McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 31 May 1923, p. 7

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THE McHENRY PLAINDEAXER, McHENRY, ILL. iRiy-* ~ tswz " MAY I AM REAL WEli So Wrttet Woman After Taking Lydia L Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound Jamestown N. Y.--"I mi nerroiML Murilj excited and discouraged and had 1no ambition. Part of the time 1 was not able to ait up aa I suffered with pains in my back and with weakness. I took Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, both the uid and tablet forma, and used Lydia'EL Pink ham's Sanative Wash for inflammation. Today I am real well and ran a rooming house and do the work. I recommend your medicine to every woman who complains, and you may use my letter to help any one else. I am passing through the Change of Life now and I keep the Vegetable Compound in the house, ready to take when I feel the need of it."--Mrs. ALICS D. DAVIS, 203 W. Second St., Jamestown, N. Y. Often some alight derangement may cause a general upset condition of the Whole system, indicated by such symptoms as nervousness, backache, lack of ambition and general weakness. Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com- Kund will be found a splendid medicine r such troubles. In many cases it has (•moved the cause of the trouble. Headaches Are Usually Due to Constipation When you are constipated, not enough of Nature'* lubricating liquid is produced m the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant and thus secures regular bowel movements byN ature's own method--lubrication. Nujol is a lubricant--not a medicine or laxative--so cannot gripe. Try it today. A LUBRICANT-NOT A LAXATIVE S'x •' I U fat * * * Feeding Methods /Help Live Stock CLEAN. DYE. AND SHINE iSXgft jtEPJi POLISHES UQU1DS OR PASTES Fcr the Whole FanilY PUT ASIDE THE TEMPTATION Woman Candidate for Political Preferment Spurned Bargain That Must . Have Been Attractive. While the woman's vote is confidently expected to--and probably will --clean up politics, it must, be admitted that there are times when the temptations, Increased by a lifetime of bargain hunting, prove almost irresistible. A man at the last election was attempting to sell his vote, but the woman candidate refused firmly to be a party to bribery and corruption. "No, sir," she said. "I will not give yiou a dollar for it. It ia not worth It- Take it for 90 cents, lady," urged the man. 1 "Why didn't you say that before?" •tie asked. But then honor triumphed. "No," she continued. "No. Not even if you offered to vote twice for a dollar aeventy-five."--Exchange. Giggling sounds very foolish, doesn't It, unless it is at what you say to pro* "woke it. il*3- " f .'•% ti*. (Pnwt*4 by tOht s AUGnRiICteUdL TUSRtEa.t)s a txptrtnwt The United States Department of Agriculture announces a nation-wide service to bring about Improved methods of feeding live stock In the United States. The plan Is to bring the knowledge of up-to-date feeding methods to the attention of every live-stock feeder in the country; and. In co-operation with state agricuhu.*al colleges, county extension agents, and other agencies interested in the betterment of the live stock of the nation, to offer individual assistance to farmers who have special and difficult feeding problems. Ever since the beginning of the "Better Sires--Better Stock" campaign, which has enrolled more than 1.200,- 000 head of live stock for improvement by means of better methods of breeding, there has been a demand from Btockruen over the entire country that the government inaugurate a betterfeeding campaign. A. large proportion of inquiries on live-stock problems received by the department from farmers of the country seek Information on feeding. The plan which has been evolved is expected to render a definite service to those who ask for feeding help, arid also to bring a knowledge of better feeding methods to many who would not make inquiries. Beat Methods Not Practiced. That good feeding Methods are known and practiced by the more experienced livestock owners in the United States Is showh by the good condition and finish of a proportion of animals appearing at stock yards, and by good records In production made by some feeders. But the proportion can be made larger with benefit to the Individual grower and to the nation, according to the deportment live-stock specialists. A conservative estimate based on a careful survey of American farms shows that there are 14 million head of runty animals In the country. A majority of nearly 1,000 farmers who commented on the situation stated that adequate and proper feed are the principal means of preventing runtiness In animals. T^e tremendous mortality among young animals Is largely attributable also to lack of proper care and feed up to and including weaning time. These, and other facts, point to the gr$at need for more general practice of better feeding methods. They point also to the Immense amount of benefit that can accrue to the nation In the way of better live stock, more economical production, and a great saving in feedstuffs. If the general live-stock feeding practice of the natlon^can be made more efficient. Department Offers Wide Service. The Department of Agriculture ofTers an individual feeding service that Is available to any live-stock feeder In the country. One of the principal features of this service will be a "Feeding- Problem Sheet" which farmers may obtain from their county agents, state ag-'cnltural colleges, or direct from the department at Washington. On the feeding-problem heet the farmer outlines his problem briefly, and describes his stock and available feeds. The sheet is designed to enable the farmer to give sufficient information In brief form to make additional correspondence unnecessary. The farmer then refers the sheet to his county agent, who makes n recommendation. When the sheet reaches the department a live-stock feeding specialist studies the problem and makes suitable reply. A great deal of the correspondence received from farmers asking Information on special feeding problems does not state the conditions surrounding the problem In sufficient detail to permit of a definite reply. Additional correspondence often causes delay. The feeding-problem sheet will correct this and make It comparatively simple for a stockman to submit his problem in a form sjich that It may be correctly diagnosed. Farmers will be encouraged to consult local agencies for help with problems that are plainly local in character. The feeding-problem service will be of help to others besides those farmers who submit their problems for diagnosis. The department will study One-Piece Dresses Are in Limeli the problems . confronting live-stock feeders In the different sections of the country and make public the results of this study, thereby Enabling the entire country to derive a benefit. Every live-stock feeder who submits his feed ing problem, telling his present practice and the results being obtained, will be an active aid In the drive for better methods of live-stock feeding. Handbook Being Prepared. A vest-pocket-size handbook entitled "A Handbook for the Better Feeding of Live Stock" Is being prepared by department feeding specialists for free distribution to farmers who desire a handy-sized set of simple rules and reference tables to be followed In feeding the different classes of farm animals. Requirements of animals, simple analyses of feeds, feeds to substitute for other feeds, and simple feeding Instructions will enable farmers to understand the principles of better feeding, and fit their own practice to suit the conditions on their farms. The Department of Agriculture realizes that, in order to accomplish the most good, a drive for nation-wide better feeding of live stock uiust have the co-operation of all persons Interested In the subject. Summaries of the progress of the work will be published to keep those Interested informed. 1 Value of Pure Bred Is Taught by County Agent ,A county agent In Colorado reported to the United States Department of Agriculture a convincing method he has used in furthering the better-sires work in his county. A butchering and meat-cutting demonstration was given with two market hogs, one a pure-bred Duroc Jersey and the other a scrub red hog. The hogs were weighed, then slaughtered and dressed, and weighed again. The live weight of each hog was practically the same. The dressing percentage of the pure bred was about 7 per cent more than that of the scrub. The good hog figured to be worth $2.10 more than the other. This was but a fraction of the difference In value between the two hogs, however, as the pure bred was but half as old as the scrub hog. and had consumed much less feed. The meat-cutting demonstration was held In the auditorium of the county school, and more than 500 men and women were present. Th^ two carcasses were cut Into the various cuts of meat, showing the superior quality of the meat of the pure-bred hog. For WMj frock wttfc a new silhouette one finds about five that are still clinging to the old tried and true straight lines. And these lines, writes a fashion correspondent in the New York Times, are so extremely simple that they charm by their very lack of ornament. They are the plainest frocks that women have ever thought of wearing, and having outlived more pretentious forms through a long period of time, which alone can test the worth of an art, they are living to lead another senson. It remains to be seen when women will ever grow tired of Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION INMOSTM"! 23 Y"r" 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief m ELL-ANS 25t AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE MAN'S BEST AGE A man is as old as his organs; ha can be as vigorous and healthy at 70 as at 35 if he aids his organs in performing their functions. Keep yew., vital organs healthy with LATH ROP'9 HAARLEM OIL OT8339EEB The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles •ince 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates vital organs. All druggists, three ; Look for til* nam* Gold Medal on bos and accapt no imitation Cuticura Soap The Healthy Shaving Soap Alfalfa in Full Bloom Will Produce More Kay Alfalfa cut In full bloom is slightly less palatable but produces more hay than when cut at beginning of bloom. Fields mowed earlier die out sooner. Cutting the alfalfa Just when the new growth starts from the crown gives the plants the best chance of competing against weeds and conserves moisture by keeping the ground shaded most of the time. Too late fall cutting promotes winter killing. Nebraska station finds that it does not pay to plant alfalfa in rows and cultivate for hay. Combination to Provide Pasture for Farm Stock A combination that will provide a good pasture for sheep, calves and colts all summer may be secured by using rape as a base. The mixture consists of three pounds of rape, one bushel of oats, one-half bushel of one or two other small grains, and from ten to twenty pounds of sorghum. If desired ten pounds of Sudan grass may be substituted for tljte sorghum with satisfactory results. Good Pasture Essential for Success in Dairying Among the essentials requisite to the greatest possible success In the dairy business Is the establishment of a good pasture, with which the labor bill can be cut In half, the feed bill materially reduced, and an adequate succu'ent famished for the summer months. INCREASE VALUE OF POTATOES « ; i Has Effect of Controlling Diseases and Helps Yield. (Prepared by the United Statea Department of Agriculture.) Spraying potatoes with such copper sprays as bordeaux, pickering sprays, and barium water sprays not only has the effect of controlling the diseases for which they are applied, but, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, thorough and timely spraying usually greatly increases the yield, influences the composition of the tubers, and Increases their keeping qualities. For many years observers have reported also a stimulating affect of bordeaux mixture on potato foliage and a gain in yield even when no diseases were present. The why and how of this effect of copper have been much discussed by scientists and many experlmenta made. An interesting contribution to this subject »has lately been made by F. C. Cook of the bureau of chemistry in department bulletin 1146, where evidence Is presented to show that bordeaux and other copper sprays increase the starch and nitrogen constituents of the potato tubers and consequently make them more valuable for food and industrial uses. The bulletin contains considerable data collected from a number of stations doing experimental work with copper sprays on potatoes and should be of Interest to the plant physiologists and others doing investigational work of this ^nature. Results obtained in seven states (Virginia, Maine. Minnesota, Pennsylvania. New York, Connecticut and New Jersey), bowed un averaye of pounds of non-copper, sprayed plants and 3,430 for the copper-sprayed plants, an average Increase of 32.4 per cent, or 4a bushels, due apparently to the use of copper sprays. The results should furnish additional support to the practice of spraying potatoes. Those Interested may secure a copy of this bulletin free of charge upon request from the United States Department of Agriculture, Washingtun, D. C. Durability of Leather Can Be Much Increased , Specialists In the bureau of chemistry, United States Department of Agriculture, have learned that the durability of machine belts, driving belts, harness, and other leather articles used by the farmer can be greatly increased after a judicious selection In the flrst place by giving them the care that will strengthen and preserve them. sash. They seem simple enough duties In connection w ith making good the a£ pea ranee of the unpretentious frock, but somehow they are not always ac* complished with the art and efficiency Conditions in Western Canada Please Farmers. Seeding Haa Been Begun Earlier Than f#r Many Years, and Soil (ft In Perfect Shape. > 1 v • . , * With weather conditions highly fathaj one might wish. When they are I •orable, the farmers of Western Canwelt done there^ls nothing left to be ' *da, with the exception probably of desired from the dress that is the re- j * portion of Manitoba, have completed suit, but when even one of them is seeding from ten to fifteen days earlier badly considered and executed there Is than for some years past. In some all the difference In the world. pariB of Manitoba there were floods The serge dress this season Is which delayed seeding, but they have trimmed, when It Is of the one-piece abated, and left the land in good shape variety, with rows of silk braid or with for quick work and speedy germlnabrilliant silk bindings and facings or tion. In Saskatchewan soil condltiona with lines of hand-done embroidery, for seeding were never better. With a embodying many colorings. generous quantity of snow, which after Then there is the one-piece dress of ' melting left needed moisture, and ansome dark tone of heavy crepe. Very , other snowstorm after seeding was often that Is left without any trimming finished, there was an ideal condition except a binding of Itself, and there ia created. From all parts of Alberta apt to be a plaited Insert or a plaited there came the best of reports as to panel or so to give It that extra flufB- j rainfall and snow moisture, leaving the ness and wavy line which makes the silk so much more attractive than when It Is left In Its original state. This dress Is lovely In dark blue or In one of the lighter shades of brown or In some tint of gray. It does for cooler days vt 1th a coat thrown over it, and for the very warm days there is noth- After EVERY . Meal give your dfge$» tton a "kick" wink WR1GLEVS. Sonad teeth, m appetite and proper digestion mean IIDGI •o your health. WBICLBY'3 la • helper In all tills work --a pleasaal« fceaeBctal plclt-mi apt (round In the Condition required for the prospects of a good crop. Spring, as In most other parts of the continent, was backward, but notwithstanding this, as has been said, farmers were able to get on the land earlier than for some years. In fact, seeding was practically •commenced about the ing like it, for it refuses to muss, and j 12th of April, which to many readers always keeps that perfectly straight j may seem remarkable, when it is line which Is so much a part of Its known that several hundred miles farattraction. Gingham?1-are lovely fof tTiese morning dresses, and they should have white linen collars and cuffs. Linens themselves are beautiful In this guise. Then there are the cotton ratines that have everything in their favor, and, whether they are striped or plaided or plain, they are wonderful when made up In the full or the scant varieties of one-piece dress. For afternoon, all there is to do, If you are a patron of the one-piece line. Is to change your type of material. The printed silks are particularly lovely In this connection. Of course, as In everything else, there are good | such as dairying, stock raising, etc. ther south It was not possible to do spring seeding for several days later. Reports to hand on the 16th of May state that wheat Is up above the ground In a great many places, oats are being sown, and corn planted: Farm labor was scarce for awhile, but the demand has fallen off. One feature of the demand for farm help is that farmers are now employing help by the year, at of course Biualier wages than those paid for special work. The Increasing tendency to employ help by the year is evidence that farmers are not relying solely upon wheat growing, but a^e going out into other branche8. LEAVE IT WITH YOUR "UNCUT* Woman Belonging to Race Noted far Economical. Instincts Had §M0- gestion of Value* ' ; A Musical conductor was Ml on tour with a revue. He had been „ staying in New York attending ro> hearsals. With him he had two rather large grips. He was not desiroua of dragging them about all over the country and remarked to his landlady that he thought of leaving them in the left-luggage office at the Pennsylvania station. His landlady happened to hall from Scotland. "And what will that cost you, sir?" she asked. ••Oh, about 50 cents a week." The landlady held up her hands ia horror. "You would be a fool to pay that a week," she said. "Why don't you pawn them and pay a dime » month?" | Afternoon Frock of Purple, Mauve and Green, With Green Ribbon Binding. their chaste expression or of the feding which they represent. You may go into any gathering-- early morning, afternoon, dinner or late evening--and always you will be able to find the one-piece dress holding Its own, looking always most attractive and forever feeling sure of itseli. Moreover, this season there are so many stunningly beautiful fabrics thnt lend themselves most particularly to the making of the one-piece frock. After all, it Is a thing of fabric and fabric only, for it brooks no tancinem of trimming, and when the material counts for much In Itself It needs nothing more elaborate than the straight and simple lines of the one-piece frock to make It a notable thing. Women will be forever thrilled at beauty of fabric, and now, when It Is their good fortune to find pieces of stuffs on every counter that hold a thrill all their own. these women Just naturally gravitate to fitting the fabrics to the onepiece frocks and vice versa. May Be of Any Material. Take the one-piece dress for the morning hours. It can be of anything from gingham to silk and to serge, or to any woolen material, depending upon the sort of duties that confront you. All that Is the duty of each Individual In planning this frock Is to decide what are her proper and harmonious proportions. She must have her waistline posed at the proper angle for Just the lines of her figure. She must have the sleeves shaped Just right for her own arms. She must study the length of the skirt and the tying of the ones and bad ones, but those that are beautiful In design and beautiful In coloring are excellent finds for the one-piece dress that |s destined to be used for the lighter formalltlea of afternoon during the spring and summer. A printed silk design needs nothing more than the material Itself to make It a success, and that Is the key to the successful Interpretation" of the simple little dress about which we are concerned. Most of these frocks are bound with ribbon--Just The prospects in all portions of Western Canada were never brighter than at present. Information regarding the condition of the crops at any time will be sent on request made to any Canadian government agent.--Advertisement Mechanical Bread 8ltosr. A mechanically operated bread sllcer, described In Popular Mechanics Magazine, Is driven by a motor or other suitable power, and has been enough accent of color being embodied i designed for use in places where large in thnt finish to make It a fitting edge quantities of bread are required. The for the material which it adorns. If there Is a good deal of black In the printing of the design, then It Is Mjfll to use a narrow black ribbon for><he binding, but If the predominant arn^ accenting note of the colored pattern happens to be some other color, then It is altogether wise to repeat that tone In the ribbon that te used for the finish. r Most of these frocks have tlriy little sleeves that fit the arm quite snugly and some of them even go so far as to have portions over the upper arm that almost look like no sleeves at all. Of course, they have some shaping and they do stretch over the shoulders in semblance of sleeves, but to the untutored eye they might very well give the Impression of no sleeves at all. However, they manage to create the desired effect that la called style, and that Is all they need do, after all. The Idea seems to be to make the pattern as stnnnlng as possible and a# aptly suited to the personality In ques tlon as It can be. When one's figure Is tall and thin then a big, spreading pattern Is much to be desired, hut when It Is short and plump then It Is far wiser to have a pattern that Is small and often repeated. loaves are placed In rows on a conveyor which carries them lengthwise to the knife where the slicing Is done. The slices fall Into pans on a second and lower conveyor and are deposited \in a basket or other container at the end of the machine. •• • Length of Skirts Growing Shorter Rat Viruses Unreliable and Also Quite Costly "Generally unreliable and costly," the United States Department of Agriculture says of rat viruses. The department has vigorously urged the destruction of rats and co-operated with local ^rat-killing- campaigns. Farmers' Bulletins 896 and 932, issued by the department, describe methods of destroying rata. 1 Avoid Hl-Fltting Collar. Ton have worn a collar that doen't fit, haven't you? Weil, a horse or mule is even worse off with one that Is toe olids of the tubers uer ucre for the j large or too small. It Is good for *'ie one-piece dress that the lengths of skirts are growing shorter, for they really should have skirts that are not too loug. After they pass a certain point of length they lose that chic and smartness which should be a part of them, and once that Is gone there is no hope for the dress and its ultimate success. The news that nine Inches from the ground shall be a happy figure for dresses this summer comes as a lifesaver to the one-piece line, which has kept that length afll along, no matter how wobbly It might have feit at times about being pushed from the standard adopted by that line alone. For sports we still have the onepiece dress, for nothing as ye; has proved Itself more satisfactory. There Is the dress of French flannel In all the lovely plain colore and In the striped and plaided patterns. For colder climes that has everything In Its favor, for while It keeps Its shape and form for all sorts of outdoor wear. It Is still capable of being washed on and on indefinitely, and even the colors are fast. They are now printing allj the colorful patterns on white and cream flannel backgrounds, the colors being guaranteed fast, so that .hey can be washed along with the best of them. With these dresses the_ brightly colored mede belts are particularly good looking, and sometimes simple edge trimmings of leather are used to match. If a good deal of room Is needed In the skirt on account of walking or goifing or tennis, that Is sup' plied by plaited Inserts at the sides, and there are apt to be decorative pockets made to top off the plaits as they near the waist line. For Instance, there is a dress of gray flannel with a red suede belt studded in steel, and there is & edging of red pointed sued:* trimming that is also studded In steel at regular Intervals. Dresses of cotton crepe and of pongee and China silk are made In this same way to be used for outdoor sports during the hot summer days. They are nice when worn with sweaters. Dessert for Large Family. The best dessert for a large family is a simple Jelly made with one box of Plymouth Rock Pink Gelatine. No lem ons are needed and one box will make four pints of delicious, attractive jelly, enough for everybody. No cooking quired.--Advertisement. r. • World War Medals. A bill Is to be introduced at the next session of the New York state legislature to award World war service medals to officers of draft boards. There is a feeling In the "'military establishment," however, that the awarding of war decorations "has gone about as far as possible without, through making such dispositions so general, lessening their significance." Cuticura 8oap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Cuticura Soap dally and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, •calp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talcum, and you have the Cuticura Toilet Trio.--Advertisement. Not Funny to Be Caddie. Beginner (#fter repeated failure)-- ••Funny game, golf." Caddie--" 'Tain't meant to be."--Punch (London). People enjoy most the favors they are not expected to return. Has Other Usei. Rub--Watson has quit . golf. Dub--Well, I saw him changing a . tire yesterday and he still speaks the language.--New York Sun. 5 Room'COO HouCe \/JO Y<tm e&nt bay mil thm mmtmrimlt for m complutm horn* dirmct from the mamm* factarar and (apt four profit• om tkm lumbmr. millwork, Kardwarm and /•>•>. Price quoted incIudM all lumber cut to fit, windows, doors, woodwork, glaas, painta, hardware, nails, lath and roofing. Complete drawings and instructions. Many styles to choose from. Satisfaction or money back. Houses, Cottages, Bungalows Highest grade lumber for all Interior woodwork. siding and outside finish. Send tody for money-saving Aladdin Catalog No. ML | BAY C "•» MICHIGAN Aba N9b Office* «t Viinvte, Nwth Caniiu; F*rti«a4. Oragaa; Tanato. Oaluia etNUINE C«-AI flogmERN^ There Is only on* Genuine NORTHERN SEAL*. "Northern Seal** to "America's Greatest"* and "Standard of the World." For Information and protection, ask yuer local furrier, or write fo*» booklet to NORTHKim? SEAL, Plerlnl Park, Sprinrfleld Gardens. L* 1„ New York. Cofyrxfht, GREEN MOUNTAIN ASTHMA COMPOUND quickly relieve* Uie dlstr«M* ing paroxysms. Used 56 yearstand result of Ion experience In treatment throat and lung diseases h* Dr J. B. Guild. FREK TRIAX, BOX, Treatise on Asthma, 11* causes, treatment, etc., a*aa upon request. Jfx- »nd St-SS at druggist*, i. iL UX, itfjViiHT, 9*. Severe Tailoring for Latest Sports Suits Pepper sod salt mixtures in Imported materials are stressed in sports suits of severe tailoring. One model introduces a long straight coat that fastens with one but|on and is bound In black braid, while another model, shorter and with tuxedo finish, is _ -bound in white kasha cloth. Interest JU immediately arrested by the smart handling of a homespun suit for spring.' A box coat with broad braided trim-, mlng of yarn adds to Its distinction and a brown facing of kaska doty gives a rich appearance. Three-piece suits for misses favor the box coat line, and in this group particular attention has been given trimming details. AppNqued squares of flat crepe of the bodice material make one navy twill model most attractive. A jacquette coat and skirt fashioned with inserted godet to match the blouse is a combination noted In threepiece suits for the more mature figure. The coming and going of the veil In fashions is unexplainable. A reason can he fouhd for most changes in fashions, but the vogue for the veil seems to he more or less a whim. There appears to be no reason why it should he dropped by women or aa suddenly taken up again. Veils are thrown carelesly over the entire hat or draped across the brim only and aMowed to hang In long streamers, which fall In some Instances below the waistline. . 8nmmer Footwear. Colored footwear is destined to be popular this summer ll\indlcatIona are not misleading. Slippers entirely of red. green and blue leather are seen as well as white ones strapped and trimmed with colored leather^ ren Cv,rnyr for CASTORIA MOTHERFletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil* Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrupy especially prepared for Infants 1 month old to Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it 8mart Mtllinsry. Helmet-shaped hats of rough straw or mllan are closely trimmed with ribbon or feathers tightly wound a boat the brim, or with some long sweeping feather. The shape ia kept very severe. ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE THE ANTISEPTIC. UAUM POWDES FOB TIE FEET Takes the friction from the shoe, relieves the pain of corns, bunions, callouses and eore spots, freshens the feeI and gives new vigor. BAKES TIGHT 08 NEW SI0ES FEEL EAST At night, when your feet are tired sore and swollen from excessive dancor walking, sprinkle Alien's Foot-Ease in the foot-bath and crnjoy the the Um of faet without en ac-he. Over One MUltoo hondroS AMMlfMh jjowder for tbs fMt w*n aasd br oar Ana* aid N*vy daring the war. Trial puk*i« IM albut F»»T Wtkiu Doil Sant Fr«. » iiwnm ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. La IU*. N. Y.

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