OF FILING AND INDEXING. Any Card can be removed and repliced in this Drawer without pulling out the rod. H.M. GOVERNMENT HAVE PLACED WITH The YŌST Typewriter Co., Ltd., THE... RECORD ORDER FOR TYPEWRITERS FOR THE WHOLE WORLD. In competition with all other makes it has The Yost is the Best Typewriter. Follow your leader and buy the Best. The YŌST Typewriter Co., Ltd., 50, HOLBORN VIADUCT, LONDON, E.C. YOST YÖST THE "ERIE" OIL HEATER A Powerful Heater. PORTABLE. LIGHT. STRONG. NO SELL OR SMOKE. EASY TO KEEP CLEAN The maximum heat at the minimum cost . Order now. Price 1 Guineas. (Carriage paid in U.K.) The LOUIS LEAKEY ALUMINIUM CO., Ltd. 127, Farringdon Road, London, E.C. should prompt you to think of your feet, especially Prudence at this season of the year. Wet and wintry weather with its attendant evils will soon be here. SOUTHALL'S (WITHOUT LACES.) LONDON ADDRESS: 35, NORFOLK ST. STRAND. There is no fear of the wet penetrating through lace holes. BETHLEHEM STORMED AND CAPTURED IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 1900. IN England the wild boar, by a play on words, has been adopted as the national symbol of the South African Republics. In these last months an abominable picture entitled "The National Cartoon has been extensively placarded throughout England. It represents the British lion triumphing over the prostrate bodies of the boars who symbolise the Transvaal and the Orange Free State. Provoked by this insolent and vulgar exultation in the victory gained by an Empire of 400,000,000 over the tiny Republics of South Africa, Mr. Moscheles has painted a picture, which is reproduced in miniature on the other side of the page. He adopted the central group of the "National Cartoon," but filled in details which bring into prominence the real truth of the situation. Upon the corpses of the murdered Republics he flung the broken cross. In the foreground lies the body of a British soldier united with the slaughtered boar in the sad brotherhood of death. Near them a bugler-boy is writhing in agony. A cannon stands in the midst of the slain, half concealed in the smoke of battle. High aloft waves the Union Jack, the proud emblem of British glory and British pride. But from the centre of St. George's cross, which is blazoned on every English flag, the crowned head of the Man of Sorrows looks down with infinite pity and reproach upon the scene of carnage and of victory. It is a great sermon in colour, and a reproduction, also in colours, is being circulated by scores of thousands in England during the Election. |