WOMEN SMOKERS.
LORD METHUEN'S CENSURE.
London, May 21. Addressing a meeting of the Army Tem-perance-Association to-day Field Marshal Lord Mcthucn condemned ia outspoken terms those women wlio wiere addicted to smoking. , ~ , Lord Methuen referred to the change that public opinion, on tho subject hau. undergone. He rcrolsmbered tho tune when the idea of a woman smoking was received with untold disgust; "but, added the speaker, "all that is changed." A woman, Lord Methuen went on to cay, had no sense of proportion like a man. She smoked morning and night, doing as much harm to her nerves as if she were drinking.—Sydney "Sun."
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Dominion, Volume 6, Issue 1762, 29 May 1913, Page 2
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103WOMEN SMOKERS. Dominion, Volume 6, Issue 1762, 29 May 1913, Page 2
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