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LOW-COST TRANSPORTATION 

 Prairie Farms butter churned in nine Illinois Producers Creameries is 

 picked up regularly by this truck fleet and deliveied to thr» IPC bntLat 

 cutting plant in Chicago. Started three years ago this service has: 1) Cut 

 costs 33y,; 2) kept creameries' inventories down preventing losses by 

 market fluctuation; 3) made less than carload shipments profitable; 4) made 

 creamery operations more profitable. Fleet owner is Alired OsterhoS. 



FARJU BUREAU ^WS i 



9h. PioU4Ael 



$1 



Paid for dear, closeup. natural phcttns No 

 others accepted. Action pictures fiiat tell a 

 story preferred. Enclose stamps for return. 



PALS 

 What iorm boy has never known the iriendship 

 of a fine dog. Here Ronald Cooper and iriend, 

 Larvrence Co., are out ior big game. Prize picture. 



.--Jlt«jJtU{WH".Hj'.plJi 



SUPER SERVICE IN 

 KENDALL CO. 

 Opening day 129 

 gallons oi gas were 

 sold at the new sta- 

 tion near the Farm 

 Bureau building in 

 Yorkville. In 45 days 

 130 cars were lubri- 

 cated, reports L. H. 

 Nesemeier, Kendall 

 Farmers Oil Com- 

 pany manager. 



MORI> 

 Six A.M 

 and orou 

 minutes c 

 Oct 9, sv 

 oi the Cai 

 singing, 

 terviewed 



LA SALLE'S 2STH ANNIVERSARY 

 Executive committee of La Salle County Farm Bureau celebrated 25 years 

 of organised farming in the county. Sept 21. Some of these men helped form 

 the original crop and soil improvement association. Front row, L. to R. are 

 John B. Kidd, L. C. Rinker, President E. E. Stevenson, Harry Flesburg and H. T. 

 Marshall, former lAA director. Back row: V. D. Evans, adviser, Wm. H. Stockley, 

 Rex E. Peddicord, vice-pres., W. F. Whipple, sec'y. and Richard Mudge, county 

 club leader. Absent were Treasurer Galon B. Birtwell and C. J. Elliot. 



SANITATION PAYS — 

 say Donald Stengel and Dean Butterbaugh, 

 sons of Ogle cotinty Farm Bureau members. 

 Their demonstration rated 2nd in Illinois Slate 

 Fair 4-H competition. 



PRODUCERS CROP IMPROVEMENT ASS'N SEED HOUSE 

 Erected last year in Piper City. Ford county, this modem 

 seed house wUl handle 50,000 bu. oi hybrid seed com. 

 The cooperative recently voted to broaden its service by 

 offering every Farm Bureau member-patron a share of 

 common stock. The buUding. grounds and equipment^ ^ 

 represent an investment of around $60,000. 



' v-Y!" 



SSSa 



-*«ANS| 



YCUWC 



aASS 



To 

 the I 

 and 

 1000 



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 tropl 

 E. G. 

 haus 

 San 



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