The following table gives approximately an exhibit of the quantity and value of the dairy products of the United States in the year 1900:—
| Cows, Millions. | Product. | Rate of Product. | Total Product. | Rate of Value. | Total Value, Dollars. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | Butter | 130 lbs. | 1,430,000,000 lbs. | 18 cents | 257,400,000 |
| 1 | Cheese | 300 lbs. | 300,000,000 lbs. | 8 cents | 24,000,000 |
| 5½ | Milk | 380 gals. | 2,090,000,000 gals. | 8 cents | 167,200,000 |
This gives the grand total of the dairy products of the country a value of $448,600,000. If to this be added the skim milk, buttermilk, and whey, at their proper feeding value, and the calves dropped yearly, the annual aggregate value of the produce of the dairy cows exceeds $500,000,000. This may be accepted as a conservative estimate.
In a classification of the various annual farm products of the country by values, meats and closely related products stand first in order, the corn crop second, dairy products and the hay crop alternate in the third and fourth places, and wheat occupies the fifth. Hay and corn are so largely and directly tributary to the dairy as raw materials for its support, that it is fair to place the products of the dairy as second only to meat products in the general list. The cotton crop of the country is considered one of great importance, but during recent years it rarely equals the butter crop in value. The dairy aggregate exceeds all the mining products of the United States other than coal, oil, and gas. There never has been a year when the entire gold and silver product of the world was enough to buy the annual dairy products of this country at the present time. These comparisons show the commercial importance which the dairying of America has assumed. It is a branch of farming of such magnitude as to command attention and justify all reasonable provisions to guard its interests.
THE CENTURY’S MORAL PROGRESS
By SARA Y. STEVENSON, Sc. D.,
Secretary Department of Archæology, University of Pennsylvania.
In dealing with a subject so indefinite in its limits as the progress of morals in the nineteenth century, it may be well to establish by a brief survey of previous facts some solid basis upon which to rest the discussion.
The notion of Duty or of moral obligation—i. e., of well-doing viewed in the abstract and outside of expediency—does not appear to have been brought forward by the Greek philosophers, to whom is mainly due the origin of our own conceptions with regard to morality.
Even Plato, who dealt with nearly all duties, while insisting especially upon the negative duty of committing no injustice or evil, even against one’s foes, nowhere systematically treats of Duty. Indeed, the Greek equivalent for the word did not exist in his time, and the notion was conveyed by a periphrase.