THE HIGH-ARCHED FEET URING the course of the me on the advisability of spending the resorts, where there seclusion to permit dressing. Most wanted to whether or not It would their feet, “Barefoot Lassie” especially anxious as her feet white and pink tinted, smooth shapely. Undoubtedly, so long as none of these girls ran nails Into thelr feet, the weeks spent running about so would improve their health. But it would not improve their feet, for no matter how healthy our an- cestors were, in their “close to Nature" life, no could accuse them of possessing really beautiful feet. The mere fact of going would not break down the arch of the foot and make it flat, as some of my correspondents feared, but it would brown and toughen the skin and it would certainly spread the was bein savage one barefoot Wear Well Will Break the Arch of the Foot. foot itself. Flat feet, result of a jar or overly high are usually a sign of lack Peasants and primitive footed-—hut then, the women who have hurt when not folk are oo THER day 1 al job een da me before I and say he gonna taka me testimony. I say 1 dunno mwoney—I jusa maka heer and spenda heem nexa jail, Oo veesit One guy am how test week, He say longa weeth one my neighbor and He say da court gotta trial vorce now and he wanta somating., I aska how moocha for wage, He say two dolla every for me dunna ver moochs job. But dat weeth heem, like or no like, and one guy tella me taka da I aska where wanta me he gettn and say take any place, guy no take cet sore no wanta eet COME ON, SLow POKE wenring injurlously high heels are | Instead of going barefoot, I advised my correspondents to wear open san- which would allow the foot free- dom of action and plenty of air, at the same time preventing it from spread- ing or growing coarse in appearance, | For flat feet I never advise arches or braces; these hold up the! is true, but weaken the bones and muscles that should be taught to do this for themselves. An exercise first on the flat of the on the toe, practised ten minutes a day, Is quite beneficial, Shoes with broad heels an inch or so high are best to wear. (Copyright) 0 ee foot, then What the Sphinx Says By Newton Newkirk. “He knows who how does much he not know is a Wise man. A ¥ CZ SS ON Burke, the pretty blonde one of the most popular ican “movie” stage, ch fame veeks ry of ROBIN'S REVENGE OBIN REDBREAST R bad fellow and never though being I until one day Jimmy Crow treated him hadly. had found a cornfield feast when “Get right out of cawed, "This is where I sit and watch out for the farmer with his gun. What right have you to come here, I should like to know, bobbing about and at- tracting the farmer's Get out, I tell you! 1 want hide In." revengefu herries for a a nice tree of « and along was planning Jimmy Crow. "he came my tree attention? this tree to his well as As Jimmy spread gry as minute it seg Pe ked he ohe ved wings and caw, and every he might sharp bill, but from that tobin Jimmy's med to get with a ow and flew Robin AWAY, watched for day ar omnat » 1 tella da kaiser You know dat gus 3 non ime ior longa tin aska me qu and den one other gay starta aska me for dat bunch for dolla day. up and say I g dn for more money. But dat judge tella me I go een da jall eef } trow up my job. I no say somating een da court how I feel, but 1 tink gooda, for da weetness would be greata stu Wot you ok? i (Copyright) ERRANT FANCY, sama ting maka fool Ro i queets I no standa woeeth two speakn right my jJob--go on strike sironga iff. A (fatuous fool’) Goes straying ‘round the edges minnow muddled pool; One hears the frogs go “Gulllwump!” or tell you it's “Knee deep of some sons onward creep. But when ‘tis spring and we have had a heated day or two, That same fool Fancy will bring back a snowy day to view! I love the summer, when spring 1 like the fall; The summer, in the winter time, the most of all tia cold; in I love through warm July, In January, o'er the stream I'd cast the tempting fly. the daisied dell a yearn for the other place! y . * » 4,000 YEARS AGO TODAY Grandpa Abie Bandar is laid up with a badly sprained tail, the result the famil Mrs. (coconut) tree. ocko Howler is THE PROVOKING ANSWERER, “dispute the things 1 say tonight? | A quiet volee at once replied: “Well, us who it is—1'll bite!” -. » - DAY OF KNOWLEDGE NEAR It is only about a month, now, till the hopeful candidate with a book containing the list of names of those | who have promised to vote for him about stayed t id n rowtol Is CHI Rob n “Wi asked, “1 have plied Jim cannot use it for driv- Ty tree ught popped ictae he decided to try flew to the vory tree from he Away he Jimmy had driven bh biggest cherry flew and gave Again and, picking the could find, away he it to mimy. and again he made the trip had to gay he could eat no more. “Those cherries best 1 ever ate” “Yes, they grew the cornfield of.” replied Robin. Jimmy Crow hung his head, remembered then how unkind he had been to Robin and here It wns Robin who had fed him when he was hungry and friendless. He was very much ashamed. Robin watched him with his bright eyes and he felt sure this revenge was far better than treating Jimmy badly, as he first had thought of doing. “I guess I was pretty cross to yon" sald Hmmy: “I am sorry and when I get well 1 will keep my eye open al- ways as I fly around the country for the biggest cherries and tell you where they grow.” are the very he said on the tree and you had fear drove me out for he (Copyright) can look over the same list and count how many liars there are in his town. ship, county or ward. Ld - . Consolation. N. Peck—Here 1 am, with my pose to the grindstone, as I have been for years and years! Mrs. N. Peck-—Huh! You ought to be glad that the grindstone don't bust on you, as grindstones do, sometimes, . - - HE KNEW HIS TREES His mother had been reading to bush, “} guess, mother, it must have this time of the year-—don't you - - - Black Crook Probahly Came From. For Sale~Fourroom house, crooked street. Good eolored neighborhood. ~Knoxville (Tenn.) Journal and Tribune. Where PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLD Europe Follow the Great World War? With the Passing of “Small Business” Went the Feeling of Community interest, Which Meant So Much, Article VIII. By FRANK COMERFORD. Not many ye: pened which changed the 1 rs #go something hap elations employee, That t tween employer and happening has had a upon indus ul discontent Somethin was lost out of the relation bet the and the for . a , between the hoss With irs owner med Human element great vig kind of unrest, too. It was Getermined, working ight thes 1wvels provir ted was and ONS thought of the community better+for him their ex his uxury would be give up and give disgrace fell but it followed his When they looked upon people knew week he was some of the men not living only and thes as hypocrites, for all that insulting pretended to worship on the Sabbath, Few men are so thick-skinned as not to feel the lash of public opinion, It isn't easy to bear the neighbors, It is natural wife went to church were every day in for men to day of small business, public but in the progress of the world the small employer was doomed to go, The partnership passed off the stage, The soulless body, was born of It absorbed small plants and emall businesses, It collected under a single roof thousands of men. The the combination, the trust, This new order of doing corpo. ration, a had come, ~economical. It eliminated waste and duplication. It was a great, smooth. running machine,” It represented prog The corporation name did not dis inhuman the stockholders impersonal, thing. did not The real owners were un known to employees and public. Many sf the large shareholders had never seen the plant. The men who worked in the plants had never seen the men for whom they worked, The man actu. ally running the business was only an employee, He was paid a large salary and it was made plain to him when he was hired that his salary and his job depended on his ability to make profits, The corporation was organized for mil tions of dollars, The manager was ox. pected to make dividends, The larger the dividend checks, the higher he was rated. His tenure of job and salary measured by this EUCCORS, definition of To make profits it is neces sary to keep down the cost of produc tion, production is the wiges of labor charge, the men. The employee man himself to his task. One thought, Hm-——kKeen this idea 1 tendents unger sot ob jeer, One WHE always down wages ie into staff, his foremen, The his guperin his irst com mandment of ‘muke dividends or quit,” Evil in Over.Capitalization, Frequently these large industria orporations were greatly overcapils corporation repre ment of s for $500,000 (00), It didn’t 100,000 O00 Grant izexd HI(WKI (KM ake a financier to see that $4 of its capitalization wn tic The right to & Ww law that gos exis? The senting Hct corporation a unaer contro! #1OCs WK shares repre The Captain of Industry elon The law wi larceny thi ning money When a envelop men § given by w their good “ general pul “Wi ir canis sed the aking 3 per cent on « get did not tell the people ing 3 S500 000 000, the STON 0K (WN, men who loan cent.” They money per they were per cent capital The need to pay If the on while only renal invesied was sweat of dis dividends men was heing idends on earned the thei the de- invested, $100.000 06x), been shown in reasonableness of ally profits have r true light The men would have been dis It was a case of crooked capi iying to protect fill-got- Big Business needs ethics— need Let me repeat, the Inw heipless, They had only Fight, Strike! Sirikes cause public inconvenience. The smarting under hardships condemn and blame the strikers, Strikes have another effect that is They harden hate into a concrete class feeling. Strikes are responsible the attitude of mind of many working men today who say, “I wili do as little work as possible for the money 1 get. It is a vicious circle of hate. Co-oper- close], talization, its gains, ins of Industry ideals left the men Me COUrgEe-—— great Capta even destroyed, trust killed; the chasm be- tween employer and employee is wid- ened and deepened. A final conse quence of these physieal and psycho logical effects is the tendency towards riot. The strike Is a training school, It develops hate, It creates lawless. ness, jdleness, hunger, hate, irritation, disregard of law which, when come bined and concentrated, make Revolu- tions, The seed of unrest is planted, (Copyright, 1920, Western Newspaper Union) Common Duty Before All it should be the sublime duty of all, without thought of partisanship, to help in building up the new world, where labor shall have its just reward, and indolence alone shall suffer want, «Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George. INFLUENZA Kill the Cold. At the first sneeze take HILLS CASCARAR= 2 QUININ BroMIDE Standard cold remedy for 20 years wt tablet form-—sale, sure, no opistes——breaks up 8 cold in 24 hours~relieves grip in 3 days. Money back if it falls, The genuine box hes a Red top with Mr. Hill's picture, At All Drug Stares STOCKS and BONDS BOUGHY -SOLD-QUOTED Our Daily Publication Free on request Explains upward and downward trend When to BUY When to SELL Where to place STOP ORDERS How to protect your profits and limit your losses Write immedistely—Desk No. 1 GRIMWOOD & COMPANY 63.54 New Street, New York City MYSTIC CREAM Makes the Skin like Velvet Tey It Best Aid for to a Good Chapped Hands MYSTIC CEEAM CO. Middletown, N. Y. Works like Witchcraft BILIGUSNESS Caused by Acid-Stomach if people wh are © ur sre tres cording 10 joes] symploms they seid very much betler Whatever rel tained i» usualiy temporary Trac ness to its source and remove the the chances are hat the patient main strong sand healthy Doctors say that more than organic diseases fan br traced to an Stomach. Biliousness is one of them gestion. heartburn, belching, sour stomach, biost and gas are other signs of acid stomach EATONIC, the marvelous modern stomach remedy. brings quick relief from these stomach miseries which lead to a long train of aliments that make life miserabie # not corrected EATONIC Nterally away the excess acid strong. coool and comfortable tion improves the appeiite get Tull strength m your food say that EATONIC is the most stomach remedy in the world It is the YOU need Try It on our mone; Bot -patisfled guarantee At all Only 50 cents for a biz box ATONIC (FOR YOUR ACID-STOMACH FRECKLES . ¥ verybod) s Friend’ carries march absorbs and Makes the sic Heips diges- and you then Thousands eflactive help back -if- druggists POSITIVELY REMOVED by Ln. Barry's Frechie hptment-- Your draggint or iy rom! Posh. Br. CW. Be ode . venus. Chiear gs an 8 gent Poor Peck! rlend—Is yogr brother ded, sensible fellow Yes, he's Trans Fipt. A Feeling of ng of Security You naturally feel secure whem you know that the medicine you are about to take is absolutely pure and contains Do barmful or habit producing drugs. Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root, kidney, liver and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintained in every Peck Boston still It is scientificaily compounded from vegetable herba. It is not a stimulant and is taken im teaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything. It is nature's great helper in relieving and overcoming kiduey, liver and blad- A sworn statement of purity is with If you need a medicine, you should On sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. N.Y, fora ssn If a married man thinks he js the head of the house that's all that is A —————_——— A single application of Roman Eve Bal sam on going to bed will prove ite merit for inflammations of the Eyes, external and internal Ady, Many a man has accidentally lost his best umbrella by coming In con tact with the owner.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers