Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 29, 1970, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    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