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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 26 Nov 1885, p. 2

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 YOUNG FOLKS. ' ' Tl ;ii ii;:i I: 'I :,fl| lii k i\ f i i A JiBgle AalMZoooldB, Wbo mtUat quite we«qr (lew OtUfe upon the C. He boUt khnwif • oottice Upon the river D. Where he idly emoked Ue pipe And drank hie (onohonit T He wiok'd hia eurboaid I, He tet hia noee aakew AadMud,liUad(edTâ€" "Piay. whattoittoUr Wanting to Hy. " I don't care for Bwimmiiiff," aaid the young wild dock, " I want to Sy. " ' It was tlw firat day of leaTin^ the nest, and the motiier bird was very proud of the floariah- ing young brood jnat beginning life. The neat had been made in the coziest of corners bedde the river, overhang by rocks, and with wild flowers and rnshes bending down ukm it. ' It was so cool and sh.ady there throngh the hot snmmer days, except when, cjoite early in the morning, the son's rays glinted down between the birch trees on the The pair had agreed it was time for the children to take to water â€" at least for some of them â€" BO while the father bird remained in the nest with those who were hatched later, the mother tamed oat with the older ones. Two were already enjoying the water, but jost as the other little dackUng was going to make a plonge he happened to look ap, and he caught sight of a dragon fly. As it hovered over him and then glanced away, its brilliant gauzy wings glittering in the snnlight, it quite turned his head. And like many another young creature he fixed his mind on something he had not and for- Spt all about what he had. " Why can't I fly like that I want to fly," he said again. " Patience, my child," replied the wise mother " you will fly some day, but you have no wings yet â€" only legs. You must use your legs in the Hater as we are doing, and that will help you to grow properly. If you do your part in the present you will be Preparing for the future. Yon have got to e educated, you know don't you see T' But the young duckling did not eee and be would not listen. He only flopped his tiny stumps of wings and stared up at the dragon-fly. If he had been a child he would have pouted, but as it was he did whatever It is that duel s do when they are sulky, and he turned his back as his brothers paddled away. I^y after day it was just the same he would not take to the water because he wanted the air. He moped and moped, and this was all his cry " I want ts fly I want to fly." Of course he could not grow. He was not using the means for developing himself, so he oould not be a duck all round. In long- ing for the future he lost the present. He got smaller instead of bigger, n 1 would have dwindled down to nothing, I suppose, had not a prowling fox one night poanced on him â€" a poor starved duckllcg, and a very meager supper after all It is no good our longing for the future uiiless we are preparing for it in the present. Because what we havA now is alivays the training for what we are to have by and by. And ah it la no use our wanting to get to heaven unless we are employing the right means and making life the training pi ce for eternity. Hatore's Story Book. Mrs. Cortwright was reading, and smiled as she read. " vTo^^ makes yon laugh, mamma 1" ask- ed Euth. "LlsJen, dear And Nature, the old nurse, took The child up an her knee, SayiDg, • Here's a etory-book Thy Father has written tor thee. " That's pretty," sadd Ruth. ' Are you sure you understand it t ask- ed her mother. " I understand thatâ€" of cotatse I do," an- swered Ruth, surprised that her mamma should doubt her. " • Nature' means^ all out-doors, and the story-book is about birds and t eea and everything you see out there." ' You darling child you do understand better than I though^," said mamma, giving her little girl a fond kiss. " 1 11 go out, now, I guess, and read in the story-book," said little Ruth. "All alone, dear? Don't you want some one to read to yon '" for Ruth could not read lainted books very well, and always asked muminii. or Amt Lucy to read to her she said she understood better so. " Oh, I can read easy lessons out-doors," she said so her mother tied en the white sun-hat and the little girl tripped away into the garden. Vnken she came in, a long time after, she seated herself on a little bench at her moth- er's feet " Now, dear mamma, let me tell yon about the stories. The first was ants they made hills all along the walks, and wer» so busy every minute bringing grains of sand to make the hill higher and there wasn't one that didn't workâ€" not one little naughty ant that said ' I won't ' or ♦ I don't want to.'" ,. .. .V " Then I saw beesâ€" the bees that gather honey all the day from every opening flow- er ' they were busy too." " Like the ants ' " They were better than the ants, cause they sang all the timeâ€" not like the birds, but they hummed and buzzsd, and it sound- ed real nice, they sremed so happy. ' Then there Were the applesâ€" the little- children aprfeaâ€" green and small and hard and sour. They are not good for much till they are bg men-and-women apples â€" ripe and sweet. The storybook said, 'Little children aren't worth much now, but let em be by and by they'll be grown up, and then they'U be good for something. The mother smUed " I think your book was very interesting, Ruthie, and you can read it better than I thought. Anything •• There was a beautiful story about dai- des When I was out this morning they wer^ aU looking over to g'and»»"S.* ~J" dinner they loSeo straight up tottosky, just as if they were praying ««" ^JL'L!!! turning their faces this way, as if they were sorry to see the sun getting dotra lower and ^r in the sky. Theylooked «d, a. if they had got to say, ' Good bye, and didn t '^The didslee follow the sun," said mam- ma. " )ns« M we ought to keep VtMag to Jflsna aU the time." " • Fix your eyes upoo Jeans I gneaa that is what thoy were saying, only they did not speak loud enough forme to hear, said Rott " utdtben 1 laid down and let the great pnnkah-wallah fan me." "Yon qwer child what do yon mean " " Why, f^wiTi*, didn't yon read to me about them the other dayâ€" the fans they have In India? 'Punkah' means 'fan,' yon said, and ' wallah ' means ' boys ' fan- boys. The fans hang from the ceiling, and the boys pull 'em up and down. The trees were my punkah-wallahs the branches were my punkahs, and the wind was the wallah, and they kept me «o cool and nice I went to sleep. I like the old ntorj book, mamma." " I wonder if my little girl Imows who wrote it for her ' " God. That is why it's so nice," snd the little girl, " and I think He helps me under- stand it." " I am sure He does, my darling and it's bettor than any other book for this reason you keep turning the leaves and never get to the end." ^iss BEEE ABD THERE AtAcworth, Ga,, a few days ago, two persona, about to entor into the bonds of matrimony stood on a tombstone to be wedded. A church at Terre Haute has. been built in just sixteen days from the time the stone was laid. It is " vflty beautiful, finished in native woods, with windows of sapphire and ruby glass." The Lancet states that a German observ- er has found that cows milked three times a day gives much more milk than whon milk- ed twice only, and that the proportion of it is the same in both cases. An attempt to punish an unruly boy in a Holyoke, Mass., school last week, brought on such a general fight that the police had to be called in to quell it, isid the teacher and two pupils were marched off to the station house. The Portland (Me. Board of Health will place an officer on the Grand Trunk train, who will go out as far as Danville Junction snd examine all parsengers and baggage coming from Montreal, using a system of checks to prevent persons getting thr ugh. In Germany the iDspection of pigs for trichina: is more thorough than is generally supposed. The Me'Hcinische Wochenschrijt state that in one year there were establish- ed in Prussia 20,636 official iospecting stations. Oat of 4,000.000 of the animals examined, 2,000 were trichinous. The Geimans have nearly stamped out small-pox. I9 the] years 1870 1874 the number of deaths from the disease per 100,- 000 inhabitents in London, Paris, Vienna, Prague, and St. Petersburg was 101.05. In Bsrlin, Breslau, Hamburg, Munich, and Dresden during the tame period it was but 1.44. The painted rock of S-nta Barbara coun- ty, Gil., is 150 feet hizh, and npcn it are many color paintings in a good state of pre- servation that are thought to be the work of Indians. There are two caves in this giant rock, one at its base and another some six- ty feet up, and in each of these are pictures of animals. The French Government would like to give the army the privilege of wearing beards, but feels the necessity of first consulting sev- eral high millitry authorities, as the opinions on the subject are contradictory. Mean- while the press falls back on history, and duds that the conquerors of all ages were about equally divided between the shorn and tLe unshofu. The French lady doctors have carried the day. Henceforth the female medical stud- ents will be mtsdtmoi elks les internes, and as such th:y will be admitted to hspitals on the same terms as their male colleagues. Sixty a?piran'5 to the M. D, degree «n M pt esent Kjoicing in the vict 'ry, mong thettt a yotmg negroes, who is said to be oao of most zsalous studente ia Patis, z " Adirondack" Murray began a ecturing tour at St. Johnbury, Vt., the other night, and after he had finished his discourse lec- tured his audience because a local newspa- per had car el his life a wasted ne. He said he had graduated from the ministry, and for six years had studied to fit himsslf for another kind of work and that, instead of having " dropped down and out from amcng forceful men," he proposed lOon ts appear in a quite opposite character. There is in the extreme north of Utah a magnificent subterranean reservoir of first- class soda water, bubbling and effervescing out 'f the ground in such quantities that all America might be suplied. In the ex- treme south, on the road to Orderville, is an exquisite circular lakelet that is iJways just full to the brim with water as clear and as green ss beryl. And wherever the water overflows the lake's edge it enciusta with a fiue coating of limestone, so that the brim Is growing higher and higher with im- p rceptible but cer a!n gio vth of a coral reef, and in the ..uurse of generations the lake will become a concreted basin. The cave out of which Gen. Israel Putnam dragged the wolf is seldom visited, because it is in a stony mountainous forest in a re« mote comer of Connecticut. A picnic party this summer made the tedious trip, which involved several, miles of rough walking. There are pictures in primers of Putnam en- tering the cave erect, with a blazing, torch held above his head. The ho'.e is really so small that it can only; be explored 'on hands and knees, and an adult cannot turn round in it. The length is 300 feet, and tradition says that he followed tlie beast to the further end, shot him between the eyes by thcJr own glow, and was drawn out with him by means of a rope. Not many years ago the late Lord Strath- naim was staying in a country house in Yorkshire. Among the gueste in the smok- ing room one night were seme young cav- alry cfficers, who were narrating tales of various skylarking adventare in which they had lately been engaged. The veteran to k himself off to bed, and, his room being over- heaa, they shortiy after heard the furniture in that apartment being moved about. The next morning some one alluded to this at breakfast. Ha, ha " said Lord S., "I was not going to let you youngsters say you had • drawn' a Field Marshal, so I put tte ch^ of drawers against the door." He wm over seventy at the time. ' A Fuufu Tiiok* SobertHeIl«r, the famous «»e^j^^ died a few years ago need to exhiUt wttt delight one trick of which he wm^^JT nond. He wonld stop to the front rf the platform, holding out at """JW » ^naU bird-cage. In which hopped and chirp- ed a Uve sparrow. Extending tte cue above his head, and grasping it with both hands, ho would say.â€" _^ M Ladies and gentiemen, ou see this cage. It ii a real cage, isn't It T You see the bird. It is a real bird, isn't It? Now watch me closely. The moment I snap my fingers, the cage and bird wUl vanish into thfa air. He would tne snsp his fingers,- and both cage and bird would disappear, leavug not so much as a feather behind. Calvert, a F ench wonder-worker, h!.^^ng head of the birdcage tri k, determined to dis -over its soeret. He came to the per- formance one evening armed with a power- ful opera-glass. Just as Heller stopped upon the platform, with the csgein his hands, Calvert called out.â€" " Put the cage down on the table, or bold i it out by one hand." Hello' ma3e a reasonable eicuse for not doing anything of the kind, and immediate- ly caused the cage t odisappear, as usual. The next merning Calvert, who was on good tormswithHt Her, called upon him at his hotel. •«Ah, monsieur!" said the Frenchman, "I have discovered your great bird-cage trick at last " " Have you 2" replied HeUer. "Pray de- scribe it." " No. Come to my performance to-mor- row night, and you shall see it." " \^ery well," said Heller. "If yon can perform the trick, you are the only Uvirg person, besides myself, who can do it." Heller went to the evening performance, and took a front seat. After the usual tricks with cards and pistols had been performed. Calve it came forward with a bird-cage, in which could be seen a small bird flutterins; about. Holding the cage out at arm's length, be said â€" " Laiiies and gentlemen, you will see here to-night, for the first time, the great bird- cage trek of the American wizurd. Heller. I have had the honor to discover the secret of this trick, and I now perform it before you as my own, when I rnap my fingers, the L-ige and bird will disappear." Tjooking directly at Heller, with a smile, Calvert snapped his lingers, and the bird- cage vanished. At Heller's death the method ofinaking the cage and causing It to disappear, was disclosed The cage,made of the fiiest and most del- icate wires, were separated into two com- partmenta by a thin partition. Those two compartments were held together by minute but powerful springs, which were made to open by pressing two wires, one on each side of the age. The two wires were held by the performer between his thumb and finger, as he extend- ed the cage at arm's-length. Each compart- ment of the cage was so made that when the springs which held them together were ' loosened, the compartments would ooll.p8e, or fold ep, irto a very small compass. Attached to each side of ths c^ge, close by the wires held by the finger and thumb of the performer, were stnut elastic cords run- ning up the ioside of Heller's sleeves, and fastened at eome point above his elbows. The bird chosen for the cage was ona of the smallest varieties of sparrow, and he was placed in the compartment to which the partition belonged. Suppose the performer now ready to ex- hibit the cage. He steps out, holdirg it up at arm's-length. The elastic bahd«, being on the inner side of his hands and wrists, are not perceived by the audience. He snaps bis fingers, that is, he presses the wires which let the cage fall apart each side col- lapses, and the lores of the tightly-stretehed ruobei^ pulls each section of the cage np the performer's sleeves. The bSfd Is dra-ira up with the side in which it was placed, and, strange to say, is not oft«a seriously injured by this operation. Every part of this trick requires the ut- most skill and the most delicate handling in every detail to make it successful. The fact that Heller performed the trick hundreds of times before attentive audiences, without betraying the secret of it, shows to what an extent attention to details may enable a man to triumph over the seemingly impos- sible. "Ladies." Cultivation alone will not make a lady of a vulgar Woman, nor a gentleman of a boor. Innate vulgarity will manifest itself in spite of all forms of politeness and etiquette. To a certain class of persons, indifference is the tect of high-breeding. If you educate a man or a woman to insensibility, he in their view is a gentleman, and she is a lady. A woman was one day brought before the judge of a police court. She said in her.de- fence, â€" " Me and another lady was a-having a few words, and she called me a ' hindewid- ual,' and I ups with a pall of water, and chucked it all over her, and that began the row lietween me and the other lady." Me and another lady indeed The following notice was once put up over the door of a show "No lady or gentleman admitted into this show in a state of intoxication." A hand-bill in St. Louis read,â€" " One hundred rats to be killed by one dog fa ten minutes. None but gtntkmen "â- eexpeotod to be present on this oocasion." ^The advertisement of a doB-fiuht in a Western town read,â€" " Tickets admitting both gentleman and lady can bs had for one dollar." A very elegantiy dressed woman once rudely pushed a man from a crowded side- walk, saying as she did so,â€" " Aint you got any more manners than to stand right m front of a lady ' A shabbily dressed woman aooldentallv ran against a superb looking woman whow dress and manner indicated the perfest " I beg your pardon, madam," sUd the poor woman m the most humble manner t»,l V° «;V^y *M»g " Migrily retorted the elegantly clad woman. Which was the lady T The cmaumption of fish in Great BribUn has conriderably increased (aa shown bv transportation statistics) since the great Fish- eries Exhibition of 1883. FOB FIiBASANT StWUSO â€" an oaLTâ€" Glapperton'8 Spool Cotton th« labeL rot tale hr jJI D» » Q«_ds«ra Free Lands and Cheap Eomes FOR THB MnXTON Along the Hn* of fli* ClileMioaBd VwlfewMtent KaliwkT In Central Uaketn and Nortkrrm Nebniaks. Ne» sectiO'S are btiog opened upjand rapidly settled in theae wonderlnlly f r««««|v« region*, and the '-ilrst comeis" will have "first choice "of loosUon. ... .^ _. Wot fnll information (which will be Bent yon nee of charge) about the free bmds and (dieap homes, •PPly to ^^^^ MOBLKT, Western Canadian Pass. Agent, C.4N. W. K. 9 Yoik St. Ttwonte^ Oat B. S. HAIB, General Pass. Agent, OhioaffO. Ills; CAUTJON. EACH PLUG OF THB MYRTLE HAYI IS MARKED T. B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. mm OTHER CENDIIVE Christmas BY MAIL •an wiwleaale prioM. 9m atkss two aUka. maybe Indudad. 26 CABD8, good vahia, tor 86 •• Utgar, •â-  te " vary fine, •• SVOideisaiaybei aooompanj order. An •ell » 25 '"^l 50 fcll Lao ti MAHHEWS BROS jl^^ ilian tme^^jSHb^l ONLY ONLY The Hew C tM^peraaw IS THE BHST IN THB MARKjj Latest Improved MMmA Igents price for similar maGhin "SUN" TYPE-WRITER. This Is not a rubber stamp, but a genuine metal type manifolding machine. Jost the thing (or cler- gyinen, teachers, business men, and others having limited correspondence. As a guarantee that the maohine a as represented. I agree to receive it any time within 6 months at price paid in exchange tor the Celebrated Remington Perfect Type- Writer. CEOKCE BEKGOVCH, Sole Agent, 34 KSnc street East, ToTonte. rbn Kgle Btnii Vbsher ia the onl. WaHhinc Haebinein Tented tbkt aw3skj woman or girl l yeara old, wltbont \tbe use of a wanQ Iward, can with eiur vash SO to 100 niem in one boor. Ageuu wanted all aver Can 4. .. ,^ aia. Sample tont (01 «nal anatetiitorr glTen. Ladln main vd agentf :no w««r oc elothea, and every lady will bnv after trying It; warranted to waab etJicos in five minatca. rott :, txods in Jft, bedelotbsi 10. or no lale. Addrem, FERRIS t CO., PatonteM Bad Hans faotar«n.78J«rTia Street. lOHOM TO rai.md* ^^ Our pries only 125 eadli. '^nS°ae'?fl;;j.2r '"""-*=' -al mr acaobfauesnaranteeafot three jslt m an Aarladrwan "t a maehlne wlU (U)i»Ut,rtt, The Oo-Operative Sewing aa JAMES ST. SOTTTH. HAMILTOK CS" S U S Sac z lb P4 a" QUEEN CITY OIL WORKSl AGAIN TICTORIOVSl HIGHEST HONORS AND GOLD MEDAL FOR Oi:| At Toronto. Every Barrel Guaranteed. This Oil was used on dl SSfw^^SJife'/c**^'**'?^ ^^l Exhibition. It has been awarded sni bOliO MEDALS dorme the last three years »-See tliat youpil PEERLESS. It is only made by SAMUEL ROGERS CO TOBPyTO s 00. LIQUIDATION S.4LB. Owing to the failing health of the senior member of our firm we hare beta oblige! S abandon the contemplated continuance of the business. The manufacturing premises, machinery, 4;c., have already been sold. Tho entire stock of furniture, upholstering material, c., amounting to over! must be disposed of as speedUy as possible. 1 The furniture is all our own manufacture, an i the reputation earned by the finn d«*f the last 50 years is a sufficient gaarabtee of its quality. The liquidation being peremptory, dealers and the general public are now »ffo* I such an opportunity as has never occurred heretofore in Canada. Toronto, 12;h Nov., ISST. jf^^ ^Z.A.T? A CfO« Meriflen Britannia Gompanrl FINEST Electro Platd GAUTIOl Goods stamped M* den surer PUte ft' are not *^1\ yon want relUbl«|0» Insist on getting** I msde by tbe MBRIDBN BBII*S| NIA 00.. Oft' HAMII-TO^, Important to All Who Desire More Li;l^j THEHARYEV'SiFEIVLAMP » TiIE^ i nJ». *Vi!. •*'"' «omeit:c Jih* nied.woT txctmso ca iSlfd*i*2?""**^'W**Bainer inm^s Bowls In Tarlona oro«- ?iff*!?J*V*^ »"""••»• »na«'a8«iUndi. Is c-.n«ume« bithj'f the 2inSS?«.' 24 "»•» ""• "c-aalwd eleoirfo lampiiaa.. It te the bri«hte«t ta b2L If* "Jf^.* .* MMmraetmers aUo of the " Sola' B«r L»^r. S.5^ fS,* KIcVel. ThU tamp tnok First Prizi aid BilMS. ihr.Tlf^^ Safbtt Lamp -We h»Te been farorsd wlth.arlew cf Sit. Srj'"'S'*!??J'*»« and we are atrooslr o«iTlnoed of it» rowrl »5*!!»v'*?' «1' *™»3er OTer ai y lamp ye"pUc3d on the market. The Sfi^**^ wh^cithe wiek-oate ta roJpendea has opentig. .t t*| collar termttttoK a oon-tantoiioolationo air downwsrd around ine «S!?'***Jl""i""S' Mirong-j the wiek-case. ihat «'» "« a d.^" Mntr«l drauiM. By this arrangement the vick-caae is isolated t^ the 0" a imalltube onvfylrg tnfflcient ol. tarongh to the »iok fW' lamp a o-tnBtraotsl upon (horaagh^ pr»o:ic«l and loicntifio prmoi- plii, anatheremUattaiaaals abeanUtai, loftwhite Ugh*. *biih for eeaioiry biUlanayaalBteadinea Ucot iorpasied by either gM or elsolric ty â€" [Toronto Tr nth. ^^Ocrraiipondeaoe with dealers and inspection ioTited. OFFICX 9 Adelaide St West, Toronto M EGYPTIA â- tarv of L0T8 and Wild Idvei tions in the Ca Author of " Nina, The Nihilis CHAPTER Vlf.â€" (CoNTiNCEi. L.Tt is certainly so. There can be 1 Lji^ontit. All these accursed loans rJS. down in Egypt become our ma Tkiy bring with them, too, their ow R in order that they may vioUte ours EiS Tonlba Pasha, to which baleims EITa^ed with an oath raifo^doubt about it, and what is wors not only start business here unaskei ?ttsv claim indemnities when they fa A, indemnities which our weak-mind* ugr always seems ready to pay." "Rslsing the taxes of our poor untu the 7cheat the collectors and get the b* 10 on beiog detected, or else, pay an â-  peopla such as these make ver [libels, for there is nothing to mat â„¢j loyal," said Toulba. hiShould Allah call upon me to reign ovt Lffl I will make them lo]|»l, for the f^-llal ^a dog, wonld lay down his very life fc iiod master. By the Prophet, would tha â-  knew better what it was to have one, I the war minister proudly, and Toulb ha at once made answer pxhatis because he has so many masten Lre are twenty foreign consuls in Egypt Ueach is a petty prince. They are abo\ ft. Their watches regulate even th i/sta Feringhee do what wrong h wet his consul wi'l protect him fror l^eoBseqnenoes, whilst the Egyptian i ,j)e injured by the seeking of redress." I*= That is true, for his cue is tried, no r Kis own laws, but by those of the mai io has injured him, which of cours:: ther [bo understanding, so that in seeking t InTsr his stolen coat the chances are tla []ooies all the rest of his apparel, ' sai( leiman Bey. ' By Allah and the Prophet, where is the of discussing these matters farther Ca3 J coont the sands of the desert or the sea lore No, no, but we can try to save our [vei from being buried beneath then, nev Ibeless. My friends, we must lose no tira Iteachingthrriugh trusty but secret emis es the population of oar great cities th DES and injustices which tbey suffer anc r they can best rid themselves of them. lAhmed Arabi, of O.'abi, proclaim myselj I friend of the downtrodden and the op used, and as being ready to lay down my t in their cause. Should they elect me a r champion my battle cry will be ' Egypi ^the Egyptians and down with the £aro 1 control.' You, my friends, I am well e, are with me hand and glove, whilst t allies that we can number without are udy more numerous than all the foUow- t of the Khedive. Go, then, and sow in Bcein order that we r^ip amidst the of victory." I spoke the war minister. Toulba Pasha answer " A victory that has been bed for by the nnlying tongue of pro y, for has it not been foretold that the at leader who shall restore Mohammed- m to its 'olden glory shall be cilled ned, and is not thy name Ahm^d And I BOt the time in which this deed will be Bght been fixed for the thirteenth cen- 1 of the Hegira And do we not enter B that century in the course of a few ki " â- Inshallah, be it as God wills," replied )*ar minister devoutly and then he Pm " You may tsU that propnecy 1 the peop'e likewise, for if Allah speak wgh his prophet and I am the person M """^*^ ***» I iare not, even if 1 ,^°' refuse to obey the behest of the Ni oet IS. Sosro away, and lose no time ia soiv- [thegood seed, yet be cireful that it falls npon stony ground, where the birds of f Mr will see and devour it. With this ~?i I^»K'i3s you, rey brothers, an 3 JWithths parting assurances that as I soar ki '^*" 'i*"fore remember that I blesses the birds that remember their t nests." PJ^ps this warning was not altogethe. w With mutual expressions of fidelity CHAPTER VJ IT. r ^*^"GIX(; .\ND THERO.^yilS.; ol .V ira. [tMiother week has passed away and a I Z^ *?•=?â- * company is playing " The iJr **** ^**""o Theatre to crowded •'!S?i.**?!,°? dancing, singing and lid- on the brink of chaos, though to be I- -obMy treses how closa chtos is at ~. or I., iowers of revolution have per kJnA '*^°' "» darkness and in si- bof W«^° °5* perceives as yet the strong feled^ft' "^*8ger and scimitar blades fciiiaJ« '=-'«ntl««s bayonet points that ^8»g ' »U around. Ih-bIL""" shower of blood drops l it7rn» ^J"" replenish that crop ari T»esJs« ~? qnicker and bear fiuit in IrivTltVu '**"' *â-  Feringhee blood l^eK the strongest nourishment these rv Mngers and revelers will be aroused iC^m '" "" of ease, luxury P»onch kJ*' !L* *^® '°«* of tlie Egyptian, tfSfVy* thunder clap. FW Mr*!*"' *^* ""' 'i'^l« *re Nw^ia .. V " Eirapean quarter of Watfp^V '[«^' "»' cheerful as acv K and r^}"""' ^*â„¢. London or Ne-v Klntoi^;^ '•' labyrinth of dark, "•tortT!!* ""'•=1 valleys, where the »«S.bJ^*® flat-roofed houses on ooottito^ "^^ '^^ **her, where »aSriUB ^1. *^* highest rooms •*li^S»«*v ****'"'^« across the tor Sv^^Si^"""*^ from their re *»» rfh^. " balconies, are the ^*«»dl !„♦ *°* discontent allowed HqubklB murmur, and that mur •^teJ efficiency of signs '%awi?^*'y warning of what n»th»v?.*PP«'^*o those who ^^e headlong pursuit of we. are alth -â„¢,.i_ diil^ parsuix 01 weaiiL I** fcttir "•! t^'oae occupations en- r'^ftSMd^l?* "adivided attention. KnoS *^* *•»• Europeans, as a HftffiS^* ^* ^^t^ed ^dth which "**• flaSSr^'V'*^ begun to regar1 "•^fag of th. ey«, the cSg

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