16 ILLINOIS STATE DAIRYMEN'S ASSOCIATION 



WEDNESDAY MORNING SESSION 



January 27, 1926, 10 A. M. 



President O'Hair: Now the crowd is not so large, but 

 if you were all bad men Galesburg would be in bad shape, 

 but I will take it that everybody is good — but you don't 

 milk cows. Down at our place if we milk cows at four 

 o'clock we begin milking at four. That means four, it 

 doesn't mean ten minutes past, and if I had a hand work- 

 ing for me that would come in as slow as you fellows are 

 coming in here this morning, I would fire him before he 

 got down to the barn. (Laughter.) 



Don't forget the banquet that is going to be given to- 

 night. It will be given in the club rooms of the Galesburg 

 Club. The club rooms are a wonderful place to hold a 

 banquet, and the committee is doing everything that can 

 be done to give us a good time and the cooks are working 

 hard to give us good eats. There can't a man of us afford 

 to miss it. You will get three dollars' worth for a dollar 

 and a half, and you will get seven dollars and fifty cents' 

 worth of fun — ten dollars' worth of value. If you don't 

 get that much worth of fun I will just say this, that Charley 

 Filson will return you your money back, but our banquet 

 is one of the best features always. You will not go over 

 there to hear lengthy speeches, that is not what it will be. 

 You will hear speeches, but it will all be foolishness and 

 fun and there will be plenty of it. 



You are all invited to come. That is the only thing 

 that costs any more while you are here. At any rate they 

 have been feeding me for nothing, most of them. (Laugh- 

 ter.) 



Now there has been a great deal said about sometimes 

 a man who is counted one of the biggest men in the coun- 

 try, is late, and I'll bet he doesn't milk on time when he is 



