•—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 20, 1966 THIS AGED COW, Beauty, shown here with owner Robert Weaver who raised her from a calf, produced 14,990 pounds of milk last year, according to Weaver’s owner-sampler records. She is one-third of Bob’s present milk herd, though he hopes to expand into a full-fledged dairy operation following gradua tion next year from Lampeter-Strasburg High School. L. F. Photo • Pouitiy Queen (Continued from Page 1) tile State Poultry Queen title next week during the Annual Poultry Festival The Poultry Festival will be held at Hershey August 23-28, corresponding with Pennsyl vania Dutch Days Festival Week chairman E Marvin Herr of Willow Street R 1 an nounced that judges for the Queen Contest will be Kay Cooper, Fashion Coordinator of Pomeroys, Harrisburg; Lloyd Kaiser, manager, WITF-TV, Hershey, and Jan Pettin, Emiles Hair Dressing Acad emy, Lancaster Robert Malick of WGAL-TV, Lancaster, will serve as master of ceremonies. Miss Wivell is a 1966 gradu ate of Donegal High School ■where she took the academic course She plans to pursue a career in home economics, and hopes to start college next year. Presently she is working with, the Maytown center of give you 10% more milk? Yes!... according to dairymen wKo have changed to new Fui-O-Pep Cattle-lzer Dairy Feed Many herds on Fu!-0-Pep Cattle-fzer Dairy for a full year report increases of 10% to 20% more milk-compared to the previous year on another feed. The extra efficiency of Ful-O-Pep is increasing net return per cow consider ably for these dairymen. The new concept in dairy feeding nutrition—Cattle-izer—allows the cow to get as much as 20% more available energy from the same amount of feed. That’s why a ton of new Ful-O-Pep Cattle-izer Dairy can give you as much milk-makmg potential as 2200 to 2400 ibs. of regular feed. See what Ful-O-Pep Cattle-izer Dairy can do for your profits! ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF THE QUAKER OATS COMPANY Here Id H. Good Terre Hill H. M. Stauffer & Sons, Inc. Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. Stevens, Penna. &^>^VVXXXXXXXXXXXXIJ^XXXXXXXXV^XXXXXXXV& Project Head Start. . Last Friday, 'Miss Wivell . (Continued from Page 1) was a winner in the 4-H coun- Merest is dairying, and his ty dress revue roundup: she budding herd presently con will be one of six girls repre- SIS * S three grade Hob senting Lancaster County at stem c 0^ s and °? ie the district dress revue Mon- “ addition to his dairy work, day at Philadelphia. be has earned projects in to bacco, swine, and corn during Miss Wivell is a member of the past .three years, both the Donegal Sewing and Weaver presently holds the Cooking Clubs, and of the County FFA’s highest office, Elizabethtown-Doriegal 4-H and is also president of his Community Club Her chief local chapter, hobbies are horseback riding, Operation of the Weaver sewing, cooking and, when farm was taken over earlier she gets time, reading. this year by Bob’s older . brother. Young Weaver does One of the following mx * be _ cro r ed . 196fr67 the home farm, and also works Pennsylvania Poultry Queen at for ne hbm , He des 3 p m on August 27 by reign- .. ° labor and man . mg Queen, Ruth Konhaus capital, labor, ana man Miss Wivell, Donna Jean- Heagy, Lebanon County; Ann Breisch, Schuylkill Couv&J ty, Mary Ann Ruskavichr Northumberland County; Ju dith Ann Ely, Northeastern Pennsylvania, Loretta Sweitzer, York County Can a change of feed Ful-O-Pep Cattle-izer Dairy Witmer • Robert Weaver HUB S. H. Hiestand & Co., Inc. Salnnga Grubb Supply Co. Elizabethtown agotnerrt for hii.ovm enter-, thoughtful, and determined *!>. prises, and pay* cash rent for proa'ch ito problems will coil his three a?roi.ql .conji.ljo»d- Unue to .he. iijiportant. osijeta •His acre and a -half'of tbbflc l In ‘'Bob', Weaver,’* 'peVsbnaflly; co is fanned on "the halves, and will certainly help pave but all of his other projects his way toward a successful he owns 100 percent. life in farming. Following graduation from . high school next June, Bob U.S. farm fire and lightning hopes to become established losses arc estimated at $lB7 in his own dairy and tobacco million for 1965, down three farming enterprise somewhere percent from 1964’s record in the southern part of' Lan- high of $193 million, according caster County. Judging from to reports from farmers’ rmi past achievements, his quiet, tual fire companies. SUCKERS MH-30 C *l* 1 *- y -T -v • -•% |r^w * - AVAILAB LE AT TH E FOLLQWI KG DEALERS LANCASTER ; r , Farmers Suppl; Jupply 215 E. Fulton St. Landis Bros. ~ . Manheim LEOLA Martin’s ; Roy A. Sfoltzfns - 22S^’Nevy'Hi|§^PiB^f^' Organic Plant Food “ J Grofftovrn Road. BAREVILLE Martin’s Hardware BLUE BALL J. B. Zimmerman DENVER Gehmau’s Feed-Mill’ ELM Bomberger’s Store EPHRATA Martin’s Feed Mill FARMERSVILLE Farmersville Eqaip. C*. GAP J. C. Walker & Sons GORDONVILLE Gideon L. Fisher John J. Hoober HONEY BROOK T PR . x ftVT M. D. Kern Hardware LEBANON Lebanon Chemical €•. INTERCOURSE - Plant Food Store R - MH3O is the U.S. Rubber reg. trademark for its growth U.S. Rubber Co., Chemical Division, Naugatuck, Conn. Uo/7X DISTRIBUTED BY , SjaqKETOWN^PAJ STOP COLD WITH KIRKWOOD Kirkwood Feed £ Grain LITITZ Eby’s Mil!, I«e. MORGANTOWN Ira Nissley NEW HOLLAND Kauffman’s Hardware Earl Sauder, Inc. PARADISE ' John J. Hess If QUARRYVILLE Lancaster Bone Fertilizer M. B. Gregg, STRASBURG J. B. Zimmerman R Son Weaver’s Farm E«ni|b WEST WILLOW West Willow Farmers- Assoc. .WHITE HORSE E. D. Kurtz Pbo»S397-3539,