I) Following- the Footsteps of Jacob and Joseph Througrh Land of Goshen TIIK Oih-HA - SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 23, 101O 1 11 '"" - "" '' "V T ; ii i , M m i- I. "TT 1? 1 , J""" "" ' - . v. - .. r - T I I I y . 'i . '. .. : I - '- ' ' . 8 I i ) ' ' - ! ' . . - ';' ' ' . '4- n ( I " jrV. J . . r , i (V -f, if , w- , - ... m: ; .. . . . '.fV !U ? '. . - : r 4 ...41 L 'j m . - '--v -- - vr;v,v.;v -."u ( . j. HV .-,.-...'. a j J Vv "' ;. ' t i ! LFrfiJ""" ' k-A , VVtl : ''v ,V. VyS 1 y;ffc -7 1 lip j fm c Ghudpek ii the. Obelise p ?i fen I ' f I OjiV a '1 M, 1 . ,; A .! M (Copyright, 1910. by Frank O. Carpenter.) 1310. (f pedal Curre- AOAZIG. ai ondence of The Bee )-Onme with me this brlgnt SundHy murning for a look at the old land cf Uoihen, where the Jrueliten . set tied, when m flist iime Into Egypt. I am writing im. n me center or It hot far from lh r..i..l down which Jonepli was carried by the caravan of Ishmaelitea. or Bedoulna, who had bought him of hi. brothera and were on their way to sell him to Potlpbar. It " 'r ''t "me road that the ten ona of Jacob, Benjamin having been left at 'home, came down here to get corn; nd It inuat have been about her that they had their dealing with Joseph, who wa then the chief officer of Pharaoh and the premier, an It were, of hit adminis tration. : You all know how he cume Into Kgypt and grew to be , the greatest man of the country. He was ao Influential that he waa able to give Goshen to Jacob and hla, family; and it waa at his advice that they all moved here and settled. That waa the beginning of the l3raolltea In Kgypt, and they remained here In Gonhen for generatlona before they were finally enslaved and forced to make bricks by the I'haraoha. Land of Gioahe The land of Goshen today one of the finest parte of the, Nile ,valley. I came here fmm Palm . i.l m ,iinta ..., - ' - J .. IIUIU Z , n BQ mi uugn ncn crops or cotton, sugar cane no ciover. xnere was green to be seen everywhere, and I could ride from here twenty miles more to the eastward before reaching the desert. The railroad from Cairo to the Suex cana! goes directly through Goshen. It strikes the canal at Ismatla and then branches off north and south, running along the line of the canal to Sues on the Red aea, and to Port Said on the Mediterranean. The first section Is over the road, which led from Arabia to Memphis and llellopolis, which cities have since been replaced by t'alro, the capital and metropolis of Egypt. Tills town of Zagazlg, where 1 am stopping, is one of the chief cities in the delta. It is on the fresh water canal and on a big Irrigation canal, which leads to the Nile. It is famous as a cotton port and today camels are coming into the town with balea on their backs, and long' truin loads are starting out for Alexandria and Port Said, from v. hence the cotton will be shipped off to Europe. This cotton is a feature of the landscape which was abucnt In the days of the Pha roalis. When Joseph came down into Egypt I ..ondence of The Bee.) -Cm. po. d ?o low that the peop.e ,JBt l - ; " ; 'fi, ili ; v i fi U if f ' I I I I' K ' I ' I 'I 4L I 'th me brint Sun.lHy crawl Into them. We know that Abraham 1 Ml ' A ii XiWtKWf Vi ' 'i f ; WW It - X''. 11 A . the only cloth that the people had was afternoon on the terrace of the Evanatoii family tree. The girl's mother Is of (Jer made of flax and wool. The cotton plant re,idence of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel H. Bum- man parentage, and her Becond husband, was not knows to exist, ana it was as late i,am, as the middle ages when the ppple gave The Kodt who ever have had the repu credit to a story that cotton of India came taUon of fav0llnK brides. added a gilt or from a sheep which vrew on the end of a two fqr Ml8 Fuler reporta tne Chicago bush and which now and then bent down TrlbunV. They gave her a glorious btu to eat the grass which grew a.l around. tember dtty for an outduor Weddlng-a risk That cotton plant was supposed to thrive few bHiea Wl)uld have cared tQ have faCeii In Hindustan, and it was not until centu- .,, - lies later that the real cotton seeds were planted in Egypt. Today Goshen la cov eted with cotton. There are many planta tions near Zagaxlg, and 1 have seen thou sands of acres of this crop throughout dif ferent parts of the Egyptian delta, lt is the chief money crop of the country, and it will bring In upward of one hundred million dollars this year. t-rrat Stock Coualry. Tlds land of Goshen Is a fine stock coun try. Camels, buffaloes and donkeys are staked out In the fields, and flocks of aheep and goats feed there, watched by shepheixU. There are, also, droves of cam els graslug or lying on the ground, chew ing their cuds. ' All have their herdsmen. There are no fences in Egypt, and the fields are bounded by imaginary lines. Sometimes the limits may be told by the ditches or the little embankments made for irrigation. It was as stock raisers that the Israel ites came Into Kgypt. They were a pastoral people, and It may have been for that tea sou that Joseph had Pharoah give them this land of Goshen, the eastern part of which is fringed by the deceit, with places tit scanty vegetation, where the stock could I rase. Today the laud is well cultivated. Mont of the fields are kept like gardens, and L fee half-naked men bending over and dig ging the soil Willi great mattock,. Here the farmers arc plowing, using the same or.e-handed plow of the days of the Scrip tures, borne of them have donkeys aud buffaloes hitched together, and now aud then one sees a plow dragged along by a cow and a camel. There is much artificial irrigation, and the water is lifted from level to level by men with buckets and baskets to which ropes sre slung. In other places the water is raised by the saklyeh, a rude wheel which is turned by the cogs of another wheel, set at rlrht angles to It. Uq the perpendicular wheel clay Jars are tautened, and as this moves through the water these fill and, turning, empty them selves Into the troughs which lead to the kittle canals and the fields. The motive power In thla case is a blindfolded camel, bullock or donkey, the animal going around like a horse In an old-fashioned bark mill. Many of the fields are uuw under water and the silvery streams shine out through the emerald green of the crops. lllaara of Uoakra, heu the Israelites first came to Goshen they probably lived in tents audi as the iMwlouius use today. These are made of aheep' wool or goat's hair, rudely woven by hand. They are upheld by ropes and poles and are to low that the people nuit crawl Into them. We know that Abraham lived In a tent and it Is probable that this was the case with- Isaac and Jacob. After coming to Goshen the Israelites probably copied the '-ouses of the Egypt ians and built village., of mud huU not un like those ' I now see. These houses are rude to an extreme. ; Many of them are m.t over twenty feet square. .They have flat .roofs and are often so low that one can look over them as he rides by on a camel. There are no gardens or lawns abqut them. They face the street and -are huddled together without regard-to beauty or comfort. The.. roofs form the woodyards of. the. people below. . The only fuel used is corn stalks, straw or the bushes from which cotton has been picked. This stuff is tied up In bundles and laid away on- the roofs .until used.. . There are but few trees to be Been. Now and then an acacia grows along the road way, and here and there over the country re clumps of date palms. There are occa sional fruit gardens, and one frequently paHses ah orchard loaded, with oranges. The roads are usually high above the rest of the country. They run along the canals, and consist of the dirt built up to hold back the waters. The aide roads are chiefly camel patha or footpaths, and one aeea everywhere the traffic moving Binn v, , u . i . . . . ... B'UIIK 11IIUUKII I It, I1HJMN. 1 M H fin the enter roaaa tnere are very few wagons. ln most or tne rreight is carried on donkeys and camels,' and they -form the chief riding animals as well. Long-legged Egyptians in turbans and gowns sit on the rumps of little donkeys, their feet almost dragging, and fierce looking Bedouins, their headdresses tied on ' with Curious and I'Uaht Troth in Open Air.- PICTURE a plateau of beau tiful lawn, kept tumbling over hillocks Into the sands of Lake Michigan's shore by a P rrr stone parapet. Its background the lake, its outlook the gar- a country estate, and you setting for the wedding of iiavc loc Miss Dorothy Rothbone Fuller, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Gordon Fuller, and William Arthur Vawter II, sun of Mr. The entrance of Yamanioto into the Pap nd Mrs. William A. Vawter of Evanston, paa family brought out the fact that four which was celebrated at fi o'clock Sunday nationalities are now renresented in the father from a narrow escape of death. While on his way to take the train to his north shore residence on Friday even-. iug, Dr. Fyller was knocked down by a cat. In front of the Northwestern station and waa picked up unconscious by a pass ing friend. He was revived and taken to his residence and when ho walked down to tne great tree which formed his daugh- people were attracted to one another. When ter's outdoor bridal altar, his head ban- Yamamoto began to make regular visits to daged and In his left hand a vane, he wils the house the mother was Inclined to dls quite the hero of the occasion. Botn Dr. courage the match, but finally she con Fuller and the bride were determined he eluded her efforts, to separate the pair were should enact his part On the program, useless. however. Immediately after the ceremony Several weeks ago the young couple an Dr. Fuller retired to the Burnham real- nounced their engagement to Mrs. Pappas. dence, where he saw only the close men Mrs. Pappas was Influenced by friends nut friend -who sought him out. The wedding was one of the most attract ive Chicago or its suburbs has been given. A single tall tree down at the turn of the terrace, with the lake In view from all points, was chosen tor the altar. About this corner the guests gathered luforiually, waiting for the laige wedding parly. The appearance of Mrs. Fuller, Mr. and Mrs. Vawter and Mr. and Mrs. Burnham through the long grape arbor which divides the flower and the vegetable gardens, an- nounced the approach of 6 o'clock, and shortly after chimes and stringed Instru- '-Very well," capitulated Mrs. Pappas, "if nents sounded the "Lohengiin" wedding yuU are go certain about It as that. 1 sup march and the ushers appeared and took poae the best I can do is to surrender." their places down either side of the space 'as the marriage laws of Missouri will abeut the tree. The Rev. Dr. J. G. K McClure, wearing clerical rubes of black silk, banded in wlaek velvet, a stole of scarlet velvet lined with royal blue satin thrown about his throat, took his place beneath the tree. Then came the bridegroom and his best man in pure white serge sack suits (the ushers wore blue sack coats with white flannel trousers) snd the brldemalds, all In white, followed. Each isrrled in one arm a large bouquet of swansonla and white clematis and in the other long ropes of smllax, which formed the aisle through which came the maid of honor and the bride and her father. The maid of honor was Miss Elisabeth Fuller, the young sister of the bride, and she wore a short gown of white net. a net tunic falling in close about the full ruffle of the undergown, csaght with a band of filet lace. The neck was Dutch and the sleeves, scarce reached- the elbow.'-where they were edged with the . lace. . Her bat waa a. Miss Muffet shape of the set over white lace, a' duplicate of those worn by the brldemalds. A reception on the terrace followed and later an old fashioned "infar" dlnucr was ropes, bob up and down as they ride on i..eir camels, their heads apparent y bow- uH m oeijr ttiepoi, me oeaui. 'i nert lire cajtiela loaded with ulralfa, the pass so coveting them that they look like minia ture . haystacks walking 'along. Tnere are donkeys With boxes and bags and mules and bullocks carrying treight of one kind or other. Out 'In the rielus one now and then aees a butfalo with a liali naked boy sitting on it, and at nightfall tne patha are lined with men coming irom tne nelds riding these ungulnly beasts, and balancing their one-handled plows In front of tlfem as they move slowly on fltjr of the Cat. It, was here in Goshen that the Israel- ltes worked after they were enblaved by the Egyptians. They went from here also . . i i . . .1 . . . . to build cities and towns In varloua purls ,. of the Nilevatley. .'1 he archeologlsts who . .. . re now exoavating in Egypt tell me they frequently find Uilcks which were prob- ably made by them,, and assert that the sun-dried bricks of today are practically tne same as those' which the children of Israel - molded under the lash of their taskmasters.' ' Romantic Incidents of Courtships arid Marriages given by Mr. and Mrs. Vawter as a wel- Miss Conroy said. She adclo.i o.oi .1,. . . . come to their new daughter-in-law. g At. Uul Girl Weda Japuiirae. Although ntany" young Americans called oiten at (tie aouse, and one young man, the von of a St. Louis pastor, offered his hand -n marriage, Miss Frieda Gast of 919 Kout.i Taylor avenue, St. Louis, mar.ied Yaklnube lamamoto, a dapper little Jupanese con- cesslonalre at Delmar garden. Peter Pappas, is a Greek. Miss Frieda, or Mrs. Yamumoto. was born In the United States. . Mrs. Yamamoto Is a very attractive bru nette, while her husband has been known among his friends as the handsomest young Japanese In St. Louis. He is the son of a wealthy merchant in Toklo, Japan. Yama moto came to America to exhibit Japanese goods at the World's fair. After the expo sition he had become so charmed with the country that he concluded io make his home here. Two years ago Yamamoto and Miss Gast were Introduced by friends. From the first, according to the girl's mother, the young' to permit her daughter to wed the Jap. Meantime Yamamoto and his fiancee quietly made arrangements for the mar riage. When Thursday, the day set for the wed- djnKi came, Mrs. Pappas had not 'changed her mind. She was determined that Yama moto should not have her daughter. It was then that the girl asserted her independ ence, according to Mrs. Pappas. The girl reminded her mother that she was 19 years 0d and that she would marry regardless of i,.r mother's objections. not permit the Intermarriage of Japanese and Caucasians, the couple went to Spring field, III. They were accompanied by Mrs. Pappas. They were married In the Illinois capital by a Justice of the peace and re turned to St. Louis in the evening. Two uttora iiet l.leenses. Miss - Isabel le Conroy of Philadel phia is facing the most serious prob lem' of her -career, inasmuch as both Edward Billings- and Arthur Dennis are carrying marriage licenses, on each ot which Is Inscribed her name. Both have shown the licenses to Miss Conroy, but she haa.not yet as announced her inten tions, telling both suitors she Is going to consult a lawyer and act upon hla advice. Miss Conroy admits that she cares a whole lot for both young men, but says her affections for. them are equally di vided. She Intimates that she would make no objection to marrying one of them. - but 'says she -does not think lt would be proper to take both. "I like both the boys snd they came to see rue frequently, but 1 arranged their visits so that they -would uot meet," a . i : i Mfy - : - - ."RKEMAKiNci m Pbaraohs Lan5 I n ' ' ,"l.....,t' y ' lH; 4 5o5E,Pii or i9io This fa the case in bastic, or the city of the ruins o,' Bu .c worship of the cat. This tov n was situated wluln a stone's throw of. the Zagazig of today, anl Its ruins are still to be seen. Its many building of mud brick have crumbled ulni.st to dust, but here und there the wans ore plainly visible. There are several hundred acres of such ruins and I spent an hour or so today driving through them. Bubastis dales back to the time when the pyramms were young, u Is suppooed to have been built by the Israelites, and was a great city until ll was captured by the f'eralans,. about 332 B. C. Buba.stix was noted for Its temples devoted to the cat headed goddess. This lady had the form of a lioness with the head of a cat, and she Herodotus Rraks of her and this citv av . J neiu in one nana a lotus leaf as a scenter. inn that the iemples were itoraeoiis , ,1 that the stone road leadina to them w- 1 ,c -oaa leauillg IO mem Was 1.S00 feet long. He says that the- oeoule came In crowd.s here to worship, and at the annual v festivals something like 700,000 strangers wtre present. " He relates that many of the worshipers were women, w ho often danced and acted otherwise, "In an unseemly manner," leading us to believe miss conroy said. She added that she thought one of them would propose, but says she lidd) no idea that both would rush off and get marriage licenses with out consulting her. Billings declares that he has courted Miss Conroy for Bix months and took it for granted that he was the only one.. "Why, the night before I got the license," lie said toduy, "we talked as though everything was 'ar ranged; she kissed tne and told me that Hhe did not caro if I did not have a big income." Dennis also admits that he never asked Miss Conroy to be his wife, but he avers, "I waa so sure of her after taking out the marriage license In regular form 1 engaged a minister and paid him his fee in udvance." The first time,tiie suitors met at the Conroy house was; when they went to present Aiiiss Conroy witli their respective marriage licenses. She tainted -when both exhibited the documents. Elopes to Mi, Dollar Bet. Joseph B. Frost, grandjon of Brigadier General Daniel M. Froat, the confederate spy, and a nephew of three St. Louij wo men who married into the English nobil ity, eioped to Clayton, Mo., today and married Mrs. Hattie lleers, a widow two years his senior, to win a $1 bet. The -loser of the wager is Roland Van Hoeien, son of Dr. Samuel Van Hoefen, and brother of the bride. The brother ventured his dollar with the remark that his slier and Froat were, already married "Just to how you that we were not Wed and to win this money, we'll go out to Clayton and have It done," suid Mr. Frost. Roland Van Hoefen was the only mem ber of the tp-o families taken Into their confidence. He paid the dollar Immedi ately after a Justice of the peace hud performed the ceremony. Mrs. Ueers was accompanied by Mrs. l'eurl Kappel. She gave her uge as 34 years. Mr. Frost said he was 32. "We became, engaged when llattie's brother suspected us of being married already," explained Mr. Frost. Mrs. Geers,' flist husband was killed In a motorcycle accident ut tiie Luulslana Purchase exposition. He was a motor cycle manufacturer. Marries Nnee-t heart of loath. With the death of Lieutenant Gov ernor James B. Wakefield at Blue Earth. Minn., comes lo light a romance seldom heard of except In fiction, and as a fit ting climax the body of the pioneer will be burled Monday beside the sweetheart, of hla youth in a1 little cemetey ut Cleve land. Many years ago, when the man who later became lieutenant governor of Min nesota was a youth of ;o years, he .met and fell In love with the. belle of Paynes V J t le. O. Although he fas an ardent ad mirer, he lacked the courage to tell of his love and left Ohio to make his for tune In the west. In 1815 he landed in Shakopee, where he lived and worked until February, 185t, when he went to Blue Earth. As the years paased and he heard of the . marriage of the sweetheart of his . youth, Mr. Wakefield married an esti mable woman of Blue Earth. y few years after hla election to con gress In 1884, his wife died, and hla life waa u lonely one until about three years ago. He was then more than 80 years CWjttfr.: r ..tyN doubt that they mopped at "ulV, 1f jSfy'g ;n Ty"- they went on to JlellopoIiH. wpV f - -m it i'iiivjVr - temple and college xtill eximted ( ) I j that they were by no means so good as iin'y siiouia oe. .tiding out to Buha.HtiH, I found there a brickyard lnfull swing. It was situated right on the edge of the ruins and the Fellaheen of today were molding the clay y lhe ,srael"e!' of the P8t lnto bu''UnK material for 110. As I looked at 1hPm mv mlnH n I.0..1, ... . A iiitrni my inula went dbck to tne days or the Pharoahs, when Moses was still living and saw his people laboring under the lash. These men and women were working under taskmanters or overseers. Their half-clad persons were burnt black by the tropical sun overhead1 and they looked not unlike slaves.' Here they were grinding the mud, old and not in robust health. The sweet heart of his youth came back to his thoughts and the old lunging to wed the woman whom he had left and who had become a widow came to him. The wedding was arranged, and on July 5, 1907, the couple, both more than 80 years old, were married at Blue Earth. The happlners was short lived, however, for the bride lived a little more than a year. The body was taken to Cleveland and sinc e that event life in the old pio-, neer has been slowlv ehM., wv. hi, last wish was to be burled sweetheart of his youth. z - - - beside the MakiiiK (he Weddlus; aPy. From a hall over a Polish saloon cafe In Chicago, came such shouts and laugh- ter und squeaking of fiddles that 1 went up the Sleep nlairs and entered, relates a writer In Everybody's Alaguiine. ".list a Wcddin'," suid the stout Irish policeman, who stood in one corner com placently tuking It In. Around the walls stood and sat some -i'O of all ages, irom the whiie-heuded old woman across the room to the wee, chubby grandchild that stolidly slept In Iter lap. On the floor were a dozen coup.es whirling and stamp ing', some laughing, others as though 'heir very lives depended on the power of each stamp. From the platform the little orchestra was playing fast and hard, repeating the same short, rythmic squeak over and over. Tho week's long grind In the stock In yams, the worne.s, the anxious planning After the war he served as a private In to save up for a cottage home all were the French army during the Franco forgotten. Each time the fiddles resumed piusslan war and was wounded at tha their frenzy the whirling aud stamping ieg of Pane. Laier he wandered about und laughing bgan us though lt were in many countries and finally entered the o'clock Instead of l. Only the babies Boer army In. the war with England scrv were sljent and dignl fied aound asleep. Ing under General Kronje and General Over In one coiner stood the bride.' Dewet. After this be returned to Amer husky young girl of perhaps 18, dressedi lea and has since lived In this country In ... iiBuiuiriiBi Miiiio wiiu a nieasci -u cheerfully doing its best to flutter and flow in the breeze from the window. She sat by her mother. Her broad, rather dull face was rosy, now and glowing. She breathed deep, smiling to hersellf, now glancing at the coarse while roses In her lap, now ut the dancers, nuw at her brand new husband, a tall, thin Pole, who stood stiff and uwkward, but grinning with delight. When a loan cuipe over and sejed her hand, she boune-cd up with u. quick laugh. And then came new excite ment, lor every male guest is expected to ask the bride to dance; and, to dc.fruy their wedding expenses, the price of each dance is SI. on the floor Is u thick white plate. upon which the guest may throw his coin Willi all his force, and if lie breuks it his money Is returned. But whether from the generous caution of the guests or the thickness of the plate provided by the bride's discreet muiiimu. this accident rarely happens. And often. If the bride is a belle and the. groom a good feiloiv. the sum amounts to I; 00 or even $300 with enough left over to furnish the new American home which ia to begin cn the marrow. New homes, new iniislu and dancing, new energy, new vital hopes are here. For It Is the lustiest youth, the very bone snd sinew of Poland, that Is now crowding In, to help make the new race of the future. T Marry at "i laelyfoar. Major Edward James Monroe of Uridge- there they were molding it Into bricks and .1.... ii uvrr ...ey e.e pmn up w.e o..." doubt Ule reliability of their statementa. which had been dried In the sun. The Tie tre(J may be U)e de.cenjt o( , carrying of the brirl.s was largely done by wlli..h Mlood thla , tn8 tlm8 of ch,t young girls, who labored under negro with a stick In his hand. bUrly At his anecuon tne gins took tne dhcks on tneir heads and carried them off on the trot. I to a nh,llntrrnli nt till. ,.no hv l.rlhlnir imuiugmpn 01 mis scene. Dy uiiouih the negro, and I doubt not my picture was '"'r type of that which went on In those long ago days, when Pharoah drove the Israelites to similar work without straw With the Virgin Mary In Egypt. It was down through Goshen that Jo- port. Conn., and Jacksonville, lia., who asserts that he is a son of James Monroe, tifth president of the United States, today announced his intention of marrying at tne age of W, having outlived three wives and twelve children and having survived three wais. Major Monroe's a sertlon that he is a son of the famous president, during whose administration the Monroe uui'.iuie was piomuigatea, is nothing new to his ac- quainlances In thin i'ifv In u.' h . r H h m hou V - " "- uct ii at. summer resident for more than bixty seasons. He has never been called upon to piove his assertion, although no biography of Jamej Monroe mentions the tact of his having had a eon. This apparent oversight on the part of the historians is due, says Major Monroe, to the fact that Utile was ever known of the personal life of his father. Major Monroe says he Is a son by a second mar riage, his mother's family name , being Lauder. Here there la another seeming ovtrsight by the historians, as only one marriage is mentioned hi the biographies of President Monroe, and that was to Miss Kourtwrlght of New York Major Monroe says he was born In Rich mond, Va., on July 4, lsio, death of his father, Tn ls.11. Upon tho he says, he passed into the hands of a guardlaa-. by whom he was taken to South Africa, where he remained several years. Returning to America before the out- break of tne civil war. he served as major an aruuery regiment irom Richmond, retirement Ma says one of his sons is alive, but he does not know where he Is. Mmnt Work to Wed. Acceptance of the tenet of the Mormon church, wliii.ii provides that no man shall live In idleness nor on tho wealth accum ulated by his father, or his father's father, is -the price Daniel Palmer of New York, Son of a multimillionaire, today decided u Pay for the hand of Miss A. Pearl Weller or Walt Lake City. Miss Wller Is the daughter of AJ. Weller, ward bishop of the Mormon ehurch. Young Palmer announced that lie had de cided upon this, course, which means the be--'" ot ''' tentative engagement with ailss Marjorle Curtis, a society woman of the younger set In New York, who was one of the oiidemalda. ai the Gould-Drexel wedding last spring. Palmer is In San ' Francisco to meet Ills father, D. 11. Paliucr, a coal magnate of New York. Father and son will go to Salt Lake, where Ihey will meet Bishop Wirier and the engagement' will be discussed. ilmer' Plana may mt-an the giving up of his lnherltage and possibly his suclal posi tion in New Yuik, where he is a member of the Knickerbocker, Hhe Princeton and other clubs. Palmer said he and Miss Curtis had been friends since childhood and that society and hla friends had taken it as a matter of couiYe that they would be married. He admitted that his fathfr, until very re cently, had been determined that he should marry Miss Curtis. .. the the in Tant lnMiii lit rod who slaughtered the inniui n. This was then the hlrf hlghnuy linn) Palestine Into Egypt, and there la no doubt that they mopped at liuhjpi, v iiit'y Weill un iu jienopuiiH, w temple and college still existed at ciiiini nan uuiii. 1111.-1 in m, live III.. from the obelik o( lieliopulis under whiCU. Mary'iind Joepli and the young JextiK me said to have rested. It Is about five miles from Cairo and guide books Bpeak of It as one of l(le Htot.R Hifclits of Egypt. ' I I f u a allil Hl'iH ,lln.u u liui lu.l u.jth numl year, and scarred with the n-mcs of lonr BtB u lg on Qne of ,he e(jUtos of A kheulve ftnd lt may be 8eeI1 througU t . . .... . . TT Dur8 of a fence, which has been built lround lt to k(H,n ott ,h. ri, hnl-- dui1k my v(sit tnere 1 tried t0 ollmb ,4 fence in order to gel a photograph of it. but some of the khedive's servants came on and warned me not to go In. The tree is surrounded by orange orchards, which ir Iri'llluloil l.7 Lalrivali. . 1 - u . n 1. . . 1. . . lames wiui oiaiiKeis over ineir eye. Am X U'Pllt hr 1 MtnntifA a & nt (ki saklyehs and the then brought me soma llianir.B fr.,.1,1 1 1 n Ifkuilti..'. W A & .J jj t sold them at the rate of eight tor ID coals.' They were wonderfluly refreshing, and as sat in the sluide of the trees outs)ds the fence I wondered whether Mary und Joseoh had not perhaps thus quenched their thirst eph and Mary tame with Savior wlieii they fled from in that same place, now over 1900 JJears "Ho. Any resting place must have been, welcome after the long ride through the cOiiCy lu.jiV, the edge of the great city of the aurt ; i addition to this thPr r. ...h.r .... re told of the stay of the holy family In Kgypt. vno is uui josepn anu Mary took our Sv- lour out to the pyramids and frorji tlieie to tne sphinx, it is khM ilmt M.rwU.i in... in the lap of the suhinx. and thaiA i.t - - - , w . . . ...... i..u& i paws or mat migniy. sone beast, half liou. half human i,..im... . Children of lOgyit. These stories seem vivid as One travail through Egypt. 1 went down the other (My lo the banks of the Nile where the little baby Moses is said to have lain in tin. lull rushes in las boat oi papyrus, and as i stood by the Obelisk at lieliopulis 'a was re minded of the virgin and the Saviour by a young girl who had a babe in h,r anus. She must have been about the ) MW' that Mary was then, and the ill:H una laughtd and crowed us she rested 'there un der the tropical sun. At tho sum time score of other children, rajiglug in age fivm 2 to 12 years, gathered mound ma dnd imMSd for my camera with the obelisk buillnd. The" obelisk was inwli,nhi.iii- Saviour was carried through Egypt and it Was erected long before Moses wui found in the bulrushes over there on Uie b. ks of the Nilo not far away. Tho areai slena seemed to tie the puat and the present to- gemer, una tho little ones of todav broutlil ..!. uione oi me limes or tho Saviour. The children were glad to pose, for me, but us 1 snapped the camera they niMito' to thu front with hands outstretch. beg- 4j glng for baksheesh. 1 was at a loss how to fee so many and finally gave ;'." rents to my coachman and left him to fight it out with the babl :. The little ones mohkea him and he had to threaten them Wltli Mi carriage whip lo keep them away. vAli'osV ally ended the trouble by giving cri tug ' children one-half a piastre, so that each re celved a little more than one cent. - 1 Vouusj America In Egypt. As 1 was about leaving the obclifli party of American tourists drove up Among them was a smart l.'-y cur-olil I'Oy who put his hand.i in his pocket and v-iad up at the Btone as though lie thout;)ii He were ready to buy it. As he did so I "Id to him: "Hello, my little man, are you not so American?" "You bet I am," he promptly replied "1 come from Chicago In the slate of Illi nois. You are EngHHh, aren't yop?" "No, 1 am an American, and my hunts Is Washington city.'' "Oh, yes," said lh urchin. I know ' about that place. President Tsft liei there. Say, what is the name of 'otu, ""X team?" iiiut was the Interesting thing ti ' , Out here under the shadow of the uLm' 4,000 ycuis old, on the spot wheie Jonrpb was married to Aseuatli; whtic I'lato philosophised and where Moses p!a ed within plain sight of the py ramids sn l n sr enough almost to hear the whlxpei of IBs sphinx, ho cured nothing for therm a live boy, and he wanted live lit in Therefore the pitchers, catcher snd stops of the great American diacnoi d i worm more io into man an un -siui i i.i... i -.i .... .. nanny biiu an me muiiimicn tv B.iitnB Anil u ll..... . . 4,4 IV v. FRANK U. CAlil'jtNTKR.