NEW ILLINI 



PREMIUM MOTOR OIL 



OFFERS FARMERS 



5 DISTINCT 

 ADVANTAGES 



1 . Keeps a clean motor clean longer 



2. Provides a better piston-seal 



3. Non-corrosive to bearing metals 



A. Holds resinous varnish formation 



to minimum 

 5. Assures longer life for piston 



rings and cylinder walls 



ILLINI is an outstanding improvement in postwar motor oiL 

 All the knowledge gained in laboratory research and through 

 hard tests on battlefield is used to make this better oil for farm 

 use in tractors, trucks and cars. 



Emphasis here is on quality plus economy in accordance with the 

 original objectives of this cooperative. ILLINI has been devel- 

 oped by the latest refining processes to meet the needs of to- 

 day's tractor, truck and car motors. It has been thoroughly test- 

 ed. It is offered you with the knowledge that ILLINI will give 

 safe and economical lubrication to modern engines. 



Try ILLINI. Call your salesman who drives the the Blue and 

 White Service Company truck. 



Illinois FnRm suppiv co. ^ 



608 SOUTH DEARBORN STREET • CHICAGO 5, ILL. 



WHAT A SCHOOL CAN DO 

 FOR A COMMUNITY 



(Continued from page 9) 



be a farmer after graduation. I think 

 the agricultural outlook is good and 

 everybody will have to eat." 



A farm shop is provided where the 

 agriculture students repair farm ma- 

 chinery, build hog feeders, etc., and 

 learn how to handle tools. Farm man- 

 agement is also taught in combination 

 with farm shop. 



Fourteen out of 15 vocational agri- 

 culture boys questioned said that they 

 planned to live on the farm after they 

 get through school. Their school pro- 

 'gram has shown them that farming 

 has 'possibilities and offers a challenge. 

 The 15th boy said he planned to run 

 a feed store. All 15 pupils named 

 agriculture as their favorite subject. 



"How will your work in vocational 

 agriculture contribute to your future 

 success?" brought the following an- 

 swers : 



Boys See Benefits 



Marshall Taggart: "I hope to de- 

 velop a pure bred herd of Angus and 

 the things I have learned about judg- 

 ing, selecting, and management of beef 

 cattle will help me." 



Jim Hatton who plans to run a feed 

 store: "The things I have learned 

 about rations and feeds will aid me 

 in serving my customers better." 



Dean Shute: "I will understand plant 

 foods, soil testing, balancing rations 

 and livestock sanitation." 



Charles Finney: "The feeding, care, 

 and management of livestock will aid 

 me materially after I graduate from 

 high school as my father works in the 

 oil field and I will manage the farm." 



Wise Planning 



The program at Casey was a result 

 of wise planning. Its success depended 

 much upon cooperation of farmers with 

 the school. The results obtained also 

 required time and the program was 

 continuous. It is doubtful if a succes- 

 sion of agriculture teachers could have 

 done what one man with an idea was 

 able to do in that space of time. 



This school recognized a respon- 

 sibility to the community that sup- 

 ported it. The service that the voca- 

 tional agriculture department gave in 

 the Casey community is only one ex- 

 ample of what a good high school pro- 

 gram can contribute to community life. 



Cattle are more susceptible to lead poison- 

 ing than are other animals, and calves are 

 especially sensitive. White paint on barns 

 and fences may be an expensive luxury. 



22 



L A. A. RECORD 



