Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 09, 1975, Image 26

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    —Lancaster Farming. Saturday. August 9, 1975
26
Grangers
be arranged, according to J. Luther Snyder, the state
Grange master.
Speakers invited to the convention, he said, are John W.
Scott, master of the National Grange and a past master of
the Pennsylvania State Grange; Senator Patrick J.
Stapleton, chairman of the State Senate Agriculture
Committee; Representative Kent D. Shelhamer, chair
man of the State House Agriculture Committee, and State
Agriculture Secretary James A. McHale.
“The opinions of these men, from the national and state
viewpoints, will be of significant value to the Grange in
formulating its 1975-76 policies and objectives,” Snyder
pointed out.
Scott, Stapleton and McHale have accepted invitations
to speak before the Grange meeting.
Daytime sessions will be held at the Fulton Opera
House, with evening sessions at the McCaskey High
School auditorium. Youth and junior activities will be held
Wednesday, October 29, at Wickersham School and
Lincoln Junior High School.
In addition to delegates from the 598 subordinate, or
local. Granges throughout Pennsylvania, Grange
members and young people will attend the convention.
Much of the attention will focus on 100 or more
resolutions dealing with legislation affecting agriculture
and rural communities. “The Grange’s policy making
sessions will not be confined, however, to just rural life
and agriculture,” Snyder said. “The Grange has
developed a broad viewpoint to meet modern conditions
and we are concerned with the best interest of all Penn
sylvanians.”
More than 2,600 bills, many of them directly or in
directly affecting agriculture, have already been in
troduced in the State Legislature, Snyder said.
“We need a balanced type of legislation to benefit all
Pennsylvanians,” Snyder declared. “Too often legislation
is aimed at a specific area or a specific problem without
regard to eventual or overall results. Consequently, we
often find ourselves trying to correct one problem by
creating another.”
In addition to Youth Day activities, the Wednesday
program will be highlighted by the conferral of the sixth
degree on a class of several hundred candidates in the
evening.
The Monday and Tuesday evening programs, featuring
talent competition, will be open to the public, Snyder said.
The annual session will be hosted by the Lancaster,
Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery County Pomona
Granges, with Richard Maule of Quarryville serving as
chairman of the convention committee.
The Pennsylvania State Grange, with 52,000 members,
is the state’s largest organization devoted to farm and
rural interests.
Buck tractor
pull results
12,000 S.S.
1. - Harry Griest,
Coatesville, Pa. IH 1456,
252.9; 2. - Michael Wright,
New Freedom, Pa. IH 1066,
238.0; 3. - Ed Herman,
Frederick, Md. IH 1466,
236.1.
5000 S.S.
1. - Tom Urmson, Tr
nasfer, Pa. Farmall 460,
300.0; 2. - Dale Smoker,
Cochranville, Pa. A C 180,
299.10; 3. • Paul Bedgar,
Freeland, Md. Farmall 450,
260.11.
9000 S.S.
1. - Ed Herman, Frederick,
Md. IH 1466,300.0; 2. - Harry
Griest, Coatesville, Pa. IH
1456, 292.0; 3. - Micheal
Wright, New Freedom, Pa.
IH 1066, 289.7,
7000 S.S.
1. - Craig Leggitt Boon
sboro, Md. JD 4020, F.P.
300.; 2. - Mark Stauffer New
Holland, Pa. Dentz 9006,
290.5; 3. - Marlin Brubaker
Quarryville, Pa. AC D-21,
245.5.
7000 Mod.
1. - Glenn Darnell,
Laytonsville, Md. Cockshutt
40 2-454, 300.0, 275.9; 2. -
Lester Houck, Kinzers, Pa.
Cockshutt 40 2-440, 300.0,
269.9; 3. - Galen Spickler Inc.
Team (Richard Zim
merman) Driver Mt. Joy,
Pa. Cockshutt 40 2-440, 300.0,
249.10.
5000 Mod.
1. - Elwood Flowers,
Manheim, Pa. IH-M 427
Chevy 300.0, 206.4; 2. - Galen
Spickler, Elizabethtown, Pa
[Continued from Page 1]
Massey 44 2-327 Corvette
300.0, 200.5; 3. - Ivan Barn
sley Laytonsville, Md.
Farmall M 396 Chevy, 300.0,
191.6.
9000 Open
1. - Michael Wright, New
Freedom, Pa. IH 1066 273.3;
2. - Galen SpciMer Inc. Team
(Richard Zimmerman)
Driver, Mt. Joy, Pa.
Cockshutt 40 2-440 256.0; 3. -
Lester Landis, Lititz, Pa.
Massey 55, 248.0.
Next pull will be held
August 16, 1975. It will be a
Pa. Class B at 7:00 p.m.
Case receives
overseas orders
RACINE, WI. - J I Case
Company has received a $4.2
million order for Vibromax
compaction equipment from
the Algerian government,
bringing Case total orders
from Algeria to $16.8 million
during the past two months.
Jerome K. Green, Senior
Vice President and General
Manager of the Case In
ternational Division, said,
“The $4.2 million order is the
largest single award ever
received by our Losenhausen
Plant in Dusseldorf, West
Germany. The contract calls
for 2,550 units of equipment,
all to be built at
Losenhausen.”
Included in the new order
are 2,500 internal vibrators,
25 vibrating tandem rollers,
USOA
Hershey foods
vp to address
convention
Ogden C. Johnson, Cor
porate Vice President of
Scientific Affairs of the
Hershey Foods Corporation
will address PennAg In
dustries Association
members at the
Association’s 97th Annual
Convention to be held Sep
tember 17-19 in Gettysburg.
Johnson who directs
research, quality assurance
and laboratory activities for
Hershey Foods will speak on
the “Realities of Future
Food Needs.” His speech
will cover trends in fuel
usage, food quality, work
habits, etc. Also Johnson will
speak on eating habits
during a recession, food
processing trends toward
specialization in small
businesses and the im
portance of associations.
Prior to joining Hershey
Foods, Johnson has held a
number of government,
association, industrial, and
teaching positions.
MAGNA CARTA
England’s Magna Carta,
signed in 1215, provided that
anyone not a prisoner or
outlaw was free to travel
abroad in time of peace
without the king’s per
mission Thus, for many
centuries, passports were
unnecessary
and 25 static rollers.
Vibromax products are used
for a variety of compaction
jobs at construction sites.
Delivery is to be made
during the remainder of
calendar year 1975.
Last month Case an
nounced a $12.4 million order
for loader-backhoes, wheel
loaders and cranes to
Algeria. This equipment,
plus the new compactors,
will be used during a five
year national program to
industrialize that Arab
country, Green Said.
The new order, like the
earlier one, was signed with
LaSociete Nationale de
Constructions Mechaniques,
the Algerian national agency
which contracts for the
purchase
PERCENT CHANGE IN AVERAGE VALUE
OF FARM REAL ESTATE PER ACRE
WHAT CONSUMERS PAID IN 15 WORLD CAPITALS 1
Bonn
Brasilia
Brussels
Buenos Aires 2
Canberra
Copenhagen
London
Mexico City
Ottawa
Pans
Rome
Stockholm
The Hague
Tokyo
Washington
Median
'On March 5, 1975
government ceiling prices are listed for meat
THE AESTAR
CALF CASTLE
A new, economical plug-up-and-go
total environment for calves
Now you can give your valuable calves royal treatment at far less
than you’d pay for an ordinary structure Famous AGSTAR quality
is now available in a complete, ready-to-use nursery building We
deliver it all you do is “plug it up" to water and electricity, then
put your calves in They get the protected, comfortable environ
ment they need to thrive Buildings are available with stalls for up
to 32 calves Each comes with slotted flooring, manure pit, venti
lation system, heater, water heater, sink and about everything
else you need to make your good calf management pay off For
full information and prices, give us a call now
SEE OUR CALF & HOG CASTLES ON DISPLAY
E. M. HERR EQUIPMENT ' INC -
R.D.I, Willow Street
Steak,
sirloin,
bone
less
Bacon.
Pork sliced. Eggs (1
chops pkgd dozen) Butter
U S dollars per lb , at
2 36 3 75
163 415
1 76 1 62
29 89
1 63 2 35
2 60 2 71
1 65 2 04
1 52 1 79
1 65 1 41
1 83 3 41
1 82 1 81
2 25 2 67
2 17 3 08
2 88 3 52
1 79 1 56
1 79 2 35
4 16
1 27
3 42
' 3
ms 203C—76W
•urrent exchange rates
,91 1 57
75 1 36
90 1 69
48 1 38
1 18 91
1 29 1 43
90 68
83 2 08
75 99
1 09 1 73
1 08 1 82
1 33 1 41
97 1 46
1 10 2 06
74 89
91 1 43
717-464-3321
Toma
toes
39
1 05
67
1 43
85
34
79
63
1 27
54
49
69
67