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+ | _THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1919. 23! ~ Se RS REET eke COUNTRY ITY | On country roads‘ the yield- : ks, ing earth cushions your fect to figures for the latest five year period cove On the hard, modern pavements of ‘ Gduinet the fare of walting sred by th iat canaus, the death rate ction 031.6% cities, every atop on ‘hard Jeather He see arene por thousand in cities; 13:4 per thousand heels is pounding away your energy country. Ne AURA Mee NS ERE PRATER Are exposing yourself to the danger of city diseases” ? a. von IRTAIN diseases are so preval- often it contributes directly to that over- Heels their springiness and wearing qualities? entincitiesthatdoctorscallthem fatigued condition which makes the city * Rubber, as you know, can be made hard “city diseases.” dweller an easy prey to illness. and brittle as in fountain pens or soft and Tuberculosis, Bright’s disease, In his usual routine the average city worker crumbly as in pencil erasers. To secure the hearttroubleareailmentsknown _ takes, 8,000 steps a day, on hard, modern _ resiliency and durability of O’Sullivan’s to “be common among people floors and pavements. If youwearnail-studded Heels, the highest grades of rubber are “com- . | wha live ip citics, leather hecls you give your body 8,000 joltsand —_pounded’’ with the best toughening agents : jars a day—for every step with hard heels on known. The “‘compound” is then “cured” or In the last five year period +11) harder pavements acts as a hammer blow baked under high pressure. covered by census figures, the ty your entire nervous system. The constant By this special process the greatest resili- death rate in cities is shown to repetition of these shocks exhausts your en- ency is combined with the utmost durability. be higher-than in country dis- ‘; -fati ith i ae aalt * Siete by 21 per cent. su ergy, helps to bring on over-fatigue, with its It is this special process that has, since the ever-present threat of serious: illness. making of the’ first rubber heel, established These conditions are due Yet walking on hard pavements need not be = O’Sullivan’s Heels as the standard of rubber 1, ; Jargely to the manner in which any more fatiguingthan walkingonturf. Walk- —_ heel quality. VA City people live. The average city worker ing can easily be made Guaranteed to outlast * spends at least five-sixths of his time indoors. a pleasure and a benefit. any other heels If he is out-of-doors more than four hours in Modetn pavements are O’Sullivan’s Heels | : every twenty-four, he can count himself built for modern traffic. Mogi a ia fo Si Porites guarahteed to wear twice f rtunal You can’t bring back the as Jong es ordinary rub- ey The city worker seldom walks. He travels Yiflding dirt pining Pd ‘ber heels; and will outlast Ss from home to business in crowded cars or psn peels a sh e threo pairs of leather - trans. He works all day stooped over adesk, treet for which leather heels. a machine or a counter. Indeed} medical men state that the average city worker uses no ' he jot : more than a third of his lung capacity—that BER MAY LHe JENS and jars about 400 muscles of his body have actually that make walking a bur- A den. You can replace Deccene ‘weakened Tsong, diate. hard, old-fashioned heels Is it any wonder that we are susteptible | with O’Sullivan’s Heels of > canting) actin) th any wonder thes — lve, qpeingy rubber If ain O'Sullivan Heel'is cut along,the sideso «= dren. Specify O’Syl- the city death rate is so high under these A i : d conditions of liviag? What gives a rubber inate tn toe ope et aeaget — livan’e Heels, ‘and be heel “‘life it can be stretched several inches. Withan sure that you get O’Sul- ’ ; ‘4 ordinary rubber heel the material enaps in ‘ Walking, the one great exercise which every It is not just the rubber tivo before it hasstretebied to any great deéres. livan’s—avoid the disap- ‘ . man should enjoy, has become aburden. Too that gives O’Sullivan’s durability of O'Sullivan's Heels: pointment of substitutes. Go to your shoe re< pairer today and have O'Sullivan’s Heels put on your shoes, O’Sullivan’s Heels are furnished in black, white or tan; for men, women and chil- can cushion your feet =>3 2 ot ew One out of every four por- ered geet sons in greater New York A fee wears O'Sutlivan's Heels. f TPLEEVATY) x ¥ Fully @ quarter of New Aid AeA i York's vast population FT cre. WITHIN finds that Q'Sullivan's Al : Heels prevent over-fatigue from the jolts and jars of walking. i " AWS fe tide ronitione) Dine heceaL sae Se ena * Absorb the shocks that tire you ous eR amen ety vse nas he {Yer ne ‘ ‘ F ‘ ‘ \ ' Z 5 q “ enlace