14—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. January 15. 1972 Kauffman Holsteins Win Linda Kauffman, Elizabethtown RDI, had the grand champion junior Holstein in Holstein competition at the 56th State Farm Show this week. Linda’s lather, Robert, had the reserve grand champion female in open class competition. Robert Kauffman shows his reserve grand champion female cow in open class Holstein competition at the Farm Show Tuesday Other females in the picture aro: Gov. Shapp (Continued from Page 1) cone at the dairy booth and a baked potato at the potato booth A number of youngsters Irom the Farm Show’s neighborhood accompanied the Governor on the lour and shared in the VIP treatment with the chief executive The only spot where the Governor missed the test of the ical larmer was in the dairy cattle barn His attempt to milk a cow owned by the Buttonwood Farm ol Birchrunville produced only a few drops of milk. One ol his problems came in the milk department when Miss Arlene Lieb, Spangler RDI, Pennsylvania Dairy Princess runner-up, handed him a gallon sized goblet of cold milk Com menting that the goblet looked big enough to take a bath in, after Secretary Jim McHale called out, “Bottoms up, Milt I ,’’ the Gocernor took a sip but came up Jim McHale, Pennsylvania Secretary of Agriculture, greets a crowd gathered on the floor of the Farm Show Building Sunday for special ceremonies and a governor’s meeting with the press to launch the 1972 Farm Show. Kauffman’s Holsteins won second place awards in a class lor the best three females, and the dairy herd class Linda placed second with a 4-H cow in the class for two-year olds. An FFA entry, a heifer calf shown by Paul Horning, Stevens The five Lancaster County 4-H Holsteins which was Kauffman, who showed the junior show grand cham first county group in the junior show Tuesday are shown pion; Carl Weidler, holding Linda’s cow; Sue Kauffman by the following: left to right, Donna Hess: Linda and Raelene Harbold, holding Randy Hess's animal with his nose and lips covered with milk Governor Shapp was delayed in arriving at the preview because he had stopped to give aid at an automobile accident on the Turnpike in Chester County RDI, won first place in its junior division class and placed second in the open show. The count-group-of-five cows took another first place, with cows owned by Linda Kauffman, Sue Kauffman, Donna Hess, Miss Joanne Thompson, left, 1972 Penn sylvania Distinguished Holstein Girl, and Miss Arlene Leib, 1972 Pennsylvania Dairy Princess, Cambria County. YOU’RE if you think that heart disease and slroke hit only the other fellow’s family. Linda Kauffman, Elizabethtown RDI, shows her grand champion Holstein at the junior show in Harrisburg this week. Presenting the championship ribbon is show judge Richard Brooks of Paclamar Farms, Lewisville, Colo. Strasburg RDI, and Randy Hess, Strasburg RDI. In the day’s final class, for a mixed herd of seven cows from one county, Lancaster entries again come out on top with cows representing the Kauffman, Hess and Horning herds. When You Buy Meat As you shop for meat, take time to compare cost per serving, suggest Extension consumer specialists at The Pennsylvania State University. Estimate the number of servings a meat package contains. Then divide the total price by the number of servings. WHISTLING INTHE DARK... GIVE ... so more will live HEART FUND ▼ Pork Consumer News The consumer pays higher prices for “glamorous” cuts of pork, a Farm Show exhitit says. The exhibit suggests that consumers purchase unglamorous cuts such as loin blade and butt and shank ends rather than center cuts of loin and ham. “Consumer demand is greater for the glamour cuts which represent only 20 per cent of the carcass,” the exhibit says. The exhibit also has these meaty statements: packers pay producers 20 cents a pound for 200-pound hogs: