\ -_Comparatively few people realize to what extent 'Gillett’s Lye can be used to advantage in every home. For instance, with one can of Gillett's Lye and five and a half pounds of lard or grease, ten pounds of good hard, soap can be made. Use one tablespoon Gillett's Lye in gallon of i iTilEl c ii@iiiiniiizi0wi iiiiiiiniiiil trout-nun.) neua s. ' -' ran-canto. aunuiutannuuai-unuu Ancodacolllcor. - TWO MINUTES SILENCE Tomorrow. at the last stroke of 9.3"?“ by the Qlty clock. all work ceases for two minutes, and pei~ YE!!! oilence wtill. be maintained. run tribute we owe to iiie 00,000 11111118 Canadians who gave up their ‘lives in the Great War for freedom and civilization. His Ma- ksll’ U19 K1118 has issued a. re- FRIDAY, NOV. 10, 1922 ' water for cleaning and disinfecting refrigerators, sinks, garbage cans. tiled floors, baths and toilets. Useful for over 500 - purposes. RATEPAYERS T0 55cm: WINNIPEG FRANCHtSE \'lr'l.\'.\‘ll’I§G. Xuv. l9."-—D(3t:lt5ltill0ll a teii-pwwir 8X[t‘YlSiUl\ of thc Winni- Company's wlii-sli expires in 1927. will lie entrusted to the small hotly than Will! oi 'i‘lu- vote was peg Electrif- franchise. Railway of 24.000 ratepayers ruthci" the city's 84.000 electors. it decided at at special itiectiiig the city council. 9 to G. -———<+>—-é— A SINGLE TAXEFI. . Slic is tiut- oi‘ those who signed tho singli- tax petition uud she ivus Illllll stated IIFKL ‘tu tie; had rlmic some quite proud m‘ ii tiiitil the explaining. “Oh. is that what it nit-tiiisufiilte said. “Whv. l iiiiilt-rsitioil it ‘was to: quest that this small tribute he IIald throughout the whole British ;Emptre. The Canadian National Railways. all British Steamship ‘contpanies and the management, of ‘all public utilities ‘in the Empire ‘have issued orders that all worn on their lines land dnulng these two minute; shall be suspended. Factories, traf. on sea and ‘children and even of those who have grown up. Do we know how many of our children‘ aronboln! fed on [milk - from ftuherfielglona cows? i - h}; ‘and hogs at so many dollarzsyeach llint who can tell in dollars and cents what a child may b} worth when he grows up? And it is the dolls/r that count —till death stares us or our little ones in the face. It"l.s then we realize its full i-iilue or its absolute worthless- ness. We yet have no Eesrn to put firsi things first. - ANOTHER ELECTION RAILWAY It appears that in view of the provincial eliectlion to be held next summer one of Premier Bell's pre- uubroken and continuous belt of silence will envelope the whole earth. for the Brithth Empire eil-. ‘circles the globe. It is a fittlngi and beautiful ti-‘ibuie. In this city as already announc-i ed. a memorial service will be held] on Queen Square around the Soil dleirs’ Cross and i! is expectetlf that “every citizen able to l~-" out‘ will participate. 1i le expected also} that traffic on the streets shalt; cease and that automobiles, CiIYfl-l ages. cars and itedestiiuns shall} stop where they are as the ciiyi clock gives the last stroke of eleven. it is sincerely hnpcd that ‘this s-‘halll be observed lflllll" ‘.e-i~ tor rind that no Jarrinc" il tie shalLl . through Ignorance tir torgetfulness, mar the solemn silence. it iis hop-v‘ ed. also that a poppy. thr brain-e. for lhcre is inuch~ to re-z everyone will wear flower" oi‘ Remem-t make ‘jingle mo“ p“). UH.“- Hh-‘u-Qmember of lay aiiiel sorrow and the! of the taxes nit’ us l itiways have thought tliiit they SlIOU-lil pay eve-u. _ more titan tflosc who liavc a hiiii-feilmb-‘lll- withI ily to stipport I signed it pleasure." ‘O4 OQ 0'99 O O0 9O O 90-{0 O 94040 i i i . HAY We want 50 .to 100 tons of good Nc. i Timothy Hay, for which we will pay top price. Don't want poor Hay at any price.’ ' ' g Feed Oats Five to ten thousand bush- els wanted. We pity accord- ing to quality. Bring us good. clean, sound, dry Oats and you will get the best price. the market will allow. bleed the poorer quality at home they are no good for export. We will pity above the market price tor Oats and Hay when taken on Boo Account or in exchange for Flour and Feeds. We buy Barley, Buckwheat, Seed and Feed Wheat, Flax Seed, Timothy Seed. Wanted. 500 to 1000 bush- els Blue Potatoes. Must he sound and tree from Dry Rot. _ WE SELL Flour. the best brands. Bran, Mlddllnga. Oll Cake Meal, Cracked corn, Corn- meal (Feed), Rolled Oats, Table cornmeal, Oatmeal, Whole Wheat Flour. Buck- whcat Fleur, Graham Flour, Feed Wheat, Mixed Scratch , Feed (for Poultry) Ohlek Feed, Gall Meal, "Purina" 00w Chow, Pig chow, Chick- en Chowder; Crushed Oyster Ohells, Poultry Grit, Poul!!! Otlppllcc, dtc., etc., all, at lewut prices. wiioteuts a RETAIL . _ i |least wt‘ can do l5 to wear illPl I t ._... ...._-¢-oc..__-. i. TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL l l Some slartllug figures have re- §|ccntiy been publishetlsiiutvlng the “animal losses from tuberculosis. (Xiffilllll statistics arc kept in all zllilllllglllel‘ houses which are under gggovernment inspection so ‘that ithe figures may be relied upon as aabsolutely correct, as far as they lgo. for thousands of animals are lslaughteijed at home and in un- mnspected slaughter houses. During the year ending March 3i, 1922, there were condemned in Canadian inspected slaughter houses as unfit for human con- sumption because of tuberculosis. (£68 ‘cat-tie and 38,529 portions of cattle; .2308 hogs and more than three quarters of a million of portions of hogs. Those enormous losses have stirred up governments and pro- lng stirred up, governments are pouring out money like water to effect a reme/d-y and provinces, coinmuninies and even taxpayern are demanding that more money be freely spent an the good cause. From the first of April this year to the end of September, Can ado has expended one half a mil- lion dollars on accredited herd woiii and on municipal control over $100,000. This expenditure la made. and very properly made, to avert loss in cattle and hogs No faullt can be found with tho expen- diture: it is business, justifiable 4 business. ' It has been estimated by com- petent authorities that fifteen per cent of children who died of tuber culoals contravened- the disease from the milk of cows affected j with qubemulosfs. How many adults contracted tihe disease from the same soitme we do not ltnow. I-Iow many llvel of children and of adults might have been savedjiait the disease been detected and treated in its incipient QtF-BQI we do not know and neither our fede- ‘ ?@§l'Q§'§§'§'Q-O-OO§Q§+§-§ b tic on the streets. in stores and lelectiou pionvisea is being polish- warehouses will hc silent and an ‘ed .up for the occasion, namely vincee and communities and. be‘ the proniiise to build a spur line to connect with the Richmond Bay mussel mud‘ beds. A federal government; engineer has looked over the ground. according to the Patriot's report of the meeting of the Bell EOVGIIIIIIGIJIC on Tuesday night. The engineer paw some very suitable locations for the new road and of course everybody between Richmond Bay and any- where either on the east or the vrcst side of the Bay will have an opportlinity to sell hils farm or part of it for the purpose. As eco- nomy is a watchword of the Bell government, we would respectful- ly suggest that tin mapping out the new spur line they use the stakes which marked the location ‘of the llondlon iRall-vray branch, which never wet built although siii~t"i.;vi-il by I-AllIEFZllS before three New . True we can ‘value our ""ca1l»l°{;¢1d that the Arctic Mean ltwsr ‘one started again the notion that the Gulf Stream in the Atlantic has shifted its course Usnallyi when the iiiie fall ll rlittlcalnll- dei- than usual as lii our ptosant etilll wiper uonleslloodetita odpsll with that important Ilhleotw- - cently tile news deapavtohtr have nilng up and that Greenland la greener-then usual, ibut the Gulf stream iiseeme to have been for. gotten. " ‘i. If, on the other hand tthe wea- ther hail been ‘ unusually cold. newspaper readers ‘Wlfllld pmbab- ly have been negaled with thean- nual offerings about the necessity of closing up the Straits of Belle isle to shut out the Arctic waters and icebergs, notwithstanding the fact that the current at- Belle 1.4a ts steadily outward and not in ward. This subject la not yet ripe for renewed distruseion and must await the advent of zero weather. of which we shall have a. taste in due time. _ ‘Referring to the weather, it may be remarked that there are few countries lntlie world where the amount of annual precipitation varies less thanhere. In ‘rainand snow we get ‘about 42 inches of water yearly, reckoning ten inches of snow as equal to one inch of rain. If we have a dry summer. and autumn _ we may Qxpgq a heavy snovmrll to follow, and vice verso. Of course this isnot al- ways lhle but is measurably true lll most years. According to ready rule. we this rough and would anticipate but a moderate fall of snow our» ing 'the coming winter, following the rather unusual rainfall since May last. But this forecast ls sub- ject to correctlonJAad he it, ob~ ‘ -_ jFThe PulihiiFornm l Is it not about time that , cane. some of the wise ‘edltftfifjl’ '_ slated from year to year, proving week by week and month by month rm column lcvcpcn for the “discussion by correspond- ents cl questions of Inter Rel. The cine-Imam "Quinlan deco not ates» ‘arlly IIIGOPOI the opinions oatpreacsd h! ' 0h comb g pens-nu. -, _ t l Did You Ever‘ Slop Bin-Jriiat you should point toy" to your city's advantages l d‘tell Bverybody of her euterprla s and ‘ resources. ‘llhat you should not hesitate m‘ postpone it, but DO i'I-‘ NOW! " That the which the circulation of your newspapers cover your wlnmunb ty, gives you the opportunity to IN G. successes your city genius of your boosting citizens.‘ That your city should recognize opportunity and not have tc loolt back regret-fully at the things that (mum have been done. " " Opportunities will mark the differ- ence iii the success or failure of your city. That you should. make your city known as the 8%’? CITY in which to live. Your city is on a sound business baiais and the fut- ure of your city never looked more ‘promising. NOW 1S THE TIME 0 G0 AHEAD-DONT STAND TILL. That your city has a good repu- tation. LIVE UP TO IT. = ‘Ilhat your city living up to its re- putation will dcvelcp even a great- er expectancy, because the achieve- ments of the past will he surpas- sed and itew standards net for the future. ‘flint the sate place to invest money is iii the city that has. not only‘ demonstrated a normal logi- cal development which has per- through the years, the solidity of its claim to a greater future. That a city ls tar more complex than any individual business. Therefore using good business judgment. even greater connltlera- tion should." be given of plans for I am, ‘Sir, elm, served that we are dealing with precipitation and not with tem- perature. As to Wll8Zll9f‘_lll8 coni- ing winter will be mild or severel con = u-uiivc elections. l '1‘ tit-re is‘ nothing like ecouomy— except possibly pro-election pro-i uiises to build branch railways. : i ' THE EUROPEAN cmsis lit is difficult from the meagre Near East sittiaiiion. The npinionl scents to prevail tin England and! Paris that the latest move by thei Turkish Kemialist-s is u bluff rat-i her than a serious intention to] enter into h08hllllll88. Nevertlte-l less the gravity of the situation, that has arisen is fully realized and measures a/re be-inig taken ac- cordingly to compel Kemal Pasha w abide by the terms agreed to at Mudiatitla. Some further complication was added by uncertainty as to what attitude the Italian Boverrnment wowld adopt. The Italians all along have been on friendly terms with the Turks and the Fasciatl move- ment there was in many respects similar to the Nationalist move- ment ln Turkey. "Wrlth similar as- pirations the Turlniah Nationalists and theltalian Fascldtrl succeeded in overthrowing their respective gov ernmenls. They are now the do- niliipnt factors ln both countries and tionsldensible doubt existed both ln London and Paris as to what the Fasclstl "would dio in the‘ new crisis. Accord-lug to our lat- est despatcbes. however. assured that the Italian govern- ment. that is. the Fasclsti govern- ment la at one with enil. Britain and Fi-iance in their determination that uhere shall! be no hack down in the face of the Keinaliat threat’ to override the Mudania, conven- tion [to whllch they are all algae- torles. W6 BIB EDITORIAL NOT‘! The distinguished visitors to the province this week represent- ing the ‘Imperial Exhibition Coin- nilttee, eaniled away with them ex oellent impressions of the Little Sister of the Confederlf/ivu. per- ritl. provincial or municipal gov- ernment has ever titled to find out. wm snob ronemiiir axpeiidli’ titres for‘ the caving of oar cattle‘ V fllflli tlcularly ‘its m industry wtiieii wiin a new one to tlielll. Milo! Belcher. who ll interested in no- uie entitle mime lhatthe n. land's record yield of M0 buehelq w the norm-could not he panelled ‘B0 ‘ tlod. - ; thoee. who are curious in such mat-i ters may consult the goosabone the pigs "melt." or the way the] inuskrat dens up for the cold 593-: _ _..-._ There are over I400 candidates in the British elections of upon the conduct of fne militant suffragettes before the war who‘. were riotous beyond measure, tie] fled the police, smashed windows. were sent ‘to jail and there star‘ ved themselves and all this to! gain the right to vote at the polls| and sit in parliament. And now,i only 32 offer themselves for ell action! Woman, thy ways are] strange. ' Otherwise the contest ls rather dull and tame. No great issue div- ides the opposing leaders. Bonar thaw says publicly, "We don't know iwliere we are," and Lloyd George apparently knows as little, although he does not confess it so openly. The ex-Preinler has not‘ ill-lid "l! nearly so many person- al. fol-lowers at the nomination as had been expected. f1. ls now doubtful whether his party in the new House will even be sufficient ln numbers to hold thdbalanee oi POWBP- Fifty-seven seats have gone by acclanration, 38 of these to ‘WWII/Waivers. Lloyd." George for the first time in his career has rid opposing candidate. The coincidence of a general OIGOUOD lll England and ii can llressional election in the United States lo not nf frequent occur rence and whefi it happens if. stirii up the entire AnglmSaxon- world. ’P-l'€lflllfi lndlctatfona seem’ to point’ to an extensive Demo'- cratlc reaction in the States. ll tltbgigfnll finalreturna confirm pre- sepl tprospeots they may go far 1mm eqiul-islair the eaeiigtii of the-taro old parties ln the nation» #1 QOlIIreaPatiIi-pi-ovb emllm-rao all!‘ ho the Harding Admflllstro ._a.__. Far more lmportanthwllllbe the Presidential election of twoyecrs hence. Until than, then and the 4th of ‘larch, DIS F ldent. Hard. lng may continue foloosltpy chi White notice whatever the voters at the polls may say, We more turn govsrnnssata more hitsilyaad more quality antennae time Jack. owqqiuoae tame" lll not?‘ ten than melt u (liege; Avie kins Government at fiction had ".0.- .. . T" ' 1; A ei-amoae‘ Jaimie l but. la the late- Israel ltIte "Mir-em wait-ii so». ' ofltlr points its ‘future development. ’ s. a. wan-s, Secretary, Shawnee Oklahoma Board of Trade. Constantinople a ilatii i ‘ Cltyto Capture thoroughness with - reach each family by ADVIQIQTE- _ That the foundation r-t "me flue ‘ Alumnae. will be done by the cooperative That the ability to see and gnisp‘. " ill‘. a straight liile down the middle a-nov-e a foot without being under M at d If. corlettln have ' l . .. ‘in the United States. ‘t sttmeonreftill d totliemne scan , Utiltbll Stale: models.“ ported . of. the _ 0cm,» debit-etc- Ydtiwian for“ Models is": w adly pay almost dou Warner a lull‘. . . . .. .'_l\°fll. m». economy. a uukmz in Are not‘ the ‘cheapest, ed‘ as low as $1.50, tic added I , dimtiiiln civilized the outbm in $6 d erentconntties or Domlft‘ _ . ‘ not: sindipiiclfica onsasthe 3,3, . by other nations arebfl " V flgpmlnioirwlrhout the-costs of duty, ‘MT b' aw lglsnfycdullyfilizzids in ‘Engine; bl h arewidelli n England. You c Vtrbtiyopmfittjable cot-lecithin repre- c l‘ t’ wot-din Style, at prices which believe-them to be the most i; ~ economical, corset you can buy. ‘ l ,‘ 3, , 5 well wgratlhxftll: filter-i cggt. or $ is Moore & McLeod, Ltd. Charlottetown, P. E. I. t. theUnludfitavu. W“ lets which‘ are lrn- to wolnen rice — and Ewrfl Pair, l8‘ Guaranteed , Note no Run,‘ Breakior Tear zzmezzi . /_ tflust-tflrof forsels cannon but we - __,,_ but the width of from tiweuty-Lyvo ltiiwen- ‘ty-f-lve miles‘. and the aunt-kins army would have to advance two- tltlrds of the length of the penln sttla in order to place guns tt play effectively upon Pore. The British fleet commands iholli sides of" the penitiaulaiand, since thc Kama-lists would it ‘tie time l)! more than twelve or thirteen miles from the coast. even if it ivere possible for them m advance of the peninsula, they could not the fire of het-‘vy guns. it would he impossible for Kenial to trims‘ ‘Sandelrbol the Ger-l mailgeneral with the Scotch name,‘ auto was cominauden-inchief of! _ wrhomithe Turkish armies in the Great‘ field artillery. only 32 m‘ women. This dlspi-ofwar, expresses the opinion that ghipg, it iwipulfl be iflflposgflfle foi- portlon of the sexes in the con-fBritaln cannot defend Constantin-line Turk to attack the city from details avmhhle w s,“ up magnet affords a strange commontaryjcvple against Kemal Pasha. Limah lithe European side, the only side like most other loyal Germans. is noitlptilbt hoping for a Turkish vilitet-y should war be declared "be tween. Bfl’taln and Turkey. but he probably knows that Kemal would find the capture of the city a matter of great difficulty, if not an impossibility, especially sines he could not reach it for nmonth The British navy is. now on the slwtand, with the troops- that couldfibe imsilted w. the ri-ent ui a - fortnight, could probably hold the Straits indefinitely. I-nstei-y etidwi that‘ Constantinople is an easy city to defend. lt has been attack- ed scores of times. ‘but has hillw only three times. in each case it was forced to oapltulate ‘by the operation of armies on ltii ‘European flank. Never liairigit b11611 111K“! by an army advancing from Asia. Yet that is whet. Kenial m‘!!! fl-fiémlft l! he makes up his mind to deft the Brltlsh,_ i‘ the following year to the Cities- Three Peninsula:- The city with" ltii suburbs is fllfmfid by 1W0 Ellwtleon and one #55110"! Peninsula. The European‘ part consists of Stambotil, where stand most of the Turkish public and. private buildings, and 1., the old site of Byzantium, which wag - captured by the Ottoman Turksin 1458. Peru contains most of the ftlfellfll residences, and at its tip ll. lfle commercial quarter of Gal. ntalThe Asiatic peninsula ls Sen. turf. In some places the Hosphoc "F: la only a llllll’ ivmiie wide which» leads iiFrencli expert to remarlrtliat the Turk‘ '- four-high "lune could COIIIIHIPI" ti“. l-fupo.‘ 19m quartet-bi cen.~iu.,_-:iii-.p-.-.Ai Mme points the Bosphorus is too Harrow to nennlrmucii freeitemrei operation kbattleshlpsi but, 5,1 _ it gives plenty of llooiri for manoeuvring, aim to pm. Veg.‘ the ram from iii-ingot; th ‘Runs to ihear on Pet-a it cer- lllflly would not be necessary for @116 summer-me» niece them- selves immediately in from o; mu pm‘ of ceiisimiiieiiie, 9g . Dyulally since the heavy guns have l.,"'l$;0|'.Wl!fly miles or more "Ne! on be iiiietgscii: it will baseman for the "rum to lil- fih "' lhisplahnla" ‘ w. 11m . out em all v, Early in the thirteenth century it , iiwpthmlmulswm am ‘mum; port guns heavy enough to answer: the guns of thefiritish warships over a country more fitted for the operation of goats than heavy Being without on which it has proved pregnaible before. Moreover, there is ‘the pro- bability that if there is to be a fight for the city the British will throw up fortifications on lhc Scutarl Peninsula and thus make still more difficult the advance. Many Times Attacked. 1n past attacks upon the city the defenders have‘ always hadau urmyof manoeuvre on the Asiat- ic side and on the occasions when the city has been taken it was flip European flank that proved vulnerable. it has been assailed by the Avnns. Arabs, Bulgars, Yaram glans. Vanetla-na and the Latin gqvvera of Western Europe. Intlie fourth century it was occupied by Constantine the Great. who changed its name from Byzantium, surrendered to the Vauctlans and tier-s, whlletlio Turks captured" ll in 1463. Russia and Austria tried w take it iii nssasoi, and eii three other occasions Russia tried alone. the last occasion Ibe- ,lng ~ln "1854. when. ‘had the city been seriously threatened, i‘. would have been defended not only by the Turks, but by their allies, the‘ British, ‘ri-eiicii and sat‘ dlniane. . Nearly’ Takenl-hy British. l The, Russo-Turkish war _of 1877 18, resulted in ‘Ifarkxey hell}; shorn of V1110“ of her illuropeaii territory. but. the retained-flonstautlnople. iii uie autisaitviitrjei tilt-n the Bulgarians rot within twenty-five mllelfofwthe city at the famous Chatalda litres. In thedGreat War an .0097 __ _ _ the; qty by‘ "fllq-Kfllllllll Tleotf ‘fits fort] on‘ rides of the Dal-item? ellee and the‘ Mormon were rs- duoed. but theflblty was not taken Since than it‘ has been usprted that theittadtt. celaotl ll a time when the Titrklf-wore" reduced to atitelltpt was made to like inelrlnfprepafitvions to ohllulofl the cit! "lnttmove tliolrlieedqa tern to Angora Two months lam nail. but p“. atootlil Mill‘, i "tfiflfl-ltnil 0s!!! '- wen " "coal strike and the textile disturb- s‘ sinllle" big sit-mass, and were . u . the fansourllelllpoll campaign qu _ Capital and Labor More Peaceful WZASHJNIGTQN. ‘Nov. lL-Rela- tlous between Capital and Labor are more peaceful than at any time since the war. Department of Labor officials announced today. For ‘the last three weeks the La- bor Department has been winding upthe strike of the railroad shop- uien and the textile strike in New England. plalned as a severe. nation-wide Summer. it was pointed out today that aside from the (Tonnellaville, Penn. reaction from the strikes last ance, not more than 25,000 men at tho most are involved in industrial disputes. At the high water mark last summer, considerably more than 1.000.000 were on strike The era of quiet is ex-l | " .. i Daily tioiectioiisliii‘ i - Guauiiiglleliicts FPOIII Lfluggg ' eolleailen 4 i‘ SMILES will. cosr vou NOTHING / 0h, let's put away the wi-rry and thc: heartaches fox-awhile, Al}?! look- upon the sunny side of " ~e. . And meet each- rugged‘ obstacle with lust a pleasant smile. And forget aboutthe troubles ‘W i and the strife. r Lefs be glad and we'll be happy and the carewirlll fly away; '3; And we'll ouly,_see uncloudcd "j according to Department of Labor estimates. A MATTER OF SPELLING. "Bill." said a sailor looking up up from his writing. “do you spell ‘sense with a ‘c’ or an ‘s’?" "That depends," replied his friend. “Do you refer to cents, meaning money, or sense, nteaning brains?" “Aw, I don't mean either of them two." was the reply. "What l‘ want to say is "'l ain't seen him senseff PLIMBOIL ‘Samuel Plimsoll. in ~‘tlie middle of the nineteenth century got the skies of blue. r _ remember that a smile is -‘ worth a heartache any day, ' And glad nmlleoicost you uotlr" llig-Jieivrtaobea do. For, Don't be grieving over errors that have been made in the past, . p But resolutely face the glad To- " day‘. We will meet with poms discom- dlortbut thpsehrlals seldom- last, . - If we smile the-doubts and har- rowed fears awly; Let's go singlngolrl-lfdelouruliy. l with a heart that's clad ‘and llEht. Billing other lives with 10y Ind’ v sunshine too. . - . ‘ And remember 713""- 5 ‘mu’ u 1 worth a heartache any filly- first constructive marine lav-a through the British Parliament. _ l XXI THQRQBR ‘time one... Brbelhiitied A h IFYou Have Any Ibubt Give Th orebred a, Try out. . I ' 1- ‘I. And glad ymilles cost you notho I D was fl- u . . , both moderate In pvt» one * realm, tumodxdu at the", Weapons, lays and 6M and u low priced _ . ‘ Ffifm. ant that farmers and others Mill“ . substantial footwear webave : ‘..-L 41i- ‘mi ' l.“