The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1902 Page: 1 of 4
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®be Scbulertbutg Sticker.
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SW JT/ny, {Publisher.
VOLUME IX.
$*lain Words jire Gver the S&est.
SCHULENBURG, FAYETTE COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16 1902
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GRAND RALLY
One 0
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At SciiuLENBuiiG, October 25, ,1902.
F". Burgess
Will make an address in English, Congressman Rudolph Kleberg in German and Judge A. Haidusek in Bohemian,
are cordially invited to attend and
enjoy the many pleasures which N1
will be afforded by the citizens of jF
Schulenburg, who will spare no
pains to entertain you royally.
AND BE WITH US. DO NOT ""**
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ilc will be Provided.
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BERMUDA VALLEY .
Stock Farm,
DR. I. E. CLARK, Proprietor.
SCHVLENBVRG. TEXAS
Internally Fired Boilers For Oil Mills, |
rfrrrrrrJrrrTiTrrfTrrrr^ YTrTVYVN "rm/YVtTrJTrVYYTYYYTO imYrnVr^
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Owner and Breeder of Standard and Tboroughbred
HORSES
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All of RigMutf IM MM Ml Registered Hclstein
CATTLE.
The famous standard bred Stallion J B, and
the celebrated thoroughbred stallion Panmur#
are now permanently located at my Farm.
* Service of either $25.00 cash with return privilege
-—\ season, in case of failure to foal. Corres-
' mce with prospective purchasers of Fine
: or Cattle is respect-fully solicited. *
PANMURE
*
WAY TO H
We've Something
6J
ON HIS WAY TO H.ORAF'S
to Tell Him, You Also.
You'll find us good friends in adversity
and prosperity, for we offer you substantial
goods at low prices, or «how you the finest
and most elegant stock aud give you an op-
portunity of spending as much as you please
in the pleasures of possession. Just re-
member us all the time.
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Just Received a Large Assortment of
DRY GOODS
And a Fresh Supply of
GROCERIES-
nR. H. J. J. Thiessen, who has
had such success in design-
ing and erecting oil mills, and in
the manufacture of cleaners, sep-
arators, etc., recently intervied a
prominent Chicago engineer on the
type of boilers best adapted to oil
mill purposes, and we are indebted
to him for the following resume of
the interview, which we believe
will be read with interest by oil
mill men everywhere.
"You are an expert in the mat-
ter of boilers, and know pretty well
the advantages and disadvantages
of the various type. I wish you
would tell me what type you
consider best in the loner run for
an up-to-date mill that is willing
to pay the price of a first-class
power equipment?''
"Before I answer your question
I must ask one because of my im-
perfect knowledge of the operation
of an oil mill. What features must
you have in a boiler for an -oil
mill?"
pair man. This latter fact is be-
cause oil mills are frequently in
isolated points where boiler repair-
ers are not easily obtained. Boil-
ers for oil mills should also be
adapted to the use of fuel oil in-
stead of coal."
"Your description of the neces-
sities is practically a description of
the leading features of the intern-
ally fired type of boiler with Mor-
is on corrugated furnaces. This is
really a modification of the Scotch
boiler which has been in use on
the great steamship lines for near-
ly half a century; the chief differ-
ence being in steamships, three or
fofar internal furnaces are frequent-
ly used instead of only one or two,
and a dry fire brick back is substi-
tuted in the land type instead of
stay bolted water legs This dia-
gram shoeing cut, of cross
section of boiler, will explain its
design better than I can do it in
words Where coal is used the
fire is built on the grate inside the
AGE TELLS.
The older the WHISKEY the better
it is—universally acknowledged.
Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars and
stantly on han d. ^ ^
SCHESTDLER.
FERD.
"I .1 .
W ■
A SMILE OF PLEASURE
1,, | ia ever t he result of a.
visit to the JEWELRY
Store o| v v v v*
DIETRICH & KRENGEL
at LaGrange, Texas.
Give them a trial. You will be pleased
"Oil mills are not radically dif-
ferent from any other class of
power users except that in the
height of the season it is necessary
to force the boilers possibly1
greater than in most other lines of
business and to have boilers that
will Btand this forcing, and that
will permit of being run with the
least possible interruption night
and day for quite a long period.
They ought to have high pressure,
be easily cleaned and requires the
minimum amount of attention on
the part of the machinist, and re-
corrugated furnaces] the flames
being deflected upwardsagainvt the
wall of the furnaces by the brick
wall back of the grate, thence
donwnward to the bottom of the
furnace and upward against the
fire brick at the back of tne com-
bustion chamber. This fire brick
soon becomes white hot insuring
perfect combustion of gases that
are unconsumed hy the time they
reach this point. The hot flames
then rush forward through the
multitude of submerged boiler
tubes and out the stack. The
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tit
temperature of combustion of ceal
is from 1400 to 20000 degrees F
You will notice that water is be
low,-above and on all sides of the
corrugated furnaces and of course
the return tubes are submerged
The corrugations of the furnace are
an extremely important feature of
this type. In the first place they
permit of the thinner metals being
used next the corrugations anc
give the furnace seven times the
reeistence to crushing strain that
you could get from a plain furnace
of the same thickness of metal.
The corrugations also serve as ex-
pansion joints, permitting the fur
nace to expand and contract length-
wise in a sort of accordeon motion,
the heads being rigidly held by
through holts or by crowfoot
braces. The strain is taken off the
tube ends preventing leaks, corro-
sion and burnt out tubes. The
second fuuetion of the corrugation
is to act as baffle plates to retard
the onward flow of flames and
gases, increasing the combustion
and heating up the water that is
around the furnace. The corru-
gations also add about one-tenth
the area of heating ^ surface. In
other words the furnace would be
one-tenth longer if it were stretch-
ed out straight. In the event that
scale could possibly form on the
out side of the furnace it would be
cracked off by the slight accordeon
like motion of the furnce under
varying temperatures before a crust
could be formed that would work
annoyance.
The Use of Fuel Oil.
''This type of boiler is peculiar-
ly fitted to the use of fuel oil. In
the ordinary tubular boiler, the
only way of securing high pressue
is by the use of a very thick plate
for a shell. The intense heat of
the combustion of fuel oil forced
the
as the
metal is too thick to transmit the
beat to the water as rapidly as it is
generated. The result is that the
outer half of the metal plate next
the fire is apt to crystalize or loose
its elastic properties, further de-
stroying its ability to transmit the
heat, permitting an extra deposit
against this thick shell plays
mischief with the boiler
• •
Than any other ;;
■■H'jH IIIIll 11 M I M'M -H"M : I I-H I-
:: IT IS A FACT^^^
The Mutual Live Insurance Co. of New York.
BI0HAED A. McGUBDY, President.
Has Larger Assiets.
Has Paid to Policy Holders More r _ ..
Has Paid More Dividend j Co in tne World.
And today sells the same policy at a lower ::
f premium and with higher guarantee than any «•
J other large company.
IR. IKZIZNTGh, Agent,
Schulenburg, Texas.
H M 111 M "I ■! 11 HI M-H-r-H Iiif"HEiM"I"M"I"Mi M I1 Mil M-H-fr
of scale over weak places thus
formed. Scale is also a non-con-
conductor of beat, the consequen-
ces is a 'bagged sheet.' In the in-
ternally fired boiler, on the other
band, the heat is generated on the
inside of the comparitively thin
corrugated furnace and so long as
beat is thrown from the grates in-
"The exceptional large volume
of water in the boiler makes steady
steaming, liberal steam space, pre-
vents siphoning, water surface pre-
sented to all fire surfaces and when
the boiler is proper insultated with
asbestus cement, or sectional cover-
ing, there is positively no unit ef
heat that can escape except
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side the furnace, the radiation of
heat and circulation of water is
from the furnace, carrying with it
the percipitated or scale forming
substance, which is thereby depos-
ited in the bottom of boiler under
the fire where it remains in a semi-
soluabla state and is easily washed
or flushed out at the 'blow off pro-
vided therefor.
years.
through the water. The ,boiler ia
absolutely safe, as the records of
the leading boiler insurance com-
panies show that, while they have
handled them for twenty
this is the only type of boiler
ou which they have never paid
dollar aud on which they have no
record or knowledge of a fatal
accident.
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King, W. R. The Schulenburg Sticker (Schulenburg, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1902, newspaper, October 16, 1902; Schulenburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth189036/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Schulenburg Public Library.