OBSERVATIONS FROM LIFE.
StottoMaa somaltema pro*« thsdltora aan figure. A budding: gealue to all right until h* begins to blow. Her (other’* boo* frequently makaa os unfavorable impression.
Too much oi tbo noise In thi* world trie* to pass itself off as music. It 1* batter to b* wrong at the right time than right at the wrontr time. The more a woman ar'-- hf more she is unable to cos ■. f.
Some dancing, uis.. .: ; • the poetry o( motion, is nt r ■. .. ;.-ei. The price of liberty i.- •..t-.nui vign lanes, but the cost of repairs is extra.
Young men think themselves wise and drunken man think themselves sober.
The man who know* it all is a fit companion (or the woman who knows nothing.
Any man can think as he likes, but it isn’t always policy to put his thoughts into word*.—Chicago Dally New*.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19060222.2.17
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 3615, 22 February 1906, Page 4
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145OBSERVATIONS FROM LIFE. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 3615, 22 February 1906, Page 4
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