Your Druggist sells Murine Eye Remedies. Our Books mailed Free, tell you all about them and how to use them.
May be sent by mail at following prices.
| Murine Eye Remedy | 30c., 60c., | $1.00 |
| DeLuxe Toilet Edition—For the Dressing Table | 1.25 | |
| Tourist—Autoist—in Leather Case | 1.25 | |
| Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes | 25c., | 1.00 |
| Granuline—For Chronic Sore Eyes and Trachoma | 1.50 | |
Murine Eye Remedy Co.
No. Nine East Ohio Street, CHICAGO, U. S. A.
CONTENTS.
| CHAPTER. | PAGE. | |
| I. | Girls and Matrimony | [5] |
| II. | The Girl whom Men Like | [20] |
| III. | The Girl who Wins | [41] |
| IV. | The Girl who Fails | [55] |
| V. | Some Unfailing Methods | [84] |
| VI. | A Word of Warning | [91] |
| VII. | The Secret of the Widow’s Power | [107] |
| VIII. | “Lady Beauty” | [119] |
| IX. | The Loved Wife | [128] |
| Choice Selections in Poetry and Prose | [145] | |
HOW TO GET MARRIED,
ALTHOUGH A WOMAN.
CHAPTER I.
GIRLS AND MATRIMONY.
It is natural for girls to wish to marry. The desire to do so is not to be condemned, but rather applauded, for it is Heaven-born. The Creator implanted it in the human heart, man and woman alike. God made man for woman and woman for man. He did not intend that they should live apart from each other. When He said, “It is not good for man to be alone,” He included woman in the man. It is not good for woman to live alone. He put a longing in the heart of man and woman alike which is only satisfied by the love of the other. He made a void in the heart which can only be filled by the companionship and love of one of the opposite sex. Man and woman are alike in this. It is as natural to her as to him: she can no more help it than he can. The unnatural part is that a woman must keep still about it, and if no one comes to woo, try to stifle the longing.
There are plenty who hold up their hands in holy horror when it is said that a certain girl wishes to marry. It is nothing at all out of the way when Mr. Jones says he has determined to marry. If his sister Mollie gave voice to such a sentiment, it would be shocking, however. It would be shocking for her to give expression to the longing the all-wise Father has implanted in her heart. It is a heart, too, that will never be satisfied with [yearning] only, with fame, with any vocation, with dumb animals, with other people’s children; and it is a wise thing it will not. It is not a wise thing, however, that Mollie will be condemned because she cannot be satisfied without having a fireside and home of her own, because she wants a big loving fellow to care for her and to protect her, and whom she can love and make happy, because she wants her own home, no matter how small it is, to adorn and make pretty, her own housekeeping to look after, her own and his children to care for; because she wants her own wifehood, just as her brother wants a wife and home of his own and will not be satisfied to be a bachelor.