ahc fUonnt ^irn ESTABLISHED 1110 MOUNT AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. MARCH 1st, 1823. 91.6.0 PER YEAR IN 'ADVANCE KING'S ROBE FOUND AMONG THE RELICS Motl Romantic Find Rnult/ Among PricaUaa Array of Ralica Uuf, Crypt. Jab. 21.—King To terihamun'* body, praaerved by em halmcra *lww prorr** la now • Inat art, Ilea untouched within the great aarcophagua found by tha Kcavv tor* laat Friday. Tha mummified heart, livar and inteatinea of tha Pha raoh were found In canopic jam undar tha pm tart kin of four goda among a bewildering maaa of objacta litter ing tha annex to tha aarrophagua chamber. Tha moat r tntic find yat mada waa alao revealed whan tha roba of tha king, mada of gold thread aawn with precioua atonaa and unuleta, waa found In a Jumble. It la probably one tha Pharaoh wore on great atate occaalona. All doubta aa to whether the klng'a body would be found untouched were cleared to the aatia'action of tha tomb dlacoverara. Tha Pharaoh'a aaat in the coffin holt waa found intact. The Innen tomb having eacaped the de predationa of the ghoul* who through the Intervening centuriea hare found tomb looting a lucrative paatime. tha j world aoon will he afforded a look at | a dead king of ancient Egypt utiff within hia wrappinga brown with age, but exactly aa he wai left by the laat member of the funeral party to re- j treat ailently through the doorway, the aeala of which have endured through time and were violated only within the laat few day*. The official opening of the inner tomb waa very different from the dramatic aecret forcing of the anr cophagua chamber laat Friday. It waa a social occasion. Women in filmy aummer dreaaea In the blazing •unahine holding gaily colored para eola and men In flannela huay with luncheon baaketa awaited the arrival of the Queen of the Belgiana and Lord Allenby. It waa difficult to realize that only • few yard* below ground waa that dim, impresatve, cave-like room In which the king atlTI aleepii surrounded by the rrumhling object* placed there by hia bereaved auhiecta *o lone mi A hundred cameras cl'cked as the Queen and her ion, Prince Leopold •tepped down into the dark punp which opens inb> the first chamber. They found themselves facing the broken wall. Light* Rhone in the mummy chamber and in the larger room leading off it. Facing the broken wall ia the door of the sar cophagus which, when found Friday was bolted and sealed. This was 'broken and the door opened. Inside were the king's jewels sparkling in the electric light as if awakened after centuries to show their beauty. There were a number of fine scarabs—a symbol of resurrection. Notable among these was a magnifi cent red scarab inscribed with the king's name. Near the sarcophagus were several dark wooden objects, the oar* of a sacred boat which the king was expected to row about at night and enjoy himself. Most bewildering is the second chamber with ita amacing confusion of articles necessary for the welfare of the royal soul in the other world. Gilded chariots stand as if the horses had just been unyoked and taken to the stables. Several beautiful curved boats, like quarter moons, one : of them at least four feet long, stand awaiting the moment when the soul of their master calls the tittle model! mariners to life and with magic words tells them to sail out with him into| the milky way, which, to the ancientj Egyptians, was the heavenly Nile. It is hoped the king's crown will j be found in one of the sealed boxes in the burial chamber.- In a locked cup-1 board in the annex to the chamber were found two statues eight inches > high of Tutenhamun standing on the | back of lionesses. The statues are of gold. The great canopy over the out er sarcophagus bears an immense gold serpent on top. The creature is represented in the act of crawling, with its head poised to strike. One of the most curious discoveries is a large stretcher of gilded wood which I* the image of a gold or a sacred boat carried on the shoulders of priests. In the sand on the floor was found a gold headed image of the God Herat. Another remarkable thing was a crepe-like black belt sewn with little crsacent moons. It was found shrouding the Inner coflln Only one other resembling It wms aver found—years ago at the tomb of Prince Yoaa. The chariot wheels still bear the M mark* of "hundred gnlad Thab**." "Marvaloua indeacrihehle, mora won derful 'han a drr-iir," vara anonf ■ha exclamation* I • at broke from thoae who *tood awe-*truck and silent in the preaanre cf tha run who lived whan tha world waa cen'uriei young er Ruin* of Anciant City Found in South Amarica Rwnni Airaa, Fab. M.—Diacovery of a foaailixed human akull of tha tartiary pariod waa announced today by Dr. G. Wolf, who haa Juat returned aftar two yaara of exploratiun In Pat agonia on bahalf of La Plata mua •um. Dr. Wolf declared tha foaailiaation waa that af a tartiary aandatona and that thara waa no doubt K waa for marly tha akull of a human baing, not an accldantel formation. Tha lowar Jaw ia miaalng, bat other wii« tha ikull ia almoat parfact. Tha aya socket* and, what la itill mora convincing, tha locket* of tha taath in the uppar jaw, ara claarly defined. The cranium ia lone and oval, and sloping. Dr. Wolf went to Patagonia pri marily to study '.he language aru' mythology of tha Indiana and found the akull in poaacaaion of a white aettler on the Andean alope who picked it up aome yeara ago and kept it aa a rurioaity, not realizing ita scientific value. He aaid he had left the foaall in tha poaaaaaion of the aettler, whoae pro party it waa, and that he had *ub mittad data ther^un to La Plata mus eum for auch action aa the muacum care* to take to obtain it. Tha acientiat alao announced the dincovery of nilna of an ancient for tified town in the heretofore unex plored region north of Lake Cardiel, in the territory of Santa Crux, which he believea to be remnanta of a civ ilization probably earlier than that of the Peruvian Incaa. Section* of -walla 46 feat km. height, built of block* each of three cubic feet, cut out of baaalt, are (till itand ing. The wall* extend for a diatance of IN) yard* between hill* which serve aa buttraase*. Within are tha ruin* of habitationa. Dr. Wolf aaid the fact that the walla contained archa* indicated that their builder* had reached a compara tively high itate of civilization and intellectual attainment. The walla were alao carved with at range hiera tic inscription*. ne noiea on* carving in wnirn ap peared the representation of an ani mal resembling the extinct glyptodon. He roughly estimated the age of the ruin* at from 2,000 to S,000 yean, hut thought excavation* might more definitely determine their age. There have been other evidence* of an ancient civilisation in Patagonia but thia i* aaid to be the fint discov ery of actual ruin*. Some diatance further south he found what waa per haps an ancient thoroughfare along which for more than a mile the rocka were covered with similar inscrip tions. After leaving his data with the museum Dr. Wolf plans to return to Patagonia nert month When he is to search for the "enchanted city" of Patagonia Indian mythology, sup posed to be situated in the Andes. Indians refer to as the home of the Sun God, will prove to be the ruins of another ancient city. Baptists Will Visit Sweden Nashville, Tenn., Feb. 24.—Approx imately 750 Southern Baptist will go to Stockholm the' last week in July for the third sesaion of the Baptist World alliance to be attended by re presentatives from every nation in the world in which there ia a church of the denomination, according to a preliminary survey made public by Baptiat headquarters in thia city. Southern Baptist will not go in • single party, but will be composed of a large number of tourist groups which will visit pointa of interest in Europe and the Near Bast while abroad. Representatives of the varioas boards of the Southern Convention already at work, in co-operating with officiala of cone*ponding groups from all sections of the globe, n to • meeting t fur the purpose of organising a cir cuit of Fain for North Carolina. IKt thia mating the following fain were 1 represented; Mount Airy, Wlnaton Sal