nrn omaiia bund ay bkk: xovkmkeu 1, I9t4. 5 n l Y How the Big Farms and Ranches of Chile Are Managed a . f" -ysy 1 I-v. 1 o- t v fiMjryMsfkl kid 3 k . ... hjiiii iixr.. - l- . h I -t 5 rot 11k thou tt rru iin1 tloltrln. which make the peon njmont dttt lve. Th hutii of the poon (ire of th mi tat doiirrtptlon. They r llom more than fifteen fret cjur. Thejr have walls of iitlrki covered with mud and tho roofa are of thatch or rude tile. The hnta are aeldom lighted except from the front, and aotne have no llittit hut from the door. The around forma the floor, I and, in many raws, the bed of the fam ily, iloxea uaunlly taVe the place of chatra, and if there la a bed"tcad It con alsta of a ledre of atloki built up from the around. The bedntead may be aepa- rated from the other part of the room by a curtain. I would any. however, that tome of tho farmer are paying attention to the better housing of their workmen. (n the tanta Ine eetate they are building tenant houaea of concrete and on Borne othera of the hacienda they are putting up what are caMod model houaea. WorVera Are Contented. I am told that the !nn,lltnoa are con tented with their lot. They aeldom f la , .71 tl m Cowboys of atig ka-clenda. Copyright, 1914, by Frank O. Carpenter.) I .I A'' O.NCKPCION, Chile For the last week I have been trav eling here and there through the central valley of Chile. This extends from Santiago to VaJdivia. more than 600 miles south. It contains the Iargret and best estates In the republic, although there Is an estensivn wheat-growing re gion below it in which great forests arc r.ow being cut down anil the clearings turned Into farms. The central valley of Chile Is one of tho gardon spots of the tlohe. It will Blow anything if It can only hnve water. As one of tho haciendadon suid to me: "All you have to do !.s to rpit on tho ground and drop In a isced nnd, presto, tliero 13 a ticc." There is no part quite so fertile, as that, but trees do grow here three times as fast as In North America. , I have seen troves of eucalyptus that are 100 feet hlph and still only ten or fifteen years old. I have already de scribed my visit to Canta Ines, the fields of which ore wal'.cd with poplars us high rs a church steeple. There Are thousands of trees on that estate t liiijh ns any lu the eastern part of our Country and they have all been planted In the last twentj'-five years. lt Is thi same with all kinds of vegetation. In the irrigated sections peach trees bear at one and two years and grains and grasses, including alfalfa, are wonderfully lux uriant. This Is so notwithstanding some of the land has been under cultivation for many generations. The lands about SuntlHgo have been tilled for 300 years and today among them are numbered some of the fine farms of the world. Large Ranches Irritated. But before I describe the big haciendas let me tell you a little more about the region In which -they are seated. The central valley .Ja .a wide strip of low land ranging In width from fifteen to 100 miles, and about TOO miles long. It begins above Santiago and winds Its way south through about one-fourth of Chile. On the east of It are the snowy walla of the Andes, with here and there the mighty' cone of a dead volcano rising above the other peaks, and on the west are the lower mountains and hills of the coast range, their tops almost a desert, but their foothills covered with green. The average width of the valley, all told, is about thirty miles, and Its area la somewhere between those of West Vir ginia and Maryland. This country Is settled throughout It has many large towns along the state railroad, which runs through It from one end to the other, and the most of Its lands are di vided up into large estates. In the north these estates are alt un der Irrigation and It Is only In the far south that the rainfall Is sufficient to dispense with the artificial watering of the crops. -Much of the country Is slightly rolling. It Is cut by many creeks and little rivers which are fed by the Andean snows. Some of these streams carry down a great deal of silt, making fat the lands over which they go. Othera. such as the Blo-blo, are as clear as crys tal from one year's end to the other. Crops In Slcht Eyerr where. Riding southward through this coun try, the scenery Is far different from that of the richest parts of the union. There are crops in sight all the way, but the fields are divided by rows of tall poplars or eucalyptus or with walls of mud and stone rather than fences. It Is only along the railroad that there la any barbed wire. The chief buildings to be seen are the great rambling structures, the homes of the. haciendados and the mean mud-walled thatch-roofed huts of the laborers. There are no bams stand ing out on the fields, and no elevators at the stations for storing the grain. There are plenty of cattle and horses, but very few stables or outbuildings. The weather Is so mild that the stock graze out of doors all the year round, and this Is so all the way from Santiago to the Strait of Magellan. Therefore there are no haystacks or strawstacks Such grass and alfalfa as are cut are put up In bales and shipped to the cities or north to the nitrate desert, where they bring higher prices. The climate of tho central valley Is about the same am that of lower California, save that there is less rain, and In the upper part of It marly everything has to be Irrigated. At present there are something like 20.0ii0 acres now reached by artificial canals, and I am told that it Is possible to pet water upon as much more. The must of the non-Irrigated lands are In the south. I shall write more fully of them in the future. I'se Ox Teams. Oxen everywhere take the place of horses and mules. They are yoked to clumsy carts by wooden bars tied to their horns and- are driven with long goads with steel spikes in the ends. Nevertheless, the farming is well done, and on many estates It Is equal to that of the United States. Nearly everywhere the business is 'on s grand scale. In many parts of tho val ley lot acres Is little more than a gar , dea patch, and the irrigated farms ot ViOO and even 10.000 acres are common. There is one farm of 20,000 acres, and several which have 15.000 and more. There are some very large vineyards. The estate of Lo Uurmenta contains 2,M acres, and of these 300 are now bearing strike, and seem satisfied If they can get enough ti et end wear and plenty to drink. One of fhe great evils of the country Is alcoholism. Nearly every one of the lower classes Is addicted to It, and this Is so In both city and coun try. A census of saliions of Santiago was recently taken and It was found to have .KX places where llqunr suM. while Valparaiso was reported to have more eases of drunkenness than llsh cities of ten times Its slf.e. It Is this custom of drinking added to Insanitary conditions of llvlmr that la responsible for tho great mortality of Chile. Tim death rate Is enormous, and that among children Is so htxh that I fear to quote tho figures which havo been given. Iead babies are called lit tle angels and are supposed to go straight to Heaven, but no one supposes that this has anything to do with the deaths. It Is aald that M per cent of the children of Santiago die beifore they are 6 years of age, but I do not be lieve this to be true. There Is cno Institution In Chllo now that promisee to bring nbout a change In the conditions of the Inqullinoa. This is the army, and the law provides thnt every mnn In the country shall spend at lnet one year of his llfo In tho service. This year Is at about nineteen or twenty. All f the boys are drafted, and no matter whether they are of tho working class . .r net they have to spend this one year ns a soldier. This ng-brln(!s the young Inquillnos away from the farms. It teaches them what It Is tc have board floors to walk on and good beds to sleep In. They get a taste for the better food of the army and do not like to go back to their beans and toasted wheat that until then have formed a large part of their diet As a result, after leaving the army many go out to seek work otherwheres. You find them as laborers nbout the ports, as the employes on street car lines and othT railway construction and doing all sorts of common labor In the cities. Mor over, they are natural mechanics and they soon learn the various trades. It I somewhat owing to these chans.es that fl. modern labor element Is developing In Chile. There have re cently been seversl strikes on the state railways; tho hands upon the wharves have their unions and aro, I am told, growing very Independent These men In tho nltrnte ports struck tho other day because they were not allowed to use grappling hooks to handle the heavy bags. They had seen such hooka used for draKglng about cotton bales, and they found It easier to move the nitrate the same way. The hooks make holes In the Iirrs and for this reason the ex porters of tho nitrate object. A similar unrest among the laboring element Is going on all along the west coast of South America. Peru has been sending agitator to Chile, and Chile has sent labor delegations to discuss such matters In the cities of Peru. Moreover, some of tho politicians of the several re publics are catering to the laboring ele ment. and among the latter Is the former president of Peru. FRANK a CARPENTKR. A rack Ko.cien3aj3o grapes. It has cellars with ' a capacity of 500,000 gallons of wine, and it bottles and ships vast quantities every year. The Erraxurls vineyard, at the foot ot the Andes, puts up 6,000 bottles of wine a day In addition to th. t which It stores away In casks. It ships more than 100 000 bottlea of wine every month. There Is another vineyard that ships 400,000 gal lons a year. Ranches ITp-toSdate. One of the richest families of Chile la that of Augiistln Edwards, who Is now minister from here to the court' of St. James. He has one hacienda about twenty-five miles north of Valparaiso that supplies a part of that city with milk. He haa 800 milch cows and he breeds fine dairy stock. He Is also noted as a breeder of horses nofonly for racing, but for heavy draft. He has In his stables 76 Arabian mares, 80 Percherons and 110 Torkshlres. He has 10 Shorthorn ibulls, some of which were brought from Eng land. Another big dairy hacienda, which also supplies Valparaiso, is that of Don Tomaa Eastman. On that estate there are several thousand cattle, Including t000 milch cows. On the Denoao dairy farm there are still more. The latter hacienda, has the biggest silo In the world and one of the queerest. It is nothing more than a great ditch 350 feet long, 30 feet wide and IS feet in depth This Is filled with red clover which' haa been trodden to pieces by driving horses over it and then laying.lt between .layers of straw. The Denoao farm runs its 'ma chinery by an electrlo plant operated by falls two mile away. The hacienda has electrlo lights and the cows are milked under the rays of Incandescent burners. The nursery at Santa, Inea Is the largest In Chile. It haa an electrlo plant run by the falls of a branch of the Mapocha river. This is now furnishing a 130-horse power, which Is used In the factories and other establishments connected with tho property. Everything excepting the farming and cultivating Is done by elea tricity, and this Includes the thrashing of all kinds' of grain, the sawing of lum ber, the lighting the owner's home and the moving of the machines of a large manufacturing pltut. On that estate there are twelve miles of railroads, and there Is one peach orchard In bearing that eon tains 45,000 trees, and the receipts must equal, I 'should say, the salary of our president Nevertheless it was twelve years before Santa Ines began to pay, and during that time it cost Don Salvador Izquterdo 8., who owns It, an outlay of 3O0,O0O. Another Valnabln Property. , During my last visit to Chile I visited the estate of Macul, which belongs to the Courinos, the descendants of a woman who was long said to be the richest widow of the world. The estate cost more than 8000,000 when it . was bought by Don Couslno. It Is now valued at over 81,000.000. It consists of about .000 acres ot irrigated land, and It haa a large number of fine blooded horses and 200 cattle bred from the beat Durham stock. Its vineyards have hundreds of thousands of vines, and they produce millions of bottles of wine every year. The water rents there are about aa much as the salary of a United Statea senator, and the Irrigation ditches are marked out by long lines of .poplars. The park of Macul is one of the finest in Chile. Another large estate la that of Agulla, belonging to Don Santiago de Toro, which contains 11,000 acres. It la not far from Santiago, and It took me about two hours on the train to go there. At the tune of my visit1 the hacienda had over 2,000 cattle and 300 horses, the most of which were used for breeding alone, and for the family. and gueata. All of the farm work was done by oxen. Of the cattle SCO were dairy cows, which brought In about $6,000 worth of milk and $8,000 worth of butter year. The Oulla hacienda has many long, low one-story buildings running round patios and gardens. These form the home ot the owner. . They have roofs ot red tile and their floors are of brick. They have wide porches and their windows look out on the gardens. They are situated in a grove of trees whloh are at least idb feet high, and among these are wonderful palms. When I visited It the house con tained about two score of guests, in ad dition to the thirty children and grand children of the family of Its owner. Each of these children had its own pony. Mre I.Ike Millionaire. Others ot the haciendas here have beautiful buildings or modern construc tion, with great parks, with miles ot shady drives, and all of the other sur roundings of a millionaire's home Ir. the states. Many of them are using modern machinery, and some are new, experi menting with fertilisers and Intensive cultivation. Everywhere I go I see Amer- can plows, 'and there r.re three or four Importing houses in Chile who have their traveling salesmen going over the coun try drumming each hacienda as to the Introduction of American harvesters, binders and windmills. One of the Interesting features of farm ing In Chile has to do with the labor. This Is made up almost altogether of a class know as Inqutllnos, or the class of which travelers sometimes speak as the rotos. This Is wrong. The word roto Is a con temptuous word, meaning torn or ragged, or, as It might be called, ragamuffin. The proper term is lnqutllno or farmer. He is a respectable person and be may or may not be ragged. These .people are the descendants of the Indians and be Immigrants from the northern provinces of Spain. They are the laboring clas of the country, and they correspond to the peons of Peru, although ' they are far above them In character and e'fldency. They are excellent workmen, and they can learn almost anything that requires handlness and craft. They are very proud and will "not tolerate abuse or Insult. You might kick a Peruvlan'a peon and he would sink humbly. The Bolivian Indian is afraid that his master Is angry If he Is not punished now and then, but the lnqulllno would be likely to resent sweh treatment and leave. Indeed, I dcubt tf It would be at all safe for his master to lay his hands on him. On the haciendas where I have been th-re seems to me a good spirit existing betwen the haclendado and the laborers. The latter are deferen tial and the owners sustain a sort ot patriarchal relation toward them. Tney are Interested In treating them well, for If they do not the inquilno will leave, and It-Is upon his labor that the man must depend for the work upon tho estate. Like Old Kendal Time. The conditions of employment are somewhat like that of the old feudal times. The haclendado owns the land, and he lets each of the workmen have a small tract to cultivate and also pas turage for his stock If he has any. This tract may consist of two, three, four, five or ten acres, and it may be only enough for a house and gardnb. In re turn for the use of the land the ln qulllno agrees to give one man's work to the owner when he requires it This means that he pays a rent for th house and grounds of about 81.60 a week. and at the same time has a house for his family to live in. In some cases small wages are paid, but as a rule the mao Is expected to furnish one hand for his labor. If his family does work, they, of course, receive an additional payment Many of the Inqullinoa are In debt to their emp'yera, but the laws here are an uv j 15) M PC m r UULa U b 24th & L St Si ri uality IHiigh Prices NOT ONE DAY BUT Low Lambert's Arts and i Crafts Furniture The "Best On Earth" Delivered in Your Nome at Factory List Price EVERY DAY . JiiHiLJ LJUM mwis in" if fits hi 1 Special Rug Prices $0.75 $14.50 $15.00 9x12 Seamless Brussels Rugs, at i 9x12 Seamless Velvet Rugs, at 9x12 Axminster Rugs, at J Full Line of Wilton and Body Brussels , Rugs In AU Sizes. ..GHome Pride Elange. Set up in your z home for You must see this stove to ap preciate its true worth. Soo Our New Daylight Display Room -r- E33I 11 fl 11 1 "IL "L "'-"y ' iii.Ksjtiii. .iiim." J Evidence of Club Feet Corrected That Cannot Be Disputed Could anyone possibly ask for more conclusive proof of the efficacy of the methods of treating crippled and deformed con ditions employed at the McLain Orthopedic Sanitarium than is furnished by the accompanying photographs? They are of Frances Campbell, 13 years old, daughter of Mrs J. A; Campbell, 3819 Western Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky. The two photographs at the left show exactly how her feet looked July 7, 1913, when she came to us for treatment. - It is difficult to imagine a more aggravated case of Club Feet. Notice that they are turned almost completely backward. The position and condition of the feet as they now appear after treatment at this Sanitarium, is shown in the pictures at the right. Write Mrs. Campbell about this; she will doubtless be glad to tell you of her experience, and verify these statements. . This deformity was corrected without Chloroform, Ether, or any General Anesthetic. Flaeter Taris was not used. 'i a- " ; v V Vi- S r1 4 0 v v V . a'- V i , , ' t , -"S? ..;,... ..: v i rlMrlr d uimI th tx- lofmHr. 4 " ' 'v f. ! - ( '. v: : . t, i . Vf' . fr " ''' I . )lr 7f t J VV. ' , ". ! f .. I . , :h I , ui V,. ' . THm&4 Drawtus ttmm thM rtiolosrspba afeair Ins roaditloa ot (! ah llnUy was canao). V 'i ;r . J i i , . i . ,. i r - . t ' L , : . rTlfliAf nfrt-m.fiatt Pifanfrl This thoroughly equipped private sanitarium is devoted exclusively Uiner ierOrmiueS OrreCieu to the treatment of crippled and deformed conditions, such as Club Feet, Infantile Paralytic, Hip Disease, Spinal Diseases and Deformities, Wry Neck, Bow Legs, Knock Kneea. Illustrated Book Fr Writl fo,r oui free book and other literature descrip tive of the Sanitarium and its methods. Also a book of references, from ex-patients living in practically every state in the Union, will be sent free, upon request. ' ' ,1-.: )? B - r Let us advise you in regard to any crippled, deformed 1 or paralyzed child or person in whom you may be interested. Our advice will cost you nothing and in view of over 30 years' experi ence in this work, it should be of value to you. The L. C. McLain Orthopedic Sanitarium Aubert Avenue St. Louis, Mo.