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Your Hair. It is a good thing to let the hair hang for fifteen minutes in the middle of the day. But this, for the business woman, is impracticable. Ten minutes at night and ten minutes in the morning should be enough for the care of the hair, allowing for its brushing, its ventilating, its perfuming, and its waving, with an occasional additional time, for a shampoo. And if this amount of time is spent upon it the owner will surely be. rewarded. For there is nothing so celebrated among poets as a woman’s beautiful hair, and there is nothing so much admired in real life.

The much-discussed appearance of three or four women upon the Paris cabstands is taken by the intelligent Frenchman, we are told, for a sign of the times. Every year, thanks to the improvement of machinery, sees a fresh battalion of women and children step into the places of their husbands and fathers, and the Frenchman in all pursuits is finding the Frenchwoman his closest competitor. Already commerce works with 35 per cent of women in the ranks, and the learned professions with 33. The home will soon be the only place left for displaced man. George held her hand and she held hisn; Soon they hugged and went to kiznl Ignorant, her pa had rizn—• Afulder’n hops and simply sizzin—- ?’!•()•;??? Gee! but George went out whizn! - * *— - — —Princeton Tiger.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP19070824.2.73.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8, 24 August 1907, Page 46

Word Count
234

Page 46 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8, 24 August 1907, Page 46

Page 46 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8, 24 August 1907, Page 46