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The Clinton News Record, 1930-05-01, Page 2Clint n ew Recor4 CLINTON,,,ONTARIO ;forms of Subscription—$2.00 per yeas' in adyenee, to Canadian addresses; $2,50 to the• lies. or other 'forei'gn eountrles. No paper discontinued until all arrears are paid unlesa'at the option of the publisher, . The 'date to'Avhleh a ory subscriptionis ^paid is denoted on the label, *Advertising Pates—Ti'ansient adver- tising, 12c per count line 'foe first inset°tion; 8e fou* each seheeenent Insertion. Heading counts.'2 Lines. Small advertisements not to exceed one ineh, such as "Wanted:" 'Lost,". "Strayed, etc., •inserted Onee foe 35e, each aubsequeut insertion 15e. Advertisements sent in witbaut in- : he failed: to put ill ,an appearsqce. and . has..aot been heats' t since; . �rheli s e structton9 •asao'the number of In h sertioia. *an ted':vein, run until -order- to lief• fernier boarding hobs, in' Aaltasr-TOXas,' did Hennepin's. bosse ed out and will be charged. accord. Coirlpton,Pavom1ee, marr(ey heir, i arnia- ingiy. Rates the display advertising lee ile :very ecce,itric and has a,feaY Urat made known .on application. • he is ':always being. fpllbweit. TTe, too;. -vanishes. Pe'ter'DeWolfe determines to'. get. at the mystery. He sails for America and -visits 'the Parmelee honor) on the :Hudson where he 'finds evidentee .In en qid book' et Ar,tee . lore which leads him to make a trrp,to an anoient Azteo "lost" city. Brans has' followed him free, Ell=- ,land and insists on'aeeompanyi»g him on the tourney. START HERR 'TODAY Peter DeWOICe has been warned to stay away from Brena Seleoss: or he will van1eb like the others," He meets her in London and • she 'tells hire her story,: When but a very young-i;iri. ber father died, leavinghe{ en. urphen, ,Site went. to St, Louis to nrarryrDick lienheptn,.irk Communications iizteuded for pub. Ilcation must, as a guarantee "oi': good ;faith, be aeeompanied by ,the 'name of the writer. G. H. HALL, M. IV OLA.Rie, Proprietor. Editor. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY At last they canie'to the,crunbling M. D. MeTAGGART wales and the gaping mouth of the ancient gateway. The surf Was still sending down its heat in .throbbing levers over the desert. Yt slanted down :from the West following the angle.of declivity of the wall of rock: behind the ruin that mounted up in '-agged overhanging crags of red and brown. Upon the base of this reek, rudely smoothed and carved, was the symeol of the feathered serpsnt. • Brena clutched Peter's forearm. "It did have a meaning then!" she Banker A general Banking $usiness transacted. Notes Discounted; Drafts Issued. Interest Allow- edDeposits. Sale Notes Pur- chased. 'H. T. RANGE' Notary Public, Conveyancer Financial, Real Estate and Fire In - nuance Agent. Representing 14 Fire Insurance Companies. Division Jourt Office. Clinton. W. T RYDONE Barrister, Solicitor, Notary. Public, etc. Of€lce: SLOAN BLOCK • CLINTON CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary Public, Com- missioner. etc - (Office over J. E. Honey's Drug Store) DR. J. C. GANDIER Office klours:-1,30 to 3.30 p.m., 0.30 to 8.00 p.m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m. Other hours by appointment only. effice and Residence•- Victoria St. DR. FRED O. THOMPSON Office. and Residence: Ontario StreetClinton, Ont. tine door west of`Anglican Church. Phone 172 Eyes Exrm,inee and Glasses Fitted DR. PERCIVAL HEARN Office and Residence: Horan Street Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 (Formerly ocoupied by the late Dr, C. W. Thompson), "I must go with yor," Eyes Examined and Vases Fitted. He nodded. He lais:tecl to 'a pile ''tif charred bones lying close to the well. Among. there was a piece of human anuli black - owe as if by fire. "Wait," Peter comnianileel; He went,fo'ward, bent .over the gr.astly pile, kicked the sand that ser - rounded it, and, stooping. clown, gath- erect a number of objects hit the cup o: his hand. "This was no prehistoric man,", he aid solemnly. "Seel The eyelets and 'Me' nails' of shoos. The owner long `ago., vanished. 'Here are two mother of .pearl.buttousha pocket knife, coins, This men lost his lire,' many' years age." Brenn tried to ape• k, wetting hey' Ape with the tip of her tongue: `There are things of ' gold,; too," said Peter. "Keep, your nerve, dear. Look at. this!" He held out he 'hes trembling fingers a signet ring with 'n It deeply en - ;;raved upon• it, "That!" exclaimed Beene with hor- ror. "It was his! -Jim Hennepin's. This is—lie?" "Yes: ' Brena moved toward the pile' of belies half eoneaned by fire;' then she stopped and•lookedaway. exclaimed."He was killed," she sited, "Ile was "A terrible meanie Brena," he shot o, tabbed. g+ "No," replied Peter grimly, "It was said with awe. worse than that—more ghastly. Ho Amidst the gigantic proportions of was killed. But it was not by a hu- man haled." * "Brena, I want ye.] to stand here by this ald we: I. without walking away from it a Monte.~," said Peter, taking her by the shoulder's and looking squarely into her dark eyes. "I'm go- ing to leave you alone a minute., It's not pleasant. -1 wan', you to .do it just the same." "Where are you going?" "Outside the wall again• I've seen something there that roe did not see," Brena shivered. • "Don't be afraid, dear," he said. "We have had—both Al us --the lesson of futile feat', Once we told each other that fear was a crime—a terrible waste. We are on the verge of 'kern- ing how terrible a waste it can be." She put her hands in his; with a smile she said, "You see, Peter, I am in the dark, clear. But just the same I'll do as you tell me." He disappeared outside the old wall, and as he vanished, so vanished all that attached her to the living world. There was no sound, no motion within the tango of the senses; the place of death Was still. Not elven a horned toad, like a piece of (tried and know what we shall flied." ,the dust. Brena felt as if the too had He, looked at the opening in the high become intlapable of movement and of wall as if it were the maw of Destiny sound; she•had a sense of being trans - opened to' belch. forte upon then a formed into stone—an adamantine sentence. statue of a woman, carved from rock, "Tell me, Peter—are there dangers waitingbeside the waterless well there?' Do you know?" undo: the beating sun,the cloudless "I only guest," he answgr�• "1 infinity of sky, the liff, until the think there are none. 1 think, Brena, of of doom, that beyond that wall there is freedom for us—life forFroin the table lands above a lonely us—a message for us." buzzard came swooping down on wide, black. wings, slipping and turning, with one eye cocked down, as if some- time before he had picked bones in this enclosure and had returned tc the scene of gruesome feasts. 'Black, ill-omened, carrion creature that he was, Brena felt glad that he had tome --a thing of life and motion "We shall see mor:" he taid grim- —into this place of vast dimensions ly. "Come." filled by the silences and rigidity of In the centre of the enclosure, there death• was one monument of permanence; it She watched the magnificent grade was the great well -curb of mighty and power o£ his flight' until Peter's slabs hewn from the rock of the cliffs. voice broke the silence againb, and flap - Towards this memorial of tragedy, oltgtowirele up whence hrd the e the had comerd begann of death, of decay, of the insignifi- "Brena," said 'Peter, who came to canoe of time, of the eneonsequence of her with an expression drewn, as if an age of man, Brent and Peter, like with some stress Within. two creatures of a moment of life, "'Yes?" walked. with solemn, awed faces. ••" "book!" said Peter suddenly, "Have Sit clown with use here 1 these you your nerve? Loolcl" blocks east a sfo, clear. I will show you what I have found—,,a, thing like the•writing of a giant finger of justice —here in the desert. But first I want to tell you a tale, Brena—revolting and terrible." a , r ✓ "Tell me;". she said, sitting with her elbows on her knees, "Itis of surprising brevity, Brena," he asserted. "Iis simplicity is the thjng that makes eitlieulous the many things I expected„ all the nightmares of, the unknown. I stumbled onto the tea. • 1 used my head. That's all." He stopped to think. ,"And yet the simplicity is hideous•!" he eeicl. Brena glanced toward all that re- ena!necl of Jim Hennepin of Virginia —the blackened, 'fleshless relics of his existence. "He deserved ` it, perhaps," said Peter pointing. "Ile tried to' cash in his knowledge.". "You told me last night of the super- stikion of 'buried treasure here,", she said. "You mean that1" e,,"No, not exactly," said Peter. "I picked up the trail in the house where Parmalee •took you. Two old books;' and maps of this country and of this place were missing from both. One Parmelee took when he went .away, The other? Well, T began to wonder about the other)' "You thought it must have been used—before?"' "Ye '• It had been used and prob- ably des'troyecl. It was used by one man to,lus'e another to hi's death!" Brenn leaned forward. "I began to be sure, Brene, when I found that expert knowledge pro- nounced that the writing'.on a cheque: made out by the one man who led the other to his death here was written by the arise hand that, with an attempt' to disguise, 'heel 'written the weeds,. 'This Sign,' on the serap of :paper Jim' Hennepin left with you and that you gave me. I'd better toll you that when I first toolcthat Omega it was because' your•indogsenent wapon' it, I wasn't cure, Leena—of.:afixbocly," desert, sky and cliff, this figare of the Mayan god—a symbol brought from the lands of the Central Amer- icas by a craven tribe fleeing frons• its enemies—had looked down with its heathen eyes' upon the growth of a city around' an oasis, around a flowing giant spring. It had seen perhaps in the coshing and going of generations within that fortified pueblo, strange rites, barbaric human sacrifice, the march of a little pomp and power, moving funerals, the dance of naked priests with painted yellow bodies, the eneless stream of laborers bending under their loads of water carried front the well to irs'le getion ditches, the 'harvest,. the Mir; aeles of water. Rut perhaps it had seen too the day when a subterranean shift had driven the underground water course away, and in a night drained out the life - maintaining supply of five thousand panic-stricken praying men and wo- men and their lamenting priests. Perhaps. .if tradition were fight, it kew where the treasures of that city had been hid away. "You are, not going into it alone?" said Brena. "I will go with youl" "It isn't rigFt, Brena] 1 do not shrivelled cactus skin, drew trail upon DR. H. A.. WICINTYRE DENTIST Office Hours: 3 to 12 a.Iu, and 1 to li p.m, except Tuesdays and Wednes- days. 'Office over Canadian Natioael Hareem, Clinton, Ont. Phone 21 DR. E. A. AXON DENTIST Clinton, Ont. Graduate of C.O.D.S. Chi_ago, and R•el.D.S., Toronto, Crown and Plate Work a Specialty. D. H. McdNNES CHIROPRACTOR • Electro Therapist Maareur ern,fe: 'Huron St. (Pew doors nest of Royal Bank). , hours --Tues„ Thurs. and Sat, an day. Other hours hi' appointment. kensatl eface—Mon•, Wed, and Fri. forenoons, Sentorth Office --Mon.. Wed. - anti- Friday afternoons. ..Phone 207. CONSULTING ENGINEER S. W. Archibald, B,A•Sc,, (U.S., Registered 'Professional En- gineer and Land Surveyor, Associate Member Engineering Institu;,e of Can- ada. Office, Seafotth, Ontario. GEORGE ELLIOTT -Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be, made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Vinton, or by oallieg Phone 203, Charges . etotlarate a.iacL Satisfaction Guertin teed. R. HIGGINS , Clinton, Ont. General Five and Life Insurance Agent for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock, Automobile and Sickness and Accident 1lneurance,' Buren and Erie and Cana- da Trust Bonds.. Appointmeists macre • t meet •par'tiesat'Brucetield, '4ea'na and Bayfield. 'Phone 57,'• I IE rvkKILLOP MUTUAL Tire Insurance Company • Head Office, S'caforth, Ont; President, Janes Evans, 130eehwood,. Nicer -President, James Connolly,Goderich, Directors: James Shoaldlee, Walton; Efts Rhin, " 3Tuiigtt; nobt. Vlerrie Y1u1- nett James Bennewels, Broadleagen; gohn Pepper; Bi'uteteld .1.-_:Sreadfoot, eafm th; G. 3'. IvicCartney, SeatOrth, .,Agents; W. J. Yeo, H.R.No. 8, Clinton) Zahn Murray, ggoaforth James Watt, Blyth 16d. HinchIey, Seatorth.' Secretary and Treasurer: D, F. lide- giregor, Seafos'th. Any moneys to be paid may be paid to Mbirish Clothing Co, Clinton, 'Or at Calvin Cuter) Grocery, Co,, Parties desiring' to -effect insurance dr transact other business will be promptly att. nand email application to any, of the above officers addreSeod to their.respee- tire post offices, Losses) Inspected by.the - Director who ]lyes iteareet the scene. At the entrance he stopped, gazing down at the ground—the film, the blanket of fine dust. He uttered an exclamation. "What cio yon see, Peter?" '"I see a record in the aaiscl•" "What record?" WRIGLEY'S is good company on` any trip. It's delicious flavor adds gest and enjoyment. The sugar cup plies pep and energy when the clay seems long. In shorties good and good for,you. �`#tA�DIIN AXs` TIME TABLE Trains' will ar'ive at and depart trosn Clinton as follows: Buffalo and Godericb Div. GoingEast, • depart • 0.44 a.m.• , „ 2.50 p.m. Going. West,, ar. . • ' 1150 a.m... " " a' 6.68• dp. 6.43 p.m. . " " ar. 10.31 .p.m. London, Huron d Bruce Going South, an 7.40 dp. 7140 am. " 09 p -m. Going North, .dejiart . , 6,42 p.m. ' ar. 11,40 dp. 1153 "a•m. ISSUE No. 18—L'30 • "I understand," she said. "I'ender-- stand. And the scrap of'paper eves n part 'of 'the bait?" Peter raised leis hand as if to say that 119 wished to' go on in hit own way. "It ,was chance, •too, that ,led rite to the motive for ridding the world of Hennepin. That miserable man had become a menace. He knew ,too much! Hp knew of a long series ed embezzle- rnents from a certain estate in 'Texas: A capitalist had .bought vast .quanti- ties of something—on'. speculation— and' his agent after his death deceived the executors es to the *extent of' hie holdings. I have had a clue from an old ;tumult book alt ted to the :bottom," "And Jim Hennepin knew?" • • "Knew and began a merciless black- mail, threatening' ruin: I eon, see him, now, insatiable, hungry, ' losing speculations, asking' for more, •hound- ing a man who, was balancing • between: success and failure and always hint- ing at bankruptcy and the peniten- tiary." Peter (vent on. Ile told of-tlie prob ability tbat Compton Parmelee, . the hounded AIM, a physical: coward, but: resourceful and ingenious, had come upon an old volume describing this lost. cityof the desert. These were tradi- tions of vast wealth hidden there. Par- melee had pretended to the possession of imowledge confirming it. He had showna old letter, tile scrap of paper, with the Kuk-u1-can symbol, He Want- ed to take the tlacktnaller to a place from which he would never come back. "To kill 'him?" asked Brena. "No," replied Peter. "Ho hadn't the courage. He feared that Iie fearer] the work. He feared the result. had a better way!" (To b' continued.) What New York Is Wearing BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern A silk and wool crepe mixture in Riviera blue that answers many day- time needs. It expresses simplicity and good taste to wear now beneath the fur wrap, and may be worn alt through the Spring. The impressed plaits of the skirt are secured by stitching to keep hips flakt• They create charming youthfulness in their soft rippling fulness aerates front. The rolled collar is of plain blue crepe. • Style No. 3380 comes in sizes 10, 18 years, 30, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Lettuce green jersey, navy blue crepe silk with white crepe collar and a yellowish and brown tweed arc effective combinations. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain- 'Iy, giving number and size of such patterns as yeti want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for 'each number, and address your order t Wiison Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St, Toronto. Sing, Boys, Sing! Everyone's against you? 'We)i, they won't be loop; Nothing veers so quickly As thoughtless throng! Don't take any notice; But keep on along, Pull your belt up tighten' And just sing this song: Where there is a• valley There's e b111 es well; Wllat will come to -morrow You can never tell, Life it ve,the.r dreary? Well, 1t might bo worse! Some fonts May be looking In an empty purse:' To your dell condition Quite a spark you'll bring, If you find tomo laughter ;Arid you start to sing; 'Where there is a valley There's a hill'as well; ,What will zoom to mors'aw You can never tel). Cloeids nae round abouit'you? • Wel), they'll blew away! Darkness goes with Morning, / Night must leave for day,. • Bain can't' last for ,ever, , Snow goes with the Spring; Take your ol'd umbrella "And just gaily •sing: WVhere.there" is a valley' 'There's a Bill as Well; , What will come to-Monetw: , YOn can never tell. • • FOR TIi1; Woman Reader BY 'FLORENCE EIDDICPi BOY'S. (Copyrighted) As .the''"Ghemist :Sees' Us A chemist- analyzing that comparra- tlyely unknown element; Woman; has 'described her as follows:, Dlement: Woman. • Occurrence:. rotted '•,wherever man exists, Seldom .in free state. With few eieeeptions the'.comhhtee'state is to be preferred. 'Physical .Propseties; A'll color . and 1 size's. Usually in disguised condition Face covered ley. a Alm of composite material. Boils at clothing and, may freeze at .any moment. ::However, melts _wheel properly treated. Very bitter if not well used. Chemical Properties: Very .active. Possesses ;great affinity for gold', sil- ver, platinum and precious stones. Violent 'reahtion when left 'alone. Ability to absorb' expensive goad at any time. Undissolved by liquids, but. activity greatly increased when satur- ated With -spirit solutions. Some times yields to pressure. Turns green when placed" beside a better' looking specimen. Ages very rapidly.. Fresh variety has great magnetic attraction,. Note: highly explosive when in inexperienced hands. The 'Kitchen Interesting Forthnate is the. woman who does not have to carry on a job In a noisy, dirty .,factory; or in the artificially lighted office, but whose work -a -day life is spent in her own home where she can make her surroundings what she will. There is no need for her to permit leer kitchen ••-e the room in which she speeds most of .her Mea— th be drab and cheerless when a lit- tle thought and a few cane of paint will transform it into 'a place of beauty and charm, Colonia the chief factor which de- termines the influence a room has up- on us. In childhood our first choices are for strong, crude galore—bright reds and yellows and greens. An edu- cated taste learns to love the subtle- ties of grayed down tints, whicb are more restful and refined, but they need not be tame and uninteresting. A few years ago, we were carried away by the white enameled kitchen. But we soon eame to realize that it looked cold and institutionalized. A more loveable kitchen is one with soft yet cheery milers, with Some hsdividn. ailty of its own and a sweet, homely atmosphere. Color has an infiuence'on our men- tal attitudes. Red is an aggressive, inflaming, quarrelsome color. BIues and greens are coo!. Yellow is sunny and happy. Any strong color soon grows monotonous and gets on our nerves, Better ueutraI backgrounds with soft tints, as trimmings, and with touches of bright color to give gaiety. A small loom needs lighter colors. .A sunny coons can take darker colors. A dark room will be brightened by light colors. I3Iue-gray, gs'een-gray, buff as -e lovely for walls, with a dark- er shade for the woodwork, Have the linoleum correspond to the walls or try black and white for the floor. Line the cupboard with orange or henna color for cheer. Let the curtains repeat some of the dominant shades of the room and stress one brighter color. Bands or pipings of blue or orange may be add- ed le more color is needed, or a shelf or two on the vvali may be painted a glad color or contain a row of bright colored dishes to introduce color, One advantage of limiting the heightened colors to cnrtairis, site!ves and dishes is that you can change them easily at will, if you get tired of your color scheme, Fashions, Fads, Foibles Those who hope to keep the hem- lines up are battling against a force no less powerful than gravity, since Madame Grundy says hemlines shall be no less than a hand's length below the knee. There is greater freedom in waistlines and while the newest and smartest are short, yet many still cling about the hips. Waistlines are ANY SEASON Is Vacation Time IIt Atlantic City ANY VACATION Is An Assured Success If You "Stay at the ST. CARPS With the Finest Location and the Longest Porch on the Boardwalk. Offering the ultimate in Service with 'Unexcelled Cuisine No matter how severe, you can a ways have immediate relief: Aspirin always stops pain quickly. It • does it without any ill effects. Harmless to the heart; 'harmless to anybody. But it always'brings relief., Why suffer? YRADE MARK REG. marked more by blousing in the hack and fitting in front than by' the belt. "Favorite materials are the jersey blouses .for sports, lace for afternoon and .evening gowns, prints of all kinds on dark backgrounds. Satins, crepes, georgettes and chiffons ;are ,good. Green, yellow, navy, black and white are popular colors. Wrought Iron eVrought iron is tremendously popu- lar ,just now, It appears in lighting .fixtures, curtain rods and tie -back holders, tables, chairs, benches, gates, plant stands , grills, fire -piece acces- sories..and other furnishings of our ,homes and gardens. It is especially appropriate for the Spanish or Italian house and the com- bination of •iron and cement. The wrought iron curtain rod with its re- movable end- piecesand its rod which may be mat any length, is useful for wall draperies as well as fol• window and door curtains. From it .may be suspended a fine tapestry, Plate Sandwiches The ordinary sandwich, unless very thin, le a sloppy thing to eat and is composed of too. much bread for fill- ing. A more delicious sandwich, and one which is move wholesome for middle-aged People who are ps'osse to eat too much starch, is the plate sand- wich. Cut the crust from a slice of bread, spread It with butter and lay it on a plate. On this put your filling. It may be a slice of meat or chopped meat, with a generous serving of succulent vegetables. For example, slice very thin cucumbers and radishes; shred lettuce; add a slice of tomato or onion if you wish, or you may use diced cel- ery, chopped olives, dates, hard-hoIled egg, or anything else which is delict - oils with bread, Mix all the ingredients with mayon- naise to snake them gooey and expect the sandwich to be eateu with a fork. Osse will thus get almost a whole meal with a sandwich made with only one shoe of bread. In the usual sandwich meal, one must eat six or eight slices of bread to feel satislled, Helpful Hints Rubber gloves will last longer if you do not always wear the same glove on the sense hand. Change them about and turfs them inside out to distribute the wear. Betote putting away the out -of -sea- son clothing, look it over and sew on lost fastener's and buttons; mend rips and tears; and remove stains. A rainy afternoon when you cannot work out- doors is a good time for this cozy work. Stitch three or foto' layers et old lace curtains together and you will LAWN T have dish cloths which wile wear well. 'To remove rest from iron, scour: it with salt, or with steel wool, 'If your recipe ealie•,for only 'the 'white or the yolic of an egg, put the remainder of the egg in a cup and cover it with water; Thi. will pre- vent it from hardening and it can be kept for cooking withinthe next three or four days. Look to the future When building your home, select materials which will stand bard usage and endure for years. Though the first cost of such better grades 10 high- er, igher, they are more economical in the long s'un. It.ia real economy to use the best screen wire, the best hinges, the equipment which will give long service with the smallest matnten• - anee east. The world lcno va nothing of its greatest men: Sir Henry Taylor, Prices from 800 to $4,00• Welch for rhe SMP tabei of quality on all E;namelod Kitchen Utensils you buy. ;o ELS CANADA'S BEST: It iontpossiblotobuid a better lawn mower than SMAR;'rh Enteral 'Mowers nave proved their superiority Entry runningkc1se cutting amlabsoluiely guaranteed. 158 Yowl NAPCWAAEMAN ro ,JAMES SMART PUNY eROCKVILLC r• ✓ arzsnVartumamws WHAT unexpected spacious- ness 'in this Cunard Tourist Third Cabin Dining -Room, typical of the accommodation on this •popular ciassl intimate little tables, laden with flowers; spot- less napery; and a menu of endless variety and astonishing generosity! ATourist Third Cabin rates adjusted. Cabin Class rates revised, Ask for information. 14eelay sailing': f un Miu--eza ta.,cl Quohe.') Rook through The Cunard line, Corner of Beyond Wellington Streets, Toronto, (Tei. Elgin 3471). or ow/ gleamghip 0gort. L KA CANADIAN SE 'VICE CABiN+TOURIST THIRD CABIN -*•THIRD CLASS s e Scraggly, unshaven beards•are'likc dull, unpolished • shoes ... both are entirely out of keeping with your pride of personal appearance. , . so keep yotar shoes tet all tines smart 'with "Nugget" which • waterproofs the shoes as it polishes.