March 15, 1917 
LAND & WATER 
i) 
is gour pen 
"too proud 
to ujrite ? 
r^ 
ft 
/5 'OKr /«« 
^io^prov.d to rvnte"? 
Tbe Onoto Pen is British. 
" Neutral " pens may fail you 
at the critical moment; the 
liritish-madeOnoto is always 
ready for action. It is neyer 
" too proud to write." 
It's nib is always wet with 
fresh ink. Its holder is 
always dry. 
The Onoto Self-filling 
Safety cannot leak. It can- 
not "sweat" ink as foreign 
pens often do. It is the one 
really satisfactory Self-filling 
Safety Pen. 
When you are choosing 
your pen, see what is written 
on ' the hblder. Make sure 
that you are getting a British 
Onoto : not a pen " Made 
in " anywhere else. 
Onoto Self-JiUing Safety Fountain 
Fens at all Stationers, etc., from j2/6 
ufiwards. Also Onoto-valveless, for 
those who do not want a Self-filling 
Safety Pen, from 10/6 upwards. 
the British Pen 
is the Onoto 
THO..IAS DE r.A RUE S: CO., T.Tn . prvmir, row, fc 
FOR GOD, KING & GOUNTRY. 
The Church Army 
has several hundred RECREATION HUTS, 
TENTS AND CLUBS F(3R GIVING REST and 
COMFORT to the BRAVE MEN of BOTH 
SERVICES in the Home Camps and in Flanders, 
France, Malta, Egypt, Salonica, Mesopotamia, East 
Africa and India. More than ONE HUNDRED on 
the West Front are actually UNDER THE 
ENEMY'S SHELL -FIRE. Sixty in Egypt. 
MORE ARE URGENTLY REQUIRED. 
Huts cost £409; Tents £150 ; Equioment £100 ; Week's Working, 
£5 Abroad ; £2 at Home. 
Cheque.s crossed " Barclay's, a/c Church Army," payable to Prebendary Carlije, 
D.D.. Hon. Chief Secretary, Bryanston Street, Marble Arch, London, W. 1 . 
With 
Hunter 
Coverf 
£3 15 
Gold, 
£8 10 
Qjj^ 
LTD 
"Active Service" WRISTLET WATCH 
Fully Luminous Figures & Hands 
Warranted Timekeepers 
n Silver Cases with Screw Bezel 
and Back, ^.-i ii%. Gold ,£8. 
th Hunter or Hall-Hunter cover. 
Silver, C;{ l.~s. Gold, its lOs. 
Others in Silver from .4iX£ XOs. 
Gold from ,£0. 
Military Badge Brooches 
J^i^y Regimental ^adge Perfectly 
Modelled. 
PUICES ON APPLICATION 
Sketches sent tor approval, 
25 OLD BOND ST., W. 
and 62&64 LUDOATE HILL, E,C. 
A New Weatherproof 
That Has No Openings in Front 
THE BURFRON 
TiREGlSTEKED',: 
Illustrated 
Naval or 
Military 
Catalogues 
Post Free 
IN the past, no 
matter how water- 
tight the material 
of a weatherproof was, 
the openings hetweeii 
the button-holes and 
the loose flaps below 
the bottom button 
were always the weak 
points. On the other 
land, the back being 
the least exposed was 
quite sectire. 
y^l The rnison d'etre of 
THE BURFRON is 
to obviate 
advantages, 
i^ 1 1 s u r e 
powers of 
these dis- 
and to 
increased 
protection 
Every 
Burberry 
(rorrnent 
la liihelled 
Burberrys. 
THE BURFRON 
' Every Officer should see it before making new 
provision against wet. A smart lop-coal which 
defies the weather in its wildest moods-" 
—Land & Water. 
Officers' Complete Kits in 2 
to 4 Days or Ready for Use. 
by means of new 
methods f)f design and 
fastening. 
T4K BURFRON ' 
literally an aU-roiiiid 
weatherproof, built 
on such entirely new 
principles that from 
chin to knees it has 
no openings 'througli 
which wet oT wind 
can penetrate. 
In addition, the front 
is constructed to form 
a conduit over which, 
ill heavy ■ rain, the 
water riijis away clear 
of the legs, and of the 
legs and seat when 
sitting down. 
On horseback this 
special front acts as a 
splendid riding-aoron 
that needs no adjust- 
ment, yet is always 
in position to prevent 
wet reaching the 
knees, thighs and 
saddle. 
The fastening of THE 
BURFRON is sim- 
plicity itself; only 
two buttons are re- 
quired — one at the 
collar and the other at 
the waist. The belt 
can be dispensed with 
if desired. 
i_ 
NAVAL & 
MILl FARY 
WEATHER. 
•PROOFS. 
During the War 
BURBERRYS 
CLEAN AND 
RE - PROOF 
oncers* •* Bur- 
berrys," Tielock. 
ens, Burfrons, 
and Burberry 
Trench-Warras 
FREE OF 
CHARGE. 
Half Weight— Double Warmth. 
Burberry Naval and Military Weatherprcofs are half the 
weight of those loaded with oiled-silk, rubber, and (he 
like air-tight, circulation-retarding fabrics, whilst the 
warmth naturally generated is doubled in value as 
circulation is aided. 
A practical example of the ill-effects induced by non- 
ventilating agents is to be found in an angler wad np. 
He invariably suffers from cold feet, the result of impeded 
circulation and the exclusion of fresh air, although his 
footwear readily proves the pre ence of perspiration. 
BURBERRYS &on 
8 & 10 Boul. Malesherbes PARIS; and Provincial Agents. 
