Famim, Satwtoy, Augwt 23,19i0 Top cooks in the first Pennsylvania Vegetable chfield, Altoona, left; second to Ruth Roberts, Recipe Contest were honored Wednesday af- Bensalem; third to Mrs. Geary Huntsberger, ternoon. First prize of $lOO went to Judy Bur- Etters; and fourth to Mrs. Myles L. Strohl, Trappe. Luther Foglesong, Westminster, Md., paused to snap a shot of one of Deere’s big combines. A large number of Maryland and Delaware farmers attended Ag Progress Days. USDA's Kenneth Leath told farmers about a newly identified clover nematode discovered when pathologists realized yield increases in Furadan treated plots were coming not from insect control but from nematode control. The stop was one of many on Ag Progress Days wagon tours. All the action Ag Rain forced crowds to desert Main Street at Ag Progress Days from 1:30 to 2 p.m. on Wednesday. But all those anxious faces peering out from the sides of the tents were looking for the first sign of a break in the weather. Rain only in creased traffic past inside exhibits and settled dust on the roads. Ten Furry, left, showed Ag Progress visitors how to make Gourmet Globe Round Zucchini at the educational tent. Pennsylvania’s First Lady, Ginny Thornburgh, was helped up to the cab of a 251 hp Steiger Cougar by Paul Tingling of C.B. Hoober’s, In tercourse. When a farmer in the crowd suggested Mrs. Thornburgh buy one for him, she replied, “No way." A new p< Don’t let th quite benig Days. State Dairy Linda McHei Marketing, In William C. of the secret! on the Ag Pro 4.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers