West Cumberland Times
24 November 1928
24 November 1928 Notes By The Way | 24 November 1928 Notes By The Way |
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CHEAPER BACON. AN ELECTION CRY. CLEARING THE AIR. TOWN AND COUNTRY. DUST REMOVED BY WIND. COUNTRY RECORDS. WIND HALL, GOSFORTH. A NOTED GALE. ______ Nevertheless, we may be thankful for things as they are. With roads and rivers flooded, and land sodden, we may be glad of all the winds that blow (in moderation), to dry the soil for the farmers, and to purify the atmosphere for the health and comfort of everybody. And, after all, is not this the season of the year whereby the Earth is purified and Nature is at reast! ********** We have, as someone said, the stars to play with and the world at our feet. The motor dust at this season is at a minimum, and we suppose that along the coast here from right to left and up to the mountains, we have the purest air in all the United Kingdom and Ireland thrown in! The chief problem is how to use it rightly, and to avoid the terrors of overcrowding. So, by the way, we wonder how many ‘teeny-weeny” invisible particles there are, actually, in this sweet country air, as compared with that of the slums of overcrowded towns. We wonder! ********** Some years ago a scientific expert let the cat out of the bag when he told us that his estimate of the number of solid particles in the air away from all public roads and buildings, but near the sea between St. Bees and Seascale, was roughly 250 to the square inch. At first this would seem to be a large number for such an obviously pure atmosphere. But let us think of what the number may be along the dust laden highways in summer. Then we shall not wonder that we sneeze in towns to get rid of them (the dust-devils), and have our eyes half closed to prevent too early blindness - even if we are run over by the first motor that passes! ********** And we mention all this (even after the wet summer and the floods) not merely to show how easily, even here, our eyes and ears may be deadened, or how the germs of infection may be increased by dry weather, but rather to emphasise the comparative purity of the seaside air as compared not merely with the dusty highways, but with the air of towns wherein (thank goodness) some of us are not yet compelled to live or to die. And with all our rates and taxes and quibbles about representation, it is a scream, isn’t it? When we are able to find that the number of particles of suspended impurities in the air of many towns in ordinary dry weather, even now, is not less than 30,000 to the square inch of the air breathed. Then, as each one of us breathes about 18 cubic feet of air per hour, we draw into the lungs and respiratory organs in 24 hours about 22,400,000,000 of such solid particles. Then, we are not well off, comparatively, in our country environments by the mountains or the deep sea? But what would happen without the rain and wind to help the town folk in their crowded areas? ********** And that reminds us how the flooded rivers also, have been propitious anglers during the fishing season of 1928. The season on the Ehen and the Calder and Irt, closed this week until the middle of March; and in these rivers, especially, the catch of smelts or sprods from the sea has been better than for many years past. There are two reasons for this - firstly, the repeated floods at most convenient times for the rod men (but bad for the farmers), and, secondly, the continued exertions of the Egremont and district Rod-fishers Club in regard to the prevention of pollution. Much of the sewerage of former years has been removed from the river Ehen, and the water is more wholesome than it was. But salmon have been very, very scare (scarcely an “odd yean”), though it is believed that in the swollen becks some have gone up higher to spawn. If so, these, if not interfered with many replenish the streams with a fresh and larger run in years to come. Let us hope so. ********** Then, finally, someone asks us this week, “If fish are scarce why shouldn’t we have cheaper bacon?” Well there is something in that. But it really is a poser! Our friend also adds, “We want more home-cured!” And we quite agree. The fact is that quite a number of pigs are bred in this neighbourhood (as of yore), but owing to want of bacon curers, or a bacon factory of the old-fashioned stamp, farmers are handicapped and kept under the thumb of the butchers. There now! One for the farmers at last! ********** But the public also suffer. Where is now to be had the good rich Cumberland ham or bacon, such as was cured by SELKIRK, ROBINSON or SMITH at Beckermet, or by ATKINSON and MATTERSON, at Sellafield, in the last century, certainly less than 50 years ago? The best and most luscious hams at eight pence per pound. And, by the way, these curers, locally, all made “their fortunes and a name.” Honest curing; honest prices; and honesty all round. What an election cry that would be - for the future! ********** |
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