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ONE
THOUSAND
ONE
T
T /^
TT"T~
T
C
r
r
EGIPES
A.
13
OUT*
OORIflG
PUBLISHED
P3Y
SAN
FRANCISCO
BUTTON
&
PARTRIDGE,
STATIONERS,
:
212-214
CALIFORNIA
STREET.
93
of
the
usi
ness.
the
{As
Compiled
from
Data
of
Record
by
Undersigned^)
Nothing
was
further
from
Mr.
Ewell's
thoughts than
going
into
the
milk
business
when,
many
years
ago,
he
loaned
a
rela-
tive
and
friend
some
money
to
engage
in
the
business.
Their
subsequent
failure
forced
him
to
take
the
business
to
secure
himself.
Becoming
interested
after
a
little
experience,
Mr.
soon
found
out,
what
few
people
knew,
viz.
That
but
a
Ewell
small
proportion
of
the
milk
sold
in
this
city
is
absolutely
pure,
and
the
idea
occurred
to
him
that
a
large
and
profitable
business
might
be
built
up
by
furnishing
such
an
article.
Not
the
meaning
of
the
word
fail,
he
commenced
experi-
knowing
menting.
Starting
with
the
idea
that
young,
healthy
cows,
with
plenty
of
good,
wholesome
food, fresh
air,
pure
water,
.good
pasture
and
proper
treatment,
would
produce
the
best
:
milk,
and
having
all
these
requisites
to
start
with,
at
his
800-
acre
ranch,
seven
miles
from
the
city,
on
the
San
Bruno
road,
Mr.
Ewell
for
years
experimented
with
all
kinds
of
feed
(for
be
it
known
that
good
pasture
alone
does
not
produce
the
rich-
est
milk,
as
most
every
one
thinks),
both
ground
and
dry,
his
experience
teaching
him
finally
that
cooked
food
gave
better
results
than
dry,
and
that
corn,
wheat,
Egyptian
corn,
bran,
peas,
beans,
broomcorn
seed
and
middlings,
in
their
seasons,
in
various
combinations,
cooked
to
the
consistency
of
mush,
with
plenty
of
squash
when
in
season,
cut
fine
and
fed
green,
giving
a
cow
all
she
can
eat
twice
a
day,
with
plenty
of
good
Bur
clover
hay
for
a
change,
is
the
best.
This
liberal
feeding,
with
good
pasture,
has
enabled
Mr.
Ewell
to
produce
a
milk
richer
and
superior
to
the
production
of
any
other
dairy,
as
the
analysis
of
two
of
the
most
prominent
analytical
chemists
of
this
city
(which
will
be
given
hereafter)
will
sufficiently
demonstrate,
their
samples
being
taken
at
their
own
volition,
at
widely
different
dates.
Having
satisfied
himself
as
to
the
quality
of
his
milk,
Mr.
Ewell
took
for
his
motto
:
And
when
The
Purest
and
Best
in
the
World,
then
turned
his
attention
to
its
delivery
'
'
'
'
to
consumers,
and
the
best
means
of
getting
it
it
leaves
the
cow,
for
it
system
of
delivering
milk
has
disadvantages
that
should
have
condemned
it
long
ago,
for
its
lack
of
cleanliness
and
its
oppor-
tunities
for
contamination,
and
Mr.
Ewell
firmly
believes
that,
with
all
his
care
and
trouble,
and
efforts
to
produce
the
best
of
milk,
his
business
would
have
been
a
failure
had
he
adhered
to
the
old
system
of
delivery.
Bottling
milk
warm
from
the
cow
is
an
original
idea of
Mr.
Ewell,
and
to
its
adoption,
two
years
ago,
Mr.
Ewell
attributes
them
as
pure
and
fresh
as
must
be
admitted
that
the
old
to
Pacific
Bank,
Capital
anl
Surplus,
SI.7OO.OOO.OO.
the
wonderful
success
of
his
business,
it
having
increased
from.
500
quart-
customers
a
day,
to
over
4500,
and
there
seems
to
be
hardly
any
limit
to
its
possible
extension,
so
popular
is
it
with
all
who
have
tried
it,
together
with
the
exceeding
richness
of
the
milk.
AN
INCORPORATED
COMPANY.
this
system
of
delivering
milk,
Mr.
Ewell,
in
order
to
get
the
most
faithful
and
devoted
service
from
his
large
number
of
employes,
incorporated
his
business,
letting
all
of
them,
who
desired,
have
stock,
at
a
mere
nominal
rate,
at
which
price
he
will
either
buy
or
sell
to
them,
at
any
time,
thus
encouraging
his
men
to
save
their
wages,
and
at
the
same
time
make
one
per
cent,
per
month
on
their
savings.
This
system
has
worked
so
well
that
most
all
of
his
employes
are
now
interested
in
the
business.
The
company
well's
X.
L,.
Dairy
Bottled
Milk
Company,
is
known
as
the
and
while
paying
one
per
cent,
per
month
dividends,
as
before
stated,
since
its
incorporation,
has
accumulated
a
large
surplus
fund
of
over
$5000,
a
most
wonderful
showing
in
so
short
a
time.
The
headquarters
in
this
city
are
at
the
northwest
corner
of
Folsom
and
Twenty-first
streets,
where
also
are
located
their
large
stables
for
the
fifty
horses
and
delivery
wagons,
and
where
are
accommodations
for
as
many
of
the
men
to
sleep,
as
may
desire.
C. P.
JONKS.
About
the
time
of
introducing
K
WM.
T.
WENZELL
&
CO.,
ANALYTICAL,
CONSULTING
AND
MANUFACTURING
CHEMISTS.
Careful
Analysis,
Qualitative
and
Quantitative,
Made
of
Ores,
Metals,
Waters,
Foods,
Medicines,
Poisons,
Etc.
OFFICE
AND
LABORATORY
No.
153
GROVE
STREET.
Oils,.
....
:
Albumen
Water
SAN
FRANCISCO,
CAL.,
Oct.
23d,
1889.
MESSRS.
EWELL
&
Co.,
SAN
FRANCISCO
Gentlemen
I
have
made
a
careful
chemical
analysis
of
your
milk,
and
have
visited
your
dairy
in
San
Mateo
county.
I
have
also
investigated
your
methods
for
supplying
fresh
and
pure
milk
to
your
customers,
and
can
affirm
that
I
commend
your
idea
of
bottling
your milk
immediately
after
its
removal
from
the
cows,
and
then
put
into
bottles,
thoroughly
cleansed
with
boiling
I
find
that
your
water,
in
order
to
secure
the
destruction
of
organic
germs.
milk,
at
ordinary
temperature
and
atmospheric
conditions,
still
retains
its,
amphisteric
reaction
on
litmus
paper
for
fully
36
hours,
showing
the
value
of
your
method
in
securing
and
retaining
the
characters
of
unchanged
and
fresh,
milk
during
this
period.
I
would
further
state
that
I
have
used
your
bottled
milk
in
my
family
during
the
past
two
years
with
perfect
satisfaction
The
following
is
the
result
of
my
analysis
of
an
average
sample,
which
proves
that
it is
fully
up
to
the
standard
of
a
pure
article
Butter
Fat
4.19
Casein
3
98
%
3.81
Sugar
of
Milk
Salts
(chiefly
Phosphates)
65
.
:
.
.
.
.
77
13
40
.86^60
.
Total
solids
'.
Ptespectfully
submitted,
100
00
W.
T.
WENZELL.
milk.
YOUNG
AND
OLD
IN
HEALTH
AND
IN
SICKNESS
TEETH,
BONE,
MUSCLES
AND
BRAINS.
IT
MAKES
Milk
has
been,
since
the
dawn
of
Pastoral
life,
one
of
the
chief
mainstays
of
mankind,
in
health
and
in
sickness.
Two
substances
in
daily
use
contain,
each
of
them,
the
elements
necessary
to
support
life.
The
first
is
milk,
which
consists
of
carbonaceous,
nitrogenous
and
phosphatic
elements
in
a
watery
menstruum;
the
second
is
wheat,
provided
that
the
flour
used
is
Graham,
or
unbolted.
Strange
to
say,
however,
they
are,
of
all
food
stuffs,
the
most
reduced
in
nutritive quality.
The
milk
by
watering,
skimming, and
the
substitution
of
that
of
sickly
or
ill-fed
cows.
The
wheat,
by
the
process
of
manufacturing
fine
white
flour,
whereby
it
is
deprived
of
almost
all
nitrogenous
and
phosphatic
elements.
milk
is
the
only
safe,
and
therefore
requisite
diet.
Before
eight
months,
the
glands
which
secrete
the
fluid
which
starchy
flood
is
digested,
have
not
developed.
The
by
success
which
the
lower
animals
have
in
rearing
their
young
to
maturity,
ought
to
be
a
lesson
to
our
boasted
civilization,
where
nearly
one
half of
the
children
die
before
reaching
the
age
of
five
years.
Milk,
pure
and
simple,
should
be
given
to
infants,
And
to
children,
with
insist-
properly
diluted
and
sweetened.
ance
that
it
be
drank
slowly,
and
in
much
larger
quantity
than
is
usual.
Sugar,
'molasses,
butter,
arrowroot,
white
flour,
etc.,
which
the
latter
unfortunates
are
generally
fed on,
do
not
contain
any
tooth,
bone,
muscle
or
brain-forming
elements;
their
constituents
are
carbonaceous,
fat-forming
and
heat-giving,
and,
given
in
excess,
increase
the
tendency
to
inflammatory
For
infants,
affections.
to
human
milk,
when
we
take
into
consideration
the
distinctive
charac-
teristics
of
the
two,
the
difference
being
that
the
former
con-
tains
more
casein
(nitrogenous
material)
and
less
sugar
than
the
Milk
from
the
cow,
can
be
rendered
very
similar
latter.
Prepared
milk,
for
infants,
can
be
made
as
follows:
If
we
heat
milk
very
gently,
a
thin
skin
will
form
on
the
surface;
this
is
casein,
and,
by
skimming
it
off
one
or
more
times,
we
de-
prive
the
milk
of
any
desired
proportion,
each
infant's
digest-
The
best
method
of
ive
power
being
the
most
correct
guide.
sweetening
is
to
use
sugar
of
milk,
the
properties
of
which
are
entirely
different
from
cane
sugar;
it
can
be
readily
obtained
from
any
druggist.
The
temperature
at
which
milk,
at
all
ages,
should
be
given,
is
important;
it
ought
to
be
95
F.
(Continued
on
page
18)
Won't
fail
to
see
tlie
Itattle
of
Cwettyslmrg
Panorama.
PACIFIC
BANK.
INCORPORATED
1863.
Depositors
secured
by
the
unlimited
pro
rata
guaran-
tee
of
all
the
Shareholders.
SAN
FRANCISCO,
CAL
Capital
.
.
.
.
si,
000.
000.
00
Surplus
700,OOO.OO
.
Average
Resources
Dividends
.
.
4,356,
17*5.94
and
Coupons
Collected.
in
transit.
Loans
Loans
on
goods
Bullion
Bought
and
Sold.
on
Warehouse
Receipts.
Drafts
issued
on
Australia
and
the
Orient.
Orders
Executed
Inquiries
about
for
all
Investment
Securities.
State,
County,
City
and
Water
Bonds
negotiated.
the
Pacific
Coast
cheerfully
answered;
Approved
for
loans.
business
paper
discounted
or
received
as
security-
Exchange
and
sold.
on
the
principal
cities
of
the
United
States
bought
Letters
of
Credit
for
use
of
travelers,
available
in
all
parts
of
the
world.
Telegraphic
Transfers
in
cipher
made
to
Condon,
Berlin,
and
various
places
in
the
United
States.
I,ondon,
Paris,
Bills
drawn
on
Union
Bank
of
Paris,
Credit
Lyonnais^
and
Direction
der
Disconto
Gesellschaft,
Berlin.
Collections
made
promptly,
and
at
lowest
market
rates.
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