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av N MAC|(|E
nu consider the most intorcn » folk you met?” vi a generation pa5t— _" m_ ,, "Cissie Loftus. She rmJ~,.~. at genius shines like an 1-,». glow that draws and hold. V, roman who gives out so in] 7 she wasn't dressed-up m , D to much~blIt she vr... ,~ it. She invited me to 21 mm often called upon to he, I ._ -.95 at the same timr» .1" ;. an?” difficult role.” Luder has an entirely clmm tage. One can imuginr zonfident of this very d a sympathetic listom-. his early struggles; illvm.‘
L“./" M‘
Jan I (7IL1«=-3.
4 - as/wide” __(//t
Ii‘. V :~u"
s conl pits, and his ulimlil
in short time beforv. 1" “H riefIto'somc untlerstnnr I V now," he told Mrs. /‘ll (. n I'm acting, I crm YOTL"
‘ ‘. 1 one of his bill ““‘]‘e"“,;,'_p.' arry Lauder. Would be W ‘_ .
plnce—u giggle ““"‘3.’ P i . \- d happened the 183* W“ ‘
1 I1 ‘- dience in the 1151"‘ “I. my '‘ me, “today. two E" rmnnce, put me 0“ "‘5;Dn
invited Mrs. Antler H11 ,1: ‘
ii there with horn" ‘'1 L 1...‘, (Conlmurtl "7
May, 1932
THEY
STA RVE STA RVE
CANADIAN Home
JOURNAL
STARVE THEMSELVES TO DEATH WHEN YOU
;::‘::.§:“..‘::;:“..;“.%..’?S LEAVE IT 10 nu IE cmm T0 Klll nu; MIJTHWORMS
Mornwonms work like moles and do their work of destruction out of sight. Yes, deep down in the heart of closet or trunk their powerful jaws are busy—busy eating wool. Hundreds of
dollars in damage, but not a warningl
You can't fight rnothworms in the open because they will not come out in the
open. The only sure way is to lay siege to
their hiding place and J‘tz17'11e them to death. Larvex can starve them because wool is their food and Larvex makes that wool uneatable. This Larvex process is
called mothpraafing, and it is something
absolutely new.
Lzzruex i.r dzficrmt fram irI.rz-criride .r[¥I‘fl_)'J", because with Larvex you can gar z//mrd of the mothworms, even before the eggs are hatched. And then the worms starve right on the wool.
Larwx ii" :1/ficrcrzt fram mat/1-541/J and other smelly devices. Bad odors will not kill mothworms, because these little enemies of mankind mmzat mzell.’ And think how delightful it is to be able to mothproof with Larvex which gives no odor whatever to your clothes.
SPRAYING
In 1931 we mm crmlm. We let I/hm pt:/z_V mill-
wnrm: dmraj pm but mml amt; and up/mlrterrv We put (mt mm‘ in (/1! urnmg /um! of "pm/(man,
\ Hut rm Irlufrlkar :1] t//at kind during l9)Z ll‘? l /rial/rpraaftil Mr u‘aa/rm’ mt/I Lari-(.\'. New Inuit al time mat/mwrnu.’ Em} am smrvctl tn r/Mt/h
WILL
LAST A
Lartm‘ it ziiflcrenr from /mgr and /Jaxer, which try to lock the mothworm out, but often lock him inside because he gets there first. There is no wrapping or pack- ing clothes away when you use the Larvex moth proofing mcthocl.
Yes, Larvcx is quite difiercnt from all other ways of combating moth (lam-.1ge. Larvcx starts from the beginning. It works on the cloth and ignores the moth alto- gether. It's there before the mothworm arrives and it's there to st;1_\'. You treat the c/or/1 with Larvcx and you make it absolutely I/nmm/zlt. You leave it to the cloth to kill the mothworm by starving him to death.
Lurvct is simply r[vr./_m/ on tours, suits, rugs and upholstery. It is odorless, non- injurious, non—inll;Imm:1blc. It is very economical, only $1 for 16 ounces. :\ whole yc.1r's mothprooling ofu suit, for example, costs less than a single pressing. Lnrvex is sold everywhere bv drug and dcpnrtnmnt stores. The Larvex Corpora- tion, Ltd., Ste. Thcrcsc, P. Q.
WHOLE YEAR