Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 23, 1956, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    fo-ikif ✓shcH ,gnirrns‘7
B—Lancaster Inarming, Friday, March 23, 1956
CORN IS KING.
The nation’s most valuable
farm crop is corn, which this
year was valued at $4,169,-
538,000, compared with $4,-
306,645,000 last year. The
average price was $l-31 a
bushel, compared with $1.43
T. J. MATTHEWS .A. H. BURKHOLDER
278R2 175
QUARRYVILIE CONCRETE PRODUCTS CO.
THOMAS J. MATTHEWS, Gen. Mgr,
Concrete or Cinder Block.
Phone Chimney Block and Lintel.
109R2 Reel Sash, Cement Paint.
Pennsylvania Community
Telephone Company!
Bangor Elizabethville Quarryville
last year. Cotton was second,
valued at $2,420,52,000. TO
matoes ranked first among
fresh vegetables, with a
valued at $2,420,529,000. To
oranges led the fruits with
x a value of $288,158,000.
' .
OSW»oW TJrfll , ov -rrT_, 3 n***% r |i'|'| i; |-'Tr*’^| s f
.Chicks —By Special Plane .
„Ames-In-Oross chicks now at Gold
fus Hatcheries, Lititz arrived at the
Lancaster Airport Saturday afternoon by
special plane. Aboard, with pilot Bob Nel
son of Nevada, lowa, were 4700 chicks
the first of their breed to arrive in Penn
v ? >
■*** t ,
; ' ~>fii
v&>
+ /•
Here is the chaperone and reception
committee for the first Ames-In-Cross
chicks received in Lancaster County, be
side plane which transported them
here. From left to right: Bob Nelson, pilot; -
Greeting Ames-In-Cross Chicks
' /
-> ' >
sylvania. The plane, specially equipped,
heated and humidified, made the trip from
lowa in seven hours, with a fuel stop in
Ohio. Despite the Saturday snow, Bob
stepped out of the plane in shirtsleeves.
(Lancaster Farming Photo).
* ✓ < ''ss A
" i * >
Chuck Simmons, eastern representative for
Ames4n-Cross, and Earl H. Diehm, vice
president of Goldfus Hatcheries, Lititz.
(Lancaster Farming Staff Photo).
Setting new standards for “big trac
tor” 3-point hitching, John Deere True
tion-Trol cuts fuel-wasting wheel slip
page to an absolute minimum on heavy
draft tillage jobs—enables you to plow
faster, deeper, and at steady pace in stub
born soils ... to do better work with
other tillage tools in tough and exacting
field conditions.
Traction-Trol does not change plow*
ing depth, cause side draft, or adversely
affect steering. What’s more, it’s sur
prisingly low in cost ... or you can
convert your present No. 800 or No.
800 A Hitch to Traction-Trol quickly and
economically ... and practically all of
the many implements for these older
hitches fit Traction-Trol without any
modification whatever.
pV S>< „
v •''• ** $
--Y v
• V
■>-„» X v * <
' " »: r
v"
' £ « v
/V /*• &