The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 13, 1907 Page: 2 of 8
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COOfcERY SUGGESTIONS.
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women had ever received It
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They must be done by an organization which covers THE WHOLE !.
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would not be room. '
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pdrtation ought to belong to the pnbbc.
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and bnn
a ter bob
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Many Infirmities ef the epee of chi!
area h»v,
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to unscrew the sec
to tarn quite easily
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hm Axntm mixnus.
has ever accomplished,
have got all the i
been for seasfckneta
she means to try aj
Mtal "
drifted 1 _
perfectly at home I
since she was seven,
fourteen swimming i
her favor with ridlnj
7
Pretty Centerpiece.
At a child’s birthday party a pretty
table center was made with a bowl of
MISS ANNETTE KELLERMAN.
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MmklA > *»<“* blue- WD,te enameieu furniture
^77 x-z-Uo - f ! or. maple might be need with just as
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MISS AGNES IRWIN.
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. lb
BR
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OF THE CITY. .
’ And the teone thing is true of lighting. Now, where there is
monopoly it is strongly urged in England that the profits which
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07
lug of tbe American Philosophical so-
ciety, held to celebrate the Franklin bi-
centennial.
It was a rare honor too. Only three
Mr. Car-
The People and
The Railroads.
By Governor C E HUGHES of New York.
■> 7 ’■ > ' ’ >■ -7 : --
slble.
XV UV 1>IM» UXV >m.v ujuo. uc Liu.nui;
pulled to tbe width and then placed
on tbe table wrong side up and Ironed >
along tbe straight edge, holding tbe
MIBB asms DtWTX, tn. D. .
negle made It plain that the honor was
never given except In recognition of.
personal achievement.
Mias Irwin might bare descended
from plain William Brown, although
she is justly proud of bolding Ln bet
veins tbe blood of America’s great
printer, philosopher, statesman. She
has won her own way to the front rank
of modern educators.
Since Its organization In 1894 Miss
Irwin has been dean of Radcliffe col-
lege. Previous to her service there she
had distinguished herself In education-
al work In Philadelphia.
The lectures at Radcliffe are deliver-
ed by the professors of Harvard,, so
that Miss Irwin's mission there has
been hot to teach, but to influence and
guide young women In their choice of
studios—to be to them an example of
rare scholarship, combined with wo-
manly charm.—Buffalo Times.
’TV If beaked, will, with tbe
----J two teaspoonf,\
vyater and, tbe eaase of lemon juice..
-a, '-Tip! ding.
Much depends oh whether the PARTICULAR WORK to be c, -
surrolv ' balls,: allowing them to soak for throe
a , rr J .In*. VMM, bnnaw 4n AnM Water thon hall,
of water is almost of necessity a monopoly. You cannot hare a
number of water companies
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Municipal Utilities
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Finish with any powder in SMALL for the holiness that it has to do. 7 Yet
bare been taken to meet the difficulty.
■UT WE’VE GOT TO COME .0 IT, AMD THE SOONER THE
■ETTER.
Fl
WOMANS | ~
-WORL,b J
HUB. ‘
> the sleeves <rf today, aa much
don ought 7 : — - — “
men of tbe was f» to the wta-
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to one man to move his goods and not to another, which gives one.
man one set of terms and anather set to his rival, which makes one
man rich by giving him access to the seaboard AND DRIVES
ANOTHER MAN INTO BANKRUPTCY or into combination
with his more successful competitors. It is a revolt against all the
influences which have grown out of an. unlicensed freedom and of a,
failure tq recognize that these great privileges, so necessary for public
welfare, have been created by the public for the public benefit AND
NOT PRIMARILY FOR PRIVATE ADVANTAGE.
.«MmwafrXmsiMwi afrs my. g>| ig| iisinwaMiliteltohto u i'i i.i n ■ miiipiW
•ten tf t
bureau ar chiffonier and a good look-
ing gtaas. a comfortable ehalr aud a
bod, the avoraga summer visitor is
vrell content, for tbe afternoon aieota
only part of tbe day spent
Friday Dish.
- Codfish Omelet on Toast.—Hake a
rich cream sauce of ohe tableepoonful
of .-flour, two tablespoonfula of butter
and three-fourfba |of a cupful of thin
cream, cooked together until thick and
smooth. Add two-tblrds of a cupful
of finely minced parsley and a salt-
spoonful of paprika. Cook for fire
minutes, take from fire, stir In fire
eggs beaten to a foam and turn Into a
buttered omelet pan. 8tlr . until the
mixture begins to harden on tbe edge,
Chen heap on sHees of toast which have
been dipped for a moment in hot wa-
ter. Butter generously and place In a
heated serving dish.
' 'Grape Spongi.
Dissolve one cup grape jelly in a cup
of hot water. Put on stove for half
fin hour. Soak In cold water two ta-
I'p espoon tula of gelatin. Add the hot
jelly water to the gelatin, stir until dis-
solved and then set to cool. Beat in
the white of one egg. a tablcspoonful
of sugar and wino to flavor, then beat
vigorously until stiff and spongy.
■
a
IDEAL SUMMER BEDROOMS.
'Avoid Glaring Papers end Seloet Com-
fortable Furniture For the Cottage.
In the summer cottage it is a pretty
idea to have each bedroom papered
with a design ahowing clusters of
•tnne flower. Ong country house to
the suburbs has a guest room facing
north la violet The matting to Iliac,
tbe paper is white with clusters of
-violets over ft, and oid fashioned fur
nfture to mahogany and tbe fireplace
and woodwork of white enajpel. Al!
through the season a bowl of violets
to left on the table In this cheerful
room.
Mg/. Another guest room in this house has
a fcrgetmenot wall paper above a white
J x picture shelf and blue burlap friese,
tn a seashore cottage care must be
i to avoid glaring walls in the
jpms, al! at which, by the Way.
Id be furntohed With flwdeo if
have« com
b1e chair, a rocker or an armchair.
to little mere than neces
e to the room. With a
■Tv
- How Tomatoes and Cuoumbera Can Be
Uaod In Salado.
Take a good thick slice of tom»to
■ and lay it on shredded lettuce. Mince
seme cttfutnbel*, henp upon It some
parsley or watercress and serve with
oil and vinegar dressing. It preferred,
use a half tomato for each person,
with the pulp looseued and ufixed
with tbe cucumber. A bit of celery
cut up with these is nice, or some cel-
ery salt.
Quite a new Idea is that of using
some apple with tomato and other
things for filling. It fits In well with
celery, lief ng more tender, and doe»
not .dominate, hut assists In blending
ffircrs of tbe divers things often used
with tomatoes for sn|«d, of course it
Is tommou to use Just apple and celery
or npple ai.d nuts, but try the iK>ple
with tomato.
Tn stuffing tomataes with crumbs tfy
some walnut eatchnp to give a nice
flavor. Be sure to season and drain
your tomatoes before stuffing them.
Scoop them out and turn them down
after salting the inside well. This
makes a lot of tbe watery part dtoap
pear. Then before filling dust in pep
per and red pepper.. Cook tbe filling,
especially,tf onion goes into it. else the
tomatoes will bake before the onion is
tender. Fried -oniou gives a better
taste than plain raw chopped onion to
tbe filling. Some grated corn or tbe
kinds that come freed from an hulls
may bo used for stuffing tomatoes. In
stead of thickening stewed tomatoes
wMb bread many persons prefer to
combine tomatoes wttb tbe kinds of
corn that have no halls toft
Why not try a- tMMto and cheese
- sated, lustss d of paBBtng cheese with
s eated sourest Simply slice the to-
Batoee as usual and arrange them to
tbe sated dtob with a layer of grated
tfteeee. Use plenty of, French dress-
ing and chill thoroughly. Serve with
tested crackers, bread sticks or polled
? 7Wbii7 z<7
new potatoes to obtained.
panics laying down their'Tails in the same streets, because there Frvtty Wait Paper,
would not be room.
THIS MUST BE A MATTER EITHER TAKEN OVER BY THE cents a foil, there to not often an es
CITY, OR HANDED OVER TO ONE CORPORATION, WHICH WOULD cuse for ugly walls in a bedchamber.
BECOME A MONOPOLIST, AT LEAST FOR ONE PARTICULAR PART' If ««>«?<■
. , carries the suggestion ot ita color and
j design into the furnishings of the room.
a one need not be at a loss to Secure a
charming effect 77 1
. . „ . . a One reom in which this cheap wall
monopoly may earn and^-tlie INCREASED VALUE which the paper was used was made as; artistic
growth of A rity gives ritoh a.monopoly m that of street trans, j
. - I chosen hiid n light paste) blue ground
—----------------- I sprinkled over with short stemmed
! daisies With yellow center*.
. w • w Wih • I With infinite taite tbrf fnrntoher used
Everything Is a Big Gamble. daisy for a keynote tn her fur-
nWhlngs. On the dressing table there
By JOHN W. »ATM. Multimillionaire Ex-Speculator. * . Is a ruffled cover of white muslin. The
W"'jni«’.jgM*le. Everything » . (—«- "rtt M»«-
I plants his corn, HE IS GAMBLING. Sometimes he good effect. .
loses. Sometimes he wins. Every man who goes into
business embarks upon speculation. Of ^'course the element
of judgment enters in, but the element of chance CANNOT BE
RULED OUT. Whenever a man starts out on a railway journey
it’s a gamble whether he ever reaches his destination. ■
7 Financial affairs in this country ar< undergoing
a pronounced change. It will not be so long a time ■ ■
before New York cesses to- be THE WHOLE
T^IING financially to anything like the extent it is
now. The western cities are constantly growing in
financial independence. Chicago, St. Louis, St.
Paul, Omaha and other cities have got to be reckoned with MORE
AND MORE AS THE YEARS GO BY.
i Our currency system, too, is antiquated. It has been neglected,
it seems to me. The administration’s attention has repeatedly been
called to the fact that the currency of the country is far TOO
' no adequate steps
te te paid to tte op-
•rial effect upon tbe complexion and
■bould be eaten at toast once a day,
but not in tbe form of tarto or plee
Aa a mucb It to most helpful.
Any fresh vegetables should te put
on the diet list. Spinach to excellent
so are beets, and summer squash te In
market and to not costly. Heavy meats,
sueb as roast beef, pork and the like,
should te eaten sparingly snd fish,
egge and poultry substituted.
■very effort should te made not to
eat food difficult of digestion. The
liver is inclined to be torpid, and this
condition immediately affects the com-
plexion." Fastriee and all fried things
Steuid be given Up entirely, and one
should exercise all that te possible, for
this te an aid to the organs performing
tliefr functions. .
If pimples appear, make an ointment
of two grams of beta naphthol, twen-
ty grams of sulphur precipitate and
twenty grams of potash soap. Rub
over the pimples at ntght.
Cueumber Is one of nature’s own cos-
metics. Try using a slice of cucumber
instead of soap for washing the face.
Don’t throw away the rind. Boll It
and use tbe water for washing the
face.
Diet That Cteane ths Cemplsxlsn.
In the diet much may be dons to Im-
prove physical conditions. Fruit should
always ba esten, but especially at this
season, ttoked and stewed apples,
prunes. stew«r fl*s and dates should
ha taken freely. Bananas ate tbe
l*aat dfolrabte of any fruit JYeah
rhubarb, stewed, has a positively bepe
177-.;' 7
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For Public Ownership.
By JAMES BBYCE. Brtttoh Ambassador to tbo United States.
UNICIPAL work<«eemB to fall into three classes. There
gre certain functfcns which are vital AND INDISPEN- ■
, SABLE because the individual citizen Irving in a. very
large community cannot do them for himself ®r herself, i with toe ?»re metal. .
HOUSEHOLD NOTES.
> - • !, 7 ’ ■ il is i ■ -■>»** --7 *-1'
. A brush dipped In salt water should
be used in cleaning bamboo furniture.
* tn an
Z- If you go beyond that limit with care
Maa treatment of them, yoall discover
they win get with yte by means
9t aching joints and <
rons. You’ll have good
bttng along instead of walking buoy
^Tea need to have your foot tn first
rate health all tbe time, therefore, be
good to them.
, A Ueefwl Wrinkie.
•ometlmee the upper or tower part of
fountain pens become so tightly
screwed that, being unable to refill
them, they are put aside as nmiew
If a kid glove te put en the right band
before attorn; — "
ttoa will tel
»ve their foundation laid tn the
•era in the nareery when eye
wks , brought About by tbe in-
i teb of colors and a earetoao
•mnsement < light.
V'’;7 ' ;
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Mi •'
CITY. One of these is the maintenance of public safety—that is to
say, the police. Among other functions are drainage,, street paving
and cleaning, the cafe of public health and making of sanitary regu-
lations and general building Regulations and protection from fire.
A second class of municipal functions covers those which might
possibly be left either to individuals or to- large corpouations—what
wo eaU in England “PUWC COMP ANTES.” I
visions of water, the prowisfau of light, whether of gte mr electricity;
etreet railways, the telephone and the prevision and regulation of
markets. There are also the care of the poor and publio education.
A third class of nnmid^al activities covers matters which may in a,short time
er may not be given t$ a public loedl authority and which in Britain
are in a few places <
these » tbe provision ef public lodging houses, of publro baths and
washhouses and of dwellings for the laboring classes.
Motet Hands.
Much can be done to improve tbe
condition of moist bands, and one may
with a mixture”of two ounces of co-
logne and two drama of tincture of
belladonna. Always use tbte after
washing.
Make another lotion of one dram of
tolnglsM. one dram of turpentine and
two drams of oxide of slnq ointment.
Put tbe turpentine Into a small basin
and set into boiling water. When tbe
turpentine to warm, add tbs isinglass
and keep at a gentle beat until tbs
isinglass to dissolved. Care must be
taken that tbs turpentlns does not
ooms into direct contact with beat or
it will bum. The basin will have heat
enough if put over a radteton
I When the toinglass is dissolved, pour
tbs liquid slowly over the ointment
working It smoothly. ..
Bub this thoroughly into.the palms
at night and if possible twice during
the day. 1
tbe daytime
________. " She mlgte
way across had It set
mesa and storm, and
Kellerman saffl that Bte just
into swimming: She has teen
in the water ever
\ bat until sbewae
■W1XIULJ*
SLinreu equate in
C. twUulS fl Qu QKD*
elng. Then she happened to,see Fred
Lee swim. ,, /
“I thought hto Strok* the meet beau-
tiful I ted evef seen.” Ate --------
I began to imitate It It vn
Me overarm strata, tut I
r«fnt brushes can be cleaned by think^t^nly suttaWe Iwsh
W«, ta a few week* > fow
swim tetter than any girt
qnalntance. Then I entered
and won tt, add my i' ‘
aser had begun.”
The Champion Woman Swimmer of
the World an Australian.
The proverbial endurance of women
stands them in good stead when if
cornea to swimming. That to how it
happens that in Australia, which has
produced the champion woman swim-
mer of the world, Miss Annette Kel-
lerman, it is a common thing for girls
to swim five miles, while not one boy
in a hundred ever does it
Mias Kellerman, the champion
woman swimmer of the world, does
not look as if she could swim any
farther than any other young woman
who has bad an opportunity to form
aquatic habits, ghe to very slight in
figure, not particularly tall, tad in a
smart tattered suit of dark red etetb
there was nothing about ter to sug
fit th* proteaatotal athtete. yet she
te the victor of many betties. She has
won forty long distance contests, from
one toile up to thirty mUeo, and fitters ,9Mj|
ted almost swum tbe Bngiteh efaanoer,'-*'^.
a feat that no one but <aPtato Webb W
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7
f *^maay wameatakoa dteeotaAged
view of their ugly arms aad think that
. there te oo use trying to do anything
for them. On the contrary, bony el-
^z- tegww and sktaty forearms can be
tag our faults that ws can know onr- *
j * ■ .__*__a. a_ __— a_ Bs . I I M 1
to others ___
Tips For Traveling Abroad.
•The permanent character of the B«- jg
ropeen pensions renders them very to- fl
liable. and even ths modeat utee esrv*
bonntlful meals in courses," writes
Bather Brook In the Woman’s Home..
Companion. "Very good board to to bo
had as cheap as s dollar a day, and the '
ones at fl Ml a day are legion. It qjMf /
remains for the traveler to «
same dellberatioti and jnd
would In hto own country ta
and bargaintag.
-Th* subject oC tips to .
sometimes pomiee the nrta
safe rale te to make the tips
< ,-’7
i*«8 rids »Mb k 7>ig .
' |i
Ths Aooomplished Dean of Radcliff?
College. - ■ ’
Fully able to shine by the light of her'
Own Intellect and accomplishmeuts i<
JIlss Agnes Irwin, deau- of Radcliffe
college, Cambridge, Mass. Although a
great-great-granddaughter of Benjamin ’
Franklin, she has no need to depend
upon the luminosity of her distinguish
ed ancestor to bring honors to herself.
This fact was emphasized by Andrew
Carnegie when, representing St. An-
drew's college of Scotland, he conferred
upon her the degree of LL. D. The de-
gree was conferred upon. Miss Irwin In
Witherspoon hall, Philadelphia, on
^^B . ' ‘ J 111 <t Jr LEUA't-
■ VANTAGES which the country and every conirnunity in der muscles.
® g it has derived from the extension of our railroad facilities. | Onr*‘*fc
They are the arteries of commerce. Our comihunities would
be -lifeless, our trade would collapse, we would all be WORSE
TH AN DEAD,.were it not for these opportunities of communication
and these facilities of transportation. We honor all that has l>een
done in a JUST effort to make these possible. We want more,
the night of April 17, J906, at .a meet- We want extensions, WE WANT GREATER FACILITIES, we
want every opportunity afforded to enable, the people to remove
their products, and we want FAIR TREATMENT to those who
are engaged in this very necessary activity.
It ffi R »
Yet it is said that, despite the prosperity of the country and the
great benefits that have been derived from tfie extension of our trans-
portation facilities, there is a state of unrest, that there is a general
condition of DISCONTENT throughout the country. Why! Is it
because of extension of means of communication!
; WILL ANY ONI SUGGEST THAT AMERICAN CITIZENS ARE IN
REVOLT AGAINST THEIR OWN FROSFERITYT
What they revolt against is DISHONEST FINANCE.
‘for them.
t «wh improved If a certain amount of
trouble to taken.
Here to tbe way that on? woffan
m4« bet arms kx>k-not quite like
new. but certainly quite presentable
- First she would fill a testa with water
as tot as she could bear it, petting into
it some borax, a few drops of benoota
and a handful of oatmeal After
' holding her arms to tbe water for
about two minute* she nsed a rub-
ber sponge on them to wake np tbe
. skin, and'just n bit of pumice on the
rough skin of the elbow.,
Treat Your Fest Well.
If you want to possess a buoyant
walk, treat yoqr feet admirably. Give
them careful attention and keep then
gool natured. - . 77
If you neglect your feet, they’ll an-
swer you with an ache or with a cal
toM.apot that te a fretful reminder of
your carelesspeM.
If you think about your feet, youT
agree that they put up with a lot of
tepoettlon before they verso Into pre
vtohnew and pain.
But there's a limit to their patience begin by wetting thoroughly every <toiy
washing In tot edda water and soft
soepi ■ ' ' ■
WMte pafirt should be cleaned with
wares water, using a little whiting on
Sueb aro the pro- tiie riMh. then rtaetag with clear wa-
I *w eUotMMtv • Po<Moe(t w|It mOTt qnlckly ;ff
boiled in Betted water for ten minutes. :
then put I* the even.. The boiling wa-
ter vrill teat therethrough so they cook
This scraping* of a jam pot, about one
only undertaken by ouch authorities One of ^mtiSr^^we^teMpooSfuis <rf. Ater
^jMhj N
make excetfrat unee for a toned pWr-
fortunate
By cutting oM potatoes tiito small
dan. i. in the nttwaaf » MONOPOLY. For
<rf water w almost of neoBMity a monopoly. You cannot have a (ng la raid oeited watt* and rervh*
number of water companies undertaking to supply eaeh citizen by .wltto cream sauce, a good satetttutr for
their own pipes. Still leswcan you hare rival street railway com- °**r to obtained.
* A WARNING TO MOTHERS.
Bowleggedness Caused by Making Chil-
dren Walk Too Soon.
Too taanU phrejits inMe the mistake
- of edcouragiug their children to walk
before the (little legs are ready to bear
the yoiingsitet*s weight’. Backward ba- '
bies are the exception, and evoh where
they tuay seeiq so it is probable that
nature knows best and that, the child
will be eager to walk as soon as it la
a physical (pLSsibllltj'. Nearly all bow-
AM fullv conscious, as is every one who professes to have leggednessHs caused by this overanx-
i Once the baby does begin to walk,
(provide a contrivance of some sort to
aid hlpi ip his new found accomplish-
ment. The so called“baby tenders
are excellent and serve well,during the
transition from the creeping to the
walking stage- ' -
See; too. that the baby’s'siloes «pe bf;
a sort to enduro good uSe. The paper
soled bootees of his earlier days must
ndw be discarded and tiuy leather
shoes procured instead, if be ha8 the
ellghtest tendency to Weak ankiw, bay
the specially stiffened shoes made to
remedy this, and tn this ease keep him
from walking as far as possible until
they become stronger.
Let htrn walk indoors entirely- fit
first. Postpone bte first outdoor jour-
ney until some warm, pleasant spring
or summer »day. And let it te a very
tong time indeed before yon let him
navigate the stairs by himself. The
slightest misstep might eauae a serious
fan. 7.’ . (>•_.-• . r-: "
TO IRON LACE. 7 7
- - *' ' -
they are in rebellion against is FAVORITISM which gives a chance Frew taiween Muslin, Net Touehed
WMh Bare Mqtal.
One of tbe pointe to remember when
ironing lace is to iron it well to tbe
width, so that the tybole design ef tbe
lac* will show clear and dtetinet and
look as like the new material ae poo-
it--,.-»• - -. u = < ,t_r . ,.f . ~ • .2^-^?'’’f
To do this the lace must be carefully
on the table wrong side up and Ironed
lace up to front of the iron so thtot tbe
toe of the Iron may press the lace to
tbe width and also keep the setvuge
straight. ' '■
Aga^n place the lace flat ou the table
and iron acrees the width, pressing the
toe of tbe fron into each point until tt
to quite dtT- If the lace has a raised
pattern, a thick piece of felt or three
folds of‘ordtanry blanket may te slip-
ped under the ironing sheet and tin-
. Imo ironed ewer it This wtt! rater
j the work considerably. “ : ■
| Very fine lace should be ironed.
' through muplta and never toficbed
■dW Com
Of all rata M« <
.neo* equate the gl
pueFte are
stedtter.
mm are s
: mns
. bewail rid
when she
People have
euM and __
friends. A girl wto
state of wretrheffMM
whht her friends M
saying about her is to
sense. No girl on eai
•orbing Interest to teiL ____r
continually food for goestp to reftec- ■
The girl who to constantly living ta . .
the thought that her every action amt’®
word is tiring criticised by ter frtond* -
or otherwise spends a miserable exist-
ence. And the pitiful part, of it to
that any young girt of this type can
rarely be made to realise her own
fotalshness or tbe mfserv it cguses her.
She cannot, It seems, recognise ths *
simple truth that supersenattiveneta
net>r has found and never can find
happiness.
Some girls nre so sensitive-land very
fooltebly so—that tf hy some |U chante
they briteve they have glree pi use fm
offense they are utterly wretched itnri
go about half erexy. wondering wta!
So-and-so will think. As likely as nbi
tbe offense to absolutely imaginary
So-and-so to not giving the slighteei
attention either te the supposed offeBM
or to tbe person who to fretting tea
life over it ( : FfWW
But if the sensitive girt should bkp- /J
pen to really offend or make a mtotako .
let her take her criticism bravely, let
her profit by it If she he-rs herself
adversely criticised, she must be truly
thankful and acknowledge that It to
dearer to her than the aweeteet compli
ment of a friend It to only by toarn-
dres and kill what in us to distasteful
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Blackshear, Ed F. The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 13, 1907, newspaper, June 13, 1907; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327533/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.