HIGHESY IN HONORS Baker's Cocoa HIGHEST AWARDS IN EUROPE AND 2 AMERICA Carpe. A medical writer says --* The use of a thoroughly reliible preparation of cocpa should be universally en- couraged, and it is the consensus of opinion among medical men as well as laboratory workers that the brefik- fast cocoa manufactured by Walter Baker & Co. Ltd., not oy meets the indications, but accomplishes even more than is claimed for it." Walter Baker & Co., Ltd. Estattished 1750. DORCHESTER, MASS, BRANCH MOUSE: 86 St. Peter Street, Montreal Palpitation of the Heart. ---- One of tho first danger signals that an. aounce something wrong with the heart ia the irregular beat or violent throb. Often there is only a fluttering sensation, or aa "all gone" sinking feeling; or again, there may be a most violent beating, with flush. ings of the skifi and visable pulsations of the arteries. |, The person may experience a smotliering sensation, fasp for breath and feel as though about to die. In such cases the action of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills in' quieting the heart, restoring its normal beat and imparting tons to the nerve centres, is, beyond ali question, mar- vellous: They give such prompt relief, that no one need suffer. Mr. Sylvester Smith, Hampton, N.B., writes: --" I was treubled with palpitation of the heart and tried doctor's medicines, but they only gave me temporary relief, I heard of your Heart and Nerve Pills and bought two boxes and before I had used them I waa completely cured and would recommend . them to all similarly affected." € Price, 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25 at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. 2 CERIN STR TT ERT TRE NERVOUS DEBIITY -- Neurasthenia Dr. Constantine O'Gorman, Distyict Medical Officer, Depot Harbor, Ont. "1 find " Wilson's Invalids' Port" as excellent as stated and endorse the many testimonials you have received concerning its efficacity."" WILSON'S Invalids' Port (2 1a Quina du Pérou) is readily assimilated by blood, nerve and tissue nutrients, exerting a steady and sustained tonic effect which is strikingly evident after its continued use, No re-action ever follows, as is often seen after the use of rapid stimu- lant. It is specially indi. cated in nervous debil- ity, sexual weakness, anm®mia, chlorosis, etc. As many inferior products are marketed a% 'Invalid Port' see that " Wilson's" is dispensed, Ask YOUR Doctor. BIG BOTTLE Sold at all Pharmacies You cannot possibly haw a better Cocoa than EPPS' A delicious drink and a sustaining food. Fragran§, nutritious and economical. THis excellent Cocoa maintains system in robust health, ag enables it to resist wintér's extreme cold. COCOA Gald by Grocers and Storekeepers - : 1-Ib. and -1b Tins. ~ = * Usually the early bird cejtches the worm for the benefit of the little fel- lows who stayed at hole A strenuous season makes a society bud look like last rose of sum mer. the A letter devoted to the antiquities of Egypt may include with some de- gree of propriety a few of the older objects of interest oi, Cairo, although Egypt's capital of to-day compared to the riins of the ancients is quite a modern tity. Most visitors hegm their, tour ~ of sightseeing in Camo with a visit to the citadel that Egvp- tian acropoli® built upon a huge rock, and, like its Grecian prototype, visible for many mVes away. This fortress-like aggregation of massive structures is entered through a gate- way of Saracenic architecture, when, after a ten minutes' walk along a steep, narrow road between high wal 5, one' comes to the level sume mit of the rock, which forms the eourtyard of the citadel. It was here within the frowning walls of the fortress that the massacre of the Mamelukes took place in 181)1--that foul blot but for which the name of Mechemet Ali would have gone in history as one of Egypt's enlightened and humane rulers. eXtenuation of this vime the admir- ers of Mehemet Ali attempt to. jus- tify the act on the ground that the existence of the rebellious Mameluke Beys continually threatened not only the peace of all Egypt but endanger- ed the personal safety of the Pasha as well. The Mamelukes were treach- erously inveigled within the walle of the citadel by a most cordial invita- tion from the sultan. The scene that followed is thus graphically des- crioed by Warburton : : "The beys came mounted on finest horses, dow n most ) their in magnificent uniforms, forming the most superb cavalry in tha world, After a very flattering reception from the pasha 'they requested te parade in the court the "citadel were of A hoy entered the fortification unsus- peclingly--the portcullis fell - behind the last of the proud proécssion, a ment's glance revealed to them their doom. They dashed forward--in: vain! Before, behind, around them, nething was visible but blank pitiless walle and barred windows; the only opening was towards the bright blue sky, even 'hat was soon darkened by their fune- val pyre of smoke, as volley alter volley flashed from a mus- kets behind the ramparts npon this defenceless and devoied band. Start ling and fearfully sudden as was their death, they met it fearless charactor-- mo- thousand as became their ome with arms crossed upon their mailed hosoms, and lurbaned heads devotedly bowed srayer; some with swords and fieree curses, alike unavailing against their dastard and ruthless foe. All that chivalrous and splendid throng save one sank rapidly beneath the deadly fire into a red and writh ing mass--that one was Emin Bev. He spurred his charger over a heap of his slaughtered comrades, and sprang upon the battlements. It was a dizzy height, but the next moment he was in the air--another, and he was dis engaging himself from his crushed ang dying horse amid a shower of bullets He escaped and found safety in the sanctuary of a mosque, and ultimately in the deserts of the Thebaid."" Emin Bey'« leap referred to above is not generally believed, though wn seems a pity to spoil such a dramatic story" Most. authors hold that he had been previously warned of the treacherous intentions of Mehemet and #0 absented himsel till 4 favorable opportunity presented iteell for his cs cape from the country. in Hashing Joseph's Well. From the top of this rock there an entrance to a well that sinks to a depth of nearly three hundred feet. Until recently this was the source water supply for the fortress, but the present' time the Aity mains are used. Outside of the curiosity this well presents and the Wholly unfound ed tradition that it once furnished a place of concealment * for Joseph, which gives it the name of "Joseph's well," this old cistern is of no special interest. The y various of the citadel are now used for prisons, barracks and officers' quarters, and both native soldiers and red-coated "Tommy Atkins," much in dence here. Within the walle of the fortress, is located the Alabaster Mosque, named 4drom the beautiful ter columns .in the interior. built with a g¢rim- of humor by Mehemet 'Ali on threshokl of the' of the mas- of the Mamelukes. Although criticized by drchitectural experts, it is nevertheless one the TOW mosques of Cairo, and with its two towering minarets presents an impos- ing appearance, crowning, as it does, the summit of this historical rock. The views from this elevated posi- tion are very fine and the prospect from the southern rampart includes all of Cairo and its environs, afford- ing an excellent point from which to study the' topography and landmarks of" the city and its surrounding terri- tory. Immediately at the base of the forti- fication rises the imposing mosque tomb of Sultan Hassan, where the body of the assassinated ruler lies id a mausoleum beneath a dome nearly two hundred feet high. Adjoining the mosque of Refaiya, built by the late Khedive and intended to rival the beauty of the former, an ambi tion which in the opinion of mest visitors falls far short of its realiza- tion To the south, standing in a small cluster the rounaed domes of the tombs of the Mamelukes appear. These sultans ruled from 1250 to 1376 and immediately preceded the Circassian Mamelules. A + to this roval ne- cropolis is easily accomplished, al- though their neglected condition and medieval Saracenic style of architec- ture presents little oi beauty and impressiveness & : ' To the right across a narrow strip t of desert the more pretentious tombs of the Caliphs are seen.' A visit to these mausalaea 'will repay the tour- ist, although, like the tombs of the Mamelukes, they are in a nore or less ailapidated condition. A carriage takes of at buildings aro evi- too, =O alabas- It was cynical the very | sense scene sacre Ol sh one along a sandy trail to this deso- boxes for A Racy Letter to Be Published 'Weekly | making THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1900. TRIP AROUND. THE WORLD by the ~ A] BY SIGEL ROUSH. late burying place. Emerging from around the base of sand dune these mosque-like tombs stand out in an ir regular row from the grayish white sandy plateau upon which they are constructed, Some of the, less preten- tious ones have been preempted. by roving bands of Arabs, and here, within the gloomy interiors, these de- sort gypsies have made for the time being their lonely habitations. Half clad children play in the drifting sand around the entrances, and _a few scrawny, sad-faced donkeys nearby gomplete the dreary picture. At -some of the larger and best preserved of these tombs, however, there is a care- taker and here a small entrance fee is charged. A visit to the interior of one or more of the best examples will be found very interesting. Especially striking are the light effects produced by the stained glass in the" windows and domes of some of them. A Visit To El Azhar. Before leaving Cairo a visit to El Azhar or the native Muhammadan University should by all means be made, for this is the greatest school of the Koran in all of Egypt. At one tine the British authorities closed this hotbed of fanaticism, but there was such an outcry against this sum- mary proceeding from Muhammadans throughout the land that for political reasons, at least, it was deemed ad- visable to again allow it to be open- ed, The presence of infideld is not en- couraged here, and, as within the mosques, the contaminating feet must be incased in protecting 'coverings be- fore crossing the theshold of this sacred temple of learning. Even then we were followed by a guard whose furtive, unfriendly glances suggested that" our presence 'was not particular- ly desirablen. Doubtless any appear- ance of criticisph or hilarity would have resulted in our summary expul- sion. So fd] very gravely we made our way among the groups of stu- dents, seated Moslem fashion, on the floor, and reciting aloud certain por- tions of the Koran. The mingled voices of thousands , of these young Muhammadans as Ahey mechanically read and re-read the Book of the Pro- phet, till committed = to memory as- ended . to the vaulted roof of the mosque university in one continuous roar. A visit tc the El Azhar will partially explain fanaticism of the tollowers Islam, for this so-called education must produce the narrowest of minds and the most warped reas- oniny powers. : If Cairo is comparatively modern, its immediate environs matk the most ancient cities of Egypt, for in the Nile Valley civilization traveled against che stream. . Heliopolis is supposed ny many Fgyptologists to be the tite of a city older even than Memphis and Sakkarah.. A hali hour by a local train from Cairo brings one to this an- cient site and while only an obelisk hewa from a single block of granite is at the present time visible, still the sxeursion an casy one and the prospect of restiul, green fields will prove a pleasant diversion after city sightseeing has possibly grown a trifle monotonous ol 18 The Pyramids Of Egypt. One cannot think of Egypt without simultaneously recalling the 'sphynx and the pyramids, and certainly no traveler in the tand of the Pharaohs would be guilty of omitting these "Lions" of the Nile from his itiner- ary. Fortunately for the tourist with little time at his disposal this trap can he made from Cairo very ex peditiously and with but little per- sonal inconvenience. A comiortable train takes one to the very edge of the desert, along which is located the so-called pyramid plain, © in - which stands some seventy of these gigan tie and, for a long time, puzzling piles of granite. Many theories have advanced in the past to explain reason for the existence of the mids, one writer 'maintaining that they were built to protect the Nike valley from drifting sands; another, that they offer a safe depository all time for certain standards weights and measures, and still an other that they furnished a means of certain astronomical observa tions and definitely i¥fng points from which latitude and longitude could be reckoned. Extensive explorations of the interior of many of the pyramids, however, has proved conclusively from the presence of sarcophaga and in- scriptions containea therein pat they were simply royal tombs, built hy , Nourishing Bleod Means Strength been the pyra: curious tor of You Are Pale Your Blood is Thin and Weak. 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You'll get that hearty bracing health that thousands and thousands are en- joying because they used this famous be no such thing pure rich clear skin as blood--nq or active and which and medi- which disease vigol You enjoy and take will feel keener my use too * medicine. Price 25c. per box, five 81. or and Weak Because the rulers of the early dynasties. Per: haps the best example of this particu- lar type of ancient Kgypts royal Iehre is the pyramid of Cheops, engin to the Ghizeh group. This is the largest of all these ancient re- mains and being also the nearest to Chir it 1s usually the first one visit- heops belohigs to a group of six mids, three of which is plainly from Cairo, and as soon as we leave the Nile bridge they stand out like well pruned mountains from the desert plan and are constantly! visible during the whole of the ten- mile journey. As the electric tram carries "us rapidly along a beautiful avenue of acacia or le trees on this bright December morning, these giants of the desert appear no la, as we near our destination then: théy did at the beginning of the journey. Indeed siwhen we were within a stone's th of "them their size was not noticeably increased. This peculiarity at first produces a feeling of disappomntment in the mind of "the beholder for .it is a note worthy fact that the pyramids stand- ing alone upon the wastes of the de- sert appear to be as vast ten miles away as they do when within a hundred miles of them. Perhaps this is because there are no objects, such as tree houses or hillocks nearby with which to compare them. But if Cheops is disappointing at first sight its vastness is most impressive ugon closer acquaintanee, Figures are in adequate in conveying impressions though the fact that Cheops covers an arca of thirteen acres and is about as tall as the Washington manument and contains enough stone to build a wall four feet high and one . foot thick around the whole of France may give one some idea of its magnitude. Climbing Cheop's Mighty Heights. But to gain some knowledge of the size of the individual stones of which it is constructed step up and stand alongside the lowest tier. If vou are six feet tall your eyes will be «cn a level with the upper edge. Now with the assistance of three Arab helpers you scramble up the step-like side till you have grown so dizzy you would fall but for the watchful care of these sons of the desert whose bare feet tnable them to cling to the slippery surface of these rocks like a fly to the ceiling. When you have gained sufficient confidence to lift your eves from yvopr narrow foothold look away over thé Nile and beyond the city of Cairo. If you are near the top you are over four hundred feet in the air. Glance down along the jagged sides over which you have just elimbed--it seems a mile. a bit begin the descent, a feat even more difficult than coming up. Pause half way down. From this position again take a survey of the Titanic dimensions , When | most to the bottom you will observe an opening in the centre of the north side. Crawl in through this aperture and make vour way along a narrow passage io the centve of 'this thirteen acres of solid granite where are locatod the royal tombs. The care taker will burn ; a bit of calcium hive for you and avfid scurrying bats you get a view of / the chamber. As soon as you have sfficiently recovered vour ctrength return to sunlight and air for this is a stuffy, uncanny place and visions of being imprisoned here alive or hopelessly lost will add wings to your feet. At last you see the small square of light that indicates the en- irance and soon you le anny against the base oi the pyramid breathless and trembling in muscle. What. think you now of pyramid of Cheops ? are every the Do you realize the magnitude of this ancient pile? Aye, you do and the whole thing at once overwhelms you, for in fancy you go back five thousand years at the very beginning of profane history and one wonder after another through your niind. Miles away across the Nile this meadous pile wae hewn out block block. The task is unthinkable, but still mote staggering comes the thought of the transporiation of thee stones to the present site. To move these huge blocks co great a distance would, with all our modern transpor- tation facilities, prove a herculcan task. How did they do it five thou sand years ago at the very beginning of civilization, as we understand it, and at time when we are wont to 166k upon the world as crude 'and primitive ? The feat scems impossible and our boasted twentieth century ideas of superiority receive aw unplea sant and disquieting shock. We next take a lpok at the nearby pyramid of Clephren but as a porlion of the smooth outer casing still re- mains in position here an ascont not advisable even if one's enthusiasm after Cheops should be equal to the task. This pyramid but little in erior in size to Cheops, was erceted as a tomb for the ruler from whom it de rives its name. The remaining four pyramids of this group arc small and need not claim more than a moment of the {qurist's time. pases tre. by a The Sphinx. And now before we end our day's outing at Ghizch let us take a look at the Sphinx, that puzzle of the desert that for thousands of years baffled the investigations of all students of Egyp- tian antiquities and who have not un- til only recently succeeded in stripping it of its charming mystery. A stella, or an ancient inseription on a tablet of stone, found within the last few years by Mariette near the great pyramid shows that the Sphinx was repaired by both Cheops and Cle phren, the builders of the two royal tombs bearing respectively these rulers' names. v Unlike the pyramids it is not an in- dependent structure but for the most pars is hewn from the rocky city that here juts out from beneath the desert .. Who the builders of "Her were, for it has been sands. machis" that the | Egyvptian's god of . tstill a matter of conjecture. tis that iis origin is enveloped in I mists of the early ages. : | It is not the Sphinx's cigantic pro {portions measuring as it does a hun- | dred and forty feet in length, while its {head is thirty feet from forehead {chin and fourteen morning. So old it the the feet wida, that im- | expression, its ite and ifs unknown antiquity. Through After you have rested | found | Sphinx' was an image of the | S| yresses one so much as does its placig | desolate surroundings, | has caught the first mellow rays of the morning sun. Through eons of time the desert winds have drifted the desolate sands around its base. Gene ratiofi€, dynasties and épochs have come and gone, nations have arisen to r and glory and in tara been lost. n {lie obscurity . of passing. ages still the inseruitable faco of the Sphinx eternal and immovable, . sets steadily to the east to t the everlasting rays of the rising orb of day. 4 ~8IGEL ROUSH, MAILS BORNE BY DOGS. Mail Service Most Unique in the World. No-one, not. even his brutal native master, begru : summor vacation. Evory Alaska town swarms with , and no amount of cuffing or of .yel will casse them to stir if they are 'indisposed to mova. In summer, says a writer in St. Nicho- las, their sluggish blood and, worn-out legs respond only to a fight. \ They are never too old, too tired or too hungry for that. When not in harness or asleep they are always serapping. In speed the outside dog--that is, the dog from Europe or the States-- shows off in camp to the disadvantage of the native, but once on the trail the latter is the Arabian steed of the retics, The aristocrats of Alaska dog ife are the mail teams in the United States service, Until the coming of the Americans 'the leaders in Eskimo dog teams were tics. The trail unknown in the are was generally broken by an Indian or Eskimo woman run- ning ahcad of the team, her tiny mukiuks--which are higly boots made of the skin of near 1 or the rein- deer--pounding through the snow, while her liege lord snuggled in the sledge's fur-lined bed. Few: pure malamutes (native dogs descended from the Siberian wolf) are now employed in the mail service Their legs are too short, their feet sink too readily through the snow. Pre ference is given to a oroes of tho mala- mute or Mehenzie htisky, and the St. Bernard or Newfoundland, Eskimo with a little hound. The Eskimo be- gins to train his dog for sledge work before it is a month old. One of the most interesting features of Eskimo villages are puppies tied to the pole of a tent. They pull on the rope with all their puppy strength in the effort {0 break away and join the frolics of their elde Not until a dog bred for mail sarvice is onc year old iw it_put in training for the trail. It begifhis by running ten miles with the team, then it is droppéd out. Next day it runs thé "same distance. Gradually the dis- tance increased until it reaches its fifteen month of life, when it becomes part of the regular service. The life of a mail dog is from three io four years. No greater punishment can Be in- flicted than to lay a dog off from scr- vice. When unruly they , are often threatened with a lay-off, and with al- most human intelligence they scem io understand the disgrace it implies in the eyes of their follow workers on the 1trgil. All fight to be leaders. Some (dogs are better trail followers than { others, as some are better leaders. In a blizzard the best of them lose the trail, but invariably find it. When on the trail they éat but omce a day, at the end of the journey. After feeding, like weary children, they fall asleep andl are never guarrelsome. It takes on an average of twenty pounds of feed a day for a team of eleven dogs on hard route. 'The dogs of tho mail teams consumed last year three tons of bacon and one of rice. The rice and bacon are cooked gether with frozen fish and eaten hot. Lhe dogs are permitied to eat all they want. When too hot they let iW cool in the smow. lf near the sea or a viver they will cunningly pull the ves- sel out on the ice and cest the lem- perature of {he contents with their long tongues until the me can be caten. without burning the mouth Frozen fish. is the staple food of all native dogs. Once a week tho dogs are fed on iresh meat bones. in i severest weather + the dogs are unpro- tected save by the thick coats of hair that nature provides. In April and May the mail dogs wear moccasing of moose or deer skin, for the thaw - of the spring sunshine freezes at night and tha ice oyts their feet. When a roadhouse is reached, they often share its shifter with the carrier, but not infrequently they burrow into the snowdrift and, curled up in the warmth, wait until bidden to move 18 a to- on. Once on the trail the dogs are un- mindful of every - discomiort, every danger. Their one playing truant from the line of duty is chasing the birds that flit across the trail. So enticing is this sport that often ihe drivar is at the. mercy of the team, which quits the trail and in eagerness to catch the flying coquettes of arctic winged lifo roll the sledge over and over snowbanks until * the birds are theirs. ¢ Nome is the small distributing depot for Seward peninsula--the gateway to North-western Alaska. Mail from the States comes from Seattle by steamer to Valdex--four days' journey. rom Valdex to Nome i= an overland route of more than fifteen hundred miles. This distance is covered by four dog team relays, cach let by the 'govern- mont to a soparate contractor. The government pays $40,000 a year for carrying the mail from Undlakilk to Nome. Out of this som the contrac- tor pays carriers and all ékpenses. SNOW His Rate Was Lower. The Railroader. 3 a: An old-time - travelling mak was talking of expeyiences of former days on the road. \ "Frequently, '» Pemarked #his travel ler, 'I journeyed to Cincinnati. 'The fare from this city to that place was 'then about 8 saved something by handing the conduetor 32 in cash. One day there was an excursion , and I bought a round trip ficket for $1.25 or 31.50 I've forgotten the exact amount, but that circumstance need not cripple this story. : "When I handed this ticket to the conductor, as he tore off the return coupon, he looked at me and in a voice. betraying how deeply he was hurt he remarked = ' 'My voung friend, don't you know to| that I can. afford to haul Nou much ! cheaper than this company can?' " . es an Eskimo dog his | or inept you one of the 6 tops or certificates and 10c with each Et thot ll bok of 808 da Rastus Goes Fishing. Mr. Henry--*"Going fishing on washday, Rastus? I thought Melissa needed you to gather wood and make a fire to boil the clothes." Rastus--*"Yes, sah, Marse Henry. But Anty Drudge © here, she done sho'd M"Lissy how to wash de clo's without no fiah an' M'lissy she say hit's as easy as rollin' off a log." 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