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Pride
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A LETTER FROM PALESTINE
I wonder if you editors of The Gol
den Age imagine that you have a mo
nopoly of the sensational over there
in America? If you do, then there is
one time that even editors are mis
taken. We have so much that is old
and our ways are so staid that some
think that we have nothing but the
antique. Well, we are so fond of an
tiquities that we have factories for
manufacturing them to order. But we
sometimes have things which are ex
citingly new. Less than two months
ago there was an
Automobile on the Streets of
Jerusalem.
It was an American machine, and
drew T such a crowd of people that the
Consul found it necessary to appoint
some of his officials to keep the peo
ple from getting run over, and said
officials w r ere so wrought upon by the
strange sight that they forgot the peo
ple, and came near being run over
themselves. The multitude gazed in
wonder, and w T ere startled when the
thing shook itself, and suddenly de
parted through the hole in the wall
which had been irreverently cut for
the German Emperor. It went away
(the automobile, not the hole) toward
old Hebron, literally shaking off the
dust from its —wheels, against Je
rusalem. It is not reported that the
curious machine was allowed to enter
the Cave of Machpelah. That would
have seemed almost enough to wake
up Abraham. Those w r ho know that
the railway from Jaffa was stopped
over the other side of Gehenna, be
cause, as was claimed by the Govern
ment authorities, it would be sacri
lege to allow such a thing to come
near the walls of the “Holy City,” may
wonder how it happened that an auto
mobile wms allowed to enter the city.
It must have been that the unholy
machine had come and gone before
the authorities awoke to the situation.
A Riot in Jaffa.
Jaffa, as if determined not to be out
done even by Jerusalem, got up a sen
sation in the way of a regular knock
down and drag-out fight between the
Moslems and the Jews, with some fatal
and many serious casualties. Many
soldiers were required to quell the riot.
The curious part of it wms the reason
the Moslems gave for their attack on
the Jews. The coming of so many
Jews into the land had caused a rise
in the rent of houses in Jaffa, thus
causing some of the Moslems to have
to pay more rent. It must be remem
bered that by far the greater part of
the rented houses there are owned by
Moslems.
A Fire in Jerusalem.
It came a few weeks ago, and being the
first in many years, of course it creat
ed a big sensation. The fire origi
nated just outside of the Jaffa Gate,
in a disreputable upstairs case-theater,
and burned out the rooms over about
twenty stores only one store being de
stroyed, and that could have been pre
vented if it had been kept closed as
were the other stores and the French
hank. The rooms occupied by the
Turkish post and telegraph offices
w r ere among those burned. Os course
an immense crowd of people gathered.
The companies of Turkish seemed to
add to the discord they had been sent
to prevent. The men who were al
lowed to go on top of the burning
buildings seemed doing their best to
help the fire spread by removing the
tiling. The fire stopped for the lack
of fuel more than because of the water
pumped upon it by a crowd of monks
from the Latin and Greek churches.
For once, during my five years in Je
The Golden Age for June 18, 1908.
rusalem, those lazy fellow’s made them
selves useful. If all the w T ood used in
the houses of Jerusalem was all
brought together, there would not be
enough of it to make a very great tire,
and the stones are too old and “sobby”
to burn very readily.
The Latest Sensation
Is an English maiden of about 7f»
summers (more probably winters)
with a family of five dogs. As she
puts it, “a family, including the father,
mother, and three babies.” A certain
tourist agent here, noted for his neat
dress and affable manners, found in
that aged maiden, a tourist that was
too much for him. Knowing that the
other hotels would not agree to enter
tain her with her canine belongings,
he went to a French hotel, and suc
ceeded in securing entertainment for
her. Imagine his consternation, on
going to the hotel the next morning,
to find the other guests ready to mob
him (who could blame them?). He
instantly agreed to hunt other quar
ters for tne undesirable company. Fi
nally, in desperation, he appealed to
the matron of an institute for blind
girls, and she, with more kindness of
heart than prudence, consented to un
dertake to entertain the aforesaid lady
and her belongings. As I suggested
to her, now she could say that
five of the inmates of the institute
vvere born blind. After two days (I
teach the blind girls of the institute)
I found the matron in a fairway to
become an inmate of a different kind
of an‘institution, unless she could be
soon relieved of the curious company
of tourists. I kindly and courageously
(it required courage) volunteered my
assistance, but alas, I found stony
hearts wherever 1 sought a place of
refuge for the undesirable company!
Fortunately the matron had some
rooms winch, w'hile in the same en
closure, were a little separated from
the main building. She stored the
late arrivals in one of those rooms.
I cannot say whether they are happy
cr not. I have not the courage, to ven
ture near enough to enquire. That
maiden carries a cane, and has away
of emphasizing with it what she says.
The members of that party have some
interesting history connected with
their sojourn in Egypt, but that is out
side the province of the sensational
in Palestine. P. L. STANTON.
Jerusalem, Palestine, May, 1908.
«e
Our newspapers are prone to boast
of the lines of advertising that they
print, but the London Times sets up
a different standard by announcing
that a recent issue contained more
than a quarter of a million words, as
many as would make three ordinary
novels. Some of this prodigious output
is due to the publication of a full report
of parliamentary proceedings. Undoubt
edly some American newspaper issues
contain many more words than that
issue of the Times, hut not one of
them, it is safe to say, ever prints
even a brief connected account of the
proceedings of Congress. The fact is
not mentioned as a commendation of
American newspapers.
SIOO Reward, SIOO.
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there is at least one dreaded disease that science has
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