Re&diixcffSrVi&weiv ojvdodl ike KxredKj I^s bSBP *>. y n%\ -^t | "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" I Copyright by International IVewa Service While Helen was in a state of in decision, hesitating to mention the course in interior decorating, and yet bulletins and asking ques tions of everyone she knew, Frances and Carp asked Helen and Warren down to an informal afternoon tea. Well did Helen remember the first tea she attended under France's espionage. Then things had seemed so different somehow; now she and Frances were such close friends that nothing she did seemed queer to Helen. Then she had been forced to defend Frances and her friends from Warren's criticism, but she had seen Warren talk gaily with Frances and light a cigarette for her, in spite of the fact that he condemned Frances and would have been shocked if Helen had suggested doing such a thing herself. As Warren dressed for the affair they talked as usual. Their manner of living had so closely approached the normal of late that Helen had been almost happy again. She had decided not to speak of the all important sub ject to Warren unless he broached it *.o her, and then she could always say that she was undecided as to which course to take—interior decorating or costume designing. She might even ask Warren to help her'choose. Warren, in the midst of struggling into a collar, remarked'suddenly, "Oh, by the way, Helen, now that you are so determined to become a modern woman, I suppose you will smoke with the others this afternoon. "I never have, why should I?" She i asked calmly. "Because it would fit in so well with 1 your aspirations." "Now. Warren, do you think that's fair? I've known Frances for a long time and I love her dearly, but 1 don't necessarily have to imitate her | in things I don't care to do." Warren said nothing to this, only remarked, "Well, in my opinion, I women who smoke are fools. If they j really liked it and smoked for the I enjoyment of the thing as men do, I could almost admire them for doing it. But the manner that they use shows only too plainly that they do it be- j cause it looks foreign and wicked. | Nine out of them do it be cause they think they must, not be- ' cause they go to it like a man does." i Helen had nothing to say to this: i she had decided not to answer lest j she prolong the conversation. The minute that Helen entered the , studio that afternoon she felt a lack of confidence in herself that surprised 1 and almost alarmed her. She looked j around the great room and saw no one outside of Carp and Frances that she knew. Anne and Jack were not there, | and some of the people Helen had | met only once or twice. She wished vaguely that she had i not come at all. She loved Carp and j Frances, but individually, not collec- j She wondered how she would , nave felt if she had entered this as- | semblage to-day with the knowledge: that she was a successful business Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton tTJ'VERY variation of the P A plaited skirt is fashion able and this frock that is made of a striped challis is just as pretty and attractive as it can be, simple enough-for morning wear and dressy enough to be worn for the simple luncheon or occasions of that sort. The collar and cuffs are of silk. The straight skirt is cut in two pieces with seams at the 6ides and it can be made with or without the pockets. The blouse tells its own story. The novel feature is found in the applied yoke portions arranged over the tucked fronts. You could use the blouse for the separate waist a* well as for the entire frock and separate blouses always are needed. For the 16 year size the blouse will require, yards of ma terial 36 inches wide, 2 yards 44, with % yard 36 for the collar and cuffs. For the skirt will be needed, 4% yards 36, 4 yards 44. The May Manton pattern of the blouse No. 9338 and of the skirt No. 9237 both are cut in I sizes for 16 and 18 years. I They will be mailed to any ad- It dress by the Fashion Depart- U ment of this paper, on receipt of fifteen cents for each. The Quinine That Does Not Cause Nervousness or Ringing in Head Because of its Tonic and Laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE can be taken by anyone without causing nervousness or ringing in the head. It removes the cause of Colds, Grip and Headache. Used whenever Quinine is needed. —but remember there Is Only One "Bromo Quinine" That Is the Original Laxative Bromo Quinine This Signature en Every Box Uamt/ thm World Ovmr 1m V/ KS 23 °' fc>. TUESDAY EVENING, woman, ready to take her place among the workers everywhere. ! Almost the first person that Helen saw was that queer little girl, Viva Nesbltt. She wore a perfectly plain I little black velvet dress, and her j strange little face was colorless with I the exception of her red mouth. Helen thought that there was no color at all about her until when the girl turned she displayed tiny black slip pers with scarlet heels. Her ankles were very slim and cov ered with the frailest of black silk stockings. She was an exotic little thing with her bored little face and her swinging jet ear rings and the rings of dark hair clinging to her cheeks and forehead. Helen was curi ous to see how she would take to this crowd, but at that moment Frances came across to her and she hadn't time for any more conjectures. It wasn't until later that Helen had a chance to speak to Vivi; then, some how she became one of a group about the girl who was discussing in her quaint, atrociously impertinent man ner, problems of life that she knew nothing about. "There is really no object in life for the woman of yesterday." she said, sagely. "What the world wants is not so much the wife and mother, but the woman who can do things; who is cre ative; who in a gense represents the modern spirit. I believe that all women who marry have the right to make a career out of marriage, and those who are left behind in the struggle will be the stay-at-homes, the women who have not made good in the larger things, and must, therefore, take sec ond place and bring up the future generations." Helen was too sensible not to real ize that the girl was talking wildly about something she knew nothing about, and that it was absurd to no tice what she was saying or to take i it seriously. But it struck Helen on a raw point and she could not help feel- | ing hurt and helplessly furious at' what the girl was saying. Further- | more, every man in the place was watching her—listening to her non sense and admiring her blatant con ceit. One of the men stood near Helen j and she heard him remark to the I woman next to him: "Gati, she's a wonder, that kid. Looks like an orchid or a poppy. I never saw anything so flagrantly de signed to attract attention as her get up. and yet she is more simply dressed than any other woman in the room. I'll het anything that she'll get what she wants out of life, and she won't have to search very hard, either." "What do you think marriage means, then Miss Nesbitt?" one of the men asked smiling. "The opportunity to get things out of the world tlyough the sight in an other person's eyes," the girl returned promptly. And Helen wondered if after all that definition was not rather a masterpiece. The girl must have some kind of a brain, filled with plenty of thoughts if one could get at them. (Watcli for the Next Installment of tills Interesting Series) Tftje^k MidTa/" g PURROUCHSjgMggft Copyright by Frank A. Muney Co. (Continued.) | Might they not still open the way to freedom? If we acted In time, A Continuous Line of Impregnable For tifications Circles the Outer Slopes. might we not even yet escape before the general alarm was sounded? We could at least try. "What will the fellow do first, Thu via V" I asked. "How long will it be before they may return for us?" "He will go directly to the father of therns, old Matai Shang. He may hare to wait for an audience, but since he is Tery high among the lesser theras—in fact, a thorlan among them —it will not be long that Matai Shang will keep him waiting. "Then, if the father of therns puts credence in his story, another hour will see the galleries and chambers, the courts and gardens filled with searchers." "What we do, then, must be done within an hour. What is the best way, Thuvia, the shortest way out of this celestial hades?" "Straight to the top of the cliffs, prince," she replied, "and then through the gardens to the inner courts. From there our way wlil lie withi* the tem ples of the therns and across them to the outer courts. Then the ramparts— O prince, it Is hopeless! Ten thousand warriors could not hew a way to lib erty from out this awful place! "Since the beginning of time, little by little, stone by stone, have the therns been ever adding to the de fenses of their stronghold. A continu ous line of impregnable fortifications circles the outer slopes of the moun tains of Otz. "Within the templrs that lie behind the ramparts a million fighting men are ever ready. The courts and gar dens are filled with slaves, with wom en and with children. "Xone could go a stone's throw with out detection." "If there is no other way, Thuvia. why dwell upon the difficulties of this? We must face them." "Can we not better make the at tempt after dark?" asked Tars Tarkas. "There would seem to be no chance by day." "There would be a little better chance by night, but even then the ramparts are well guarded, possibly better than by day. There are fewer abroad in the courts and gardens, though," said Thuvia. "What is the hour?" I asked. "It was midnight when you released me from my chains," said Thuvia. "Two hours later we reached the store room. There you slept for fourteen i hours. It must now be nearly sun- j down again. Come; we will go to; some necrby window In the cliff and make sure." So saying, she led the way through winding corridors until at a sudden turn we came upon an opening which overlooked the valley Dor. At our right the sun was setting, a huge red orb. below the western range of Otz. A little below u stood, the holy thern on watch upon his balcony. His scar let robe of office was pulled tight about him in anticipation of the cold that comes so suddenly with darkness as the sun sets. So rare Is the atmosphere of Mars that it absorbs very little heat from the sun. During the daylight hours it Is always extremely hot; at night it is Intensely cold. Nor does the thin atmosphere refract the sun's rays or diffuse its light as upon earth. The declining sun lighted brilliantly the eastern banks of ICorus, the crim son sward, the gorgeous forest. Be neath the trees we saw feeding many herds of plant men. Thuvia lost no time iu leading us to ward the corridor which winds back and forth up through the cliffs toward^ HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH the suriaeo tuousnuda of fget above , the level on which we had been. I Twice great banths, wandering loose | through the galleries, blocked our I progress, but in each Instance Thuvia S spoke a low word of command, and ! the snarling beasts slunk sullenly ; away. | "If you can dissolve all our obsta cles as easily as you master these fierce brutes I can see no difficulties in our way," I said to the girl, smiling. do you do it?" She laughed and then shuddered. "I do not quite know," she said. "When first I came here 1 angered Sator Throg because I repulsed him. He ordered me thrown into one of the great pits in the Inner gardens. It was filled with banths. "In my own country I had been ac customed to command. Something in my voice, I do not know what, cowed the beasts as they sprang to attack me. "Instead of tearing me to pieces, as i Sator Throg had desired, they fawned jat my feet. So greatly were Sator Throg and his friends amused by the sight that they kept me to train and | handle the terrible creatures. I know ■ them all by name. ! "There are many of them wandering I through these lower regions. They are the scavengers. Many prisoners die here in their chdlns. The banths solve the problem of sanitation, at least in ; this respect. j "In the gardens and temples above I they are kept In pits. The therns fea<.' I them. It is because of the banths that they seldom venture below ground ex j cept as their duties call them.'* | An idea occurred to me, suggested by what Thuvia had just said. "Why not take a number of banths and set them loose before us above ground?" I asked. Thuvia laughed. "It would distract attention from us. I am sure," she said. She commenced calling in a lwfciz£- | song voice that was half puif. She continued this as we wound our tedi ous way through the maze of subter ranean passages and chambers. Presently soft padded feet sounded •close behiud us, and ns I turned 1 saw a pair of great green eyes shining In ; the dark shadows at our rear. From i a diverging tunnel a sinuous, tawny I form crept stealthily toward us. Low growls and angry snarls as sailed our cars on every side as we hastened on, and one by one the fero cious creatures answered the call of their mistress. She spoke a word to each as it Joined us. Like well schooled terriers, they paced the corridors with us, but I could not help but note the lathering jowls nor the hungry expressions with which the terrible beasts eyed Tars Tarkas and myself. Soon we were entirely surrounded by some fifty of the brutes. Two walked close on either side of Thuvia, as guards might walk. The sleek sides of others now and then touched my own naked llmba. It was a strange experience, the al most noiseless passage of naked hu man feet and padded paws; the golden walls splashed with precious stones; the dim light cast by the tiny radium bulbs set at considerable distances along the roof; the huge, maned beasts of prey crowding with low growls about us; the mighty green warrior towering high above us all; myself crowned with the priceless diadem of a holy thern, and leading the proces sion the beautiful girl Thuvia. I shall not soon forget it. Presently we approached a great chamber more brightly lighted than the corridors. Thuvia halted us. Quietly she stole toward the entrance and glanced within. Then she mo tioned us to follow her. The room was filled with specimens of the strange beings that inhabit tliis underworld, a heterogeneous collectloh of hybrids—the offspring of the pris oners from the outside world, red and green Martians and the white race of therns. Picking our way carefully, we i threaded a winding path across the chamber, the great banths sniffing hungrily at the tempting prey spread before them in such tantalizing and defenseless profusion. Several times we passed the en trances to other chambers similarly peopled, and twice again we were com pelled to cross directly through them. In others were chained prisoners and beasts. "Why is it that we see no therns?" I asked of Thuvia. 1 (To Be Continued.) it3T Good Printing The Telegraph Printing Co. EARLY MARRIAGES OFTEN FAILURES Child Wives Apt to Regard Home as Prison and Hus band as Tyrant By DOROTHY DIX ! A silly little goose of a girl has been I haled into the divorce court by her hus- I band because she neglected her home J and her baby. In her defense the young i woman makes this excuse for herself: "Jim barely nineteen now. I ain j young and pretty, and I just want to j have Borne pleasure in life, I want to I go around with the other girls to par- I lies, and the theater, and to dance, and I play tennis, and have a good time. I | love my husband and my baby, but my i husband hasn't got any right to expect me to be always tied down to a house, cooking and sewing and scrubbing, and to want no other amusement except wheeling out a baby perambulator. Why, 1 am nothing but a girl even if I am married and have a baby." And there you have as pertinent an illustration as you could wish of one of the reasons why there are so many di vorces. It's youth. Youth that must be served, that cries out for its joy and laughter, its fun and playtime be fore age comes to take the spring out of its step and the effervescence out of its soul. It's youth whose weak should ers are not strong enough to bear the heavy burdens of life. After KUMIIIIIK Into Matrimony nt 10, Girl* Naturally Find It Dull There's nothing the matter with this little girl, as there is nothing the mat ter with hundreds like her who make failures as wives and mothers, except j that they have rushed into matrimony before they were ready for it. They are I miserable, fretting, whining, complain- I ing wives and neglectful mothers, be cause they are children who have left | their play to assume the responsibil- I ities of grown people, and they are ! pining to be back amusing themselves. It' you will look about among your acquaintances you will see that the pleasure mad women, the women who are crazed over society, who can never I get enough card playing, or dancing, | or restaurant or theater-going, are in variably women who married when they were very young. These women regard home as a prison, and their one idea of having a good time is to get away from it. They look upon their husbands and children as burdens, and are forever complaining about the dull monotony of domesticity. The reason is perfectly plain. They married before they had had their play time of life, before they had had their ■ill of admiration and gadding about, i herefore, the things that they have missed have alway had a fatal lure for I them. On the other hand, you will see that no women are so domestic, such home keepers, such admirable wives and i mothers as the women who have mar- ] ried late and who have had a long and j happy girlhood. These have been sati ated with society and admiration, and are glad to turn from Its froth to the real things of existence. These women know that there is no other good time on earth like the good time that one has in building up a home. They know that the excitement j of the most thrilling flirtation does not 1 send the same tingle along a woman's ' veins as does the look of love in the eyes of iter husband. .Marriage 1M TOO lllg n Proposition For Anyone Hut Mature Meu nml Women ■ To tneni children are not tiresome j little brats that keep a woman from I doing the things she wants to do. They ' are the most absorbing and fascinating ] study on earth, and taking care of them | is not a bore. It's a priviiug* _iod! grants the women He blesses. Just as nature ordained milk fori babies and strong meat for men. so there are certain occupations that are blessings or curses, according to age. | Domesticity is one of these, and those [ who rush into it untimely nearlv al- i ways make havoc of it. Marriage is a! full grown man's and woman's propo sition and children have no business ' mixing up with it. We have long realized this from the masculine point of view, as is snot, ui by the old proverb that says that no man should marry until he has sown his wild oats. The same principle ap- i plies with equal force to women. No girl should marry until she lias had I her innocent little fling, and is good and tired of it, and ready to settle down. Discontented anil Fretful Wlvea Have Only One Oonl In l.lfe—the Divorce Court It takes a great many things to make a happy home but above all It takes a contented woman, and that the child wife never Is. She has the im pulses and desires of her age, and it is not in human nature for her to be sat isfied to walk the floor with a crying baby while her girl friends are fox trotting in the cabaret, or to pass a pleasant evening dining husband's socks when she knows that her chums are off to theater and opera. Small wonder that when these girl children find out that marriage means sacrifice and self-denial, and labor and trouble, instead of being just a game as when they "played house" with their dollies and little tea sets, they so often knock over the apple cart. As a first aid to divorce, there Is nothing equal to an early marriage. Letter List LIST OF BETTERS REMAINING IN the Post Office, at Harrisburg, Pa., for the week ending February 17, 1917: Indies' List Mrs. Wilbur Adams. Ruth Book, Mrs. Leydia Burden, Mrs. Earl Causman, Mrs. M. M. Duncan. Mrs. Lily Keefer, Lily A. Reefer, Mrs. Ueorge H. Lucas, Florence Mclnterifff, Mrs William Moyer, Maria Porter, Mrs. Ella Richardson, Mrs. Emma Seering, Tillie Seibert, Bertha Skiner, Lucy Smith Mrs. Frank Strine, Alice Thomas, Mrs J. A. Traub, Mrs. Darena Walforth. Gentlemen's List Jay Aldrich, N. T. Bickley, John A. Burger, Elmer H Burkhart, Jack Cook, Albert Cross, II Elfman, John Flananagan,Bitot- Garza, E. Garrett, Ell R. Garrett, Bitor Garza F. Gerhardt, Gliota Wapolitana. James Kaser, H. Kipple. G. J. Kissinger, R. II Krips, Elmer McClain, P. U McDermott, M. J. McKeon, Mr. Mctiocklin, John B. Miller, Robert Milliken, Y. T. Mytle B L Murray, William Patterson, John j! Piper, Herbert E. Pray, R. B. Proad, I'rank Ralston, Robert Raylon, Richard E. Revnolds, David Rlcherson (2), Ralph Riegle, Rev. Salvador, Henry Schmidt, C. Sheler, P. E. Shoap, D. W Sholly (2), J. 1,. V. Smith, Ollle Smith, Kenneth Stetson, L Stober, C. T. Tavlor W. E. Topin, C. A. Wagner, A. F. Welty! James White, Wm. Work, Victor E Young. Foreign Catherine Morris, Salva tore Srena. Firms Schaeffer Heirs, Manager Temple Theater. Persons should Invariably have their mail matter addressed to their street and number, thereby insuring prompt delivery by the carriers. FRANK C. SITES, Postmaster. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS The United States Civil Service Com mission announces the following ex aminations to be held in this city on the dates named; Electrical machin ist, March 13; Engineer of tests (male), March 20; foreman brick maker (male), March 20; aid (male), bureau of standards, March 21-22. Application papers and further in formation concerning the above ex aminations can be secured from the secretary, board of examiners, Har risburg Past Office. FEBRUARY 20, 1917. Copyright, 1913, by Ooubleday,"pa a A Ce. (Continued.) I "All the surface diggings are taken j up," our friend told us, "so now you j have to dig deep. It's about four feet | down where I'm working. It'll prob j ably be deeper up here. You'd better ! move back where you were." j Yank stretched himself upright. | "Look here," he said decidedly, "let's J get a little sense into ourselves. Here's I our pore old bosses standing with their packs on and we no place to stay I and no diuner, and we're scratchin' | away at this bar like a lot of fool hens. ; There's other days com in'." Johnny and I agreed with the com [ mon sense of the thins, but reluctant- J We Actually Panned Our First Gold! ly. Now that we knew how. our en thusiasm surged up again. We want ed to get at it. The stranger's eyes twinkled sympathetically. "Here, boys," satd he, "I know Just how you feel. Come with me." He snatched up our bucket and strode back to his own claim, where he filled the receptacle with some of the earth he had thrown out. "Oo pan that," he advised us kindly. We rated to the water and once more stirreu about the heavy contents of the pail until they had floated off with the water. In the bottom lay a 2ne black residue, and in that residue glittered (he tiny yellow particles. We bad actually panned our first gold! Our friend examined it critically. "That's about a twelve cent pan." be adjudged it. Somehow in a vague way rve had unreasonably expected millions at a twist of the wrist, and the words, "12 cents,'" had a rankly penurious sonnd to us. However, the miner pa tiently explained that a twelve cent pan was a very good one, and indubi tably It was real gold. Yank, being older and less excitable, had not accompanied us to the water side. "Well, lys," he drawled, "that 12 cents is highly satisfactory, of course, but in the meantime we've lost about fGOO worth of boss and grub." Surely enough, our animals had tired of waiting for us and had moved out packs and all. We hastily shouldered our implements. "Don't yon want to keep this claim next me?" inquired our acquaintance. We stopped. "Surely!" I replied. "But how do we do It?" "Just leave your pick and shovel In the hole." "Won't some one steal them?" "Xo." "What's to prevent?" I asked a little skeptically. "Miner's law," he replied. We almost Immediately got trace of our strayed animals, as a number of ; men hail seen them going upstream. In fact, we had no difficulty whatever in finding them, for they had simply followed up the rough stream bed be tween the canyon walls until it had opened up to a gentler slope and a hanging garden of grass and flowers. Here they had turned aside and were feeding. We caught them and were Just heading them back when Yank stopped short. "What's the matter with this here?" he inquired. "Here's feed and water near, and It ain't so very far back to the diggings." We looked about us for the first time with seeing eyes. The little up sloping meadow was blue and dull red with flowers, below us the stream brawled foam flecked among black rocks, the high hills rose up to meet the sky, and at our backs across the way the pines stood thick serried. Far up in the blue heavens some birds Were circling slowly. Somehow the leisurely swing of these unhasting birds struck from us the feverish hurry that had lately fllled our souls. We drew deep breaths, and for the first time the great peace and majesty of these California mountains cooled our spirits. "I think it'sja bully place, Yank," snid Johnny soberly, "and that little bench up above us looks flat." We clambered across the slant of the flower spangled meadow to the bench, Just within the fringe of the pines. It proved to be flat, and from the edge of It down the hill seeped a little spring marked by the feathery bracken. We entered a cool green place, peopled with shadows and the rare, considered notes of soft voiced birds. Just over our threshold, as It were, was the sun lit, chirpy, buzzing, bright colored busy world. Overhead a wind of many voices hummed through the pine tops. The golden sunlight flooded the moun tains opposite, flashed from the stream, lay languorous on the meadow. Long bars of it slanted through an unguess ed gap in the hills behind us to touch with magic the very tops of the trees over our heads. The sheen of the pre cious metal was over the land. CHAPTER XIII. The Firt Gold. WE arose before daylight, pick eted our horses, left our dishes unwashed and hur ried down to the diggings Just at sunup, carrying our gold pans, or "washbowls," and our extra tools. The bar was as yet deserted. We set to work with a will, taking turns with the pickax and the two shovels. I must confess that our speed slowed down considerably after the first wild, burst, but we kept at it steadily. It was hard work, and there Is no deny ing it, Just the sort of plain hard work the day laborer does when he digs sewer trenches in the city streets, only worse, perhaps, owing to the nature of the soil. It had struck me since that those few years of hard labor In the diggings, from '49 to '53 or '54, saw more actual manual toil accomplished than was ever before performed in the same time by the same number of men. The discouragement of those re turning we now understood* l&hertmd expected to take the gold without toil and were dismayed at the labor it had .required. At any rate, we thought we were doing our share that morning, especially after the sun came up. We wielded our Implements manfully, piled our debris to one side and gradually achieved a sort of crumbling uncertain excavation reluctant to stay emptied. About an hour after our arrival the other miners began to appear, smoking their pipes. They stretched themselves lazily, spat upon their hands and set to. Our friend of the day before nod ded at us cheerfully and hopped down Into his hole. We removed what seemed to us tons of rock. About noon. Just as we were thinking rather dispiritedly of knock lug off work for a lunch, which in our early morning eagerness \ys had for gotten to bring, Johnny tilTned up a shovelful whose lower third consisted of the pulverized bluish clay. We promptly forgot both lunch and our own weariness. "Hey!" shouted our friend, scram bling from his own claim. "Easy with the rocks! What are you conducting here, a volcano?" He peered down at us. "Pay dirt, hey? Well, take it easy. It won't run away." Take it easy! As well ask us to quit entirely! We tore at the rubble, which apgravatingly and obstinately cascad ed down upon us from the sides. We scraped eagerly for more of that blue clay. At last we had filled our three pans with a rather mixed lot of the dirt and raced to the river. Johnny fell over a bowlder and scattered his panful far and wide. His manner of ■cuttllng back to the hole after more reminded me Irresistibly of the way a contestant in a candle fcace hurries back to the starting point to get his candle relighted. We panned that dirt clumsily and hastily enough and undoubtedly lost much valuable sand overside, but we ended each with a string of color. We crowded together, comparing our pans. Then we went crazy. I suppose we had about a quarter of a dollar's worth of gold between us, but that was not the point. The long Journey with all Its hardships and adventures, the toil, the uncertainty, the hopes, the disap pointments and reactions had at last their visible tangible conclusion. The tiny flecks of gold were a symbol. We yapped aloud, we kicked up wr heels, we shook hands, we Anally Joined hands and dan'— ' --Mind and around. (To Be Continued.) Suggestion on Eczema .Jt W| U J"t few tDomeata to ttep hi And mk us what our experience hai been in the way of grateful customers with the tooth. Inf wuh of oil*. D. D. I), tsc, soc and ti.oo. Tour money back unless the lint bottle te uevei you. PD.D. Liciviici Waah Oortraa, The Druggist. > J. Kelson Clark, Druggist 7