—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 9, 1961 12 Best Food Buys Vegetables Find A shoil work-week gives piomise that mosi retail to ed prices will be unchanged from levels ol last week Watch newspaper ads for spot baigams, suggests Tom Piper, Penn State Extension Maiketing Agent, as most stoies will be attempting to balance inventories aftei the holiday pi emotions Wholesale prices for broil er-frveis have dipped to a xiother new low Retail spe cials can be anticipated for the next couple of months as supplies in the next ten weeks will be 8 to 10 pei cent more than last year Stewing hens are increasing in supply as we enter the fall months, this item now joim, the list of good buys Storage stocks of turkeys are 63 per cent over year-ago levels and cm lent product ion indicates 25- per cent moie turkey than last jnar, another good buy item Fiesli poik "picnics and lamb shoulder i oasts will ap peai at featmed prices in some stores Beef prices are generally unchanged and eco nomical selections of steaks and i oasts will prevail in most markets Small size eggs provide an economical protein choice too ‘Depressed and demoraliz ed’ is the pioduce wholesal er expression for the condi tion of fresh produce prices With local tomatoes, cucum bers, salad greens, eggplant, peppers, sweet corn and J \J Ip J v breeding a £ SERVICE f Hi Represented Locally By WILLIAM H. WALKER Ph. ST 6-2395 CLIFFORD N GIBBLE Ph. MO 5-4252 RICHARD 8.-HURST Ph. EX 3-0945 TIME TO SOIL TEST Hess Bros. FLORIN. PA. Ph. ML Joy OL 3-7195 OSSS® POWER T-®«® INSURANCE TRACTOR GENERATOR with r~ ;*Whwatt] y iPiuvidcs dependable emergency electric tpoiver for lights, heal, refrigeration, milk cooler, and water system. Nerf WIN CO 12 KW PTO with MAXI-WATT gives Enfra Power, Performance, and Value' Bolted tractor model ami complete line ?™ l „ nclor and en 'J |n; generators from 1500 to 12,000 watt. Call 808 SHANK F3i Free estimate and size to suit your needs. L H. BRUBAKER 353 Strasburg Pike - Lane R. D. 3, Lititz, Pa, Ph. Lane. EX 7-5179 Strasburg OV 7-6002 Buyers Market squash costing less than any time this season, foodshop pers witness a buyer’s mar ket Add to this the outlook expectation of the biggest potato crop since 1946; de clining onion prices; and a variety of sources for car rots, celery beets and cook ing greens—and the econo mical buys are numerous. Western lettuce and new sweet potatoes are also low er in price this week-end The fresh fiuit picture is not as varied but peaches, pears, grapes, plumbs, apples and a wide variety of melons ■ ■ ■ 1941 20th Anniversary— l96l ■ {summer sales! I PROMOTION I s Wow-Bigges* Than Ever! E \ SAVE-Special Anniversary Prices | E MANY-MANY SPECIALS 5 ■ ■ ■ See Us Today! ■ I HI. Charles B. Hoober [ ■ INTERCOURSE PH. SO 8-3501 J ■ ■ inaaiißnaarnaaiiaiaaiaHamiaaiaqßnnaak take guesswork out of dairy feeding... I « «:rV©~® ( <w * * * mJj vM * • • y # #' *H # * *9w w • * ® •« « «® « @S } A • • . |3h Xfc w v # , \5? fp # ( « /, • « NEW STEP FORWARD In This is what dairymen are saying about Farm Bureau's revolutionary "Maximum Profit Dairy Feeding" Program. Take time to discuss "M.P.F." with your FARM BUREAU FIELDMAN you'll Be Glad You D;d. START TODAY... FEED THE FARM BUREAU WAY! • School Lunches (From cage 1) lunch daily in school through this program, which is oper ated cooperatively with State and local agencies Some of the increase this year will come as the result of a spec ial $2 5 million fund author ized by Congress to furnish commodity assistance to the schools in some areas of ec onomic need in line with the expanded food distribution polic.es now being carried out by USDA Overall, the Department es- provide a wide selection of economically priced fruit Locally grown Bartlett pears prune-plums, and the popu lar canning vanlies of peach es are available now For Prompt/ Courteous Service/ Always/ Call . . . . Lancaster EX 4-0541 MOhawk 5-2456 New Holland Quarry villa ELgin 4-2146 STerling 6-2126 timates that Federal con tribution year to the school lunch program will reach $268 million In fiscal 1961, Federal contributions totaled $225 million in cash and commodities The program, m its present form, began in 1946 when Congress passed the National School Lunch Act “to safe guard the health and well being of the Nation’s child ren, and to encourage the do mestic consumption of nutri tious agricultural products ” When the new program got underway in the fall of ’46, less than one school child out of six was able to buy lunch at school. This year, in its 16th year of operation, one City and State . Dairy Feeding! Manheim PENN SQUARE MUTUAL FUND Investing in Diversified Securities for INCOME and CAPITAL GAINS Possibilities NO BUYING CHARGE NO SELLING CHARGE Subscnptions Accepted With No Minimum Share Requirements Free of Pa. Personal Property Tax in opinion of Legal Counsel NON-ASSESSABLE J. L. HAIN «c CO. 451 Penn Square. Reading, Pa. Please send me free information about Penn Square Mutual Fund Name Address LISTEN TO WCOY-COLUMBIA 1580 ON THE DIAL 12:05 to 12:10 Daily For accurate up do minute data on stock prices. new electronic brain accurately determines optimum feeding level for each cow in your herd. Scientific & Efficient *iC. COU BUR^ out of every three school children -will eat lunch at school Of the total lunches served, about one in 10 served free to children who cannot afford to pay. ~ CLEAN SHOES Clean leather shoes often with saddle soap, and shine frequently with a good paste or cream polish to keep the leather pliable, reminds Ber nice Tharp, Penn State ex tension clothing specialist Dried out leather fibers grind together and cause perman ent damage to uppers if the shoes are not polished often Polishing also helps to make leather water res.stant. FR 5-4424
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers