SHOULD* WOMEN SMOKE PIPES? Miss Sheila Kaye-Smith, the famous 1 English novelist, thinks that most women to-day do not know how to make their lives happy. Comparing them with women of the past, she says: “One would have thought that the increase of leisure—no more four-teen-hour days at school, or at the factory, or in the home —would have made for more reflection, more feeling in life. But it does not seem to have had that effect. On the contrary, we generally rush out to fill this new leisure with something; we cannot bear to sit still. And it is not i our emotions that drive us to such j restlessness, it is our nerves.” I If women smoked pipes there would |be a different story to tell! Can you I imagine a better picture of placid I contentment than a man smoking his I pipe—especially when it is> filled with Red Shield (Dark) or Blue Shield (Medium) ? These two brands, are favourites with New Zealand i smokers in town and country. One of them is sure to please you—invest 1/7 in a handy 2oz. tin to-day. Afterwards, you will probably prefer the economical lib, tin.—Advt. 55
Paint Bargains*—for roofs, fences, gates, ironwork, garages. Sale prices —Smith and Smith Ltd., late Badger’s.—Advt.
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Greymouth Evening Star, 11 October 1934, Page 2
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212Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Greymouth Evening Star, 11 October 1934, Page 2
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