too—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 19,1977 Jim Bright, on far left, smiles offer buying the champion capon from John Huber, seen standing next to him. On the right, Clarence Keener, Sr., looks on after purchasing the reserve champion bird, here held by Phillip Nissley, brother of the winner. Huber wins capon roundup MANHEIM - John Huber, roundup, dinner, and Third place bird was Lititz, a 15-year-old 4-H auct i° n were ail sponsored shown by Jeff Shenk, Lititz, Capon Club member, won the Manheim Rotary and sold for $1.65 per pound, his second championship at Club. Eighteen birds, Wendy Huber showed the the Elm-Penryn and Lititz- weighing between 10 and fourth place capon, which Manheim 4-H Clubs capon 12% P ounds were offered by brought a selling price of roundup on November 15 ers so ** $1.75. The ten pound champion throughout the evening, bird was auctioned after the .Reserve champion capon roundup to be sold for the was shown by Ed Nissley, Other 4-H members nrice of S 2 50 iur nr.,.na Manheim R 5. The 11% pound participatmg in the roundup being boueht bird was sold for 1.60 per from the area included: Jir£ president of the Mmiheim P ound to Clarence Keener, Kreider, Bud Shenk, Tun Rotary Club, Jim Bright Sr -> who is Vlce president of Phil Nissley, and 8 ' the Manheim Rotary Club. Deb Huber. ■ Where a everytl this White □ Trucks □ Cars □ Boats □ Bikes □ Campers □ Trailers □ Outdoor Furmtun □ Lawn and Gardei Equipment □ Snowmobiles □ (A Handy Hideawi Here’s the answer A beautiful, low-cost Wickes utility building, garage or workshop Rugged, professionally-engineered poleframe structures with maintenance-free extenors of textured color aluminum or color steel—your choice Plenty of storage space for equipment and vehi cles, plus extra room for a workshop too, if you want one Sizes and plans for every need Erected on your land by skilled Wickes crews Protect your investments Get 'em out of the weather and into a Wickes building Extended payment plans available, including long-term financing A Division ol The W'Clces Corps niion Ephrata, Pennsylvania, Box 300 (717) 738-2401 DO-IT-YOURSELF SPECIAL • Materiai-Oniy-Packages available on all standard building plans for quick, easy erection by the buyer. Ask us about them. No. 4 milk price $10.46 during October. When ad justment for variation in 3.7 per cent above the Oc- calendar composition is tober 1976 daily average. oct ° ber milk Middle Atlantic Order pool f les * ere f do^ n 0 6 Pf r cent handlers reported Class I in area milk sales of 7.63 ft P tober. ALEXANDRIA, Va. - Market ” Administrator Joseph D. Shine re cently announced an October 1977 base milk price of $10.46 per hundredweight for the Middle Atlantic Marketing Order and an excess milk price of $8.75. The wieghted average Oc tober price is $10.32 and the butterfat differential-for the month is 11.6 cents. The October base milk price is down 10 cents -from Sep tember and is 24 cents below the October 1976 base price. Order No. 4 prices are an nounced for-3.5 per cent milk f .o.b. plant location within 55 nules of Philadelphia, Pa., and also within 75 miles from the nearer of Washington, D.C. or Baltimore, Md. There is a 6-cent direct delivery differential ap plicable to producer milk received at plants located within 55 miles of Philadelphia. Shine reported that Oc tober producer milk receipts totaled 468.2 million pounds, a drop of 2.0 per cent from September, on a. daily basis, but 3.4 per cent above a year ago. Class I producer milk accounted for 59.54 per cent of total October producer deliveries, compared to 61.10 per cent in September and 61.50 per cent a year ago. Base milk represented 91.87 per cent of total October production. A total of 7,941 dairymen supplied Middle Atlantic Order handlers during he month and the average daily delivery per producer was 1,902 pounds. Your Averages Are Better With Gutwein! We Have The Plots To Prove It! Prove It To Yourself In 1978... Call HAROLD J. DIETRICH RD 1. Box 98. Richland. PA (717) 933-4940 * 1 i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers