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nton Mission "The frequent excuse which parents give for not enlightening their children on these most important points is that they have never known how to do so. This excuse can no longer be considered valid. "Dr. Wood-Allen has a remarkable gift in the facility and refinement with which she is able to approach the most delicate subject without arousing a single morbid and sensitive impulse." COMMENDED BY MRS. H. CAMPBELL The Eminent American Author and Educator [Illustration: MRS. HELEN CAMPBELL] Dean of the Department of Household Economics in the Kansas State Agricultural College. Author of "Prisoners of Poverty," "Wage Earners," etc., etc. "I cannot speak too warmly of your invaluable series. There is hardly a woman in America so thoroughly qualified by education, long experience, deep sympathies, and, most excellent of all gifts, as deep common sense, as Dr. Mary Wood-Allen, to meet the growing need, or rather the growing sense of need. Mothers and fathers alike will be helped and enlightened by these simple, clear-phrased, wholesome books, and they deserve all the success already their own." COMMENDED BY L.M.N. STEVENS The Eminent Temperance Worker [Illustration: MRS. LILLIAN M.N. STEVENS] President of National Woman's Christian Temperance Union. "I consider the book 'What a Young Wife Ought to Know' a wise and safe teacher. It is a careful and delicate presentation of vital truths which have to do with the happiness and welfare of home life." COMMENDED BY EMINENT AMERICAN AUTHORS AND EDITORS MARGARET WARNER MORLEY Author of "The Song of Life," "Life and Love," "The Bee People," etc. "There is an awful need for the book, and it does what it has undertaken to do better than anything of the kind I have ever read. You may rely upon me to make it known wherever I can." ELISABETH ROBINSON SCOVIL Superintendent of the Newport Hospital, and Associate Editor of the Ladies' Home Journal; Author of "The Care of Children," etc. "'What a Young Woman Ought to Know' is characterized by purity of tone and delicacy of treatment. "It is one which a mother can place with confidence in the hands of her daughter. Reverent knowledge is the surest safeguard of innocence, and it is every mother's duty to see that the young girl committed to her charge is duly forearmed by being forewarned of the dangers that
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