12 Conservative * A RKPI/Jf FROM A BUTTER BIAK R. EDITOU CONSERVATIVE : y Under "paternalism" you make' some misleading statements. You p y , "only those who buy from the farindr the pro duct of the dairy and in large establish ments , with expensive machinery , convert it into butter , " whom you de fine as butter-makers , are demanding national legislation restricting the manu facture and sale of oleomargarine. The facts are , that not more than one butter- maker in one thousand owns such an \ i > establishment. They are owned , con trolled and supplied by the very per sons you try to divest of any blame in the matter the farmers. These farmers hire the butter-makers , and whatever ' " f f legislation he is demanding , is through their desire and by their advice. The term butter-maker , in the parlance - lance of today , means only those who make butter in a creamery , or in such an establishment as yon mention , and not the owners thereof and his personal interests are infinitesimal when com pared to those of the hundreds of thou- " snnds of farmers who employ him. You should place -the blame , if any , whore it belongs and not on the com- \f paratively few who have raised the grade of American butter from where it was only a few years ago , known as grease and sold only in the local markets , to where it now is , the standard in the markets of the world. What memorial has expressed the de sire , much less a demand , that a certain variety of butter shall be the "legalized bread-spreader throughout the United States , " and that "oleomargarine be de clared unconstitutional , " and how can oleomargarine or other snbstance be de clared unconstitutional ? Such demands if made will not , and should not , re ceive consideration by law-makers. We do not sanction the fostering of one manufactured product to the detri ment of another , nor do we sanction the i manufacture of any substitute which is to go upon our markets as the genuine v article. The butter producer does not object to the manufacture and sale of oleo margarine providing it is known and * sold as oleomargarine. It is the deception g tion and fraud practiced that is causing this agitation by the producers and cou- Lil . Burners through the butter-maker. It is conceded that of the eighty-two million pounds of this counterfeit manu factured in 1809 , ninety per cent was consumed by those who paid butter prices for it and supposed they were getting butter. ( Authority , Hoard's Dairyman. ) You say "it is made from the fat of the bovine. " Why did yon not enum erate all of its ingredients ? Or did you not know that the bovine fat is the smallest portion of the formula , if it is thereat all ? If it is made entirely of the fat what effect would it have on the farmer sup plying the beef market ? The average yield of this fat is not more than three ) or cent of each beef , or about one dol- ar and twenty cents , which you fear may be legislated against to the detriment of the beef market and which is only produced once in a life-time , whereas the bovine milk producer yields that much every week for from six to ten years and at last supplies her share of this "nutritions and infinitely superior" article. Would you strangle the weekly pro ducer of the one dollar and twenty cents' worth'of a pure product in order to preserve the once in a life-time pro ducer of the same value of fat , that the poor may not be deprived of the blessed privilege of buying a cheap substitute at the same price they could get the genuine article for ? You want gold and silver to circulate at their genuine commercial ratio. We want butter and oleomargarine on the same equitable footing , and nothing but proper legislation will secure these de sires. The figures quoted prove that under the present conditions the poor are the ones who suffer most and will be most benefited by the only important legisla tion now asked for , viz : that oleomar garine shall not be colored to imitate genuine butter. N. S. ANDREWS. Dnbuque , la. , Mar. 10 , 1900. New York World : SECRKTSOF LONGEVITY.The causes of Natural Death and How to Attain an Active and Useful Old Age , " was the subject of a lecture by Dr. Cyrus Edson before the Hund red Year Olub at 226 West Fifty-eighth street last night. "Farmers are of long lives , " said Doc tor Edson , "but men in the city who observe the rules of health live longer than the farmer. The reason is thai the city man exercises his mental pow ers more than the farmer and the secret of longevity is in mentality. "The rules for a long life are : Plain 'ood ; plenty of good air ; not more than eight hours of sleep ; periods of exercise part of which should be of such a nature as to produce a deep respiration and perspiration ; don't worry or go to ex- ' ; remes or excesses. " Doctor Edson said the average life of a brain worker was sixty-seven years. "The cause of death , " said he , "is fail ure of assimilation , the giving out of one organ and failure of the nervous system. " Doctor Edsou told of Thomas Parr , an Englishman , who lived to be 152 years old and outlived nine princes. Parr was supposed to have died because of a change of food and air , moving from the fresh country to London. He worked - j ed in a field until he was 180 years old and married a widow at 120. A BOTTLE OF THE Guaranteed Dehorner Contains Enough to Dehorn About 1OO Calves. PRICE $1.00. AGENTS WANTED , Write For Particulars. Made and Warranted by the Guarantee Remedy Co. OFFICE , 502 BROADWAY , COUNCIL BLUFFS , IOWA. 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