-~NO, 17 Y REPORT Of G. G. Publow, Reganiing = Eastom Ontario. i g 18 ASKED FOR KINGSTON DAIRY SCHOOL Cheese Factories Closed -- Effected by the New United States Tariff and Increase in Home Consumpt- jon of Milk, In dealing with the work of dairy instructors during 'the past year G.Gi. Publow' told the Eastern Ontario Dairymen's = association at Comwall. that 23 instructors were employed in 1913, one less than last year. Before starting their season's work the in structors were given a short course of instruction at the * Kingston Dairy school. : There was 882 Sess factories in tion 'during the past season, just 13 less than a year ago. Before the ¥oason closed, | however, 20 of these shut down on account of their pat- rons thippiog milk or cream to the cit ies, thereby rendering factory opera tions both unprofitable and impractic- able. Ove factory was compelled to Close it doors on acdount of its being nan unsanitary condition and 12 ot. were burned. Four of these were iit and seven new ones were added fo the list. Four hundred and five factories ex. pended the sum of $77,633 in improv- ing their buildings and equipment. Six pew copl-curing rooms were construct. ed bringing the total number in East- eri Ontetio up to "60, or in other words only about seven per cent of the total dumber of factories are equ- ipped with this exceedingly important feature of: factory construction, It £5 interesting to note that during the six months' season extending from May 1st to Nov. 1st a total' of 921, 743,762 Ibs. of milk was delivered to these 882 factories. This was con- tributed by 30,885 patrons from 281, 489 cows. Analyzing these figures we find that each cow yielded approxi- mately 3274 bs. or an average of 18.2 Ibs. per day, , Decline of 183,000 Boxes "From this milk," said Mr. Pub- low, . #4 0,383. -of Sheets Mare man! ) © OF approximatefy 1,- 014,000 boxes, the average amount of * mith PORE YS Wake o pound of cheese beitig. 10.77 bs, Going back to my ol a yeast ago I find that this yewr our total make up to Nov. 1st "is a trifle over + 100,000 boxes short, and for the whole sea- son some 135,000 boxes short. This shortage may bel attributed almost entirely to two €auses, namely. an un usually dey summer and a greater production of milk and cream for other Ses. It is interesting to note that over 1,600 of those who sent ' milk to cheese factories in 1912 have 'vither shipped milk or cream to the cities or have patronized but- ter factories 1913. Then again, a very. able amount of milk and cream was shipped to the Uni- ted States during the latfer part of were mde, over forty "lactories dis- continuing the manufacture of cheese entirely to supply the demands of the new market. Twenty-four fae- tories cream to the United States du the whole season. Nine of these casein as a by-product and twormade skimmed milk cheese for a part of the season. ene Whey Butfer "In connection with the manufac- ture. of 118 factories made whey butter, the total amount being approximately 375,000 lbs., about 10,000 Ibs. less than was manufac- tured by 121 factories during the previous vear. Eighty-eight factor 103, or only ten per cent.. of total number in operation, pasteuri- zed the whey." | vogret that this number is so;small and that prac- tically no improvement has been made in this respect over the' pre- vious season as 1 consider it ome of the most important features of sue cessful management in the interest of both patrons, makers und factory- men, » ' Falling Of in Adulteration "During the season the instructors made a total of 1,305 full day visits to the factories avd 4,976 call visits. They visited 2,096 patrons and tested 20,585 samples of milk, 53 of which showed to hate been adulterated. is 'gratifying to note that the centage of adulterations shows a falling off of over 27 per cent. from the year 1912. Thirty-eight of these were prosecuted, two cases being dis- missed antl thirty-six being fined from $5 to 230 each, amounting in all to $917. "Seventy-nine factories used butter fat basis in paying for milk, the being . 3.60 "A very encouraging feature =i this season's report is the fact that a tos tal of 589 new silos were built, show- ing that the patrons are rapidly rea- lizing both the advantages and ne- cessity of this element in the pro- fitable production of milk. The in- creasing desire of factory patrons to gain a greater knowledge of the con- ditions upon which the success - of their 'work depends is very' evident by the marked attendance at the dis- trict dairy meetings and the 130 fac- tory meetings which were addressed by ome or wiore of the instructors. Besides addressing most of the dis- trict dairy meetings! and four spe- cial "chepse-makers' * meetings. Most of. my time was spent during the summer with the instructors in going amongst the different factories, and 'at_several poiats conferences, were held: with groupe: of the instructors at some factory where the day was spent in wranufacturing the cheese. Several makers usually attended these practical demonstrations as' well, and results weré noticeable in "their work aftérwards. » the the average per cent. of' fat Creamery Reports "The number of creameries visited by me in 1913 was increased from 1912 and during the past season I visited all creameries in Fastern On- tario except the Prescott and Pie- ton areamaries. In all T had thirty- one creameries and one skimming sta- tion in my group and I made fortyv- one full day. visits and eighty-six call visits during the season and vis- ited fifty patrons. . "The output of butter in 1913 has been graater in most oreameries than in" 1912+and this increase combined with the make of the new creameries the seascpy when the tarifi' changes in operation in 1913 will make an MR. DR MRS. DYSPEPTIC ! GET YOUR ~ STOMACH RIGHT---PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN lu Five Minités! Time it! No Indigestion, gas, sourness, 5 hing. "Really ** put bad stomachs in order--"reslly does" overcome indi- gestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes--that-- just that---makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest polling stomach regulator in the World. If what you eat fer- ments into stubborn lumps, you belch fas and eructate sour, undigested food and weld; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, remember the moment Papé"s Diapepsin comes in f A Coupe oF | ; DRS Aso T PROMISED | TB BWEAR OFF HerYviNG {YOU on MEW Ye ARS. SL Mew Years 18 Pay AND AT SLL GOES. 1 INE Re sovey MOY To TY AIOV THIS whole yeas. 1 oR contact with the stomach. all distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing-- almost. marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty cent case of Pape's Diapepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction, or your druggist hands you your money back. At's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stomachs regulated. It belongs in your home---should always be kept handy in case of a sick. sour, upset stomach during the day or at night, It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world. , ON THE LEVEL, Do You ME AN THAT No MATTER WHAT ~ the | It: per- * . The Cox Mausoleum, one of th morning of the 19th, increase of about 380,000 lbs. of but- ter over 1912.. Besides this increase considergbly more cream has beén shipped to Toronto during the past season than in 1912 and the - make of the Tononto cresmeries does mot show in the total "make of Fastern Ontario. The average percentage of overrun for the season was 19.63 per cent. and the average selling price was about 25 6-10, slightly over one cent a pound less than the average price of 1912. "Of the thirty-one creameries four- teen use the individual can exelusive- ly, four use both the large jacketed cans and the individual cans, ten use the large cans exclusively, one uses tanks and two whole milk, * creamer- ies of course use the ordinary milk cans, The individual cans has some advantages over the large can as the butter maker has control of *the inspection, weighing and sampling of the cream where the individual can is used. On the other hand the in- dividual can means . greater eNpense and more platform room on the hauler's waggon to accommodate the cream of any given number of pa- trons. Have Refrigerators "Of the thirty-one creameries, twen- ty-on¢ are equipped with refrigera- tors. Two of these twenty-one. are equipped with the Cooper Madison system, two with jammonia refrigera- ting, machines, two with permanent storpge of ice, two with cylinders for ice and salt mixture, and the maiming thirteen with temporary ice storage. While the latter are ver satisfactory when kept properly iced. this frequent icing entails more worl. and is apt to be neglected when work is heapiest, which is just when it ig most necessary to have the ice cham ber well filled. Undoubtedly for or dinary creamery work the permanent storage of ice Will be the most wa tisfactory type of refrigerator "One hundred ami samples of butter were tested moisture, the highest test bein: 20.9 per cent. the lowest 10 per cent., and the average 14.37 per cent This average "is slightly lower than the average! moisture of 1912. © One hundred and thirty-nine samples were tested for salt, the highest test be ing 6.86 per cent., lowest test .G0 por cent., and the average 2.88 per cent This average is considerably higher than in 1912. "The creameries were for the most part well kept, having good drainage aud apparently good water supply The quality of butter was much su petior to that of 1912, particularly in the early part of the season The flavor was cleaner and milder, due largely, no doubt, to more favorable weather conditions. On the whole the body and texture of the butter was superior to 1912. A marked im- provement in the body and texture and also in Yhe favor of the butter re seventv-eight for THATS BxalrLy | MY New ears REsoluTion may be secured by more prompt and Be wt a ---------- efficient coeling of the cream after it AND Wm GUY wWiTH THE KEEP thy ---- REE NEY LAST RESTING PLACE OF SENATOR GEORGE A. COX EN MOUNT PLEASANT CEMETERY, TORONTO. e finest in the Domipion, where the late Senator was laid to rest on the is received at the creamery." Should Not Ship Green Cheese In dealing with the cheese end of it G. G. Publow: said it should . be compulsory to keep cheese for a cer- tain time. It would bé no disad- vantage to buyers. I, further,' we could sell cheese. on their. merits many 'defects would disappear. J. A. Campbell moved : Whereas the dairy, industry of Fastern On- tario could be materially advanced and assisted by. increased equipment and facilities at the Eastern, Ontario Dairy School, Kingston; be it -resolv- ed that the Department of; Agricul ture be requested = to increase the grant to that institution, in order that the additionalystafft and equip- ment necessary to do research, and experimental work may be conducted under the supervision "of the super ihiendent. MISS ZARA CLINTON At the Grand next Friday and Satur- day evénings and Saturday matinee ¥ Jesse Collings Leaving Politics Loudon, Jan. 21.--The Right Hon. Jesse Collings, who from the laborers cottage his father in Devonshire tose to be a member - of the king's privy council, has decided to follow into retirement his leader, the Right Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, who a few days ago abnounced that he about to give up political life, of was sari fias------------ Miss Mary Tighe, an esteemed re sident of Brockville, passed away Saturday evening. Deceased had been an invalid for some years. a ATS xe THE {s § BPEAK Ruut auY FEAR LY! - we Rk To Ly Powe ' You're SOLUTIONS SERVE NEURALGIA Cured Through the Use Of Dr. : ' Bi a Williams' Pink Pills excellent reason why De. Williams' Pik Pills have cured the most severe: cases of neuralgia, sciatica and other complaints in the group known as disorders of the ner- ves. This group also includes ~ St. Vitus dante, partial paralysis and the common state of extreme ner- vousness and excitability. Fach of these complaints exists because there is something the matter with the ner- vous system. Ii the nerves have tone and are strong and healthy vou will not have any = of these complaints. I'he reason why Dr. Willian' Pink Pills cure nervous disorders is that they restore weak, run-down 'nerves to their proper state of tome. They act both directly upon' the blood supply and the nertes. The highest medical" authorities have ' noted that nervous troubles generally attack people who are bloodless and that the nerves are 'toned when the blood in renewed. It is thus seem that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure nervous.dis- orders by curing the cause of the trouble. The following i 'an "in- stance... Miss 'Annie Jones, London, Ont., says: "For over a year I was an intense . sufferer from neuralgia, which located in my face and head. The pain at times was so intense that I could. scarcely keep from screaming, and nothing I was doing for the . trouble scemed to help me. As time went on my whole nervous system was affected. At last when I felt that my case was almost hope- less I was advised to try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. The result of this treatment was that 1 am now en- joying such comiort as 1 had mot known for years, and only those who have suffered from neuralgic pains can realize what a blessing the Pills have been to me." ! Ii you are suffering from any blood or nervous disorder begin to cure vourself to-day with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which vou can get from any medicine dealer or by mail at 30c. g¢ bo® or six hoxes for $2.50, from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont There is an Plans Big Shake-up. New York, Jan. 21.--~Reforms in the New York police department, as suggested by a special committee of the board of aldermen, which investi- gated the department after the mur- der of Herman Rosentha), in July, 1912, are to be adopted by Mayor Mitchel. Announcement to this effect was made by the mayor. Under the new regulations - inspectorships will be abolished; a secret service squad will be created to watch for ¢orrup- tion within the department aud there will be special vice squads, operat- ing from headquarters fo combat WELL THEN T CAN A J STIFF, | YOU Big Bum. yiuke gambling.and the social evil AND A DIBGR ACE TO THE MUMAN RACE, NEXT TIME You ORDER ME Xo Do SOMETHING NMaePen; Yov MONT Mir me ? . : To S0AK ME FoR Aa WHOLE | . RESotved nor | ( Bo =e A COWARD AND |» BULLY AND -{ ---- TLL 3AY'Poo * Pee' AND You CANT Do A THNNG ABOUT IT. THAY FoR YOU } SOLEIL ALAR ESL a SSO DELLA LES LAALL RSS. FTETTITTTTTTProeeees dd TTTIITTFTTerTes wer ee eeeest ee Pleasant Fields of *Holy "Whit. THE INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. A weekly column of abiding interest to both teachers and oa scholars. " Motto for this Week: * benevolence--mwhiich has yielded a and National character than the John Bright, Statesman. First Quarter. Lesson IV, January 23, 1914. SERVING JESUS (THE STORY) Jesus: was distinctly social "He loved ; : 8 . people. tified with His presence and miracles all domestic He smiled and indulged in humor. Without v Orie a Aad Ind hout violating the customs of the or of Palestine in articular, He al ministered to by a group of devoted a, who { pte armslf to be and stood apart when He worked His miracles orVareacheq His sermons St. Luke in his navrative naturally follows his inimitable description of Jesus' compassionate attitude toward the repentant woman in Simon's house with a roll of the pious women who were devoted to the Master: Mary, of Magdala: Jobanna, wife of Chusa, Herod's steward; and Susann, Such a life, such assoclations, is a flat denial of asceticism as an elpment in Jesus was no hermit. - This social disposition of Jesus had its consummate flower in His relation to the favored family in Beth- any. Among the olives and vines of the hillside was a white-walled villa which, sheltered three choice spirits--a brother and two sisters all devot- edly attached to the Master. Here He found comradeship, shelter from the and mental refreshment. |, The simple strong In ardent t in order Martha,is at her wits' end how to Luke 8: 1.3; 10: 88.42, He adorned and beau- events and amenities. the la to worthily entertain the loved guest. make the entertainment worthy. She needs many hands to give the ban- quet a high festa) air. Mary's attitude presents a strong contrast. She meets the Master on a higher plane. Sympathetic appreciation of Him- self and His mission--this gives rest to His ardent spirit, such as no couch of down could afford. It gives refreshment to the soul, such as no studied and ample banquet. Martha's chiding of Mary is the most human stroke in the narrative. As she could not approach the Master on that plane herself, she could not be expected to understand what 'Mary was do- Ing when she wis so approaching Him. It looked like indolence and waste to her. Her appeal to the guest to decide between thom was characteristic of her impetuous disposition. Jesus' reply was more humorous than didactic. The very repetition of Martha's name was a playful allusion to her busy spirit. As in a sense the Master bas come not to receive, but. to give, receiving from Him, not giving to Him. was the better part--all the more so since the results of receiving are permanent, forming the good part no' to be taken away THE TEACHER'S LANTERN Beneath the simple and pleasing narrative there portrayal of character and analysis of motive. puts the high stamp of His approval upon the amenities of social life when, as in this instance, he plays the part of guest. Whatever that part required He gladly paid, and that, too with exquisite courtesy. .. Appearances are. deceitful. Mary, sittin inactive when all'the house.was bustling to make ready something w «of the guest, seemed the incarnation of indo- lenge, dnd naturally provoked her sister's protest. But in reality Mary was giving the Master Avore. pleasure than meat or drink. To be an appreciative Hstener to the ibgh ideals and profound convictions of another is to give the narrator the most exquisite joy of which he is capable, bi was in appearance only that Mary' was slothful. Her mind way as alert and - active as it could ever be. . Jesus seals her receptive attitude with His ap- proval. Receptivity is the very avenue by which the highest and most per- preparation for is a subtle lesson--a Jesus deliberately manent gaod is attained. It is also the true ng the largest good. . . Here is the age-old antithesis between uctivity an dRe¢eptivity. It has been well sald that Martha was the St. Poter and Mary the St. John of the women apostles. There are perils in 'Doth disposi- tions. In the former, pride and self-confidence. - In the latter, solf-complac- ent quietism. . Jesus in ap ideal way unites the two dispositions. In Him the equilibrium between activity and passivity is perfect. He is con- templative. yet practical. He is unreserved in endeavor, bit unmoved in rest. He had what Ruskin has called the greatest possession---sself-posses- sion. In every age the zeal of Martha's hand antagonizes the repose of Mary's heart. . » Martha is not to be criticised except in her demand that Mary shall be like herself. The truest service nf Jesus is when we allow Him to serve us. Sight of professed followers of Jesus recip- rocally accusing each other Is' unpleasing and uncomely. . A small and diminishing sect has as its slogan, "Why do people differ so when our way is right?" ANALYSIS AND KEY Jesus of a social disposition. Incidents in evidence. Miunistered to by devoted women His life the denial of asceticism Supreme illustration. Attitude toward the family in Bethany. Tuncident of His first visit Martha and Mary types. Productive vs. Receptive. Latter really means of highest productivity. > THE YOUNG PEOPLE'S DEVOTIONAL SERVICE January 25, 1914. Jer, 82: 13; 13-18. PERILS THAT THREATEN OUR NATION. (Home Missionary Meeting) The laws of true national prosperity are fundamestal, universal and perpetual. . What Jeremiah said to Israel may be said to America to-day: "Execute judgment and righteousness; deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor. Do no wrong to the defenseless, strangers fatherless and widows. Shed po innocent blood (in wars of any kind)." Observance of this injunction with all its implications, is the price of national prosperity. The contrary spells desolation. Admirable progress has. n made in child-labor, temperance, care df immigrants, and universal peice; but much remains to be done. Py [ THE : REIOLLTION 1S oF But.it