12—Lancaster Fctanlnq. Saturday, July 18, 1959 County Poultry Tour Is July 29 Lancaster County Poultry Assn, Is sponsoring the an imal Poultry Tour July 29, with York County industrial, canning and farming operations on the agenda for the one day event. Co-chairmen Mark Myer and Richard Kreider report the tour will begin at 9 a.m. July 29, at the entrance to Gladfelter Paper Co., Spring Grove. (Go west of York four miles on Rt. 30, left on Rt. 116, pass the plant, ac ross the railroad and park in the large lot on the right.) Here the tourists will see pulp wood processed into paper, in a plant employing 1,000 persons, nd using the most modem equipment. At 11 a.m. the Guy Leader Jr., farm, New Freedom Rl, will receive the tour. The op eration includes 30,000 breeder hens, 60 Guernsey milkers in new barn, and modern, equipment. Lunch will be “basket style" with tourists bringing their own and eating in a park near Shrewsburg. Light refreshments available at a park stand. At 1:15 pm. the tour will reach the Summers Canning Company, New Freedom. The company grows 4600 acres and contracts 1,000 acres of peas, string beans, baby limas, corn, tomatoes, beets and carrots, for proces sing in the plant. The Eugene Blevins farm, Stewartstown RDI, will be visited at 2 30 pm, with 1,- 400 puMlets, 135 acres of bearing peaches, 75 acres of apples and 35 acres of sweet and sour cherries to be seen. At 3 pm. the tour will visit the farm of Hugh Mc- Pherson, "New Park. He oper ates five farms in southern York county, with 30,000 layers in. nine houses, 800 acres tillable land 250 acres potatoes, 20 of peaches, FOR ANY FARM PURPOSE MADE THE FARMER'S WAY i » Lancaster ■yL Production Credit Ass’n. ■|}W 411 W. RomtUU M Lancactw, Fc. Ph. Lome. EX 3-3»3l iIOUDEN WATER [BOWLS Wafai l f ifafc^^UAßS • A* achooj* and icaiiing duramen «t water tuarts pa* fr rt»jimlaMMt> and Ion,; lift. Ami liu louden ht'crn , . , it 9 L«r a lion \ nf a prha U«1 Set ua (or vmu bain njmpment aieeda. 9 AN» 4TANcVIoNS S L,TTC * CARNICNS 1. H. BRUBAKER 350 Strosburg Pike Lititz, R. D. 3 Ph. Lane. EX 3-7607 Lilitz MA 6-7756 Sirasburg OV 7-6002 42 with apples, balance gen eral crops. All Lancaster County Poultrymen, -their families and friends are invited to share in the tour and see what the York County neigh bors are doing. BE CAREFUL The power lawn mower is not a plaything, remind Penn State safety specialists. Keep a safety eye open whenever you mow the lawn. It’s good health insurance to be care ful. NOW! Farm Bureau PROFITMAKE DAIRY FEEDS . . . the right protein level to balance yoi roughages . . . the exact texture for easei feeding and handling. MILKMAKERS OVER 1400 TDN ground or partSallr pelleted MILKMAKER SUPPLEMENTS OVER 1400 TDN ground or all pelleted PRO-BLEND "SO" ground or all pelleted Qualified Assist You In Designing a For Prompt . . . Courteous . . . Service . . . Call . • • IC. CO Ui BUR 1 Wheat Quota Vote Set Thursday More than 6,000 Lancaster County farmers will trek to the polls next Thursday to join wheat producers in 39 states in the annual vote on wheat marketing quotas and acreage allotments. This will mark the seventh year for quotas, if the nation’s producers approve them by at least two-thirds majority. ~ A “Yes Vote” majority will Farmers with 15 acres or mean marketing quotas will less of wheat and compilers be in effect for the 1960 with the feed wheat program wheat crop in all 39 com- are exempt from both voting mercial wheat states; farm- and restrictions, ers who exceed wheat ac- If a “No Vote” is record reage allotments will be sub- ed, marketing quotas and ject to quota penalties on penalties will not be in effect their “excess” wheat, and for the 1960 crop; acreage growers who comply with al- allitments will remain in al lotments will be eligible for feet as a condition for price price support at the full lev- support eligibility, and el. (Present supplies indicate growers who comply with a 75 per cent of parity sup- their allotments will receive port level. 50 per cent parity supports. Choose from wide selection c HAY AMD SILAGE QUALITY VARY CONSIDERABLY FROM FMM TO FARM- AND ON THE SAME FARM FROM YEAR TO TEH That's why Farm Bureau offers a Wide Selection .of quality M Feeds. This wide selection otters you the opportunity to cioott die one feed that provides the exact protein level for maxima economy ■with your hay and silage. It otters you awj choice in selecting the feed texture that best suits your own fee* ing and feed handling methods. —' Fieldrnen are anxious FEEDING PROGRAM DARI-KRUNCH FITTING OVER 1400 TDN all pelleted free flowing ideal for bulk handling '"OWNED and CONTROLLED Quarryville ST by Lancaster Comfy FARMERS County wheat ceived their igA -farm acreage a ii„> week. a % Individual a ii. ( each farmer’s S h. 46.633 acre co u Z( is shared by 7.47 acres per County grow e 1 pected to follow J tional local Patt * ct . th * qif; choice with a vote. s S However, wm « ing of the St La w way and continue " 1 of allotments m a l ' Belt, stronger SU p L be gained for rej in recent years, n , Wheat growers * at the same ti me J pected glut f rom '.[ grain sections, (Turn to pa K , to Serve am Profitable Lancaster EX Manheim MO E 1959? New Holland OVER 1400 TDK partially pelleted all pelleted completely balanc* highly pciatdbh