Land and watek 
1 6, 
Ul 
More letters showing 
hov/ OXO is valued 
at the Front 
The reviving, strength-givin? power of OXO has 
received remarkable endorsement in the great war. 
It is invaluable for all who have to undergo exertion, 
either to promote fitness or to recuperate after fatigue. 
OXO aids and increases nutrition ; it stimulates and 
builds up strength to resist climatic changes ; it is 
exactly suited to the needs of our men at the front, and 
in training, as well as for general use in the home. 
From a member of llie London 
Scottish with the British Expe- 
ditionary Force. 
And so after all these liorrors 
liere I am living in a cow byre 
some way away from tlie firini; liii3 
to recuperate. IJke manna, how- 
ever, your tjlorioiisbo.'t has arrived, 
coffee and milk, butter, Brands 
Essence, OXO- oh joy ! Never 
was seen a more glorious box, and 
all my cow byre is interested in it. 
We start to-night on our feast, and 
I am to thank you both from all 
my section for being so generous. 
Reprinted from the "Globe," 
Dec. 12th, 1914. . 
A gentleman ha» «ent u« a letter 
from hia son in the Army Service 
Corps in which he says : — 
I must tell you how delighted I 
was to get the OXO. It is great. 
You should have seen us preparing 
it. We made a wood fire by the 
roadside, and boiled the water in 
an empty petrol can — enough for 
three of us. The OXO was made 
in my dixie can, in which we soaked 
some biscuits. We then placed 
the can on the fire to boil ; all the 
time it was raining hard, but we 
were repaid by the satisfaction we 
gcit for our efforts. 
I shall be very pleased to get 
some more when you are sending 
^ain, as a good cup of OXO 
before we turn in at night con- 
siderably warms us up. 
From an A.B. on H.M.S. •• Landrj.il." 
In my opinion there is no better gift anyone could make 
fo our bluejackets, especially at a time like this, and when the 
Bights (and days) are so nippy as they are at present. 
Personally I think OXO is worth its weight in gold, 
OXO is made in a moment and, 
witli bread or a few biscuits, 
sustains for hours 
THE "X" TYRE 
Most motorists will have noted the renewal of attacks 
on the "X" (or Dunlop) tyre made in the general 
and motor press by a foreign tyre manufacturer. By an 
inaccurate comparison an attempt is made to show 
that his own tyres are superior to Dunlop tyres costing 
25 per cent. more. 
A mantifacturcr ivho is reduced to such a pass 
cannot have much confidence in his own goods. 
DUNLOP 
tyres, on the other hand, sell on their own merits alone, and 
have from the very first been advertised in accordance with the 
British standard of fair play and good taste. 
In relation to the service they give, the prices are lower than any 
other, and that those prices are accepted and endorsed by the 
public is proved by the fact that since the first Dunlop motor 
tyre was made the demand has always exceeded the supply. 
The Dunlop Rubber Co., Ltd., Founders throughout the World 
of the Pneumatic Tyre Industry, Aston Cross, Birmingham ; 
1 4 Regent Street, London, S.W. PARIS : 4 Rue du Colonel Moll. 
DUNLOP SOLID TYRES FOR HEAVY COMMERCIAL VEHICLES 
'!0-' 
Country Ltie 
Smoktng Mixture 
This delightful comLtnatton of tKe Best 
Tobaccos IS iol<l tn two strengtlis 
(MILD anJ MEDIUM 
5 
D. 
^r ounce 
1/8 
per 
1-lt. tm 
PSS 
N.B. "Country Life t» t""^'''" only 
in original f^cKets an<l tins by tke 
Alanuiacturcrs : 
JOHN PLAYER & SONS. NottlncK. 
The Imperial Tobacco Co. (of Ot. Britain & Irelaml), Ltd. 
MMMHMMMHMHMMMMMMHMMMMMM 
212 
