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] VorcEs i THE AIR [—————— KDKA - he Flavor ety 1o the second of & series of lalks b:08 w.o—Brewning, Kiag and company’s Wednesday night dance. P t— WGl 7 . TRIBUTION u mzqns - e - o LANTAVIED o umie snown 6 conmuy, s T —————— - BEGIN HERE TODAY ter, The next few days you're going Ned Cornet, his fiancee, Lenore, |'0 8p2nd building yourseives a shaek and Ress, 3 scamstress, are survivors | 804 cutling winter fuel, Then eagh of a shipwreck They land on an | © ¥ou will have a trap line—a good Island inhabited only by a man named | S one, toa. Every day you'll ge Doomsdorf and his Indian wite, 0ut and follow your line of traps— Doomsdorf tells them he has named | Paiting, skinning and fleshing, drying the island “Hell,” and warns Ned and ' the skins when you get tosthe eabina the girls that he is master of the You'll know what it really is to he fsland and that they must be his ©0ld. thew you'll knew what work willing slaves, means, too, With you three 1 ex. Ned defies Doomsdor!f and the two|beet to tHiple my usual season’s eateh, fight, Ned, however, is no mateh for bullding up three times as fast the the big man's strength and is badly fortune I need, beaten, Scoond In command is the “All my life I've looked forward to #quaw and she proves herself a faith. & chance to give society the same ful watchdog for her master. | Kind of treatment it pave me—and « Mess is the stronger of the two | when that fortune is large enough tc girle, Bhe makes up her mind to be work with theré will be a new dy. y for any opportunity of escape, Nhasty arise in Russia Lenore seems helpless to cope with “When I said to abandon hope 1 the situation | meant it You have no beat, and I'll ! give you no chance to make one, The distance is too great across the fee ever to make It through; hesides, you won't be given a chance to try ven If your doting fathers should NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “But I really must get down to es. sentials, It's 5o long since I've talked o the outside world that I can't help | being garrulous. To begin with—I| came here some years ago, not en- tirely by my own choice, Of course, | not even the devil comes to such a hell as this from his own cholce, There's always pressure from above.” He paused again, hardly aware of the horrified gaze with which his Learers regarded him. A startling change had come over him when he spoke again. His eyes looked red as | a weasel's in the shadowed room the tones of his voice were more sub- dued, yet throbbing with passion, “I remember gray walls, long ago, in Siberia,” he went on slowly and | gravely. ' “I was not much more than a 'boy, a student at a great university ~and then there were gray wals in & gray, snow-swept land, and gray | cells. with barred doors, and men| standing ever on watch with loaded rifles, and thousands of human cattle in prison garb. It was almost straight west from here, far heyond | Bering Sea: and somctimes inspectors | would eome, stylish people ilike your- selves, except that they were bearded men of Petrograd, and 'ook at us through the bats as at animals in a 200, but they never interfered with === == the way things were! run! 1 was an|send out a search party, they will enemy of society, they d—s0 1 be- overlook this little isiand, Tt was came an enemy of society in reali Just-a freak of the currents that you Right then I learned a hate for so- landed here-—I don't gee yet why you clety and a desirc to hurn out the weren't blown to Tzar Island, im- heart of such weak thi you!" | mediately east of here. \When they He turned to them, sn, ng like a ' find you aren’t there, and pick up any beast. other lifeboats from your ship that in “One day the chance came to all probability janded there, they'll be escape. While more cowardly nwu‘L"M enougi to turn around and go would have hesitated, | pushed|back. Especially if they see your through and out. On the way 1! lifeboat floating bottom upward in the “learned a little lesson—-that none of water!", the larger creatures of the wild die! He paused, a8 easily as men, I found out that|drawn faces, there .is nothing more to killing ~a|but the latter was too immersed in man that is in your way than killing 2 his own despair even to return his caribou I want to eat, I didn't feel 'stare. ore didn't raise her golden any worse about it afterward. head to meet his eyes. RBut before “I had to come across here. I Lis gaze ever got to her, Dess was on couldn’t forever escape the hue and|her feet. cry that was raised. Ultimately 1 “Don’t be toe sure of yourself,” she landed on this island——with Sindy | cautioned quickly. He looked with and a few steel traps. - | sudden amazement into, her kindling “In this climate we can (rap al-|eyes, “Men like you have gonein most the whole year round, We can |the face of society hefore. You're start putting them out in a few days!rot r up here that the arm.of more—keep them out clear tili Jund. | the can't reach 3-o_u." Every vear a ship—the Intrepid, that The blond man smiled into her you've likely heard of—touches he carnest face, “Go on, my dear,” he to buy my furs—just one trip a year! urged. —and it leaves here supplics of all| "It's got vou once, and it'll get . kinds in exchange. But don't take you again. = And I warn you that if hope from that. Hope is ‘'one thing'you put one il{«'ignity on us, do .one you want to get out of your systems. | thing you've said-—you'll pay for-it in The captain of the Tntrepid and the |the end—just as you'll pay ' for that Japanese crew are the only human |fiendish crime that you committed beirfks that know there's a human, today.” occupant on this island. As her eves met his, straight and On their| yearly visit I'll see to it that none|unfaltering, the expression ol: of them get’a sight of you. temptuous amazement died in his “Once 1 was used to working all{face. Presently his interest ‘seemed day from down to dark, with an|to quicken. Tt was asif he had seen armed master on guard over me, It!her for the first time, searching eyes {sn't' going to be that way from now resting first on hers, then on her lips, on, I'm going to he the armed mas- dropping down over her n,lllt'ht‘ | form, and again into her eye.' He e = | s5eemed lost in sinister speculations. Doomsdorf had seemingly ' Co Just Say Bl 1 uejay 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. At your druggist SALESMAN $AM {5AM- NOW THAT TH' WIFES | GONE TO TH' COUNTRY WHAT | 9B NOU SIAd OUER BF MV HOUSE AND WELL HAVE. ONE. GRENT TIME- —— 5 BUCK- ING UP,”” HE COMMENTED., scanning - their pale, He turned to Ned first, { achieved S Why a dentist begged for this tooth paste . Pyrodento is not only a fine cleunser, effective yet gentle and pleasant. An aid to health —its antiseptic power fights infections that enter through the mouth. A great healer of bleeding, receding gums. A preventive of Pyorrhoea— successful even in advanced cases when used along with dentists’ treatments. You can get Pyrodents to- day simply because a young chemist had to discover an antiseptic that would free his own father from a terrible case of Pyorrhoea. So startling was his success that the den- tist in charge of the case pled for the manufacture of this wonderful Pyrodento in tube form for the public. Start using Pyrodento today —uyou'll be glad years later. con- ! Medford Hiliside, Mass.) 600 p. mo—lale news fashes Early sports news. 615 p. m—~Code practice, Lesson Ne, 108, { 630 p, mo~Hoston police reports Amrad bulletin heard. Worll Market survey, U, 8 Dept. of Forelgn and | Domestie Commeree, | 64 p. m—~Girls hour, eonducted by Mi Funice I, Randall, “Camp Fire Girls" by “Big Bmok ) 7:30 p. m—Evening program, “Selence U'p to Date,” by the Beiens tifie Amerie Band concert, WMAF A Hills Radie Corp—South Dartmouth, Mass,) | | ! ) l (Westinghouse—hast Pitisburgh) iuu-mm Hadio and Research Corp, | 600 . m—Haseball scores. 615 p. m.—Digner concert by the KDKA Littie Symphony eorchestra under the direction of Vieter Saudek, | T:00 p. m.—Baschall sceres, 1:05 p, m.—~Digner econcert | tinued, 0 p. m~The literary program conducted by Marjory Btewart. Tidd p. m—~The children's period, 1 8:00 p, m.—Bascball scores, 8106 p. m ddress | 8120 p. m.~—Concert by the KDKA | Litye Symphony orchestra under the | direction of Vietor Baudek, assisted | by Mre, ¥, W, Myler, contralte, | 9:45 p. m.~Natlonal Stockman and | Farmer market reports | {Round 10:00 p, m.—Baseball scores, ‘\ | | COR- Once on, it's on to stay—holds {'M.y’ it inensi- 10¢ for a dozen, at all motion ‘ counters, * 7:80 p, m.—~United Cigar Stores company's daily sport talk by Thern- % ) f ton ‘I’Ilhrr. 5 . T:40 p, mo~William F, Bweeney, ’.w‘wn | 600 P, M, —Dinner concert by lU'...,.,.,dem“",. accompanied h’y | WRZ Trio, ¢ | Winifred T, Barr, | 7i00 p, m.—Daseball scores of the| 7:55 p m.—Vee Lawnhurst, | Eastern, American and National | yiar New York pianist, leagues, “The Berlousness of the Ac- §:10 p, m—"The National Police or | Cldent Bituation,” by Fred C. Wil- gureau,” by Richard Enright, po- the | !lams, Jr. .secretary and = manager|jce commissioner' of New York city, Nghting spirlt in Ness; Lenore had | SPringfield safety councll, !the largest police force In the world, | Leen broken by Doomadorf's: first| 7:80 p. m.—Bedtime story for the| ;35 p, m.—Wm, F. Sweeney, bar. | And now all the structure of |Children. “Ifind the Things That |j(one, | Ned's 1ife “had seemingly toppled | Break Your Back" by John D. Wil-| . §:40 p, m,—Vee Lawnhurat, labout him. Inrd, Extension service, ' End Ladies' Trio, | For in this moment of unspeakable | Massachusetts Agricultural college, it remorse, he found he could blame no | Humorous remarks, | __Complete radio sets and supplies at one but himself for the disaster.| 8:00 p. m.—Concert by Mrs, Wm.| Henry Morans'¢gf365 Main street, op- | Every year men traversed these deso- contralto and the WBZ!posite Myrtle street.—adyvt, !Imu- waters to buy furs from the In- | | dians; he had been in a staunch hoat, | 9:00 p. mi-—Baseball scores. Bed. land with a littie care, a little fore. | time story for grown-ups by Orison | |sight, the journey could have been |8 Marden, . | made in perfect safety, It was «| man's venture, surely; but he could | | have carried through if he had met (It like a nmn instead of a weakling. In spite of his own despair, his own bitter hopelessness, he must do | | what he could to keep hope alive in Lenore and Bess. It was the only | chance Ke had to pay. even In the I most pitiful, slight degree for what the had done to them, He must al- ! ways try to fnake their- lot easfer, doing their work when he could, mairtaining an attitude of cheer, liv- ing the lie of hope when hope seemed | dead in his breast, | | And that is why, when Doomsdorf Bowie Grant. {1ooked at him again, he found him in ' 9:15 p. m.—Song recital |some way straightened, his eyes more Phine Huber. | steadfast, his lips in & firmer, stronger 9:30 p. m.—Violin recital by line, Alvarado. | “Glad to see you're bucking up,” |, 9:45] ». {he commented lightly. ! Kennedy. it ; ¥ 10:00 p. m.-—Saxophone solos by | Ned turned soberly. “I am buck- | sextette from the United States army |ing up,” he answered. “] see now Ithat you've gone into something you | """ can’t get’ away with, Miss Gilbert | was right; in the end you'll find your- | self laid out by the heels.” | “You think so eh?" Doomsdorf ! | yawned and stretched his arms. *‘Just | try something-—that's all. And since | you're feeling so good, I don't see why ! you shouldn’t.get to work. You can' |stil put in a fairy good. morning, | 1And vou"-—he turned, with catlike | ewiftness that marked so many of his| movements, toward Bess—'‘what's | your name?"” Bess, in her misery, looked at him WBZ (Westingheuse—idpringfield) THE AUTOYRE CO, OAKVILLE, CONN, pop- lay Ins | prisoners A fear of toll his purpose, and his crushed In his hands. | finitely worse than that hardship had evidently killed West- director J. Warner, Trio, Dr. Meehan to Remain as Clinic Chief Till Sept. 15 Because several commissioners of the board of health were unable to attend a mepting scheduled for ys- | terday afternoon, the session wa | postponed until next Tuesday after- [noon. Dr. R. W. Pullen, superinten- dent of heajth, reported, that Dr. I.mnnh P. Meehan has . consented to remain in the dental clinic until' Sep- tember 15, WRC (Aznrr!m’m Radio Corp—Washington) 6:00 p. m~—Children’s hour, by Marietta Stockhard Albion. 8:00 p. m,—Song recital Bowie Grant. $:15 p. m.—Song recital phine Huber, 7:30 p. me—Violin recital by Leo! Alvarado, 8:45 p. Kennedy. 9:00 p. m.—Plano recital by Amy by Jose- M. H. NORTON ELECTED. ' | | Heads P, 0.5, of A:'Nmmpwn is] i | by Amy| State Treasurer, { | Election of officers. marked 'the closing session of the annual conven-) | tion of the Patgotic Order, Sons of America, at New Haven yesterday. The officers are: State president, M. H. Norton, New Britain; State vice-president, W. F, Perkins, New Haven; state master-of forms, L. W. Curtiss, Wa- terbury; state secretary, J. A, Wright, Meriden; state treasurer, = A, .'L. Thompson, New Britain; state con- | ductor, James Weller, Sonth Nor- walk; state inspector, James Byers, | Hartford; state guard, Buell Bodley, | Torrington; state trustees, J. B. Da-| m,—8ong recital by Sue by Jose- Leo Sue | m.—S8ong recital by Y, (Aeolian Hall, N. City) 7:30 p. m.—Theodore's Hotel Mu-‘ jestic orchestra. | venport, South Norwalk; K. A. Evarts, | 7:45 p. m.~—"The Progress of theiand R. G. Monroe, Waterville. By World,” a review of reviews talk by|vote it was decided to hold the netx Beatrice Prince. | convention in: Meriden. 8:00 p. m.—Theodore's Hotel Ma-| et jestic orchestra. | 0ld fashioned charcoal burners are 8:15 p. m.—"“Automatic Machines Used for heating in .most. Cuban and Their Effect on Men,” a McGraw- | homes. T X1 A ORANGE PEHOE BLEND is exquisite-- Enjoy it today. Nellie Revell Wins Nellie Revell, famous press agent, has left, St. Vincent’s 'hos-_ pital in-.New Yorlk city. | Doctors said she would never be able to get up, due to her spine affliction. She lay on her back thove four years. She is now able to. sit up and walk a bit, ileys she'is surrounded by flowers, fruits antl gifts of friends after-het:iome- coming, - with dread. “Bess Gilbert,” she an- swered quietly. “Bess it will be. Lenore, I think |You call the other—and Ned. Good thing to know vour first names, since we've got an uncertain number of years before us. Well, T suggest that all three of you go out and see what you can do ‘about wood. You'll have to cut some and split it, I've been llazy about laying in a winter store.” ! Much to his amazement, Ned stood | erect, pulled down his cap over his Ibrown curls, and buttoned his coat. “I'll see what we can do,” he an-| |swered straightforward| 1 have, | though, one thing to ask.” “What is it—" “That vou let the.two girls take it | easy today—and get warmed through. It you sent them out now, weakened as they are, it might very easily mean | pneumonia and death, It's to your| interest to keep them alive.” | “It's to my interest, surely—but don’t rely on that to the extent of showing too much independence. The | human body can stand a lot before it gives up the ghost. The human voice can do a lot of screaming. - 1 know, ! because I've seen. 1 don't mind running a little risk with humadn life | {to get my way, and 1 know several | things, short of actual killing, that go | toward enforcing obedience and quei- ling: mutiny.” I Lenore, staring wildly J‘(augm her breath in a sob. don't mean—" NO fUSS! He | Doomsdorf did not look at her, NO " still smiled down at Ned. “You've | t[l {never felt a knout, have you, on the | uss" | naked back?" he asked etly. by { WHEN YOU MAKE YOUR LEMON PIE WITH found ont what they were like in Si- [ beria, and with the hope of showing | some one else, I took one out—in my | [boot. It half-killed many a man— | but 1 only know one,man that it's| & | completely killed, He was a guard— | tand 1 found out just how many blo A package it takes,” The man yawned again. makes a pie Hill talk by Kenneth H. Condit. o ¥ 3 :30 p. m.--Theodore's Hotel Ma- Bedtime Stories. Locking Up. Jjestic orchestr: | 9:00 p. m.—“Interior Decorating," by Mrs, Penrhyn Stanlaws, celebrated | decorator. 9:15 p. Plank, violinist, pianist. 9:35 p. m.-—"Peter Pan,” by Mary James, noted reader, and “Mono- logues With Music,” with Kate Mc- Comb, pianist, 10:00 p, m.-—Recital by Plank, violinist and Robert planist. 10:20 -p. m.—Songs by Comb, contralto. m.—Recital by Edward and Rebert Childe, | i = \ Edward ‘ Childe, Kate Mec- WEAF (American Tel. and Tel, Co., N. Y.) 7:30 p. m.—Wm. I, Sweeney, bari- tone. Talk by courtesy of American | Agriculturist. Vee Lawnhurst, pianist and soprano, Richard E, Enright, police commissioner of New York| e T s s—— SAYS HI-HO-HUM GUESS IT'S MME TO LOCK UP AND GO0 TO BED him, | “You at LOCKS BACK DOOR. QUESTION ARISES* WHETHER MAID HAS TAKEN HER KEY WITH HER, UNLOCKS IT, TO BE ON SAFE SIDE “Rut your request is granted—so far |as Lenoré is concerned, You can| |1eave her here for me to entertain ‘ Pese has spirit enough to work." | | ey (Continued "in Our Next ITseue) Sam Would Be O,ut GOSH- D THAYS FINE- \'VE BLRERDY FRAMED A Bl PART FOR - TONIGHT, A TOKER 7A&TY TO- MORAOW NIGHT - WE'RE. GONNEY REALIZE. WE'RE LWWNG T SHE eE/Ti// WiLL | 21t /BT | \WONT BE. PBLE. JUHT TR TOR B TO COME. DOWN: COUPLA DAMS GET — . B13cuiTy ‘,‘( WALKS ROUN ROOM FEELING THE WINDOW CATCHES TO MAKE SURE THEV'RE TASTENED - WIPE REPORTS DINING- ROCM WINDOW CORD HAS GOT TWISTED OR SOMETHING AND THERE'S NG USE TRYING TO SHUT THAT WINDOW ~ D LIVING= . By GLUYAS WILLIAMS GOES THROUGH HIS NICMJ . LY STRUGGLE TO MAKE STUDY, WINDOW. CATCH SHUT, DECIDING AT LAST IT WONT MATTER MUCH IF IT DOESN'T Ny CALLS TROM PANTRY DOES SHE WANT HIM T LEAVE THIS WIN- DOW OPEN: AS USUAL TOR THE CAT TO GOES U TO BED TEEL: ING_ THAT HE'S-MADE - EVERYTHING DERPECT- Ly ‘SAPE TOR THE bt GLUYAS WILLIAMS — VERY CAREFULLY LOCKS, BOLTS, AND CHAINS THE FRENT DOCR. (C) Wheeler Syn. Inc. BY SW‘AN. ’ TR SEE- T P80 U R | \D P "TILL TH' DR BFTER TOMORROW , WHERE. | Lo, S s, T servics