S olve M ystery or the P yramids STREETS LIKE A STAIRWAY TEMPLE BAR TO BE RESTORED LOCK OUT A MINISTER SERVICE FOR MUTES n’ T Â ’ * û y uWhlOh On® »”• Original Gate. of London Ascent la Gained by Climbing to Be Permanently Erected In Numerous Flights of Stepa. RESENTED HIS NEEDLE-EYED Epping F orest BAN ON SELFISH RICH. Texas Church Whose Members Algiers, Africa.—One of the oldest London.- .u - _ . . — r;— « « m i ' i i . —Londoners are keenly In- A frl-e T h l i? F * *5*' f' ° rtb lereeted In the proposed restoration to Are All Deaf. .. the ^r a . 5 w blcb? oday b*BrB “ >e flty of Temple Her. one of orlalnal Following Eloquent Denunciation ot Of the Romen , » . " “ " T i * • , P«'<1ed the Increasing , raffle, end the « « •b u r g , P a - Since he preached Ale,era I nt m T . Ila«« Sir Henry Meux bought It. had all the Idea that It wae more difficult for Fort Worth. Texas,—Sermons with m 7 ' , p,ctur*8l,ue and one o t , «he atones carefully marked and erect- ne‘.dl‘r t h ^ ^ 7 ‘he ®y# ° f * ........ ” uru' e..H «rvg«„oua. never . * a ■»*— spoken “ word, congrvgatluual , P'cturesque rig h t. I. the ed again at the sn,rance of h l. estate, to « » ‘ W , without an audible note of atreet of the camels, which Is In the Theobald's park at Chestnut, a little th e k ln a .lm » f r fc* F Ch to the io n a r r it i* * * ’ ? “ “ warnln« u‘»ludy. public prayer. In which there way out of Loudon, where It has stood mil lo n a lr « . 7 ' nour" b®d , «• “» «»und. Sunday school teachers «her. I.“ .? ' ,, ( *,,r n ,>.Of? h‘’,r w x - ‘- b o . , lip . .r e Inarticulate. All t h . . . ..... ..... ® doubt whether the Itev are Incidentals of the Sunday services John Milton Oakesford le stili redor of a Fork Worth chunffi. h A Prot®', *o ‘ Kplscopal co,.grò The pastor Is not disturbed by cry­ K“’l,’n- " n,"n » v fn u ., North Side. ing bablee, and the late comers do Followlng lt a majority of thè rea- nut take the trouble to tip toe, but let at ,h® ",al" »»ran ce their b o d s fall noisily on the uncar- of Ihe edlflce at mldnlght. After a conreronn. < . . -----floor. The belfry that tope the « painter's ehi *i’* I’.*r,y Produced building Is purely ornamental, for no « scratched painters chisel with w » hich m - i . i ... ' ___ . . . . . ....... ... rrn „ , .» . ........ he member of this unique congregation 'ng woMs; b° * rd th" could hear any bell Invented W » No church In the United States Is “Rector, the Rev. John It ' Is only church church In In the the Oakesford, residence No so« Milton u I ' like . . It. » • the 'ne only - man avenue. North Side ° *F 1 * b country whose congregation la When thle was done a can of black composed wholly of deaf mules. r slumbered lor 37 centuries be­ which has Sir Gaston Maspero as Its The sixty or more deaf mules living enamel fore the coming of Christ—the director general of antiques, no man W hirl? th I’’'°d u ced a n d **»• space In Fort Worth organlxed the congrega- on Great Pyramid of Cheops, or Khu­ is allowed to touch a single pebble, had stood out m ,‘ r Oak’" f" rd |t'on- called »he First K v .n g .llc .l fu. It still stands there, eight much less exp ore. But Mr. Covington several coati 7» d Pa nt WB8 »*»»n chursh for the deaf. In 1907. The real miles from Cairo, defying time, did such good work at the beginning party (llBiM.r».d>f. a n#,ne Th®n ,be founder Is the Rev. J. W. Michaels of Old Ttm pls Bar. the e.em ents and the vandals, all lng home *” n?e “,ber* return- Louisville. Ky.. who Is still the pee that he has been authorised to clear working together, barely able to away the slxty-nlne feet of debris Street of the Camola rver since. It Is suggested now to neat Deonle h m w’ “ ,by and proml- lor. although he can make only four * ‘° th8 «“ « " ■ » visit. . year to h l. voiceless flock. stretch Its skin. Egyptologists worked which obstructs the upper and outer very heart of the oldest part ot the pu‘ ** up ln EpP*n« forest, one of the Son at it; Napoleon fought one of bis end of the channel which leads to the town. This street, like others built In nlle passengers passed In un- are very proud of having the only deaf safe down as the level of the Nile In 2170 inner extrem ities of these were d is-; other and the overhanging balconies- adJu• te<, «°*niute church In the United Status and ,h ® an,'len‘ doorway after their that tb e , Mf«M7.,Lr B. C. covered by an Englishman, Weyman are supported by rough timbers. T h e ilo0K and 8O,ne,|uies adventurous Jour- o n . excePr Ì h o . ; glve’ n X " ” ’ a--® ^rrea.H.ndlngty u.y.1, Best of all, he has cleared the sin Dlxon. In 1872. ; doorways are frequently of beauttrul ney8 from Brighton ot Portsmouth. blnatlnn by the veetrv'h , .W C° ? 'I Thw churrh *• •"«•rdenomlnatlonal. gle remaining course just above the Masons today build no more beau- Saracenic design and often lead to in- Here, ” i_ .v of .. latter from time to time, breathless »• lock the r a ••try. ‘«»'er the me Creeds creeds are stink In the common tn- sands of the desert and revealed to UL , Fh“ . dld those anclent m«n n et courts, which are beautified with horsemen dashed up with tales of also was adjusted ch urch I f‘vml«y In the roster of 40 members. the world that Its outer sheath who tolled 5.600 year. ago. They brilliant flowers and tropical planta plunder by highwaymen on the wilds hv ___ ». . . * b“*f dosen denominations are repre- It was stated s?ri„7 was of pure white limestone, have left their own monument In the { 5 ,h e •®n ,“<‘ The pastor I. a Bapll.t. but -_____ ________ _ of the Hampstead Heath. During the . 7 “ Ul* *ctlon waa b* which nobody knew before, be­ queen's chamber, which, apparently, great fire at London Temple Bar was A MEMORIAL TO JOHN FITCH cause the great mass of stone bad was never used. It Is superbly fin­ nearly destroyed, but It was restored notice to” r 7 ? « 7 n t ? f ' V®n ,Ornial been used as a common quarry for ished and jointed; yet, oddly enough, In 1870 by Sir Christopher Wren. se r v l? .. . Oakesford that his ____________ qX ed F * ° Uld “° ‘ b* f * thousands of years. The limestone the entrance to this superb tomb was Monument to the Inventor of the Steamboat Has Been Erected at sheathing makes a mosque in Egypt covered and concealed. Possibly It WEST VIRGINIA CURIOSITY^ Warmlnleter, Pa. today. When the tomb of Cheops was was Intended for Martltefe. Khufu's first reared It was as white as a mar­ queen, but she survived him and mar­ APPLES BAKED BY THE HEAT ____________ ___ who „u... Harrisburg. Pa.— In 1785 John Fitch Lincoln County Boasts of “Maul ble mansion of our times. But It Is not ried his brother ___ Cbephren. built the second pyramid In ThZgreaVgroup co"1’>le,ed • model of a boat to be pro- Rock,” So Called Because of Its so now. Fruit Wae Roasted on the Trees Both Resemblance to a Maul. Few of us can realize what thirty- which stands today as a perpetual pelled by steam with side wheels, and In New York and petitioned both congress and the Penn­ seven centuries before Christ really monument Just outside Cairo. Missouri. Wheeling. W. Va.—It becomes expe­ means. That Is 5,611 years ago. The The great king's chamber. 35 feet by sylvania legislature for aid In con­ technical work of those days was mar­ 17 by 19. Is wrought In polished gran­ structing a b oat In 1786-7 Fitch built dient for Lincoln county, West Vir­ New York.—The torrid heat that velous. The masonry Is absolutely ite. Just one hundred perfect blocks a steamboat that made several sue- ginia, to tell of one of her few nat- icorched the country deranged the o r ln five courses compose its walls. Nine ce“ ful ,r1P’ on the Delaware river be- urnl curiosities. As the accompany unrivaled—there is nothing better In ot and 11,e »rrl/.ni."' “fi*1 c«u»ed all Picture shows, thia rock Is called kinds of Incident« all the world today. Monuments and granite slabs form its celling and the tween Philadelphia and Burlington. N j •oiiie palaces have come and have gone a floor of the low granite chamber J. He thus became the Inventor of i "Maul Rock," because of Its slmllarl-1 amusing and some pathetic »'c®mbo“« In America. The ty to a maul. The baie of the rock la hundred times Blnce the great pyra­ above. The second chamber's celling the i " u o .7 :kf 0rt’ N Frank Sparlln ’ rTan* i mid was built. They have perished; forms the floor of a third chamber, I name ° \ tb,B boat WBS ‘"Th« Perse- about 1,000 feet above sea level and Is exhibited and so on up to the fifth, which is the v®rance'" ’ fi'1 wa» capable of making made up of large boulder. The stem roasted^on tr £ a r PP o' t. h , ‘ were it remains. of the rock I. 20 feet high and will I po“ “ , “ * ¿ 7 ” e "'er o f Ml" For twenty years 100,000 men tolled topm ost each one rising over the l bree “ lleB per hour' h contained the average about seven feet In diameter perlence on his fa m . at the stones. They built their great great one Intended for the deadl flrat doubIe-actlng condensing engine The cap. or maul part. I. about .lx pTe" were .er?e., *dd' ,h ® BP’ pile facing exactly north and south. king. Like the queen's chamber, this ,» „ » .„ d a « •» » 4 » They chose a base of nearly a sev­ top one Is roofed with an arch of enth of a mile. 761 feet, to be exact. heavy lim estone slabs. On one o f , * sober and creditable farmer living This was a plot covering nearly 13 those slabs there still stays In living near Chlemsford. Conn., declares the acres. There were 210 perfect courses paint Khufu’s quarry mark, or official beat of the sun's rays hatched a set­ of stone, almost Invisibly joined, of seal—two birds and a snake, sur­ ting of eggs the hen left a few days Mokattem limestone blocks. At an mounted by a round dot. before they were to mature. angle of a little more than fifty-one de­ Of the m ysteries he has found Mr. Henry Herrick, an undertaker, was grees its four sides swept up, tapering Covlngston has Just spoken, and espe- overcome by the heat In Hudson, to the pointed apex, 431 feet above the tially above the grand gallery, 155 feet Mass., while embalming a body and ground. long and 28 feet high, by which the Superintendent Shsppsrd Preaching. dropped dead. In it were 85,000,000 cubic feet of king's chamber was reached. Walcott Gregory, a r" farmer of Plne- Pine 1 lf " conv’ r‘ " conscientiously op- c r o ft B . " " n® r of stone, put up by people who had no “I consider this the most mysterious ‘ “ ,m PrlBon«d o»er an posed to Immenslon. ho does not hesl- modern machinery. There are about part of this mighty miracle ln stone," and an n ie a t r®f r ,* e rB to r nnd his tate to use the sprinkling or pouring 2.300,000 individual blocks. Treated said he, "because lf the pyramid were ears and fingers were frost bitten. method of baptism. for centuries as a public quarry, all Its intended only as a tomb there was With the thermometer registering Because of the long lapses between outer stones and facings have been practically no use for this elaborate 101 In the shade, Isaac P. Manchester If v « the T,al,,, ot ,b ® PBBtor. a large part of taken to Cairo and elsewhere, chiefly grand gallery, with Its strange and re­ cold built a lir e In hi" p "¿ned of ,b ® th® ministerial duties fall upon the for mosque construction. The anti­ markable features, except perhaps to — '. . . D b 8 cook stove and Sunday school superintendent. quaries never knew about this outside temporarily accommodate the granite put his feet In the oven, He waa The service begins when 8upt. Shep­ sheath until Mr. Covington of America plugs which still close the lower end found dead In a few hours. pard mounts the rostrum. First Is roll came there with permission from the of the ascending passage, but which u c i n sassi . | call. With the record before him, the British government to make his ex ­ I find fit too tightly to have been slid plorations. n tL U MAN ON MOLTEN IRON «up*rlntendent. by signs, calls off Into position. At an angle of about —--------- I the name of each member, and each Mr. Covington began bis work nine twenty-six degrees eight minutes It Incredible Ferocity of a Fighting New P®f»°n present responds In the same years ago. making his camp In the dopes up for 155 feet. Its heigh’ 28 Jersey Foundryman Toward fashion. , shadow of the great pyramid. He feet, and Its width above the ramps started where the Caliph Mamoun left nearly seven fe e t Its great aides are His Foe. The Apostles' Creed Is recited In off in 818 A. D., nearly 1,100 years ago. clearly marked by seven overlapping ' unison. The uniformity of gestures Trenton. N. J.—A horrible story of ,B not the result of careful drilling, It was Mamoun who forced the first layers of stone, while lt Is roofed by M o n u m e n t to F itc h , an Infuriated man's cruelty was told but comes as naturally to the worshlp- passage Into the stern depths of the thirty-six slabs. Bordering the third transmitting power by means of In police court here when Ricardo Za j PC" »■ M>eech to the average person, monster of stone, but after he found overlapping layer Is a finely finished cranks, ever constructed. He succeed fretl was arraigned charged with atro- I Supt. Sheppard then delivers a short It nothing more was done for cen­ narrow groove extending right round ed In forming a stock company, but at clous assault and battery upon Co- 1 »ernioti. taking the Sunday school text turies. Whole generations came and the gallery; lt is but one of several went before anything was learned of remarkable and Inexplicable features the height of hla experiments, bis pri- ence- The stem Is of a soft formation logne Zoda. The men, employed at tor tb® day for hla subject. He Is vate resources gave out, his stock- and *• ,BBt crumbling away, since the the Trenton Malleable Iron works, got known as an “eloquent man” by the the mystery. which distinguish this part of the holders became discouraged, and he Umber has died that was a great pro- Into a quarrel which developed In to1 members of the silent congregation. First of all the American searcher structure. was forced to abandon his project. In lecH°n from the force of strong winds, a fight. They tussled about cleared away all the debris. Then he “A twenty-inch ramp borders each until His delivery has an earnestness that aide nf the e»iierv e.ten d tee ,t„ h . „«I 1793 he went to FraDce to build a By mounting the rock, by means of a started at the descending or entrance Zafretl hurled his combntnnt upon the Impresses even those who cannot un­ to the g r e a t a t e n ' w h ic h Is Inst one steamboat' but ,h e revolution prevent- la,lder that Is kept there, a magnlfl- passage. Just below its granite plugs, to the great step, which Is Just one ed_ and he returned home p' nnlleM ' cent view of the West Virginia hills mound of n large mold with su c h . d«r»tand his signs, force that Zoda was stunned and la y ) At times he “talks" rapidly, his and found the mysterious chamber be­ yard high. Each ramp contains twen­ low the ground—burrowed out of the ty-eight rampholes, over nearly all of and as a common sailor. He made sev- can be obtained. unconscious until the sizzling meial, i feclle fingers, accompanied by full eral unavailing attempts to secure| living rock beneath the mighty pile which, for some strange and as yet Just poured Into the mold, burned arra gestures, working with a speed money to perfect his Inventions, and “ MUMMY” above— “The stones of darkness and unknown reason, shallow holes have WHEAT SWINDLE through lfls clothing and began to tbat ta*es the attention of his audi­ burn his flesh, The man uttered a ence. Again, for the sake of greater the shadow of death.” What this been chiseled out, and a neat close- ln grievous disappointment ended his life by poison at Bardstown, Ky., at chamber was for is not yet known. fitting stone let In. Western Farmers Who Paid $5 a Pint piercing shriek. emphasis, the words come slowly, lln- which place his remains lie. The passage leading to It may now be “As most pyramidlsts are much per­ Find They Bought a Common Zafretl was so Infuriated that he Kerlngly, from his finger tips, and one Fitch was captured at one time by used by cautious visitors. It Is 350 plexed by this feature and have ad­ Variety. Jumped madly upon Zoda, witnesses may wel1 Imagine that he la an adept feet long and through the natural rock vanced theories I must venture mine. the Indians, but he escaped from them said, and held his roasting body Into ln hla silent art of oratory. and reached Warmlnlster, Pa., where slopes down not half an Inch out of It Is Just possible that the places chis­ Kansas City, Mo.—-Numerous farm­ the molten Iron until Zoda was un­ The eyes of the members never plumb. eled out originally contained inscrip­ a monument, shown here, has been ers In Western Missouri and Eastern conscious. wander from the speakor, since, erected to him, on which 1. the foi-, Kan8ag ''„V™ When he got to the bottom of this tions, which the king for some reason men through their eyas alone, can they re­ lowing inscription: chamber Mr. Covington realized that desired to obliterate. It became nec­ who last spring sold them small quantl- S teel Fish Rod D angerous. ceive his message. “John Fitch here conceived the there was more to do He found a essary then to remove—to chisel out— Idea of the first steamboat. He ran t°»flu?nV they called "mummy" At the close of the superintendent'! Marinette, Wls.—Max Engles bad well shaft, 192 feet long, piled up with the disfigured parts caused by the ob­ a boat with sldewheels by steam o n ' Bnd said t i rorn “ ‘ ^syptlan tombs a miraculous escape from death. llo address the congregation "sings” In twenty feet of debris. When this was literation and replace them by a close- le ln in 1785. 17RS d d 1 be Vastly suPer*or In qual- was fishing with a steel rod when i B|8 ns- Most commonly the hymn Is a pond below Davisvllle cleared away there started a current fitting let-in stone. Ity and yield to the Turkey red wheat he touched one of the high power 0113 famHlur to all the members, as usually grown. of strong, fresh air. It swept down “In 1905 I discovered on the twenty- wires with It. Engles was knocked un- | ,he al"8|nK would be hlndored by hold S n a k e V ic tim 8h o o ts O ff F in g e r. the entrance passage, up the well sixth course of the south flank a simi­ The swindlers purported that there conscious and for some time It was ' ,nK books. Next, the Sunriay/srhool Renovo, P a.—W hile picking berries shaft, thence down the descending lar let-in stone, to the reverse side of was only a small quantity of the wheat feared he was dead. Artificial res­ classes take their places. The lesson passage out by the forced passage which still adhered buff-colored ce- near here, Charles Smith was bitten and they sold It for as much as |5 a piration revived him and he Is now on goes forward as In the ordinary Hun by a rattlesnake. Having no remedies made by Mr. Mamoun. Immediately m^tat. It had doubless become de­ pint. This quantity, they said, would the road to recovery. His right side day school, except that the questions and being miles from a doctor he the temperature dropped 2 degrees. tached from the face of a falling cas­ produce enough the second year to Is badly burned. It Is said that 88,- and answers are In the sign language. ■When Mr. Covington cleared the de­ ing stone. Clearly Incised ln the whipped his revolver from his pocket seed a quarter section, which would The service closes with a benediction. bris from the lower end of the king’s dressed surface was the full tenth and shot off the end of the finger yield from 50 to 76 bushels to the acre 000 volts of electricity passed through Often ministers from other churches his body. abd“W0“'d S™de ih e chamber south air channel, 174 feet part of an 18-lnch diameter circle. It iT'rush ° UtThee nrornnt8"»'* com­ In the city preach to the deaf muts a rush. The prompt act saved his long, he reduced the temperature was the only known Inscribed stone mon hard w heat congregation. A young woman, who . Finds »790 Pearl In Clam. again. • ever found on the great pyramid. 1 life. Farmers who planted the wheat married a mute, and so acquired a La Crosse, Wls.—A pearl valued at The ordinary man may but visit the would judge lt had been let into a found that It waa a common variety, thorough knowledge of the sign lan­ Quite an Egg for a Hen. great pyramid—or any of the others, south flank casing stone at a place not aa good aa the Turkey red, and did »760 was picked up In a clam shell ln guage, stands directly behind the visit- . Goldendale, Wash.—One of Frank not yield any better. It Is supposed the Mississippi river by William E , for that matter. Unless he have au­ from which another Inscription had e peari p . , „ weigns . . „ h . 47 grains 1 r A “ - . " ' ”“ ? " “ '. »»IIBB , O T JJI. h »ue Vincent's hens has laid an egg meas­ the wheat had been stored In a dry R thority from the British government. baen for tom« reason chiseled o u t ?p° k e n -J uring eight Inches around one way place for several years, which gave and I. the largest found in th l. vic.nl- are transmitted to the deaf congre ty this season. and five and threeelghtbs the other. It th« "mummy" appearance. gatlon by signs nvwfUDj ar rut frsiwwpj I