The War Cry . ritishfashion. Then two chairs wereprocured from somewhere, andwe sat before him, the greatestof his chiefs forming a circle tied two and two by the. legs,vegetables in : dreadful abund-ance, milk, baskets of fresh eggs,and so on. Finally, a dozen wo-men piled high a royal bonfirebefore our tent and lit it in ourhonour. That night HalleysComet came across the sky likesome spectre searchlight, clearand scintillating. It was a- goodomen, Mochta told us, apd thesuperstitious crieEl, Allah llAllah, and did obeisance. fROHOTED TO GLORY, (Continued fronr pan 1W denied her, and it was a


The War Cry . ritishfashion. Then two chairs wereprocured from somewhere, andwe sat before him, the greatestof his chiefs forming a circle tied two and two by the. legs,vegetables in : dreadful abund-ance, milk, baskets of fresh eggs,and so on. Finally, a dozen wo-men piled high a royal bonfirebefore our tent and lit it in ourhonour. That night HalleysComet came across the sky likesome spectre searchlight, clearand scintillating. It was a- goodomen, Mochta told us, apd thesuperstitious crieEl, Allah llAllah, and did obeisance. fROHOTED TO GLORY, (Continued fronr pan 1W denied her, and it was a bitterdisappointment. Coming to Canada, she 1hrewin her lot at the Temple Corps,and became a member of the lateBrigadier Stewarts Bible also-worked in the sewingclass, and many garments for thepoor were made by her deft fin-gers. For twelve months shewas a stenographer Q.,failing health terminating herwork in that capacity. : Eighteenmonths ago she showed signs ofbreaking down completely. Sad. Loop Showing Four Tracks on the Canadian Pacific Railway. about us. Mochta was on hishaunches at our feet, and openedthe bait by expressing on Rais-uli!s behalf the pleasure he andhis people felt in our visit. Wereplied in suitable terms, nod-ding and smiling to give em-phasis. We began our sentenceswith, Mochta, please tell Rais-uli, when Mochta stopped uswith an expression of horror, al-most ludicrous in its intensity,and said: Not call him that name; hecalled Mulai Hamid—call himMulai Hamid. Thenceforward things . wentmost smoothly. We told of thedeath of our beloved King, andMulai Hamid expressed, andlooked, his He said,too, he had written to KingGeorge V. stating bis ? extremesympathy with him in his per-sonal grief and the national loss. At length, the afternoon draw-ing on, we bade farewell, and,finding our horses, left the an-cient city, feeling that even if abrigand can be blood-thirsty hecan also be hospitable. Back werode, and with us El Hadj Ad


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