DAIRY AND CREAMERY. RUNNIKG THE SEPARATOH FAST AND ,- . . . RUNNING IT SLOW. Mott Cream la Obtained Separator Is Baa at About Two-Thrrda the Speed Earned m the Clneolars. Teat to See tt Um Cream Is Ooi. A few year ag I thought some of patting in a separator tn my gathered cream plant, and to learn all I could I took a trip of a week or so and visited . same twenty or more creameries. I saw -the two styirsof the De Laval separator, he Danish Weston - and Sharpies, and I mist say I was greatly surprised at the -variation in the yield of butter. A mem orandum will show yoa why I was frar- -prised: nntcmmeir, Punish separator, yield. . . 4.27 Becoptl crwMTTFtry. DaoWl separator. yield. 4JH Third creaJnoryDo Laval mmaratnr.jttehi. 5.M) VoorthreameryjaharpLesaeparator, yield. 4.48 yjftb creamery, De Laral separator, yield- 4.10 Birth creamery. De Toval nrjtiuratar. yield. &iC Boventh cz&armry DantHhoparatar yield . SjOO gK.K creamery, Itarrtwn separator, yield. iJS These eight creameries' wSl show as a fair sample of the balance I visited. Now these eight were in the sxme local ity, and why should there be a differ ence of a pound of batter to the 100 pomidHof milk is what boats ma. Bat I have solved the question, or at least part of it. For in-eoery cam whore they had a lag yield the batter maker "was onto bis Job," asthosaymg is. He ' was not htrrryiag the milk through hia separator at a 2rtO gait, bat be was run ning slow, not over two-thirds as moch as the printed circulars say can be ran through. The same day I visited the creameries that showed a yield of 4.10 and 8.05. The batter maker in the ' creamery where they got 4 pounds per hundred was always in a hmr to get -his work done. He was exosading hia separatozaan they could stand and never tested to eee if be got aU the cream. The-one that gotCQS waaonlyputtmg throngh 1,000 poonds an hoar, and he was very careful to test omuj few days to-eee if he wsas Ratting all the-cream. 1 would like very moch to bear from some one who has had experience irt run ning milk through fast and slow. There is of course a difference in the yield of batter from difflerent herds, and a difference of the yield in different creameries,- bat I do not think there should be a pound to the hundred. Cor. Creamery Journal. Catehiac DisboMt Kmcmes. The habit of keeping strict accounts is one-cause of the caramon soccesa of the tanning of former basinessmen. The farm needs basmess habits as much as a store does. I wasonoe running a dairy with a larj5& and valuable milk route. Two men were employed, to deliver the milk. Eiach helped at the milking. weighed the zrr&k and recorded the weight on a sheet hrmg in the barn and changed weekly, QocaskirtaJly I -watch ed the milking and weighing, so that a standard of the yield ws oocuril. Any falling off In the yield of cuuraa would be noticed at once, and tt varied very little from day tx day. By and by I found the setorna of safes much shorter than the yield of mflk. The difference made (S3 in'ooa month. At pay day I keot back the wages of tho two muQ until tb shortage was ex 71nL I wa sued by one, and as I produced in the court the statement of the milk yield aa thematrsvbandwritmg, -and he could not for the short returns, I recovered judgment against him. Then the other fellow confessed to me be had been indrtced to keep back every day so much money. Had the men not tefi a witness in their own writing iney eoau not nave Dean con victed of the Bioaltog. This hint may be valuable to owners of milk routes. Sew York Tribune. A dealer in dairy supplies, and who mannfactares batter packages ttrJAi-ng Xrom two to fifty pounds, says that he baa all along found .a bitter opposition from groosrymen in handling-theee pack ages. The reason for this, be says, is to lie found in the fact that the grocer would rather furrrrah, the dish m which to put the batter himself, and as these weigh two ounces it win be seen that the customers who order one prm-nfl of batter-only get tour teen emwv and the other two ounces go into the grocer's pocket, less the-eost of the-dish. So long as the consumer ia content to pay the .grocer thirty cents a pound for wooden dishes with, tin oorneraon just bo long will the grocer impose on him. The customer ought to rnsistoo-eighteen ounces to the pound if two ounces of it are to be in wood and tin. Bg., Notes. The following remedy is recommended for a cow that gives bloody milk: Ex tract Phytolacca decanrura fluid, five ounces; water, one pint; mix, and. give " two ounces three times daily. Also ap ply locally Phytolacca in the proportion of about one to four of water. Rich and high feeding will not only produce a greater flow of milk, but will the raiiir richer, When the cow is shedding her hair her milk is poorer and thinner than at other tames. Thunder storms sour milk, bat it is not -m account of electricity passing through the milk. On the contrary, electricity in a current throngh milk will keep it sweet for a considerable length of time. But if the electric current is passed over the milk and above it soar ing is hastened. The Italian chemist who made these experiments reasoned that the elect rio current in the air above the milk produced ozone, and that was what caused the acidntataon. The souring of milk is attributed, like ' everything else now, to the development of a bacillus. Warmth develops this. bacillus, hence if the milk is kept very cold it does not appear and multiply. An excellent ration for pigs is two parte of milk, either skimmed or butter milk, to one of corn meal. WINTER FEEDING. The Old and Jfew Way of Wtnterlns; Baoire Cattle. In everything there is a right and wrong way. Often the conditions are such that in following oat the wrong way there is considerable profit, and after a while those engaged in the busi ness come to believe that this really wrong' way is m reality the right way. The range cattle- industry at the oat start and as a matter of necessity was conducted on this plan. ' Cattle were moved into the mountain a and turned loose in the high valleys and parks and allowed to rustle. There was a certain percentage of loss each winter, varying in accordance with the amount of snow fall and the severity of the cold. Prices ruled for years so high that the death loaaes only cat down the size of the divi dends, while still leaving a handsome balance in the treasury. So matters continued. The ranges be came overstocked, and following una prices began to tumble. From bad the affairs and general tlnaTww of most cat tle enterprises contrnoed on the down grade, and failure after failure followed. At a certain period a few of the more en terprising stockmen began to cat bay for winter use. This was found to pay, and others followed in the same path. Their object in feeding was simply to give the poor animals sufficient food to poll them through alive, until they were able to begin to rustle again in the spring. This was aU that was aimed at. No thought or care was given to improve the indi vidual animal, The idea of the trade was that this would not pay. If the critter lived the summer and fall feed on the range would make it fit for mar ket. AH this was wrong. However, until the farmer crowded in upon the open range, and fenced his homestead or pre emption claim, things were allowed to drift along in this fashion of taking des perate chances and hoping the markets would mend. Ratherxhan mending, the farmers' claims became more numerous and the range cattle industry more disas trous. Each year the cattlemen ware obliged to cat more hay to pull the ever increasing number of weak animals through the winter. StQl. their object was simply to keep life in them until the grass was strong enough in the spring to build them up again. This, in a few brief words, is the outline of the range cattle industry. There is but little won der that there have been so many dire disasters in the business. That it pays always to do things right is exemplified in the winter feedingof ranga cattle as in other callings. By winter feeding we mean what the words imply, not the meager giving out of enough hay to simply prevent the weak animals from turning up their hoofs, but feeding so as to keep -the animal in a healthy condition is where there is good clean money for the stockman. The humani tarian question does not enter into the present idea of the gain or loss of the irrmhie dollar, which what the cattle groweta are after. Fewer numbers and irrrinvilfl of larger frame and better con dition and more weight are what give the best returns when the ahipments are made. A day or two ago the writer was going south from Denver, and on the car were two trrothm-a - returning to Archuleta county, having disposed of a good bunch of cattle at the top market price. In conversation we asked if there was not good dean money in winter feeding on this plan, and if they had ever given it a good trial. To oar Burpriae and grati fication they said the cattle they had just sold were winter fed, and every titttj was given hay in plenty to bold it in healthy form. The result was that in the spring they grew so much faster than the same grade of cattle that had been doing as best they could for themselves on the range, daring the months, of snow and ice, that when they were marketed they were 30 per cent, better and heavier ani mals, and brought from 30 to 40 percent. higher price. When they started from home they thought thoy would have to go to Omaha or Kansas City to eeU. While the yards in Denver were full of common ranee cattle that buyers did not want save at bottom figures, they made a quick sale at the top price, and were on their homeward way, leaving the owners of the common, non-winter fed stock see ting in vain far customers. Yes, it pays to do everything in the right way. Now that the range cattle business has been curtailed within such narrow limits and the times not as they once were for the quondam cattle barons, those who do not adopt the genuine win ter feeding plan can look forward to ultimate disaster and failure. Such is the handwriting on the wall. Field and Farm. Points of Interest. When you set the hens for spring chickens this year take some-dried tobac co leaves and line the nests with trmro. This will keep all lice and vermin effect ually away from the nest as long as the hen sits. Sometimes when sitting hens leave their nests from unknown cause it is the vermin that drives them away. If. colts are kept in fields adjoining railroad tracks, where they see trains pass and repass constantly, there is little danger that they will be frightened after ward by railway trarSs. Raise a few leaves of tobacco on your farm every year. The dried leaves will keep the vermin from hens' nests, and the leaves or stems steeped to a strong decoction with sulphur, four ounces of tobacco to one of sulphur, in a gallon of bailing water, will kill the sheep scab. Canada is making marvelous progress in the five stock industry. We of the United. States must 'stir ourselves to keep up. Bulletin No. 11, Mississippi Agricult ural Experiment station, is devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of nttirT or charbon. N. Story, of Bozeman, was the first man who ever drove a herd of cattle from Texas to Colorado. He says stock raising ia nothing like as profitable as it was formerly. FOR THE CHEESEAIAKER. THINGS TO BE OBSERVED tN CitN?- INQ A FLUID TO A SOLID. An Experienced Cauadlan ChiKMmakei Gjias Some Valuable Suggestions Uni form Milk Neeegary to Make Uniform Cheesv Pnrrefactive Fermentation. In an address before the New York Farmers' institute, Mr. D. McPheraon, the noted Ontario cheesemaker, said: We are all anxious to learn something new. Oheesemakmg Has been supposed to be a very simple thing. My experi ence of twenty-one years has taught me that it is a very difficult thing. It is al most impossible to control results and to make cheese such as is wanted. Cheese making consists simply in changing a fluid into a solid. This on the surface may seem to be a little thing, but it is in reality a very intricate thing to do. Bat one tiling is added rennet (not counting salt); and one thing taken out whey. Fermentation is the chief chem ical factor.: To control this agent is the most difficult thing to do and have its work jost right. The first requisite is a uniform con dition of the milk. Without uniform milk we cannot have uniform cheese. Temperature, moisture and time are most important. Milk which has about 3 per cent, of butter fat and 3 per cent, of casein, being pure and sweet in flavor, is what is wanted. Any slight change in the temperature and composition of milk will affect the character of the cheese. Too much moisture is detri mental. If the air is charged with elec tricity the milk should be cooled. It should always be aerated. A great deal of aeration will improve its keeping qualities, and it will also make better Any discovery which would enable us to determine the exact amount of moist ure would be a boon to oheesemakers. As shown with the hot iron, the curd should contain 48 per cent, of moisture when there are fine threads on the iron. When taken from the press the cheese should have 38 per cent, of moisture, and when well cored 33 per cent. An exeens of moisture tends to carry on fer rnentation; a reduction to . lessen it A low temperature leaves a soft, pasty cheese, and a high temperature, a hard, firm cheese; according to the degree of heat. Putrefactive fermentation must be avoided. It is the greatest dread of tle cheese maker. ' A large amount of acid and moisture in the curd at any stage causes the cheese to be leaky; crumbly and mealy. A small amount of acid with an ordi nary amount of moisture causes a corky, open cheese, with a smooth texture, and it goes off-flavor very shortly. Milk should keep sweet three hours at a tem perature of 84 degs. When the curd will draw out on a hot iron one-sixteenth of an inch it is ready to have the whey drawn off. The acid should be devel oped after this at a temperature of 95 degs. to 98 degs. for four hours, after which it should be cooled to 75 degs. preparatory to salting and the press. The amount of acidity thus developed overcomes putrefaction and preserves the flavor and quality of the cheese. We must make our cheese as perfect in all its etagesas possible, and make it so that it will retain its good qualities and reach the consumer in the best possible condi tion. 0lng MUk Wttnoot - With moch less money than $100 a first class outfit can be purchased of any of the standard makes of cabinet cream ery supplies, and with a well filled ice boose which, by the way, no farmer should try to get along .without this will put it within the power, of every butter maker to make an article which she will not be obliged to sell for a shil ling a pound, or trade out at the village grocery. Our dairy outfit consists of a milk room, 12 by 15 feet, adjoining the wash room. It is wainscoted up and- ceiled inside with black oak in stripe three inches wide, plain, alternating with beaded. This is finished with oiL On one side is a refrigerator, which is built out into the ice bouae, which joins the milkroom on that side. This refrigerator is a home made affair, and is simply a large box, four feet in width, the same in depth and five in height, with the open side toward the milkroom, from which a door opens into it. It is fitted with shelves for the storing of cream, butter, etc. It is lined with galvanized iron. , Of course, it is surrounded on three sides and the top with ice. The milkroom contains a four-can Wilson cabinet creamer, a barrel churn, a butter worker, together with a table and scales for weighing butter. A well of pure cold water is within three feet of the door. Though tins system may not pro duce any better 'results than the spring water, it has at least one or two advan tages. It can . be used in winter and snmmer alike; while a separate milk-' roam at some distance from the house might not perhaps be convenient at all seasons of the year, and a great saving of steps is also effected by having the milkroom under the same roof as the living rooms. The public or co-operative creameries take a great deal of work off the hands of the farmer's wife, and unless there is some better way of marketing butter than the average country town affords it is much better to send the cream to the creamery 'than to make it up at home. The creameries established upon the co-operative plan pay for the butter made from the cream, each" lot being tested at the time it is taken, thus giv ing for it a fair price, in many instances more than could be got far it if made up at home. Then afterward semi-annual dividends are made of the profits. This has been a remarkably poor year for butter all over the country , yet the co operative creamery of our county has just declared a dividend of nearly four cents per pound on all the butter made during the past season. Such an insti tution should be looked upon 'as a publio benefaction and patronized accordingly; Cor. Rural New Yorker. J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Abstracters, Heal Estate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of, and Information Concern-! ingLand Titles on Short Notice. ' j - Land for Sale and , Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Buiqe LQD&fciong, Should Call on or Write to us. - Agents for a Full Line of LeaiiDs rire Insurance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for on all DESHiABIiE RISKS. Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or, JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Xiunoli Counter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and Fresh Oysters. Convenient to the Passenger Depot. On Second St., hear corner of Madison Also a . Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and Best Apple Cider the If you want a good lunch, give me a call. Open all Night C. N. THORNBURY. T. A. HUDSON. Late Bee C. 8. Land Office. Notary Public THORHBURY & HUDSON. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, rouomce uok ssss, THE DALLES, OR. Filings, Contests, And all oilier Business in the D. S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. We have ordered Blanks for Filines Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act. which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made. 'Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornburv & Hudson Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Nebvk anb Brain Treat ment, a fruaranteea speclnc for Hysteria, Dizzi- Ti i;u rVinvnWniifl V,' ... X .. v 1 : . ' " . .... . ............. a. v., um iicuiaiKU Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or ix boxes ior o.w, sent Dy mall prepaia on receipt ol price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received b; us for six boxes, accompanied bv 5.00. we wil send the nurchaser our written nArantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not efi'ect a cure, uuarantees Issued only by . BLAKELEV & HOCGHTOS, Prescription Druggists, 17S Second St. The Dalles, Or. $500 Reward ! We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver (Inrnnlnint. nvfmertfda. Rick Headache. In. digestion, Constipation or Costiv'eness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisf ac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by 1.ULJJ.U1B. BLAKEIET & HOUGHTON, - Prescription Drncsrists. 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. Te Dalles is here and has borne to stay. It hopes ;'win,' itsjjway vtb public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. The four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects will be to advertise city, and adjacent developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. For the benefit of our advertisers we shall print the first issue about 2,000 copies for free distribution, and shall print from time to so that the paper will reach every citi zen of "Wasco and adj acent counties THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CHRONICLE PUB. GO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. Daily the resources of the j country, to assist in Eastern Oregon. time extra editions, 4