Lancaster Farming. Saturday. Oct. 26, 1974 Showing Guernseys Their Summer Project (Continued From Page 11 which received second place. Timy also had a busy season that began with the York County 4-H Roundup where his cow took first place in the senior calf class and followed by taking the Junior champion honors and reserve grand champion honors. The same honors went to Timy’s animal at the following shows including the 4-H district show, the York Fair and the All American show. While not at the area shows, Cindy and Timy are •both active in many other organizations. This year Cindy was a member of the York County Dairy Judging team that participated in competition at the 4-H Achievement Festival. Cindy, who is a sophomore at York Central High School, is in the color guard for the MARVIN J. HORST Dependable and rugged, Patz Barn Cleaners make your work load lighter! 325 ft. Cornell was Jonas Zimmerman’s 35 Cow Shuttle Stroke Mechanical Jamesway 300 ft. Cornell was David Brandt’s still in barn at Warren Hetrick’s 250 ft. Cornell was John Tshudy’s 2 Hydraulic Jamesway Units 225 ft Cornell was John Bomgardner’s 2 Terri-Matic Hydraulic Units 135 ft Farmway Cham was Ivan Hoover’s Several Standard Equip Co. Barn Cleaner Units. MARVIN J. HORST R.D. 1, (Iona) LEBANON, PA. band and is a member of the Literary Club and the Order of the Rainbow 92 drill team. Having an interest in sports, Cindy has been a football manager and has played intramural basketball and volleyball. Her present activities in clude being a member of the school pep club and Health service club. “The health interest club is designed to introduce the field of medicine to in terested young people," Cindy explained. Each week the students visit an area of the York Hospital and see first hand the work that is done. Along with being active in many extracurricular functions, Cindy is an honor student and has belonged to the National Honor Society. FOR DO-IT-YOURSELFERS USED BARN CLEANERS ZERO MILK TANKS AND PIPELINES. SOLD A SERVICED BY: Was Timy attends the North Hill Junior High School and is interested in sports. He is presently playing junior varisty football and enjoys wrestling and playing volleyball. He has played baseball and basketball in the Manchester League and has also participated on the bowling league. Tina, Tiray’s twin sister also helps show the family’s cows and has won numerous awards in the past few years. She has been active in working with her church’s youth group this summer. It is a busy schedule for the Rutter youngsters as many of the shows are just a short time apart but each of them enjoy the work and have myriad ribbons, trophies and plaques of which they are very proud. AND pnrz "helps you work smarter... not harder. CHAIN FITS OTHER BARN CLEANERS. Olden Km Beiwe Sfee£ Pnicet Hite Agouti Darvin Boyd, left, and Kyong Kon Urn, renewed their old friendship this week as Lim visited the area during a three-week tour of the U.S. Lim replaced Boyd as the 4-H program Korean 4-H 717-272-0871 director with the American-Korean Foundation in Seoul, Korea. Next to the U.S., Korea has more 4-H members than any other country in the world. (Continued From Page 1] me past eight years, more than 200 youths between the ages of 18 and 21 spend three weeks at the 22-acre farm, working and learning together. When they go back to their villages, they are better-equipped in the skills needed to operate a farm or a rural home. “In the past eight years,” Kim said, “the farm has helped to train 2400 youths.” Another AKF project is the Korean Agricultural Training Program. Each year, some 80 Korean youths are placed on American farms in Missouri, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Carolina or Kansas. They will stay on these farms for two years to learn American farming practices. When they return home, they very often assume leadership roles in their communities. Many of them, with the help of government loans, buy their own farms or start agribusiness ventures. “This program,” Lim pointed out, “is entirely self supporting. While the men and women are here, they are paid prevailing wages for the work they do on the farms. This pays for the air fare and all the other ex penses connected with running the program. Whatever is left over, and it can be as much as $l5OO for each participant, is distributed among the youths themselves. This money, along with govern ment loans, can get them started in businesses or farms of their own.” During his three-week stay in the U.S., Lim will be touring many of the farms where the Koreans are living and working. He hopes to gain a broader awareness of the program’s strengths and weaknesses. His Erst trip to the U.S. has been a whirlwind of vir tuallly ceaseless activity, Lim said late Wednesday afternoon when we talked to him. Since his arrival here last Friday, he has seen New York and Philadelphia. On- Tuesday, he was with Bphrata dairy farmer Clarence Stauffer as he hosted a touring group of New York Holstein dairy farmers. Wednesday, he talked to reporters, visited the Lancaster Farm and Home Center, toured Sperry New Holland, and went to a banquet in the evening. On Tuesday’s tour, Lim saw quite a few Penn sylvania farms, and he said he was impressed. “They are nothing like we have in Korea,” he said. “The average farm there is just a little over two acres, and is given over mostly to rice fanning. Through our 4-H program, we hope to educate people to the potential for mechanization, new crop varieties, and better farming methods. We are losing people from rural Korea, and we hope the people who stay on the land can learn to become better farmers.”