Potato grower was innovator in his time Hy-ludy Mitchell Hrrk»( o. Reporter I li KTW(X)I) Raymond ( Snvder. a retired ladngh ( minty farmer now 1U ing in I leetwood 112. feels th.il potato growing is nn area of farming which has remained too lon# in the shadows Snyder would like lo see the potato "get its Mice" of public recognition, anti it appears that the potato could find no abler champion for its cause than a man who has tillQll tlte GRAIN BINS Ulla|| mil mil WITH ADVANCED FEATURES VB Hwe sell, service and install I spent over hall a tentur) in the busmen Snyder, who itlheres to the philosophv that a man is never through learning." Indiescs Hint at age /?, he can now sav he knows 'a little bit about potatoes " Snyder began learning about growing potatoes when he was nine, working the fields on the family farm with a harrow and a team of horses H> the time he was eleven he was guiding the plow, but Full Line Parts Dept E. M. HERR EQUIPMENT, INC. RDI, Willow Street, PA. Sin drr sldl rr< .ill", fh.il w hrn hr Imgan working thr held hr wasn't men strong enough to turn the rt)tu|>- mrnt, and if hr didn f sr| if straight the (ml ftmr hr would have to rirrlr fhr tntiro field and try again When hr «;ii 77 vrnrs old. Snyder derided lo makr jmtito growing hit hfr' r . work and took o\rr fhr family farm, but onh. hr adds, after much mn sidcration "I had to make a choice," he recalls now 'There wa.s a mortgage on the farm still lo be paid, and rn> father was a crippled man " Although he’d never made a dollar’s wages on the farm, there were all the years his parents and he had already put into it to think about. If he hadn’t decided to stay with the farm, he says, “aU that would have gone down the dram." Snyoer says that, ac- 10% DISCOUNT SALE THROUGH OCTOBER Tools Forks Shovels Plow Shares Forks Etc. SPECIAL No 163 Heavy Duty D Handle Manure Forks M 5.00 (Less 10 Percent) MENNO S. BEILER R 1 Christiana, PA Near Nine Points, PA Brock has a long line of gram bins that can keep you out ol those long Lancaster Co. tording to I.r. .«i!r j*itain tint rr i lon -how (hr hardest was lo in.ikr J In mg ' White working (nr his (athrr Sivdrr hail loaded potalor- on Ixi* r.n .ind workrd on road rmi slrurlion during 'hr off season and after hr |f«ok ov rr thr (arm hr continued to find wavs to supplrmrnl thr imomr from hr. {iota to irops Hr ran a .mall dam operation lo put bread on the table " Hr raised beef cattle and swirr for a timr, "lo fill in. and also for the fertilizer " Hut Snyder nesrr stopped learning about potatoes and continued to work towards making his potato business go And make it go he did Young Snyder was obviously an innovator in his time, a brash young man who, as he recalls, his older neighbors gave a year to go under “But they lived to see me "TEMPER DRY" jmn Emm ria ns P*| EWfll toSOObu per hr 'i;| 1 AB Model—l2B ':' CMS Model—l 46 Temper Dries lo 480 bu per hr i AB Model—lß • •*•* —v —. 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He recalls that he had a pb convincing his father to try the sprays, which also required investment in new equipment; but when he was sure Raymond was willing FARM FANS Leasing Available On Bins & Dryers In Stock for Immediate Delivery X* * •if and able to do the work himself, the elder Snyder finally consented. Within four years of farming on his own, Snyder averaged over 400 bushels of potatoes per acre for which he was awarded membership in the Pennsylvania Potato Growers Association 400- Bushel Club In 1941, Snyder made the news again when he installed a pond and irrigation system, the first of its kind in the area. According to the old newspaper clippings Mrs. Snyder has preserved in a scrapbook, the irrigation system, which could match IVi inches of rainfall in one hour, was the talk of the town. But Snyder recalls the ribbing he took from friends and neighbors because “the first year I was ready to irrigate, it really rained.” Before turning the business over to his only son, Lee, 11 years ago, Snyder had purchased two more farms, added three more ponds, built a 50 by 112 foot, temperature and humidity controlled storage building (another first in the area), and had progressed to machine harvesting. Although he claims he’s been retired 11 years now, Snyder admits that “when you have worked all your life to build something, you can’t just turn your back on it. It’s kind of m the blood.” In keeping with his basic philosophy, Snyder is still learning about potatoes. Although he says he grew mainly russets in his day, the tried and true standby at that time, he eventually began to follow the results of experimental test plots at such institutions as Penn State University, and “if I saw somthing that looked good, I tried it.” Now Snyder does the testing himself, planting new varieties that interest him in two potato patches, one at the family farms in Lehigh County and another behind his home ir Fleetwood. I Continued on Page 68| ' * '