. .. . ....... .... S . .... .,. 1: - :r' - , . - V ' -4 : . V , r' ' 7 I r-'' Li E. F. YOUNG, Manager. "LIVK AND LET lE." O K. GRANTHAM, Local Editor. I?UNN, HARNETT CO:, ISV C, THURSDAY. MARCH 5, 1891. I VOLUME I. NUMBER 2. -it m ... . i ! L ! V t ? 1 y i ) X I ji jit iZ- --- - - - . - !f j 1 published Every Thursday -UY- F. Yonn aal G. K. SUBSCRIPTIONS IN ADVANCE: fl.CO $9 J ft ire M iifn, I ADVERTISING RATE: f One Cluiu n, One Year, -I i . . i.75J 0 'J' .O.i 10.0 ) Ii' 1 l:e'.i. . .rC"Cmtra-t wSvertiseineiits taken sit pro- jrt:oiiattI 1 ,v mtv. I.'o! not !, 10 cents a liu'e. r s yffKiiti rrrf tit tfif 7V;of ff. 'm ;mi(.Y. c ! I f '. jt v OH-f-cf'js-: m ilt- r. ' 1 t - . ; I The cigarette is an illegal luxury for I yquth in twenty-nine State3. " " A cent us of the Province , of Quebec, I Canada, compared with the returns of vlivil, shows a great exodus of the popa rt j' latioa. ! i ' , The University of Geno, Italy,. ha es- tablihed an academy for scientific travel- J er. It jroposes to teach students how l to observe and investigate all phe- 1 uiracm. - Manv. women are finding congenial em- )iovmpnt in the various libraries which have been established in nearly all the eities and towns throughout the country. The work, is eminently suited, for fhera, declares the New Y'ork World, and thev .liave been found suited for th.e work. Mrs.- Caroline La Conte has been ap pointed State Librarian of Suth Caro lina. She is an accomplished stuJent, a. resident of Columbia, and is the first' Woman to hold .suck a position in the State". .' If there is no' law upon the statute books to prevent a same 'person fronc . being dragged from home, declared in 'sane on the authority of two physicians, and left to the chance of meeting an up- ' right judge to save him from incarcera tion in a luuatic 'asylum, it is time, in sists the.New YorkuYcc, that one should lit passed. How cailya m;n may be gt ovit of the way in New York has re cently been s-hown in the ease ofa well- r to-slo citizen, and the fact is not credit able. The existing statute -on the sub ject evidently requires overhauling. i The United States has now become the grea'est iron producing nation of the worfd,; having produced 0,202,703 gross ' tons of pig iron in A$0Qf against about 8,0.)(),010 grovs ton produced in Great Uritain, an excess of all out l.20D,05 tons, or fifteen per cent. It has been at tained by the most astoundingly rapid development of a vast indusirv which the . world has ever seen, our pig iron product having increased from 1.01 millions in lbSo to 0.2 ) railiions ia an in crease of 5.1C milliojs or 12S per cent;, during whieh'p.eriod the Uritish product . jucreascd only from 7.12 to 8.00 million tons, or about 7.8 per cent. 1- -Says the St. Louis liqmhlk: Wc thiuk : we have some big churches here in - America' but few of them have a seating' t . " 1 opacity f over 1500 pvrsor.s. Com- V cd with sonic of th lir churches of iropc ours mountains. are but as mole-hills I to, Seats. St'.Tetcr'sCIuirel), Rome 54,000 . Milaii C'atheJra! .....37,000 St. TauIV, Home ,3-2,000 St. rau.'s, London ........ .i. 35, GOO St. Petrionio, Boloua 24, AM Florence Cathedral .....,.. .114,300 Antwerp Cathedral i.,'24,000 St. Sophia's, Constantinople.. .23,000 i i St. John's, Lateran........ 2'2,'AX) Norte Dame, Paris -. .....21.000 Pisn ChalheJral '. 13,000 St . Stephcus', Vienna 12,400 St. Dom:n:e. Bologna 12,000 St. Peter's, Boloina... ..114400 Ccthedral of Vienni 1 l,OG0 . St. Mart's, Venice...- 7,000 , Spurgoon's Tabernacle, London....:.. 7,000 Dr. Hall's," the gredt chuicli at Fifth avenue, New York, but. 2,000 - That the C'.iiliai', who have bc?n dubbed the Y'au'iees Of" South America because of their busluess enterprise and stability--of .character, should have a .revolution on their hands has disap pointed and 5 even shocvcd their well wisheis i.i this cjuatry.a Imits the New York -'Trih-tne. But the trouble seean to have. sprung not from the lawlessness or "unrest..of the people, but from the un patriotic ..course of a few 4pliticians, especially Senbr Halmaccda. The Chil ians have advanced too far in the path of civilization to make it either possible or -.probable .that they will revert to the state of chronic iusurrtttfon which ' has characterized so many countries of Latin . America. After they' have taught some politicians a salutary lessoa order-will doubtless be restored, aud the jeojde will again resume the industrial and com mercial pursuits inw.hich they have so signally distinguished llnnslvta in the' OUR KIND O" A MAW. Kot an Apollo with wiow-whitc han L A trifle austere, nor yet too blan 1; But a heart of gold all through an 1 through. And tender and gympathetic, too . . Our kind of a man! Ab.one who, wakin the world' broad ways, Sees little to blame and much to praise; Was cheer and smile for th3 weary throng And boid contempt for the bitter wrouj Oar kind of a man! .Yea. one who, ignoring baser ends, Liveth for home and the good of frien Is; "Where, self forgotten, broad manhood lies, Astar in the glory of the skies Our kind of a man! Who not for theories but for deals, Christ's own apostle, with love for cresls. The world's brave prophet, after Gol's plan. In healing and teaching ha leads the van Our kind of a man ! E. S. L. Thompson, in FranP Leslie's. AN EVICTION FIGHT. Et I.UKK SHAKP. This 'is the story o'f the house of Ma ginley, its building and itsfwreck. A the present moment Magtnlry him self is in 3Iontana. He inadc his money in Australia and then - came hometo Ire land and foolishly built a house on a land lord's estate. " It was built wliere labor and malerial were cheap. Stones cost next to nothing; in fact, the land around produced little else, and soMagiuley spent $1500 in buifding a nioeftvvo-story house with a slate roof upon it. Maginley was in America. Times were bad. Hjs boys had not been able to make any money in the Scottish harvest fields. They wanted an abatement of the rent, but that' the landlord, refused to grant. The money was subscribed and was offered to the cvicfors by the priest of the parish,jJjhe celebrated Fr. Mac Fadden. It wafc refused as beiug offered too late, and (he command was given that the eviction must proceed. I ar rived on the ground just at the end of these negotiations. The pplice refused to a flow me to pass down the road near the house to be attacked so I struck across the fields, keeping on the outside of the police cordon threatened every now and then when I approached too near that line and at last took up a po sition on thf hillside, just outside the line of policemen and facing the cud of the house where I could see what was goiogcn ou both sides of it. I will now mention a little incident which, although trivial in itself, goes to account for the hatred with which the police are regarded in Ireland. When I took up my position as near to the out side line as 1 was permitted, the police man near where I stood thought it would be the correct thing to stand in front of ra'j so that I could not see what was go ing on. I moved up the hill a little and he moved up in front of n.e. I moved down and he again moved down in Iront of met "I don't Ihink you have any right to do that," I said. , Y'ou move on," was his answer. . .My own. impulse at the moment was to hit the man across the face with my um brella, but I realized the futility of do-' iug this to a man armed with a riilc, so I called to an officer, who was standing near by, inside the cordon. "You cannot get inside,". said the of ficer, anticipating the question tha$ was usually asked him. . "I do not want to go inside," I said, "but I want to know if it is any part of this "man's duty to obstruct my view- of what is going on?'" "Not at all,", was the answer cf the officer. Then addressing the man he or dered him to keep his place and I had no mortal rouble with that man. The fact is the police are over-zealous in their du ties and get themselves disliked not to put it .too strongly. Although there were so many people around the fine kept by the police the si lence was most intense. The housoJComing out the officer handed the piece showed no signs of having anybody in it. yet everybody knew that a number of young men weic locked inside, and were going to ' defend the place they were able. as knir cs Here a certain comic element was in troduced. One of the officers of tne constabulary looked as if he had just come oil the 'Savoy Theatre stage after playing the 1 art of an officer in the 'Pirates 'of Penzance." He was a fine looking man with a heavy mustache and he hnd one eyeglass stuck in his" eye. This, which dcesn't look at all bad on Piccadilly, seems rather comical out in the wilds of Donegal. He strode into the open space before the house and with his one -eyeglass cast a look un and down the house as if judging thebest place to attack. Then he walked a Yew steps further with that pompous stagey air of .his and again glanced up and down that house. Finally he walked down to the other corner aud gave the same glance. It looked rather ridicu lous when you, remember that only five boys were in that house and this of ficer had at least 150 armed policemen at his back. - Nevertheless he examined the house as critically as if Napoleon were defending it, 'and the Old Guard that might die but never surrendered were going to -take part in the conflict. When he stood back a man with a crowbar ad vanced to the corner of the house and drove his crowbar in between the stones. At the same instant appeared the head aud shoulders of a man from out one of the second story windows. He had a stone in his hand and he flung it with a viciousness that I have never seeu equided at the man with the crowbar. The stone went wide of its mark. The next came closer. , The third, with deadly accuracy, hit the man and keeled him. over, while the blood spurted from his cheek where the stone had. struck. His comrades pulled him back into line. The head and shoulders disappeared from the second story window and a cheer went up from the ciowd of peasants who saw' what had been. done. Maginley's house is situated on the hillside. The main body of policemen wfxe ou the side above the houe. Ai- ter the repulse of the crowbar man ji number of police picked up a ladder end placed it on the edgo of the roof. Then very nimbly three or four police men ran up the incline. Instantly there was a shower of stones from all that side of the house knocking down a -couple of the policemen, but one managed to secure his place on the roof. He raised a Ratchet which he had ia hishand and struck the 6lates, which few of! in a dozen pieces, rattling down the roof and" falling i'n a shower to the ground.; Blow after blow .was struck. Those inside, being unable to hit the mnn on the roof, began flinging stones at the crowd of po lice outside. - Then the police, !seized with a sudden frenzy, began to , throw stones back at those in the house, j This, I was told, was against the law, and it has bjeu denied that the police ithrow stones; nevertheless they did it, and did it with a vengeance. In a very short time every window oa that side of the house was riddled. The police threw with an accuracy and vigor that wa3 ad mirable, looked at from their point of view. WJien the man on the roof had smashed a sufficiently large hole ia it two or three more policemen with arm fuls of stones rushed up the ladder in spite of the missiles flung at them arid began throwing' stones down the hole ia the roof at those inside. -Then a body of police took another ladder and smashed in the paneless sash of one ol the upper story windows, giving , the ladder one or two swings as the sash gave way from its impact. Placing the ladder on the window-sill, a dozen po licemen, with great nimbleness, rushed up jhe ladder and entered the house. Another dozen or more quickly fol lowed. The men ou the roof ceased throwing down stones. .TI13 mau with a hatchet pulled out a liandkerchief and began to ; mop his brow, The rain of stones from the police stopped and silence again intervened,' only broken bv a low wail from the peasants on the hill side who knew the "boys" inside and knew what their fate would be. In a very short time the door looking out on the hillside was opened and twenty 01 thirty police marched out with five ill clad lads ranging -in age from sixteen tc twenty-four. The first prisoner who came out had a fearful cut on his face until it presented a most hideous aspect. Another had his hand completed , smashed, and as the boy stood on tht road he held his hand out from him and the blood streamed from it as if it wert poured from a teapot, forming a-grea; slowly coagulating pool on the road; The police were very much excited, and "when some of the English ladies, who had b2en wringing their hand3 and crying as they lookod at the scene, tried to pasi down the road to say a word of comfort to the prisoners, the police shoved them back with some degree of rudeness, al though for that they , were checked by their officers, who explained to tho ladies that they would not be allowed to have a word with the arrested men. One of the j oung men was the son of Ma ginley, who was off in America. The res': were neighbors' boys from the im mediate locality, and their relatives and friends stood on the hillside crying, as they saw their hands held up while the steal handcuffs were clasped upon them. Thirty or forty policemen completely surrounded them. Nobody was allowed to approach them or speak to them. Tho constabulary formed two doubltf iines on each side of the young men. The order; "Forward, march," was given, and the regular tramp of the troop3 echoed down the hard road. Then an officer of the law went to the ruined house, picked up a piece of broken slate aud a handful of the earth near the house. He went inside to see that. the fire was trampled out, because if a spark of fire is left alive the eviction is not complete. He searched the house to see that no domestic animal was inside. A clog is a domestic animal and if- left inside of the house invalidates the evic tion ; a eat is looked on by this wise law afe a wild animal and does not matter. of broken slate and the piece of earth to the, agent of the landlord, saying, as he gave tnc slate, "There is your house, and as he gave the earth, "there are your lands." Thi3 was accepted by the agent, and thus the house that Maginley, who is in America, built with his own' monay.becomes the property of the land land, who never expended a cent on the house, and never expended accent oe the land. Thus ends the story of the - House of Maginley, its building and its wreck. Detroit Free Press. s The Invention 6T Spectacles. Old Roger B.icon is generally nc-. credited with the invention of spectacles, at least of the pattern now used by per sons of failiug or defective eyesight. It seems to b-nore than likely that his work in this direction, as early as 1292, originated the custom of wearing glasses, at least in the western nations. Alless andro de Spino, a monk of Pisa, has also been credited with the same discovery, but his pretensions or rather those cf his adherents, for ,he has never been heard to say a word on the subject him self aredispiited by students who think Salvinus Armatus wa3 the real father of the spectacle. Bat as both" these b5ne f actors flourished later than Bacon, and as he is known to have mentioned the work, they are probably much in the position of the gentleman who invented the telephone after another had shown them the way. Chicaqo Herald. A Faculty Prairie Dogs Lack. Dr. Wildr has madman interesting not relative to piairie dogs. They seem to lack any sense of height or distance, owing, it is thought, to the nature of their ordi nary surroundings a flat, - level plain, destitute of pitfalls of any kind. Sev eral dogs experimented with walked ovei the edges of tables, chairs and othei pieces of furniture, and seemed, to be greatly surprised . when their ad venture ended in a fall to the ground. One dog fell from a window-sill twenty feet abovt a granite pavement. Ke) Yvk Juurnal THE JIERRYSIDE OF LIF$. : : . Li- I STOEIES THAT ABE TOLB BY Tlf !e ruNirr men of the psess. . A Song of. Isms A Careful Man T0c Flatterer A Heartless H nsbaa One on His Dad, lite, Etc. if Sin z a song of isms. Of fads and foibles past, Sing a song of erases Too ludicrous to last; . Eingthe odd caprices Inspiring social cliques, Si dc of wild sensations, Of silly whims and freaks. I r Sing a song of isms, And when this song is dona Let us sing another Of the latest one. ' . ' . . j Showing how eacu lsmy jr Evea as of yore, Always is succeeded By one ism more. j London Truth,4 OXE ON DAD. Brown "Was that boy going up tjie ladder or coming down when he felli" Little Johnny f "From the way. fje looked, dad, I guess he. wa3 down." Puck. comiii? A CAREFCli MAN. She "Are you really a ti" fortune it- n hunter and nothing more?" . He 'Certainly not. I want a seJS: Eible wife to go with it, who can tafSe care of it for us." Boston Tramcript. -I X IIEARTLES3 HU8BAXD. . if " "Wife "Do you really think, dea, that this bonnet matches my hair?" ' Huband (tired of waiting) "Wbt does it matter? If it doesn't, all yeju have to do is to get another set H hair." Chicago News. X - . f AN JXDCLGENT TAP.EXT. j He (a scion of wealth) "I was in Ber lin quite two yeahs, don't you know." She "Indeed? What kept you ovr there so long?" Y ' He (innocently aud truthfully) "Paa did." Waihinrjton Star. I ' AMBITIOUS. ?J Applicant "I wraut a salary of thrc thousand dollars a year." M ; Proprietor (sarcastically) " Would if t you like a partnership?" . :-1 Applicant "No; 1 wish to maje money." Munseys Weekly. j . THE FliJTTERER. She "Now, how old would you taUc. me to be? No flattery,, now.". , l ITe "About forty. That isv by stra in g an average. You talk as wisely !s a wo&an of sixty and look like a girl )f twenty. Indianapolis Journal. M Mrs. Younorwifs "Take another pieb te of the cake, dear." Mr. Y."Wfio made it, love?" Mrs. Y. "To cook, oaransc. Mr. Y. "Tha ik you, anijeL mineJil don't care if I do." Washington Star.lr ' 1 ALWAYS SEASONABLE. m ' Tapely "What kind of a suit do yu want?" ' f Grayneck "I would like to get oe that would always be in season." Tapely "Ah, then how would yyiu like one of these pepper-and-salt suits!'" DAYS OP HORROR. First Traveler "I was in Paris during the siege." . . xf Second Traveler "I was in New Yojjk during the draft riots:" " . Third , Traveler 'I was in Scotland when the railway strikers paraded tfe streets with bagpipes." Nexo Tok Wtelly. - j) it - COMPLETELY "GONE. Si Myrtle "He's awfully attentive her, you know." Lilly "How far has it gone?" ' Mvrtfe "Very far. I'm' afraid. . i )-' held her prayer-book upside down jt church yesterday, and - I'm sure I heariS him say a woman' instead of 'amen!' The ledger. .' UNCERTAIN, COY AND HARD TO PLEASfL Jones (who has just told his best storj and been rewarded with a gentle smilj) "Upon my word, women haven't got te real sense of humor!' Why, 'when I head that story for the rir3t time, only hjHt week, 1 simply roared." . -Miss Smith "So did I only it wfts last year. Loncion Jfuncti. i SHE WAS TAKINO LESSONS. Roadside Bill (handing back the piij)1 "Mdam, will you kindly change this for a piece of soap?" . 4 Mrs. Ncwhouse "Certainly; but yAi, can have the pic too." $ Roadside Bill "Don't need it. RI wanted the soap to get the taste of thfjt one mouthful out."- Judge. . . y FORCE W HABIT. Robber (to bank teller) "I'm Blooi Jim, th Rip Roarin Snorter-of ..t Rockies. Hand over that there cash!' Bank Teller (mechanically) "I have no doubt, personally, sir, that you afV Bloody Jim, the Rip Roaring Snorter the Rockies; but, sir, you will have tp get somebody to identify you." Qo6$ Hoes. W' li . MANY BARS REST. j Daughter "Paw, this piano is hor ribly out of tune. H Nervous Parent "Y-e-s, my dear, ft is. I guess you'd better not play on it o r tt m rm nfit-'l If lias lwitn f n r Of 1 T ' ? "Well, I won't, it fixed!" "Oh, in a year Weelly. iWheh will you hayi w so." New York BOTH IN LUCK. " "Do you love me, MUs MableyAf Maude?" the young man asked in de lightfully tremulous tones. AI am sorry," she replied, coolly (h$ was her twentieth victim), "but I d not.". J "-"Bv Jove!" hr exclaimed under breath, "but that was lucky. Only two more to ask and I'll win "tbaV"iiat.'T Chicago Ntui. . . TLEASAST TO RECEiyE. Edith "All is over between its, sir. Here are your letters and the little gold locket and the ring you gave me Ch-ch-ch-ristraas." Cyril "There are some other things I tjave you, Edith. Y'ou must return all." ; Edith "Ttfhat arc they?'' . Cyril "Eleven thousand nine dred and thirty-seven kisses." hun- A THIRD PARTY SUGGESTION. "Do you believe in starling a third party," asked old Mr. Diramick of his daughter's beau, as all three sat in the parlor. - "Well," replied the young man, who had not called to discuss politics,. "I wouldn't have thought of asking you to retire; but since you mention it, ."Mr. Dimmick, I will say that it is the general belief that two are company." -irper'a Bazar. ' AFTER MARRIAGE. He "My dear,' I am a little shott of money. Could you. let me have twenty thousand dollars of your million for a few days." She "I have no million dollars!" He "Betore .we were married you said you were worth ' a million." She "Why, you often told me I wa3 worth my weight-in gold, and I thought one hundred and forty-two - pounds of gold was worth about a million ; that's all.'.' Judge. EE WAS IKOUD. - "Do you have your washing done in this precinct?" asked ono of the judge3 of election. "No sir," replie.2 the man. "Then you cannoi vote here," said the judge. And the shaggy-haired reformer of society turned contemptuously on hii heel and went awa3T,too proud to tell the tyrannical minions of a capitalistic and corrupt government that he didn't have his washing done in any precinct. Chi cago Tribune. A DISINGENUOUS PHILANTHROPIST, a Secretary of Charitable Association- "Are you the wife cf Muller; the coaV porter? The wealthy He"rr von Knicker called on me this "morning and drew my attention to your unhappy circumstances. He told me that you are going to be turned out of your lodgings as you can not pay your rent." sPoor Woman "It is, alas, too true!'' Secretary '.'Who is 3-our landlord ?'' P.; W. "Tiiat same wealthy Herr yon Knicker." Chicago Keas. TnE EXPENSE WAS IMMATERIAL. I am not permitted to give my author-, ity for this anecdote, but it is true. A woman who is not uuknown in fashion able society, where she reigns by right of riches over a little quecaclom of loyal admirers and admiresses, had an affection of the throat, but was not too ill to see her physician. After making an exami nation he said: "Madam, I shall'have to touch two or three of the affected spots with nitrate of silver." "Oh, doctor, please don't do that,'' she said. . "Use nitrate of gold ; the ex pense is immaterial." San Francisco Examiner HE BOUGHT THE RING. "Florry, dear," faltered the Washing ton youth, "I I couldn't summon cour age to. tell you what wa3 in my heart and I wrote it. You got my letter, didn't you?" . "Yes, George, I got it." "And you read it, didn't you?" "Yes, I read it. In fact, I I read it over twice." ' "And now, "Florry," he said, grow ing bolder, "I have come to lcara my fate." "The best I can promise you, George,' said the blushing daughter of the dis tinguished' Congressman, withdrawing her hand from the ardent clasp of the in fatuated young man, "is that I will ad vance your letter to a third reading to morrow." Chicago Tribune. TnE SHOPKEEPER SIS SING. I Customer"! want some kind of a door spring; one that won't get out of order." ., f Hardware Dealer "A door,spring?" ' Customer ' Y'es ; and one that won't require the strength of an elephant to open!" . j . Dealer "Hem !" ' Customer "And yet it must be strong enough to bring the door all the way to and not leave it swinging open a couple of inches." Dealer "I see." Customer ;"And when the door closes I don't want it to ram shut like a cata pult, with a crash 4hat shakes the house irom its foundations.". , . - Dealer "Yes, you want one that will bring the door all the way to, and yetdo4. it gently." - ' - Customer "That's the idea. Bat I . don't want any complicated arrangement ' that requires a skilled mechanic to attend to it." - ! Dealer "No, of course not; you want something simple, yet strong and effec- tive." . , . j Customer "That's the thing; some- i thing that can be put on or taken off easily; something that will do its -work t quietly yet thoroughly, and won't be , eternally getting out of order." j Dealer "I see ; I know exactly what ! you want, sir, just exactly." Customer "Well, show me one." Dealer "We don't keep door springs." Tit-BU. - . ... A street railway line in Berne,Switzer land, has been operated with compressed air as its motive power for about fout months. The line is four and three quarter miles long. Its operation has been satisfactory. . -: i . t The first newspaper in Virginia was jorinted in 1780 at $50 per annum. C.0TT0.N IN THE OBIENT. ISniGATION- THE SECXET OP TTS SUCCESSFUL CULTUBE. How the Crop i Haiset In the Val- ley of the Nile TUe iory of I he Industry. Surprises have bs?ri coming out of Egypt ever since cutside barbarians' picked up intelligence enough to recog nize that which was odd when they saw it. Even down to this: day the Nile country has continued' to send forth strange things, and cveryrday things put Mo unusual uses, and curious things to be used for most prosaic purposes. It was not very long ago that shiploads 1 of all that was left of sacred cats and a job lot" of run-to-seed mudamies arrived in New York en route to tne fertilize 1 factory. That was certainly ptting4whatthad once been objects of venerates and aion ate care to strictly utilitarian uses. And now Egypt stands- as the source of sup ply of shipments to this country of what has always been considered a peculiarly American product, at least in its best forms. A few davs ao the Times' told of the arrival in this port of a largo cargo of Egyptian cotton shipped from Alexan dria, to be, worked into fabrics in New England mills. It consisted of 2150 bales, . was valued at about $350, 000, and was by far the largest impor tation of the kind ever made into this country. Persons who are interested in the tiade 'say, however, that a good deal of Egytian cotton has beenrcbrning herefrom Europe in the shapcr of goods manufactured in English and Continen tal mills. ' ' , One American manufacturer began to experiment with the Egyptian product three yeara ago. He began buying a lot of fifty bales; now he gets 2500 bales in a lot. About twenty owners of cotton mills in this ,dountry are said to be using the imported article. To handle it they have to use combing machines and that fact probably keep it out of other mills. . In Egypt itself there-. is" no manufac turing of the cotton. -The product is exported to be made into cloth and that is the last the producer generally sees, of it. Two kinds of cotton are produced one white, .the other brown. The white is the lc33 valuable of the two, as the staple is shorter. ' Cultivation on a large scale began in 1821,' in the reign of Mahomet Ali. 'Ex periments were made with the seed from plants growing wild, and cotton was produced of a character good enough to warrant a rapid spread of its cultivation throughout Lower Egypt. Very high prices were ?.lized for this early pro duct. , A Frenchman named Jumel, a mer chant, brought about the next step in the development. He imported the seed of Sea Island cotton from Florida and devoted much care to its culture. His trouble was well rewarded, lor bis experiments were highly successful, and the new grade of cotton he secured was a great improvement on that formerly raised. One result of 'hi3 eiitsrprise was the giving of his name to Egyptian cotton which is called either Jumel or Mako. The latter name is that of a planter who, previous to the Jumel experiments, had raised cotton on an extensive scale. In" the beginning the cultivation was a monopoly farmed out by. the Goveru-r nicnt but later oh the fellahs secured the right to become planters. There was a boom in the industry when that privilege was granted. Methods employed were rudimentary then, and they arc s.ill far behind the time. Primitive tools are used, such as an American planter would regard as beneath contempt. There has all along been one factor . rn the case, however, which the peasant' understood thoroughly. He knew how necessary ir rigation was to cotton-growing in hJis country. They have two methods of cultivating cotton in Egypt, one known as "Mes gani,". the other as. "Bali." In the'for mer the fields are regularly irrigated with water pumped from" the Nile and carried over the country in canals. In the lat ter the fields afe thoroughly saturated before the planting takes place. Aft2 that the plant3 have to get along with out water until the Nile riset. . Then pumps- are set at work and the fields get their needed supply of moisture. In Up per Egypt the Mesgani system is gener ally followed. Directly the Nile inundations are of po benefit to cotton, although for a long time a notion prevailed that the overflow; would serve to fertilize and irrigate the fields. Experience showed, however, that too great floods often meant thai cotton could not be raised. So .weirs or dams were provided to carry off the sur plus water into canals. Planters have more or less difficulty from the fogs which prevail in September and October to the detriment of the crop. When the British took hold of Egypt they went to work oa vast improvements designed to extend irrigation. A great deal of money has been expended . on these works, which are expected to prove of lasting benefit to the planters. . s There is some doubt whether the area under cotton cultivation can be .extended very greatly. In the delta about 1,000, 000 feddans, or acres, are in use for the crop, or about one-third of i the total area under cultivation of all sorts. One estimate is that the limit of the crop is ebout 100,000 bales in excess of any year's yield so far recorded ' Further up the Nile, to be'sure, the system of irri gation may be perfected, and perhaps that, region may increase the total pro duction more than is at present ex pected. : Nearly half, the Nile delta, which . was cultivated centuries ago, is unproductive now, because the water supply for three months of the year is none too large for the fields in use. To get' much bigger cropj it is estimated that storage reser voirs will have to be constructed, capable of taking in from 20,000,000 cubic me ters to 50,000,000 meters a day. Even the smaller figure calls for a flow of 8000 feet per second. The crop for lb8U-90 turned out to be better than tho' 'unfavorable condi tions indicated that it would be. .The Nile -was unusually low, and the wcathet . was not all that could bo, desired. Sys tematic irrigation produced a good ef fect, nevertheless, and the seasotproved to.be fairly prosperous. Net York Times. About Glass5 Eyes. ; "Good glass eyes come high," taid an c occulist recently. j . "Cost a big prie, do they?n, ' - , : "Yes, the good ones do." "Then there is'a good deal of differ-' encet". . - .- :.. - ..-; Obi yes. Thc range all the way from fifty cents to $50." "Is there such !& big demand for them'" "Larger than most pcop-j supposa.' The fact is thatjnaay peoplf get alo'a; so well with a glass eye that cot ono pe soiWn tea suspects the f.vt.w vSome of our friends nay bs wearing ; one of these solid visual ; rrgans and we do not it?" , "Precisely. I'll het that several tro pic in this city withj whom you are ac quainted are wearing jjlass eyes and 'th.3 fact has al ways escaperl your attention." "Tell me Njaiethwg about tho busi ness, doctor." . "In the firt place the -greater shaye of ; glass'eyes, g3 filled are not glass. The best quality (pf artificial eyea is manufac tured in America by a process which it " kept absolutely eectct. These aro the lightest and best and will hist longer. . The Germans also' make a' tiue artificial, eye. The best eyes nra made of stone.1' The German article is cheaper than the American. The veining in the foreign eye is not so well marked." ' 'What makes the trade profitable?" "I'll tell vou. Qne-cvcd ratrCTaro litely to be rather scarce, and ono would think that having once stocked up they would buy no more.! But this is not the case. An artificial eye gets to, be a nuis ance after it has been on .duty lor two or three months. Another one pas to be purchased This ex"pl ains the reason for the lively trade in these articles. There'll ' always be a trade in them, and a good one,, too." - . ..' ! . "How is it we. dou't notice a glass eye ' in soine, men?" (';:. ' . , v . "Hecau.se they know enough to keep stilt about the matter and car the best eyes obtainable. In this way, if you no- -tice anything at all peculiar about their optics. you imagine they save asquint or are.cro33-eycd."Lujfato (iT, Y.) Neva. . Lobbyists In Engl an! . In England lobbyists are called parlia mentary lawyers, and thoy are upheld .by some people 'who really do not know much about them as a class infinitely "su perior to our lobbyists." Maybe , they are as aiclass better than sorai of 'dur lob byists, but there are some of them a v great deal worse than our lobbyists are as . a class; .They are suppoiVl simply to argue before parliamentary committees, but wlint is to prevent then from aru- ing with the in.lividaal members of tho. committees? In tile" House of Commons c4Kreat Britain are some of the, most disreputable' scamps-in England. Thej frequent the gambling houses and the low saloou-i, and'tliey ate, just as pur-, chasable by an unscrupulou-i "parliamen tary lawyer" as any member of Congress .isjiv thi country .by a lobbvis. If there were statistics in existence they would show, without a- shadow of a doubt, a greater percentage of corrupt!- . bleytoembers of the House of Commons than of the 'House of Representatives. The British lobbyist is at aay rate a luxury fully as expensive as one of ours. A numDe)f j-ears ago it, is said, that the enormous sum $110,000 was paid the parliamentary solicitor" for one rail way bill that never got into the. House of Commons at ail. There is a story of a-i- -other British '.'lawypr," "who boing re tained to appear before a number qf dif ferent committee at the same hour of the, same day, Having receivcdLa nurar : ber of guineas foreach attendance, was : found by a friend repo?ing ; under a tree in the park, in, order, as be said, that he Tfnight do "equal justice to all his clients." .. Perhaps the cunning of our lobbyists wa3 an inheritance from the rd country. ' If the . truth wcrfl' knovn it would be found that many lob byists prey; upon . the credulity of . th?ir clients and thatvthey pretend to do a great dcal.of bribing, where in realitj they tlo but little. Washington Star. Fronts in Will Aufinal Breed hi?. One of-'Barnum's big;ters dicdTre cently at Bridgejortj .Conai The ani mal was given its breakfast and in tbe huge piece of meat which formed a part of its meal was a . small boae whicli got stuck in the animal'i' throat, and before it couia dc removcu tne user naa cnocxea v to death. The carcass of the dead .tiger was sent to the Birnum inuseum at Tufts College. The same night that the ' tiger died there was quite an addition to the family- of animals at th? quarters By the law of compensation a liones gave birth to four beautiful cub. Thtj are living and the owners of tlis show value them at 15,000. In speaking of tbe matter 3Ir. Barnum said to a reporter: "I have offered my partner, 3lr." Bailey, $100,000 for the first baby elephaul born in Philadelphia, and if' will bf. worth every dollar of that amo mt. Out ' gains by the birth of wild animals among those in the menigerie of o ir 6how arr annually about $50,000 greater than ouv losses by death of animahL-FAirtyfa.i Star. .. " ':. ' ' '.. A Prlmillre Tnrkih Halli. ' 1 ' The Alaskans, as a rule, arc Dot" par ift tic6larly fond of bathing, but some ol them like occasionally to indulge in sort of Turkish Lath of a primitive ' character. For this purpose a nunibei -of long sticks are driven into the ground V in a circie four feet in diameter, being thereopod drawn together and tied at point six 'feet from the bottom. A small fire of wood, with stone?,te lightel in the middle, and the heat h kept in witb the blankets spread over the framework. When only the cicderi are left and the' stones are well heatcd, the lather takci a seat inside and proceed to ptrapire. WatMijtVut , :, ' ( It? II