HOOD KIVER GLACIER,' THUfcdD AY, JUNE 29, 1905 THERE IS HONEY IN CREAMERIES (Continued from Pure 1.) fungus diseaeieH cause less injury to Kraut, clover and corn than any other farm crops, and these are the greatest dairy foods. The future to toe skilled dairyman is full of promise and hone." The average quality of butter has wonderfully improved, and the de iiiiiixl is for the liest, and this demand is unlimited and largely unsupplied. The fact is right here in a nutshell, thut any farmer who takes up dairying for a business, and follows It Intelli gently, using the best tools and im plements for Ills work, will have a pro tltahle and continuing Iraslness so long as he may follow it. Worth Twice an Much. Separator butter is usually quoted about twice the price of baud made farm butter, from twenty to thirty oeuts when the latter Is eight to twelve cents, and the reason is that anything that is done by machinery is done regularly steadily : steam doesn't get tired; it doesn't move fast for awhile and then slow ; you can regulate It : you can adjust It to ex actly the same speed today as you did yesterday, and the result is that the machine will take the milk from two to ten farms from a dozen or 200 cows, and turn the cream out even, uniform, of the same grade and tem perature, and yon cam do the same thing tomorrow, and next day, and the consequence is regularity; you know what you are doing and can de pend on your product, and know what the price will be; and instead of twenty farmers sending to the coun try store twenty kinds, styles and grades of butter, and none of them as good as the evenly machine made, there is one large lot of butter, of a standard quality, neatly boxed and labeled, shipped to the city market and sold for cash. And it is in those communities where the separator is used that thrift and success prevail. Iteason For Separator Creamery. It takes from 10 to 25 per cent more creum from milk than any other sys torn. It makes more butter from the same amount of oream, as it churns more completely and quicker. It enables you to make 25 cent but ter Instead of 10 to 12 cent button It enables eight cows to make as much butter as twelve would under the old system. It saves from 25 to 50 per oeut of the labor In handling the milk. It takes the great burden of caring for the milk from the bouse, You pay taxes on the farm, keep fences In repair, keep borses and hir ed help, movers, etc, to support the cow you milk twice a day. Then af ter all this expense and trouble, you waste 25 per cent of the crebta. Do you waste 25 per cent of the corn, hay, wheat, etc:. Why then not save all the cream f You cannot afford to feed cream worth 20 oeuts a pound to make 1-ceut pork or 3-cent veal, or fertilize the ground with it. You might as well throw away 25 per cent of your cash, because oream is the le gal tender or cash the cow gives you for her accommodation, shelter, feed, etc. Couslder your own Interests. Farmers, Stop and Think I No place to sell your mllkf Butter too low to pay to churn ltf These diilioulties need not stand in your way, if you desire to make something of your cows. One hundred farmers make one hundred kinds of buttor. The poor spoils the good and It has to go for grease ; this loss will con tinue for the lack of oo-operatlon. A butter and cheese factory built in a neighborhood will pay for itself twice by advancing the price of milch cows. If a factory is not built, this great loss would build a factory every year. The demand of the trade is for the best fresh made butter of uniform quality and the factory is fast sup planting the farm dairy. Encouraging IlcportH. A co-operative creamery sooures to the farmer and milk producer abso lute independence, it places every oow Keeper in tne position or a mau ufacturer, with the very best of con ditions, and all advantages secured by most approved appliances and ex perleuce. It affords every one such facilities as they can only obtain through a rather considerable outlav of money in the dairy, and eliminates from the duties of the women of the household that painstaking and labor ious care and attention necessary for a successful production of marketable goods. A well built and properly managed creamery, with intelligent patrons behind it, is, anil will con tinue to lie, a blessing to the district where it is located. Hotter butter Is produced and at less expense than in too private dairy, and, of course. brings a higher price. It is bettor because made by experts, approved apparatus, with less expense, because one or two men do the work that would require the labor of more than one hundred women. The goods are made In style just as they are wanted by the dealer or consumer, lteiug un I for in in quality, the salesman is able to realize a large price, " Krom ad dress of President Johnson, at Illinois St lite Dairymen s Association, Through a co-operative creamery the farmer secures a good investment. an increase of products; an increase of value; a not inconsiderable saving of labor at the house ; a regular monthly pay-day; a gam of sou fertility, ihrotigh a co-operative creamery the merchant secures a regular time for prompt settlement with his farm customers; freedom from shoe box butter,nnd losses Inherent to its hand ling; and the circulation or a nice amount of cash in the neighborhood every month. Hon. II. 1). Sherman, of Iowa, says that the butter of the entire milk that is manufactured on the farm In the State loses at least llfty per ceut of it s value for the want of proper con ditious or tiie exercise of proper skill in its production. To this fact is due the origin of the factory system, whore the making of the goods was placed In competent hands. Why the System Makes Cons Fay. Simply by taking more butter, which" brings more per pound, from the same quantity of milk, liy the separator system all the cream Is extracted from the milk, as it can be ripened evenly at the factory, all of the butter is ob tained from the cream, so that about four to five pounds of butter is ob tained from the huudred pounds of mill:, instead of two or three pounds which the farmer averages. Again, the separator expels from the cream all the impurities which may be in the milk, thus enabling the factory to produce fine "gilt-edge" butter. This butter beiug produced in large quantities, perfectly uniform in color, salting, flavor and grain, always com mands ready sale for cash, at the very highest market price. These figures are upon the basis of the cows, we now have, fed as we now feed thorn, and treated as we now treat them. It is simply wasting fciC ou each cow by a poor system of handling the milk, that could be saved by a good butter and cheese factory. Thero can be a thousand good things said for a cheese and butter factory, and not a single objection can be urged against it. with the separator system. One of the best features in dairying is that our farms constantly Increase in productive value Instead of grow ing less productive, as they do under the old system of working them. As soon as tho farmers learn the truth of the niatter,tbey will all waut factories, Ilcncllt to HiimIums Men. A combination centrifugal factory in your own town will pay three times as much for farmers cow product as any rival town without such a factury can afford to Day. it or sumcient ca pacity it will handle all the surplus milk oroduoed tributary to your town and will therefore draw the bulk of the farmers' trade for tbat distance. Farmers devote their "cow money" to the payment of current expenses It Is paid to them every month at the factory. Exjierience shows that at least 90 percent of each monthly pay ment is left with merchants and tradesmen of the town. Co-operation. The co-operative creamery has of late years become very popular be cause it enables a farmer to get the use machinery for making bis but ter and cheese at a small cost and one man does the marketing for many, and he becomes a stockholder in a prosperous factory. He gets the ben efit of co-operation, which is simply a number of persons working together, and the more persons working in a harmonious mass the more they will accomplish with a less effort. That li the whole secret of the success of rail roads, telegraph companies, factories and other corporations, a lot of men can make a suocess of what is impos sible for one. Make Frosperons Communities. It is a rule that the more prosperous agricultural sections In the Middle and Eastern Btates today are the Dairying sections. This applies particularly to those lo calities where the "Klgln System" of co-operative butter factories is employed. No other product of the soil pays on the average as well as butter and cneeso, and no oiner product uriugs in the steady income every month in the year. The day has gone by when the pro duct of the private dairy can compete in the markets with that of the Klglu System Oreamery. The uniform product of scientific methods and treatment is what brings the high prioe, and every patron of such a creamery receives equal benefit and snares In the Increased profit of this plan of dairying. Special attention to this fact is re quested by those who are now engaged In working up tbelr own milk at home. Could Establish Itoute Here. W. II. Marshall of Mount Hood has received the following communication from the Ilazelwood Co. of Portland relative to establishing a oreamery route In Hood Kiver valley: "We pay for butter fat on the basis of the selling prioe of Ilazelwood but ter, always paying just l'oO less than the highest wholesale quotation on Ilazelwood butter for the butter fat in the oream delivered in Portland. We always aim to have Hezelwood but ter sell for several cents more than the average oreamery. therefore, as we pay on the selling price or Ilazelwood butter, the farmer gets this extra. This makes it practically a co-op erative deal, as the farmer gets the raise, or any extra that we can get on butter; we get the extra volume ot business. The fact that we are able to make Ilazelwood butter bring a few cents more than the ordinary makes, has been the means of getting us the large volume of business we are doing here, whloh we believe is over three times that of any other creamery ou the Pacillo coast. "If any one there wishes to ship cream, they can do bo. We will loan them cans for .'10 days, at the end of which time if they are satlslled with shipping, they buy the cans. "Could there not be a cream route started at your place, picking up the cream along the route? We would ap preciate any further information re garding this point." Success of the Fiilluiun Dairy. Spokesmau-Keview. That dairying Is one of the Iwnt paying industries for the Inland Em pire farmer is coming to be more and more widely recognized, ami tho in dustry, which is still in its infancy a compared with what it should lie, has already brought handsome prollts to many sections and to a small army of farmers. The latest returns on this subject come from Pullman In Whit man county. A new creamery af that town has for the few months of its existence been paying out 2100 a mouth to some 'M small farmers who regularly furnish it with cream. The dairymen receive 20 and 21 cents a pound for butter fat, and at this rate, which Is considerable higher than is paid in eastern states, the industry If the most profitable method of market ing reed. The disbursements of the new Pull man oreamery form only a fraction of what the farmers in that neighborhood are earning from their cows. An older dairy Is paying out a still larger sum for cream, llesides these cash earnings for the butter fat supplied to the creameries, the farmers have the income from the growth of their herds and they are further enriched by the improvement of their hinds through fertilization. A constant succession of wheat crops can not but exhaust tho richest soil. Dairying returns to the laud what is taken away by the crops. Just What Everyone Should lie. Mr, J. T. Harder of lrwlnvllle, tin., always keeps a dottle of Chamberlain's folic Cholera and Diarrhoea Kcniedy at band for instant use. Attacks of colic, cholera morbus and diarrhoea come on so suddenly that there Is no time to hunt a doctor or go to the store for medicine. Mr. Harder savs: I have tried Cliamlicrliiin' Colic, Cholera ami Diarrhoea Komedv which is one of the best medicines I ever saw. 1 keep a bottle of it in mv room as 1 have had several attacks of colic and it proved to lie the best medicine 1 ever used. Sold by Williams' Pharmacy. Portland Will Celebrate. July 4th will be a great day in Port- laud. The Exposition management have charge of tho celebration which will he held at the Ex posit on grounds. Excellent music will be furnished for this occasion, and a display of tire- works equal, if not superior, to any that have yet been given at the Expo sition, will be the closing number of the day's attractions. John Culbertson was Friday. a Dalles visitor, Wants to (Iran Walnuts Here, II. (1. Cotton, Pacific Northwest manager for the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co., writes to the Ola cler as follows. If (jlacler readers can supply the desired information it will lie appreciated : "1 noto in a recent issue that your correspondent at White Salmon says that Mr. llalsiger has planted eleven acres in English walnuts. I should liko to know through the columns of vour paper if there has been any proof that walnuts will thrive in the Hood River valley. If any of your sub scribers have bearing trees that will prove the fact that they are adapted to that climate and soil, it is my de sire to put in a nut orchard on my ranch west of your city. Walnuts are a ifood crop Iu the Willamette valley, and it is mv belief that a diversified interest is better than having only one thing to look to for revenue on a olace. as the time muy come when ap ples and strawberries will not do so well. I should alto like to know if chestnuts and almonds will thrive in that valley". I am a firm believer In diversified farming and believe each farm, no matter how small the place may lie, should have two or three products ou it. 1 have seen orange groves in California to be a total fail ure, while if the owner had diversified his farming he would have at least some income. If there are any farms in the valley from which you can get Information as to how nuts will thrive, 1 should be pleased to hoar of same so I will know when 1 plant an orcnurd this fall." Excursion Kates To The Fair. The general passenger department of the O. K. & N. t o , has notified agents east of Portland that round trip tickets for the Lewis and Clark exposition, at Portland, June 1 to October 15, will be sold under the following arrangements: Individual Tickets. One and one third fare for round trip; daily from May 2! to October 15, inclusive; final return limit HO days from date of sale out In no cast! later than October 31, 1IM)5. Party tickets. One single fare per eainta for round trip for parties of ten or more on one ticket. Daily from May 21) to October 15, inclusive,; Continuous passage in each direction; final return limit 10 days from date of sale. Organized Parties of WO or More. In dividual rate of one fare per capita for round trip ill be made fur organized parties ot Hill or more moving on one day from one point; limit 7 days from (late of sale ; continues passage in one direction. Coach excursions. Individual coach excursion tickets (not good in sleeping or parlor ems) will be sold troiii time to time during the life of tho fair at very low rales ; particulars as to rates, etc., covering each excursion will be duly ami' iinecd. Clilld en's tickets. Tickets may be soldjto children of half-fare age at one half of the n i 'Vi- rates, adding suffi cient to make the end in 0 or 5, when necessary. No Excuse Not to do. Olynipla Recorder. There is small excuse for any resi dent of .the Northwest failing to visit the Portland exposition. All previous great expositions held iu the east were out of the question for the great ma jority of Westerners, but with a mam moth fair now brought into their very midst, it is an opportunity to be real ized lief ore too late. Nono who go will regret the trip while it is a cer tainty that most of those who stay away will have to SBy "I wish now I had gone. " Then there is a matter of local pride and reputation at stake. The Northwest is a great country with a great future, and lack of interest and attendance should not be permit ted to be a detraction from the com plete success of such a vast enter prise. Ureat things are expected of the Western people. The gate touder is waiting for you. Wasco County mU New Jail. The Dalles Chronicle. Wasco county needs a new jail, and needs it badly. That fact has been sutllciently demount rated during the past few weeks as never before. The present headquarters for criminals is not worthy the name of "jail," and the wonder is thut county prisoners during tile years past have been as se curely hold as they have, not a break occurring. Only for the extreme vig ilance of Jailor Fitzgorald and the olllcers, the thin wall would not have been sufllclent to hold them. Decide its insecurity, it is entirely too small for the use of tho county. This has boon proven since ten prisoners have been confined therein with room for only about half that number. What Wasco needs is a good Pauley jail.and it is time the county invoke to that fact. We Must Wash. We may live w ithout poetrv, music and art; We may live w ithout conscience, may love without heait; We may live without, mothers, live without hope; Hut civilized women cannot live with out soap. We may live without book what is knowledge hut sorrow ? We may live without dcauty it fades on the morrow. We may live without lawsuit indict ments are ?iiiahing ; Hut where if t lie one who can live with out washing. Patronize the Hood Kiver Steam Laundry. Olcu Fabnk, proprietor. Towns and cities of the state of Wash ington will begin their 2 special days at the Portland fair next week. June 27 will be Oklahoma day, and (iovernor l erguson of that territory, with many citizens, will he in attendance, .luneitu is v oman s nay, and .liny l is lacoma dav. The Pominion of Canada also will have special exercises ou that day. The American Library association con vention begins its session Monday, July ,1. Ou the Fourth of July there will be a grand celebration of Independence I'av will a great display of tin-works in evening. Examination! for Forestry Sen Ice. Adolph Aschoff, supervisor of the north half of the t'ascade forest reserve, announces that civil service examina tions for the position of forest ranger iu the forest M-rvice, department of agricul ture will Is' held at, Hood Kiver, Oregon, August II to 11, 11MI5. July 12 will be Advertising Men's Pay at the Lewis and Clark exHisilion. The Pacific Coast Advertising Men's Association will Is- in session on that date. This association is working along very broad lines for the promo tion of the coast and its products and for the elevation of advertising and the betterment of the craft. The Children's Favorite. For Coughs. Croup, Whooping Cough, etc., One Minute Cough Cure is the children's favorite. This because it con tains no opiate, is perfectly harmless, tastes good and cures. Sold by O.K. ilhams. Rivervicw Easy Grades, Fine View and Good Water, ALSO MANUFACTURING SITES FRONTING ON 0. R. & N. TRACK WITH DEVELOPED WATER POWER : : : i Cheap lots for building small houses near Flour and proposed Woolen mSH FRUIT LANDS FOR SALE IN TRACTS TO SUIT HOOD RIVER DEVELOPMENT CO. Office Next T HE full line of new are arriving. Fifty titles are now in. New ones will be added as fast as tlie.v leave the publisher. For this year's trade, I have bought a large and well-selected stock. Don't wait until holidays to select your gifts in this line. Come in and look them over; read them, and then you will know what you are sending. Refrigerators! Refrigerators!! Refrigerators!!! Hot weather is Ice will soon be delivered at your door, buy a ...REFRIGERATOR... and be prepared to keep cool. We have just added this line and can save you money. NORTON Opposite Mme. ABBOTT, EZigb. Class IvIlli32Ler3r HAIR GOODS TOILET ARTICLES Natural wavy switches, Knlish wave, Pompadour rolls and bangs. Hair goods of every description ina.de to order. Agent for the celebrated Marie de Medicis' ('old dream imp Yucca powder. .Mount Hood Store... W. S. GRIBBLE, Proprietor. Fine Fishing Tackle Hardware Hav (irain Flour EVERY FARMER in Hood River Yallev needs not too good for him. I am prepared to supply all your needs in Plows, Harrows, Cultivators, n fact all tools that are needed on every well equipped farm. For orchard tools California Sr. 1 light Lap Cuta way has no superior. The Ohio Reversable Extension Head Disc is tlu only one on the market that is worthy of the name. Acme Harrow is too well known to need a description. Osborne Combination Spring Tooth Harrows are without a competitor. If you need a good WAGON OR BUGGY I can supply you. For clearing your land you need powder 1 have just'reeeived a carload and have it stored in a mag azine here, and can supply you cheaper than you can get it from Portland. Land Plaster, Flour and Feed in any quantity and at the right prices. Full line of staple Groceries, Ammunition and Fishing Tackle a specialty. ISarb Wire. Hope, Axes, X-Cut Saws, Shovels, Spades and gardan tools. Yours For Pusiness, 3rd and River Street. CHOICE RESIDENCE Park AND to Waucoma Hotel, and popular books SLOCOM'S near at hand. rn in, Postoffice Ammunition Dry Goods Graniteware Notions Feetl Full line of Groceries to use good tools, the best is D. M'DONALD Hood River, Ore. LOTS FOR SALE IN Idlewilde -TRY "North Coast Limited" The Electric Lighted Observation Car Train between Portland and St. Paul. Puilman First Class Sleepers, Pullman Tourist Sleepers, Dining Car, Day Coaches, Observation Car. The Acme of is found on 3 DAILY TRANSCONTINENTAL TRAINS 3 Head four cents for our Lewis and Chirk Hookl-t; or six cents for "Wonderland 1905." Yellowstone Park Literature can be had for the asking. The Ticket Office at Portland is at 255 Morrison St., Cor. Third. A. D. CHARLTON, Assistant General Passenger Portland, Oregon. C. T. RAWBON. F. H. STANTON HOOD RIVER NURSERY. Stock Grown on Full Roots. We desire to let our friends and patrons know that for the fall planting we will have and can sup ply in any number Cherry, Pear,Apricot,Pcach& Plum Trees, GRAPES, CURRANTS, BERRY PLANTS, Shade and Ornamental Trees. Also, all the standard varieties of apple trees. Can supply the trade w ith plenty of Newtown, Spitzen berg and Jonathan apple trees. RAWSON & STANTON, Hood River, Or. MT. HOOD All kinds of Seasoned Lumber in stock. .Mill with the Little Prices. Fvervthinir as the cheapest and good Mill one-fouth mile west lielly DAVIDSON FRUIT CO FRUIT DEALERS and Manufacturers of all kinds of F mil Highest Prices Paid Additions Hood Kiver. THE- Travel Comfort anv of the Agent, MILL CO. The Little is cheap as good as the best. of S. A. Ilelmers store. , 1LJ V Proprietors. for Hi Fruit, oxe zh Grade