><s/4J* / "■V When barbecuing, cook meat and poultry thoroughly, but slowly Longer cooking over a low fire means less shrinkage and more thorough cooking. Let your fire burn down to glowing coals. THE SENTINEL. NEW HOLLAND - Helping to farm 100 acres, tending to 60 head of hogs and planting 15 acres of com is not an easy task > especially if you are still a student - as is the case of Linford Weaver, East Earl youth assumes leadership of Grassland FFA By MELISSA PIPER See your dealer about the Sentinel —or drop us a line RO. Box 433 Elizabethtown, PA 17022 newly elected president of the Grassland FFA. The youth is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester M. Weaver, Jr. East Earl R 2, and will begin his role as leader of the chapter beginning this summer. As a member of the Grassland Chapter, Linford has been active in numerous projects and committee work and served the organization as vice president during this year’s school season. One project which has taken up much of Linford’s free time has been public speaking and the youth worked many hours in “polishing-up” his topic entitled “The Silent Killer.” At the county public speaking contest, Linford won first place in the senior division with his talk and grabbed a berth in the area contest. In competition with Round-the-clock guardian of stored milk temperature If you depend upon your milk check for a living, protect that income by insuring milk quality. The least expensive, single-payment insurance obtainable is the Sentinel the heavy-duty, 10-inch recorder which charts round-the-clock temperature of your milk-cooling or holding tank. Assure yourself and your processor that proper milk temperature is always maintained. Keep a permanent log of compressor operation and tank cooling or pre-cooling efficiency, from first filling to pickup. Cleaning temperatures increasingly ques tioned by sanitarians—are recorded on the same chart At little added cost, the Sentinel is available with provision for actuating an alarm or warning light if milk holding temperature rises above pre-set level. Remember—if it prevents the loss of only one tank of milk, the Sentinel has paid its own way. rni PARTLOW Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 1.1976 students from Chester and Delaware Counties, last week, Linford placed third. Describing his peers as “tough contestants.” Linford chose his public speaking topic on world hunger explaining that the subject is timely and of extreme importance. “Hunger is all around us and we must be willing to deal with it and soon,” he noted. “It is not enough to give people food we must teach them good production methods and encourage their own interests in having supplies available.” The student’s knowledge of farming methods and production comes first hand as his FFA projects and or the farm training has given him a working relationship with agriculture. Linford’s position of vice president of the Grassland FFA has helped the youth gain the responsibility he will need for directing the chapter next year. “FFA has given me a good sense of leadership and I hope to pass that quality on to the younger members,” he stated. “I’m hoping to work toward a more active group especially with the Greenhands and for more total involvement.*’ One area in which Linford hopes to do more work is with the environmental FFA at Garden Spot. In its second year, the counterpart to production agriculture - environmental FFA has steadily progressed and Linford would like to get more members interested in the chapter which deals with wildlife protection, con servation and ecology. Although his senior year will be busy with FFA ac tivities, Linford is also an ticipating many projects with the youth group at the Weaverland Mennonite Church. And keeping in tough with the family farm will add more responsibility to the youth’s work load, but the Grassland FFA’er isn’t worried yet - “It will be interesting and I plan to do the best I can,’’ he concluded smiling. As president of the chapter, Linford will be joining a long line of prominent FFA members all of whom took on an extra responsibility to help other members. Bank officer named LANCASTER, Pa. - Robert H. Kusche baa joined the National Central Bank as vice president - secured lending, in the commercial load division according to an announcement made today by Wilson D. McElhinny, bulk president. Kusche, 456 Estelle Drive, Lancaster, has had over 20 years of management ex perience in the commercial and loan review fields. For the past two years, he served as financial vice president of Marshall Maintenance in New Jersey and was responsible for the banking relationship of the company. He ia married to the for mer Bett Murchie of White Plain, New York. The Kusches have four children. Dead Dog The old fisherman’s dog died. The fisherman asked a local minister for a funeral. “Dogs don’t have souls,” said the minister. “I know,” replied the fisherman, “but I want my dog to have a funeral and I will pay $l,OOO to the minister that per forms the service.” “Why didn’t you tell me Rover was a Baptist,” countered the clergyman. RENTAL TRACTORS AVAILABLE 81
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