Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, June 17, 1972, Image 17

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    Lancaster County Farmers Assn.
Membership in the Lancaster
r y unty Farmers Association
reached an alltime high of 1172
reported Nathan Stoltzfus,
membership secretary, at the
recent June board meeting.
Lancaster County now joins the
majority of Pennsylvania Farm
Bureau Associations who have
reached their 1972 membership
goals.
Statewide membership is
approaching 16,000 as Penn
sylvania leads the nation in rate
of growth. Only several county
associations have not reached
goal at this date.
This is the first time in several
years the the county has reached
goal according to James Shertzer
who chaired this year’s mem
bership drive.
Initial plans are now being
formulated for the 1972 policy
development sessions. The first
statewide meeting will be held
June 28-29 at the Embers
Restaurant north of Carlisle.
Meeting will be legislative and
association leaders.
William Guhl, Tayloria, county
policy development chairman,
reports that each county has been
requested to bring five issues for
consideration to the state
meeting.
Since this is the first stage of all
Farm Bureau policy, Guhl urges
any member to bring any issue of
concern to farmers to him at
their earliest convienience. He
can be phoned at 717-529-2569.
Reynolds
& Yellot
COMPANY INC
REISTERSTOWN,
MARYLAND
833-1840
Builders Since 1953 /
ATTENTION GRAIN GROWERS
SEE A BROCK GRAIN DRYING SYSTEM IN OPERATION ON OUR OWN FARM.
HFjg
Announcement has been
recently made of a Mrs. Penna.
Farmers Assn. Contest as part of
the regional ladies day to be held
in Reading July 19.
Any woman member is urged
to consider this contest. One lady
will represent the Lancaster
association. Both county and
regional entries will be judged on
a five minute presentation en
titled “What PFA Means to Me.”
The women’s committee also
announced plans to charter a bus
from the Farm and Home Center
to the Reading meeting. Women’s
Committee member Mrs. Helen
Wivell expressed hope that there
would be a good turnout for both
the trip and the contest. Complete
details can be obtained from Mrs.
Wivell. Her phone is 426-1303.
All policy holders of Farm
Family Insurance will soon be
receiving a visit from either of
two recently hired service
representatives. The program,
perhaps temporary, will serve
the over 200 subscribers until
additional agents can be put in
the field. An additional agent has
been hired and is starting
training
The service representatives
hired are Mrs. Thomas
(Patricia) Coffey and Mrs. Roy
(Mary) Martin. Both reside in the
Elizabethtown area and will
function from their homes until -
office space is found.
The business analysis ac
countants are completing con
Pole-type
Farm
Buildings
BROCK
DUAL PURPOSE GRAIN BINS
pH!
jagcs]
r r?r T * r
FOR GRAIN STORAGE AND DRYING
48 MODELS
18 TO 40 FOOT DIAMETER BINS
CAPACITY FROM 2200 TO 40000 BUSHELS
L M. HERR EQUIPMENT, INC.
R. D. T, Willow Street
WE SELL, SERVICE AND INSTALL
sulation of the 1971 analyses.
They also have openings for new
accounts.
Both the insurance and
business analyses as well as the
Safemark supply programs are
independent self supporting
operations.
In other action the board
discussed the possibility of
having booths at the county fairs
again this year. Fairs under
consideration are Solanco,
Lampeter, Ephrata and
Manheim.
Any member who could help
organize such displays is urged to
contact president James Kreider,
Quarryville. Kreider stated the
board position when he said,
“Such displays help both farmers
and the association, but will not
be possible unless members in
each area are willing to assist.”
Plans for the annual meeting to
be held October 20 at Harvest
Drive Restaurant are
progressing. The restaurant’s
new enlarged facilities will ac
comodate approximately 500.
A capacity crowd was served
last year All details of the
program including the speaker
are still incomplete at this
writing.
Another annual event, the
county picnic, will be held at the
Lampeter Fair Ground, July 29.
Meal tickets will be one dollar.
Additional details will be for
thcoming next month
Ever had a stomach ache and
headache at the same time?
Usually you have to decide which
hurts the most, so that you can
take the proper remedy Relief is
on the way! Scientists are in the
process of “getting-it-together”
with a milk-buffered aspirin,
designed to cure both symptoms
at the same time.
EL-
717-464-3321
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 17,1972
Students to Attend Co-op
Institute at Shippenshurg
Seven Lancaster County
students have been named
winners in the Cooperative
Business Education Program
sponsored by the Lancaster
Council of Farmer Cooperatives
and will represent the County at
the Pennsylvania Association of
Farmer Cooperatives Summer
Institute at Shippenshurg State
College, July 9-13.
Those chosen to attend the
Institute are: Richard Bollinger
of Lititz, Janet Brubaker of
Lititz, Lynn R. Groff of Ephrata,
Wayne Kreider of Quarryville,
Michael Martin of New Holland,
and Delmar Weaver of New
Holland, all first-year scholars,
Debora Gregory of Lititz will
return to the Institute as a
second-year scholar.
Winners were selected on the
basis of their knowledge of the
cooperative way of doing
business and on activities of the
participants identifying them
with school, community, church,
and youth organizations.
These young leaders will be
accompanied to Shippenshurg by
Jay W. Irwin, Association County
Agent
The Institute program is
designed to teach youth more
about business in general, career
possibilities in agribusiness, and
Corn-country
Oliver 7600
45-inch body, 128 observed bp,
150-bushel tank, Kwik-Switch heads
■ Ideal for bumper crops, big acreages of corn,
beans, sorghum, grain. ■ Grain and corn heads in
terchange, in minutes with Kwik-Switch system.
■ Load-balanced, 150-bushel grain tank. ■ Corn
heads up to 6 narrow rows, grain headers to 22
feet. ■ Compact, low-incline corn head, automatic
roll tension. ■ Row-crop rear axle adjusts from
64 to 84 inches. ■ Even-Flo feeding system in
creases capacity. ■ Low-angle, 13-bar concave re
duces break-over. ■ Variable, two-speed cylinder
drive (optional]. ■ Release of stone trap without
loss of grain. ■ Integral, walk-through cab (op
tional air conditioner]. ■ Enclosed gasoline V-8
engine with service walkway. ■ Low-mounted
twin fuel tanks hold 78 gallons. ■ Hydrostatic
ground drive —0 to 16 mph (optional]. ■ Rotary
shield to cut off gram flow from tank. ■ Five open
bottom walkers, full-width return pan. ■ Op
posed-motion cleaning shoe, variable-speed fan.
■ Tailings elevator inside cab quick, easy in
spection.
FARMERSVILLE
EQUIPMENT INC.
RD2 Ephrata, Pa.
CHAS. J. McCOMSEY & SONS
to provide opportunities for in
dividual leadership development.
Approximately 225 young
adults, representing the best of
over 4,000 participants in the
annual P.A.F.C. youth education
program, will attend the four-day
event.
The Institute is a joint effort of
the Pennsylvania Association of
Farmer Cooperatives, local coop
council, and the Colleges of
Agriculture of The Pennsylvania
State University.
A total of 80 local boys and girls
took part in this year’s
cooperative program
Meat Prices Why?
Several factors combined to
bring about the recent in
crease in meat prices, accord
ing to the National Live Stock
and Meat Board. An extreme
ly bad winter in some live
stock-growing sections of the
country in ’7l plus fear that
the dreaded corn blight would
spread brought about a tem
porary reduction of livestock
on feed. This resulted in fewer
meat animals coming to mar
ket at a time when consumer
demand for meat was strong
due to the increased level of
income for most Americans
which has been occurring over
the past several years.
N. G. HERSHEY
& SON
Hickory Hill, Pa
17