CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 16, 1898 A SEA OF FLAME. On the evening of November, 28th, 1878 a fire broke out in the British ship Melanie, Joaded with soo barrels of petroleum. An awful mass of flames shot up from the main hatch and the vessel quivered from stem to stern with explosion of the barrels. Her wnen tne meal was over, a acteristic ceremony was enacted. J calf only a few days old was led into the open space and killed with a sword, char- ward the castle. The animal's life ex- agi ¢ » | s opened and the Llazin etrole ntti eed a into the riv edtalin roe tinct, every man who was to accom- u . a he — g pany the expedition stepped solemnly of fire around her. T'e ‘na-ter and seamen ; ‘ over the body, which was then burned, jumped ove rboard ( tain Sharp, whose vessel was lying close propelled a small boat through the )!azing river and after a severe scorching timinent peril, saved the seamen from a rorrible death. so that no dog or other unclean beast might eat any part of the flesh. This is supposed to bring good fortune, and an Arab army could not be induced to bs | its blood being made to flow inward to- ' ; holds All over civilizatiou there are thousands take the field without first observing | of men in more imminent danger than were the sacrificial rite. The calf safely cremated, the men immediately mount- ed their camels and horses and wheeled into line. Then Abou Kuram, going to the front, delivered a short oration on the glory of war and the bravery of his soldiers, which evoked uproarious applause from the flattered. Ere it died away the kettledrums were rattling and the cymbals clash- ing the advance, and, amid vociferous cries of ‘‘Gced save Abou Kuram: God give the victury to Abou Kuram.” the strangely-assorted troops swung slow- ly into line. The huge serpentine pro- ce@sion wound tediously through the narrow, tortuous streets, in which twe camelmen found it hard to march abreast, but its tardy coilings were en- livened by the caperings and shoutings of the mob who ran in front of us and hung on our heels, and, to their own immediate peril, squeezed and pressed on both sides of @s. On the outskirts of the town the people stopped, finding the pace on the Open ground beyond their capacity in They are threatened with consumption « lready in the clutch of that deadly disease If they only knew it, help is at hand. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- jcal Discovery cures 98 per cent of all cases of consumption t also cures bronchitis, asthma, throat and nasal troubles and all diseases of the a It is the great blood-maker, flesh-builder, and nerve-tonic. It makes the hearty, the digestion fect and the liver active. The ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery’ is the product of that eminent specialist, Dr. R. V. Pierce, who, during the thirty vears that he has been chief consulting physician to the great [Iavalids’ Hote! and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, has treated more cases than fifty ordinary physicians treat in a lifetime. Thousands given up by doctors, have tes- tified to complete recovery under this mar- velous medicine Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. speedily cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. those seame ni Tare a ir passaces. inpet ite + je t 18 running, so they stood there and yei ed themselves hoarse with and good wishes, which we ledged with resounding cheers. As we deployed into open order for great- er ease in marching, I caught a last glimpse of Said Achmet, who apart, waving his hands as if to sig- nify he had a double interest in the receding column. Both Tabal and my- self waved our adieu in return, and * from me there went with it a heart- felt benediction. CHAPTER XVII. THE MARCH. The details of the march need not be narrated at length. Our journey lay over scarred and blighted ground, and across sandy plains, and in and out among circular sandhills—loose, impermanent heaps, which the winds of the desert twist and curve and fling about in their wanton, lonely sport; desolate heaps that hide, the bones of the perished traveller, and are forever moving their formless lips with a si- lent, stealthy motion, to suck in and overwhelm the living. No man knows the deep treachery of mother earth till he has wrestled with the noiseless forces of the desert. however, YOUNG WOMEN LOVE The D & A Corset, it fits so comfortably, supporting the figure, while yielding easily to every was brisk, for stood | turned (Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Steuart.) witn their grunting beasts. bakers were busy with the compound they called bread. ily swallowed mouthfuls of it Straight off the burning coals, with a few dates and a drink of musty water apiece, and were off again. For awhile the air was deliciously cool and refreshing, and the glories of the opening day in the lone wilderness as the sun broke through his curtain of white mist were such as a man be- with awe and remembers with reverence. gut the blazing orb soon the dewy freshness to a swel- blistering heat that was try- ; the nerves and temper of men toiling through shifting sands and conical tumuli of voleanic slag. Yet no man complained, only as we mopped ana our glutinous We hast- some tering, ing to eur streaming faces the conversation lagged, and here and there a man gave a low involuntary moan. Save such intermittent noises and the dreary, monotonous, sift, sift, sift, of animals’ feet in the sand, there was not a sound. When the sun mounts in his might, desert traveHers are apt to fall | silent. Toward noon, when we had almost reached the point of utter dissolution, we gained the-.crest of a low ridge, whence, looking to the north-west, we Saw what evoked a cry of gladness from nearly every throat in the com- pany. It was an oasis, a tiny spot | of green, with a clump of trees in the blessings | | midst, shining like an emerald in a broad drab setting. We knew there Was a \ ell there, and Tabal, with the privilege of a guide, suggested we should halt and replenish our water skins. But Abou Kuram answered curtly that we were not yet in need acknow- | ~ i movement. It lasts well, and sells at The pace, howe popular prices. — MORAL : man and beast were fresh and eager. Indeed, it was 2 perpetual surprise to YOUNG WOMEN WEAR me how the animals made such pro- THe D & A CORSET. (5) gress over th elusive path. The cam- els. swinging at 2a steady trot, had much the best of it, for when the hard hoof of the horse sinks and slips the ° elastic, spongy foot of the camel spreads like web, and he passes as ns ‘ { easily anu ly drifting sands ’ : as a snowshoer over sm sthering wreaths. It we then I first under- stood hew truly the cam >] deserves ; its tithe of the ship of the desert, for . as ships pass along their liquid way, 1 so the camel treads his un table course over the andy wastes. Yet the } horses, too, had uncommon ligatnsss and skill in making way where every step forward was 4 ialf-step back- ward. | To the hot in the first sensation For Coughs, . of a desert ride is as if he were nt spring ¢ ineffable delicacy, which = : | on springs of in ffable « licacy, Colds, Bron ; swayed gently on the slightest pres- chitis, Sore i? sure. Much of this luxurious ease Is - due to the yielding track, but some- throat, etc. ul thing also to the springy motion of the KERRY, WATSON 4 CO., Proracrone. Arab horse. To the saddle nothing | ‘ MOnTAEAL. whatever is due, since it 15 merely | pieces of the hardest wood, roughly —a_— oOo wooo ‘ ) ers ; - nailed, and bound with thongs of raw- | hide. On an English horse and @ macadamized road it would reduce @ trooper to helplessness in an hour; and, indeed, with all the suppleness and softness of the tru dlery is apt to pa The Arabs themselves no discomfort because they as the wood they bestride. first night we marched stead- EPPSS COG ENGLISH | EREAKFAST COCOA are aware of are as hard On the : Possesses the following | ily till set of —. _ — bind . ‘ ~tj arite : | food and rest. couk —— Distinctive Merits: | mire the quickness with which the . : “ji | sored grasses fires were lighted with withered gra DELICACY OF FLAVOR. and shrubs, and the good-humoured alacrity of the cooks in preparing the SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING meal. To he sure it did not call for any e : : ions rations of nothing daintier ; VOuSs Ss : han coarse flour, salt, and dried dates, te the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. than qonke Nr coe ot ae oe NUTS ITIVE QUALITHESUNRIVALLED | Cooks took two pnts handfuls of flour apiece, pourec In Quarter-Pound Tins only. |} a skin and kneaded it into a Posed Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid | dough with dirty hands. It wou e H profane in an Arab cook to have clean hi “he Se . ut m4 PC ES Se ney Snes hands, and so he keeps them religious- consisted or Enzland. lv filthy, thus giving those who eat >» ee ee _ his preparations the benefit of many unsuspected ingrecicnts. The dough, which was wet perhaps LEGAL CARD. half-way to the centre, was beaten | out into thick cakes, which were laid | ee, on the glowing embers and covered M T y with hot ashes. They were left thus ATHIESON NX BENTLEY} | till converted into a sodden, soapy paste, then taken out, and eaten as ister lipit * hot as they could be swallowed. I Barristers, Solicitors, ac. nibbled the edge of one, but, finding my teeth steck in it, I ate a handful OFFICES— of dates, took a drink of water, and then, wrapping my burnoose close Cameron Block, Charlcttetowr Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN. about me, threw myself on the ground and slept the sweet sleep of the weary. It had not lain five min- utes when the kettledrums were beat- seemed 1 J. A. Maruteson, W. E. Bent ing the reveille. The gray dawn was Geo’town. Ch town. only beginning to glimmer, but al- ready the Kohlan Arab sad- . in the inexperienced. | laborate exercise of art, for the ,; water on it from ; | ' camel-men were pos esas of water; that the time for rest had not come, and that in forced marches men had to think more of speed than ymtort. There was a general look of disap- pointment at this speech, which urged ‘Tabal to appeal again and to advance ns for stopping. . (‘Lo be Continned.) 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