Front:
ARABIA.
PAINTING COPYRIGHTED 1893 ARBUCKLE BROS,
Back:
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GRIND YOUR No. 38
ARABIA.
HE Arabians are and always have been a nation of no ... Is.
COFFEE
They pitch their tents wherever they list, and remove their
camps whenever they will. Their land is in great part a
AT HOME. desert, but throughout dotted with the most fruitful and lovely of
oasis. As a race, the Arabians are quick, agile, alert and supple.
Like the steeds for which the land is famous, they are built more
It will pay you well to keep a small cof- } life is much more comfortable and even luxurious than it is gener-
for speed and grace, than for strength and endurance. Their tent
fee-mill in your kitchen and grind your ally credited to be.
coffee just as you use it-one mess at a
time. Coffee should not be ground until The Harem, although not exclusively an Arabian institution, is
the coffee-pot is ready to receive it. Cof- }the natural home of the women of this nation. In certain respects
fee will lose more of its strength and the harem is of course the dreariest, most lonesome and unendur-
aroma in one hour after being ground able spot on earth. But as far as creature wants are concerned, the
than in six months before being ground. harem life is, in a superlative degree, the acme of luxury.
So long as Ariosa remains in the whole The love which the Arabs bear for their horses is proverbial,
berry, our glazing, composed of choice and the relations between man and animal are often wonderfully
eggs
pure confectioners' A sugar, close. These equines seem to be endowed with almost human
closes the pores of the coffee, and thereby { intelligence, and wonderfully attached to their masters.
all the original strength and aroma are
retained. Ariosa Coffee has, during 25 slaves. These beasts of burden
serve better through the hot and
Next in affection come the camels, most faithful and patient of
years, set the standard for all other roast- arid waste of the desert, than even horses.
ed coffees. So true is this, that other
manufacturers in recommending their
The Arabs indulge in but few games and none not
in
goods, have known no higher praise than other lands. Their pastimes consist chiefly in story-tellitig and
to say: "It's just as good as Arbuckles'." feasting.
Banqueting is a fine art with the Arabians. Flowers, music
ARBUCKLE BROS., and censors diffusing delicate fragrance add their charn these
feasts. Voices of singing men and women are heard, a avish-
NEW YORK CITY.
ing slave-girls are made to dance.
This is one of a series of Fifty (50) Car
pictorial vistory of the Sports and Pastimes of all Nations,
RAFMANN & STRAUSS