Show PRAISES VIRTUE OF SILENCE habit of carrying domestic troubles to outsiders Is deplored by writer one pretty sensible girl who truly loved her young husband who as truly loved her came hear wrecking their happiness through her uncontrolled tongue she had always been in the habit and a very proper one t Is ot telling her mother everything in her girlhood now that she was a married woman she ought to have discriminated between what concerned her husband and what concerned herself alone she had no business to tell her mother of con fl dences which passed between him and herself and be bad no idea that she would not appreciate this fact un til she happened to relate what moth er said when I 1 told her thus and so why you dlan t tell your mother that he cried ilia tongue angered her and she retorted in a sudden flame indeed I 1 did I 1 shall always tell my mother exactly what I 1 please epry well he commented coldly I 1 ahall understand now just bow far 1 ec can trust you months and many heart burnings were required before this breach was healed A tender and petted girl la alt ogeth er too fond of fleeing for consolation to mother or bister when some fan cled slight baa been offered her by the adored one who has recently sworn a thousand times that he will think of her comfort and happiness and that only till the sands of the desert grow cold and then he goes off some rooming and forgets to kiss her good by or be comes home at night with out the egg beater that he solemnly promised to get and perhaps a foolish mother or sister says he Is a brute and you can easily see what a train 0 evils might follow n the wake of this tiny little train of circumstances don t tell anybody of your domestic troubles big or little they grow in the telling the first lesson that the wise wife should learn Is to hold her tongue lesliea weekly |