Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 13, 1904 Page: 3 of 4
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DOUBLE DAILY CONNECTION
J -TO THE —-
j WORLD’S FAIR. ««
I SAINT LOUIS o
Week Old Cream.
The buttermaktng business of to-
lay is an entirely different proposi-
tion from what it was five years ago,
as the hand se-irator has made It
necessary to use many new and dif-
ferent methods than when nothing
but whole milk was received at the
factory. In the flrsf place, cream
which is a week old ought not to be
accepted by any creamery, no mat-
ter whether It Is a co-operative cream-
ery or a central plant, but competi-
tion is so fierce that it is aocepted,
and this puts a premium upon old
cream, because-the farmer Isn't going
to deliver his cream any oftener than
is necessary to enable him to get the
same price as the farmer who deliv-
ers his cream dally. It Is my opinion
that it Is a mistake to mix week old
cream with cream which la one or two
days old, and in good condition, and I
recommend that this old cream he
pasteurised, heating It to as high a
temperature as possible without giv-
ing the cream a cooked flavor,'and
then cool it to about 65 degrees, then
add a good commercial or home-made
starter and then cool It down to about
50 degrees. The churning tempera-
ture varies with the season of the
year from 60 degrees In the winter to
62 In the summer. Care should be
taken not to overchurn the butter,
then draw off the buttermilk, add the
wash water, revolving the churn two
or three times, being careful not to
roll the butter so as to make It
chunky, then drain off the wash water
and work the butter until the salt Is
entirely dissolved. I have made some
experiments and at the present time
am investigating several new ideas,
but, as yet, none of them have proved
& success, and if it Is going to be Im-
possible to force the farmer to bring
his cream oftener than once a week,
it is my opinion that in the due course
of time our men who are Inventors in
dairy apparatus and dairy prepara-
tions will discover some piece of ma-
chinery or some chemical which will
be of great assistance, but until that
time our only salvation is to labor
with the farmer and show him how
it is an impossibility to make extras
out of cream which is a week old.—
.1 H. Brock way.
Your patronage solicited.
Wright 4 Son
New Phone 480, Division St,
Opposite Holland Hotel
When Ashee ArsyPut on Land.
The application of ashes to land
does not necessarily show what that
land needs. It has been a favorite,
practice to apply ashes to land to de-
termine its supply of potassium, and
’o-dsy most of our people believe that
the chief fertilising value of ashes is
he potassium. The writer remembers
a bare hill top to which he applied
ashes during all of one winter. The
next spring the growth wae so great
on that place that the hay could not
be cured on the ground where It waB
grown; tut part of It had to be car-
ried to another spot to allow of Its
neing spread thin enough to permit of
the eun's getting into it The natural
inference was that the land had be-
come very deficient In potaeslnm. Bat
Professor Hopkins of Illinois says
that the test la not a sure one In Its
results. He mentioned parts of Illi-
nois where there la no deficiency of
potassium, but where the soil Is add.
The application of ashes brought good
harvests and the farmers wrote him
that their land needed potassium. He
Investigated and found that they were
mistaken. The lime in the° ashes
had neutralized the acid and caused
the change In conditions that resulted
in an abundant yield of grain. Some
kinds of dshes contain over 60 per
cent of lime, and this Is the element'
that does the
KACBIM «T LOUIS IT 7:M THE SECONS M01NIN0-VH
NEW ORLEANS and
Illinois CentraJ
The Most Comfortable Route to
Houston
Chronicle
both for
ST. LOUIS
ASK THE AGENT FOR RATES AND INFORMATION
OR ADDRESS
N. D. FINCH. T P A.,
Houston.
A. J. McDOUGALL, D. P. A
New Orleans.
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NEW FA8T TRAINS TO ST. LOUIS.
MOBILE A OHIO LIMITED
Leaves New Orleans 7:30 p. m., arrive
In St. Louis 6:52 next afternoon.
ST. LOUIS EXPRESS
Leaves New Orleans 9:10 a. m., arrive
in St Louis 8:46 next morning
Through Sleepers New Orleans to
St Louis—Superb Dining Car Service
on all trains, meals a la carte, library
observation cars.
Stopovers allowed at SL Ljuis on
all tickets.
Ticket Office, 229 8t Charles, cor-
ner Gravier, opp. Postal and Western
Union Telegraph Companies.
Phone Main 3639-L.
Phone Main 3639-L., New Orleans,
La. F. E. GUEDRY.,
District P A.
per month
1 FARM LANDS
work in many cases.
When land responds to the application
or ashes it means that either the soil
contains too much acid, which the
lime in the ashes neutralizes, or Jiat
It is deficient in potassium.
Old Phone 75
New Phone 460.
Call us up, drop a postal, or come
and see us at the TRIBUNE OFFICE,
hoom 24, Rein Building.
BOTH PHONTS NO. 74.
ALONG
THE DENVER ROAD
IMPROVED SERVICE TO
NORTH TEXAS
NORTHWEST TEXAS
(THE PANHANDLE)
Are advancing in value at rate of 20 per cent per annum
Do You Know of tn Equal Investment?
priced period. This of course gave
large profits. As was certain to be
the case, other mea saw the same
method of getting rich and began to
build like plants. This was all right
for some years, while the number of
plants was small enough so that the
goods stored would not greatly af-
fect the market. But the building
continued, and now the products
stored compete so strongly with each
other that the margin of difference of
prices at different times of year is
greatly reduced. Reports from New
Jersey tell of a new cold storage
plant at Jersey City, which was built
last year at a cost of $300,000. The
establishment was perfect in every
detail and the promoters expected
great things. But they were unable
to secure business and the enterprise
went into the hands of a receiver.
The plant was offered for sale at
suction, with the proviso that not less
than $190,000 would bo taken. Not a
bid was received.
Are advancing in value at rate of 20 per cent per annum.
As our assistance may be of great value toward securing what
you need or wish, aa regards either Agricultural Properties or
Business Opportunities, arid will coat nothing, why not use us?
Drop ut a postal. ''*• ** , ,
' A. A. GLIS80N, General Paaa. Agent,
* Fort Worth, Texas.
Soil and Milk.
The surprising assertion is made by
an English scientist that the class^of
soil on which the hay or pasture grass
is grown controls to a large extent
the quality of the milk. Americans
will be slow In aecepling the state-
ments In behalf of such a doctrine.
It will do no harm, however, to note
the points that the said scientist
thinks he brings out. He claims, in
the first place, that milk from grass
grown on a limestone soil will be
richer than on a clay soil, even though
all treatment of the cows la the
same. But we have frequently noted
that the English still have the ides
that the richness of the milk con-
tinually varies according to the vary-
ing rlchneas of the feed. This Ides
is being constantly brought out in
one way and another there, the local
Judges even letting off the milkmen
that sell milk below the required per-
centage of aolids, the milk producers
having made the plea that the feed
was poor In quality.
Again, the man referred to declares
that milk made on limestone soil will
keep fifty per cent longer than that
made on clay soils, other things be-
ing equal He asserts that la the
making of cheese the* milk has to be
scalded at not less than 108 degrees
If It 1$ made on clay, while if it Is
made on limestone soil the scalding
can be-done at 100 degrees. He does
aot try to explain the cause of these
remarkable differences, but guesses
that perhaps the micro-organisms In
the clay soil are different from the
mlcro-orga&isms In the other soil. Un-
fortunately, the gentleman does not
furnish verified data to prove his as-
sertions.
Now Operates a Through
Pullman Sleeper
Between
Beaumont and Dallas
Baltimore, . Washington,
Cincinnati, Saint Louis,
Chattanooga, KnoxrriUe,
Asheville, Birmingham.
Through Pullman Drawing Rood
Sleeping Cars Between
New Orleans and New York,
New Orleans and Cincinnati,
New Orleans and Saint Lou s,
WITHOUT CHANCE.
Superb dining Cars. All meals a
la Carte. Summer Tourist Tiokets
now on sale to all Summer Resorts
in Tennessee, North and South Car-
olina, Kentucky and Virginia.
IWORLD’S FAIR ROUTE
Vim Meridian end Mobile dt Ohio ft. ft.
Write to C. F. Woods. Traveling
Passenger Agent, San Antonio, Tex.,
for detailed Information.
V Train leaves Beaumont Daily pt 5
p. m., arriving in Dallas 8:40 a. m.
This train is equipped with new
Coaches throughout, and as it makes
direct connections with last trains
for Chicago, Kansas City and St.
Lonis, it will prove very attractive
to the people of East Texas. Reser-
vations may be made in advance by
addressing
I. B. HUXEN, C. P. A
BEAUMONT, TEXAS.
Good Hsifsra from Good Cows.
No really good milker should be
sold except for a very high price pro-
vided it is possible to breed her to a
dairy bull of a good milking strain.
Every farmer should make an attempt
to raise enough first-class heifers for
his own use, and to do this he will
have to refuse to listen to the voice of
the tempter when he has the oppor-
tunity to let go of his best milch
cow tor s few more dollars than tha
next best would bring In the light of
s mother that cow la worth more to
bin than she is to the man that In-
tends to buy her, milk her for a few
months and send her to the butcher.
It Is a bad policy to try to buy cows
from others. One never knows what
he Is getting in such a case. It takes
time for a man to learn that the cow
he bought has faults, and during the
time he Is finding this out he may be
losing money. Heifers raised on the
place are of more lntereat to the farm-
er and his family than are the cows
that are purchased from no one knows
whom.
KANSAS CITY TO THE GULF
snrtnrirtnnrtrtfBinrinnnnnrTinnnr
PASSING THROUGH A GREATER DIVERSITY OP CLIMATE
BOIL AND R£3DUDCR THAN ANY OTHER RAILWAY
* IN TDD WORLD. FOR ITS LENOTH.
mules, emtio, nog*.sheep, poultry and Anzors goats, at prices ranging In
FREE GOVERNMENT HOMESTEADS
to twenty-five dollars or more per a, re. *
Write for a copy of •Ct ROKXT FVKNT3," puWlnhed by the
KANSAS CITY SOUTHERN RAILWAY
1H8 SHORT LING TO "
“INEXPENSIVE AND COMFORTABLE HOMES.”
SUMMER RESORTS.
“The Land of the 8ky."
“The Toxaway Country,"
Low Summer Tourist Rates to
Tennessee, North and South
Carolina and Virginia.
Through Vestibuled Trains.
Dining Cara Serve All Meals.
For partlcultrs apply to
HOLMES SMITH,
Trav. Pass. Agent,
Houston, Texas.
•-••"daatR-.ssr’-*-
F. C. ROCSLCR. T**v. pass, mm o uwa w AOT., Kansas city, mo.
vJUUiUL8.iUlJU,JlfiJA&JUlgJ^Lfl.ii3
Feed Improves Breeds.
It has been frequently remarked
that dairy breeds of cattle Improve
when they come to this country. Ma-
jor Alvord, on hls return from .a visit
to the Islands of Guernsey and Jersey,
said that we have better Jerseys and
Guerr ts than are to be found on
those Island \ they having improved
In our hands. Incidentally he men-
tions that the pasturage there is high
In price and the cows have to be
tethered. This indicate* that they
Southern Pacific
___
In Picking Apples.
One man suggests that a good way
to |>ick apples is to put a tick filled
with hay under a tree and drop the
apple* into It from the ltmba. He
asserts that tola has been his practice
and that the fruit la not thereby In-
jured. This may be all right for
some kinds of fruit, but it would not
BOATING
BATHING
k SAILING
jVfishing
AN IDEAL
bo for others. There are some of oar
varieties that Injure so easily that
even the pressure of the thumb and
finger must be looked out for. Be-
sides, In the letting fall of apple* from
the top of the tree a great deal of
skill Is required not to hit the other
apples in the tick or the limbs of the
tree when the apples are being
stSMJS
tagetriw for most of the work of fruit
SHORTEST and
QUICKEST LINE
Louisville&Nas
ve the molding of
extent in our own
is certain and that
Santa k’
Route
las
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Dickensheets, Charles D. Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 13, 1904, newspaper, September 13, 1904; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth644385/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.