Modern Business Geography Fig. 66. Milking a camel. Primitive people who live largely on the milk of their flocks and herds make no attempt to keep it fresh. They find it both more palatable and more digestible when properly soured than when fresh. They convert much of it into a verv hard. sour cheese. to the dairy farm, where the primary production takes place. There we find that the mild-eyed cow is mistress of all she surveys. During cold weather, and usually at night during all seasons, she is kept in a clean barn where a bed of straw is spread for her comfort. She is provided with the food that is most to her liking — sweet hay, cotton-seed meal, wheat bran, or juicy cornstalks. In the best barns a stream of fresh water flows before her at all times. At the same hours, two or three times each day, a milker approaches her quietly with a clean pail and skillfully takes the milk from her udder. On some farms milking machines are used because they do the work at less cost and keep the milk cleaner than hand-milkers can. All this care is designed to make the cow give a large amount of rich milk. The lack of it is one of the chief reasons why many cows give a small amount of milk or milk of poor quality. The care of milk. As soon as the milk is taken from the cow it is strained through cloth and cooled. It is then kept cool until it is delivered to the refrigerated milk car at the railway station, or to the neighborhood creamery or cheese factory. Or the farmer may sepa- rate the cream from the rest of the milk by whirling it very rapidly in a machine called a ‘ separator.” He then takes the cream to the creamery, where it is made into butter, while the skim milk is kept at home and fed to the pigs.