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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 13 Nov 1885, p. 2

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· W§titi Ai&ifiA &9 was most gorgeously att ired, wh ilst she her - / mr. the palace, t ake up our position unseen ,he gorgeous H all of a. H undred Mirrors, self wore on nm <, wrist s, a nkles and a.rms in 1 almost sufficient of golden ornamcnt6 to h a.ve from whose azurn·domed r oof a t houc"ncl sunk her with their weight even h P.d she at1·rB of glaes gleam down on an assemblage th"-t"is well worth contemplating. been able to s wim." "l declare, Frank, I think I have as 'l' he superb band of the Khedin ;'a favorite much reason t o be jea.l0us of your interest- r er.iment of zoua.ve· uniformed l·.ncers ia die1 ing bat her a~ you have to he of rny war min- co1n"i!ing the most modern da.nce music in a ister . Pri:.y, how d id she thank you ? ' ah.,ll-sha.pd gallery, which i8 entirely coat . R emember. t his aml purcl1ase your Furs at "She p ressed my hand, and t hfn slipped ed with mother of vear l, and in the vast Jly the .Auther of "N1:;A, T rrE Nrn1LI8T," "Tn E RED SPJDER," "TuE RussuN SPY," on to my litt le finger t hia ring, which she space beneath, the K hedive's guests are alt ook from· off her t humb She a ocomp11.nied ' r eady nearly all assembled. Seventeen out E Tc., ETc, the gilt wit h the~ e softly murmured wor<ls of the twenty foreign consuls, es.ch of whom in broken yet perfectly intelligible French, brings his own la ws t o Egypt, i>nd it eist s you'll let me be y our c'.i.arioten, N ellie, I'll ' 'Tls the jewel of the month, so ·Near it ever, that his countrymen shall be amenable t o no CHAPTER I. iell you all a bout the affair and smd Simson and be su re that as long a.a you do so during other, a.re there with their wives and fami GRAND CAIRO-THE CHOUilRA.ll ROAD AT SUN· b. 1ch: with my groom. You don·t want t o this month of the yea.r, deat h nor misfortune lies, a swa.rm of locus t a that certainly for m will ever find you. ' Then she looked me one of the s ev~n pfagues of modern Egypt; A full and complet e stock of all J.;inds of F ur Coats, Caps, SET. fin 8h your drive thh early ?" It is the celebrated Ohoubrah Ro!l.d of "1 am n ot very particu lar, nml I don't full In the face wit h a wor ld of sentiment in but t hey by n o means exclude the other six, Jackets, Ladies' and Misses' Sets, &c. Grand Cairo, the favoritti European ride, think mamma will scold much if I d on t re- her da.~k, lustrous orbs, and added in still who a.re also pr esent in full force, com pris· drive a.nd p<'ome;111de in the cool of the eve- turn for ano~her ha.If honr. Anyhow, in con- lower tones, ' Answer the summons of the fog men who ha.ve grown fat on t he spoiling ning, which is already here, for the great ei<l e ~· tio n of our noo having met for five lotus flower ,' a.~d immediately d rawing the of the Egyptians, and whom one ca.11 tnly golden sun of Egypt is· fa.st sinking below wt eks, I 1l take a tum down the r oad wit h curblns that sunounded the litt le oabln of feel ha.If inclined to forgive, beoa.use so much the da.babefya.h, I r ·a.W her no more." of the loot has gone toward enh1mcing the the neighboring desert sands, encrimson ing. you and chu .ce it." "A very pr~tty ad venture, I declare; but charms of their comely wives imd pretty a heaven tha.t crimwns again the boundleso T he r.sult of t his "chanciDg it" was t hat .BR I NG YOUR WOR K I N EARLY. plain of burning sa.nd till it looks like a vo.st Captain D .;nelly called up his groom, P at what did she mean by the summons of the daughters. Nellie Tregarr is there, looking as beantllake of blood, with· Sphinx and Pyramids .Mon~gban, die({;onuted, threw him the .lotus fbwer ?" "l'm sure 1 cannot say. Some mere flower ful as a Peri, but not quite so happy a.a one, A.11 the leading lines and special bargains in Felt Hats and Caps. rising like the grotesque hhaped rocky islets brid le, ordered him to be sure to fo ke the for 6he is under her mother 's wi11g, and her Irom out it1 midst. horse in cool, an I then enteriog the lit tle of spsech, I should imagine, Nellie. " " lf I were Pot all jea lous or suspicious I mother is essentially world'y. They, too, are bathed In the same fierce, phaf ion he r elieved the fair charioteer ,,f Gents' Furnishings,. of which there is always the latest styles Like me.ny mothers, so she hae a pet avereneanguiued glow, which, sh<Jotinl'( a.thwa.rt tb.e white rna.mt led reins, wbeel·:d the ponies should feel positive t hat it bore r eference to some future meetiog that she intended to sion for the man whom her daughter loves the entire exa.upse of pale ultramarine sl<y, sharply roun'1, and a.fcer u. f.tiot s how .,f rn· and best quality at lowest prices, such as Rubber Coats, like the streamers, reddens even the crumb- hellion on their pa.rt, made them trot back have with you. However , I po~seaa neither better than all others, and .in heart (and feeling, so let me hll.ve 1\ nel.\rer look at the herein we hope that she is unlike the majoriUmbrellas, Underwear, H ose, Braces, Gloves, &c. lini;i: wa.lls of the cit!l.del and stee:pa in a. rosy on their tracks. ty of motnersl would ra.t her see her fair blush the alabaster dome and heaven -inspir"Well, Frank, I wonder what brought us rinl! which she gave you." "Frank Donelly passed t he whip into his child even the fourth wife of a rich l!;gyp · ing minarets of the Mosq ue of Mehemet back to Cairo almost together?" · GIVE HIM A CALL · AND PROCURE A BARGAIN. · Ali. "l:ll tell you what brought me back, rein hand, and his hastily drawn off glc.ve tfan or T urkish pasha than married to a pen · and h t U op t he other for his comp1 m· niless Irish drag.Jon. along, Bnt the Choubra.b Road, bordered and in N ellie It wa.u . the convict ion tha.t you " But l!'rank is Dot penniless and he has, places almost overarched by its broad·lea.fed would r eturn for t he fete at the Gezirah Pal. ion'a close inspection." No sooner d id N ellie's g ·ze a.light on the besides, great expectations," Nellie had sycamore a.ad magnificent la.roh trees, is a.ce to-morrow night. It will be a gra.nd plea.ded as they were crossing the N ile by pleasa.nt and agreeable, gay a.nd animated, a.ff.ir. T'...ree thousand guests ar e invited, gem, however, thiJ.n she exclaimed : a. nineteenth century fragment of Europe and it will be gotten up regardless of cost." "Oh, it's a fire opal, &nd it glar es l ik e a. con - the e~peci:tl pontoon bridge that s panned i·t fiagr at:on. ' V by, F rank, it is the most un- for the occasion, on their way to t he pa lace, plumped down in the midst of a land t h a.t T h I' seems to have remained stationary ever since . " en ve a grPat mind not to go, for the lucky st one that one pernon cw possibly " Yes, ma.mma, he ha.s very large expectak 1mmfnse amount of mon·y that is t o be · tion a." those long pu.st a.ges when t he litt1a a.r ·of wasted thereon, will be fi, at wrung from the giv e unto anot her ." 1J s Nollie Tregarr utt ered the words, st ill " I never knew an Irishman who had not, the outoas' Hebrew infant and t he golden wretched peasantry, who are the only workbarge of the gorgeous daughter of the Ptol- ing cla·s of t he ent re community, and whose holding Fra.nk Donelly's hand in hers (in- my dea.r, im d expecta.tions they ln genera.I deed she w:u unable to let h go, eo great remain to the end of the chi<pter. But aa emiea gloated over the lotus a.nd lily stud- hooey is stolen from t h em a· fa.at aa they ded river, whoae yellow wat ers are now ca.n accumulate it by their idk and cruel was her horror) she happened t o look up t o Captain DJnelly, I have obj ect ions to him Those who stay at home, oil up with and round, and w as instantly fasoina.ted by on ot bt:r grounda, for he le vol· .·t ile to a fault, plowed by .many a. stea.m launch under t he rulers, who Iea.ve t hem only the wax," the glance of t wo eyes that were fixed upon sxt ravaga.nt , reckless, au d in ad dition that euphonious name of da.habeeyah, and re-echo " The s nucks, you mean. ' V· 11, per haps instead of the clash and clangor of Pharaoh 8 so ; bu t auyhow t hey grin a.nd bea r it re- her from within a. r!l.pidly p assing carri ~ge, m ust detest ,bfo thing, a male fi 1rt. ' " Oh, mamma , I am sure tba.t hie worst war timbrels, the la.st C !ltching opcri:. boufle ma.rkably well, which is mor e t han I should and whose expreaeion filled her with more or blatant muaio h:i.ll air, as bored on t he do your abaenting yourself from t he f, te. unaccount able dread t han even the opal ring enemies cannot say that of him." and k eep tliings running till the absent ones return. "Then I will sa y it for them, my dear . flute or blared on the cornet by some average Oh, you must Prt·mi'e y ou will go, I shull had done. ' ·Frau k," said she, h:·etily dropping his I'm sure that ofttimes his attentions t o me l\IACHLN E OILS . .sample of American or British touriots not let vou alight until y ou r1 o." h <nd, " who was Inside tha t c&rriage 1" have been of a most devoted m ture, yet no T :But, thanks be, ther e are few of t his class WOOL OILS. of gentrv on the Choubrah Road t he even" hen, for m y ponies' sake, I will give "What carriage? T he Kbedival affair sooner have you come up to us than ha has ~ you the pr omioe-tber e." that just fiaehed p a.st us, do y<m mean? I trausferr ed t hem to you as lightly and easi HARNESS OILS. Ing in which our tale orions 1 but the most ,I h f b · d showy turnouts that Parle or L ondon ca.n ' n t e ·name 0 t eponiesan my own e.s declare, I Dever notiaed. N ot your war ly 1.\8 be could cb1J.nge Ilia gloves" A X L E GREASE. well, I t hank you. And n ow tell me for ho w minister , y ou may be quite .s ur e of t hat, ·'But, mn.mnm, dear , he was only at tensupply a.re there, 118 well ai fo.cl!es and gentle· lon g a t ime have you b· en st u.Jying Bgyp· tive t o y ou because you were my mother.' N ellie." men mounted and P.ttired aa they would be 1 fan political .,conomy ? · "\.Va.r minis~er? Who is thinking of ' 'NfUifl, I'm really surprised >tt your selfin Central Pa.rk, the course at Longchamps, or London Rotten Row, aud neither is music "I have giv· n o. t e w st r ay t l10ughis to t he euch noneens~? It was t wo y~ehma.cked conceit. rm sure I 'm still a very presentable women who were inside, and one hu.d the woman, and therdore it Is by no means a wa.nting to enliven the scene, for almost subi ·' ct evtir sin ce I ma.rl e a. delightful a.cwitbin sound of the muezzinb' voices, a.a q uaintanoe at AlPxansfria. in Arnb! Pa~hP., most beautiful eyes, but t hey glared on me necessity tha.t a gentleman should p ·y attenlike those of a. fury." tion to me merely for my daughter's eak". from every mina.ret top of t he acl jacent city tile war minister. " F rank Donelly looked around on hearing I've known queens of society at sixt y , a.nd they throw out their arms toward the set"Whew ! H is Is a name offensive to Euthis, and beheld the huge face of a Nubia u how a. man of t aste and discernment can ting sun and chant in sonorous tones, " God ropea.n n oet rils just at present. "Vhy, Nelia great, and prayer is better than sleep I" lie dear, he ie a dark schemer, a r eckless negr<>, with a scarlet and white turban suffer his attention to be li!lhtly diverted 4 nelections from "Pin- adventurer , a.n unscrupulous soldier of for- stuck sideways on the top thereof, and a from the c· o nversatlon of a. oultured woma.n a. brass band is playing hfr eoua grin on his thick blubber lips, star· to t he oommonpia.ce inanities of"' mere girl a fore" a.nd "Les ~Iantea.nx No~:" tune." · . Yet the scene is n-0tall European, for it "My opinion of him Is that he is a man ing back at him across the t op of the heavy, Is more than I can comprehend No, N Pllie, would be impossible to pla.nt London or New iu a thousand, a true pa.triot, if ever there cumbrous vehicle which they had just en- I hi>ve a very poor opinion of Captain Donelly, and I feiir wi th grave re ~e<. n, " York bePide Grand Cairo without tho pop- wa.a one, the S'1!e living E gy pt ;an whose countered. ··Confound it," he ejaculated, " tba.t fol (To BE COJSTINUED.) ula.tion of the m;1e overllowing occa.eiona.lly heart bleeds for the degradation of his coun-·- lnto the other, a.nd thus It ie ·that along with try and the misery of its people, and who low perched beside th.i driver on the box is European carriages and horses, ladies and would will;ngly die to exalt both or either.' ' the very eunuch who had charge of the The Reading ,f :Newspapers. ha.thing la.dy whom 1 saved from the croco· gentlemen, grooms clad in showy liveries "You little rebel,"lan~hed the young ofIt will not be difficult to decide this ca r'l, a.:nd of course, better mountfd than their ficer. "You will make me jealous before dile." "Then it was your bathing fady who submitted to us by a young man in the maaters or mistresses, we behold a.leo the lo:..g if you rattle on a.t that rate. But I'll swarthy Egyptian officer in bis dark blue tell you what, Nell, I don't feel at all up to glared at me through the eyele~ holes in her West: "A dispute arose between a friend a.nd uniform and red ta.rbouob, ta.king an a.iring discussing politics with you, of all folks in veil a.11 though she would like to 'kill me. on hie thoroughbred Arab eta.Ilion, for well the world, I'd much sooner talk about to- Frank; her fierce, vengeful eyes and that myself as to whether the readi11g of news he loves to look upon the unveiled women of morrow. You'll go to this fete of the Khe- ring together have given me 2uch a. turn. pa.pera would in the long run prove cf more the west, with every now and then eomo diva's and you'll dance the first round dance And see how dark it has suddenly grown. a.dvantage than disadvantage to a young "Light of the Harem," mounted on a paint- with nie, Come, that's all settled, is It not, It is like a.n ill-omened something suddenly man. My friend stoutly upheld the former, o:vereha.dowing our young lives. It ma.v he while I as persistently contended that the ..ed Ca.irene as11, which is led by an armed eu- dear?" nuch, who (a perfect study in black and "vVhv, yes, if you will have it so. But foolish of me to think so, but I ca.n't help It. constant reading of papers would ultimately white) scowls savagely at any Feringhee isn't it a shame, Frank, yes, a burning Oh, do let us turn a.round and drive home." ha.ve none hut deleterious dfeote on young " By a.11 means, if you dedre it, d arling; men. F inally, we a.greed t o r efer the who dares to gaze too fixedly at his mietresa, aha.me I ca.II it, that whilst the Kedive a·d albeit tha.t there is nothing to be seen of her all his 1. lficera of ~tate dance with us E oro- but prav, how long ha.ve yon been so super- question to your et.teemed papei:." Reading newspapers a. disri.dva.ntaga ! .nve a. shroud-like mass of drapery and a pean girlA and en j oy it so that they keep stitious ?" "I don't know, not for long, I think, but WhP.t do you mea.n? How can an intelli· pair of lustrous eyes, that glea.m like eta.rs their wives, sisters and daughters a.nd- a.nd :through the slits of her ya.ehma.ck. -and in short, the whole of their woman- this strange, mysterious land forces me Into gent man get a.long w .thout reading them! Of course there is muoh other literature Then, too, there la the wandering Bedouin, kind locked up in what can only be oa.lled weird ~tra.ms of though~ tha.t are even opwith a turban as big a.a a pumpkin a.nd " prisons, where they can see nothing of posed to one's common sense, Frank, I have he ought to rea d, but, first of a.11, he must _ spear of p1·odigious length, who Is mounted wh ..t'a going on or enjoy themselves In the never doubted your affection or your con- keep himself informed a.bout what le going stanoy, a.nd yet do let me hear you say tha.t on in the world by rea.diug !I g ood uewtt· on a. gra.at gaunt camel and is making bis lea·t ?" way dese1·tward with what speed he may "It is the custom of the country, and all you will never in the future love any one p~per; and he must read it constant ly from day to day or week to week, or elae he fa lls through the fashionable crowd, cursing them c~untries have some absurd cu~tome, you else as well as you now love me. " Bowmanville, August 28, 1885. ··If I so f&rhnmor you, you will be quite into a condition of deplorable ignorance. 35. a.11 under his beard, all unclean dogs aud un- know." It Is nonsense to talk about the harm of believers, an!1 fnquent~r, mutter1vg some "Then why don't the men observe the sure to go·to the p'l.lace fete to-morrow?" "Quite sure ; in fact, I would not miss read ;ng good newspapers. They give the such piouE1 wish as th~t Ja ckasses mar, de- cmtome of thie especial country as well a.s public the best a1'1d moat profi table literature file the gr1~ves of their burnt fa.there, for make their women do so 1 I'm sure an E gyp- goin~ there now on any sccount." " "Tnen, IDHie, may I die a death of shame that they are able to i<·it . Your friend is the am!!lble Bedouin hP.B been 11tifiin~ in the tian looks as much out of place in a round close city a.ll day, ~nd _even the gay Italian <lance as one of their Nile oroeodiles could if I even learn to love any one else a quarter right, and you a.re altogether wrovg, though villas, ea.oh standing m Its own grounde, do, And if they drank shPrbet instead of so mnoh as I now love you," and he r aised we a.re glad to know tno.t you do not carry ---o- - out your silly theory in practice, and \\ill th!!.t still border the island. on either side, champagne they'd be a deal more closely fol- her gloved hand to hie lips and kissed it. Let us picture the r emuinder of the home- compHment you by supposing that you I beg to announce that m y suppl y of Granite a nd M a rble M onuments was n ever so seem to him Jl.ke prison walls, He pa.nts to lowing the la.we of their prophet. Oh, dear, large as at presen t. .reach the boundless sands and freedom. · what it is to belong to tbe weaker sex ! Do ward drive, and the tender leave t a.king of only advanced it for argument's sake. Here a.nd there also are a few Pcri.nt1ly you think their women can be so ver y love- its t ermination, a beautiful Italian villa ca.11In Y ariety of Pattern it is most modern. ed Mount Carmel, t he abode of the rich .clad Fa.lb.heen, the peasantry of. the land, a ly ? They never give us Feringhee girls a. The Canadian J:'acific. In Finish, far exceeding any you can see elsewhere. peasantry who_ a.re always work·ng and yet cnance c ,f judging, for in the street they look Eng lish oonnteas, whose only child our pret A few more miles of track-laying and the ever on ·he brink of starvation, by reason like ba.les of meroha.ncli·e. M .. mma who ty herofoe le; afterwards aocompanyiDg in ln Workmanship, first-cl~ss. tha.t three-fourths of thdr earnings are bas been insid e a harem wa· only re~eived imagination the young Irish dragoon gua.rds- Canudia.n P.1~cific RJ.i!we.y will be completAnd price as low as at any experienced shop m·n (who Is wintering in Egypt for bis ed. In a few days the iron band will unite ground out of them by iniquitous taxes for iiy the older la.dies wh~se charma had a.lhealth's sake) in hia aolltary wa.lk back to the e11st with t he west, British Columbia. I have r eceived by S. S. "Iodiana," a consignment of th·e buildiJJg of palaces and the feting of together flown," ' strangers, They have to:help pay, too, for " I should say that none of t he younger his quarters a.t thti world-fa.med Shepherd's will be only a few h ours' from Nova Sootia. As a. triumph of engineering skill our great SCC>TC~ the construction and mamtenance of that on~s would compare in beauty with you H otel. trans· continentalline sta.nds unrivalled in the wondrous ship canal, oom:eotbg t wo sea.a, Nellie." ' Another lot has arrived by S. S. "Nebraska," and oth ers are followin g. CHAPTER III. annals of railway building. The history of which has' given to Francegl<:>rv, to England "Oh, I might have known tha.t yrn would the work from its inception to its grand con- l BlTY DIRECT FROJI THE JUANUFAU1'URERS THE ILLUMINATED FETE AT THE PALACE, wealth, 1111d to poor E gypt simply a. debt have ma.de some such reply thougu 1 don't which will weigh her down for generations believe that you have ever ~een one and so Pass we over an uninteresting twenty- summation will he interesting &Qd instructive in Aberdeen, Scotland ,"a.nd from long experience (28 y ears) at t h e bes t advanta"e I yet untold, · co.n be in no poaition to judge," ' efght hours, and then change we the scene rea.ding when it is written by the unprejudinte nd that the p ublic n eeding work in my line shall be liberally dealt with~ ' "Then permit m e to inform you, MisB to the lllurnina.ted pa.lac~ of Gezirah, on the dioed historian. In the prosecution of such I enga ge no .Agents. I k eep for sale CHAPTER II Nell, tha,t not only have I seen one, but that opposite ba.nk of the Nile, a vast Saracenic a work, involving, aa it has, millions of .A ROlCANTIC RJ!SOUE-THE MYSTERIOUS llGYP· not a. fortnight ago I held what I should structure standing in the midst of many money it would be scarcely possible to carry TIANEEAUTY. take to be a ver.y favorable specimen of the acres of park and shrubbery a.::d beautifully it through without some attempt at jobbery. On the Choubrnh. road at the rosy sunset genus in my arms, -;vho was obd in nothing la.id out gardens, ln which a fete is being The building of the Ca.nadia.n Pacific Rail· hour there is no time for further moralizing, more shape-destroying or beauty-concealing given by the K hedive on the mere occasion way, has been carried forwa.rd by the Comfor enclosing Lots, at Lowest Prices. pany with commendable energy, a.nd if 'hey and here comes one wlio deprives us of a.ll lhan one of those scant bathillg costumes of his birthday. desire to d" so. tha.t are in common use a.t ·frouville or BiarOut of the three thousand ~guests who have succeeded in getting a big price for A L L W 0 R K G U A RA N T E E D. She is a. moat beautiful girl of some elgh- ritz. It was a. wonder tha.t tbe bla.ok ra.eca.l have been invited, there are at least two their werk they should be allowed to enjoy teen years of age, and she is driving a. pa.tr who was in charge of her didn't slice my thousand five hundred present, the hundreds the benefits of their good bargain, What is of cream colored ponies in an elegimt little head open with hie scimitar, for 8 0 it wa.s being r epreeented by the fete:giver's fellow matter for sincere rei,_ret, . however, is the phaeton tha.t Is shaped almost like a shell. his duty to serve any one who gazed on his countrymen, and the thousands being drawn ex ceeding spii.rseneea of the popula.tion along N. B.- I have no connection or inter est in t h e Composition, P ot tery or Z inc She manages It.er whip and ribbons' very mistress unveiled." from the most influentia.l and opulent of the the line of the railway in the Northwest. prettily with the tiniest of hri.nds, that are "I don't feel at all sure that It wouldn't Cbrietia.n populatlo.o, who, of late years, Before the conoern can ever pay a d ividend M onuments , so calle d ; I h ave enquired concerning t h eir merits and cannot r ecomcued in dainty buff gauntlet gloves, and she ha.n ser ved yourigllt if he had." have made the land of the Pharaohs their the number of settlers will hawe t o increase me nd them t o the public at any price. Buwmanville, J une 18, 1885. i.s dnssed in the very height of Parisian "He'd have used his scimitar a.nd his sil- home, 11.nd whe, the Khedive knows full m111lons. At present, soa.ttered through a 25-3m. thousand miles of the territory through f&Bhion. tt:~.!'iJ ver info id pistols as well to better purpose well, are the sole supporters of his throne. the line pMsea, there are little over which Surely that peerless girl, with her epiritu- if he had attacked with t hem t he crocodile The gardens ar e adorn ed with a th->usand elle violet e)·es, golden hair, porcelain pure that wa.a on the point of ma.king the pretty flower beds, whose uhrubs are the myrtle 200,000 people, whilst the resources of thlti complexion and sweet, swaying form, will bather its prey. Ha.d he d one 80 I might and the minoea, wi·h orange, lemon and vast region lie pra.ctica.lly undeveloped. But not be allowed to run the gauntlet of so not have in.terfer ed, but as it was I thre w cit ron t rees showing the blossom, the gr een the completion of the road will increa.se many eligible cavaliers without a single Mohammedan etiquette to the winds, b y fruit and the ripe, at one and the ea.me time, the tide of immigration in that direction, challenj?e. first shooting the crocodile from the bank whilst high above them all the feathery ll.nd villages, towns and cities wm multiRor is she, ror prcson~l:V a tall, ma.nly with my r ifiu and then plunging into the forms of the palm, t he dusky foliage of the ply until Manitoba and tho North west will looking,' curly-ha.ired and laughiEg eyed river t o preserve from drowniug the woman olive, and t·he broa.d waxen leaves of the fig be peopled by t he millions for which there young fellow, who sits his horse as though whom its advance had frigh tened out of her wave in the gentle brerne that comes laden is ample room. he and the anima.l were one, curveta toward dept!.. int o cleep wat er. I aa.ved her, carried with t he hot air from the d ista.Ii. t desert. Purify tho Blood, correct all Disorders of the the elegant· little equipage, and as be gets her back to her d · habeeyah, and depoait -.:d Her e and there, too, ar e perfect grc.ves of To the Oyster. into cfose prox imity theret o, lifts his hat her therein, an d t hen wad ed and ewa.m roses, whosa f rag rance is alm ost over power LIVER, STOlllACD, IilD~EYS A ND BOWELS. a.nd Exclaims in accents of evident delight : a.ehoro ns best I could with my water ·sat u- ing, and in aud out through flower beds and You're here, They invigorate and restore to health Debilitated Constitutions and "I felt sure it wa.s you when you were rated cloth· a on and a current running at emer ald leri.vos, like silvery sea.led serpent s M y dear. are invalu abl e. in 8:11 Complaints in cidental t o Females of · au .Agee, F~r Lucious, juicy, plump and tab, · ever so fa.r off, W hen d id you return to t he rate of ver y nearly four miles an h our." gliding in all directions, trickle rills of bubAs shiny as a new sill< hat, Children a nd t he aged t hey ar e p riceless. Cairo?" " Well, all tnings comidered, y ou did uot oling water in .t iny t erre. cotta canals, for Or boot that's just been polished. "Last niglit. And you? You have been deserve to have your hea.d sliced off. I'm flowers, grass and shrubs are ever thirsty in very glad you saved the :poor thing. And 8 0 such a cl ·me, and would soon fade and pera.way also, have yon not!" As sweet "I went simply because you went . Day- she was not eo very, ver y beautiful?" A treab [s an infallible re_ medy for Bad Legs, Bad Breast s, Old Wounds, Sores ish but for thig tribute drawn from the As balmy breezra !rem the South, light cannot long linger when once its mis-. " Certainly n ot . She had t he moat splen- neighboring N i!e. a nd U lcers. It 1s famo us for G out a n d R h eumat ism, For disorder e of t he You melt llke bunt.er In the mouth. tress, the sun, ha.s diea.ppeared. So, not didly luatrouReyes, magnificent hair and a. Nor without it would even the lea.vaa of Wnen your outside'e demolished . - Ches!; it h as no equa l. ~nowlng how to kill time, and ha.ving no d e- moat perfect form, but t houg h her features the tall tr.ees be so green, or the ga.ily Most line, s1~e that time should klll !De, I went up t l-e were a lao good in the ma.In, her lips are like plumaged bir ds warble so blithely in their For Sore Tltroats, Bronchitis, Coughs, C:olds, Divine I ~1le with half a. .dozen fne~,ds, and we en- t hose t hat we see in the pict ures of Pharaoh's bunches, t h inking that anot her day h a.a With pl· neure now we gaily p·a~ce GJll.Ildular Swellings, and all Skin Diseases it has no rival· and."for JO~~d onrselv?s immensely, daught e.r, and to an exa.ggera.ted extent in dawned before its t ime, and lit tle wonder, For oh, your placid countenance contracted a n d stiff j oints it acts like a charm , ' i.. Is open and lorgiving. - What , w1th?ut me? Are y ou a.ware t he Spbmx, and they a.r e certainly the re- for the outlines of every bed and path are that the co~olus1on of you r sp?ech has oom- verse of lovely to Eur opean t aste," t raced with little, colored llllmps, and thouYu m, yum I pletely spoiled the effect of 1te commence"Yet they mark her as being a. real Egyp- sands _ Manufactured only at THOM.AS HoLLOWAY's Establishmen t , of ga.u~y Cbi~ese lanterns hang like Thou~h dumb, ment? In t he beginning y on d~cla.re that tia.~ , and one of pure blood and ancien t Brobd1gnang1 Your sll-nt ek quence appeals an fruit amidst tree and shrub, 78, NEW OXFOR;D STREET, (late 533, OXFORD STREET), LONDON my abs~nce has almoat killed you,_ and t he lineage. " Unto t he t.ste of hlm who feels wh ilst every fountain (and ther e are ma.ny Tb11t vou m~ke life wort h living, " Such Is my Impression, a.nd I should sa.y soor~) tosses high in ah- _ result 1a that y~u go a.way imd eni oy yourA.ad are sold at ls. I!d. , 2s. 9d. , 4s. 6d ., Us., 22s, 1 and 33s. e ach Box or and water of th~. moet that she wa.s the wife sister or da.ught f brlllmnt and ever chang mg cokrs. self Immensely. ! may b e had from all M edicine V end ors throughout t he World. "Oh, I 1!1eant to h a'e said. that the other some very great ma~, for her dahabe:;:h . But let_ i:s quit this scene of fair)' laud unA lie bas no legs. Neit her has a. ch eese B'l'arehasers shonld look at the La bel on the Pots ancl nox ee. H' the addre11 iellowe enJoyed themsd ve3 immensely, lf was a lso a. magnificent one, and her eun uch til the fa ,r1 es arrive to people it , and .enter- Some cheeses are living lies, 111 110' 533, Ox cord Street, Lon<lon, they are spnrloas. ··· AN EGYPTIAN R'OMANCE tions in the Oaree1 of Arabi Pasha. S ELF PRESERVATIONI The first Law of Nature. HAT AND FUR STORE. A Story of Love and Wild Adventure, founded upon Hartling Revela- Russian Lamh Coats made on the premises. Ordered Work. and Rep,air_ing a specialty. N eads' Block. M. MAYER, Furrier RANK AND Fl LE to the Front an d Defend your Country. ' McCOLL'S LARDIN E McColl Bros. & Co., Toront o. · , , COAL COAL · Messrs. McDOUGALL & METCALF beg to announce that they have received a large consignment of Celebrated Lehigh Coal, and are prepared to fill all orders at LowEsT PRICES. W"e intend to keep on hand an assortment of Lumber~ Shingles, Posts, Lath, Cordwood, &c. Office, Old Foundry Lot, corner Church a11d Division Streets. ROBT. McDOUGALL. HENRY METCALF. I Granite and Marble Works, BOWMANVI L LE. C:.-Fl..Ar\TITE:; Marble Mantles, Grates, &c., and fix them. Head Stones, Posts, and Metallic Bctrs C. BOUNSALL, Proprietor. HEALTH FOR ALLI . ltlM&'JlVmlBmlHHIWJ T :EI E FILLS T H E OINTMENT j .......... !-\it, '

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