The Lucknow Sentinel, 1919-04-03, Page 7AMM•101'
OFFICIAL LISrT OF 17'}EE FLAG IS
HUNS' WAR CRIMES,
. .
1Y�-swept Christianity -11 -one oAsi.� and
syriToL• Africa, threatening also its safety is
Luroise.- ‘se...-.........-
Symbols of the Ghurt,h.
To opliose the doctrine of MoL,ant-
med, the Christian Church .^.doti'ted_
Ft nuzuercus y:iibotirand. emblems,— i.11
bearing allusion, to' -the
cross, was, indeed, stho acknowledged
emblem of , f'hristiauity. But in this
conflict the cross was not distinctive
enough,
'The reason for this•, was- that the
MOslenis held our Saviour iii high re-
verence as the•greate:;t of the inspired
enemy countries during the war, as religious things he has•reen? What is. Prophets Iseforp 'the time of Mohain-
classified . by the sub -committee on a flag, t ryway? 'Hew few know. Like,''med. They indt>,rporated malty of His
fact appointed _.by the commisslan Qn most fanilthtr-h}ngse_a eag--is: taken -.i benign precepts it:to the Koran: ,They
responsibilities for the war: for granted. - were• well. acquainted with the'eevents.
Massteere of civilians. In the first place, a flag., 13 a sign, L. of His ' life ,a° I'd the manner of-- His-.
' Putting to death of hostages. and as such is as eld-.iis hutnan• speech. 'death., For these reasons* the cross,
.Torture of civilians. But what interests t :niott.Iti-,-that'
the instrument , of His matXr'ciem,
Starvation of civilians.. � the flag symbol grew out .of tate re -
Violation -of women. •ligiaus element in the human niind.
Abduction of .girls -and women for -The More civilized nations. of an --
the purpose of enforceit''tiegradation.
Deportation of civilians.:
Internment of civilians under bru-
tal conditions. • • • -
Forced labor of • civilians in con-
i formed the corner-stdne. and the sue- rr
cess,of the Arab arms. which, between
'the seventh and tenth :centuries, near -
COMMISSION ON RESP ONSIBIL- GREW OUT CIF% THE RELIGIOUS
I1'Y FOR TIIE WAR -{-- CLEMENT t•N THE MIND.
Sub-Commit'ec Careful to Point Out
That This Lint• Does Not Exhaust
Record of Enemy's Crimea.
IIIere, is the list of the thirty -one
varieties of crime committed by the
It Epitomizes' the Birth, the Growth
jrod Ultimate Supremacy of the
Highest Conceptions cf t.1rn.
The religion of the flag! Who ever
thinks than a flag is one of theimos,t
'would be a..symbol much less obnox-
4ous and Jess defiant than other Chris-
tian symbols. ' Those, like the ;three-
tionity- tooktheir emblems .of -the- elate ._._ ointed pent}ant, while asserting the
directly front The religion of the -state. -+d etrmne of the Trinity. struck direct
The standards under which the king ly at the very foundation of the. Mos-
marshaled his subjects and led thein lem faith, and this was exactly what
to battle •were 'representations of the Abe Church intended. So it is quite.
section with military operations. national deities or the symbols of their clear that the triple -pointed pennon
Enemy usurpation -of sovereignty 'attribute& was adopted by the western warriors.
during militarytt.o s upation. In the Old Testament.* as a practical .declaration of their re-
ligious creed. .
Compulsory enlistment of soldiers
among inhabitants of occupied terri-
tory.
Pillage.
•.
Confiscation of property.
Exaction of illegitimate or exorlei
The . Latest
Design:•
..
t
$3.O0, iliguakrats
00.
In the wilderness the children t�
Israel were ordered to "pitch their
tents every Yuan by his ownstarnikzi'd,
We have not yet the' rectangular
flag., but it :is .a. short -:step to it. Out of
the Cr.ussdes grew. chivalry, which was
with the ensign- of his father's hoose, � f the
round about the tabernacle of the con- + th'e .feet `etage',in the eWoluti n ot
Presumably the Hebrew full-fledged flag . of modern times.
When for any valiant exploit a knight,
was advanced- to the more honorable
rank of banneret or baronet, the king
or his general on the field of battle,
caused the pointed ends: to be cut
from the -knight's pennon, which thus
became a square or. rectangular flag.
He was then called a knight of .the
.square flag. After his advancement
he did not throw away the three
pointed' ends, but cherished them as -
honorable badges proving his share
in the danger and glory of a crusade.
Though removed from the banner un-
der which he had led his vassals in
the field, he sewed them on the -breast
•or 'sleeve of his ,tunic, -or depicted
was first used in the East, and that it } them .on his shield, making them one
tint contributions and .requisitions. ensigns resembled the Egyptian,
Debasement ''of currency and issue
of spurious currency. -
Imposition of .collective penalties.
Wanton devastation and destruc-
-tion of propet-ty.
Bombardment . of
undefended
places. .
Wanton destruction of relhious,
charitable. educational and historic
buildings and monuments. '
Destruction of *n irchant 'ships and
passenger vessels Without warning.
Destruction of fishing . boats.
Destruction of a- relief ship:
Bombardment of hospitals:
Attack' on and destruction of h
pital ships.
Breach of. other rules relating to
the Red Cross.- ' • ' Use of deleterious and` asphyxiat-
ing
sp11yx al t-
ing gases. -
Use • of explosive and expanding
bullets.
►
s -
_
Directions to give no quarter, ,
I11 treatment of prisoners.
Misuse of flags cf truce.
Poisoning , of, wells.
Even this list, as the sub -commit-
tee takes pains to point out, does not
exhaust the record of the epemy's- rallied the people and defeated Dahak.
In this -way the smith's eeerimsoned
apron became the national flag of Per.
s4a.- •
wooden ' or metal - tablets set upon
lances, for the IIebrew word foe stand-
ard means a thing' which shines from
-.afar.
have you ever wondered why redis
in nearly all flags? It is there to tell
the pathetic -story of ,tan's noble ef-
fort to bring his life into Harmony
with the moral order of the universe.
It speaks of his .persistent sense of the
need of -superhuman power and of his
heroic willingness in his unequal con -
;pet with ..hostileelements. and_ Over-
whelming ,foes to ply any price to en-
list the intervention of the deity.
It is --asserted that the` waving flag
was red. ` I)o you know the old Per-
' a# legend- of Shah Dahak, who -
reigned' nearly- 4,00. years ago? - He
was a monster of disease and cruelty.
of the earliest "honorable ordinaries"
o --true heraldry.
.What the Flag Stands For.
Hence when a flag is unfurled we
Each day of his wretched life he had . behold more than a flimsy, fickle in-
-slaughtered two men in order to apply strumen.t, more than ' "a bit -of red
their warm brains 'to his suffering rag.". ,It epitomizes, sin -the:'most .sim-
body. This,. fate at length fell to the �ple and at the same time .the' most
_Ii
two sons _of a'smith n theilaoh._ At beautiful symbol .,the primitive birth
the sight of...his mangled boys he tore sand race -long growth. and ultimate me -
off his leather apron, dined it•in their premacy of the highest and -most .per-.
blood ancl, making a standard 'of it, sistent conceptions of man. It re:
minds us of 'a humanity in the ever-
increasing complexity . of its relations
and reactions, endeavoring to make
articulate=-and-...practical---its--
religious and social- consciousness. It
pays eloquent tribute to that teat
crimson stream of suffering and sacrI-
fice which has flowed from the always
crimes, and • it recommends the ap-
pointment of some standing body for
system-
atizing further information wit the
the purpose of collecting and sv
hthe
.
view •of laying before a tribunal . or
tribunals to he set, up a comprehen?
sive list of 'charges and accused per-
sons.
Heavy Punishment Urged.
I•n the *commiss.ion of responsibilj-
ties as a whole, more perhaps • than
in any other commission, differences
of tendency are apparent. While
some energetic people take common
sense as the• guiding star, there are
others who are unable to get away
from-gai precedent, unable -to see
that war may even have rendered
put of . date all the ideas of their
sacred temple.
_st,_spay _saisi:that_ the_Aro,
of at least two of the sub -committees
were not by any means satisfactory
as to the, punishment of those chiefly
responsible for the war, - which, it
was suggested, would be satisfactor-
•fly meted out if a parliament of the
world- were .to., pima , a resolution de-
, Oaring the''(erman Emperor was not
a, i 11y good fellow. Those drafts are
{Ming-- reconsidered, and the British,
_tenet, t(ttng their utmost to
bring ,the ex'-Kaiserr to book, together
With Otho chief offenders.
.. Army_ Mascots.
\Vhat is to happen to the amazing
menagerie of ,regin'tental m'ascets that
have accompanied our troolis through-
' out the, varying fortunes of war?
writes a'Britisli correspondent. There
is a formidable list. The monkeys of
` 11e-"Skittil'•St c ids, the hyena of _Elie-
We:+t Surreys, th'e goose of the W.A.,
the taine rats, kittens, pigs,
r.e i s, ferrets and mnugooses, parrots.
foxes: 'trans, -Ihe7C titd- cage. birstai."• A
ee a ea.in military policeman at Bou-
logne. •engaged in the .usual examine-
- tiltit_'- r the kits of five men jar voil-
a_ - .t',.iris..iitl_. goods... _hail _the time • ori his
Ere, .• lie broke open a carefully -wrap -
poi h:i rce-1 and out fell th re:° snakes.
'they h ui. been captured 1.y they linyaI
Engineers in ;11oeina1 Forest a few
da;rs .before the Armiiitice.
•
e 11,.e not by what we eat, but
-by what we digest, and what one
man digests another would die in at-
tempting. Rules dn, this subject are
almost useless. Each man can soon
learn' tha polders of his stomach, in,
health or :disease. He has no more
buattiest to icing en indigestion than
he has to.get intoxicated or fall into
,debt: He wh) offends -on these points
. deserves to forfeit stomach, head and
his electoral franchise. Generally
speaking. fat and spices resist the
---digestive-pror,-rr, and too Mutt- nu-
tritious food is next evil to too tittle.)
Goatir-areekorra--by developing, -r;
increases 'the nutritiousness of food
which bad •cookery would perhaps
render indigestible. Hence 'a 'good
• '"' cook rises to the dignity 'of "artist,"
and may rank with the •chentiet, if
sot with the , blsieien.' • 4
Banners of the Crusaders.
Even therectangular shape; now, so
u1iivereally given to flags, was reli-
gious, in its origin. • The orifi.unme,
the- ancient royal standard of France
'—a red flag borne on a gilded lance, -
was no doubt --suggested to the Cru-
saders by the waving banners of the
'Saracens. But -here is -the 'interest-
ing thing: The banners of the soldier
in the Bayeux tapestry -and elsewhere
depicted. ate three -pointed streamers.
In.the. A.grtus Dei..1a- -figure of -a lamb
bearing a cross or a flag), -as in all
early representations of the descent
of -Christ into Sheol'and the resurrec-
tion, the Saviour holds a three -pointed
banner surmounted by a cross . Hence'
it is inferred that the banner of the
Crusaders had a religious origin and
an allubive religious symbolists:
Here it Is. The peace of the Church
was during the first six centuries dis-
turbed by nearly 100 lieresie , most of
them impugning the'doetrine of the
Trinity. Thesd, doubtless, assisted
tate rapid progress of the Moslem faith,
of -which a belief in the -"unity of God"
j—�— .� ,� a '' .� � `•-. �.
'tl {') \V.
Delicious
Mixture
of -Wheat
13a -rile
1- healthva ue,
sound ncuri h-
rn -Matd a --
sweee t nu*rlik e
Ivor impos-
sible
mpos-sible in a pro-
duct made of
wheat alone,
eat,
rose SRAM; tails*" no 2 oa
C.. ,.r Nut!.
.Cememl mei•Rim
114•1•M lam/ Lailluer.
AfMOO
taf �lfir
_ /"1"
a•
Swagger sports model for women.
The middy is made on simple lines
and the yoke is of an odd shape. Tho
band at the lower .edge is turned up
and forms pockets at either side of
front. McCall Pattern No. 8796, La-
dies' Middy Blouse. In 5 sizes, 34 •to
42 bust. Price, 20 cents.
WOULD $E A IiICixt PEtCE
BOND Fl[REI8 !LEt OPYElLING
We ray Dzpress and Postage
AVE WILL T'AY.
YOU TEE EIOKEST ?RIC'E
ACCORPING TO nazi UD
QUALITY
Oliver Spanner & Co.
1 Dopt. k. 26 ELK ET..
TORONTO, a
!!iT
His First Visit.
•
Mr. Lloy . " orge 'would teem, says
the Liverpo.l Post, to have had a pre-
jrionition .dt-his future eminence when
he paid a first visit to London as a lad
of nineteen. '"Went to the House of
..Commons," - he wrote ..home to his
uncle. `. ` "Very .'disappointed. I .will
not say but,that. I eyed the 'assembly -
in` a sfiirit' - similar to that in which
William the Conqueror eyed-Englstiiid
on his visit _to Edward the „Confessor
as the region of his future domain.
Oh, vanity!"
•
Marion Bridge, C.B., May 30, '02. '
I have handled MINARD'S LINI-
I
MENT during the pasit year. Itis al-
waye the first : Liniment asked-
here,
sk, d`here, and- ,unquestionably the best
seller of all -the different kinds of
Liniment I handle.
NEIL FERGUSON.
The, Army -Nurse -Off Duty:
(She Speaks to a Friend from Home).
"I'm tired—too tired to live, / -
To sleep :or. to laugh or to cry!
I have given thein all I eau give,'
And yet l'n too busy to die! .
"I'm tired—too tired to move,
M3 head "and my -ha -ads and :my soul,
Too weary to hate or to love,
,To.stineelate, soothe or.,eonsole,
"I'm tired of crutches • and • canes,
. Of bandages. med-icine, dope,
Of -doe -toffs, and dressings and pains,
Of sympathy, even of haps!
"Of letters to open .and read, -
From -sister or -sweetheart -or' wife; •
The others, that question and plead,'
Will. haunt inc the rest • of ,my life.
"I`nrrtfre o StrIpTtngs untamed— ,
',!; i They la -ugh and you love .and they
• diel --
Of the scared and the blind and the
- - maimed,
And of forcing myself not to cry!
"It's the life a- sla-ve; _.. _.
-Noca.L This salving the wreckage .of war,+
A Spring suit is smart this seasoiylaou talk of 'our glorious Brave,'
when one wears a waistcoat with at.
.This. one offers -an opportunity to
But we—all, we know .what thaw
are!
struggling and oft,, -bleeding heartof wear one of daring form and color: ,
mankind, . upon whose broad and, ir- McCall Pattern No. 8787, Ladies''I
"Do I like it'—this game, I roust play?-
Does a doom -haun=ted --prisoner sing?
restible tide there is borne to the Coat. In 7 sizes, '34 to 46 bust. No. ,Don't listen—I'm tired to -day -r
farthest .shores and the last genera- $794, Ladies' and Misses' Chinese • •
tion the total .nf vicariaua,good .and Biotite. In_ 3 sizes; small, 32, Med-».. Be quiet --`yes, th<tt was my ring.
cumulative racial ideals. A flag re- ium, .34 to 36; large, 38 to 40 bust....No, doctor, quite rested—What, Dan?
-asserts the basic fact of the insoluble No. 8693, Ladies' Two -Piece Skirt. 1 Not red-headed Dan from .Duluth"
In 7 sizes, 22 to 34 waist. Price, 20 He shan't die . - . . we'll save -him!"
cents each. • .8he. ran, .
These patterns may be ObtainedFor .of_ such, is our Kingdom 'of
from your local McCall dealer, or Youth* -
from The McCall Co., 70. Bond St.,� -♦,►
Toronto, Dept. W. • MONEY ORDERS.
s served
religious instinct. -
0
BRITISE WAR - HELMET
One of the Successes of the War Was
• Made From Japanese Design.
The steel helmet which «;
oto to the British soldier
Dominion Exprese Money Orders
n 1916' is I Coughed for 13 Years are on sale in five thousand offices
BITS OF
HUMOR
fn3MHERE bTNERE
J
Conservation.
UTZ POtlltLTRT WANTED.
NVE BUY ALL KINDS LIVE POUL-
try, nay hUrbest prices- , prompt
returns. Write for pricers. I- Weinraucta
' & Bon. 10-18 St. JC>sn au:purtee ,tarkot.
Montreal. Que.
-"I -wish .11»hada baby , brother ta-
wheel ' in. my gocart, mamma," -said
small Elsie.' "My dolls are always
getting broke when it tips aver."
First Essential. -
"How would you like to sign_3ip wit
. me 'for a life .game?" , was the way e
baseball fan proposed. •-
"I'm a agreeable;" replied the gir!, '
"where's your diamond." .
A Mean 'Remark. ..
"It says here -that a weathy western
titan has left 4604,00, ta,-the'' woman
who '' refused to marry htm twenty
years ago," said Mrs. Gabb , as she
looke&. up from the newspaper she was
reading. • `
•
AGENTS WANTED.
PORTRAIT AGENTS ;WANTING
11
good prim:
finishing a specialty;
:tames find ev ythinx at lowest price*:
outek sere Ice. Milted Art Coutpaoy.
4 Brunswick Ar Toronto.
it a Elazig
Vir ELL - EQUIPPED NEVA/PAPitEA
and lob printing plant In Easters
untarle Inesurance carried 21.500. Will
en for $1.100 on Quirk sale. Boz 8*.
Vile ►n rutti,hdntr Co.. -Ltd.. Toronto
N�f•EKLY NEWSPAPER FOR SAL'
2r' New Ontario. (Avner Roina to
Frances Will sell $1.000. Worth doubts
that amount. Anely J. R. elk Witless
Tvh11ahinr Ce...Limited. Tornntri
:WANTED
GOOD J1lVE AGENTS wanted (re-
,urned '"soldiers or others) to handle
'our music in your territory: Sell the
latest -patriotic and other songs before.
they are on sale in the stores. Pleasant
work—liberal remuneration. Write for.
full particulars. Ideal Music Vt., -17
Adelaide East, Toronto.
"That's what I call gratitude," Cote 11FISQELLANNODU -
C1NCER. TUMORS. 'LUMPS. ETC..
internal and ezternat cured, with-
out rain by our .home treatment. W is
us beforetoo late. Dr. _ Bellman Medleal
Co.. Limited. Cotttnttwood. Ont.
mented Mr. Gabb:
What Saved .the Baby. -- The family were entertaining callers
one afternoon; "and- while the grown-
ups were tallying the- baby crept on
the floor. Suddenly there was a loud
bump and wild wail. It came from,
the direction ,t tn' • _'r'•
"Oh, .the '.baby bus hurt himself!"
cried the mother. "Run quick, dear!"
The young father 'had already dash-
ed toward the ,piano. He dropped on
his knees and groped under the piano
for - his injured offspring. - Presently
he returned.
"1 -ie fell down and bumped his head-
on
ead-on one of the pedals," lie reported.
"Oh; .the poor darling" Is 'It a bad
bump?" asked one `of the guests.
"No," he answered. "Fortunately,
his head hit the soft pedal!"
Not His Function.
-tee
"I want to know," said the grim -
faced woman, "bow much money my
,husband., -drew :out - of '-the• bank last
week"
• "I jean not ''gtive. you. that informa-
tion, Madam," answered.. -the man in
the cage.
"You're the paying teller, aren't
you?'
"Yes, but I'm -Trot-the telling payer."
4- ---- + i
Kinard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.' . •.
Let's try to bring into bearingthis
year some Little field - that has not
brought in anything before. That
will make the -wor?d so much. bet-er."
--o— o
Hurrahl IoW's. This
- Cincinnati authority says corns G
, dry up;and lift out
41 with fingers.
—y-o—o—o--o--o—o—o—o—o-*
,i Tiospital records show that every.
':-tie you, cut 'a corn you invite lock -
Aar or
ock-jaw--or blood poison. which is needless;
says: a Cincinnati authority, who tells
you that a quarter.' ounce of a - drug
called freezone can he obtained at lit -
Ile cost from the drug store but is suf-
clenrt to rid one's feet of -every liar
or soft .corn 9r callus.
You simply Apply a few drops of
freezone on a tenders aching corn and
soreness is instantly relieved. Short-
ly the entire corn cart bo lifted oq,t,l;,
root and all, without pain.
This drug is sticky but dries at once
and is claimed to just shrivel up any
corn without inflaming or even irri-
tating the surrounding tissue or akin.
If your Wife- wears` high, heels she
will be glad to.know of this.
STU
Kinard's Liniment , Cures Sams. Rio.
,skim milk is, less digestible than
whole milk.. The safety Lies in light
feeding.
WHEN NEURALGIA
ATTACKS NERVES__
Sloan's Liniment scatters
the c?ngestion and
relieves pain
A little, applied without rubbing,
will penetrate ,inuriediately and rest
Sloan's Liniment is very effective
in allaying -external pains. strains,
cies', lumbago, neuritis, sciatica, rheu-
Keep a big bottle always. on,hand
for use.. Made in• Canada.
-Druggists every -Where.
30aa aka $L206
INSTANTLY. RELIEVED
WITH
ReiremZer thenttne Rs it Alight her.tfr seen ace,
kit and equipment of Torrimy Atkins. .ta.w. KWh. intueseliklnirceop.r.fehiittihlic:::741fattriu,;r:erscitnifdroeir31. nat Iher,e: • . . .
The:War,Offtee is said to contemplate eere "-The best education in the world tbasaitelueetbeihettfategalasa-eetaiaetal,
or your White Bronchitis
it Will be worthy." a soldier's full- one bottle'
'dress review Order unifortn in times has ered aeutelY with 'a bronchial! ' •
4.141:011r.li _For 9Yer..thirteen years elle] living.--7Wendell. Phillips. a•
of peace when presumnbly he -shan't Lennie vo'ir‘totuer„
be hack again to the scarlet tunict-tbaottnea unlit she trre4 -=our marvelous -
ITA (tT1t1TerY cured -area - You are at
'remedr. rind 1 Dm glad to statri that one A nian pulfed-out the Willows Thal
and the,pipe-clayed belt -
the bank of a stream
The British steel helmet is one oft liberty to use MY name, and should grew along
of 1 water that flowed througl his cand.
But he was a new man and did not
the succesS,CS of -,the- war.-- -Although
we were late -in the field m-ith it, our Wheoli.rtils-:Thoisanicnal'icterelY.Ae-e°tinurC:.
one of the. m
"tin hat" is better than that of the! name. le only
realize what he waS
Freneh tVr German,. It owes its; auc--1 ale or-tta-wonddrful heulibk Power. t- learned- -sutriethirrg-_--yrhen 'the- w er'
cess lttrgely to its shape, and around' cur. '4 came up, aial ripped his Meadow'
• hron-hitl coughs colds
that hangs an interesting tale': *fat asthma. ,1%.; eure--Po pay'. br'rr; , •
was considering the ' qtesfion of de -1 tra Totemalling: 3 1.ottlos nlaileri fr.., ; n!lr, Q II n 0 A w
fo.r 21.r,o. ,,t4ohi otily bv Br ctlitsiiiiIrotil,lat. u IRL 0 I U - V H A M' •
, Druggist, .. Dundb.s Street E JIST
signing an armored headclreas fol. the
British soldier. it .cons.ulteli"gentie-; ie., . .1
men who was a well known authority i •
. . j---43"--- '' . • 1 CI 01'9 TV01"1 IIAI,R,
that the sueecas of the noted -nialiers
th deei as much as in the sub., tbe said to Col. John
etance the Limner . which they Ward, ,M.P., whea 0,a0ber la. -a. • _a...a..
made., Ile poitited out thet the art, he nlai'died i'l..t.;1",011 int'? n Ilus- Try this! Hair gcts
•inelzine.: milled armor w:a; prae-' ,town. 6)1. iprernpry,ar- gl,)sst ‘‘;•;,
'it'1131.E4-1'
t •
ago, 'and ehnt it was not improbable, 0.1nS, rind by resolute action seved 1
that in the. kineelom of the MikUilee the bait:111.9n .from be'.ng off. ,• t
-there-Artight -survive F-ome -mag-1 Col. Wa.r.1 would so. III er -the- trr te-ft. 11!*::* i'*;;T;r1;:rV.:-.•
ter of this ancient' P -aft who toul;1, command, a imital-ion then aerept , light- wavY- ftnifea ap-;
How to Purify
the Blood •
e c'Fiteen to thirty drops of ia
called Mother Seigel's Curative ;
Syrup. may be taken in water
with meals and at bedtime, for
the _cure of indigestion, consti-
pation and bad blood. -Persist- is
cnce in this treatment will effect 4
41 a cure in nearly every case." ;
Get the genuine at druggists. A
. mitking• of a shrapnel -proof helmet ,! aft -a young girl's after 0 Dandeeme t
, Flew Over the , Andes. ; hair (Ieause. ..ins; try this -ntokten i
Chilean army, ,crossed the Andes at taking' initer%ialli Ittit:;°11111g I 1.}1.t(7 ti-iTaiar:1
adopted. The British Ernbassy in
their highest point in te Bristol bi-,' Th:s will cleanse the hair -of dust. dirt
Tokio was rommueicated with by
donated *by thc British Gov- I or exce.seive oil, and inalust a few ma- '
ciNe. A master craftsman of the Plana,
the shape :of the modern British •Ieft • clients you have doubled the Nemo, et
ernment recently. The aviator
ancient .art was' found in Japan and i
Santiago, Chile, -and crossed the TU -i your- heir. A ,deligl,tful surprise a-
Argen- i aa a nese whose hair . has (been
•strel• helmet, if _not something in its i of 19:1,aeglected or ii at'eaggy. faded: dry,
brittle or thin. Besides beautifying
composition, is' due to the skill and
knowledge, of one of the very few* tine Republic. •
survivors of the men who made , 4 '
particle ,of dandruff!" cleanses, -puri-
armor for iitegamurai' of Japan Pigs farrowed early in spring ties •and invtgorates.theascalp. foreVer
sometimes become' badly c Med. One stopping. itching and falling hair, but
selfen; they fought with bows and
good way revive a pig so chilledla, what 'Will PleMie_you most will he After
arrows and douhle-edired -swords.
to hold him for a minute or so in a la few weeks use, when you see new
took part in -the 'German -raids on Then dry .off thoroughly' and put j'eall'-'llt'""'*alr gr"Init all Ovtt
the scalp. If you ewe for pretty, soft
England. hark With the sow. hair, and lots of it, enrely get a Small
Fold tahleslothis differently from
Printkrs in Japan any ,drug -store or toilet counter.. for
time to time and you will prevent •
the forming of worn lire- in the
receive -67%
creases. ISSUE 13—'49
• 411014
and Ointment
Quiciily soothe and heal
eczemas, rashes, itchings
and burnings of 'the skin.
Semple Etch Free by Mail. Address cost,
Sold by dealers throughout the werld.
•
!sec, teingper Cosnpourtd
OR SO.
rev
yrur
or c.,irc
ole
'Me Great North. ‘V.•;:fhrti Tiitvapit. Company
14,000 Allies of Railway ,56,0L0 .Miles of Telegrapb Lines
Hilifax -St. John -Quebec - Montreal -Vanconvet -Victoriik
-n Iv to flesie.t
Ilead Offteee'.. Toronto. Ont.
G110. STEPHEN,