The Clinton News Record, 1918-10-10, Page 7An Excellent
Opportunity
ie afforded every Father and
Mettler to Marta Sort on the
right road to prosperity.
A few dollars invested month.
ly through otrr
Partial Payment Nan
will, in a very tthurt time, give'
hila a dividend paying security,
thus eAeurirlq a good retu',n on
the money invested, and en-
couraging that on his pert to
Increase his capital;
» M. CONNOLLY Sr. CO.
Members Mentreril Stock-)aaohat!1I(1
105.100 `i ran.pr.iii ion Building
Main 1104
• Wee: REAL, QUO,
WOMENINTHE WAR -ZONE
Stolid Attitude of French Peasants
Afraid the Dangers of War.
Nothing is more amazing to the
soldier newly arrived- near the fight-
ing line than the attitude the peasants
of France adopt towards the war. One
talks of the phlegmatic British, hut
few people could be more phlegmatic
"MIR MEN FROM
�. M Autumn
ACROSS THE SEAS" n >LVs
or
CANA I)IAN, AUSTRALIAN AND
N WIN a Iaal'il.) TiIOOPS
lalg;i".h Nmestprpers Stite&t in Glow-
ing TOM s i 1u' ;lcbietentcote
All' i'U:ninion rC.ioldiere,
A.s the tlut.ion lurks bac!c on the.
Set'ord 'of the last wicks it may 'wall
be filled with pride at the thought
oi' th t u eniflcint aeht vemente of i
it 'll.t.,,, Avinies. Canadian, Atte-
leather, and New 'Zeeland troops, as
• well as 'ununynrnu+ liluglish, Scottish
end Weleb regiments, have all in
turn covered themselves with immor-
tn] honor, says the London Daily
Mail.
Their victories are the more glori-
ous because fishy have been won by
men who have fought through four
weary yenrs with steadfast determ-
ination and have 'passed through the
bitter waters of defeat. It is truly a
marvellous Army that day after day
and week after week .is facing pri-
tation and death; that has never lost
than the French workers on the land. ',heart] and that, in the words of one
Let me take you Into the arena of of Napoleon's marshals, never kpows
war. We are leaving the cobbled I when it is beaten, anti is most dang-
Market square of the shell -shattered crone When the enemy imagines that
little village three miles behind our
trenches. The dusty lane leads from
the square to the close zo-_o of war.
As we walk along there Is the wouff,
wouff! of the German Archles, shelling
it. is broken.
Haig aind His Men.
' ir- most salient tl leg about Sir
Douglas Haig's mentions of the
one of our patrol aeroplanes. We gaze troops' engaged at various points is
to see the black bursts dotting I the revelation of the solid, steady
upthe sirssee sec our bur airman -
Welsh ly I work done by English, Scottish, and
banking and twisting to avoid being 1ti slab battalions. No duty comes
hit. The young corn, waving green 1 amiss to them. They are always
on each side of us, presents the false the Tch, hardworking, reliable, says
the Times.
idea hi peace. Thee'are vvomQn• App',reciation of what they_ have
workers here and there on these fields, ' ddne, anti are doing, will make the
backs bent to the scorching sun, their observer all the more ready to give
heads protected by huge straw sun- credit is the Dentition' troops for
bonnets. They do not look up. A their specially brilliant feat of arms.
well -hidden British -battery fires a New Zealand troops entered Shus-
han -salvo. It Makes us start. To paume, after being conspicuous- in
those brown -faced daughters of France the close fighting that went before
it is the common event of the day. it,' fall. The Australian masterly
The fall of an anti-aircraft "dud" capture of St. Quentin on Saturday
creates interest for then] only if it i morning will rank as one of the
falls a few yards from them. 'great single feats of this war. The
These French people, who live , Australian; must he very unpopular
their whole life in communion with
the silent, waving fields are so nega-
tive. We wonder why they are not
the volatile people we anticipated.
Our soldiers are wearing steel helmets
and gas -masks, but the peasants would
not be encumbered with any such pro- court-Queant line.
tection. Their whole demeanor seems The Oanodiuns have many glorious
to suggest a certain fatalism. "If a achievement!, to their credit, but they
shell is meant for us it will hit us, no
matter how or where we live, or what
we do," is their mental attitude.
These young French women are
wonderful. Wherever you go it is
the same. They are up at sunrise,
and work incessantly until dark. There
are no intervals for food, or practically
noire. A dozen shells may drop in the
field where they ato at work. They
e
S
do not show their alarm, although they
must feel frightened, radeship of the British Armies, and
Their menfolk are at- war, and oc- indeed of the Armies of the Alliance.
aasionally they come back from their That is the mortar of the structure of
part of the line to their tiny thatched i 'victory which rises steudfly before
cottage homes, still in the danger- I the eyes of an astonished Germany.
zone. We marvel that they should
not get to Paris, or as far away from
the war as possible; but war cannot
destroy the ties of home, so they come
back here to spend their leave within
bound -of tho guns,
et the moment with the German Gen-
e'r'al Staff. The Canadians—we fol-
low, it will be observed, the eider of
time of recent notable feats by Do-
minion troops—have won imperish-
able fame by heir breach of the Dime
have never surpassed their great deed
of September 2, when they pierced
c defensive system which even time
most sanguine experts believed would
take much time to subdue, rays the
London Times.
This is a bare record of what has
beeteklone in the battle by men from
overseas. They would be quiet: to re-
sentha odiousness of
t comparisons—
alertt.
to insist on the con -tenet corn -
Deaf Airmen..
The Americans have made en as,
tonishing discovery. They have
found out that deaf mutes can be
turned into efficient aviators. There
are, in fact, certain points where the
deaf: man has a distinct advantage
But we in -this country have special
reason to observe—eo that we may
ease ;hr. in ora• memory—the de-
mes of Dominion troops. The mat -
uric: has been abundant in this hatic.
That Impregnable Line.
The Hindenburg or Wotan line
which the Canadians smashed
through on the 2nd of September is
thus described by the Daily 'Tele-
graph:
The Drocourt-Queant, or Wotan
line, the extension northward of the
colossal system of field fortifications
named after Ilindebterg, is n deep -bolt
over the man who can hear. of defences, with. its multiplex trench
For one thing, deaf people are ' systems and jungles of barbed wire,
never sea -sick. They never grow sown thick with machine gun places.
It was the in otection of much more
dizzyowhen in high altitudes—neitherdthan the great concentration of Ger-
mountains nor clouds hold any ter-'
y • man troops' moved up to stem the
,urs for them, Thisahi they d have the feel- British advance in this quarter. It
inn of dread. is due to fact covered the ona.ny's whole readjusted
that deaf mutesn do not possess any I phm. of campaign; the gigantic move -
favor
of. .Motion. Another point in' rent of retreat in which he has been
is noto of the deaf airmailexplosionsisthat he engaged for the past few weeks dc -
h» worried by the fact'that ef peded upan she legendary impregna-
ue,'uplano engines.kupTps hhe brhty of the so-called "switch" line
�' leeks one sense keys all his others.
If the tests which are now being laming neethwards from the junction
conducted in America continue to with the main Hindenburg line oppo-
hear good fruit, a deaf-and-dumb man siterBuliecourt.
will not in the future be necessarily Would it be assaulted now?
.,That
disqualified for the Flying Service. was the question troubling many
minds during the week -end; for this
would be the trench war conte again
with a vengeance, a frontal attack
upon long -prepared positions, s and
those of a strength reputed to be far
greeter char the strength against
which Francn and British blows had
been .dealt in vale in the past two
,rears.
it was a lime o fpainful suspence,
for the prospect opened by a succese-
fml assault would be as dazzling as
the effect of a failure would ,be dis-
heartenitig after so much victory.
But..the nation at home treated ,and
with good :casun, in the generalship
at work in its cause; it felt confident
that no rash decision would lower the
towering prestige well by the armies
since their record of triumph opened.
-The Song of an Optimist.
Did it evrenl.once possess you
As you -walk the path of life
That no matter• what besets you
In this world of toil and strife
There are others just as batt
If even nbt worse offet:han you,
And tholgle you stiller hardship
Others r,ugfe' hardship too?
Learn to take things as they come,
This orad is not so bad:
Yoh Will nei'er inose the 14tie things
Jliat 'on ]lave Heusi' hard,
'Mush trials anti +litres beset you
Why, lint perk right
up
and smite
-.
Vow this thing Of 'feeling ddwncast
le not .oven worth the while.
tao if you think you're out of tach
must bticlt up, boy, Arid grill;
Diemise dull care, display your pluck
And you are mire to will.
And remember through life's journey,
nee scab late you would bemoan,
'hed,t the World smilax witty the smiler
And the griever grieves alone,
Made
to preserve
the fullest
food values
of the
choicest
grains.
4 rioivrehre$en '
PRA Is Deo
.. 1 04 ons
�{b
q
�.A
�j Y d
A
s :r ovta '> 1
en .. s
a•
etr�t. 4s
A Ceesde Peed herd deters I;r� 7.024
Mils latae apron and knickers com-
bined makes a very practical romper.
It saves materiel and does away •witth
washing. McCall Pattern No. 8494,
Child's Romper and Bloomer in one.
In 4 slizels, 1 to 6,years, Price, 15
cent*.
Plaid always appeals in the faill, and
this design is excellent for its use be-
come of the simplicity and straight-
ness of line: McCall Pattern No. 8477,
Ladies' Waist. In 6 sizes, 34 to 44
bust. Price, 20 cents. No. 84.61,
.
84
Skirt. ]n7
sizes,22 to
Laxities' S
k t.
•
waist. Price, 20 centTransfer
s. Tnsftr
Design No. 912. Price, .15 cents.
From Erin's Green Isle
NEWS;, BY MAIL PROM , IRE,
LAND'S SHORES-.
Simrffe little dress with yoke and
sl'eevds ire one, to be slipped on over
elle head. McCall Pattern No. 8552,
Girl's Drees, In 5 sizes, 6 to l;i ye'ars.
Pelee, 20 cents. Transfer De•cign No.
888, Price, 15 cen»:e .
b alcc.r.,,
• I
A band of fun' and at touch of em-
broidery give this wi'mp'le dross the
riIvilege of being termed "dlisthlno-
v0 f' tleCgi1l Pattern Hp, $264,
tions' J; oo& In 9 OUse;f, pied to 20
tg+elt'in, ,Pr'3iet De , 4`li" Mssf'or
Design No, 024. Price, 15 Centts,
rPL'.
J era jnal>tetlla may be Obtained
'tram your lama WOW decibel', 'ar
ram the McCall CO, 70 Monti St.,
Toronto, Dept, W,
All the tree) s acd shrubs whieh pro -
duo robber grow in a belt Around
the World within five degrees of the
equator,
Rappeniug. In the Emerald Isle of
Interest to irish-
men,
An Inter -Allied exhibition of work
done by wounded soldiers was held
in Dublin during August,
James McGrath and Demian Foley
were arrested for showing lights on
the storm' wall at Ardmore.
A memorial service was held h
Derry Cathedral for the Deyrymen
who have fallen in the war,
A well-known resident of Rath-
far'nham has passed away in the per-
son of William Hayes, chemist,
A hearty send-off was given at
Dublin to a party of recruits who
were leaving for a training camp.
The Countess of Randon presided
at a meeting held in Corkin support
of the Nation's Tribute to Nurses.
Commander J. C. Gainford, St.
Lawrence, l>?owth Castle, Co. Dublin,
has been. elected a Commissioner of
Irish Lights.
Elia Kernoff, a Russian, was fined
g5 at the Northern Police Court, Dub-
lin, for failing to register under the
Aliens Act.
The Lord Mayor of Dublin presided
at the 100th Annual meeting of the
Mendicity Institution held recently in
Dublin.
Charles Kelly, Summerhill, Dub-
lin, was fined .25 for selling tea at
more than the price fixed by the
Food Controller.
A successful garden party in aid
of the Irish Prisoners of War was
held at Howth Castle, Co. Dublin re-
cently.
Ata meeting of the Manufacturers'
Agents for Great Britain and Ireland
it was decided to establish a branch
in Dublin.
While searching for• military pro-
perty in Knocicinceyley the police dis-
covered a quantity of hoarded silver,
which they took away.
The Dublin police are making many
arrests of persons whom t they y believe
eve
to be -'absentees from the Military
Service Act.
Two of the missing plate dishes of
the Royal Tyrone Regiment found in
Armagh have been presented to the
Royal Inniskilling Feathers.
The Londonderry Port and Har-
bor Commissioner presented an ad-
dress of welcome to the Lord
Lieutenant on his recent visit.
The death took place recently in
Athlone of John Turhington, for
sixty-six years manager of the Local
Loan Fund Bank.
Five htirtdred workers in the
Portadown weaving factories have
volunteered their services in con-
nection with flax saving.
The Cookstown Urban Council
notified the Recruiting Council that
they would give every assistance
possible to the recruiting scheme.
SHIP'S "LISTENER"
A War Device Which Will Prove -of
Value in Peace Time.
The war has, speeded up all sorts
of contrivances, inventions and in-
dustrie sae some compensation for its
awful wastage of life and limb and
prope'tq, and one thing it has done
which may save countless lives in the
future is to make collisions at sen lir
thick fog at leagt avoceable, if not im-
possible,
It is the submarine uumttce that has
brought this great improvement in the
dangers and risks of navigation' of our
narrow seas to the fore, for the listen-
er has been so mach used and so mutt
improved in under to detect those
undort ea piratical craft that lemdreds
of men cite now wonderfully skilful in
detecting the wirernhouts of something
they can neither see with their ityes
nor hear with their unaided ears. It
will hereadily seen that this
opensens u)
possibilities lvondeiffni list
of fol' Llie
future, not the least being the avoid -
:ince of collision, one of the most
dreadful and deadly dangers of the
deep in times of pence.
Many a 'gallant vessel, after plough-
ing its way from the Antipodes for
weeks, has met its fate in the nape
of another outward bound vessel al-
most within a cable's length of port
on account of the thick mists which
cone down In the Channel. But if
Ievery vessel has its listener both Im-
ran and instrumental, nine -tenths of
these fatal encounters will be avoided.
1Kinerd'p T.lMJntens dares gore, *ie.
WANT
P0411 -TAY)
EMU; an
lilnhest Price* Paid
Prompt l tettime--•No Goma\losioal
P. POULIN & CO:
M 1Mosusooar. 1&arket - Won al
GIRI.SI LEMON JUICE
IS SKIN WHITENER
How to make a creamy beauty lotion
for a few cents,
The juice of two fresh imam' strain-
ed Into a bottle containing three
ounces of orchard white makes a whole
quarter pint of the rmoist. Tenrttl'kable
lemon skin beautifier at about the cost
one nmst pay for a small jar of the
ordinary cold creams, Care should be
taken to strain the lemon Juice through
a• fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in,
thea„this lotion will keep fresh for
months, Every woman knows that
lemon juice is used to bleach and re -
,move such blemishes as freckles, sal-
lowness and tan and is the ideal skin
softener, whitened' and beautifier.
Just try it! Get three ounces of
orehtu•d white at shy drug store and
two lemons from,the grocer and make
tip a. quarter pint of this sweetly Crag -
rant lemon lotion and massage it daily
into the We, neck, nrme and hands.
,As was generally expected the
PPrizedecided to award the Nobel
rize ;for. 1017 or$iterature to one
ga neutral nation, a Neutral nation. The lucky author -
Dr, IC, ajellerup, the distinguished
auieh litteralteur and novelist. Two
nr
best-known works—"The Pil-
grimhis best o 1'
grim Kamanite." and "Minna"• -have
been published in 'Engl'ish,
Minard's Liniment ter sate overvwleere.
BELGIANS FACE
HAD WINTER
R IR
UNPREPARED VOR TIIE RIGORS
OF COLD SEASON
Country on Short Rations—Heat-
Giving Food and New Clothing
'''Not Obtainable.
"Bismarck said he would leave no-
thing to hia.enemies by their eyes to
weep; his successors do not allow us
even a handkerchief with which to
dry them," says a Belgian gentleman
of good standing, in an account of
the unpreparedness of the population
of occupied Belgium for the winter
made recently.
"The popuation of occupied Bel-
gium, already on short rations, can
look forward to the winter with no
prospect of any sufficient provision
against its rigors. All the wheat
grown ill the country is controlled by
the Spanish -Dutch Commission, and
supplemented by corn from America,
but this allows the population only
half a pound of bread a day. Meat
can be procured only by the. rich.
"Potatoes, the staple food of the
peasant ,aro passed through a Ger-
man office and a proportion -handed
over to the communes for distribu-
tion. In 1917 the Belgians received
only 180 pounds of potatoes a head,
far less than the normal consumption
even when other things were plenti-
ful.
A toil spring attachment !has been
invented for holding wash boards hi
tubs,
ISSUE Na
•
M'.he. 'yictarla Cross, �• {*Wrdxmw.p,tvxlltp
When Queen Victoria .erented this • r>it a' lit n t `t' ACiatIl l's WAIS I140
' ues p •tele.. tt'iniahi a i e9 lty»
ardor at the'time of the CrirnOarn ta•nnles ae�i ovarythinrf aT1°tnx•.oa�' 1?r aoa»
war, 64 years ago, she decreed that, airedto, Art Co., 4 I3r'rrnswiek Nv..,,
the mos eheald be wen in the navy
hanging by a blue- ribbon and in the
army'by a red one, Now the dif-
ference between the two armed ear -
vices is done away with, and the 'led
ribbon will be worn with the Victoria
Crass by sailors as well as icy sol -
1 i
ie rs.
Iiiivaid s Liniment c o„ blunted.
Dear Sirs; -I uun recommend A'lI-
NAI1D S LINIMI'.NT for )Thoumatient
and Rprains; as I have used it for both
with excellent moults,
Yours truly,
T. 13, LAYJO11S,
St. John,
vv.
A'bi'P'JC7"�
I71AJ,Mn 11.4X, Qiidem.) 7 iro.Iv'I7Jtien;
Jt? Jiakhwrll. Olmn,tario, Heid hires,
I letlltweih uet,rr
"Ole NA1i 1
rCI.I. i cliirm%n NJ!!i't'SUrrili
yT nd Jeb printing plant in I7attter
Culo.'`u. tau enc r. m'' i it
t4 11 Io a akSle, h. W.
go for 51.100 on quick Sale. sox 69.
Wilson ?iibllehine co.. Md., Toronto,
•
"eVleielgi2Y NI,IWNl'AP79Etvon SAT.]
lit Now t)nta 1 Owner oing I
Prance. an ce. l'fIlm ren tzsee. Worts double
Lf
amount. Aunty .1. 1L, elm Wilco
Publishing en., Limited, Toronto.
311a130Viai.1 11MOti>5
/' '141 NOM 7`n;hk'oRS, LUMPS, wry,
see internal and external) mined with
out pain by our borne treatment. Writ
us halo's fee late.. Ur. Bell:nen Med lmt
Co., Limited, Cotllnewoed, Ont,
ADIF)S WANTED 7'O DO PJ.AIIlI
.1J and light sewing at home, whole o5
spare time, good par, work sent any disc
tense, ehariies paid,, Send stamp for pare
tit:Oars. National Alanufaetur ng Comm'
Petry, Mon tree 1.
A;
There is stillirlent.y of room at the Help speed up production in 1919,e
top, but the top is higher up than it Start now.
used to be,
MONEY ORDERS.
The sale tray to send money by mail
IS by Dominion Express Money Order.
A wholesome and appetizing kind
of muffin is made of nuts, bran and
honey. ._ -. —
1Sfnard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
Tho most important point in filling
a silo is to see that the tramping is
well done.
The Lash of the Conqueror.
"Cooking presents another difficul-
ty, as coal is painfully scarce and gas
and electricity short. Lighting has
to be reduced to a minimum. Heat -
giving food, such as oils and fats, is
almost unobtainable, and new clothes
are a thing of the past. Very little
gas is obtainable for heating purpos-
es, all wobd, even standing trees, be-
ing requisitioned by the occupier, who
uses the trunks and larger branches
for military purposes, releasing the.
small branches, which again may only
be sold by his agents. A kind of
peat, formed by the silt of canals,
reached fancy prices, sometimes cost-
ing $5 a cubic yard.
"Candles have disappeared, and the
only thing obtainable is the -pre-war
farthing dip, which is used sparingly
on all occasibns. Brussels street
lighting is so restricted that vehicles
have to carry bells after dark. 'the:
tiny light burning before the taber-
nacle, so dear to the pious souls, has
to be abandoned altogether or lie re- j
placed by an electric bulb.
"Trade is hampered
by regimeime of
per mits made out to' bearer and with-
out. which nothing may be offered for
sale. These are issued by German
bureaucrats, who usually require
bribes."
O--e—O—.O—O—o^O—O—O—O 0 0 0
YES! MAGICALLY!
CORNS LIFT OUT
WITH FINGERS
0 0 0
You say to the drug store elan, "Give
ale a mull bottle of freezone," This
will cost very little but will positively
remove every hard or soft corn or cal-
lus from one's feet.
A few drops of this new other con-
pon,d fipplied directly upon a tender,
aching corn relieves the soreness In-
stantly, and soon the entire corn or
callus, root and all, dries up and can
be lifted offwI
h the fingers.
q
This new way to rid ode's feet of
corns was introduced. by a Cincinnati
man, who says t:hat.freezone dries in
I a moment, and simply shrivels up tine
corn or callus without Irritating the
surrounding skin.
Don't let father die of infection or
lockjaw from whittling at his corns,
but clip this out and make hint try it.
If Mar draggie( hasn't any freezono
tell trim to order it small bottle front
]Pis wholesa--Tle drug house for you.
S
COLD STORAGE
An Invention of Immense Benefit to
Great Britain To -day.
Our allies nueil foot] as much as w'a
do, nod the dMMCteultios of mantle in
Europe are great, soya an English
newapnpe'. Ti' we had to depend upon
near neighbors for supplies we should
starve, in spite of our Fleet, The
prime fact of the present war is that
the food which Is•saving 13rltitin comes
from vast distances, is brought over
thodsands of leagues of ocean, through
tropic heat and torrid zones, in short,
the food we eat is often nm,mtlle old
when We eat it. Tot it is fresh and
wholesome.
The man who (line poasiltle the
hnportation ef frozen neat to Briteht
probably saved the Empire, Ile vv'as
a P'renchman--Charles Politer. Ills
discoveries regarding the laws of ee-
fn'igen'ation have bear recognizail
scientists and capitalists In every
country on the globe that counts, :and
to•tlay literally millions of tons of per-
ishable food, which but two or three
decades mei) could not possibly have
reached our shores in a fit state for
consumption, are to -day conveyed with.
ease from the Antipodes, tlfe Argen-
tine, Brazil, the par West of the Ain.
erica') continent -in, fact, wherever
food is in abttlldaace.
Our Fleet makes it possible, but if
thescience of efrl •
'f l tl r
were not U
it g
eratioli and the invoition of cold stor-
age the Fleet ovou would be helpless
today. Yet like a good many other
great bouefaetors of the human race,
Charles Peltier died. in. a small flat in
Paris, almost penniless, in his eighty-
sixth year.
ZitmthiZeii L,iniifrori.t Paw UM dreet,
el?
it.:,-
qr
l
MAKEabecaa al t WHOM
r iminma all guess
l*,•+ ', .Iork. Makes fight,
wholesome bread,
ftI'r•»' rutl•, etc., without
Ee trouble. Sava flour
and helps conserve
�� fit
Nation's toad
� "apply'
Convenient, quick
nod dean—bend,
I,N en» do not touch dough.
Delivered all shames
paidtoyew home, or
through your dealer—
four loaf eine 02.75,
eight loaf sine5).25.
62.75
61.20
E. T. WRIOHTCO.
HAMt6TON
eA t.AU.
�,,.�_...r••�,.,,�..Ai%m w:wr Wit.
/ ( EEP YOUR SifOES NEAT
t
a
r'
WHEN NEURALGIA
if r 1.
ATTACKS NERVES 1
Sloan's Liniment scatters
the congestion and
relieves pain
A little, applied-ritIwtt rubbing'
will penetrate immediately and rest -
and soothe the nerves.
Sloan's Liniment is very. effective}
in alfa-iug' external pains, strain9e
bruiuee, aches, stiff joints, sore muse,
des, lembago, neuritis, sciatica, rheuse
uratic linage%
Keep a big bottle always on hen
for [teeny use. Made in Canada,.
Druggists everywhere,
l'+
Dandruff Kills the Hair
CuticuraKillsDandruff
Try one treatment with Cuticura
and see how qui ckly it clears the scalp
of dandruff and itching. On retiring
gently rub spots of dandruff and itch•
mg with Cuticura Ointment. Next
morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap
and hot water. Rinse with tepid
water. Repeat in two weeks. Noth-
ing better or surer.
- --- Sample Each Free 6r Mail. Address post.
card: "Cutieure, Dept. N. Beaton, U.S. A."
Sold by dealers throughout the world.
t.
SAFETY
Of Supreme
Necessity
Every soldier's kit
must contain certain
things if he is to pre-
sent that mart ap-
pearance which is so
necessary in our Army.
Of these probably the
mnstimportant is his razor
it must "staid -tip"
nailer all conditions -- it
noel be reedy at all time
;o that he, can get a clean,
velvety, comfortable share
in the shortest time. That
is only possible with the
AutoSirop Safety Razor
because it is the only one
that 'sharpens its oris
blanks antomat!cplly.
Include an !hutoStrop in
)'our next Overseas pack-
• age,
Price $5.00
At teepee dealer; everywhere
.. _wfb' rap
r:, t, ,,. rd 41, ;I.
AutoStrop
Safety Ra'ror Co.
Melee
hili II,,onoeie, Oct.
• l I
veohs,hDy�
'i dQ,. 7C11174
ce Lu" a wdeJJ,t'il
It is every woman's duty to Rio -
pear as attractive us possible. So
when your skin begins to look
oily end shiny Just apply a light
touch of Ingram's Velveola Sour-
eraine Face Powder. It makes
your complexion smooth and
clear, butes the small blemishes,
and stays on until washed off. It
is so fine in texture that you can
scarcely see it. (50c)
For the sake of a fresh healthful
complexion use Ingram's Milk-
weed Creast. It cleanses the tiny
pores, soothes and softens the.
skin tissue, and keeps the com-
plexion healthful because of its
tlterapeu'teproperties. Two sizes,
SOc. and 51.00. Your dniggiet con
show you a complete line of In -
gram's toilet aids, including
Zodente for the teeth, 25d.
A Picture
With Each Purchase
Bacvom'n flow.
Toilet yes
side or package
mo yf our
alaartiica pertra rist is ea you,
ed molls
• piett0e actress. Retch time yen get .r
tiofinforrerent nortrit en urhome. Ask3 e,rdtcollec-
tion
ger-
''
F. F. Ingram' Company
NlmLer.Ontario (il9)
j It' S P V E a pA N ---$VY' HIRST'S I
neva-eels.
at il• 1
ire nCl 8
I�jj a honor 1 I Od.
awlbecede n'talae, eeeiy 0, r i. qq ii
eatelnctnbaa rest a 01110ll lndulivbfortmltopjewireenimhikcm ae d)
isiSnrlSi 6otq h, oat sae ester tvyalntu nasals, icor Veer 4o ocaul e it,. '
fermi- ietk_ llente erituek-buyuiraMe-enveaneveubottle8e t
Ilio bra a. lias a humored t'�red iste
At (Note" Ortvr(taUs MBA' EDAM' CO., tlarrdltos (,reads, y
t teeer(t,?".it.
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