NEWS ^ VIEWS 



At Mt Mn. C. W, Sawa/I, mImtnMratlvu diractor, Asaeclatad Woman, fa»t»n» a diamond farm Buraou pin on AfBf PratUant Allan S. 

 iriina. At right ara llllnolt Homa Buraou dalagatat to Aftt convantion. laff to right: Mrt. Cecil Smitikamp, Idgar counfy; Miss Myrtt 

 Robinson, Illinois Homa Buraou federoHon protldant, Idgar; and Mrs. Adam McWIIIIam, Stark county. 



Farm Women 

 Pick Leaders 

 At Atlantic City 



MRS. Raymond Sayre, of Iowa, was 

 elected president of the Associated 

 Women of the American Farm 

 Bureau Federation at its I4th 

 annual convention in Atlantic 

 City in December. The Associated 

 Women held its meeting in conjunction 

 with the AFBF. 



Mrs. Sayre, former vice president, re- 

 places Mrs. Roy C. F. Weagly of 

 Hagerstown, Md., who has served in 

 this post since 1944. The new presi- 

 dent was nominated by Mrs. Weagly 

 and elected by majority vote of the dele- 

 gates. 



New vice president of the organiza- 

 tion is Mrs. Paul Palmer of Missouri, 

 who formerly served as recording secre- 

 tary. 



The voting delegates, of whom there 

 were several hundred present, re-elected 

 Mrs. M. L. Reeder of Utah as regional 

 director for the Far West. 



They also voted to retain Mrs. Philip 

 Jones, of Connecticut, as regional direc- 

 tor for the Northeast. 



Preceding the election ceremony, 

 AFBF President Allan Kline welcomed 

 the delegates and praised their part in 



helping to maintain a sound and pro- 

 gressive agriculture. 



Among the other highlights of the 

 two-day meeting was a plea by Repre- 

 sentative Walter Judd (R., Minn.) for 

 "a more realistic and effective" U.S. 

 leadership in the realm of world affairs. 



Rep. Judd declared that such leader- 

 ship can avert war between Russia and 

 the U. S. "Russia does not want to fight, 

 because she knows she would stand no 

 chance of winning," he asserted. 



Mrs. Weagly, outgoing president, 

 called upon the delegates to continue 

 and strengthen their leadership in build- 



ing a better rural life. 



A frontal attack upon rural educa- 

 tion problems was recommended to the 

 group by Agnes Samuelson, of the Na- 

 tional Education Association. 



Better care for the aged people of the 

 nation was urged by Dr. Theodore 

 Klumpp, president, Wintro-Stearns, 

 Inc., New York. Social phases of Farm 

 Bureau membership were discussed by 

 Mrs. Wilma Sledge, of Mississippi. 



A vesper service in Convention Hall 

 ballroom marked the convention's open- 

 ing. This included choral numbers by 

 the Princeton choir. 



Illinois' exhibit had 

 a prominent place 

 at the farm Bureau 

 convention In At- 

 lantic City. Illinois 

 women looking It 

 over, left to right. 

 Include: Mrs. E<f> 

 win Gumm, Knox 

 county; Mrs. J. S. 

 Woedburn, Rock 

 Island; Mrs. W. f. 

 Staggs, fulton, and 

 Mrs. M. R. Staggs, 

 fulton. 



h i 



Falls Cc 

 First Pic 

 Home A 



BETTER bt 

 the warn 

 home managei 

 versity of Illir 



She says too 



Most accid< 

 says. In 194" 

 burns, falls, ai 



To check ] 

 Miss Ward h 

 you may have 

 of Illinois G 

 bana. 



She says fa 

 home-accident 

 proof she asks 



"Do you ir 

 water and fat 

 bathroom floo 

 handrails for 

 outside? Ai 

 lighted?" 



Living C 



CONSUME 

 year in 1 

 cialists at the 

 lege of Agric 



Living cost! 

 while the supj 

 disc will be { 

 buys in home : 

 ment and clotl 



Food prices 

 clothing price 



