Page:Notes on New Zealand (1892).pdf/123

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NOTES ON NEW ZEALAND.
113

altogether different land, and keep all classes of cows.

It should be so arranged that all butter for exportation be factory made, then the samples would always be the same and the supply regular.

A dairy factory, now that the cream separators have been so perfected, is no very formidable undertaking for a man in a good district and with a small capital; he can keep cows of his own and arrange with his neighbours to have their milk sent in every day at so much per gallon, as is the custom in the cheese factories in England. If a factory were started solely with the