Five named Keystone 4-H winners in Lebanon H Keystone winners are ' Regional and State 4-H Regional and State 4-H finalists in the State contest. Days, Bev will be a Days. Fastaon Revue, State One delegate is chosen in sophomore Pharmacy major Capitol Day, PA 4-H each category to represent at Purdue University Leadership Congress and PA at the National 4-H Beth Ann, 15, is a daughter Letan® Area Fair Beth Congress in Chicago. - {* Ga } l and Dan Shiner, Ann will be a junior at Elco Melissa, 18, daughter of Myerstown She is a finalist High School. Nancy Weaver, Jonestown, Outstandmg 4-H’er ; K . is a Keystone winner in both Category. Beth Ann is a teen 1\ Forestry and Home En- leader in her club, the J V_y|| N vironment Sh< a member Myerstown Raiders. Her _ _ of the Natuie . rT projects center on Clothing, 1 B Club where her Foods, and other Home center on flower arranging, Economics skiLs Beth B ■ W wildflowers, and other Ann s activities include aspects of horticulture Her activities have included Camp Teen Council, PA 4-H Leadership Congress, National Junior Horticulture Association, Citizenship - Washington Focus, and State 4-H Days. She will be a sophomore at Elizabethtown College. Michelle, 16, a daughter of Marguerite and Melvin Noll, Lebanon, will be considered for state honors in the out standing 4-H’er category. She is a member of the Mill Acres 4-H Club where her projects include Clothing, horticulture, leadership, and foods Her activities include Teen Council, Olympic Day, LEBANON Years of hard work in 4-H have paid off for five Lebanon County 4-H’ers. Named as Keystone Winners were Melissa Weaver, Michelle Noll, Sue Attention Beef & Pork Raisers CUSTOM BUTCHERING Upf HESS’ BUTCHER SHOP 717-464-33741 ♦ t —We Process the Old Fashioned Way— ♦ • Pudding • Hams • Bologna ♦ • Scrapple • Bacons • Dry Beef We also Specialize in Beef For Your Freezer, Sides of Pork, s■♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦< Even our directors make personal calls. At Hamilton Bank one of our primary objectives is to serve and help preserve, the family farm We still believe that agriculture is the backbone of America, and the family farm is the cornerstone of agriculture in our area Brent Shunk C Abram Snyder Members of Lancaster Regional Advisory Board of Directors W Douglas Darmstaetter Member of Hamilton Bank Board of Directors and the Lancaster Regional Advisory Board of Directors with Robert D Shearer Mt Joy R D #T in his 15 Osowswme unit SS& H^ W&ftww/t/s Bomberger, Bev Hale, and Beth Ann Shiner. According to Linda Rohrbach, extension 4-H agent, being a Keystone winner is “a great honor”. 4- 2635 Willow Street Pike Willow Street, PA Sides of Beef When we work together, through a relationship of mutual trust, we can all continue to move ahead We can continue to keep agriculture strong Contact your local office for complete details on Hamilton Bank Agri-Finance Program I / / Regional and State 4-H Days, National Junior Horticulture Association, and State Capital Days Michelle will be a Senior at Cedar Crest this fall Sue, 18, daughter of Alta and Donald- Bomberger, Annvdle, is a Keystone Winner in the Garden in? and Agncultm e Catci. > year Sue a State wmner in the Outstanding 4-H’er Category and therefore, participated in the Ohio 4-H Leadership Congress last month Sue is a member of NoSoAnn Dairy and South Mountain Clubs In addition, she has been active in the Lebanon Area Fair, Regional and State 4-H Days, the PA Farm Show, and PA 4-H Leadership Congress Sue is a junior Botany major at George Washington University. Bev, 18, is a daughter of George and Beverly Hale, Lebanon Bev, a winner in the Consumer Education and Home Management Categories, is now a member of the Mill Acres Club. Ac tive in Teen Council, Olympic Day, Camp, vgSl. es - ® 3 HAMILTON BANK Formert\ Ndliondl Q nr u Bonh Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 19,1980—A23 It pays to advertise. Among poultry promotion signs on the road to Ko-Ka-Le-Ko Egg Ranch is this catchy advice How-to (Continued from Page A2l) any money back,” Lemmger said Poultry brings in a con tinuing, almost immediate return and it helps that monthly fact of life in any business called cash flow The first chicken house was put up only 14 years ago Today, the ranch has 90,000 layers and 90,000 pullets Eggs are sold at the ranch, and are marketed elsewhere In addition, the total operation includes some 2,200 hogs and 800 beef cattle The feed mix facilities will be used for both the hogs and chickens Four bins in the feed mixing complex include 60.000 bushels of wet storage, 12.000 bushels of dry storage and a 1,700-bushel batch dryer The dryer has a false bottom tf> provide total aereation. control It is possible to mix feed right out of the dryer into the mill Leminger points out that it has already been proven to him that bulk purchases and mixing his own feed pays “We have been using our own hammer mill ” he says “Back when nogs were selling for 29 cents, I was still able to break even ” But the beef phase of the operation is not going to be forgotten Just like the eggs, beef is retailed right off the farm “With our terrain, we can only grow grass in some areas,” he explains “It’s either high and dry or low and wet. “ The Reed’s Cam grows mighty tall in some areas and it is put through the cattle The custom mixing facilities were fabricated m the shop of Earl Light, of Palmyra