Miss Audra Swift and Frank F. 



Gingrich, director of young people's 

 activities with the lAA, were married 

 at the Tabernacle Christian Church, 

 Franklin, Indiana, Saturday, May 21. 

 Mrs. Gingrich recently resigned her 

 position as recreational director of the 

 Indiana Farm Bureau. The couple will 

 be at home early in June at 1116 W. 

 Washington Blvd., Oak Park. 



Stores in the Olney district now re- 

 ceive their supplies of Prairie Farms 

 butter directly from cream truck sales- 

 men. Service was improved and ex- 

 penses reduced when the butter sales 

 truck was retired. 



A rock phosphate company serving Illinois 



farmers reports that shipments during the 

 first 3 months of 1938 were more than 15% 

 larger as compared to the same period last 

 year. Phosphate shipments slumped after 

 March 28th, when increased freight rates 

 went into effect, the report says. 



On a recent trip into central Missouri, 

 where there are no cooperative creameries, 

 it was found that farmers are selling their 

 butterfat at Lebanon, Missouri, for seventeen 

 and nineteen cents a pound, according to 

 quality, says C. C. Burns, Champaign. This 

 is just another demonstration of what the 

 Producers' Creamery is doing in this area. 

 Price levels are bound to be raised where 

 farmers enter the field of manufacturing 

 their own butterfat into butter and getting 

 all out of it that there is in it for the 

 producer. 



About seven and one-quarter million 

 pounds of butterfat are produced in the 

 Champaign Producers' Creamery district. 

 Farmers, through their own cooperative 

 creamery, have increased the price level ap- 

 proximately five cents a pound all over the 

 district. Five cents on seven and one- 

 quarter million pounds amounts to $361,- 

 250.00 annually. A check for this amount 

 would make a nice present for producers in 

 this territory. 



Douglas County has added more new 

 patrons to the Producers' Creamery of 

 Champaign in the last six weeks than any 

 other county in the district. Lowell Pitch- 

 ford is now assisting Barney McDuflFee in 

 Douglas County on a Producers' Creamery 

 truck. 



Sixty-three per cent of the farmers 

 in Marshall and Putnam counties are 

 Farm Bureau members. Membership: 

 939. 



two Mltklna ^cene5 in rlu Time 



A COW 

 A FLY 



A TAIL 

 A SWISH 



A SMEAR 

 A SWEAR 



SAME COW 

 SAME ELY 



SAME TAIL 

 NO SWISH 



NO SMEAR 

 NO SWEAR* 





/^xx^c^ 



SLVt SEAL TWICE A DAY 



KEEPS flits AWAY 



■ ■ ■ 



Get your supply from the salesman who 

 drives the Blue and White Service Company 

 tank truck. 



Call him TODAYl 



BLUE SEAL 



FLY SPRAY 



tt/iis AMD Relets 



'Apologies to the Monroe County Hammer . 



'OIS FARM SUPPLY COMPANY 



608 So. Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois 



Every fifth farm in Illinois is repre- 

 sented by a membership in one of the 

 377 grain marketing co-ops. 



Clothes baskets caa be kept clean by litiiag them 

 with washable material, such as oilcloth, muslin, or 

 heavy paper. 



Sponge and angel'food cakes should be baked 



in a slow oven so that the air which has been beaten 

 into them has a chance to expand and lighten the 

 cake before the eggs set and give the cake a shape. 



Mrs. Rex Petticord of LaSalle county 

 has a small slate in her kitchen on 

 which notices, reminders and instruc- 

 tions are written for busy members of 

 her family who come and go at dif- 

 ferent hours. 



improve 

 the daug 

 Dutch CO 

 they disci 

 tion Inka 

 Ormsby 

 in both b 

 1752.5 lb 

 of milk 



30 



I. A. A. RECORD 



