appetite is to be appeased.
+
+Take a frying-pan. It should be of aluminium for lightness; though a
+good stout iron one will help you make good girdle-cakes, if you get
+it hot and drop the flour paste on it. You must find some other way of
+making girdle-cakes, and if you take an iron frying pan with you,
+don't say that I told you to.
+
+Though it is obviously necessary that a frying-pan should have a
+handle, I was bound to tell Gertrude that I do not find it convenient
+to take handled saucepans when I go camping. I take for all boiling
+purposes, including the making of tea, what is called a camp-kettle.
+Most ironmongers of any standing seem to keep it, and those who have
+it not in stock can show you an illustration of it in their wholesale
+list. It is just like the pot in which painters carry their paint,
+except that it has an ordinary saucepan lid. You should have a "nest"
+of these--that is, three in diminishing sizes going one inside the
+other. The big lid then fits on the outer one and the two other lids
+have to be carried separately.
+
+[Illustration: _The Five-Foot Sausage_]
+
+You hang these camp-kettles over the fire by their bucket handles,
+from the tripod or other means of getting over the fire. Sometimes the
+bough of a tree high out of the reach of the flames will do. Sometimes
+a stick or oar thrust into the bank or in a crevice of the wall behind
+the fire is more convenient than a tripod. Again, you can do without
+any hanging at all, making a little fireplace of bricks or stones and
+standing the saucepans "on the hob."
+
+It is a simple thing to tie the tops of three sticks together and make
+a tripod. Then from the place where they join you dangle a piece of
+string, pass it through the handle of the kettle and tie it to itself,
+in a knot that can be adjusted up or down to raise or lower the kettle
+from the fire. This knot is our old friend the two half-hitches. Pass
+the loose end round the down cord, letting it come back under the up
+cord, then round again with the same finish, and lo! the up cord makes
+two half-hitches round the down cord. You can slip, them up and put
+them where you like and they will hold, but you have to undo them to
+take the kettle clean away from the fire. So we add to our equipment a
+few pot-hooks or pieces of steel wire shaped like an S. Their use will
+be obvious. If we have three of them it is quite easy to keep three
+kettles going over one fire. They swing cheek by jowl when they all
+want the same amount of fire, but each can be raised or lowered an
+inch or several inches to let them respectively boil, simmer or just
+keep warm.
+
+These are the cooking utensils. A biscuit tin would make an oven and
+Gertrude says she must have an oven. For my part I would not attempt
+baking when camping out and I will say no more about ovens, except
+that all the biscuit tins in the world won't beat a hole in the ground
+first filled with blazing sticks and then with the things to be baked
+and covered with turves till they are done.
+
+I had great difficulty in persuading Gertrude to feed out of tin
+dishes like those which we use sometimes for making shallow round
+cakes or setting the toffee in. They are ever so much better than
+plates, being deep enough for soup-plates and not easy to upset when
+you use them on your lap. Any number of the same size will go into one
+another and a dozen scarcely take up more room than one.
+
+It was worse still when it came to a still more useful substitute, the
+camp equivalent of the teacup. In the first place we abolish the
+saucer, for the simple reason that we have no earthly use for it in
+camp. We take tin mugs with sloping sides and wire bucket handles.
+They fit into one another in the same accommodating way as the eating
+dishes. Gertrude was nearly put off this device altogether by Basil's
+remark that he had only seen them in use in poulterers' shops, where
+they are put under hares' noses....
+
+"Basil, you, you monster," cried Gertrude, and I had to push those tin
+mugs as though I had been a traveller interested in the sale of them.
+
+The drinking of hot tea out of these mugs is quite a beautiful art.
+You hold the wire handle between finger and thumb and put the little
+finger at the edge of the bottom rim. It is thus able to tilt the mug
+to the exact angle which is most convenient for drinking. When
+Gertrude had learnt the trick, she became perfectly enamoured of the
+mugs. She sometimes brings one out at ordinary afternoon tea and
+insists that the tea is ever so much better drunk thus than out of
+spode.
+
+Smaller mugs of the same shape do for egg-cups, and the egg-spoons I
+take to camp are the bone ones, seldom asked for but easy to get in
+most oil-and-colour shops. Dessert spoons and forks and table knives
+are of the usual pattern, but the former can be had in aluminium and
+therefore much lighter than Britannia metal.
+
+The camping-out valise is by all means the rucksack. Never the
+knapsack. I am almost ashamed to say this, because as far as my
+knowledge goes the knapsack is now obsolete. It may be, however, that
+it lingers here and there. If you see one, buy it for a museum if you
+like but not for use. The bundle should be allowed to fit itself to
+the back, as it does in a canvas bag. Suppose now that you fix the V
+point of a pair of braces somewhere near the top of the sack and
+bringing the webs over your shoulders, fix them, nicely adjusted, to
+the lower corners of the sack, it will ride quite comfortably upon
+your back--that is, you have made it from a plain sack into a rucksack
+or back-sack. Get or make as many good large strong ones as you have
+shoulders in the party to carry them. Have them made of a waterproof
+canvas, green or brown, to reeve up tight with strong cord passed
+through a series of eyelet-holes and, if you would be quite certain of
+keeping out the rain, with a little hood to cover the reeved bag end.
+
+The great bulk of your luggage you will generally find it best to
+carry by wheeling it on a bicycle. Spread your ground-sheet on the
+floor. On that lay your blankets, doubled so as to make a smaller
+square, tent, mattress cover and bed suits on that, then your camping
+utensils and all other paraphernalia and roll the whole up into a
+sausage about five feet long, when the loose ends of the ground-sheet
+have been tucked over as in a brown-paper parcel. Tie it well with
+whipcord and fasten it to the top bar of your bicycle frame, leaving
+freedom of course for the handles and the front wheel to move and
+steer. Push the tent-poles through the lashings and start for your
+camp at a comfortable four or five miles an hour. You will find it
+easy to move camp at the rate of twenty miles a day and will see a
+great deal of country in the course of a fortnight.
+
+The sausage on the bicycle shown in the illustration may be taken to
+contain all the gear and a little food. The rucksacks will take the
+rest and each man's most precious personal belongings. There is a
+small parcel tied to the handle-bar, scarcely to be seen because it is
+smaller than the end of the sausage. It is a complete tent tied up in
+its ground-sheet.
+
+C.R. FREEMAN.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT: A WARNING.
+
+_This article, by one of the pioneers of modern dietetics, is in the
+nature of a challenge, and is certain to arouse discussion among all
+who have studied the food question closely._--[EDS.]
+
+
+When men lived on their natural food, quantities settled themselves.
+When a healthy natural appetite had been sated the correct quantity of
+natural food had been taken.
+
+To-day all this is upside down, there is no natural food and only too
+often no natural healthy appetite either. Thus the question of
+quantity is often asked and many go wrong over it. The all-sufficient
+answer to this question is: "Go back to the foods natural to the human
+animal and this, as well as a countless number of other problems, will
+settle themselves."
+
+But supposing that this cannot be done, suppose, as is often the case,
+that the animal fed for years on unnatural food has become so
+pathological that it can no longer take or digest its natural food?
+
+Those who take foods which are stimulants are very likely to overeat,
+and when they leave off their stimulants they are equally likely to
+underfeed themselves. Flesh foods are such stimulants, for it is
+possible to intoxicate those quite unaccustomed to them with a large
+ration of meat just as well as with a large ration of alcohol. The one
+leads to the other, meat leads to alcohol, alcohol to meat. Taking any
+stimulant eventually leads to a call for other stimulants.
+
+How are we to tell when a given person is getting enough food, either
+natural or partly natural? Medically speaking, there is no difficulty;
+there are plenty of guides to the required knowledge, some of them of
+great delicacy and extreme accuracy. The trouble generally is that
+these guides are not made use of, as the cause of the disaster is not
+suspected. A physiologist is not consulted till too late, perhaps till
+the disorder in the machinery of life is beyond repair.
+
+Diminishing energy and power, decreasing endurance, slowing
+circulation, lessening blood colour, falling temperature, altered
+blood pressure, enlarging heart and liver, are some of the most
+obvious signs with which the physician is brought into contact in such
+cases. But every one of these may, and very often does, pass unnoticed
+for quite a long time by those who have had no scientific training.
+The public are extremely ignorant on such matters because the natural
+sciences have been more neglected in this country in the last fifty
+years than anywhere else in Europe, and that is saying a good deal.
+Hence diet quacks and all those who trade on the ignorance and
+prejudices of the public are having a good time and often employ it in
+writing the most appalling rubbish in reference to the important
+subject of nutrition.
+
+Being themselves ignorant and without having studied physiology, even
+in its rudiments, they do not appear to consider that they should at
+least abstain from teaching others till they have got something
+certain for themselves.
+
+If the public were less ignorant they would soon see through their
+pretensions; but, as it is, things go from bad to worse, and it is not
+too much to say that hundreds of lives have been lost down this sordid
+by-path of human avarice.
+
+On one single day a few weeks ago the writer heard of three men, two
+of whom had been so seriously ill that their lives were in danger, and
+one of whom had died. The certified cause of death in this case might
+not have led the uninitiated to suspect chronic starvation, but those
+who were behind the scenes knew that this was its real cause. A
+further extraordinary fact was that two out of these three men were
+members of the medical profession, whose training in physiology ought,
+one would have thought, to have saved them from such errors.
+
+The conclusion seems to be that they did not use their knowledge
+because at first they had no suspicion of the real cause of their
+illness. In other words, chronic starvation is insidious and, if no
+accurate scientific measurements are made, its results, being
+attributed to other causes, are often allowed to become serious before
+they are properly treated.
+
+These three men went wrong by following a layman quite destitute of
+physiological training, who APPEARED to have produced some wonderful
+results in himself and others on extraordinarily small quantities of
+food.
+
+If the above tests had been made at once by a trained hand the error
+involved in such results could not have escaped detection, and none of
+these men would have endangered their lives. I myself examined the
+layman in question and finding him not up to standard refused to
+follow him. The writer has no difficulty in recalling at least a dozen
+cases similar to those above mentioned which have been under his care
+in the last twelve months, and the three above mentioned were none of
+them under his care at the time of their danger.
+
+What, then, must be our conclusions in reference to these and similar
+facts of which it is only possible to give a mere outline here? I
+suggest that they are:--
+
+1. Food quantities are of extreme importance.
+
+2. These quantities were settled by physiologists many years ago, and
+no good reasons have since been adduced for altering them.
+
+3. The required quantity is approximately nine or ten grains of
+proteid per day for each pound of bone and muscle in the body weight.
+
+4. Any considerable departure from this quantity continued over months
+and years leads to disaster.
+
+5. The nature of this disaster may appear to be very various and its
+real cause is thus frequently overlooked.
+
+I will say a few words about each of these except the first, which is
+already obvious. The layman above mentioned asserted that he could
+live on but little more than half this quantity, but the food quantity
+really required is that which will keep up normal strength, normal
+circulation, normal colour, normal temperature and normal mental
+power. As we have got perfectly definite standards of all these normal
+conditions, serious danger can only be run into by neglecting to
+measure them.
+
+It is also possible to tell fairly accurately the quantity of food a
+man is taking in a day, and then, by collecting and estimating his
+excreta, the quantity also out of this food which he is utilising
+completely and burning up in his body.
+
+You would say that no danger should be possible with all these
+safeguards, and yet the above case history shows that of two trained
+physiologists, members of the medical profession, one died at least
+twenty years before his time, and the other was in great danger and
+only recovered slowly and with difficulty. Another similar case came
+to the writer suffering from increasing debility and what appeared to
+be some form of dyspepsia. He was quite unable to pass any of the
+above-named tests as to physiological standards, and an investigation
+of his excreta showed that his food was at least one-fifth or
+one-sixth below its proper quantity and had probably been so for many
+months past. Some of his doctors had been giving his "disease" a more
+or less long list of names and yet had not noted the one essential
+fact of chronic defective nutrition and its cause--underfeeding.
+Naturally their treatment was of no avail, but when he had been sent
+to a nursing home and had put back the 20 lbs. of weight he had lost
+he came slowly back to more normal standards and is now out of danger.
+In this case there was marked loss of weight, and few people, one
+would think, would overlook such a sign of under nutrition. But loss
+of weight is not always present in these cases, at least not at first.
+Some people tend to grow stout on deficient proteid, and then the fact
+that some of the essential tissues of the body (the muscles, the heart
+and the blood) are being dangerously impoverished is very likely to be
+overlooked. In the case last mentioned the loss of weight was put down
+to the dyspepsia, whereas the real fact was that the "dyspepsia" and
+loss of weight were both results of a chronic deficiency in food.
+
+It is evident that some care about food quantities must be taken by
+all those who do not live on natural foods. For physiologists there is
+no difficulty in settling the question of quantity in accordance with
+the signs of the physiology of a normal body. That all, even
+physiologists, may run into danger if, while living on unnatural or
+partly unnatural foods, or while making any change of food, they do
+not consider the question of quantity with sufficient care.
+
+That the question of nutrition should be considered in relation to
+_every illness_ even though it may appear on the surface to have no
+direct connection with foods or quantities. As a matter of fact, the
+nature of the food and its quantity controls all the phenomena of
+life. Some twenty years ago most people lived fairly close to the old
+physiological quantities, now they have been cut adrift from these and
+completely unsettled and are floundering out of their depth. A most
+unsatisfactory, even dangerous, condition of affairs.
+
+For the public it will now probably suffice if they insist on raising
+the question of quantity whenever they suffer in any way. If they are
+unable to answer the question themselves let them go to a trained
+physiologist who can do so, and not to a diet quack. But muscular
+strength, endurance, mental and bodily energy, skin circulation,
+temperature and blood colour are all things which the public can see
+for themselves and from which they should in all cases be able to get
+sufficient warning to save them from the worst forms of disaster.
+
+Some people imagine that they eat very little, when as a matter of
+fact they have good healthy appetites. Others again think they are
+eating a great deal, when as a matter of fact they take very little.
+In both cases a physiological test of the excreta will give accurate
+information. I once had a medical patient who imagined that he
+produced great amounts of force and performed feats of endurance on
+wonderfully small quantities of food. His excreta showed, however,
+that he was merely under-estimating the food he took. A fat man may
+seem to be living on very little, but fat does not require to be fed,
+and his real bone and muscle weight is not large. A thin man may seem
+to require a large quantity of food, but he is really very heavy in
+bone and muscle, the tissues that have to be nourished. In all these
+ways appearances are apt to be deceptive for those who are ignorant of
+science and who do not go down to the root of the matter.
+
+It is not necessary to follow the given quantity of grains per pound
+slavishly and without regard to consequences. It is necessary to see
+that the required physiological results are obtained.
+
+If a patient says he can live on less than I ordered for him and if
+he can pass the physiological tests satisfactorily I know that his
+bone and muscle weight has been over-estimated. On the other hand, if
+a patient falls below the physiological tests, though taking and
+digesting the quantities ordered for him, I conclude that his bone and
+muscle weight has been under-estimated.
+
+In all cases it is possible to obtain the best physiological results
+and to say when quantities are just right, neither too much nor too
+little.
+
+The evil effects of too much are not serious; they entail perhaps a
+little "gout" or some temporary loss of freedom from waste products.
+
+The evil effects of too little, if persevered in and continued,
+especially if some of these effects are attributed to causes which
+have no real existence, are deadly and dangerous, for they bring on an
+insidious deterioration both of function and structure which leads by
+several avenues, often miscalled "diseases," to death itself.
+
+M.D.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY BRAINS.
+
+_Comparatively few health enthusiasts or food reformers realise the
+necessity for mental, as distinct from bodily, hygiene, yet all real
+health has its roots in the mind. Moreover, it is only by studying the
+hygiene of mind that we are enabled to do work in greater quantity and
+of better quality than we should otherwise be capable of, and to do
+this without risk of strain on the nerves or injury to health. The
+articles under this heading put forward some of the elementary laws of
+mental hygiene._--[EDS.]
+
+
+IMAGINATION IN USE.
+
+To some people any talk about the importance of training the
+imagination of children through their toys, games and studies seems
+fantastic and trivial. They compare it to feeding them on sweetmeats;
+they think it means substituting story books for real life and
+encouraging the easy exercise of fancy for the careful study of fact.
+
+But imagination is not a mere ornament to a life-work; it is rather
+one of its most valuable and necessary tools. If it did no more than
+sweeten and adorn the world, it would be well worth having, well worth
+making considerable sacrifices to attain. But it does more than this.
+It bears much fruit as well as flowers; fruit that, if it ripens in
+suitable weather, endures and can be used for the service of man.
+
+There is a wonderful palm-tree, called the Tal or Palmyra palm, which
+in India and Ceylon supports six or seven millions of people, and
+"works" also in West Africa, where it is probably native. It gives its
+young shoots and unripe seeds as food; its trunk makes a whole boat,
+or a drum or a walking-stick, according to size; hats, mats, thread
+and baskets--in fact, almost all kinds of clothing and utensils--are
+made from the split and plaited leaves; gum comes from it, and certain
+medicines, jaggery sugar too and an intoxicating drink for those who
+desire it. In one of the museums at Kew--a wet day brings always
+_something_ besides disappointment--there is a book made up of the
+very leaves of the palm, containing a Tamil poem enumerating more than
+eight hundred human uses to which this marvellous single plant can be
+put.
+
+Now the imagination is like a Palmyra palm. We stand a long way off
+and, looking up, say "What a graceful tree! But what a pity it
+produces that intoxicating 'toddy' and nothing else!" Yet all the
+while food and clothing and shelter and travel and learning are all
+wrapped up in it, if only we were not too ignorant to guess, or too
+idle to seek.
+
+We talk as if the poet and painter had need of imagination, but not
+the student, the doctor, the philanthropist, the business man, whereas
+none of these can do work at a really human standard without
+imagination that is living, penetrating, active and yet trained and
+disciplined.
+
+A recent illuminating address to a body of students pointed out that
+Germany's immense industrial strides have been made possible by an
+education which draws men's minds out of narrow old grooves, and helps
+them to see and grasp wider possibilities. But the same speaker went
+on to point out that the English worker has far more real initiative
+and imagination than the German, and that in our own country we have
+not even to make elaborate plans for developing these qualities, but
+rather to release them in our administrators so far as to prevent
+actually checking them in the children now growing up.
+
+Imagination in business, for instance, means new possibilities, fresh
+sources of supply and fresh markets to demand, economy of working and
+better adjustment of work to worker, so as to have less waste of our
+greatest capital, human time and power. America has taught us
+something in these respects; what we must do is to take what new light
+she has developed, while keeping our long-grown, well-earned skill
+which she has not had the chance to make.
+
+In research work, again, we need perpetually the synthetic and
+constructive imagination if individual work is not to become narrowly
+specialised and shut off from other divergent or parallel lines which
+would illuminate it. The other day I was told of a great surgeon who
+not only has six or seven assistants to help him in his immediate
+tasks, but also, since he is too busy in the service of humanity to
+have time for reading, has eight trained assistants whose business it
+is to read in many languages what is being done all over the civilised
+world in his own line, and keep him informed as to the development of
+experience. A wonderful advance on the crystallisation of individual
+method, this, and yet it needed but the imaginative projection upon
+scientific work of what every business firm and every political unit
+has long done.
+
+To transfer to our own concerns a method developed elsewhere is one of
+the most valuable services imagination can render. Almost all
+educational reform comes about thus, most mechanical inventions, a
+great part of economy and comfort in individual homes. Also, besides
+these particular advantages, the incessant coming and going between
+the different fields of activity, the circulation of attention which
+this use of the imagination involves, tends to vitalise and enrich
+not only the individuals who carry it out, but the whole social
+organism of which they form part.
+
+Upon the moral side not much need be said. "Put yourself in his place"
+is a very old and respectable recipe for growing justice in one's
+conduct, consideration in one's speech, sympathy in one's heart. As
+employer or magistrate, as teacher or nurse, as customer or shopman,
+as parent or husband or child we must all deal somehow with our
+fellow-men: honestly and truthfully, we mean, kindly and helpfully, we
+hope. But is it not the more or the less of our imagination that makes
+such dealings possible? Without it, we are cruel because of something
+we do not feel, unjust because there is something we do not know,
+unwittingly deceitful because there is something we do not understand.
+With it, our justice will support, our kindness uplift, our attempt at
+help will not be barren, but will awake response and raise the whole
+level of our human intercourse into a region of higher possibilities.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+
+
+FUTURIST GARDENING.
+
+TO-MORROW'S FLOWERS.
+
+
+These three months of July, August and September are the second
+seed-time. I think they must be the most proper sowing-time, for is it
+not clear that Nature sows seed, not in spring, but in autumn? At any
+rate, now we can do more towards making a perpetually beautiful flower
+garden than in any other season. The biennials, those that blossom in
+their second year of life and those jolly perennials that come up year
+after year and always stronger than before, without any trouble on our
+part, are best started in life not too long before the winter.
+Spring-sown seed sometimes forgets that it is biennial and blossoms
+rather futilely the same summer, and at other times it grows so lush
+and large by winter that it cannot stand the frost.
+
+Now we see the flowers in blossom in the vineyards of our friend
+Naboth and we know which we should most like in our own garden. There
+is an exquisite joy in begging or stealing a few seeds and bringing
+them home to blossom for us as they did for Naboth. I carry at this
+time a few small envelopes bought for a few pence a hundred at
+Straker's, and whenever I see something nice in seed I bag it. In
+another week it would drop beneath the plant it grew on and, not being
+cared for by a gardener, would be smothered or hoed up. In a nice
+little seed-bed all to itself it can unfold all manner of pleasure for
+its abductor.
+
+Plant your flower seeds on a nice ripe, rich bed--that is, one
+compounded of old and even half-used manure. Keep the seedlings
+watered as they grow and by judicious pricking-out give them the room
+they need. About October you can plant the best of them in the place
+where you want a good bush next year, and, if it is a perennial, you
+have for many years to come a beautiful plant with a personal history.
+Even if you have bought your penn'orth of seed there may be a pleasant
+anecdote connected with it. My garden is at present amazingly blue
+with Dropmore Alkanet (Anchusa). Three years ago I bought three seeds
+for a penny. Two of them came up. I slashed up the plants and now I
+have half-a-dozen clumps as well as a similar number left in the old
+garden whence I have removed.
+
+If you asked me what kinds of seed in particular you ought to plant
+for perennial flowers just now, I might want many more pages to tell
+you in. Let me give you a very short list of those that most appeal to
+me on the spur of the moment. It will be enough to go on with:--
+
+ Trollius (globe flower).
+ Helianthemum (rock rose).
+ Epilobium (willow herb).
+
+ Hollyhock.
+ Echinops (globe thistle).
+ Anchusa Italica, Dropmore variety.
+
+ Lupine.
+ Tritoma (red-hot poker).
+ Heuchera (coral-root).
+ Yarrow.
+
+ Lychnis (garden campion).
+ Inula (Elecampane).
+ Funkia (Plaintain lily).
+ Eremurus.
+
+This list is representative because it includes some species, such as
+Eremurus, Trollius and Tritoma, that are not usually grown from seed
+by the amateur. To raise these rather expensive monsters from
+pennyworths of seed is a floral adventure which brings its own
+abundant reward.
+
+I should be very proud of a garden that consisted entirely of plants
+that I had raised from seed. It might be one that had never had
+anything else in or the seedlings might gradually oust the bulbs and
+corms and grown plants with which the garden began. There would be
+many things there intrinsically as well as extrinsically valuable.
+Carnation seed, for example, is constantly producing new varieties,
+and to grow rose seedlings is even to court fortune. It is a long time
+before you see your rose. The seed takes sometimes two years to
+germinate, and then you have to wait a year or two before you get a
+typical blossom. The growers hurry matters by cutting a very tiny bud
+from the first sprout and splicing that on to an older stock. One of
+the advantages of having your roses grown from seed and on their own
+stocks would be that they could not produce wild suckers.
+
+I have just seen a wonderful grove of Aquilegias, the glorified
+columbine which has the centre of one colour and the outside petals of
+another--sulphur with mauve or yellow with pink, and many other
+varieties. The nucleus was grown from shop seed and the rest from the
+seed of the first-comers. The only thing to choose between them is
+that the new ones have produced a least one variety not represented in
+the first batch. You may be sure that I am going to get some seed
+from here and raise some Aquilegias for myself. Good reader, go thou
+and do likewise.
+
+G.G. DESMOND.
+
+
+
+
+MIDSUMMER MADNESS.
+
+
+We had come, "3.7" and I, to the Boundary, a white, unpaved road which
+winds across the full width of Wimbledon Common, from the old Roman
+camp to the windmill. Simultaneously we cried a halt, I because I
+never cross that road without some hesitation, he because he wanted to
+get out of the folding go-cart in which he had been riding and turn
+it, with the aid of a small piece of string and a big piece of
+imagination, into a 40-horse-power motor car.
+
+On the map the road is not called the Boundary. If you want to know
+why I call it so I can only say that once you have crossed it things
+are different; I do not mean a difference merely of country or
+scenery, but a difference of atmosphere; better, and more literally, a
+change of spirit. To put it bluntly, I never knew the reality of
+fairyland until I blundered across that road one grey gusty evening
+ten years ago, and heard the tall grasses whistling in the wind. Since
+then the road has always been a frontier, not to be crossed without
+preparation.
+
+As "3.7" tumbled out of his go-cart I looked at my watch and saw it
+lacked but a few minutes to noon. It was just such a cloudless June
+day as must have inspired Shelley's _Hymn of Apollo_. No smallest
+cloud to break the dazzling blue; and, high above our heads, Apollo,
+standing "at noon upon the peak of heaven."
+
+If it had been Midsummer Day I should have thought twice about
+crossing the Boundary. As it was, we were quite near enough to the
+24th of June to make it risky. So, as "3.7" bent a tangled head over
+the bonnet of his Daimler, I flung myself down on the level turf
+beside him and stared across the road.
+
+Behind us and on either side were clumps of gorse bushes, and beyond
+them the immense level expanse of the open heath. Immediately in front
+was the road, sunk a foot beneath the turf, which comes right up to
+it, both on this side and that.
+
+"Another piece of string, please," said "3.7," rummaging in my pockets
+without waiting for an answer, "and a pencil, and----"
+
+And then I saw it. On the farther side of the road there is a stretch
+of short turf, some hundred yards wide; and beyond that an irregular
+line of silver birches; and beyond that the blue of distant hills, for
+the Common slopes down where the trees begin. Between the silvery wood
+and the road, through the midst of the wide belt of turf, and parallel
+with the Boundary, ran a river. There was nothing to be much surprised
+at, for it was just the kind of river you would expect to see running
+through the fields of fairyland. It was a river of grass.
+
+It was the slender-stalked, tufted, not very tall, grey-headed grass
+that grows quite generally in open country and wild places. But the
+wind and the sun now turned it into a river which ran fast between its
+banks of green, its waves silvery grey, quick-flowing waves, gleaming
+and dappled, an endless succession. It flowed from somewhere out of
+sight in the west, and disappeared to the east over the edge of the
+great slope that brings you down to the woods, vanishing, to all
+intents and purposes, over the edge of the world.
+
+Without taking my eyes off this astonishing spectacle I stretched out
+a hand and, catching "3.7" by the edge of his white smock, told him to
+run across the road to the grass and--paddle in it. I said it was
+better than motor cars. He made no comment on this but, after glancing
+warily up and down the road (for he has been brought up in wholesome
+awe of the entire tribe of automobiles), he crossed the Boundary, ran
+across the turf and plunged up to his knees in the river.
+
+I cannot be certain, but it is my considered opinion that Apollo
+stopped his golden chariot for the space of a whole minute to look
+down at the golden-haired boy wading in that noiseless, fast-flowing
+river.
+
+In another minute "3.7" was back at my side, both hands full of the
+tufted grass he had pulled. I regret to say he tickled my ear with it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Honest, solemn reader, ardent food reformer, keen educationist,
+clear-headed moralist, practical-minded housewife, I tell you frankly
+there is no moral to this little episode. It throws no light on what
+to eat, or on the purchasing power of an English shilling, or on the
+ethical training of young children, or on the nature of neurasthenia.
+Fairyland, of course, is a childish fiction, Apollo a solar myth, a
+road is a road, grass is grass and heaven is a state of mind. I quite
+agree with you. But let me whisper something in your ear. If you
+should ever blunder across your Boundary, don't be surprised if things
+look queer on the other side; above all, whatever you do, don't let
+any strange river you may find flowing there carry you away, or it may
+bring you, spite of all your protests, through one of the gates of
+pearl into the City of God.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+A SCIENTIFIC BASIS FOR MENTAL HEALING.
+
+
+There is a vast amount of loose talk, and innumerable assertions from
+irresponsible individuals concerning the wonders that have been
+achieved by Mental Healing, but naturally the scientist and physician,
+when dealing with such a question as this, has to put aside, not all
+enthusiasm, but certainly all emotionalism, and then, most carefully
+sift the evidence laid before him. The scientist here wants hard, dry,
+irrefutable facts; the responsible physician requires to know--by his
+own careful diagnosis or by an array of tabulated facts--the condition
+of the patient before and after treatment--that is, of the one who
+claims to have been cured by mental means. Innumerable claims are
+thus being made by patients and others, so that it is imperative for
+the unbiased physician at all events to consider the above question;
+this in order to give a reason for the faith that is in him, when he
+is known to be one of those who favour the metaphysical means of
+healing. Even the sciolist in the matter knows that in the case, say,
+of blushing, or blanching of the face, the action of mind over
+matter--of the body--is palpable; all admit that the quality of joy,
+for instance, will prove a splendid tonic; that despair, on the other
+hand, will pull down the bodily condition. But all this, we shall be
+told, is unconscious action; true, but fortunately we are now aware
+that by a forceful action of the will we can _consciously_ direct or
+derivate, as the case may be, currents of nerve-force to any part of
+the body. Occultists have known this for many centuries. Joy, hope,
+faith: these are very potent factors in improving the health
+conditions--simply because they act upon the sympathetic nervous
+system, and this latter acts upon the circulation. Happiness dilates
+the blood-vessels. Fear contracts them. Thus, unbounded faith; renewed
+hope; sudden joy; enforced will-power; all have a marked effect upon
+bringing about an equilibriated condition of the circulation--just the
+same as a hot bath does, though not so rapidly or so perceptibly.
+Further, we must remember that all disease more or less is a stasis, a
+congestion, somewhere; we have only to dissipate this; to separate the
+cells; to expand the part, as it were, and "resolution," as we call it
+in congestion of the lungs, takes place. So that it seems to me that
+we can fairly claim a strictly scientific basis for Mental Healing. I
+have always, however, maintained that the attitude of the patient's
+own mind has much to do with the result: in his consciousness there
+must be faith and hope in order to get the best effect.
+
+Judging, then, of the very remarkable and palpable changes which
+anyone can see occur on such superficial parts as the face and
+extremities, I can see no reason that, by an enforced mental action,
+the deeper parts--including any hidden diseased part--should not be
+altered for good. I am very confident that it is upon these lines,
+coupled, as they can always be, with advice as to clean feeding and
+right living generally, the physician of the future will largely
+depend for his cures. Thus we are fully justified in not only trying
+the system on "functional," but also for "organic," cases.
+
+J. STENSON HOOKER, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+A SIGNIFICANT CASE.
+
+ACCOUNT OF A FAST, UNDERTAKEN FOR THE CURE OF A PROFOUND BLOOD
+DISEASE.
+
+
+The following account of a fast is worthy of attention. It is rigidly
+accurate _in principle_, as far as I could make it so, and I am
+responsible for its truthfulness. But the subject of it, feeling that
+he is engaged in a duty and "labour of love," as he expresses it, is
+yet naturally anxious to prevent his identity from being discovered;
+and so, while the facts of the narrative are true in principle they
+have been varied in a few details for the purpose of preventing the
+recognition of the subject of them.
+
+They occurred in the history of a man of about 40 years of age, who
+fell ill of an infectious disease some 20 years ago, while living
+abroad. The exact time of the infection is not known. The patient was
+treated by qualified doctors living in the same country as himself,
+and there is no reason to believe that he was not properly and
+skilfully treated. He had, however, for years buoyed himself up with
+the hope that he should be able to come to England for the best
+treatment, and recently he found himself in this country for that
+purpose. It goes without saying that the eminent men consulted treated
+him after the most modern and approved methods, which were also, so
+far as knowledge goes, the most likely to benefit him. Not only as to
+treatment must it be assumed that the best was done, but the diagnosis
+also is supported by the authority of the doctors seen, and was
+confirmed by physiological and pathological investigation. This would
+be recognised if it were possible to publish names, places and dates
+which are withheld from the courteous reader for the reason already
+given. I can only say that I entirely concur in the diagnosis and in
+the suitability of the treatment.
+
+The man came under my care on a Sunday, the fast, which is the subject
+matter of this communication, having been commenced on the Friday six
+weeks before that day, the last food having been taken on the Thursday
+at 5 P.M. I saw him, therefore, on the forty-fifth day of the fast.
+His pulse was 59, soft, steady, regular. Temp. 96.8 degrees, about 11
+A.M. He was able to be up, and walked actively, all his bodily
+movements being active and his mind quite clear and rational. His
+weight on the day after I first saw him was, in the same clothes as
+when weighed at the beginning of the fast, 129½ lbs. He said he
+weighed 171 lbs. on the machine at the commencement, and therefore the
+loss of bodily weight up to that time was 41.5 lbs. The average loss
+of weight during the 46 days of the fast was about nine-tenths of a
+pound daily if the 41.5 lbs. loss is divided by the 46 days of the
+continuance of the fast up to that time--41.5/46=.9 lbs. almost
+exactly.
+
+When he came to my consulting room on the forty-sixth day, about 2.15
+P.M., the pulse was 64, temp. 95.6 degrees (thermometer 3 minutes
+under tongue). He was much troubled with a nasty expectoration of
+mucus. His breath was very offensive. No enlarged glands could be felt
+in either groin--perhaps a trifling enlargement in the right. In
+middle of front border of right tibia a little irregularity is felt,
+and a small hollow, which he thinks is filling up; but it might be
+that the exudation on the bone immediately above and below the hollow
+is somewhat reduced, as this would equally give the suggestion that
+the hollow is filling up. There is a similar but rather smaller
+irregularity on the left tibia also. He felt rather weak that day,
+which he attributed to not having had his usual walk the day before.
+The nasal cavity consists of a large grey septumless cavern showing
+dry crusts. The issuing breath is most offensive. Patient had drunk
+freely of water, he said, to the extent of 4 or 5 quarts a day during
+the fast but when I said--do you mean that you have been taking over a
+gallon of water daily?--he rather hesitated, and did not think it was
+so much as that. He had not measured it and had taken it cold usually,
+though occasionally hot, and had taken it without stint as he wanted
+it. On the forty-eighth day of the fast he complained of being weak
+but worst of all, he said, his breath was very offensive to himself.
+It was so to me also--faint, fetid, putrid. His sense of smell was
+greatly impaired, so much so that he could not smell the offensiveness
+of the bowel-excreta which came away every day on using the
+gravitation-enema, and which were horrible to by-standers. It would
+seem from this as if his distress at the bad smell of his breath was
+probably due to a perversion of the sense of smell, which can be
+easily understood if we reflect that the disease-process was going on
+in the region where the smell-apparatus is specially located. The
+temperature was 96.2 degrees that morning the patient said. At 2 P.M.
+when I saw him the pulse was 68, regular, even, steady. He says he was
+feverish last night. I suppose he felt hot. He sleeps well, but says
+he hears the clogs of the mill-hands as they go to their work in the
+mornings. Has lost 2 lbs. weight in last 2 days. Temp. 93.6 degrees to
+my observation 2.30 P.M. Says he feels "done at the stomach." His
+voice is poor. Expectorates somewhat freely. A small blob of green
+thickish mucus in ordinary white mucus came away in my presence. Urine
+acid 1010. No glucose. Faint trace of albumin to heat and picric
+acid: also to nitric acid. The right lachrymal punctum is blocked; the
+tears run down the cheek; and I failed to get even a hair-thick wire
+into it. Evening, pulse 65, temp. 97.2 degrees in bed with hot-water
+bottle. Fæces most offensive, no bowel-excreta coming away except to
+enema. Forty-ninth day. In bed, temp. 97.2 degrees, pulse 65, soft,
+steady, regular. No great emaciation of limbs. Showed me some green
+expectoration. He says it is from Salvarsan as it is exactly like what
+he was injected with! The motion to the enema as offensive as before,
+but the breath is less offensive to me: not so fetid.
+
+On this day patient completed 7 weeks of fasting. Feels sick and as if
+he would vomit. About midday he did vomit about a teaspoonful of dark
+green stuff, very bitter and acid (bile, I should call it, though he
+calls it "pure citric acid") and immediately after that he got rid of
+a motion without the use of the enema, brown, dark and very offensive
+still. I think the breath, however, is rather less offensive; and so I
+thought also two days ago. Temp. 97, pulse 67, soft, steady, regular;
+about 1.30 P.M. In bed since fiftieth day of fast. Not feeling very
+ill and not specially emaciated, though the buttocks are thinning; but
+legs and thighs and arms and forearms not specially thin. He came to
+me to be weighed on the forty-ninth day and weighed 127½ lbs.
+Fifty-second day of fast. Still in bed. Condition much the same as to
+pulse, temperature, etc., and as to emaciation so far as observation
+goes. Remained in bed, not because unable to be up, but because he
+thought it would be better for him to be resting. On the fifty-fourth
+day, as he still felt sick, I gave him, at his request, an emetic in
+the form of 10 grains of copper-sulphate. This was followed by
+sickness after about an hour, when he got rid of a very little of the
+same green stuff as before. Bile? But the difficulty is to understand
+how, after all this time of fasting, he should still feel sick and
+with inclination to vomit. On the fifty-fifth and fifty-sixth days of
+the fast he remained in bed, the condition being much the same. On
+Thursday, the fifty-sixth day, he broke the fast at 5 P.M., just 8
+weeks after beginning it. He had meant to go on for 60 days, and I did
+not think that there would have been any danger in his doing so; but I
+did not press him to continue any longer. He took 3 oranges on that
+day; and on the Friday he took 5 more. I advised him not to increase
+the quantity of food too quickly. The breath has been quite sweet
+during the last two days. He has been too weak to take enemata, so we
+cannot say if motions would still have been offensive. And as there is
+no weighing machine in his room, we don't know the exact loss of
+weight sustained during the fast, though there is no reason to think
+that it has averaged more than .9 lb. a day. Up to the time of
+stopping the enemata, pieces of mucous membrane and mucus itself came
+away from the bowel, and the motions were very offensive. He seems to
+have a mucous enteritis without fever.
+
+On the fourth day after breaking the fast, patient took 6 oranges, 4
+apples and a banana; and he ordered much more food, which, however, I
+advised him not to take. On this day his bowels were opened naturally,
+with a very offensive motion. But the breath was much sweeter, in fact
+not offensive at all.
+
+On the sixth day he came to my consulting-room and weighed 128 lbs.
+Pulse 80, soft, steady, regular. He had not slept all night and had
+had to be up no fewer than 6 times to have his bowels opened. No
+diarrhoea, he said, but full motions, the first 3 very offensive.
+Breath not offensive. Has dry pharyngitis and is complaining of sore
+throat.
+
+Next day. Weight 133 lbs. Bowels acted again, 1 A.M., 3 A.M., 6 A.M.,
+9 A.M. and 1 P.M. Large motions. I told him I thought he was taking
+too much food. Pulse 104. Not sleeping well. Complained of sore
+throat.
+
+Eighth day. Weight 138 lbs., a gain of 5 lbs. a day for 2 days. Pulse
+80 at 7 A.M. (his own statement), at 2.30 P.M. pulse 100, temp. 99.4
+degrees. Bowels acted at 12 midnight, 3.30 A.M. and about 11 A.M. Went
+that day to have his photograph taken. The throat was better. Tongue
+dry and leathery. It was plain to me that he was taking too much food.
+He was having a mixed diet and taking much and often. He said his
+"mouth was coming to pieces," and in fact the mucous membrane was
+glazed and peeling; also the lips. On the ninth day he returned home.
+
+The loss of weight can be seen from the following statement. On
+commencing the fast the weight was 171 lbs.
+
+ First day weight was 171 lbs.
+ Sixth day " " 165½ "
+ Seventh day " " 163½ "
+ Twelfth day " " 158 "
+ Fifteenth day " " 155½ "
+ Eighteenth day " " 150½ "
+ Twenty-fifth day " " 142½ "
+ Forty-seventh day " " 129½ "
+ Forty-ninth day " " 127½ "
+
+Fast ended on fifty-sixth day. On the sixth day after breaking the
+fast the weight was 128 lbs. On the next day it had risen to 133 lbs.
+and on the following day to 138 lbs. In the first 47 days of the fast
+the loss of weight was 43.5 lbs., or an average loss of .888 lbs.
+daily (43.5/49=.888 lbs.) The loss of weight for the last 8 days
+before the fast was broken is not known as patient was in bed, though
+it probably was at much the same rate as during the other times of the
+fast when the weight was taken on the scales.
+
+The following comparative measurements are interesting. Of course he
+had been eating for a week after the termination of his fast, so that
+the measurements taken on that day would be higher probably than if
+they had been taken seven days before, when he broke the fast.
+
+
+BODILY MEASUREMENTS.
+
+ _At Commencement_ _At Termination_
+ _of Fast._ _of Fast._
+
+ Forearm 11 inches 9+5/8 inches
+ Arm 11½ " 8¾ "
+ Hips 38 " 32½ "
+ Thigh 21¼ " 16 "
+ Pelvis 37½ " 30½ "
+ Calf[1] 15¼ " 13½ "
+ Neck 14½ " 12½ "
+ Chest 38 " 31¼ to 34½ "
+
+[1] There was a bundle of varicose veins behind right calf.
+
+Patient kept a diary during his fast, but it does not seem necessary
+to reproduce its statements here. It shows that he walked about during
+the time, notes the state of the weather as foggy or very foggy or
+freezing, mentions that water was taken, sometimes hot apparently, as
+on 15th March, "after glass of hot water, pulse 70, temperature 98½
+degrees." No doubt drinking the hot water had elevated temporarily the
+mouth-temperature, as it does. The diary also notes that he felt weak,
+had a bath, or did not have a bath, notes the pulse-rate, etc., as
+also the effects of the daily enemata. On the twenty-ninth day of the
+fast he took a bottle of Apenta Water. Such are samples of statements
+from the diary.
+
+A. RABAGLIATI, M.A., M.D.
+
+_The remainder of this article deals with conclusions of great
+interest and value, and will appear in our next issue._--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS.
+
+
+For salads it is not necessary to depend entirely upon the usual salad
+vegetables such as lettuce, watercress, mustard and cress.
+
+The very finely shredded hearts of raw brussel sprouts are excellent,
+and even the heart of a savoy cabbage. Then the finely chopped inside
+sticks of a tender head of celery are very good; also young spinach
+leaves, dandelion leaves, endive, sorrel and young nasturtium leaves.
+
+Then there are the onion family (for those who can take them), the
+tender kinds, such as spring onion, chive and shallot being very good
+when chopped finely and used as a minor ingredient in any salad.
+
+The root vegetables should also be added in their season, raw carrot,
+turnip, beet, artichoke and leek, all finely grated.
+
+A taste for all the above-mentioned vegetables, eaten raw, is not
+acquired all at once. It is best to begin by making the salad of the
+ingredients usually preferred and mixing in a small quantity of one or
+two of the new ingredients.
+
+For those who find salads very difficult to digest, it is best to
+begin with French or cabbage lettuce and skinned tomatoes only, or, as
+an alternative, a saucerful of watercress chopped very finely, as one
+chops parsley.
+
+Any salad, however made up, should be served in as dainty and pleasing
+a fashion as possible. It is, perhaps, usually best to serve it ready
+chopped and shredded, and to allow each person at the table to take
+his or her own helping of "dressing."
+
+English people seldom serve salad in the French fashion--that is,
+quite dry, save that the dressing is well mixed in an hour before the
+meal. Readers who have been to France may have seen French peasant
+women whirling a wire salad-basket round their heads in order to dry
+the materials after the cleansing has been done. When dry, the
+green-stuff is torn with the hands, the dressing (and the French know
+all about salad dressings) is added and the whole allowed to stand
+some little time, so that by the time the meal is served there is a
+complete blending of all flavours.
+
+Not everyone likes this method; but it is certainly better than the
+customary method here, which too often leaves a little puddle of water
+at the bottom of the bowl.
+
+There are many ways of preparing good salad dressing without resort to
+vinegar, salt and pepper. The two prime necessities are (1) really
+good oil and (2) some kind of fresh fruit juice. Most people prefer
+lemon juice or the juice of fresh West Indian limes, well mixed into
+either olive oil, nut oil or a blended oil such as the "Protoid Fruit
+Oil" or Mapleton's Salad Oil. The ordinary "salad oils" obtainable at
+grocers are seldom to be recommended; they almost invariably contain
+chemical preservatives and other adulterants. It is better to have the
+best oil and use it sparingly if need be, than take any faked product
+just because it is cheap.
+
+With most people the addition of pure oil assists the digestion of the
+salad, as well as serving other purposes in the body.
+
+Many excellent salad recipes and suggestions for novel yet simple
+"dressings" will be found in _Unfired Food in Practice_, by Stanley
+Gibbon.[2]
+
+[2] 1s. net; 1s. 1½d. post paid, from the office of _The Healthy
+Life_, 3 Amen Corner, London, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+_This, which is a regular feature of THE HEALTHY LIFE, is not intended
+as a household guide or home-notes column, but rather as an
+inconsequent commentary on current thought._--[EDS.]
+
+
+ An interesting booklet by Raymond Blathwayt with samples of Bath
+ Mustard will be sent free on application to J. & J. Colman, Ltd.
+ (Dept. 49) Norwich.--Advt. in _Punch_.
+
+Rumours are also afloat that G.K. Chesterton has written a brilliant
+booklet on Eiffel Tower Lemonade, and that the Attorney General has
+been commissioned to write a highly interesting brochure on American
+macaroni.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "I enclose you a photo of my baby, Willie, aged fifteen months.
+ He was given up by two doctors, and then I consulted another, who
+ advised me to try ----'s Food, which I did, and he is still
+ having it. You can see what a fine healthy boy he is now, and his
+ flesh is as hard as iron."--From an advt. in _Lady's Companion_.
+
+Evidently a case of advanced arterio-sclerosis.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ HEALTH BISCUITS. Nice and Tasty, handled by our 55 salesmen
+ daily.--Advt. in _Montreal Daily Star_.
+
+One reason, perhaps, why both the public and the sales have
+declined.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ WHAT WOULD YOU GIVE FOR A PERFECT SKIN?
+ Is 3d. too much?
+ Many perfect skins to-day are traced to a single sample.
+ --Advt. in _Lady's Companion_.
+
+The price is reasonable; but I think I would rather see a sample
+first, wouldn't you?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ OUR SPECIAL FILLING FAST--Headline in _Daily News_.
+
+The correct antidote for the well-known "starvation of
+over-repletion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Cold Anniversary Raised Pie and New Potato Salad.--From the
+ _Seventh Anniversary Menu of The Eustace Miles Restaurant_.
+
+I am told that one old gentleman, misled by the chef's quite innocent
+use of adjectives, protested to a waitress that the day was really
+very warm; also that a youthful wag obliterated the initial C from his
+menu with a pen-knife and then inquired which was the better vintage,
+'06 or '09.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But to contend that there is no difference between a good yellow
+ man and a good white man is like saying that a vegetarian chop of
+ minced peas is like a chop of the chump variety.--_New Witness_.
+
+Chop-chop--as the good yellow man might be tempted to say if he came
+upon this specimen of white wisdom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Canvassers can make a very good profit by selling a patent
+ ladies' folding handbag, also wristlet watches.--Advt. in _Daily
+ Mail_.
+
+Nevertheless, the only place for a patent lady is a registry
+office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CAKEOMA PUDDING? You cannot know how delicious they are until you
+ have tasted them.--Advt. in _Lady's Companion_.
+
+One of the things that would never have occurred to you if you hadn't
+seen it expressed so clearly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SAXON.--How cruel of you. Although I have not the honour of cap
+ and gown, I do possess a Classical Dictionary. If I can help
+ further, write again. Regarding the recipe, it depends upon its
+ nature. Perhaps VERA is the lady to whom you should address your
+ question--_Lady's Companion_.
+
+My colleague, Mr Edgar J. Saxon, denies all knowledge of this affair.
+But I do wish he would be a little more careful in future.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading Dr Knaggs deals briefly month by month, and
+according as space permits, with questions of general interest._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on one side only of
+the paper, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as a
+guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a stamped
+addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+CAN MALARIA BE PREVENTED?
+
+ A. de L. (Lisbon) writes:--For five months I have been a strict
+ "fruitarian," and as I am obliged now to go to Mozambique
+ (Portuguese East Africa) to remain there five rears, I should be
+ much obliged to you if you kindly let me know what I must do to
+ prevent the African fever and biliousness which seem to afflict
+ all Europeans in that part of the world. Any hints you could give
+ me as to maintaining health in such a climate would be most
+ gratefully acknowledged.
+
+I do not think that it is possible for any European, whether he adopts
+fruitarian or ordinary diet, to entirely escape malaria, since it is
+caused by a minute parasite which is forced into the blood by a
+certain form of biting mosquito.
+
+The parasite will, however, surely gain less hold on one whose blood
+is clean and pure and whose vital force is strong, than on one who
+dissipates his strength by partaking of meat, alcohol, tea, coffee and
+other stimulants, or who otherwise gets his blood into a bad state by
+faulty diet generally.
+
+Therefore, the thing this correspondent should do is to live as much
+as possible upon the simple frugal fare of the natives. He can take
+raw coker-nut freely and eat the fresh fruits which grow in this part
+of Africa. If he can obtain pineapple or papaw he will find these
+excellent to help him to retain his health and strength in this
+country.
+
+
+UNFIRED DIET FOR A CHILD: IS IT SUITABLE?
+
+ Mrs L.B.F. writes:--My husband and I are much interested in _The
+ Healthy Life_, deriving much benefit and good advice from its
+ pages. It is the only magazine, we find, which answers questions
+ that we have long been puzzling over. Reading a work of the
+ "Montessori Method" of training children last night I was
+ disturbed to find I had, according to that book, been feeding my
+ little boy, aged three years, all wrong. It says: "Raw vegetables
+ should not be given to a child and not many cooked ones. Nuts,
+ dates, figs and all dried fruits should be withheld. Soups made
+ with bread, oil, bread and butter, milk, eggs, etc., are the
+ principal foods Dr Montessori recommends. She also advocates the
+ use of sugar."
+
+ Our boy has nuts, ground and whole, all the fresh fruits and
+ dried ones, salads, brown bread and nut butter, sometimes dairy
+ butter, no milk, his food mostly uncooked, as we ourselves
+ believe in. If Dr Valentine Knaggs would give us his opinion on
+ this I should be very grateful. The boy is healthy, but I notice
+ a slight puffiness below the eyes of late in the morning. Also
+ his temper does not improve as he gets older. Will he be having
+ too much proteid (nuts) for one of his years, or is the temper
+ natural as a result of bad discipline. His father is away all
+ day, and mothers are, as a rule, soft marks, are they not?
+
+It is difficult to answer fully a question of this sort, as so much
+depends on the child's temperament and environment. A frail, delicate
+child with the promise of high mental development requires a finer and
+softer grade of nutriment than one of a coarse animal nature with
+strong, well-developed digestive organs.
+
+All healthy children, especially boys (as Mr Saxon will attest!), are
+full of mischief and restlessness, which it is the duty of a mother or
+a nurse to divert into right channels.[3] The display of temper is
+probably an indication of this not being done, though it _may_ be due
+in part to the raw diet not suiting the child.
+
+[3] This correspondent, and all mothers of difficult children, should
+study the works of Mary Everest Boole, published by C.W. Daniel, Ltd.;
+also _The Children All Day Long_, by E.M. Cobham.--[EDS.]
+
+The advice I would give would be to alter the diet and make it
+lighter.
+
+From my point of view, Dr Montessori has not given sufficient
+attention to the other side of the diet question, preferring to remain
+more on the side of orthodoxy. Moreover, her own work has been done in
+Italy, where a climate prevails which does not call for so free a use
+of vegetables and salads as is the case in our own cooler and bleaker
+clime.
+
+I suggest, as a beginning, the following diet might be tried, but it
+is necessarily impossible to guarantee good results unless the cause
+of the puffy eyes and temper have been definitely located by personal
+examination:--
+
+_On rising._--A raw ripe apple, finely grated, or simply scraped out
+with a silver spoon.
+
+_Breakfast at 8._--A scrambled egg on a Granose biscuit with a little
+finely chopped salad or finely grated; raw roots appetisingly served
+with a dressing of oil, lemon juice and a little honey. This to be
+followed by an "Ixion" or "P.R." biscuit, with fresh butter.
+
+_Dinner at 2._--Home-made cottage cheese, or cream cheese, or a nut
+meat (served cold out of the tin, or, better still, home-made). Two
+casserole-cooked vegetables, done with a little fruit juice and lemon
+to retain colour. This to be followed by a baked apple with cream and
+a little home-made, unfired pudding made of dried fruits.
+
+_Supper at 5._--A slice of "Maltweat" bread, and butter, and a cupful
+of clear vegetable soup, or some hot water with some lemon juice
+added, and slightly sweetened with a little honey.
+
+
+GIDDINESS AND HEAD TROUBLE.
+
+ Mrs L.B.F. also writes:--I sometimes think I must make dietetic
+ mistakes. My husband thinks I am perfectly healthy, so I do not
+ say anything of the giddiness in the morning and after eating, a
+ drowsiness and slight pain at the back of the head and underneath
+ one of my ears. Also under my eyes is on some mornings quite
+ swollen and puffed up. It is not so marked, but I am quite
+ conscious of it. Our diet consists mostly of a salad, with bread
+ or baked potato and cheese or ground nuts or cooked brussels
+ sprouts and a nut meat pie, apple pie and cream, with brown bread
+ and butter, or a raw fruit meal, nuts, apples, grapes, figs,
+ dates and no bread.
+
+ Two meals a day, first in the morning at eight o'clock, second at
+ two or three in the afternoon. A glass of hot water with lemon at
+ nine P.M., and the same in the morning. I do some exercises night
+ and morning and am out in the fresh air often through the day. We
+ live in the country and I have every chance of keeping myself
+ healthy. Perhaps I should say I do not eat many nuts, finding
+ them rather difficult to digest. Should I use an enema when I
+ feel like this, or wait for natural results?
+
+The symptoms of which L.B.F. complains are in all probability due to
+flatulence and to general disturbances of the digestive process.
+
+Perhaps it would be a good plan to make the diet lighter. The nuts
+could be omitted and cheese or eggs substituted. An evening meal would
+be helpful.
+
+As to the bowels, some senna and camomile tea at bedtime would help to
+clear them. Unless there is distinct evidence of fæcal retention in
+the colon it is better not to use the enema as a regular thing.
+
+_On rising._--A tumblerful of Sanum Tonic Tea made with hot,
+preferably distilled, water.
+
+_Breakfast._--An all-fruit meal consisting of nothing but apples,
+bananas, grapes, or orange, or any fresh ripe fruit that is in season.
+
+_Dinner at 12.30._--A cooked meal consisting of two casserole-cooked
+vegetables, with grated cheese as a sauce dressing, with some
+twice-baked or well toasted bakers' bread, followed by a baked apple
+and cream. (Omit nut meat pie and apple pie.)
+
+_Tea meal at 5._--2 oz. of cottage cheese or cream cheese, wholemeal
+bread and butter, small plateful of finely grated raw roots with an
+appetising dressing containing some "Protoid Fruit-Oil."
+
+_Bedtime._--Tumblerful of hot water (preferably distilled) to which
+senna leaves and German camomile flowers (very little) have been
+steeped to infuse; or a cupful of dandelion coffee could be taken if
+the bowels are regularly acting.
+
+
+LONG-STANDING GASTRIC TROUBLE.
+
+ W.T. writes:--Having tried a diet, recommended in _The Healthy
+ Life_, for a month I find the nuts and cheese are far too heavy
+ for the apparent weak condition of my stomach, also that the
+ salads and casserole-baked vegetables are too irritating to the
+ membrane of the stomach. I have no desire to return to flesh food
+ and ordinary feeding, which I feel would not be good for me. From
+ eggs I cannot obtain any good results. The continuance of loss of
+ weight is worrying me, being down to eight stone from eleven
+ stone in twelve months. I feel satisfied it is only a question of
+ diet, if I could only strike the correct one. I am naturally most
+ anxious to regain some of my lost strength and weight. I am at
+ present taking bread and butter, cooked fruit, and occasionally
+ an egg, boiled rice, vegetables and a little dried fruit. No
+ matter how light I make my diet I still suffer after every meal
+ with dilated stomach and irregular working of the heart. Blood
+ circulation is still bad and constipation is gradually getting
+ worse. As before stated, I am anxious to succeed with the
+ reformed diet, but I am really at a loss to know which way to
+ proceed to make any progress. As I was in South Africa twenty
+ years, and only returned to England just before this catarrh set
+ in, is the climate here against my progress, do you think? I am
+ so sorry to take up so much of your time, but shall be grateful
+ for any help you can give me which will be greatly appreciated.
+
+It is difficult to advise how best to proceed in this case as our
+correspondent really ought to seek medical advice. Only in this way
+can he obtain really satisfactory guidance. For without knowing the
+state of his blood and the organs generally it is impossible to advise
+correctly. Speaking generally, until salads and casserole-cooked
+vegetables can be taken freely there can be no possible permanent
+cure.
+
+In many such cases the best way to train the digestive organs into a
+healthy state is to keep to a diet consisting chiefly of dextrinised
+cereals, which must be eaten dry, with some vegetables and as little
+fresh fruit as possible. This to be continued until little by little
+the raw salad vegetables are found to agree; then the rest is easy.
+
+A diet on the following lines would probably be a good temporary
+measure:--
+
+_Breakfast._--One egg lightly boiled, poached or baked, with two
+Granose biscuits and fresh butter, eaten dry.
+
+_Dinner._--Brusson Jeune bread (one or two rolls) with butter, and
+small helping of vegetables, cooked at _first_ in the orthodox way.
+
+_Supper._--Plateful of boiled rice (cooked dry in the Indian
+fashion[4]) with a tablespoonful of good malt extract.
+
+No sugar, honey, stewed fruit, or dried fruit should be taken until
+improvement has set in. As little fluid as possible should be taken
+until the stomach has regained more tone and become more normal in
+size.
+
+[4] See _The Healthy Life Cook Book_. 1s. net (post free, 1s. 1½d.).
+
+
+SEVERE DIGESTIVE CATARRH.
+
+ Miss S.L.P. writes:--I should like a little help as to diet. I
+ have just had an attack of epidemic influenza with throat
+ trouble, so that I feel very much run down and unfit for a diet
+ too depleting in character. For over four years I have adopted a
+ non-flesh diet on account of a tendency to chronic catarrh of the
+ whole alimentary tract, due to rheumatic tendencies which affect
+ me internally rather than externally. The continuous damp weather
+ has produced much gastric irritation, and frequent acidity.
+
+ I cannot discover a diet that is convenient and at the same time
+ sufficiently nourishing. I lose flesh on what I take, and I have
+ none to spare, though at one time I was inclined to be stout. My
+ age is forty-eight.
+
+ I take three meals a day. A light breakfast either of "Maltweat"
+ bread or "P.R." Cracker biscuits and butter, with tomato or fresh
+ fruit or occasionally an egg. For midday meal an egg or milled
+ cheese, or nuts or cream cheese, with a baked potato and a
+ conservatively cooked vegetable. Occasionally I have a little
+ salad and grated carrot, but unless I am better than usual I
+ cannot digest these. The evening meal consists of "Maltweat"
+ bread or "P.R." Cracker biscuits or Granose flakes, with cream
+ cheese. As a child I suffered constantly from colds in the head,
+ but now my troubles are oftener internal.
+
+ The action of the bowels is irregular. I depend chiefly upon an
+ enema of warm water when constipation is present.
+
+ I never drink tea, only hot water, or Emprote and water, or
+ occasionally vegetable juices or fruit juices. I find I am better
+ without much fluid.
+
+So far as it is possible to judge from this letter, this correspondent
+is suffering not only from stomach and bowel catarrh, but her
+condition as a whole is unsatisfactory. The vital force is depleted
+and the nervous system is not doing efficient work.
+
+She needs suitable treatment to remove the acid and toxins with which
+the system is evidently clogged. This is not an easy task, for as soon
+as elimination begins trouble arises in the form of influenza or other
+similar derangements. These are probably little else but attempts on
+the part of nature to rouse the vital force of the body into action
+with a view to clearing out the clogging poisons.
+
+Waste clearing should be done gradually. The skin should be made to
+act better by means of home Turkish baths, or by wet-sheet packs. Then
+mustard poultices can be applied _along the course of the spine_ and
+massage with suitable manipulations can be applied to the muscles and
+bones which make up the spine. The daily practising of the excellent
+and simple breathing and bending exercises described in Müller's _My
+System for Ladies_[5] will be very helpful. By means such as these the
+body will be gradually cleared of its poisons, and so the nervous
+system will be made to do better work.
+
+The diet specified can be continued.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+[5] 2s. 8d. post free from the office of _The Healthy Life_, 3 Amen
+Corner, London, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_May we ask the co-operation of all our readers during the holiday
+season in the following way. On holidays you are bound to meet fresh
+people, and make new acquaintances, and even friends. We suggest you
+purchase a few extra copies of _THE HEALTHY LIFE_ before you start and
+hand them on to any likely to be interested. People tell us the
+magazine is its own recommendation. This does not mean that you need
+not add your own. The circulation grows steadily, but it is far short
+of what it might easily be if every reader were to gain one fresh
+reader every month._--[EDS.]
+
+
+MORE APPRECIATIONS.
+
+I want to say how very interesting and helpful I find _The Healthy
+Life_, and it is always a pleasure to buy an extra copy to give to
+friends, for I always feel it will do them good to read it, and
+perhaps make regular subscribers of them.
+
+H. BARTHOLOMEW, Knebworth.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V AUGUST
+ No. 25. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+The pursuit of health, considered from the negative standpoint, is the
+flight from pain.
+
+And pain is the great mystery of life.
+
+James Hinton, himself a well-known physician of his time, attempted to
+solve the mystery of pain by showing that it is the accompaniment of
+imperfection. That what is now experienced as pain might be exquisite
+pleasure given a higher stage of human development.
+
+But this, after all, only shifts the mystery one step farther. Instead
+of the mystery of pain we have the mystery of imperfection. Yet to
+image perfection is always to image something incapable of growth or
+further development.
+
+Take, for example, a perfect circle. So long as it remains unbroken,
+flawless, the line (or infinite number of lines) composing it cannot
+be continued or extended. But given a break in the line and it may be
+continued round and round, up and up (or down and down) into an
+infinitely ascending spiral. This possibility of extension depends on
+a break, on an imperfection.
+
+It does not follow, of course, that every flaw in human nature is
+always the starting-point of new growth, every failure a
+stepping-stone to greater knowledge, but the possibility is there. It
+is for men to see that they do not neglect their opportunities.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+IMAGINATION IN PLAY.
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this wonderfully simple and
+suggestive article a continuation of the series previously entitled
+"Healthy Brains." The author of "The Children All Day Long" is an
+intimate disciple of one of the greatest living psychologists, and she
+has a message of the first importance to all who realise that true
+health depends as much on poise of mind as on physical fitness._--[EDS.]
+
+
+The fruit of imagination ripens into deeds actually done in the
+service of man: its flower brightens the whole of life and makes it
+fragrant, from the budding-time of children's play and laughter to the
+developed blossoms of the creative imagination which we call painting
+or poetry or music.
+
+Play and art have this in common, that they are activities pursued for
+the sake of the activity itself, not as a means to any other object,
+not aiming at any material usefulness. Actually, of course, there is
+nothing more useful, on every scale of usefulness, than the
+development of the individual in art or play, but these would never be
+really themselves while an ulterior purpose formed a background to
+them in consciousness.
+
+Physical exercises devised for the sake of health are a more or less
+pleasant form of work; they do not take the place of play. Our
+ordinary work is usually more or less one-sided and unbalanced in the
+demands it makes upon us; we therefore try to find what other set of
+movements will undo this unbalancement and give us back unbiased
+bodies. When that is done, and not till then, we get freedom, and it
+is at that moment that real "play" begins--the use of the freed
+muscles according to our own will and pleasure.
+
+The same thing is perhaps true in connection with our minds. We all
+see the fallacy of the old-fashioned hustlers' cry, "Make your work
+your hobby; think of nothing else; let every moment be subordinated to
+the dominating idea of your career; put aside all sentimentalism, all
+laziness and self-will, all enthusiasm about things not in your own
+line of work."
+
+We have come to see that this kind of effort leads often to nervous
+breakdown and early death; always to a certain narrowing of sympathy
+and hardening of method even in the career itself. So we
+conscientiously "take up" a hobby or a sport and set aside some hour
+or day for indulgence in it. We make it a duty to lay aside for the
+time being all idea of duties; part of our work is to learn to rest.
+
+So far so good. But does all this go far enough?
+
+Work imposed by any set of outer needs puts the whole being under a
+certain strain. The aim of remedial exercises, prescribed rest-times
+and legal holidays is to undo this strain, to unwind us from our coil
+by twisting us the other way.
+
+When this has been satisfactorily done, too often the person
+responsible thinks that this is enough. But it is really and truly at
+this moment that one is beginning one's real life.
+
+When the body is freed from strain and weariness is the time to leap
+and dance and sing and wrestle.
+
+When the mind is free from prejudice and weariness is the time for its
+original activity to begin; new thoughts spring up unbidden and the
+creative imagination lives and grows.
+
+(In the sphere of will, many great sages have said that an analogous
+sequence holds good. When the whole emotional and moral nature has
+thrown itself in a particular direction, and then an unwinding has
+taken place, the moment of completed renunciation has been said to be
+the dawn of some great new spiritual light.)
+
+Who does not know the peaceful activity of a Sunday evening, the
+fruitful quiet of a long railway journey or sea-voyage _at the end_ of
+a holiday? Two friends walk slowly home together after an exciting
+expedition or debate; two girls give each other their confidence while
+brushing their hair after a dance.
+
+Why is this so? Nowadays people are very ready to answer the question
+by refusing the fact. It is waste of time not to be _doing_ something
+strenuously. Rest is almost as strenuous as everything else; it is to
+be thorough while it is the duty on hand and is to fit exactly on to
+the work time, without overlapping but without interspace.
+
+In this way too often the imagination, the really individual part of
+the mind, is starved and atrophied. Especially in childhood there
+ought to be a space left between useful work and ordered play for the
+individually invented games, the pursuits that are not for any
+definite end, for dreams and lived-out tales, when the child may make
+what he likes, do what he likes, and in imagination be what he likes.
+If we scrupulously respected this growing-time we should soon have a
+race of sturdier mettle altogether. Just now this particular want is
+probably most nearly supplied among elementary school children than
+among those who have more "educational advantages"; they "go out to
+play" in the streets for hours every day, and one cannot help thinking
+that it is the vitality thus evolved that keeps most of them healthy
+and happy in spite of many hardships.
+
+In later life, if we really want to make something of our lives, we
+shall do well to insist an keeping such a margin of free time to
+ourselves. It need not be long. Five minutes, if one really sails away
+in the ship of imagination, will take us to fairyland and back again.
+But the five minutes (or the day in the country, or the week of quiet,
+or whatever we take or can get) must really and truly be free; we
+must have the courage to seek for what we really want, and we shall
+have the inestimable reward of finding what we really are.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?[6]
+
+[6] See July number.
+
+
+For some years I lived according to the advice given by "M.D." with
+regard to the quantity of proteid that should be taken. But experience
+led me to believe that it was wrong. In recent years my diet has
+consisted of the following quantities per annum:--
+
+ Three to four bushels of wheat.
+ Seventy pounds of oats.
+ One bushel of nuts (measured in the shells).
+
+And with these foods rich in proteid, I have taken plenty of raw
+vegetables and fruit, and three to four gallons of olive oil.
+
+I do not mention this as an ideal, in order to suggest another and
+better standard than that of "M.D." I do not think any such thing as a
+standard really exists or can exist. But I mention it to show how far
+I have travelled away from where I was.
+
+I take it that all food reformers will agree that the main reason for
+food reform is to make the body a more harmonious instrument for the
+true life of man, and that carries with it the belief that there is
+some correspondence, if we cannot yet see absolute unity, between the
+physical and the spiritual. Now the law of life, according to Christ,
+is one of continual progress towards perfection and I do not see how
+this will harmonise with the teaching of a fixed law for the body. All
+my experience and observation point to a progressive law for the body,
+and I do not know of a single fact contrary to it.
+
+My first point, then, is that there is no such thing as a standard of
+proteid needed by the body. All that can be said is this, that if you
+take a man who has been fed on a certain quantity for such and such a
+time and then feed him on a certain other quantity, alterations in
+the physical condition will appear. But who can say whether these
+changes are attributable merely to a deficiency or to a previous
+excess? If "M.D." and his patients take excessive food they naturally
+get trouble from stored poisons when they reduce the quantity. But why
+put all the trouble down to present deficiency instead of to previous
+excess? To this I can find no satisfactory answer.
+
+If we have got our bodies into so hopeless a condition that we cannot
+use our God-given instincts, tastes and feelings in the first place,
+the wisdom of troubling much about the continuance of bodily life
+would be doubtful; and, in the second place, one would need most
+overwhelming signs of knowledge to substitute for them. But where are
+they? There is no agreement between those who have been taught
+physiology. On the one hand, "M.D." gives a proteid standard, now
+impossible to myself, and I believe to many others, for it would
+involve eating a nauseating quantity; and, on the other hand, another
+doctor, presumably acquainted with the same physiology, tells me I
+cannot eat too little, so long as I do not persistently violate true
+hunger and taste. Then another doctor gives quite a different
+standard, and a much lower one. If we discard our natural guides,
+which of the claimants to knowledge is to be followed, and is there
+any knowledge at all such as is claimed?
+
+Imagine what a mockery it would have been to give such a standard as
+that of "M.D." to the agricultural labourer about the middle of last
+century, a typical one with a large family, and one who worked as men
+do not work to-day, and had to rear his family on a few shillings a
+week. How could such a one have provided more than a fraction of what
+"M.D." says is necessary, either for himself or his children?
+
+The broad fact is, that all the hardest work of the world has always
+been done by those who get the least food. As one who has had some
+experience of labour, I doubt if the workers could have done so much
+if it had not been for a spare diet. Certain it is, that since they
+have more to eat, they are much less inclined to work.
+
+My contention, then, is that there is no fixed standard of proteid
+needed by the body, but that the quantity depends on the development
+that is in progress and is only discoverable by the natural guides of
+appetite and taste, ruled by reason and love of others. Moreover, I
+contend that even if there were such a standard as "M.D." says
+physiology has found, it obviously is not known.
+
+I cannot help recognising in "M.D." one whom I gratefully love and
+respect. He helped me on the road, and now that I differ from him I do
+not forget it, and I ask his forgiveness if I seem to be arrogant. He
+thinks I cannot see what he sees because I am underfed, and I think he
+cannot see what I see because he is overfed. In a sense we are both
+right, and we form a beautiful illustration of the different states of
+mind that belong to different physical conditions. I urge the laymen
+like myself not to be afraid of that musty old ill-shaped monster
+called Science[7] when he is up against the eternal truths that belong
+to every simple untutored man. Shun the monster as you would a priest,
+to whom he has a great likeness, and unite with me in a long strong
+pull to get "M.D." out of the rut in which the monster holds him, so
+that we may have him with us on the road, for he carries much treasure
+and we cannot do without him.
+
+A.A. VOYSEY.
+
+[7] I do not wish to be misunderstood. No sane man despises real
+science, but when the mixture of science and ignorance, which usually
+stalks about in the name of science, wants to usurp our heaven-born
+instincts we cannot but notice his ugly and monstrous shape. It is the
+function of science, or a true knowledge of details, to fill in the
+mosaic of the temple of wisdom, but the mosaic can never be the
+structure itself and is only useful and good when it is subservient to
+that structure and harmonious with it.
+
+
+
+
+CAMPING OUT.
+
+FOOD QUESTIONS.
+
+
+"We have to consider," I said, "the question of what food to take and
+how to cook it."
+
+"Camping out," said Sylvia, "ought to be a complete holiday from the
+food bother. Why not live on unfired food, such as tinned tongue,
+sardines and bottled shrimps?"
+
+Thereupon Felix laughed a great laugh, and said: "Just try and do a
+thousand miles on sardines."
+
+Felix is Sylvia's brother, who has spent some twenty years in America,
+travelling for weeks through country that contained no people, and
+spending nearly two years in a single journey to Dawson City and home
+again. He plainly knows far more about bed-rock camping than anyone
+else in the family and we allowed him to take the floor for a time.
+
+"The first thing is bread." said Felix, "because you can't do without
+bread. You must take some yeast or else some baking-powder with you to
+make it rise, or you must bake it very quickly so that the steam
+aerates it. You might take a Dutch oven with you, but it's nothing
+like the Dutch oven that you know in this country. It is an iron pot
+on three legs, with an iron lid. You stand it in the fire and cover
+the lid with hot brands and you can cook anything inside it--ducks and
+chunks of venison, and bread of course."
+
+"But Mr Freeman has barred the oven," said Sylvia, "and if we are not
+going a thousand miles from home perhaps we can do without it."
+
+"As you like," answered Felix. "I only mention it so that you can get
+hold of the general principle. You can make very good bread in a
+frying-pan. You must mix the dough up stiff so that when the pan is
+nearly upright it won't tumble out. You fix the pan up with a prop
+behind it so that the dough faces the fire, quite close, and you draw
+some more fire behind it so that the back is warmed as well. When it
+burns a good crust on both sides it is done."
+
+"What are flap-jacks," I asked.
+
+"Just pan-cakes made without eggs or milk," said Felix. "You mix a
+quart of flour with a tablespoonful of baking-powder and put in water
+till it is just so thin that when you take up a spoonful and let it
+drop back you can see the shape of it for a few seconds before it
+melts into the rest. You fry the batter in bacon fat or butter just
+like pan-cakes, and the cakes are very good."
+
+[Illustration: _A Summer Idyll_]
+
+"That's a good tip for us," I said, "and another good thing to take is
+cuddy biscuits, a kind of captain's biscuit. Soak them a few minutes
+in water or milk and fry them. They're nice with tomatoes or anything,
+or by themselves."
+
+"Mebbe," said Felix, and his tone said, "Mebbe not." "I'm only
+discussing general principles, and you've got to work your own way out
+in the light of them. I've known an outfit come away without a
+frying-pan. How do you make bread then?"
+
+We had to give it up, and Felix went on: "Open your flour sack, turn
+down the edge like it is in a baker's shop, make a little hole in the
+flour and pour in water to make a pond. Mix in what flour you want to
+use and get your dough into the shape of a snake, wind it round a
+stick and cook it like that. You've got your bread then like a French
+roll, and very good it is."
+
+We all liked the idea of making bread every day and eating it hot.
+Here was something to be had in camp that you could not get at home.
+And we liked the idea of learning our cooking by means of first
+principles. Whether we liked it or not, Felix liked talking about it,
+and he began to grow anecdotal.
+
+"Once," he said, "I met a whole lot of men, ten of them I should
+think, camped on a cold frosty night with nothing to eat. They were
+trying to do a journey of thirty miles on rough prairie and their
+horses were tired and they could not get on. They had brought their
+lunch and eaten it long ago, and they told me they were starving. They
+had nothing to eat, nothing to do any cooking with and no wood to make
+a fire with. I never saw such hungry people. They were new settlers
+just out from England and it was up to me to do something for them.
+
+"'What have you got in that great waggon?' I asked. They told me they
+had some sacks of flour and two frozen quarters of beef, but there was
+nothing to cook it in and no wood to make a fire.
+
+"There was any amount of cow-dung on the prairie, and it was dry as
+chips. I set them collecting that and soon enough had a fire. I filled
+a bucket with water and put it on to boil. I chopped off some meat and
+put it in. Then I made some dumplings and put them in. You just put
+them into boiling water, you know, and then they cook at once on the
+outside and don't come to pieces. If they boil too much they get
+pappy, and if not done through they're not good. Most dumplings you
+eat in England are not done, but mine were just right and those ten
+hungry men had just as good a supper as anyone could wish for."
+
+"Tell us about the coffee you used to make," said Sylvia. "What
+horrible stuff it must have been."
+
+"The very best coffee ever I drank," said Felix.
+
+"We used to make it in a pot that was nearly a yard high. We never
+turned out the grounds, but let them settle and put in a little more
+every time we made coffee, till the pot was so full that it wouldn't
+hold any more water."
+
+"I don't see anything against it," I said, when Sylvia and Gertrude
+were both expressing their horror. "There is no tannin or other bad
+principle in coffee and you never get anything worse out of it than
+you do at the first soaking."
+
+"The fellows that work the logs on the river have their own kind of
+coffee that they call drip coffee," said Felix. "They have a tall pot
+like ours was and they tie the coffee in a sack above the water, so
+that the water never touches it, but the steam goes up and fetches it
+out in drops. They don't change the sack every time, but keep adding
+coffee till it won't hold any more."
+
+"The moral of which is?" said Basil, who had for some time been
+growing impatient.
+
+"That there are plenty of ways of cooking an egg besides frying it,"
+said Felix, "and that a bit of common-sense is about the best article
+you can take with you out camping. Take your food as raw as you can
+get it and know how to cook it. Also know a good herb when you see it,
+and never overlook a chance of getting a meal from the country that
+will save your stores."
+
+C.R. FREEMAN.
+
+_Food reformers will have their own opinion about a diet of shrimps,
+sardines, tinned tongue and stale coffee when camping out: the most
+important part of the outfit is doubtless an adequate supply of
+common-sense._--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+SEASICKNESS: SOME REMEDIES.
+
+_In the April and May numbers of the present year we published an
+article by Mr Hereward Carrington entitled "Seasickness: How Caused,
+How Cured." The following supplementary suggestions by the same
+well-known writer will be useful to many readers._--[EDS.]
+
+
+A very good plan, when you think of undertaking a voyage, is to begin
+to prepare for it several days in advance. For three or four days,
+before embarking, eat only very simple and somewhat laxative
+foods--such as fruits--so as to open the bowels well and tone up the
+system. This simple diet should be followed for the first two or three
+days aboard--of course not so rigidly, but taking care not to indulge
+in many heavy, greasy dishes. Unfortunately, the food on board is
+usually very rich and plentiful, and tempts one to eat. If one suffers
+from seasickness, there is not this same temptation, to be sure; but
+the malady may certainly be warded off, in the majority of cases, if
+only reasonable care be taken of the diet before and during the
+voyage, and if instructions herein laid down be followed.
+
+As before stated, drugs are as a rule useless for the cure of
+seasickness; but on occasion a "seasick cure" of some kind may prove
+effective. The harm which results from the drug may perhaps be more
+than counterbalanced by the benefits which the system derives from the
+cessation of seasickness. A preparation of this kind which is very
+highly recommended by many travellers is known as "Antimermal," and
+though none of these remedies are to be recommended with assurance,
+this one--and perhaps one or two others--might at least be tried, in
+cases of dire necessity, when seasickness has already supervened.
+
+It is hardly necessary to say that the patient should remain in the
+open air continuously, until all symptoms of seasickness have paused.
+_Live_ in your deck chair until you feel quite well and able to get
+up and walk round. Do not attempt to go downstairs into the
+dining-saloon to meals, if you feel in the slightest "squirmish."
+Rather have some hot soup or broth of some kind sent up to you, and
+drink it sitting in your chair. Do not be afraid to drink water at all
+times, even if you feel ill--as the water is easily returned, and it
+is less strain on the stomach to be able to bring up something than to
+find nothing in the stomach when an effort is made to eject what is
+not there. Water will serve to allay this strain, and thus serve a
+useful purpose.
+
+In very severe cases of seasickness, the stomach of the patient should
+be emptied and washed out at once. This is usually an easy matter.
+Have the patient drink one or two glasses of water, warm or cold, with
+a little salt or bi-carbonate of soda added--say a teaspoonful to a
+pint of water. This will have the desired result! In extreme cases of
+seasickness, dry cold, such as ice-bags, placed behind and about the
+ears, will sooth the patient, and help to allay his suffering. Cold
+cloths to the forehead will also prove helpful. Full baths had best be
+omitted, until the attack has worn off, as they are injudicious on
+account of the reactions they induce.
+
+In prolonged cases of seasickness, there is often a craving for acids
+and fruit juices. The continued absence or diminution of the acid
+contents of the stomach, and the privation from normal food, accounts
+in part for this, and it is highly proper to satisfy such a
+craving--providing due care is taken not to add to the stomach's
+distress by taking too much juice, or the juice of unripe fruit, or by
+swallowing the fibre of the fruit, which is allowable only when
+recovery is complete.
+
+HEREWARD CARRINGTON.
+
+
+
+
+IMPORTANT.
+
+
+If readers who possess copies of the first number of _The Healthy
+Life_ (August 1911) will send them to the Editors, they will receive,
+in exchange, booklets to the value of threepence for each copy.
+
+
+
+
+A SYMPOSIUM ON UNFIRED FOOD.
+
+
+_In the November number we published a letter from a reader containing
+the excellent suggestion that readers who had experimented to any fair
+extent with unfired diet should be invited to contribute to a
+conference on the subject in _THE HEALTHY LIFE_, and that the
+symposium should be gathered round the following points_:--
+
+(1) The effect of the diet in curing chronic disease.
+
+(2) Its effect on children so brought up--_e.g._ do they get the
+so-called "inevitable" diseases of chicken-pox, measles, etc., and
+_especially_ have they good (_i.e._ perfect) teeth?
+
+(3) The effect of the diet in childbirth.
+
+(4) The cost of maintaining a household in this way, as compared with
+the cost under ordinary conditions.
+
+(5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional
+dietary (often found amongst food reformers)?
+
+(6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?
+
+_Two letters were published in the January number. Two more in
+February. Others will appear in future issues. We are anxious to
+receive a large number of personal experiences, but they must be
+brief, and classified under the above heads as far as possible._--[EDS.]
+
+
+ ST ALBANS.
+
+ In response to your invitation I am sending you my experience with
+ vegetarian dietary. Although, as you will see, this has not been
+ altogether "unfired," I think it should be of interest to many.
+
+ (1) I became a vegetarian at the time of my marriage, nearly three
+ years ago, my husband being already a vegetarian of eleven years. I
+ considered this a good opportunity to commence. Previous to this I
+ had for some time suffered from indigestion, which continued for a
+ few months after marriage. I attribute the cure to the change of
+ diet, and drinking hot water after meals.
+
+ (2) We have one child eighteen months old, totally breast fed for
+ twelve months, and another four months: on breast and Ixion Food
+ and some fruit juice.
+
+ She has never had any disease whatever, and so far her teeth are
+ perfect and she has cut them quite easily. She is a bonny, sturdy
+ little girl, and very intelligent.
+
+ (3) With regard to childbirth, I previously followed the advice of
+ Dr Alice Stockholme in "Tokology," avoiding flesh meats and
+ bone-making food and adopting a diet of fruit (chiefly lemons) and
+ rice, brown bread and nut butter, wearing no corsets and taking
+ frequent baths. The effect during pregnancy was highly
+ satisfactory. I enjoyed perfect health the whole time, free from
+ the usual discomforts, and at childbirth I received similar
+ results: a speedy and safe delivery. Indeed, since marriage, my
+ husband, baby and myself, have been singularly free from even
+ minor complaints.
+
+ (4) As we do not have the specially prepared, expensive vegetarian
+ foods (supposed to substitute meat), but mainly the simple foods, I
+ consider the diet less costly than the meat diet.
+
+ (5) We are honestly quite free from the craving for meat or meat
+ foods.
+
+ (6) In the summer-time we live principally on salads, cheese,
+ rissoles, etc., made from beans, peas, lentils, etc., fresh fruits,
+ brown bread and nut butter. In the very cold weather we seem to
+ need rather warmer stuffs, such as porridge (carefully cooked) and
+ cooked vegetables, etc.
+
+ D. GODMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BRIGHTON.
+
+ I have read with the greatest interest the correspondence in _The
+ Healthy Life_ on the unfired diet. As the majority of your
+ correspondents have not been living _exclusively_ on unfired food,
+ or have only done so for short periods, may I suggest that some of
+ your correspondents or contributors live on an _entirely_ unfired
+ diet, _excluding dairy produce_, for a period of six or twelve
+ months and then relate their experiences. In this way some valuable
+ evidence would be obtained. At any rate I am prepared to do this
+ myself.
+
+ With reference to living on the unfired diet on 4d. a day, I have
+ often had two unfired meals for less than 4d., and two meals a day
+ are sufficient for anyone. Of course to do this one has to buy the
+ food which is in season and therefore cheap. Dried fruit and nuts,
+ followed by a cress salad with oil and lemon dressing, does not
+ cost more than 2d. An unfired rissole made from grated carrot and
+ flaked peanuts cost at most a penny, and if followed by dates or
+ figs would be a sufficient meal, and 2d. would cover the cost.
+
+ In conclusion, I have no difficulty in producing a "two course"
+ unfired meal for 2d.--but perhaps I should have left the subject of
+ cost for Dr Bell to deal with. Yours faithfully,
+
+ ALFRED LE HURAY.
+
+
+
+
+MORE ABOUT TWO MEALS A DAY.
+
+
+With reference to my article, "Two Meals a Day," which appeared in the
+May issue of _The Healthy Life_, several correspondents have asked me
+to give more particulars about my life and diet. I do so gladly; but I
+must be brief, as the demand upon space in this magazine is now very
+great.
+
+Resolved into a single sentence, what all my correspondents wish to
+know is this: Is a two-meal dietary best for all?
+
+To this question, however, a definite answer cannot be given, for the
+simple reason that scientific experimentation with respect to food
+quantities and times of meals, etc., has gone such a little way, so
+that it would be presumptuous to set a limit in regard to meals and
+food reduction. To my mind, apart from the question of the quantity of
+food to be taken, there is a great and important field of inquiry open
+with respect to the effect of rest upon the stomach and the
+intestines, upon the digestive and assimilative powers of the body.
+
+Now the whole purpose of my article was to show that a reduction of
+one's dietary was a matter of training, of gradual adaptation, but
+also--and this is the important fact-of gradual strengthening. My
+theory is that the two-meal plan is possible owing to the immense
+economy in digestive energy that is effected through giving the
+stomach adequate rest, and also through keeping the blood stream pure
+and unclogged, almost absolutely free from surfeit matter. A rested
+stomach will get more nutriment out of a small amount of food-stuff
+than an overworked stomach will get out of a much larger quantity. But
+experimentation which is sudden and covers a few weeks only, is worse
+than useless, as it tends to disprove the very principles that a saner
+method of experimentation would probably establish. And if I can
+impress this fact upon the reader I shall have performed a good
+service.
+
+Carefully undertaken, and properly graduated, I believe there are few
+people in these days who would not greatly benefit by a reduction in
+the number of meals and in the quantity of food they take. By means of
+a healthy and cheerful habit of introspection--not morbid and
+feverish--I am firmly convinced that by cutting down their meals most
+people would not only greatly improve their health, but their mental
+and spiritual condition as well, and also greatly increase their
+capacity for work ... And if in this way we can effect such an
+improvement in our life and condition it does not really matter
+whether we get to the two or even one meal basis or not.
+
+As to myself, my work is chiefly literary and my life moderately
+sedentary. But the fact is that I now have two moderate meals a day
+whereas I used to have four pretty good ones. But I have many friends
+whose work is mechanical, and demands much muscular energy, who are
+two-mealists. One lady I know, who is one of the healthiest, strongest
+and best physically developed persons I have ever met, is a
+two-mealist, and not only does she work at a mechanical occupation for
+ten hours a day, but on several evenings each week conducts a ladies
+gymnastics class as well. But in her case, as in mine, the two meal
+was an ideal that was gradually and slowly attained, and not a sudden
+reform. Indeed, the main thing to remember is that it is all a matter
+of training, it being quite impossible to say where the limit is. For
+of one thing I am quite sure--viz. that most people, were they to
+adopt a slow process of food and meals reduction, on the lines I
+suggested in my article, would be astonished at the result. The number
+of people one meets, chiefly among those whose life is more or less
+sedentary, who say they can't work as they should, are subject to
+pains and heaviness in the head, constipation and indigestion, is
+simply appalling; and on questioning such people I come to the
+conclusion that in the majority of cases it is because they eat too
+much or too often.
+
+My meals are very simple, and the simpler they are the better I like
+them. I like a cold lunch about noon, and a hot meal about six. I have
+tried a wholly uncooked diet, but as yet my body does not seem ready
+for it: perhaps it will be after a little while. The first meal
+usually consists of wholemeal bread and fruit, green or vegetable
+salads, just according to my needs at the time. In winter I take a
+more liberal supply of dried fruits and nuts. Pulses I eschew
+altogether. My second meal consists of a substantial entrée with one
+or two conservatively cooked vegetables--occasionally I have a soup
+and a sweet in addition. But of course it is for everyone to find out
+his or her own ideal diet; and let me say that it is worth while to do
+so, even though it involves much confusion and perplexity during the
+period of experimentation.
+
+WILFRED WELLOCK.
+
+
+
+
+A BALLADE OF SKYFARING.
+
+
+ Ye whom bonds of the city chain,
+ Yet whose heart must with Nature's be;
+ Ye who, bound to a bed of pain,
+ Dream there of torrent and tower and tree,
+ Here behold them--the magic key,
+ Turned by a thought in yon gates of blue,
+ Even now has revealed to me
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+ Why of the bondage of earth complain?
+ Wide as heaven is our liberty!
+ Where are the streets and their smoke and stain
+ When to the land of the lark we flee?
+ Where is the sight that we may not see,
+ Cloudland's citadel passing through?
+ Switzerland beckons with Sicily,
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+ Here, 'twixt walls with the marble's vein,
+ Oared on a river of gold are we;
+ There we watch, on a sapphire main,
+ White fleets voyage to victory.
+ Day unto day flashes grief or glee;
+ Night to night utters speech anew,
+ Figuring forest and lane and lea--
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+ ENVOY
+
+ Prince whose course through the world is free,
+ Fare you better than dreamers do?
+ Here are the mountains and here the sea--
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+S. GERTRUDE FORD.
+
+From _Lyric Leaves_, by S. Gertrude Ford. Cloth, 2s. 6d. net; 2s. 8d.
+post free from _The Healthy Life_, 3 Amen Corner, E.C. This charmingly
+bound book makes an excellent holiday companion, for it contains many
+beautiful lyrics, all characterised by serious thought, generous human
+sympathies and a delicate imaginative quality.
+
+
+
+
+A REMEDY FOR LONGEVITY.
+
+
+Once upon a time there was a little boy whose parents took things very
+seriously. They answered all his questions with painstaking precision.
+At a comparatively early age he could prove that fairies were
+non-existent. At the same time his toys were marvels of mechanical
+perfection.
+
+At the age of seven he was sent to a very efficient school, where,
+being naturally a bright boy, he gained high marks every term and
+passed all the examinations, for he had a wonderful and well-trained
+faculty for remembering exactly what his teachers had told him.
+
+When he left school he entered a London merchant's office, where his
+knowledge of arithmetic was of the greatest assistance in bringing him
+to the front. Moreover, he could argue very tellingly with all the
+clerks and warehousemen, and always knew what the morning papers were
+saving about health, neck-ties or religion.
+
+In course of time he grew a moustache, joined the Territorials, was
+made a partner in the firm, married a well-educated young lady and
+became a strong supporter of the local Liberal Club, where his
+opinions were so well known that it was unnecessary for anyone
+seriously to combat them. He was never known to vote for the
+Conservative candidate or to lose his head. His concluding speech in
+the historic debate on The National Health Insurance Act will always
+be remembered, by those who heard it, for its earnest defence of the
+medical profession. In fact, the Mayor, who was in the chair, and was
+a doctor himself, warmly congratulated the speaker, who was evidently
+very pleased.
+
+Ten years later he became a Town Councillor, opened several Institutes
+for the Care of the Poor, and sent his second son to join the eldest
+at the same kind of school at which he (the father) had been so well
+trained. About the same date he bought a new edition of the
+Encyclopædia Britannica and carefully compiled a list of facts and
+figures showing that idealists and all new-fangled ideas were the
+greatest danger to the increasing trade and expansion of the Empire.
+
+At the age of fifty he took a house at Surbiton and was continually
+congratulated on his hale and hearty appearance. His opinions were
+known and respected by all who met him. His sons were models of what
+the children of such a father should be, and they supported him in
+every argument.
+
+At the age of fifty-two he retired from business. A month later he had
+an idea; and it so interfered with all his opinions, and so affected
+his general health, that he died.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+A SIGNIFICANT CASE--II.
+
+
+He stopped smoking tobacco on the second day, and does not mean to
+resume its use. Of course he had no alcohol in any form during the
+fast, but he never has taken much alcohol, although he was not a
+pledged abstainer. The temperature was taken many times and seems to
+have been almost always subnormal, about 97 degrees Fahr., but this is
+not so unusual a condition as to call for comment. The chief cause of
+a subnormal temperature, in my opinion, is blocking of the body with
+too much food. No doubt in prolonged fasting the temperature may fall
+also; but sometimes a fast will be the cause of raising a subnormal
+bodily temperature, as happened in a case of mine in which on the
+twenty-eighth day of the fast there was a large elimination of urates
+by the kidneys and a rise of temperature from 96 degrees to 98.4
+degrees. Subnormal bodily temperature has not received the attention
+which it deserves. It is usually one of the forerunners, or prodromata
+as they are called, of the onset of incurable diseases like cancer,
+Bright's disease or apoplexy. The commonly accepted view that the heat
+of the body depends upon the food, and that people eat blubber in the
+Arctic and Antarctic regions to keep the bodily heat up, is one of the
+chief causes for neglect of the study of subnormal temperature. And it
+is quite surprising that physiologists have not thought it necessary
+to explain why nature has provided sugar and palm oil and cocoa-nut
+oil and ground-nut oil in the tropical regions, as well as abundance
+of olive oil in the warm temperate regions of the earth if these foods
+keep the bodily heat up. They ought to have been more abundantly
+supplied in the Arctic and Antarctic regions if the accepted view is
+correct. Besides, if we must eat blubber to keep bodily heat up in the
+Arctic regions when the outside temperature is 50 or 100 or more
+degrees lower than that of the body, what ought we to eat in the
+tropics to keep bodily heat down when the outside temperature is 50 or
+even 80 degrees above that of the body? Physiologists have not
+explained this, although assuredly an explanation is wanted. But the
+true explanation, the correct explanation, would have demolished the
+doctrine that bodily heat is due to the food, and so it has not been
+given. It is too simple to imagine that the bodily heat is, like the
+body itself and all its functions, the effect of the life-force that
+inhabits the body and builds up the body so that the body shall be a
+fit dwelling-place for itself--this explanation is too simple and too
+idealistic for modern science, which is less and less disposed, we are
+told, to invoke the aid of a force of life to account for vital
+phenomena, although it assumes an attracting force to account for
+gravitating phenomena, and an electric and chemic force to account for
+electric and chemic phenomena. Modern science (and ancient science,
+too, apparently) which sees well enough that an idealistic or a
+materialistic explanation would equally account for the nexus of the
+phenomena of the universe, deliberately and almost invariably prefers
+the materialistic explanation. She is anxious that we should be kept
+free of superstition. But the superstition that forces are the effects
+of things does not seem to distress her at all. And so we are told
+that gravitation is a property of matter, and are forbidden to think
+that perhaps gravitation, a force, procreates matter, a thing, in
+order that the effects of the fore may be perceived by dull sense. We
+are told that the function of the liver and the brain depends on the
+structure of the liver and the brain respectively and we are not
+allowed to think that perhaps the force of animal life, feeling the
+need of an instrument to secrete bile, on the one hand, and to secrete
+cerebral lymph to act as a vehicle for the conveyance of thought and
+emotion and higher things, on the other, introduces the liver with its
+elaborate structure and the brain with its still more complicated
+structure, in order that both the one function and the other may be
+well performed. And so, although all forms of kinetic energy (and
+among them zoo-dynamic, or the force of animal life) manifest warmth
+and luminosity as qualities, science attributes animal heat to chemic
+force and refuses to consider that perhaps zoo-dynamic uses
+chemico-dynamic for its own purposes, even if these purposes are
+unconscious, because the higher force always dominates the lower.
+Properly speaking, science is out of her sphere, though she does not
+seem to know it, in making these suggestions. When she keeps herself
+to the investigation of facts, their exposition, their sequence and
+their laws, in her painstaking and accurate manner, we accept her
+revelations thankfully, and beg her to allow us to make our own
+philosophic and other explanations in attempting to account for the
+existence, sequences and relations of the facts of life.
+
+After his return home, patient continued to gain weight, as might have
+been expected. On the seventeenth day after ending the fast he
+weighed 140 lbs. and on the nineteenth day 144 lbs. On that day he
+received from a hospital a report that the reaction of the
+physiologico-pathological test was negative. This has naturally had a
+great effect on the patient; and it is worthy of very careful
+consideration. Of course one negative result may not be conclusive
+although it was positive before the fast. But if the result should be
+repeated, and especially if it should prove to be permanent, the
+importance of the fact can hardly be exaggerated, since the suggestion
+arises in our minds that perhaps we may be able to cure profound
+blood-poisoning by fasting, neither the usual treatment nor the use of
+Salvarsan enabling the investigator to say that the result of the
+pathological reaction was negative; but this has followed after a
+heroic fast of 56 days. The result if confirmed would not be unique.
+Quite recently I saw a specific ulcer close to the ankle-joint for
+which operation had been recommended. It seemed to me that operation
+would be likely to open the joint, and that therefore it was a risky
+proceeding. But under a restriction of the diet, putting the young man
+on barley-water for a few days and then advising him to eat once a day
+only, the ulcer became very much smaller, and no operation has had to
+be performed. Blood-poisoning of this nature, of course, is not caused
+by improper nutrition, but it may readily be believed to be aggravated
+by the ordinary conventional over-feeding to which, so far as I can
+see, we are all subjecting ourselves, especially as persons who put
+themselves in the way of contracting blood-poisoning do not generally
+belong to the class of those who are attracted by the suggestion that
+it is noble to keep the body under, and that if we do not strive to
+keep the body under, it will be very likely to keep us under. Although
+we shall be liable to be infected, however we live, still we may
+believe that we shall be more likely to be badly infected (if we put
+ourselves in the way of contracting disease) if we have been
+previously subjected to the bad effects of over-feeding. This
+consideration renders a possible cure by fasting, a not impossible
+suggestion. And if, therefore, we have in fasting the suggestion of a
+remedy which offers us the hope of eradicating such a fearful disease
+from the human system, it certainly behoves us to make use of it.
+
+As a rule it seems to me that bad forms of blood-poisoning of this
+nature are incurable. In three or four generations they destroy the
+strain affected by it, do what we will. Meantime it shows all the
+signs and symptoms of a hereditary disease, for the children are born
+suffering, showing a coppery rash, and old before they are young. And
+when they get a little older they have no bridges to their noses,
+their teeth are ill-formed, their vision is imperfect, their
+intellects dull. It seems as if nature could not forgive crimes of
+this nature. She seems to treat them as the unpardonable sin. If we
+find cancer appearing in a family at 55 years of age in 3 or 4
+successive generations, there is no proof of heredity in that. Inquire
+and see if like causes acting on like organisms in 3 or 4 successive
+generations have not produced the disease each time. The children are
+not born cancerous, and our efforts to prevent the disease may
+succeed. But children often _are_ born with specific disease, and
+there is no doubt at all about its being a hereditary disease. Even
+now I should not like to sanction marriage in the case of this man who
+has heroically fasted for 56 days, although he seems for the present
+to have got rid of his disease. But the outlook is hopeful, more
+hopeful than I thought, and in the hope that the suggestion may convey
+a message of hope to those who are willing to do penance for crimes
+against the body, I send out these remarks. The opinion expressed by
+the patient that he was getting rid of the Salvarsan which had been
+injected into his blood to cure his disease is, of course, his own
+only. I offer no opinion upon it. But I think the whole case very
+instructive, and it will be deeply interesting to follow it up with
+special regard to the inquiry whether the pathological test remains
+negative. The reflective reader of these remarks will need no hint
+from me to suggest how a study of questions of this sort raises in our
+minds all sorts of other questions, physical, metaphysical,
+philosophical, social, religious; what are laws of nature, how they
+come to be what they are, whether they can be disregarded without
+paying the penalty, and whether we men are bond or free. Each of us
+will settle these questions for ourselves, for each of us is
+responsible for his own conclusion. But as to the inevitableness with
+which such questions do rise in our minds, I take it there can be no
+difference of opinion.
+
+A. RABAGLIATI.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY HOMEMAKING.
+
+
+_For the benefit of new readers it seems well to explain that this
+series of articles is not intended for the instruction of experienced
+housewives. It was started at the special request of a reader who
+asked for "a little book on housekeeping, for those of us who know
+nothing at all about it; and put in all the little details that are
+presumably regarded as too trivial or too obvious to be mentioned in
+the ordinary books on domestic economy."_
+
+
+XXI. HIRED HELP.
+
+It does not seem proper to conclude the present series of articles
+without touching upon the "servant problem," but I do not pretend to
+be able to solve it. It is a problem usually very difficult of
+solution by the homemaker of small means. If she has but few persons
+to cater for, and is not the mother of a young family, she is often
+very much better off without hired help, except for a periodical
+charwoman. But it is not always indispensable to the woman who has
+other duties besides housekeeping.
+
+I am not here concerned with the housewife who can afford to keep more
+than one efficient servant. Indeed, I am hardly concerned with one who
+can employ a really good "general" at from £20 to £25 per annum. The
+person I am concerned with is the homemaker who can afford at most to
+employ an inexperienced young girl at from £10 to £14 per annum.
+
+I will draw the worst side of the picture first, for although it _is_
+the worst side it is true enough, as so many harassed housewives know.
+
+The young "general" often comes straight from a council school where
+domestic economy had no place in the curriculum, and from a home in
+name only. Such an one is usually slatternly and careless in all her
+ways, has no idea of personal cleanliness, and regards her "mistress"
+as, more or less, her natural enemy! She is "in service" only under
+compulsion, and envies those of her schoolmates whose more fortunate
+circumstances have enabled them to become "young lady" shop
+assistants, typists and even elementary school teachers. If she had
+her choice she would prefer labour in a factory to domestic work; but
+either a factory is not available, or the girl's parents consider
+"service" more "respectable" in spite of its hardships. Its hardships?
+Yes, it _is_ its hardships that account for its peculiar unpopularity.
+For there are hardships connected with domestic service in small
+households that do not apply to other forms of much harder labour.
+
+Everyone who is familiar with the small lower middle-class household
+knows how often the life of the little "general" resembles that of an
+animal rather than a human being. All day long she drudges in a
+muddling, inefficient way, continually scolded for her inefficiency
+yet never really taught how to do anything properly. Her work is never
+done, for she is always at the beck and call of her employers; yet
+she lives apart in social isolation, is referred to contemptuously as
+the "slavey," and even her food is dispensed to her grudgingly and
+minus the special dainties bought for Sundays and holidays. This is
+domestic service at its worst, of course, but the prevalence of such
+"places" in actual fact is undoubtedly at the root of the young girl's
+objection to it. How can she help gleaning the impression that such
+work is "menial," when her employers more or less openly despise her?
+Being human, how can she but envy those of her old friends who have
+their evenings to themselves? What contentment can she find in a life
+of drudgery unenlightened by intelligent interest in learning how to
+do something well? What wonder that all her hopes and ambitions become
+centred in the possession of a "young man," and that reason--stunted
+from its birth for lack of room to grow--being entirely absent from
+her choice, she marries badly and too young, and becomes the mother of
+a numerous progeny as helpless, hopeless, stunted and inefficient as
+herself?
+
+Some conscientious women try to remedy this state of things by
+treating the girls they take into their homes as "one of the family."
+This _may_ answer well sometimes, but it has its drawbacks, both for
+the girl and the "family." Husband and wife, brother and sister,
+inevitably find the constant presence of a stranger with whom they
+have little in common very irksome. While the girl herself is equally
+conscious of restraint when forced to spend her leisure time with her
+employers. She would usually infinitely prefer the solitude of the
+kitchen, if combined with a good fire, a comfortable chair and a story
+book.
+
+Among the girls I have spoken to on the subject I have not found
+"socialist" households popular. One girl I met refused to stay in such
+a place for longer than three days, because she "never had the kitchen
+to herself." Another told me that she found it intensely boring to
+take meals with the family, because she was not interested in the
+things they talked about.
+
+I think that the ultimate solution of the "servant problem" will not
+be that every woman will do all her own housework, but that domestic
+work will become, on the one hand, very much simplified and, on the
+other, will be put on the same footing as teaching, nursing or
+secretarial work. That we are beginning to move in this direction is
+evidenced by the coming into existence of schools of domestic economy,
+to which "ladies" do not disdain to resort for training. This will
+undoubtedly result in domestic labour becoming a much higher-priced
+commodity than it is now, the housewife will have to pay at least as
+much for three hours help per day as she now does for nine hours, but
+the fact that the help will be skilled, combined with the greater
+simplicity of housework, will surely more than compensate for this.
+
+But what is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help,
+to do under present conditions? This we must consider next month.
+
+FLORENCE DANIEL.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading Dr Knaggs deals briefly month by month, and
+according as space permits, with questions of general interest._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on one side only of
+the paper, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as a
+guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a stamped
+addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+BOILS: THEIR CAUSE AND CURE.
+
+ Miss L.C. writes:--I should be deeply indebted to you if you
+ would advise me in the following matter. I have been suffering
+ from a recurrence of boils on different parts of my body during
+ the last six months. I have consulted a local doctor, but he can
+ find no reason for their appearance, but suggested I should try a
+ mixed diet, to include some animal food, rather than adhere to
+ vegetarianism as I have done for some two years past.
+
+ My diet is about as follows:--
+
+ _On rising._--Tumblerful of hot water.
+
+ _Breakfast_ (eight o'clock).--One egg, toasted bread (wholemeal)
+ and butter, with either a little lettuce or marmalade and either
+ weak tea or cocoa.
+
+ _Lunch_ (one o'clock).--Steamed green or root vegetable, with
+ cheese sauce or macaroni cheese or similar savoury, or nuts.
+ Boiled or baked pudding or stewed fruit with custard or blanc
+ mange.
+
+ _Tea_ (four o'clock).--Tea or cocoa, with or without a little
+ bread and butter and cake.
+
+ _Supper_ (7 o'clock).--Vegetable soup, milk pudding and a little
+ cheese, butter and salad and wholemeal bread.
+
+ I am forty-nine years of age, lead a fairly active life,
+ frequently taking walking exercise. I am very tall and weigh
+ twelve stone. Have had no serious illness, but been more or less
+ anæmic all my life.
+
+ If you can tell me whether there is anything wrong in connection
+ with my diet and suggest the cause of, and treatment for, the
+ boils I shall be exceedingly obliged.
+
+In order to help this correspondent to permanently get rid of these
+boils, we must first ascertain what those troublesome manifestations
+are and look to the causes which produce them.
+
+A boil is a small, tense, painful, inflammatory swelling appearing in
+or upon the skin, and is due to the local death or gangrene of a small
+portion of the skin's surface. This eventually comes away in the form
+of a core, and, until this has cleared away, the boil will not heal or
+cease to be painful.
+
+Boils occur chiefly on the neck, arms or buttocks. If very large they
+are known as carbuncles, and if they occur on the fingers or toes they
+are described as whitlows. It is often the friction of a frayed-out
+collar or cuff, of tight waist clothing, or, in the case of whitlows,
+the introduction of some irritant or poison between the nail and the
+skin that determines the precise site at which they will come.
+
+Boils, although rarely dangerous to life, are usually accompanied by
+pain severe out of all proportion to the extent of surface involved.
+This gives rise to much broken rest and loss of vitality, which at
+once ceases when the boil has finished its course. Boils usually occur
+in series or crops.
+
+Now large numbers of people wear collars and cuffs with frayed edges,
+or handle irritants with their fingers, but they do not necessarily
+contract boils or whitlows. Therefore, we see that there must be other
+factors to be taken into consideration to account for their presence.
+The orthodox germ-loving practitioner may tell you that a boil is a
+purely local disorder and that a certain form of microbe, known as the
+_Staphylococcus pyogenes_, is the cause of it. This germ, he asserts,
+lives normally on the surface of the skin and, when this surface
+becomes broken, it enters the part and infects it, thereby starting
+the boil.
+
+If this is true every person who wears old collars or dabbles his
+hands in dirt should without exception contract boils. This is
+obviously untrue.
+
+The factor to be considered, then, is this. What is it that induces
+boils in one person and not in another under identical circumstances?
+The answer is obvious. The boil is not a local disease at all, but is
+a manifestation of some constitutional defect, or of some impurity of
+the blood stream, which enables this microbe to find a congenial
+breeding ground.
+
+The people who suffer most from boils are young or middle-aged adults,
+and we usually find the two extremes among sufferers. There is the
+full-blooded, often overfed, individual and there is the pale,
+debilitated and emaciated person whose constitution is broken down by
+worry, overwork, sexual troubles, unhealthy surroundings or badly
+selected foods.
+
+If we inquire into the constitutional history of these cases we shall
+almost invariably discover that the digestive or assimilative
+processes of the body are not working smoothly. This may be due to the
+worry or overwork, or to unhealthy surroundings which dis-harmonise
+the digestive and nutritive functions, or to nervous exhaustion from
+one cause or another, or it may be due to the wrong diet, which is
+filling the colon (or large bowel) with fermenting poisons.
+
+When the body is clogged in this manner nature often proceeds to get
+rid of the accumulating waste through the skin. By a vigorous effort
+on the part of the life-force the impurity is thrown outwards to the
+surface. Looked at in this light a boil is really a most salutary
+cleansing agent, and the Nature-Cure practitioner, who calls it a
+"Crisis," often does everything in his power to produce boils when
+treating chronic diseases.
+
+The alternative is often some more deeply seated form of elimination,
+resulting in serious organic disease of the organs or tissues. One of
+the first signs of improvement in disorders like diabetes,
+consumption, arthritis, Bright's disease, or even cancer, is the
+appearance of boils, showing that the vitality has improved to an
+extent sufficient to enable the foreign matter to be expelled by means
+of relatively harmless boils. The hydropathic expert also tries to
+induce this condition by means of his mustard and water packs.
+
+If our correspondent wants to rid herself of her boils she must adopt
+all means to improve her vitality and to cleanse her body of its
+impurities. She can do this along many lines. She can take a holiday
+and rest from her work; or by positive thinking she can set to work to
+get rid of her worries. She can learn to laugh as often as possible,
+and to breathe deeply, slowly and fully. If her house is unsanitary
+she should make it sanitary, or move elsewhere.
+
+Then she must restrict her diet and take only those forms of food
+which create a minimum amount of poison in the system. _She must
+cleanse the colon daily_ with warm water enemas, and encourage the
+action of the kidneys in doing their rightful part in the elimination
+of poisons by the drinking of distilled water or a good herbal tea on
+rising, and of clear vegetable broth at night.
+
+Clay packs, applied cold, are the best form of treatment for
+application to the boils themselves. They should never be cut or
+squeezed, as this only intensifies the trouble. Hot applications, as
+poultices, are bad, because they induce the boil to mature
+prematurely, and also are conducive to reinfection of the skin in
+other parts. Drugs or medicines are of very little use in the
+treatment of boils, because they do not go to the root of the
+trouble. The only remedy that I have found of any avail is yeast. In
+former times this was taken in the form of fresh or dried brewers'
+yeast, and it was, if unpleasant, a very effectual remedy. Yeast
+yields a free supply of what is called nuclein and nucleinic acid.
+These, chemically, are identical with the same substances found in the
+human cells. Nuclein is a powerful antiseptic. It has been found that
+the toxins or emanations from diphtheria and other deadly germs are
+precipitated and destroyed by nucleinic acid.
+
+It is for this reason that yeast extracts, such as Marmite, often have
+a beneficial effect in disorders accompanied by the formation of pus
+matter.
+
+Our correspondent's diet should be amended as follows:--
+
+_On rising._--A cupful of unseasoned Marmite.
+
+_Breakfast._--One scrambled or lightly poached egg with stale,
+yeast-made, wholemeal bread and nut butter, with lettuce or other
+salad food. No marmalade; no tea or coffee.
+
+_Lunch._--1 to 2 oz. of grated cheese or flaked pine kernels, finely
+shredded raw cabbage, or grated radishes, or grated raw roots with oil
+and lemon dressing. No cooked savouries, no puddings, nor stewed fruit
+with custard or blanc mange should be taken.
+
+_Tea Meal._--Cupful of Marmite, only.
+
+_Supper._--Clear, unseasoned, vegetable broth, with Veda or wholemeal
+bread, or Granose biscuits, with nut butter and some fresh fruit.
+
+_At bedtime._--A cupful of Marmite.
+
+NOTE.--The unseasoned Marmite should be used, as the ordinary kind is
+rather heavily salted.
+
+
+A BAD CASE OF SELF-POISONING.
+
+ Mrs H.W. writes:--I should be very glad if you would give me
+ enlightenment on one or two points about my diet. I am suffering
+ from a somewhat dilated stomach, also a catarrhal condition of
+ nose, throat and alimentary canal, with constipation and much
+ flatulence in the bowels. My teeth are decaying quickly, my nails
+ have got softer, and I have become anæmic and generally
+ debilitated, being unable to properly assimilate my food. All my
+ joints crack when moved, and the knee joints creak as well. Is
+ this a uric acid condition, or do you think it merely due to a
+ lack of nourishment, causing a lack of synovial fluid? The joints
+ are not swollen and not painful, they merely crack. My whole
+ system seems to be over-acid, and my mouth gets sore and
+ ulcerated. I have got very thin, having lost a stone in twelve
+ months.
+
+ I notice that you always advise for dilated stomach greatly
+ restricting the liquid part of the diet. Will you tell me just
+ how much one _may_ drink in a day, because when I go without
+ drinking my constipation and other troubles are worse and the
+ urine gets thick and muddy.
+
+ You also deprecate milk. This puzzled me until you explained to a
+ correspondent last month in _The Healthy Life_. Will you tell me
+ if the same applies to dried milk--will it tend to increase
+ intestinal trouble? I am anxious to know this because I have been
+ relying somewhat on Emprote and Hygiama lately, for I had got so
+ that I could scarcely digest anything.
+
+ Do you consider it better to use the enema than to take a mild
+ aperient? I do not want to start with the enema again if I can
+ possibly manage to do without, because I found that my bowels
+ depended upon it. And that is why I want to ask if it is
+ absolutely necessary when on an antiseptic diet to entirely avoid
+ fruit. I find it so necessary to keep the bowels working
+ naturally.
+
+ I _do_ want you to answer me these questions, because I have got
+ so worried and fearful (people's theories are so varied) that I
+ scarcely dare eat any food at all. I am at present taking only
+ two meals daily (I like the two-meal plan best): at eleven A.M.
+ and 6 P.M. I take a cup of weak coffee on rising, without milk or
+ sugar--this warm drink seems to start the peristaltic action and
+ I then get bowel action. I think of changing the coffee for Sanum
+ Tonic Tea or Dandelion Coffee.
+
+ At eleven o'clock I have an egg with Winter's "Maltweat" bread
+ and almond butter, and some conservatively cooked vegetable
+ (celery or carrot or spinach).
+
+ At six P.M. I have one or two baked apples, a teaspoonful or two
+ of malted nuts, or Emprote, and more "Maltweat" bread and butter.
+
+ At four P.M. I take a cup of barley water or carrot water, and at
+ bedtime another cup of barley water.
+
+ Do you think that if I went on to a milk diet for a time it would
+ do good?
+
+This correspondent seems to be suffering from auto-toxæmia, or
+self-poisoning in a severe form, and a condition of what is termed
+arterio-sclerosis or premature old age. Associated with it are
+evidently symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, which is affecting her
+joints and teeth. It is not one of ordinary gout or uric acid
+poisoning. The trouble no doubt has been caused by past errors of
+diet, so that the present efforts at reform have come too late to be
+of service to her. Something more than diet is now needed to clear the
+acids and toxins from the system. It is not a simple case of digestive
+catarrh, for the whole body is affected. The present diet will answer
+very well as it stands.
+
+The first thing to do is to obtain a well-fitting dilatation belt.
+This must have leg straps and firmly support the lower half of the
+abdomen. The next thing is to promote skin action so as to
+encourage the clearing out of poisons along this line of elimination.
+Vapour baths, wet-sheet packs or alkaline hot baths can effect this
+purpose. An alkaline hot bath should be of a temperature of 105
+degrees Fahr. or more, and to the bath should be added ¼ lb. of
+bicarbonate of soda and ¼ lb. packet of "Robin" starch. She should
+remain as long as possible in this so as to well clear the acids from
+the skin and induce as much skin action or perspiration as possible.
+The _first_ baths must be of very short duration, and she should be
+careful to avoid chill after the bath; it is best to lie prone and
+completely relaxed for half-an-hour at least after the bath. Finally
+massage and Swedish movements directed to the entire back will help to
+disencumber the central nervous system, which is evidently very badly
+depleted of its vital force. It is, of course, a pity the
+correspondent cannot get away to a properly organised Nature-Cure home
+and have the continuous attention and treatment which her condition
+really necessitates.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+ AMANZIMTOTI, NATAL.
+
+ _To the Editors._
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ You will see that your little magazine finds its way even to this
+ out-of-the-way corner of the globe, and you may be sure that it is
+ appreciated. I am specially interested in Dr V. Knaggs'
+ contributions and should like to ask him a few questions. May I
+ say that I have some knowledge of chemistry and that I try and
+ take an interest in the scientific aspects of food reform.
+
+ (1) P. 237. What grounds has Dr Knaggs for speaking so definitely
+ about human magnetism and that of vegetables? How would he
+ recognise or test for either, and where can I get further
+ information (scientific) on the question of food magnetism.
+
+ (2) Same page. Dr Knaggs says salt added to cooking vegetables
+ converts organic salts into inorganic. I cannot follow that. _What_
+ organic salts are so converted? One or two examples would suffice.
+
+ (3) I have been reading Dr Rabagliati's _Conversations with Women
+ Concerning their Health and that of their Children_.[8] In it he
+ says that food is not the source (cause) of body energy, but is
+ used merely to replace waste material. Elsewhere I read that
+ "Professor Atwater's investigations into nutrition have shown in a
+ most convincing manner that the body derives _all_ its energy from
+ the food consumed. This may be regarded as established." Which of
+ these definite and contradictory assertions does Dr Knaggs support,
+ and why? Where can I get information _re_ Professor Atwater's
+ experiments and other recent works on similar subjects?
+
+ To me the questions involved are intensely interesting, hence my
+ queries. I hope they do not read as if I were hypercritical or
+ sceptical.
+
+ With all good wishes for the success of your healthy little
+ magazine. I am, yours, etc.,
+
+ W. BLEWETT.
+
+[8] 5s. net. C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Amen Corner, London.
+
+We handed the above interesting letter to our contributor, Dr H.
+Valentine Knaggs, and append his reply:--
+
+
+HUMAN MAGNETISM.
+
+There is very little information available from ordinary scientific
+sources anent the question of the life-force or of the animal
+magnetism which animates our bodies and is the motive force common to
+all organic structures whether animal or vegetable. We do know that
+fresh fruits and vegetables are strongly magnetic because the
+magnetism which they emit can be gauged by means of delicate
+galvanometers. It has been found that leaves, flowers and seeds are
+positively, and roots negatively, charged. We also know that the same
+conditions are found in the human subject, since Dr Baraduc, who is a
+celebrated French Psycho-Therapeutist, in his book, "The Vibrations of
+Human Vitality," tells us that he has invented a machine called a
+biometer to test these very vibrations. I have had one of these
+machines myself and have experimented with it a great deal. By its aid
+we can make the machine work differently with different persons, and
+by careful tabulation of records Dr Baraduc has been able to elicit
+some very remarkable information about the magnetic currents which are
+constantly flowing into and out of the human body. If our
+correspondent really wants to know more about the wonders of human
+magnetism he should read some of the voluminous literature upon the
+subject published by the Theosophical Society. Just recently also a Dr
+Kilner has invented a form of coloured screen by which he and others
+who have some psychic sight can actually see the magnetic emanations
+which flow through a person placed in a darkened room.
+
+
+SALT-COOKED VEGETABLES.
+
+The one object of the vegetable kingdom is to build up, for the use of
+the animal or organic realm, the constituents found in the mineral or
+inorganic kingdom. These mineral constituents are dissolved, sorted
+out and built up in the right proportions for the use of animals when
+taken as foods. Whenever these foods are not so eaten they are sent
+back again to the earth by the aid of microbes during the process of
+decay, to be again available for plant use. Cooking is a process
+invented by man which is analogous to that of decay, for it dissolves
+and disintegrates the structures which Nature has built up. When man
+eats food that is partially disintegrated he does not obtain from it
+the right sort of nutriment which Nature intended him to have. To
+intensify the wrong-doings of the cook, man further hastens the
+disintegrating process by adding to the things that he cooks a due
+proportion of a common and very stable mineral, called salt. It is
+powerful, because it is not easily disintegrated. The salt greatly
+expedites the process of decay, whether in the natural form of
+fermentation, or whether by the application of heat, as in cooking.
+Salt is used in Nature to promote the flow of those electric and
+magnetic currents which are a manifestation of the universal
+life-force which pervades all things seen and unseen. It is an
+essential constituent of the sea because the ocean is the life-blood
+of the earth. It is an essential constituent of our own blood, because
+it is needed to make the blood stream a good conductor of magnetic
+currents. When you put this salt into water and then proceed to boil
+vegetables in it, it quickly sucks out all the life-force from them,
+and if persisted in reduces them to the state of minerals from which
+they were originally constructed.
+
+
+FOOD AND THE SOURCE OF BODILY ENERGY.
+
+Dr Rabagliati and Professor Atwater are, I believe, both right, but
+the former does not always explain himself clearly to the lay mind.
+The life-force or animal magnetism is the real source of bodily
+energy, and it manifests itself only when it has something that
+resists or regulates its flow.
+
+It does this just as certain forms of wire, or other materials, which
+possess indifferent conducting power, resist the flow of electricity
+through them.
+
+Electricity cannot manifest as light in the usual electric lights used
+in our houses, as heat in the electric culinary appliances or stoves,
+or even as power in the motors which run our trams and trains, unless
+it be given the requisite apparatus to bring about the manifestation
+required.
+
+In exactly the same way life cannot manifest itself as consciousness,
+with its flow of thoughts, emotions and bodily activities, without the
+food which is daily supplied to the body.
+
+It consequently depends considerably upon how we select our daily
+rations as to how this vital force will manifest within us.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+HOLIDAY APHORISMS.
+
+
+A Sun Bath needs no Soap.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Man was made for the Weather, not the Weather for man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A long drink often makes a short walk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may bring a man to the Sea, but you cannot make him think.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A tanned face doesn't make a healthy body.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dew paddling should be done in the dark.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The only things that bathing machines make are cowards.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is better to board yourself than let others be bored by you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"A bore is one who thinks his opinions of greater importance than your
+own."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+People who throw pebbles into the sea shouldn't dive near shore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A toothbrush is what many forget but few should need.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Scotland Yard is not in the Grampians.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cheap food is often dearly bought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lyons have no depôts in Skye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Orange-trees never yet sprang from scattered peel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A pear in the hand is worth two in the can.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V SEPTEMBER
+ No. 26. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+Food reformers sometimes forget that "man does not live by bread
+alone," not even when supplemented by an ample supply of fresh air and
+physical exercise.
+
+It has been pointed out by psychologists that the more highly
+organised and highly developed the creature, the less it depends on
+nervous energy obtained via the stomach and the more it depends on
+energy generated by the brain. True, the brain must be healthy for
+this, and one poisoned by impure blood, due to wrong feeding, cannot
+be healthy. But something more than clean blood is necessary. For, as
+change of physical posture is necessary to avoid cramped limbs, so
+periodic reversal of mental attitude (consideration from other than
+the one view-point) is necessary to the brain's health.
+
+Again, change of air is often prescribed when the patient's real need
+is a change of the personalities surrounding him. While for the
+lonely country dweller a bath in the magnetism of a city crowd may be
+a far more efficacious remedy than the medicinal baths prescribed by
+his physician.
+
+For man lives by _every_ word that proceeds out of the mouth of
+God.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+FEAR AND IMAGINATION.
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this article a continuation of the
+series previously entitled "Healthy Brains." The author of "The
+Children All Day Long," is an intimate disciple of one of the greatest
+living psychologists, and she has a message of the first importance to
+all who realise that true health depends as much on poise of mind as
+on physical fitness. We regret that in the previous article,
+"Imagination in Play," the following misprints occurred:--P. 475, line
+4 from top, "movement" should be "moment"; p. 475, line 5 from bottom,
+"admiration" should be "imagination."_--[EDS.]
+
+
+Some people are given to excusing their own uncharitable thoughts by
+saying, "I suppose I ought not to have minded her rudeness; I am
+afraid I am too sensitive." In the same way, people say, "Oh, I
+_couldn't_ sleep in the house alone" (or let a child go on a
+water-picnic, or nurse a case of delirium or do some other thing that
+suggested itself), "I have too much imagination." In both cases the
+claim, though put in deprecating form, is made complacently enough.
+The correlative is: "You are so sensible, dear; I know you won't
+mind," which is a formula under cover of which many kindnesses may be
+shirked and many unpleasant duties passed on.
+
+The sensible, practical people who listen to these sayings sometimes
+attach importance to them, so that a habit has grown up of describing
+morbidly neurotic people as "over-sensitive" and cowardly ones as "too
+quick of imagination." Ultimately, this leads to the thought that both
+sensitiveness and imagination are mental luxuries too costly for
+ordinary folk to grow, and that it is safest to check, crush or uproot
+them when we discover them springing up in others or in ourselves.
+
+Is not this attitude of mind due to a misunderstanding? Imagination is
+an _organ of activity_; it can be kept in the highest possible
+condition of health by having plenty of exercise; it should be working
+continually against resistance. A rabbit's gnawing tooth, if the
+opposing tooth be broken, may grow inwards and cause the creature's
+death, but the same activity of growth, if working under suitable
+conditions, enables him to go on living and gnawing at his food year
+after year without wearing his tools away.
+
+The problem, then, in economy of effort is: How shall we use whatever
+force of sensitiveness and imagination we have, so as to get its
+maximum efficiency of usefulness and its minimum pain and
+inconvenience?
+
+For many ages man has been dominated by fear. His way to freedom, now,
+is to step out through his cobweb chains and go right forward with
+courage and in faith. So we are told with relentless and almost
+tiresome reiteration. It is the fashion, one might almost say, to have
+cast off fear, and the one thing an honest "modern thinker" is afraid
+of is being afraid. (To less honest ones it is the thought of _being
+thought_ afraid that is a very real and present fear.)
+
+But, if this standpoint is right, is not fear at least a vestigial
+organ, a survival of a mental activity which served its purpose in
+times gone by? Is it not even truer to go further still and say, as
+_each particular fear_ serves its purpose it may safely be discarded,
+but that, as far as our present knowledge goes, other grades of
+sensitiveness, finer shades of imagination of the type we have called
+fear, must take its place, to be discarded in their turn for yet other
+apprehensions?
+
+For if we lost the kind of perception that we associate with fear, if
+our imagination closed itself automatically to the suggestion of all
+sorts of ugly possibilities, should we not find ourselves soon in the
+midst of difficulties akin to those of the hero of the German tale of
+the man who felt no pain? We accept the evidence of pain as a guide
+to action; when we have decided on action we proceed to get rid of the
+pain as expeditiously, safely and permanently as we can.
+
+The same thing seems true of fear. Over and over again we laugh at
+ourselves for fearing something that either never happened at all or
+happened in such a way as to be softened out of all likeness to the
+monstrous terror we had created. On the other hand, when misfortune
+falls heavily because of our lack of imagination in not foreseeing
+possible consequences of particular actions or events, we lament and
+complain: "If I could only have guessed! If I had only known!"
+
+Fear pure and simple--the imagination of possible trouble--is a stage
+we can hardly yet afford to do without. But when it has roused our
+attention to a danger, its work is done. Let us practise turning it
+into action; taking due precautions against accident, guarding against
+hurting a neighbour's feelings, watching some possibility of evil
+tendency in ourselves. Then, and not till then, may we let it drop. It
+may pass; it has done its work. It is no longer our responsibility to
+foresee, it is our privilege to lay down the fear and live happily and
+at peace.
+
+Even the dread perceptions of eternal laws come under the same method.
+"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom," the _beginning_:
+the end is faith and love.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round nature |
+ | of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the extension of |
+ | its circulation by tactfully urging their local newsagent to |
+ | have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. An |
+ | attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
+
+_The article (signed "M.D.") with the above title which we published
+in the July number has, as we anticipated, aroused considerable
+discussion. One interesting criticism appeared in the August number.
+We now publish two further contributions, to be followed, in our next
+issue, by two further articles by Dr Rabagliati and Mr Ernest
+Starr._--[EDS.]
+
+
+I
+
+As one who has tried the low proteid diet, and came to grief on it, I
+desire to set my experience against that of Mr Voysey,[9] and to
+assert that, if it is true for him, it certainly is not true for me.
+Mr Voysey indulges in many loose and generalised statements which do
+not help the average man or woman in the least. I imagine it is these
+that "M.D." has in mind when he advises a certain standard of diet,
+below which it is not safe to go. If Mr Voysey can, as Horace Fletcher
+can, exist on a very low proteid diet, that does not prove that all
+men and women can do the same and be healthily active; it only shows
+that he and Fletcher are exceptions to the average person, and that it
+may be dangerous to follow their example. For most men, "M.D.'s"
+proteid standard is not so nauseating as he finds it. Here is a
+specimen dietary for a day, for a man of ten stone, following, as most
+of us do, a sedentary occupation:--
+
+ 3 oz. cheese.
+ 9 oz. bread.
+ 8 oz. vegetables and salad.
+ 8 oz. fruit.
+ 1½ pints milk.
+
+Will any average person say that that quantity, divided into three
+meals, would be nauseating to him? And is that diet so very expensive
+that it would be beyond the means of an agricultural labourer in any
+country? It is certainly no mockery. The cost to such a labourer would
+probably not exceed 3d. or 4d. Of course the diet can be made as
+expensive as one chooses, and widely varied.
+
+[9] See August number.
+
+Who amongst ordinary men and women has a reliable natural taste that
+would be an infallible guide in all matters of food? And what a
+misleading statement that is which asserts "that all the hardest work
+of the world has always been done by those who get the least food."
+Put it to the test on the average person and see where it leads to.
+
+My contention is that the average person, throwing over his or her
+accustomed meat diet, requires some definite guidance as to the
+quantity of proteid, such as Dr Haig's wide experience and much
+patient research have proved needful, or at least advisable, for the
+continuance of a healthy and vigorous life; and I will say that it
+does not help this average person in the least to put before him the
+misty statement that "the quantity depends on the development that is
+in progress, and is only discoverable by the natural guides of
+appetite and taste, ruled by reason and love of others." All very
+noble and very well in another place, but hardly meeting the case of
+the ordinary person who is seeking a healthy diet. Nor can you "make
+the body a more harmonious instrument for the true life of man" by
+habitually underfeeding it. I thought that was a mediæval notion that
+had been knocked on the head long ago.
+
+Is there any man, lay or scientific, Mr Voysey notwithstanding, who
+can claim to have as wide an experience of diet in its relation to
+health and disease as "M.D.," to say nothing of the trained mind and
+long years of patient thought that have been exerted in dealing with
+the facts of this wide experience. For myself, I have come to see
+that, if "M.D." does not hold in his grasp the absolute truth in the
+matter of diet, he is nearer to it, and is a safer guide, than all
+your low proteid advisers, lay or otherwise, where they come much
+below "M.D.'s" standard.
+
+So, using Mr Voysey's phrases, I would urge laymen like myself to shun
+that weak-kneed manikin, the low proteid diet, and unite with me in a
+long strong pull to get him and others like him out of the rut in
+which that sorry weakling holds him.
+
+HY. BARTHOLOMEW.
+
+
+II
+
+The Editors were quite right in saying that the article under this
+heading in the July issue would arouse discussion. My wife and I,
+having discussed "M.D." and many others with the title, feel
+constrained to put forth a warning against blind faith in anything
+which the faculty have to say on dietetics.
+
+There are of course brilliant exceptions, such as Dr Rabagliati, Dr
+Knaggs, Dr Haig, the late Dr Keith and others, who give chapter and
+verse for every statement made; but when we consider the excellent
+work of laymen such as Albert Broadbent, Joseph Wallace, Horace
+Fletcher, Alice Braithwaite, Eustace Miles, Hereward Carrington, Edgar
+J. Saxon, Bernarr MacFadden, Arnold Eiloart, ordinary folks like
+ourselves may be excused if we venture to give our experience as
+against that of "qualified" men.
+
+With your permission, then, we reply to "M.D.'s" five suggestions in
+the order he gives them:--
+
+1. Food qualities are _not_ of extreme importance.
+
+2. Quantity tables may have been "settled" by physiologists to their
+own satisfaction many years ago; but very good reasons have since been
+given for altering, or even ignoring, them.
+
+3. The particular number of grains of proteid to be consumed per day
+is not of serious moment.
+
+4. That departure from the quantity specified has not led to disaster
+is proved by the fact that the human race still persists, in spite of
+the very varying eating customs found in different nations. The great
+majority being poor or ignorant, or both, know neither "tables" nor
+the need for them.
+
+5. There can be no reply to such a general statement as: "The nature
+of this disaster may appear to be very various, and its real cause is
+thus frequently overlooked."
+
+In such matters an ounce of personal experience is worth a pound of
+cut-and-dried theory. We--my wife and I--have been reared in an
+atmosphere suspicious of doctors, both sets of grandparents having
+relied rather on herbs, water treatment, goodness of heart and faith
+in God; and their children have had too many evidences of medical
+ignorance to accept any dogmas. We are anti-vaccinators, nearly
+vegetarian, and, to come to the point, we have four children who will
+persist in thriving on a basis of always too little rather than too
+much of food. The respective ages are girl 13, boy 10, girl 6, boy 2.
+
+All have been brought up on these lines: never pressed to eat, but
+continually asked to chew thoroughly. Foods "rich in proteid" put
+sparingly before them. Milk has been well watered; and eggs, bacon and
+other tempting and rich foods only on rare occasions given to them.
+
+We would ask readers who can to make the following experiment: Let
+your children have a good drink to start the day, and then run and
+play; don't offer food till asked for. You will almost to a certainty
+find, if you start this plan immediately after weaning, that day by
+day and year after year it is twelve to one o'clock before they
+inquire for "something to eat." We have done this for twelve years,
+with children of entirely different temperament and of both sexes.
+They go to school, poor things! breakfastless. During these twelve
+years light breakfast for father has been on the table--he goes
+without lunch--and not once in fifty do they ask to join him. Nor, if
+invited, will they after three or four years of age.
+
+The have never had a fever which lasted more than a day or two, and
+they are all above average height and weight.
+
+They get fruit in season just as asked for, and as much to drink as
+they like, _but not at meal-times_.
+
+Our experience is over a period of twelve years, and we have come to
+the conclusion that the infectious diseases so prevalent and
+death-dealing amongst children of all classes, rich or poor, are, in
+the main, the result of over-feeding. We find it wise to keep highly
+nutritious foods (like eggs, cheese, meat, etc.) away from
+children--that is, for regular consumption; a little occasionally may
+do no harm.
+
+You will have it borne in on our minds year by year, as your children
+grow up under such a plan, that Dr Rabagliati, Hereward Carrington and
+others are quite right. We do not get our strength, nor heat, from
+food. Let the force of animal life (zoo-dynamic, I believe Dr
+Rabagliati calls it) have free play, and your children can't help
+growing up well and strong.
+
+In to-day's _London Daily Chronicle_ I see a special article by Dr
+Saleeby, under this heading: WORLD'S DOCTORS VERSUS DISEASE. 5000
+MEDICAL MEN MEET TO-DAY. THE TRIUMPHS OF THREE DECADES. We know how
+much this wonderful faculty knew thirty years ago about, _e.g._, fresh
+air for consumptives. There is not a word said in this article (which
+is a sort of programme of the weighty matters for discussion) on the
+relation of food to the body. That question probably 4950 of them
+believe was settled by the eminent physiologists who compiled those
+"food-tables" years ago--and in so doing went far to pave the way for
+the modern frightful increase of cancer, Bright's disease, etc., as
+well as for "scientific" horrors like anti-toxin, tuberculin--not to
+mention compulsory eugenics!
+
+J. METHUEN.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH THROUGH READING.
+
+
+Do many people consider reading from the point of view of health of
+mind and body--of refreshment in times of struggle--of recuperation
+after knock-down blows of sorrow, disappointment or misfortune?
+
+Let us begin by saying that some of the greatest books are not to be
+read by everybody at all seasons. When one's heart or ankles are weak,
+one does not start to climb mountains, or one may end as a corpse or
+a cripple. So with one's soul under shock or stress. Personally, I can
+imagine nothing more cruel than the action of two women, one a
+story-teller of great repute among the "goody," who, to a specially
+stricken and lonely young widow, tendered as "bed-side books," Victor
+Hugo's _Les Miserables_ and Browning's poignant _The Ring and the
+Book_. If they had wished to make her realise to the bitterest depths
+the awfulness of the world wherein she was left alone, and the
+blackest depravity of the human nature around her, they could not have
+done differently. _Les Miserables_ she read till she reached the
+dreadful scene where a vicious cad hurls snowballs at the helpless
+Fantine. Then the strong instinct of self-preservation made her put
+the book aside--not to touch it again for nearly thirty years. With
+_The Ring and the Book_ her mind was too wrung and too weary to
+wrestle--all it could receive was a picture of wronged innocence, and
+especially of the rampant forces of evil with which she was left to
+contend. With the same want of tact and judgment, if with unconscious
+cruelty, the gloomy, fateful _Bride of Lammermoor_ was selected out of
+all Scott's novels for the reading of a very homesick youth, solitary
+in a strange country!
+
+Yet we must always remember that, as in affairs of the body so of the
+spirit, "what is one man's meat may be another man's poison." Some of
+the wisest and most successful nurses or doctors will occasionally
+permit an invalid to indulge in a longed-for diet which would
+certainly never be prescribed. They know that idiosyncrasy follows no
+exactly known rule. So we could tell of one who, amid the dry
+agnosticism of the later half of last century, had felt her faith, not
+indeed extinguished, but obscured and darkened. From the perusal of
+certain writers she had shrunk, perhaps with cowardice. They were put
+on such a pinnacle that she feared she would find no arguments fit to
+oppose to theirs. Weakly, she locked the skeleton cupboard. Then she
+was attacked by a malady which, while leaving her mind free and
+strong, she knew might be very speedily fatal. Straightway she said
+to her husband: "In two or three days I shall probably 'know'--or
+cease from all knowing. There will not be long to wait. Therefore
+bring me three books," which she named, works of authors of extreme
+agnostic views. Rather reluctantly he complied with her wish. She went
+steadily through the joyless pages, turned the last with the
+significant remark: "If this is all they can say, well!--" The
+skeleton cupboard, once opened, was speedily swept out. She quickly
+recovered, but never forgot her experience. Yet it must be remembered
+that this was the patient's own prescription, and was permitted by one
+who thoroughly understood her temperament. Therefore, though one would
+never wish to overrule a strong personal desire, that is quite
+different from offering counsel and furtherance--or proving
+experiments upon oneself.
+
+A celebrated woman writer of the middle of last century was of opinion
+that young people of both sexes should not indulge in reading "minor
+poetry." "Let them keep to the great poets, made of granite," was her
+graphic phrase. A woman of singularly self-controlled nature has
+confessed that the only time in her whole life that she experienced an
+unwholesome moral and emotional disturbance, after reading a book, was
+when, at about twenty-two years of age, she read Emily Brontë's
+_Wuthering Heights_. She dared not finish it: and when, some time
+later, a copy was presented to her, she caused it to be exchanged for
+another book, not wishing it even to be in the house with her. Years
+afterwards, she read it again, quite unmoved. It may be added that her
+first reading was made in the course of a systematic study of English
+literature, which had already led her through the works of Chaucer and
+Fielding. She has herself asked: "Is it possible that the strong and
+unpleasant effect was produced because the book was the production of
+another young woman, perhaps of somewhat 'sympathetic' temperament?"
+
+Taken as a whole, probably most fiction and all highly emotional work
+of any sort should be indulged in sparingly by those in the
+danger-zone of life, or by any under special mental or moral stress.
+History, philosophy (with sustained chains of reasoning) and
+biographies (best, autobiographies) of active and strenuous lives,
+should be resorted to by those temporarily doomed to spells of
+suspense and involuntary inaction. Invalids should be encouraged to
+read Plutarch's _Lives_ rather than the _Memorials_ of other
+sufferers, however saintly!
+
+It may be broadly stated that, during the tragic episodes which seem
+to occur in all lives, the most wholesome reading is to be found in
+the books of the great World-Religions--the Bible, and the teachings
+of Buddha, Confucius and Mahomet. The Bible is of course a library in
+itself, and many of its books are suited to very widely different
+circumstances and temperaments. The Psalms, the Gospels, the Epistle
+of St James, and parts of those great poems known as the "prophetical
+books" and the more personal and less doctrinal portions of Paul's
+epistles are perhaps of widest application. From the words of Buddha,
+Confucius and Mahomet there are many admirable selections--and one
+remembers a wonderful compilation of more than thirty years ago,
+called _The Sacred Anthology_, and wonders if it be out of print. It
+does not follow that these works should not be studied at other times
+than "tragic episodes." If this were more often the case, perhaps
+there would be fewer "tragic episodes"!
+
+Next to these come such wonderful books of spiritual experience as À
+Kempis's _Imitation of Christ_, the _Pilgrim's Progress_, the _Devout
+Life_ of Francis of Sales and others which will occur to the memory.
+
+Allusion to the _Pilgrim's Progress_ brings us to the remark that no
+books are more truly wholesome than some that can be enjoyed by those
+of all ages, and of very varied types of "culture": in which the
+children can delight, and which refresh the aged and weary. Like
+Nature herself, they have hedgerows where the little ones can gather
+flowers, little witting of the farther horizons of earth and sky
+lifted up for the eyes of the elders. Let the children read the
+_Pilgrim's Progress_ simply as "a story," its eternal verities will
+sink into their souls to reappear when they too are in _Vanity Fair_
+or in bitter conflict with _Apollyon_.
+
+For the same reason, the Book of Proverbs should be commended to
+youthful study. Under wise supervision--or rather, in mutual study--it
+becomes at once a series of vivid pictures of primitive Eastern
+life--for all allusions should be explained, where possible,
+pictorially--while at the same time the memory will be insensibly
+stored with shrewd common sense and knowledge of the world, to be
+turned to, and drawn upon, as needed.
+
+And then, while the children revel in the fun and the fancy of Hans
+Andersen's _Fairy Tales_, let the sorrowful or sore or wounded heart
+turn to them for solace, soothing or healing. Hans Andersen enjoys a
+very special "popularity" and yet some, who have learned to love and
+value him, doubt whether justice has yet been done to his work.
+Because it is matchless for the young, it may be easily forgotten that
+it can be so, only by some quality which makes it matchless for all
+others. Perhaps some of his most popular stories are not his most
+wonderful, but have simply caught the popular fancy, because of some
+artist's illustration, or some personal application to the writer's
+own history, as in the case of his _Ugly Duckling_. How many--or
+rather, how few!--can readily recall the pathos and wit of his
+_Portuguese Duck_ or the deep philosophy of his _Girl Who Trod on a
+Loaf_?
+
+It is told of Hans Andersen, a gentle soul in a homely exterior, which
+attracted the snubs and neglect which "patient merit of the unworthy
+takes," on some such occasion was once heard to murmur: "And yet I am
+the greatest man now in the world!" It was very naive of him to say
+so, even in a whisper, probably wrung from him only in self-defence,
+but perhaps he might have thought it, in solemn silence--and--not been
+so very wrong! It may have been part of the very transparency of his
+inspired genius that he could not keep the secret to himself!
+
+There is at least one reader who declares that she finds the seeds of
+all vital philosophy--ancient or modern--in his stories. How much he
+derived from those who went before him, it is not for us to say, but
+this disciple, herself a devoted student and admirer of the world's
+latest teacher, Leo Tolstoy, yet puts Hans Andersen above him, as
+having attained in practically all his work what Tolstoy attained only
+occasionally--_i.e._ Tolstoy's own ideal of what Art should be and do.
+
+In such a paper as this little can be done beyond indicating on the
+broadest lines the kind of reading which tends to preserve or to
+restore mental health. Away with your "problem" novels and "realistic"
+poems stated in the filthy material of moral gutters! Hans Andersen
+will take some birds, some flowers, some toys, and will state the same
+problems, and get the same eternal solutions, without making the
+inquirer run any risk of meanwhile catching moral malaria. Isaiah will
+help us to build "castles" for the human race and for our own future,
+but he will take care that we shall remember that righteousness and
+unceasing vigilance and unflagging repair must go into the laying of
+foundations and the upholding of walls. David, even in his "cursing
+psalms," will exemplify for you the power of hate and vengeance in
+your own heart, and as he holds it up before you, you will see how
+small a thing it is, how mean, how ludicrous!
+
+As a man eats and drinks, so is his body: if he is a gross feeder, his
+body will be gross and sensual; if his food lacks nourishment, he will
+pine and fade. So it is with our minds and our morals. With whatever
+original "spiritual body" we may start, it needs spiritual sustenance,
+spiritual discipline, spiritual sufficiency and spiritual abstinence.
+Too often we ill-use it, as bodies are ill-used, goading its weakness
+with fiery excitement, or gorging its greed with sickly sentiment, or
+emasculating it by empty frivolity.
+
+All who desire spiritual health must find out what books best promote
+it in themselves: and sometimes they are found, like wholesome herbs,
+in very lowly places. One good rule is never to recommend what we have
+not seen proved in ourselves, or on others.
+
+ISABELLA FYVIE MAYO.
+
+
+
+
+THE SWAN-SONG OF SEPTEMBER.
+
+
+ This fine sonnet is from _Lyric Leaves_, poems by S. Gertrude
+ Ford. 2s. 6d. net (postage 2d.). (C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor
+ Street, London, E.C.)
+
+ Sing out thy swan-song with full throat, September,
+ From a full heart, with golden notes and clear!
+ No rose will wreathe thee; yet the harebell's here,
+ And still thy crown of heath the hills remember.
+ Bright burns thy fire, e'en to its latest ember,
+ The sunset fire that lights thee to thy bier,
+ Flaming and failing not, albeit so near
+ Dun-robed October waits, and grey November.
+ And though, at sight of thee, a chill change passes
+ Through wood and wold, on leaves and flowers and grasses,
+ Thy beauty wanes not; thou hast ne'er grown old;
+ Death-crowned as Cleopatra, lovely lying
+ Even to the end; magnificently dying
+ In pomp of purple and in glare of gold.
+
+S. GERTRUDE FORD.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEST FOR BEAUTY.
+
+
+If you have travelled at all frequently on certain of the London
+"tube" railways you may occasionally have noticed, facing you in the
+carriage, a small framed poster which for beauty and imaginative power
+has, I should think, never been surpassed in advertising art. If the
+first sight of it did not make you catch your breath you will not, I
+am afraid, be interested in this article.
+
+The poster represents a rich landscape, in which noble tree-forms show
+sombre against a tumultuous sky--the latter an architectural mass of
+pale cloud, spanned by a vivid rainbow. Across the lower part of the
+picture is a scroll, on which are written, in musical notation, two
+bars from Chopin's Twentieth Prelude. At the top are the words,
+_Studies in Harmony_: it is an advertisement of Somebody & Co.'s
+wall-papers.
+
+In both colour and design this poster is very beautiful. It would be
+scarcely less so without the rainbow; but "the dazzling prism of the
+sky" not only intensifies the subtle harmony of colour throughout the
+picture: it turns the poster into a symbol. And the artist might well
+have stopped there; only, you see, he had an inspiration. When he
+wrote across the picture those eight descending chords from the
+immortal _Largo_ he made of the poster--a poem.
+
+I do not know anything about the artist who conceived this
+advertisement of wall-papers. I do not even know his name. But I
+believe him to be the herald of an invasion.
+
+The invasion of life by beauty.
+
+Do you think it a degradation of art that it should be enlisted by the
+makers of wall-papers? Are there not too many ugly and discordant
+posters? Do you consider trade and manufacture so sordid that they are
+beneath the ministrations of beauty? It doesn't matter a new penny
+whether you answer such questions with a nod or a no: the invasion has
+begun. It is irresistible. Beauty is stooping--stooping to conquer.
+
+Your ardent social reformer is too often obsessed with one idea.
+Across his mental firmament he sees only one blazing word: INJUSTICE.
+And, fine fellow though he often is, he is inclined to be impatient
+with any talk of art or beauty. "How can beauty grow in these vile
+cities?" he cries. "What is the use of your music, your statuary, your
+fine pictures, your poetry, to the starving and the oppressed?" And he
+does not see that his passionate desire for justice is at root the
+quest for beauty, for fullness and harmony of life. His stormy sky
+shows no rainbow: yet it is there. And so is the stately music, the
+transmutation of colour into sound. And if his eyes could be opened to
+one and his ears to the other, there would be more power to his elbow.
+For beauty is inspiration and courage--
+
+ "My heart leaps up when I behold
+ A rainbow in the sky...."
+
+And there is more than that in it. The cultivation of a sense of
+beauty, of harmony, makes reformers less harsh in their judgments,
+broadens their sympathies and helps to save them from becoming mere
+doctrinaires. If you have any love for the beautiful you simply cannot
+be happy about most Utopias, though they be Justice itself in civic
+form; and, when our "scientific" Fabian has demonstrated to you how to
+organise the national life in all its parts into one vast smoothly
+working State mechanism you will shudder, and then laugh. And then,
+without any rudeness, you will say: "Hang mechanism and a minimum
+wage! Live men and women want living crafts, liberty and a maximum
+beauty!"
+
+And really, I am coming to see that there are a great many
+health-culture enthusiasts (not to mention food reformers) who see no
+rainbow in the sky and hear no music in the wind; and even if they
+did, ten to one they would see no connection between the two. I verily
+believe there are some poor souls who have studied food questions so
+closely that they cannot see the sun for proteid nor the sea for
+salts. In all meekness, and knowing the frailty of the human mind (I
+have written dozens of articles on diet!), I would prescribe for them
+a course of artistic wall-paper advertisements, combined with the
+letters of Robert Louis Stevenson. He, poor fellow, had to battle
+against disease all his short life; but he managed to end one of his
+letters something like this (I quote from memory): "_Sursum Corda_!
+Heave ahead! Art and blue heaven! April and God's larks! A stately
+music.... Enter God."
+
+A somewhat ecstatic utterance. A trifle too exclamatory. Perhaps. You
+and I don't end our letters like that. (Or do you?) More likely we say
+something about the weather down here being miserably cold (or damp,
+or dull, or changeable, or hot) and brave out the lie with "yours
+truly." But O for one little spark from the fire that shone in the
+soul of R.L.S. Better to die young with a broken heart, if it were a
+heart as brave and gay as his, than beat Methuselah by means of a
+mincing, calculating, cold-blooded attention to irritating self-made
+little rules.
+
+Oh yes, I know well the value of little rules. And I know also that
+Nature offers us only two alternatives--obedience or death (either
+sudden or slow). But then Nature is something more than Mistress and
+Lawgiver. She is Beauty. And in that aspect, as in all other aspects,
+Nature is unescapable. We turn our backs on her only to find her
+awaiting us at the next turn in the road. Looking at the matter all
+round, I don't think we can come to any other conclusion than that
+Nature (or whatever you like to call It, Her or Him) is aiming at
+beauty all the time. So that we who are literally, if not
+figuratively, the children of Nature, had best do likewise.
+
+Some mystic or other has said that man's search for God is God's
+search for man. If he was right--and I think he was--it follows that
+man's quest for beauty is Beauty invading life; and that the only
+healthy life worth the having is that which begins with "Lift up your
+hearts!" and issues in "a stately music. Enter God."
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_SEMPER FIDELIS._
+
+
+ Do two things worth doing, every day.
+ Be scrupulously polite and kind, rather than witty or entertaining.
+ Cherish cleanliness, sobriety, frugality and contentment.
+ Cultivate sweetness of disposition and tranquillity of mind.
+ Think before speaking, and so reduce your causes of regret.
+ Seek peace and be peaceable for _lis litem generat_.
+ Begin at home, let home always find you faithfully on duty.
+ Care carefully for those whom Providence has entrusted to your care.
+ And the reward of the faithful will abundantly yours,
+ And your heaven will go with you wherever you go.
+
+"A.R."
+
+
+
+
+MORE HOLIDAY APHORISMS.
+
+
+Two's company, three's fun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Levity is the bane of wit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Braggers mustn't be losers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Never put on to-day what you can't put on to-morrow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's an ill mind that finds no one any good.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's no use crying over spilt milk: you're better without it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Look before you sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Never put an excursion ticket in the mouth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Long hair never made true poets.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Obesity always carries weight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Look after your manners and your friends will look after themselves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cranks of a feather fight together.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All is not toil that blisters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Sea Anglers_:
+
+A live catch is no better than a dead fish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Better a place in the sun than a plaice on a hook.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY HOMEMAKING.
+
+
+XXI. HIRED HELP (_continued_).
+
+What is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help, to do
+under present conditions? Well, meantime, there is only the young
+"general" for her, either the "daily girl" or one who "lives in." Of
+the two I prefer the "daily girl," when she can be obtained. And the
+younger she can be obtained, other things equal, the better. She will
+have fewer bad habits to overcome. Some housewives object to the daily
+girl on the score that she may bring dirt or infection from her home,
+and also because she can seldom arrive early enough to help get
+breakfast. But a little management overnight can reduce the labour of
+breakfast getting to a minimum, and if the "outings" of the girl who
+lives in are as frequent as they ought to be the risk of her carrying
+infection, etc., will always apply.
+
+The "daily girl" has definitely fixed hours of work and the same
+chance of enjoying a measure of home life, of keeping her friends and
+individual interests, as the typist or factory worker whose lot the
+domestic servant so often envies; while her employers are not faced
+with the alternatives of condemning a young fellow-creature to a
+solitary existence or forcing an unreal companionship which is equally
+irksome on both sides. It is true that the wages of the "daily girl"
+do not equal, in actual money, those of the factory worker, neither
+does she obtain the Saturday half-holiday or the whole of Sunday free.
+But to set against this she receives her entire board and, with a
+kindly mistress, is not tied down to staying her full time on days
+when she is "forward" with her work.
+
+The life of the young "daily girl," if her employer is a conscientious
+woman, need not be hard nor unpleasant; very little harder and no more
+unpleasant than the lot of the young "lady" who is paying from £60 to
+£80 per annum to learn cookery, laundry and housework at a school of
+domestic economy. Properly conducted, the relations between employer
+and employee, "mistress" and "servant," are those of mutual aid. Such
+relations _may_ be, and too often _are_, those of an inefficient
+little drudge for a "mistress" almost equally ignorant and
+inefficient. But when the employer is an intelligent woman with a
+sense of justice (I prefer a sense of justice to sentimental theories
+about sisterhood--people do not always treat their sisters justly) the
+weekly money payment and food will be but a small part of the girl's
+wage. In addition she will receive a training that will equip her for
+the "higher" branches of domestic service, or for homemaking on her
+own account. Not every girl has the sense to appreciate this when she
+gets it, nor the intelligence to profit by it; while it is certainly
+rather trying to the employer when the girl is "all agog" to "better
+herself" as soon as she has gained a bare smattering of how to do
+certain things properly. But all this is "the fortune of war." Some
+girls never cease to be grateful to their first teachers and leave
+them reluctantly, while other girls never realise that they have
+anything to be grateful for. When gratitude and affection come they
+are pleasant to receive. But the motive power of the really
+conscientious woman is not the expectation of gratitude or affection.
+
+A word to the unconventional homemaker. The young "general" is a bird
+of passage. Age and experience bring with them the necessity of
+earning more, and if her first employer cannot periodically raise the
+girl's wages the latter must in time seek better paid employment,
+probably with a mistress who is not unconventional. It is unkind,
+therefore, to refrain from teaching the girl how she will be expected
+to do things in the ordinary conventional house. I do not mean that
+the employer ought to slavishly run her home on conventional lines for
+the instruction of her "help." But it is kinder, for instance, to help
+a girl regard a cap and apron with good-humoured indifference, or as
+on a par with a nurse's uniform, rather than as "a badge of
+servitude." It is kinder, too, to show her that it is not only
+"servants" who are expected to address their employers as "Sir" and
+"Ma'am," but that well-mannered young people in all conditions of life
+can be found who use this form of address to persons older than
+themselves. I do not suggest for one moment that any attempt should be
+made to delude a girl into the belief that she will not be expected,
+in conventional households, to behave with equal deference to persons
+younger than herself. Such deception would be unpardonable. But it is
+anything but kind to allow a young girl to drift into careless and
+familiar habits of speech bound to lead to dismissal for "impudence"
+in her next "place." There is a type of person, for example, who seems
+to believe that, in order to show that he is "as good as anybody
+else," it is necessary to be rude and familiar. But good manners are
+not necessarily associated with servility. And it is no kindness to
+help to unfit a girl for getting her living in the world as it is.
+
+It may seem that, in this article, I am more concerned for the "hired
+help" than the homemaker for whom I am ostensibly writing. But the
+points I have touched on are just those about which I know many
+thoughtful women are puzzled. I cannot solve their individual problems
+for them, of course, I can only just barely indicate some of the
+thoughts that have come to me on a subject that is so intimately bound
+up with the whole of our present unsatisfactory social and economic
+conditions that it cannot be adequately discussed in a little tract
+upon domestic economy.
+
+FLORENCE DANIEL.
+
+
+THE CARE OF CUPBOARDS.
+
+There are three methods in general use of caring for cupboards. Some
+housewives prefer their cupboard shelves of bare wood, to be well
+scrubbed with soap and water at the periodical "turn-out." Others
+cover all shelves with white American cloth, which only needs wiping
+over with a wet house-flannel; while still others prefer to dispense
+with the necessity for wetting the shelves and line them with white
+kitchen paper, or even clean newspaper, which is periodically renewed.
+
+Of the three methods I prefer the last, with the addition of a good
+scrubbing at the spring clean. The weekly or fortnightly scrubbing is
+apt to result in permanently damp cupboards, unless they can be left
+empty to dry for a longer time than is usually convenient. The use of
+American cloth is perhaps the easiest, most labour-saving method, but
+the cloth soon gets superficially marked and worn long before its real
+usefulness is impaired, so that the cupboard shelves never look quite
+so neat as after scrubbing or relining with white paper.
+
+The larder should be thoroughly "turned out" once a week. Once a
+fortnight is enough for the store-cupboard and for china cupboards in
+daily use. While cupboards in which superfluous china and other
+non-perishable goods are stored, and that are seldom opened, need not
+be touched oftener than once or twice a year.
+
+In very small houses one cupboard often must house both china and
+groceries, thus combining the offices of storeroom and china cupboard.
+The larder, strictly speaking, is for the food consumed daily. But
+when larder and store-cupboard have to be combined, the groceries may
+be packed away on the upper shelves, which can be tidied once a
+fortnight; but the shelves doing duty for the larder proper should
+never be left for longer than a week.
+
+Nothing betrays the careless housewife like an ill-smelling larder.
+All food should be examined daily and kept well covered. Hot food
+should be allowed to cool before storing in the larder. In the summer
+time special precautions must be taken against flies, all receptacles
+for food which are minus well-fitting lids being covered with
+wire-gauze covers or clean butter muslin. If the shelves are lined
+with paper, care should be taken at the weekly change to examine the
+wood for stains caused by spilt food that has penetrated through the
+paper. These should not be just left and covered over, but well washed
+off. With ordinary carefulness, however, they need not occur.
+
+F.D.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK REVIEWS.
+
+
+_The New Suggestion Treatment._ By J. Stenson Hooker, M.D. Cloth 1s.
+ net (postage 1½d.) C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor Street, E.C.
+
+This book is a striking example of the new synthetic movement in the
+medical profession. It is an exposition for the general reader of
+certain basic principles of mental treatment and of the author's
+methods of applying these; it is also, in reality, an appeal to
+doctors generally to put aside prejudice and examine the immense
+potentialities of rational "suggestion" healing methods.
+
+After examining the main features and disadvantages of mere hypnotic
+treatment and passing under review present-day "mental science," the
+author explains wherein his method of mental treatment both avoids the
+dangers of hypnotism and reinforces ordinary self-suggestion.
+Throughout there is the frank recognition that few forms of dis-ease
+are curable by one means alone; on the other hand, it is contended
+that most disorders, both mental and physical, are remarkably amenable
+to a rightly directed course of the new suggestion treatment,
+supplemented by other natural means.
+
+The narrowness of view that too often characterises the specialist is
+entirely absent from this book. It is throughout thoroughly broad,
+refreshingly sensible and profoundly convincing.
+
+_The Cottage Farm Month by Month_ (illustrated with original
+ photographs). By F.E. Green. Cloth, 1s. net (postage 2d.). C.W.
+ Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.
+
+Here is a book of immediate social interest, of great practical value,
+and of uncommon literary quality.
+
+In the course of twelve chapters, bearing the titles of the months of
+the year, it reveals a welding together of two things which in many
+minds have unfortunately become divorced: the practical problems and
+arduous labour which no tiller of the soil can escape and--the keen
+delight of a poetical temperament in the ever-changing, yet annually
+renewed, beauties of earth and sky and running water.
+
+It escapes the dry technicalities of the agricultural text-book, while
+at the same time conveying innumerable valuable hints on practically
+every branch of "small farming"--advice which springs from the
+author's thorough knowledge based on long and often hard experience.
+
+On the other hand, while entirely free from that all too common defect
+of "nature-books"--hot-house enthusiasm--it will delight the most
+incurable townsman (providing his sense of beauty is not withered) by
+its joyous yet restrained pictures of open-air things.
+
+_Simple Rules of Health._ By Philip Oyler, M.A. (2nd ed.). 3d. net.
+ Post free from the author, Morshin School, Headley, Hants.
+
+An admirable epitome of what might be called "advanced health culture
+without crankiness." The author is an ardent advocate of simplicity in
+all things and--practises what he preaches. Moreover, he is one of
+those who sees health from all points of view: he is as much concerned
+with what the English Bible calls "a right spirit" as with a fit body
+and a responsive mind. It is a little book deserving of a wide
+circulation.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+A REMEDY FOR SLEEPLESSNESS.
+
+ To the Editors
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ Would you care to publish the following experience of a cure for
+ sleeplessness:--
+
+ I had no difficulty in going to sleep, but usually awoke again at
+ about two A.M. with palpitation, and it often took me two or
+ three hours to go to sleep again.
+
+ I cured myself in the following way: I left off supper and
+ reduced my tea meal by half, and the result was continuous sleep;
+ the symptoms, however, began to come back again after a time, so
+ I gradually cut the tea meal right away, and half of the midday
+ meal as well. The cure was then permanent and after a time I
+ found that I could resume the tea meal again. At the present time
+ I am having a tea meal of fruit only.
+
+ In addition I should advise those who suffer from this complaint
+ to keep cheerful, and to avoid excessive physical or mental
+ fatigue and worry. Yours faithfully,
+
+ "A SIX MONTHS' READER."
+
+
+IS PURE LIME JUICE OBTAINABLE?
+
+The Editors have received the following letter from Messrs Rowntree &
+Co., Ltd.:--
+
+ "We note in your issue of July 1913 under the heading of 'Lemon
+ or Orange Squash' a note to the effect that bottled lemon
+ squashes and lime cordials 'are not pure in the strict sense of
+ the term, since they are bound to contain 10 per cent. alcoholic
+ pure spirit by Government regulations.' We should be glad to know
+ what is your authority for this statement. Possibly it is a
+ misprint, because obviously the Government does not require
+ anything of the kind. Our own lemon squash and lime juice cordial
+ are entirely free from any form of preservative, including
+ alcohol. They are made up from pure lemon juice and lime juice
+ respectively, with sugar, and contain no foreign ingredient."
+
+The statement complained of was based on an article entitled
+"Fortified Lime Juice" which appeared in _The Chemist and Druggist_,
+13th May 1911 (page 51). On again referring to this article we find
+that the Government regulation applies only to _exported_ Lime Juice.
+
+We regret having made this error, and are genuinely glad to have
+Messrs Rowntree's assurance that their own "Lime Juice Cordial" and
+"Lemon Squash" are "entirely free from any form of preservative,
+including alcohol."
+
+Nevertheless, we think our suspicions regarding the presence of
+preservatives in such articles are justifiable in view of the
+following authoritative statements made by _The Chemist and Druggist_
+in the article referred to:--
+
+ "The British Revenue authorities have drawn the line a little
+ tighter in the discharge of their responsibility respecting the
+ soundness of lime-juice intended for exportation or for use on
+ board ship. The new rule henceforth is to grant a 'pass'
+ certificate for unfortified lime-juice to last for fourteen days
+ only, at the end of which time another certificate must be
+ obtained. As this new regulation affects lime-juice in its
+ natural condition before rum or any other spirit is added to it,
+ only lime-juice manufacturers or importers are concerned in the
+ matter.... _With such rapidly deteriorating liquid as lime or
+ lemon juice the addition of the preservative spirit is a
+ necessity, hence the sooner it is fortified the better._ The
+ Revenue authorities permit duty-free spirit to be used for this
+ purpose, but in order that lime-juice manufacturers shall have
+ this advantage of not paying duty on the spirit used the Revenue
+ authorities insist on approval of the juice and its subsequent
+ fortification in bond under supervision of the Crown.... In
+ reference to the proportion of spirit used, previously the
+ regulation was expressed in a permissive sense, but now the
+ emphatic "must" is used. In the last Government Laboratory report
+ it was stated that 396 samples were examined, most of which were
+ lime-juice, representing nearly 50,000 gallons. Even the
+ fortified article is re-tested if more than three months old in
+ cask or two years old in bottle, and this re-testing resulted
+ last year in a condemnation of several hundred gallons owing to
+ deterioration during storage. This juice is principally for use
+ in the Mercantile Marine to combat scurvy."
+
+From which it would appear that the use of _some_ kind of preservative
+is essential with such a rapidly deteriorating liquid as lime or lemon
+juice; and if not alcohol, there are innumerable chemical
+preservatives available. We wish we could rely on receiving assurances
+from other "Lime Juice" importers and manufacturers similar to that we
+have received from Messrs Rowntree.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To People with Strong Convictions:_
+
+A holiday is the best of all opportunities for appreciating the
+opposite point of view to our own: this is why everyone needs a day's
+holiday once a week.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+FAULTY FOOD COMBINATIONS.
+
+ H.E.H. writes.--I should like your opinion of the statement of
+ the late Mr A. Broadbent, that fruit when taken with starchy food
+ by dyspeptics delays digestion, and that the digestion of starchy
+ foods and vegetables occupied only one-third of the time needed
+ for the digestion of starch with fruit. I have lived on a strict
+ vegetarian diet and observed the laws of hygiene for two and a
+ half years, to rid myself of dyspepsia, with great success,
+ having increased my weight by thirty-six pounds; for the last
+ nine months of this time I have lived on a largely "unfired"
+ diet, but am still troubled with acid risings and flatulence and
+ cannot account for it. Will you kindly enlighten me on the
+ subject?
+
+ I am a carpenter by trade and get eight hours in the open air
+ every day. I take a tumbler of distilled water hot with the juice
+ of one orange at 6 A.M., breakfast at 7.30 A.M., dinner at 12
+ noon and tea at 6 P.M., all consisting of Wallace unfermented
+ bread and biscuits, various fruits (mostly apples, bananas and
+ tomatoes) and nuts, about ½oz. at a meal; also a little cheese,
+ about 1 oz. at a meal.
+
+The late Mr A. Broadbent was quite right, in my opinion, when he
+asserted that fruit taken with starchy foods delayed digestion.
+
+To reap the true benefit from fruit it must be taken alone.
+
+The dominant element in fruit is oxygen and the feature of oxygen is
+its power to start the process of oxidation in decomposing and
+disintegrating substances. It follows that when the stomach is filled
+with fermenting food-stuffs, or the tissues are clogged with the
+products derived from such, the oxidising action of fruit will be
+correspondingly intense.
+
+The Naturist who applies the Schroth Cure for the purpose of curing
+chronic diseases uses fruit as his chief eliminating agent. The reader
+will remember that the peasant healer, Schroth, made his patients take
+dry stale rolls alone for three whole days, with nothing whatever to
+drink, and on the fourth day, he gave them a full bottle of white
+wine, which then caused intense oxidation, with marked elimination of
+poisons. His methods, if successful, were drastic and weakening, and
+so the latter-day exponents of Schrothism have modified this and give
+their patients zweiback or twice-baked bread instead of rolls, and on
+the third or fourth day make the patient partake freely of fresh
+fruit. This process of alternate dry days and fluid days is continued
+for some weeks until the cure is complete.
+
+I have merely referred to this matter to show the part played by fruit
+in the body. To a healthy person fruit is in truth a splendid
+regenerating food, but it should, whenever possible, be eaten alone.
+To a dyspeptic, fruit is often equally good, if _taken by itself_.
+
+The case of vegetables is different, and I hold with Broadbent that
+salad or properly cooked vegetables do go well with cereals, because
+they contain, not oxygen and oxygen acids, but mineral elements like
+soda, lime and magnesia, which neutralise the acids and toxins which
+form in the body as a result of its work. The vegetable is just as
+active as the fruit as an eliminant, but it works on different lines.
+Cereal foods, if eaten slowly in a dry condition are made alkaline by
+the saliva, so that the vegetables, which are also naturally alkaline,
+would harmonise well with cereals if eaten with them.
+
+Our correspondent should modify his diet as follows, and then, I
+anticipate, he will cease to be troubled with his acid dyspepsia and
+flatulence. He should take his fruit alone, and take any of the crisp
+unsweetened Wallace "P.R." Biscuits in preference to the unfermented
+bread, which latter is often difficult to digest:--
+
+_On rising._--A tumblerful of hot distilled water.
+
+_Breakfast_ (at 7.30).--Fresh fruit only.
+
+_Lunch_ (at 12).--1 to 2 oz. of cheese, preferably home-made curd
+cheese; salad of green leaf vegetables; "P.R." or Ixion biscuits with
+fresh butter, or nut butter.
+
+_Dinner_ (at 6).--1 to 2 oz. of flaked pine kernels, finely grated raw
+roots or tomatoes, with pure olive oil; Granose biscuits, or Shredded
+Wheat biscuits, and fresh butter.
+
+_At bedtime._--Cupful of dandelion coffee or hot distilled water.
+
+
+NEURITIS.
+
+ E.M.A. writes.--At the age of five years I had an attack of
+ rheumatic fever through taking a severe cold, and have been
+ troubled more or less with pains since that time, which I feel
+ sure are caused through rheumatism of the nerves. I am now
+ fifty-eight years of age and have been a vegetarian for six
+ years.
+
+ My diet is:--8 A.M., cup of Sanum Tonic Tea; 9 A.M., Cup of dried
+ milk; 10 A.M., half of an apple and a little crust of wholemeal
+ bread; 1 P.M. conservatively cooked vegetable, using "Emprote"
+ for sauce; 4 P.M., cup of dried milk; 6 P.M., a little green
+ salad with St Ivel lactic cheese (size of one large walnut); 9
+ P.M., cup of dried milk. Do you think dried milk is harmful to
+ me? I should miss it very much were I to leave it off. I must
+ mention how great a help _The Healthy Life_ magazine is to me in
+ many ways.
+
+Neuritis is a painful and wearying form of nerve trouble which mostly
+affects the arms and legs. It can, however, originate in any other
+part of the body through the spinal nerve centres. It may sometimes be
+due to injury, but the usual cause is some form of thickening or
+misplacement of the spinal structures, which induces pressure upon the
+nerves as they emerge through the apertures between the spinal bones.
+A careful examination of the back will show the site, and often the
+nature, of the thickening or encumbrance which is present.
+
+In our correspondent's case the thickening process doubtless occurred
+as an after effect of the attack of rheumatic fever.
+
+The best remedy is suitable osteopathic treatment for the spine,
+supplemented by _either very_ hot or _quite_ cold spinal sitz baths,
+by acetic acid skin treatment, or by any other means which will have
+the effect of disencumbering the spine. By means of our treatment we
+free the painful nerves from harmful pressure and promote an increased
+blood circulation in the parts affected. In this way the cause of the
+disorder is removed.
+
+A diet along the following lines would be better than the present
+one:--
+
+8 A.M.--Tumblerful of hot distilled water.
+
+9.30.--One raw egg beaten up with cream and vegetable juice or clear
+vegetable soup made without salt. Wholemeal bread with plenty of
+butter and some celery or watercress.
+
+1.30 P.M.--Two conservatively cooked vegetables done without salt,
+with grated cheese as sauce and a Granose biscuit with butter.
+
+4.--Tumblerful of hot distilled water only.
+
+6.30.--2 oz. of cottage cheese or cream cheese, salad and Granose
+biscuits, or "P.R." crackers, with butter.
+
+9.30.--A raw egg beaten up with cream and vegetable juice or soup.
+
+I think dried milk preparations are inadvisable in such cases as these
+(especially when taken as beverages, as the "milk sugars" present are
+very prone to ferment and to hinder the cleansing of the digestive
+tract), and that the required proteid is best obtained from eggs and
+curd cheese. Fat is very necessary in nervous troubles; hence plenty
+of cream, fresh butter and cream cheese should be taken; also pure oil
+with the salad.
+
+
+MALT EXTRACT.
+
+ L.F.H. writes.--Is malt extract a good thing to take daily with
+ an ordinary non-flesh diet, two teaspoonfuls or so at breakfast?
+ And is the desiccated or dry malt extract to be preferred to the
+ ordinary sticky article?
+
+Malt extract of good quality, containing an active form of diastase,
+is a good form of relish to take with meals. The diastase promotes
+starch digestion and makes a good addition to foods of the cereal
+order. The thick sticky form is the best because the diastase is then
+in an active condition. Dried malt usually will have this diastase
+destroyed, hence, although much more convenient to handle, it is not
+so good dietetically as the sticky original extract.
+
+
+ABOUT SUGAR.
+
+ C.T. writes.--I have read the article on sugar with considerable
+ interest. I have noted nervous disorders, etc., manifest in cases
+ of excessive consumption of manufactured sugar. I have been an
+ abstainer from cane sugar (all commercial sugars, though _I do
+ not know of any objection to milk, sugar_) for many years,
+ regarding it as an unnatural excitant and stimulant as well as
+ being inimical to digestion. As a physiologist I have taken
+ immense interest in longevity, feeling that an active life past
+ the age of ninety-five or a hundred, and upwards, carries with
+ it, in evidence of right living, the force of demonstration, and
+ more conclusively, in direct ratio to the advance of years. I
+ firmly believe that all anomalies will ultimately admit of
+ resolution. In this connection I could mention a number of
+ strange and paradoxical cases for which, as yet, I have obtained
+ no solution. I know of centenarians who began using "sugar"
+ freely late in life. In one case, when past eighty, a new set of
+ teeth (not odd "supernumeraries") appeared all round! How is it,
+ again, that the natives of the West Indies, when living on sugar
+ (in its crude state, I suppose) have excellent teeth and perfect
+ health? Is not raw sugar better the less manufactured it is? On
+ the other side, Captain Diamond, at 114, attributes his health in
+ great measure to abstinence from sugar.
+
+Most of these queries are answered in the completed book[10] published
+this year. The point about "milk sugar" not being injurious he will
+find answered on page 72.
+
+[10] _The Truth about Sugar_, 1s. net. (C.W. Daniel, Ltd.)
+
+"Milk sugars" taken to excess with a mixed diet, or in the form of
+milk as a beverage, break down into lactic, butyric and other
+destructive acids under the influence of intestinal germs and thus do
+harm to the body.
+
+The natives of the West Indies (page 39) take the sugar cane in its
+natural state as a living vegetable food--a very different thing from
+the isolated and chemicalised sugar on our tables at home. Moreover,
+the chewing required helps digestion. This is very different to the
+drinking rapidly of sugared beverages, which do not receive this
+necessary mouth preparation.
+
+One is quite prepared to admit that paradoxical cases do occur where
+sugar seems to agree well even with octogenarians, but they are, in my
+opinion, the exceptions, and I am constantly coming across cases where
+the free consumption of table sugars has proved very harmful to both
+old and young.
+
+
+ULCERATION OF THE STOMACH.
+
+ A.L.M. writes.--Our domestic servant, a girl aged twenty-four, is
+ suffering from ulceration of the stomach and has had periodical
+ attacks for the past six years. She has apparently, until she
+ came to us, eaten and drunk very unwisely. She has been with us
+ seven months and has been fed on a non-flesh diet since she came.
+ For the last four weeks tea, coffee and cocoa have been
+ forbidden, and as little sugar is consumed as possible. She had a
+ very bad attack in August and we had to call in a doctor is we
+ did not like the responsibility. He strongly recommended the
+ hospital and an operation, which would ensure that there would be
+ no repetition of the complaint. She decided to go and was there
+ six weeks. After much experimenting there, inoculating and
+ wondering whether it was tuberculosis, they operated and in due
+ course she came back. We went to the sea for three weeks and
+ shortly after our return the vomiting of blood and pains
+ recommenced. After four days in bed she returned to light dishes,
+ and a fortnight after another slighter attack came on, which in
+ twenty-four hours. She takes hot boiled water five times a day.
+ She suffers also from a horny skin on the palms of her hands,
+ with deep cracks where the natural lines are. These periodically
+ bleed. This skin exists also on her heels and the soles of her
+ feet. Before and after, an attack this skin seems to be worse
+ than ever.
+
+ I mentioned the fact of the recurring attacks since the operation
+ to the doctor and he seemed surprised and said the matter must be
+ constitutional and there was no hope for her.
+
+ My own opinion is that pure food will put her right eventually,
+ and that these attacks will recur in diminishing force until the
+ poisons are eliminated front the system.
+
+ Her diet is at present as follows:--
+
+ _On rising._--Half-pint of boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Breakfast._--Either Shredded Wheat softened in hot milk or
+ breakfast flakes and cold milk: followed by either bananas or
+ apples. Half-pint boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Lunch._--Ordinary vegetarian cooked dishes, vegetables
+ conservatively cooked, some fruit. Half-pint boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Tea meal._--Wholemeal bread (Artox flour), usually non-yeast,
+ nut butter. Lettuces and radishes when obtainable. Half-pint
+ boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Before retiring._--Half-pint of boiled water (hot).
+
+It has been shown by Brandl and other investigators that ulceration of
+the stomach can always be produced in animals by feeding them with an
+excess of sugar foods. The same thing applies to human beings, who, if
+fed with an excess of sweetmeats, sugar, milk or soft mushy cereals,
+will first contract catarrh of the stomach, which will ultimately
+deepen into a condition of ulceration.
+
+The rationale of the process is this: Fermentation and putrefaction of
+the foods eaten to excess produce in the stomach various acids and
+toxins. These become absorbed and pass into the liver. Then the liver
+becomes clogged, its flow of blood is obstructed and this naturally
+retards the flow of food from the stomach. That organ becomes
+congested and inflamed and, when the lower end, or pylorus, is
+obstructed, this congested state may easily deepen into ulceration. We
+also nearly always find a tender spine, showing that the nervous
+system has equally participated in the conditions produced, and this
+nervous factor intensifies the trouble by retarding the due working of
+the digestive functions.
+
+What we have to do to cure a case of ulcerated stomach is _to withhold
+the foods which create fermentation_. Then the liver will be allowed
+time to work off the poisons which are clogging its substance and when
+this has come about the stomach will slowly return to its normal
+condition.
+
+The diet which our correspondent cites is badly arranged. It is a
+mistake to give fluid _with_ the meals, and the mushy food at
+breakfast and the soft food at dinner should be changed to drier and
+crisper forms of nutriment.
+
+The following diet would be a distinct improvement:--
+
+_On rising._--Half-pint of boiled hot water, sipped slowly; or
+quarter-pint Sanum Tonic Tea, taken hot.
+
+_Breakfast._--A Shredded Wheat biscuit _eaten dry_ and well buttered;
+a lightly boiled egg and some finely grated raw roots, especially
+carrots and turnips.
+
+In a case of this sort it is best not to mix cereals with fruits.
+
+An alternative breakfast would consist of _fruit alone_ such as two
+apples, finely grated at first, or two bananas mashed and mixed with
+pure olive oil and sprinkled with flaked nuts but care must be taken
+that the pulped banana is well chewed.
+
+_Lunch._--Grated cheese, or cream cheese, with some finely chopped
+salad, or grated raw roots, or conservatively cooked vegetables
+(preferably roots or onions baked fairly dry by the casserole method)
+can be taken at this repast. Follow with a slice or two of cold
+ordinary toast or rusks with butter.
+
+_Tea meal._--Half-pint of hot boiled water with a little lemon or
+orange juice added to it for flavouring.
+
+_Supper_ (about 6.30).--Stale standard bread with butter and curd
+cheese or an egg. The non-yeast bread should be avoided as in the weak
+state of the stomach it will not be properly digested; besides, the
+bran may irritate the lining in the present condition of the stomach.
+As soon as the stomach has regained its power of digesting food, and
+the ulcers have healed, then fine wholemeal biscuits of the Wallace or
+Ixion kind can be taken, but the unfermented bread had better be
+avoided.
+
+_At bedtime._--A half-pint of hot water.
+
+
+GOING TO EXTREMES IN THE UNFIRED DIET.
+
+ W.O.C. writes.--As a bachelor who (not believing in, and
+ therefore doing without domestic help) is anxious to reduce time
+ spent on cooking to a minimum, I shall be glad if Dr Knaggs will
+ tell me whether the use of the oven, pan and kettle are necessary
+ to healthy diet. For instance (1) would a diet of bread and
+ butter, biscuits, cheese, fruit (fresh and dried), ordinary cold
+ water and cold milk, be as healthy as a diet of hot vegetables,
+ puddings, cocoashell, etc.? (2) Are cooked lentils,
+ butter-beans, macaroni, etc., more beneficial taken hot than
+ after they have cooled? (3) Could uncooked vegetables _of
+ sufficient nutriment_ be substituted for these? I shall be glad
+ if it is quite safe to live entirely on raw foods, whether fresh
+ or "prepared."
+
+The use of the oven, pan and kettle is not essential to a healthy
+diet, but few people in this changeable, and often cold, depressing
+climate are willing to forgo their occasional use. One cannot get hot
+water for a drink without a kettle or a small saucepan and a gas ring,
+and hot water is often a very comforting and useful drink, especially
+where an effort is being made to break off the tea and coffee habit.
+
+A diet of bread and butter, biscuits, cheese, fresh and dried fruits
+is excellent, provided our correspondent also includes grated raw
+roots and salads as the medicinal part of the regimen, and keeps the
+fresh fruit to itself as one meal of the day. Cold water or cold milk
+could also be taken in the place of hot water or hot milk, although I
+deprecate the use of milk as a beverage unless a person is willing to
+live entirely on milk like a baby does. The hot vegetables are
+uncalled for, provided the raw vegetables are substituted for them.
+The puddings can well be discarded. Cocoashell beverages are useful in
+very many cases.
+
+Beans or lentils can be eaten sparingly in a raw state if first
+soaked, then flaked in a Dana machine, and afterwards flavoured with
+herbs or parsley. I certainly think that, if they _are_ to be cooked,
+the taste is better if eaten hot; but there is no reason why cold
+cooked lentils should not be eaten any more than is the case with an
+other form of cooked food. Uncooked vegetables will not take the place
+of lentils, because they are of a different order of food-stuff. The
+uncooked vegetable would go well with the lentils as neutralising
+agents of the acids into which all nitrogenous foods break down in the
+body. Most people will find that nuts, cheese and eggs are better
+sources of proteid than lentils or other "pulse foods."
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V OCTOBER
+ No. 27. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+Just as there is a pride that apes humility, so there is an egotism
+that apes selfishness, a cowardice that apes stoicism and an indolence
+that apes effort. This is especially apparent in matters pertaining to
+health.
+
+How often, on the plea of not causing worry or expense to others, does
+a man or woman not put off taking necessary rest, or consulting a
+doctor, until a slight ailment that once would have yielded to
+treatment becomes an irreparable injury.
+
+Such conduct is often admired as unselfish, but for unselfishness and
+stoicism a psychologist would read fear, indolence and egotism. Fear
+of being thought hypochondriacal and fear of facing facts; shrinking
+from the exertion involved in the effort to become healthy and from
+the pain involved in witnessing the possible distress and anxiety of
+friends should the complaint prove serious--regardless of the fact
+that its neglect and resultant incurability would cause infinitely
+more distress; above all, that mental egotism which breeds in its
+victim an unreadiness to acknowledge that he does not _know_ what may
+be wrong and to take prompt steps to remedy his ignorance.
+
+It is not fair, of course, to attach too much blame to the patient.
+Such faults as those cited above are in themselves symptoms of nervous
+disease. Body and mind act and react upon one another. Nevertheless,
+the practice of the virtues loses its meaning when there is no pull in
+the opposite direction.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+IMAGINATION IN INSURANCE.
+
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this article a continuation of the
+series previously entitled "Healthy Brains." The author of "The
+Children All Day Long" is an intimate disciple of one of the greatest
+living psychologists, and she has a message of the first importance to
+all who realise that true health depends as much on poise of mind as
+on physical fitness._
+
+It is an unpleasant subject, but have you ever faced the fact that
+your widow might be left in poverty?
+
+We all know the phrases that come so glibly from the lips of the
+insurance agent. Perhaps the very fact that it pays companies to spend
+thousands a year on the salaries of agents, and other thousands on
+broadcast eye-catching advertisements, shows that there are many
+things which our imagination only accepts "against the grain." Fire,
+storm, loss by theft or burglary, sickness, disablement and death we
+do not, by choice, dwell on these things in thought.
+
+Now some people are inclined to pet this impulse of turning away. "Do
+not think dark thoughts," they tell us, "the best insurance is
+unconsciousness, insouciance, denial. Misfortune will pass you by if
+you do not look for it."
+
+Perhaps there is something to be said for this method when it comes
+with absolute spontaneity from the innermost nature. But if for the
+radiant apprehension of beauty and health we substitute an effort to
+cling to the picture of good when our very bodies and nerves are
+warning us with suggestions of evil, we run grave risks. By adopting
+someone else's sense of freedom from danger and repressing our own
+conviction that for us a certain danger, more or less remote, exists,
+we are putting great pressure upon ourselves. At times of ill-health
+or accidental worry, a sleepless night may bring us an agonising
+succession of imaginative pictures, those very pictures which we have
+attempted to banish from our daily life. If we have still greater
+power of repression these grim images, forbidden throughout every
+moment of waking life, may reappear in dreams.
+
+(Of the still more serious dangers of repression and of its relation
+to various forms of insanity, this is hardly the place to speak.[11]
+It ought not to be necessary to appeal to alarming instances in order
+to make us attend to a suggested warning.)
+
+[11] See Bernard Hart's illuminating treatment of the whole subject in
+_The Psychology of Insanity_, Cambridge Manuals of Science.
+
+Now if we decide to regard all fear as a suggestion of precaution, the
+emotional part of it to be laid aside as soon as it has fulfilled its
+function of arousing interest and directing action, it is easy to see
+the psychological justification for insurance.
+
+Of course pecuniary insurance is but one instance of such sequences of
+action, though it happens to be a rather obvious one. In a different
+field, most of us know the delightful feeling of relief experienced
+after consulting a doctor about some symptom that has perhaps been
+troubling us for a long time. "May I safely do this? Ought I to
+refrain from that?" and such perpetually recurring irritations to the
+attention are replaced by the knowledge that it is now the doctor's
+business to decide whether this or that is "serious," and that as
+long as we carry out his orders we may lay aside all worry about the
+matter.
+
+So in the case of fire insurance, what we are really buying with our
+annual premium is freedom from haunting questions as to the loss that
+would ensue if our house or shop or office were burnt down or damaged.
+Whenever the thought comes, it may, as far as the money loss is
+concerned, be dismissed.
+
+We see then that instead of keeping the suggestion of such misfortunes
+before us, as some people might allege, the act of insurance
+substitutes for vague and recurrent fears a formal and periodical
+recognition of possibilities, a recognition, too, that contains within
+itself a precaution against some of the results of the misfortune
+should it ever occur. What we buy, at the cost of a fixed number of
+pounds or shillings of money and a few minutes of time once a year, is
+the right to put the dangers out of our consciousness altogether and
+yet leave no residuum of repressed fear to split up our personality or
+give us indigestion.
+
+If we choose, for some reason or other, to let our imagination dwell
+on the objective side of the possibility we have insured against, we
+shall find a pleasure in thinking of what can be done by many people
+working together. If we need help to meet some misfortune, it is ours
+as a right, not doled out to us through others' pity. And every year
+that we have made no claim we have the delight of knowing that we are
+helping those who need.
+
+The art of working together is yet in its infancy. But if even the
+present standard of method devised for money insurance were to be
+adopted in the deeper matters which we so often allow to trouble us,
+what an advance in mental development we should have made and what new
+possibilities of safe action would be opened up!
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Every youth should learn to do something finely and thoroughly with
+his hands.--_Ruskin._
+
+
+
+
+THE SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF VEGETALISM.
+
+This article has been translated from the French of Prof. H. Labbé,
+the head of the _laboratoire à la Faculté de Médecine_, in Paris. It
+reflects a rather characteristic aloofness to any considerations other
+than scientific or economic. But it will well repay careful
+study.--[EDS.]
+
+
+I
+
+Vegetarianism has been the object of many attacks, and has also been
+warmly defended. Most of its adepts have sought to give the value of a
+dogma to its practice.
+
+For quite a number of people "vegetarianism" is a kind of religion,
+requiring of its votaries a sort of baptism, and the sacrifice of many
+pleasures. It is this which justifies the infatuation of some, and the
+systematic disparagement of others.
+
+"Vegetalism"[12] cannot pretend to play a similar part, or to lend
+itself to ambiguity. To be a "vegetalist" is to choose in the
+vegetable kingdom, with a justified preference, foods susceptible of
+filling the energy-producing needs, and the needs of the reparation of
+the human system.
+
+"Vegetalism" is a chapter of dietetic physiology which must utilise
+the precise methods and recent discoveries of the science of
+nutrition.
+
+[12] The word "Vegetarianism" implies a judgment of the qualities
+which such a diet entails. This word is derived, in fact, from the
+Latin adjective "Vegetus" (strong). The word "Vegetalism," which we
+oppose to the preceding one, admits only the establishing of a fact,
+that of the choice--exclusive or preferred--of the nutritious matters
+in the vegetable kingdom.
+
+
+II
+
+Before putting "vegetalism" into practice the first point is to know
+whether the foods of "vegetal" origin contain, and are susceptible of
+producing regularly, the divers nutritive principles indispensable to
+the organisation of an alimentary diet. The principles are the
+following:--Proteid or albuminoid substances; hydrocarbonated and
+sweet substances fatty substances; mineral matters, alkalis, lime,
+magnesia, phosphates and chlorides, etc. In most compound foods, no
+matter of what origin, mineral materials almost always exist in
+sufficient quantities. The most important amongst them, at all events,
+are found combined in liberal, even superabundant, portions in dishes
+of vegetal origin. The analysis of the ashes of our most common table
+vegetables fixes us immediately to this subject: Leguminous plants
+supply from about three to six per cent. of ashes, rich in alkalis,
+lime and phosphates. Potatoes, green vegetables and fruit as a whole
+absorbing considerable quantities of mineral elements. These are the
+elements of a nature to allow a precise reply to this question which
+we propose to expound briefly.
+
+
+III
+
+In order to examine a food thoroughly, for the purpose of ascertaining
+if it can be advantageously introduced for consumption, whether
+albumins, fats, hydrate of carbon, or sugar, etc., or again an
+association of these principles in a composite article of food are in
+question, divers researches must be carried out before giving a final
+judgment.
+
+If a more or less complex article of food is in question, before
+considering it as a good nutriment, its centesimal composition, or its
+immediate composition, should be established; its theoretic calorific
+power should be known, and it should be measured if this has not yet
+been done.
+
+Besides the calorific yield thus estimated _in vitro_, the real
+utilisation in the human organism of articles of food alone or mixed
+with other foods should be determined, taking simultaneously into
+account their effects, whether tonic, stimulating or depressing.
+
+From a different point of view it is no longer allowable to neglect
+before judging whether such and such a nutritive substance is
+advantageous, the valuation of what we have called, with Prof.
+Landouzy, the economic yield--that is to say, the price of the
+energy, provided by the unity of weight of the article of food.
+
+It is only in reviewing "vegetal" substances, taking these divers
+titles into consideration, that we shall be justified in attributing
+to the practice of "vegetalism," integral or mitigated, its definite
+value.
+
+
+IV
+
+Only a few years ago, when Schützenberger, emulator and forerunner of
+Fischer, Armand Gautier, Kossel, first disjointed the albuminoid
+molecule, to examine one by one its divers parts, the composition of
+the various albumins was very little known. Whether, therefore,
+albumins of the blood, or those of meat or eggs, were in question,
+these bodies were hardly ever separated, except through physical
+circumstances, amongst others by constant quantities of different
+coagulation. As to the centesimal formula and the intimate structure
+of the different protoid substances, they could be considered as
+closely brought together.
+
+From this fact, the physiological problem of the utilisation of
+albumin was simpler. No matter which article of food contained this
+albumin, its nutritive power by unity of weight remained the same. At
+the present time the number of albumins is no longer limited. It is
+not now physical characteristics founded difficult separations which
+arbitrarily distinguish those bodies from each other. The
+individuality of each of the albumins results from its formula of
+deterioration, under the influence of digestive ferments, or of
+chemical bodies acting in a similar way, as do mineral acids and
+alkalis. For want of constituary formula this methodical deterioration
+makes known the number of molecules (acids or other bodies) which are
+responsible for the structure of each albumin. These deleterious
+formula of proteid matter are not less suggestive than composition
+ones. They reveal notable differences between "vegetal" and animal
+albumins.
+
+To be sure, animal albumins (beef, veal, mutton, pork, etc.) which we
+are offered in an alimentary flesh diet, resemble more nearly the
+structure of our own bodily albumins than do the gluten of bread or
+the albumin of vegetables. This fact seems actually the best support
+of the theory which affirms the superiority of the flesh over the
+vegetable diet. Such a remark is therefore well worth discussing by
+showing that the consequences which can be deduced from it are
+paradoxical, and rest upon hypothesis which, not very acceptable in
+theory, are hardly verified in practice.
+
+Admitting that albumin plays in alimentary diet only the plastic part
+of reconstruction of used-up corporal matter, it might be advantageous
+to ingest but one albumin the composition of which is very similar to
+our own. By virtue of the law of least effort such a one in equal
+weights ought to be of more service than a foreign albumin, as it
+requires less organic work. For man, albumin of animal origin ought to
+be more profitable in equal weight than vegetable albumin. In the
+organism, indeed, albumin passes through a double labour. After the
+intestinal deterioration, followed by a passage through the digestive
+mucus membrane, a re-welding of the liberated acids takes place, with
+a formation of new albumin.
+
+If, therefore, alimentary albumin's mission is, not to be definitely
+burnt up in the organism, but to help in the plastication of the
+individual, the more its initial formula approaches the definite one
+to which it must attain, the more profitable it becomes, giving out
+less useless fragments and waste. Animal albumin approaching more
+nearly to human albumin, is also the one whose introduction into the
+daily alimentary diet is most rational. This statement seems to be the
+defeat of vegetal albumin. But let there be no mistake. It consecrates
+at the same time the triumph of anthropophagy, for there could not be
+for man a more profitable albumin than his own, or that of his
+fellow-man! This should make us pause and reflect, before allowing
+this deduction to be accepted.
+
+Besides, these arguments _ad hominem_ do not appear to us necessary
+for repelling such an interpretation of facts. Modern works have
+shown us that the greater proportion of ingested albumin played, in
+fact, a calorific, and not a plastic, part. Under these conditions one
+is justified in doubting whether there takes place with regard to the
+total albumins ingested a work of reconstruction thus complicated in
+the organism, after their first deterioration. Evidently one may come
+to believe that this complicated labour applies only to the more or
+less feeble portion of albumin really integrated.
+
+Practically speaking, the best criterion for judging the utilisation
+of an ingested albumin lies in the persistence of the corporal weight,
+allied to the ascertained fact of a stable equilibrium in the total
+azotized balance-sheet which is provided by the comparison of the
+"Ingesta" with the "Excreta." From this point of view there exists the
+closest similitude between the albumins of animal and those of
+vegetable origin; both, in fact, are capable of assuring good health
+and corporal and cellular equilibrium.
+
+However, the digestibility of vegetable albumins seems to remain
+slightly inferior to that of animal albumins. 97 per cent. of the
+animal fibrine given in a meal are digested, where 88 to 90 per cent.
+only of vegetable albumins are absorbed and utilised. It is a small
+difference, but not one to be overlooked. We must say, however, that
+the method one employs in determining these digestibilities takes from
+them a part of their value, and renders difficult the comparison of
+results obtained. Sensibly pure albumins are too often compared in an
+artificial diet. One deviates thus from the conditions of practical
+physiology. In fact, in ordinary meals, all varieties of foods are
+mixed together, acting and reacting upon each other, reciprocally
+modifying their digestibility. If one conforms to this way of acting
+towards alimentary albumins, the results change sensibly. In the
+presence of an excess of starch, under the shape of bread, for
+example, vegetable albumin seems to be absorbed in about the same
+proportions as animal albumin.
+
+If, in a flesh diet, animal albumins are always consumed nearly pure
+(lean meat containing hardly anything but albumin, besides a little
+fat, and an inferior quantity of glycogen) vegetable albumin is
+always, on the contrary, mixed with a number of other substances. This
+is doubtless one of the reasons which causes the digestibility of
+vegetable albumins to vary, the foreign nutritive matters being able
+to bring about, under certain circumstances, and in cases of
+superabundant ingestions, a real albuminous "saving" in the newest
+sense of the word.
+
+Besides, a prejudicial question makes the debate almost vain. When it
+was admitted by such physiologists as Voit, Rubner and their school
+that from 140 to 150 grammes of albumin in the minimum were daily
+necessaries in the human diet, a variation of a few units in the
+digestive power presented some importance. Nowadays the real utility
+of albumins is differently appreciated. The need of them seems to have
+been singularly exaggerated; first lowered to about 75 gr. by A.
+Gautier, it has dropped successively with Lapicque, Chittenden,
+Landergreen, Morchoisne and Labbé, by virtue of considerations both
+ethnological and physiological, to 50 grs., 30 grs. and even to 25 or
+20 grammes. The "nutritive relation"--that is to say, the yield from
+albuminoid matters to the total nutritive matters of diet--is thus
+brought down from 1/3 its primitive value to 1/15 or 1/20 at most. It
+follows that the slight inferiority found in the digestive powers of
+vegetable albumin appears unimportant. It is sufficient to add 2 or 3
+more grammes of albumin to a ration already superabundant of from 40
+to 50 grammes of vegetable proteins to bring back a complete
+equilibrium in the use of vegetable and animal varieties. The
+theoretical inferiority of vegetable albumin thus almost completely
+disappears.
+
+H. LABBÉ.
+
+(_To be continued._)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If your system has become clogged, go slow--and fast.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO THE WEST WIND.
+
+
+ O Wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being,
+ Thou from whose unseen presence the leaves dead
+ Are driven like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,
+ Yellow, and black, and pale, and hectic red,
+ Pestilence-stricken multitudes! O thou
+ Who chariotest to their dark wintry bed
+ The wingèd seeds, where they lie cold and low,
+ Each like a corpse within its grave, until
+ Thine azure sister of the Spring shall blow
+ Her clarion o'er the dreaming earth, and fill
+ (Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air)
+ With living hues and odours plain and hill
+ Wild Spirit which art moving everywhere;
+ Destroyer and preserver; hear, oh hear!
+
+ Thou on whose stream, 'mid the steep sky's commotion,
+ Loose clouds like earth's decaying leaves are shed,
+ Shook from the tangled boughs of heaven and ocean,
+ Angels of rain and lightning! there are spread
+ On the blue surface of thine airy surge,
+ Like the bright hair uplifted from the head
+ Of some fierce Mænad, even from the dim verge
+ Of the horizon to the zenith's height,
+ The locks of the approaching storm. Thou dirge
+ Of the dying year, to which this closing night
+ Will be the dome of a vast sepulchre,
+ Vaulted with all thy congregated might
+ Of vapours, from whose solid atmosphere
+ Black rain, and fire, and hail, will burst: Oh hear!
+
+ Thou who didst waken from his summer dreams
+ The blue Mediterranean, where he lay,
+ Lulled by the coil of his crystalline streams,
+ Beside a pumice isle in Baiæ's bay,
+ And saw in sleep old palaces and towers
+ Quivering within the wave's intenser day,
+ All overgrown with azure moss, and flowers
+ So sweet the sense faints picturing them! Thou
+ For whose path the Atlantic's level powers
+ Cleave themselves into chasms, while far below
+ The sea-blooms and the oozy woods which wear
+ The sapless foliage of the ocean know
+ Thy voice, and suddenly grow grey with fear,
+ And tremble and despoil themselves: Oh, hear!
+
+ If I were a dead leaf thou mightest bear;
+ If I were a swift cloud to fly with thee;
+ A wave to pant beneath thy power, and share
+ The impulse of thy strength, only less free
+ Than thou, O uncontrollable! if even
+ I were as in my boyhood, and could be
+ The comrade of thy wanderings over heaven,
+ As then, when to outstrip thy skiey speed
+ Scarce seemed a vision,--I would ne'er have striven
+ As thus with thee in prayer in my sore need.
+ Oh lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!
+ I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!
+ A heavy weight of hours has chained and bowed
+ One too like thee--tameless, and swift, and proud.
+
+ Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:
+ What if my leaves are falling like its own?
+ The tumult of thy mighty harmonies
+ Will take from both a deep autumnal tone,
+ Sweet though in sadness. Be thou, Spirit fierce,
+ My spirit! Be thou me, impetuous one!
+ Drive my dead thoughts over the universe,
+ Like withered leaves, to quicken a new birth;
+ And, by the incantation of this verse,
+ Scatter, as from an unextinguished hearth
+ Ashes and sparks, my words among mankind!
+ Be through my lips to unawakened earth
+ The trumpet of a prophecy! O Wind,
+ If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?
+
+PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT MAKES A HOLIDAY?
+
+
+What is it makes a holiday? Some people want Paris, some Monte Carlo,
+one man cannot be satisfied without big game to hunt, another must
+have a grouse moor. The student has his sailing boat, the young
+wage-earner his bicycle, three girl friends look forward to their week
+in a Hastings boarding-house. Almost anything may be "a change"; most
+things, to someone or other, are "a holiday." What does it all mean?
+
+The sands of West Sussex are wide and free, firm and smooth for
+walking with bare feet, lovely with little shells and sea-worm curves
+and ripple marks and the pits of razor-shells. Above them are the
+slopes of shingle, gleaming with all colours in the September sun.
+Farther up again, the low, brown crumbling cliffs crowned with green
+wreaths of tamarisk. The sea comes creeping up, or else the wind
+raises great white breakers; if the waves are quiet, old breakwaters,
+long ago broken themselves, smashed fragments here and there of
+concrete protections put by man, gaps in the cliff and changes in the
+coast-line, remind us of the vast force behind the gentle and
+persistent lap of water. The beach itself reminds us of it; there a
+flint and here a rounded pebble made out of brick or glass, worn down
+from man's rubbish to sea's proof of power.
+
+Over it all are the children, brown-legged and bare-headed. (Is it
+something in the weather this year that has given us the particular
+red-brown, suggestive of shrimp and lobster, that is the
+colour-vintage of 1913?) Babies with oilskin waders, bathers, girls in
+vividly coloured coats walking along the sands; all make up the
+picture and give us once again the thrill of holiday.
+
+Inland, the Sussex lanes are green and the trees are broad and shady.
+Thatched cottages are everywhere, and barns with heavy brows;
+yesterday I saw some pots put for shelter from the sun under the
+far-projecting thatch of a farmhouse. The gardens are full of
+sun-flowers and hollyhocks, fuchsia and golden rod; the walls are
+covered with jasmine and passion-flowers. Old, old churches make us
+feel like day-flies. The yew in the churchyard five minutes' walk from
+here is said to be 900 years old; the church itself is thirteenth
+century, but into its walls were built fragments of a former church,
+far older, on the same site. It carries us more than half-way back to
+the foundation of Christianity. Dim tales of heathen earls and Norman
+kings hang around the villages, and the very floor of the sea beyond
+the land is richly laden with stores of half-forgotten memories.
+
+Which of all these things makes these days my holiday?
+
+All of them, perhaps. Present moving life, and long-past history, the
+mighty movement of nature and the changes of geologic time: sheer
+beauty too and the gaiety of amusements and excursions; do not all
+have their place in unwinding us from the tight coils we make for our
+working days?
+
+Freedom to take from the world whatever is there of beauty and of
+interest--it really hardly matters what or where; freedom enhanced by
+sympathy, perhaps, for we seem to need some comrade in our play; so
+many days and nights following each other--no matter exactly how
+many--for letting ourselves go, and letting the world and all its
+power and wonder flow into us; that, whatever be place, time and
+conditions, is the making of a holiday.
+
+C
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round nature |
+ | of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the extension of |
+ | its circulation by tactfully urging their local newsagent to |
+ | have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. An |
+ | attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE ABROAD.
+
+
+"HYGIE."
+
+_A New Definition of Neurasthenia._
+
+We cull the following definition of neurasthenia from our French
+contemporary: Neurasthenia is discouragement of the soul. Being in a
+state of discouragement the soul ceases to take care of the body and
+allows it to become encumbered with waste products. The body in its
+turn becomes so defective that the soul is incapable of repairing the
+enfeebled organs and throws the body away into the water or leaves it
+somewhere to be crushed or abandons it by some other means.
+Neurasthenia may be compared to an indolent mechanic. He neglects to
+oil his engine. It runs off the rails and is smashed.
+
+
+_Fresh Departures._
+
+The Vegetarian Society of France has introduced three new sections
+into its organisation. The first is documentary, and aims at the
+collection, centralisation and classification of all information
+bearing on food reform. The second deals with domestic economy and
+hygiene. A number of ladies willing to devote themselves to the
+popularisation of the leading ideas of vegetarianism have joined this
+section. They offer advice and instruction to all who wish to
+familiarise themselves with food reform principles. The third section
+is concerned with physical training and outdoor games, with special
+reference to the relationship between these things and a non-flesh
+regimen.
+
+
+"VEGETARISCHE WARTE."
+
+_Nietzsche as Fruitarian._
+
+"A simple life," wrote Nietzsche in 1879, "is very difficult at the
+present time," and went on to explain its difficulties and to suggest
+that even the most determined would be obliged to leave the discovery
+of the way to a wiser generation. He himself, however, took some
+steps upon the way during his stay in Genoa, when he lived on bread
+and fruit and spent but a few shillings a week. Eggs were occasionally
+included, and artichokes--and the little cookery he needed was done by
+himself over a spirit lamp. His winter in Genoa, he declares, was the
+happiest in his life and saw the production of his "Twilight of the
+Gods."
+
+
+_Food Reform in Russia._
+
+The movement goes ahead rapidly in Russia. Hardly a town of any size
+but has now its vegetarian restaurant. This year the first Russian
+Vegetarian Congress has been held. It seems to have been a very
+successful gathering. "Seldom," writes one who was present, "have I
+experienced such a strong impression as was made upon me by this first
+vegetarian congress in Moscow." Unity seems to have been the
+prevailing note. Papers were read on the general significance and the
+various aspects of vegetarianism, followed by discussions. Amongst the
+various excursions undertaken was a pilgrimage to Yasnaya Polyana,
+including a visit to Tolstoy's grave.
+
+A Vegetarian Exhibition has also been held in Moscow. It included a
+fine show of fruits and vegetables, exhibits of various substitutes
+for leather, soaps made of vegetable oils, an abundance of Russian and
+foreign vegetarian literature of all sorts, from the noblest reaches
+of theory to the most invaluable details of practice. The next
+Congress is arranged for Easter 1914, at Kiev.
+
+
+_A Hopeful Sign._
+
+Fifteen years ago the Berlin municipal authorities stoutly refused
+Professor Baron's offer to found an orphanage which should be
+conducted on vegetarian principles. At the present moment it is being
+arranged that all school children shall be taught the value of
+vegetables and leguminous preparations and the wholesomeness of a diet
+that is relatively non-stimulating and practically meatless.
+
+D.M. RICHARDSON.
+
+
+
+
+THE CURTAINED DOORWAYS.
+
+
+In George Macdonald's _Phantastes: a Faery Romance for Men and Women_
+it is told how a man found himself in the midst of a great circular
+hall built entirely of black marble. On every side and at regular
+intervals there were archways, all heavily curtained. Hearing a faint
+sound of music proceeding from one of these hidden doorways he went
+towards it and, drawing aside the hangings, found a large room crowded
+with statuary, but no sign of an living creature. Yet he was certain
+the music had proceeded from that particular archway. Greatly puzzled,
+he let the curtain fall and stepped back a few paces. At once the
+music continued. Stepping stealthily and quickly to the curtain, he
+again lifted it, and received a vivid impression of a crowd of dancing
+forms suddenly arrested: something told him beyond dispute that at the
+moment he had drawn the hangings aside what were now lovely but
+motionless statues had sprung each to its pedestal out of the mazes of
+an intricate dance. Sound and movement had been frozen, in a flash of
+time, into a crowd of beautiful forms--in stone. No statue but seemed
+to tremble into immobility as the intruder's gaze turned this way and
+that no marble face but seemed to be aglow with the music that had
+died with his entry; no white limb but seemed to be tremulous with the
+rhythm of the dance that had ceased so suddenly.
+
+If the subtlety and imaginative truth of this story should lead you to
+read the whole book, I shall have had the privilege of introducing you
+to what is surely one of the finest and most delicately wrought
+fantasies in the English language, a fantasy so permeated with beauty
+and truth that you will neither wish nor need to look for the "moral".
+
+But whether you read _Phantastes_ or not, I may be allowed to suggest
+that the incident I have attempted to describe conveys one of the
+secrets of healthy living.
+
+It is a trite saying, that health is harmony. But I plead for a much
+wider and fuller interpretation of harmony than is customary. _Mens
+sana in corpore sano_--a sane mind in a healthy body--does not fill
+all the requirements of a healthy life. It is but an excellent theme,
+wanting orchestration.
+
+It is good to aim at a harmonious working of one's internal
+arrangements if one has had the misfortune or the folly to break that
+harmony. The physical basis of life must be attended to if we would be
+well. Only, you cannot stop there without imperilling the whole
+scheme.
+
+Again, it is good to train the body by means of exercise, play,
+singing and handicraft; all these things react both upwards and
+downwards, outwards and inwards. For example, one of the special
+virtues of tennis, if it be played at all keenly, is the necessity for
+making one's feet (those neglected members!) quick and responsive to
+the messages of eye and brain. In an increasingly sedentary age the
+rapidly growing popularity of tennis is, for this one reason alone, a
+good omen. But if you play tennis, or any other healthy outdoor sport,
+or learn how to sing, or how to breathe, or if you do Müller's
+exercises daily, for the sole purpose of benefiting your liver or
+developing your muscles, or of "keeping fit," you will miss the real
+prize.
+
+It is good, also, to train the mind to be logical, critical and
+balanced: it is good to cultivate a retentive memory and to store up
+useful facts. But if while you are aiming at intellectual fitness and
+alertness you allow these good things to obscure other and better
+things, if, in short, you let means become ends, you will never be
+healthy, because you will miss half the joys of living.
+
+There are many very skilful performers on musical instruments. They
+have set themselves, or their parents have set them, to gain certain
+prizes, distinctions or qualifications. No music is now too difficult
+for them to execute. But that is exactly what they do--they execute
+it: destroy its head and heart by sheer mechanical perfection. They
+have mastered the piano, or the organ, or the violin, or their own
+voice; but music eludes them.
+
+You see why I began with that tale of the curtained doors, the
+mysterious music, and the quivering statuary. There is an elusive,
+haunting quality about life and all living things which, if we look
+for it and listen to it, imparts a glamour, a rhythm, a beauty to
+everything that is worth doing. The great danger is that in the
+pressure of work, the hurry of play, the pursuit of health, or the
+training of the mind we miss the very thing which can give meaning and
+value to all these things. The severely matter-of-fact people don't go
+near the curtained doors, and if they did, would discover only a lot
+of cold, lifeless statues. Whoever heard of statues dancing? Whoever
+heard of music without instruments? And yet this very sense of a
+lyrical movement imperfectly seen, and of a temporarily frozen music,
+is not only the very secret of all art: it is a slender guiding clue
+to the centre of everything....
+
+And in the house of every man, and of every woman, are the curtained
+doorways.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
+
+_This discussion arose out of the article with above title, by "M.D.,"
+which was published in our July number._--[EDS.]
+
+
+III
+
+I lift my hat to M.D. and trust that, as I don't know him, the
+somewhat jarring difference that I have with his views will not be put
+down to personal feeling. A.A. Voysey has put my first objection quite
+well from the layman's point of view. He says "there is no agreement
+between those who have been taught physiology." This is true.
+Playfair's full diet is different from Voit's. Voit's is different
+from Atwater's. Atwater's is different from Chittenden's.
+
+The custom of reducing the diets to calories, inasmuch as it
+introduces a false theory, has had a disastrous effect on progress,
+and has been a great hindrance to the attainment of knowledge. If the
+coal in the fireplace _were_ the cause of the heat of the fire (but is
+it?), there is no analogy between the elevation of the heat by
+hundreds and even thousands of degrees when the fire is lighted, and
+the elevation of half-a-degree or a degree which occurs when food is
+taken into the body, especially when we remember that a similar
+elevation of temperature occurs when work is performed by means of the
+body without eating or drinking at all.
+
+It is quite evident to every clear seer, or it ought to be, that the
+force of animal life or zoo-dynamic is the cause of the heat of the
+body, just as the electric force is the cause of the liberation of
+heat through the battery, and the chemic force is the cause of the
+heat of the fire, and that zoo-dynamic and electro-dynamic and
+chemico-dynamic are forms or species or varieties of the one
+omnipotent and eternal energy by which all things in this universe
+consist. The aggregate of all the particular forces makes up the
+eternal energy which is one. They are all species of the one, but it
+is convenient and even necessary for our limited intellects to
+consider them separately, for the indefinite number of the facts and
+also their intricacy and complexity stagger and overwhelm us unless we
+do; and indeed they stagger us even when we try to treat them and take
+them up separately for consideration and examination. But now for the
+proof of A.A. Voysey's statement.
+
+Ranke found he required 100 grammes proteid; fat 100 grammes;
+carbo-hydrate 240 grammes to keep him going. These he could have got
+from 9 oz. of lean meat or 250 grammes, 18 oz. of bread or 500
+grammes, 12 oz. or 55 grammes of butter and 1 oz of fat (I do not, of
+course, suggest that it would have been wise for him to get them so).
+Moleschott's demands are: proteid 120 grammes, fat 90 grammes,
+carbo-hydrate 333 grammes. Voit demands for hard work: proteid 145
+grammes, fat 100 grammes, carbo-hydrate 450 grammes. Atwater demands
+for hard work the following:--proteid 177 grammes, fat 250 grammes,
+carbo-hydrate 650 grammes. Horace Fletcher, we are told by Professor
+Chittenden, took for a time, when everything was accurately measured
+and weighed: proteid 44.9 grammes, fat 38 grammes, carbo-hydrate 253
+grammes. Cornaro lived on 12 oz. of solid food and 14 oz. of red wine
+a day for a period of something like 60 years, from 38 years of age to
+about 97, and had vigorous health during the time except when he
+transgressed his rule. Of course, he was not a hard physical
+worker--_i.e._ he did not do the work of a navvy. But how, in view of
+these differences, can M.D. say: "These quantities were settled by
+physiologists many years ago, and no good reasons have since been
+adduced for altering them"? It is amazing to me to read such a
+statement. It reminds me of a statement by a distinguished physician
+in London during last year to the effect that we could not give a
+growing schoolboy too much food--we could not over-feed him. My
+opinion, on the other hand, after a long experience, during which time
+my eyes have not been shut, is that the large majority of the diseases
+of humanity are due to mal-nutrition and that the form of that
+mal-nutrition is over-feeding--not under-feeding. This opinion should
+be taken for what it is worth. But to test it we should ask ourselves:
+What is the reason for the necessity to take food into the body? Is it
+to give strength and heat to the body? Or is it to restore the waste
+of the body sustained by the action on it of the force of life or
+zoo-dynamic which inhabits it? The demands for food will vary and vary
+much according to the way in which we answer this question. As you
+allowed me to discuss this question in _Healthy Life_ in July and
+August of last year I must not take up your space by discussing it
+again. But the answer we give determines the amounts of food that we
+require to take, since, obviously, if the strength and heat of the
+body depend upon the food, the more food we take the more strength and
+heat shall we have; while, if the function of food in the adult or
+grown body is only to restore the waste of the body, the question is
+how much is the waste. There are various ways in which this question
+can be answered and I cannot go into them now; but I say, in my
+opinion, the waste is very much less than is commonly supposed. The
+body, I take it, is made by zoo-dynamic or the life-force to be a fit
+habitation for itself. The body must waste when the life-force acts
+through it, and that waste must be restored by food and sleep, or the
+body will die; since things (the body) cannot act as the medium of
+conveying forces (zoo-dynamic or the life-force) without wasting under
+their action. But so beautifully has the body been made by zoo-dynamic
+that it wastes very little, much less than is commonly supposed, by
+the action of zoo-dynamic through it. Not seeing this, we ingest into
+the body far more than is required to restore its waste, and so we
+fall ill, for, obviously, if we ingest more than the quantity
+necessary for this purpose we choke the body up and render it
+inefficient for its purpose as an instrument for work.
+
+Now this is precisely what seems to me to happen in life. As we are
+all under the double delusion that the strength of the body and its
+heat come from the food, we all with one accord put far too much food
+into the body, and when we find that we die, all of us, generation
+after generation, at from 50 to 70 years of age, we make up little
+proverbs to justify our unphysiological conduct and say that three
+score years and ten are the measure of the duration of life. M.D. says
+that "some twenty years ago most people lived fairly close to the old
+physiological quantities" (but what are these? for we have seen how
+they vary), "now they have been cut adrift from these and are
+floundering out of their depth." May I remind M.D. that people are now
+living longer than they did twenty years ago. How does he account for
+that? No doubt some of the increase in the length of life is due to
+the diminution of the birth rate, but still I suppose M.D. would
+admit that there is an increase in the duration of life over and above
+what can be accounted for in this way. If so, how does he account for
+it?
+
+M.D. says, further: "For the public it will now probably suffice if
+they insist on raising (or considering, A.R.) the question of
+quantity" (of food, A.R.) "wherever they suffer in any way." I agree
+with all my heart. But M.D. implies, if I read him aright, that the
+public should increase the quantity of their food when they suffer in
+any way. I, on the other hand, and rather unhappily for myself, am
+convinced that the raising of this question implies that it should be
+answered in the exact opposite way to that of M.D. and that we should
+diminish our food if we "suffer in any way." And I can point to
+Nature's own plan as a corroboration of the truth of my view, for her
+plan when we suffer in any way is to fling us into bed and take away
+our appetite, or at least to diminish our appetite if we are not so
+ill as to require to remain in bed.
+
+The whole question of medical practice depends on the answer we give
+to this question, and therefore one might go on indefinitely with its
+discussion. Neither the Editors' space and patience nor my time allow
+of this; but I should like to ask M.D., with all respect, if he
+remembers what Dr King Chambers said of the starvation that comes of
+over-repletion? Dr King Chambers occupied one of the most prominent
+places as a consultant in London (very probably, I suppose) when M.D.
+was a very young man. My late lamented friend, Dr Dewey of Meadville,
+Pennsylvania, used the phrase "starvation from over-feeding," not
+knowing that Dr King Chambers had used practically the same expression
+before him. That I made the same discovery myself, and independently,
+is not, I take it, a sign of acuteness of intellect or of observation.
+The amazing thing is that every practitioner is not compelled to make
+the same discovery. But if it is a true discovery, then it follows
+that all the signs of lowered vitality referred to by M.D., while
+they _may_ be caused by under-feeding, may also be caused by
+over-feeding and may therefore require for proper treatment, not
+increase of the diet, but diminution of it. A low temperature,
+therefore, a slow pulse, languor, pallor, inanition, fatigue,
+good-for-nothingness, inefficiency, anorexia, anæmia, neurasthenia,
+etc., etc., may all be due to blocking of the body with too much food
+as well as to supplying it with too little. Fires may be put out by
+heaping up too much coal on them. To make them burn briskly we ought
+to push the poker in and gently lift the coal so as to admit of the
+entrance of air. Then in a while our fire will become brisk and
+bright. And so it may be in the body. Nay, my opinion is that almost
+always these marks of depression are caused by blocking up of the body
+and that therefore the proper treatment is, as a rule, not increase
+but diminution of the diet. The place in the body in which the
+blocking first occurs is the connective tissues or the tissues that
+connect every part with every other. It is here that the lymph is
+secreted, and as the lymph joins the thoracic duct which conveys the
+products of digestion to the blood, it is obvious that lymph-secretion
+is a complementary digestive process and it is also obvious how
+blocking up of the connective tissues, which is the immediate cause of
+anorexia and inanition, usually comes to exist in the body.
+
+M.D. talks of "natural food." He seems to be a vegetarian? Good. But
+is not the question of how much food we ought to eat equally urgent
+whether we are vegetarian or omnivorous? I think it is. I do not think
+that the chief cause of our illnesses to-day is taking wrong or
+unsuitable food. In my opinion we are ill mainly because we take
+suitable food too often and because we take too much of it. My answer
+to the question, therefore--"How Much Should We Eat?--A
+Warning"--turns on the previous question: What is the Function
+performed by Food in the Body? As I think that this function in the
+grown body is only to restore the waste, the warning in my mind is
+far rather that we should take less than that we should (as M.D.
+advises us) take more. I agree with him in the view that "chronic
+starvation is insidious." But, as I believe that "chronic starvation"
+is usually a form of Dr King Chambers's "starvation from
+over-repletion" and of Dr Dewey's "starvation from over-feeding," I am
+bound to be of the consequent opinion that it is to be met, not by
+increase, but by diminution of the diet. This is one of my reasons for
+thinking that none of us ought ever to eat oftener than twice a day,
+under fifty years of age, and that after that we would do well to eat
+once a day only. I feel sure that if we altered our habits in these
+ways, we should add very much both to the duration and to the
+efficiency of life. This is not a question of dietetics only. The
+issue is of the most practical character. What an addition of five or
+ten or fifteen or twenty or twenty-five years to the average duration
+of life might mean to this people and still more to the people of the
+whole globe is unpredictable by mortal man. But it is evident that it
+would be of the very greatest import to humanity. This is the great
+issue of the discussion of this subject. It seems to me that illness
+might be enormously diminished and health and efficiency and happiness
+immensely increased. But I think that these boons might be obtained,
+not by indulging the body and its appetites, but only by the exercise
+of a wise restraint and government over it. It is at least very much
+to be desired that more agreement might be manifested in the opinions
+and practice of qualified physiologists so that the public might have
+clear guidance, and not as at present, be advised in ways so
+conflicting that they do not know what or whom to believe.
+
+A. RABAGLIATI, M.D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Tourists:_
+
+Every little village has a little shop where you can buy nasty little
+sweets.
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+
+ He was a native of Liverpool, but had liver for many years in the
+ Isle of Wight--_Edmonton_ (Canada) _Journal_.
+
+Funny he didn't go to Poole and leave his liver behind him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ REAL FLESH FOOD FOUND AT LAST.
+ --From an advt. in daily papers.
+
+Evidently we have all been vegetarians and knew it not.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Nothing can replace salt.--From an advt. in _Punch_.
+
+Many food reformers advantageously replace salt with nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The golf craze has been greater this autumn than in any previous
+ year. Nobody is quite safe from the fever. It seizes those who
+ mocked at it, and pays no respect to sex or age.--_British
+ Weekly_.
+
+By the time the next Medical Congress comes round it is expected that
+at least three distinguished bacteriologists will have discovered the
+golf-fever microbe. They will probably agree to call it _Mashilococcus
+Caddes_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Between lunch and dinner take another tumbler of water cold. Take
+ a glass of cold water half-an-hour after lunch, half-an-hour
+ after tea, half-an-hour after dinner, and before going to bed at
+ night. Never drink between meals.--_Woman's Life_.
+
+All other methods failing, try putting your watch half-an-hour on
+after each meal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I once got a circular from a man who grew potatoes containing his
+ photograph, and, I think, an autobiography.--_Musical Standard_.
+
+Not nearly so convenient as one of those automatic egg-stamping
+hens.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Stop-Press News._
+
+ A "pocket clipper" has been invented (according to a certain
+ catalogue) which can be used for the beard or hair at back of
+ neck.
+
+But surely people who can do anything so clever as grow a beard
+on the back of the neck ought not to be tempted to clip it off.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+
+MORE EGG DISHES.
+
+In our issue of May 1912 we published a number of special recipes for
+eggs. These were much appreciated. And even now this and other back
+numbers are asked for. We now give some further recipes.
+
+It should be remembered that eggs are a simple form of animal food and
+much purer than meat. They are also easily digested by most people.
+They therefore form a very useful substitute for flesh-foods,
+especially where the latter have only recently been discarded.
+
+The normal progress towards a more or less ideal diet involves, of
+course, the elimination of eggs as well as of other dairy products.
+But wise food reform proceeds always by steps.
+
+
+SAVOURY BAKED EGGS.
+
+Melt a little butter, or vegetable fat, in an open earthenware baking
+dish; break into this as many eggs as required. Cover thinly with
+grated cheese; add a knob of butter and bake till set. The dish can be
+placed direct on the table.
+
+
+EGG ON TOMATO.[13]
+
+ One egg, two medium-sized tomatoes, butter.
+
+Skin the tomatoes; cut in halves and put them, with a small piece of
+butter, into a small stewpan. Close lightly, and cook slowly until
+reduced to a pulp. Break the egg into a cup, and slide it gently on to
+the tomato. Replace the pan lid and the egg will poach in the steam
+rising from the tomato.
+
+[13] This recipe is from _The Healthy Life Cook Book_, a new and
+revised edition of which is in contemplation.
+
+
+SAVOURY EGG FRITTERS.
+
+ Six eggs, two large tomatoes, half-teaspoon mixed dried herbs,
+ about three tablespoons ground biscuits ("Ixion" or any of the
+ unsweetened "P.R." kinds).
+
+Hard boil three of the eggs and chop them finely. Skin the tomatoes,
+mash them and add to the chopped eggs with the remaining eggs (well
+beaten), herbs and biscuit powder. Should the mixture be too moist to
+mould add more biscuit powder; if too dry add a little water. Cut and
+shape into finger shapes and either fry in olive oil or bake on
+buttered tin or open earthenware baking dish. (The last-mentioned is
+the best method, as the baking dish can be brought to the table as it
+is, and there is only one dish instead of two to wash up afterwards.)
+
+
+SAVOURY EGG PATTIES.
+
+The above Egg Fritter mixture made rather moist may be used as a
+filling for savoury patties.
+
+Make for these a short crust with ½ lb. of Artox meal, 3 oz. of
+Nutter and water. Slightly bake the shells of pastry (made thin)
+before adding the filling, and finish to a golden brown.
+
+Serve these and the fritters with either brown gravy or white sauce.
+
+
+SWEET EGG SOUFFLÉ.
+
+ Five eggs, ¾ lb. soft cane sugar, 1 oz. ground rice, 2 oz. of
+ butter, rind of half a lemon.
+
+Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs. Beat up the yolks and sift
+in the ground rice, sugar and grated rind of the lemon. To this batter
+add the well-whisked whites. Well heat the butter in a frying pan,
+turn in the batter and fry over gentle heat till set. Fold over the
+edges and place on well-greased flat dish and bake for barely a
+quarter of an hour. Sift over some soft cane sugar and serve very hot.
+
+
+SNOW EGGS.
+
+ Three eggs, one and a quarter pints of milk, a teaspoon of soft
+ cane sugar, vanilla flavouring.
+
+Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs and whisk the whites to a
+very stiff froth with the sugar. Put the milk into a saucepan and when
+it boils drop in whites of eggs in small pieces shaped between two
+dessert spoons. Only a little should be cooked at a time in this way,
+and each should be allowed to poach for two minutes, and when done
+should be taken out with a slice and put on a sieve to drain. When all
+the whites are used in this way, strain the milk and add it to the
+well-beaten yolks. Pour into a double saucepan and stir over the fire
+till the custard thickens; flavour with vanilla to taste.
+
+When _cold_ pour into a dish and lay the snow eggs on top.
+
+(Kindly supplied by Mrs Edith Wilkinson.)
+
+
+EGG-RAISED CHERRY CAKE.
+
+ 9 oz. good "standard" flour, 5 oz. Nutter (or other nut fat), 5
+ oz. cane castor sugar, 2 oz. preserved cherries (glacé), 2 oz.
+ well-washed sultanas, 2 oz. ground almonds, four eggs, outer rind
+ of lemon (grated).
+
+Beat Nutter and sugar to a cream; add eggs one by one, beating all the
+time; have ready the flour, with the fruit, grated lemon rind and
+ground almonds mixed in, and add gradually to the above mixture,
+beating all the time, and until of even consistency throughout. Line a
+cake tin with double thickness of buttered paper, pour in the mixture
+and bake in moderate oven about one and a half hours.
+
+_Any housewife who doubts the possibility of making light and dainty
+cakes without the now customary baking powder and baking soda, etc.,
+should try the above recipe. No one could wish for a more excellent
+cake._
+
+
+NOTE ON CASSEROLES.
+
+Now that casserole cookery (_i.e._ cooking in earthenware dishes, both
+open and covered) is becoming more widely known and practised, readers
+will be glad to know that many housewives believe in boiling new
+earthenware before using it, as this effectually toughens and hardens
+it. This is particularly efficacious in the case of ordinary brown
+kitchenware, the articles being placed in a large pan of cold water
+which is then brought slowly to the boil. After being allowed to boil
+for ten minutes remove the pan and allow the water to cool before
+taking out the ware.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+EXCESSIVE PERSPIRATION.
+
+ Miss R.E.N. writes.--I am troubled with excessive perspiration. I
+ neither eat meat nor drink tea. I have a cold sponge bath down to
+ my waist every morning, and I change all my clothes when I go to
+ bed. My diet is, roughly, as follows:
+
+ _Breakfast._--Oatmeal porridge with toast or bread and jam or
+ golden syrup. Hot water.
+
+ _Lunch._--Peas, beans or lentils, eggs, cheese. Vegetables:
+ potatoes and onions, or carrots, cabbage, cauliflower, turnips.
+ Puddings, fruit or milk wholemeal bread, not much sugar except
+ for sweetening fruits, etc.
+
+ _Tea meal._--Wholemeal bread and butter, nuts, jam, cake, pastry;
+ hot water.
+
+ _At bedtime._--Hot water or coffee.
+
+If our correspondent wishes to remedy this excessive perspiration she
+must get a hot towel-bath daily (all over),[14] wearing porous
+linen-mesh underclothing next the skin. She should also discontinue
+the soft sugary and starchy foods, and not mix fruit with other foods
+(it is best taken by itself, say, for breakfast). She needs more of
+the cooling salad vegetables. The following diet would be a great
+improvement:--
+
+_On rising._--Half-pint of hot boiled water, sipped slowly.
+
+_Breakfast._--Wholemeal bread or biscuits and butter (all made
+without salt), with salad or grated raw roots. Stop porridge, jam and
+golden syrup. Avoid drinking at meals.
+
+_Lunch._--Two eggs, or 2 oz. of curd cheese. Two vegetables cooked in
+casserole without salt; wholemeal bread or biscuits and butter; a few
+figs, prunes, dried bananas, or raisins, washed but not cooked. Avoid
+milk puddings or stewed fruits as too fermentative and heating.
+
+_Supper meal._--1 to 2 oz. flaked nuts, some crisp "P.R." or "Ixion"
+biscuits with nut butter. Some fresh salad or grated roots. Stop jam,
+cake and pastry.
+
+_At bedtime._--Half-pint of hot boiled water, or clear vegetable soup,
+sipped slowly.
+
+[14] The Sanum Oxygen Baths are also excellent in a case of this kind.
+
+
+DIET FOR ULCERATED THROAT.
+
+ Mrs L.B. writes.--Do you think it would be wise for a person
+ suffering from ulcers in the throat and on other mucous membranes
+ to adopt a diet devoid of meat, yeast and salt?
+
+It would certainly be wise to discard meat and salt in a case of this
+kind, but yeast is sometimes useful taken as "unflavoured Marmite."
+The chief cause of ulcers is the abuse of the soft cereal and sugary
+foods. In a case of this sort I should advise a diet consisting
+exclusively of well-dextrinised cereals--_e.g._ Granose, Melarvi,
+etc.--with plenty of grated raw roots and finely chopped salads and
+tomatoes. This can be combined with curd cheese, raw or lightly cooked
+eggs, flaked nuts or Brusson Jeune bread as the proteid part of the
+diet.
+
+
+FARMING AND SCIATICA.
+
+ Mrs A.C.B. writes.--For two months my husband, who leads an
+ active open-air life, has had severe pain all down the back of
+ his left leg. It is like neuralgia, and comes on worse when
+ sitting. He has been a farmer all his life, but is anything but
+ strong and constantly taking cold. Are these pains likely to be
+ due to wrong food?
+
+This pain is evidence of sciatica. Chills alone will not produce
+sciatica, which has its real cause in the system being choked up with
+acids and toxins of various kinds. In such a case as this, warm water
+enemas should be taken freely to clear the colon well; sugar, milk and
+all starchy mushy foods should be strictly avoided; vegetables should
+be taken either as baked roots or as fresh salads; eggs and cheese
+should be substituted for meat; and plenty of fresh butter should be
+taken. Boiled water, _between meals_, will be good, but nothing should
+be given to drink with food. Salt, pickles, and greasy or highly
+flavoured foods should be avoided.
+
+
+TEMPORARY "BRIGHT'S DISEASE" AND HOW TO DEAL WITH IT.
+
+ Miss E. would like to know what kind of diet is suitable for one
+ who has been suffering from Bright's Disease following a serious
+ illness. Why should meat have any bad effect upon the kidneys?
+ She does not take it, although her medical man advises the use of
+ it at once.
+
+It is not an uncommon thing for people who have suffered from an acute
+septic fever to find albumen temporarily present in the urine. This is
+due to the irritant action of the toxins and other poisons (which the
+fever is the means of ejecting) upon the structure of the kidneys. The
+kidneys are filters and they remove the bulk of the soluble waste of
+the body.
+
+The practitioner frequently finds albumenuria in cases of scarlet
+fever, typhoid fever, diphtheria, etc., and the object of his
+treatment is to prevent this condition of kidney irritation from
+becoming an established disease (Bright's disease).
+
+Flesh foods, and especially meat extracts and meat soups, are the
+worst possible wherewith to feed these fever cases, because they throw
+so much extra work upon the kidneys. Meat is composed mainly of
+proteids. It also contains the urinary wastes and the toxins (due to
+fear) which were in the animal's body and on the way to elimination
+when it was killed.
+
+This sufferer should take one meal per day consisting of fresh fruit
+only; the rest of the diet should consist of salad vegetables and
+finely grated raw roots, home-made curd cheese, dextrinised cereals
+(such as Melarvi biscuits, Shredded Wheat, "P.R." crackers, Granose
+biscuits, Grape-Nuts, twice-baked standard bread, etc.) and fresh or
+nut butter.
+
+
+PHOSPHORUS AND THE NERVES.
+
+ W.H.H. writes:--I should be very grateful if Dr Knaggs could help
+ me with any information or hints regarding phosphaturia. I suffer
+ much from this troublesome complaint.
+
+We have to remember that the nervous system is two-fold. The one, or
+conscious portion, consists of the brain and spinal cord, from which
+all the nerves or branches travel to all parts of the body and give us
+dominion over them. The other, or subconscious, called the sympathetic
+nervous system, lies on either side of the front of the spine as two
+long chains with centres, or ganglia, at intervals. This second system
+is not within our control and has to do with the regulation of our
+vegetative functions, including the bulk of the digestive process.
+
+All nerves, whether they come from the brain or from the sympathetic
+system, ranging to their smallest terminals, are built alike of cells,
+and these cells secrete a complex _fatty_ substance, called
+_lecithin_, whose dominant element is phosphorus. This phosphorus has
+to be supplied to the body with food, and as food, and it cannot be
+properly utilised or assimilated by the body or used by the nerves to
+build up their _lecithin_ unless it is eaten in the form of organic
+compounds.
+
+The tissues of the body are continually dying, as a result of work
+done, and are continually being replaced by fresh young tissues as
+needed. It is the function of the nerves to manage this work for us as
+well as to similarly arrange for reproduction.
+
+In order to control the functions of the various organs and tissues
+and to regulate the rate at which they reproduce themselves, the
+nerves extend their terminal branches, not only into every tissue, but
+into every microscopical unit of such tissue, and the part of the cell
+which represents the nerve terminal is the inner structure called the
+nucleus.
+
+Now it will be obvious that the more the two nervous systems are
+worked the greater will be their depletion of _lecithin_ and the more
+need there will be for fresh supplies of phosphorus in the daily food
+rations.
+
+The person who works hard, whether it be manual labour or brain work,
+needs food and rest at intervals in order that the nerves may
+recuperate and replenish their stocks of _lecithin_.
+
+A goodly proportion of uncooked foods rich in phosphorus must be
+supplied to make good the wear and tear, and the digestion must
+equally be efficient if these food-stuffs are to become assimilated.
+
+Cooking of food to a large extent breaks down the organic phosphorus
+salts and makes them inorganic. In this state they are of but little
+use to the body. Poor digestion associated with putrefactive
+fermentation equally converts the organic salts into inorganic ones.
+These pass into the blood and are promptly eliminated by the kidneys
+as waste (_phosphaturia_) and thus they never reach the nerves at all.
+
+We must remember that phosphorus is usually found in natural foods
+bound up with the proteid and especially with that proteid which has
+to do with the reproduction of the species. For this reason man
+instinctively resorts to the use of egg-yolks, and to the various
+seeds (such as nuts, wheat, barley, etc.) because of their rich
+phosphorus content.
+
+These proteid-bound phosphorus salts can only be properly utilised
+when the hydrochloric acid of the stomach juice is well formed, for it
+converts them into acid salts which are readily absorbed. Therefore to
+ensure free absorption we must always remember to give the
+phosphorus-containing foods with such meals as will cause free
+secretion of the gastric acid.
+
+When fermentation is active and the stomach juices are weakened the
+germs of the intestines rapidly break up the phosphorus constituents
+of the proteids and make them inorganic. Therefore the first thing to
+do when a person is found to be suffering from _phosphaturia_ is to
+stop the intestinal fermentation by a right diet, clear the bowels of
+their accumulated waste poisons and give the nerves plenty of rest.
+Another consideration to bear in mind is that the nerves need fat
+wherewith to build up the _lecithin_. An excessive fermentative
+sourness of the stomach makes the food so acid when sent into the
+bowels that the bile, pancreatic and other intestinal juices cannot
+neutralise them, and so the fats themselves are not emulsified and
+digested, which fully accounts for the mental depression and debility
+of which these patients complain.
+
+People who are suffering from "nerves" in any form need plenty of pure
+fat (fresh dairy butter, cream, nut butter, fruit-oils, etc.) and an
+abundance of natural fresh vegetable products at once rich in
+phosphorus and iron and in organic alkaline acid-neutralising earthy
+salts. These arrest fermentation and so enable the phosphorus and the
+fat to become duly assimilated.
+
+
+CANARY _VERSUS_ JAMAICA BANANAS.
+
+ R.B., Lincoln, would like to know if there is very much
+ difference, as regards food value, between the Jamaica and Canary
+ banana. "I have heard it said that the Jamaica is only fit for
+ the dust-heap. Well, I cannot very easily think it is so useless,
+ and at the same time I have an idea that the Canary is the better
+ of the two. I should be very pleased to know if you think there
+ is much difference between them."
+
+The difference between Jamaica and Canary bananas is due to the length
+of time necessary for them to reach us from their place of growth. It
+takes, I believe, nearly twice as long for a ship to travel from
+Jamaica as from the Canary Islands. Hence the fruit imported from the
+latter place can be picked in a much riper condition than would be the
+case with the Jamaica article. This probably accounts for the better
+quality and flavour of the Canary banana. Besides this the climate may
+have some determining influence. To say that the Jamaica bananas
+should be discarded because they are of a less satisfactory food value
+or because their flavour is less developed is uncalled for. The
+disparity in price is also very marked, so that the poor can readily
+procure the Jamaica banana where they would not be in a position to
+afford the better class of fruit coming from the Canaries. I have
+discussed this subject in p.34 of my book, _The Truth about Sugar_.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+ LEYTONSTONE
+
+ _To the Editors._
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ Enclosed please find P.O. for a copy of _The Healthy Life_ to be
+ sent to Carnegie Public Library, close to Midland Station,
+ Leytonstone, also to The Alexandra Holiday Home, Y.W.C.A.,
+ Alexandra Road, Southend-on-Sea. At the latter home there are
+ something like 500 to 600 visitors every year, many of whom are
+ semi-invalids. No doubt the magazine will be scorned by many, yet
+ I am quite certain that there are others amongst the number there
+ who will gladly welcome the truths it teaches, and if only one or
+ two are helped to live a more healthy and therefore more happy
+ life, it will be quite worth while. Please do not mention my name
+ in either case. Yours, etc., X.
+
+There is every reason why _The Healthy Life_ should be known and
+read in every public library in the United Kingdom. In this we
+are entirely dependent upon those readers who are ready to follow
+the excellent example of the above correspondent. A year's
+subscription--2s.--is a very small price to pay for bringing the
+message of this magazine before the public in this way. We should
+like to hear from readers in all parts.--[EDS.]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #Back Numbers# |
+ | |
+ | If readers who possess copies of the first number of _The |
+ | Healthy Life_ (August 1911) will send them to the Editors, |
+ | they will receive, in exchange, booklets to the value of |
+ | threepence for each copy. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V NOVEMBER
+ No. 28. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+It was the slave-woman who laid her child under a bush that she might
+spare herself the pain of seeing it die!
+
+One of the commonest sources of mental and moral confusion is to
+mistake the egotistic shrinking from the sight of suffering with the
+altruistic shrinking from causing it and desire to relieve it.
+
+The so-called sensitive person is too often only sensitive to his or
+her own pain and, therefore, finds it difficult in the presence of
+another's suffering to do what is needed to relieve it.
+
+The healer, the health-bringer, the truly sympathetic person, does not
+even hesitate to inflict pain when to do so means to restore
+health.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+CASTLES IN THE AIR.
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this wonderfully simple and
+suggestive article a continuation of the series previously entitled
+"Healthy Brains." The author of "The Children All Day Long" is an
+intimate disciple of one of the greatest living psychologists, and she
+has a message of the first importance to all who realise that true
+health depends as much on poise of mind as on physical fitness._--[EDS.]
+
+
+Of all the occupations which imagination gives us, surely none is more
+popular or more delightful than the planning out of future days.
+Pleasure and fame and honour, work and rest, comfort and adventure:
+all things take their turn in our romances.
+
+Not all the castles are for ourselves alone. In childhood it is our
+school, our club, our town that is to be the centre of great events.
+The young man's castle is a nest to which he hopes to bring a mate.
+The mother sees the future coronet or laurel-wreath round the soft
+hair of her baby's head. And we all build castles for the world
+sometimes--at least for our own country or our own race. Sometimes we
+knock them down and rebuild again in rather different shape--Mr Wells
+has taught us what a fascinating game it is.
+
+Sometimes, especially perhaps in little, unimportant things, our
+imagination does centre chiefly around our own activities. What we
+mean to do, what we might do, what we would like to do: there must be
+something else besides selfishness and waste of time in the constantly
+recurring thoughts.
+
+Who does not know the charm of looking down the theatre-list of the
+morning paper? One may be too busy or two poor to go often to the
+play, but the very suggestion of all the colour and interest is
+pleasant. Who does not like looking over prospectuses of lectures and
+classes at the beginning of the winter session? "I _should_ like to go
+to that course on Greek Art. Oh, it is on Mondays, then that is no
+good. German, elementary and conversation. How useful that would be!
+Gymnasium and physical culture; how I wish I had another evening in
+the week to spare!"
+
+Railway books, again, and guides and travel bills--how delightful they
+are! It is easy to plan out tours for one's holidays up to the age of
+100. "Brittany; oh yes, I must go there one day. And Norway, that must
+really be my next trip." The Rockies, the cities of the East, coral
+islands of the Pacific--they all seem to enrich our lives by the very
+thought of their possibilities.
+
+Again, who does not love a library catalogue? To go through with a
+pencil, noting down the names of books one wants to read is a form of
+castle-building by no means to be despised.
+
+Some people get the same pleasure out of house-hunting; they see an
+empty house and go and get the key in order to see over it. The
+chances of their ever living there are practically none, but the view
+gives a stimulus to their inventive activity: they plan out how they
+would furnish the rooms and fill the empty hearths with dreams.
+
+Is not the same thing the explanation of shop-gazing? The woman who
+has bought her winter coat and hat does not as a rule refrain from
+looking any more into shop windows till the spring; instead, she
+clothes herself in imagination in all the beautiful stuffs she sees
+displayed, and if some of the things demand ballroom, racecourse, golf
+links or perhaps the Alps for the background, why, so much the better,
+the suggestion puts, as it were, a view from the windows of her castle
+in the air.
+
+A garden--a dozen square yards or reckoned in acres--is full of
+material for our imagination; indeed, a seedsman's catalogue or a copy
+of "Amateur Gardening" will often be enough to start us; long lines of
+greenhouses will build themselves for us, or rockeries, or wild glens
+with streams in them, and the world will blossom round about us.
+
+Sometimes it is ambition that calls us, personal or professional; we
+get beforehand the sweet taste of power upon the tongue. It may
+perhaps be sometimes the rewards of work, riches and honour and so on,
+but more often, I think, the dreams of youth circle round the work
+itself. We will be of use in the world, we will find new paths and
+make them safe for those coming after us to walk in, we will get rid
+of that evil and set up a ladder towards that good; we will heal,
+teach, feed, amuse, uplift or cherish the other human beings round
+about us. We will store only for the sake of distributing; we will
+climb only to be better able to give a helping hand.
+
+Well, there are some danger signals at cross-roads of our dream-way,
+some precautions to be observed if we would not let romance obscure
+and hinder us in our search after reality. But none of these "castles"
+are bad in themselves. In so far as they quicken our attention power,
+deepen our thoughtfulness, make our activities more elastic and keep
+us from carelessness or sloth, they are surely all to the good as
+episodes in our development.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+
+
+THE SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF VEGETALISM.
+
+This article, the earlier part of which appeared in the October
+number, is from the French of Prof. H. Labbé, the head of the
+_laboratoire à la Faculté de Médecine_, in Paris. It reflects a
+characteristic aloofness to a any considerations other than scientific
+or economic. But it will well repay careful study.--[EDS.]
+
+
+V
+
+Though the consumption of vegetable foods seems to offer a slight
+disadvantage from the point of view of albuminoid matters, this is not
+the case touching hydro-carbonated matters and sugars. The vegetable
+kingdom constitutes the almost exclusive source of these alimentary
+principles. One cannot indeed take much account of the consumption of
+the .5-.6 per cent, of glycogen which exists in the animal muscle
+partaken of under the shape of butcher's meat. There is hardly enough
+in this for a large eater of between 200 and 250 grammes of meat, to
+find in hydrocarbonated matters the 1/300 or the 1/400 of the daily
+ration. Hydrocarbons are necessarily borrowed from the vegetable
+foods. This is also the case with sugars which do not exist in the
+animal kingdom in appreciable quantities. It is the same thing with
+alcohol which is obtained only from the vegetable kingdom.
+
+
+VI
+
+As to fatty matters, animal foods, like vegetable products, are
+abundantly provided with them. Moreover, from the point of view of
+digestibility and capability of assimilating, one may say that there
+is a quasi-absolute identity between animal and vegetable fats. The
+reason which would induce us to prefer either would not seem to be of
+a physiological nature. The economics, which we shall see further on,
+take this upon themselves, as the most serious reproach which can be
+made against the use of animal dishes is doubtless their dearness, and
+the reason which militates most in favour of the predominance of a
+vegetable diet is to a certainty its cheapness.
+
+
+VII
+
+Such are, briefly expounded and refuted, the fundamental objections
+which can be brought against the vegetarian diet and the "vegetalian"
+customs. There exists, in fact, no serious physiological or chemical
+reason for not satisfying our needs solely with foods of vegetable
+origin. It may be interesting to note that, in reality, the most
+confirmed flesh eaters support their energy-producing needs mainly
+with vegetable products. In the mixed diet universally practised meat
+plays but a small part.
+
+In meat the waste in preparation and consecutive waste at table is
+considerable. To really introduce 200 grammes of meat into the
+stomach, nearly 400 grammes must be purchased, and expensively put
+into use. What do these 200 grammes really bring in nutritive
+elements?
+
+ Meat.
+
+ 200 gr. (mod. fat.) at 18% albumin = 36 gr. album., about.
+ " " 5% fat = 10 gr. fat, about.
+ -----
+ 46 gr.
+
+These 46 grs. constitute barely the 8 per cent. of the total weight of
+a ration, averaged in nutritive elements, calculated as follows:--
+
+ Albumin 80
+ Fatty matters 70
+ Hydrates of carbon 350
+
+This is a very feeble proportion.
+
+If one turns to the calorific point of view, in order to estimate the
+share of energy useful to the organism, we arrive at much the same
+conclusion. The 46 grs. of nutritive animal elements barely provide
+230 thermal units which can be utilised, while the total diet which we
+are considering brings a power of disposal of nearly 2,350 thermal
+units. It is, even then, barely 10 per cent. of the total energy. The
+most convinced flesh eaters, those who buy 400 grs. of meat a day for
+their consumption, must learn, willingly or unwillingly, that the
+animal element enters only in an infinitesimal part into their real
+substance and reparation.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Beyond this very feeble nutritive help is there, then, in meat,
+anything else which makes the use of this article of food necessary,
+agreeable or particularly strengthening? It is incontestible that meat
+contains stimulating substances, which, as Prof. Armand Gautier has
+said, play the part of nerve tonics, and have perhaps a direct action
+on the circulation.
+
+These special meat matters are found concentrated in the gravy. Meat
+gravy, in fact, beside a feeble proportion of albuminoid matters, or
+solubly derived quantities, polypeptides, etc., in notable proportion
+of liberated acids, contains a certain quantity of matters, qualified
+by the generic name of extractives; a notable quantity of these
+extractive matters being creatine and creatinine, as well as
+substances of which the fundamental nucleus is the puric grouping.
+These purins, by the name which E. Fischer attributes to them, derive
+from a special grouping which it would be supposed exists in a
+hypothetic body, but which is not known in a state of liberty, purin.
+This first term gives rise to a series of bodies in lateral groups, of
+which the most interesting are caffeine and theobromine. Amongst these
+substances the one which has the maximum of oxidation is no other than
+uric acid. Caffeine and theobromine enjoy nervine properties and
+energetic vascular actions. These properties minutely studied are
+utilised every day for therapeutic purposes. It is probable that the
+other bodies of the series which are met with in the extract of meat
+enjoy analogous physiological properties. These substances are
+ingested without discernment, often in great excess, and daily, by
+people who consume meat.
+
+Amongst these latter, many would not dare to drug themselves with a
+centigramme of pharmaceutic caffeine, whereas they absorb each day gr.
+5 and more, of its homologous constituents.
+
+Therefore, in the same way as chocolate, tea and coffee, meat has a
+stimulating effect on the system. He who is accidentally deprived of
+it finds that he experiences a passing depression. This obviously
+proves that by the exaggerated use of meat, one drugs and doctors
+oneself without discernment. However this may be, the judicious part
+played by meat must apparently be reduced to that of a condiment food
+destined to produce in a measure the whipping-up which is useful, and
+sometimes indispensable to the system. We cannot here discuss the
+expediency of action and the harmlessness of the dose of substances
+reputed stimulating. But one can ask oneself whether, to attain this
+object of stimulation, carnivorous feeding is indispensable, and if
+vegetarianism could not supply the need.
+
+The reply is easy: the vegetable kingdom disposes of a variety of
+stimulating articles, such as tea, coffee, kola and cocoa. Through
+their active substances these foods are nerve tonics of the first
+order, less dangerous in their use than meat, because more easily
+assimilated, of far more continuous effects, less mixed with other
+substances, sometimes noxious, and consequently more measurable.
+Besides, in pulse food, quantities of purins are found as important as
+in meat. If the part they play has not been systematically studied
+from the point of view of their effects on the nervous organism, they
+still give rise to the same terminal products, such as uric acid. One
+can quite well argue that the pulse purins have physiological effects
+comparable to those of meat purins. On the other hand, vegetable
+purins have the considerable advantage of being less easily
+precipitated in the urine, after the human interorganic metabolism,
+than those resulting from the metabolism of flesh material.
+
+This explains why a frequent use of a vegetable diet offers
+appreciable advantages in the amelioration of arthritic diatheses so
+common amongst us. Certain effects observed in these diatheses arise
+from the purins, from their localisation in the system, and their
+vitiated metabolism. The use of a moderate vegetable diet is the best
+means of treatment in order to relieve, to ameliorate, even to cure,
+arthritic diathesis.
+
+
+IX
+
+Such are the certain physiological advantages which the predominant
+use of vegetable products are capable of offering. If one takes the
+pure energy-producing point of view, the superiority of the vegetarian
+diet becomes greater still. From the fine works of A. Chauveau, modern
+physiology has shown us that muscle, in working, consumes sugary
+materials. These are provided by ingestions of sugar in a natural
+state, of dextrine or of starch; for a less important part, the
+glycogen of the system may also arise from hydrocarbonated cords
+existing in the molecule of certain albumins. Therefore it is only in
+an infinitesimal part, due to the fibrine of meat, and to the small
+proportions of glycogen which it contains, that flesh diet intervenes
+in the direct production of kinetic energy.
+
+The demonstrations which have been essayed, touching the muscular
+superiority of vegetarians, appear superfluous to us. Such experiments
+could only have a positive value if they were made on both series of
+antagonistic subjects, with alimentary powers of energy-producing
+equality.
+
+It should be distinctly understood that the vegetarian does not profit
+by any mysterious forces. The habit of preferring to nourish oneself
+with vegetable foods, can, at most, or at least, favour the
+physiological integrity of the subject, shield him against disease and
+assure his revictualment with foods recognised as active and easily
+measurable.
+
+One cannot leave alcohol out of the list of advantageous vegetable
+foods. In fact, provided one keeps to strictly limited doses, it may
+be included among the alimentary foods, on a footing comparable to
+that of sugar. If one knew how to use without misusing it, alcohol
+might become a daily food.
+
+
+X
+
+Another order of ideas which one cannot pass by in silence at the
+present time militates in favour of vegetable alimentation. Dietetics
+cannot neglect economic problems. A flesh diet is very costly. In
+large towns, like Paris, at a time when everything is increasing in
+cost, one must be favoured by fortune to be able to indulge in the
+real luxury of consuming the calories of meat. As we said in 1905,
+with Prof. Landouzy and M. Labbé, in our inquiry into popular
+Parisian alimentation, the calorific energy of meat comes, on an
+average, to between 15 to 20 times dearer than that of bread or pulse
+foods.
+
+The diet with a vegetable predominance may therefore, by those who
+adopt it, be considered as much less costly than a mixed one. Does not
+this fact, then, deserve to be taken into consideration and
+compared--startlingly illustrative--to the ingenious calculation
+recently made by Lefèvre in his examination of vegetarianism? One
+acre of land planted for the purpose of breeding cattle produces three
+times less living strength than an acre planted with wheat!
+
+Is it not criminal, or at any rate ill-judged, for the richness and
+health of the country to have, by the laws of a draconian
+protectionism, spurred the French agricultural population along the
+road to the breeding of cattle, thus turning it away from cultivation?
+These laws are the cause, on the one hand, of the high price of wheat,
+owing to the abandonment of its culture and the barriers opposed to
+its entrance, and on the other, of the dearness of meat, owing to the
+stock and the land which the cattle require.
+
+Under these facts economists have indeed a direct responsibility, as
+for more than fifty years economic orthodoxy has presented meat as a
+necessity, whereas it is the least advantageous particle amongst so
+many others.
+
+In conclusion, let us hope that future distinctions of "Vegetalists,"
+vegetarians or flesh eaters may be completely abolished. _In medio
+stat virtus._ The dietetic regimen, the general adoption of which must
+henceforth be desired, must reject all preconceived and hereditary
+ideas, and unite in one harmonious use all foods with a hygienic end
+in view. The place of each one amongst them and its predominance over
+the others should be determined only by conforming to reasons at the
+same time physiological and economic.
+
+H. LABBÉ.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round nature |
+ | of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the extension of |
+ | its circulation by tactfully urging their local newsagent to |
+ | have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. An |
+ | attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH AND JOY IN HAND-WEAVING.
+
+_This article gains additional interest from the fact that it has been
+written by one who works her own loom and teaches others the ancient
+and healthy art of hand-weaving._--[EDS.]
+
+
+Hand-weaving is an art, a handicraft, one aspect of which we are apt
+to forget--namely, that it is a splendid health-giver. Indeed, all who
+have felt the rhythm of the loom, as they throw the shuttle to and
+fro, and in blending colours and seeing the material grow thread by
+thread, can witness to the power of the work to banish both the large
+and small worries that eat away our health of mind and body. The
+hand-weaver learns to look upon his (or her) loom as a very good
+friend.
+
+The possibilities in weaving are immense, and the great difficulty
+that always confronts the weaver is the impossibility of letting
+gussets into the day: the end of the week comes all too soon.
+
+One very satisfactory thing about weaving is the fact that from the
+very first we can use the things woven, even those we learn on.
+
+First, there is plain weaving, with which we can make dress materials
+and many things for household use. Then come fancy and striped
+materials, which require more knowledge and ingenuity.
+
+There are endless varieties in bands of different patterns thrown in
+with the shuttle, or shuttles, sometimes as many as a dozen of which
+may be in use at a time. These can be used for the purpose of
+ornamentation. In weaving these no end of play of colour can be made,
+by using many colours in rotation, either as the groundwork of plain
+material, under the patterns, or as the pattern itself.
+
+Metal threads can also be used of various kinds, either as an entire
+texture, or to enrich the fancy bands.
+
+Lastly, there is inlay weaving, by which we can put in by hand, with
+little separate bobbins, as we go along, any cross-stitch design,
+lettering, monograms, figures and designs of every description.
+
+Anyone with a knowledge of carpentry can make his own loom, the
+construction being of a very simple nature. In fact, the Orientals
+erect a few sticks, dig a hole in the ground to sit in, tie their warp
+up to a tree, and then produce the most charming work, both in texture
+and colour.
+
+The warp can also be made as these people often make theirs, by fixing
+it to sticks stuck into the ground, and walking backwards and forwards
+with the thread, singing as they go. Yes, singing! I think we English
+folk might learn from them to put more joy into our work, that
+fountainhead of life and health. We are apt to take such a serious
+view of ourselves and of all we do. So often, too, we only feel the
+dull and quiet colours, instead of using the many brilliant ones that
+nature loves so well. Once we begin working in, and appreciating,
+these we realise the exhilarating effect on our spirits. Indeed, I
+think we are only beginning to realise what a great influence colour
+has upon us, and all that colour signifies, each colour having various
+meanings of its own.
+
+Many people are now realising that we are surrounded by a halo of
+colour woven by our character--the most highly developed people being
+surrounded by clear, bright colours. It is strictly true that we are
+all weavers, every day of our lives. By following the laws of nature
+we make the finest texture composed of all the most glorious colours
+or qualities in the Universe, so by degrees bringing ourselves, and
+others, into perfect harmony and peace.
+
+MINNIE BROWN.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
+
+_This discussion arose out of the article with above title, by "M.D.,"
+which was published in our July number._--[EDS.]
+
+
+IV
+
+In dealing with this vitally important question, we shall most of us,
+I take it, agree upon certain points. In the light of recent knowledge
+upon, and extended experience of the subject, one such point which now
+appears incontrovertible is that there are thousands die
+annually--directly or indirectly--through overfeeding where one dies
+through insufficient nourishment. And it may at once be said that, as
+regards these thousands, the death certificates are practically
+valueless as data in relation to erroneous dieting, so that in this
+way we can never get at a correct estimate as to the actual number of
+deaths due to overfeeding. Bright's disease, gastric and intestinal
+affections, growths of various kinds, cancer, etc., are each in their
+turn certified as the "Cause of Death." Most often, however, the
+initial cause is the overloading of the system with an amount of food
+beyond that which is necessary or healthful--and thereby clogging up
+the tissues, the organs and smaller bloodvessels.
+
+But it may be said: "How can you substantiate such a general and
+sweeping statement?" In the first place--and this is profoundly
+significant--other things being equal, it must be acknowledged by all
+unbiased people that the small and moderate feeders do not contract
+disease in anything like the proportion that big feeders do, and as a
+natural consequence live longer lives.
+
+Further, it must surely be quite evident by this time that there is a
+sufficiently large enough number of people who are thus existing in
+good health--and steadily regaining it where it has been lost--on the
+lines of moderate feeding. And the number is accumulating at a rapid
+pace; more and more are coming into line with those of us who, having
+thus found health in themselves, their patients and friends, are
+preaching the practice of two meals a day, and sometimes only one
+where there is serious organic disease to combat--thus defying the
+dicta of those eminent physiologists who "settled" the question years
+ago.
+
+Now I quite admit--it would be impertinence to do otherwise--that
+"M.D.'s" statements and views must not be ignored, must indeed be
+respected. And he tells us that he "heard of," in one day, three cases
+which "went wrong" through underfeeding; well, for those three cases
+we can point to hundreds who are _going right_ through eating just
+enough and not too much. I am prepared, on the other hand, to admit
+the danger of a continued semi-starvation diet; our difficulty
+is to define in each individual case what exactly would be a
+semi-starvation, and what a sufficient diet. It is impossible to have
+a fixed standard for everybody. After all, "the proof of the pudding
+is in the eating"; often it is a matter of experimenting for some
+little time, and in this way we could judge largely of the result of
+our dieting by our state of general health.
+
+On some main points of the question I am now absolutely
+convinced--viz.:
+
+1. Excessive bulk is always dangerous, often disastrous, causing
+sudden death in a large number of cases.
+
+2. Starchy foods are best strictly limited as we get along towards
+middle age and beyond.
+
+3. A life which is largely mental or sedentary will be healthier and
+longer on a strictly moderate diet.
+
+4. A life largely of physical labour must be dealt with on its own
+particular conditions.
+
+5. At all times due regard, of course, must be paid to age, weight,
+etc.
+
+6. On the whole, "eminent physiologists" have erred on the side of
+excess of proteid being advised.
+
+7. Middle age is the critical time of life in respect to a man's diet
+in other words, I would say in axiomatic form that as a man feeds at
+or about middle age, so will he be for the rest of his life.
+
+J. STENSON HOOKER, M.D.
+
+
+V
+
+As a very interested reader of this discussion I should be very glad
+to know exactly what "M.D." means by _each pound_ of _bone_ and
+_muscle_ in the body weight? What proportion (approximately) is it to
+total body weight? I have been trying to keep up to Dr Haig's 9 grains
+per lb. of "body weight" and find that it is too much for my digestive
+powers, which are very weak owing to chronic nervous dyspepsia. If I
+take 15 per cent. or 20 per cent. _less_ proteid my troubles are so
+greatly lessened that I feel that to continue to take the lower amount
+would mean perpetual relief. But there have been so many warnings,
+including M.D.'s, of the dangers of under-nutrition, that I am in a
+quandary; and others of your readers too.
+
+If M.D. means grains per lb. of _something less_ than total body
+weight, a lesser amount of proteid than I try to take may have his
+sanction, and be safe for me.
+
+JNO. A. COOKSON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There appears to be a sincere attempt in "M.D.'s" article to prove
+that a physiologist is the best guide in diet. But, as one can get the
+degree of M.D. without any scientific knowledge of dietetics, the
+inference that one would be likely to make from such an alarming
+article is erroneous. I say "alarming" because vague statements are
+made as to patients who were rescued just in time to be stimulated by
+over-feeding into a semblance of health, and we are treated to a list
+of very alarming symptoms in the last paragraph on p. 443.
+
+"M.D." says, "Suppose that the animal fed for years on unnatural food
+has become so pathological that it can no longer take or digest its
+natural food." How grateful to M.D. for this statement will be those
+who long for an excuse to cling to the spoiled, boiled and unnatural
+dishes of which the popular diet mainly consists! And how they will
+continue to overeat themselves, content to avoid the truth regarding
+food quantities.
+
+Living on a right and natural diet, a man or woman will correct the
+effects of wrong living. This will bring crises, and unless they know
+that this is Nature's attempt to rid the body of unwanted and effete
+matter they may be duped into returning to their high feeding, either
+by those whom "M.D." calls diet quacks or by qualified quacks.
+
+I do not believe it possible for anyone to die for lack of indication
+that they were eating too little.
+
+The opposite is what people die of. If we carefully read Dr
+Rabagliati's article in the same issue we shall rightly ask what would
+be the results of analyses and measurements in such a case.
+
+About a year ago we had a young woman under our care who had suffered
+with deafness and other troubles for years. She had tried dietetic
+treatments, "uric-acid-free" and otherwise, and had at last been told
+that her deafness was incurable, being due to heredity and deficiency
+in the organs of hearing. She was extremely thin when she came to us,
+but we did not measure her, nor analyse unclean excreta, nor weigh
+her.
+
+She saw an M.D. who was in sympathy with the philosophy of fasting,
+and she fasted (taking water only) for 28 days. She then had four days
+of fruit juice, and was so disappointed at having broken her fast
+prematurely that she continued it for another 12 days, making 44 in
+all--40 days actual fasting.
+
+[_During this period she was living an almost complete out-door
+life._--EDS.]
+
+During the fast many interesting phenomena were witnessed, chief among
+which was the discharge from ears and nose--significant indeed to all
+who study Nature's ways. Result: normal hearing restored. This was
+nearly twelve months ago; and, having heard of her recently, we find
+that, though she had had a cold, there has been no recurrence of
+deafness. I wonder what assistance measurements would have been in
+this true cure. The patient (an adult) weighed 4st. 8 lbs. at the end
+of her fast and could then walk short distances.
+
+The way in which "M.D." dismisses "a little gout" in his last
+paragraph but one almost leads one to think that he is unaware of the
+failure of the natural defences of the body that must have gone on in
+a very serious degree before the manifestation of gout became
+possible.
+
+I respectfully submit this problem to "M.D.":--If a very thin patient
+can go without food entirely for 40 days, with only benefit accruing,
+_how many centuries_ will it take for a fairly fat person to die
+through slightly under-eating?
+
+As Dr Haddon has said, the proteid myth will die hard, but there are
+physiologists who, with their faces to the light, are finding the
+truth of man's requirements in food and who know that absolute purity
+and simplicity are the ideals to be sought and that all food we eat
+more than is absolutely necessary is a diversion of energy to carnal
+channels.
+
+ERNEST STARR.
+
+
+
+
+A DOCTOR'S REASONS FOR OPPOSING VACCINATION.
+
+
+In opposing vaccination I am aware that it is a thankless task to
+brave the abuse and antagonism which everyone who attempts to move
+forward in the work of medical progress is sure to encounter.
+
+In order that I may not be regarded as prejudiced against the dogma of
+vaccination, I will preface my remarks with the confession that I was
+at one time myself a confiding dupe of the "tradition of the
+dairymaids." While attending medical college I was told that
+inoculation with cow pox virus was a certain preventive of small-pox,
+and like most other medical students I accepted with childlike faith
+and credulity the dictum of my teachers as so much infallible wisdom.
+After an experience derived from treating a number of cases of
+post-vaccinal small-pox in patients who gave evidence of having been
+recently and successfully vaccinated, I awoke to a realisation of the
+unpleasant fact that "protective vaccination" was not all that was
+claimed for it. I thereupon began a study of the vaccination problem
+in all its bearings. After several years of reading, observation and
+experience I became fully convinced that "successful" vaccination not
+only fails to protect its subjects from small-pox, but that, in
+reality, it renders them more susceptible to this disease by impairing
+their health and vitality, and by diminishing their power of
+resistance.
+
+Personally, I have known of recently vaccinated patients dying from
+small-pox while having the plainest foveated vaccine marks upon their
+bodies, and I have seen other individuals who had never submitted to
+vaccine inoculation have variola in its mildest and most benign type.
+
+In view of such experience I refused to ignore the evidence of my own
+senses, and determined to follow the dictates of reason instead of the
+dogmas of faith, and have, consequently, for the past fifteen years
+refused to pollute the blood of a single person with vaccine virus.
+
+I oppose vaccination because I believe that health is always
+preferable to disease. The principle and practice of vaccination
+involves the introduction of the contagion of disease at least twice,
+and, according to numerous authorities, many times, into the human
+organism. The disease conveyed by vaccination causes an undeniable
+impairment of health and vitality, it being a distinctly vaccine
+"lymph," is taken from a lesion on the body of a diseased beast, and
+inserted by the vaccinator into the circulation of healthy children.
+The performance of such an insanitary operation, in the very nature of
+the case, is a violation of the cardinal principles of hygiene and of
+sanitary science.... Moreover, this operation is in direct
+controversion of the basic principles of aseptic surgery, the
+legitimate aim of which is to _remove_ from the organism the products
+of disease, but never to _introduce_ them.
+
+The prime aim of the modern surgeon is to make every wound aseptic and
+to keep it so. The careful operator employs every means at his command
+to clear the field of operations of all bacteria. He utilises every
+particle of the marvellously minute and intricate technique of asepsis
+to prevent the entrance through the wounded tissues of any disease
+elements before, during or after the operation. He fears sepsis
+equally with death, and yet, under the blighting and blinding
+influence of an ancient and venerated myth inherited from his ignorant
+and superstitious forbears of a pre-scientific age, he will
+deliberately inoculate the virulent infective products of diseased
+animal tissues into the circulation of a healthy person. And as if to
+cap the climax of his stupidity and inconsistency, he performs the
+operation under "aseptic precautions."
+
+The poisonous matter which nature wisely eliminates from the body of a
+diseased calf in an effort to save its life and restore it to health
+is seized upon by the vaccinator and implanted into the wholesome body
+of a helpless child. Think of the unparalleled absurdity of purposely
+infecting the body of a healthy person in this era of sanitary science
+with the poison from a diseased beast, under the senseless pretext of
+protecting the victim of the ingrafted disease from the contagion of
+another disease! Can inconsistency go further?
+
+I oppose the practice of vaccination because it is not known what
+vaccine virus is, except that it is a mixed contagion of disease. We
+hear much these days about "pure" virus and "pure calf lymph." Nothing
+could be more absurd and meaningless than the flippant talk indulged
+in by vaccinators and the purveyors of vaccine virus about "pure calf
+lymph," a hybrid product of diseased animal tissues. "Pure virus"
+translated into plain English is pure "animal poison." The phrase
+"pure calf lymph" is applied to an brand of vaccine virus now in use
+is a misnomer for two reasons. It is not "pure" and it is not "calf
+lymph."
+
+Calf lymph is the normal nutrient fluid which circulates in the
+lymphatic vessels of the calf. Lymph is described by physiologists as
+a "transparent, colourless, nutrient alkaline fluid which circulates
+in the lymphatic vessels and thoracic ducts of animal bodies." Lymph
+is a physiological product, while the so-called "pure calf lymph" used
+by vaccinators is a pathological product, derived from a lesion on a
+diseased calf. The difference between calf lymph and so-called "pure
+calf lymph" is as great as is the difference between a food and a
+poison. The vaccine mixture now most generally used by the medical
+profession is known under the name of "glycerinized vaccine lymph,"
+but it is not _lymph_ at all. It is made by utilising practically the
+entire lesion or pock on the heifer when it is in the vesicular stage.
+Such a lesion is broken open and scraped with a Volkmann spoon until
+the whole of the tissue is forcibly and roughly curetted away,
+consisting of pus, morbid serum, epithelium, fibrous tissue of the
+skin, and any foreign matter on or in it, constituting what is called
+"pulp." This pulp is then passed between glass rollers for trituration
+and afterwards mixed with a definite amount of glycerine and distilled
+water. This complex pathologic product of unknown origin is injected
+into the wholesome bodies of helpless children under the false but
+plausible name of "pure calf lymph." ...
+
+I oppose the practice of vaccination because under whatever pretext
+performed the implantation of disease elements into the healthy human
+organism is irrational and injurious. It is subversive of the
+fundamental principles of sanitary science, while the attainment of
+health as a prophylactic measure is rational and in harmony with the
+ascertained laws of hygiene and consistent with the canons of
+common-sense. I am firmly convinced that the absurd and unreasonable
+dogma which assumes to conserve health by propagating disease should
+receive the open condemnation of every scientific sanitarian. That
+this health-blighting delusion conceived in the ignorance of a past
+generation should find lodgment in the minds of intelligent people
+enjoying the light of the world's highest civilisation is to my mind
+inexplicable....
+
+Sanitation and isolation of the infected offer the only rational and
+effective antidote for these disorders. Away, then, with the
+abominable and filthy subterfuge! Give us health instead of disease.
+Health is the great prophylactic.
+
+No man in perfect health can be truly said to be susceptible to the
+infection of small-pox, nor to that of any other zymotic disease.
+Vigorous health confers immunity from disease-producing agents as
+nothing else can. It is usually after the vital functions have become
+impaired by the effects of vaccination or some other injurious cause
+that individuals become susceptible to small-pox infection.
+
+J.W. HODGE, M.D.
+
+[_The above article can be obtained in pamphlet form from the
+publisher. Wm. J. Furnival, Stone. Staffs._--EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW RACE.
+
+(_Specially written for THE HEALTHY LIFE._)
+
+
+ A new race on the ruins of the old
+ Build we: a temple of the human form
+ Fairer than marble, since with life-blood warm,
+ Well crowned with its appointed crown of gold,
+ Russet or ebony; lines clear and bold
+ Beneath--a citadel no ills can storm,
+ Buttressed with health; a type to be the norm
+ In that great age the world shall yet behold.
+
+ For now the laws of Health and Heaven are seen
+ In their identity, life's body and soul;
+ Though, like divorce, disease may come between
+ What God hath joined; but at the human goal,
+ Where the New Race rules, splendid and serene,
+ Sit Health and Holiness, made one and whole.
+
+S. GERTRUDE FORD.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAY SPIRIT.
+
+
+We all long for reality. Most of the amusements in the world are
+imitations of the reality for which we long. They promise a
+satisfaction they are unable to give. Drink, mechanical love-making,
+all snatched gratification of the senses, religious excitement,
+revivalist meetings, and so forth, most theatre-going and sports, all
+simulate the real glory of life. They bring an illusion of well-being.
+They produce a glow in the nervous system. They cause the outlines of
+everyday life as we know it to grow suffused. They give us a momentary
+sense of heightened power and freedom. We float easily in a happy
+world. A sort of relaxation has been achieved. The less common forms
+of amusement bring us nearer to the gateway of reality. For some, they
+have been the rivers leading to the ocean of truth itself.
+
+Art, for instance, the interpretation of life in terms of beauty; the
+"artist," the man in whom sensuous perception is supreme, offers us a
+sublime aspect of reality. He dwells in the universe constructed for
+him by his senses and tells us of its glories. He achieves "freedom."
+The veil covering reality is woven for him far thinner than for common
+men. He sees life moving eternally behind the forms he separates and
+"creates." And to those of us who are akin to him, who are
+temperamentally artistic, he offers freedom of a kind. The
+contemplation of a work of art releases the tension of the nerves. To
+use the language of psychology it "arrests" us, suspends the functions
+of our everyday surface personality, abolishes for a moment time and
+space, allows the "free," generally suppressed subconscious self to
+come up and flood the surface intelligence, allows us for a moment to
+be ourselves. But, still, this momentary relaxation, this momentary
+"play," this holiday from the surface "I," remains an affair dependent
+upon suggestive symbols coming from "without." The supreme artist
+achieves freedom. We, who in matters of art are the imitative mass,
+can only have "change," a new heaven and earth, a fresh "culture."
+
+Then there is love. That promises, at the outset, complete escape into
+freedom and reality. And supreme lovers, both of individuals and of
+"Humanity," have indeed found freedom and the pathway to reality in
+love. But ordinary everyday people rushing idolatrously out to find
+themselves in others find in the end only another I. The religions
+perhaps work best and longest. But even here average humanity, where
+the mystical sense is feeble, are thrown back in the end upon
+ethics--and go somewhat grimly through life doing their duty, living
+upon the husks of doctrine, the notions and reports of other men.
+
+If the play spirit within us, that longing for the real joy of life,
+for real relaxation and re-creation, fares so poorly for most of us in
+the amusements large and small that life offers to our leisure
+moments, is it any better in the "games" the individual chooses for
+himself--hobbies, for instance? Can these generally "instructive" and
+"useful," generally also solitary, occupations be called play? Are
+they not merely a reversal of life's engine, rather than an unmaking
+and a remaking. They are merely a variant of life. They are very truly
+called a "change of occupation." They are led and dominated, commonly,
+by the intelligence. They contain no element of freedom. The same
+defect is found in all organised "games."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Real play, like every other reality, comes from what our mechanical
+and practical intelligences have called "within."
+
+Real play arises when the "I" is in direct contact with the myself,
+with Life, with God, with the actuality moving beneath all symbolic
+representations.
+
+It is only when "I," the practical, intelligent, abstract-making,
+idealising, generalising, clever, separated "I," the "I" which has a
+past, a present and a future, renounces its usurpation of the
+steering apparatus, that play can be. "I," to play or to pray or to
+love, must be born again. "I" must relinquish all. "I" must have
+neither experience nor knowledge, neither loves nor hates, neither
+"thought" nor "feeling" nor "will"--nor anything that can arrest the
+action of the inner life. When this complete relaxation, which has its
+physical as well as its mental aspect, is achieved, then and then only
+can "I" rise up and play. Then "I" shall rediscover all the plays in
+the world in their origin. "I" shall understand the war-dance of the
+"savage." "I" shall know something about the physical convulsions of
+primitive "conversion." The arts may begin to be open doors to me. "I"
+shall have stood "under," understood my universe, in the brief moment
+when "I" abandoned myself to the inner reality. The words of the great
+"teachers" will grow full of meaning. My own "experiences" will be
+re-read. I shall see more clearly with my surface intelligence what I
+must do. I shall be personal in everything, personal in my play.
+Surface self-consciousness which holds me back from all spontaneous
+activity will disappear in proportion as "I" am immersed in the
+greater "me."
+
+Look at that woman walking primly down the lane to the sea with her
+bathing-dress. She is a worker on a holiday. But she cannot play. She
+goes down every day to bathe in the Cornish sea, the sea that on a
+calm sunny day is like liquid Venetian glass and flings at you, under
+the least breeze, long, green, foam-crested billows that carry you off
+our feet if you stand even waist-high. She potters in the shallows and
+splashes herself to avoid taking cold. Her intelligent "I" is
+uppermost. Her world of every day never leaves her. She will go back
+to it as she came, unchanged. Her wistful face betrays the seeker lost
+amidst unrealities. If the "I" were a little more intelligent, she
+might try to defy the surrounding ocean, to pit her powers against it,
+to swim. She would learn a most practical and useful and withal
+invigorating accomplishment. If her busy, watchful "I" could be
+arrested she might "see" the billows, the sky and the headlands reared
+on either side of her bay. She might dance into the water, and see her
+world dance back. She would fling herself amongst the wavelets where
+she stands and splashes. She might give herself up and know nothing
+but the beauty and strength around her. It would not teach her to
+swim, but she would have taken a step towards the great game of
+walking upon the waters.
+
+D.M. RICHARDSON.
+
+
+
+
+TRAVELS IN TWO COLOURS.
+
+
+One is often tempted to suspect that in some schools there is a
+deep-laid plot to destroy in the bud any love for poetry which
+children may possess. Otherwise how is it that little boys and girls
+are made to commit to memory William Blake at his highest reach of
+mystical fire, as in _Tiger, Tiger, burning bright_, or William
+Wordsworth at his lowest ebb of uninspired simplicity, as in _We are
+seven_? These are very popular, apparently, as poems for children to
+recite; yet in the one case it is beyond any teacher's power to show
+children the unearthly flaming beauty which alone gives the poem its
+peculiar quality and undefinable power; and in the other the maudlin
+sentimentalism and almost priggish piety of the verses are positively
+dangerous to the child's health of mind. Both types of recitation work
+out in the end to this--that when the child attains adolescence, and
+the great world of literature dawns on the hungry mind, an evil
+association of ideas has been established--the association of poetry,
+the highest of all arts, either with the saying of lines without
+meaning, or with the learning of "poems" devoid of what wholesome
+youth really desires or enjoys.
+
+People may wrangle all night as to whether the normal healthy child is
+at heart a mystic or a realist; whether he likes fairy tales because
+they show him a magical world where flowers can talk and umbrellas are
+turned into black geese, or because they tell of strange romantic
+things happening to a real human boy like himself; but there can be no
+shadow of doubt that much of the verse intended for children is either
+too clever in its humour to make them laugh, or too bald in its matter
+or tone to stir the romance that is never quite asleep in their
+hearts. There are really surprisingly few versifiers who have
+altogether avoided these errors. Some of George Macdonald's _Poems for
+Children_ are almost perfect, both as regards lyrical form, simplicity
+of language and in the unobtrusiveness of the inner truth they convey.
+For example,
+
+ "The lightning and thunder
+ They go and they come;
+ But the stars and the stillness
+ Are always at home."
+
+But others come perilously near mere versified moralising. Lewis
+Carroll's nonsense verses in the two famous _Alice_ books are supreme
+among their kind; but are they not sometimes just a shade too
+ingenious, or too adult in wit? Probably Stevenson, in those seemingly
+artless poems in _A Child's Book of Verse_, comes nearest to a level
+perfection. Who has ever approached him in his power to understand and
+express the small child's world, desires and delights, without a trace
+of the grown-up's condescension or self-consciousness?
+
+Well, these great ones are no longer in the world; yet, with the
+recognition of their genius, there is the usual danger of bemoaning
+the lack of worthy successors. Not but what there is some excuse for
+such lamentation; for this reason that every Christmas there is a
+veritable flood of children's verse, a great deal of which is either
+painfully didactic, painfully sentimental, painfully funny or
+painfully foolish.
+
+What I wish to do at the moment is to call attention to the fact that
+there is one man alive in England--one of many, I do not doubt: but
+one at a time!--who is doing "nonsense verses" for children which are
+guiltless of all the faults I have indicated above.
+
+Jack Goring is known among some of his friends as "The Jolly
+Rhymster." He writes his verses first for his own children, and then
+publishes them from time to time for the pleasure of other children.
+The secret of his success is partly that he knows that even small
+children like a story to be an adventure; partly that he understands
+how their own romances, the things they picture or hum to themselves
+when well-meaning adults are not worrying them, or rather, trying to
+amuse them, begin--wherever they may end!--with a perfectly tangible
+object, such as a pillar-box, a rag-doll or a toy locomotive. One of
+"The Jolly Rhymster's" best things begins--
+
+ "Finger-post, finger-post, why do you stand
+ Pointing all day with your silly flat hand?"
+
+--which is exactly the sort of question that a very small child in all
+probability does really ask itself when it has seen a finger-post day
+after day at a cross-roads. How the poem continues and where it ends
+you must find out for yourself. It's all in a book called _The Ballad
+of Lake Laloo_.
+
+In the recently published volume[15] that now lies before me, this
+telling of a tale of wonder which begins with an ordinary thing is
+again evident. Nip and Flip, aged six and four respectively, are the
+adventurers; and they make three voyages in this little book. In the
+first, _The Fourpenny-Ha'penny Ship_, they circumnavigate the world.
+Now please note how Mr Goring strikes the right note at the very
+outset:
+
+ "Nip and Flip
+ Took a holiday trip
+ On a beautiful fourpenny-ha'penny ship
+ With a dear little handkerchief sail;
+ And they sang, 'Yo ho!
+ We shall certainly go
+ To the end of the world and back, you know,
+ And capture the great Seakale.'"
+
+[15] _Nip and Flip._ By Jack Goring. Illustrated by Caterina
+Patricchio. 1s. net (postage 1½d.). C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor Street,
+London, E.C.
+
+And there follows a picture (in black and gold) of this strange
+monster, just to make sure that no one will suppose they were out
+after a vegetable.
+
+The tale moves along, as such stories should, very rapidly. Thus--
+
+ "And when they came to the end of the world,
+ Their dear little handkerchief sail they furled
+ And put on the kettle for tea."
+
+But you have only just time to look at the tea things when--
+
+ "But alas! and alack
+ About six o'clock
+ The good ship strack
+ On the Almond Rock
+ And split like a little split pea."
+
+So the story goes on, through divers adventures,
+
+ "From Timbuctoo to Timbucthree"
+
+and so at last home again.
+
+The next voyage is to the land of Make-Believe on a Christmas Eve, "in
+a long, long train of thought." In the course of this tale we are
+given a little picture of Flip herself, and here it is for you to look
+at. Only, in the book her shoes and stockings, the inside of her
+skirt, and the squiggly things on the top of her head are a bright
+golden colour.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The third voyage is all the fault of a toy monkey--"six
+three-farthings and cheap at the price"--and takes them among whales,
+mermaids, sea-serpents and other deep-sea creatures.
+
+Here, then, are delightful little pictures on every page, which even a
+two-year-old will enjoy. And here are verses which most boys and girls
+under seven or eight will like to learn. And the best of it is that it
+doesn't matter a bit if they do "sing-song" them, for they are the
+kind of verses which only sound right from the lips of quite small
+children who have never been taught elocution.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+
+ SOUP.--Oxtail from 10 A.M.--From a Restaurant Menu.
+
+What it was in the early morning it would be indiscreet to inquire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I learn that a serum for mumps is now being made at the Pasteur
+Institute. "A number of monkeys were inoculated with the serum," says
+_The Times_ (30th July), "and a mild form of the disease was
+produced." It is an age of scientific progress, so we may expect news
+shortly of sera for toothache, hiccough, and the hump. It will not be
+necessary to inoculate camels for the last.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ You will say--with Mr Arnold Bennett, the distinguished
+ playwright and novelist--"the tonic effect of ********* on me is
+ simply _wonderful_."--From an advt. in _Punch_.
+
+You may join in the chorus if you like, but you mustn't all expect to
+be simply _wonderful_ playwrights and testimonialists.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A STRANGE SHAMPOO.... "I make my chemist get the stallax for me,"
+ said she. "It comes only in sealed packages, enough to make up
+ twenty-five or thirty individual shampoos, and it smells so good
+ I could almost eat it."--_Secrets of Beauty_ column in _The Daily
+ Sketch_.
+
+Which only shows how careful one has to be.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In the days to come every army will fight on bloodless
+ food.--_Herald of the Golden Age_.
+
+When every army fights on bloodless food, we may be just as far from
+the Golden Age as we are now.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am told that an obscure practitioner who sent up an account of some
+interesting discoveries, addressed to
+
+ MEDICAL CONGRESS,
+ DIETETICS SECTION,
+ LONDON.
+
+has had his communication returned by the Post Office, marked _Not
+Known_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is no truth, it is said, in the rumour that a secret meeting was
+held during the Congress to discuss the proposed raising of the rate
+of commission payable by surgeons to physicians.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+SOME "EMPROTE" RECIPES.
+
+
+Exaggeration is popularly regarded as one of the vices of food
+reformers; but it is certainly no exaggeration whatever to say that Mr
+Eustace Miles and the restaurant associated with his name have had a
+large share in bringing about the more sympathetic attitude towards
+"food reform" noticeable on all sides to-day.
+
+Mr Miles is no amateur in the gentle art of self-advertisement: he
+would be the first to admit it. But the advertisements have resulted
+undoubtedly in a very large number of people taking the first steps
+towards food reform, people who are repelled by the out-and-out
+"vegetarian" propaganda.
+
+There are those who view with disfavour the introduction of
+manufactured or artificial foods into the health movement; they think
+it hinders simplicity. There is a truth in this; but, on the other
+hand, it must be recognised that the great majority cannot be reached
+save by meeting them half-way. This applies to the flavours of foods,
+the digestibility of foods and the convenience of foods. Few can go
+straight from beef to nuts. After generations of abuse the human
+digestive system has to be humoured if the ideal is to be approached.
+And in this invaluable work of meeting people half-way and of
+humouring their tastes and digestions, the restaurant in Chandos
+Street, London, the specially prepared foods made and sold there and
+the strongly individual, thoroughly sane and pleasantly
+straightforward advocacy of Mr. Eustace Miles have been a very
+important factor.
+
+The idea behind "Emprote"--the Eustace Miles Proteid Food--is that,
+being a blend, in powder form, of various kinds of proteid (the
+proteids of milk, of wheat, and so forth) it supplies the right kind
+of substitute for flesh foods not only because it is so easily
+assimilated, but because it is in a very convenient and easily kept
+form.
+
+We believe such foods have a very definite and necessary part in the
+progress of the individual from the customary unhealthy diet to the
+better ways of feeding. The following recipes illustrate some of the
+methods of using "Emprote." They are taken from the booklet _45 Quick
+and Easy Recipes for Healthy, Meatless Meals_, to be obtained for 2½d.
+post free from 40 Chandos Street, London, W.C.--
+
+
+SAVOURY CHEESE SANDWICHES.
+
+_NOTE.--These Savoury Sandwiches can form a complete meal with a
+little salad (dressed with oil and lemon juice), or celery or lettuce
+or watercress or other salad material._
+
+ 3 oz. of cheddar cheese; 1 oz. of "Emprote"; the juice of half a
+ lemon; two tablespoonfuls of fresh tomato pulp or tomato chutney;
+ a pinch of celery salt.
+
+Prepare some slices of not too new bread and butter. Mill the cheese,
+add to it the "Emprote" and the celery salt, then add the tomato pulp
+or chutney and the lemon juice. Mix all well together into a smooth
+stiff paste, and spread upon the slices, and form sandwiches, which
+may be eaten with watercress or lettuce or cucumber. If the material
+is too moist, mix in a little more "Emprote," or else "Procrums."
+
+
+MACARONI CHEESE.
+
+ One teacupful of macaroni; two tablespoonfuls of milled cheese
+ one tablespoonful of butter; one dessertspoonful of flour; one
+ tablespoonful of "Emprote"; one large cupful of milk.
+
+Boil the macaroni for half-an-hour in a little water. Strain the
+macaroni and put it in the bottom of a buttered dish. (Put the liquid
+in the stock-pot, to thicken a soup.) Mill the cheese, and put half of
+it over the macaroni. In the small saucepan make a sauce of the
+butter, flour, milk and "Emprote." Pour this over the macaroni and
+cheese, sprinkle the rest of the cheese on the top, put in the pan to
+brown, then serve.
+
+
+STUFFED VEGETABLE MARROW.
+
+Mince two large onions very fine, and fry in 1 oz. of butter; add 3
+oz. of "Proto-Savoury," one dessertspoonful of Nutril, 1 oz. of
+breadcrumbs (or "Procrums"), and one egg. Scoop the seeds from one
+large vegetable marrow, fill with the mixture, and bake for one hour.
+Serve with Apple Sauce.
+
+_NOTE.--"Proto-Savoury," "Nutril," and "Procrums" are special "E.M."
+products and are readily obtainable from health Food Stores, etc._
+
+
+A NOURISHING GRAVY READY IN A MINUTE.
+
+When cutlets or croquettes are heated up, or when macaroni or
+vegetables or a vegetable stew (none of which are really adequate
+substitutes for meat) are to be made nourishing, mix some of the E.M.
+Savoury (or Mulligatawny, or Blended) Gravy Powder, with hot water, to
+the thickness of gravy, and add to the dish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+NEW METHOD OF PREPARING FRUIT FOR THE DINNER-TABLE.
+
+In cold weather fruit is often cold, and if heated in an oven may be
+injured partially or wholly. Here is, perhaps, a new way of warming
+fruit which has been tried and proves satisfactory. Wash the apples,
+pears, oranges, bananas and wipe them and place on a dish on the
+dinner-table. Also place a jug of boiling water and a bowl upon the
+table. Then when the fruit is required pour the hot water into the
+bowl and place the fruit in it and cover with a plate until warm
+enough to eat comfortably. Bananas should be peeled before placing in
+hot water.
+
+"A.R."
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+ECZEMA AS A SIGN OF RETURNING HEALTH.
+
+ Mrs M.K. writes:--Until the last few years I have been subject to
+ sciatica and a certain amount of dry eczema. About a year ago my
+ health greatly improved, with the exception of the eczema, which
+ has much increased the last year, coming out in large angry
+ spots which irritate. I am 69, small, spare and white, have never
+ been strong until a year ago, have led a sedentary life, being an
+ artist. Three years ago I left off eating meat. My diet at
+ present is:
+
+ _On rising._--Cup of hot rain-water.
+
+ _Breakfast_ (8 A.M.)--Unfired Bread with butter and pine nuts;
+ cup of weak tea, no sugar.
+
+ _At 11._--One raw apple.
+
+ _Dinner_ (1 P.M.)--One lightly boiled egg or an omelette, with
+ "Artox" home-made bread, and butter conservatively cooked celery
+ or broccoli; stiff milk pudding with eggs in it, or "Artox"
+ pastry.
+
+ _Tea_ (5 P.M.).--Weak China tea "Artox" bread, and butter, and
+ home-made plain cake.
+
+ _Supper_ (8.30).--Slice of bread and butter; tumblerful of hot
+ rain-water sipped at bedtime.
+
+ I have not been able to digest uncooked vegetables, excepting
+ lettuce; nor do I eat other fruit than apples; any sweet things
+ cause acidity. I do not suffer with constipation.
+
+In this case it will be noted that the skin disease occurred
+simultaneously with a marked improvement in health. This shows that
+Nature was adopting her usual plan of forcing the impurities outwards
+to the surface and that the change of diet made this possible. With
+her body less encumbered with waste a return of health became
+possible.
+
+The plan now to adopt is not to check this skin trouble but to cure it
+along safe lines by amending the diet and purifying the skin itself by
+means of warm alkaline baths.
+
+These baths, which should be taken twice a week at first, are made by
+adding a ¼lb. of bicarbonate of soda and a ¼lb. of "Robin" starch
+to an ordinary hot bath at a temperature of 105 degrees, which can be
+gradually increased to 110 degrees as the correspondent can bear it.
+In this the bather stays for from ten to twenty minutes to well soak
+out the acids and the oily greasy waste from the surface. The starch
+is added because it moderates the action of the alkali and leaves a
+comfortable gloss on the skin after the bath is finished. The bath
+gradually clears the poisons from the skin and encourages the free
+action of perspiration, thus promoting the further elimination of
+waste acid poisons and at the same time clearing the skin and making
+it healthy.
+
+The next thing to do is to amend the diet so that as little waste as
+possible shall be formed. Rice is the cereal that contains the least
+amount of waste of any kind and this should therefore be the cereal
+selected. The wholemeal, although good for most people, is not suited
+to this case. A strict salt-free diet is also necessary, as it is
+often the retention of salt in the system that leads to the presence
+of eczema. The following amended diet should suit the case, and it
+should be continued until the skin has quite cleared itself:--
+
+_On rising._--Cup of filtered boiled rain-water.
+
+_Breakfast._--Cottage cheese, 2 oz.; rice, boiled or steamed without
+salt (large plateful), with Granose biscuits or toasted "Maltweat"
+bread.
+
+_At_ 11 A.M.--More rain-water (not fruit).
+
+_Lunch._--The same as breakfast.
+
+_Tea._--Hot rain-water only.
+
+_Supper, 6.30._--The same as breakfast.
+
+When the skin is quite clear the correspondent can return to the
+wholemeal bread (but biscuits made with "Artox" would be better than
+the yeastless bread), and also to a more varied diet generally, as at
+present.
+
+
+DEAFNESS.
+
+ J.G. writes:--My hearing got bad about twenty years ago, caused I
+ think by a cold in the head. When in bed I can hear the tick of a
+ watch with the left ear but the other is almost stone deaf. I am
+ not much at a loss in ordinary conversation, but in trying to
+ hear people speak I lose much of what is said. Although I have no
+ real pain, my head is rarely clear, feeling full and congested. I
+ have now and again a slight sensation of giddiness or reeling.
+ The right ear runs some offensive matter, and there is always a
+ hissing sound. I live what is, I think, a simple life, but I must
+ confess to a little smoking. My general health is good. I am a
+ working farmer and fairly active for one of my age (69). My diet
+ is generally as follows:
+
+ _On rising._--One or two cups of warm water, sometimes with lemon
+ juice.
+
+ _Breakfast._--An apple or orange, oatcake and dairy butter.
+ Baker's bread and one cup of tea.
+
+ _Lunch._--Nil, or perhaps I should say that I eat an apple or
+ orange before each meal or a bit of turnip or even cabbage.
+
+ _Supper._--Potatoes with fish, and milk pudding. On some days it
+ may be broth with meat cooked in it.
+
+ _Before retiring._--Nothing but water, or at other times oatcake
+ and one cup of milk.
+
+There does not seem to be much prospect of this correspondent
+recovering the hearing of his right ear, as the conditions have lasted
+so long. He might, however, certainly try by diet and hygiene to get
+rid of the unpleasant discharge and the noises. To effect this he
+should carefully syringe the ear once or twice a day with a weak
+solution (1 grain to the ounce) of permanganate of potash, using an
+all-rubber ear-syringe.
+
+Then he should get someone to well stretch the upper bones of the
+spine and to massage well the muscles at the back of the neck to
+induce, thereby, a better circulation in the nerves and blood-vessels
+which proceed from that part of the spine into the ears. In this way
+he will be able to ensure a removal of the clogging poisons which are
+lurking in the bad ear and thus promote less noises and a better
+health state of the ears generally. The diet should be amended as
+follows:--
+
+_On rising._--One or two cups of warm water, with lemon juice added.
+
+_At 8. Breakfast_.--Apples, oranges or other fruit only. _Take plenty
+of fruit at this meal and eat it at no other time._
+
+_At 12. Lunch._--One boiled egg or some cream cheese: Oatcakes and
+butter or good wholemeal biscuits ("P.R." or "Ixion" kinds) and
+butter, and a plateful of finely grated raw roots (carrots, turnip,
+etc.).
+
+_Tea meal._--One cupful of Hygiama, using water in place of milk.
+
+_Dinner._--Cheddar cheese or cottage cheese (the latter is best);
+potatoes and a green vegetable, cooked by baking or steaming, without
+salt. No broth or meat. (Meat and especially meat broths are very
+undesirable in this case.)
+
+_Before retiring._--Hot water only.
+
+
+ANOTHER CASE OF DEAFNESS.
+
+ J.A.B. writes:--I have been a reader of _The Healthy Life_ for
+ the last six months, and am suffering from a complaint since I
+ was three years old. When three years old I was attacked by
+ scarlet fever and on getting better I had a discharge from my
+ right ear. This continued for several years, then it would
+ disappear and reappear at short intervals of say a few weeks.
+ This last few years the discharge has disappeared for six months,
+ only to reappear again for a week with severe pains in back over
+ right shoulder and right side of neck. I always feel weak and
+ tired when discharge reappears and sometimes experience pains in
+ the head and cannot remember anything for a few minutes.
+
+This correspondent needs a suitable diet in order to purify his blood
+stream and to promote elimination of bodily poisons which are
+evidently affecting his ears. He also needs suitable massage and
+stretching movements applied to the upper part of the spine, which is
+functioning badly. Then he can supplement this by taking Turkish baths
+or wet sheet packs to promote a free action of the skin and thus clear
+away poisonous waste from the system. The same diet as recommended to
+the previous correspondent should be tried.
+
+
+CONCERNING COTTAGE CHEESE.
+
+ Mrs C.E.J. writes:--I have been making cottage cheese curdling
+ the milk with lemon juice, as recommended in _The Healthy Life_.
+ Suppose the milk contains disease germs, would not this cheese be
+ injurious, as the milk is not sterilised by being brought to
+ boiling point? I have also been drinking the whey from the same,
+ as it as given in _The Healthy Life Beverage Book_. I notice in a
+ reply given in this month's issue that Dr Knaggs states that the
+ whey of the milk is the dangerous element. Since reading this
+ answer I have been somewhat in doubt as to drinking the whey. I
+ should like to know if it can be taken without harmful effects.
+
+Ordinary unboiled milk, free from preservatives, is far less dangerous
+to health than boiled milk, because Nature inserts in the raw milk
+certain germs known as the lactic-acid-producing bacilli, which
+protect us from the injurious germs. These lactic germs cause the milk
+to go sour and produce in this way the much-extolled soured or curdled
+milk. They convert the sugar of the whey into lactic acid by a process
+of fermentation. If milk is boiled it cannot go sour because the germs
+natural to it have been destroyed by the heat and it becomes necessary
+to introduce fresh lactic germs into the boiled milk as is done in the
+artificial production of curdled milk. Failing this, milk will
+undergo, not lactic fermentation, but _putrefaction_, and thereby
+develop highly dangerous qualities.
+
+When a person takes soured milk its lactic acid acts as a powerful
+germ destroyer and in a certain concentration it actually kills the
+lactic germs as well. It also keeps down the disease-producing germs
+of putrefaction which work in an alkaline medium (opposite to acid) by
+depriving them of the sugar of the whey.
+
+Boiled milk, if set on one side, in warm weather, speedily becomes
+alkaline and putrid or putrefactive. It is in this condition that,
+when babies take it, they are made dreadfully ill with diarrhoea and
+inflammation of the stomach and bowels. Hence it is the chief cause of
+the appalling mortality among infants in hot weather.
+
+Mrs F.K.J. need have no fear of any harm coming to her as a result of
+eating cottage cheese, but she should not take the whey unless she has
+decided to undergo a whey cure and take _nothing but whey_; in this
+latter case, there being no other foods taken, there will be no germs
+to act harmfully upon it. If there is much flatulence and stomach or
+bowel trouble sweet milk or whey will simply feed the germs which are
+the cause of the digestive trouble, or self-poisoning, and are thus
+far better discarded.
+
+
+DIET FOR OBSTINATE COUGH.
+
+ Miss N.S. writes:--For the last three weeks I have been troubled
+ with a very bad cough It started in the first place with a cold
+ in the head and then it got on my chest, and do what will I
+ cannot get rid of it. I have been having honey and lemon juice,
+ and also each morning have taken olive oil and lemon juice beaten
+ up together, but without (apparently) any effect. I have bad
+ coughing fits in the night and the next morning I do not feel up
+ to much.
+
+ I may say that I have not taken meat for about six years, and I
+ try to follow the kind of diet advocated in _The Healthy Life_.
+
+ I am 23 years of age and a typist in an office, which is about 4
+ miles from my home. I try to get out in the fresh air as much as
+ possible to counteract any bad effects which may arise from my
+ work. My people at home are very much opposed to my food reform
+ sympathies and efforts.
+
+This correspondent should consult a sensible doctor about this cough
+and thus be on the safe side. It is unwise to allow a cough to become
+chronic without ascertaining the cause of it. Coughs are often due to
+stomach and liver trouble, as distinguished from lung trouble. In
+either case a salt-free diet will greatly help. Thus
+
+_Breakfast._--All fresh fruit, nothing else but fruit. Apples best.
+(_Not_ stewed fruit).
+
+_Lunch._--Boiled or steamed rice, done without salt; about 2 oz.
+cottage cheese or a poached egg; a little raw carrot, turnip or
+artichoke, finely grated, with dressing of fruit-oil beaten up with a
+raw egg. The grated roots must be well chewed; as a change they may
+be cut up and cooked in a casserole with very little water.
+
+_Dinner._--Potato baked in skin, with fresh butter, a little cheese,
+or flaked nuts, and a few plain rusks, or a saucer of P.R. Breakfast
+Food, dry, with cream. The honey and lemon juice should be disgarded
+in favour of liquorice (little bits being sucked at intervals) or of
+linseed tea. I have often found an obstinate cough yield to a diet
+which contains lactic acid buttermilk, combined with the use of the
+new oxygen baths. The lactic acid buttermilk can be obtained from any
+good dairy and should be taken in the morning fasting and at bedtime.
+
+
+WATER GRAPES.
+
+ W.G.B. writes:--Referring to article in January number entitled
+ "Grape juice for all," I think perhaps it would interest others
+ besides myself if Dr Knaggs would give us his opinion on the
+ value of what are commonly termed "Water Grapes," as compared
+ with more expensive kinds.
+
+On the Continent the grape cure is a popular method of treatment. It
+is especially good for those who are anæmic and underfed as well as
+for those who suffer in the opposite way from over-feeding. It depends
+upon which condition is present as to the kind of grapes selected for
+the cure.
+
+Fully ripe grapes with but little acidity (water grapes) are best
+suited for persons suffering from anæmia and malnutrition. The unripe
+or sour grapes answer best for cases of over-eating associated with
+constipation, gout and allied disorders of nutrition. The excess of
+acid and cellulose helps the bowels and promotes elimination of the
+gouty poisons.
+
+Our correspondent will note that for thin people who are pale and
+deficient in vitality the water grapes will be found most salutary.
+They are best taken alone at breakfast without the addition of any
+other form of food.
+
+
+CEREAL FOOD IN THE TREATMENT OF NEURITIS.
+
+ E.J.H. writes:--A friend of mine who is suffering from an attack
+ of neuritis (not badly) is desirous of trying the diet of
+ twice-baked standard bread as recommended by Dr Knaggs in an
+ answer to a query in _The Healthy Life_ some months since. She
+ has asked me if Dr Knaggs would limit the quantity of this bread
+ taken in the course of the day. If Dr Knaggs will very kindly
+ tell me this I shall be greatly obliged.
+
+Neuritis is a form of rheumatism or gout which involves the nerves.
+Its usual starting centre is the spine itself, from which all the
+nerves of the body spring. The diet needs to be greatly restricted so
+that the poisons can be eliminated. The most important foods to cut
+down are the cereals because they are very slow to digest and are apt
+to cause constipation with its attendant self-poisoning of the system
+with uric and other acids. Horses and animals suffer from neuritis
+from over-feeding with cereals and beans, and the stockbreeder or
+horse expert usually restricts these foods and gives plenty of grass,
+hay, chaff and green clover, which corrects the trouble.
+
+The same thing applies equally to man. He should take his cereals in
+the form they are the most easily assimilated--namely, twice-baked or
+dextrinised. Thus "pulled" or twice-baked bread, Granose or Melarvi
+biscuits, or rusks, or toasted "Maltweat" bread are the best form of
+cereal for people suffering from neuritis. Other treatment besides
+diet restriction is, of course, needed to cure neuritis, because we
+have to clear the clogged tissues of the poisons which are interfering
+with right nerve action. Thus we can resort hot alkaline baths,
+Turkish baths, massage and Osteopathic stretching movements to help in
+this respect.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #Back Numbers# |
+ | |
+ | If readers who possess copies of the first number of _The |
+ | Healthy Life_ (August 1911) will send them to the Editors, |
+ | they will receive, in exchange, booklets to the value of |
+ | threepence for each copy. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V DECEMBER
+ No. 29. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+There are some statements, the very simplicity and truth of which
+create a shock--for some people. For instance, there are certain
+seekers after health who ignore and are shocked by the very obvious
+truth that "brain is flesh." A brain poisoned by impure blood is no
+fit instrument for the spirit to manifest through, and "mental
+suggestion" must inevitably prove of no avail as a cure if the origin
+of the impure blood be purely material.
+
+It is just as futile, on the other hand, to treat the chronic
+indigestion that arises from persistent worry, or indulgence in
+passion, by one change after another in the dietary. The founder of
+homoeopathy insisted that there was no such thing as a physical
+"symptom" without corresponding mental and moral symptoms. "Not soul
+helps flesh more than flesh helps soul." Thus the Scientist and the
+Poet come to the same truth, albeit by different ways.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+PLAIN WORDS AND COLOURED PICTURES.
+
+
+While most of us would at first sight find fault with Mr G.K.
+Chesterton's sweeping advice--
+
+ "And don't believe in anything
+ That can't be told in coloured pictures,"
+
+many would probably end by endorsing it. But we should do so only
+because we were able to give a very wide and varied meaning to
+"coloured pictures."
+
+No one ever made a coloured picture of the "wild west wind"; but there
+are plenty of coloured pictures in which there is no mistaking its
+presence. We all believe in wireless telegraphy (now that it is an
+accomplished fact) which is, in itself, untranslatable into colour or
+line; but its mechanism can be photographed, and its results in the
+world of men and ships are in all the illustrated papers. Music, which
+is pure sound, is to some the surest path to the Reality behind this
+outward show things; yet to some at least of such music is indeed form
+and colour, even though the colours be beyond the rainbow. For in
+truth, everything worth believing in, all those things, those ideas,
+which renew the springs of our life, have form and they have colour.
+Even to the colour-blind one word differeth from another in glory.
+
+This is no idle fancy, no mere subject for academic debate: it is the
+most practical subject in the world. For even as the body is fed not
+by food alone but by the living air, so is the spirit nourished not
+alone by right action but by inspiring ideas. Ideas are pictures; and
+the best ideas are coloured pictures.
+
+Hence the great value of words. It is idle to speak of "words, idle
+words," as though they were the transient froth on the permanent ocean
+of thought. They are the vehicle, the body of thought. If the thought
+be shallow or silly, the words will indeed be "idle." But if the idea
+be inspiring the words will be the channel of that inspiration.
+
+The greater part of this power in words is lost to us to-day.
+Everything tempts us to hurry over words. We talk too quickly to be
+able to pay that respect to words which they deserve; and we read the
+newspaper, the magazine, the novel, the play, the poem, with the same
+disastrous haste. We devour the words but lose their essence. Hence
+there is a grave danger that through this neglect we shut out one of
+the main streams by which our life must be fed if it is not to shrink
+into mere fretful existence.
+
+There is a curious idea in some minds that fine language consists of
+long words difficult to understand. Nothing could be farther from the
+truth. Most of the great words--the words of power, as the old
+Kabalists called them--are short words, words in common use. And how
+common is the sound of them in the mouth of the preacher! Not long ago
+I heard an intelligent and cultured man reading one of the many
+beautiful passages from the English Bible:--
+
+ "Ye dragons, and all deeps;
+ Fire and hail, snow and vapour;
+ Stormy wind fulfilling his word;
+ Mountains and all hills;
+ Fruitful trees and all cedars, ..."
+
+and he read it as though it were a draper's sale bill. And yet it
+needs but a very little imagination for such a passage to become a
+series of vivid pictures. Fire, hail, snow, vapour, hills, mountains,
+cedars, dragons and deeps--every word is "a word of power" if only
+there is no hurry, if only each word as it comes is given time to call
+up the picture of the real thing before the inward eye.
+
+And you may hear children of fourteen and fifteen who have passed
+examinations in "English" recite line after line of, say, Matthew
+Arnold's _The Forsaken Merman_ with a glib self-assured colourlessness
+due solely to the fact that no teacher has ever taught them respect
+for simple words. And what simpler words could there be than these,
+for example--
+
+ "Where great whales come sailing by,
+ Sail and sail, with unshut eye,
+ Round the world, for ever and aye"?
+
+Simple, common words; yet if there is that leisurely attention to each
+one as it comes what an exhilarating picture arises of the great
+sea-beasts, and of "the round ocean and the living air."
+
+I am not pleading for the stylist's concentration on words which
+exalts them above the things they body forth. The most vivid and
+beautiful description of dawn in the English language--
+
+ "Night's candles are burned out, and jocund morn
+ Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops"
+
+though spoken by the most sensitively vibrant voice in the world, can
+never come near the real dawn breaking across real mountains. But the
+point is that those two lines composed of simple English words have
+power, if we pay them respect, to create the dawn within the mind, and
+to supply the spirit with that beauty which is its very breath.
+
+If this patience with words, this respect for the familiar fine things
+of our native tongue, this desire to make them yield up their strength
+and beauty, if this has nothing to do with healthy living I don't know
+what has. William Wordsworth's--
+
+ "And vital feelings of delight
+ Shall rear her form to stately height"
+
+is only a metrical expression of a great and practical truth. You do
+not need to be a "Christian Scientist" to know that ideas and emotions
+can affect the stoop of the shoulders or the lines of the mouth. Other
+people besides "Eugenists" have observed that ugly or mean-spirited
+parents seldom have beautiful children.
+
+But though the power of ideas is a commonplace, and though
+psychologists tell us how much we may improve mental concentration by
+letting the words of any sentence call up each its own picture, what
+they a omit to do is to recognise the need of the human spirit for
+beauty. You can concentrate your thought on the list of pickles in a
+grocer's price list: it is doubtless a good exercise. But the same
+exercise directed to some great phrase, such as Emerson's _Trust
+thyself: ever' heart vibrates to that iron string_; or some vivid
+lyrical image such as _All the trees of the field shall clap their
+hands_, or even a complete poem of simple words but permanent beauty,
+such as that one of Wordsworth's beginning _I wandered lonely as a
+Cloud_; this will not only improve concentration and sharpen memory:
+it will enrich the mind with ever-available sources of inspiration,
+courage and joy.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S WANDERERS.
+
+
+ Tell me, thou star, whose wings of light
+ Speed thee in thy fiery flight,
+ In what cavern of the night
+ Will thy pinions close now?
+
+ Tell me, moon, thou pale and grey
+ Pilgrim of heaven's homeless way,
+ In what depth of night or day.
+ Seekest thou repose now?
+
+ Weary wind, who wanderest
+ Like the world's rejected guest,
+ Hast thou still some secret nest
+ On the tree or billow?
+
+PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY.
+
+
+
+
+CLOUD-CAPPED TOWERS.
+
+
+Building castles in the air has always been one of the favourite
+amusements of mankind. To it we owe much, not only of the zest of
+life, but also of motive power for overcoming difficulties and
+reaching out towards new possibilities. Yet all literature, and
+tradition that is earlier than any written literature, is full of a
+deep note of warning; over and over again we see in the dim past the
+shadow of a tower that was built in vain, of walls that were piled too
+high and toppled into ruin, of crests that tapped the thunder-clouds
+and drew down lightning to their own destruction. Evidently man has
+seen danger in his own desire! The castle must be built with wisdom as
+well as with industry and boldness if it is to escape disaster and to
+become a storehouse, a safe defence or a vantage-ground for surveying
+earth and sky.
+
+There is one obvious precaution we should observe in building our
+castles, and that is to realise that all which we imagine and think
+about tends sooner or later to externalise itself and pass into
+action. Every idea tends to glide into an ideal. Nearly all thinkers
+have recognised this, and have seen that morality lies much farther
+back than action, farther back than conscious will. Banquo had dreams
+of ambition, as had Macbeth, but they dealt differently with them;
+while Macbeth allowed his visions to lead him on to treachery and
+murder, Banquo prayed against the temptations that came to him in
+sleep. To most of us imagination, sleeping or waking, comes in less
+dramatic form, but we should all think more sanely and act more wisely
+if we interposed a definite revision by the conscious mind and will of
+all our plans and ideals between their (perhaps quite automatic)
+formation in our imagination and their translation into fact. Slack
+muscle should go with the daydream or picture of the future; we should
+not strike or clench or lift until we have decided that the action is
+right and just and wise. The girl who counted her chickens and broke
+the eggs is a true enough example: every doctor and coroner knows many
+instances of results far more tragic.
+
+But sometimes the vision has nothing in it but what is pure and good
+and noble. Are there any dangers even here?
+
+There is this danger always, that we find the picture so lovely and so
+satisfying that we cannot summon up courage and energy to turn away
+from it towards the serious work which it suggests. The castle in the
+air is radiant and tall, but it is generally meant as a model for a
+tougher building made out of common earth, by toil and pain, amidst
+mud and dust. It is so much easier, as Sordello knew, to imagine than
+to do. Actual circumstances, real life, other people all this that
+lies round us is sterner stuff than our easily moulded material of
+dreams. Who has not at some time or other lain sleepily in bed of a
+morning and gone through in thought the processes of getting up, until
+a louder call or an alarum bell has awakened the realisation that the
+task is not yet begun? Who has not been tempted to shirk practice of
+some sort in thinking of a prize? Who has not sometimes built
+expectation higher and higher until his demands of fate have become so
+great that, in despair of making good, he has let the whole plan slip
+away into the valley of forgotten dreams?
+
+These dangers, the almost involuntary carrying out of unworthy aims
+that have been cherished in thought and the loss of vigour for real
+achievement, due to too easy an indulgence in blameless aspiration,
+are fairly obvious and have long been recognised.
+
+There is another that has been seen from time to time and occasionally
+expressed.[16] We have seen that too loose a dream-world may make the
+world in which we live seem dull and ordinary. But is not the converse
+at least as often true? If our thought-world is too narrow, too
+selfish or too weak, all our ordinary work, sound and compact though
+it may be, is stultified, misdirected, often wasted. We all know how
+in the industrial world something more than industry is needed; in the
+emotional world something more than a clumsy and unapprehending
+goodwill. We need a certain insight to turn these solid qualities of
+labour and feeling to the best account. "A man's reach should exceed
+his grasp," a great poet tells us, and even the birds or beavers do
+not go on quite blindly with their building, but, when effort on
+effort has been destroyed by wind and water or man's interference,
+they at last accommodate their instinct to circumstances so as to give
+themselves a better chance of fulfilling their deeper purpose. In many
+ways we have hardly outgrown the beaver stage: wars, accidents,
+disease, disputes--how many times must we try over again the same path
+which has led us before into trouble and disaster before we put our
+imagination seriously to work on the problem and try to find some more
+complete solution?
+
+Of all the dangers of the use of the imagination, perhaps the greatest
+of all is the neglect to use it, the denial of it and its consequent
+starvation.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+[16] Mrs Book sees an allusion to this danger, as well as to the
+first, in the warnings against covetousness in the Tenth Commandment.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAY SPIRIT[17]: A CRITICISM.
+
+[17] See the article, "The Play Spirit," in the November issue.
+
+
+With your contributor's description of the play spirit, that happy
+leisure from self and its responsibilities in order that time and
+thought and heart may be filled with wider inspiration, most of your
+readers will, I think, entirely agree, and all of us will be grateful
+for the spirited claim on behalf of "play."
+
+The one criticism that occurs to the mind is that a touch of
+professionalism, of patronage towards the ordinary person, has crept
+into the author's thought and peeps out through many of the sentences.
+
+"Common men" ... "ordinary everyday people" ... "average humanity,"
+... "a worker" who ... "cannot play"; does the writer of the Play
+Spirit really show us what is in their hearts? He is an artist in
+words, he is a keen admirer of other arts, he is interested in
+thinking; it seems all but impossible to him that anyone can have
+"freedom" without the power of expressing it, without even the
+consciousness of its possession.
+
+We are all too apt, I think, to imagine that our own discoveries of
+the mystery and magic of life are peculiar to ourselves, or shared
+only with a sympathetic few, passed on sometimes (by the _very_ few
+who have both will and power to do so) to such of the outsiders as are
+interested enough to enter into that enchanted garden and take gifts
+from it. But has not the supreme discovery of the greatest artists,
+philosophers and teachers been that the "everyday people" _do_ live as
+deeply and broadly as the thinkers and artists? They are inarticulate
+and cannot tell what they see, but to them life is made amusing, or
+interesting, or consecrated according to their temperament.
+
+Who can say what the Cornish sea means to that tired worker? At least
+it seems a boldness that is almost insolence to decide what it did
+_not_ mean to her!
+
+Has not every life its revelations? Is it not because we do _not_ see
+as God does that some one particular life which strikes across our
+path cannot reveal its revelation over again to us?
+
+Surely "the commonplace is the highest place." Or rather, there are no
+hierarchies of the soul. Artist or seamstress or carpenter, we live by
+the glory that flows to us through whatever curtains of environment
+are round us.
+
+I have not a word of criticism for the writer's ideal. All that I
+would suggest is that the ideal is really present in the world,
+"common" as the "everyday" flowers at his feet. Not all can sing or
+paint or write, but many more can laugh or run and all, perhaps, can
+love and pray.
+
+L.E. HAWKS.
+
+
+
+
+ON LEARNING TO BREATHE.[18]
+
+[18] This is article has been specially written as a preface for
+_Health Through Breathing_, by Olga Lazarus, shortly to be published
+(1s. net).
+
+
+To breathe correctly and sufficiently is to live more healthily. This
+dictum is incontrovertible, and it becomes my pleasant duty herein to
+demonstrate its truthfulness. And, after a careful perusal of the
+hundred exercises which the authoress has so clearly and succinctly
+described, I am still more convinced of the very great, one might
+almost say of the tremendous, importance of deep-breathing exercises.
+What has struck me so forcibly in this little book is the fact that
+there is no undue enthusiasm evident; no embellishment of the subject;
+no extravagant claims for the system advocated; just a plain sane,
+sober and intelligent description of procedures of immense value to
+all who would either keep, or improve, their health. The authoress
+has, as it were, laid before the reader a feast of good things in the
+way of physical culture, and leaves it at that. She seems to have
+brought into purview a splendid variation of the exercises, and indeed
+every mode of breathing and exercise likely to be beneficial--to those
+in health as out of it.
+
+Reverting for a moment to the supreme importance of the subject, I may
+say that it has of late years come home to me more than ever, and with
+greater insistency, that innumerable ills of to-day are due to faulty
+breathing and lack of correct physical exercises generally. I wonder
+how many of us could conscientiously say that we devote fifteen or
+twenty minutes regularly every day to the system? And yet such a great
+deal could be done for health in that time! No, we "haven't time," or
+we "oversleep ourselves so often," or we make some such other flimsy
+excuse; but of course we ought to "make time," we ought not to
+"oversleep ourselves." The fact is, rather, that most of us are too
+lazy to go through the exercises, even though we may know of their
+transcendent benefit. In the words of the poet: "Let us, then, be up
+and doing"--that is, up in time in the morning in order to be going
+through exercises such as described in this little volume.
+
+It is within my personal knowledge, and must be within the personal
+knowledge of every actively engaged physician, that but very few of us
+yet have any idea, in spite of all the teaching and the advocacy of
+it, of really deep and scientific breathing. If the system could be
+made quite general and enforced upon us--especially when young or
+adolescent--we should not see, as we do now, _thousands_ walking about
+the streets whose nostrils are too narrow through insufficient
+breathing, whose lungs are not properly inflated as they inspire; and,
+as a consequence, who have neither the bloom nor the carriage of
+health.
+
+Perhaps if I show here how vastly important it is for us to have our
+blood well oxygenated, it may be some sort of encouragement for Mrs
+Lazarus's readers to persevere with and _work into their lives_ the
+system she advocates and describes.
+
+If we did not renew the oxygen in our lungs to a sufficient extent, we
+should die in a few minutes. We can do without food for many days;
+without water for less days, but only for a few minutes without
+oxygen. Anything which tends to increase the intake of this vitally
+important element, whether deeper breathing or exercises, will have a
+very pronounced effect upon our general health. Now deep breathing is,
+_par excellence_, the way to bring about this desirable condition. It
+may interest the readers of this little book if I remind them that in
+the ordinary way the total capacity of the lungs is about 340 cubic
+inches; as a rule, the amount of air breathed amounts only to some 20
+or 30 cubic inches, but this, by special effort, can be increased by
+some 110 cubic inches. Thus it is demonstrated how much more air we
+could take into the lungs by better and deeper breathing, thereby
+securing, sooner or later, a greater natural expansion of the lungs,
+with the result, of course, of improved health generally.
+
+It would surprise most people if they tested their breathing capacity
+by the aid of the spirometer, to discover how inefficiently they did
+breathe; in other words, how much below the normal was the amount of
+air they were usually inspiring. Encouragement might also be found in
+the matter--incentive, that is, to learn how to breathe and exercise
+correctly and scientifically--if mention were here made categorically
+of the very profound influences upon certain physiological processes
+of our organisation which are brought about if we would but mend our
+ways in this respect. Space will only allow of a few such to be
+detailed.
+
+1. The circulation is improved and equalised. This implies much more
+than appears on the surface: it means that the blood is made to flow
+from any congested internal organ (such as the liver, stomach, etc.)
+towards the peripheries--that is, the extremities and everywhere where
+there is the capillary system--the changing-place between the venous
+and the arterial blood; thus we at the same time warm our extremities
+and relieve internal congestion. In other words, "to bring the blood
+to the surface" in many conditions of ill-health is of paramount
+importance.
+
+2. It will strengthen the action of the heart and lungs. For lack of
+proper breathing exercises the heart's walls get thin, the expansive
+power of the lungs' tissue gets less, and as a consequence, when any
+little extra strain is thrown upon either, permanent damage is often
+the result.
+
+3. In any tendency to constipation, indigestion and similar
+conditions, such exercises are especially beneficial, and that both by
+flushing the system with more oxygen and by mechanically exerting
+pressure on the different organs--thus giving those latter what is
+actually a good massaging!
+
+4. Indirectly, such exercises must of necessity be splendid for
+"nerves," as we thus get these supplied with a larger amount of
+purified blood, and of course this must result in better and
+heightened nerve and brain action.
+
+And all this--and much more which we have not space enough to deal
+with--being so, it might now be well asked, who and what class of
+individuals would benefit by these exercises. The list is a long one,
+and would include practically all growing children and adolescents--in
+order that adenoids, narrow chests, debility in general, malnutrition
+and a host of other abnormal states might be either cured or
+prevented. Innumerable adults would also benefit by such exercises:
+those who are in health, in order to keep so; those who are depressed
+mentally, or who are suffering from constipation, dyspepsia, anæmia,
+obesity, debility, etc.
+
+Even those who are "getting on" in years could, with care and caution,
+go through such exercises to advantage, providing, that is, that their
+heart, lungs and blood vessels are fairly normal; it is only where
+there is serious organic disease such exercises must be withheld.
+
+Thus we have a big field for such a system which Mrs Lazarus has
+described so fully in this little work of hers; it deserves wide
+recognition, and my final word to the reader is not only to keep the
+book as a "boon companion," but to encourage others to purchase it and
+to carry out its most excellent teachings.
+
+J. STENSON HOOKER, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+LETTERS OF A LAYMAN.
+
+1.--DOCTORS AND HEALTH.
+
+
+Medicine is a progressive science--and art, if we judge by the
+statistics given of the fall in the rate of mortality. Even this,
+however, must be carefully analysed, because a good deal of the fall
+of mortality is due to the great reduction in the birthrate which has
+taken place in the last twenty years. Still, after this has been
+allowed for, there is probably a balance in the doctors'
+favour--something to the good of the science and art of medicine.
+Doubtless the science is improved and the practical advice offered by
+medical men is better and more effectual than it used to be.
+
+A layman, nevertheless, may be forgiven if, with all due deference, he
+is tempted to believe that many of the benefits attributed to medicine
+have been achieved through attention to sanitation--cleanliness and
+ventilation. Of course this is due to the work of science, which
+necessarily includes the members of the medical profession, but it is
+not due to medical science _qua_ medical science.
+
+The terms 'sanitation' and 'sanitary' nearly always connote only ideas
+associated with cleanliness, free ventilation, etc. They scarcely
+connote ideas of food management, or, if they do, it is only to the
+extent of inferring that food shall not be adulterated or of bad
+quality--and perhaps that there shall be enough of it.
+
+Such questions as what food shall we eat, and how much; what are the
+real reasons for taking food into the body, whether it is to give
+strength and heat to the body or only to supply the body's waste, as
+Dr Rabagliati contends--these and other relevant questions are usually
+left to unorthodox members of the medical profession to declare upon.
+They seem to be very important questions, but we do not find that they
+were discussed--or ever mentioned--at the thirty-fourth International
+Medical Congress, which completed its sittings several months ago.
+
+Obviously, the practical questions of food supply are answered very
+differently, according as one _believes_ they must be answered one way
+or another, as, for instance, in Dr Rabagliati's or Dr Haig's way. But
+that they are questions not worthy of consideration by doctors in
+congress may be taken as an ominous sign.
+
+It must not be forgotten that we owe many valuable discoveries of
+medical science to qualified members of the profession, just as
+discoveries of mechanical science are made by men working at their
+respective trades. We have sorrowfully to admit, however, that nearly
+all the great achievements upon which medicine plumes herself are in
+the direction of increasing the doctors' power over his patient, and
+seldom of giving his patient power over disease. It is also true that
+the advocacy by unorthodox members of the profession of simple and
+natural remedies often involves them in a charge of charlatanism, and
+subjects them to persecution by medical associations.
+
+If the medical profession were all that it is supposed to be, it might
+be good that the reformer should suffer in solitude while his
+experiments and methods were subjected to adequate tests and
+criticism. If the associated physicians and surgeons jealously guarded
+the public from quackery while they impartially investigated every
+fresh discovery, the true reformer would welcome the protection
+afforded him from the "counter-currents of senseless clamour" within
+the doctors' own ranks, occasioned by party and vested interests.
+
+It may be true that "loneliness tends to save the Seer from becoming a
+charlatan and to make of him a true Reformer." But it is not that
+peculiar loneliness of the Seer that the medical trade unions afford
+the reforming physician. That is inevitably and sufficiently accorded
+him by the "unwillingness of the masses to enter into the thoughts of
+the Seers."[19] An ignorant and inert people will always follow a
+charlatan, because they like to do things which are mysterious and
+involve no trouble on their part.
+
+[19] The reason "Why the Prophet should be lonely" is perfectly
+elaborated in a chapter under that title in _Logic Taught by Love_,
+from which I have quoted.
+
+The Seer among doctors is boycotted by his fellow medicos _after_ he
+and his co-workers have tested their experiments for themselves,
+weeded out what is false from what is true, and proved their methods
+to be right. Not only that, but too often it turns out that it is
+proper food selection, cleanliness, personal effort and restraint
+advocated by doctors as substitutes for serums and drugs, which
+excites the opprobrium of medical coteries. Whereas, the misguided
+Serum Specialist, who ought to be saved from himself, and from whom
+the public ought to be protected, is given full medical honours--and
+facilities to become that most dangerous type of charlatan, the
+licensed one.
+
+There are doubtless many abstract questions of health and disease
+which orthodox and unorthodox doctors alike are unable satisfactorily
+to settle. But if that be admitted, then it is certainly not in the
+public interest that serum treatments should be accepted as almost the
+last words in medical science. More anti-social still is it to attempt
+to justify the compulsory orders of Parliament that expensive
+sanatoria shall be built to cope with disease that might be more
+economically and more satisfactorily treated.
+
+Is there not too little consideration given to theoretical issues
+underlying practical experience of disease? Is there not too great an
+anxiety to force remedies at the public expense before all the
+bearings of the different questions and their phases have been
+considered? All new methods savour too much of compulsion. They all
+require the provision of large armies of officials to carry them out.
+It is interesting to note that the successors of the men who told us
+how grievously the Church has failed because she is established,
+should be so anxious to more firmly establish the medical priesthood.
+
+Modern statecraft calls out to us: 'we will appoint officials to
+inquire into and decide upon what is to be done, but we will make no
+inquiries into the real nature of this disease and that: we will find
+out remedies which, in the form of serums to be injected into the
+blood, shall counteract the effects of disease: we will also appoint,
+at your expense, doctors to perform these operations: we will force
+the man whose family may have the misfortune to contract a disease,
+which the doctors have not told him how to prevent, to submit them to
+such treatment.' But nothing is said about the desirability of
+exercising government over oneself, one's body and one's mind! And
+nothing is _said_ either, but it is suggested, that, if one accepts
+meekly coercive treatment by official doctors, one may probably be
+able to ignore the laws of life and health without having to pay the
+penalty.
+
+No sane and properly instructed citizens would be satisfied to have
+State officials compel them to do what they ought to do for
+themselves. It is because of this and because the suggestions and
+compulsions of modern medicine are in keeping with the prevailing
+philosophy that accumulates knowledge without wisdom, that we need
+such counteracting influences as are afforded by journals like _The
+Healthy Life._
+
+LAYMAN.
+
+
+
+
+A DOCTOR ON DOCTORS.
+
+
+"I charge that whereas the first duty of a physician is to instruct
+the people in the laws of health and thus prevent disease, the
+tendency has ever been towards a conspiracy of mystery, humbug, and
+silence."
+
+"I charge that the general tendency of the profession has been to
+depreciate the importance of personal and municipal cleanliness, and
+to inculcate a reliance on drug medicines, vaccination, and other
+unscientific expedients."
+
+ALEXANDER ROSS, M.D., F.R.S.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round |
+ | advocacy of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the |
+ | extension of its circulation by tactfully urging their local |
+ | newsagent to have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. |
+ | An attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+MODERN GERM MANIA: A CASE IN POINT.
+
+
+Under the sensational heading, _Doomed to Carry Germs: Woman Typhoid
+Victim for Life_, the following account appeared recently in _News of
+the World_:--
+
+ Almost unique in medical history is the case of a woman typhoid
+ carrier, who, it is said, will carry the bacilli with her through
+ life. The case is described by Dr Barbara Cunningham in a report
+ of the Manchester Medical Officer of Health. In order that the
+ woman shall cease to be a source of danger--as she has been
+ keeping lodgers--the health authorities are giving her 7s. a
+ week, and that, with her old-age pension of 5s., will be
+ sufficient to keep her without lodgers. The case has aroused much
+ interest in Manchester. The principal restrictions on the part of
+ the Health Department are that she must not cook or wash for
+ anyone. Anyone can, however, cook for her. In discussing the case
+ Dr Martin, who for 25 years was Medical Officer of Health for
+ Gorton, remarked that in some cases of typhoid carriers the
+ infection ceased to exist for a time, but it was unusual for it
+ to exist year after year. "The reason for the woman referred to
+ carrying the typhoid bacilli with her through life is," he added,
+ "because of a peculiarity of constitution. There is no remedy to
+ be found for it at present, and no means of freeing her from the
+ germs, hence the reward offered by an American to anyone who can
+ find a remedy for such cases. The germs themselves are proof
+ against remedies, and they go on multiplying. The woman is
+ incurable, and you cannot kill the germs without killing the
+ woman. It is the first case, to my knowledge, where the health
+ authorities have taken such measures to prevent a spread of the
+ infection." The history of the affair is interesting. The woman's
+ case had been reported to the authorities, and when her lodger
+ became ill with typhus she was suspected, and was found to be
+ giving off large numbers of typhoid bacilli. She was placed in
+ Monsall Hospital for two months, during which time she was
+ treated with gradually increasing doses of vaccine prepared in
+ the Public Health Laboratory, York Place. When discharged, three
+ separate tests were made as regards the typhoid bacilli. For one
+ week after her discharge the organisms did not reappear, but
+ during the second week a few colonies were grown, and in the
+ third and fourth weeks the number increased. Shortly after that
+ her lodger developed enteric fever.
+
+This case is instructive, because it shows very clearly the utter
+futility of the modern method of treating infectious diseases by means
+of drugs and vaccines.
+
+It is well known that the infecting agent or microbe found in cases of
+typhoid fever originates in man himself, that, in fact, it is
+essentially a man-made disorder. Dr Budd, who was the first to fully
+investigate this important subject, brought together the most
+convincing considerations to show this.
+
+We know further that impure water and milk, shellfish and certain
+foods which are contaminated with sewage are capable of giving rise to
+epidemics of this complaint.
+
+This was shown in Paris in May last, when a plumber carelessly
+connected a pipe along which Seine water flowed to a drinking-water
+pipe. The typhoid germ is always present in Seine water and this
+mistake cost the lives of twenty people.
+
+Dr Freeman, an American doctor, who has studied the habits of the
+typhoid germ, tells us that it does not survive so well outside the
+human body as does the tubercle microbe, but it can, nevertheless, do
+an incalculable amount of mischief when the local authorities are
+careless about the matter of sewage disposal.
+
+A great deal has been heard of late of what are termed Typhoid
+Carriers. There are apparently numbers of people who, while they
+appear to be in good health, yet harbour these germs and are thus
+liable to infect others with them; and the problem is what to do with
+them.
+
+The orthodox authorities, as happened in the case cited above, would
+like to isolate them indefinitely and even to pension them off for
+life, but this seems to be a hopeless way out of the difficulty.
+
+The remedy seems obvious to me. Let us stop the drugs and serums and
+use common-sense hygiene of the body instead. This must be patent to
+anyone who has any knowledge of the subject; but why the authorities
+do not put it into execution I am at a loss to imagine. Surely the
+right thing to do is to clear away the impurities in which the typhoid
+germs live. _By depriving them of the material or soil in which they
+grow and propagate we should practically starve them out of
+existence._
+
+Moreover, this seems to me to be a perfectly easy procedure. If this
+woman were handed over to me for treatment I should at once place her
+on an antiseptic diet consisting solely of salads, grated roots, fresh
+fruits, sour buttermilk and dextrinised cereals. The effect of this
+diet would be to cleanse and sterilise the entire digestive tract, and
+thus break up and clear away the soil in which the microbes are
+living. Supplementary to this cleansing diet other means could be
+adopted to effect a general purification of the whole body. Thus
+vapour baths could be used to promote skin action; beverages could be
+taken morning and night, consisting of distilled water with lemon
+juice or suitable herbal "teas" to promote free action of the kidneys;
+and colon-flushing treatment could be used to fully cleanse the colon,
+or large bowel.
+
+By combined treatment of this rational order, I am convinced that this
+woman would speedily become freed from her unpleasant visitors and
+would be enabled to return to her relations without, as it were, a
+stain upon her character.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+BURIED TALENT COMPETITION.
+
+
+The Editors of _The Healthy Life_ are convinced that there are many
+men and women who can write well and interestingly on subjects
+relating to health in its many aspects; and they wish to unearth this
+talent.
+
+They therefore offer a _First Prize_ of _Two Guineas_, a _Second
+Prize_ of _One Guinea_, and a _Third Prize_ of _Books_ (published at
+_The Healthy Life_ Office) to the value of Half-a-Guinea, for the best
+ESSAY, SKETCH or SHORT STORY appropriate to the pages of _The Healthy
+Life._
+
+Please read the following Conditions carefully:--
+
+CONDITIONS.
+
+ 1. Each Essay, Short Story, or Sketch must contain _not less than
+ 1000 words_, and _not more than 2000 words._
+
+ 2. Each Essay, Short Story, or Sketch must be written (or typed)
+ on one side of the paper only, leaving at least one inch of
+ margin on which each 100 words must be indicated in figures.
+
+ 3. Each attempt must be accompanied by the front cover (or top
+ part of cover showing date) of either the December or January
+ numbers. (Where more than one MS. is sent in by one contributor,
+ extra covers in proportion must be enclosed.)
+
+ 4. The full name and address of the competitor must be written at
+ the foot of last page, in addition to the competitor's _nom de
+ plume_ (if any).
+
+ 5. All Essays, Short Stories or Sketches must be sent in not
+ later than the 31st of January 1914, addressed _Buried Talent_,
+ _The Healthy Life_, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.
+
+ 6. No one who is at present, or has ever been, a regular
+ contributor to _The Healthy Life_ is eligible for a prize.
+
+ 7. The Editors reserve the right to publish any contribution sent
+ in under this Competition.
+
+ 8. The decision of the Editors will be final and no
+ correspondence can be entered into with unsuccessful competitors.
+
+Competitors are asked to note that legibility of handwriting will
+carry weight as well as intrinsic merit.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+
+SOUPS.
+
+Many cases of ill-health demand that the meals should be as dry as
+possible. Having granted this, it will be admitted that there is quite
+a proper place for soups in ordinary everyday food reform catering.
+
+The chief objection to ordinary soups is that they are made on a basis
+of meat stock and flavoured with one of various "meat extract"
+preparations. Meat stock, meat gravy and meat extract all alike
+represent the least desirable elements in flesh food, namely, the
+acids and tissue-wastes of the living animal at the moment of its
+death--acids and tissue-debris which were on their way to normal
+excretion via the lymph channels, veins, etc.
+
+It is therefore only common-sense to avoid such soup-bases,
+especially as the most excellent soups can be made without recourse to
+any animal product.
+
+The juices of vegetables, being rich in alkaline "salts" and other
+organic elements, are the natural cleansing agents in a rational diet.
+Hence to obtain a maximum _remedial_ effect, vegetable soup should be
+taken in the form of a clear, unflavoured broth, quite apart from the
+solid meals, and preferably on retiring. But for the dinner or supper
+soup, some richness of flavour and creaminess of substance are
+pleasing and legitimate.
+
+The following recipes explain, first, how to prepare vegetable
+"stock," and then how to make rich, creamy nourishing soups, on the
+basis of that "stock." Each recipe will, of course, suggest
+variations.
+
+
+HOW TO MAKE VEGETABLE STOCK.
+
+Put any fresh vegetables in season in a large stewpot--being careful
+not to include _overmuch_ cabbage or other coarse green leaves, as
+these give a rather strong flavour--with a quart or more of water,
+cover, and simmer gently for at least two hours. The outer leaves
+discarded when preparing vegetables for the table, the stalks and
+stems, and the peelings of apples, potatoes, etc., should all be used
+for stock, care being taken, of course, to cleanse them well first,
+cutting out any insect-eaten or decayed parts.
+
+
+ALMOND CREAM SOUP.
+
+Mix two tablespoonfuls of fine wholemeal or good "standard" flour into
+a smooth paste with a little water, add this to the hot stock (as
+above), and stir till soup is thickened. Just before serving stir in a
+tablespoonful of Almond Cream (either "P.R." or Mapleton's).
+
+_The addition of the almond cream gives the above a nutritive value,
+apart from the tonic and cleansing elements in the stock._
+
+
+NOURISHING ARTICHOKE SOUP.
+
+Pare, scrub and cut into small pieces, 1 lb. of artichokes and put
+immediately into a pan with a pint of water or milk and water. Boil
+till soft, then rub through a wire sieve, using a wooden spoon. Put
+back in pan, add a little more water, a little chopped parsley, and a
+small piece of butter (or nut butter). Bring to the boil, stirring
+well; stir in a tablespoonful of Pinekernel Cream ("P.R." or
+Mapleton's), and serve at once.
+
+
+LEEK AND CELERY SOUP.
+
+Put four well-cleansed medium-sized leeks (cut up small), the outer
+parts of a head of celery (chopped), a quart of water and 2 oz.
+unpolished Japan rice, into a pan and simmer for two hours. Rub
+through wire sieve, return to pan, bring to the boil, and serve.
+
+_This soup is not so much nutritive as cleansing and antiseptic._
+
+
+
+
+TASTE OR THEORY?
+
+FRUIT AND THE OXALIC ACID BOGEY.
+
+
+Many and varied are the creeds of Health Reformers, but all may be
+included within two main camps. And the opposing battle-cries are
+Instinct _versus_ Intellect, Taste _versus_ Theory, _à priori versus à
+posteriori_, Motives _versus_ Purposes. Some overlapping and confusion
+of creed may be found in both camps, but in the main one is filled
+with lovers of Nature, the other with devotees of Science.
+
+"We believe in simplicity," cries the Nature-lover from the meadow
+where he is taking a sun-bath; "you are so complex, so artificial."
+
+"We believe in being 'sensible,'" retorts the devotee of Science from
+the cabinet where he is taking an electric light bath, "you are so
+extreme."
+
+"Not extreme--consistent. Your treatment varies every month as the
+decrees of 'Science' change."
+
+"But your treatment varies every minute as the wind and clouds change.
+I can keep mine constant with mathematical accuracy, or vary the light
+to a nicety by pressing a button."
+
+And so also is it with regard to diet. The person who talks learnedly
+about germs and calories (though he never saw a germ or measured a
+calorie in his life) will be found in the same camp with the electric
+light advocate, while this other who cultivates a taste in harmony
+with Nature by consuming what he likes best of her unaltered products,
+he is found arm in arm with the sun-bather. But Science will by no
+means allow him to eat his uncooked food in peace. "If we all adopt
+_that_ diet," her pseudo-disciples cry, "what is to become of the
+potatoes?"
+
+Now, with regard to uncooked foods, it would seem that as little fault
+can be found with ripe fruit in its natural state as with any article
+of diet. Yet even here "Science" holds up a warning hand and is
+succeeding in scaring people away from one of the most harmless, most
+wholesome and most neglected of foods.
+
+Leaving generalities, let us come to a specific case, an actual
+difficulty propounded to me by a sufferer, one who had spent her
+substance till she could spend no more in having various parts of
+herself examined and in learned prescriptions and processes of cure,
+but who found herself as far from health as ever. Obsessed by certain
+theories of "Science," this lady had acquired a dread of sugar _in
+every form_. Hence her query addressed to me: "In your book, _No
+Rheumatism_, you say that sugar is to be avoided. Why, then, do you
+recommend fruit, which is mostly sugar?"
+
+I replied as follows: "The reason I recommend ripe uncooked fruit--in
+spite of its containing a certain quantity of sugar--is that it
+contains also purifying salts, and that for most people it is the
+pleasantest form in which these salts can be taken. Moreover, fruit
+sugar appears to be more wholesome than that formed from starch. When
+you say that 'fruit is mostly sugar,' are you not leaving the water of
+the fruit out of account? As the water often amounts to 90 per cent.
+this makes all the difference. Taking the fruits generally grown in
+this country the average proportion of sugar is seven per cent.
+
+[This statement is based on the following figures given in Goodale's
+Physiological Botany:--
+
+ Apples contain 7.73 per cent. sugar
+ Pears " 8.26 " "
+ Plums " 3.56 " "
+ Strawberries 6.28 " "
+ Gooseberries 7.03 " "
+
+Grapes are stated to contain 24.36 per cent, but often contain much
+less and sometimes even more.]
+
+"Now a person eating fruit _ad lib._, but allowed other foods, will
+hardly ever eat more than a pound or two a day (generally less). But
+suppose him to eat two pounds. Seven per cent. of this is 2¼ oz. If he
+eats only 1 lb. he takes 1+1/8 oz. sugar. Now compare this with
+the amount he gets from starchy foods, say, bread, which contains
+fifty per cent. of starch and sugar. As the starch, if it is to be
+assimilated, must be (and as a general rule practically all is)
+converted into sugar during digestion, we get from 1 lb. of bread 8
+oz. of sugar (to be exact, nearly 9 oz., because starch forms rather
+more than its own weight of sugar). But the weight of bread allowed
+for daily food, if no other starchy or sugary food is taken,
+is--according to orthodox physiology books--1 lb., 11 oz., yielding
+over 14 oz. of sugar. Now I reduce the starchy food to 8 oz. or less
+(_No Rheumatism_, p. 34), yielding at most about 4½ oz. of sugar. You
+see, then, that the patient can now afford to take even 2 lbs. of
+fruit, because this will bring his total of sugar up to only 6¾ oz.,
+as against 14 oz. allowed by the orthodox. And if, as I recommend (p.
+33), fruits containing but little sugar (especially cucumbers) are
+taken, his total sugar under my regime will be even less than 6¾ oz.
+
+"As so many people fail to distinguish between fruit sugar occurring
+naturally in fruit and ordinary separated and concentrated cane sugar,
+or even beet sugar separated by various chemicals--'shop sugar,' in
+fact--I translate for you a passage from Dr Carton's _Trois Aliments
+Meurtriers_[20]:--
+
+[20] _Some Popular Foodstuffs Exposed_, translated by D.M. Richardson.
+1s. net. Daniel.
+
+"'Let us proceed now to the study of the third deadly food. The sugar
+contained in vegetables and raw fruits is a living aliment,
+physiologically combined with the protoplasm of the vegetable cells,
+associated with ferments and with vitalised chemical salts. The
+absorption of this natural sugar is effected by a harmonious contact,
+by an exchange of energy between the living vegetable cells and our
+living digestive cells.
+
+"'The sugar of commerce, on the contrary, is a dead food which has
+lost all association with vegetable protoplasm, with vitalised mineral
+salts and with oxidising ferments which would render it physiological.
+It is nothing more than a drug, a dangerous chemical, because Nature
+has nowhere presented it to us in this form.... Its absorption
+involves an anti-physiological irritation which over-excites the
+viscera, and when repeated ends by profoundly altering them.'"
+
+"This is all very well," cries Pseudo-Science, "but people may eat too
+much fruit."
+
+"Certainly, but then I warn them at once," quoth Taste.
+
+"But they have an idea it is good for them, and they disregard your
+warnings."
+
+"If they 'have an idea' which runs counter to my warnings and my
+penalties, to say nothing of my promises and my rewards, then they can
+only get that idea from you, Mr Pseudo-Science, with your theories and
+your figures and your long words."
+
+"Why not from your relative, Unnatural Taste? Anyhow, it is my duty to
+warn them."
+
+"If they don't heed my warning, they certainly won't heed yours," says
+Taste.
+
+"But I can paint such a picture of the trouble they store up for the
+future if they persist in excessive fruit eating!"
+
+"Never mind about persisting and storing up for the future. I punish
+excess in fruit eating as in everything else by prompt discomfort and
+pain."
+
+"But what do you know about oxalic acid?"
+
+"Enough to avoid it. Like every other poison it is repugnant to me."
+
+"Yet fruit which is so nice in the mouth may ferment in the intestines
+and form that very poison. Then what are you going to do about it?"
+
+"Take care that not too much fruit is eaten another time."
+
+"But in the meantime the oxalic acid already formed must be
+neutralised at once."
+
+"No, no! It would be a pity to do that. Oxalic acid is the latest
+fashion. What would your patients do without it? And what would you do
+without your patients?"
+
+"It must be neutralised at once. It can only be neutralised at the
+cost of abstracting lime from the system. Result: oxalate of lime,
+forming calculus, or 'stone,' which you don't want, and tissues
+depleted of lime which you do want."
+
+"So you get your patients after all. In fact, having 'neutralised
+their oxalic acid' to escape you, they come back to you with two
+diseases instead of one. It seems to me you are a very profitable
+investment, Mr Pseudo-Science."
+
+"Really, Mr Taste, you would not, I presume, have me suppress the
+truth simply because it happens to be profitable?"
+
+"But is it the truth? What proof have you?"
+
+"I presume you are ignorant of the fact that animals have died with
+all the symptoms of oxalic acid poisoning, simply through taking too
+much sugar."
+
+"What kind of animals? You chose such as are used to taking shop sugar
+as part of their ordinary food, of course?"
+
+"Well--no; not in that form. The subjects of the experiment were
+rabbits."
+
+"Ah! And from these you draw deductions about man who has been eating
+artificial sugar for ages. How like a vivisectionist! But what doses
+of sugar did the rabbits get?"
+
+"About one-fortieth of the body-weight."
+
+"That would be as if a man of 150 lbs. weight should take 3¾ lbs.
+sugar at a meal! And since it is excessive fruit you are warning us
+against, can you tell me how many pounds of fruit--say, apples--one
+must take in order to get that amount of sugar in a day? No less than
+sixty pounds. Really your warning seems a little superfluous."
+
+"It is all very well for you to scoff, Mr Taste, but if it were not
+for me you would know nothing about the latest diseases. I really
+believe you would be content to go right through life without knowing
+that you had a duodenum or an appendix."
+
+"Quite" assented Taste cheerfully.
+
+ARNOLD EILOART, B.SC.
+
+
+
+
+A SYMPOSIUM ON UNFIRED FOOD.
+
+
+_In November, 1912, we published a letter from a reader containing the
+excellent suggestion that readers who had experimented to any fair
+extent with unfired diet should be invited to contribute to a
+conference on the subject in_ THE HEALTHY LIFE, _and that the
+symposium should be gathered round the following points:--_
+
+(1) The effect of the diet in curing chronic disease.
+
+(2) Its effect on children so brought up--_e.g._ do they get the
+so-called "inevitable" diseases of chicken-pox, measles, etc., and
+especially have they good (_i.e._ perfect) teeth?
+
+(3) The effect of the diet in childbirth.
+
+(4) The cost of maintaining a household in this way, as compared with
+the cost under ordinary conditions.
+
+(5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional
+dietary (often found amongst food reformers)?
+
+(6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?
+
+_A number of interesting letters have been published this year, and we
+shall be glad to receive a large number of personal experiences, but
+they must be brief, and classified under the above heads as far as
+possible. The following is a striking piece of personal
+evidence._--[EDS.]
+
+ BUCKHURST HILL, ESSEX,
+
+ _28th April 1913._
+
+ To the Editors of _The Healthy Life._
+
+ DEAR SIRS,
+
+ As a slight contribution to the interesting discussion which is
+ taking place in your magazine, will you allow me to give you a
+ short summary of nearly sixty years experience of the effects,
+ in my own case, of flesh eating, vegetarianism and the uncooked
+ food diet.
+
+ This is not a fairy tale, as some may be inclined to think, but a
+ plain unvarnished statement of facts.
+
+ The flesh-eating period lasted for seventeen years. When three
+ months old I was the unfortunate victim of vaccination poisoning,
+ and for years afterwards was continually in the doctor's hands.
+ The best medical men in this country and America were consulted;
+ for months daily visits were paid to a noted Chicago specialist
+ in the hope that he might be able to effect a cure, but it was a
+ case of "love's labour lost," and, instead of improving, my
+ condition grew steadily worse.
+
+ During all these years, drugging was constantly going on, the
+ pills and potions ordered were religiously swallowed, and,
+ strange as it may seem, the ordeal was survived. Flesh meat was
+ eaten daily, and, of all the members of the medical profession
+ consulted, not one of them ever hinted that a change of diet
+ might be beneficial.
+
+ When 17 years of age my attention was drawn to an article in _The
+ Phonetic Journal_ on the advantages of a non-flesh diet. By this
+ time, being thoroughly tired of taking endless quantities of
+ useless, poisonous and expensive drugs, I decided, there and
+ then, to throw "physic to the dogs," making up my mind that if
+ death did come, and it seemed to be staring me in the face, I
+ would, at any rate, die a vegetarian.
+
+ Within six months the most dangerous symptom had completely
+ disappeared and has never recurred, but, although greatly
+ benefitting by the new diet, and enjoying on the whole fairly
+ good health, yet there were frequent attacks of rheumatism,
+ lumbago and neuralgia; dyspepsia, with its attendant pain and
+ flatulence, often made life miserable; now and again the liver
+ would rise up in rebellion, bringing in its train vertigo,
+ blurred vision and severe headaches; constipation, that bane of
+ modern life, was a source of endless trouble, in fact, for many
+ years the enema had to be used once or twice a week, and last,
+ but worst of all, came those sharp, shooting, lancinating pains,
+ one of the premonitory symptoms of cancer.
+
+ Obviously, there was still something radically wrong somewhere,
+ and on retiring from practice, a great deal of time and attention
+ was devoted to the subject, innumerable experiments were made,
+ and, ultimately, results obtained, the value of which cannot be
+ exaggerated.
+
+ Five years ago the uncooked food diet was commenced, and from the
+ very first week a steady improvement took place. The constipation
+ vanished as if by magic; there has not been the slightest touch
+ of rheumatism or neuralgia for at least three years the liver is
+ now an unknown quantity, the dyspepsia is a thing of the past,
+ and, most important of all, the cancer symptoms are entirely
+ gone, and in their place has come an abounding health, vigour and
+ vitality that is marvellous. The years seem to have "rolled back
+ in their flight"; all the centres of life are rejuvenated; and
+ the hopes, feelings and aspirations of youth sway me now as they
+ did nearly half-a-century ago. Work, mental or physical, is a
+ perfect pleasure, and to feel fatigue is almost unknown.
+
+ What a glorious gift life really is has never been realised till
+ now, and the wealth of the Indies would not induce me to go back
+ to the flesh-pots, or live on cooked foods again. This diet gives
+ two important advantages: firstly, the elimination of all excess
+ of starchy matter prevents the formation of needless fat, and,
+ secondly, the entire absence of artificially sweetened food
+ removes one of the main causes of over-eating.
+
+ Will people ever learn that fat, instead of being a sign of
+ health, is the very reverse, that every ounce of superfluous
+ adipose tissue means more work for the heart, diminished
+ vitality, lessened energy, and, when excessive, is not only a
+ distinct menace to longevity, but to life itself?
+
+ I never take more than two meals a day and very often only one,
+ which consists of raw vegetables, nuts, olive oil and unfired
+ bread; the second meal, when required, is a simple fruit salad.
+
+ When a vegetarian the writer lived for years on a shilling a
+ week; it costs rather more now, the oil, nuts, fruit and bread
+ being more expensive than beans, rice, meal, etc., but the
+ difference is so trifling that it is not worth talking about.
+
+ Whilst "Fletcherising," deep breathing, distilled water, olive
+ oil, fasting, saltless food, the open-air life, regular exercise,
+ etc., were valuable allies, it was not until the powerful aid of
+ uncooked food was invoked that the real benefits began to appear
+ and life became a real joy. Yours, etc.,
+
+ JOHN REID, M.B., C.M.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+_Every inquiry must be accompanied by the front cover (or upper part
+of same showing date) of a recent number_ of _The Healthy Life_.
+
+
+ONION JUICE AS HAIR RESTORER.
+
+ Mrs M. McC. writes:--In your book, _Onions and Cress_,[21] on p.
+ 49, it is stated that the juice of onions mixed with honey will
+ change the colour of hair from grey to black. Will you be kind
+ enough to tell me in what proportion these should be mixed, as,
+ of course, if not in a proper mixture, the hair would become so
+ clogged. And will you also kindly tell me how one is to extract
+ the juice from the onions, whether they are to be boiled or
+ squeezed when raw.
+
+With regard to the use of a mixture of onion juice and honey as a hair
+restorative the reader of my little book must remember that it is
+largely a compilation of quotations from old herbal books, and it
+gives the history, use and folklore of these interesting edibles. I am
+not responsible for this recipe and cannot therefore vouch for its
+utility. We know, however, that onions contain a wonderful sulphured
+oil and that sulphur in one form or another is an important ingredient
+of most hair preparations which restore colour. The raw juice
+evidently should be used, and this can be extracted either by pounding
+and grating and then extracting the juice under pressure, or it can be
+readily obtained in any quantity by putting onions through the
+Enterprise Juice Press. The amount of honey, I think, to be added to
+this juice should be very small, otherwise, as our correspondent
+surmises, the preparation would be very sticky and objectionable.
+Would any reader care to try this and report upon it?
+
+[21] _Onions and Cress_, 6d. net (postage 1d).
+
+
+SCIATICA.
+
+ Mrs M.G. writes:--My husband is a sufferer from sciatica; has had
+ it for some years, on and off, but just lately he seems is to get
+ it constantly--sometimes a little, sometimes a lot. He has been
+ taking some salicylate of soda, and I have tried to persuade him
+ to give it up. His age is 42. For his meals he takes, on rising,
+ an apple or a cup of apple tea; an hour afterwards his breakfast,
+ which consists of two tablespoonfuls of a proteid food mixed with
+ distilled water, and a hard biscuit, two slices of whole meal
+ brown bread, nut butter, and watercress or lettuce. During the
+ morning he drinks barley water. For dinner, a salad and a few
+ ground nuts and hard biscuits and an apple; sometimes home-made
+ nut meat and spinach, hard biscuits and dried or fresh fruit.
+ For tea, a salad or lettuce, tomatoes, onions and cress, and
+ Shredded Wheat and wholemeal bread. Last thing at night, a few
+ steamed onions and distilled water. His bowels are in good
+ condition, very regular, but he has this constant gnawing pain.
+ If you can help me in any way as to a change in his diet, it will
+ be a relief to me. I do not mind the trouble of preparing things
+ for him. It is about two months ago that he has taken to drinking
+ distilled water, which I make myself. His occupation is very
+ sedentary, with long hours, sometimes from six in the morning
+ till nine at night. He has a bicycle, and gets as much exercise
+ as possible.
+
+From the description given one would assume that the sedentary
+occupation and long hours of work have caused this correspondent to
+fall into bad postural habits of sitting and standing, coupled with
+excessive depletion of his nervous energy. The diet given is on good
+lines and, with the addition of home-made curd cheese and eggs as
+proteid, might certainly be continued as it stands, especially as the
+bowel action is regular. What the correspondent does need is less
+hours of work; more physical exercises of a brisk back-stretching
+nature, and certain spinal stretching manipulations of an Osteopathic
+nature. Full deep breathing in fresh air will also be beneficial. The
+lower part of the spine, from which the sciatic nerves originate,
+needs the most attention.
+
+
+REFINED PARAFFIN AS A CONSTIPATION REMEDY.
+
+ Mr E.H. writes:--Will Dr Knaggs very kindly say whether Refined
+ Paraffin, now being given so generally for the relief of
+ constipation, may be regarded as a harmless method of overcoming
+ this trouble or whether its use might lead to harmful results. I
+ am told that this preparation of oil is not assimilated, and is
+ therefore harmless, but I should much appreciate Dr Knaggs'
+ opinion on this matter.
+
+The use of refined paraffin as a remedy for constipation is just now
+all the rage with the orthodox medical profession. There is nothing
+really to be said against its right use, provided it is made to serve
+as one of the means to an end. It has been proved that this paraffin,
+which is quite tasteless, odourless and easy to swallow, is not
+absorbed by the system but passes unchanged and unaltered through it.
+It acts therefore as a mere mechanical lubricant. The one thing to
+remember is that its use should be combined with a curative diet, so
+that it need not be taken indefinitely.
+
+
+(1) DRY THROAT; (2) SACCHARINE; (3) DILATED HEART.
+
+ Mr L.S. writes:--I have read _The Healthy Life_ from the
+ appearance of the first number, and I have studied the Answers to
+ Correspondents, but have not observed a case identical with my
+ own, hence my reason for troubling you.
+
+ (1) The back part of mouth next throat has a curious glazed
+ appearance--no cough or expectoration. I am inclined to think it
+ extends to and includes the stomach. I have always a good
+ appetite, but am not well nourished; much under weight. Age 44
+ years; school officer; cycle 25 miles a week.
+
+ Eat meat sparingly, not a pound a week. Live principally upon
+ eggs and bread and butter--(three eggs a day): "Digestive Tea"
+ two and three times a day.
+
+ 2. Is saccharine less harmful than sugar for sweetening?
+
+ 3. As the result of a nervous breakdown I had five years ago I
+ suffer from a dilated heart, consequently--I suppose--I have
+ palpitation occasionally, oftener when in bed. I don't think my
+ heart is really normal since my breakdown five years ago.
+
+ 4. Would bathing myself with cold water over the region of the
+ heart strengthen the muscles? Would you please suggest anything
+ for strengthening heart. Are lemons or eggs injurious to the
+ heart?
+
+1. The throat symptoms indicate a dry, irritable, heated condition of
+the mouth and throat which, as the correspondent surmises, equally
+affects the stomach and the rest of the digestive organs. He should
+have a breakfast of fresh fruit only, take salads and grated raw roots
+with his meals and stop tea altogether. He can drink distilled water
+and vegetable or lemon drinks (unsweetened) instead.
+
+2. Saccharine is a mineral substance, a fossilised product of
+putrefactive action in the coal age. It is closely analogous to
+carbolic acid, which equally originates from microbic action. By
+leaving off sugar and replacing it by saccharine our correspondent
+gains nothing. He is simply leaping from the frying pan into the fire.
+It is best for him to cultivate a taste for unsweetened or even acid
+drinks.
+
+3. A dilated heart is usually an after effect of a dilated stomach,
+which strains it, just as it does every other organ, whether in the
+chest or the abdomen.
+
+4. Bathing the chest with cold water is not desirable. What is needed
+is that the correspondent should drink as little fluid as possible and
+pay close attention to the condition of his digestive mechanism. If
+the organs are dilated or misplaced he should wear a belt and take
+suitable gentle Osteopathic exercises.
+
+
+TREATMENT FOR STAMMERING.
+
+ A.M.D. writes:--Could you kindly give in _The Healthy Life_
+ magazine some suggestions as to the best method to follow in a
+ case of stammering (slight) in a boy of ten or eleven years who
+ has been rather left to himself, the hesitancy in speech being
+ regarded as incurable?
+
+This boy should be trained by someone who understands how to cure
+stammering. The correspondent would do well to consult Miss Behncke of
+18 Earl's Court Square, S.W., who makes a speciality of treating such
+cases.
+
+
+WHY THE RED CORPUSCLES ARE DEFICIENT IN ANÆMIA.
+
+ A.M.D. writes:--Is there any way, independent of diet, of
+ increasing the red corpuscles in the blood? I have tried walking
+ nine miles a day, thus getting up free perspirations. What of
+ this method? I did imagine that this resulted in a better
+ condition of the skin, the latter losing in a measure the white
+ and parched appearance.
+
+A deficiency of red corpuscles in the blood, which shows in anæmia, is
+usually caused by self-poisoning. When food ferments or putrifies in
+the colon, owing to faulty diet and other causes, certain toxins are
+created. These become absorbed into the blood and there destroy the
+red corpuscles. Walking is a good form of exercise, but it will not
+suffice alone to remedy this type of anæmia unless the diet and
+general habits of the patient are so arranged that the unsanitary
+condition of the colon is also remedied. The correspondent will find,
+if she studies the replies to others in this magazine, many details as
+to diet, etc., for rectifying bad conditions in the bowels.
+
+
+THE CORRECT BLENDING OF FOODS.
+
+ T.B.W. writes:--Is it inadvisable for a dyspeptic (and sufferer
+ from constipation) to eat salad, or cooked vegetables, and stewed
+ fruit at the same meal; also, do I do right in eating bread and
+ butter (preferably crust) or hard biscuits with stewed fruit or
+ soft vegetables, etc.? Would you please inform me the best Still
+ that I can obtain--preferably one that does not require much
+ attention, and is fairly portable, and that does not cost much to
+ work?
+
+I do not believe that it is right to mix salads or cooked vegetables
+with stewed fruits. It is better to take them at separate meals.
+
+It is, in my view, equally bad to take cereals (_i.e._ bread,
+biscuits, etc.) with stewed fruits. The reason is that cereals call
+for an alkaline form of digestion in the mouth which the acid fruits
+or the added sugar greatly retard.
+
+I believe strongly in the all-fruit breakfast or all-fruit supper,
+when fresh, dried, or even stewed dried fruits (possibly with some
+fresh cream) can be taken alone, without either cereals or vegetables.
+
+Cereals go best with salads and cooked vegetables, because of the
+alkalinity of the latter which harmonises with the salivary secretion
+intended for the digestion of grains.
+
+The Gem Still is the best to buy. It is well made and does not need
+much attention. The large automatic commercial size is, however, the
+best if any quantity is needed, as it works throughout the day with
+practically no attention when properly adjusted.
+
+
+DIFFICULTIES IN CHANGING TO NON-FLESH DIET.
+
+ F.C.W. writes:--I shall be glad if you will inform me from your
+ experience whether, after one has broken from the customary meat
+ diet and adopted a "reform" diet, there is any real difficulty in
+ reverting to the former state. I have seen it stated that
+ vegetarian diet did not call into action all the natural powers
+ of the digestive organs, and, this being so, the tendency was for
+ them to become weakened so that the food reformer eventually
+ found himself unable to digest meat. I believe some health
+ culturists make practice of taking meat twice a week. I have been
+ about seven or eight weeks on reform diet, and though better in
+ some ways have to confess to a feeling of deficient energy and
+ nerve power. I was once told by a doctor that I could not afford
+ to do without the stimulating effect derived from meat. I
+ propose making a test of the two methods, but should like to hear
+ from you in reply to the above query. Another new feature I have
+ noticed on the new diet is a thinness of the teeth and a feeling
+ of weakness in them generally.
+
+This correspondent omitted to supply his amended diet, so this was
+asked for and is as follows:--
+
+ _On rising_ (6.40).--Cup of cold water.
+
+ _Breakfast_ (8 A.M.).--Porridge, boiled egg or white fish done in
+ oven. Turog brown bread and butter; a banana; cup of coffee.
+
+ _Lunch_ (12.45, _at The Home Restaurant_)--Nut or cheese savoury
+ and one vegetable, a sweet dish, a few dates or a nut and fruit
+ cake.
+
+ _Tea meal (in office at 5)._--Bread and butter, piece of cake,
+ large cup of cocoa.
+
+ _Supper._--One of following:--
+
+ (a) "Force" with stewed prunes and junket; small piece of cheese
+ with wholemeal biscuit.
+
+ (b) Milk pudding and stewed fruit; small piece of cheese and
+ biscuit.
+
+ (c) Vegetable soup with toast.
+
+ (d) Bread and milk and fruit cake.
+
+ _On retiring_ (10 P.M.).--Cup of hot milk.
+
+The correspondent adds further:--
+
+ I have only been about eight weeks on food reform and the general
+ result, so far, is less susceptibility to draughts and ability to
+ sleep with windows open top and bottom, which I could not do
+ before, and a feeling of lightness and freshness. On the other
+ hand, I have not the same nerve force or power. I am of a highly
+ sensitive nervous disposition, and the latest trouble is with my
+ teeth. I was told yesterday by a dentist that a non-flesh diet is
+ harmful to them and that were one to eat meat only, there would
+ be no trouble! Perhaps it is owing to the dates and nut-and-fruit
+ cakes which I have been eating, or to a general weakened
+ condition due to want of finding my natural diet. I have a friend
+ who is a fine specimen of physical development, and on his going
+ on to food reform he had to have his teeth seen to. I suppose it
+ would not be the softer diet giving his teeth less to do. I am at
+ a disadvantage as I can get nothing specially prepared at home
+ and can only add to my diet articles which I can prepare myself.
+ I like my liquids fairly sweet and I like liquid foods. I am a
+ catarrhal subject and when this starts at the back of the nose
+ the hearing is affected.
+
+Whenever a person changes from a meat diet to one that is of the
+non-flesh order the digestive organs have to learn how to adjust their
+secretions to the altered diet. This applies just as forcibly when a
+food reformer wishes to return to the "flesh-pots." After a long
+course of abstinence from meat the food reformer does find it
+difficult to return to it. This is due not so much to the difficulty
+in digesting it as to the violent stimulation and grossening of the
+body which it induces.
+
+I have never heard of any food reformer who discarded meat for ethical
+or humane reasons who willingly returned to meat so that he could if
+necessary be in a position to digest it.
+
+With regard to the loss of energy and nerve power the correspondent
+must distinguish between real weakness and absence of stimulation. The
+first effects of discarding meat show a deficient energy due to the
+absence of stimulation. When this has passed it gives place to a
+feeling of buoyancy and energy which is permanent.
+
+The dental weakness is aggravated, if indeed it is not actually
+_caused_, by the milk puddings, porridge, cake and sugared beverages
+which are a feature of this correspondent's diet, and to the absence
+of salad vegetables. If he amended his diet somewhat as follows he
+should make steady progress in energy and general fitness:--
+
+_On rising._--Tumblerful of cold water.
+
+_Breakfast_ (7.15).--One lightly boiled, baked or poached egg; Veda
+bread and butter, a little watercress or other salad. A small cup of
+Hygiama in place of the sugared cocoa.
+
+_Lunch_ (12.45).--Nut or cheese savoury and one vegetable; baked
+pudding by preference for second course, or simply a nut and fruit
+cake; no dates.
+
+_Or_ salad with grated cheese or cream cheese, or flaked pine nuts;
+followed by a piece of the excellent wholemeal cake supplied at the
+restaurant this correspondent frequents.
+
+_Tea meal._--One cup of Salfon cocoa (unsweetened), preferably without
+other food.
+
+_Supper_ (6 to 7) (This meal is at present far too mushy).--Cream
+cheese, Veda bread with fresh butter or nut butter, salad, tomatoes,
+cucumber, etc., with dressing of pure oil and lemon juice.
+
+_Or_ simply fresh ripe fruit, with dried fruit and cream; no cereals.
+
+_On retiring._--Cupful of hot unsweetened lemon water, or weak barley
+water; no milk.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+_All Correspondence should be addressed (and all contributions
+submitted) to the Editors, _THE HEALTHY LIFE_, 3 Tudor Street, London,
+E.C._
+
+
+COTTAGE CHEESE.
+
+ WILDERTON, BOURNEMOUTH.
+ BOURNEMOUTH.
+
+ _To the Editors_,
+
+ DEAR SIRS,
+
+ _Re_ Mrs C.E.J.'s letter and the reply thereto: I should be
+ inclined to doubt the wisdom of making this from unboiled or
+ uncooked milk unless one had it from one's own cows and could
+ supervise the dairy oneself. The average milk that comes into
+ towns from country farms is--well, it's unthinkable. There's a
+ saying that what the eye doesn't see the heart doesn't grieve
+ over, but that doesn't alter the fact that the average cow is
+ none too clean, the average milker's hands and clothes (to say
+ nothing of his face, hat and head) none too clean, the
+ milking-place none too clean, and the circumstances of transit
+ such as don't make for cleanliness. I have put it very
+ moderately, as those who know country dairy farms will admit.
+ Those who particularly want clean cheese from uncooked milk
+ should buy it from a County Council dairy farm or similar
+ institution. Yours truly,
+
+ B.C. FORDER.
+
+
+WILL OTHER READERS DO LIKEWISE?
+
+Mrs E. BUMPUS writes (7th October 1913):--
+
+ I am ordering two copies each month from my local newsagent.... I
+ thought he might be induced to show copies of your publication in
+ his window.
+
+[An attractive blue poster is supplied each month free by the
+Publishers to all genuine agents who apply for the same.--EDS.]
+
+
+_THE HEALTHY LIFE_ IN THE LIBRARIES.
+
+Mr C.H. GRINLING writes (25th October 1913):--
+
+ I note the suggestion on p. 580 of the October number of _The
+ Healthy Life_. A friend enables me to ask you to send _The
+ Healthy Life_ regularly for one year to the Woolwich Public
+ Library, William Street, Woolwich. I enclose 2s. The librarian
+ will see that it appears on the magazine-room table regularly.
+
+[There is every reason why _The Healthy Life_ should be known and read
+in every public library in the United Kingdom. In this we are entirely
+dependent upon those readers who are ready to follow the excellent
+example of the above and other correspondents. A year's
+subscription--2s.--is a very small price to pay for bringing the
+message of this magazine before the public in this way. We should like
+to hear from readers in all parts.--EDS.]
+
+
+FRUIT-OILS AND NUTS.
+
+ WESTCLIFF-ON-SEA, 22nd Oct. 1913.
+
+ _To the Editors_,
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ With reference to the last paragraph of "Phosphorus and the
+ Nerves" on p. 579 of the October number, I should be obliged if I
+ could be informed through your correspondence columns (1) what
+ are the "fruit oils" recommended therein and (2) how they are to
+ be taken. (3) Is olive oil good to take? (4) Is it good for
+ children? If so how is it to be administered? (5) What nuts are
+ richest in phosphorus? I enclose my card, and remain, yours
+ truly,
+
+ W.W.
+
+(1) Any olive oil that bears a thorough guarantee of purity (such as
+"Minerva" Olive Oil, "Crême d'Or" Olive Oil, etc.); also any pure nut
+oil (such as supplied by Mapleton's or The London Nut Food Co.); also
+the pure blended oil sold as "Protoid Fruit Oil." Our advertisement
+pages should be studied for further details.
+
+(2) Suggestions were given on pp. xxxiii and xxxv of the November
+number.
+
+(3) Yes, excellent.
+
+(4) Yes, they usually take it more readily than adults, for the
+latters' palates are generally spoilt. For its use see _Right Diet for
+Children_, by Edgar J. Saxon, 1s. net.
+
+(5) Almonds and walnuts. If the nuts are found difficult to digest try
+them in a finely prepared form, as in Mapleton's Almond Cream, "P.R."
+Walnut Butter, or "Protoid" Almond Butter.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+
+ Lady Cheylesmore was wearing a magnificent cock pheasant's plume.
+ The eagle eye of the customs official caught sight of it and
+ handed her a pair of scissors to help her detach it.--_Daily
+ News._
+
+Now we know what a really well-trained eagle eye can do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Perhaps the only remnant of the awful sameness characteristic of
+ the typically English kitchen is the bacon and egg breakfast to
+ which the average Briton clings with wonderful tenacity. The mere
+ possibility of infidelity to that national dish is enough to make
+ one shudder. No one could be such an iconoclast as to suggest a
+ variant from the traditional breakfast; it would be table-treason
+ of the worst kind.--_Daily Telegraph._
+
+ A middle-aged Briton named Leary,
+ Of bacon and eggs got so weary,
+ That for no other reason
+ He committed high treason--
+ But whether he shuddered's a query.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Silver-fox furs are rapidly becoming more and more rare, and this
+ fact lends a special interest to the wonderful collection of
+ these skins now being shown this week by Revillon Frères at 180
+ Regent Street. These beautiful silver foxes, to the number of
+ over a hundred, are grouped in eight large showcases on the
+ ground floor, and represent the latest arrivals from Revillon's
+ Canadian outposts, where they have special facilities for
+ securing these rare skins.--_Daily Chronicle._
+
+A ninth large showcase containing specimens of the steel traps in
+which "these beautiful silver foxes" are caught, and in which they
+remain till "collected," would give added interest to the collection
+at 180 Regent Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sixty-six persons banqueted at Gorleston on a single "sea-pie,"
+ which weighed 200 lbs. Prepared by an old smack skipper, it was
+ built in three stories. The foundation consisted of beef bones,
+ and inside were six large rabbits, half-a-dozen kidneys, thirty
+ pounds of beef steak.--_Daily Chronicle._
+
+Not to be confused with the Gorleston Mausoleum.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HEALTHY LIFE, VOL. V ***
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28
+ The Independent Health Magazine
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Charles William Daniel
+
+Release Date: February 5, 2006 [EBook #17682]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HEALTHY LIFE, VOL. V ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Feòrag NicBhrìde, Laura Wisewell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<h1><i>The</i><a class="pagenum" name="Pg1" id="Pg1"></a>
+<br />HEALTHY
+<br />LIFE<br /><br />
+<small>The Independent<br />
+Health Magazine</small></h1>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="title">VOLUME V<br />
+<span class="smcap">July-December 1913</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="title">LONDON<br />
+GRAHAM HOUSE, TUDOR ST., E.C.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<h2 class="center">INDEX<a class="pagenum" name="Pg2" id="Pg2"></a>
+
+<br /><small>VOLUME V.&mdash;JULY-DECEMBER 1913</small></h2>
+
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Ballade of Skyfaring, A, S. Gertrude Ford, <a href="#A_BALLADE_OF_SKYFARING">490</a></li>
+<li>Book Reviews, <a href="#BOOK_REVIEWS">532</a></li>
+<li>Breathe, On Learning to, Dr J. Stenson Hooker, <a href="#ON_LEARNING_TO_BREATHE">630</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Camping Out, C.R. Freeman, <a href="#CAMPING_OUT1">438</a>, <a href="#CAMPING_OUT2">480</a></li>
+<li>Care of Cupboards, Florence Daniel, <a href="#Cupboards">530</a></li>
+<li>Castles in the Air, E.M. Cobham, <a href="#CASTLES_IN_THE_AIR">582</a></li>
+<li>Cloud-capped Towers, E.M. Cobham, <a href="#CLOUD-CAPPED_TOWERS">626</a></li>
+<li>Correspondence, <a href="#CORRESPONDENCE1">504</a>, <a href="#CORRESPONDENCE2">533</a>, <a href="#CORRESPONDENCE3">580</a>, <a href="#CORRESPONDENCE4">658</a></li>
+<li>Cottage Cheese, <a href="#CottageCheese">658</a></li>
+<li>Curtained Doorways, The, Edgar J. Saxon, <a href="#THE_CURTAINED_DOORWAYS">561</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Doctor on Doctors, A, <a href="#A_DOCTOR_ON_DOCTORS">637</a></li>
+<li>Doctor's Reason for Opposing Vaccination, A, Dr J.W. Hodge, <a href="#A_DOCTORS_REASONS_FOR">597</a></li>
+<li>Doctors and Health, <a href="#Doctors">633</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Fasting, A Significant Case, A. Rabagliati, M.D., <a href="#Fasting1">458</a>, <a href="#Fasting2">492</a></li>
+<li>Fear and Imagination, E.M. Cobham, <a href="#FEAR_AND_IMAGINATION">510</a></li>
+<li>Food and the Source of Bodily Energy, <a href="#Energy">507</a></li>
+<li>Fruit-Oils and Nuts, <a href="#FruitOils">659</a></li>
+<li>Futurist Gardening, G.G. Desmond, <a href="#FUTURIST_GARDENING">451</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Health Queries, Dr H. Valentine Knaggs:&mdash;<ul>
+<li>About Sugar, <a href="#Sugar">540</a>;</li>
+<li>Bad Case of Self-poisoning, <a href="#Poisoning">502</a>;</li>
+<li>Boils, their Cause and Cure, <a href="#Boils">498</a>;</li>
+<li>Canary <i>versus</i> Jamaica Bananas, <a href="#Bananas">579</a>;</li>
+<li>Can Malaria be Prevented? <a href="#Malaria">466</a>;</li>
+<li>Cereal Food in the Treatment of Neuritis, <a href="#Cereal">619</a>;</li>
+<li>Correct Blending of Foods, <a href="#Blending">655</a>;</li>
+<li>Concerning Cottage Cheese, <a href="#Concerning">617</a>;</li>
+<li>Deafness, <a href="#Deafness1">615</a>, <a href="#Deafness2">616</a>;</li>
+<li>Diet for Obstinate Cough, <a href="#Obstinate">618</a>;</li>
+<li>Diet for Ulcerated Throat, <a href="#Ulcerated">575</a>;</li>
+<li>Dilated Heart, <a href="#DSD">653</a>;</li>
+<li>Difficulties in Changing to Non-Flesh Diet, <a href="#NonFlesh">655</a>;</li>
+<li>Dry Throat, <a href="#DSD">653</a>;</li>
+<li>Eczema as a Sign of Returning Health, <a href="#Eczema">613</a>;</li>
+<li>Excessive Perspiration, <a href="#Perspiration">574</a>;</li>
+<li>Farming and Sciatica, <a href="#Farming">575</a>;</li>
+<li>Faulty Food Combinations, <a href="#Faulty">536</a>;</li>
+<li>Giddiness and Head Trouble, <a href="#Giddiness">468</a>;</li>
+<li>Going to Extremes in the Unfired <a class="pagenum" name="Pg3" id="Pg3"></a>Diet, <a href="#Unfired">543</a>;</li>
+<li>Long Standing Gastric Trouble, <a href="#Gastric">470</a>;</li>
+<li>Malt Extract, <a href="#Malt">539</a>;</li>
+<li>Neuritis, <a href="#Neuritis">538</a>;</li>
+<li>Onion Juice as Hair Restorer, <a href="#Onion">651</a>;</li>
+<li>Phosphorus and the Nerves, <a href="#Phosphorus">577</a>;</li>
+<li>Refined Paraffin as a Constipation Remedy, <a href="#Paraffin">652</a>;</li>
+<li>Saccharine, <a href="#DSD">653</a>;</li>
+<li>Stammering, <a href="#Stammering">654</a>;</li>
+<li>Severe Digestive Catarrh, <a href="#Catarrh">471</a>;</li>
+<li>Sciatica, <a href="#Sciatica">651</a>;</li>
+<li>Temporary &ldquo;Bright's Disease&rdquo; and How to Deal with it, <a href="#Brights">576</a>;</li>
+<li>Ulceration of the Stomach, <a href="#Stomach">541</a>;</li>
+<li>Unfired Diet for a Child, <a href="#Child">467</a>;</li>
+<li>Water Grapes, <a href="#Grapes">619</a>;</li>
+<li>Why the Red Corpuscles are Deficient in An&aelig;mia, <a href="#Anaemia">654</a></li></ul></li>
+<li>Health and Joy in Hand-weaving, Minnie Brown, <a href="#HEALTH_AND_JOY_IN">591</a></li>
+<li>Health through Reading, Isabella Fyvie Mayo, <a href="#HEALTH_THROUGH_READING">517</a></li>
+<li>Healthy Brains, E.M. Cobham, <a href="#HEALTHY_BRAINS1">448</a>, <a href="#IMAGINATION_IN_PLAY">474</a>, <a href="#FEAR_AND_IMAGINATION">510</a>, <a href="#IMAGINATION_IN_INSURANCE">546</a>, <a href="#CASTLES_IN_THE_AIR">582</a></li>
+<li>Healthy Homemaking, Florence Daniel, <a href="#HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING1">495</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING2">528</a></li>
+<li>Healthy Life Abroad, D.M. Richardson, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_ABROAD">559</a></li>
+<li>Healthy Life Recipes, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES1">462</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES2">571</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES3">610</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES4">641</a></li>
+<li>Hired Help, Florence Daniel, <a href="#HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING1">495</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING2">528</a></li>
+<li>Holiday Aphorisms, Peter Piper, <a href="#HOLIDAY_APHORISMS">508</a>, <a href="#MORE_HOLIDAY_APHORISMS">527</a></li>
+<li>How Much Should We Eat? <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1">442</a>, <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT2">477</a>, <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT3">513</a>, <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT4">563</a>, <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT5">593</a></li>
+<li>Human Magnetism, <a href="#Magnetism">505</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Imagination in Insurance, E.M. Cobham, <a href="#IMAGINATION_IN_INSURANCE">546</a></li>
+<li>Imagination in Play, E.M. Cobham, <a href="#IMAGINATION_IN_PLAY">474</a></li>
+<li>Imagination in Use, E.M. Cobham, <a href="#IMAGINATION_IN_USE">448</a></li>
+<li>Indication, An, Editors, <a href="#AN_INDICATION24">437</a>, <a href="#AN_INDICATION25">473</a>, <a href="#AN_INDICATION26">509</a>, <a href="#AN_INDICATION27">545</a>, <a href="#AN_INDICATION28">581</a>, <a href="#AN_INDICATION29">621</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Learning to Breathe, On, Dr J. Stenson Hooker, <a href="#ON_LEARNING_TO_BREATHE">630</a></li>
+<li>Letters of a Layman, I., <a href="#LETTERS_OF_A_LAYMAN">633</a></li>
+<li>Lime Juice, Pure, <a href="#Lime">534</a></li>
+<li>Longevity, A Remedy for, Edgar J. Saxon, <a href="#A_REMEDY_FOR_LONGEVITY">491</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Mental Healing, A Scientific Basis for, J. Stenson Hooker, M.D., <a href="#A_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_FOR_MENTAL_HEALING">456</a></li>
+<li>Midsummer Madness, Edgar J. Saxon, <a href="#MIDSUMMER_MADNESS">454</a></li>
+<li>Modern Germ Mania: A Case in Point, Dr H.V. Knaggs, <a href="#MODERN_GERM_MANIA_A_CASE">638</a></li>
+<li>More About Two Meals a Day, Wilfred Wellock, <a href="#MORE_ABOUT_TWO_MEALS_A_DAY">487</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>New Race, The, S. Gertrude Ford, <a href="#THE_NEW_RACE">601</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Ode to the West Wind, Shelley, <a href="#ODE_TO_THE_WEST_WIND">555</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Pickled Peppercorns, Peter Piper, <a href="#PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS1">464</a>, <a href="#PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS2">570</a>, <a href="#PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS3">609</a>, <a href="#PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS4">660</a></li>
+<li>Plain Words and Coloured Pictures, Edgar J. Saxon, <a href="#PLAIN_WORDS_AND_COLOURED">622</a></li>
+<li>Play Spirit, The, D.M. Richardson, <a href="#THE_PLAY_SPIRIT">602</a></li>
+<li>Play Spirit, The: A Criticism, L.E. Hawks, <a href="#THE_PLAY_SPIRIT_A_CRITICISM">628</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Quest for Beauty, The, Edgar J. Saxon, <a href="#THE_QUEST_FOR_BEAUTY">523</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Recipes, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES1">462</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES2">571</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES3">610</a>, <a href="#HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES4">641</a></li>
+<li><a class="pagenum" name="Pg4" id="Pg4"></a>Remedy for Longevity, A, Edgar J. Saxon, <a href="#A_REMEDY_FOR_LONGEVITY">491</a></li>
+<li>Remedy for Sleeplessness, <a href="#Sleeplessness">533</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Salads and Salad Dressings, <a href="#Salads">462</a></li>
+<li>Salt Cooked Vegetables, <a href="#SaltCooked">506</a></li>
+<li>Swan Song of September, The, S. Gertrude Ford, <a href="#THE_SWAN-SONG_OF_SEPTEMBER">523</a></li>
+<li>Sea-sickness, Some Remedies, Hereward Carrington, <a href="#SEASICKNESS_SOME_REMEDIES">484</a></li>
+<li>Semper Fidelis, &ldquo;A.R.,&rdquo; <a href="#SEMPER_FIDELIS">526</a></li>
+<li>Sleeplessness, A Remedy, <a href="#Sleeplessness">533</a></li>
+<li>Scientific Basis for Mental Healing, A, J. <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'Stenton'.">Stenson</ins> Hooker, M.D., <a href="#A_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_FOR_MENTAL_HEALING">456</a></li>
+<li>Scientific Basis of Vegetalism, The, Prof. H. Labb&eacute;, <a href="#THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM1">549</a>, <a href="#THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM2">584</a></li>
+<li>Significant Case, A, A. Rabagliati, M.D., <a href="#A_SIGNIFICANT_CASE">458</a>, <a href="#A_SIGNIFICANT_CASE_II">492</a></li>
+<li>Symposium on Unfired Food, A, D. Godman, <a href="#A_SYMPOSIUM_ON_UNFIRED">486</a>, <a href="#A_SYMPOSIUM_ON_UNFIRED_FOOD">648</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Taste or Theory? Arnold Eiloart, B.Sc., <a href="#TASTE_OR_THEORY">643</a></li>
+<li>Travels in Two Colours, Edgar J. Saxon, <a href="#TRAVELS_IN_TWO_COLOURS">605</a></li>
+<li>To-morrow's Flowers, G.G. Desmond, <a href="#Flowers">451</a></li>
+<li>Two Meals a Day, More About, Wilfred Wellock, <a href="#MORE_ABOUT_TWO_MEALS_A_DAY">487</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Vaccination, A Doctor's Reason for Opposing, Dr J.W. Hodge, <a href="#A_DOCTORS_REASONS_FOR">597</a></li>
+<li>Vegetalism, The Scientific Basis of, Prof. H. Labb&eacute;, <a href="#THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM1">549</a>, <a href="#THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM2">584</a></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>West Wind, Ode to, Shelley, <a href="#ODE_TO_THE_WEST_WIND">555</a></li>
+<li>What makes a Holiday? C., <a href="#WHAT_MAKES_A_HOLIDAY">557</a></li>
+<li>World's Wanderers, The, Shelley, <a href="#THE_WORLDS_WANDERERS">625</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg437" id="Pg437"></a></p>
+
+<div class="cover">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="coverleft">Vol. V<br />
+No. 24</span>
+<span class="coverright">July<br />
+1913<br /></span>
+<img src="images/title.png" width="220" height="330"
+alt="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C."
+title="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C." /></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+philosophers will all speak the same language and
+understand one another.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Claude Bernard</span>.</p></blockquote>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+<h2><a name="AN_INDICATION24" id="AN_INDICATION24"></a>AN INDICATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">S</span>ome laymen are very fond of deprecating the
+work of specialists, holding that specialisation
+tends to narrowness, to inability to see
+more than one side of a question.</p>
+
+<p>It is, of course, true that the specialist tends to
+&ldquo;go off at a tangent&rdquo; on his particular subject,
+and even to treat with contempt or opposition the
+views of other specialists who differ from him.
+But all work that is worth doing is attended by
+its own peculiar dangers. It is here that the work
+of the non-specialist comes in. It is for him to
+compare the opposing views of the specialists, to
+reveal one in the light thrown by the other, to help
+into existence the new truth waiting to be born of
+the meeting of opposites.</p>
+
+<p>Specialisation spells division of labour, and apart
+from division of labour certain great work can never
+be done. To do away with such division, supposing
+an impossibility to be possible, would simply mean
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg436" id="Pg436"></a> primitive savage. But
+we have no call to attempt the abolition of even the
+minutest division of labour. What is necessary is
+to understand and guard against its dangers.</p>
+
+<p>Specialisation <i>may</i> lead to madness, as electricity
+<i>may</i> lead to death. But no specialist need go far
+astray who, once in a while, will make an honest
+attempt to come to an understanding with the man
+whose views are diametrically opposed to his own.
+For thus he will retain elasticity of brain, and gain
+renewed energy for, and perhaps fresh light on,
+his own problems.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CAMPING_OUT1" id="CAMPING_OUT1"></a>CAMPING OUT.</h2>
+
+<h3>IV. <span class="smcap">The Five-Foot Sausage.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">T</span>he question of blankets and mattresses may be
+taken as settled. We can now sleep quite comfortably,
+take our fresh air sleeping and waking,
+and find shelter when it rains. But that same fresh
+air brings appetite and we must see how that appetite
+is to be appeased.</p>
+
+<p>Take a frying-pan. It should be of aluminium for
+lightness; though a good stout iron one will help you
+make good girdle-cakes, if you get it hot and drop the
+flour paste on it. You must find some other way of
+making girdle-cakes, and <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'of'.">if</ins> you take an iron frying
+pan with you, don't say that I told you to.</p>
+
+<p>Though it is obviously necessary that a frying-pan
+should have a handle, I was bound to tell Gertrude that
+I do not find it convenient to take handled saucepans
+when I go camping. I take for all boiling purposes,
+including the making of tea, what is called a camp-kettle.
+Most ironmongers of any standing seem to keep
+it, and those who have it not in stock can show you an
+illustration of it in their wholesale list. It is just like
+the pot in which painters carry their paint, except that
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg439" id="Pg439"></a>it has an ordinary saucepan lid. You should have a
+&ldquo;nest&rdquo; of these&mdash;that is, three in diminishing sizes going
+one inside the other. The big lid then fits on the outer
+one and the two other lids have to be carried separately.</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <a id="sausage" name="sausage"></a>
+ <img src="images/sausage.jpg"
+ alt="The Five-Foot Sausage"
+ title="The Five-Foot Sausage" height="332" width="450" />
+ <p class="caption"><i>The Five-Foot Sausage</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>You hang these camp-kettles over the fire by their
+bucket handles, from the tripod or other means of
+getting over the fire. Sometimes the bough of a tree
+high out of the reach of the flames will do. Sometimes
+a stick or oar thrust into the bank or in a crevice of
+the wall behind the fire is more convenient than a
+tripod. Again, you can do without any hanging at
+all, making a little fireplace of bricks or stones and
+standing the saucepans &ldquo;on the hob.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It is a simple thing to tie the tops of three sticks
+together and make a tripod. Then from the place where
+they join you dangle a piece of string, pass it through
+the handle of the kettle and tie it to itself, in a knot
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg440" id="Pg440"></a>that can be adjusted up or down to raise or lower the
+kettle from the fire. This knot is our old friend the two
+half-hitches. Pass the loose end round the down cord,
+letting it come back under the up cord, then round
+again with the same finish, and lo! the up cord makes
+two half-hitches round the down cord. You can slip,
+them up and put them where you like and they will
+hold, but you have to undo them to take the kettle
+clean away from the fire. So we add to our equipment
+a few pot-hooks or pieces of steel wire shaped like
+an S. Their use will be obvious. If we have three of
+them it is quite easy to keep three kettles going over
+one fire. They swing cheek by jowl when they all want
+the same amount of fire, but each can be raised or
+lowered an inch or several inches to let them respectively
+boil, simmer or just keep warm.</p>
+
+<p>These are the cooking utensils. A biscuit tin would
+make an oven and Gertrude says she must have an oven.
+For my part I would not attempt baking when camping
+out and I will say no more about ovens, except that
+all the biscuit tins in the world won't beat a hole in the
+ground first filled with blazing sticks and then with the
+things to be baked and covered with turves till they are
+done.</p>
+
+<p>I had great difficulty in persuading Gertrude to feed
+out of tin dishes like those which we use sometimes
+for making shallow round cakes or setting the toffee
+in. They are ever so much better than plates, being
+deep enough for soup-plates and not easy to upset when
+you use them on your lap. Any number of the same
+size will go into one another and a dozen scarcely take
+up more room than one.</p>
+
+<p>It was worse still when it came to a still more useful
+substitute, the camp equivalent of the teacup. In the
+first place we abolish the saucer, for the simple reason
+that we have no earthly use for it in camp. We take
+tin mugs with sloping sides and wire bucket handles.
+They fit into one another in the same accommodating
+way as the eating dishes. Gertrude was nearly put off
+this device altogether by Basil's remark that he had
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg441" id="Pg441"></a>only seen them in use in poulterers' shops, where they
+are put under hares' noses....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Basil, you, you monster,&rdquo; cried Gertrude, and I
+had to push those tin mugs as though I had been a
+traveller interested in the sale of them.</p>
+
+<p>The drinking of hot tea out of these mugs is quite
+a beautiful art. You hold the wire handle between
+finger and thumb and put the little finger at the edge
+of the bottom rim. It is thus able to tilt the mug to
+the exact angle which is most convenient for drinking.
+When Gertrude had learnt the trick, she became perfectly
+enamoured of the mugs. She sometimes brings
+one out at ordinary afternoon tea and insists that the
+tea is ever so much better drunk thus than out of spode.</p>
+
+<p>Smaller mugs of the same shape do for egg-cups,
+and the egg-spoons I take to camp are the bone ones,
+seldom asked for but easy to get in most oil-and-colour
+shops. Dessert spoons and forks and table knives are
+of the usual pattern, but the former can be had in
+aluminium and therefore much lighter than Britannia
+metal.</p>
+
+<p>The camping-out valise is by all means the rucksack.
+Never the knapsack. I am almost ashamed to say this,
+because as far as my knowledge goes the knapsack is
+now obsolete. It may be, however, that it lingers here
+and there. If you see one, buy it for a museum if you
+like but not for use. The bundle should be allowed to
+fit itself to the back, as it does in a canvas bag. Suppose
+now that you fix the V point of a pair of braces somewhere
+near the top of the sack and bringing the webs
+over your shoulders, fix them, nicely adjusted, to the
+lower corners of the sack, it will ride quite comfortably
+upon your back&mdash;that is, you have made it from a
+plain sack into a rucksack or back-sack. Get or make
+as many good large strong ones as you have shoulders
+in the party to carry them. Have them made of a
+waterproof canvas, green or brown, to reeve up tight
+with strong cord passed through a series of eyelet-holes
+and, if you would be quite certain of keeping out the
+rain, with a little hood to cover the reeved bag end.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg442" id="Pg442"></a>The great bulk of your luggage you will generally
+find it best to carry by wheeling it on a bicycle. Spread
+your ground-sheet on the floor. On that lay your
+blankets, doubled so as to make a smaller square, tent,
+mattress cover and bed suits on that, then your camping
+utensils and all other paraphernalia and roll the
+whole up into a sausage about five feet long, when the
+loose ends of the ground-sheet have been tucked over
+as in a brown-paper parcel. Tie it well with whipcord
+and fasten it to the top bar of your bicycle frame, leaving
+freedom of course for the handles and the front wheel
+to move and steer. Push the tent-poles through the
+lashings and start for your camp at a comfortable four
+or five miles an hour. You will find it easy to move
+camp at the rate of twenty miles a day and will see a
+great deal of country in the course of a fortnight.</p>
+
+<p>The sausage on the bicycle shown in the illustration
+may be taken to contain all the gear and a little food.
+The rucksacks will take the rest and each man's
+most precious personal belongings. There is a small
+parcel tied to the handle-bar, scarcely to be seen because
+it is smaller than the end of the sausage. It is a
+complete tent tied up in its ground-sheet.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">C.R. Freeman.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1" id="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1"></a>HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT:
+A WARNING.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>This article, by one of the pioneers of modern
+dietetics, is in the nature of a challenge, and is certain
+to arouse discussion among all who have studied the food
+question closely.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">W</span>hen men lived on their natural food, quantities
+settled themselves. When a healthy natural
+appetite had been sated the correct quantity of
+natural food had been taken.</p>
+
+<p>To-day all this is upside down, there is no natural
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg443" id="Pg443"></a>food and only too often no natural healthy appetite
+either. Thus the question of quantity is often asked
+and many go wrong over it. The all-sufficient answer
+to this question is: &ldquo;Go back to the foods natural to
+the human animal and this, as well as a countless
+number of other problems, will settle themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But supposing that this cannot be done, suppose, as
+is often the case, that the animal fed for years on
+unnatural food has become so pathological that it can
+no longer take or digest its natural food?</p>
+
+<p>Those who take foods which are stimulants are very
+likely to overeat, and when they leave off their stimulants
+they are equally likely to underfeed themselves.
+Flesh foods are such stimulants, for it is possible to
+intoxicate those quite unaccustomed to them with a
+large ration of meat just as well as with a large ration
+of alcohol. The one leads to the other, meat leads to
+alcohol, alcohol to meat. Taking any stimulant eventually
+leads to a call for other stimulants.</p>
+
+<p>How are we to tell when a given person is getting
+enough food, either natural or partly natural? Medically
+speaking, there is no difficulty; there are plenty of
+guides to the required knowledge, some of them of
+great delicacy and extreme accuracy. The trouble
+generally is that these guides are not made use of, as
+the cause of the disaster is not suspected. A physiologist
+is not consulted till too late, perhaps till the disorder
+in the machinery of life is beyond repair.</p>
+
+<p>Diminishing energy and power, decreasing endurance,
+slowing circulation, lessening blood colour, falling
+temperature, altered blood pressure, enlarging heart
+and liver, are some of the most obvious signs with which
+the physician is brought into contact in such cases.
+But every one of these may, and very often does, pass
+unnoticed for quite a long time by those who have had
+no scientific training. The public are extremely ignorant
+on such matters because the natural sciences have been
+more neglected in this country in the last fifty years
+than anywhere else in Europe, and that is saying a
+good deal. Hence diet quacks and all those who trade
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg444" id="Pg444"></a>on the ignorance and prejudices of the public are having
+a good time and often employ it in writing the most
+appalling rubbish in reference to the important subject
+of nutrition.</p>
+
+<p>Being themselves ignorant and without having studied
+physiology, even in its rudiments, they do not appear
+to consider that they should at least abstain from teaching
+others till they have got something certain for
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>If the public were less ignorant they would soon see
+through their pretensions; but, as it is, things go from
+bad to worse, and it is not too much to say that
+hundreds of lives have been lost down this sordid by-path
+of human avarice.</p>
+
+<p>On one single day a few weeks ago the writer heard
+of three men, two of whom had been so seriously ill
+that their lives were in danger, and one of whom had
+died. The certified cause of death in this case might
+not have led the uninitiated to suspect chronic starvation,
+but those who were behind the scenes knew that
+this was its real cause. A further extraordinary fact
+was that two out of these three men were members of
+the medical profession, whose training in physiology
+ought, one would have thought, to have saved them
+from such errors.</p>
+
+<p>The conclusion seems to be that they did not use their
+knowledge because at first they had no suspicion of the
+real cause of their illness. In other words, chronic
+starvation is insidious and, if no accurate scientific
+measurements are made, its results, being attributed to
+other causes, are often allowed to become serious
+before they are properly treated.</p>
+
+<p>These three men went wrong by following a layman
+quite destitute of physiological training, who <span class="smcap">appeared</span>
+to have produced some wonderful results in himself and
+others on extraordinarily small quantities of food.</p>
+
+<p>If the above tests had been made at once by a trained
+hand the error involved in such results could not have
+escaped detection, and none of these men would have
+endangered their lives. I myself examined the layman
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg445" id="Pg445"></a>in question and finding him not up to standard refused
+to follow him. The writer has no difficulty in recalling
+at least a dozen cases similar to those above mentioned
+which have been under his care in the last twelve
+months, and the three above mentioned were none of
+them under his care at the time of their danger.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, must be our conclusions in reference to
+these and similar facts of which it is only possible to
+give a mere outline here? I suggest that they are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<ol><li>Food quantities are of extreme importance.</li>
+
+<li>These quantities were settled by physiologists
+many years ago, and no good reasons have since been
+adduced for altering them.</li>
+
+<li>The required quantity is approximately nine or ten
+grains of proteid per day for each pound of bone and
+muscle in the body weight.</li>
+
+<li>Any considerable departure from this quantity
+continued over months and years leads to disaster.</li>
+
+<li>The nature of this disaster may appear to be very
+various and its real cause is thus frequently overlooked.</li></ol>
+
+<p>I will say a few words about each of these except the
+first, which is already obvious. The layman above
+mentioned asserted that he could live on but little more
+than half this quantity, but the food quantity really
+required is that which will keep up normal strength,
+normal circulation, normal colour, normal temperature
+and normal mental power. As we have got perfectly
+definite standards of all these normal conditions, serious
+danger can only be run into by neglecting to measure
+them.</p>
+
+<p>It is also possible to tell fairly accurately the quantity
+of food a man is taking in a day, and then, by collecting
+and estimating his excreta, the quantity also out of
+this food which he is utilising completely and burning
+up in his body.</p>
+
+<p>You would say that no danger should be possible with
+all these safeguards, and yet the above case history
+shows that of two trained physiologists, members of
+the medical profession, one died at least twenty years
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg446" id="Pg446"></a>before his time, and the other was in great danger and
+only recovered slowly and with difficulty. Another
+similar case came to the writer suffering from increasing
+debility and what appeared to be some form of dyspepsia.
+He was quite unable to pass any of the above-named
+tests as to physiological standards, and an investigation
+of his excreta showed that his food was at least one-fifth
+or one-sixth below its proper quantity and had
+probably been so for many months past. Some of his
+doctors had been giving his &ldquo;disease&rdquo; a more or less
+long list of names and yet had not noted the one
+essential fact of chronic defective nutrition and its
+cause&mdash;underfeeding. Naturally their treatment was of
+no avail, but when he had been sent to a nursing home
+and had put back the 20 lbs. of weight he had lost he
+came slowly back to more normal standards and is now
+out of danger. In this case there was marked loss of
+weight, and few people, one would think, would overlook
+such a sign of under nutrition. But loss of weight
+is not always present in these cases, at least not at first.
+Some people tend to grow stout on deficient proteid,
+and then the fact that some of the essential tissues of the
+body (the muscles, the heart and the blood) are being
+dangerously impoverished is very likely to be overlooked.
+In the case last mentioned the loss of weight
+was put down to the dyspepsia, whereas the real fact
+was that the &ldquo;dyspepsia&rdquo; and loss of weight were both
+results of a chronic deficiency in food.</p>
+
+<p>It is evident that some care about food quantities
+must be taken by all those who do not live on natural
+foods. For physiologists there is no difficulty in settling
+the question of quantity in accordance with the signs
+of the physiology of a normal body. That all, even
+physiologists, may run into danger if, while living on
+unnatural or partly unnatural foods, or while making
+any change of food, they do not consider the question
+of quantity with sufficient care.</p>
+
+<p>That the question of nutrition should be considered in
+relation to <i>every illness</i> even though it may appear on
+the surface to have no direct connection with foods or
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg447" id="Pg447"></a>quantities. As a matter of fact, the nature of the food
+and its quantity controls all the phenomena of life.
+Some twenty years ago most people lived fairly close to
+the old physiological quantities, now they have been
+cut adrift from these and completely unsettled and are
+floundering out of their depth. A most unsatisfactory,
+even dangerous, condition of affairs.</p>
+
+<p>For the public it will now probably suffice if they
+insist on raising the question of quantity whenever they
+suffer in any way. If they are unable to answer the
+question themselves let them go to a trained physiologist
+who can do so, and not to a diet quack. But muscular
+strength, endurance, mental and bodily energy, skin
+circulation, temperature and blood colour are all things
+which the public can see for themselves and from which
+they should in all cases be able to get sufficient warning
+to save them from the worst forms of disaster.</p>
+
+<p>Some people imagine that they eat very little, when as
+a matter of fact they have good healthy appetites.
+Others again think they are eating a great deal, when
+as a matter of fact they take very little. In both cases
+a physiological test of the excreta will give accurate
+information. I once had a medical patient who imagined
+that he produced great amounts of force and performed
+feats of endurance on wonderfully small quantities of
+food. His excreta showed, however, that he was merely
+under-estimating the food he took. A fat man may
+seem to be living on very little, but fat does not require
+to be fed, and his real bone and muscle weight is not
+large. A thin man may seem to require a large quantity
+of food, but he is really very heavy in bone and muscle,
+the tissues that have to be nourished. In all these ways
+appearances are apt to be deceptive for those who are
+ignorant of science and who do not go down to the root
+of the matter.</p>
+
+<p>It is not necessary to follow the given quantity of
+grains per pound slavishly and without regard to consequences.
+It is necessary to see that the required physiological
+results are obtained.</p>
+
+<p>If a patient says he can live on less than I ordered for
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg448" id="Pg448"></a>him and if he can pass the physiological tests satisfactorily
+I know that his bone and muscle weight has
+been over-estimated. On the other hand, if a patient
+falls below the physiological tests, though taking and
+digesting the quantities ordered for him, I conclude that
+his bone and muscle weight has been under-estimated.</p>
+
+<p>In all cases it is possible to obtain the best physiological
+results and to say when quantities are just right,
+neither too much nor too little.</p>
+
+<p>The evil effects of too much are not serious; they
+entail perhaps a little &ldquo;gout&rdquo; or some temporary loss
+of freedom from waste products.</p>
+
+<p>The evil effects of too little, if persevered in and
+continued, especially if some of these effects are attributed
+to causes which have no real existence, are deadly
+and dangerous, for they bring on an insidious deterioration
+both of function and structure which leads by
+several avenues, often miscalled &ldquo;diseases,&rdquo; to death
+itself.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">M.D.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTHY_BRAINS1" id="HEALTHY_BRAINS1"></a>HEALTHY BRAINS.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Comparatively few health enthusiasts or food reformers realise
+the necessity for mental, as distinct from bodily, hygiene, yet all
+real health has its roots in the mind. Moreover, it is only by
+studying the hygiene of mind that we are enabled to do work in
+greater quantity and of better quality than we should otherwise be
+capable of, and to do this without risk of strain on the nerves or
+injury to health. The articles under this heading put forward
+some of the elementary laws of mental hygiene.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3><a name="IMAGINATION_IN_USE" id="IMAGINATION_IN_USE"></a><span class="smcap">Imagination in Use.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">T</span>o some people any talk about the importance of
+training the imagination of children through their
+toys, games and studies seems fantastic and
+trivial. They compare it to feeding them on sweetmeats;
+they think it means substituting story books for
+real life and encouraging the easy exercise of fancy for
+the careful study of fact.</p>
+
+<p>But imagination is not a mere ornament to a life-work;
+it is rather one of its most valuable and necessary
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg449" id="Pg449"></a>tools. If it did no more than sweeten and adorn the
+world, it would be well worth having, well worth
+making considerable sacrifices to attain. But it does
+more than this. It bears much fruit as well as flowers;
+fruit that, if it ripens in suitable weather, endures and
+can be used for the service of man.</p>
+
+<p>There is a wonderful palm-tree, called the Tal or
+Palmyra palm, which in India and Ceylon supports six
+or seven millions of people, and &ldquo;works&rdquo; also in West
+Africa, where it is probably native. It gives its young
+shoots and unripe seeds as food; its trunk makes a whole
+boat, or a drum or a walking-stick, according to size;
+hats, mats, thread and baskets&mdash;in fact, almost all
+kinds of clothing and utensils&mdash;are made from the split
+and plaited leaves; gum comes from it, and certain
+medicines, jaggery sugar too and an intoxicating drink
+for those who desire it. In one of the museums at Kew&mdash;a
+wet day brings always <i>something</i> besides disappointment&mdash;there
+is a book made up of the very
+leaves of the palm, containing a Tamil poem enumerating
+more than eight hundred human uses to which this
+marvellous single plant can be put.</p>
+
+<p>Now the imagination is like a Palmyra palm. We
+stand a long way off and, looking up, say &ldquo;What a
+graceful tree! But what a pity it produces that intoxicating
+&lsquo;toddy&rsquo; and nothing else!&rdquo; Yet all the while
+food and clothing and shelter and travel and learning
+are all wrapped up in it, if only we were not too
+ignorant to guess, or too idle to seek.</p>
+
+<p>We talk as if the poet and painter had need of
+imagination, but not the student, the doctor, the philanthropist,
+the business man, whereas none of these
+can do work at a really human standard without
+imagination that is living, penetrating, active and yet
+trained and disciplined.</p>
+
+<p>A recent illuminating address to a body of students
+pointed out that Germany's immense industrial strides
+have been made possible by an education which draws
+men's minds out of narrow old grooves, and helps them
+to see and grasp wider possibilities. But the same
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg450" id="Pg450"></a>speaker went on to point out that the English worker
+has far more real initiative and imagination than the
+German, and that in our own country we have not even
+to make elaborate plans for developing these qualities,
+but rather to release them in our administrators so far
+as to prevent actually checking them in the children now
+growing up.</p>
+
+<p>Imagination in business, for instance, means new
+possibilities, fresh sources of supply and fresh markets
+to demand, economy of working and better adjustment
+of work to worker, so as to have less waste of our
+greatest capital, human time and power. America has
+taught us something in these respects; what we must
+do is to take what new light she has developed, while
+keeping our long-grown, well-earned skill which she
+has not had the chance to make.</p>
+
+<p>In research work, again, we need perpetually the
+synthetic and constructive imagination if individual
+work is not to become narrowly specialised and shut
+off from other divergent or parallel lines which would
+illuminate it. The other day I was told of a great
+surgeon who not only has six or seven assistants to
+help him in his immediate tasks, but also, since he is
+too busy in the service of humanity to have time for
+reading, has eight trained assistants whose business it
+is to read in many languages what is being done all
+over the civilised world in his own line, and keep him
+informed as to the development of experience. A
+wonderful advance on the crystallisation of individual
+method, this, and yet it needed but the imaginative
+projection upon scientific work of what every business
+firm and every political unit has long done.</p>
+
+<p>To transfer to our own concerns a method developed
+elsewhere is one of the most valuable services imagination
+can render. Almost all educational reform comes
+about thus, most mechanical inventions, a great part of
+economy and comfort in individual homes. Also,
+besides these particular advantages, the incessant
+coming and going between the different fields of activity,
+the circulation of attention which this use of the imagi<a class="pagenum" name="Pg451" id="Pg451"></a>nation
+involves, tends to vitalise and enrich not only
+the individuals who carry it out, but the whole social
+organism of which they form part.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the moral side not much need be said. &ldquo;Put
+yourself in his place&rdquo; is a very old and respectable
+recipe for growing justice in one's conduct, consideration
+in one's speech, sympathy in one's heart. As
+employer or magistrate, as teacher or nurse, as customer
+or shopman, as parent or husband or child we must all
+deal somehow with our fellow-men: honestly and truthfully,
+we mean, kindly and helpfully, we hope. But is
+it not the more or the less of our imagination that
+makes such dealings possible? Without it, we are cruel
+because of something we do not feel, unjust because
+there is something we do not know, unwittingly deceitful
+because there is something we do not understand.
+With it, our justice will support, our kindness uplift,
+our attempt at help will not be barren, but will awake
+response and raise the whole level of our human intercourse
+into a region of higher possibilities.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">E.M. Cobham.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="FUTURIST_GARDENING" id="FUTURIST_GARDENING"></a>FUTURIST GARDENING.</h2>
+
+<h3><a name="Flowers" id="Flowers"></a><span class="smcap">To-Morrow's Flowers.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">T</span>hese three months of July, August and September
+are the second seed-time. I think they must
+be the most proper sowing-time, for is it not
+clear that Nature sows seed, not in spring, but in
+autumn? At any rate, now we can do more towards
+making a perpetually beautiful flower garden than in
+any other season. The biennials, those that blossom in
+their second year of life and those jolly perennials that
+come up year after year and always stronger than
+before, without any trouble on our part, are best started
+in life not too long before the winter. Spring-sown
+seed sometimes forgets that it is biennial and blossoms
+rather futilely the same summer, and at other times it
+grows so lush and large by winter that it cannot stand
+the frost.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg452" id="Pg452"></a>Now we see the flowers in blossom in the vineyards
+of our friend Naboth and we know which we should
+most like in our own garden. There is an exquisite
+joy in begging or stealing a few seeds and bringing
+them home to blossom for us as they did for Naboth.
+I carry at this time a few small envelopes bought for
+a few pence a hundred at Straker's, and whenever I
+see something nice in seed I bag it. In another week
+it would drop beneath the plant it grew on and, not
+being cared for by a gardener, would be smothered or
+hoed up. In a nice little seed-bed all to itself it can
+unfold all manner of pleasure for its abductor.</p>
+
+<p>Plant your flower seeds on a nice ripe, rich bed&mdash;that
+is, one compounded of old and even half-used
+manure. Keep the seedlings watered as they grow and
+by judicious pricking-out give them the room they need.
+About October you can plant the best of them in the
+place where you want a good bush next year, and, if it
+is a perennial, you have for many years to come a
+beautiful plant with a personal history. Even if you
+have bought your penn'orth of seed there may be a
+pleasant anecdote connected with it. My garden is at
+present amazingly blue with Dropmore Alkanet
+(Anchusa). Three years ago I bought three seeds for
+a penny. Two of them came up. I slashed up the
+plants and now I have half-a-dozen clumps as well as
+a similar number left in the old garden whence I have
+removed.</p>
+
+<p>If you asked me what kinds of seed in particular you
+ought to plant for perennial flowers just now, I might
+want many more pages to tell you in. Let me give you
+a very short list of those that most appeal to me on the
+spur of the moment. It will be enough to go on with:&mdash;</p>
+
+<ul class="off">
+<li>Trollius (globe flower).</li>
+<li>Helianthemum (rock rose).</li>
+<li>Epilobium (willow herb).</li>
+
+<li style="margin-top:0.75em;">Hollyhock.</li>
+<li>Echinops (globe thistle).</li>
+<li>Anchusa Italica, Dropmore variety.</li>
+
+<li style="margin-top:0.75em;">Lupine.<a class="pagenum" name="Pg453" id="Pg453"></a></li>
+<li>Tritoma (red-hot poker).</li>
+<li>Heuchera (coral-root).</li>
+<li>Yarrow.</li>
+
+<li style="margin-top:0.75em;">Lychnis (garden campion).</li>
+<li>Inula (Elecampane).</li>
+<li>Funkia (Plaintain lily).</li>
+<li>Eremurus.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>This list is representative because it includes some
+species, such as Eremurus, Trollius and Tritoma, that
+are not usually grown from seed by the amateur. To
+raise these rather expensive monsters from pennyworths
+of seed is a floral adventure which brings its own
+abundant reward.</p>
+
+<p>I should be very proud of a garden that consisted
+entirely of plants that I had raised from seed. It might
+be one that had never had anything else in or the
+seedlings might gradually oust the bulbs and corms
+and grown plants with which the garden began. There
+would be many things there intrinsically as well as
+extrinsically valuable. Carnation seed, for example, is
+constantly producing new varieties, and to grow rose
+seedlings is even to court fortune. It is a long time
+before you see your rose. The seed takes sometimes
+two years to germinate, and then you have to wait a
+year or two before you get a typical blossom. The
+growers hurry matters by cutting a very tiny bud from
+the first sprout and splicing that on to an older stock.
+One of the advantages of having your roses grown
+from seed and on their own stocks would be that they
+could not produce wild suckers.</p>
+
+<p>I have just seen a wonderful grove of Aquilegias, the
+glorified columbine which has the centre of one colour
+and the outside petals of another&mdash;sulphur with mauve
+or yellow with pink, and many other varieties. The
+nucleus was grown from shop seed and the rest from the
+seed of the first-comers. The only thing to choose
+between them is that the new ones have produced a
+least one variety not represented in the first batch.
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg454" id="Pg454"></a>You may be sure that I am going to get some seed from
+here and raise some Aquilegias for myself. Good
+reader, go thou and do likewise.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">G.G. Desmond.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="MIDSUMMER_MADNESS" id="MIDSUMMER_MADNESS"></a>MIDSUMMER MADNESS.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">W</span>e had come, &ldquo;3.7&rdquo; and I, to the Boundary,
+a white, unpaved road which winds across
+the full width of Wimbledon Common, from
+the old Roman camp to the windmill. Simultaneously
+we cried a halt, I because I never cross that road
+without some hesitation, he because he wanted to get
+out of the folding go-cart in which he had been riding
+and turn it, with the aid of a small piece of string and
+a big piece of imagination, into a 40-horse-power motor
+car.</p>
+
+<p>On the map the road is not called the Boundary. If
+you want to know why I call it so I can only say that
+once you have crossed it things are different; I do not
+mean a difference merely of country or scenery, but a
+difference of atmosphere; better, and more literally, a
+change of spirit. To put it bluntly, I never knew the
+reality of fairyland until I blundered across that road
+one grey gusty evening ten years ago, and heard the
+tall grasses whistling in the wind. Since then the road
+has always been a frontier, not to be crossed without
+preparation.</p>
+
+<p>As &ldquo;3.7&rdquo; tumbled out of his go-cart I looked at my
+watch and saw it lacked but a few minutes to noon.
+It was just such a cloudless June day as must have
+inspired Shelley's <i>Hymn of Apollo</i>. No smallest cloud
+to break the dazzling blue; and, high above our heads,
+Apollo, standing &ldquo;at noon upon the peak of heaven.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>If it had been Midsummer Day I should have thought
+twice about crossing the Boundary. As it was, we were
+quite near enough to the 24th of June to make it risky.
+So, as &ldquo;3.7&rdquo; bent a tangled head over the bonnet of
+his Daimler, I flung myself down on the level turf
+beside him and stared across the road.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg455" id="Pg455"></a>Behind us and on either side were clumps of gorse
+bushes, and beyond them the immense level expanse
+of the open heath. Immediately in front was the road,
+sunk a foot beneath the turf, which comes right up to
+it, both on this side and that.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Another piece of string, please,&rdquo; said &ldquo;3.7,&rdquo;
+rummaging in my pockets without waiting for an
+answer, &ldquo;and a pencil, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And then I saw it. On the farther side of the road
+there is a stretch of short turf, some hundred yards
+wide; and beyond that an irregular line of silver birches;
+and beyond that the blue of distant hills, for the
+Common slopes down where the trees begin. Between
+the silvery wood and the road, through the midst of the
+wide belt of turf, and parallel with the Boundary, ran a
+river. There was nothing to be much surprised at, for
+it was just the kind of river you would expect to see
+running through the fields of fairyland. It was a river
+of grass.</p>
+
+<p>It was the slender-stalked, tufted, not very tall, grey-headed
+grass that grows quite generally in open country
+and wild places. But the wind and the sun now turned
+it into a river which ran fast between its banks of green,
+its waves silvery grey, quick-flowing waves, gleaming
+and dappled, an endless succession. It flowed from
+somewhere out of sight in the west, and disappeared
+to the east over the edge of the great slope that brings
+you down to the woods, vanishing, to all intents and
+purposes, over the edge of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Without taking my eyes off this astonishing spectacle
+I stretched out a hand and, catching &ldquo;3.7&rdquo; by the
+edge of his white smock, told him to run across the
+road to the grass and&mdash;paddle in it. I said it was
+better than motor cars. He made no comment on this
+but, after glancing warily up and down the road (for
+he has been brought up in wholesome awe of the entire
+tribe of automobiles), he crossed the Boundary, ran
+across the turf and plunged up to his knees in the river.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot be certain, but it is my considered opinion
+that Apollo stopped his golden chariot for the space of
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg456" id="Pg456"></a>a whole minute to look down at the golden-haired boy
+wading in that noiseless, fast-flowing river.</p>
+
+<p>In another minute &ldquo;3.7&rdquo; was back at my side, both
+hands full of the tufted grass he had pulled. I regret
+to say he tickled my ear with it.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="break">Honest, solemn reader, ardent food reformer, keen
+educationist, clear-headed moralist, practical-minded
+housewife, I tell you frankly there is no moral to this
+little episode. It throws no light on what to eat, or on
+the purchasing power of an English shilling, or on the
+ethical training of young children, or on the nature of
+neurasthenia. Fairyland, of course, is a childish fiction,
+Apollo a solar myth, a road is a road, grass is grass
+and heaven is a state of mind. I quite agree with you.
+But let me whisper something in your ear. If you
+should ever blunder across your Boundary, don't be
+surprised if things look queer on the other side; above
+all, whatever you do, don't let any strange river you
+may find flowing there carry you away, or it may bring
+you, spite of all your protests, through one of the gates
+of pearl into the City of God.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Edgar J. Saxon.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_FOR_MENTAL_HEALING" id="A_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_FOR_MENTAL_HEALING"></a>A SCIENTIFIC BASIS FOR
+MENTAL HEALING.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">T</span>here is a vast amount of loose talk, and innumerable
+assertions from irresponsible individuals
+concerning the wonders that have been
+achieved by Mental Healing, but naturally the scientist
+and physician, when dealing with such a question
+as this, has to put aside, not all enthusiasm, but
+certainly all emotionalism, and then, most carefully sift
+the evidence laid before him. The scientist here wants
+hard, dry, irrefutable facts; the responsible physician
+requires to know&mdash;by his own careful diagnosis or by
+an array of tabulated facts&mdash;the condition of the patient
+before and after treatment&mdash;that is, of the one who
+claims to have been cured by mental means. Innumer<a class="pagenum" name="Pg457" id="Pg457"></a>able
+claims are thus being made by patients and others,
+so that it is imperative for the unbiased physician at all
+events to consider the above question; this in order to
+give a reason for the faith that is in him, when he is
+known to be one of those who favour the metaphysical
+means of healing. Even the sciolist in the matter
+knows that in the case, say, of blushing, or blanching
+of the face, the action of mind over matter&mdash;of the
+body&mdash;is palpable; all admit that the quality of joy, for
+instance, will prove a splendid tonic; that despair, on
+the other hand, will pull down the bodily condition.
+But all this, we shall be told, is unconscious action;
+true, but fortunately we are now aware that by a
+forceful action of the will we can <i>consciously</i> direct or
+derivate, as the case may be, currents of nerve-force
+to any part of the body. Occultists have known this
+for many centuries. Joy, hope, faith: these are very
+potent factors in improving the health conditions&mdash;simply
+because they act upon the sympathetic nervous
+system, and this latter acts upon the circulation.
+Happiness dilates the blood-vessels. Fear contracts
+them. Thus, unbounded faith; renewed hope; sudden
+joy; enforced will-power; all have a marked effect upon
+bringing about an equilibriated condition of the circulation&mdash;just
+the same as a hot bath does, though not so
+rapidly or so perceptibly. Further, we must remember
+that all disease more or less is a stasis, a congestion,
+somewhere; we have only to dissipate this; to separate
+the cells; to expand the part, as it were, and &ldquo;resolution,&rdquo;
+as we call it in congestion of the lungs, takes
+place. So that it seems to me that we can fairly claim
+a strictly scientific basis for Mental Healing. I have
+always, however, maintained that the attitude of the
+patient's own mind has much to do with the result: in
+his consciousness there must be faith and hope in order
+to get the best effect.</p>
+
+<p>Judging, then, of the very remarkable and palpable
+changes which anyone can see occur on such superficial
+parts as the face and extremities, I can see no reason
+that, by an enforced mental action, the deeper parts&mdash;<a class="pagenum" name="Pg458" id="Pg458"></a>including
+any hidden diseased part&mdash;should not be
+altered for good. I am very confident that it is upon
+these lines, coupled, as they can always be, with advice
+as to clean feeding and right living generally, the
+physician of the future will largely depend for his cures.
+Thus we are fully justified in not only trying the system
+on &ldquo;functional,&rdquo; but also for &ldquo;organic,&rdquo; cases.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">J. Stenson Hooker, M.D.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_SIGNIFICANT_CASE" id="A_SIGNIFICANT_CASE"></a>A SIGNIFICANT CASE.</h2>
+
+<h3><a name="Fasting1" id="Fasting1"></a><span class="smcap">Account of a Fast, undertaken for the Cure of a Profound
+Blood Disease.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">T</span>he following account of a fast is worthy of attention. It
+is rigidly accurate <i>in principle</i>, as far as I could make it
+so, and I am responsible for its truthfulness. But the
+subject of it, feeling that he is engaged in a duty and &ldquo;labour of
+love,&rdquo; as he expresses it, is yet naturally anxious to prevent his
+identity from being discovered; and so, while the facts of the
+narrative are true in principle they have been varied in a few
+details for the purpose of preventing the recognition of the subject
+of them.</p>
+
+<p>They occurred in the history of a man of about 40 years of age,
+who fell ill of an infectious disease some 20 years ago, while living
+abroad. The exact time of the infection is not known. The
+patient was treated by qualified doctors living in the same country
+as himself, and there is no reason to believe that he was not
+properly and skilfully treated. He had, however, for years
+buoyed himself up with the hope that he should be able to come
+to England for the best treatment, and recently he found himself
+in this country for that purpose. It goes without saying that the
+eminent men consulted treated him after the most modern and
+approved methods, which were also, so far as knowledge goes, the
+most likely to benefit him. Not only as to treatment must it be
+assumed that the best was done, but the diagnosis also is supported
+by the authority of the doctors seen, and was confirmed by
+physiological and pathological investigation. This would be
+recognised if it were possible to publish names, places and dates
+which are withheld from the courteous reader for the reason
+already given. I can only say that I entirely concur in the
+diagnosis and in the suitability of the treatment.</p>
+
+<p>The man came under my care on a Sunday, the fast, which is
+the subject matter of this communication, having been commenced
+on the Friday six weeks before that day, the last food having been
+taken on the Thursday at 5 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> I saw him, therefore, on the
+forty-fifth day of the fast. His pulse was 59, soft, steady, regular.
+Temp. 96.8 degrees, about 11 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> He was able to be up, and
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg459" id="Pg459"></a>walked actively, all his bodily movements being active and his
+mind quite clear and rational. His weight on the day after I first
+saw him was, in the same clothes as when weighed at the
+beginning of the fast, 129&frac12; lbs. He said he weighed 171 lbs. on the
+machine at the commencement, and therefore the loss of bodily
+weight up to that time was 41.5 lbs. The average loss of weight
+during the 46 days of the fast was about nine-tenths of a pound
+daily if the 41.5 lbs. loss is divided by the 46 days of the continuance
+of the fast up to that time&mdash;41.5/46&nbsp;=&nbsp;.9 lbs. almost exactly.</p>
+
+<p>When he came to my consulting room on the forty-sixth day,
+about 2.15 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, the pulse was 64, temp. 95.6 degrees (thermometer
+3 minutes under tongue). He was much troubled with a nasty
+expectoration of mucus. His breath was very offensive. No
+enlarged glands could be felt in either groin&mdash;perhaps a trifling
+enlargement in the right. In middle of front border of right tibia
+a little irregularity is felt, and a small hollow, which he thinks is
+filling up; but it might be that the exudation on the bone immediately
+above and below the hollow is somewhat reduced, as this
+would equally give the suggestion that the hollow is filling up.
+There is a similar but rather smaller irregularity on the left tibia
+also. He felt rather weak that day, which he attributed to not
+having had his usual walk the day before. The nasal cavity
+consists of a large grey septumless cavern showing dry crusts.
+The issuing breath is most offensive. Patient had drunk freely of
+water, he said, to the extent of 4 or 5 quarts a day during the
+fast but when I said&mdash;do you mean that you have been taking
+over a gallon of water daily?&mdash;he rather hesitated, and did not
+think it was so much as that. He had not measured it and
+had taken it cold usually, though occasionally hot, and had taken
+it without stint as he wanted it. On the forty-eighth day of the
+fast he complained of being weak but worst of all, he said, his
+breath was very offensive to himself. It was so to me also&mdash;faint,
+fetid, putrid. His sense of smell was greatly impaired, so much
+so that he could not smell the offensiveness of the bowel-excreta
+which came away every day on using the gravitation-enema, and
+which were horrible to by-standers. It would seem from this as if
+his distress at the bad smell of his breath was probably due to a
+perversion of the sense of smell, which can be easily understood if
+we reflect that the disease-process was going on in the region
+where the smell-apparatus is specially located. The temperature
+was 96.2 degrees that morning the patient said. At 2 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> when I
+saw him the pulse was 68, regular, even, steady. He says he was
+feverish last night. I suppose he felt hot. He sleeps well, but says
+he hears the clogs of the mill-hands as they go to their work
+in the mornings. Has lost 2 lbs. weight in last 2 days. Temp.
+93.6 degrees to my observation 2.30 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> Says he feels &ldquo;done at
+the stomach.&rdquo; His voice is poor. Expectorates somewhat freely.
+A small blob of green thickish mucus in ordinary white mucus
+came away in my presence. Urine acid 1010. No glucose. Faint
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg460" id="Pg460"></a>trace of albumin to heat and picric acid: also to nitric acid. The
+right lachrymal punctum is blocked; the tears run down the
+cheek; and I failed to get even a hair-thick wire into it. Evening,
+pulse 65, temp. 97.2 degrees in bed with hot-water bottle. F&aelig;ces
+most offensive, no bowel-excreta coming away except to enema.
+Forty-ninth day. In bed, temp. 97.2 degrees, pulse 65, soft, steady,
+regular. No great emaciation of limbs. Showed me some green
+expectoration. He says it is from Salvarsan as it is exactly like
+what he was injected with! The motion to the enema as offensive
+as before, but the breath is less offensive to me: not so fetid.</p>
+
+<p>On this day patient completed 7 weeks of fasting. Feels sick
+and as if he would vomit. About midday he did vomit about
+a teaspoonful of dark green stuff, very bitter and acid (bile, I
+should call it, though he calls it &ldquo;pure citric acid&rdquo;) and
+immediately after that he got rid of a motion without the use
+of the enema, brown, dark and very offensive still. I think the
+breath, however, is rather less offensive; and so I thought also
+two days ago. Temp. 97, pulse 67, soft, steady, regular; about
+1.30 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> In bed since fiftieth day of fast. Not feeling very ill
+and not specially emaciated, though the buttocks are thinning;
+but legs and thighs and arms and forearms not specially thin.
+He came to me to be weighed on the forty-ninth day and weighed
+127&frac12; lbs. Fifty-second day of fast. Still in bed. Condition much
+the same as to pulse, temperature, etc., and as to emaciation
+so far as observation goes. Remained in bed, not because unable
+to be up, but because he thought it would be better for him to
+be resting. On the fifty-fourth day, as he still felt sick, I gave
+him, at his request, an emetic in the form of 10 grains of copper-sulphate.
+This was followed by <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'sickeness'.">sickness</ins> after about an hour,
+when he got rid of a very little of the same green stuff as
+before. Bile? But the difficulty is to understand how, after all
+this time of fasting, he should still feel sick and with inclination
+to vomit. On the fifty-fifth and fifty-sixth days of the fast he
+remained in bed, the condition being much the same. On Thursday,
+the fifty-sixth day, he broke the fast at 5 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, just 8 weeks
+after beginning it. He had meant to go on for 60 days, and I
+did not think that there would have been any danger in his
+doing so; but I did not press him to continue any longer. He
+took 3 oranges on that day; and on the Friday he took 5 more.
+I advised him not to increase the quantity of food too quickly.
+The breath has been quite sweet during the last two days. He
+has been too weak to take enemata, so we cannot say if motions
+would still have been offensive. And as there is no weighing
+machine in his room, we don't know the exact loss of weight
+sustained during the fast, though there is no reason to think that
+it has averaged more than .9 lb. a day. Up to the time of
+stopping the enemata, pieces of mucous membrane and mucus
+itself came away from the bowel, and the motions were very
+offensive. He seems to have a mucous enteritis without fever.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth day after breaking the fast, patient took 6
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg461" id="Pg461"></a>oranges, 4 apples and a banana; and he ordered much more food,
+which, however, I advised him not to take. On this day his
+bowels were opened naturally, with a very offensive motion.
+But the breath was much sweeter, in fact not offensive at all.</p>
+
+<p>On the sixth day he came to my consulting-room and weighed
+128 lbs. Pulse 80, soft, steady, regular. He had not slept all
+night and had had to be up no fewer than 6 times to have his
+bowels opened. No diarrh&oelig;a, he said, but full motions, the first
+3 very offensive. Breath not offensive. Has dry pharyngitis and
+is complaining of sore throat.</p>
+
+<p>Next day. Weight 133 lbs. Bowels acted again, 1 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, 3 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>,
+6 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, 9 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> and 1 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> Large motions. I told him I thought
+he was taking too much food. Pulse 104. Not sleeping well.
+Complained of sore throat.</p>
+
+<p>Eighth day. Weight 138 lbs., a gain of 5 lbs. a day for 2 days.
+Pulse 80 at 7 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> (his own statement), at 2.30 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> pulse 100,
+temp. 99.4 degrees. Bowels acted at 12 midnight, 3.30 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> and
+about 11 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> Went that day to have his photograph taken.
+The throat was better. Tongue dry and leathery. It was plain
+to me that he was taking too much food. He was having a
+mixed diet and taking much and often. He said his &ldquo;mouth was
+coming to pieces,&rdquo; and in fact the mucous membrane was glazed
+and peeling; also the lips. On the ninth day he returned home.</p>
+
+<p>The loss of weight can be seen from the following statement.
+On commencing the fast the weight was 171 lbs.</p>
+
+<table summary="The man's weight, measured on various days during the fast.">
+<tr><td>First day </td><td>weight was </td><td>171 </td><td>lbs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Sixth day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>165&frac12;</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Seventh day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>163&frac12;</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Twelfth day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>158</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Fifteenth day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>155&frac12;</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Eighteenth day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>150&frac12;</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Twenty-fifth day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>142&frac12;</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Forty-seventh day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>129&frac12;</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Forty-ninth day </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>127&frac12;</td><td> <span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Fast ended on fifty-sixth day. On the sixth day after breaking
+the fast the weight was 128 lbs. On the next day it had risen
+to 133 lbs. and on the following day to 138 lbs. In the first 47
+days of the fast the loss of weight was 43.5 lbs., or an average
+loss of .888 lbs. daily (43.5/49&nbsp;=&nbsp;.888 lbs.) The loss of weight for
+the last 8 days before the fast was broken is not known as
+patient was in bed, though it probably was at much the same rate
+as during the other times of the fast when the weight was taken
+on the scales.</p>
+
+<p>The following comparative measurements are interesting. Of
+course he had been eating for a week after the termination of
+his fast, so that the measurements taken on that day would be
+higher probably than if they had been taken seven days before,
+when he broke the fast.</p>
+
+
+<table style="width:90%;" summary="The circumference of various parts of the man's body, measured at the beginning and at the end of the fast."><caption><a class="pagenum" name="Pg462" id="Pg462"></a>Bodily Measurements.</caption>
+<tr><th></th><th colspan="2"><i>At Commencement<br />of Fast.</i></th><th colspan="2"><i>At Termination <br />of Fast.</i></th></tr>
+<tr><td>Forearm </td><td>11 </td><td>inches </td><td>9&#8541;</td><td>inches </td><td> </td></tr>
+<tr><td>Arm </td><td>11&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>8&frac34; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Hips </td><td>38 </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>32&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Thigh </td><td>21&frac14; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>16 </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Pelvis </td><td>37&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>30&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Calf<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> </td><td>15&frac14; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>13&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Neck </td><td>14&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>12&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Chest </td><td>38 </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>31&frac14; to 34&frac12; </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1">[1]</a> There was a bundle of varicose veins behind right calf.</p>
+
+<p>Patient kept a diary during his fast, but it does not seem
+necessary to reproduce its statements here. It shows that he
+walked about during the time, notes the state of the weather as
+foggy or very foggy or freezing, mentions that water was taken,
+sometimes hot apparently, as on 15th March, &ldquo;after glass of
+hot water, pulse 70, temperature 98&frac12; degrees.&rdquo; No doubt
+drinking the hot water had elevated temporarily the mouth-temperature,
+as it does. The diary also notes that he felt weak,
+had a bath, or did not have a bath, notes the pulse-rate, etc., as
+also the effects of the daily enemata. On the twenty-ninth day
+of the fast he took a bottle of Apenta Water. Such are samples
+of statements from the diary.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">A. Rabagliati, M.A., M.D.</p>
+
+<p><i>The <a href="#A_SIGNIFICANT_CASE_II">remainder of this article</a> deals with conclusions of great
+interest and value, and will appear in our <a href="#Pg473">next issue</a>.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES1" id="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES1"></a>HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.</h2>
+
+<h3><a name="Salads" id="Salads"></a><span class="smcap">Salads and Salad Dressings.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>For salads it is not necessary to depend entirely upon
+the usual salad vegetables such as lettuce, watercress,
+mustard and cress.</p>
+
+<p>The very finely shredded hearts of raw brussel
+sprouts are excellent, and even the heart of a savoy
+cabbage. Then the finely chopped inside sticks of a
+tender head of celery are very good; also young
+spinach leaves, dandelion leaves, endive, sorrel and
+young nasturtium leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Then there are the onion family (for those who can
+take them), the tender kinds, such as spring onion,
+chive and shallot being very good when chopped finely
+and used as a minor ingredient in any salad.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg463" id="Pg463"></a>The root vegetables should also be added in their
+season, raw carrot, turnip, beet, artichoke and leek,
+all finely grated.</p>
+
+<p>A taste for all the above-mentioned vegetables, eaten
+raw, is not acquired all at once. It is best to begin
+by making the salad of the ingredients usually preferred
+and mixing in a small quantity of one or two of the
+new ingredients.</p>
+
+<p>For those who find salads very difficult to digest, it
+is best to begin with French or cabbage lettuce and
+skinned tomatoes only, or, as an alternative, a saucerful
+of watercress chopped very finely, as one chops
+parsley.</p>
+
+<p>Any salad, however made up, should be served in
+as dainty and pleasing a fashion as possible. It is,
+perhaps, usually best to serve it ready chopped and
+shredded, and to allow each person at the table to take
+his or her own helping of &ldquo;dressing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>English people seldom serve salad in the French
+fashion&mdash;that is, quite dry, save that the dressing is
+well mixed in an hour before the meal. Readers who
+have been to France may have seen French peasant
+women whirling a wire salad-basket round their heads
+in order to dry the materials after the cleansing has been
+done. When dry, the green-stuff is torn with the hands,
+the dressing (and the French know all about salad
+dressings) is added and the whole allowed to stand
+some little time, so that by the time the meal is served
+there is a complete blending of all flavours.</p>
+
+<p>Not everyone likes this method; but it is certainly
+better than the customary method here, which too often
+leaves a little puddle of water at the bottom of the
+bowl.</p>
+
+<p>There are many ways of preparing good salad dressing
+without resort to vinegar, salt and pepper. The two
+prime necessities are (1) really good oil and (2) some
+kind of fresh fruit juice. Most people prefer lemon
+juice or the juice of fresh West Indian limes, well mixed
+into either olive oil, nut oil or a blended oil such as the
+&ldquo;Protoid Fruit Oil&rdquo; or Mapleton's Salad Oil. The
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg464" id="Pg464"></a>ordinary &ldquo;salad oils&rdquo; obtainable at grocers are seldom
+to be recommended; they almost invariably contain
+chemical preservatives and other adulterants. It is
+better to have the best oil and use it sparingly if need be,
+than take any faked product just because it is cheap.</p>
+
+<p>With most people the addition of pure oil assists the
+digestion of the salad, as well as serving other purposes
+in the body.</p>
+
+<p>Many excellent salad recipes and suggestions for
+novel yet simple &ldquo;dressings&rdquo; will be found in <i>Unfired
+Food in Practice</i>, by Stanley Gibbon.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2">[2]</a> 1s. net; 1s. 1&frac12;d. post paid, from the office of <i>The Healthy
+Life</i>, 3 Amen Corner, London, E.C.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS1" id="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS1"></a>PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>This, which is a regular feature of THE HEALTHY
+LIFE, is not intended as a household guide or home-notes
+column, but rather as an inconsequent commentary
+on current thought.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>An interesting booklet by Raymond Blathwayt with samples of
+Bath Mustard will be sent free on application to J. &amp; J. Colman,
+Ltd. (Dept. 49) Norwich.&mdash;Advt. in <i>Punch</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Rumours are also afloat that G.K. Chesterton has
+written a brilliant booklet on Eiffel Tower Lemonade,
+and that the Attorney General has been commissioned
+to write a highly interesting brochure on American
+macaroni.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I enclose you a photo of my baby, Willie, aged fifteen months.
+He was given up by two doctors, and then I consulted another,
+who advised me to try &mdash;&mdash;'s Food, which I did, and he is still
+having it. You can see what a fine healthy boy he is now, and
+his flesh is as hard as iron.&rdquo;&mdash;From an advt. in <i>Lady's Companion</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Evidently a case of advanced arterio-sclerosis.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>HEALTH BISCUITS. Nice and Tasty, handled by our 55
+salesmen daily.&mdash;Advt. in <i>Montreal Daily Star</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>One reason, perhaps, why both the public and the
+sales have declined.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><a class="pagenum" name="Pg465" id="Pg465"></a>
+WHAT WOULD YOU GIVE FOR A PERFECT SKIN?<br />
+Is 3d. too much?<br />
+Many perfect skins to-day are traced to a single sample.</p>
+<p class="sig"><span style="font-variant:normal;">&mdash;Advt. in <i>Lady's Companion</i>.</span>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The price is reasonable; but I think I would rather
+see a sample first, wouldn't you?</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>OUR SPECIAL FILLING FAST&mdash;Headline in <i>Daily News</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The correct antidote for the well-known &ldquo;starvation
+of over-repletion.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>Cold Anniversary Raised Pie and New Potato Salad.&mdash;From the
+<i>Seventh Anniversary Menu of The Eustace Miles Restaurant</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>I am told that one old gentleman, misled by the chef's
+quite innocent use of adjectives, protested to a waitress
+that the day was really very warm; also that a youthful
+wag obliterated the initial C from his menu with a pen-knife
+and then inquired which was the better vintage,
+'06 or '09.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>But to contend that there is no difference between a good yellow
+man and a good white man is like saying that a vegetarian chop of
+minced peas is like a chop of the chump variety.&mdash;<i>New Witness</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Chop-chop&mdash;as the good yellow man might be tempted
+to say if he came upon this specimen of white wisdom.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>Canvassers can make a very good profit by selling a patent
+ladies' folding handbag, also wristlet watches.&mdash;Advt. in <i>Daily
+Mail</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the only place for a patent lady is a
+registry office.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>CAKEOMA PUDDING? You cannot know how delicious they
+are until you have tasted them.&mdash;Advt. in <i>Lady's Companion</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>One of the things that would never have occurred to
+you if you hadn't seen it expressed so clearly.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Saxon.</span>&mdash;How cruel of you. Although I have not the honour of
+cap and gown, I do possess a Classical Dictionary. If I can help
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg466" id="Pg466"></a>further, write again. Regarding the recipe, it depends upon its
+nature. Perhaps <span class="smcap">Vera</span> is the lady to whom you should address
+your question&mdash;<i>Lady's Companion</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>My colleague, Mr Edgar J. Saxon, denies all knowledge
+of this affair. But I do wish he would be a little
+more careful in future.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Peter Piper.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTH_QUERIES1" id="HEALTH_QUERIES1"></a>HEALTH QUERIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Under this heading Dr Knaggs deals briefly month by
+month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on
+one side only of the paper, giving full name and address,
+not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
+When an answer is required by post a stamped addressed
+envelope must be enclosed.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Malaria" id="Malaria"></a>CAN MALARIA BE PREVENTED?</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>A. de L. (Lisbon) writes:&mdash;For five months I have been a strict
+&ldquo;fruitarian,&rdquo; and as I am obliged now to go to Mozambique
+(Portuguese East Africa) to remain there five rears, I should be
+much obliged to you if you kindly let me know what I must do
+to prevent the African fever and biliousness which seem to afflict
+all Europeans in that part of the world. Any hints you could give
+me as to maintaining health in such a climate would be most
+gratefully acknowledged.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not think that it is possible for any European,
+whether he adopts fruitarian or ordinary diet, to entirely
+escape malaria, since it is caused by a minute parasite
+which is forced into the blood by a certain form of biting
+mosquito.</p>
+
+<p>The parasite will, however, surely gain less hold on
+one whose blood is clean and pure and whose vital
+force is strong, than on one who dissipates his strength
+by partaking of meat, alcohol, tea, coffee and other
+stimulants, or who otherwise gets his blood into a bad
+state by faulty diet generally.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, the thing this correspondent should do is
+to live as much as possible upon the simple frugal fare
+of the natives. He can take raw coker-nut freely and
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg467" id="Pg467"></a>eat the fresh fruits which grow in this part of Africa.
+If he can obtain pineapple or papaw he will find these
+excellent to help him to retain his health and strength
+in this country.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Child" id="Child"></a>UNFIRED DIET FOR A CHILD: IS IT SUITABLE?</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs L.B.F. writes:&mdash;My husband and I are much interested
+in <i>The Healthy Life</i>, deriving much benefit and good advice from
+its pages. It is the only magazine, we find, which answers
+questions that we have long been puzzling over. Reading a work
+of the &ldquo;Montessori Method&rdquo; of training children last night I was
+disturbed to find I had, according to that book, been feeding my
+little boy, aged three years, all wrong. It says: &ldquo;Raw vegetables
+should not be given to a child and not many cooked ones. Nuts,
+dates, figs and all dried fruits should be withheld. Soups made
+with bread, oil, bread and butter, milk, eggs, etc., are the
+principal foods Dr Montessori recommends. She also advocates
+the use of sugar.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Our boy has nuts, ground and whole, all the fresh fruits and
+dried ones, salads, brown bread and nut butter, sometimes dairy
+butter, no milk, his food mostly uncooked, as we ourselves
+believe in. If Dr Valentine Knaggs would give us his opinion
+on this I should be very grateful. The boy is healthy, but I notice
+a slight puffiness below the eyes of late in the morning. Also his
+temper does not improve as he gets older. Will he be having too
+much proteid (nuts) for one of his years, or is the temper natural
+as a result of bad discipline. His father is away all day, and
+mothers are, as a rule, soft marks, are they not?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is difficult to answer fully a question of this sort,
+as so much depends on the child's temperament and
+environment. A frail, delicate child with the promise of
+high mental development requires a finer and softer
+grade of nutriment than one of a coarse animal nature
+with strong, well-developed digestive organs.</p>
+
+<p>All healthy children, especially boys (as Mr Saxon
+will attest!), are full of mischief and restlessness, which
+it is the duty of a mother or a nurse to divert into right
+channels.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> The display of temper is probably an indication
+of this not being done, though it <i>may</i> be due in
+part to the raw diet not suiting the child.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3">[3]</a> This correspondent, and all mothers of difficult children, should
+study the works of Mary Everest Boole, published by C.W.
+Daniel, Ltd.; also <i>The Children All Day Long</i>, by E.M.
+Cobham.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg468" id="Pg468"></a>The advice I would give would be to alter the diet
+and make it lighter.</p>
+
+<p>From my point of view, Dr Montessori has not given
+sufficient attention to the other side of the diet question,
+preferring to remain more on the side of orthodoxy.
+Moreover, her own work has been done in Italy, where
+a climate prevails which does not call for so free a use
+of vegetables and salads as is the case in our own
+cooler and bleaker clime.</p>
+
+<p>I suggest, as a beginning, the following diet might
+be tried, but it is necessarily impossible to guarantee
+good results unless the cause of the puffy eyes and
+temper have been definitely located by personal examination:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;A raw ripe apple, finely grated, or simply
+scraped out with a silver spoon.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast at 8.</i>&mdash;A scrambled egg on a Granose
+biscuit with a little finely chopped salad or finely grated;
+raw roots appetisingly served with a dressing of oil,
+lemon juice and a little honey. This to be followed by
+an &ldquo;Ixion&rdquo; or &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; biscuit, with fresh butter.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dinner at 2.</i>&mdash;Home-made cottage cheese, or cream
+cheese, or a nut meat (served cold out of the tin, or,
+better still, home-made). Two casserole-cooked vegetables,
+done with a little fruit juice and lemon to retain
+colour. This to be followed by a baked apple with
+cream and a little home-made, unfired pudding made
+of dried fruits.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper at 5.</i>&mdash;A slice of &ldquo;Maltweat&rdquo; bread, and
+butter, and a cupful of clear vegetable soup, or some
+hot water with some lemon juice added, and slightly
+sweetened with a little honey.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Giddiness" id="Giddiness"></a>GIDDINESS AND HEAD TROUBLE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs L.B.F. also writes:&mdash;I sometimes think I must make
+dietetic mistakes. My husband thinks I am perfectly healthy, so
+I do not say anything of the giddiness in the morning and after
+eating, a drowsiness and slight pain at the back of the head and
+underneath one of my ears. Also under my eyes is on some
+mornings quite swollen and puffed up. It is not so marked, but
+I am quite conscious of it. Our diet consists mostly of a salad,
+with bread or baked potato and cheese or ground nuts or cooked
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg469" id="Pg469"></a>brussels sprouts and a nut meat pie, apple pie and cream, with
+brown bread and butter, or a raw fruit meal, nuts, apples, grapes,
+figs, dates and no bread.</p>
+
+<p>Two meals a day, first in the morning at eight o'clock, second
+at two or three in the afternoon. A glass of hot water with
+lemon at nine <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, and the same in the morning. I do some
+exercises night and morning and am out in the fresh air often
+through the day. We live in the country and I have every chance
+of keeping myself healthy. Perhaps I should say I do not eat
+many nuts, finding them rather difficult to digest. Should I use
+an enema when I feel like this, or wait for natural results?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The symptoms of which L.B.F. complains are in all
+probability due to flatulence and to general disturbances
+of the digestive process.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it would be a good plan to make the diet
+lighter. The nuts could be omitted and cheese or eggs
+substituted. An evening meal would be helpful.</p>
+
+<p>As to the bowels, some senna and camomile tea at
+bedtime would help to clear them. Unless there is
+distinct evidence of f&aelig;cal retention in the colon it is
+better not to use the enema as a regular thing.</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;A tumblerful of Sanum Tonic Tea made
+with hot, preferably distilled, water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;An all-fruit meal consisting of nothing
+but apples, bananas, grapes, or orange, or any fresh
+ripe fruit that is in season.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dinner at 12.30.</i>&mdash;A cooked meal consisting of two
+casserole-cooked vegetables, with grated cheese as a
+sauce dressing, with some twice-baked or well toasted
+bakers' bread, followed by a baked apple and cream.
+(Omit nut meat pie and apple pie.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea meal at 5.</i>&mdash;2 oz. of cottage cheese or cream
+cheese, wholemeal bread and butter, small plateful of
+finely grated raw roots with an appetising dressing
+containing some &ldquo;Protoid Fruit-Oil.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><i>Bedtime.</i>&mdash;Tumblerful of hot water (preferably distilled)
+to which senna leaves and German camomile
+flowers (very little) have been steeped to infuse; or a
+cupful of dandelion coffee could be taken if the bowels
+are regularly acting.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a class="pagenum" name="Pg470" id="Pg470"></a><a name="Gastric" id="Gastric"></a>LONG-STANDING GASTRIC TROUBLE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>W.T. writes:&mdash;Having tried a diet, recommended in <i>The
+Healthy Life</i>, for a month I find the nuts and cheese are far too
+heavy for the apparent weak condition of my stomach, also that
+the salads and casserole-baked vegetables are too irritating to
+the membrane of the stomach. I have no desire to return to
+flesh food and ordinary feeding, which I feel would not be good
+for me. From eggs I cannot obtain any good results. The
+continuance of loss of weight is worrying me, being down to
+eight stone from eleven stone in twelve months. I feel satisfied
+it is only a question of diet, if I could only strike the correct
+one. I am naturally most anxious to regain some of my lost
+strength and weight. I am at present taking bread and butter,
+cooked fruit, and occasionally an egg, boiled rice, vegetables and
+a little dried fruit. No matter how light I make my diet I still
+suffer after every meal with dilated stomach and irregular working
+of the heart. Blood circulation is still bad and constipation
+is gradually getting worse. As before stated, I am anxious to
+succeed with the reformed diet, but I am really at a loss to
+know which way to proceed to make any progress. As I was
+in South Africa twenty years, and only returned to England just
+before this catarrh set in, is the climate here against my progress,
+do you think? I am so sorry to take up so much of your time,
+but shall be grateful for any help you can give me which will be
+greatly appreciated.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is difficult to advise how best to proceed in this
+case as our correspondent really ought to seek medical
+advice. Only in this way can he obtain really satisfactory
+guidance. For without knowing the state of
+his blood and the organs generally it is impossible to
+advise correctly. Speaking generally, until salads and
+casserole-cooked vegetables can be taken freely there
+can be no possible permanent cure.</p>
+
+<p>In many such cases the best way to train the digestive
+organs into a healthy state is to keep to a diet consisting
+chiefly of dextrinised cereals, which must be eaten dry,
+with some vegetables and as little fresh fruit as possible.
+This to be continued until little by little the raw salad
+vegetables are found to agree; then the rest is easy.</p>
+
+<p>A diet on the following lines would probably be a
+good temporary measure:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;One egg lightly boiled, poached or
+baked, with two Granose biscuits and fresh butter,
+eaten dry.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg471" id="Pg471"></a><i>Dinner.</i>&mdash;Brusson Jeune bread (one or two rolls) with
+butter, and small helping of vegetables, cooked at <i>first</i>
+in the orthodox way.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper.</i>&mdash;Plateful of boiled rice (cooked dry in the
+Indian fashion<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>) with a tablespoonful of good malt
+extract.</p>
+
+<p>No sugar, honey, stewed fruit, or dried fruit should
+be taken until improvement has set in. As little fluid
+as possible should be taken until the stomach has
+regained more tone and become more normal in size.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4">[4]</a> See <i>The Healthy Life Cook Book</i>. 1s. net (post free, 1s. 1&frac12;d.).</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Catarrh" id="Catarrh"></a>SEVERE DIGESTIVE CATARRH.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Miss S.L.P. writes:&mdash;I should like a little help as to diet. I
+have just had an attack of epidemic influenza with throat trouble,
+so that I feel very much run down and unfit for a diet too
+depleting in character. For over four years I have adopted a
+non-flesh diet on account of a tendency to chronic catarrh of the
+whole alimentary tract, due to rheumatic tendencies which affect
+me internally rather than externally. The continuous damp
+weather has produced much gastric irritation, and frequent
+acidity.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot discover a diet that is convenient and at the same
+time sufficiently nourishing. I lose flesh on what I take, and
+I have none to spare, though at one time I was inclined to be
+stout. My age is forty-eight.</p>
+
+<p>I take three meals a day. A light breakfast either of &ldquo;Maltweat&rdquo;
+bread or &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; Cracker biscuits and butter, with
+tomato or fresh fruit or occasionally an egg. For midday meal
+an egg or milled cheese, or nuts or cream cheese, with a baked
+potato and a conservatively cooked vegetable. Occasionally I
+have a little salad and grated carrot, but unless I am better than
+usual I cannot digest these. The evening meal consists of
+&ldquo;Maltweat&rdquo; bread or &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; Cracker biscuits or Granose
+flakes, with cream cheese. As a child I suffered constantly from
+colds in the head, but now my troubles are oftener internal.</p>
+
+<p>The action of the bowels is irregular. I depend chiefly upon
+an enema of warm water when constipation is present.</p>
+
+<p>I never drink tea, only hot water, or Emprote and water, or
+occasionally vegetable juices or fruit juices. I find I am better
+without much fluid.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>So far as it is possible to judge from this letter, this
+correspondent is suffering not only from stomach and
+bowel catarrh, but her condition as a whole is unsatisfactory.
+The vital force is depleted and the nervous
+system is not doing efficient work.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg472" id="Pg472"></a>She needs suitable treatment to remove the acid and
+toxins with which the system is evidently clogged.
+This is not an easy task, for as soon as elimination
+begins trouble arises in the form of influenza or other
+similar derangements. These are probably little else
+but attempts on the part of nature to rouse the vital
+force of the body into action with a view to clearing
+out the clogging poisons.</p>
+
+<p>Waste clearing should be done gradually. The skin
+should be made to act better by means of home Turkish
+baths, or by wet-sheet packs. Then mustard poultices
+can be applied <i>along the course of the spine</i> and massage
+with suitable manipulations can be applied to the
+muscles and bones which make up the spine. The daily
+practising of the excellent and simple breathing and
+bending exercises described in M&uuml;ller's <i>My System for
+Ladies</i><a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> will be very helpful. By means such as these
+the body will be gradually cleared of its poisons, and
+so the nervous system will be made to do better work.</p>
+
+<p>The diet specified can be continued.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5">[5]</a> 2s. 8d. post free from the office of <i>The Healthy Life</i>, 3 Amen
+Corner, London, E.C.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%; display:block; margin:1em auto 1em auto;' />
+
+<p><i>May we ask the co-operation of all our readers
+during the holiday season in the following way. On
+holidays you are bound to meet fresh people, and make
+new acquaintances, and even friends. We suggest
+you purchase a few extra copies of </i><span class="smcap">The Healthy Life</span><i>
+before you start and hand them on to any likely to be
+interested. People tell us the magazine is its own
+recommendation. This does not mean that you need
+not add your own. The circulation grows steadily, but
+it is far short of what it might easily be if every reader
+were to gain one fresh reader every month.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3>MORE APPRECIATIONS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>I want to say how very interesting and helpful I find <i>The
+Healthy Life</i>, and it is always a pleasure to buy an extra copy
+to give to friends, for I always feel it will do them good to read
+it, and perhaps make regular subscribers of them.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Bartholomew, <span style="font-variant:normal;">Knebworth.</span></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg473" id="Pg473"></a></p>
+
+<div class="cover">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="coverleft">Vol. V<br />
+No. 25</span>
+<span class="coverright">August<br />
+1913<br /></span>
+<img src="images/title.png" width="220" height="330"
+alt="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C."
+title="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C." /></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+philosophers will all speak the same language and
+understand one another.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Claude Bernard</span>.</p></blockquote>
+</div>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="AN_INDICATION25" id="AN_INDICATION25"></a>AN INDICATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">T</span>he pursuit of health, considered from the
+negative standpoint, is the flight from pain.</p>
+
+<p>And pain is the great mystery of life.</p>
+
+<p>James Hinton, himself a well-known physician
+of his time, attempted to solve the mystery of pain
+by showing that it is the accompaniment of imperfection.
+That what is now experienced as pain
+might be exquisite pleasure given a higher stage
+of human development.</p>
+
+<p>But this, after all, only shifts the mystery one
+step farther. Instead of the mystery of pain we
+have the mystery of imperfection. Yet to image
+perfection is always to image something incapable
+of growth or further development.</p>
+
+<p>Take, for example, a perfect circle. So long as
+it remains unbroken, flawless, the line (or infinite
+number of lines) composing it cannot be continued
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg474" id="Pg474"></a>or extended. But given a break in the line and it
+may be continued round and round, up and up
+(or down and down) into an infinitely ascending
+spiral. This possibility of extension depends on
+a break, on an imperfection.</p>
+
+<p>It does not follow, of course, that every flaw in
+human nature is always the starting-point of new
+growth, every failure a stepping-stone to greater
+knowledge, but the possibility is there. It is for
+men to see that they do not neglect their opportunities.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="IMAGINATION_IN_PLAY" id="IMAGINATION_IN_PLAY"></a>IMAGINATION IN PLAY.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Regular readers will recognise in this wonderfully simple and
+suggestive article a continuation of the series previously entitled
+&ldquo;Healthy Brains.&rdquo; The author of &ldquo;The Children All Day Long&rdquo;
+is an intimate disciple of one of the greatest living psychologists,
+and she has a message of the first importance to all who realise
+that true health depends as much on poise of mind as on physical
+fitness.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">T</span>he fruit of imagination ripens into deeds actually
+done in the service of man: its flower brightens
+the whole of life and makes it fragrant, from the
+budding-time of children's play and laughter to the
+developed blossoms of the creative imagination which
+we call painting or poetry or music.</p>
+
+<p>Play and art have this in common, that they are
+activities pursued for the sake of the activity itself, not
+as a means to any other object, not aiming at any
+material usefulness. Actually, of course, there is nothing
+more useful, on every scale of usefulness, than
+the development of the individual in art or play, but
+these would never be really themselves while an ulterior
+purpose formed a background to them in consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>Physical exercises devised for the sake of health are
+a more or less pleasant form of work; they do not take
+the place of play. Our ordinary work is usually more
+or less one-sided and unbalanced in the demands it
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg475" id="Pg475"></a>makes upon us; we therefore try to find what other
+set of movements will undo this unbalancement and give
+us back unbiased bodies. When that is done, and not
+till then, we get freedom, and it is at that <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'movement' but the misprint is corrected in the next issue (page 510).">moment</ins>
+that real &ldquo;play&rdquo; begins&mdash;the use of the freed muscles
+according to our own will and pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>The same thing is perhaps true in connection with our
+minds. We all see the fallacy of the old-fashioned
+hustlers' cry, &ldquo;Make your work your hobby; think
+of nothing else; let every moment be subordinated to
+the dominating idea of your career; put aside all sentimentalism,
+all laziness and self-will, all enthusiasm
+about things not in your own line of work.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We have come to see that this kind of effort leads
+often to nervous breakdown and early death; always
+to a certain narrowing of sympathy and hardening of
+method even in the career itself. So we conscientiously
+&ldquo;take up&rdquo; a hobby or a sport and set aside some hour
+or day for indulgence in it. We make it a duty to lay
+aside for the time being all idea of duties; part of our
+work is to learn to rest.</p>
+
+<p>So far so good. But does all this go far enough?</p>
+
+<p>Work imposed by any set of outer needs puts the
+whole being under a certain strain. The aim of remedial
+exercises, prescribed rest-times and legal holidays is to
+undo this strain, to unwind us from our coil by twisting
+us the other way.</p>
+
+<p>When this has been satisfactorily done, too often the
+person responsible thinks that this is enough. But it
+is really and truly at this moment that one is beginning
+one's real life.</p>
+
+<p>When the body is freed from strain and weariness
+is the time to leap and dance and sing and wrestle.</p>
+
+<p>When the mind is free from prejudice and weariness
+is the time for its original activity to begin; new
+thoughts spring up unbidden and the creative <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'admiration' but the misprint is corrected in the next issue (page 510).">imagination</ins>
+lives and grows.</p>
+
+<p>(In the sphere of will, many great sages have said
+that an analogous sequence holds good. When the
+whole emotional and moral nature has thrown itself in
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg476" id="Pg476"></a>a particular direction, and then an unwinding has taken
+place, the moment of completed renunciation has been
+said to be the dawn of some great new spiritual light.)</p>
+
+<p>Who does not know the peaceful activity of a Sunday
+evening, the fruitful quiet of a long railway journey or
+sea-voyage <i>at the end</i> of a holiday? Two friends walk
+slowly home together after an exciting expedition or
+debate; two girls give each other their confidence while
+brushing their hair after a dance.</p>
+
+<p>Why is this so? Nowadays people are very ready to
+answer the question by refusing the fact. It is waste
+of time not to be <i>doing</i> something strenuously. Rest
+is almost as strenuous as everything else; it is to be
+thorough while it is the duty on hand and is to fit
+exactly on to the work time, without overlapping but
+without interspace.</p>
+
+<p>In this way too often the imagination, the really
+individual part of the mind, is starved and atrophied.
+Especially in childhood there ought to be a space left
+between useful work and ordered play for the individually
+invented games, the pursuits that are not for any
+definite end, for dreams and lived-out tales, when the
+child may make what he likes, do what he likes,
+and in imagination be what he likes. If we scrupulously
+respected this growing-time we should soon
+have a race of sturdier mettle altogether. Just now
+this particular want is probably most nearly supplied
+among elementary school children than among those
+who have more &ldquo;educational advantages&rdquo;; they &ldquo;go
+out to play&rdquo; in the streets for hours every day, and
+one cannot help thinking that it is the vitality thus
+evolved that keeps most of them healthy and happy in
+spite of many hardships.</p>
+
+<p>In later life, if we really want to make something
+of our lives, we shall do well to insist an keeping such
+a margin of free time to ourselves. It need not be long.
+Five minutes, if one really sails away in the ship of
+imagination, will take us to fairyland and back again.
+But the five minutes (or the day in the country, or the
+week of quiet, or whatever we take or can get) must
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg477" id="Pg477"></a>really and truly be free; we must have the courage to
+seek for what we really want, and we shall have the
+inestimable reward of finding what we really are.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">E.M. Cobham.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT2" id="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT2"></a>HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></h2>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6">[6]</a> See <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1">July number</a>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">F</span>or some years I lived according to the advice
+given by &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; with regard to the quantity
+of proteid that should be taken. But experience
+led me to believe that it was wrong. In recent years
+my diet has consisted of the following quantities per
+annum:&mdash;</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Three to four bushels of wheat.</li>
+<li>Seventy pounds of oats.</li>
+<li>One bushel of nuts (measured in the shells).</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>And with these foods rich in proteid, I have taken
+plenty of raw vegetables and fruit, and three to four
+gallons of olive oil.</p>
+
+<p>I do not mention this as an ideal, in order to suggest
+another and better standard than that of &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; I do
+not think any such thing as a standard really exists or
+can exist. But I mention it to show how far I have
+travelled away from where I was.</p>
+
+<p>I take it that all food reformers will agree that the
+main reason for food reform is to make the body a more
+harmonious instrument for the true life of man, and
+that carries with it the belief that there is some correspondence,
+if we cannot yet see absolute unity, between
+the physical and the spiritual. Now the law of life,
+according to Christ, is one of continual progress towards
+perfection and I do not see how this will harmonise with
+the teaching of a fixed law for the body. All my experience
+and observation point to a progressive law for the
+body, and I do not know of a single fact contrary to it.</p>
+
+<p>My first point, then, is that there is no such thing as
+a standard of proteid needed by the body. All that can
+be said is this, that if you take a man who has been
+fed on a certain quantity for such and such a time and
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg478" id="Pg478"></a>then feed him on a certain other quantity, alterations
+in the physical condition will appear. But who can say
+whether these changes are attributable merely to a
+deficiency or to a previous excess? If &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; and
+his patients take excessive food they naturally get
+trouble from stored poisons when they reduce the
+quantity. But why put all the trouble down to present
+deficiency instead of to previous excess? To this I can
+find no satisfactory answer.</p>
+
+<p>If we have got our bodies into so hopeless a condition
+that we cannot use our God-given instincts, tastes and
+feelings in the first place, the wisdom of troubling much
+about the continuance of bodily life would be doubtful;
+and, in the second place, one would need most overwhelming
+signs of knowledge to substitute for them.
+But where are they? There is no agreement between
+those who have been taught physiology. On the one
+hand, &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; gives a proteid standard, now impossible
+to myself, and I believe to many others, for it
+would involve eating a nauseating quantity; and, on the
+other hand, another doctor, presumably acquainted with
+the same physiology, tells me I cannot eat too little, so
+long as I do not persistently violate true hunger and
+taste. Then another doctor gives quite a different
+standard, and a much lower one. If we discard our
+natural guides, which of the claimants to knowledge
+is to be followed, and is there any knowledge at all
+such as is claimed?</p>
+
+<p>Imagine what a mockery it would have been to give
+such a standard as that of &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; to the agricultural
+labourer about the middle of last century, a typical one
+with a large family, and one who worked as men do not
+work to-day, and had to rear his family on a few
+shillings a week. How could such <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original has an apostrophe after the 'a'.">a</ins> one have provided
+more than a fraction of what &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; says is necessary,
+either for himself or his children?</p>
+
+<p>The broad fact is, that all the hardest work of the
+world has always been done by those who get the least
+food. As one who has had some experience of labour,
+I doubt if the workers could have done so much if it had
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg479" id="Pg479"></a>not been for a spare diet. Certain it is, that since they
+have more to eat, they are much less inclined to work.</p>
+
+<p>My contention, then, is that there is no fixed standard
+of proteid needed by the body, but that the quantity
+depends on the development that is in progress and is
+only discoverable by the natural guides of appetite and
+taste, ruled by reason and love of others. Moreover,
+I contend that even if there were such a standard as
+&ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; says physiology has found, it obviously is not
+known.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot help recognising in &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; one whom I
+gratefully love and respect. He helped me on the road,
+and now that I differ from him I do not forget it, and
+I ask his forgiveness if I seem to be arrogant. He
+thinks I cannot see what he sees because I am underfed,
+and I think he cannot see what I see because he is
+overfed. In a sense we are both right, and we form a
+beautiful illustration of the different states of mind that
+belong to different physical conditions. I urge the
+laymen like myself not to be afraid of that musty old
+ill-shaped monster called Science<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> when he is up against
+the eternal truths that belong to every simple untutored
+man. Shun the monster as you would a priest, to whom
+he has a great likeness, and unite with me in a long
+strong pull to get &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; out of the rut in which the
+monster holds him, so that we may have him with us
+on the road, for he carries much treasure and we cannot
+do without him.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">A.A. Voysey.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7">[7]</a> I do not wish to be misunderstood. No sane man despises
+real science, but when the mixture of science and ignorance, which
+usually stalks about in the name of science, wants to usurp our
+heaven-born instincts we cannot but notice his ugly and monstrous
+shape. It is the function of science, or a true knowledge of details,
+to fill in the mosaic of the temple of wisdom, but the mosaic can
+never be the structure itself and is only useful and good when it is
+subservient to that structure and harmonious with it.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg480" id="Pg480"></a><a name="CAMPING_OUT2" id="CAMPING_OUT2"></a>CAMPING OUT.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Food Questions.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">&ldquo;W</span>e have to consider,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;the question of
+what food to take and how to cook
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Camping out,&rdquo; said Sylvia, &ldquo;ought to be a complete
+holiday from the food bother. Why not live on
+unfired food, such as tinned tongue, sardines and bottled
+shrimps?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Felix laughed a great laugh, and said:
+&ldquo;Just try and do a thousand miles on sardines.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Felix is Sylvia's brother, who has spent some twenty
+years in America, travelling for weeks through country
+that contained no people, and spending nearly two years
+in a single journey to Dawson City and home again.
+He plainly knows far more about bed-rock camping than
+anyone else in the family and we allowed him to take
+the floor for a time.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The first thing is bread.&rdquo; said Felix, &ldquo;because you
+can't do without bread. You must take some yeast or
+else some baking-powder with you to make it rise, or
+you must bake it very quickly so that the steam aerates
+it. You might take a Dutch oven with you, but it's
+nothing like the Dutch oven that you know in this
+country. It is an iron pot on three legs, with an iron
+lid. You stand it in the fire and cover the lid with hot
+brands and you can cook anything inside it&mdash;ducks and
+chunks of venison, and bread of course.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But Mr Freeman has barred the oven,&rdquo; said Sylvia,
+&ldquo;and if we are not going a thousand miles from home
+perhaps we can do without it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As you like,&rdquo; answered Felix. &ldquo;I only mention it
+so that you can get hold of the general principle. You
+can make very good bread in a frying-pan. You must
+mix the dough up stiff so that when the pan is nearly
+upright it won't tumble out. You fix the pan up with
+a prop behind it so that the dough faces the fire, quite
+close, and you draw some more fire behind it so that
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg481" id="Pg481"></a>the back is warmed as well. When it burns a good
+crust on both sides it is done.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What are flap-jacks,&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just pan-cakes made without eggs or milk,&rdquo; said
+Felix. &ldquo;You mix a quart of flour with a tablespoonful
+of baking-powder and put in water till it is just so thin
+that when you take up a spoonful and let it drop back
+you can see the shape of it for a few seconds before
+it melts into the rest. You fry the batter in bacon fat
+or butter just like pan-cakes, and the cakes are very
+good.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<a id="summer" name="summer"></a>
+ <img src="images/summer.jpg"
+ alt="A Summer Idyll"
+ title="A Summer Idyll" height="404" width="450" />
+ <p class="caption"><i>A Summer Idyll</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;That's a good tip for us,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;and another
+good thing to take is cuddy biscuits, a kind of captain's
+biscuit. Soak them a few minutes in water or milk
+and fry them. They're nice with tomatoes or anything,
+or by themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg482" id="Pg482"></a>&ldquo;Mebbe,&rdquo; said Felix, and his tone said, &ldquo;Mebbe
+not.&rdquo; &ldquo;I'm only discussing general principles, and
+you've got to work your own way out in the light of
+them. I've known an outfit come away without a
+frying-pan. How do you make bread then?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We had to give it up, and Felix went on: &ldquo;Open
+your flour sack, turn down the edge like it is in a
+baker's shop, make a little hole in the flour and pour
+in water to make a pond. Mix in what flour you want
+to use and get your dough into the shape of a snake,
+wind it round a stick and cook it like that. You've got
+your bread then like a French roll, and very good it is.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We all liked the idea of making bread every day and
+eating it hot. Here was something to be had in camp
+that you could not get at home. And we liked the
+idea of learning our cooking by means of first principles.
+Whether we liked it or not, Felix liked talking about it,
+and he began to grow anecdotal.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Once,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I met a whole lot of men, ten
+of them I should think, camped on a cold frosty night
+with nothing to eat. They were trying to do a journey
+of thirty miles on rough prairie and their horses were
+tired and they could not get on. They had brought
+their lunch and eaten it long ago, and they told me they
+were starving. They had nothing to eat, nothing to
+do any cooking with and no wood to make a fire with.
+I never saw such hungry people. They were new
+settlers just out from England and it was up to me to
+do something for them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;What have you got in that great waggon?&rsquo; I
+asked. They told me they had some sacks of flour and
+two frozen quarters of beef, but there was nothing to
+cook it in and no wood to make a fire.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There was any amount of cow-dung on the prairie,
+and it was dry as chips. I set them collecting that and
+soon enough had a fire. I filled a bucket with water
+and put it on to boil. I chopped off some meat and
+put it in. Then I made some dumplings and put them
+in. You just put them into boiling water, you know,
+and then they cook at once on the outside and don't
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg483" id="Pg483"></a>come to pieces. If they boil too much they get pappy,
+and if not done through they're not good. Most dumplings
+you eat in England are not done, but mine were
+just right and those ten hungry men had just as good
+a supper as anyone could wish for.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Tell us about the coffee you used to make,&rdquo; said
+Sylvia. &ldquo;What horrible stuff it must have been.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The very best coffee ever I drank,&rdquo; said Felix.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We used to make it in a pot that was nearly a yard
+high. We never turned out the grounds, but let them
+settle and put in a little more every time we made
+coffee, till the pot was so full that it wouldn't hold any
+more water.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don't see anything against it,&rdquo; I said, when Sylvia
+and Gertrude were both expressing their horror. &ldquo;There
+is no tannin or other bad principle in coffee and you
+never get anything worse out of it than you do at the
+first soaking.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The fellows that work the logs on the river have
+their own kind of coffee that they call drip coffee,&rdquo; said
+Felix. &ldquo;They have a tall pot like ours was and they
+tie the coffee in a sack above the water, so that the
+water never touches it, but the steam goes up and
+fetches it out in drops. They don't change the sack
+every time, but keep adding coffee till it won't hold
+any more.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The moral of which is?&rdquo; said Basil, who had for
+some time been growing impatient.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That there are plenty of ways of cooking an egg
+besides frying it,&rdquo; said Felix, &ldquo;and that a bit of
+common-sense is about the best article you can take
+with you out camping. Take your food as raw as you
+can get it and know how to cook it. Also know a good
+herb when you see it, and never overlook a chance of
+getting a meal from the country that will save your
+stores.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="sig">C.R. Freeman.</p>
+
+<p><i>Food reformers will have their own opinion about a
+diet of shrimps, sardines, tinned tongue and stale coffee
+when camping out: the most important part of the
+outfit is doubtless an adequate supply of common-sense.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg484" id="Pg484"></a><a name="SEASICKNESS_SOME_REMEDIES" id="SEASICKNESS_SOME_REMEDIES"></a>SEASICKNESS: SOME REMEDIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>In the April and May numbers of the present year we
+published an article by Mr Hereward Carrington entitled
+&ldquo;Seasickness: How Caused, How Cured.&rdquo; The
+following supplementary suggestions by the same well-known
+writer will be useful to many readers.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">A</span> very good plan, when you think of undertaking
+a voyage, is to begin to prepare for it several
+days in advance. For three or four days, before
+embarking, eat only very simple and somewhat laxative
+foods&mdash;such as fruits&mdash;so as to open the bowels well
+and tone up the system. This simple diet should be
+followed for the first two or three days aboard&mdash;of
+course not so rigidly, but taking care not to indulge in
+many heavy, greasy dishes. Unfortunately, the food
+on board is usually very rich and plentiful, and tempts
+one to eat. If one suffers from seasickness, there is
+not this same temptation, to be sure; but the malady
+may certainly be warded off, in the majority of cases,
+if only reasonable care be taken of the diet before and
+during the voyage, and if instructions herein laid down
+be followed.</p>
+
+<p>As before stated, drugs are as a rule useless for the
+cure of seasickness; but on occasion a &ldquo;seasick cure&rdquo;
+of some kind may prove effective. The harm which
+results from the drug may perhaps be more than
+counterbalanced by the benefits which the system derives
+from the cessation of seasickness. A preparation of this
+kind which is very highly recommended by many
+travellers is known as &ldquo;Antimermal,&rdquo; and though none
+of these remedies are to be recommended with assurance,
+this one&mdash;and perhaps one or two others&mdash;might
+at least be tried, in cases of dire necessity, when
+seasickness has already supervened.</p>
+
+<p>It is hardly necessary to say that the patient should
+remain in the open air continuously, until all symptoms
+of seasickness have paused. <i>Live</i> in your deck chair
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg485" id="Pg485"></a>until you feel quite well and able to get up and walk
+round. Do not attempt to go downstairs into the
+dining-saloon to meals, if you feel in the slightest
+&ldquo;squirmish.&rdquo; Rather have some hot soup or broth
+of some kind sent up to you, and drink it sitting in your
+chair. Do not be afraid to drink water at all times,
+even if you feel ill&mdash;as the water is easily returned, and
+it is less strain on the stomach to be able to bring up
+something than to find nothing in the stomach when
+an effort is made to eject what is not there. Water
+will serve to allay this strain, and thus serve a useful
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>In very severe cases of seasickness, the stomach of
+the patient should be emptied and washed out at once.
+This is usually an easy matter. Have the patient drink
+one or two glasses of water, warm or cold, with a little
+salt or bi-carbonate of soda added&mdash;say a teaspoonful
+to a pint of water. This will have the desired result!
+In extreme cases of seasickness, dry cold, such as
+ice-bags, placed behind and about the ears, will sooth the
+patient, and help to allay his suffering. Cold cloths
+to the forehead will also prove helpful. Full baths had
+best be omitted, until the attack has worn off, as they
+are injudicious on account of the reactions they induce.</p>
+
+<p>In prolonged cases of seasickness, there is often a
+craving for acids and fruit juices. The continued
+absence or diminution of the acid contents of the
+stomach, and the privation from normal food, accounts
+in part for this, and it is highly proper to satisfy such
+a craving&mdash;providing due care is taken not to add to
+the stomach's distress by taking too much juice, or the
+juice of unripe fruit, or by swallowing the fibre of the
+fruit, which is allowable only when recovery is
+complete.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Hereward Carrington.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="IMPORTANT" id="IMPORTANT"></a>IMPORTANT.</h3>
+
+
+<p>If readers who possess copies of the first number of
+<i>The Healthy Life</i> (August 1911) will send them to the
+Editors, they will receive, in exchange, booklets to the
+value of threepence for each copy.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg486" id="Pg486"></a><a name="A_SYMPOSIUM_ON_UNFIRED" id="A_SYMPOSIUM_ON_UNFIRED"></a>A SYMPOSIUM ON UNFIRED
+FOOD.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>In the November number we published a letter from a reader
+containing the excellent suggestion that readers who had experimented
+to any fair extent with unfired diet should be invited to
+contribute to a conference on the subject in </i><span class="smcap">The Healthy Life</span><i>,
+and that the symposium should be gathered round the following
+points</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<ul><li>(1) The effect of the diet in curing chronic disease.</li>
+
+<li>(2) Its effect on children so brought up&mdash;<i>e.g.</i> do they get the
+so-called &ldquo;inevitable&rdquo; diseases of chicken-pox, measles, etc., and
+<i>especially</i> have they good (<i>i.e.</i> perfect) teeth?</li>
+
+<li>(3) The effect of the diet in childbirth.</li>
+
+<li>(4) The cost of maintaining a household in this way, as compared
+with the cost under ordinary conditions.</li>
+
+<li>(5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional
+dietary (often found amongst food reformers)?</li>
+
+<li>(6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?</li></ul>
+
+<p><i>Two letters were published in the January number. Two more
+in February. Others will appear in future issues. We are anxious
+to receive a large number of personal experiences, but they must
+be brief, and classified under the above heads as far as possible.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="sig">St Albans.</p>
+
+<p>In response to your invitation I am sending you my experience
+with vegetarian dietary. Although, as you will see, this has not
+been altogether &ldquo;unfired,&rdquo; I think it should be of interest to
+many.</p>
+
+<p>(1) I became a vegetarian at the time of my marriage, nearly
+three years ago, my husband being already a vegetarian of eleven
+years. I considered this a good opportunity to commence.
+Previous to this I had for some time suffered from indigestion,
+which continued for a few months after marriage. I attribute
+the cure to the change of diet, and drinking hot water after meals.</p>
+
+<p>(2) We have one child eighteen months old, totally breast fed
+for twelve months, and another four months: on breast and Ixion
+Food and some fruit juice.</p>
+
+<p>She has never had any disease whatever, and so far her teeth
+are perfect and she has cut them quite easily. She is a bonny,
+sturdy little girl, and very intelligent.</p>
+
+<p>(3) With regard to childbirth, I previously followed the advice of
+Dr Alice Stockholme in &ldquo;Tokology,&rdquo; avoiding flesh meats and
+bone-making food and adopting a diet of fruit (chiefly lemons)
+and rice, brown bread and nut butter, wearing no corsets and
+taking frequent baths. The effect during pregnancy was highly
+satisfactory. I enjoyed perfect health the whole time, free from
+the usual discomforts, and at childbirth I received similar results:
+a speedy and safe delivery. Indeed, since marriage, my husband,
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg487" id="Pg487"></a>baby and myself, have been singularly free from even minor
+complaints.</p>
+
+<p>(4) As we do not have the specially prepared, expensive
+vegetarian foods (supposed to substitute meat), but mainly the
+simple foods, I consider the diet less costly than the meat diet.</p>
+
+<p>(5) We are honestly quite free from the craving for meat or
+meat foods.</p>
+
+<p>(6) In the summer-time we live principally on salads, cheese,
+rissoles, etc., made from beans, peas, lentils, etc., fresh fruits,
+brown bread and nut butter. In the very cold weather we seem
+to need rather warmer stuffs, such as porridge (carefully cooked)
+and cooked vegetables, etc.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">D. Godman.</p></blockquote>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+<blockquote>
+<p><span class="smcap">Brighton.</span></p>
+
+<p>I have read with the greatest interest the correspondence in
+<i>The Healthy Life</i> on the unfired diet. As the majority of your
+correspondents have not been living <i>exclusively</i> on unfired food, or
+have only done so for short periods, may I suggest that some of
+your correspondents or contributors live on an <i>entirely</i> unfired
+diet, <i>excluding dairy produce</i>, for a period of six or twelve months
+and then relate their experiences. In this way some valuable
+evidence would be obtained. At any rate I am prepared to do this
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>With reference to living on the unfired diet on 4d. a day, I
+have often had two unfired meals for less than 4d., and two meals
+a day are sufficient for anyone. Of course to do this one has to
+buy the food which is in season and therefore cheap. Dried fruit
+and nuts, followed by a cress salad with oil and lemon dressing,
+does not cost more than 2d. An unfired rissole made from grated
+carrot and flaked peanuts cost at most a penny, and if followed
+by dates or figs would be a sufficient meal, and 2d. would cover
+the cost.</p>
+
+<p>In conclusion, I have no difficulty in producing a &ldquo;two course&rdquo;
+unfired meal for 2d.&mdash;but perhaps I should have left the subject
+of cost for Dr Bell to deal with. Yours faithfully,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Alfred le Huray.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="MORE_ABOUT_TWO_MEALS_A_DAY" id="MORE_ABOUT_TWO_MEALS_A_DAY"></a>MORE ABOUT TWO MEALS A DAY.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">W</span>ith reference to my article, &ldquo;Two Meals a
+Day,&rdquo; which appeared in the May issue of
+<i>The Healthy Life</i>, several correspondents have
+asked me to give more particulars about my life and
+diet. I do so gladly; but I must be brief, as the
+demand upon space in this magazine is now very great.</p>
+
+<p>Resolved into a single sentence, what all my correspondents
+wish to know is this: Is a two-meal dietary
+best for all?</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg488" id="Pg488"></a>To this question, however, a definite answer cannot
+be given, for the simple reason that scientific experimentation
+with respect to food quantities and times of
+meals, etc., has gone such a little way, so that it
+would be <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'presumptious'.">presumptuous</ins> to set a limit in regard to meals
+and food reduction. To my mind, apart from the
+question of the quantity of food to be taken, there is
+a great and important field of inquiry open with respect
+to the effect of rest upon the stomach and the intestines,
+upon the digestive and assimilative powers of the body.</p>
+
+<p>Now the whole purpose of my article was to show that
+a reduction of one's dietary was a matter of training,
+of gradual adaptation, but also&mdash;and this is the important
+fact-of gradual strengthening. My theory is
+that the two-meal plan is possible owing to the immense
+economy in digestive energy that is effected through
+giving the stomach adequate rest, and also through
+keeping the blood stream pure and unclogged, almost
+absolutely free from surfeit matter. A rested stomach
+will get more nutriment out of a small amount of food-stuff
+than an overworked stomach will get out of a
+much larger quantity. But experimentation which is
+sudden and covers a few weeks only, is worse than
+useless, as it tends to disprove the very principles that
+a saner method of experimentation would probably
+establish. And if I can impress this fact upon the reader
+I shall have performed a good service.</p>
+
+<p>Carefully undertaken, and properly graduated, I
+believe there are few people in these days who would not
+greatly benefit by a reduction in the number of meals
+and in the quantity of food they take. By means of a
+healthy and cheerful habit of introspection&mdash;not morbid
+and feverish&mdash;I am firmly convinced that by cutting
+down their meals most people would not only greatly
+improve their health, but their mental and spiritual
+condition as well, and also greatly increase their capacity
+for work ... And if in this way we can effect such an
+improvement in our life and condition it does not really
+matter whether we get to the two or even one meal
+basis or not.</p>
+
+<p>As to myself, my work is chiefly literary and my life
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg489" id="Pg489"></a>moderately sedentary. But the fact is that I now have
+two moderate meals a day whereas I used to have four
+pretty good ones. But I have many friends whose work
+is mechanical, and demands much muscular energy, who
+are two-mealists. One lady I know, who is one of the
+healthiest, strongest and best physically developed
+persons I have ever met, is a two-mealist, and not only
+does she work at a mechanical occupation for ten hours
+a day, but on several evenings each week conducts a
+ladies gymnastics class as well. But in her case, as in
+mine, the two meal was an ideal that was gradually
+and slowly attained, and not a sudden reform. Indeed,
+the main thing to remember is that it is all a matter of
+training, it being quite impossible to say where the
+limit is. For of one thing I am quite sure&mdash;viz. that
+most people, were they to adopt a slow process of food
+and meals reduction, on the lines I suggested in my
+article, would be astonished at the result. The number
+of people one meets, chiefly among those whose life
+is more or less sedentary, who say they can't work as
+they should, are subject to pains and heaviness in the
+head, constipation and indigestion, is simply appalling;
+and on questioning such people I come to the conclusion
+that in the majority of cases it is because they eat too
+much or too often.</p>
+
+<p>My meals are very simple, and the simpler they are
+the better I like them. I like a cold lunch about noon,
+and a hot meal about six. I have tried a wholly uncooked
+diet, but as yet my body does not seem ready
+for it: perhaps it will be after a little while. The first
+meal usually consists of wholemeal bread and fruit,
+green or vegetable salads, just according to my needs
+at the time. In winter I take a more liberal supply of
+dried fruits and nuts. Pulses I eschew altogether.
+My second meal consists of a substantial entr&eacute;e with
+one or two conservatively cooked vegetables&mdash;occasionally
+I have a soup and a sweet in addition. But of
+course it is for everyone to find out his or her own ideal
+diet; and let me say that it is worth while to do so, even
+though it involves much confusion and perplexity during
+the period of experimentation.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Wilfred Wellock.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg490" id="Pg490"></a><a name="A_BALLADE_OF_SKYFARING" id="A_BALLADE_OF_SKYFARING"></a>A BALLADE OF SKYFARING.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanzadc">
+<span class="i0"><span class="firstletter">Y</span>e whom bonds of the city chain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet whose heart must with Nature's be;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ye who, bound to a bed of pain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dream there of torrent and tower and tree,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here behold them&mdash;the magic key,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Turned by a thought in yon gates of blue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Even now has revealed to me<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alps and Mediterranean too.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Why of the bondage of earth complain?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Wide as heaven is our liberty!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where are the streets and their smoke and stain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When to the land of the lark we flee?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where is the sight that we may not see,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cloudland's citadel passing through?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Switzerland beckons with Sicily,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alps and Mediterranean too.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Here, 'twixt walls with the marble's vein,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Oared on a river of gold are we;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There we watch, on a sapphire main,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">White fleets voyage to victory.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Day unto day flashes grief or glee;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Night to night utters speech anew,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Figuring forest and lane and lea&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alps and Mediterranean too.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza"><h4>envoy</h4>
+<span class="i0">Prince whose course through the world is free,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fare you better than dreamers do?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here are the mountains and here the sea&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alps and Mediterranean too.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="sig">S. Gertrude Ford.</p>
+
+<p>From <i>Lyric Leaves</i>, by S. Gertrude Ford. Cloth, 2s. 6d. net;
+2s. 8d. post free from <i>The Healthy Life</i>, 3 Amen Corner, E.C.
+This charmingly bound book makes an excellent holiday companion,
+for it contains many beautiful lyrics, all characterised by
+serious thought, generous human sympathies and a delicate
+imaginative quality.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg491" id="Pg491"></a><a name="A_REMEDY_FOR_LONGEVITY" id="A_REMEDY_FOR_LONGEVITY"></a>A REMEDY FOR LONGEVITY.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">O</span>nce upon a time there was a little boy whose
+parents took things very seriously. They
+answered all his questions with painstaking
+precision. At a comparatively early age he could prove
+that fairies were non-existent. At the same time his
+toys were marvels of mechanical perfection.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of seven he was sent to a very efficient
+school, where, being naturally a bright boy, he gained
+high marks every term and passed all the examinations,
+for he had a wonderful and well-trained faculty for
+remembering exactly what his teachers had told him.</p>
+
+<p>When he left school he entered a London merchant's
+office, where his knowledge of arithmetic was of the
+greatest assistance in bringing him to the front. Moreover,
+he could argue very tellingly with all the clerks
+and warehousemen, and always knew what the morning
+papers were saving about health, neck-ties or religion.</p>
+
+<p>In course of time he grew a moustache, joined the
+Territorials, was made a partner in the firm, married
+a well-educated young lady and became a strong
+supporter of the local Liberal Club, where his
+opinions were so well known that it was unnecessary for
+anyone seriously to combat them. He was never known
+to vote for the Conservative candidate or to lose his
+head. His concluding speech in the historic debate on
+The National Health Insurance Act will always be
+remembered, by those who heard it, for its earnest
+defence of the medical profession. In fact, the Mayor,
+who was in the chair, and was a doctor himself, warmly
+congratulated the speaker, who was evidently very
+pleased.</p>
+
+<p>Ten years later he became a Town Councillor, opened
+several Institutes for the Care of the Poor, and sent
+his second son to join the eldest at the same kind of
+school at which he (the father) had been so well trained.
+About the same date he bought a new edition of the
+Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica and carefully compiled a list
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg492" id="Pg492"></a>of facts and figures showing that idealists and all
+new-fangled ideas were the greatest danger to the increasing
+trade and expansion of the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of fifty he took a house at Surbiton and
+was continually congratulated on his hale and hearty
+appearance. His opinions were known and respected
+by all who met him. His sons were models of what
+the children of such a father should be, and they
+supported him in every argument.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of fifty-two he retired from business. A
+month later he had an idea; and it so interfered with all
+his opinions, and so affected his general health, that he
+died.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Edgar J. Saxon.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="Fasting2" id="Fasting2"></a><a name="A_SIGNIFICANT_CASE_II" id="A_SIGNIFICANT_CASE_II"></a>A SIGNIFICANT CASE&mdash;II.</h2>
+
+
+<p>He stopped smoking tobacco on the second day, and does not
+mean to resume its use. Of course he had no alcohol in any form during
+the fast, but he never has taken much alcohol, although he was
+not a pledged abstainer. The temperature was taken many times and
+seems to have been almost always subnormal, about 97 degrees
+Fahr., but this is not so unusual a condition as to call for
+comment. The chief cause of a subnormal temperature, in my
+opinion, is blocking of the body with too much food. No doubt
+in prolonged fasting the temperature may fall also; but sometimes
+a fast will be the cause of raising a subnormal bodily
+temperature, as happened in a case of mine in which on the
+twenty-eighth day of the fast there was a large elimination of
+urates by the kidneys and a rise of temperature from 96 degrees
+to 98.4 degrees. Subnormal bodily temperature has not received
+the attention which it deserves. It is usually one of the
+forerunners, or prodromata as they are called, of the onset of incurable
+diseases like cancer, Bright's disease or apoplexy. The commonly
+accepted view that the heat of the body depends upon the food,
+and that people eat blubber in the Arctic and Antarctic regions to
+keep the bodily heat up, is one of the chief causes for neglect
+of the study of subnormal temperature. And it is quite surprising
+that physiologists have not thought it necessary to explain why
+nature has provided sugar and palm oil and cocoa-nut oil and
+ground-nut oil in the tropical regions, as well as abundance of
+olive oil in the warm temperate regions of the earth if these foods
+keep the bodily heat up. They ought to have been more
+abundantly supplied in the Arctic and Antarctic regions if the
+accepted view is correct. Besides, if we must eat blubber to
+keep bodily heat up in the Arctic regions when the outside
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg493" id="Pg493"></a>temperature is 50 or 100 or more degrees lower than that of the
+body, what ought we to eat in the tropics to keep bodily heat
+down when the outside temperature is 50 or even 80 degrees
+above that of the body? Physiologists have not explained this,
+although assuredly an explanation is wanted. But the true
+explanation, the correct explanation, would have demolished the
+doctrine that bodily heat is due to the food, and so it has not
+been given. It is too simple to imagine that the bodily heat is,
+like the body itself and all its functions, the effect of the
+life-force that inhabits the body and builds up the body so that the
+body shall be a fit dwelling-place for itself&mdash;this explanation is too
+simple and too idealistic for modern science, which is less and less
+disposed, we are told, to invoke the aid of a force of life to account
+for vital phenomena, although it assumes an attracting force to
+account for gravitating phenomena, and an electric and chemic
+force to account for electric and chemic phenomena. Modern
+science (and ancient science, too, apparently) which sees well
+enough that an idealistic or a materialistic explanation would
+equally account for the nexus of the phenomena of the universe,
+deliberately and almost invariably prefers the materialistic
+explanation. She is anxious that we should be kept free of
+superstition. But the superstition that forces are the effects of things
+does not seem to distress her at all. And so we are told that
+gravitation is a property of matter, and are forbidden to think
+that perhaps gravitation, a force, procreates matter, a thing, in order
+that the effects of the fore may be perceived by dull sense. We
+are told that the function of the liver and the brain depends on
+the structure of the liver and the brain respectively and we are
+not allowed to think that perhaps the force of animal life,
+feeling the need of an instrument to secrete bile, on the one hand,
+and to secrete cerebral lymph to act as a vehicle for the conveyance
+of thought and emotion and higher things, on the other,
+introduces the liver with its elaborate structure and the brain with
+its still more complicated structure, in order that both the one
+function and the other may be well performed. And so, although
+all forms of kinetic energy (and among them zoo-dynamic, or the
+force of animal life) manifest warmth and luminosity as qualities,
+science attributes animal heat to chemic force and refuses to
+consider that perhaps zoo-dynamic uses chemico-dynamic for its
+own purposes, even if these purposes are unconscious, because
+the higher force always dominates the lower. Properly speaking,
+science is out of her sphere, though she does not seem to know
+it, in making these suggestions. When she keeps herself to the
+investigation of facts, their exposition, their sequence and their
+laws, in her painstaking and accurate manner, we accept her
+revelations thankfully, and beg her to allow us to make our own
+philosophic and other explanations in attempting to account for
+the existence, sequences and relations of the facts of life.</p>
+
+<p>After his return home, patient continued to gain weight, as
+might have been expected. On the seventeenth day after ending
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg494" id="Pg494"></a>the fast he weighed 140 lbs. and on the nineteenth day 144 lbs.
+On that day he received from a hospital a report that the reaction
+of the physiologico-pathological test was negative. This has
+naturally had a great effect on the patient; and it is worthy of
+very careful consideration. Of course one negative result may not
+be conclusive although it was positive before the fast. But if the
+result should be repeated, and especially if it should prove
+to be permanent, the importance of the fact can hardly be
+exaggerated, since the suggestion arises in our minds that perhaps
+we may be able to cure profound blood-poisoning by fasting,
+neither the usual treatment nor the use of Salvarsan enabling the
+investigator to say that the result of the pathological reaction
+was negative; but this has followed after a heroic fast of 56 days.
+The result if confirmed would not be unique. Quite recently I
+saw a specific ulcer close to the ankle-joint for which operation
+had been recommended. It seemed to me that operation would be
+likely to open the joint, and that therefore it was a risky
+proceeding. But under a restriction of the diet, putting the young
+man on barley-water for a few days and then advising him to
+eat once a day only, the ulcer became very much smaller, and no
+operation has had to be performed. Blood-poisoning of this
+nature, of course, is not caused by improper nutrition, but it may
+readily be believed to be aggravated by the ordinary conventional
+over-feeding to which, so far as I can see, we are all subjecting
+ourselves, especially as persons who put themselves in the way of
+contracting blood-poisoning do not generally belong to the class of
+those who are attracted by the suggestion that it is noble to keep the
+body under, and that if we do not strive to keep the body under, it will
+be very likely to keep us under. Although we shall be liable to be
+infected, however we live, still we may believe that we shall be
+more likely to be badly infected (if we put ourselves in the way
+of contracting disease) if we have been previously subjected to the
+bad effects of over-feeding. This consideration renders a possible
+cure by fasting, a not impossible suggestion. And if, therefore, we
+have in fasting the suggestion of a remedy which offers us the
+hope of eradicating such a fearful disease from the human system,
+it certainly behoves us to make use of it.</p>
+
+<p>As a rule it seems to me that bad forms of blood-poisoning
+of this nature are incurable. In three or four
+generations they destroy the strain affected by it, do
+what we will. Meantime it shows all the signs and
+symptoms of a hereditary disease, for the children are born
+suffering, showing a coppery rash, and old before they are young.
+And when they get a little older they have no bridges to their
+noses, their teeth are ill-formed, their vision is imperfect, their
+intellects dull. It seems as if nature could not forgive crimes of
+this nature. She seems to treat them as the unpardonable sin.
+If we find cancer appearing in a family at 55 years of age in 3 or
+4 successive generations, there is no proof of heredity in that.
+Inquire and see if like causes acting on like organisms in 3 or 4
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg495" id="Pg495"></a>successive generations have not produced the disease each time. The
+children are not born cancerous, and our efforts to prevent the
+disease may succeed. But children often <i>are</i> born with specific
+disease, and there is no doubt at all about its being a hereditary
+disease. Even now I should not like to sanction marriage in the
+case of this man who has heroically fasted for 56 days, although
+he seems for the present to have got rid of his disease. But the
+outlook is hopeful, more hopeful than I thought, and in the hope
+that the suggestion may convey a message of hope to those who
+are willing to do penance for crimes against the body, I send out
+these remarks. The opinion expressed by the patient that he was
+getting rid of the Salvarsan which had been injected into his
+blood to cure his disease is, of course, his own only. I offer no
+opinion upon it. But I think the whole case very instructive, and
+it will be deeply interesting to follow it up with special regard to
+the inquiry whether the pathological test remains negative. The
+reflective reader of these remarks will need no hint from me to
+suggest how a study of questions of this sort raises in our minds
+all sorts of other questions, physical, metaphysical, philosophical,
+social, religious; what are laws of nature, how they come to be
+what they are, whether they can be disregarded without paying the
+penalty, and whether we men are bond or free. Each of us will
+settle these questions for ourselves, for each of us is responsible
+for his own conclusion. But as to the inevitableness with which
+such questions do rise in our minds, I take it there can be no
+difference of opinion.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">A. Rabagliati.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING1" id="HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING1"></a>HEALTHY HOMEMAKING.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>For the benefit of new readers it seems well to explain
+that this series of articles is not intended for the
+instruction of experienced housewives. It was started
+at the special request of a reader who asked for &ldquo;a
+little book on housekeeping, for those of us who know
+nothing at all about it; and put in all the little details
+that are presumably regarded as too trivial or too
+obvious to be mentioned in the ordinary books on
+domestic economy.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">XXI. Hired Help.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">I</span>t does not seem proper to conclude the present
+series of articles without touching upon the
+&ldquo;servant problem,&rdquo; but I do not pretend to be able
+to solve it. It is a problem usually very difficult of
+solution by the homemaker of small means. If she has
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg496" id="Pg496"></a>but few persons to cater for, and is not the mother of
+a young family, she is often very much better off
+without hired help, except for a periodical charwoman.
+But it is not always indispensable to the woman who
+has other duties besides housekeeping.</p>
+
+<p>I am not here concerned with the housewife who can
+afford to keep more than one efficient servant. Indeed,
+I am hardly concerned with one who can employ a
+really good &ldquo;general&rdquo; at from &pound;20 to &pound;25 per annum.
+The person I am concerned with is the homemaker who
+can afford at most to employ an inexperienced young
+girl at from &pound;10 to &pound;14 per annum.</p>
+
+<p>I will draw the worst side of the picture first, for
+although it <i>is</i> the worst side it is true enough, as so
+many harassed housewives know.</p>
+
+<p>The young &ldquo;general&rdquo; often comes straight from a
+council school where domestic economy had no place
+in the curriculum, and from a home in name only.
+Such an one is usually slatternly and careless in all her
+ways, has no idea of personal cleanliness, and regards
+her &ldquo;mistress&rdquo; as, more or less, her natural enemy!
+She is &ldquo;in service&rdquo; only under compulsion, and envies
+those of her schoolmates whose more fortunate
+circumstances have enabled them to become &ldquo;young lady&rdquo;
+shop assistants, typists and even elementary school
+teachers. If she had her choice she would prefer labour
+in a factory to domestic work; but either a factory is
+not available, or the girl's parents consider &ldquo;service&rdquo;
+more &ldquo;respectable&rdquo; in spite of its hardships. Its
+hardships? Yes, it <i>is</i> its hardships that account for its
+peculiar unpopularity. For there are hardships connected
+with domestic service in small households that
+do not apply to other forms of much harder labour.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone who is familiar with the small lower
+middle-class household knows how often the life of the
+little &ldquo;general&rdquo; resembles that of an animal rather
+than a human being. All day long she drudges in a
+muddling, inefficient way, continually scolded for her
+inefficiency yet never really taught how to do anything
+properly. Her work is never done, for she is always
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg497" id="Pg497"></a>at the beck and call of her employers; yet she lives apart
+in social isolation, is referred to contemptuously as the
+&ldquo;slavey,&rdquo; and even her food is dispensed to her grudgingly
+and minus the special dainties bought for Sundays
+and holidays. This is domestic service at its worst, of
+course, but the prevalence of such &ldquo;places&rdquo; in actual fact
+is undoubtedly at the root of the young girl's objection to
+it. How can she help gleaning the impression that such
+work is &ldquo;menial,&rdquo; when her employers more or less
+openly despise her? Being human, how can she but
+envy those of her old friends who have their evenings
+to themselves? What contentment can she find in a
+life of drudgery unenlightened by intelligent interest
+in learning how to do something well? What wonder
+that all her hopes and ambitions become centred in the
+possession of a &ldquo;young man,&rdquo; and that reason&mdash;stunted
+from its birth for lack of room to grow&mdash;being
+entirely absent from her choice, she marries badly and
+too young, and becomes the mother of a numerous
+progeny as helpless, hopeless, stunted and inefficient
+as herself?</p>
+
+<p>Some conscientious women try to remedy this state of
+things by treating the girls they take into their homes
+as &ldquo;one of the family.&rdquo; This <i>may</i> answer well sometimes,
+but it has its drawbacks, both for the girl and
+the &ldquo;family.&rdquo; Husband and wife, brother and sister,
+inevitably find the constant presence of a stranger with
+whom they have little in common very irksome. While
+the girl herself is equally conscious of restraint when
+forced to spend her leisure time with her employers.
+She would usually infinitely prefer the solitude of the
+kitchen, if combined with a good fire, a comfortable
+chair and a story book.</p>
+
+<p>Among the girls I have spoken to on the subject I
+have not found &ldquo;socialist&rdquo; households popular. One
+girl I met refused to stay in such a place for longer
+than three days, because she &ldquo;never had the kitchen
+to herself.&rdquo; Another told me that she found it intensely
+boring to take meals with the family, because she was
+not interested in the things they talked about.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg498" id="Pg498"></a>I think that the ultimate solution of the &ldquo;servant
+problem&rdquo; will not be that every woman will do all her
+own housework, but that domestic work will become,
+on the one hand, very much simplified and, on the other,
+will be put on the same footing as teaching, nursing
+or secretarial work. That we are beginning to move in
+this direction is evidenced by the coming into existence
+of schools of domestic economy, to which &ldquo;ladies&rdquo; do
+not disdain to resort for training. This will undoubtedly
+result in domestic labour becoming a much higher-priced
+commodity than it is now, the housewife will have
+to pay at least as much for three hours help per day as
+she now does for nine hours, but the fact that the help
+will be skilled, combined with the greater simplicity of
+housework, will surely more than compensate for this.</p>
+
+<p>But what is the homemaker of limited means, who
+must have some help, to do under present conditions?
+This we must consider next month.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Florence Daniel.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTH_QUERIES2" id="HEALTH_QUERIES2"></a>HEALTH QUERIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Under this heading Dr Knaggs deals briefly month by
+month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on
+one side only of the paper, giving full name and address,
+not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
+When an answer is required by post a stamped addressed
+envelope must be enclosed.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Boils" id="Boils"></a>BOILS: THEIR CAUSE AND CURE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Miss L.C. writes:&mdash;I should be deeply indebted to you if you
+would advise me in the following matter. I have been suffering
+from a recurrence of boils on different parts of my body during
+the last six months. I have consulted a local doctor, but he can
+find no reason for their appearance, but suggested I should try a
+mixed diet, to include some animal food, rather than adhere to
+vegetarianism as I have done for some two years past.</p>
+
+<p>My diet is about as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;Tumblerful of hot water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast</i> (eight o'clock).&mdash;One egg, toasted bread (wholemeal)
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg499" id="Pg499"></a>and butter, with either a little lettuce or marmalade and either
+weak tea or cocoa.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch</i> (one o'clock).&mdash;Steamed green or root vegetable, with
+cheese sauce or macaroni cheese or similar savoury, or nuts.
+Boiled or baked pudding or stewed fruit with custard or blanc
+mange.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea</i> (four o'clock).&mdash;Tea or cocoa, with or without a little
+bread and butter and cake.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper</i> (7 o'clock).&mdash;Vegetable soup, milk pudding and a little
+cheese, butter and salad and wholemeal bread.</p>
+
+<p>I am forty-nine years of age, lead a fairly active life, frequently
+taking walking exercise. I am very tall and weigh twelve stone.
+Have had no serious illness, but been more or less an&aelig;mic all my
+life.</p>
+
+<p>If you can tell me whether there is anything wrong in connection
+with my diet and suggest the cause of, and treatment for, the
+boils I shall be exceedingly obliged.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In order to help this correspondent to permanently
+get rid of these boils, we must first ascertain what those
+troublesome manifestations are and look to the causes
+which produce them.</p>
+
+<p>A boil is a small, tense, painful, inflammatory swelling
+appearing in or upon the skin, and is due to the local
+death or gangrene of a small portion of the skin's
+surface. This eventually comes away in the form of
+a core, and, until this has cleared away, the boil will
+not heal or cease to be painful.</p>
+
+<p>Boils occur chiefly on the neck, arms or buttocks. If
+very large they are known as carbuncles, and if they
+occur on the fingers or toes they are described as whitlows.
+It is often the friction of a frayed-out collar or
+cuff, of tight waist clothing, or, in the case of whitlows,
+the introduction of some irritant or poison between the
+nail and the skin that determines the precise site at
+which they will come.</p>
+
+<p>Boils, although rarely dangerous to life, are usually
+accompanied by pain severe out of all proportion to
+the extent of surface involved. This gives rise to much
+broken rest and loss of vitality, which at once ceases
+when the boil has finished its course. Boils usually
+occur in series or crops.</p>
+
+<p>Now large numbers of people wear collars and cuffs
+with frayed edges, or handle irritants with their fingers,
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg500" id="Pg500"></a>but they do not necessarily contract boils or whitlows.
+Therefore, we see that there must be other factors to
+be taken into consideration to account for their presence.
+The orthodox germ-loving practitioner may tell
+you that a boil is a purely local disorder and that a
+certain form of microbe, known as the <i>Staphylococcus
+pyogenes</i>, is the cause of it. This germ, he asserts, lives
+normally on the surface of the skin and, when this
+surface becomes broken, it enters the part and infects
+it, thereby starting the boil.</p>
+
+<p>If this is true every person who wears old collars or
+dabbles his hands in dirt should without exception contract
+boils. This is obviously untrue.</p>
+
+<p>The factor to be considered, then, is this. What is it
+that induces boils in one person and not in another
+under identical circumstances? The answer is obvious.
+The boil is not a local disease at all, but is a manifestation
+of some constitutional defect, or of some
+impurity of the blood stream, which enables this microbe
+to find a congenial breeding ground.</p>
+
+<p>The people who suffer most from boils are young
+or middle-aged adults, and we usually find the two
+extremes among sufferers. There is the full-blooded,
+often overfed, individual and there is the pale, debilitated
+and emaciated person whose constitution is broken
+down by worry, overwork, sexual troubles, unhealthy
+surroundings or badly selected foods.</p>
+
+<p>If we inquire into the constitutional history of these
+cases we shall almost invariably discover that the
+digestive or assimilative processes of the body are not
+working smoothly. This may be due to the worry or
+overwork, or to unhealthy surroundings which dis-harmonise
+the digestive and nutritive functions, or to
+nervous exhaustion from one cause or another, or it
+may be due to the wrong diet, which is filling the
+colon (or large bowel) with fermenting poisons.</p>
+
+<p>When the body is clogged in this manner nature
+often proceeds to get rid of the accumulating waste
+through the skin. By a vigorous effort on the part of
+the life-force the impurity is thrown outwards to the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg501" id="Pg501"></a>surface. Looked at in this light a boil is really a most
+salutary cleansing agent, and the Nature-Cure practitioner,
+who calls it a &ldquo;Crisis,&rdquo; often does everything
+in his power to produce boils when treating chronic
+diseases.</p>
+
+<p>The alternative is often some more deeply seated
+form of elimination, resulting in serious organic disease
+of the organs or tissues. One of the first signs of
+improvement in disorders like diabetes, consumption,
+arthritis, Bright's disease, or even cancer, is the appearance
+of boils, showing that the vitality has improved
+to an extent sufficient to enable the foreign matter to
+be expelled by means of relatively harmless boils. The
+hydropathic expert also tries to induce this condition
+by means of his mustard and water packs.</p>
+
+<p>If our correspondent wants to rid herself of her boils
+she must adopt all means to improve her vitality and to
+cleanse her body of its impurities. She can do this along
+many lines. She can take a holiday and rest from her
+work; or by positive thinking she can set to work to get
+rid of her worries. She can learn to laugh as often as
+possible, and to breathe deeply, slowly and fully. If
+her house is unsanitary she should make it sanitary,
+or move elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Then she must restrict her diet and take only those
+forms of food which create a minimum amount of
+poison in the system. <i>She must cleanse the colon daily</i>
+with warm water enemas, and encourage the action of
+the kidneys in doing their rightful part in the elimination
+of poisons by the drinking of distilled water or a good
+herbal tea on rising, and of clear vegetable broth at
+night.</p>
+
+<p>Clay packs, applied cold, are the best form of treatment
+for application to the boils themselves. They
+should never be cut or squeezed, as this only intensifies
+the trouble. Hot applications, as poultices, are bad,
+because they induce the boil to mature prematurely, and
+also are conducive to reinfection of the skin in other
+parts. Drugs or medicines are of very little use in the
+treatment of boils, because they do not go to the root
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg502" id="Pg502"></a>of the trouble. The only remedy that I have found of
+any avail is yeast. In former times this was taken
+in the form of fresh or dried brewers' yeast, and it was,
+if unpleasant, a very effectual remedy. Yeast yields
+a free supply of what is called nuclein and nucleinic
+acid. These, chemically, are identical with the same
+substances found in the human cells. Nuclein is a
+powerful antiseptic. It has been found that the toxins
+or emanations from diphtheria and other deadly germs
+are precipitated and destroyed by nucleinic acid.</p>
+
+<p>It is for this reason that yeast extracts, such as
+Marmite, often have a beneficial effect in disorders
+accompanied by the formation of pus matter.</p>
+
+<p>Our correspondent's diet should be amended as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;A cupful of unseasoned Marmite.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;One scrambled or lightly poached egg
+with stale, yeast-made, wholemeal bread and nut butter,
+with lettuce or other salad food. No marmalade; no tea
+or coffee.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;1 to 2 oz. of grated cheese or flaked pine
+kernels, finely shredded raw cabbage, or grated
+radishes, or grated raw roots with oil and lemon dressing.
+No cooked savouries, no puddings, nor stewed
+fruit with custard or blanc mange should be taken.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea Meal.</i>&mdash;Cupful of Marmite, only.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper.</i>&mdash;Clear, unseasoned, vegetable broth, with
+Veda or wholemeal bread, or Granose biscuits, with
+nut butter and some fresh fruit.</p>
+
+<p><i>At bedtime.</i>&mdash;A cupful of Marmite.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;The unseasoned Marmite should be used, as the ordinary
+kind is rather heavily salted.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Poisoning" id="Poisoning"></a>A BAD CASE OF SELF-POISONING.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs H.W. writes:&mdash;I should be very glad if you would give me
+enlightenment on one or two points about my diet. I am suffering
+from a somewhat dilated stomach, also a catarrhal condition of
+nose, throat and alimentary canal, with constipation and much
+flatulence in the bowels. My teeth are decaying quickly, my nails
+have got softer, and I have become an&aelig;mic and generally
+debilitated, being unable to properly assimilate my food. All my
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg503" id="Pg503"></a>joints crack when moved, and the knee joints creak as well. Is
+this a uric acid condition, or do you think it merely due to a
+lack of nourishment, causing a lack of synovial fluid? The joints
+are not swollen and not painful, they merely crack. My whole
+system seems to be over-acid, and my mouth gets sore and
+ulcerated. I have got very thin, having lost a stone in twelve
+months.</p>
+
+<p>I notice that you always advise for dilated stomach greatly
+restricting the liquid part of the diet. Will you tell me just
+how much one <i>may</i> drink in a day, because when I go without
+drinking my constipation and other troubles are worse and the
+urine gets thick and muddy.</p>
+
+<p>You also deprecate milk. This puzzled me until you explained
+to a correspondent last month in <i>The Healthy Life</i>. Will you
+tell me if the same applies to dried milk&mdash;will it tend to increase
+intestinal trouble? I am anxious to know this because I have
+been relying somewhat on Emprote and Hygiama lately, for I had
+got so that I could scarcely digest anything.</p>
+
+<p>Do you consider it better to use the enema than to take a mild
+aperient? I do not want to start with the enema again if I can
+possibly manage to do without, because I found that my bowels
+depended upon it. And that is why I want to ask if it is absolutely
+necessary when on an antiseptic diet to entirely avoid fruit. I
+find it so necessary to keep the bowels working naturally.</p>
+
+<p>I <i>do</i> want you to answer me these questions, because I have got
+so worried and fearful (people's theories are so varied) that I
+scarcely dare eat any food at all. I am at present taking only
+two meals daily (I like the two-meal plan best): at eleven <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> and
+6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> I take a cup of weak coffee on rising, without milk or
+sugar&mdash;this warm drink seems to start the peristaltic action and
+I then get bowel action. I think of changing the coffee for
+Sanum Tonic Tea or Dandelion Coffee.</p>
+
+<p>At eleven o'clock I have an egg with Winter's &ldquo;Maltweat&rdquo;
+bread and almond butter, and some conservatively cooked
+vegetable (celery or carrot or spinach).</p>
+
+<p>At six <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> I have one or two baked apples, a teaspoonful or
+two of malted nuts, or Emprote, and more &ldquo;Maltweat&rdquo; bread
+and butter.</p>
+
+<p>At four <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> I take a cup of barley water or carrot water, and
+at bedtime another cup of barley water.</p>
+
+<p>Do you think that if I went on to a milk diet for a time it
+would do good?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This correspondent seems to be suffering from auto-tox&aelig;mia,
+or self-poisoning in a severe form, and a
+condition of what is termed arterio-sclerosis or
+premature old age. Associated with it are evidently
+symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, which is affecting
+her joints and teeth. It is not one of ordinary gout or
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg504" id="Pg504"></a>uric acid poisoning. The trouble no doubt has been
+caused by past errors of diet, so that the present efforts
+at reform have come too late to be of service to her.
+Something more than diet is now needed to clear the
+acids and toxins from the system. It is not a simple
+case of digestive catarrh, for the whole body is affected.
+The present diet will answer very well as it stands.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing to do is to obtain a well-fitting dilatation
+belt. This must have leg straps and firmly support the
+lower half of the abdomen. The next thing is to promote
+skin action so <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'are'.">as</ins> to encourage the clearing out of
+poisons along this line of elimination. Vapour baths,
+wet-sheet packs or alkaline hot baths can effect this
+purpose. An alkaline hot bath should be of a temperature
+of 105 degrees Fahr. or more, and to the bath
+should be added &frac14; lb. of bicarbonate of soda and &frac14; lb.
+packet of &ldquo;Robin&rdquo; starch. She should remain as long
+as possible in this so as to well clear the acids from the
+skin and induce as much skin action or perspiration as
+possible. The <i>first</i> baths must be of very short duration,
+and she should be careful to avoid chill after the bath;
+it is best to lie prone and completely relaxed for half-an-hour
+at least after the bath. Finally massage and
+Swedish movements directed to the entire back will
+help to disencumber the central nervous system, which
+is evidently very badly depleted of its vital force. It is,
+of course, a pity the correspondent cannot get away to
+a properly organised Nature-Cure home and have the
+continuous attention and treatment which her condition
+really necessitates.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CORRESPONDENCE1" id="CORRESPONDENCE1"></a>CORRESPONDENCE.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="address">Amanzimtoti, Natal.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>To the Editors.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sirs</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="corresp">You will see that your little magazine finds its way even to
+this out-of-the-way corner of the globe, and you may be sure that it
+is appreciated. I am specially interested in Dr V. Knaggs' contributions
+and should like to ask him a few questions. May I
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg505" id="Pg505"></a>say that I have some knowledge of chemistry and that I try and
+take an interest in the scientific aspects of food reform.</p>
+
+<p>(1) P. 237. What grounds has Dr Knaggs for speaking so
+definitely about human magnetism and that of vegetables? How
+would he recognise or test for either, and where can I get further
+information (scientific) on the question of food magnetism.</p>
+
+<p>(2) Same page. Dr Knaggs says salt added to cooking
+vegetables converts organic salts into inorganic. I cannot follow
+that. <i>What</i> organic salts are so converted? One or two examples
+would suffice.</p>
+
+<p>(3) I have been reading Dr Rabagliati's <i>Conversations with
+Women Concerning their Health and that of their Children</i>.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> In
+it he says that food is not the source (cause) of body energy, but
+is used merely to replace waste material. Elsewhere I read that
+&ldquo;Professor Atwater's investigations into nutrition have shown in
+a most convincing manner that the body derives <i>all</i> its energy
+from the food consumed. This may be regarded as established.&rdquo;
+Which of these definite and contradictory assertions does Dr
+Knaggs support, and why? Where can I get information <i>re</i>
+Professor Atwater's experiments and other recent works on similar
+subjects?</p>
+
+<p>To me the questions involved are intensely interesting, hence
+my queries. I hope they do not read as if I were hypercritical
+or sceptical.</p>
+
+<p>With all good wishes for the success of your healthy little
+magazine. I am, yours, etc.,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">W. Blewett.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8">[8]</a> 5s. net. C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Amen Corner, London.</p>
+
+<p>We handed the above interesting letter to our contributor,
+Dr H. Valentine Knaggs, and append his
+reply:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<h3><a name="Magnetism" id="Magnetism"></a><span class="smcap">Human Magnetism.</span></h3>
+
+<p>There is very little information available from ordinary
+scientific sources anent the question of the life-force or of
+the animal magnetism which animates our bodies and
+is the motive force common to all organic structures
+whether animal or vegetable. We do know that fresh
+fruits and vegetables are strongly magnetic because the
+magnetism which they emit can be gauged by means of
+delicate galvanometers. It has been found that leaves,
+flowers and seeds are positively, and roots negatively,
+charged. We also know that the same conditions are
+found in the human subject, since Dr Baraduc, who is
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg506" id="Pg506"></a>a celebrated French Psycho-Therapeutist, in his book,
+&ldquo;The Vibrations of Human Vitality,&rdquo; tells us that he
+has invented a machine called a biometer to test these
+very vibrations. I have had one of these machines
+myself and have experimented with it a great deal. By
+its aid we can make the machine work differently with
+different persons, and by careful tabulation of records
+Dr Baraduc has been able to elicit some very remarkable
+information about the magnetic currents which are
+constantly flowing into and out of the human body. If
+our correspondent really wants to know more about
+the wonders of human magnetism he should read some
+of the voluminous literature upon the subject published
+by the Theosophical Society. Just recently also a Dr
+Kilner has invented a form of coloured screen by which
+he and others who have some psychic sight can actually
+see the magnetic emanations which flow through a
+person placed in a darkened room.</p>
+
+
+<h3><a name="SaltCooked" id="SaltCooked"></a><span class="smcap">Salt-cooked Vegetables.</span></h3>
+
+<p>The one object of the vegetable kingdom is to build
+up, for the use of the animal or organic realm, the
+constituents found in the mineral or inorganic kingdom.
+These mineral constituents are dissolved, sorted out
+and built up in the right proportions for the use of
+animals when taken as foods. Whenever these foods
+are not so eaten they are sent back again to the earth
+by the aid of microbes during the process of decay, to
+be again available for plant use. Cooking is a process
+invented by man which is <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'analagous'.">analogous</ins> to that of decay,
+for it dissolves and disintegrates the structures which
+Nature has built up. When man eats food that is
+partially disintegrated he does not obtain from it the
+right sort of nutriment which Nature intended him to
+have. To intensify the wrong-doings of the cook, man
+further hastens the disintegrating process by adding to
+the things that he cooks a due proportion of a common
+and very stable mineral, called salt. It is powerful,
+because it is not easily disintegrated. The salt greatly
+expedites the process of decay, whether in the natural
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg507" id="Pg507"></a>form of fermentation, or whether by the application of
+heat, as in cooking. Salt is used in Nature to promote
+the flow of those electric and magnetic currents which
+are a manifestation of the universal life-force which
+pervades all things seen and unseen. It is an essential
+constituent of the sea because the ocean is the life-blood
+of the earth. It is an essential constituent of our
+own blood, because it is needed to make the blood
+stream a good conductor of magnetic currents. When
+you put this salt into water and then proceed to boil
+vegetables in it, it quickly sucks out all the life-force
+from them, and if persisted in reduces them to the
+state of minerals from which they were originally constructed.</p>
+
+
+<h3><a name="Energy" id="Energy"></a><span class="smcap">Food and the Source of Bodily Energy.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Dr Rabagliati and Professor Atwater are, I believe,
+both right, but the former does not always explain
+himself clearly to the lay mind. The life-force or animal
+magnetism is the real source of bodily energy, and it
+manifests itself only when it has something that resists
+or regulates its flow.</p>
+
+<p>It does this just as certain forms of wire, or other
+materials, which possess indifferent conducting power,
+resist the flow of electricity through them.</p>
+
+<p>Electricity cannot manifest as light in the usual
+electric lights used in our houses, as heat in the
+electric culinary appliances or stoves, or even as power
+in the motors which run our trams and trains, unless it
+be given the requisite apparatus to bring about the
+manifestation required.</p>
+
+<p>In exactly the same way life cannot manifest itself
+as consciousness, with its flow of thoughts, emotions
+and bodily activities, without the food which is daily
+supplied to the body.</p>
+
+<p>It consequently depends considerably upon how we
+select our daily rations as to how this vital force will
+manifest within us.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg508" id="Pg508"></a><a name="HOLIDAY_APHORISMS" id="HOLIDAY_APHORISMS"></a>HOLIDAY APHORISMS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>A Sun Bath needs no Soap.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Man was made for the Weather, not the Weather
+for man.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>A long drink often makes a short walk.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>You may bring a man to the Sea, but you cannot
+make him think.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>A tanned face doesn't make a healthy body.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Dew paddling should be done in the dark.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>The only things that bathing machines make are
+cowards.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>It is better to board yourself than let others be bored
+by you.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A bore is one who thinks his opinions of greater
+importance than your own.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>People who throw pebbles into the sea shouldn't dive
+near shore.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>A toothbrush is what many forget but few should
+need.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Scotland Yard is not in the Grampians.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Cheap food is often dearly bought.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Lyons have no dep&ocirc;ts in Skye.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Orange-trees never yet sprang from scattered peel.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>A pear in the hand <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'in'.">is</ins> worth two in the can.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Peter Piper.</p>
+
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg509" id="Pg509"></a></p>
+<div class="cover">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="coverleft">Vol. V<br />
+No. 26</span>
+<span class="coverright">September<br />
+1913<br /></span>
+<img src="images/title.png" width="220" height="330"
+alt="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C."
+title="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C." /></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+philosophers will all speak the same language and
+understand one another.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Claude Bernard.</span></p></blockquote>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+<h2><a name="AN_INDICATION26" id="AN_INDICATION26"></a>AN INDICATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">F</span>ood reformers sometimes forget that &ldquo;man
+does not live by bread alone,&rdquo; not even when
+supplemented by an ample supply of fresh
+air and physical exercise.</p>
+
+<p>It has been pointed out by psychologists that the
+more highly organised and highly developed the
+creature, the less it depends on nervous energy
+obtained via the stomach and the more it depends
+on energy generated by the brain. True, the brain
+must be healthy for this, and one poisoned by
+impure blood, due to wrong feeding, cannot be
+healthy. But something more than clean blood is
+necessary. For, as change of physical posture is
+necessary to avoid cramped limbs, so periodic
+reversal of mental attitude (consideration from other
+than the one view-point) is necessary to the brain's
+health.</p>
+
+<p>Again, change of air is often prescribed when the
+patient's real need is a change of the personalities
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg510" id="Pg510"></a>surrounding him. While for the lonely country
+dweller a bath in the magnetism of a city crowd
+may be a far more efficacious remedy than the
+medicinal baths prescribed by his physician.</p>
+
+<p>For man lives by <i>every</i> word that proceeds out
+of the mouth of God.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="FEAR_AND_IMAGINATION" id="FEAR_AND_IMAGINATION"></a>FEAR AND IMAGINATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Regular readers will recognise in this article a continuation of
+the series previously entitled &ldquo;Healthy Brains.&rdquo; The author of
+&ldquo;The Children All Day Long,&rdquo; is an intimate disciple of one of
+the greatest living psychologists, and she has a message of the
+first importance to all who realise that true health depends as
+much on poise of mind as on physical fitness. We regret that in
+the previous article, &ldquo;Imagination in Play,&rdquo; the following misprints
+occurred:&mdash;P. 475, line 4 from top, &ldquo;movement&rdquo; should be
+&ldquo;moment&rdquo;; p. 475, line 5 from bottom, &ldquo;admiration&rdquo; should be
+&ldquo;imagination.&rdquo;</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">S</span>ome people are given to excusing their own
+uncharitable thoughts by saying, &ldquo;I suppose I
+ought not to have minded her rudeness; I am
+afraid I am too sensitive.&rdquo; In the same way, people
+say, &ldquo;Oh, I <i>couldn't</i> sleep in the house alone&rdquo; (or let
+a child go on a water-picnic, or nurse a case of delirium
+or do some other thing that suggested itself), &ldquo;I have
+too much imagination.&rdquo; In both cases the claim,
+though put in deprecating form, is made complacently
+enough. The correlative is: &ldquo;You are so sensible,
+dear; I know you won't mind,&rdquo; which is a formula
+under cover of which many kindnesses may be shirked
+and many unpleasant duties passed on.</p>
+
+<p>The sensible, practical people who listen to these
+sayings sometimes attach importance to them, so that
+a habit has grown up of describing morbidly neurotic
+people as &ldquo;over-sensitive&rdquo; and cowardly ones as &ldquo;too
+quick of imagination.&rdquo; Ultimately, this leads to the
+thought that both sensitiveness and imagination are
+mental luxuries too costly for ordinary folk to grow,
+and that it is safest to check, crush or uproot them
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg511" id="Pg511"></a>when we discover them springing up in others or in
+ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>Is not this attitude of mind due to a misunderstanding?
+Imagination is an <i>organ of activity</i>; it can be
+kept in the highest possible condition of health by
+having plenty of exercise; it should be working continually
+against resistance. A rabbit's gnawing tooth,
+if the opposing tooth be broken, may grow inwards
+and cause the creature's death, but the same activity of
+growth, if working under suitable conditions, enables
+him to go on living and gnawing at his food year after
+year without wearing his tools away.</p>
+
+<p>The problem, then, in economy of effort is: How shall
+we use whatever force of sensitiveness and imagination
+we have, so as to get its maximum efficiency of usefulness
+and its minimum pain and inconvenience?</p>
+
+<p>For many ages man has been dominated by fear.
+His way to freedom, now, is to step out through his
+cobweb chains and go right forward with courage and
+in faith. So we are told with relentless and almost
+tiresome reiteration. It is the fashion, one might
+almost say, to have cast off fear, and the one thing an
+honest &ldquo;modern thinker&rdquo; is afraid of is being afraid.
+(To less honest ones it is the thought of <i>being thought</i>
+afraid that is a very real and present fear.)</p>
+
+<p>But, if this standpoint is right, is not fear at least
+a vestigial organ, a survival of a mental activity which
+served its purpose in times gone by? Is it not even
+truer to go further still and say, as <i>each particular
+fear</i> serves its purpose it may safely be discarded, but
+that, as far as our present knowledge goes, other grades
+of sensitiveness, finer shades of imagination of the type
+we have called fear, must take its place, to be discarded
+in their turn for yet other apprehensions?</p>
+
+<p>For if we lost the kind of perception that we associate
+with fear, if our imagination closed itself automatically
+to the suggestion of all sorts of ugly possibilities, should
+we not find ourselves soon in the midst of difficulties
+akin to those of the hero of the German tale of the
+man who felt no pain? We accept the evidence of pain
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg512" id="Pg512"></a>as a guide to action; when we have decided on action we
+proceed to get rid of the pain as expeditiously, safely
+and permanently as we can.</p>
+
+<p>The same thing seems true of fear. Over and over
+again we laugh at ourselves for fearing something that
+either never happened at all or happened in such a way
+as to be softened out of all likeness to the monstrous
+terror we had created. On the other hand, when misfortune
+falls heavily because of our lack of imagination
+in not foreseeing possible consequences of particular
+actions or events, we lament and complain: &ldquo;If I
+could only have guessed! If I had only known!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Fear pure and simple&mdash;the imagination of possible
+trouble&mdash;is a stage we can hardly yet afford to do
+without. But when it has roused our attention to a
+danger, its work is done. Let us practise turning it
+into action; taking due precautions against accident,
+guarding against hurting a neighbour's feelings, watching
+some possibility of evil tendency in ourselves. Then,
+and not till then, may we let it drop. It may pass; it
+has done its work. It is no longer our responsibility
+to foresee, it is our privilege to lay down the fear and
+live happily and at peace.</p>
+
+<p>Even the dread perceptions of eternal laws come under
+the same method. &ldquo;The fear of the Lord is the
+beginning of wisdom,&rdquo; the <i>beginning</i>: the end is faith
+and love.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">E.M. Cobham.</p>
+
+<div class="box"><hr />
+<h3>To Our Readers.</h3>
+
+<p>Readers who appreciate the independence and
+all-round nature of <i>The Healthy Life</i> can materially
+assist the extension of its circulation by tactfully
+urging their local newsagent to have the magazine
+regularly displayed for sale. An attractive monthly
+poster can always be had free from the Publishers,
+3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.</p><hr />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg513" id="Pg513"></a><a name="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT3" id="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT3"></a>HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>The <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1">article</a> (signed &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo;) with the above title
+which we published in the <a href="#Pg437">July number</a> has, as we
+anticipated, aroused considerable discussion. <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT2">One interesting
+criticism</a> appeared in the <a href="#Pg473">August number</a>. We
+now publish two further contributions, to be followed,
+in our <a href="#Pg545">next issue</a>, by two further articles by <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT4">Dr
+Rabagliati</a> and <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT5">Mr Ernest Starr</a>.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">I</h3>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">A</span>s one who has tried the low proteid diet, and came to
+grief on it, I desire to set my experience against that
+of Mr Voysey,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and to assert that, if it is true for
+him, it certainly is not true for me. Mr Voysey indulges
+in many loose and generalised statements which do not
+help the average man or woman in the least. I imagine
+it is these that &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; has in mind when he advises
+a certain standard of diet, below which it is not safe
+to go. If Mr Voysey can, as Horace Fletcher can,
+exist on a very low proteid diet, that does not prove
+that all men and women can do the same and be healthily
+active; it only shows that he and Fletcher are exceptions
+to the average person, and that it may be dangerous
+to follow their example. For most men, &ldquo;M.D.'s&rdquo;
+proteid standard is not so nauseating as he finds it.
+Here is a specimen dietary for a day, for a man of ten
+stone, following, as most of us do, a sedentary occupation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>3 oz. cheese.</li>
+<li>9 oz. bread.</li>
+<li>8 oz. vegetables and salad.</li>
+<li>8 oz. fruit.</li>
+<li>1&frac12; pints milk.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>Will any average person say that that quantity, divided
+into three meals, would be nauseating to him? And
+is that diet so very expensive that it would be beyond
+the means of an agricultural labourer in any country?
+It is certainly no mockery. The cost to such a labourer
+would probably not exceed 3d. or 4d. Of course the diet
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg514" id="Pg514"></a>can be made as expensive as one chooses, and widely
+varied.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9">[9]</a> See <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT2">August number</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Who amongst ordinary men and women has a reliable
+natural taste that would be an infallible guide in all
+matters of food? And what a misleading statement
+that is which asserts &ldquo;that all the hardest work of the
+world has always been done by those who get the least
+food.&rdquo; Put it to the test on the average person and see
+where it leads to.</p>
+
+<p>My contention is that the average person, throwing
+over his or her accustomed meat diet, requires some
+definite guidance as to the quantity of proteid, such as
+Dr Haig's wide experience and much patient research
+have proved needful, or at least advisable, for the continuance
+of a healthy and vigorous life; and I will say
+that it does not help this average person in the least
+to put before him the misty statement that &ldquo;the quantity
+depends on the development that is in progress, and is
+only discoverable by the natural guides of appetite and
+taste, ruled by reason and love of others.&rdquo; All very
+noble and very well in another place, but hardly meeting
+the case of the ordinary person who is seeking a healthy
+diet. Nor can you &ldquo;make the body a more harmonious
+instrument for the true life of man&rdquo; by habitually underfeeding
+it. I thought that was a medi&aelig;val notion that
+had been knocked on the head long ago.</p>
+
+<p>Is there any man, lay or scientific, Mr Voysey notwithstanding,
+who can claim to have as wide an experience
+of diet in its relation to health and disease as
+&ldquo;M.D.,&rdquo; to say nothing of the trained mind and long
+years of patient thought that have been exerted in dealing
+with the facts of this wide experience. For myself, I
+have come to see that, if &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; does not hold in his
+grasp the absolute truth in the matter of diet, he is
+nearer to it, and is a safer guide, than all your low
+proteid advisers, lay or otherwise, where they come
+much below &ldquo;M.D.'s&rdquo; standard.</p>
+
+<p>So, using Mr Voysey's phrases, I would urge laymen
+like myself to shun that weak-kneed manikin, the low
+proteid diet, and unite with me in a long strong pull
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg515" id="Pg515"></a>to get him and others like him out of the rut in which
+that sorry weakling holds him.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Hy. Bartholomew.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">II</h3>
+
+<p>The Editors were quite right in saying that the
+<a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1">article</a> under this heading in the <a href="#Pg437">July issue</a> would
+arouse discussion. My wife and I, having discussed
+&ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; and many others with the title, feel
+constrained to put forth a warning against blind faith
+in anything which the faculty have to say on dietetics.</p>
+
+<p>There are of course brilliant exceptions, such as
+Dr Rabagliati, Dr Knaggs, Dr Haig, the late Dr
+Keith and others, who give chapter and verse for every
+statement made; but when we consider the excellent
+work of laymen such as Albert Broadbent, Joseph
+Wallace, Horace Fletcher, Alice Braithwaite, Eustace
+Miles, Hereward Carrington, Edgar J. Saxon, Bernarr
+MacFadden, Arnold Eiloart, ordinary folks like ourselves
+may be excused if we venture to give our experience
+as against that of &ldquo;qualified&rdquo; men.</p>
+
+<p>With your permission, then, we reply to &ldquo;M.D.'s&rdquo;
+five suggestions in the order he gives them:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. Food qualities are <i>not</i> of extreme importance.</p>
+
+<p>2. Quantity tables may have been &ldquo;settled&rdquo; by
+physiologists to their own satisfaction many years ago;
+but very good reasons have since been given for altering,
+or even ignoring, them.</p>
+
+<p>3. The particular number of grains of proteid to be
+consumed per day is not of serious moment.</p>
+
+<p>4. That departure from the quantity specified has
+not led to disaster is proved by the fact that the human
+race still persists, in spite of the very varying eating
+customs found in different nations. The great majority
+being poor or ignorant, or both, know neither &ldquo;tables&rdquo;
+nor the need for them.</p>
+
+<p>5. There can be no reply to such a general statement
+as: &ldquo;The nature of this disaster may appear to be very
+various, and its real cause is thus frequently overlooked.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg516" id="Pg516"></a>In such matters an ounce of personal experience is
+worth a pound of cut-and-dried theory. We&mdash;my wife
+and I&mdash;have been reared in an atmosphere suspicious
+of doctors, both sets of grandparents having relied
+rather on herbs, water treatment, goodness of heart
+and faith in God; and their children have had too
+many evidences of medical ignorance to accept any
+dogmas. We are anti-vaccinators, nearly vegetarian,
+and, to come to the point, we have four children who
+will persist in thriving on a basis of always too little
+rather than too much of food. The respective ages
+are girl 13, boy 10, girl 6, boy 2.</p>
+
+<p>All have been brought up on these lines: never
+pressed to eat, but continually asked to chew thoroughly.
+Foods &ldquo;rich in proteid&rdquo; put sparingly before them.
+Milk has been well watered; and eggs, bacon and other
+tempting and rich foods only on rare occasions given
+to them.</p>
+
+<p>We would ask readers who can to make the following
+experiment: Let your children have a good drink to
+start the day, and then run and play; don't offer food
+till asked for. You will almost to a certainty find, if you
+start this plan immediately after weaning, that day by
+day and year after year it is twelve to one o'clock before
+they inquire for &ldquo;something to eat.&rdquo; We have done
+this for twelve years, with children of entirely different
+temperament and of both sexes. They go to school,
+poor things! breakfastless. During these twelve years
+light breakfast for father has been on the table&mdash;he
+goes without lunch&mdash;and not once in fifty do they ask
+to join him. Nor, if invited, will they after three or four
+years of age.</p>
+
+<p>The have never had a fever which lasted more than
+a day or two, and they are all above average height and
+weight.</p>
+
+<p>They get fruit in season just as asked for, and as
+much to drink as they like, <i>but not at meal-times</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Our experience is over a period of twelve years, and
+we have come to the conclusion that the infectious
+diseases so prevalent and death-dealing amongst chil<a class="pagenum" name="Pg517" id="Pg517"></a>dren
+of all classes, rich or poor, are, in the main, the
+result of over-feeding. We find it wise to keep highly
+nutritious foods (like eggs, cheese, meat, etc.) away
+from children&mdash;that is, for regular consumption; a little
+occasionally may do no harm.</p>
+
+<p>You will have it borne in on our minds year by
+year, as your children grow up under such a plan, that
+Dr Rabagliati, Hereward Carrington and others are
+quite right. We do not get our strength, nor heat,
+from food. Let the force of animal life (zoo-dynamic,
+I believe Dr Rabagliati calls it) have free play, and your
+children can't help growing up well and strong.</p>
+
+<p>In to-day's <i>London Daily Chronicle</i> I see a special
+article by Dr Saleeby, under this heading: <span class="smcap">World's
+Doctors versus Disease. 5000 Medical Men Meet
+To-day. The Triumphs of Three Decades.</span> We
+know how much this wonderful faculty knew thirty
+years ago about, <i>e.g.</i>, fresh air for consumptives.
+There is not a word said in this article (which is a sort
+of programme of the weighty matters for discussion) on
+the relation of food to the body. That question probably
+4950 of them believe was settled by the eminent
+physiologists who compiled those &ldquo;food-tables&rdquo; years
+ago&mdash;and in so doing went far to pave the way for the
+modern frightful increase of cancer, Bright's disease,
+etc., as well as for &ldquo;scientific&rdquo; horrors like anti-toxin,
+tuberculin&mdash;not to mention compulsory eugenics!</p>
+
+<p class="sig">J. Methuen.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTH_THROUGH_READING" id="HEALTH_THROUGH_READING"></a>HEALTH THROUGH READING.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">D</span>o many people consider reading from the point
+of view of health of mind and body&mdash;of refreshment
+in times of struggle&mdash;of recuperation after
+knock-down blows of sorrow, disappointment or misfortune?</p>
+
+<p>Let us begin by saying that some of the greatest
+books are not to be read by everybody at all seasons.
+When one's heart or ankles are weak, one does not
+start to climb mountains, or one may end as a corpse
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg518" id="Pg518"></a>or a cripple. So with one's soul under shock or stress.
+Personally, I can imagine nothing more cruel than the
+action of two women, one a story-teller of great repute
+among the &ldquo;goody,&rdquo; who, to a specially stricken and
+lonely young widow, tendered as &ldquo;bed-side books,&rdquo;
+Victor Hugo's <i>Les Miserables</i> and Browning's poignant
+<i>The Ring and the Book</i>. If they had wished to
+make her realise to the bitterest depths the awfulness
+of the world wherein she was left alone, and the
+blackest depravity of the human nature around her,
+they could not have done differently. <i>Les Miserables</i>
+she read till she reached the dreadful scene where a
+vicious cad hurls snowballs at the helpless Fantine.
+Then the strong instinct of self-preservation made her
+put the book aside&mdash;not to touch it again for nearly
+thirty years. With <i>The Ring and the Book</i> her mind
+was too wrung and too weary to wrestle&mdash;all it could
+receive was a picture of wronged innocence, and
+especially of the rampant forces of evil with which she
+was left to contend. With the same want of tact and
+judgment, if with unconscious cruelty, the gloomy,
+fateful <i>Bride of Lammermoor</i> was selected out of all
+Scott's novels for the reading of a very homesick youth,
+solitary in a strange country!</p>
+
+<p>Yet we must always remember that, as in affairs of
+the body so of the spirit, &ldquo;what is one man's meat
+may be another man's poison.&rdquo; Some of the wisest
+and most successful nurses or doctors will occasionally
+permit an invalid to indulge in a longed-for diet which
+would certainly never be prescribed. They know that
+idiosyncrasy follows no exactly known rule. So we could
+tell of one who, amid the dry agnosticism of the later
+half of last century, had felt her faith, not indeed extinguished,
+but obscured and darkened. From the perusal
+of certain writers she had shrunk, perhaps with
+cowardice. They were put on such a pinnacle that she
+feared she would find no arguments fit to oppose
+to theirs. Weakly, she locked the skeleton cupboard.
+Then she was attacked by a malady which, while
+leaving her mind free and strong, she knew might be
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg519" id="Pg519"></a>very speedily fatal. Straightway she said to her husband:
+&ldquo;In two or three days I shall probably &lsquo;know&rsquo;&mdash;or
+cease from all knowing. There will not be long
+to wait. Therefore bring me three books,&rdquo; which she
+named, works of authors of extreme agnostic views.
+Rather reluctantly he complied with her wish. She
+went steadily through the joyless pages, turned the last
+with the significant remark: &ldquo;If this is all they can
+say, well!&mdash;&rdquo; The skeleton cupboard, once opened,
+was speedily swept out. She quickly recovered, but
+never forgot her experience. Yet it must be remembered
+that this was the patient's own prescription, and
+was permitted by one who thoroughly understood her
+temperament. Therefore, though one would never wish
+to overrule a strong personal desire, that is quite different
+from offering counsel and furtherance&mdash;or proving
+experiments upon oneself.</p>
+
+<p>A celebrated woman writer of the middle of last
+century was of opinion that young people of both sexes
+should not indulge in reading &ldquo;minor poetry.&rdquo; &ldquo;Let
+them keep to the great poets, made of granite,&rdquo; was her
+graphic phrase. A woman of singularly self-controlled
+nature has confessed that the only time in her whole
+life that she experienced an unwholesome moral and
+emotional disturbance, after reading a book, was when,
+at about twenty-two years of age, she read Emily
+Bront&euml;'s <i>Wuthering Heights</i>. She dared not finish it:
+and when, some time later, a copy was presented to
+her, she caused it to be exchanged for another book,
+not wishing it even to be in the house with her. Years
+afterwards, she read it again, quite unmoved. It may
+be added that her first reading was made in the course
+of a systematic study of English literature, which had
+already led her through the works of Chaucer and
+Fielding. She has herself asked: &ldquo;Is it possible that
+the strong and unpleasant effect was produced because
+the book was the production of another young woman,
+perhaps of somewhat &lsquo;sympathetic&rsquo; temperament?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Taken as a whole, probably most fiction and all highly
+emotional work of any sort should be indulged in
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg520" id="Pg520"></a>sparingly by those in the danger-zone of life, or by any
+under special mental or moral stress. History, philosophy
+(with sustained chains of reasoning) and biographies
+(best, autobiographies) of active and strenuous
+lives, should be resorted to by those temporarily doomed
+to spells of suspense and involuntary inaction. Invalids
+should be encouraged to read Plutarch's <i>Lives</i> rather
+than the <i>Memorials</i> of other sufferers, however saintly!</p>
+
+<p>It may be broadly stated that, during the tragic
+episodes which seem to occur in all lives, the most
+wholesome reading is to be found in the books of the
+great World-Religions&mdash;the Bible, and the teachings of
+Buddha, Confucius and Mahomet. The Bible is of
+course a library in itself, and many of its books are
+suited to very widely different circumstances and temperaments.
+The Psalms, the Gospels, the Epistle of
+St James, and parts of those great poems known as the
+&ldquo;prophetical books&rdquo; and the more personal and less
+doctrinal portions of Paul's epistles are perhaps of
+widest application. From the words of Buddha, Confucius
+and Mahomet there are many admirable selections&mdash;and
+one remembers a wonderful compilation of more
+than thirty years ago, called <i>The Sacred Anthology</i>,
+and wonders if it be out of print. It does not follow
+that these works should not be studied at other times
+than &ldquo;tragic episodes.&rdquo; If this were more often the
+case, perhaps there would be fewer &ldquo;tragic episodes&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>Next to these come such wonderful books of spiritual
+experience as &Agrave; Kempis's <i>Imitation of Christ</i>, the
+<i>Pilgrim's Progress</i>, the <i>Devout Life</i> of Francis of Sales
+and others which will occur to the memory.</p>
+
+<p>Allusion to the <i>Pilgrim's Progress</i> brings us to the
+remark that no books are more truly wholesome than
+some that can be enjoyed by those of all ages, and of
+very varied types of &ldquo;culture&rdquo;: in which the children
+can delight, and which refresh the aged and weary.
+Like Nature herself, they have hedgerows where the
+little ones can gather flowers, little witting of the
+farther horizons of earth and sky lifted up for the eyes
+of the elders. Let the children read the <i>Pilgrim's
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg521" id="Pg521"></a>Progress</i> simply as &ldquo;a story,&rdquo; its eternal verities will
+sink into their souls to reappear when they too are in
+<i>Vanity Fair</i> or in bitter conflict with <i>Apollyon</i>.</p>
+
+<p>For the same reason, the Book of Proverbs should be
+commended to youthful study. Under wise supervision&mdash;or
+rather, in mutual study&mdash;it becomes at once a
+series of vivid pictures of primitive Eastern life&mdash;for all
+allusions should be explained, where possible, pictorially&mdash;while
+at the same time the memory will be insensibly
+stored with shrewd common sense and knowledge of the
+world, to be turned to, and drawn upon, as needed.</p>
+
+<p>And then, while the children revel in the fun and the
+fancy of Hans Andersen's <i>Fairy Tales</i>, let the sorrowful
+or sore or wounded heart turn to them for solace,
+soothing or healing. Hans Andersen enjoys a very
+special &ldquo;popularity&rdquo; and yet some, who have learned
+to love and value him, doubt whether justice has yet
+been done to his work. Because it is matchless for the
+young, it may be easily forgotten that it can be so,
+only by some quality which makes it matchless for all
+others. Perhaps some of his most popular stories are
+not his most wonderful, but have simply caught the
+popular fancy, because of some artist's illustration, or
+some personal application to the writer's own history,
+as in the case of his <i>Ugly Duckling</i>. How many&mdash;or
+rather, how few!&mdash;can readily recall the pathos and wit
+of his <i>Portuguese Duck</i> or the deep philosophy of his
+<i>Girl Who Trod on a Loaf</i>?</p>
+
+<p>It is told of Hans Andersen, a gentle soul in a
+homely exterior, which attracted the snubs and neglect
+which &ldquo;patient merit of the unworthy takes,&rdquo; on some
+such occasion was once heard to murmur: &ldquo;And yet
+I am the greatest man now in the world!&rdquo; It was very
+naive of him to say so, even in a whisper, probably
+wrung from him only in self-defence, but perhaps he
+might have thought it, in solemn silence&mdash;and&mdash;not been
+so very wrong! It may have been part of the very
+transparency of his inspired genius that he could not
+keep the secret to himself!</p>
+
+<p>There is at least one reader who declares that she
+finds the seeds of all vital philosophy&mdash;ancient or
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg522" id="Pg522"></a>modern&mdash;in his stories. How much he derived from
+those who went before him, it is not for us to say, but
+this disciple, herself a devoted student and admirer of
+the world's latest teacher, Leo Tolstoy, yet puts Hans
+Andersen above him, as having attained in practically
+all his work what Tolstoy attained only occasionally&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>
+Tolstoy's own ideal of what Art should be and do.</p>
+
+<p>In such a paper as this little can be done beyond
+indicating on the broadest lines the kind of reading
+which tends to preserve or to restore mental health.
+Away with your &ldquo;problem&rdquo; novels and &ldquo;realistic&rdquo;
+poems stated in the filthy material of moral gutters!
+Hans Andersen will take some birds, some flowers, some
+toys, and will state the same problems, and get the
+same eternal solutions, without making the inquirer
+run any risk of meanwhile catching moral malaria.
+Isaiah will help us to build &ldquo;castles&rdquo; for the human race
+and for our own future, but he will take care that we
+shall remember that righteousness and unceasing vigilance
+and unflagging repair must go into the laying
+of foundations and the upholding of walls. David,
+even in his &ldquo;cursing psalms,&rdquo; will exemplify for
+you the power of hate and vengeance in your own
+heart, and as he holds it up before you, you will see
+how small a thing it is, how mean, how ludicrous!</p>
+
+<p>As a man eats and drinks, so is his body: if he is a
+gross feeder, his body will be gross and sensual; if his
+food lacks nourishment, he will pine and fade. So it is
+with our minds and our morals. With whatever
+original &ldquo;spiritual body&rdquo; we may start, it needs
+spiritual sustenance, spiritual discipline, spiritual sufficiency
+and spiritual abstinence. Too often we ill-use it,
+as bodies are ill-used, goading its weakness with fiery
+excitement, or gorging its greed with sickly sentiment,
+or emasculating it by empty frivolity.</p>
+
+<p>All who desire spiritual health must find out what
+books best promote it in themselves: and sometimes
+they are found, like wholesome herbs, in very lowly
+places. One good rule is never to recommend what
+we have not seen proved in ourselves, or on others.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Isabella Fyvie Mayo.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg523" id="Pg523"></a><a name="THE_SWAN-SONG_OF_SEPTEMBER" id="THE_SWAN-SONG_OF_SEPTEMBER"></a>THE SWAN-SONG OF SEPTEMBER.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>This fine sonnet is from <i>Lyric Leaves</i>, poems by S. Gertrude
+Ford. 2s. 6d. net (postage 2d.). (C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor
+Street, London, E.C.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanzadc">
+<span class="i0"><span class="firstletter">S</span>ing out thy swan-song with full throat, September,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From a full heart, with golden notes and clear!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No rose will wreathe thee; yet the harebell's here,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And still thy crown of heath the hills remember.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bright burns thy fire, e'en to its latest ember,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The sunset fire that lights thee to thy bier,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Flaming and failing not, albeit so near<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dun-robed October waits, and grey November.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And though, at sight of thee, a chill change passes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through wood and wold, on leaves and flowers and grasses,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thy beauty wanes not; thou hast ne'er grown old;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Death-crowned as Cleopatra, lovely lying<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Even to the end; magnificently dying<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In pomp of purple and in glare of gold.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="sig">S. Gertrude Ford.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_QUEST_FOR_BEAUTY" id="THE_QUEST_FOR_BEAUTY"></a>THE QUEST FOR BEAUTY.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">I</span>f you have travelled at all frequently on certain of
+the London &ldquo;tube&rdquo; railways you may occasionally
+have noticed, facing you in the carriage, a small
+framed poster which for beauty and imaginative power
+has, I should think, never been surpassed in advertising
+art. If the first sight of it did not make you catch your
+breath you will not, I am afraid, be interested in this
+article.</p>
+
+<p>The poster represents a rich landscape, in which
+noble tree-forms show sombre against a tumultuous sky&mdash;the
+latter an architectural mass of pale cloud, spanned
+by a vivid rainbow. Across the lower part of the
+picture is a scroll, on which are written, in musical
+notation, two bars from Chopin's Twentieth Prelude.
+At the top are the words, <i>Studies in Harmony</i>: it is an
+advertisement of Somebody &amp; Co.'s wall-papers.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg524" id="Pg524"></a>In both colour and design this poster is very beautiful.
+It would be scarcely less so without the rainbow; but
+&ldquo;the dazzling prism of the sky&rdquo; not only intensifies
+the subtle harmony of colour throughout the picture:
+it turns the poster into a symbol. And the artist
+might well have stopped there; only, you see, he had
+an inspiration. When he wrote across the picture those
+eight descending chords from the immortal <i>Largo</i> he
+made of the poster&mdash;a poem.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know anything about the artist who conceived
+this advertisement of wall-papers. I do not
+even know his name. But I believe him to be the
+herald of an invasion.</p>
+
+<p>The invasion of life by beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Do you think it a degradation of art that it should
+be enlisted by the makers of wall-papers? Are there
+not too many ugly and discordant posters? Do you
+consider trade and manufacture so sordid that they
+are beneath the ministrations of beauty? It doesn't
+matter a new penny whether you answer such questions
+with a nod or a no: the invasion has begun. It is
+irresistible. Beauty is stooping&mdash;stooping to conquer.</p>
+
+<p>Your ardent social reformer is too often obsessed
+with one idea. Across his mental firmament he sees
+only one blazing word: <span class="smcap">Injustice.</span> And, fine fellow
+though he often is, he is inclined to be impatient with
+any talk of art or beauty. &ldquo;How can beauty grow in
+these vile cities?&rdquo; he cries. &ldquo;What is the use of
+your music, your statuary, your fine pictures, your
+poetry, to the starving and the oppressed?&rdquo; And he
+does not see that his passionate desire for justice is at
+root the quest for beauty, for fullness and harmony
+of life. His stormy sky shows no rainbow: yet it is
+there. And so is the stately music, the transmutation
+of colour into sound. And if his eyes could be opened
+to one and his ears to the other, there would be more
+power to his elbow. For beauty is inspiration and
+courage&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;My heart leaps up when I behold<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A rainbow in the sky....&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg525" id="Pg525"></a>And there is more than that in it. The cultivation of
+a sense of beauty, of harmony, makes reformers less
+harsh in their judgments, broadens their sympathies
+and helps to save them from becoming mere doctrinaires.
+If you have any love for the beautiful you
+simply cannot be happy about most Utopias, though
+they be Justice itself in civic form; and, when our
+&ldquo;scientific&rdquo; Fabian has demonstrated to you how to
+organise the national life in all its parts into one vast
+smoothly working State mechanism you will shudder,
+and then laugh. And then, without any rudeness, you
+will say: &ldquo;Hang mechanism and a minimum wage!
+Live men and women want living crafts, liberty and a
+maximum beauty!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And really, I am coming to see that there are a great
+many health-culture enthusiasts (not to mention food
+reformers) who see no rainbow in the sky and hear no
+music in the wind; and even if they did, ten to one they
+would see no connection between the two. I verily
+believe there are some poor souls who have studied
+food questions so closely that they cannot see the sun
+for proteid nor the sea for salts. In all meekness, and
+knowing the frailty of the human mind (I have written
+dozens of articles on diet!), I would prescribe for them
+a course of artistic wall-paper advertisements, combined
+with the letters of Robert Louis Stevenson. He, poor
+fellow, had to battle against disease all his short life;
+but he managed to end one of his letters something like
+this (I quote from memory): &ldquo;<i>Sursum Corda</i>! Heave
+ahead! Art and blue heaven! April and God's larks!
+A stately music.... Enter God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A somewhat ecstatic utterance. A trifle too exclamatory.
+Perhaps. You and I don't end our letters
+like that. (Or do you?) More likely we say something
+about the weather down here being miserably cold (or
+damp, or dull, or changeable, or hot) and brave out the
+lie with &ldquo;yours truly.&rdquo; But O for one little spark
+from the fire that shone in the soul of R.L.S. Better
+to die young with a broken heart, if it were a heart as
+brave and gay as his, than beat Methuselah by means
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg526" id="Pg526"></a>of a mincing, calculating, cold-blooded attention to
+irritating self-made little rules.</p>
+
+<p>Oh yes, I know well the value of little rules. And
+I know also that Nature offers us only two alternatives&mdash;obedience
+or death (either sudden or slow). But then
+Nature is something more than Mistress and Lawgiver.
+She is Beauty. And in that aspect, as in all other
+aspects, Nature is unescapable. We turn our backs
+on her only to find her awaiting us at the next turn in
+the road. Looking at the matter all round, I don't
+think we can come to any other conclusion than that
+Nature (or whatever you like to call It, Her or Him) is
+aiming at beauty all the time. So that we who are
+literally, if not figuratively, the children of Nature, had
+best do likewise.</p>
+
+<p>Some mystic or other has said that man's search
+for God is God's search for man. If he was right&mdash;and
+I think he was&mdash;it follows that man's quest for
+beauty is Beauty invading life; and that the only healthy
+life worth the having is that which begins with &ldquo;Lift
+up your hearts!&rdquo; and issues in &ldquo;a stately music.
+Enter God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Edgar J. Saxon.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="SEMPER_FIDELIS" id="SEMPER_FIDELIS"></a><i>SEMPER FIDELIS.</i></h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Do two things worth doing, every day.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Be scrupulously polite and kind, rather than witty or entertaining.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cherish cleanliness, sobriety, frugality and contentment.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cultivate sweetness of disposition and tranquillity of mind.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Think before speaking, and so reduce your causes of regret.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Seek peace and be peaceable for <i>lis litem generat</i>.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Begin at home, let home always find you faithfully on duty.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Care carefully for those whom Providence has entrusted to your care.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the reward of the faithful will abundantly yours,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And your heaven will go with you wherever you go.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="sig">&ldquo;A.R.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg527" id="Pg527"></a><a name="MORE_HOLIDAY_APHORISMS" id="MORE_HOLIDAY_APHORISMS"></a>MORE HOLIDAY APHORISMS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Two's company, three's fun.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Levity is the bane of wit.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Braggers mustn't be losers.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Never put on to-day what you can't put on to-morrow.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>It's an ill mind that finds no one any good.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>It's no use crying over spilt milk: you're better without it.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Look before you sleep.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Never put an excursion ticket in the mouth.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Long hair never made true poets.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Obesity always carries weight.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Look after your manners and your friends will look after themselves.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Cranks of a feather fight together.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>All is not toil that blisters.</p>
+
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p><i>To Sea Anglers</i>:</p>
+
+<p>A live catch is no better than a dead fish.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Better a place in the sun than a plaice on a hook.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Peter Piper.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg528" id="Pg528"></a><a name="HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING2" id="HEALTHY_HOMEMAKING2"></a>HEALTHY HOMEMAKING.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">XXI. Hired Help</span> (<i>continued</i>).</h3>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">W</span>hat is the homemaker of limited means, who
+must have some help, to do under present
+conditions? Well, meantime, there is only the
+young &ldquo;general&rdquo; for her, either the &ldquo;daily girl&rdquo; or
+one who &ldquo;lives in.&rdquo; Of the two I prefer the &ldquo;daily
+girl,&rdquo; when she can be obtained. And the younger she
+can be obtained, other things equal, the better. She
+will have fewer bad habits to overcome. Some housewives
+object to the daily girl on the score that she may
+bring dirt or infection from her home, and also because
+she can seldom arrive early enough to help get breakfast.
+But a little management overnight can reduce
+the labour of breakfast getting to a minimum, and if
+the &ldquo;outings&rdquo; of the girl who lives in are as frequent
+as they ought to be the risk of her carrying infection,
+etc., will always apply.</p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;daily girl&rdquo; has definitely fixed hours of work
+and the same chance of enjoying a measure of home
+life, of keeping her friends and individual interests, as
+the typist or factory worker whose lot the domestic
+servant so often envies; while her employers are not
+faced with the alternatives of condemning a young
+fellow-creature to a solitary existence or forcing an
+unreal companionship which is equally irksome on both
+sides. It is true that the wages of the &ldquo;daily girl&rdquo;
+do not equal, in actual money, those of the factory
+worker, neither does she obtain the Saturday half-holiday
+or the whole of Sunday free. But to set against
+this she receives her entire board and, with a kindly
+mistress, is not tied down to staying her full time on
+days when she is &ldquo;forward&rdquo; with her work.</p>
+
+<p>The life of the young &ldquo;daily girl,&rdquo; if her employer
+is a conscientious woman, need not be hard nor unpleasant;
+very little harder and no more unpleasant
+than the lot of the young &ldquo;lady&rdquo; who is paying from
+&pound;60 to &pound;80 per annum to learn cookery, laundry and
+housework at a school of domestic economy. Properly
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg529" id="Pg529"></a>conducted, the relations between employer and employee,
+&ldquo;mistress&rdquo; and &ldquo;servant,&rdquo; are those of mutual aid.
+Such relations <i>may</i> be, and too often <i>are</i>, those of an
+inefficient little drudge for a &ldquo;mistress&rdquo; almost equally
+ignorant and inefficient. But when the employer is
+an intelligent woman with a sense of justice (I prefer
+a sense of justice to sentimental theories about sisterhood&mdash;people
+do not always treat their sisters justly)
+the weekly money payment and food will be but a small
+part of the girl's wage. In addition she will receive
+a training that will equip her for the &ldquo;higher&rdquo; branches
+of domestic service, or for homemaking on her own
+account. Not every girl has the sense to appreciate this
+when she gets it, nor the intelligence to profit by it;
+while it is certainly rather trying to the employer when
+the girl is &ldquo;all agog&rdquo; to &ldquo;better herself&rdquo; as soon
+as she has gained a bare smattering of how to do
+certain things properly. But all this is &ldquo;the fortune
+of war.&rdquo; Some girls never cease to be grateful to their
+first teachers and leave them reluctantly, while other
+girls never realise that they have anything to be grateful
+for. When gratitude and affection come they are
+pleasant to receive. But the motive power of the really
+conscientious woman is not the expectation of gratitude
+or affection.</p>
+
+<p>A word to the unconventional homemaker. The
+young &ldquo;general&rdquo; is a bird of passage. Age and
+experience bring with them the necessity of earning
+more, and if her first employer cannot periodically raise
+the girl's wages the latter must in time seek better
+paid employment, probably with a mistress who is not
+unconventional. It is unkind, therefore, to refrain
+from teaching the girl how she will be expected to do
+things in the ordinary conventional house. I do not
+mean that the employer ought to slavishly run her
+home on conventional lines for the instruction of her
+&ldquo;help.&rdquo; But it is kinder, for instance, to help a girl
+regard a cap and apron with good-humoured indifference,
+or as on a par with a nurse's uniform, rather
+than as &ldquo;a badge of servitude.&rdquo; It is kinder, too, to
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg530" id="Pg530"></a>show her that it is not only &ldquo;servants&rdquo; who are
+expected to address their employers as &ldquo;Sir&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Ma'am,&rdquo; but that well-mannered young people in all
+conditions of life can be found who use this form of
+address to persons older than themselves. I do not
+suggest for one moment that any attempt should be
+made to delude a girl into the belief that she will not
+be expected, in conventional households, to behave with
+equal deference to persons younger than herself. Such
+deception would be unpardonable. But it is anything
+but kind to allow a young girl to drift into careless and
+familiar habits of speech bound to lead to dismissal
+for &ldquo;impudence&rdquo; in her next &ldquo;place.&rdquo; There is a
+type of person, for example, who seems to believe that,
+in order to show that he is &ldquo;as good as anybody else,&rdquo; it
+is necessary to be rude and familiar. But good manners
+are not necessarily associated with servility. And it
+is no kindness to help to unfit a girl for getting her
+living in the world as it is.</p>
+
+<p>It may seem that, in this article, I am more concerned
+for the &ldquo;hired help&rdquo; than the homemaker for whom
+I am ostensibly writing. But the points I have touched
+on are just those about which I know many thoughtful
+women are puzzled. I cannot solve their individual
+problems for them, of course, I can only just barely
+indicate some of the thoughts that have come to me
+on a subject that is so intimately bound up with the
+whole of our present unsatisfactory social and economic
+conditions that it cannot be adequately discussed in
+a little tract upon domestic economy.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Florence Daniel.</p>
+
+
+<h3><a name="Cupboards" id="Cupboards"></a><span class="smcap">The Care Of Cupboards.</span></h3>
+
+<p>There are three methods in general use of caring for
+cupboards. Some housewives prefer their cupboard
+shelves of bare wood, to be well scrubbed with soap
+and water at the periodical &ldquo;turn-out.&rdquo; Others cover
+all shelves with white American cloth, which only needs
+wiping over with a wet house-flannel; while still others
+prefer to dispense with the necessity for wetting the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg531" id="Pg531"></a>shelves and line them with white kitchen paper, or even
+clean newspaper, which is periodically renewed.</p>
+
+<p>Of the three methods I prefer the last, with the
+addition of a good scrubbing at the spring clean. The
+weekly or fortnightly scrubbing is apt to result in
+permanently damp cupboards, unless they can be left
+empty to dry for a longer time than is usually convenient.
+The use of American cloth is perhaps the
+easiest, most labour-saving method, but the cloth soon
+gets superficially marked and worn long before its real
+usefulness is impaired, so that the cupboard shelves
+never look quite so neat as after scrubbing or relining
+with white paper.</p>
+
+<p>The larder should be thoroughly &ldquo;turned out&rdquo; once
+a week. Once a fortnight is enough for the store-cupboard
+and for china cupboards in daily use. While
+cupboards in which superfluous china and other non-perishable
+goods are stored, and that are seldom opened,
+need not be touched oftener than once or twice a year.</p>
+
+<p>In very small houses one cupboard often must house
+both china and groceries, thus combining the offices of
+storeroom and china cupboard. The larder, strictly
+speaking, is for the food consumed daily. But when
+larder and store-cupboard have to be combined, the
+groceries may be packed away on the upper shelves,
+which can be tidied once a fortnight; but the shelves
+doing duty for the larder proper should never be left
+for longer than a week.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing betrays the careless housewife like an ill-smelling
+larder. All food should be examined daily
+and kept well covered. Hot food should be allowed to
+cool before storing in the larder. In the summer time
+special precautions must be taken against flies, all
+receptacles for food which are minus well-fitting lids
+being covered with wire-gauze covers or clean butter
+muslin. If the shelves are lined with paper, care should
+be taken at the weekly change to examine the wood for
+stains caused by spilt food that has penetrated through
+the paper. These should not be just left and covered
+over, but well washed off. With ordinary carefulness,
+however, they need not occur.</p>
+<p class="sig">F.D.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg532" id="Pg532"></a><a name="BOOK_REVIEWS" id="BOOK_REVIEWS"></a>BOOK REVIEWS.</h2>
+
+<p class="book"><i>The New Suggestion Treatment.</i> By J. Stenson Hooker,
+M.D. Cloth 1s. net (postage 1&frac12;d.) C.W. Daniel,
+Ltd., 3 Tudor Street, E.C.</p>
+
+<p>This book is a striking example of the new synthetic
+movement in the medical profession. It is an exposition
+for the general reader of certain basic principles
+of mental treatment and of the author's methods of
+applying these; it is also, in reality, an appeal to doctors
+generally to put aside prejudice and examine the immense
+potentialities of rational &ldquo;suggestion&rdquo; healing
+methods.</p>
+
+<p>After examining the main features and disadvantages
+of mere hypnotic treatment and passing under review
+present-day &ldquo;mental science,&rdquo; the author explains
+wherein his method of mental treatment both avoids the
+dangers of hypnotism and reinforces ordinary self-suggestion.
+Throughout there is the frank recognition
+that few forms of dis-ease are curable by
+one means alone; on the other hand, it is contended that
+most disorders, both mental and physical, are remarkably
+amenable to a rightly directed course of the new
+suggestion treatment, supplemented by other natural
+means.</p>
+
+<p>The narrowness of view that too often characterises
+the specialist is entirely absent from this book. It is
+throughout thoroughly broad, refreshingly sensible and
+profoundly convincing.</p>
+
+<p class="book"><i>The Cottage Farm Month by Month</i> (illustrated with original
+photographs). By F.E. Green. Cloth, 1s. net (postage 2d.). C.W.
+Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.</p>
+
+<p>Here is a book of immediate social interest, of great
+practical value, and of uncommon literary quality.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of twelve chapters, bearing the titles of
+the months of the year, it reveals a welding together of
+two things which in many minds have unfortunately
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg533" id="Pg533"></a>become divorced: the practical problems and arduous
+labour which no tiller of the soil can escape and&mdash;the
+keen delight of a poetical temperament in the ever-changing,
+yet annually renewed, beauties of earth and
+sky and running water.</p>
+
+<p>It escapes the dry technicalities of the agricultural
+text-book, while at the same time conveying innumerable
+valuable hints on practically every branch of &ldquo;small
+farming&rdquo;&mdash;advice which springs from the author's
+thorough knowledge based on long and often hard
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, while entirely free from that all
+too common defect of &ldquo;nature-books&rdquo;&mdash;hot-house
+enthusiasm&mdash;it will delight the most incurable townsman
+(providing his sense of beauty is not withered)
+by its joyous yet restrained pictures of open-air things.</p>
+
+<p class="book"><i>Simple Rules of Health.</i> By Philip Oyler, M.A. (2nd
+ed.). 3d. net. Post free from the author, Morshin
+School, Headley, Hants.</p>
+
+<p>An admirable epitome of what might be called &ldquo;advanced
+health culture without crankiness.&rdquo; The author
+is an ardent advocate of simplicity in all things
+and&mdash;practises what he preaches. Moreover, he is one of
+those who sees health from all points of view: he is as
+much concerned with what the English Bible calls &ldquo;a
+right spirit&rdquo; as with a fit body and a responsive mind.
+It is a little book deserving of a wide circulation.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CORRESPONDENCE2" id="CORRESPONDENCE2"></a>CORRESPONDENCE.</h2>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Sleeplessness" id="Sleeplessness"></a>A REMEDY FOR SLEEPLESSNESS.</h3>
+
+<p>To the Editors</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sirs</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="corresp">Would you care to publish the following experience
+of a cure for sleeplessness:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I had no difficulty in going to sleep, but usually awoke
+again at about two <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> with palpitation, and it often
+took me two or three hours to go to sleep again.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg534" id="Pg534"></a>I cured myself in the following way: I left off supper
+and reduced my tea meal by half, and the result was
+continuous sleep; the symptoms, however, began to
+come back again after a time, so I gradually cut the tea
+meal right away, and half of the midday meal as well.
+The cure was then permanent and after a time I found
+that I could resume the tea meal again. At the present
+time I am having a tea meal of fruit only.</p>
+
+<p>In addition I should advise those who suffer from this
+complaint to keep cheerful, and to avoid excessive
+physical or mental fatigue and worry. Yours faithfully,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">&ldquo;A Six Months' Reader.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Lime" id="Lime"></a>IS PURE LIME JUICE OBTAINABLE?</h3>
+
+<p>The Editors have received the following letter from
+Messrs Rowntree &amp; Co., Ltd.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote style="margin-left:8%;"><p>&ldquo;We note in your issue of <a href="#Pg437">July 1913</a> under the heading of
+&lsquo;Lemon or Orange Squash&rsquo; a <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: I am unable to find this note.">note</ins> to the effect that bottled
+lemon squashes and lime cordials &lsquo;are not pure in the strict
+sense of the term, since they are bound to contain 10 per
+cent. alcoholic pure spirit by Government regulations.&rsquo; We
+should be glad to know what is your authority for this
+statement. Possibly it is a misprint, because obviously the
+Government does not require anything of the kind. Our own
+lemon squash and lime juice cordial are entirely free from
+any form of preservative, including alcohol. They are made
+up from pure lemon juice and lime juice respectively, with
+sugar, and contain no foreign ingredient.&rdquo;</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The statement complained of was based on an article
+entitled &ldquo;Fortified Lime Juice&rdquo; which appeared in <i>The
+Chemist and Druggist</i>, 13th May 1911 (page 51). On
+again referring to this article we find that the Government
+regulation applies only to <i>exported</i> Lime Juice.</p>
+
+<p>We regret having made this error, and are genuinely
+glad to have Messrs Rowntree's assurance that their
+own &ldquo;Lime Juice Cordial&rdquo; and &ldquo;Lemon Squash&rdquo; are
+&ldquo;entirely free from any form of preservative, including
+alcohol.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, we think our suspicions regarding the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg535" id="Pg535"></a>presence of preservatives in such articles are justifiable
+in view of the following authoritative statements made
+by <i>The Chemist and Druggist</i> in the article referred
+to:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote style="margin-left:8%;"><p>&ldquo;The British Revenue authorities have drawn the line a
+little tighter in the discharge of their responsibility respecting
+the soundness of lime-juice intended for exportation or for use
+on board ship. The new rule henceforth is to grant a &lsquo;pass&rsquo;
+certificate for unfortified lime-juice to last for fourteen days
+only, at the end of which time another certificate must be
+obtained. As this new regulation affects lime-juice in its
+natural condition before rum or any other spirit is added to
+it, only lime-juice manufacturers or importers are concerned
+in the matter.... <i>With such rapidly deteriorating liquid as
+lime or lemon juice the addition of the preservative spirit is
+a necessity, hence the sooner it is fortified the better.</i> The
+Revenue authorities permit duty-free spirit to be used for this
+purpose, but in order that lime-juice manufacturers shall have
+this advantage of not paying duty on the spirit used the
+Revenue authorities insist on approval of the juice and its
+subsequent fortification in bond under supervision of the
+Crown.... In reference to the proportion of spirit
+used, previously the regulation was expressed in a
+permissive sense, but now the emphatic &ldquo;must&rdquo; is used. In
+the last Government Laboratory report it was stated that
+396 samples were examined, most of which were lime-juice,
+representing nearly 50,000 gallons. Even the fortified article
+is re-tested if more than three months old in cask or two
+years old in bottle, and this re-testing resulted last year in a
+condemnation of several hundred gallons owing to deterioration
+during storage. This juice is principally for use in the
+Mercantile Marine to combat scurvy.&rdquo;</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>From which it would appear that the use of <i>some</i>
+kind of preservative is essential with such a rapidly
+deteriorating liquid as lime or lemon juice; and if not
+alcohol, there are innumerable chemical preservatives
+available. We wish we could rely on receiving assurances
+from other &ldquo;Lime Juice&rdquo; importers and manufacturers
+similar to that we have received from Messrs
+Rowntree.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p><i>To People with Strong Convictions:</i></p>
+
+<p>A holiday is the best of all opportunities for appreciating
+the opposite point of view to our own: this is
+why everyone needs a day's holiday once a week.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg536" id="Pg536"></a><a name="HEALTH_QUERIES3" id="HEALTH_QUERIES3"></a>HEALTH QUERIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine
+Knaggs, deals briefly month by month, and according
+as space permits, with questions of general interest to
+health seekers and others.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is
+essential that full details of the correspondent's customary
+diet should be clearly given.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on
+<span class="u">one side only of the paper</span>, giving full name and address,
+not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
+When an answer is required by post a stamped addressed
+envelope must be enclosed.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Faulty" id="Faulty"></a>FAULTY FOOD COMBINATIONS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>H.E.H. writes.&mdash;I should like your opinion of the statement of
+the late Mr A. Broadbent, that fruit when taken with starchy
+food by dyspeptics delays digestion, and that the digestion of
+starchy foods and vegetables occupied only one-third of the time
+needed for the digestion of starch with fruit. I have lived on a
+strict vegetarian diet and observed the laws of hygiene for two
+and a half years, to rid myself of dyspepsia, with great success,
+having increased my weight by thirty-six pounds; for the last nine
+months of this time I have lived on a largely &ldquo;unfired&rdquo; diet, but
+am still troubled with acid risings and flatulence and cannot
+account for it. Will you kindly enlighten me on the subject?</p>
+
+<p>I am a carpenter by trade and get eight hours in the open air
+every day. I take a tumbler of distilled water hot with the juice
+of one orange at 6 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, breakfast at 7.30 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, dinner at 12 noon
+and tea at 6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, all consisting of Wallace unfermented bread and
+biscuits, various fruits (mostly apples, bananas and tomatoes) and
+nuts, about &frac12;oz. at a meal; also a little cheese, about 1 oz. at a
+meal.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The late Mr A. Broadbent was quite right, in my
+opinion, when he asserted that fruit taken with starchy
+foods delayed digestion.</p>
+
+<p>To reap the true benefit from fruit it must be taken
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>The dominant element in fruit is oxygen and the
+feature of oxygen is its power to start the process of
+oxidation in decomposing and disintegrating substances.
+It follows that when the stomach is filled with ferment<a class="pagenum" name="Pg537" id="Pg537"></a>ing
+food-stuffs, or the tissues are clogged with the
+products derived from such, the oxidising action of
+fruit will be correspondingly intense.</p>
+
+<p>The Naturist who applies the Schroth Cure for the
+purpose of curing chronic diseases uses fruit as his chief
+eliminating agent. The reader will remember that the
+peasant healer, Schroth, made his patients take dry
+stale rolls alone for three whole days, with nothing
+whatever to drink, and on the fourth day, he gave them
+a full bottle of white wine, which then caused intense
+oxidation, with marked elimination of poisons. His
+methods, if successful, were drastic and weakening, and
+so the latter-day exponents of Schrothism have modified
+this and give their patients zweiback or twice-baked
+bread instead of rolls, and on the third or fourth day
+make the patient partake freely of fresh fruit. This
+process of alternate dry days and fluid days is continued
+for some weeks until the cure is complete.</p>
+
+<p>I have merely referred to this matter to show the
+part played by fruit in the body. To a healthy person
+fruit is in truth a splendid regenerating food, but it
+should, whenever possible, be eaten alone. To a dyspeptic,
+fruit is often equally good, if <i>taken by itself</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The case of vegetables is different, and I hold with
+Broadbent that salad or properly cooked vegetables do
+go well with cereals, because they contain, not oxygen
+and oxygen acids, but mineral elements like soda, lime
+and magnesia, which neutralise the acids and toxins
+which form in the body as a result of its work. The
+vegetable is just as active as the fruit as an eliminant,
+but it works on different lines. Cereal foods, if eaten
+slowly in a dry condition are made alkaline by the
+saliva, so that the vegetables, which are also naturally
+alkaline, would harmonise well with cereals if eaten
+with them.</p>
+
+<p>Our correspondent should modify his diet as follows,
+and then, I anticipate, he will cease to be troubled with
+his acid dyspepsia and flatulence. He should take his
+fruit alone, and take any of the crisp unsweetened
+Wallace &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; Biscuits in preference to the un<a class="pagenum" name="Pg538" id="Pg538"></a>fermented
+bread, which latter is often difficult to
+digest:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;A tumblerful of hot distilled water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast</i> (at 7.30).&mdash;Fresh fruit only.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch</i> (at 12).&mdash;1 to 2 oz. of cheese, preferably home-made
+curd cheese; salad of green leaf vegetables;
+&ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; or Ixion biscuits with fresh butter, or nut
+butter.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dinner</i> (at 6).&mdash;1 to 2 oz. of flaked pine kernels, finely
+grated raw roots or tomatoes, with pure olive oil;
+Granose biscuits, or Shredded Wheat biscuits, and
+fresh butter.</p>
+
+<p><i>At bedtime.</i>&mdash;Cupful of dandelion coffee or hot distilled
+water.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Neuritis" id="Neuritis"></a>NEURITIS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>E.M.A. writes.&mdash;At the age of five years I had an attack of
+rheumatic fever through taking a severe cold, and have been
+troubled more or less with pains since that time, which I feel sure
+are caused through rheumatism of the nerves. I am now fifty-eight
+years of age and have been a vegetarian for six years.</p>
+
+<p>My diet is:&mdash;8 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, cup of Sanum Tonic Tea; 9 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, Cup of
+dried milk; 10 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, half of an apple and a little crust of wholemeal
+bread; 1 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> conservatively cooked vegetable, using &ldquo;Emprote&rdquo;
+for sauce; 4 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, cup of dried milk; 6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, a little green
+salad with St Ivel lactic cheese (size of one large walnut); 9 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>,
+cup of dried milk. Do you think dried milk is harmful to me?
+I should miss it very much were I to leave it off. I must mention
+how great a help <i>The Healthy Life</i> magazine is to me in many
+ways.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Neuritis is a painful and wearying form of nerve
+trouble which mostly affects the arms and legs. It
+can, however, originate in any other part of the body
+through the spinal nerve centres. It may sometimes
+be due to injury, but the usual cause is some form of
+thickening or misplacement of the spinal structures,
+which induces pressure upon the nerves as they emerge
+through the apertures between the spinal bones. A
+careful examination of the back will show the site, and
+often the nature, of the thickening or encumbrance
+which is present.</p>
+
+<p>In our correspondent's case the thickening process
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg539" id="Pg539"></a>doubtless occurred as an after effect of the attack of
+rheumatic fever.</p>
+
+<p>The best remedy is suitable osteopathic treatment
+for the spine, supplemented by <i>either very</i> hot or <i>quite</i>
+cold spinal sitz baths, by acetic acid skin treatment,
+or by any other means which will have the effect of disencumbering
+the spine. By means of our treatment we
+free the painful nerves from harmful pressure and promote
+an increased blood circulation in the parts affected.
+In this way the cause of the disorder is removed.</p>
+
+<p>A diet along the following lines would be better than
+the present one:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>8 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>&mdash;Tumblerful of hot distilled water.</p>
+
+<p>9.30.&mdash;One raw egg beaten up with cream and
+vegetable juice or clear vegetable soup made without
+salt. Wholemeal bread with plenty of butter and some
+celery or watercress.</p>
+
+<p>1.30 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>&mdash;Two conservatively cooked vegetables
+done without salt, with grated cheese as sauce and a
+Granose biscuit with butter.</p>
+
+<p>4.&mdash;Tumblerful of hot distilled water only.</p>
+
+<p>6.30.&mdash;2 oz. of cottage cheese or cream cheese, salad
+and Granose biscuits, or &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; crackers, with butter.</p>
+
+<p>9.30.&mdash;A raw egg beaten up with cream and vegetable
+juice or soup.</p>
+
+<p>I think dried milk preparations are inadvisable in such
+cases as these (especially when taken as beverages, as
+the &ldquo;milk sugars&rdquo; present are very prone to ferment
+and to hinder the cleansing of the digestive tract), and
+that the required proteid is best obtained from eggs and
+curd cheese. Fat is very necessary in nervous troubles;
+hence plenty of cream, fresh butter and cream cheese
+should be taken; also pure oil with the salad.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Malt" id="Malt"></a>MALT EXTRACT.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>L.F.H. writes.&mdash;Is malt extract a good thing to take daily with
+an ordinary non-flesh diet, two teaspoonfuls or so at breakfast?
+And is the desiccated or dry malt extract to be preferred to the
+ordinary sticky article?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Malt extract of good quality, containing an active
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg540" id="Pg540"></a>form of diastase, is a good form of relish to take with
+meals. The diastase promotes starch digestion and
+makes a good addition to foods of the cereal order. The
+thick sticky form is the best because the diastase is
+then in an active condition. Dried malt usually will have
+this diastase destroyed, hence, although much more
+convenient to handle, it is not so good dietetically as
+the sticky original extract.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Sugar" id="Sugar"></a>ABOUT SUGAR.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>C.T. writes.&mdash;I have read the article on sugar with considerable
+interest. I have noted nervous disorders, etc., manifest in cases
+of excessive consumption of manufactured sugar. I have been an
+abstainer from cane sugar (all commercial sugars, though <i>I do
+not know of any objection to milk, sugar</i>) for many years, regarding
+it as an unnatural excitant and stimulant as well as being
+inimical to digestion. As a physiologist I have taken immense
+interest in longevity, feeling that an active life past the age of
+ninety-five or a hundred, and upwards, carries with it, in evidence
+of right living, the force of demonstration, and more conclusively,
+in direct ratio to the advance of years. I firmly believe that all
+anomalies will ultimately admit of resolution. In this connection
+I could mention a number of strange and paradoxical cases for
+which, as yet, I have obtained no solution. I know of
+centenarians who began using &ldquo;sugar&rdquo; freely late in life. In one
+case, when past eighty, a new set of teeth (not odd &ldquo;supernumeraries&rdquo;)
+appeared all round! How is it, again, that the
+natives of the West Indies, when living on sugar (in its crude state,
+I suppose) have excellent teeth and perfect health? Is not raw
+sugar better the less manufactured it is? On the other side,
+Captain Diamond, at 114, attributes his health in great measure
+to abstinence from sugar.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Most of these queries are answered in the completed
+book<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> published this year. The point about &ldquo;milk
+sugar&rdquo; not being injurious he will find answered on
+page 72.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10">[10]</a> <i>The Truth about Sugar</i>, 1s. net. (C.W. Daniel, Ltd.)</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Milk sugars&rdquo; taken to excess with a mixed diet,
+or in the form of milk as a beverage, break down into
+lactic, butyric and other destructive acids under the
+influence of intestinal germs and thus do harm to the
+body.</p>
+
+<p>The natives of the West Indies (page 39) take the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg541" id="Pg541"></a>sugar cane in its natural state as a living vegetable
+food&mdash;a very different thing from the isolated and
+chemicalised sugar on our tables at home. Moreover,
+the chewing required helps digestion. This is very
+different to the drinking rapidly of sugared beverages,
+which do not receive this necessary mouth preparation.</p>
+
+<p>One is quite prepared to admit that paradoxical cases
+do occur where sugar seems to agree well even with
+octogenarians, but they are, in my opinion, the exceptions,
+and I am constantly coming across cases where
+the free consumption of table sugars has proved very
+harmful to both old and young.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Stomach" id="Stomach"></a>ULCERATION OF THE STOMACH.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>A.L.M. writes.&mdash;Our domestic servant, a girl aged twenty-four,
+is suffering from ulceration of the stomach and has had periodical
+attacks for the past six years. She has apparently, until she
+came to us, eaten and drunk very unwisely. She has been with
+us seven months and has been fed on a non-flesh diet since she
+came. For the last four weeks tea, coffee and cocoa have been
+forbidden, and as little sugar is consumed as possible. She had
+a very bad attack in August and we had to call in a doctor is we
+did not like the responsibility. He strongly recommended the
+hospital and an operation, which would ensure that there would
+be no repetition of the complaint. She decided to go and was there
+six weeks. After much experimenting there, inoculating and
+wondering whether it was tuberculosis, they operated and in due
+course she came back. We went to the sea for three weeks and
+shortly after our return the vomiting of blood and pains recommenced.
+After four days in bed she returned to light dishes, and a
+fortnight after another slighter attack came on, which
+in twenty-four hours. She takes hot boiled water five times a
+day. She suffers also from a horny skin on the palms of her
+hands, with deep cracks where the natural lines are. These
+periodically bleed. This skin exists also on her heels and the soles
+of her feet. Before and after, an attack this skin seems to be worse
+than ever.</p>
+
+<p>I mentioned the fact of the recurring attacks since the operation
+to the doctor and he seemed surprised and said the matter must
+be constitutional and there was no hope for her.</p>
+
+<p>My own opinion is that pure food will put her right eventually,
+and that these attacks will recur in diminishing force until the
+poisons are eliminated front the system.</p>
+
+<p>Her diet is at present as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;Half-pint of boiled water (hot).</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;Either Shredded Wheat softened in hot milk or
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg542" id="Pg542"></a>breakfast flakes and cold milk: followed by either bananas or
+apples. Half-pint boiled water (hot).</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;Ordinary vegetarian cooked dishes, vegetables conservatively
+cooked, some fruit. Half-pint boiled water (hot).</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea meal.</i>&mdash;Wholemeal bread (Artox flour), usually non-yeast,
+nut butter. Lettuces and radishes when obtainable. Half-pint
+boiled water (hot).</p>
+
+<p><i>Before retiring.</i>&mdash;Half-pint of boiled water (hot).</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It has been shown by Brandl and other investigators
+that ulceration of the stomach can always be produced
+in animals by feeding them with an excess of sugar
+foods. The same thing applies to human beings, who,
+if fed with an excess of sweetmeats, sugar, milk or soft
+mushy cereals, will first contract catarrh of the stomach,
+which will ultimately deepen into a condition of ulceration.</p>
+
+<p>The rationale of the process is this: Fermentation
+and putrefaction of the foods eaten to excess produce
+in the stomach various acids and toxins. These
+become absorbed and pass into the liver. Then the
+liver becomes clogged, its flow of blood is obstructed
+and this naturally retards the flow of food from the
+stomach. That organ becomes congested and inflamed
+and, when the lower end, or pylorus, is obstructed, this
+congested state may easily deepen into ulceration. We
+also nearly always find a tender spine, showing that the
+nervous system has equally participated in the conditions
+produced, and this nervous factor intensifies the
+trouble by retarding the due working of the digestive
+functions.</p>
+
+<p>What we have to do to cure a case of ulcerated
+stomach is <i>to withhold the foods which create fermentation</i>.
+Then the liver will be allowed time to work off
+the poisons which are clogging its substance and when
+this has come about the stomach will slowly return to
+its normal condition.</p>
+
+<p>The diet which our correspondent cites is badly
+arranged. It is a mistake to give fluid <i>with</i> the meals,
+and the mushy food at breakfast and the soft food at
+dinner should be changed to drier and crisper forms of
+nutriment.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg543" id="Pg543"></a>The following diet would be a distinct improvement:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;Half-pint of boiled hot water, sipped
+slowly; or quarter-pint Sanum Tonic Tea, taken hot.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;A Shredded Wheat biscuit <i>eaten dry</i> and
+well buttered; a lightly boiled egg and some finely
+grated raw roots, especially carrots and turnips.</p>
+
+<p>In a case of this sort it is best not to mix cereals
+with fruits.</p>
+
+<p>An alternative breakfast would consist of <i>fruit alone</i>
+such as two apples, finely grated at first, or two bananas
+mashed and mixed with pure olive oil and sprinkled
+with flaked nuts but care must be taken that the
+pulped banana is well chewed.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;Grated cheese, or cream cheese, with some
+finely chopped salad, or grated raw roots, or conservatively
+cooked vegetables (preferably roots or onions
+baked fairly dry by the casserole method) can be taken
+at this repast. Follow with a slice or two of cold
+ordinary toast or rusks with butter.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea meal.</i>&mdash;Half-pint of hot boiled water with a little
+lemon or orange juice added to it for flavouring.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper</i> (about 6.30).&mdash;Stale standard bread with
+butter and curd cheese or an egg. The non-yeast bread
+should be avoided as in the weak state of the stomach
+it will not be properly digested; besides, the bran may
+irritate the lining in the present condition of the
+stomach. As soon as the stomach has regained its
+power of digesting food, and the ulcers have healed,
+then fine wholemeal biscuits of the Wallace or Ixion
+kind can be taken, but the unfermented bread had better
+be avoided.</p>
+
+<p><i>At bedtime.</i>&mdash;A half-pint of hot water.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Unfired" id="Unfired"></a>GOING TO EXTREMES IN THE UNFIRED DIET.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>W.O.C. writes.&mdash;As a bachelor who (not believing in, and
+therefore doing without domestic help) is anxious to reduce time
+spent on cooking to a minimum, I shall be glad if Dr Knaggs will
+tell me whether the use of the oven, pan and kettle are necessary
+to healthy diet. For instance (1) would a diet of bread and butter,
+biscuits, cheese, fruit (fresh and dried), ordinary cold water and
+cold milk, be as healthy as a diet of hot vegetables, puddings,
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg544" id="Pg544"></a>cocoashell, etc.? (2) Are cooked lentils, butter-beans, macaroni,
+etc., more beneficial taken hot than after they have cooled? (3)
+Could uncooked vegetables <i>of sufficient nutriment</i> be substituted for
+these? I shall be glad if it is quite safe to live entirely on
+raw foods, whether fresh or &ldquo;prepared.&rdquo;</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The use of the oven, pan and kettle is not essential
+to a healthy diet, but few people in this changeable, and
+often cold, depressing climate are willing to forgo their
+occasional use. One cannot get hot water for a drink
+without a kettle or a small saucepan and a gas ring,
+and hot water is often a very comforting and useful
+drink, especially where an effort is being made to break
+off the tea and coffee habit.</p>
+
+<p>A diet of bread and butter, biscuits, cheese, fresh and
+dried fruits is excellent, provided our correspondent also
+includes grated raw roots and salads as the medicinal
+part of the regimen, and keeps the fresh fruit to itself
+as one meal of the day. Cold water or cold milk could
+also be taken in the place of hot water or hot milk,
+although I deprecate the use of milk as a beverage unless
+a person is willing to live entirely on milk like a baby
+does. The hot vegetables are uncalled for, provided
+the raw vegetables are substituted for them. The
+puddings can well be discarded. Cocoashell beverages
+are useful in very many cases.</p>
+
+<p>Beans or lentils can be eaten sparingly in a raw state
+if first soaked, then flaked in a Dana machine, and
+afterwards flavoured with herbs or parsley. I certainly
+think that, if they <i>are</i> to be cooked, the taste is better
+if eaten hot; but there is no reason why cold cooked
+lentils should not be eaten any more than is the case
+with an other form of cooked food. Uncooked vegetables
+will not take the place of lentils, because they
+are of a different order of food-stuff. The uncooked
+vegetable would go well with the lentils as neutralising
+agents of the acids into which all nitrogenous foods
+break down in the body. Most people will find that
+nuts, cheese and eggs are better sources of proteid
+than lentils or other &ldquo;pulse foods.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg545" id="Pg545"></a></p>
+<div class="cover">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="coverleft">Vol. V<br />
+No. 27</span>
+<span class="coverright">October<br />
+1913<br /></span>
+<img src="images/title.png" width="220" height="330"
+alt="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C."
+title="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C." /></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+philosophers will all speak the same language and
+understand one another.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Claude Bernard.</span></p></blockquote>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+<h2><a name="AN_INDICATION27" id="AN_INDICATION27"></a>AN INDICATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapj"><span class="dropcap">J</span></span>ust as there is a pride that apes
+humility, so there is an egotism that
+apes selfishness, a cowardice that apes
+stoicism and an indolence that apes
+effort. This is especially apparent in
+matters pertaining to health.</p>
+
+<p>How often, on the plea of not causing worry or
+expense to others, does a man or woman not put
+off taking necessary rest, or consulting a doctor,
+until a slight ailment that once would have yielded
+to treatment becomes an irreparable injury.</p>
+
+<p>Such conduct is often admired as unselfish, but
+for unselfishness and stoicism a psychologist would
+read fear, indolence and egotism. Fear of being
+thought hypochondriacal and fear of facing facts;
+shrinking from the exertion involved in the effort
+to become healthy and from the pain involved in
+witnessing the possible distress and anxiety of
+friends should the complaint prove serious&mdash;regard<a class="pagenum" name="Pg546" id="Pg546"></a>less
+of the fact that its neglect and resultant incurability
+would cause infinitely more distress; above
+all, that mental egotism which breeds in its victim
+an unreadiness to acknowledge that he does not
+<i>know</i> what may be wrong and to take prompt steps
+to remedy his ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>It is not fair, of course, to attach too much blame
+to the patient. Such faults as those cited above are
+in themselves symptoms of nervous disease. Body
+and mind act and react upon one another. Nevertheless,
+the practice of the virtues loses its meaning
+when there is no pull in the opposite direction.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="IMAGINATION_IN_INSURANCE" id="IMAGINATION_IN_INSURANCE"></a>IMAGINATION IN INSURANCE.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Regular readers will recognise in this article a continuation of
+the series previously entitled &ldquo;Healthy Brains.&rdquo; The author of
+&ldquo;The Children All Day Long&rdquo; is an intimate disciple of one of
+the greatest living psychologists, and she has a message of the
+first importance to all who realise that true health depends as
+much on poise of mind as on physical fitness.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapiup" title="Transcriber's Note: This illuminated capital I is upside-down here as in the original."><span class="dropcap">I</span></span>t is an unpleasant subject, but have you
+ever faced the fact that your widow might
+be left in poverty?</p>
+
+<p>We all know the phrases that come so
+glibly from the lips of the insurance agent.
+Perhaps the very fact that it pays companies
+to spend thousands a year on the salaries of agents, and
+other thousands on broadcast eye-catching advertisements,
+shows that there are many things which our
+imagination only accepts &ldquo;against the grain.&rdquo; Fire,
+storm, loss by theft or burglary, sickness, disablement
+and death we do not, by choice, dwell on these things
+in thought.</p>
+
+<p>Now some people are inclined to pet this impulse of
+turning away. &ldquo;Do not think dark thoughts,&rdquo; they
+tell us, &ldquo;the best insurance is unconsciousness, <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'insousiance'.">insou<a class="pagenum" name="Pg547" id="Pg547"></a>ciance</ins>,
+denial. Misfortune will pass you by if you do
+not look for it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps there is something to be said for this method
+when it comes with absolute spontaneity from the innermost
+nature. But if for the radiant apprehension of
+beauty and health we substitute an effort to cling to the
+picture of good when our very bodies and nerves are
+warning us with suggestions of evil, we run grave risks.
+By adopting someone else's sense of freedom from
+danger and repressing our own conviction that for us
+a certain danger, more or less remote, exists, we are
+putting great pressure upon ourselves. At times of ill-health
+or accidental worry, a sleepless night may bring
+us an agonising succession of imaginative pictures,
+those very pictures which we have attempted to banish
+from our daily life. If we have still greater power of
+repression these grim images, forbidden throughout
+every moment of waking life, may reappear in dreams.</p>
+
+<p>(Of the still more serious dangers of repression and
+of its relation to various forms of insanity, this is hardly
+the place to speak.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> It ought not to be necessary to
+appeal to alarming instances in order to make us attend
+to a suggested warning.)</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11">[11]</a> See Bernard Hart's illuminating treatment of the whole subject
+in <i>The Psychology of Insanity</i>, Cambridge Manuals of Science.</p>
+
+<p>Now if we decide to regard all fear as a suggestion
+of precaution, the emotional part of it to be laid aside
+as soon as it has fulfilled its function of arousing interest
+and directing action, it is easy to see the psychological
+justification for insurance.</p>
+
+<p>Of course pecuniary insurance is but one instance of
+such sequences of action, though it happens to be a
+rather obvious one. In a different field, most of us
+know the delightful feeling of relief experienced after
+consulting a doctor about some symptom that has perhaps
+been troubling us for a long time. &ldquo;May I
+safely do this? Ought I to refrain from that?&rdquo; and
+such perpetually recurring irritations to the attention are
+replaced by the knowledge that it is now the doctor's
+business to decide whether this or that is &ldquo;serious,&rdquo;
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg548" id="Pg548"></a>and that as long as we carry out his orders we may lay
+aside all worry about the matter.</p>
+
+<p>So in the case of fire insurance, what we are really
+buying with our annual premium is freedom from haunting
+questions as to the loss that would ensue if our
+house or shop or office were burnt down or damaged.
+Whenever the thought comes, it may, as far as the
+money loss is concerned, be dismissed.</p>
+
+<p>We see then that instead of keeping the suggestion of
+such misfortunes before us, as some people might allege,
+the act of insurance substitutes for vague and recurrent
+fears a formal and periodical recognition of possibilities,
+a recognition, too, that contains within itself a precaution
+against some of the results of the misfortune
+should it ever occur. What we buy, at the cost of a
+fixed number of pounds or shillings of money and a few
+minutes of time once a year, is the right to put the
+dangers out of our consciousness altogether and yet
+leave no residuum of repressed fear to split up our
+personality or give us indigestion.</p>
+
+<p>If we choose, for some reason or other, to let our
+imagination dwell on the objective side of the possibility
+we have insured against, we shall find a pleasure in
+thinking of what can be done by many people working
+together. If we need help to meet some misfortune, it
+is ours as a right, not doled out to us through others'
+pity. And every year that we have made no claim we
+have the delight of knowing that we are helping those
+who need.</p>
+
+<p>The art of working together is yet in its infancy.
+But if even the present standard of method devised for
+money insurance were to be adopted in the deeper
+matters which we so often allow to trouble us, what an
+advance in mental development we should have made
+and what new possibilities of safe action would be
+opened up!</p>
+
+<p class="sig">E.M. Cobham.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Every youth should learn to do something finely and
+thoroughly with his hands.&mdash;<i>Ruskin.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg549" id="Pg549"></a><a name="THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM1" id="THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM1"></a>THE SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF
+VEGETALISM.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p>This article has been translated from the French of Prof. H.
+Labb&eacute;, the head of the <i>laboratoire &agrave; la Facult&eacute; de M&eacute;decine</i>, in
+Paris. It reflects a rather characteristic aloofness to any considerations
+other than scientific or economic. But it will well
+repay careful study.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">I</h3>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapv"><span class="dropcap">V</span></span>egetarianism has been the object of
+many attacks, and has also been warmly
+defended. Most of its adepts have sought
+to give the value of a dogma to its practice.</p>
+
+<p>For quite a number of people &ldquo;vegetarianism&rdquo;
+is a kind of religion, requiring of
+its votaries a sort of baptism, and the sacrifice of many
+pleasures. It is this which justifies the infatuation of
+some, and the systematic disparagement of others.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vegetalism&rdquo;<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> cannot pretend to play a similar
+part, or to lend itself to ambiguity. To be a &ldquo;vegetalist&rdquo;
+is to choose in the vegetable kingdom, with a
+justified preference, foods susceptible of filling the
+energy-producing needs, and the needs of the reparation
+of the human system.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vegetalism&rdquo; is a chapter of dietetic physiology
+which must utilise the precise methods and recent discoveries
+of the science of nutrition.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12">[12]</a> The word &ldquo;Vegetarianism&rdquo; implies a judgment of the qualities
+which such a diet entails. This word is derived, in fact, from the
+Latin adjective &ldquo;Vegetus&rdquo; (strong). The word &ldquo;Vegetalism,&rdquo;
+which we oppose to the preceding one, admits only the establishing
+of a fact, that of the choice&mdash;exclusive or preferred&mdash;of the
+nutritious matters in the vegetable kingdom.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">II</h3>
+
+<p>Before putting &ldquo;vegetalism&rdquo; into practice the first
+point is to know whether the foods of &ldquo;vegetal&rdquo; origin
+contain, and are susceptible of producing regularly, the
+divers nutritive principles indispensable to the organisation
+of an alimentary diet. The principles are the follow<a class="pagenum" name="Pg550" id="Pg550"></a>ing:&mdash;Proteid
+or albuminoid substances; hydrocarbonated
+and sweet substances fatty substances; mineral
+matters, alkalis, lime, magnesia, phosphates and chlorides,
+etc. In most compound foods, no matter of what
+origin, mineral materials almost always exist in sufficient
+quantities. The most important amongst them, at all
+events, are found combined in liberal, even superabundant,
+portions in dishes of vegetal origin. The
+analysis of the ashes of our most common table vegetables
+fixes us immediately to this subject: Leguminous
+plants supply from about three to six per cent. of ashes,
+rich in alkalis, lime and phosphates. Potatoes, green
+vegetables and fruit as a whole absorbing considerable
+quantities of mineral elements. These are the elements
+of a nature to allow a precise reply to this question
+which we propose to expound briefly.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">III</h3>
+
+<p>In order to examine a food thoroughly, for the purpose
+of ascertaining if it can be advantageously introduced
+for consumption, whether albumins, fats, hydrate
+of carbon, or sugar, etc., or again an association of
+these principles in a composite article of food are in
+question, divers researches must be carried out before
+giving a final judgment.</p>
+
+<p>If a more or less complex article of food is in question,
+before considering it as a good nutriment, its centesimal
+composition, or its immediate composition, should be
+established; its theoretic calorific power should be
+known, and it should be measured if this has not yet
+been done.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the calorific yield thus estimated <i>in vitro</i>, the
+real utilisation in the human organism of articles of food
+alone or mixed with other foods should be determined,
+taking simultaneously into account their effects, whether
+tonic, stimulating or depressing.</p>
+
+<p>From a different point of view it is no longer allowable
+to neglect before judging whether such and such
+a nutritive substance is advantageous, the valuation of
+what we have called, with Prof. Landouzy, the economic
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg551" id="Pg551"></a>yield&mdash;that is to say, the price of the energy, provided
+by the unity of weight of the article of food.</p>
+
+<p>It is only in reviewing &ldquo;vegetal&rdquo; substances, taking
+these divers titles into consideration, that we shall be
+justified in attributing to the practice of &ldquo;vegetalism,&rdquo;
+integral or mitigated, its definite value.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">IV</h3>
+
+<p>Only a few years ago, when Sch&uuml;tzenberger, emulator
+and forerunner of Fischer, Armand Gautier, Kossel, first
+disjointed the albuminoid molecule, to examine one by
+one its divers parts, the composition of the various
+albumins was very little known. Whether, therefore,
+albumins of the blood, or those of meat or eggs, were in
+question, these bodies were hardly ever separated,
+except through physical circumstances, amongst others
+by constant quantities of different coagulation. As to
+the centesimal formula and the intimate structure of the
+different protoid substances, they could be considered
+as closely brought together.</p>
+
+<p>From this fact, the physiological problem of the
+utilisation of albumin was simpler. No matter which
+article of food contained this albumin, its nutritive
+power by unity of weight remained the same. At the
+present time the number of albumins is no longer
+limited. It is not now physical characteristics founded
+difficult separations which arbitrarily distinguish those
+bodies from each other. The individuality of each of the
+albumins results from its formula of deterioration, under
+the influence of digestive ferments, or of chemical bodies
+acting in a similar way, as do mineral acids and alkalis.
+For want of constituary formula this methodical
+deterioration makes known the number of molecules
+(acids or other bodies) which are responsible for the
+structure of each albumin. These deleterious formula
+of proteid matter are not less suggestive than composition
+ones. They reveal notable differences between
+&ldquo;vegetal&rdquo; and animal albumins.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, animal albumins (beef, veal, mutton,
+pork, etc.) which we are offered in an alimentary flesh
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg552" id="Pg552"></a>diet, resemble more nearly the structure of our own
+bodily albumins than do the gluten of bread or the
+albumin of vegetables. This fact seems actually the
+best support of the theory which affirms the superiority
+of the flesh over the vegetable diet. Such a remark is
+therefore well worth discussing by showing that the
+consequences which can be deduced from it are paradoxical,
+and rest upon hypothesis which, not very acceptable
+in theory, are hardly verified in practice.</p>
+
+<p>Admitting that albumin plays in alimentary diet only
+the plastic part of reconstruction of used-up corporal
+matter, it might be advantageous to ingest but one
+albumin the composition of which is very similar to
+our own. By virtue of the law of least effort such a
+one in equal weights ought to be of more service than
+a foreign albumin, as it requires less organic work.
+For man, albumin of animal origin ought to be more
+profitable in equal weight than vegetable albumin. In
+the organism, indeed, albumin passes through a double
+labour. After the intestinal deterioration, followed by a
+passage through the digestive mucus membrane, a re-welding
+of the liberated acids takes place, with a formation
+of new albumin.</p>
+
+<p>If, therefore, alimentary albumin's mission is, not to
+be definitely burnt up in the organism, but to help in the
+plastication of the individual, the more its initial formula
+approaches the definite one to which it must attain, the
+more profitable it becomes, giving out less useless fragments
+and waste. Animal albumin approaching more
+nearly to human albumin, is also the one whose introduction
+into the daily alimentary diet is most rational.
+This statement seems to be the defeat of vegetal albumin.
+But let there be no mistake. It consecrates at
+the same time the triumph of anthropophagy, for there
+could not be for man a more profitable albumin than his
+own, or that of his fellow-man! This should make us
+pause and reflect, before allowing this deduction to be
+accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, these arguments <i>ad hominem</i> do not
+appear to us necessary for repelling such an interpreta<a class="pagenum" name="Pg553" id="Pg553"></a>tion
+of facts. Modern works have shown us that the
+greater proportion of ingested albumin played, in fact,
+a calorific, and not a plastic, part. Under these conditions
+one is justified in doubting whether there takes
+place with regard to the total albumins ingested a work
+of reconstruction thus complicated in the organism, after
+their first deterioration. Evidently one may come to
+believe that this complicated labour applies only to the
+more or less feeble portion of albumin really integrated.</p>
+
+<p>Practically speaking, the best criterion for judging
+the utilisation of an ingested albumin lies in the persistence
+of the corporal weight, allied to the ascertained
+fact of a stable equilibrium in the total azotized balance-sheet
+which is provided by the comparison of the
+&ldquo;Ingesta&rdquo; with the &ldquo;Excreta.&rdquo; From this point of
+view there exists the closest similitude between the
+albumins of animal and those of vegetable origin; both,
+in fact, are capable of assuring good health and corporal
+and cellular equilibrium.</p>
+
+<p>However, the digestibility of vegetable albumins
+seems to remain slightly inferior to that of animal
+albumins. 97 per cent. of the animal fibrine given in
+a meal are digested, where 88 to 90 per cent. only of
+vegetable albumins are absorbed and utilised. It is
+a small difference, but not one to be overlooked. We
+must say, however, that the method one employs in
+determining these digestibilities takes from them a part
+of their value, and renders difficult the comparison of
+results obtained. Sensibly pure albumins are too often
+compared in an artificial diet. One deviates thus from
+the conditions of practical physiology. In fact, in ordinary
+meals, all varieties of foods are mixed together,
+acting and reacting upon each other, reciprocally modifying
+their digestibility. If one conforms to this way of
+acting towards alimentary albumins, the results change
+sensibly. In the presence of an excess of starch, under
+the shape of bread, for example, vegetable albumin
+seems to be absorbed in about the same proportions as
+animal albumin.</p>
+
+<p>If, in a flesh diet, animal albumins are always con<a class="pagenum" name="Pg554" id="Pg554"></a>sumed
+nearly pure (lean meat containing hardly anything
+but albumin, besides a little fat, and an inferior
+quantity of glycogen) vegetable albumin is always, on
+the contrary, mixed with a number of other substances.
+This is doubtless one of the reasons which causes the
+digestibility of vegetable albumins to vary, the foreign
+nutritive matters being able to bring about, under
+certain circumstances, and in cases of superabundant
+ingestions, a real albuminous &ldquo;saving&rdquo; in the newest
+sense of the word.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, a prejudicial question makes the debate
+almost vain. When it was admitted by such physiologists
+as Voit, Rubner and their school that from 140
+to 150 grammes of albumin in the minimum were daily
+necessaries in the human diet, a variation of a few units
+in the digestive power presented some importance.
+Nowadays the real utility of albumins is differently
+appreciated. The need of them seems to have been
+singularly exaggerated; first lowered to about 75 gr. by
+A. Gautier, it has dropped successively with Lapicque,
+Chittenden, Landergreen, Morchoisne and Labb&eacute;, by
+virtue of considerations both ethnological and physiological,
+to 50 grs., 30 grs. and even to 25 or 20
+grammes. The &ldquo;nutritive relation&rdquo;&mdash;that is to say, the
+yield from albuminoid matters to the total nutritive
+matters of diet&mdash;is thus brought down from 1/3 its
+primitive value to 1/15 or 1/20 at most. It follows
+that the slight inferiority found in the digestive powers
+of vegetable albumin appears unimportant. It is sufficient
+to add 2 or 3 more grammes of albumin to a
+ration already superabundant of from 40 to 50 grammes
+of vegetable proteins to bring back a complete equilibrium
+in the use of vegetable and animal varieties.
+The theoretical inferiority of vegetable albumin thus
+almost completely disappears.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Labb&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>If your system has become clogged, go slow&mdash;and
+fast.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg555" id="Pg555"></a><a name="ODE_TO_THE_WEST_WIND" id="ODE_TO_THE_WEST_WIND"></a>ODE TO THE WEST WIND.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanzadc">
+<span class="i0"><span class="dropcapo"><span class="dropcap">O</span></span> Wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thou from whose unseen presence the leaves dead<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Are driven like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Yellow, and black, and pale, and hectic red,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pestilence-stricken multitudes! O thou<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Who chariotest to their dark wintry bed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The wing&egrave;d seeds, where they lie cold and low,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Each like a corpse within its grave, until<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thine azure sister of the Spring shall blow<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Her clarion o'er the dreaming earth, and fill<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air)<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With living hues and odours plain and hill<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Wild Spirit which art moving everywhere;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Destroyer and preserver; hear, oh hear!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thou on whose stream, 'mid the steep sky's commotion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Loose clouds like earth's decaying leaves are shed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shook from the tangled boughs of heaven and ocean,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Angels of rain and lightning! there are spread<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On the blue surface of thine airy surge,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Like the bright hair uplifted from the head<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of some fierce M&aelig;nad, even from the dim verge<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of the horizon to the zenith's height,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The locks of the approaching storm. Thou dirge<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of the dying year, to which this closing night<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Will be the dome of a vast sepulchre,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Vaulted with all thy congregated might<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of vapours, from whose solid atmosphere<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Black rain, and fire, and hail, will burst: Oh hear!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thou who didst waken from his summer dreams<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The blue Mediterranean, where he lay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lulled by the coil of his crystalline streams,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Beside a pumice isle in Bai&aelig;'s bay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><a class="pagenum" name="Pg556" id="Pg556"></a>And saw in sleep old palaces and towers<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Quivering within the wave's intenser day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All overgrown with azure moss, and flowers<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">So sweet the sense faints picturing them! Thou<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For whose path the Atlantic's level powers<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Cleave themselves into chasms, while far below<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The sea-blooms and the oozy woods which wear<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The sapless foliage of the ocean know<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy voice, and suddenly grow grey with fear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And tremble and despoil themselves: Oh, hear!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">If I were a dead leaf thou mightest bear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">If I were a swift cloud to fly with thee;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A wave to pant beneath thy power, and share<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The impulse of thy strength, only less free<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than thou, O uncontrollable! if even<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">I were as in my boyhood, and could be<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The comrade of thy wanderings over heaven,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As then, when to outstrip thy skiey speed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Scarce seemed a vision,&mdash;I would ne'er have striven<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As thus with thee in prayer in my sore need.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Oh lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A heavy weight of hours has chained and bowed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One too like thee&mdash;tameless, and swift, and proud.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">What if my leaves are falling like its own?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tumult of thy mighty harmonies<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Will take from both a deep autumnal tone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sweet though in sadness. Be thou, Spirit fierce,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My spirit! Be thou me, impetuous one!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Drive my dead thoughts over the universe,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Like withered leaves, to quicken a new birth;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, by the incantation of this verse,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Scatter, as from an unextinguished hearth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ashes and sparks, my words among mankind!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Be through my lips to unawakened earth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The trumpet of a prophecy! O Wind,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="sig">Percy Bysshe Shelley.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg557" id="Pg557"></a><a name="WHAT_MAKES_A_HOLIDAY" id="WHAT_MAKES_A_HOLIDAY"></a>WHAT MAKES A HOLIDAY?</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapw"><span class="dropcap">W</span></span>hat is it makes a holiday? Some people
+want Paris, some Monte Carlo, one man
+cannot be satisfied without big game to
+hunt, another must have a grouse moor.
+The student has his sailing boat, the young
+wage-earner his bicycle, three girl friends
+look forward to their week in a Hastings boarding-house.
+Almost anything may be &ldquo;a change&rdquo;; most
+things, to someone or other, are &ldquo;a holiday.&rdquo; What
+does it all mean?</p>
+
+<p>The sands of West Sussex are wide and free, firm
+and smooth for walking with bare feet, lovely with
+little shells and sea-worm curves and ripple marks and
+the pits of razor-shells. Above them are the slopes of
+shingle, gleaming with all colours in the September
+sun. Farther up again, the low, brown crumbling
+cliffs crowned with green wreaths of tamarisk. The
+sea comes creeping up, or else the wind raises great
+white breakers; if the waves are quiet, old breakwaters,
+long ago broken themselves, smashed fragments here
+and there of concrete protections put by man, gaps in
+the cliff and changes in the coast-line, remind us of the
+vast force behind the gentle and persistent lap of water.
+The beach itself reminds us of it; there a flint and here
+a rounded pebble made out of brick or glass, worn down
+from man's rubbish to sea's proof of power.</p>
+
+<p>Over it all are the children, brown-legged and bare-headed.
+(Is it something in the weather this year that
+has given us the particular red-brown, suggestive of
+shrimp and lobster, that is the colour-vintage of 1913?)
+Babies with oilskin waders, bathers, girls in vividly
+coloured coats walking along the sands; all make up
+the picture and give us once again the thrill of holiday.</p>
+
+<p>Inland, the Sussex lanes are green and the trees are
+broad and shady. Thatched cottages are everywhere,
+and barns with heavy brows; yesterday I saw some pots
+put for shelter from the sun under the far-projecting
+thatch of a farmhouse. The gardens are full of sun-<a class="pagenum" name="Pg558" id="Pg558"></a>flowers
+and hollyhocks, fuchsia and golden rod; the
+walls are covered with jasmine and passion-flowers.
+Old, old churches make us feel like day-flies. The yew
+in the churchyard five minutes' walk from here is said
+to be 900 years old; the church itself is thirteenth
+century, but into its walls were built fragments of a
+former church, far older, on the same site. It carries
+us more than half-way back to the foundation of Christianity.
+Dim tales of heathen earls and Norman kings
+hang around the villages, and the very floor of the sea
+beyond the land is richly laden with stores of half-forgotten
+memories.</p>
+
+<p>Which of all these things makes these days my holiday?</p>
+
+<p>All of them, perhaps. Present moving life, and long-past
+history, the mighty movement of nature and the
+changes of geologic time: sheer beauty too and the
+gaiety of amusements and excursions; do not all have
+their place in unwinding us from the tight coils we make
+for our working days?</p>
+
+<p>Freedom to take from the world whatever is there of
+beauty and of interest&mdash;it really hardly matters what
+or where; freedom enhanced by sympathy, perhaps, for
+we seem to need some comrade in our play; so many
+days and nights following each other&mdash;no matter exactly
+how many&mdash;for letting ourselves go, and letting the
+world and all its power and wonder flow into us; that,
+whatever be place, time and conditions, is the making
+of a holiday.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">C</p>
+
+<div class="box"><hr />
+<h3>To Our Readers.</h3>
+
+<p>Readers who appreciate the independence and
+all-round nature of <i>The Healthy Life</i> can materially
+assist the extension of its circulation by tactfully
+urging their local newsagent to have the magazine
+regularly displayed for sale. An attractive monthly
+poster can always be had free from the Publishers,
+3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.</p><hr />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg559" id="Pg559"></a><a name="HEALTHY_LIFE_ABROAD" id="HEALTHY_LIFE_ABROAD"></a>HEALTHY LIFE ABROAD.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">&ldquo;Hygie.&rdquo;</span></h3>
+
+<h4><i>A New Definition of Neurasthenia.</i></h4>
+
+<p>We cull the following definition of neurasthenia from
+our French contemporary: Neurasthenia is discouragement
+of the soul. Being in a state of discouragement
+the soul ceases to take care of the body and allows it
+to become encumbered with waste products. The body
+in its turn becomes so defective that the soul is incapable
+of repairing the enfeebled organs and throws
+the body away into the water or leaves it somewhere to
+be crushed or abandons it by some other means.
+Neurasthenia may be compared to an indolent mechanic.
+He neglects to oil his engine. It runs off the rails and
+is smashed.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Fresh Departures.</i></h4>
+
+<p>The Vegetarian Society of France has introduced
+three new sections into its organisation. The first is
+documentary, and aims at the collection, centralisation
+and classification of all information bearing on food
+reform. The second deals with domestic economy and
+hygiene. A number of ladies willing to devote themselves
+to the popularisation of the leading ideas of
+vegetarianism have joined this section. They offer
+advice and instruction to all who wish to familiarise
+themselves with food reform principles. The third
+section is concerned with physical training and outdoor
+games, with special reference to the relationship between
+these things and a non-flesh regimen.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">&ldquo;Vegetarische Warte.&rdquo;</span></h3>
+
+<h4><i>Nietzsche as Fruitarian.</i></h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A simple life,&rdquo; wrote Nietzsche in 1879, &ldquo;is very
+difficult at the present time,&rdquo; and went on to explain
+its difficulties and to suggest that even the most determined
+would be obliged to leave the discovery of the
+way to a wiser generation. He himself, however, took
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg560" id="Pg560"></a>some steps upon the way during his stay in Genoa,
+when he lived on bread and fruit and spent but a few
+shillings a week. Eggs were occasionally included, and
+artichokes&mdash;and the little cookery he needed was done
+by himself over a spirit lamp. His winter in Genoa,
+he declares, was the happiest in his life and saw the
+production of his &ldquo;Twilight of the Gods.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>Food Reform in Russia.</i></h4>
+
+<p>The movement goes ahead rapidly in Russia. Hardly
+a town of any size but has now its vegetarian restaurant.
+This year the first Russian Vegetarian Congress has
+been held. It seems to have been a very successful
+gathering. &ldquo;Seldom,&rdquo; writes one who was present,
+&ldquo;have I experienced such a strong impression as was
+made upon me by this first vegetarian congress in
+Moscow.&rdquo; Unity seems to have been the prevailing
+note. Papers were read on the general significance and
+the various aspects of vegetarianism, followed by discussions.
+Amongst the various excursions undertaken
+was a pilgrimage to Yasnaya Polyana, including a visit
+to Tolstoy's grave.</p>
+
+<p>A Vegetarian Exhibition has also been held in
+Moscow. It included a fine show of fruits and vegetables,
+exhibits of various substitutes for leather, soaps
+made of vegetable oils, an abundance of Russian and
+foreign vegetarian literature of all sorts, from the
+noblest reaches of theory to the most invaluable details
+of practice. The next Congress is arranged for Easter
+1914, at Kiev.</p>
+
+
+<h4><i>A Hopeful Sign.</i></h4>
+
+<p>Fifteen years ago the Berlin municipal authorities
+stoutly refused Professor Baron's offer to found an
+orphanage which should be conducted on vegetarian
+principles. At the present moment it is being arranged
+that all school children shall be taught the value of
+vegetables and leguminous preparations and the wholesomeness
+of a diet that is relatively non-stimulating
+and practically meatless.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">D.M. Richardson.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg561" id="Pg561"></a><a name="THE_CURTAINED_DOORWAYS" id="THE_CURTAINED_DOORWAYS"></a>THE CURTAINED DOORWAYS.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapi"><span class="dropcap">I</span></span>n George Macdonald's <i>Phantastes: a Faery
+Romance for Men and Women</i> it is told
+how a man found himself in the midst of a
+great circular hall built entirely of black
+marble. On every side and at regular
+intervals there were archways, all heavily
+curtained. Hearing a faint sound of music proceeding
+from one of these hidden doorways he went towards it
+and, drawing aside the hangings, found a large room
+crowded with statuary, but no sign of an living
+creature. Yet he was certain the music had proceeded
+from that particular archway. Greatly puzzled, he let
+the curtain fall and stepped back a few paces. At once
+the music continued. Stepping stealthily and quickly to
+the curtain, he again lifted it, and received a vivid
+impression of a crowd of dancing forms suddenly
+arrested: something told him beyond dispute that at
+the moment he had drawn the hangings aside what
+were now lovely but motionless statues had sprung
+each to its pedestal out of the mazes of an intricate
+dance. Sound and movement had been frozen, in a
+flash of time, into a crowd of beautiful forms&mdash;in stone.
+No statue but seemed to tremble into immobility as the
+intruder's gaze turned this way and that no marble
+face but seemed to be aglow with the music that had
+died with his entry; no white limb but seemed to be
+tremulous with the rhythm of the dance that had
+ceased so suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>If the subtlety and imaginative truth of this story
+should lead you to read the whole book, I shall have
+had the privilege of introducing you to what is surely
+one of the finest and most delicately wrought fantasies
+in the English language, a fantasy so permeated with
+beauty and truth that you will neither wish nor need
+to look for the &ldquo;moral&rdquo;.</p>
+
+<p>But whether you read <i>Phantastes</i> or not, I may
+be allowed to suggest that the incident I have at<a class="pagenum" name="Pg562" id="Pg562"></a>tempted
+to describe conveys one of the secrets of
+healthy living.</p>
+
+<p>It is a trite saying, that health is harmony. But I
+plead for a much wider and fuller interpretation of
+harmony than is customary. <i>Mens sana in corpore
+sano</i>&mdash;a sane mind in a healthy body&mdash;does not fill all
+the requirements of a healthy life. It is but an excellent
+theme, wanting orchestration.</p>
+
+<p>It is good to aim at a harmonious working of one's
+internal arrangements if one has had the misfortune
+or the folly to break that harmony. The physical
+basis of life must be attended to if we would be well.
+Only, you cannot stop there without imperilling the
+whole scheme.</p>
+
+<p>Again, it is good to train the body by means of
+exercise, play, singing and handicraft; all these things
+react both upwards and downwards, outwards and
+inwards. For example, one of the special virtues of
+tennis, if it be played at all keenly, is the necessity for
+making one's feet (those neglected members!) quick
+and responsive to the messages of eye and brain. In
+an increasingly sedentary age the rapidly growing
+popularity of tennis is, for this one reason alone, a
+good omen. But if you play tennis, or any other
+healthy outdoor sport, or learn how to sing, or how to
+breathe, or if you do M&uuml;ller's exercises daily, for the
+sole purpose of benefiting your liver or developing
+your muscles, or of &ldquo;keeping fit,&rdquo; you will miss the
+real prize.</p>
+
+<p>It is good, also, to train the mind to be logical,
+critical and balanced: it is good to cultivate a retentive
+memory and to store up useful facts. But if while you
+are aiming at intellectual fitness and alertness you
+allow these good things to obscure other and better
+things, if, in short, you let means become ends, you
+will never be healthy, because you will miss half the
+joys of living.</p>
+
+<p>There are many very skilful performers on musical
+instruments. They have set themselves, or their
+parents have set them, to gain certain prizes, distinc<a class="pagenum" name="Pg563" id="Pg563"></a>tions
+or qualifications. No music is now too difficult
+for them to execute. But that is exactly what they do&mdash;they
+execute it: destroy its head and heart by sheer
+mechanical perfection. They have mastered the piano,
+or the organ, or the violin, or their own voice; but
+music eludes them.</p>
+
+<p>You see why I began with that tale of the curtained
+doors, the mysterious music, and the quivering statuary.
+There is an elusive, haunting quality about life and
+all living things which, if we look for it and listen to
+it, imparts a glamour, a rhythm, a beauty to everything
+that is worth doing. The great danger is that
+in the pressure of work, the hurry of play, the pursuit
+of health, or the training of the mind we miss the very
+thing which can give meaning and value to all these
+things. The severely matter-of-fact people don't
+go near the curtained doors, and if they did, would
+discover only a lot of cold, lifeless statues. Whoever
+heard of statues dancing? Whoever heard of music
+without instruments? And yet this very sense of a
+lyrical movement imperfectly seen, and of a temporarily
+frozen music, is not only the very secret of all art: it
+is a slender guiding clue to the centre of everything....</p>
+
+<p>And in the house of every man, and of every woman,
+are the curtained doorways.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Edgar J. Saxon.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT4" id="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT4"></a>HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>This discussion arose out of the <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1">article</a> with above
+title, by &ldquo;M.D.,&rdquo; which was published in our <a href="#Pg437">July
+number</a>.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">III</h3>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapi"><span class="dropcap">I</span></span> lift my hat to M.D. and trust that, as
+I don't know him, the somewhat jarring
+difference that I have with his views will
+not be put down to personal feeling. A.A.
+Voysey has put my first objection quite well
+from the layman's point of view. He says
+&ldquo;there is no agreement between those who have been
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg564" id="Pg564"></a>taught physiology.&rdquo; This is true. Playfair's full diet
+is different from Voit's. Voit's is different from
+Atwater's. Atwater's is different from Chittenden's.</p>
+
+<p>The custom of reducing the diets to calories, inasmuch
+as it introduces a false theory, has had a disastrous
+effect on progress, and has been a great hindrance to
+the attainment of knowledge. If the coal in the fireplace
+<i>were</i> the cause of the heat of the fire (but is it?),
+there is no analogy between the elevation of the heat by
+hundreds and even thousands of degrees when the fire
+is lighted, and the elevation of half-a-degree or a degree
+which occurs when food is taken into the body, especially
+when we remember that a similar elevation of temperature
+occurs when work is performed by means of the
+body without eating or drinking at all.</p>
+
+<p>It is quite evident to every clear seer, or it ought to
+be, that the force of animal life or zoo-dynamic is the
+cause of the heat of the body, just as the electric force
+is the cause of the liberation of heat through the battery,
+and the chemic force is the cause of the heat of the
+fire, and that zoo-dynamic and electro-dynamic and
+chemico-dynamic are forms or species or varieties of
+the one omnipotent and eternal energy by which all
+things in this universe consist. The aggregate of all
+the particular forces makes up the eternal energy which
+is one. They are all species of the one, but it is convenient
+and even necessary for our limited intellects to
+consider them separately, for the indefinite number of
+the facts and also their intricacy and complexity stagger
+and overwhelm us unless we do; and indeed they stagger
+us even when we try to treat them and take them up
+separately for consideration and examination. But now
+for the proof of A.A. Voysey's statement.</p>
+
+<p>Ranke found he required 100 grammes proteid; fat
+100 grammes; carbo-hydrate 240 grammes to keep him
+going. These he could have got from 9 oz. of lean
+meat or 250 grammes, 18 oz. of bread or 500 grammes,
+12 oz. or 55 grammes of butter and 1 oz of fat (I do not,
+of course, suggest that it would have been wise for him
+to get them so). Moleschott's demands are: proteid
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg565" id="Pg565"></a>120 grammes, fat 90 grammes, carbo-hydrate 333
+grammes. Voit demands for hard work: proteid 145
+grammes, fat 100 grammes, carbo-hydrate 450 grammes.
+Atwater demands for hard work the following:&mdash;proteid
+177 grammes, fat 250 grammes, carbo-hydrate 650
+grammes. Horace Fletcher, we are told by Professor
+Chittenden, took for a time, when everything was
+accurately measured and weighed: proteid 44.9
+grammes, fat 38 grammes, carbo-hydrate 253 grammes.
+Cornaro lived on 12 oz. of solid food and 14 oz. of red
+wine a day for a period of something like 60 years,
+from 38 years of age to about 97, and had vigorous
+health during the time except when he transgressed
+his rule. Of course, he was not a hard physical worker&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>
+he did not do the work of a navvy. But how,
+in view of these differences, can M.D. say: &ldquo;These
+quantities were settled by physiologists many years ago,
+and no good reasons have since been adduced for
+altering them&rdquo;? It is amazing to me to read such a
+statement. It reminds me of a statement by a distinguished
+physician in London during last year to the
+effect that we could not give a growing schoolboy too
+much food&mdash;we could not over-feed him. My opinion,
+on the other hand, after a long experience, during which
+time my eyes have not been shut, is that the large
+majority of the diseases of humanity are due to mal-nutrition
+and that the form of that mal-nutrition is
+over-feeding&mdash;not under-feeding. This opinion should
+be taken for what it is worth. But to test it we should
+ask ourselves: What is the reason for the necessity to
+take food into the body? Is it to give strength and
+heat to the body? Or is it to restore the waste of the
+body sustained by the action on it of the force of life or
+zoo-dynamic which inhabits it? The demands for food
+will vary and vary much according to the way in which
+we answer this question. As you allowed me to discuss
+this question in <i>Healthy Life</i> in July and August of last
+year I must not take up your space by discussing it
+again. But the answer we give determines the amounts
+of food that we require to take, since, obviously, if the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg566" id="Pg566"></a>strength and heat of the body depend upon the food,
+the more food we take the more strength and heat shall
+we have; while, if the function of food in the adult or
+grown body is only to restore the waste of the body, the
+question is how much is the waste. There are various
+ways in which this question can be answered and I
+cannot go into them now; but I say, in my opinion, the
+waste is very much less than is commonly supposed.
+The body, I take it, is made by zoo-dynamic or the
+life-force to be a fit habitation for itself. The body
+must waste when the life-force acts through it, and that
+waste must be restored by food and sleep, or the body
+will die; since things (the body) cannot act as the
+medium of conveying forces (zoo-dynamic or the life-force)
+without wasting under their action. But so beautifully
+has the body been made by zoo-dynamic that it
+wastes very little, much less than is commonly supposed,
+by the action of zoo-dynamic through it. Not seeing
+this, we ingest into the body far more than is required
+to restore its waste, and so we fall ill, for, obviously,
+if we ingest more than the quantity necessary for this
+purpose we choke the body up and render it inefficient
+for its purpose as an instrument for work.</p>
+
+<p>Now this is precisely what seems to me to happen
+in life. As we are all under the double delusion that the
+strength of the body and its heat come from the food,
+we all with one accord put far too much food into the
+body, and when we find that we die, all of us, generation
+after generation, at from 50 to 70 years of age, we make
+up little proverbs to justify our unphysiological conduct
+and say that three score years and ten are the measure
+of the duration of life. M.D. says that &ldquo;some twenty
+years ago most people lived fairly close to the old
+physiological quantities&rdquo; (but what are these? for we
+have seen how they vary), &ldquo;now they have been cut
+adrift from these and are floundering out of their
+depth.&rdquo; May I remind M.D. that people are now living
+longer than they did twenty years ago. How does he
+account for that? No doubt some of the increase in
+the length of life is due to the diminution of the birth
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg567" id="Pg567"></a>rate, but still I suppose M.D. would admit that there
+is an increase in the duration of life over and above
+what can be accounted for in this way. If so, how
+does he account for it?</p>
+
+<p>M.D. says, further: &ldquo;For the public it will now
+probably suffice if they insist on raising (or considering,
+A.R.) the question of quantity&rdquo; (of
+food, A.R.) &ldquo;wherever they suffer in any way.&rdquo;
+I agree with all my heart. But M.D. implies, if I
+read him aright, that the public should increase
+the quantity of their food when they suffer in any
+way. I, on the other hand, and rather unhappily for
+myself, am convinced that the raising of this question
+implies that it should be answered in the exact opposite
+way to that of M.D. and that we should diminish our
+food if we &ldquo;suffer in any way.&rdquo; And I can point to
+Nature's own plan as a corroboration of the truth of
+my view, for her plan when we suffer in any way is to
+fling us into bed and take away our appetite, or at least
+to diminish our appetite if we are not so ill as to require
+to remain in bed.</p>
+
+<p>The whole question of medical practice depends on
+the answer we give to this question, and therefore one
+might go on indefinitely with its discussion. Neither
+the Editors' space and patience nor my time allow of
+this; but I should like to ask M.D., with all respect, if
+he remembers what Dr King Chambers said of the starvation
+that comes of over-repletion? Dr King
+Chambers occupied one of the most prominent places
+as a consultant in London (very probably, I suppose)
+when M.D. was a very young man. My late lamented
+friend, Dr Dewey of Meadville, Pennsylvania, used
+the phrase &ldquo;starvation from over-feeding,&rdquo; not
+knowing that Dr King Chambers had used practically
+the same expression before him. That I made the
+same discovery myself, and independently, is not, I
+take it, a sign of acuteness of intellect or of observation.
+The amazing thing is that every practitioner is not
+compelled to make the same discovery. But if it is a
+true discovery, then it follows that all the signs of
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg568" id="Pg568"></a>lowered vitality referred to by M.D., while they <i>may</i> be
+caused by under-feeding, may also be caused by over-feeding
+and may therefore require for proper treatment,
+not increase of the diet, but diminution of it. A low
+temperature, therefore, a slow pulse, languor, pallor,
+inanition, fatigue, good-for-nothingness, inefficiency,
+anorexia, an&aelig;mia, neurasthenia, etc., etc., may all be
+due to blocking of the body with too much food as well
+as to supplying it with too little. Fires may be put out
+by heaping up too much coal on them. To make them
+burn briskly we ought to push the poker in and gently
+lift the coal so as to admit of the entrance of air. Then
+in a while our fire will become brisk and bright. And
+so it may be in the body. Nay, my opinion is that
+almost always these marks of depression are caused by
+blocking up of the body and that therefore the proper
+treatment is, as a rule, not increase but diminution of
+the diet. The place in the body in which the blocking
+first occurs is the connective tissues or the tissues that
+connect every part with every other. It is here that
+the lymph is secreted, and as the lymph joins the
+thoracic duct which conveys the products of digestion
+to the blood, it is obvious that lymph-secretion is a
+complementary digestive process and it is also obvious
+how blocking up of the connective tissues, which is the
+immediate cause of anorexia and inanition, usually
+comes to exist in the body.</p>
+
+<p>M.D. talks of &ldquo;natural food.&rdquo; He seems to be a
+vegetarian? Good. But is not the question of how
+much food we ought to eat equally urgent whether we
+are vegetarian or omnivorous? I think it is. I do not
+think that the chief cause of our illnesses to-day is
+taking wrong or unsuitable food. In my opinion we
+are ill mainly because we take suitable food too often
+and because we take too much of it. My answer to the
+question, therefore&mdash;&ldquo;How Much Should We Eat?&mdash;A
+Warning&rdquo;&mdash;turns on the previous question:
+What is the Function performed by Food in
+the Body? As I think that this function in
+the grown body is only to restore the waste, the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg569" id="Pg569"></a>warning in my mind is far rather that we should take
+less than that we should (as M.D. advises us) take
+more. I agree with him in the view that &ldquo;chronic
+starvation is insidious.&rdquo; But, as I believe that &ldquo;chronic
+starvation&rdquo; is usually a form of Dr King Chambers's
+&ldquo;starvation from over-repletion&rdquo; and of Dr Dewey's
+&ldquo;starvation from over-feeding,&rdquo; I am bound to be of
+the consequent opinion that it is to be met, not by
+increase, but by diminution of the diet. This is one of
+my reasons for thinking that none of us ought ever to
+eat oftener than twice a day, under fifty years of age,
+and that after that we would do well to eat once a day
+only. I feel sure that if we altered our habits in these
+ways, we should add very much both to the duration
+and to the efficiency of life. This is not a question of
+dietetics only. The issue is of the most practical character.
+What an addition of five or ten or fifteen or twenty or
+twenty-five years to the average duration of life might
+mean to this people and still more to the people of the
+whole globe is unpredictable by mortal man. But it is
+evident that it would be of the very greatest import to
+humanity. This is the great issue of the discussion
+of this subject. It seems to me that illness might be
+enormously diminished and health and efficiency and
+happiness immensely increased. But I think that these
+boons might be obtained, not by indulging the body
+and its appetites, but only by the exercise of a wise
+restraint and government over it. It is at least very
+much to be desired that more agreement might be
+manifested in the opinions and practice of qualified
+physiologists so that the public might have clear guidance,
+and not as at present, be advised in ways so
+conflicting that they do not know what or whom to
+believe.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">A. Rabagliati, M.D.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<h4><i>To Tourists:</i></h4>
+
+<p>Every little village has a little shop where you can
+buy nasty little sweets.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg570" id="Pg570"></a><a name="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS2" id="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS2"></a>PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>He was a native of Liverpool, but had liver for many years in
+the Isle of Wight&mdash;<i>Edmonton</i> (Canada) <i>Journal</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Funny he didn't go to Poole and leave his liver
+behind him.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>
+REAL FLESH FOOD FOUND AT LAST.<br />
+&mdash;From an advt. in daily papers.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Evidently we have all been vegetarians and knew it
+not.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>Nothing can replace salt.&mdash;From an advt. in <i>Punch</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Many food reformers advantageously replace salt
+with nothing.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>The golf craze has been greater this autumn than in any
+previous year. Nobody is quite safe from the fever. It seizes
+those who mocked at it, and pays no respect to sex or age.&mdash;<i>British
+Weekly</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>By the time the next Medical Congress comes round
+it is expected that at least three distinguished bacteriologists
+will have discovered the golf-fever microbe.
+They will probably agree to call it <i>Mashilococcus
+Caddes</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>Between lunch and dinner take another tumbler of water cold.
+Take a glass of cold water half-an-hour after lunch, half-an-hour
+after tea, half-an-hour after dinner, and before going to bed at
+night. Never drink between meals.&mdash;<i>Woman's Life</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>All other methods failing, try putting your watch
+half-an-hour on after each meal.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>I once got a circular from a man who grew potatoes containing
+his photograph, and, I think, an autobiography.&mdash;<i>Musical
+Standard</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Not nearly so convenient as one of those automatic
+egg-stamping hens.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>Stop-Press News.</i></p>
+
+<p>A &ldquo;pocket clipper&rdquo; has been invented (according to a certain
+catalogue) which can be used for the beard or hair at back of
+neck.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>But surely people who can do anything so clever as
+grow a beard on the back of the neck ought not to be
+tempted to clip it off.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Peter Piper.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg571" id="Pg571"></a><a name="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES2" id="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES2"></a>HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">More Egg Dishes.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="firstletter">I</span>n our issue of May 1912 we published a number of
+special recipes for eggs. These were much appreciated.
+And even now this and other back numbers
+are asked for. We now give some further recipes.</p>
+
+<p>It should be remembered that eggs are a simple
+form of animal food and much purer than meat.
+They are also easily digested by most people. They
+therefore form a very useful substitute for flesh-foods,
+especially where the latter have only recently been
+discarded.</p>
+
+<p>The normal progress towards a more or less ideal
+diet involves, of course, the elimination of eggs as well
+as of other dairy products. But wise food reform
+proceeds always by steps.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Savoury Baked Eggs.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Melt a little butter, or vegetable fat, in an open
+earthenware baking dish; break into this as many eggs
+as required. Cover thinly with grated cheese; add a
+knob of butter and bake till set. The dish can be
+placed direct on the table.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Egg on Tomato.</span><a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>One egg, two medium-sized tomatoes, butter.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Skin the tomatoes; cut in halves and put them, with
+a small piece of butter, into a small stewpan. Close
+lightly, and cook slowly until reduced to a pulp. Break
+the egg into a cup, and slide it gently on to the
+tomato. Replace the pan lid and the egg will poach in
+the steam rising from the tomato.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13">[13]</a> This recipe is from <i>The Healthy Life Cook Book</i>, a new and
+revised edition of which is in contemplation.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Savoury Egg Fritters.</span></h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Six eggs, two large tomatoes, half-teaspoon mixed dried herbs,
+about three tablespoons ground biscuits (&ldquo;Ixion&rdquo; or any of the
+unsweetened &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; kinds).</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Hard boil three of the eggs and chop them finely.
+Skin the tomatoes, mash them and add to the chopped
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg572" id="Pg572"></a>eggs with the remaining eggs (well beaten), herbs and
+biscuit powder. Should the mixture be too moist to
+mould add more biscuit powder; if too dry add a little
+water. Cut and shape into finger shapes and either
+fry in olive oil or bake on buttered tin or open earthenware
+baking dish. (The last-mentioned is the best
+method, as the baking dish can be brought to the
+table as it is, and there is only one dish instead of two
+to wash up afterwards.)</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Savoury Egg Patties.</span></h3>
+
+<p>The above Egg Fritter mixture made rather moist
+may be used as a filling for savoury patties.</p>
+
+<p>Make for these a short crust with &frac12; lb. of Artox meal,
+3 oz. of Nutter and water. Slightly bake the shells of
+pastry (made thin) before adding the filling, and finish
+to a golden brown.</p>
+
+<p>Serve these and the fritters with either brown gravy
+or white sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Sweet Egg Souffl&eacute;.</span></h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Five eggs, &frac34; lb. soft cane sugar, 1 oz. ground rice, 2 oz. of
+butter, rind of half a lemon.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs. Beat up
+the yolks and sift in the ground rice, sugar and grated
+rind of the lemon. To this batter add the well-whisked
+whites. Well heat the butter in a frying pan, turn in
+the batter and fry over gentle heat till set. Fold over
+the edges and place on well-greased flat dish and bake
+for barely a quarter of an hour. Sift over some soft
+cane sugar and serve very hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Snow Eggs.</span></h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Three eggs, one and a quarter pints of milk, a teaspoon of
+soft cane sugar, vanilla flavouring.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs
+and whisk the whites to a very stiff froth
+with the sugar. Put the milk into a saucepan and
+when it boils drop in whites of eggs in small pieces
+shaped between two dessert spoons. Only a little should
+be cooked at a time in this way, and each should be
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg573" id="Pg573"></a>allowed to poach for two minutes, and when done
+should be taken out with a slice and put on a sieve to
+drain. When all the whites are used in this way, strain
+the milk and add it to the well-beaten yolks. Pour into
+a double saucepan and stir over the fire till the custard
+thickens; flavour with vanilla to taste.</p>
+
+<p>When <i>cold</i> pour into a dish and lay the snow eggs
+on top.</p>
+
+<p>(Kindly supplied by Mrs Edith Wilkinson.)</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Egg-raised Cherry Cake.</span></h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>9 oz. good &ldquo;standard&rdquo; flour, 5 oz. Nutter (or other nut fat),
+5 oz. cane castor sugar, 2 oz. preserved cherries (glac&eacute;), 2 oz.
+well-washed sultanas, 2 oz. ground almonds, four eggs, outer rind of
+lemon (grated).</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Beat Nutter and sugar to a cream; add eggs one by
+one, beating all the time; have ready the flour, with the
+fruit, grated lemon rind and ground almonds mixed in,
+and add gradually to the above mixture, beating all the
+time, and until of even consistency throughout. Line
+a cake tin with double thickness of buttered paper, pour
+in the mixture and bake in moderate oven about one and
+a half hours.</p>
+
+<p><i>Any housewife who doubts the possibility of making
+light and dainty cakes without the now customary
+baking powder and baking soda, etc., should try the
+above recipe. No one could wish for a more excellent
+cake.</i></p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Note On Casseroles.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Now that casserole cookery (<i>i.e.</i> cooking in earthenware
+dishes, both open and covered) is becoming more
+widely known and practised, readers will be glad to
+know that many housewives believe in boiling new
+earthenware before using it, as this effectually toughens
+and hardens it. This is particularly efficacious in the
+case of ordinary brown kitchenware, the articles being
+placed in a large pan of cold water which is then
+brought slowly to the boil. After being allowed to boil
+for ten minutes remove the pan and allow the water to
+cool before taking out the ware.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg574" id="Pg574"></a><a name="HEALTH_QUERIES4" id="HEALTH_QUERIES4"></a>HEALTH QUERIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine
+Knaggs, deals briefly month by month, and according
+as space permits, with questions of general interest to
+health seekers and others.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is
+essential that full details of the correspondent's
+customary diet should be clearly given.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on
+<span class="u">one side only of the paper</span>, giving full name and address,
+not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
+When an answer is required by post a stamped
+addressed envelope must be enclosed.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Perspiration" id="Perspiration"></a>EXCESSIVE PERSPIRATION.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Miss R.E.N. writes.&mdash;I am troubled with excessive perspiration.
+I neither eat meat nor drink tea. I have a cold sponge bath
+down to my waist every morning, and I change all my clothes
+when I go to bed. My diet is, roughly, as follows:</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;Oatmeal porridge with toast or bread and jam or
+golden syrup. Hot water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;Peas, beans or lentils, eggs, cheese. Vegetables:
+potatoes and onions, or carrots, cabbage, cauliflower, turnips.
+Puddings, fruit or milk wholemeal bread, not much sugar
+except for sweetening fruits, etc.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea meal.</i>&mdash;Wholemeal bread and butter, nuts, jam, cake,
+pastry; hot water.</p>
+
+<p><i>At bedtime.</i>&mdash;Hot water or coffee.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>If our correspondent wishes to remedy this excessive
+perspiration she must get a hot towel-bath daily (all
+over),<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> wearing porous linen-mesh underclothing next
+the skin. She should also discontinue the soft sugary
+and starchy foods, and not mix fruit with other foods
+(it is best taken by itself, say, for breakfast). She needs
+more of the cooling salad vegetables. The following
+diet would be a great improvement:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;Half-pint of hot boiled water, sipped
+slowly.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;Wholemeal bread or biscuits and butter
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg575" id="Pg575"></a>(all made without salt), with salad or grated raw roots.
+Stop porridge, jam and golden syrup. Avoid drinking
+at meals.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;Two eggs, or 2 oz. of curd cheese. Two
+vegetables cooked in casserole without salt; wholemeal
+bread or biscuits and butter; a few figs, prunes, dried
+bananas, or raisins, washed but not cooked. Avoid
+milk puddings or stewed fruits as too fermentative and
+heating.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper meal.</i>&mdash;1 to 2 oz. flaked nuts, some crisp
+&ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; or &ldquo;Ixion&rdquo; biscuits with nut butter. Some
+fresh salad or grated roots. Stop jam, cake and
+pastry.</p>
+
+<p><i>At bedtime.</i>&mdash;Half-pint of hot boiled water, or clear
+vegetable soup, sipped slowly.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14">[14]</a> The Sanum Oxygen Baths are also excellent in a case of this
+kind.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Ulcerated" id="Ulcerated"></a>DIET FOR ULCERATED THROAT.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs L.B. writes.&mdash;Do you think it would be wise for a person
+suffering from ulcers in the throat and on other mucous membranes
+to adopt a diet devoid of meat, yeast and salt?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It would certainly be wise to discard meat and salt
+in a case of this kind, but yeast is sometimes useful
+taken as &ldquo;unflavoured Marmite.&rdquo; The chief cause
+of ulcers is the abuse of the soft cereal and sugary
+foods. In a case of this sort I should advise a diet
+consisting exclusively of well-dextrinised cereals&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>
+Granose, Melarvi, etc.&mdash;with plenty of grated raw roots
+and finely chopped salads and tomatoes. This can be
+combined with curd cheese, raw or lightly cooked eggs,
+flaked nuts or Brusson Jeune bread as the proteid part
+of the diet.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Farming" id="Farming"></a>FARMING AND SCIATICA.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs A.C.B. writes.&mdash;For two months my husband, who leads an
+active open-air life, has had severe pain all down the back of his
+left leg. It is like neuralgia, and comes on worse when sitting.
+He has been a farmer all his life, but is anything but strong and
+constantly taking cold. Are these pains likely to be due to wrong
+food?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This pain is evidence of sciatica. Chills alone will
+not produce sciatica, which has its real cause in the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg576" id="Pg576"></a>system being choked up with acids and toxins of various
+kinds. In such a case as this, warm water enemas
+should be taken freely to clear the colon well; sugar,
+milk and all starchy mushy foods should be strictly
+avoided; vegetables should be taken either as baked
+roots or as fresh salads; eggs and cheese should be
+substituted for meat; and plenty of fresh butter should
+be taken. Boiled water, <i>between meals</i>, will be good,
+but nothing should be given to drink with food. Salt,
+pickles, and greasy or highly flavoured foods should be
+avoided.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Brights" id="Brights"></a>TEMPORARY &ldquo;BRIGHT'S DISEASE&rdquo; AND HOW
+TO DEAL WITH IT.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Miss E. would like to know what kind of diet is suitable for one
+who has been suffering from Bright's Disease following a serious
+illness. Why should meat have any bad effect upon the kidneys?
+She does not take it, although her medical man advises the use of
+it at once.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is not an uncommon thing for people who have
+suffered from an acute septic fever to find albumen
+temporarily present in the urine. This is due to the
+irritant action of the toxins and other poisons (which
+the fever is the means of ejecting) upon the structure of
+the kidneys. The kidneys are filters and they remove
+the bulk of the soluble waste of the body.</p>
+
+<p>The practitioner frequently finds albumenuria in cases
+of scarlet fever, typhoid fever, diphtheria, etc., and the
+object of his treatment is to prevent this condition of
+kidney irritation from becoming an established disease
+(Bright's disease).</p>
+
+<p>Flesh foods, and especially meat extracts and meat
+soups, are the worst possible wherewith to feed these
+fever cases, because they throw so much extra work
+upon the kidneys. Meat is composed mainly of proteids.
+It also contains the urinary wastes and the toxins (due
+to fear) which were in the animal's body and on the
+way to elimination when it was killed.</p>
+
+<p>This sufferer should take one meal per day consisting
+of fresh fruit only; the rest of the diet should consist
+of salad vegetables and finely grated raw roots, home-<a class="pagenum" name="Pg577" id="Pg577"></a>made
+curd cheese, dextrinised cereals (such as Melarvi
+biscuits, Shredded Wheat, &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; crackers, Granose
+biscuits, Grape-Nuts, twice-baked standard bread, etc.)
+and fresh or nut butter.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Phosphorus" id="Phosphorus"></a>PHOSPHORUS AND THE NERVES.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>W.H.H. writes:&mdash;I should be very grateful if Dr Knaggs could
+help me with any information or hints regarding phosphaturia.
+I suffer much from this troublesome complaint.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>We have to remember that the nervous system is two-fold.
+The one, or conscious portion, consists of the
+brain and spinal cord, from which all the nerves or
+branches travel to all parts of the body and give us
+dominion over them. The other, or subconscious, called
+the sympathetic nervous system, lies on either side of
+the front of the spine as two long chains with centres,
+or ganglia, at intervals. This second system is not
+within our control and has to do with the regulation of
+our vegetative functions, including the bulk of the
+digestive process.</p>
+
+<p>All nerves, whether they come from the brain or from
+the sympathetic system, ranging to their smallest terminals,
+are built alike of cells, and these cells secrete
+a complex <i>fatty</i> substance, called <i>lecithin</i>, whose
+dominant element is phosphorus. This phosphorus has
+to be supplied to the body with food, and as food, and
+it cannot be properly utilised or assimilated by the body
+or used by the nerves to build up their <i>lecithin</i> unless
+it is eaten in the form of organic compounds.</p>
+
+<p>The tissues of the body are continually dying, as a
+result of work done, and are continually being replaced
+by fresh young tissues as needed. It is the function
+of the nerves to manage this work for us as well as to
+similarly arrange for reproduction.</p>
+
+<p>In order to control the functions of the various organs
+and tissues and to regulate the rate at which they
+reproduce themselves, the nerves extend their terminal
+branches, not only into every tissue, but into every
+microscopical unit of such tissue, and the part of the
+cell which represents the nerve terminal is the inner
+structure called the nucleus.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg578" id="Pg578"></a>Now it will be obvious that the more the two nervous
+systems are worked the greater will be their depletion
+of <i>lecithin</i> and the more need there will be for fresh
+supplies of phosphorus in the daily food rations.</p>
+
+<p>The person who works hard, whether it be manual
+labour or brain work, needs food and rest at intervals
+in order that the nerves may recuperate and replenish
+their stocks of <i>lecithin</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A goodly proportion of uncooked foods rich in phosphorus
+must be supplied to make good the wear and
+tear, and the digestion must equally be efficient if these
+food-stuffs are to become assimilated.</p>
+
+<p>Cooking of food to a large extent breaks down the
+organic phosphorus salts and makes them inorganic.
+In this state they are of but little use to the body. Poor
+digestion associated with putrefactive fermentation
+equally converts the organic salts into inorganic ones.
+These pass into the blood and are promptly eliminated
+by the kidneys as waste (<i>phosphaturia</i>) and thus they
+never reach the nerves at all.</p>
+
+<p>We must remember that phosphorus is usually found
+in natural foods bound up with the proteid and especially
+with that proteid which has to do with the reproduction
+of the species. For this reason man instinctively resorts
+to the use of egg-yolks, and to the various seeds (such
+as nuts, wheat, barley, etc.) because of their rich phosphorus
+content.</p>
+
+<p>These proteid-bound phosphorus salts can only be
+properly utilised when the hydrochloric acid of the
+stomach juice is well formed, for it converts them into
+acid salts which are readily absorbed. Therefore to
+ensure free absorption we must always remember to
+give the phosphorus-containing foods with such meals
+as will cause free secretion of the gastric acid.</p>
+
+<p>When fermentation is active and the stomach juices
+are weakened the germs of the intestines rapidly break
+up the phosphorus constituents of the proteids and make
+them inorganic. Therefore the first thing to do when a
+person is found to be suffering from <i>phosphaturia</i> is to
+stop the intestinal fermentation by a right diet, clear
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg579" id="Pg579"></a>the bowels of their accumulated waste poisons and give
+the nerves plenty of rest. Another consideration to bear
+in mind is that the nerves need fat wherewith to build
+up the <i>lecithin</i>. An excessive fermentative sourness of
+the stomach makes the food so acid when sent into the
+bowels that the bile, pancreatic and other intestinal
+juices cannot neutralise them, and so the fats themselves
+are not emulsified and digested, which fully accounts for
+the mental depression and debility of which these
+patients complain.</p>
+
+<p>People who are suffering from &ldquo;nerves&rdquo; in any form
+need plenty of pure fat (fresh dairy butter, cream, nut
+butter, fruit-oils, etc.) and an abundance of natural
+fresh vegetable products at once rich in phosphorus and
+iron and in organic alkaline acid-neutralising earthy
+salts. These arrest fermentation and so enable the
+phosphorus and the fat to become duly assimilated.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Bananas" id="Bananas"></a>CANARY <i>VERSUS</i> JAMAICA BANANAS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>R.B., Lincoln, would like to know if there is very much
+difference, as regards food value, between the Jamaica and Canary
+banana. &ldquo;I have heard it said that the Jamaica is only fit for
+the dust-heap. Well, I cannot very easily think it is so useless,
+and at the same time I have an idea that the Canary is the
+better of the two. I should be very pleased to know if you think
+there is much difference between them.&rdquo;</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The difference between Jamaica and Canary bananas
+is due to the length of time necessary for them to reach
+us from their place of growth. It takes, I believe, nearly
+twice as long for a ship to travel from Jamaica as from
+the Canary Islands. Hence the fruit imported from the
+latter place can be picked in a much riper condition
+than would be the case with the Jamaica article. This
+probably accounts for the better quality and flavour of
+the Canary banana. Besides this the climate may have
+some determining influence. To say that the Jamaica
+bananas should be discarded because they are of a less
+satisfactory food value or because their flavour is less
+developed is uncalled for. The disparity in price is also
+very marked, so that the poor can readily procure the
+Jamaica banana where they would not be in a position
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg580" id="Pg580"></a>to afford the better class of fruit coming from the
+Canaries. I have discussed this subject in p.34 of my
+book, <i>The Truth about Sugar</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CORRESPONDENCE3" id="CORRESPONDENCE3"></a>CORRESPONDENCE.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Leytonstone</span></p>
+
+<p><i>To the Editors.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sirs,</span></p>
+
+<p>Enclosed please find P.O. for a copy of <i>The
+Healthy Life</i> to be sent to Carnegie Public Library, close
+to Midland Station, Leytonstone, also to The Alexandra
+Holiday Home, Y.W.C.A., Alexandra Road, Southend-on-Sea.
+At the latter home there are something like
+500 to 600 visitors every year, many of whom are semi-invalids.
+No doubt the magazine will be scorned by
+many, yet I am quite certain that there are others
+amongst the number there who will gladly welcome
+the truths it teaches, and if only one or two are helped
+to live a more healthy and therefore more happy life,
+it will be quite worth while. Please do not mention my
+name in either case. Yours, etc., X.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There is every reason why <i>The Healthy Life</i> should
+be known and read in every public library in the United
+Kingdom. In this we are entirely dependent upon those
+readers who are ready to follow the excellent example
+of the above correspondent. A year's subscription&mdash;2s.&mdash;is
+a very small price to pay for bringing the message
+of this magazine before the public in this way. We
+should like to hear from readers in all parts.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<div class="box"><hr />
+<h3>Back Numbers</h3>
+
+<p>If readers who possess copies of the first number
+of <i>The Healthy Life</i> (August 1911) will send them
+to the Editors, they will receive, in exchange,
+booklets to the value of threepence for each copy.</p><hr />
+</div>
+
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg581" id="Pg581"></a></p>
+<div class="cover">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="coverleft">Vol. V<br />
+No. 28</span>
+<span class="coverright">November<br />
+1913<br /></span>
+<img src="images/title.png" width="220" height="330"
+alt="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C."
+title="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C." /></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+philosophers will all speak the same language and
+understand one another.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Claude Bernard.</span></p></blockquote>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+<h2><a name="AN_INDICATION28" id="AN_INDICATION28"></a>AN INDICATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapi"><span class="dropcap">I</span></span>t was the slave-woman who laid her
+child under a bush that she might spare
+herself the pain of seeing it die!</p>
+
+<p>One of the commonest sources of
+mental and moral confusion is to mistake
+the egotistic shrinking from the sight of suffering
+with the altruistic shrinking from causing it and
+desire to relieve it.</p>
+
+<p>The so-called sensitive person is too often only
+sensitive to his or her own pain and, therefore, finds
+it difficult in the presence of another's suffering to
+do what is needed to relieve it.</p>
+
+<p>The healer, the health-bringer, the truly sympathetic
+person, does not even hesitate to inflict pain
+when to do so means to restore health.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg582" id="Pg582"></a><a name="CASTLES_IN_THE_AIR" id="CASTLES_IN_THE_AIR"></a>CASTLES IN THE AIR.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p><i>Regular readers will recognise in this wonderfully simple and
+suggestive article a continuation of the series previously entitled
+&ldquo;Healthy Brains.&rdquo; The author of &ldquo;The Children All Day Long&rdquo;
+is an intimate disciple of one of the greatest living psychologists,
+and she has a message of the first importance to all who realise
+that true health depends as much on poise of mind as on physical
+fitness.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapo"><span class="dropcap">O</span></span>f all the occupations which imagination
+gives us, surely none is more popular or
+more delightful than the planning out of
+future days. Pleasure and fame and
+honour, work and rest, comfort and
+adventure: all things take their turn in
+our romances.</p>
+
+<p>Not all the castles are for ourselves alone. In
+childhood it is our school, our club, our town that is
+to be the centre of great events. The young man's
+castle is a nest to which he hopes to bring a mate.
+The mother sees the future coronet or laurel-wreath
+round the soft hair of her baby's head. And we all
+build castles for the world sometimes&mdash;at least for our
+own country or our own race. Sometimes we knock
+them down and rebuild again in rather different shape&mdash;Mr
+Wells has taught us what a fascinating game it is.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, especially perhaps in little, unimportant
+things, our imagination does centre chiefly around our
+own activities. What we mean to do, what we might
+do, what we would like to do: there must be something
+else besides selfishness and waste of time in the constantly
+recurring thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Who does not know the charm of looking down the
+theatre-list of the morning paper? One may be too
+busy or two poor to go often to the play, but the very
+suggestion of all the colour and interest is pleasant.
+Who does not like looking over prospectuses of lectures
+and classes at the beginning of the winter session?
+&ldquo;I <i>should</i> like to go to that course on Greek Art.
+Oh, it is on Mondays, then that is no good. German,
+elementary and conversation. How useful that would
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg583" id="Pg583"></a>be! Gymnasium and physical culture; how I wish I
+had another evening in the week to spare!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Railway books, again, and guides and travel bills&mdash;how
+delightful they are! It is easy to plan out tours
+for one's holidays up to the age of 100. &ldquo;Brittany;
+oh yes, I must go there one day. And Norway, that
+must really be my next trip.&rdquo; The Rockies, the cities
+of the East, coral islands of the Pacific&mdash;they all seem
+to enrich our lives by the very thought of their possibilities.</p>
+
+<p>Again, who does not love a library catalogue? To
+go through with a pencil, noting down the names of
+books one wants to read is a form of castle-building by
+no means to be despised.</p>
+
+<p>Some people get the same pleasure out of house-hunting;
+they see an empty house and go and get the
+key in order to see over it. The chances of their ever
+living there are practically none, but the view gives a
+stimulus to their inventive activity: they plan out how
+they would furnish the rooms and fill the empty hearths
+with dreams.</p>
+
+<p>Is not the same thing the explanation of shop-gazing?
+The woman who has bought her winter coat
+and hat does not as a rule refrain from looking any
+more into shop windows till the spring; instead, she
+clothes herself in imagination in all the beautiful stuffs
+she sees displayed, and if some of the things demand
+ballroom, racecourse, golf links or perhaps the Alps for
+the background, why, so much the better, the suggestion
+puts, as it were, a view from the windows of her
+castle in the air.</p>
+
+<p>A garden&mdash;a dozen square yards or reckoned in
+acres&mdash;is full of material for our imagination; indeed, a
+seedsman's catalogue or a copy of &ldquo;Amateur Gardening&rdquo;
+will often be enough to start us; long lines of
+greenhouses will build themselves for us, or rockeries,
+or wild glens with streams in them, and the world will
+blossom round about us.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes it is ambition that calls us, personal or
+professional; we get beforehand the sweet taste of
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg584" id="Pg584"></a>power upon the tongue. It may perhaps be sometimes
+the rewards of work, riches and honour and so on, but
+more often, I think, the dreams of youth circle round
+the work itself. We will be of use in the world, we
+will find new paths and make them safe for those
+coming after us to walk in, we will get rid of that
+evil and set up a ladder towards that good; we will
+heal, teach, feed, amuse, uplift or cherish the other
+human beings round about us. We will store only for
+the sake of distributing; we will climb only to be better
+able to give a helping hand.</p>
+
+<p>Well, there are some danger signals at cross-roads
+of our dream-way, some precautions to be observed if
+we would not let romance obscure and hinder us in
+our search after reality. But none of these &ldquo;castles&rdquo;
+are bad in themselves. <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'Is'.">In</ins> so far as they quicken our
+attention power, deepen our thoughtfulness, make our
+activities more elastic and keep us from carelessness
+or sloth, they are surely all to the good as episodes in
+our development.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">E.M. Cobham.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM2" id="THE_SCIENTIFIC_BASIS_OF_VEGETALISM2"></a>THE SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF
+VEGETALISM.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>This article, the earlier part of which appeared in the October
+number, is from the French of Prof. H. Labb&eacute;, the head of the
+<i>laboratoire &agrave; la Facult&eacute; de M&eacute;decine</i>, in Paris. It reflects a
+characteristic aloofness to a any considerations other than scientific
+or economic. But it will well repay careful study.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">V</h3>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapt"><span class="dropcap">T</span></span>hough the consumption of vegetable
+foods seems to offer a slight disadvantage
+from the point of view of albuminoid
+matters, this is not the case touching
+hydro-carbonated matters and sugars.
+The vegetable kingdom constitutes the
+almost exclusive source of these alimentary principles.
+One cannot indeed take much account
+of the consumption of the .5-.6 per cent, of glycogen
+which exists in the animal muscle partaken of
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg585" id="Pg585"></a>under the shape of butcher's meat. There is hardly
+enough in this for a large eater of between 200 and 250
+grammes of meat, to find in hydrocarbonated matters
+the 1/300 or the 1/400 of the daily ration. Hydrocarbons
+are necessarily borrowed from the vegetable
+foods. This is also the case with sugars which do not
+exist in the animal kingdom in appreciable quantities.
+It is the same thing with alcohol which is obtained only
+from the vegetable kingdom.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">VI</h3>
+
+<p>As to fatty matters, animal foods, like vegetable
+products, are abundantly provided with them. Moreover,
+from the point of view of digestibility and capability
+of assimilating, one may say that there is a
+quasi-absolute identity between animal and vegetable
+fats. The reason which would induce us to prefer either
+would not seem to be of a physiological nature. The
+economics, which we shall see further on, take this upon
+themselves, as the most serious reproach which can be
+made against the use of animal dishes is doubtless their
+dearness, and the reason which militates most in favour
+of the predominance of a vegetable diet is to a certainty
+its cheapness.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">VII</h3>
+
+<p>Such are, briefly expounded and refuted, the fundamental
+objections which can be brought against the
+vegetarian diet and the &ldquo;vegetalian&rdquo; customs. There
+exists, in fact, no serious physiological or chemical
+reason for not satisfying our needs solely with foods
+of vegetable origin. It may be interesting to note that,
+in reality, the most confirmed flesh eaters support their
+energy-producing needs mainly with vegetable products.
+In the mixed diet universally practised meat plays but
+a small part.</p>
+
+<p>In meat the waste in preparation and consecutive
+waste at table is considerable. To really introduce 200
+grammes of meat into the stomach, nearly 400 grammes
+must be purchased, and expensively put into use. What
+do these 200 grammes really bring in nutritive elements?</p>
+
+<table summary="Calculation of the fat and albumin content of a piece of meat.">
+<caption style="text-align:left; font-variant:normal;"><a class="pagenum" name="Pg586" id="Pg586"></a>Meat.</caption>
+<tr><td style="text-align:right;">200 gr. (mod. fat.) at 18%</td><td>albumin</td><td style="text-align:right;"> = 36 gr.</td><td> album., about.</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align:right;"><span style="margin:auto 2em auto 2em;">"</span><span style="margin:auto 3em auto 1em;">"</span>5% </td><td>fat </td><td style="text-align:right;"> = 10 gr.</td><td> fat, about.</td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td style="text-align:right; border-top:thin solid black;">46 gr.</td><td></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>These 46 grs. constitute barely the 8 per cent. of the
+total weight of a ration, averaged in nutritive elements,
+calculated as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="Table showing the albumin, fat, and carbohydrate content of a ration.">
+<tr><td>Albumin </td><td style="text-align:right;">80</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Fatty matters </td><td style="text-align:right;">70</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Hydrates of carbon </td><td style="text-align:right;">350</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>This is a very feeble proportion.</p>
+
+<p>If one turns to the calorific point of view, in order to
+estimate the share of energy useful to the organism,
+we arrive at much the same conclusion. The 46 grs. of
+nutritive animal elements barely provide 230 thermal
+units which can be utilised, while the total diet which
+we are considering brings a power of disposal of nearly
+2,350 thermal units. It is, even then, barely 10 per
+cent. of the total energy. The most convinced flesh
+eaters, those who buy 400 grs. of meat a day for their
+consumption, must learn, willingly or unwillingly, that
+the animal element enters only in an infinitesimal part
+into their real substance and reparation.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">VIII</h3>
+
+<p>Beyond this very feeble nutritive help is there, then,
+in meat, anything else which makes the use of this
+article of food necessary, agreeable or particularly
+strengthening? It is incontestible that meat contains
+stimulating substances, which, as Prof. Armand Gautier
+has said, play the part of nerve tonics, and have perhaps
+a direct action on the circulation.</p>
+
+<p>These special meat matters are found concentrated in
+the gravy. Meat gravy, in fact, beside a feeble proportion
+of albuminoid matters, or solubly derived
+quantities, <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'polypetides'.">polypeptides</ins>, etc., in notable proportion of
+liberated acids, contains a certain quantity of matters,
+qualified by the generic name of extractives; a notable
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg587" id="Pg587"></a>quantity of these extractive matters being creatine and
+creatinine, as well as substances of which the fundamental
+nucleus is the puric grouping. These purins,
+by the name which E. Fischer attributes to them,
+derive from a special grouping which it would be supposed
+exists in a hypothetic body, but which is not
+known in a state of liberty, purin. This first term
+gives rise to a series of bodies in lateral groups, of
+which the most interesting are caffeine and theobromine.
+Amongst these substances the one which has
+the maximum of oxidation is no other than uric acid.
+Caffeine and theobromine enjoy nervine properties and
+energetic vascular actions. These properties minutely
+studied are utilised every day for therapeutic purposes.
+It is probable that the other bodies of the series which
+are met with in the extract of meat enjoy analogous
+physiological properties. These substances are ingested
+without discernment, often in great excess, and daily,
+by people who consume meat.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst these latter, many would not dare to drug
+themselves with a centigramme of pharmaceutic caffeine,
+whereas they absorb each day 0 gr. 5 and more,
+of its homologous <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'constitutents'.">constituents</ins>.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, in the same way as chocolate, tea and
+coffee, meat has a stimulating effect on the system.
+He who is accidentally deprived of it finds that he experiences
+a passing depression. This obviously proves
+that by the exaggerated use of meat, one drugs and
+doctors oneself without discernment. However this may
+be, the judicious part played by meat must apparently
+be reduced to that of a condiment food destined to
+produce in a measure the whipping-up which is useful,
+and sometimes indispensable to the system. We cannot
+here discuss the expediency of action and the
+harmlessness of the dose of substances reputed stimulating.
+But one can ask oneself whether, to attain
+this object of stimulation, carnivorous feeding is indispensable,
+and if vegetarianism could not supply the need.</p>
+
+<p>The reply is easy: the vegetable kingdom disposes
+of a variety of stimulating articles, such as tea,
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg588" id="Pg588"></a>coffee, kola and cocoa. Through their active substances
+these foods are nerve tonics of the first order, less
+dangerous in their use than meat, because more easily
+assimilated, of far more continuous effects, less mixed
+with other substances, sometimes noxious, and consequently
+more measurable. Besides, in pulse food,
+quantities of purins are found as important as in meat.
+If the part they play has not been systematically
+studied from the point of view of their effects on the
+nervous organism, they still give rise to the same
+terminal products, such as uric acid. One can quite
+well argue that the pulse purins have physiological
+effects comparable to those of meat purins. On the
+other hand, vegetable purins have the considerable advantage
+of being less easily precipitated in the urine,
+after the human interorganic metabolism, than those
+resulting from the metabolism of flesh material.</p>
+
+<p>This explains why a frequent use of a vegetable diet
+offers appreciable advantages in the amelioration of
+arthritic diatheses so common amongst us. Certain
+effects observed in these diatheses arise from the purins,
+from their localisation in the system, and their vitiated
+metabolism. The use of a moderate vegetable diet is
+the best means of treatment in order to relieve, to
+ameliorate, even to cure, arthritic diathesis.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">IX</h3>
+
+<p>Such are the certain physiological advantages which
+the predominant use of vegetable products are capable
+of offering. If one takes the pure energy-producing
+point of view, the superiority of the vegetarian diet
+becomes greater still. From the fine works of A.
+Chauveau, modern physiology has shown us that muscle,
+in working, consumes sugary materials. These are
+provided by ingestions of sugar in a natural state, of
+dextrine or of starch; for a less important part, the
+glycogen of the system may also arise from hydrocarbonated
+cords existing in the molecule of certain
+albumins. Therefore it is only in an infinitesimal part,
+due to the fibrine of meat, and to the small proportions
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg589" id="Pg589"></a>of glycogen which it contains, that flesh diet intervenes
+in the direct production of kinetic energy.</p>
+
+<p>The demonstrations which have been essayed, touching
+the muscular superiority of vegetarians, appear
+superfluous to us. Such experiments could only have
+a positive value if they were made on both series of
+antagonistic subjects, with alimentary powers of energy-producing
+equality.</p>
+
+<p>It should be distinctly understood that the vegetarian
+does not profit by any mysterious forces. The habit
+of preferring to nourish oneself with vegetable foods,
+can, at most, or at least, favour the physiological
+integrity of the subject, shield him against disease and
+assure his revictualment with foods recognised as active
+and easily measurable.</p>
+
+<p>One cannot leave alcohol out of the list of advantageous
+vegetable foods. In fact, provided one keeps to
+strictly limited doses, it may be included among the
+alimentary foods, on a footing comparable to that of
+sugar. If one knew how to use without misusing it,
+alcohol might become a daily food.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">X</h3>
+
+<p>Another order of ideas which one cannot pass by in
+silence at the present time militates in favour of vegetable
+alimentation. Dietetics cannot neglect economic
+problems. A flesh diet is very costly. In large towns,
+like Paris, at a time when everything is increasing in
+cost, one must be favoured by fortune to be able to
+indulge in the real luxury of consuming the calories of
+meat. As we said in 1905, with Prof. <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'Laudouzy'.">Landouzy</ins> and
+M. Labb&eacute;, in our inquiry into popular Parisian alimentation,
+the calorific energy of meat comes, on an average,
+to between 15 to 20 times dearer than that of bread or
+pulse foods.</p>
+
+<p>The diet with a vegetable predominance may therefore,
+by those who adopt it, be considered as much less
+costly than a mixed one. Does not this fact, then,
+deserve to be taken into consideration and compared&mdash;startlingly
+illustrative&mdash;to the ingenious calculation
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg590" id="Pg590"></a>recently made by Lef&egrave;vre in his examination of vegetarianism?
+One acre of land planted for the purpose of
+breeding cattle produces three times less living strength
+than an acre planted with wheat!</p>
+
+<p>Is it not criminal, or at any rate ill-judged, for the
+richness and health of the country to have, by the laws
+of a draconian protectionism, spurred the French agricultural
+population along the road to the breeding of
+cattle, thus turning it away from cultivation? These
+laws are the cause, on the one hand, of the high price
+of wheat, owing to the abandonment of its culture and
+the barriers opposed to its entrance, and on the other,
+of the dearness of meat, owing to the stock and the
+land which the cattle require.</p>
+
+<p>Under these facts economists have indeed a direct
+responsibility, as for more than fifty years economic
+orthodoxy has presented meat as a necessity, whereas
+it is the least advantageous particle amongst so many
+others.</p>
+
+<p>In conclusion, let us hope that future distinctions of
+&ldquo;Vegetalists,&rdquo; vegetarians or flesh eaters may be completely
+abolished. <i>In medio stat virtus.</i> The dietetic
+regimen, the general adoption of which must henceforth
+be desired, must reject all preconceived and hereditary
+ideas, and unite in one harmonious use all foods with
+a hygienic end in view. The place of each one amongst
+them and its predominance over the others should be
+determined only by conforming to reasons at the same
+time physiological and economic.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Labb&eacute;.</p>
+
+<div class="box"><hr />
+<h3>To Our Readers.</h3>
+
+<p>Readers who appreciate the independence and
+all-round nature of <i>The Healthy Life</i> can materially
+assist the extension of its circulation by tactfully
+urging their local newsagent to have the magazine
+regularly displayed for sale. An attractive monthly
+poster can always be had free from the Publishers,
+3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.</p><hr />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg591" id="Pg591"></a><a name="HEALTH_AND_JOY_IN" id="HEALTH_AND_JOY_IN"></a>HEALTH AND JOY IN
+HAND-WEAVING.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>This article gains additional interest from the fact
+that it has been written by one who works her own
+loom and teaches others the ancient and healthy art
+of hand-weaving.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="dropcaph"><span class="dropcap">H</span></span>and-weaving is an art, a handicraft,
+one aspect of which we are apt to forget&mdash;namely,
+that it is a splendid health-giver.
+Indeed, all who have felt the rhythm of the
+loom, as they throw the shuttle to and fro,
+and in blending colours and seeing the
+material grow thread by thread, can witness to the
+power of the work to banish both the large and small
+worries that eat away our health of mind and body.
+The hand-weaver learns to look upon his (or her) loom
+as a very good friend.</p>
+
+<p>The possibilities in weaving are immense, and the
+great difficulty that always confronts the weaver is
+the impossibility of letting gussets into the day: the
+end of the week comes all too soon.</p>
+
+<p>One very satisfactory thing about weaving is the
+fact that from the very first we can use the things
+woven, even those we learn on.</p>
+
+<p>First, there is plain weaving, with which we can
+make dress materials and many things for household
+use. Then come fancy and striped materials, which
+require more knowledge and ingenuity.</p>
+
+<p>There are endless varieties in bands of different
+patterns thrown in with the shuttle, or shuttles, sometimes
+as many as a dozen of which may be in use at a
+time. These can be used for the purpose of ornamentation.
+In weaving these no end of play of colour can
+be made, by using many colours in rotation, either as
+the groundwork of plain material, under the patterns,
+or as the pattern itself.</p>
+
+<p>Metal threads can also be used of various kinds,
+either as an entire texture, or to enrich the fancy bands.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg592" id="Pg592"></a>Lastly, there is inlay weaving, by which we can put
+in by hand, with little separate bobbins, as we go along,
+any cross-stitch design, lettering, monograms, figures
+and designs of every description.</p>
+
+<p>Anyone with a knowledge of carpentry can make
+his own loom, the construction being of a very simple
+nature. In fact, the Orientals erect a few sticks, dig
+a hole in the ground to sit in, tie their warp up to a
+tree, and then produce the most charming work, both in
+texture and colour.</p>
+
+<p>The warp can also be made as these people often
+make theirs, by fixing it to sticks stuck into the ground,
+and walking backwards and forwards with the thread,
+singing as they go. Yes, singing! I think we English
+folk might learn from them to put more joy into our
+work, that fountainhead of life and health. We are
+apt to take such a serious view of ourselves and of all
+we do. So often, too, we only feel the dull and quiet
+colours, instead of using the many brilliant ones that
+nature loves so well. Once we begin working in, and
+appreciating, these we realise the exhilarating effect on
+our spirits. Indeed, I think we are only beginning to
+realise what a great influence colour has upon us, and
+all that colour signifies, each colour having various
+meanings of its own.</p>
+
+<p>Many people are now realising that we are surrounded
+by a halo of colour woven by our character&mdash;the most
+highly developed people being surrounded by clear,
+bright colours. It is strictly true that we are all
+weavers, every day of our lives. By following the
+laws of nature we make the finest texture composed of
+all the most glorious colours or qualities in the Universe,
+so by degrees bringing ourselves, and others, into
+perfect harmony and peace.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Minnie Brown.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg593" id="Pg593"></a><a name="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT5" id="HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT5"></a>HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p><i>This discussion arose out of the <a href="#HOW_MUCH_SHOULD_WE_EAT1">article</a> with above
+title, by &ldquo;M.D.,&rdquo; which was published in our <a href="#Pg437">July
+number</a>.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">IV</h3>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapi"><span class="dropcap">I</span></span>n dealing with this vitally important question,
+we shall most of us, I take it, agree
+upon certain points. In the light of recent
+knowledge upon, and extended experience
+of the subject, one such point which now
+appears incontrovertible is that there are
+thousands die annually&mdash;directly or indirectly&mdash;through
+overfeeding where one dies through insufficient nourishment.
+And it may at once be said that, as regards
+these thousands, the death certificates are practically
+valueless as data in relation to erroneous dieting, so that
+in this way we can never get at a correct estimate as
+to the actual number of deaths due to overfeeding.
+Bright's disease, gastric and intestinal affections,
+growths of various kinds, cancer, etc., are each in their
+turn certified as the &ldquo;Cause of Death.&rdquo; Most often,
+however, the initial cause is the overloading of the
+system with an amount of food beyond that which is
+necessary or healthful&mdash;and thereby clogging up the
+tissues, the organs and smaller bloodvessels.</p>
+
+<p>But it may be said: &ldquo;How can you substantiate
+such a general and sweeping statement?&rdquo; In the first
+place&mdash;and this is profoundly significant&mdash;other things
+being equal, it must be acknowledged by all unbiased
+people that the small and moderate feeders do not
+contract disease in anything like the proportion that
+big feeders do, and as a natural consequence live longer
+lives.</p>
+
+<p>Further, it must surely be quite evident by this time
+that there is a sufficiently large enough number of
+people who are thus existing in good health&mdash;and
+steadily regaining it where it has been lost&mdash;on the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg594" id="Pg594"></a>lines of moderate feeding. And the number is accumulating
+at a rapid pace; more and more are coming into
+line with those of us who, having thus found health
+in themselves, their patients and friends, are preaching
+the practice of two meals a day, and sometimes only
+one where there is serious organic disease to combat&mdash;thus
+defying the dicta of those eminent physiologists
+who &ldquo;settled&rdquo; the question years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Now I quite admit&mdash;it would be impertinence to do
+otherwise&mdash;that &ldquo;M.D.'s&rdquo; statements and views must
+not be ignored, must indeed be respected. And he tells us
+that he &ldquo;heard of,&rdquo; in one day, three cases which &ldquo;went
+wrong&rdquo; through underfeeding; well, for those three
+cases we can point to hundreds who are <i>going right</i>
+through eating just enough and not too much. I am
+prepared, on the other hand, to admit the danger of
+a continued semi-starvation diet; our difficulty is to
+define in each individual case what exactly would be
+a semi-starvation, and what a sufficient diet. It is
+impossible to have a fixed standard for everybody.
+After all, &ldquo;the proof of the pudding is in the eating&rdquo;;
+often it is a matter of experimenting for some little
+time, and in this way we could judge largely of the
+result of our dieting by our state of general health.</p>
+
+<p>On some main points of the question I am now
+absolutely convinced&mdash;viz.:</p>
+
+<p>1. Excessive bulk is always dangerous, often disastrous,
+causing sudden death in a large number of
+cases.</p>
+
+<p>2. Starchy foods are best strictly limited as we get
+along towards middle age and beyond.</p>
+
+<p>3. A life which is largely mental or sedentary will
+be healthier and longer on a strictly moderate diet.</p>
+
+<p>4. A life largely of physical labour must be dealt with
+on its own particular conditions.</p>
+
+<p>5. At all times due regard, of course, must be paid
+to age, weight, etc.</p>
+
+<p>6. On the whole, &ldquo;eminent physiologists&rdquo; have
+erred on the side of excess of proteid being advised.</p>
+
+<p>7. Middle age is the critical time of life in respect
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg595" id="Pg595"></a>to a man's diet in other words, I would say in
+axiomatic form that as a man feeds at or about middle
+age, so will he be for the rest of his life.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">J. Stenson Hooker, M.D.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="center">V</h3>
+
+<p>As a very interested reader of this discussion I should
+be very glad to know exactly what &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; means by
+<i>each pound</i> of <i>bone</i> and <i>muscle</i> in the body weight?
+What proportion (approximately) is it to total body
+weight? I have been trying to keep up to Dr Haig's
+9 grains per lb. of &ldquo;body weight&rdquo; and find that it is
+too much for my digestive powers, which are very weak
+owing to chronic nervous dyspepsia. If I take 15 per
+cent. or 20 per cent. <i>less</i> proteid my troubles are so
+greatly lessened that I feel that to continue to take the
+lower amount would mean perpetual relief. But there
+have been so many warnings, including M.D.'s, of the
+dangers of under-nutrition, that I am in a quandary;
+and others of your readers too.</p>
+
+<p>If M.D. means grains per lb. of <i>something less</i> than
+total body weight, a lesser amount of proteid than I try
+to take may have his sanction, and be safe for me.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Jno. A. Cookson.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>There appears to be a sincere attempt in &ldquo;M.D.'s&rdquo;
+article to prove that a physiologist is the best guide
+in diet. But, as one can get the degree of M.D. without
+any scientific knowledge of dietetics, the inference that
+one would be likely to make from such an alarming
+article is erroneous. I say &ldquo;alarming&rdquo; because vague
+statements are made as to patients who were rescued
+just in time to be stimulated by over-feeding into a
+semblance of health, and we are treated to a list of very
+alarming symptoms in the last paragraph on <a href="#Pg443">p. 443</a>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; says, &ldquo;Suppose that the animal fed for
+years on unnatural food has become so pathological that
+it can no longer take or digest its natural food.&rdquo; How
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg596" id="Pg596"></a>grateful to M.D. for this statement will be those who
+long for an excuse to cling to the spoiled, boiled and
+unnatural dishes of which the popular diet mainly
+consists! And how they will continue to overeat themselves,
+content to avoid the truth regarding food
+quantities.</p>
+
+<p>Living on a right and natural diet, a man or woman
+will correct the effects of wrong living. This will
+bring crises, and unless they know that this is Nature's
+attempt to rid the body of unwanted and effete matter
+they may be duped into returning to their high feeding,
+either by those whom &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; calls diet quacks or by
+qualified quacks.</p>
+
+<p>I do not believe it possible for anyone to die for lack
+of indication that they were eating too little.</p>
+
+<p>The opposite is what people die of. If we carefully
+read Dr Rabagliati's article in the same issue we shall
+rightly ask what would be the results of analyses and
+measurements in such a case.</p>
+
+<p>About a year ago we had a young woman under our
+care who had suffered with deafness and other troubles
+for years. She had tried dietetic treatments, &ldquo;uric-acid-free&rdquo;
+and otherwise, and had at last been told that
+her deafness was incurable, being due to heredity and
+deficiency in the organs of hearing. She was extremely
+thin when she came to us, but we did not measure her,
+nor analyse unclean excreta, nor weigh her.</p>
+
+<p>She saw an M.D. who was in sympathy with the
+philosophy of fasting, and she fasted (taking water only)
+for 28 days. She then had four days of fruit juice, and
+was so disappointed at having broken her fast prematurely
+that she continued it for another 12 days, making
+44 in all&mdash;40 days actual fasting.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>During this period she was living an almost complete
+out-door life.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p>During the fast many interesting phenomena were
+witnessed, chief among which was the discharge from
+ears and nose&mdash;significant indeed to all who study
+Nature's ways. Result: normal hearing restored. This
+was nearly twelve months ago; and, having heard of
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg597" id="Pg597"></a>her recently, we find that, though she had had a cold,
+there has been no recurrence of deafness. I wonder
+what assistance measurements would have been in this
+true cure. The patient (an adult) weighed 4st. 8 lbs. at
+the end of her fast and could then walk short distances.</p>
+
+<p>The way in which &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo; dismisses &ldquo;a little gout&rdquo;
+in his last paragraph but one almost leads one to think
+that he is unaware of the failure of the natural defences
+of the body that must have gone on in a very serious
+degree before the manifestation of gout became possible.</p>
+
+<p>I respectfully submit this problem to &ldquo;M.D.&rdquo;:&mdash;If
+a very thin patient can go without food entirely for 40
+days, with only benefit accruing, <i>how many centuries</i>
+will it take for a fairly fat person to die through slightly
+under-eating?</p>
+
+<p>As Dr Haddon has said, the proteid myth will die
+hard, but there are physiologists who, with their faces
+to the light, are finding the truth of man's requirements
+in food and who know that absolute purity and simplicity
+are the ideals to be sought and that all food we eat
+more than is absolutely necessary is a diversion of
+energy to carnal channels.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Ernest Starr.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_DOCTORS_REASONS_FOR" id="A_DOCTORS_REASONS_FOR"></a>A DOCTOR'S REASONS FOR
+OPPOSING VACCINATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapi"><span class="dropcap">I</span></span>n opposing vaccination I am aware that it
+is a thankless task to brave the abuse and
+antagonism which everyone who attempts
+to move forward in the work of medical
+progress is sure to encounter.</p>
+
+<p>In order that I may not be regarded as
+prejudiced against the dogma of vaccination, I will
+preface my remarks with the confession that I was at
+one time myself a confiding dupe of the &ldquo;tradition of
+the dairymaids.&rdquo; While attending medical college I
+was told that inoculation with cow pox virus was a
+certain preventive of small-pox, and like most other
+medical students I accepted with childlike faith and
+credulity the dictum of my teachers as so much infallible
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg598" id="Pg598"></a>wisdom. After an experience derived from treating a
+number of cases of post-vaccinal small-pox in patients
+who gave evidence of having been recently and successfully
+vaccinated, I awoke to a realisation of the unpleasant
+fact that &ldquo;protective vaccination&rdquo; was not all
+that was claimed for it. I thereupon began a study of
+the vaccination problem in all its bearings. After several
+years of reading, observation and experience I became
+fully convinced that &ldquo;successful&rdquo; vaccination not only
+fails to protect its subjects from small-pox, but that,
+in reality, it renders them more susceptible to this
+disease by impairing their health and vitality, and by
+diminishing their power of resistance.</p>
+
+<p>Personally, I have known of recently vaccinated
+patients dying from small-pox while having the plainest
+foveated vaccine marks upon their bodies, and I have
+seen other individuals who had never submitted to
+vaccine inoculation have variola in its mildest and most
+benign type.</p>
+
+<p>In view of such experience I refused to ignore the
+evidence of my own senses, and determined to follow the
+dictates of reason instead of the dogmas of faith, and
+have, consequently, for the past fifteen years refused
+to pollute the blood of a single person with vaccine
+virus.</p>
+
+<p>I oppose vaccination because I believe that health is
+always preferable to disease. The principle and practice
+of vaccination involves the introduction of the contagion
+of disease at least twice, and, according to numerous
+authorities, many times, into the human organism. The
+disease conveyed by vaccination causes an undeniable
+impairment of health and vitality, it being a distinctly
+vaccine &ldquo;lymph,&rdquo; is taken from a lesion on the body
+of a diseased beast, and inserted by the vaccinator into
+the circulation of healthy children. The performance of
+such an insanitary operation, in the very nature of the
+case, is a violation of the cardinal principles of hygiene
+and of sanitary science.... Moreover, this operation is
+in direct controversion of the basic principles of aseptic
+surgery, the legitimate aim of which is to <i>remove</i> from
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg599" id="Pg599"></a>the organism the products of disease, but never to
+<i>introduce</i> them.</p>
+
+<p>The prime aim of the modern surgeon is to make
+every wound aseptic and to keep it so. The careful
+operator employs every means at his command to clear
+the field of operations of all bacteria. He utilises every
+particle of the marvellously minute and intricate technique
+of asepsis to prevent the entrance through the
+wounded tissues of any disease elements before, during
+or after the operation. He fears sepsis equally with
+death, and yet, under the blighting and blinding influence
+of an ancient and venerated myth inherited from
+his ignorant and superstitious forbears of a pre-scientific
+age, he will deliberately inoculate the virulent infective
+products of diseased animal tissues into the circulation
+of a healthy person. And as if to cap the climax of his
+stupidity and inconsistency, he performs the operation
+under &ldquo;aseptic precautions.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The poisonous matter which nature wisely eliminates
+from the body of a diseased calf in an effort to save its
+life and restore it to health is seized upon by the vaccinator
+and implanted into the wholesome body of a
+helpless child. Think of the unparalleled absurdity of
+purposely infecting the body of a healthy person in this
+era of sanitary science with the poison from a diseased
+beast, under the senseless pretext of protecting the
+victim of the ingrafted disease from the contagion of
+another disease! Can inconsistency go further?</p>
+
+<p>I oppose the practice of vaccination because it is not
+known what vaccine virus is, except that it is a mixed
+contagion of disease. We hear much these days about
+&ldquo;pure&rdquo; virus and &ldquo;pure calf lymph.&rdquo; Nothing could
+be more absurd and meaningless than the flippant talk
+indulged in by vaccinators and the purveyors of vaccine
+virus about &ldquo;pure calf lymph,&rdquo; a hybrid product of
+diseased animal tissues. &ldquo;Pure virus&rdquo; translated into
+plain English is pure &ldquo;animal poison.&rdquo; The phrase
+&ldquo;pure calf lymph&rdquo; is applied to an brand of vaccine
+virus now in use is a misnomer for two reasons. It is
+not &ldquo;pure&rdquo; and it is not &ldquo;calf lymph.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg600" id="Pg600"></a>Calf lymph is the normal nutrient fluid which circulates
+in the lymphatic vessels of the calf. Lymph is
+described by physiologists as a &ldquo;transparent, colourless,
+nutrient alkaline fluid which circulates in the
+lymphatic vessels and thoracic ducts of animal bodies.&rdquo;
+Lymph is a physiological product, while the so-called
+&ldquo;pure calf lymph&rdquo; used by vaccinators is a pathological
+product, derived from a lesion on a diseased calf. The
+difference between calf lymph and so-called &ldquo;pure calf
+lymph&rdquo; is as great as is the difference between a food
+and a poison. The vaccine mixture now most generally
+used by the medical profession is known under the name
+of &ldquo;glycerinized vaccine lymph,&rdquo; but it is not <i>lymph</i> at
+all. It is made by utilising practically the entire lesion
+or pock on the heifer when it is in the vesicular stage.
+Such a lesion is broken open and scraped with a Volkmann
+spoon until the whole of the tissue is forcibly and
+roughly curetted away, consisting of pus, morbid serum,
+epithelium, fibrous tissue of the skin, and any foreign
+matter on or in it, constituting what is called &ldquo;pulp.&rdquo;
+This pulp is then passed between glass rollers for
+trituration and afterwards mixed with a definite amount
+of glycerine and distilled water. This complex pathologic
+product of unknown origin is injected into the
+wholesome bodies of helpless children under the false
+but plausible name of &ldquo;pure calf lymph.&rdquo; ...</p>
+
+<p>I oppose the practice of vaccination because under
+whatever pretext performed the implantation of disease
+elements into the healthy human organism is irrational
+and injurious. It is subversive of the fundamental
+principles of sanitary science, while the attainment of
+health as a prophylactic measure is rational and in
+harmony with the ascertained laws of hygiene and consistent
+with the canons of common-sense. I am firmly
+convinced that the absurd and unreasonable dogma
+which assumes to conserve health by propagating
+disease should receive the open condemnation of every
+scientific sanitarian. That this health-blighting delusion
+conceived in the ignorance of a past generation
+should find lodgment in the minds of intelligent people
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg601" id="Pg601"></a>enjoying the light of the world's highest civilisation is
+to my mind inexplicable....</p>
+
+<p>Sanitation and isolation of the infected offer the only
+rational and effective antidote for these disorders.
+Away, then, with the abominable and filthy subterfuge!
+Give us health instead of disease. Health is the great
+prophylactic.</p>
+
+<p>No man in perfect health can be truly said to be susceptible
+to the infection of small-pox, nor to that of any
+other zymotic disease. Vigorous health confers immunity
+from disease-producing agents as nothing else
+can. It is usually after the vital functions have become
+impaired by the effects of vaccination or some other
+injurious cause that individuals become susceptible to
+small-pox infection.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">J.W. Hodge, M.D.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>The above article can be obtained in pamphlet form from the
+publisher. Wm. J. Furnival, Stone. Staffs.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_NEW_RACE" id="THE_NEW_RACE"></a>THE NEW RACE.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>Specially written for <span class="smcap">The Healthy Life.</span></i>)</p>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanzadc">
+<span class="i0"><span class="dropcapa"><span class="dropcap">A</span></span> new race on the ruins of the old<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Build we: a temple of the human form<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Fairer than marble, since with life-blood warm,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Well crowned with its appointed crown of gold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Russet or ebony; lines clear and bold<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Beneath&mdash;a citadel no ills can storm,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Buttressed with health; a type to be the norm<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In that great age the world shall yet behold.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For now the laws of Health and Heaven are seen<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In their identity, life's body and soul;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Though, like divorce, disease may come between<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">What God hath joined; but at the human goal,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where the New Race rules, splendid and serene,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Sit Health and Holiness, made one and whole.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="sig">S. Gertrude Ford.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg602" id="Pg602"></a><a name="THE_PLAY_SPIRIT" id="THE_PLAY_SPIRIT"></a>THE PLAY SPIRIT.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapw"><span class="dropcap">W</span></span>e all long for reality. Most of the amusements
+in the world are imitations of the
+reality for which we long. They promise
+a satisfaction they are unable to give.
+Drink, mechanical love-making, all snatched
+gratification of the senses, religious excitement,
+revivalist meetings, and so forth, most theatre-going
+and sports, all simulate the real glory of life. They
+bring an illusion of well-being. They produce a glow
+in the nervous system. They cause the outlines of
+everyday life as we know it to grow suffused. They
+give us a momentary sense of heightened power and
+freedom. We float easily in a happy world. A sort of
+relaxation has been achieved. The less common forms
+of amusement bring us nearer to the gateway of reality.
+For some, they have been the rivers leading to the
+ocean of truth itself.</p>
+
+<p>Art, for instance, the interpretation of life in terms
+of beauty; the &ldquo;artist,&rdquo; the man in whom sensuous
+perception is supreme, offers us a sublime aspect of
+reality. He dwells in the universe constructed for him
+by his senses and tells us of its glories. He achieves
+&ldquo;freedom.&rdquo; The veil covering reality is woven for him
+far thinner than for common men. He sees life moving
+eternally behind the forms he separates and &ldquo;creates.&rdquo;
+And to those of us who are akin to him, who are
+temperamentally artistic, he offers freedom of a kind.
+The contemplation of a work of art releases the tension
+of the nerves. To use the language of psychology it
+&ldquo;arrests&rdquo; us, suspends the functions of our everyday
+surface personality, abolishes for a moment time and
+space, allows the &ldquo;free,&rdquo; generally suppressed subconscious
+self to come up and flood the surface intelligence,
+allows us for a moment to be ourselves. But,
+still, this momentary relaxation, this momentary &ldquo;play,&rdquo;
+this holiday from the surface &ldquo;I,&rdquo; remains an affair
+dependent upon suggestive symbols coming from &ldquo;without.&rdquo;
+The supreme artist achieves freedom. We, who
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg603" id="Pg603"></a>in matters of art are the imitative mass, can only have
+&ldquo;change,&rdquo; a new heaven and earth, a fresh &ldquo;culture.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then there is love. That promises, at the outset,
+complete escape into freedom and reality. And supreme
+lovers, both of individuals and of &ldquo;Humanity,&rdquo; have
+indeed found freedom and the pathway to reality in love.
+But ordinary everyday people rushing idolatrously out
+to find themselves in others find in the end only another
+I. The religions perhaps work best and longest. But
+even here average humanity, where the mystical sense
+is feeble, are thrown back in the end upon ethics&mdash;and
+go somewhat grimly through life doing their duty, living
+upon the husks of doctrine, the notions and reports of
+other men.</p>
+
+<p>If the play spirit within us, that longing for the real
+joy of life, for real relaxation and re-creation, fares so
+poorly for most of us in the amusements large and
+small that life offers to our leisure moments, is it any
+better in the &ldquo;games&rdquo; the individual chooses for himself&mdash;hobbies,
+for instance? Can these generally
+&ldquo;instructive&rdquo; and &ldquo;useful,&rdquo; generally also solitary, occupations
+be called play? Are they not merely a reversal
+of life's engine, rather than an unmaking and a remaking.
+They are merely a variant of life. They are
+very truly called a &ldquo;change of occupation.&rdquo; They are
+led and dominated, commonly, by the intelligence. They
+contain no element of freedom. The same defect is
+found in all organised &ldquo;games.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>Real play, like every other reality, comes from what
+our mechanical and practical intelligences have called
+&ldquo;within.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Real play arises when the &ldquo;I&rdquo; is in direct contact
+with the myself, with Life, with God, with the actuality
+moving beneath all symbolic representations.</p>
+
+<p>It is only when &ldquo;I,&rdquo; the practical, intelligent,
+abstract-making, idealising, generalising, clever, separated
+&ldquo;I,&rdquo; the &ldquo;I&rdquo; which has a past, a present and
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg604" id="Pg604"></a>a future, renounces its usurpation of the steering
+apparatus, that play can be. &ldquo;I,&rdquo; to play or to pray or
+to love, must be born again. &ldquo;I&rdquo; must relinquish all.
+&ldquo;I&rdquo; must have neither experience nor knowledge,
+neither loves nor hates, neither &ldquo;thought&rdquo; nor &ldquo;feeling&rdquo;
+nor &ldquo;will&rdquo;&mdash;nor anything that can arrest the
+action of the inner life. When this complete relaxation,
+which has its physical as well as its mental aspect, is
+achieved, then and then only can &ldquo;I&rdquo; rise up and play.
+Then &ldquo;I&rdquo; shall rediscover all the plays in the world in
+their origin. &ldquo;I&rdquo; shall understand the war-dance of
+the &ldquo;savage.&rdquo; &ldquo;I&rdquo; shall know something about the
+physical convulsions of primitive &ldquo;conversion.&rdquo; The
+arts may begin to be open doors to me. &ldquo;I&rdquo; shall have
+stood &ldquo;under,&rdquo; understood my universe, in the brief
+moment when &ldquo;I&rdquo; abandoned myself to the inner
+reality. The words of the great &ldquo;teachers&rdquo; will grow
+full of meaning. My own &ldquo;experiences&rdquo; will be re-read.
+I shall see more clearly with my surface intelligence
+what I must do. I shall be personal in everything,
+personal in my play. Surface self-consciousness
+which holds me back from all spontaneous activity will
+disappear in proportion as &ldquo;I&rdquo; am immersed in the
+greater &ldquo;me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Look at that woman walking primly down the lane
+to the sea with her bathing-dress. She is a worker on
+a holiday. But she cannot play. She goes down every
+day to bathe in the Cornish sea, the sea that on a
+calm sunny day is like liquid Venetian glass and flings
+at you, under the least breeze, long, green, foam-crested
+billows that carry you off our feet if you stand even
+waist-high. She potters in the shallows and splashes
+herself to avoid taking cold. Her intelligent &ldquo;I&rdquo; is
+uppermost. Her world of every day never leaves her.
+She will go back to it as she came, unchanged. Her
+wistful face betrays the seeker lost amidst unrealities.
+If the &ldquo;I&rdquo; were a little more intelligent, she might
+try to defy the surrounding ocean, to pit her powers
+against it, to swim. She would learn a most practical
+and useful and withal invigorating accomplishment. If
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg605" id="Pg605"></a>her busy, watchful &ldquo;I&rdquo; could be arrested she might
+&ldquo;see&rdquo; the billows, the sky and the headlands reared on
+either side of her bay. She might dance into the water,
+and see her world dance back. She would fling herself
+amongst the wavelets where she stands and splashes.
+She might give herself up and know nothing but the
+beauty and strength around her. It would not teach
+her to swim, but she would have taken a step towards
+the great game of walking upon the waters.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">D.M. Richardson.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="TRAVELS_IN_TWO_COLOURS" id="TRAVELS_IN_TWO_COLOURS"></a>TRAVELS IN TWO COLOURS.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapo"><span class="dropcap">O</span></span>ne is often tempted to suspect that in
+some schools there is a deep-laid plot to
+destroy in the bud any love for poetry which
+children may possess. Otherwise how is
+it that little boys and girls are made to
+commit to memory William Blake at his
+highest reach of mystical fire, as in <i>Tiger, Tiger,
+burning bright</i>, or William Wordsworth at his lowest
+ebb of uninspired simplicity, as in <i>We are seven</i>?
+These are very popular, apparently, as poems for
+children to recite; yet in the one case it is beyond
+any teacher's power to show children the unearthly
+flaming beauty which alone gives the poem its peculiar
+quality and undefinable power; and in the other the
+maudlin sentimentalism and almost priggish piety of
+the verses are positively dangerous to the child's health
+of mind. Both types of recitation work out in the end
+to this&mdash;that when the child attains adolescence, and
+the great world of literature dawns on the hungry mind,
+an evil association of ideas has been established&mdash;the
+association of poetry, the highest of all arts, either
+with the saying of lines without meaning, or with the
+learning of &ldquo;poems&rdquo; devoid of what wholesome youth
+really desires or enjoys.</p>
+
+<p>People may wrangle all night as to whether the
+normal healthy child is at heart a mystic or a realist;
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg606" id="Pg606"></a>whether he likes fairy tales because they show him a
+magical world where flowers can talk and umbrellas
+are turned into black geese, or because they tell of
+strange romantic things happening to a real human boy
+like himself; but there can be no shadow of doubt that
+much of the verse intended for children is either too
+clever in its humour to make them laugh, or too bald
+in its matter or tone to stir the romance that is never
+quite asleep in their hearts. There are really
+surprisingly few versifiers who have altogether avoided
+these errors. Some of George Macdonald's <i>Poems for
+Children</i> are almost perfect, both as regards lyrical
+form, simplicity of language and in the unobtrusiveness
+of the inner truth they convey. For example,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The lightning and thunder<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">They go and they come;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the stars and the stillness<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Are always at home.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But others come perilously near mere versified moralising.
+Lewis Carroll's nonsense verses in the two
+famous <i>Alice</i> books are supreme among their kind;
+but are they not sometimes just a shade too ingenious,
+or too adult in wit? Probably Stevenson, in those
+seemingly artless poems in <i>A Child's Book of Verse</i>,
+comes nearest to a level perfection. Who has ever
+approached him in his power to understand and express
+the small child's world, desires and delights, without
+a trace of the grown-up's condescension or
+self-consciousness?</p>
+
+<p>Well, these great ones are no longer in the world;
+yet, with the recognition of their genius, there is the
+usual danger of bemoaning the lack of worthy successors.
+Not but what there is some excuse for such
+lamentation; for this reason that every Christmas
+there is a veritable flood of children's verse, a great
+deal of which is either painfully didactic, painfully
+sentimental, painfully funny or painfully foolish.</p>
+
+<p>What I wish to do at the moment is to call attention
+to the fact that there is one man alive in England&mdash;one
+of many, I do not doubt: but one at a time!&mdash;<a class="pagenum" name="Pg607" id="Pg607"></a>who
+is doing &ldquo;nonsense verses&rdquo; for children which are
+guiltless of all the faults I have indicated above.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Goring is known among some of his friends as
+&ldquo;The Jolly Rhymster.&rdquo; He writes his verses first
+for his own children, and then publishes them from time
+to time for the pleasure of other children. The secret
+of his success is partly that he knows that even small
+children like a story to be an adventure; partly that
+he understands how their own romances, the things
+they picture or hum to themselves when well-meaning
+adults are not worrying them, or rather, trying to
+amuse them, begin&mdash;wherever they may end!&mdash;with a
+perfectly tangible object, such as a pillar-box, a rag-doll
+or a toy locomotive. One of &ldquo;The Jolly
+Rhymster's&rdquo; best things begins&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Finger-post, finger-post, why do you stand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pointing all day with your silly flat hand?&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&mdash;which is exactly the sort of question that a very small
+child in all probability does really ask itself when it
+has seen a finger-post day after day at a cross-roads.
+How the poem continues and where it ends you must
+find out for yourself. It's all in a book called <i>The
+Ballad of Lake Laloo</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In the recently published volume<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> that now lies
+before me, this telling of a tale of wonder which begins
+with an ordinary thing is again evident. Nip and Flip,
+aged six and four respectively, are the adventurers; and
+they make three voyages in this little book. In the
+first, <i>The Fourpenny-Ha'penny Ship</i>, they circumnavigate
+the world. Now please note how Mr Goring
+strikes the right note at the very outset:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Nip and Flip<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Took a holiday trip<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On a beautiful fourpenny-ha'penny ship<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With a dear little handkerchief sail;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And they sang, &lsquo;Yo ho!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We shall certainly go<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To the end of the world and back, you know,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And capture the great Seakale.&rsquo;&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15">[15]</a> <i>Nip and Flip.</i> By Jack Goring. Illustrated by Caterina
+Patricchio. 1s. net (postage 1&frac12;d.). C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor
+Street, London, E.C.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg608" id="Pg608"></a>And there follows a picture (in black and gold) of this
+strange monster, just to make sure that no one will
+suppose they were out after a vegetable.</p>
+
+<p>The tale moves along, as such stories should, very
+rapidly. Thus&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And when they came to the end of the world,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their dear little handkerchief sail they furled<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And put on the kettle for tea.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But you have only just time to look at the tea things
+when&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;But alas! and alack<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">About six o'clock<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The good ship str<i>a</i>ck<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On the Almond Rock<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And split like a little split pea.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>So the story goes on, through divers adventures,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;From Timbuctoo to Timbucthree&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and so at last home again.</p>
+
+<p>The next voyage is to the land of Make-Believe on
+a Christmas Eve, &ldquo;in a long, long
+train of thought.&rdquo; In the course
+of this tale we are given a little
+picture of Flip herself, and here it
+is for you to look at.
+<span class="figleft">
+<img src="images/flip.png" height="300" width="168" title="Flip" alt="A girl wearing a dress, with a ribbon in her hair." />
+</span>
+Only, in the
+book her shoes and stockings, the
+inside of her skirt, and the squiggly
+things on the top of her head are
+a bright golden colour.</p>
+
+<p>The third voyage is all the fault
+of a toy monkey&mdash;&ldquo;six three-farthings
+and cheap at the price&rdquo;&mdash;and
+takes them among whales,
+mermaids, sea-serpents and other
+deep-sea creatures.</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, are delightful little pictures on every
+page, which even a two-year-old will enjoy. And here
+are verses which most boys and girls under seven or
+eight will like to learn. And the best of it is that
+it doesn't matter a bit if they do &ldquo;sing-song&rdquo; them,
+for they are the kind of verses which only sound right
+from the lips of quite small children who have never been
+taught elocution.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Edgar J. Saxon</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg609" id="Pg609"></a><a name="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS3" id="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS3"></a>PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>SOUP.&mdash;Oxtail from 10 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>&mdash;From a Restaurant Menu.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>What it was in the early morning it would be indiscreet
+to inquire.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>I learn that a serum for mumps is now being made at
+the Pasteur Institute. &ldquo;A number of monkeys were
+inoculated with the serum,&rdquo; says <i>The Times</i> (30th July),
+&ldquo;and a mild form of the disease was produced.&rdquo; It is
+an age of scientific progress, so we may expect news
+shortly of sera for toothache, hiccough, and the hump.
+It will not be necessary to inoculate camels for the last.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>You will say&mdash;with Mr Arnold Bennett, the distinguished playwright
+and novelist&mdash;&ldquo;the tonic effect of ********* on me
+is simply <i>wonderful</i>.&rdquo;&mdash;From an advt. in <i>Punch</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>You may join in the chorus if you like, but you
+mustn't all expect to be simply <i>wonderful</i> playwrights
+and testimonialists.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">A Strange Shampoo....</span> &ldquo;I make my chemist get the stallax
+for me,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;It comes only in sealed packages, enough
+to make up twenty-five or thirty individual shampoos, and it
+smells so good I could almost eat it.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Secrets of Beauty</i> column
+in <i>The Daily Sketch</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Which only shows how careful one has to be.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>In the days to come every army will fight on bloodless food.&mdash;<i>Herald
+of the Golden Age</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>When every army fights on bloodless food, we may
+be just as far from the Golden Age as we are now.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>I am told that an obscure practitioner who sent up
+an account of some interesting discoveries, addressed to</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+MEDICAL CONGRESS,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">DIETETICS SECTION,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">LONDON.</span><br />
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg610" id="Pg610"></a>has had his communication returned by the Post Office,
+marked <i>Not Known</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<p>There is no truth, it is said, in the rumour that a
+secret meeting was held during the Congress to discuss
+the proposed raising of the rate of commission payable
+by surgeons to physicians.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Peter Piper.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES3" id="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES3"></a>HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Some &ldquo;Emprote&rdquo; Recipes.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcape"><span class="dropcap">E</span></span>xaggeration is popularly regarded as
+one of the vices of food reformers; but it
+is certainly no exaggeration whatever to
+say that Mr Eustace Miles and the restaurant
+associated with his name have had a
+large share in bringing about the more
+sympathetic attitude towards &ldquo;food reform&rdquo; noticeable
+on all sides to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Miles is no amateur in the gentle art of self-advertisement:
+he would be the first to admit it. But
+the advertisements have resulted undoubtedly in a very
+large number of people taking the first steps towards
+food reform, people who are repelled by the out-and-out
+&ldquo;vegetarian&rdquo; propaganda.</p>
+
+<p>There are those who view with disfavour the introduction
+of manufactured or artificial foods into the health
+movement; they think it hinders simplicity. There is
+a truth in this; but, on the other hand, it must be
+recognised that the great majority cannot be reached
+save by meeting them half-way. This applies to the
+flavours of foods, the digestibility of foods and the
+convenience of foods. Few can go straight from beef
+to nuts. After generations of abuse the human digestive
+system has to be humoured if the ideal is to be approached.
+And in this invaluable work of meeting
+people half-way and of humouring their tastes and
+digestions, the restaurant in Chandos Street, London,
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg611" id="Pg611"></a>the specially prepared foods made and sold there and the
+strongly individual, thoroughly sane and pleasantly
+straightforward advocacy of Mr. Eustace Miles have
+been a very important factor.</p>
+
+<p>The idea behind &ldquo;Emprote&rdquo;&mdash;the Eustace Miles
+Proteid Food&mdash;is that, being a blend, in powder form,
+of various kinds of proteid (the proteids of milk, of
+wheat, and so forth) it supplies the right kind of substitute
+for flesh foods not only because it is so easily
+assimilated, but because it is in a very convenient and
+easily kept form.</p>
+
+<p>We believe such foods have a very definite and
+necessary part in the progress of the individual from
+the customary unhealthy diet to the better ways of
+feeding. The following recipes illustrate some of the
+methods of using &ldquo;Emprote.&rdquo; They are taken from
+the booklet <i>45 Quick and Easy Recipes for Healthy,
+Meatless Meals</i>, to be obtained for 2&frac12;d. post free from
+40 Chandos Street, London, W.C.&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Savoury Cheese Sandwiches.</span></h3>
+
+<p><i>NOTE.&mdash;These Savoury Sandwiches can form a complete meal
+with a little salad (dressed with oil and lemon juice), or celery
+or lettuce or watercress or other salad material.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>3 oz. of cheddar cheese; 1 oz. of &ldquo;Emprote&rdquo;; the juice of half
+a lemon; two tablespoonfuls of fresh tomato pulp or tomato
+chutney; a pinch of celery salt.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Prepare some slices of not too new bread and butter.
+Mill the cheese, add to it the &ldquo;Emprote&rdquo; and the
+celery salt, then add the tomato pulp or chutney and the
+lemon juice. Mix all well together into a smooth stiff
+paste, and spread upon the slices, and form sandwiches,
+which may be eaten with watercress or lettuce or
+cucumber. If the material is too moist, mix in a little
+more &ldquo;Emprote,&rdquo; or else &ldquo;Procrums.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Macaroni Cheese.</span></h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>One teacupful of macaroni; two tablespoonfuls of milled cheese
+one tablespoonful of butter; one dessertspoonful of flour; one
+tablespoonful of &ldquo;Emprote&rdquo;; one large cupful of milk.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg612" id="Pg612"></a>Boil the macaroni for half-an-hour in a little water.
+Strain the macaroni and put it in the bottom of a
+buttered dish. (Put the liquid in the stock-pot, to
+thicken a soup.) Mill the cheese, and put half of it
+over the macaroni. In the small saucepan make a sauce
+of the butter, flour, milk and &ldquo;Emprote.&rdquo; Pour this
+over the macaroni and cheese, sprinkle the rest of the
+cheese on the top, put in the pan to brown, then serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Stuffed Vegetable Marrow.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Mince two large onions very fine, and fry in 1 oz. of
+butter; add 3 oz. of &ldquo;Proto-Savoury,&rdquo; one dessertspoonful
+of Nutril, 1 oz. of breadcrumbs (or &ldquo;Procrums&rdquo;),
+and one egg. Scoop the seeds from one large
+vegetable marrow, fill with the mixture, and bake for
+one hour. Serve with Apple Sauce.</p>
+
+<p><i>NOTE.&mdash;&ldquo;Proto-Savoury,&rdquo; &ldquo;Nutril,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Procrums&rdquo; are
+special &ldquo;E.M.&rdquo; products and are readily obtainable from health
+Food Stores, etc.</i></p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Nourishing Gravy Ready In A Minute.</span></h3>
+
+<p>When cutlets or croquettes are heated up, or when
+macaroni or vegetables or a vegetable stew (none of
+which are really adequate substitutes for meat) are to
+be made nourishing, mix some of the E.M. Savoury
+(or Mulligatawny, or Blended) Gravy Powder, with hot
+water, to the thickness of gravy, and add to the dish.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%; margin:1em auto 1em auto; display:block;' />
+
+
+<h3>NEW METHOD OF PREPARING FRUIT
+FOR THE DINNER-TABLE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>In cold weather fruit is often cold, and if heated in an oven
+may be injured partially or wholly. Here is, perhaps, a new way
+of warming fruit which has been tried and proves satisfactory.
+Wash the apples, pears, oranges, bananas and wipe them and place
+on a dish on the dinner-table. Also place a jug of boiling water
+and a bowl upon the table. Then when the fruit is required pour
+the hot water into the bowl and place the fruit in it and cover
+with a plate until warm enough to eat comfortably. Bananas
+should be peeled before placing in hot water.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">&ldquo;A.R.&rdquo;</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg613" id="Pg613"></a><a name="HEALTH_QUERIES5" id="HEALTH_QUERIES5"></a>HEALTH QUERIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine
+Knaggs, deals briefly month by month, and according
+as space permits, with questions of general interest to
+health seekers and others.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is
+essential that full details of the correspondent's customary
+diet should be clearly given.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on
+<span class="u">one side only of the paper</span>, giving full name and address,
+not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
+When an answer is required by post a stamped addressed
+envelope must be enclosed.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Eczema" id="Eczema"></a>ECZEMA AS A SIGN OF RETURNING HEALTH.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs M.K. writes:&mdash;Until the last few years I have been subject
+to sciatica and a certain amount of dry eczema. About a year
+ago my health greatly improved, with the exception of the eczema,
+which has much increased the last year, coming out in large angry
+spots which irritate. I am 69, small, spare and white, have never
+been strong until a year ago, have led a sedentary life, being an
+artist. Three years ago I left off eating meat. My diet at present
+is:</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;Cup of hot rain-water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast</i> (8 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>)&mdash;Unfired Bread with butter and pine nuts;
+cup of weak tea, no sugar.</p>
+
+<p><i>At 11.</i>&mdash;One raw apple.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dinner</i> (1 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>)&mdash;One lightly boiled egg or an omelette, with
+&ldquo;Artox&rdquo; home-made bread, and butter conservatively cooked
+celery or <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'brocoli'">broccoli</ins>; stiff milk pudding with eggs in it, or &ldquo;Artox&rdquo;
+pastry.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea</i> (5 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>).&mdash;Weak China tea &ldquo;Artox&rdquo; bread, and butter,
+and home-made plain cake.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper</i> (8.30).&mdash;Slice of bread and butter; tumblerful of hot
+rain-water sipped at bedtime.</p>
+
+<p>I have not been able to digest uncooked vegetables, excepting
+lettuce; nor do I eat other fruit than apples; any sweet things
+cause acidity. I do not suffer with constipation.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In this case it will be noted that the skin disease
+occurred simultaneously with a marked improvement in
+health. This shows that Nature was adopting her usual
+plan of forcing the impurities outwards to the surface
+and that the change of diet made this possible. With
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg614" id="Pg614"></a>her body less encumbered with waste a return of health
+became possible.</p>
+
+<p>The plan now to adopt is not to check this skin
+trouble but to cure it along safe lines by amending the
+diet and purifying the skin itself by means of warm
+alkaline baths.</p>
+
+<p>These baths, which should be taken twice a week at
+first, are made by adding a &frac14;lb. of bicarbonate of soda
+and a &frac14;lb. of &ldquo;Robin&rdquo; starch to an ordinary hot bath
+at a temperature of 105 degrees, which can be gradually
+increased to 110 degrees as the correspondent can bear
+it. In this the bather stays for from ten to twenty
+minutes to well soak out the acids and the oily greasy
+waste from the surface. The starch is added because it
+moderates the action of the alkali and leaves a comfortable
+gloss on the skin after the bath is finished. The
+bath gradually clears the poisons from the skin and
+encourages the free action of perspiration, thus promoting
+the further elimination of waste acid poisons
+and at the same time clearing the skin and making it
+healthy.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing to do is to amend the diet so that
+as little waste as possible shall be formed. Rice is the
+cereal that contains the least amount of waste of any
+kind and this should therefore be the cereal selected.
+The wholemeal, although good for most people, is not
+suited to this case. A strict salt-free diet is also necessary,
+as it is often the retention of salt in the system
+that leads to the presence of eczema. The following
+amended diet should suit the case, and it should be continued
+until the skin has quite cleared itself:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;Cup of filtered boiled rain-water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;Cottage cheese, 2 oz.; rice, boiled or
+steamed without salt (large plateful), with Granose
+biscuits or toasted &ldquo;Maltweat&rdquo; bread.</p>
+
+<p><i>At</i> 11 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>&mdash;More rain-water (not fruit).</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;The same as breakfast.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea.</i>&mdash;Hot rain-water only.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper, 6.30.</i>&mdash;The same as breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>When the skin is quite clear the correspondent can
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg615" id="Pg615"></a>return to the wholemeal bread (but biscuits made with
+&ldquo;Artox&rdquo; would be better than the yeastless bread),
+and also to a more varied diet generally, as at present.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Deafness1" id="Deafness1"></a>DEAFNESS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>J.G. writes:&mdash;My hearing got bad about twenty years ago,
+caused I think by a cold in the head. When in bed I can hear
+the tick of a watch with the left ear but the other is almost stone
+deaf. I am not much at a loss in ordinary conversation, but
+in trying to hear people speak I lose much of what is said.
+Although I have no real pain, my head is rarely clear, feeling
+full and congested. I have now and again a slight sensation
+of giddiness or reeling. The right ear runs some offensive matter,
+and there is always a hissing sound. I live what is, I think, a
+simple life, but I must confess to a little smoking. My general
+health is good. I am a working farmer and fairly active for one
+of my age (69). My diet is generally as follows:</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;One or two cups of warm water, sometimes with
+lemon juice.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;An apple or orange, oatcake and dairy butter.
+Baker's bread and one cup of tea.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;Nil, or perhaps I should say that I eat an apple or
+orange before each meal or a bit of turnip or even cabbage.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper.</i>&mdash;Potatoes with fish, and milk pudding. On some days
+it may be broth with meat cooked in it.</p>
+
+<p><i>Before retiring.</i>&mdash;Nothing but water, or at other times oatcake
+and one cup of milk.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There does not seem to be much prospect of this
+correspondent recovering the hearing of his right ear,
+as the conditions have lasted so long. He might, however,
+certainly try by diet and hygiene to get rid of the
+unpleasant discharge and the noises. To effect this he
+should carefully syringe the ear once or twice a day
+with a weak solution (1 grain to the ounce) of permanganate
+of potash, using an all-rubber ear-syringe.</p>
+
+<p>Then he should get someone to well stretch the upper
+bones of the spine and to massage well the muscles at
+the back of the neck to induce, thereby, a better circulation
+in the nerves and blood-vessels which proceed
+from that part of the spine into the ears. In this way
+he will be able to ensure a removal of the clogging
+poisons which are lurking in the bad ear and thus
+promote less noises and a better health state of the ears
+generally. The diet should be amended as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg616" id="Pg616"></a><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;One or two cups of warm water, with
+lemon juice added.</p>
+
+<p><i>At 8. Breakfast</i>.&mdash;Apples, oranges or other fruit
+only. <i>Take plenty of fruit at this meal and eat it at no
+other time.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>At 12. Lunch.</i>&mdash;One boiled egg or some cream
+cheese: Oatcakes and butter or good wholemeal biscuits
+(&ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; or &ldquo;Ixion&rdquo; kinds) and butter, and a plateful
+of finely grated raw roots (carrots, turnip, etc.).</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea meal.</i>&mdash;One cupful of Hygiama, using water in
+place of milk.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dinner.</i>&mdash;Cheddar cheese or cottage cheese (the latter
+is best); potatoes and a green vegetable, cooked by
+baking or steaming, without salt. No broth or meat.
+(Meat and especially meat broths are very undesirable
+in this case.)</p>
+
+<p><i>Before retiring.</i>&mdash;Hot water only.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Deafness2" id="Deafness2"></a>ANOTHER CASE OF DEAFNESS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>J.A.B. writes:&mdash;I have been a reader of <i>The Healthy Life</i> for
+the last six months, and am suffering from a complaint since I
+was three years old. When three years old I was attacked by
+scarlet fever and on getting better I had a discharge from my
+right ear. This continued for several years, then it would
+disappear and reappear at short intervals of say a few weeks.
+This last few years the discharge has disappeared for six months,
+only to reappear again for a week with severe pains in back
+over right shoulder and right side of neck. I always feel weak
+and tired when discharge reappears and sometimes experience
+pains in the head and cannot remember anything for a few
+minutes.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This correspondent needs a suitable diet in order to
+purify his blood stream and to promote elimination of
+bodily poisons which are evidently affecting his ears.
+He also needs suitable massage and stretching movements
+applied to the upper part of the spine, which is
+functioning badly. Then he can supplement this by
+taking Turkish baths or wet sheet packs to promote a
+free action of the skin and thus clear away poisonous
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg617" id="Pg617"></a>waste from the system. The same diet as recommended
+to the previous correspondent should be tried.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Concerning" id="Concerning"></a>CONCERNING COTTAGE CHEESE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs C.E.J. writes:&mdash;I have been making cottage cheese curdling
+the milk with lemon juice, as recommended in <i>The Healthy Life</i>.
+Suppose the milk contains disease germs, would not this cheese
+be injurious, as the milk is not sterilised by being brought to
+boiling point? I have also been drinking the whey from the same,
+as it as given in <i>The Healthy Life Beverage Book</i>. I notice in
+a reply given in this month's issue that Dr Knaggs states that
+the whey of the milk is the dangerous element. Since reading
+this answer I have been somewhat in doubt as to drinking the
+whey. I should like to know if it can be taken without harmful
+effects.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Ordinary unboiled milk, free from preservatives, is far
+less dangerous to health than boiled milk, because
+Nature inserts in the raw milk certain germs known as
+the lactic-acid-producing bacilli, which protect us from
+the injurious germs. These lactic germs cause the milk
+to go sour and produce in this way the much-extolled
+soured or curdled milk. They convert the sugar of the
+whey into lactic acid by a process of fermentation. If
+milk is boiled it cannot go sour because the germs
+natural to it have been destroyed by the heat and it
+becomes necessary to introduce fresh lactic germs into
+the boiled milk as is done in the artificial production of
+curdled milk. Failing this, milk will undergo, not
+lactic fermentation, but <i>putrefaction</i>, and thereby
+develop highly dangerous qualities.</p>
+
+<p>When a person takes soured milk its lactic acid acts
+as a powerful germ destroyer and in a certain concentration
+it actually kills the lactic germs as well. It also
+keeps down the disease-producing germs of putrefaction
+which work in an alkaline medium (opposite to acid) by
+depriving them of the sugar of the whey.</p>
+
+<p>Boiled milk, if set on one side, in warm weather,
+speedily becomes alkaline and putrid or putrefactive. It
+is in this condition that, when babies take it, they are
+made dreadfully ill with diarrh&oelig;a and inflammation of
+the stomach and bowels. Hence it is the chief cause of
+the appalling mortality among infants in hot weather.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg618" id="Pg618"></a>Mrs F.K.J. need have no fear of any harm coming
+to her as a result of eating cottage cheese, but she
+should not take the whey unless she has decided to
+undergo a whey cure and take <i>nothing but whey</i>; in this
+latter case, there being no other foods taken, there will
+be no germs to act harmfully upon it. If there is much
+flatulence and stomach or bowel trouble sweet milk or
+whey will simply feed the germs which are the cause of
+the digestive trouble, or self-poisoning, and are thus
+far better discarded.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Obstinate" id="Obstinate"></a>DIET FOR OBSTINATE COUGH.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Miss N.S. writes:&mdash;For the last three weeks I have been
+troubled with a very bad cough It started in the first place with
+a cold in the head and then it got on my chest, and do what
+will I cannot get rid of it. I have been having honey and lemon
+juice, and also each morning have taken olive oil and lemon
+juice beaten up together, but without (apparently) any effect. I
+have bad coughing fits in the night and the next morning I do
+not feel up to much.</p>
+
+<p>I may say that I have not taken meat for about six years, and
+I try to follow the kind of diet advocated in <i>The Healthy Life</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I am 23 years of age and a typist in an office, which is about
+4 miles from my home. I try to get out in the fresh air as much
+as possible to counteract any bad effects which may arise from my
+work. My people at home are very much opposed to my food
+reform sympathies and efforts.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This correspondent should consult a sensible doctor
+about this cough and thus be on the safe side. It is
+unwise to allow a cough to become chronic without
+ascertaining the cause of it. Coughs are often due to
+stomach and liver trouble, as distinguished from lung
+trouble. In either case a salt-free diet will greatly help.
+Thus</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast.</i>&mdash;All fresh fruit, nothing else but fruit.
+Apples best. (<i>Not</i> stewed fruit).</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch.</i>&mdash;Boiled or steamed rice, done without salt;
+about 2 oz. cottage cheese or a poached egg; a little
+raw carrot, turnip or artichoke, finely grated, with
+dressing of fruit-oil beaten up with a raw egg. The
+grated roots must be well chewed; as a change they
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg619" id="Pg619"></a>may be cut up and cooked in a casserole with very little
+water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dinner.</i>&mdash;Potato baked in skin, with fresh butter, a
+little cheese, or flaked nuts, and a few plain rusks, or a
+saucer of P.R. Breakfast Food, dry, with cream. The
+honey and lemon juice should be disgarded in favour of
+liquorice (little bits being sucked at intervals) or of
+linseed tea. I have often found an obstinate cough yield
+to a diet which contains lactic acid buttermilk, combined
+with the use of the new oxygen baths. The lactic
+acid buttermilk can be obtained from any good dairy
+and should be taken in the morning fasting and at bedtime.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Grapes" id="Grapes"></a>WATER GRAPES.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>W.G.B. writes:&mdash;Referring to article in January number entitled
+&ldquo;Grape juice for all,&rdquo; I think perhaps it would interest
+others besides myself if Dr Knaggs would give us his opinion
+on the value of what are commonly termed &ldquo;Water Grapes,&rdquo; as
+compared with more expensive kinds.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On the Continent the grape cure is a popular method
+of treatment. It is especially good for those who are
+an&aelig;mic and underfed as well as for those who suffer in
+the opposite way from over-feeding. It depends upon
+which condition is present as to the kind of grapes
+selected for the cure.</p>
+
+<p>Fully ripe grapes with but little acidity (water grapes)
+are best suited for persons suffering from an&aelig;mia and
+malnutrition. The unripe or sour grapes answer best
+for cases of over-eating associated with constipation,
+gout and allied disorders of nutrition. The excess of
+acid and cellulose helps the bowels and promotes
+elimination of the gouty poisons.</p>
+
+<p>Our correspondent will note that for thin people who
+are pale and deficient in vitality the water grapes will
+be found most salutary. They are best taken alone at
+breakfast without the addition of any other form of food.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Cereal" id="Cereal"></a>CEREAL FOOD IN THE TREATMENT OF NEURITIS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>E.J.H. writes:&mdash;A friend of mine who is suffering from an
+attack of neuritis (not badly) is desirous of trying the diet of twice-baked
+standard bread as recommended by Dr Knaggs in an answer
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg620" id="Pg620"></a>to a query in <i>The Healthy Life</i> some months since. She has
+asked me if Dr Knaggs would limit the quantity of this bread
+taken in the course of the day. If Dr Knaggs will very kindly tell
+me this I shall be greatly obliged.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Neuritis is a form of rheumatism or gout which
+involves the nerves. Its usual starting centre is the
+spine itself, from which all the nerves of the body
+spring. The diet needs to be greatly restricted so that
+the poisons can be eliminated. The most important
+foods to cut down are the cereals because they are very
+slow to digest and are apt to cause constipation with
+its attendant self-poisoning of the system with uric and
+other acids. Horses and animals suffer from neuritis
+from over-feeding with cereals and beans, and the stockbreeder
+or horse expert usually restricts these foods and
+gives plenty of grass, hay, chaff and green clover, which
+corrects the trouble.</p>
+
+<p>The same thing applies equally to man. He should
+take his cereals in the form they are the most easily
+assimilated&mdash;namely, twice-baked or dextrinised. Thus
+&ldquo;pulled&rdquo; or twice-baked bread, Granose or Melarvi
+biscuits, or rusks, or toasted &ldquo;Maltweat&rdquo; bread are
+the best form of cereal for people suffering from neuritis.
+Other treatment besides diet restriction is, of course,
+needed to cure neuritis, because we have to clear the
+clogged tissues of the poisons which are interfering with
+right nerve action. Thus we can resort hot alkaline
+baths, Turkish baths, massage and Osteopathic stretching
+movements to help in this respect.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+<div class="box"><hr />
+<h3>Back Numbers</h3>
+
+<p>If readers who possess copies of the first number
+of <i>The Healthy Life</i> (August 1911) will send them
+to the Editors, they will receive, in exchange,
+booklets to the value of threepence for each copy.</p><hr />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg621" id="Pg621"></a></p>
+<div class="cover">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="coverleft">Vol. V<br />
+No. 29</span>
+<span class="coverright">December<br />
+1913<br /></span>
+<img src="images/title.png" width="220" height="330"
+alt="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C."
+title="THE HEALTHY LIFE
+The Independent Health Magazine
+3 Amen Corner London E.C." /></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+Philosophers will all speak the same language and
+understand one another.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Claude Bernard.</span></p></blockquote>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+<h2><a name="AN_INDICATION29" id="AN_INDICATION29"></a>AN INDICATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapt"><span class="dropcap">T</span></span>here are some statements, the very
+simplicity and truth of which create a
+shock&mdash;for some people. For instance,
+there are certain seekers after health who
+ignore and are shocked by the very
+obvious truth that &ldquo;brain is flesh.&rdquo; A brain
+poisoned by impure blood is no fit instrument for
+the spirit to manifest through, and &ldquo;mental suggestion&rdquo;
+must inevitably prove of no avail as a
+cure if the origin of the impure blood be purely
+material.</p>
+
+<p>It is just as futile, on the other hand, to treat the
+chronic indigestion that arises from persistent
+worry, or indulgence in passion, by one change
+after another in the dietary. The founder of hom&oelig;opathy
+insisted that there was no such thing as a
+physical &ldquo;symptom&rdquo; without corresponding mental
+and moral symptoms. &ldquo;Not soul helps flesh more
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg622" id="Pg622"></a>than flesh helps soul.&rdquo; Thus the Scientist and the
+Poet come to the same truth, albeit by different
+ways.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="PLAIN_WORDS_AND_COLOURED" id="PLAIN_WORDS_AND_COLOURED"></a>PLAIN WORDS AND COLOURED
+PICTURES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapw"><span class="dropcap">W</span></span>hile most of us would at first sight find
+fault with Mr G.K. Chesterton's sweeping
+advice&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanzadc">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And don't believe in anything<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That can't be told in coloured pictures,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>many would probably end by endorsing it.
+But we should do so only because we were able to
+give a very wide and varied meaning to &ldquo;coloured
+pictures.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>No one ever made a coloured picture of the &ldquo;wild
+west wind&rdquo;; but there are plenty of coloured pictures
+in which there is no mistaking its presence. We all
+believe in wireless telegraphy (now that it is an accomplished
+fact) which is, in itself, untranslatable into
+colour or line; but its mechanism can be photographed,
+and its results in the world of men and ships are in all
+the illustrated papers. Music, which is pure sound, is
+to some the surest path to the Reality behind this
+outward show things; yet to some at least of such
+music is indeed form and colour, even though the
+colours be beyond the rainbow. For in truth, everything
+worth believing in, all those things, those ideas,
+which renew the springs of our life, have form and they
+have colour. Even to the colour-blind one word differeth
+from another in glory.</p>
+
+<p>This is no idle fancy, no mere subject for academic
+debate: it is the most practical subject in the world.
+For even as the body is fed not by food alone but by
+the living air, so is the spirit nourished not alone by
+right action but by inspiring ideas. Ideas are pictures;
+and the best ideas are coloured pictures.</p>
+
+<p>Hence the great value of words. It is idle to speak
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg623" id="Pg623"></a>of &ldquo;words, idle words,&rdquo; as though they were the
+transient froth on the permanent ocean of thought.
+They are the vehicle, the body of thought. If the
+thought be shallow or silly, the words will indeed be
+&ldquo;idle.&rdquo; But if the idea be inspiring the words will be
+the channel of that inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>The greater part of this power in words is lost to
+us to-day. Everything tempts us to hurry over words.
+We talk too quickly to be able to pay that respect to
+words which they deserve; and we read the newspaper,
+the magazine, the novel, the play, the poem, with the
+same disastrous haste. We devour the words but lose
+their essence. Hence there is a grave danger that
+through this neglect we shut out one of the main
+streams by which our life must be fed if it is not to
+shrink into mere fretful existence.</p>
+
+<p>There is a curious idea in some minds that fine
+language consists of long words difficult to understand.
+Nothing could be farther from the truth. Most of
+the great words&mdash;the words of power, as the old
+Kabalists called them&mdash;are short words, words in common
+use. And how common is the sound of them in
+the mouth of the preacher! Not long ago I heard an
+intelligent and cultured man reading one of the many
+beautiful passages from the English Bible:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Ye dragons, and all deeps;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fire and hail, snow and vapour;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stormy wind fulfilling his word;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mountains and all hills;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fruitful trees and all cedars, ...&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and he read it as though it were a draper's sale bill.
+And yet it needs but a very little imagination for such
+a passage to become a series of vivid pictures. Fire,
+hail, snow, vapour, hills, mountains, cedars, dragons
+and deeps&mdash;every word is &ldquo;a word of power&rdquo; if only
+there is no hurry, if only each word as it comes is given
+time to call up the picture of the real thing before the
+inward eye.</p>
+
+<p>And you may hear children of fourteen and fifteen
+who have passed examinations in &ldquo;English&rdquo; recite
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg624" id="Pg624"></a>line after line of, say, Matthew Arnold's <i>The Forsaken
+Merman</i> with a glib self-assured colourlessness due
+solely to the fact that no teacher has ever taught them
+respect for simple words. And what simpler words
+could there be than these, for example&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Where great whales come sailing by,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sail and sail, with unshut eye,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Round the world, for ever and aye&rdquo;?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Simple, common words; yet if there is that leisurely
+attention to each one as it comes what an exhilarating
+picture arises of the great sea-beasts, and of &ldquo;the
+round ocean and the living air.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I am not pleading for the stylist's concentration on
+words which exalts them above the things they body
+forth. The most vivid and beautiful description of
+dawn in the English language&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Night's candles are burned out, and jocund morn<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>though spoken by the most sensitively vibrant voice in
+the world, can never come near the real dawn breaking
+across real mountains. But the point is that those two
+lines composed of simple English words have power, if
+we pay them respect, to create the dawn within the
+mind, and to supply the spirit with that beauty which
+is its very breath.</p>
+
+<p>If this patience with words, this respect for the
+familiar fine things of our native tongue, this desire to
+make them yield up their strength and beauty, if this
+has nothing to do with healthy living I don't know what
+has. William Wordsworth's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And vital feelings of delight<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall rear her form to stately height&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>is only a metrical expression of a great and practical
+truth. You do not need to be a &ldquo;Christian Scientist&rdquo;
+to know that ideas and emotions can affect the stoop
+of the shoulders or the lines of the mouth. Other people
+besides &ldquo;Eugenists&rdquo; have observed that ugly or mean-spirited
+parents seldom have beautiful children.</p>
+
+<p>But though the power of ideas is a commonplace,
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg625" id="Pg625"></a>and though psychologists tell us how much we may
+improve mental concentration by letting the words of
+any sentence call up each its own picture, what they a
+omit to do is to recognise the need of the human spirit
+for beauty. You can concentrate your thought on the
+list of pickles in a grocer's price list: it is doubtless
+a good exercise. But the same exercise directed to some
+great phrase, such as Emerson's <i>Trust thyself: ever'
+heart vibrates to that iron string</i>; or some vivid lyrical
+image such as <i>All the trees of the field shall clap their
+hands</i>, or even a complete poem of simple words but
+permanent beauty, such as that one of Wordsworth's
+beginning <i>I wandered lonely as a Cloud</i>; this will not
+only improve concentration and sharpen memory: it
+will enrich the mind with ever-available sources of
+inspiration, courage and joy.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Edgar J. Saxon.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_WORLDS_WANDERERS" id="THE_WORLDS_WANDERERS"></a>THE WORLD'S WANDERERS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanzadc">
+<span class="i0"><span class="dropcapt"><span class="dropcap">T</span></span>ell me, thou star, whose wings of light<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Speed thee in thy fiery flight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In what cavern of the night<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Will thy pinions close now?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanzadc">
+<span class="i0">Tell me, moon, thou pale and grey<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pilgrim of heaven's homeless way,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In what depth of night or day.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Seekest thou repose now?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Weary wind, who wanderest<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like the world's rejected guest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hast thou still some secret nest<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">On the tree or billow?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="sig">Percy Bysshe Shelley.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg626" id="Pg626"></a><a name="CLOUD-CAPPED_TOWERS" id="CLOUD-CAPPED_TOWERS"></a>CLOUD-CAPPED TOWERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapb"><span class="dropcap">B</span></span>uilding castles in the air has always
+been one of the favourite amusements of
+mankind. To it we owe much, not only
+of the zest of life, but also of motive power
+for overcoming difficulties and reaching out
+towards new possibilities. Yet all literature,
+and tradition that is earlier than any written
+literature, is full of a deep note of warning; over and
+over again we see in the dim past the shadow of a
+tower that was built in vain, of walls that were piled
+too high and toppled into ruin, of crests that tapped the
+thunder-clouds and drew down lightning to their own
+destruction. Evidently man has seen danger in his own
+desire! The castle must be built with wisdom as well
+as with industry and boldness if it is to escape disaster
+and to become a storehouse, a safe defence or a vantage-ground
+for surveying earth and sky.</p>
+
+<p>There is one obvious precaution we should observe in
+building our castles, and that is to realise that all which
+we imagine and think about tends sooner or later to
+externalise itself and pass into action. Every idea tends
+to glide into an ideal. Nearly all thinkers have recognised
+this, and have seen that morality lies much farther
+back than action, farther back than conscious will.
+Banquo had dreams of ambition, as had Macbeth, but
+they dealt differently with them; while Macbeth allowed
+his visions to lead him on to treachery and murder,
+Banquo prayed against the temptations that came to
+him in sleep. To most of us imagination, sleeping
+or waking, comes in less dramatic form, but we should
+all think more sanely and act more wisely if we interposed
+a definite revision by the conscious mind and will
+of all our plans and ideals between their (perhaps quite
+automatic) formation in our imagination and their translation
+into fact. Slack muscle should go with the daydream
+or picture of the future; we should not strike
+or clench or lift until we have decided that the action
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg627" id="Pg627"></a>is right and just and wise. The girl who counted her
+chickens and broke the eggs is a true enough example:
+every doctor and coroner knows many instances of
+results far more tragic.</p>
+
+<p>But sometimes the vision has nothing in it but what
+is pure and good and noble. Are there any dangers
+even here?</p>
+
+<p>There is this danger always, that we find the picture
+so lovely and so satisfying that we cannot summon up
+courage and energy to turn away from it towards the
+serious work which it suggests. The castle in the air
+is radiant and tall, but it is generally meant as a model
+for a tougher building made out of common earth, by
+toil and pain, amidst mud and dust. It is so much
+easier, as Sordello knew, to imagine than to do. Actual
+circumstances, real life, other people all this that lies
+round us is sterner stuff than our easily moulded material
+of dreams. Who has not at some time or other lain
+sleepily in bed of a morning and gone through in
+thought the processes of getting up, until a louder call
+or an alarum bell has awakened the realisation that the
+task is not yet begun? Who has not been tempted
+to shirk practice of some sort in thinking of a prize?
+Who has not sometimes built expectation higher and
+higher until his demands of fate have become so great
+that, in despair of making good, he has let the whole
+plan slip away into the valley of forgotten dreams?</p>
+
+<p>These dangers, the almost involuntary carrying out
+of unworthy aims that have been cherished in thought
+and the loss of vigour for real achievement, due to too
+easy an indulgence in blameless aspiration, are fairly
+obvious and have long been recognised.</p>
+
+<p>There is another that has been seen from time to
+time and occasionally expressed.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> We have seen that
+too loose a dream-world may make the world in which
+we live seem dull and ordinary. But is not the converse
+at least as often true? If our thought-world is too
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg628" id="Pg628"></a>narrow, too selfish or too weak, all our ordinary work,
+sound and compact though it may be, is stultified, misdirected,
+often wasted. We all know how in the industrial
+world something more than industry is needed;
+in the emotional world something more than a clumsy
+and unapprehending goodwill. We need a certain insight
+to turn these solid qualities of labour and feeling
+to the best account. &ldquo;A man's reach should exceed
+his grasp,&rdquo; a great poet tells us, and even the birds or
+beavers do not go on quite blindly with their building,
+but, when effort on effort has been destroyed by wind
+and water or man's interference, they at last accommodate
+their instinct to circumstances so as to give
+themselves a better chance of fulfilling their deeper
+purpose. In many ways we have hardly outgrown
+the beaver stage: wars, accidents, disease, disputes&mdash;how
+many times must we try over again the same path
+which has led us before into trouble and disaster before
+we put our imagination seriously to work on the problem
+and try to find some more complete solution?</p>
+
+<p>Of all the dangers of the use of the imagination,
+perhaps the greatest of all is the neglect to use it, the
+denial of it and its consequent starvation.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">E.M. Cobham.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16">[16]</a> Mrs Book sees an allusion to this danger, as well as to the
+first, in the warnings against covetousness in the Tenth Commandment.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_PLAY_SPIRIT_A_CRITICISM" id="THE_PLAY_SPIRIT_A_CRITICISM"></a>THE PLAY SPIRIT<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>: A CRITICISM.</h2>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17">[17]</a> See the article, &ldquo;<a href="#THE_PLAY_SPIRIT">The Play Spirit</a>,&rdquo; in the <a href="#Pg581">November issue</a>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapw"><span class="dropcap">W</span></span>ith your contributor's description of the
+play spirit, that happy leisure from self and
+its responsibilities in order that time and
+thought and heart may be filled with wider
+inspiration, most of your readers will, I
+think, entirely agree, and all of us will be
+grateful for the spirited claim on behalf of &ldquo;play.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The one criticism that occurs to the mind is that a
+touch of professionalism, of patronage towards the
+ordinary person, has crept into the author's thought
+and peeps out through many of the sentences.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Common men&rdquo; ... &ldquo;ordinary everyday people&rdquo;
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg629" id="Pg629"></a>... &ldquo;average humanity,&rdquo; ... &ldquo;a worker&rdquo; who ... &ldquo;cannot
+play&rdquo;; does the writer of the Play Spirit
+really show us what is in their hearts? He is an
+artist in words, he is a keen admirer of other arts, he
+is interested in thinking; it seems all but impossible
+to him that anyone can have &ldquo;freedom&rdquo; without the
+power of expressing it, without even the consciousness
+of its possession.</p>
+
+<p>We are all too apt, I think, to imagine that our own
+discoveries of the mystery and magic of life are peculiar
+to ourselves, or shared only with a sympathetic few,
+passed on sometimes (by the <i>very</i> few who have both
+will and power to do so) to such of the outsiders as
+are interested enough to enter into that enchanted
+garden and take gifts from it. But has not the supreme
+discovery of the greatest artists, philosophers and
+teachers been that the &ldquo;everyday people&rdquo; <i>do</i> live as
+deeply and broadly as the thinkers and artists? They
+are inarticulate and cannot tell what they see, but to
+them life is made amusing, or interesting, or consecrated
+according to their temperament.</p>
+
+<p>Who can say what the Cornish sea means to that
+tired worker? At least it seems a boldness that is
+almost insolence to decide what it did <i>not</i> mean to her!</p>
+
+<p>Has not every life its revelations? Is it not because
+we do <i>not</i> see as God does that some one particular
+life which strikes across our path cannot reveal its
+revelation over again to us?</p>
+
+<p>Surely &ldquo;the commonplace is the highest place.&rdquo; Or
+rather, there are no hierarchies of the soul. Artist or
+seamstress or carpenter, we live by the glory that flows
+to us through whatever curtains of environment are
+round us.</p>
+
+<p>I have not a word of criticism for the writer's ideal.
+All that I would suggest is that the ideal is really
+present in the world, &ldquo;common&rdquo; as the &ldquo;everyday&rdquo;
+flowers at his feet. Not all can sing or paint or write,
+but many more can laugh or run and all, perhaps, can
+love and pray.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">L.E. Hawks.</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg630" id="Pg630"></a><a name="ON_LEARNING_TO_BREATHE" id="ON_LEARNING_TO_BREATHE"></a>ON LEARNING TO BREATHE.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></h2>
+
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18">[18]</a> This is article has been specially written as a preface for <i>Health
+Through Breathing</i>, by Olga Lazarus, shortly to be published
+(1s. net).</p>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapt"><span class="dropcap">T</span></span>o breathe correctly and sufficiently is to live
+more healthily. This dictum is incontrovertible,
+and it becomes my pleasant duty
+herein to demonstrate its truthfulness. And,
+after a careful perusal of the hundred exercises
+which the authoress has so clearly and
+succinctly described, I am still more convinced of the
+very great, one might almost say of the tremendous,
+importance of deep-breathing exercises. What has
+struck me so forcibly in this little book is the fact that
+there is no undue enthusiasm evident; no embellishment
+of the subject; no extravagant claims for the system
+advocated; just a plain sane, sober and intelligent
+description of procedures of immense value to all who
+would either keep, or improve, their health. The
+authoress has, as it were, laid before the reader a feast
+of good things in the way of physical culture, and leaves
+it at that. She seems to have brought into purview a
+splendid variation of the exercises, and indeed every
+mode of breathing and exercise likely to be beneficial&mdash;to
+those in health as out of it.</p>
+
+<p>Reverting for a moment to the supreme importance of
+the subject, I may say that it has of late years come
+home to me more than ever, and with greater insistency,
+that innumerable ills of to-day are due to faulty breathing
+and lack of correct physical exercises generally. I
+wonder how many of us could conscientiously say that
+we devote fifteen or twenty minutes regularly every day
+to the system? And yet such a great deal could be done
+for health in that time! No, we &ldquo;haven't time,&rdquo; or
+we &ldquo;oversleep ourselves so often,&rdquo; or we make some
+such other flimsy excuse; but of course we ought to
+&ldquo;make time,&rdquo; we ought not to &ldquo;oversleep ourselves.&rdquo;
+The fact is, rather, that most of us are too lazy to go
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg631" id="Pg631"></a>through the exercises, even though we may know of
+their transcendent benefit. In the words of the poet:
+&ldquo;Let us, then, be up and doing&rdquo;&mdash;that is, up in time in
+the morning in order to be going through exercises
+such as described in this little volume.</p>
+
+<p>It is within my personal knowledge, and must be
+within the personal knowledge of every actively engaged
+physician, that but very few of us yet have any idea,
+in spite of all the teaching and the advocacy of it, of
+really deep and scientific breathing. If the system could
+be made quite general and enforced upon us&mdash;especially
+when young or adolescent&mdash;we should not see, as we
+do now, <i>thousands</i> walking about the streets whose
+nostrils are too narrow through insufficient breathing,
+whose lungs are not properly inflated as they inspire;
+and, as a consequence, who have neither the bloom nor
+the carriage of health.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps if I show here how vastly important it is for
+us to have our blood well oxygenated, it may be some
+sort of encouragement for Mrs Lazarus's readers to
+persevere with and <i>work into their lives</i> the system she
+advocates and describes.</p>
+
+<p>If we did not renew the oxygen in our lungs to a
+sufficient extent, we should die in a few minutes. We
+can do without food for many days; without water for
+less days, but only for a few minutes without oxygen.
+Anything which tends to increase the intake of this
+vitally important element, whether deeper breathing or
+exercises, will have a very pronounced effect upon
+our general health. Now deep breathing is, <i>par
+excellence</i>, the way to bring about this desirable condition.
+It may interest the readers of this little book
+if I remind them that in the ordinary way the total
+capacity of the lungs is about 340 cubic inches; as a
+rule, the amount of air breathed amounts only to some
+20 or 30 cubic inches, but this, by special effort, can
+be increased by some 110 cubic inches. Thus it is
+demonstrated how much more air we could take into
+the lungs by better and deeper breathing, thereby securing,
+sooner or later, a greater natural expansion of the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg632" id="Pg632"></a>lungs, with the result, of course, of improved health
+generally.</p>
+
+<p>It would surprise most people if they tested their
+breathing capacity by the aid of the spirometer, to
+discover how inefficiently they did breathe; in other
+words, how much below the normal was the amount of
+air they were usually inspiring. Encouragement might
+also be found in the matter&mdash;incentive, that is, to learn
+how to breathe and exercise correctly and scientifically&mdash;if
+mention were here made categorically of the very
+profound influences upon certain physiological processes
+of our organisation which are brought about if we would
+but mend our ways in this respect. Space will only
+allow of a few such to be detailed.</p>
+
+<p>1. The circulation is improved and equalised. This
+implies much more than appears on the surface: it
+means that the blood is made to flow from any
+congested internal organ (such as the liver, stomach,
+etc.) towards the peripheries&mdash;that is, the extremities
+and everywhere where there is the capillary system&mdash;the
+changing-place between the venous and the arterial
+blood; thus we at the same time warm our extremities
+and relieve internal congestion. In other words, &ldquo;to
+bring the blood to the surface&rdquo; in many conditions of
+ill-health is of paramount importance.</p>
+
+<p>2. It will strengthen the action of the heart and lungs.
+For lack of proper breathing exercises the heart's walls
+get thin, the expansive power of the lungs' tissue gets
+less, and as a consequence, when any little extra strain
+is thrown upon either, permanent damage is often the
+result.</p>
+
+<p>3. In any tendency to constipation, indigestion and
+similar conditions, such exercises are especially beneficial,
+and that both by flushing the system with more
+oxygen and by mechanically exerting pressure on the
+different organs&mdash;thus giving those latter what is
+actually a good massaging!</p>
+
+<p>4. Indirectly, such exercises must of necessity be
+splendid for &ldquo;nerves,&rdquo; as we thus get these supplied
+with a larger amount of purified blood, and of course
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg633" id="Pg633"></a>this must result in better and heightened nerve and
+brain action.</p>
+
+<p>And all this&mdash;and much more which we have not
+space enough to deal with&mdash;being so, it might now
+be well asked, who and what class of individuals would
+benefit by these exercises. The list is a long one, and
+would include practically all growing children and
+adolescents&mdash;in order that adenoids, narrow chests,
+debility in general, malnutrition and a host of other
+abnormal states might be either cured or prevented.
+Innumerable adults would also benefit by such exercises:
+those who are in health, in order to keep so; those who
+are depressed mentally, or who are suffering from constipation,
+dyspepsia, an&aelig;mia, obesity, debility, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Even those who are &ldquo;getting on&rdquo; in years could,
+with care and caution, go through such exercises to
+advantage, providing, that is, that their heart, lungs
+and blood vessels are fairly normal; it is only where
+there is serious organic disease such exercises must be
+withheld.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we have a big field for such a system which Mrs
+Lazarus has described so fully in this little work of
+hers; it deserves wide recognition, and my final word
+to the reader is not only to keep the book as a &ldquo;boon
+companion,&rdquo; but to encourage others to purchase it and
+to carry out its most excellent teachings.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">J. Stenson Hooker, M.D.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="LETTERS_OF_A_LAYMAN" id="LETTERS_OF_A_LAYMAN"></a>LETTERS OF A LAYMAN.</h2>
+
+<h3><a name="Doctors" id="Doctors"></a><span class="smcap">1.&mdash;Doctors and Health.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapm"><span class="dropcap">M</span></span>edicine is a progressive science&mdash;and
+art, if we judge by the statistics given of
+the fall in the rate of mortality. Even
+this, however, must be carefully analysed,
+because a good deal of the fall of mortality
+is due to the great reduction in the birthrate
+which has taken place in the last twenty years.
+Still, after this has been allowed for, there is probably
+a balance in the doctors' favour&mdash;something to the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg634" id="Pg634"></a>good of the science and art of medicine. Doubtless
+the science is improved and the practical advice offered
+by medical men is better and more effectual than it used
+to be.</p>
+
+<p>A layman, nevertheless, may be forgiven if, with all
+due deference, he is tempted to believe that many of
+the benefits attributed to medicine have been achieved
+through attention to sanitation&mdash;cleanliness and
+ventilation. Of course this is due to the work of
+science, which necessarily includes the members of the
+medical profession, but it is not due to medical science
+<i>qua</i> medical science.</p>
+
+<p>The terms &lsquo;sanitation&rsquo; and &lsquo;sanitary&rsquo; nearly always
+connote only ideas associated with cleanliness,
+free ventilation, etc. They scarcely connote ideas of
+food management, or, if they do, it is only to the
+extent of inferring that food shall not be adulterated
+or of bad quality&mdash;and perhaps that there shall be
+enough of it.</p>
+
+<p>Such questions as what food shall we eat, and how
+much; what are the real reasons for taking food into
+the body, whether it is to give strength and heat to the
+body or only to supply the body's waste, as Dr Rabagliati
+contends&mdash;these and other relevant questions are
+usually left to unorthodox members of the medical
+profession to declare upon. They seem to be very
+important questions, but we do not find that they were
+discussed&mdash;or ever mentioned&mdash;at the thirty-fourth
+International Medical Congress, which completed its
+sittings several months ago.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously, the practical questions of food supply are
+answered very differently, according as one <i>believes</i>
+they must be answered one way or another, as, for
+instance, in Dr Rabagliati's or Dr Haig's way. But
+that they are questions not worthy of consideration
+by doctors in congress may be taken as an ominous
+sign.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be forgotten that we owe many valuable
+discoveries of medical science to qualified members of
+the profession, just as discoveries of mechanical science
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg635" id="Pg635"></a>are made by men working at their respective trades.
+We have sorrowfully to admit, however, that nearly
+all the great achievements upon which medicine plumes
+herself are in the direction of increasing the doctors'
+power over his patient, and seldom of giving his patient
+power over disease. It is also true that the advocacy
+by unorthodox members of the profession of simple and
+natural remedies often involves them in a charge of
+charlatanism, and subjects them to persecution by
+medical associations.</p>
+
+<p>If the medical profession were all that it is supposed
+to be, it might be good that the reformer should suffer
+in solitude while his experiments and methods were
+subjected to adequate tests and criticism. If the
+associated physicians and surgeons jealously guarded
+the public from quackery while they impartially investigated
+every fresh discovery, the true reformer would
+welcome the protection afforded him from the &ldquo;counter-currents
+of senseless clamour&rdquo; within the doctors' own
+ranks, occasioned by party and vested interests.</p>
+
+<p>It may be true that &ldquo;loneliness tends to save the
+Seer from becoming a charlatan and to make of him a
+true Reformer.&rdquo; But it is not that peculiar loneliness
+of the Seer that the medical trade unions afford the
+reforming physician. That is inevitably and sufficiently
+accorded him by the &ldquo;unwillingness of the masses to
+enter into the thoughts of the Seers.&rdquo;<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> An ignorant and
+inert people will always follow a charlatan, because
+they like to do things which are mysterious and involve
+no trouble on their part.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19">[19]</a> The reason &ldquo;Why the Prophet should be lonely&rdquo; is perfectly
+elaborated in a chapter under that title in <i>Logic Taught by Love</i>,
+from which I have quoted.</p>
+
+<p>The Seer among doctors is boycotted by his fellow
+medicos <i>after</i> he and his co-workers have tested their
+experiments for themselves, weeded out what is false
+from what is true, and proved their methods to be right.
+Not only that, but too often it turns out that it is
+proper food selection, cleanliness, personal effort and
+restraint advocated by doctors as substitutes for serums
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg636" id="Pg636"></a>and drugs, which excites the opprobrium of medical
+coteries. Whereas, the misguided Serum Specialist,
+who ought to be saved from himself, and from whom
+the public ought to be protected, is given full medical
+honours&mdash;and facilities to become that most dangerous
+type of charlatan, the licensed one.</p>
+
+<p>There are doubtless many abstract questions of health
+and disease which orthodox and unorthodox doctors alike
+are unable satisfactorily to settle. But if that be admitted,
+then it is certainly not in the public interest that
+serum treatments should be accepted as almost the
+last words in medical science. More anti-social still
+is it to attempt to justify the compulsory orders of
+Parliament that expensive sanatoria shall be built to
+cope with disease that might be more economically and
+more satisfactorily treated.</p>
+
+<p>Is there not too little consideration given to theoretical
+issues underlying practical experience of disease?
+Is there not too great an anxiety to force remedies
+at the public expense before all the bearings of the
+different questions and their phases have been considered?
+All new methods savour too much of compulsion.
+They all require the provision of large armies
+of officials to carry them out. It is interesting to note
+that the successors of the men who told us how grievously
+the Church has failed because she is established,
+should be so anxious to more firmly establish the
+medical priesthood.</p>
+
+<p>Modern statecraft calls out to us: &lsquo;we will appoint
+officials to inquire into and decide upon what is to be
+done, but we will make no inquiries into the real nature
+of this disease and that: we will find out remedies
+which, in the form of serums to be injected into the
+blood, shall counteract the effects of disease: we will
+also appoint, at your expense, doctors to perform these
+operations: we will force the man whose family may
+have the misfortune to contract a disease, which the
+doctors have not told him how to prevent, to submit
+them to such treatment.&rsquo; But nothing is said about the
+desirability of exercising government over oneself, one's
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg637" id="Pg637"></a>body and one's mind! And nothing is <i>said</i> either, but
+it is suggested, that, if one accepts meekly coercive
+treatment by official doctors, one may probably be
+able to ignore the laws of life and health without having
+to pay the penalty.</p>
+
+<p>No sane and properly instructed citizens would be
+satisfied to have State officials compel them to do what
+they ought to do for themselves. It is because of this
+and because the suggestions and compulsions of modern
+medicine are in keeping with the prevailing philosophy
+that accumulates knowledge without wisdom, that we
+need such counteracting influences as are afforded by
+journals like <i>The Healthy Life.</i></p>
+
+<p class="sig">Layman.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_DOCTOR_ON_DOCTORS" id="A_DOCTOR_ON_DOCTORS"></a>A DOCTOR ON DOCTORS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;I charge that whereas the first duty of a physician
+is to instruct the people in the laws of health and thus
+prevent disease, the tendency has ever been towards
+a conspiracy of mystery, humbug, and silence.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I charge that the general tendency of the profession
+has been to depreciate the importance of personal and
+municipal cleanliness, and to inculcate a reliance on
+drug medicines, vaccination, and other unscientific
+expedients.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Alexander Ross, M.D., F.R.S.</p>
+
+<div class="box"><hr />
+<h3>To Our Readers.</h3>
+
+<p>Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round
+advocacy of <i>The Healthy Life</i> can materially
+assist the extension of its circulation by tactfully
+urging their local newsagent to have the magazine
+regularly displayed for sale. An attractive monthly
+poster can always be had free from the Publishers,
+3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.</p><hr />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg638" id="Pg638"></a><a name="MODERN_GERM_MANIA_A_CASE" id="MODERN_GERM_MANIA_A_CASE"></a>MODERN GERM MANIA: A CASE
+IN POINT.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapu"><span class="dropcap">U</span></span>nder the sensational heading, <i>Doomed to
+Carry Germs: Woman Typhoid Victim for
+Life</i>, the following account appeared recently
+in <i>News of the World</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Almost unique in medical history is the case of
+a woman typhoid carrier, who, it is said, will
+carry the bacilli with her through life. The case is described by
+Dr Barbara Cunningham in a report of the Manchester Medical
+Officer of Health. In order that the woman shall cease to be
+a source of danger&mdash;as she has been keeping lodgers&mdash;the health
+authorities are giving her 7s. a week, and that, with her old-age
+pension of 5s., will be sufficient to keep her without
+lodgers. The case has aroused much interest in Manchester.
+The principal restrictions on the part of the Health Department
+are that she must not cook or wash for anyone. Anyone can,
+however, cook for her. In discussing the case Dr Martin, who
+for 25 years was Medical Officer of Health for Gorton, remarked
+that in some cases of typhoid carriers the infection ceased to
+exist for a time, but it was unusual for it to exist year after
+year. &ldquo;The reason for the woman referred to carrying the
+typhoid bacilli with her through life is,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;because
+of a peculiarity of constitution. There is no remedy to be found
+for it at present, and no means of freeing her from the germs,
+hence the reward offered by an American to anyone who can
+find a remedy for such cases. The germs themselves are proof
+against remedies, and they go on multiplying. The woman
+is incurable, and you cannot kill the germs without killing
+the woman. It is the first case, to my knowledge,
+where the health authorities have taken such measures to
+prevent a spread of the infection.&rdquo; The history of the affair
+is interesting. The woman's case had been reported to the
+authorities, and when her lodger became ill with typhus she
+was suspected, and was found to be giving off large numbers
+of typhoid bacilli. She was placed in Monsall Hospital for
+two months, during which time she was treated with gradually
+increasing doses of vaccine prepared in the Public Health
+Laboratory, York Place. When discharged, three separate tests
+were made as regards the typhoid bacilli. For one week after
+her discharge the organisms did not reappear, but during the
+second week a few colonies were grown, and in the third and
+fourth weeks the number increased. Shortly after that her
+lodger developed enteric fever.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This case is instructive, because it shows very clearly
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg639" id="Pg639"></a>the utter futility of the modern method of treating infectious
+diseases by means of drugs and vaccines.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that the infecting agent or microbe
+found in cases of typhoid fever originates in man himself,
+that, in fact, it is essentially a man-made disorder.
+Dr Budd, who was the first to fully investigate this
+important subject, brought together the most convincing
+considerations to show this.</p>
+
+<p>We know further that impure water and milk, shellfish
+and certain foods which are contaminated with
+sewage are capable of giving rise to epidemics of this
+complaint.</p>
+
+<p>This was shown in Paris in May last, when a plumber
+carelessly connected a pipe along which Seine water
+flowed to a drinking-water pipe. The typhoid germ is
+always present in Seine water and this mistake cost the
+lives of twenty people.</p>
+
+<p>Dr Freeman, an American doctor, who has studied
+the habits of the typhoid germ, tells us that it does not
+survive so well outside the human body as does the
+tubercle microbe, but it can, nevertheless, do an incalculable
+amount of mischief when the local authorities
+are careless about the matter of sewage disposal.</p>
+
+<p>A great deal has been heard of late of what are
+termed Typhoid Carriers. There are apparently numbers
+of people who, while they appear to be in good health,
+yet harbour these germs and are thus liable to infect
+others with them; and the problem is what to do with
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The orthodox authorities, as happened in the case
+cited above, would like to isolate them indefinitely and
+even to pension them off for life, but this seems to be
+a hopeless way out of the difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>The remedy seems obvious to me. Let us stop the
+drugs and serums and use common-sense hygiene of
+the body instead. This must be patent to anyone who
+has any knowledge of the subject; but why the authorities
+do not put it into execution I am at a loss to
+imagine. Surely the right thing to do is to clear away
+the impurities in which the typhoid germs live. <i>By
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg640" id="Pg640"></a>depriving them of the material or soil in which they
+grow and propagate we should practically starve them
+out of existence.</i></p>
+
+<p>Moreover, this seems to me to be a perfectly easy
+procedure. If this woman were handed over to me for
+treatment I should at once place her on an antiseptic
+diet consisting solely of salads, grated roots, fresh
+fruits, sour buttermilk and dextrinised cereals. The
+effect of this diet would be to cleanse and sterilise the
+entire digestive tract, and thus break up and clear
+away the soil in which the microbes are living. Supplementary
+to this cleansing diet other means could be
+adopted to effect a general purification of the whole
+body. Thus vapour baths could be used to promote
+skin action; beverages could be taken morning and
+night, consisting of distilled water with lemon juice or
+suitable herbal &ldquo;teas&rdquo; to promote free action of the
+kidneys; and colon-flushing treatment could be used to
+fully cleanse the colon, or large bowel.</p>
+
+<p>By combined treatment of this rational order, I am
+convinced that this woman would speedily become freed
+from her unpleasant visitors and would be enabled to
+return to her relations without, as it were, a stain
+upon her character.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="BURIED_TALENT_COMPETITION" id="BURIED_TALENT_COMPETITION"></a>BURIED TALENT COMPETITION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The Editors of <i>The Healthy Life</i> are convinced that
+there are many men and women who can write well
+and interestingly on subjects relating to health in its
+many aspects; and they wish to unearth this talent.</p>
+
+<p>They therefore offer a <i>First Prize</i> of <i>Two Guineas</i>, a
+<i>Second Prize</i> of <i>One Guinea</i>, and a <i>Third Prize</i> of <i>Books</i>
+(published at <i>The Healthy Life</i> Office) to the value of
+Half-a-Guinea, for the best ESSAY, SKETCH or
+SHORT STORY appropriate to the pages of <i>The
+Healthy Life.</i></p>
+
+<p>Please read the following Conditions carefully:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><a class="pagenum" name="Pg641" id="Pg641"></a>CONDITIONS.</p>
+
+<blockquote><ol><li> Each Essay, Short Story, or Sketch must contain <i>not less
+than 1000 words</i>, and <i>not more than 2000 words.</i></li>
+
+<li> Each Essay, Short Story, or Sketch must be written (or
+typed) on one side of the paper only, leaving at least one inch of
+margin on which each 100 words must be indicated in figures.</li>
+
+<li> Each attempt must be accompanied by the front cover (or
+top part of cover showing date) of either the December or January
+numbers. (Where more than one MS. is sent in by one contributor,
+extra covers in proportion must be enclosed.)</li>
+
+<li> The full name and address of the competitor must be written
+at the foot of last page, in addition to the competitor's <i>nom de
+plume</i> (if any).</li>
+
+<li> All Essays, Short Stories or Sketches must be sent in not
+later than the 31st of January 1914, addressed <i>Buried Talent</i>,
+<i>The Healthy Life</i>, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.</li>
+
+<li> No one who is at present, or has ever been, a regular
+contributor to <i>The Healthy Life</i> is eligible for a prize.</li>
+
+<li> The Editors reserve the right to publish any contribution
+sent in under this Competition.</li>
+
+<li> The decision of the Editors will be final and no correspondence
+can be entered into with unsuccessful competitors.</li></ol></blockquote>
+
+<p>Competitors are asked to note that legibility of handwriting
+will carry weight as well as intrinsic merit.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES4" id="HEALTHY_LIFE_RECIPES4"></a>HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Soups.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="dropcapm"><span class="dropcap">M</span></span>any cases of ill-health demand that the
+meals should be as dry as possible. Having
+granted this, it will be admitted that
+there is quite a proper place for soups in
+ordinary everyday food reform catering.</p>
+
+<p>The chief objection to ordinary soups is
+that they are made on a basis of meat stock and
+flavoured with one of various &ldquo;meat extract&rdquo; preparations.
+Meat stock, meat gravy and meat extract all
+alike represent the least desirable elements in flesh
+food, namely, the acids and tissue-wastes of the living
+animal at the moment of its death&mdash;acids and tissue-debris
+which were on their way to normal excretion
+via the lymph channels, veins, etc.</p>
+
+<p>It is therefore only common-sense to avoid such
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg642" id="Pg642"></a>soup-bases, especially as the most excellent soups can
+be made without recourse to any animal product.</p>
+
+<p>The juices of vegetables, being rich in alkaline
+&ldquo;salts&rdquo; and other organic elements, are the
+natural cleansing agents in a rational diet. Hence
+to obtain a maximum <i>remedial</i> effect, vegetable soup
+should be taken in the form of a clear, unflavoured
+broth, quite apart from the solid meals, and preferably
+on retiring. But for the dinner or supper soup,
+some richness of flavour and creaminess of substance
+are pleasing and legitimate.</p>
+
+<p>The following recipes explain, first, how to prepare
+vegetable &ldquo;stock,&rdquo; and then how to make rich, creamy
+nourishing soups, on the basis of that &ldquo;stock.&rdquo; Each
+recipe will, of course, suggest variations.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">How To Make Vegetable Stock.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Put any fresh vegetables in season in a large stewpot&mdash;being
+careful not to include <i>overmuch</i> cabbage or
+other coarse green leaves, as these give a rather strong
+flavour&mdash;with a quart or more of water, cover, and
+simmer gently for at least two hours. The outer leaves
+discarded when preparing vegetables for the table, the
+stalks and stems, and the peelings of apples, potatoes,
+etc., should all be used for stock, care being taken, of
+course, to cleanse them well first, cutting out any
+insect-eaten or decayed parts.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Almond Cream Soup.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Mix two tablespoonfuls of fine wholemeal or good
+&ldquo;standard&rdquo; flour into a smooth paste with a little
+water, add this to the hot stock (as above), and stir till
+soup is thickened. Just before serving stir in a tablespoonful
+of Almond Cream (either &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; or Mapleton's).</p>
+
+<p><i>The addition of the almond cream gives the above a nutritive
+value, apart from the tonic and cleansing elements in the stock.</i></p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Nourishing Artichoke Soup.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Pare, scrub and cut into small pieces, 1 lb. of artichokes
+and put immediately into a pan with a pint of
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg643" id="Pg643"></a>water or milk and water. Boil till soft, then rub
+through a wire sieve, using a wooden spoon. Put
+back in pan, add a little more water, a little chopped
+parsley, and a small piece of butter (or nut butter).
+Bring to the boil, stirring well; stir in a tablespoonful
+of Pinekernel Cream (&ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; or Mapleton's), and
+serve at once.</p>
+
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Leek And Celery Soup.</span></h3>
+
+<p>Put four well-cleansed medium-sized leeks (cut up
+small), the outer parts of a head of celery (chopped),
+a quart of water and 2 oz. unpolished Japan rice, into
+a pan and simmer for two hours. Rub through wire
+sieve, return to pan, bring to the boil, and serve.</p>
+
+<p><i>This soup is not so much nutritive as cleansing and antiseptic.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="TASTE_OR_THEORY" id="TASTE_OR_THEORY"></a>TASTE OR THEORY?</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Fruit and the Oxalic Acid Bogey.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcapm"><span class="dropcap">M</span></span>any and varied are the creeds of Health
+Reformers, but all may be included within
+two main camps. And the opposing
+battle-cries are Instinct <i>versus</i> Intellect,
+Taste <i>versus</i> Theory, <i>&agrave; priori versus &agrave;
+posteriori</i>, Motives <i>versus</i> Purposes. Some
+overlapping and confusion of creed may be found in
+both camps, but in the main one is filled with lovers of
+Nature, the other with devotees of Science.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We believe in simplicity,&rdquo; cries the Nature-lover
+from the meadow where he is taking a sun-bath; &ldquo;you
+are so complex, so artificial.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We believe in being &lsquo;sensible,&rsquo;&rdquo; retorts the devotee
+of Science from the cabinet where he is taking an
+electric light bath, &ldquo;you are so extreme.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not extreme&mdash;consistent. Your treatment varies
+every month as the decrees of &lsquo;Science&rsquo; change.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But your treatment varies every minute as the
+wind and clouds change. I can keep mine constant
+with mathematical accuracy, or vary the light to a
+nicety by pressing a button.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg644" id="Pg644"></a>And so also is it with regard to diet. The person who
+talks learnedly about germs and calories (though he never
+saw a germ or measured a calorie in his life) will be
+found in the same camp with the electric light advocate,
+while this other who cultivates a taste in harmony with
+Nature by consuming what he likes best of her unaltered
+products, he is found arm in arm with the sun-bather.
+But Science will by no means allow him to eat his
+uncooked food in peace. &ldquo;If we all adopt <i>that</i> diet,&rdquo;
+her pseudo-disciples cry, &ldquo;what is to become of the
+potatoes?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Now, with regard to uncooked foods, it would seem
+that as little fault can be found with ripe fruit in its
+natural state as with any article of diet. Yet even here
+&ldquo;Science&rdquo; holds up a warning hand and is succeeding
+in scaring people away from one of the most harmless,
+most wholesome and most neglected of foods.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving generalities, let us come to a specific case, an
+actual difficulty propounded to me by a sufferer, one
+who had spent her substance till she could spend no
+more in having various parts of herself examined and in
+learned prescriptions and processes of cure, but who
+found herself as far from health as ever. Obsessed by
+certain theories of &ldquo;Science,&rdquo; this lady had acquired
+a dread of sugar <i>in every form</i>. Hence her query addressed
+to me: &ldquo;In your book, <i>No Rheumatism</i>, you
+say that sugar is to be avoided. Why, then, do you
+recommend fruit, which is mostly sugar?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I replied as follows: &ldquo;The reason I recommend ripe
+uncooked fruit&mdash;in spite of its containing a certain
+quantity of sugar&mdash;is that it contains also purifying
+salts, and that for most people it is the pleasantest form
+in which these salts can be taken. Moreover, fruit
+sugar appears to be more wholesome than that formed
+from starch. When you say that &lsquo;fruit is mostly
+sugar,&rsquo; are you not leaving the water of the fruit out
+of account? As the water often amounts to 90 per cent.
+this makes all the difference. Taking the fruits generally
+grown in this country the average proportion of
+sugar is seven per cent.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg645" id="Pg645"></a>[This statement is based on the following figures
+given in Goodale's Physiological Botany:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="The percentage of sugar in several fruits.">
+<tr><td>Apples </td><td>contain </td><td>7.73 per cent. sugar</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Pears </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>8.26 <span style="margin:auto 2em auto 2em;">"</span> "</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Plums </td><td><span style="margin:auto 1em auto 1em;">"</span> </td><td>3.56 <span style="margin:auto 2em auto 2em;">"</span> "</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Strawberries </td><td> </td><td>6.28 <span style="margin:auto 2em auto 2em;">"</span> "</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Gooseberries </td><td> </td><td>7.03 <span style="margin:auto 2em auto 2em;">"</span> "</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Grapes are stated to contain 24.36 per cent, but often
+contain much less and sometimes even more.]</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now a person eating fruit <i>ad lib.</i>, but allowed other
+foods, will hardly ever eat more than a pound or two
+a day (generally less). But suppose him to eat two
+pounds. Seven per cent. of this is 2&frac14; oz. If he eats
+only 1 lb. he takes 1&#8539; oz. sugar. Now compare this
+with the amount he gets from starchy foods, say, bread,
+which contains fifty per cent. of starch and sugar. As
+the starch, if it is to be assimilated, must be (and as a
+general rule practically all is) converted into sugar
+during <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: The original reads 'digeston'.">digestion</ins>, we get from 1 lb. of bread 8 oz. of
+sugar (to be exact, nearly 9 oz., because starch forms
+rather more than its own weight of sugar). But the
+weight of bread allowed for daily food, if no other
+starchy or sugary food is taken, is&mdash;according to orthodox
+physiology books&mdash;1 lb., 11 oz., yielding over 14 oz.
+of sugar. Now I reduce the starchy food to 8 oz. or
+less (<i>No Rheumatism</i>, p. 34), yielding at most about
+4&frac12; oz. of sugar. You see, then, that the patient can
+now afford to take even 2 lbs. of fruit, because this will
+bring his total of sugar up to only 6&frac34; oz., as against
+14 oz. allowed by the orthodox. And if, as I recommend
+(p. 33), fruits containing but little sugar (especially
+cucumbers) are taken, his total sugar under my regime
+will be even less than 6&frac34; oz.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As so many people fail to distinguish between fruit
+sugar occurring naturally in fruit and ordinary separated
+and concentrated cane sugar, or even beet sugar separated
+by various chemicals&mdash;&lsquo;shop sugar,&rsquo; in fact&mdash;I
+translate for you a passage from Dr Carton's <i>Trois
+Aliments Meurtriers</i><a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20">[20]</a> <i>Some Popular Foodstuffs Exposed</i>, translated by D.M.
+Richardson. 1s. net. Daniel.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg646" id="Pg646"></a>&ldquo;&lsquo;Let us proceed now to the study of the third
+deadly food. The sugar contained in vegetables and
+raw fruits is a living aliment, physiologically combined
+with the protoplasm of the vegetable cells, associated
+with ferments and with vitalised chemical salts. The
+absorption of this natural sugar is effected by a
+harmonious contact, by an exchange of energy between
+the living vegetable cells and our living digestive cells.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The sugar of commerce, on the contrary, is a dead
+food which has lost all association with vegetable protoplasm,
+with vitalised mineral salts and with oxidising
+ferments which would render it physiological. It is
+nothing more than a drug, a dangerous chemical, because
+Nature has nowhere presented it to us in this
+form.... Its absorption involves an anti-physiological
+irritation which over-excites the viscera, and when
+repeated ends by profoundly altering them.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This is all very well,&rdquo; cries Pseudo-Science, &ldquo;but
+people may eat too much fruit.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, but then I warn them at once,&rdquo; quoth
+Taste.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But they have an idea it is good for them, and they
+disregard your warnings.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If they &lsquo;have an idea&rsquo; which runs counter to my
+warnings and my penalties, to say nothing of my
+promises and my rewards, then they can only get that
+idea from you, Mr Pseudo-Science, with your theories
+and your figures and your long words.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not from your relative, Unnatural Taste?
+Anyhow, it is my duty to warn them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If they don't heed my warning, they certainly won't
+heed yours,&rdquo; says Taste.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I can paint such a picture of the trouble they
+store up for the future if they persist in excessive fruit
+eating!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind about persisting and storing up for the
+future. I punish excess in fruit eating as in everything
+else by prompt discomfort and pain.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But what do you know about oxalic acid?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg647" id="Pg647"></a>&ldquo;Enough to avoid it. Like every other poison it is
+repugnant to me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yet fruit which is so nice in the mouth may ferment
+in the intestines and form that very poison. Then what
+are you going to do about it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Take care that not too much fruit is eaten another
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But in the meantime the oxalic acid already formed
+must be neutralised at once.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no! It would be a pity to do that. Oxalic
+acid is the latest fashion. What would your patients
+do without it? And what would you do without your
+patients?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It must be neutralised at once. It can only be
+neutralised at the cost of abstracting lime from the
+system. Result: oxalate of lime, forming calculus, or
+&lsquo;stone,&rsquo; which you don't want, and tissues depleted of
+lime which you do want.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;So you get your patients after all. In fact, having
+&lsquo;neutralised their oxalic acid&rsquo; to escape you, they come
+back to you with two diseases instead of one. It seems
+to me you are a very profitable investment, Mr
+Pseudo-Science.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Really, Mr Taste, you would not, I presume, have
+me suppress the truth simply because it happens to be
+profitable?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But is it the truth? What proof have you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I presume you are ignorant of the fact that animals
+have died with all the symptoms of oxalic acid poisoning,
+simply through taking too much sugar.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What kind of animals? You chose such as are
+used to taking shop sugar as part of their ordinary
+food, of course?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;no; not in that form. The subjects of the
+experiment were rabbits.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! And from these you draw deductions about
+man who has been eating artificial sugar for ages. How
+like a vivisectionist! But what doses of sugar did the
+rabbits get?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;About one-fortieth of the body-weight.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg648" id="Pg648"></a>&ldquo;That would be as if a man of 150 lbs. weight should
+take 3&frac34; lbs. sugar at a meal! And since it is excessive
+fruit you are warning us against, can you tell me how
+many pounds of fruit&mdash;say, apples&mdash;one must take in
+order to get that amount of sugar in a day? No less
+than sixty pounds. Really your warning seems a little
+superfluous.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It is all very well for you to scoff, Mr Taste, but
+if it were not for me you would know nothing about the
+latest diseases. I really believe you would be content
+to go right through life without knowing that you had
+a duodenum or an appendix.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Quite&rdquo; assented Taste cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Arnold Eiloart, B.Sc.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_SYMPOSIUM_ON_UNFIRED_FOOD" id="A_SYMPOSIUM_ON_UNFIRED_FOOD"></a>A SYMPOSIUM ON UNFIRED FOOD.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>In November, 1912, we published a letter from a reader containing
+the excellent suggestion that readers who had experimented to
+any fair extent with unfired diet should be invited to contribute to a
+conference on the subject in</i> <span class="smcap">The Healthy Life</span>, <i>and that the symposium
+should be gathered round the following points:&mdash;</i></p>
+
+<p>(1) The effect of the diet in curing chronic disease.</p>
+
+<p>(2) Its effect on children so brought up&mdash;<i>e.g.</i> do they get the
+so-called &ldquo;inevitable&rdquo; diseases of chicken-pox, measles, etc., and
+especially have they good (<i>i.e.</i> perfect) teeth?</p>
+
+<p>(3) The effect of the diet in childbirth.</p>
+
+<p>(4) The cost of maintaining a household in this way, as compared
+with the cost under ordinary conditions.</p>
+
+<p>(5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional
+dietary (often found amongst food reformers)?</p>
+
+<p>(6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?</p>
+
+<p><i>A number of interesting letters have been published this year,
+and we shall be glad to receive a large number of personal experiences,
+but they must be brief, and classified under the above
+heads as far as possible. The following is a striking piece of
+personal evidence.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="address">Buckhurst Hill, Essex,<br /><span style="font-variant:normal;"><i>28th April 1913.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">To the Editors of <i>The Healthy Life.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sirs,</span></p>
+
+<p class="corresp">As a slight contribution to the interesting discussion
+which is taking place in your magazine, will you allow me to give
+you a short summary of nearly sixty years experience of the
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg649" id="Pg649"></a>effects, in my own case, of flesh eating, vegetarianism and the
+uncooked food diet.</p>
+
+<p>This is not a fairy tale, as some may be inclined to think, but
+a plain unvarnished statement of facts.</p>
+
+<p>The flesh-eating period lasted for seventeen years. When three
+months old I was the unfortunate victim of vaccination poisoning,
+and for years afterwards was continually in the doctor's hands.
+The best medical men in this country and America were
+consulted; for months daily visits were paid to a noted Chicago
+specialist in the hope that he might be able to effect a cure, but
+it was a case of &ldquo;love's labour lost,&rdquo; and, instead of improving,
+my condition grew steadily worse.</p>
+
+<p>During all these years, drugging was constantly going on, the
+pills and potions ordered were religiously swallowed, and, strange
+as it may seem, the ordeal was survived. Flesh meat was eaten
+daily, and, of all the members of the medical profession consulted,
+not one of them ever hinted that a change of diet might be
+beneficial.</p>
+
+<p>When 17 years of age my attention was drawn to an article
+in <i>The Phonetic Journal</i> on the advantages of a non-flesh diet.
+By this time, being thoroughly tired of taking endless quantities
+of useless, poisonous and expensive drugs, I decided, there and
+then, to throw &ldquo;physic to the dogs,&rdquo; making up my mind that
+if death did come, and it seemed to be staring me in the face, I
+would, at any rate, die a vegetarian.</p>
+
+<p>Within six months the most dangerous symptom had completely
+disappeared and has never recurred, but, although greatly benefitting
+by the new diet, and enjoying on the whole fairly good
+health, yet there were frequent attacks of rheumatism, lumbago
+and neuralgia; dyspepsia, with its attendant pain and flatulence,
+often made life miserable; now and again the liver would rise
+up in rebellion, bringing in its train vertigo, blurred vision and
+severe headaches; constipation, that bane of modern life, was a
+source of endless trouble, in fact, for many years the enema had
+to be used once or twice a week, and last, but worst of all, came
+those sharp, shooting, lancinating pains, one of the premonitory
+symptoms of cancer.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously, there was still something radically wrong somewhere,
+and on retiring from practice, a great deal of time and attention
+was devoted to the subject, innumerable experiments were made,
+and, ultimately, results obtained, the value of which cannot be
+exaggerated.</p>
+
+<p>Five years ago the uncooked food diet was commenced, and
+from the very first week a steady improvement took place. The
+constipation vanished as if by magic; there has not been the
+slightest touch of rheumatism or neuralgia for at least three years
+the liver is now an unknown quantity, the dyspepsia is a thing of
+the past, and, most important of all, the cancer symptoms are
+entirely gone, and in their place has come an abounding health,
+vigour and vitality that is marvellous. The years seem to have
+&ldquo;rolled back in their flight&rdquo;; all the centres of life are reju<a class="pagenum" name="Pg650" id="Pg650"></a>venated;
+and the hopes, feelings and aspirations of youth sway me
+now as they did nearly half-a-century ago. Work, mental or
+physical, is a perfect pleasure, and to feel fatigue is almost
+unknown.</p>
+
+<p>What a glorious gift life really is has never been realised till
+now, and the wealth of the Indies would not induce me to go
+back to the flesh-pots, or live on cooked foods again. This diet
+gives two important advantages: firstly, the elimination of all
+excess of starchy matter prevents the formation of needless fat,
+and, secondly, the entire absence of artificially sweetened food
+removes one of the main causes of over-eating.</p>
+
+<p>Will people ever learn that fat, instead of being a sign of health,
+is the very reverse, that every ounce of superfluous adipose tissue
+means more work for the heart, diminished vitality, lessened
+energy, and, when excessive, is not only a distinct menace to
+longevity, but to life itself?</p>
+
+<p>I never take more than two meals a day and very often only
+one, which consists of raw vegetables, nuts, olive oil and unfired
+bread; the second meal, when required, is a simple fruit salad.</p>
+
+<p>When a vegetarian the writer lived for years on a shilling a
+week; it costs rather more now, the oil, nuts, fruit and bread
+being more expensive than beans, rice, meal, etc., but the difference
+is so trifling that it is not worth talking about.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst &ldquo;Fletcherising,&rdquo; deep breathing, distilled water, olive
+oil, fasting, saltless food, the open-air life, regular exercise, etc.,
+were valuable allies, it was not until the powerful aid of uncooked
+food was invoked that the real benefits began to appear and life
+became a real joy. Yours, etc.,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">John Reid, M.B., C.M.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="HEALTH_QUERIES6" id="HEALTH_QUERIES6"></a>HEALTH QUERIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine
+Knaggs, deals briefly month by month, and according
+as space permits, with questions of general interest to
+health seekers and others.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is
+essential that full details of the correspondent's customary
+diet should be clearly given.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on
+<span class="u">one side only of the paper</span>, giving full name and address,
+not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
+When an answer is required by post a stamped addressed
+envelope must be enclosed.</i>&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="u">Every inquiry must be accompanied by the front cover
+(or upper part of same showing date) of a recent number</span>
+of <i>The Healthy Life</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a class="pagenum" name="Pg651" id="Pg651"></a><a name="Onion" id="Onion"></a>ONION JUICE AS HAIR RESTORER.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs M. McC. writes:&mdash;In your book, <i>Onions and Cress</i>,<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> on
+p. 49, it is stated that the juice of onions mixed with honey will
+change the colour of hair from grey to black. Will you be
+kind enough to tell me in what proportion these should be mixed,
+as, of course, if not in a proper mixture, the hair would become
+so clogged. And will you also kindly tell me how one is to
+extract the juice from the onions, whether they are to be boiled
+or squeezed when raw.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>With regard to the use of a mixture of onion juice
+and honey as a hair restorative the reader of my little
+book must remember that it is largely a compilation of
+quotations from old herbal books, and it gives the
+history, use and folklore of these interesting edibles.
+I am not responsible for this recipe and cannot therefore
+vouch for its utility. We know, however, that
+onions contain a wonderful sulphured oil and that
+sulphur in one form or another is an important ingredient
+of most hair preparations which restore colour.
+The raw juice evidently should be used, and this can
+be extracted either by pounding and grating and then
+extracting the juice under pressure, or it can be readily
+obtained in any quantity by putting onions through the
+Enterprise Juice Press. The amount of honey, I think,
+to be added to this juice should be very small, otherwise,
+as our correspondent surmises, the preparation would be
+very sticky and objectionable. Would any reader care
+to try this and report upon it?</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21">[21]</a> <i>Onions and Cress</i>, 6d. net (postage 1d).</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Sciatica" id="Sciatica"></a>SCIATICA.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mrs M.G. writes:&mdash;My husband is a sufferer from sciatica;
+has had it for some years, on and off, but just lately he seems is
+to get it constantly&mdash;sometimes a little, sometimes a lot. He has
+been taking some salicylate of soda, and I have tried to persuade
+him to give it up. His age is 42. For his meals he takes, on
+rising, an apple or a cup of apple tea; an hour afterwards his
+breakfast, which consists of two tablespoonfuls of a proteid food
+mixed with distilled water, and a hard biscuit, two slices of
+whole meal brown bread, nut butter, and watercress or lettuce.
+During the morning he drinks barley water. For dinner, a salad
+and a few ground nuts and hard biscuits and an apple; sometimes
+home-made nut meat and spinach, hard biscuits and dried or fresh
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg652" id="Pg652"></a>fruit. For tea, a salad or lettuce, tomatoes, onions and cress,
+and Shredded Wheat and wholemeal bread. Last thing at night,
+a few steamed onions and distilled water. His bowels are in
+good condition, very regular, but he has this constant gnawing
+pain. If you can help me in any way as to a change in his
+diet, it will be a relief to me. I do not mind the trouble of
+preparing things for him. It is about two months ago that he
+has taken to drinking distilled water, which I make myself. His
+occupation is very sedentary, with long hours, sometimes from
+six in the morning till nine at night. He has a bicycle, and gets
+as much exercise as possible.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>From the description given one would assume that
+the sedentary occupation and long hours of work have
+caused this correspondent to fall into bad postural habits
+of sitting and standing, coupled with excessive depletion
+of his nervous energy. The diet given is on good lines
+and, with the addition of home-made curd cheese and
+eggs as proteid, might certainly be continued as it
+stands, especially as the bowel action is regular. What
+the correspondent does need is less hours of work; more
+physical exercises of a brisk back-stretching nature, and
+certain spinal stretching manipulations of an Osteopathic
+nature. Full deep breathing in fresh air will
+also be beneficial. The lower part of the spine, from
+which the sciatic nerves originate, needs the most
+attention.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Paraffin" id="Paraffin"></a>REFINED PARAFFIN AS A CONSTIPATION REMEDY.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mr E.H. writes:&mdash;Will Dr Knaggs very kindly say whether
+Refined Paraffin, now being given so generally for the relief of
+constipation, may be regarded as a harmless method of overcoming
+this trouble or whether its use might lead to harmful
+results. I am told that this preparation of oil is not assimilated,
+and is therefore harmless, but I should much appreciate Dr
+Knaggs' opinion on this matter.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The use of refined paraffin as a remedy for constipation
+is just now all the rage with the orthodox medical
+profession. There is nothing really to be said against
+its right use, provided it is made to serve as one of the
+means to an end. It has been proved that this paraffin,
+which is quite tasteless, odourless and easy to swallow,
+is not absorbed by the system but passes unchanged
+and unaltered through it. It acts therefore as a mere
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg653" id="Pg653"></a>mechanical lubricant. The one thing to remember is
+that its use should be combined with a curative diet,
+so that it need not be taken indefinitely.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="DSD" id="DSD"></a>(1) DRY THROAT; (2) SACCHARINE; (3) DILATED
+HEART.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mr L.S. writes:&mdash;I have read <i>The Healthy Life</i> from the
+appearance of the first number, and I have studied the Answers
+to Correspondents, but have not observed a case identical with
+my own, hence my reason for troubling you.</p>
+
+<p>(1) The back part of mouth next throat has a curious glazed
+appearance&mdash;no cough or expectoration. I am inclined to think
+it extends to and includes the stomach. I have always a good
+appetite, but am not well nourished; much under weight. Age
+44 years; school officer; cycle 25 miles a week.</p>
+
+<p>Eat meat sparingly, not a pound a week. Live principally upon
+eggs and bread and butter&mdash;(three eggs a day): &ldquo;Digestive Tea&rdquo;
+two and three times a day.</p>
+
+<p>2. Is saccharine less harmful than sugar for sweetening?</p>
+
+<p>3. As the result of a nervous breakdown I had five years ago
+I suffer from a dilated heart, consequently&mdash;I suppose&mdash;I have
+palpitation occasionally, oftener when in bed. I don't think my
+heart is really normal since my breakdown five years ago.</p>
+
+<p>4. Would bathing myself with cold water over the region of the
+heart strengthen the muscles? Would you please suggest anything
+for strengthening heart. Are lemons or eggs injurious to the
+heart?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>1. The throat symptoms indicate a dry, irritable,
+heated condition of the mouth and throat which, as
+the correspondent surmises, equally affects the stomach
+and the rest of the digestive organs. He should have a
+breakfast of fresh fruit only, take salads and grated
+raw roots with his meals and stop tea altogether. He
+can drink distilled water and vegetable or lemon drinks
+(unsweetened) instead.</p>
+
+<p>2. Saccharine is a mineral substance, a fossilised
+product of putrefactive action in the coal age. It is
+closely analogous to carbolic acid, which equally originates
+from microbic action. By leaving off sugar and
+replacing it by saccharine our correspondent gains
+nothing. He is simply leaping from the frying pan into
+the fire. It is best for him to cultivate a taste for
+unsweetened or even acid drinks.</p>
+
+<p><a class="pagenum" name="Pg654" id="Pg654"></a>3. A dilated heart is usually an after effect of a
+dilated stomach, which strains it, just as it does every
+other organ, whether in the chest or the abdomen.</p>
+
+<p>4. Bathing the chest with cold water is not desirable.
+What is needed is that the correspondent should drink
+as little fluid as possible and pay close attention to the
+condition of his digestive mechanism. If the organs
+are dilated or misplaced he should wear a belt and take
+suitable gentle Osteopathic exercises.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Stammering" id="Stammering"></a>TREATMENT FOR STAMMERING.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>A.M.D. writes:&mdash;Could you kindly give in <i>The Healthy Life</i>
+magazine some suggestions as to the best method to follow in a
+case of stammering (slight) in a boy of ten or eleven years who
+has been rather left to himself, the hesitancy in speech being
+regarded as incurable?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This boy should be trained by someone who understands
+how to cure stammering. The correspondent
+would do well to consult Miss Behncke of 18 Earl's
+Court Square, S.W., who makes a speciality of treating
+such cases.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="Anaemia" id="Anaemia"></a>WHY THE RED CORPUSCLES ARE DEFICIENT IN
+AN&AElig;MIA.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>A.M.D. writes:&mdash;Is there any way, independent of diet, of
+increasing the red corpuscles in the blood? I have tried walking
+nine miles a day, thus getting up free perspirations. What of this
+method? I did imagine that this resulted in a better condition
+of the skin, the latter losing in a measure the white and parched
+appearance.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A deficiency of red corpuscles in the blood, which
+shows in an&aelig;mia, is usually caused by self-poisoning.
+When food ferments or putrifies in the colon, owing to
+faulty diet and other causes, certain toxins are created.
+These become absorbed into the blood and there destroy
+the red corpuscles. Walking is a good form of exercise,
+but it will not suffice alone to remedy this type of
+an&aelig;mia unless the diet and general habits of the patient
+are so arranged that the unsanitary condition of the
+colon is also remedied. The correspondent will find, if
+she studies the replies to others in this magazine, many
+details as to diet, etc., for rectifying bad conditions in
+the bowels.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a class="pagenum" name="Pg655" id="Pg655"></a><a name="Blending" id="Blending"></a>THE CORRECT BLENDING OF FOODS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>T.B.W. writes:&mdash;Is it inadvisable for a dyspeptic (and sufferer
+from constipation) to eat salad, or cooked vegetables, and stewed
+fruit at the same meal; also, do I do right in eating bread and
+butter (preferably crust) or hard biscuits with stewed fruit or
+soft vegetables, etc.? Would you please inform me the best Still
+that I can obtain&mdash;preferably one that does not require much
+attention, and is fairly portable, and that does not cost much
+to work?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not believe that it is right to mix salads or
+cooked vegetables with stewed fruits. It is better to
+take them at separate meals.</p>
+
+<p>It is, in my view, equally bad to take cereals (<i>i.e.</i>
+bread, biscuits, etc.) with stewed fruits. The reason
+is that cereals call for an alkaline form of digestion in
+the mouth which the acid fruits or the added sugar
+greatly retard.</p>
+
+<p>I believe strongly in the all-fruit breakfast or all-fruit
+supper, when fresh, dried, or even stewed dried
+fruits (possibly with some fresh cream) can be taken
+alone, without either cereals or vegetables.</p>
+
+<p>Cereals go best with salads and cooked vegetables,
+because of the alkalinity of the latter which harmonises
+with the salivary secretion intended for the digestion of
+grains.</p>
+
+<p>The Gem Still is the best to buy. It is well made and
+does not need much attention. The large automatic
+commercial size is, however, the best if any quantity
+is needed, as it works throughout the day with practically
+no attention when properly adjusted.</p>
+
+
+<h3 class="health"><a name="NonFlesh" id="NonFlesh"></a>DIFFICULTIES IN CHANGING TO NON-FLESH DIET.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p>F.C.W. writes:&mdash;I shall be glad if you will inform me from
+your experience whether, after one has broken from the customary
+meat diet and adopted a &ldquo;reform&rdquo; diet, there is any real difficulty
+in reverting to the former state. I have seen it stated that
+vegetarian diet did not call into action all the natural powers of
+the digestive organs, and, this being so, the tendency was for
+them to become weakened so that the food reformer eventually
+found himself unable to digest meat. I believe some health
+culturists make practice of taking meat twice a week. I have
+been about seven or eight weeks on reform diet, and though better
+in some ways have to confess to a feeling of deficient energy and
+nerve power. I was once told by a doctor that I could not afford
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg656" id="Pg656"></a>to do without the stimulating effect derived from meat. I propose
+making a test of the two methods, but should like to hear from
+you in reply to the above query. Another new feature I have
+noticed on the new diet is a thinness of the teeth and a feeling
+of weakness in them generally.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This correspondent omitted to supply his amended
+diet, so this was asked for and is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>On rising</i> (6.40).&mdash;Cup of cold water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast</i> (8 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>).&mdash;Porridge, boiled egg or white fish done in
+oven. Turog brown bread and butter; a banana; cup of coffee.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch</i> (12.45, <i>at The Home Restaurant</i>)&mdash;Nut or cheese
+savoury and one vegetable, a sweet dish, a few dates or a nut and
+fruit cake.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea meal (in office at 5).</i>&mdash;Bread and butter, piece of cake,
+large cup of cocoa.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper.</i>&mdash;One of following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>(a) &ldquo;Force&rdquo; with stewed prunes and junket; small piece of
+cheese with wholemeal biscuit.</p>
+
+<p>(b) Milk pudding and stewed fruit; small piece of cheese and
+biscuit.</p>
+
+<p>(c) Vegetable soup with toast.</p>
+
+<p>(d) Bread and milk and fruit cake.</p>
+
+<p><i>On retiring</i> (10 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>).&mdash;Cup of hot milk.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The correspondent adds further:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I have only been about eight weeks on food reform and the
+general result, so far, is less susceptibility to draughts and ability
+to sleep with windows open top and bottom, which I could not do
+before, and a feeling of lightness and freshness. On the other
+hand, I have not the same nerve force or power. I am of a
+highly sensitive nervous disposition, and the latest trouble is with
+my teeth. I was told yesterday by a dentist that a non-flesh diet
+is harmful to them and that were one to eat meat only, there
+would be no trouble! Perhaps it is owing to the dates and nut-and-fruit
+cakes which I have been eating, or to a general weakened
+condition due to want of finding my natural diet. I have a friend
+who is a fine specimen of physical development, and on his going
+on to food reform he had to have his teeth seen to. I suppose it
+would not be the softer diet giving his teeth less to do. I am at a
+disadvantage as I can get nothing specially prepared at home and
+can only add to my diet articles which I can prepare myself. I
+like my liquids fairly sweet and I like liquid foods. I am a
+catarrhal subject and when this starts at the back of the nose the
+hearing is affected.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Whenever a person changes from a meat diet to one
+that is of the non-flesh order the digestive organs have
+to learn how to adjust their secretions to the altered
+diet. This applies just as forcibly when a food reformer
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg657" id="Pg657"></a>wishes to return to the &ldquo;flesh-pots.&rdquo; After a long
+course of abstinence from meat the food reformer does
+find it difficult to return to it. This is due not so much
+to the difficulty in digesting it as to the violent stimulation
+and grossening of the body which it induces.</p>
+
+<p>I have never heard of any food reformer who discarded
+meat for ethical or humane reasons who willingly
+returned to meat so that he could if necessary be in a
+position to digest it.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the loss of energy and nerve power
+the correspondent must distinguish between real weakness
+and absence of stimulation. The first effects of
+discarding meat show a deficient energy due to the
+absence of stimulation. When this has passed it gives
+place to a feeling of buoyancy and energy which is
+permanent.</p>
+
+<p>The dental weakness is aggravated, if indeed it is not
+actually <i>caused</i>, by the milk puddings, porridge, cake
+and sugared beverages which are a feature of this
+correspondent's diet, and to the absence of salad vegetables.
+If he amended his diet somewhat as follows he
+should make steady progress in energy and general
+fitness:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>On rising.</i>&mdash;Tumblerful of cold water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Breakfast</i> (7.15).&mdash;One lightly boiled, baked or
+poached egg; Veda bread and butter, a little watercress
+or other salad. A small cup of Hygiama in place of
+the sugared cocoa.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lunch</i> (12.45).&mdash;Nut or cheese savoury and one vegetable;
+baked pudding by preference for second course,
+or simply a nut and fruit cake; no dates.</p>
+
+<p><i>Or</i> salad with grated cheese or cream cheese, or flaked
+pine nuts; followed by a piece of the excellent wholemeal
+cake supplied at the restaurant this correspondent
+frequents.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tea meal.</i>&mdash;One cup of Salfon cocoa (unsweetened),
+preferably without other food.</p>
+
+<p><i>Supper</i> (6 to 7) (This meal is at present far too
+mushy).&mdash;Cream cheese, Veda bread with fresh butter or
+<a class="pagenum" name="Pg658" id="Pg658"></a>nut butter, salad, tomatoes, cucumber, etc., with dressing
+of pure oil and lemon juice.</p>
+
+<p><i>Or</i> simply fresh ripe fruit, with dried fruit and cream;
+no cereals.</p>
+
+<p><i>On retiring.</i>&mdash;Cupful of hot unsweetened lemon water,
+or weak barley water; no milk.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">H. Valentine Knaggs.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CORRESPONDENCE4" id="CORRESPONDENCE4"></a>CORRESPONDENCE.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>All Correspondence should be addressed (and all contributions
+submitted) to the Editors</i>, <span class="smcap">The Healthy Life</span>,
+3 <i>Tudor Street, London, E.C.</i></p>
+
+
+<h3><a name="CottageCheese" id="CottageCheese"></a>COTTAGE CHEESE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="address"><span class="smcap">Wilderton, Bournemouth.<br />
+Bournemouth.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>To the Editors</i>,</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sirs,</span></p>
+
+<p class="corresp"><i>Re</i> Mrs C.E.J.'s letter and the reply
+thereto: I should be inclined to doubt the wisdom of
+making this from unboiled or uncooked milk unless one
+had it from one's own cows and could supervise the
+dairy oneself. The average milk that comes into towns
+from country farms is&mdash;well, it's unthinkable. There's
+a saying that what the eye doesn't see the heart doesn't
+grieve over, but that doesn't alter the fact that the
+average cow is none too clean, the average milker's
+hands and clothes (to say nothing of his face, hat and
+head) none too clean, the milking-place none too clean,
+and the circumstances of transit such as don't make for
+cleanliness. I have put it very moderately, as those
+who know country dairy farms will admit. Those who
+particularly want clean cheese from uncooked milk
+should buy it from a County Council dairy farm or
+similar institution. Yours truly,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">B.C. Forder.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3>WILL OTHER READERS DO LIKEWISE?</h3>
+
+<p>Mrs <span class="smcap">E. Bumpus</span> writes (7th October 1913):&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I am ordering two copies each month from my local
+newsagent.... I thought he might be induced to show
+copies of your publication in his window.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>[An attractive blue poster is supplied each month free by the
+Publishers to all genuine agents who apply for the same.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3><a class="pagenum" name="Pg659" id="Pg659"></a><i>THE HEALTHY LIFE</i> IN THE LIBRARIES.</h3>
+
+<p>Mr <span class="smcap">C.H. Grinling</span> writes (25th October 1913):&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I note the suggestion on <a href="#Pg580">p. 580</a> of the <a href="#Pg545">October number</a>
+of <i>The Healthy Life</i>. A friend enables me to ask you
+to send <i>The Healthy Life</i> regularly for one year to the
+Woolwich Public Library, William Street, Woolwich.
+I enclose 2s. The librarian will see that it appears on
+the magazine-room table regularly.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>[There is every reason why <i>The Healthy Life</i> should be known
+and read in every public library in the United Kingdom. In this
+we are entirely dependent upon those readers who are ready to
+follow the excellent example of the above and other correspondents.
+A year's subscription&mdash;2s.&mdash;is a very small price to pay for bringing
+the message of this magazine before the public in this way.
+We should like to hear from readers in all parts.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+<h3><a name="FruitOils" id="FruitOils"></a>FRUIT-OILS AND NUTS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="address">Westcliff-on-Sea, <span style="font-variant:normal;">22<i>nd Oct.</i> 1913.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>To the Editors</i>,</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sirs,</span></p>
+
+<p class="corresp">With reference to the last paragraph of &ldquo;<a href="#Phosphorus">Phosphorus
+and the Nerves</a>&rdquo; on <a href="#Pg579">p. 579</a> of the <a href="#Pg545">October
+number</a>, I should be obliged if I could be informed
+through your correspondence columns (1) what are the
+&ldquo;fruit oils&rdquo; recommended therein and (2) how they are
+to be taken. (3) Is olive oil good to take? (4) Is it
+good for children? If so how is it to be administered?
+(5) What nuts are richest in phosphorus? I enclose
+my card, and remain, yours truly,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">W.W.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>(1) Any olive oil that bears a thorough guarantee of purity
+(such as &ldquo;Minerva&rdquo; Olive Oil, &ldquo;Cr&ecirc;me d'Or&rdquo; Olive Oil, etc.);
+also any pure nut oil (such as supplied by Mapleton's or The
+London Nut Food Co.); also the pure blended oil sold as &ldquo;Protoid
+Fruit Oil.&rdquo; Our advertisement pages should be studied for
+further details.</p>
+
+<p>(2) Suggestions were given on <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: I am unable to find this reference.">pp. xxxiii and xxxv</ins> of the
+<a href="#Pg581">November number</a>.</p>
+
+<p>(3) Yes, excellent.</p>
+
+<p>(4) Yes, they usually take it more readily than adults, for the
+latters' palates are generally spoilt. For its use see <i>Right Diet for
+Children</i>, by Edgar J. Saxon, 1s. net.</p>
+
+<p>(5) Almonds and walnuts. If the nuts are found difficult to
+digest try them in a finely prepared form, as in Mapleton's
+Almond Cream, &ldquo;P.R.&rdquo; Walnut Butter, or &ldquo;Protoid&rdquo; Almond
+Butter.&mdash;[<span class="smcap">Eds.</span>]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a class="pagenum" name="Pg660" id="Pg660"></a><a name="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS4" id="PICKLED_PEPPERCORNS4"></a>PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>Lady Cheylesmore was wearing a magnificent cock pheasant's
+plume. The eagle eye of the customs official caught sight of it
+and handed her a pair of scissors to help her detach it.&mdash;<i>Daily
+News.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Now we know what a really well-trained eagle eye
+can do.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>Perhaps the only remnant of the awful sameness characteristic
+of the typically English kitchen is the bacon and egg breakfast to
+which the average Briton clings with wonderful tenacity. The
+mere possibility of infidelity to that national dish is enough to
+make one shudder. No one could be such an iconoclast as to
+suggest a variant from the traditional breakfast; it would be
+table-treason of the worst kind.&mdash;<i>Daily Telegraph.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A middle-aged Briton named Leary,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of bacon and eggs got so weary,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That for no other reason<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">He committed high treason&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But whether he shuddered's a query.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>Silver-fox furs are rapidly becoming more and more rare, and
+this fact lends a special interest to the wonderful collection of
+these skins now being shown this week by Revillon Fr&egrave;res at
+180 Regent Street. These beautiful silver foxes, to the number of
+over a hundred, are grouped in eight large showcases on the ground
+floor, and represent the latest arrivals from Revillon's Canadian
+outposts, where they have special facilities for securing these rare
+skins.&mdash;<i>Daily Chronicle.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A ninth large showcase containing specimens of the
+steel traps in which &ldquo;these beautiful silver foxes&rdquo; are
+caught, and in which they remain till &ldquo;collected,&rdquo;
+would give added interest to the collection at 180 Regent
+Street.</p>
+
+<div class="hr"><hr style='width: 45%;' /></div>
+
+<blockquote><p>Sixty-six persons banqueted at Gorleston on a single &ldquo;sea-pie,&rdquo;
+which weighed 200 lbs. Prepared by an old smack skipper, it was
+built in three stories. The foundation consisted of beef bones, and
+inside were six large rabbits, half-a-dozen kidneys, thirty pounds
+of beef steak.&mdash;<i>Daily Chronicle.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Not to be confused with the Gorleston Mausoleum.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">Peter Piper.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28, by Various
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg's The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28
+ The Independent Health Magazine
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Charles William Daniel
+
+Release Date: February 5, 2006 [EBook #17682]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HEALTHY LIFE, VOL. V ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Feorag NicBhride, Laura Wisewell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Transcriber's Note: In preparing this ebook I have corrected a small
+ number of obvious typographical errors, including the two which are
+ mentioned in the September issue. I have not interrupted the text by
+ marking each, but they are marked in the html version of this text.
+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ _The_
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine
+
+
+
+ VOLUME V
+ JULY-DECEMBER 1913
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+ GRAHAM HOUSE, TUDOR ST., E.C.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+VOLUME V.--JULY-DECEMBER 1913
+
+
+Ballade of Skyfaring, A, S. Gertrude Ford, 490
+
+Book Reviews, 532
+
+Breathe, On Learning to, Dr J. Stenson Hooker, 630
+
+
+Camping Out, C.R. Freeman, 438, 480
+
+Care of Cupboards, Florence Daniel, 530
+
+Castles in the Air, E.M. Cobham, 582
+
+Cloud-capped Towers, E.M. Cobham, 626
+
+Correspondence, 504, 533, 580, 658
+
+Cottage Cheese, 658
+
+Curtained Doorways, The, Edgar J. Saxon, 561
+
+
+Doctor on Doctors, A, 637
+
+Doctor's Reason for Opposing Vaccination, A, Dr J.W. Hodge, 597
+
+Doctors and Health, 633
+
+
+Fasting, A Significant Case, A. Rabagliati, M.D., 458, 492
+
+Fear and Imagination, E.M. Cobham, 510
+
+Food and the Source of Bodily Energy, 507
+
+Fruit-Oils and Nuts, 659
+
+Futurist Gardening, G.G. Desmond, 451
+
+
+Health Queries, Dr H. Valentine Knaggs:--
+ About Sugar, 540;
+ Bad Case of Self-poisoning, 502;
+ Boils, their Cause and Cure, 498;
+ Canary _versus_ Jamaica Bananas, 579;
+ Can Malaria be Prevented? 466;
+ Cereal Food in the Treatment of Neuritis, 619;
+ Correct Blending of Foods, 655;
+ Concerning Cottage Cheese, 617;
+ Deafness, 615, 616;
+ Diet for Obstinate Cough, 618;
+ Diet for Ulcerated Throat, 575;
+ Dilated Heart, 653;
+ Difficulties in Changing to Non-Flesh Diet, 655;
+ Dry Throat, 653;
+ Eczema as a Sign of Returning Health, 613;
+ Excessive Perspiration, 574;
+ Farming and Sciatica, 575;
+ Faulty Food Combinations, 536;
+ Giddiness and Head Trouble, 468;
+ Going to Extremes in the Unfired Diet, 543;
+ Long Standing Gastric Trouble, 470;
+ Malt Extract, 539;
+ Neuritis, 538;
+ Onion Juice as Hair Restorer, 651;
+ Phosphorus and the Nerves, 577;
+ Refined Paraffin as a Constipation Remedy, 652;
+ Saccharine, 653;
+ Stammering, 654;
+ Severe Digestive Catarrh, 471;
+ Sciatica, 651;
+ Temporary "Bright's Disease" and How to Deal with it, 576;
+ Ulceration of the Stomach, 541;
+ Unfired Diet for a Child, 467;
+ Water Grapes, 619;
+ Why the Red Corpuscles are Deficient in Anaemia, 654
+
+Health and Joy in Hand-weaving, Minnie Brown, 591
+
+Health through Reading, Isabella Fyvie Mayo, 517
+
+Healthy Brains, E.M. Cobham, 448, 474, 510, 546, 582
+
+Healthy Homemaking, Florence Daniel, 495, 528
+
+Healthy Life Abroad, D.M. Richardson, 559
+
+Healthy Life Recipes, 462, 571, 610, 641
+
+Hired Help, Florence Daniel, 495, 528
+
+Holiday Aphorisms, Peter Piper, 508, 527
+
+How Much Should We Eat? 442, 477, 513, 563, 593
+
+Human Magnetism, 505
+
+
+Imagination in Insurance, E.M. Cobham, 546
+
+Imagination in Play, E.M. Cobham, 474
+
+Imagination in Use, E.M. Cobham, 448
+
+Indication, An, Editors, 437, 473, 509, 545, 581, 621
+
+
+Learning to Breathe, On, Dr J. Stenson Hooker, 630
+
+Letters of a Layman, I., 633
+
+Lime Juice, Pure, 534
+
+Longevity, A Remedy for, Edgar J. Saxon, 491
+
+
+Mental Healing, A Scientific Basis for, J. Stenson Hooker, M.D., 456
+
+Midsummer Madness, Edgar J. Saxon, 454
+
+Modern Germ Mania: A Case in Point, Dr H.V. Knaggs, 638
+
+More About Two Meals a Day, Wilfred Wellock, 487
+
+
+New Race, The, S. Gertrude Ford, 601
+
+
+Ode to the West Wind, Shelley, 555
+
+
+Pickled Peppercorns, Peter Piper, 464, 570, 609, 660
+
+Plain Words and Coloured Pictures, Edgar J. Saxon, 622
+
+Play Spirit, The, D.M. Richardson, 602
+
+Play Spirit, The: A Criticism, L.E. Hawks, 628
+
+
+Quest for Beauty, The, Edgar J. Saxon, 523
+
+
+Recipes, 462, 571, 610, 641
+
+Remedy for Longevity, A, Edgar J. Saxon, 491
+
+Remedy for Sleeplessness, 533
+
+
+Salads and Salad Dressings, 462
+
+Salt Cooked Vegetables, 506
+
+Swan Song of September, The, S. Gertrude Ford, 523
+
+Sea-sickness, Some Remedies, Hereward Carrington, 484
+
+Semper Fidelis, "A.R.," 526
+
+Sleeplessness, A Remedy, 533
+
+Scientific Basis for Mental Healing, A, J. Stenson Hooker, M.D., 456
+
+Scientific Basis of Vegetalism, The, Prof. H. Labbe, 549, 584
+
+Significant Case, A, A. Rabagliati, M.D., 458, 492
+
+Symposium on Unfired Food, A, D. Godman, 486, 648
+
+
+Taste or Theory? Arnold Eiloart, B.Sc., 643
+
+Travels in Two Colours, Edgar J. Saxon, 605
+
+To-morrow's Flowers, G.G. Desmond, 451
+
+Two Meals a Day, More About, Wilfred Wellock, 487
+
+
+Vaccination, A Doctor's Reason for Opposing, Dr J.W. Hodge, 597
+
+Vegetalism, The Scientific Basis of, Prof. H. Labbe, 549, 584
+
+
+West Wind, Ode to, Shelley, 555
+
+What makes a Holiday? C., 557
+
+World's Wanderers, The, Shelley, 625
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V JULY
+ No. 24. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+Some laymen are very fond of deprecating the work of specialists,
+holding that specialisation tends to narrowness, to inability to see
+more than one side of a question.
+
+It is, of course, true that the specialist tends to "go off at a
+tangent" on his particular subject, and even to treat with contempt or
+opposition the views of other specialists who differ from him. But all
+work that is worth doing is attended by its own peculiar dangers. It
+is here that the work of the non-specialist comes in. It is for him to
+compare the opposing views of the specialists, to reveal one in the
+light thrown by the other, to help into existence the new truth
+waiting to be born of the meeting of opposites.
+
+Specialisation spells division of labour, and apart from division of
+labour certain great work can never be done. To do away with such
+division, supposing an impossibility to be possible, would simply mean
+reversion to the state of the primitive savage. But we have no call
+to attempt the abolition of even the minutest division of labour. What
+is necessary is to understand and guard against its dangers.
+
+Specialisation _may_ lead to madness, as electricity _may_ lead to
+death. But no specialist need go far astray who, once in a while, will
+make an honest attempt to come to an understanding with the man whose
+views are diametrically opposed to his own. For thus he will retain
+elasticity of brain, and gain renewed energy for, and perhaps fresh
+light on, his own problems.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+CAMPING OUT.
+
+IV. THE FIVE-FOOT SAUSAGE.
+
+
+The question of blankets and mattresses may be taken as settled. We
+can now sleep quite comfortably, take our fresh air sleeping and
+waking, and find shelter when it rains. But that same fresh air brings
+appetite and we must see how that appetite is to be appeased.
+
+Take a frying-pan. It should be of aluminium for lightness; though a
+good stout iron one will help you make good girdle-cakes, if you get
+it hot and drop the flour paste on it. You must find some other way of
+making girdle-cakes, and if you take an iron frying pan with you,
+don't say that I told you to.
+
+Though it is obviously necessary that a frying-pan should have a
+handle, I was bound to tell Gertrude that I do not find it convenient
+to take handled saucepans when I go camping. I take for all boiling
+purposes, including the making of tea, what is called a camp-kettle.
+Most ironmongers of any standing seem to keep it, and those who have
+it not in stock can show you an illustration of it in their wholesale
+list. It is just like the pot in which painters carry their paint,
+except that it has an ordinary saucepan lid. You should have a "nest"
+of these--that is, three in diminishing sizes going one inside the
+other. The big lid then fits on the outer one and the two other lids
+have to be carried separately.
+
+[Illustration: _The Five-Foot Sausage_]
+
+You hang these camp-kettles over the fire by their bucket handles,
+from the tripod or other means of getting over the fire. Sometimes the
+bough of a tree high out of the reach of the flames will do. Sometimes
+a stick or oar thrust into the bank or in a crevice of the wall behind
+the fire is more convenient than a tripod. Again, you can do without
+any hanging at all, making a little fireplace of bricks or stones and
+standing the saucepans "on the hob."
+
+It is a simple thing to tie the tops of three sticks together and make
+a tripod. Then from the place where they join you dangle a piece of
+string, pass it through the handle of the kettle and tie it to itself,
+in a knot that can be adjusted up or down to raise or lower the kettle
+from the fire. This knot is our old friend the two half-hitches. Pass
+the loose end round the down cord, letting it come back under the up
+cord, then round again with the same finish, and lo! the up cord makes
+two half-hitches round the down cord. You can slip, them up and put
+them where you like and they will hold, but you have to undo them to
+take the kettle clean away from the fire. So we add to our equipment a
+few pot-hooks or pieces of steel wire shaped like an S. Their use will
+be obvious. If we have three of them it is quite easy to keep three
+kettles going over one fire. They swing cheek by jowl when they all
+want the same amount of fire, but each can be raised or lowered an
+inch or several inches to let them respectively boil, simmer or just
+keep warm.
+
+These are the cooking utensils. A biscuit tin would make an oven and
+Gertrude says she must have an oven. For my part I would not attempt
+baking when camping out and I will say no more about ovens, except
+that all the biscuit tins in the world won't beat a hole in the ground
+first filled with blazing sticks and then with the things to be baked
+and covered with turves till they are done.
+
+I had great difficulty in persuading Gertrude to feed out of tin
+dishes like those which we use sometimes for making shallow round
+cakes or setting the toffee in. They are ever so much better than
+plates, being deep enough for soup-plates and not easy to upset when
+you use them on your lap. Any number of the same size will go into one
+another and a dozen scarcely take up more room than one.
+
+It was worse still when it came to a still more useful substitute, the
+camp equivalent of the teacup. In the first place we abolish the
+saucer, for the simple reason that we have no earthly use for it in
+camp. We take tin mugs with sloping sides and wire bucket handles.
+They fit into one another in the same accommodating way as the eating
+dishes. Gertrude was nearly put off this device altogether by Basil's
+remark that he had only seen them in use in poulterers' shops, where
+they are put under hares' noses....
+
+"Basil, you, you monster," cried Gertrude, and I had to push those tin
+mugs as though I had been a traveller interested in the sale of them.
+
+The drinking of hot tea out of these mugs is quite a beautiful art.
+You hold the wire handle between finger and thumb and put the little
+finger at the edge of the bottom rim. It is thus able to tilt the mug
+to the exact angle which is most convenient for drinking. When
+Gertrude had learnt the trick, she became perfectly enamoured of the
+mugs. She sometimes brings one out at ordinary afternoon tea and
+insists that the tea is ever so much better drunk thus than out of
+spode.
+
+Smaller mugs of the same shape do for egg-cups, and the egg-spoons I
+take to camp are the bone ones, seldom asked for but easy to get in
+most oil-and-colour shops. Dessert spoons and forks and table knives
+are of the usual pattern, but the former can be had in aluminium and
+therefore much lighter than Britannia metal.
+
+The camping-out valise is by all means the rucksack. Never the
+knapsack. I am almost ashamed to say this, because as far as my
+knowledge goes the knapsack is now obsolete. It may be, however, that
+it lingers here and there. If you see one, buy it for a museum if you
+like but not for use. The bundle should be allowed to fit itself to
+the back, as it does in a canvas bag. Suppose now that you fix the V
+point of a pair of braces somewhere near the top of the sack and
+bringing the webs over your shoulders, fix them, nicely adjusted, to
+the lower corners of the sack, it will ride quite comfortably upon
+your back--that is, you have made it from a plain sack into a rucksack
+or back-sack. Get or make as many good large strong ones as you have
+shoulders in the party to carry them. Have them made of a waterproof
+canvas, green or brown, to reeve up tight with strong cord passed
+through a series of eyelet-holes and, if you would be quite certain of
+keeping out the rain, with a little hood to cover the reeved bag end.
+
+The great bulk of your luggage you will generally find it best to
+carry by wheeling it on a bicycle. Spread your ground-sheet on the
+floor. On that lay your blankets, doubled so as to make a smaller
+square, tent, mattress cover and bed suits on that, then your camping
+utensils and all other paraphernalia and roll the whole up into a
+sausage about five feet long, when the loose ends of the ground-sheet
+have been tucked over as in a brown-paper parcel. Tie it well with
+whipcord and fasten it to the top bar of your bicycle frame, leaving
+freedom of course for the handles and the front wheel to move and
+steer. Push the tent-poles through the lashings and start for your
+camp at a comfortable four or five miles an hour. You will find it
+easy to move camp at the rate of twenty miles a day and will see a
+great deal of country in the course of a fortnight.
+
+The sausage on the bicycle shown in the illustration may be taken to
+contain all the gear and a little food. The rucksacks will take the
+rest and each man's most precious personal belongings. There is a
+small parcel tied to the handle-bar, scarcely to be seen because it is
+smaller than the end of the sausage. It is a complete tent tied up in
+its ground-sheet.
+
+C.R. FREEMAN.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT: A WARNING.
+
+_This article, by one of the pioneers of modern dietetics, is in the
+nature of a challenge, and is certain to arouse discussion among all
+who have studied the food question closely._--[EDS.]
+
+
+When men lived on their natural food, quantities settled themselves.
+When a healthy natural appetite had been sated the correct quantity of
+natural food had been taken.
+
+To-day all this is upside down, there is no natural food and only too
+often no natural healthy appetite either. Thus the question of
+quantity is often asked and many go wrong over it. The all-sufficient
+answer to this question is: "Go back to the foods natural to the human
+animal and this, as well as a countless number of other problems, will
+settle themselves."
+
+But supposing that this cannot be done, suppose, as is often the case,
+that the animal fed for years on unnatural food has become so
+pathological that it can no longer take or digest its natural food?
+
+Those who take foods which are stimulants are very likely to overeat,
+and when they leave off their stimulants they are equally likely to
+underfeed themselves. Flesh foods are such stimulants, for it is
+possible to intoxicate those quite unaccustomed to them with a large
+ration of meat just as well as with a large ration of alcohol. The one
+leads to the other, meat leads to alcohol, alcohol to meat. Taking any
+stimulant eventually leads to a call for other stimulants.
+
+How are we to tell when a given person is getting enough food, either
+natural or partly natural? Medically speaking, there is no difficulty;
+there are plenty of guides to the required knowledge, some of them of
+great delicacy and extreme accuracy. The trouble generally is that
+these guides are not made use of, as the cause of the disaster is not
+suspected. A physiologist is not consulted till too late, perhaps till
+the disorder in the machinery of life is beyond repair.
+
+Diminishing energy and power, decreasing endurance, slowing
+circulation, lessening blood colour, falling temperature, altered
+blood pressure, enlarging heart and liver, are some of the most
+obvious signs with which the physician is brought into contact in such
+cases. But every one of these may, and very often does, pass unnoticed
+for quite a long time by those who have had no scientific training.
+The public are extremely ignorant on such matters because the natural
+sciences have been more neglected in this country in the last fifty
+years than anywhere else in Europe, and that is saying a good deal.
+Hence diet quacks and all those who trade on the ignorance and
+prejudices of the public are having a good time and often employ it in
+writing the most appalling rubbish in reference to the important
+subject of nutrition.
+
+Being themselves ignorant and without having studied physiology, even
+in its rudiments, they do not appear to consider that they should at
+least abstain from teaching others till they have got something
+certain for themselves.
+
+If the public were less ignorant they would soon see through their
+pretensions; but, as it is, things go from bad to worse, and it is not
+too much to say that hundreds of lives have been lost down this sordid
+by-path of human avarice.
+
+On one single day a few weeks ago the writer heard of three men, two
+of whom had been so seriously ill that their lives were in danger, and
+one of whom had died. The certified cause of death in this case might
+not have led the uninitiated to suspect chronic starvation, but those
+who were behind the scenes knew that this was its real cause. A
+further extraordinary fact was that two out of these three men were
+members of the medical profession, whose training in physiology ought,
+one would have thought, to have saved them from such errors.
+
+The conclusion seems to be that they did not use their knowledge
+because at first they had no suspicion of the real cause of their
+illness. In other words, chronic starvation is insidious and, if no
+accurate scientific measurements are made, its results, being
+attributed to other causes, are often allowed to become serious before
+they are properly treated.
+
+These three men went wrong by following a layman quite destitute of
+physiological training, who APPEARED to have produced some wonderful
+results in himself and others on extraordinarily small quantities of
+food.
+
+If the above tests had been made at once by a trained hand the error
+involved in such results could not have escaped detection, and none of
+these men would have endangered their lives. I myself examined the
+layman in question and finding him not up to standard refused to
+follow him. The writer has no difficulty in recalling at least a dozen
+cases similar to those above mentioned which have been under his care
+in the last twelve months, and the three above mentioned were none of
+them under his care at the time of their danger.
+
+What, then, must be our conclusions in reference to these and similar
+facts of which it is only possible to give a mere outline here? I
+suggest that they are:--
+
+1. Food quantities are of extreme importance.
+
+2. These quantities were settled by physiologists many years ago, and
+no good reasons have since been adduced for altering them.
+
+3. The required quantity is approximately nine or ten grains of
+proteid per day for each pound of bone and muscle in the body weight.
+
+4. Any considerable departure from this quantity continued over months
+and years leads to disaster.
+
+5. The nature of this disaster may appear to be very various and its
+real cause is thus frequently overlooked.
+
+I will say a few words about each of these except the first, which is
+already obvious. The layman above mentioned asserted that he could
+live on but little more than half this quantity, but the food quantity
+really required is that which will keep up normal strength, normal
+circulation, normal colour, normal temperature and normal mental
+power. As we have got perfectly definite standards of all these normal
+conditions, serious danger can only be run into by neglecting to
+measure them.
+
+It is also possible to tell fairly accurately the quantity of food a
+man is taking in a day, and then, by collecting and estimating his
+excreta, the quantity also out of this food which he is utilising
+completely and burning up in his body.
+
+You would say that no danger should be possible with all these
+safeguards, and yet the above case history shows that of two trained
+physiologists, members of the medical profession, one died at least
+twenty years before his time, and the other was in great danger and
+only recovered slowly and with difficulty. Another similar case came
+to the writer suffering from increasing debility and what appeared to
+be some form of dyspepsia. He was quite unable to pass any of the
+above-named tests as to physiological standards, and an investigation
+of his excreta showed that his food was at least one-fifth or
+one-sixth below its proper quantity and had probably been so for many
+months past. Some of his doctors had been giving his "disease" a more
+or less long list of names and yet had not noted the one essential
+fact of chronic defective nutrition and its cause--underfeeding.
+Naturally their treatment was of no avail, but when he had been sent
+to a nursing home and had put back the 20 lbs. of weight he had lost
+he came slowly back to more normal standards and is now out of danger.
+In this case there was marked loss of weight, and few people, one
+would think, would overlook such a sign of under nutrition. But loss
+of weight is not always present in these cases, at least not at first.
+Some people tend to grow stout on deficient proteid, and then the fact
+that some of the essential tissues of the body (the muscles, the heart
+and the blood) are being dangerously impoverished is very likely to be
+overlooked. In the case last mentioned the loss of weight was put down
+to the dyspepsia, whereas the real fact was that the "dyspepsia" and
+loss of weight were both results of a chronic deficiency in food.
+
+It is evident that some care about food quantities must be taken by
+all those who do not live on natural foods. For physiologists there is
+no difficulty in settling the question of quantity in accordance with
+the signs of the physiology of a normal body. That all, even
+physiologists, may run into danger if, while living on unnatural or
+partly unnatural foods, or while making any change of food, they do
+not consider the question of quantity with sufficient care.
+
+That the question of nutrition should be considered in relation to
+_every illness_ even though it may appear on the surface to have no
+direct connection with foods or quantities. As a matter of fact, the
+nature of the food and its quantity controls all the phenomena of
+life. Some twenty years ago most people lived fairly close to the old
+physiological quantities, now they have been cut adrift from these and
+completely unsettled and are floundering out of their depth. A most
+unsatisfactory, even dangerous, condition of affairs.
+
+For the public it will now probably suffice if they insist on raising
+the question of quantity whenever they suffer in any way. If they are
+unable to answer the question themselves let them go to a trained
+physiologist who can do so, and not to a diet quack. But muscular
+strength, endurance, mental and bodily energy, skin circulation,
+temperature and blood colour are all things which the public can see
+for themselves and from which they should in all cases be able to get
+sufficient warning to save them from the worst forms of disaster.
+
+Some people imagine that they eat very little, when as a matter of
+fact they have good healthy appetites. Others again think they are
+eating a great deal, when as a matter of fact they take very little.
+In both cases a physiological test of the excreta will give accurate
+information. I once had a medical patient who imagined that he
+produced great amounts of force and performed feats of endurance on
+wonderfully small quantities of food. His excreta showed, however,
+that he was merely under-estimating the food he took. A fat man may
+seem to be living on very little, but fat does not require to be fed,
+and his real bone and muscle weight is not large. A thin man may seem
+to require a large quantity of food, but he is really very heavy in
+bone and muscle, the tissues that have to be nourished. In all these
+ways appearances are apt to be deceptive for those who are ignorant of
+science and who do not go down to the root of the matter.
+
+It is not necessary to follow the given quantity of grains per pound
+slavishly and without regard to consequences. It is necessary to see
+that the required physiological results are obtained.
+
+If a patient says he can live on less than I ordered for him and if
+he can pass the physiological tests satisfactorily I know that his
+bone and muscle weight has been over-estimated. On the other hand, if
+a patient falls below the physiological tests, though taking and
+digesting the quantities ordered for him, I conclude that his bone and
+muscle weight has been under-estimated.
+
+In all cases it is possible to obtain the best physiological results
+and to say when quantities are just right, neither too much nor too
+little.
+
+The evil effects of too much are not serious; they entail perhaps a
+little "gout" or some temporary loss of freedom from waste products.
+
+The evil effects of too little, if persevered in and continued,
+especially if some of these effects are attributed to causes which
+have no real existence, are deadly and dangerous, for they bring on an
+insidious deterioration both of function and structure which leads by
+several avenues, often miscalled "diseases," to death itself.
+
+M.D.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY BRAINS.
+
+_Comparatively few health enthusiasts or food reformers realise the
+necessity for mental, as distinct from bodily, hygiene, yet all real
+health has its roots in the mind. Moreover, it is only by studying the
+hygiene of mind that we are enabled to do work in greater quantity and
+of better quality than we should otherwise be capable of, and to do
+this without risk of strain on the nerves or injury to health. The
+articles under this heading put forward some of the elementary laws of
+mental hygiene._--[EDS.]
+
+
+IMAGINATION IN USE.
+
+To some people any talk about the importance of training the
+imagination of children through their toys, games and studies seems
+fantastic and trivial. They compare it to feeding them on sweetmeats;
+they think it means substituting story books for real life and
+encouraging the easy exercise of fancy for the careful study of fact.
+
+But imagination is not a mere ornament to a life-work; it is rather
+one of its most valuable and necessary tools. If it did no more than
+sweeten and adorn the world, it would be well worth having, well worth
+making considerable sacrifices to attain. But it does more than this.
+It bears much fruit as well as flowers; fruit that, if it ripens in
+suitable weather, endures and can be used for the service of man.
+
+There is a wonderful palm-tree, called the Tal or Palmyra palm, which
+in India and Ceylon supports six or seven millions of people, and
+"works" also in West Africa, where it is probably native. It gives its
+young shoots and unripe seeds as food; its trunk makes a whole boat,
+or a drum or a walking-stick, according to size; hats, mats, thread
+and baskets--in fact, almost all kinds of clothing and utensils--are
+made from the split and plaited leaves; gum comes from it, and certain
+medicines, jaggery sugar too and an intoxicating drink for those who
+desire it. In one of the museums at Kew--a wet day brings always
+_something_ besides disappointment--there is a book made up of the
+very leaves of the palm, containing a Tamil poem enumerating more than
+eight hundred human uses to which this marvellous single plant can be
+put.
+
+Now the imagination is like a Palmyra palm. We stand a long way off
+and, looking up, say "What a graceful tree! But what a pity it
+produces that intoxicating 'toddy' and nothing else!" Yet all the
+while food and clothing and shelter and travel and learning are all
+wrapped up in it, if only we were not too ignorant to guess, or too
+idle to seek.
+
+We talk as if the poet and painter had need of imagination, but not
+the student, the doctor, the philanthropist, the business man, whereas
+none of these can do work at a really human standard without
+imagination that is living, penetrating, active and yet trained and
+disciplined.
+
+A recent illuminating address to a body of students pointed out that
+Germany's immense industrial strides have been made possible by an
+education which draws men's minds out of narrow old grooves, and helps
+them to see and grasp wider possibilities. But the same speaker went
+on to point out that the English worker has far more real initiative
+and imagination than the German, and that in our own country we have
+not even to make elaborate plans for developing these qualities, but
+rather to release them in our administrators so far as to prevent
+actually checking them in the children now growing up.
+
+Imagination in business, for instance, means new possibilities, fresh
+sources of supply and fresh markets to demand, economy of working and
+better adjustment of work to worker, so as to have less waste of our
+greatest capital, human time and power. America has taught us
+something in these respects; what we must do is to take what new light
+she has developed, while keeping our long-grown, well-earned skill
+which she has not had the chance to make.
+
+In research work, again, we need perpetually the synthetic and
+constructive imagination if individual work is not to become narrowly
+specialised and shut off from other divergent or parallel lines which
+would illuminate it. The other day I was told of a great surgeon who
+not only has six or seven assistants to help him in his immediate
+tasks, but also, since he is too busy in the service of humanity to
+have time for reading, has eight trained assistants whose business it
+is to read in many languages what is being done all over the civilised
+world in his own line, and keep him informed as to the development of
+experience. A wonderful advance on the crystallisation of individual
+method, this, and yet it needed but the imaginative projection upon
+scientific work of what every business firm and every political unit
+has long done.
+
+To transfer to our own concerns a method developed elsewhere is one of
+the most valuable services imagination can render. Almost all
+educational reform comes about thus, most mechanical inventions, a
+great part of economy and comfort in individual homes. Also, besides
+these particular advantages, the incessant coming and going between
+the different fields of activity, the circulation of attention which
+this use of the imagination involves, tends to vitalise and enrich
+not only the individuals who carry it out, but the whole social
+organism of which they form part.
+
+Upon the moral side not much need be said. "Put yourself in his place"
+is a very old and respectable recipe for growing justice in one's
+conduct, consideration in one's speech, sympathy in one's heart. As
+employer or magistrate, as teacher or nurse, as customer or shopman,
+as parent or husband or child we must all deal somehow with our
+fellow-men: honestly and truthfully, we mean, kindly and helpfully, we
+hope. But is it not the more or the less of our imagination that makes
+such dealings possible? Without it, we are cruel because of something
+we do not feel, unjust because there is something we do not know,
+unwittingly deceitful because there is something we do not understand.
+With it, our justice will support, our kindness uplift, our attempt at
+help will not be barren, but will awake response and raise the whole
+level of our human intercourse into a region of higher possibilities.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+
+
+FUTURIST GARDENING.
+
+TO-MORROW'S FLOWERS.
+
+
+These three months of July, August and September are the second
+seed-time. I think they must be the most proper sowing-time, for is it
+not clear that Nature sows seed, not in spring, but in autumn? At any
+rate, now we can do more towards making a perpetually beautiful flower
+garden than in any other season. The biennials, those that blossom in
+their second year of life and those jolly perennials that come up year
+after year and always stronger than before, without any trouble on our
+part, are best started in life not too long before the winter.
+Spring-sown seed sometimes forgets that it is biennial and blossoms
+rather futilely the same summer, and at other times it grows so lush
+and large by winter that it cannot stand the frost.
+
+Now we see the flowers in blossom in the vineyards of our friend
+Naboth and we know which we should most like in our own garden. There
+is an exquisite joy in begging or stealing a few seeds and bringing
+them home to blossom for us as they did for Naboth. I carry at this
+time a few small envelopes bought for a few pence a hundred at
+Straker's, and whenever I see something nice in seed I bag it. In
+another week it would drop beneath the plant it grew on and, not being
+cared for by a gardener, would be smothered or hoed up. In a nice
+little seed-bed all to itself it can unfold all manner of pleasure for
+its abductor.
+
+Plant your flower seeds on a nice ripe, rich bed--that is, one
+compounded of old and even half-used manure. Keep the seedlings
+watered as they grow and by judicious pricking-out give them the room
+they need. About October you can plant the best of them in the place
+where you want a good bush next year, and, if it is a perennial, you
+have for many years to come a beautiful plant with a personal history.
+Even if you have bought your penn'orth of seed there may be a pleasant
+anecdote connected with it. My garden is at present amazingly blue
+with Dropmore Alkanet (Anchusa). Three years ago I bought three seeds
+for a penny. Two of them came up. I slashed up the plants and now I
+have half-a-dozen clumps as well as a similar number left in the old
+garden whence I have removed.
+
+If you asked me what kinds of seed in particular you ought to plant
+for perennial flowers just now, I might want many more pages to tell
+you in. Let me give you a very short list of those that most appeal to
+me on the spur of the moment. It will be enough to go on with:--
+
+ Trollius (globe flower).
+ Helianthemum (rock rose).
+ Epilobium (willow herb).
+
+ Hollyhock.
+ Echinops (globe thistle).
+ Anchusa Italica, Dropmore variety.
+
+ Lupine.
+ Tritoma (red-hot poker).
+ Heuchera (coral-root).
+ Yarrow.
+
+ Lychnis (garden campion).
+ Inula (Elecampane).
+ Funkia (Plaintain lily).
+ Eremurus.
+
+This list is representative because it includes some species, such as
+Eremurus, Trollius and Tritoma, that are not usually grown from seed
+by the amateur. To raise these rather expensive monsters from
+pennyworths of seed is a floral adventure which brings its own
+abundant reward.
+
+I should be very proud of a garden that consisted entirely of plants
+that I had raised from seed. It might be one that had never had
+anything else in or the seedlings might gradually oust the bulbs and
+corms and grown plants with which the garden began. There would be
+many things there intrinsically as well as extrinsically valuable.
+Carnation seed, for example, is constantly producing new varieties,
+and to grow rose seedlings is even to court fortune. It is a long time
+before you see your rose. The seed takes sometimes two years to
+germinate, and then you have to wait a year or two before you get a
+typical blossom. The growers hurry matters by cutting a very tiny bud
+from the first sprout and splicing that on to an older stock. One of
+the advantages of having your roses grown from seed and on their own
+stocks would be that they could not produce wild suckers.
+
+I have just seen a wonderful grove of Aquilegias, the glorified
+columbine which has the centre of one colour and the outside petals of
+another--sulphur with mauve or yellow with pink, and many other
+varieties. The nucleus was grown from shop seed and the rest from the
+seed of the first-comers. The only thing to choose between them is
+that the new ones have produced a least one variety not represented in
+the first batch. You may be sure that I am going to get some seed
+from here and raise some Aquilegias for myself. Good reader, go thou
+and do likewise.
+
+G.G. DESMOND.
+
+
+
+
+MIDSUMMER MADNESS.
+
+
+We had come, "3.7" and I, to the Boundary, a white, unpaved road which
+winds across the full width of Wimbledon Common, from the old Roman
+camp to the windmill. Simultaneously we cried a halt, I because I
+never cross that road without some hesitation, he because he wanted to
+get out of the folding go-cart in which he had been riding and turn
+it, with the aid of a small piece of string and a big piece of
+imagination, into a 40-horse-power motor car.
+
+On the map the road is not called the Boundary. If you want to know
+why I call it so I can only say that once you have crossed it things
+are different; I do not mean a difference merely of country or
+scenery, but a difference of atmosphere; better, and more literally, a
+change of spirit. To put it bluntly, I never knew the reality of
+fairyland until I blundered across that road one grey gusty evening
+ten years ago, and heard the tall grasses whistling in the wind. Since
+then the road has always been a frontier, not to be crossed without
+preparation.
+
+As "3.7" tumbled out of his go-cart I looked at my watch and saw it
+lacked but a few minutes to noon. It was just such a cloudless June
+day as must have inspired Shelley's _Hymn of Apollo_. No smallest
+cloud to break the dazzling blue; and, high above our heads, Apollo,
+standing "at noon upon the peak of heaven."
+
+If it had been Midsummer Day I should have thought twice about
+crossing the Boundary. As it was, we were quite near enough to the
+24th of June to make it risky. So, as "3.7" bent a tangled head over
+the bonnet of his Daimler, I flung myself down on the level turf
+beside him and stared across the road.
+
+Behind us and on either side were clumps of gorse bushes, and beyond
+them the immense level expanse of the open heath. Immediately in front
+was the road, sunk a foot beneath the turf, which comes right up to
+it, both on this side and that.
+
+"Another piece of string, please," said "3.7," rummaging in my pockets
+without waiting for an answer, "and a pencil, and----"
+
+And then I saw it. On the farther side of the road there is a stretch
+of short turf, some hundred yards wide; and beyond that an irregular
+line of silver birches; and beyond that the blue of distant hills, for
+the Common slopes down where the trees begin. Between the silvery wood
+and the road, through the midst of the wide belt of turf, and parallel
+with the Boundary, ran a river. There was nothing to be much surprised
+at, for it was just the kind of river you would expect to see running
+through the fields of fairyland. It was a river of grass.
+
+It was the slender-stalked, tufted, not very tall, grey-headed grass
+that grows quite generally in open country and wild places. But the
+wind and the sun now turned it into a river which ran fast between its
+banks of green, its waves silvery grey, quick-flowing waves, gleaming
+and dappled, an endless succession. It flowed from somewhere out of
+sight in the west, and disappeared to the east over the edge of the
+great slope that brings you down to the woods, vanishing, to all
+intents and purposes, over the edge of the world.
+
+Without taking my eyes off this astonishing spectacle I stretched out
+a hand and, catching "3.7" by the edge of his white smock, told him to
+run across the road to the grass and--paddle in it. I said it was
+better than motor cars. He made no comment on this but, after glancing
+warily up and down the road (for he has been brought up in wholesome
+awe of the entire tribe of automobiles), he crossed the Boundary, ran
+across the turf and plunged up to his knees in the river.
+
+I cannot be certain, but it is my considered opinion that Apollo
+stopped his golden chariot for the space of a whole minute to look
+down at the golden-haired boy wading in that noiseless, fast-flowing
+river.
+
+In another minute "3.7" was back at my side, both hands full of the
+tufted grass he had pulled. I regret to say he tickled my ear with it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Honest, solemn reader, ardent food reformer, keen educationist,
+clear-headed moralist, practical-minded housewife, I tell you frankly
+there is no moral to this little episode. It throws no light on what
+to eat, or on the purchasing power of an English shilling, or on the
+ethical training of young children, or on the nature of neurasthenia.
+Fairyland, of course, is a childish fiction, Apollo a solar myth, a
+road is a road, grass is grass and heaven is a state of mind. I quite
+agree with you. But let me whisper something in your ear. If you
+should ever blunder across your Boundary, don't be surprised if things
+look queer on the other side; above all, whatever you do, don't let
+any strange river you may find flowing there carry you away, or it may
+bring you, spite of all your protests, through one of the gates of
+pearl into the City of God.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+A SCIENTIFIC BASIS FOR MENTAL HEALING.
+
+
+There is a vast amount of loose talk, and innumerable assertions from
+irresponsible individuals concerning the wonders that have been
+achieved by Mental Healing, but naturally the scientist and physician,
+when dealing with such a question as this, has to put aside, not all
+enthusiasm, but certainly all emotionalism, and then, most carefully
+sift the evidence laid before him. The scientist here wants hard, dry,
+irrefutable facts; the responsible physician requires to know--by his
+own careful diagnosis or by an array of tabulated facts--the condition
+of the patient before and after treatment--that is, of the one who
+claims to have been cured by mental means. Innumerable claims are
+thus being made by patients and others, so that it is imperative for
+the unbiased physician at all events to consider the above question;
+this in order to give a reason for the faith that is in him, when he
+is known to be one of those who favour the metaphysical means of
+healing. Even the sciolist in the matter knows that in the case, say,
+of blushing, or blanching of the face, the action of mind over
+matter--of the body--is palpable; all admit that the quality of joy,
+for instance, will prove a splendid tonic; that despair, on the other
+hand, will pull down the bodily condition. But all this, we shall be
+told, is unconscious action; true, but fortunately we are now aware
+that by a forceful action of the will we can _consciously_ direct or
+derivate, as the case may be, currents of nerve-force to any part of
+the body. Occultists have known this for many centuries. Joy, hope,
+faith: these are very potent factors in improving the health
+conditions--simply because they act upon the sympathetic nervous
+system, and this latter acts upon the circulation. Happiness dilates
+the blood-vessels. Fear contracts them. Thus, unbounded faith; renewed
+hope; sudden joy; enforced will-power; all have a marked effect upon
+bringing about an equilibriated condition of the circulation--just the
+same as a hot bath does, though not so rapidly or so perceptibly.
+Further, we must remember that all disease more or less is a stasis, a
+congestion, somewhere; we have only to dissipate this; to separate the
+cells; to expand the part, as it were, and "resolution," as we call it
+in congestion of the lungs, takes place. So that it seems to me that
+we can fairly claim a strictly scientific basis for Mental Healing. I
+have always, however, maintained that the attitude of the patient's
+own mind has much to do with the result: in his consciousness there
+must be faith and hope in order to get the best effect.
+
+Judging, then, of the very remarkable and palpable changes which
+anyone can see occur on such superficial parts as the face and
+extremities, I can see no reason that, by an enforced mental action,
+the deeper parts--including any hidden diseased part--should not be
+altered for good. I am very confident that it is upon these lines,
+coupled, as they can always be, with advice as to clean feeding and
+right living generally, the physician of the future will largely
+depend for his cures. Thus we are fully justified in not only trying
+the system on "functional," but also for "organic," cases.
+
+J. STENSON HOOKER, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+A SIGNIFICANT CASE.
+
+ACCOUNT OF A FAST, UNDERTAKEN FOR THE CURE OF A PROFOUND BLOOD
+DISEASE.
+
+
+The following account of a fast is worthy of attention. It is rigidly
+accurate _in principle_, as far as I could make it so, and I am
+responsible for its truthfulness. But the subject of it, feeling that
+he is engaged in a duty and "labour of love," as he expresses it, is
+yet naturally anxious to prevent his identity from being discovered;
+and so, while the facts of the narrative are true in principle they
+have been varied in a few details for the purpose of preventing the
+recognition of the subject of them.
+
+They occurred in the history of a man of about 40 years of age, who
+fell ill of an infectious disease some 20 years ago, while living
+abroad. The exact time of the infection is not known. The patient was
+treated by qualified doctors living in the same country as himself,
+and there is no reason to believe that he was not properly and
+skilfully treated. He had, however, for years buoyed himself up with
+the hope that he should be able to come to England for the best
+treatment, and recently he found himself in this country for that
+purpose. It goes without saying that the eminent men consulted treated
+him after the most modern and approved methods, which were also, so
+far as knowledge goes, the most likely to benefit him. Not only as to
+treatment must it be assumed that the best was done, but the diagnosis
+also is supported by the authority of the doctors seen, and was
+confirmed by physiological and pathological investigation. This would
+be recognised if it were possible to publish names, places and dates
+which are withheld from the courteous reader for the reason already
+given. I can only say that I entirely concur in the diagnosis and in
+the suitability of the treatment.
+
+The man came under my care on a Sunday, the fast, which is the subject
+matter of this communication, having been commenced on the Friday six
+weeks before that day, the last food having been taken on the Thursday
+at 5 P.M. I saw him, therefore, on the forty-fifth day of the fast.
+His pulse was 59, soft, steady, regular. Temp. 96.8 degrees, about 11
+A.M. He was able to be up, and walked actively, all his bodily
+movements being active and his mind quite clear and rational. His
+weight on the day after I first saw him was, in the same clothes as
+when weighed at the beginning of the fast, 129+1/2 lbs. He said he
+weighed 171 lbs. on the machine at the commencement, and therefore the
+loss of bodily weight up to that time was 41.5 lbs. The average loss
+of weight during the 46 days of the fast was about nine-tenths of a
+pound daily if the 41.5 lbs. loss is divided by the 46 days of the
+continuance of the fast up to that time--41.5/46=.9 lbs. almost
+exactly.
+
+When he came to my consulting room on the forty-sixth day, about 2.15
+P.M., the pulse was 64, temp. 95.6 degrees (thermometer 3 minutes
+under tongue). He was much troubled with a nasty expectoration of
+mucus. His breath was very offensive. No enlarged glands could be felt
+in either groin--perhaps a trifling enlargement in the right. In
+middle of front border of right tibia a little irregularity is felt,
+and a small hollow, which he thinks is filling up; but it might be
+that the exudation on the bone immediately above and below the hollow
+is somewhat reduced, as this would equally give the suggestion that
+the hollow is filling up. There is a similar but rather smaller
+irregularity on the left tibia also. He felt rather weak that day,
+which he attributed to not having had his usual walk the day before.
+The nasal cavity consists of a large grey septumless cavern showing
+dry crusts. The issuing breath is most offensive. Patient had drunk
+freely of water, he said, to the extent of 4 or 5 quarts a day during
+the fast but when I said--do you mean that you have been taking over a
+gallon of water daily?--he rather hesitated, and did not think it was
+so much as that. He had not measured it and had taken it cold usually,
+though occasionally hot, and had taken it without stint as he wanted
+it. On the forty-eighth day of the fast he complained of being weak
+but worst of all, he said, his breath was very offensive to himself.
+It was so to me also--faint, fetid, putrid. His sense of smell was
+greatly impaired, so much so that he could not smell the offensiveness
+of the bowel-excreta which came away every day on using the
+gravitation-enema, and which were horrible to by-standers. It would
+seem from this as if his distress at the bad smell of his breath was
+probably due to a perversion of the sense of smell, which can be
+easily understood if we reflect that the disease-process was going on
+in the region where the smell-apparatus is specially located. The
+temperature was 96.2 degrees that morning the patient said. At 2 P.M.
+when I saw him the pulse was 68, regular, even, steady. He says he was
+feverish last night. I suppose he felt hot. He sleeps well, but says
+he hears the clogs of the mill-hands as they go to their work in the
+mornings. Has lost 2 lbs. weight in last 2 days. Temp. 93.6 degrees to
+my observation 2.30 P.M. Says he feels "done at the stomach." His
+voice is poor. Expectorates somewhat freely. A small blob of green
+thickish mucus in ordinary white mucus came away in my presence. Urine
+acid 1010. No glucose. Faint trace of albumin to heat and picric
+acid: also to nitric acid. The right lachrymal punctum is blocked; the
+tears run down the cheek; and I failed to get even a hair-thick wire
+into it. Evening, pulse 65, temp. 97.2 degrees in bed with hot-water
+bottle. Faeces most offensive, no bowel-excreta coming away except to
+enema. Forty-ninth day. In bed, temp. 97.2 degrees, pulse 65, soft,
+steady, regular. No great emaciation of limbs. Showed me some green
+expectoration. He says it is from Salvarsan as it is exactly like what
+he was injected with! The motion to the enema as offensive as before,
+but the breath is less offensive to me: not so fetid.
+
+On this day patient completed 7 weeks of fasting. Feels sick and as if
+he would vomit. About midday he did vomit about a teaspoonful of dark
+green stuff, very bitter and acid (bile, I should call it, though he
+calls it "pure citric acid") and immediately after that he got rid of
+a motion without the use of the enema, brown, dark and very offensive
+still. I think the breath, however, is rather less offensive; and so I
+thought also two days ago. Temp. 97, pulse 67, soft, steady, regular;
+about 1.30 P.M. In bed since fiftieth day of fast. Not feeling very
+ill and not specially emaciated, though the buttocks are thinning; but
+legs and thighs and arms and forearms not specially thin. He came to
+me to be weighed on the forty-ninth day and weighed 127+1/2 lbs.
+Fifty-second day of fast. Still in bed. Condition much the same as to
+pulse, temperature, etc., and as to emaciation so far as observation
+goes. Remained in bed, not because unable to be up, but because he
+thought it would be better for him to be resting. On the fifty-fourth
+day, as he still felt sick, I gave him, at his request, an emetic in
+the form of 10 grains of copper-sulphate. This was followed by
+sickness after about an hour, when he got rid of a very little of the
+same green stuff as before. Bile? But the difficulty is to understand
+how, after all this time of fasting, he should still feel sick and
+with inclination to vomit. On the fifty-fifth and fifty-sixth days of
+the fast he remained in bed, the condition being much the same. On
+Thursday, the fifty-sixth day, he broke the fast at 5 P.M., just 8
+weeks after beginning it. He had meant to go on for 60 days, and I did
+not think that there would have been any danger in his doing so; but I
+did not press him to continue any longer. He took 3 oranges on that
+day; and on the Friday he took 5 more. I advised him not to increase
+the quantity of food too quickly. The breath has been quite sweet
+during the last two days. He has been too weak to take enemata, so we
+cannot say if motions would still have been offensive. And as there is
+no weighing machine in his room, we don't know the exact loss of
+weight sustained during the fast, though there is no reason to think
+that it has averaged more than .9 lb. a day. Up to the time of
+stopping the enemata, pieces of mucous membrane and mucus itself came
+away from the bowel, and the motions were very offensive. He seems to
+have a mucous enteritis without fever.
+
+On the fourth day after breaking the fast, patient took 6 oranges, 4
+apples and a banana; and he ordered much more food, which, however, I
+advised him not to take. On this day his bowels were opened naturally,
+with a very offensive motion. But the breath was much sweeter, in fact
+not offensive at all.
+
+On the sixth day he came to my consulting-room and weighed 128 lbs.
+Pulse 80, soft, steady, regular. He had not slept all night and had
+had to be up no fewer than 6 times to have his bowels opened. No
+diarrhoea, he said, but full motions, the first 3 very offensive.
+Breath not offensive. Has dry pharyngitis and is complaining of sore
+throat.
+
+Next day. Weight 133 lbs. Bowels acted again, 1 A.M., 3 A.M., 6 A.M.,
+9 A.M. and 1 P.M. Large motions. I told him I thought he was taking
+too much food. Pulse 104. Not sleeping well. Complained of sore
+throat.
+
+Eighth day. Weight 138 lbs., a gain of 5 lbs. a day for 2 days. Pulse
+80 at 7 A.M. (his own statement), at 2.30 P.M. pulse 100, temp. 99.4
+degrees. Bowels acted at 12 midnight, 3.30 A.M. and about 11 A.M. Went
+that day to have his photograph taken. The throat was better. Tongue
+dry and leathery. It was plain to me that he was taking too much food.
+He was having a mixed diet and taking much and often. He said his
+"mouth was coming to pieces," and in fact the mucous membrane was
+glazed and peeling; also the lips. On the ninth day he returned home.
+
+The loss of weight can be seen from the following statement. On
+commencing the fast the weight was 171 lbs.
+
+ First day weight was 171 lbs.
+ Sixth day " " 165+1/2 "
+ Seventh day " " 163+1/2 "
+ Twelfth day " " 158 "
+ Fifteenth day " " 155+1/2 "
+ Eighteenth day " " 150+1/2 "
+ Twenty-fifth day " " 142+1/2 "
+ Forty-seventh day " " 129+1/2 "
+ Forty-ninth day " " 127+1/2 "
+
+Fast ended on fifty-sixth day. On the sixth day after breaking the
+fast the weight was 128 lbs. On the next day it had risen to 133 lbs.
+and on the following day to 138 lbs. In the first 47 days of the fast
+the loss of weight was 43.5 lbs., or an average loss of .888 lbs.
+daily (43.5/49=.888 lbs.) The loss of weight for the last 8 days
+before the fast was broken is not known as patient was in bed, though
+it probably was at much the same rate as during the other times of the
+fast when the weight was taken on the scales.
+
+The following comparative measurements are interesting. Of course he
+had been eating for a week after the termination of his fast, so that
+the measurements taken on that day would be higher probably than if
+they had been taken seven days before, when he broke the fast.
+
+
+BODILY MEASUREMENTS.
+
+ _At Commencement_ _At Termination_
+ _of Fast._ _of Fast._
+
+ Forearm 11 inches 9+5/8 inches
+ Arm 11+1/2 " 8+3/4 "
+ Hips 38 " 32+1/2 "
+ Thigh 21+1/4 " 16 "
+ Pelvis 37+1/2 " 30+1/2 "
+ Calf[1] 15+1/4 " 13+1/2 "
+ Neck 14+1/2 " 12+1/2 "
+ Chest 38 " 31+1/4 to 34+1/2 "
+
+[1] There was a bundle of varicose veins behind right calf.
+
+Patient kept a diary during his fast, but it does not seem necessary
+to reproduce its statements here. It shows that he walked about during
+the time, notes the state of the weather as foggy or very foggy or
+freezing, mentions that water was taken, sometimes hot apparently, as
+on 15th March, "after glass of hot water, pulse 70, temperature 98+1/2
+degrees." No doubt drinking the hot water had elevated temporarily the
+mouth-temperature, as it does. The diary also notes that he felt weak,
+had a bath, or did not have a bath, notes the pulse-rate, etc., as
+also the effects of the daily enemata. On the twenty-ninth day of the
+fast he took a bottle of Apenta Water. Such are samples of statements
+from the diary.
+
+A. RABAGLIATI, M.A., M.D.
+
+_The remainder of this article deals with conclusions of great
+interest and value, and will appear in our next issue._--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS.
+
+
+For salads it is not necessary to depend entirely upon the usual salad
+vegetables such as lettuce, watercress, mustard and cress.
+
+The very finely shredded hearts of raw brussel sprouts are excellent,
+and even the heart of a savoy cabbage. Then the finely chopped inside
+sticks of a tender head of celery are very good; also young spinach
+leaves, dandelion leaves, endive, sorrel and young nasturtium leaves.
+
+Then there are the onion family (for those who can take them), the
+tender kinds, such as spring onion, chive and shallot being very good
+when chopped finely and used as a minor ingredient in any salad.
+
+The root vegetables should also be added in their season, raw carrot,
+turnip, beet, artichoke and leek, all finely grated.
+
+A taste for all the above-mentioned vegetables, eaten raw, is not
+acquired all at once. It is best to begin by making the salad of the
+ingredients usually preferred and mixing in a small quantity of one or
+two of the new ingredients.
+
+For those who find salads very difficult to digest, it is best to
+begin with French or cabbage lettuce and skinned tomatoes only, or, as
+an alternative, a saucerful of watercress chopped very finely, as one
+chops parsley.
+
+Any salad, however made up, should be served in as dainty and pleasing
+a fashion as possible. It is, perhaps, usually best to serve it ready
+chopped and shredded, and to allow each person at the table to take
+his or her own helping of "dressing."
+
+English people seldom serve salad in the French fashion--that is,
+quite dry, save that the dressing is well mixed in an hour before the
+meal. Readers who have been to France may have seen French peasant
+women whirling a wire salad-basket round their heads in order to dry
+the materials after the cleansing has been done. When dry, the
+green-stuff is torn with the hands, the dressing (and the French know
+all about salad dressings) is added and the whole allowed to stand
+some little time, so that by the time the meal is served there is a
+complete blending of all flavours.
+
+Not everyone likes this method; but it is certainly better than the
+customary method here, which too often leaves a little puddle of water
+at the bottom of the bowl.
+
+There are many ways of preparing good salad dressing without resort to
+vinegar, salt and pepper. The two prime necessities are (1) really
+good oil and (2) some kind of fresh fruit juice. Most people prefer
+lemon juice or the juice of fresh West Indian limes, well mixed into
+either olive oil, nut oil or a blended oil such as the "Protoid Fruit
+Oil" or Mapleton's Salad Oil. The ordinary "salad oils" obtainable at
+grocers are seldom to be recommended; they almost invariably contain
+chemical preservatives and other adulterants. It is better to have the
+best oil and use it sparingly if need be, than take any faked product
+just because it is cheap.
+
+With most people the addition of pure oil assists the digestion of the
+salad, as well as serving other purposes in the body.
+
+Many excellent salad recipes and suggestions for novel yet simple
+"dressings" will be found in _Unfired Food in Practice_, by Stanley
+Gibbon.[2]
+
+[2] 1s. net; 1s. 1+1/2d. post paid, from the office of _The Healthy
+Life_, 3 Amen Corner, London, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+_This, which is a regular feature of THE HEALTHY LIFE, is not intended
+as a household guide or home-notes column, but rather as an
+inconsequent commentary on current thought._--[EDS.]
+
+
+ An interesting booklet by Raymond Blathwayt with samples of Bath
+ Mustard will be sent free on application to J. & J. Colman, Ltd.
+ (Dept. 49) Norwich.--Advt. in _Punch_.
+
+Rumours are also afloat that G.K. Chesterton has written a brilliant
+booklet on Eiffel Tower Lemonade, and that the Attorney General has
+been commissioned to write a highly interesting brochure on American
+macaroni.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "I enclose you a photo of my baby, Willie, aged fifteen months.
+ He was given up by two doctors, and then I consulted another, who
+ advised me to try ----'s Food, which I did, and he is still
+ having it. You can see what a fine healthy boy he is now, and his
+ flesh is as hard as iron."--From an advt. in _Lady's Companion_.
+
+Evidently a case of advanced arterio-sclerosis.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ HEALTH BISCUITS. Nice and Tasty, handled by our 55 salesmen
+ daily.--Advt. in _Montreal Daily Star_.
+
+One reason, perhaps, why both the public and the sales have
+declined.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ WHAT WOULD YOU GIVE FOR A PERFECT SKIN?
+ Is 3d. too much?
+ Many perfect skins to-day are traced to a single sample.
+ --Advt. in _Lady's Companion_.
+
+The price is reasonable; but I think I would rather see a sample
+first, wouldn't you?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ OUR SPECIAL FILLING FAST--Headline in _Daily News_.
+
+The correct antidote for the well-known "starvation of
+over-repletion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Cold Anniversary Raised Pie and New Potato Salad.--From the
+ _Seventh Anniversary Menu of The Eustace Miles Restaurant_.
+
+I am told that one old gentleman, misled by the chef's quite innocent
+use of adjectives, protested to a waitress that the day was really
+very warm; also that a youthful wag obliterated the initial C from his
+menu with a pen-knife and then inquired which was the better vintage,
+'06 or '09.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But to contend that there is no difference between a good yellow
+ man and a good white man is like saying that a vegetarian chop of
+ minced peas is like a chop of the chump variety.--_New Witness_.
+
+Chop-chop--as the good yellow man might be tempted to say if he came
+upon this specimen of white wisdom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Canvassers can make a very good profit by selling a patent
+ ladies' folding handbag, also wristlet watches.--Advt. in _Daily
+ Mail_.
+
+Nevertheless, the only place for a patent lady is a registry
+office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CAKEOMA PUDDING? You cannot know how delicious they are until you
+ have tasted them.--Advt. in _Lady's Companion_.
+
+One of the things that would never have occurred to you if you hadn't
+seen it expressed so clearly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SAXON.--How cruel of you. Although I have not the honour of cap
+ and gown, I do possess a Classical Dictionary. If I can help
+ further, write again. Regarding the recipe, it depends upon its
+ nature. Perhaps VERA is the lady to whom you should address your
+ question--_Lady's Companion_.
+
+My colleague, Mr Edgar J. Saxon, denies all knowledge of this affair.
+But I do wish he would be a little more careful in future.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading Dr Knaggs deals briefly month by month, and
+according as space permits, with questions of general interest._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on one side only of
+the paper, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as a
+guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a stamped
+addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+CAN MALARIA BE PREVENTED?
+
+ A. de L. (Lisbon) writes:--For five months I have been a strict
+ "fruitarian," and as I am obliged now to go to Mozambique
+ (Portuguese East Africa) to remain there five rears, I should be
+ much obliged to you if you kindly let me know what I must do to
+ prevent the African fever and biliousness which seem to afflict
+ all Europeans in that part of the world. Any hints you could give
+ me as to maintaining health in such a climate would be most
+ gratefully acknowledged.
+
+I do not think that it is possible for any European, whether he adopts
+fruitarian or ordinary diet, to entirely escape malaria, since it is
+caused by a minute parasite which is forced into the blood by a
+certain form of biting mosquito.
+
+The parasite will, however, surely gain less hold on one whose blood
+is clean and pure and whose vital force is strong, than on one who
+dissipates his strength by partaking of meat, alcohol, tea, coffee and
+other stimulants, or who otherwise gets his blood into a bad state by
+faulty diet generally.
+
+Therefore, the thing this correspondent should do is to live as much
+as possible upon the simple frugal fare of the natives. He can take
+raw coker-nut freely and eat the fresh fruits which grow in this part
+of Africa. If he can obtain pineapple or papaw he will find these
+excellent to help him to retain his health and strength in this
+country.
+
+
+UNFIRED DIET FOR A CHILD: IS IT SUITABLE?
+
+ Mrs L.B.F. writes:--My husband and I are much interested in _The
+ Healthy Life_, deriving much benefit and good advice from its
+ pages. It is the only magazine, we find, which answers questions
+ that we have long been puzzling over. Reading a work of the
+ "Montessori Method" of training children last night I was
+ disturbed to find I had, according to that book, been feeding my
+ little boy, aged three years, all wrong. It says: "Raw vegetables
+ should not be given to a child and not many cooked ones. Nuts,
+ dates, figs and all dried fruits should be withheld. Soups made
+ with bread, oil, bread and butter, milk, eggs, etc., are the
+ principal foods Dr Montessori recommends. She also advocates the
+ use of sugar."
+
+ Our boy has nuts, ground and whole, all the fresh fruits and
+ dried ones, salads, brown bread and nut butter, sometimes dairy
+ butter, no milk, his food mostly uncooked, as we ourselves
+ believe in. If Dr Valentine Knaggs would give us his opinion on
+ this I should be very grateful. The boy is healthy, but I notice
+ a slight puffiness below the eyes of late in the morning. Also
+ his temper does not improve as he gets older. Will he be having
+ too much proteid (nuts) for one of his years, or is the temper
+ natural as a result of bad discipline. His father is away all
+ day, and mothers are, as a rule, soft marks, are they not?
+
+It is difficult to answer fully a question of this sort, as so much
+depends on the child's temperament and environment. A frail, delicate
+child with the promise of high mental development requires a finer and
+softer grade of nutriment than one of a coarse animal nature with
+strong, well-developed digestive organs.
+
+All healthy children, especially boys (as Mr Saxon will attest!), are
+full of mischief and restlessness, which it is the duty of a mother or
+a nurse to divert into right channels.[3] The display of temper is
+probably an indication of this not being done, though it _may_ be due
+in part to the raw diet not suiting the child.
+
+[3] This correspondent, and all mothers of difficult children, should
+study the works of Mary Everest Boole, published by C.W. Daniel, Ltd.;
+also _The Children All Day Long_, by E.M. Cobham.--[EDS.]
+
+The advice I would give would be to alter the diet and make it
+lighter.
+
+From my point of view, Dr Montessori has not given sufficient
+attention to the other side of the diet question, preferring to remain
+more on the side of orthodoxy. Moreover, her own work has been done in
+Italy, where a climate prevails which does not call for so free a use
+of vegetables and salads as is the case in our own cooler and bleaker
+clime.
+
+I suggest, as a beginning, the following diet might be tried, but it
+is necessarily impossible to guarantee good results unless the cause
+of the puffy eyes and temper have been definitely located by personal
+examination:--
+
+_On rising._--A raw ripe apple, finely grated, or simply scraped out
+with a silver spoon.
+
+_Breakfast at 8._--A scrambled egg on a Granose biscuit with a little
+finely chopped salad or finely grated; raw roots appetisingly served
+with a dressing of oil, lemon juice and a little honey. This to be
+followed by an "Ixion" or "P.R." biscuit, with fresh butter.
+
+_Dinner at 2._--Home-made cottage cheese, or cream cheese, or a nut
+meat (served cold out of the tin, or, better still, home-made). Two
+casserole-cooked vegetables, done with a little fruit juice and lemon
+to retain colour. This to be followed by a baked apple with cream and
+a little home-made, unfired pudding made of dried fruits.
+
+_Supper at 5._--A slice of "Maltweat" bread, and butter, and a cupful
+of clear vegetable soup, or some hot water with some lemon juice
+added, and slightly sweetened with a little honey.
+
+
+GIDDINESS AND HEAD TROUBLE.
+
+ Mrs L.B.F. also writes:--I sometimes think I must make dietetic
+ mistakes. My husband thinks I am perfectly healthy, so I do not
+ say anything of the giddiness in the morning and after eating, a
+ drowsiness and slight pain at the back of the head and underneath
+ one of my ears. Also under my eyes is on some mornings quite
+ swollen and puffed up. It is not so marked, but I am quite
+ conscious of it. Our diet consists mostly of a salad, with bread
+ or baked potato and cheese or ground nuts or cooked brussels
+ sprouts and a nut meat pie, apple pie and cream, with brown bread
+ and butter, or a raw fruit meal, nuts, apples, grapes, figs,
+ dates and no bread.
+
+ Two meals a day, first in the morning at eight o'clock, second at
+ two or three in the afternoon. A glass of hot water with lemon at
+ nine P.M., and the same in the morning. I do some exercises night
+ and morning and am out in the fresh air often through the day. We
+ live in the country and I have every chance of keeping myself
+ healthy. Perhaps I should say I do not eat many nuts, finding
+ them rather difficult to digest. Should I use an enema when I
+ feel like this, or wait for natural results?
+
+The symptoms of which L.B.F. complains are in all probability due to
+flatulence and to general disturbances of the digestive process.
+
+Perhaps it would be a good plan to make the diet lighter. The nuts
+could be omitted and cheese or eggs substituted. An evening meal would
+be helpful.
+
+As to the bowels, some senna and camomile tea at bedtime would help to
+clear them. Unless there is distinct evidence of faecal retention in
+the colon it is better not to use the enema as a regular thing.
+
+_On rising._--A tumblerful of Sanum Tonic Tea made with hot,
+preferably distilled, water.
+
+_Breakfast._--An all-fruit meal consisting of nothing but apples,
+bananas, grapes, or orange, or any fresh ripe fruit that is in season.
+
+_Dinner at 12.30._--A cooked meal consisting of two casserole-cooked
+vegetables, with grated cheese as a sauce dressing, with some
+twice-baked or well toasted bakers' bread, followed by a baked apple
+and cream. (Omit nut meat pie and apple pie.)
+
+_Tea meal at 5._--2 oz. of cottage cheese or cream cheese, wholemeal
+bread and butter, small plateful of finely grated raw roots with an
+appetising dressing containing some "Protoid Fruit-Oil."
+
+_Bedtime._--Tumblerful of hot water (preferably distilled) to which
+senna leaves and German camomile flowers (very little) have been
+steeped to infuse; or a cupful of dandelion coffee could be taken if
+the bowels are regularly acting.
+
+
+LONG-STANDING GASTRIC TROUBLE.
+
+ W.T. writes:--Having tried a diet, recommended in _The Healthy
+ Life_, for a month I find the nuts and cheese are far too heavy
+ for the apparent weak condition of my stomach, also that the
+ salads and casserole-baked vegetables are too irritating to the
+ membrane of the stomach. I have no desire to return to flesh food
+ and ordinary feeding, which I feel would not be good for me. From
+ eggs I cannot obtain any good results. The continuance of loss of
+ weight is worrying me, being down to eight stone from eleven
+ stone in twelve months. I feel satisfied it is only a question of
+ diet, if I could only strike the correct one. I am naturally most
+ anxious to regain some of my lost strength and weight. I am at
+ present taking bread and butter, cooked fruit, and occasionally
+ an egg, boiled rice, vegetables and a little dried fruit. No
+ matter how light I make my diet I still suffer after every meal
+ with dilated stomach and irregular working of the heart. Blood
+ circulation is still bad and constipation is gradually getting
+ worse. As before stated, I am anxious to succeed with the
+ reformed diet, but I am really at a loss to know which way to
+ proceed to make any progress. As I was in South Africa twenty
+ years, and only returned to England just before this catarrh set
+ in, is the climate here against my progress, do you think? I am
+ so sorry to take up so much of your time, but shall be grateful
+ for any help you can give me which will be greatly appreciated.
+
+It is difficult to advise how best to proceed in this case as our
+correspondent really ought to seek medical advice. Only in this way
+can he obtain really satisfactory guidance. For without knowing the
+state of his blood and the organs generally it is impossible to advise
+correctly. Speaking generally, until salads and casserole-cooked
+vegetables can be taken freely there can be no possible permanent
+cure.
+
+In many such cases the best way to train the digestive organs into a
+healthy state is to keep to a diet consisting chiefly of dextrinised
+cereals, which must be eaten dry, with some vegetables and as little
+fresh fruit as possible. This to be continued until little by little
+the raw salad vegetables are found to agree; then the rest is easy.
+
+A diet on the following lines would probably be a good temporary
+measure:--
+
+_Breakfast._--One egg lightly boiled, poached or baked, with two
+Granose biscuits and fresh butter, eaten dry.
+
+_Dinner._--Brusson Jeune bread (one or two rolls) with butter, and
+small helping of vegetables, cooked at _first_ in the orthodox way.
+
+_Supper._--Plateful of boiled rice (cooked dry in the Indian
+fashion[4]) with a tablespoonful of good malt extract.
+
+No sugar, honey, stewed fruit, or dried fruit should be taken until
+improvement has set in. As little fluid as possible should be taken
+until the stomach has regained more tone and become more normal in
+size.
+
+[4] See _The Healthy Life Cook Book_. 1s. net (post free, 1s. 1+1/2d.).
+
+
+SEVERE DIGESTIVE CATARRH.
+
+ Miss S.L.P. writes:--I should like a little help as to diet. I
+ have just had an attack of epidemic influenza with throat
+ trouble, so that I feel very much run down and unfit for a diet
+ too depleting in character. For over four years I have adopted a
+ non-flesh diet on account of a tendency to chronic catarrh of the
+ whole alimentary tract, due to rheumatic tendencies which affect
+ me internally rather than externally. The continuous damp weather
+ has produced much gastric irritation, and frequent acidity.
+
+ I cannot discover a diet that is convenient and at the same time
+ sufficiently nourishing. I lose flesh on what I take, and I have
+ none to spare, though at one time I was inclined to be stout. My
+ age is forty-eight.
+
+ I take three meals a day. A light breakfast either of "Maltweat"
+ bread or "P.R." Cracker biscuits and butter, with tomato or fresh
+ fruit or occasionally an egg. For midday meal an egg or milled
+ cheese, or nuts or cream cheese, with a baked potato and a
+ conservatively cooked vegetable. Occasionally I have a little
+ salad and grated carrot, but unless I am better than usual I
+ cannot digest these. The evening meal consists of "Maltweat"
+ bread or "P.R." Cracker biscuits or Granose flakes, with cream
+ cheese. As a child I suffered constantly from colds in the head,
+ but now my troubles are oftener internal.
+
+ The action of the bowels is irregular. I depend chiefly upon an
+ enema of warm water when constipation is present.
+
+ I never drink tea, only hot water, or Emprote and water, or
+ occasionally vegetable juices or fruit juices. I find I am better
+ without much fluid.
+
+So far as it is possible to judge from this letter, this correspondent
+is suffering not only from stomach and bowel catarrh, but her
+condition as a whole is unsatisfactory. The vital force is depleted
+and the nervous system is not doing efficient work.
+
+She needs suitable treatment to remove the acid and toxins with which
+the system is evidently clogged. This is not an easy task, for as soon
+as elimination begins trouble arises in the form of influenza or other
+similar derangements. These are probably little else but attempts on
+the part of nature to rouse the vital force of the body into action
+with a view to clearing out the clogging poisons.
+
+Waste clearing should be done gradually. The skin should be made to
+act better by means of home Turkish baths, or by wet-sheet packs. Then
+mustard poultices can be applied _along the course of the spine_ and
+massage with suitable manipulations can be applied to the muscles and
+bones which make up the spine. The daily practising of the excellent
+and simple breathing and bending exercises described in Muller's _My
+System for Ladies_[5] will be very helpful. By means such as these the
+body will be gradually cleared of its poisons, and so the nervous
+system will be made to do better work.
+
+The diet specified can be continued.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+[5] 2s. 8d. post free from the office of _The Healthy Life_, 3 Amen
+Corner, London, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_May we ask the co-operation of all our readers during the holiday
+season in the following way. On holidays you are bound to meet fresh
+people, and make new acquaintances, and even friends. We suggest you
+purchase a few extra copies of _THE HEALTHY LIFE_ before you start and
+hand them on to any likely to be interested. People tell us the
+magazine is its own recommendation. This does not mean that you need
+not add your own. The circulation grows steadily, but it is far short
+of what it might easily be if every reader were to gain one fresh
+reader every month._--[EDS.]
+
+
+MORE APPRECIATIONS.
+
+I want to say how very interesting and helpful I find _The Healthy
+Life_, and it is always a pleasure to buy an extra copy to give to
+friends, for I always feel it will do them good to read it, and
+perhaps make regular subscribers of them.
+
+H. BARTHOLOMEW, Knebworth.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V AUGUST
+ No. 25. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+The pursuit of health, considered from the negative standpoint, is the
+flight from pain.
+
+And pain is the great mystery of life.
+
+James Hinton, himself a well-known physician of his time, attempted to
+solve the mystery of pain by showing that it is the accompaniment of
+imperfection. That what is now experienced as pain might be exquisite
+pleasure given a higher stage of human development.
+
+But this, after all, only shifts the mystery one step farther. Instead
+of the mystery of pain we have the mystery of imperfection. Yet to
+image perfection is always to image something incapable of growth or
+further development.
+
+Take, for example, a perfect circle. So long as it remains unbroken,
+flawless, the line (or infinite number of lines) composing it cannot
+be continued or extended. But given a break in the line and it may be
+continued round and round, up and up (or down and down) into an
+infinitely ascending spiral. This possibility of extension depends on
+a break, on an imperfection.
+
+It does not follow, of course, that every flaw in human nature is
+always the starting-point of new growth, every failure a
+stepping-stone to greater knowledge, but the possibility is there. It
+is for men to see that they do not neglect their opportunities.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+IMAGINATION IN PLAY.
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this wonderfully simple and
+suggestive article a continuation of the series previously entitled
+"Healthy Brains." The author of "The Children All Day Long" is an
+intimate disciple of one of the greatest living psychologists, and she
+has a message of the first importance to all who realise that true
+health depends as much on poise of mind as on physical fitness._--[EDS.]
+
+
+The fruit of imagination ripens into deeds actually done in the
+service of man: its flower brightens the whole of life and makes it
+fragrant, from the budding-time of children's play and laughter to the
+developed blossoms of the creative imagination which we call painting
+or poetry or music.
+
+Play and art have this in common, that they are activities pursued for
+the sake of the activity itself, not as a means to any other object,
+not aiming at any material usefulness. Actually, of course, there is
+nothing more useful, on every scale of usefulness, than the
+development of the individual in art or play, but these would never be
+really themselves while an ulterior purpose formed a background to
+them in consciousness.
+
+Physical exercises devised for the sake of health are a more or less
+pleasant form of work; they do not take the place of play. Our
+ordinary work is usually more or less one-sided and unbalanced in the
+demands it makes upon us; we therefore try to find what other set of
+movements will undo this unbalancement and give us back unbiased
+bodies. When that is done, and not till then, we get freedom, and it
+is at that moment that real "play" begins--the use of the freed
+muscles according to our own will and pleasure.
+
+The same thing is perhaps true in connection with our minds. We all
+see the fallacy of the old-fashioned hustlers' cry, "Make your work
+your hobby; think of nothing else; let every moment be subordinated to
+the dominating idea of your career; put aside all sentimentalism, all
+laziness and self-will, all enthusiasm about things not in your own
+line of work."
+
+We have come to see that this kind of effort leads often to nervous
+breakdown and early death; always to a certain narrowing of sympathy
+and hardening of method even in the career itself. So we
+conscientiously "take up" a hobby or a sport and set aside some hour
+or day for indulgence in it. We make it a duty to lay aside for the
+time being all idea of duties; part of our work is to learn to rest.
+
+So far so good. But does all this go far enough?
+
+Work imposed by any set of outer needs puts the whole being under a
+certain strain. The aim of remedial exercises, prescribed rest-times
+and legal holidays is to undo this strain, to unwind us from our coil
+by twisting us the other way.
+
+When this has been satisfactorily done, too often the person
+responsible thinks that this is enough. But it is really and truly at
+this moment that one is beginning one's real life.
+
+When the body is freed from strain and weariness is the time to leap
+and dance and sing and wrestle.
+
+When the mind is free from prejudice and weariness is the time for its
+original activity to begin; new thoughts spring up unbidden and the
+creative imagination lives and grows.
+
+(In the sphere of will, many great sages have said that an analogous
+sequence holds good. When the whole emotional and moral nature has
+thrown itself in a particular direction, and then an unwinding has
+taken place, the moment of completed renunciation has been said to be
+the dawn of some great new spiritual light.)
+
+Who does not know the peaceful activity of a Sunday evening, the
+fruitful quiet of a long railway journey or sea-voyage _at the end_ of
+a holiday? Two friends walk slowly home together after an exciting
+expedition or debate; two girls give each other their confidence while
+brushing their hair after a dance.
+
+Why is this so? Nowadays people are very ready to answer the question
+by refusing the fact. It is waste of time not to be _doing_ something
+strenuously. Rest is almost as strenuous as everything else; it is to
+be thorough while it is the duty on hand and is to fit exactly on to
+the work time, without overlapping but without interspace.
+
+In this way too often the imagination, the really individual part of
+the mind, is starved and atrophied. Especially in childhood there
+ought to be a space left between useful work and ordered play for the
+individually invented games, the pursuits that are not for any
+definite end, for dreams and lived-out tales, when the child may make
+what he likes, do what he likes, and in imagination be what he likes.
+If we scrupulously respected this growing-time we should soon have a
+race of sturdier mettle altogether. Just now this particular want is
+probably most nearly supplied among elementary school children than
+among those who have more "educational advantages"; they "go out to
+play" in the streets for hours every day, and one cannot help thinking
+that it is the vitality thus evolved that keeps most of them healthy
+and happy in spite of many hardships.
+
+In later life, if we really want to make something of our lives, we
+shall do well to insist an keeping such a margin of free time to
+ourselves. It need not be long. Five minutes, if one really sails away
+in the ship of imagination, will take us to fairyland and back again.
+But the five minutes (or the day in the country, or the week of quiet,
+or whatever we take or can get) must really and truly be free; we
+must have the courage to seek for what we really want, and we shall
+have the inestimable reward of finding what we really are.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?[6]
+
+[6] See July number.
+
+
+For some years I lived according to the advice given by "M.D." with
+regard to the quantity of proteid that should be taken. But experience
+led me to believe that it was wrong. In recent years my diet has
+consisted of the following quantities per annum:--
+
+ Three to four bushels of wheat.
+ Seventy pounds of oats.
+ One bushel of nuts (measured in the shells).
+
+And with these foods rich in proteid, I have taken plenty of raw
+vegetables and fruit, and three to four gallons of olive oil.
+
+I do not mention this as an ideal, in order to suggest another and
+better standard than that of "M.D." I do not think any such thing as a
+standard really exists or can exist. But I mention it to show how far
+I have travelled away from where I was.
+
+I take it that all food reformers will agree that the main reason for
+food reform is to make the body a more harmonious instrument for the
+true life of man, and that carries with it the belief that there is
+some correspondence, if we cannot yet see absolute unity, between the
+physical and the spiritual. Now the law of life, according to Christ,
+is one of continual progress towards perfection and I do not see how
+this will harmonise with the teaching of a fixed law for the body. All
+my experience and observation point to a progressive law for the body,
+and I do not know of a single fact contrary to it.
+
+My first point, then, is that there is no such thing as a standard of
+proteid needed by the body. All that can be said is this, that if you
+take a man who has been fed on a certain quantity for such and such a
+time and then feed him on a certain other quantity, alterations in
+the physical condition will appear. But who can say whether these
+changes are attributable merely to a deficiency or to a previous
+excess? If "M.D." and his patients take excessive food they naturally
+get trouble from stored poisons when they reduce the quantity. But why
+put all the trouble down to present deficiency instead of to previous
+excess? To this I can find no satisfactory answer.
+
+If we have got our bodies into so hopeless a condition that we cannot
+use our God-given instincts, tastes and feelings in the first place,
+the wisdom of troubling much about the continuance of bodily life
+would be doubtful; and, in the second place, one would need most
+overwhelming signs of knowledge to substitute for them. But where are
+they? There is no agreement between those who have been taught
+physiology. On the one hand, "M.D." gives a proteid standard, now
+impossible to myself, and I believe to many others, for it would
+involve eating a nauseating quantity; and, on the other hand, another
+doctor, presumably acquainted with the same physiology, tells me I
+cannot eat too little, so long as I do not persistently violate true
+hunger and taste. Then another doctor gives quite a different
+standard, and a much lower one. If we discard our natural guides,
+which of the claimants to knowledge is to be followed, and is there
+any knowledge at all such as is claimed?
+
+Imagine what a mockery it would have been to give such a standard as
+that of "M.D." to the agricultural labourer about the middle of last
+century, a typical one with a large family, and one who worked as men
+do not work to-day, and had to rear his family on a few shillings a
+week. How could such a one have provided more than a fraction of what
+"M.D." says is necessary, either for himself or his children?
+
+The broad fact is, that all the hardest work of the world has always
+been done by those who get the least food. As one who has had some
+experience of labour, I doubt if the workers could have done so much
+if it had not been for a spare diet. Certain it is, that since they
+have more to eat, they are much less inclined to work.
+
+My contention, then, is that there is no fixed standard of proteid
+needed by the body, but that the quantity depends on the development
+that is in progress and is only discoverable by the natural guides of
+appetite and taste, ruled by reason and love of others. Moreover, I
+contend that even if there were such a standard as "M.D." says
+physiology has found, it obviously is not known.
+
+I cannot help recognising in "M.D." one whom I gratefully love and
+respect. He helped me on the road, and now that I differ from him I do
+not forget it, and I ask his forgiveness if I seem to be arrogant. He
+thinks I cannot see what he sees because I am underfed, and I think he
+cannot see what I see because he is overfed. In a sense we are both
+right, and we form a beautiful illustration of the different states of
+mind that belong to different physical conditions. I urge the laymen
+like myself not to be afraid of that musty old ill-shaped monster
+called Science[7] when he is up against the eternal truths that belong
+to every simple untutored man. Shun the monster as you would a priest,
+to whom he has a great likeness, and unite with me in a long strong
+pull to get "M.D." out of the rut in which the monster holds him, so
+that we may have him with us on the road, for he carries much treasure
+and we cannot do without him.
+
+A.A. VOYSEY.
+
+[7] I do not wish to be misunderstood. No sane man despises real
+science, but when the mixture of science and ignorance, which usually
+stalks about in the name of science, wants to usurp our heaven-born
+instincts we cannot but notice his ugly and monstrous shape. It is the
+function of science, or a true knowledge of details, to fill in the
+mosaic of the temple of wisdom, but the mosaic can never be the
+structure itself and is only useful and good when it is subservient to
+that structure and harmonious with it.
+
+
+
+
+CAMPING OUT.
+
+FOOD QUESTIONS.
+
+
+"We have to consider," I said, "the question of what food to take and
+how to cook it."
+
+"Camping out," said Sylvia, "ought to be a complete holiday from the
+food bother. Why not live on unfired food, such as tinned tongue,
+sardines and bottled shrimps?"
+
+Thereupon Felix laughed a great laugh, and said: "Just try and do a
+thousand miles on sardines."
+
+Felix is Sylvia's brother, who has spent some twenty years in America,
+travelling for weeks through country that contained no people, and
+spending nearly two years in a single journey to Dawson City and home
+again. He plainly knows far more about bed-rock camping than anyone
+else in the family and we allowed him to take the floor for a time.
+
+"The first thing is bread." said Felix, "because you can't do without
+bread. You must take some yeast or else some baking-powder with you to
+make it rise, or you must bake it very quickly so that the steam
+aerates it. You might take a Dutch oven with you, but it's nothing
+like the Dutch oven that you know in this country. It is an iron pot
+on three legs, with an iron lid. You stand it in the fire and cover
+the lid with hot brands and you can cook anything inside it--ducks and
+chunks of venison, and bread of course."
+
+"But Mr Freeman has barred the oven," said Sylvia, "and if we are not
+going a thousand miles from home perhaps we can do without it."
+
+"As you like," answered Felix. "I only mention it so that you can get
+hold of the general principle. You can make very good bread in a
+frying-pan. You must mix the dough up stiff so that when the pan is
+nearly upright it won't tumble out. You fix the pan up with a prop
+behind it so that the dough faces the fire, quite close, and you draw
+some more fire behind it so that the back is warmed as well. When it
+burns a good crust on both sides it is done."
+
+"What are flap-jacks," I asked.
+
+"Just pan-cakes made without eggs or milk," said Felix. "You mix a
+quart of flour with a tablespoonful of baking-powder and put in water
+till it is just so thin that when you take up a spoonful and let it
+drop back you can see the shape of it for a few seconds before it
+melts into the rest. You fry the batter in bacon fat or butter just
+like pan-cakes, and the cakes are very good."
+
+[Illustration: _A Summer Idyll_]
+
+"That's a good tip for us," I said, "and another good thing to take is
+cuddy biscuits, a kind of captain's biscuit. Soak them a few minutes
+in water or milk and fry them. They're nice with tomatoes or anything,
+or by themselves."
+
+"Mebbe," said Felix, and his tone said, "Mebbe not." "I'm only
+discussing general principles, and you've got to work your own way out
+in the light of them. I've known an outfit come away without a
+frying-pan. How do you make bread then?"
+
+We had to give it up, and Felix went on: "Open your flour sack, turn
+down the edge like it is in a baker's shop, make a little hole in the
+flour and pour in water to make a pond. Mix in what flour you want to
+use and get your dough into the shape of a snake, wind it round a
+stick and cook it like that. You've got your bread then like a French
+roll, and very good it is."
+
+We all liked the idea of making bread every day and eating it hot.
+Here was something to be had in camp that you could not get at home.
+And we liked the idea of learning our cooking by means of first
+principles. Whether we liked it or not, Felix liked talking about it,
+and he began to grow anecdotal.
+
+"Once," he said, "I met a whole lot of men, ten of them I should
+think, camped on a cold frosty night with nothing to eat. They were
+trying to do a journey of thirty miles on rough prairie and their
+horses were tired and they could not get on. They had brought their
+lunch and eaten it long ago, and they told me they were starving. They
+had nothing to eat, nothing to do any cooking with and no wood to make
+a fire with. I never saw such hungry people. They were new settlers
+just out from England and it was up to me to do something for them.
+
+"'What have you got in that great waggon?' I asked. They told me they
+had some sacks of flour and two frozen quarters of beef, but there was
+nothing to cook it in and no wood to make a fire.
+
+"There was any amount of cow-dung on the prairie, and it was dry as
+chips. I set them collecting that and soon enough had a fire. I filled
+a bucket with water and put it on to boil. I chopped off some meat and
+put it in. Then I made some dumplings and put them in. You just put
+them into boiling water, you know, and then they cook at once on the
+outside and don't come to pieces. If they boil too much they get
+pappy, and if not done through they're not good. Most dumplings you
+eat in England are not done, but mine were just right and those ten
+hungry men had just as good a supper as anyone could wish for."
+
+"Tell us about the coffee you used to make," said Sylvia. "What
+horrible stuff it must have been."
+
+"The very best coffee ever I drank," said Felix.
+
+"We used to make it in a pot that was nearly a yard high. We never
+turned out the grounds, but let them settle and put in a little more
+every time we made coffee, till the pot was so full that it wouldn't
+hold any more water."
+
+"I don't see anything against it," I said, when Sylvia and Gertrude
+were both expressing their horror. "There is no tannin or other bad
+principle in coffee and you never get anything worse out of it than
+you do at the first soaking."
+
+"The fellows that work the logs on the river have their own kind of
+coffee that they call drip coffee," said Felix. "They have a tall pot
+like ours was and they tie the coffee in a sack above the water, so
+that the water never touches it, but the steam goes up and fetches it
+out in drops. They don't change the sack every time, but keep adding
+coffee till it won't hold any more."
+
+"The moral of which is?" said Basil, who had for some time been
+growing impatient.
+
+"That there are plenty of ways of cooking an egg besides frying it,"
+said Felix, "and that a bit of common-sense is about the best article
+you can take with you out camping. Take your food as raw as you can
+get it and know how to cook it. Also know a good herb when you see it,
+and never overlook a chance of getting a meal from the country that
+will save your stores."
+
+C.R. FREEMAN.
+
+_Food reformers will have their own opinion about a diet of shrimps,
+sardines, tinned tongue and stale coffee when camping out: the most
+important part of the outfit is doubtless an adequate supply of
+common-sense._--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+SEASICKNESS: SOME REMEDIES.
+
+_In the April and May numbers of the present year we published an
+article by Mr Hereward Carrington entitled "Seasickness: How Caused,
+How Cured." The following supplementary suggestions by the same
+well-known writer will be useful to many readers._--[EDS.]
+
+
+A very good plan, when you think of undertaking a voyage, is to begin
+to prepare for it several days in advance. For three or four days,
+before embarking, eat only very simple and somewhat laxative
+foods--such as fruits--so as to open the bowels well and tone up the
+system. This simple diet should be followed for the first two or three
+days aboard--of course not so rigidly, but taking care not to indulge
+in many heavy, greasy dishes. Unfortunately, the food on board is
+usually very rich and plentiful, and tempts one to eat. If one suffers
+from seasickness, there is not this same temptation, to be sure; but
+the malady may certainly be warded off, in the majority of cases, if
+only reasonable care be taken of the diet before and during the
+voyage, and if instructions herein laid down be followed.
+
+As before stated, drugs are as a rule useless for the cure of
+seasickness; but on occasion a "seasick cure" of some kind may prove
+effective. The harm which results from the drug may perhaps be more
+than counterbalanced by the benefits which the system derives from the
+cessation of seasickness. A preparation of this kind which is very
+highly recommended by many travellers is known as "Antimermal," and
+though none of these remedies are to be recommended with assurance,
+this one--and perhaps one or two others--might at least be tried, in
+cases of dire necessity, when seasickness has already supervened.
+
+It is hardly necessary to say that the patient should remain in the
+open air continuously, until all symptoms of seasickness have paused.
+_Live_ in your deck chair until you feel quite well and able to get
+up and walk round. Do not attempt to go downstairs into the
+dining-saloon to meals, if you feel in the slightest "squirmish."
+Rather have some hot soup or broth of some kind sent up to you, and
+drink it sitting in your chair. Do not be afraid to drink water at all
+times, even if you feel ill--as the water is easily returned, and it
+is less strain on the stomach to be able to bring up something than to
+find nothing in the stomach when an effort is made to eject what is
+not there. Water will serve to allay this strain, and thus serve a
+useful purpose.
+
+In very severe cases of seasickness, the stomach of the patient should
+be emptied and washed out at once. This is usually an easy matter.
+Have the patient drink one or two glasses of water, warm or cold, with
+a little salt or bi-carbonate of soda added--say a teaspoonful to a
+pint of water. This will have the desired result! In extreme cases of
+seasickness, dry cold, such as ice-bags, placed behind and about the
+ears, will sooth the patient, and help to allay his suffering. Cold
+cloths to the forehead will also prove helpful. Full baths had best be
+omitted, until the attack has worn off, as they are injudicious on
+account of the reactions they induce.
+
+In prolonged cases of seasickness, there is often a craving for acids
+and fruit juices. The continued absence or diminution of the acid
+contents of the stomach, and the privation from normal food, accounts
+in part for this, and it is highly proper to satisfy such a
+craving--providing due care is taken not to add to the stomach's
+distress by taking too much juice, or the juice of unripe fruit, or by
+swallowing the fibre of the fruit, which is allowable only when
+recovery is complete.
+
+HEREWARD CARRINGTON.
+
+
+
+
+IMPORTANT.
+
+
+If readers who possess copies of the first number of _The Healthy
+Life_ (August 1911) will send them to the Editors, they will receive,
+in exchange, booklets to the value of threepence for each copy.
+
+
+
+
+A SYMPOSIUM ON UNFIRED FOOD.
+
+
+_In the November number we published a letter from a reader containing
+the excellent suggestion that readers who had experimented to any fair
+extent with unfired diet should be invited to contribute to a
+conference on the subject in _THE HEALTHY LIFE_, and that the
+symposium should be gathered round the following points_:--
+
+(1) The effect of the diet in curing chronic disease.
+
+(2) Its effect on children so brought up--_e.g._ do they get the
+so-called "inevitable" diseases of chicken-pox, measles, etc., and
+_especially_ have they good (_i.e._ perfect) teeth?
+
+(3) The effect of the diet in childbirth.
+
+(4) The cost of maintaining a household in this way, as compared with
+the cost under ordinary conditions.
+
+(5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional
+dietary (often found amongst food reformers)?
+
+(6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?
+
+_Two letters were published in the January number. Two more in
+February. Others will appear in future issues. We are anxious to
+receive a large number of personal experiences, but they must be
+brief, and classified under the above heads as far as possible._--[EDS.]
+
+
+ ST ALBANS.
+
+ In response to your invitation I am sending you my experience with
+ vegetarian dietary. Although, as you will see, this has not been
+ altogether "unfired," I think it should be of interest to many.
+
+ (1) I became a vegetarian at the time of my marriage, nearly three
+ years ago, my husband being already a vegetarian of eleven years. I
+ considered this a good opportunity to commence. Previous to this I
+ had for some time suffered from indigestion, which continued for a
+ few months after marriage. I attribute the cure to the change of
+ diet, and drinking hot water after meals.
+
+ (2) We have one child eighteen months old, totally breast fed for
+ twelve months, and another four months: on breast and Ixion Food
+ and some fruit juice.
+
+ She has never had any disease whatever, and so far her teeth are
+ perfect and she has cut them quite easily. She is a bonny, sturdy
+ little girl, and very intelligent.
+
+ (3) With regard to childbirth, I previously followed the advice of
+ Dr Alice Stockholme in "Tokology," avoiding flesh meats and
+ bone-making food and adopting a diet of fruit (chiefly lemons) and
+ rice, brown bread and nut butter, wearing no corsets and taking
+ frequent baths. The effect during pregnancy was highly
+ satisfactory. I enjoyed perfect health the whole time, free from
+ the usual discomforts, and at childbirth I received similar
+ results: a speedy and safe delivery. Indeed, since marriage, my
+ husband, baby and myself, have been singularly free from even
+ minor complaints.
+
+ (4) As we do not have the specially prepared, expensive vegetarian
+ foods (supposed to substitute meat), but mainly the simple foods, I
+ consider the diet less costly than the meat diet.
+
+ (5) We are honestly quite free from the craving for meat or meat
+ foods.
+
+ (6) In the summer-time we live principally on salads, cheese,
+ rissoles, etc., made from beans, peas, lentils, etc., fresh fruits,
+ brown bread and nut butter. In the very cold weather we seem to
+ need rather warmer stuffs, such as porridge (carefully cooked) and
+ cooked vegetables, etc.
+
+ D. GODMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BRIGHTON.
+
+ I have read with the greatest interest the correspondence in _The
+ Healthy Life_ on the unfired diet. As the majority of your
+ correspondents have not been living _exclusively_ on unfired food,
+ or have only done so for short periods, may I suggest that some of
+ your correspondents or contributors live on an _entirely_ unfired
+ diet, _excluding dairy produce_, for a period of six or twelve
+ months and then relate their experiences. In this way some valuable
+ evidence would be obtained. At any rate I am prepared to do this
+ myself.
+
+ With reference to living on the unfired diet on 4d. a day, I have
+ often had two unfired meals for less than 4d., and two meals a day
+ are sufficient for anyone. Of course to do this one has to buy the
+ food which is in season and therefore cheap. Dried fruit and nuts,
+ followed by a cress salad with oil and lemon dressing, does not
+ cost more than 2d. An unfired rissole made from grated carrot and
+ flaked peanuts cost at most a penny, and if followed by dates or
+ figs would be a sufficient meal, and 2d. would cover the cost.
+
+ In conclusion, I have no difficulty in producing a "two course"
+ unfired meal for 2d.--but perhaps I should have left the subject of
+ cost for Dr Bell to deal with. Yours faithfully,
+
+ ALFRED LE HURAY.
+
+
+
+
+MORE ABOUT TWO MEALS A DAY.
+
+
+With reference to my article, "Two Meals a Day," which appeared in the
+May issue of _The Healthy Life_, several correspondents have asked me
+to give more particulars about my life and diet. I do so gladly; but I
+must be brief, as the demand upon space in this magazine is now very
+great.
+
+Resolved into a single sentence, what all my correspondents wish to
+know is this: Is a two-meal dietary best for all?
+
+To this question, however, a definite answer cannot be given, for the
+simple reason that scientific experimentation with respect to food
+quantities and times of meals, etc., has gone such a little way, so
+that it would be presumptuous to set a limit in regard to meals and
+food reduction. To my mind, apart from the question of the quantity of
+food to be taken, there is a great and important field of inquiry open
+with respect to the effect of rest upon the stomach and the
+intestines, upon the digestive and assimilative powers of the body.
+
+Now the whole purpose of my article was to show that a reduction of
+one's dietary was a matter of training, of gradual adaptation, but
+also--and this is the important fact-of gradual strengthening. My
+theory is that the two-meal plan is possible owing to the immense
+economy in digestive energy that is effected through giving the
+stomach adequate rest, and also through keeping the blood stream pure
+and unclogged, almost absolutely free from surfeit matter. A rested
+stomach will get more nutriment out of a small amount of food-stuff
+than an overworked stomach will get out of a much larger quantity. But
+experimentation which is sudden and covers a few weeks only, is worse
+than useless, as it tends to disprove the very principles that a saner
+method of experimentation would probably establish. And if I can
+impress this fact upon the reader I shall have performed a good
+service.
+
+Carefully undertaken, and properly graduated, I believe there are few
+people in these days who would not greatly benefit by a reduction in
+the number of meals and in the quantity of food they take. By means of
+a healthy and cheerful habit of introspection--not morbid and
+feverish--I am firmly convinced that by cutting down their meals most
+people would not only greatly improve their health, but their mental
+and spiritual condition as well, and also greatly increase their
+capacity for work ... And if in this way we can effect such an
+improvement in our life and condition it does not really matter
+whether we get to the two or even one meal basis or not.
+
+As to myself, my work is chiefly literary and my life moderately
+sedentary. But the fact is that I now have two moderate meals a day
+whereas I used to have four pretty good ones. But I have many friends
+whose work is mechanical, and demands much muscular energy, who are
+two-mealists. One lady I know, who is one of the healthiest, strongest
+and best physically developed persons I have ever met, is a
+two-mealist, and not only does she work at a mechanical occupation for
+ten hours a day, but on several evenings each week conducts a ladies
+gymnastics class as well. But in her case, as in mine, the two meal
+was an ideal that was gradually and slowly attained, and not a sudden
+reform. Indeed, the main thing to remember is that it is all a matter
+of training, it being quite impossible to say where the limit is. For
+of one thing I am quite sure--viz. that most people, were they to
+adopt a slow process of food and meals reduction, on the lines I
+suggested in my article, would be astonished at the result. The number
+of people one meets, chiefly among those whose life is more or less
+sedentary, who say they can't work as they should, are subject to
+pains and heaviness in the head, constipation and indigestion, is
+simply appalling; and on questioning such people I come to the
+conclusion that in the majority of cases it is because they eat too
+much or too often.
+
+My meals are very simple, and the simpler they are the better I like
+them. I like a cold lunch about noon, and a hot meal about six. I have
+tried a wholly uncooked diet, but as yet my body does not seem ready
+for it: perhaps it will be after a little while. The first meal
+usually consists of wholemeal bread and fruit, green or vegetable
+salads, just according to my needs at the time. In winter I take a
+more liberal supply of dried fruits and nuts. Pulses I eschew
+altogether. My second meal consists of a substantial entree with one
+or two conservatively cooked vegetables--occasionally I have a soup
+and a sweet in addition. But of course it is for everyone to find out
+his or her own ideal diet; and let me say that it is worth while to do
+so, even though it involves much confusion and perplexity during the
+period of experimentation.
+
+WILFRED WELLOCK.
+
+
+
+
+A BALLADE OF SKYFARING.
+
+
+ Ye whom bonds of the city chain,
+ Yet whose heart must with Nature's be;
+ Ye who, bound to a bed of pain,
+ Dream there of torrent and tower and tree,
+ Here behold them--the magic key,
+ Turned by a thought in yon gates of blue,
+ Even now has revealed to me
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+ Why of the bondage of earth complain?
+ Wide as heaven is our liberty!
+ Where are the streets and their smoke and stain
+ When to the land of the lark we flee?
+ Where is the sight that we may not see,
+ Cloudland's citadel passing through?
+ Switzerland beckons with Sicily,
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+ Here, 'twixt walls with the marble's vein,
+ Oared on a river of gold are we;
+ There we watch, on a sapphire main,
+ White fleets voyage to victory.
+ Day unto day flashes grief or glee;
+ Night to night utters speech anew,
+ Figuring forest and lane and lea--
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+ ENVOY
+
+ Prince whose course through the world is free,
+ Fare you better than dreamers do?
+ Here are the mountains and here the sea--
+ Alps and Mediterranean too.
+
+S. GERTRUDE FORD.
+
+From _Lyric Leaves_, by S. Gertrude Ford. Cloth, 2s. 6d. net; 2s. 8d.
+post free from _The Healthy Life_, 3 Amen Corner, E.C. This charmingly
+bound book makes an excellent holiday companion, for it contains many
+beautiful lyrics, all characterised by serious thought, generous human
+sympathies and a delicate imaginative quality.
+
+
+
+
+A REMEDY FOR LONGEVITY.
+
+
+Once upon a time there was a little boy whose parents took things very
+seriously. They answered all his questions with painstaking precision.
+At a comparatively early age he could prove that fairies were
+non-existent. At the same time his toys were marvels of mechanical
+perfection.
+
+At the age of seven he was sent to a very efficient school, where,
+being naturally a bright boy, he gained high marks every term and
+passed all the examinations, for he had a wonderful and well-trained
+faculty for remembering exactly what his teachers had told him.
+
+When he left school he entered a London merchant's office, where his
+knowledge of arithmetic was of the greatest assistance in bringing him
+to the front. Moreover, he could argue very tellingly with all the
+clerks and warehousemen, and always knew what the morning papers were
+saving about health, neck-ties or religion.
+
+In course of time he grew a moustache, joined the Territorials, was
+made a partner in the firm, married a well-educated young lady and
+became a strong supporter of the local Liberal Club, where his
+opinions were so well known that it was unnecessary for anyone
+seriously to combat them. He was never known to vote for the
+Conservative candidate or to lose his head. His concluding speech in
+the historic debate on The National Health Insurance Act will always
+be remembered, by those who heard it, for its earnest defence of the
+medical profession. In fact, the Mayor, who was in the chair, and was
+a doctor himself, warmly congratulated the speaker, who was evidently
+very pleased.
+
+Ten years later he became a Town Councillor, opened several Institutes
+for the Care of the Poor, and sent his second son to join the eldest
+at the same kind of school at which he (the father) had been so well
+trained. About the same date he bought a new edition of the
+Encyclopaedia Britannica and carefully compiled a list of facts and
+figures showing that idealists and all new-fangled ideas were the
+greatest danger to the increasing trade and expansion of the Empire.
+
+At the age of fifty he took a house at Surbiton and was continually
+congratulated on his hale and hearty appearance. His opinions were
+known and respected by all who met him. His sons were models of what
+the children of such a father should be, and they supported him in
+every argument.
+
+At the age of fifty-two he retired from business. A month later he had
+an idea; and it so interfered with all his opinions, and so affected
+his general health, that he died.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+A SIGNIFICANT CASE--II.
+
+
+He stopped smoking tobacco on the second day, and does not mean to
+resume its use. Of course he had no alcohol in any form during the
+fast, but he never has taken much alcohol, although he was not a
+pledged abstainer. The temperature was taken many times and seems to
+have been almost always subnormal, about 97 degrees Fahr., but this is
+not so unusual a condition as to call for comment. The chief cause of
+a subnormal temperature, in my opinion, is blocking of the body with
+too much food. No doubt in prolonged fasting the temperature may fall
+also; but sometimes a fast will be the cause of raising a subnormal
+bodily temperature, as happened in a case of mine in which on the
+twenty-eighth day of the fast there was a large elimination of urates
+by the kidneys and a rise of temperature from 96 degrees to 98.4
+degrees. Subnormal bodily temperature has not received the attention
+which it deserves. It is usually one of the forerunners, or prodromata
+as they are called, of the onset of incurable diseases like cancer,
+Bright's disease or apoplexy. The commonly accepted view that the heat
+of the body depends upon the food, and that people eat blubber in the
+Arctic and Antarctic regions to keep the bodily heat up, is one of the
+chief causes for neglect of the study of subnormal temperature. And it
+is quite surprising that physiologists have not thought it necessary
+to explain why nature has provided sugar and palm oil and cocoa-nut
+oil and ground-nut oil in the tropical regions, as well as abundance
+of olive oil in the warm temperate regions of the earth if these foods
+keep the bodily heat up. They ought to have been more abundantly
+supplied in the Arctic and Antarctic regions if the accepted view is
+correct. Besides, if we must eat blubber to keep bodily heat up in the
+Arctic regions when the outside temperature is 50 or 100 or more
+degrees lower than that of the body, what ought we to eat in the
+tropics to keep bodily heat down when the outside temperature is 50 or
+even 80 degrees above that of the body? Physiologists have not
+explained this, although assuredly an explanation is wanted. But the
+true explanation, the correct explanation, would have demolished the
+doctrine that bodily heat is due to the food, and so it has not been
+given. It is too simple to imagine that the bodily heat is, like the
+body itself and all its functions, the effect of the life-force that
+inhabits the body and builds up the body so that the body shall be a
+fit dwelling-place for itself--this explanation is too simple and too
+idealistic for modern science, which is less and less disposed, we are
+told, to invoke the aid of a force of life to account for vital
+phenomena, although it assumes an attracting force to account for
+gravitating phenomena, and an electric and chemic force to account for
+electric and chemic phenomena. Modern science (and ancient science,
+too, apparently) which sees well enough that an idealistic or a
+materialistic explanation would equally account for the nexus of the
+phenomena of the universe, deliberately and almost invariably prefers
+the materialistic explanation. She is anxious that we should be kept
+free of superstition. But the superstition that forces are the effects
+of things does not seem to distress her at all. And so we are told
+that gravitation is a property of matter, and are forbidden to think
+that perhaps gravitation, a force, procreates matter, a thing, in
+order that the effects of the fore may be perceived by dull sense. We
+are told that the function of the liver and the brain depends on the
+structure of the liver and the brain respectively and we are not
+allowed to think that perhaps the force of animal life, feeling the
+need of an instrument to secrete bile, on the one hand, and to secrete
+cerebral lymph to act as a vehicle for the conveyance of thought and
+emotion and higher things, on the other, introduces the liver with its
+elaborate structure and the brain with its still more complicated
+structure, in order that both the one function and the other may be
+well performed. And so, although all forms of kinetic energy (and
+among them zoo-dynamic, or the force of animal life) manifest warmth
+and luminosity as qualities, science attributes animal heat to chemic
+force and refuses to consider that perhaps zoo-dynamic uses
+chemico-dynamic for its own purposes, even if these purposes are
+unconscious, because the higher force always dominates the lower.
+Properly speaking, science is out of her sphere, though she does not
+seem to know it, in making these suggestions. When she keeps herself
+to the investigation of facts, their exposition, their sequence and
+their laws, in her painstaking and accurate manner, we accept her
+revelations thankfully, and beg her to allow us to make our own
+philosophic and other explanations in attempting to account for the
+existence, sequences and relations of the facts of life.
+
+After his return home, patient continued to gain weight, as might have
+been expected. On the seventeenth day after ending the fast he
+weighed 140 lbs. and on the nineteenth day 144 lbs. On that day he
+received from a hospital a report that the reaction of the
+physiologico-pathological test was negative. This has naturally had a
+great effect on the patient; and it is worthy of very careful
+consideration. Of course one negative result may not be conclusive
+although it was positive before the fast. But if the result should be
+repeated, and especially if it should prove to be permanent, the
+importance of the fact can hardly be exaggerated, since the suggestion
+arises in our minds that perhaps we may be able to cure profound
+blood-poisoning by fasting, neither the usual treatment nor the use of
+Salvarsan enabling the investigator to say that the result of the
+pathological reaction was negative; but this has followed after a
+heroic fast of 56 days. The result if confirmed would not be unique.
+Quite recently I saw a specific ulcer close to the ankle-joint for
+which operation had been recommended. It seemed to me that operation
+would be likely to open the joint, and that therefore it was a risky
+proceeding. But under a restriction of the diet, putting the young man
+on barley-water for a few days and then advising him to eat once a day
+only, the ulcer became very much smaller, and no operation has had to
+be performed. Blood-poisoning of this nature, of course, is not caused
+by improper nutrition, but it may readily be believed to be aggravated
+by the ordinary conventional over-feeding to which, so far as I can
+see, we are all subjecting ourselves, especially as persons who put
+themselves in the way of contracting blood-poisoning do not generally
+belong to the class of those who are attracted by the suggestion that
+it is noble to keep the body under, and that if we do not strive to
+keep the body under, it will be very likely to keep us under. Although
+we shall be liable to be infected, however we live, still we may
+believe that we shall be more likely to be badly infected (if we put
+ourselves in the way of contracting disease) if we have been
+previously subjected to the bad effects of over-feeding. This
+consideration renders a possible cure by fasting, a not impossible
+suggestion. And if, therefore, we have in fasting the suggestion of a
+remedy which offers us the hope of eradicating such a fearful disease
+from the human system, it certainly behoves us to make use of it.
+
+As a rule it seems to me that bad forms of blood-poisoning of this
+nature are incurable. In three or four generations they destroy the
+strain affected by it, do what we will. Meantime it shows all the
+signs and symptoms of a hereditary disease, for the children are born
+suffering, showing a coppery rash, and old before they are young. And
+when they get a little older they have no bridges to their noses,
+their teeth are ill-formed, their vision is imperfect, their
+intellects dull. It seems as if nature could not forgive crimes of
+this nature. She seems to treat them as the unpardonable sin. If we
+find cancer appearing in a family at 55 years of age in 3 or 4
+successive generations, there is no proof of heredity in that. Inquire
+and see if like causes acting on like organisms in 3 or 4 successive
+generations have not produced the disease each time. The children are
+not born cancerous, and our efforts to prevent the disease may
+succeed. But children often _are_ born with specific disease, and
+there is no doubt at all about its being a hereditary disease. Even
+now I should not like to sanction marriage in the case of this man who
+has heroically fasted for 56 days, although he seems for the present
+to have got rid of his disease. But the outlook is hopeful, more
+hopeful than I thought, and in the hope that the suggestion may convey
+a message of hope to those who are willing to do penance for crimes
+against the body, I send out these remarks. The opinion expressed by
+the patient that he was getting rid of the Salvarsan which had been
+injected into his blood to cure his disease is, of course, his own
+only. I offer no opinion upon it. But I think the whole case very
+instructive, and it will be deeply interesting to follow it up with
+special regard to the inquiry whether the pathological test remains
+negative. The reflective reader of these remarks will need no hint
+from me to suggest how a study of questions of this sort raises in our
+minds all sorts of other questions, physical, metaphysical,
+philosophical, social, religious; what are laws of nature, how they
+come to be what they are, whether they can be disregarded without
+paying the penalty, and whether we men are bond or free. Each of us
+will settle these questions for ourselves, for each of us is
+responsible for his own conclusion. But as to the inevitableness with
+which such questions do rise in our minds, I take it there can be no
+difference of opinion.
+
+A. RABAGLIATI.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY HOMEMAKING.
+
+
+_For the benefit of new readers it seems well to explain that this
+series of articles is not intended for the instruction of experienced
+housewives. It was started at the special request of a reader who
+asked for "a little book on housekeeping, for those of us who know
+nothing at all about it; and put in all the little details that are
+presumably regarded as too trivial or too obvious to be mentioned in
+the ordinary books on domestic economy."_
+
+
+XXI. HIRED HELP.
+
+It does not seem proper to conclude the present series of articles
+without touching upon the "servant problem," but I do not pretend to
+be able to solve it. It is a problem usually very difficult of
+solution by the homemaker of small means. If she has but few persons
+to cater for, and is not the mother of a young family, she is often
+very much better off without hired help, except for a periodical
+charwoman. But it is not always indispensable to the woman who has
+other duties besides housekeeping.
+
+I am not here concerned with the housewife who can afford to keep more
+than one efficient servant. Indeed, I am hardly concerned with one who
+can employ a really good "general" at from L20 to L25 per annum. The
+person I am concerned with is the homemaker who can afford at most to
+employ an inexperienced young girl at from L10 to L14 per annum.
+
+I will draw the worst side of the picture first, for although it _is_
+the worst side it is true enough, as so many harassed housewives know.
+
+The young "general" often comes straight from a council school where
+domestic economy had no place in the curriculum, and from a home in
+name only. Such an one is usually slatternly and careless in all her
+ways, has no idea of personal cleanliness, and regards her "mistress"
+as, more or less, her natural enemy! She is "in service" only under
+compulsion, and envies those of her schoolmates whose more fortunate
+circumstances have enabled them to become "young lady" shop
+assistants, typists and even elementary school teachers. If she had
+her choice she would prefer labour in a factory to domestic work; but
+either a factory is not available, or the girl's parents consider
+"service" more "respectable" in spite of its hardships. Its hardships?
+Yes, it _is_ its hardships that account for its peculiar unpopularity.
+For there are hardships connected with domestic service in small
+households that do not apply to other forms of much harder labour.
+
+Everyone who is familiar with the small lower middle-class household
+knows how often the life of the little "general" resembles that of an
+animal rather than a human being. All day long she drudges in a
+muddling, inefficient way, continually scolded for her inefficiency
+yet never really taught how to do anything properly. Her work is never
+done, for she is always at the beck and call of her employers; yet
+she lives apart in social isolation, is referred to contemptuously as
+the "slavey," and even her food is dispensed to her grudgingly and
+minus the special dainties bought for Sundays and holidays. This is
+domestic service at its worst, of course, but the prevalence of such
+"places" in actual fact is undoubtedly at the root of the young girl's
+objection to it. How can she help gleaning the impression that such
+work is "menial," when her employers more or less openly despise her?
+Being human, how can she but envy those of her old friends who have
+their evenings to themselves? What contentment can she find in a life
+of drudgery unenlightened by intelligent interest in learning how to
+do something well? What wonder that all her hopes and ambitions become
+centred in the possession of a "young man," and that reason--stunted
+from its birth for lack of room to grow--being entirely absent from
+her choice, she marries badly and too young, and becomes the mother of
+a numerous progeny as helpless, hopeless, stunted and inefficient as
+herself?
+
+Some conscientious women try to remedy this state of things by
+treating the girls they take into their homes as "one of the family."
+This _may_ answer well sometimes, but it has its drawbacks, both for
+the girl and the "family." Husband and wife, brother and sister,
+inevitably find the constant presence of a stranger with whom they
+have little in common very irksome. While the girl herself is equally
+conscious of restraint when forced to spend her leisure time with her
+employers. She would usually infinitely prefer the solitude of the
+kitchen, if combined with a good fire, a comfortable chair and a story
+book.
+
+Among the girls I have spoken to on the subject I have not found
+"socialist" households popular. One girl I met refused to stay in such
+a place for longer than three days, because she "never had the kitchen
+to herself." Another told me that she found it intensely boring to
+take meals with the family, because she was not interested in the
+things they talked about.
+
+I think that the ultimate solution of the "servant problem" will not
+be that every woman will do all her own housework, but that domestic
+work will become, on the one hand, very much simplified and, on the
+other, will be put on the same footing as teaching, nursing or
+secretarial work. That we are beginning to move in this direction is
+evidenced by the coming into existence of schools of domestic economy,
+to which "ladies" do not disdain to resort for training. This will
+undoubtedly result in domestic labour becoming a much higher-priced
+commodity than it is now, the housewife will have to pay at least as
+much for three hours help per day as she now does for nine hours, but
+the fact that the help will be skilled, combined with the greater
+simplicity of housework, will surely more than compensate for this.
+
+But what is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help,
+to do under present conditions? This we must consider next month.
+
+FLORENCE DANIEL.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading Dr Knaggs deals briefly month by month, and
+according as space permits, with questions of general interest._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on one side only of
+the paper, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as a
+guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a stamped
+addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+BOILS: THEIR CAUSE AND CURE.
+
+ Miss L.C. writes:--I should be deeply indebted to you if you
+ would advise me in the following matter. I have been suffering
+ from a recurrence of boils on different parts of my body during
+ the last six months. I have consulted a local doctor, but he can
+ find no reason for their appearance, but suggested I should try a
+ mixed diet, to include some animal food, rather than adhere to
+ vegetarianism as I have done for some two years past.
+
+ My diet is about as follows:--
+
+ _On rising._--Tumblerful of hot water.
+
+ _Breakfast_ (eight o'clock).--One egg, toasted bread (wholemeal)
+ and butter, with either a little lettuce or marmalade and either
+ weak tea or cocoa.
+
+ _Lunch_ (one o'clock).--Steamed green or root vegetable, with
+ cheese sauce or macaroni cheese or similar savoury, or nuts.
+ Boiled or baked pudding or stewed fruit with custard or blanc
+ mange.
+
+ _Tea_ (four o'clock).--Tea or cocoa, with or without a little
+ bread and butter and cake.
+
+ _Supper_ (7 o'clock).--Vegetable soup, milk pudding and a little
+ cheese, butter and salad and wholemeal bread.
+
+ I am forty-nine years of age, lead a fairly active life,
+ frequently taking walking exercise. I am very tall and weigh
+ twelve stone. Have had no serious illness, but been more or less
+ anaemic all my life.
+
+ If you can tell me whether there is anything wrong in connection
+ with my diet and suggest the cause of, and treatment for, the
+ boils I shall be exceedingly obliged.
+
+In order to help this correspondent to permanently get rid of these
+boils, we must first ascertain what those troublesome manifestations
+are and look to the causes which produce them.
+
+A boil is a small, tense, painful, inflammatory swelling appearing in
+or upon the skin, and is due to the local death or gangrene of a small
+portion of the skin's surface. This eventually comes away in the form
+of a core, and, until this has cleared away, the boil will not heal or
+cease to be painful.
+
+Boils occur chiefly on the neck, arms or buttocks. If very large they
+are known as carbuncles, and if they occur on the fingers or toes they
+are described as whitlows. It is often the friction of a frayed-out
+collar or cuff, of tight waist clothing, or, in the case of whitlows,
+the introduction of some irritant or poison between the nail and the
+skin that determines the precise site at which they will come.
+
+Boils, although rarely dangerous to life, are usually accompanied by
+pain severe out of all proportion to the extent of surface involved.
+This gives rise to much broken rest and loss of vitality, which at
+once ceases when the boil has finished its course. Boils usually occur
+in series or crops.
+
+Now large numbers of people wear collars and cuffs with frayed edges,
+or handle irritants with their fingers, but they do not necessarily
+contract boils or whitlows. Therefore, we see that there must be other
+factors to be taken into consideration to account for their presence.
+The orthodox germ-loving practitioner may tell you that a boil is a
+purely local disorder and that a certain form of microbe, known as the
+_Staphylococcus pyogenes_, is the cause of it. This germ, he asserts,
+lives normally on the surface of the skin and, when this surface
+becomes broken, it enters the part and infects it, thereby starting
+the boil.
+
+If this is true every person who wears old collars or dabbles his
+hands in dirt should without exception contract boils. This is
+obviously untrue.
+
+The factor to be considered, then, is this. What is it that induces
+boils in one person and not in another under identical circumstances?
+The answer is obvious. The boil is not a local disease at all, but is
+a manifestation of some constitutional defect, or of some impurity of
+the blood stream, which enables this microbe to find a congenial
+breeding ground.
+
+The people who suffer most from boils are young or middle-aged adults,
+and we usually find the two extremes among sufferers. There is the
+full-blooded, often overfed, individual and there is the pale,
+debilitated and emaciated person whose constitution is broken down by
+worry, overwork, sexual troubles, unhealthy surroundings or badly
+selected foods.
+
+If we inquire into the constitutional history of these cases we shall
+almost invariably discover that the digestive or assimilative
+processes of the body are not working smoothly. This may be due to the
+worry or overwork, or to unhealthy surroundings which dis-harmonise
+the digestive and nutritive functions, or to nervous exhaustion from
+one cause or another, or it may be due to the wrong diet, which is
+filling the colon (or large bowel) with fermenting poisons.
+
+When the body is clogged in this manner nature often proceeds to get
+rid of the accumulating waste through the skin. By a vigorous effort
+on the part of the life-force the impurity is thrown outwards to the
+surface. Looked at in this light a boil is really a most salutary
+cleansing agent, and the Nature-Cure practitioner, who calls it a
+"Crisis," often does everything in his power to produce boils when
+treating chronic diseases.
+
+The alternative is often some more deeply seated form of elimination,
+resulting in serious organic disease of the organs or tissues. One of
+the first signs of improvement in disorders like diabetes,
+consumption, arthritis, Bright's disease, or even cancer, is the
+appearance of boils, showing that the vitality has improved to an
+extent sufficient to enable the foreign matter to be expelled by means
+of relatively harmless boils. The hydropathic expert also tries to
+induce this condition by means of his mustard and water packs.
+
+If our correspondent wants to rid herself of her boils she must adopt
+all means to improve her vitality and to cleanse her body of its
+impurities. She can do this along many lines. She can take a holiday
+and rest from her work; or by positive thinking she can set to work to
+get rid of her worries. She can learn to laugh as often as possible,
+and to breathe deeply, slowly and fully. If her house is unsanitary
+she should make it sanitary, or move elsewhere.
+
+Then she must restrict her diet and take only those forms of food
+which create a minimum amount of poison in the system. _She must
+cleanse the colon daily_ with warm water enemas, and encourage the
+action of the kidneys in doing their rightful part in the elimination
+of poisons by the drinking of distilled water or a good herbal tea on
+rising, and of clear vegetable broth at night.
+
+Clay packs, applied cold, are the best form of treatment for
+application to the boils themselves. They should never be cut or
+squeezed, as this only intensifies the trouble. Hot applications, as
+poultices, are bad, because they induce the boil to mature
+prematurely, and also are conducive to reinfection of the skin in
+other parts. Drugs or medicines are of very little use in the
+treatment of boils, because they do not go to the root of the
+trouble. The only remedy that I have found of any avail is yeast. In
+former times this was taken in the form of fresh or dried brewers'
+yeast, and it was, if unpleasant, a very effectual remedy. Yeast
+yields a free supply of what is called nuclein and nucleinic acid.
+These, chemically, are identical with the same substances found in the
+human cells. Nuclein is a powerful antiseptic. It has been found that
+the toxins or emanations from diphtheria and other deadly germs are
+precipitated and destroyed by nucleinic acid.
+
+It is for this reason that yeast extracts, such as Marmite, often have
+a beneficial effect in disorders accompanied by the formation of pus
+matter.
+
+Our correspondent's diet should be amended as follows:--
+
+_On rising._--A cupful of unseasoned Marmite.
+
+_Breakfast._--One scrambled or lightly poached egg with stale,
+yeast-made, wholemeal bread and nut butter, with lettuce or other
+salad food. No marmalade; no tea or coffee.
+
+_Lunch._--1 to 2 oz. of grated cheese or flaked pine kernels, finely
+shredded raw cabbage, or grated radishes, or grated raw roots with oil
+and lemon dressing. No cooked savouries, no puddings, nor stewed fruit
+with custard or blanc mange should be taken.
+
+_Tea Meal._--Cupful of Marmite, only.
+
+_Supper._--Clear, unseasoned, vegetable broth, with Veda or wholemeal
+bread, or Granose biscuits, with nut butter and some fresh fruit.
+
+_At bedtime._--A cupful of Marmite.
+
+NOTE.--The unseasoned Marmite should be used, as the ordinary kind is
+rather heavily salted.
+
+
+A BAD CASE OF SELF-POISONING.
+
+ Mrs H.W. writes:--I should be very glad if you would give me
+ enlightenment on one or two points about my diet. I am suffering
+ from a somewhat dilated stomach, also a catarrhal condition of
+ nose, throat and alimentary canal, with constipation and much
+ flatulence in the bowels. My teeth are decaying quickly, my nails
+ have got softer, and I have become anaemic and generally
+ debilitated, being unable to properly assimilate my food. All my
+ joints crack when moved, and the knee joints creak as well. Is
+ this a uric acid condition, or do you think it merely due to a
+ lack of nourishment, causing a lack of synovial fluid? The joints
+ are not swollen and not painful, they merely crack. My whole
+ system seems to be over-acid, and my mouth gets sore and
+ ulcerated. I have got very thin, having lost a stone in twelve
+ months.
+
+ I notice that you always advise for dilated stomach greatly
+ restricting the liquid part of the diet. Will you tell me just
+ how much one _may_ drink in a day, because when I go without
+ drinking my constipation and other troubles are worse and the
+ urine gets thick and muddy.
+
+ You also deprecate milk. This puzzled me until you explained to a
+ correspondent last month in _The Healthy Life_. Will you tell me
+ if the same applies to dried milk--will it tend to increase
+ intestinal trouble? I am anxious to know this because I have been
+ relying somewhat on Emprote and Hygiama lately, for I had got so
+ that I could scarcely digest anything.
+
+ Do you consider it better to use the enema than to take a mild
+ aperient? I do not want to start with the enema again if I can
+ possibly manage to do without, because I found that my bowels
+ depended upon it. And that is why I want to ask if it is
+ absolutely necessary when on an antiseptic diet to entirely avoid
+ fruit. I find it so necessary to keep the bowels working
+ naturally.
+
+ I _do_ want you to answer me these questions, because I have got
+ so worried and fearful (people's theories are so varied) that I
+ scarcely dare eat any food at all. I am at present taking only
+ two meals daily (I like the two-meal plan best): at eleven A.M.
+ and 6 P.M. I take a cup of weak coffee on rising, without milk or
+ sugar--this warm drink seems to start the peristaltic action and
+ I then get bowel action. I think of changing the coffee for Sanum
+ Tonic Tea or Dandelion Coffee.
+
+ At eleven o'clock I have an egg with Winter's "Maltweat" bread
+ and almond butter, and some conservatively cooked vegetable
+ (celery or carrot or spinach).
+
+ At six P.M. I have one or two baked apples, a teaspoonful or two
+ of malted nuts, or Emprote, and more "Maltweat" bread and butter.
+
+ At four P.M. I take a cup of barley water or carrot water, and at
+ bedtime another cup of barley water.
+
+ Do you think that if I went on to a milk diet for a time it would
+ do good?
+
+This correspondent seems to be suffering from auto-toxaemia, or
+self-poisoning in a severe form, and a condition of what is termed
+arterio-sclerosis or premature old age. Associated with it are
+evidently symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, which is affecting her
+joints and teeth. It is not one of ordinary gout or uric acid
+poisoning. The trouble no doubt has been caused by past errors of
+diet, so that the present efforts at reform have come too late to be
+of service to her. Something more than diet is now needed to clear the
+acids and toxins from the system. It is not a simple case of digestive
+catarrh, for the whole body is affected. The present diet will answer
+very well as it stands.
+
+The first thing to do is to obtain a well-fitting dilatation belt.
+This must have leg straps and firmly support the lower half of the
+abdomen. The next thing is to promote skin action so as to
+encourage the clearing out of poisons along this line of elimination.
+Vapour baths, wet-sheet packs or alkaline hot baths can effect this
+purpose. An alkaline hot bath should be of a temperature of 105
+degrees Fahr. or more, and to the bath should be added 1/4 lb. of
+bicarbonate of soda and 1/4 lb. packet of "Robin" starch. She should
+remain as long as possible in this so as to well clear the acids from
+the skin and induce as much skin action or perspiration as possible.
+The _first_ baths must be of very short duration, and she should be
+careful to avoid chill after the bath; it is best to lie prone and
+completely relaxed for half-an-hour at least after the bath. Finally
+massage and Swedish movements directed to the entire back will help to
+disencumber the central nervous system, which is evidently very badly
+depleted of its vital force. It is, of course, a pity the
+correspondent cannot get away to a properly organised Nature-Cure home
+and have the continuous attention and treatment which her condition
+really necessitates.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+ AMANZIMTOTI, NATAL.
+
+ _To the Editors._
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ You will see that your little magazine finds its way even to this
+ out-of-the-way corner of the globe, and you may be sure that it is
+ appreciated. I am specially interested in Dr V. Knaggs'
+ contributions and should like to ask him a few questions. May I
+ say that I have some knowledge of chemistry and that I try and
+ take an interest in the scientific aspects of food reform.
+
+ (1) P. 237. What grounds has Dr Knaggs for speaking so definitely
+ about human magnetism and that of vegetables? How would he
+ recognise or test for either, and where can I get further
+ information (scientific) on the question of food magnetism.
+
+ (2) Same page. Dr Knaggs says salt added to cooking vegetables
+ converts organic salts into inorganic. I cannot follow that. _What_
+ organic salts are so converted? One or two examples would suffice.
+
+ (3) I have been reading Dr Rabagliati's _Conversations with Women
+ Concerning their Health and that of their Children_.[8] In it he
+ says that food is not the source (cause) of body energy, but is
+ used merely to replace waste material. Elsewhere I read that
+ "Professor Atwater's investigations into nutrition have shown in a
+ most convincing manner that the body derives _all_ its energy from
+ the food consumed. This may be regarded as established." Which of
+ these definite and contradictory assertions does Dr Knaggs support,
+ and why? Where can I get information _re_ Professor Atwater's
+ experiments and other recent works on similar subjects?
+
+ To me the questions involved are intensely interesting, hence my
+ queries. I hope they do not read as if I were hypercritical or
+ sceptical.
+
+ With all good wishes for the success of your healthy little
+ magazine. I am, yours, etc.,
+
+ W. BLEWETT.
+
+[8] 5s. net. C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Amen Corner, London.
+
+We handed the above interesting letter to our contributor, Dr H.
+Valentine Knaggs, and append his reply:--
+
+
+HUMAN MAGNETISM.
+
+There is very little information available from ordinary scientific
+sources anent the question of the life-force or of the animal
+magnetism which animates our bodies and is the motive force common to
+all organic structures whether animal or vegetable. We do know that
+fresh fruits and vegetables are strongly magnetic because the
+magnetism which they emit can be gauged by means of delicate
+galvanometers. It has been found that leaves, flowers and seeds are
+positively, and roots negatively, charged. We also know that the same
+conditions are found in the human subject, since Dr Baraduc, who is a
+celebrated French Psycho-Therapeutist, in his book, "The Vibrations of
+Human Vitality," tells us that he has invented a machine called a
+biometer to test these very vibrations. I have had one of these
+machines myself and have experimented with it a great deal. By its aid
+we can make the machine work differently with different persons, and
+by careful tabulation of records Dr Baraduc has been able to elicit
+some very remarkable information about the magnetic currents which are
+constantly flowing into and out of the human body. If our
+correspondent really wants to know more about the wonders of human
+magnetism he should read some of the voluminous literature upon the
+subject published by the Theosophical Society. Just recently also a Dr
+Kilner has invented a form of coloured screen by which he and others
+who have some psychic sight can actually see the magnetic emanations
+which flow through a person placed in a darkened room.
+
+
+SALT-COOKED VEGETABLES.
+
+The one object of the vegetable kingdom is to build up, for the use of
+the animal or organic realm, the constituents found in the mineral or
+inorganic kingdom. These mineral constituents are dissolved, sorted
+out and built up in the right proportions for the use of animals when
+taken as foods. Whenever these foods are not so eaten they are sent
+back again to the earth by the aid of microbes during the process of
+decay, to be again available for plant use. Cooking is a process
+invented by man which is analogous to that of decay, for it dissolves
+and disintegrates the structures which Nature has built up. When man
+eats food that is partially disintegrated he does not obtain from it
+the right sort of nutriment which Nature intended him to have. To
+intensify the wrong-doings of the cook, man further hastens the
+disintegrating process by adding to the things that he cooks a due
+proportion of a common and very stable mineral, called salt. It is
+powerful, because it is not easily disintegrated. The salt greatly
+expedites the process of decay, whether in the natural form of
+fermentation, or whether by the application of heat, as in cooking.
+Salt is used in Nature to promote the flow of those electric and
+magnetic currents which are a manifestation of the universal
+life-force which pervades all things seen and unseen. It is an
+essential constituent of the sea because the ocean is the life-blood
+of the earth. It is an essential constituent of our own blood, because
+it is needed to make the blood stream a good conductor of magnetic
+currents. When you put this salt into water and then proceed to boil
+vegetables in it, it quickly sucks out all the life-force from them,
+and if persisted in reduces them to the state of minerals from which
+they were originally constructed.
+
+
+FOOD AND THE SOURCE OF BODILY ENERGY.
+
+Dr Rabagliati and Professor Atwater are, I believe, both right, but
+the former does not always explain himself clearly to the lay mind.
+The life-force or animal magnetism is the real source of bodily
+energy, and it manifests itself only when it has something that
+resists or regulates its flow.
+
+It does this just as certain forms of wire, or other materials, which
+possess indifferent conducting power, resist the flow of electricity
+through them.
+
+Electricity cannot manifest as light in the usual electric lights used
+in our houses, as heat in the electric culinary appliances or stoves,
+or even as power in the motors which run our trams and trains, unless
+it be given the requisite apparatus to bring about the manifestation
+required.
+
+In exactly the same way life cannot manifest itself as consciousness,
+with its flow of thoughts, emotions and bodily activities, without the
+food which is daily supplied to the body.
+
+It consequently depends considerably upon how we select our daily
+rations as to how this vital force will manifest within us.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+HOLIDAY APHORISMS.
+
+
+A Sun Bath needs no Soap.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Man was made for the Weather, not the Weather for man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A long drink often makes a short walk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may bring a man to the Sea, but you cannot make him think.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A tanned face doesn't make a healthy body.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dew paddling should be done in the dark.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The only things that bathing machines make are cowards.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is better to board yourself than let others be bored by you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"A bore is one who thinks his opinions of greater importance than your
+own."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+People who throw pebbles into the sea shouldn't dive near shore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A toothbrush is what many forget but few should need.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Scotland Yard is not in the Grampians.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cheap food is often dearly bought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lyons have no depots in Skye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Orange-trees never yet sprang from scattered peel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A pear in the hand is worth two in the can.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V SEPTEMBER
+ No. 26. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+Food reformers sometimes forget that "man does not live by bread
+alone," not even when supplemented by an ample supply of fresh air and
+physical exercise.
+
+It has been pointed out by psychologists that the more highly
+organised and highly developed the creature, the less it depends on
+nervous energy obtained via the stomach and the more it depends on
+energy generated by the brain. True, the brain must be healthy for
+this, and one poisoned by impure blood, due to wrong feeding, cannot
+be healthy. But something more than clean blood is necessary. For, as
+change of physical posture is necessary to avoid cramped limbs, so
+periodic reversal of mental attitude (consideration from other than
+the one view-point) is necessary to the brain's health.
+
+Again, change of air is often prescribed when the patient's real need
+is a change of the personalities surrounding him. While for the
+lonely country dweller a bath in the magnetism of a city crowd may be
+a far more efficacious remedy than the medicinal baths prescribed by
+his physician.
+
+For man lives by _every_ word that proceeds out of the mouth of
+God.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+FEAR AND IMAGINATION.
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this article a continuation of the
+series previously entitled "Healthy Brains." The author of "The
+Children All Day Long," is an intimate disciple of one of the greatest
+living psychologists, and she has a message of the first importance to
+all who realise that true health depends as much on poise of mind as
+on physical fitness. We regret that in the previous article,
+"Imagination in Play," the following misprints occurred:--P. 475, line
+4 from top, "movement" should be "moment"; p. 475, line 5 from bottom,
+"admiration" should be "imagination."_--[EDS.]
+
+
+Some people are given to excusing their own uncharitable thoughts by
+saying, "I suppose I ought not to have minded her rudeness; I am
+afraid I am too sensitive." In the same way, people say, "Oh, I
+_couldn't_ sleep in the house alone" (or let a child go on a
+water-picnic, or nurse a case of delirium or do some other thing that
+suggested itself), "I have too much imagination." In both cases the
+claim, though put in deprecating form, is made complacently enough.
+The correlative is: "You are so sensible, dear; I know you won't
+mind," which is a formula under cover of which many kindnesses may be
+shirked and many unpleasant duties passed on.
+
+The sensible, practical people who listen to these sayings sometimes
+attach importance to them, so that a habit has grown up of describing
+morbidly neurotic people as "over-sensitive" and cowardly ones as "too
+quick of imagination." Ultimately, this leads to the thought that both
+sensitiveness and imagination are mental luxuries too costly for
+ordinary folk to grow, and that it is safest to check, crush or uproot
+them when we discover them springing up in others or in ourselves.
+
+Is not this attitude of mind due to a misunderstanding? Imagination is
+an _organ of activity_; it can be kept in the highest possible
+condition of health by having plenty of exercise; it should be working
+continually against resistance. A rabbit's gnawing tooth, if the
+opposing tooth be broken, may grow inwards and cause the creature's
+death, but the same activity of growth, if working under suitable
+conditions, enables him to go on living and gnawing at his food year
+after year without wearing his tools away.
+
+The problem, then, in economy of effort is: How shall we use whatever
+force of sensitiveness and imagination we have, so as to get its
+maximum efficiency of usefulness and its minimum pain and
+inconvenience?
+
+For many ages man has been dominated by fear. His way to freedom, now,
+is to step out through his cobweb chains and go right forward with
+courage and in faith. So we are told with relentless and almost
+tiresome reiteration. It is the fashion, one might almost say, to have
+cast off fear, and the one thing an honest "modern thinker" is afraid
+of is being afraid. (To less honest ones it is the thought of _being
+thought_ afraid that is a very real and present fear.)
+
+But, if this standpoint is right, is not fear at least a vestigial
+organ, a survival of a mental activity which served its purpose in
+times gone by? Is it not even truer to go further still and say, as
+_each particular fear_ serves its purpose it may safely be discarded,
+but that, as far as our present knowledge goes, other grades of
+sensitiveness, finer shades of imagination of the type we have called
+fear, must take its place, to be discarded in their turn for yet other
+apprehensions?
+
+For if we lost the kind of perception that we associate with fear, if
+our imagination closed itself automatically to the suggestion of all
+sorts of ugly possibilities, should we not find ourselves soon in the
+midst of difficulties akin to those of the hero of the German tale of
+the man who felt no pain? We accept the evidence of pain as a guide
+to action; when we have decided on action we proceed to get rid of the
+pain as expeditiously, safely and permanently as we can.
+
+The same thing seems true of fear. Over and over again we laugh at
+ourselves for fearing something that either never happened at all or
+happened in such a way as to be softened out of all likeness to the
+monstrous terror we had created. On the other hand, when misfortune
+falls heavily because of our lack of imagination in not foreseeing
+possible consequences of particular actions or events, we lament and
+complain: "If I could only have guessed! If I had only known!"
+
+Fear pure and simple--the imagination of possible trouble--is a stage
+we can hardly yet afford to do without. But when it has roused our
+attention to a danger, its work is done. Let us practise turning it
+into action; taking due precautions against accident, guarding against
+hurting a neighbour's feelings, watching some possibility of evil
+tendency in ourselves. Then, and not till then, may we let it drop. It
+may pass; it has done its work. It is no longer our responsibility to
+foresee, it is our privilege to lay down the fear and live happily and
+at peace.
+
+Even the dread perceptions of eternal laws come under the same method.
+"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom," the _beginning_:
+the end is faith and love.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round nature |
+ | of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the extension of |
+ | its circulation by tactfully urging their local newsagent to |
+ | have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. An |
+ | attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
+
+_The article (signed "M.D.") with the above title which we published
+in the July number has, as we anticipated, aroused considerable
+discussion. One interesting criticism appeared in the August number.
+We now publish two further contributions, to be followed, in our next
+issue, by two further articles by Dr Rabagliati and Mr Ernest
+Starr._--[EDS.]
+
+
+I
+
+As one who has tried the low proteid diet, and came to grief on it, I
+desire to set my experience against that of Mr Voysey,[9] and to
+assert that, if it is true for him, it certainly is not true for me.
+Mr Voysey indulges in many loose and generalised statements which do
+not help the average man or woman in the least. I imagine it is these
+that "M.D." has in mind when he advises a certain standard of diet,
+below which it is not safe to go. If Mr Voysey can, as Horace Fletcher
+can, exist on a very low proteid diet, that does not prove that all
+men and women can do the same and be healthily active; it only shows
+that he and Fletcher are exceptions to the average person, and that it
+may be dangerous to follow their example. For most men, "M.D.'s"
+proteid standard is not so nauseating as he finds it. Here is a
+specimen dietary for a day, for a man of ten stone, following, as most
+of us do, a sedentary occupation:--
+
+ 3 oz. cheese.
+ 9 oz. bread.
+ 8 oz. vegetables and salad.
+ 8 oz. fruit.
+ 1+1/2 pints milk.
+
+Will any average person say that that quantity, divided into three
+meals, would be nauseating to him? And is that diet so very expensive
+that it would be beyond the means of an agricultural labourer in any
+country? It is certainly no mockery. The cost to such a labourer would
+probably not exceed 3d. or 4d. Of course the diet can be made as
+expensive as one chooses, and widely varied.
+
+[9] See August number.
+
+Who amongst ordinary men and women has a reliable natural taste that
+would be an infallible guide in all matters of food? And what a
+misleading statement that is which asserts "that all the hardest work
+of the world has always been done by those who get the least food."
+Put it to the test on the average person and see where it leads to.
+
+My contention is that the average person, throwing over his or her
+accustomed meat diet, requires some definite guidance as to the
+quantity of proteid, such as Dr Haig's wide experience and much
+patient research have proved needful, or at least advisable, for the
+continuance of a healthy and vigorous life; and I will say that it
+does not help this average person in the least to put before him the
+misty statement that "the quantity depends on the development that is
+in progress, and is only discoverable by the natural guides of
+appetite and taste, ruled by reason and love of others." All very
+noble and very well in another place, but hardly meeting the case of
+the ordinary person who is seeking a healthy diet. Nor can you "make
+the body a more harmonious instrument for the true life of man" by
+habitually underfeeding it. I thought that was a mediaeval notion that
+had been knocked on the head long ago.
+
+Is there any man, lay or scientific, Mr Voysey notwithstanding, who
+can claim to have as wide an experience of diet in its relation to
+health and disease as "M.D.," to say nothing of the trained mind and
+long years of patient thought that have been exerted in dealing with
+the facts of this wide experience. For myself, I have come to see
+that, if "M.D." does not hold in his grasp the absolute truth in the
+matter of diet, he is nearer to it, and is a safer guide, than all
+your low proteid advisers, lay or otherwise, where they come much
+below "M.D.'s" standard.
+
+So, using Mr Voysey's phrases, I would urge laymen like myself to shun
+that weak-kneed manikin, the low proteid diet, and unite with me in a
+long strong pull to get him and others like him out of the rut in
+which that sorry weakling holds him.
+
+HY. BARTHOLOMEW.
+
+
+II
+
+The Editors were quite right in saying that the article under this
+heading in the July issue would arouse discussion. My wife and I,
+having discussed "M.D." and many others with the title, feel
+constrained to put forth a warning against blind faith in anything
+which the faculty have to say on dietetics.
+
+There are of course brilliant exceptions, such as Dr Rabagliati, Dr
+Knaggs, Dr Haig, the late Dr Keith and others, who give chapter and
+verse for every statement made; but when we consider the excellent
+work of laymen such as Albert Broadbent, Joseph Wallace, Horace
+Fletcher, Alice Braithwaite, Eustace Miles, Hereward Carrington, Edgar
+J. Saxon, Bernarr MacFadden, Arnold Eiloart, ordinary folks like
+ourselves may be excused if we venture to give our experience as
+against that of "qualified" men.
+
+With your permission, then, we reply to "M.D.'s" five suggestions in
+the order he gives them:--
+
+1. Food qualities are _not_ of extreme importance.
+
+2. Quantity tables may have been "settled" by physiologists to their
+own satisfaction many years ago; but very good reasons have since been
+given for altering, or even ignoring, them.
+
+3. The particular number of grains of proteid to be consumed per day
+is not of serious moment.
+
+4. That departure from the quantity specified has not led to disaster
+is proved by the fact that the human race still persists, in spite of
+the very varying eating customs found in different nations. The great
+majority being poor or ignorant, or both, know neither "tables" nor
+the need for them.
+
+5. There can be no reply to such a general statement as: "The nature
+of this disaster may appear to be very various, and its real cause is
+thus frequently overlooked."
+
+In such matters an ounce of personal experience is worth a pound of
+cut-and-dried theory. We--my wife and I--have been reared in an
+atmosphere suspicious of doctors, both sets of grandparents having
+relied rather on herbs, water treatment, goodness of heart and faith
+in God; and their children have had too many evidences of medical
+ignorance to accept any dogmas. We are anti-vaccinators, nearly
+vegetarian, and, to come to the point, we have four children who will
+persist in thriving on a basis of always too little rather than too
+much of food. The respective ages are girl 13, boy 10, girl 6, boy 2.
+
+All have been brought up on these lines: never pressed to eat, but
+continually asked to chew thoroughly. Foods "rich in proteid" put
+sparingly before them. Milk has been well watered; and eggs, bacon and
+other tempting and rich foods only on rare occasions given to them.
+
+We would ask readers who can to make the following experiment: Let
+your children have a good drink to start the day, and then run and
+play; don't offer food till asked for. You will almost to a certainty
+find, if you start this plan immediately after weaning, that day by
+day and year after year it is twelve to one o'clock before they
+inquire for "something to eat." We have done this for twelve years,
+with children of entirely different temperament and of both sexes.
+They go to school, poor things! breakfastless. During these twelve
+years light breakfast for father has been on the table--he goes
+without lunch--and not once in fifty do they ask to join him. Nor, if
+invited, will they after three or four years of age.
+
+The have never had a fever which lasted more than a day or two, and
+they are all above average height and weight.
+
+They get fruit in season just as asked for, and as much to drink as
+they like, _but not at meal-times_.
+
+Our experience is over a period of twelve years, and we have come to
+the conclusion that the infectious diseases so prevalent and
+death-dealing amongst children of all classes, rich or poor, are, in
+the main, the result of over-feeding. We find it wise to keep highly
+nutritious foods (like eggs, cheese, meat, etc.) away from
+children--that is, for regular consumption; a little occasionally may
+do no harm.
+
+You will have it borne in on our minds year by year, as your children
+grow up under such a plan, that Dr Rabagliati, Hereward Carrington and
+others are quite right. We do not get our strength, nor heat, from
+food. Let the force of animal life (zoo-dynamic, I believe Dr
+Rabagliati calls it) have free play, and your children can't help
+growing up well and strong.
+
+In to-day's _London Daily Chronicle_ I see a special article by Dr
+Saleeby, under this heading: WORLD'S DOCTORS VERSUS DISEASE. 5000
+MEDICAL MEN MEET TO-DAY. THE TRIUMPHS OF THREE DECADES. We know how
+much this wonderful faculty knew thirty years ago about, _e.g._, fresh
+air for consumptives. There is not a word said in this article (which
+is a sort of programme of the weighty matters for discussion) on the
+relation of food to the body. That question probably 4950 of them
+believe was settled by the eminent physiologists who compiled those
+"food-tables" years ago--and in so doing went far to pave the way for
+the modern frightful increase of cancer, Bright's disease, etc., as
+well as for "scientific" horrors like anti-toxin, tuberculin--not to
+mention compulsory eugenics!
+
+J. METHUEN.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH THROUGH READING.
+
+
+Do many people consider reading from the point of view of health of
+mind and body--of refreshment in times of struggle--of recuperation
+after knock-down blows of sorrow, disappointment or misfortune?
+
+Let us begin by saying that some of the greatest books are not to be
+read by everybody at all seasons. When one's heart or ankles are weak,
+one does not start to climb mountains, or one may end as a corpse or
+a cripple. So with one's soul under shock or stress. Personally, I can
+imagine nothing more cruel than the action of two women, one a
+story-teller of great repute among the "goody," who, to a specially
+stricken and lonely young widow, tendered as "bed-side books," Victor
+Hugo's _Les Miserables_ and Browning's poignant _The Ring and the
+Book_. If they had wished to make her realise to the bitterest depths
+the awfulness of the world wherein she was left alone, and the
+blackest depravity of the human nature around her, they could not have
+done differently. _Les Miserables_ she read till she reached the
+dreadful scene where a vicious cad hurls snowballs at the helpless
+Fantine. Then the strong instinct of self-preservation made her put
+the book aside--not to touch it again for nearly thirty years. With
+_The Ring and the Book_ her mind was too wrung and too weary to
+wrestle--all it could receive was a picture of wronged innocence, and
+especially of the rampant forces of evil with which she was left to
+contend. With the same want of tact and judgment, if with unconscious
+cruelty, the gloomy, fateful _Bride of Lammermoor_ was selected out of
+all Scott's novels for the reading of a very homesick youth, solitary
+in a strange country!
+
+Yet we must always remember that, as in affairs of the body so of the
+spirit, "what is one man's meat may be another man's poison." Some of
+the wisest and most successful nurses or doctors will occasionally
+permit an invalid to indulge in a longed-for diet which would
+certainly never be prescribed. They know that idiosyncrasy follows no
+exactly known rule. So we could tell of one who, amid the dry
+agnosticism of the later half of last century, had felt her faith, not
+indeed extinguished, but obscured and darkened. From the perusal of
+certain writers she had shrunk, perhaps with cowardice. They were put
+on such a pinnacle that she feared she would find no arguments fit to
+oppose to theirs. Weakly, she locked the skeleton cupboard. Then she
+was attacked by a malady which, while leaving her mind free and
+strong, she knew might be very speedily fatal. Straightway she said
+to her husband: "In two or three days I shall probably 'know'--or
+cease from all knowing. There will not be long to wait. Therefore
+bring me three books," which she named, works of authors of extreme
+agnostic views. Rather reluctantly he complied with her wish. She went
+steadily through the joyless pages, turned the last with the
+significant remark: "If this is all they can say, well!--" The
+skeleton cupboard, once opened, was speedily swept out. She quickly
+recovered, but never forgot her experience. Yet it must be remembered
+that this was the patient's own prescription, and was permitted by one
+who thoroughly understood her temperament. Therefore, though one would
+never wish to overrule a strong personal desire, that is quite
+different from offering counsel and furtherance--or proving
+experiments upon oneself.
+
+A celebrated woman writer of the middle of last century was of opinion
+that young people of both sexes should not indulge in reading "minor
+poetry." "Let them keep to the great poets, made of granite," was her
+graphic phrase. A woman of singularly self-controlled nature has
+confessed that the only time in her whole life that she experienced an
+unwholesome moral and emotional disturbance, after reading a book, was
+when, at about twenty-two years of age, she read Emily Bronte's
+_Wuthering Heights_. She dared not finish it: and when, some time
+later, a copy was presented to her, she caused it to be exchanged for
+another book, not wishing it even to be in the house with her. Years
+afterwards, she read it again, quite unmoved. It may be added that her
+first reading was made in the course of a systematic study of English
+literature, which had already led her through the works of Chaucer and
+Fielding. She has herself asked: "Is it possible that the strong and
+unpleasant effect was produced because the book was the production of
+another young woman, perhaps of somewhat 'sympathetic' temperament?"
+
+Taken as a whole, probably most fiction and all highly emotional work
+of any sort should be indulged in sparingly by those in the
+danger-zone of life, or by any under special mental or moral stress.
+History, philosophy (with sustained chains of reasoning) and
+biographies (best, autobiographies) of active and strenuous lives,
+should be resorted to by those temporarily doomed to spells of
+suspense and involuntary inaction. Invalids should be encouraged to
+read Plutarch's _Lives_ rather than the _Memorials_ of other
+sufferers, however saintly!
+
+It may be broadly stated that, during the tragic episodes which seem
+to occur in all lives, the most wholesome reading is to be found in
+the books of the great World-Religions--the Bible, and the teachings
+of Buddha, Confucius and Mahomet. The Bible is of course a library in
+itself, and many of its books are suited to very widely different
+circumstances and temperaments. The Psalms, the Gospels, the Epistle
+of St James, and parts of those great poems known as the "prophetical
+books" and the more personal and less doctrinal portions of Paul's
+epistles are perhaps of widest application. From the words of Buddha,
+Confucius and Mahomet there are many admirable selections--and one
+remembers a wonderful compilation of more than thirty years ago,
+called _The Sacred Anthology_, and wonders if it be out of print. It
+does not follow that these works should not be studied at other times
+than "tragic episodes." If this were more often the case, perhaps
+there would be fewer "tragic episodes"!
+
+Next to these come such wonderful books of spiritual experience as A
+Kempis's _Imitation of Christ_, the _Pilgrim's Progress_, the _Devout
+Life_ of Francis of Sales and others which will occur to the memory.
+
+Allusion to the _Pilgrim's Progress_ brings us to the remark that no
+books are more truly wholesome than some that can be enjoyed by those
+of all ages, and of very varied types of "culture": in which the
+children can delight, and which refresh the aged and weary. Like
+Nature herself, they have hedgerows where the little ones can gather
+flowers, little witting of the farther horizons of earth and sky
+lifted up for the eyes of the elders. Let the children read the
+_Pilgrim's Progress_ simply as "a story," its eternal verities will
+sink into their souls to reappear when they too are in _Vanity Fair_
+or in bitter conflict with _Apollyon_.
+
+For the same reason, the Book of Proverbs should be commended to
+youthful study. Under wise supervision--or rather, in mutual study--it
+becomes at once a series of vivid pictures of primitive Eastern
+life--for all allusions should be explained, where possible,
+pictorially--while at the same time the memory will be insensibly
+stored with shrewd common sense and knowledge of the world, to be
+turned to, and drawn upon, as needed.
+
+And then, while the children revel in the fun and the fancy of Hans
+Andersen's _Fairy Tales_, let the sorrowful or sore or wounded heart
+turn to them for solace, soothing or healing. Hans Andersen enjoys a
+very special "popularity" and yet some, who have learned to love and
+value him, doubt whether justice has yet been done to his work.
+Because it is matchless for the young, it may be easily forgotten that
+it can be so, only by some quality which makes it matchless for all
+others. Perhaps some of his most popular stories are not his most
+wonderful, but have simply caught the popular fancy, because of some
+artist's illustration, or some personal application to the writer's
+own history, as in the case of his _Ugly Duckling_. How many--or
+rather, how few!--can readily recall the pathos and wit of his
+_Portuguese Duck_ or the deep philosophy of his _Girl Who Trod on a
+Loaf_?
+
+It is told of Hans Andersen, a gentle soul in a homely exterior, which
+attracted the snubs and neglect which "patient merit of the unworthy
+takes," on some such occasion was once heard to murmur: "And yet I am
+the greatest man now in the world!" It was very naive of him to say
+so, even in a whisper, probably wrung from him only in self-defence,
+but perhaps he might have thought it, in solemn silence--and--not been
+so very wrong! It may have been part of the very transparency of his
+inspired genius that he could not keep the secret to himself!
+
+There is at least one reader who declares that she finds the seeds of
+all vital philosophy--ancient or modern--in his stories. How much he
+derived from those who went before him, it is not for us to say, but
+this disciple, herself a devoted student and admirer of the world's
+latest teacher, Leo Tolstoy, yet puts Hans Andersen above him, as
+having attained in practically all his work what Tolstoy attained only
+occasionally--_i.e._ Tolstoy's own ideal of what Art should be and do.
+
+In such a paper as this little can be done beyond indicating on the
+broadest lines the kind of reading which tends to preserve or to
+restore mental health. Away with your "problem" novels and "realistic"
+poems stated in the filthy material of moral gutters! Hans Andersen
+will take some birds, some flowers, some toys, and will state the same
+problems, and get the same eternal solutions, without making the
+inquirer run any risk of meanwhile catching moral malaria. Isaiah will
+help us to build "castles" for the human race and for our own future,
+but he will take care that we shall remember that righteousness and
+unceasing vigilance and unflagging repair must go into the laying of
+foundations and the upholding of walls. David, even in his "cursing
+psalms," will exemplify for you the power of hate and vengeance in
+your own heart, and as he holds it up before you, you will see how
+small a thing it is, how mean, how ludicrous!
+
+As a man eats and drinks, so is his body: if he is a gross feeder, his
+body will be gross and sensual; if his food lacks nourishment, he will
+pine and fade. So it is with our minds and our morals. With whatever
+original "spiritual body" we may start, it needs spiritual sustenance,
+spiritual discipline, spiritual sufficiency and spiritual abstinence.
+Too often we ill-use it, as bodies are ill-used, goading its weakness
+with fiery excitement, or gorging its greed with sickly sentiment, or
+emasculating it by empty frivolity.
+
+All who desire spiritual health must find out what books best promote
+it in themselves: and sometimes they are found, like wholesome herbs,
+in very lowly places. One good rule is never to recommend what we have
+not seen proved in ourselves, or on others.
+
+ISABELLA FYVIE MAYO.
+
+
+
+
+THE SWAN-SONG OF SEPTEMBER.
+
+
+ This fine sonnet is from _Lyric Leaves_, poems by S. Gertrude
+ Ford. 2s. 6d. net (postage 2d.). (C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor
+ Street, London, E.C.)
+
+ Sing out thy swan-song with full throat, September,
+ From a full heart, with golden notes and clear!
+ No rose will wreathe thee; yet the harebell's here,
+ And still thy crown of heath the hills remember.
+ Bright burns thy fire, e'en to its latest ember,
+ The sunset fire that lights thee to thy bier,
+ Flaming and failing not, albeit so near
+ Dun-robed October waits, and grey November.
+ And though, at sight of thee, a chill change passes
+ Through wood and wold, on leaves and flowers and grasses,
+ Thy beauty wanes not; thou hast ne'er grown old;
+ Death-crowned as Cleopatra, lovely lying
+ Even to the end; magnificently dying
+ In pomp of purple and in glare of gold.
+
+S. GERTRUDE FORD.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEST FOR BEAUTY.
+
+
+If you have travelled at all frequently on certain of the London
+"tube" railways you may occasionally have noticed, facing you in the
+carriage, a small framed poster which for beauty and imaginative power
+has, I should think, never been surpassed in advertising art. If the
+first sight of it did not make you catch your breath you will not, I
+am afraid, be interested in this article.
+
+The poster represents a rich landscape, in which noble tree-forms show
+sombre against a tumultuous sky--the latter an architectural mass of
+pale cloud, spanned by a vivid rainbow. Across the lower part of the
+picture is a scroll, on which are written, in musical notation, two
+bars from Chopin's Twentieth Prelude. At the top are the words,
+_Studies in Harmony_: it is an advertisement of Somebody & Co.'s
+wall-papers.
+
+In both colour and design this poster is very beautiful. It would be
+scarcely less so without the rainbow; but "the dazzling prism of the
+sky" not only intensifies the subtle harmony of colour throughout the
+picture: it turns the poster into a symbol. And the artist might well
+have stopped there; only, you see, he had an inspiration. When he
+wrote across the picture those eight descending chords from the
+immortal _Largo_ he made of the poster--a poem.
+
+I do not know anything about the artist who conceived this
+advertisement of wall-papers. I do not even know his name. But I
+believe him to be the herald of an invasion.
+
+The invasion of life by beauty.
+
+Do you think it a degradation of art that it should be enlisted by the
+makers of wall-papers? Are there not too many ugly and discordant
+posters? Do you consider trade and manufacture so sordid that they are
+beneath the ministrations of beauty? It doesn't matter a new penny
+whether you answer such questions with a nod or a no: the invasion has
+begun. It is irresistible. Beauty is stooping--stooping to conquer.
+
+Your ardent social reformer is too often obsessed with one idea.
+Across his mental firmament he sees only one blazing word: INJUSTICE.
+And, fine fellow though he often is, he is inclined to be impatient
+with any talk of art or beauty. "How can beauty grow in these vile
+cities?" he cries. "What is the use of your music, your statuary, your
+fine pictures, your poetry, to the starving and the oppressed?" And he
+does not see that his passionate desire for justice is at root the
+quest for beauty, for fullness and harmony of life. His stormy sky
+shows no rainbow: yet it is there. And so is the stately music, the
+transmutation of colour into sound. And if his eyes could be opened to
+one and his ears to the other, there would be more power to his elbow.
+For beauty is inspiration and courage--
+
+ "My heart leaps up when I behold
+ A rainbow in the sky...."
+
+And there is more than that in it. The cultivation of a sense of
+beauty, of harmony, makes reformers less harsh in their judgments,
+broadens their sympathies and helps to save them from becoming mere
+doctrinaires. If you have any love for the beautiful you simply cannot
+be happy about most Utopias, though they be Justice itself in civic
+form; and, when our "scientific" Fabian has demonstrated to you how to
+organise the national life in all its parts into one vast smoothly
+working State mechanism you will shudder, and then laugh. And then,
+without any rudeness, you will say: "Hang mechanism and a minimum
+wage! Live men and women want living crafts, liberty and a maximum
+beauty!"
+
+And really, I am coming to see that there are a great many
+health-culture enthusiasts (not to mention food reformers) who see no
+rainbow in the sky and hear no music in the wind; and even if they
+did, ten to one they would see no connection between the two. I verily
+believe there are some poor souls who have studied food questions so
+closely that they cannot see the sun for proteid nor the sea for
+salts. In all meekness, and knowing the frailty of the human mind (I
+have written dozens of articles on diet!), I would prescribe for them
+a course of artistic wall-paper advertisements, combined with the
+letters of Robert Louis Stevenson. He, poor fellow, had to battle
+against disease all his short life; but he managed to end one of his
+letters something like this (I quote from memory): "_Sursum Corda_!
+Heave ahead! Art and blue heaven! April and God's larks! A stately
+music.... Enter God."
+
+A somewhat ecstatic utterance. A trifle too exclamatory. Perhaps. You
+and I don't end our letters like that. (Or do you?) More likely we say
+something about the weather down here being miserably cold (or damp,
+or dull, or changeable, or hot) and brave out the lie with "yours
+truly." But O for one little spark from the fire that shone in the
+soul of R.L.S. Better to die young with a broken heart, if it were a
+heart as brave and gay as his, than beat Methuselah by means of a
+mincing, calculating, cold-blooded attention to irritating self-made
+little rules.
+
+Oh yes, I know well the value of little rules. And I know also that
+Nature offers us only two alternatives--obedience or death (either
+sudden or slow). But then Nature is something more than Mistress and
+Lawgiver. She is Beauty. And in that aspect, as in all other aspects,
+Nature is unescapable. We turn our backs on her only to find her
+awaiting us at the next turn in the road. Looking at the matter all
+round, I don't think we can come to any other conclusion than that
+Nature (or whatever you like to call It, Her or Him) is aiming at
+beauty all the time. So that we who are literally, if not
+figuratively, the children of Nature, had best do likewise.
+
+Some mystic or other has said that man's search for God is God's
+search for man. If he was right--and I think he was--it follows that
+man's quest for beauty is Beauty invading life; and that the only
+healthy life worth the having is that which begins with "Lift up your
+hearts!" and issues in "a stately music. Enter God."
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+_SEMPER FIDELIS._
+
+
+ Do two things worth doing, every day.
+ Be scrupulously polite and kind, rather than witty or entertaining.
+ Cherish cleanliness, sobriety, frugality and contentment.
+ Cultivate sweetness of disposition and tranquillity of mind.
+ Think before speaking, and so reduce your causes of regret.
+ Seek peace and be peaceable for _lis litem generat_.
+ Begin at home, let home always find you faithfully on duty.
+ Care carefully for those whom Providence has entrusted to your care.
+ And the reward of the faithful will abundantly yours,
+ And your heaven will go with you wherever you go.
+
+"A.R."
+
+
+
+
+MORE HOLIDAY APHORISMS.
+
+
+Two's company, three's fun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Levity is the bane of wit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Braggers mustn't be losers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Never put on to-day what you can't put on to-morrow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's an ill mind that finds no one any good.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's no use crying over spilt milk: you're better without it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Look before you sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Never put an excursion ticket in the mouth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Long hair never made true poets.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Obesity always carries weight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Look after your manners and your friends will look after themselves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cranks of a feather fight together.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All is not toil that blisters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Sea Anglers_:
+
+A live catch is no better than a dead fish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Better a place in the sun than a plaice on a hook.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY HOMEMAKING.
+
+
+XXI. HIRED HELP (_continued_).
+
+What is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help, to do
+under present conditions? Well, meantime, there is only the young
+"general" for her, either the "daily girl" or one who "lives in." Of
+the two I prefer the "daily girl," when she can be obtained. And the
+younger she can be obtained, other things equal, the better. She will
+have fewer bad habits to overcome. Some housewives object to the daily
+girl on the score that she may bring dirt or infection from her home,
+and also because she can seldom arrive early enough to help get
+breakfast. But a little management overnight can reduce the labour of
+breakfast getting to a minimum, and if the "outings" of the girl who
+lives in are as frequent as they ought to be the risk of her carrying
+infection, etc., will always apply.
+
+The "daily girl" has definitely fixed hours of work and the same
+chance of enjoying a measure of home life, of keeping her friends and
+individual interests, as the typist or factory worker whose lot the
+domestic servant so often envies; while her employers are not faced
+with the alternatives of condemning a young fellow-creature to a
+solitary existence or forcing an unreal companionship which is equally
+irksome on both sides. It is true that the wages of the "daily girl"
+do not equal, in actual money, those of the factory worker, neither
+does she obtain the Saturday half-holiday or the whole of Sunday free.
+But to set against this she receives her entire board and, with a
+kindly mistress, is not tied down to staying her full time on days
+when she is "forward" with her work.
+
+The life of the young "daily girl," if her employer is a conscientious
+woman, need not be hard nor unpleasant; very little harder and no more
+unpleasant than the lot of the young "lady" who is paying from L60 to
+L80 per annum to learn cookery, laundry and housework at a school of
+domestic economy. Properly conducted, the relations between employer
+and employee, "mistress" and "servant," are those of mutual aid. Such
+relations _may_ be, and too often _are_, those of an inefficient
+little drudge for a "mistress" almost equally ignorant and
+inefficient. But when the employer is an intelligent woman with a
+sense of justice (I prefer a sense of justice to sentimental theories
+about sisterhood--people do not always treat their sisters justly) the
+weekly money payment and food will be but a small part of the girl's
+wage. In addition she will receive a training that will equip her for
+the "higher" branches of domestic service, or for homemaking on her
+own account. Not every girl has the sense to appreciate this when she
+gets it, nor the intelligence to profit by it; while it is certainly
+rather trying to the employer when the girl is "all agog" to "better
+herself" as soon as she has gained a bare smattering of how to do
+certain things properly. But all this is "the fortune of war." Some
+girls never cease to be grateful to their first teachers and leave
+them reluctantly, while other girls never realise that they have
+anything to be grateful for. When gratitude and affection come they
+are pleasant to receive. But the motive power of the really
+conscientious woman is not the expectation of gratitude or affection.
+
+A word to the unconventional homemaker. The young "general" is a bird
+of passage. Age and experience bring with them the necessity of
+earning more, and if her first employer cannot periodically raise the
+girl's wages the latter must in time seek better paid employment,
+probably with a mistress who is not unconventional. It is unkind,
+therefore, to refrain from teaching the girl how she will be expected
+to do things in the ordinary conventional house. I do not mean that
+the employer ought to slavishly run her home on conventional lines for
+the instruction of her "help." But it is kinder, for instance, to help
+a girl regard a cap and apron with good-humoured indifference, or as
+on a par with a nurse's uniform, rather than as "a badge of
+servitude." It is kinder, too, to show her that it is not only
+"servants" who are expected to address their employers as "Sir" and
+"Ma'am," but that well-mannered young people in all conditions of life
+can be found who use this form of address to persons older than
+themselves. I do not suggest for one moment that any attempt should be
+made to delude a girl into the belief that she will not be expected,
+in conventional households, to behave with equal deference to persons
+younger than herself. Such deception would be unpardonable. But it is
+anything but kind to allow a young girl to drift into careless and
+familiar habits of speech bound to lead to dismissal for "impudence"
+in her next "place." There is a type of person, for example, who seems
+to believe that, in order to show that he is "as good as anybody
+else," it is necessary to be rude and familiar. But good manners are
+not necessarily associated with servility. And it is no kindness to
+help to unfit a girl for getting her living in the world as it is.
+
+It may seem that, in this article, I am more concerned for the "hired
+help" than the homemaker for whom I am ostensibly writing. But the
+points I have touched on are just those about which I know many
+thoughtful women are puzzled. I cannot solve their individual problems
+for them, of course, I can only just barely indicate some of the
+thoughts that have come to me on a subject that is so intimately bound
+up with the whole of our present unsatisfactory social and economic
+conditions that it cannot be adequately discussed in a little tract
+upon domestic economy.
+
+FLORENCE DANIEL.
+
+
+THE CARE OF CUPBOARDS.
+
+There are three methods in general use of caring for cupboards. Some
+housewives prefer their cupboard shelves of bare wood, to be well
+scrubbed with soap and water at the periodical "turn-out." Others
+cover all shelves with white American cloth, which only needs wiping
+over with a wet house-flannel; while still others prefer to dispense
+with the necessity for wetting the shelves and line them with white
+kitchen paper, or even clean newspaper, which is periodically renewed.
+
+Of the three methods I prefer the last, with the addition of a good
+scrubbing at the spring clean. The weekly or fortnightly scrubbing is
+apt to result in permanently damp cupboards, unless they can be left
+empty to dry for a longer time than is usually convenient. The use of
+American cloth is perhaps the easiest, most labour-saving method, but
+the cloth soon gets superficially marked and worn long before its real
+usefulness is impaired, so that the cupboard shelves never look quite
+so neat as after scrubbing or relining with white paper.
+
+The larder should be thoroughly "turned out" once a week. Once a
+fortnight is enough for the store-cupboard and for china cupboards in
+daily use. While cupboards in which superfluous china and other
+non-perishable goods are stored, and that are seldom opened, need not
+be touched oftener than once or twice a year.
+
+In very small houses one cupboard often must house both china and
+groceries, thus combining the offices of storeroom and china cupboard.
+The larder, strictly speaking, is for the food consumed daily. But
+when larder and store-cupboard have to be combined, the groceries may
+be packed away on the upper shelves, which can be tidied once a
+fortnight; but the shelves doing duty for the larder proper should
+never be left for longer than a week.
+
+Nothing betrays the careless housewife like an ill-smelling larder.
+All food should be examined daily and kept well covered. Hot food
+should be allowed to cool before storing in the larder. In the summer
+time special precautions must be taken against flies, all receptacles
+for food which are minus well-fitting lids being covered with
+wire-gauze covers or clean butter muslin. If the shelves are lined
+with paper, care should be taken at the weekly change to examine the
+wood for stains caused by spilt food that has penetrated through the
+paper. These should not be just left and covered over, but well washed
+off. With ordinary carefulness, however, they need not occur.
+
+F.D.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK REVIEWS.
+
+
+_The New Suggestion Treatment._ By J. Stenson Hooker, M.D. Cloth 1s.
+ net (postage 1+1/2d.) C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor Street, E.C.
+
+This book is a striking example of the new synthetic movement in the
+medical profession. It is an exposition for the general reader of
+certain basic principles of mental treatment and of the author's
+methods of applying these; it is also, in reality, an appeal to
+doctors generally to put aside prejudice and examine the immense
+potentialities of rational "suggestion" healing methods.
+
+After examining the main features and disadvantages of mere hypnotic
+treatment and passing under review present-day "mental science," the
+author explains wherein his method of mental treatment both avoids the
+dangers of hypnotism and reinforces ordinary self-suggestion.
+Throughout there is the frank recognition that few forms of dis-ease
+are curable by one means alone; on the other hand, it is contended
+that most disorders, both mental and physical, are remarkably amenable
+to a rightly directed course of the new suggestion treatment,
+supplemented by other natural means.
+
+The narrowness of view that too often characterises the specialist is
+entirely absent from this book. It is throughout thoroughly broad,
+refreshingly sensible and profoundly convincing.
+
+_The Cottage Farm Month by Month_ (illustrated with original
+ photographs). By F.E. Green. Cloth, 1s. net (postage 2d.). C.W.
+ Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.
+
+Here is a book of immediate social interest, of great practical value,
+and of uncommon literary quality.
+
+In the course of twelve chapters, bearing the titles of the months of
+the year, it reveals a welding together of two things which in many
+minds have unfortunately become divorced: the practical problems and
+arduous labour which no tiller of the soil can escape and--the keen
+delight of a poetical temperament in the ever-changing, yet annually
+renewed, beauties of earth and sky and running water.
+
+It escapes the dry technicalities of the agricultural text-book, while
+at the same time conveying innumerable valuable hints on practically
+every branch of "small farming"--advice which springs from the
+author's thorough knowledge based on long and often hard experience.
+
+On the other hand, while entirely free from that all too common defect
+of "nature-books"--hot-house enthusiasm--it will delight the most
+incurable townsman (providing his sense of beauty is not withered) by
+its joyous yet restrained pictures of open-air things.
+
+_Simple Rules of Health._ By Philip Oyler, M.A. (2nd ed.). 3d. net.
+ Post free from the author, Morshin School, Headley, Hants.
+
+An admirable epitome of what might be called "advanced health culture
+without crankiness." The author is an ardent advocate of simplicity in
+all things and--practises what he preaches. Moreover, he is one of
+those who sees health from all points of view: he is as much concerned
+with what the English Bible calls "a right spirit" as with a fit body
+and a responsive mind. It is a little book deserving of a wide
+circulation.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+A REMEDY FOR SLEEPLESSNESS.
+
+ To the Editors
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ Would you care to publish the following experience of a cure for
+ sleeplessness:--
+
+ I had no difficulty in going to sleep, but usually awoke again at
+ about two A.M. with palpitation, and it often took me two or
+ three hours to go to sleep again.
+
+ I cured myself in the following way: I left off supper and
+ reduced my tea meal by half, and the result was continuous sleep;
+ the symptoms, however, began to come back again after a time, so
+ I gradually cut the tea meal right away, and half of the midday
+ meal as well. The cure was then permanent and after a time I
+ found that I could resume the tea meal again. At the present time
+ I am having a tea meal of fruit only.
+
+ In addition I should advise those who suffer from this complaint
+ to keep cheerful, and to avoid excessive physical or mental
+ fatigue and worry. Yours faithfully,
+
+ "A SIX MONTHS' READER."
+
+
+IS PURE LIME JUICE OBTAINABLE?
+
+The Editors have received the following letter from Messrs Rowntree &
+Co., Ltd.:--
+
+ "We note in your issue of July 1913 under the heading of 'Lemon
+ or Orange Squash' a note to the effect that bottled lemon
+ squashes and lime cordials 'are not pure in the strict sense of
+ the term, since they are bound to contain 10 per cent. alcoholic
+ pure spirit by Government regulations.' We should be glad to know
+ what is your authority for this statement. Possibly it is a
+ misprint, because obviously the Government does not require
+ anything of the kind. Our own lemon squash and lime juice cordial
+ are entirely free from any form of preservative, including
+ alcohol. They are made up from pure lemon juice and lime juice
+ respectively, with sugar, and contain no foreign ingredient."
+
+The statement complained of was based on an article entitled
+"Fortified Lime Juice" which appeared in _The Chemist and Druggist_,
+13th May 1911 (page 51). On again referring to this article we find
+that the Government regulation applies only to _exported_ Lime Juice.
+
+We regret having made this error, and are genuinely glad to have
+Messrs Rowntree's assurance that their own "Lime Juice Cordial" and
+"Lemon Squash" are "entirely free from any form of preservative,
+including alcohol."
+
+Nevertheless, we think our suspicions regarding the presence of
+preservatives in such articles are justifiable in view of the
+following authoritative statements made by _The Chemist and Druggist_
+in the article referred to:--
+
+ "The British Revenue authorities have drawn the line a little
+ tighter in the discharge of their responsibility respecting the
+ soundness of lime-juice intended for exportation or for use on
+ board ship. The new rule henceforth is to grant a 'pass'
+ certificate for unfortified lime-juice to last for fourteen days
+ only, at the end of which time another certificate must be
+ obtained. As this new regulation affects lime-juice in its
+ natural condition before rum or any other spirit is added to it,
+ only lime-juice manufacturers or importers are concerned in the
+ matter.... _With such rapidly deteriorating liquid as lime or
+ lemon juice the addition of the preservative spirit is a
+ necessity, hence the sooner it is fortified the better._ The
+ Revenue authorities permit duty-free spirit to be used for this
+ purpose, but in order that lime-juice manufacturers shall have
+ this advantage of not paying duty on the spirit used the Revenue
+ authorities insist on approval of the juice and its subsequent
+ fortification in bond under supervision of the Crown.... In
+ reference to the proportion of spirit used, previously the
+ regulation was expressed in a permissive sense, but now the
+ emphatic "must" is used. In the last Government Laboratory report
+ it was stated that 396 samples were examined, most of which were
+ lime-juice, representing nearly 50,000 gallons. Even the
+ fortified article is re-tested if more than three months old in
+ cask or two years old in bottle, and this re-testing resulted
+ last year in a condemnation of several hundred gallons owing to
+ deterioration during storage. This juice is principally for use
+ in the Mercantile Marine to combat scurvy."
+
+From which it would appear that the use of _some_ kind of preservative
+is essential with such a rapidly deteriorating liquid as lime or lemon
+juice; and if not alcohol, there are innumerable chemical
+preservatives available. We wish we could rely on receiving assurances
+from other "Lime Juice" importers and manufacturers similar to that we
+have received from Messrs Rowntree.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To People with Strong Convictions:_
+
+A holiday is the best of all opportunities for appreciating the
+opposite point of view to our own: this is why everyone needs a day's
+holiday once a week.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+FAULTY FOOD COMBINATIONS.
+
+ H.E.H. writes.--I should like your opinion of the statement of
+ the late Mr A. Broadbent, that fruit when taken with starchy food
+ by dyspeptics delays digestion, and that the digestion of starchy
+ foods and vegetables occupied only one-third of the time needed
+ for the digestion of starch with fruit. I have lived on a strict
+ vegetarian diet and observed the laws of hygiene for two and a
+ half years, to rid myself of dyspepsia, with great success,
+ having increased my weight by thirty-six pounds; for the last
+ nine months of this time I have lived on a largely "unfired"
+ diet, but am still troubled with acid risings and flatulence and
+ cannot account for it. Will you kindly enlighten me on the
+ subject?
+
+ I am a carpenter by trade and get eight hours in the open air
+ every day. I take a tumbler of distilled water hot with the juice
+ of one orange at 6 A.M., breakfast at 7.30 A.M., dinner at 12
+ noon and tea at 6 P.M., all consisting of Wallace unfermented
+ bread and biscuits, various fruits (mostly apples, bananas and
+ tomatoes) and nuts, about 1/2oz. at a meal; also a little cheese,
+ about 1 oz. at a meal.
+
+The late Mr A. Broadbent was quite right, in my opinion, when he
+asserted that fruit taken with starchy foods delayed digestion.
+
+To reap the true benefit from fruit it must be taken alone.
+
+The dominant element in fruit is oxygen and the feature of oxygen is
+its power to start the process of oxidation in decomposing and
+disintegrating substances. It follows that when the stomach is filled
+with fermenting food-stuffs, or the tissues are clogged with the
+products derived from such, the oxidising action of fruit will be
+correspondingly intense.
+
+The Naturist who applies the Schroth Cure for the purpose of curing
+chronic diseases uses fruit as his chief eliminating agent. The reader
+will remember that the peasant healer, Schroth, made his patients take
+dry stale rolls alone for three whole days, with nothing whatever to
+drink, and on the fourth day, he gave them a full bottle of white
+wine, which then caused intense oxidation, with marked elimination of
+poisons. His methods, if successful, were drastic and weakening, and
+so the latter-day exponents of Schrothism have modified this and give
+their patients zweiback or twice-baked bread instead of rolls, and on
+the third or fourth day make the patient partake freely of fresh
+fruit. This process of alternate dry days and fluid days is continued
+for some weeks until the cure is complete.
+
+I have merely referred to this matter to show the part played by fruit
+in the body. To a healthy person fruit is in truth a splendid
+regenerating food, but it should, whenever possible, be eaten alone.
+To a dyspeptic, fruit is often equally good, if _taken by itself_.
+
+The case of vegetables is different, and I hold with Broadbent that
+salad or properly cooked vegetables do go well with cereals, because
+they contain, not oxygen and oxygen acids, but mineral elements like
+soda, lime and magnesia, which neutralise the acids and toxins which
+form in the body as a result of its work. The vegetable is just as
+active as the fruit as an eliminant, but it works on different lines.
+Cereal foods, if eaten slowly in a dry condition are made alkaline by
+the saliva, so that the vegetables, which are also naturally alkaline,
+would harmonise well with cereals if eaten with them.
+
+Our correspondent should modify his diet as follows, and then, I
+anticipate, he will cease to be troubled with his acid dyspepsia and
+flatulence. He should take his fruit alone, and take any of the crisp
+unsweetened Wallace "P.R." Biscuits in preference to the unfermented
+bread, which latter is often difficult to digest:--
+
+_On rising._--A tumblerful of hot distilled water.
+
+_Breakfast_ (at 7.30).--Fresh fruit only.
+
+_Lunch_ (at 12).--1 to 2 oz. of cheese, preferably home-made curd
+cheese; salad of green leaf vegetables; "P.R." or Ixion biscuits with
+fresh butter, or nut butter.
+
+_Dinner_ (at 6).--1 to 2 oz. of flaked pine kernels, finely grated raw
+roots or tomatoes, with pure olive oil; Granose biscuits, or Shredded
+Wheat biscuits, and fresh butter.
+
+_At bedtime._--Cupful of dandelion coffee or hot distilled water.
+
+
+NEURITIS.
+
+ E.M.A. writes.--At the age of five years I had an attack of
+ rheumatic fever through taking a severe cold, and have been
+ troubled more or less with pains since that time, which I feel
+ sure are caused through rheumatism of the nerves. I am now
+ fifty-eight years of age and have been a vegetarian for six
+ years.
+
+ My diet is:--8 A.M., cup of Sanum Tonic Tea; 9 A.M., Cup of dried
+ milk; 10 A.M., half of an apple and a little crust of wholemeal
+ bread; 1 P.M. conservatively cooked vegetable, using "Emprote"
+ for sauce; 4 P.M., cup of dried milk; 6 P.M., a little green
+ salad with St Ivel lactic cheese (size of one large walnut); 9
+ P.M., cup of dried milk. Do you think dried milk is harmful to
+ me? I should miss it very much were I to leave it off. I must
+ mention how great a help _The Healthy Life_ magazine is to me in
+ many ways.
+
+Neuritis is a painful and wearying form of nerve trouble which mostly
+affects the arms and legs. It can, however, originate in any other
+part of the body through the spinal nerve centres. It may sometimes be
+due to injury, but the usual cause is some form of thickening or
+misplacement of the spinal structures, which induces pressure upon the
+nerves as they emerge through the apertures between the spinal bones.
+A careful examination of the back will show the site, and often the
+nature, of the thickening or encumbrance which is present.
+
+In our correspondent's case the thickening process doubtless occurred
+as an after effect of the attack of rheumatic fever.
+
+The best remedy is suitable osteopathic treatment for the spine,
+supplemented by _either very_ hot or _quite_ cold spinal sitz baths,
+by acetic acid skin treatment, or by any other means which will have
+the effect of disencumbering the spine. By means of our treatment we
+free the painful nerves from harmful pressure and promote an increased
+blood circulation in the parts affected. In this way the cause of the
+disorder is removed.
+
+A diet along the following lines would be better than the present
+one:--
+
+8 A.M.--Tumblerful of hot distilled water.
+
+9.30.--One raw egg beaten up with cream and vegetable juice or clear
+vegetable soup made without salt. Wholemeal bread with plenty of
+butter and some celery or watercress.
+
+1.30 P.M.--Two conservatively cooked vegetables done without salt,
+with grated cheese as sauce and a Granose biscuit with butter.
+
+4.--Tumblerful of hot distilled water only.
+
+6.30.--2 oz. of cottage cheese or cream cheese, salad and Granose
+biscuits, or "P.R." crackers, with butter.
+
+9.30.--A raw egg beaten up with cream and vegetable juice or soup.
+
+I think dried milk preparations are inadvisable in such cases as these
+(especially when taken as beverages, as the "milk sugars" present are
+very prone to ferment and to hinder the cleansing of the digestive
+tract), and that the required proteid is best obtained from eggs and
+curd cheese. Fat is very necessary in nervous troubles; hence plenty
+of cream, fresh butter and cream cheese should be taken; also pure oil
+with the salad.
+
+
+MALT EXTRACT.
+
+ L.F.H. writes.--Is malt extract a good thing to take daily with
+ an ordinary non-flesh diet, two teaspoonfuls or so at breakfast?
+ And is the desiccated or dry malt extract to be preferred to the
+ ordinary sticky article?
+
+Malt extract of good quality, containing an active form of diastase,
+is a good form of relish to take with meals. The diastase promotes
+starch digestion and makes a good addition to foods of the cereal
+order. The thick sticky form is the best because the diastase is then
+in an active condition. Dried malt usually will have this diastase
+destroyed, hence, although much more convenient to handle, it is not
+so good dietetically as the sticky original extract.
+
+
+ABOUT SUGAR.
+
+ C.T. writes.--I have read the article on sugar with considerable
+ interest. I have noted nervous disorders, etc., manifest in cases
+ of excessive consumption of manufactured sugar. I have been an
+ abstainer from cane sugar (all commercial sugars, though _I do
+ not know of any objection to milk, sugar_) for many years,
+ regarding it as an unnatural excitant and stimulant as well as
+ being inimical to digestion. As a physiologist I have taken
+ immense interest in longevity, feeling that an active life past
+ the age of ninety-five or a hundred, and upwards, carries with
+ it, in evidence of right living, the force of demonstration, and
+ more conclusively, in direct ratio to the advance of years. I
+ firmly believe that all anomalies will ultimately admit of
+ resolution. In this connection I could mention a number of
+ strange and paradoxical cases for which, as yet, I have obtained
+ no solution. I know of centenarians who began using "sugar"
+ freely late in life. In one case, when past eighty, a new set of
+ teeth (not odd "supernumeraries") appeared all round! How is it,
+ again, that the natives of the West Indies, when living on sugar
+ (in its crude state, I suppose) have excellent teeth and perfect
+ health? Is not raw sugar better the less manufactured it is? On
+ the other side, Captain Diamond, at 114, attributes his health in
+ great measure to abstinence from sugar.
+
+Most of these queries are answered in the completed book[10] published
+this year. The point about "milk sugar" not being injurious he will
+find answered on page 72.
+
+[10] _The Truth about Sugar_, 1s. net. (C.W. Daniel, Ltd.)
+
+"Milk sugars" taken to excess with a mixed diet, or in the form of
+milk as a beverage, break down into lactic, butyric and other
+destructive acids under the influence of intestinal germs and thus do
+harm to the body.
+
+The natives of the West Indies (page 39) take the sugar cane in its
+natural state as a living vegetable food--a very different thing from
+the isolated and chemicalised sugar on our tables at home. Moreover,
+the chewing required helps digestion. This is very different to the
+drinking rapidly of sugared beverages, which do not receive this
+necessary mouth preparation.
+
+One is quite prepared to admit that paradoxical cases do occur where
+sugar seems to agree well even with octogenarians, but they are, in my
+opinion, the exceptions, and I am constantly coming across cases where
+the free consumption of table sugars has proved very harmful to both
+old and young.
+
+
+ULCERATION OF THE STOMACH.
+
+ A.L.M. writes.--Our domestic servant, a girl aged twenty-four, is
+ suffering from ulceration of the stomach and has had periodical
+ attacks for the past six years. She has apparently, until she
+ came to us, eaten and drunk very unwisely. She has been with us
+ seven months and has been fed on a non-flesh diet since she came.
+ For the last four weeks tea, coffee and cocoa have been
+ forbidden, and as little sugar is consumed as possible. She had a
+ very bad attack in August and we had to call in a doctor is we
+ did not like the responsibility. He strongly recommended the
+ hospital and an operation, which would ensure that there would be
+ no repetition of the complaint. She decided to go and was there
+ six weeks. After much experimenting there, inoculating and
+ wondering whether it was tuberculosis, they operated and in due
+ course she came back. We went to the sea for three weeks and
+ shortly after our return the vomiting of blood and pains
+ recommenced. After four days in bed she returned to light dishes,
+ and a fortnight after another slighter attack came on, which in
+ twenty-four hours. She takes hot boiled water five times a day.
+ She suffers also from a horny skin on the palms of her hands,
+ with deep cracks where the natural lines are. These periodically
+ bleed. This skin exists also on her heels and the soles of her
+ feet. Before and after, an attack this skin seems to be worse
+ than ever.
+
+ I mentioned the fact of the recurring attacks since the operation
+ to the doctor and he seemed surprised and said the matter must be
+ constitutional and there was no hope for her.
+
+ My own opinion is that pure food will put her right eventually,
+ and that these attacks will recur in diminishing force until the
+ poisons are eliminated front the system.
+
+ Her diet is at present as follows:--
+
+ _On rising._--Half-pint of boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Breakfast._--Either Shredded Wheat softened in hot milk or
+ breakfast flakes and cold milk: followed by either bananas or
+ apples. Half-pint boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Lunch._--Ordinary vegetarian cooked dishes, vegetables
+ conservatively cooked, some fruit. Half-pint boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Tea meal._--Wholemeal bread (Artox flour), usually non-yeast,
+ nut butter. Lettuces and radishes when obtainable. Half-pint
+ boiled water (hot).
+
+ _Before retiring._--Half-pint of boiled water (hot).
+
+It has been shown by Brandl and other investigators that ulceration of
+the stomach can always be produced in animals by feeding them with an
+excess of sugar foods. The same thing applies to human beings, who, if
+fed with an excess of sweetmeats, sugar, milk or soft mushy cereals,
+will first contract catarrh of the stomach, which will ultimately
+deepen into a condition of ulceration.
+
+The rationale of the process is this: Fermentation and putrefaction of
+the foods eaten to excess produce in the stomach various acids and
+toxins. These become absorbed and pass into the liver. Then the liver
+becomes clogged, its flow of blood is obstructed and this naturally
+retards the flow of food from the stomach. That organ becomes
+congested and inflamed and, when the lower end, or pylorus, is
+obstructed, this congested state may easily deepen into ulceration. We
+also nearly always find a tender spine, showing that the nervous
+system has equally participated in the conditions produced, and this
+nervous factor intensifies the trouble by retarding the due working of
+the digestive functions.
+
+What we have to do to cure a case of ulcerated stomach is _to withhold
+the foods which create fermentation_. Then the liver will be allowed
+time to work off the poisons which are clogging its substance and when
+this has come about the stomach will slowly return to its normal
+condition.
+
+The diet which our correspondent cites is badly arranged. It is a
+mistake to give fluid _with_ the meals, and the mushy food at
+breakfast and the soft food at dinner should be changed to drier and
+crisper forms of nutriment.
+
+The following diet would be a distinct improvement:--
+
+_On rising._--Half-pint of boiled hot water, sipped slowly; or
+quarter-pint Sanum Tonic Tea, taken hot.
+
+_Breakfast._--A Shredded Wheat biscuit _eaten dry_ and well buttered;
+a lightly boiled egg and some finely grated raw roots, especially
+carrots and turnips.
+
+In a case of this sort it is best not to mix cereals with fruits.
+
+An alternative breakfast would consist of _fruit alone_ such as two
+apples, finely grated at first, or two bananas mashed and mixed with
+pure olive oil and sprinkled with flaked nuts but care must be taken
+that the pulped banana is well chewed.
+
+_Lunch._--Grated cheese, or cream cheese, with some finely chopped
+salad, or grated raw roots, or conservatively cooked vegetables
+(preferably roots or onions baked fairly dry by the casserole method)
+can be taken at this repast. Follow with a slice or two of cold
+ordinary toast or rusks with butter.
+
+_Tea meal._--Half-pint of hot boiled water with a little lemon or
+orange juice added to it for flavouring.
+
+_Supper_ (about 6.30).--Stale standard bread with butter and curd
+cheese or an egg. The non-yeast bread should be avoided as in the weak
+state of the stomach it will not be properly digested; besides, the
+bran may irritate the lining in the present condition of the stomach.
+As soon as the stomach has regained its power of digesting food, and
+the ulcers have healed, then fine wholemeal biscuits of the Wallace or
+Ixion kind can be taken, but the unfermented bread had better be
+avoided.
+
+_At bedtime._--A half-pint of hot water.
+
+
+GOING TO EXTREMES IN THE UNFIRED DIET.
+
+ W.O.C. writes.--As a bachelor who (not believing in, and
+ therefore doing without domestic help) is anxious to reduce time
+ spent on cooking to a minimum, I shall be glad if Dr Knaggs will
+ tell me whether the use of the oven, pan and kettle are necessary
+ to healthy diet. For instance (1) would a diet of bread and
+ butter, biscuits, cheese, fruit (fresh and dried), ordinary cold
+ water and cold milk, be as healthy as a diet of hot vegetables,
+ puddings, cocoashell, etc.? (2) Are cooked lentils,
+ butter-beans, macaroni, etc., more beneficial taken hot than
+ after they have cooled? (3) Could uncooked vegetables _of
+ sufficient nutriment_ be substituted for these? I shall be glad
+ if it is quite safe to live entirely on raw foods, whether fresh
+ or "prepared."
+
+The use of the oven, pan and kettle is not essential to a healthy
+diet, but few people in this changeable, and often cold, depressing
+climate are willing to forgo their occasional use. One cannot get hot
+water for a drink without a kettle or a small saucepan and a gas ring,
+and hot water is often a very comforting and useful drink, especially
+where an effort is being made to break off the tea and coffee habit.
+
+A diet of bread and butter, biscuits, cheese, fresh and dried fruits
+is excellent, provided our correspondent also includes grated raw
+roots and salads as the medicinal part of the regimen, and keeps the
+fresh fruit to itself as one meal of the day. Cold water or cold milk
+could also be taken in the place of hot water or hot milk, although I
+deprecate the use of milk as a beverage unless a person is willing to
+live entirely on milk like a baby does. The hot vegetables are
+uncalled for, provided the raw vegetables are substituted for them.
+The puddings can well be discarded. Cocoashell beverages are useful in
+very many cases.
+
+Beans or lentils can be eaten sparingly in a raw state if first
+soaked, then flaked in a Dana machine, and afterwards flavoured with
+herbs or parsley. I certainly think that, if they _are_ to be cooked,
+the taste is better if eaten hot; but there is no reason why cold
+cooked lentils should not be eaten any more than is the case with an
+other form of cooked food. Uncooked vegetables will not take the place
+of lentils, because they are of a different order of food-stuff. The
+uncooked vegetable would go well with the lentils as neutralising
+agents of the acids into which all nitrogenous foods break down in the
+body. Most people will find that nuts, cheese and eggs are better
+sources of proteid than lentils or other "pulse foods."
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V OCTOBER
+ No. 27. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+Just as there is a pride that apes humility, so there is an egotism
+that apes selfishness, a cowardice that apes stoicism and an indolence
+that apes effort. This is especially apparent in matters pertaining to
+health.
+
+How often, on the plea of not causing worry or expense to others, does
+a man or woman not put off taking necessary rest, or consulting a
+doctor, until a slight ailment that once would have yielded to
+treatment becomes an irreparable injury.
+
+Such conduct is often admired as unselfish, but for unselfishness and
+stoicism a psychologist would read fear, indolence and egotism. Fear
+of being thought hypochondriacal and fear of facing facts; shrinking
+from the exertion involved in the effort to become healthy and from
+the pain involved in witnessing the possible distress and anxiety of
+friends should the complaint prove serious--regardless of the fact
+that its neglect and resultant incurability would cause infinitely
+more distress; above all, that mental egotism which breeds in its
+victim an unreadiness to acknowledge that he does not _know_ what may
+be wrong and to take prompt steps to remedy his ignorance.
+
+It is not fair, of course, to attach too much blame to the patient.
+Such faults as those cited above are in themselves symptoms of nervous
+disease. Body and mind act and react upon one another. Nevertheless,
+the practice of the virtues loses its meaning when there is no pull in
+the opposite direction.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+IMAGINATION IN INSURANCE.
+
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this article a continuation of the
+series previously entitled "Healthy Brains." The author of "The
+Children All Day Long" is an intimate disciple of one of the greatest
+living psychologists, and she has a message of the first importance to
+all who realise that true health depends as much on poise of mind as
+on physical fitness._
+
+It is an unpleasant subject, but have you ever faced the fact that
+your widow might be left in poverty?
+
+We all know the phrases that come so glibly from the lips of the
+insurance agent. Perhaps the very fact that it pays companies to spend
+thousands a year on the salaries of agents, and other thousands on
+broadcast eye-catching advertisements, shows that there are many
+things which our imagination only accepts "against the grain." Fire,
+storm, loss by theft or burglary, sickness, disablement and death we
+do not, by choice, dwell on these things in thought.
+
+Now some people are inclined to pet this impulse of turning away. "Do
+not think dark thoughts," they tell us, "the best insurance is
+unconsciousness, insouciance, denial. Misfortune will pass you by if
+you do not look for it."
+
+Perhaps there is something to be said for this method when it comes
+with absolute spontaneity from the innermost nature. But if for the
+radiant apprehension of beauty and health we substitute an effort to
+cling to the picture of good when our very bodies and nerves are
+warning us with suggestions of evil, we run grave risks. By adopting
+someone else's sense of freedom from danger and repressing our own
+conviction that for us a certain danger, more or less remote, exists,
+we are putting great pressure upon ourselves. At times of ill-health
+or accidental worry, a sleepless night may bring us an agonising
+succession of imaginative pictures, those very pictures which we have
+attempted to banish from our daily life. If we have still greater
+power of repression these grim images, forbidden throughout every
+moment of waking life, may reappear in dreams.
+
+(Of the still more serious dangers of repression and of its relation
+to various forms of insanity, this is hardly the place to speak.[11]
+It ought not to be necessary to appeal to alarming instances in order
+to make us attend to a suggested warning.)
+
+[11] See Bernard Hart's illuminating treatment of the whole subject in
+_The Psychology of Insanity_, Cambridge Manuals of Science.
+
+Now if we decide to regard all fear as a suggestion of precaution, the
+emotional part of it to be laid aside as soon as it has fulfilled its
+function of arousing interest and directing action, it is easy to see
+the psychological justification for insurance.
+
+Of course pecuniary insurance is but one instance of such sequences of
+action, though it happens to be a rather obvious one. In a different
+field, most of us know the delightful feeling of relief experienced
+after consulting a doctor about some symptom that has perhaps been
+troubling us for a long time. "May I safely do this? Ought I to
+refrain from that?" and such perpetually recurring irritations to the
+attention are replaced by the knowledge that it is now the doctor's
+business to decide whether this or that is "serious," and that as
+long as we carry out his orders we may lay aside all worry about the
+matter.
+
+So in the case of fire insurance, what we are really buying with our
+annual premium is freedom from haunting questions as to the loss that
+would ensue if our house or shop or office were burnt down or damaged.
+Whenever the thought comes, it may, as far as the money loss is
+concerned, be dismissed.
+
+We see then that instead of keeping the suggestion of such misfortunes
+before us, as some people might allege, the act of insurance
+substitutes for vague and recurrent fears a formal and periodical
+recognition of possibilities, a recognition, too, that contains within
+itself a precaution against some of the results of the misfortune
+should it ever occur. What we buy, at the cost of a fixed number of
+pounds or shillings of money and a few minutes of time once a year, is
+the right to put the dangers out of our consciousness altogether and
+yet leave no residuum of repressed fear to split up our personality or
+give us indigestion.
+
+If we choose, for some reason or other, to let our imagination dwell
+on the objective side of the possibility we have insured against, we
+shall find a pleasure in thinking of what can be done by many people
+working together. If we need help to meet some misfortune, it is ours
+as a right, not doled out to us through others' pity. And every year
+that we have made no claim we have the delight of knowing that we are
+helping those who need.
+
+The art of working together is yet in its infancy. But if even the
+present standard of method devised for money insurance were to be
+adopted in the deeper matters which we so often allow to trouble us,
+what an advance in mental development we should have made and what new
+possibilities of safe action would be opened up!
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Every youth should learn to do something finely and thoroughly with
+his hands.--_Ruskin._
+
+
+
+
+THE SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF VEGETALISM.
+
+This article has been translated from the French of Prof. H. Labbe,
+the head of the _laboratoire a la Faculte de Medecine_, in Paris. It
+reflects a rather characteristic aloofness to any considerations other
+than scientific or economic. But it will well repay careful
+study.--[EDS.]
+
+
+I
+
+Vegetarianism has been the object of many attacks, and has also been
+warmly defended. Most of its adepts have sought to give the value of a
+dogma to its practice.
+
+For quite a number of people "vegetarianism" is a kind of religion,
+requiring of its votaries a sort of baptism, and the sacrifice of many
+pleasures. It is this which justifies the infatuation of some, and the
+systematic disparagement of others.
+
+"Vegetalism"[12] cannot pretend to play a similar part, or to lend
+itself to ambiguity. To be a "vegetalist" is to choose in the
+vegetable kingdom, with a justified preference, foods susceptible of
+filling the energy-producing needs, and the needs of the reparation of
+the human system.
+
+"Vegetalism" is a chapter of dietetic physiology which must utilise
+the precise methods and recent discoveries of the science of
+nutrition.
+
+[12] The word "Vegetarianism" implies a judgment of the qualities
+which such a diet entails. This word is derived, in fact, from the
+Latin adjective "Vegetus" (strong). The word "Vegetalism," which we
+oppose to the preceding one, admits only the establishing of a fact,
+that of the choice--exclusive or preferred--of the nutritious matters
+in the vegetable kingdom.
+
+
+II
+
+Before putting "vegetalism" into practice the first point is to know
+whether the foods of "vegetal" origin contain, and are susceptible of
+producing regularly, the divers nutritive principles indispensable to
+the organisation of an alimentary diet. The principles are the
+following:--Proteid or albuminoid substances; hydrocarbonated and
+sweet substances fatty substances; mineral matters, alkalis, lime,
+magnesia, phosphates and chlorides, etc. In most compound foods, no
+matter of what origin, mineral materials almost always exist in
+sufficient quantities. The most important amongst them, at all events,
+are found combined in liberal, even superabundant, portions in dishes
+of vegetal origin. The analysis of the ashes of our most common table
+vegetables fixes us immediately to this subject: Leguminous plants
+supply from about three to six per cent. of ashes, rich in alkalis,
+lime and phosphates. Potatoes, green vegetables and fruit as a whole
+absorbing considerable quantities of mineral elements. These are the
+elements of a nature to allow a precise reply to this question which
+we propose to expound briefly.
+
+
+III
+
+In order to examine a food thoroughly, for the purpose of ascertaining
+if it can be advantageously introduced for consumption, whether
+albumins, fats, hydrate of carbon, or sugar, etc., or again an
+association of these principles in a composite article of food are in
+question, divers researches must be carried out before giving a final
+judgment.
+
+If a more or less complex article of food is in question, before
+considering it as a good nutriment, its centesimal composition, or its
+immediate composition, should be established; its theoretic calorific
+power should be known, and it should be measured if this has not yet
+been done.
+
+Besides the calorific yield thus estimated _in vitro_, the real
+utilisation in the human organism of articles of food alone or mixed
+with other foods should be determined, taking simultaneously into
+account their effects, whether tonic, stimulating or depressing.
+
+From a different point of view it is no longer allowable to neglect
+before judging whether such and such a nutritive substance is
+advantageous, the valuation of what we have called, with Prof.
+Landouzy, the economic yield--that is to say, the price of the
+energy, provided by the unity of weight of the article of food.
+
+It is only in reviewing "vegetal" substances, taking these divers
+titles into consideration, that we shall be justified in attributing
+to the practice of "vegetalism," integral or mitigated, its definite
+value.
+
+
+IV
+
+Only a few years ago, when Schutzenberger, emulator and forerunner of
+Fischer, Armand Gautier, Kossel, first disjointed the albuminoid
+molecule, to examine one by one its divers parts, the composition of
+the various albumins was very little known. Whether, therefore,
+albumins of the blood, or those of meat or eggs, were in question,
+these bodies were hardly ever separated, except through physical
+circumstances, amongst others by constant quantities of different
+coagulation. As to the centesimal formula and the intimate structure
+of the different protoid substances, they could be considered as
+closely brought together.
+
+From this fact, the physiological problem of the utilisation of
+albumin was simpler. No matter which article of food contained this
+albumin, its nutritive power by unity of weight remained the same. At
+the present time the number of albumins is no longer limited. It is
+not now physical characteristics founded difficult separations which
+arbitrarily distinguish those bodies from each other. The
+individuality of each of the albumins results from its formula of
+deterioration, under the influence of digestive ferments, or of
+chemical bodies acting in a similar way, as do mineral acids and
+alkalis. For want of constituary formula this methodical deterioration
+makes known the number of molecules (acids or other bodies) which are
+responsible for the structure of each albumin. These deleterious
+formula of proteid matter are not less suggestive than composition
+ones. They reveal notable differences between "vegetal" and animal
+albumins.
+
+To be sure, animal albumins (beef, veal, mutton, pork, etc.) which we
+are offered in an alimentary flesh diet, resemble more nearly the
+structure of our own bodily albumins than do the gluten of bread or
+the albumin of vegetables. This fact seems actually the best support
+of the theory which affirms the superiority of the flesh over the
+vegetable diet. Such a remark is therefore well worth discussing by
+showing that the consequences which can be deduced from it are
+paradoxical, and rest upon hypothesis which, not very acceptable in
+theory, are hardly verified in practice.
+
+Admitting that albumin plays in alimentary diet only the plastic part
+of reconstruction of used-up corporal matter, it might be advantageous
+to ingest but one albumin the composition of which is very similar to
+our own. By virtue of the law of least effort such a one in equal
+weights ought to be of more service than a foreign albumin, as it
+requires less organic work. For man, albumin of animal origin ought to
+be more profitable in equal weight than vegetable albumin. In the
+organism, indeed, albumin passes through a double labour. After the
+intestinal deterioration, followed by a passage through the digestive
+mucus membrane, a re-welding of the liberated acids takes place, with
+a formation of new albumin.
+
+If, therefore, alimentary albumin's mission is, not to be definitely
+burnt up in the organism, but to help in the plastication of the
+individual, the more its initial formula approaches the definite one
+to which it must attain, the more profitable it becomes, giving out
+less useless fragments and waste. Animal albumin approaching more
+nearly to human albumin, is also the one whose introduction into the
+daily alimentary diet is most rational. This statement seems to be the
+defeat of vegetal albumin. But let there be no mistake. It consecrates
+at the same time the triumph of anthropophagy, for there could not be
+for man a more profitable albumin than his own, or that of his
+fellow-man! This should make us pause and reflect, before allowing
+this deduction to be accepted.
+
+Besides, these arguments _ad hominem_ do not appear to us necessary
+for repelling such an interpretation of facts. Modern works have
+shown us that the greater proportion of ingested albumin played, in
+fact, a calorific, and not a plastic, part. Under these conditions one
+is justified in doubting whether there takes place with regard to the
+total albumins ingested a work of reconstruction thus complicated in
+the organism, after their first deterioration. Evidently one may come
+to believe that this complicated labour applies only to the more or
+less feeble portion of albumin really integrated.
+
+Practically speaking, the best criterion for judging the utilisation
+of an ingested albumin lies in the persistence of the corporal weight,
+allied to the ascertained fact of a stable equilibrium in the total
+azotized balance-sheet which is provided by the comparison of the
+"Ingesta" with the "Excreta." From this point of view there exists the
+closest similitude between the albumins of animal and those of
+vegetable origin; both, in fact, are capable of assuring good health
+and corporal and cellular equilibrium.
+
+However, the digestibility of vegetable albumins seems to remain
+slightly inferior to that of animal albumins. 97 per cent. of the
+animal fibrine given in a meal are digested, where 88 to 90 per cent.
+only of vegetable albumins are absorbed and utilised. It is a small
+difference, but not one to be overlooked. We must say, however, that
+the method one employs in determining these digestibilities takes from
+them a part of their value, and renders difficult the comparison of
+results obtained. Sensibly pure albumins are too often compared in an
+artificial diet. One deviates thus from the conditions of practical
+physiology. In fact, in ordinary meals, all varieties of foods are
+mixed together, acting and reacting upon each other, reciprocally
+modifying their digestibility. If one conforms to this way of acting
+towards alimentary albumins, the results change sensibly. In the
+presence of an excess of starch, under the shape of bread, for
+example, vegetable albumin seems to be absorbed in about the same
+proportions as animal albumin.
+
+If, in a flesh diet, animal albumins are always consumed nearly pure
+(lean meat containing hardly anything but albumin, besides a little
+fat, and an inferior quantity of glycogen) vegetable albumin is
+always, on the contrary, mixed with a number of other substances. This
+is doubtless one of the reasons which causes the digestibility of
+vegetable albumins to vary, the foreign nutritive matters being able
+to bring about, under certain circumstances, and in cases of
+superabundant ingestions, a real albuminous "saving" in the newest
+sense of the word.
+
+Besides, a prejudicial question makes the debate almost vain. When it
+was admitted by such physiologists as Voit, Rubner and their school
+that from 140 to 150 grammes of albumin in the minimum were daily
+necessaries in the human diet, a variation of a few units in the
+digestive power presented some importance. Nowadays the real utility
+of albumins is differently appreciated. The need of them seems to have
+been singularly exaggerated; first lowered to about 75 gr. by A.
+Gautier, it has dropped successively with Lapicque, Chittenden,
+Landergreen, Morchoisne and Labbe, by virtue of considerations both
+ethnological and physiological, to 50 grs., 30 grs. and even to 25 or
+20 grammes. The "nutritive relation"--that is to say, the yield from
+albuminoid matters to the total nutritive matters of diet--is thus
+brought down from 1/3 its primitive value to 1/15 or 1/20 at most. It
+follows that the slight inferiority found in the digestive powers of
+vegetable albumin appears unimportant. It is sufficient to add 2 or 3
+more grammes of albumin to a ration already superabundant of from 40
+to 50 grammes of vegetable proteins to bring back a complete
+equilibrium in the use of vegetable and animal varieties. The
+theoretical inferiority of vegetable albumin thus almost completely
+disappears.
+
+H. LABBE.
+
+(_To be continued._)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If your system has become clogged, go slow--and fast.
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO THE WEST WIND.
+
+
+ O Wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being,
+ Thou from whose unseen presence the leaves dead
+ Are driven like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,
+ Yellow, and black, and pale, and hectic red,
+ Pestilence-stricken multitudes! O thou
+ Who chariotest to their dark wintry bed
+ The winged seeds, where they lie cold and low,
+ Each like a corpse within its grave, until
+ Thine azure sister of the Spring shall blow
+ Her clarion o'er the dreaming earth, and fill
+ (Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air)
+ With living hues and odours plain and hill
+ Wild Spirit which art moving everywhere;
+ Destroyer and preserver; hear, oh hear!
+
+ Thou on whose stream, 'mid the steep sky's commotion,
+ Loose clouds like earth's decaying leaves are shed,
+ Shook from the tangled boughs of heaven and ocean,
+ Angels of rain and lightning! there are spread
+ On the blue surface of thine airy surge,
+ Like the bright hair uplifted from the head
+ Of some fierce Maenad, even from the dim verge
+ Of the horizon to the zenith's height,
+ The locks of the approaching storm. Thou dirge
+ Of the dying year, to which this closing night
+ Will be the dome of a vast sepulchre,
+ Vaulted with all thy congregated might
+ Of vapours, from whose solid atmosphere
+ Black rain, and fire, and hail, will burst: Oh hear!
+
+ Thou who didst waken from his summer dreams
+ The blue Mediterranean, where he lay,
+ Lulled by the coil of his crystalline streams,
+ Beside a pumice isle in Baiae's bay,
+ And saw in sleep old palaces and towers
+ Quivering within the wave's intenser day,
+ All overgrown with azure moss, and flowers
+ So sweet the sense faints picturing them! Thou
+ For whose path the Atlantic's level powers
+ Cleave themselves into chasms, while far below
+ The sea-blooms and the oozy woods which wear
+ The sapless foliage of the ocean know
+ Thy voice, and suddenly grow grey with fear,
+ And tremble and despoil themselves: Oh, hear!
+
+ If I were a dead leaf thou mightest bear;
+ If I were a swift cloud to fly with thee;
+ A wave to pant beneath thy power, and share
+ The impulse of thy strength, only less free
+ Than thou, O uncontrollable! if even
+ I were as in my boyhood, and could be
+ The comrade of thy wanderings over heaven,
+ As then, when to outstrip thy skiey speed
+ Scarce seemed a vision,--I would ne'er have striven
+ As thus with thee in prayer in my sore need.
+ Oh lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!
+ I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!
+ A heavy weight of hours has chained and bowed
+ One too like thee--tameless, and swift, and proud.
+
+ Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:
+ What if my leaves are falling like its own?
+ The tumult of thy mighty harmonies
+ Will take from both a deep autumnal tone,
+ Sweet though in sadness. Be thou, Spirit fierce,
+ My spirit! Be thou me, impetuous one!
+ Drive my dead thoughts over the universe,
+ Like withered leaves, to quicken a new birth;
+ And, by the incantation of this verse,
+ Scatter, as from an unextinguished hearth
+ Ashes and sparks, my words among mankind!
+ Be through my lips to unawakened earth
+ The trumpet of a prophecy! O Wind,
+ If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?
+
+PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT MAKES A HOLIDAY?
+
+
+What is it makes a holiday? Some people want Paris, some Monte Carlo,
+one man cannot be satisfied without big game to hunt, another must
+have a grouse moor. The student has his sailing boat, the young
+wage-earner his bicycle, three girl friends look forward to their week
+in a Hastings boarding-house. Almost anything may be "a change"; most
+things, to someone or other, are "a holiday." What does it all mean?
+
+The sands of West Sussex are wide and free, firm and smooth for
+walking with bare feet, lovely with little shells and sea-worm curves
+and ripple marks and the pits of razor-shells. Above them are the
+slopes of shingle, gleaming with all colours in the September sun.
+Farther up again, the low, brown crumbling cliffs crowned with green
+wreaths of tamarisk. The sea comes creeping up, or else the wind
+raises great white breakers; if the waves are quiet, old breakwaters,
+long ago broken themselves, smashed fragments here and there of
+concrete protections put by man, gaps in the cliff and changes in the
+coast-line, remind us of the vast force behind the gentle and
+persistent lap of water. The beach itself reminds us of it; there a
+flint and here a rounded pebble made out of brick or glass, worn down
+from man's rubbish to sea's proof of power.
+
+Over it all are the children, brown-legged and bare-headed. (Is it
+something in the weather this year that has given us the particular
+red-brown, suggestive of shrimp and lobster, that is the
+colour-vintage of 1913?) Babies with oilskin waders, bathers, girls in
+vividly coloured coats walking along the sands; all make up the
+picture and give us once again the thrill of holiday.
+
+Inland, the Sussex lanes are green and the trees are broad and shady.
+Thatched cottages are everywhere, and barns with heavy brows;
+yesterday I saw some pots put for shelter from the sun under the
+far-projecting thatch of a farmhouse. The gardens are full of
+sun-flowers and hollyhocks, fuchsia and golden rod; the walls are
+covered with jasmine and passion-flowers. Old, old churches make us
+feel like day-flies. The yew in the churchyard five minutes' walk from
+here is said to be 900 years old; the church itself is thirteenth
+century, but into its walls were built fragments of a former church,
+far older, on the same site. It carries us more than half-way back to
+the foundation of Christianity. Dim tales of heathen earls and Norman
+kings hang around the villages, and the very floor of the sea beyond
+the land is richly laden with stores of half-forgotten memories.
+
+Which of all these things makes these days my holiday?
+
+All of them, perhaps. Present moving life, and long-past history, the
+mighty movement of nature and the changes of geologic time: sheer
+beauty too and the gaiety of amusements and excursions; do not all
+have their place in unwinding us from the tight coils we make for our
+working days?
+
+Freedom to take from the world whatever is there of beauty and of
+interest--it really hardly matters what or where; freedom enhanced by
+sympathy, perhaps, for we seem to need some comrade in our play; so
+many days and nights following each other--no matter exactly how
+many--for letting ourselves go, and letting the world and all its
+power and wonder flow into us; that, whatever be place, time and
+conditions, is the making of a holiday.
+
+C
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round nature |
+ | of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the extension of |
+ | its circulation by tactfully urging their local newsagent to |
+ | have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. An |
+ | attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE ABROAD.
+
+
+"HYGIE."
+
+_A New Definition of Neurasthenia._
+
+We cull the following definition of neurasthenia from our French
+contemporary: Neurasthenia is discouragement of the soul. Being in a
+state of discouragement the soul ceases to take care of the body and
+allows it to become encumbered with waste products. The body in its
+turn becomes so defective that the soul is incapable of repairing the
+enfeebled organs and throws the body away into the water or leaves it
+somewhere to be crushed or abandons it by some other means.
+Neurasthenia may be compared to an indolent mechanic. He neglects to
+oil his engine. It runs off the rails and is smashed.
+
+
+_Fresh Departures._
+
+The Vegetarian Society of France has introduced three new sections
+into its organisation. The first is documentary, and aims at the
+collection, centralisation and classification of all information
+bearing on food reform. The second deals with domestic economy and
+hygiene. A number of ladies willing to devote themselves to the
+popularisation of the leading ideas of vegetarianism have joined this
+section. They offer advice and instruction to all who wish to
+familiarise themselves with food reform principles. The third section
+is concerned with physical training and outdoor games, with special
+reference to the relationship between these things and a non-flesh
+regimen.
+
+
+"VEGETARISCHE WARTE."
+
+_Nietzsche as Fruitarian._
+
+"A simple life," wrote Nietzsche in 1879, "is very difficult at the
+present time," and went on to explain its difficulties and to suggest
+that even the most determined would be obliged to leave the discovery
+of the way to a wiser generation. He himself, however, took some
+steps upon the way during his stay in Genoa, when he lived on bread
+and fruit and spent but a few shillings a week. Eggs were occasionally
+included, and artichokes--and the little cookery he needed was done by
+himself over a spirit lamp. His winter in Genoa, he declares, was the
+happiest in his life and saw the production of his "Twilight of the
+Gods."
+
+
+_Food Reform in Russia._
+
+The movement goes ahead rapidly in Russia. Hardly a town of any size
+but has now its vegetarian restaurant. This year the first Russian
+Vegetarian Congress has been held. It seems to have been a very
+successful gathering. "Seldom," writes one who was present, "have I
+experienced such a strong impression as was made upon me by this first
+vegetarian congress in Moscow." Unity seems to have been the
+prevailing note. Papers were read on the general significance and the
+various aspects of vegetarianism, followed by discussions. Amongst the
+various excursions undertaken was a pilgrimage to Yasnaya Polyana,
+including a visit to Tolstoy's grave.
+
+A Vegetarian Exhibition has also been held in Moscow. It included a
+fine show of fruits and vegetables, exhibits of various substitutes
+for leather, soaps made of vegetable oils, an abundance of Russian and
+foreign vegetarian literature of all sorts, from the noblest reaches
+of theory to the most invaluable details of practice. The next
+Congress is arranged for Easter 1914, at Kiev.
+
+
+_A Hopeful Sign._
+
+Fifteen years ago the Berlin municipal authorities stoutly refused
+Professor Baron's offer to found an orphanage which should be
+conducted on vegetarian principles. At the present moment it is being
+arranged that all school children shall be taught the value of
+vegetables and leguminous preparations and the wholesomeness of a diet
+that is relatively non-stimulating and practically meatless.
+
+D.M. RICHARDSON.
+
+
+
+
+THE CURTAINED DOORWAYS.
+
+
+In George Macdonald's _Phantastes: a Faery Romance for Men and Women_
+it is told how a man found himself in the midst of a great circular
+hall built entirely of black marble. On every side and at regular
+intervals there were archways, all heavily curtained. Hearing a faint
+sound of music proceeding from one of these hidden doorways he went
+towards it and, drawing aside the hangings, found a large room crowded
+with statuary, but no sign of an living creature. Yet he was certain
+the music had proceeded from that particular archway. Greatly puzzled,
+he let the curtain fall and stepped back a few paces. At once the
+music continued. Stepping stealthily and quickly to the curtain, he
+again lifted it, and received a vivid impression of a crowd of dancing
+forms suddenly arrested: something told him beyond dispute that at the
+moment he had drawn the hangings aside what were now lovely but
+motionless statues had sprung each to its pedestal out of the mazes of
+an intricate dance. Sound and movement had been frozen, in a flash of
+time, into a crowd of beautiful forms--in stone. No statue but seemed
+to tremble into immobility as the intruder's gaze turned this way and
+that no marble face but seemed to be aglow with the music that had
+died with his entry; no white limb but seemed to be tremulous with the
+rhythm of the dance that had ceased so suddenly.
+
+If the subtlety and imaginative truth of this story should lead you to
+read the whole book, I shall have had the privilege of introducing you
+to what is surely one of the finest and most delicately wrought
+fantasies in the English language, a fantasy so permeated with beauty
+and truth that you will neither wish nor need to look for the "moral".
+
+But whether you read _Phantastes_ or not, I may be allowed to suggest
+that the incident I have attempted to describe conveys one of the
+secrets of healthy living.
+
+It is a trite saying, that health is harmony. But I plead for a much
+wider and fuller interpretation of harmony than is customary. _Mens
+sana in corpore sano_--a sane mind in a healthy body--does not fill
+all the requirements of a healthy life. It is but an excellent theme,
+wanting orchestration.
+
+It is good to aim at a harmonious working of one's internal
+arrangements if one has had the misfortune or the folly to break that
+harmony. The physical basis of life must be attended to if we would be
+well. Only, you cannot stop there without imperilling the whole
+scheme.
+
+Again, it is good to train the body by means of exercise, play,
+singing and handicraft; all these things react both upwards and
+downwards, outwards and inwards. For example, one of the special
+virtues of tennis, if it be played at all keenly, is the necessity for
+making one's feet (those neglected members!) quick and responsive to
+the messages of eye and brain. In an increasingly sedentary age the
+rapidly growing popularity of tennis is, for this one reason alone, a
+good omen. But if you play tennis, or any other healthy outdoor sport,
+or learn how to sing, or how to breathe, or if you do Muller's
+exercises daily, for the sole purpose of benefiting your liver or
+developing your muscles, or of "keeping fit," you will miss the real
+prize.
+
+It is good, also, to train the mind to be logical, critical and
+balanced: it is good to cultivate a retentive memory and to store up
+useful facts. But if while you are aiming at intellectual fitness and
+alertness you allow these good things to obscure other and better
+things, if, in short, you let means become ends, you will never be
+healthy, because you will miss half the joys of living.
+
+There are many very skilful performers on musical instruments. They
+have set themselves, or their parents have set them, to gain certain
+prizes, distinctions or qualifications. No music is now too difficult
+for them to execute. But that is exactly what they do--they execute
+it: destroy its head and heart by sheer mechanical perfection. They
+have mastered the piano, or the organ, or the violin, or their own
+voice; but music eludes them.
+
+You see why I began with that tale of the curtained doors, the
+mysterious music, and the quivering statuary. There is an elusive,
+haunting quality about life and all living things which, if we look
+for it and listen to it, imparts a glamour, a rhythm, a beauty to
+everything that is worth doing. The great danger is that in the
+pressure of work, the hurry of play, the pursuit of health, or the
+training of the mind we miss the very thing which can give meaning and
+value to all these things. The severely matter-of-fact people don't go
+near the curtained doors, and if they did, would discover only a lot
+of cold, lifeless statues. Whoever heard of statues dancing? Whoever
+heard of music without instruments? And yet this very sense of a
+lyrical movement imperfectly seen, and of a temporarily frozen music,
+is not only the very secret of all art: it is a slender guiding clue
+to the centre of everything....
+
+And in the house of every man, and of every woman, are the curtained
+doorways.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
+
+_This discussion arose out of the article with above title, by "M.D.,"
+which was published in our July number._--[EDS.]
+
+
+III
+
+I lift my hat to M.D. and trust that, as I don't know him, the
+somewhat jarring difference that I have with his views will not be put
+down to personal feeling. A.A. Voysey has put my first objection quite
+well from the layman's point of view. He says "there is no agreement
+between those who have been taught physiology." This is true.
+Playfair's full diet is different from Voit's. Voit's is different
+from Atwater's. Atwater's is different from Chittenden's.
+
+The custom of reducing the diets to calories, inasmuch as it
+introduces a false theory, has had a disastrous effect on progress,
+and has been a great hindrance to the attainment of knowledge. If the
+coal in the fireplace _were_ the cause of the heat of the fire (but is
+it?), there is no analogy between the elevation of the heat by
+hundreds and even thousands of degrees when the fire is lighted, and
+the elevation of half-a-degree or a degree which occurs when food is
+taken into the body, especially when we remember that a similar
+elevation of temperature occurs when work is performed by means of the
+body without eating or drinking at all.
+
+It is quite evident to every clear seer, or it ought to be, that the
+force of animal life or zoo-dynamic is the cause of the heat of the
+body, just as the electric force is the cause of the liberation of
+heat through the battery, and the chemic force is the cause of the
+heat of the fire, and that zoo-dynamic and electro-dynamic and
+chemico-dynamic are forms or species or varieties of the one
+omnipotent and eternal energy by which all things in this universe
+consist. The aggregate of all the particular forces makes up the
+eternal energy which is one. They are all species of the one, but it
+is convenient and even necessary for our limited intellects to
+consider them separately, for the indefinite number of the facts and
+also their intricacy and complexity stagger and overwhelm us unless we
+do; and indeed they stagger us even when we try to treat them and take
+them up separately for consideration and examination. But now for the
+proof of A.A. Voysey's statement.
+
+Ranke found he required 100 grammes proteid; fat 100 grammes;
+carbo-hydrate 240 grammes to keep him going. These he could have got
+from 9 oz. of lean meat or 250 grammes, 18 oz. of bread or 500
+grammes, 12 oz. or 55 grammes of butter and 1 oz of fat (I do not, of
+course, suggest that it would have been wise for him to get them so).
+Moleschott's demands are: proteid 120 grammes, fat 90 grammes,
+carbo-hydrate 333 grammes. Voit demands for hard work: proteid 145
+grammes, fat 100 grammes, carbo-hydrate 450 grammes. Atwater demands
+for hard work the following:--proteid 177 grammes, fat 250 grammes,
+carbo-hydrate 650 grammes. Horace Fletcher, we are told by Professor
+Chittenden, took for a time, when everything was accurately measured
+and weighed: proteid 44.9 grammes, fat 38 grammes, carbo-hydrate 253
+grammes. Cornaro lived on 12 oz. of solid food and 14 oz. of red wine
+a day for a period of something like 60 years, from 38 years of age to
+about 97, and had vigorous health during the time except when he
+transgressed his rule. Of course, he was not a hard physical
+worker--_i.e._ he did not do the work of a navvy. But how, in view of
+these differences, can M.D. say: "These quantities were settled by
+physiologists many years ago, and no good reasons have since been
+adduced for altering them"? It is amazing to me to read such a
+statement. It reminds me of a statement by a distinguished physician
+in London during last year to the effect that we could not give a
+growing schoolboy too much food--we could not over-feed him. My
+opinion, on the other hand, after a long experience, during which time
+my eyes have not been shut, is that the large majority of the diseases
+of humanity are due to mal-nutrition and that the form of that
+mal-nutrition is over-feeding--not under-feeding. This opinion should
+be taken for what it is worth. But to test it we should ask ourselves:
+What is the reason for the necessity to take food into the body? Is it
+to give strength and heat to the body? Or is it to restore the waste
+of the body sustained by the action on it of the force of life or
+zoo-dynamic which inhabits it? The demands for food will vary and vary
+much according to the way in which we answer this question. As you
+allowed me to discuss this question in _Healthy Life_ in July and
+August of last year I must not take up your space by discussing it
+again. But the answer we give determines the amounts of food that we
+require to take, since, obviously, if the strength and heat of the
+body depend upon the food, the more food we take the more strength and
+heat shall we have; while, if the function of food in the adult or
+grown body is only to restore the waste of the body, the question is
+how much is the waste. There are various ways in which this question
+can be answered and I cannot go into them now; but I say, in my
+opinion, the waste is very much less than is commonly supposed. The
+body, I take it, is made by zoo-dynamic or the life-force to be a fit
+habitation for itself. The body must waste when the life-force acts
+through it, and that waste must be restored by food and sleep, or the
+body will die; since things (the body) cannot act as the medium of
+conveying forces (zoo-dynamic or the life-force) without wasting under
+their action. But so beautifully has the body been made by zoo-dynamic
+that it wastes very little, much less than is commonly supposed, by
+the action of zoo-dynamic through it. Not seeing this, we ingest into
+the body far more than is required to restore its waste, and so we
+fall ill, for, obviously, if we ingest more than the quantity
+necessary for this purpose we choke the body up and render it
+inefficient for its purpose as an instrument for work.
+
+Now this is precisely what seems to me to happen in life. As we are
+all under the double delusion that the strength of the body and its
+heat come from the food, we all with one accord put far too much food
+into the body, and when we find that we die, all of us, generation
+after generation, at from 50 to 70 years of age, we make up little
+proverbs to justify our unphysiological conduct and say that three
+score years and ten are the measure of the duration of life. M.D. says
+that "some twenty years ago most people lived fairly close to the old
+physiological quantities" (but what are these? for we have seen how
+they vary), "now they have been cut adrift from these and are
+floundering out of their depth." May I remind M.D. that people are now
+living longer than they did twenty years ago. How does he account for
+that? No doubt some of the increase in the length of life is due to
+the diminution of the birth rate, but still I suppose M.D. would
+admit that there is an increase in the duration of life over and above
+what can be accounted for in this way. If so, how does he account for
+it?
+
+M.D. says, further: "For the public it will now probably suffice if
+they insist on raising (or considering, A.R.) the question of
+quantity" (of food, A.R.) "wherever they suffer in any way." I agree
+with all my heart. But M.D. implies, if I read him aright, that the
+public should increase the quantity of their food when they suffer in
+any way. I, on the other hand, and rather unhappily for myself, am
+convinced that the raising of this question implies that it should be
+answered in the exact opposite way to that of M.D. and that we should
+diminish our food if we "suffer in any way." And I can point to
+Nature's own plan as a corroboration of the truth of my view, for her
+plan when we suffer in any way is to fling us into bed and take away
+our appetite, or at least to diminish our appetite if we are not so
+ill as to require to remain in bed.
+
+The whole question of medical practice depends on the answer we give
+to this question, and therefore one might go on indefinitely with its
+discussion. Neither the Editors' space and patience nor my time allow
+of this; but I should like to ask M.D., with all respect, if he
+remembers what Dr King Chambers said of the starvation that comes of
+over-repletion? Dr King Chambers occupied one of the most prominent
+places as a consultant in London (very probably, I suppose) when M.D.
+was a very young man. My late lamented friend, Dr Dewey of Meadville,
+Pennsylvania, used the phrase "starvation from over-feeding," not
+knowing that Dr King Chambers had used practically the same expression
+before him. That I made the same discovery myself, and independently,
+is not, I take it, a sign of acuteness of intellect or of observation.
+The amazing thing is that every practitioner is not compelled to make
+the same discovery. But if it is a true discovery, then it follows
+that all the signs of lowered vitality referred to by M.D., while
+they _may_ be caused by under-feeding, may also be caused by
+over-feeding and may therefore require for proper treatment, not
+increase of the diet, but diminution of it. A low temperature,
+therefore, a slow pulse, languor, pallor, inanition, fatigue,
+good-for-nothingness, inefficiency, anorexia, anaemia, neurasthenia,
+etc., etc., may all be due to blocking of the body with too much food
+as well as to supplying it with too little. Fires may be put out by
+heaping up too much coal on them. To make them burn briskly we ought
+to push the poker in and gently lift the coal so as to admit of the
+entrance of air. Then in a while our fire will become brisk and
+bright. And so it may be in the body. Nay, my opinion is that almost
+always these marks of depression are caused by blocking up of the body
+and that therefore the proper treatment is, as a rule, not increase
+but diminution of the diet. The place in the body in which the
+blocking first occurs is the connective tissues or the tissues that
+connect every part with every other. It is here that the lymph is
+secreted, and as the lymph joins the thoracic duct which conveys the
+products of digestion to the blood, it is obvious that lymph-secretion
+is a complementary digestive process and it is also obvious how
+blocking up of the connective tissues, which is the immediate cause of
+anorexia and inanition, usually comes to exist in the body.
+
+M.D. talks of "natural food." He seems to be a vegetarian? Good. But
+is not the question of how much food we ought to eat equally urgent
+whether we are vegetarian or omnivorous? I think it is. I do not think
+that the chief cause of our illnesses to-day is taking wrong or
+unsuitable food. In my opinion we are ill mainly because we take
+suitable food too often and because we take too much of it. My answer
+to the question, therefore--"How Much Should We Eat?--A
+Warning"--turns on the previous question: What is the Function
+performed by Food in the Body? As I think that this function in the
+grown body is only to restore the waste, the warning in my mind is
+far rather that we should take less than that we should (as M.D.
+advises us) take more. I agree with him in the view that "chronic
+starvation is insidious." But, as I believe that "chronic starvation"
+is usually a form of Dr King Chambers's "starvation from
+over-repletion" and of Dr Dewey's "starvation from over-feeding," I am
+bound to be of the consequent opinion that it is to be met, not by
+increase, but by diminution of the diet. This is one of my reasons for
+thinking that none of us ought ever to eat oftener than twice a day,
+under fifty years of age, and that after that we would do well to eat
+once a day only. I feel sure that if we altered our habits in these
+ways, we should add very much both to the duration and to the
+efficiency of life. This is not a question of dietetics only. The
+issue is of the most practical character. What an addition of five or
+ten or fifteen or twenty or twenty-five years to the average duration
+of life might mean to this people and still more to the people of the
+whole globe is unpredictable by mortal man. But it is evident that it
+would be of the very greatest import to humanity. This is the great
+issue of the discussion of this subject. It seems to me that illness
+might be enormously diminished and health and efficiency and happiness
+immensely increased. But I think that these boons might be obtained,
+not by indulging the body and its appetites, but only by the exercise
+of a wise restraint and government over it. It is at least very much
+to be desired that more agreement might be manifested in the opinions
+and practice of qualified physiologists so that the public might have
+clear guidance, and not as at present, be advised in ways so
+conflicting that they do not know what or whom to believe.
+
+A. RABAGLIATI, M.D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Tourists:_
+
+Every little village has a little shop where you can buy nasty little
+sweets.
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+
+ He was a native of Liverpool, but had liver for many years in the
+ Isle of Wight--_Edmonton_ (Canada) _Journal_.
+
+Funny he didn't go to Poole and leave his liver behind him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ REAL FLESH FOOD FOUND AT LAST.
+ --From an advt. in daily papers.
+
+Evidently we have all been vegetarians and knew it not.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Nothing can replace salt.--From an advt. in _Punch_.
+
+Many food reformers advantageously replace salt with nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The golf craze has been greater this autumn than in any previous
+ year. Nobody is quite safe from the fever. It seizes those who
+ mocked at it, and pays no respect to sex or age.--_British
+ Weekly_.
+
+By the time the next Medical Congress comes round it is expected that
+at least three distinguished bacteriologists will have discovered the
+golf-fever microbe. They will probably agree to call it _Mashilococcus
+Caddes_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Between lunch and dinner take another tumbler of water cold. Take
+ a glass of cold water half-an-hour after lunch, half-an-hour
+ after tea, half-an-hour after dinner, and before going to bed at
+ night. Never drink between meals.--_Woman's Life_.
+
+All other methods failing, try putting your watch half-an-hour on
+after each meal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I once got a circular from a man who grew potatoes containing his
+ photograph, and, I think, an autobiography.--_Musical Standard_.
+
+Not nearly so convenient as one of those automatic egg-stamping
+hens.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Stop-Press News._
+
+ A "pocket clipper" has been invented (according to a certain
+ catalogue) which can be used for the beard or hair at back of
+ neck.
+
+But surely people who can do anything so clever as grow a beard
+on the back of the neck ought not to be tempted to clip it off.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+
+MORE EGG DISHES.
+
+In our issue of May 1912 we published a number of special recipes for
+eggs. These were much appreciated. And even now this and other back
+numbers are asked for. We now give some further recipes.
+
+It should be remembered that eggs are a simple form of animal food and
+much purer than meat. They are also easily digested by most people.
+They therefore form a very useful substitute for flesh-foods,
+especially where the latter have only recently been discarded.
+
+The normal progress towards a more or less ideal diet involves, of
+course, the elimination of eggs as well as of other dairy products.
+But wise food reform proceeds always by steps.
+
+
+SAVOURY BAKED EGGS.
+
+Melt a little butter, or vegetable fat, in an open earthenware baking
+dish; break into this as many eggs as required. Cover thinly with
+grated cheese; add a knob of butter and bake till set. The dish can be
+placed direct on the table.
+
+
+EGG ON TOMATO.[13]
+
+ One egg, two medium-sized tomatoes, butter.
+
+Skin the tomatoes; cut in halves and put them, with a small piece of
+butter, into a small stewpan. Close lightly, and cook slowly until
+reduced to a pulp. Break the egg into a cup, and slide it gently on to
+the tomato. Replace the pan lid and the egg will poach in the steam
+rising from the tomato.
+
+[13] This recipe is from _The Healthy Life Cook Book_, a new and
+revised edition of which is in contemplation.
+
+
+SAVOURY EGG FRITTERS.
+
+ Six eggs, two large tomatoes, half-teaspoon mixed dried herbs,
+ about three tablespoons ground biscuits ("Ixion" or any of the
+ unsweetened "P.R." kinds).
+
+Hard boil three of the eggs and chop them finely. Skin the tomatoes,
+mash them and add to the chopped eggs with the remaining eggs (well
+beaten), herbs and biscuit powder. Should the mixture be too moist to
+mould add more biscuit powder; if too dry add a little water. Cut and
+shape into finger shapes and either fry in olive oil or bake on
+buttered tin or open earthenware baking dish. (The last-mentioned is
+the best method, as the baking dish can be brought to the table as it
+is, and there is only one dish instead of two to wash up afterwards.)
+
+
+SAVOURY EGG PATTIES.
+
+The above Egg Fritter mixture made rather moist may be used as a
+filling for savoury patties.
+
+Make for these a short crust with 1/2 lb. of Artox meal, 3 oz. of
+Nutter and water. Slightly bake the shells of pastry (made thin)
+before adding the filling, and finish to a golden brown.
+
+Serve these and the fritters with either brown gravy or white sauce.
+
+
+SWEET EGG SOUFFLE.
+
+ Five eggs, 3/4 lb. soft cane sugar, 1 oz. ground rice, 2 oz. of
+ butter, rind of half a lemon.
+
+Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs. Beat up the yolks and sift
+in the ground rice, sugar and grated rind of the lemon. To this batter
+add the well-whisked whites. Well heat the butter in a frying pan,
+turn in the batter and fry over gentle heat till set. Fold over the
+edges and place on well-greased flat dish and bake for barely a
+quarter of an hour. Sift over some soft cane sugar and serve very hot.
+
+
+SNOW EGGS.
+
+ Three eggs, one and a quarter pints of milk, a teaspoon of soft
+ cane sugar, vanilla flavouring.
+
+Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs and whisk the whites to a
+very stiff froth with the sugar. Put the milk into a saucepan and when
+it boils drop in whites of eggs in small pieces shaped between two
+dessert spoons. Only a little should be cooked at a time in this way,
+and each should be allowed to poach for two minutes, and when done
+should be taken out with a slice and put on a sieve to drain. When all
+the whites are used in this way, strain the milk and add it to the
+well-beaten yolks. Pour into a double saucepan and stir over the fire
+till the custard thickens; flavour with vanilla to taste.
+
+When _cold_ pour into a dish and lay the snow eggs on top.
+
+(Kindly supplied by Mrs Edith Wilkinson.)
+
+
+EGG-RAISED CHERRY CAKE.
+
+ 9 oz. good "standard" flour, 5 oz. Nutter (or other nut fat), 5
+ oz. cane castor sugar, 2 oz. preserved cherries (glace), 2 oz.
+ well-washed sultanas, 2 oz. ground almonds, four eggs, outer rind
+ of lemon (grated).
+
+Beat Nutter and sugar to a cream; add eggs one by one, beating all the
+time; have ready the flour, with the fruit, grated lemon rind and
+ground almonds mixed in, and add gradually to the above mixture,
+beating all the time, and until of even consistency throughout. Line a
+cake tin with double thickness of buttered paper, pour in the mixture
+and bake in moderate oven about one and a half hours.
+
+_Any housewife who doubts the possibility of making light and dainty
+cakes without the now customary baking powder and baking soda, etc.,
+should try the above recipe. No one could wish for a more excellent
+cake._
+
+
+NOTE ON CASSEROLES.
+
+Now that casserole cookery (_i.e._ cooking in earthenware dishes, both
+open and covered) is becoming more widely known and practised, readers
+will be glad to know that many housewives believe in boiling new
+earthenware before using it, as this effectually toughens and hardens
+it. This is particularly efficacious in the case of ordinary brown
+kitchenware, the articles being placed in a large pan of cold water
+which is then brought slowly to the boil. After being allowed to boil
+for ten minutes remove the pan and allow the water to cool before
+taking out the ware.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+EXCESSIVE PERSPIRATION.
+
+ Miss R.E.N. writes.--I am troubled with excessive perspiration. I
+ neither eat meat nor drink tea. I have a cold sponge bath down to
+ my waist every morning, and I change all my clothes when I go to
+ bed. My diet is, roughly, as follows:
+
+ _Breakfast._--Oatmeal porridge with toast or bread and jam or
+ golden syrup. Hot water.
+
+ _Lunch._--Peas, beans or lentils, eggs, cheese. Vegetables:
+ potatoes and onions, or carrots, cabbage, cauliflower, turnips.
+ Puddings, fruit or milk wholemeal bread, not much sugar except
+ for sweetening fruits, etc.
+
+ _Tea meal._--Wholemeal bread and butter, nuts, jam, cake, pastry;
+ hot water.
+
+ _At bedtime._--Hot water or coffee.
+
+If our correspondent wishes to remedy this excessive perspiration she
+must get a hot towel-bath daily (all over),[14] wearing porous
+linen-mesh underclothing next the skin. She should also discontinue
+the soft sugary and starchy foods, and not mix fruit with other foods
+(it is best taken by itself, say, for breakfast). She needs more of
+the cooling salad vegetables. The following diet would be a great
+improvement:--
+
+_On rising._--Half-pint of hot boiled water, sipped slowly.
+
+_Breakfast._--Wholemeal bread or biscuits and butter (all made
+without salt), with salad or grated raw roots. Stop porridge, jam and
+golden syrup. Avoid drinking at meals.
+
+_Lunch._--Two eggs, or 2 oz. of curd cheese. Two vegetables cooked in
+casserole without salt; wholemeal bread or biscuits and butter; a few
+figs, prunes, dried bananas, or raisins, washed but not cooked. Avoid
+milk puddings or stewed fruits as too fermentative and heating.
+
+_Supper meal._--1 to 2 oz. flaked nuts, some crisp "P.R." or "Ixion"
+biscuits with nut butter. Some fresh salad or grated roots. Stop jam,
+cake and pastry.
+
+_At bedtime._--Half-pint of hot boiled water, or clear vegetable soup,
+sipped slowly.
+
+[14] The Sanum Oxygen Baths are also excellent in a case of this kind.
+
+
+DIET FOR ULCERATED THROAT.
+
+ Mrs L.B. writes.--Do you think it would be wise for a person
+ suffering from ulcers in the throat and on other mucous membranes
+ to adopt a diet devoid of meat, yeast and salt?
+
+It would certainly be wise to discard meat and salt in a case of this
+kind, but yeast is sometimes useful taken as "unflavoured Marmite."
+The chief cause of ulcers is the abuse of the soft cereal and sugary
+foods. In a case of this sort I should advise a diet consisting
+exclusively of well-dextrinised cereals--_e.g._ Granose, Melarvi,
+etc.--with plenty of grated raw roots and finely chopped salads and
+tomatoes. This can be combined with curd cheese, raw or lightly cooked
+eggs, flaked nuts or Brusson Jeune bread as the proteid part of the
+diet.
+
+
+FARMING AND SCIATICA.
+
+ Mrs A.C.B. writes.--For two months my husband, who leads an
+ active open-air life, has had severe pain all down the back of
+ his left leg. It is like neuralgia, and comes on worse when
+ sitting. He has been a farmer all his life, but is anything but
+ strong and constantly taking cold. Are these pains likely to be
+ due to wrong food?
+
+This pain is evidence of sciatica. Chills alone will not produce
+sciatica, which has its real cause in the system being choked up with
+acids and toxins of various kinds. In such a case as this, warm water
+enemas should be taken freely to clear the colon well; sugar, milk and
+all starchy mushy foods should be strictly avoided; vegetables should
+be taken either as baked roots or as fresh salads; eggs and cheese
+should be substituted for meat; and plenty of fresh butter should be
+taken. Boiled water, _between meals_, will be good, but nothing should
+be given to drink with food. Salt, pickles, and greasy or highly
+flavoured foods should be avoided.
+
+
+TEMPORARY "BRIGHT'S DISEASE" AND HOW TO DEAL WITH IT.
+
+ Miss E. would like to know what kind of diet is suitable for one
+ who has been suffering from Bright's Disease following a serious
+ illness. Why should meat have any bad effect upon the kidneys?
+ She does not take it, although her medical man advises the use of
+ it at once.
+
+It is not an uncommon thing for people who have suffered from an acute
+septic fever to find albumen temporarily present in the urine. This is
+due to the irritant action of the toxins and other poisons (which the
+fever is the means of ejecting) upon the structure of the kidneys. The
+kidneys are filters and they remove the bulk of the soluble waste of
+the body.
+
+The practitioner frequently finds albumenuria in cases of scarlet
+fever, typhoid fever, diphtheria, etc., and the object of his
+treatment is to prevent this condition of kidney irritation from
+becoming an established disease (Bright's disease).
+
+Flesh foods, and especially meat extracts and meat soups, are the
+worst possible wherewith to feed these fever cases, because they throw
+so much extra work upon the kidneys. Meat is composed mainly of
+proteids. It also contains the urinary wastes and the toxins (due to
+fear) which were in the animal's body and on the way to elimination
+when it was killed.
+
+This sufferer should take one meal per day consisting of fresh fruit
+only; the rest of the diet should consist of salad vegetables and
+finely grated raw roots, home-made curd cheese, dextrinised cereals
+(such as Melarvi biscuits, Shredded Wheat, "P.R." crackers, Granose
+biscuits, Grape-Nuts, twice-baked standard bread, etc.) and fresh or
+nut butter.
+
+
+PHOSPHORUS AND THE NERVES.
+
+ W.H.H. writes:--I should be very grateful if Dr Knaggs could help
+ me with any information or hints regarding phosphaturia. I suffer
+ much from this troublesome complaint.
+
+We have to remember that the nervous system is two-fold. The one, or
+conscious portion, consists of the brain and spinal cord, from which
+all the nerves or branches travel to all parts of the body and give us
+dominion over them. The other, or subconscious, called the sympathetic
+nervous system, lies on either side of the front of the spine as two
+long chains with centres, or ganglia, at intervals. This second system
+is not within our control and has to do with the regulation of our
+vegetative functions, including the bulk of the digestive process.
+
+All nerves, whether they come from the brain or from the sympathetic
+system, ranging to their smallest terminals, are built alike of cells,
+and these cells secrete a complex _fatty_ substance, called
+_lecithin_, whose dominant element is phosphorus. This phosphorus has
+to be supplied to the body with food, and as food, and it cannot be
+properly utilised or assimilated by the body or used by the nerves to
+build up their _lecithin_ unless it is eaten in the form of organic
+compounds.
+
+The tissues of the body are continually dying, as a result of work
+done, and are continually being replaced by fresh young tissues as
+needed. It is the function of the nerves to manage this work for us as
+well as to similarly arrange for reproduction.
+
+In order to control the functions of the various organs and tissues
+and to regulate the rate at which they reproduce themselves, the
+nerves extend their terminal branches, not only into every tissue, but
+into every microscopical unit of such tissue, and the part of the cell
+which represents the nerve terminal is the inner structure called the
+nucleus.
+
+Now it will be obvious that the more the two nervous systems are
+worked the greater will be their depletion of _lecithin_ and the more
+need there will be for fresh supplies of phosphorus in the daily food
+rations.
+
+The person who works hard, whether it be manual labour or brain work,
+needs food and rest at intervals in order that the nerves may
+recuperate and replenish their stocks of _lecithin_.
+
+A goodly proportion of uncooked foods rich in phosphorus must be
+supplied to make good the wear and tear, and the digestion must
+equally be efficient if these food-stuffs are to become assimilated.
+
+Cooking of food to a large extent breaks down the organic phosphorus
+salts and makes them inorganic. In this state they are of but little
+use to the body. Poor digestion associated with putrefactive
+fermentation equally converts the organic salts into inorganic ones.
+These pass into the blood and are promptly eliminated by the kidneys
+as waste (_phosphaturia_) and thus they never reach the nerves at all.
+
+We must remember that phosphorus is usually found in natural foods
+bound up with the proteid and especially with that proteid which has
+to do with the reproduction of the species. For this reason man
+instinctively resorts to the use of egg-yolks, and to the various
+seeds (such as nuts, wheat, barley, etc.) because of their rich
+phosphorus content.
+
+These proteid-bound phosphorus salts can only be properly utilised
+when the hydrochloric acid of the stomach juice is well formed, for it
+converts them into acid salts which are readily absorbed. Therefore to
+ensure free absorption we must always remember to give the
+phosphorus-containing foods with such meals as will cause free
+secretion of the gastric acid.
+
+When fermentation is active and the stomach juices are weakened the
+germs of the intestines rapidly break up the phosphorus constituents
+of the proteids and make them inorganic. Therefore the first thing to
+do when a person is found to be suffering from _phosphaturia_ is to
+stop the intestinal fermentation by a right diet, clear the bowels of
+their accumulated waste poisons and give the nerves plenty of rest.
+Another consideration to bear in mind is that the nerves need fat
+wherewith to build up the _lecithin_. An excessive fermentative
+sourness of the stomach makes the food so acid when sent into the
+bowels that the bile, pancreatic and other intestinal juices cannot
+neutralise them, and so the fats themselves are not emulsified and
+digested, which fully accounts for the mental depression and debility
+of which these patients complain.
+
+People who are suffering from "nerves" in any form need plenty of pure
+fat (fresh dairy butter, cream, nut butter, fruit-oils, etc.) and an
+abundance of natural fresh vegetable products at once rich in
+phosphorus and iron and in organic alkaline acid-neutralising earthy
+salts. These arrest fermentation and so enable the phosphorus and the
+fat to become duly assimilated.
+
+
+CANARY _VERSUS_ JAMAICA BANANAS.
+
+ R.B., Lincoln, would like to know if there is very much
+ difference, as regards food value, between the Jamaica and Canary
+ banana. "I have heard it said that the Jamaica is only fit for
+ the dust-heap. Well, I cannot very easily think it is so useless,
+ and at the same time I have an idea that the Canary is the better
+ of the two. I should be very pleased to know if you think there
+ is much difference between them."
+
+The difference between Jamaica and Canary bananas is due to the length
+of time necessary for them to reach us from their place of growth. It
+takes, I believe, nearly twice as long for a ship to travel from
+Jamaica as from the Canary Islands. Hence the fruit imported from the
+latter place can be picked in a much riper condition than would be the
+case with the Jamaica article. This probably accounts for the better
+quality and flavour of the Canary banana. Besides this the climate may
+have some determining influence. To say that the Jamaica bananas
+should be discarded because they are of a less satisfactory food value
+or because their flavour is less developed is uncalled for. The
+disparity in price is also very marked, so that the poor can readily
+procure the Jamaica banana where they would not be in a position to
+afford the better class of fruit coming from the Canaries. I have
+discussed this subject in p.34 of my book, _The Truth about Sugar_.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+ LEYTONSTONE
+
+ _To the Editors._
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ Enclosed please find P.O. for a copy of _The Healthy Life_ to be
+ sent to Carnegie Public Library, close to Midland Station,
+ Leytonstone, also to The Alexandra Holiday Home, Y.W.C.A.,
+ Alexandra Road, Southend-on-Sea. At the latter home there are
+ something like 500 to 600 visitors every year, many of whom are
+ semi-invalids. No doubt the magazine will be scorned by many, yet
+ I am quite certain that there are others amongst the number there
+ who will gladly welcome the truths it teaches, and if only one or
+ two are helped to live a more healthy and therefore more happy
+ life, it will be quite worth while. Please do not mention my name
+ in either case. Yours, etc., X.
+
+There is every reason why _The Healthy Life_ should be known and
+read in every public library in the United Kingdom. In this we
+are entirely dependent upon those readers who are ready to follow
+the excellent example of the above correspondent. A year's
+subscription--2s.--is a very small price to pay for bringing the
+message of this magazine before the public in this way. We should
+like to hear from readers in all parts.--[EDS.]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #Back Numbers# |
+ | |
+ | If readers who possess copies of the first number of _The |
+ | Healthy Life_ (August 1911) will send them to the Editors, |
+ | they will receive, in exchange, booklets to the value of |
+ | threepence for each copy. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V NOVEMBER
+ No. 28. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+It was the slave-woman who laid her child under a bush that she might
+spare herself the pain of seeing it die!
+
+One of the commonest sources of mental and moral confusion is to
+mistake the egotistic shrinking from the sight of suffering with the
+altruistic shrinking from causing it and desire to relieve it.
+
+The so-called sensitive person is too often only sensitive to his or
+her own pain and, therefore, finds it difficult in the presence of
+another's suffering to do what is needed to relieve it.
+
+The healer, the health-bringer, the truly sympathetic person, does not
+even hesitate to inflict pain when to do so means to restore
+health.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+CASTLES IN THE AIR.
+
+_Regular readers will recognise in this wonderfully simple and
+suggestive article a continuation of the series previously entitled
+"Healthy Brains." The author of "The Children All Day Long" is an
+intimate disciple of one of the greatest living psychologists, and she
+has a message of the first importance to all who realise that true
+health depends as much on poise of mind as on physical fitness._--[EDS.]
+
+
+Of all the occupations which imagination gives us, surely none is more
+popular or more delightful than the planning out of future days.
+Pleasure and fame and honour, work and rest, comfort and adventure:
+all things take their turn in our romances.
+
+Not all the castles are for ourselves alone. In childhood it is our
+school, our club, our town that is to be the centre of great events.
+The young man's castle is a nest to which he hopes to bring a mate.
+The mother sees the future coronet or laurel-wreath round the soft
+hair of her baby's head. And we all build castles for the world
+sometimes--at least for our own country or our own race. Sometimes we
+knock them down and rebuild again in rather different shape--Mr Wells
+has taught us what a fascinating game it is.
+
+Sometimes, especially perhaps in little, unimportant things, our
+imagination does centre chiefly around our own activities. What we
+mean to do, what we might do, what we would like to do: there must be
+something else besides selfishness and waste of time in the constantly
+recurring thoughts.
+
+Who does not know the charm of looking down the theatre-list of the
+morning paper? One may be too busy or two poor to go often to the
+play, but the very suggestion of all the colour and interest is
+pleasant. Who does not like looking over prospectuses of lectures and
+classes at the beginning of the winter session? "I _should_ like to go
+to that course on Greek Art. Oh, it is on Mondays, then that is no
+good. German, elementary and conversation. How useful that would be!
+Gymnasium and physical culture; how I wish I had another evening in
+the week to spare!"
+
+Railway books, again, and guides and travel bills--how delightful they
+are! It is easy to plan out tours for one's holidays up to the age of
+100. "Brittany; oh yes, I must go there one day. And Norway, that must
+really be my next trip." The Rockies, the cities of the East, coral
+islands of the Pacific--they all seem to enrich our lives by the very
+thought of their possibilities.
+
+Again, who does not love a library catalogue? To go through with a
+pencil, noting down the names of books one wants to read is a form of
+castle-building by no means to be despised.
+
+Some people get the same pleasure out of house-hunting; they see an
+empty house and go and get the key in order to see over it. The
+chances of their ever living there are practically none, but the view
+gives a stimulus to their inventive activity: they plan out how they
+would furnish the rooms and fill the empty hearths with dreams.
+
+Is not the same thing the explanation of shop-gazing? The woman who
+has bought her winter coat and hat does not as a rule refrain from
+looking any more into shop windows till the spring; instead, she
+clothes herself in imagination in all the beautiful stuffs she sees
+displayed, and if some of the things demand ballroom, racecourse, golf
+links or perhaps the Alps for the background, why, so much the better,
+the suggestion puts, as it were, a view from the windows of her castle
+in the air.
+
+A garden--a dozen square yards or reckoned in acres--is full of
+material for our imagination; indeed, a seedsman's catalogue or a copy
+of "Amateur Gardening" will often be enough to start us; long lines of
+greenhouses will build themselves for us, or rockeries, or wild glens
+with streams in them, and the world will blossom round about us.
+
+Sometimes it is ambition that calls us, personal or professional; we
+get beforehand the sweet taste of power upon the tongue. It may
+perhaps be sometimes the rewards of work, riches and honour and so on,
+but more often, I think, the dreams of youth circle round the work
+itself. We will be of use in the world, we will find new paths and
+make them safe for those coming after us to walk in, we will get rid
+of that evil and set up a ladder towards that good; we will heal,
+teach, feed, amuse, uplift or cherish the other human beings round
+about us. We will store only for the sake of distributing; we will
+climb only to be better able to give a helping hand.
+
+Well, there are some danger signals at cross-roads of our dream-way,
+some precautions to be observed if we would not let romance obscure
+and hinder us in our search after reality. But none of these "castles"
+are bad in themselves. In so far as they quicken our attention power,
+deepen our thoughtfulness, make our activities more elastic and keep
+us from carelessness or sloth, they are surely all to the good as
+episodes in our development.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+
+
+
+THE SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF VEGETALISM.
+
+This article, the earlier part of which appeared in the October
+number, is from the French of Prof. H. Labbe, the head of the
+_laboratoire a la Faculte de Medecine_, in Paris. It reflects a
+characteristic aloofness to a any considerations other than scientific
+or economic. But it will well repay careful study.--[EDS.]
+
+
+V
+
+Though the consumption of vegetable foods seems to offer a slight
+disadvantage from the point of view of albuminoid matters, this is not
+the case touching hydro-carbonated matters and sugars. The vegetable
+kingdom constitutes the almost exclusive source of these alimentary
+principles. One cannot indeed take much account of the consumption of
+the .5-.6 per cent, of glycogen which exists in the animal muscle
+partaken of under the shape of butcher's meat. There is hardly enough
+in this for a large eater of between 200 and 250 grammes of meat, to
+find in hydrocarbonated matters the 1/300 or the 1/400 of the daily
+ration. Hydrocarbons are necessarily borrowed from the vegetable
+foods. This is also the case with sugars which do not exist in the
+animal kingdom in appreciable quantities. It is the same thing with
+alcohol which is obtained only from the vegetable kingdom.
+
+
+VI
+
+As to fatty matters, animal foods, like vegetable products, are
+abundantly provided with them. Moreover, from the point of view of
+digestibility and capability of assimilating, one may say that there
+is a quasi-absolute identity between animal and vegetable fats. The
+reason which would induce us to prefer either would not seem to be of
+a physiological nature. The economics, which we shall see further on,
+take this upon themselves, as the most serious reproach which can be
+made against the use of animal dishes is doubtless their dearness, and
+the reason which militates most in favour of the predominance of a
+vegetable diet is to a certainty its cheapness.
+
+
+VII
+
+Such are, briefly expounded and refuted, the fundamental objections
+which can be brought against the vegetarian diet and the "vegetalian"
+customs. There exists, in fact, no serious physiological or chemical
+reason for not satisfying our needs solely with foods of vegetable
+origin. It may be interesting to note that, in reality, the most
+confirmed flesh eaters support their energy-producing needs mainly
+with vegetable products. In the mixed diet universally practised meat
+plays but a small part.
+
+In meat the waste in preparation and consecutive waste at table is
+considerable. To really introduce 200 grammes of meat into the
+stomach, nearly 400 grammes must be purchased, and expensively put
+into use. What do these 200 grammes really bring in nutritive
+elements?
+
+ Meat.
+
+ 200 gr. (mod. fat.) at 18% albumin = 36 gr. album., about.
+ " " 5% fat = 10 gr. fat, about.
+ -----
+ 46 gr.
+
+These 46 grs. constitute barely the 8 per cent. of the total weight of
+a ration, averaged in nutritive elements, calculated as follows:--
+
+ Albumin 80
+ Fatty matters 70
+ Hydrates of carbon 350
+
+This is a very feeble proportion.
+
+If one turns to the calorific point of view, in order to estimate the
+share of energy useful to the organism, we arrive at much the same
+conclusion. The 46 grs. of nutritive animal elements barely provide
+230 thermal units which can be utilised, while the total diet which we
+are considering brings a power of disposal of nearly 2,350 thermal
+units. It is, even then, barely 10 per cent. of the total energy. The
+most convinced flesh eaters, those who buy 400 grs. of meat a day for
+their consumption, must learn, willingly or unwillingly, that the
+animal element enters only in an infinitesimal part into their real
+substance and reparation.
+
+
+VIII
+
+Beyond this very feeble nutritive help is there, then, in meat,
+anything else which makes the use of this article of food necessary,
+agreeable or particularly strengthening? It is incontestible that meat
+contains stimulating substances, which, as Prof. Armand Gautier has
+said, play the part of nerve tonics, and have perhaps a direct action
+on the circulation.
+
+These special meat matters are found concentrated in the gravy. Meat
+gravy, in fact, beside a feeble proportion of albuminoid matters, or
+solubly derived quantities, polypeptides, etc., in notable proportion
+of liberated acids, contains a certain quantity of matters, qualified
+by the generic name of extractives; a notable quantity of these
+extractive matters being creatine and creatinine, as well as
+substances of which the fundamental nucleus is the puric grouping.
+These purins, by the name which E. Fischer attributes to them, derive
+from a special grouping which it would be supposed exists in a
+hypothetic body, but which is not known in a state of liberty, purin.
+This first term gives rise to a series of bodies in lateral groups, of
+which the most interesting are caffeine and theobromine. Amongst these
+substances the one which has the maximum of oxidation is no other than
+uric acid. Caffeine and theobromine enjoy nervine properties and
+energetic vascular actions. These properties minutely studied are
+utilised every day for therapeutic purposes. It is probable that the
+other bodies of the series which are met with in the extract of meat
+enjoy analogous physiological properties. These substances are
+ingested without discernment, often in great excess, and daily, by
+people who consume meat.
+
+Amongst these latter, many would not dare to drug themselves with a
+centigramme of pharmaceutic caffeine, whereas they absorb each day gr.
+5 and more, of its homologous constituents.
+
+Therefore, in the same way as chocolate, tea and coffee, meat has a
+stimulating effect on the system. He who is accidentally deprived of
+it finds that he experiences a passing depression. This obviously
+proves that by the exaggerated use of meat, one drugs and doctors
+oneself without discernment. However this may be, the judicious part
+played by meat must apparently be reduced to that of a condiment food
+destined to produce in a measure the whipping-up which is useful, and
+sometimes indispensable to the system. We cannot here discuss the
+expediency of action and the harmlessness of the dose of substances
+reputed stimulating. But one can ask oneself whether, to attain this
+object of stimulation, carnivorous feeding is indispensable, and if
+vegetarianism could not supply the need.
+
+The reply is easy: the vegetable kingdom disposes of a variety of
+stimulating articles, such as tea, coffee, kola and cocoa. Through
+their active substances these foods are nerve tonics of the first
+order, less dangerous in their use than meat, because more easily
+assimilated, of far more continuous effects, less mixed with other
+substances, sometimes noxious, and consequently more measurable.
+Besides, in pulse food, quantities of purins are found as important as
+in meat. If the part they play has not been systematically studied
+from the point of view of their effects on the nervous organism, they
+still give rise to the same terminal products, such as uric acid. One
+can quite well argue that the pulse purins have physiological effects
+comparable to those of meat purins. On the other hand, vegetable
+purins have the considerable advantage of being less easily
+precipitated in the urine, after the human interorganic metabolism,
+than those resulting from the metabolism of flesh material.
+
+This explains why a frequent use of a vegetable diet offers
+appreciable advantages in the amelioration of arthritic diatheses so
+common amongst us. Certain effects observed in these diatheses arise
+from the purins, from their localisation in the system, and their
+vitiated metabolism. The use of a moderate vegetable diet is the best
+means of treatment in order to relieve, to ameliorate, even to cure,
+arthritic diathesis.
+
+
+IX
+
+Such are the certain physiological advantages which the predominant
+use of vegetable products are capable of offering. If one takes the
+pure energy-producing point of view, the superiority of the vegetarian
+diet becomes greater still. From the fine works of A. Chauveau, modern
+physiology has shown us that muscle, in working, consumes sugary
+materials. These are provided by ingestions of sugar in a natural
+state, of dextrine or of starch; for a less important part, the
+glycogen of the system may also arise from hydrocarbonated cords
+existing in the molecule of certain albumins. Therefore it is only in
+an infinitesimal part, due to the fibrine of meat, and to the small
+proportions of glycogen which it contains, that flesh diet intervenes
+in the direct production of kinetic energy.
+
+The demonstrations which have been essayed, touching the muscular
+superiority of vegetarians, appear superfluous to us. Such experiments
+could only have a positive value if they were made on both series of
+antagonistic subjects, with alimentary powers of energy-producing
+equality.
+
+It should be distinctly understood that the vegetarian does not profit
+by any mysterious forces. The habit of preferring to nourish oneself
+with vegetable foods, can, at most, or at least, favour the
+physiological integrity of the subject, shield him against disease and
+assure his revictualment with foods recognised as active and easily
+measurable.
+
+One cannot leave alcohol out of the list of advantageous vegetable
+foods. In fact, provided one keeps to strictly limited doses, it may
+be included among the alimentary foods, on a footing comparable to
+that of sugar. If one knew how to use without misusing it, alcohol
+might become a daily food.
+
+
+X
+
+Another order of ideas which one cannot pass by in silence at the
+present time militates in favour of vegetable alimentation. Dietetics
+cannot neglect economic problems. A flesh diet is very costly. In
+large towns, like Paris, at a time when everything is increasing in
+cost, one must be favoured by fortune to be able to indulge in the
+real luxury of consuming the calories of meat. As we said in 1905,
+with Prof. Landouzy and M. Labbe, in our inquiry into popular
+Parisian alimentation, the calorific energy of meat comes, on an
+average, to between 15 to 20 times dearer than that of bread or pulse
+foods.
+
+The diet with a vegetable predominance may therefore, by those who
+adopt it, be considered as much less costly than a mixed one. Does not
+this fact, then, deserve to be taken into consideration and
+compared--startlingly illustrative--to the ingenious calculation
+recently made by Lefevre in his examination of vegetarianism? One
+acre of land planted for the purpose of breeding cattle produces three
+times less living strength than an acre planted with wheat!
+
+Is it not criminal, or at any rate ill-judged, for the richness and
+health of the country to have, by the laws of a draconian
+protectionism, spurred the French agricultural population along the
+road to the breeding of cattle, thus turning it away from cultivation?
+These laws are the cause, on the one hand, of the high price of wheat,
+owing to the abandonment of its culture and the barriers opposed to
+its entrance, and on the other, of the dearness of meat, owing to the
+stock and the land which the cattle require.
+
+Under these facts economists have indeed a direct responsibility, as
+for more than fifty years economic orthodoxy has presented meat as a
+necessity, whereas it is the least advantageous particle amongst so
+many others.
+
+In conclusion, let us hope that future distinctions of "Vegetalists,"
+vegetarians or flesh eaters may be completely abolished. _In medio
+stat virtus._ The dietetic regimen, the general adoption of which must
+henceforth be desired, must reject all preconceived and hereditary
+ideas, and unite in one harmonious use all foods with a hygienic end
+in view. The place of each one amongst them and its predominance over
+the others should be determined only by conforming to reasons at the
+same time physiological and economic.
+
+H. LABBE.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round nature |
+ | of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the extension of |
+ | its circulation by tactfully urging their local newsagent to |
+ | have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. An |
+ | attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH AND JOY IN HAND-WEAVING.
+
+_This article gains additional interest from the fact that it has been
+written by one who works her own loom and teaches others the ancient
+and healthy art of hand-weaving._--[EDS.]
+
+
+Hand-weaving is an art, a handicraft, one aspect of which we are apt
+to forget--namely, that it is a splendid health-giver. Indeed, all who
+have felt the rhythm of the loom, as they throw the shuttle to and
+fro, and in blending colours and seeing the material grow thread by
+thread, can witness to the power of the work to banish both the large
+and small worries that eat away our health of mind and body. The
+hand-weaver learns to look upon his (or her) loom as a very good
+friend.
+
+The possibilities in weaving are immense, and the great difficulty
+that always confronts the weaver is the impossibility of letting
+gussets into the day: the end of the week comes all too soon.
+
+One very satisfactory thing about weaving is the fact that from the
+very first we can use the things woven, even those we learn on.
+
+First, there is plain weaving, with which we can make dress materials
+and many things for household use. Then come fancy and striped
+materials, which require more knowledge and ingenuity.
+
+There are endless varieties in bands of different patterns thrown in
+with the shuttle, or shuttles, sometimes as many as a dozen of which
+may be in use at a time. These can be used for the purpose of
+ornamentation. In weaving these no end of play of colour can be made,
+by using many colours in rotation, either as the groundwork of plain
+material, under the patterns, or as the pattern itself.
+
+Metal threads can also be used of various kinds, either as an entire
+texture, or to enrich the fancy bands.
+
+Lastly, there is inlay weaving, by which we can put in by hand, with
+little separate bobbins, as we go along, any cross-stitch design,
+lettering, monograms, figures and designs of every description.
+
+Anyone with a knowledge of carpentry can make his own loom, the
+construction being of a very simple nature. In fact, the Orientals
+erect a few sticks, dig a hole in the ground to sit in, tie their warp
+up to a tree, and then produce the most charming work, both in texture
+and colour.
+
+The warp can also be made as these people often make theirs, by fixing
+it to sticks stuck into the ground, and walking backwards and forwards
+with the thread, singing as they go. Yes, singing! I think we English
+folk might learn from them to put more joy into our work, that
+fountainhead of life and health. We are apt to take such a serious
+view of ourselves and of all we do. So often, too, we only feel the
+dull and quiet colours, instead of using the many brilliant ones that
+nature loves so well. Once we begin working in, and appreciating,
+these we realise the exhilarating effect on our spirits. Indeed, I
+think we are only beginning to realise what a great influence colour
+has upon us, and all that colour signifies, each colour having various
+meanings of its own.
+
+Many people are now realising that we are surrounded by a halo of
+colour woven by our character--the most highly developed people being
+surrounded by clear, bright colours. It is strictly true that we are
+all weavers, every day of our lives. By following the laws of nature
+we make the finest texture composed of all the most glorious colours
+or qualities in the Universe, so by degrees bringing ourselves, and
+others, into perfect harmony and peace.
+
+MINNIE BROWN.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT?
+
+_This discussion arose out of the article with above title, by "M.D.,"
+which was published in our July number._--[EDS.]
+
+
+IV
+
+In dealing with this vitally important question, we shall most of us,
+I take it, agree upon certain points. In the light of recent knowledge
+upon, and extended experience of the subject, one such point which now
+appears incontrovertible is that there are thousands die
+annually--directly or indirectly--through overfeeding where one dies
+through insufficient nourishment. And it may at once be said that, as
+regards these thousands, the death certificates are practically
+valueless as data in relation to erroneous dieting, so that in this
+way we can never get at a correct estimate as to the actual number of
+deaths due to overfeeding. Bright's disease, gastric and intestinal
+affections, growths of various kinds, cancer, etc., are each in their
+turn certified as the "Cause of Death." Most often, however, the
+initial cause is the overloading of the system with an amount of food
+beyond that which is necessary or healthful--and thereby clogging up
+the tissues, the organs and smaller bloodvessels.
+
+But it may be said: "How can you substantiate such a general and
+sweeping statement?" In the first place--and this is profoundly
+significant--other things being equal, it must be acknowledged by all
+unbiased people that the small and moderate feeders do not contract
+disease in anything like the proportion that big feeders do, and as a
+natural consequence live longer lives.
+
+Further, it must surely be quite evident by this time that there is a
+sufficiently large enough number of people who are thus existing in
+good health--and steadily regaining it where it has been lost--on the
+lines of moderate feeding. And the number is accumulating at a rapid
+pace; more and more are coming into line with those of us who, having
+thus found health in themselves, their patients and friends, are
+preaching the practice of two meals a day, and sometimes only one
+where there is serious organic disease to combat--thus defying the
+dicta of those eminent physiologists who "settled" the question years
+ago.
+
+Now I quite admit--it would be impertinence to do otherwise--that
+"M.D.'s" statements and views must not be ignored, must indeed be
+respected. And he tells us that he "heard of," in one day, three cases
+which "went wrong" through underfeeding; well, for those three cases
+we can point to hundreds who are _going right_ through eating just
+enough and not too much. I am prepared, on the other hand, to admit
+the danger of a continued semi-starvation diet; our difficulty
+is to define in each individual case what exactly would be a
+semi-starvation, and what a sufficient diet. It is impossible to have
+a fixed standard for everybody. After all, "the proof of the pudding
+is in the eating"; often it is a matter of experimenting for some
+little time, and in this way we could judge largely of the result of
+our dieting by our state of general health.
+
+On some main points of the question I am now absolutely
+convinced--viz.:
+
+1. Excessive bulk is always dangerous, often disastrous, causing
+sudden death in a large number of cases.
+
+2. Starchy foods are best strictly limited as we get along towards
+middle age and beyond.
+
+3. A life which is largely mental or sedentary will be healthier and
+longer on a strictly moderate diet.
+
+4. A life largely of physical labour must be dealt with on its own
+particular conditions.
+
+5. At all times due regard, of course, must be paid to age, weight,
+etc.
+
+6. On the whole, "eminent physiologists" have erred on the side of
+excess of proteid being advised.
+
+7. Middle age is the critical time of life in respect to a man's diet
+in other words, I would say in axiomatic form that as a man feeds at
+or about middle age, so will he be for the rest of his life.
+
+J. STENSON HOOKER, M.D.
+
+
+V
+
+As a very interested reader of this discussion I should be very glad
+to know exactly what "M.D." means by _each pound_ of _bone_ and
+_muscle_ in the body weight? What proportion (approximately) is it to
+total body weight? I have been trying to keep up to Dr Haig's 9 grains
+per lb. of "body weight" and find that it is too much for my digestive
+powers, which are very weak owing to chronic nervous dyspepsia. If I
+take 15 per cent. or 20 per cent. _less_ proteid my troubles are so
+greatly lessened that I feel that to continue to take the lower amount
+would mean perpetual relief. But there have been so many warnings,
+including M.D.'s, of the dangers of under-nutrition, that I am in a
+quandary; and others of your readers too.
+
+If M.D. means grains per lb. of _something less_ than total body
+weight, a lesser amount of proteid than I try to take may have his
+sanction, and be safe for me.
+
+JNO. A. COOKSON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There appears to be a sincere attempt in "M.D.'s" article to prove
+that a physiologist is the best guide in diet. But, as one can get the
+degree of M.D. without any scientific knowledge of dietetics, the
+inference that one would be likely to make from such an alarming
+article is erroneous. I say "alarming" because vague statements are
+made as to patients who were rescued just in time to be stimulated by
+over-feeding into a semblance of health, and we are treated to a list
+of very alarming symptoms in the last paragraph on p. 443.
+
+"M.D." says, "Suppose that the animal fed for years on unnatural food
+has become so pathological that it can no longer take or digest its
+natural food." How grateful to M.D. for this statement will be those
+who long for an excuse to cling to the spoiled, boiled and unnatural
+dishes of which the popular diet mainly consists! And how they will
+continue to overeat themselves, content to avoid the truth regarding
+food quantities.
+
+Living on a right and natural diet, a man or woman will correct the
+effects of wrong living. This will bring crises, and unless they know
+that this is Nature's attempt to rid the body of unwanted and effete
+matter they may be duped into returning to their high feeding, either
+by those whom "M.D." calls diet quacks or by qualified quacks.
+
+I do not believe it possible for anyone to die for lack of indication
+that they were eating too little.
+
+The opposite is what people die of. If we carefully read Dr
+Rabagliati's article in the same issue we shall rightly ask what would
+be the results of analyses and measurements in such a case.
+
+About a year ago we had a young woman under our care who had suffered
+with deafness and other troubles for years. She had tried dietetic
+treatments, "uric-acid-free" and otherwise, and had at last been told
+that her deafness was incurable, being due to heredity and deficiency
+in the organs of hearing. She was extremely thin when she came to us,
+but we did not measure her, nor analyse unclean excreta, nor weigh
+her.
+
+She saw an M.D. who was in sympathy with the philosophy of fasting,
+and she fasted (taking water only) for 28 days. She then had four days
+of fruit juice, and was so disappointed at having broken her fast
+prematurely that she continued it for another 12 days, making 44 in
+all--40 days actual fasting.
+
+[_During this period she was living an almost complete out-door
+life._--EDS.]
+
+During the fast many interesting phenomena were witnessed, chief among
+which was the discharge from ears and nose--significant indeed to all
+who study Nature's ways. Result: normal hearing restored. This was
+nearly twelve months ago; and, having heard of her recently, we find
+that, though she had had a cold, there has been no recurrence of
+deafness. I wonder what assistance measurements would have been in
+this true cure. The patient (an adult) weighed 4st. 8 lbs. at the end
+of her fast and could then walk short distances.
+
+The way in which "M.D." dismisses "a little gout" in his last
+paragraph but one almost leads one to think that he is unaware of the
+failure of the natural defences of the body that must have gone on in
+a very serious degree before the manifestation of gout became
+possible.
+
+I respectfully submit this problem to "M.D.":--If a very thin patient
+can go without food entirely for 40 days, with only benefit accruing,
+_how many centuries_ will it take for a fairly fat person to die
+through slightly under-eating?
+
+As Dr Haddon has said, the proteid myth will die hard, but there are
+physiologists who, with their faces to the light, are finding the
+truth of man's requirements in food and who know that absolute purity
+and simplicity are the ideals to be sought and that all food we eat
+more than is absolutely necessary is a diversion of energy to carnal
+channels.
+
+ERNEST STARR.
+
+
+
+
+A DOCTOR'S REASONS FOR OPPOSING VACCINATION.
+
+
+In opposing vaccination I am aware that it is a thankless task to
+brave the abuse and antagonism which everyone who attempts to move
+forward in the work of medical progress is sure to encounter.
+
+In order that I may not be regarded as prejudiced against the dogma of
+vaccination, I will preface my remarks with the confession that I was
+at one time myself a confiding dupe of the "tradition of the
+dairymaids." While attending medical college I was told that
+inoculation with cow pox virus was a certain preventive of small-pox,
+and like most other medical students I accepted with childlike faith
+and credulity the dictum of my teachers as so much infallible wisdom.
+After an experience derived from treating a number of cases of
+post-vaccinal small-pox in patients who gave evidence of having been
+recently and successfully vaccinated, I awoke to a realisation of the
+unpleasant fact that "protective vaccination" was not all that was
+claimed for it. I thereupon began a study of the vaccination problem
+in all its bearings. After several years of reading, observation and
+experience I became fully convinced that "successful" vaccination not
+only fails to protect its subjects from small-pox, but that, in
+reality, it renders them more susceptible to this disease by impairing
+their health and vitality, and by diminishing their power of
+resistance.
+
+Personally, I have known of recently vaccinated patients dying from
+small-pox while having the plainest foveated vaccine marks upon their
+bodies, and I have seen other individuals who had never submitted to
+vaccine inoculation have variola in its mildest and most benign type.
+
+In view of such experience I refused to ignore the evidence of my own
+senses, and determined to follow the dictates of reason instead of the
+dogmas of faith, and have, consequently, for the past fifteen years
+refused to pollute the blood of a single person with vaccine virus.
+
+I oppose vaccination because I believe that health is always
+preferable to disease. The principle and practice of vaccination
+involves the introduction of the contagion of disease at least twice,
+and, according to numerous authorities, many times, into the human
+organism. The disease conveyed by vaccination causes an undeniable
+impairment of health and vitality, it being a distinctly vaccine
+"lymph," is taken from a lesion on the body of a diseased beast, and
+inserted by the vaccinator into the circulation of healthy children.
+The performance of such an insanitary operation, in the very nature of
+the case, is a violation of the cardinal principles of hygiene and of
+sanitary science.... Moreover, this operation is in direct
+controversion of the basic principles of aseptic surgery, the
+legitimate aim of which is to _remove_ from the organism the products
+of disease, but never to _introduce_ them.
+
+The prime aim of the modern surgeon is to make every wound aseptic and
+to keep it so. The careful operator employs every means at his command
+to clear the field of operations of all bacteria. He utilises every
+particle of the marvellously minute and intricate technique of asepsis
+to prevent the entrance through the wounded tissues of any disease
+elements before, during or after the operation. He fears sepsis
+equally with death, and yet, under the blighting and blinding
+influence of an ancient and venerated myth inherited from his ignorant
+and superstitious forbears of a pre-scientific age, he will
+deliberately inoculate the virulent infective products of diseased
+animal tissues into the circulation of a healthy person. And as if to
+cap the climax of his stupidity and inconsistency, he performs the
+operation under "aseptic precautions."
+
+The poisonous matter which nature wisely eliminates from the body of a
+diseased calf in an effort to save its life and restore it to health
+is seized upon by the vaccinator and implanted into the wholesome body
+of a helpless child. Think of the unparalleled absurdity of purposely
+infecting the body of a healthy person in this era of sanitary science
+with the poison from a diseased beast, under the senseless pretext of
+protecting the victim of the ingrafted disease from the contagion of
+another disease! Can inconsistency go further?
+
+I oppose the practice of vaccination because it is not known what
+vaccine virus is, except that it is a mixed contagion of disease. We
+hear much these days about "pure" virus and "pure calf lymph." Nothing
+could be more absurd and meaningless than the flippant talk indulged
+in by vaccinators and the purveyors of vaccine virus about "pure calf
+lymph," a hybrid product of diseased animal tissues. "Pure virus"
+translated into plain English is pure "animal poison." The phrase
+"pure calf lymph" is applied to an brand of vaccine virus now in use
+is a misnomer for two reasons. It is not "pure" and it is not "calf
+lymph."
+
+Calf lymph is the normal nutrient fluid which circulates in the
+lymphatic vessels of the calf. Lymph is described by physiologists as
+a "transparent, colourless, nutrient alkaline fluid which circulates
+in the lymphatic vessels and thoracic ducts of animal bodies." Lymph
+is a physiological product, while the so-called "pure calf lymph" used
+by vaccinators is a pathological product, derived from a lesion on a
+diseased calf. The difference between calf lymph and so-called "pure
+calf lymph" is as great as is the difference between a food and a
+poison. The vaccine mixture now most generally used by the medical
+profession is known under the name of "glycerinized vaccine lymph,"
+but it is not _lymph_ at all. It is made by utilising practically the
+entire lesion or pock on the heifer when it is in the vesicular stage.
+Such a lesion is broken open and scraped with a Volkmann spoon until
+the whole of the tissue is forcibly and roughly curetted away,
+consisting of pus, morbid serum, epithelium, fibrous tissue of the
+skin, and any foreign matter on or in it, constituting what is called
+"pulp." This pulp is then passed between glass rollers for trituration
+and afterwards mixed with a definite amount of glycerine and distilled
+water. This complex pathologic product of unknown origin is injected
+into the wholesome bodies of helpless children under the false but
+plausible name of "pure calf lymph." ...
+
+I oppose the practice of vaccination because under whatever pretext
+performed the implantation of disease elements into the healthy human
+organism is irrational and injurious. It is subversive of the
+fundamental principles of sanitary science, while the attainment of
+health as a prophylactic measure is rational and in harmony with the
+ascertained laws of hygiene and consistent with the canons of
+common-sense. I am firmly convinced that the absurd and unreasonable
+dogma which assumes to conserve health by propagating disease should
+receive the open condemnation of every scientific sanitarian. That
+this health-blighting delusion conceived in the ignorance of a past
+generation should find lodgment in the minds of intelligent people
+enjoying the light of the world's highest civilisation is to my mind
+inexplicable....
+
+Sanitation and isolation of the infected offer the only rational and
+effective antidote for these disorders. Away, then, with the
+abominable and filthy subterfuge! Give us health instead of disease.
+Health is the great prophylactic.
+
+No man in perfect health can be truly said to be susceptible to the
+infection of small-pox, nor to that of any other zymotic disease.
+Vigorous health confers immunity from disease-producing agents as
+nothing else can. It is usually after the vital functions have become
+impaired by the effects of vaccination or some other injurious cause
+that individuals become susceptible to small-pox infection.
+
+J.W. HODGE, M.D.
+
+[_The above article can be obtained in pamphlet form from the
+publisher. Wm. J. Furnival, Stone. Staffs._--EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW RACE.
+
+(_Specially written for THE HEALTHY LIFE._)
+
+
+ A new race on the ruins of the old
+ Build we: a temple of the human form
+ Fairer than marble, since with life-blood warm,
+ Well crowned with its appointed crown of gold,
+ Russet or ebony; lines clear and bold
+ Beneath--a citadel no ills can storm,
+ Buttressed with health; a type to be the norm
+ In that great age the world shall yet behold.
+
+ For now the laws of Health and Heaven are seen
+ In their identity, life's body and soul;
+ Though, like divorce, disease may come between
+ What God hath joined; but at the human goal,
+ Where the New Race rules, splendid and serene,
+ Sit Health and Holiness, made one and whole.
+
+S. GERTRUDE FORD.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAY SPIRIT.
+
+
+We all long for reality. Most of the amusements in the world are
+imitations of the reality for which we long. They promise a
+satisfaction they are unable to give. Drink, mechanical love-making,
+all snatched gratification of the senses, religious excitement,
+revivalist meetings, and so forth, most theatre-going and sports, all
+simulate the real glory of life. They bring an illusion of well-being.
+They produce a glow in the nervous system. They cause the outlines of
+everyday life as we know it to grow suffused. They give us a momentary
+sense of heightened power and freedom. We float easily in a happy
+world. A sort of relaxation has been achieved. The less common forms
+of amusement bring us nearer to the gateway of reality. For some, they
+have been the rivers leading to the ocean of truth itself.
+
+Art, for instance, the interpretation of life in terms of beauty; the
+"artist," the man in whom sensuous perception is supreme, offers us a
+sublime aspect of reality. He dwells in the universe constructed for
+him by his senses and tells us of its glories. He achieves "freedom."
+The veil covering reality is woven for him far thinner than for common
+men. He sees life moving eternally behind the forms he separates and
+"creates." And to those of us who are akin to him, who are
+temperamentally artistic, he offers freedom of a kind. The
+contemplation of a work of art releases the tension of the nerves. To
+use the language of psychology it "arrests" us, suspends the functions
+of our everyday surface personality, abolishes for a moment time and
+space, allows the "free," generally suppressed subconscious self to
+come up and flood the surface intelligence, allows us for a moment to
+be ourselves. But, still, this momentary relaxation, this momentary
+"play," this holiday from the surface "I," remains an affair dependent
+upon suggestive symbols coming from "without." The supreme artist
+achieves freedom. We, who in matters of art are the imitative mass,
+can only have "change," a new heaven and earth, a fresh "culture."
+
+Then there is love. That promises, at the outset, complete escape into
+freedom and reality. And supreme lovers, both of individuals and of
+"Humanity," have indeed found freedom and the pathway to reality in
+love. But ordinary everyday people rushing idolatrously out to find
+themselves in others find in the end only another I. The religions
+perhaps work best and longest. But even here average humanity, where
+the mystical sense is feeble, are thrown back in the end upon
+ethics--and go somewhat grimly through life doing their duty, living
+upon the husks of doctrine, the notions and reports of other men.
+
+If the play spirit within us, that longing for the real joy of life,
+for real relaxation and re-creation, fares so poorly for most of us in
+the amusements large and small that life offers to our leisure
+moments, is it any better in the "games" the individual chooses for
+himself--hobbies, for instance? Can these generally "instructive" and
+"useful," generally also solitary, occupations be called play? Are
+they not merely a reversal of life's engine, rather than an unmaking
+and a remaking. They are merely a variant of life. They are very truly
+called a "change of occupation." They are led and dominated, commonly,
+by the intelligence. They contain no element of freedom. The same
+defect is found in all organised "games."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Real play, like every other reality, comes from what our mechanical
+and practical intelligences have called "within."
+
+Real play arises when the "I" is in direct contact with the myself,
+with Life, with God, with the actuality moving beneath all symbolic
+representations.
+
+It is only when "I," the practical, intelligent, abstract-making,
+idealising, generalising, clever, separated "I," the "I" which has a
+past, a present and a future, renounces its usurpation of the
+steering apparatus, that play can be. "I," to play or to pray or to
+love, must be born again. "I" must relinquish all. "I" must have
+neither experience nor knowledge, neither loves nor hates, neither
+"thought" nor "feeling" nor "will"--nor anything that can arrest the
+action of the inner life. When this complete relaxation, which has its
+physical as well as its mental aspect, is achieved, then and then only
+can "I" rise up and play. Then "I" shall rediscover all the plays in
+the world in their origin. "I" shall understand the war-dance of the
+"savage." "I" shall know something about the physical convulsions of
+primitive "conversion." The arts may begin to be open doors to me. "I"
+shall have stood "under," understood my universe, in the brief moment
+when "I" abandoned myself to the inner reality. The words of the great
+"teachers" will grow full of meaning. My own "experiences" will be
+re-read. I shall see more clearly with my surface intelligence what I
+must do. I shall be personal in everything, personal in my play.
+Surface self-consciousness which holds me back from all spontaneous
+activity will disappear in proportion as "I" am immersed in the
+greater "me."
+
+Look at that woman walking primly down the lane to the sea with her
+bathing-dress. She is a worker on a holiday. But she cannot play. She
+goes down every day to bathe in the Cornish sea, the sea that on a
+calm sunny day is like liquid Venetian glass and flings at you, under
+the least breeze, long, green, foam-crested billows that carry you off
+our feet if you stand even waist-high. She potters in the shallows and
+splashes herself to avoid taking cold. Her intelligent "I" is
+uppermost. Her world of every day never leaves her. She will go back
+to it as she came, unchanged. Her wistful face betrays the seeker lost
+amidst unrealities. If the "I" were a little more intelligent, she
+might try to defy the surrounding ocean, to pit her powers against it,
+to swim. She would learn a most practical and useful and withal
+invigorating accomplishment. If her busy, watchful "I" could be
+arrested she might "see" the billows, the sky and the headlands reared
+on either side of her bay. She might dance into the water, and see her
+world dance back. She would fling herself amongst the wavelets where
+she stands and splashes. She might give herself up and know nothing
+but the beauty and strength around her. It would not teach her to
+swim, but she would have taken a step towards the great game of
+walking upon the waters.
+
+D.M. RICHARDSON.
+
+
+
+
+TRAVELS IN TWO COLOURS.
+
+
+One is often tempted to suspect that in some schools there is a
+deep-laid plot to destroy in the bud any love for poetry which
+children may possess. Otherwise how is it that little boys and girls
+are made to commit to memory William Blake at his highest reach of
+mystical fire, as in _Tiger, Tiger, burning bright_, or William
+Wordsworth at his lowest ebb of uninspired simplicity, as in _We are
+seven_? These are very popular, apparently, as poems for children to
+recite; yet in the one case it is beyond any teacher's power to show
+children the unearthly flaming beauty which alone gives the poem its
+peculiar quality and undefinable power; and in the other the maudlin
+sentimentalism and almost priggish piety of the verses are positively
+dangerous to the child's health of mind. Both types of recitation work
+out in the end to this--that when the child attains adolescence, and
+the great world of literature dawns on the hungry mind, an evil
+association of ideas has been established--the association of poetry,
+the highest of all arts, either with the saying of lines without
+meaning, or with the learning of "poems" devoid of what wholesome
+youth really desires or enjoys.
+
+People may wrangle all night as to whether the normal healthy child is
+at heart a mystic or a realist; whether he likes fairy tales because
+they show him a magical world where flowers can talk and umbrellas are
+turned into black geese, or because they tell of strange romantic
+things happening to a real human boy like himself; but there can be no
+shadow of doubt that much of the verse intended for children is either
+too clever in its humour to make them laugh, or too bald in its matter
+or tone to stir the romance that is never quite asleep in their
+hearts. There are really surprisingly few versifiers who have
+altogether avoided these errors. Some of George Macdonald's _Poems for
+Children_ are almost perfect, both as regards lyrical form, simplicity
+of language and in the unobtrusiveness of the inner truth they convey.
+For example,
+
+ "The lightning and thunder
+ They go and they come;
+ But the stars and the stillness
+ Are always at home."
+
+But others come perilously near mere versified moralising. Lewis
+Carroll's nonsense verses in the two famous _Alice_ books are supreme
+among their kind; but are they not sometimes just a shade too
+ingenious, or too adult in wit? Probably Stevenson, in those seemingly
+artless poems in _A Child's Book of Verse_, comes nearest to a level
+perfection. Who has ever approached him in his power to understand and
+express the small child's world, desires and delights, without a trace
+of the grown-up's condescension or self-consciousness?
+
+Well, these great ones are no longer in the world; yet, with the
+recognition of their genius, there is the usual danger of bemoaning
+the lack of worthy successors. Not but what there is some excuse for
+such lamentation; for this reason that every Christmas there is a
+veritable flood of children's verse, a great deal of which is either
+painfully didactic, painfully sentimental, painfully funny or
+painfully foolish.
+
+What I wish to do at the moment is to call attention to the fact that
+there is one man alive in England--one of many, I do not doubt: but
+one at a time!--who is doing "nonsense verses" for children which are
+guiltless of all the faults I have indicated above.
+
+Jack Goring is known among some of his friends as "The Jolly
+Rhymster." He writes his verses first for his own children, and then
+publishes them from time to time for the pleasure of other children.
+The secret of his success is partly that he knows that even small
+children like a story to be an adventure; partly that he understands
+how their own romances, the things they picture or hum to themselves
+when well-meaning adults are not worrying them, or rather, trying to
+amuse them, begin--wherever they may end!--with a perfectly tangible
+object, such as a pillar-box, a rag-doll or a toy locomotive. One of
+"The Jolly Rhymster's" best things begins--
+
+ "Finger-post, finger-post, why do you stand
+ Pointing all day with your silly flat hand?"
+
+--which is exactly the sort of question that a very small child in all
+probability does really ask itself when it has seen a finger-post day
+after day at a cross-roads. How the poem continues and where it ends
+you must find out for yourself. It's all in a book called _The Ballad
+of Lake Laloo_.
+
+In the recently published volume[15] that now lies before me, this
+telling of a tale of wonder which begins with an ordinary thing is
+again evident. Nip and Flip, aged six and four respectively, are the
+adventurers; and they make three voyages in this little book. In the
+first, _The Fourpenny-Ha'penny Ship_, they circumnavigate the world.
+Now please note how Mr Goring strikes the right note at the very
+outset:
+
+ "Nip and Flip
+ Took a holiday trip
+ On a beautiful fourpenny-ha'penny ship
+ With a dear little handkerchief sail;
+ And they sang, 'Yo ho!
+ We shall certainly go
+ To the end of the world and back, you know,
+ And capture the great Seakale.'"
+
+[15] _Nip and Flip._ By Jack Goring. Illustrated by Caterina
+Patricchio. 1s. net (postage 1+1/2d.). C.W. Daniel, Ltd., 3 Tudor Street,
+London, E.C.
+
+And there follows a picture (in black and gold) of this strange
+monster, just to make sure that no one will suppose they were out
+after a vegetable.
+
+The tale moves along, as such stories should, very rapidly. Thus--
+
+ "And when they came to the end of the world,
+ Their dear little handkerchief sail they furled
+ And put on the kettle for tea."
+
+But you have only just time to look at the tea things when--
+
+ "But alas! and alack
+ About six o'clock
+ The good ship strack
+ On the Almond Rock
+ And split like a little split pea."
+
+So the story goes on, through divers adventures,
+
+ "From Timbuctoo to Timbucthree"
+
+and so at last home again.
+
+The next voyage is to the land of Make-Believe on a Christmas Eve, "in
+a long, long train of thought." In the course of this tale we are
+given a little picture of Flip herself, and here it is for you to look
+at. Only, in the book her shoes and stockings, the inside of her
+skirt, and the squiggly things on the top of her head are a bright
+golden colour.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The third voyage is all the fault of a toy monkey--"six
+three-farthings and cheap at the price"--and takes them among whales,
+mermaids, sea-serpents and other deep-sea creatures.
+
+Here, then, are delightful little pictures on every page, which even a
+two-year-old will enjoy. And here are verses which most boys and girls
+under seven or eight will like to learn. And the best of it is that it
+doesn't matter a bit if they do "sing-song" them, for they are the
+kind of verses which only sound right from the lips of quite small
+children who have never been taught elocution.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+
+ SOUP.--Oxtail from 10 A.M.--From a Restaurant Menu.
+
+What it was in the early morning it would be indiscreet to inquire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I learn that a serum for mumps is now being made at the Pasteur
+Institute. "A number of monkeys were inoculated with the serum," says
+_The Times_ (30th July), "and a mild form of the disease was
+produced." It is an age of scientific progress, so we may expect news
+shortly of sera for toothache, hiccough, and the hump. It will not be
+necessary to inoculate camels for the last.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ You will say--with Mr Arnold Bennett, the distinguished
+ playwright and novelist--"the tonic effect of ********* on me is
+ simply _wonderful_."--From an advt. in _Punch_.
+
+You may join in the chorus if you like, but you mustn't all expect to
+be simply _wonderful_ playwrights and testimonialists.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A STRANGE SHAMPOO.... "I make my chemist get the stallax for me,"
+ said she. "It comes only in sealed packages, enough to make up
+ twenty-five or thirty individual shampoos, and it smells so good
+ I could almost eat it."--_Secrets of Beauty_ column in _The Daily
+ Sketch_.
+
+Which only shows how careful one has to be.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In the days to come every army will fight on bloodless
+ food.--_Herald of the Golden Age_.
+
+When every army fights on bloodless food, we may be just as far from
+the Golden Age as we are now.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am told that an obscure practitioner who sent up an account of some
+interesting discoveries, addressed to
+
+ MEDICAL CONGRESS,
+ DIETETICS SECTION,
+ LONDON.
+
+has had his communication returned by the Post Office, marked _Not
+Known_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is no truth, it is said, in the rumour that a secret meeting was
+held during the Congress to discuss the proposed raising of the rate
+of commission payable by surgeons to physicians.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+SOME "EMPROTE" RECIPES.
+
+
+Exaggeration is popularly regarded as one of the vices of food
+reformers; but it is certainly no exaggeration whatever to say that Mr
+Eustace Miles and the restaurant associated with his name have had a
+large share in bringing about the more sympathetic attitude towards
+"food reform" noticeable on all sides to-day.
+
+Mr Miles is no amateur in the gentle art of self-advertisement: he
+would be the first to admit it. But the advertisements have resulted
+undoubtedly in a very large number of people taking the first steps
+towards food reform, people who are repelled by the out-and-out
+"vegetarian" propaganda.
+
+There are those who view with disfavour the introduction of
+manufactured or artificial foods into the health movement; they think
+it hinders simplicity. There is a truth in this; but, on the other
+hand, it must be recognised that the great majority cannot be reached
+save by meeting them half-way. This applies to the flavours of foods,
+the digestibility of foods and the convenience of foods. Few can go
+straight from beef to nuts. After generations of abuse the human
+digestive system has to be humoured if the ideal is to be approached.
+And in this invaluable work of meeting people half-way and of
+humouring their tastes and digestions, the restaurant in Chandos
+Street, London, the specially prepared foods made and sold there and
+the strongly individual, thoroughly sane and pleasantly
+straightforward advocacy of Mr. Eustace Miles have been a very
+important factor.
+
+The idea behind "Emprote"--the Eustace Miles Proteid Food--is that,
+being a blend, in powder form, of various kinds of proteid (the
+proteids of milk, of wheat, and so forth) it supplies the right kind
+of substitute for flesh foods not only because it is so easily
+assimilated, but because it is in a very convenient and easily kept
+form.
+
+We believe such foods have a very definite and necessary part in the
+progress of the individual from the customary unhealthy diet to the
+better ways of feeding. The following recipes illustrate some of the
+methods of using "Emprote." They are taken from the booklet _45 Quick
+and Easy Recipes for Healthy, Meatless Meals_, to be obtained for 2+1/2d.
+post free from 40 Chandos Street, London, W.C.--
+
+
+SAVOURY CHEESE SANDWICHES.
+
+_NOTE.--These Savoury Sandwiches can form a complete meal with a
+little salad (dressed with oil and lemon juice), or celery or lettuce
+or watercress or other salad material._
+
+ 3 oz. of cheddar cheese; 1 oz. of "Emprote"; the juice of half a
+ lemon; two tablespoonfuls of fresh tomato pulp or tomato chutney;
+ a pinch of celery salt.
+
+Prepare some slices of not too new bread and butter. Mill the cheese,
+add to it the "Emprote" and the celery salt, then add the tomato pulp
+or chutney and the lemon juice. Mix all well together into a smooth
+stiff paste, and spread upon the slices, and form sandwiches, which
+may be eaten with watercress or lettuce or cucumber. If the material
+is too moist, mix in a little more "Emprote," or else "Procrums."
+
+
+MACARONI CHEESE.
+
+ One teacupful of macaroni; two tablespoonfuls of milled cheese
+ one tablespoonful of butter; one dessertspoonful of flour; one
+ tablespoonful of "Emprote"; one large cupful of milk.
+
+Boil the macaroni for half-an-hour in a little water. Strain the
+macaroni and put it in the bottom of a buttered dish. (Put the liquid
+in the stock-pot, to thicken a soup.) Mill the cheese, and put half of
+it over the macaroni. In the small saucepan make a sauce of the
+butter, flour, milk and "Emprote." Pour this over the macaroni and
+cheese, sprinkle the rest of the cheese on the top, put in the pan to
+brown, then serve.
+
+
+STUFFED VEGETABLE MARROW.
+
+Mince two large onions very fine, and fry in 1 oz. of butter; add 3
+oz. of "Proto-Savoury," one dessertspoonful of Nutril, 1 oz. of
+breadcrumbs (or "Procrums"), and one egg. Scoop the seeds from one
+large vegetable marrow, fill with the mixture, and bake for one hour.
+Serve with Apple Sauce.
+
+_NOTE.--"Proto-Savoury," "Nutril," and "Procrums" are special "E.M."
+products and are readily obtainable from health Food Stores, etc._
+
+
+A NOURISHING GRAVY READY IN A MINUTE.
+
+When cutlets or croquettes are heated up, or when macaroni or
+vegetables or a vegetable stew (none of which are really adequate
+substitutes for meat) are to be made nourishing, mix some of the E.M.
+Savoury (or Mulligatawny, or Blended) Gravy Powder, with hot water, to
+the thickness of gravy, and add to the dish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+NEW METHOD OF PREPARING FRUIT FOR THE DINNER-TABLE.
+
+In cold weather fruit is often cold, and if heated in an oven may be
+injured partially or wholly. Here is, perhaps, a new way of warming
+fruit which has been tried and proves satisfactory. Wash the apples,
+pears, oranges, bananas and wipe them and place on a dish on the
+dinner-table. Also place a jug of boiling water and a bowl upon the
+table. Then when the fruit is required pour the hot water into the
+bowl and place the fruit in it and cover with a plate until warm
+enough to eat comfortably. Bananas should be peeled before placing in
+hot water.
+
+"A.R."
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+
+ECZEMA AS A SIGN OF RETURNING HEALTH.
+
+ Mrs M.K. writes:--Until the last few years I have been subject to
+ sciatica and a certain amount of dry eczema. About a year ago my
+ health greatly improved, with the exception of the eczema, which
+ has much increased the last year, coming out in large angry
+ spots which irritate. I am 69, small, spare and white, have never
+ been strong until a year ago, have led a sedentary life, being an
+ artist. Three years ago I left off eating meat. My diet at
+ present is:
+
+ _On rising._--Cup of hot rain-water.
+
+ _Breakfast_ (8 A.M.)--Unfired Bread with butter and pine nuts;
+ cup of weak tea, no sugar.
+
+ _At 11._--One raw apple.
+
+ _Dinner_ (1 P.M.)--One lightly boiled egg or an omelette, with
+ "Artox" home-made bread, and butter conservatively cooked celery
+ or broccoli; stiff milk pudding with eggs in it, or "Artox"
+ pastry.
+
+ _Tea_ (5 P.M.).--Weak China tea "Artox" bread, and butter, and
+ home-made plain cake.
+
+ _Supper_ (8.30).--Slice of bread and butter; tumblerful of hot
+ rain-water sipped at bedtime.
+
+ I have not been able to digest uncooked vegetables, excepting
+ lettuce; nor do I eat other fruit than apples; any sweet things
+ cause acidity. I do not suffer with constipation.
+
+In this case it will be noted that the skin disease occurred
+simultaneously with a marked improvement in health. This shows that
+Nature was adopting her usual plan of forcing the impurities outwards
+to the surface and that the change of diet made this possible. With
+her body less encumbered with waste a return of health became
+possible.
+
+The plan now to adopt is not to check this skin trouble but to cure it
+along safe lines by amending the diet and purifying the skin itself by
+means of warm alkaline baths.
+
+These baths, which should be taken twice a week at first, are made by
+adding a 1/4lb. of bicarbonate of soda and a 1/4lb. of "Robin" starch
+to an ordinary hot bath at a temperature of 105 degrees, which can be
+gradually increased to 110 degrees as the correspondent can bear it.
+In this the bather stays for from ten to twenty minutes to well soak
+out the acids and the oily greasy waste from the surface. The starch
+is added because it moderates the action of the alkali and leaves a
+comfortable gloss on the skin after the bath is finished. The bath
+gradually clears the poisons from the skin and encourages the free
+action of perspiration, thus promoting the further elimination of
+waste acid poisons and at the same time clearing the skin and making
+it healthy.
+
+The next thing to do is to amend the diet so that as little waste as
+possible shall be formed. Rice is the cereal that contains the least
+amount of waste of any kind and this should therefore be the cereal
+selected. The wholemeal, although good for most people, is not suited
+to this case. A strict salt-free diet is also necessary, as it is
+often the retention of salt in the system that leads to the presence
+of eczema. The following amended diet should suit the case, and it
+should be continued until the skin has quite cleared itself:--
+
+_On rising._--Cup of filtered boiled rain-water.
+
+_Breakfast._--Cottage cheese, 2 oz.; rice, boiled or steamed without
+salt (large plateful), with Granose biscuits or toasted "Maltweat"
+bread.
+
+_At_ 11 A.M.--More rain-water (not fruit).
+
+_Lunch._--The same as breakfast.
+
+_Tea._--Hot rain-water only.
+
+_Supper, 6.30._--The same as breakfast.
+
+When the skin is quite clear the correspondent can return to the
+wholemeal bread (but biscuits made with "Artox" would be better than
+the yeastless bread), and also to a more varied diet generally, as at
+present.
+
+
+DEAFNESS.
+
+ J.G. writes:--My hearing got bad about twenty years ago, caused I
+ think by a cold in the head. When in bed I can hear the tick of a
+ watch with the left ear but the other is almost stone deaf. I am
+ not much at a loss in ordinary conversation, but in trying to
+ hear people speak I lose much of what is said. Although I have no
+ real pain, my head is rarely clear, feeling full and congested. I
+ have now and again a slight sensation of giddiness or reeling.
+ The right ear runs some offensive matter, and there is always a
+ hissing sound. I live what is, I think, a simple life, but I must
+ confess to a little smoking. My general health is good. I am a
+ working farmer and fairly active for one of my age (69). My diet
+ is generally as follows:
+
+ _On rising._--One or two cups of warm water, sometimes with lemon
+ juice.
+
+ _Breakfast._--An apple or orange, oatcake and dairy butter.
+ Baker's bread and one cup of tea.
+
+ _Lunch._--Nil, or perhaps I should say that I eat an apple or
+ orange before each meal or a bit of turnip or even cabbage.
+
+ _Supper._--Potatoes with fish, and milk pudding. On some days it
+ may be broth with meat cooked in it.
+
+ _Before retiring._--Nothing but water, or at other times oatcake
+ and one cup of milk.
+
+There does not seem to be much prospect of this correspondent
+recovering the hearing of his right ear, as the conditions have lasted
+so long. He might, however, certainly try by diet and hygiene to get
+rid of the unpleasant discharge and the noises. To effect this he
+should carefully syringe the ear once or twice a day with a weak
+solution (1 grain to the ounce) of permanganate of potash, using an
+all-rubber ear-syringe.
+
+Then he should get someone to well stretch the upper bones of the
+spine and to massage well the muscles at the back of the neck to
+induce, thereby, a better circulation in the nerves and blood-vessels
+which proceed from that part of the spine into the ears. In this way
+he will be able to ensure a removal of the clogging poisons which are
+lurking in the bad ear and thus promote less noises and a better
+health state of the ears generally. The diet should be amended as
+follows:--
+
+_On rising._--One or two cups of warm water, with lemon juice added.
+
+_At 8. Breakfast_.--Apples, oranges or other fruit only. _Take plenty
+of fruit at this meal and eat it at no other time._
+
+_At 12. Lunch._--One boiled egg or some cream cheese: Oatcakes and
+butter or good wholemeal biscuits ("P.R." or "Ixion" kinds) and
+butter, and a plateful of finely grated raw roots (carrots, turnip,
+etc.).
+
+_Tea meal._--One cupful of Hygiama, using water in place of milk.
+
+_Dinner._--Cheddar cheese or cottage cheese (the latter is best);
+potatoes and a green vegetable, cooked by baking or steaming, without
+salt. No broth or meat. (Meat and especially meat broths are very
+undesirable in this case.)
+
+_Before retiring._--Hot water only.
+
+
+ANOTHER CASE OF DEAFNESS.
+
+ J.A.B. writes:--I have been a reader of _The Healthy Life_ for
+ the last six months, and am suffering from a complaint since I
+ was three years old. When three years old I was attacked by
+ scarlet fever and on getting better I had a discharge from my
+ right ear. This continued for several years, then it would
+ disappear and reappear at short intervals of say a few weeks.
+ This last few years the discharge has disappeared for six months,
+ only to reappear again for a week with severe pains in back over
+ right shoulder and right side of neck. I always feel weak and
+ tired when discharge reappears and sometimes experience pains in
+ the head and cannot remember anything for a few minutes.
+
+This correspondent needs a suitable diet in order to purify his blood
+stream and to promote elimination of bodily poisons which are
+evidently affecting his ears. He also needs suitable massage and
+stretching movements applied to the upper part of the spine, which is
+functioning badly. Then he can supplement this by taking Turkish baths
+or wet sheet packs to promote a free action of the skin and thus clear
+away poisonous waste from the system. The same diet as recommended to
+the previous correspondent should be tried.
+
+
+CONCERNING COTTAGE CHEESE.
+
+ Mrs C.E.J. writes:--I have been making cottage cheese curdling
+ the milk with lemon juice, as recommended in _The Healthy Life_.
+ Suppose the milk contains disease germs, would not this cheese be
+ injurious, as the milk is not sterilised by being brought to
+ boiling point? I have also been drinking the whey from the same,
+ as it as given in _The Healthy Life Beverage Book_. I notice in a
+ reply given in this month's issue that Dr Knaggs states that the
+ whey of the milk is the dangerous element. Since reading this
+ answer I have been somewhat in doubt as to drinking the whey. I
+ should like to know if it can be taken without harmful effects.
+
+Ordinary unboiled milk, free from preservatives, is far less dangerous
+to health than boiled milk, because Nature inserts in the raw milk
+certain germs known as the lactic-acid-producing bacilli, which
+protect us from the injurious germs. These lactic germs cause the milk
+to go sour and produce in this way the much-extolled soured or curdled
+milk. They convert the sugar of the whey into lactic acid by a process
+of fermentation. If milk is boiled it cannot go sour because the germs
+natural to it have been destroyed by the heat and it becomes necessary
+to introduce fresh lactic germs into the boiled milk as is done in the
+artificial production of curdled milk. Failing this, milk will
+undergo, not lactic fermentation, but _putrefaction_, and thereby
+develop highly dangerous qualities.
+
+When a person takes soured milk its lactic acid acts as a powerful
+germ destroyer and in a certain concentration it actually kills the
+lactic germs as well. It also keeps down the disease-producing germs
+of putrefaction which work in an alkaline medium (opposite to acid) by
+depriving them of the sugar of the whey.
+
+Boiled milk, if set on one side, in warm weather, speedily becomes
+alkaline and putrid or putrefactive. It is in this condition that,
+when babies take it, they are made dreadfully ill with diarrhoea and
+inflammation of the stomach and bowels. Hence it is the chief cause of
+the appalling mortality among infants in hot weather.
+
+Mrs F.K.J. need have no fear of any harm coming to her as a result of
+eating cottage cheese, but she should not take the whey unless she has
+decided to undergo a whey cure and take _nothing but whey_; in this
+latter case, there being no other foods taken, there will be no germs
+to act harmfully upon it. If there is much flatulence and stomach or
+bowel trouble sweet milk or whey will simply feed the germs which are
+the cause of the digestive trouble, or self-poisoning, and are thus
+far better discarded.
+
+
+DIET FOR OBSTINATE COUGH.
+
+ Miss N.S. writes:--For the last three weeks I have been troubled
+ with a very bad cough It started in the first place with a cold
+ in the head and then it got on my chest, and do what will I
+ cannot get rid of it. I have been having honey and lemon juice,
+ and also each morning have taken olive oil and lemon juice beaten
+ up together, but without (apparently) any effect. I have bad
+ coughing fits in the night and the next morning I do not feel up
+ to much.
+
+ I may say that I have not taken meat for about six years, and I
+ try to follow the kind of diet advocated in _The Healthy Life_.
+
+ I am 23 years of age and a typist in an office, which is about 4
+ miles from my home. I try to get out in the fresh air as much as
+ possible to counteract any bad effects which may arise from my
+ work. My people at home are very much opposed to my food reform
+ sympathies and efforts.
+
+This correspondent should consult a sensible doctor about this cough
+and thus be on the safe side. It is unwise to allow a cough to become
+chronic without ascertaining the cause of it. Coughs are often due to
+stomach and liver trouble, as distinguished from lung trouble. In
+either case a salt-free diet will greatly help. Thus
+
+_Breakfast._--All fresh fruit, nothing else but fruit. Apples best.
+(_Not_ stewed fruit).
+
+_Lunch._--Boiled or steamed rice, done without salt; about 2 oz.
+cottage cheese or a poached egg; a little raw carrot, turnip or
+artichoke, finely grated, with dressing of fruit-oil beaten up with a
+raw egg. The grated roots must be well chewed; as a change they may
+be cut up and cooked in a casserole with very little water.
+
+_Dinner._--Potato baked in skin, with fresh butter, a little cheese,
+or flaked nuts, and a few plain rusks, or a saucer of P.R. Breakfast
+Food, dry, with cream. The honey and lemon juice should be disgarded
+in favour of liquorice (little bits being sucked at intervals) or of
+linseed tea. I have often found an obstinate cough yield to a diet
+which contains lactic acid buttermilk, combined with the use of the
+new oxygen baths. The lactic acid buttermilk can be obtained from any
+good dairy and should be taken in the morning fasting and at bedtime.
+
+
+WATER GRAPES.
+
+ W.G.B. writes:--Referring to article in January number entitled
+ "Grape juice for all," I think perhaps it would interest others
+ besides myself if Dr Knaggs would give us his opinion on the
+ value of what are commonly termed "Water Grapes," as compared
+ with more expensive kinds.
+
+On the Continent the grape cure is a popular method of treatment. It
+is especially good for those who are anaemic and underfed as well as
+for those who suffer in the opposite way from over-feeding. It depends
+upon which condition is present as to the kind of grapes selected for
+the cure.
+
+Fully ripe grapes with but little acidity (water grapes) are best
+suited for persons suffering from anaemia and malnutrition. The unripe
+or sour grapes answer best for cases of over-eating associated with
+constipation, gout and allied disorders of nutrition. The excess of
+acid and cellulose helps the bowels and promotes elimination of the
+gouty poisons.
+
+Our correspondent will note that for thin people who are pale and
+deficient in vitality the water grapes will be found most salutary.
+They are best taken alone at breakfast without the addition of any
+other form of food.
+
+
+CEREAL FOOD IN THE TREATMENT OF NEURITIS.
+
+ E.J.H. writes:--A friend of mine who is suffering from an attack
+ of neuritis (not badly) is desirous of trying the diet of
+ twice-baked standard bread as recommended by Dr Knaggs in an
+ answer to a query in _The Healthy Life_ some months since. She
+ has asked me if Dr Knaggs would limit the quantity of this bread
+ taken in the course of the day. If Dr Knaggs will very kindly
+ tell me this I shall be greatly obliged.
+
+Neuritis is a form of rheumatism or gout which involves the nerves.
+Its usual starting centre is the spine itself, from which all the
+nerves of the body spring. The diet needs to be greatly restricted so
+that the poisons can be eliminated. The most important foods to cut
+down are the cereals because they are very slow to digest and are apt
+to cause constipation with its attendant self-poisoning of the system
+with uric and other acids. Horses and animals suffer from neuritis
+from over-feeding with cereals and beans, and the stockbreeder or
+horse expert usually restricts these foods and gives plenty of grass,
+hay, chaff and green clover, which corrects the trouble.
+
+The same thing applies equally to man. He should take his cereals in
+the form they are the most easily assimilated--namely, twice-baked or
+dextrinised. Thus "pulled" or twice-baked bread, Granose or Melarvi
+biscuits, or rusks, or toasted "Maltweat" bread are the best form of
+cereal for people suffering from neuritis. Other treatment besides
+diet restriction is, of course, needed to cure neuritis, because we
+have to clear the clogged tissues of the poisons which are interfering
+with right nerve action. Thus we can resort hot alkaline baths,
+Turkish baths, massage and Osteopathic stretching movements to help in
+this respect.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #Back Numbers# |
+ | |
+ | If readers who possess copies of the first number of _The |
+ | Healthy Life_ (August 1911) will send them to the Editors, |
+ | they will receive, in exchange, booklets to the value of |
+ | threepence for each copy. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ HEALTHY
+
+ LIFE
+
+ The Independent
+ Health Magazine.
+
+ 3 AMEN CORNER LONDON E.C.
+
+
+ VOL. V DECEMBER
+ No. 29. 1913
+
+
+ _There will come a day when physiologists, poets, and
+ philosophers will all speak the same language and understand one
+ another._--CLAUDE BERNARD.
+
+
+
+
+AN INDICATION.
+
+
+There are some statements, the very simplicity and truth of which
+create a shock--for some people. For instance, there are certain
+seekers after health who ignore and are shocked by the very obvious
+truth that "brain is flesh." A brain poisoned by impure blood is no
+fit instrument for the spirit to manifest through, and "mental
+suggestion" must inevitably prove of no avail as a cure if the origin
+of the impure blood be purely material.
+
+It is just as futile, on the other hand, to treat the chronic
+indigestion that arises from persistent worry, or indulgence in
+passion, by one change after another in the dietary. The founder of
+homoeopathy insisted that there was no such thing as a physical
+"symptom" without corresponding mental and moral symptoms. "Not soul
+helps flesh more than flesh helps soul." Thus the Scientist and the
+Poet come to the same truth, albeit by different ways.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+PLAIN WORDS AND COLOURED PICTURES.
+
+
+While most of us would at first sight find fault with Mr G.K.
+Chesterton's sweeping advice--
+
+ "And don't believe in anything
+ That can't be told in coloured pictures,"
+
+many would probably end by endorsing it. But we should do so only
+because we were able to give a very wide and varied meaning to
+"coloured pictures."
+
+No one ever made a coloured picture of the "wild west wind"; but there
+are plenty of coloured pictures in which there is no mistaking its
+presence. We all believe in wireless telegraphy (now that it is an
+accomplished fact) which is, in itself, untranslatable into colour or
+line; but its mechanism can be photographed, and its results in the
+world of men and ships are in all the illustrated papers. Music, which
+is pure sound, is to some the surest path to the Reality behind this
+outward show things; yet to some at least of such music is indeed form
+and colour, even though the colours be beyond the rainbow. For in
+truth, everything worth believing in, all those things, those ideas,
+which renew the springs of our life, have form and they have colour.
+Even to the colour-blind one word differeth from another in glory.
+
+This is no idle fancy, no mere subject for academic debate: it is the
+most practical subject in the world. For even as the body is fed not
+by food alone but by the living air, so is the spirit nourished not
+alone by right action but by inspiring ideas. Ideas are pictures; and
+the best ideas are coloured pictures.
+
+Hence the great value of words. It is idle to speak of "words, idle
+words," as though they were the transient froth on the permanent ocean
+of thought. They are the vehicle, the body of thought. If the thought
+be shallow or silly, the words will indeed be "idle." But if the idea
+be inspiring the words will be the channel of that inspiration.
+
+The greater part of this power in words is lost to us to-day.
+Everything tempts us to hurry over words. We talk too quickly to be
+able to pay that respect to words which they deserve; and we read the
+newspaper, the magazine, the novel, the play, the poem, with the same
+disastrous haste. We devour the words but lose their essence. Hence
+there is a grave danger that through this neglect we shut out one of
+the main streams by which our life must be fed if it is not to shrink
+into mere fretful existence.
+
+There is a curious idea in some minds that fine language consists of
+long words difficult to understand. Nothing could be farther from the
+truth. Most of the great words--the words of power, as the old
+Kabalists called them--are short words, words in common use. And how
+common is the sound of them in the mouth of the preacher! Not long ago
+I heard an intelligent and cultured man reading one of the many
+beautiful passages from the English Bible:--
+
+ "Ye dragons, and all deeps;
+ Fire and hail, snow and vapour;
+ Stormy wind fulfilling his word;
+ Mountains and all hills;
+ Fruitful trees and all cedars, ..."
+
+and he read it as though it were a draper's sale bill. And yet it
+needs but a very little imagination for such a passage to become a
+series of vivid pictures. Fire, hail, snow, vapour, hills, mountains,
+cedars, dragons and deeps--every word is "a word of power" if only
+there is no hurry, if only each word as it comes is given time to call
+up the picture of the real thing before the inward eye.
+
+And you may hear children of fourteen and fifteen who have passed
+examinations in "English" recite line after line of, say, Matthew
+Arnold's _The Forsaken Merman_ with a glib self-assured colourlessness
+due solely to the fact that no teacher has ever taught them respect
+for simple words. And what simpler words could there be than these,
+for example--
+
+ "Where great whales come sailing by,
+ Sail and sail, with unshut eye,
+ Round the world, for ever and aye"?
+
+Simple, common words; yet if there is that leisurely attention to each
+one as it comes what an exhilarating picture arises of the great
+sea-beasts, and of "the round ocean and the living air."
+
+I am not pleading for the stylist's concentration on words which
+exalts them above the things they body forth. The most vivid and
+beautiful description of dawn in the English language--
+
+ "Night's candles are burned out, and jocund morn
+ Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops"
+
+though spoken by the most sensitively vibrant voice in the world, can
+never come near the real dawn breaking across real mountains. But the
+point is that those two lines composed of simple English words have
+power, if we pay them respect, to create the dawn within the mind, and
+to supply the spirit with that beauty which is its very breath.
+
+If this patience with words, this respect for the familiar fine things
+of our native tongue, this desire to make them yield up their strength
+and beauty, if this has nothing to do with healthy living I don't know
+what has. William Wordsworth's--
+
+ "And vital feelings of delight
+ Shall rear her form to stately height"
+
+is only a metrical expression of a great and practical truth. You do
+not need to be a "Christian Scientist" to know that ideas and emotions
+can affect the stoop of the shoulders or the lines of the mouth. Other
+people besides "Eugenists" have observed that ugly or mean-spirited
+parents seldom have beautiful children.
+
+But though the power of ideas is a commonplace, and though
+psychologists tell us how much we may improve mental concentration by
+letting the words of any sentence call up each its own picture, what
+they a omit to do is to recognise the need of the human spirit for
+beauty. You can concentrate your thought on the list of pickles in a
+grocer's price list: it is doubtless a good exercise. But the same
+exercise directed to some great phrase, such as Emerson's _Trust
+thyself: ever' heart vibrates to that iron string_; or some vivid
+lyrical image such as _All the trees of the field shall clap their
+hands_, or even a complete poem of simple words but permanent beauty,
+such as that one of Wordsworth's beginning _I wandered lonely as a
+Cloud_; this will not only improve concentration and sharpen memory:
+it will enrich the mind with ever-available sources of inspiration,
+courage and joy.
+
+EDGAR J. SAXON.
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S WANDERERS.
+
+
+ Tell me, thou star, whose wings of light
+ Speed thee in thy fiery flight,
+ In what cavern of the night
+ Will thy pinions close now?
+
+ Tell me, moon, thou pale and grey
+ Pilgrim of heaven's homeless way,
+ In what depth of night or day.
+ Seekest thou repose now?
+
+ Weary wind, who wanderest
+ Like the world's rejected guest,
+ Hast thou still some secret nest
+ On the tree or billow?
+
+PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY.
+
+
+
+
+CLOUD-CAPPED TOWERS.
+
+
+Building castles in the air has always been one of the favourite
+amusements of mankind. To it we owe much, not only of the zest of
+life, but also of motive power for overcoming difficulties and
+reaching out towards new possibilities. Yet all literature, and
+tradition that is earlier than any written literature, is full of a
+deep note of warning; over and over again we see in the dim past the
+shadow of a tower that was built in vain, of walls that were piled too
+high and toppled into ruin, of crests that tapped the thunder-clouds
+and drew down lightning to their own destruction. Evidently man has
+seen danger in his own desire! The castle must be built with wisdom as
+well as with industry and boldness if it is to escape disaster and to
+become a storehouse, a safe defence or a vantage-ground for surveying
+earth and sky.
+
+There is one obvious precaution we should observe in building our
+castles, and that is to realise that all which we imagine and think
+about tends sooner or later to externalise itself and pass into
+action. Every idea tends to glide into an ideal. Nearly all thinkers
+have recognised this, and have seen that morality lies much farther
+back than action, farther back than conscious will. Banquo had dreams
+of ambition, as had Macbeth, but they dealt differently with them;
+while Macbeth allowed his visions to lead him on to treachery and
+murder, Banquo prayed against the temptations that came to him in
+sleep. To most of us imagination, sleeping or waking, comes in less
+dramatic form, but we should all think more sanely and act more wisely
+if we interposed a definite revision by the conscious mind and will of
+all our plans and ideals between their (perhaps quite automatic)
+formation in our imagination and their translation into fact. Slack
+muscle should go with the daydream or picture of the future; we should
+not strike or clench or lift until we have decided that the action is
+right and just and wise. The girl who counted her chickens and broke
+the eggs is a true enough example: every doctor and coroner knows many
+instances of results far more tragic.
+
+But sometimes the vision has nothing in it but what is pure and good
+and noble. Are there any dangers even here?
+
+There is this danger always, that we find the picture so lovely and so
+satisfying that we cannot summon up courage and energy to turn away
+from it towards the serious work which it suggests. The castle in the
+air is radiant and tall, but it is generally meant as a model for a
+tougher building made out of common earth, by toil and pain, amidst
+mud and dust. It is so much easier, as Sordello knew, to imagine than
+to do. Actual circumstances, real life, other people all this that
+lies round us is sterner stuff than our easily moulded material of
+dreams. Who has not at some time or other lain sleepily in bed of a
+morning and gone through in thought the processes of getting up, until
+a louder call or an alarum bell has awakened the realisation that the
+task is not yet begun? Who has not been tempted to shirk practice of
+some sort in thinking of a prize? Who has not sometimes built
+expectation higher and higher until his demands of fate have become so
+great that, in despair of making good, he has let the whole plan slip
+away into the valley of forgotten dreams?
+
+These dangers, the almost involuntary carrying out of unworthy aims
+that have been cherished in thought and the loss of vigour for real
+achievement, due to too easy an indulgence in blameless aspiration,
+are fairly obvious and have long been recognised.
+
+There is another that has been seen from time to time and occasionally
+expressed.[16] We have seen that too loose a dream-world may make the
+world in which we live seem dull and ordinary. But is not the converse
+at least as often true? If our thought-world is too narrow, too
+selfish or too weak, all our ordinary work, sound and compact though
+it may be, is stultified, misdirected, often wasted. We all know how
+in the industrial world something more than industry is needed; in the
+emotional world something more than a clumsy and unapprehending
+goodwill. We need a certain insight to turn these solid qualities of
+labour and feeling to the best account. "A man's reach should exceed
+his grasp," a great poet tells us, and even the birds or beavers do
+not go on quite blindly with their building, but, when effort on
+effort has been destroyed by wind and water or man's interference,
+they at last accommodate their instinct to circumstances so as to give
+themselves a better chance of fulfilling their deeper purpose. In many
+ways we have hardly outgrown the beaver stage: wars, accidents,
+disease, disputes--how many times must we try over again the same path
+which has led us before into trouble and disaster before we put our
+imagination seriously to work on the problem and try to find some more
+complete solution?
+
+Of all the dangers of the use of the imagination, perhaps the greatest
+of all is the neglect to use it, the denial of it and its consequent
+starvation.
+
+E.M. COBHAM.
+
+[16] Mrs Book sees an allusion to this danger, as well as to the
+first, in the warnings against covetousness in the Tenth Commandment.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAY SPIRIT[17]: A CRITICISM.
+
+[17] See the article, "The Play Spirit," in the November issue.
+
+
+With your contributor's description of the play spirit, that happy
+leisure from self and its responsibilities in order that time and
+thought and heart may be filled with wider inspiration, most of your
+readers will, I think, entirely agree, and all of us will be grateful
+for the spirited claim on behalf of "play."
+
+The one criticism that occurs to the mind is that a touch of
+professionalism, of patronage towards the ordinary person, has crept
+into the author's thought and peeps out through many of the sentences.
+
+"Common men" ... "ordinary everyday people" ... "average humanity,"
+... "a worker" who ... "cannot play"; does the writer of the Play
+Spirit really show us what is in their hearts? He is an artist in
+words, he is a keen admirer of other arts, he is interested in
+thinking; it seems all but impossible to him that anyone can have
+"freedom" without the power of expressing it, without even the
+consciousness of its possession.
+
+We are all too apt, I think, to imagine that our own discoveries of
+the mystery and magic of life are peculiar to ourselves, or shared
+only with a sympathetic few, passed on sometimes (by the _very_ few
+who have both will and power to do so) to such of the outsiders as are
+interested enough to enter into that enchanted garden and take gifts
+from it. But has not the supreme discovery of the greatest artists,
+philosophers and teachers been that the "everyday people" _do_ live as
+deeply and broadly as the thinkers and artists? They are inarticulate
+and cannot tell what they see, but to them life is made amusing, or
+interesting, or consecrated according to their temperament.
+
+Who can say what the Cornish sea means to that tired worker? At least
+it seems a boldness that is almost insolence to decide what it did
+_not_ mean to her!
+
+Has not every life its revelations? Is it not because we do _not_ see
+as God does that some one particular life which strikes across our
+path cannot reveal its revelation over again to us?
+
+Surely "the commonplace is the highest place." Or rather, there are no
+hierarchies of the soul. Artist or seamstress or carpenter, we live by
+the glory that flows to us through whatever curtains of environment
+are round us.
+
+I have not a word of criticism for the writer's ideal. All that I
+would suggest is that the ideal is really present in the world,
+"common" as the "everyday" flowers at his feet. Not all can sing or
+paint or write, but many more can laugh or run and all, perhaps, can
+love and pray.
+
+L.E. HAWKS.
+
+
+
+
+ON LEARNING TO BREATHE.[18]
+
+[18] This is article has been specially written as a preface for
+_Health Through Breathing_, by Olga Lazarus, shortly to be published
+(1s. net).
+
+
+To breathe correctly and sufficiently is to live more healthily. This
+dictum is incontrovertible, and it becomes my pleasant duty herein to
+demonstrate its truthfulness. And, after a careful perusal of the
+hundred exercises which the authoress has so clearly and succinctly
+described, I am still more convinced of the very great, one might
+almost say of the tremendous, importance of deep-breathing exercises.
+What has struck me so forcibly in this little book is the fact that
+there is no undue enthusiasm evident; no embellishment of the subject;
+no extravagant claims for the system advocated; just a plain sane,
+sober and intelligent description of procedures of immense value to
+all who would either keep, or improve, their health. The authoress
+has, as it were, laid before the reader a feast of good things in the
+way of physical culture, and leaves it at that. She seems to have
+brought into purview a splendid variation of the exercises, and indeed
+every mode of breathing and exercise likely to be beneficial--to those
+in health as out of it.
+
+Reverting for a moment to the supreme importance of the subject, I may
+say that it has of late years come home to me more than ever, and with
+greater insistency, that innumerable ills of to-day are due to faulty
+breathing and lack of correct physical exercises generally. I wonder
+how many of us could conscientiously say that we devote fifteen or
+twenty minutes regularly every day to the system? And yet such a great
+deal could be done for health in that time! No, we "haven't time," or
+we "oversleep ourselves so often," or we make some such other flimsy
+excuse; but of course we ought to "make time," we ought not to
+"oversleep ourselves." The fact is, rather, that most of us are too
+lazy to go through the exercises, even though we may know of their
+transcendent benefit. In the words of the poet: "Let us, then, be up
+and doing"--that is, up in time in the morning in order to be going
+through exercises such as described in this little volume.
+
+It is within my personal knowledge, and must be within the personal
+knowledge of every actively engaged physician, that but very few of us
+yet have any idea, in spite of all the teaching and the advocacy of
+it, of really deep and scientific breathing. If the system could be
+made quite general and enforced upon us--especially when young or
+adolescent--we should not see, as we do now, _thousands_ walking about
+the streets whose nostrils are too narrow through insufficient
+breathing, whose lungs are not properly inflated as they inspire; and,
+as a consequence, who have neither the bloom nor the carriage of
+health.
+
+Perhaps if I show here how vastly important it is for us to have our
+blood well oxygenated, it may be some sort of encouragement for Mrs
+Lazarus's readers to persevere with and _work into their lives_ the
+system she advocates and describes.
+
+If we did not renew the oxygen in our lungs to a sufficient extent, we
+should die in a few minutes. We can do without food for many days;
+without water for less days, but only for a few minutes without
+oxygen. Anything which tends to increase the intake of this vitally
+important element, whether deeper breathing or exercises, will have a
+very pronounced effect upon our general health. Now deep breathing is,
+_par excellence_, the way to bring about this desirable condition. It
+may interest the readers of this little book if I remind them that in
+the ordinary way the total capacity of the lungs is about 340 cubic
+inches; as a rule, the amount of air breathed amounts only to some 20
+or 30 cubic inches, but this, by special effort, can be increased by
+some 110 cubic inches. Thus it is demonstrated how much more air we
+could take into the lungs by better and deeper breathing, thereby
+securing, sooner or later, a greater natural expansion of the lungs,
+with the result, of course, of improved health generally.
+
+It would surprise most people if they tested their breathing capacity
+by the aid of the spirometer, to discover how inefficiently they did
+breathe; in other words, how much below the normal was the amount of
+air they were usually inspiring. Encouragement might also be found in
+the matter--incentive, that is, to learn how to breathe and exercise
+correctly and scientifically--if mention were here made categorically
+of the very profound influences upon certain physiological processes
+of our organisation which are brought about if we would but mend our
+ways in this respect. Space will only allow of a few such to be
+detailed.
+
+1. The circulation is improved and equalised. This implies much more
+than appears on the surface: it means that the blood is made to flow
+from any congested internal organ (such as the liver, stomach, etc.)
+towards the peripheries--that is, the extremities and everywhere where
+there is the capillary system--the changing-place between the venous
+and the arterial blood; thus we at the same time warm our extremities
+and relieve internal congestion. In other words, "to bring the blood
+to the surface" in many conditions of ill-health is of paramount
+importance.
+
+2. It will strengthen the action of the heart and lungs. For lack of
+proper breathing exercises the heart's walls get thin, the expansive
+power of the lungs' tissue gets less, and as a consequence, when any
+little extra strain is thrown upon either, permanent damage is often
+the result.
+
+3. In any tendency to constipation, indigestion and similar
+conditions, such exercises are especially beneficial, and that both by
+flushing the system with more oxygen and by mechanically exerting
+pressure on the different organs--thus giving those latter what is
+actually a good massaging!
+
+4. Indirectly, such exercises must of necessity be splendid for
+"nerves," as we thus get these supplied with a larger amount of
+purified blood, and of course this must result in better and
+heightened nerve and brain action.
+
+And all this--and much more which we have not space enough to deal
+with--being so, it might now be well asked, who and what class of
+individuals would benefit by these exercises. The list is a long one,
+and would include practically all growing children and adolescents--in
+order that adenoids, narrow chests, debility in general, malnutrition
+and a host of other abnormal states might be either cured or
+prevented. Innumerable adults would also benefit by such exercises:
+those who are in health, in order to keep so; those who are depressed
+mentally, or who are suffering from constipation, dyspepsia, anaemia,
+obesity, debility, etc.
+
+Even those who are "getting on" in years could, with care and caution,
+go through such exercises to advantage, providing, that is, that their
+heart, lungs and blood vessels are fairly normal; it is only where
+there is serious organic disease such exercises must be withheld.
+
+Thus we have a big field for such a system which Mrs Lazarus has
+described so fully in this little work of hers; it deserves wide
+recognition, and my final word to the reader is not only to keep the
+book as a "boon companion," but to encourage others to purchase it and
+to carry out its most excellent teachings.
+
+J. STENSON HOOKER, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+LETTERS OF A LAYMAN.
+
+1.--DOCTORS AND HEALTH.
+
+
+Medicine is a progressive science--and art, if we judge by the
+statistics given of the fall in the rate of mortality. Even this,
+however, must be carefully analysed, because a good deal of the fall
+of mortality is due to the great reduction in the birthrate which has
+taken place in the last twenty years. Still, after this has been
+allowed for, there is probably a balance in the doctors'
+favour--something to the good of the science and art of medicine.
+Doubtless the science is improved and the practical advice offered by
+medical men is better and more effectual than it used to be.
+
+A layman, nevertheless, may be forgiven if, with all due deference, he
+is tempted to believe that many of the benefits attributed to medicine
+have been achieved through attention to sanitation--cleanliness and
+ventilation. Of course this is due to the work of science, which
+necessarily includes the members of the medical profession, but it is
+not due to medical science _qua_ medical science.
+
+The terms 'sanitation' and 'sanitary' nearly always connote only ideas
+associated with cleanliness, free ventilation, etc. They scarcely
+connote ideas of food management, or, if they do, it is only to the
+extent of inferring that food shall not be adulterated or of bad
+quality--and perhaps that there shall be enough of it.
+
+Such questions as what food shall we eat, and how much; what are the
+real reasons for taking food into the body, whether it is to give
+strength and heat to the body or only to supply the body's waste, as
+Dr Rabagliati contends--these and other relevant questions are usually
+left to unorthodox members of the medical profession to declare upon.
+They seem to be very important questions, but we do not find that they
+were discussed--or ever mentioned--at the thirty-fourth International
+Medical Congress, which completed its sittings several months ago.
+
+Obviously, the practical questions of food supply are answered very
+differently, according as one _believes_ they must be answered one way
+or another, as, for instance, in Dr Rabagliati's or Dr Haig's way. But
+that they are questions not worthy of consideration by doctors in
+congress may be taken as an ominous sign.
+
+It must not be forgotten that we owe many valuable discoveries of
+medical science to qualified members of the profession, just as
+discoveries of mechanical science are made by men working at their
+respective trades. We have sorrowfully to admit, however, that nearly
+all the great achievements upon which medicine plumes herself are in
+the direction of increasing the doctors' power over his patient, and
+seldom of giving his patient power over disease. It is also true that
+the advocacy by unorthodox members of the profession of simple and
+natural remedies often involves them in a charge of charlatanism, and
+subjects them to persecution by medical associations.
+
+If the medical profession were all that it is supposed to be, it might
+be good that the reformer should suffer in solitude while his
+experiments and methods were subjected to adequate tests and
+criticism. If the associated physicians and surgeons jealously guarded
+the public from quackery while they impartially investigated every
+fresh discovery, the true reformer would welcome the protection
+afforded him from the "counter-currents of senseless clamour" within
+the doctors' own ranks, occasioned by party and vested interests.
+
+It may be true that "loneliness tends to save the Seer from becoming a
+charlatan and to make of him a true Reformer." But it is not that
+peculiar loneliness of the Seer that the medical trade unions afford
+the reforming physician. That is inevitably and sufficiently accorded
+him by the "unwillingness of the masses to enter into the thoughts of
+the Seers."[19] An ignorant and inert people will always follow a
+charlatan, because they like to do things which are mysterious and
+involve no trouble on their part.
+
+[19] The reason "Why the Prophet should be lonely" is perfectly
+elaborated in a chapter under that title in _Logic Taught by Love_,
+from which I have quoted.
+
+The Seer among doctors is boycotted by his fellow medicos _after_ he
+and his co-workers have tested their experiments for themselves,
+weeded out what is false from what is true, and proved their methods
+to be right. Not only that, but too often it turns out that it is
+proper food selection, cleanliness, personal effort and restraint
+advocated by doctors as substitutes for serums and drugs, which
+excites the opprobrium of medical coteries. Whereas, the misguided
+Serum Specialist, who ought to be saved from himself, and from whom
+the public ought to be protected, is given full medical honours--and
+facilities to become that most dangerous type of charlatan, the
+licensed one.
+
+There are doubtless many abstract questions of health and disease
+which orthodox and unorthodox doctors alike are unable satisfactorily
+to settle. But if that be admitted, then it is certainly not in the
+public interest that serum treatments should be accepted as almost the
+last words in medical science. More anti-social still is it to attempt
+to justify the compulsory orders of Parliament that expensive
+sanatoria shall be built to cope with disease that might be more
+economically and more satisfactorily treated.
+
+Is there not too little consideration given to theoretical issues
+underlying practical experience of disease? Is there not too great an
+anxiety to force remedies at the public expense before all the
+bearings of the different questions and their phases have been
+considered? All new methods savour too much of compulsion. They all
+require the provision of large armies of officials to carry them out.
+It is interesting to note that the successors of the men who told us
+how grievously the Church has failed because she is established,
+should be so anxious to more firmly establish the medical priesthood.
+
+Modern statecraft calls out to us: 'we will appoint officials to
+inquire into and decide upon what is to be done, but we will make no
+inquiries into the real nature of this disease and that: we will find
+out remedies which, in the form of serums to be injected into the
+blood, shall counteract the effects of disease: we will also appoint,
+at your expense, doctors to perform these operations: we will force
+the man whose family may have the misfortune to contract a disease,
+which the doctors have not told him how to prevent, to submit them to
+such treatment.' But nothing is said about the desirability of
+exercising government over oneself, one's body and one's mind! And
+nothing is _said_ either, but it is suggested, that, if one accepts
+meekly coercive treatment by official doctors, one may probably be
+able to ignore the laws of life and health without having to pay the
+penalty.
+
+No sane and properly instructed citizens would be satisfied to have
+State officials compel them to do what they ought to do for
+themselves. It is because of this and because the suggestions and
+compulsions of modern medicine are in keeping with the prevailing
+philosophy that accumulates knowledge without wisdom, that we need
+such counteracting influences as are afforded by journals like _The
+Healthy Life._
+
+LAYMAN.
+
+
+
+
+A DOCTOR ON DOCTORS.
+
+
+"I charge that whereas the first duty of a physician is to instruct
+the people in the laws of health and thus prevent disease, the
+tendency has ever been towards a conspiracy of mystery, humbug, and
+silence."
+
+"I charge that the general tendency of the profession has been to
+depreciate the importance of personal and municipal cleanliness, and
+to inculcate a reliance on drug medicines, vaccination, and other
+unscientific expedients."
+
+ALEXANDER ROSS, M.D., F.R.S.
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | #To Our Readers.# |
+ | |
+ | Readers who appreciate the independence and all-round |
+ | advocacy of _The Healthy Life_ can materially assist the |
+ | extension of its circulation by tactfully urging their local |
+ | newsagent to have the magazine regularly displayed for sale. |
+ | An attractive monthly poster can always be had free from the |
+ | Publishers, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+MODERN GERM MANIA: A CASE IN POINT.
+
+
+Under the sensational heading, _Doomed to Carry Germs: Woman Typhoid
+Victim for Life_, the following account appeared recently in _News of
+the World_:--
+
+ Almost unique in medical history is the case of a woman typhoid
+ carrier, who, it is said, will carry the bacilli with her through
+ life. The case is described by Dr Barbara Cunningham in a report
+ of the Manchester Medical Officer of Health. In order that the
+ woman shall cease to be a source of danger--as she has been
+ keeping lodgers--the health authorities are giving her 7s. a
+ week, and that, with her old-age pension of 5s., will be
+ sufficient to keep her without lodgers. The case has aroused much
+ interest in Manchester. The principal restrictions on the part of
+ the Health Department are that she must not cook or wash for
+ anyone. Anyone can, however, cook for her. In discussing the case
+ Dr Martin, who for 25 years was Medical Officer of Health for
+ Gorton, remarked that in some cases of typhoid carriers the
+ infection ceased to exist for a time, but it was unusual for it
+ to exist year after year. "The reason for the woman referred to
+ carrying the typhoid bacilli with her through life is," he added,
+ "because of a peculiarity of constitution. There is no remedy to
+ be found for it at present, and no means of freeing her from the
+ germs, hence the reward offered by an American to anyone who can
+ find a remedy for such cases. The germs themselves are proof
+ against remedies, and they go on multiplying. The woman is
+ incurable, and you cannot kill the germs without killing the
+ woman. It is the first case, to my knowledge, where the health
+ authorities have taken such measures to prevent a spread of the
+ infection." The history of the affair is interesting. The woman's
+ case had been reported to the authorities, and when her lodger
+ became ill with typhus she was suspected, and was found to be
+ giving off large numbers of typhoid bacilli. She was placed in
+ Monsall Hospital for two months, during which time she was
+ treated with gradually increasing doses of vaccine prepared in
+ the Public Health Laboratory, York Place. When discharged, three
+ separate tests were made as regards the typhoid bacilli. For one
+ week after her discharge the organisms did not reappear, but
+ during the second week a few colonies were grown, and in the
+ third and fourth weeks the number increased. Shortly after that
+ her lodger developed enteric fever.
+
+This case is instructive, because it shows very clearly the utter
+futility of the modern method of treating infectious diseases by means
+of drugs and vaccines.
+
+It is well known that the infecting agent or microbe found in cases of
+typhoid fever originates in man himself, that, in fact, it is
+essentially a man-made disorder. Dr Budd, who was the first to fully
+investigate this important subject, brought together the most
+convincing considerations to show this.
+
+We know further that impure water and milk, shellfish and certain
+foods which are contaminated with sewage are capable of giving rise to
+epidemics of this complaint.
+
+This was shown in Paris in May last, when a plumber carelessly
+connected a pipe along which Seine water flowed to a drinking-water
+pipe. The typhoid germ is always present in Seine water and this
+mistake cost the lives of twenty people.
+
+Dr Freeman, an American doctor, who has studied the habits of the
+typhoid germ, tells us that it does not survive so well outside the
+human body as does the tubercle microbe, but it can, nevertheless, do
+an incalculable amount of mischief when the local authorities are
+careless about the matter of sewage disposal.
+
+A great deal has been heard of late of what are termed Typhoid
+Carriers. There are apparently numbers of people who, while they
+appear to be in good health, yet harbour these germs and are thus
+liable to infect others with them; and the problem is what to do with
+them.
+
+The orthodox authorities, as happened in the case cited above, would
+like to isolate them indefinitely and even to pension them off for
+life, but this seems to be a hopeless way out of the difficulty.
+
+The remedy seems obvious to me. Let us stop the drugs and serums and
+use common-sense hygiene of the body instead. This must be patent to
+anyone who has any knowledge of the subject; but why the authorities
+do not put it into execution I am at a loss to imagine. Surely the
+right thing to do is to clear away the impurities in which the typhoid
+germs live. _By depriving them of the material or soil in which they
+grow and propagate we should practically starve them out of
+existence._
+
+Moreover, this seems to me to be a perfectly easy procedure. If this
+woman were handed over to me for treatment I should at once place her
+on an antiseptic diet consisting solely of salads, grated roots, fresh
+fruits, sour buttermilk and dextrinised cereals. The effect of this
+diet would be to cleanse and sterilise the entire digestive tract, and
+thus break up and clear away the soil in which the microbes are
+living. Supplementary to this cleansing diet other means could be
+adopted to effect a general purification of the whole body. Thus
+vapour baths could be used to promote skin action; beverages could be
+taken morning and night, consisting of distilled water with lemon
+juice or suitable herbal "teas" to promote free action of the kidneys;
+and colon-flushing treatment could be used to fully cleanse the colon,
+or large bowel.
+
+By combined treatment of this rational order, I am convinced that this
+woman would speedily become freed from her unpleasant visitors and
+would be enabled to return to her relations without, as it were, a
+stain upon her character.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+BURIED TALENT COMPETITION.
+
+
+The Editors of _The Healthy Life_ are convinced that there are many
+men and women who can write well and interestingly on subjects
+relating to health in its many aspects; and they wish to unearth this
+talent.
+
+They therefore offer a _First Prize_ of _Two Guineas_, a _Second
+Prize_ of _One Guinea_, and a _Third Prize_ of _Books_ (published at
+_The Healthy Life_ Office) to the value of Half-a-Guinea, for the best
+ESSAY, SKETCH or SHORT STORY appropriate to the pages of _The Healthy
+Life._
+
+Please read the following Conditions carefully:--
+
+CONDITIONS.
+
+ 1. Each Essay, Short Story, or Sketch must contain _not less than
+ 1000 words_, and _not more than 2000 words._
+
+ 2. Each Essay, Short Story, or Sketch must be written (or typed)
+ on one side of the paper only, leaving at least one inch of
+ margin on which each 100 words must be indicated in figures.
+
+ 3. Each attempt must be accompanied by the front cover (or top
+ part of cover showing date) of either the December or January
+ numbers. (Where more than one MS. is sent in by one contributor,
+ extra covers in proportion must be enclosed.)
+
+ 4. The full name and address of the competitor must be written at
+ the foot of last page, in addition to the competitor's _nom de
+ plume_ (if any).
+
+ 5. All Essays, Short Stories or Sketches must be sent in not
+ later than the 31st of January 1914, addressed _Buried Talent_,
+ _The Healthy Life_, 3 Tudor Street, London, E.C.
+
+ 6. No one who is at present, or has ever been, a regular
+ contributor to _The Healthy Life_ is eligible for a prize.
+
+ 7. The Editors reserve the right to publish any contribution sent
+ in under this Competition.
+
+ 8. The decision of the Editors will be final and no
+ correspondence can be entered into with unsuccessful competitors.
+
+Competitors are asked to note that legibility of handwriting will
+carry weight as well as intrinsic merit.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTHY LIFE RECIPES.
+
+
+SOUPS.
+
+Many cases of ill-health demand that the meals should be as dry as
+possible. Having granted this, it will be admitted that there is quite
+a proper place for soups in ordinary everyday food reform catering.
+
+The chief objection to ordinary soups is that they are made on a basis
+of meat stock and flavoured with one of various "meat extract"
+preparations. Meat stock, meat gravy and meat extract all alike
+represent the least desirable elements in flesh food, namely, the
+acids and tissue-wastes of the living animal at the moment of its
+death--acids and tissue-debris which were on their way to normal
+excretion via the lymph channels, veins, etc.
+
+It is therefore only common-sense to avoid such soup-bases,
+especially as the most excellent soups can be made without recourse to
+any animal product.
+
+The juices of vegetables, being rich in alkaline "salts" and other
+organic elements, are the natural cleansing agents in a rational diet.
+Hence to obtain a maximum _remedial_ effect, vegetable soup should be
+taken in the form of a clear, unflavoured broth, quite apart from the
+solid meals, and preferably on retiring. But for the dinner or supper
+soup, some richness of flavour and creaminess of substance are
+pleasing and legitimate.
+
+The following recipes explain, first, how to prepare vegetable
+"stock," and then how to make rich, creamy nourishing soups, on the
+basis of that "stock." Each recipe will, of course, suggest
+variations.
+
+
+HOW TO MAKE VEGETABLE STOCK.
+
+Put any fresh vegetables in season in a large stewpot--being careful
+not to include _overmuch_ cabbage or other coarse green leaves, as
+these give a rather strong flavour--with a quart or more of water,
+cover, and simmer gently for at least two hours. The outer leaves
+discarded when preparing vegetables for the table, the stalks and
+stems, and the peelings of apples, potatoes, etc., should all be used
+for stock, care being taken, of course, to cleanse them well first,
+cutting out any insect-eaten or decayed parts.
+
+
+ALMOND CREAM SOUP.
+
+Mix two tablespoonfuls of fine wholemeal or good "standard" flour into
+a smooth paste with a little water, add this to the hot stock (as
+above), and stir till soup is thickened. Just before serving stir in a
+tablespoonful of Almond Cream (either "P.R." or Mapleton's).
+
+_The addition of the almond cream gives the above a nutritive value,
+apart from the tonic and cleansing elements in the stock._
+
+
+NOURISHING ARTICHOKE SOUP.
+
+Pare, scrub and cut into small pieces, 1 lb. of artichokes and put
+immediately into a pan with a pint of water or milk and water. Boil
+till soft, then rub through a wire sieve, using a wooden spoon. Put
+back in pan, add a little more water, a little chopped parsley, and a
+small piece of butter (or nut butter). Bring to the boil, stirring
+well; stir in a tablespoonful of Pinekernel Cream ("P.R." or
+Mapleton's), and serve at once.
+
+
+LEEK AND CELERY SOUP.
+
+Put four well-cleansed medium-sized leeks (cut up small), the outer
+parts of a head of celery (chopped), a quart of water and 2 oz.
+unpolished Japan rice, into a pan and simmer for two hours. Rub
+through wire sieve, return to pan, bring to the boil, and serve.
+
+_This soup is not so much nutritive as cleansing and antiseptic._
+
+
+
+
+TASTE OR THEORY?
+
+FRUIT AND THE OXALIC ACID BOGEY.
+
+
+Many and varied are the creeds of Health Reformers, but all may be
+included within two main camps. And the opposing battle-cries are
+Instinct _versus_ Intellect, Taste _versus_ Theory, _a priori versus a
+posteriori_, Motives _versus_ Purposes. Some overlapping and confusion
+of creed may be found in both camps, but in the main one is filled
+with lovers of Nature, the other with devotees of Science.
+
+"We believe in simplicity," cries the Nature-lover from the meadow
+where he is taking a sun-bath; "you are so complex, so artificial."
+
+"We believe in being 'sensible,'" retorts the devotee of Science from
+the cabinet where he is taking an electric light bath, "you are so
+extreme."
+
+"Not extreme--consistent. Your treatment varies every month as the
+decrees of 'Science' change."
+
+"But your treatment varies every minute as the wind and clouds change.
+I can keep mine constant with mathematical accuracy, or vary the light
+to a nicety by pressing a button."
+
+And so also is it with regard to diet. The person who talks learnedly
+about germs and calories (though he never saw a germ or measured a
+calorie in his life) will be found in the same camp with the electric
+light advocate, while this other who cultivates a taste in harmony
+with Nature by consuming what he likes best of her unaltered products,
+he is found arm in arm with the sun-bather. But Science will by no
+means allow him to eat his uncooked food in peace. "If we all adopt
+_that_ diet," her pseudo-disciples cry, "what is to become of the
+potatoes?"
+
+Now, with regard to uncooked foods, it would seem that as little fault
+can be found with ripe fruit in its natural state as with any article
+of diet. Yet even here "Science" holds up a warning hand and is
+succeeding in scaring people away from one of the most harmless, most
+wholesome and most neglected of foods.
+
+Leaving generalities, let us come to a specific case, an actual
+difficulty propounded to me by a sufferer, one who had spent her
+substance till she could spend no more in having various parts of
+herself examined and in learned prescriptions and processes of cure,
+but who found herself as far from health as ever. Obsessed by certain
+theories of "Science," this lady had acquired a dread of sugar _in
+every form_. Hence her query addressed to me: "In your book, _No
+Rheumatism_, you say that sugar is to be avoided. Why, then, do you
+recommend fruit, which is mostly sugar?"
+
+I replied as follows: "The reason I recommend ripe uncooked fruit--in
+spite of its containing a certain quantity of sugar--is that it
+contains also purifying salts, and that for most people it is the
+pleasantest form in which these salts can be taken. Moreover, fruit
+sugar appears to be more wholesome than that formed from starch. When
+you say that 'fruit is mostly sugar,' are you not leaving the water of
+the fruit out of account? As the water often amounts to 90 per cent.
+this makes all the difference. Taking the fruits generally grown in
+this country the average proportion of sugar is seven per cent.
+
+[This statement is based on the following figures given in Goodale's
+Physiological Botany:--
+
+ Apples contain 7.73 per cent. sugar
+ Pears " 8.26 " "
+ Plums " 3.56 " "
+ Strawberries 6.28 " "
+ Gooseberries 7.03 " "
+
+Grapes are stated to contain 24.36 per cent, but often contain much
+less and sometimes even more.]
+
+"Now a person eating fruit _ad lib._, but allowed other foods, will
+hardly ever eat more than a pound or two a day (generally less). But
+suppose him to eat two pounds. Seven per cent. of this is 2+1/4 oz. If he
+eats only 1 lb. he takes 1+1/8 oz. sugar. Now compare this with
+the amount he gets from starchy foods, say, bread, which contains
+fifty per cent. of starch and sugar. As the starch, if it is to be
+assimilated, must be (and as a general rule practically all is)
+converted into sugar during digestion, we get from 1 lb. of bread 8
+oz. of sugar (to be exact, nearly 9 oz., because starch forms rather
+more than its own weight of sugar). But the weight of bread allowed
+for daily food, if no other starchy or sugary food is taken,
+is--according to orthodox physiology books--1 lb., 11 oz., yielding
+over 14 oz. of sugar. Now I reduce the starchy food to 8 oz. or less
+(_No Rheumatism_, p. 34), yielding at most about 4+1/2 oz. of sugar. You
+see, then, that the patient can now afford to take even 2 lbs. of
+fruit, because this will bring his total of sugar up to only 6+3/4 oz.,
+as against 14 oz. allowed by the orthodox. And if, as I recommend (p.
+33), fruits containing but little sugar (especially cucumbers) are
+taken, his total sugar under my regime will be even less than 6+3/4 oz.
+
+"As so many people fail to distinguish between fruit sugar occurring
+naturally in fruit and ordinary separated and concentrated cane sugar,
+or even beet sugar separated by various chemicals--'shop sugar,' in
+fact--I translate for you a passage from Dr Carton's _Trois Aliments
+Meurtriers_[20]:--
+
+[20] _Some Popular Foodstuffs Exposed_, translated by D.M. Richardson.
+1s. net. Daniel.
+
+"'Let us proceed now to the study of the third deadly food. The sugar
+contained in vegetables and raw fruits is a living aliment,
+physiologically combined with the protoplasm of the vegetable cells,
+associated with ferments and with vitalised chemical salts. The
+absorption of this natural sugar is effected by a harmonious contact,
+by an exchange of energy between the living vegetable cells and our
+living digestive cells.
+
+"'The sugar of commerce, on the contrary, is a dead food which has
+lost all association with vegetable protoplasm, with vitalised mineral
+salts and with oxidising ferments which would render it physiological.
+It is nothing more than a drug, a dangerous chemical, because Nature
+has nowhere presented it to us in this form.... Its absorption
+involves an anti-physiological irritation which over-excites the
+viscera, and when repeated ends by profoundly altering them.'"
+
+"This is all very well," cries Pseudo-Science, "but people may eat too
+much fruit."
+
+"Certainly, but then I warn them at once," quoth Taste.
+
+"But they have an idea it is good for them, and they disregard your
+warnings."
+
+"If they 'have an idea' which runs counter to my warnings and my
+penalties, to say nothing of my promises and my rewards, then they can
+only get that idea from you, Mr Pseudo-Science, with your theories and
+your figures and your long words."
+
+"Why not from your relative, Unnatural Taste? Anyhow, it is my duty to
+warn them."
+
+"If they don't heed my warning, they certainly won't heed yours," says
+Taste.
+
+"But I can paint such a picture of the trouble they store up for the
+future if they persist in excessive fruit eating!"
+
+"Never mind about persisting and storing up for the future. I punish
+excess in fruit eating as in everything else by prompt discomfort and
+pain."
+
+"But what do you know about oxalic acid?"
+
+"Enough to avoid it. Like every other poison it is repugnant to me."
+
+"Yet fruit which is so nice in the mouth may ferment in the intestines
+and form that very poison. Then what are you going to do about it?"
+
+"Take care that not too much fruit is eaten another time."
+
+"But in the meantime the oxalic acid already formed must be
+neutralised at once."
+
+"No, no! It would be a pity to do that. Oxalic acid is the latest
+fashion. What would your patients do without it? And what would you do
+without your patients?"
+
+"It must be neutralised at once. It can only be neutralised at the
+cost of abstracting lime from the system. Result: oxalate of lime,
+forming calculus, or 'stone,' which you don't want, and tissues
+depleted of lime which you do want."
+
+"So you get your patients after all. In fact, having 'neutralised
+their oxalic acid' to escape you, they come back to you with two
+diseases instead of one. It seems to me you are a very profitable
+investment, Mr Pseudo-Science."
+
+"Really, Mr Taste, you would not, I presume, have me suppress the
+truth simply because it happens to be profitable?"
+
+"But is it the truth? What proof have you?"
+
+"I presume you are ignorant of the fact that animals have died with
+all the symptoms of oxalic acid poisoning, simply through taking too
+much sugar."
+
+"What kind of animals? You chose such as are used to taking shop sugar
+as part of their ordinary food, of course?"
+
+"Well--no; not in that form. The subjects of the experiment were
+rabbits."
+
+"Ah! And from these you draw deductions about man who has been eating
+artificial sugar for ages. How like a vivisectionist! But what doses
+of sugar did the rabbits get?"
+
+"About one-fortieth of the body-weight."
+
+"That would be as if a man of 150 lbs. weight should take 3+3/4 lbs.
+sugar at a meal! And since it is excessive fruit you are warning us
+against, can you tell me how many pounds of fruit--say, apples--one
+must take in order to get that amount of sugar in a day? No less than
+sixty pounds. Really your warning seems a little superfluous."
+
+"It is all very well for you to scoff, Mr Taste, but if it were not
+for me you would know nothing about the latest diseases. I really
+believe you would be content to go right through life without knowing
+that you had a duodenum or an appendix."
+
+"Quite" assented Taste cheerfully.
+
+ARNOLD EILOART, B.SC.
+
+
+
+
+A SYMPOSIUM ON UNFIRED FOOD.
+
+
+_In November, 1912, we published a letter from a reader containing the
+excellent suggestion that readers who had experimented to any fair
+extent with unfired diet should be invited to contribute to a
+conference on the subject in_ THE HEALTHY LIFE, _and that the
+symposium should be gathered round the following points:--_
+
+(1) The effect of the diet in curing chronic disease.
+
+(2) Its effect on children so brought up--_e.g._ do they get the
+so-called "inevitable" diseases of chicken-pox, measles, etc., and
+especially have they good (_i.e._ perfect) teeth?
+
+(3) The effect of the diet in childbirth.
+
+(4) The cost of maintaining a household in this way, as compared with
+the cost under ordinary conditions.
+
+(5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional
+dietary (often found amongst food reformers)?
+
+(6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter?
+
+_A number of interesting letters have been published this year, and we
+shall be glad to receive a large number of personal experiences, but
+they must be brief, and classified under the above heads as far as
+possible. The following is a striking piece of personal
+evidence._--[EDS.]
+
+ BUCKHURST HILL, ESSEX,
+
+ _28th April 1913._
+
+ To the Editors of _The Healthy Life._
+
+ DEAR SIRS,
+
+ As a slight contribution to the interesting discussion which is
+ taking place in your magazine, will you allow me to give you a
+ short summary of nearly sixty years experience of the effects,
+ in my own case, of flesh eating, vegetarianism and the uncooked
+ food diet.
+
+ This is not a fairy tale, as some may be inclined to think, but a
+ plain unvarnished statement of facts.
+
+ The flesh-eating period lasted for seventeen years. When three
+ months old I was the unfortunate victim of vaccination poisoning,
+ and for years afterwards was continually in the doctor's hands.
+ The best medical men in this country and America were consulted;
+ for months daily visits were paid to a noted Chicago specialist
+ in the hope that he might be able to effect a cure, but it was a
+ case of "love's labour lost," and, instead of improving, my
+ condition grew steadily worse.
+
+ During all these years, drugging was constantly going on, the
+ pills and potions ordered were religiously swallowed, and,
+ strange as it may seem, the ordeal was survived. Flesh meat was
+ eaten daily, and, of all the members of the medical profession
+ consulted, not one of them ever hinted that a change of diet
+ might be beneficial.
+
+ When 17 years of age my attention was drawn to an article in _The
+ Phonetic Journal_ on the advantages of a non-flesh diet. By this
+ time, being thoroughly tired of taking endless quantities of
+ useless, poisonous and expensive drugs, I decided, there and
+ then, to throw "physic to the dogs," making up my mind that if
+ death did come, and it seemed to be staring me in the face, I
+ would, at any rate, die a vegetarian.
+
+ Within six months the most dangerous symptom had completely
+ disappeared and has never recurred, but, although greatly
+ benefitting by the new diet, and enjoying on the whole fairly
+ good health, yet there were frequent attacks of rheumatism,
+ lumbago and neuralgia; dyspepsia, with its attendant pain and
+ flatulence, often made life miserable; now and again the liver
+ would rise up in rebellion, bringing in its train vertigo,
+ blurred vision and severe headaches; constipation, that bane of
+ modern life, was a source of endless trouble, in fact, for many
+ years the enema had to be used once or twice a week, and last,
+ but worst of all, came those sharp, shooting, lancinating pains,
+ one of the premonitory symptoms of cancer.
+
+ Obviously, there was still something radically wrong somewhere,
+ and on retiring from practice, a great deal of time and attention
+ was devoted to the subject, innumerable experiments were made,
+ and, ultimately, results obtained, the value of which cannot be
+ exaggerated.
+
+ Five years ago the uncooked food diet was commenced, and from the
+ very first week a steady improvement took place. The constipation
+ vanished as if by magic; there has not been the slightest touch
+ of rheumatism or neuralgia for at least three years the liver is
+ now an unknown quantity, the dyspepsia is a thing of the past,
+ and, most important of all, the cancer symptoms are entirely
+ gone, and in their place has come an abounding health, vigour and
+ vitality that is marvellous. The years seem to have "rolled back
+ in their flight"; all the centres of life are rejuvenated; and
+ the hopes, feelings and aspirations of youth sway me now as they
+ did nearly half-a-century ago. Work, mental or physical, is a
+ perfect pleasure, and to feel fatigue is almost unknown.
+
+ What a glorious gift life really is has never been realised till
+ now, and the wealth of the Indies would not induce me to go back
+ to the flesh-pots, or live on cooked foods again. This diet gives
+ two important advantages: firstly, the elimination of all excess
+ of starchy matter prevents the formation of needless fat, and,
+ secondly, the entire absence of artificially sweetened food
+ removes one of the main causes of over-eating.
+
+ Will people ever learn that fat, instead of being a sign of
+ health, is the very reverse, that every ounce of superfluous
+ adipose tissue means more work for the heart, diminished
+ vitality, lessened energy, and, when excessive, is not only a
+ distinct menace to longevity, but to life itself?
+
+ I never take more than two meals a day and very often only one,
+ which consists of raw vegetables, nuts, olive oil and unfired
+ bread; the second meal, when required, is a simple fruit salad.
+
+ When a vegetarian the writer lived for years on a shilling a
+ week; it costs rather more now, the oil, nuts, fruit and bread
+ being more expensive than beans, rice, meal, etc., but the
+ difference is so trifling that it is not worth talking about.
+
+ Whilst "Fletcherising," deep breathing, distilled water, olive
+ oil, fasting, saltless food, the open-air life, regular exercise,
+ etc., were valuable allies, it was not until the powerful aid of
+ uncooked food was invoked that the real benefits began to appear
+ and life became a real joy. Yours, etc.,
+
+ JOHN REID, M.B., C.M.
+
+
+
+
+HEALTH QUERIES.
+
+_Under this heading our contributor, Dr Valentine Knaggs, deals
+briefly month by month, and according as space permits, with questions
+of general interest to health seekers and others._
+
+_In all Queries relating to health difficulties it is essential that
+full details of the correspondent's customary diet should be clearly
+given._
+
+_Correspondents are earnestly requested to write on _one side only of
+the paper_, giving full name and address, not for publication, but as
+a guarantee of good faith. When an answer is required by post a
+stamped addressed envelope must be enclosed._--[EDS.]
+
+_Every inquiry must be accompanied by the front cover (or upper part
+of same showing date) of a recent number_ of _The Healthy Life_.
+
+
+ONION JUICE AS HAIR RESTORER.
+
+ Mrs M. McC. writes:--In your book, _Onions and Cress_,[21] on p.
+ 49, it is stated that the juice of onions mixed with honey will
+ change the colour of hair from grey to black. Will you be kind
+ enough to tell me in what proportion these should be mixed, as,
+ of course, if not in a proper mixture, the hair would become so
+ clogged. And will you also kindly tell me how one is to extract
+ the juice from the onions, whether they are to be boiled or
+ squeezed when raw.
+
+With regard to the use of a mixture of onion juice and honey as a hair
+restorative the reader of my little book must remember that it is
+largely a compilation of quotations from old herbal books, and it
+gives the history, use and folklore of these interesting edibles. I am
+not responsible for this recipe and cannot therefore vouch for its
+utility. We know, however, that onions contain a wonderful sulphured
+oil and that sulphur in one form or another is an important ingredient
+of most hair preparations which restore colour. The raw juice
+evidently should be used, and this can be extracted either by pounding
+and grating and then extracting the juice under pressure, or it can be
+readily obtained in any quantity by putting onions through the
+Enterprise Juice Press. The amount of honey, I think, to be added to
+this juice should be very small, otherwise, as our correspondent
+surmises, the preparation would be very sticky and objectionable.
+Would any reader care to try this and report upon it?
+
+[21] _Onions and Cress_, 6d. net (postage 1d).
+
+
+SCIATICA.
+
+ Mrs M.G. writes:--My husband is a sufferer from sciatica; has had
+ it for some years, on and off, but just lately he seems is to get
+ it constantly--sometimes a little, sometimes a lot. He has been
+ taking some salicylate of soda, and I have tried to persuade him
+ to give it up. His age is 42. For his meals he takes, on rising,
+ an apple or a cup of apple tea; an hour afterwards his breakfast,
+ which consists of two tablespoonfuls of a proteid food mixed with
+ distilled water, and a hard biscuit, two slices of whole meal
+ brown bread, nut butter, and watercress or lettuce. During the
+ morning he drinks barley water. For dinner, a salad and a few
+ ground nuts and hard biscuits and an apple; sometimes home-made
+ nut meat and spinach, hard biscuits and dried or fresh fruit.
+ For tea, a salad or lettuce, tomatoes, onions and cress, and
+ Shredded Wheat and wholemeal bread. Last thing at night, a few
+ steamed onions and distilled water. His bowels are in good
+ condition, very regular, but he has this constant gnawing pain.
+ If you can help me in any way as to a change in his diet, it will
+ be a relief to me. I do not mind the trouble of preparing things
+ for him. It is about two months ago that he has taken to drinking
+ distilled water, which I make myself. His occupation is very
+ sedentary, with long hours, sometimes from six in the morning
+ till nine at night. He has a bicycle, and gets as much exercise
+ as possible.
+
+From the description given one would assume that the sedentary
+occupation and long hours of work have caused this correspondent to
+fall into bad postural habits of sitting and standing, coupled with
+excessive depletion of his nervous energy. The diet given is on good
+lines and, with the addition of home-made curd cheese and eggs as
+proteid, might certainly be continued as it stands, especially as the
+bowel action is regular. What the correspondent does need is less
+hours of work; more physical exercises of a brisk back-stretching
+nature, and certain spinal stretching manipulations of an Osteopathic
+nature. Full deep breathing in fresh air will also be beneficial. The
+lower part of the spine, from which the sciatic nerves originate,
+needs the most attention.
+
+
+REFINED PARAFFIN AS A CONSTIPATION REMEDY.
+
+ Mr E.H. writes:--Will Dr Knaggs very kindly say whether Refined
+ Paraffin, now being given so generally for the relief of
+ constipation, may be regarded as a harmless method of overcoming
+ this trouble or whether its use might lead to harmful results. I
+ am told that this preparation of oil is not assimilated, and is
+ therefore harmless, but I should much appreciate Dr Knaggs'
+ opinion on this matter.
+
+The use of refined paraffin as a remedy for constipation is just now
+all the rage with the orthodox medical profession. There is nothing
+really to be said against its right use, provided it is made to serve
+as one of the means to an end. It has been proved that this paraffin,
+which is quite tasteless, odourless and easy to swallow, is not
+absorbed by the system but passes unchanged and unaltered through it.
+It acts therefore as a mere mechanical lubricant. The one thing to
+remember is that its use should be combined with a curative diet, so
+that it need not be taken indefinitely.
+
+
+(1) DRY THROAT; (2) SACCHARINE; (3) DILATED HEART.
+
+ Mr L.S. writes:--I have read _The Healthy Life_ from the
+ appearance of the first number, and I have studied the Answers to
+ Correspondents, but have not observed a case identical with my
+ own, hence my reason for troubling you.
+
+ (1) The back part of mouth next throat has a curious glazed
+ appearance--no cough or expectoration. I am inclined to think it
+ extends to and includes the stomach. I have always a good
+ appetite, but am not well nourished; much under weight. Age 44
+ years; school officer; cycle 25 miles a week.
+
+ Eat meat sparingly, not a pound a week. Live principally upon
+ eggs and bread and butter--(three eggs a day): "Digestive Tea"
+ two and three times a day.
+
+ 2. Is saccharine less harmful than sugar for sweetening?
+
+ 3. As the result of a nervous breakdown I had five years ago I
+ suffer from a dilated heart, consequently--I suppose--I have
+ palpitation occasionally, oftener when in bed. I don't think my
+ heart is really normal since my breakdown five years ago.
+
+ 4. Would bathing myself with cold water over the region of the
+ heart strengthen the muscles? Would you please suggest anything
+ for strengthening heart. Are lemons or eggs injurious to the
+ heart?
+
+1. The throat symptoms indicate a dry, irritable, heated condition of
+the mouth and throat which, as the correspondent surmises, equally
+affects the stomach and the rest of the digestive organs. He should
+have a breakfast of fresh fruit only, take salads and grated raw roots
+with his meals and stop tea altogether. He can drink distilled water
+and vegetable or lemon drinks (unsweetened) instead.
+
+2. Saccharine is a mineral substance, a fossilised product of
+putrefactive action in the coal age. It is closely analogous to
+carbolic acid, which equally originates from microbic action. By
+leaving off sugar and replacing it by saccharine our correspondent
+gains nothing. He is simply leaping from the frying pan into the fire.
+It is best for him to cultivate a taste for unsweetened or even acid
+drinks.
+
+3. A dilated heart is usually an after effect of a dilated stomach,
+which strains it, just as it does every other organ, whether in the
+chest or the abdomen.
+
+4. Bathing the chest with cold water is not desirable. What is needed
+is that the correspondent should drink as little fluid as possible and
+pay close attention to the condition of his digestive mechanism. If
+the organs are dilated or misplaced he should wear a belt and take
+suitable gentle Osteopathic exercises.
+
+
+TREATMENT FOR STAMMERING.
+
+ A.M.D. writes:--Could you kindly give in _The Healthy Life_
+ magazine some suggestions as to the best method to follow in a
+ case of stammering (slight) in a boy of ten or eleven years who
+ has been rather left to himself, the hesitancy in speech being
+ regarded as incurable?
+
+This boy should be trained by someone who understands how to cure
+stammering. The correspondent would do well to consult Miss Behncke of
+18 Earl's Court Square, S.W., who makes a speciality of treating such
+cases.
+
+
+WHY THE RED CORPUSCLES ARE DEFICIENT IN ANAEMIA.
+
+ A.M.D. writes:--Is there any way, independent of diet, of
+ increasing the red corpuscles in the blood? I have tried walking
+ nine miles a day, thus getting up free perspirations. What of
+ this method? I did imagine that this resulted in a better
+ condition of the skin, the latter losing in a measure the white
+ and parched appearance.
+
+A deficiency of red corpuscles in the blood, which shows in anaemia, is
+usually caused by self-poisoning. When food ferments or putrifies in
+the colon, owing to faulty diet and other causes, certain toxins are
+created. These become absorbed into the blood and there destroy the
+red corpuscles. Walking is a good form of exercise, but it will not
+suffice alone to remedy this type of anaemia unless the diet and
+general habits of the patient are so arranged that the unsanitary
+condition of the colon is also remedied. The correspondent will find,
+if she studies the replies to others in this magazine, many details as
+to diet, etc., for rectifying bad conditions in the bowels.
+
+
+THE CORRECT BLENDING OF FOODS.
+
+ T.B.W. writes:--Is it inadvisable for a dyspeptic (and sufferer
+ from constipation) to eat salad, or cooked vegetables, and stewed
+ fruit at the same meal; also, do I do right in eating bread and
+ butter (preferably crust) or hard biscuits with stewed fruit or
+ soft vegetables, etc.? Would you please inform me the best Still
+ that I can obtain--preferably one that does not require much
+ attention, and is fairly portable, and that does not cost much to
+ work?
+
+I do not believe that it is right to mix salads or cooked vegetables
+with stewed fruits. It is better to take them at separate meals.
+
+It is, in my view, equally bad to take cereals (_i.e._ bread,
+biscuits, etc.) with stewed fruits. The reason is that cereals call
+for an alkaline form of digestion in the mouth which the acid fruits
+or the added sugar greatly retard.
+
+I believe strongly in the all-fruit breakfast or all-fruit supper,
+when fresh, dried, or even stewed dried fruits (possibly with some
+fresh cream) can be taken alone, without either cereals or vegetables.
+
+Cereals go best with salads and cooked vegetables, because of the
+alkalinity of the latter which harmonises with the salivary secretion
+intended for the digestion of grains.
+
+The Gem Still is the best to buy. It is well made and does not need
+much attention. The large automatic commercial size is, however, the
+best if any quantity is needed, as it works throughout the day with
+practically no attention when properly adjusted.
+
+
+DIFFICULTIES IN CHANGING TO NON-FLESH DIET.
+
+ F.C.W. writes:--I shall be glad if you will inform me from your
+ experience whether, after one has broken from the customary meat
+ diet and adopted a "reform" diet, there is any real difficulty in
+ reverting to the former state. I have seen it stated that
+ vegetarian diet did not call into action all the natural powers
+ of the digestive organs, and, this being so, the tendency was for
+ them to become weakened so that the food reformer eventually
+ found himself unable to digest meat. I believe some health
+ culturists make practice of taking meat twice a week. I have been
+ about seven or eight weeks on reform diet, and though better in
+ some ways have to confess to a feeling of deficient energy and
+ nerve power. I was once told by a doctor that I could not afford
+ to do without the stimulating effect derived from meat. I
+ propose making a test of the two methods, but should like to hear
+ from you in reply to the above query. Another new feature I have
+ noticed on the new diet is a thinness of the teeth and a feeling
+ of weakness in them generally.
+
+This correspondent omitted to supply his amended diet, so this was
+asked for and is as follows:--
+
+ _On rising_ (6.40).--Cup of cold water.
+
+ _Breakfast_ (8 A.M.).--Porridge, boiled egg or white fish done in
+ oven. Turog brown bread and butter; a banana; cup of coffee.
+
+ _Lunch_ (12.45, _at The Home Restaurant_)--Nut or cheese savoury
+ and one vegetable, a sweet dish, a few dates or a nut and fruit
+ cake.
+
+ _Tea meal (in office at 5)._--Bread and butter, piece of cake,
+ large cup of cocoa.
+
+ _Supper._--One of following:--
+
+ (a) "Force" with stewed prunes and junket; small piece of cheese
+ with wholemeal biscuit.
+
+ (b) Milk pudding and stewed fruit; small piece of cheese and
+ biscuit.
+
+ (c) Vegetable soup with toast.
+
+ (d) Bread and milk and fruit cake.
+
+ _On retiring_ (10 P.M.).--Cup of hot milk.
+
+The correspondent adds further:--
+
+ I have only been about eight weeks on food reform and the general
+ result, so far, is less susceptibility to draughts and ability to
+ sleep with windows open top and bottom, which I could not do
+ before, and a feeling of lightness and freshness. On the other
+ hand, I have not the same nerve force or power. I am of a highly
+ sensitive nervous disposition, and the latest trouble is with my
+ teeth. I was told yesterday by a dentist that a non-flesh diet is
+ harmful to them and that were one to eat meat only, there would
+ be no trouble! Perhaps it is owing to the dates and nut-and-fruit
+ cakes which I have been eating, or to a general weakened
+ condition due to want of finding my natural diet. I have a friend
+ who is a fine specimen of physical development, and on his going
+ on to food reform he had to have his teeth seen to. I suppose it
+ would not be the softer diet giving his teeth less to do. I am at
+ a disadvantage as I can get nothing specially prepared at home
+ and can only add to my diet articles which I can prepare myself.
+ I like my liquids fairly sweet and I like liquid foods. I am a
+ catarrhal subject and when this starts at the back of the nose
+ the hearing is affected.
+
+Whenever a person changes from a meat diet to one that is of the
+non-flesh order the digestive organs have to learn how to adjust their
+secretions to the altered diet. This applies just as forcibly when a
+food reformer wishes to return to the "flesh-pots." After a long
+course of abstinence from meat the food reformer does find it
+difficult to return to it. This is due not so much to the difficulty
+in digesting it as to the violent stimulation and grossening of the
+body which it induces.
+
+I have never heard of any food reformer who discarded meat for ethical
+or humane reasons who willingly returned to meat so that he could if
+necessary be in a position to digest it.
+
+With regard to the loss of energy and nerve power the correspondent
+must distinguish between real weakness and absence of stimulation. The
+first effects of discarding meat show a deficient energy due to the
+absence of stimulation. When this has passed it gives place to a
+feeling of buoyancy and energy which is permanent.
+
+The dental weakness is aggravated, if indeed it is not actually
+_caused_, by the milk puddings, porridge, cake and sugared beverages
+which are a feature of this correspondent's diet, and to the absence
+of salad vegetables. If he amended his diet somewhat as follows he
+should make steady progress in energy and general fitness:--
+
+_On rising._--Tumblerful of cold water.
+
+_Breakfast_ (7.15).--One lightly boiled, baked or poached egg; Veda
+bread and butter, a little watercress or other salad. A small cup of
+Hygiama in place of the sugared cocoa.
+
+_Lunch_ (12.45).--Nut or cheese savoury and one vegetable; baked
+pudding by preference for second course, or simply a nut and fruit
+cake; no dates.
+
+_Or_ salad with grated cheese or cream cheese, or flaked pine nuts;
+followed by a piece of the excellent wholemeal cake supplied at the
+restaurant this correspondent frequents.
+
+_Tea meal._--One cup of Salfon cocoa (unsweetened), preferably without
+other food.
+
+_Supper_ (6 to 7) (This meal is at present far too mushy).--Cream
+cheese, Veda bread with fresh butter or nut butter, salad, tomatoes,
+cucumber, etc., with dressing of pure oil and lemon juice.
+
+_Or_ simply fresh ripe fruit, with dried fruit and cream; no cereals.
+
+_On retiring._--Cupful of hot unsweetened lemon water, or weak barley
+water; no milk.
+
+H. VALENTINE KNAGGS.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+
+_All Correspondence should be addressed (and all contributions
+submitted) to the Editors, _THE HEALTHY LIFE_, 3 Tudor Street, London,
+E.C._
+
+
+COTTAGE CHEESE.
+
+ WILDERTON, BOURNEMOUTH.
+ BOURNEMOUTH.
+
+ _To the Editors_,
+
+ DEAR SIRS,
+
+ _Re_ Mrs C.E.J.'s letter and the reply thereto: I should be
+ inclined to doubt the wisdom of making this from unboiled or
+ uncooked milk unless one had it from one's own cows and could
+ supervise the dairy oneself. The average milk that comes into
+ towns from country farms is--well, it's unthinkable. There's a
+ saying that what the eye doesn't see the heart doesn't grieve
+ over, but that doesn't alter the fact that the average cow is
+ none too clean, the average milker's hands and clothes (to say
+ nothing of his face, hat and head) none too clean, the
+ milking-place none too clean, and the circumstances of transit
+ such as don't make for cleanliness. I have put it very
+ moderately, as those who know country dairy farms will admit.
+ Those who particularly want clean cheese from uncooked milk
+ should buy it from a County Council dairy farm or similar
+ institution. Yours truly,
+
+ B.C. FORDER.
+
+
+WILL OTHER READERS DO LIKEWISE?
+
+Mrs E. BUMPUS writes (7th October 1913):--
+
+ I am ordering two copies each month from my local newsagent.... I
+ thought he might be induced to show copies of your publication in
+ his window.
+
+[An attractive blue poster is supplied each month free by the
+Publishers to all genuine agents who apply for the same.--EDS.]
+
+
+_THE HEALTHY LIFE_ IN THE LIBRARIES.
+
+Mr C.H. GRINLING writes (25th October 1913):--
+
+ I note the suggestion on p. 580 of the October number of _The
+ Healthy Life_. A friend enables me to ask you to send _The
+ Healthy Life_ regularly for one year to the Woolwich Public
+ Library, William Street, Woolwich. I enclose 2s. The librarian
+ will see that it appears on the magazine-room table regularly.
+
+[There is every reason why _The Healthy Life_ should be known and read
+in every public library in the United Kingdom. In this we are entirely
+dependent upon those readers who are ready to follow the excellent
+example of the above and other correspondents. A year's
+subscription--2s.--is a very small price to pay for bringing the
+message of this magazine before the public in this way. We should like
+to hear from readers in all parts.--EDS.]
+
+
+FRUIT-OILS AND NUTS.
+
+ WESTCLIFF-ON-SEA, 22nd Oct. 1913.
+
+ _To the Editors_,
+
+ SIRS,
+
+ With reference to the last paragraph of "Phosphorus and the
+ Nerves" on p. 579 of the October number, I should be obliged if I
+ could be informed through your correspondence columns (1) what
+ are the "fruit oils" recommended therein and (2) how they are to
+ be taken. (3) Is olive oil good to take? (4) Is it good for
+ children? If so how is it to be administered? (5) What nuts are
+ richest in phosphorus? I enclose my card, and remain, yours
+ truly,
+
+ W.W.
+
+(1) Any olive oil that bears a thorough guarantee of purity (such as
+"Minerva" Olive Oil, "Creme d'Or" Olive Oil, etc.); also any pure nut
+oil (such as supplied by Mapleton's or The London Nut Food Co.); also
+the pure blended oil sold as "Protoid Fruit Oil." Our advertisement
+pages should be studied for further details.
+
+(2) Suggestions were given on pp. xxxiii and xxxv of the November
+number.
+
+(3) Yes, excellent.
+
+(4) Yes, they usually take it more readily than adults, for the
+latters' palates are generally spoilt. For its use see _Right Diet for
+Children_, by Edgar J. Saxon, 1s. net.
+
+(5) Almonds and walnuts. If the nuts are found difficult to digest try
+them in a finely prepared form, as in Mapleton's Almond Cream, "P.R."
+Walnut Butter, or "Protoid" Almond Butter.--[EDS.]
+
+
+
+
+PICKLED PEPPERCORNS.
+
+
+ Lady Cheylesmore was wearing a magnificent cock pheasant's plume.
+ The eagle eye of the customs official caught sight of it and
+ handed her a pair of scissors to help her detach it.--_Daily
+ News._
+
+Now we know what a really well-trained eagle eye can do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Perhaps the only remnant of the awful sameness characteristic of
+ the typically English kitchen is the bacon and egg breakfast to
+ which the average Briton clings with wonderful tenacity. The mere
+ possibility of infidelity to that national dish is enough to make
+ one shudder. No one could be such an iconoclast as to suggest a
+ variant from the traditional breakfast; it would be table-treason
+ of the worst kind.--_Daily Telegraph._
+
+ A middle-aged Briton named Leary,
+ Of bacon and eggs got so weary,
+ That for no other reason
+ He committed high treason--
+ But whether he shuddered's a query.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Silver-fox furs are rapidly becoming more and more rare, and this
+ fact lends a special interest to the wonderful collection of
+ these skins now being shown this week by Revillon Freres at 180
+ Regent Street. These beautiful silver foxes, to the number of
+ over a hundred, are grouped in eight large showcases on the
+ ground floor, and represent the latest arrivals from Revillon's
+ Canadian outposts, where they have special facilities for
+ securing these rare skins.--_Daily Chronicle._
+
+A ninth large showcase containing specimens of the steel traps in
+which "these beautiful silver foxes" are caught, and in which they
+remain till "collected," would give added interest to the collection
+at 180 Regent Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sixty-six persons banqueted at Gorleston on a single "sea-pie,"
+ which weighed 200 lbs. Prepared by an old smack skipper, it was
+ built in three stories. The foundation consisted of beef bones,
+ and inside were six large rabbits, half-a-dozen kidneys, thirty
+ pounds of beef steak.--_Daily Chronicle._
+
+Not to be confused with the Gorleston Mausoleum.
+
+PETER PIPER.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28, by Various
+
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