s&wsy; 53 t" jtv r UhtS.'W ff ,j-if 20 JOSHUA: A STORY OF EGYPTIAN-ISRAELITISH LIFE. BY PROF. GEORG EBERS, Author of'"Uarda" "An (NOW FIRST CopjTithted, 18S9, CHAPTEBXXm. HJ5 song of praise had died away and the storm had Ions since ceased; yet the morn ins ETi which had been red at dawn, was again covered with pray clouds, and a strong wind still blew from the southwest disturbing the lake, and shaking and rock ing the crowns of palms which stood by the wells. The rescued people had extolled the Host High, and eren the coldest and most perverse had joined in Miriam's hymn of praise, hat, as the procession of dancers ap proached the sea, many wonld hare gladly left the ranks and hare hastened to the strand where many things attracted them. Hundreds had now betaken themselves to the shore, where the wares like generous robbers disgorged and washed up on to the Band that which they had engulfed during the night. Nor did the women eren allow the wind to hinder them, for covctousness and re venge, the most powerful instincts in the human breast, drew them to the shore. Howls of rage and cries of joy went up together, obviously caused by the fact that the sea had thrown up something particu larly valuable on land. Curiosity attracted Ephraim and Miriam, who was now the wife of Hur, to the spot; and as Miriam's proud dignity caused the people to stand aside, she soon caught sight of the body of a traveling chariot which had lost its wheels, and of its pitiable contents. The linen can opy which had screened it was torn away, and lying on its floor were two elderly Egyptian women; a third, much younger, lay 'against the back seat of this singular vehicle, which had thus become a boat, xbe first two lay dead in the water that covered the bottom of the carriage, and several He brew women were in the act of tearing off the costly ornaments irom the throat and arms of one of them. The younger woman had escaped death by a wonderful chauce, and now she was offering her very precious jewels to the Hebrew women. At the same time, with pale, quivering lips and slender, half-benumbed hands, she was promising the robbers, in a soft, harmonious voice, to give them all she had, and a handsome re ward in money as well, if they would spare her life. She was still so yonng, and she had been kind, very kind, to a Hebrew. If they would but hear her. This petition sounded affecting, though it was interrupted - so frequently with curses and groans that little of it was audible. Just as Miriam and Ephraim reached the shore she screamed aloud, lnr a brutal woman tore the gold snake from ber ear. The Egyptian girl's cry of anguish struck the youth like a sword thrust, and the color lc!t his face as he recognized Kasana's voice. The corpses by her were those of her nurse and Bale's wile. Ephraim, almost beside himself, thrust aside the men who separated him from the victim on one side and hastened toward the remains of the chariot; sprang into the sand bank at the foot of which the vehicle was stranded, and cried, with burning cheeks and impetuous passion: "Back! "Woe to those who touch herl" ,But a Hebrew woman, the wife of a brick maker, whose child bad died in frightful convulsions on the journey through the sea, had already snatched the dagger from Kasana's girdle and had "stabbed ber in the back, with the cry; "That's for my little Buth! "Wretch!" She raised the bloody poignard for a sec ond blow; but before she could strike her enemy again Ephraim rushed between them und wrenched away the knife. Then, stand ing in front of the hapless creature, he shouted In loud menace: "Murderers and thieves! If one of you dares to touch her, his blood shall mingle with that of this woman!" "With these words he fell on his knees by the side of the bleeding victim, and, finding that she had lost consciousness, he lifted her in his arms and carried her to Miriam, who was in Nun's tent To find his favorite again in so pitiable a plight was so great a grief to the old man that the tears ran down on bis snowy beard, and his voice shook when he saw the blood stained bandage about ner shoulder. "When she was laid on his couch, and Nun had placed his medicine chest at the prophetess' service, Miriam desired the men to leave her alone with the sufferer; and when she called them back into the tent, she had revived Kasana with some drug and bound her wound with greater care. "With her hair smoothly arranged and the blood all washed away, she lay between fresh linen sheets like a sleeping child, hardly looking as if she had attained woman's estate. And she still breathed, though the blood had notreturned to her lips or cheeks, and it was not till she had again swal toned the mixture which Miriam had prepared for her that she opened her eyes. . At the foot of the bed stood the old man and his grandson, and each would fain have ' asked of the other how it came to pass that he could not refrain his tears as he looked into the face of this stranger. Old Nun had never ceased to think of her as the sweet child he had known so well, the apple of his eye and joy of his heart. He looked down on the quivering features with tender pity, and when at length she opened her eyes he smiled at her with fatherly affec tion. The light in he; eyes showed that she, too, at once recognized him and Ephraim, but when she tried to nod her head to them she was too weak. Still, her expressive face confessed her surprise and pleasure; and when Miriam, for the third time, offered her the draught, and moistened her brow with some strong essence, she looked from one to another with her large eyes, and seeing their curious gaze she was able to say in a low voire: "These wounds ache so, and death Shall I die?" They glanced inquiringly at each ether, and the men would very gladly have concealed the dreadful truth, but she vent on: "Ob, let me know; tell me the truth, I pray you!" .And Miriam, who was kneeling on the ground by her side, found courage to reply: "1'es, poor, young thing, the wound is deep; but all my art may do to save you shall bo done, to preserve your life as long as possi ble." The words were spoken kindly and com passionately, and yet the prophetess' deep voice seemed to jar on Kasana's ear; her lips curled pitifully while Miriam spoke, snd when she ceased the sufferer closed her eyes and large tears flowed down her cheeks. Deep and anxious silence reigned till she Opened ber eyes once moreand hxing them -Sadlv on Miriam's facet asked, as if in i rSj-iamaxement at something strange, "You, a fe 'woman, are learned in the leech's art?" 'To which Miriam replied: "My God hath bidden me to care for the sufferers among eople.' 'his the dying woman's eyes sparkled "v, and she exclaimed in a stronger deed with a vigor which surprised s: "Ton are Miriam, the woman for Joshua to go to her;" and n replied unhesitatingly and " you say," Kasana went are, indeed, of great tdix and must be capableof beyed your call, andvou heless marry another?" phetess aDswered,but la youssy." ua closed her eyes rt smile parted her , me became un- ngerscit herlittle jer eyebrows, were joeth,n&rrowbrow was ., Egyptian Frincess," Etc PUBLISHED.) by B. S. McUure.1 furrowed as though she had something weighing on her brain. At length the trouble which disturbed her peace found ut terance, and she said in quavering accents; "You are Ephraim, whom he loved as a son, and yon are Nun, the old man. his father. There you stand, and you will lire, while I ob, and it is so hard to leave the light of day. Anubis will lead me before the judgment seat of Osiris, my heart will be weighed, and then " She shuddered vio lently, openirg and closing her trembling hands; but she soon recovered herself, and begau to speak once more. But Miriam pos itively forbade her, us it must hasten the end. At this Kasana collected all her strength and exclaimed quickly, and as loudly as she could, glancing at Miriam from top to toe: "So von would hinder me from doing what I must do? Youl" There was an ac cent of contempt in her tone: bnt she no doubt felt that, she must husband ber strength, for she went on more calmly, and as if speaking to herself: "But I cannot de part thus not thus! How it happened why I did it all I must confess; and I will not complain if only he may know how it who gave me a lamb when I was yet but a child I loved it so and you, Ephraim, my boy, I will tell you everything." A painful cough here checked her utter ance; as soon as she had recovered her breath she turned to Miriam again and went on, in a voice so fall of bitter aversion that it startled those who knew her kindly nature: "It is you you. tall woman with a man's voice, and the learning of a leech you who beguiled him from Tanis, and from me. He went and came and did your bidding. And you you became another man's wile it must have been after his coming; yes for when Ephraim brought your message he spoke of you as a maiden. "Whether it was a grief to Joshua I know not. But another thing I know, and that is that I have somewhat to confess before it is too late. And none may hear it but those who love him, and I do you hear? I love him more than all else on eartbl xoni you have a husband, and a God whose bidding you zealously obey as you yourself have said. "What Is Joshua to you? I beg you to leave us. "Very few have I met in'my life to whom I could not feel kindly, but you I I cannot love, I know notwhy and if you remain near me I cannot speak and I must and it hurts me so to speak! But before you go you are a physician tell me one thing; Xhave so many things to say to him before I die will it kill me if I speak?" And again the prophetess found no reply but her brief, "As you say," and her tone was one of stern warning. As soon as Kasana fonud herself alone with the grandfather and grandson, and Ephraim had fallen on his knees by the bedside, while the old man, after kissing her brow, stood with his hoary head bent to hear her low tones, she began again: "Now, I am easier. That tall woman her eyes as dark as night they are fiery indeed, and yet sp cold that woman Did Joshua lore her, 'father? Tell me. I do not ask out of idle curiosity." "He honored her," replied the old man in some trouble, "as do all our people. She is of a lofty spirit, and our God vouchsafes to her to hear Hi voice. But you, sweet one, were dear to him even as a child; that 1 enow. A slight shudder ran through her frame. For a short space she closed her eyes and a blisstul smile lighted up her face. This lasted so long that Nun thought that death had already claimed her, and he leaned over her, listening to her breathing, with the draught in his hand. Sbe did not seem to see him; bnt when at last sbe looked up again, she put out her hand for the cup, drank from it, and then went on: "I telt as tbongh he were there before me Joshua himself. He wore his warrior's dress, as he did the first time he took me on his arm. I was but a little child, and Xwas afraid of him because he looked so grave, and my nurse had told me that he had slain many enemies. But I. was happy when became, and when he went away I was sad. And years went on, and my love lor him grew as I grew. My young heart was so full of him, so full. . . Yes, eren when I was compelled to marry another, and after I was a widow." The last words were scarcely audible, and she rested a while before she went on: "Joshua knows it well only he dees not know how anxious I was when he was in the field, and how I longed for him till he came home again. At last, at last, he returned, and how glad I was to see him once more! But he himself! That woman Ephraim told me that tall, proud woman bade him go to Titbom. Yet he came back from thence, and then, O Nun. Tnat n as hardest of all to bear he refused my hand when my father offered it. That ah, how it hurt me! I can no more give me the curkagain." "Then I hated him; but not for long; and I never loved him more than when I went after the hapless prisoner' you know, boy. And then came the dreadful, horrible time, the shamelul things but he must know it all that he may not despise me if he ever hears. I never knew my mother, and there was no one to warn me. "Where shall I begfn? Prince Siptah you know him, father the bad man who will soon be lord over Egypt My father is in a plot with him. Great gods! I can speak no morel" "Aye," said the old man, only anxious to stop her speaking and to help her tell all she wished to make known, "and as Baie raised him up, so can he overturn him. He, even more surely than his predecessor, will be the tool of the man who has made him King. I know Aarsu, the Syrian, aud if I am not deceived the time is coming when he will aim at seizing the reins of power in Egypt, torn as it will be by Internal divis ions, though he and his mercenaries hare so far helped others to snatch them. But you, child, what prompted you to follow the army and that profligate traitor?" Kasana's eyes gleamed more brightly again, for the question led directly to the matter of which she desired to speak, and she replied as clearly as her fail ing strength allowed, "It was for your sou's sake for love of him to procure his release. Only the erenlng before I had refused posi tively to go with Baie's wife. But when I had seen Joshua once more by the well, and he ah, he was so kind at last, and kissed my brow! And I saw him in misery alas, poor heart! I saw the best of men doomed to perish in dHgrace and sickness. And when he went onward with chains on his his feet it suddenly struck me." i "Then, brave, foolish, misguided child that you are, you determined to win the de votion of the future king in order to secure the release of your friend, my son?" The dying woman smiled and said softly, 'Yes. res: for that and that alone. And I loathed the prince. And the disgrace, the shame horrible, horrible!" "So it was for my son's sake that you en dured it all," cried the old man interrupting her, and her hand which he pressed to his lips was wet with his tears, while she turned to Ephriam and sighed: "And I thought of this lad, ton. He is so young and the mines so terrible." Again she shuddered. The boy corered her hand with kisses while she looked ten derly in his face aud his grandfather's, and added: "Now all is well, and if the gods grant him freedom " Here Ephraim broke in, "We are setting forth this very day for the mines. I and my comrades and my grandfather will drive his keepers to the four winds" "And he shall learn from my own lips," said Nun, "how trnlv Kasana loved him, and his whole life wifl be too short to thank her for such a sacrifice." His voice tailed him. Bat every trace ot tronble had vanished from the dying wo man's faee, and she lay forsosse time gazing upward in meat oeatesaMfit. sat mm, by degrees, an anxious frown came on her brow, and sbe softly gasped outt "It is well yes, all is well but yet one thing. My body, unembalmed with no holy amu lets " And here Nun again interrupted her, say ing: "As soon as we have closed your eves I will deliver it, safely wrapped, to the Phoe nician seaman who is close at hand, that he may convey it to your father." She tried to turn her head to thank him with a loving glance; but suddenly she clutched at her throat with both hands, dark blood rose to her lips, a bright flame tinged her cheeks- and faded to dead white, and after a short and painful"struggle she sank back. Death had laid his hand on the lov ing heart, and her face wore the look of a child's whose mother has forgiven it some fault, and kissed it before it fell asleep. Nun closed her eyes, weeping as he did so; Ephraim, deeply moved, kissed the drooping lids; and after a few moments' silence the old man said: "I tronble myself very little about the life beyond the grare, of which eren Moses knows nothing; but one who lires as she has lired must always survive in the faithful memory of those whom she loved, and she has done her part, it seems to me, to attain immortality. We will dispose of her bodr according to our promise, and then set forth to prove to him for whom Kasana gare all she had to give, that we lore him no less well than the Egyptian womaa." CHAPTER XXIV. The prisoners were making their way bnt slowly to the mines. Never in all his ex perience had the leader of the gang known a worse journey through the desert, more luckless in every way, or so beset with mis haps and hindrances. One of his "moles," Ephraim, to wit, had made his escape; he had lost one of his faith ful hounds; and after his gang bad been ter rified and drenched by such a storm as scarcely befell once in five years in all that thirsty tract, another overtooK them on the following day the same in which Pharaoh and his host bad perished even more vio lent than the first The tempest had stopped their march, and after this second deluge some of his prisoners and men had sickened with ferer from sleeping on the wet ground in the oped air. Eren the Egyptian asses, unaccustomed to the rain, had suffered from the wetting, and the best had been left to die on the way. At last they had been compelled to bury two of their comrades in the sand, and three more were so ill that they must be mounted on the asses that were left; thus the pris oners were forced to carry the provisions with which the beasts "had been laden. In all his 25 years' experience such a thing had never before happened to their guide, and he looked forward to severe reproof at home. All this had a bad effect on the man's tem per, though he was commonly regarded as the most lenient of hia tribe, and Joshua, as the accomplice of the audacious rascal whose escape was the beginning of all these vexa tions, was the chief victim of his wrath. Angry as he was, the leader of the gang might perhaps have dealt more mercifully with him if he had bewailed his lot like the man next behind him, or cursed as loudly as his companion in chains, who spent his breath in threats ot a time coming when bis sister-in-law would be in attendance on Pharaoh, and she wonld find some way to punish the man who had ill-treated her dear sister's husband. But Joshua had made up his mind to take all the rough driver and his men could do to him with as calm submission as the scorching sun which had tortured him many a time ere this during his marches across the desert, under arms; and his manly spirit and strong will helped blm to keep this reso lution. When the driver loaded him with a monstrous burthen, he collected all the strength of his powerful muscles and tot tered forward under it without a rebellious word till his knees gave way; and then his tyrant would fly at him, snatch a few bales from off his shoulders, and declare he knew all the wickedness of his heart, and that all be hoped for was that he might have to be left on the way and so bring his driver into further tronble; but he would not let his Srisoners cheat him of their lives when ands were needed in the mines. Once the man inflicted a deep wound; but he was immediately most anxiously careful that it should be healed; gave him wine to strengthen him, and delayed the caravan for half a day that he might rest. He had not forgotten Prince Siptah's promise of a splendid reward to the man who should bring him news of his prisoner's death; but he was an honest man, and it was this very promise which prompted him to watch with special care over Joshua's life; for the consciousness of having neglected his duty for any personal profit would have spoiled his appetta for meat, drink and sleep, the three blessings he most prized. Hence, though the Hebrew had much to suffer, it was not beyond en durance; and it was a real pleasure to be able to lighten the woes of his weaker com rades by exerting his own great strength. He had resigned his fate to the God who had called him to serve Him; but his ser vice, he knew, was something more than mere pious trust; and day and night his mind was set on flight. Bet the fetters which linked him to his fellow-victim were so firmly riveted, and so carefully examined and hammered night and morning, that any attempt to escape must only hare ended in more cruel misery. The prisoners were conducted first across a hilly country and then toward a range of mountains lying in front of them, till they reached a desert tract where weather-worn boulders of sandstone stood up at intervals from the rocky ground. On the fifth evening the gang stopped to rest by a lofty mountain which nature seemed to have piled up out of flat layers of stone; aud at sunrise, on the sixth morning, they turned off down a valley leading to the mines. They had overtaken no one since, on the first day, they had come np with a messenger from the King's treasury. They had, on the other hand, met several small caravans, conveying malachite, turquoises and copper .to Egypt, as well as the green glass manufactured in the neighborhood ot the mines. Among a party whom they met at the opening of tie gorge Into which they diverged on this last day, were a married 4 coaple on their way homeward, havlag bMAMrdssftf by tAt.XiM, XMdxiTK THE PITTSBURG- -DISPATCH, pointed to them, to raise the spirits of his exhausted "moles," but the sight of them had quite an opposite effect; for the man's unkempt hair was already gray, though he -was hardly past SO, his tall figure bent and haggard, and his bare back striped with many scars and clotted blood, while his wife, who had shared his fate, had gone blind. Sbe sat huddled on an ass in the brooding melancholy of mania; and although the prison gang, as they marched past, loudly broke the silence of the desert, and her hearing Was as sharp as ever, she paid no heed to them, but stared unmoved into vacancy. The sight of these hapless wretches held no his own hideous fate as clearly as a mirror before Joshua's eyes; for the first time he groaned aloud and clasped his hands over his face. This the driver no ticed, and touched by the horror of a man whose powers of endurance had till now seemed Indomitable, he cried to him : "But they do not all return like this no, indeed, not like this 1" "Because they are even more utterly wretched," he thought to himself, "but that poor fellow need not know that. Next time I come this war I will remember to ask for Joshua, for I snail be curious to know what will become of such a bull of a man. The strongest and most determined often are the quickest to perish." At this he flourished his whip over the heads of his gang as if he were driving a team of horses, without touching them, however. Then he pointed to a cloud of smoke rising from behind a wall of rock on the right hand and said : "There are the smelting furnaces! We shall be in by mid-day. There is no lack of fires here to cook our lentils, and a bit of sheep's flesh into the bargain; for we are keeping the kind god's birthday, the Bon of Ea. Long may he lire! Hail and good health to him!'' Eor half an hour longer they toiled along the dry bed a torrent, with high banks on each side; after the storm a roaring moan tain stream had rushed down this gully to the lower ground, and eren now a few pools were exhaling their moisture. When the melancholy train had made their way round a steep shoulder of rock, on the top of which stood a small Egyptian temple to Hathor and a considerable number of grave stones, they found themselres close to a bend in the ravine "which led to the gorge where the mines lay. Flags were waving from tall masts in front of the temple in honor of Pharaoh's birthday; and when presently a noise came up from the valley, usually so silent, of shouts, and tumult, and clatter, the driver expressed his opinion that the high fes tival was being kept by the prisoners with unwonted jollity, saying so to the other guards who had pansed to listen. So they moved forward without delay; THE ATTACK UP OK KASANA. but no man held up his drooping head, for the noonday sun was so relentlessly cruel, and the sides of the ravine, dazzling with the glare, poured down such fierce heat that it seemed as though they were striving to outdo the smelting furnaces. Though so near their journey's end, the wanderers tottered forward as if in sleep, and one alone held his breath with excite ment. As a war horse harnessed to a plow arches his neck and dilates his nostrils, while the fire sparkles in his eye, so had Joshua drawn up his stooping form in spite of the heavy sack across his shoulders, and his flashing gaze turned to the spot whence the uproar came which the driver supposed to be load revelry, Bat he, Joshua, knew better. He could never mistake the sounds which he heard. It was the battle cry of Egyptian troops, the trumpet call to sum mon tbem to arms, the clatter of weapons and shouting of hostile parties. Beady at once for swift action, he ad dressed his comrade in chains and whis pered his commands : "The hour of release i is at hand. Keep your eyes open, but fol low me blindly." At this the other, too, was greatly excited, and no sooner had Joshua looked down the ravine than be said: "Now. Be ready!" The first glance into the little gorge had revealed tonim a figure standing on the top of a cliff, and a noble head framed with white hair. It was his father. He would have known him among 10,000, and from a much greater distance. But he looked away from that beloved face for a moment to glance at the driver of the gang who stood still, startled and speechless; and then, thinking that a mutiny had broken out among the state prisoners, with quick pres ence of mind he cried in harsh accents to his subordinates: "Get behind our prisoners and kill any one who attempts to escape." But hardly had the men done his bidding and gone to the rear, when Joshua whispered to his com panion: "Now, down with him!" With these words the Hebrew, who, with his fellow captive, was at the head of the file, rushed on the driver, and Joshua bad seized his right arm and the other man his left, before he was aware of it. He was a stalwart fellow, and rage doubled his, strength; he struggled wildly to free himself, but Joshua and his comrade held him in a grip ol iron. One glanee had been enough to show the captive warrior which way he must go to reach his own people. It wonld hare to pass a small force of Egyptian bowmen who were shooting their arrows at the Hebrews on the opposite side of the ravine; but the enemy would not dare to turn on them, for the-stardy form of , the slave driver served to screen them both, and he was easily rccogmzaoie ny nis aress ana weapons. "Hold up the chain with one hand," said Joshna to his accomplice. "I can hold our living Bhield. We must get up the shoulder of the hill crab-fashion." His companion obeyed, and when they eame within arrow-shot length of the foe they held their prisoner first on one side, and tbeD, walking backward, between them selves and the Egyptians. Thus Joshua, shouting in ringing tones: "The son of Nun is returning to bis lather and his people!" made his way, step by step, toward the He brew fighting men. None of the Egyptians who recognized the Captain of the prison gang had dared to let fly a shaft at the escaped prisoners; and now, from the top of the slope which the fettered couple were climbing backward, Joshna heard his name called in joyful accents, and at the game moment Ephraim and his company of youthful combatants came flying down the hill to meet him. To his astonishment the warrior saw in thf hands of every son of his people a large inieiaaa oi an jgypuan loot soldier, a sword, or a battleax. But many still wore at tneir girdles WHMMMBMM sua u.i a UUf Of BAMlM. SUNDAY, DECEMBER f22, Ephraim was their leader, aad before he greeted his ancle, he ranged his men in two ranks like a double wall between Joshua and the enemy's archers. Not till then did he give utterance to the joy of meeting; and another glad greeting followed his, for old Nun was safely led to the wall of rock under cover of those large Egyptian shields which the sea had cast on shore; and then, under shelter of the cliff, strong hands filed off the fetters which bound Joshua and his comrade, while Ephraim, aided by a few others.boundthedrivercaptive. Theunfortu nate officer had given np all resistance and let them do what they would, passivplr re signed. Before they tied his hands behind his back, he only begged to be allowed to wipe his eyes, for the tears were conrsing each other down the stern man's cheeks and onto his grey beard; tears of rexation at finding himself outwitted and overpowered, and unable to fulfill his duty. The old Hebrew clasped his redeemed and only son to his heart with passionate affec tion. Then, releasing him from his em brace, he stepped back a' few paces, and would nerer hare tired of feasting his eyes on Joshua, and of hearing that, faithful to bis uod. ne would henceforth devote him self to the service of his people. But it was not for long that they might allow themselves to revel in the joy of this happy meeting; the (battle was still to be won, and Nun, as a matter of course, trans ferred his command to Joshua. With thankful gladness, and yet not with out pang of regret, Joshua heard of the end which had overtaken the fine army among whose captains he had long been- proud to reckon himself; and he rejoiced to learn that another company ot armed shepherds had gone under the leadership of Hur, Miriam's husband, to surprise the turquoise mines at Dophka, at about an hour's march further to the south. If they were victorious thev were to rejoin the young men under Ephraim before sundown. "These ardent spirits were burning to fall upon the Egyptians once more; Joshua, who was prudent, and who had reconnoitered the foe, had, indeed, no doubt that they would succumb to the fierce herdsmen who far out numbered them. But he was anxious to avoid bloodshed in this fight which was being waged for his sake, so be desired Eph raim to cut him a plumy leaf from the nearest palmtree, borrowed a shield, and went forward alone to speak with the enemy, waving his symbol of peace. The chief body ot the Egyptians were guarding the en trance to the mines, and, recognizing the token whicn invited a parley, they desired their Captain to meet Joshua. This officer was nothing loth to grant the Hebrew an In terview, but he would first make himself acquainted with the contents of a letter which had Just been delivrd to him, and which must contain evil tidings, for that much could be gathered from the messenger's demeanor, and from a few broken but omin ous words which he had muttered to his fellow Egyptians. While some of Pharaoh's soldiers fetched refreshment for the exhausted and travel stained runner, listening with horror to the tidings he panted out in hoarse accents, the officer read the letter. His brow darkened, and when he ended he clutched the papyrus fiercely in bis hand, for it announced nothing less than the de struction of the army, the death of Pharaoh Menephtab, and. moreover, that hia eldest surviving son had been proclaimed and crowned as Seti the second; an attempt on the part of Prince Siptah to possess himself of the throne having completely failed, this Prince had fled to the marshlands of the Delta, and the Syrian, Aarsu, after desert ing him and ranging himself on the side of the new king, had been raised to the com mand of the whole army of mercenaries. Baie, the high priest and supreme judge, had been deprived of his offices by Seti II., and banished from court. Those who had conspired with Siptah were condemned, not Lto the copper mines, bnt to the gold-mines oi .btmopia. it was also reported tnat several 'women attached to the family of the fugitive usurper had been strangled, certainly his mother. Every fighting man who could be spared from the mines was to return forthwith to Tanis, as there was need of men for the newly-constituted legions. These tidings produced a great effect; for, after Joshua had commnnicated to the Egyptian captain the fact that he, too, knew of the destruction of the Egyptian host, and expected fresh reinforcements in a few hours, who had, meanwhile, been sent to reduce Dophka, the Egyptian surrendered to his imperious tone, and only sought favorable terms and leave to depart. He knew only too well how weak was the forces in charge of the turquoise mines, and he could look for no succor from headquarters. .Beside this, the person of the envoy captivated his con fidence, so, after many excuses and threats, he contessed himself satisfied with Joshua's permission to withdraw the garrison un harmed, with their beasts of burthen and provisions for the journey. This, to be sure, was not to be granted till they had laid down their arms and shown the Hebrews every entrance to the mines where prisoners 'were working. The young Hebrews proceeded forthwith to disarm the Egyptians, who were more than their number, and many a veteran's eye was moist, while many a one broke his spear or nicked his arrows, cursing and swearing the while; and some of the older men who had formerly served under Joshua, and now recognized him, raised their fists and railed at bim for a traitor. It was always the re'use of the troops which was sent on service in this wilder ness; most of the men were stamped with traces of evil living, and their faces were hard and cruel. On the banks of the Nile, those were carefully chosen who made ruth less brutality to the helpless their duty. At last the mines were opened,and Joshna himself seized the miners lamp and made his way into the sweltering galleries where the state prisoners, naked and loaded with letters, were hewing oat the copper ore. From a distance he could hear the swallow tailed picks hacking at the hard rock. Then the miserable wailing of men and women in torment fell on his ear, for barbarous drivers pursued them into these depths and goaded the idlers to bestir themselves. . This morning.as being Pharaoh'sblrthday, they had all been driven to the temple of Hathor, np on the cliff, to pray for the King who had cast them into this uttermost wretchedness; and thev would have snjoyed a respite from labor till next morning it it had not been tor the unexpected arrival of the chief overseer which had compelled them to return underground. Indeed, even the women Were all employed ia digging, HllwVf ow m , irnvir vvaM'iwu vntr Km iHnuUaMliifUa the m whltkwMjtk we ' '5 . "- -v 1839. '" used in the raasHfaclare of glaetaad dye -stuffs. ' Wheu 'the victims heard Joshua's foot step echoing from the bare rock-wall, they feared lest some new torment should be coming upon them, and their cries and lamentations were heard ea all sides. Bat the deliverer had soon reached the first of the toilers, and the glad tidings, that he had" come to put an end to their" wretched lot, were soon repeated to the furthest depths of the caverns. Wild shouts of joy filled the galleries long used to wailing and tears; but loud cries for help, gasping, groaning and a death-rattle also fell on Joshua's ear, for one hot-headed victim-had turned on the driver of his gang and. killed him with a blow of his pick. His example fired the vengeance of the others, and before they could be stopped the rest of the overseers had met the same fate. Not without defend ing themselves, however, and many a pris oner lay dead by the torpid of his torment ors. In obedience to Joshua's call the liberated throng at length made their way out to the light of day. Wild and harsh indeed were their shouts, mingling with the clatter of the chains tbey dragged behind them. And the most hard-hearted among the Hebrews, when they saw this troop of despairing wretches in the broad sunshine, shrank from the sight. Many of these hapless creatures had, in former times', enjoyed every earthly blessing in tueir own homes, or in the king's palace; had been loving fathers and mothers: had rejoiced in their power for good, and had had their part in all the fruits which culture could bestow on a gifted people; and now their weak aud bloodshot eyes, though they glittered at first with the tears brought into them by the sudden change from the night of the caverns to the glare of the midday sun, presently flashed with a wild and greedy gleam like those of starving owls. In their first bewilderment and in their consternation at the amazing change in their fortune they trem ulously struggled for composure, and suffered the Hebrews, at Joshua's bidding, to file off the fetters from their ankles; bat tbey soon caught sight of the disarmed sol diers and overseers, who were ranged under a wall of rock under the eye of Ephraim and his 'followers, and a strange impulse came over them. With a yell and a shriek for which there is no name, and which no words could describe, they tore themselves away from the men who were trying io re move their chains, and without a word or a sign of mutual agreement, rushed with a common instinct, heedless of their metal bonds, on the helpless wretches. Before the Hebrews could stay them each fell on the one who had treated him most cruelly; and here a famished creature gripped the foe who had been hi master by the throat while there a herd of women, stripped of all clothing and horribly disfigured by want and neglect, flew at the man who had most brutally insulted, beaten and injured them, and wreaked their long-repressed fury with tooth and nail, It was as though a sudden flood of hatred had broken down the dam and was ravening unchecked for its prey. There was a frantic attack and defense, a fearful and bloody struggle on the shifting red sandy soil, an ear-splitting chorus of shrieks, wailing and yells; Indeed it was hard to distinguish anything in the revolt ing medley of men and women, which be came more and more inextricably tangled as itwas aggravated on one side by the wild est passions and a desire for revenge which was sheer blood-thirstiness, and on the other by the dread of death and strenuous instinct of self-defense. Only a few of the prisoners had held back, and even they shrieked encouragement to the rest, reviled the enemy with excited ve hemence, and shook their fists. The rage witn wmen tne released victims now fell on their tormentors was as unmeasured as the cruelty under which they had suffered. Bnt it was Joshua who had disarmed the tyrants; they were therefore under his pro tection, ue oroerea nis men to separate the combatants, and if possible without bloodshed; this was no easy matter, and many a fresh deed of horror was ineyitable. At last it was done, and now it could be seen how strangely passion had lent strength to the most exhausted and wretched, for, though no weapons had been used in the struggle, not a few corpses lay on the arena, and most of the guards and overseers were bleeding from ngly wounds. When they set forth on their re turn, Joshua, as the younger, drew back to let the elder man take the lead; but Hur had begged Nun, who was much older than himself, to march at the head of the little host, although, after the escape of the people on the shore of the Bed Sea, he had been named the chief captain of the Hebrew fighting men by Moses and the elders of the tribes. Their way led tbem first through a level valley. Then they mounted and crossed a pass over the ridge, this being the only road by which there was any communication be tween the mines and the Bed Sea. At the top they were to rest, waiting for the'main body of the Israelites who were to be led through the desert of Sin tqwards Dophka. Joshua and Hur were standing together on the highest point of the pass and gazing down into the desolate valley of rocks, which, surrounded by columns and pillars of God's own hewing, and vaulted over by the bine dome of heaven, appeared to each as the most stupendous of temples. The elder kept his eyes fixed gloomily on the ground; but suddenly he broke the silence, saying: "It was at Succoth that I built an heap and cried upon the Lord to be witness between us two. But in this place, and in this stillness, it seems to me that we are certain of His Presence without sign or token." He raised his face to heaven and went on: "And I lift up mine eyes to Thee, Adonai; X send up my hnmble words to Thee, O Jehovah, Thou God of Abraham and our fathers, that Thou mayest again be witness between me and this jnau whom Thou callest to be Thy servant and the sword in Thy right hand 1" He spoke the words loudly, with eyes and hands upraised to heaven. Then he turned to his companion and said with solemn gravity: "And I ask thee, Joshua, son of Nun, dost thou remember the witness borne by thee and me by the stone at Succoth 1" "I do remember it," was the answer. " And in bitter ill-fortune and great dan gers I have learnt what the Most High re quires of me. I am ready to devote such strength of soul and body as He hath vouchsafed to me to Him alone, and to His people, which is my people. Joshua, hence forth, be my name. I ask no further help, neither from the Egyptians nor from any other strange folk, for it was the Lord our God who gave me this name by the mouth of thy wife." Hereupon Hur broke in with earnest words: "This is what I looked to hear; and inas much as in this place also the Most High k a witness between me and thee, and heareth our present speech together here, io, I fulfill that which I have vowed. The elders of the tribes, and Moses, the servant ol the Lord, called me to be chief captain over the fighting men of Israel. But now thou art Joshua, and hast sworn to serve none other but the Lord thy "God. Likewise I know that, as the captain of our host, thou canst do greater things than l, who have grown gray tending herds, or than any other Hebrew, be he who he may; there fore do I perform my vow made at Snccotb. I will require ot Moses, the servant of the Lord, and of the elders ot the people, that they give thee the office of captain of the host, I leave the governance in thy hapds; and inasmuch as I know that the Lord readeth the heart, I hereby confess that I had evil thoughts of thee in mine. But for the good of the people I will forget all strife between us, aad I give thee my right hand in token thereol!" He held out hia hand aa he spoke, and Joshua grasped it, replying with generous frankness: "These are the words of a ihb, and so likewise shall mine be. For tbe people's sake, and. the causa we both serve, I accept tbe offered sacrifice. And inaaanch as yon solemuiy called the Lord to witness, who likewise heareth me, I will speak tbe truth in everything. The oftoapfeaptala of the boat ef Israel whieh yea Will lay upon ns, I was aaUed to by MM JUSffl aiBMtU. 'I'M Mil MMM t HT UmrnHMltHMtTtW VW,MaWMA). - " ' ne3MM ;7!w "V gj HMVHViTvU WW v it i by right. Yet, that you should ba wiliia M yield yonr own dignity to me, I take' a a nobis deed;, for I know, full well bow hard it is for a man to resign power, more especially in favor of a younger man who is not dear to his heart. This yon have done, aad I thank yon. And I, too, have had evil thoughts of you, ior through you I lost another blessing which a man finds it harder to give np than his office the- love of a woman." Hereupon the blood mounted to Hur's face, and he exclaimed: "Miriam! Vnever forced her to marry me. Nay, without my paying for her eren, after the manner of our fathers, she became my wife of her own free will." "I know it," replied Joshua calmly. "Still, another than yon had loved and wooed her longer and more fervently, and the fires of jealousy bnrn fiercely. But have no fears. If you were now to get a hill of divorce and bring-her tome, that I should open my arms anil tent to her, I should say; 'Wherefore have yon done this thing to yourself and to me?' For X have just now learned what the love of a woman is and can do, and I was mistaken when I believed that she loved me as hotly as I loved her. Yes, and In the coarse of my wanderings, with fetters on my feet, in grief and misery, I vowed to my self that X would devote all tbat is in me of the fire and foroe of love to no single creat ure, but all to my people. .Not eren the love of woman shall ever tarn me away from the great duty X hare taken upon me. And as for your wife, X am as a stranger to her, unless it be tnat sbe sends lor me, as a prophetess, to declare to me some new pur pose of the Lord." And he, on his part, held out his hand and Hnr took it To be continued next Sunday. 11F1 OP SHOOTING STABS Mrrladi of Iilttle Sleicori That May Hare Wondered for Aces. A small body, perhaps as large as a paving-stone or larger, more often perhaps not as large as a marble, is moving round the sun. Just as a mighty planet revolves in an ellipse, so this small object will more round and round in an ellipse, with the sun in the focus. There ate at the present mo ment, we find in "The Story of the Heavens," inconceivable myriads of such meteors moving in this manner. They are too small and too) distant for our telescopes, and we can never see tbem except under ex traordinary circumstances. At the time we see the meteor it is usually moving witn enormous velocity, so that it often traverses a distance of more than 20 miles in a second of time. Such a velocity is almost impossi ble near the earth surface; the resistance of the air would prevent it Aloft, in the emptiness ot space, there is no air to resist the meteors. It' may have been moving round and round the sun for thousands, per haps for millions of years, without let or hindrance; but the supreme moment arrives, and the meteor perishes in a streak of splendor. In the coarse of its wandering the body comes nearer the eartfa,and within a few hun dred miles of its surface of course begins to en counter the upper surface of the atmos phere with which the earth is inclosed. To a body moving with the appalling velocity of a meteor, a plunge into the atmosphere is usually fatal. Even though the upper layers of air are excessively attenuated, yet they suddenly check the velocity, almost as a rifle bullet would be checked when fired into water. As the meteor rushes through the atmosphere the friction of the air warms its surface, gradually it becomes red-hot, then white-hot, and is finally driren off into vapor with a brilliant light, while we on the earth, one or two hnndred miles be low, exclaim: "On look! there is a shooting star!" ' EXCITING WOLF HDNT8. How tbe Iiapps Panne and Kill the Beta deer's Destroyer. Tooth's Companion. The Swedish Lapps live entirely with, by, and upon the reindeer. A Lapp who owns a thousand deer is a very rich man; but as taxes are assessed upon the number of deer, he is inclined to under-estimate his herd. The most dangerous enemy to tha herd is the wolf, which if disposed, can kill 30 deer in a night A band of wolves can make a rich Lapp poor. When the snow is deep and soft, and it is announced that the wolf-tracks have been seen in the neighborhood oi the deer, the swiftest runners on snow-shces prepare for an exciting chase. The wolf may have a start of a mile or two, but the track it leaves in the deep.soft snow is so prominent that the hunters can follow It at their bestspeed. The wolf, though he may run fast, has but a slight chance for escaping the short men who, on snow-shoes, rush through the wood, dart down steepfhills, and jump from ledges several yards in height. Each hunter does his best to outrun the others, for the wolf belongs to the Lapp who strikes the first blow. As soon as the lead ing hunter is close enough to the wolf, he gives It a heavy blow across the loins with his strong, spiked snow-shoe staff. If there are other wolves to be pursued, he kills it outright; if not,he disables it, and waits till all the hunters have arrived, before giving the death stroke. A Saoitltnte Bill. Mrs. Kidby Ntfpop, (to her unmarried brolber-in-ltw) Batchley, would you very much mind taking the baby out in his car riage, while the nurse goes for a walk ? Batchlev W-W-Wouldn't it d-d-de jnst as well if X t-t-took the n-n-nurse out in m-m.m-m-my carriage, while the b-b-baby went for a w-w-walk ? Puck. Bather Wearlaa. "Why don't von go to work 1 Why do yea waete yonr time begging ?" "DWyoH ever beg?" Hej ereourseBot. til J-L5Kli K8fis4K- MTU. . cLAJS't l3KW ak4 wmW1 1m IF I ATOM VB MKmTWn Wl MVmT IU11, Afl " I AMONG THfi INDIANS. Descendahts of the Cliff Dwellers as Agriculturists. A TEISB OP EELIGIOUS EEDJHEN Who Wonld Kot Allow BnsinessInter- fArn With rtn - "- ' I4.J. GOOD WOBK OP THE 1KDIAIT SCHOOLS tcozBZSTOAuaacB or tbz dispatch.! Bed Bock, Otoe Aoeuct, tjtd. T., De cember 14. General Armstrong, United States Indian Inspector, has been with us. , He has been an Indian Inspector for fiva years. His term of office expires in 11a y. He has visited every GoTernment,and mis sion school in the United States, and hia riews concerning the Indians are practical. He takes a practical view of ererything. v He is neither a fanatic nor a scoffer. He told the Chilocco superintendent, who is a Methodist minister, that they had too many Bibles there and not enough soap. He has visited the Moqny Indians who lire in Arizona. They are a peculiar tribe. In form and features they are superior to the Indians of this Territory. The women are really handsome, resembling the beautiful Spanish women of Mexico. The single women are distinguished from the married by the way they wear their hair. The raising of their crops is a proof of the homely old maxim of "Where there is a will, there is a way." The soil is too sandy to plow, so they take sticksjtnd reach away down below the sand until they come to the moist earth, thrust in their grains of corn and in the harrest time reap a fair crop. The Moquy Indians are descendants of the ancient clift dwellers. They, too, build their houses away up on tbe rocky cliffs and Eop in and out of their eyries like the storm irds we read about. The General also told of a tribe of Indians he risited who are renowned for their piety. They are devout Catholics, and hare taken a French name which means "nierced heart." The Jesuits were the first mission aries tbat risited them. To simplify the , suffering and death of Christ, His sorrow for -the human race, they showed them the pict ure of two hearts pierced. When he was among them to arrange with them to gire ' the right of way through their country for a great railway corporation, in the midst of railroad magnates, expert lawyers and Government officials, ana perplexed with an important interest to settle they did not forget their religion. The General relates graphically how they were all seated around the council fire when the bell at the mission rang. In the midst of business of rsst im portance to them and their white brothers, the chief rose modestlr, and through the in terpreter, said that they were accustomed whenerer within sound of that bell to KNEEL FOB PKAYKES. They begged to be excused for a few min utes. And right there, before their worldly audience, they knelt derontly and prayed. The effect was electrical. It has left its im press upon the General, for with a voice tremulous with emotion and a tear glisten ing in his ere, he told his story. It had a practical effect upon the others. "Such people as these can be trusted," they said. The right of way was secured, and the privilege given to each member of the tribe to ride free on the road whenerer they wished. The Genoa Indian school, in Nebraska, is highly spoken of. There are 175 Indian boys and girls there. The majority are Sioux and Winnebagos. There are some Arapahoes also. The Indian children make ail their own clothing, tbe Government fur nishing the material. The wedding suit of one of the employes was made at tho ichoolmi by an Indian boy. They raise broom corn and make brooms, small whisk brooms and large ones. General Armstrong told one of the broom makers that he was very dusty, and would like to have a whisk broom. The boy said they had none made. The General said: "Well, I'll wait until you. make one." In 20 minutes he was pre sented with a nice, neat, well-made broom that costs 25 cents in the stores. They make them at the school and sell them. They cost the school about 3 cents each. They have plucky Indian boys at that school, and a sharp, practical superinten dent. Two large boys ran off to see the world. After they had seen enough they wrote to tbe Superintendent that if he would send them some money they would come back. He answered and said: "Don't care whether you come back or not, we haven't any money for tbat purpose, and I guess we don't need yon." Bat they were anxious to get back, hired out to some farmers, earned enough to pay their fare on the' railroad, and one bright morning walked into the school, wiser and better boys- The Genoa school has done well. They have raised on 222 acres of land 5,000 bush els of corn, 1,100 bushels of potatoes, 1,275 bushels of oats, 300 bushels of onions, 3,600 heads of cabbage, 1,000 ot which was made Into sonrkrout, 300 bushels of tomatoes, 80 t6ns of hay, 20 acres of broom corn and 10 acres ot sugar cane, which yielded 75 gallons of molasses. A JOKE OK THE BEAVE3. At the San Carlos agency in Arizona the war-like Apaches are being civilized at the point of the bayonet. In that dry country irrigation is necessary, and to bring the water from the mountain streams they are digging ditches, and the Apaches are doing the work, "packing" the dirt away in huge baskets strapped on their backs. One morn ing they told the soldiers that the squaws ought to pack the baskets, so much similar, you know, to the way they carry the papooses, and they thought that was surely the squaws work. The soldiers agreed. So the next morning the squaws brought the baskets. The soldiers ordered them to set them down, then ordered the Indian men to fill them and carry them and ordered the sqnaws to return to camp. They left and all squatted on a hill overlooking the scene and laughed at their husbands, fathers and brothers. At the San Carlos school they have 40 Indian boys to learn English. They have had a teacher there who seemed to pay more attention to singing than to anything else. He really was an excellent singer. During General Armstrong's visit there he asked one of the boys to do some work on the blackboard. The boy shuffled up. looked at tbe blackboard awhile, turned around and said: "Me no savey work on blackboard, but me heap savey 'Hold the Fort" The General called for the song and they did sing it, and sang it with a ven geance. .Bed Bibb. An Economical Idea. Detroit Free Press. The slowest walking horses in the world are to be found in Germany. They are trained to a slow gait on the theory that the slower they move the bettor they will keep their flesh. A great many American livery men seem to have caught on to this idea in the last two or three years. RADALTS MICROBE KILLER CUBES ALL DISEASES. The claim to cure all diseases, may at first glance seem very absurd; bat after reading our pamphlet giving a history ot the Microbe Killer, explaining the germ theory ot disease. and reading our testimonials, which prove con- the truth ot our assertion becomes clear. Noj person suffering from any blood, chronic org contagious disease should let adaypasswtth-I ont getting and reading this Interesting book;? wmen win oe given awav or maiiea iree. J ne m grntlemen connected with this company areji.C, well-known buslucis men of tbis city. A;onUfe utj wanted ererywnere. Address j?3 he Wm- Kadam Microbe Ki erCo. kj BTYmr AT7i?wrrp www vnTTHin vWL" sT1 rTTJITDTV AVWMTTTP PTfTflDTTon .? i sniB23 i .&&