DAIKYIKG AND FAEM CROPS. 107 



butter in that way. "We want our ruJlk room no arranged 

 that we can control the temperature. A gentleman who used 

 to live in Portland — was a merchant tht^re — went into Leeds 

 and bought a dairy farm, and went to making butter. He 

 asked the people where he sold it to try it, and the word came 

 back in a short time for more, and what he would supply 

 them for. This summer he has sold his butter for 35 cents 

 per pound. Now, ladies and gentlemen, don't go away with 

 the idea you don't want any place to put your iijilk. It is as 

 essential for you to control the temperature as it is for you 

 to get the milk from the cows, and I would say to the ladies, 

 if I had the milk to take care of. I would make my husband 

 buy a Cooley Creamery, and then they would have the most 

 of the work to do themselves. 



Mr. Roiiiii.vs. I know from what I have seen that you 

 have the foundation for what can be made one of the finest 

 dairy regions in the country". I live in a town where some 

 of the leading men live and have lived : those who have made 

 dairying a business for more than a quarter of a century. 

 Many of them have selected the Jersey cow as superior for 

 the manufacture of butter and cheese. You know the value 

 of well selected stock, and you know what stock j^ou prefer. 



