WEATHER WOES
Waiting for summer sunshine has a depressing effect, for dull skies, cold and i*ain don't make for cheerfulness. The fact that our tissues need the sun's rays is an added aggravation. People who allow themselves to got into a hopeless mood lay themselves open to minor iiilrnents—colds, sore throats and 'flu—because their vitality is lowered. It is a safe principle always to see one*6lf in perfect health, to adopt the attitude that one is always fit. External things like the weather shouldn't really affect s.ny one with, shall w e say, a philosophic mind —the type of »und that doesn't allow itself to be infltiMicod by outside trivialities.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21248, 30 July 1932, Page 7 (Supplement)
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110WEATHER WOES New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21248, 30 July 1932, Page 7 (Supplement)
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