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Show 1 pTiCURA HEALS " ;i ITCHIKGBURNING j i On Body, Kept Getting j Worse.CausedLossofSleep, i -I , j 'My whole body was affected with : n itching and burning which kept t getting worse all the time. It would break out in bunches that resembled blisters. They caused great Iobs of sleep and itched constantly and when they were scratched they scaled, j i Theokin was sore and later on scales formed. ' i "I had the trouble nearly a year when 1 I tried Cuticura. When I had used six cakto of Soap and eight boxes of Oint- meat I was healed," (Signed) Miss Loulao Belkch, Three Forks, Mont. Most skin troubles might be prevented pre-vented by using Cuticura Soap a.nd Ointment for every-day toilet purposes. "Ort&V Jn Addrwa poet-card-. fSg' Ointoot S oJ SOc. Talcum iu. j BANK WITH US! This is a simple little Invita- un !n itself, but it means to the , Hrm, Merchant, or Corporation j who accepts, Substantial Assist- I ance in Business, Security for Funds and all the Conveniences j a well organized Banking sys- 1 tern can extend. Established 1884. Member Federal Reserve ; Bank. COMMERCIAL NATIONAL I BANK Exhausted Bodies TIRED NERVES Relieved Absolutely by Cadomene Tablets The Real, Satisfying Tonic. Sold by All Drugrjistc. Tho highest tide in tho world is in Bay of Fundy, between Nova Scola and New Brunswick Tho tide there sometimes rises to tho height of seventy-one feet. oo N. Constant, a man's education la never complete until ho can tell when a woman's liat is on straight. for women , ll ' "For MEN must FIGHT and WOMEN must WORK39 '"' . I "i - riPWELVE MILLION women earning make her a lighter one, a "woman-size" lathe, lfl v 1 money; women's money in women's and she'll turn it faster than ever a man i jt JL pockets! turned his! M -,vy And sixty years ago there were not half "a They shortened the hours ! Provided rest Iflf . V million women in "gainful" occupations in rooms, cloak rooms dining rooms. Made lf .-" ' the United States. over factories employing thousands of women ) Women chauffeurs ! Women police! equipped them with specially made-to- I'll rrr r , A l i l . f easure - to - worn an - size machinery I N Ifl vj Women farmers! At least two million of , I I them. Women elevator boys! Everywhere! And women, under these new conditions, , . M Women street car conductors thousands of were actually delivering as mucp. as a man, H them! Women in war industries Already a and in many cases more. ... H million and a half of them! This is the extraordinary story that was w Even before the war became our war, told by Pictorial Review to American women. . ' 1 before our men were called, our women were t ' XL following eagerly the record of what The spirit of American women H women were doing on the other side With a spiritas alert as our women's i . to keep their countries industries g& own, Pictorial Review, even before -. - 1 oin 6vfl-n we entered the war, sent Mabel , w Were women "over there" really doing J pSSr-LJL Potter Daggett abroad to record the - 9 men's work just like men? That splendid work that women - M was the breathless question! SPfrBr were doing in Europe- Factories made over I T I With a vigor worthy of its I to fit women 1,500,000 WOMEN readers, Pictorial Review, : f to ui women in war industries since the war, has kept those And the extraordinary alone readers constantlyin touch with 'M answer came under the au- 205 ooo in canneries the broader issues of a world ; M thority of the British WarOffice 275,000 in textile mills opened wide to women. ; m itself: That in the 1701 jobs at 212,000 sewing machine And Pictorial Review read-' IB .,u:u operators . tfiH v.-' ,vu,"u ru.lill u " 130,000 in knitting and ho- crs have responded splendidly : ?J ';' a woman is just as good as a sIcry miIIs tothese contributionsandtothe 1 a man, and for some of them 100,000 women mechani- broad, comprehensive work ; M V" better." 100,000 S munition plants Pictorial Review has always l' 1 But the great lathes? Could -100,000 making military endeavored to do in matters ' ' II a woman turn them? Just equipment of vital interest to women. . t ; 1 t . 95,000 shoe workers m . v Topics which have been discussed in a broad J comprehensive way by Pictorial Review : ' I MABEL POTTER DAGGETT IDA CLYDE CLARKE HELEN RING ROBINSON ARTHUR T. VANCE S the firt woman to be sent abroad Pictori, 1 Review's Washington the first woman senator in tho Editor of Pictorial Review, to study tho changes in woman's Editor, through Pictorial United States contributed a has constantly through his own life caused by the war, pointed Review's Bureau in Washington, series of articles "Preparing editorials urged a broader recpg- O nut in nine articles the deep bear- has contributed in the most prao- Women for the Ballot" and urg- nition of women's awakening Ji ing these changes will have on tical way to women's national ing a broader interest in civio and their share in national JI woman's life in the future. service. and national issues. work. 1 ,10 II Lareest 2l)-cent circulation in the world 1,500,000 cobies monthly - ' f, ' 19 PICTORIAL REVIEW AMERICA'S GREATEST WOMAN'S MAGAZINE f The Pictorial Review Company f 20 cents the copy K New York At news-stand everywhere $2.00 the year ! K Bluhill cheese fits in on that auto tripS J Hair Under Arms j Jj l)e9nimefc ; For remoTlngr hujr from vaSer t j the anai there 1 nothing: an Kauai- I tnrr ob DeMlracIe the orltfm! I j M liquid. It In ready for Instant ne ' ' I r I and ' the ia!eket and iaovt cob- ; fit Tenlent to apply. De Miracle im m equally efllcncloa for remoTlsar j M hoJr from face. Beck, arm or i sfl limbi. j f all Only sennJne DeSIlraele kaa a 1 I money-back guarantee 1h caem ' 1 If pnekaee. At nil toilet counter ! iWi In OOc, VI nnd $2 sizes, or by aall H Kj from ua In plain rrrapper da je- i S ffij celpt of price. R all FREE book ned la plaia Mi ealed envelope en refaert I Y ml rteMlraele, Park Are. and 12&ta I f |