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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1916-7-6, Page 2WWwWWwolreww THE LAPSE OF ENOCH WENTWORTH By ISABEL GORDON CURTIS, Author of "The Woman from Woivertons " CHAPTER S .—(Cont'd,) ; to have grown strangely cool and im- pervious dropped lightly upon his knees pervious to contempt or anger. "The. in front of V entworth when he finish- play is mine, he repeated; It is the clue arid forfeit of my bond," ell, "I await thine Ludes, must grave The eyes of the actor narrowed and aliel reverend seigneur," :then he laid he laughed savagely, his ranger: upon ZW'entworth's arm and "•Take your pound of flesh," he Welted up with al: expectant t -'1-.11e. cried "What will you du with it?» Eeelz wrenches his arm free and l~vexvtliin� we ha'', planned, rose awkwardly to his feet, The lanoeh's voice teal calm. "Give it a comedian drew tack with a startled }»g production, advertise it as a play comedian as if fear st'rumnied with never r was advertised before, and build: up your fame an a actor." bewiiderment. •1'i'hat, will you not play the con- 'You, see," Enoch's lips were per - e" ?„ feerly c'�lo+le-. “Your“Yourn3alltal ability, vi::I 1 Of s'ourse not. There i. only is pledged to arae_” 1 , Merry started tell a t him, cuneus and one actor in America who can p: i} John 1E,sterbrooli " 1 re Iteis yegr ma.i_,➢... alit•: which 1 _Andrew rushed acne•e the 3 .art ill a. clippings and cagy which littered grain t ;` '„ leo.. a•,. . laiindi.:sy. He stretched out his heed table. Then he walked to the safe value of the farm, In ninnyarts of e t their seed A in order cla.ra r.+•n, 1Ia r:ai.t tAcaberatt;l-• and knelt deface at. He had p to prevent severe loss. Anyway, it c :arse wlzia 'r, and aloalth 'Wentworth a stinging blow just open -Canada trees and shrubs for planting is a precaution that costs little ex- Is Unaggressive, But Will Not Stand' Artik et. i ke in a p ed thL door alt i laid his hand upon the ;can afters be •seeuz ed from the wild, sept labor and trouble, and, not know- for Nonsense. ••I '.:esti ureteral -mei." •acre s the mouth "That ac e tee to t manuscript when the door openedNothing' ••I demand, year ;e'.ayt" . pia It- Do you understand?" Dorcas ran in. J:i;�c_ followed,. i and .than the .common trees from the surme - crag what the season will be like, it When the Prince of Wales got short �; , i o Wentworth lifted hie arm faereen , *z f .l , ea c Twill probably pay to make it an an- 'You a',e;'D::3. d Ilse ¢' k y , To .ell. then it fico 4'll tiertiles h by h eying a st ft C.a�P, For a minute, rounding woodland, no shrubs pier- nual practice just as is the seeding is- leave to go to Buckingham Palace to ''`K'; cf 4e., ,,,tP a:e'w' ��4'nt"Stir".h se ie., wale rosein ills neer :see ;`�entlrorti: ors,°'zt the vieiter in his chased from an .Agent are superior to , "good-bye" — self. --farmers Advocate. sayto' his parents and je' - 1 t* t "•'.- t;� z"'•.:ar'ra:y�tly. ` �t 3y .`' The e (those native to the distriett, and no bro*hors altcl sister befoxo going to f * ehc si iik� taut c��1ua. He st?ill inlaer roam, she* •.? I want tta :l:': I wa:a* tt, Lett- a "I3hess nay heart, I'm glad to have Purchased vines clan surpass some of the (rant, Prince John a.�kecl bloc e :.t'e tl-- :.A merge a= r nv - I 1_,..- ..-.;t, n r:t- staring at itt cry, shit �trutls :abaia, Harrow or Roller? ti is rua�m in edenso y',`u back " he criefl, •Never in all these growing wild, such as the �'ir- "'Virhat are you going to do when you il:ae Bary. r t''il' , ••(scall: You're nota Iran You're a my life have I seen you look so well." ginia creeper, bitter sweet or the wild There is often a considerable 41f- get there, David?" (David being the Merry rI<<";D'1 `'t ar„i loan wail an clef ,nei1 l+kto-tiotvn, scurrisati:: black-! She held him at arm's length and grape. Many of the choicest wild ferenee of opinion as to whether a name by which he is called at hone), ag r3' "fi' tearer to hip `>zt'- " o. c and to think t•i you tanziing < Ized ;at him eriteally. "I ii,iG11 I; flowers, when transplanted to the field of grain should be harrowed or "David" rubbed his chin and smile v,:int tt. t'al;e frt.:m mo my one cam- lag, :oohing. me in the lace--Gt:"d:" could say a-•, much for you, Enoch, Bowel• boiler, often fiburish more than rolled In the spring•, and if it is to be ed, ee thunk I'll grow a beard :for p't tF' rfla,t, m,• +lila imi"iii+ r., my Merry raist'd his hand again ;i if to' Teti look decidedly seedy. I've got to in the wild, Yet in spite of the ease both harrowed and rolled, whether the one thing," he answered, ever °bait: ; z':iz t� ;:1::,z3 ;.r l,al.i:ifi 1 : •stay- ri>1ht here, Pal the only oiler: rt-zth which these attraction, nsay be rolling or the harrowing should be Figuratively speaking, the Prince :a men c>r n,4^, ' , tt'13itll I ha" tailed etrtl.e. then he crit pged it by lies side, who can mans " . s obtained, many farm home ~';rounds Performed first. The proper method of Wales has ""grown a beard" since c filly for weed, you tcce:ilel clo 'hya`I`ic'rui> call ~lashed :tert�ss tics "" ge you , • 'are un canted, untidy and unattractive of procedure is reap determined b he has that!: I� a you tacit?er�t.:.:i -while I room. He pieleed up hitt hat and, I be„ your paltion, Doxc<ts, I t e p I p y y the war began that is to ,aye leaved to the door- guest here, Her brother led her to Ali that is needed to make them real- the state of the soil, If the soil is ceased to be a boy and has become n wrote I e aree.y stoppiel to eat or ...Where ars, you t;oii:j;' kzdthe inner room and intiodur,cl •his ; ly beautiful is a little planting and lying very light and open on the sur- man. Tl;e change is very apparent slee;a? When e.I I did ,peep, I :reamed e f cellar to her. I care. face, then the rolling is the best, for to all who come in contact with him. Fezo.h >ternly. 1 ••Mr, Oswald and Iwere having a Always inclined to serlousneys, he ie ani „ "•I`na n �: ;j straight t -hell." ! The morning glories, used - decub- it well consolidate the oil round the lir •tk.�i c;.l, tee ir,.'at *a :a+.lee' +i to ,; s gloves frieze elle �ea . ' business tall:, Dom— . exactly lits.' iy the caUin, were plai3ted by the plants; but in nearly every case the has taken his share in the war very *-°: ,a, t lees • t� is a. He ai.I attic Ila�,d lie lifted hi t;housewife. In fact, it is usually the rolling shou?�i be followed b a light r, r, . ,ts -,,. Ile-i>Ie them lt3y the m,ra: ;'rcpt sill' iii, zees. either. You may stay if you y seriously indeed. His staff work has y ct e, t!;e ,!.; , of t.a ��,"t :•I••. t .. , IL • . ,•r >ta13C'I east his dial. a .:..o1 wish and hear a play. 1 was just go. woman who lakes an interest; they harrowing tvitlz a chain harrow ar a included carrying despatches, acting Tr, '`~' ," =".hd6ng' ploy.I hie i .e- on the t+tau- men, ilea to read to him. If he likes it he!man is too busy with the crops to set of very light seed harrows, so that as interpreter, superintending the �+-t:: ,�..:t'h i=ll to ' 'g at a 3: fle'e't+. •n nits eta1 Andrew llierr " { bother with such things.—F.C.N. N- in , the top half inch or so shall be again makingof trenches, and duty as as- ti::.t;^� man. k?iml; :.,.�n cot.i ant v:'�:h:z'`= IIin1 3 a t>>@�z naii.t:t, tirli,e ,e, r y izz It, ' Canrervation. `broken u When the soil is inclined relea t:c:.� t 1'cpt` .,a,3 an., ey Ile• ?^ ,i fw"'3•• 1'Q.11.g caao;;1e i:i an :l t ":, rots+. ~Oli, A. slow rf anticipation shone; psistant transport officer, and he has ire the ^lei's e� e, , She said her coat t to be solid, then rolling. is generally been in imminent danger of death eery. •i a mistake,and should not be under - his heed on M n:Fe arra. "Tillie it; `cele :I i9sid.crr. •I Irate a and hat un the window seat and drop • 1 Try Alfalfa,;Again.scores of times. r, pati into a low chair beside her bro. generally taken unless it is necessary to smooth There is nothing aggressive about `Ilei 1:N ^:c tai you„Iin14iF:.' _ T l°.t ` ,i°::: lett d erre:l tlli`=f:t`' a "ire° ti1„it” a ecaa e' ala na? Lat•ta ha "1 then. (ince or twice she cited h'r Although it is nett '-ce admit- the surface somewhat or press in the the personality of "P, W ,” but be He . ;.,1 �'+ll with dual" r3- writing." •, R .� el'ticinwtel - on the �lle.3uIi;; . The' ted •t13at alfalfa • is t11e one best feed- stones in anticipation of harvest. Roll- has a quiet way of standing no non - 1• i -were. } et,I,el to . roc a it3� tea.Ii.3,,t.. }, Ing crop for lite stock, and despite • Ing i• s very seldom really required un- sense. Il1at`i;' a• His face was Hazing tvitla ",What •.t i sou p' ipt..• IC; ilia with Englishman watched her. There teas i the fact that it has been proved suit -;less the ]and is uire li ht an the sur. w. atli, He went tramp ani about the n . `avid admiration in his eyes, but Dar q g One day at the front he was on a to u wag y able to nearly every district in On- ;face, -,....„.• duty watching transport wagons de - mom in ca vague Ie • e.es, half -Blink.- "eh.] it lay a tie;'crt name. I: be- ca, did not see i;, Her only thought, tario, many farmers refuse to give the in filled Packages were e,1 f ash er. 'A„ th'tght ?r.me;1 oto lenge to me, 'loney "le°t': ale~ count w:i�„ ^cif the lianpine 'i in store fury planta trial on their farm, while oth- g g being t:;tie Mian abruptly. He ~'.het?.'d with nae i1I t?11 tl:aia-action. Too 111; . timer-}• I ers rive up trying to grow it after Little Potato Disease, thrown up to the man in the wagon, arc,h'r1 suddenly and faced the m,, , i �i'entworth laid the a whale duty it was to count them Dolt M take :all the I ey allies• I ewiet nntllinpages of tnar'a• making a very feeble effort for sue- , The Little Potato disease causes lit- h 1)e ode him' but the atrth.), �'aii 1 of the pia •.'' • ' script on the table a d clears i h� •} cess, i tie potatoes as big as a pea ax a little loudly, pausing as each fresh 25 pack - F **Why in the devil's name, r,noeh, "'Nettling nut 1 the autllt-up-", throat, Oswald sat ready to bestow al Thane who wish to excuse them- !larger to form on the potato stems, and ages were reached.,, The man in the k sh, Ices y Stu cin this? Have I ever dont :4f�'rrv': lance was a matt elictian, blames: -like attention upon the react i selves for neglecting to even try al -Ino potatoes form on the roots. 'lie ,wagon, "tried it an with the Prince; P y�',t ore cruel, eii �Itjy al act in all zh} fi' inti. �i'hen Enoch lifted the first falfa say that it interperes with their I reason is that this disease closes up to save himself trouble he stile}ed. Wee" He dropped the paeta and h"i =sed his calling out 25 when he should have h t upon his head. Wentworth wrath- T••xe his vi. liar a ke 11 t •";t3ay 1 knot. rotation, is hard to break up if once !the pores in the stem so the starch Wentworth dill not answer. He re- I • oho melte the Izt ',•' abeen saying '"20:' But it did not work. tarns 1 the terror in Mercy's eyes with ed him curc�u:>lt . The neater e�aell cif Ir P • : establiahe+„ and is not suited for pas- made in the leaves cannot go back to "`Twenty-five already?" said the �' a ei*sill sti;labttro glance. the Iiia•, 11•:'1 ch tngeat: ills e uth, • ", toccata; while those who give up trying 1 the roots to form potatoes. Potatoes prince blandly. '"i melee it 20. One hellish loader coni ice=cats :ail hour ciao , it+ol:eth die- sill. said the Englishmen. He to grow the crop say that their land affected with this disease have small r Did ,you have this p spotsof us is wrong Just unload the whole clieme in mind when you drew up hev`'led. 1 lock of fair hair strayed outiceti the• star,led look on Dorcas" is unsuited for it. on file surface made up of germ wagon and begin from the beginning that bond?" he asked unsteadily*,1 down over his ferchead, his lineal had face. It escaped her brother, who set The first reason given fax not sow- massesr, that look like a little soil g „ g “What did you have in mind when a 1'"tin r•d epee crease, file white turned half way from her. ing alfalfa is perhaps the best, but it stuck on the surface. The difference again. . 1 he.<ear*he .'roe ed from his buttonhole Wentworth bean to read. He was is not a very ,good reason at that comes out when one tries to remove you made me our stave?" - litI blot,' re which heti been touch an excellent reader; his enunciation Alfalfa is known to improve with the the spots. They do not come off The world can.. get along without "I dont knew --exacts}.. Wentworth fecal el mane, etc i, fir _ t. He stood. for a moment n.:.; slots aril distinct- The story length of time that it occupies a field, while soil will. This disease is also you but that's no reason for not try- , turned such a st rai;llft.I < 1 e with the aloes -knot? in hie hand star- quickly unfolded itself in strong, vivid but even if the third or fourth year called Russet Scab and Rhizoctonia. It ing to be ane that the world doesn't • upon :Merry that he reailzed the mars was speaking the truth. :As I told I ing at Wentworth, who returned his , language* Grant Oswald, who teas an are sacrificed to maintaining a rota- is best not to use affected potatoes for want to get along without. • you that night, and I am telling the t gaze with a cold, ruthless scrutiny, ardent student of chaotic literature, tion the whole benefit of the crop is seed. If they must be used first treat ibut a fence of hlez-r}-'s et`=? fell before them. It fell immediately under its spell and not loot; and what cuttings are made for two hours in a se ution of 4 ounces , When a mother begins to tell her truth, it was nothing with was the fir.~ palpable toneession tie, listened rvlth intent quiet, in the first few years of its life are eorrosive sublimate to 80 gallons of i children how smart their father is, mine; When Lieu came ba me Enoe1t's stronger will. , The minds of both men were Eo equal, if not superior, in value to cwt- water. (Corrosive sublimate is now, they look at her as reproachfully as this, Enoch's hard dropped on the"Good-by," he sale with an unsteady vitally concentrated upon the drama tings of any other crop in the same four dollars a pound.)—D. G. M., if they thought she was losing her manuscript which fay upon the table t la ' h. He closed the dor behind him. that they were scarcely conscious, of a. period. North Dakota Experiment Station. i mind. "you came with a great temptation; it r , - was too much for me" i Wentworth turned to the table, lifted , movement when Dorcas crept from her As for the trouble of breasting up a "Evidently," cried Merry. His tone the manuscript and stood glancing lour chair t5 the window seat. She lay field of alfalfa, this only occurrs ins Tells Was withering in its scorn. He seated through the closely sera -Med pages, back against a pillow, gathered the very old fields; and the fault found Dost +r �' ells .Ho ` o Strengthen and his eyes turned fiercely k Then he era s� i the room, dropped it : folds of a silly portiere around her, by the plowman that• the roots run upon himself anvarth. The muscles of his ; upon the mantel, and watched until " and stare „ down at the square. She his plow out—is often due to the oc- n a per cent In One r each gray ash became a films atom of ; heard her brother's voice in fregments, 9urrence of an odd plant of alfalfa FJ cheek twitched as regularly as a dust. Those fragments were always the hat comes as a surprise after the y. pulse. __ _ words of the. girl, Cordelia, or of the plow -has been running through light Week's Time it ilf ,ray Instances "The play is mule." Enoch seemed CHAPTER �'I. • father fallen to pitiful estate,. She or poor sod for some time. "Jason, this is nobody I know." clasped her hands together with such The third reason for objection to al- d Free Prescription You Can mat e Wentworth sat staring at a care} pus a grip that it numbed her fingers. A i falfa cannot be very well maintained Pilled and 'Use at Home. laid before him He knitted his, strange pain and a horrible suspicion by many who make it, because the ee in through her bad and crop is so valuable as hay, and is cap- able of producting so many cuttings in a season that other ground than he alfalfa field may well be given over to pasture and the alfalfa crop used for soiling if the 'Summer feed is in- sufficient. Vaseline Camphor' Ice Soothes and smooths chapped hands and lips. Keeps the skin soft. Sold in metal boxes and tin tubes at .chemists and general stores everywhere. Refuse substitutes, Free booklet on request. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO, (cornmeal) 1880 Chabot Ave. Montreal Tbe Farm Rome Grounds, gist in a small town told a repres- During 1915; an agricultural survey entative of this paper before seeding was conducted by the Commission of started that he had sold 200 pounds Conservation on 400 farms in Ontario. of formalin and expected to sell 'Zii in answer to the question "Are thr pounds more before the season was grounds around the house neat ?" it over. This i$ significant, especially was found that 53: per cent, of the where his sales of this material replies were in the negative. 1n amounted to very little in 1915. There travelling over Canada one cannot but are farmers in the Province who have be impressed by the general untidi- treated their seed for the past ten or ness and the absence of plan or sys- fifteen years annually, and without tem in the planting and care of the fail, and the results have well repaid farm home grounds. them for their trouble. We have also Clean-up and Arbor Day campaigns, known of farmers who have never conducted each spring in many of our treated for"smut, and their grain has towns and cities, should be extended become so badly infested and their to rural communities. The first goes- threshings so dirty that the neighbors tion the farmer asks is: "What will refuse to assist them at threshing time it cost?" feeling that he cannot af- Fruit growers are obliged to spray ford it. It will cost .a little time in in order to produce a marketable planning and work in planting, but commodity, and the time may come these will he well repaid by the added when farmers generally will be oblige bis attraction and consequently increased ed to treat The Secret of Flaky Pie Crust It's in our Recipe Soolr—with a lot of other recipes for making good Pies. 8u1--wa'ro going to tell you right afar c urs fine a d flaky—andaheas how to have the ave d the under crust justright, oven when using fresh frtpt. Just use part tit Instead prove itll wheat flour, Try It, Cot a package of BENSON'S at your grocer's, and write to our Vicarial Offlco for copy of our new recipe book, sok clo'Desserts and Candies" that AP, C . LIM TEA CANADA STARCH C THE A MONTREAL, CARDINAL, BRANTFORD, 218 orrrwiRL1AM. THE PRINCE OF WALES. 20 I.85, F Cane I - Pure �= 2 and 5 -ib. Cartons 10 and 204b. Bags Don't buy sugar by thee`quarter's worth" or "dollar's worth" when you can buy in these full weight -. original packages, con- taiuing the"fuze"grauu- Iation every housewife likes. 8 "The All -Purpose Sugar" laremukatmloagm man 1 brows querulously, Make him un• were s p g g y , burning in her veins. Outwardly she derstand that I'm engaged." "He's terrible masterful, Marie was inert. Enoch," said the darky apologetically; , Suddenly she was awake again, wide "he's boun' he'll see yo', Hees a gen- : awake, tingling with life and emotion tleman all right I don' believe I kin listening to her brother's vibran- git rid ob him easy-" voice The day of release had come "Tell him I can spare ten minutes." for John Esterbrook. He tood with Jason ushered the visitor into Went- halting, tremulous steps, fearful at worth's library. He was a tall distin- the sight of the world he had left guished man, with a fine, highbrcii twenty years before, hiding his eyes face. His manners were exceeeingly from its tumult. Then. Cordelia ran acinus, yet simple to meet him—young, hopeful, loving gr"I don't believe, Mr. Oswald, I'ved D forgot thehorror met you before," said Enoch. - "You haven't" Grant Oswald smil- ed cordially. - "Your man tells me you have exactly ten minutes to spare. I'll go straight to business. I'm an of that day when Andrew and shes+.nglishman. I have been in New walked home over the beach' at Junip- York for three weeks. I want to in-, er Point. Her eyes grew wet with vest money in something along the! pity, then she smiled happily as life theatrical line.". ceased to be a problem for Cordelia. "Ohl' Enoch looked up sharply.' Love had came, and the father turned "Andrew Merry mentioned you." - I to work out what was left of a fu - "Yes, I spoke to Merry one night bure. - on the elevated. He's one of your (To be continued.) few American aetors whom I admire. - If a -play could be found that fitted Cats -Up. - hira--he spoke of having . one—len "Sarah," :said her mistress during willing to venture a hundred thous- the dinner hour, "will you go down to and dollars on its production." the basement and - get the catsup ?" "A hundred thousand! That would' Sarah departed, and a few minutes he a production worth whiles" ""Bub :remember—only if the play appeals to me. I've been studying theatrical business since I was • a younger. I never. threw money Away on it." , ""If you can -stay I -will read you the play now." "My ten minutes are up." The Eng lishman smiled. "This work can -wait. Excuse me a The Contented Cow. There is a firm, whose business it is to supply milk to city consumers, who make a specialty of advertising that their milk is drawn from contented an eager; occas orgo cows.- There is a lot in this for the and doubt which had swept'her dawn farmer to consider. Mlik produc- for a moment, she -was thinking of tion bears close relationship to nervi- nothing but the play. It was greater, t Dies condition. An excited cow will not more -human, than she had dreamed readily "let down" her milk, as every- body knows. Excitement is an intim- ation that she may- require herener- gies for self-preservation, - and the milk making process adjourns its act- ivities to allow her to meet the appre- hended emergency. Annoyance in any form produces some degree of worry, irritability, and consequently excitement. Keep the cows contented, and functional activ- ity in milk secretion will be the more generous. Hence it is that dogs, unusual odors, vitiated air, sudden chills or draughts of air, irregular feeding or watering, later the. family heard a great shooing noise, roughness in handling, all help and scampering of feet. - Shortly to decrease the milk yield. Keep the after Sarah came breathlessly into the animal quiet and contented, in well dining room and said to her astonish- ventilated but quiet quarters, feed re- ed inasfress "They're up, mum." gularly, and act in a kindly and gentle "What are up?" - manner when about the cattle. "The cats, mum." - The. War on Smut. Vocal Bravery. - - The prevalence of smut in the On - "My voice is for war."' tario grain crop last season induced "But.are you, Willing to offer the many farmers to treat their_seed be - minute:" Wentworth lifted ahead Dig zest of yourself?" fore sowing this sprint. One drug- Philadelphia, Pa. T)o you wear glasses? Are you a -victim of eye strain or other eye weaknesses? If so,- you will be glad to know that according to I)r. Lewis there is real hope for you. Many whose eyes were failing say they have had their eyes re- stored- through the, principle of this won- derful free prescription. One man says, after trying it: 'I t,•as almost blind; could not see to read at all. Now I can read everything without- any glasses and my eyes do not water nny more. At night they would pain dreadfully; now they feel fine all the time. It was like a miracle to me." .A lady who used it says: "The at- mosphere seemed hazy with or without glassc,7, but after using this prescription for fifteen days everything seems clear. I can even rendtine print without glasses." It Is believed that thousands who wear glasses can now discard them in a reason- able time and multitudes more will be able to strengthen their eyes so as td,he spared the trouble and expense of ever getting glasses. Eye troubles of many tleserip- tions may. be wonderfully benefited by fol- lowing the simple rules. Isere is the pre- scription: Go to any active drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. Drop one Bon-Opto tablet In a fourth of a glass of water and allow to dissolve. With this liquid bathe the eyes two to four times daily. You should notiee your eyes clear up perceptibly right from the start and in- flammation will quickly disappear. If your eyes are bothering you, even a little, take steps to sage them now before it is too late. Many hopelessly blind might have been saved if they had cared for their eyes in time, Note: Another prominent Physician to whom the alcove article was sumltted, said: •Ron•Op(o is a eery remarkable remedy. its constituent ingredients are well known to eminent eye specialists and widely prescribed by them. The manufac- turers guarantee it to strenath"m-eyesight 5e per cat In one week's Bine in many instanera or refund the 311011,2V. 1t ran be obtained Imo any good druggist and is one of the :•ry few preparations I Seca should be kept on hand for rc,,.d«r use in almost :way family," It is sold in Toronto by Valmas Drug Co. , A comtination of both liquid and paste. They produce a brilliant, lasting shine withverylittte effort. These contain no acid and will not crack the leather. They preserve the leather and increase the life of your shoes. F. F. DALLLEY CO. OE CANADA Ltd. Hamilton • Canada