THIRTY-SIXTH ANNUAL CONVENTION. 6i) 



PRODUCTION OF CLEAN MILK. 

 By 

 Prof. Hunziker, Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. 



We are fortunate this morning in having with us Professor 

 Hunziker of Lafayette, Indiana, Chief of the Dairy Department 

 of Purdue University. 



Mr. Hunziker: Mr. President, Members of the IlHnois 

 State Dairy Association : I suppose it is necessary for me to say 

 that I am very glad to be with you at your Convention. I ought 

 not to say it for of course you know it. I wish to thank your 

 officers for their kind invitation to me to come over here. I assure 

 you I appreciate the invitation very much. 



Now my subject this morning is *'The Production of Clean 

 Milk," and I want to ask you what you expect me to say after 

 listening to this most interesting address by the last speaker. I 

 have been wondering in looking over the program what in the 

 world I could tell, what would be of interest and what would be 

 of instruction and what would be new that has not been said. It 

 seems to me that the subject has been treated from all sides. It 

 has come up now three times during your Convention, and I am 

 really almost afraid it has been exhausted, and yet judging from 

 the conditions, or at least some of the conditions under which 

 milk is produced in my own state, Indiana, and the condition 

 with which I am quite familiar, and conditions I expect are not 

 so different in Illinois, perhaps after all the gospel will bear re- 

 peating. 



You recall John Wesley asked his wife why she told the 

 children the same thing over and over again to which she replied : 

 ''John Wesley, because once telling is not enough," and I feel 

 that we have much the same proposition here. The subject of 

 clean milk is of such enormous importance that the dairymen can 

 never know too much and it cannot be repeated any too often to 

 impress it upon the minds of our dairymen. 



