522 IOWA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 



when it should have been churned. This sweet milk arrests the 

 fermentation for a time. 



Nieteet : I think the gentleman misconstrued my language. I 

 didn't mean to insinuate that the separator spoiled any cream. 



Mr. Hubbele : There was a farmer some six or eight weeks 

 ago bought a separator. He was a gentleman of Swedish extrac- 

 tion and a good butter maker. I met him and asked him how he 

 was getting along. He said : "I am making better butter than the 

 creamery." I said: "Of course you are a good butter maker, 

 but how do you make better butter than the creamery ?" He said : 

 "Why, I tell you. Those scientific gentlemen tell you about some- 

 thing that be in the milk that be not pure, and when you leave 

 that in the milk it makes a bad smell, and when you take and keep 

 it one day or two days and send it to the creamery it have a bad 

 smell, and you know that is the part of the animal that does not 

 give out a good smell. ISTow that which is taken to the creamery 

 is not separated the right way. ISTow in my separator I separate it 

 the right way." He takes it out and has it perfectly pure and 

 has extracted all the impurities of the milk as it came from the 

 cow. 



President: The next on the programme is the report of the 

 secretary and treasurer. I would say that Mr. Ashby, the treas- 

 urer, is not here, and did not get the books here until noon, and the 

 auditing committee has not had time to go go over them as yet, so 

 have delayed the reports until this evening. 



I wish at this time to appoint the committee on resolutions, so 

 that they may go to work at once. I will appoint H. J. JSTietert, 

 Fred Kimball and M. O. Wheelock. 



I wish to state that the National Dairy Union have placed on 

 sale here their book, and I hope you will give the Dairy Union 

 the support of purchasing one of their books. You now stand 

 adjourned until 7 :30 this evening. 



