Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, July 07, 1973, Image 12

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    —Lancaster Farming. Saturday. July 7, 1973
12
Demonstrating the art of malting a cheese ball won Martha
Gregory the right to compete at the regional 4-H Demon
stration Contest on July 17.
Ephrata
< Continued From Page 1)
stone arch affair, has much less
carrying capacity than the new
one which is nearing completion.
The old bridge, however, was
lower at the ends When the creek
flooded, water went around the
bridge, spilling onto an open flood
plain which lies south of the
bridge site
The parties responsible for the
bridge and affected by the floods
have been pointing accusatory
fingers at each other The real
culprit, though, appears to be the
state The Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental
Resources told the County
II M STAUFFER
4 SONS INC
Witmer
ROIIRER’S MILL
R D 1 Ronks
IK'MAR FARM
SUPPLY INC.
Lawn—Ph 964-3444
n JACOB HOOBER
Intercourse, Pa
II MIDI Dll GOOD
Torre Hill
OKI BBSI PPI T (O
Elisabethtown
engineers that the bridge should
have a carrying capacity of 5000
cubic feet of water per second.
Huth engineers, designers of the
birdge, drew their plans for a
bridge with 7500 cubic feet per
second capacity, or half again as
much as DER said they should
have.
The state also specified the
construction of the approaches
leading up to the bridge Con
structing approaches is the
responsibility of the Ephrata
Township Board of Supervisors.
The supervisors recognized the
potential flooding threat, but
were compelled to follow the
state’s recommendations or risk
losing state construction funds.
After the July 3 flood, which
came just one day after the
farmers called on the con-
E SAUDER & SONS
R D 1 East Earl
WHITE OAK MILL
STEVENS FEED MILL.
INC
Stevens, Pa
DUTCHMAN FEED
MILLS, INC.
R D 1. Stevens
Tires Are Minimized
As Accident Factors
A new federal government
study has found that passen
ger car tires are “not signifi
cant factors in traffic acci
dents.”
The new findings were con
tained in a report to Congress
by U. S. Comptroller General
-Elmer B. Staats on the entire
federal auto safety testing
program The Comptroller
General heads the General
Accounting Office, Congress*
watchdog over federal spend
ing.
In the fiscal years 1970-72,
the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration spent
a total of $4.8 million on com
pliance testing, the report
noted. More than half of this,
$2.5 million, went for tire
testing, compared to $1.4 mil
lion for vehicle testing, and
$913,943 for other equipment.
“Available accident data
and information from tire
studies indicate that dis
abled passenger vehicle tires
are not significant factors in
traffic accidents, and that the
Safety Administration’s rel
ative degree of emphasis on
tire testing, in terms of its
total enforcement program, is
more than warranted,” the
report declared.
The GAO report cited acci
dent data provided by the
National Bureau of Stand
ards, the Traffic Institute of
Northwestern University,
and the Highway Safety Re
search Institute at the Uni
versity of Michigan, to back
up its statements on tire
safety.
servatiomsts, the approaches to
the as yet unopened bridge were
reportedly eroded away to the
blacktop portion of the road
surface Officials from the
and the township are expected to
confer on the problem, with an
eye to somehow opening up the
old flood plain.
FOWL'S FEED SERVICE
R D 2. Peach Bottom
MOUNTVILLE
FEED SERVICE
R.D 2, Columbia
PARADISE SUPPLY
Paradise
GO CLASSIFIED
PHONE 394-3047 or 626-2191
GT Tox-o-Wlx
GRAIN DRYER
WILL DRY CORN FOR 4 C PER BUSHEL
Your Best Investment
Removing Moisture From 32% Down to 14%
WORLDS LARGEST SELLING
Fr- —1 GRAIN DRYER BECAUSE
- Price is Lower
’ ost Less to Operate
'f'" - Easier to Operate
- Dries more Efficiently
f nrSfl ' Will handle 50 percent
moisture
; J o GT— I «
> Po ° o **
I C 0 LuLLil
i Se e Us For Your
» I gN L---J
t: U Gra,n Storage &
Drying Needs
SHENK'S FARM SERVICE
R.D. 4 Lititz, Pa. Rh. 626-4355
JOHN DEERE
SELF-UNLOADING
WAGONS
125
Chuck
Retire the unloading hook and silage fork... put
John Deere Self-Unloaders to' work for you. High
volume Forage Wagons keep pace with modern forage
harvesters. Durable Chuck Wagons are built to take
year-round feedlot use. Stop in for the details.
EDWIN HURST INC.
Adamstown. Pa. 215-484-4391 Kim
VENDER IMPLEMENT, INC. A. B. C. GROFF, INC.
The Buck
LANDIS BROS. INC. M. S. YEARSLEY & SONS
Lancaster 393-3906 Westchester 696-2990
77^-
rage^Wagon
SHOTZBERGER'S
284-4141
New Holland
jobs
665-2141
354-4191