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WHY A LUXURY?

USB OF CREAM LN DOMINION. 'v • A • SUPPLIES FROM FACTORIES. Support of the efforts of the Tauranga Dairy Company for the removal of any > obstacle preventing the sale of aairy companies’ cream was forthcoming from the North Auckland dairy conference. “If cream were sold by factories at a reasonable price there would be no quota,” said Mr. A. C. Kingston (Bay of Islands), introducing a remit on those lines. "Consumers are paying an exorbitant price at the present time, and there is no valid. reason why factories should not sell wholesale.” * Mr. C. B. Michie stressed the desirability of not overloading the product to an unnecessarily high price, which would place a necessary food out of reach of many people. “The city children need cream,” he said. “Many of them are under-nourished and their minds are depraved. Due to the. aftermath of war conditions, many of our present-day troubles have grown upon us, and whatever we can do to help in the •'recovery to a healthy' outlook in body and mind should be done.” Mr. W. Grounds said that the matter had been before the Dairy Board last year. The Health Department, then, had no objection to factories supplying cream, provided the properties from which the supply was drawn conformed to ‘ the standard of farms licensed to supply city dairies. Mr, F. Cullen said that in the Waikato there were a few farmers so licensed, and consequently the * factories, which they supplied took the right of-sending . pasteurised cream to the cities. “The average test of cream sent to northern factories,” he said, “would be about 40 per cent, whereas the minimum test at which the retailer may sell is 25 per. cent. That is about the maximum, too, while it is cream, and not good milk, which the city dwellers ask for.” Mr. A- F. Guy (Kaikohe) said that when farmers visited friends in the cities the eream was passed along with great, pride. It was regarded as> a. luxury, and New Zealand was the country where the butter came from, and "the- home of the dairy cow.” The use of cream would save importing other foods, and lessen the export of butter. ? It was rather pathetjp that the Aucklander regarded cream as a rare delicacy, while New Zealand did not know what to-do with her surplus butter. The remit was carried unanimously. ■ •

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19350604.2.66

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 4 June 1935, Page 5

Word Count
396

WHY A LUXURY? Taranaki Daily News, 4 June 1935, Page 5

WHY A LUXURY? Taranaki Daily News, 4 June 1935, Page 5

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