Officer’s Training Set For York 4-Hers 's Parliamentary ire? This is one of the questions to be id at the 1975 York - Officers Training ; on February 26 at i. at the York County From the Beginning 4-H Center. Here officers from some 15 clubs throughout York County wil learn how to properly execute their office they hold in their local club and how to successfully carry out their officer responsibilities. The Bed Lion High School Parliamentary Procedure Team will give a presen tation on how to properly conduct a business meeting. Then the York County 4-H Council officers will conduct workshops on the offices of President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer, Newsreporter, Recreational Director, and Historian. The President and Vice President workshop will involve learning how to conduct a business meeting, how to pass legislation through use of motions, how a President can introduce legislation. The Secretary workshop will show how to write an acceptable secretary’s report that keeps the records of the activities of a dub. The Treasurer workshop will educate the treasurers in keeping ac curate financial records for a dub. Ihe Newsreporter workshop will inform the newsreporters how to write news articles that will be acceptable for newspapers and the York County 4-H Reporter. Ihe Recreational Director workshop will give Song and Game Leaders a chance to leam games and songs they may take back to their dubs to teach other 4-H members. The Historian Workshop will give the Historians knowledge of how to properly put a scrapbook together containing photos and news articles of their club’s activities. There will be sample Historian record books at the workshop to look at. It is recommended that all officers from all the clubs within the York County 4-H program attend this educational seminar. There will be something useful for everyone to leam about. Ayrshire Completes Record In the herd of Milton M. Brubaker, Spruce Villa Farm, Lititz, Pa., a senior three-year old registered Ayrshire cow named Spruce Villa Com Star has com pleted an official milk production record of 12380 pounds, with 536 pounds of butterfat, on twice daily milking for 305-day DHIR Testing period. This record is one of many being made by an increasing number of registered Ayrshires on the Ayrshire Breeders’ Association official DHIR testing program. Star’s record is 1V« times the national average for all dairy cows. The Ayrshire breed is noted for persistent, profitable production of nutritious, quality milk. Try A Classified Ad chain feeding has been a chain of improvements Our Chain Feeders have been performing for thousands of successful poultrymen for over 25 years. Today when you buy Big Dutchman chain feeding, you get “Speed Feed,” a systems concept that is so good, nobody has been able to duplicate its performance. That’s because we’ve been working on chain feeding since the beginning. Big Dutchman, where proven ideas are put into action. HERSHEY EQUIPMENT Co., Inc. Phone (717) 354-4576 AUTHORIZED B\<\ Dutchman DISTRIBUTOR Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Feb. 22,1975 Ag Dept. Housing Plan to Use Local Labor, Leadership Awards for completing a year of driving without a preventable accident were presented to 26 Agway truck operators from this area at a dinner February 20, 1975 at York, Pa. Drivers honored and their years of accident-free driving are: Wilbur B. Shultz - Lancaster Store, 5 years; Vernon Frankhouser - Lancaster Store, 9 years; Donald B. Groff - New Holland Store, 6 years; Stephen M. Kurtz - New Holland Store, 7 years; E. Phares Martin - New Holland Store, 9 years; Wayne M. Carrigan - Quarryville Store, 2 years; Harvey J. Walton Quarryville Store, 3 years; Donald Carrigan Quarryville Store, 4 years; Melvin L. Hollinger - Quarryville Store, 4 years; W. Verne Anderson - Quarryville Store, 11 years; Samuel B. Heisey - Salunga Store, 1 year; David S. Musser - Salunga Store, 3 years; Nathan Dombach - Lancaster Petroleum, 1 year; Carl G. Groff - Lan caster Petroleum, 2 years; Glenn L. Hassel - Lancaster Petroleum, 2 years; Paul A. Kauffman - Lancaster Petroleum, 2 years; Kenneth W. Bradford - Lancaster Petroleum, 5 years; Mervin Weaver - Lancaster Petroleum, 6 years; Edward G. McMullen - Lancaster Petroleum. 7 years; S. Roy Hollinger - Lancaster Petroleum, 9 years; Roy M. Lancaster Gerlach Petroleum, 11 years; Mark Burkholder - Lancaster Petroleum, 12 years; Paul E. Miller - Lancaster Petroleum, 12 years; Morgan B. Zook - Lancaster Petroleum, 12 years; Clair L. Shimp - Lancaster Petroleum, 12 years; H. Paul Huber - Lancaster Petroleum, 13 years. These men are among the 1,635 drivers throughout Agway who were recognized for safe driving records of one to 30 years. This represents about two-thirds of Agway’s 2,450 full time drivers. Almost half of the drivers honored this year are receiving awards for five or more years of safe driving. Agway drivers covered more than 56 million miles in 1974, operating vehicles from small service vans to tractor-trailers. The number of accidents involving Agway vehicles dropped in 1974 from 452 to 427, despite an increase of 70 in the number of trucks m the Agway fleet. Agway’s accident rate is 0.76 accidents per 100,000 miles, compared with the national average of 1.22 accidents per 100,000 miles for all fleets reporting such statistics to the National Safety Council. Awards were presented by Agway area manager James Waters and petroleum district manager Robert Sowerbrower. Richard Charles of Syracuse. N. Y. represented the Agway Safety Department. TRY A CLASSIFIED AD! IliiO Good news for car owners AGWAY NOW HAS UNLEADED GAS Voii ii mm u u acted tro"' AliO an U'vt moi ? h« 0» i Inn hu a'ou t *\pt i t ,I ' i ; US SOMH 0 "lit f nod N ilsi , t itom o' >\ th uni U'i d Not siiti UMIH ' U Ul <. V V HI list . n i lut d , is ’ \sK '.out An\ n n hi chi 11 st p n SO Ml' AGWAY PETROLEUM CORP. BOX 1197, DILLERVILLE ROAD LANCASTER, PA PHONE 397-4954 51