NASSAU MILK RECEIVING &
COOLING STATION
TUESDAY , APRIL 1,
1924.
The Wilmington Evening
Journal , April 5, 1924, reported that the milk receiving and
cooling station at Nassau is in operation and that an inspection and
program was held last Thursday when dairymen and agriculturalist from
all sections of lower Delaware where visitor.
Thomas R. Ingram of Sussex
Trust Company eas chairman of this affair. Brinser's Band of Lewes
was resent and furnished music during the afternoon and evening.
The new plant was in
operation Tuesday, April 1, and diarymen of the Nassau community
were paid $2.85 per hundred
pounds at the plant. The secretary of the Interstate Milk
Producers
Association , C. I. Cohee,
spoke about the necessary requirements expected of the diary farmers
to produce high grade milk
for the Nassau plant. He congratulated Sussex County Ag Agent
Molloy Vaughn and his
committee who had aroused the farmers to establish the cooling plant.
The diary farmers are
reqired to have their milk at the plant before 9 in the morning so
it
can be be cooled peior to
rail shipment to Philadelphia in the afternoon.
Dean McCue, University of
Delaware School of Agricculture , also was a speaker and he
emphasized the fact that
eastern Sussex was suitable for milk production and that he Nassau
Station would be a siccess. Other speakers were H. D. Davis of the
Supples – Willis Diary Company of Philadelphia, Molloy Vaughn and
Hiram Burton of Lewes.
Some 700 persons enjoyed
the visit and feed cafeteria style , free ice cream supplied by the
Supplee - Willis people of
Philadelphia and the owners of the Nassau plant.
The Nassau Station is one
of the most modern in Maryland and Delaware, the only grade A
receiving plant on the
Delmarva Peninsula and cost $25,000. Milk is furnished from more
than
four hundred thoroughbred
cows.
Samuel Wallace of
Philadelphia is manager of the Nassau plant of the Supplee –
Willis Company. Also present at the affair were Dell Henderson
Supplee -Willis superintendent and Dr.
R.C. Dayton, representative
of Grade A.
No comments:
Post a Comment