Coin Club Show One billion dollars will be dis played Friday, September 24 through Sunday, September 26 at the Red Rose Coin Show, to be held at the Farm and Home Center, 1383 Arcadia Road. Ad mission is free. The billion dollar exhibit from the U.S. Treasury Department will include large and small U.S. notes, ranging from $1 to $lOO,- 000. The Treasury Department printing press demonstration consists of actual printing of currency by the intaglio method. We Pay The... My V \\ V /\W -223 P ',, ** ~ t X •' * A ,/ v -'•- -v„; v >**, T a . ! /•Sp v \r-<' $ I s* J f HIGHEST INTEREST RATES OBTAINABLE ■"Z* , y ■r , '■"? ' The coin show will feature ex hibits by members of the club. Twenty-five dealers from the eastern United States will offer coins for sale or trade. The show will be open 4 to 10 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday; and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. The Farm and Home Center is off the Man heim Pike, near the Route 30 intersection. In celebration of the 13th an nual coin show, the club has struck a special medal to com memorate the steamboat “Lady Gay,” which was an excursion type boat that traveled the Con estoga River. The medals will be on sale, and souvenir wooden dollars will be given away. i tt @ I ****&' V**&rf:V v, , .A' y (On Certificates • 90-day Golden Passbook*) 5 3 /4 5 S* From no other bank can you obtain a higher rate of interest on Certificates and Golden Passbook accounts. The law says so. Each account insured to $20,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Today—tomorrow for sure~bring your money to Fulton where the inter est is greatest. FULTON »«BANK f-.yjS on 2 year Certificates (Automatically renewable) on 1 year Certificates (Automatically renewable) 90-day Golden Passbook ($lOO initial deposit) SERVING LANCASTER AND DAUPHIN COUNTIES Member Federal Reserve System / F.D IC Dry Weather The spread of Southern Corn Leaf Blight (SCLB) is near a standstill in the Corn Belt, the Federal-State Information Center on Corn Blight reported last week. Dry weather and advanced maturity are holding blight in check there. Many farmers who planted blends last spring are ex periencing difficulty harvesting this fall because of premature dying of T-cytoplasm among healthy N-cytoplasm plants. Mid-Atlantic States along the East Coast are reporting con siderable damage to the crop due ♦ Under $lOO,OOO Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 25, 1971—9 and Maturity Slow Com Blight to SCLB, probably because higher humidity and other fac tors contributed to the continued spread of disease in this area. Plant pathologists are finding it difficult to determine whether corn lodging was due to blight or secondary diseases which have become more apparent in recent weeks. Corn that'either died or matured early has been attacked by many molds, including several stalk rot diseases. Field visits conducted in early September in the Corn Blight Watch showed little change in SCLB intensity. Evidence of SCLB was reported in 80 per cent of the fields visited compared with 77 per cent two weeks earlier! Ear lesions were reported on at least two ears on five consecutive plants in 78 per cent of the fields visited in western Indiana, where ROHRER’S MILL R. D. 1, Ronks HEISEY FARM SERVICE Lawn Ph: 964-3444 MOUNTVILLE FEED SERVICE R. D. 2, Columbia DUTCHMAN FEED MILLS, INC. R. D. 1, Stevens HAROLD H. GOOD STEVENS FEED MILL, Terre Hill INC. Stevens, Pa. PARADISE SUPPLY Paradise Leola, Pa. FOWL’S FEED SERVICE R. D. 1, QuarryviUe R. D. 2, Peach Bottom H. M. STAUFFER & SONS, INC. Witmer H. JACOB HOOBER Intercourse, Pa. GRUBB SUPPLY CO. Elizabethtown C. E. SAUDER & SONS R. D. 1, East Earl HERSHEY BROS Reinholds WHITE OAK MILL R. D. 4, Manheim more intensive sampling of fields is being conducted, compared with 67 per cent two weeks earlier. Ear lesions were similarly present in 56 per cent of the visited fields in the rest of the seven State test area, compared with 47 per cent two weeks earlier. Fewer fields were visited than earlier in the season, however, because of early harvest of some sample fields. It was not possible to evaluate the extent of leaf damage by SCLB in many fields because of leaf drying from drought and normal maturity. No Minimum Age The Constitution does not prescribe a minimum age for federal judges, the question of age remaining within the discretion of the appointing officer.