458 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. 



agement which has hei'etofore been extended to those who would adulter- 

 ate foods is very great, and it is certainly time that Indiana should awake, 

 establish a laboratory and make an ample appropriation for the prose- 

 cution of the I'ascally food adulterators. 



President: I will appoint a Committee on Resolutions, to consist of 

 Mr. Burnside for chairman, and Messrs G. P. Newsom, Drischel, Martin 

 and Henley. And it is necessary for us to have an Auditing Committee; 

 and I will appoint on that committee Samuel Schlosser and A. J. Newsom. 



Mr. Burnside: Mr. Chairman, I want to ask you to excuse me from 

 serving as chairman on the Resolutions Committee, for the simple reason 

 that I will be absolutely worthless on that committee. Anything else I 

 can do for this Association I am willing to do, but to serve on the Resolu- 

 tions Committee, I can not do. It is something far from anything I 

 like to do, and you want a Committee on Resolutions that is capable to do 

 it, and I will ask you to please excuse me from acting. 



President: You will serve on the Committee? 



Mr. Burnside: Yes, sir. 



President: I will ask Mr. Drischel to act as chairman. 



Mr. Drischel: I think it will be better to appoint some other mem- 

 ber, for I am not acquainted with the work at aU. 



The President: I am going to request Mr. G. P. Newsom to act as 

 chairman. There are one or two other committees that I believe should 

 be appointed— one a Committee on Nominations and another a Legislative 

 Committee. 



The Secretary: Before more leave the room, there are a few notices 

 that ought to be given out, if you can wait a few moments. 



President: We will not adjourn until we get through our business this 

 morning. I would like to have you consider the propriety of appointing 

 a Committee on Nominations. 



Mr. Shugart: I move that the Chair appoint a Committee to present 

 nominations. Motion seconded and carried. 



President: I have called up the matter of the Legislative Committee 

 for this reason: There is always a disadvantage in having a committee 

 appointed for legislative matters just at the time the Legislature con- 

 venes. If a committee of three, for example, should be appointed well in 

 advance it would be able to discuss matters and get ready between now 

 and the next meeting of the Dairy Association so that things would be in 

 proper shape, and that committee could be continued for the next year, 



