The Opportunity of the Dealer 



against a hillside this is readily accom- 

 plished, and even when on level ground a 

 bridge driveway six to eight feet high can 

 be built at a cost that is more than justified 

 by the improvement in handing the milk. 



The receiving room should be enclosed and 

 cut off from the bottling room. It is not 

 unusual to find one large room in which milk 

 is flowing over an immense uncovered cooler 

 into uncovered vats, and thence through the 

 various stages of bottling, while at a wide 

 doorway farmers are driving up, depositing 

 their cans, and standing by while the con- 

 tents are weighed or measured. 



It follows as a matter of course that the 

 bottling room should adjoin the receiving 

 room, that the passage of the milk from one 

 to the other may be as short and accom- 

 plished in as simple a manner as possible. 

 In cases where the bottling cannot keep pace 

 with the delivery it is necessary that the 

 milk be received in vats, but there is no rea- 

 son why these vats should not be covered. 



At some stage in the routine of passing 



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