Ih Old Egypt 1 T? THE EHEDWE. Copyright. W0. by Frank Q. Carpenter. AIRO. (Special ' Correspondence to the Hee.) liave pist had nn audence with his roval hlgh ns'p, the Khedlve of Egvpt. The meeting was arranged hv the diplomatic asent of tho c Vnlted Slates and it took Rome time to bilriK It about. The kIWIve Is tho Mo hammedan ruler of these ten million fc-gyptlans and the many tribe of the Su- to mosque regularly, and urged the push dan bow down to him as their chief. Al- Ing of the Mohammedan religion. Abbas la hough the country Is really ruled by. tho also regular In his mosque attendance, but English, the khedlve holds the place of I doubt whether he Is doing anything 6ut klng In the minds of the people. Hp live- lde that und nl Pilgrimage. ' In great state and appreciates the dignity ' ' S of his position. It was only through letters 'rb Khedlve In 1910. of Introduction whloh I have from Wash- A" 1 WHS thinking of these things a Ington that I was able to enter his pies- atately official In dark clothes and red fes nee. My appointment came from the caD n'el'eil told me nls highness was grand master of ceremonies of the Abdlne rt'dv to eei me- He ,nen ,ed me out of palace. The letter from the khedlve was the room and "os the hall Into another written In French, and It Informed me th. parlor.twhlch was equally large. As we his royal highness would receive me Tn... day afternoon. When I arrived at the palace. I found a regiment of soldiera drilling in front of It and a company of fierce looking Arabs on guard at the door. These men presented arms aa I entered. I first came Into a hall where other dark-faced guards In full uni forms stood, and I parsed between these to the foot of the grand staircase where one of the cabinet ministers met me. With him I wulked up to the second floor of the palace, and was taken Into a great Dar. hh where I waited i.n.ii th. , . for my In!ervtw cam" Tewftk Pasha's Throne Room. As I looked about this room I rccoir nled it as the audience chamber In which hedlve. Tewflk Pasha hen he was ruler of note than twenty-one tlmo I had a moat re- me rather of this khedlve, Tewflk Pasha, had received me w tne country, now mor " " ago. At mat tlmo I had a moat re markable Interview with him. and aa I looked about me the ma.i and his words came to mv mind Th. .. , . a It w. then, all the furniture be In. EuroDean nniwMh.i.nrfi t.-. . ,. land of the orient. The sofas and ehslr. are ,.f , .., . , cjiairs !,4:V.!uW.J,0d"rk Pa'n,ed WhUe and plated with gold. They are upholstered in while brocaded satin, decorated with flowers and the carpet of European make i woven In one piece. At one end of th room is a great brocaded sofa, as wide aa a Turkish divan. ' It was upon that sofa that his highness Tewflk sat as he chatted with me about himself and his country. He spoke English well, and talked freely about the then condition of Egpyt and ita future. He was not averse to speaking of reiiRion and his Mohammedan sublecta. us spuae a lime concerning himsel. $ .Tw,,'t er.ua Abba., oince men great chajiges have taken place in tgypL The present khedlve's father was h Ih hi j assassination, and when w..T.n ! i WV ,u,,p, ,hat ..ww u uncu un un oi a uneruvt. lie re piled: "I don't like It I am told that manv people envy me and think that my lot muet oe a pleasant one. They do not un- derstand the troubles that surround me. I have aeen many a time when I should hv. oeen glad to have laid down all the honors 1 have for rest and peace. My ten years of reign have been equal to forty years of worry, and If life were a matter of pleas- ure I would be a fool to remain on the throne. I believe, however, that God put man Into the world for a purpose other lh" " ' dy that is man . ehlef end. I am trying to do what 1 can . vUu..w, aim peopie, ana i am hau- plcst when I am working the hardest. ine.e worda were uttered after the Eng lish had taken hold of the Egyptian situa tion. As you will remember, they came In at the end of Araba Pasha's rebellion, and ener iney nad put down the revolution of tho Mahdl. Tewflk was ground between ins upper and nether millstones of the reb els ajid the English, and his bed was nevt oneTf roses. II IV a.lterent With the nienenl Ll,.ll. H ha. practically nothing to do with the actual government, and the English relieve uarV ruler m''1 ' ,roublt'8 of the ordi- "sen were to be transmitted any ilia- and . would booii submit hla Invention lo by a ingle driver in the aeropl .ne. The . M1'""""1" Halera. tance at low pressure It would take a the government. The gun will tire from load would be less than the aeroplane ui coin lewfik and Abbas have upheld the larx canal to earn- th. r..,i.. . . .. .1,.. .. .,.,. ... j 1 - m a . , Z -- - i-uiiiia iiiy he did not drink because It was against the laws of life a. laid down ln the Koran. I understand that the present kbr.liv- r... louche, tobacco or Intoxicating liquor, and that he Is almost aa good a Mussulman as mu.. n. vbik.v . j . . , . .... . ..s leeeniiy gained . . ....... ...... iimj,ni unuer nign pressure a small III ami 1 a a fiffr..! .. . . 1 ,1 j . it'tiii -i-Manu ...-...... 1 ...... . ... th. 11- ,7 . uwnu" irry tfuod many hundra III at l J IS nlariineaaal illil lnt. tllbraa at . I . ...... .... 4 I refused, ami a moment laTer l asked Vi e T.1 T .Tl i"' th V khedive If I,, did not .,nl. .7- ,1, th 'tr'-J 'Tent ut that he neithar ..,k..i frure over a very .mall 1 greai i.vor wnn ins .objects, not only In m-usanu kilowatts In output, and from that an aeroplane will ever drop bombs I. hour Into exact range, and using a pio-i-gypt. but ui Old Sudau, by uiakiu. a oil- a t thouaaud volt, to 13s.iou Vulu. The a were lamau'a HcUou. It make a powder Jeciila whicii will tear it lo piece" and the lis T EGYPT grlmage to Mecca, and the tact that he has increased tho size of his harom will prob ably be another point in his favor. Aa to ,TewflU Pnsha, ha told me that r.e could recite the Koran backward from be ginning to end. He knw the whole book by heart, and could commence at any place and recite back and forth. He raid that he thought; every man should be faithful to the beliefs of his fathers, and that he was In favnr nf r-Hirloufl toleration. He went .entered a straight, atout young man. with a fair face and blond mustache, came forward and offered me hla hand. It was the young khedlve, whom I had met when 1,'was In Egypt four years ago. He greeted me with a welcome back to Kgypt. saying that he Amjldied it a compliment to his country that the Americans who came Invarlably returned. Hla highness led the way to a sofa near the window, and mo tioned me to a chair at hla aide. When he aat down himself he put one foot un der him and aat upon that. I remem- berA that his father had sat the same Wajr Th khedWe maJnU,ned this posi- tion during the half hour of our audience. As ve talked I had an excellent oppor- He says that draining is quite as 1m tunlty to study the man. His hlghnei-s Is portant for Egypt as Irrigation, and that about five feet eight tall, and he weighs there are vast territories here whlc'.i pernap" 1,0 lx'u" " ,'8 a" "'f" " TIT' u ?. B? T . . Wer" m , " h,m look taller- X Amerlcan" think all of the peo- pie of this part tr the world have dark complexions. That of the khedive is fair, "" ' o no d a "k Jj0? f"h'?nable . " coatume would not have been out of ".Progressive TraaamK tins Water Power. 1THULT a doubt the develop ment of electrical tranemlsslon of power was the greatest dis covery In the history of manu facturing. The fact that the w millions of horse-power,, of dis- mm umurfaiu ..uirt tu nu.mi,i.i ........ mountains and deserts,, land and water, to the Industrial centers to turn the wheels of mills and factories, to light the .treets and houses, to drive the electric Lrs and .In all th hrt snrb ih. vUIm and towns was a great boon to tne Industrial world. ' shipping facilities make large In- dustrlal centers and these Industrial points require vast' quantities' of cheap and (ell- able power.' Only in a few places was It possible for! an industry to combine good - hipping with cheap water-power, iiut uow - wnen man has discovered how to DI"' ll,e distant water-power to any J- a'rable place, industrial "centers are sprlng- ln uu all over the country. No longer it necet-sary for the eoutti to ahlp cot- ton to the New England water-power cities to be made Into cloth. Southern rivers are being harnessed and the work l being done at home and only the fln- l.,hed product shipped away. 1. uuu ,h- in..,.i, .1. , uevclopment of the electrical transformer which brought about thia modern miracle. jne iransiormer Is a device to raise the p,eii,,ure vt electricity and to force it at " 1111 uiiagc, or pressure, over a slender copper wire to great distance, with little, if any. loss. The generators, driven by water heels, produce . electricity i about 1. W0 volts and the transfiu-mar m. Creases the Vollace or lirnmn 1.. ku.l. HO.OuO volts for transmission. , k"' voltage would lequlre a large trans- mission line and a heavy lo.. In current. Hy wy ot explanation. If the water-power vMunv BliUVUIll, 01 water; out IC the water could be sent pipe would horse-power. llage and under hign lire, land so pressure that thousand, of """ """' o fitni 10 great d a- (sent tance. over .mall wlies with very little lo" 10 the last ten years the transformer n urn w. n r r. ..n a r. u i.ti ... . .. anuaaii. 10 a lew THE OMAHA New Movement Afford a Very Interesting: Study l,"EJ)EiOOM OTT THE KHEDIVE'S "ZACHT 7 v - , " V '' ' "Sew" 5 place In any American club. Our conversa tion was carried on In English, which his highness speaks with a slight German ao cent, probably from the German pro fessors who taught him that language. He was, you know, educated In Vienna, and It Is said that he speaks French, German, Kngllsh, Turkish and Arabic with great, fluency, while he Is conversant with several other languages. ' A Talk A'ouit KsrnlBK, Before going to the palace I "had been warned that hla highness would, not dis- cul)i pontics, and I, therefore, turned the conversation to farming. The khedive Is one of the largest farmers of the Nile valley. He has stock ranches, cotton plantations and grain fields r.aloie. He is a suocexsful developer of real estate propositions. He take an(TDV mean. of lrr,t up encap ian ion : nd drainage makes them double and treble In vain. P'Per drainage might bring Into use. This " ' f 8me '"k'S nPRr Ale"m,,la- Th 1 J"t as much danger from un oversup- ply a. from an undersupply of the Nile waters. The floods contain a certain amount of salts of one kind or another. nnicn are injurious to me crops it tne ",er to '" V"n th8 land' and thls r.as to oe removea. i During my talk with his highness I : Activities and transformer has no moving par. In shape and outline It looks not unlike a rarge oval boiler. The interior media. li.sm consists of large colls of wire insulated with oil. It waa but fifteen years ago when the first 1O0.0OJ vult transmission line in this I'll 11 n ( r V uram msnl Irt uiiihc I'ullfApniu transmitting single-phase current from San : Antonio Canon to light Pomona and San Bernardino, distant fourteen and twenty- eight miles. There were two banks of small transformers, i&lsinir tha nm.nr. from ! to 10.W0 volts. In all. there were forty six kilowatt transformers the largest, of that day. A comparison of these lnsUnifi- ant machine, with the aix monster trans- former, being con.tructed by the General Electric company at Schenectady, X. V.. tor the Great Western Power company of -auiornia tuny demonstrates the wondtr- u. man tension utiuuui- sion. When these world's largest transformers slood on the test floor ready for shipment to California, each unit weighed more than Shooting Iron VDSON MAXjM, the Inventor of H niaxlmlte, and a brother of Sir Hiram Maxim, whose jiamo ha. long been associated with long- tern range guns, declared that the , aeroplane waa fully developed . purposes, and that he had been at umk f.ir mnrt lhan a vm i- ncrru.-lltiir tho kind of gun necessary to fight the aero- Plane In the air. He said he had hit upon the right kind of gun necessary and also the projectile, . J JOI l V va 1 1 1 V VUlll(ail IlllUUil n 11a I, ilr. Maxlia called "the celestial concave - Mr. Maxim drove down from his home on lke Hopatcong to aee the V right av ta tors In flight. ll was waichlng Hoxney In a 3,M-foot flight when the Times Col respondent found him silting In his auto- mobile along the parkway east of the field. "The world little realizes." he .aid. "how far aeroplane development ha. progressed toward a point where it may be utilised aa an actual fighting machine, and by this I ........ . . , .n. uo 1101 iiican lor aropping Domus. 1 ne idea m 1 SUNDAY IJKK: SEPTEMBER IS, li10. of r MfUSON DU KHEtUVX r. a w c r tnns uimc Oft comjs Aii vwtf.f:.: Al . ' 1 ' 'XHE XEIIER IROX1 TELE. KHEDIVE TA$ IirrBENCH ;slie(1 hlm as t0 hlH Urmlng and whether he really gave It his personal attention, He replied that he did so. and that he was in telephonic conm-ctlon with fwch of his estates and received daily reports from all of them. We talked of the fertilization of the Kile valley. The khedlve aid that the Und was exceedingly rich, but that It could be Improved by adding protphatcs and that : Developments in the Electrical World twenty-eiijht tons. Each tratibfurmer oc cupied a floor space of nine by five feet and stood seventeen feet high1. The core of each device contains more than four miles of heavy copper wire by mi-ans of which o.tvO-horsepow er of electrical energy is raised to a pressure of 1&.50U volts, tletore shipment each machine was testtd with a pressure of 2MMUU olts to prove the safety of the insulation. Without the transformer the millions of hoie-pjer uhicn are now being duve.oped from the various rivers und siiua.i.K und ud in Ihe cities and Villages for iiiaiiuiac- luring and railroad work, us well us lor healing and lighting, would be impossible, The current could be generated, but it could not be transmitted very far. It is the big tiansformers which make it pos- sible to turn the water power of Niagara into electricity and to send it over mo slender wirea as tar as Syracuse, Toronto and Km neuter with a trifling cot. Among the larger cities, which receive a greater portion of their tlectrcliy from Designed to Fight man want to laugh. Hut 1 mean an urro- plane to fight another aeroplane. "Why, I, or any government ar.-enal, for that mailer, would make this Wriyiit ma- chine here into a fighting craft In almost a single day. Here's the equipment needed; One light one-pounder gun, many of which aie now in existence weighing less than 100 pounds, plus 100 one-pound shells, thut making a total fighting equipment weigh ing less than 200 pounds and capable of adjustment 00 that the firing could be done IVU V I 11 t I UHV JU at- I 1 1 I I . "Aeroplanes can be built in numbers in nil Khty short time, and their ait. Her equipment can be put on them in equally short time. The next warfare is going to be a'oft, and 10 tne speediest aeroplane will belong the greatest power to effect a victory. "Tea years ago I began experimenting with a gun to fire at any angle in the celestial concave, and 1 hae now the gun that will fire swinging on a pivot, equipped . . ., .. .. 10 ormg an aeroplane masmg iwi mites an 0 -.1 0 t : a. 0 ) - I t- i ('J'i. farming was Improving throughout Evpt. and that the aurtcultural department' U teaching the people the value of good e-na and of mten-tvo cultivation X abked him what would be the effect of the raisin of the dam at Assouan. He answered that it would double tho quantity of water that la now being held back and that If will add millions of acres to cultivated Egypt. He says that the gov- transmitted water-puwt-r, are the following: Miles Ciiy. Buffalo Montreal Water-Power. HorBe- to City. Power. SOflOil ?V'V.. 11.MM 4.W0 x.ooj a7i jj'SJ i.llo lu.tiUj g'oTo 10,0.0 r. iMm i'iIi"! ti 147 10 'Ji 83 40 11 1) 14 37 13 40 j 112 3 4 20 7 27 Man Franciso Minneapolis St. Paul L s Angeles Albany liarrford S" iiiKf leld. Mass , Manchester. X. 11. Suit L...I.K City ... Portl tnU, Me. Seattle Itutle . , llakliUHl Lew Utou, Me Concord, N. H. ... licit im. Alonl. ... Quebec HiiJeH, Ore Ill uildition tlier. lioo) could also be named Urn binalhr cltk-s und several hundred vil- ages, which secuie tneir electricity irom Mniilar sources. street tlshtluK Nnvrlt), Why hhould sober minded citizens' who Aeroplanes in explaining why the aeroplane could not dmii bombs on battleships, Mr. Maxim said it would move forward from the aero- plane's momentum while dropping down- ward and wuuld be affected by the wind. lie also said that explosives don't do the work for which they are famous when set off freely In the surface. ir or loosely against a "Now. a twelve-inch gun, firing at l.vnt ari'.a. will send a l.Ooo-pound projectile into a foot of armor plate tiiat will shatter the plate if it explodes after entering It," Pittsburg has started a campaign asainnt j he Khedlve's l'auill. said Mr. Maxim. "To get the same effect 'epn eleclrlflcauon of all Th(J khedve waa marI.,.j ytal, ago. d from an aeroplane It would be necessary to ru" c" ,"' "a w . . . . has five children, all by that wife. Accord carry 1.000 pounds of metal to a height of ,;H"nPh?b ?he wea ,t r'l' m ln- lu Kt"n' he ha. the right to four twenty mile, aid drop It for that distance 'J.JVharge by askng central wve and any number of concubines, and througha perfect vacuum."-New York r;)w.trt y w, be dev,,ed a, P.rlain a alory Is current hat he has Increased Tunes. C(, inlni-K In Texaa and the current din- his harem within the past two mouth.. 11 -TliHiik lm'." The man who is not thankful for the lesson, he learned in adversity ddn't learn any. lliere would be plenty or tnankiuineiis in the world if thos who have loved and lost nl know juki wriai iney nave nwi. Why are you giving thanks? They took ...... - tl"i from you wan bireei a mile while ago. didn t n.ey ?" "Iw; I'Ji 1 gor out with 20 they dido t know I had. '-Jud.o. Av.1t 1 ,' V EDLY CAEPEX "WHICH. eminent lias otl'er schemes umler way which will materially Increate the farming possibilitif s of hla country. 'the Khedive's Ilia Farm. I.,irg ha ,over,atlon 1.1. highness spoke at length as to some of hi, farms. sugteutln.; that I n,3ht find It liu-restlng to visit them, lie has redeemed 'over 2.000 ncres not far from Cairo. The land was poor-and swampy and some of it was des- ert." His highness drained and Irrigated It and .now It brings In an enormous revenue. He has another big farm pear Alexandria and another at Koubbeh. The latter es tate Is a model plantation of 800 acres. It is equipped with the most scientific ma- chinery and Implements and its buildings comprise a inudel village, with which in fifinnnftflrl u m hnnl olnK a mrivriiia nntl An up-to-date fire station. The khedlve has " "trenuous ex-president can wear out breeding establishments there, and he im-, lmoBt ,nun of U ,ulu' ports the finest cattle and poultry. He Is noted as a horee lover, and has recently Th Pitlacra of the Khedlve. inaugurated a company to Improve the The khedlve has a half doaen palaces, blood of tho Egyptian horse. Hla position is The Abdlne Palace, where I'waa received, such that he can get the finest of the Is his chief official residence. It la a Arabian sires and the best pure-blooded straggling pink and white building with a stallions from Nejd, Arabia, are si nt to him grand staircase, enormous rooms and gor by the L'edouln shellis. He in also Inter- genus furniture. It Is lighted with electric ested In camel and mule breeding, and has llghia and carpeted with ruga, mostly from some of the swiftest of dromedaries. Some Europe. The furniture is European, of his camels can travel seventy-five miles The khedlve's bedroom has a marble a day, and are worth as much as the finest bathroom attached, with special arrange horse. His highness exhibits at many of merits for shower and douche, but there the agricultural shows and Is often among Is no Turkish bath, as In the homes of the prize winners there. most oriental rulers. Hla study looks like a During our talk 1 asked the khedive as workroom. It haa a big library table In the to his daily life, lie replied that he had center, and his highness has a telephone al all he could do from daylight to dark, but ways at hand. Tho bathroom of this palace all he could do fron that he believed In Y upon It. In addition which are manv, he hard work and thrived to his official duties, he haa the management of his own estates and various enterprises, He tiaid that many of his days from o'clock In the morning until o'clock at night were taken up at the palace. From other sources I learned that the khedlve Is almost as strenuous as Theo- are in their-home and af in beti by 10 o clock at night pay lighting taxes for others who, being of a Jovial turn of mind, P'eier 10 stay in 1 tt.es, ciuds or ears uniu ,j , j , j . . , midnight and do not, return homo until tho early hour. f the ma, nl,.g? Man.festly It Is unfair, but in Germany this quewtlon has now been answered In a Way whk-1 wl" pleas' ,ne earn,,t tax- payer., and probably prove a terror to the late nigh birds. To the village of Zarkau, near Glogau. In Silesia, must be given the honor of installing a system of automatic cltclrlc lighting for the streets. The electric lights burn every night from the outskirts "f u,,u through tfie village of Zarkau, a dlt,tunt'e of about a kilometer, until 10 S.ikiO o'clock at a mutual cost to the community bine, and three screws. It can make sev I.Sd'J In general. Then they are switched off. .i,.n kniiiH un hour, ami tins averaaed At each end of this kilometer stretch, on an iron pillar, stands a small Iron cupboard lighted by a tiny electric light. Those per- sons who are out after 10 o'clock wishing to have their way lighted must Insert a. ten pfennig piece Into a slot In the side of the Iron cupboard. Then the nine lamp placed along this stretch burst forth Into a twelve-minute life, thus enabling the pas- scnger to find his way in lightness to his or her houbc. The scheme is working in a satisfactory way and -it seems quite probable that other Gei man village, and towns will follow the example of Zarkau and install the auto- maUc lighting system to be put Into opera- tion after 10 o'clock. Klrrtrlcnl .oe. Tha ffovernment nf AiiMtiallu urwl KT.u. Zealand are planning to establish a system of wireless Intercommunication among the Hrlll,,h islands in the South seas. Manitoba has 5.1S0 mllea of long distance leieimouu wires, mere are over Jw.ino muij scrlhers to the sysiem. and 7.UM farmers in the province have rural telephones. A Jud-.'e In Warsaw. Ind., recently held a session of court over the telephone. tnjuted Inst, ad 01 coal, screening, will fi-rnh fuel for the .team boiler.. A steam electric locomotive na neen pro- duced In Glasaow. The locomotive It driven by four electric motor, receiving this cur- lent from a steam turblno-drlven genera- tor. The electric Iron srnelter at lleroult. Cnl., ha. been pronounced a su cecal. The nut- put Is twenty ton. of pig iron a day ahd five aJdil.onal furnace, will soon be erected. s THE. SENT .IX) HE CCA dore Roosevelt. He rises at 5 o'clock in the morning, and. after dressing and at- tending prayers at a mos(TJ, he takes a lonir drive In a carriage or motor car through one of his farms. Sometimes he on parade and attend, a review of e is usually back for breakfast t . or rather for hi. cup of coffee, for he takes little else. After this he look, over his official papers until noon, when he ha. lunch, or breakfast, as It . called here, After breakfast he chats with hla visitor. and gives receptions of one kind or an other, and then reads or works away until sunset, when he again goea to hla farms. At 7 or 8 o'clock he la baok In the paiara for dinner, and his evenings are apent i OH KlieUlVC IB b BlIUl IBUlWk AM well and shoots straight, and, like our is large, and It Is especially gay every win- ter on the occasion of the khedlve's annual ball, to which l.buu guests are inviiea. t-on- neciec wiwi una iv..i mB" " w'ora mrougn wiucii ...o c..u " the royal harem can peep down and watch tlla dancers wtyle they listen to the strains 01 tne nana. Another official palace Is that of Raa- el-Teen at Alexandria. This lies right on tha h wKh a beautlful outlook oVer r: the Mediterranean a. His favorite resi dence near Alexandria Is at Montaxa. which Ithin a mile of Aboukir bay. made fa mous by Nelson's victory over the French lMW, UK'l "' ntUr r.uiBio uau rAi'Inlmcd from tn desert only ... ... ...... un,-. Tl.(. UHur hmu f.,r-. f a few years since. quick growing trees and parks which have , . . . ,., p,.,a ti,. been stocked with game from Euroe. 1 ne hag a th- and -he starts out from there with Bedouin rtders U( make ,ong excuralons Into the tmj khedlve.. yaoht u often seen there at de8t.rt Xhe place ne. right on the sea and ani.hor- JUa r'oya, nlKhne., has a turbine yacht w(l,cn , sal(1 lo be one of the finest on the Mediterranean, 't was originally a two- fuIleied paddle steamer of about eleven jjiiola, built forty or more years ao. This waa B'ent dba to Glasgow and rearranged throughout. The ship haa now Parson tur- .,rani..n and thr-fYurtha knots for a long distance. The yacht Is beautifully furnished In European style, and Its ap- poinlmenU are those of a millionaire. H Itlt-h Ituler. As to the wealth of the khedlve, he has, 1 doubt not. millions and to spare. He Is a money maker aa well as a money saver, and the English government allows him out of the revenues of the country IjOO.OUO a year. He has single estates which will, 1 venture, approximate a million dollars each In actual value, and stocks and bonds many of the best institutions of Egypt. H wm apartment house. In Cairo, cotton plantations In the delta and much land which would sell ut auction for from fcjoo to $1,000 per acre. His highness has good business Judg ment, and everything he touches seems to turn into money. Ills subjects often crit icise the simplicity of his living, and say it would Jie better for the country If he spent, as his old grandfather Ismail did. I'm of Ihouvamls of dollars a month on entertain- menu of one kind or other. l. not polite to ask a Mohammedan as to ,,, of nd faniflyi amJ p,aclkally nothing I. known of what goes on In the ..... . , ... , . .. . .... royul 1"l,em' The khedlve a children con- l"t of four girls and a boy, the latter being the heir to the throne. In addition 1 these he ha. a brother, the Prince Mo- hammed All; two uncles and an aunt, all ot whom ,. lrmnent feature, of this city , l.u,, .ivavu- .ol.i.vri.ii -.alio. HUM. O. CAKl'tMUC ii Ml 1 1 (! ' f