Thought For the Week.
W HY always rattle a sword and be in the right? A little reasonableness ‘and everything goes better.
Lioi
Feuchtwanger
in "The Ugly Duchess."
GT eT eee eT Te) UN-BATHING should be vigorously controlled (says a writer in "Better Health"). Initial exposure should be short, a few minutes, and only a portion of the body at a time. The head should be protected. Day by day the length of the exposure and the amount of, the body to be exposed can be gradually increased, until by the end of the third week the whole body can be exposed for a considerable period. It should be noted, also, that exposure of the body to the air on sunless, warm days is also most health-giving, as the movement of the air energises the body and even sunless air contains a considerable degree of the ultra-violet rays. . * s AN effective finish for the end of a ‘room are jutting out casement win-
Se TST eT eT eT the home. On the outside were painted such slogans as: "Electricity. wins all the tests without the ashes," and "Cook without cooking the cook." * bd ? IVE guests at a recent luncheon party in a London hotel began to discuss a business scheme, and became so enthusiastic that they began to draft the points of an agreement on the tablecloth. One member of: the party suggested jokingly that each guest should sign the notes. This was actually done, and the cloth placed for security in the hotel safe. At the weekend it was brought forth, carefull, wrapped up and sealed, and dispatched by air to Paris to be produced as evi dence at an important business: meeting.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/RADREC19301003.2.58
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Radio Record, Volume IV, Issue 12, 3 October 1930, Page 30
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284Thought For the Week. Radio Record, Volume IV, Issue 12, 3 October 1930, Page 30
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