m Trucks, loaded with wheat from Lan- Bcaster County farms, stand in-line waiting Hto unload at the Marietta elevators of Car- ■First Public Defender Attorneys Bn County To Give Free Legal Aid K. Attorneys Wilson Bucher Kolumbia, and Edgar R Barnes Br.> Lancaster, have been select-. Kd by a committee of the Lan caster Bar Association to be the ■first Public Defender Attorn eys for Lancaster County. K' The institution of a Public foefender service for Lancaster ■bounty was announced by W. faensel Prown, president of the ■Lancaster Bar Association. Its Ipurpose will be to serve worthy •applicants, charged with cnm- Bnal offenses, other than mur feer, who because of their in ability to pay an attorney’s fee, iare unable te- secure needed Regal advice, counsel and aid. I Indigent persons charged bwth the commission of crime pnay request this service Khrough William Wagner at the. tOffice of the Clerk of Quarter pessions or' the warden at the County Prison. I An affidavit regarding the in ability of the person to pay will ibe included on this request, j [Applications will be screened' tand then assigned to a member [of the Lancaster Bar Associa tion appointed to the Board of [Public Defender Attorneys. • . - , .nplete pacity... % c per mile operating cost lla Electric S artei Shank’s Garage 216 NEVIN STREET LANCASTER uastaa:::: LANDIS STONE MEAL CO. | Consult Us For The Best WHITE LILLY ALL PURPOSE MINERALS Agricultural Ground Limestone Hard Poultry Grits Feed Mixing Calcium Calcium Stable Grits ~ - Lime Spreading Service RHEEMS, PA. Call Elizabethtown 7-2901 Night Calls 7-2906 Trucks, Loaded with Wheat The first board will be com posed of Bucher and Barnes, kho were selected by the com mittee from numerous appli cants. After assignment, a board member will take com plete charge of the case. The Public Defender Service of the Lancaster Bar Associa tion is the product of more than a year’s work by a committee of that organization. In June of 1955, the Hon orable H. Clay Burkholder ap pointed a committee composed of John Milton Ranck, Peter K. Honaman, Lawrence E. Stengel and W. Roger Simpson with Sam Ferguson Musser as chair man, to consider the needs for such a service and the means of obtaining one. committee determined that such a service was needed m Lancaster County and re ported their findings to the Association as a body in Janu ary, 1956. In June of 1956, the committee was authorized to proceed with the organization of the service on a temporary basis, with the entire cost to be paid by the Lancaster Bar As sociation. The Public Defender Attorn eys will receive a modest com pensation from the Lancaster Bar Association. -In the .past, defendants in crminal court who were unable to pay the cost of legal services, were repres.ented by court ap pointed lawyers, who received no compensation for such Bucher was born m Marietta and is a graduate of Marietta High School, Class of 1938, and Franklin and Marshall College, Class of 19£2. He served m the U.JS. Army from 1942 to 1946, attaining the rank, of captain. He is a graduate of Uni versity of Pennsylvania Law School, Class of 1948, and began practice of law_in Columbia in January of 1950, being admittedr to practice in Lancaster County Courts and the State Supreme Court in that month. He is a member of the Lan caster, Pennsylvania and Ameri can Bar Associations. gill Inc. Great variance in test weights was reported from the rain-soaked grain (Lancaster Farming Staff Photo). Homans Hosts to Flying Farmers At July Meeting , Since plans for the July meet ing of Pennsylvania Flying Farmers at Perth, Ontario had to be canceled due to the air port at Perth being shut down for repairs, the group met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Homan, Pennsylvania Furnace for a fly-in breakfast on Sunday morning, July 15. After break fast the group attended Fair brook Methodist Chuch in a body. After church a bountiful picnic lunch was arranged on the lawn, and_l7 planes landed on the Homan strip beyond the barn Over 50 persons were in attendance. ' Flying weather was excellent for most of the state. There was the usual good time of fellow ship encouraged by the hospital ity of 1954-55 Pennsylvania queen Aileen and her husband Elwood. The - Homans operate a 300- acre farm with 33 Holstein dairy cows with approximately 35 head of young heifers They til! 170 acres and have 30 acres ot permanent pasture m the rich Nittany Valley west of Penn State University They own their own J-3 Cub and their own licensed landing strip. Mi. Homan, a director of the Pennsylvania Flying Farmers, is active in the local grange be sides being superintendent of the Fairbrook Methodist Sunday School. Aileen, Pennsylvania queen for 1954-1955, is active in P T.A. being .chairman of the enter tainment ( committee. She too is active in grange, presently being Home Economics chairman. In spite of her busy farm life and looking after their four daugh ters, ages 4,6, 7 and 8, she had lime to solo and expects to be come a full fledged pilot soon. Barnes was born in Lan caster and is a graduate of Mc- Caskey High School, Class of 1941; Franklin and Marshall College, 1944; and Dickinson Law School, 1948. He served in the U. S. Air Force from 1944 to 1946. He served as law clerk to Tudge Albert L. Watson, United States District Court, Scranton, 1948 to 1950, and began his practice in Lancaster m 1950. He is associated with the firm of Arnold, Bricker and Beyer. He is a member of the Lan caster County, Pennsylvania and American Bar Associations. The words picked bv the press secretary to describe the President’s reaction, and some times Mrs. Eisenhower’s reac tion, to various developments, are sometimes mighty creamy. Judge Lewis New Man-of-Year for Potato Growers COUDERSPORT, Pa. Judge Robert R Lewis of Potter Coun ty 'last week was named “Man-ol- Cooperative Potato Growers As sociation The annual award, made tor the first time by members of the association, was for outstanding service to the Pennsylvania pota to industry over a period of many years Presentation was at a mass meeting of approximately 1,000 association members and their families at the close of the first day of the annual field days of the association at nearby Potato City Hotel and Camp Potato The association also honored Samuel Gray, Kensington, Md, retired after 31 years as north eastern manager for the potash industry. The field day issue ot the association’s magazine was dedicated to him for helpful service in the fertilization of po tatoes on the heavier soils of Pennsylvania. Originated Queen Ceremony Dr E. L. Nixon, adviser and research director for the potato growers association, m present ing the association’s award to Judge Lewis said he originated the Potato Blossom "Queen ceie mony and crowned the first queen at Camp Potato in 1936 Since that time he has taken an active interest in the association and provided the land now used for experiments in potato breed ing and selection under Dr Nixon at Camp Potato, using a greenhouse dedicated a year ago. The 12 candidates for the title of 1956-57 Pennsylvania Potato Blossom Queen were introduced tonight. Judging takes place Thursday and the new queen will be crowned by State Secre tary of Agriculture W L. Hen ning. The events here included an air show and rescue demonstra tion by helicopter,' the opening of a fashion show, a potato re cipe contest, teen-age fishing contest, Red Cross farm pond safety demonstration and potato culture and grading demonstra tions A display of machines used in potato growing attracted attention • Mock Council Session Climaxing the program was a mock council session conducted by Mayor Fred A. Schidmg of York, “honorary mayor” of Po tato City. Thursday’s program included “the annual potato 'pick ing contest, finals in the fashion show, and tours of the experi mental potato breeding plots. The white collar class is us ually the first to feel the pinch of the high cost of living; this was so m the twenties but the white collar class hasn’t done much about it. I gillliillllilllllilllllllllllllli I DR. SALSBURY’S VACCINES 1 g Only vaccines produced on R. O. P., non- g g contaminated (C. R. D. complex or Sal- H g monel la) Eggs. ~ g FOWL & PIGEON POX cost about 4 g bird. WAVAC (water) New Castle * Bronchitis, 3, to .01c. m INTRANASAL New Castle or Bronchitis g about 3 c All vaccines attenuated, bacteno- == statically-sterile, and carry their own stabi- g hzers. Cannot carry respiratory disease g or pullorum, etc. j|§ See Your Sal&bury Dealer : Rep. F. W. fisher,Leacock Pa. [ h “' 6!4!2 g Lancaster Farming—ll Friday, Aug. 3, 1956 87.5 Per Cent of Votes Favoring 1956 Wheat Reins WASHINGTON (USDA)— Pielimmaiy returns from rc ierendum held Friday (July 20) in the 36-State wheat producing aiea show that 87 5 per cent of faimers voting favor marketing quotas for 1957 crop wheat, the U S Department of Aguculture announced today. Piehminary returns show a total of 261,495 votes counted about 25 per cent less than last year Of these 228,737 (87 5 per cent) favored marketing quotas on 1957-crop wheat and 32,758 (12 5 per cent) were opposed. Although this is a preliminary tabulation, the final total is not expected to show any signifi cant change. Because wheat marketing quo tas proclaimed by Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, last May 15 are effective on ap proval by two-thirds or more of farmers voting in the recent referendum, marketing quotas will be in effect for the 1957 crop This referendum marked the sixth time farmers have voted on marketing quotas for wheat. They approved quotas fo t the 1941 crop by an 81 per cent favorable vote, for the 1942 crop by 82.4 per cent, the 1954 crop by 87 2, the 1955 crop by 73 3 per cent, and the 1956 crop by 77 3 pei cent No teacher can do much with the brain ot a student who doesn’t want to learn | USED TRACTOR | I SPECIALS I m 50 T and 45 Baler= ||| 50 Farmall Cub & |l| == 54 Farmall Super Al^ |s & Cult. |ji = 44 Farmall BN &.= = 46J' u Farmall H &.= mC. B. Hoober^ H FARM EQUIPMENTm Phone 8-3,501 || INTERCOURSE PA. || Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -sC per g