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heart; for the poor woman will not long survive the loss
of her little one."
" 'T is an easy matter to abuse the profession," quoth
Paulus Androcydes, sneeringly. "Ah ! my wonderful,
talented, gifted, and intellectual Egyptian friend, tell me
truly, what was the cause of sickness in this child ?
Know, that these skillful surgeons have only performed
a simple operation, by means of which they hoped to
save life."
"And yet have driven it out of its primal abode! "
answered Athothis. " You ask for the original cause of
the disease, and I answer, poisonous air and water!"
And as he spoke the Egyptian'%. .spiritual finger pointed
directly at a stationary washstahd in the corner of the
room.
" I can readily believe that such may be the case," re-
marked Paulus Androcydes, " since sewer gas contains
poisonous germs. Yet, this hotel is provided with the
best sanitary plumbing. No better evidence of modern
mechanical skill can be found than in the plumbing
noticeable here. It is simply perfect. The luxury and
convenience of our house-drainage system can never be
appreciated by one of the first dynasty."
"We had no plumbers in Egypt," responded Athothis,
with dignity ; " for we knew full well that filth was the
prime factor in the causation of disease, and had no need
for the services of mechanics who convert house interiors
into sewers. 'T is possible, in this respect, that we
lacked the rare wisdom displayed by the present age.
Now, as filth is the chief agent in creating sickness, it
follows that the more cleanly a population, the less its
mortality rate. The experience of centuries has shown
that man is a most uncleanly animal. So from the dawn