I04 FRUIT HARVESTING, STORING, MARKETlNCx 



ful operation for many years, and are used chiefly for 

 storing dressed poultry, butter, and eggs. Around 

 the sides of each storage room are set a series of verti- 

 cal pipes. These are made of galvanized iron or steel, 

 and have a diameter of approximately 8 inches each. 

 These pipes stand closely side by side in a single rank. 

 The entire row sits in a wooden trough, which carries 

 off the water as the ice melts. The pipes extend 

 through the ceiling of the storage room and terminate 

 in a broad trough in the room above. In this upper 



KIG. 38 — TROUGHS FROM WHICH ICE TUBES ARE FED 



room the work of icing the tubes is carried on. The 

 ice is brought from the ice house on a suitable slide, 

 and is crushed in a machine in the passage below. The 

 crushed ice is swung up by a horse and tackle to the 

 workroom above the storage room. Here the crushed 

 ice is mixed with salt in definite proportions, and is fed 

 into the cooling tubes by being shoveled into the 

 trough already mentioned. The entire storage room 

 is cooled in this way with the crushed ice and salt mix- 

 ture, and operates, in fact, like a large ice-cream 

 freezer. Any practicable temperature may be secured 



