THE CHINA, MAIL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1954.
WE'RE GOING TO BE TOUGH WITH YOU, MR. ROE!
Fyou met Graham Roo for the first time, you would take him for a successful and thrust- Ing young business mali. And you would be right,
Basically Graham Roe is as sound as a bell-he had to be to pass the Fleet Air Arm pilot's rigorous medical text in the war. And since he came back from the war he has hardly had a day off ill. But today he finds it an effort to keep fit.
As he himself muts It: "I don't 1 balt of sprinting 100 yards after a bus." His exervine fus men whittled down to an Gestal gaine of golf and a Sunday morning walk,
Q., attention to his business has mnt thet he hoa put on retore weight than he should have 12.1. 216, He weighs which is about 1815. more than he should do at his height of 5tt. 71.
:
Trouble ahead
Ils problem is typical of that of many ambitious inen of bls age whose energles are devoter. with concentrated purpose, inte building a career. Graham Rue put every shut he's got into the Jedi
it with and dong dezire of success.
fine
This is as it should be. But from the medical point of view,
man he 13 building up troubles .Jor himself in the future which enn be avoided by
0
HOW TO LIVE TO
BE 100
TO-DAY
Graham Roa. Age 31.
Profession: Executive in ofrec
tiding firm,
Home: Service flat. Weight: 12st, 2lb. Health rating: 19.
indigestion still persists time to time,
from
ite
Let Mr Hoe be reassured, has nothing to worry about. Ills
trouble in uncomfortabije, bul
nut serious
There រង
-Stand with the
hips, legs apart,
hands on and twist
your trunk sideways six times in euch direction.
2-Six hand-presser, Lie fave» down on floor. Place hands under chest and turn inwards, Press upwards with arms und toes,
body straight and keeping
of floor. che
Fallow the exercises with a short tepid bath, or, better still, #cold shower, In summer have a cold bath and a thorough rub down with a rough towel,
After breakfast
THESE MUST BE CUT BY HALF Graham Roe's 20 cigarettes a day is 10 too many. From now on, his first smoke should come AFTER lunch.
herring, two thin pieces wholemeal bread with a <erap ing of butter, no cereals, no
But tuant). WALK to the office. Yes,
a harmful and on moking is It 10 bid for a young influence. Walki
It is bad for the work. I causes calarth. It man of your age to be entirely Momach.
reduces Atness. dependent on cars and taxis.
The fewer And lake up some of those expareiles you smoke, the better rports that you've dropped, Mr for your general condition. Roe. Play squash on three If Graliam Roe finds it hurd events +1 week in winter, to cut down to 10 a day, here is tennis in summuner.
a tip.
Stop cosseting
for
Prople have got to karn to live with their stomachs. Muat What is this we hear Graham of us for that there are some Hoe muttering? You feel that en't take without at the age of 31 squah might things we Trotsbju. may be mussels, it
100 energetic "Kuine may be mushrooms, it may be
Nonsense Stanley you? whlaky.
only one Matthews is still playing drai sensible thing to do. Avold clas: soccer at the age of 39. So them.
Bar Rue hoy nervous indiges stop cus.eting yourself. You are not BD yet, although you may Other people suffer from live to be so if you stop neting other mysterious nches ແ
as if you were. for which pains
there is 310 apparent medical explanation,
La.
Be reassured
examine
15 Usis happens to you, po to a dortor in where you have com- Plete confidence. Let him te tough self-discipline now.
thoroughly. If he Grabam Roe puls in what he calls a
"low pressure 16-hour romething wrong, he will trent you for it. If nothing is day." By that he meant that,
Allow from the time he gets up to the wrong, accept his word.
yourself to be reassured, and the he gues
bed, be a certain extent pain should disappear in time. prevrcupied to
Above all, don't worry about with his work.
your health. The best way to avoid worry is to your life
1
ed
#
fle is unmarried, lives In service flat. Having no home responsibilities, he is able to devote mest evenings to social OT semi-social engagements. Many of his friends are connect-
Іл
his with some way business life.
On other evenings, he is apt to take work home with him, and often at the week-ends too.
He gets up at 8 o'clock, cats a cooked breakfast, drives to the omer. His lunch habits vary. sometimes it is a snack, matched in a few moments, on other days a business enagement with heavy meal attached.
Д
There is a little matter of his digestion that has been troubling him. At his last periodle check- he mentioned this to the up doctor, but was told, after a thorough examination that there was nothing wrong. Mr Roe is not altogether convinced.
The
50
full of interests that
your
thoughts arc always directed into other channels.
sport.
A
or
As for lead and drink we are being tough, and we say: Don't overdo it. No alcohol at
Junch time. If it is business lunch, tomato grapefruit have
cocktail, the meat course (but nothing fried and no potatoes), and one biscuit and plain che
chee'c (not cream or veined cheese).
If it is not business lunch, fruit (two apples or banana) and either plain omelete or sandwich with lean or cheese (not ham or
cat
tongue).
Q
£
One cocktail
Dinner should consist of salad without salad cream), a cheese
cold lean meat or souffle, grilled steak, green vegetable and one potato (not fried). One cocklall Is allowed (preferably none), a glass of light wine or a pint of beer, but no Burgundy,
or liqueurs. port or
But to ray that Graham Roc. needn't worry is not the whole story.
He is heading for trouble if he allows his weight to
does nothing Increase, and take
himself in hand. fte used to od a much more active life, and should not have
Now about clgarettes. At the given up all forms of
moment Graham Roe smokes 20 Now he must pay the penalty. a day. That is 10 too many.
He must start the day with Ten
" day should be his ten Dunutes of exercises, some
maximum consumption. of them purticularly designed to tone up the abdominal muscles. lead to illness? No, there is no Why only 10 a day? Will more
|--Lie on your back, anchoring reason to think that smoking your feet under a settee or leads to serious complaints
Keep armchair.
your unless really carried to excess, heavy knees straight, raise your trunk and certainly there is not enough and stretch forward in the evidence to convince us that touch-your-toes style. Gradually cancer of the lung is caused by work up. to a dozen limes.
tobacco.
WATERPROOF
You want your watch to be accurate.....
-
ETERNA
yet you are going to expose it to all kinds of dangers: rain, soap-lather, dust, perhaps even perfume and powder all these are deadly enemies of your watch and can prove fatal to the mechanism and oils inside it! It is a gruelling test. That is why, if you prize accuracy above all, you must insist on a watch that is absolutely waterproof -only then can you be sure of lasting precision. The Eterna waterproof guarantees enduring accuracy, ● It is shock-protected, antimagnetic and completely impervious to damp and dust thus it assures you of time-security under all the conditions of everyday life.
ETERNA
Let him make a polut of not having this fro cigarette unil after lunch. It will be tough for the first few days, but there- will look forward so after he much to the exquishe pleasure of an after-lunch cigaretic that
he will not wish
mar that
pleasure with a cigarette curlier in the morning.
If Graham Roe is dismayed by this regime, tet hlu give it a He will and he month's Tini. has more energy. H much healthler
reaction to
exercise,
for
thereated capacity. He will also very slowly lose weight, and when he has lost a mone, he can begin to let up Just a.little on this routine, providing he keeps his weight of its pro- per level.
if What
happen would Graham Roe ignored the regime altogether? He might quite well get away with it for ten years,
The thirties are not a critical perled in the average man's life. But the years from 40 to 60 are.
By taking himself in now, Graham Roe will be ensur- ing that he enters that critical period fighting ft.
|
First Full story of the biggest art sale for centurios
THE
T
year,
FADS OF FAROUK
By WOLF MANKOWITZ –
One of the world's most knowledgeable authorities on
taking ita holiday early
this
Wedgwood china,
of linted paper, him a stamp dealer's
HE world's art trade fa While Sotheby's have been had a monstrous avidity for
Farouk's trinkets small squares Bummer cataloguing
Cairo's experienced tourist making fleecors prepare to take the dream-schoolboy. visitors for as much as possible, There is a surcharge of five per- on goods bought at the cent auction, and a fee of 21 to enter the Kaubbeh Palace (to are importing charge If you toreign currency),
For the next two months .8.0.A.C. airliners will ferry art dealers (at £162 return) to Cairo for the greatest art auction in history.
The collector's lust In Farouk was never satisfied by less than of overything his collectio modern coins is the most com- niete ever to be assembled and includes rare American Items drnw certainly will which But admission to the private
from the patriatic bidding view can only be obtained from United States.
the Offeer Member of the Commitice," and presumably It
(by order of The sale. Naguib) of Farouk's vast collection of precious trinkets at the Casino- costs nothing to look. style Koubbeh Palace.
For the British trade there has been no greater oppor tulily since Cromwell sold the Whitehall treasures.
Revolutions always bring ari knick-knackery into the market at bargain prices-for tionaries, short of credit. gait to get what they can for the gilded extravagances of the nld regime.
revolu-
Naguib's Respect
A number of paintings have display at the been put on Kubbeh Palace, where, resting are
The Rarities
More than 8800 of the coins solid gold-100 are solid
1 purple velvet, they are platinum. Among the rarities, offered by the Puritans as " four Roman gold bars which memorial to Farmuk's luxurious the magpic extravagance and vulgarity,"
one of on rambles.
monach picked up his Mediterranean
The well-known Byzantine
The are capacity for selling the cake
palace, silver will take you have bured finds in tila, two days to sell. It is in the the Arst Egyptan
National over-ornate, absurdly Gallery, a superb example.
-
the 19th taste of which, Lor Farouk, essence of imperial
travagant But Farouk did not restrict century,
the พาย his collection to furniture, He, magnificence. Included an American Jukebox,"
chemistry set, two gelger
ם
He was particularly attached But the Koubbeh Palace has counters, and a gold and dia- to an 18-carat gold tea-set, 10 bargain basement, for mond sword.
practical which has the sole Among other endearing per advantage of with hand Naguib
unexpected
being unbreak- Britain's business comalia there ia a gold and
Discriminating collectors respeel for
able. button-book, acumen, has appointed Sothe by's to supervise the dispersal, ruby and amber cigarette Patronisingly regard the silver
Sotheby's while reticent as holder, and a 2,000-year-old
NEXT SATURDAY: PATRICIA CUTTS--the career girl
►YOUR_THREE MINUTE CHECK-UP
The young executive: Age group 25-40 If you are a business or professional mos of 25-40, tick the answere applicable to you and then reed the key below.
(b)
(a) 1 usually feel fresh
in the morning.
wake up tend to feeling lverish. (c) feel hauseated in the
morning.
2 (a) I have a good appe-
tile.
(b) My appetite is fair. (e) My appetite is bad.
3) My digestion
Kooday
[
(b) somēšimes bate
Indigestion.
(ct I suffer from "chronic
Пукрервід.
4(a) Unly violent exer
cine breathless.
makes
me
(b) get breathless fairly
quickly. (c) The lightest exertion
makes me breathicas,
5
(s) 1 never have bead-
aches.
(b) I sometimes have them. Celoften have them.
6(N) I never have a sore
thragt,
I have no sign of middle-age spread. (1 am tending 16 ket initiale-nge spread. tet have a definite middle-ngr spread.
8(a) My carriage is
origin. (1 am beginning
toup.
(c) am very
shouldered.
ta
round.
(a) sive quick. con- Ident decisions.
(b)
and responsibility o strain.
(0) I worry about my work.
10 (8) 1 am very even- (b)
teinpered.
tend to be irritable. icy of the handic
bedtime.
11(a)1 am only tired at (b) 1 get fired during the
day.
1) Im tired rawnt of the
#
12
д
KOTE
(b) sometimes barr
sure throat (e) often have
throat.
time.
(a) sleep
Roundly. (2) I'sleep fairly soundly. (0) Y suffer from insomnia,
COUNT two points answers and nil for (e),
Over 18 points: Good. 12-18 paints: Averago, Under 12 points: Poor, if your answers to questions 3, 4, 5 ore tel, you abould see a doctor.
for (a) answers one for (b)
Total up and check below.
to
ᄆ
the total value of the lections, expect the sovchi- days'
Glone to sale of coins realise half
million.
green enamel
sale
as a couple of Bekt daya
Likely to excite flerce bidding
A market which Farouk, by a famous Fabergo silver ogg his insatiable buying, materially They (presented by the last Czar as helped to create ls that in gloss have been purring discreetly an Eastern gift to his Czarina) paper-weights another 19th, for
that containing somo months post
yolk with
hen century extravagance. other works of art in precious concealing an emerald and dia-
The materials
nearly mond ring. comprise
theso of week
His
for enthusiasm 1,500 lots. Many of these Items the auctions will sco Farouk's jumps of glass, stured full or will realise
several thousands stamp collection, including the coloured flowers, "eandies," and aplece which makes whatever most complete Egyptian section reptiles, forced the prices for commission Naglub allows a lot in the world, knocked down to the rarer of money.
belt (which sild not fit Farouk), for American tarte.
wealthy philatelists; for Farouk
AMERICAN VIEW
From Donald Ludlow
New York. ores in the central part of the
examples as high as £2,000. A few years ago the finest paper-weight could be or BO, Lought for a hundred Dealers are worried that with Farouk's deflation
prices too
will lose weight.
Obsessional Class
What is the mentality of
TTOW stands the Presi. State, and the Atomic Energy, collector who combines a taste.
Ident's popularity?
Commission
says: "This looks A like a most important find."
4
•
- TIME
Burvey conducted for the influential Boston Post
only driving DAY shows that it has dipped Hence for 17-year-olds are suggested by magistrate Albert V. d'Amato, of East Rutherford, He thinks they New Jersey. would curb juvenile delinquency and traffic accidents,
a point or two from the 55 percent share of the two-Party vote he got in 1952.
The drift, as might be ex- pected,
is in the Democratle Southern States, and just now programme Mr Eisenhower needs all the De- mocratie support he can get to counter the dichards in his own party.
for his new
for ornate trash with an avidity for the mos delicate objets vertu?
Farouk belongs to the obsessional class had to have the largest stamp collection, the most complete coin cabinet.
His personal taste also found in the (for the expression moment) suppressed collections for which he was well known to be a ready buyer; addition- RAINMAKER, TUE
anything in gold ily, Wallace E. Howell, who was hired by New York to replenish precious stones excited the last
1950 Byzantine king.
Dr
its reservoirs during the drought, has a new contract: to make snow on Bromley Moun- tals, Vermont; where bare for WYOMING, land of
moun- skling slopes have ruined the tains, prairies, and glaciers winter sports trade. and the Yellowstone Park, is the scene of the latest uranium He will try to do it by creat
ing anog: using smoke A solitary prospector, Neil generators to warm up air and McNeil, has located uranium bring the snow down.
rush.
or
His collecting activities were а истоп- Farouk simply
of his power to buy ration
He be whatever he wanted. langed strictly to the "overy. thing has a price" school. What the price amounted to we will know when the Koubbeh Palace auctions end in March,
A House Of Death Comes To Life Again
"HILDREN'S
laughter
and the sound of happy voices are once more echo-
By LEN COTTON
wêre
ing through a "house of bannisters remain untouched widely publicised. In fact, we Carrickowl has once more came
terribly thrilled and death" on the Cornish coast back to life.
thought.
be It must
Somo -where a year ago a son The bannisters are
re-historical event. Д
"But it made no difference to murdered his father and, minder of the fateful day when, mother and threw their after kliling his father and us when we heard the details. B damn for mother, Giffard fled upstairs to We didn't give bodies into the sen.
his what had happened here. and make That house is Carrickowl. Pack clothes
"There is a perfectly good скоро.
argument for our taking the house. We love it.
at
About
the children. But no sooner find moved in than they were 190 telling us all about it.
"All the neighbours around us have been extremely kind and are glad that the house is no longer a 'dead' houso."
Laber as the colonel and I walked round the Christopher joined us.
At
Back in the 11-roomed bouse Mrs Christine Parkinson added, as we went from room to room, "We are soldiers; we have no We believe if one is fears,
those actions directly. kindly, affect a house."
Colonel Parkinson, late of the Gloucester Regiment in two world wars, amiled and added:
"I wondered how the chit- would react whom they know. I need not have done. the They are as keen about house as we are."
grounds, rem
which
at Porthpean, once the proud As the colonel and his wife home of Mr. and Mrs Charles cat chatting to me in their
Slowly we walked the garden Giffard, and the mur magnificent home with the lap-
path along which Girard had derer was their son, 27. ping son visible on three sides
"If one is going to worry
taken the wheelbarrow carry- the bodies of his mother year-old Miles Giffard, who of it, they explained why they
had bought Carrickowi.
what has happened in ing was hanged
and father. Horfeld
the history of a house, I am "We couldn't care lcm about sure thousands of houses
the end of the unmade secret, gaol, Bristol.
the story behind this lovely old throughout the country would path a wired frame secured the
broken gate through house. We just fell in love bo vacant. with it. It so reminded us of
feel it is a friendly Giffard had trundled his grue a Bome load. Bermuda, where we lived for house, although there was several years,
"We have yet to get round to atmosphere when we Κοστήν
this," the colonel told me. "It we were took it over five weeks ago. was while
We are sure that if the is as it was left at the time." searching for a house in Corn-
Christopher toki me: "It was wall that we heard about Car- ghosts of Mr and Mrs Gifford rickowl. The agent warned us: eyer returned they would be ever so eerie for the first few It's a nice house, but there pleased we had the courage to nights when I lay in bed, I
lako. it over..
all kinds of things is a story behind it.
Imagined "At drst we never connected
did try to keep the I've got over that now and I with the atory so atory of the Giffard away from couldn't care dem,” the house
Now after a year of empti- ricss shut up with its tragle history a house no one wanterl to buy-It has been bought by Colonel and Mrs W. H. Parkin- son, who occupy it with their two children, Rosemary aged 14, and Christopher, aged 15.
Completely redecorated and transformed -- only the oak
JOHNNY
HAZARD
THE POLICE WILL BE ||LOOKING FOR ME ALL OVER ||TOWN/ Z'D BETTER LAY LOW.VI IN THIS HOT CAR UNTIL THINGS:
COOL DEFA BIT?
"It
DEEP IN THE WOODS ON THE OUT- SKIETS OF TOWN JOHNNY REMAINS CHIPPENSE
*We
By Frank Robbins /
MAUINTIL PAST MIDNIGHT, WHEN HE "THE ONLY MAN WHO CAN START
SLIFE BACK INTO LE HAVRE/
IME OFF ON THE TRAIL OF ALLY
|
POISSON.....IS SAVERTZ MAYBE KI
CROWS WHERE
But I left the house with a
While going from room to rootn I asked the Tainily whether, they knew which room had been occupied by the mindere They dirt now
I did, but I kept the informa- tion to myself. The Parkinsons are a very happy family, and even if they had knows I am sure. It would not alter. Their genial, and pleasant nature.
Carrickowi, now renamed, is happy tibuse onco more,
this situation
calls for a
an
Miguel