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Show T 4 THE MORNING EXAMINER VOL. ffl. NO 245 OGDEN British I CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 2, Cammed Goods Reveal! F.NGLISH SYSTEM OE INSPECTION DECLARED BY LONDON SCIENTISTS TO BE USELESS AND INEFFICIENT DISGUSTING CONDITION OF SLAUGHTER HOUSES HORRORS OF ROT-TE- N ROW AT SMITHFIHLl.) MARKET London, Aug. S3.Gullty American small slaughter house, in England may at leant rejoice sre absolutely without any inspection j meat packer Exwhatever; the butchers may kill when in having companions in crime. amination juai made In England by they like and under whatever condiauthorities tions they please. The places literally various aanitary demonstrate ibat English reek with filth; they are never propt erly cleaned up, and the conditions packer end other food manufacturer are quite on a par with their under which animals sre slain make ao whom oouaina have ihe meat unfit for human consumption. they American loudly denounced recently. Front every I nse proof of the sale in Ijnndun from of of the carcases of animals that have London, and, indeed, part ail the big cl l lea of England, come died of tuberculosis in various parts a report from aanitary authorities to of the country. "As for meat inspection in this the effect that canning factories, , in meat market, daughter house and country, It dues not exist. The incould not be worse. butcher shop spectors have no training whatever According to atatementa made over they know nothing about barteriolug their own aignuturea by many of the leal or microscopical examination. most prominent public analysts, meat They only have their sense of smell prepared and put up hy English to go by. Butchers know this; and packers is often In a condition not when they have meat which Is parto public health, but ticularly bud, and amelia so 'loud' that only andgerou All aorta of even an Inspector would notice It, absolutely poiaonoua. ruse, and dodge are employed for they treat the meat with permanconcealing the real nature of the food- ganate of potash, which kills the smell stuffs prepared in thfa country. at least loug enough fur temporarily of the When the first announcement inspector to pronounce the Chicago exposure reached Engl- It Hound. and, a universal about went up iiom What with. tuberculous and meat packer to the effect that .tad rotten meat, selling with the perand "home Industries" been patronlccd functory and useless system of althere would have been no cause for leged that goes on In this alarm. Almost Immediately the Im- country,inspection I do not consider that we portation of American canned goods are a whit, better off than the Ameroff an to alarming extent, icana. With uneducated Inspectors dropped and the American industry received a who are not up to the tricka of the blow. No staggering opportunity was trade, no one in England is safe In lost by Brittisih packer themselves eating the 'roast beef of old England' to roast American products of every that we boast so much about. Amerikind, and while wrecking the There la a place In Smithfleld can market, these packer made desIn their own Market the largest meat center of perate attempt to get where thousands of tons products prominently before the pub- England, meat are sold which is called Hotten lic. Stores in various parts of LonRow.' This section of the market does don displayed big signs Sold hew the jurisdiction of the Hrltlfch Products Only, and Tae not come under honest. British goods; don't eat vile inipectorsw ho have charge of the city of London; and, as a consequence, American stuff. to be disposed when any bad meat Hut the triumph waa not for long. How. Hr. F. Cooper, one of the beat known of It finds its way to 'Rotten to medical men In London, who la also Here Inspectors aren ot allowed what a member of parliament and of the Interfere, and you may imagine Tuherculoua, filthy meat is londnn county Cotinrlf, rose up goes on. offered for sale. People of the hrively to say In public that English here I meat packers and sellers were as poorer classes buy this gitffi and no doubt that many diseases guilty as their. American rivals, la a have even deaths may be attributed istemrnt made to the writer of this and to it. Hr. said: subject, Cooper i he public has no conception ef the "I have seen with my own eye conditions filthy prevailing in moat rr tea of Oatend rabbits treated with of the English slaughter houses, permanganate of potash to keep them especially the small private ones. from smelling, and sold at Ihe Chinan's wont .places could am bq ridiculously low price of aeventy-firany worse' thaa. these. Moat of the cents per crate. This bs. practically ! CuptiiKh; candalls in the I'niu-- Sta'cs aud it'-.- ii All Rich i a Strict ho giving them away. They have sold for the reason that the permanganate only keeps them from smelling for a short time, and if they are nut gotten riil of quickly even the purchasers would realise their hy vurtis, Rican, ket ech year. Of om.i-- e d, not nay that ail this meat - h:..l, hut a Vum ..f it la large quantity of it is often properly inspected, ami sold in a condition wb:i) rulers it highly dangerous fur butiun 1 i. i nii-a- 1 ' . e FIVE PRICE 1906. " HOC'-- CENTS. 0 S3 TUBFRCl IOUS CUTIIi SOLD FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION AND DISINFECTANTS DISGUISE THE BAD DFODORANTS MEAT PROMINENT MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT LAYS BARE SOME RIDE'. FA (.Is done from what we call harrows, or. aa the American-- ! sat . push carts. Etervtliitis is sold on those cart, from suit and meal to fitriiit.ire and fish Again anil again I hate seen push esrts with meat and fish for sale pcn, foul smelling sumdiug ot cr reeking with all sorts of bacterial nutter. A great deal of it gets fly blow u. aud if we bail any decent inspection in this count r.i it would be condemned. There should lie a law passed in thia oountrv forbidding the sale of meat from push esrts. and also It should lie forbidden to exiioae meat on the dusty streets, unprotected by glass covering, as is ihme iu every huirlier shop in England. No marter'ahal may lie Mid of Chicago. we hare equally hat conditions prevailing here, not only iu the aale of what is misnamed 'fresh killed' meat, hut also In tha canned goods variety. Rearing out Hr. Cooper's statements as to canned goods, every analyst of Imdon employed to make special examinations of British tinned goods found condition prevailing quite as bad aa thisie existing in America before the great "huuae rleanitg there. As a matter of fact, nearly every law-dopublic analyst Just now has hi hands full making analyse of canned pomeats and other canned goods, rtal attention la being given to British produce, and some startling revelaAt the tion have Just been made. special Instance of the local government hoard no leas than twenty-eigli- t different sections of Ixindou bate taken up the iavesitgatton of canned goods from various English rucking houses. In every public laboratory and there is one for nearly every district In lamrion you see pile of canned goods standing waiting for analysis. while specially empkiyed chemist a. nilcmscnpists and bacteriologists are looking assiduously for evidences of diseased and deleterious matter In the contents uf the supposedly Irreproachable English canned goods shout which packers have been Ik tasting so is literally n much. The result of many of those analyses has been (hu prosecution and in- fliction of heavy fines and even Iinon many lomrion peckers, firlaoninent where horacic arid aaa found In milled bam. the meat had turned blsrk, and it was testified hy treated with expert that It had been preservative because 14 wsa Ninflt far SANITARY INSPECTOR AT SMITHFIKI.D MARI. AT human consumption when packed. The Tsktaw Siapto" I i Bids d Kelt U Asrrrtila a better It Is Tskemkaa er Neb Tke Twits it wla Inllur Iwtw An Almn "SararlMS.1 firm whose label was on Ihis abnmlna-tlo- n had been supplying largo quantiEven when meat la In a fairly d I dralua and newer. Naturally this ties of canned meals to the British It must be remembered that rabbit Is one of the staple articles of con- cent condition. 1 have seen It offered J meat, often bring warm and fresh army, and had lirauchea In lointlou. Hover, Dublin, Aldershot tttae princiwhich 1 killed, fornta a splendid culture sumption among the poorer cLsses for sale under eircnnurfance In England. Thousands of tons of tt unfit for Au bun food., la 1 dlum for aM aorta f aerais, and. of pal army corps eatnpt, Gibraltar and rabbit, are wold tm the London mar-- England a large amimm of trading la I coarse, alien bumaa beings buy it oilier place. Undoubtedly sack year thousands of tons of this deleterious canned stuff was supplied to tha British arm. The magistrates on this occasion imp-wea fine of 25 or one analysis and $SRt costa, while other analyse were sent up for further latest! gat ton. The puhllr analyst, who has done more work on foodstuff tha a any other latndon health officer, ta Dr. IX L. Thomas, medical officer of health for the utelrnpoMian borough cf tttep-neIt la in Hr. Thomas' district that many of the largest London dorks am situated, iln-- arrive dally shipments from ail oter the world, and It la from thia district that large shipments of British canned goods are aent abroad. Hr, Thomajf was found by the writer In his laboratory, surrounded by huge pile of English and American canned goods, the content of which were undergoing various process of analysis. Home asm pies acre In platinum dishes placed over spirit lamps and undergoing Incineration: others wern being weighed on delicate analytical balances; while the doctor himself waa busy with the mlrroacope looking for active organisms.'' Departing from the rule of moat London medio officers. he permitted himself to bo photographed while at work. We examine In thia district." said Hr. Thom as, "foodstuffs from al parts of the world. We have fruilsland pulps from Tasmania; rabbit, fruit and meats from Australia: meats, salmon and fruit a from Canada, sad sums fruit from California. Ws have prao tlcally no canned goods from the American beef trust In our district. Most of our stuff is British, therefore, and our result point conclusively to tbs fact that British goods are no better than those from America; and, in many cases, much worse. For instance, to give enme Interesting figures 1a 19(11, lid tons of impure tend ware destroyed ; In 1902 430 tons off bad tend were destroyed, while In 1903 Ht tons of bad food wens destroyed, while la 1904 there were 7XS tuns C British food which had to be condemned. Tbs remarkable Increase from 1901 to 1904 shows the loose methods employed ta parking tinned meats. Oa an average In our district akmo during the. last five years there has been one tea of tinned 'Rood destroyed dally. ..Preview to the introduettow ef systematic laboratory work, all thin ewnr. d - a (Oonthuuxl on. laga' . i ; ;i' IK) 'ifWM A Peep Into Some Parisian Ateliers Catherine Talbot Obtains Glimpses Into Certain Sartorial Developments That Will Usher In the Autumn Season ' - . rsn Doop Rod Veiling, Boa Plaiting Cloth, With Bands of fiilk. Aug. 18. We fashion chroniclara art to be her In Faria deadly dull days to keep ?',r Angers on the feeble pulse of la Mode. That this Illustrious 'ieni l most anaemic and run' down r without raying. Practically wa kn,,w that we cannot pieces the veil ' sartorially unaeen for a few at least. Rtlll the lmpovalble t Hhi'ity am u on and In soma opens up endleaa opportunities J' fraud and deception.' Particularly this noticed bl In the model con- -: 'cuonaiy displayed aa Fall Fashion 0,,t a halt to ratrh the eye of American tourists. 3ut what victim we all are t the of the g'smour Few men. rl certainly noImpossible! women, are devoid of 'hBlon. Whatever the aim and of ur live may he. t merely the ' Vn fiffov something .we are never Ukeiy to get. The more developed our PARIS. ' j. " '' ltd ob-le- ct of Silk. Imagination the more happiness and sorrow will be our lot in the pursuit of tha unattainable. For people with a glimmering of Imagination the mystical fascination of their own mental existence is often the one thing that makes life worth living, and the only absolutely hopeleaa person Is the one who believes that the Imposelble .1 really Impossible. The make believe of children le the first experience of tjiie Children glamour of the Impossible. are sever content with things aa they are. To be an ordinary boy or girl at mealtimes or at school le well enough, but gfter physical cravings are satisfied away they fly on wings of Imagination to the golden lands where they are kings and queens, where they ride on swans and sleep on beds of chocolate meringue for pillows and sponge cakse for blankets And to this glamour of the impossible, too, are due tha unfathomable depths In the eyes of some women women who seem to be Navy Blut Suit. Valvet Cuffs and Collar. looking for the fairies they sought In childhood, who are neder quite understood In thl world because they never quite belong to ft. la tee improbable for Nothing, again, a woman 4o hope for. - Every girl lying In a hammock under the trees these August days craves - for the Impossible. Hhe believes In- herself with the and le condaring confidence of youth vinced that she only needs the opportunity to capture a duke and play the role of grande dame. Eventually. If she marries at all. It will be perhaps a the will never struggling clerk, and' see a duke in the flesh except In a big But why break up her procession. dream . - In the meantime, while femininity Is dreaming dreams knd looking visions enough ef loveliness to satisfy the longing of most men.' the couturiers are closeted with their confidential clerks and artists devising the costume that Gown ef Black Poplin. Chestnut Taffete Silk. transform madam In the autumn of the court and for many of the noInto quite as beautiful a butterfly, bility. 9 at though with less glittering colorings. Rut. to come hack to our own days, Apropos of couturier- -. I wa Interested in learning nm Imig ago that the the very slight Information that ha flint male celebrity hn made hla mark leaked out frotq behind the closed door as a dresamaker wat Ithonberg. the of up to dele sartorial princes is thet son of a Uevarian pniii:t living In the empire modes are still 1o dominate the "period" neighborhood of M unit It. One day In fashion In Ihe fall, hut the the month of May a beautiful equliwge touch will be prominent merely Infront waa aeen driving ah iui the streets of back of cost nines. Ihe lea gown Parle with an escutcheon In the shape having disappeared rnrirely from view. of a fralr of corset and an open pair of It is also hinted that the empire will scissor In the middle of the panel of only be d rlgueur far Indoor gown coot nd wraps of a ceremonious character. each door. That wa- Rhonherg As to the color s hin. dull tone of arms, and It told Its own tale. He owed hla surcess chief, to skill In dis- are to prevail. alth navy blue in the ultra rblr I mean guising slight deformities end In bring- lead. Plack le In h with any hint of unrelieved of black attraMlv rhaftns most out the ing tt Is a pity that the his fair customers, lie made a great Cheerfulness, we fnrtune and left his heirs an annual In-- c Pfi'y. refined gsyely of coloring this tnder the fret enjoyed last season Is to he taboo - te f SO.Oflg francs, court haprf-nes- a dressmakyear. It seem to me there Is s.,dre Leroy waa Ihe in certain colorings and rontrasl. er. and al hla atelier In Ihe Rue Rich, lieu ha dtslgned dresses for the ladies 1 not bins cheerful and pink tender. W'ill Princsss Fra ok ef Gray 'Tussore. mauve soothing, gray restful, green re. freshing, yellow emotional and red stirring? Wa It not Thackeray who said that good humor Is one of the best articles of dress one can wear tn society? If it was true In his day It is doubly true now. Indeed, good humor la tha only substitute we will accept 'or that aven greater gift, a sense of humor; whirh in turn Is only second best te that of wit. We all have to acknowledge that In the social life It Is not the ugly or even the silly men and women that sre avoided, hut the dull, the prosy, the heavy, the people who can't make a joke or take one. Neither wealth, rank nor- reputation - will make dull people really welcome In society. And obviously It wa the earns in tha days when Thackeray gave "Vanity Fair" to the world, for was It not the quick wit of Becky Sharp that elevated her tn saeetty? t k I wonder whether on your aide ef the Cestume ef Brawn BreefdHh .' -- rented gown" la an acosgtq Well, over hers It exists a a recent outreme of the eenuailn!B ids reaching out Into the realm of drees. A certain madam conceived tha notion of making up costumes to rent to patrons of her estaMIshment, thereby Increasing the alia of their wardrobes at a nominal cost. For Instance, If one' wants gowns for a week and and la not In a position financially for such an extravagance, madam for the trifling or fill a week will supply, sum of you with handsome creation,. Includera ing all accessories. The germvnta soma marie tn fit ihe customer and In rases have proved so satisfactory that they hav been bought outright. W 'riding trousseaux are rented fa the honeymoon trip on the same term. fads yot exAmong the I tse ploited the rented costume Idea greatest boon vouchsafed to suffering i femininity. CATHERINE TALBOXa. water the ed fact! A , 1 fc |