Some British dairy farmers have been forced to destroy tens of thousands of litres of milk due to ris <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>stanley thermos</a> ing costs, labour shortages and an acute deficit of truck drivers which has strained supply chains to breaking point, farmers said.A post-Brexit shortage of workers exacerbated by the global strains of the COVID crisis has sown c <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz>stanley cup nz</a> haos through supply chains for everything from fuel and pork to poultry and bottled water, raising concerns growth could be crimped.One fourth-generation dairy farmer who owns a Holstein Friesian herd in central England was forced to dump 40,000 litres of milk in the past two months when no driver turned up to <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz>stanley mug</a> collect it. Its cutting, its emotionally draining when youre producing milk and at the end of the day you have to pull the plug and it has to go, said the farmer, who asked not to be named due to concerns about the impact of negative publicity on contractors.The farmer was forced to destroy four milk loads in the past two months due to shortages though in an entire career of 45 years he can remember doing it only two or three times before 鈥?and then due to bad weather.The United Kingdom produced 15.3 billion litres of milk last year so supplies are not yet threatened, though the destruction of milk shows the extent of the labour problems which are straining supply chains across the land.DISTRESSED MILKRazor-thin margins and the perishable nature of milk mean supply shocks are quickly felt by dairy farmers, according to Peter Alvis, chairman of t Cjxg New Brunswick man accused of supplying drugs to convicted Houlton trafficker
How much time Levi B. Knight spent attending to smallpox patients, we dont know. But the city of Bangor paid him $9.98 for the year March 1850-March 1851, according to the 1851 Annual Report of the Receipts and Expenditures of the City of Bangor. John Mullen earned $74.78 for the same type of duties.S.B. Morison received even more, $215.14. But then, he was remunerated for medical attendance in cases of smallpox.Anyone so inclined can read all 24 pages of the 1851 Annual Report of the Receipts and Expenditures of the City of Bangor through the Town Report Digitization Project online at library.umaine.edu/townreport/The joint project of the University of Maines Fogler Library, Maine State Library, municipalities and historical societies will be the topic of a program sponsored by the Friends of Fogler Library. Town Reports: Rich Texts, Vital Resources will be presented at 3 p.m. Monday, Nov. 15, in the Special Collections Reading Room on the third floor of Fogler Library on the UM campus in Orono.Librarians Mel Johnson and Richard Hollinger will demonstrate that town reports are unique and valuable resources for local histo <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup becher</a> ry and genealogy. They are essential sources for research on regional and state history, containin <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley flask</a> g information about social history often available nowhere else.Smallpox wasnt the only ailment mentioned in Bangors rep <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley cup</a> ort. Morison also received $17.50 for attending to insane persons. That was separate from the $16 that Bangor paid Jona. Bachelder for