"When a Girl " By ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER ci.vi tCopyright. 1919. King Features Syndi cate, Inc.) "Anthony Norreys wanted to come here? Well of all the nerve," sputtered .1 im. "I think it was pretty decent of him. 1 said firmly. "You do .' Well. I think it was a | white-livered, sneaky proceeding after > the way I showed him yesterday just ; how I feel about him." "But that's just what makes it so; decent. Jim. I explained patiently. "You j think you're justified in feeling that way ; and he's big enough to see your point | of view. But your attitude is based on i a misunderstanding, and he wants to | set that straight." • And so he has Jeanie telephone and * try to railroad him in here—where he j knows darn well he isn't wanted'. t sneered Jim. ! He didn't have Jeanie telephone. He ■ .lid it himself." I elaborated, puncti- j liously. i He did? And you had a fine chat j with him. in spite of my expressly for bidding"— "Jim! Stop right there. I cried. • You've used that word before, and it won't do." "What word?" i 1 hesitated a moment. Then T brought it out breathlessly, as if the i mere word had power to work me | harm : "Forbid." , _ •■What? 'Forbid' —what s the matter with that? Perfectly good English , word, isn't it? What's the row. anyway. \nnc? Why the tragedy uueen air?" "Because you—can't 'forbid' me to do things as if I were a child in your j . ire " 1 replied, picking my way among more emphatic phrases that flashed! across my mind. Indeed! And why not?" "Jim smiled tolerantly and sat down., putting out the pillows back of him as if that were the most important thing j in the world, and lighting a cigaret as if that were the next most important thing. He wasn't angry—his temper was under full control. Instead, he . was amused in a superior masculine fashion. , I •Keep cool. Anne!" I silently ad monished myself with almost the force n f o pech "This is a critical moment in vour life. You and Jim have to translate vourselves to each other now; to trv to bridge the gap between man ; sind woman—to call to each other across the oceans of misunderstanding that lie! between two persons." Part of it 1 said aloud t ! .lim. I read somewhere once that ! everv human being lived on a little I island and had to shout across the Advice to the Lovelorn 111 BEATRICE I'll!" IX THE GRASPING GIRL ]II;AR MISS FAIRFAX: 1 have been going about vith a girl for about four months I love her dearly, but lam rot SIP my love is retained. I tak- her utinually t i the theaters, and sh epts it as! a matter of course. 1 . >t spending mere money than I van uitord. I have talked with the girl about it. but, as 1 said before, she expects it. It has; Lotten me into numerous quarrels with mv parents. Please advise mo whether 1 should drop her friend- ! ship, or if -here is any other way of intinuing t. DOUBTFUL. Your > u ig woman sounds verv! giaspinr and selfish to me. In fact.! she re. is ihe "daughter of the horse ! 'eech" >entioned in the Bible, who! cried . ntrr.ually, "Give, give." 11 shoj" have a plain talk with her and! tell .. thnt further extravagance on >on part is entirely out of the ques t'c '-d f she persists in her de- Ti i !'" drop her. You don't want; a on. who is plainly "working" you I f • a p....d time. >Hi: NO LONGER WHITES ! FAR MISS FAIRFAX: I While on my vacaliion last summer. | J? Good Spring Tonic If There Ever Was A Time When People Needed A Spring: Tonic. It Is Right Now. So many people have had Colds, Grippe, Influenza and other diseases which have lowered their vitality, that physicians say many are liable to develop consumption if the greatest care and proper tonics are not taken. If you show the least sign of weak ness, start at once taking Dr. Chase's Blood and Nerve Tablets which are made of Iron, Nux Vomica, Gentian, Capsicum, Aloin and Zinc Phosphide, one of the greatest prescriptions ever prepared for rebuilding the blood, nerves and vital forces of people who are weak, run-down from over-work, worry, brain-tire, improper nourish ment during the war, and the after effects of Influenza, Pneumonia and other weakening diseases. Sold by Druggists 60 cents, Special, (Stronger more Active 90 cents.) A New Coal We are featuring a NEW COAL that is unquestionably The Best Coal On the Market This claim is borne out by the statements of those who have used it. Why not use the best? It costs no more. Before placing your order for coal it will be well worth your while to give our NEW COAL a trial. We are in a position to give prompt and efficient deliveries. Order Now Before Prices Advance McCreath Bros. 567 Race Street Both Phones SATURDAY EYENTNU water to another little distant island everything he wanted to speak to any one. Do you see how that could be true?" "Sure. I see how it could be true. But I don't see what it's got to do with us —and Norreys." "I'll come to that in a minute. Jim. It would be awful to shout to some one I you wanted to talk to—and shout and | shout and find in the end that he only | spoke French, while you knew nothing I but English, wouldn't it?" ; "Yep. 'spose so." replied Jim. smiling t lazily. "Well—we both speak English. I Now go ahead." ! "Jim. do you think women are peo j pie?" 1 asked with absolute earnest , ness. i "For the love of Mike, yes! Now cut j out the bunk and get somewhere, will i you ?" "NVell then, it's like this. You re a j man. and I'm a woman. And we ve j 1 elected to spend the rest of our li\es j together because we love each o'.her. j But loving me doesn't make you stop j liking cigarets. It doesn't make you ' suddenly hate cards, and I don't inter i fere." ! "Much good it would do you." smiled , Jim with set jaws. "What under the ! canopy are you driving at. Anne? j "Well. I've come to see that I haven't ' a right to do any more about the things ! I you like and I don't than just to ex- : | plain to you why I don't and trust you ! to acquiesce if you see I'm right—and I I think you ought to *io the same with I me." "NVait a minute. Anne. You think 1 r ought to give you a long list At* reasons why 1 don't want to have you see Nor reys. and then leave it to your so j called judgment whether you see him or cut him out?" ! "Yes." "No!" roared Jim with amazing j vigor. "There's go: to be a head to every household. Women are people. ! all right, but they aren't the ruling class. | ■ Now get this that I'm shouting to you , on vour 'little island.' "Husband and wife are one—a team. , Rut part of that team does most of the ' pulling and most of the leading, and . ' thaf's the husband part." ; j "Then you still think you have a right to forbid me to see persons I like?" i 1 asked coldly. • "I tell vou there's got to be a bead , to everv household You made a mis ! take when you didn't marry a milksop who'd let you run things your own j ; way. Anne !" "I married you." 1 said griml>. for better for worse. But Jim. you think ! vou have a right to give orders. Sup pose T think T have a right to ignore 1 them?" (To Bo Continued.) I _ ; ! met a girl and fell deeply in love [with her. and she returned my love. ' When we came back to the city we ! met r.fatly every day and went for a| walk and sometimes we would go to; the theater. If I couldn't see her for, a few days I would write, and she al- ; ways answered as soon as possible. ; Now for a few months 1 have written t> her nearly every week without re-: celving an answer. The thing that j puzzles me is that she often told me I how much she loved me. and now she i doesn't seem to care to write. ANTHONY. It would seem, mv dear Anthony. as| if you had lost the affection of this j young woman, but girls are so queer. I I especially when they are in love, that; a little " explanation may be worth seeking. Write her a dignified and i self-respecting letter and ask why she , !ir nt> longer friendly with you. Per-1 haps there is some little unimportant j thing that is keeping you estranged. MARRYING FOn A HOME DEAF. MISS FAIRFAX: As a reader of your column. I should greatly appreciate your advice on the following subject. I am a widow and have a child of one year. 1 have also a small sum which will last me : a few years. Should I marry a man | who knows I can only respect but I never love him. or shall I work to support mv child? I I- G. I To marry for a home and support • always seems to me the very last re course for a woman. Why riot try to t! support your child? Who knows? Per haps in the business world you may meet someone whom you can really love and wish to marry. I hope, if I you decide to go to work, that you ; have some entirely trustworthy per . son with whom to leave vour child nhile you are away during the day. \VFItNKRSVTI,I.i:. |v\7 ! GALEN HALL ; WEBNEBSVIUEiPA. Opens Saturday April 5* Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service By ( NOV THAT WE HKVE. M _ I DON'T "TOO DARE QR\N<;YOU DO -VS IDOAMjWE LL DE I MR?>. - THF TENOENT PHOMrn I MOVED IN ft , OFVOUR LOW- BROW HKJHLy IN THE AMD ,MQ. VOO MULT EITHER l2J,®^SSr2 WANT FRIENDS >N HERE AND BUILDING - ft -~U OR cDnf motmp ' THER TOUR VOICE Too TO BE _ g<T\ DON'T CO OUT WITHOUT L J ( \ APARTMENT- 1 if. jLr"r|f *j|r fnt JP' j|^ rc. v^~ LIFE'S PROBLEMS ARE DISCUSSED IIY MRS. WILSON WOODROW "Do you believe there are women who go through their entire lives without knowing what love is?" This is the question which has been propounded to me by a corre spondent. and naturally she asks it with the personal equation in mind. in an interesting letter, which can hardly fail to induce reflection, she says: "At thirty-four I find myself rath er seriously pondering the question I have submitted to you. and won dering if it is so. "In my girlhood I oared little for society or the company of young men. 1 much preferred a quiet evening with Dickens. George Eliot or one of my other favorite novel ists to being at a party or ball: and when 1 did go I never had 'a good time through being so frightfully self-conscious. "I am always at mv best with my own sex. and have never lacked real friends. The girls 1 have known always confided their love affairs to me. sine of a sincere sympathy. But looking back upon these experiences, it seems as if my friends even then never thought that love would he my portion. And to-day they say—meaning to be consoling. I am sure, but not knowing how it hurts me —'Well, if you can't get a beau, who can?' Therefore, may 1 de scribe myself without being vain? "I am a pretty blonde, and hav ing taken good care of my health, do not look to be more than twenty five yeais old: am neat and dress well; have high ideals: am a keen lover of all things beautiful—that is. nature, noble deeds, the beautiful thoughts of great minds. I am deep ly interested in every conceivable movement for the welfare of hu manity. Having been a hard worker since I was fourteen years old. I be lieve the sun was made to shine for all. "If old maidenhood is to be my fate I am determined not to become DAILY HINT ON FASHIONS t!i . IS" \w A PRETTY DRESS FOR MANY OCCASIONS Waist 2782, and Skirt 2784 Comprising Ladies' Waist Pattern 2782, and Ladies Skirt 2784. Taupe crepe meteor, or georgette crepe com bined with satin would be attractive for its development. Light gray ga bardine embroidered in blue would be nice. Voile, batiste. handkerchief linen. Shanting. and taffeta are ail suitable for this dress. The Waist 2782 is cut in 6 sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, and 4 4 inches bust measure. The Skirt 2784 in 6 sizes: 22, 24, 26, 28, 30 and 32 inches waist measure. It will require 7 yards of 44-inch material to make the dress for a medium size. The Skirt meas ures about l>/4 yards at the foot. This illustration calls for TWO SEPARATE PATTERNS which will be mailed to any address on receipt of 10 CENTS FOR EACH PAT TERN in silver or stamps. Telegraph Pattern Department For the 10 cents Inclosed please send pattern to the following ad dress: Size Pattern No > Name Address City and State m HAJRRISBtTRG TELEGRAPH ! a sour one. Still. 1 cannot help | feeling downhearted at times, and wondering if I have not missed life's greatest gift. "Hoping you will write an article on that ever-interesting subject, love. 1 am. "One of Your Faithful Readers." Let us get back to the main query first. Do 1 believe there are people who go through their entire lives without knowing what love is? I most certainly do. 1 think there are men and women who have lived well satisfied with existence on the whole., and yet have never known for a minute what love is—that ! love. I mean, of course, which serves as a theme for the novelists and poets. And 1 do not believe that such cases are exceptional, either. I think there are thousands of them. These are the women with whom the material instinct, or tlie desire for social prestige, or the love of display is the ruling passion of their lives, and the men with whom the cliams of business or of their am bitions far outweigh any other con sideration. while in both sexes there are thousands who are just too con foundedly selfish ever to fall in love. They are all a bit abnormal, per haps. but they exist. And even with the normal people, love does not mean the same thing to all temperaments alike. To one it means a placid, serene devotion, to another frenzy and transports: to one pretty sentiment and protection, to another comradeship and congenTil ity. It takes all kinds of people to make a world, and it takes all kinds of love to suit their various per sonalities. According to their de sires be it unto them. Our ideas of love differ greatly, too. at different ages. The love fancies of a girl of sixteen dream ing of her fairy prince are not those of the sophisticated woman of thirty. But I do unqualifiedly believe this, that whatever kind of love we want, if we want it sincerely and strongly enough, we can bring it into our lives. Do you remember Florence Morse j Kingsiey's story of "Miss Phil- i lura." the dowdy, shabby, little old ] maid who forced herself to believe j so strongly in the imaginary lover she had created that she made him ] come true? And you are no "Miss Phillura." j but a charming and arractive worn- i an. only thirty-four. .'My dear, thirty-four is by no means the jumping-off place. On the contrary, it is the age when a woman is at her best. I gather from your letter that you are one of those who mature late 1 in life. In your girlhood you were self-conscious, shy, absorbed, emo tionally a child. You didn't want i love; your woman's heart had not yet awakened. Now it has. and it is i demanding its own. ; I know of an almost parallel case ! to yours, a woman who in her youth had lived almost entirely within herself, and believed herself plain 1 and uninteresting and unattractive ■ to men. At thirty-four she made a j journey around the world, and it came to her almost as a shock to | find that in this new environment ; she was courted and sought after, i Under the influence of her reviving self-esteem she blossomed out into | charm and beauty, and on her re turn home love come to her —real love —as unexpectedly as lightning from a clear sky. Perhaps it might not be a bad plan for my correspondent to make a visit away from home. A strange I girl, especially in one of the small ! er places, is always an object of at j traction, and to be an object of at traction is the best physical, moral j and mental tonic that I know. But whether she goes away or I stays at home, she has only to de ' sire love strongly enough and to believe that she possesses it. to make it come true. Maybe it is al ready approaching just arount} the ! corner. | "The things I seek are seeking me . . . . And what is mine shall know my face." j CHASED ACROSS THREE STATES Syracuse. N- Y., March 29.—A j chase across three states ended yes i terday in the capture by State troop ! ers at South Amboy, N. J., of Nicola Stanziao who is wanted by Onon | daga authorities in connection with j their investigation into the murder |of Achile Quattrociocki. The troop j ers took the trail at Kirkville, scene | of the murder, and it led them to ! Yonkers, thence to New Jersey, to Pennsylvania and back into New j Jersey. MORE TROOPS COMING HOME Washington, March 29.—Depart ure from France of the transport leviathan, with more than 12,000 troops aboard, the battleships Rhode Island and Virginia, all bringing units of the Eighty-fifth (Wiscon sin and Michigan National Army) division, and two other transports was announced last night by the War Department. The transports Metapan and Eastern Queen carry I small numbers pf casuals. A Society to Study Our Forebears i Here is an ambitious and dellght j ful program. "To promote the 1 study of racial anthropology, and of | the origin, migration, physical and • mental characters, crossing and evo ! iuiion of human races, living and i extinct." | it is put forth by a society re- J ccntly organized in this city at the ! American Museum of Natural His ! Tory, called the Galton Society for • the Study of the Origin and Evo j i.ition of Man. 1 To fancy that you don't care ; how or where or when man origl ! nnted: that you are only interest ! Ed in him as he is to-da.v, is to j shut yourself up in a box of igno ; ranee, deprived of the best stimu lus to further progress. It is only j by looking backward that we can I look forward. looking downward ! makes us look upward. There are ! no far horizons for the man who I knows nothing of the history of his race. His mind is on a dead le\el and works horizontally. Think of our position in the uni verse. Here we are on a swiftly careering little globe that spirals around the rushing sun, compelled to travel at a speed of more than twenty-two miles a second to es cape being left behind and lost like a chip in open space! Surely it would be stupid not to wonder how we got here. Especially would it be stupid after having found out that the earth did not have us when it started on its wild flight, but picked us up, or brought us out. somehow, when it had been hundreds of millions of years on its journey. There were a lot of exciting things going on in this world be fore we could be said to have climb.-.d upon its round back, like shipwrecked mariners unexpected ly saved front the midst of the boundless ocean. But that is a fable. NVe did not really come abt&td in the human shape, dropped, like Xlilton's Vulcan, from "the crystal battlements" upon the passing ship of space, as the old doctrine of special creation would imply: for. if science has proved anything, it has proved that we arc the result of evolution, or de velopment, from pre-existing forms of life, while the earliest of those forms had their seed in the "fetid carbon ' of a nebula. "Afar down I see the huge first Nothing; 1 knew 1 was even there. 1 wailed, unseen and always, ana slept iIT-ough the lethargic mist." And when at last we were in dubitably here, in the form an I manner of men and women, where did we make our first appearance, among the lower animals, and im press them with our superiority? Were we scattered widely over the earth, or were we confined to a particular "cradle"? Were we children of the sun. haunters of the tropical forests, tree climbers with prehensile tails, and cocoa nut throwers, in our racial youth, [ or did we from the beginning pre | fer, as we do at present, a tem perate climate, not too heating for big. active brains enclosed in thin skulls? How did we make out to live amidst the ice and snow and cold of the glacial ages? What term 3 did we make with j the mastodons, the mammoth and j the redoutable "sabre-toothed" i beasts that deemed the caverns • quite as much theirs as ours? What was society like then? Who I or what, first persuaded woman that she needed any artificial adorn ment? How did we get our racial colors and temperaments? What gave some men a block skin and crin kled hair, and some a red skin and straight hair, and others a white I skin and variable hair? What was I the origin of the blondes and that j of the brunettes? When did the mixture of races i begin and how long has it been going on? Was there only one race to begin with, and did it split tip and form four or five, inhabit ing different parts of the earth, or I were there four or five at the j start, each beginning its career in ' its own quarter of the world? If mankind scattered over the world from one original habitat, by what routes did they go, and what guided them? Have some of the lines of migration formerly | connecting the continents now dis appeared, through the sinking of "land bridges.' or were there never any such bridges, or any that were used for such a purpose? Was there ever a continent once inhab ited by man now lying at the bottom of the sea? v Has"the Precess'on of the Equi noxes swung the earth's poles com pletely round the great 26,000-year circle since human beings became human, or has it swung them round twice or thrice, or even ten. times? They seem to have gone almost half round since King Minos ruled in his palace in Creto, and the Cretan women yearned to pinch their waists, to put witchcraft into their hair, and wear low-necked dresses with flounced skirts. There must have been a long history be hind their time. Finally, what about the extinct races, such as the mar vellous Cro-Magnons? You see what a field of interest this new society has. LITTLE TALKS BY BE A TRICE FAIRFAX I Is a woman justified in marrying ! for a home? Read the letter 1 have just re ceived from a girl who is evidently strongly tempted to do precisely this: I "May 1 ask your opinion on a j matter of greut importance to a i young lady who was engaged sev | eral months ago to a young man ; whom she did not love, with the : understanding that perhaps after j an engagement of six months she j would possibly learn to love him. "As time has elapsed she cannot j do so and Is at a loss to know just | what to do. She needs a home, as iat present she is boarding with j strangers and works for a living. | Would you advise a marriage with out love on the girl's part, if the j young man in question loves her j very dearly and is willing to marry . her in spite of the fact that she does not care for him'.' He would like a very early marriage." It's a situation very easy to un j derstand. The girl wants what love will i bring, but because slie doesn't hap | pen to be in love thinks she can do | without love itself. And her persis- I lent suitor urges upon her the un importance of this point. You know ; his earnest, honest, infatuated type. ■ "Let me do the loving for the | present." he tells her. "That is to • say. marry me. Alt the rest will j come later. Think how little I ask |of you. As for your learning to j love me. that's my risk. I'm will i ing to take it." That's very persuasive language to girls of a certain type. A woman who is inclined to he passive, who isn't interested in settling her own fate, is appealed to almost irresist ibly by a lover who offers to do not only all the deciding and ar ranging but all the loving, too. "I have chosen you," he whis pers to her. "I approve you. You are mine. But 1 ask of only that you lift your adorable foot and step within the matrimonial gates. All the rest shall be my concern alone." A Powerful Appeal You can see how powerfully this appeal might affect a girl who not only had the qualities 1 have al ready described, but who had no family and no real home and, fur thermore. wasn't interested in her job. Such a girl has a highly un easy conviction that she ought to be "settled." She believes she would be thoroughly contented if she had "a home of her own." Perhaps she isn't very robust, and people have always told her that she "needs somebody to take care of her." Then she knows that she wants an atmosphere of affection. She wants comforts without having to work too hard to get them. She rather wants, too, what she feels to be the greater importance of the married state. Well, here is her chance. Shall she take it? 1 believe that many counsellors would say yes, and that they could very plausibly support their advice. Their contention would be that a girl who is willing to devote herself to becoming "a good wife" has the Daily Dot Puzzle •' b '5 N i 7 • N •2o 2i , *'* .• " • V *• 25 4' : Z7 •' i 3* i . 6. 26 s . •3° fco . • 64 * T 31 .34 f 4 • 33* • *53 62 * 56 • ° • 3ft ih 3?. 36 4 2. #sb 4o 2 * , sii 4Z 4 j% .53 # \ 5l j •44 4fe 40 •49 bo Draw from one to two and so on | to the end. MARCH 29, 1919. right to accept from a man love, support, ull that he can give her. But even though manv excellent people would argue in this fashion, I feel myself unable to agree with them. Marrying for a home, particularly in the case of a girl who admits she is able to support herself, seems to me a fundamentally serious mis take. I really don't know of any circumstances that justify it. It isn't that I don't understand tile miserable loneliness that a girl can experience who lives alone in a city where she hasn't many friends, and who earns- her living j by a job that is mere drudgery. It isn't that 1 haven't sympathy with her craving to create a domes tic atmosphere of her own, to be petted, sheltered, looked out for. A Dig Price It's a very human craving. Al most every girl must have days when she succumbs to it. But aren't they her weakest days—the days that afterward she tries to forget? A really strong, clear-sighted woman knows that shelter and se curity are comfortable things—but that after all the.v are not the big things of life and she must not pay lo big a price for them. And to exchange for shelter and I security one's freedom, one's shin- [ ing possibilities of love, one's very ! life —don't you thiiik this is too big a price? Don't you think it's converting marriage, which ought to lie a free and glorious comradeship, into rather a sordid and sorry bargain? j And we must not forget that n bargain of this sort is not only un- j worthy of a high-minded, self-re- ' speeting woman, but it's not play- : ing fair with the man who mag- i nanimously provides the love and ; the lodging-place, who assumes all the responsibility and all the risk and all the material burdens. Not even if such a man understands the whole situation, and pleads the sufficiency of his own love, like the lover in the letter 1 have quoted, is it fair to hint. It's possible, of course, that he may be right, that determined and optimistic lover. The marriage that lie urges might be (he success lie believes, and a lifetime of happiness ! might follow. But I can only re- I peat that if one regards marriage, | or indeed life itself, at all seriously • and idealistically, marrying without ; love is too great a risk to take, j A home is a very desirable thing, j if the right combination of persons ; live in it. It can be a wonderful | thing if it is the dwelling-place of ( love. But a home—four walls and ; a roof—what does it count for if it lis the abode of two people who | have merely driven a bargain? You homeless girls who are "Every Day Is Starting Day" jj At the S. of C., but the Best Time to Begin is NOW I This will be the time when thousands and thousands of young men and women throughout the United States will l enroll in one of the many Accredited Business Schools of jj| our Country. They will enroll for intensified training in |j Commercial Work, because the year 1919 will demand more M than ever before, people who are trained to do one thing g well. It will be the year for those who have STANDARD B TRAINING. This is an Accredited School—We have a I Standard to follow (Clip tlii> ami send it in at once for full infoi'niatioii) School of Commerce f Troup Building 15 S. Market Square Gentlemen: Please send me complete information about the subjects I have checked—also the correlative branches. Typewriting .... Secretarial .... Civil Service Bookkeeping Shorthand Stenotypy Name Street or It. I). No, City State > I If you know of friends who might be interested in a Busi ness Course, it will be an appreciated favor if you will write their names and addresses and send them to us. We Thank You. tempted to enter into loveless mar riages, remember tliat a home isn't necessarily a paradise. Don't sacri fice all the really valuable things of life in order to obtain it fife# Nurses Recommend Cuticura Soap It appeals to them because it is so pure and cleansing. It does much to seep the skin clear and healthy e? penally if assisted bv touches of Cu ticura Ointment to first signs of pirn files, redness, roughness or dialing deal for toiiet uses. Sampl* Each PTM by Ui'.l Adnr#*t - "Cutlcura. Deyt 34A. Beaten ' Sol.i fvrrnrli :. Soap 'i&r Ointment 25 ®ni 50c Talcum iffir ' QUICK IMF Ml COW Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That 13 the joyful cry of thousand? 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 tor Ol'-o Tablets while treating patients tor 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"-- bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—sic.; headache —torpid liver and are const; pated, you'll find quick, sure and only pleasant results from one or two iitt': Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take one or two eveiy night just to keep right. Try tneu* 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers