GIRLS! IMAGINE YOUR COM--1 PLEXION CLEAR, ROSY, VELVETY * When your complexion worries you * and you feel that your skin is un- | attractive, instead of fresh and smooth, look to the soap you are using, Many soaps are lnore harmful to the skin than actual neglect, for they contain alkali, which makes the skin harsh and dry. Rexona Skin and Facial Soaii is specially prepared skin soap, free from i alkali, and contains just the right i amount of the gentle healing mediea- ; lion of J’exona, the Rapid Healing i Ointment, which is so widely used in i the treatment of skin and scalp troubles. Rexona Soap relieves the clogged pores and tendency to redness, cleans away the blotches and oiliness, and brings back that natural beauty to the skin which is the heritage of every girl. ' . Rexona Soap makes the best shampoo for the hair. It cleanses the scalp from dandruff, and leaves the hair rich and glossy. Rexona Soap, Is bd per tablet. Obtainable everywhere. A WARNING DREAM. LONDON, December 2. Mr J. G. Lockhart, in his interesting book, "‘.Mysteries of the Sea” tells the story of a warning dream which saved the life of one of the passengers in the steamer Waratah, which was lost at sea, while bound from Durban to Capetown in 1900. I lie passenger, Mr C'. Sawyer, landed at Durban, though lie had hooked his passage to Caoetown in the Waratah. In the early morning, he said, I had this strange dream. 1 saw a man dressed in a peculiar dress which I had never seen before, with a long sword in his right hand, which he seemed to_ lie holding between us. In his other hand he had a rag covered with blood. I saw that three times in rapid succession in the same morning. He told many people in Durban of this dream, including ‘‘the nihnager of the Union-Castle office, when he went to book a fresh passage.” On July 2?, after the Waratah had sailed, but before there was any reason to suppose that anything had happened to her. he had another and even more disturbing vision. He seemed to see the Waratah ploughing her way through a heavy sea. As he watched, a great wave swept over her bows, and rolling over on her starboard side she disappeared from sight. The Waratah was seen for the last
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Hokitika Guardian, 23 February 1925, Page 4
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397Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Hokitika Guardian, 23 February 1925, Page 4
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