What a Young Woman Ought to Know. Mary Wood-Allen

What a Young Woman Ought to Know - Mary Wood-Allen


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BY THE PRESS

       A New Book by Charles Frederic Goss

       "HUSBAND, WIFE AND HOME"

       A NEW DEVOTIONAL BOOK

       "Faces Toward the Light"

       FIVE-MINUTE OBJECT SERMONS TO CHILDREN

       Through Eye-Gate and Ear-Gate Into the City of Child-Soul

       Talks to the King's Children

       Second Series of "Five-Minute Object Sermons"

       By SYLVANUS STALL, D.D.

       Two Important Booklets

       The Social Duty of Our Daughters

       Before Marriage

       God's Minute

       " Touchstones of Success "

       Marvels of Our Bodily Dwelling

       Bible Selections for Daily Devotion

       Table of Contents

      During a number of years it has been my privilege to be the confidante and counsellor of a large number of young women of various stations in life and in all parts of the United States.

      These girls have talked freely with me concerning their plans, aspirations, fears and personal problems. It has been a great revelation to me to note with what unanimity they ask certain questions concerning conduct—queries which perhaps might astonish the mothers of those same girls, as they, doubtless, take it for granted that their daughters intuitively understand these fundamental laws of propriety.

      The truth is that many girls who have been taught in the "ologies" of the schools, who have been trained in the conventionalities of society, have been left to pick up as they may their ideas upon personal conduct, and, coming face to face with puzzling problems, are at a loss, and perhaps are led into wrong ways of thinking and questionable ways of doing because no one has foreseen their dilemma and warned them how to meet it.

      The subjects treated in this little book are discussed because every one of them has been the substance of a query propounded by some girl otherwise intelligent and well informed. They have been treated plainly and simply because they purport to be the frank conferences of a mother and daughter, between whom there can be no need of hesitation in dealing frankly with any question bearing on the life, health or happiness of the girl. There is therefore no need of apology; the book is its own excuse for being, the queries of the young women demand honest answers.

      Life will be safer for the girl who understands her own nature and reverences her womanhood, who realizes her responsibility towards the human race and conducts herself in accordance with that realization.

      Life will be nobler and purer in its possession and its transmission, if, from childhood onward to old age, the thought has been held that "Life is a gift of God and is divine," and its physical is no less sacred than its mental or moral manifestation; if it has been understood that the foundations of character are laid in the habits formed in youth, and that a noble girlhood assures a grand maturity.

      Dear girls who read this book, the mother-heart has gone out to you with great tenderness with every line herein written, with many an unspoken prayer that you will be helped, uplifted, inspired by its reading, and made more and more to feel

      "A sacred burden is this life ye bear.

       Look on it, lift it, bear it solemnly;

       Stand up and walk beneath it steadfastly;

       Fail not for sorrow, falter not for sin,

       But onward, upward, till the goal ye win."

      Mary Wood-Allen.

      Ann Arbor, Michigan.

       Table of Contents

       RESPONSIBILITY IN MAINTAINING IT.

       Table of Contents

       OUGHT TO KNOW.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      WHAT ARE YOU WORTH?

      My Daughter Dear:

      When I see you with your young girl friends, when I look into your bright faces and listen to your merry laughter and your girlish chatter, I wonder if any one of you understands how much you are worth. Now you may say, "I haven't any money in the bank, I have no houses or land, I am worth nothing," but that would only be detailing what you possess. It is not what you possess but what you are that determines what you are worth. One may possess much wealth and be worth very little.

      I was reading the other day that the first great lesson for a young man to learn, the first fact to realize, is that he is of some importance; that upon his wisdom, energy and faithfulness all else depends, and that the world cannot get along without him. Now if this is true of young men, I do not see why it is not equally true of young women.

      It is not after you have grown old that you will be of value to the world; it is now, in your young days, while you are laying the foundation of your character, that you are of great importance. We cannot say that the foundation is of no importance until the building is erected, for upon the right placing of the foundation depends the firmness and stability of the superstructure. Dr. Conwell, in his little book, "Manhood's Morning," estimates that there are twelve million young men in the United States between fourteen and twenty-eight years of age; that these twelve million young men represent latent physical force enough to dig the iron ore from the mines, manufacture it into wire, lay the foundation and construct completely the great Brooklyn Bridge in three hours; that they represent force enough, if rightly utilized, to dig the clay from the earth, manufacture the bricks and construct the great Chinese Wall in five days. If each one were to build himself a house twenty-five


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