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Show w. Y.- M&fe5i&JI WwBtfoft -- '"' ''- - - UTAH CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE. HSBaMMCaKtliSBa had called her :n the night, and I think none on mine, ami I don't dunk she was glad to nl tier wear a bird again. say, Vos, Path . bnarula It. Harris in Mat Detroit free Press , fuming. Jtomc ami TJoitth. .1 ect Juim! The euo neer leaks so Ob, taw, FINDING PHARAOH. b sight In the May Century are two M wlieu he peers foilh from thy aaure hky! illustrated articles under the &bv capnr Thy twinkling nils crystal of imre light To gens our way, and as we wander by, tion describing the discovery of Phaa wUiu. pt deli and vai- -, we twme raoh s tomb and picturing its contents. With 1roeuee, iUm isk, M jfa, to give delight, From the first article by Mr. Wilson, the Oh, ranw! month, i!oj,artiug all too,, soon! Since Heaven we see not now, we think a boon photographer, we quote this account of From thence was sent in thee, dune, radiant June the way in which the tomb was located: Sophie L, Sehench, 'n TV Jnnr-ioiMaazlu Raro-tsseuprc-fuse.l- fMl-rmo- n LIFE IS TOO SHORT. short for any hitter feeling; Tune Is the best avenger, if we wait; Tim years speed by, and on their wings Life m too We have no room lor anything like hate. This solemn truth the slow wounds seem reyeaiing Tsiat ti.isk and fast about our feel are stealing Life Is too short F.Ua Whet tea. WORN OUT. No, she was not strong she never had been very strong. Farmer Gray knew it when he manic-d- . Lei, Eight She raa-lchihlren called her mother. their clothes and did her own homework, and yet mother was not strong, Partner Gray said it often, always re- -j grefcfully. Feihaps he was unselfish enough to wish that she was stronger for her own sake, but I fear not. He was a very robust, active man, and exceedingly anxious to get along in the world. Therefore, I fear that his regret of mothers fsebleiiess was simply a i egret, that she eonld uol do more, to aid him in his getting along schemes. She -r self regretted she was not stronger, Father works so hard, she would say, 1 feel that 1 am not so much help to him as i might he, if I were a strong woman. What more would she have done? What more could she have done? And, moat of all, what moie should she have e 11 h- rai tee? She kept the house in order. Shw did mothers duty by a loving, her children.. She was up early and to bd late. She milked and made butter, woikrd in her garden, cooked for hands, raised and sold chickens, but never had a dollar of her own. She could and did, when father was ruslmd, go out into the field and drop corn for half a day, and then came in to her hot, little kitchen and got dinner for fourteen people: yet mother was not g Strong. trim often wondered if she ever would strong. She would sit down on the kitchen doorstep some nights, loilg after all the others were in bed, dreading the coming of the marrow, and hoping it wouldnt be very hot. She was afiaid Slid would lean she might give out. her aching head agaiu&t the unpainted cross her tired hands listlessly iu her Up close her eyes, and wonder We door-fiaai- about many things. Some of her neighbors, with families vnly half as large as her own, kept a .strung hired girl in tha kitchen the year round. She often wondered vaguely , how it would seem to have a girl in her kitchen; he wondered how it would seem, for her to he away fiom home over night.. The fondest hope of her life for ten years had been that she might visit her mother, who lived two hundred miles away. She said she wouldnt ,be afraid to go such a long way alone, and father had often said ate should go if such and such thing turned out well, Thus things often turned out well, but mother never made the visit no, me re--! In a line of tombs beyond the lived four sturdy Arabs named Abd erRasoul. They supplied guides and donkeys to tourists who desired to visit the ruins of and sold them genuine and spurious antiquites. AY hen they found a mummy, it being forbidden by lavv to sell it, the head and hands and feet were wrenched off and sold on th sly, while the torso was kicked about the ruined tetnpUs until the Jackals came and carried it away, I purchased a head and hand of one of the brothers amid the dark shadows of the tornpie at Qurneh. Early in 1831 circumstantial evidence pointed to Ahas the one who med knew more than he would tell. Professor Maspero caused his arrest, and he lay in prison at Kench for some months. He also suffered the bastinado and the browbeating of the women repeatedly; he resisted bribes, and showed no melting mood when threatened with execution. His lipa told no more than the unfound tomb and not as much. Finally his brother Mohammed regarded the offer of bakshish, which Professor Maspero deemed it wise to make, as worth more to him than any sum he might hope to realize from future and made a clean breast of the whole affair. How the four brothers ever discovered the hidden tomb has remained a family secret. On July 5th, 1881, the wily Arab conducted Herr Emil Brugsch Bey, curator of the Bulad and pointed Museum, to so long looked for. out the hiding-plac- e A long climb it was, up the slope of the western mountain, till, after scaling a great limeston cliff, a huge, isolated rock was found. Behind this a spot was reached where the stones appeared to an expert observer and tomb searcher to have been arranged by hand, rather than scattered by some upheaval of nature. There, said the sullen guide; and there the enterprising Emil Brugsch Bey, with more than Egyptian alacrity, soon had a staff of Arabs at work hoisting the loose stones from a well into which they had been thrown. The shaft had been sunk into the solid limestone to the depth of about forty feet, and was about six feet square. Before going very far, a huge palm log was thrown across the well and a block and tackle fastened to it to help bring up the debris. When the bottom of the shaft was reached a subterranean passage was found which ran westward feet and then turned some twenty-fou- r northward, continuing into the directly heart of the mountain, straight except where broken for about two hundred feet by an abrupt stairway. The passage terminated in a mortuary chamber feet in about thirteen by twenty-threextent and barely six fact in height, where was found the mummy of King Pharaoh of the Oppression, with nearly forty others of kings, queens, princes, and priests. Th-b- healing; God-fearin- . s, Ahd-er-Raso- g, Deir-el-Baha- ri -- e I -- -- i Wide A lady told me the other day a painful little incident relating to wearing birds on your bonnets and hats. T will try and give her own words. She said: One day our pastor said (during service) that when he was in Florence a lady cam i to him and said, Do come wjth me ar.d hear those birds sing, ch! such mournful notes! There was a room full of birds in veiy small cages, and these birds were all blind; they had had their eyes put out. In the night the ownets take them outside hs city and hang the cages in the trees. Tha trees are then smeared with, tor. These birds keep up their mournful singing, and other birds aie gHracted to the , and tlmy cage-gn stuck on the Ur, and are then they caught, ami thoir eyes are put out. And the: birds are liUcd and sent to America for ladax to b var cn AN UF ACT USING COMPANY, BUILDERS OF hand and bounded into the gutU r mu of iv.u h. Twenty idle clerks and saw ti e old mans and smiled at his look of predicament, bewilderment. No one entered to help hi. a. A fariii'mabiv-d;evMwo- voting ' C man came a ring, to ik in the situation at a glance, and, without looking to the right or to the left, stepped into the gutter, picked up the bovk in her dainty, gloved fingers, and ban It-- 1 it to the man with a plcasaut smile. The idlers looked &t, each other and at the fair young woman. The old truckman, in a violent effort to express Lis thanks politely, lost his hat. It rolled into the gutter where the hook had been. This was almost too much for any woman, young or past young, hut this New York girl was equal to the occasion. Into the gutter she tripped again and gut the soiled hat. When she handed it to the truckman a happy smile was seen to play about her lips. God bless ye, miss, the old man said, as the fair maiden turned her back on the idlers and went on her way. hook f. 11 from hi- Or- - Wagon-- Buck Boards, , - d DOIN A SPRING AND TRAVELING 33 and people, whose lives are spent ( Young in cities, have no idea of the fun their street. 35 Main - - - - - WAGONS. - Sait Lake City. jTaosTTaastoI ol db 144 & 146 EAST TEMPLE STREET, SALT LA RE CITY. New arrivals daily of Fancy and Staple lOIEtJEQSfS GOODS, LIT XjX jIXT jED JRTsT s TChbo., Gents and Boys Clothing, Boots and Shoes. OUR HATS AND CAPS, NOTIONS, ETC., ETC., STOCK comprises of all that is Nkw and Elegant in lotoses Goods, Prom 10 cie per yard for durable Materials to Silk e at $3, 00 per yard Choice Grenadines, Burettes, Polonaise Cloths, Oa.s33.rn MILLINERS BERRYINV lew xe, etc., will find our Stock and Fall m Every Department LADIES AND CHILDREN'S READY MADE SUITS, country follows have in gosn a berry Gall and Perfect fit, very cheap. convince yourselves. in, as it is sometimes called. Indeed, it has appeared to me that our country Novelties in Embroideries, Laces, Ties, Fringes, Zephyrs, Tab! boys and girls did not make all they Damasks, Towels, etc. Gents and Boys Clothing, Gents and Boys Boots, Stylish, and might out of it. They can collect all that can be used at home, fresh,, dried or LCheap. Gents and Boys Tkirnisitin Gooch, Notions, Cutlery, Pipes. Wholesale and Retail Buyers will find our stock and prices an inpreserved, and enough besides to bring in ducement to trade with. us. the way of pocket quite a good sum Orders promptly filled and honorable treatment gttamiteed. money, if sold; besides all this the fun! The way to get Ihe most fun is to hold berrying picnics, where a jolly, not too large a party, make a day of it. Such hunting for the places where the fruit is We beg to announce that we have just opened an thickest, such laughter at the tears and Immense Stock of scratches, and the rivalries as to who will gather the most fruit, make the day luS.XTaTSLJA'imidrT. pass joyously. Wild strawberries! Was there ever such fragrance and flavor? It Any one desirous of purchasing goods in the above lines, either is many, very many years since I atwholesale or retail, will do well to visit our establishment ere doing so tended a strawberry picnic, but the exthose odor of of the fields wildings quisite Orders by mail promptly and carefully attended to. and the bright faces and rippling laughI' st.. i& wter, are as distinct in my memory m if that happy day had been but fire instead of fifty years ago. American Agriculturist for June. -- AITO GOODS' SIMON BEOTI ER S, m - la. School Books The House of Representatives is described by Z. 1. White in the American Magazine for June, with portraits and sketches of prominent Congieesmen, under the heading of The Nations The longer I live, the larger allowances I make for human infirmities. I exact more from myself and less from others. Go thou and do likewise. John Wesley. School Supplies, Sunday School Suppii Or anything you want, order of C. H. PARSONS I Go., Booksellers, Stationers and Newsdealers, When a young man comes Lome late Sunday night with one boot in his hand, you may be sure it is not settled bat ke gets a bottle of German Com Remover before the nur Snndav. Salt Lake City. neer Lumber Yard. EC. SEXjilBL Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lumber, T. & 0. Flooring, Rustic Siding Lath, Windows, XDooxs, SlTA.ci8 axLduJLixAgja, SLtegles, Opposte FourUerdh Ward As'StnrJjly Booms - T-T- o Our assortment in all 'grades of building materials is full and complete. To our patrons we gaarrantee Satisfaction in price and quality. WASATCH importance of purifying tee Wood ssa-abe ovciestuoatrii, for without pure blood , you cannot CD joy good lieaJtia. At this season ready e?ry one ngeds a good medicine to forTy, v.tUire, and enrich tin blocd, and vso ask ta try Hood' Sarsaparilla. Itstreagttea Sr txUUJsai rid fcudeis up tlis system, creates an appet'te, awl tears the digestion, while it rradn ate viisRe. The peculiar proportion, and preparation of hfcs vegrtaWe remedies wed gwe to Hood's Sonoipaiil'a i e ul- I tar curative potters. No ottset at dieice bit surh a record of w onderftd cures. If you fcava made ep yovr mind to buy Bute, S.u sapm ilia do not be induced to tare any ether Instesid, It is a Medicine, and is worthy your con Odense. is sold hy all dmgfdfiM, Hoods by C. 1, Hood & Co., Lovell, AUml Tie ot y-j- . tovli r war 31 A LADY BORN. An aged trackman bent, under the Carriages, Baggies, Sleighs, Faria ami weight .f a leg roil of carpet. His bale, MURDEROUS MILLINERY. she said, One thing and another, hi nl her at home, and one dav a ines- suin' came, bringing- news of that motb-eiShe would have liked to go dea'.ii. ev.-s- i then, to '! once more that beloved men though it was ooH in death. fa?, Hut father slid that, Seeing as she oo'ihhff do a.iv, good, there was nous "n,iir. erself out making the trip, so "ib .rayed at home, grateful to father fm in- - thnvghtfuhifss in not wanting imr "wfa' herself nut. 5i,d she wi, so utterly worn out one day , so w urn out in body and mind and d. ih.u whin she clasped her tired ban - over hr 1m aM in sk-othey were ons u 'udaeped again m this world. Then1 w.i-- , o rc spout' of Yes, I'm coining, whim i,ttov called her in the gray dav,o ot a November montiSg. m their brands! And I lookid around One father who L&a toady level her, h hot r hear win bed Jjeiff&l heavy tlon to cee what Liles had birds, hc-tcera e .roi'gh ali twenty years, their hanrets. an X - STUDEBAKFH BROS, Aake. UNE. KHnmHpyss eS ISO Ore DRUG Moores jLllon TORE, dS? Ocx WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGITSS. And Dealers m HiSTWiniunumncm Prescriptions Carefully Prepared by Competent ' err Draggiks at all Hoars, Day and Night. by. mail filled with Prom Eastern Prices, '-- BALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. |