Loading...
The Wingham Times, 1902-09-25, Page 3WHEN THE CROPS ARE IN 'Here's n kind of happy feelin' creeps dowel a teller when .' Hcs u nkins'gathore and t!n 0 1 1 ltimow's full ages ; There's ,pope in ell the breezes that ' I corn blowire from the hill, And you get to kind or thinil;in' God its i up there stontethero' still; What a purtnefight the wheat is as it's. • a piled up, in the bin! Oh, it's good es be a farntor evh3n the crone Aro In. It's lively in the city and Ws very , quiet here ;, There the hurry and the racket keeps 1 a a-goin' all the year ; There 'most every. day's excitin" and { , they keep it up at eight, E,vpry way a person gazes There is • some onoommon sight ; And t s'pose.it's never lonesome livin' l { round the ,haunts of sin- Hut the city people never have their 1 I crops • All ln. There's many a day of toilin' and there is many air ache end pain, And thceren lots and lots 'of frcttin' at ! I the dryness or the rain, There the weeds• and worms and in - mete that ten farmer hes to f'ght But the. gbed Lent doesn't often fait to pull !aim through all right; And the. &detest satlsfnotion that a ( - mortall,>fuan, man win • Sort of Lovers round the farmer when .. the.crepe. - Aro In. The Caton the Roof. The following verses were composed on the experiet.oms of a cat that spoil three:days on a rat to in lower Wmg- bam. The copy was at hand for t ur last issue but was crowded out: -- Of all the ills that ever fall Upon a pussy's pate, There's nothing •hair so hard to bear As this, any awful fate. Yon tall: of Dreyfus in a pi'. Of Sanford in a well; Yon talk of St. Helena's isle, Where Cronje went to dwell. But I would hail a lonely isle Or on a dungeon rest, And not a wave of trouble roll Across my penetfut bt east. Alone upon the roof I sit, Itdy heart bonoft of mirth; For naught but sorrow reaches ca to So far above the earth. No meat have I, or mica, or milk, And hunger's potter is strong; My born, once so fat and plump, Is getting lean and long. All night my coat is wet with dew. At echo mocks my cries; And all day long, with withered paws, I wipe my weeping eyes How long 'twill last I cannot tell, It may be mouths or years: For not the fainteet sound of hope Has fallen on my ears. Bat hark! I hear a sound below; A ladder rises high 1 My fainting heart is cheering wi h hope • That helps is denying nigh. But, oh! a man with club appears; My heart is all forlorn; I take a desperate leap for life To Billy Johnston's corn. ASOLUTE SECYITY. C•61,44-1. EZZIONI Ge Tai -:e Cart&'s Little L iver9 Fids. Must Bear Signature of +' Sce Fac ehnno Wrapper Below. Very email and as attar to talo :.s [MVO.' roil NU/5;411E., Furl DIZZINESS. FON BILIOUSNESS. "'OC TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION CARTER'S 1' !TILE PILLS. ,.a�':1 GIP'P„UIeYiD MOITHAVI330MATuitt. tlidc�art rarely vegetatble.reet, CURE SICK HEADACHE. Dizzy? °Then your liver isn't acting well. You suffer from bilious. ness, constipation. Ayer's Pills act directly on the liver. For 60 years thehave been the Standard Family Pill. Small doses cure.Atidrunlets. • want your moustache or beard • mater it brown or nee buck? Then ue BUCKINGHAM'S DYEwrti' ers It is a Difficult Thing to Please All the People All the Time, MaltBreakfastraod Has Accomplished the Great Work. It Possesses A11 the Good Points That People Look For. The task of pleaarin a all t'at' p e.'ple all t'ie tituts h'ts•b son fully autarnn •teeled by M Jt Break/es; Food, the most delict )us the di bo Attest grow roosts. nat. Breakfast Font pleasee young autl old alt the time, empty hemline it pussessos ell the good points Brit contrib- ute to health. /roam; uhiittren thrive alt it; >taints Ilnd it wi r.tizing and laealtheil; invalids tua,1 ovnvnle:;oents lova it became of its line and delicate el tvor Hatt . IN saut•hing eta•cts 011 the weak stotench. It luta captured all pal- ates by its dein:loneness. Your Gn er sells ie. • Proposed Legislation re ft So - Called Woollen Goods," By Alfred Me:an`:rei1, Shrewsbury,Eng, With this object• in view, the lion. Chas. el Cro'svenor, ut the request of the N'ticnal Live Stock Association, racenti;• intrcduced into the House of Repreeentativos of the United States, a Lill le provide for federal Inspec- tion of mixed goods and the proper marking of the san►a, whish is known as II, B. 6505. The rurpo;,o cP th s Bill is to make. it possible for the consum= cer to know what he its purchasing by hiving the boons t;tamped •,o as to indieetc whether it is all wool, or ie not, then the percentage of shoddy or waste. There is no objection made to the use of cotton waste, xnungo, shoddy, etc., in the manufacture of• textile fabrics, when the fact is made known to the consumer, send where fraud h. not perpetrated by selling these mixtures as ell -wool fabrics. As in epitome of the measure, the following is extracted :'"All manufac- turer.. of goods or fabrics of any kind whatsoever made in imitation of Woollen goods' or fabrics, or needs which when so made are calculated or intended td be Sold as woollens or woollen, goods, not made wholly of new • o•r 1111.1.1800 Dressers wool, shill 1)3 so mark, label or tag such goods, as that they may be. !readily distinguished from genuine. wools' or woollens, as defined in the first section of this Act. That such mark, label or tag shalt be so aatteched to such, goods or. fabric so thet it cannot be detached except by design ; and such label sh ail accur- ately stage in plain printed letters u• figures the cen,tituent fibres or oilier materials or substances cf which it is composed, or the relative propor- tion pot cont. or each." Tho penalty for non-compliance with the provisions of the proposed law aro thus set forth, "That any manufacturer, merchant, imparter, or other person who shall wilfully recklessly, or carelessly mark incorrectly any cloths, goods or fatness, • or any article manufactured. or •e process of manufacture therefrom, re- quired by tide Act to be labelled or marked. se as to show a larger, per cent. of wool or a smaller percent of shoddy or cheaper fibro or material, in any manner than will, or is calcu- lated to. deceive or mislead the pur- chaser thereof, 'shall be guilty of a miscteemenoanor, and shall be fined not less than $50 and not more than 555,000 for eaaoh• offence." •c The N ition:al Live Stock Association paints out that "There are several classes 1 of tc s, d be d The best is made i y ri from The. sweepings c:f tailor shops, and the emptying of rag bags in civil- 1 ized countric,e. Tito worst, 'which con- p stituteg the greater port used in Am- • era a, from the rottop eastoff rags at begga.re and' the Inman and pest h houses cf Europa, having in them all 1 kinds and 'amounts of filth and dis- . eche. These are gathered by rag - pickers from the slums.and alleys and sent to America •in shiploads, where 'they ere purchesed by a certain class off nr'nufacturerv, wlio, in oreer 'to take ti . curse off the name, terxn the stuff "te used wool fibre." It must he rtizrembcred, however. that in most instances, when tearing this shrddy to pieces, pr<ep)r•Itnry' t.o ngain weaving it info cloth, it is found to be so rot- ten and deed. thet nothing i, rrcducecl but dn•t ensile orier to got two, n is, , eras tla:•at: it' 0 in he spun. a minimunt pe t:ion of weed or ootto•a is mixe•tl with it, in order t'h•it it nv y be held tcgeeth r. 'lirl next. step lifter •.rear- ing' c• rrie• dt. to unucrupulottn ceders, who sell thee. prcductio.t to ill' lnl:or• - ins; 3111•::. ;nil in fact the all elaae:sten of i i ceiety for "ours wool," thus getting for a suit wert.h four or fives dollars, :more than threes times this am,unt. To eneour'•;; a sunk• a fraud '•n simply I {putting the lousy `•cgs of Etxrone-%n e anper.- in etenpetil ion with the cheep and wool growers of Aneoece1 and else-, where, end robbing the consumers who wear wcollen gnrm••ents by selling them the rtnff under n misreprcesen- ; ej tatien.' If the foregoing statements are f. cis, it is scarcely likely the Live !Stork :1• snci•stion would publicly stnto !Mem unI±seg they were true. Jt c•In; be ?seedily Baan, that. ::mart from the freed nave mierepres�ertt"tinn in the 1 t matter there is a considerable source of danger to the public health through infectinn. 1 It. will. I believe. be readily admit- ted that Rome shoddy is better than many low gentle •users. and when made . into elate would make a better anti-; etas then the short steepen low gr•'de wool , bap' this' is one of th anomalies ' one has to contend with. and should : not be 11 stumbling block to legisla- tion Ora the question. Strenumi i efforts will no areibt be Med," it all countries whc+re logislstion is prnnesrd to prevent the. considers- 1 tir ! oi' the aubjnet•; but the. 1irrioul-; tics in the why .rt formulating a work -1 able ennotment cannot be nnsnrmount nble. eer?ci I sincerely hope that this' may da>sotnething tohalsten the Obj:et! WO may. in,viow. ', t . TllE W.INGIIAM TIMES; .SEPTEMBER ROAD REFORM IN O IT ;RID, • A; Pro m llenI Clergyman gyman An Interesting Letter from Ontario's. Jays Commissioner of Highways About twenty -live per cent. of the Meter ruundeipalitied in; Ontario have eha�uged their statute labor either by attelislting the system or eommua- ing tlis Taber into ,a money tax. The prejudice" which torinerly exerted U ULflSt an trey way a tot•rninl; the eyes- tem ye- teat lied grOwn into a !strong feel.ng of sy:wpatiiy Lowarne any reform. that will baring about beater results watll- vut iutpoeing additioauat outlay. The cbjectton at first made to the agit:t- Lion was not so tamale an apposition to reformed methods 4s it was to a erit•ioisaa of tltee nuIuner in which the work pact been parturined, arta the amount of work produced by the ex- easidLture. flits was loolceu upon. us eenn; u eonutlnnuttutr of the work c;eiicrally p.:itormed, no;. only nt the present time, but in the past, during the eo'nstrauti.on oL planer roads. As 111e people became more familiar with the criticism otfered, it was readily seen that the agitation was in the lablic good. Money was being ex - Vended and tuber performed in pro- ducieng work oi such a temporary character as to be lost sight of in a fele' weeks only to be repeated, al- most annu it�', It was maedi m.uni- iest that, the roods of the country we're not bang maintained by .stoe me tabo•r only, but that the people, in addition, were subecribu very large amounts of money and that our roads were not by any )neared intprov- less in. a manner Censidterae with this ()Paley. 11 bsoama apparent that the prebent eysturn o! roudmaaking, 'em- bidyuig au ekperiditte e o 'statute labor, and also an melt:Aortal expen- diture et mmol. y equuliin1 , as a gen- eral thing, a dollar of cash tor each day of Statute Inbar, was a sort of compound system which :sus difficult Lo control; that the two exl)Lnatttlres were not being tuuitcd, and could mon to t o envie:nag•e be properly .con- neeted, that in coneegaenue the forests at work were divided; team. the money and labor Wert Luang a�cattered to swell art extent that it wasj almost hopeless to expect work of a finished tr subetuntea1 teller:toter. is was clearly •Segal an many aectto•ud that meet under the statute -lab -pc system pereotaued thcar work ffai',.hfalay -annd well, that leech interest was taken in the proper maintenance of their section or bat wuile m other parts of the tawne5htp the greatest indiffer- ence prevailed, niut•li et the labor was not expended, and in oilier inato:wen ao much nue les•..uess existed that even the week puliormed was of l.ttle etrnsequ.enee. .a:colpie enea,,ed in keel- ing Up their ow.tal piece u! road had reached the aanclueton that they had not tang to do with other eecituus, anti Ile a matter ce fact they possessed little knowtca, o of the nature or extent of the expenditure in their township. They rarely thought that the other sections were al ub.atut as mach Lmportunee to 111001 ass their own, anu, as a matter ot municipal ecoaiomy, it was their duty to see that in every scowl nue .importance was attached to the work and every day end ev.ry delete: sp.na.. sheulu be ap.nc• to the best advantage. To get the people to utnderstand that the movement was one in their favor rather than a.ntagonis,tic to their in- terests; one or eooneemy, rather than of greater expenditure; that modern implements and labor-saving machin- ery were just as necessary on, tile pub- I.te highway as on. the farm,; that oi:e- gun•ization, system, carefully-p:ep1tr cd plans and specifications were as cesential in the building of roads as in the beading of any other eteuc- tures Or works; that earelut supervi- Sinn and proper direction of the forces employed were of importance, , was poeeibly the most diffiotult task in connection with the work of road re- form. I•n me'st of the townships where hunger have been made, they have been ot the most revolutionary eh,a- -teter, and are abaat as 'complete as a• •tea eCs.�ar for the f r 1 e work Lr h�an:l. Yu The by-law of the Township of I'el- lam, which wee mit carefully pre- ared, i3 or.e which has been very much used as a standard. in the remainl'3r a' the townships f t to v3lsha s s: h r th oldsystem An expert t in' .the e e e once in t, use e, r I a d i� r as not been entirely changed it has manipulation of concrete goes over the n a great many ways been modified. ground in advance or the train, and .he number of pathmaritcrs has been n.t gravel pits! in every 'township, 'by reduced. thus concentrating to a mixture of cement and gravel, menu- - factures samples of concrete pipe, and erects a samplearoh culvert, showing to the local authorities exactly how the work is performed, and whet it cruets. : During his visit he fully gra ins one a Iwo local men in • the art of malting in simple way, sub- stantial and durable culverts. This 1 re in commenced iia work in Juane. 1001, and was constantly engaged dur- ing the whel of the stseeon. The de - mend for its continu=,ace was so great that i` ccmmcnced operation'; as early this Reason es th) weather would, permit, and has already gone into a number oe iotva:hip3 acrd has don:: a lot of excellent work. teach an illus- tratin;; outfit should be encouraged in every pert of the Province. There are many nxunicirali ti's nnxi: me to unfie r- tnl:c, the betterment 'et certain Rtrct- ?. �a-- chez of roe d. 'they are prep^rod to `nY�•,,,.y- furnign m•Itnrial, but are, urfa.utiliar • GN Y' Jv"freal. ._ with the wee of such mueehinery. used are incapable of providing' it. Should one, car these• oai•fits doe at their dis- posal they would r•ea d'Iv take edvant- ago of showing to the whole commun- ity how ' isily, ch s•Iply and perfectly implements of this kind perform their work, and how much more substantial the venting, are. The fundamental prinoiplee of rond- making; ere. now boiny embodied in the work of nearly every township, town and village, Long strctchcs cf pro- p ,rev toiletruetrd meenilant :ted gravel ronde are to be found in ihcarly every, section where rood -making 'material k available, and the p+'nple ITS EFFEII.1 T AIiE MARVELLOUS. 0.rd becont)ntr rapidly ronvineeal that IT ACTS LIKE A o11'ARM. alt entirely different method of finale= Eltl<1!P ALMOST 91t8TANTAP3EOU , 'forge sums a s mthe road ost y arlem e nnav beirig spent annually in the repair and train= etenetncn 0 reeds' and Innen of this • "Paine's Celery Com pound Purifies the Blood and Revives the System." No Other Medicine in the World' Hap Ever Achieved Such Wonderful Victories 1CCU Over Disease and S;lf- Perin . I'sitaa'$ Celery O.)mpaantl has wrought murvellunit ours tor suffering tneu mud women in every aeorian of the D An MOIL It has the iuelersatiou of the beast lieu and women 111 Canada, because they have fonud the great remedy to be exact- ly what weeoimitaied for it. Scores of pro. minent ulergywen have gratefully writ• ten. in its praise,muti recoaiuu"uei it when they have opportunity. Rev. ,T. D, Leashtnan, of Angus, Out., gives his own. personal experience a,a follows: -I have alms vs forted P,tue's Calory COmpolinrl sun e*neilant• nerve tonic, and have tregnently recommend •d it to per - setts suffering from u(( fans debility and s1eiplessuess. I believe it to he a most powerful medicine. Is n1s ► purifies the blood and revive. the systetu• Give it it fair trial :and it will la those easels. be Iouud helpful." ' grrceater extent the expenditure ;mo•i- ern implements are bin employed and are being worked under the man - moment of a eemrni,ssion appointed by the council. The money raised by 'general tax is used far operating machinery, such ee graders for form- :,n•g the road, rock crushers for pro - pet l�' preparing; material, and in mak- ung concrete p'pa for tenon sluices and concrete -arches in large culverts, leav- ing the stotuto labor to bo expended in the: hauling cf gravel only. These are modifications wJaicll have proven very emotion' and are steps lending tc a more complete change. A more careful inspection of the work is beim; generally made, a greater study is bestnlwed nn the expenditure, erect the people find in the work a sub- ject. of muco interest and importance. Possibly one of the most encourag- ing features noViceable during the past few yetis is the fact that all meetings now being held for the rurpose of con- sidering the expenditure aro called by the mrnicipt1 authorities, and aro as largely attended as possible by the people -of the neighborhood. ' The v'r.me.t. reception is extended to the advocate the very closest Attention is given to everything said. All ques- tions asked are eskid for the express purpose of getting at the best way of doing' the work. in the °hon est and easiest and at, the same Time the most substantial, finished, and, lasting man- ner. Tice exp!>nditure is now in the hands ofth^ mtrnicipatl councillors and is receiving' and most careful consideration. Permanency end dur- ability are: sought, and the most need- ful work is! first' undertnkon. ' While much hee bee'h done along the lutes' o!' instruction, mucin remains to be dean. An annual meeting should purpose of talking over the question be held in every •municipality, for the of road -makings', at which the season's work eirould be mapped out. This meeting should be attended by every .ratepayer, and . no c''thor question should at this meeting be considered. Detailed statements of ttll the work in te•e townhip and the cost of each piece of work should be given. In Eastern Ontario for the past two yeaxe aa. illustration train 'has been menngteo•by the Eastern Ontario ,Qood, Roads Association. (This train is operatint in ten counties, and has con- strueteel many stretches cf ideal roads., which serve as an• object lesson to the people in the surrounding districts. The outfits ecnsis;t of rook crush•^r,, road graders, £Ieam roller, and all such tool•t :-Ica 'eiiplrnaecl:et as are necessary for doing good work. 'Each machine is attended' by a man eeper- ';'i►, 1102. CANADIAN CHEESE. Opportunit]es for Improving its Market Value, Thr following' lottor, which appoar- ed in the Montreal f"raizette of Fri- day, deals with, a Matter of numb lm•• terect to the dairymen of Canada: Sir,• -Having lived during the past six r ars int Legrand, and visited most of tete principal towns, I found our Canadian clusiso was highly :tp- preciated there. )lliilions of pounds ' of it: were sold and consumed, while nay family as well as myself scarcely ever eat it, because other cheese suet. tie Gorgonzola, Gruyere, and Lameaxtbort ebcia o, 'were so much more palatable as well as ninon ease Ter of digestion. The fact of our C.inudleu otete being sold there in such large q entities caused me to look clo,eely Into the subject. T ask red the question, How is this? Why Tet this dry, hard Ceoadia'n cheddar sold in such large quantities? The reply generally ivas, "Because we make a good profit on it." The trad ere of Groaat Britain as well as trad- ers generally, can influence or retard trade us they. choose. if an article gives deem little trouble and a big prefi'' they will naturally push that article. John Bull is mora interested about profits than, any other con- sideration, provided the article 'dealt in is pure and good of its kind. CANADIAN t IIEE SE IS GOOD. It .is. geed of its kind and should be continued. It suits a certain trade, which is very large, and should bo aerefull;r preserved, ' At Inc same time tLcres is n0 rcaeon why the peo- ple cf the United Kingdom should make. iso larges a profit on cheese at the. expense of .the iaraners a]; Canada. This is a subject which our farmers need to look into. They aro as intelligent men as probably any far- mers in the world', and so are the m•1nagers of our cheese factories. But they ate certainly behind the times In the study of profit making from their milk, she hard, dry cheese made under the present system, and which tho trade demands, docs not yield them the weight which they should get, nor is the cheese g ratable as as formerly, when it was made differently. Some years ago the CHOICE OF A DRUGGIST. Wise and prudent people shonld choosy a reliable and well gnalitied druggist to lvht au they cell leo ar all tittles with a con. tirlence that their pies riotious will be vroumptly and necurnu 1+ flllt•tl. We are iu a positive to viler you our long ex- perieucu with a gn+n•antee than your wants will be propaetle attended to, and than our prices will 13 satisfuctory. ALL RANKS AND CONDITIONS Of our peoule aver now reinter nears of Ptainas's Celery Compound, the g •Hatt health re+.torer. The virtues of this m.ad- ieine 'ore ustnnisliint. Paine'. Uetery Compound peernuua*nt•ly Bares rhesutntt- tisna, •neuralgia, dtver.aund kidney com- plaints and blood tron'•les Try is battle of Paine's Oelery t.'on:poued if you are out-of-surts; it ',vill give you cheering results. A. L. H%MIL'rox, Onsite}est•, \eViu;;haun, Ont. 11 erase was! 'over .ono pound ot cheese from ten 'pounds of milk, but now it acquires about eleven j)ounds of mill,. to make one pound of cheese. Our eine, c factories have not kept peen with other Canadian industries end are not up to date as they should Ix:. ; I haves examined the whey from two i cheese factories. one in the eastern I townships and one`in the Brcekvillo district. Ina eaolt case there was at leaast'.one quarter ,of a pound of ,good cesspit found, ih.• each' gallon of whey exemened', us well ae half a pound of milk sugar to each gallon of whey. This indicated that EVERY IS 7'A R '. C1 5. O kindling 1,000 gallons of milk a day there was in the whey 250 paunds of ohne ae e day. • This is an enormous loss, one amounts 1.o millions 6i' dol- lars a m,ually. Thera is also some, 500 pounds of milks sugar a p ttg `u day wasted or fed to the pigs, which 'sometimes get beastly drunk from the 4 quantity of. a:cohol generated in 'the whtey from so'1arg a les • ntage of sug.er which causes ?':rnicntation. The experts in 'The cheese business might. find some use for this sugar, which is ;le easily extracted from the � whey ac; the sugar is from the maple cep. • If 40.Oth;,000 gallons :ic milk , ears ma.dc into cheeses annually there 1 are '200,000 pounds of sugar thrown away In fart, one expert in this line told m'. the other day that the waste pccduete of the dairy business in Canada were of greater value than the total amount the. farmers now obtain from their milk. Can this waste be prevented? It should. It can be. Yes, and it will be. But it cannot be done suddenly. FO IMF RH9Pl , DYSENTERY, COLIC, CRAMPS, PAIN IN THE STOMACH, AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS. a ,• money is not beings protaitnbly expend= Pl.asant, Rapid , ,B11ablo, llffeGtuala roach by not: extensivesystlnl of patch. �;,. work. rather than building them in a coney?rehen3ive and finished manner, mrtd repairing i•liepli by tt system of proper inspection width will provide for theft: netintenaneo by not allowing them to get: slit ot repair. PRICE, - 350, 'A. %V. C'Alllrl'it;tt, , ' Commissioner, of llighwoys. EVtRY HOUSC QNOULn HAVE 1T. Set vete briti0 IeT rots tr. saint IS °ta.ee. THAT'S THE SPOT! Right in the small of the back. Do you over got a pain there? if so. do you know what it moans'? It is a Backache. A sure sign of Kidney Trouble. Don't neglect it. Stop it in time. hf you dotet, serious Kidney Troubles ate sure to follow. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS care Backache, it.atae Back, biabetes, Dropsy and all kidney and Bladder Troublee, Priors Sim. sties s► itet$1,35.all goidito. DOAN ICIDN111Y PILL GO• '1r et st% Ont. Our Tear its of disturbing the present and vor,Y important trade which baa been bt:t/t up ou the present system. Let ifs keep the 'trade by all means. It is better to .have the labouring class s of Greatll .rita' use s our r 1 tad dry cheese than 'to suddenly `toss their custom by tryang to gain the middle and higher classes with a bet- ter close before we are prepared to turn it out Iproperly. TI11 m s't I'LAN TO ADOi Iu thee of beginning to shake other standard qualities of cbeese—suets as lure demanded in the British market. The Gruyere, the Camembert and the Gorgonzola cheese can eadily be shade if the proper attention is given to thein. 'Aitc former qualities are more successfully made in Canada and aro. of excellent quality. The demand for suite cheese, in Loudon and all over Brsgland is large, but the supply comes from France, and Jthor coun- tries aw'the continent. Canada should begin to supply the English market with these cheese. We should also supply cheddar cheese in s'`.naaller sixes. Even here at home it is diffi- cult to get 'ts .cheese under 80 lbs. weight. 'Phaco is a demand for small- er sized cheese, and yet our factory system is such that they aro not rondo to any great extent for suppiy- inlg the home trade, let alone elle Englsb market where they are in greater demand. • In England the shops are stocked with smell sized cheese, whicb weigh from 1-Z Ib. to 10, 15, or 20 lbs., while C•taindian cheese of ponderous size miry be seem ;!l1 cut up in chunks whish are exposed 'o the dust and tickete l 64. or 74. a lb., awaiting purchnser3 who are not Too fastidi- one about dust .in their food, If our farmers would but turn their t'ttention to Snaking intense at home the e•une as the peasant farmers of Ne)rm•andy, Brittany and 'other parts oaf mance, Germany and ether .Euro- peen countries, they might make much morel profit; out of their milk. But here'ngain .THE WARNING VOICE shout l be raised to persuade them to be cautious. •'hey- should keep up the eupply of milk to the factories, and at the cams time begin at home in ea small way the manufacture • of different kinds of cheese until they become expert at the business, and their products are accepted by the trade. Or they might agree to ar- range with the manager CZ their fac- tory to exjx riment in the manufac- ture of the different kinds of cheese, which would yield them a bigger profit. The British market is open for a aifferont cheese from that which is In•a la now supplies, and it is pcs- sible rot this country to send double the quantity pf cheese to the home market if the quality was equal to the cheese thet market now gets from either countries. In the present system of cheese making there is hot only great Waste, but some very unsanitary practices which Phould be avoided. While ev- erything is kept cleanly in our fac- tory and the use of tobacco strictly breaking; up the curd With' the hands fahbieisi.= acre is the practise of and arms, which' is objeotiontblo. In warm weather the perspiration oozes from the faces end urine lef the man into the curd. This is not only a waste of energy but an uncleanly ptractice, which could be easily abol- ished. And why it is not, lee a mys- tery, as good. 'cheese can, be made without this practice. Another very objectionable'oature in the manufac- ture io-: the high temperature of heat applied to the milk after the extract' of rennet is introduced. This prac- tice combined with the raking anil trituration employed, to produce the ecid-reaction is not .;poly injurious to r THE HYGENIC PROPERTIES of the cheese but cause of. the great waste experienced. it breaks. up the curd into such infinitesimal atoms that it filters away imperceptibly in- tro .the, weliey and ]u laical. The Wien* tors, ii, tett ata., 4o not eureka* the whey,exceprt Visor butter fat. It examined foto Inteein they would f Iargo quantity, such; as referred ftp' Atomr• The Agricultural Department 4 the .Government is in a, positiest tort bring about eucb change.a as will 1354•.4 tet: the condition ot the farmere sad improve the dairy industries (4 the eouxltry. Taarge+ awns « tuonoy are expended in experiments. but vary, little mores to be done with, a. view; of aero profit to the farmers. TJam curing ,stations lately built at etatt- sideroble expense, ere tint sight considered, a great improve- ment, but it} Ls' very quostionnble if the tanners are going tto reap great* er profit's by the experiment. The dipping of cheese into vats of hot iatratin may be rooked upon as an ingenious method of preventing any mould, but it 'may likewise) prevc only cbimcricel, Even it it succeeds, there i:t the objection to the use of pa,rafiv when a ' more ((unable arti- cle,is found in a preparation of case- in,. which is quite as Adhesive an11 more. in harmony with an article of diet. , 4. say object in writing this article is to draw more attention to the nee ce*sity of improving a great Indus- try, ane eeepaoially to arouse the fare niers' intensat in a manner'that will be seats#. Since the big cheese of 1590 wrus made the country as liable to think itself the biggest and greats est cheese country in the world. That may be true, but there is a danger of a big head. It may swell to such! an exten'. that an eruption "nay take plztce. 'The Safest course to adopt its to improve on sate, emend Iines, tend to do so, the hints and sus;ltese- theirs of others besides the• experts may be useful. F. C. 7ItELAND, • • . ii'ood Specie:dist. ,September 10, 1902. e : • Opinions of Leading Physicians. I have beei. using Strong's Pilekone for•' Several m'pnchg with remits that warrant ane$ in recommending it to my patients with every contldeuc"in it claims. 1t. Ferguson, 31,. D., Coroner, London, Ont. Price $1.00. For sale by druggists, or by mail on e 'T Sen TRORG, Manufacturing Chemist Louuon, O.aturw. HAVEyou been smok- ing a good deal lately and feel an occasional twinge of pain roundyourbeart? Are you short of breath, haves unhinged, sense - tion of pins and needles going through your arms and hngers? Better take a box or two of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and get cured before things become too. serious. As a specific for el] heart and nerve troublestheycan, not be excelled. A true heart tonic, blood enricher and nerve re- • newer, they cure nervousness, sleepless- ness, nervous prostration, smoker's heart) palpitation of the heart, after effects of la grippe, etc. Price goc. per box or 3 boxes for$n.as at all druggists, or will be sent on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.. Limited, Toronto. Ont. Goo. T f 6fsming TO WINGS M FAIR ON FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26th. Their• Orchestra will be in attendance during the after- noon of Fair at the grounds, and at night the Company will give an entertainment in the Town Hall In aid of the Agricultural Society. Tickets for Concert Deserved Seats 356. Adults 25c. Children Plan of Hall and sale of seats at Douglass' Drug Store. Open IViondayT, 2nd September.