jA. barbecue will be served from 4 to 8 p.m. on Friday by the Lancaster County Swine Producers Assn., Inc., with •tickets available from John H. Henkel, Strasburg HI, or any association director. Judging the contests will be Wilbur Plager and M. M. Smith. Something To Sell? A Lancaster Farming Classified Ad Helps of short talk with your Agway man about what’s new and profitable in the Complete Crop Program for fall grain and you’re off and growing. First, with the certification .label on Agway seed-seed adapted to our area—seed that you know will grow profitably in your soil and climate. Then to grow the full potential from extra-special seed, your Agway man will guide you in selecting the right grade of high-analysis fertilizer for fall planting. Here are some of the seed varieties Agway seedsmen have selected fis extra-profit varieties for 1967.* 5 " ' PENNRAD BARLEY HUDSON BARLEY 1 High yielding and winter hardy. yielding a - r^; t, . . , . Scald resistant. Good bushel Resistant to powdery mildew and . weight stiff> medium - height scald. Awnless kernel. Stiff straw. straw. BALBO RYE CATSKILL BARLEY • , , . ~ , ~, Superior to Wong in yield, winter An early-maturing high yielder. hardiness, lodging resistance and Use for pasture or cover crop. test weight of grain. Awnless for easy combining. REDCOAT WHEAT ' BESBAR BARLEY ■ The highest-yielding red wheat. „ Resistanf-to-Hessian fly And some 1 . High yielding with good winter i stem and leaf rusts. Is susceptible- - hardiness. Resistant to scald, to dwarf-bunt and loose smut... Awnless. Stiff, medium-height Awniess _ kernel. Medium-short, , f very strongs straw. ' \Z *—.- ♦ " r - A'*- Sr - £way 'New, Holland Lancaster —Quarryville Honey Brook ■VTf&A ~18, foster son of Mr. >nd Mi’s. FT A GTS Harvey Hill, H’Town Hi.' n WAef ' Accompanying the boys is J 5 ■ C ® l an honorary FFA chapter Three members Eliza- member Kenneth Umbenhau bethtown Future Farmers of aa E 7° wn t mor High America Chapter departed the Sch ° ol soclal fitudies teacher county Wednesday for west ern parts of the ILS.A. They will spend about four weeks touring that part of the coun try and visiting other FFA members and high school vo ag departments. The trio, all graduates of Elizabethtown High School, are: Barry Kurtz, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kurtz, 1160 N. Market St; Donald Gruber, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. TVlenno Gruber of Bain bridge Rl; and John Cramer, Agway Inc. This will be the third group from the E’Town Chapter to make this trek v/est. The pur pose of the trip is to reward the boys who have contribut ed to the chapter FFA proj ect. Gruber has served as both chapter and county FFA treas urer, and Kurtz served two years as chapter secretary Gruber and Kurtz received their Keystone Degrees in January. ' *”,» Lancaster- Faming, Saturday, July 23, 1966-^,, SADDLE UP, WE’RE HEADIN’ WEST Three E’Town Future Farmers and an advisor preparing to depart Wednesday for the west coast for a four-week tour. Left to right they are- Barry Kurtz, Donald Gruber; Kenneth Umbenhauer, advisor, and John Cramer. MILLPORT ROLLER MILLS R. D. 4, Lititz FOWL’S FEED SERVICE R. D. 1, Quarryville R. D. 2, Peach Bottom ROHRER’S MILL R. D. 1, Ronks C. E. SAUDER & SONS R. D. 1, East Earl H. M. STAUFFER & SONS, INC. Witmer GRUBB SUPPLY CO. Elizabethtown MOUNTVILLE FEED SERVICE R. D. 2, Columbia HEISEY FARM SERVICE Lawn and Bellaire DUTCHMAN FEED MILLS, INC. R. D. 1, Stevens WHITE OAK MILL R. D. 4, Manheim MILLERSVILLE SUPPLY CO. llillersville PARADISE SUPPLY Paradise HERSHEY BROS. Reinholds
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers