Gadget on market to ripen fruit ■LYNNHERSHEY ,jre Extension Service ARK, Del. - Do you iuy room left on your 0 counter? Are you oth your newest toys .maker, hot dogger, | broiler, food isor, fry baby)? Well, & EVERY P WEDNESDAY IS Hp DAIRY a DAY NEW HOLLAND SALES STABLES, INC. New Holland, PA lyou need 1 cow or a truck load, we have from 'to 200 cows to sell every week at your price, ly fresh and close springing Holstems. 7S from local farmers and our regular ipers including Marvin Eshleman, Glenn Fite, ly Bowser, Bill Lang, Blaine Hoffer, Dale tetter, H.D. Matz, and Jerry Miller. SALE STARTS 12:30 SHARP Also Every Wednesday, Hay, Straw & Ear Corn Sale 12:00 Noon. All Dairy Cows & Heifers must be eligible for Pennsylvania Health Charts. arrangements for special sales or herd sals at our barn or on your farm, contact; Abram Diffenbach, Mgr. 717-354-4341 -A OR Norman Kolb 717-397-5538 DALE L. SCHNUPP R.D.6 Lebanon, Pa. 17042 717-865-2534 R.D.3 Ephrata, Pa. shove everything aside and make.room for a brand new plaything. It’s called a fruit ripener. Yes indeed, now there is a bandy little item you buy just for ripening fruit. No well-dressed home should be without one. Go ahead and laugh. I did, HIGH FEED COSTS GETTING YOU Do,, Try ROASTED SOYBEANS SOYBEAN SCREEINGS, Or DAMAGED SOYBEANS Available in small lots or trailer loads. Soybean Roasting on your farm because somehow a fruit ripener represents the ultimate in civilized nonsense. We pick fruit rock hard and green, then buy something to make it edible. It’s sort of like melting ice to get water to make ice cubes. But hang on, maybe the inventor isn’t so crazy after all. When supermarkets offer tomatoes resembling green golf balls, and peaches you can’t slice, perhaps it’s time for the best fed nation in the world to market fruit ripeners. In fact, the F.R. could be displayed in supermarkets right next to the underripe produce. I’m surprised they haven’t thought of that already. In case you are seriously interested in this latest merchandising marvel, look in larger deparment stores and specialty shops. The F.R. is about 15 inches high and 15 inches in diameter, with a clear acrylic lid appropriately pear shaped. Vent holes permit air circulation but concentrate HIGH PRESSURE WASHING OF POULTRY HOUSES AND VEAL PENS BARRY I. HERR 1744 Pioneer Road, Lancaster. Pa Phone 717-464-2044 the ethylene gas naturally given off by the fruit to produce ripening. Marguerite Krackbardt, Delaware Extension food and nutrition specialist, says a F.R. is O.K. for ripening green pears, apples, bananas, mangoes, avocados, tomatoes, plums, nectarines, apricots, peaches, some citrus fruits, and melons (except watermelons). She does not recommend it tor use with fruits gown locally or in your own garden, since these are normally picked at the peak of ripeness. Because the ripener works quickly, it requires careful watching lest the fruit becomes overripe. For example, green bananas placed inside the F.R. in the morning will be ready to eat by earling evening. If your forget and leave them there all night, you can conveniently throw them out next day. The F.R. is supposed to work better than the old fashioned brown paper bag. For Lower Protein Cost. CONESTOGA VALLEY GRAIN Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 25.1977 But I’ll stick to the old way, thank you. Maybe you think it’s stubbornness. Or thrift. But it’s not. It’s just the principle of the thing. And in case you’re Ag trade called peace TOKYO, Japan - Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland said here recently that “a continued and growing friendship between the people of the United States and the people of Japan” remains “a key factor” in the maintenance of world peace and that “trade is the cornerstone of our mutual friendship and cooperation.” To illustrate the importance of the Japanese market to the American farmer, Bergland noted that the United States trade with Japan is “double that of any single western European country” and “equal to more than a third of our total trade with all European nations, including the Soviet Union.” The Secretary also emphasized that the domestic agricultural policies of the United States “are geared toward expanding foreign trade.” “We have proposed a system of reserves and commodity loans which provide economic protection DEALER IN GRAIN wondering, I don’t own a crepe maker either - or a hot dogger, a food processor, a fry baby, a bacon broiler, etc., etc., etc. factor for farmers, supply protection for foreign and domestic buyers and support prices which which keep American grain competitive in world markets,” the secretary said. ‘‘We firmly believe,” Bergland continued, “that the importing and exporting nations of the world must agree to establish grain reserves as an emergency supply and to dampen the wide price swings which trouble both consuming and producing countries.” After two days of meeting with Japanese and American agriculture, trade and government leaders, Bergland toured agricultural areas in rural Japan before departing for Hong Kong, the second stop in his six-nation tour. 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