8 COLFAX GAZETTE, COLFAX, WASHINGTON, SEPTEMBER 29, 1905.

ROPY AND BITTER MILK. TWO FAMILY RESIDENCE.

Both The«f < «tn«l i t ion w Are I'anally Modern Uonble lloaMe With Many \ Canned by Bacteria. Attractive Feature*— Cont, KIM:- o. A ropy milk is not always caused by LCopyright, ISOT>. by Stanley A. Dennis, 231 Broadway, New York ] bacteria, may come but it from the We show herewith elevation and Annual Fall Exposition animal suffering from certain diseases, floor plans for a model, low cost double particularly garget. In the majority house. This house may be erected on OF THE FASHIONABLE of cases the trouble is due to the de- a 37Vj foot lot, or larger, at au esti- Though not among the most sitlous velopment of bacteria subsequent to mated cost of $2,200. lliere Is a cel- of dairy troubles, "mottling" of butter the milking, says Hoard's Dairyman. lar under the entire house, with twelve Las perhaps been the cause of as much and eight inch walls, laid In cement Garment The cause of ropy milk can be traced Kaufman mortar. cc- discussion as any, says American Cul- to several species of bacteria, but the The cellar floor is also of For Men and Young Men tivator. The white streaks ami patches one that Is the most troublesome In mar the beauty of otherwise per- to be stylishly which the United States can be traced to an To those discriminating, economical Men and Young Men, who want fect butter do not affect Savor or uro- ?. or organism that is an Inhabitant of wa- at a cordial to view our tall display ina of the product, but they displease attired a moderate cost, we extend invitation the eye and thus lower the price. ter. It has been found living and nobby KAUFMAN Suits and Overcoats. For a long time the trouble was growing in the water used for wash- in all the exclusive effects seemingly beyond control, for it would ing the milk vessels or for submerg- C We are showing every popular fabric, pattern and fashion appear and disappear in a most pe- ing them to cool the milk. Through and designs. culiar way in dairies and creameries BOOfa a source of contamination the men of every where most careful attention was given bacillus gets into the milk. The HH- id t s^ x f^iriTSS- CL Our assortment is so complete and choice, that we can accurately fit to all points and where no cause could trouble can usually be removed by fir size and proportion in their most becoming style. be assigned with certainty by the vexed thoroughly scalding the milk utenslla of our maker. Finally irregular distribution and water tanks in which the water CT, We heartily recommend these servicable garments, and beg to advise those mod- of salt was settled upon as the cause stands for the cooling of milk. patrons who have confidence in our judgment, that they cannot get better tailored, and a method of handling established, Bitter milk Is due to several causes. baaed on this factor, which practically Cows produce bitter milk after eating erate priced clothing. trouble, seems ragweed and lupine. eliminated the but it certain foods, like d. We trust to have the pleasure of personally explaining and showing in detail the that the last word on the subject was Perhaps these weeds have bacteria on character in their not yet snld. Recent investigations their leaves and stems, which get on many merits of these garments, to those who desire individuality and FRONT ELEVATION. made by the experiment station at Ge- the cows' udders and fall into the clothing, and who appreciate the opportunity of buying fine Suits and Overcoats at a neva, N. V., prove that the success of milk at the time, of milking, and the ment. The hot air furnaces In the eel nominal price. modern dairy methods rests, so far as eating of the weeds does not cause the lar heat the entire house. The frame mottling Is concerned, upon securing bitter taste In milk. Some cows pro- Is of hemlock lumber. The house is reniovnl of casein compounds rather duce bitter milk when well along in •heathed and covered with two ply LIPPITT BROTHERS than upon distributing the salt evenly. the period of lactation, and certain ud- building paper, narrow beveled siding Butter entirely freed from the casein der dlseas*s render the milk bitter. As of cypress and white cedar shingles. r Merchants, Col lax. Wash -^I^M of the milk-thut is, butter washed a rule, bitter milk is caused by the The main roof Is covered with cypress \u25a0\u25a0^> The" lMoin'« thoroughly enough to get rid of all but- growth of bacteria which have resist- dimension shingles on 1 by 2 inch termilk-will not produce mottles, no ed the heat of sterilization. It is no spruce lath. The Slavery of the Match. matter how unevenly the salt be dis- easy matter to destroy the bacteria All windows except those of the cel- To a novis noker a match is v small tributed, and butter containing an ex- that cause bitter flavored milk. Just lar are fitted with outside blinds, hung sulphur tipped stick, useful for light- cess of buttermilk will produce mot- before milking the cows' udders should with up to date hardware. The ex- ing the gas. It is kept in a holder on tles even if the salt Is uniform through- be washed in a 2 per cent solution of terior woodwork Is painted with two the walj and is no more important out the mass. soda and the milk duct with a 3 per than ice wafer or slippers. To a smok- urain Drills The bulletin notes, experimentally, boracic acid. Thomas cent solution of er a match is one of the currencies of the effect of many factors upon mot- Sometimes milk develops a bitter comfort. It is Indispensable, precious tling clearly only and shows that those taste by keeping It too long at a very and exceedingly scare* 1. To him the which prevent perfect removal of the low temperature. In such cuses the man who always has a match to lend buttermilk tend to produce the defect. milk should not be cooled quite so low Is a friend worth having—a chronic Thig discovery Involves no change in In temperature and consumed more borrower of matches Is a public nui- methods- It merely explains why the quickly. While heat falls to destroy sance. The smoker's life 1b divided Drill on the market best present methods succeed. Churn- the spores of these bacteria, yet all the Into periods of affluence when his vest The Strongest and best Ing at rather low temperature and con- milking vessels should be thoroughly pocket is foil of matches and of pov- tinuing only until the butter has scalded whenever a dairy is infected erty when be has but one match and It is built on a U inch axle with a 10 inch sise, washing reached rice grain twice with these germs. Is not sure that It will light. He .15 degrees F., with water at from to 4T» dreams at night that he Is on a vast hub bearing; solid boot, which is less liable to Baiting working as and and usual will Improving the Dairy Herd. prairie, miles from home, with a pipe- give dairyman nothing butter free from mottles. A may start with ful of tobacco and no match. He expecting ordinary by D/^i/x^/Sooai choke. Those who are to purchase but the most cows, and knows e\«'ry vantage point where minii«iii of ;; Foil Mliis. simply breeding to dairy sires of ex- o\ /6 o" matches can be had. lie Is always primary object building breeding willmake a mistake if they don't The in silos cellent quality and pure he greedy for them always suffering for to tight. can is make them air This will in a few years have n fine work- them. lie envies the man who always be done without sealing over the top. Reg- Ing herd, says Holsteln-Frlesian has two matches left. Trs as he may, The sides and bottom then must be ister. There is no reason why a good he can't do the trick himself. -Council herd of grades cannot be made to yield Bluffs Nonpareil. a profit, but too many of us do not ap a bred sire. predate the value of pure Ortstnal \iitiirnl Illtitnry. See the Thomas Before Buying The Rev. Samuel Peters was the man Catarrh of the Idder. who made Connecticut's laws fa- may caused blue Catarrh of the udder bo mous by fhelr publication in his his- the cow lying ou damp ground But. by tory of state. In that interesting or a which hALL that night after night by germ \u25a0 PAf?LOfP volume tho following original bit of rabrnL-cEMEMT cove the udder. Low Is introduced Into natural lihttory is to be found: "In the dairy ground pasture for cows should /2'OX/4:3' river, Long which || Connecticut 2 miles from Co high ground upon Enterprise Implement have some Island sound, is a narrow of five yards they may He after eating. only for.iA-d by two shelving moun- Opposite Gazette Office. COLFAX, WASH. SECTION tains of DoHd rock whose tops Inter- cept the Clouds. Through this chasm AROUND THE DAIRY arc compelled to pass all the waters ||PO/?CM which in tlie time of floods bury the northern country. Here water Is con- d^i j For Your Fine Wives, It should be considered that the poor- solidated without frost, by pressure, by T^* 1? FOUNDATION OF STAVE SII.O. m—«•«,« est cows eat practically a 6much as swiftness, between the pinching sturdy (io to Jomnara s air tight. Failures sometimes result the best. This will hold true generally. rocks to, such a degree of induration from building good, tight walls and A poor cow will cut us much as a quod that an iron crow floats smoothly down Whiskey and Other Drinks lOc aettiug them on porous soils, which cow. Also, while a good cow will re- RIGHT HALF OF FIRST FLOOR PLAN. its current. Here Iron, lead and cork allow air to in as profit AllWines, Per Drink 5c pass and upward, spoil- turn ten to twenty times much good coats of white lead linseed oil have ona common weight; here, steady ing the mass. A concrete and brick as the poor cow, she can be bought for painta of such colors as may be de- as time and harder than marble, the Gallon Bottle Doz Gallon Bottle Do/ foundation prevents this. See cement but very little more. Her price is out sired. The interior walls are lathed stream passes irresistible if not swift PortWineXXX $150 ...50c ...S4OO Sauterne $160 .. 50c ...$4.00 cove in cut. Doors are needed, and as Wine XXX 150 ...50c ... 4.00 Claret 30c... 800 of all proportion to her profitableness. and plastered with two good coats of lightning." Angelica Wine XXX LSt ...50c 4.09 Whiskey—full quarts, $1 00; gallon 8.00 flt tight. The re- Muscatel ...... must silo does not In short, the good cow is a highly patent plaster, finished white and Wine XXX... 1.50....50 c... 400 WhUltey—full pints, 50c; full half quire of full- Wine 1.50...50 c... 4.00 pinta 25c a cover any kind. Rain profitable investment. The poorest floors are of Caro- An Imii.-iii Fable. silage hard. The North ing upon the surface only seals cows are kept at a positive loss. lina pine, blind nailed. The stairs are A woodman entered a wood with his the top portion all the tighter when Real Value of a Good (...it. of cypress, with ash newels, rails and ax on hin shoulders. The trees were no feeding going Is on. The illustra- The real value of a fine milk cow balusters. alarmed mid addressed him thus: "Ah, The tion shows Colfax Wine House rock or brick foundations lies in her pedigree, her prepotent pow- The Interior trim is of one inch clear sir, will you not lot us live happily with floor above outside B. BINNARD, Proprietor. concrete er of heredity, that power that a long cypress. The parlors find dining rooms some thr-.e longer?" "Yes," said the ground drainage. level to insure line of good ancestors gives her to pass are fitted with quartered mantels, woodman; "I am quite willing to do her good qualities along to her off with bevel plate mirrors, tiled facings bo, but as often as I sec this ax I Food and Quality of Milk. spring, so that a great deal depends and summer pieces. The kitchens and am tempted to come to the wood and Decent evidence collected l>3' F. W. upon the man as to whether he is wise bathrooms contain complete plumbing do my work in it, so I am not to blame WoO of the Wisconsin station goes to in the selection of the kind of animal and fixtures of the latest and most so much as tills ax." "We know," show that the food of the dairy cow for the work, and with the care and Raid the trees, "that the handle of the —•— ~i Influences the quality of the milk pro- feed there is nothing to hinder the r ax, which is a piece of a branch of a duced this cow to extent-that the will dairyman from being master of the tree in this very wood, Is more to yield a maximum flow of milk of the the Iron, which Harpole's Full situation and having eonditAons favor- blame than forit Is that Measure House highest fat content which she is ca- able to his ambitions. helps you to destroy its kindred." ED. HARPOLE, pable of producing Proprietor on rations relative- At Roof "You are quite right," said the wood- ly rich in nitrogenous substances. The < nl ving Time. Never allow calve In the man. "There is no foe bo bitter as a productive capacity of the cow, the a cow to pasture. young thing renegade." prices of feeding stuffs of The in such and the cases partakes of the wild, and It la milk products are the main factors Arc and Liquors for family use says \ron Engaged? that will determine how highly nitrog- never overcome, Farm Journal. |CLOS|CLOSJ Excellent California Winea 5c a glass If it Is a I Engaged people should remember Old Kentucky Whiskey enous can heifer, It will never make a marriage many quarrels $3 a gallon rations be fed to advan- perfectly that after can tage. ordinary docile cow. If a bull, It will avoided, by keeping their digestions Under conditions in the be be northern states It will not as a rule, wild and vicious. in good condition with Electric Bitters he thinks, be advantageous to feed ra- Traiiiln* the Heifer. 8. A. Brown, of Bennetteville, S. C., 3L\D QOoAptD POOM my wife suffered in tions containing over two pounds of Take your time about teaching the says: "For years, from dyspepsia, complicated with digestible protein a day and of a nu- heifer to milk. Lots of men are In too tensely big a torpid livpr, until she lost her strength tritive ration narrower than 1:6.7 to a hurrj-, and they expect too much of the young cows anyway. It hag and vigor, and became a mere wreck of cows of average dairy capacity.— her former self. Then she tried Electric American Cultivator. taken most of us a good many years Bitters, which helped her at once, and to learn what we know, and there HALL DATH ji ill made her entirely well. She is are finally A MilL Producer. some things that we are not alto- now strong and healthy." Elk Drug Family Liquor Store gether posted on THE Butterniakers who are endeavoring even now. Store, sells and guarantees them, at 50c NECTAR to stimulate increased milk production White Specks In Hotter. a bottle. CHAS. JONES, Prop. In their respective communities should Carelessness In warming cream Is re- Colds sponsible Neßlectrd try to teach the farmers the value of for the white specks which the mucous Old Kentucky liquors for familymedical use. We carry complete of are Every part of membrane, line wines silage. Silage is pre-eminently a food sometimes found In the butter, the nose, throat, ears, head and lungs, a for dairy cattle, and a liberal use of it writes correspondent of National etc., are subjected to disease and blight WHI>KEY-Per gal., $3; full quart, f1; full pints, 50c; full half pints, 25 will cheapen the cost of milk produc- Stockman. If the cream becomes too Qoom from neglected colds. Ballard's Hore- tion. Its succulence and palatability, warm, It separates or "wheys off" ex- X &JLzD Hi bound Syrup is a pleasant and effective WINES-Port, $1.50 gallon; 50c quart. Sherry, 50 gallon; Tokay, $1 50c quart. together with the large tonnage per actly the same as sour milk does in 8 n:?xi6-o' remedy. f1.50 gallon; 50c quart. Muscatel, f1 50 gallon 50c quart. acre, an indispensable the process of making cottage cheese. W. Akendrick, Valley Mills, Tex. Angelica, f1.50 gallon; 50c qt. Wines 5c per glass, all make it feed used Ballard's Hore- other drinks 10c for the dairy farmer. provides The sour milk becomes curd; theu, writes: I have It Syrup for coughs and throat dairying when the butter comes, this curd, hound We handle Spokane drouth beer; also, all summer conditions for winter In troubles; is pleasant and most lines of eastern bottled beer. line particles, is found incorporated it a and readily supplants summer pastur- effective remedy. Sold by McCroskey & with It—a very annoying of af- age when the latter Is lacking either Btate Bros. Phone Main 521 Oolfax. Washington through drought or acreage.— fairs, and all owing to carelessness. short Sale. Cor. Creamery Journal. When this Is allowed to occur, the only Farms For thing to do Is to strain the cream be- 218 acres fairly well improved, one Winona at 3000 Also several Where fore churning. mile from f Dairymen Fall. others at prices and terms to suit. It willpay you to examine The grain ration is where a good Seed of Cooling Milk. H. W. Goff. many fall dowu. We ought to remem- Decomposition commences in milk, ber It Is 011 the amount fed over and If allowed to retain Its natural heat, RIGHT HALF OF SECOND FLOOR PLAN. Males For Sale. CARLEY'S ROLLER FEED MILL the 6oon after It is drawn from the broke mules, above actual maintenance from cow. Improved make. The hardware is of Five span well •"! to 5 Before investing your money are o^r Poor Covrs Are Dear at Any old, for sale. in a Chop Mill. which we to derive profits and Price. plain Imitation bronze, with apple years of It la pay J. G. Gins n, Johnson, Wash. Some its features: that we must feed with a liberal hand. no sacrifice to a big price wood knobs, roses and escutcheons. All there Is In profit In such an for a cow If you of animal, are sure getting Hiebuilding Is piped for gas throughout. For Sale—The B. H. Holm ranch of No Burrs calf, big money back again. acres, Colfax, to Wear Out. No Gears. Only Six aslda from her Hen In the balance Where the losa The floor plans given here illustrate 318 5 miles from well im Bearings furnishing her living. comes In Is In buying a poor proved: all cultivation. price left after So It cow Just the right side of the house. The apart- under For to make this because she is cheap. The poorest and terms apply to Lennox & Larkin. Millsspecially adapted to wind mill power. behooves us living as ments on the left side are Identical Allrises np comprehensive and at the thing a man can have on the farm Colfax. to S% tons capacity per hour. same time la wtth those on the right, except that the M cheap aa possible,-Farm Progress. a poor cow. j positions & O'Neal, Real of the rooms are reversed. Larue Estate. Manufactured by OABLEY IBON WORKS, Colfax, Wa«h.