Sports Festival 



(Continued from page 9) 



Woodford county home adviser; James 

 Holderman, Grundy County Farm Bureau 

 president; Helen Bennett, Montgomery 

 county home adviser; Mary McKee, ex- 

 tension service; Roger Gish, lAA; E. I. 

 Pilchard, extension service; Allan Sapora, 

 U. of I. athletic department; Charles S. 

 Mayfield, lAA; Clareta Walker, exten- 

 sion service; George Bower, Bond County 

 Farm Bureau president; Wayne Churchill, 

 Will county farm adviser; E. H. Regner 

 extension service; Merle Jeffers, repre- 

 senting Vermilion County Farm Bureau; 

 E. H. Garlich, Morgan county farm ad- 

 viser; Ray Eichelberger, Champaign 

 county Rural Youth; Roy Johnson, lAA; 

 and John Evans, Albert Webb and Otto 

 SteflFey, members of the lAA board of 

 directors. 



Pure Milk Meeting 



THREE thousand dairy farmers are ex- 

 pected to attend the 24th annual meet- 

 ing of the Pure Milk Association to be 

 held Saturday, March 12, at the Hotel 

 Sherman, Chicago. 



Pure Milk Association represents 14- 



600 Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, and 

 Indiaiu farmers selling milk in the Chi- 

 cago market. 



Principal speakers will include Mrs. 

 Haven Smith, vice president of the Ne- 

 braska Farm Bureau; Dr. J. O. Christian- 

 son of the University of Minnesota; and 

 A. W. Colebank, federal milk market 

 administrator. 



A. H. Lauterbach, general manager of 

 PMA who has been on leave of absence 

 because of illness, will be present. Elec- 

 tion of directors will be held. 



Rural Youth 



Buffalo Manager 



Tom Edwards, 39, Buffalo, N.Y., has 

 been employed to manage the Buffalo, 

 N.Y., branch office of the Illinois Grain 

 Terminals Company. 



Illinois Grain Terminals is one of the 

 youngest of the Illinois Agricultural As- 

 sociation affiliated cooperatives. It will 

 collect grain in member inland elevators 

 and river sub-terminals before moving it 

 to terminal elevators at East St. Louis 

 and Chicago for direct sales to processors. 



To widen the sales field, Illinois Grain 

 Terminals recently opened a branch office 

 in Buffalo, the great eastern milling 

 center. 



(Continued from page 20) 



munity service. We need more of such 

 cooperation all over Illinois among Rural 

 Youth groups. 



It may be too late to write New Year 

 resolutions, but it is not too late to 

 quote in part from a series of resolu- 

 tions found in Will's January issue of 

 "Wee Will Tell. " The following lines 

 should start you thinking: "For Boys 

 — I realize that some day in the future 

 I will be taking the place of my father 

 regarding Farm Bureau activities, and 

 I Resolve to take more interest in farm- 

 ing operations. I also Resolve to learn 

 more about Farm Bureau on the county, 

 state and national levels. For Girls — 

 I realize that some day in the future I 

 will be taking the place of my mother 

 in Home Bureau work and I Resolve to 

 learn more about Home Bureau on the 

 county, state, and national levels. I Re- 

 solve to take part in my Rural Youth 

 program whenever asked. I Resolve 

 to work on committees when appointed 

 and I mean, really work, because I know 

 a committee does no one any good un- 

 less those who are appointed on it really 

 work and put thought into it." 



DON'T FORGET- 



In the rush of spring 



work — DON'T FORGET and 



neglect your spring pig crop! 



One touch of hog cholera 

 can take the profit out of 

 your hog business for the 

 entire year. SEE YOUR 

 FARM BUREAU NOW FOR 

 FRESH, POTENT FARM BUREAU SERUM 



26 



I. A. A. RECORD 



1 .:/'.;.;. -■■:. ■.;.^p; 



