The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 18, 1920, Image 3

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    \ HOW DOCTORS
TREAT COLDS
AND THE FLU
First Stevo in Treatment Is a Brisk
Purgative With Calotabs, the
Purified and Refined Calomel
Tablets that are Nausea.
less, Safe and Sure.
Doctors have found by experience
that no medicine for colds and influ.
enza can be depended upon for full ef-
fectiveness until the liver is made thor
oughly active. That is why the first
step in the treatment is the new, nauseg-
less colomel tablets ealled Calotabs,
which are free from the sickening and
weakening effects of the old style calo-
mel. Doctors also point out the fact
that an active liver may go a long way
towards preventing influenza and is one
of the most important factors in en-
abling the patient to successfully with.
stand an attack and ward off pneu.
monia,
One Calotab on the tongue at bed
time with a swallow of water—that’s
all. No salts, no nausea nor the slight
ure or work.
system is purified, and vou are feeling
fast.
original sealed packages, price thirty
fully refunded if you do not find them
delightful.—(Adv.)
RamovesDanarufl -Stopsialr Falling]
Beauty 0 and Faded Hair]
to Gra
ve 0c, and $1 ry Dragyista
(7 4 Riseox Chem. W ka. Patebios
louses, ete., stops all pain, ensures comforts to the
feet, makes walking easy, lic by mall or at Drugs
wists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. X,
Investment and Business Opportunities,
FREE Upon receipt of your name nil
dress I will furnish you f ry
map covering oper
locks like a sure shot
Year and double fron
ment particular
Chief Task.
“What is your boy
college, old man?”
“Me.”
now
doing
NEW TONIC MADE
HER STRONG AND
WELL VERY QUICK
I Took Earle’s Hypo-Cod Too and
It Worked Wonders.
1 KNOW MANY OTHER
FOLKS IT HELPED
nervous 1
name and was
“1 was
write my
and out. I could hardly get arou t
all. One bottle Earle’'s Hypo-Cod
helped me so much I took three and it
built up my
strength
nervousness which had for
years, I
through =a
built af
with it,” declared RR. F.
Farmer at Hyattsvill
tional Training School
“My relief was so or
felt better in wy life. My
In-law after a spell of slekness
oped a cough which the doctor couldn't
seein to help.
doctor and take Hypo-Cod, which
did, and although I don't know wheth-
er she took more than
not-—she rid of that cough
as strong and well as she
I could mention others I've
be helped with this wonderful touie,
but what is the use? People can easily
find out how It does the work by
ting a bottle just like T did." conti
Mr. Anderson, who at the age
76 looks and works like a young man.
Thousands of men and womer
stronger, healthier and vigorous and
thank Hypo-Cod for it. Professor
Early asserts it Is the most powerful
reconstructive tonle Druggists
endorse it and its formula is in-
dorsed by leading physiclans all over
America. Each bottle bears name of the
nationally known Earle Chemieal Cu,
which i= a guarantee of finest quality,
(See formula on bottle). Drop In at
the drug store tonight and take hone a
bottle with you.—Ady,
False Hopes. ~
“Why is the deaf mau you brought
here so anxious to go to a police
court?”
“Becnuse somebody
magistrate there
hearing.”
850
down
nd at
of
lost
of
Loven
appetite, revived my
and irove y 4 Clase
this tonie
i 1 Te
heard about
men I
Pn
couple
themselves up
the
dls
foil
GHoeveis
I told her to stop the
she
two bottles or
got and is
&eYer
known
Hed
made,
one
told
would
him
give
the
him a
A torpid liver condition prevents proper
food assimilation. Tone up your Hver with
Wright's Indian Vegetable Pilis They act
gently and surely.--Ady
A Grouchy Comment.
“Of course, women will tnke
rally to the ballot”
"What 1eakes you think that?”
“Don't they take naturally to any.
thing on earth that's marked downy
i
natu
Night and Mornin
Have Strons, Healt
POPP. PPP & PPP
2,
SOEs
»,
-
OTST,
®
CHAPTER XVi—Continued,
mee] Gomme
“But this scheme of life had this In
it that brought disaster to his sons-—
f laxness of any discipline related to
their spiritual and mental develop
ment. When we were corrected or
punished it was for conduct which af-
his comfort or dignity, never
“We had abundant money to spend.
It was a part of our father's egotism
that we should be young swells, and
we were early In disorderly ways.
Richard bad a genius for cruelty. A
to
eltfes, It was brutal, He lked
tear things to pleces slowly, a fly If {t
I had a faithful little
dog which Richard staked out In the
and killed by vivisection. 1}
little animal when It was
with its bowels ex-
a fleld
mouse,
the
“Richard destroyed birds’ nests for
He liked to cut
it stagger about wvalnly
He maimed dogs. He
He killed
to
a leg off a
and see
cattle and horses,
how
treatment
tO See
the
long it
he
osely
live under
it.
doubt that I was a more lovahle
but at least 1 did not
of cruelty. 1 was
but 1 weaker physically
legree which made
would
we
have the
attribute not only
younger was
me an extraordinary victim to Richard
when he cared to express his flendish
ness {oOo or upon me.
“We
hood-
child
about
i
were getting into late
I should that 1
when Richard began
was
SAY
to
3
cruelty uj
had a ta
came from
iveness in on
As
delight
as he
S000
which tor
me I had no further peace,
1 r with a still agonized
experience in
bed
ing a
He had put It there,
to tor.
He dominated me
snake in my
He used his superior strength
ture i
tur me physic
He
» ean be made
child wh
has not starkly asserted itself,
spiritus made life a hell, such
mistreatment,
proportions are establishes
when [llusions can be kindly
ous,
“Richard and I grew up In this fash
jon, 1
lence
trys fore ¢
in terror of
When I was fifteen me
him and his males
hor 11
been an unassertive motl
fitior
gth of mind or «x
5 Were D
iv. bn
a friend, and I n o
It was really a terrible
when I much
Clreumstances and cond
Hier str
been
time
3
ae needed a
“As older Richard's dia-
ghrewder
the
we
habits
less
grow
became only
He
schemes for
assertive, contrived
most ingenious tor
He humiliated me
wosgible before other bovs anne
} #
my
whenever
better
ment
“Ms father put us out to school to
gether, and this sulted Richard's pur
admirably, How I hated this
that bore my name and n a
hate, 1
t
human being
pose
thing
It became
exists to
over was
F bloo
indomitable
this day. No
hated by another as my
brother Richard was by me—and
this and will be
while a breath remains In my body.
“When 1 my father
died, and Richard and 1 Inherited the
under
was twenty-one,
an
#0
fem
hated
is to moment
was eighteen
a trusteeship to continue
until I Richard was
then In another vear he at
tained his majority. He was profligate
and id, a drinker, a
cruel boor, a leentlons young ruffian
who had suffered twice In actions
by weak and unfortunate
twenty.
heavy COnYSe
brought
girls,
“It irritated him beyond expression
that he had to wait the slow process
into his share of the property
Several times 1 tried to estab.
the reasonable relations which
ought, In convention, to exist between
It was quite hopeless, and
It remains as a pas
“T may not be able to satisfy anyone
this was the Inevitable conse.
~0or merely state them. However
my purpose Is not so much to Indict
my culpability with joy
“He 1s a broken old man.
a penitentiary.”
Here followed a sectfon of the man.
useript from which, as 1 recognized.
the page Dravada had taken was miles
ing. Then it continued:
“I became a little more assertive of
my rights and dignity, with the result
that our quarrels were more violent.
I tried to fit myself physically to meet
Richard, but he was very sturds, and
his proflignte habits had not yet un.
Adermined his health. When I resisted
him physically he had the better of me.
He is in
i
By CLIFFORD
Pd SOP SSP
nad
a
S. RAYMOND
Three times he knocked me wuncon-
scious, Once I was {ll in bed a week
as the result of a beating he gave me.
“Frequently he threatened that he
would kill me, He sald this often and
openly, with every evidence of earnest-
ness and determination, Later that
counted against him,
“I was not cowed, and with the great
hatred firmly rooted 1 was willing to
accept thd unequal struggle with hime
It was a Joy to hate him, fight him,
even to be beaten by him. I had re
gained enough courage to seek socla-
bility. It was dificult, because his
refined sense of cruelty led him to
search me out, wherever I might be
| with my friends, and to humiliate me,
if possible, before them.
“One night 1 had been
in the vill:
nequaintance
at a tavern
Richard being
drunk and very violent, found me. and
Was an in
loud threats that he Intended to kill
me.
when
there scene which he
friends
At
tance
in
Richard,
who
"One of my
home,
the dis
persuaded
Hartley he
from the
1
to go
walked
to the
| out
from
detained him, pursued me.
| up with me
| as
HIRE
house
village those «
alone, but breaking away
the young men would have
He caught
¢ abused each other
and
we walked, being overheard by sev.
i eral persons al
“When we fo a po
river near the house, he
cried that
the way
sanely violent,
would rid
He at
he
3
hie
farmer Acro
ad hard insanely
He
he
the re wos
drunk, intended te
had done so.
spot, disturbed,
thought
probably,
{ thought of physical consequences but,
I am sure, not by any spiritual mis
givings,
“1 do not know how long I remain
ed unconscious or when | awoke. It
nay have been ten, forty or sixty min-
utes, It may have an hour or
two. When it
brought an aching head and a
Ing determination.
“Life with Richard at Hartley house
had
longer
i endure
“A
wis possible, 1
been
was,
dawn
impossible 1 .could
him, I
become
control could no
him.
and of revenge
Richard's un-
had tried to
made to think
chance of escape
was, in
He
Ww
derstanding, dead,
kill me. He might
he had. I had considerable
with Richard, of course, Lind not
{ touched it. Each of us had been giv-
en, that morning, five hundred dollars
by trustees. That had been the occa
gion of Richard's murderons debauch.
It is strange—or Ie it7-that 1 never
think of ‘him as, or ever called him,
Dick.
“1 arranged the spot as well as 1
could In the details to suggest that my
drunken and brutal brother had not
only killed me but had disposed of
my body in the river. When I had
done this, relying for success on
uncertain memory of the act which
already had terrified him, I left Hart
ley house—all its painful memories
and brutal experiences, the unhappi
ness | had experienced there, the mis.
ernble ehfidhood, the wretched boy
hood and the young manhood, come
to this furtive, malevolent end. And
1 there resolved that If I got safely
away and if my design worked out
suceessfully, I should return to the
selfsame spot some time to live a jo-
vial life where life had been so drear,
“My plans were not perfect: my
resources and my intelligence for this
sudden meeting of the world were
slender: but my success was beyond
expectation,
“First I had the satisfaction of
knowing that my brother was taken
for my murder, Circumstances were
all against him, and he was convinced
in his own heart that lie had not only
killed me as he so often had wished
¥
money
me,
to do, but that he had disposed of my
body,
“In arranging the spot to Indicate
a murder I had thrown my hat, which
was broken and bloody, down the
bank. It had caught on a projecting
rock. T had taken a ring off my finger
had thrown that Into the pool.
It had
this seemed to me to afford inconeclus-
ive evidence, but there were obvious
in finding a body which
might Increase Richard's troubles.
“I waited In New York, carefully
many - months, reading of
It gained some celebrity.
prosecuting zeal was tremendous,
The
bones
Were
as important evidence,
brofight
read In the
fish-nibhbled
nlso up some
which, as 1 papers,
regarded as remains
me,
“Much legalistic
I became a case of
argument ensued,
importance, involv-
evidence, The super-
all against Richard
fuced him. The evi.
arranged damned him.
in hate and his
against me arose against him.
He thought he had killed me. He knew
had. There many
In
facts
confession
had
relationship
were
His
dence |
ur
were witnesses
iy thing helping
clearly identifis
of
re
vestiges something
the circumstances, were ac.
parts of
the prosecution and the jury,
I that I was dead and my re-
angious to
requirements
the #orpus dellet!
mains swept away, were
meet technically the
Lin wa
the testimony of
of terrors th
wis terrific,
Any aggressor
of men,
of the
witnesses
an 1
It
in
Ev-
Ci se
ta
pmned
pinion of any body
who knew anything
13d
ia
ervone
included, was con-
I had been m
vinced
BOTY
y
i
instead
instead
doubt remained merely
a life
Popular
lack
sentence
PRY hology
of essential
bie
pay him--at
my score.
I know,
shall
owner,
can
least
not pay .
for 1 have the
return to Hart-
aMtiough es
an alien; with a false name, a
fals s and a What is a
family that 1 should notienjoy my per.
ct revenge upon this brute who made
years and wore of my
most impressionable form,
thing when it was
“Some day,
jctermination, 1
as
house its
great joy.
teen
its an
most
“1 shall go back to Hartley
life and health be spared me,
mke It and life in it jovial,
gth be spared my will, the
that my Richard
is suffering for the murder a dead
and if stror
brother
of
the caves below which burn my
ires,
“This is my crime, and If It causes
one dear to iater to suffer, 1
it known, Some day I shall
man wholly unknown to
HE n
people who knew the Dobsons, 1 shall
no me
I shall knew
suffering a
Richard Dobson is
in a penitentiary close to the place
where 1 whall live in the circumstances
which a great deal of money will en-
able me to set up.
“That is my natural revenge upon a
fiend who happened to come of the
Hate is a wonders
CHAPTER XVII.
Jed came Into the room again as 1
finished reading, and put another log
on the fire. Then he sat down In a
rocking chair by the fire,
“They met that night, you know,"
he sald after he had rocked a while,
“They? 1 said.
“Arthur and Richard Dobson.” said
Jed, “Mr. Sidney and his brother,
who is over there in the peniten-
tiary.”
“They met what night? 1
Jed was patient,
“They met the night last fall,” he
explained, “when you found Mr, Sid.
ney leaving the house, the night 1
found you outside, tha night we pre
tended I was sick, the night he che
In heme and had us endl the penitentiary
to say a convict had escaped, That
night, he met his brother. His broth.
er was the conviet.,” .
Jed was rocking and talking to the
fire.
“Mr. Sidney--Arthur Dobson" he
asked,
suid, “went out to see the pool on
& SP o> >
ee
-
=
eee
Te
a
Tee
aa!
eee
vod¥
He
every anniversary of his murder,
voir of will, The reaction wes almost
disastrous,
lived
not
fall.
“I knew It was a great
wns keeping Mr. Sidney
continged. “Such a hate as he had!
I don’t know that I understand it
now. It was so unprofitable, Or was
it? I do not know. It had a great
value in his lfe, I think
another year or two If he had
had the experience he had
hate
alive," he
every yen r
He did not
him. It was
“He went to the pool
the night of his murder,
know that F went with
such an abnormal abuse of his
sirength., I was afrald for him.
“Your prospects depended
him,” 1 suggested, .
He allowed a moment to pass In
It was as If he permitted ven-
before we again entered the
common thought anfl come
He did not look pained or
any fashion. There was no
about It, He just
for a moment from talking.
opening the windows
When the alr
odors of my
"”
upon
tilntion
room of
munion,
hurt ‘in
were
that momepqt.
of the
went
cleared testy
mark, he on as
nothing,
ficult to denl
“The
he met
with,
night 1 am remir
Richard
and recognized him,
walked
every
Dobson
The pu
out of the
He
do The warden
him out if he had
was helpless outside,
rag
he wanted to escape,
have
Wie
had
tiary.
80,
opportunity
would have
BO,
He did not have
or a crust. But
asked to
1
A piace to get a
“There must been something
in his mind about this night and
place. Arthur Ddbson found hi
by the ol.” X
I
hidden hy th
ils
was 50
away, bushes,
wo oid men in t
light, when Arthur Dobson
to speak, 1 hear d 3
"Well, Ri said Mr. Sidney,
‘we are here
“Richard
stinctly,
cl
Dobson quavered in a
senile tone, almost a®falsetto:
"Who are you?
“I'm your brother Arthur. sald Mr,
Sidney. “What
“Richard
he
made a
weak,
are you doing here?
Dobson must have felt
that was confronted
He
by a gh
shrill
little sound. as
$s paisied, Ti
tuation tremendous
know what sould hag
what
was
Her
Mr
to
know do .
caltn as an oyster,
“a your brother
‘and 1
been dead,
have been
comfortably
in gprison,
you if you that.
half crazy. If 3
prison, you would die
tion and
Arthur, Rich
dead, 1
didn't kill
in the old
you have
would be
You are
were out
of starva.
exposure in 24 hours. I am
am
he sald am not
You
living
while
No
+
told
me, 1
ane
iiove
and you
¢
ing brother.’
{TO
BE ED)
LUCKY AND UNLUCKY DAYS
CONTINU
most Any One to Justify Mig
Pet Belief,
Cold. hard statistics prove that the
number of premier awards
were won on Monday,
the same
maligned
ably,
Which fact gives some. color to the
superstitions many people have about
certain days of the seek being lucky,
while others are unlucky.
Tuesday seems to be the had day
record,
Friday
much.
notice
though the
stands out
common on that day than on any other
day. Railway disasters, fires, street
necldents—the record in each case is
held easily by Tuesday. And it is
the dad most favored, too, by those
who desire to put an end to thelr existe
ence,
Saturday also has a bad reputation:
Its specialty is murders: and fully
half the petty crime that is dealt with
In the, police courts occurs on that
day. But probably that Is because
Saturday also holds the record for
drunkenness,
There is rothing very distinctive
about Thursday beyend the fact that
It Is the day upon which the birth.
cate is highest; and Sunday Is notices
able only for its low death-rate.
Wednesday fs, above all the rest,
the day of weddings. This applies to
all classes, and nearly as many mar
finges nre celebrated on that day alone
Ag upon any three of the others. Mon.
{real Herald ;
Why Holland Grows Willows
Holland is covered willow
trees, and the great dikes of the
country are made stronger by the
network forined by the roots. Brooks
Ivy Eagle. y
Some Never Unmask,
Unfortunately our blessings fn dis
guise are painfully slow in unmask.
tig. ~DBoston Transcript,
Ouch! Such Pain!
It takes you right in the back!
Bometimes in the arm, hip or foot.
It's all due to
an over-abund-
ance of that
poison, called
uric acid, The
kidneys are not
able to get rid
of it. Such
conditions you
can readily
overcome, and
proiong life by
taking the ad-
vice of Doctor
Pierce, which is,
“keep the kid-
neys in good
order.” Avoid too much meat,
alcohol or tea. Drink ‘plenty of
pure water, preferably hot water,
before meals, and drive the uric
acid out of the system by taking
‘Anuriec.” This can be obtained at
any drug store, in tablet form.
Srreny, W. VA."—1 have used Doctor
Plerce’s Anuric Tablets with great pleas-
ure a8 they al
Ways give re fi.
I was a ted
with kidney
trouble for sever-
al years, I tried
several doctors
and none of the
helped me bus
little, After Isaw
Doctor Plerce's
advertisement I
thought 1 would
try ‘Auurie’ and
the first bottle
ich that I got more. An-
‘“ } 3 ne | ever
used, i ] sll my friends about
these tablets and do ail get {
A) We Bul
ferers w use them.”—lsasc NELSON
| Stomach
on Strike
20 Years
§ Eaftonic Settled It]
ee
Ha
“Eatonie is wonderful,”
Burton. “I
stomach trouble for 20 years
I am well”
Eatonlec gets right
stomach troubles by tak
carrying out the acidity and
of course, when the cause |
the sufferer gets well, If
sourness, bel
repeating or 1)
trouble, take Eat
each meal and
had been a sufferer
after the car
i $y tnd oes or
ain ingigestion,
other st
tablets
rel
guarantee,
Bottle Handy
Pain whether it
comes from rheu-
matism, neuralgia,
sciatica, backache
or sprain is usually
most acute at night.
H you have a bottle of Yager's
Liniment handy and use it you
get quick relief. Price 35¢
The large bottle contzsine twice
88 much as the usual 50c bottle of
liniment and lasts the sverage fam-
ily for months, At all dealers,
wt
Comfort Baby's Skin
With Cuticura Soap
And Fragrant Talcum
Seap 25¢, Ointment 25 and 50¢, Talcwm 25¢.
QUININE HAIR TUNIG
A FULL PINT YOR 50 CENTS
ate prefer Liles, Rose, Violet or Mimoss ottons
19 Ama wa W111 oho yon nahn rar fe each, bend
ad a ¥ a oon rated Fale
The
: Jousimply nad water
hy par directions, i ¥ i
hea Rs 8 nie it wonderfully
»
we
air Tos
" especially fine for the sin
the 8 miryel for men after Lhe
hare, Cord by £F Dironsn ts, Or tor
eo Voor
and Tia
fio crags Fd a Sach Halr Yenie, Gue
i Vie KIN. Calvert Bi, Baltimore. Md
Constipation, Stomach Troublecinstant re
Hel + Treatment, Siaflard lieadache Char,
0c. Prof. Guibert, £506 Vine St
A A DC Sh
FRECKLES Spl
NA i
W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 44.1920,