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Oil Mill Gazetteer O F F IC IA L ORGAN ... OF THE -------------- ------------------ V O L U M E <2©, N O . 8 N A TIO N AL 1,; O IL MIL L S U P E R IN T E N D E N T S ASSO C IATIO N -------------------.■ W H A R T O N . T E X A S , F E B R U A R Y , 1925 P R IC E T E N C E N T S — “BAUER” originated the Beater with revolv ing- cylinders displacing the old cradle type. — The BAUER Rotary has greater screening area per ton of seed worked than any other Beater. It’s efficiency is well known. Also built with single cylinder. Write for Catolog THE “ B A U E R ” Rotary Beater— Ball Bearing PRESS CLOTH! W E MANUFACTURE ALL KINDS OF HAIR and WOOL PRESS CLOTH Our products are known throughout the world for their su perior structure and Quality. WHY? Because we employ in their manufacture only the best raw material, mechanical equipment and textile talent. We sell them to you for relatively less, afforded by our vol ume of production and ripe experience. Our reputation is established and you take no chance. There fore, with our press cloth you are in competing- advantage with your products to meet your neighboring1 mill competitor. We do not make test rolls, but stock rolls, that run uniformly throughout the year; we do not trifle with your credulity through means of confusing technical theories merely to sell a trial roll. « We dependably take care of your needs and are responsible; won’t you invest us with your confidence and your Press Cloth contract? AGENCIES ATLANTA, GA. COLUMBIA, S. C. Peeples and Melone, 24 1-2 Luckie St. Kaminer & Neil, 804 Nat’l Loan & Exch. Bank Bldg. NEW ORLEANS, LA., MEMPHIS, TENN., George B. Aarons, 441 S. Peters St. Linden Storage Co., Linden Station SHIPMENTS DIRECT FROM FACTORY OR ABOVE AGENCY POINTS Main Office and Mills, Houston, Texas New York O ffice, 50 Church St. Oil Mill Gazetteer O F F IC IA L •= ■ ---VOLUME ORGAN &V - T@. N O . ' OF THE N A TIO N AL — ----- ------- ==--8 O IL --- M IL L SU PE R IN TEN D EN TS - ■- W H A R T O N , T E X A S , F E B R U A R Y , 1925 TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATION The most of you are making up your repair lists and requisitions fo r new equipment and while doing this, if you would recommend sup plies and m achinery that are advertsied in your official organ, you would be helping the Oil Mill Gazetteer as well as yourself without adding anything to the cost o f your material. All o f this is o f course provided that our advertisers will make you the same prices that others will, and they are in the business fo r that purpose. Why not turn over a new leaf and help out the editor of the Gazetteer to this extent? It will also show your appreciation to the advertisers in your official organ. The editor is doing his best to give you a good paper, but w ithout your help he has his hands tied. W e need the co-operation of every member o f the association, both in talking the advertising columns to the men from whom you buy your supplies and equipment to writing for the columns. W e have been repeatedly ask ed by our advertisers w hy it is that the con tributors to our columns have fallen o ff so badly. They want to know if you all have w riter’s cramp or are ju st too busy to write. As mentioned elsewhere in this issue, this is our last appeal to ttie members o f the A sso ciation. It is your paper and you should take more interest in it than you do. If you do not take this interest, we will have to do the best we can w ithout your help. HOW ABOUT IT BOYS? We ran across our good friend John G uffee in Dallas the other day. John looks prosperous and told us to tell the boys that he believed we are going to have a good convention this, year. We see our good friend George Walsh has not forgotten how to write. He has a good article in the Oil Miller this month. W e wonder if he has forgotten our address. It’s better business policy to patronize the advertisers o f the Gazetteer, the official organ, ASSO C IATIO N ~ ■ ■—g PR ICE TEN C E N T S BANKERS GIVE L. P. BROWN, JR., HIGH PLACE L. P. Brown, Jr., o f Memphis, has been elect ed chairman o f the Board o f Directors o f the International Vegetable Oil Company. P. R. Lamar o f Atlanta, Ga., has been relected presi dent o f the company, and the executive offices will be continued in that city, while the executive direction o f the company will be divided be tween Mr. Brown and Mr. Lamar, with the fo r mer in direct charge o f operations. Mr. Brown’ s selection to this responsible position by the lead ing New York and Boston bankers who hold fi nancial control o f this company is a high com pliment to his personal character and business abilities. The position was not sought by him and it was a case of the job seeknig and finding the man. The cottonseed crushing industry will view with confidence and satisfaction the asso ciation o f these two comparatively young men in the management of the large interes of the International Company. Both men are won derfully well equipped in experience and execu tive qualifications to make the company an out standing example o f successful oil mill operators. Mr. Brown will retain his interest in the mill machinery and supply business which he estab lished in Memphis a few years ago under the HOUSTON LABORATORIES P. S. TILSON, M. S. Analytical and Consulting Chemist COTTON SEED AND PEANUT PRODUCTS A SPECIALTY Member o f the Interstate and Texas Cotton Seed Crushers’ A ss’ns. and Referee Chemist o f the American Oil Chemists’ Society 215 1-2 Main Street HOUSTON, TEXAS When you get your copy o f the Gazetteer, first, always read all of t e adveitisem ents. 6 OIL MILL name o f the L. P. Brown Co., but which has re cently been merged with the Lewis Mill Supply Company of Helena, A rkansas; the new company being incorporated as theLewis-Brown Company, with a capital stock of $500,000.00. Mr. Brown a‘nd his associate, T. H. Baker, are vice-presi dents o f the new company, while T. W. Lewis of Helena is president. Mr. Brown also retains his interest in the E. M. Corbett Company of Mem phis, cotton linters, recently organized, o f which he is vice-president, while Mr. Baker is president. Palmer Brown entered the oil mill business as an office boy with the old Mississippi Cotton Oil Company at Meridian, Mississippi about twentyone years ago, before it was taken over by the American Cotton Oil Company. He was con tinuously with the American until that com pany’s retirement and liquidation three years ago. His advancement had been through all grades of service, until from the management o f one mill and then a group o f mills, he was promoted to the assistant district management at Memphis and was then made district man ager. When the American went out of buisenss, Mr. Brown bought its surplus machinery and equipment at Memphis and it several other points and its old refinery property on the river j T ‘ ....................... ............. GAZETTEER February, 1925 front, negotiated fo r the liquidators o f the com pany the sale o f a number o f its plants, and engaged in a successful mill supply business. He also purchased the A m erican’s mill at Tren ton, Tennessee, which, as the Trenton Cotton Oil Company, is being successfully opei^ted under his presidency. In the reorganization o f the International Veg etable Oil Company, W. W . Banks and J. W. Conway, form er controlling factors in the board, have retired, and with the exception o f Chair man Brown and President Lamar, the board is now composed o f bankers who hold the entire stock control. The company has resumed direct operations o f its refineries at Savannah and At lanta, which fo r several years have been man aged, under contract, by John Aspegren, re cently deceased. Its crude mill properties, all in active operation this season, are at Arlington, Ga., (3 presses) ; Augusta, Ga., (8 presses) ; Savannah, Ga., (8 presses) ; T ifton, Ga., (8 presses) ; Raleigh, N. C., (6 presses) ; Dallas, Texas, (6 presses) ; Houston, Texas, (6 p resses); The Atlanta refinery includes the lard plant where the popular Cotton Bloom is produced. — The Cotton Oil Press. ............................................................................' “ ” - -------------- 1 N E W S OF THE OIL MILLING I N D U S T R Y Information has just been received that Mr. J. B. Spears of Spears and Company o f El Paso, Texas has just placed an order with the Western Engineering Company of Dallas for ten 1925 model Anderson Expellers complete with tem pering apparatus, individual feeders and all pumps. Each expeller is equipped with electric motor and silent chain drive. These expellers are being installed as received, the first carload having already arrived. The expellers are to increase the capacity o f the new four expeller mill which Spears and Company put in operation the early part of last year, and will give them a fourteen speller crushing capacity fo r the com ing season. This will be approxim ately 100 tons fo r each 24 hours. This will give them one o f the most up-to-date cottonseed oil mills in the state and will enable them to work seed at the very lowest possible cost. J. B. Spears, owner of Spears and Company, is an experienced oil mill operator, being at one time part owner o f two hydraulic mills, one of which was located at El Centro, California; at the same time being part owner o f an Anderson | fou r expeller mill located at Calerico, California, which was afterw ards moved into Mexico. Mr. B. B. McCall who built the fou r expeller mill in Santa Anna, Senoria, Mexico, has sold all of his interest in that mill, it now being under the management o f Mr. Geo. A. Roach, formerly connected with the California Cotton Oil Com pany o f Los Angeles, California. Mr. S. O. W om ack, for the past several years manager o f the Mill Supply Department of the Murray Company of Dallas, Texas, recently re signed his position with that company to accept the position of sales manager with the Hercules Supply Company, which has established head quarters in the new Santa Fe building in Dallas. This company is an independent oil mill supply company with branches in important oil centers throughout the state. Plans are being made to enter the general supply business on a large scale in Texas territory. Mr. A. W. Smith, for the past several years city salesman of the Murray Company, has been appointed to fill the vacancy ceated by the resig nation o f Mr. Womack. February, 1925 OIL MILL GAZETTEER Mr. L. P. Brown, Jr., o f Memphis, Tennessee, has been elected chairman of the board of di rectors of the International Vegetable Oil Com pany by banking interests of New York and Boston, who are interested in the organization. Mr. Brown will continue his interest in the cot tonseed oil mill machinery supply business, which he established in Memphis a few years ago under the name o f L. P. Brown Company, but which has recently been merged with the Lewis Mill Supply Company o f Helena, Ark. The new company is now incorporated as the LewisBrown Corporation, with a capital of $500,000.00 The La Occidental, Gandalajara, Mexico, are now installing an Anderson Expeller for the working of coquito, corpra and other oil bearing seeds. Mr. Emery, vice president o f the Western En gineering Company o f Dallas, is at present i n . the east, visiting various factories of their con nection, with the idea o f making some new ar rangements for the expansion of their operations in Texas territory. Mr. Cecil Earp was caught in a belt at the Luttrell and Keeny Gin at Bronto, Texas, and died from injuries received. On the night of January 27th fire damaged the Palestine Oil and Manufacturing plant to the extent o f $5,000.00. A cottonseed house and its contents and a cottonseed conveyor were des troyed. The plant will be out o f commission for a few days. Dallas, Texas, January 27th, 1925. H. E. Wilson, Manager Peoples Cotton Oil Company, Wharton, Texas. Dear Mr. W ilson: We appreciate the many kind experssions of approval of the efforts o f the service bureau. Every effort possible has been made to legit imately serve the mills in the distribution o f bagging and ties, press cloth, fuel oil and other supplies used. W ith our force, however, we have been unable to give you the best results. We take pleasure in advising that we have associated with us Mr. Charles Guthrie, who will devote his entire time to serving the mills in such distribution, and feel that both the mills and the bureau will be mutually benefitted, Mr. Guthrie and this office will appreciate the opportunity to serve you at any time— day or night— and Mr. Guthrie will see you in the near future. Again thanking you for your expressions of approval of our efforts and wishing for you a prosperous year ahead, we are, yours truly, Woodall & Pendleton. 7 NO EXCESS SUPPLY OF COTTONSEED CAKE AND MEAL Memphis, Tennessee, Jan. 29— The total con sumption o f cake and meal, August to December, 1924, was 1,036,921 tons against 744,426 tons for the same period last year, an increase in consumption o f 292,495 tons or nearly 40 per cent. The total stock of cake -and meal on hand at December 31, 1924 was only 166,000 tons, or 52,000 tons less than last year— and this with an increase in production o f 27 per cent. The situation with reference to immediate supply, especially in Oklahoma and Texas, is interesting. The reports show only 33,700 tons of cake and meal on hand at Demecber 31, and production for the period of 513,000 tons— about 93 per cent o f the production having been shipped. Convincing evidence o f the keen de mand in the West for quick shipments. In other states, notably Louisiana, stocks are also depleted. Exports of cake and meal are heavy and show a most substantial increase over last year, being 255,486 tons to December 31, against 69,572 •tons on the same date last years— an increase of 185,914 tons. The small stocks on hand show that meal is going into consumption at a rapid rate. There is no indication o f falling o ff in exports, the clearance for December being about the same as November. The domestic consumption for November-December is far ahead o f last year. Grains and feed stuffs generally are advancing. Linseed meal is selling in the northwest at about 50c per unit o f protein higher than cotton seed meal. Nitrates are high and advancing. Cottonseed meal is, by far, the cheapest feeding concentrate obtainable. The market is under current cost of production. There is no excess supply of cake and meal this season and if the good export demand con tinues, it would not be surprising to find an actual shortage of supply before the new crop is available. All conditions, statistical and commercial, point to higher prices.— National Cottonseed Products Corporation. Copra production increasing somewhat first two weeks in January as anticipated, reports Edwin B. George to the department o f commerce. Prices eased off. Provincial buying now on basis of pesos fourteen fifty per picul for rececado. Mills have been buying sparingly in e ffort to aid downward price trend, but now appear to be gradually increasing purchase. Production declining again and market undertone firm. OIL 8 MILL GAZETTEER February, 1925 O il M ill G a z e t t e e r earlier in the month. This is the final time. We are not going to wait on him after this. Official Organ o f the National Oil Mill Superintendents Association. Published monthly by the Wharton Spec tator Printing Company, at Wharton, Texas. You will all remember Mr. L. P. Brown who was so active in seeing that everyone had a good time last year at Memphis. W e carry an item concerning his appointment to direct the af fairs o f one of the largest companies in the busi ness. W e can wish fo r nothing but success for Mr. Brown in his new position, and the company which has secured his services is to be congrat ulated upon their selection. Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Wharton, Texas, under act o f Congress o f March, 1879. H. E. W ILSON..............................................................EDITOR Subscription $1.00 per year. Single copy 10c NOTICE TO A L L A D V E R T ISE R S — Our press day is the tenth (10th) o f the month, and your changes o f copy should be in the hands o f the editor thirty (3 0 ), days in advance o f the date o f publication. Please take notice o f this, and hereafter have all changes o f copy in on the 10th o f the month preceeding the month o f publica tion. O fficers o f the National Oil Mill Superintendents A ss’n. A . J. LURRY, Baton Rouge, La.................. .-.President C. S. M cKINLEY, Ada, Okla.............. ....Vice President F. P. MORRIS, Purcell, Okla...... Secretary and Treasurer State Vice Presidents A RK AN SA S, L. O. Rucker.................................Blytheville A LA B A M A , P. Z. Harllee------------------------ Birmingham MISSISSIPPI, T. J. M cNulty............................ Brookhaven OKLAHOMA, P. C. F itz......................... ....... ....Anadarko LOUISIANA, J. A . Stuart............ b.......................... .....Arcadia TENNESSEE, J. J. Finch.................. ...................... Memphis TE X A S, M. C. Dimphl................................. ....................Dallas We have been pleading with the membership for the past few months to write something fo r the Gazetteer each month, and we noticed that the president and secretary both made earnest pleas for opinions on the convention and program for this month's issue. The only communication we have this month besides the president’s call for the convention has nothing to say about the program or the convention. W e are going to press on schedule time from now on if we have to go to press with nothing but reprint. The publisher has served notice on us that he must have copy early in the month so that he can get the Gazetteer out without interrupting his other publications and work. Fellows, we have done our best to get you to respond, and we are now leaving it up to you entirely. President Lurry did not get his call in until late this month or we would have gone to press The Interstate Cotton Seed Crushers Associa tion will hold their annual convention in New Orleans May 13th, 14th and 15th, with the rules committee m eeting tw o days in advance. Head quarters will be established at the Roosevelt Hotel. This convention should be attended by every cotton oil man in the country. Sam Horton, 60 years old, was crushed to death December 4t!i at the cotton oil mill at Durant, Oklahoma, when his clothes caught in a belt and he was drawn into the machinery. The body was badly mangled. He had been an employe of this oil mill fo r many years. He leaves a w ife and three children. Through a book found on the body o f a man who died from suffocation in the seed house of the Southland Cotton Oil Company in Bossier City, La., early m orning Decem ber 24th, he was identified as John Lynch, -a railroad man o f 2414 Hattie Street, Chicago, Illinois. A message was received stating that he was an employe of the Kansas City Terminal Company in Chicago. Fire starting from friction in a seed conveyor did $15,000 damage to the Kerens Cotton Oil Mill at 5 o’clock the m orning o f Decem ber 30th. The loss was fully covered by insurance. The hull house with 500 tons o f hulls, 125 tons of fertilizer and two box cars belonging to the Cotton Belt Railroad were totally destroyed. The Cot ton Oil Company has already begun work of clearing away the ashes, and will begin rebuilding immediately. This is their second loss this year. February, 1925 OIL MILL GAZETTEER PROCTOR AND GAMBLE REPRESENTATIVE DELIVERS SEVENTH OF COURSE OF COTTON SEED LECTURES The origin of soap stock and the process of manufacture were topics explained by J. E. Pruden of the Proctor and Gamble Company of Dallas in the seventh o f lectures given under the auspices of the Texas Cotton Seed Crushers Association, to the students of chemical and mechanical engineering. The tallow is imported from Argentine and contains sheep fat in mixture with it; vegetable tallow from China where it is obtained from a bean about the size of the coffee bean, cocoanut oil mostly from the Orient; whale oil, mostly from south of Cape Horn, the industry having shifted there from Greenland and N orway; fish oil from our own coast fisheries; palm oil from the Congo in A frica ; rosin from southern and southeastern sta tes; perfume oils from France, Italy, Bulgaria, Persia and some from the United States. Very little animal fa t is now used in soap making but a great percentage of soap is made from cotton seed oil residue obtained in the refining of cotton seed oil to make cooking oil and lard compounds. Thus the soap making industry is world wide, depending upon sup plies from all parts o f the globe. Refining of this oil to remove color and odor is a chemical treatment. Factors controlling the value of the various oils are color and odor. Those with the clearest color and most nearly odorless being the highest in price. There are two processes in use in soap manu facture— hot and cold. The chemical reactions are the same but in the cold process the gly cerine and impurities are not removed. This necessitates high grade materials as raw stock. In the cold process the caustic soda and soap stock is run into a m ixer and thoroughly mixed, then dropped into fram es to complete saponifi cation. From this point the process is the same for all soaps. In the hot process the caustic and soap stock are boiled until the fat is all saponified. It is then grained with salt. The impurities and gly cerine fall to the bottom and are drawn o ff. The soap is washed several times and then dropped E L E C T R IC A L 9 into a mixer known as a crutcher, where it is thoroughly mixed with fillers, perfumes and air, and then poured into frames. A fter cooling it is cut into bars o f proper size, dried, stamped with name of the soap and is wrapped and stored or shipped. A new commodity on the market is chipped soap. This is made by pouring the molten soap onto chilled rolls and solidifying it. It is scrap ed o ff and sold as soap flakes. Powdered soaps are made by pumping the soap at 180 degrees F. through atomizers into a large cooling chamber. The atomized soap or soap mixture cools rapidly and is drawn o ff as a powder. To make high grade toilet soaps and medicinal soaps, the framed soap is pulverized and ground under incorporating rolls with filler and perfume or medicine, and forced through a die by an archimedian screw in a body resembling a sau sage machine, known a s 'a plodder. The soap comes from the plodder in a continuous stream resembling a sausage. It is cut into desired sizes, stamped, wrapped and packed in special containers. The glycerine is recovered from the lyes by partial evaporation. The impure glycerine from the evaporators is redistilled and the purified glycerine sold to explosive manufacturers or to druggists. ARCADIA MOURNS THE PASSING OF JAMES STEWART We have been advised of the death of James Stewart, son of Mr. J. A. Stewart, vice president of the association in Louisiana. The association, as well as the Gazetteer, extends to Mr. and Mrs. Stewart their most profound sympathy in this, their great loss, in the death of their noble son. The Ft. Worth Laboratories Consulting, A n a ly tic a l Chemists and chemi cal Engineers. Chemistry applied to all phases of Manufacturing. Cotton seed products, fuel, Water feeds our Specialty. F. B. PORTER, B. S., Ch. E., Pres. 281-2 Monroe St. R E P A IR FT. W ORTH, T E X AS WORK. Rewinding, Repairing, Rebuilding Dynamos, Motors and Linter Magnets Direct or Alternating Current H ou ston A rm atu re W o rK s No. 4 Preston Ave., Houston, Texas 10 OIL MILL Below is reprinted an article taken from the local paper: The entire community was very much shock ed and grieved when it was learned that one o f our most promising young boys, James Stew art, 15-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Stew art, and whose entire life had been spent in Arcadia, passed away late Tuesday afternoon at the Highland Sanitarium, where he had been carried a week before. He was accompanied by his parents who were with him at the time of his death. James had suffered a combination o f throat and ear trouble, but was feeling much better and wanted to return to school, when he was stricken violently ill and did not regain con sciousness before he was taken to the sanitarium. The remains arrived in Arcadia at 10:30 o ’clock Wednesday morning, and the funeral service was held at the First Methodist church at 3:00 p. m. Rev. H. W. Ledbetter officiated. The school was dismissed for the afternoon, and the church was filled to capacity with the friends o f the family. James was loved by his teachers in the school and held in the highest esteem by his school mates and companions. He was a consistent member o f the Methodist church, the Epworth League and the Sunday school, and fo r several years he was a real Boy Scout, always counting it a great pleasure to do a kindly deed fo r some one each day. ****** LINK-BELT PUTS OUT NEW MALLE ABLE IRON SAFETY COLLAR It is estimated that ten per cent of the power generated in the average industrial plant is wasted between the generator and the consum ing machine. Attention to this loss of power has given rise to changes in power transmission equipment and the development o f more efficient mechanical means. One o f the most recent developments along this line comes from the Link-Belt Company of Indianapolis— the device illustrated by the accompanying photographic reproduction. This new safety collar is intended to maintain the GAZETTEER February, 1925 proper alignment o f such equipment as pulleys, shaft bearings, hangers, etc. Great strength, toughness, durability, and light weight have all been incorporated in this new Malleable Iron Safety Collar, in addition to which, a new design which perm its the collar to be split in tw o places, thus a fford in g ready and economical installation or adjustm ent. This type o f collar, however, is made also in the solid ring type, both types being accurately machine finished, assuring a tight fit and a pleasing appearance. Exhaustive tests made with the Link-Belt Safety Collar have proven it to be impervious to shocks and strains encountered in heavy duty service. The material o f which it is made pos sesses unusual wear and rust resisting qualities. This extends its sphere o f usefulness to installa tions where the atm ospheric conditions contrib ute to rust or excessive abrasiveness. The set screw, by which the collar is firm ly a ffixed to the shaft, is flange protected. As with the recently “ K ex-T op” grease cup, the Link-Belt Malleable Iron S afety Collar will be marketed through dealers located throughout the country, thereby assuring prom pt service and shipment. COTTON OIL FUTURE TRADING The Interstate A ssociation’ s special trading committee appointed fo r the purpose, held a conference with a similar com m ittee o f the New York Produce Exchange in that city January 21 and 22 and discussed all o f the suggested changes in deliveries under future contracts on the exchange from barrel to bulk basis and from “ P. S. Y .” to “ P. S. Y. deodorized,” with delivery acceptable at certain specified Southern trade centers. No definite conclusions were reached, although a unanimous desire was ex pressed fo r some sort o f broadening of the cotton oil future market. The Interstate com mittee consists o f Ed. W oodall, chairman, F. W. McKee, Geo. W. Covington, F. N. Bridges and Louis Rosenstein, all o f whom were present.Through the courtesy o f the Houston, Labora tories, P. S. Tilson, Chem ist, Houston, Texas, the Southwestern Laboratories o f F ort Worth and Dallas, Texas, wish to announce the estab lishment o f a branch o ffice and physical test ing laboratory in Houston, using the office and laboratory facilities 215 1-2 Main Street, Hous ton, Texas, with Mr. H. B. Clay in charge. This arrangement a ffects neither the ownership, management nor operation o f the Houston La boratories, who will continue as analytical and consulting chemists. February, 1925 OIL MILL FIGHTING THE “BOLL WEEVIL” OUT OF THE OLIVE GROVES Cotton growers are not alone in having to com bat an insect, the pernicious ravages o f which threaten to destroy the entire crops of sections worst affected. The olive growers o f Spain, Italy, France, Anatolia and the Mediterranean Basin in general must fight the “ dacus” or olive tree fly. This dread insect bites the olives before maturity in order to put its eggs inside. The larvae which develops therein upon maturity devour the flesh of the olive. The affected olives fall and those remaining on the tree yield an oil of inferior quality. But just as it has been possible to hold back the boll weevil as proven by the fact that Texas has gone on making cotton for 20 years in the face o f boll weevil infestation and as growers in other state sare learning they in turn can do it, it is possible to figh t the dacus. In France and Italy the dacus is combated by whitewashing with a 50 per cent solution of sulphate o f iron or with a solution of black soap in petroleum in the proportion o f one kilogram of soap per litre o f peroleum. A very efficacious process has been demon strated in Italy these last few years and applied in Greece with much success. It consists of spraying the olives with a solution o f 200 iltres of water, 18 kilograms of cane molasses and 575 grams of sodium arsenate. The dacus likes sweets and in gnawing the sprayed olive meets its death poisoned by the solution. The dacus lays several times a year and mul tiplies with an extreme rapidity. It is beginning to be a veritable curse fo r Anatolia and its rav ages are great, especially in the region of Avivalik-Edremid. The hard, dry winters are unfavorable to it, HOUSTON 11 GAZETTEER the insect preserving itself well during warm, damp winter weather. In certain regions of Greece the output of large expanses of olive groves has been saved by a methodic struggle against the dacus and the population has proposed to submit a new tax to permit the intervention of the state in this struggle. Statements to the effect that the olive oil fly is doing this or that must be weighed in connection with the knowledge that there is a definite means of fighting this pest and that the growers do not sit down supinely and wait for it to gobble all of their olives up. A MAN’ S JOB A man’s job is his best friend. It clothes and feeds his wife and children, pay the rent and supplies them with the wherewithal to de velop and become cultivated. The least a man can do in return is to love his job. A man’s job is grateful. It is like a little garden that thrives on love. It will one day flower into fruit worth while, for him and his to enjoy. If you ask any successful business man the reason for his making good, he will tell you it is because he likes his work; indeed, he loves it. His whole heart and soul are wrapped up in it. His whole physical and mental energies are wrapped up in it and focused on it. He walks his w ork; he talks his work; he is entirely inseperable from his work, and that is the way every man worth his salt ought to be if he wants to make o f his work what it should be and make o f himself what he wants to be.— Senator Arthur Capper. Mr. M. Helmick, form erly manager of the Hunt County Oil Mill, died on December 17th at a Dallas sanitarium after a lingering illness. SCALE COMPANY Do not forget that your scales are the most important machine you have. We repivot, repair, and install any make or capacity. Have your work done by us— we are responsible and guarantee our work. Get our prices on new scales. 4717 Washington Ave. L. H. Hood, Mgr. Phone Taylor 1355 Houston, Texas IF IT IS ANYTHING ELECTRICAL WE CAN REPAIR IT REWINDING, REPAIRING OR REBUILDING OF MOTORS, DYNAMOS AND LINTER MAG NETS FOR ALTERNATING OR DIRECT CURRENT. ALL WORK GUARANTEED UMvrv - EI^ S I A N ELECTRIC MAINTENANCE COMPANY STREET HOUSTON, T E X A S 12 OIL MILL THE COMING ANNUAL CONVENTION The Cotton Oil Press says as the time ap proaches for the annual convention o f the In terstate Cottonseed Crushers Association, it will be well for chairmen o f committees to consider their official reports and plan their own meet ings preliminary to the convention session. Mem bers are requested to send to Chairman Jno. W. Todd o f the Rules Committee such changes in the trading rules as they have in miwd to propose. The executive committee will meet at an early date and decide upon time and place for the convention. It looks like a favorable year for a big attendance, and that should also mean favorable conditions fo r a real progressive convention. WHERE ARE THE SOYA BEAN MILLS? A firm interested in the purchase o f soya bean oil recently endeavored to augment its meager list o f soya bean mills— not more than three or four— from whom they m ight secure domestic produced soya bean oil. Their inquiry failed to reveal any new names of producing mills. An examination o f the bureau o f the census records supplies immediate explanation for this circumstance. There is virtually no soya bean oil produced in the United States. For the quarter ending September 30th, 1924, the last report available, the census report shows the stupendous volume o f twelve thousand, nine hundred and fifty-eigh t pounds o f soya bean oil having been produced during that quarter. What a showing for those gentlemen who assur ed congress when the T ariff Act of 1922 was passed that if it would only let them butcher the welfare o f the industries which were using Oriental soya bean oil that they would guarantee a home grown stock of soya bean oil. They stated that the farm ers would grow soya beans for their oil producing qualities. These gentlemen, of course, had not the most rudimentary knowledge o f economics. All they knew was that soya beans were grown in the United States. They did not stop to ascertain for what purpose they were grown and are still grow n; to-wit, for feeding,purposes. Walter Relf, unmarried and world war vet eran, employed at the Temple Cotton Oil Mill, died instantly in an accident here. Relf was employed in the lint, room and attending the cotton press. Trouble developing with the lat ter, lie went down into a small basement under neath the press, to make adjustments. Not re turning, a fellow workman went after him. Relf GAZETTEER February, 1925 was found lying dead on the floor with his skull crushed and one side o f his face caved in. It is believed that he became entangled in some belting and was whirled around with great speed and hurled with terrific violence against the concrete wall. ARMY COOKS TAKE UP PROBLEM SOAP MAKING A rm y cooks in the New England area will study methods o f making soap in accordance with orders received from the W ar Department. The department has also ordered a reduction o f 25 per cent in the allowance o f soap to each soldier in the New England area, recommending that the lack be made up by soap made from kitchen waste. The use o f soap fo r washing win. dows is prohibited. Kerosene is to be used instead. FLEXCO GUARDS REVISED The F L E X C O -F L E X C O -L O K line o f expanded metal lamp guards has ju st been thoroughly re vised and greatly simplified. In such manner has this been done that all ordinary conditions o f service are provided fo r in the present thirtyfour numbers. The lines now give a choice o f key locking or screw locking guards, in usual standard brass and w eatherproof sizes. Both types are made in regular and reflector styles. There is a locking or plain guard fo r mill type lamps in four socket sizes. Also the F LE XC O portable guard is made fo r both types o f sockets and in regular, reflector and mill types. This would seem to sim plify the problem of stocking and supplying guards as compared with the more numerous numbers previously supplied. These guards are the products o f the Flexible Steel Lacing Company o f Chicago.