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POOR WOMAN

,' Some women only know what they ' want when they realise they can't get it. It is easy to meet temptations brave- .. ly. Saying good-bye to them is what hurts. 1 There are two kinds of girls; pretty girls and those who stand in crowded 1 tramcars. The way; o£ the transgressor is just hard enough to make transgressing delightful. Two men after a woman, tragedv; two women after a man, melodrama. Let us respect our enemies. However, much they wish us ill, they at least never deceive us. A man always wants to be first in a woman's life, but a woman prefers to fbe last in a man's. It's certainly I safer.

A married woman derives most of her pleasure from making her husband realise what a sacrifice she has made in marrying him. In the spring a young woman's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of how she can make some man believe he loves her

All cynical observations to the contrary a woman's affections never vary. All that varies, is the object of them. It is so much easier for a woman to tell about the trouble her husband causes her than to reveal the reasons, that induce her to continue living with him.

Experience teaches a man two things; first,, that there are certain things he ought to avoid; and second, that there is not much chanc e of'his avoiding them.

Man is surrounded by three types of women. Those who are trying to marry him, those, who are trying to keep from marrying him. and those who ignore him.- He marries one of the latter.

The average woman knows all there is to be known about her husband before she has been married three months. The average man may celebrate his golden wedding without understanding his wife better than the day he married her.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19270607.2.19

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 7 June 1927, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
310

POOR WOMAN Shannon News, 7 June 1927, Page 3

POOR WOMAN Shannon News, 7 June 1927, Page 3

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