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Efnremr William of Germany on His Way Through | the Holy Land. y the to the N character that the entir continuot Why doe! “I think it interest Lohun isnor press nan son why tt 1d not e hundrec of every year. B ent at the dedication of Our S as his f: laying of official the Em compan the object of t The K been vior, its corr no! has to abitious. He find some opening there has seemed little for he wani it been sugge mission to ject the proc head of t Nichola h in Russ thre young the Emiperor is tour to the Holy making a magnifice Laund. He dc Richard Coeur de Lion, v of fighting men at his ¥ Vs train is an army rt th 1 mules are through pass is guarded a to protect the . Alre plots hav nate the Emperor. It was intended at should visit Egypt, but as F fairs are not at 1 German Empire « from home ol head of the N pers captu that a cons kill the roy of a bomb. narrow streets of to throw a bomb of minate of m was carriage, carrying ey one near. When Wi decided to go to Cairo the plan o changed thrown dur- an ed not be men should lowed abroad in any city through which Wil Th g. loose, long veil , and the anarchists As a Mo- hammedan woman may' not go unveiled this order will mean that the women must stay at home. When the royal fleet entered the Dardanelles it was joined two patched up vessels' of the decrepid Turkish fleet bearing envoys with greetings from the Sultan to the BEm peror and inviting him to rest and ac- cept entertainment in Constantinople. A royal palace had been prepared with lavish outlay to be placed at the serv- ice of the couple and their suite. When the Christian and Mohamme- dan, monarchs met they kissed. The Sulfan bowed low over the Empress' white hand and laid upon it his royal Hps, an honor never before accorded to any Christlan woman by the Mo- hammedan Sultan. The city had been cleaned and decor- ated Whole streets of picturesque neg- | that | * | of the Empress. 1 and ful- | he dedleation of | were furbished up with red or blue low paint. Streets were paved, r did the Turks behold such 1 to the German Empress the At cupied a seat of guests one on inetions e Sultan the royal vas ended farewell long banquet went to make hi » Ministers of State the S an and his eldest son h women and Jven the Emperor of Ger- the harem. many might not.look upon the face of The g daughter of the Sultan acted as v of the women of the harem. or, and a pleasant hour was me for the entire two prograr months of a nberlain as follows Hohenzollern Sultan’s household | »mpany at the | the grand | At the nee from Germany has carefully prepared by the court | ? I ilnations before. From a hill the led w of the town viewed the Ithough every mark of | the Empress to the home | children— October 26 the will rive at. Haifa. At that point will be- | the long’ dri the Plain of | aron, the re the most utiful in all the world and now in blossom in great gardens, to be gath- ered soon for making attar of roses. At , whence St. irney to Tarsus. are not mere tents, containing many rooms and Most of evel _the into the Holy ke on his white to him by the Sultan the gorgeous unded bodyguard, dressed ary color. no one of whom is under 6 feet 3 inches carries. fifty unitorms f »ants and wears no sackcloth em. October 3 will be con- tinued over the Plain of Sharon to , the travelers stopping at -the places on the way where the apostles walked and talk by s into Jerusalem. ate the Emperor Jerusalem white muslin and carrying M lilies of the vall trimmed with mofre silk chal Niel roses and , the favorite flowers | After the German maidens have | passed the Emperor will be received by | a guard of Turkish soldiers and by the | Bishops of the Roman, Greek, Ar- menian, Catholl and Protestant churches of Jerusalem. The spectacle will be as magnific sonceive. 1 pilgrims will at- at the Church of “her—the visible result 3 The church was built in the fourth century by the Emperor Constantine and has been the Mecca of | hundreds of pilgrims from every Chris- | tian country, not excepting America. It is one of the oldest Christian churches In the world. This church is built on the tomb of our Savior, and | beneath is the grotto of the sepulcher, only and a half feet long by six feet wide and very low. Here are the foriy-three precious lamps maintained by the different churches of Christen- dom. The place of the ecrucifixion (Gol- gotha) is near, and here is shown the hole in which was inserted the cross. October 31—Ceremony of the dedica- tion. November 1 the pilgrims will go to the Mount of Olives. The house of Mary and Martha is still standing, and | the tomb of thelr brother is here. | November 2 Bethlehem will be vis- | ited. Here is the beautiful Church of | the Natlvity, built by Constantine | A. D. 320, and one of the oldest | churches in the world.” Here on a slab | let into the floor is the inscription in | La | jere of the Virgin Mary | Christ was born.” November 3 to 5 will be spent in Jerusalem, and during this time the Emperor 11 visit his Jewish subjects. These Jews are supported by the Jews of all Christendom to stay at Jerusa- Jesus ht the tents will be pi‘ched outside | Paul | in | 1 be recefved into | erman girls dressed in | Jericho, passing through Bethany and | new | | | lum, study the Talmud, and wail that the temple has been overthrown and pray for the coming of the kingdom of Judea. November 5 the return journey gins. November 14—Entry of the pilgrims in_Berlin. Thousands of pilgrims from Germany who have gone to Jerusalem to be pres- ent at the ceremony will attend the dedication. The church is of the Lu- theran denomination, and the head of the church, the Bishop, will lead the ceremony. For the music special musicians have been practising for months in Berlin, be- | and they, too, have made the pilgrim- age to Jerusalem. During the ceremony the Sultan, by an envoy, will present to the Emperor as a gift the deed of the spot known as the site of the Last Supper of Our OWEVER fantastic my particu- lar method of dealing with the tobacco habit may seem on pa- per, it will effect a cure if faith- fully carried out. In the first piace, be sure that your patient rea_lly desires to break off the habit of using tobacco. In the second place, remem- ber that your patient will react accord- ing to the impression your manner makes upon his mind. If you speak lightly of your method of treating him he will hold that method in small es- teem. Therefore, speak impressively, and if he smiles at your modus op- erandi frown him into a decent humil- ity. ’Euggenuon alone is not sufficient to hold the average tobacco user, and you will therefore ‘add a material medicine in the shape of—peanuts! Yes, my friend, ludicrous as the idea seems, there lies in the vulgar peanut a charm to sap the power of My Lady Nicotine and free the fettered slave. In all drug habits there are two con- ditions to combat—physical and mental, or physiological and. psychological. I use peanuts to offset the physical crav- ing and suggestion to calm the mind. ‘What is the conditfon of the user of tobacco If the weed Is withdrawn? It is important to understand this, be- DAY, OCTOBER 30, 1898. bURING THE EMPERORS ABSENCE | savior. | "The ‘church which the Emperor has | traveled all the way from Germany to Jerusalem to see dedicated 1s one built at the cost of $300,000 by Germany for | her subjects in Jerusalem. It is thought | most significant that the Emperor has | selected October 31 for the dedication, Jns it 1s the anniversary of the day when Martin Luther nailed his twenty-' OOOOOOOOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOO00000000000000000000000OOOOOOOODOOOOOO NEW CURE FOR THE TOBACCO HABIT. Dr. Sydney Flower says that by simply eating peanuts and following certain directions in mental training the craving for ROYAL PILGRIMS "TO THE HOLY LAND I Historical Visit of Emperor William to the Holy Land and the Great Results It May fué 7y -Tories oF THE KINGS.-. h I F SAXO [e) % GERMANYS RULE oe | three propositions on the door of the Castle Church after thundering his de- nunciations against Tetzel. The date marks the beginning of the Reforma- Samuel Ives Curtiss says: France and Russia ar ing Palestine between themselves. is not for nothing that on_every com- manding position around Jerusalem is tobacco can be stopped. cause there is but a slight variation in one dozen cases from the average. The condition is one of mental un- rest, some physical sensations and ner- vousness. The withdrawal of tobacco acts as a withdrawal of a powerful nerve tonic, because this weed, used first as a nerve sedative, becomes by force of usage a nerve stimulant. Let us take the mental condition first under consideration. 1 do not try to put a tobacco user to sleep, because it is an unnecessary performance, but give him positive suggestions while he is sitting opposite me to the following effect: 1. That it will be easy to break him of the habit. 2. That he will not suffer, despite the fact that he has tried to break off pre- viously, but has failed on account of the discomfort ensuing. 3. That he is not a hero or a being to be pitied oer sympathized with, because he will not be calied upon to display any heroic qualities of endurance. 4. That If he follows directions he will not suffer from nervousness or “sink- ings” at the pit of the stomach. 5. That he will begin at once to gain in weight; that his memory will be sharper and more tenacious, and that his digestive organs will regain tone; that his nerves will be as steel, his muscles as iron and his complexion will lose the muddy hue which mars its comeliness. 6. That the habit is uncleanly—in fact, degrading—and that its gratifica- tion entails a gross waste of money. What right has he to literally burn his income when his wife is compelled to wear a gown that Is out of date? (In the event of the operator being himself addicted to the habit of smoking it is wiser to omit No. 6.) Thus, then, do I pr mind for the lightne fore him, laying specia fact that he ill at no t consider himself an object of compassion or self- pity, for if he believe himself to be per- forming a deed of no small heroism he will suffer agonies, whereas if his ab- negation is ignored and taken as a matter of course he will react accord- ingly. NoOw as to the physical symptoms. They will be but slight if the above preparation of the mind is properly done, and will show themselves in oc- casional pains about the region of the heart, sinking at the pit of the stom- ach, a lassitude, weak and accelerated pulse and muscular twitchings. Nerv- ousness, jumping at a sudden noise and irritability of temper will be in evi- dence, but will be greatly modified by suggestion. Prescribe peanuts, to be eaten slow- ly, constantly and continually. He must be occupied; busy him therefore with peanuts. He would, if left alone, think of tobacco; he must. on the con- trary, think of peanuts. Has he a loath- ing for peanuts? All the better. He will learn to love them for their nutri- tious qualities and intrinsic flavor. Does his stomach rebel on the second are the vatient’s of the task be- upon the THE BETH,_A\NY ROAD SOUTHEAST. | | a Russian convent or a Russian hos- | pice. It is not mere charity which makes Russia and France found schools and endow hospitals and asy- i lums all over Palestine. They are only | waiting till the ‘sick man’ dies to ta | openly what they have taken diplomat | ically. | “England cannot afford to interfere, nor can she afford to let Russia get Syria; it is too near to her rebellious India. So Queen Victoria felicitates | the German Emperor and aids him in his attempt to gain a substantial foot- hold in Palestine, where already five or six German colonies have the pro- | tectorate of William. It is not a new | idea of William’s to establish a Ger- man caliphate in Jerusalem. Frederick | William III nearly a century ago hoped | to do it, and every German ryer since has dreamed of it. The Great William | wrested from the Sultan in 1869 the gift of Muristan, a quarter of Christian Je- | rusalem. Germans who remain | mans still are living there. Only here | in Palestine of all the German colo- | nists are any who do not lost their na- tionality, just as they do in America, or Canada, or Africa. Here are German banks, and a Ger- man railroad is building from Bagdad to the Mediterranean. The Emperor cultivates the friend- ship of the Sultan, and when the “sick man” dies Germany will not let France and Russia take peaceful posséssion of _Lead toin the Eastern Question. ries here have made all the fireworks for the illuminations and all the am- munition used in the maneuvers in honor of the royal guests. The stony roads which M he Holy Land. The Sultan has left nothing undone | to please the Emperor. | So far as possible, German merchants | supply the materials for the banquets | and entertainment German ° facto- | traveled in just the same way as King |David did and our Savior a his | friends, and Paul and Godefr de Bouillion and Saladin and every one who ever went to Jerusa- have been smoothed | paved and widened for the ca | the Empress. ~ Donkey traiis s | prgvailing road through the Holy | but in order that the Empress | be fatigued or travel so undignified a manner as,on a donkey the roads have been made so as to allow a car- Twain riage to roll smoothly all the way to Jerusalem. Wheh the Church of Our Savior. is dedicated the Sultan will present to the Emperor a deed of the spot which is called the site of the Last Supper of Our Savior. There will doubtle erected soon another great e as a church or as a hc a great German hospital in Jeru cares for 500 people annually, i ive of creed or race. Th Smperor will change the : stantinople and Syria more than three hundred years have done, and finan- cially the German merchants will be benefited by thousands upon thousands of dollars Germans do not de- mand_that evervthing shall be “im- ported,” so that whether the Emperor is actually proclaimed the-head of the German church with a caliphate at Je- rusalem or not his journey will be a success. @JLRICH ‘\@Jmus,%.}mu 'BETHLEHEM < L J:Ccfiynlnsn e p— 5 . £ SAMARITAN PENTATEULUCH S\ WAILING or third day? Has he billousness or colic? It is still well, because no man when bilious desires tobacco. Observe that you are sppplying him with material for the digestive organs to work upon, and that his jaws are not idle. ~ There is no vacuum, and there will be, under this regimen, no sinking at the pit of the stomach. A feeling of fullhess, perhaps: a plethoric condition; a sense of satiety; but this is exactly what we desire to bring about. Keep the system busy and at work; keep the mind at rest: Ah, my friends, how true it is that the mouse may gnaw the ropes that bind the lion! Even the plebeian pea- nut may be the means of restoring har- mony to an afflicted household. I have known this humble agent, taken ac- cording to directions, stretch strong men upon beds of sickness, from which they rose in the course of a day or two clean of heart and purged of the crav- ing for tobacco. I have known of others whose stomachs were not upset, and who went their way rejoicing and waxed fat speedily. I have never known of a failure if the above directions were carried out. The tobacco habit is not worthy to be classed as a drug habit. SYDNEY FLOWER, M. D. —_— BISMARCK’'S BOSWILL. Anton Memminger, whose recollections of Bismarck in retirement are creating considerable interest in Germany, is a’ PLACE OF THE JEWS:..,_ man of extraordinary versatility. ~ His memoirs of the Iron Chancellor are be- ing published in the Neue e Lan- deszeitung, a_well-known paper of inde- pendent principles, of which he has been the editor for ma ars. To the Ger- man public, however, he is known prin- cipally as the author of a remarkable book, called “The Romance of Ludwig 1L," a biography of the mad King of Ba- varia, for which Bismarck supplied much of the material, and ke has w equally important work on the of the @erm « his numerous pu a treatige on the rai ia, another dealing wi Passes, and a clever Herzogin _von Galllera,” and again must be added a volu clalistic Letters” from Ameri Chronicle. policy Among are tions, too, of Bul- the th Alpine novel entitled ‘‘Die to th ‘“‘Here!” cried the lady who had just given the weary walker a good breakfast, “\;'!h}' are )gul gol:ng that way?" e stopped, looked at her. for a mc and. then asked: e “Didn’t you say de man what wanted to hire help lived around dat corner down yonder?"” o “‘Yes, just around the corner to your rlgi\lL"u 5 “Well, den, I ain’t went and m: sickenin’ blunder. Dat’s why ‘1'1:1" around de corner to me left." Leader. Boatman—Fine d for a ale, sur, Solomon Isaacs, Esq. (licensed brok- er and apprajser). 11, I knows that, stoopid; but I'm down ’ere a-injyin’ myself, I don’'t carry my hauction rooms about vith me.—Colored Comie.