. Creamery butter-making. Butter. 178 CREAMERY BUTTER MAKING ing it with a cement filler which produces a uniform, grayish color. The ceiling should be built of the best ceiling lumber and must be kept well painted. Seweragei Effective sewerage must be provided at the time the floor is laid. A bell trap (Fig. 41) should be placed in the center of each room and carefully connected with the sewer. Conduct the sewage far enough away to keep its odors a safe distance from the creamery. See chapter XX. Ventilation. Hitherto this subject has received little or no attention whatever from creamery bui


. Creamery butter-making. Butter. 178 CREAMERY BUTTER MAKING ing it with a cement filler which produces a uniform, grayish color. The ceiling should be built of the best ceiling lumber and must be kept well painted. Seweragei Effective sewerage must be provided at the time the floor is laid. A bell trap (Fig. 41) should be placed in the center of each room and carefully connected with the sewer. Conduct the sewage far enough away to keep its odors a safe distance from the creamery. See chapter XX. Ventilation. Hitherto this subject has received little or no attention whatever from creamery builders. The influence of foul, moist air upon the qual- ity of the butter and the general health of the buttermaker is too little appreciated. We hear much about that "pecu- liar creamery odor'' which is simply an- Fig. Q^her expression for the foul, moist, stifling air that prevails in a great many of our creameries. Almost daily we learn of butter makers who are forced into retirement or compelled to take up other lines of work because of lung trouble, rheumatism, or general ill health. Unsanitary creamery conditions are held accountable. Ventilating shafts, extending from the creamery room to the top of the building where they end in cupolas, are serviceable but inadequate for the best ventilation. The most effective ventilator with which the author is ac-. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Michels, John, 1875-. Milwaukee, Wis. , The author


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbutter, bookyear1911