Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, April 20, 1956, Image 15

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    Classified
Advertising
FOR SALE
■LOGAN FAMOUS SEX LINKS
Unsold April 23 -L 26—5000
Straight Run 17c; or pullets 28c 5
1100 Harco Orchards Red 17c,
L. h- Logaft, Rennett Square,' Pa.-
t 1
FOR SALE.—Certified naspberry,
plants, Willinette large red for
freezing $B.OO per 100. Cumber'
land black $6.00 per 100. -At
farm 4 miles south of Elizabeth
town. Levi S. Ober. Elizabeth
town 81, Ph. 7-3118- -
'i
FOR SALE. 1954 Plymouth
convertible clean. A-l condi
tion. R. H. Low Milage Write
in care Lancaster Farming. Box
3
You can’t get better to save
your life. Red Comet Fire Con
trol Systems & Equipment. Box
#456 Mountville, Penna.
nnMEr U WHITE cross
For Broiler Chicks
musser leghorn farms
Mt Joy Ph. 3-4911
100 Bushel Black Wilson Soy
' bean seed. Home grown Harry
Frank, New Providence (Near
Faxrview Church)
SPRAY CANPHOSAL for res
piratory relief of poultry.
There is no cure! Cost, about
$lOO per thousand birds. Use
Avi-Tab too, in the feed. See
your Salsbury dealer for form
ula
FOR SALE. —New DeWalt %
h p. radial saw Regular $239.
only $135. Bart’s Repair & Ser
vice 1952 Landis Valley Rd.,
Lane. 2-1568.
LEGHORN CHICKS
IflUdjCn mt. JOY 34911
Crossed For Added Vigor l
POST HOLE DIGGING AND
sheep shearing Call evenings
7 to 8. Jonas Martin, Gap Rl, Ph
Hickory 24601.
FOR SALE. Redwood Silo
10x28 ft.; also good feeding
hay Contact Melvin C Boyce,
Rp, Quarryville, Ph. 274R31.
NEW AND USED Garden tract
- ors and power mowers; Sim
plicity Sales & Service. Frank K
Denlinger, Lampeter, Ph. Lane.
3-0614.
Classified
Advertising
Kates
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wer coming to a Box Number,
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’LANCASTER FARM
ING, Quarryvflle, Pa.
Ads running 3 or more con
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with 80c minimum.
DEADLINE: Wednesday morn
ing «t each week** publication.
PosHJae’y no ad? accepted after
W.OO- a.- m.-Wfidpcadays, ■-
HISTORICAL —Freighted with, memories, this Conestoga wagon is, posed at entrance to the
covered bridge which lead* to the Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, Vt., where it will be displayed
beside other significant examples of the carriage-and-wagon makers’ art. The freighter of the
plains -from 1750 to 1850, the Conestoga wagon was usually about 24 feet long and could trans
port a load of up to five tons.- when tied to a six-horse bitch. Save for its cloth cover, this
relic of another aee is in a remarkable state of preservation.
Colerain Grange
Given Award At
Ephrata Visit
Colerain Grange held its April
meeting on Thursday evening,
April 12 at Odd Fellows’ Hall,
Kirkwood. Ephrata Grange, with
15 members, made the Visitation
trip to Colerain, to honor the
Executive Committee.
Worthy Master Paul Übel
made the presentation for Eph
rata and James Weicksel, a mem
ber of the Executive Committee
of Colerain, accepted the award.
The Visitation program is
sponsored by Lancaster Pomona
Grange each year. As is the cus
tom, the visiting grange had
charge of the evening’s program.
Mrs. Paul Übel, Ephrata Lec
turer, presented a reading by
Sister_ Stober, and a panel dis
cussion on the planting and cdfe
of flowers was given by two of
the members. Sister Schweitzer
talked on gardens and Sister
Singer on indoor plants, especi
ally the African violet.
A piano duet by Sisteis Burk
lolder and Wenger, a' talk on
ihe “Reclaiming of the Fjbnda
iiverglades,” by Brother Peter
Fry, and a playlet, “As Adver
ised," by Sisters Burkholder and
vry closed the program.
Colerain Grange voted to
sponsor again this year the
Dairy Contest exhibits in the
grocery store in Kirkwood dur
mg Dairy Week in- June
Bennett Coates, Legislative
chairman of Colerain Grange,
reported sending a wire to Con
gressman Paul Dague. approv
ng the domestic parity plan for
wheat and rice in the Farm Bill,
in behalf of the Grange. Mr.
Doates also wrote State Senator
Edward, Kessler, (protesting the
Plumbers Bill No 8885.
Worthy Master Loran Brinton
conducted the meeting.
After Grange closed, refresh
ments were served by the Home
Economics Committee Mrs.
Melvin Boyce, Mrs. Henry Wen
gar, Mrs Robert Stotlemeyer
and Miss Pauline Mitchell, chair
man.
On May 1, Colerain Grange
will visit Salisbury Grange and
present a program The meeting
By FRANCES DELL
About this time of year home
makers all over America begin to
think about spring house-clean
ing. The latest theory about this
custom is that if you are a good
housekeeper spring cleaning will
not be necessary. However, even
if you are the kind of homemak
er who makes it unnecssary, you
may benefit by looking over your
house with a.critical eye.
We often become so accustom
ed to the surroundings, we don’t
notice the chair we had done
over two years ago, or the living
room walls that need looking
after.
(3)lssues
$2.40
Time fo'r Yard Work
This is also the time when
most of us begin to feel a strong
desire to do something about our
yards. Every year many of us
get out the seed catalogues- and
indulge in planning that beauti
ful “daydream” .garden. ,
Farm-City Week
November 16-23
In Pennsylvania
HARRISBURG Observance
of the second annual statewide
Farm-City Week in Pennsyl
vania has been set for Nov- 16-
23. The announcement was made
today following a meeting of
representatives of ten interested
organizations held in the office
of L. IH Bull, State Deputy Sec
retary of Agriculture.
The first Keystone State
Farm-City observance last No
vember had approximately 150
communities participating, ac
cording to H K Anders, State
College, Pennsylvania Kiwanis
District coordinator wl>o headed
the 1955 Farm-City steering com
mittee.
The group s made preliminary
plans designed to greatly in
crease Farm-City Week activi
ties Anders explained that city
people will be taken on visits to
'farms and rural people will at
tend events and participate in
tours to city industrial and busi
ness places
“Agricultural and business or
ganizations are anxious to get
an early start on arranging ac
tivities that will bring city and
farm people closer together foi
a better understanding of living
and working conditions,” Anders
declared
Next step is selection of a
statewide committee to set up a
urogram, together with an ex
ecutive committee Smaller
groups then will be established
to provide suggestions for com
munity activities These will in
clude farm organizations- food
processors, service clubs, gov
ernment, business, industry,
farm and city women’s 'clubs,
religious, educational, civic,
social and various other groups.
will be held at the White Horse
Fire Hall- On May 12, Russell
ville Grange will visit Colerain
and conduct the program.
About Your Home
This year, why not try to do
better than that and really
plant it and .care for it 9 Its;
beauty greatly enhances the
home.
There was an interesting story
m the newspapers a few weeks
ago about a town that was plan
ning a spring drive to make
yards, houses, churches and 01-
fice building more beautiful.
The old court house was to be
painted by a group of volunteer
painters. New planting was to
done around the post oflice
and public library. The house
wives were to spruce-up their
yards.
There is something very Am
erican about this combined effort
of a whole town. It might be well I
for your town to adopt such a j
self-improvement plan. Thar
town, like the home, could stand
beautification .each spring!
Visits Planned to Farm
Very American
Lancaster Farming, Friday, April 20, 1956—15
Automation
Not New to
Penn Farmer
Automation isn’t a coming
thing, it’s here according to Prof
J. K. Pasto in his article, “Robots
on Your Farm?” in the current
issue of “Science for the Farm
er”, the quarterly publication of
the College of Agriculture at the
Pennsylvania State University.
Me writes that automation has
been with mankind “ever since
the prehistoric man picked up a
club to fight off a reptile ” This,
Pasto contends, used the principle
of the lever, basis of many ma
chines and that evei since, man
has been increasing his own pow
er through machines
“On the farm the really heavy
jobs like seedbed fitting, harvest
ing and hauling have been lifted
from the farmer’s back,” he
states in the article. Many other
repetitive jobs, though not muscle
busters, still remain Much re
mains to be done m these “over
and-over-again” jobs such as
animal feeding and watering,
barn and chicken house cleaning,
and the handling of milk and
eggs For these repetitive jobs
automation is just the ticket, he
contends.
The article states, “Automated j
machines on the farm can relieve
the drudgery of jobs that can be,
reduced to a pre-set, repetitive
system This includes many of the
time-consuming, rather unin
teresting jobs disdainfully called
‘chores’. Thus relieved from tire
some routine the farmer can de
vote more time to creative
thought the one important
f *>"■>" that pv«>n the most complex
machines cannot do.”
Evidently
Brown eyes are an indication
of a weak will, black eyes, of a
weak defence Bainbndge Mam
sheet.
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★
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Please nail afl advertisements care of MAIL BOX MAR
KET, LANCASTER FARMING, OUABRYVHIE, fA.
March Milk
Prices Hit
|3.68 Average
NEW YOKK Dr. C. J, Stan
ford, Market Administrator of
the New York metropolitan- Milk
marketing area, announced to
day that March deliveries to toe
milkshed’s 394 approved plants
would return dairy farmers .a
uniform price of $3.68 per hund
redweight (46 5 quarts). The
uniform price in February was
$3.99 per hundredweight and in
March, 1955, was $3.80 per
hundredweight.
The producer butterfat differ
ential for the month was an
nounced at 5 6 cents for each
tenth of a pound of fat above or
below the 3.5 per cent standard.
Record for Month
April’s milk production set a
record for the month, Dr. Blan
ford reported. Consumption of
fluid milk in New York City and
Nassau, Westchester and Suffolk
Counties the marketing area
also set a record for the
month and was the third highest
in history for any month.
The March production totaled
770,505,656 lbs, the Administra
tor said- This was 46,614,132 lbs
or six per cent over last year’s
total of 723,891,524 lbs. The
higher production also came
from fewer Dr, Stan
ford noted Last year there were
49,777 dairy farmers in the New
York pool but this year the
number had decreased 1,542 to
a total of 48,235 producers. How
ever, the production per day
per dairy was also the highest
ever for March. This year it
was 515 lbs per day, as compar
ed with 469 lbs last March, the
increase being 46 lbs per dairy.
Mail Box Market
FOR SALE —Box top Sewing
machme like new; othtfr
household articles. Phone- <740116
Elizabethtown.
FOR SALE 500 Mt. Hope
Yearlings Reason for selling:
To make room for pullets Call
Terre Hill 5-2286 Robert L.
Yohn, Narvon Route 1, Pa
FOR SALE*—Range shelter.
Otoo- 1 condition $4O. Roy Bix
ler, Maytown Road. E-Town,
RDI. E-Town 72647.
FOR SALE.—S Range Shelters
with ISun Porches, 1 Feed
Mixer, 4 ft wood feeders. Fowl’s
Poulltry Fhrm, ILampeter, Pa..
2nd house West of High School.