> / Mmmz * How. CHARLES L. SCOTT , of Blchmond , Va. , appointed Minister Resi dent and Consul General to Venezuela * , THE MURDERER. du Account of His Arrest and Trial in Hew Zealand Strong Circumstantial Eol- denee. San Francisco dispatch : Tho steamer City of Sydney , from Australia , arrived this morning with Sydney advices of May 21 , and Auckland , New Zealand , ol May .26. Auckland papers contain an. account of the arrest on May 25 ol Walter P. I/en- aor Maxwell alias Theodore Cecil Danguer , charged with having murdered Charles A. Preller at St. Louis , April 25. The arrest was mado by United States Consul Gamble , who received a telegram from the chief of police of St. Louis with instructions to that ffect. Two days later Consul Gamble re- ceived a telegram from the United States ( Secretary of state authorizing him to make the arrest. Two detectives boarded the -steamer at Tiritiri. The purser , in reply . to their questions , stated that there was a i ; man among the , steerage passengers bear- a ? Maxwell's description. He was summoned r- on deck. The first question asked him was ' whether ho was a doct'or. He promptly -denied this , saying he was a native of France and an officer in the French army. The detectives informed him that they had -a warrant for his arrest , and would have to take him into custody. Maxwell ap- .peared to be disconcerted , but recovered his composure while the officers were hand- cufling him , he coolly remarking that the whole matter was a mistake which would be quickly explained away. On Majr 5 he was taken into the police court , and the charges against him read. ! TLe crown solicitorappeared for theprose- cuciou , Messrs. Uapier &Burton for the de fense. The latter claimed that the court had no jurisdiction , and after some argu ment the case was remanded to the 7th , after which it was again remanded to the llth. On that day the case was brought up. Consul Gamble was the iirst witness called. He testified on behalf the prosecution as to various articles found in Maxwell's trunk , which among other things contained two embroidered handkerchiefs , on one "C. A. P. , " and a shirt with large spots of ilood on it. In reply to the question as to how articles not bearing the initials of his name came into his possession , Maxwell - aid they had been given him at San Fran cisco by a man named Robinson. Detective Twokoy , one of the two who had arrested him on the steamer , testified to finding the following articles in Maxwell's -gripsack : Thirty-four cuffs and two hand kerchiefs , all marked "C. A. P. ; " memor andum bopkj marked "Danguer ; " a pocket tnedjcal dictionary , in which was written AV.P. LennoxMoxwellM.D.F. A. R C. S. , uud a dressing case marked A. P. Lennox Maxwell. These articles Maxwell said he bought from the same man ( Robinson ) in San Francisco. The counsel for the de fense at this point of the proceedings again -contended that the court had no jurisdic tion in the matter , and asked for the dis- auissul of the case. It was then remanded to May IGth , on that day to the 23d , and again on that day to the 30th. Judge Smith , who is hearing the case , stated that he would remand eight days at a time until officers from St. Louis' arrived. A. GREAT DAT Z2V XEW YORK. The Occasion Using tho Arrival of the Mag nificent Offering from. France. The day broke auspiciously for the for mal welcome to Bartholdi's great statue of liberty at Now York. The sky was cloud less and the weather cool. Along the lower -river fronts and the battery great crowds fathered early in the day. As the morning wore on the multitude increased. Over the water all sorts of gaily-decked crafts sped : lrither and thither. They swarmed with human life , and many carried small bands of music. Tall buildings in the neighbor- hood of Bowling Green displayed the stars and stripes. Here and there might also be -seen the national colors of France. The scene in the harbor was one of the liveliest description. Nearly every vessel , small and large , waved the tri-color and the stars andstripes , and all were dressed up -BO as to speak for the occasion. When the the vessels which were to escort the Isereto Bedloe's island arrived in the lowerbay the water was swarming with crafts as far as the eye could reach. Soon volumes of smoke went belching forth from the funnels of the Isere , her propellorbegan to revolve , and she headed in the direction of Bedloe's Island. The French man-of-war headed the procession. Soon her gunners opened a salute' of honor , firing twenty-one guns in the short space of sixty-one seconds. Hardly had the smoke cleared away from her deck when the United States man-of- war Omaha replied with a broadside. Then the Alliance and the Powhattan fired their guns. The guns gf Fort Wadsworth thundered out a salute as the naval pro cession passed. One hundred steamers and jratchs with flying flags and steamers crowded with people followed the Isere , the officers of which stood on the quarter deck bowing to the salutes which they heard on every side. All the way up the harbor till the head of the procession reached reached Bedloe's Island the shores of New Jersey and Long Island resounded with the crash of guns. When the anchor of the Isere was lowered there was more firing of cannon and blowing of whistles and salutes of people. Bedloe's Island was crowded with spectators. After a parting cheer to the officers , the Isere proceeded on her way to the battery , and the party went ashore. The boat bearing the members of the American committee and their guests , the officers of the French navy , then landed at the battery. The mayor , aldermen , General Shaller and staff of police commiseioners and other civil dignitaries were in waiting , and as Admiral Lacombe stepped on theahore the mayor grasped him warmly "by the hand. It was nearly three when , the procession moved to the city , where the guests were 'P vena .banquet , and. af towards speeches made by Mayor Grace , President Sangor . and Frederick Condort. " " ' . t C ' v. . . _ _ _ _ COLLIER ! EXPLOSION. Onei JQoBdred. Xlves I.ostin H E Coal Mine. A terrible explosion caused by fire damp , occurred at Clifton Hall colliery. Three hun dred and fifty men were at work at the time , of whom one hundred and twenty were res cued , and the remainder arc entombed , and it is feared all lost. The shaft is surrounded by .friends and relatives of the miners im ploring God to save them. The suspense is heart rendering. Cajrcs filled by explorlne parties stuck in descending the abaft and were delayed for two hours. They have not yet succeeded In reaching the imprisoned men. The miners who were rescued say that at the time of the explosion a rush was made for the bottom of the main shall , they barely getting there with their lives. They are entirely ignorant of the fate of those left behind. LATEST. The exploring parties who de scended the Clifton hull colliery for tLc pur pose of rescuing , if possible , the survivors of the explosion , met volumes of # as which drove them b.tck to tbc mouth of the mine. The work of rescuing the entombed miners is now at a complete standstill. It is now known that one hundred persons were killed. A. Fearful Stovm in Northern Nebraska. Specials to the Sioux City Journal from northern Nebraska indicate that the storm of Sunday night was the most severe ever expe rienced In that section since its settlement , tho rain foiling in torrents and the gale beingr Blmply terrific. At Hartington quite a num ber of bouses and barns were blown down and a great deal of damage done , there being scarcely a house in the town but what Dears Borne trace of the storm. Three miles north of the town the roof of tho Paragon flouring mill was blown off and scattered about over the country. No lives have been reported lost. Two miles west of Co'erldgo a new set tler named Loener , whose honso and barn had out recently been completed. suCcred tho lose of two children , with his wife and remaining child not expected to recover and himself bo- ing badly injured in the spine. The town of Coleridge suffered the most , some of the streets being fairly blocked with wreckage. Tho town of Wayne. Wakefleld and Concord Buffered but slight damage , a few houses be ing unroofed. Dashed to Pieces from a Ualloon. A most frightful accident happened at th.9 tarcus grounds at Charleston , West Va. , jjnst prior to the opening of the perform ance of Richards & , Leon's circus. Among the other outdoor attractions was a bal loon ascension , and just as the ropes Tiold- ing the balloon were cast off , an accident occurred by the overturning of the hot air stove used in inflating the balloon , causing it to catch fire. The burning balloon shot up in the air at a very rapid rate withWm. Patterson , the aeronaut , in the basket. When but a short distance the crowd yelled for him to jump , but he did not heed the warning , and after going up several hundred feet the balloon collapsed and Patterson fell to the earth and was crushed into a lifeless humanity. Patterson was twenty-two years old and resided in Wells- villc , Ohio , wherd he leaves a wife and fam ily. It was his 'first ascension. The bal loon was totally consumed by fire. Waging War on Polygamy. Salt Lake dispatch : Andrew Smith , on * af the oldest members of the police force , was arrested to-day charged with polyg amy. He was placed under bonds and his wives and children held as witnesses in tho case. Several members of the police force are polygamists , and it is said will be prosecuted. The Gen tiles regard the arrest of the police as a retaliation on the latter for raids made on houses of prostitution , the inmates of which are frequently ar rested and fined from 5-10 to § 100 each. It is said the district attorney has the names of over 400 poly.iamists , with wit nesses in most cases , information being fur nished him largely through anonymous let ters believed to have been "written by dis- contcd Mormons. A corps of depu ties is busy serving subpomas of wit- nerses to appear before the grand jury nexj Monday. Agnosticism. A correspondentwrites entreating us to conceal his name , but to let him know " what under the sun" the "agnosticism" and the "agnostics , " so often mentioned in the debates of the Pan-Presbyterian Council in Philadelphia , really may be. Our correspondent need not be ashamed of his query. Prof. Huxley claims to have been the first to apply these terms , formerly used to designate a branch of the JDonatists of early times , to the doc trines and the "doctrinaires" now BO designated. Agnostics are persons who refuse either to affirm , or deny , or accept upon authority the doctrine of the exist ence of a God , the immortality of the soul , and , in general , anything in the ology , psychology or metaphysics the ex istence of which cannot be scientifically proved or disproved. They are literally "know-nothings" in regard to such mat ters , and , since theywill neither affirm nor deny , they are , or should be , indiffer ent to them. In practice , however , these anti-believers and anti-infidels aro apt to be as hot as if they were baptized Chris tians or rank heathen. [ Agnosticism and agnostic are defined substantially as above in the supplement to the latest edition of "Webster's Die' tionary. ] New York World. THE MARKETS. OMAHA. WHEAT No.3 71 © . BAJUXY No.S 48 © 49 HTE No. 2 - . . 50 @ 51 COUN No.2 mixed 81H < % 344 OATS-NO. 2 2Gj ® 27 BUTTER Fancy creamery. . . . 18 @ 20 BUTTER Choice dairy - . 10 © 12 BUTTER Best country S & 10 EGGS Fresh - 10 © 10J.J ONIONS Perbbl . 3 50 & 3 75 CmcKENS Per doz. . alive. . . . 350 @ 375 CHICKENS Dressed , per lb. . . . 12 & 13 LEMONS Choice 4 50 © 475 BANANAS Choice 275 © 350 ORANGES Mesina 325 ® 350 POTATOES Per bushel CO © 70 POTATOES Now 200 @ 225 SEEDS Timothy 210 & 220 SEEDS Blue Grass 1 33 0 1 40 HAV Baled , per ton 050 © 700 ILvr In bulk 050 © 7 50 NEW YOBS. WHEAT No. S red 103 @ 104 WHEAT Ungraded red 90 & 1 OS CORN No.2. " 55J © 56 OATS Mixed western . . 39 © 40 PORK 1125 © J1.76 LAKD 670 © T CHICAGO. FLOTJJI Choice "Winter 4 75 © 5 FfcoUK Spring extra 3 75 © 4 "WHEAT Per bushel 89 @ CORN Per bushel 46&Q OATS Per bushel 35 @ PORK. , 10 30 © 10 LARD C 62H © 6 HOGS Packing and shipping. 4 00 © 4 CATTLB Stockors 3 40 © 5 SJHEET Medium to good. . ' . . . . 2 60 © 3 ST. LOUIS. WJIEATNO. . 2 red 1 013 © 1 CORN JPer bushel 4554 © OATS Per bushel 30 © CATTLE Stockers 3 50 @ 4 SHEEP Western 250 © 4 HOGS Packers 350 © 4 KANSAS CrnC. "WHEAT Per bushel . SOJ4 © CORN Per bushel 39 © OATS Per bushel 30 @ CATTLE Exports. f > 15 0 5 35 HOGS 370 @ 375 SHEEP Common to good 3 00 , Q 315 - „ ' "f- % f"- ' > trV - -4 * - V ; ' > ' ' ; ' ' V * : .7. . ' * ' ; > ' . ; ' " - - . : > FAEMANDGABUEN. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ t The Production of Supplies for the Family- Minor .Topics. Supplies for the Family. A generation , ago , says The Cliicago Times , nearly every farmer in the country endeavored to produce nearly every article of food that was required for his family and help. He purchased at the grocery little except tea , coffee , pepper , salt , and spices. He raised all the varieties of grain required to make bread , pastry , and puddings , took them to a custom mill , where they were converted into flour , meal , grits , hominy , bran , and shorts , which were carried home and consumed. The garden was mado to produce all the vegetables wanted for immediate use , and an abundance for perservation , Every family made its own pickles , preserves , and jellies. Butter and cheese were made in every farmer's house. With very rare exceptions families made their own soap , candles , and vinegar. All the meat consumed by the family was raised on the farm , cured in the house , and preserved in tho cellar or garret. In the fall or early part of tho winter" supply of smoked and dried meats was prepared sufficient to last a year. Every farm er raised fruit , a considerable portion of which was dried or preserved for use during the winter. The first ob ject of every farmer was to supply his family with food produced on tho place ho occupied. He was regarded as very unthrifty if he did not do this. During tho past few jears matters have changed greatly in this respect. Tn many purts of the country farmers are as dependent on the grocer and butcher for food as mechanics and traders in a large city are. They raise cattle , hogs , and sometimes sheep , but the practice is to sell them "on the hoof. ' ' They procure the meat they consume from the butcher , paying at least twice as much for it as they get for that they sell. Raising large fields of grain , they buy their flour , meal , and other breadstuffs. They are , if they have the means to do it , liberal , purchasers of dried , canned , and pre served fruits and pickles. Some buy the garden vegetables thev use , but the larger number go without them. Farmers who have good credit employ it for their disadvantage. They obtain most that they purchase on credit , fn the fall they dispose of nearly all tho grain and stock they have raised to obtain money to meet their obliga tions. They then commence to run up new bills for supplies for their families. A. farmer in Lee county , Illinois , in a communication to an eastern paper , shows the way in which families are suplied with food. He writes : "Sheep are very much neglected here , and with the present low prices are not likely to rise in favor. And yet I have found no stock more profitable they are so health } ' , so cheaply raised , such fertilezers of tho farm , and furnish such excellent food. The demand for mutton with our local butchers is in excess of the supply , and they have to send to Chicago for it , getting it here for 9 cents per pound , dressed. Wo also get our bacon from there at 14 cents , our potatoes from Michigan at 70 cents , and most of our apples from that state. Our flour is manufactured here from Dakota wheat at § 1.15 to S1.30 the fifty-pound sack , while bran is 90 cents per one hundred pounds. Farm houses'are no longer victualed as lor a siege , most of tho supplies being bought weekly in town , and smoke-houses are getting to be as rare as spinning-wheels , " A generation ago there was a great er necessity for producing all or near ly all the articles of food required for a family than there is at present. There was a poor market for many of the products of the farm. Especially was this the case with those that were heavy or bulky. The means of trans portation were very poor in most parts of the country. Farmers living near the ocean , a large lake , or a navigable river enjoyed great advantages over those living in the interior of the country. There was no way of trans porting heavy articles economically , except by boats. As farmers remote from water communication could not dispose of their products for cash , there was very little money in circula tion. Most of the local trade was car ried on withont the employment of money. Articles brought from a dis tance commanded a high price on ac count of the great cost of transporta tion. The farmer accordingly found it to his advantage to produce what was required to supply the wants of his family. If he desired to live well , and at the same time to live cheaply , he and his family raised a large num ber of articles of food , and took great pains , in preserving them for future use. The curing of meat , the drying of fruit , the making of pickles and pre serves received great attentionin every well-regulated farm-house. A farmer wasnotf dependent on tho grocer and butcher for food. Farmers of the present age are in a inuch better condition to purchase articles of food than were those who lived a generation ago. Railroads have produced a cash market for all their products in almost every town. It is no longer necessary to have a farm located near navigable water in order to have an accessible market for what is raised on a farm. Farmers now sell their products for cash , as manufacturers do. Money is in cir culation in every part of the country where crops , eggs , butter , cheese , wool , and "domesticated animals are produced. , . , It is policy „ for a . farmer to rs > highly beneficial to transpor tation companies , packers , and trad ers , but ruinous to farmers. A return , in a somewhat modified form , to the practices that prevailed before rail roads revolutionized farming .and trade , would result in great "benefit to farmers. Hlnor Topics. Radish tops chopod fine make ex cellent green matter to mix with tho soft food for the chicks. Young chicks should bo fed , for morning feed , for the first week , chop ped up hard boiled eggs. Soofc is a valuable fertilizer on farm , garden and flower bed , .and should never be allowed to go to waste. In tlio colder latitudes of Europe the Guinea fowl is very rare , and sel dom , if ever , seen in Sweden , Nor way or Northern Russia. Willows should never bo planted near underdrains , as their roots will invariably enter tho drains and in course of time choke them up. A rich sandy soil is best for beets. The long red'beet grows larger and makes the heaviest crops ; it is prefer red to Qthers for feeding cows and hogs. Sow grass seed over the thin places in.your lawns and rake it in , or better , throw an eight of an inch of line corn- pots over it and let the rain do the work. Potatoes should bo got out of tho pits or bins and exposed to the light for a while before being planted. The careful observance of this is of much importance. In weaning calves , the change from whole milk to skim milk should bo gradual to prevent danger of scours. It is also well to add cornmeal gradu ally to the skim milk. The manure from fowls is very val uable , but is topstrong to be used alone ; it should be collected with dry muck , plaster or road dust , then spread broadcast and harrowed in. The ground should be well prepar ed , plowed deep and thoroughly pul verized for raising sugar beets. The roots require a deep soil , and the por tion grown under ground contains the most saccharine matter. A hill of raspberry plants after be ing trimmed in the spring should have only three or four canes , about three and a-half feet high , and nearly on3 inch in diameter" the base , each cane bavins : a few side spurs about ten inches long. On good land , with tho same cul ture as corn , artichokes will produce from 300 to 500 bushels per acre. It is asserted that they yield more hog food than any other crop , and that forty hogs may bo kept on an acre of arti chokes without liny other food. To make a good water , air and rat proof floor lirst grade the floor and cover with a concrete of coarse gravel and hydraulic lime. Melt ashphalt and saturate the concrete with it , leaving a thin coat of hot asphalt on the sur face , then scatter hot sand over this and beat it firmly. It is of no use attempting to keep fowls unless they are well attended to. Many farmers who complain that their poultry is not paying them , should consider whether the } ' have given their fowls the same attention so generally bestowed upon horses and cattle , or swine. The statical account of the produc tion of wool throughout the civilized word shows that in 1830 it was 320- 000,000 pounds , in 1871 it was nearly 2,000,000,000 pounds , while in 1883 , in the United States alone , the production of wool was 320,000,000 pounds , or as much as was produced in the whole world in 1830. It is all very well to break the colt and exercise him gently when two years old , but it will be a great mis take to put him at hard work until two years later. Fast road service is more injurious than farm work. While the muscles and bones are yet tender injuries are easily incurred which no after care will remove. Nearly every spring on most farms , a portion of the farm horses that havo lain idle during the winter need to be rebroken. For the first few days only light work should bo given them , and great oare should be taken not to produce galls on the shoulders , which , once started , arc very hard to heal without stopping work altogether. Animals which have only that food which is given them should be fed three times a day. Regularity in feed ing them should be practiced also , as they are subject to disease as well as ourselves. The allowance of food for each meal should be the same each day , and only varied in oases where the condition of tho animal demands it Charcoal is valuable for many other purposes than that of fuel. Strewn over heaps of decomposed pelts or over dead animals it will prevent un pleasant odors. Foul water is purified by it , and if placed in shallow trays around apartments it will sweeten of fensive air. It absorbs and condenses gases so readily that one cubic inch of fresh charcoal will absorb nearly 100 inches of gaseous ammonia. While pasture should contain a va riety of grasses , meadows should not. Confine each meadow to but one grass. The various grasses do not ripen at the same time. This fact makes a variety in the pasture desirable , but there may be a succession throughout the season , but is just the very reason why there should not be a variety in the meadow , as when one grass is ready to be cut tho others will not be. Spending valuable time and labor in cultivating poor land is one of the most serious mistakes ever made by tillers of the soil. After preparing the soil and putting out the plants we must see that they are kept growing without hindrance of any. kind. All our small fruits , except the grape , do best in a comparatively cool , moist ' soil , and in a situation 'that is some what sheltered and not exposed to the full glare of the sun. Plants are hin- dered in their growth in various waj's as by weeds , drought , and the want of air at the roots. Allo.wing weeds to grow among our plants to rob them of food and moisture , is almost as unwise as cultivating poor soil. HAED FACTS. DIVORCE NEWS. . A rather depressed looking kind of a man , who was formerly one of the leading citizens of Austin , wont into the office of a young lawyer and said : "I live very unhappily with my wife , and I come to you for relief. " The young lawyer thought ho was going to get a big fee in a divorce suit , so he said , gleefully : "Yes , I think I can get you a divorce , which will mitigate your af fliction. " "I don't care to put you to all that trouble. Just lend mo a quarter to make mo forget my woes. " AMICABLY ADJUSTED. ' Do you mean to call mo a liar ? " isked one rival railroad man of anoth- 3r railroad man , during a dispute they had on business. "No , colonel , I don't moan to call rou a liar. Un the contrary , I say you are the only man in town who tells the truth all the time , but I'm Dftenng a reward of twenty-five dol lars and a chromo to any other man who says ho believes me when I say fou never lie , " was the response. ' Well , I'm glad you took it back , " replied the other party , as the tiger- li e look of ferocity faded out of his features , and he looked around for the nearest saloon. FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Gilhooly and Gus Do Smith were talking in an Austin restaurant. "How about the war in Europe ? " isked Gus. "The situation is very alarming , al though Just now everything is in statu 2 o , " replied Gilhooly. One of the most intelligent citizens nf Austin got up from an adjoining table , and approaching Gilhcoly , ask- 3d : "Would you be kind enough to toll me where that state is ? " "What state ? " 'Statu quo , I believe you called it. " "It is in foreign parts sir. " "Thanks. Much obliged. " A CONSIDERATE COLORED MAN. He tapped the egg gently with his knife , and it popped , and people all over the house began to examine the gas fixtures to see if the gas was pro perly turned off. "This egg doesn't seem to be quite fresh , " remarked Gilhooly , having opened the window. "I spected dat egg wasn't all right , " remarked the colored waiter. "Why then didn't you tell me so ? " exclaimed Gilhooly. "liekase , sah , I wasn't quite sure ob hit , and 1'se always willing to gib a gemmen de benefit ob de doubt. " "But you told me the egg was per fectly fresh ; that it was laid yester day. " 'I tole yer dat bekase I didn't wanter be too previous-like in spiling yer appetite. " IMPORTANT TO EX-OFFICE HOLDERS. A young man , named Folsom Bow ser , applied to a wealthy Austin stock man for a position on his stall' to go West and herd sheep at § 10 a month , but the stockman said he was not hir ing anybody to herd sheep. "Have you all the shephreds you re quire ? " asked Folsoni Bowser. "No , I am needing several , but I'm going to wait until the President has made his appointments. " " \Vhat has that got to do with herd ing sheep ? " "It has a great deal to do with it. As soon as Cleveland has made his ap pointments , I can have my pick of disappointed applicants who will be willing to hire for nothing but their grub , itist to get out into the coun try. " " "The sheep industry of western Tex as is suffering from the tardiness of the President. Texas Siftings. Short Talks with the Boys. "I am a farmer's son and am not satisfied with my surroundings. " This paragraph or a portion of it is certain to be found in four out of every five letters received from the country , and it is a matter which should be in vestigated. Our statesmen and jour nalist and philanthropists are continu ally praising agriculture as a vocation , and the idea that the farmer is inde pendent and happy prevails in every story of rural life. What has dissatisfied farmers' sons ? Why is it that so many of them want to leave the farm for any work which will bring them a living ? In most cases the trouble will be found with the farmer instead of his son. It is a curious position in which an old-fashioned farmer and his son are placed. The old man is content with some improvements' on the ideas of fifty years ago. He can't see why any one should want anything better than bare floors , Windsor chairs and cow hide boots. He would as soon go to meeting without a collar as with one. He "rayther likes" the music of an organ , but if he buys an organ he won't feel like building that addition to the barn. He can't really see how any one can sit down and getjnterested in books , and why Henry and William should want "real cloth" collars and cuffs is a deep conundrum. When 8 o'clock comes he gets reidy for bed , and can't see how the boys and girls can'abear" company who keep them up till until 10. The farm is conduct ed after the fashion of a quarter of the last century. The house may be painted once in five years , but the chances are that it is allowed to go ten. The barns have needed repairs for years past , but it's cheaper to lose a ton of hay by the leaks than to buy new shingles. The fences are rotting down , but next winter will be a good time to split rails. There are half a dozen panes of glass needed about the house , but if the broken lights were renewed they might be smashed again. The democrat wagon has been "about worn out" for the last five years , and that's the excuse for not having it painted. The harnesses will hardly hold to gether , but they must answer for an other year. The boys are held to "serve their time , " like so many slaves or convicts , and the amonnt of cash finding its way into their pockets yearly would not keep a bootblack in stock to do business. Is the picture overdrawn ? lean add - .1 I twentv per cent to the strength of * each assertion and then not exceed the truth. . , . . And now what is tho matter with farmers' boys ? They live in anew world tho father in an old one. No matter how little schooling they havo had , they aro better educated than ho is. Nc matter if tho father refuses to do more than subscribe to a weekly paper , his boys are fairly posted ou the daily happenings all over tho world. He wants to farm after old ideas they after new ones. Ho got along without knowing whether Eng land was east or west of tho United States without grammar , orthogra phy or being able to more than writo his name without collars or cuffs or neckties without books or papers or amusements , and he is quite certain that the boys can do tho same. The number of farmers' sons who aro leaving home , either with a half hearted consent , or running away , is greater than you dream of. They Hock to the towns and cities to learn trades ; to accept of menial positions ; to take any work which will pay their way and prevent the necessity of re turning to farm work. The farmer who realizes this must ask himself where the blame lies , and then seek a remedy. Is thero a rem edy ? Let us see. In the first place , farmers' aons aro overworked. There is no doabt that tho farmer is , too , but that doesn't alter the case. When you rout a boy of 14 , 1G or 18 out of bed at 4:30 or 5 o'clock in the morning , and work him. till 7 or half-past , you are making a white slave of him. You not only peril his health , but you deform his body. That's the cause of so many sons of farmers being lop-shouldered" , bow-backed or otherwise deformed , and tho origin can bo traced to over- exertion while growing. * Thero isn't a farm in this country on which the hours of labor couldn't be + shortened to ten hours without causing a loss of $25 per year. If ten hours is enough for a ditch-digger it is all that a farmer's son should be called upon to endure. If there are two hours be tween G o'clock and darkness on a summer's evening tho boy can take up a book or paper , or put it to good use in some other way. As it is now , ho knows ho is expected to slave from daylight till dark , and when night conies he is weary in body and aggra vated in spirit. And the remedy is not altogether in shortening the hours of work. Tho boys must have things to interest and amuse them. They want books , mag azines and newspapers. If there's a chance to fix. up a bowling alley let thu boys go ahead and make one. The game of bowls is a healthy exercise , and furnishes plenty of sport. If ono of the boys has a taste for music help him on with it. Let him have a fiddle , accordion , organ , or whatever instru ment he feels he can bring music out of. Both boys and girls should be en couraged to sing. To this end they If- should be encouraged to get up sing Ji ing classes , which might hieet around 5 ? from house to house. A young peo ' ! ' . ; ple's social club , to meet in tho same < * S manner , would prove very interesting. The farm can be made pleasantec than tho work-shop the farm-houso as full of comfort and happiness aa 1 any home in the city. When this takes place the farmer's son will not be the young man he is. He will bo jovial , content , and enthusiastic. He will be able to appear well in any so ciety , to converse with any o.ue on the topics of the day , and ho will have some future outside of the day in and day out toil which is crooking big spine and thickening up his brains M. Quad , in Detroit Free Press. Would Not Crowd Them. The other day , down in Desha coun ty , a little negro man with an "old time aspect was arraigned before a colored justice of the peace , having been charged with deadly assa'ult. The testimony was so direct that the justice was compelled to pronounce sentence. "Jedge , " said the little negro when the magistrate had concluded , "dis heah is awful. " -"Putty bad , sah. " "Hafter go ter dat jail fur six mont's ? " "Dat'swhutlsaid. " "W'y , judge , I'se been heah too laung ter be treated dat way. " "Yas , I knows yer's been heah too laung. Dat's de reason yer'd better bo tuck erway fur er while. " "Jedge , I doan like dis. " "Nor , sah , I persumes not" "I doan' hab no fon'ness lur dat jail. " "Nor , sah. " "Da coops er pusson up an * doan * gin him ernuff tor eat" "Yas , sah. " "Jedge , I'd ruther gin yer ten dol lars den ter go dar. " "Whar's yer ten dollars ? " "Right heah. " "Wall , gin me de money. Dat jail's full , nohow. Doan b'lebe it's right ter crowd prisoners. " Arkan-iaw Traveler. Canoeing as an Exercise. Canoeing pronvses to be a favorite pastime this season among young men who are fond of athletic exercise. It is a capital form of recreation. Pad dling develops both sides of the body , strengthens the chest and hardens all the muscles. It is , too , a much more social manner of getting over the water than rowing. You face tho prow , see the view ahead instead of behind you , and have none of that machine-like forward-and-back mo tion which rowing involves. Philadel phia bulletin. Horse-Flesh in Butchers' Stalls. A local government inquiry was held recently in Manchester , Eng. , to in quire among other things Into an ap plication of the corporation to impose regulations on the sale of horse-llesh. Evidence was given that horse flesh was largely sold in the poorer neighborhoods of the city , dressed like beef , cut up into steaks , and sold at a pence per pound. Much of the horse flesh sold was unsound. The corpora tion , who were supported by the Butchers' Asaociation , desired to im pose regulations on the sale. -fe