HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1919-10-16, Page 7GROWTH OF WOODEN
IN 'JSTRY
FRENCH HEELS ARE MADE OF
HARD MAPLE,
Interesting Process of Manufacture
From Check of Wood to the
Finished Article,
Tho word sh•,8s naturally brines to
mind leather, 1211. Hosie urn made now-
adays grest nulnirers 5,C women's seep
pers. pumps 1111! shoes designed for
house and for dress wear that ore
elide with uppers of silk, ratan,. vet and and Meth. as well alt of kid, calf
and fine leathers and which have
wooden heels,
These wooden heels emit 10,2323 to
nlake than leather heels, but they are
put 00 the finest 218 Well as the less
expensive shoes because they aro
-lighter than leather heels of We same
size, • because In thn tall, slender
8hapus, and especially in the high,
narrow -necked 1,`r2neh heels, they
stand up better andel' weight, and be-
cause, being rigid, the covering on
then remains smooth and perfect.
Shaping the Heel.
These wooden peels are made of
hard luapin. Pirst a block is groved,
put in a m 4411ne that cuts in that part
of it that ilreoy the sole of the shoe
under the instep, the little incurving
sweep that hives the heel grace 1h0re,
and then il>,• block goes Into Il mould-
Mg- machine that cuts It into heel
shape.
The lulieee in ttils in:wh1ne work
rapidly and smoothly, and as the heel
coulee out It may seem perfectly
smooth and tlnhshed and ready to be
Covered, as it Is If the material to be
used In the covering is comparatively
thick, but if the heel has nu extension
front under the instep it goes to a
02201(iug machine to bo finished on
that extending part, and if It is to be
covered with silk or satin, very thin
material, the entire heel is polished on
a buffer to a perfect silky smooth-
ness The heel is bored and plugged
to re -enforce and strengthen it, and
then, tint: :ted in the wood, is ready to
be coveted.
Many materials are used in cover-
ing wooden heels, and they may be
used in almost endless variety of
cobra or shades. Some shoe manu-
facture's buy the wooden heels and
cover them in their own factories;
801110 have wooden heel manufacture's
cover and finish the heels completely,
sending the covering materials, cut or
not cut, as the case may he, and re-
ceiving from them heels ready to go
on the sloe. And wooden. heels are
commonly made to order, for they are
required of many sizes and of many
shapes, with the fashions always
changinig.
Applying the Covering.
Tho coverings are cut out by hand,
though they are knife cut, many at a
tine, but each cove' must be stretched
or glued to each heel by ]ranch. Then
there is glued into the grove of the
heel, completely covering` that surface,
a piece of split leather of precisely
rho color and also of the same style
of finish as that of elle gotten of the
shoe, which the groove faces, and now
there is nailed to the bottom' of the
heel a thickness of leather like a layer
on any heel. The leather protects the
wood from wear, kills the sound that
the wood would otherwise make in
walking, and also protects the lower
edge:
The trim little semicircles of tiny
brass nails that are seen in the heels
are really pieces of brass wire, sec-
tions from a coil of wire carried on a
machine which thrusts the end of the
wire through the leather, and into the
wood. It then cuts off the wire and
drives the next nail in the same man-
ner, and so around,
• From this the heel goes to a trilu-
ming machine. The leather may pro-
ject a trifle beyond tb heel's cover-
ing. It must be made so`"that its edge
surface is absolutely smooth and flush
with the covering. This is done in
the trimming machine, and then the
edge of the leather is colored as leath-
er edges Commonly are, usually either
red, leather colored or black,
The heel next proceeds to a buffer
on which the bottom of the leather is
smoothed and polished. Then it may
bo colored artificially, or if it is not
to be colored 'the bottom of the leather
may be finished with a velvet finish.
The finish, whatever it"'may be, is
made to be in accordance with the
finish of the sole or the shoe on which
It is to go, and with the final finishing
of the leather the heel is completed,
Through the latter process the heel
has been handled with its coverings
on and this may bo of some delicate
material or color. So now they aro in-
spected and finally packed in Cartoons•
a dozen pairs of heels to the box, and
are ready for the shoe manufacturer,
It is stated that 25 per cent, of the
women's shoes worn in North A.morica
aro now Made with wooden Noels, of
which thetlo are proainced millions of
pairs annually.
The northermost cannery in the
World, a fish packing plant, is in op-
eration at Kotzebue, Alaska, well
within the arctic eitele.
Tlie old Indian plan of curing seed
corn has a lesson for the farmer of
to -clay. The Indiana laid it on an
open willow branch platform, where
the air could Clire3tllate freely until it
was dry, Then it was safely 'stored
for Winter.
v
e *,:1L;,,36r
"Here's Tray idea of
a razor ----
one that sharpens its own blades"
"Why, I remember
wl rel I used to have to
throw away a blade
after a couple of shaves.
Now, I simply take it
and give a few turns on
the strop and its as
good as ever.
"I can shave in three minutes,
and my face is as smooth and
slick and comfortable as when
the head barber used to go
over it. To clean, I simply
put the blade under the tap
and wipe it off There's no
taking the razor to pieces and
messing around with parts.
In fact, the whole thing is so
simple and easy, I wish I had
had one long ago,"
Razor -- Strop - 12 blades - $5
i' AZ O
AUTOSTROP SAFETY RAZOR CO,, Limited
AutoStrup Building, Toronto, Canada
r•'`
The Retort Crisp.
After a grand review of the German
troops at Potsdam some years ago the
Kaiser called out to the officer com-
manding the Prussian Guard in a voice
loud enough to be heard by all the dis•
tinguished guests who were grouped
in front of the palace:
"Pick ole Out a hundred 111e1 from
the Prussian Guard."
Then, talking the arm of King Ed-
ward VII„ who was there, he said:
"Collie with me."
He escorted King Edward very
delicately round the hundred niers, and
then said banteringly;
"Well, do you think you could find
a hundred men in England to beat
then.?"
"I (don't know so much about that,"
Promptly replied the late King, "but
I could easily find 50 who would try."
MONEY ORDERS.
When ordering goods by mail send
a Dominion Express Money Order.
Fustic Wood.
For many years manufacturers have
used fustic dye for coloring yellow,
and with the appropriate mordants for
brown, olive, and green. A contributor
to the Bulletin of the Pan-American
Union says that during the war the
dye was in groat demand for coloring
the cloth of uniforms and of army
tents. The dye comes from a tropical
tree technically known as Chloropho•a
tinctoria, that grows abundantly in the
lowlands of Mexico from Tampico
southward, and less abundantly in all
of Central America. It is a tree of
medium size that rarely reaches sixty-
five feet in height and thirty inelnes in
diameter.
Transportation is the most difficult
part of marketing the trees. The
tracts where the wood grows are us-
ually without roads, and the logs have
to be hauled over the roughest ground
to the rivers. Before the war the
wood was cut, hauled and delivered to
the side of the ship for about eight
dollars a ten, and was sold in New
York at prices ranging from twenty-
five dollars a ton. During the war ftls-
tic'wood sold for fifty dollars a ton.
The wood is imported in the form of
short logs with the sapwood removed;
only the heartwood has the coloring
matter. Before it can be used it has
to be ground to a powder, and in that
form it readily dissolves in water. A
dilute solution gives a light yellow,
and the addition Of acid makes the
color still lighter. The use of metals
lie salt adds a greenish tint.
I'ASJ-IIONAI3L
COSTUMES
1
�3
8791 echo
No. 8791 -Ladies' Semi -Fitted Dress -
Price, 25 cents.
Minaret tunic, in one piece; one-
piece foundation lengthened by
straight section; instep length. Cut
in 0 sizes, 34, 30, 38, 40, 42 and 44 ins,
bust measure. Size 30, waist, tunic,
3?'s yds. 36 ins. wide, of 21/3 yds. 54
ins. wide; contrasting, 2% yds. 30 ins.
wide; one material, 4% ycls. 36 ins.
wide, or 3% yds. 54 ins. wide. Width
around bottom, 1% yds.
No. 9019 -Ladies' Dresls. Price, 25
cents.
Closing side -front and on shoulder;
instep or shorter length. Cut in 7
sizes, 34 to 46 ins. bust, Size 36, one
material, with revers, instep length,
3% yds. 54 ins. wide; dress, 3% yds.
40 ins. wide; revers, belt, 111'1 yds. 40
ins. wide; front and back of dress,
instep length, 1% yds. 54 ins. wide;
collar, side -back and front, 'belt, short
sleeves, 1% yds. 36 ins. wide. Width,
112 yds.
These patterns may be obtained
from y8llr local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Department W.
Are You a Gossip?
Are your neighbors gossips? Yes,
certainly they axe. But before telling
Mrs. Brown across the way that site is
a gossip you had better insure your-
self against accidents.
Originally there was no sinister
meaning in the word "gossip." It was
good old English for a sponsor jn bap-
tism, from God and "sib," meaning
"related." Later a gossip came to
mean a relative, or neighbor. And,
since relatives and neighbors usually
talk w1108 they meet together, the
verb "to gossip" was coined.
Who, to be quite accurate, can be
rightly described as -a gossip? You
turn the corner of Love Lane, and
come upon two stout women stanching
at their cottage doors tallting. Are
they gossiping?
Even if you stand and listen -which
is bad manners, and may lead to seri-
ous consequences -I defy you to an-
swer that question. "Gossip" is loose-
ly used to include all talk that is idle
and useless. If all talk that could not
be justified on the grounds of useful-
ness were banned, some of us would
never open our mouths.
But there is another side to talk be-
side mere utility. It done people good.
If you have just been defrauded of a
dime it mantes you feel better to tell
somebody about it. Preferably the
person who defrauded you. But, fail-
ing him, someone else.
4 '
Good For Business.
The young doctor sat wearily down
in his easy chair, and asked his wife
affectionately;
"And has my darling been lonely?"
"Oh, no!" she said animatedly -"at
least, not very. I've found something
to busy myself with:'
"Indeed!" he said. "What is it?"
"Ch, I'm organizing a class! A lot
of girls and young married women
are In it, and we're teaching each
other how to cook,"
"What do you do with the things
you cook?"
"We send them to the neighbors."
"Dear little woman," he said. toss-
ing her fondly, "always thoughtful of
your husband's practice.'
8 3 13 8 8 8 8 8 8 1, nel
w
t
When Your Nerves
Cry Out
It may be from tea or, coffee.
Then think of the healthful,
,satisfying qualities of
INF��Jy ''�',Q, ��tJT � g.~t X1 .5 �s8 try S 411 t !A
n
IJ
Delicious, freefrorrl nerve-1�e-disi,c.Irb- ,�
111 fill gfi eclie'I11 i.
E,'conornical
Try a No
from your Grocer
.7VNo fd is'L ,1'.7 .Priev
The Widow's Windows, OWN
qy t
'I'In' widow had three large windows BABY'S vY R� TAaa' TS
nv(u•Inuhinft the route of I'llris's
T(111211 Day; and as she wib 1112,1'
clot.riuof 1121122 it(1111notocrnl t0121(1(1'to
111 10 fur a 1211.1211 fill 11) 1:11':'711",121'23
The "ferning Post" G41a the :Jury
Instead elm invited a- number of arm
102323 and legless ponos 10 sit In the
right - 10111 left windows and watcll 1111
OF GREAT HELP
•
5lrit1ers, If pier lathy e1' growing
child 1,1 sickly; if he dors not sleep
well at • :gilt; If he cries a. great deal;
• Is crnrtiputc,l curl leis 1 11 14, bowels
prnceestoll pussy, exphliniift that the
venire mai+ was (elgagcd. But. no one
cam" tp 220Pulr3 it, 111111 2013(1, the
trc006 0!111 ban110 and banners warell-
cl proudly by, the. Whduw, to ler
i>1 te2' :1uuizeme111, sat at the balclt of
the room with her head in her hands.
When it teas over one of the grateful
guests said:
"So your friends never came, after
all!"
"Oh, yes; they were there," she re-
plied, quietly, "My son, lay grandson,
and my son-in-law, They all gave
their lives for France."
DREADED .INFLUENZA
Medical Men Believe it Will
Again Visit Canada This
Autumn and Winter.
There is a widespread belief among
medical mon that the epidemic of la
grippe, or influenza, which swept over
the world last year, will again appear
in Canada during this autumn and
coining winter. This dangerous trou-
ble spares neither ago nor sex, but 1,
naturally finds its easiest victims
among those who aro run down in
health, or those whose blood is weak
and watery, and it is among the latter
class in which the greatest number of
fatalities occur. Tho surest way to
prevent an attack of this dreaded
trouble is to keep the blood rich and
pure, and the safest 'and best way to
do this is through the use of Dr, Wil-
liams' Pink Pills,
No reasonable precaution to avert
an attack of influenza or la grippe
should be spared, The disease itself
is deadly, but its after-effects, among
those who are spared, make the life
of the victim one of constant misery.
Ask ahnost any of those who have
been attacked by influenza what their
present condition of health is and
most of them will answer: "Since I
had the influenza I have never been
fully well." This trouble leaves be-
hind it a persistent weakness of the
limbs, shortness of breath, bad diges-
tion, palpitation of the heart, and a
tired feeling after even slight exer-
tion. This is clue to the thin -blooded
condition in which la grippe almost
always leaves Its victims after the
fever and influenza have subsided.
They are at the mercy of relapses and
complications, often very serious,
This .condition will continuo until the
blood is built up again, and for the
purpose of building up the blood and
strengthening the nerves nothing can
equal a fair treatment with Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills, From first to last
dose these pills make new, rich blood,
which reaches every organ and nerve
in the body. Thus the lingering
germs are driven out, and the weak,
despondent victims of influenza are
transformed into cheerful, healthy,
happy mel and women.
But better still, you can put your-
self in a condition to resist an attack
of influenza by enriching the blood
through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, and this, it seems, is the sensible
thing to do at once.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all dealers in medicine or will be sent
by mail at 50 cents a box, or six boxes
for $2,50, by The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co„ Brockville, Out,
w `
Loose Rivets.
Few autoists examinie the frame for
loose rivets, yet these - often shake
loose and fall out. A car owner re-
cently falid that two rivets which
had held a cross Member of the frame
in place had slipped out and the side
rail had cracked a little as a result,
hlinard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gents, -A customer of ours cured a
very bad case of distemper in a valu-
able horse by the use of MINARD'S
LINIMENT.
Yours truly,
VILANDIE FRERES,
Sentry Go.
True lace who shared the guard with
me
That night of whirling snow,
What other nights have brohght to
you
I shall not know.
I never even heard your name
And hardly saw your face,
Yet you poured out your heart to me
As we kept pace, '
I know not if you're living still,
Or fallen 111 the light:
But in my heart your heart is safe
Till the last night,
Wifely Amenities,
That there' are two sides to every
caro this bt'ief bit of conversation
from an Englialr contemporary re-
veals:
"Will tells me that be leads a dog's
life," said Will's mother to Will's
Vvifc.
"i'es, that's so," 12123W1'1'51 \V ill's
wife, "Ile conics in with 012121:ly feet,
stales himself ((11l1):013)-, 1,•
fire, t,t;>Wla, and 1vA:112 1., ,. ;2 i
and sim:0:rh arr. 122.1 20212121121 1'iglit,
g1"1111" Bahy'.1 Oval theyhave proved of 20 221 !Will 10 th'uusimd t
of mothers, ('elle"('diol•; the Tablets
Mrs. W. H. Deeeter, Corson'.2 Siding,
Ott„ says;_ "1 !laveused illby's Own
Tablete and h'1044 round 1110105,1 e10 Plicel-
11for tine 11lt Dur s 11114 would not
be wllhent them.' The Tablets are a
mild but thoroughlaxative and are
1 anemiasc l to contain leo harmful
drug -that is w44y they always do
• good and never harm. They are sold
by medicine dealers or by until at 25
cents a box front The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
HOW LONG GAN THEY DO IT?
There 1s in Canada current opinion
that it costs the Government $1.03 to
get 01 of gross revenue free the rail-
roads which have been emancipated
from the capitalistic elan. A deficit
of $50,000,000 in 1019 is the forecast.
This straightway gives rise to conjec-
ture as to what the true relation of
cost and revenue would be if some
courageous Administration reached
clown to the bottom of our own Gov-
ernment
overnment operation of the roads.
Thanks In part to the peculiarities
of the Canadian situation the private
Grand Trunk and Canadian Pacific
have contributed nobly to the Govern-
ment's experiment in railroad opera-
tion. This and other causes have
steadily lilted the percentage of cost
to gross revenue. To -clay it Is 80 per
cent. fop the Grand Trunk and 81 per
cent. for the. Canadian Pacific, The
percentage thus actually discloses the
81102111111(1 scandal of surplus, rather
than the uplifting inspiration of de,,
Reit, - -
Sionthly statements duly audited
and certified show Canadian Pacific
and Grand Trunk can still operate on
their own motive power; the exact
status of the Government roads is not
so clearly revealed. Why it is not is
a matter of conjecture, friendly, in-
vidious or neutral, as may be. Some
irrecoucilables want to know how
they are to reach a conclusive audit
of Canadian Northern, slaking a true
capital investment basis for figures.
Others say there is an operation defi-
cit of more than three per cent.
What If it be so that the more
wheels turn round and the faster they
go, the more money they lose? If it
costs 3 cents net loss to take to a dol-
lar, isn't the taxpayer there to pay it?
And doesn't the paltry 3 cents go at
once back into circulation? "As long
as he has a dollar left to barn, why
shouldn't the taxpayer writhe and
turn?"
A St,nliell supporter of a 'western
cooperative grain concern with a long
and honorable record of losses used
to refer to its "turnover" as its "turn -
under." Happily free of the embar-
rassment of literary cult, he has given
the Government's railroad auditors a
book heading, accurate and novel.
'!'hey should be satisfied and so should
the taxpayers. For as a facetious In-
quirer for Got'ermuent figures says:
'If a taxpayer is not to pay these
axes, what is he for?" Btit how long
call they do it? -Wall Street Journal.
Speedy Pigeons.
In calm weather a carrier pigeon
can fly at the rate of 1,200 yards a
minute; with the Help of n moderate
wind it Neill attain a speed of 1,540
yards; and before a strong wind 2,000
yards.
Minarri'a Liniment Cures Suras, cite.
Cleanliness in the poultry runs is
absolutely essential for best growth
in the chicks. Too often the yards
are overcrowded and are allowed to
get bare. Cultivate soil, grow green
food, and provide plenty of shade.
"SYRUP OF HCS"?
CHILD'S LAXATIVE
Look at tongue! Remove poi-
sons from little stomach,
liver and bowels
' 0
RIUMOr
ROM IlERE CAPRI
Tommy Understood,
" I'''" " •:1',1,1 tier.. Funday.schuel tr,,ioh.
or, ''1A•:11 114411811 cut Samson's hair
Le 144421 all his courage and strength,
.and became (2111,1 tie a lamb. Can you
under:Itvial that?"
"t1' 11 11(8'13111,''replied Tamely, "it
does malty' yi-r feel t 1(01. 1 when a
woman cuts yet' bail."
Romance Nearer Home.
Lady--'"Iluw romantic' you must
have found the vines of France, the
olives of Italy, the oranges and citrons
of Palestine."
Demobilized Cockney - "Not 011.
Give me the cocoanuts of 'Amit ad
every time."
Misplaced Slang.
A story that has a pedal worth think-
ing about (0201 recently printed in the
'WA3PRO».
AI)1z7H WAN't'ilD 1't') :)G I'I.AIN
.4llgbt sewing et home; whole or
spare time; good nay; work hent any
distance; cluugen void Fend r0,1110 for
Particulars. Nl,tl"na1 A1a(31(2o''I. ring
c'.'n,punY, h144,10401.
POTAWOZIO VOA SALE,
if1Hu1t(1 M R' ONTARIO I'(>TAT,)ilH,
It.' 'Ur 1„ts a].In bu,:h11. Ions,'. Wire
I01 151.0 (no.... lrrvden.'N,•w (302401,2.
FO$ SALE,
' .,Ti tt El'A I'7 it
WEEKLY - iN 138170)5
IA (runty. v
ty. htl nlid rnurtunitY• WolLo
keii r. Vinson Publishing Cu., ldml1ed,
I8 Adelaide Sr V1'.. Toronto.
vsr 5,d lolICQlrirl.kli) 54EWSI'APIaW
ptlutit,g elan.' in 31:Astern
Onturlo, Liston:0 curried 01,000. (0111
Wilson Pell fFI,tnpquirk,,1 Pale.
1 o ilex .02,
c' Tcronto.
ZXTVATIONS V CANT.
A 11 18 Aidi. 1'1'1„I ii:' IP YGU
1S 1'(211„ ad r_,nt 221 in any situation
or lif menta!i.,.tu,ry is Meat w111
brim., fru '122 , 1 , r, Pelaan System
of 91,.,11 a,.d .L.pv'ry Tr:1114441g develops
latent f - W,•rs With w1' a ierlul results.
ret It , 11112' I t r ->„„• moments of
st•,lt rrtl memo) `s,•1', WO. It matters
124 f -toy:t1' you i,1' 1the eourae Is 001244
1'1111'14 1 ! Y loo 1 t e'nln ..cutlal col.r'es-
pt.nd
for free book-
let, Mind rind hf,'e , r,' will bring this
and all particular2 by return mail.
Write 10-41ay. Pelulan Institute, 706
T"mf,b, nidi._ Toronto.
MISCZLLANEOVS,
Louisville Course Juurmil. A bey had i- IA 11,211. ata MORS. LUMPS, w)1 '.
passed a fairly good examination, and ruin by our home treuunsnt, (01'1[22 us
c ..
his prospective pl. [aerie r�llploy'r'1• told him to before (1, Irate. 711'. L•"lemon hlediosl
Co.. Limited. C„llingwood• Ont.
report the next morning.
"1 goteha," said the boy.
"But you Haven't got the job yet,"
was the swift reply, "and what's more,
you never (0111 "
Teacher's Memory.
A sc•heol teacher who had been tell-
ing a class of email pupils the story
of the discovery of America by Colum-
bus ended it with: "And all alis hap-
pened more than 400 years ago."
A little boy, his eyes wide open with
wonder, said. after a moment's
thought, "Cee! What a memory you've
got!"
DEWS OF EVE
No More Gentle Than l
1
`Cascarets for the
Liver, Bowels
It is just as needless a • •�„.„.„ <
7s as is dan-
gerous to take violent or nasty cathar-
tics. Nature provides no shock -ab-
sorbers for swur liver and bowels
against calomel, harsh pills, sickening
oil and salts. Cascarets give quick re-
lief without injury from Constipation,
Biliousness, Indigestion, Gases and
Sick Headache. Cascarets work while.
you sleep, removing the toxins, poisons
and sour, indigestible waste without
griping or inconvenience. Cascarets
regulate by strengthening the bowel
muscles. They cost so little too.
,Omerico,'s ?Joiner nog ltomaiilea
Book on
DOS DISEASES
111131 =OW to Voad.
Mailed Free 122 any Ad-
dress, by the Author,
IE. Clay Glover Go., Inc.
118 West Ulst Street
N,w
GET SLOAN'S FOR
YOB PAIN RELIEF
You don't have to rub it hi
to get quick, comfort-
ing relief
Once you've tried it on that stili
joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, rheu-
matic twinge, lame back, you'll find
a warns, soothing relief you never
thought a liniment could produce.
Won't stain the skin, leaves no
muss, wastes no time in applying, sure
to give quick results, A large bottle
means economy. Your own or any
other druggist has it, Made in Can-
ada. Get it to -day. 35c., 70c., $1.40.
Queen ES,izabeth, of Belgium, is 43
years of age, and is one of the most
talented of women. '
=natrd's Liniment Steitovos Neuralgia.
A touch of ail at the hinged points
of umbrella rods will prevent the
rusting and breaking , of the small
wires that hold the ribs together.
0
0
SUFFERING CATS!
GIVE THIS MAN
THE GOLD MEDAL
0 . - 0 0 - •
Let folks step on your feet hereafter;
wear shoes a size smaller if you like,
for corns will never again send electric
sparks of pain through you, according
to this Cincinnati authority.
He says that a few drops of a drug
called freezone, applied directly upon
a tender, aching col -n, instantly re-
lieves soreness, and soon the entire
corn, root and all, lifts right out.
This drug is a sticky ether com-
pound, but dries at once and simply
shrivels up the corn without Inflaming
or even irritating the surrounding
tissue.
It is claimed that a quarter of an
ounce of freezone obtained at any drug
store svill aost very little but Is sufll-
clent to remove every hard or soft corn
or callus from one's feet. Cut this out,
especially if you are a woman reader
who wears high heels.
ll
SINCE ti7670 .f #
60 STO-� S COUGUS S
MILES
A ik5 KIND
FaceWas Badly Disfigured.
Cuticura Soap and
Ointment Healed,
"Small red pimples and black-
heads began on my fare, and my
s face was badly disfigured.
tib\ Some of the pimples [es-
)tered while others scaled
over and there were places
where the pimples were
in blotches. They used
to itch and bum terribly.
"I saw an advertise-
ment for Cuticura and I tried them.
They stopped the itching and burn-
ing and I used four cakes of Soap
and three boxes of Ointment which
healed me." (Signed) Miss V. A.
Hayne, Stormont, N. S., Dec.25,'18.
The Cuticura Toilet Trio, consisting of
Soap.Ointment and Talcum;promotes skin
pur, comfort and health when used for
everyday toilet purposes, For Sample
Each Free by Mail, address: Concur",
Dopt.A,Bonton,U.S.A." Sold everywhere.
Ole TABLETS MARKED
"BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN
Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross'.
Accept California" Syrup of Figs
only --1022( for the mune C'alifur0ie on
the package, then you ere 8(1'n your
('111121 is having 112m best and most
harmless laxative or physic' for the
lilt." st4mlrlt, liver and bowels. Child.
r(n1 leve 1214 doth -Ions - fruits taste,
1 t 11 (1 Meet!n1,8 for child's dose i ri 021111
.t t'thrllcf
Vie 1 t . 1 }- 1111'.1' 1 t'
Por Colds, Pain, Il'eadaelle, Neural. package which contains complete
gia, Toothache, harnelte, and for rectlons. Then you aro getting to
ItbeninalMi11, Lumbago, Seiatdea, Neu. Aspirin»-tbo genuine ,Aspirin pr -
r11i': take A'nunm :marl04'1-21131 tltr scribed by physicians for over 5,i e
name 13' V21'' or yell are not taking teen Sears. Now made is Kana
A$ drin et .dl. trendy tin bo os containin 12 t,
i�.r.. pt eels,"Rayer Tablets of lets ens1 but 0. fSw cents. Drhg416M
A4:i,1l321" in an ulabreken lilyer" al,o soil larger -$layer' packagpe.
7:12 ro £a 221.137 c, -:o 11.,:p_.eii-.r'1.aayer"-•'Von must bay "2 3290 "
Alt i 1 2 t touden, 7 r r' 1 In r'unfla1 of Bayer Manufacture, of lfonv-.
a0, u f i' 11, , t - t t I t 1:1 11 known that Aspttutusn tuts Si
n •• .a 2 i 1 1 11 ,t. 11"p111,11..• 0011 ,an, the Tnblete 0 l@AY51 cow ,'
t,.,, Co M..111acd 2‘1:11 ❑,ci+ [,..m..1 ,.. .,oily 11222 "IlaYer tt"1oso. ,