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' Retail Siloe Trading in 1921 Was 26 Per Cent of Net Sales—Packing Plant Deficit. By A. D. WELTON. @pecial Dispatch to The Star. CHICAGO, January 11.—Motor ‘car manufacturers are preparing for a big year's business, and this is being reflected in the activity in the steel mills of this district. In many mills production has’ advanced to 50 per | tl cent. Plants in South Chicago,:closed during the holidays, are producing at an increased rate, and other plants will resume before February 13 Rail- roads are preparing car ordeMy and this factor will also tend to increase steel demand. ‘The Illinois Central will place orders for 2,000 cars soon, and the Burlington and Union Pacific programs provide for expenditure of s The retail shoe dealers now in con- vention here declare that a fourth of their number lost money last year. the -delegafes are optimistic for! and are aggressive in determina- tion to Secure new business. The cost of & b s last year per cent of the net sales, they This is about the same as it has been for two years past. - Pricex of shoes are fairly stable and orders for spring delivery are good. _° Another packing plant has made an annual report showing a deficit for 1921. Automobile men agree with the economists that there is no such thing as a surplus except at a price. el + Nearly Four Billion to Aid . Commerce and Industry BY FRANK D. McLAIN. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. s PHILADELPHILA, January 11.—It|o has become evident that the weeding- | 1! out process of the firms of unstable conditions was pretty thoroughly. ac- complished before January 1, #g-there S have been no business fatalities of consequence ltre this vear. -Local utflities companies which suffered a period of depressian_ after the .war are getting on their feet again. The | ( agreement by which the local transit | e company will operate a city-built line b u of elevated railroad, which cost tax- I present year in this section. payers $15,000.000, is approaching completion and is expected to result; in a decided building beom in the morthwest section of the city. Figures made public today show through discounts, bankers' ‘accept- ances and foreign trade acceptances, [N the federal reserve bank of this dis- | O! trict loaned nearly four billion dol- Jars during 1321 in the aid of com- merce and industry. Buyers of kid leathers. purchased last month for delivery in the latter part of January are insisting on early deliveries, indicating’ a _shortage among shoe manufacturers of this grade of leather. Manufacturers complain this leather is costing them 100 per cent above pre-war prices, |} although hides have fallen in price. Stocks of shoes are moving freely in retail stores. New Orleans Foreign Trade Increased 12 Per Cent in 21 BY L V. SHANNON. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. NEW ORLEANS, January 11.—The foreign commerce of this port. in- _ creased 12 per cent.last year in'spite \ of unfavorable shipping conditions and showed a gain of 60 per cent over the totals of 1919. The importations of coffee and oil and the increased trade Wwith South America were largely re- sponsible for the gain. The activity iu shipping lias boeh a large :a(;‘(o; in maintaining stable commercial an Tabor Sondriis yeye dyrfie *&e-fign ear. i Retailers here have redtced prices n many cases and have met with a ready response from the public. Sales are running oily. slightly behind the totals of the best month thé mer- chants ever experienced. Mild weath- er, however, has resulted in a slack- ening of demand for clothing. Pur- | chases for spring by retailers have been conservative and there is a marked disinclination to carry heavy |o stocks. i Wholesalers and jobbers in some lines are marking time temporarily until farmers complete arrangements for next season’s planting and dispose | .. of the crops they now are holding for higher prices. Collections are siow. [$ tl Notew. pe CUMBERLAND, ‘Md.. January 11|, ‘(Speeial).—The local bricklayers’ union has made a voluntary reduction of 12% ' cents an hou® in wages of its mem- bers. This makes the scale $1.121%2 an hour, and the reduction is expected td 8id in promoting building throughout the spring. DETROIT, January 11 (Special).— FEmployment has increased rapidly since January 1. Approximately 70,000 mmen are employed by the seventy-nine firms belonging to the Detroit Employ-| rf ers’ Aasociation, while part-time sched- ules include nearly 22,000 men. At the beginning of 1921 the total employed by association firms was about 25,000. ALTOONA, Pa., January 11 (Spe- gial).—Penngylvania railroad employes in the passenger car plant and uphol- stery departments, the pipe, tin, elec- tric and smiths shops and planing mill here have been placed on a forty-hour- week schedule instead of forty-eight hours, as a result of a conference be- tween road officials and representative of the men. The men decided it was better to reduce working time than to Jay off part of the force. Commodity Reports' ¢ From Various Sections |- ' Non-Ferrous Metals. NEW YORK, January 11 (Special).— Whe price of platinum has advanced $9 an ounce. It is now quoted at $93 an ounce for pure piatinum, $38 for plati- num containiing 5 per cent of iridium &nd $104 for metal containing 10 per | cent of iridium. 3 BUTTE, January. 11 (Special).—A | t] business revival in Montana is forecast #s a result of an announcement that ' the Butte mines and the smelters of Great Falls will reopen next Monday. 3t is estimated that 100,000 persons will be indirectly benefited. cl st - i Brick. NEWCASTLE, Pa., January 11 (Spe-| al).—The Newcastie Mining and Ciay ' Products Company has received a con- fract for 600,000 brick to be used in the nstruction of a school building at Yoledo, Ohio. & 3 $hoes. JOHNSON CITY, N. Y., January 11 ‘(Special).—The new Endicott-Johnson shoe factory here is now producing 15,000 pairs of shoes a day and is ex- pected to reach capacity production of 30,000 pairs & day by early spring. Grain, EL PASO, Tex., January 11_(Special). #—Rains throughout the southwest in the last week have had a strongly ficial effect on the condition of wheat in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico. ‘Wool. BOSTON, January 11 (Special).—The American Woolen Company. has flled notice of intention to absorb the Ayer Mills, a subsidiary concern, with the state comuissioner of corporations. Automobiles. NEW YORK, January 11 (Special). +—Officials of automobile companies 5 ho are here for the auto show ‘esti- ated today that 1,600,000 automo- ;%l.e’,' ‘would be produced and sold in the n_cut FLINT, Ji 1. a Elnunta%t e at let motor plant_has bee: —The Aetna-Standard plant of United. States Steel -Corporation re- The lo¢al Company report a yery glack demand | fof sole leathérs Englan —A contract . seriou ly a yea factory will resume February 1, giv- ing employment to.150 men. £ STRIKE INSURANCE has proved it not only th means for distributing the money los caused by strikes, but was even more useful in promoting unity of purpose among employers. a mutual basis, with legally limited to an amount equal to the annual premium. insured by such a plan are the fixed necessarily plant is ir op point, ance, arpa that' it affords argue 3 a means of unifying employers of all industries and loc way as the labor unions collectively act for_the benefit of workers. spirft: tic ties. able $0 this was. furnished. th the humber of down fn order to produce new models unexpectedly ordered. _ Iron and Steel WHEELING; January 11 (Special). the umed operations in full this wee! Three of the corporation’s plants in he Wheeling district are now oper- ating in full, YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio., January 11 (Special).—Steel operations in the Ma- honing valley will expand this week in finished lines. Sheet ar'd Tube Company. will register the largest gain. Twelve of.the seven- teen furnaces in the district are fired. The. Carnegie -plants - will: continue Wwith five "blast furnaces and 60 per cent of finishing mllls .in operation. ten million dollars each. Forty-five of 'the val milistare, producing. The -Youngstown lley's 113 sheet = . BOSTON Japuary 11 (Specigl).— fMces.of the Ceniral u?n r thrgugheut - New Tannery” dperations have een reduced from 55 per cent of capacity three weeks ago to 50 per cent. Electfical Equipment. PITTSBUR(.i?‘ January 1] (Special). or a large amount of lectrical equipment to be used in re- storing coal mines in devastated sec- tions of France.has been received by the Westinghouse Electric and Man- facturing Company. Live Stock. ST. PAUL, January 11 (Special).— outh “St.” Paul packing plants )nrfl perating at. nérmal, - although 200 utchers still are on strike. Disturb- nces at has FORT WORTH. Tex:;, Jandary 11 Special). —Wholesale and retail Jew- lers report increased business and £ €ammed Goods. SAN FRANCISCO, Jantary 11°(Spe- clal).—There i3 a sliglit softening in the market for canned goods with the earer approach of spring and fav- rable weather conditions. Sales at t reduced prices indicate a movemen: to clear stocks. 5 Plonographs. DETROIT, January 11 (Special).— Business of .the Jewett Phonograph Company is’ increasing rapidly, its cabinet plant-at Allegan is work- ing on a thirteen-hour daily schedule. Working force has been increased by 10 men since the 1st of January. Glass. SISTERSVILLE, W. Va., January 11 Special).—After a shutdown of near- the John B. Soohy glass COMPANY LIKELY Coficérn Liquidated in Balti- more‘May Againy Be Re- - .- -organized, - BALTIMORE; January 11.~Though a company created. to underwrite trike insurance went into liquida-' tion after a little more than a year f existence, it is stated that a large; number of employers, familiar with he plan and its benefits, are Insistent that a new company be formed. The Xecutives of the old company, there- fore, are about to ‘organize another| one upon a plan which, they say, will ontain the best features of the old oncern, but with certain changes found necessary through experience. A widespread series of strikes dur- ing the past year, coupled@ with busi- ness depression, was responsiblé for the failure of the gld company, the former management asserted. _ - 4 Siriks, Ingiitance Standardized. - It is pointed out that strike insur- ance has become standardized in Eu- ope, where, it is claimed, experience e practical The local compa: i, operated om n' assessment Specific_items harges; - that is, all expenses which continue whether the ation or not. Premium rales have a wide range. They vary according to the actual trike experience of each class of in- dustry covering a period of many years, adjusted with regard to local- ity and the werking conditions-found |- in each establishment. -—- “Use- snd ‘Otcwpancy.” From the practical insurance view- really the standard “use and occupancy” insur- the chief difference being the cause of loss, which in this case is a strike instead of fire, other physical disaster. Strike insurance, its advocates con- | tend, is a business necessity to meet strikes.. Be- indemnity, - - they practicable the contract 1is he losses caused by “turnishing nsisti {hat it=i8 mot con ‘agree. nvi {SECOND ARBUCKLE TRIAL explosion or ties in the same ‘hey ived’ in-a ‘ndstile to labor, But is & prac- balance wheel between two par- ho-for the moment appear un Ing- proof -of decldred, by trikes prevented, the early termination of others and unity of purpose developed among em- ployers. 'apé’s Cold Compound”™ Breaks Cold in Few Hours AR EDTToR Muet W S HANDS PULL T “émg WITH NEWS EveRY GET A nice Pece oF CHANGE ,T20, GHT | OPENS IN CALIFORNIA Attorneys Expect New Proceedings to Be Longer Than First. SAN FRANCISCO, January 11— Roscoe’ Arbuckle’'s second trial on a churge of manslaughter in connection with the death of Miss Virginia Rappe took the top place on the cal endar today before Superior Judge Harold Louterback. The jury in the first case disagreed. Attorneys for both defense and prosecution have expressed belief that “this trial, which is to be con- the yards have not been{ducted on a grand jury indictment, Thére " ‘been a steady | would be longer than the first one. It +of feeder cattle for the |is” expected to develop into a legal batfle between Matthew Brady, dis trict attorney of San Francisco coun- ty, and -Gavin McNab, chief of the Arbuckle defense staff. A venire of sixty has been called and several days are expected to pass predict & brighter outlook for the |Défore selection of a jury has been completed. ’ Miss Rappe died, it is alleged, as a result 'of injuries inflicted by Arbuckle at a drinking party staged last Labor day, September 5, in his rooms at the Hotel St. Francis, here. —_——————— PLANS GROUP OF EDITORS. University Institute to Collect Archaic Mortuary Data. CHICAGO; January 11.—Announce- and | ment is just made by the director of the Driental Institute of the Univer- EASY WASHER The Electric 4 Washing Machine That Housewivesl Like Best of All - MUDDIMAN{ 616 12th St—1204 G St. Lift Off with Fingers Doeen’t hurg & bit! Drop e lLittle “Freezone”. on an aching, corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly ’lfi“ 1ift it right off with fin gere. ly! - Your drugyist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” fof & few cents, eufficient to remove every hard cern, soft corn, or corn between the toes, the cal- luses, without eoreness or irritation. Instant Relief! -Don't stay stuffed-up! Qui-E ‘blowing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound”:taken cvl:r'y two bours until three doses are taken usually breaks any cold right up. \ - The first dose opens clogged-up “nostrils and air passages of head; stops nose running; relieves headache, dullness, fever- v . ishness, sneezing. MANY LOST MONEY LAST YEAR, |MUTT AND JEFF—This BUT. ARE OPTIMISTIG FOR 1922 Dealers} De'élax:e Cost of_ i Finai]y 3 L ALY DAY, EXZ I WONDER WHAT - SALARY AN EDITOR GETS? FEATURE WRITERS MUST sity of Chicdgo, Dr. James Henry Breasted, 'thdl funds hl\mmbeeh pros cured for the orgauisation of &n in- ternational group of editors for the collection, editing and publication of the archaic -mortuary documents which preceded’ the famous “Book of the Dead” and out of wWhich the “Book of the Dead” was later put ‘together. These martuary texts were written in ink dn ‘the.-insides of the massive cedar coffins in which the Egyptian nobles were ‘baried ‘4,000 “years ago. The coffins containing this literature are scattered throughout the great museums of the world, where they H. of and the work of producing the great publication will three editors—M. Plerre Lacau, leading French Egyptologist.and di- rector of the Egyptian government department of antiquities; Egyptologist, and Director James H. Breasted of the University D;(‘hlcnxn, The coffin texf{s only as raw earliest belief in a judgment in the hereafter. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 'C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1922.’ Sunk Into Mutt’s Bean. e s ' ke in the hands of the Dr. Alan Gardiner, the eminent British|but @ t not! the rum. ~are import: aterials for the “Book the Dea but as showing the the hole. ave never been comple!elylficopl'ed F nd studled, These strange ffscr tions w/l_ll bé called “The Coffin Texts,’ ever. (4 - Thermometers Eyes Examined McCormick Medical Oulll:! Glasses Fitted DR.CLAUDE S.SEMONES Eyesight Speclalist (Formerly With Edwin H. Etz) Now Looated by Phons Main 781, l Graduste The Chastleton Sixteenth Street at R Handsomely Furnished Apartments One and Two Rooms and Bath Hotel Service : ‘Weekly and Monthly Rates t T T Horlick's The ORIGINAL " Malted Milk » = 3 ~at your service when _feady-to have.the Paint- ing, - Papeérhanging - -or Upholstering done. " Geo. Plitt Co., Inc.. 525142, Mein 1234-8 PERPETUAL “BUILDING i’ ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in ‘45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity - Assets More Than $7,000,000 Surplus Nearing ‘ $800,060 | Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY, President JOSHUA W. CARR. Secretary For Cold on the ( Chestl Musterole—is easy to apply and it does not blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. Musterole is a olean, white oint- ‘ment, made with oll of mustard. Sim- ply massage it in gently with the finger tips. You will be delighted to see how quickly it brings relipf. Get Musterole at your drug store. afo lng 65c, jars and tubes; hospital | siz d Better Than a Mustard Plaster EECHAM'S ) PILLS- Sick Headaches IF YOU HAD A’ NECK AB LONGASTHIS FELLOW, AND HAD Minute” Fever Thermomet e T, good standard quality. Special, 98¢ Thermometers, $1.19, $1.98, $3.49 75¢ Alophen Pills, 100s Alcorub Rubbing Alcohol. 75¢ Analgesique Baume Bengue, 53¢ Aspirin Tablets (Bayers), $1.00 Bitro Phosphate 3 Bromu Seltzer ...10c, 23¢, 43¢, Sbe Bromo Quinine .......... Brown's Bronchial Troches....2% Borle. Acld, % Ib.. c—-m ;California Syrup Figs, 48¢ Fletcher's Corega . CADOX. = Caldwell's Syrup of Pepsin, 39¢, 78¢ Camphor Spirits, 2 oz for....35c \ v | andDouche Pans, $3.79, + 98¢ Certified “One- i Other Fever . Stere No. Bath Ther- l“ll”-‘-.ll_e U ;'(:. ‘N . _mometers, 25c . 7th and M Sts. N.W. “MILK” JAMAICA RUM. MINNEAPOLIS, Min —Two hundred cocoanuts whie tained not their own natural milk, pint each of stre rum, were seized by federal agents the Oriental Institute Oflxt a Minneapolis railroad station. A cork plug coming out of one of the cocoanuts led to the discovery of An®eye of each cocoanut had been bored out, the nut filled and a burnt cork stopper placed in lore No, 1 Tth and K Sts, N.W. Store No, 2 7th and E Stx. N.W. (Copyight, 1922, by H. C. Fisher. Trade mark registered U. 8. Pat. OR.) Home ¥ concern, 4we are quoting o0 all work to- be. comple iy and February. Quality s (ained as usual. This is with steadily employed. R K 1114 9th St. N, ? January u.l con” | Jamaica Store No. 8 14th and Park R Store No. 5 Sth and H Sts. N.E. Store No. € W. 8. THOMPSON Store No. 7 BRANCH 11th and G Sts. N.W. 31st and M Sts. N.W. Store No. 9 NI%, MOTT S For THE LevE OF MIKE, USE | DISCRETION - Special Notice. e B view of keeping our men RGUSON _ me. W. _ Ph. N. 231-233. W N. PAINTING DEPARTMENT 18TH AND COLUM- BIA ROAD Store No. 653 Pa, Ave. S.E. BERMUDA—CUBA MEDITERRANEAN CRUISES WEST INDIES CRUISES CARIBBEAN CRUISES CALIFORNIA AND HONOLULU Via PANANA CAWAL Steamship and Tourist Agency, No. 1 Woeodward Buildiag Tooth- \ Brushes 19¢ —exceptional val- ues these. well worth your in- spection. Other Tooth- brushes under-. priced at 35c, 39e, 45¢c, and 49c. n* That Are Definitely Low---Thrifty Folks Will Shop at People’s Prices are extremely low on these good quality HOT WATER BOTTLES Good quality, durable Hot-Water. Bottle, holding almost 2 quarts. Special.. 98 “Capital” 2-quart, guaranteed Hot-Water i Bottle, a splendid valie at........ -$1.49 “Congress” 2-quart, year guaranteed Hot- Water Bottle ..... “Atoz” 2-quart, 2-year guaranteed Hot Water Bottle; highest quality “Bostonia”_Metal Hot-Water Bottl for years. Special. No. 400 Bulb Byringe, complete with fit- tings of best quality. Very special at..§l. “Goodyear” Hygienic Bulb Byrinie, N $1.19 300.. SPECIBl 1evvneqervonenroracesacns “Radiant” “Capitol” guaranteed. “Congress” Fountain Syring able “Sen Fountain S: ‘apitol” tion Fountain Bottle “Congress” Water Bottle . “Ato tian Bottle. Price .. A Sale---A Real Money-Saving Sale of ~ STANDARD HOME REMEDIES —Analax Absdrbine, Jr. 25¢ Alcock’s Porous Plasters . Two for, . 128, 15c; 248, 28e; 1008......80c —Blye-jay Corn Plaster: Bellans ...:........ 308088 Bell's Pine Tar Honey «. - Cough Syrup,. 25¢, 49¢, Shc 89¢ Akrter's Little Liver Pills, 16e ““CINGHO-TONE COLD-~ . VABLETS <....0s000.-356- Remedy . for tender feet...... A Regular $1.00 Package .af : Genuine Yeast Vitamine Tablets ; _ With Every Package ‘of . Nuxated Iran Tablets X At Our Special Price of At Iast, the Genuine kets of the celebrated the mal e ial offer limited to a sho . teg. ¢t 9o and get s $1.00 g‘e’l’l‘! 'lg‘:l; Tlhl:'ll !!Rll. A Sr ‘This yours “Special -BED AND DOUCHE PANS “Perfect” Bed Pans, Special g $1.69 “Nu-Zinc” Sale Price Alumint: Douche Pans. Special 1.49 ‘White Enameled Bed Pang (as lljustrated). Special Sai Price ...... Perfection Combination g : 3008 seen 9098 » Rlal;bfi mhlll.llt m(lemll‘) r ly or ke o198 —De Witt's Kidney Pills...49¢ " Doane’s Kidney Pills,...49¢ D..D. D.. 206, 49¢c, 83c Freezone for Coins Father John's Medicine —Gét's It Corn Remedy G Glover's Manj . Gude's Pepto-! —HABL'S CHERRY EXPECT Hill's Cascara Quimine...2lc Horlick's Malted 4 Milk cressanees 42, The, $2.98 Hagee's Extract Cod Liver Oil, 85¢ 6%c —Jad Salts .. caese Jayne's Expectorant, —King’s New Dis- g i e COVETY ........:..s.d8¢, 89c —Sal Hepatica 3Te, EPTIND 's Emulsion’ .. . 48e, Sbe MUSCO RUBBI o oo MILK OF MAGNESIA, pt., 35¢ Marmola_Tablets .80e Mellin’s Food Musterole .. Mastin’s Vitamon ture’'s Remedy Nuxated Iron . Phenolax Wafers.. Pape’s Cold Compound. She 25¢ Pape’s Diapepsin 53¢ Pinkham’s. Vegetable Comp. 93¢ - Fierce’s Favorite Prescrip- ‘Hemed: S 'ORANT, - 35¢, . 86c large ..... eseeeess Pinex Cough Remedy . 128 . . 100s s ... e, s9c 0c Resi Plasters .. Sc n's Liniment, 45c 33¢, 39¢, T3 33, 45c, 89 50c; Caldwell's S ol el amberlain’s 1Ame Water; PInt. . vsen orenor 13 yree's Po 3 Reniedy yater R Veronal Tablets, tub Chamberlal Frsatholatum L7 e, 8S A0e: Vinol ...... e NG OIL. ..50¢ Vick's Vaporub .. 65e 4 one tle cigar. THERMOS 'BOTTLE $2.19 . Nickel-plated, But- ter-finish Thermos Bottles, in corrugated style’case. A hand- some, practical bottle. foF Jor- Pintostee o Fateytoot ‘Quart-sise. couldn’t- wear_a "shoe, for 8 2-quart Special . 2-quart, ringe . quart, Combination Fountain S Fountain Syringe Olive Oil (Pompeian), 35c; pts., 63er qts. Pazo Pile Ointment. fon: . .3 R Pluto - Water, small, 17e; e . —Quinine Capsules, & gr- Quinine Capsules, 3 gr., 125. ... 100: vees..B8c —10 mild little smokes in each packag handmade cholcest Porto Rico and Havana tobacco, light, desirable Sumatra “wrapper—an elegant lit- e. 189c¢, 3 for 80c' Bunions So Bad ' Could Not Wear Shoe for Year — Now Knows Perfect Comfort Calls Fairyfoot a Godsend husband's “bunlon was so sore he whole ried Fai 'k he ye Mes, BAdy. “He Felief was w0 gulel 158 e "Bvery, fime. he. pute iy shoes Fountain Syringe, rable quality, complete with fittings... Fountain 2-quart highest qualit; and -Things Needed for the Home Medicine Chest and Toilet Cabinet at Prices . .20¢, Go¢, $1.15 very of with J Big, Fine Bath Towels; 98¢ —good - heavy weight, good-looking bath towels, size 22x44—the kind men like. Peoples low price, 98¢c. ped , ¥ &) thoroughly Specially Lowered Prices on Fountain Syringes and Combinations du- 98¢ Syringe; -$1.49 good, nteed depend- | $1.98 $2.49 to: uart highest quality Fountain Syringe; fully guaranteed .. s 2-quart guaranteed Combina- Syringe and Hot-Water $2.49 ear-guaranteed PR nge and Hot- t $2.98 Combina- Hot-Water “Rubs Pain . Right Away” - —*“Musco” Rubbing Oil penetrates and gets right down to the seat, of the pain where ith great me- dicina} qualities quickly relieve and heal. It is a splendid remedy for Rheuma- tism, sore muscles, bruises, etc.” Good Big Bottles ......50¢ Hall's. Cherry Expectorant quick- ly relieves coughs ] and colds. Non- f} injurious. 35¢ & 60c Quick, sure remedy for . Powerful .Toliic tizer; contains fo quinine, ar- senic or habit-forming drigs. 60c Size, 53c '’ and = Appe- 4 NUXTONE ° TABLETS —a _health, strength and blood building_combination of Nux a iron. Peoples 3pecial ”c FOOTONA (M- Cann's Liquid Foot Soap), is the ideal’ and effective R TR Oy e 8 ch ns. = aulckly stops the | SHIT pain and itching | Seee and affords real e ments — softens corns, bunions and calluses and