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A MEW REPUBLIC TAKES 1 I HER PLACE AMONG 1 I THE WORLD'S NATIONS. | .¥ & <|> The United States of Central America, a Probable <fs w Power in the Politics of This Continent. Now cornea the United States of Central America, a nation which lias arisen out of much revolution. It is composed of Nicaragua, Salvador and Honduras, which have at various times done a little fighting together and against eaoh other. The seat of government has just been moved from Amapala, the temporary capital, to Cfoinaudega, in Nicaragua. A con stitution, which is practically that of our own country, has been adopted. So ihe new nation, pocketed between Guatemala and Costa Rica, two States not particularly friendly to it, has be gun its existence. Enthusiasts have been singing of THE PLAZA AT GRANADA. the blessings of a union of the five States of Central America for many years—ever since the federation made in 1823 was destroyed by strife aud jealousies. Central American politics is an intricate game. In view of his tory there have been doubts ex pressed as to tho permanence of the present union. Yet if the Nicaragua Canal is built there may be a develop ment and a building up of these Cen tral American States which will give their institutions stability. There is no limit to the effects which may follow the formation of this new unification of the Latin re publics. Tho three States which are enclosed in the mic.dle of Central America are keeping at arms' length two nations with whom their relations are constantly disturbed. There is Guatemala on the north and Costa Kirn on the south. Between these nnhlics stretch the mahogany of Honduras, Salvador and \ icaragua. Salvador has had several encounters with Guatemala, and Nicaragua and Costa Rica are not on especially good terms. Theoretically, the five States are supposed to have a community of in terests; to be a greater republic, the members of which are bound together by indissoluble ties. Revolution seems inborn in the body politic of these countries. The wars and internal disorders have undoubtedly interfered with the prosperity and progress of the repub lics. While the United States of A TYPICAL HOME Ol" THE I'IBST-Clj ASS. American was building railroads, re claiming the wilderness and improving harbors, Central America was pursu ing the game cf revolution. Stability of government, the com pletion of a ship canal, the exchange of prodncts with the United States, may work wonders in this laud of change and shift. Here is the oldest community on the American continent and yet the last to take to itself a government which gives some sign of being an abiding one. Years before Jamestown was founded Spain had planted her colonies here and had ground the natives under her heel. Tho ruins of once wealthy and influential cities still attest Ihe THE AMERICAN LEGATION AT MENAGCA, NICARAGUA. story of wealth and grandeur. Struc- ' tares over the roofs of which centuries i have passed remain to tell of the civ ilization which came to the land of re publics and revolutions. It was on this neck of land which Columbus set foot when he first reached this continent. That was in 1502. Twenty years passed by and then the conqueror of Mexico—Her nando Cortes—hearing stories of the fabulous wealth of the countries vhich lay below, started south with an army of seasoned, mailclad vet erans. He reached his destination after two years of almost incredible hardship. He conquered Guatemala. The natives were slaughtered by the thou sand. The conqueror or his lieu tenants possessed the land. Granada, in Nicaragua, was founded and a civilization was built on this con tinent which the Spaniards had largely learned from the Moors. In Grauada many of the old buildings still stand. All the countries of Central America were united under the name of Guatemala and a captain-general pre sided over them. Those who have followed the history of Spain know how the proud old land ruled her Central American possessions. Then Mexico gained her freedom. Then the Cenral American provinces of Spain demanded independence, and in 1821 they received it. The Federal Union of Central America was founded in 1832, and until the close of 1839 it held the five States together. The States withdrew one by one. With this period the name of General Marazon will always be associated. He was one of the founders AMArALA, THE OLD CAPITAL. of the Union. Even after it had gone to pieces he tried to join together the fragments—to get the blocks which formed this puzzle of Ave into regular order again. He was shot at San Jose, in Costa Rica, in 1842, whither he had gone to attempt a coup in the interests of a united Central America. Several efforts have been made since that. Unrest was the leading trait in the political character of these re publics. Revolutions sprang up from time to time in all of them. It was charged by each republic that its neighbor or neighbors were giving aid to the revolutionists which she had ex pelled from her borders. Less than a year ago Nicaragua came very near going to war with Costa Rica on account of such a charge. Her Presi dent imprisoned a Costa Rican Consul at Managua. Troops were marched to the frontiers and a treaty of peace was finally signed. An unsuccessful effort was made by Guatemala in 1872 to effect a union of the States. General Justo Rufus Barrios came very near forming an organization in 1887. He discovered that Salvador was treacherous and marched against it. He conquered the Salvadoreans, but fell a victim to sharpshooters. By a treaty concluded at Analapa in 1896 all five of the re publics formed a federation, which was called the Greater Republic of Central America. It amounted to little more than an agreement to leave questions in dispute to a diet of deputies appointed from the various republics. It will, of course, be superseded by the formation of the United States of Central America. Diplomacy has sought to do every thing possible to restrain jealousy and dissatisfaction in this new nation. The Presidents of the States become Gov ernors. It has been agreed that none of them shall become a candidate for THE CAorrat. > v Jf. Jjo6 NEW NAT 10M "J MAP OF THE NEW UNITED STATES. President of the new Republic, who will be chosen on December 13. The successful candidate will be inaugu rated next March. The new capital, Chinandega, is iu Nicaragua, on the Pacific side. The temporary capital, Amapala, was in Honduras, on an isl and in the Bay of Fonseca. If the resources of this new nation were properly developed it would be come a rich and peaceful nation. The forests of all three of the countries are rich in mahogany and dye-woods; gold and silver have been found, there is an abundance of coal, and there are fortunes in coffee and tropical fruits. The future of this trio of republics de pends in a large measure as to what policy may be pursued with regard to the Nicaragnan Canal. The present concession expires next year. The United States of America, it will bo remembered, sent a delegation of of ficers and engineers under Admiral Walker to make an examination of canal routes. It is proposed to use the San Juan River, the boundary be tween Nicaragua and Costa Rica, aud Lake Nicaragua as a part of the pro posed waterway across Central America. Nicaragua is as large as the group of States inclnding Maine, Massachu setts, Connecticut and Rhode Island. Honduras is about the size of Ohio. Salvador is one hundred and forty miles long and sixty miles in breadth. Nicaragua has been the sceno of many conflicts. The old cities of Granada and Leon warred for fifty years as to which should be the capital of the State. Leon, which is now par tially iu ruins, represented the liberal party, and Granacla the conservap e. General Walker, a New Orleans edi tor, and a distinguished scholar, was invited to the country in 1855. He seized the supreme power, partly de stroyed the city of Granada, and ruled with a high hand. The neighboring | States aided his enemies against him, and expelled him from the country. He returned to Truxillo iu IS6O, where he was shot. Salvador, the smnllest of the three, has always been an aggressive State, and has not been behind her neigh bors in wars and revolutions. The capital is San Salvador. The Enelifih Moody. At one time the Rev. Henry Varley was a butcher. He is a noted English evangelist,, who recently came on a second visit to this country. The way HENRY VARLEY, THE ENGLISH MOODY. he entered upon an evangelistic career was by addressing his fellow workmen. Gradually he became known as a good speaker, and went traveling over Eng land addressing the people. He has since earned the title of"The English Moody," which is a great compliment, for Evangelist Moody is as much thought of by the religious people of the British Isles as he is in his own country. The Rev. Mr. Varley has addressed large crowds in New York and elsewhere. He is a powerful and eloquent speaker and has a charming personality. It is by the sheer force of ability that he has risen to his high posi'lon in the evangelistic world. Among the assets on which Spain will have trouble in realizing is a great ileal of shop worn diplomacy. TOOK A WILDCAT'S PHOTOGRAPH. Boj Photographer's Father Shot the An!- uial Directly Afterward. To photograph a wildcat just before shooting the animal is a feat whioh few hnnters have ever accomplished. It was done recently by William M. Shaw, of Greenville, Me., and the photo graph has just been reproduced in the New York Sun. Mr. Shaw, who is a rich lumberman in the Moosehead re gion, owns most of Sugar Island, one of the most picturesque spots in Moose head Lake. On this bit of land is situated the camps of the Nighthawk Club, whose membership is largely drawn from sportsmen from New York and Boston. None of the campers is a more en thusiastic sportsman than Mr. Shaw, who combines with his tastes as a hunter those of the artist. He is a de voted amateur photographer and has taught the art to all the members of his family who are able to handle a camera. On his near-by hunting trips ho is usually accompanied by his twelve-year-old son Hugh. It was on one of these trips that the photograph was taken. On this occasion the younger Shaw carried the camera. They had had a tiresome tramp through the woods when Mr. Shaw, looking up, saw a large wildcat ready to spring. Raising his rifle and standing ready to fire should the beast attempt to spring, Mr. Shaw kept his eyes on the ißi M J|§4 FE TIFIL' W. ]F vM FCS (/| I TII I' i i cat, while Master Hugh pressed the button. The result is the picture. Mr. Shaw, the next instant, fired, and the cat fell to the ground mortally wound ed. Mr. Shaw has the wildcat mount ed and he keeps it in his house. The Snelp—- In South Africa. The snelpaardelooszouderspoorweg petroolrijtuig is being introduced into progressive South Africa as into other parts of the world. The snelpaardel ooszonderspoorwegpetroolrijuig is, as the reader will doubtless have noted at a glance, the mellifluous Dutch name of the quiok-horseless tipou ordinary-road-rnnning-petroleum - car riage or motor car soon to be a familiar object in Johannesburg as already in Amsterdam. A Child's Philosophy. Lord Crewe, at an educational meeting at Liverpool, told on amus ing story of the little son of a friend of his who refused to say his lesson to his governess. He admitted that he knew it well, but, said he, "If I say my lesson, what's the use? you will only make me learn something else." That child will probably be heard of again.—Westminster Gazette. stuffing: Live Fowl* by Machinery. Poultry raising has become a science. No longer do the featherod beauties run free picking up the suc culent caterpillar and scratching for grain. It's too expensive. In the first place caterpillars aren't good food for chickens; in the second, grain thrown on the ground is wasted; ir the third place, they run off their fat if obliged to trot around aud pick up their food. On the great poultry farms where fowls are fattened for the London market the birds are imprisoned in long rows of coops. At feeding time along comes a boy wheeling a queer barrow that looks something like a tool grinder's kit, except that it has a big hopper on top. In this is ground and mixed food. Opening each cage door in succes sion, the boy takes out a fowl and holds :t under his arm. Deftly he opens its bill with his lingers, inserts THE STTJFFER AT WORK. in its mouth a tube connected with the hopper, presses his foot upon a lever under the barrow, and pumps until the crop is full—like blowing up a bicycle tire with a foot-pump. One charge of food is rammed down that fowl's receptive gullet; and back be goes to his cage to ruminate 011 a world of queer things. Thus deprived of exercise, the bird* grow fat very rapidly. With the ma chine on 7 boy can feed 280 fowls io au hoar. TFOR FARM AND GARDEN.} C J Sunlight for Stock. A sun bath will do animals as much good as human beings, and the win dows on both the horse and cow barns should be so arranged that the animals can have all the sunlight possible. There is no necessity for placing the windows where draughts of air are likely to fall on the animals, but thoy should be placed where the animal will get some of the sunlight on bright days. Not only will this benefit the animal, it will add materially to the warmth and dryness of the barn aud do much toward killing the odors in separable from animal life. Iu colder climates the wiiulows should be ar ranged so that they may be lifted, or in other ways opened for needed ven tilation, and each with au outer door of wood to close over them 011 cold nights. Added warmth will be se cured by having a curtain to pull down from the inside. These guards against cold should be arranged so that they will in no way interfere with giving the animals tbe benefit of the sunlight during the day. Good for Kattenin? Pis:*. While corn remains at the low price it has brought for several years it would seem as if uo better or cheaper hog food,especially for fattening,could be had, but if it is possible to accom plish the same result at even less ex pense just so much is saved. Experi ment with kaffir corn have proven that while its feeding or fattening value is almost exactly the same as corn, the yield per acre is nearly one-third more, which constitutes the saving in the planting of kaffir corn. The soy bean has also been found not only a good fattening food for hogs, but particu larly valuable for general planting be cause of its draught-resisting qual ities. When fe I with kaffir corn, both of them ground aud mixed, the result was eight per cent, gain in weight over a mixture of corn and soy bean meal. It is evident, therefore, that kaffir corn, owing to its increased yield, is preferable to corn, while tho use of the soy bean adds to its fatten ing properties. The soy beau should have more attention in districts where droughts are common. It has 110 epial as a drought-resistor, and is readily eaten by all stock when ground. Tim Coot of Keeping a Hen. The cost of keeping hens depends not only on intelligent care in feeding, but 011 whether tho feed is bought or raised. The ration for laying hens tillould be such that tho nutritive ra tion to the egg-producing properties should be about one iu four. This can boat be produced with cut clover, middlings, bran and corn meal, for a morning mash, with grains in variety, corn, rye, buckwheat, wheat, millet, etc. A fair amount of greon food, cabbage, cavxt-i, potatoes,etc.,should be mixed in the mash occasionally, or feu raw every few days. tin such rations a hen may be kept at a cost of about seventy-five cents a year, less if the food is ruined. Buckwheat is one of the best grains for fowls aud adds largely to tho an'g production. Kaffir corn and millet ave also good if they can be raised or bought at a low price. On the rations specified two meals a day id sufficient, the mash in the morning and tho whole grain at niglit fed among the litter on the floor. It is sometimes a good plan to cut the night ration a little short, feeding the portion re served about the middle of tho after noon scattered among tho litter on the floor of the scratching house to koop the hens busy. This question of foods and their cost needs to be stud ied closely, especially in sections where eggs fall as low as ten cents a dozen during the summer. A From Poultry and Keen. A living can be made on a small plot of ground by keeping poultry and bees, but the person must study to learn the conditions of success and then faithfully carry them out in de tail. His plant must be large enough to give him constant employment,aud he should have a tnste for tho work, so that instead of its being ouerons to him he will enjoy doing. Iu this business, as in any other, what leads to success is a large capacity for pains taking work. In my little farm in the village, I have four large poultry yards. Iu these yards are planted small fruit and opple trees, which make a shade for tho heus and furnish me with fruit for family use and for market. In each yard, as fast as they increase, I shall set twelve or fifteen hives of bees. These do not in any way dis turb the hens, and with good manage ment are a source ot' considerable profit. I have been able to pay for my farm and many improvements upon it, besides saving some money, because our poultry have nearly made a living for my little family, so we could save about all the receipts from any special money crops grown ou the farm. Our poultry aud bees and the three acres on which strawberriss aud celery are grown for market, I know are more profitable to me than would be a good dairy farm of 100 acres.— W. H. .T., Delaware county, N. Y., in New England Homestead. Two Fault* With I.amh*. A sheep salesman recently called our attention to the loss ouo farmer sustained because he failed to finish his stock for market. The stock, a bunch of lambs averaging fifty pounds, sold for $5 per hundredweight. All were ewes and wethers of good qual ity, but they were iu very poor con dition. On the same market good fat lambs brought s',so per liuudfttd weight. For the thin lambs the pro ducer received about $4 per hundred weight, or, say, s'2 per head. Allow ing the same difference between the market and farm price on the fat lambs, and he would have received 85.50 per hundredweight. But had these thin lambs been fed to their ca pacity they would have weighed at least seveutv pounds, aud at $3.5Q per hundredweight would have brought the producer $3.85 per head. Or if they hail brought him $5 pei hundredweight there would have been a difference of $1.50 per head, or SISO on ono hundred lambs. Clearly this man erred in not fattening his lambs, even if he had to buy feed to do it. On the same market was a lot ot lambs that contained a liberal propor tion of bucks. No complaint was made as to the quality of the stock aside from this, yet these lambs sold at a discount of over 75 cents per hun dredweight as compared with good ewes and wethers. The buyer of the latter considered them cheaper than the bucky lambs at the difference. On a hundred lambs averaging seven ty-live pounds this would mean a dif ference of $56.25, a good price for the labor required to castrate the ram lambs in such a bunch aud allow for losses too. Besides, the wether lambs would have uiade better aud cheaper gains, and so would the whole Hock. The above arc two of the most com mon mistakes of those who raise lambs for market, aud they are illustrated just as forcibly on every market.— Stockman and Farmer. Thorough Preparation of Soil. A few years ago the Rev. W. R. Brown of Empire, N. C., informed me that upon a certain occasiona tenant commenced laying off for corn, being, as I understood it, the first or leading row through the field. The row was crooked and Mr. Brown in formed him that ho would straightea it if he had to run a lialf-dozeu times. He accordingly ran a number of times, cutting from one side of the furrow aud then from the other until he fin ally got it sufficiently straight t» Answer. No person appeared to have the most remote idea that this extra plowing would result in any advan tage, other than straightening the row, but Mr. Brown says that the com of this row was twice as good as that of any of the other rows. The above shows the effect of thor ough preparation. A loose bed from twelve to sixteen inches deep and of a proper width should be made before planting the corn. In cultivating, said bed can be gradually widened until all the ground between the rows be broken deep. This deep tillage will exert an immense influence in time of drouth. More than this, the corn in the drill can be twice as thick as shnllow plowing will admit of, and will then bear better aud bo better every way than the shallow plowed. When the people come to understand this matter properly they will see that they cannot afford to cultivate their land shallow. It would, however, be better for the land to be Bttb-soiled in the fall or early winter, but when inconvenient to do this, it may be plowed deep, as aforesaid, in early spring, provided that it is done with a narrow plow of proper construction that will not throw the subsoil out of the furrow and expose it to the air. It is advis able to expose the sub-soil to the air if done at the proper time, but not after the winter passes. If people would cultivate less and fertilize more they would,as a general thing, succeed far better. They could then retain command of their crops, and as a result would not lose all in time of extreme drouth, as is now fre quently the case. Nine times out of ten when a farmer fails in his crop it. is his fault rather than that of the season. The soil must not only be kept up but the fertility thereof gen erally increased over what it now is. Clover and cow peas, in connection with proper fertilizers, are the great levers that are destined to revolution ize the agriculture of this country. The corn rows are preferably wide, say, seven to eight feet. The corn should be planted ia the drill suffi ciently close to make from fifty bush els per acre up, according to the rich ness. The cow peas are preferably drilled midway between the corn rows. An exceil fertilizer for corn is n good dose of table manure, to which about 200 pounds each of acid phos phate and kninit per aere have been added. Stable manure contains an excess of nitrogen, and it is necessary to add these elements in order to cor rect said featw e. About 300 pounds each of acid phosphate and kaiuit may be applied to the peas, in both cases in the drill and well mixed with the Boil, preferably several weeks before planting. The peas at most need but little nitrogen in the soil; they draw it from the air—far cheaper than buy ing in the market. By reason of this fact, in connection with certain chem ical changes that will take place after the corn stalks aud pea vines are turued under, the farmer will be ex ceedingly well compensated for his ontlay. The above quantity of fer tilizer may seem large, but it will prove economy in the end. Follow with wheat and clover, applying one ana oue-half bushels aud fifteen pounds of seed per acre respectively. —Bryan Tyson in Farm, Field and Fireside. Hobsoa'n Choice. After meeting manv people at the league, Colonel MeMiehael suggested that Lieutenant Hobson should have a drink, to which the hero responded that he never drank anything. When asked to have a cigar he also replied that he never smoked. However, ho nuggestei to Colonel MeMiehael that he would like to liavo a shave.—Phila delphia Times.