Prairie Farmer, Vol. 56: No. 1, January 5, 1884.

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If the turn ofthe market should be the other way, among the numerous patrons there issure to be more or less dissatisfaction and a more or less breaking upof the condition of friendly reciprocity which should exist betweencreamery and patron. Patrons may damage their own interest by exactingtoo much from the creamery as well as by accepting too little, and agreedy grasping after an unreasonable share of the profit on the part ofthe creamery owner is sure to bring retaliation, disturb cordiality... offeeling, and bring loss to all concerned.
The remedy for most of these evils can only come from intelligent andwise action on the part of the creamery patrons of a given locality. They should study to prevent an unseemly and expensive competition. They, as the encouraging source, will surely in the end pay the expenseof it. It has been said that no people in the world enjoy paying taxeslike Americans, provided they are only indirect, sugar coated, and withsome plausible pretense. It would seem, however, that even Americandairymen could see that the maintenance of superfluous creameries, superfluous teams for hauling cream and milk, superfluous men formanufacturing and handling the product is an extra expense of which theywill surely bear their full share; if not at once, they will do sobefore the outcome is reached.


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