Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, March 11, 1914, Page 5, Image 5

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    Mflx«ienaunteße<tTi&
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX
ConvriW. 1914. by stttr Company.
7 "Why not write
about the henpecked
Bachelor Girl?
"Tho girl who is
trying make a
HmHH home
who is alone in the
world.
who
cannot go home
without expecting to
be nagged and
scolded about some
thing.
"The girl who
not have a beau—
mother objects.
"The girl who
! cannot have com
pany— mother ob-
WTKmiF'i jects to most of her
CT? ;■ acquaintances.
•fie girl who cannot be out one
n ii a week, but what she is out
•efy night.'
/he girl who is not bad—and It
wonder that she Isn't—but on
a iunt of her home surroundings she
jj.s away from home at night us
lk as she can; she prefers home to
yiig forced out Into company for
Jich she cares little.
/'The girl who would much rather
ive her mother her 'Pal' than have
I choose one from among her girl
Mends.
"The gir! who works hard all day.
iaving worries a mother knows noth
,'ng of, nor could understand If she
(lid know, same as a man; but who,
/when she gets home is nagged and
tagged, found fault with, scolded, in
tact made miserable the minute she
gets inside the door.
"Talk about a henpecked husband—
Is the condition of the henpecked bach
elor girl any better?
"Through It all she is trying to keep
herself clean and wholesome. But will
Blie succeed?
Constant Nagging Will Drive Any Girl
Astray
"She can't go to the club the same
as man; if Blie goes out she lays her
self liable to criticism. She can't get
a divorce nor leave home, run away;
Their Married Life j
:: / By KABEL HERBERT URNER j
THEY HAVE A CHEERLESS TRIP
TO L SUBURBAN TOWN ON A
DISMAL RAINY NIGHT.
•'Lak, dear, isn't that a restaurant
over pere?"
Waren shifted the dripping um
brellaand peered across the dimly-lit,
rairyrlven village street.
"riiry lunchroom," in a tone of j
disgst. as he caught a glimpse of the j
casl/ register and marble-topped ta- |
bled through the glass door. "Wei
wet driveling idiots not to eat be-;
for, we started. Stand a mighty slim j
chAce of getting anything around j
hot"
ut whatever the discomforts of the I
dfier and evening, Helen felt freej
fflu all blame, for Warren had plan- j
ifl this trip.
Several weeks before he had said j
it to make any engagement for the j
as they were going up to Milford \
i see Jack Maxwell in an amateur j
/lay. It was so unlike Warren to at- j
.end an affair of this kind that Helen,
liad not * taken it seriously. But thatv
morning at breakfast he told her to/j
/meet him at 5.30; that they would take])
/ an early train and get dinner at Mil-
I ford.
/ "We'll not go if it rains?" protested
j Helen, looking at the gray, threaten
ing sky.
"Rain? Think I'd let a little rain
keep me from seeing 'Max' make a
fool of himself? Not much."
But now, as they splashed through
the dark, rain-swirled streets, with
the prospect of a dairy lunch room
jiA Sure Wrinkle Remover;:
and Other Beauty Secrets;;
Se'rcts That Will Save You Years of
'lme and Many Dollars lu Your
Uuest for Ueuuty, Told by
Yaleska Suratt, Famed as
the Greatest Self-Mnde
Reality Actress
By Yaleska Sura'lt
VE all more or less lead lives of
quiet desperation, and the older
we become the more pronounced
sens to be our resignation. And par
tlilarly Is this true with women upon
wose faces Time is sketching, in
wnkle character, an epic of Its
fllht.
tore wonderful to these, then, seems
tl< statement that wrinkles can be
eidicated as surely as chalk from a
ete. We are all sisters in the skin—
•Vuur Mirror Will Soon Reveal a Won
/ derful Story of Youthful Appearunce
I Regained."
skin is skin. That the skin can be
made youthful in its vigor and appear
ance, is no longer a question. It is a
fact. The secret lies in the material
used, not in the manner of use. Mas
sage alone is of no value. Ordinary
creams are of little merit. The fol
lowing formula, to my mind. Is posi
tively revolutionary In Its results, yet
it is simplicity Itself. Mix this for
mula yourself at home in a few mo
ments and you will have a quantity
of surpassing wrinkle remover which
would ordinarily cost many dollars if
it could be bought in the stores al
ready prepared.
To half a pint of hot water, add
two ounces of eptol and two table
spoonfuls of glycerine. This forms
a cream. When cool, apply regularly,
every day, generously. The eptol will
cost not more thkn fifty cents at any
drug store. This cream removes light
and deep wrinkles, lines of worry,
habit ana age, and makes a difference
of years In you» appearance.
• • •
MISS HOW? Poor girl! You will
be able to comb and brush your hair
vigorously without having a single
strand come out and ' your hair will
begin to grow out most beautifully
again if you will apply every other
day or so, and in liberal quantities,
a mixture made of half a pint of al
cohol. half k pint of water, and one
WEDNESDAY EVENING
she is too honorable for that. Isn't the
condition awful? What will the end
be? Think it over, my friend, and see
if the subject does not deserve an ar
ticle froin your hand, which may pos
sibly came under the observation of
some of these girls. Mothers who do
not realize what they are doing and
in what danger they are placing their
daughters, for a mother would not
deliberately send her girl to the bad —
she Just does not think—that It all. and
possibly you can help her to think.
There are doubtless many girls in the
same plight as myself, and a word
from an outside disinterested person
might help out matters a whole lot."
A Friend In Distress
The young woman who wrote the
above letter was not conscious that
she had written the very article she
desired should be published In this
column.
It is quite complete as It Is, and
really needs no comments.
But mucli more can be said on the
subject of unwise mothers.
The really wise, the really unselfish,
the really tender and big brained and
hearted mother is an unusual being
to encounter.
There are mothers who love to slave
for their children.
They love to wait upon them, to deny
themselves necessities, to suffer for
them. This mother Is usually called a
good, devoted mother, but she rears a
brood of selfish, inconsiderable chil
dren, who make bad wives and hus
bands. And of course, they are un
grateful and unsatisfactory sons and
daughters, because only their most sel
fish Instincts have been catered to.
There is the mother who loves her
children so devotedly that she Is jealous
of all their friends, and later Is Jealous
of their wives and husbands, and de
stroys their happiness by being the
proverbial mother-in-law.
There is the disorderly mother, who
neglects to teach her children the
foundation of all the other virtues.
Order, Heaven's first law.
Confusion and Disorder Helen In the
Home Lacking Order
Confusion and disorder reign in the
dinner, Warren's ardor was dampened.
"There, that's more like It," as now
two signs, "Milford House Grill" and
"Cafe" shone out cheerfully ahead.
"We san at least get something to j
drink there."
Helen Gleeful
"Oh, it's an old-fashioned country
hotel," exclaimed Helen gleefully, as
j they went up the steps. "Just the
! kind of a place I hoped we'd find."
j It was an old frame house, built on
I Colonial lines, , and the wide center
;hall used as an office.
! A man, evidently the proprietor,
I pleased at having guests on so rainy
| a night, came from behind the desk
I with a hospitable "Good evening."
j "Can you give us something to eat?"
I asked Warren, ramming his dripping
! umbrella into a stand by the door,
i "Yes, sir, certainly," leading them
jinto the dining room, which was
! empty and dark except for a single
; gas jet. Hastily he lit up 'he center
j chandelier and turned to Warren with
an apologetic, "It's a little late for
(our regular supper, sir, but we can
i give you anything you want."
|| "What have you got that's good?"
j for Warren knew that "whatever you
want" in a village hotel meant a
choice of but two or three things.
"Nice sirloin steak, sir, or we can
broil you a chicken."
Warren ordered a steak and French
fried potatoes, his standard order
when in doubt about the culinary re- 1
sources of a place.
Helen, always interested in the at
mosphere of rooms and places, was
TT mnrmnrTTTYnvTWVVVVVV\r
ounce of beta-quinol. Shake thor
oughly, and then it will be ready to
use. If you prefer, you can use im
ported bay rum instead of the water
and alcohol. The beta-quinol you can
get at almost any drug store for not
more than fifty cents.
• • •
MRS. O. F. L.—Most of the beautiful
complexions you have admired have
been developed after years of pains
taking effort. But such labor and
patience are no longer necessary by
the use of a formula which I believe
is the most wonderfuli beautifier I
have ever known. • With a half-pint
of hot water mix two tablespoonfuls
of glycerine, and while stirring pour
in one ounce of zintone, obtainable
for not more than fifty cents at any
drug store. When cool it makes an
exquisite, satiny cream and is ready
to use. This is exceedingly econom
ical, and you can and must use It gen
erously on face, arms, hands, neck and
shoulders, every day.
• • •
MRS. NO-FORM lt Is a difficult
matter, at best, to develop the bust,
but there is only one way that de
serves a trial, and that is to make
a mixture of two ounces or ruetone
a (sold at drug stores for not more
h than one dollar), half a cup of sugar,
1 and a pint of cold water, and taking
| of this two teaspooiifuls after meals
3 and at bedtime. This should do it if
[| anything can.
• • •
Miss O. N. R.—The best soap in the
f world can never cleanse tho scalp of
all scurf, dead skin particles and dan
druff as can eggol. This produces a
wonderfully rich, creamy lather and
Is unexcelled as a scalp cleanser. Dis
solve a teaspoonful of eggol in half
a cup of hot water for your shampoo.
Enough eggol can be secured from
your druggist for twenty-five cents to
give over twelve exquisite shampoos.
• • •
DISSATISFIED I do not wonder
that you are dissatisfied with the many
superfluous hair removers you have
used. You will remove such hairs
perfectly, and without burn or irri
tation by using simple sulfo solution,
which dissolves the hair instead of
burning it off and leaving a red snot.
It is very startling in Its action. You
can get simple sulfo solution for not
more than one dollar at the drug store.
• • »
LOOKS BAD—You will go on forever
using creams to get rid of pimples,
and never succeed. What you need is
a powerful blood cleanser. There is
nothing better than a mixture of
twelve ounces of sugar dissolved in a
pint of water and one ounce of oar
sene, taken in doses of three or four
teaspoonfuls three or four ttmes a day.
Get the sarsene in the original pack
age. by the ounce, at the drug store.
You will get rid of your pimples
quickly.
• « •
. P" ».¥' ls an astonishing
fact tnat blackheads can be removed
In a few minutes by sprinkling some
neroxin on a hot-wet sponge and rub
bing this on the blackheads. It re
moves them all, the big and little
ones. The neroxin can be obtained
at the drug store for not more than
fifty cents Advertisement.
home of such a mother and In the
minds of those she brings up. The
time spent in hunting for lost objects
in such a home would make one con
versant with all languages, If spent in
study.
There is the other type of mother,
so orderly that no comfort Is found In
her presence.
When she is not picking up after her
family or correcting the members of
her household for their disorder, she
Is lying in a darkened room with a
I nervous headache, which she says is
caused by her Inconsiderate family.
Then there is the nagging mother,
so well described by the letter given
above.
A type, not a mere Individual case.
A numerous type.
Mothers of small children are fre
| quently tender, devoted, unselfish and
ideal, but the mother of children who
grow up and devote a distinct in
dividuality, and who know how to deal
with these distinct Individualities, are
rare lndeeu.
The mother who sees her own fea
tures reflected in a small daughter is
oftimes amazed when she sees that
daughter growing into a type of woman
wholly unlike herself; a woman with
different taßtes, ideas and temperament.
She does not know what to do with
her; how to adapt herself to the situa
tion.
Deal vrlth Daughters According to
Their Own Natures
It Is seldom she is broad enough to
realize that her child must be dealt
with according to her own nature and
tendencies and not according to the
mother's.
Just as a fern In a garden requires,
different treatment and a different lo
cation from a carnation or rose.
Mothers should study their children
as the horticulturist studies plants, and
help each child to grow according to
its own tendencies.
It may be repeated as a final clause
what has been said many, many times
before in this column. The greatest
need in the world today Is a school for
i good, wise parentage.
absorbed In "looking around."
The wall paper was a cheerful flow
ered red and white, the floor was
covered with linoleum and a dingy
red carpet. Over the mantel hung
some colored coaching and hunting
scenes.
"Haven't any too much time —that
show's supposed to begin at 8:15.
Hope they'll hurry along that steak,"
as Warren drained his cocktail.
Helen hail been making futile ef
forts to "fix" ner hair, which was al
most down from the constant jog
gling of Warren's umbrella against
her hat. As they were alone in the
dining room, she now went over to
the mantel mirror, but found that her
pocket comb was not in her handbag.
"Oh, I've lost my comb—what shall
I do? I can't go to that place with
my hair like this!"
"Now never mind the primping—
here comes the steak!"
Helen went back to the table with
the uncomfortable feeling a woman
always has when her hair is loose
and no re-thrusting of hairpins will
help.
"How's that?" demanded Warren,
who had carved into the steak and
now held up a piece with critical ap
proval. "Pretty good sirloin, eh? Done
enough for you?"
"Oh, yes: plenty."
Potatoes Good
The potatoes were not the ordinary
soggy "French fried," but were
browned to a golden turn, smoking
hot and deliciously mealy inside.
"Knew we'd get good plain food
here," declared Warren with satisfac
tion. "Never order any fancy stuff at
a place like this."
Their table was by a window, and
now through the rain-blurred glass
elen saw the colored lights of a drug
store across the street.
"Dear, I know they have combs
over there. When we're through
can't you run over and get mej>ne?"
pleadingly. "It won't take mftute."
"Now we've got no time to fool.
Shove your hair up under your hat.
Who's going to notice you anyway?"
"But I'll have to take my hat off,
won't I?"
() f How do I know?" with a shrug.
"I've never been to one of these
church shows. But I'd go anywhere
to see Max try to act They've been
rehearsing this dope for about six
months. He's been shouting about it
ever since—the 'to be or not to was'
style."
"To bo or not to was!" laughed
Helen. "I never heard that before
But I didn't know it was a Shake
spearian play."
"It's not. But he't got an Idea he
can act, and he's studying on the
side. That's the joke—he really
THINKS he can act. Ha! Ha!" War
ren threw back his head with his
deep laugh. "Maxwell's a mighty fine
fellow—but ACT! Oh, say, it's going
to be rich!"
The waitress came up now with
solicitous Inquiry.
"No, I guess that's about all we'll
have time for. You can bring the
check. How about tipping her''" as
rhe disappeared. "Shall I risk it' She
looks to me like the proprietor's
wife."
[ But Helen was much too worried
about her hair to be concerned about
the status of the waitress.
Helen Seeks Keller
| "Dear, I'm going to run over to
that drug store for a comb. I'll be
back before you get the change."
i Unheeding the protest Warren
: roared after me. Helen darted out
i through the office and across the
street. She had not waited to take
the umbrella, but the rain had slack
ened some.
The drug clerk, who was weighing
out cough drops, looked up in mild
surprise as she entered with a breath
less:
"A comb! Any kind of a pocket
comb. '
The next moment she had the comb,
a cheap ten-cent one in a leatherette
case, and was darting back.
"Have you a dressing room here?"
she asked of the waitress who was
now making change from the cash
| drawer in the office.
' "Yes, ma'am, right up the stairs to
your left."
| The first door was ajar and Helen
pushed it open. But It was a bed
room, a country hotel bedroom with
the musty odor that comes from such
a room, shut us on a rainy night.
Across the hall was a sort of parlor
with cheap upholstered furniture and
further an was the dressing room.
Before the small cracked mirror
which hung over an unvarnished ta
ble, she quickly took down her hair
braided and colled it securely. Then
with a feeling of immense relief that
she could now enjoy the evening, she
hurried down.
| Warren, already In his overcoat,
, was waiting with a savage scowl
"Know what time It is? Ten after
eight! You never go anywhere that
you're not everlasting powdering
and fixing up! It's your blamed con
! ceit. Think everybody'll be looking
| at you Instead of the stage, do you?"
I "Why, dear," ventured Helen un-
I happily, "my hair was almost down."
The proprietor, who had directed
I Warren how to reach the church
where the play was being given, now
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
WmOIMFtS'
70 DIG UP STREETS
[Continued from First Page.] '
tion not to issue a permit to dig up the 1
streets. He said: "If they come after
me to-day, I will tell them what I told
them yesterday I said that if they j
wanted.a permit to open the streets foi j
the purpose of turning on water or for
making repairs I would issue the neces- 1
sary paper but they were not willing to
take a permit with those provisions at
tached. No, I will not allow them to
dig up the streets to turn oft the wa
ter."
In front of many of the homes in
Camp Hill are water boxes, or plugs,
which permit the water being turned
off at that point without the necessity
of digging up the streets. However,
these boxes, in almost all cases are on
the ground just Inside the pavement
line and on the lots on which the
houses are built. Residents of the
borough say that the company will not
, use the boxes because in so doing
they face arrest under the trespass
i laws, the boxes being on private prop- i
j erty.
Boxes Not Used
i It is said that in front of the four
i residences where water employes were
: halted In their work of opening the
street Monday and yesterday there are
at least two of these boxes which can
easily be found just inside the line of
the pavement. The men did not at
tempt to use the boxes In their efforts
to turn 'off the supply but instead be
jgan to dig in the street. Superinten
dent Saunders said this morning that
|he believed it wouldbe as cheap to dig
lup the street and turn the water off
from the main as It would be to shovel
away some snow along the pavement
and use the box.
Residents say that trespass suits will
follow if any attempt is made to use
the boxes. The property owners, it is
said, are made to pay for the boxes,
the tap In the main and the pipe from
the main to the house and some per
sons are inclined to believe that If the
company does succeed in getting per
mission to dig up the streets, suits
can be filed for tampering with the
tap .which they say belongs to the
property owner.
Saunders to Proceed
On advice of counsel, says Superin
tendent Saunders, he will proceed to
open the streets even though permits
may not be issued. He understands
that he will be arrested but he says
his company is ready to have the ar
rest made so that the case can be
carried to court for a decision. It Is
said, too, that company will ask
the Cumberland county court for a
writ which will give it the right to dig
up the streets notwithstanding the
borough highway commissioner's re
fusal of a permit.
Patricio Russ. president of the wa
ter company, said this morning that
he is sorry so much trouble has arisen
but that the rates now being charged
in Camp Hill are only In accordance
wi{h those charged in other West
Shore towns. He said the company at
times is losing money by carrying wa
ter to Camp Hill.
Oouncilmen of the borough will
meet to-morrow night and at that
time it is expected the water question
will be threshed out thoroughly. In
dications are that the councilmen are
In favor of fighting the water company
at every step, for this morning they
told Chief of Police Fox that they
would back him in every thing he
would do.
May Seek Injunction
It is said that late to-day the citi
zens will ask the court to grant an
njunctlon which will prohibit the wa
ter company from opening any streets
in the future unless authorized to do
so.
Superintendent Saunders, during a
conversation, said that he did not want
to .turn off the supply of the residents
of the borough unless forced to do so
by 'the nonpayment of bills. He said
further {hat the payment at a 10-cent
rate would be considered only a par
tial payment of the bill rendered to
property owners at the 30-cent rate
wd would not keep the company from
turning off the water if the balance
remained unpaid. He said that during
the past few days a number of pay
ments were made at the 30-pent rate
nnd that in the event of the Cumber
land County Court finding that rate Is
too high the difference between that
rate and the 10-cent rate will be re
funded to the property owners. Prop
erty owners wanted the entire matter
'o rest until a definite conclusion was
reached, but the water company wants
'he consumed water paifi for at the
30-cent rate with the refunding pro
vision in the receipt. The Increase in
the rates Is what has caused the
trouble, which has continued for more
than a year.
ADVERTBiE
. NOT INCREASE COST
[Continued from First Page.]
a very large extent the future prosper
ity of the United States.
Advertising, he said, paves the way
and reaches great groups of people.
It does the pioneer work for the sales
man at a minimum of cost and makes
his work of consumating the sale com
paratively easy. Every good salesman
realizes this and recognizes that ad
vertising at once lightens his burden
followed them out on the dripping
porch with a final:
"Three blocks straight ahead and
then to the left."
At the first crossing, with a splash
Helen stepped Into a puddle.
"Look where you put your feet,"
growled Warren.
Then as she glanced down at her
spattered skirt she stopped short with
a dismayed:
"Oh!"
"Now what's the matter?"
Another Mishap
"Oh, nothing, only I—l must have
left my overshoes under the table.
But it doesn't matter," hasUly, "they're
old ones and these shoes are heavy."
Without a word Warren switched
her around, and in grim silence
marched her back to the hotel. At
the gate she broke away from him
and ran ahead, through the office and
into the dining room, where her over
shoes were still under the table.
"Oh, I'm so sorry," as she Joined
him breathlessly. But we won't be
late if we hurry, will we? These
things never begin on time."
Without deigning an answer, War
ren strode on so fast that Helen had
almost to run to keep under the um
brella. One of her overshoes was
loose, and, when she stopped to stamp
It on, he Jerked his arm away and
stalked on ahead.
She caught up with him, but her
overshoe was still loose, and as they
crossed the street it came off In the
mud.
"What the devil's the matter
NOW?" savagely, as she turned to
look for it.
"One of my overshoes came oft,"
falterlngly. "But we won't stop to
look for It."
"No, by George, we WON'T! You've
done about enough to queer this even
ing. Now come on."
| Ladies' Easter Garments i
| ===——— =— 5
1 Captivating Styles Reflecting •
£ Famous Paris Atelieres i
• • w
U There seems no end to •
® the entrancing novelties •
• jk and accessories noted in 0
® 1 trimming The $
S IrS® I glonously beautiful Suits •
° Wis*Y Jk are here. The styles are 2
• jil I If decided. Select them ©
• If now while selection is J
2 fk Jm Easter is not so far ©
• A 111 v i XiWJf away. Time to THINK %
• JjBBBy about your suit now. ©
• 1 This Store Can Scrv3 You J
J Tgpr f' 1 Best. We Were Never •
® IW jp-
Better Prepared to Serve §
• I X 'l m ou aD ow ®
5 I! % Mwi Compare Our Styles §
i and Value * " i
% »; Ladies' Suits, $12.98 to S6O |
% JjL_ ss?s 'Suits,. 5 9.98 to $35 ®
i> Blouses & Waists, 98 :to sls J
© Have Your Bill Charged 2
I if You wish «
® ■ I
| Home Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. Family f
| Furnishers 29-31-33 &35 S. Second Street Clothiers J
• OUR LOCATION MEANS A GREAT SAVING TO YOU %
® •
and increases his selling capacity, said returns are to be commensurate with]' See here, Hills. Let's co-operate. I
the speaker. expenditures. He called attention to don't want your money, but I'll agree
"But," said Mr. Mahin, "nobody the fact that while the average re- to keep your wife out of Heaven as
has any right to expect profitable re- tailer pays for clerk hire more than long as I can if you agree to keep mo
turns from advertising unless what fifty per cen.t of his entire expend!- out of Hell as long as you can.' "
he is advertising is meeting a distinct tures, advertising seldom averages Mr. Mahin made a trip about the
want or will perform some needful more than one per cent, and he asked city with Mr. Watt before the meet
service." In addition, he said, adver- his hearers if they thought this was ing and took occasion to compliment
tising must be prepared so as to ap- co-operation properly balanced. his hearers on the beauties of our
peal to the reader and no advertiser "Co-operation," said he, "in advcr River Front and the condition of tha
can expect permanent benefits from tising and selling is just as necessary streets.
an ad. that draws people to his store as old Dr. Webster and the Rev. Dr.
under the false pretense of offering for Hills found it in Chicago, when the STEELWORKER HURT
sale goods that he has not or which great preacher was serving there. Dr.
are not up to the standard described. Webster was as big a man in medicine Henry Miner, 52 years old, of 22#
Co-operation Needed as Dr. Hills was in religion. When Dr. Bailey street, Steelton, was Injured at
Mr. Mahin said that co-operation Hills went to Dr. Webster to thank the Central Iron and Steel Company
between advertising and the salesman him for saving his wife's life and to this afternoon when a heavy piece ofi
are absolutely necessary if the joint pay the doctor bill, Dr. Webster said: iron fell on his right foot.
|OF IMPORTANCE ONLY TO WOMEN]
r Think What it Will Mean to YOIK
to be free henceforth from
HOT FLASHES DIZZINESS-
SEVERE NERVOUSNESS
HEADACHES AND
BACKACHES
with which you have been afflicted at times. These symptoms are danger
signals. Nature sends them as a warning of the coming of that period in a
woman's life when her delicate organism is to change in an important
manner. This is the time when a woman should be strong and nealthy
unless- serious consequences are to follow.
DR. PIERCE'S
Favorite Pre
oln Tablet or Liquid Form)
Helps All Women Over Times of Danger and Dread
This famous Prescription, consisting of the natural rem- I U| .
edies our forests provide—without alcohol or narcotics—is Boon to Woman-Kind
prepared by a physician of vast experience and highly skilled «i conß ider —"N.
in the treatment of the troubles to which women are so subject Dr. Pierce's / \
Dr. Pierce' 3 Famous Prescription has been sold in liquid form for Prescription \
forty years, always helping its thousands of users. It can now be a great boon J
had in tablet or liquid form from all medicine dealers. Or send 50 to womu- / Iff TlMg, I
one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce, and a trial box of the tablets will be kind for fe- I *3c I
mailed to you. ma,e I *•}£ 7 WfQ- I
• nets ana con- I Wj i^V
Every woman is invited to write for strictly confidential advice Also* for °in- \ naV
concerning her physical trouble#. The advice will be riven, en- flammatlon \ JJf\l&3
tirely without cost, by a physician who makes the Ills of women and troubles \
his specialty. Address: Dr. Pierce. Invalids' Hotel. Buffaiu, N.Y. fernMns,'^.—
Dr. Pierce'« Pleasant Pelleti regulate and invigorate stomach uiftcan'st.
kver and bowel*. Tiny, tugar-coated; pleasant at candy. Certxmdaltju. wm Hillbb
MARCH 11,1914.
5