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THE RAILROAD RATE BILL Synopsis of the Important Pro visions of the New Law. The Term Common Carriers Includes Railroads. Express Companies, Sleeping Car Companies and Pipe Lines—Passes Hay Be Issued to Railroad Employes—Authority of Commission to Fix Rates. Washington.—The following is a synopsis of the important sections of the 1 abroad rate bill. Section on« makes the law apply to corporations or persons engaged in the transportation of oil or other com modities, except water, by pipe line, to those engaged in transportation of passengers or property by railroad or partly by railroad and partly by wa ter, between states. “Common Carriers" Defined. The term common carrier is de scribed as follows: The term "common carrier,” as used ioyhis act, shall include express cotn pr.nies and sleeping car companies. The term “railroad,” as used in this act. shall include all bridges and ferries used or operated In connection with any railroad, and also all the road in use by any corporation operating a railroad, whether owned or operated under a contract, agrement or lease, and shall also include all switches, 6purs, tracks, and terminal facilities of every kind used or necessary in the transportation of the persons or prop erty designated herein. All charges made for any service ren dered or to be rendered in the trans jKirlation of passengers or property as aloresaid. or in connection therewith, shat! be just and reasonable: and every urjiist and unreasonable charge for such service or any part thereof is prohibited and declared to be unlaw ful. What Passes may Be Issued. The section relative to the issuing of railway passes is as follows: A. No carrier subject to the provis ions of this act shall hereafter, direct ly or indirectly, issue or give any m terstaate free ticket, free pass or free tiansportation for passengers, except t< its officers, agents, employes, sur geons, physicians, actual and bona fide attorneys, and members of their im mediate families; to ministers of reli gion, local and traveling secretaries of Yeung Men's Christian associations, in mates of hospitals and charitable an-1 eleemosynary institutions; to indigent, destitute and homeless persons, and to such persons when transported fcy charitable societies or hospitals, and the necessary agents employed in such tiansportation: to inmates of the na tional homes or state himies for dis abled volunteer soldiers and of sol diers’ and sailors’ homes, including those about to enter and those return ing home after discharge, under ar rangements with boards of managers, and female nurses that served during the civil war; to ex-union soldiers and sailors and ex-confederate soldieis; and to owners and caretakers of live stock when traveling with such stock or when going to point of shipment or returning from point of delivery. Exceptions to the Buie. Provided, that this provision shall rot be construed to prohibit the inter change of passes for the officers, agents at £ employes of carriers, and members of their immediate families, nor to prohibit any carrier from carrying passengers free with the object of pro viding relief in cases of general epi demic, pestilence or other calamitous visitations, nor prevent such carrier Rom giving free or reduced transpor tation to laborers transported to any place for the purpose of supplying any demand for labor at such place. Cannot Own Coal Mines. All common”carriers are prohibited from transporting from one state to another any article manufactured, mine.1 or produced by the carrier or under Us authority, and owned wholly or in part by the carrier; except that pipe bnes operated by oil companies may transport their own commodities as well as those offered for transporta tion by competitors. Section 2 amends section 6 of the present law sc as to make it obligatory on the part of carriers to file with the commission and keep open to the public schedules showing all rates, fares and charges between different points on Its own route and points on other routes, when a through rate is made, and no change Should be made in these rates without giving 30 days' no tice of change. It also provides for the filing of all contracts and agreements between different lines. Penalties Are Provided. The penalties provided for violation of these rates are as follows: That section 1 of the act entitled "An act to further regulate eomemree with foreign nations and among the states," epproved February 19, 1903, be amend ed so as to read as follows: The willful failure upon the part ol any carrier subject to said acts to file | and puDlluu lue larms OI rules auu charges as required by said acts, or strictly to observe such tariffs until changed according to law, shall be a misdemeanor, and upon conviction tnereof the corporation offending shall be subject to a fine of not less than Ji.000nor more than$20,000 for each of fense; and ii shall be unlawful for any person, persons or corporation to offer, ’ grant or give, or to solicit, accept or | receive any rebate, concession or dis I crimination in respect to the transpor | ration of any property in interstate or foreign commerce by any common car rier subject to said act to regulate commerce and the acts amendatory thereto whereby any such property shall by any device whatever be trans ported at a less rate than that named iu the tariffs published and tiled by i such carrier, as is required by said act ; to regulate commerce and the acts amendatory thereto, or whereby any I other advantage is given or discrimin- j ation is practiced. Every person or corporation who shall offer, grant or give, or solicit, ac cept, or receive any such rebates, con cession, or discrimination shall be deemed guilty or a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall be punished by a tine of not less than J1.000 nor : more than IHU.OOO: Provided, that any person, or any officer or director of any corporation subject to the provisions of this act. or the act to regulate com merce and the acts amendatory there ot, or any receiver, trustee, lessee, agent or person acting for or employed by any such corporation, who shall be ; convicted as aforesaid, shall, in addi- 1 tton to tine herein provided for, be lia- | ble to imprisonment in the peniten tiary for a term of not exceeding two years, or both such fine and imprison ment, in rhe discretion of the court. , Every violation of this section shall be prosecuted in any court of the Uniteu States having jurisdiction of crimes within the district in which such vio lation was committed, or through which the transportation may have been conducted: and whenever the of-j feuse is begun in one jurisdiction and I completed in another it may be dealt with, inquired of, tried, determined, :.pd punished in either jurisdiction in i the same manner as ir the offense had i beer actually and wholly committed I therein. Authorized to Fix Kates. Section 15 authorizes the interstate commerce commission to fix rates as follows: Sec. 4. That section 15 of said act be amended so as to read as follows: “Sec. 15. That the commission is au thorized and empowered, and it shall be its duty, whenever, after full hear ing upon a complaint made as provided in section 13 of this act, or upon com plaint of any common carrier, it shall be of the opinion that any of the rates, or charges whatsoever, demanded, charged, or collected by any common carrier or carriers, subject to the pro visions of this act. for the transporta tion of persons or property as defined in the first section of this act, or that any regulations or practices whatso evei of such carrier or carriers affect ing such rates, are unjust or unreason able, or unjustly discriminatory, or un duly preferential or prejudicial, or oth erwise in violation of any of the pro visions of this act, to determine and prescribe what will be the just and reasonable rate or rates, charge or charges, to be thereafter observed in such case as the maximum to be charged; and what regulation or prac tice in respec: to such transportation is just, fair and reasonable to be there after followed; and to make an order that the carrier shall cease and desist 1 ; trom such violation, to the extent to which the commission find the same to i exist, and shall not thereafter publish. demand, or collect any rate or charge j for such transportation in excess of the I maximum rate or charge so prescribed, I and shall conform to the regulation or | practice so prescribed. Ail orders of the commission, except orders for the ] payment of money, shall take effect j i within such reasonable time, not less than 3 Odays, and shall continue in ! force for such period of time, not ex | feeding two years, as shall be pre scribed in the order of the commis- \ sion. unless the same shall be suspend- | j ed or modified or set aside by the com- j I mission or be suspended or set - aside j by a court of competent jurisdiction, j Any person, corporation, or company ! who shall deliver property for inter | state transportation to any common : carrier, subject to the provisions of j this act. or for whom, as consignor or consignee, any such carrier shall trans i port property from one state, territory, ! or district of the United States to any other state, territory or district of the United States or foreign country, who shall knowingly and willfully, by em ploye, agent, officer or otherwise, di rectly or indirectly, by or through any means or device whatsoever, receive or accept from such common carrier any sum of money, or any other valuable consideration, as a rebate or ofTset against the regular charges for trans portation of such property, as tixed by the schedules of rates provided for in this act, shall be deemed guilty of a fraud, which is hereby declared to be a misdemeanor, and, shall, upon cou viction thereof in any court of the United Stales of competent Jurisdic tion within the district where such of fense was committed, in addition to any other penalties provided by this act, be subjected to a fine equal to three times ihe sum of money so re ceived or accepted, and three times the value of any other consideration so re ceived or accepted, to be ascertained by the trial court; and in the trial for such offense, all such rebates or other considerations so received or accepted for a period of six years prior to the commencement of the action may be considered, and the said fine shall be three times the total amount or money or three times the total value of such considerations so received or accepted, a°. the case may be: Provided, that the foregoing penalties shall not apply to rebates or considerations received prior to the passage and approval of this act. In addition to the above the commis sion is empowered to make joint rates. Orders of the Commission. Any carrier, any officer, representa tive. or agent of a carrier, or any re ceiver, trustee, lessee, or agent of either of them, who knowingly tails or neglects to obey any order made un dei the provisions of section 15 of this act, shall forfeit to the United States the sum of $5,000 for each offense. Every distinct violation shall be a sep arate offense, and in case of a continu ing violation each day shall be deemed a separate offense. Provision for Court Review. The court-review provision of the bill is as follows: If any carrier fails or neglects to obey any order of the commission, other than for the payment of money, while the same is in effect, any party irjured thereby, or the commission in its own name, may apply to the circuit court in the district where such carrier has its principal operating office, or in which the violation or disobedience of such order shall happen, for an en forcement of such order. Such applica tion shall be by petition, which shall state the substance of the order and the respect in which the carrier has tailed of obedience, and shall be served upon the carrier in such manner as the court may direct, and the court shall prosecute such inquiries and make such investigations, through such means as F shall deem needful in the ascertain ment of the facts at issue or which may arise upon the hearing or such petition. If, upon such hearing ns the court may determine to be necessary i; appears that the order was lawfully made and duly served, and Mint the cnrier is in disobedience of the same the court shall enforce obedience to such order by a writ of injunction, or other proper process, mandatory or otncrwise, to restrain such carrier, its officers, agents or representatives, from further disobedience of such order, or to enjoin upon it. or them, obedience to the same; and in the enforcement of such process the court shall have those powers ordinarily exercised by it iu compelling obedience to its writs ol injunction and mandamus. From any action upon such petition on appeal shall lie by either party to the supreme court ot the United States, anti in such court the case shall have priority in hearing and determination over all other causes except criminal causes, but such appeal shall tor va cate or suspend the order appealed Horn. The so-called Allison provision pro vides that all cases for the annulling of a rate as made by the commission should be brought in the district where the carrier against whom such order of requirement may have been made has its principal office. Other provisions of the bill provide that the commission shall be empow ered to require annual reports from all common carriers, and providing that such reports shall be of the fullest character; giving the commission at all times access to the books of com mon carriers, heavy penalties are en joined for false entries in accounts. A line of $5,000 or imprisonment for a term of two years, or both, is decreed for any examiner who shall wrongly divulge information acquired through examinations of accounts. Circuit and district courts are to have jurisdiction to’issue writs of mandamus compell ing common carriers to obey the or ders ot the commission. Bills of lad ing are to be issued by any common carrier accepting goods for transporta tion. making railroad companies liable for loss or damage done in transit over their or any other line. The com mission is empowered to employ spe cial agents or examiners with full powers. This act takes effect and is in force from and after its passage. The interstate commerce commission will consist of seven members, who shall draw salaries of $10,000 per an num each. Not So Foolish. ‘‘I can't understand why men drink whisky.” she said. "Does it quench thirst?” “Of course not,” he replied. “If it did tney wouldn't be foolish enough to drink it.”—Chicago Daily News. Neutralized. He—Gracious! Did yon notice the terrible smell that automobile made that went by a little whole ago? She—No, dear; 1 was peeling onions | for dinner then.—Yonkers Statesman. Wants International Observatory. Prof. Edward C. Pickering, director of the Harvard college observatory, has attracted much attention to himself through his project for an internation al observatory. He proposes to col lect a committee of the most eminent astronomers of the world, raise a sum of money, build a gigantic telescope and set all to work on the most suit able spot on earth. ---—1 Girl Zionists. A Zionist society of young girls has been organized in Brooklyn, N. Y. Unfortunate. First Merchant—Well, cheer up, old duck! You never know your luck. Seiond Ditto—That s a fact, I don't believe I’ve ever seen mine. Firs* Merchant — Always out, I s'pose? Head on a Pivot. “The trouble is she’s too fond of' talking behind her back.” "Behind whose back?” “Her own. She’s a regular rubber- J neck.”—Philaedphia Press. Learning English. There are thousands of pupils at tending fiee night schools maintained by the authorities in Antwerp for teaching the English language. So much shipping from English-speaking countries uses the great Belgian port that it is becoming almost an English speaking city. But It’s Full of Hazards. “After all, life is only a game.” “Yes, but not the game of golf. In life it’s easy to get into a hole.”—Bos ton Transcript. • % Explanation. Myer—Your friend Cutter always speaks well of everybody. Oyer—Mere force of habit. Myer—How’s that ? Gyer—He used to carve epitaphs on tombstones.—Chicago Daily News. Certainly Took It. Redd—How did the horse take the 'hurdle ito-day? Greene—All right. He took it about 20 yards with him.—Yonkers States man. Caution. "What’s the matter with him, any way?” “ ’Sh! They're trying to keep it quiet. It’s gastritis.” "Why, that isn't contagious. Why should—" “ ’Sh! They’re afraid the gas com pany may send in a bill against him." —Philadelphia Ledger. Mountain Climbers. In Germany there are 54 mountain eering clubs with a total membership of 142.603. FLOWERS ON THE FARM. Our Farmers Been Criticised by For eigners for Their Indifference to Immediate Surroundings. It has been argued that in this coun try among onr farmery carelessness is the trait which a foreigner most ob serves, and some say that a glance a; the immediate surroundings of more than the average number of farm houses, proves the correctness of this assertion. Tin-can strewn grounds, un sightly rubbish heaps, empty boxes and barrels, occupy space which, in most European countries, would be put un der thorough cultivation. Such en vironment has a depressing effect all around. It is our duty, at all seasons of the year, to make our homes pleasant and attractive. The old Athenians spent their money freely to build temples and erect statues, while their own homes were unadorned. This was perverted patriotism, for the homes of a country are the true index of its strength and prosperity, and the man or woman, who seeks to beautify his or her home surroundings, is a public benefactor even though unknown to themselves. The beautifying of the home and lawns generally is done by the women folk, or else goes undone. This is not as it should be. The farmer could spare at least one hour of painstaking effort a week, to the work of improve ment. He understands the adaptibility of certain soils, and is more able to dig and plant than his wife; but first he must know that it is not a loss of time, and even if he be too intensely practical to care for flowers, he must know that a beautiful home has a most decided commercial value. No home is too humble to join in the good work, and no spot of land should be wasted. In many countries in Europe even the space along the hedges and byways is made to produce something of use to mankind. It is not area, but taste that counts in landscape gardening. The cost at the start need not be great. Seeds and slips are not expensive. Many plants are easily propagated from cuttings, and a few dollars thoughtfully ex pended will start a garden, capable of giving pleasure for many years. Pe rennials are decidedly the best for farm homes. They require less atten tion than annuals, and when once planted, with a reasonable amount ol care, one has a succession of blooms without much labor.—Farm and Home. WEALTH OF NEW YORK. Twenty-Five States Valued at Less Than the State’s Untaxed Real Estate. The enormous material wealth ot the state of New York is in no way, perhaps, more clearly marked than in the fact that the total amount of real estate—land and buildings—exempted from taxation is larger than the total assessed wealth of 25 of the 45 states of the country, states the Sun. New York has $1,500,000,000 of real estate exempted from taxation. It has $185,000,000 represented in churches and church buildings. It has $150, 000,000 in hospitals and charitable in stitutions. It has $100,000,000 in schools, exclusive of $60,000,000 in colleges, universities and other build ings wholly devoted to the purposes of instruction. The city of New York includes, of course, by far the largest proportion of these holdings, though in the mat ter of church property the land and buildings outside of the city of New York represent a total value of $75, 000,000. The federal government has $80, 000,000 worth of land and buildings in the state of New York, of which $60,000,000 worth is in New York city and $6,500,000 worth in Buffalo. The state Itself has $85,000,000 worth of property, land and buildings throughout the state, of which by far the largest single item is at Albany. There is $60,000,000 of property within the state of New York in cemeteries and $40,000,000 worth of, property in libraries and scientific and patriotic organizations. Agricultural societies own $1,000, 000 worth, and township and village buildings represent $22,500,000 more. MISCELLANEOUS. A simple method of cleaning lamp chimneys—hold in the steam of a ket tle and polish with a newspaper. An ola refrigerator which has a lin ing.of tin may be-made. to. look clean er by applying two coats of white en amel. Put a few grains of rice in the salt cellars to keep the salt from caking; as the cellar is shaken the rice will keep the salt moving. To clean a fishy frying pan, fill with cold water and place on the fire to boil. When boiling, put a red-hot cin der in, and then wash in the usual way. When washing glassware do not put it in hot water bottom first, as it will be iiable to crack from sudden expan sion. Even delicate glass can be safely washed in very hot water if slipped in edgewise. Gin is the best thing to use to re move tea stains from a white dress Place the stained part in a saucer, with enough gin to cover the stain, rub with a piece of the same material, press on the wrong side v^lth a moderately not iron till dry. Rubbed well into yellowed knife handles of ivory, turpentine restores the color. Gilt frames can be cleaned by wiping with a small sponge dipped lightly in oil of turpentine. Wet the sponge just enough to take off the soil and dry marks. Let the frame dry it self.—Peoples Home Jr. Chicken Soup. Cut up a chicken and cover with cold wafer in which place a sprig of parsley and a small onion finely minced. Boil until meat drops from the bones, then remove chicken and strain broth. Stand liquor in a cool place and when fat forms hard on top, re move it in a cake. Measure broth and for each pint allow a pint of cream. Heat broth and the cream in another. Rub smoothly together one tablespoon flour and one of butter and stir into boiling broth. Let boll, stirring con stantly for two or three minutes, then gradually stir in the scalded cream. Cook about a minifte longer and serve ^ at once. THE AGRICULTURIST About Farms and Firming Adrice and Suggestions to Boys and Young Men Wbo May Enter or Remain in This Vocation - Many Facts of Profitable and Economic Moment. By NATH’L C. FOWLER. JR. Author of "The Boy—How to Help Him Succeed.'' "Building Business.” "Dollars and Sense.” "Practical Publicity.” “Fowier's Cyclopedia Of Publicity arid Printing.” "Gumption,” Etc. - —--■*—-< (Copyright, 1906, by Neth'l C. Fowler, Jr.) In the world's dictionary the farmer is defined as a plain tiller of soil, and the agriculturist or planter as one who has lifted the farm on to the plane of business. The term farmer, however, covers that bast company of workers '-vho, by the planting of the seed, raise any kind of a harvest, or who breed and raise cattle and other stock. The railroad may cease running, and tilings will continue to live. The stock board may board up its doors, and .the world will continue to move as it has been moving for centuries, subject only to transient financial cloudiness. Most businesses may go out of busi ness, and the professional may no long er continue to practice, yet people will continue to live and to propagate. But when there is no longer any farmer there will be no longer any people, for th? world will have starved to death. Farming is our greatest industry, the Industry preservative of all industries. Notwithstanding the existence of hun dreds of abandoned farms, and the constant exodus from the farm to the city, the farm in its numerical and financial strength is to-day the greatest power in the whole civilized world. The farmer is not recognized as he should be, because he seeks neither notoriety nor prominence, but quietly does bis work, allowing others to play at society and to receive its shallow reward. Here, however, has been made a grievous mistake. The farmer, like the lawyer, should be proud of his pro fession, sufficiently appreciative of it to contribute to it the full measure of his self-respect. Because he does not do so, he has lost both the social and business prominence which really be longs to his calling. Why Farms Do Net Pay. Seme farms do not pay, partly be-1 cause some farms cannot be made to pay. Probably not more than one-half i of our fertile farms pay as well as they would pay if the right effort was made to make them pay. It is but a common remark that a great majority of farms ,aro unprofitable because of the indif ference and lack of cultivation on the part of the owners. Altogether too many farmers, instead of working their farms, allow their farms to work them. The tendency to-day is unmistakably away from the farm. The farmer's boy, partly because he wants a change, but largely because the great un known shines with a light apparently brighter than all the lights he has ever seen, desires to leave the farm and to earn his living under entirely different conditions, away from nature as he has experienced it, where he may lead a life diametrically different front that of his childhood. The fault, in more than half the cases, is due to the farmer himself and to the way the farm is conducted. The boy, brought up upon the farm which is not properly culti vated. and where most of the work is ditldgery, or is made to be drudgery, >vhere intellectual growth is stunted. ; naturally, in the ignorance of his youth, assumes that all farms are like ; the farm of his childhood, and that the opportunities of life, must lie else-; wiiere. Therefore he gravitates to the. city, not so much because he loves the city, but because he feels that that which he knows nothing about, al though he may think he does, is better than that which he does knawn about from actual boyhood experience. tt the average farmer works harder; ihau does the business man, it is not] always because he has to, but general- j ly because he thinks he must. 1 do not ! deny that there is much of drudgery in farm labor—there is. So is there in al cost any other calling or work. But !be excess of drudgery is usually the fault of the drudge, not of the work itself So far as the long farm hours are concerned, they are no longer than those required of the majority of men in business for themselves and of members of all professions. Brains Needed on Farm. Although the average city business man may accumulate more money than the farmer can possibly gain under the most favorable circumstances, he pays a greater price for what he obtains; ana in the majority of caaes is worse off than is the farmer. If the farmer treated his work as he should, and applied to it the intelligence that is given to other trades, he would reduce the drudgery to a minimum, and ready money would not be a stranger to him. Nearly all farmers make a living. Comparatively few grow rich from the proceeds of the farm; but more than half of the farmers, whether located on the rocky hills of Maine or on the i rapidly producing western soil, not, only make expenses, hut are able to save something every year. The city clerk or city business man, working in a block and housed in a j flat, does not have one-half as much 1 opportunity to progress, in the truest' sense of the word, as -joes the farmer j on a fairly fertile faim, working as his ! own master on his own property. Better Off Than City Han. With the modern periodicals and the j distribution of every class of reading matter, the farmer has every opportu nity for mental development. The edu cation of the progressive farmer is superior to that of. the rank and file of metropolitan men of.,wealth. There always will be 'some poor and half-starved men among farmers, but this class is far less prominent upon the farm than in the marts of business; and there are ten times more impecu nious city workers than there are farm ers in actual want. .But right here.let it te said that even the poorest farm ers are better1 off than are the average stragglers of the great city. The farm er has a chance to grow. The city man may or may not have that opportunity. Should the farm hoy remain upon the ftmT Upcm genorg ntecigles 1 say yo3, and emphaticaliy, yes. There are exceptions. There are many boys who have no business to stay upon the Inins, because they are destined for something not necessarily better, but son ething entirely different from farm ing; but. generally speaking. I would advise the farmer’s boy to remain on | tho farm, unless he can give legiti-I mate, sensible, and positive reasons for a change. Where nature placed us! would appear to be our natural field of action, subject only to exceptions. Therefore, the boy born upon the tarn should consider the farm the place for his life work, unless there are rea sons why a change of base should be iueae. boi any reason save a good reason, many a farmer’s boy despises the farm, when he should be proud of his agri cultural heritage. He is of the nobility of the soil, a nobility, not of many dol lars. but descendant from the parent of dollars. The boy who would leave the farm, ar.d who gives no good reason for leaving, may as well go as stay, for he will undoubtedly be a failure any where. The boy who dislikes the farm, because he does not like work, will not be a success anywhere. If he is not willing to work as hard upon the farm as he would have to away from the farm, he will not work hard enough anywhere else to earn more than a i mere livelihood. ?he boy who does not like farming, who dislikes it from his very soul, who has absolutely no love for plant ing or harvesting, and yet is not a loafer, is not likely to become a good farmer, and forcing hint to remaini there indefinitely is certainly bad 1 judgment and will prove unprofitable. Why City Attracts Eoys. Any boy has a light to dislike the farm, if his dislike is sensible; hut many boys, perhaps the majority of them, who leave thi faint to go to the city, do so beehuse they look upon farming as inferior labor and believe that the farm offers little opportunity. This is all too often the farmer's fault, not the fault of the farm itself. Thou sands upon thousands of boys, failures in great cities, might have been suc cessful citizens upon the farm. The d-uciging farmer, the ne'er-do-well dig ger of the soil, with weedy garden and shabby house, cannot expect his boy to respect the farm or love the farm; and this boy, unless he is broad enough and intelligent enough to see beyond his father’s farm, will probably leave it, even if he has to run away. Should the city boy leave the city to become a farmer? Yes, if he wants to. If he goes, the chances are that he will i become a 'happier man, a healthier j man. and a better citizen: but if he does not want to go, do not force or even urge him. Probably a great many more city boys might go to the coun- ' try if they only knew the meaning of life in the country. However, there j sre comparatively few city boys who ! turn farmers, and it may be a long t:me before the sense of the etty will j be strong enough and broad enough to sec beyond its brick walls and tower- i ing buildings. Heal Success. The farm, which gives the father a mere- living, may give the son a com petency. The farmer’s boy should ; realize that success is not so much how much one earns in a year, as how much one gets out of the year in ex perience, money and opportunity to en joy life. A few hundred dollars earned on a good farm may leave at the end j ot the year much more in actual money than live times the amount of earn ings will leave to the boy or man in the.cijy. True, the city boy may say! that, although It costs more to live in the city, one gets more that is worth vhiie. and therefore city life is worth wnar Is paid for it. There never was a greater mistake made. While the city may give more than does the country, even in some things worth having, the city charges more for what it gives, even when intrinsic value is ! considered ounce by ounce and pound by pound. Many of the things whiph i city people think they want, they neither want nor need. Our comforts depend largely upon the difference be tween what we earn and what we need to spend. ihe farmer may receive the mini mum amount of income, but he also has the minimum amount of worry and expense. What the world needs to day is more, and not less, farms, and more intelligent and scientific farming, and more business farmers. There are altogether too few agricul tural schools. The states can do no nobler work for civilization than to es- ! tabltsh schools, where real farming (noi drudgery) as a business is taught. It is difficult to be extravagant in edu- I cation: but, notwithstanding Our great liberality in educational matters, we are woefully deficient in the number of cur agricultural schools. Better farms would make better peo ple, not only better farming people, not only better country people, but better city people, in the days of the ffivtu zation to come, city centralization will have stopped, and equitable and proper distribution will be one of the orders < r the day. The tendency will not be flora outdoors into indoors, but will be the migration of both mind and body out into the great and glorious c-pen air, and Qod’s country will be came the arena of our greatest con ItiilS. What Schools Might Teach I wish the country school, yes even toe city school, would instruct the boy in the elements of agriculture tneoreucally, If necessary, but In some ♦ nftU1 int° hls m,nd the truth about planting and Its resulting har ThL ,We are teachlnS almost every thing in our public schools, both in the city and in the country, save the one fundamental scietlce of all. the science on which depends our healtS and wealth—that of agriculture. i would not ask the farmer’s boy to remain on his father’s farm, if it is improperly cultivated and is a mere place of drudgery; nor would I ask ilim to remain upon a barren farm where every product is literally forced from an unwilling soil. I would aim ply say, because you are a farmer's boy. give the farm the preference, li your father’s farm is not suitable to your ambition and to your capacity, go to some larger and better farm. Uori sdder your father's larm first. If there be evidence that this is not best fot you, then consider some other farm Give the farm the first choice, considei It from every standpoint and without prejudice, even though your farm ex periences may have been unfortunate and disagreeable. Advantages and Disadvantages. After you have placed all the ad vantages of farming in one column, and ail the objections in another, study each advantage and disadvantage by iiselt and collectively; then, i£ the dis advantages greatly outweigh the ad vantages, you have every .ensible, moral and business right to torsake the farm, either for a mercantile life *n the city or in the country. But do not leave the country, or the country town, even If you leave the farm, un til you have intelligently exhausted its opportunities. The country needs you; the city may not want you. Do not make a radical change without a h;gli motive, and be sure that your motive Is not a mistaken preference. What kind, and how much, school education can the farmer use to ad vantage? To specify is well nigh im possible. Upon general principles, however, it may be said that 'here is little likelihood of tlje farmer, or the wouid-be farmer, acquiring too aiucu book knowledge. In this country there are many successful farmers who are graduates of classical colleges, and this broad education has not injured them, although it may not, in every case, have been of financial benefit, if I were forced to answer this question specmcany, i would advise the boy who intends to follow' agriculture to obtain, at least, a high school educa tion. I would not advise against a classical college course, but I find it impossible to consider higher education essential. I advise most emphatically ana enthusiastically the boy to attend, and graduate from, an agricultural col lege. if the boy and his parents are not familiar with the location, scope and requirements of these agricultural in stitutions, information can be obtained from the editor of the local newspaper, the minister, the lawyer, the doctor, or the teacher, or a ietter addressed to the secretary of state, of any state, it the state capitol, would either bring full inforamtion or would imorm the writer where he can obtain it. Prof. John F. Duggar, M. S.. director of the experimental station, at Auburn, Aia.. and protessor ol agriculture a: ti. A’ahama Polytechnic Institute, in a letter to the author, says: "1 am thoroughly convinced thut I’.icr.y a country boy overlooks rich op portunities for a useful and prosperous life in the country. The country has been made unattractive to the farmer's children on account of isolation, on ac count of the farmer's uncomplimentary talk about his own vocation, and on ac count of the failure of the average country boy to understand the fascic aiing operations of nature with which he is surrounded. Awakened public sentiment in favor of improved rural schools and better roads is already notable and will result in partially overcoming the isolation of country life. Inducements of Country Life. "Among the considerations which should be weighed by the young man investigating the advantages of country life are the following: First, land is advancing in value, and unless one g»ts a foothold in this generation, its acquirement in the next may be far more difficult. Second, the highest degree of health and independence and happiness are obtainable in the coun try. The returns trom agriculture are mort certain, even though less in gross amount, than in most other occupa tions, and the opportunities for sav ing are far greater than In the city. Moreover, increased knowledge of 'ha sciences on which agriculture is based b-ings increased profits and affords the inestimable satisfaction of pursu ing a vocation congenial and fascinat ing. Mr. Frederick Gnrady, of "The Or chards," Morrlsonvllle, ill., in a letter t.» the author, says: Among the principal advantages which agriculture offers to young men is complete independence. He is in partnership with nature, and with he' assistance produces what all the world must have —food. There is a never ending demand for his products. His hand is his own, and no petty t» or party chief can hold any rod over him that he need fear in tha leas'. Agriculture does not hold forth to 'lv* young man the promise of great wraith, but of independence, comfo t, peace and full enjoyment of life "The disadvantages are not mime ous. The young man who begins with onty his hand and fair health has be lore him a struggle which' will 'e^t his mettle. The price of land is high, anu only the most skillful manage ment can make an here pay for itsei* iu vrhat may be termed a reasonable -lumber of years. Skill counts for more than muscle now. Jt a man is content to he only a common hand, progress toward the ownership of a farm and home will be very slow. But if h« makes of himself a really skillful farm er, he will not long remain i hired man.” Hon. O. B. Stevens, commissioner de partment of agriculture, state of Geor gia, in a letter to the author, says: Boys, stick to the farm! it is an independent profession: it produces bone, muscle, and a strong constitution, and these develop the bfain. No profession brings as much revenue from the amount invested as that of farming. No profession give.: wider scope for the practical applies tton of the various sciences—chemi try, geology, botany, entomology, en gineering — consequently, the ideal farmer is an accomplished scientist. I-astly, no profession brings a mac f*ln«Ar tn nature **