The Keim and allied families in America and Europe . vicar undertook tosend this complaint to the consistory atStrassburg, but this body, denying allknowledge of the existence or approvalof the document in question rejectedtheir suit, referring the plaintiffs to theFirst Court of Appeal. And now there followed the most tedi-ous and wearisome negotiations, inwhich the defendants made every en-deavor to give their victims the death-blow. (To be continued.) TRAVEL NOTES IN DISTANT CLIMES1865-1866 AMID THRILLING SCENES OF BIBLE HISTORY. By A Herald Foreign Correspondent. (Continued from No. n, p.


The Keim and allied families in America and Europe . vicar undertook tosend this complaint to the consistory atStrassburg, but this body, denying allknowledge of the existence or approvalof the document in question rejectedtheir suit, referring the plaintiffs to theFirst Court of Appeal. And now there followed the most tedi-ous and wearisome negotiations, inwhich the defendants made every en-deavor to give their victims the death-blow. (To be continued.) TRAVEL NOTES IN DISTANT CLIMES1865-1866 AMID THRILLING SCENES OF BIBLE HISTORY. By A Herald Foreign Correspondent. (Continued from No. n, p. 327, K. & A. F.) ^KKE mahinal is the procession My sight-seeing in this city of the which precedes the departure of Pharoahs continued: the great caravan for Mecca July 2s, 1&S5, Fiuday: This is the with the pilgrims to the toml) of Ma- Mahommedan Sunday. Toward cven- homrned. I liad the fortune to be in ing strolled into the Ezbekeeyeh place, Cairo upon their return. where the returned pilgrims fanatical THE IvEIM AND ALLIED FAMILIES. 361. from the Delta to it with both feet, one in Asia, the other in Africa. pranks were engaging a vast amount ofvocal and muscular energies. So tem-pestuous was their shouting* that thecommotion could be heard in , myapartments in the hotel. The Ezbekeej-eh is covered with pa-vilions and thronged A\ith people of di-vers oriental clashes both day and nightto witness the dance of the beg-in in a sitting posture, swing-ing the upper part of the body back-ward and forward, exclaiming with each motion, Allah il Allah! God is theCod! Another party marches about amongthe pavilions beating drum-like instru-ments. The dancing men stand in tworows with the head dervish in the cen-tre. The dancing- is done under pa-vilions made of beautifully woven camelshair cloth. Innumerable glass globeswith candles furnish a weird light. The fierce war cry of the Mahomme- THE KEIM AND ALLIED FAMILIES. dan taken from the Muezzins prayer is


Size: 1230px × 2032px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorkeimdebrandolphdebenn, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890