INTERNATIONAL harvester farm equipment ROurE T 0: > —— _ SALES DEPT. r] HI SERVICE DEPT. □ JUNE-JULY, 1969 • FOR THE MEN WHO SELL AND SERVICE IH FARM EQUIPMENT VOL. V NO. 6 C. B. “Bud” Hoober visits with Ivan Yost (left), state president of Young Farmers of America, 1969 chair man of Young Farmers Institute, current county plowing champ, placed 3rd in state in ’6B. Owner of new 856, Yost farms 400 acres, milks 50 Holsteins. Accounting responsibilities are headed up by Chuck Flick aided by Arietta Arment and Vivian Maitland. The latter (not shown here) also serves as the firm’s receptionist. A Business Built on C. B. “Bud” Hoober and his son Charlie head up one of Penn sylvania’s top dealei ships, al ways in Harusbmg district’s “Top Ten.” “Why not 7 ” you might ask “Look wheie they are . . Lan caster County, one of the most productive agricultural counties in the US. Anyone could sell the line in that lush land ” And right there is wheie the “bear stomped the buckwheat,” as they say m Intercourse, Pa, the home of C. B. Hoober & Son. You see, at least 50 percent of Hoober’s customers can’t plow with a farm tractor. It isn’t they don’t know how, or can’t learn. It’s because their religious be- SALES ACTION The Hoobers of Lancaster County * t i I *1 ,((,, V * dA ✓ 4-^ lieis tell them “no self pi open ed faim power, no rubber on wheels, only steel ” For these are the Amish peo ple, famed every wheie as splen did farmers, modem in many agricultural techniques, often a step or two ahead of then neighboring farmers And while one might own a Farmall, it may be used only as station aiy power. Horses'" or mules must - pull the plow, disk or planter. Hoober has delt with the Amish for many yeais, has woiked with them, helped them adapt certain modern equip ment to conform to then rules. As a result, there is a mutual feeling of tryst and confidence •jV-'v.:-*,. Parts Manager is Charles Eschleman (right), whose 22 years with Hoober probab ly makes him “senior” member, with ex ception of Bud himself. ABOVE: Roy Weav er is an 8-yr. veteran engine specialist. Mutual Respect and Confidence By Larry Herr, Harrisburg here That is why they buy bal ers, disks plows and cultivators all on sceei, none self-power ed fi om Bud Hoober The other half ot Hoobei’s market’ Not greatly unlike the Amish, except they can farm with full power and mn on rub ber-tued wheels Pennsylvania Dutch, descen dants of vast colonies of Ger mans who settled when the land was known as Penns Woods. Scotch-Insh, whose hardy forebears moved to the area's western borders before the French and Indian Wars. And down through the yeais, there has not been too much change. Those who didn’t move Lancaster Farming, Saturday. August 9,1969—1 Charlie Hoober adjusts diesel fuel rotor prior to vo-ag demonstration. Charlie works closely with such groups, participates in service training programs at seven area high schools. ever-westward, stayed on to faim, generation after geneia tion. Lancaster County Hums aie small by today’s standaids, with aci cages fiom 75 on up to some of 200 or more, heie and theie The land is pi iceless, almost 100% tillable, producing cigai tobacco, corn, hay, feed crops and wheat, but mostly “milk,’’ for dairying is the No 1 souice of farm income, and the coun ty’s Holstein herds are famous thi oughout the dairy woi Id Bud Hoober took on the IH dealership at Intercourse in No vember of ’4l. He’ll tell you, “I had $620 of parts and a six nionth note, but we made rt.” Today, the fum sells in ex cess of 50 new and used tiactois annually with the 656 and 544 leading the way Baleis move well, as do pull-type coin pick ets Cub Cadet sales will um as high as 35 a yeai For years, Bud paiticipaled stiongly in- Penn Slate's Vo-Ag education program Chailie has taken over his fathei’s respon sibilities here, and conducts courses regularly. Hoober attiibutes his film’s success to the seivice it gives. And that is tiue Just ask any one in and aiound Inteicouise, Pa, whether on rubber or on steel, or maybe even chasing the bear out of the buckwheat. ■9