MIXED BATHING.
. • With the summer at ita height the metropolitan newspapers are, as usual, discussing very fiercely the question of mixed bathing. Views on both sides are expressed by score? of correspondents, and "Everylady's Journal" has been to the trouble of collecting the ideas of such notable people as the Lord Mayors of Sydney and Melbourne, Archbishop Mannix and Canon Hughes, the Commissioners of Police and a lady doctor, the American, French, and German consuls and Mr "Snowy" Baker, the famous aurf champion. The views of these varied folk, it may be added, are illustrated with a number of magnificent camera views that seem also to offer arguments on hnth sides of the vexed question: "Should Mixed Bathing be Encouraged?" There are a dozen almost equally interesting articles in the January issue of "Everylady's Journal,'' which begins a new year with a capital number, and the promise of _ a very full twelvemonth. It is a sixpenny magazine which should appeal strongly to all our women readers.
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King Country Chronicle, Volume VIII, Issue 635, 17 January 1914, Page 3
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166MIXED BATHING. King Country Chronicle, Volume VIII, Issue 635, 17 January 1914, Page 3
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