§ Mr. and Mrs. Pau' Kean of Evansto" . were Bunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. / Cannon, _« Anna Nadr had a birthday Thursday f last week and her young friends held a party in her honor at the home YCNLD E: . @It is the first time that a pro-- s organization of farmers has bught a charter from the American Pederation: of Labor. The purpose is o obtain the support of the trade in * Chicago and adjoining ounties --to make the strike against @ milk distributors more effective _ If the milk producers become a fade union, the milk wagon drivers Mmigsht be called out on ~a sympa-- hetie {strike with them. _ 'John Fitzpatrick, president of the EBhicago Federation of Labor invited i¢ Cofficers of the Milk Producers' tion to meet with the exec Ive committee of 'the federation 166 West Washington street on ednesday afternoon ate 2 o'clock, when the question of organizing the Rilk producers will We taken up. "The 'unions have orgapized --the C trades in connection' with the ,'fi-'u"» of milk," said Mr. Fitz atrick. "To organize the milk pro-- would be to go outside of hat scope,. If they want to do hat, well and good. --I am glad this tter came up and believe it is a tonnection between the workers on farms and the workers in the tity that ought to be made . io S N O W'S rank T. Fowlers _ Address Broadcast ~ from _ Elgin in Cause of Producers. PHONE 306 Probably, the. first--time in bistory at the radio has been used in the use of strikers, took place Bunday ght, when. a speech of Frank T. Wler, Lake Villa, <was broadcast Artbur and Grady Lyvers spent the ew Year holidays with their fath»= in " (station WTAS, Charles .Erb n's farm at Elgin. It was> the e address that Mr. Fowler had vered at a meeting in Chicago re an cffort is being made --to C& producers affiliate with the P of labor and it was tele phed . to WTAS. where it was adcast several times during the The Torrington Dflmfifi waiting to give you a mentary .demonstration of this better cleaner. _ Simply tele-- ml.-..almwn'teud'l!: VWVLV L UR _ Rev. B. F. 'm mb:: m lN .nvmtor Monday, ?d Doris Barnsta-- v ble is staying with Mrs. Wentworth. s'l\ 9 Gertrude Weniss visited friends in RIKERS CAUSE"\'V'ukl::n and> Libertyville a ~few Wt M 1 would like to have a frea demon-- tHration of the Terrington Electric 804 No. Minumiese Ave. ghona 90) -- 300 : \\ertgrvitia Mfl wiLLys uewt co. |"'i'u'n-nu-muduuhun have been i1 with the mumps during j;:w&._&t week; also Clyde Helm and \Lester Hamlin. ~ oo T of Mr. and Mrs. ¥red Hamlin in the h ¥ evening. ° & $ Rev. B F. Wc-tv&th began h'is * A\ studies at Garret BibNeal Institute in days last week. been used to. The members of the Ladies'*® Ald will hold a social ovnh%d experi-- ence social at the church Mond,," evening and' serve. supper to which their husbands are invited. The mem-- bers will tell how they have been earning the'r extra dollar and a half to pay for the improvements at the The cold weather of last Baturday and mwm most folks to stay indoors to keep the fires going. Bome change from the weather we have been used to. pha S y Bs parsonage. School siarted in again on Monday after.a two weeks vacation and a few are still absent because mumps, but it is nearly over. stall. 1j E. Bartlett has been confined to his home by illiness the n_lt_v_eol.L o_ _ F. B. Rhodes transacted business in the city on Saturday. _ _______ _ _'The Mothers' Association had an in-- teresting meeting last Friday after-- noon at the church. Fred Busch had quite a tough time of i tlast Saturday night when he went to the garage at Long.Grove to get his car f:xed. In the first place. it was too cold to run a car, but he got there at nine o'clock at night.. <Then the garage man poured oil on the fire, and severely burned his face and hands, and could not proceed with the work, so Fred started for home with a bor-- rowed car, and got stalled seveéeral times. He left Long Grove at one o'clock, reached the Ed Giss place at three a. m., stalled again, so he went back to the home of Mrs. Mary @chley, where he spent the rest of the dark hours, almost frozen.. Ray Atow-- ed him home Sungay morning. . ' Martha Voss was a calléer at the Caroline Busch home Bunday. "he N. F. Busch family were all on the sick list with colds but are about all right again. Mrs. Erben Riehm and childrén are staying at the home of George Volz. under the care of the former's moth-- eér, M cence. _ Al Bunton, &r.. unloaded coal last 'uk"k- for Emil Geest; also some this w ; ~Mrs. Ed Giss is on the ailing list with a severe cold. , & *n 4 A shower was held ltast Tuesday and Wednesday nights in honor of Miss Clara Miler, who will become the bride of Frank Liscomb on Satur-- c--i--a'y afternoon, Jan. 12th, at the sonage in Wheeling. We wish happy pair a long ll_fe. e Milk strike on. Train and tTruCk shippers hold back --~milk for right price. Some only needed to hold the milk from mornéng till evening when the m'l kmen had signed the contract and coe out after the milk. .. Mrs. Bunton is on the, ailing list with a bad cold. c guk The children of Max Miller, on Sec-- ond street, Libertyville, are on the sick list with pnewgnonia. Miss Daisy Wolf, a trained nursé, is in attendance for baby Gien, who is very iI1. Ray and Lucilie are on the road to recov-- ery. . _ Alice Bunton is staying at the Mil-- ler home assisting Mrs. Miler with the care of the sick children. _ . _ Mr. Anderson and were business callers : I'ne Busch's Wednesday On the night of Dec. 31st some mis-- creant entered the barn of George Siurm, of this »place, tumé every-- thing topey: turvyy. Blankets, hay, oats and other articles were strewn \ DONT WAH TL | YOURE DOWNSICK all dover the barn. The-- also kiMed a Adog, sleeping with the horses. In the morning when the family arose they discevered the batn door open, and upon further investigation they found the do g{ylng dead inside the door, and the borse atmost dead from the cold, as that was a real cold night, and the bhorse must have been standing by the door all night. It is not known what was th, meaning of /this inhu-- man trick. It was at this place, too, the midnight rappings on the windows took place several weeks ago. Valuable American Trees, Among our most useful and vyalua ble trees are the white oak and the red oak, which produce a brown--col ored-- hardwood of remarkable durg bility, says the School Book of For-- estry. _ The white oak is the monarch of the forest, aw it lives very long and is larger and stronger than the imajority of it«@ asseciotes HE minute you feel a little under the weather, get a bot-- ' tle of Gude's Pcpeo-lam f * wait till you're down Take Gude'lnl as r: {nmtti'vo of i'l'la ness--it will enrich your A build up your energy. Yol::d&ub gist has n\u both liquid and tablets. e wn e W.M0 11 1_ 'Tn sse for yourself Free Trial Tablets 52 428 Poliding value of Gude's Pepto--Mangan, write today Jt Wenerous Trial Package of Tablets, Send i. 5. Sonlntntt 0o« 14 Warren Bu., N. ¥. :'K'Eébt: during hberconvales-- APTAKISIC on. -- Train and truck Mr. Williams at Mrs. Caro In its 1923--24 membership campaign, now in full swing and scheduled to end by next March, the Indiana Farm Bureau federution is bearing down beavily, among other things, on the co-- operative murketingy work being done by the various orgunizations within the federation and is finding this sort of work effective. In wool, dairy and produce and live stock the various or-- ganizations of co--operatives within the Indiara Farm Bureau federation have made great strides in the last year, and the same ean be said of the wool pool. Not to be outdone by any of the organ-- izations, the Indiana Farm Bureau On-- lon Growers' exchange, although com-- paratively young, is 'operating in a manner that is giving great satisfac-- tion not only to its officers, but te--its member growers as well. On Basis of Efficiency. Between May, 1922, the time of its organization, and August 1, 1923, the hdln::ol is Live Stock Producers' eommission showed a steady monthly _gain in the amount of live stock handled at the Indianapolis stock yards, and in that period did a total 'business of well over $16,000,000. More than $42,000 was returned to its pa-- troms in commissions and there is be-- ing accumullted steadily a reserve from which the next refund will be pald. The refunding of this amount of money, however, is not the only benefit reaped by members of this or-- ganization and of the farm bureau, The Live Stock Producers:.--Commis-- sion association has put live stock marketing at Indianapolis on a com-- petitive basis, as well as on a basis of efficiency, to the very great enhance-- ment of the live stock handling busi-- ness in Indiana's capital city. . A Solica Trainload of Fertilizer, Thirty Cars, nepresenting a Single Order Placed by the Farm Bureau Units of One Iindiana County (Clinton) Through the Purchasing Department of the Iindiana Farm Bureau Fed-- eration. The Order Was for 65§ Tons.. * Thirteen dairy and produce stations have been organized in gleven counties under the farm bureau plan, and many more are in process of organization. None of these stations is under what may be termed full headway as yet, all being young, but during the month of August, 1923, eleven of thege sta-- tions handled 106,173 pounds of but-- fer fat; 54,815 dozens of eggs and 37,-- 550 pounds of poultry. In all of these stations the producers received at least REST CAMP FOR FARM WwOMEN MEETS FAVOR One of Annual Projects of, West Virginia Bureau. . A rest camp for farm women is one of the annual projects of the West Virginia Farm Bureau federation. At the second camp, held this year at Jackson Mills, W. Va., 125 farm wom-- en were in attendance. *PC**~ Reporting on this project J. B. Mce-- Laughlin, secretary of the Westh Vir-- win'ia Farm Bureain federation, says, Farm Women Attending Rest Camp. "It was \wonderful to see the spirit in which the campers entered into every pWhse of camp life. It was no trouble at all to organizeé a health unit, form a little choir, get actorse for the health play, secure a horseshoe pitching team, pliayers for volley ball and baseball----well, that bassball game would have had to have been seen to have been appreciatéd." wofian our school, health, recreation, home industries and loan _ The committese work as planned for the whole group brought before each fund work, and stimulated their in-- terest in these phases of women's club ';h work was. demonstrated by the current market price for their prod-- ucts, and in many instances, especially with poultry, much higher prices were pald. --After paying all expenses all these stations have laid by reserves for distribution to members. The Indiana Farm Bureau federation has offered a statewide plan for mar-- keting wool direct from the farm to the mill with one handling for grading and assembling in quantities suited to mill demands. This has beep done at ac-- tual cost to the grower, which has been low, and the average price obtained has been from two to five cents above the average pald by home buyers with the possible exception of 1920, when prices early were much higher thear during most of the wool marketing season. s Sold Many 'Onions. ._Up to October the Indiana Farm Bu-- reau Onion Growers' exchange sold around 140 carloads of onions, which were sent to twenty states, and the work at that time had only just be gun. The exchange is making efforts to reach the largest number of coR-- sumers, thereby saving extra freight charges ~which the> producer --and-- con--' sumer ultimately pays. es T The Indiana Farm Bureau Purchas | ing Department, Inc., is the authorized purchasing agent of the Indiana Farm . Bureau federation. Not only has the . existence of this department bad a stabilizing effect on the prices of. fer-- } tilizer, twine and feeds, but the ac--> tual saving on these "commodlth'i bought through this department, has amounted to many thousands of dol-- lars. This department also has bought many thousands --of.. tons. of coal of high quality at a price of from $1.50 to $2.50 a ton under the regular price. At Cinvinnati one of the most mod-- ern feftilizer factories in the United States has been btllt and its entire output placed at the disposal of the farm bureau. The purchasing depart-- ment recently placed an order for 655 tons, that represented farm bureau or-- ders from Clinton county. A special trair of 30 cars was--arranged for to. carry the fertilizer from Cincinnati to Clinton county, thus insuring prompt delivery. k . the hbealth committee working with Mrs. Jean Dilion of the state health department. The health unit, consist-- ing of health officer, inspector, nurse and assistants chosen frem among the women, was right on duty and looking after sanitaty conditions of the camp. The-- period for group round--table discussions proved popular and help-- ful. Savings of $177.000 in refunds to members of the National Live Stock Producer# association during its first 291 months' operation at an average of 'approxlmately $5 per car, is not the big accomplishment desired, according ' to John G. Brown, president of the pro-- | ducers. Nature study under college experts, consisting of talks--and field trips to-- gether with talks on art, were helpful in opening the eyes of the farm wom en to the appreciation of the bekatiful. There were other actlivities of the damp consisting of hofne economic demonstrations, basket weaving, song fests and the like. * we expect to do more when we get live stock producers to send their animais : to market in more even numbers and in quantities comparable with the demand | for meats," continued Mr. Brown. |\ 'The present 'glut and famino' sys | tem of marketing |ive stock benefits no \ one but the retailer of meats," eontin-- Live Stock Association Expects to Remedy Situation to Benefit of All Conserned. * REFUNDS IS NOT GREAT AIM "We are, of course, very glad to pay the %) cents dividend represented by the $175,000 sent hack to members, but ;:;d lir. Brown. -- "Producers of Hye stock ship the bulk of their products on a down market, which means a Joss. '_"--W;ilrre handling about 10 per cent of the total live stock shipped to the markets where we operate, and when we Increase this percentage materially wa expect to remedy~"the situation to the beneft of the producer, packer -"D-flu"---t--l; 'm aix months of 10298 0171 cars of live stock were hawiled as compared with 3.082 cars for the Arst six months of 1N22. For these mmnm.fllve'todw was $587,795,000 ind $5,008.000 respee . --JANUARY 10,1924. Farm s the ; § : ad a | N | .fvf"; ; e ac-- j - dltle-.'% , has '| {f dol-- | FARMERS URGED TO STORE ICF 'COR DAIRYING Local Health Department Ad-- vises Milk Producers to Build Ice Houses. Farmers, with large herds oi cat-- tle that produce milk for the market, are urged to store ice for the sum-- mer months by 'attaches of the Wau-- kegan Health department to insure less loss of thol;&':roluco and to keep it in better col lon. Ice is extremely desirable, in. fact almost a necessity, in the businesé of market high--grade ufi in the opinion of the health advisors. + It is their suggestion that at least a ton and a half pf ice be stored for each milk cow, which would leave enough ice for houkehold use. This will cool the milk, allow for the melt-- age, and provide the margin for the housewife. R lce ponds can be built with little trouble, members 'of the department declare, and the erection of ice hous* es on farms without them is con-- sidered by them a piece of_ good business. " The Department of Agriculture has published in Farmers' Bulletin 1078, a complete history of harvesting and storing ice. The health department suggests that the farmers who have no ice houses write for the bulletin, which is free of charge while the sup-- ply last. Address requests to the Department of Agriculture, Washing-- ton, D. C.. and ask for Bulletin 1078. 3 PLEAD "NOT GUILTY SATURDAY William Orlandini of Highwood, James Ward of-- Highwood, and Charles Inman, all charged with vio-- lations of the national prohibition act, were arraigned (in county court Saturday morning.-- Motions to quash the informations were made l-u each case and were overruled. The defendants each pleaded '"not guilty" and were released in bonds. Phone 456 ? PuBLC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS j If You Notice An Increase In Your Light Bill > THEO BLECH, Dist Supt. Waukegan, Ilinols One Policy <-- One System" Universal Service Wunuvak your thotht goes your voice may ?o. You can talk across the conti-- nent as if face to face. Your telephone is the latch to open for you any door in the land. There is the web of wires. The many switch-- boards. Themaze of apparatus. The millions of telephones. All are parts of a country--wide mechanism for far--speaking. The equipment has. cost over two billion dollars, but more than equipment is needed. _ : There must be the guardians of the wires 16 keep them vital with speech--carrying elec-- trical currents. There must be those who watch the myriads of tiny switchboard lights and answer your commands.. There-- must be technicians of every sort to construct, repair und operate. {:<>.--®:* > : f A quarter of a million men and women are united to give nation--wide telephone service. With their brains and hands they make the Bell System live. f you sat on the porch, perhaps you only used the light a short while before bedtime. But now, when days are short, electric light in some part of the house is needed before 5 o'clock in the evening. : And, too, on winter mornings -- electric light is necessary from the time of arising until after breakfast. j £*~** That's why there is a slight in-- crease in electric light bills dur-- ing the fall--and winter. Giving the Telephone | Life Please remembet that last sum-- mer it was eight o'clock or later before you used electric light. If the evening was pleasant and Illinois Bell Telephone Company: x a PR . f&';fi%'fi GVS KRUMREY, Local Rep. Telephone 144.W Bell System And All Directed Towards ~Better Service # 7 TA we U