1922
BOSTON — A medley of public officials, business men, manufacturers, debutantes and society matrons have worn a path to the studio of a modest and demure young woman in Beacon St.
They go to her filled with worldly knowledge and material experience of years but conquered by one of the greatest of man's weaknesses — self-consciousness.
She diagnoses their cases like a physician, cures them and endows them with man's greatest boon — personality.
She is Miss Evangeline Weed, proprietor of the Personality Institute, the first project of its kind.
Miss Weed numbers among her clients three mayors, two state senators, three representatives and many business men. These men, though successful, are handicapped by self-consciousness and unable to realize their full powers because of undeveloped personality.
—The Lima News, Lima, Ohio, Aug. 26, 1922, p. 1.
Saturday, May 12, 2007
Evangeline Weed — Making Personality to Order
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