Automobile Service Tips Bfirt&ZV CABLES PEUVEP. ELECTRICITY TO STARTER ANP ALL OTHER ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS.. ANP BRTN& wC" CHARGING CURRENT FROM THE ALTERNATOR . UNLESS Xgj* CABLES ARE IN COOP CONPUTON ANP HARE CLEAN. tight connections, the car CANNOT START OR RUN PROPERLY. Enjoy Gifts Shopping with No Money Problems... far / / Wv \< » Making Your Last Payment... IF YOU HAVEN'T JOINED FOR NEXT YEAR, STOP IN TODAY AND SEE HOW YOU CAN SAVE $5O TO $lOOO OR MORE. WE HAVE A NEW CLUB PLANNED FOR '74. YOU MAKE 49 PAYMENTS, WE MAKE THE 50th PAY MENT FOR YOU. STOP IN TODAY FOR DETAILS CLUB MEMBERSHIP DEADLINE IS FEB. IST 1974 BLUE BALL TERRE HILL 445-6741 7^o / rA /l . J?\ * We'll Help You By ¥ NATIONAL BANK mam BankAmericard BLUE BALL ■SB 354-5163 From local A This is the fifth of a series of articles to acquaint you with the newest vocational teachers in Lancaster County. Raymond Little came to Lancaster County in late August to begin teaching horticulture at the Mount Joy Vo-tech School. There are 29 students enrolled in the horticulture program at Mount Joy with two sessions daily, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. Horticulture subjects taught include such areas as nursery production, turf grass establishment and maintenance, landscape establishment and maintenance, plant propogation and hor ticulture mechanics. The Vocational Club at Mount Joy is Plants Unlimited. The Delaware County native worked for five summers preparing for his future in the horticulture field by working in landscape maintenance for :A 'I k / / / / A i,r NOW OPEN Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 8,1973—27 Teachers: Thoughts in Passing Philadelphia Suburban Water Company. Little graduated in June from Penn State with a major in forestry. He and his wife, the former Donna Amer from West Chester, reside m Elizabethtown. Hobby areas for Little include plant identification, nature photography and plant propogation. His future goals include having his own greenhouse when he and his wife buy their own home. Pa. Poultrymen Bucking National Downward Trend Pennsylvania poultry producers continue to increase their weekly production in a trend that runs counter to data from the other 20 leading broiler producing states, according to the Crop Reporting Service. In the last full report-week in November, the placement of day old broiler chicks was 1,308,000. Although this is a modest one percent decline from the preceding week it is 17 percent ahead of the same week in 1972. Similarly, the average for the past 10 weeks is 17 percent ahead of the corresponding period a year earlier. Across the nation, broiler placements for the same week were 57,139,000 but the 10 week average, nationally, is trailing the same 10 weeks, last year, by one percent. In 1972, Pennsylvania ranked only 14th among the states active in broiler production. Raymond Little Courthouse Squares
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