— —————————— OLD ‘MAN: STILL FALE AND. HEARTY; WORKS. EVERY DAY AND PRAISES NEW FEMEDY in Bed for Months s He Was Too Weak to Stand Up. TAKES HYPO-COD REGAINS HEALTH “1 certainly am : indebied to this new tonic Hypo-Cod,” declared Wm. kK Gilbert, 12069 Battery Ave., Baltimore, Md. “It put me back on my feet seventy years of age, I'm every day and feeling fine. “For months I was spending most of my time In bed with two doctors part of the time. Nervous indigestion had made me so weak and bad I could hardly stand on my feet. I had a had cough too and pains in my chest and a general breakdown kept me away from work and in bed for months. My appetite was gone too, but Earle's Hypo-Cod built me up—gave we a new appetite and with plenty of strength and free of all those old troubles I've been working regularly since and praise Hypo-Cod to the sky everytime 1 get a chance. It does the work and it is pleasant to take too,” continued Mr. Gilbert, Good health, more strength, better appetite, strong lungs, steadier nerves and richer blood means better work, easier work and more fun out of life and it costs very little when you stop and think. Earle's Hypo-Cod Is simply a newer, more modern, more powerful tonle and is so pleasant to take even chil dren love It and elderly folks say it agrees perfectly with the weakest stomach. See formulas on bottle. Drug- gists, chemists and experts assert it Is an ideal tonic. Drop in at the drug stare tonight and get hottle or two and give it a trial.—Adv. working A Fresh Start “Jack's married.” “Got through sowing his wild oats, eh? “No, %'s already started a new crop with his wife's money."—Boston Tran script. Important to all Women Readers of this Paper Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble and never suspect it. Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease, If the kidneys are not in a healthy con dition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. You may suffer pain in the back, head ache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous irrite ble and may be despondent; it makes any one so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring health to the kidneys, proved to be just the remedy needed conditions, Many send for a sample bottle to see what Swamp-Root, the great kidney, them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co. Binghamton, N. Y. you may receive sample size bottle by Parce' Post. You can purchase medium and large size bottles at all drug stores.—Adv. Silliness Discouraged. “There's one thing 1 like about the fdea of women in politics,” remarked Farmer Corntossel, “What is that?” “They Bre not likely to encourage any of these fool election bets about people's not shaving until one candi Cate or another is elected.” Catarrh Catarrh is a local disease greatly nflu. enced by constitutional conditions HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE is a Tonle and Blood Purifier. By cleansing the blood and building up the System HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allows Nature (« do its work All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Locating the Heart, “Home Is where the heart 18" re marked the man of sentiments, “Yes,” commented Mr. Bildoo; "but 1 wish my landlord wouldn't keep my heart in my mouth” A Lady of Distinction fs recognized by the delicate faxcinat ing influence of the perfume she uses A bath vith Cuticura Boap and ho! water to thoroughly cleanse the pores followed by a dusting with Cutlcurn Talcum powder usually means a clear sweet, healthy skin.-—Adv. This Fitch a Fighter. Muskellunge sometimes run up to one hundred pounds in weight, says the American Forestry Magazine, and to land one with rod and line is a fea! not to be forgotten in a lifetime. One dose of Dr Pesry's “Dead Shot” ex. oe Worms or Tapeworm [ts section upon he Slamat and Bowes is beneficial. No see dose or after purgative necessary. ~~ Adv Jud Yunkine. Jud Tunkinse says the old-time statesman who sat down and wrote out hig speeches with a pen wouldn't stand any chances whatever in these days of handshaking. ““INURI URI, ~ Morning « eepYour Eyes Sloan Slept Habirhy 4 of —— & L ad hd CHAPTER XVIii—Continued. El “There was & lot of malevolence In { Mr, Sidney's tone, a tremendous | amount of hate. Richard Dobson ut- tered the quivering, quavering little ery again and started to run. As he got under way, he shrieked. It sound- ed like an old woman's shriek, “Mr, Sidney started after him. He had that cane you saw him take out of this room. That was the one he | was beaten down with, “1 think for a moment he wanted to kill Richard. He flourished the stick and yelled, Richard, being In a fren- zy of fright, was stronger on his legs than his brother. He was off into the bush. Mr. Sidney stumbled and fell. He got up rather slowly, as if he were either hurt or as If his strength were leaving him. 1 could hear Richard shrieking farther off In the bush. “When Mr. Sidney got up, he turned toward the house, and I ran to beat him here and found you.” Jed rocked a while, and I did say anything. “1 am decldedly shaken)” after a while, “I was very fond of him, and I am a useless old man, an alcoholic of no account except to him, nnd he is dead™ “There is only one thing to do,” I gald. “Richard Dobson must be on his way to freedom tomorrow. We shall have to see to that" Jed aroused himself for an Instant. “You copy-book moralist!” he sald. “You would interfere with a genial, lovable man's magnificent hate Just because he 1s dead and your scruples have tmportant. You ought Let the brute Diek Dobson rot in prison. It's his “It can't be done, Jed,” 1 sald. “To- morrow we'll go to Alwick prison and explain.” . - » * * * . . not he sald become to choke. desert.” For me to act without telling Mrs, Sidney was Impossible, and It was al- most impossible for me to take the subject up with her. I saw her only for a moment, told her that, being ae- quainted with the facts, 1 thought 1 knew what the conscience of the house would require. Her world had been destroyed ; her light had gone out. EBhe had no pride for herself; she shrank from the pos sibility of a hurt to Isobel, but I had judged the conscience of the correctly. She would have protected Mr. fustice in the world in her own esteem, justice could be house that was her tut now he done, sin was dead: I did not want to act without Iso bel's knowing what I was doing. i hoped she would of what 1 intended to do. though 1 Intended to do 1t whether she did or not. 1 had to tell the story. “You are right, i “But how magnificent He was stark Nemesis, purest justice there is!” She wns a bit ecstatic. They teach young ladies too many generalizations, 1 thought There was no rhapsody in this: it was ugly. Jed had one more fash of spirit as we started for the penitentiary. “You poor old copy-book fool of a mornlist ' he sald. “Why can't your insignificant conscience be satisfied without doing a lot of damage tr -n good end? Hang you moralists! You areck life. Richard Dobson can't eo Approve John," she said father was! the cleanest, tain vam Mr. S.dney Started After Him, outside the penitentiary. He has no money, no way of making aay, ns place to go. no friends. You +e go- ing to throw him out of his home. You »re going to torture hin with the knowledge that his life was wasted in prison when he wa< a free man in sw. You are going to destroy “ie Sid- sey family.” “Richard Dohgon saw his brother” I snidd, “that night at (he pool” “He saw a ghost.” asserted Jed, "Or H he n't see a ghost, |» must went to «tay in the penitentiary. If he knew It was his brother, why didn’t ne demand an inquiry and his fre dom? Either because he saw n ghost ar he does not want his freedom. You A ££ " ’ Wee can have it either way you want. You are going to force him out of the only place he has to live, and ycu are go- ing to give him the tragedy of know- ing that his life was woecked” “He Is a rich man,” 1 said “Half the old Dobson estate 8 his, An of It is his. His brother was legally and is now actually dead” “You are a worse man than I was,’ suid Jed. “I never interfered with Mr. 8 dney's scheme of punishment. You are trying to. His scheme was just” “What's the use of this debate?” 1 exclaimed. “You are morally incapa- ble of right doing” “And you are a foolish collection of plous axioms” sald Jed. When we came to the penitentiary eptrance, we encountered Morgan of the Metropolitan agency. me. “You had me fooled.” he said. really thought you didn’t know." “1 did not know,” 1 sald. “Didn't you!” he exclaimed. are hore to see Richard Dobson, 1 fol- lowed my hunch. [I have the answer to the thing. 1 know why this man Sidney never was younger than twenty years. Yon are to see Richard because you are representing Arthur Dobson.” “Arthur Dobson is dead.” “1 know he is—a8 a name; fs nlive as Sidney.” “Mr. Sidney is dead.” 1 salds “We have come here to tell Richard Dob son that he ean go free. 1 did not know who last night” As Morgan stood before penitentiary steps, 1 thought how true had been my conception of him as the inevitable. Mr. Sidney had out- played fate, but it was by using the trump card death, Morgan's face showed some unpleas- aut lines, “What do you mean, that Sidney is dead? he asked. “He died Christmas night. 1 read his diary last night. Jed gave It tO me. It Is the one Dravada tried to steal. We came here at once to fell Richard Dobson.” : “Let his brother Arthur tell him Richard Is dead.” sald Morgan, going on down the steps. “But I am not through with you people. Publicity is “yx “You here but he He got into an sutomobile, and was driven away, “Something always happens to these sald Jed savage young shut consciences,” fellow. Now mouth inside here” The warden told us Dobson had died the night before. He had sustained a great shock the night he walked out of the penitentiary and was found on Mr. Sidney's grounds The adventure not only overtaxed him physically, but it had affected his Im agination, When the him. after the message from Hartley house, he was Incoherent and io a fe keep your He never regained strength or ra- tionality. He had been quiet at times, but at other times was in delirium. When delirious, be suffered chiefly from the delusion that he had seen his brother's ghost. He died slowly and In great misery. the warden sald. “Now keep your mouth shut fool” Jed ordered ding me in the ribs, The warden was affected by the news of Mr. Sidney's death. He re. membered him as the pleasant’ man who had called one day. It seemed to me that our visit, so shortly after Mr. Sidney's death, must appear as a thing strangely without purpose to the war. den, but Jed was so apparently right in asking for silence at this time that I yielded to hia prugential course. The right and wrong of the Dobson Affalr was in the grave. Our depar ture from the penitentiary was awk. ward, 1 thought. The warden did not seem to find it so On the way back Jed presented, vi elously. the sharp edges of our trouble. “You have that fellow Morgan to deal with,” he sald. "If you are going to be moralistic, you will ruin the lives of two ladies who have trusted you. Morgan has to be bought. You are not doing anyone any hurt now. You are not keeping an innocent man In the penitentiary. You are not disturbing justice or defeating punishment. You are taking the surest means to the protection of the innocent by bribing this man to silence.” Of all the obvious things I might have sald to this man who for a long time had terrorized the Sidney house. hold. none seemed pertinent, They would have been imprecations and re pronches, They would have denit with the past. He, as if he had a clean slate, was dealing with the fu. ture. It did Mrs. Sidney and Isobel no good to tell Jed that he had been a rascal and was unfit to advise, “If you go to Mrs, Sidney" sald Jed, “she will sacrifice herself and everyhody else, Go to Miss’ Sidney and tell her that the family must pay Mr. Morgan £20000. Hell want $50. 000. He'll take twenty. Give It to him in five annnal Installments, At the end of five years he'll be harm. less. You and Miss Sidoey will have you by merely prod: — RR RR AN, he 8 Tene oe, CX NS » areal yy bed dh it established yourselves, and Morgan's story will be a dried-up walnut.” The proposal was so repulsive that I did not answer Jed. He sald a great deal more in a great deal of bitter. ness, chiefly against me and what he conceived to be my moralistic ideas. When we had returned to Hartley house, Jed sald: “Do at least one thing, Sidney what she prefers.” I had no right and no inclination to make a decision which concerned the family and not me. I did not want to speak to Mrs. Sidney—Jed was right, her conscience might permit only the answer which would expose the family to consequences, 1 spoke to Isobel. We compromised with Morgan. Jed again was right. Morgan wanted $30. 000. He took $20,000. Isobel had been insistent. She had been impatient of any suggestion that there could be anything immoral or dangerous in such compromising. Fem- inine mosals are selfishly protective of things near and dear. A general ized immorality, an upembodied Im- morality, is to women unimportant, It is less than unimportant; it is lnpos gible; It does not exist. This is a part of the Instinet which nourishes and protects the infant “1 don't understand John,” she said. “Is there any ques tion in your migd that we ought to protect my father's memory and my ask Miss you at all, You admit this man Morgan can things we hold dearest, that a small payment can that even now the You admit protect these things. the one thing of which we mit that we any harm by man Morgan.” Of course, 1 had to give in. using it to bribe CHAPTER XVIIL Mr. Ridney was buried by the pool on a bitter afternoon when the spow creaked underfoot, and the sun, In a cold blue sky to the southwest above the hills across the river, could hard iy be regarded as a warm and sustain ing star, The servants were pall bearers—sad ones: and we had the chaplain from the penitentiary to read the service in the room Mr. Sidoey had used. The sun came in the southwestern win. dows, and the canaries sang. Algol was afraid of strangers and hid him. self. Otherwise It was Mr. Sidoey's room. We carried the coffin the half-mile in the bitter cold to the grave which had been dug by the pool with mat tocks through the frozen earth. Mrs Sidney took my arm, but walked the distance bravely. Isobel went as if she were a clear-eyed Spartan girl ac cepting life without a quaver or whim. upon the terms offered. We left the remains of our gracious gentleman there, 80 genial a man could not die. He still pervaded the house. He had im pregnated it. His death could not de stroy his influence. Even his room, his death chamber, remained jovial; but Algol attached himself to Isobel and could not be parted from her, He went to her room that night. Necessity and delicacy both sup gested that 1 go away for a while the following morning. It was necessary for me to establish myself in the city in material and physical facts of lodg ing. and so forth, and delicacy Intimat. ed that I was an alien in the house. hold upon a strangely fictitious stand. ing. I went away in the early morning. leaving word that 1 would return in = day or two to say goodbye. I came back the evening of the second day by automobile from the city. 1 had been impelled to go back and had so far resisted the compulsion that 1 had missed train time. Then the Impulse reasserted itself so irresistibly that 1! took an automobile for the 40-mile ride. Jed smet me at the door. diality was unforced. It was the din ner hour. Jed suggested either some biscuits and sherry in my room or an omelet with mushrooms. Mrs. Sidney, he said, had been Spartan, but was in collapse. Miss Sidney was somewhere about—he did pot know where, 1 did not want anything to eat and went toward the library. Isobel was sitting there by the fire, 1 had often seen her thus before. It was. one of ghe familiar pictures 1 should remember. There were proba. biy a half dozen others—none better than this, She looked up as 1 entered. “1 am glad you are back, John,” she said. 1 could think only of a common: place, “1 did not intend to disturb you” | sald. “How is your mother?" tterly and happily stupefied,” sald Isobel, “Her pain waits for her” “And yourself?” J “1 ean't find a tragedy In 1" whe maid. “1 feel a sense of terrible bu: inevitable loss. 1 had reconciled my self to it. 1 can't be a sentimental reb el against life. His life was happy tu per, His cor the end. He would bate us If we & 7 were morose, Please sit down, John.” 1 did, in a comfortable chair. We looked at the fire, “I'l be saying good-bye tomorrow, I said. “What are yon going to do?” “I have made some arrangements I'l bulld up a small practice, I go to a small town. 1 think would suit me. I havel't the ment for a city. It is chill.” “You have really set yourself back by coming here,” she suggested, “Possibly,” 1 admitted, “in material ways; but 1 have wonder time of my life here, rifice was cheap.” “But it was a sacrifice? “In a strictly pragmatic yes.” “You think of it as a sacri “I do pot. I think of lived the The sac- fice?” it as my real “You Presume That | Am Not in Love With You” iife. the sacrifice.” John" “1 presume 80, think otherwise™ ® women, John ¥™ “1 have no ideas of women. not presumptuous or, in that egotistie™ “Ses, you are.” she sald, *] don't think you are right in say. ing that." “Sou are presumptuous shout “1 am wot!” | exclaimed pride. “Nou are,” she said. "Yon that I am not In love with (THE END). I am me.” in hurt you." WANTED T0 “GO IT ALONE” Many Years Age Misspurl Her Declared Ambition to Become an In. dependent Republic. ting up as an independent republic all by herself, The Session acts, state of Missouri, 1838.18%9, morial to the congress of the United It tells of an expedition to Santa Fe in 1812 from St. Louis, though it is not specifically stated that they went over the Ranta Fe trail tain many Interesting resolutions and of political and historical subjects of 1820 starts with the preamble that and establish a {ree and independent Missouri, Missouri was one of the pivotal states In “the history of this country, It was made such In the ancient fight in congress over the slavery question, which took up the admission of free and slave states and considered the 4 balance therenf In congress. Migsou- ri was also a pivots! state In yet an other and larger sense--ghe wae the jumping-off place for that wild and unknown country called the Wild West «the land west of the Missouri river She made the midway point hetween the frontiersmen of Kentucky and those of the great plains, occupying a generation of history herself as » frontier commonwealth, Value of Snakes. Most people have a decided shrink- ing from snakes, which is not to be wondered at in tropical countries where thelr bite is venomous and nften fatal, But the grass snake ought not to be confounded with the rattiers cobrae or pythons. It is Ms harmieew to humanity as a frog and a good dea! No greater enemy to field pests. They keep down the num bers also of such other peste as mice shrews and other small rodents. Bu as slug destroyers they deserve to he sight, which is their usual fate. i GREAT BENEFIT South Carolina Lac Lady Suffered Un- til She Couldn’t Stay Up or Go Anywhere—Tells How Cardui Helped Her Get Well, Batesburg, 8. C.—In telling how ghe found relief from troubles that had caused her much suffering, Mrs, E. E. this place, says: “Each My limbs would ache wouldn't be able no matter what 1 wanted to do, or where 1 wanted to go. My people tried giving me different medi- get any better, “Some one told me of Cardul, god 1 began to take it. I noticed it helped me. I kept it up. After a few months For about six months I used it, before . . . “I found I was all right, and from time. I have taken It or two in the winter, especially when I have been exposed, it the best thing a woman can take to tone up the system, keep off nervous. ness, and the appetite. I certainly know it has been of great benefit to me.” If you are weak, nervous, nerecse or suffer troubles such as Mrs. Oswalt take Cardul, the Woman's Tonle, All good drug me ntions, ists sell Cardul—aAdy. Savages Pogr Physically. The na if the Afric instead of being the lusty fiver « fon. are for lmaginat physically below par are malnourd physic and marked mon USE “DIAMOND DYES” Don’t risk i aperies, ings, everything, wool, silk, linen, mixed goods, Buy “Dinme no other kine results Druszis wt Dyes O olor Card” Sparen industry If Japar obtain del ym Engl ££. N0e pee iiiils had veries of dered fire builders § ever, Is No important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of that famous old remedy In Use for Over 80 Years tcher’s Castoria Turni ing the Luck. In Yorkshire, country folk their thumbs “to turn the meet 8 single magpie. Scotland a magpie ing is believed to portend death to one of the inmates, TOSS luck” In seen pear a dwell Anoint the eyeilds with Roman Hye Bal sa at night. and in the morning your eyes will feel refreshed and Stranatheney ——h dw What She Hunted. “Do you ever go hunting?” asked a “No, reply. “Your wife?" “Yos.™ “What for?" “Oh. for burglars fire, or pare- goric, or trouble, or my salary; it's al- ways hard to tell In advance. "Hous ton Post, Don't Go From Bad to V Worse! always weak, miserable and balls? Then it's time you found out what is wrong. ney weakness causes uch suffering from backache, lame a neu and rheumatic p emia iting danger of gravel 't delay. Use Dosn's oy Kidney Pills, They bave thousands and should help you. your neighbor! A Virginia Case Mra. Chas Cook, $16 Queen 81, Alex- “The ‘fin’ left my Kidneys In bad ® pe. My back pained and 1t geemed ae though a daguer were be ne thruet Into nay jrinays. The kid. but my wife does” was the or wer and ornings x was tired. A friend told me how wonderful Doan's Kidney Pls were and 1 used them, Before JoLg I was hyp Fhe aly ry DOAN’ S S KibRey | PosTeR sawsuRN co. BuTFALS. KY. Trouble, Instant relied rd Headaches Chart, Ne. Vire $0. Philadelphia, ment, St Prof. Glibert.