Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, November 19, 1977, Image 106

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    06—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 19,1977
Keystone
beef honors
(Continued from Page 105)
Heifers, Spring Yearlings
4. Thompson Hereford
T arm.
Bulls, Junior Calves
2. Nature’s Acres, 3.
Thompson Hereford Farm.
Bulls, Spinor Calves
3. Thompson Hereford
rf’arm.
Bulls, Summer
Yearlings
2. Thompson Herefoi d
?arm.
Bulls, Junior
Yearlings
1. Pigeon Hill Farm,
4bbottstown.
Bulls, Senior
Yearlings
1. Mr. and Mrs. S. E.
Kimmel, Wellsville.
Two Bulls
1. Thompson Hereford
Farm.
Pair of Yearlings
3. Thompson Hereford
Farm.
Pair of Calves
4. Nature’s Acres Farm,
(nc.; 5. Thompson Hereford
Farm.
SHORTHORN AND
POLLED SHORTHORN
Senior Heifer Calves
4. Sheila Peoples, Volant.
Late Spring
Yearling Females
5. Joan Peoples, Volant.
Junior Yearling Females
1. Sheila Peoples, Volant.
Two-Year-old Bulls
1. Richard Peoples.
Get of Sire
4. Richard Peoples,
Volant. 5. Richard People.
WHITE HORSE GRAIN CO. ( INC.
AT TWO LOCATIONS
(We have recently emerged with
Breckbill Farm Seed & Supply)
Grain Elevator located Warehouse will be at
at White Horse Grain Russellville for farm
R2Cochranville supplies, fertilizer
808 HOOD arid chemicals.
215-869-8201 DICK BRECKBILL
215-932-3307
NOW BUYING
• SHELLED CORN & SOYBEANS
WE HAVE INCREASED OUR DRYING
FACILITIES TO SERVE YOU BETTER
AND FASTER.
FALL SEEDS AVAILABLE
WHEAT BARLEY
• Abe •Pennrad
• Red Coat • Barsoy
• Logan • Rapidan
• Arthur 71
We have complete fertilizer needs
for Fall Seeding.
Combining & True's Service Available.
ANGUS BREEDING
CATTLE
Junior Heifer Calves
2. Cecil Teets, Freedon; o
Richard L. Cooney, West
minister, Md.
Late Senior
Heifers Calves
3. Rishels Edlyn Farm,
York.
Early Senior
Heifer Calves
1. Cecil W. Teets,
Freedom.
Late Summer
Yearling Heifers
1. Rishels Edlyn Farm, 2,
Rishels Edlyn Farm.
Early Summer
Yearling Heifers
2. Thomas A: Baum,
Elizabethtown; 5. Carol L.
Krause, Slatmgton.
April Junior
Yearling Heifers
1. Rishels Edlyn Farm, 5.
S. David Wise, Spring Grove.
March Junior
Yearling Heifers
1. Cecil W. Teets.
Early Junior
Yearling Heifers
2. Thomas A. Baum, 3.
Diane S. Krause.
Junior Bull Calves
3. Cecil Teets, 4.*Wood
bridgetown Farm, Smith
field, Pa.; 5. Sidney Riggs,
Fnedens.
Early Summer
Yearling Bulls
1. William Angus Farm,
Stahlstown, Pa.
April Junior
Yearling Bulls
1. Branchwater Farms,
Inc., Owings Mill, Md.
Senior Yearling Bulls
1. Clifford Teets.
Two-Year-old bulls
2. Jacob Tams and
Delaware Valley College,
Doylestown; 3. Walter S.
Laird, Dover.
On a day to day basis at current
price or by contract.
Also Rye Seed
IH grants quarter mill to nat’l 4-H center
WASHINGTON - A
$250,000 grant frpm the
International Harvester
Foundation to help complete
expansion of the National 4-
H Center in Washington,
D.C., was announced
recently by Brooks Mc-
Cormick, president and chief
executive officer, In
ternational Harvester
Company.
The 12% acre National 4-H
Center, which opened in 1959
with major assistance from
the Ford and £)anforth
Foundations, currently
serves more than 30,000
participants annually. Rapid
expansion of 4-H enrollment
nearly doubling since 1970 to
5.8 million boys and girls
today makes completion of
the Center an urgent matter,
according to Grant A.
Shrum, executive director of
the National 4-H Council.
“The International
Harvester Foundation grant
will provide a substantial
portion of our remaining
capital needs,” Shrum said.
“In recognition of the long
term support of the Mc-
Cormick family and In
ternational Harvester
Company to agriculture and
4-9, one building will be
named McCormick Hall.’ ’
International Harvester
provides annual support to
the national 4-H agricultural
awards program and to the
young agricultural
specialists exchange
program between the U.S.
and the Soviet Union.
TRY A
CLASSIFIED
AD!
The National 4-H Center is
owned and operated by the
National 4-H Council as an
educational service to 4-H.
The 4-H program is con
ducted by the Cooperative
Extension Service of state
land-grant universities and
the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
“This new grant and those
which have preceded it have
but one ultimate purpose - to
strengthen the 4-H program
and build responsible
initiative in youth,” Shrum
said.
When completed the
Center will provide lodging,
dining and conference
facilities for 650 persons at a
time to meet the goals of
annually training 12,500 key
teenage leaders, 5000 ~
volunteer leaders and 2500
professional staff members,
to serve the educational
training needs of 10,000
others in cooperating youth
groups and organizations; to
provide a national
educational library and
service pilot programs
F sAllt »/3 OF I
k THE COST OF i
y SPRAY PAINTING BARNS |
ft • By bavins it done right!
J • Like you want it done. jg
• With latest equipment. ||
\ •Crushed properly with theg
real 6" paint brush. M
|> • By one who is self-||
v employed. - - w
x • Using the original proven M
y barn paint. II
' • Check with my recent work ||
/ - near your place. ii
£ PHARESS. HURST %
1/ RD1,80x420 ;|
Narvon, Pa. 17555 ; -s
215-445-6186 ~
WHO’S MINDING
THE MIIKP
which will update, extend,
and expand 4-H educational
efforts.
Special emphasis is given
to citizenship training for
teenagers each Summer
with programs focusing on
the free enterprise system,
health, environmental
improvement, economics,
judicial process, and in
ternational understanding.
-.The expansion program
initiated in 1969 is scheduled
for completion this Summer
with dedication of entire
maintained.
• Record of coding equipment effic ;ncy.
• Cleaning temperature recording on the same
chart
The Sentinel is also available with provision for
actuating an alarm or warning light if pre-set tempera
ture is exceeded.
Remember—if it prevents the loss of only one
tank of product, tne Sentinel has paid for itself. It
minds your milk.
PARTLOW
See your dealer about the
Sentinel—or drop us a line
RO. Box 433
Elizabethtown, PA 17022
facility set for September 22.
Expansion has been made
possible by gifts totaling $2
million from 4-H members,
leaders and staff, together
with more than six million
dollars from the private
sector. In addition to In
ternational Harvester
Foundation, major con
tributors to date include
W.K. Kellogg Foundation,
Kresge Foundation, J.C.
Penney Company, Inc., and
J.C. Penney Foundation,
Inc.
you depend upon
our milk check
(brtlMhf
who's mimHng
*our milk?
tne-shot insurance you can
- 10-inch recorder which
tur milk-cooling or holding
ies
proper temperature was