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mA , AUGU mass of humanity always does eventu- ally react. To be sure our historles tell us that Rome was sacked by the|ample insurance vandals, but only because the great|to non-representative snt. mass of tiie common people who| They make it possible Toh) people made up the real Roman Empire|to be posted on public q and were quite willing that it should be|to take an active part in thagrairs of sacked. Theaters meant nothing to|the government even thoud they be them but years of toll under the slave | many thousand miles fromyy capi- Night's Tonics — fresh air, drivers’ lash. Great works of art|tal city. \ 050 and an B Tebiet to meant tribute and taxes. The culture| “America is not as bad off,\ geems, - of Rome spelled nothing to them but|as some degenerated reformelwould \ Nature's Remed: ....»'1. 'l‘h-hhl'h( “:c:".':'," oppression and extortion. The vandals| have us believe. were welgome. \ digestive and eliminative system—t! “Today we have made slaves of |Qfficial Spanker for \ Stomach, Liver and Bowsla. a1 aa Ciiheon 3 Toblet—ita Bl stemminnd electricity. Tasks that used you ™ al ctric 0 asks at use to spell weeks of drudgery and the San Francisco Chi‘“ 8an Francisco, Aug. 31.—"Spatng action AERERNS 2 Setecnet. o wit be 4 hardest kind of work for human hands are now done in a few moments | neatly done'” might be the sign onhe by the electric motor. Goods and mer- | door of the headquarters of the Chla. chandise once transported slowly at|town squad at the Hall of Juspe the expenditure of great effort are|here. Police Corporal Jack Floydis no wearried swiftly and easily by the | the official spanker, and rarely a steam locomotive, Our present civili- | passes that he does not imprint zation is enjoyed and shared in by|trademark on some incorrigibl every member of soclety. There is no | Chinese youth. \i been steadily Ancreasing and the vege- tation has grown more rapidly. The nights, which usually are cold, have ' Nofcorns become very mild. 7y NS —0 70 - N C H T LV_OICES (N THE AIR Friday, August 31, WGl (American Radio & Rescarch Corp, 1] Medford Hillside, Mass.) E ISLE Ol RETRIBUTION EDISON MARSHALL < | ! i | L4 : - - i The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. Stops the pain in- stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out, Made in clear liquid and in thin plasters, The action is the same, ¢t your druggist Biue-jay selling out-of-date women's clothes! “Can’t, eh? Son, while he was talking to me, it occurred to me all at once that the least of those gowns, the poorest one in the lot, was worth ! at least a marten skin! Think of it!| ue A marten skin, from Northern Cana- da and Alaska, returned the trapper around $60 in 1920. Now let me get down to brass tacks. “It's true I don't intend to sell any of those hairy old whitte trappers any women's silk gowns. But this was|’ what I was going to have you do: first you were to hire a good auxili- ary schooner—a strong, sturdy, sea- worthy two-masted craft such as is used in northern trading. You'd fit P that craft out with a few weeks' sup- 2 plies and fill the hold with a couple of thousand of those gowns. You'a need two or three men to run the launch—1I believe the usual crew is a pilot, a first and second engineer, and PE—— ! BEGIN HERE TODAY Ned recoiled at the words, but his Naw Cornet, son of wealthy God-|father threw him a quick smile. fray Cornet. calebrates with his friend,| ''Your mother and I have a lot to Rodesy Coburn, the return of the lat- | Answer for. Both of us were busy, ter Zom Canuda. Ned leaves the|l With my business, she with her ‘Totsan Clud in a happy frame of niind | household cares and social duties, and and drtves homeward in the drizziing |It was easler to give you things for rain. wanted than to refuse you thingh for Ned's car goes into a perllous skid, | YOur own good. It was easier to let knocking down Bess Gilbert, a shop-|YOu g0 soft than to provide hardship girl, on her way home. A po- |for you. It was pleasanter to give ifceman ‘tells Cornet to .report to|lIn than to hold out—and we loved Judge Rossman in the morning and [YOu too much to put you through udvises Ned to settle for damage|What we should have put you throuh. done to a passing jitney. “This thing we've talked over be- Ned is allowed to continue on his|fore. I've never been firm. I've let way when the girl is found to be un-|You grow to a man’'s years—29, I be- injured. He asks her to ride to her|lieve—and still be a child in experi- home in his car. Ned returns home |[ence. The work you do“around my to tell his father of the accident. business could be done by a 17-year- SRR, Ned, I want to make a man 6:30 p. m.—Boston police reports, Boston police headquarters. Amrad Builletin Board. 6:45 p. m.—Condition of Massa- | | chusetts Highways furnished by thel Automobile Legal fssociation. 7:30 p. m,~Evening program. 1. Concert by Medford Klks. KDEA (Westinghouse—East Pittsburgh). great slave class to rise in revolt| Corporal Floyd, who, because of, th against it. fierce aspect he assumes on punitivy “The other weakness In the old |0c¢casions. is also known as the “Man civilization,” continued Dr. Steinmetz, | 4arin of Chinatown,” first entered his| « “was the difficulty of communicatioa, | Present profession about three months | As long as these old city states re-|2B0 when a worried Oriental parent | mained within their own walls they | conflded to him: \ got along very well, but the moment| My boy, 8am, he§ no likee go | they extended their borders beyond | 5chool. All-time lun away. Take him ‘\ these walls decay began to set in, The | juv'nile court—no good. No like | Roman Empire for instance was nec- | JuV'nile court. Sam ju' lun away some ily ruled from Rome, but since|More. You spankee him, Mister « there was no easy method of com-|¥lovd” And Floyd did. munication between Rome and its sub-| SO appreciative was the parent of ject countries scattered all over cen-| Floyd's handiwork that he presented tral Kurope and Africa, the govern-|him ‘With a canary bird in a - pic- ing was done entirely by the people | turesque cage. Today a dozen canary living at the capital. The situation birds at the Hall of Justice testify that was very much as though the United | 1'lovd's business is expanding. States of Ambrica today, Was §OVErn- | smm————— ed entirely by the citizens of Wash- ington, D. C. or of any other one city.|Ar® You the Woman You Were In such a case there Is no guarantec pleane i He? that this relatively smal group of peo- | IVery woman was meant to be ple represents the best brains and|N¢althy, happy, and fill her sphere in highest minds in the country at large, | 1fe t0 the best of her ability; but, In fact, exactly the opposite was !hc‘fllus, how few have the health or dagsiin Rome. Thet cltisenn: of flfls‘physh-'al endurance to live up to their great city became degenerate, luxury I}Ieals. Over-ambitious, many of them loving, und lustful. The governmeyt|4€VeIoP nervousness, irritability, foll into the handa of the: greedy headaches, backaches, irregularities, selfish, and short sighted, who wery|And often more serious ailments called upon to shape the destiny -of 4| L 1ich retard their progress in lfe, great empire. The inevitable downfall| 7 OmeR in this condition should turn L B il 5 lto Lydia E. Pinkham% Vegetable 5 $ Compound, a root and herb medicine Our modern newspapers,: our tclc-}which las been proven to benefit 98 tems, our telephone and our put of every 100 women who try it. ss, which make it possible for|let Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetabls all the people of the United States.|¢ompound make you well and strong, all the people of the world for that ad the woman you were meant to be. . m.—The Children's Period. .—Baseball scores. 9 yme ingredi- 7 T . m,—Farm program contin- d { h dy coated, For children_and adults, Draqgist £ | 7:20 p. m.—Concert by Madelinc | Barnes,.soprano; J. A. Murer, accom- ship of the world, broadcast direct panist; and A. W. Juehner, baritone. from 'hg Polo Grounds, ‘New Tork 8:45 pe m.—National Stockman and | 1t¥: The preliminary bouts will al- Farmer Market Report. 80 be, broadeast. _ 9 p. m.—Baseball scores. %+ ity 2 Complete radio sets and supplies at 9:55 p. m.—Arlington time signals. | yonry Morans, 365 Main street, op- SR posite Myrtle ‘St.—advt PRI ., SR AMERIG A WILL_N[]T G0 INTO DECLINE Steinmetz Sees No Danger o Decay in This Country NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY Godfrey had fought upward from utter poverty to the presidency and ownership of one of the greatest fur houses of his country, partly through the exercise of the principle of abso- lute business integrity, mostly through the sheer dynamic force of the man. His cempetitors knew him as a fair but remorseless fighter; but his fame carried far beyond the confines of his resident city. Bearded trappers, running their lines through the deso- late wastes of the North, were used to _seeing him come venturing up their gray rivers in the spring, fur-clad and wind-tanned—finding his relaxation and keeping fit by personally attend- ing to the buying of some of his furs. Thus it was hard for a soft man to feel easy in his presence. Ned Cornet was somewhat down- cast and sulen as he entered the cheerfully lighted hallway of his father’s house. In the soft light it was immediate- 1y evident that he was his father's son, yet there were certain marked differences between them. Warrier blood had some way failed to come down to Ned. For all his staiwart body, he gave no particular image of strength. He paused again, and their eyes met over the table. All too plainly the elder Cornet saw that his appeal had failed to go home. His son was smiling grimly, his eyes sardonic, un- mistakable contempt in the curl of his lips. Ned's bitter smile had seemingly passed to his own lips. “I suppose there's no use of going on,” he said. “By all means go on, since you are so warmed up to your subject,” Néd answered coldly. “I wouldn't like to deprive yot of the pleasure. You e 5 a cook—and you'd have to have a " |seamstress to do fitting and make minor alterations. They you'd start up for Bering Sea. “You may not know it, but along the coast of Alaska ,and throughout the islands of Rering Sea there are hundreds of little, scattered tribes of Indians, all of them trappers of the finest, high-priced furs . Nor do their| women dress in furs and skins alto- gether, either, as popular legend would have you believe. Through their hot, long summer days they wear dresses like American women, | and the gayer and prettier the dresses, | S the better they like 'em. To my| 7:85 p. m.—Health talk, “Hygienc knowledge, no one has ever fed them of the Workshop,'™ State Department because silk p. m.—Baseball scores of the Eastern, American and National Leagues. 0 p. m~—Bedtime story for the children. 7:40 p. m.—Current Book Review by J. W. Gilman, manager of the Court Square Book store, Inc., Spring- field, § p. m.—Musical concert by Mrs. Minnie Nickels, contralto; M Hugo 8. Thompson, pianist and ac compan. assisted by the WBZ Trio, 9 p. m.—Baseball scores. Bedtime story for grownups, by Orison 8. Mar- den, editor Success Magazine. 11 p. m.—Arlington time signals. Wellesley Hills, Mass., Aug. 31.— “Whether the country is going to the dogs or not depends upon two things, your age and your digestion,” Accord- ing ta Dr. Charles P. Steinmetz, elec- trical wizard and authority extra- ordinary social developments. Speaking before the leading busi- ness men-of the country at the Babson Institute, Dr. Steinmetz discussed the future of American civilization. “The old civilization of Greece and WGY Electric Co,, N. Y.) (General Schenectady, too | of Health. was He took his place at the stately table so gravely and quietly that his parent’s interest was at once wak- ened. His father smiled quietly at him across the board. “Well, Ned,” he “What is it today.” “Nothing very much. call, though, to real tragedy. I might as well tel you about it, as likely enough it'll be in the papers tomor- row. I went into a bad skid at Fourth and Madison, hit a jitney, and pefore we got quite stopped managed to knock a girl over on the pavement. Didn't hurt her a particle But there's a hundred dollars’ damage to the jit—and a pretty severe scare for asked at last. A very close your young son.” As he talked, his eyés met those of his father, almost as if he were afraid to look away The older man made little comment. He went on with his THEIR EYES MET OVER THE TABLE had something on your min what is it2" “It's simply this,” his father went on. “Today I met Leo Schauffner at lunch, and in our talk he gave me what I' consider a real business in- spiration . He tells me, in his various jobbing houses, he has several thou- sand silk and velvet gowns and coats and wraps left on his hands in the financial depression that immediately silk—simply high—but being women, red or white, they'd simply go crazy over it. | “The other factor in the combina- tion is that the Intrepid, due to the unsettled fur market, failed to do any extensive buying on her last annual} trading trip through the islands, and as a result practically all the lnlllan.&l have their full catch on hand. The | Intrepid is the only trader through the particular chain of islands I have in mind—the Skopin group, north and east of the Aleutian chain—and she's not countting on going up again till spring . Then she'll reap a riche har- vest—unless you get there first. “The Skopin Islands are charted— any that are inhabited at all—easy t6 find, casy to get to with a sea-worthy | launch. Every one of those Indians| you'll find there wil lbuy a dress for his squaw or his daughter to show off in, during the summer, and pay for it Stories” for the kiddies, by Fuller Orton. Topica. Slocum of the New 40 p. m.—RBaseball scores 7:45 p. m-~—Musical program and three one-act plays. 10:30% p. m.—Musical program by Imperial Brass Quartet. Wiz (Aeolian Hall, N. Y. City). m.—"Cloverfield Farm Helen 6:05 p. 745 8:15 p. m.—Harper Brothers Liter- ary Minutes. 8:45 p. m.—"Sports” by William J. York Tribune. 9 p. m—E Organ Recital by direct wire from the Estey Organ Stu- dio in New York 10 p. m.—"Berthoven Recital” by Eduard Dino Anghineli, celebrated stey P m—"Looscleal Current | Rome,” he says, “were founded upon a system of slavery. The citizens of Athens enjoyed their leasure, produc- | ed works of art, attended the theater, | and pondered on philosophical prob-| lems, only at the expense of a much | large class of slaves who labored long| hours that the Athenians might live in luxury. The Roman citizen in his time enjoyed the freedom of the world | but Rome prospered at the expense of a hundred subject states and because | of the labor of a hundred subject peo- | !'ples. In both of these older civillza- | tions a very small proportion of the| | people enjoyed their advantages at! the expense of a large majority. “The idle rich degenerated, as the| idle rich will, and the great mass of the common people finally reacted to the impositions put upon them as the &0 M!LA.S_S ES With“:he delicate, le ded flavor {Flavor with B & O molasses, ani you'll flavor dessert, and soon the talk veered to other matters. The older man finished his coffee, slowly lighted a long, sleek cigar, and for a moment rested with elbows on the table. “Well, Ned, I suppose might as well get this off my chest,” he began “Now is as auspicious a time as any. You say you got a good scare today. I'm hoping that it put ‘you in a mood so that at least you can give me a good hearing.” The man spoke rather humbly. The air was electric when he paused. Ned leaned forward. “You've heen a very attentive son,” Godfrey Cornet paused again. “The trouble, I'm afraid, is that 1 haven't been a very attentive father. I've attended to my business—and little else—and now 1'm paying the piper. “Please bear with me, It was only a little accident, as you say. trouble of it is that it points the waz that things are going. It could ve easily have been a terrible accident a dead girl under your speeding wheels, a charge of manslaughter iu stead of the good joke of being arrest- foliowed the war. He was cussing his luck because he didn't know what to do with them Of "course they were part of the surplus that helped glut the markets when hard times made people stip buying—stock that was manufactured during the booming days of the war. He told me that this finery was made of the most with a fine piece of fur. “This is August. I'm already ar-| ranging for a license. You'd have to| 10:55 p. m. get going in a week. Hit as far|¥eather forccast retransmitted from north as you want—the farther the government station at NAA at! go the better you will do—and then |Arlington. | work south. Making a big chain e that cuts off the currents and the WEAT beautitul silks and velveets, but all of | Lo un enproen jon Pmeet. in mid. | o To_nd Tel: €0 N ¥ ;tt\‘l‘eflb BH?'.’,'er’l',fe.n’f“fii"’xm°3?' corLwinter, so you have to count on| 7:30 p. m—“Trapping Wild Ani- ¥ |round|ng the Aleutian Peninsula into| mals in the Jungles of Malay,” by | Italian pianist | 5 —Time signals and Holiday Days. When The Family’'s Coming Home. you thousand for—I'm ashamed to tell | G "0\l " iomo time in Novem-|Charles Mayer, famous trapper, whe you rlmw much}.l‘ 1ber. 1f you wait much longer you're | has spent twenty years in the jungles ed pimost nothing!™ his son prompt- | upt not to get out hefore apring. [oteaaies tarsiie Al R “Yes. Ambat “That's the whole story. The car-|is one of a series of talks under the took him up." go of furs you should bring out|auspices of the Boy Scout Foundation. s aoh e should be worth close to a hundred | 745 p. m.—Molody Relles Orchos- i thousand. Expenses won't be fifteen | tra in a popular music program. 5 nothing. And 1 back, keenly inter- “Good Lord, into business | = WONDERS IFIT WOULD REMEMBERSWIPE GUESSES HE'D BETTER HAVE BEEN LESS CAUTIONED HM NOT MAKE HI$ BED. NEVER WORK TO HAVE WASH- T0 PORGET D PUT HAS SEEMED TO HAVE ED HIS BREAKPAST OUT MILK BUTLE HAD TIME TO DOIT DISHES EVERY MORN- EACH NIGHT SINCE PAMILY'S BEEN ING AWAY ' (Continued in Our Next Issue) Warm Ocean Currents ‘ Bring Mild Nights| London, Aug. 31.—The greater| warmth of the water surrounding ||v-; Faroe Islands, in the North Sea, has caused the temperature of the Islands to undergo a radical change during, the last few months, Scientific investigations have that a warm ocean stream from the is encircling the Islands and that great quantitics of strange fish! scales have been washed ashore | These scales belong to a type of oc- | topus that inhabits western European | waters, but hitherto has not been | known to exist north of the south coast of England. The temperature of the Islands ha e 2::'::4"';"] thousand tn all. 1t would mean R e? work; dealing with a bunch of crafty Johnny Wilson-Harry Q@reb" redskins isn't play for boys! Ma¥be | hout <or the middlewelght ehampion- there'd be cold and rough enough weather, for Bering Sea deserves no g man's trust. But it would be the SUPPOSES “THAT WITH THE Inneqt sport in the \\'nrlh]. an oppor- | R T e o tunity to take Alaskan bear and tun-| dra caribou—plenty of adventure and mixu%fi\ék:‘rpgs\;l:s i i - - cxcitement and tremendous profits to | EISE sphetiing, a term in the penic o boot. It would be a man’s job, Ned THINGS UP A LITTLE S insteac o :t fl’?e‘ MT:' ‘{hym: —but vou'd get a kick out of it you R iiieg: the gitl 1t WO S ot to ever got out of a booze party in e e e SNAP FASIENER Trie: “Ana we snilt the profits spend a good many of the best years/ N s andresto o of your life behind prison walls. 1 he success ask myself whether or not 1 wn;‘n»l of a gown ifg my incuence to bear, in that by ::sc.g to yke»,. you from going there: or waist may T's ashamed to say that I would. 5 depend upon ou may wonder about that. T ( Rowteaitiv s would know, in my heart, that vou fast ¥] should go there. 1 can’t accuse you astened. witheut alao accusing muyself.| There; The SO-E-Z i vould try to keep you out of ! :.:‘:m[ NOin ‘doing thet, 1 would see SnapFas;te?}fr | in myselt {urther proof of my ‘o never cuts the e T 2 it g ou want f.r your skin troubl B e might rake.a man | thread or = Resinul 10 stop the liching and burn. el G | wears loose. ing—Resinol to heal the eruption, Scratching makes it worse, besides 10cforadozen, being embarrassing and dangerous at al i ut the smooth gentle ingredients of coung}r:ouon RESINOL OINTMENT often over- | oy come the trouble promptly, even if it is | THE AUTOYRE Co. severe and long-established. Bathing AREYRAR, coun, the affected part first with RESINOL I . | ““It Stays Sewed!’’ )AP hastens the beneficial results, i0: products at all druggists. shown SUDDENLY REMEM- L5 THAT PERMAPS A BERS THE ONE LITRE OF WATER NOW DUTY SHE HAD SAID WIL BE AS GOOD AS IP HE SIMPLY MUST HE\ DONE IT EACH DAY NOT TORGET | ANDII'S ONLY HIS IMAGI NATIQ} MAKES THEM LOOK SORT 4P DRY AND YELLOW HAS UNEASY FEEL- ING THERE WAS GOMETHING ELSE HI$ WIFE TOLD HIM T0 DO o you." i FEW FOLKS HAVE GRAY HAIR NOW Draugist Says Ladies Are Using Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphnr. | south TIDIES UP LIVING - ROOM BY BLOWING ALL CIGAR ASHES FROM TABLE ON TO T'LOOR. cLuyas hwiLiaMS i (C) Wheeler Syn. Inc. $ALESMAN $AM The Eyes Have It Hair that 10ses Its color and lustre, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and 1jfeless, Js caused by a iack of sul- phur in the hair. Our grandmother made up a mixiure of Sage Tea and GOTW% GUN THAT'LL smiphur to Xeep her | and A THATLL Smeatiful, and thousands of 1 SH00T 5TRAHT? and men who that even color, ) /, spat beaviifci de.: shade of 75 4 whoch is => attraciive, use oply old-tim> recipe Nowudays we got this famous mix ;preved by the addition of er ingredients by king at any drug stere for a botie of “Wyeth's \ Rage and Sw:lphur Compoun? which - = - — : darsens tie hair o 6o uly, 8 TOSR-AND 'L KEZY (Ot BRK Wi BN | evenly, & nobudy car possibiy tell 57 R Rhated Pl it hae been aphel You just dampen MTIL 00 GRE. ME A VOU%‘L—‘L)?::K-JE\:‘_- a sponge or soft brus. with it anl 7 H draw this through your halr, taking 9.2 small strand at a time. y hai: dirappe e ladles with Wreth's uur Compound is 1had, ! 2lly darkening the hnir a few applications. it also| Nrings back the gloss and lustre and == an app-irauc: of abJudisce. AR | THINK | (AN HELP NOU- JUsT A MINUTE- WELL-©THER Y GIMME MY MONEY PAK OR A GUN | CAN SHOO0T STRRGHT WTH NOUVE TRIED EVERY ONE N TH' -STORE.- | | CANT SEE WHM THEY DONT 5HOOT S5WRAIGHT FOR NOU SAY - AINT SO0 ) ( WHETT BRCK AGAIN7? S by hair . 4 this g 131