M l.»iU’inU«r Knrmlng. Snturdny. August 2f>. 1970 DHIA MONTHLY REPORT Owner . N.imr llrrrcl ll.ii i \ G Kindri Mix) tilt Mooio till tl F A M.n\ r»ln’lm.tn 00 ticirli lilt Amos A Kli'.inoi IlnshcN IkMitiv till Ideal' tilt .'olin & It F.in melon Soki mi (*.iike II Ranck Pamela • on.is S Noll lUil.i Giaceful "loses N Good Polly Joanna 'ohn C MeUlcr Scots Ci islme 1,011 Ada 7 lannce F Wclk Spottie OrH .Indy RH Sis GiH . T Aithur Rohier & Sons Mamet OrH Ox 6i H • T Rohrer Witmei Astei Dan S Stoltzfus Faith Beth S R Shellenbei'gei Pixie Audiey Goldie Paul N Biubaker 35 16BS Leßoy S Smuckei Queen RII Sam & Allen Kieidei Jackie RH Gina RH Melvin R Eby Ei ma RH Allan R Shoemakei Jane GiH 5 0 305 (Continued on Page 20) (SR— a big edgerfe£rfi§ a „"■ =*■ v-;’: a SS* outside. New Super 717 forage harvester has extra-strong, reinforced cutterhead that keeps chopping in toughest cutting conditions. It chops uni formly fine to 3/16". New sickle bar attachment with heavy-duty reel and forged-steel knife guards requires less maintenance... lasts longer. JL nr ISEW HOLLAR PVISIQN OF SPERRY RAND C. E. Wiley & Son, Inc. L. H. Brubaker 101 S Lime St Qu.myville Lihb RD‘l 786-2895 626-7766 L. H. Brubaker A. B. C. Groff, Inc. 350 Stiasbmg Pike 110 S Raihoad Ave. Lancaster New Holland 397-5179 354-4191 (Conliiuu’cl fiom I’oro 13) I»a>t Arc 3o;> 30.) 30.) 204 303 305 303 Rll 305 305 50 106 RH Rll 305 305 RH RH 68 3-10 305 305 280 305 9-10 12-3 73 10 9 RH HI I RH RH 302 288 305 3-3 5-7 3-3 305 305 6 10 8-11 305 RBi Sw 305 295 10 8 42 RH RH 305 305 291 GiH GrH RH 6 11 50 4 5 305 305 RH RBi Sw 305 305 303 305 This big edge inside... Milk Tr»l Fjf 707 002 17 800 18 096 705 20 388 704 647 13.949 17.121 757 16 891 752 16 896 750 654 10 825 19.976 747 634 19 470 14.411 745 731 681 673 36 43 34 45 20.815 17 018 19 931 14,806 744 686 647 22.534 19,167 16,291 33 36 40 743 635 19.747 15,521 742 16,922 741 681 19,063 18,855 736 683 667 19 435 18.179 19,041 734 653 21,729 15,532 734 17,601 15 985 16,020 734 631 19,030 733 17,130 732 To Honor Hneeiis A box sou.il mu' H(jn,nr dome to lionni llu' 411 \chu\enunt D.ij (iimns will be lu Id at 6 30 p m Wednesday .il the Faun .nut Home Centei A <riu.iic d.inoo will follow .it 8 p in New York 4-H A gioup of 25 .now Yoik 4 11 membcis will visit L.inc.istii County Tuesday ufloinoon and Wednesday moi nmg, i cpo r I s Miss Joan Lucas, assistant exten sion home economist The gioup will tour Lancastei County. 4-H Wildlife Club The Lancaster 4-H Wildlife Club's activity for August was, to some members, the highlight of the years activities Club foundeis, the Mehin Longs, opened then large Pottei County hunting cabin to a gioup of about 16 pei sons who ate all their meals by an outside file The women piepaied good tast ing food which included chicken noodle soup, spaghetti, watei melon and biownies The gioup left Lancastei at Sam Friday and auived at the “-MILK MARKETING DOORS MUST DEKEPT OPEN! The dairy farmer can afford to see milk-marketing doors close like he can afford an extended plague of garget. Back in the ‘Teens and Twenties, handlers closed their doors deliberately, but with full intent of opening them again after farmers had seen ‘the light of reason ’ Today, many of the dairy farmers’ market outlets are in danger of being forced to close up —with very little hope of taking the lock off, ever again. And when the number of handlers shrinks to a handful. Monopoly moves in: Even the pretense of competition is dead. Do you want this to happen by default? Or would you rather fight? And don’t think it won’t take courage. Now, more than ever, it takes cooperative courage —the do-some thing-about-it kind made possible by interaction in a membership of nearly 1 0,000 dairy farmers of Eastern Milk Producers. In Eastern, ‘doing something about it’ means defending the farmer’s market for milk. It means increasing his share in over-all milk profits. It means active promotion of milk and milk products. It means helping the farmer when he’s ‘locked in’ by quarantine or bad weather. And much more. It’s the foundation for cooperative courage. To participate in East ern’s fight to keep milk-marketing doors open—and in all other benefits —call your local Eastern representative right now. Or write: Long's at about 4 30 p m That Venn Willow 111 .un\nt the gioup hiked up »he On August 14. the Penn Wll ,'l i road to a beatei dam low Ml Community Club held Us flu next dav included anothei iigulm monllilv meeting In con- Ink. to i slate (plain wheie in Junction with a sleep-oul at the oiMduals iiiltial.d Us walls That home of Mr, and Mm Hobul ~( einoon eon-ist. d of a 25 mile Maiun dm. to a 1 ike to swim and sun ,\flei tlu Inisiiu ss meeting. bum meinbei'i placed games and had Sunday was llu long li ip home ~ trt-nt The following moining h\ wav of the PcnnsvKama u u . chef's club piepaied bicak- Oinml Canyon The next meeting planned is The next monthly meeting on to help fill out iecoid books and September 11 will be a talent o socialize show Start raising more and better Calves the Easy NURS-ETTE way No more carrying pails of warm water or hand mixing rmlk replacer. Just fill the hopper of the NURS ETTE with milk replacer and the NURS-ETTE will mix milk replacer and waim water and keep it waim until calf nurses the mix (appiox. 14 oz.) Then it will mix a fresh batch of water and replacer. For more information contact YOUNG BROS. NURS-ETTE SALES AND SERVICE Ph. 717-548-2462 Peach Bottom, R. D. 1, Pa. 17563 V EASTERN MILK PRODUCERS COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION. INC. Kmne Road. Syracuse, New York 13214 fasl foi the club members
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers