Study Habit The entire family needs to cooperate to help students develop good study habits, says James Van Horn, Extension family life specialist at Penn SPECIAL PRICE ON - Silo Plastics by the roll and silo caps. All sizes. - ACID CLEANERS - MAES INFLATIONS - Cattle Wormers AARON S. GROFF Farm & Dairy Store RD3, Ephrata, Pa. Phone 354-0744 17572 (Hinkletown) Store Hours 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. Closed Tue.& Sat. at 5:30 P.M. ,V,V« Suggestions sylvania State University. All students need a quiet time and place—with no interruptions or confusion. Provide study areas that are VISIT PLEASANT VALLEY MUM FARM Open Daily—DAWN to DUSK Admission - FREE— : Your Cameras—Big Savings on :y Field Grown Mums Cut rs & Arrangements Thousands on Display (No Sunday Sales) Located 2 Miles North of Lititz on Rt. 501. Turn West on Lexington Rd., Right on Kreider Road well lighted and quiet. And remember that the time for study is just as important as the place. A child should be rested and relaxed after a school day. Allow him time for active play before concentrating on homework. Van Horn suggests that you help him avoid rushing to finish homework before a deadline such as dinner or bedtime. Try to schedule study time so it doesn’t conflict with a favorite activity or necessary function. If possible, plan the study hour for toe same time every evening. He’ll become accustomed to a regular homework time and be more ready to concentrate. If you have preschoolers in toe home, too, arrange a period of quiet play for them during the older child’s study period. Coloring or finger painting, reading or listening to a story are good quiet activities. This quiet play gives youngsters a chance to “play” at studying and helps them get in the habit of a study period. When children get older and homework assignments take longer, encourage a short study break. A glass of milk, fruit juice, cookies or a piece of fruit can help build up enthusiasm for returning to studying. Popcorn - New Crop? Are Pennsylvania farmers overlooking the opportunity of producing another cash crop? A survey of snack food processors by marketing specialists of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture indicates this is the case, according to Secretary Jim McHhle. These processors are using between one and 1.5 million pounds of popcorn annually to FOR BEST RESULTS USE FARMERS’ PREMIUM FERTILIZERS Since 1904 COMPLETE FERTILIZER PROGRAM COMPLETE PESTICIDE PROGRAM Bagged, B.ulk, Bulk Trailer Spreaders and Custom Spread on Fields. Nitrogen Solutions-Custom Applicators FARMERS’ FERTILIZER WORKS, INC. Elizabethtown, Pa. Phone 367-1211 1 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 14,1972 This perky rooster may be what some sleepy-head at your house needs to start off the day with a smile. For complete crocheting instructions send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Needles, Lancaster Farming, Box 266, Lititz, Pa. 17543. Ask for instructions for the Cock-a-Doodle Pot Holder No. A-230. satisfy the demand for this popular snack food. Less than five percent of this is being grown by Pennsylvania farmers. In creasing freight costs and the convenience of procuring a larger part of their needs locally have increased the interest of distributors and processors in contracting for larger quanities of Pennsylvania grown popcorn. Farmers who are growing com as a cash crop would do well to look into the possibility of growing popcorn, Secretary McHale said. The only change they would have to make on their equipment would be the in stallation of special plates in the planter. Cultural practices are the same for both field and popcorn. Growers in south central Pennsylvania told a Department representative they are well pleased with the returns they have been getting from this popcorn. They stated net profits are better than field com since there is less labor and risk in volved. The crop is sold directly from the field to the wholesale buyer. There is no storage in volved and no deductions for moisture. The Bureau of Rural Affairs and Marketing Services is developing a program to assist popcorn distributors in locating Pennsylvania farmers who are interested in growing this crop. Additional information can be obtained by writing the Division of Marketing Services, Bureau of Rural Affairs and Marketing Services, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, 20301 North Cameron Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 17120. Snuff It Out Approximately 64,000 Amer icans died last year of lung can cer which could be cut drastic ally if people stopped smoking cigarettes. The American Can cer Society says if you smoke, quit; if you don’t smoke, don’t start. TOAST-N-FLO TOAST YOUR OWN SOYBEANS All automatic. Use LP Gas and 110 volt electric. For More Information Call Collect 717-872-4348 31