, i • A View From The When the General Assembly sent the legislation which per mits the State Government to spend money for the next year over to my desk for signature last week, a curious thought oc curred. What, exactly, does $1,713,- 410,398 in general appropriations mean to us? What does $1.71 billion really stand for? People have always needed safety and the chance to gather the basic necessities of life. A long time ago we found there is safety in numbers. Some people could guard the group while the others worked. The guards were paid a percentage of the work er’s goods. As life became more complex, guarding the group and hand ling the politics of satisfying as many members of the group as possible became a very complex job. Government was created. Land, water, fresh air, food, money all are in demand in modern life. In a huge State, like Pennsylvania with more than 11 million people, there is competition for everything we value in life. That’s where politics comes in. The government is, in effect, ap pointed by the people to hear the demands of all the differ ent groups of people in Pennsyl- THE BRINGING FEED BUXMONT 40 BRINGING Higher Milk Production From Dairy Herds BRINGING New Customers to Agway Corn Distillers’ Dried Grains, Corn Gluten Feed, Brewers’ Dried Grains, Wheat Bran, Wheat Middlings, Soybean Meal, Cane Mo lasses, Ground Limestone, Mono-Calcium Phosphate, Dicalcium Phosphate, Salt, Manganous Oxide, Zinc Oxide, Iron Carbonate, Calcium lodate, Cobalt Carbonate, Copper Oxide, O-Activated Animal Sterol, Vitamin A Supplement (Palmitate), Vitamin E Supplement (I-alpha Tocophery Acetate) WHAT’S IN IT FOR YOU! ! ! ! 100% Vegetable = Top Palatability = Vitamins & Minerals Fortified = FV F = Most Value For The Lower Milk Production (Full Value Formulation) Money = Costs Please Note If you are wary of feeding a urea type feed, check out the BRINGING FEED BUXMONT 40 Your cows Will be glad you did and so will you! NEW HOLLAND LANCASTER 219 S. Railroad Ave. Pike and Dillerville Rd. 354-2146 394-0541 Governor's Office vania, weigh the advantages and disadvantages of giving some of our resources to one group or another, make decis ions, and carry them out. The Government’s resources are money, from taxes and other sources. The demand for a share of the Government’s resources comes from every corner of the Commonwealth. Our job, in State Government, would be simple if only there were enough resources available to the State to give everybody all he asked. The truth is there are many more very worthwhile causes than there is money to spend. For instance, education. For the last 200 years, the United States has pegged its hopes to the dream of educating every citizen to the highest possible level. But how do you give every man equal education? The answer is, the Govern ment attempts through its best judgment to provide facilities which can attract students and then teach them in a proper manner. To this end we are spending the better part of $1 billion of State money on edu cation in Pennsylvania. And, then, there are those people who are seriously ill, in firm with age, or too young to IT’S IN THE SCOOP!! INGREDIENTS Elimination of Deficiency Worries = r rn jr> r. 4. _ Production of Milk at Lower Feed Cost = Lower Unit Cost Economy = Coll AGWAY Today care for themselves. They, too, need help from State Govern ment. When all else is said and done, Americans have a lot of human kindness. For these people, we will spend about $250 million in the next year. For example, $13.4 million will be spent on mental health centers in communities across the State. With these cen ters spread out across Pennsyl vania, disturbed persons can be treated better and closer to home. Sewage must be removed. We entrust that job to our govern ments. This year the State Health Department will distrib ute $8 million as the State share of the cost of operating 652 lo cal sewage disposal plants in the Commonwealth. There are more people today than ever before, so we need more jobs. There are many Pennsylvanians earning wages below the poverty level; they need better jobs. To create more jobs all across the Common wealth, the Pennsylvania Indus trial Development Authority will leceive $lB 6 million. They will loan the money to businesses which need money to set up new plants or expand others, thus cieating more jobs. We expect to gain 50,000 new jobs for that $lB 6 million in the next year. There are several thousand severely handicapped children High milk production - Assured Feeding Confidence QUARRYVILLE 27 E. 4th St. 786-2126 Lancaster Farming, Saturday. July G. 1968 New Honey-Fruit Spread Developed At Penn State A promising new table spread, fruit flavored honey, has been developed by the Agricultural ■Experiment Station at The Pennsylvania State University. If as good as surveys indicate, fruit-flavored honey should in crease sales of this product, says Robert Berthold, Jr., graduate assistant working on the experi ments in blending honey and fruits. "Our surveys found that many potential users of honey think it lacks variety in flavor or is too sweet. By adding dried fruits, we get a tangy, sweet-sour taste. In sampling honey blend ed with apricots, about 80 per cent of the persons who said they didn’t like honey, liked it with apricots,” he states. Large batches of the new hor in our State. They are deaf, blind, have cerebral palsy, or have muscular dystrophy They are not able to attend schools, so we will spend $8 million to give special education to some 4,300 of these youngsteis. With inci eased education, li braries and their facilities are veiy much in demand We ha\e tried to find some money to sup port them. Next year we’ll spend about $5 million to help support An effective faimyaid light -533 libraries across the State. mg system is an aid to safety The list of programs and seiv- and convenience Extension ag ices is long and shows that Penn- ncultuial engineers at The sylvama is a State dedicated to Pennsylvania State Umversiiy, investing in its people The Gen- suggest a combination of ya>d eral Appropriation Bill is tiuly lights on poles and flood lights a human investment plan for all located over entrances to farm Pennsylvanians buildings ad says it's like baling oney,so he got the best Get big capacity and fop quality with an Allis-Chaimers 303 Hay Baler! The 303’s wide 60" pickup handles light or heavy windrows—cleans the field! Twin-feed rakes move hay evenly into the baling chamber, comb out wads, to form tight, square bales. Grooves are formed on the bale to minimize twine or wire slippage. See the 303 and the complete line of A-C tools for haying! Allen H. Motz Form Equipment Roy H. Buch, Inc. Grumelli Farm Service Ephrata, R. D. 2 Quarryville, Pa. L. H. Brubaker N. G. Myers & Son Lititz, Pa. Rheems, Pa. Nissley Form Service LH. Brubaker Washington Boro, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. ey-fruit spread, made on com mercial size equipment, were as tasty or better than small amounts made in the original experiments. Berthold used a very finely crystallized honey. Thicker than the liquid variety, it does not run, eliminating the complaint that honey is messy. Both sun-dried apricots and freeze-dried strawberries were found to have long shelf-life and, if anything, the flavor improved in time. Concentrations of 7 per cent apricot, or 2 percent straw berries, produced a balanced sweet-sour flavor. As other tangy fruits such as cherries, pineapples, and cranberries be come available in dried form, they will be tested with honey. One honey packer has already gone into production with toe new product At present only the apricot and strawberry fla vors are being marketed. Sai-s may become a boon to beekeep ers and packers For a number of years beekeepers have seen the per capita consumption cf honey decrease while per capha consumption of most other aga cultural products has remained steady or increased. Light Up - "4' New Holland 7