The evening world. Newspaper, May 18, 1921, Page 11

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“The pace they must travel is so swift, competition has become so fierce, that brains and vision alone are not enough. One must have the punch to put things through!” You can easily bend an O'Sullivan Heol double without cracking the rubber—proof of its remarkable quality “They will be 1’ the new pilots— the new leaders” Only the man with limitless energy can qualify for this leadership “PITAHE 1921 man,” said one of America’s largest manufacturers recently, “is going to be one who tackles the most difficult problems confronting his business or his industry—and beats them!” “The owners of businesses today are watching their executives, and even their stenographers and office boys, as they never have before,” writes a keen analyst of industrial conditions. “If they don’t measure up, they may have to go; but if they can pilot their department or their business through the shallow water safely, they can take the wheel. This is going to be their year!” The demands upon these new leaders will be great. The pace they must travel is so swift, competition has become so fierce, that brains and vision alone are not enough. One must have the punch to put things through! Fatigue—the greatest menace to success In every walk of life it’s the same story. Mill foreman and business man, office clerk and bank president all face the sarne problem: they must have energy to stand the strain. Yet advancing civilization is making it harder and harder for us to preserve this vital force. “‘The human organism has not yet adapted itself to the high nervous tension of modern life,” says the New York State Conservation Commission. ‘This fail- ure .. . constitutes one of the greatest physical and social menaces of today.” Working longhours . at top speed under conditions which put a cruel strain on the human mechanism, millions of city dwellers today are suffering from over-fatigue. They never get a chance to claim Life’s big rewards —fatigue slows down their pace from day to day. Some of the fatigue from which they suffer is of course unavoidable. But thousands are going down -hill steadily today because they waste strength and energy with every step. Remove this cause of fatigue The average man takes 8000 steps a day. If he wears hard leather or ordinary rubber heels, every step is like a hammer blow to the delicate nervous system. 8000 daily shocks—that’s why he goes home exhausted every night. It is this useless, needless fatigue that drags him down. You can eliminate this great source of fatigue. O’Sullivan’s Heels absorb the shocks that tire you out. To secure the resiliency, the springiness of O’Sullivan’s Heels, the highest grades of rubber are blended by special formula. With this blend of live, springy rubber are ‘‘compounded” the best toughening agents known. The compound is then ‘‘cured” or baked under high pressure. The same process that makes O’Sullivan’s Heels resilient gives them their great durability. O’Sulli- van's Heels outlast three pairs of leather heels— they often outlast two pairs of ordinary rubber heels, Stop pounding away your energy. Go to your shoe repairer today and have O’Sullivan’s Heels putonyourshoes. Jnsiston getting O'Sullivan’ s! O’Sullivan’s Heels Absorb the shocks that tire you out en a

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