A. Y M. t ' V HIGH RENTS IN CITY. Thay Have Caused a Large Migra tion to the Suburbs. WaihlaBton la No Longer a Excep tion to the General Rale muA i the Commuter Hub Com to Slur. Special Washington Letter. T111S is the tory of the commuters aud their advantages. It alto tells of their disadvantages. Every city of considerable siz has itscoinmuters, and the national capital has only recently grown to that size. Of course, even small cities have a per centage of commuters, but they only attain respectability in numbers when the city grows abnormally. Some reader have, never heard of commuters, nor even seen any of them. They must be informed that com muters aro men uud women who work in cities, no matter at what occupa tions, while they dwell in suburban vil lages or away out iu the country. Henry George, or some philosopher like him, would here stop to reel oil an argument about the wickedness and wrong-doing of those who own prop erty to the exclusion of others; but that has nothing to do with this story. It may be wrong for certain individ uals to own thousands of acres of graz ing ground for their countless cattl; and it may be wrong for certain men to own a mujor portion of the earth in which gold is deposited. It may be wrong for William A. Clark to own the greatest deposit of copper on the face of the earth; and it may be wrong for a few individuals- to own the great coal ilelds- of this continent. But the right of it and the wrong of itmust be argued out by philosophers, scientists', politi cians or political economists. Bents in cities are very high because the limited amount of land used for busiuess purposes is very valuable. The ground is1 of greater value than the edifice erected upon it. Therefore, the ground used for restidencesissofar beyond the reach of ordinary, wage earners that they can never think of owning city homes; and a very large number of them cannot even earn enough to enuble them to afford to pay house rent or room rent. These people become the commuters of the cities. They get thut peculiar name be cause of the fact that the railroad com panies carry them from their suburban homes to their work in the city every morning and back again every night f ora comparatively small charge. That is, as compared with the regular rates for passengers. They buy monthly or quarterly communtatlon tickets, and it is on account of this that they are called commuters. The strangest thing about com muters of the national capital is that they can rent houses in Baltimore at such a low rate, as compared with rates here, tliat they can afford to pay their communtatlon rates and yet save money. Baltimore is 40 miles distant from Washington, but it only takes about three-quarters of an hour to make the trip. Government clerks here in great numbers rent homes in Baltimore, although they do their work in this city. Th oflices here open at A COMFORTABLE HALF HOUR. nine o'clock every morning, and close at four o'clock every afternoon. The commuters read their morning papers while coming to their oflices, and read their evening papers while returning to their Baltimore homes. These commuters are not known in Washington outside of their offices. They are well known in Baltimore, where their families enter upon all so cial functions, including the church services of all kinds. Thcir.nnmcs are mentionefin the Baltimore newspa pers, but they are never mentioned here. Only a few years ago a govern mentclerk was1 shadowed by Baltimore detectives for several weeks, because they suspected him of being a burglar. He chose to httTe it understood thathe was a man of means, that he did not have to work, and his liberal expendi tures of money excited suspicion in many minds. The detectives were dis gusted, after all of their sleuthing, when they found that he was a govern ment clerk who earned a good salary in the national capital, while he resid ed in Baltimore and appeared every evening at some function, and always ft gentleman of leisure. The electric line to Mount Vernon, the home of Washington living and the tomb of Washington dead, hasinduoed several hundred people to buy small acreages along the llneand build there on homes for themselve. The distance to Mount Vernon is only 14 miles, and the car line is well equipped, so that it is almost as easy to live on the Vir ginia shores of tho Potomac as it is to dwell in the remote parts of this city, so far a9 time is concerned in going back and forth. Moreover, the ancient city of Alexandria is on the route, the cars passing through it, nndthere our commuters And it possible for them to mingle with the best society of the blue bloods of the first families of Virginia. Alexandria itself is becoming an at tractive suburb of this capital city. Several score of the best people in the government scrvicehnve rented houses NOT WORRIED ABOUT COAL FAMINE. there, and some have undertaken to build homes there for themselves, on the installment plan. Alexandria, al beit nn ancient city, has fallen into business decay ever since the great shot and shell discussion between the sec tions of our country. But of recent years it lias been growing gradually into modernized conditions. Every body feels and almost knows that in a short space of time, say ten years, it will become a part of the national cap ital, as it once was. The commuters of to-dny will be the fathers of resident families there in the next generation. Northeast of the city proper is a vil lage of 10,000 inhabitants, called Eck ington; und it is subdivided so that a portion of it is called Brookland. This populous suburb is now builded up to the city limits, so that only old inhab itants know it is a suburb which has grafted itself onto the boundary line. Eckington wa until recently the un divided property left by Chief Justice Salmon 1 Chase, to his brilliant and beautiful daughter, Kate. J,ust a f ew years before her death she sold it, and it was converted into building lots by enterprising real estate dealers. It is a beautiful place, and it is the product of commuters. Eckington has a history, although there is nothing left of the old coun try place which is visible to mortal eyes. Many wonderful political deals were there arranged. The most no table occurrence of all was in January, 1877, when Kate Chase entertained Sen ator Conkling so charmingly and en chantingly that she kept him away from the capitol while the electoral commission bill wus being enacted in to law. If Conkling had been on duty he would have defeated that bill. But Kate Chase kept him away, the bill was enacted, and llajes became presi dent. Col. Andrew Geddes, chief clerk of the department of agriculture, lives at Kensington, a suburb 15 miles to the north webt of the city proper. He says: "We have as pretty a little place nsany of those which have been built up around Chicago by its commuters, al though it is not yet so large as some of them. 1 can take an electric car at eight o'clock every morning, open my morning paper and read it all the way to the city, arriving at the department at half-past eight o'clock, which is half an hour before the department work begins. Quite a number of Wash ington business men, as well as govern ment clerks, live there, and we are all proud of our country homes." Arlington National cemetery is on the heights across the Potomac river, and the old Lee mansion is visible from every part of tho city. West of Ar lington is Fort Myer, nn army post of the regular army. Between the fort and the aqueduct bridge, a distance of three miles, the entire hill'country is divided into lots and called Fort Myer Heights. Here the commuters ure building homes by the score. Then there is u splendid new electric line running through Georgetown, past President Cleveland's former country home, and far out to Ilock ville, Md., where an excellent seminary is located. This is a line ride, with the homes of the wealthy all along the route. John It. McLean, of Ohio, owns a baronial estate here, of which any of the noblemen of the old world might be proud. And, best of all, these commuters of ours live where there is plenty of tim ber land, and they are buying cord wood for from $3 to $5 a cord, and they are not worried about the coal famine. Under the circumstances the commu ters are to be envied. SMITH D. FRT. THE ERA OF MISSIONS. It Was a Golden Age for the Fa thers of the Church. Jeanlta and Kraaolacaaa Krectcd Most of th Karlr Snettmrit la California, Arlaona and Texas, 8peclal Los Angeles (Cal.) Letter. IT is hard to describe the sensations with which one approaches the re mains in which all thut was best and most interior in a past civilization ultimated itself and from which the soul has long been withdrawn. The history of the church fathcrsin the far west is that of human kind in general. Ambition for wealth and distinction traveled hand in hand with religious fervor, the latter embodying itself in material shapes wonderfully beauti ful and inposing, when one takes into consideration the workmen em ployed, prieste ull unused to m a mm 1 labor and indolent, ignorant Indian converts, with whom superstition must be employed as a lash to quicken their spiritual nrdor sufficiently to in duce them to labor. All that wus best in that nearly vanished civilization was represented iu its church edillces, many of which have entirely disap peared and neurly all are in a condi tion of picturesque ruin. As one rev erently approaches the altar in some of the better preserved missions and feels the spirit of the place stealing into and around him, it is hard to con ceive of the vandalism which more swiftly than time and the elements is despoiling all that it left to mark the labors of love und devotion surround ing him. llelic-seekers gain little for themselves and lose much to the world by their thoughtless defacement of what they must be unable to appreci ate. Perhaps that of Juan de Capistrano is as picturesque us any of the dead missions. One might spend days gaz ing down it long corridors, repco pling them, in imagination, with those who traversed their shaded lengths in the past. Some of the fres coes remain in strangely beautiful coloring, which defies sun and rain, MISSION CHURCH AT PASO and the compounding and application of the pigments of which are forgot ten processes. Hardly anything remains of the San Diego mission except the beautiful date palms near, planted by Father Jenipero and his followers. These were the first introduced into this country and are said to be over 300 years old. At intervals all along the Pacific coast, are missions in every stage of decaj That in Los Angeles, opposite the plaza, is still in use. The San Gabriel mission, especially noted for its bells, is in a fair state oi preser vation and the bestowal of "two bits" sufficiently warms the heart of its old Mexican guardian to induce her to show its interior to the best advan tage. The appearance of San Luis Bey mission is very well known, it having been reproduced in facsimile in sev eral places. San Francisco possesses one of grcnt interest, but the best pre served and most noted is located at Santa Barbara, Cal. It is in excellent condition and constant use, being the home of monks, whose hospitality and ready kindness in conducting visitors through the building are appreciated by the traveling public. One may here purchase rosaries and other souvenirs manufactured by the fathers them selves. Fnther Junipero Serra found ed this mission in 1782 or 178C (the dates are variously given), but the present building was not erected until 1815-20. This bhould not in any way be confounded with the mission Santa Barbara de Altar at Sonora, Mexico, which is practically destroyed, itb site being marked by stutely palms. The Jesuits founded the latter in 1C87. It was 300 feet long and built of adobe. It was established by Father Kino and its thick walls enclosed a presidio, cemetery und sleeping quarters for Christians and soldiers when the lat ter were warring with hostile Indians. After the Jesuits were expelled Fran ciscans' served the people, but mis fortunes rapidly followed each other and the place was finally considered hoodooed and abandoned. Many romantic storiesareconnected with the mission at Altni, which ore sometimes erroneously supposed to pertain to that at Scnta Barbara, Cal. Purlsslmn, mirsion, at Lompno, which li dated December 8, 1787, three year after his death, is said to be one of the 11 founded by father Junipero Sevra. In 1811 it was- nearly destroyed by an earthquake. The Indians were super stitious and it was found neceasary to rebuild it across the river, whose abundant water supply had at first aU traded over 3,000 settlers- to the place. The old building inclosed a space of 400 feet square. The new one wa much smaller, and its settlement never num bered over 1,500 people. Its 200 feet of wide veranda still bears evldenco of carving and other ornamentation. Its furniture was long since removed, and reports of buried treasure have caused excavations 20 feet deep to bo made within tho walls, to no purpose. The recent earthquake has loosened the old MISSION SAN XAV1ER. TUCSON. rafters and shaken the adobe walls, thus hastening the desolating work of time. At Juarez (Paso del Norte), over the Mexican line from El Paso, Tex., is an interesting old mission, in nn intercst ingstnteof preservation, being still tho resort of many worshipers. The altar, confessional, pictures and statunry be long to a time and nation not ourown, but are interesting in the extreme. Small, shiny, little Mexican boys may always be seen outside tho doorway with bits of dried leaves, said to bo blessed and to insure great ndvnntngcs to the purchaser. All through New Mexico and Arlzonn the remains' of old missions appear. That of San Xnvier del Bae ("Bae" be ing an Indian word for house), situated about nine miles southwest of Tucson, presents many attractive features. The architectural lines are very beau- DEL NORTE, MEXICO. ti, and in its partial restoration great care has been taken to preserve them, One distinguishing characteristic of this building is that the walls are of brick, rather than of adobe, but lurgcly resembling the latter in size. These bricks nre said to have been brought from Spain and transported with great labor to this point. The edifice has re cently been plastered, except the tower at the right in the Illustration, which has been left unprotected, in order to show the original material. The four saints in the niches on the exterior at the sides of the entrance, nre carved in stone, life bi.e. There are many fig ures of wood and wax in the interior. The Blessed Virgin is resplendant in a milled silken robe, while tarleton of many colors adorns some of her com panions. Poor St. Patrick, minus one wooden finger, which erstwhile pointed heavenward, has to content himself with but one garment, a skirt extend ing from the waistline abouthnlf way to the ground, this bingular, abbrevi ated protection being of thin white muslin trimmed with crocheted lace. The scene is somewhat amusing when, on his anniversary, the children of the Indian school march1 to a neighboring hill and sing, "All hail to St. Patrick," their brown fncesdlffering in color and expression from those with which we usually associate this celebration. Sis ters conduct the school in the right wing. On entering the church, a damp, earthy smell ubsails the nostrils and one is scarcely able to see in the dim light, which only enters through openings in the dome. After a few sec onds, the outlines of the carved altar become visible and the designs on the walls, some of which nre of a sort of gilding, the composition of which be longs to the lost arts. Father Kino established a mission here in 1700 or 1731 authorities differ. It i general ly agreed that the present building was begun in 1783. Apaches and other vvnr like tribes gren.tly retarded the work. EDWARD JULIAN. Mamma'a Great 1'leaanrr. "There is really no iue iu tulking to you, Minnie." "Oh, don't say that, mamma. Now, you know you like to hear yourself talk." Yonkers Statesman. THE NEGLECTED H0O. Hmny Otherwise Ilnma Varment Vlalt the llamble rork with ! Bkntacfal Traalmeatt, Pcrhnns in the whole rnnir nt farta life no bettor or worse example' of "let well enough nlonc" can be fotisri than in the case of tho poor, negleettf pig. As vre all know, this animal wW live, and to a certain extent, thrive n Jcr tho most adverse conditions. There are always n multitude f things to bo looked after on n farm; lomo of them muBt bo looked after thoroughly or they will bo complete losses; others can bo somewhat ne glected and still counted on yielding i fair return. Tho hog, of nil farm inlmalB, of nil farm work, is the most accommodating, the most patient ol leglect, hence the hog is the most ne glected. He may be putln n pen scarce largo enough for him to turn about n. bo mode to plow his way In half his depth of mud and filth, be without belter from tho rnln ami without strnvv for bedding, and yet ho will ?row and add his full share to tho arm products. As n pig clean, keen and healthy he is put into his narrow luartcrs, perhaps into four or live Inches of oozy mud as left by his prc lecessor, and from that on to tho time when he, too, is ready for the pork barrel there is but ono thought re rnrding him to feed him to his full est capacity. The farmer Is not so nuch to blame as might appear at first thought, lie is very busy, the pig Is very accommodating, tho rcstiUti in iny case fairly sure. True, a few hours' work would mean a good pen, with sufficient shelter, nnd clean ground and straw for bedding; but there nre fields to be mnfle ready, Joeds to be planted, crops to bo looked lfter, nil impatient of delny, bo, as tho pig grows and grunts on contentedly, lie is passed over and tho other things Utendcd to. Now his pork mny look ill right, nnd sell for Just ns much au hough he hud been exposed to tho in iuence of pure nlr anil bunllght in stead of being shutuwoy from it by a )rpetuul incrustation of mud mm) 11th; but enlightened customers aro Jkely to have peculiar views of their Jwn on tho hubjeet. Frank Sweet, In Epltomist. WELL-FATTENED FOWLS. rhMr Flculi Nlioultl lie I't-rmralctl liy Fnt HiiIIkt Tli ii n Miirroiimloil ly l.uyrrn of Fat, To properly fatten a fowl is n, science. That fowl is not properly fattened which has n largo amount ot fat in layers under the akin nnd around the intestines. Around -tho intestines it may be, but tho flesh should be rather permeated by fat than surrounded by fat. Tho flesh should be evenly inflltrntcd by fat Fnt iiould not show through the skin, nor should there he any fnt under the skin to kIiovv, no matter how thin tho skin mny be. In Franco a wclMat tened bird Is one that huso good sup ply of flesh over the back. When that is-attained the buyers feel certain that the breast meat is in good condition,, ns fnt more readily accumulates on the back than on the brensit. To fat ten birds properly requires food rich in nitrogen as well ns carbo-hydrates, It also requires some attention .to breeding, as the quality to fatten prop erly must be inbred to a very con siderable extent. As yet we have done little along the line of determin ing what breeds fatten most perfectly.' Probably in each breed will be found Mrnins of fowls-that have the desired qualities-. Before long, experimenta tion will without doubt be made along this line. The result should grcntly Improve the quality of the fattened fowls we see in our markets. Farmora' IJeview. THE GIANT SPURRY. A IMnnl Tlml la Now llrliijr niyen n Trial on Hnnily Holla lit Kx- lterlmvnt HtittlniiM. We illustrate giant spurry, a plant that is being tried on some of our sandy soils. It is a low-growing an- THE C-IANT RPURRY. nual, forming a tangled muss. Under fair conditions it makes a good growth' on sandy laud, but is otherwise of Jit- toy iiiiui, out isotiierwtse of Jit ,lue. Its place in thp ugricul system of the country, U'et ,lo termlned. Farmers' He'Yiuw -v. tie value. tu nil h be tlet ( i AK JAf A W r, rioil