16 Saaoioenffl'JnTeßg-sRS; By BEATRICE FAIRFAX ■ ith;i ci>i 11 1 • ti nn I'liml |11 .■ iii »:i should be forbidden, it is on the wed- I fling day. Though one may, like the I lugubrious Pleasant Riderhood, in [ "Our Mutual Friend." see in a wed- j ding only two people taking out aj license to quarrel and tight; though I one may, through personal experience. I deem single life more blessed: or, be- i iog single, envy those at the altar; or though one may have suffered a re- j bereavement, one should not. | under any or all circumstances, show ! hy look or garb anything but felicitous ' condition at a wedding. It is the most important day in the lives of at least two people. What- 1 ever their troubles, sorrows and dis appointments in the past, they stand j at the threshold of a new opportunity for joy. They are beginning life all | ' over again, and under the happiest of : iftlT conditions, for Love presides. 1 Forgot Them t If there have been sorrows, every i .sore present should forget them. If I « fel Because it cleans everything you can quickly make your oilcloth or linoleum g Igsqs GOLD DUST I Always ready for its endless uses. §*gg Imm 5c and larger packages. LZ ITHE UK. FfITPRAMK COWPAHYT HARRISBURG WOMAN FINDS QUICK RELIEF FROM STOMACH AILMENTS IVlary Wheeler Gains in Weight | After Taking Mayr's Won derful Remedy, Mary Wheeler, of 706 Green street, | Harrlsburg, Penna,, for a long time was a victim of stomach disorders. She tried many treatments and found ; nothing; that could help her. At last she came upon Mayr's Won- j il.erflil Stomach Remedy and quickly found herself on the way to health, i Sh» wrote: "I received your wonderful stomach remedy. T tool< it and it acted just iis you said it would. I had suffered with : my stomach for nearly a year and! doctored all the time. The first dose of your treatment gave me relief. 1 j feel like now. 1 had awful distress; after eating and suffered from bloat- | and gas, but now I feel fine, am j gaining in weight and can eat any-: thing." This is a typical letter from the I SAVES ELDERLY PEOPLE FROM KIDNEY AND BLADDER MISERIES Sleep Disturbing Bladder Weaknesses, Backache. Stiff Joints, Rheu matic Pains Disappear After Few Doses are Taken While people along In yeans arei naturally more subject to weak kid neys, they can avoid the tortures of I backache, and rheumatism, anil be leaved th> annoyance of getting up at jiight with disagreeable bladder dis orders, for the new discovery, Crox orie, quickly relieves the most scverej nnd obstinate cases. Croxone cures these conditions be-! cause it removes the cause. It is the most wonderful remedy ever devised for ridding the system of uric acid. Ht is entirely different from all other remedies. It is not like anything else ever used for the purpose. Oroxone makes the kidneys filter the blood and *ift out all the poisonous acids and vaste matter that cause these trou bles. It soaks right in and cleans out the M.opped-up, inactive kidneys like wa ter does a sponge, dissolves, and drives out every particle of uric acid CATARRH SUFFERERS' HERE'S II QUICK CURE! OPENS CLOGSEDIIOSE MD HEAD I! Offi In One Minute Your Stuffy Nose and Heiul Clears, Sneezing and Nose Running Cease, Dull Headache Goes. Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just to try It—Apply a little tn the nostrlld end Instantly your clogged nose and stopped air passages of the. head will open; you will breathe freely; dull ness and headache disappear. By morning' the catarrh, cold-in-hea ' or catarrhal sore will he gone. End such misery iiant it is more important to show re j spcct for the living by refusing to im- I pose marks of bereavement on the public; but the advocates of this cus tom refuse to pay heed to the good of those who survive. Fashion demands crepe so they swathe themselves in this most expensive attire at a time when sickness and death have already made such exhaustive demands on the purse that simple consideration for the living should forbid further in roads. 11 one wears mourning or not is one s privilege but it is never one's privi lege to wear such marks of woe at a wedding. Tf one is too selfish to lav aside such trappings for the sake of! others, then ono should stay at home. If grief is to be nursed, home is the place to nurse it. Under no con ditions should it be trotted out and exhibited at a wedding. thousands received from those wbo have taken Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy. The first dose of this re markable remedy convinces—no long treatment. It clears the digestive tract of mucoid accretions and removes poisonous matter. It brings swift relief to suf ferers from ailments of the stomach, liver and bowels. Many declare it has saved them from dangerous operations and many are sure it has saved their lives. Because of the remarkable success of Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy there are many imitators, so be cau tious. Be sure it MAYR'S. Go to Geo. A. Gorgas' drug store and ask about the wonderful benefits it has been accomplishing among people they know—or send to Geo. IT. Mayr, Mfg. rhemist. li>4-186 Whiting street, Chi cago. Til., for free book on stomach ailments and many grateful letters from people who have been restored. Any druggist can tell you its marvelous results.—Advertisement. and other poisonous impurities that lodge in the joints and muscles and cause rheumatism. It neutralizes the urine so it no longer irritates the ; bladder, overcomes unnecessary break -1 ing of sleep and restores the kidneys and bladder to health and strength. it matters not how long you have [suffered, how old you are, or what 1 else you have used. The very prin | ciple of ! practically impossible to take it into I the human system without results. I I There is nothing else on earth like lit. it starts to work the minute you I take it and relieves you the first time , you use it, and all your misery and suffering soon disappear. You can secure an original package of Croxone !at trifling cost from any first-class [ druggist. All druggists are authorized to personally return the purchase price jif it fails in a single case. Adve r-1 tisement. at any drug store. This sweet, frag rant balm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the in flamed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, head and throat; clears the air passages; stops nasty dis charges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes Immediately. iJon't lay awake to-night struggling tor breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catafrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul niueous dropping Into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly needless. Put your faith—Just once—in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or ca tarrh will surely disappear Advertisement. TIE TWO WIDE TUCKS GREARY FMED Stylish Design For One of the Latest Skirts For Spring 8*33 Two-PJece Tucked Slcirt, 22 to 30 waist. With high or natural waist link. The skirt that is cut in two pieces is a ' favorite for all the simpler gowns. This one with its two wide tucks is well adapted to washable materials as well as to tnose of silk and of wool. The two wide tucka give breadth where fashion requirea breadth yet are simple and mean no difficulty in the making and tucks alwava launder well. In the picture, striped cotton 6ponge of light weight is shown but the skirt is just as well adapted to taffeta and to foulard. For the medium size, the skirt will re quire 5 yds. of material 27, 3% yds. 36 or 44 tn. wide. The width at the lower edge is I yd. and 30 in. The pattern of the skirt 8232 Is c t in sires from 22 to 30 inches waist me ure. It will be mailed to any addrc ;s by tha Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of tut ceuta. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. Madame Ise'bell Say* "Firat Find the Cauae of a Line or Wrinklm Then Correct It" fc.-i ■ ■■ ■ .1 ■ 1 j 00 s HABITS— Part 11. I am going to talk today of little trick* of expression that come from over work ing some muscle of the face, and I am go ing to talk right out to the young girl, for she is the greatest sinner in this respect. I mean the young girl that we meet on the train, that we see in tea rooms, at home, or at school who, when she Is not talking, distorts her face with frowns, twists her mouth, bites her lips and in dulges in other facial gymnastics. 1 think some girls do this through embarrass ment. they fancy it conceals the self con sciousness of which they are accutely aware; in other cases I think there is an Idea that such mannerisms are pretty and desirable. Pouts and frowns may oc casionally sway an enraptured lover, but facial distortions are a dubious method of attracting favorable attention, and their after effects on the countenance Is de plorable. So, my pretty girls. If you are "making np faces," as the children do, to attract attention, I beg you to stop it. Tou will not get the kind of attention you want and the habit will leave unpleasant lines on even your smooth skin. Petulance and bad temper suggest not so much the spoiled beauty, as beauty spoiled. The unthinking may he amused *t the sight of a pretty child in a rage, but no one would wish to live permanent ly with ill temper or with a face that shows the marks of It. So do not get into the habit of simulating any emotion the marks of which you would dread to sit? permanently stamped on your coun tenance. Facial Exercises for Llnea and Wrlnklea. One of the latest ideas in beautifying consists of what are termed fsclal exer cises. These are designed to exercise cer tain muscles of the face that have become weakened by disuse and, by go doing, erase the lines and wrinkles into which the loose sl.ln has fallen. The theory behind this work, the correcting of bad facial habits, is excellent. Find the Cauae of Wrlnklea. I advise my pupils when a line appears In the face always to find the cause of it. It comes, as a rule, either from some un fortunate trick of expression, or from holding the head badly or too constantly in the samo position. Twisting the mouth will make unpleasant lines about it, purs Intt It will bring a little cluster of llnr.' radiating towards the upper lip, and al lowing the lips to habitually droop will mark two distinct lines 'from the corners of the mouth down on the chin. Wliilo these lines are light, they can be erat'-ci by massage, but It must be remembered that they will return unless the facta! habits that formed them are corrected. To be continued. T \ Miss Fairfax Answers Queries chanok vara homk fJICAIt .MISS FAIRFAX: 1 am twenty-two urn! board with my , married sister, who treats me mean. I |Q)range Wee^Xl skies and sunshine of the world-famed (Jrange Land—California. 11 ""■'»"' "Sunkist" oranges slowly ripen beneath the warm kiss of the glowing % m ™ 'oral 9un; l^ey Btore up ra< 7' honey-like juice that makes them so tempting, healthful and delightful. 'Sunkist" are the finest selected oranges grown B Uy t^l6 X ' a^"^°X ° r ozen "~Sale Begins Monday I CMmp "Sunkist" oranges and lemons are carefully picked and packed by workers B who wear white gloves while at work. "Sunkist" fruit I Lemons and Fish This handsome orange spoon Is our exclusive "Sunkist" Pattern. Each spoon is wrapped in the Wm. ill jpnlsL' &fl Rogers Manufacturing Cotlipany's guarantee A-l Standard Plate. Foreach orange spoon desired, send 12 ||jj jjkn After my day's work 1 come home at night and help her but she is never contented with what I do. I beg her to send me to ni,.cht school so 1 may learn something, but she says stay up at night and wait for me. JULIA R. YOUR ssist r is so unjust to you you tvill be lu; tilled in leaving her home. There ars homes for working girls where one may live for very little- and have one's evenings free to devote to study. But, remember, you must make good in your ambition or be a lasting reproach to your family and to your self. THAT DF.I'KXDS ON YOUR PUItSK DKAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am in love with a girl about my age and I would like to know if I take her to the theatre whether 1 should So to a cafe afterwards, and what it Ts customary to order. Do yau think shf would object to a cafe, as she is a church member'.' I am a stran ger to the city ways. COUNTRY BOY. DON'T take, ally girl to such a place . unless you can afford it. Mural I.\ there | is nothing wrong In an after-theatre j lunch, but it Is g-ood for neither of I you, is wholly unnecessary, and is au affectation of the customs of the idle rich that no man and woman with work to do next day, can afford to adopt. REFI'SH IIIM, IIY VI.I. MUA3S DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am 20, and met a man fifteen years my senior, but he looks 60. I have only teen him twice, and he has asked me for my hand. 1 do not love him at all, but my people want me to marry him, because he Is wealthy, while I am poor. I thought If I became engaged to him I could learn to love him, but I find I can't. What shall I do? IN DOUBT. There never was enough wealth In the world to meun happiness to a mar riage without love. • Refuse him, and make your refusal final. Don't let any one l'orce you into a marriage like this. SPEAK IX A I'HIK.MII.V WAY DKAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am a young girl 17 years of age, and having lieai d remarks jiHssed about !my girl friend, I discontinued my [ friendship with a young man whom I I cared for very much. I hu\ e mot him recently and he has shown signs of wanting to renew our acquaintance. Kindly advise me what to do in order to speak to him. WAITING. If you show your friendliness, lie will take the next step If he wants to be reconciled with you. Rut I hope that you are not renewing' a friendship with one who has slandered one of your girl friends. That would be the worst kind of disloyalty. SHE IS UNFAIR DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am 22 and have been keeping com pany with a Rlrl of 18 for the last year and a half. Lately she has taken a dislike to me over something: told her by u friend, which, of course, was not true. I loved her dearly and expected to nmrry her, to which she had agreed. Now she pauses me whenever we ineel .as if she had never known me. J. R. J. CAS T 0 RIA For Infants and Children. Bears the * - The Kind You Have Always Bought Slgn o a / ure All you can do Is to sand her proor that the charges against you ar false. If that falls to win her, try t forget her. She will have proved sli no longer cares for you, even to you satisfaction. SHU IS TIRF.D OF YOU DEAF MISS FAIRFAX: I am In love with a girl of my ag Lately she has been acting quee and as she does not want me t So to parties or dances without her, o not go to any. I have found out sli goes to parties and dances without tel ing me, and as I never asked her sh does not know that I know that st goes. F. \L The next time you know ahe 1« gom to sueh a place, appear there youi self with another young lady. If yoi devotion has bored her, she will gro less bored when she finds you Interest* in another.