Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 24 Dec 1885, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

 |»JF 5 EGYPTIANROM ANrCE. I^ye and Wild Adyentiire, foimded upon Startling Berela- tions in. the Career of AraM Pasha, Litihor of " NiifA, Thb Nihilist," " Tax R«d Etc., Eta CHAPIER XVI. AND THAT WILL MISTEFS li!)- CO'TE'T ME. fflelioK that he had drawn the ' » -e P»l*" â- ^» '^^ P*8«ed out " r^ir ifld the aunahiae ha met ^p£ 8'i'l looking calm, amUing f^rot*: He. whom he desired most "'it iimsdiately drew him a8^^e. f^U'baveresoarce to strong. "uca from jourfaoe, also that •'•^""'t-tel as to tne strong." 'â- tT too true. The Khedive is â- ^/. "-born, and so we mast bade- ' aich a result and have al- 'V' i for it, Tewlik has favored m^,ix -ilher than his own people, 1 'i i- he h»s 30 wn the storm, ao let "trwhirlwind. Egypt will rise ii;b; iid cast ofl the viper that she h-^r-i in her bosom, the Albanian '"rtoTTOuld take the bread of her aa: 3iat it unto dogs. I hail thee, E-ir4bi,aj our future Khedive," • caly as the running safe who iitfee ifproach of Prince Halim, our bjM ruler according to the law of the ttiiid the Koran," L p,aie H»lini is a shadow and no Lsii he atill lives." F]" bJ tie oiioaea of Allah, Allah will kiatJ aiit th3 proper hoar mean- ijora jeiT, a month, a week and a fiill keep the silver throne empty and tifseli with the ivory footstool. " [gitybs a wiae plan, for the nnaelfish Ufivsiriaa respect, love and raver- _j mMuwhile would to Allah that Jtiie Saltan would sanction oar up- [lodwhy should he not, for the Khe- o! late sent but little tribute jftoStambonl?" giiinstijt a little Nubian page, at- biplctoreique and scanty costume tntiaaid silver lace that left his Lind glossy black limbs almost entire^ I, approached the two conspirators, fliii waoUy head so that hia great rand noserings might jiagle and jieTideiice of hia proximity. lUigaady butterfly look did thatwith- noiae, and Arabi Pasha turning liegarded him eagerly aad keenly. ' pel; bay 'a lipa expanded in a grin keileirowd of teeth as white as boil- kthe^inth asalaam he advanced and liiii c'.jiei fiat in the war minister's mttn f onn. wulBg a aomwtey twitohlng Spo»," " Th. RcasiAK Sft," I JJP**«» »» *«»• Wumph to.* •b^^, tJ^J-'T**" l»vede«rib«d thabemo- H all inaligmty or allhata. «fif!**l^?^ "^^ *^ •»»â-¼â€¢ ««»»de MNne yrt» cruel in BigiiifioMioe, bat the PiinoaM her Uttie lunda tiU the large ;^d Aipelr arna qmvared from ahoolder to elbowa, and in BD inatant the curtain » _l..,^ J BBILLIA.118. yon were, 'la it a me were, 'In the the prophe*^, yea.' ed my final worda to bargain?' and yoora to nime of Allah aad of aaoh an asaoranoe is never UgMlF"riveS1h« a true Mohammedan, and ThS^o'Kkd J performed my part of the contract." Arabi Paaha'a eyea flaahed with triumph. It waa as he aoapected. She had won the Sultana aanctioa for tbe gnat national movement of which he waa the mainaprina and the head, and he felt that that aanoti^ was of greater value than an army of fiftv thousand man. Carried away by hia excite- ment he ezclaimtd "Your highceaa you have aaved the nationâ€" you are the preaerver of Egypt As you have kept your word, ao wiU I keep mine. Aye, by Allah and hia only prophet, by the blessed Koras, which ia the Book of Life, and by the aacred heads of the martyr brothers, Haasan and Hooaeyn, I swear that for thia graat thing which thou hast done I will grant whatever thou deaireat. Speak, lovely princess, and thy aervant will obey " " Thou muat obey af rer the taking of ao aolemn an oath or the flamea of Ei Sirat will oonaume thy petjured aonl to all eterni- ty. THou loveat a Feringhee girl. Nay deny it not, for I read the truth of my ao- cuaation in your eyes, and the eyea cannot lie Uke the tongue. Well, I will be good- natured and you ahall poaaeaa her." Arabi Paaha eiuld not conceal hia aatia- faction at thia anawer, for a audden and a terrible fear had crept- into hia heart that the prineesa would take advantage of hia oath to grant her whatever ahe deaired to part him from Nellie Trezarr forever. But the beautiful Oriental watched the lighting up of hia whole countenance with secret exultation and indulged in a truly Satanic amile aa she made reply " Yea, I will be thy wife, Arabi, and my royal rank will make me supreme over all othera, and ahe, thia Feringhee girl, ahall be a alave of thy harem, a beautiful oda- liaqne and no more, and aa auch I ahall be her miatreas, and that will content me." Had a apear been thrust auddenly into the tendereat part of hia body Arabi Paaha'a countenance could not have exUbited a sharper ezpre sion of pain. He read the privceaa'a fiendiah intentiona with respect to her younger and fairer rival in an in tant. " I ahall be her miatreas and that will content me." The worda were aimple, and yet what did they not ex- preaa He knew that they would aignif y to Nellie Trezarr atrocious tyranny, perpet- ual persecution, in the end, in all pyobabili- ty, madness. Far better for her had ahe ^y~^ "wne who graatly amd to look to ueir own aalvatiaB. Irete to theaa wIm an alwaja oiitiaiBiDg attMn. Mai y ohnroh membaca think tiiat if thsy do no^ag wrooK aad mak% ao traoUe they ue all right. Not at all, rir, aot at aU. Anjbody who oal'a off the thonghta oi the church from aoul-aaviag ia a miadiief- maker, I have beard it aaid of a miaiatar, " Ha greatty inflaaioo* the politioa of oar town." Wall, it is a vary doubtful good, a vary doubtful good ii I he withdraw it, however, it had uthiug behind, and Arabi Pasha, jliastiiy at aomething, discovered it nopal ring. I at once blazid aa brightly, aye, llaiSl; too, as the red fife thit aeem- liam furtfl from the very heart ot the king a rapid sign to the boy to a little distance he returned tfa Fiaha and tald in an excited |»Jit me here, and perchance I will nil tt â- ,7ith that which we most re- he â- -OQiia I f doubt and apprehen- oe rolling away, laaving a clear iiitiim. No more at present, for e ;,it chafea at delay or tardy obe- E tiece worda he darted once more iusjde, aad a mlnat'=! later was ztheNiibiin page through an oran- â„¢ i'.nwat deserved the name of a OKchspwe didil co.er, .and a) r»6K the treea planted. I^ycsd got to the other end of it, F.U page came to a full stop, seiz- ".Biater by the arm, and first p8i?n that had d go no further, towards a t. ^a that waa much iaeJ: wyof the rep;, and intimated l,u"'°.f*'"°°* (f-rthe poor Uttle l*la»dhis tongvs cut out in his ' Wh-'d •*'**' second guide would â- '»armlniater gave him a handful L '\f^ P-"ed on, to discover » jaideto be Elmar. the buffoon. â- â- ""^»".-a the usual feminbie dis- fe-L^j'?,' '°.°*® capacious raiment, n-M him from the crown of the \il '^efoot, and caused him U :.P"*?»Dolatory cotton bale, flf'^.^^'^sby side with the emaJe je.ter and story teller, J^* on thefl^t of their feet, and E ofTi vlP*f*' presently enter- i.„~,°'^ne Khedive. "•.ttdv *^"'!lP*"«'il'^*Wth- r«•a^dt!"•"" ^o^elly likewise, V.e «; J'^^* ^soond description â- "â- anchf "*, ' tJierefore, to aay Wn ftf *™« curtain waa atlaat 4T P^. ^^^ "'»«=««" Zeeneh. "tffonl^'^°'" Zeeneh, for Et- "iin a«5 '1°* *°*«'«i thecham- iJ ^tt each moment the patter C^r'^°»»P»«oforimaon liLTmK "Jf'^elesa and very *»Wer ^fu ,T"^^ tronaers JerlLWy around the h'W. bl^ **"" *»*" "ay Into ^^itS^/ nwovered. 'ihe i'^^^eS^"*^'"'"'" i^ and^ji j°* °^ European L*^ Wi. *** ^8hind in anin: ^M C wWch aeemed to en- â- ^ i^^' "" "»d Umb. 9^U:^^^^^^ ware atud- ^^'goldcoina. «*t we met and coavara- been murdered by the Bedouics, ' You bta'tate," aaid the princess, rarcaa- tically. " Do her parenta refuse her to you, or does it happen tKat ahe loves another, cr likes not the darkness of your complexion Why, what matters any of all of these things when I am about to place you in a position to seize upon, aa the lawful captives of your bow and spear, as many of the Fer- inghee women as you like Thia letter will make you all powerful in the land of Egypt, And lifting up one of her auperb wraps she drew from underneath it a folded letter and held it towards the war minister with a cold and icy smile. But he hesitated to take it. He looked indeed like a man who had b'tien turned into stone. The princess' eyes flashed, " What, do you not then care for what I have been at audi trouble to obtain?" she demanded. " If*the document is of so little value you will not regret should the flame of my chibouk cocanme it," and as she ut- tered the words she puffed the perfumed blazes into a red flime and applied the cor- ner of the all important di.cnment thereto. At the prospect of its deatruction, how- ever, a cold perspiration broke out on the war minister's contracted brow,, and he ex- claimed breathleasly " A native oeforean individual, no matter how young, innocent or fair ahe be. Give me the letter and all shall be aa your high- ness desires. I swear it unto you yet again,"' The princea made no answer, but handed Arabi the letter open and he read as fol- lows His majfsty the Sultan has ordered me to express hia pleasure and hia pardcin _to you, my son, and to aay that as the main- tenance of the integrity of the Caliphate ia a duty which touchea the honor of idl true Moslems, it is incumbent on every Egyp- tian to strive earnestly after the consilida- tion of hia power therein, in order to pre- vent Egypt from- pasfing out of hia hands into the rapacioiu grasp of foreigners, as the vilayet of Tunia has already paaaed, and hia majesty repotes all confidence in your excellency to exert all your influence and to put forth every effort to prevent ao great a cataatrophe from happening, and you are to remember that, he locks only to yon and to none other- Done by his majesty's humble aervant un- der hia majeaty'a eye and authority. Ahmed Pasha Ralib, A de-de Camp and Secretary. "It isacfficlent, and E.ypt is aaved " exclaiaied the war miniatar, preaaing the document first to hia lips aad thoa hia brow ere he placed it in hia pocket. " And I am avenged oa my brother, oa thee and on her," reapoaded the priaceaa, " Thou Imoweat much, oh, Arabi, lord of my life and heart, but thou knoweat not aU. Go, my portion of our compact ia performed youra has atill to ba aooompllahed, and you dare not fall ma. 'Us Mdd that women are plaaaed with trifles It may be ao, tor I niy Agaia that I ahaU be her miatraaa, and fliat will content me," CHAPTER XVn. WHAT MAY qCCVK BEHIirDA HABIH OUBTAIK Ktherelaanybaaatyin the graoa of ft* biawny tigraa aa riie oronohaa pmi ing ow her Btriokaa aad praatcata fpa, 'nj^'f*^ waa there both graoo aad bawrigr » «« Utha,quivarlngHmbof tha ^gJ^-F"" oaaa. aa aha gaya utteraBoa to »•*«* with wbleh m ooooladad oar lMtotaaptw *w .. ^T,, the curtain was raised aad there atoodElmar the buffoon aa aa effeotual check to all f nrthw converae of a oonfidea- tial aature aad ia to6ea alao that the iater- vlew waa over aad that ahe wu waitiac to coaduct him whom ahe had brought hiUier once more bayoad the man-fo^biddan pre- cinota of our harem. The prinoeas pointed tewarda the curtidn butapokeno word, and the dieguiaed war minuter had no option but to bow and re- tire. Elmar the buffoon now hurried him along aa though ahe had some oanae for anxiety, but Arabi could not gueaa wherein it lay ua- icwi It had aomething to do with the more tiian usual racket aad riot cieated by the wives and alavaa of th- Khedive, who, aa a rule, poaaeaaing aot the alighteat mental culture, are addicted to all kmda of romp- and aoiay gamea aad aporta. But the buffoon'a real reaaon for haste waa now made apparent enough, for aa they reached a vast and teaaelatad- floored apart- ment that had a door at either ead, oaeof theae doora opened aad there came hopping through it a crowd of young girls who had evidently juat emerged from the bath, for acme of them were more than par- tially clad, and some were almost or evea eatirely nude, whilat their long unbouad hair, which in many caaea reachea almoat to their heela, dripped moiatare oathe floor aa they came aloag, laughing, ainging, romp- ing, and aometimea careaaing each other aa though they had not a care In the world. Suddenly, however, there waa a aound of a blow on naked flash, folio irad by a little panting and half atiflad cry, aad Arabi Pa- aha, glancing in the directioa thereof, be- held one of i,the femalea belaboring another with a aomething which ahe held in her hand. A second look auffioed to show that the belaborer was a little skinny womaa, paat the prime of life, aad the belabored a gl;r- ioua young creature not more than half way through her teens, with the moat exqubite- ly rounded limbs and fleah of the most daz- zling purity and whiteneaa. The elder woman had dragged from off her victim the aolitary garment that had concealed her nakednesSj and having taken three turna of her magnificent golden hair around her own;,caarae, long arma,ahad com- menced to atrike her as hard aa he could with the aole of a yellow aatia ahoe, which ahe graaped firmly in her right hand, at the aame time exclaiming in tunea of excessive paasion " You wretched Zobeide, you splashed me purpoaely in the bath. You did it once, you did it twice, you did it thrice, you great aleek, aaucy, white fleshed Zolteide, and now that I have got thee, by the prophet 1 will take it out ot thee for not hi.viug that reapect that is due to the Valide Khanoum, the chief wife of the Khedive-el-Mise, the great sovereign of Egypt," And then the hag-like woman laughed like a hyena and took a yet firmer gTihp of her yellow satin slipper and of the glorious golden tresses, and down on the glossy shouldAra fell blow after blow, each follow- ed by a twist, a writhe, a moan or a cry, whilat the other girla and women atood atill and laughed and even clapped their handa at the aight, for not only waa it politiks to applaud all that the Valide Klianoum or h.ad wife did, but the beautiful Circaaaian alave Zobaide waa the yonngeat of then all, the laat arrival amongst and the present anprema favorite of their lord aad maater the Khedive, who, it waa believed, liad im- ported her from Stamboul at a coat equiva- leat to five thouiaand dollara, which ia a high price aa timea go even for the most lovely apecimeaa of the peerleaa race, and on thia account moat of the other girla were jaaloua of, whilat acme hated her. Qh, how the blowa of the lithe, pliant leaAer muat have atnng that porcelain clear and ivory aoft akin but the delicate pink aplotchea that roae to ita ataialeaa aaowa won no mercy from the atrong heart of the Valide Khanoum, whaae anger waa aa yet far from aatiatad. (TO BE CONTINUED Cliristlaa Ufa la aotloa aot a apaculating, aot a dabattng, but a doi^g. One tiiiag, aad oae oaly, ia ttJa world haa eteraity atamped upoB it. FaeliBga paaa reaolvea and thonghta paaa opiaioaa ohaage. What you have doaa laafea-^laata ia you, Tlirough agao, throuj^ atendty, what you have doaa for Cliriat, that and only that, yon are. He in whoae heart the law waa, and who alone of all mankind waa content to do it, Hia aacrifica alona can ba the aaorifice all- auffici' nt in the father'a aight aa the proper aaorifice of humanity. Ha who through the Eternal Spirit offcrml Himself without apoc to God He alons can give the apirit which enablea us to present our bodiea a living aacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. He is the only High Priest of the nniverae. It seems aa if the day waa not wholly pro- fane in which we h\ve given heed to aome natural object. The fall of anowflakea in a atill air, preaerving to each cr^ atal ita per- fect form the blowing of aleet over a wide sheet of water, and over plaina the reflac- tiona of treea and fiowera in gfaway lakea the muaical, ateamiag, odoroua aouth wind, which converts all trees to windliarpa. The Lord'a Supper ia the right of every tmadng aonl thatneeda the help of God, and recognizee Him. Anybody burdened with aia, anybody d'acouragad in endeavora to right himaeif, anybody that wanta to live a aobler and purer life, haa a right to come here and claim at the hand of the Lord, aad take Hia body, aymbolically, and Hia blood, aymbolioally, for the aake of that work in the aonl for which Chriat came into the world. AU ye that need come, and come freely. You live in an age when aympathy and humanity may ba aaid to ba the great idea of the publicâ€" to make justice more aurely juat to make mercy more aurely merciful to alleviate diaease and poverty to cleanae the waya of aociety to repreaa vice and crime; to treat even the priaonar with more lenity and humanity, and bring him up from his degradation. These are the great thonghta that are throbbing in the breaat of univeraal humanity. What part have you had in them Have you done anything, thought anything in these directiona Yet, how large liave Ieen the instrumentalities put into your hand to contribute to auch great movements. His WTondeiM Escape. Capt. Steiling of the achooner Mercury, which arrived at Ciiicagb the other aight from Ludingtoa, telle an exciting atory of the marvelloua eacape of a aeaman who waa waahed overboard in mid-lake during the recent fearful rtorm. About midaight a trammdeua aaa atouck the veaa el, which waa lab9riag heavily, aad carried Joha Aadaraoa ovar the aide. It -waa impOaaible to round to, and hia compaaioaa gave him up for Icat. Capt. Sterling* who waa at the wheel, waa thonderatruok a few mia- utaa later to aee the man holding on to the port quarter fender and endeavoring to climb over the aide. Capt- iStarling aang ont to the mate to take the wheel, and mahing to the fender rope, reached over and pnllad Anderaon on board. The man aaya tiiat the aea which waahad him overboard carried liim about fifty feet from tiia vaaaal in the diractien in whioh aha waa aidllag. fie la a good awiauaar, aad whaa lie oama up on the «raat of tlia'wava ha law tha TOMala Ujghta â- hiniag faintly through the driving aiMW atcnm, aad ataroak out aa beat be oonld to gat aa near tham aa poaallda. In hia lifa-aad-daath atcog^ teina Biataiially aaaiated bytta nadartow, or back aaa, whioli, baiag atroog, drMgad ha toward Oa vaaaaL At ttla win ji wit erwava awapt ovar tM, aad ut ha to tiie mxfaoo hia haadateock of tiie aiAooow. Harafeaiaad hia. of nfaid aaid bagaa readiiu far iMadMra, wUoh, ha kaewJiwojMwfag OTaa|*«aid* FartaiiatalT ha â-  a ooaa dan ta gnvng _aia SUSPENDED ANIMiHON. Some Extraordinary Cases Keported Fioiu an KuKlIi To'wit. An extraordinary caae of auapended ani- mation ia reported from Dalton in Fnmeaa, A girl named Newell, after an illness of three weeks' duration, apparently died. She was placed in a coffii, and the hour th.xt had b^en fixed for the funeral was drawing near, when she gave signs of re- turning vitality, A doctor waa summoned, and the. young woman ia now aaid to be recovering. A little more than a year ago a a 'ma what a'milar phenomenon cccnrred at Wembdon, near Bridgewater. A laborer named George Chilcot fell down en-Jdenly on the 5Sh of September, 1884, pnd when picked up seemed to be dead. It was sup- posed that he had c'ied from heart disease,^ and preparations were made for the man's funeral. The Vicar of Webdon, however, aaw tho body and waa not entirely aatiafied that death had taken place. He therefore refuaed to bury the auppoaed corpae, but allowed it to be placed in Ita coffin. On the 8th movementa of the body were obaerved, a doctor waa called in, and Chilcot waa taken back to hia home. At the end of eight day a he recovered conaciooaneaa, and finally he regained to a great extent hia nonnal health. These and dozens of well authenticated instancea which might ba cited aeem to anggeat that aoon after aninu- tion has apparenuy departed it may often be within the power of acienoe to revive it. Newell and Chilcot began to recover unaid- ed by aay artifi.ialatlmuloua, aad in apite of the diaadvaatageoua conditiona in which they were left, aad it ia but natural to anp- poae that other apparent oorpaaa might be, aa it were, called back to life, if help were at baud. There are probably many illaeaaea ia which the patleat ahould aot be daapidr- ed of uatil long after the braatiii^ haa ceaaed aad the oulaes have atopped bMtlag, HEALTH, GloQ^d With Â¥ait0. Aa thaaawara of oorcMaa oanyofflhii WMta iccaaaaatly poarad Into thanii w tha bMaaaat wa^ta of ear bodiea ia gdKrad q; by onr vwaa, aad gettaarid of t^ tiialaaB. Uvar, kidnqra aad AIM. If iliaaaaliauBa*- lag oigana get dogged m la aajr way, tha waate ooonmnlatea fa tile blood, geaeratiur diaeaae, aad If their proper aottmi ia aot natored, rtanltkig la deaO. Thia iraata, hewavar, ia aot geaerally dfaa* inated ia the form la which it ia throwa lata the velna, but uadergoea chemical wfn ^wgft iato varloua nlta Aad aolda. Amoag theaa are uric add, aad ha aalta kaown aanrata. The real trouble in BrighVa diaeaae ia that thediaeaaed kidneya, being nnablate do their proper woi^^ the uric add aooumubtea in the circnlatioB, and poiaona the whola ayste p. It ia aome what the aame, but in a lower degree, ia mlaor adlmenta, audi aa "bilious attacka" and many ao-oallad "colda," Now a cold may ba not a oold at all, any more than amali-pox ia a cold, though india- tinguiahable from it at the beginning. It may be due aimply to overeating of auimal (nitrogenoua) food, either habit aaOy or from a partionlir excesa or to a temporary lack of accustomed exaroiae while th^ full, but not otherwise excessive, amount of nitrogen- oua food is kept up. In theae caaaa, the liver, whioh should prepare! the nitrcgecona elements of foodfor assimilation, and effect other change on our waste and redundant elamenta, to enable the kidneya to eliminate them, ia overburd- ened and unequal to tiie exigency. At length there ia a feeling of depresson, aore- nesa, headaohes, bad breath, and a furred tongue, and people aay they have a "biUaua attack," Farther, when the circnlatloa ia more or less loaded with urates, a slight chill, which might ba otherwise hArmlaas, cloaea up tha pores of the skin, and thus throwa back oa the struggling kidneys the large ahare of eliminating work belonging to the latter. The person ia aaid to have takea a hard cold, but the trouble ia in the overloaded drcui ation. The aymptoma, when the whole oul- miaateaia the "attick," are esaentlally the aame. The aystem ntw unloada, during tha enforced reat of the digeative organa, and with the aid of medicine. Sometimaa a aome what aimllar condition reaults where one doea aot drink eaough to meet the aeeda of the system. Much of the power of mineral apiinga la due aot 80 much to aay ingredient contained in the water, aa to the water itaelf Saya a writer in the JUedicalaadSwgicalBeporter, to whom wa are indebted for aome of thi^ above pointa. "The whole aystem becomes thoroughly washed out every particle of tissue has the effete, waste material all aoaked out and flooded away." He^th Hints bv an M. D. A Codicil Written on the Battlefield. '.\ Fortunattly iaal oaa OB tiio port Mda aad waa halpad oa baaid mora dead tiaui allrai The will of the Bight Hon. John Edward Laveaoo, Viscount St. Vmoent, late of Nor- ton Dianey, Lincolnshire, a Captain in the Sixteenth Lancers, who died on Jan, 22 laat, at Abou,Klea. in the Soudan, waa proved on the 221 ult,, the value of the personal estate amounting to over jCll 000, The codicil waa made by the deoeaaed after he waa wounded It ia written on one of tha pagea of Ilia pocket army book, following aome notea aa to camels, aketohea, and other mill- taiy memoa,, and tiie book Is filed in the principle registry of the Probate Court, llie codidl U in pencil in the form of a let- ter, but act witaeaaed. Bdng, however, written by the deoeaaed himaeif, he iaing attiia time engaged la actual military aer- vioa fai tha face of tha enemy, aad intended by lilm to operate ahould ha die, it haa fall aad Uading affect In' law. It ia aa foliowa Dbab IfiMMA la tha event' of my dying under liie opaiation alMut to ba par- facnied, I ahould ilka Pta. Taafiby* Hoamar, aad Kright to have aa aaaidW ot £15 each. IdioiddlikeatablatBatiaNortoa Church witii a amall deaci^ im from 'Army Liat,' or daawliare, of my military life. Your afia. aoa. St. VnrciHT. ••To Ladt St. Vwcent." JelMa(iriiola aotfrindfy tojohaaon)â€" Y«a i Ha leaomUaa hia fatiur, who b ifttUfcaa amaU aiaaa ail •varnwfe I Ifi; Oldbaaa (to yooag rival, bofata ^djIoiriMmttej an both attaat- bkaa bm, Gharley, hair jtm'n yoaag lady While everybody ahould uae aalt w|tti their food, it doea not follow that aalted food is good. Salted food containa an exceaa of aalt, and ita continued use is an evil. But salt taken with the food asaiata digea- tion, supplies to the system certain needed elimicat dements, diaaolvea albumen and haa a healthy influence. The difference be- tween salted food and food with aalt ia tha difference between too much and enough. The old lady who had lived many yeara wi«h her husband without quarreling, whea asked the secret of their happy life, aaid "I alnraya feed him well. When I waa young I won^ hia heart, and now I am old I hwe won hia atomach, and ha is never croaa." Nothing ia more conducive to a happy, cheerful apirit than good feeding. With a great many people the heart ia ap- proached through the atomach. Both work and play are neceaaaijr for healthy development. By work we main- tain the body in a aound atate. Play ia ex- erciae not conadonsly directed aa work ia, but juat as aeceaaary. Work developa the particular organ of iody or mind employed. Play bringa the other parta of the body iato action, and preaervce aa even balance of the ayatem. It ia useful for all people; but ia absolutely essential for this young. Clothing ought to vai^ not only with tiia aeaaon or the weather, but with reapect to the active or paaaive atate of the wearer. He who walka muat be clothed differently from he who drivea, and ahe who dancea from ha who playa the fiddle. Gircumatancea altar caaea m thia seapedt and we cannot proper- ly dreaa by any hard and f aat rule. Light la one of the greateat of bleaainga. Do not ezduda It from the houae. Never mind the color of the carpets and furniture. Let the sunlight in freely. It ia a good dia- laf ectaat it ia a good atbnulant ita prea- ence cheera and e^veda it bringa health and happiaeaa. Reat brlaga repair of body and miad. Thoae who are habituated to full aad regu- lar aleep recover moat rradily firom aickaoaa. Sleep reducea fever, qoiokeaa nutrition, aoothea pain, encouragea the healing of wounded auriaoea. The man who neglecta aleep,. whether It be for atudy, for work, or £uipatlon, ia ruining hia health aad ia- juring both body and mind. Many moderate dilakera of iatozlcatfu liquor profeuto bcUeva that thdr iadnf ganoe improvea thefar condition and ke them in health. Now, their are aymptoma of goad health that the haldtual drinker aaldom ahowa. If he haa a dean tongue, a good appetite, a dow and ataady pnbe, a dean liaad, a cool aUa, a ateady hand, a firm walic, and aonad refraahlag deep at aight, tiian lila liquor drinking la not ddng 1dm any harm, avan If It ia not doing good. It ia aafa to aay that mod«rate drinidag when aiaodatad wi thooa ooaditloiia la aot harmf d but than, how many modwata difaikwa can ahow tliami â-  »«â-  â-  " How do you tall a fool whan yon aaa oea, lira. Joaea?" aakad a waarimaa old bachelor of a livdy youag widow. "I uanally tall aaa to leave," ahe rq^tliad, aad tha baohalor didntadc for a diagram. Hie glory ottMa wmdd paaaea i attaatioe dioald be fixed oa that iriiioh la to ooma. Witiiout that baUaf how oould wa bear tiie daric di^ of tnobla, Iww faoa tha waird a^ataif af pain, wdaaa «a fait that aaffwi^g hadaparpoae, aad tbataaoh atoaaiatlia great taa^toafaonlaaaadad to ba oMadad, aad tha* owdiblair waa daaltl^tiianaaRiMr haadtf Hia Gnat Soolptar. UtbUMlkw m 1^- 1 f:^ '" :.!â- ]: m- :, r-V: H i iii •â- â- |«:1.:' mWW

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy