I «/ mm I Mi i^^^B • (Sifts for men ? Here's the universal answer — make it a Valet Safety Razor set! It's so practical ! He'll use the Valet you give him every day of the year.. He'll love the quick, simple way it works —no fiddling with bits and pieces, for the razor's ready already. Just a few brisk strokes across the strop — and the blade comes up keen and smiling, all set for a smooth shave. Yes, a Valet's the answer every time. Prices go from 4/-up to 50/-. The set illustrated is the NO. 56 travelling set. In red-grained folding case, contains self-stropping Valet razor, strop and five blades ; also two \-j\c Mouldritetubescontaining Valet shaving brush and stick of shaving soap ■' ° RJUTISH' MADE • OF ALL DEALERS VALET MOR^GOOD Sffm . The Human Story of the War told by Actual Eye-witnesses GREAT iWJ/A& WAR ... jj ™^!L U ium Sir John Hammerton Undying Memories of \ PART ONE | 1914-1918 jON SALE TODAY [ THIS magnificent new work is the ■ Britain's Great War 5 firrt and only authentic record of ■ . __j^ ■ the outstanding events of those his- a ueaaer ■ toric years of 1914-1918 —told by actual . ■ The Rt. Hon. DAVID m eye-witnesses; no greater humandocu- 3 LLOYD-GEORGE ■ ment has been completed throughout ■ ASQUITH Speaks ■ the ages. , "' . ._- . re 4. ■ «I Was There" brings together in com- J „ .. °-^L™ ~t 5 pact form the most vivid, the most ■ Svcrlon j JcniiiTu " poignant, the most human experiences ■ OXFORD and ASQUITH ■ of those who took part —no matter how 5 Thunder Over ■ humble a part—in those world-shaking m PARIC Z . events of more than twenty years ago. ■ r/*ma ■ "I Was There" is the keynote of every S Sir PHI LI P GIBBS ■ chapter. Nothing has its origin ou«ide ■ Scenes during French ■ of immediate personal experience. The ■ Mobilization a entire literature of the Great War, pub- J The Clock Ticks at ■ lished during its progress and since ■ ... AHmiraltv 5 November nth, 1918, has been ran- ■■ the *? m}™ J**. 2 ■ sacked to secure thembst vivid and vital J By the Rt. Hon. WINSTON ■ personal revelations of that human story, B CHURCHILL, P.C., M.P. v the telling of which has been too long ■ m v c: rst . n a ys at Z delayed, and the proper telling of which ■ -my first uays at - has been achieved triumphantly in the £ war ■ pages of this amazing work. ■ By Ad m i ral Si r ROG E R m This is not just another war book; it is J KEYES, G.C.B. ■ the ONE book that brings home to every- ■ fhe First Hours at Z one the real meaning of war. Only a book ■ MONS ■ , written by those who experienced war in " . **y *_*r____ r ■ all its phases could do this ; the contri- ■ By Major A. CORBETT ■ butors to "I Was There" are men ■ SMITH* . who KNOW. B When the Foreign ! The illustrations to thii unique pubheauon in- ■ nHi Bt,.w*A*wa.A " elude gome of the most remarkableaction photo- ■ wince DlUnaereu ■ graphs of war ever taken, in addition to many ■ By v HAROLD !! hundreds of photographic studies of warareas. as ■ >lirni end m d - they were in 1914-1918 and as they are today. #■ INH-ULoUIn, rl.r. ■ , I Fired the First Shot ■ . t \^^^^^r>l '^a^^^^KtMm An Historic Episode ■ s\~)f^fKK^^^tFl^oJ^^^B&m Related for the First Time* J t^^^/jm^^^mjßifVKfßL By Sgt. E. THOMAS, M.M. ■ MmmiMrU*wL*^ll^^Kfc. rice in Australia and ■ m J/|^2^^Hrf J^^Kt New Zealand ■ ■ iLjiCHM^^B \f ■ Obtainable all Newsagents and .Bookstall s
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 132, 1 December 1938, Page 30
Word Count
568Page 30 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 132, 1 December 1938, Page 30
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