GRANGE NEWS Fulton Grange #66 met Mon day evening at Oakryn with Clif ford W. Holloway Jr. presiding at the business session. The Grange will again provide a Savings Bond for a Harvest Queen contestant at the South- • Form Women (Continued from Page 17) Treat, at Howard Johnson’s Res taurant, Our next meeting will be a Wer and Mrs Charles McSpar “Come As You Are Party” at ran attended the State Grange the home of Mrs. Richard Hess, Leadership School at Gettysburg E.D. #l, Strasburg. Pa. It will College June 23-26. be held on July 24 at 7:30 p.m. A very fine and interesting Farm way szis.% There’s a Faraway barri cleanerfot a thing tight. TaHc jour bam. One unit will handle any- to a Faraway man, you’ll see, thing from a single gutter to 4or 6 Affiliate of Berg Equipment gutter set-ups. Corporation, Marshfield, Wisconsin. Rugged drive unit. Here’s Your Farmway dealer is: .and power for even the biggest * lams. Each part of the bam cleaner is designed to decrease drag. Less %, maintenance, lower operating cost. I > New nickel alloy, German made * -chains are optional. The ?4" has a tm -minimum breaktest-of 54,000 lbs, J - Steel elevator 1 pc. seamless, { F. D. 4,Lititz I heavy 10 ga. copper content steel i Fh. 626-5996 ( plate. No bolts or rhets. L m HUSKY, HEAVY-BODIED HEIFERS -in a hurry! ...with Ful-O-Pep Calf Ration Get your future milkers off to a sound, early start for top pro duction. Keep them hale and hearty, grow them big-framed and husky —in a hurry —with Ful-O-Pep Calf Ration. It's ummmmmm good. Tempting and tasty, calves start nibbling at 3 to 6 days. Feed along with Ful-O-Pep Milk Replacer, gradually increasing Calf Ration until calf is eating about 4 lbs. a day. Antibiotics help prevent scours and protect health. Special proteins, vitamins and minerals pack a real growth punch. Complete Ful-O-Pep Calf Ration helps your calves develop big frames, deep chests, and good feed capacity. Ask us for more feeding details. S, H. Hiestond & } Co. Salunga ' Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. Leola ern Lancaster County Commun ity Fair in September, The Pride in Pennsylvania committee. Russel Hartsoe chair man, reports progress on the Clean-Up, Paint-Up project on the Grange Hall and grounds. The Grange also made plans to have the floors of the Grange Hall cleaned and refinished. Fifty three from Lancaster County attended the Pomona District Visitation meeting held at Trappe, Montgomery County June 21. Mrs. Jacob Fantom, Edith Am- SHENK'S FARM SERVICE Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. Stevens Harold H. Good Terre Hill display of antiques were exhibit ed at this meeting. The program opened with group singing “Sil ver Threads Among The Gold"; Mrs. Jesse Wood read “Know Your Antiques’ Age By Owner ship” and “Old Age Sure Isn’t For Sissies.” The following spoke about their exhibits: Mrs. Owen Groff, Norman Wood, Charles Tindall Sr., Mrs. Thomas Brad ley, Mrs. Freeda Huber, Mrs. Stanley Stauffer Jr., Clayton J. Metzler and Charles McSparran. Fulton Grange will be host to the Lancaster County Grange Visitation meeting July 14 when Salisbury Grange will present the program, the theme being “Looking Ahead In Agriculture”, and Colenan Grange will fill Officers’ chairs. The annual pic nic will' be held July 28. fed up.with a plugged mower? here's real non-stop mowing-conditioning Now you can make hay without getting off the tractor seat With this new New Idea cut/ditioner which does the work of a mower and a hay conditioner, you get plug-free non-stop operation in all kinds of hay. “ It’s great in heavy, down and tangled hay which'plugs "stckll bar mowers. Where your mower won’t go, this machine will! Does speedy job of shredding stalks, cutting weeds, clipping pastures. Available in 7-ft. and 6 ft. models. Windrow attach* ment available. Longenecker Farm Supply Rheems Graybill Machines, Inc. Lititz, R. D, 2 A. B. C. Groff, InCr New Holland Roy H. Buch. Inc. Ephrata, R.D. #2 SITCHERS AND STEWERS by Donna Lindley The Sitchers and Stewers met recently at Chestnut Level Church House. Vice-President, June Aaron called the meeting to order. The 4-H pledge was said. Mary Douts read the minutes and took roll call. A swimming party was discussed, and a refreshment committee was appointed. A committee was also appointed to raise funds for 4-H. June Aaron clos ed the meeting. Immediately following the Kinzer Equip. Co. Kinzer A. L. Herr & Bro. Quarryville Chas. J. MfComsey & Stms Hickory Hill, Pa. Landis Bros., Inc. Lancaster Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 5,1969 meeting was a talent show, a violin solo by Karen Gehron, and acrobatics by Kathy Byers, Diane Kreider played a song on the piano, Diane Dundam play ed two songs on her clarinet, and Julie McMichel led a song. After the talent show Mary Douts and June Aaron talked about the trip to Penn State. PENN MANOR COMMUNITY The fourth meeting of the Penn Manor 4-H Community Club was recently held at the home of Philip, Chris and Steve Stehman. The role was called and members responded by giv ing a progress report on their projects. It was voted to help sponsor the IFYE “walk” m connection with their August convention in lowa. The meeting also featured a scavenger hunt, baseball and refreshments. The third meeting of the Penn Manor Kookie Kooks was held Wednesday June 25 at the Penn Manor Junior High School The older girls made Peach Upside- Down Cake while the younger girls and boys made pudding Duung the business meeting the amount for dues was decid ed The next meeting will be at 11 30 a m on Wednesday July 2 at the Penn Manor Junior High School. • Standard (Continued from Page 13) cattle were not decreased by j feeding the complex mineral | vitamin supplement. In measur ing reproductive performance, no significant differences were observed for cows fed the com plex supplement compared with those fed the standard ration. “This was not a test of the value of vitamins and minerals as such,” Dr. Kesler states. “This was a study of the need, if any, for supplying additional amounts of the commonly fed vitamins, B-vitamins, trace min erals, and rumen stimulants ” . In the first year, 409 pairs of cows were compared—with one cow in each pair fed the com plex supplement and the other cow the standard ration. Of these, 141 pairs completed a second year on trial. The results seem to dispel any fears that high gram feeding might re duce rumen synthesis of essen tial vitamins. Data was collect* ed from reports of the Dairy Herd Improvement Association and by farm visits by county agents twice a month. An adequate diet calls for two or more servings of protein foods every day, reminds Mrs. Kuth J. Buck, Penn State Exten sion foods and nutrition specia list. In red meats, poultiy, or fish, one serving would be two to three ounces, or about tha size of a half breast of chicken or a good size hamburger. la other protein foods, one serv ing would be two eggs, a cup of cooked dry beans or peas, or four tablespoons of peanut bufo ter. Label every package of food you put into the freezer with name of contents, how prepar ed, and date packaged, advises Mrs. Ruth J. Buck, Penn State Extension foods and nutrition specialist. Keep a recoid of all food frozen, including size of package and date fiozen Check off packages as you use them you’ll know what’s in the er at all times. Use the oldest packages first. ißy Ronny Thomas KOOKIE KOOKS By Ellyce Jean Engle How Much Protein? 1 Food In Your Freezer 21