X&oMer) rglnteßes laic ha: a mother who watches over her and teaches her how to be modest and disuroet and gentle and tender, and a father who instills grit and courage and determination and the big imper sonal view of things into her. She has a mother who teaches her to speak pink tea patter at parties and a father who discusses with her the effect of regional banks on the currency system and the Monroe doctrine in world poli tics, so to speak. When you find a girl who has been brought up exclusively by her mother, and who had had no masculine Influence * on her life, you are very apt to find bar narrow and prejudiced, full of petty ways and convinced that the most im portant thing on earth is to have a Bklrt four inches narrower than any other girl's or a feather half a foot or to be the limit of the ex aggeration of fashion, whatever it is. Also she Is almost always overcon ventlonal and given to subsisting on Chocolate creams. On the other hand, when you And a girl who has been raised by her father without a mother's influence she's pretty certain to be hoidenish and sporty; to lack a certain delicate re finement that is the hallmark of a lady, and to so scorn the proprieties that gossip is always busy with her name. And she eats roast beef and onions. Hooray! Baby To Rule the House No Longer Do Women Fear The Great* est of All Human B'essings. It Is a joy and comfort to know that those much-talked of pains and other dis tresses that are said to precede child-bear ing may easily be avoided. No woman need fear the slightest discomfort If she will tortify herself wi(h the well-known and time-honored remedy, "Mother's Friend." This Is a most grateful, penetrating, ex ternal application that at once softens and makes pliant the abdominal muscles and ligaments. They naturally expand without the slightest strain, and thus not only banish all tendency to nervous, twitching •pells, but there Is an entire freedom from nausea, discomfort, sleeplessness and dread that BO often leave their Impress upon the babe. The occasion la therefore one of un bounded, Joyful anticipation, and too much ■tress can not be laid upon the remarkable Influence which a mother's happy, pre-natal disposition has npon , the. health and for tunes of the generation to eome. Mother's Friend is recommended only fo# the relief and comfort of expectant mothers, thousands of whom have used and recom mend It. You will find It on sale at all drug ■tores %t SI.OO a bottle. Write to-day to th«| Urartfleid Regulator Co., 130 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga., for a most Instructive book oa this greatest of all subjects, motherhood. Dependable Coal Pile the coal on the fire for more heat. More heat is the cry. Too late to correct mistakes if the coal you bought doesn't burn satisfactorily and heat the .house comfortably. Next time buy Kelley's coal and get all the qualities for lasting heat and an even burning fire that are charac teristic of good fuel. Kelley's coal is dependable. E M.KELLEY CO. 1 N. Third St 10th and State Streets. rA';V-: If You Are Looking For an eyeglass that will not slip— that will not pinch or tilt—that will hold easily and comfortably, that will tnaura your glasses against breaking, -then call and let me show you the Stay Best mounting. I guarantee .It Lgainst breakage of any kind. The price is right, $1.60 and $8.50. Lenses replaced from 7Gc up. With H. C. Claster. 302 Market St. Breaks a Cold Over Night aUICK REMKDT FOR GRIP Snail Tablets—Ea»y tt Take—oß Cntt GORGAS' DRUG STORBS M Rcrtk nw M. tan. Statloa UNDERTAKERS ! RUDOLPH K. SPICER ' Funeral Director and Embalme: 813 Walnut St. Sell Phone TUESDAY EVENING, By DOROTHY DIX Raising a girl is no one-man or no one-woman ,lob. It takes both the father and the mother to turn but a specimen Uiat is a credit to the human 1 race and a blessing to the world she lives in. The ideal force, she must have sweetness and strength, she must have innocence and knowledge. These qualities are the composite of the l blending of the feminine and masculine : Influence on a plastic character. The world has always been so busy rhapsodizing over a mother's Influence over her children that It has left Itself no breath in which to speak of a fa ther's Influence. But the latter is equally as valuable and even more po tent. The pity of it is that so few American children ever have the bene fit of this benign power in shaping: their lives. For in this country it is sadly true that in most families father is nothing but a cash register. He feels that he, has done his complete duty when lie feeds and clothes his children and pays their school bills, and he loaves all the balance to the mother. He doesn't even ■ get acquainted with them enough to i know what they really think and feel, and what their real abilities are. He • lets their mother set her Ineffaceable' seal upon them, although he may know! her to be silly and vain and frivolous and everything he doesn't want his , sons and daughters to be. Most men recognize some duty they| owe their sons along this line, although : they generally never pay it; at the, same time few men ever realize that ; they have a saorcd obligation to help develop their daughters' characters. Thoy feel that the> can turn over their girls to their wives with a clear con science. Never was there*a greater mistake. Biologists tell us that daughters are closer to their father fn spiritual and mental fibre than sons are; that thero ; is the same close tie betweep them that, • there is between mothers' and sons. Common observation and experience bear this out. Every woman will tes-| : tify that she has always "understood" her father better than she has lierl] mother, and been In closer sympathy : with him. has found it easier to' i AMU