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Creator (Definite): Lisa HaushoferDate: 2018
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Cited by T. Quick, 'Puppy Love: Domestic Science, “Women's Work,” and Canine Care,' Journal of British Studies 58 (2) (2019), pp. 289-314.
Description:'Food and feeding enjoyed a prominent place in the professional lives of canine nurses... Nurses managed feeding regimes during whelping, when dogs fell ill, and when dogs (such as was often the case with toys) were found to be constitutionally unsuited to conventional feeding regimes. How to Save Our Dogs recommended “fortifying” products such as Bovril and Benger’s (human) milk food for dogs afflicted with distemper, “Parish’s Chemical Food” as a treatment of rickets, and Lactol, administered with Mayhew’s adapted feeding bottle, for hand-rearing. An advertisement for Sherley & Co.’s product appeared at the back of the volume. [note: 'Collins and Campbell, How to Save Our Dogs, 11, 16, 24, 77, inside back cover. Similar advice andadvertising appeared in Williams’s Puppy Manual, 14, 17, 50, 52, inside back cover. On late nineteenth-century medicinal foods, see Lisa Haushofer, “Between Food and Medicine: Artificial Digestion, Sickness, and the Case of Benger’s Food,” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 73, no. 2 (April 2018): 168–87.']' (303)