PRESENTING SCHOLARSHIP checks to two county 4-H’ers is John Long, chairman of the Lan caster Kiwanis Club agriculture committee. Recipients, of the checks are Mark Nestleroth and Barbara Gamble. L. F. Photo. Fed. Land Bank Lowers Rates Warren R Fankhanel, Pres ident of the Federal Land Bank of Baltimore, announced today that effective September 16, 1963, the interest rate charged by the Bank on new loans will be reduced from 6 to and that on the same date, the Bank will voluntarily reduce to 5M>% the interest charged to borrowers whose loans now carry a 6% rate Fankhanel stated “These ac tions are in line with the long time policy of The Land Bank to provide mortgage credit to farmers at the lowest possible cost consistent with sound bus iness operations”. Fankhanel also pointed out that the vol untary reduction in rates on loans outstanding is virtually unprecedented outside the Land Bank system The Federal Land Bank of Baltimore, which makes loans through Federal Land Bank Associations, has over $ll9 million in loans to farmers in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Dela- -SHS WolgemutfiSros latj >:■ Mount Joy, .-Pa. ■EOB>3£BS .j&msssm ware, Virginia and Puerto Rico. This voluntary reduction m in terest rate will result in an nual savings of approximately $325,000 to thousands of farm owners Mr. Paul B. Whipple, Mana ger of the Federal Land Bank Association of Lancaster, sta ted that the reduction in in terest rates charged by the Federal Land Bank of Balti more will result in a substan tial savings to farmers who have land bank loans in the three counties served by the Lancaster association The re duction in rate applies to $3, 628,000 in loans outstanding in this area The Federal Land Bank Association of Lancaster, which has its headquarters office in 411 West Roseville Road, Lan caster Pennsylvania and Farm Bureau Building, 17th and Cumberland Street, Lebanon, Pennsylvania, services more than 450 land bank loans, to taling over $6,500,000. Horse sense is what keeps :hem from betting on people BARTLETT PEARS Pears For Every one.. Beginning Today Wholesale and Retail - Bring Your Own Containers OPEN: 8 o.m. to 8 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call At The . SHANK FRUIT **fr. New Danville Pike (Pa. Route 324) R. D. #6, Lancaster, Pa. Summer Rambo Apples: Plsb t # lia' \i.hu'L >j5J "V Jv SiiJ c . o • Scholarships iHunting Licenses (Continued from Page 1) lm gi i A graduate of Hempfield Un-" * ° ion High School, Miss Gamble was Pennsylvania Cherry Queen last year, a county, district and state winner in the 4-H bread demonstration, a 1961 delegate to the National 4-H Club Con gress, Chicago, and a member of the Lancaster - County 4-H food judging team at Pennsyl vania 4-H days in 1960. Nestleroth, a graduate of Manheim Central High School, was a double champion of the Lancaster County 4-H Pig Show last week In 1958 he became the first 4-H Club member to ever sweep all thiee divisions of the Lancaster County 4-H Tobacco Show Nestleroth was a mem ber of the county’s state cham pionship swine judging squad last year. Now, 10% More Milk Dairymen everywhere are talking about, Ful-O-Pep Cattlc-izcr Dairy Feed—the biggest breakthrough in dairy cattle nutdtion<in this century. In herd after herd, the. story is the same: more milk on the same (mount of feed. Based on an entirely new principle in ruminant nutrition, Ful-O-Pep Cattle-izer Dairy produces up to . 20% more usable ehergy thah regular Super Milking Feed. And records show tins extra energy results m an average of 10% more milk after only 4 weeks on feed. What would 10% more milk, mean for your profits? Ful-O-Pep Dairy Feed (Complete or Concentrate) Morgantown Feed & Grain Stevens & Morgantown Grubb Supply Co. Elizabethtown S. H. Hiestand & Co., Inc. PEARS and choice new pear varieties Pennsylvania sportsmen can soon purchase their 1963 hunt ing and trapping licenses from any of the 2,100 Issuing agents acros the state. But for the first time since 1949, they will have to pay higher fees ” R S Lichtenberger, Chief of the Pennsylvania Game Com mission’s Division of Adminis tration, announced today that the new licenses are being lushed from the printer to county treasurers, sporting goods stores and other issuing agents He said shipments will be completed before Septem ber 1 The new licenses be come effective September 1 and aie valid until August 31, 1964 Under amendments to the Salonga ARE PICKED! Millport Boiler Mills H. M. Stauffer & Sons, Inc. •\V / Leola and TVitmer Kirkwood Feed & Grain CLOSED SUNDAY • • FARMS Pennsylvania Came l,»w enac ted by the recent session of the state legislature and sig ned into law by the Governor on August 7, the fee for the 1963 resident hunting license will be $5 20, an increase oi $2 05 over last year. The only exception is that resident youngsters between the ages oi 12 and 16 years, inclusive, will pay a $3.20 fee. Game Com mission spokesmen emphasizcci that youngsters making appli cation for the $3 20 license must write their date of birth 1 on the application blank in addi tion to giving other required information They said that even though every application must show the hunter’s age in a blank provided for this pur pose, the 12-16 year old appli cants must also write in then date of birth. Millport Kirkwood 'vOW DiT*' Ph. 392-6022
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers