A View From The Governor's Office By Gov. Raymond P, Shafer Tho Appalachian Regional otherwise could not have been Commission has provided Penn- built. sylvania with vitally-needed new A detailed report of the first schools, hospitals, low-income f,°“ r “ haU J cars ° f P ro S^ . . ... under the program shows that housing and highways which $ 58 . 8 million m Fedcral Appala . You hear a lot these days about fertilfz- ers being uniform. But only UNIPELS have all the prescribed nutrients chem ically and physically uniform from pel let to pelletl Not just from ton to ton. or even bag to bag. So, the ingredi- power available, remember: no fertiii ents cannot be segregated or zer ‘ s etter suitec * f° r broad separated. □ And, unlike wWI KU W casting than UNIPELS— other fertilizers, every pel- so uniform "The All-Season Fertilizer." about UNIPELS? TM’S ORTHO, CHEVRON DESIGN, UNIPEL-REG. U S. PAT. OFF. ehla funds has resulted In $3OO Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 1.19(59—7 million worth of projects for Industrial dc Appalachian counties. vclopment conservation and Hie Another $60.6 million from ad- like, ditional Federal sources, $733 More than that—but less easy million from the Stale and $lOO to measure—we have found in million provided locally makes the Appalachia program a new up the total, means for uniting the will, the What this means is that Penn- and the spirit of sylvania has found in Appalachia men and w ° men of diverse back ' a new and effective vehicle for gr ° unds and experience into a uniting Federal, State and local coh ® sive force for the common financing the help to solve ex- gootl tremely pressing domestic prob- In short, some $3OO million in lems in education, housing, new projects necessary to rejuve- i Plant PIONEER "New Generation" Hybrids Medium Season 3567 3571 Ask your Pioneer Salesman about these Outstanding Varieties - / ■ ,' > -f-' iy " Vi,'- »/ V,. _ - B R AND ■• ' . A J SEED CORN : i- i- • ■ ■ -.•• • v ..-a , : '—’ :. - _•> __— let has the same shape and density for maximum uniformity when applied from a broadcast-type spreader. □ So, if you're planning to broadcast and plow down this fall when.there's extra time and man- Full Season 3304 3306 3369 A nalo those Pennsylvania counties included in the Appalachian re gion simply could not have been started without the Appalachian Regional Development Act of 1965. Constiuction of new vocation al technical high schools had been given “top priority” in the Appalachian program in Pennsyl vania. Twenty-eight such schools al ready have been completed or are under construction with Ap ualachian aid, at a total cost of $105.7 million, and we fully ex pect that 12 more will have been built by June of 1971. Of the total cost of the 28 vo tech schools already built or now under construction, Appalachia contributed $10.3 million, the State $52.4 million, local sources $26J7 million with the balance of $16.1 million coming from other Federal funds. Particularly important in those figures is the fact that approxi mately half of the total cost came fiom State government itself. In addition. Appalachia has provided $392,909 in seed money loans for planmng and pre con struction financing to make pos sible $2O million worth of low and moderate income housing in the Commonwealth. Eleven Pennsylvania piojects, which togethei will provide 966 housing units for State residents have already been appioved by the Appalachian Regional Com mission, and that is one thud of all such piojects initiated to date in all 13 Appalachian states Appalachian funds in the amount of $6 9 million also has resulted in $6O 6 million in new hospital facilities while another $5.2 million has generated con struction of $42 1 million in class room facilities at both public and private colleges and univer sities. In other areas, $19.7 million from Appalachia has resulted in $26 2 million in mine area res toration projects and $5 6 million in 36 access roads to industrial parks at a total cost of $12.6 mil lion. With a record like that, Ap palachia cannot help but be the most successful exercise in Fed eral, State and local relations ever conceived. Dairy Assn. Holds Meeting In Lebanon The Annual Dinner Meeting of District #lB of American Dairy Association and Dairy Council of New York took place at Hei sey’s Diner, Lebanon, Monday afternoon, October 27 at 12 Noon with J. Russell Ober, Lit itz, presiding. Committeemen were elected as follows; John Lesher, Lykans Rl; George Mayer, Myerstown R 1 and Willard Gray, Dowmng town Rl. Ted Roodhof, Public Relations Director, ADA & DC of New York and William McKinney, Na tional Dairy Council were the featured speakers and gave those attending a presentation of the American Dauy Association and Dauy Council’s expanded milk piomotion and educational pro giainraing Also, those attending had an oppoitunity to see the amount of icseaich and develop ment that goes into the making of TV and other commeicials to make sine of their acceptance by the special target audience. In addition to those elected, othei committeemen making up the Distuct #lB local boaid in clude John C Ki one, Glen Rock; Eail Patches, Annville, Mark Wagner, Hummel stown Good news The boss says the fnm is going to make money this year, despite the staff’s best ef forts.