ipii wmmm "%-«**!."" !5»; m Hui ^3 m H«w to aM9«g* ft â- kfc-rooa lo tkat h (Aall be M whowmM^ MoomioitabbaBdM •hMifnl u Oe poafbOity of tt« esM ad- Bill, ka itudy wUoh wiU prob»b^ attnt neehr* theittmtli^ It morittoatil the "art «f mminfi^ iball be fully recognized aa fenafag a I«|^tmate and important branch ef the art of healing. No error of management in a rick -room ia â- ooraumon «a a neglect orpropor tempera- tare and â-¼entOatioii yet imon tfaeie â-¼ery â- abiectiphyaiolgiatah«Te wiittenmore pages, and phyiioiane spent more breath, tiuat Bpon all Icfadred tofdcs put togetbcv. Of oosiee no inflexible mle can be f ormnlated npoa these points. An op«n window may be •aJration to a man in the bnming stage of a feTor at the same time it ia fatal to one in the sweating stage. With all dne regard for the thermometer, good sense and enlighten- ed and cureful observation should regulate there essential conditions. Every one admits the necessity of keeping the air of the iiok-room as pue aa possible, yet howlseldom, except in caies^of contagion, do we see disinfectants about a sick-bed. Chloride of lime and carbolic acid ate cheap and efieotive and something of the kind should always be used wherever fresh air cannot Ie freely admitted. Diere should always be a towel-raok in the room, or just outtiide, where moistened cloths can be quickly dried. Cloths wet in pure water even give out an unpleasant odor left lying in a heap to mold or dty as they best can. Keep one stand or table for food or drinks and another for medicines, A clean newspaper often renewed makes a better covering for such tables than a cloth. Have a basin of water always at hand, that when- ever a spoon cr wineglass is used, it can be rinsed immediately and ready for use. Guard against irritating noiie,|creakic gdoon, chairs or shoes, also against too much light and cross lights. Holes in window-shades and' gaps in shutters are often first-clasS nuisan- ' oes. Many an invalid is tortured by a einglo point of piercing light, wliich seems, like a faithful eye, to pursue him everywhere, and to which in spite of himjelf he is ever re- turning. A little daily change in the arrangement ei furniture, a little planning for such pleas- ant surprises as sn invalid can bear, in the way of food, company and amusement, will often be more effectual in hastening the convalescence of a patient that all the tonics thtkt have been used in the building up of in- firm humanity since the days cf Esculapins. A soft tread, a mild, persuasive word, a tcacnetic hand, a tact â€" or shall we say a geuus â€" for detecting the interior aspects of disease, are invaluable adjuccts cf good nnrsing. Clatter of firearms, rattle of dishes and newspapers, lond talking and whisper- ing, are about equally abominable. Growing plants are usually interdicted in a tick-rcom, but cut flowers are gr at brighteners of Its sombemess. Fear and Disease. Som emotions accelerate the heart, quick- en the action ot the braib,'glve new strentth and elasticity to the step, and greatly enliv- en the spirits â€" the effect being of brief dur- ation. Others, like hope, for instance, have a similar effect much lower in degree, but much more prolonged. Still others have an opposite effect. Among the last is fear. Many cases are en record in which it has resulted in sudden death. Under its inflaence, as is well known, the face often becames pale, the heart beats violently, the breath is obstxncted, the limbs tremble, the appetite is lost, and all other emotions are overcome. We ppeak of the man as paralyzed with fear. There is literal truth in this. The effect is dne to the Inflnenceof the emotion on some one of tiie cerebral centres â€" the gan- gUsa, or nerve masses, near the base of the bndn, which govern the action of the various vital organs This influencejs, for the time, of a paralyzing nature. Hence the capillary blood-vessels oear the â- nrface are collapsed, and the blood is driv- en back on the heart, bnrdenirg both i*. and At lung while the secretion of .the gastric juice is arrested b; a paralysis of the great nerve â€" ^the pnenmogastric â€" which supplies the stomach with its working force. Sach a case k an extreme one, but it is the same in kind with fear in every degree. It low- era the tone of the system, .It lessens the vitality. ' Even this condition is a diseased one, and if protracted, the system would, sooner or later, give way under it. But the particular point we wish to make is tliat fear exposes even the most robust to the attacks of infectious diseases. The dis- eases are caused by minute organbms which enter the body through the stomach or the lungs. They may be harmless, if the stomach digests tiiem, or if the body has its full pow- er of redstance to infection. Bat just here is the danger from fear â€" it lessens the normal resistance of the system, and especially arrests the power of the stomach to secrete the gastric fluid. I: puts the nstem, for the time beii^, wl ere it is left by debilitating disease, by drinking habits, by over-eating, by excesses, by too continuous watcliing, or by anxious worry. If therefore, the cholera invades Amer!ca, or smallpox prevails, don't let us invite an attack by fear; bnt rep^l it by keeping about our dally vocations with a cheerful tmst and a' hand of help for others â€" having, of -course, done our whole duty in the mat- ter of hygiene. raters. Many poople pin their faith to filter^' and think that so long as they pass th^ driok- fag watartiucaghan earthenware jar with â- omo mystariona filtering medium inside, titesoorte of the water or the ocndition of tholr datama does not ia tlia laaat mat- tar. This to a dndlar ddnaion to tiielM- liaf which paasea frady correat, that if yea add spirits to anwholeaoma w»Mr yoa rob tt of ha aoxlaaa qoalitioa. or at laaat dimin- bh them. We d« not daay tha aaafalamn •f filtan, but wa daoin to pmnt oat that they most oot bo exolosively rolled apoo. Water filtnktiaahaaiaUasray Iiad as muoh aon- aowa aiHton aibeo* it aa watar analyato. Thait«aka«i0tto*o kamtiio watar Itaolf aa pu« M poHibla. Where poUatitm to aiianairtail. la* Mm watar bo bollad for a oon- siSnaTrT' r^"*~* ^* ^^^ afterward ba aar- atod by paulBg it avvaral timaa from a haUit d( two or tlirao faat from ona veoaal toHMtiiar.OTbyaitlMalaMuia. If a fil- tKbeoHi. it AutM. W ai uuaJbla wiiiiiHiiia. anil tbt fai ahiraW ba M«li^ nmaTaUa for d ean- aii« pnipoasa. U » iW *• |bo» '^^ polhitea rather thMs fmlfi« th» water. Cholera Mttbu. At a recent «»thering of madioal mea io Philadol^da Dr. W. S. Janney, late Coron- er of that oity, made tha aterOhig state- ment, that " no healthy man or woman evar dies in this olinsaCe from cholera moilras." He repeated the remark to the editor of tiie Medical and Sttrgietd Btporier, â- aying thrt tlie records of the Coroner's ofaa* would aub- atanttoto hto words. He explained tiiat by " healthy" he meant a person with organic diseases aodof average strength and vitality. " Such a person," he said "when dying with symptons of cholera morbus, always dies from poisoning (usually arsenic,) and the case to one of suicide or homicide." The ex-Coronar first examined into these caaes whenaatout, healthy man of hto acquaintance died after an illness of thirty-six hours with cholera morbus. He had been attended by four reputable physiclanp, one of whcm had signed the death certificate. Yet he iiuti- tuted an inveatigation, and found enough araenic in the decaased to Idll a dozen men. He afterwards met with five or six similar cases. Dr. Barthlow, in a conversation with the editor of the Reporter, said that he had not the least doubt of the correctness of Dr, Janney's assertion. Another p.omin- ent physican stated hto belief in these views, and referred the causes of such attempto to pohon vrith arsenic to connubial unco r gen- iality. Ooorage. Who to afraid Everybody There is not a creature living who does not suffer from fear, reasonable or unreasonable upon the whole, there to not more fear in the world then there is need of. It is indispensable, ^Ve could no more do without fear than a watch could do without its mainspring. Some good ard brave boys suffer from the fear of being afraid others, from the fear of being thought afraid. Having learned to admire courage and courageous deeds of heroes, when they find themselves alarmed at acything, they s^y to themselves: â€" " An: I really a coward, then If I am afraid of a cow, a dog, a dark room, or a clap of thunder, what a sorry figure I should cut if I had been a soldier " Bat let us reflect a moment. A boy â€" even a mKaâ€"ougM to bs afraid of a big, strange dcg coming toward him, with a red mouth open, panting and g'aring. Perhaps he ought not to run away, because that to a dangerous kind cf strategy but he ought to be so much afraid of the dog as to keep a sharp lookout until he discovers the inton- tioVs of the brute. Courage r'oes not consist in not being afr,!id,-hut m moedng danger we are afraid of. That person is brav- who does a duty he mentally dreads, and mary a gallant fel- low has gone into peril tremblicg and pale with alt rm. Butheu'e« When the a*e J. 11 A.-ucedy, of Balti- more, formerly Secretary of the Navy, was fifteen years of age, the country being stonadaa, aad. it may be ol deatii. Tha 2SaH«faUof laaartoddaUn., Thay ataad on the edgaa of remote parka, they «a hidden In tUclly wooded ravlem. tbw atand, toototed and lonely, o« tha «»«»«*« flanks of ragged fodthOto, with tiia m^iam swaying ua i^thbg above Oiem. On the riMM^ l^l^laBd^takaa. overhoag by gnat dlffc, and where the sound of rf ppiiiig water blends with the mysteriona noiaoa of an to- brokea forert, there wiU be fomd a cabto. Aod in open valleya, rnggei and gray wltt ease braab, and desolate, a cabin to sore to be found. It may be old and partiy decayed, bnt it shows that man once lived, and toU- ed, and aoflfered, in the highland vtHej _of desolation. Ah, the stories that the desert- ed cabina of the Rooky Mountains could tol if they could apeak 1 I have seen many of these hute, and they always interested me. Some years ago I was traveling m tire westerly apura of the Bitter Root Monntalna. One day, towarda evenine, an autumn storm swept over the range. The snow fiUed too air. The extent of vbion waa about fifty yards. I supposed I waa in an unknown region, probably one that had never been trodden by white men. I rode out of tiwj tim- ber into a tiny park. Standing among the trees that fringed ita edge was a log hut. The chinkirg had fallen from between the logs, and there waa alarge hole in ita roof; but it would shelter myself and my horse from the storm. I entered it and led my horse in. There was not a thing in the c^bin, ex- cepting pieces of beaver and bear skins, two blocks of wood, and a small corroded, brass crucifix, which hong on a nail above where the bank should have been. I built a fire on the damp, old hearth, and sat snpperleas looking at the crucifix. I knew the story of ita owner just as well as thoush it had ' been told to me. A Hudson Bay Cotrpwiy employee, probably a French Cana'diar, had built the cabin and had passed the winter in trapping in those highland solitudes. The cr tcmx was the emblem of his faith, and, in sdiition, it reminded the lonely trapper ' of the highlBst civilizatiou he knew ofâ€" thit which surrounded Port Garry, and that lin- ed tiie banks of the Red River of the North, dark-e}e' bright faced half-breed women, with whom he had danced at frontier balls- hovered aroncd the crucifix. Often dnring the long winter nighto he had gezed on the cru- cifix and sighed or smiled as hto mood might have been. One day the trapper went forth and never returned. He perished in a storm, he was killed in a contest with a bear, he was waylaid by Spokane IndiiCf, at v rate he cerer retorned. The large quantity of torn, moth-eaten fur that littered the cabin showed that he had r ot marketed hto catch. After the turs had been tern and mothea'en and recdered valueless, the cabin had been plundered of cooking utensito by predatory visitors. Three years ego I found a em«ll well-bnilt cabin that stood in a deep and thickly «rood- jjjgu j ed ravine by a tiny stream of ice water. A deepiy'agitated bV'the prospect .fwM with j few old sluice boxes and the denuded bed England, he made up hi« mind that when it "%°^ ""°'»" P^ "" â„¢^°* *?^«* "»« 'to^ came, he would join the army. One thought oj mmer. who th. ight he had strack it nrcnEiT8 nr the BOcnBBi CablBs yamts. Tto*«athiBaalBaon«af flM dawrted oaUM in thtfBoSy Maoataiu that apeak in .ad tcsMi to thelnaii •* i«»'»«»" "^^ teU him atociea of Idaatcd hopoa, of inuOMe held him back He was awfully afraid of the dark, having been terrified by ghost stories in his childhood. In o: der to cure himself of bis fears, he used to go at midnight to an extensive forest near his father's house, and walk about until morning. Thto he did until he was as much at ease in the woods at two o'clock in the morning, as he was in his father's garden after breakfast. Although at first he saw enemi esand gbo'sta at every step, he perse- vered until even these startling experiences ceased to alarm him. When the war was declared in 1S1*2, he went to the front, took part in the battle of Bladensburgh, and ran away, with the rtit of his regiment Bat his running away was glorious, too " Wo made a fine scamper cf i%" he says, " I lost my muitket in tbe melee, while bear- ing off a comrade whose leg was broken by a buUet.' Another proof that even heroes run away sometimes. If heroes, why not boys Every good solc'ier knows that there are times When discretion !s the better part of valor. The Coanterslgn. 'Twas near tbe break r{ day, hn* still The moon waa ahlD^ing biightly The west wind as it passed tbe flowers Set each one rwaj icg lightly. Tbe sentry (low pi^eed to and fro, A faithful night-watch keeping, While in his tents b:hind bim stretched His comr,;des all were sletpiog. Slow to and fro tbe sentry paced, His mnsket on bis shoulder, But not a ttacngbt of death or war Was w'tb this brave young soldier Ah, no 1 his heart was far away Wbere, on a western prairie, A rose-twiued cottage stood That nlg'bt The countersign was "Mary." And there his own true love be saw, Her blue eyes kindly beiming Above them, on her son-kissed brow, Her curls like cuiibine gleaming. And heard her sic ging as Sba churned Her butter in the dairy. The song she loved th» best. That night The countersign was "Mary." "Oh I for one kiss from her V he dghed. When up tiie lone road glancing, He spied a slender little form With falterin.: staps advancing. And aa it neartd him silently He gtzed at it in wonder Then dropped his musket In hit band And chikUenged, "Who goes yondsrV' Still on it came. â- 'Not one step more. Be you man or • hild or faiiy, UoIms yon give the connter^gn. Hsitt Whogocsthcrer •• 'Ui ii«»v •• Aswsetvoloscried,andlnUsa(Bu â- The he left behind him ^^ ^S^'Sf?" '•"• 'ermanymU«s She'd brsvety toUed to flnd him. "I heard that y«u were wonnded, dear " I Mmld Ml star • moment, butT^*^ AU other ties foisaUog. ^^'SH?*' '" "y trief made strons Klrd heaven wsfcshfas o'ei me^' "At last tcu stocdJlo„ «!?• "^*' "^^iS^ ?• "•" «»«»W no* pasi â- ••weuay hWy oams bnt I A^??L£ •" "*«" »«• ow. ..J^'VhsSMOUfl 'hsssid. "%^*' *»'*Ood ilMBirtt," Thslcouatertipi is 'Ib^ Don't growl when tiia doctor orden bark. he had rich, building a house and working for one season, and then abandoning the claim. There was no blazed trail leading to this house. Thto indicated that the owuer cf the cabin did ITot hanker for vistors, and made me suspect that the diggings must have prospected well, I tried the gravel. It prospected fairly, bnt it was so high lying that water b sufficient quantities to work the ground rapidly and thoroughly could not be got on te it. The mine was worthless. I went to the house, and as I passed aronnd one end I saw that the window had been broken inward. That was odd. Why should any one break into a house throogh a win- dow when the door was fastened by a latch only Curious about the .broken window,! looked through it into ths house. On the floor lay two dead mountain lions, I open- ed the door and examined the dead animato. They, judging from the condition of their skins, had got into the house the previous winter when the snow was deep and t'-e weather intensely cold. The broken window showed how they had got in. Why they sought refuge in the cabin, and what killed them, I do not know. Another cabin stood on the headwaters of a creek by a deep spring of ice water. Thto cabin was about fifteen miles from my highland house, I found it one day while deer hunting. It had not been occupied for years. There were holes in ita roof, and some of the lower wall logs were badly de- cayed. In a box, pushed far back under a double bunk, were thirty or forty pfcecea of white chhia table ware, and a doaen plated forks. There was nothing else hi the home, Ua my return home I told my wife cf the chtaa, and she, womanhke, coveted it. I promfaodto go for it in a few days and did so but it was gone. Anotiier hunter or min- er had found the cabin, and, being a prompt ter man than I, had packed the fi»x on his horse and carried it off. The Fatal Watch. The late Ihr.lMoLean sometimes. In feelins the putoe of hto patients, held hto wateh in biataand and counted the putoations. On stopped suddenly hi hto hand, and hto pa- tient, cratrary to hto expectation, died. He related tidato a party of gentleman among whom was Davy H.rris, a weU-knowiI Mtiaen of onr ooapty, long time clerk of onr toferior court. Not long after, Harris was taken riok, and sent for the Dactot. WTwa the Dootor arrived, ha waa a great deal bet- tor^and waa aitting on the pJLza at Maj w B«fa. where ha Ihred. The Dootor f3?hh P»toe. and wioonadonaly polled out hto wateh. Harris, remembering tha iaddant The watoh stopped. In forty eight Iwu. he waa a oorpoe. ~a • iroia .-y ^^' ^?°nb*rt rf Italy waaaho f ^«r««tiy la tiia park at Miiat hiaion SSr* ^a*^ when ha Bat In aoothor S?. tiidgaandfired ha looJVad awSTalwtt r.t'^u'?!. J!_^ .*»"4 ttrt ttte. L o^a. •wanptloBBad from tha goo, and tha MO«B«.o,4.i«ioiga Uoek, it ^oStSZ VOB .ivVIIOILT-â€" Clapperton'8 SpodlSotton WBHaBtodfVIiBi I«mtW**2^JJ?Asii OT ssetaf waawne Hse »w -^^ â€" ._»„. â€" Sm. JVVasaalebtslttfw CiktcADA LOAN SAVINGS CO. â- â- eMVorated. Snbsctibed OniltBl Paid up CapiM-~. Beeerve F«Dd.â€" .â€" "•- Total Assets... lasB. .._ |8,ooo.roo .... 2,200,000 .... 1.100.000 .... 8,eeo,ooo ComDnay's BalMlngit T»roBto »t, Toronto. The CoBMsany has bow «b hand a large MnooBt of KagUab money which it la pre- pared to lead on firtt-claas aecontlea at low ratea of intereat. Apply to J. HBKBBKT HAMtH. Xansctac Direoio) Christmas Cards BT MAZIi At less than wiiolfsale prices A",^«" •»?'*fJ,,S2 two alike. Postage prepaid. EIBTHDAY CARDS 25 CABDS, good value, fot I 26 «1 M o: " «, â- laiser, • «• ' " M " veiytoe. " 1.00 8 26 ilVlOrdert may be proportionately mUed. Cash o accompany order, Addtsss, Matthe ws Bros. Oo. .Toronto Allan Lini Koyal Mall Steamsliips. Sailing duiing winter from PortUtd every Thurs- day and Halifax every Eatuiday to lifrerpooi. and In sammer from Quebec every Saturdav to Liverpool, calUmc at LonxJoDderry to land mails and psssengeis for SootiaDd and Ireland Also from Baltlmon. via t HilitaxandSt Joha's,N.F. to Liverpool fortnightly duiing snmmer montbs. The steamers of tiie Oias- gow lines sail during winter to and from Halifax Portland, Boston and Philadelphia: and duiing sum- mer between Glasgow and Montreal, weekly; Glas- gow and Bostcn weekly, and Glasgow acd PhUsdel' phla t ttnightly. For freight, pMSage, or other Information apoly to A. Schumacher ft Co. Baltimore 8. Onnard Co., Halifax Shea Co., St John's, N.F.: Wm Thomp- son Co St John, N B Allan Co Chicago Love* Alden. New York H. BourUer, TorMtp; AlUns. Bat Co., Quebec Wm. BiooU*. Plilla- delphU: H. A. Allan, Portlatd. Bcstoa. Won^eal. it. 0. BaooB, Bidled 'slJ\, I Ji Wn» P^irv Salt i^ .«« Bag»Jl â€" -aB-^ â- JEfcZlBr Cheap Homes for thp Along the line of the Oiie.^ KaUway m Central ^•â- «»«»J Helbraska. Kew slS?iJ2S«jtau7a lanidly settled In tbese^Sf-^ '^iCS ^cS^^£StS;-^«^'«^^ cbSe^Uh^tXtffiS?;?^/ K. 8. OUR FfiEJJ 120-Page Catalot For 1886 ^s Now J CAUTION EA.CH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAYY IS BIABEED T- B IN BRONZE LETTERS None Other Gennise. niiistratin? nearly fhtM diflerent .styles of uZ\ sfiitablefot Xmas Presei and at lower prices tliaiei before oflTered to the puHt] yon want to savemoneYMillj address for our f 'ATAlOCa] We have a variety ii i and elegant designs, seti II iamonds. Riibie.sPearl$i Brecious stones, in BrwL ins*. Bracelets, Scarf Piis| lar Buttons. A.c. and am ' variety of Gold isilm it OUR OWN MMj And .Maniiriictiirrd in Onr E»t.tM Shall be pleased lo gVe (stiimtsM desciipttOD or st\-le of Jewe'lerT'ok^ to order. All our gco's are felly tee" +0 Ve the quality of gold siwfdl mark 3d with our initials, thns 'â- C. S. ISKt." In Silverware we bare m\ Largest and Most Complete StickiT Drin=Bi n, all ti.e Litest Deiigis ni| Quality made, CATALOGUE PRal Manufacturer, Imnortih WtdA Retail Dealer, 5« CHIRCH ST., TOMS BOOT SHOE HAMACTi OF MONTR EAL Whereas the reports of the epidemic in Montreal Mwjj vi«us reasons, heen greatly exasserated, we, the nnle"'fSl S?f «»?L?."""'»'^?'*«" of Montreal, hejc to Jnf"" i'^ffcip i„«Ji?****.%"'"y *•»»* •«»• mannfactnrii.g estabHsWfl^ nn^lliril •!S5**i*!L*'*** "' rcmoTed from what is known «5 ^^ District! that the extraordinary precautions taken by as " extremely improbable that coutacf on can be carried m ow ' S^o^fJ7**5?*PA?7^*l» onr establishment hasjjeen vacoj" re-vaccinated (their families also being vaccinated), »• Ki*lI^i5V^5â„¢i"*/**» •«'« homes of onr operatives Msko SI««i??*«?'*5pI*J*'«*»» I *ndthat it is acknowiediredbytW' 5£S?iLi'^*^*J'*. combination of cnemicals used mttr*i MLii?^i**l*J?'i**i^»««f the leather used in Boots and*!*" itself a potent disinfectant. J nBAl,â„¢*.atr-ifl"*«**"'P"** ^»** *^*ry reqtilremenl •»' •"•'•^iSf.^l iBspecter.wekavereeelvea hUcertlOcates. I (Signed.) ,1 SH4BPF JV*%TA COCHR41VE, CAS8I*' {AMIS LIMTON CO.* JAMBIPOPHAM « CO.. JAMBS WHITMAM CO.. C. BOIVIN. IMPORTAN T TO AU W HP DESIRE MORE TB HAEW SAFETY LAMP unp osss- •• 5,u| ever inTented lUnnf sonren sbo oMbe w â- -»•-â- ».- in Bssss ud Mieksl. IWs lamp »ok |»« " sad tana MssAbst Xeiaato's Industrial ExUbitien. 18«- f m^i^ IkeeO,! r«tac • SMslSBt iiiealaf Ion at sir innvsrSlknash tks ' B^IUs sifBTfafBt r«--rito«S.j4*«»"a'U tbs wiek^w U fw^" nil aU kh'OB'h to tke w Wv^^. i ayOwrsnsMceflswitfc «ss1sn. and iDSpcetleii isrttM OFnOl: 9 Adelaide St.We8t,Toronto nfPTi i fui wild AdT{ tions in the Ga .ifllM* at •• NiifA, Th« Nihilis E CHAPXEE XIV. JriiBBADOWWO or DKSnST. _l,aoo of n»Me **""» ®°' ^P°" f StMto pe»on»ge the wsx minU IStutoovmAbaVOtUnt time tl "i-ir V and M ke re-entered Cai '^beelmie Nellie's pwrents fa fher tohiai in mnrringe ^c ' " BOinttan ihanld have becoi a- he met AH Bey Fehmy a Bev the colonels of ths ne| gl that hkd revolted against the Ki i^Biaaated on powerfnl horsos a xmstsnanoBS expresaiTe of distrust a i^A, where in tiie name of AU -phei; ha»e yon been?" laBAiwh end »t such a time, too, wh J|]°5laoging on to life by our eyelasi WM the dual greettng, utttred h so that neither the negro orderl: servants should imderstasd. Are nw that something untoward h -J bm he did not allow his face CrSeilighert trace of discamposi lieplied: IfoSsn can be in two places at on( iM« is more than one matter to be i _1 to. In the name of the only proph( ris it' that disturbs you! ' laa know the C^oasnan officer who i tad to assassinate yon« aye, and agaii I As crime waa clearly proved and w Btenoed to death accordingly " I is excited tonal from Abdullah Be laU leplied with a amile I I didn^ i«m«mber him, who sfaoul( irhst of him, my good friend " sentence has been revoked and gsA sent away to aimp'e banithmei lompanied even by military degrad Wtat think ou of that ' Rot being vindictive, I am glad that t tonate Has escaped so eaaiiy," â- liaUah, the man ia nothing. Thefai piflosBoe that p r o m pted the action is I that we look at. £vea a straw nhoi I way the wind blows, and this stn â- itiiata gale ia about to blow on I die direction of England and Franc ono, f «r worse, lemains to be tol 1 Pasha, tiiat son of burnt fathei jed round agidn like a weather van I gone over a second time by joi I in excited tones from Ali Bey Fehm I Bey at omct rtriking in with i is too true. And now comee the wot The interview between the Turkl ' and the consuls general of Ed •ad France took place at midnigl Hy thty love dukaeaa rather tni i whose dMda are tareacherous and ev I tiie result waa that the Khedive i I the Ulemas and such of the notabl I coold bribe or affright l^ special sn: at the palace an hour before dan I to them declared that he had dismiss from the ministry and from all ra I oomnumd in the army as well, and tl 'ght you should be on your way to t u or tha White NUe. He added th ras the Khedive el-Mise, the sole gove [power in Egypt, and that he wished le generalljr luown that his good trien^ [French and English, conld land tei mnds of soldierd and qaell with fi| i^and steel any uprising of the p^pui. " B army against his lawful and undi vie liis is serious," excUdmed Arabi. ' 'Fr| n got you this intelligence ' IFrom Giraffer, the Aga, who, as |W| is in our pay,' answered Abdullah fAnd," added Ali Bey Fehmy, "Gir^ ' Aga, coonseled immediate fligh â- etbat the maciiinations of our fors w| f ame not to be defeated, Abdullah • to share your fate. ' -d, aa you see, idy monniied to evaa^ it, bnt we co I â„¢P»rt without giving von a wamin, onoe the more wh d desert me, '.I â- h»ll have to reward when I beo |M»e-el-Miae, in the place of that wre |»J^r Te *fik. Let thoee who aban â- â- tte hour of peril qu^ce and trem ^•W for though I may forgive a f o ' "WW panl-a a false friend, W' tioab r4ha and Suleiman Bey Lkli " ' *** **»«y'U never blanch f ^â- •hn for such a oat's paw of adv m as this. I have good news that tjpw^h your bad. But go, go, I 1 â- cert m -a of stout heart left, I ca OBtycu," I'T* "• M brave as most men. W( l^I«dent," said Abdullah sheepis r?M If yon ciu, convince us that u..*^ ill-timed, we wiU throw [*«â- ." added AU Bey Fehmy. " *â- yen see, we could not leave hAfci*"" r *^t wMoh alone induces me to la?* .*•» my favor," replied the p ««5 adniatar. "Yea, I at sU ev' â- ^fear yoar devotion, and in 1 «.-l"i ' '•^ y®' my news, i*"*p»«lx*ta, the warlike miâ€" ,. '^^w would fain have served E, 'â- •^•d Tnaia, has fallen from po T of Zg*^ BfMe hM filled his place, [ygawigittodowltiiour •ppreJ jnijUwi. On tiMothw hand. End l"2*5»e to fly alone in the teel 't"5* •â- * QermaBy, by whose f M ^jT*^â€" dwhâ€" did yon learn *f 'naoet' domaaded both his r â€" wii« not an hour and i L!««hiif •ran the Frisiichc, l«i tiM inldligaBce as yd Itt once to the Khel t.' I w ito board the U| to oertain de lAIIB^ ow idea of i ftjprtoBwpt^.lad iMraoak Itla your boi^ 'AS,??!!^:;.^^