Interdependence Emphasized In caster on November 26, starting 1968 Farm-City Week Observance . . „ _ , . e . . rT , Service Road (next to Christ Pennsylvania’s Farm - City The Pennsylvania State Univer- Craft Snles Bu i ld i ng) and pro . Week observance scheduled sity, pointed out that the 1988 fw.r for November 22-28 will em- celebration will also focus atten- ceed two blocks t 0 the Center * phasize, more strongly than tlon on the need for a discus- jj. M. Smith, Lancaster Coun ever before, the interdepen- sion of problems of mutual con- , Aeent savs the i mDO rtance of dence that exists between rural cern to all Commonwealth resi- *. g “*’“ y * „ and urban people. Marlon R. dents. this b,n( * uet cannot bc over Deppen. State Farm,City Week Loc , llyt the Annual Agrlcul . stressed. For the eighth time in chairman, announced today. ture-Industry Banquet will be rccent yetrs > tbe busines s and Deppen, assistant’Cooperative held at Lancaster County’s new agriculture communities will be Extension Service director at Farm and Home Center, located drawn together as a group to ATTENTION FARMERS... WHY SHOULD YOU BUY A NEW CASE FARM TRACTOR NOW? ,25% discount on any New Case tractor I on our lot purchased during November. 2. Waiver of Finance Charges until spring. 3. 7% tax investment credit. 4. 20% depreciation allowance on 1968 tax return. 5. Protection from company price increases. STOP IN TODAY FOR ANY EQUIPMENT NEEDS. KINZER EQUIPMENT CO. Box 23, Kinzers, Pa. Phone 442-4186 cH P S|of * pen lllB. peaFtien* n^ssas&Sig& ..stfsSgfs® 1 * ca r\oad. o* =tp,d to chafr 3 ’ ca*W»OSSfe«« BC “ SSs^* 0 *” 4 - ne vf^ el ° C Co. 1 968 Lancaster StoceteW 5°“ IS ' 3MB es«.^“ 8 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 23,1968 discuss mutual problems and LATE FALL HAY CUTTING activities. Calvin D. Johnson, Special Consultant on Public Affairs for ou , can a c u ttmg New Holland Division, Sperry- from legume-grass meadows if Rand Corporation, will be the you time , ‘ h « cutt P rQ P« rly principal speaker. then mulch for winter protec- Pennsylvania is linking its on ’ ® ays Dr> George R. Gist, celebration this year to the f ns |? n . agronomist at Ohio theme, "Farm-City Partners Sta * e University, for Better Living.” County Meadows should be permitted committees are organized f row a * e October, Dr. throughout the state to plan p ist P° ints °nt- Right now, community programs in cities, legumes are storing food re towns, and rural areas. serves in their root systems, and "Agriculture has become a bil- harvesting during this reserve lion dollar business in the Com- £uild-up will reduce next year s monwealth,” Deppen said, “but ? ay , cro P- 11 even result this is only a small part of the in almost complete winterkill, economy compared to the im- especially after a wet season, pact of agricuture on other en- Food reserves in legume roots terprises that depend solely on are lewer after a wet season farms for the products they than after a dry one. process and sell.” F°r a late harvest, Dr. Gist Agriculture takes more steel, advises cutting during the last rubber, petroleum, trucks, week of October or the first tractors, and electricity than week of November. This late any other industry, the chair- harvest will keep regrowth and man emphasized. Agribusiness— depletion of food reserves at a the food and fiber produced on minimum. farms, its transporting, process- As a mulch following the late mg, and marketing involves harvest, he suggests up to four to varying degrees, 37 percent tons per acre of strawy manure of Pennsylvania’s total labor or two tons per acre of old hay, force. straw or similar material. “The rapid increase in the number of people in the United States has created new and un- usual demands for food, housing, phosphate powders have cal industry, and a host of other c i U m acid phosphate, necessities,” Deppen pointed Tartrate powder has potas out. “It has lead to some con- s j um acid tartrate and tartaric cern that land was being gob- ac j d bled up at such a rapid rate Combination powders have that soon there would be little two acid ingredients—calcium left on which to produce food.” acid phosphate and sodium It is true, he said, that much aluminum sulphate, land is needed for houses, fac- Read the label on the can fac tories, shopping centers, high- f ore buying baking powder ways, and recreational facilities. a jj ingredients are listed In Pennsylvania, three million Almost all baking powder acres of farmland have been used in home baking is double diverted to other purposes since a c,ting or combination powder. 1950. Baking powders react at dif- More important, it seems to f eren t rates of speed because of have widened the gap between the d iff ere nt acid ingredients, rural and urban centers and to rphis means you can’t change have separated farm and city b aking powders among recipes people by a much wider margin and use same amounts, than land alone. “In celebrating - City iUes,” the state chairman Week, efforts are being made to emphasized biing the important issues to the It is essential, Deppen said, to forefront and have the two im- realize that farm and city portant segments of our society people, working together, are attempt to solve differences that the most potent power for pro might exist in local commun- gress in this nation NEEDS CAREFUL TIMING • Have You Heard? (Continued fro n Page 15) 19