t Francis N OLD BAILEY. Middie of July AubPon Poubon vs fail a 16,209 Deaths I all sther bead W ARATING amberlain, the Mr. Chamberâ€" ter to the vieaâ€" lizes with this always pleased being doue ts piness into the lilea From Haw» ying V almes. es f Francisa JOIQ.., of an Unuamed Coiny.. Defence Wl be Rob and Bl“.-." Ugdom, has reâ€" noA less an agaâ€" MHave Quit n D PLACER. PPROVES H Indict CARS R. Eimploya= RIFE IN EGYPT, °/ praond Jury t â€"ca y "Plhrized Fra neis Jmph utenant in the nssars, and wi» ne Augtroâ€"Hug. the Coronation irged with toly _ Cmnnal faw [Y rO) on mnet us it the v#â€" ® 6 6 o« â€" house y yards, 1 fatally. of _ ag>, on ageat n (nuaster itg â€" care ars came c _ Merbert have cut mineeriog and have Only one turing th nboned be mmghly on prince %234 the chargs> ck at the and pleadâ€" Nicholas of atives and ded court.â€" #oâ€" Counsel he offence s chargest Londeon was couâ€" the pay Phis sumâ€" ‘ot wide, Ne ricnâ€" i men t 18 Counâ€" tor and and has parative attractea iret ma?.e‘ ‘@ral, _ de prosecutor k '.W" 6 "".'mndl iwes. and \@eklY chok \hO" ‘..t ."Z““I'] c‘~ l iale M#dcse ha ndoned 20 miles lra weeqn. t M i¢ pla® rlesto® »t hege * and 16 MHezt» Dool®, Army, try and He has 0 rewâ€" 3 ow a t in Boc $ Ur rk Polise ® No# Saly & iwo to wA 6 one of a+€CY _ to KPCreqcy official« : of thse AMl at the harges Fran o 1 4% ring irâ€" vJ «o I arrived at Ballater without wsarnimg, and, leaving Ferguson at be station to order a fly and come n with my luggage, 1 walked to arkhill in the Gusk. There was a amp in the atudy, I could see it plainâ€" y enough, for the blind was not yawn cdown. I saw a figure pass »@ween the window and the light, s another minute the front iloor mened, agad Taâ€"ta rushed . at me, eaping on to my _ shoulders, and sarking . loyously ; while Bablote herâ€" self. @carcely â€" less fleet of â€" foot, elzed both my hands, erying in joyâ€" me welcome : "Mr. . Maude! Mr. Maude!. â€" Mr. Moude !" ~ â€" ( sald, "How are yoy? 1 hope you 1re quite well. Isn‘t it cold?" But, wieed, no furnaceâ€"{ire could have sent auck a glow through my veins a« the â€" warmâ€"hearted pressure of the girl‘s hands. o you know 1 have a sort of ‘ecling that 1 knew you were comâ€" ug toâ€"day?" The SRcotch believe in «cond sight . perhaps it‘s a giit of the country. I‘ve had all day a preâ€" sentment that something was goâ€" w to happenaâ€"something nice, you now ; and just now, before you vere near enough for me to hear your step, some impulse made me zit up and look out of the window. a)@l,. Mr. Maunde, don‘t believe mamâ€" no if she says Taâ€"ta moved first, ecouse she lidno‘t; it was I. There‘s «lways something in the air before »gool genlus appears, you know.," the «l she laughed very happily as she me in anmd gravely introduced me her mother. Both had been kaitâ€" w stocking» for me, aud I thought v stiuly hiawt never looked so warm so homeâ€"like as it did with their kâ€"baskeis and wools about, aurl these two good little women king â€" kindly _ welcoming â€" uproar wl me. _ ‘Toâ€"io broke his chain, <â€"climbed up â€" oaua my _ s#houlder, srling amwm!l showing his teeth jeailâ€" siv al Babiole. The _ delighted nor «oothed my ears as no prima iaa‘s singing hbad ever done. That cniag 1 could have embraced Mrs. mer with tenderness. Nx day: 1 was alone in the drawâ€" & room, the ladies having given wssrssion of the Hall and reâ€" ul to the cottage, when 1 heard vmie teething, etc. L uese AdUICSS Dtain no opiate or polsonous crugs wl meother« who iry them onca will ot be without thom while they have ultle ones. Mrs. D. E. Badgles, Yo«wimore, Man., says: *"*When our itle girl was about six months old a1° caught a bad cold, and was much roubled with indigestion and constiâ€" pation, and very restless both day ind night. One of my neightors brought â€"me some Baby‘s Own Tab t# oml In a fow days &y little one was regular in her bowels and rested well. _T found the Tablets so satis actory that I row always keop them in the house, and have since found hem valiable when she was teethâ€" (ng. T can iruly recommend them for he illes of little ones," & Children tsk> these Tablets readil3, ud erushed to a powder they an be xiven with absolute safety to the smollest infant. The Tablets cal__Pf ~Vtatne«! at all drag stores, or you can got thom post paid at 23 cents « boxr by writing direct to the _])r‘ Killams â€" Mcedictce Co.,_ Brockyille. On‘t.. or Sohenectady. N. Y. ~=~~ May I gome in, Mr. Maude * erlainly." . was husy putting up two paintâ€" « of Norwegian scenery lndflace the portraits of Lady elen, ich were on the ground against the . (m weeing my occupation, Baâ€" e uttered a short ery of surâ€" s and dismay. 1 said nothing, but my head on one side to see if * of my new pictures was hung aight. At last «ho spokeâ€" (h, Mr. Maude!" was all she said, s tone of timid reproach. W elt," You‘re not going to take her down Lal & «tepns PP Y That would be rather contemptu tMerance, wouldn‘t it ?" Bat the picture wouldn‘ » W tluat : and it t_lw BABY‘S OWN TABLETS A W eak, Sickly aad Fretinl CRIGO~ ron of All Ages. h the children‘s digesiive organs all right, the cehbildren are all t. _ They _ will be heariy, ro#y. yâ€"ami hungry. _ Get the little : righi, aml koep them right t>s use e( Baby‘s Own Tablets. This cine cures all stomach and bowel bies, noervousness, irrita tion e tecthing, etc. â€" Duese Tablets ain no opiate or poisonous crugs meothers who ivy them once will be without thom while they have ‘re not going to take her down all this time *" 7 Irs 3Â¥ the picture wouldn‘t tluxt : and it the should ever grow sorry for harm s«heâ€"he bad done, it Iâ€" something to know that should 1. say ?" would say. ‘He‘s been _ ‘up + long that,. . whatever he‘s c may as well stay there y enoug! itreaty. som think she‘s been x U t] have taken her down."‘ it was not euriosity ; opea door and a of 5 NNo ohnt aad Fretful Childâ€" 1 up the picture satill hung there just the «a me.‘" , The story must have leaked out, thenâ€"the first part <through Faâ€" bian, probably, and the rest through the divorcee court colâ€" umns of the daily papers. I said nothing in answer, to the girl‘s pleadâ€" ings, buti I restored the portraits to their old place with the excuse that the landscapes would look better in the diningâ€"room. Our ‘studies began again that very afterroon.>, Babiole had forgotten nothing, titough: work had, of course, grown #lack during the hot days of eummer. She had had another and rather absorbing love affair, too, the details of which I extracted with the accompaniment of more blushes than in the old days. â€"â€" Te "Weskail have you getting married and flying away from ns altogether, I suppose, now, ~before we know where we are." * No," she protested stoutly, "!‘ m not going to marry ; I am going to devote mysell{ to art." Pn s Upon this I made her fetch her sketch book, after promising "not to tell mamma," who might well be forgiven for a prejudice against any more members of ker family sacrificâ€" ing themsgelves to this Juggernaut. The sketches were all of fit and larch tree, hillside and _ rippling stony Dee : some were in pencil, some in water color ; there was love in every line of each of the little pictures, and there was something more. _ "Why, Babiole, you‘re going to be a great artist, I believe," 1 cried, as I noticed the vigor of the outâ€" lines, the imaginative charm of the treatment of her favorite corners of rock and Torest. Oh no, not that," she said deprecatâ€" ingly. "If I can be only a little one 1 shall be swatislied. I _ should never . dare to draw the big hills. When I get on those hills along the Cairn and : see the peaks rising the one behind , the other all round me, 1 feel almost | as if 1 ought to fall on my knees | only to look at them; it is only when we â€" have crept _ down into some , cleft full of trees. where L can peep ; at them from round a corner, that | ; feel 1 can take out my paper and my paintâ€"box without disrespect." i " But you can be a great arlist without painting great things. You may paint Snowdon so that it is nothing but a drawingâ€"master‘s copy, and you may paint a hiemafal of wild flowers so that it imay shame acres ol classical potâ€"boilers bung on the line at the Roval Academy."‘ Babiole was wtlu.v\xg-lly-trflllâ€"lSr silent for some minutes after _ this, while 1 turned over the rest of her drawâ€" In@s wl it dhi. ""Wel, look here ; I‘ve revisited the world since you have, and, believe me, you are much better outside. It‘s a horrid, overâ€"crowded, noisy place, uand as for the artists in whorm yCu are interested, you wust â€" worshin them from afar if you want 10 worâ€" ship them at all. Painters, actors. writors and the resiâ€"the successiul! ones are . snobs, the unsaccessfalâ€" sponges. And as for the dresses, my child, there was never A frock sent out of Bond â€" street so pretty, so tasteful, or so becoming as the one you have on."‘ ie HamenkIn"" 0 o osa Askw at het \(b Mr. Maude," laughing, *"*you must of i mk." ~; you naveâ€"uns But Babiol: glanced down at her blue serge gown rather disdain{ully, and there whone in her eyes, 48 brightly as ever, that vague hunger of a woman‘s first youth for emoâ€" tions â€" and pleasures, which _ evory morning‘s sunghins seemed to proâ€" mise her, and whose nanses she did not know. " Ah," she said, gaily, "but everyâ€" body doesn‘t speak like that. 1 shall wait ‘until my friends come in the summer ; and see what they tell me about iIt." * My â€" fTace elouded, and, withn the pretty affectionateness with which she now always treated me, she a8â€" sured me that she did not really want any fdvice but mine, and that, S long as‘! was good enough to teach her, she was content to read the lessons of the busy world throug‘!: y eyes. Meanwhile, howeyer, 'r,‘;"‘ e kz\g;l she â€" answered, bear the blame To F CC Ei P SAEEEY 11 E .l:,.:; s]leldi(| }agu. It bad been new then, but it | was very old, worn and greasy now ; "but everyâ€"| still I think it must have been in that. I shall | the habit of lying by for long periâ€" come in the | ods out of its owner‘s reach, or it they tell me | could scarcely have held together j | so well. Mr. Ellmer wore a roundâ€"topâ€" nd, witn the | ped felt hat a size too large for him, with which | with a very wide and rather curly 1 me, she a8â€" | brim, from under which his long fair t really want | hair, which had the appearance of and that, 28 ' being kept in order by the occasional rugh to teach appiiention of pomatum rather than to read the | bJ the coustant use of the comb, fell orld through | down over a paper collar in careless profusion. The same change for the I was mysell, worse was apparent in the man ghe reâ€" lhrough those same eyes "of mine, learuipg: a far more dangerous lesâ€" son,. and one, unluckily, which I coull never hope toâ€"impart to any woman. I had no one butâ€"mysell to thank for my folly, into which I had socliy walked with ‘*‘my eyes open. But the temptationâ€"to direct that {fair young‘ mind had been too strong for me, and, having once indulzed in Athe plessure. the few months away ‘had but increased my craving to taste it again. _ This second winter we worked even harder than the first. Babiole, with. her expanding mind, aud the passionate excitement she beganâ€"to throw into every pursuit, became daily a more fascioating pupil. She would slile down from her chalr on t3 a footstool at my side when discussion grew warm between us concerning an interesting chapter we had beeo reading. She would put her hand on my shoulder with affecâ€" tionate persuas‘ion if I disagreed with her, or: tap my fingers impatient= ly to hurry nty expression of opinâ€" ion. How c®uld she know that tha ugly, grave man, with furrows in his scarred face, and already whitâ€" ening hair, was young and hotâ€"bloodâ€" ed too, with passgions far stronger than hers, and all the stronger from being ironâ€"bound. Sometimes I {felt tempted to iet her know that [ was twenty years ypunger than she, growing un in the belie{f of her childhood on that matâ€" ter innocently thought. Eut it cou.d make no difference, in the only way in which I cared for it to make a difâ€" ference, and it might render her conâ€" strained with me. After all it was my comparative youth whch enabled me to enter into her feelings, as no dryâ€"asâ€"dust professor of fiflty could have done, andi it was ‘upon that sympathy thai the bond between us was founded. In the happiness this companionship brought to, me,. I thought I had lujled keener feelings to sleep, when, as spring came back, and 1 was beginning again to dread the return of the long days, an event happened , which made. havoe of the most cherished sentiments of all three of us. s The first intimation of this revoluâ€" tion was given by Ferguson, who:inâ€" formed me at lunchkeon, with a solâ€" emrly indignaut face, that a "verra disreputableâ€"looking â€" person" : had been pesteriog him with inquiries for Mr. Maude, and: after kaving the door shut in his face had taken himself off,} so Ferguson feared, in the direction of the cottage, to bother the ladies. My butler‘s disbka of Mrs. Elimer had broken down under her constant assistance to Janet. .. "I saw that Jim was aboot the staâ€" ble, sir, ay, 1 nave nae doot he helpâ€" ed the gentleman awa‘ saie eno‘," added Ferguson grimly. < _ _ _ _ __ [ thoughit no more of ‘the incident, which the butler had. reported simâ€" ply becango up among the hills the sight of am unknown‘face is an event. But at 4 o‘clock Babloie did not appear ; 1 sat waiting, _ looking through the pages of Green‘s Short History of the English People, _ on which we woere then engaged, â€" for twenty minutes; and then, almost alarmed â€"a« such an â€" unusual occurâ€" rence, 1 was getting up to go and matk inquiries _ at the _ cotâ€" tage when i cheard her wellâ€"known lootstep curough the open hallâ€"door. Even bâ€"fore she cim> ly I knew that something had bappened, for instead ofâ€" running in @Ilt. eager, Jaugting apology. as wa‘s her way on the rare vceasions when sho was a few minâ€" utes late, I heard her cross the hall very slowly and hesitate at the door. "Come in, come in, Bahole ; what‘s the â€" maiter?" i1 cried out, hmpaâ€" | /# dow‘t think any thing of you," i I said ar randoimn, betug far too much ‘distressed _ by her unhappiness _ to . think of any words more uppropr?flu'. i,"\'uw tell me, what is the matter?" l 1 was in ro bhurry for the answer, \for 1 had already a very strong preâ€" ; sontiment wlhat it would be. | "Papa has fouwnd us out ; ho‘s at i the cottage now."‘ is She came in then quickly, and held out ner hand to me as she wished me goodt afterndon. But there was no smile on ner face, and the light seemâ€" ed to hage gone out of her eyes. ~ "Wihat 16 it, chid ? Something has happened,/ said 1. as I _ drew her down into her usual chair. She sbhook her head and tried to laugh, bu. suddenly broke down. and, bur®#tinsy into tears, leaned her face against her liands and sobbed bitâ€" terly. I was hborribly distressed. 1 tried som» vague words of consolation for the unknown evil, and laid my hand lightly on ome heaving shoulder, only io withdraw it as if seared by the touch. â€" Then I ygat cown quietly and waited, while ‘Taâ€"ta, more daring set up a kindly howl of sympathetle lamentation, which happity caused a diversion. _ the | tienthy "1 ought to be ashamed of inyself," she said, sitting upright, and drying her eyes. "I don‘t ksow what you must think of me, Mr. Maude." But he was evon nearer, as a heayy tread on the stone steps outside the front door at this moment â€" told us. "II‘m. }‘m.â€" and no one _ about‘ And no knocker!® we heard a thick voice say. imperiously, as my townâ€" bred visitor â€"â€" stumped â€" about _ the E HIET C "Leok here, Babiole: I think you‘d beiter go, dear. Run through the back «dloor, and com{ort mamma." There was no use disgnuising the fact that our visitor‘s arrival was a commoh calamity. She made one step caway, cbut then turned back, clasped my right hband tighUy, and whispered : > 1 vi .o aa eAE C oo bred steps "Remember, you don‘t see hLim at his best. He‘soa very, vory clever moah, indeedâ€"at hoime." Then she ran Nightly away, withâ€" out looking at me again, half conâ€" secious, I am afraid, poor echild, that her apology was but a lame one. I rose and went to the hall to inâ€" vite my visitor in. * *HAPTER I. Mr. Elimer‘s appearance had mol improved with the lapse of â€" years. He was dressed in the shme brown overcoat that he bad worn when I made his acquaintance seven years [rhe u0 sn 56 himself His face was more bloated, his jook more shifting, the whole man was mworé sodkien and ‘more swaggering â€"than he hbhad been geven years ago. If it had not been for the two poor little women so unluckily bound to him, I would not have tolefated such a repulsive crerature even on my doorstep; but for the same of making such terms with him as would rid us all of h.s obnoxrxious presence, I held out my hand, which he, after a moment‘s hesitation, took and dropped out of his flabby palm, with a look of horror at my scarred face. "Will you come in?" said I, ‘leadâ€" ing the way into the study, which he examined on entering with unâ€" disguised and contemptuous â€" disapâ€" pointment. 5 s "Have you come far toâ€"day, Mr. Elimer?" I asked, handing him A chair, which I inwardly â€" resolved for the future to dispense with, having sentimental feelings about the furniture of my favorite room. "Yes, well, I may say I have. Ali the way from Aberdeen. And it‘s a good pull up here from the station to a gentleman who‘s not used to much walking exercise." He spoke in a low, tuick voice, yery dtfiicuit to hear and urderstand, his eyes wandering furtively from one wbject to anotner all the time. _ finding the place ? "Oh, yes. she had taken care to hide herself well." And his face slowâ€" ly contracted with a lowering and brutal expression. "She thought 1 ahouldn‘t find them up hbere. But 1 awore I would, and when I swear a thing it‘s as good as done.‘" G _ "I hope you found your wife and daughter looking well." .____ _ "Oh, they‘re well enough, of course; trust themm to get fat and flourishâ€" ing, while their husband and father may be starving." _ _ _ 24 Now this was laughable ; for whatâ€" ever defects Mr. Elimer‘s appearance might have, the leanness of starvaâ€" tionâ€" was not one of them. 3 â€""They were‘by no means fat and flourishing when I first met them, I assure you,‘‘ I snid gravely. s "That was not my fault, sir," he | whispered, with affected humility, : being . evidently far too stupid to ; know how his looks pbelied his words. | *‘PThey had been away from me for | some‘time ; my wife left me because { was unable to support her in lusxary, ' the depression inâ€" aprt being '\'eryl great at this moment, sir. She took my child away from me to teach ner to hate her own father, and to bring her up in her own extravagant notions.‘" The brute turned his eyes on with slow and sullen ferocity. "She has cured Lerselt of those now," I said ; "she lives on the barest eim ~hecessary to keep two people alive.‘ Jt is, unfortanately, alt I can »pare for her kindness in taking care of my ‘cottage." This was true. I had often reâ€" gretted that the poor lady‘s inflexâ€" fvle independence had made her reâ€" fuge to accept more than enough for her and her â€" daughter, with the strictest _ economy, â€"to live upon. Now, I rejoiced to think that she hiul absolutely noâ€" savings to be eucked dowastinto the greedy maw of the creature before me. My words were evidentlvy the echo ol some statement that had been already made. Naturally, he bolieved neither his wife nor me $ why THE PRINCE _ $ $ â€"_ NEver comes $ AMMVIAIMAUMAAAARLRLAAAALAF @ANRRARANARRARFRRARARAAARAMAN n 3M$MMWV:N\MIWV\MM; It remaing for a man to â€" explain why some girls never receive proâ€" posals of marriage, This particnuliar man is a hbachelor, eligzible, and a student ol womanâ€" k‘md. He is positive that it is not due to the searcity of men that so many loving, good looking girls reâ€" ma‘in single, Instead, it is because they do not live up to the ideal in the mind of the modern young man. "Probably the girl a man least Mkes is the meabest. Sh> believes _ a perfect man 4s waiting _ for her :omewhere cown life‘s highway.and makes a practice of snubbing a felâ€" low as soon as she decides he is rot that paragon. Instead of trying to see him at his best, she tries to make him feet that in her eves he is only the common or garden rariety of man. AMAmrM mm mmAAA 6 HAD LOST HOPE OF GETTING WELL On not been for Dr. Chase‘s Kidneyâ€" Liver Pills I would be in my graye before this. I was very bad with kidney disease, and suffered with dreadful pains in my kidneys. Being disappointed in the use of many mediâ€" cines, I had almost given up hopes of ever getting better. _"One morning, after a especially hard suffering, YVears of (To be Continued.) have much difficalty in 9+# Keen Suffering From Kidney Disease Owes Life Dr. Chase‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills night of a â€" friend Dopirtment of Agricaiture, Ottawa. kets against our progres«iv~ Danish, Canada enjoys the unique position 'l\e“i\“ Z:lland. Victorian and Russian of be nable ._,_ | and other competitors. lntgb: asl kt,o butles: .‘ :on‘a c e us It is necessary, also, to provide for produc ng as she tOPE8 in | masteurizing the cream from which quality, as tho caian do, all competiâ€"| butter is to be mads _ for export. tors without more than the use of| Among the various minute and low ordinary diligence, care, and pruâ€" forms of lif: which ureupm:n:h:: ts germs In mlk ana cream Qhere i8 / dencee. To get trade a country MUSL | Copgtant struggle for survival which supply a want ; anad to mako that | in a cultivated tiel1 goses on betweon trade permanent that want must be | weeds and useful plants. ‘The careâ€" supplied at a standard of quality suâ€" | ful farmer tills the swoil to kill the perior t> its competitors, or at a | weeds and then sows pure seed for pr.ce lower than theirs. Canada proâ€"| the crop he desires. . The butterâ€" duees what Great Britain and â€" the‘ maker follows a similar course when rest of the world cannot do without; | ne pasteurizes milk or cream, and but . while Bélle sells it at a market | then rate favorable to herseil and acceptâ€" y able to her qustomers, she is not Puts it Into a Pure * Starter * miking the most out of hor latent to yield the desived Navor. Pasteurâ€" matcrial wealth. Her {armers and irntion does not destroy all the germs commercial men are noi yet educated |!" milk or cream any more than culâ€" up to the operation. And it is not tivation eradicates all weeds, but 1t grandmotherly legislation for the | dJecreases theoir number. Sterilizatior Agricultural Department of the counâ€" when efficient destroys all forms of try to lead theom towards greater life; but pasteurization destroys prosperity than has ‘been enjoye}| about all of those which are injurt heretofore. Frequenitly one hears| ons to the quality of dairy products complaints about The conc}lt'ion thus created gives the d \G Gnven on Wns * o t n n in infhnbErrns =~ cuce â€" cuncamabmaie ___ white Threadâ€"like Stroaks appearing in buitter. ‘This is someâ€" times due to errors in the salting and working of the outter. If the sait be added to the butter while the latter EPUAde NBP Sn mt ooel 7 is silll in the granular condition, a nd not in too large quantities at n time, so that It may dissolve ynickly and be distributed throughout the mass of butter to some extent before working beging, there will not be PR emmer s Sm OO so much trouble from streakiness. If, however, working is begun before any salt has been added, as is someâ€" times the practice, the salt is then thrown on the emooth surface from which the water has been removed, and tho result is that the salt does not diesolve readily, but remains for some time in a partially dissolved layer between the surlace of _ the butter. There is. probably, a eort of bleaching of the butter by the chemical action of the #salt in euch strong solution, the effect reâ€" maining in the shape of white streaks when the undissolved â€" salt â€" finally «isappenis. is a cJilferent thing altogether, alâ€" though it is also the result of not having the salt evenly distributed throughout the _ mass of â€" butter, either through careless addition of the ealt, Insufficient working, or working at unsuitable temperaâ€" tures. â€" The parts which contain the most sailt have the deepest Lolor ; thie is the natural effect of the adâ€" dition of salt to butter in . proper quantities. It is when the salt and the butter come together in layeors, and remain so for some time, that the> bleaching oceurs which causes the «etreakiness." As Mr. J. A. Ruddick, chief of the dairying division,. has pointed out. time after time, the commercial value of Canadian buiter can in no way be more easily advanced than by paying the utmost attention 1to finish and appearance. Use good parchment paper, . s0o _ as to fully proteet your product. Avoid slovenâ€" liness in putting up buttler for (-x-l portation ; use black and not red stencilling, because in the British markets red stencilling is the out-‘ ward â€" and visible sign of inward "milled" orâ€" "ladle stock," or very inferior grades of butter. By this we do not advise black stencilling on qualities which realâ€" 1y should be marked red, for if the factories â€" should follow the pracâ€" tice of putting a distinguishiag mark on all packages of dairy proâ€" duee which is inferior in quality, it would be greatly to their advanâ€" tage. Many | a shipment of cheese or butter, of passable quality exâ€" cept for a few "culls," is condemnâ€" ed wholesale because the trier hapâ€" pens to drop on the inferior samâ€" ples. These "culls" are somelimes included among the good, in the hope that they may escape detecâ€" tion. But this has become well nigh impossible, and the best advice to all is "Don‘t try it on." The possibilities of _ the export butter trade are limited onuly by the available supply, provided the quality be honestly and constantly Maintained at ** Kxcelsier." This is shown by the fact that while in â€"18%0 the expoort butter trade of Canada amounted to on!ly #£540,181, a year ago it exceedad £5,100,000 ; â€" and the exports of butter in 1901 was nearly double that of 1900, and exeseded in value those of any previous year. During last summer there was a falling of{f in Canadian butter exports, brought about by the comparatively high prices which our cheosge was fetching ; for as cheose was pa ying better than butter the factory men kept on making it. Toâ€"day there is a loud ery in Great Britain for Cnaaâ€" dian butter of high quality, and, if our dairrmen respoud expeditiously, 1902 will be the banuner year in Doâ€" minion history so far for butter exports. _ A need in the butiter business is better buildings in the creameriesâ€" improvements | in _ construction, in their drainage appointments, and in thrir equipment. These changes must be eifected or we cannot expect to hold a prominent place in the marâ€" called to see me, and asked why I did not try Dr. Chase‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills#. Igot a box at once, and took two pills, which was a rather heayy dose; one pill is plerty at a dose. Aoiueys CCC mt l ds I used them regularly for a month, and at the end of that timg was a changed man. "It is now about five years «ince SR ols Cc c ades "It is now about five years since I began using this pill, and since that time I have felt as good as I did 40 years ago. I am almost 80 years old, and I am free from all dGigease, except rheumatism, and this is much better than it used to hbe before I used this mediciap. I «* Mottled * Butter UNTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Ii is necessary, also, to provide for pasteuriszing the cream from which buiter is to be mad» for export. Among the various minute and low forms of life which are present as germs in ml‘k and cream there is that constant struggle for wurvival which in a cultivated ftield1 goses on between weeds and useful plants. ‘The care ful farmer tills the soil to kill the weeds and then sows pure seed for the crop he desires. _ ‘The butterâ€" miker follows a similar course when he pasteurizecs milk or cream, and then Puts it lato a Pure * Starter * to yield the desived Navor. Pasteurâ€" irntion does not destroy all the germs in milk or cream Any more than culâ€" tivation eradicates a‘ll woeds;, but it decreases thcir number. Sterilization when efficient destroys all forms of life; but pasteurization destroys about all of those which are injuriâ€" ous to the quality of dairy products. The condition thus created gives the germs of fermentation or souring which are introduced by the starter a good chance to become the prevallâ€" ing if not the only ones, so that the flayvors which are the result of ripening or souring are those charâ€" acteristic of the germs of the "starter." The later _ treatment should be such as to prevent any germs which bring about decay or nasty flayvors from becoming active in the butter; and this is the use | of cold storage. The Process of Pastenrizing consists of heating the cream to a tewperature of 158 to 160 degrees fahr., and cooling it rapidly to the ripening temperature by the use of some special cooling _ apparataus. Wherever this has been carried out properly in Canadian creameriecs the results have given bett»r keeping qualities to the butter, and have remedied faulis in fNlayor in cases where taints of various sorls had previously been troublesome. When only the quality of the butâ€" ter has to be considered it is suffiâ€" cient to pasteurize the cream after separation; but when it is also deâ€" gwired to lessen the danger of spreadâ€" int ligease by means of the wkimâ€" milk It is necessary to heat the milk before separation, and cool the skimâ€"milk and cream afterwards. A temperature of 185 degrees fahr. 4s sufficient to destroy discase germs likely to be found in milk ; and whao milk may be heated to that temperaâ€" ture, with proper â€" appliances aund handling, without giving any olb In making butter from pasteurised cream the preparation and use of the "Termentation startor‘ are hm portant parts of _ the operation. About two quarts of skim imilk are heated to 205 degrees Fabhrenhelt, and held at that point for ten minâ€" utes, after which the milk is cooled to 80 degrees Fahrenhe‘t by pourâ€" :w::th;n:blo flavor to the butter made from it. goix ing from one vessel to another, exâ€" posed to the atmosphere of the butâ€" ter makinx room. It is then left im a tightly closed glass jar at ordiâ€" nary atmospheric â€" temperature, in summer from $0 to 75 degrees, untAl it is coagulated and has a mild lacâ€" tic acid flavor. This method _ cam only be successful when the atmosâ€" phere to which it is exposed is KFree From Germs which cause undesirable odors and flavors. When the veulture" as this is called, has been prepared, a quanâ€" tity of skim milk, which is pure, sweet and free from taint, should be heated to 150 degrees Fahrenâ€" beit and left at that temporature for ten minutes. It may then hbe coolâ€" ed to a temperature of from 80 to 7O degrees Fahrenhe‘ t, when a porâ€" thion of the culture, as already deâ€" seribed, at the rate of from 5 to 10 per cent. should be added to it, and well mixed with it. That is the "ferâ€" mentation «tarier." It sbou!d b> left to ripen at a temperature not ex ceeding 70 degrees Fahrenheit. When it bas become distincuy sour and is nearing the point of coagulation, further deve‘opment should be checkâ€" ed by lowering the temperature. The "starter" may be added . to the ecream at the rate of from 83 to 6 per cent. of the quantity of cream to be ripened. In every case where the cream has brcome tainted, if the taint be of fermentation or(‘in, A larger quactity than usual of the fermentation â€" "starter" . should be added. This will check the taint and leave the particular fermentation of the "starter" to be the prevailing one in the cream and butter. To be most effective the "starter" should be added to the cream vyery soon afâ€" ter it has coagulated. After that po‘int has been reachesd it deteriorâ€" ates in activity as a "starter" and undesirable flayors are apt to deâ€" | velop in it animals, is he oot ?~ "Certainly." "Then, I wonder why he doesn‘t wear a loose, comfortable coliar, like a dog‘s."â€"Washington Star. recommend Dr. Chase‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills with all my heart to any perâ€" son, man or woman. This is ny opinion of these valuable pills, and you may use it for the benelit of othera" * DPr. Chage‘s Kidneyâ€"Iiver Pills are especially appreciated by people of advanced age. â€" The kidneys are freâ€" quently the first organs of the body to break down, and there are few old people but suffer from kidney disâ€" orders, and resulting pains and acohos. One pill a dose,. 2% cents m box, at all dealers, or EA4mansor Bates & Co.. Toreato. t 1‘% M A "man is the most sensible o all STUDIES IN SENSE HTRD . ye : EW P hi tt m&;ï¬ ze At W, ‘ton en «liss rtâ€". 1t Ww NS »h. n ntâ€" W I‘8 1@ 14