The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 15, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 June 1922 — Page 2

011 p magazine r i. S ECTION Interesting Features for the Entire Family lL- ”.! ■ -

~ I " Something to Think About " By F. A. lai ~)f . "" Bl

FORWARD, BACKWARD in nature is moving j -U' towanil a great purpose. There is j no inactivity in the atoms or in the j spheres; n[o turning backward, no indecision, but a constant movement in | a forward [direction, carrying us away [ from the yesterdays to new dawnings | and new days. The winds, the tides, the spinning j of the eahh in its prescribed orbit, tlie rising and the setting of the sun. the coming and the going of the sea- ■ sons, the blooming and flic fading of | verdure and flowers, all bear evidence of progress, and eternal life. Being a minute part of nature, per- 1 forming your little role in the great ■ scheme of creation, reciting your lines, do you ever pause to ask yourself Whether you are moving forward or • backward? In spite of any thought you may entertain in the matter, you are going [ ahead or drifting behind, just as sure- ’ ly as the roses bloom in summer and I the snows blanket the ground in win- I ter. You are better equipped for your ' life-work today than you were yester- I day, or less efficient. Your niental and physical forces [ have undergone an imperceptible change and you have changed with ' them. You are a trifle more dexterous, in your work or slightly more clumsy. In the last 24 hours you have not remained in a quiescent for the laws of motion have been silently’ at work, carrying you a step or two forward or backward, setting you down j at the threshold of a new day a slightly changed being for better or worse, ■ "" Uncommon Sense IOHN BLAKE I ■ === . ■ WHAT A WOMAN DID TT SEEMS probable that cancer, one of the most deadly of the enemies of mankind, will soon be conquered by the use of radium. Since the beginning of time this element lias existed in nature. For the last score or more,of years the presence of some unseen but force has been suspected. Scientists sought to discover what it was, but sought [in vain, till a quiet little Polish woman 1 , after years of laborious experiment, discovered it. That a woman should have made this discovery 7 —one of the most notable in aH history—is highly important. It disproves forever the old contention that there is any difference between [the brain of a man and that of a woman. The [highest concentration, the greatest reasoning power, the most indomitable ’determination were required for the yeiirs of work which had to be done before this discovery could be made. A inanjstnmbles on a gold mine or a ‘ diamopd deposit by accident. But to find a[ metal which exists in the most minute quantities, and which must be extracted by. infinite pains from the surrounding elements, has to be located

■ I TTlot ner’s Cook Book ||

nuuililUfiluiniiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinuiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiuiiiuiuiiuuiuuiiiiiu "A house is never perfectly furnished for enjoyment unless there is a child rising three years old and a kitten rising three (weeks.” MORE GOOD THINGS A S.STALE bread will accumulate, a little care is needed to keep ahead| of the growth. If dry bread is put through the meat chopper it may then be used for croquettes, meat balls and any number of dishes. Keep the crumbs in a glass jar, sealed from the air. Tip-Top Omelet. A Boil one-half cupful of milk, add one tablespoonful of butter and one cupful 6f bread crumbs, seasoning to taste. Beat the yolks of three eggs and add them, then stir in the stiffly beatep whites. Pour into a buttered omelet pan and cook until well browped. Ham Patties. Take two cupfuls of ham chopped fine, three cupfuls of bread crumbs, three eggs and enough sweet milk to make a soft batter. Mix well, drop into gem pans, drop a piece of butter in each and bake* until brown. Fruit Betty. Put a layer of crumbs in a well buttered baking dish, cover with blueberries, canned or fresh, then ,add another layer of bread with a bit of butter and sugar If needed. Bake until well heated through. Serve with creain and sugar. Brown Bread. Take two cupfuls of stale bread crumbs, one and one-half pints of cold water, mix and soak over night, then

which y*ou may or may not observe as j you take hold of today's duties. <■ Before night, however, you may become conscious of a new-born power, | or a lack of it. and wonder what the i transformation means. Its significance is clear. You are going forward or backward, keeping I in accord with the eternal motion of things of which you are a part. If you would move forward, keep ! step with the men and women who are laboring and achieving in the great purpose, you must watch your every thought, impulse and act, and j ask yourself at the beginning of each I day whether you are pressing toward rvictory or turning toward defeat. | “Forward or backward?” ought to I be your initial question at dawn, and your final query ut night. Let this i self-examination become a habit, and i in a little while you will be glad that you acquired it. (Copyright.)

T] SCHOOL DAI]S (IF w 1 "W -Me f*. “"x \ "▼Ls TMe. >r JIW 3 * y - ) V r—n 1 r- 1 <s>oU’. MUSSEL-SHELL COPYRIGHT I

first, and laboriously separated afterward. ' . Countless experiments entered into Mme. Curie’s work, and only a remarkable human being could have brought it to a successful conclusion. Much is yet to be done before the power of radium over cancer can be thoroughly tested.' But this can be left to others, as the consolidation of a captured position in war can be left to subordinates after a brilliant general has won an engagement. Mine. Curie has set an example, not only for heil own sex, but for all the searchers for truth in the world. Her achievement is an inspiration, and probably to the end of time, will be an inspiration to the whole world. (Copyright.)

uiiiiimmmuiiimmiiimmiimumimHimmiimiiimimiiiminimmmiiiiiiiiuiiH rub through a sieve ohe and onefourth cupfuls of molasses, one and one-half cupfuls each of graham flour, cornmeal and rye meal, two tea spoonfuls of salt, three and one-half teaspoonfuls of soda and one and threefourths cupfuls of cold water. Mix well and steam three hours. Stuffed Apples for Tea. Take fine large apples, core and fill with one-half cupful each of bread crumbs and chopped roast beef, one tablespoonful of melted butter, one teaspoonful of onion juice, one-quar-ter teaspoonful of celery salt, half teaspoonful of salt, one tablespoonful of parsley chopped and a dash of red pepper. Mix well and press into the apples. Bake in a little hot water from half to three-quarters of an hour. jtuxCc •*<££. Copyright, 1522, Western Newspaper Union, i Q ( Half City, Half Desert. On the Gulf of Aden is a spot of j barren sand where a city springs up every winter and almost disappears in the summer. This place is called Berbera. A market is held there every winter and during the height of trading it becomes a city of rude huts and tents with a population of over 20,000. During the summer the place is deserted. O Green, White and Black. Two men passed each other in Washington street. “Hello, Green,” said one. **How' hre you, Whitd?” Said’ the other. And they both are black.

yiiiiiiiiimmiiuiiiimmiiiiiiiiimimmu lIZ-IDDIES1 IZ-IDDIES SIX I | LVJ Will M. Maupin | aiiiiiiitiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiffi BRACE UP WHEN you're feeling rather blue And the sledding’s hard for you; "\\’hen your schemes go up the spout And you’re feeling down and out; When you've shot and scored a miss— Brace up and remember this: Those who win are those who try. So brace .up and don’t say die. Swell your chest and try again; Grit your teeth and smile at pain. Tackle trouble with a laugh And you’ll cut the dose in half. Look the world square in the eye; Buck the line and don't say die, Laying down is all the shame — Sit straight up and play the game. Don’t dodge trouble —if you do It will doubly trouble you. Meet each task with grit and vim. Do the square thing, sink or swim. If you see hard luck draw nigh Laugh again and don't say die. Keep your face turned to the light, Do your best and you're all right. ■— (Copyright.)

! THE ROMANCE OF WORDS * * “BRICK” J * T IKE many other expressions « * which, at first glance, ap- J * pear to belong to the slang of a 0 ( very recent period, “He’s a J ' brick” dates back to the days of * t ancient history, Plutarch being J J authority for the statement that * t Lycurgus used it m connection J J with the defense of Sparta. • * * The story goes that Lycurgus. J J being a man of few words, was * } asked whether Sparta should be J » inclosed with walls, and replied: * J “That -city is well fortified * * which has a wall of men instead * $ of brick.” ! * Another historical allusion of * t the same nature was made when « * an ambassador from Epirus, on * ( a diplomatic mission, was shown * * by the king of Sparta over his J 0 capital. The ambassador was * J amazed to see that the city was J t apparently unfortified and re- * J marked about the matter. , J t “Indeed,” replied the king. * J “Thou canst not have looked J * carefully. Come with me tomor- * J row and I will show you the J f walls of Sparta.” * J On the following morning the * f king led his guest out upon the * { plains, where his army was j * drawn up in full battle force. ; J There, pointing proudly to the * * solid battalions of armed men. « f he exclaimed: “Thou benoldest J * the walls of Sparta—every man t t of them a brick !” J * The antiquity of the expres- i t sion in English may he gathered * * from the fact that the Ingoldsby t t Legends contain the following^ J * couplet: * I "In brief, I don’t stick to declare f f Father Dick, t * So they called him for short,' was a # regular brick.” < 0 (Copyright.) * * * THE CHEERFUL CHERUb I like to tfc-ke rr\y per» Ana sit ttnd tJone., And tL little. Thougßt From ovt tke Gret-t Vnknovm ~ J yHovyy c

SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

MK I '/ wBUajIWSW WBlx Wr* Vopyriqhf, 1921- by the. Bell Syndicate Inc,

PART lll—Continued. Dusk was misting down, outdoors, When with dragging steps he came out of the station. He looked hazily up and down the street, where the cornerlamps and shop-windows now were lighted, and, after dreary hesitation, he went In search of a pawn-shop, and found, one. The old man who it must have been a philanthropist, for Noble was so fortunate as to secure a loan of nine dollars upon his watch. Surprised at this, he returned to the station, and went back to the same old bench. A little after six o’clock a clanging and commotion in the train-shed outside, attending the arrival of a I “through express,” stirred him from his torpor. He walked heavily across [ the room to the same ticket-window [ he had blocked before, but there was I no queue attached to it now. He rested his elbow on the apron and his [ chin upon his hand, and for some ino- [ ments the clerk waited until he should state his wishes. This was a new | clerk, who had just relieved the other, “Well! Well!” he said at last. “I’ll take It now,” Noble responded, gently. “What’ll you take now?” “That ticket!” l “What ticket?” “The same one I wanted before,” Noble sighed. The clerk gave him a piercing look, glanced out of the window and saw that there were no other clients, then went to a desk at the farther end of his compartment, and took up some , clerical work he had in hand. Noble leaned upon the apron of the window, waiting; and if he thought anything, he thought the man was serving him. The high, resonant room became clamorous with voices and with the mingling echoes of footsteps on the tiled floor, as passengers from the express hurried to the street, or more [ gaily straggled through, shouting to J friends who came to greet them; and I among these moving groups there | walked a youthful fine lady noticeably [ enlivening to the dullest eye. She was [ preceded by a brisk porter who car- [ ried two traveling bags of a rich sort, as well as a sack of implements for the game of golf; and she was warm in dark furs, against which the vasty clump of violets she wore showed dewy gloamings of blue. At sight of -Noble Dill, more than pensive at the ticket-window, she hesitated, then stopped and observed him. Here was a coincidence, in a mild way, for, as it happened, she was herself the most observed person in all that place. She was veiled in two veils, but she had been seen in the train without these, and some of her fellow-travelers, though strangers to her. were walking near her in a hypocritical way, hoping still not to lose sight of her, even veiled. And although the shroudings permitted the most meager information of her features, what they did reveal was harmfully piquant; moreover, there was a sweetness to the figure, a disturbing grace; j and nothing disguises such an air of wearing that many violets as a daily' [ perquisite and matter of course. It was Julia’s fortune (though her I father haff other ideas concerning the ' matter) to be the possessor of a personality distinctly pleasing to the masculine eye, and of this the fair [ Julia was probably aware. In any ; event she was quite conscious of the stir which her passage through the throng created. So the coincidence came about that this observed lady stopped and observed Noble, who in return observed [ het not at all, being but semiconscious. “Noble!” she said. He stared at her. His elbow sagged away from the window;; the whole person of Noble Dill seemed near collapse. He shook, and had no voice. "I just this minute got off the train,” Julia said. “Are you going away somewhere?” “No,” he whispered; then obtained command of a huskiness somewhat greater in volume. “I’m just standing here.” 'T told the porter to get me a taxictfb.” she said. “If you're going home for dinner I’ll drop you at your house.” *l— I'm — I —” His articulation encountered unsurmountable difficulties, but Julia had been with him through many such trials aforetime. I She said briskly. “I’m awfully hungry j and I want to get home. Come on—if i you like.” I He walked waveringly at her side through the station, and follow’ed her Into the dim interior of the cab, which became fragrant of violets —an emanation at once ineffable and poisonous. “I’m so glad I happened to run across you,” she said, as they began to vibrate tremulously in unison with the fierce little engine that drove them. “I want to hear all the news. Nobody knows I’m home. I didn’t write or telegraph to a soul; and I’ll be a complete surprise to father and everybody—l don’t know 7 how pleasant a »ne! You didn’t seem so frightfully glad to see me, Noble!” “Am I?” he w’hispered. “I mean —I mean —I mean: Didn’t I?” “No!” she laughed. “You looked — you looked shocked! It couldn’t have been because I looked ill or anything, because I’m -not; and if I were, you Couldn’t have told it, through two veils. Possibly I’d better take your expression as a compliment.” She paused, then asked hesitatingly, “Shall I?” ' This was the style the Atwaters held Julia responsible for; but they rare mistaken: she was unable to con-

trol it. She at once went cheerily on: “Perhaps not. is you don't answer. 1 , shouldn't be so bold! Do you sup t pose anybody'll be glad to see me?" >| “I-—I-t-” He seemed to hope that! - words would come, all In their own > j good time. , | “Noble!” she cried. “Don’t be so [ glum!” And she touched his arm d with her muff, a fluffy contact causing • [ within him a short convulsion, natural--11 ly Invisible. "Noble, aren’t you going . to tell me what’s all the news?” > “There’s —some,” he managed to inI form her. “Some —some news.” “What is it?” ; “It’S- it’S—” “Never mind," she said soothingly. t “Get your breath; I can wait. I hope ! nothing’s wrong in your family, 5 ! Noble.’’ - “No—oh. no.” 5 “It isn't just my turning up un- > expectedly that's upset you so, of ; course,” she dared to say. “Naturally. . I know better than to think such a I thing as that.” r “Oh, Julia!” he said. “Oh, Julia! . “What is it. Noble?” “Noth —ing.” he murmured, disjointing tiie word with a gulp. “How odd you happened to be there at the station,” she said; “just when my train came in! You’re sure 7 you weren’t going away anywhere?” ' “No; oh, no.” She was thoughtful, then laughed , confident .'ally. “You’re the only per- ■ son in town that knows I’m home, i Noble.” • “I’m glad,” he said, humbly. , • She laughed again. “I came all of a sudden —on an impulse. It’s a little . idiotic. I’ll tell you about it, Noble. You see, ten or twelve days ago I . wrote the family a more or less indiscreet letter. That is, I told them something I wanted them to be discreet about, and, of course, when I got , to thinking it over, I knew they wouldn’t. You see, I wrote them something I wanted them to keep a secret, but the more I thought about it, the more I saw I’d better nurry back. Yesterday it got into my head that I’d better hop on the next train for home.” She paused, then added, “So I did' About ten or twelve days is long as anybody has a right to expect the Atwater family connection to keep the mvei l - -* YfJfl/flj'mfffVfllli/ WA 'A W “Noble!” She Said. deadliest kind of a secret, isn’t it?” And as he did not respond, she explained, modestly. “Os course, it wasn’t ft very deadly secret; it wfts really about something of only the least importance.” This was so frightful an understatement that the jar of it restored Noble’s voice to a startling loudness. “Only the least importance!” lie shouted. “With a man named Crum!” “What!’’ she cried. “Crum!” Noble insisted. “That's exactly what it said his name was!” “What said his name was?” asked Julia, excitedly. < “The North End Daily Oriole.” “What in heaven's name is that?” “It’s the children’s paper, Herbert’s and Florence’s, your own niece and nephew, Julia! You don’t mean you deny it, do you, Julia?” She was in great confusion: “Do I deny what?” "That his name is Crum!” Noble said passionately. “That his name is Crum and that he’s a widower ant he’s been divorced and’s got nobody knows how many children!” Julia sought to collect herself. “I dent know what you’re talking about,” she said. “If you mean that I happened to meet a very charming man while I was away, and that his name happened to be Crum, I don’t know why I should go to the trouble of denying it. But if Mr. Crum has bad the experiences you say he has, it is certainly news to me! I think someone told me he was only twentysix years old. He looked rather younger” “You ‘think some one told’ you;” Noble groaned. “Oh, Julia, .Tula! And here it is, all down in black and white, in my pocket!” “I haven’t the slightest idea what you’re talking about.” Julia’s tone i was cold, and she drew herself up i haughtily, though the gesture was in- '

effective, so far as Noble was c »n---cerned, in the darkness of the quivering interior. The quivering stopped just then, however, kb the taxicub halted before her house. “Will you come in with me a moment, please?” Julia said as «he got out. “There are some »hings I want to ask you—and I'm sure pa|i%, hasn't come home from uowntowa yet. | There’s no light in the front part of I the house.” There was no light it- any other ■ part of the house, either, us they dlsj covered after abandoning the bell for I an excursion to the rear. “That’s dis/ heartening to a hungry |»erson,” Julia remarked; and then remembered that she had a key to the front door in her purse. She oj»en<‘tl the door, and lighted a hall luster while Noble brought in her bugs from the steps where the taxicab driver had left tjiem. “There's nobody at home at all,” Julia said, thoughtfully, “No. Nobody," her sad companion agreed, shaking his head. “Nobody at all, Julia. Nobody at all.” Housing himself, he went back for the golf tools, and with a lingering gentleness set them in a corner. Then, dumbly, he turned to go. “Wait, please,” said Julia. “I want to ask you a few things—-especially abouft what you've got ‘all down in black and white’ in your pocket. Will you shut the door, if you please, and go into the library and turn on the lights ami wait there while I look over the house and see if I can find why it’s all closed up like this. “It’s chilly. The furnace seems to be off,” she said. “I’ll—” But instead of declaring her intentions, she enacted them; taking a match from the little white porcelain trough on the mantelpiece and striking it on the heel of her glittering shoe. Then she knelt before the grate and set the flame to excelsior beneath the kindling and coal. “You mustn't freze.” she said, with a thoughtful kindness that killed him. “I'm Robinson Crusoe, Noble,” she said, when she came back. “I suppose I might as well take off my furs, though.” She did so. first unfastening the great bouquet she wore and tossing it upon a table. Noble was standing close to the table, hut moved away from it hurriedly. This revulsion she failed to notice; and she went on to explain, as she dropped her cloak and stole upon a chair. “Papa's gone away for at least a week. He's taken his ulster. It doesn’t make any differences what the weather is. lie never wears his ulster in this town, but when he's going away for a week, or longer, he always takes it with him, except in summer.” “I suppose.” said Noble huskily, “I suppose you'll go to some of your aunts or brothers or cousins or something.” “No,” she said. “My trunk may come up from the station almost any time, and if I close the house they'll take it back. The servants are having a holiday, not expecting me back.” (TO BE CONTINUED.) HUMAN EYE SELDOM PERFECT But Probably Few Persons Realize That They Are Either Left or Right-Eyed. Few persons, perhaps, realize that they are so much right or left-eyed as they are right or left-handed, remarks the Cincinnati Enquirer. Sit down in a chair and fix your attention on some object on the other side of the room. Quickly hold your finger up right in front of the object and instantly shut your eyes. Then, without moving your head or your finger, open your eyes one at a time. If when you open your right eye yon find your finger directly in front of the object, you are right-eyed. In that case you will find your finger very much to the right of the object when you open your left eye. If you are right-handed you will most probably find that you are righteyed. This is due to the fact that of .the two halves of your brain one is slightly more developed than the other. And the organs and limbs on that side of your body which is controlled by the more-developed half are able to carry out your wishes more easily and quickly than those of the - other side. Conserve Heat From Sun’s Rays. Long years ago, a gentleman in In- | dia cooked a meal for some of his friends by reflecting the rays of the sun from a mirror on his cooking utensil, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. This was, of course, out of the question on rainy days and during the night. Now comes a mechanical harness for the heat of the sun's rays wherein it is preserved for night and cloudy-day use. At the Smithsonian solar observing station on Mount Wilson in California is such a device. A large 7 by 10-foot mirror, built semi-cylindrical in shape and made of aluminum-covered steel plates, focuses the rays of the sun on a pipe placed centrally in its frame. This pipe carries an oil of high boiling point, which, after heating from the reflected rays, rises to a reservoir that is insulated to retain the heat for a long time. Oven compartments are embodied in this reservoir in which the foods may be placed for cooking. Old-Time Remedies. There still exist among iisj’good old souls who like to think that the old days and ways were the best, that their elders were a healthier and more vigorous lot and that the old-rashioned remedies were far superior to modern medical lore. From good-natured tolerance we agree that probably those were good old days in many ways, but when we investigate the remedies in question even the hardy spirits who will try anything once pause to shudder. Here is one recorded in “The Family Adviser, a Book of Primitive Physic”: Baldness—Rub the part morning and evening with onions til) it is red, and rub afterward wltb honey. Inventor Well Rewarded. For his invention of babbitt metal, a soft, anti-friction alloy used for bear ings,'lsaac Babbitt received a rewar' of |20,000 trom congress.

GAINS 8 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS’ TIME Dyspepsia Entirely Overcome and She Eats, Sleeps and Feels Better Than in Years, Says Boston j Resident. ! “I have actually gained eight pnqndt In two weeks' time and am now eating be»t<T. sleeping better ami feeling beu ■ ter than I have in three or four year-! ” ■) said Mrs. Celesta Fell. 32 Prince stro.-f ' Boston, Muss., recently, in telling of i the great benefits she has derived from : the use of Tanlac. i "My stomach Whs In such a bad fix I before I took Tanlac tba* I did not i dare eat much of anything, for if I did > ' I would have so much pnin and dis- : | tress from Indigestion that I felt like | I was going to die. I was so run down i and weak from lack of nourishment ) that I could not do my housework. i ! “I was so nervous I couldn't keep | still during the day nor sleep at night. : i I can see now if it had not been for * | Tanlac I would have had to give up i j entirely. lam now feeling strong :*nd , | healthy and all the credit belongs to j Tanlac." ( i Tanlac Is sold bj 7 all good druggists. i Improvement Goes On. I Although Recent statistics state I that 92.C> per cent of American farm » I souses have telephones, only 27.1 per ; [ ent have electric lights, 21 per cent [ ! lave vacuum cleaners and 16.2 per i -ent have electric washing machines. > I, — 1 Cross Ball Blue is the finest • [ product of its kind in the world. Ev- . j ery woman who has used it knows . j this statement to be true. —Advenise- ! tnent. , Marks of Care. I I Ethel —“Her face shows marks of pare.” Clara—“ Yes; sne isn't very j i ?lever at making up!” I No truth is understood until It is obeved. » I r

■ FROM GIRLHOOD TO WOMANHOOD . ■ I Woman Relied Upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Emporia, Kansas. —’! began using Lydia E. Pinkham’s medicines years ago

when I was a girl. For several years I had severe pains at menstrual periods, 1 making me very weak and interfering with my regular duties. I tried several remedies without obtaining relief. I was induced to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound by friends and it re-

IlHlHUMlilll ‘jl i K 1 w : i jll i I | T'?' " !

stored me to normal health. I often have occasion and do recommend your Vegetable Compound to my friends who have troubles similar to my own. You may use these facts as a testimonial. Eva Aldrich, 218 Union St., Emporia, Kansas. There are many women who first used our Vegetable Compound during their girlhood days. They found it a valuable help during trying periods. In later years they use it whenever they feel, those annoying symptoms which women' often have. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a woman’s medicine. It is prepared carefully from the best quality of medicinal plants, whose properties are especially adapted to correct the troubles women have. MAN’S BEST AGE A man is as old as his organs; he can be as vigorous and healthy at 70 as at 35 if he aids his organs in performing their functions. Keep your vital organs healthy with COLD MEDAL The world’s standard remedy for kidney, 1 liver, bladder and uric acid troubles since I 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates vital organs. All druggists, three sizes. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation Shave, Bathe and Shampoo with one Soap. — Cuticura Cuticura Soaptathefavoriteforsafetyraxorahaving. ALLEYS FOOT-EASE FOR THE FEET Sprinkle one or two Alien’s Foot Ease powders in the Foot Bath and soak and rub the feet. It takes the. sting out of Corns and Bunions and smarting, aching feet. Then for lasting comfort, shake Allen’s Foot=Ease into your shoes. It takes the friction from the shoe, rests the feet md makes walking a delight. Always use it for dancing parties and to break in new ’ shoes. Over One Million Five Hundred Thousand pounds of Powder for the Feet were used by our Army and Navy during the war. In * Pinch, U.e ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE FH|l| feelSOgOO Ilk but what R? v \ I will make you w 1 I feel better. 1 ryiry I St I