—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. May 21. 1977 50 Farm Women Societies (Continued from Page 45] York Co. Society 26 Hie Green Valley Society of Farm Women Group 26 held their eleventh an niversary meeting at the Holiday Inn, York. Chairman Mrs. Shirley J. Miller presented a hanging plant to the president, Mrs. Luna Kahler. A potted plant was given to each member as a favor table setting. In total, 23 members attended with 12 charter members midst the group. Hie Hospital Fete will be held at the fairgrounds in LANCASTER FARMING MARKET REPORTS NEED A JACK? WE RENT 'EM Whether it’s a 30 ton jack to jack up a building or a service jack for working on your car or pickup WE HAVE THE RIGHT JACK FOR YOU! Give us a call for all your equipment needs LANCASTER Aedaimas 720 N PRINCE ST LANCASTER PA / PHONE 717-393 1701 LEBANON Dentals n U %Jnumited 940 Cornwall Rd. Phone 717-272-4658 BEADING eading tool ana equipment Bit toil 12th & Spring Streets Phone 215-376-3896 We Rent Most Everything York on May 20 - 21. All Society members are doing voluntary help in three hour shifts. The next benefit bake sale for York County Farm Women will be held at the York Mall on June 24 - 25. Group 26 will work on June 25 from 12 to 1 pan. Arts and crafts tables will also be exhibited for special events and projects. During the meeting a Mother’s Day program was presented by the charter president Mrs. William Hake READ FOR FULL with a report of the very first meeting of Mrs. Flora Black, founder of Pennsylvania Farm Women in the year 1914. Mrs. Hake also read the letter received from Mrs. Black’s four children on State Farm Women’s 50th anniversary. Tim Markovits from the York Extension office also spoke on the special care of house plants. Hie June meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Ethel Conley, 1761 North View Road, York, on June 14 at 12:30 p.m. The program will be a special flag day. New from HESSTON Hesston 1010 Mower-Conditioner gives you a 10’ header with center-pivot maneuverability. Conditioner Width 110 in. Its almost like operating a self propelled' But the 1010 Hydro Swine® has all the economies of a pull-type And its 10’ header insures an easy fit into any size field Key to its maneuverability is center pivot design that allows the header to work on either side of the tractor and anywhere in between Famous Hesston conditioning system delivers quality hay Swathing shield or windrow forming and fluffing shield lets you follow your own hay curing management plan exactly Hydrostatic header drive and hydraulic header control allow on-the go positioning for added convenience Ask your Hesston dealer about the 1010 today l Hydro Swing is a registered trademark of the Hesston Corporation Get multi-crop flexibility at an economical price! Hesston 6200 Regular Duty Windrower Interchangeable headers adapt this machine to almost any crop you'd want to windrow Big 16' and 20' draper headers handle huge gram acreages Standard auger headers in 10' 12' and 14 sizes handle alfalfa, native hay and sorghum sudans Special auger headers let the 6200 work in grass seed peas and mint Whatever your crop you'll get reliable performance from proven Hesston features Simple belt transmission for easy maintenance Effortless Trim Steering to allow all buf extreme and reverse steering with the right hand lever only Van Drive for independent ground and engine speeds A Hesston 6200 gives you big self propelled power with a minimum investment Find out more about putting one to work on your place today HESSTON FARM EQUIPMENT 312 W. Main St New Holland, Pa. Ph. 717-354-4181 | Ida’s ♦ Notebook I I don’t remember a Spring when I’ve seen a wider variety of birds than this Spring. Everywhere I look they are gathering material for nests. The other morning I watched a cardinal pull strips of bark off our white grapevine and carry them to a row of evergreen trees. When I drive down our lane, I startle thrush and they dart here and there in the rasp berry bushes. This morning as I hunted moss and fern, a bird that I can’t name flew off an almost nonexistent nest on a bare mulberry branch and flopped on the ground to distract me. It is becoming STAUFFER DIESEL Inc. .3* T~*~g* ♦ Ida Risser * X more difficult to find a really untouched area of woodland, as our 18 cottagers keep their land quite well trimmed. But, there is still a secret place or two where white violets cover the hillside and fallen trees areieft to rot and return to nature instead of quickly being sawed and neatly stacked. One thing which strikes terror into my heart is the cry, “the heifers are out.” Especially is this true if it is nighttime and we don’t know where they have gone. We grab every available flashlight and Allen drives the truck through the fields Over the years, one thing about Mol-Mix never changed. Quality. From the first day that was made, the people at National Molasses'made it with quality ingredients . . . because they knew a better-quality supplement would mean more net profit for the cattlemen who used it. Today, instead of decreasing or eliminating these quality ingredients because of shortages and higher costs, Mol-Mix has maintained the same level of quality that has made it the liquid leader. BUFFERED RELEASE IS JUST PART OF OUR QUALITY STORY Occasionally, somebody finds out about one of our unique features and gets really excited about it. For example, our buffered release of urea ammonia, heralded by other supplements as a brand-new innovation, has been in Mol- Mix for years to improve its protein-building efficiency. And our performance-proven ingredients, like corn distillers solubles, con densed fermented corn extractives, phosphor ic acid, and ammonium polyphosphate, have yet to be included in most other supplements! Stop in soon. We would like to demonstrate the dramatic results that Mol-Mix can bring to your herd in terms of performance and profits. We’re not talking about something that will only add to your supplement costs . . . we’re talking about the bottom line. Mol-Mix^ liquid supplements See me now. JOHN L MARTIN New Holland R No. 1 Phone 717-354-5848 in search of them. ' I’m notaure which I fear the most, their running pell mell through my 800 feet of fenced sugar peas or then escaping to a nearby development and devastating newly planted lawns. Either would be disastrous in my mind. Long gone are the days when each field was fenced in and animals could be contained. Guess I better stop writing and go pick some more of those big strawberries which we’ve so carefully covered on those cold nights. TRY A CLASSIFIED AD!