58. In addition to Government control the co‐operative societies have their own organisations for controlling the health of the cattle and improving the cleanliness and quality of the milk produced by their members. These organisations co‐operate closely with the Government Keuringsdienst van Waren (Food Control Service) and welcome the Government's efforts; they say, however, that they can do far more than the Government officials could do unaided since they are in very intimate touch with the farmers, and have behind them the power to pay the farmer a lower price for his milk or to refuse it entirely, or expel him from the Society; these possibilities have greater compelling force than the necessarily more formal official methods of procedure and the threat of legal proceedings.
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1 August 1929
Review Article|
August 01 1929
British Food Journal Volume 31 Issue 8 1929
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-4108
Print ISSN: 0007-070X
© MCB UP Limited
1929
British Food Journal (1929) 31 (8): 81–90.
Citation
(1929), "British Food Journal Volume 31 Issue 8 1929". British Food Journal, Vol. 31 No. 8 pp. 81–90, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb011213
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