Show DONT MARRY IN A HURRY Some Good Advice to the Girls Which Should be Heeded Young girls wait until you are at least twentyfive before you think of marrying All tastes change between tho ages of sixteen six-teen and thirty The books you read the games you enjoy the milliners skill you trust to the friendships you cultivate all are changing why should not the tastes and fancies of the soul The age that feeds upon Mrs Southworth and Mrs Holmes is i I vastly unlike the age tliatderpeniis stronger I I I mental food The hero you are ready to j worship at eighteen will not be a hero to you ten chances to one at twentyeight Walt until your tastes settle and the possibilities pos-sibilities within you have found their level before you fix upon an unalterable destiny For I tell you whether it brings sorrow or joy j the choice you make is an irrevocable one The moon may go back and be a crescent cres-cent ere the first quarter is reached the rose reenfold itself within the calyx of the bud or the sultry noon renew the freshness fresh-ness of the dawn before the circle of the day is spanned with greater ease than a woman can resume the lightness of her maiden fancies after the die of her wedded lot is cast I There ought to bo a special legislation against hasty and early marriages for although al-though I am willing to grant that there are signal exceptions to the rule I think I am safe in saying that threefifths of tho exceedingly ex-ceedingly early unions turn out a curse to either or both of the mated parties There is love like Romeos vows and Juliets passion that flowers in an outburst and consumes like a moths wings in the flame I and there is another lovo that orbs as the morn does slowly and silently in the infinite in-finite calm of heaven Which will you have The power to choose is yours Chicago Herald |