304 The Farm Girl's Preparation for a Vocation 



Finally, it may be said that there is no greater 

 charm or thing of more superior beauty in this good 

 world of ours than the character of a woman who has 

 been well-born and well-reared, and who has been 

 safely guided into the home of her own wherein she 

 reigns as mistress supreme. In this ideal home the 

 love and sympathy and the kindly deeds of the true 

 home-maker will reveal themselves permanently in 

 the lives of her children and her husband and the 

 many others who come into contact with her con- 

 structive personality. 



REFERENCES 



Women's Ways of Earning Money. Cynthia Westover Alden. A. S. 



Barnes & Co. 

 The Home Builder. Dr. Lyman Abbott. Houghton, Mifflin Company. 



Sympathetic and cheering. 

 Almost a Woman. Mary Wood Allen, M.D. Crist, Scott & Parshall, 



Coopertown, N.Y. A plain talk to the young woman about her 



sex nature. 

 The Problem of Vocational Education. David Snedden, Ph.D. Chapter 



XII, "The Problem of Women in Industry." Houghton, Mifflin 



Company. 

 The Vocational Guidance of Youth. Meyer Bloomfield. Chapter I, 



"The Choice of Life Work and its Difficulties." Houghton, Mifflin 



Company. 

 Parenthood and Race Culture. Charles W. Saleeby M.D. Chapter X, 



"Marriage and Maternalism." Moffat, Yard & Co., New York. 

 Should Women work for their Living? M. Yates. Westminster 



Review, October, 1910. 



Social Diseases and Marriage. Educational Pamphlet, No. S. Amer- 

 ican Society of Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis, New York. 10 



cents. Every parent should read this booklet 



