V The population of Egypt Increased from about nix and ft half millions in 1882 to over eight millions in 1891 The use of trolley curs in connec tion with funerals is becoming quit common in Borao of the northern cities. Chicago is not satisfied with its river, and is talking of digging an other, which shall run from the lake end into tho big ditch. The Irishmen of Australia have no tified the Irish politicians of the Brit ieh parliament that if the counsels of the party are not united they will not pot tip another penny. In Mexico less than 5,000 mnrders were committed last year, or one to every 24,000 of the popnlation, while in the United States there were 10,500 mnrders, or one to every 7,000 of the population. Philadelphia has so many electric railwaysmnningin every direction that the United States Geological Survey is having considerable trouble in de termining the magnetic variation in Philadelphia, as the earth beneath the city is so filled with electric currents that compass needles behave in most eccentrio manuer. New York City is the great center of the ready made clothing trade. In the manufacturing part of this busi ness there are about 00,000 workers, while within a radius of twenty-five miles from the city hall there aro prob. ably 25,000 more. Of these, about 65 percent are American and foreign Hobrews, 23 percent Italians and the balance of American, English and Other nationalities. Calculations as to the speed of an eloctrio locomotive and train of the weight of the famous Empire state express, running at a speed of seventy miles an hour, show that, without in creased cost of coal, the electric mo tors could make a speed of 108 miles per hour, indicating a saving of over one-third the expense and that much higher speed is economically possible with eloctric motors. Liechtenstein, the smallest sover eign stnte in Europe save Monaco, is having a constitutional crisis. The Prinoe lives at Vienna, leaving tho w iue uroverumem 10 a miinuger, who recently undertook to establish a censorship over the only newspaper published in the principality. The people and Legislature are up in arms for the freedom of the press, and de mand that the Prince shall observe the Constitution. Liechtenstein used to send a contingent of 7 1-2 men to the army of the German confedera tion. A man by the name of E. H. Ken nedy, who lived in Philadelphia, died fow days ago, leaving an estate which was valued at 8100,000. Ac cording to the terms of the will the property is to be held in trust for the benefit of the woman's branch of tho Pennsylvania Society for the Preven tion of Cruelty to Animals. The trustee is to pay to the society the en tire inooine from this large sum, un- ' less the sooiety shall disband,or cease to do the work which it is now doing, to protect animals from cruelty. In the latter event the net annual iooome of the trust estate is to be paid an nually to the commissioners .of Fair mount park, for the purchase annual ly of one painting, which shall be ' placed in the art gallery of Fairniount ..... .1 il. n . . park. Mr. Kennedy, who died at Hahnemann hospital, had long been a devoted friend to the society which ho made his beneficiary. Says the Twentieth Century : "Oor large cities are becoming clearly more and more dangerous to live in. If it is not the trolley and the cable that laughter people remorselessly, it is manhole that bursts or a live wire that slays. It is fur cheaper for monopoly to kill women aud children than to pnt its implements of death where their destructive oapacity is under control The resource of damage suits is beyond the reach of the poor. Anyhow, the damage suit is a curious nperstition. If a man loves his wife and child, what good will a few thou sand dollars do him? What good would the entire coinage of the coun try do him for that matter? Of course, grown people oan take care of children are in oonstant peril. It is very odd that the peril always in creases. One might suppose that the monopolies would try to kill less children every year, but the faot is that their young victims increase in number daily. Progress. is a most carious thing. " The Isle of Lone; Ago. 0t 1 wonderful stream is tlo River Time, As It flows through the realm ot year- With a faultless rhythm and a musical r Anil a broader sweep and a surge su' As it blends with tho oeean of years, How the winters are drifting, like flakes ot snow, And the summers like tmds between i And the years In the sheaf so they come and they go On the river's breast, with Its ebb end flow, As they glide In the shadow and sheen. There's a magical Isle up the River Tlmo, Where the softest of nltn aro plnvlng t There's a cloudless sky and a tropical clime, And a voice, as sweet as a vesper chime, And tho Junes with the roses are staying. And the name of this Isle Is the Long Ago, Anil we bury our treasures there t There are brows of beauty and bosoms of snow- There are henps of dust, b"t we love them so ! There are trinkets and tresses of hair. There are fragments of songs that nobody sings. And a part of nn Infant's prayer, There's a harp unswept and a Into without strings, There are broken vows and pieces of rings, And the garments she used to wear. There are hands that are waved when the fairy shore Ry the mirage Is lifted In air i And we sometimes hear through the tiirbii' lent ronr Sweet voices we heard In the days gone be fore. When the wind down tho river is fair. Oh, remembered for aye ho tho blessed Is!o All the day of our life till night. And when evening comes with Its beautiful smile, And our eyes are closing In slumber nwhile, May that "Greenwood" of soul be In sight, Renjamin F. Taylor. Wooing of Mis3 Anna Beggs. BY KATHF.HINE BATES. "No," said lawyer Anna Beggs, "no, I shall never marry." "That is a great pity," replied the mai Vj whom she was speaking, "for you vould make a delightful home for some lucky fellow. " The lawyer lookod at him in sur prise. "Do yon think so ?" she asked. "I hardly agree with you, for I am not at all domestic, lou probably think so because it ie your theory that women should make homes" "No, that isn't it," interrupted her friend. "I think yoa would mako a delightful homo." Miss Beggs was silent; she crossed her feet and slipped down in her chair, meditating for a little while. At last she said: "Ob, I think not." "Why not?" "Well, it is generally held that one of the essentials of a homo is wifoly admiration for the head of tho family. It is not my custom to admire men." "That is true," admitted the man; "but a man's admiration for his wife goes a long way toward making a homo." "That's another theory, isn't it? Did you ever see a home properly oonduoted without wifely admiration?" "No; I can't say that I ever did. But I should be willing to try the ex periment if yon would take mo." "Take you? Are you proposiug to me, Henry West?" "That's what I am working up to I have intended for some years to do it when yon bad time to listen. You seemed a trifle short of clients this afternoon the extremecold.no doubt so I deemod it a good time to try my luck. That is why I introduced matrimony as general topio ; unless it is positively disagreeable to von. I'd now like to make it a speoial one." The lawyer sighed She was a handsome woman, with very long lashes to her dark grey eyes, and she drooped these convenient lashes as she considered the matter. "Well, if you must talk it ont I suppose now is as good a time as auv : but I am dissappoiuted in yon, Henry. X have known you for years, and I have always counted on you as oue of the men who would uot want to marry me." "For a good many of those years I did not inteud to woutto,"said Henry, apologetioally. "In fact, I thought the men who were anxious to in spite of your eccentricities, were great idiots, but 1 have changed my mind." "Aud yon a man 1" "Yes, but I am not verv much of one, Anna. That's the plea I am go ing to advanoe this afternoon the basis of my argument. I Lave gone over all the'poiuts in the case, and it seems my best ohanoe. I know that I am no better looking, no more en tertaining, have no, better principles and no more money than some of the men yon have already refused ; but I do thiuk I am ahead of them in that one point. You enjoy being a manly woman well, I enjoy being a man with womanly tustes. Why shouldn't we bs just the people for each other? No, that was only a rhetorical ques tion I don't want an answer yet, for I should like to set forth the whole plan. That is the great advantage in proposing to a sensible woman one doesn't waut to got hurried and flur ried. If yon married me, yon conld go on just the same with your work tho honsckoeper aud I conld manage the house well enough, I am sure " "Yon and the housekeeper I" inter rnpted the lawyer, impulsively. "Yes no doubt we conld get A capable woman to help us ont I have quite good taste in the furnishing of a house, the equipping of a small eon sorvatory, aud so on ; and I conld confer with her on the points I nm weak in. She could manege the cui sine with hints from me about game, fish, aud a few other matters in which I am well up. I know quite a littlo of landscape gardeuing, and if she had taste, too, no doubt we could man age to make the whole place quite at tractive." "I thought yon said I would make a delightful home." "So you would; the housekeeper and I are only going to see to the house." "May I ask why you don't marry ucrr "Because I am, unfortunately, in love with you." "And yet you don't count me in your plans at all 1" I nm dwelling merely on the mate rial side now. When you came homo at night, after dinner (about which, you remember, yen need have no thought whatever) if you had no ref erences to look up, and if there was nothing yon cared to go to, why you and I could talk. I am a good listen er, Anna," "And what should we have to talk about? Evory possiblo common in terest would bo monopolized by the housekeeper, it seems to me." "Oh, no, not nt all. i read a groat deal especially fiction and we could discuss current literature. I know littlo Mrs. Hardy nud her husband often read the magazines , to each other in the eveningafter she has at tended to tho ordering breakfast nnd other household mnttcrs nud they seem very hnppy in doing so." "After sho has attended her house hold affairs," in used the lawyer. "Yes ; but of course you would not hnvo any household affairs to mar your enjoyment. Yon could feel exactly as if yon were in a hotel." "I haven't the faintest doubt that I should," said Miss Beggs, warmly. "All the details of our life together would soon fall into shape there are a good many things I should like to do if I were established in n home of my own, but I should never think of insisting on your sharing thorn. For instance, 'I should like to have a visit from Aunt Lne.itia, the dear old lady buck in the East who brought me up; but if we haij succocdod in getting ajploasant woman ns housekeeper, Aunt Lctty would not bo in the least a drain on yon. She is a chummy old soul, and very like ly sho would grow fond of the house keeper and they conld go on all sorts of larks together. Then I should like to take n pew in tho nearest church of our of my persuasion. My father had one as long as he livod, nnd some way nn interest in a church has always seemed to me a part ot domesticity, I dare say I should not go ofteu, but if she were a Christian woman, and that is the sort we should like to get, shouldn't we? why, she could use the pew. " "Do I understand that you are go ing to churoh with her, while I" "Oh, not at all, of oourse not.Aono. I merely wished to have the pew in my name, and I hoped she would oare to attend that chnrch because well, because I should like to thiuk of a good woman in the West pew my briugiug-np cropping out, yon see. Then there are other things books are my hobby, yon know, but we could have two libraries, one for your legal books aud political science and all the other things you know so muoh about, and a little den for my novels and books of verse. I confess to lik ing some oue to judge a new book with mo but I promise not to bore yon in that way, Anna." "The housekeeper, in the intervals between beautifying the home and go ing to church, could probably read them with you," said Miss Beggs. "Isn't it queer, I had thought of that very thing if we should chanoo on a cultured womau, Now, Anno, doesn't it seem a possibility? Won't you consider " "I consider," said the lawyer, ris ing to ber feet with sudden vim, "that you are insulting me, Henry West I After our long friendship, I should not have expected this of you. I may have been indifferent to marriage, from personal point of view, but I j have always considered it a sacred institution. To be asked to join with you in such an arrangement as yon propose" she broke off aud for the first time sinee she hnd beon admitted to the bar tears came into her eyes, and her voice trembled. The man with womanly tastes was pleased at tho sight ot the drops on her chocks, and he bent over and kissed them away. "Dearest," he said, "will you bo my housekeeper?" The New Bo hemia. Somo New IMsonses. The intensity of present-day life has developed new and enrious ills that act principally npon the nerve and brain. There is one malady that is peculiar to cities. It is called the elevated-rnilroad disease, and has be como sufficiently common to attract the attention of scientists. Among the leading symptoms are nervous irritation and a habit of hesitation in speaking. Many people who live on tho line of the elevated railroads are suffering from nervous systems that are almost entirely shattered. An eminent surgeon is authority for tho statement that there are about half a score ot new diseases developed by the high-pressure methods of present-day living. Writer's cramp and telegrapher's cramp aud paralysis are not new, but they are becoming modified nnd complicated with other diseases. A number of telegraphers hnvo become insane from the nervous strain of their occupation, and several have committed suicide. With tho introduction of tho typewriter, writer's cramp grew less prevalent, but in its place came muscular cramps, uorvous dilllcultics nnd brain troubles, half a score of them. A new disonse is called railroad shock, nnd is a nervous affection in duced by fright and the shock caused by being the victim of an accident. There is n flute-player's disease of the throat, nud medical men tell ns of piano paralysis and cramps. The violinist has his peculiar ills to battlo with, and now somebody has dis covered that street-car conductors are snbjoct to an illness causod by touching brass railings with thoir bare hands nnd then bringing them in contact with the eyes and face. These aro only a few of the out growths of our artificial method of living, but they are quite enough to furuish occasion for serious thought as to whethor our manners aud habits are not in urgent need of modifica tion and reformation. Now York Ledger. Story of a Poultice. Family discipline is still maintained in some American families, as of course it ought to be in nil. The Rcboboth Herald furnishes an in stance. A small boy got a sliver in his foot, according to tho writer and his mother expressed - her intention of putting a poultioe on the wound, Tho boy with the natural foolishnoss which is bound up in the heart of a child, objected to the proposed rente1 dy. "I won't have any poultice I" he deolnred. "Yes, you will," said both mother and grandmother, firmly. The ma jority was two to one against him, and at bedtime the poultioe was ready. The patient was not ready. On the contrary, he resisted so stoutly that a switch was brought into re quisition. It was arranged that the grandmother should apply the poul tice while the mother with uplifted stick, was to stand at the bedside. The boy was told that if bo "opened his mouth" ho would reoeive some thing that would keep him quiet. The hot poultioe touched his foot and he opened his mouth. "Yon" he began. "Keep stilll" said his mother, shakiug hor stick, while the grand mother applied the poultice. Once more the little fellow opened his mouth. "I " But the uplifted switob awed him into silence. In a minute more the poultioe waa firmly in plaoe, and the boy was tuoked in bed. " There, now," said his mother, "the old sliver will be drawn out, and Eddie's foot will be all well." The mother and grandmother were moving triumphantly away, when a shrill voice piped from under the bodolothee: "You've got it ou the wrong foot I" It is charged that Succi, the fasting man, managed to get raw beef and other such trifles without the knowl edge of the attendant physicians dur ing hie late phenomenal fast at Vienn OSTRICH FARM. A Picturesque and Profitable In dustry in Florida. The Eggs of The Big Birds Fetch Twenty-Five Dollars Apiece. During tho Atlanta exposition last fall major H. C. Tiffin, ot Courteuay, on the Indian river in Floridn, while he was in Atlanta, bonght fifteen os triches, seven females and eight males, and carried them to his Indian river home. This was the initial move toward the establishment of this most pictur esque nnd profitable industry in tho South. Tho ostriches soon became ac climated and are now bs happy and thrifty a colony as one would wish to see. Thirteen of tho birds were raised on a farm in southern California, and the other two were raised in South Africa and were imported to this country. The hens hnve been laying since early last spring aud foriy-two eggs are now hatching. Major Tifiin uses an ordinary chicken incubator for hatuhing,oud just forty two days are required to hatch an ostrich egg, A number of eggs nre being hutched by the hens in tho nests. The incubator is heated by a kero sene lamp with thermometer attach ment. A temperature of 110 degrees will kill the eggs, nud an electrio bell contrivance warns major Tifiin in his house of any undue rise in the tem perature. "Mineral wool," a compo sition of slag and other rocks, is used as packing around the eggs. The vitreous tubstuuee is converted into a fibrous condition for this purpose. In appearance it consists of innumerable tiny air cells formed by the inter twining of tlie fibres. The birds are sepnrated by pairs, each pair or family requiring a half acre run. The runs or lots are pro vided with plenty of gravel, dry sand and grain food. A hose furnishes cool aud fresh wnter for the pool and stall in each run. The gravel was secured in Atlanta. The ostrich house is a round structure, sixty feet in diameter, and is located in the centre of the ten-acre farm, lb dating from the centre of the bouse are sixteen stalls extondiug to the limit of the enclosure, giving each bird a room to itself, the sixteenth stall ex tend iug into the houso yard of major Tiffiu nnd serving for nn avenue into the ostrich domain. In the very cen ter of the ostrich house, under a large oeutrul draught shaft, is a circular cham ber, with doors opening iuto each stall thus affording a means of transference from one stall to another without go ing .outside of tho iuclosure, and through which the ostriches may be changed nt will. A three-foot open ing extends along the walls inar the caves. A similar opening is left in the cupoln, and these openings will be screened with fine netting, Tho house eutrauce to each stall is closed by a heavy door, thus shutting up the os triches at night nud keopiug the mos quitoes out. The ostriches are per mitted to run during the day, nnd at night they are confined to their rooms for repose. A female ostrich begins laying usually when she is five years old, laying after thut period during each year exaotly 50 eggs, weighing 84 ounces each. These eggs sell for $20 apiece anywhere in the world that there is a market for them. Thus, after a hen reaches ber fifth birthday she earns by her laying $1,000 a year, as much as a railway clerk or as much as some bank cashiers to say nothing of a newspaper correspond ent's earnings. This is not all the earning capacity of this famous bird, for the ostrich feather is always sold at good prices. The fertilizer that is obtained from an ostrich farm is very valuable, and major Tifiin will hereafter use it ex clusively on ' his extensive furm. Mujor Tiffin will soon begin the train ing of two ot his ostriches to draw a cart on his farm. In Africa ostriches are frequently put to such use, and the same is done in California to some extent of late. The ostrich is very strong, standing from five to six feet high, and is sometimes vioious and un manageable. A careful and experienced trainer soon gets even the most vi oious of the birds in control, after whioh'the birds beooine mush attached to the keeper. Atlanta Constitution. Sew Womau' Year. DelaWare Ah, welll Man pro poses and" Erie Depougb Not this year, Mis Ware. It's your inning now. Buffalo Journal, An Antarotio ioeberg has been seen that was twenty miles wide, forty milts in leogtb and 600 feet in height. Magnetic Torpedo for Ships, Experiments are being made with an invention for the torpedo service, aft tho torpedo station in Narrsgansett Bay, ot which remarkable results arc expected. The torpedoes now in ex istence, su fares their destructive qual ities are concerned, are perfect when a vessel is struck by one of them, but should one of them miss tho torpedo is lost. The devico which is now being ex perimented with consists ot a magnet, dolicately constructed and intended to be hung ou an arm at the bow, which is in turn fastened to the rudder. The two urms are connected by crossed wires or chains, and the idea of the invention is thnt, whon approaching a vessel the magnet will be attracted in thnt direction, and in turning will move the arm to which it is fastened and so operate tho ruddor, thus steer ing the torpedo toward the ship. It is said thnt the magnet is so dolicately constructed thai should it come with in one hundred yards of the vessel it would be effective. Tho torpedoes will be painted water color and would be of immense ad vantage at night, when the enemy has distinguished the lights aboard ship. 'I'tlA l..,.,..n,1 ... Imped, nud would approach a hostile fleet with more stealth than even ft ' submarino boat would. The question has been raised as to whether the magnet wonld not be at tracted to the vessel from which it is fired, but the meohaoism is arranged so that the magnet will not be influ enced nt nil until it has reached a cer tain distance from the vessel, Caryl D. Haskius, of the Qeneral Electrio Company, of Boston, is the inventor. The device is seven feet long aud weighs 130 pounds. At o recent trial the magnet needle followed an iron steamer at distances of from fifty to several hundred feet. The boat against which the device was op erated was a comparatively small iron one, and could not be oxpeoted to offer ns great an attraction as the big but tlcships plated with armor. The fact that these experiments are being made has been cabled abroad by the military attaches of foreign lega tions at Washington. With a view of offsetting the deadly power of these torpedoes, thore is a tulk of trying to demagnetize the big war cruisers. If watches can be demagnetized, it is thought that warships may be also. New York Journal, Fishes Eating All Ills Meadow (J ran. A rancher, whose plaoe is ou tho bottom along the Willamette slough, below Uolbrook station, was in the city recently to find out whether he had:' any recourse against tho United States fish commission for the .introduction of carp iuto tho rivers of this section. He say these fish are destroying his meadows by eating his grass niid grubbing up the roots. As the wnter overflows' his meadow, tho carp fol low it np in thousands, the small ones weighing about throe pounds pushing thoir way up where the wator is only three inches or so in depth, when tho water recedes he will have mud flats in place of the meadows. Ho says that while looking at tho fish eating bis grass one Sunday he got so mad that be took off bis shoe nnd stockings and went out into the shallow water and attacked them with a hoo. He slashed a lot of them in two, bnt when the drove became alarmed and made for deep water they bumped their noses against his shins, and came near knocking him off hia feet, and his ankles were all black and . blue from the bnmping he got A for driving the carp away he says he might as well have tried to sweep back the rise of the Columbia with a broom. Morning Oregouian. Fre-Natnl Influence. "The most marked case of a mother's fright showing in her off spring is that of au Indian in my couutry," said D. L. Rogers of Tan. couver, B. C-, at the Howard. "He ia known as the 'Bear-faoed Indian,' and the resemblunoe to a bear is much more marked than that ot the dog. faced boy who was exhibited for several years to a dog. The bear faced Indian, which is the only name by which be is known, comes down from the north every bop season to pick hops, and bis services are very greatly in demand. He can pick more bops than any two other Indium in the band. His companions have bnt little to do with him, seeming to re gard him in a superstitions way, bnt the oause of his deformity is well es tablished. His mother, while picking hops, was suddeuly confronted by large bear and was frightened rata oonvulsions, the bear, however, not molesting her. In a few weeks the bear-faoed Indian was born. "-Washington Star,