West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 24 Jun 1897, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

are now prepared PTLY. Fay of Sash, d the differ- laminar; - ORAN-u: twitch! zdnunu Ind nil“ l “can; no" 01:00.3 ”induce: but can. rowan. his, Emissions sale. Cured. iiilL8 lite. Antidote (a n sadness and u so that all order! " In. eorTN It " nun f. .100 vim “A “We" Poison. Mead, cortit-t OISENY NO RISK KECHNIE. VICTIMS. NO PAY? ath always nr ids sheeting. Mllflll ban " ta actory. Fidelity . " Proapuity. DUE ON n prosperity. Us _ of nu.- Hh,' nudit- A: 'e " month no. I' ' Ono dress. l no iroct F no wis- at} And wo- Ikvs " " " pt In n The belief in ignore“: entertained in Hana. that mum-Guam Wayla- qAll be Immediately "oalUd (tom (the. 'ueorufrpmMixieo Ciqr state that Duos nad the isthmu- of ehuentepeo tt eerthqnebe ducks on Sunday Int- " m. The Cut end. Czaripa no understood to he greet], appointed became their ”and chad la also a daughter. She Will be named Tatiana. l An attempt was made to awning“ President Faun at Paris while on his It is banned tr many good V as at Athena that Gina may "mg" in fight for hot very oxbtenoo. TU Cut-inn has given birth to I. dautrhter. It in dill-lolly declared that the bu- honic plague exists in Jeddah. omen! statistics show u deficit of a million mark. on the Baltic cant! during the put you. It is aananeed that the Turks have committed scrim}: excesses in Epita- snd in the vicinity od Larissa. Bishop Thornton. st the Eocene Council in Jae son, Mane" tfl this tribute to the late Bishop . Cleve- land C'oxe:-"F'or living, for genim. for pure lofty life, 'for plain living and high, thinking,' for loyalty to the pur- est. Math. I venture to say no man in the history of outr country ever excel- led Bishop (‘oxe." According to the reports of the New York commercial menace there is an appreciable improvement in the gen- eral trade situation. a distinction which. while moderate. is decidedly marked. Favourable reports as to the wheat and cotton have exercised a beneficial influence, which has been added to buy memorable buying of American tteeemsitiea. more has been an increase of nearly six per cent. in the cotton acreage af ell the States. hut the cotton market is weaker. Some Southern cotton mills ere limiting pro-l ductiou. {Some unfllesgdmille are ar-= ranging or an en er output. and; have purchased heavily. The hoot and shoe industry is active. and order: are growing were. President McKinley has finished his note to Spain presenting the ultima- tum of the United States on the Cuban question. The note alleges that Spain has loot control o.t thim. that Spain has failed and in impotent to protect the lives and property od American oitizone. and ttttyt she he. failed to comply with her treaty obligation. A branch of the FrtrgMthrCanudian Or- tra-ni-ion Society was formed in Man- chester. N. B., on Thursday. with the object. of enabling Ii'rtsuetr4?snadians to return to the Dominion. ' Dr. John Lowis Smith is the patri- arch of Mothodiam in Indiana, and ban written, in his eitrhtreynd your. a book bf 450 was, containmg anecdotes of pioneer preachers and their charges in tho West. together with a treatmo on Indiana Methodist). The Universal Poets! Congress just closed at Weehimton will hold its next gggenninl conference in Rome in A Brooklyn. N. Y., man recently "or- ed so hideouer in a tenement house that a three-year-old child who heard the noise was frightened into convulsions, which ondad sully, and now the auth- orities want to know whether the man in criminally responsible for the child's that . Julep): Richardson. the eccentric mil- lionaire. said to be worth $20,000,000 died at New York on Thursday. The output of coal in this United States during the nu 1896 was 190.- 889.959 tons, valued at $195,557,619. duped M. 1i,ti,ii,itei; Ky” tdf T119358- ishmmt of bicre e thieves. UNITED STATES. Prof. Melvin G. Chat. the noted "SiO- soope mAnuhusturer, in dead at Cam- bridge, M‘s. The Daily Graphic anlish‘ed an in- terview with Sir Dona d Smith in Lon- don on Wednesdny. in which the Cana- dian High Commissioner expresses the opinion that the union of Newfound- land with Canada is bound to come. It is said that the Qua-gen intends to confer an houorar Grand Cross of the Order of the la, on M. Hanotaux, 2t French Miniater of Foreign At- a rn. The Pall Mall Gazette, in the course ot a long article on the business and with.“ outlook in America. says that r. McKinley la a distinct failure, and has proved him-elf more of a party pol- itician than a President. It is again asserted that Great Britain has become possessed of Doing»: Bay, and that an. is wring, w on the prop-er time comes, to assert her own- ershw. ' [It is stated that the Quran ms_so much affected recently by the singing of "The Wuri of this Green" * Windsor cutle "an she wept. PM: a; Gaia, -i-iiio.iiifir"A' b33333? ributed in donations of from 31,000 to .511!) each. , ' has been .enht181 Brineipal at the Congregauond College. Montreal. The Montreal City Hall and Remn- teuta were seized by bailiffs totsatiatr a claim of "2.000 costs in connection with ospprmsrintioom Intonati- tte- beet In... .M-:. 'ttt Pe Pe “I"! GREAT BRITAIN. A we? eulociltic review of the pro-, Cr,',', o Canada by the Marquis of no has been published in London. Lady Chalet Rose has been granted a divorce from her husband. Sir Char- .lea 1Jernt.Rotry, and tttq counterosuit we vERv_yt'riii'i'rsston ALL ma L CANADA. Mumford will spend .5.” on m- Iret numb. t My. S. A. Mitchell. ot Kingston won a .500 (allownhip at the Johan Hop- kins Univeristy, Ibitimore. â€"â€" -- -.l.ql. may. 0m! m. the UM M. and All Pr!- cl It. (In... “I...“ a. ”WNW“: and... »iqg-poot JY" _beeq intro- GEN ERA L Tarf) Mp.. P.ttartrowwhu on oath has given Smithorton such. . bicycle face! He doesn't ride . bunk. 2'geteti but ho had to buy three Mayo " for his family to ride. The chief and of man mm te be to get something tor nothing. and the young man who was striving to concu- uto in beat girl'a father. F'Doq tlt, 'J",tt1 ch: glad“, egotistzmn. or ms nu. 'ro ry to my deyghtor to: yourself. ' "0 - Inns Inland lunar-ll ttttttto. Elm-cu Deni-0nd by Flu. A deqpatoh from Saw York 'bB3'8.u- Fire at an early hour on Tuesday morn- ing destroyed the immigrant landing station that covered almost all of El- lis Island. causing a property loss of about 3780.000 to the United States Government. All of the Government? records, and the baggage of the unmi- grnnts were burned. Two hundred and tifrr.immigrtspts mare rescued from the [prdi'ttittpit',t.u",'t and o?rou.ght safely to t . city. Not one them rewind a burn. There mu forty patients in the wooden hospital build: mg in tho rear of the, main structure,‘ who were carried out in cots just bed fore the. hogiital took fire. The onus. ot the fire ID as yet a unitary. but thought nothing of it. When din- ner lime arrived young Thiokson did not return. His sister ate her dinner alone, not feeling at all alarmed at her brother's absence, as he often went shooting and missed his meals. Mr. Thicket)!!! and his eldest son returned home at 5 o'clock, and when they learned that James had not yet returned they decided to look for him and started off in the direction he had taken. They had proceeded about a quarter of a mile and had just reach- ed the edge of the woods, when their ‘eyes met a sight that firoae the brood ‘in their veins. Lying face downwards. , in a deep gully, was the lifeless body of ‘James Thickson. His left temple was towards them, and in it was exposed to the gaze of the horrified father and brother a terrible hole two inches in diameter. filled with clotted blood, while down 'tus back of the neck streams of blood were trickling. and the clothes of the unfortunate victim were soaked in his life's blood. The al- most crazed father turned the body over and revealed the powder-blacked [are of his son. who must have been killed instantly. Across the gully stretched a log, and resting against this was young Thickson's gun, the butt firmly prese into the mud and the barrel pointing at an angle that would have directed the charge at the same height as Thicktgon's head when he was Elandimi). The accident was no doubt caused y Tihickson crossing the log. when he either rested the 11 against it, or it was discharged in $18 attempt to drag the bun after him. l A Young Man Instantly Killed by the Bis. chnrle of. “In Which Me "as ”fouling Acme a Gully. A despatch from Port Hope "rr.- A shocking and fatal accident occurred ‘01. Iluesday in Hope Township, when the twenty-year-old son of Mark Think- sun “was killed. The terrible fatality happened on the edge of a wood about a quarter of a mile from Mr. Thiokson's farm, in the Township of Hope. Mr. Thickson and his oldest son went away in the morning. leaving his other son, James, at home with his sister. About 10 o'clock James took his gun, a single- barreled affair, and told his sister that he was going out in the woods to shoot crows. A neighboring farmer, Mr. B. B. PeLheok. who was working in a field, saw young 'lllxicksun head for the woods and heard a gunshot about 11 o'clock. FATAL ACCIDENT NEAR PORT HOPE. {inied by a letter oonvtyingW.Ptypal oediotion and expressing admiration of her Majesty's courage and wisdom in the late Ministerial arisis. The Pape has sent to Queep Regent Christina of Spain a splendid rosary, consisti of a gold chain set altern- ately wig) diamonds, rubies. and em- oral-dig {w heads. The gift i!'. unicorn: Dr. James Martinoau, who the other day celebrated his nimsisee?.nd. birth. day, Is one of the very few living au- thors whose literary activity dates from the beginning of the yic.tot.ian. reign. Dr. MArtineau published his first book, i',f'tM.ation"s of Religious Enquiry," In . A Spanish Captain and twtt.1ieyttn- Int: wore tried by court-martial iniLa Cabana fortress and sentenced to be shot for cowardice in bums surrend- trod the Government forts at Cuhorro, In eastern (him, to the rebels. The Hawaiian Government has re- fused to renew the concession to Z. & Spalding for laying a cable from San Francisco to Honolulu, and it is thought the Hawaiian Islands may pal-m a link in the CtrurdianrAustral- um system. F In tho Davis will case at San Fran- “.00- au., the other day it madam tl.tat the ashes of the deceased million- mm are being held for debt, while heirs art wrangling over the property. m, auraiiiGriiriri, ga, 03ml cm“! have decided to ereot thereto “tug to the memory of the Count do "ttsi, the engineer of the anal. tt expedition is bei fitted out to 'tuae, the 'dM'2','1'"V,'ttl.'l; who gummy attacked a British force “I! the Twin Valley, on the North In- dine, frontier. . hum William in earnestly prese- ‘N. tt.in mm scheme, and will net be “tufted until the German new In on no equal footing with the French and Rm nevi”. Herr Mauser, the inventor of the well-known rifle bearing his name. has sulanitted to the German We: ortiee {new mechanism, that is appllcable to Pistols and mrbinea. it. is reported from Rom that the Judmiuy Council. now considering the Bank of Naples scandals, han rejected Signor Criapi's demand to be tried by the Senate. and will direct thut he be prosecuted. , “immune; iAhoenttwas u- 'ey -oltmes to his earrings. , A _ m. mai' -... "”35““. that negotiation LPpt1,tt,"tfl, mom than Spain and the United sum LP ruched an" advanced M' ,7 - UNCLE SANS BIG LOSS. ACASE IN POINT. REASON ENOUGH; ed. The next day and the day after it was the? who were washed and put in white c othes. The children did not die. Perhaps it was because their blood was fresh and clear; maybe the reason was that they had not touched the dead. But their fathers and mothers were dead, and they had no one to care for them. No native thought of fromution- Mina If they were to die hey would die. hen the scourge gnawad the life from whole streets terror crept into tho hearts of the people. fljhen they .tled in thoueande. .The municipal auth- orities, medical officers, and native ae- sietante hunted for the ailing. But when a man or a woman tell in it was kept a. secret. In the .Mohammedan quarter the _hute are the fiimsistst-ato. thing but elun poleeoovered with mat- ting. When the ethos!!! go round the triitht.-d.f.oihs mine the main and push the naturism into the next hut. On the on tap! the town. on A. dry wade the unanimity hoe erectedI hundreds of hate. Here the r'mher Hin- dooe were prevenled on to live. 'IM of them. But the plug: broke out or- ociously. Walking t ugh the lenee I saw dozens of safe. They muted the laces of death. or the hate lied been gunned down. .The gull Mt h" Rim turdedTntd aiiiiriu%riFita. i: Before the plague came Karachi was cleansed. Every native house and shop was whitewashed. Families and their goods were bundled into the roadway. and the people eat on their loan- haun- ches watching the work of the cleaners. Suddenly the black death appeared. It settled m one district, and then, oct- opus-like. stretched long arms tor fresh Victims. When a man died all the friends and relations crowded into the fetid. vile-odured . hole to wash. the corpse. and wrap It in white ramment. That day, when the body had been pushed into a sandy grave loutside the tttwacfhes friends and relations sicken- nfaihst tho wildest fanaticism, strug- g ing bravely, but. often dowuhearted- ly, beseeching. Pelt operointp-that is the work of the nut critics. The Mo- hammedans have a. .verse from the Kor- an blessed by a priest. They tie it in a leather case upon their arms. If that will not induce Allah to keep off the vigitgtion. _wha_t will? Some months ago the statue of Queen Victoria in Bombay was disfigured. "Sahib," said a fuirow,-browod, large- boned, rusty-voiced Mohammedan to me, "sahib. I understand all. The English Government is displeeeed. They t ink we natives did the indignity. And they punish us: they are poisoning all our people. Ah. sahib, you smile. Allah 18 great and this is the truth. When our people fail sick your doctors come to them. They give them poison. Then they die. Sahib, have i not seen? Do is not knownt All the people in India are to be killed that way." ' So the raving infection more on its pestilential course. It in hid tom the authorities; WHOLE FAMILIES SUCCUMB. When a. case is discovered medicine will not be taken. "It is poison; yap want to eitottcPtlr'.,air,thf, "r... with: I am writing this at Karachi. the great port of Sind. with a conglomerate population of feeble Hindoos, fanatical Moslema, swaggering Afghans sullen but brawny Baluohis, and a dozen low- caste races. The population is small compared with Bombay. But the vig- or of the plague is appalling. One walks through the streets with hesit- ating bmth to watch the hasty pro- cessions of the dying, to visit the search parties looking for the dead, to in.. speot the burning of the houses of the dead and the destruction of their cloth- ing. then the plague first came it at- tacked the Hindoos. "Ah," amid the Mo- hammedana, "this is a Hindoo scourge; we have nothing to fear." But death has cast its dull, sinister eye on the Mo- hammedan, and they die like flies. "AI- lah is angry with us; we have done wrong; it is a visitation!" they say. "Yes, snubs." [We are about to turn when one of us exclaimed, "What is this?" The head covering was pulled from a. woman. She As a shrivelled old creature. And she was dead; cold dead-dead of the plague. That is how the Shadow spreads over India. ', WRE'I‘GHED BEINGS. "Are all well here t" "Oh, yes, samba; We are all well." "No one has had sick- ness t" "No, sanibo. none." We looked at the crouching terowd--ehe alert-eyed. suspicious, lying Hindooa--and glanced at the huddled women. "All are well t" They were destroying all the goods of a. dead family. Down the street house after house bore the big red circle on its portals telling that death had been hungry there. We knocked st one door, There was no answer. We Irnoeked min. A wretched old men, narrow- chested, with his bony shoulders bent and protruding, his fingers long and skinny, his face wrinkled, his eyes shifty with fright, came and looked through the lattice. "Opera!" "Why, sahiba; why, sahibe, should I open!" "You have sidk- ness here." <The old man trembled. "No, samba, there is no sickness here." "Open!" we said. With palsied hands he opened the door. Through a dark passage We struggled lto a darker room. There were four women. and three mem-poor, worn, physically i, INDIA UNDER ME PLAGUE m“ Burk-cu - Super-nun and Salon-g nu Auto-puny no ram- "tere-l" Sign of Abate-OIO-IOW the "an _ This morning we numbered the dead. A pail of head: hung over the [and so stifling and choking that it made the brain throb in agony, an a letter from DAILY maDzirf onscmnnn BY an anwnnxss. India. (We went down a long, top. MVY. hitth-houaed hue. Every .door W15 hiked. every mam: fastened. The inhabitants were all dead or hid flowas. Four cooling came dithering their thin shanks through the dust and shouting "Make wart make way!” On their shoulders, rested a. pole and from it mung an ambulance. There was another victim. Round the corner we found a meal of smouldering rubbish in the roadway, emitting horrible sickening fumes. Three Hiudoos dragged bedding and matting from a rickety shanty, threw it upon the tire, and fanned it to flame. ottf'AiFiei' ARCHIV- TORONTO with -rihink"t tiiideitrta nd. _ air! He talked to me with the other one. a. in mu and dumb. fifteen books on the subject. worked nights (or two weeks, hatched eighty- nine chinks out of one hundred Iqtttb- tusd then Hopkins came over and con- gratmlatod Inn Mt' my luck. ' Tut was my cousin George I wu at drivqu with {gateway “tampon. tIll gm; méot 33pm driar'"with one an Say, you know I have started an in- cubator. . Yeast mt of it! A. idi'il, gnu-um cast 076.. I told about "Ml-"s: may (with an I told you so sin-WW maybe ye'll tape away from than Oytdiana. Saiait Bott-He any-6Q thur was some forttignyy1ys.tawys..iy it. - . ._ "Oh, that we had some good, devot- ed nurses," eghed the commissioner ten days ago. " ow many do you want?" asked a Romen Catholic priest. "As many as poeatble." "You shall have them." Next day there came all the available Sisters of Mercy from a near convent. And I saw them min- istering to the sink this morning with a gentle love beautiful to behold, soft- vowed and cheerful, unmindful of all the dangers they ran. While panic- atricken Europeans scrambled from the plague, flying to. every corner of the earth to escape its. fill embrace, these loyal Women are swung their lives with sweet detottdmysa. They are Sie- ters of Mercy indeed. PM 1 Mrs. Muntr--An' pint did Ut' deer tuher sgy won th' matter wid y'r ere, Loose gauze lies over their heads. A ref,', little trembling Hindoo girl was taught into the female ward. Her eyes stared with the tension of dread. "Oh, don't kill me, mhibe; don't kill me!" she pleaded with thin voice and outstretched hands. A man patient at- rived. IHis clothes were taken off to be destroyed, and he is being washed. "There is not a bed to spare," says the doctor. A tour of the ward in made. "Yes there is," comes the intelligence; "here is a, man dying. In five min- ute.tht.rttw patient can have ltiapeti./' The news ttttr, in worse, and all et- tarts seem hope as. ‘-.We went to the plague hospital to see scenes shudderingly, repulsive. hor- rible, and. bloody, and make the flesh cringe at the bare remembrance. It is rarely till the last moment that the natives think of bringing their sicken- ing relatives to the English sahibe. They sometimes bring them dead. Three died yesterday within two min- utes of their arrival. It is this keep- ing 'IST from the hospital till near the feta stroke that makes the work of the doctors so hard and leads to the natives saying that whoever enters its door never comes out alive. Scraggy and emaciated are the 'e,i,1l,?re,"l2h sufferers. Bo feeble are some, no hen can be raised to keep off the flies IPerggy.trt lies. I'.'" Atusir heguls. A a sturdy wan. "iiraia?iai%rd"Tviii, their hands tied, the authorities wpge 1'51:- ugainst this demon of desolauon. Repelling an epidemic, at home is dis- heartening. But here, where there is religious fanaticism, caste hatred, trouble in dealing with Mohammedan weapon. lethargy, apathy. suspicion. it is like heath? with open palms against a sturdy wal . Blindfolded and with we: TERRIBLE SUFFERINGS. the ruin, the fearful fate to overtake them if they remain antagonistic to the advice of the doctors. The English Government want to save lite, not to destroy it. “But the Government has failed," replied the head mean; "look at Bombay; how much has the plague been stopped there?" It is arguing in a circle to argue with a Mohammedan. But the Commissioner perseveree. He gives instances where the evil has been checked; he shows that if the Govern- ment has not prevented people dying the deaths are at least fewer than they would have been. It is an animated talk under the heat of a broiling Indian sun. The Commissioner gains one point; then he gains another. When we come away the head men has eon- segted‘to the sequestration, of the 519k. od'Dufferin Héspital iieien timed to use. Stables. sheds. outbouus. h%r place that is clean and airy in nun: The Commissioner sailed for the head man. He in a. tawny, well-formed Mo- ha.m.uey.un with a Semitic countenance -ryitelligent, inquiring, tprgympntari.vtr, He has a certain air of dignity, 1m- ptsrted by the long white shawl thrown about his shoulders and the enormons many-folded pale-blue turban on his head. Half the village gather round to hat the parte/uw-La heap of resen.t- fPL Ignorant. humanity. The Commu- 51099.1: wtyxplitints, matters He tells of owl!!! it. otspyrthtt.1..Thas hardly fins-h- ttiseatse. _ mgoidiCiiiisr" -retat re- ;npval to the sequestration camps. med- 'CRI' LB?! Pitch Bwar.. . - .. . ' WHEN THERE IS A DEATH. all who hue been in oontaqt.with the dead go off to the 'l'lrtfe,ttt,iflt camp. There is a. wailing en expoetuletion " this. I new tttttth dirtrtimil, clinging to one snot r. ,t.srsdehintt.r.o be and. They were locum on with men with their sea. life, are Inn-cpl“ and wgorous; the women are rsu.es, graceful, fiemsiy featured. No family has escaped. They know they are be- mg swept to their graves as a few years ago they were with the oholera. Jllnt they rajgse no finger to fight the £1er end tear-filled eyes at their httle possession burning In the. street. They saw the doors ot their miserable hpvel testened and the painting of the Apty.tt (path. When the plague regs. bI'Gat in one cluster of hoiis.iia0.tiisis i'iitijYi, remaining in the district in hurried_ the can I met e men whose Wife died last night. '.'.1ut.stts", he held. " know I em to be killed. My unto was killed. All our when ere being killed. There is an Eng“ lady doctor smug among them. 0 takes someetutt out of a, green bottle and puts it. on their tongues. After that they die." In the bazaars may of the shoe are 'ef/tir,',: t1gut; thmmt: gt,te2',ttf, w a. mo y-ger on ple masque throng. I an wno terror. In11eed, at moments one would force from the mind that the death cloud hovered about. At turns to the way we encountered the ms!u'cty.partiusss-iaass" of married men Search attics - a of settled men who td' the 'laftN'A' for good I,',',': "How mung deaths here"' ."F.o.ur, ht mg the pig t, aahib." How u that “2“,. the previous night?" "Two less. “tub. We went on further. "How man! 035°. but you yesterday!" "Nearly seventy. sahiti, and tittr-iix deaths." Hturtr, clear, decisive Instructions are ten. Doctors, weary-faced with um toil, come forward to report. 311191,”? the plague is relaxing; at others It ll increasing virulently. . We went across the burning and to , fishing village lying on thy l.oar. It. is gut o t from bracmhot at “15;: on yet it is the t o e . The people are U11'l, lowest cafe. The stained and - fur-Med} PREMATURE CONCLUSION. NERD OF CAUTION APPRECIATION. iiriiFuaiGiirhndst1rt than: are neither. Habits]; mrding to the Io- cal ”rounding“ but in any vase. it uking into consideration all the cir- cttgtttAaateMter. A general answer would be to build anyone factories in cheese factory 'setimtts,c.reaTeIies _in crea- In Mhee localities where the pop- ulation in uttered, roads are bad and the a of tmtttqmrta!ion high. the creamer: will men with more favor than the cheese ttrtrosiT.. 9nd.will be more reliable. It is a qurstmn Yum 'd'lN')'l"llllfft thought _i,eelt,, a Pr We. have more cheese factories than ereameries. But there are sane dis- tricts where a cheese factory cannot be wccgasfully carried on unless tor a short time during the summer, and even than it in under difficulties. Sw- tions such as pans of Wellington (bunty. Waterloo, (Huron, Bruce. a por- timy of Erasmus of Simcoe and York. where raising has been a weialty for Years-io these sections cheese “annotating is difficult, "w- ing to the fact that all the milk ietaken from the tarm and there is none to rear steers (or mulling. In such places the crmry will be found more_ ent- isfnctory, In the sskim-rnile is either left at tho tum or returned after sep- antimut this ftpttory. . . The mam-r to this depends upon cir- cumstwcps. Of course those who ask are annals to know which will pay them best. Judging from the exper- ience of the Province as a whole, we should 'oonclude that the cheese factory has paid better than the creamery: as "We are thinking of starting a cheese factory or a creamery in this neighborhood. Which would you advise ttaiohuildt" ,, l . This (medium is trequenlly asked. Several times we have received a postal card with walking like the following wait/ers upon it; - _ _ . 5. more will be more wealth to the mass of tumors. more comfort in the home, less tired, worn~our farmers' wives and daughters,.whu are already overworked, and 11mm. if co-operative dairying is more largely ado‘xed. there uvill ha built nn " nations: induatrv Jiti' h; built up aGaTronal industry that. wall be a. source of natiunpl pride. This last ‘cunnot be accomplished so long as private dairying takes the lead. CHEESE FACTORY OR CREAMERY ? 4. It is possible to extend co-o wra- tive dairying to that branch of 1'0,T. img known as the hog industry, which Ls so closely allied with the dairy. lu- stead ot hauling the whey, gkism-uiiik and buttermlk back to the farm tor Media? hogs, It will be more profitable to f (hem bags at or near the Go. wry, where there are sufficient hy- produpta to warrant the erection of suitable pens and the amusement of a competent person to feed and care for the animals. The object of each person engaged in the business should be to produce goods an cheaply as possible. The profits in dairying lie betweem the price obtained and the cost of producing and market- ing. For instance if cheese sells fur 10 cents per pound. and it costs 6 cents to produce and market it, a profit of 4 cents per pound, is made. But if it sells for 15 cents and it costs 13 cents to produce it a profit of 2 cents is made on each pound of cheese. Profits do not depend merely upon getting a high price, but in Inducing as cheaply as possible. and LE5!) getting the high- eat available price for the goods. 3. Skilled labor may be employed in manufacturing., This is a day of spen- ialties. A farmer is not expected _tu be an expert in growing foods, In branding and rearing dairy manhunt! also be an expert. chum» or butter- maker. 2. Butter and cheese can be produced more cheaply, [woman there is less outlay tor labor and capital on Uses cooperative plan, than there would be it each dairyman “and buy the utensils and employ the labor necessary to manuImturev the milk in his own dairy. 'Dhe running expenses are also HDVANTAGES or? CO-OPERATION. I. A better average article. may be produced and alga goods of more uni- form quality, which will consequently bring I higher average price than pri- vate dairy goods. It is mime to make a better quality of cheese or butter in a private dairy than in a fwtury. in case a person has the necessary skill and conveniences. but only under special circumstances will it pay the dairyman to employ they labor and buy the utensils required. Consequently for the may; of farmers it will be wiser to adopt the (yo-opera- tire or factory plain in the munufacturo ing of dairy goods. at mutter per 100 lbs. of skim-milk. and the extra price obtained for crea- may butter he commuted with dairy butter. will pay the expenses ot men- u'fncturiug and selling n the creamery. In many cases the neon-nun creamer)! in winter would pay the dairies n mar- gin of 8 to 5 cents a. pound after do. ducting the cast of making, while the tarm would be relieved of the drud- gery of making butter under trying and unfavorable circumstances. Near- ly every theme factory in the Province ought to arrange to make butter for tKaur to six months each year, and thus increase the profits of the patrons br one-third to one-half, as well as be I. “we of revenue to the owners of factories. w V .0... 3.3.... Men or“ - Ink-dry an the _ mm ©ethegg. Ml Expert-um! Fun. Ib, Watt“ system of dnitying in W I) Invariant to dairymln, and the need of good buildings and mullin- or] I, preasietq that the following kick on building mating cooper- ativa "reameriesa and cheese factories are abutted with the hype that they my be fund useful in securing the latest improvements in structures to be used Our the manufacture of Camo. dian chem and butter. Mlllilrat IN HUMMER of butter per 100 and the extra pri: may butter .3 c buttor, will my t muons or oouSucrma cums: “aromas no “mamas. we would urge the need at having (he milk made into butter " the crea- mory in winter as well as during the manner. The saving of butter from the tin-milk. averaging about 1 lb. lunar”..- - 'ee-ee" l The reports that all the building. " Shallow had been destrnyed are con- firmed. Mr. hit-Calm. the British reli- dent deputy cmmissiimvr, was killed iby . ta ling ham. and the. English _ Indies and children are "uttering mum- I so] from exposure. The town. of 'Sylyhet and Chernpuajl were levelled I to the ground and whole villages nub- sided. The losses are so great that it in feared I severe scarcity of foot) in inevitable in several populous dislrma. Prince Nirholu of Montenegro In. had the lu-k todispose of all his grown- up pretty daughters if the engagement of the King of Semis to the Primal Xenia turns out to be : fact. He will than 11:79. left only an ten-rear-old ii/Gods. Vern. Terrible reports are coming in from Assam. At Shillong everything bu been levelled to theground. An in- antor of prisons bu been killed end there have been any death- in the public offices in the military lines and in the bazaar. No further detail-are ub- taineble.1‘theotl'iciul reoorxbrhwve been buried at Geuheti, where the roads are now crowned by wide chumei The rail- road has unis-bed in that vicinity, end at Gotham a tidal mm but destroy- ed the lmur and all tho other build- ings. and the Win. country in covered with {Wee which are spurt- ing mud and and. Numbers of build- ings have been destroyed at ”hubri. where the river bank has subsided. flooding the msuntry and ruining the mops. There but been heavy In“ cl life at Coupon. and 11mm. Sever“ of the shaken districts have not. been heard from, but isolated roads have been broken w) lg fissures. bridged have heel: destroye and the telegraph lites hive been brtken down almost th_rymrhout Aryan. " . l -.A.- . ___ 7""“"‘ van nun-um. Ull‘ “IV ally it in either what is known u "priu "in enterprise" or the “joint stotAg may" plan. In Hus first wer, sound papal Or person- ume to build . suitable building, equip it pmperts. um manhunt-e thes milk or (team " n certain rate per pound, the patron. can! raeCusg to furnish the milk from I certain number of new for a (serum ettunbesr of years. In this use the private individual running all the an, usually charges a higher rate luau tht hint swat “cloths. For alum-nu the rat» usually varies tram an und one: half cents to two and one-Ulf cent. per palm. the ntrnns delivering thq milk on tho milL alum! or at the tao: tory--usuallr (he former. For button the rate varies from three to four cents‘pet yered. _ 7 - 2. The mums receive the bandit. at the profits at tnaatuttrcta1re, which mu] be armed in reducing the out of menu acture mwareholde-ra to its lows out limit, after all abuses bu. been paid; or a dividend may he declared each Fear after paying running u- peysen. glut a! rep-firs, out. . . . to the (an alumni)” of Assn]. (h- ohar and Dunc. when» a; mum." of factories Ink! whine hon-nu m wrecked. At Krinhnagar, Hymndi‘n‘ and Silkot all the courts and (rounds: were denwliobod. I In the joint stock (Inn‘uny method the pull-ms and others a so. nub-crib. all or a. portion. of the money required to build and equip the factory. thun be- coming owners of Ihe building and plant as well " of the cows. Thin method has nevernl advantages, the chief of which we: l l. The shareholders, who Ire chin-fly pox-was of the new“. have m inm- ea tin its, vulture. Gil are more Il‘kely lo give It hearty support than if it tupeysdbttromeooe.eiet. _ -.. - Sung chem "etirries are Mrle tat haul the milk and manufacture the chem d diureholdars for [use this) one vent per mind. It is usual to charge non- metal an utn rate of about Mun-tor at a mat per pound. Un.. lea- there is a mm in the. nem- hood who is likely to succeed as a mu:- ager. and will undertake the work. it in better to start. a factory on tht private enterprim plan. 1b (can I joint stock vomnany lt will he bed to W under the Ontario Art of 1&8. which m'ovides for tbs incorporata'oet of chew and button manufacturing -iatiom, in a my" simple manner. that [until of the destruction can“ by the earthquake on sum-d" lad show that great damage wu done " Damn, J amalwr and Murtghithuimd, At the latter plus the Numb but u nir- uouloua can». GM injury wudou Wide-pro“ -rtee%- In lec- famed by the manic-ulna. A deqmwh from Culcuttas says v-Fur- 'ale ti,tttttat.tee that T chem or t m M- hotund 'd,'htt Ttt twill“! ex- Pelln. " are . industry in te..try,mrir.ir due-a in Dunner and batty- ln mm. owing 'hietly to cli- Inlnc condzuom ES’DABIJSHING FACTORIES. u Iago-litig- atom the people know Prr.1ittie about the management or requirement. of a on»... factory oz ',f,fntt.r..giyGaTiTuii when" the services " some WM no. to addrm. I public meeting on t: 94- P.etta.tms 3nd maul: of (Io-opera". gnu-wag. Seek to trot the Import and Influence of we prominent man in lb Wily. as the majority ire at to my and an: mint action hall u down ttth hungry Ire sulfate tttd has men t it, t not: I no likely 'lfn'hl into line. "eel d be full at this or some other meet" 1,. :...'J- 4- . . . . __ “\- mu uuler‘lllum to .d.ivido the territory into any t retie.ma, und Ippoinl n mitt»? two In ends-scum to t'antratt the new Irrood. {ad (ind out the nllnbor ot any. “that I radius at five or " male; and my number of men who will pledge the milk from their cow: to! Atom (I three or five yum. if uh. Mary is erected. Aim this mung; teat "gut. there will be name data framed upon for future operation. Ul- eas the milk (run about. we can a. lie sugared. or 'yprphatrility of Mn use this number in the our tutm. It would not be advisable to build . ho- tory and. equip it on a very extend" male. The next atop in to ”loot u oouplo at alum-amen to go into oheese and butter diatrictsnnd author all the m- honnntio'n possible in reference to tsod. ing own, are of milk and “full. methods of (wanting the busing-n. plans of buildings and all [111qu por- uinning to the dairy. l l The next [hint to dmide in the l CONDUCTING THE FACTORY. ' There. are neveral wuyn at 'ttes, and yonduc'ling this llpuiueu, but us - AFFLICTED IN DIA, A Lucky Prince. " H t', (l, Ti,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy