WHEN ON HOLIDAY
Most of us are just holding on. and no more, until that blessed respite comes—our annual holiday. For a week or two —there are some lucky ones, myself, for instance, who get several weeks off the leash—we will j drop the daily task and forget the constant grind. We hope that Nature will be specially kind to us, and give | us lots of sunshine, j But do you know that lots of folk | ire never really refreshed by their | holidays? They make a task of holidays. They are so anxious to crowd ! as much as they can into their break ! that they end up l»v being exhausted. ! If a holiday is to do us real good, we ! must relax, and give those nerves of ours a rest. How best can that bo I done? ! Here are a few rules which 1 have ! proved up I" flic hilt to he the best guide for a holiday for tired people, i First, take lots of books with you. A j box of hooks is more important than a box of tinned meats. There are so | many cheap editions nowadays that it
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Waikato Times, Volume 123, Issue 20690, 28 December 1938, Page 3
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192WHEN ON HOLIDAY Waikato Times, Volume 123, Issue 20690, 28 December 1938, Page 3
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