6—Lancaster Parmin, Home Economics Scholarships Are Available Twenty-four scholarships of $2OO each will be available for the 1967-68 academic year from the Lydia Tarrant-Extension Homemakers Scholarship Fund, announces T. H. Patton, direc tor of the Cooperati' a Exten sion Service or Penn State Uni versity. These scholarships are avail able to students majoring in home economics and enrolled at all the four-year accredited home economics schools or col leges in Pennsylvania. Contributions of women ac tive in the home economics ex tension program throughout the Commonwealth support the fund. Donations for the 1966-67 fiscal year totaled $5,100. Students interested in apply ing for one of the scholarships may obtain information from the head of the Department of Home Economics at the college where they will be enrolled as sophomores, ju.nors, or seniors this fall. Established in 1953 at the first Extension Homemakers Week, the fund has provided SET YOUR CLOCK FOR NEXT YEAR'S CROP WITH OUR FALL-WINTER FERTILIZATION PROGRAM Lay your plans now to beat the weather by top dressing yearly Legumes and applying plow down mixtures this fall. Try CONESTOGA BRAND FERTILIZERS For these services Chickweed killer alfalfa mixtures All fall grain analysis ' Special mixing to soil test Bulk spread Pick up or bags ' Special terms on fall plow downs. Make Conestoga Brand your winner this fall. LANCASTER BONE FERTILIZER CO., INC. Quarryville Oxford 786-2547 215-932-8323 Saturday. September 9,1967 • Frey's Dairy (Continued from Page 1) lor. It takes four men in the barn three hours to milk. Twelve silos the largest a newly constructed 30’x80’ one supplies the herd with hay lage and corn silage. Alfalfa and corn are the only crops grown With all the size of this op eration the average yearly milk production per cow is still eleven to twelve thousand pounds. The milk tank holds 4.000 gallons and daily pro duction now is about 12,000 pounds. The four men employed in the barn never get to the field and four other employees be side Armor and Jay do the field work. They have nine tractors. As the cows go dry they are taken from the free-stall barn and placed in the old barn for a week until they are com pletely dry. Then they are placed in a pen with a me chanical feeder. Here they re ceive all the silage they can eat and only six pounds of 243 scholarships totaling $36,- 500. For the 1966-67 academic year, 24 students received scho larships. They represented 14 different colleges, says Patton. grain « day. Shortly before The Freys have increased the tour also stopped in York freshening they are moved their herd from 200 head to County at Sulking Springs (back to the old barn and the the present 400 in the last year Farm and Rutter Bros. They grain is gradually increased to and a half. They want to add continued on to The Atlantic 15 or 20 pounds a day. The another 50 head in the next Breeders headquarters for a best milking cows get up to 25 year. charbroiled steak evening meal pounds of grain a day. The two hundred people on and open house. COWS EATING FROM THE BUNK stretched through the 420 foot free-stall barn on the FREY’S DAIRY FARM, Now 5 engines to choose from with the Allis-Chalmers One-Ninety tractor! Pick the fuel, pick the power you want for 5-bottom work! Gasoline or diesel in the One-Ninety—or get 15 to 20 extra horses in the new One- Ninety XT, diesel, gasoline or LP gas. No matter which one you pick, L. H. Brubaker Lancaster, Pa. Nissley Farm Service N. G. Myers & Son Washington Boro, Pa. Rheems, Pa. Grumelli Farm Service “This One-Ninety is < whole tractor family! Quarryville, Pa. Conestoga R 2. The National Breeders Tour stopped here on, their way from Hershey. you’ll be getting the workin’est, easiest-operating 5-plow tractor you ever saw! You have to experience a One-Ninety to know how great it is. We’ll be glad to provide the experi ence. Drop in and see us! Allen H. Matz Form Equipment New Holland L. H. Brubaker Lititz, Pa. Chef 1 Long Akron, Pa.