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THIS XEW W'ZIL LIGHTED PLANT WILL BI THE HOME OF PRODUCERS CREAMERY OF CARBONDAIE. 



It IS ferir^p R* moct*ied insidp and vill be Ec;u:pped w itS N<-^^ Ma^liinTj- to P 

 business men are co-'p(-rar:r.gr •x-i'.Y. vvgamzefl rream producers ;n ?etriT.s ti-e 



(•»i upwards of 1.000.000 pounds ijf 'P:a.rie Farms ' Butter Ann^.'.lr. Lccai 

 ipirai.vt- ■":earn»Ty underway. 



5-Course Soybean Menu 



The fivf-coiiri^e soyliean dinnir ^ervtd 

 at the- Press Iiay dinner in the Ford 

 Expo>ition ijuil<iir(r at tht- Chicago 

 WorldV Fair int-luded: 

 Tomato juice seasoned with ?oybi-an 

 sauce 

 n<'asted salted soybean? 

 CVltry'stalks stufTed with 

 soybean cheese 

 b'>ybean waters 

 Puree of soybean 

 with soybean flour sticks 

 Soybean croquettes with tomato sauce 

 Buttered j;reen soybeaiis 

 Pineapple rinjr with soybean cheese and 

 dressing 

 Sc>ybean bread buttered with 

 soybean relish and »oasted 

 soybean spread 

 Fresh apple pie with soybean crust 

 Assorted soybean cakes and cookies 

 Soybean coifee 

 Soybean chocolate milk 

 Press representatives who attended 

 were informed that the attractive execu- 

 tive lounpe where the .dinner was served 

 was decorated with ivory, enamel wall 

 coverinjr which contained soybean oil. 

 Twenty automobile parts are made from 

 soybeans. The Ford industrialized farm 

 barn at the Exposition had a processing 

 plant in operation which extracted the oil 

 from the b^an. 



(ieo. ,F. TulliH-k, president of the Winne- 



liasro County Farm Bureau and I. A. A. 

 director from lC»22-'33 has a beautvful 

 trold watch presented to him by the Farm 

 Bureaus of the 12th district. It is en- 

 graved with the I. A. A. Farm Bureau 

 emblem, his period of service, and iiame. 



Our recent annual meetine at BIrcs- 



ville was probably the !ary:est one we 

 ever held reports Otto Stcffey of Hender- 

 son county. Henderson doubled its Farm 

 Bureau and I. A. A. membership during 

 the past year. President Earl Smith ad- 

 dressed the meeting. 



Producers Creamery of 

 Carbondale 



pc 



Tijt I'roductis Creaniciy •>: (.ai lioiidaie 

 has taken .-teps toward purchasing a 

 well-lighted.' modern factory building 

 erecttd a few years ago for its )>lant. 

 Work toward remodeling the building for 

 a modern creamery will begin .-hortly. 

 The building was formerly used as a 

 shoe factory. It is a modern, tiri'pioof 

 two-story structure with a concrete lower 

 floor. It is proposed to use the north end 

 of the ground floor lor the creamery 

 which will be separated from the rest nf 

 '.he building by a tight w-all. 



.\ rra n genie lit s have been made to buy 

 the building under ivnitract from the 

 rarb(indal.' Business Men's Association. 

 Favorable terms have been secured so 

 that the initial investment for recondi- 

 tioning and e^iuipping the plant will be 

 held to a minimum. .As the payroll at 

 the plant increases the purchase price 

 will be reduced. Part "f the space in the 

 iiuilding already has been leased, the in- 

 come nf which will be used to pay taxes, 

 insurance and upkeep. The Illinois Fruit 

 Orowers' Exchange is considering using 

 part of the building as a warehouse and 

 ;iacking plant. The Jackson County 

 Farm Bureau has been invited to move 

 Its offices into the building froin 

 Murphysboro. 



.\n executive committee compo.-ed of 

 F. A. Easterly, Carbondale, president; 

 L. E. Lingenfelter, Ullin, vice-president; 

 and A. E. Fosse of Marion, secretary- 

 treasurer of Producers Creamery of Car- 

 bondale, is in charge of negotiations and 

 plans for launching the new co-pperative. 



Frank Gougler. director of produce 

 marketing, is giving the new creamery 

 special attention. Carbondale is in the 

 center of a large cream producing terri- 

 tory in southern Illinois. The cream pool 



at Murphysboro, I'hly a few miies away, 

 is one of the largest in the state deliver- 

 ing upwards of lnO.OOO pounds of butter- 

 fat annually. 



The Illinois .\gricultural .>IutuaI had 



insured ll'.M 4-H club calve:- up to Nov. 

 !."). Thirty-two calves died aud ?1140 was 

 paid in losses. The premium is OTr of 

 the cost of calf and the amount of pro- 

 tection on each increases l'">^ each 

 month fof siv- months. 



The College of Agriculture. Iniversity 



of Illinois, has the largest enrollment 

 this year («'.'.! I ■students since 1.'21. En- 

 rollment for the <iitire University was 

 lti.<;ii'. students, a gain of 'i.S per cent 

 over last year. One-fourth of this gain 

 was in the An: College. 



Price fi.xing under the NRA was de- 

 clared illegal by Judge Harry B. Ander- 

 son of Memphis. Tennessee in a ruling 

 on the national lumber code. "'Any pri(^. 

 fixing is the antithesis of competition, 

 fair or otherwise — and there is nothing 

 in* the national recovery act to show that 

 such was the intention of Congress," he 

 said. 



The AAA dairy divistun ha.s adopted 



a policy of keeping fluid milk prices more 

 closely in line with butterfit prices. Thus 

 Class I milk at Chicago ^'as cut from 

 $2.2.'5 to $2, and at the Qujfd Cities from 

 $1.S5 to §1.70. . f 



Illinois wheat signers will receive an 



estimated $7G0..500 in the second benefit 

 payment and approximately $1,712,846 as 

 the first 1034-".'55 payment. 



"l 



I'ncle Ab says that the best of eas* 

 comes only after the hardest of toil. 



• 20 



I. A. A. RECORD 



