"The milking machine is a most valuable invention for tho dairy farmer m these days of scarcity of labor. It would bo "practically impossible to continue the. development of the industry without the aid of such an invention." Thus spoße a farmer who has a wide and intimate knowledge of milking and machines, to an Otago Daily Times reporter. Continuing, he said : "Although there may be sins laid nt t^ie door of the machine, they should rightly be [placed to the account . of the careless farmer. Tho state of his byres,, of his 'stock, and of himself, are often mii describable, and the supply of milk under such conditions must always be detrimental to the general supply. It is the dairy farmer who should mend ihis ways. There is no more valuable addition to the equipment of a dairy than the 1 milking machine, artd t-here should therefore bo no disparagement of it m the first instance." •For Influenza take Woods' Great Peppermint Cure. Never fails. Is 6d, 8s 6d.*
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19130616.2.89.2
Bibliographic details
Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XXXX, Issue 13102, 16 June 1913, Page 5
Word Count
170Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XXXX, Issue 13102, 16 June 1913, Page 5
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