( Order case lots of U S No 1 Florida’s finest oranges and grapefruit now Here s a rare opportunity to treat your family to the delicious goodness of fresh top-quality Florida citrus and save money too A special arrangement with Florida growers and packers enables us to have pre-ordered just-picked citrus shipped directly to us saving time and preserving freshness Quantity ORDER DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 15 PICK UP ON: DECEMBER 3 Name Address LEBANON 16th & Cumberland St Lebanon, Pa 17042 717-273-2621 G & G FEED &SUPPLY Rr 123 E Stiegel Street Manheim, Pa 17545 717 665 5001 (flGWflv) Product _ NAVEL ORANGES . . . JUICE ORANGES . . TANGELOS PINK GRAPEFRUIT . . . GOLDEN GRAPEFRUIT NONE SOLD WITHOUT ADVANCE ORDER Qcj mtilies rrid\ hr limited and prices may men ase m ‘w » vent of unfr ft seen damage to crops or other causes bt vond Aqw s control LANCASTER 1140 Oillemile Road Lancaster, Pa 17603 717-394-0541 SALUNGA 101 Mam St Salunga. Pa 17538 717-898 2248 717-653-1864 CHAPMAN IRONTON CRESSONA RD2 RD #l, Box 326 2nd & Walnut St Wescosville, Pa 18106 Allentown, Pa 18104 Cressona, Pa 17929 215-395-3381 215-799-3111 717-385-2160 B-Z FARMS ROI Box 260 Lehighton, Pa 18235 717-386-4184 Rustlers (Continued from Page B 4) Sentencing would be delayed until those costs were paid Meanwhile, Donald Baker had become a one-man crusade for photographs on cattle registry papers. “The state’s attorney told me that one little discrepancy one misplaced curve or angle one little spot missing on a sketched paper might be cause to throw out the registry certificate as legal evidence, he says. “Only an identical picture, a photograph, may be considered solid proof on “spotted” cattle, like Ayrshires, Holsteins, or Guernseys. In Maryland, most registered cattle would not have an eartag, which can be removed anyway. We may have to ultimately rely on tattoos, like the Brown Swiss and Jersey breeds. ’ ’ In July, Judge Donald J. Gilmoiepiom < ’ i<hrpp- AGWA TASTE THE SUNSHINE J AGWAY FRESH FLORIDA FRUIT SALE .80 bushel (4/5) Cost Size Carton Total Price *9.99 4/5 bushel $ *7.99 4/5 bushel 5 *8.49 4/5 bushel $ *7.99 4/5 bushel $ *7.49 4/5 bushel $ Total $ Phone NEW HOLLAND HANOVERDALE 2X9 Railroad Ave RD I*3 Harrisburg, Pa 17112 New Holland, Pa 17557 717-566 2569 717 354-4526 QUARRYVILLE 27 E 4th Street Quarryville, Pa 17566 717-786-2126 FRED M. IRWIN & FAMILY, INC. MSS RO #l, Bangor Pa 18013 215 588 1627 year suspended sentence and five years probation for Ambrose, and ordered him to obtain treatment in a mental health program Attorney H.L Huhl had cited Ambrose’ history of mental problems and his having been enrolled in programs m the Spring Grove State Hospital, the Walter P. Carter Medical Center and a clinic m Catosnville, MD. An account of the sen tencing carried in the “Carroll County Evening Sun” noted Judge Gilmore as saying “The court recognizes that the defen dant has serious problems that need constant medical supervision.” Maximum penalty for rustling in Maryland is 15 years in jail, a $lOOO fine or both. Cattle rustling, which had been taking place frequently in the southern York County and northern Maryland area, has since quieted, although the crime had TEMPLE SUPPLY CENTER North sth Street Highway Temple, Pa 215-929 5264 929 5794 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 8,1980—85 made an upswing in other parts of the state. Like other farmers in the area who had been cattle loss victims, Baker and his family carry lasting emotional scars of the in trusion onto their private property. They recall a mght earlier this past summer, when at 2:30 a.m., the dairy cattle were heard nulling around an.l lowing. Earlier that night, an unfamiliar pickup had traveled back and forth on the two roads that bisect at the edge of Baker’s meadow pasture. “I grabbed my shotgun,” Baker admits. As he stood checking it outside the house m the light, the strange pickup agam, traveling at great speed toward Penn sylvania, passed the house and has not seen back in the area. All that was found up at the dairy bam was a new calf, with the cows moving aroupd to observe the calf. But still, the family and neighbors wonder if they disturbed a potential troublemaker A wariness has settled over the quiet neighborhood and the residents keep an eye out for each other Recently a Pennsylvania neighbor up the road called the Bakers, when a large truck was observed creeping down the narrow road toward the farm It was a feed truck making a late delivery, but Baker rests easier knowing that everyone remains alert and concerned. And, every chance they have, the Baker family continues to campaign for pictures on cattle registry certificates. Suppose, they wonder, if the stolen animals had carried sketched registry, and a question of ownership had arisen, would Patches and Betsy been returned? Representatives of the three “spotted” dairy cattle breeds say they’ve never had any refusal to their knowledge of sketched registry certificates being accepted as positive iden t'fication. Dale Severy, assistant to the manager of the Ayrshire Breeders Association at Brandon, Vermont, in dicated that an Ayrshire can be identified in several ways. Tattooing is one ap proved method, following requirements set by the Association Board. Or breeders can submit a sketched application, or photographs, which will be fastened to the final cer tificate. However the Ayrshire Association is presently covertmg to computerization and will then encourage tattooing. The Canadian breed organization already requires mandatory tattoos A spokesman for the registry department of the Holstein Association at Brattleboro, Vermont, in dicated that, while tattooing has been discussed already, it is not likely to become mandatory. The Holstein Association does prefer that each registry application come with an eartag num ber. Holstein registration can also be either it sketch or photograph form, black and white, and no questioning or sketched registries has ever been made in legal proceedings Although Guernsey breeders may submit photographs in lieu of sketches, they will be used only for an office staffer to draw the registry sketch, according to Irvin Nichols, registry director for the American Guernsey Cattle Club at Petersburg, New Hampshire. Tattooing is also optional, if breeders prefer to use that method of identification
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers