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OT understood.

How trifles often change us!

The thoughtless sentence or the fancied slight Destroy long years of friendship and estrange us, And on our souls there falls a freezing blight, Not understood.

-Thomas Bracken.

TAKE envy out of a character and
it leaves great possibilities for

friendship.

-Elizabeth B. Custer.

NEVER yet

Was noble man but made ignoble talk.
He makes no friend who never made a foe.

-Tennyson.

Half

LD friends are the great bles-
sing of one's later years.
a word conveys one's meaning. They
have a memory of the same events,
and have the same mode of thinking.
I have young relations that may grow
upon me, for my nature is affec-
tionate, but can they grow old friends?
-Horace Walpole.

FRIENDS are like melons; shall I tell you why? To find one good you must a hundred try.

-Claude Mermet.

THE only true and firm friendship
is that between man and woman,
because it is the only affection ex-
empt from actual or possible rivalry.
-A. Comte.

EOPLE who have warm friends

are healthier and happier than those who have none. A single real friend is a treasure worth more than gold or precious stones. Money can buy many things, good and evil. All the wealth of the world could not buy you a friend or pay you for the loss of one.

-Unknown.

THE

то

ideal of friendship is to feel as one while remaining two.

-Madame Swetchine.

o act the part of a true friend requires more conscientious feeling than to fill with credit and complacency any other station or capacity in social life.

-Sarah Ellis.

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