Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Oct. 7, 1916, edition 1 / Page 7
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. i J- cr .5.. , EGPIttiRH lit r-;, -feoS -M " ' . 'BL? X, clean and a f eeline of nlu,W IT-Ir-"EX J!3"? by the disappearance erf dandruff; the canae of most hafatoSSwt "iS- vf mm. mm m owning nr in rnw irrr. Aside from its sanitary and tfadtavtt m..Mt u l'uutohmii u v"""" i nL naa an exquisite odor which makes it popular as a hairlressinB among: 11 elasses. It stops itching of the scaln almost instanxiy: Appucauona at the better barber aopv: v, A -; 7T uuarantoa y uua UKKQnjB CO.-Sold Bverywhero. - rV7 "rilSTlv mm PRMBB TO DISCUSS PRISON REFORM AT MEETING Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 7. The modem idea of prison reform, as exemplified by the work of Warden usirurne at Sing Sing, is to be exhaustively dis cussed by the American Prison As sociation at its annual . congress opening in this city tonight. Import ant innovations rlnprison manage ment and discipline introduced in o.her sections of the country during the past year also will receive at tention at the hands of the congress. ACCUSED VICTIM HOPES TO WED BLACKMAIL VICTIM. , ".S Cairo, Egyp.t . Octo . 6 . important I discoveries ; which are . said to, shave supplied :much.of the - hitherto " ob scure history of ancieht Ethiopia were, made'Tecf fatly by theEgyptiaii Expedi-: i uon sent. by. Harvard University and the oston Musftum of Fine Arts under Reisher, well known as an Egyptolo gist; j In interview with a representatives j The, Associated Press, Dr. Resiner said that during excavations at Gebel J Barkal material bearing on the whole '.period between 1600 B.C. and 100 A.D. had been found and that prospects were that further excavation would bring to light objects of still ' greater ; importance . ' . I ; Among the more important . finds !have been ten large statues of kings . of Ethiopia . .Five of these were near- jly complete and five were lacking the heads but it is belJeved these will . be found The expedition has also ( uncovered the foundations of temples I built by Egyptian kings of the Eigh- . ; . '-' - teenth Dynasty and shown that the . . r. ' sphinxes of Amenophis III. and other Delegates appointed by the govern- ( monuments of that peridd found at ors of many States, together with Barkal belong to these temples and prison administrators and expert pen-1 were "not brought here in later times ologists from various fffartsr 0f the' as some nrstnans have assumed. De TinitH ou j j ' ' I scribing th'e work, Dr. Reisner said: United States, and Canada, have ar-j Geb61 Barkal whlch ls in the rived m Buffalo to participate in the district of Napata, lies 250 miles up congress. The sessions will continue the Nile from Kerma in the province through the greater part of next Ddngola. Napata was the capital week. i of that kingdom of Ethiopia whose , . Armies are "mentioned in the Old Tes- 5 tament as the opponents of Assyria in WHY BUY READ t-MADE CLOTHES? the' latter part of the eighth" century - L Shrier will make your Suit or before Christ.' Gebel Barkal is an up Overcoat to your own Measure $15 to standing table mountain of sandstone, $35. I Shrier; 32 North Front street. . visible for a trreat rJi start re. From the j- 10-r6-lw ' moment it appears in the Egyptian in- " :. - j scriptions it is marked as 'the "Holy Mountain.' Its selection was no doubt due to its proximity to Napata, the gold. Neverthelessj we , gathered a mass of material from which .we were able to, reconstruct the forms and character of the greater partVof the potteryy implements, ..hd . other things characteristiefpf the period. This reconstructed group pointed clearly to th3;.first century before Christ as the time in which had lived those little kings who had5 built these monuments, but in view of the scanty material for comparison, this conclu sion may be a j6entury stway from (the truth. " "' "The most interesting objects wfere t peea oroKen. up. ana carrjea oui,. mere lay'the Inner chambers with their con tents, just'' as they- stood wheH the cliff f fllfabout 100 B.' 0C , Jn thdtnex to.' te last room stood a great altar of black granite carved with "offering scenes and inscriptions , in : hierogly phics showing that the altar had been ' dedicated b'y Itlanersa to Amon of Napata. In the small Holyof-Holies, j were - tiiere Meroitlc statues of 4 the god and curiously enough by. some an-' cfent mistake a statuette of . Ameno phis III, a great king of Egypt in the ' Eighteenth Dynasty. About these statuettes lay the last votive offerings i placed in the shrine of the worship ers of the Meroitic age. We pene trated the foundation deposits under' the back wall of the temple and found the small tablets-6f Itlanersa cdmplet-! ihg the history of the temple. Itlanersa had foolishly built his temple right j under the overhanging cliff, but much' to our advantage. Almost immediate-! ly thn cliff had fallen and crushed the! temple. His successor, Senka-amon- Advt. red-glazed: b'owls "with relief patterns, red-glazed plates, polfthe' vessels' of , seken. Diouslv rebuilt the broken walls opaque red or variegate glass, am- and set bis name beside that of Itlan-' phorae. imitating the Khodian m form ersa. Again the cliff dronDed a huee and material; a broijze. jiig . with two flake on the back of the sanctuary.i handles, each ending-, m a mask, fourBut in his dav the writing of hieroelv- bronze vessels,, a piece of . wood carv-jphics was nearly a lost art and his ea in reiiei ana a wonaerrui goia , name can only be surmiSed. bracelet with a lequer decoration in! ,-r , . . , , , v- - ?rX'--i ' Only at the very end could work Egypto-Mefoitic style: ,nn A 41' :iu- l,.,be begun on the great temple. A few xuwaiua iuc cuurui rem uaiy me full force was, turned on the excava tion of the temple area. The back part of. the great temple and almost the . whole of the other temples were in a seemingly hopeless state of, de- area Pernaps twenty times tnat ai struction. Half a dozen expeditions ready excavated. In a few days the had dug desultory trenches in these expedition will return to the Sudan aim resume wont wncre it was cul rooms at the ' back were cleared and the foundation of five successive tem ple were laid bare. But the great temple still awaits excavation and an short by the hot weather." and the natives had used them as quarries for centuries. In hunting for a suitable place to throw the refuse, we cleared a space beside the first "Have you a lawyer," asked the pylon! We found ourselves, however, judge of a young man brought before inside the lemDle enclosure and on him. the living floor of the Meroitic. period "No, sir," was the answer, (about 100 B. C). To our-great sur- "Well, don't you think you had bet prise, in a hole in this floor, we came ter have one?" inquired His Honor. On the edge of a pile of fragments of j "No, sir," said the youth. "1 don't large royal statues of the Ethiopian I need one. I am going to tell the period. Investigation showed that.trutn. Ji,xcnange. there had been a great restoration of : a YitatijDGi isSksT-infuiE " Arrivals an peparturts"ofTrains at llmfagtori; Effective ' Sept 11, . r .1916. Time Not Guaranteed. . k " , .' ' -,; ( - :' : " - ' ' ' : DEPABTUBE: 1 TO AND FBOM 1 - ARRIVALS I ' : ' ' No. 90. 1 Uoldsboro, Bicturond, xVoif oik aad Eastern No. 01. 8s40 A. M. j - North Carolina polatsv Qonnecta at Golds- i:is A. m; Daily Except : bera with Sonthern Railway at Nerfolt Dally Kxcept Sunday. Bouthern (Kallroad. . Monday. No. 64. . No. 65. 5:16 Ai m: JackBOOTlile, rtew Bent and In tanned lata 6jis P. Mi Mon.. Wed. and Stations. Mon., Wed. and Friday Only. - Friday Only. , - v -u; : . : Chadbnurn, Conway. Florence, CharlMtoa, M ?'mJ' Bavannah, JackBOOTille, Tamna tic Vi.r . k.m a w Peteraborg, Fort Myera Colnmbta ana t!ia i 0:80 A. M. Ashevllle, Pullman Sleeog Cara between 1Z,ZW A M vilmtnRton and Columbia, open to re ceive outbound passengers at WUmlag ton at and after 10:00 P. and may be occupied, lnboad ontll 7:00 A. M. . "- -1 " " ' 1 - Ooldsboro, Klchmond, Norfolk and Wash. No. 48. ington. Parlur Cara between Wltolagton No. 49 Dally. and Norfolk connecting at Rocky Mount Daily. 8:40 A. M. with New York trains having Pullman 6:05 P. M. Service. No. S3. Solid train between Wilmington and aft. No. 52 Daily. Air? via Fayettevllle and Sanf ord. Daily. 8:45 A.M. ' 8:00 P. M. ' No. G2. " K. l. Now Dai'y Jacksonville. New Bern and Intermediate Daily 8:25 P. M. Station. 12:60 V. M. Cbadbourn, FJorence. Colombia, Anguar, Atlanta and the West. Caar'taton 8a- vannab and all Florida Points. All Steel ' ro"n Pullman Sleeping Cara between Wllrolna tPo'iiw h.akv Vr ton and Atlanta, via Augusta. Sleeping 8.4B P. jr . Cars dnlly between Florence and Colum- 18'60 e- M bia, which may be occupied at Colum bia until 7:00 A. M. No 59 1 No 00 TaUnd9'sSnly "ayetteville .intermedia Sta. aTnUde8sa't?on",y 6:80 P.M. 10:15 A.M. " . Daily. ! Goldsboro, Klchmond, Norfolk, Washington , and New York, Pullman Brolert tiulex No. 42. Sleeping Cars, between Wilmington and No. 41. Daily. Washington, connecting witb New Tork Dully 6:45 P. M. trains carrying dining cars: also Pullman - 0:50 A. M. I Sleeping Cars between Wilmington and Norfolk. t ; . ; For Folder, Reservations, rates of faresi etc., call 'Phone 160. W. J. CRAIG, T. C. WHITE, Passenger Traffic Manager. General Passenger Agent. Wilmington, N. C. - the, temple after a period of destruc- New Goods arrive every week, Coi tion, subsequent to 600 B. C, and that lars, Ties, Hosiery, Neckwear, Shirts, the statues of the Ethiopian ! great city which must have lain on found broken during this restoration, naa oeen carried out ana tnrown in to this place. The names of four kings were found the Biblical Tirha- kings etc, at I. Shrier's. Advt. 10-5-7t ILIULU OIUCQ lUt . A lio Olio Napata was peculiarly fitted for of a groat role in the political' and com- raercial activities of ancient times. It ;IIesv at the head of the' naviga ble stretch of river between the third and fourth cataracts, at the end of the relatively rich agricultural area of the province ,a"nd at the junction of five caravan roads through the desert. - "The extent of the city has not yet ! been determined but there are traces of ruined buildings on both sides of the river. There are at least four groups or pyramids, that is, royal cemeteries in the neighborhood, and i the two most distant groups are near ly twenty miles apart.-. In this long stretch, which may be assumed to contain the city of Napata, it is Gebel Barkal and its immediate neighbor- !hood which has always drawn the at tention of modern scholars. Besides the mountain stand two groups of pyramids and under the perpendicular ! face of the rock on the river side or seven temples have been traceable, one of which was very large. These tem ples have in past times yielded a re markable series of sculptures and in scriptions which have gone to enrich the museums of Cairo, London, Paris and BarUn and form the greatest source of our knowledge of the his tory of Ethiopia . "Our expedition reached Gebel Barkal from Cairo on January 24, last. We worked there three months, em ploying a force of about 300 local workmen, and left just in time to es' cape the hot weather. Many people had worked on the pyramids but no one yet had discovered the plan of the structures and no one knew how to get into them. Fortunately, at Gebel Barkal there were two com pletely ruined pyramids of small, size Chicaeo Oct 7 Miss Ruda Godman, the alleged lure in tne west , . blackmau s still seeking to exert her charms on Edwin R. West, the of "Wp New York bus ness man who says he gave up $15,000 blackmail to com- the case of each a stairway on the -New York business man, wno sa a u ' eastern side leading down to cham- panions of Miss Godman who surpris ed the pair in a New YorK Hotel West , t. wo this is now in York to testify before the Federal urana jury, imss vuu- wr. man is on trial here. "I am still in love with Mr. West," the rwoman declared. engaged to him .a long time. We expected to be married next Christmas. I had nothing to do with the crime. It was as great a surprise to me as it was tn hi t h0iib Mr Wpst. thinks I am guilty. I will be able to prove my innocence in court. I hope to convince Mr. West of my -innocence still hope some day to be his wife NOTICE! The Atlanta Journal is not the Hearst's Sunday American, and any j one selling it as such is liable to be : prosecuted. J Let us deliver Hearst's Sunday American so you will not get a substi tute. Call Phone 745. Gordon Brothers. 1 (advt.) ka. Amoneanal, his son Espalta and a later king named Senka-amon-seken. Only the statue of Espalta was com plete. It seemed therefore that there must be another dump in which the fragments of these statues had been thrown, but in so vast an area the ! chance of finding the other dump with- ! FLOBECLOrsE sale. . . . j i , j . Bv virtue of tue power of Bale contained out excavating the tvhole seemed too ; ln a certain deed of mortgase executed small for consideration. i by E- F. Burdick on j the 23d day of January, 191a. , and registered in the re-1 "This find forces us to plan some -ord of New Hanover County in book . . . . . .. I nujnber S3, page number 505, default Other way of attacking the excavation having been made in the payment of .the of the great temple, and I turned .to i lt therein named and the power ot become aDsoiutr, tne uuaorsignea :::;:::::::S!jS5SJA : :-. : :-:-:-:-:-x:3b:fe -w : 5: the area next to the mountain, think ing. to clear, away the -rubbish . strewn ground and pile the refuse, beside the back part of the ' temple. In the course of this work we came on the foundation walls of two smaller, temp les and while clearing these, with no thought of anything but archaeologic al results, we suddenly came, on the other ancient dump, over 100 meters from the first dump where we had found the statues. Here was the head of the Tirhaka statue, the crown and basis of the mon-anal" statue, the body belonging to the head of the Senka-amon-ssken statue, and the of sa bodies of two statues of Tanut-amon, sucessor of Tirhaka.. It was the most astonishing freak of chance in my whole experience as an excavator. As a result, we had. ten statues of kings of Ethiopia of the time of Tirhaka and later, all broken but five of them prac- mor I tgagee. on Monday the th, day of Octo-.j I ber, 1910; at 12 o'clock noon at the Court . j House door, in the city or Wilmington, i ' N. C, will offer for sale to the highest, i bidder for cash the following described , land anu premises : J Lying auri being in Masonboro Town- j ship, in New Hanover County, North Car- . olina. Beginning at a stake ou the old ' Federal Point Koad, in what is konwn as the Jafford line, at a point forty feet North -of the run of Clay Bottom Branch where it crosses said road, and running thence with the said road South 11 1-2 degrees West S33 feet to a piece of pmP pipe in tne Western edge of said road, at the Northeastern corner of a tract of land conveyed to George F. Bowen and Martna uowen Dy ta. ti. uavis anu f wife by deed registered in the records of ; New Hanover County in book number 49 I at page is; thence with the Northern line I ATLANTIC COAST LINE The Standard Railroad of The South EXCURSION FARES From Wilmington OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. 50.05 Des Moines, Iowa. Account National Churches of Churchy es of Christ. Tickets will be sold Oc tober 6, 7 and 8, limited returning until October 20. $20.50 Cincinnati, Ohio. Account Llaundrymans National Asso ciation of America. Tickets . will be sold October 7, 8 and 9 limited return ing until October 16. $35.55 St. Louis, Mo. Account Triennial General Convention, Protestant Episcopal Church. Tickets will be sold Oct. 9, 10 and 11, limited returning until Nov. 4. $3.40 Goldsboro, N. C. Account Wayne County Fair. Tickets will be sold October 9 to 13, inclusive, limited returning until October i5. $31.30 Springfield, Mass. Account National Dairy Association. Tickets will be sold October 12, 13, 14 and 15, limited returning until October 25th. $20.95 Jacksonville, Fta, $21.45 State Camp, Fla. Account the following important Na tional events: Southern Rifle Association, October 11 and 12. Suburban Schedule 5. EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER Leave Wilmington 6:25 A. M. R:55 " 7 25 " 8:00 " 8 :30 " 10 :00 " 11:30 " 1:10 P. M. x 1 :30 " 2:00 " 2:30 " 3 :00 3:30 4 .00 " 4:30 5:00 " 5 :30 " . 6:10 " 6:40 " 7:15 " 8 :15 9 :15 " 10 :15 - 11:15 " 12 :10 " lailr except Sun Jay. x Saturdays Only. FREIGHT SCHEDULE Daily Except Sundays Leave Ninth and Orange Streets 9:30 A. M., 3:30 P. M. Leave Beach'12:15 P. M, 5:15 1'. M. Freight" Office Oven from 8:00 A. M. to 9:30 A. MM and from 2:00 P. M. to 3:30 P. M. SUNDAYS Leave Ninth and Orange Streets 11 KM) A. M. Leave Beach 12:45 P. M. Freight Office Open Sundays from 10:00 1CI6. . Leave Beack 6:05 A. M. ! 0:40 " 7:10 " 7:40 " 8:15 8:45 0:15 10:45 . 12:15 P. M. 1:50 x 2:15 " 2 '45 3:15 -3:45 " 4:15 4 :45 " 5:15 -l:45 " 6:20 " 6:55 -7:20 7:50 -B:uU " 9:50 -10 :50 " 11 :C0 ! Sunday 'only tract North 57 degrees and 24 minutes West 2.936 feet to a long leaf pine in W. P. Oldham's old line, now E. F. Burdick's line, said pine standing about 40 feet from the margin of what was called Mcllhenny.'s Mill Pond, now known as Greenfield -Lake: thence from tmid pine 40 feet direct to the said lake; i thence with the margin of said lake North 01 1-4 deirrees West 204 feet to a stake: ! thence with said lake North 62 degrees and 40 minutes West 208 feet to a stake on a ; SOUTHERN RAILWAY National Rifle Association, October , Wuve Mond'ay September 11Uv National Rifle Practice, October 20 1916 Souer R&y announces the Moorehead City Pullman Sleeping Car line will be shortened to Winston Salem Goldsboro Pullman Sleeping I ticallv comDlete : with DOrtrait heads : bend of said lake; thence with the said; ucany complete wnn porird.it iitdub iake North J 2 degreeg West 233 feet! m ruyai nigypuuu wui imitmsuiy. i to a stake at anotner Dena oi saia iaae; believe that there are good chances ot thenee wn- the said lake in a general 1; 988 feet, more or less, to a cypress on tne lake-side ; thence with the said lake in a general direction or jorcn o aegrees s hint we attacked the larger pyramids "I have been 'and within a month we had found the entrances of 25 pyramids and had cleared the burial chambers of all but one: I "All the chambers had been repeat : I edly plundered in ancient days for our finding the remaining parts xof the other statues. "To shorten this story, the rest of the season was spent in clearing the ground south of the great temple in preparation for the excavation of the great temple itself. Here, we uncov ered four small temples each on the site of older temples and one of them of considerable interest. This was a temple built by a king of Ethiopia, named Italanersa, about 600 B. C, and had been preserved from the efforts of psrvious excavators by a mass of huge blocks which had fallen upon it from the cliff. When with infinite labor these blocks of sandstone had and 20 minutes West 821 feet to a cypress tree on a noint: inenee in a general direc tion of North 75 degrees East alone the margin of said lake to the mouth of Clay Bottom Branch aforesaid; thence up said branch in an Eastern direction to a stake standing 186 feet South 86 1-2 degrees West from the beginning point; thence from the said stake North 86 1-2 degrees East 186 feet to the beginning, con taining 83 acres, more or less, and being the same land and premise Conveyed to Wi P. Oldham by deed registered in thft rwords of New Hanover County afore said in book YYY at oage number 575. j subject to a mortgage dated the 2lth day of January, 1914, and registered in the records of said New Hanover County in book number 73 at page number 381. This the 8th day of September; 191G. WILLIAM L. SMITH, Mortgagee. I Sept. 8-16-23-30-Oct 7. ana zi. , National Individual Rifle Match, Oc tober 23. N National Pistol Match, October 24. National Team Match, October 24 to 26. Tickets will ie sold to Jacksonville and return September 16, 17, 18, ?3, 24, 25, 30; October 1 and 2 and to btate Camp and return October 7, 8, 9, 14, 15 and 16. All tickets will be limited re turning until November 4, 1916. Re duced fares for parties of ten or more traveling together. , $18.30 Chattanooga, Tenn. Account Reunion of the Society of the Army of the Cumberland and Ohio'? Mounument Association. Tickets will ! be sold Oct. 17 and 18, limited return ing until October 23, $4.35 Raleigh, N. C, Account 56th N. C. State Fair. Tickets will be sold October 14 to 21, Inclu sive, limited returning until October 23rd. 1 PROPORTIONATE kakeS FROM MOTHER POINTS ON THE ATLANTIC COAST LINE, "The Standard Railroad of the South." Car line. This car will leave Winston Salem at8:50 p. m., same as at pre- ( sefit and arrive Goiflsboro following ' morning, returning car will leave V Goldsboro 10:35. P. M., ' arriving Win- i ' ston-Salem following morning'. ' ;. r Present Greensboro-Raleigh Pull- ' man Sleeping Car line will continue to " , ; operate. For full details, reservations, etc., address, J. O. JONES, Traveling Passenger Agent, , Raleigh, N. C. , ; The Southern Serves the South. ; , , 1 !,.'; REGULAR DINNER TWENTY-FJVE CENTS NEW YORK CAFE. BBtBN&HRHB UP JFTTIHIEUS m . h , i-. Try WW YOU KEEP SOWELU- JoOPPOSf;YOU -OEAL D0 X t EVERY OP EXECE DO "tOO take? EVERT MORHiH l ,tVlTSi THE CLOe,b PLAY GOLF FER AH A HOUR v MARVELOUS - LIFT DOMii-bEUpS-.BOX-OUMP Av" RUN, COUPLE OF :. T " V "T- ( N l -LIFT dom- J THEM - ' ; t . 4 1 f -.' VP j! i, . " , ' IS W- IS y. n :V. .1. 'ii .1. i I!! !.: f r I.'! ' li ill I I'M it jl 1 1 t 1 '
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Oct. 7, 1916, edition 1
7
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