5 Life's Problems Are Discussed The perplexities of youth! Older people have a way of treating them very lightly or else of belittling them us matters of no consequence. This is, of course, natural; they, the older people, are very prone to remem ber only their glad hours and to forget the others, and they like to think of extreme youth as an apple blossom period of carc free, light-hearted gayety before the serious responsibilities have had a chance to produce their sobering i nd saddening effects. Ask any of these older persons, man or woman, the question: "Would you like to be seventeen again?" and he or she will almost invariably answer, "1 would give anything to be seventeen again if 3 could know all that I do to-day." And if you press the question and say, "No; I mean would you like to so back and lie seventeen with just the ideas and views you held then?" they will respond, in nine cases out of ten: "Xo-o; 1 don't believe I care to live all my follies and mistakes over again." Which is a tacit acknowledgment of two things: The first, that they know that Seventeen was not a season of much unmixed happiness as they now like to think it, and the second, that when they say they would like to be a boy or a girl figain they really mean that they -would like to look as they did at the age and have the experience iind knowledge that life and fric tion with the world have taught them. The truth is that if Seventeen's capacity for enjoyment is unduiled, its capacity for suffering is equally poignant. Seventeen has no rush light of experience to show that joy and grief are more or less trans itory. Neither has it acquired that philosophy which teaches that all things pass, and that "wrecked hope and passionate pain shall be as tender things of the Springtime sea." Consequently, its doubts and perplexities are the more insistent. I have a little bundle of letters which I sifted out from the others nnd laid aside for consideration. They are all from very young peo ple and they express the same longings and desires. They may be divided into two classes; the first class want to know how to ac quire social ease and grace, how to be popular and admired, .the second class want a receipe for suc cess in life. Here is a letter from one land: "Dear Mrs. Woodrow: 1 am eighteen, graduated, three years pin Heals Pimples and Itching Scalp in About 3 Weeks Head full of fish-like scales. Pim ples red and scales formed. Face in terrible condition. Did not like to go out. Ruined scalp by scratching. Trouble lasted 4 weeks. Wrote for free sample Cuticura Soap and Oint ment. Bought more and was healed. From signed statement of Lloyd C0bb5,4129 Warren St., W. Phila., Pa. Use Cuticura Soapfortoilet purposes, assisted, now and then, by touches of Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal any tendency to irritation, redness or roughness of the skin or scalp. By using these delicate, fragrant super creamy emollients for all toilet pur poses you may prevent many skin and scalp troubles becoming serious. Sample EacbFrce by Mail. Address post card : "Cuticura, Dept. H, Boston." Sold everywhere. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. EDUCATIONAL , "7 -N School of Commerce AND Harrisburg Business College Troup llullillng, 13 S. Market So Bell phone 4S5| Dial -J303 Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Steno type, Typewriting, Civil Service. OUtt OFFEU—Right Training by Specialist* and High Urpde Positions. You take a Business > Course but once. The Meat i what you want. Day and Nishl School. Enter any Monday. J A Fully Accredited College Beautiful Bust and Shoulders y ft on'jolie' Ur 1 ssif"" W °* r * ,c ' entiflcll ' r constructed The dragging weight of an unconflned bint so stretches the | '' supporting uiuscles that the contour of the figure is spoiled. 1T P ut the bu,t b ck Where it be- I Mm in raa lon K s ' Prevent the full bust from !■! .IV V/OIUE having the appearance of flnl>- I L*)}\ //^ I (BE AM JO-L££J biness, eliminate the danger of -= BH" r V : \ . , .• flesh of the shoulder giving a graceful lino to the entire upper body. ■ They are the daintiest and most serviceable garments imagl r \t=vd!Plr VJ nable—come in all materials and styles : Cross Back Honk \a=Ww9l M Front, Surplice, Bandeau, etc. Boned with "Walohn," the rußt '* ,fl bon ' n ß—permittingwashingwithoutremoval.8 — permittingwashingwithoutremoval. : 'IL/ Ilave your dealer show you Bien Jolie Brassieres, if not stock ed, we will gladly send him, prepaid, samples to show you. _mt BENJAMIN & JOHNBS, 81 Warren Street, Newark, N. J. H T °Er of [HOTEL MARTINIQUE) I BROADWAY, 32D STREET, NEW YORK I "' One 11 lock From I'enn ajlvanla Station. Equally Convenient for f/ity § A Yk Amusements, Shop iir* t pins or Business. II 1 ttll 157 Pleasant Rooms, l\bJ , ZJII With Private Bntli, I vp snlins $// $2,50 peh vav v !H1! ''''til O if 257 Excellent Rooms, ilibjiLLiiiiiil b?/I : wlUi Private llath, 'UJ fTjOlt It"??! j/w facing street, south, m IjLffj' "jjj Jy ern exposure, $3.00 PER I)AY Ann T3 Alho Attractive Roomn from SI.OO. tUU oaths j| The Ilea fun rant I'rlcea Are Moat Moderate 600 Rooms SATURDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Father # * Copyright, 1917, International News Service *■' By McManus I'LL tSE A U I UP L( - TSE ON ) [ lit BE ON HOW UO 1 1 I'M 4LAD TOU CAMp.| Tut _ T , r R , DD , r AND HURRN- I I C>UM IF I HAVE To VOU DO - WE ARE TO Tha T V/HAT I j 0 MRS J°NES^I ! tL ago from the public schools and now working in a factory. I am very ambitious, vbut it is along lines entirely apart from my present work, and I can see no means of attaining my ambition. This in a way has worked against my ad vancement and also against my social popularity, for I have fallen into the way of pondering so much over my present and possible fu ture chances that I am always pre occupied and silent even when in company. I would greatly appre ciate any advice you can give me which would help me to get rid of my absentmindedness and preoccu pation." It is a wonderful thing to have great ambitions. This lad should cling to them and believe in them. But he is certaily wasting his time in trying to figure out his present and future chances. His chances are what he makes them. They are not going to be wafted to hint by any set of fortuitous cir cumstances. and they will be the result of devoting himself with all his energy to the task at hand. He owes both his employer and him self something more than preoccu pation about his future possibili ties. You can't get out of to-mor row the things you haven't put into to-day. The next few letters were from ' boys and sirls who complained of : their sufferings from diffidence i i and scll'-consciouness. They love •to go out among companions of ; their own age, and long to enjoy themselves and have a good time ;as others do. But they are always j hindered and humiliated by ex- I treme bashfulness. Of' course, there are many j methods advised for the over- I coming of this unfortunate afflio | tion, but I have been told by the ! persons who suffer from it that j most of them are not very effl ; cacious. To tell persons in the agonizing throes of an exaggerated I self-conseiounesss to forget all : about themselves and try to make I others happy is not very partical | advice. How is it possible to j others happy is not very practical | tongue is guled to the roof of J one's mouth and all one's efforts at S sprightly conversation will only re -1 suit in a few incoherent and stam ] mering phrases? ; Bashfulness, like anything else, | can be conquered by persistent I effort. If a young man—or woman —has the courage to keep himself : habitually on the social tiring line jhe will ultimately win that ease I and grace of manner to which h aspires, and be able to laugh at his former misery. But during the period of his initiation he will feel that being boiled in oil is, by com j parison, merely one of life's minor inconveniences. ! This little bundle of letters has 1 been lying on my desk for days. 1 | had left them unanswered simply I because 1 wanted to give some j definite and practical help, and nothing suggested itself to me other than the usual platitudes. 1 do not know wltather I "sent my soul into the invfflble" or not, \ HAIR COMING OUT? } Dandruff causes a feverish irrita- I tion of the scalp, the hair roots J shrink, loosen and then the hair 1 comes out fast. To stop falling hair i |at once and rid the scalp of every ' particle of dandruff, get a small ; : bottle of Danderine at any drug l I store, for a few cents, pour a little in your hand and rub it into the' scal>. After several applications the 1 hair stops coming out and you can't I find any dandruff. but at any rate I received this let ter yesterday: "Dear Mrs. Woodrow: I have a helpful suggestion lo make, which is my excuse for writing to you. In a. recent article you quote the ad vice given to "Timid Little Woman." is was good. But as an addition to it. here is some very practical in formation (it works), which is sure to help any of your readers who will take the trouble to fol low it. "As you know, our mental hab its—in fact, any of our habits and characteristics—are the result of previously held thoughts. People who suffer from fear, embarrass ment, bashfulness, impatience, an ger, resentment, etc.,, can over come them if they wish to by fol lowing this easy system. "Take, for instance, bashful ness. which is the Little, Big Dreadful , Thing in the lives of so many of the young people. After one of them has been subjected to conditions which brought on the bashful feeling, let him go oft by himself lo a queit place, shut his eyes, and go over in his imagina tion, thought by thought, just how he would like to have appeared at each phase of the situation, pic turing himself as masterful, com posed, fully at ease. "And every time he suffers from j bashfulness. let him repeat the process, always picturing himself as he would have liked to appear. Before long his thoughts will be gin automatically to follow the new thought-grooves, and he will be no more bashful than I am now. "The same scheme applies to all other undesirable traits and | habits. Replace the bad thoughts j by. the desired ideal ones after | every fall, and the old shall pass | away. It cannot be otherwise." MISSION ENTERTAINMENT Newville, Pa., Feb. 2 3.—A foreign | mission entertainment will be held at St. Paul's Lutheran Church to j morrow morning at 10.45 o'clock. I Sermon theme, "Do You Fish?" The cottage prayer meeting will be held on Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Jennie Mentzer. I Daily Fashion J I Hint | H Prepared Especially For This § iSiraWWunfa P if if TYPES FOR DAYTIME WEAR The styles are so varied this sea son that the woman who wears what suits her taste and her figure is fairly sure to find good authority for it. If she likes the oval sklri, she will find it spondored by Cheruit, Doeuillet and other great dressmak ers of Paris. A splendid new devel opment Is exploited in the frock of plaid gingham to the left. The over waist is cut out at the front to show a girdle of plaifl linen to correspond with the plain color underblouse. A hemstitched collar turns over the square neck, while the sleeves are finished with fancy cufTs. In medi um size the dress requires 6 yarda 36-inch gingham and 2 yards 36-inch batiste for the underblouse. The woman who contents herself with the serviceable skirt of serge, wearing it wtih separate waists, will be pleased with the plaited panel effect at the right. The panels may be omitted, however. The straight belt is of self-material. Rose pink linen is used, for the blouse, with col lar finishing the V-shaped neck It fastens in single breasted effect. Three yards 44-inch serge make the skirt, while 2% yards linen are re quired for the waist. First Model: Pictorial Review Costume No. 7612. Sizes, 16 to 20 years. Price, 20c. Second 'Model: Waist No. 759.1 Sizes, 34 to 44 inches bust. Price, 20c. HXRRISBURG TELEGHXPK THEIR MARRIE Copyright by International News Service "Helen, you simply must help mei out of it.' "But, Louise, you know how War-! ren is about things of that kind.! For my part, 1 would be only too delighted to do it. But let me call him up, dear, won't you?" "There isn't time to do that; I'm holding the wire now. Mabel says the boys will be over at her place unless I lind some one to take them." "Very well, then." said Helen, des perately. "I'll take them." "Oh, Helen, you're a perfect dear? All right," she yent on, turning and speaking into the telephone. "My sister-in-law will take them, Mabel, and do take care of that cold. Your voice sounds dreadful. "She says she can never thank you enough, Helen, and you cer tainly were a trump to do it. Don't look so downhearted, child. Warren won't be so unreasonable about so small a thing, will he?" "I don't know," Helen returned. "He may not, but there's the chance that he may. I hate to do anything like asking people to dinner withoout consulting him first." "Does he always consult you?" "No," said Helen slowly. "Well, then, besides, you needn't make any fuss for these boys. They're glad to get any kind of home cooking let me tell you. Why, Bob yas tickled to death when I told him about this crowd of sol diers. He said he was sorry we hadn't done something of the I<ind before. You just tell Warren that if he's the least bit patriotic, he simply must be nice about enter taining Uncle Sam's boys." Helen smiled. "Well, I must hurry along home and see about dinner, r suppose they will be at the house in plenty of time." Helen shook her head. "No, I won't do that. I'll take a chance on it now: besides I don't think he's at the office this afternoon." Helen hurried home, stopping on her way at the florist's for a few simple blossoms. She and Mary put another leaf in the table and added a few extra things to the dinner for that evening. Helen found that in spite of herself she was looking for ward to entertaining the soldiers. She felt a warmth of patriotism that had not been hers before. Now if Warren would only be nice and genial! Her great worry was that he would act formally with the boys and make them hopelessly uncom fortable. Warren often did this on purpose to punish her, when she happened to do something without discussing it with him first, and he wished to humble her to the dust. But Helen weni ahead on her own volition, hoping vaguely that Warren would come home before the boys arrived. Then the worst of the thing would be over, and even if he decided to act frigid she would, in a sense, be prepared for it. Finally everything in the dining room was ready arl Helen went into her own room to dress. She got out the red dress that had been so striking when it was new. It was old now and she seldom wore it, but its color was still fresh and becoming, and it looked as though she wanted to look nice for the boys. She was in the midst of her Daily Dot Puzzle ie I io 17. • 2 9 3, •19 28* • 16* ly *32 • 2o 4 z, *" • 3t> ' 4 * ■ " .34 IS . 23 *3* 8* * • . 35 7.3 • h *■ 6. .37 5. *3® 4. V l< | 47 4o f ' 4645 3 V 40. • • ,4, V ,4Q 44 , V '* • -4 .1 .5, \ N 52 ss V 0 K'mt Draw from one to two and so on to the cnO. dressing when slie heard Warren come in. "Hello," he called. "I came home! J early tonight; thought we might go! | out somewhere. How about it?" And j then us he came into the room! | where Helen was and saw her i gown, he whistled surprisedly. j "Whew, why the fancy dress get ! up?" "Well, dear, I have asked two sol -1 dier boys to come here tonight. Louise and Mubel Garrison were to j divide a crowd between them, and Mabel was taken down with a cold, i so I told Louise I'd help her out." ! "And I suppose that necessitated! i the ridiculous get-up and so forth,"| I Warren remarked sarcastically. j "Why, Warren, this is just an old! I dress; I thought I'd make the boys j feel more at home if 1 wore some-! i thing bright." It's the most conspicuous dress! you ever wore in your life, and you I j know it." "Well, I have time to change ifj ! you'd rather." i "No, certainly not, wear what you] please. I don't care." "I didn't think you'd mind sol much, Warren. In a way. I think! ' we ought to. do things like that,! it's such a little thing, after all." ; "I've told you that I don't think I ; the boys care about it, and 1 think i j you women are running such niat-i i ters into the ground, as you always j j do." "Well, after all, Warren, 1 proni-| i ised more to help Louise out than! | for any other reason, but I've been ' I thinking all afternoon how glad I i ■ was to have an opportunity of this j I kind. Can't you try to be a little hit hospitable, and treat them like I friends of the family, so that they'll; I enjoy their meal?" "Of course, do I ever treat people j | bad who happen to be our guests?' | I never said I didn't approve of the | j idea, did I? But trust a woman to | always put a wrong meaning pn ( j everything. I was criticising your I ! manner of dress and the fuss you are going to, rather than the fact! j that they are coming, you knowi ! that very well, only you want to! ' pretend that you don't." (The next instalment of this inter- : cstlng series will appear here soon.) Mifflin County Soldiers in Various Branches of Service Lewistown, Pa„ Feb. 23. Thomas ! Miller, of Lewistown. who enlisted in j the United States Army at Belle- , fonte last fall, is home from Camp ] Hancock. Augusta, Ga., on furlough. ! Robert O'Hara, of Lewistown, is j j ill at Camp Grant. Rockford, 111., with i peritonitis following an operation fori appendicitis. Mrs. Temp Burlew and Mrs. Wil-; j liani W'ian, sisters, and Mrs. George i Martin, mother of William Martin,, at Camp Meade, are visiting the sol- ] | dier at camp. Philip Hall has recovered from an j attack of illness at Camp Meade, Md. i | Bert Prescott, after spending sev eral days here with his bride, has I returned to Camp Green, Charlotte. I I N. <'. I Charles Kline, of Lewistown, is in I France with the United States Army. Victor Hinkle, of Lewistown, is in the NaVy helping transport troops to I France. William Calahan, well-known 1 sportsman, of Lewistown, is now at I l Camp Hancock, Augusta, Ga. I Friends of Albert v. Moyer, of I Lewistown Junction, were pleased to hear that his name is on the list of] the saved from the Tuseatiia. The first reports to reach this place made j it look as if the young man had been! lost. j Robert Miller, of Lewistown, is in Fra nee. Frank Kline, of Lewistown. is with ' the United States Army in France. Karl ami Engle Childs. only chil dren of Mr. ami Mrs. Frank Childs, of Lewistown are in- the service. Engle is at Camp Meade, and Earl in the Navy. Earl is a graduate of Annapolis, and Eng|c has had mili tary training In a military academy in New Jersey. Harry Shimp, a former Lewistown boy, now of Harrisburg, has enlist ed in the service and is iiow at Camp Hancock, Augusta, Ga. James T. Pelter, of Lewistown is at Camp Hancock, Ga. He saw eight months service on the Mexican bor der last year. Patriotic Dishes BEAN SOUP Look over carefully one-half pound of beans. Wash and soak over night In the morning skim . off the fat from the water in which ham was cooked and add the beans and One pint of tomatoes. Four large onions. Two carrots. One bunch of soup herbs. Place the tomatoes In a bowl and squeeze between the hands until they are a fine pulp. Peel and chop the onions fine. Peel and dice the carrots. Add the herbs. Bring to a boil and then cook slowly for four hours. Season to taste with salt and pepper. <irh> Kollows the Snow LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tab lets taken in time will Prevent Grin TO. W. GROVE'S signature oil box ;!0c Advertisement. FEBRUARY 23, 1918 Advice to the Lovelorn YOU WON'T IJKK MY ANSWER! BEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am twenty-two and my friend! is only eighteen. We have known ■ each other through church work for ! live years, but never paid much at tention to one another until a few months ago. His father died when he was sixteen and he has partially supported his mother ever since. His father died of tuberculosis and he now has a sister Ih a sanatorium with the disease. I am considered very capable. My health, mental and physical, is of tlie best. I love this boy and he thinks he loves me. The question is, what shall we do? We do not con- i sider marriage for two years, at least, j We are extremely happy in each! other's company. Neither is jealous I of the other, I think. HAZEL,, j There Is an obstacle that is real, j However manly a boy of eighteen | seems, it is not fair that he should | be tied down to the responsibility of j marriage. Nor can he be expected ! to make a life's choice by which he' will want always to abide. He hasn't ! enough experience nor yet enough : things with which to compare his j emotions so that he can be guaran- i teed to have right sense of values, j 1 think it is thoroughly unjust to a ' boy like this for a girl four years i older than he to plan marriage. If you can be sensible and self-con trolled I don't see particularly why a friendship need be forbidden. Tu berculosis is not hereditary, but the tendency to it may be. 1 think the ; boy has had too many responsibilities already—the added one of a wife seems to me too great a burden to carry. Jealousy Is a Terrible Tiling DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I have been engaged for two years.- My liance is very jealous and suspi cious. He is a cultured man a West Point graduate. One afternoon I was obliged to visit the dentist, 1 and, being detained there much lon ger than I had contemplated, it was already dark when I started for home. In the car I met a young man, a good friend of my father, and I accepted his offer to escort me, since the way from the trolley to my house is long and lonely. On reaching my destination 1 was about to thank my escort for his courtesy and hurry into the house, when my fiance, who had been pa tiently awaiting my arrival, sudden ly rushed out and in a tit of Jealousy struck my escort and demanded that I return his ring. Our engagement was broken off then and there. Ever since my fiance has shown his regret in many ways. He says he has learned his lesson and Implores forgiveness. t OLGA R. I don't like jealousy. It is un | generous, and it pays no attention | to the freedom of the individual. A i man of education and the sort of • training your fiance lias had ought ! to have learned self-control and yet j he conducts himself with brutality, j temper and shameful injustice. lf j you really love this man why not I put him on probation? Give him | chance to prove his sincere regret land if he manages to'controi himselt j and to behave, overlook his past | mistakes in the light of future good I conduct. But I strongly advise | against your marrrying him until he I has proved conclusively that he rec i ognizes his own fault and its really | criminal weakness and has gotten i the better of it. ! no\T Hl', SI I'KKS I ITIOI s I DEAR MISS I'AIKI'AX: Will you please tell me if it is right for two sisters to marry two broth ers. Such is my case and my friend s&ys that a marriage of this kind gen erally results in a death. I am pati-1 ently waiting for your answer. CAMIIXE. Your question sounds like a relic of the dark asres. And I thought the days of Salem witchcraft and equally tragic, blind superstition were dead and buried. Now just use common sense. How under the sun could the fact that Anna and Mary, sisters, married John and William, broth ers, cause death to any of the four? There is such a thing in the world as cause and effect. If, when John marries Mary, William runs after j the wedding carriage to shower it with rice and he climbs around In heavy snow with pumps on and gets wet feet to which he does not at tend, he may get pneumonia and die—that comes from his own rash ness with his health and doesn't bear any relationship to the fact that his wife and the bride are sisters and he and the groom are brothers. There are reasons for everything in this world, my dear. Superstition is ig norance unreasonable. Don't let this relic of an age when people had no education and were hardly more than animals conquer you. Relief from Eczema V ' V Don't worry about eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy skin by using a little zemo, obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at SI.OO. Zemo generally removes pimples, blackheads, blotches, eczema and ring worm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each I application. It is always dependable. The E. W. Rose Co.. Cleveland, O. WO JACK SPRATS Some Fat Must lie Used to Main tain Health, hut Amount Should Be Cut Down During the War. We must eat some fat in order to live. It gives tis energy and is an absolutely necessary part of our diet. This is the reason that the problem of saving fat is more serious than that of saving some other kinds of foods. Nothing can be substituted for it. Yet we must give an enor mous amount of fat from our na tional larder to our soldiers and the Allies if they are going to have the necessary energy and physical strength to continue this war. How are we going to do it, since we cannot get along without fat ourselves? The answer is that although we cannot get along with less than we are now using. Experts tell us that the American people consume three times as much fat per person on an average as they should. Certain it is that Americans eat and waste more than do the people of any other country, and it seems reason able that if other countries can get along with less, we can. Let it be remembered that under the name fat are included, butter, meat fat, cream, egg yolks, cho'ese, nuts, olive oil, bacon, suet, lard, table and salad oils and vegetable fats. Butter and meat fats, espe cially all forms of pork, are especial ly needed for the soldiers. Bacon should be struck off our home menu entirely, and while but ter may be used on the table, no but ter whatever should be used in cook ing. Probably the best known butter substitute is oleomargarine. This may be used measure for measure in place of butter. Then there are the hardened veg etable-fats sold under various trade names. These contain very little water and may be used in place of butter in all recipes for bread, muffins, cookies, cakes, and pastry, if one and a half tablespoonfuls less of the hardened vegetable fat is used for each cup of butter for which it is substituted. Vegetable oils like corn-oil, cot tonseed-oil, olive oil, and peanut oil CANPHOROLE AT ONCE REIMS COM Easily Loosens Congestion and Drives out that Cold in the Head, Throat or Chest If you have a sore, tight chest, cold in the head or a raw, sore throat, get a jar of CAMPHOROLE from the nearest drug store, and watch how it will loosen up ! that cough, cold and congestion in chest. Do not treat your colds lightly: this is pneumonia season. The remarkable suc cess of CAMPHOROLE is entirely due to Wintergreen. Menthol and Camphor, pre pared in a synthetic way to give results. Physicians recommend CAMPHOROLE for Bronchitis. Sore Throat. Croup. Whoop- 1 ing Cough. Tonsilitis, Pleurisy, Neuralgia. Asthma. Stiff Nc u Useful in Broncho- Pneumonia. Grand Patriotic Rally Chestnut Street Auditorium Monday, Feb. 25, 7.30 P. M. SPEAKERS George Wharton Pepper Chairman Committee of Public Safety Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Howard Heinz Federal Food Administrator Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Lieut. Frank A. Sutton Member Royal Engineers Community Singing No Admission will be Charged may also be used in place of butter. Fourteen and one half tablespoons of any of these fats equal sixteen tablespoons of butter. JDK RfIEF FK CISTIMN Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No griping is the "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab lets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth"—a bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—sick headache—torpid liver and are consti pated, you'll find quick, sure and only pleasant results from one or two little Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take one or two every night just to keep right. Try them. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. INTHECAMP For Many ILLS Dad ways Apeady Q u ' c k Acting All l>ruccist*. Remedy For Sciatica, Sore Back, Lumbago, Sore Throat, Sprains, Bruises, Neu ralgia, Rheumatism, Sore Muscles, Cold in Chest. Also Internally for Bowel Complaints Beware /r*|k Cheap Glasses SBm Kelf-selected store glasses or glasses furnished by incompetent persons is FAI.SK ECONOMY. Value your eyes at their true worth. Have them examined here and wear the glasses required. We Ait; Competent Optometrists Eyesight Specialist 2 SOUTH Til llt I) STHEET Sclilelnner llulldlng
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