QyUomcM Societies York Executive Board. «* The York Executive Board met New cook books will be on sale at recently to make arrangements for the convent, on the 42nd York County Farm Women’s Convention. The convention is to be held November 5 at the St. Matthew Lutheran Church, 839 West Market St., York. Lancaster Co, Society 6 Lancaster Co.- Society 6 met recently at the home of Ruth Weidman, Willow Street. Plans were made to have a food stand at the Ezra Bucher sale, October 31 on College Avenue, Elizabethtown. Lancaster Co, Society 27 Lancaster Society 27 will en tertain Society 17 and county of ficers at a toss salad luncheon at Donegal Presbyterian Church. Each guest was invited to take home a box of nuts and a pumpkin. Cindy Garber was entertainment for the evening as she sang a few Saturday, October 17 Lancaster Society 3 takes a trip to Gettysburg Lancaster Society 18 to hear Alice Dourte present a musical presentation Lancaster Society 12 to do work for the Needlework Guild Monday, October 19 Lancaster Co. Society 31 to en tertain Society 21 Tuesday, October 29 Berks Society 6 meets with Dorothy Wagner for a Halloween Party Wednesday, October 21 Lancaster Co. Society 33 meets WIC MOTORIZED SILAGE WAGON WITH HYDROSTATIC SPEED CONTROL A GREAT IMPROVEMENT ON EFFICIENCY ★ Electric of Gas Operated - ★ Regular Feed Discharge or No Competitor Con Beat The Wk Choppers 40" High Feed Discharge For performance And Cost &O.MW Members were reminded that the project is quilting this year. The State Convention will be held January 11 and 12 at the Farm Show building. Mary Spangler was named treasurer for the 1982-83 year. The program for the evening was a speaker from Hospice. The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Musser Heisey, November 14. songs. Christine Erb gave a talk with slides on her stay in Japan as an IFYE representative. At the next meeting, members will be making graham cracker houses. &QA/2. Cadmdati with Karen Pietzke, beautician from Germany Lancaster Society 24 meets with husbands for. Three Little Bakers Dinner Theatre Thursday, October 22 Lancaster Co. Society 28 meets with Jane Landis for Harvest Sale Lancaster Society 26 to entertain husbands at the'Old Fashioned Dinner Party Lancaster Society 4 to meet witf Mrs. Harriet Kauffman for £ craft day ELECTRIC BEDDING CHOPPER Wic also makes an electric 200 volt a c chopper or a 24 volt d c battery operated chopper including an automatic charger These two .models are equipped in the v factory with a manual starter panel and are protected by fuses to dimmish nsk of accidents Very quiet, these bedding choppers are mostly used on small or medium-sized farm. As well as being mobile the 220 volt 'ac model can be Motor 220 volt a c 3 h p 24 volt d c 21/2 hp Saturday, October 24 The NEW Hydra-static speed control gives you a choice of speeds from slow to fast. With a touch of the pedal the wagon moves forward or backward: release the pedal and it automatically brakes. You also have a regular feed discharge or a 40-inch high discharge from one or two sides. The WIC Silage Wagon is operated by gas or electric and available in 30-, 45- or 52-bushel sizes. With the 16-inch wheels it goes wherever you want to take it. COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Students and faculty members in the Division of Agricultural' and Life Sciences at the University of Maryland are inviting the general public to join them in an ob servance of the first World Food Day., The event in scheduled for Oct. 19 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Student Union building on the College Park campus. Admission is free, except for a luncheon at 1 p.m. in the Red room. Three officials from Washington, D.C., who are working in the area of international assistance and food policy will highlight a three hour forum on the world food situation, beginning at 10 a.m. in the Colony ballroom. The roster of speakers includes Nyle C. Brady, deputy ad ministrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development; W. David Hopper, vice-president of the World Bank; and Arthur Mead, senior economist at the North American liaison office for the Food and Agriculture Organization of tiie United Stations. A continouus showing of films on the world food situation is scheduled m room 1131 of the Student Union. Appropriate exhibits will also be on display at various locations. Cost of the 1 p.m. luncheon is $4.75 per person. Reservations should be made in advance by October 12 if possible with Mrs. Patricia M. (Patti) Nitowitz;' phone: (301) 45445407. Moore stated that the purpose of the observance, is to raise awareness about the current world food situation and generate ideas for new directions in solving the hunger problem facing many underdeveloped nations. He noted that the official ob servance of World Food Day is A GREAT IMPROVEMENT ON EFFICIENCY First World Food Day set On our way to the fair, we bought Jonathan and Mclntosh apples and enjoyed the colorful leaves on the maple and. dogwood trees as Columbia County its farther north than we are. Cindy is enjoying college life after spending a busy summer at home. Besides a full time job, she helped to coach the Lancaster County 4-H Horticulture team to first place in the state. She also led a small 4-H Cooking Club at our local high school and helped her club take top honors in their class at the County 4-H Fair by setting up a New Year’s Eve Party display. Ail during the last weeks, she made lists of what things she needed at college until there were GAS BEDDING CHOPPER The gas powered bedding- * chopper Is the most popular on c the market lt‘s operation is <*d it handles easily a Honda 4-stroke gas' engine, the Wic bedding chopper insures maximum* out' put while tn use Motor 5. 7. or 10 h p 4* stroke Honda Starter: 5 h p manual, and 7 and 10 h p manual or electric start Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 17,1981—8 it Friday, October 16, and com memorates the founding of the UF Food and Agriculture Organization in 1945; An official announcement states that the 147-member nations of FAO established the 1981 World Food Day observance “because they felt the need to alert public opinion to the gravity of the world food situation now and the dangers in the years to come.” The North American liaison office of FAO report in early Oc- Ida’s Notebook Ida Kisser We went to the Bloomsburg Fair and saw everything from, not soup to nuts, but soap to nuts. There were ten different Granges displaying home-grown products. Some unusual canned goods were banana pickles, sauerkraut with hot. dogs and spaghetti in tomato sauce-. Other seldom seen things were broom corn and hops on a vine. The varieties of tea were endless and the biggest squash-type that I saw weighed 236 lbs. Wic has perfected a three point hitch PTO chopper activated by the power of your tractor. Easy to in stall, it is ideal for free-stalls, or in strawberry fields for mulching purposes. -DISTRIBUTOR- PAUL HORNING R.D. 1, Stevens, PA 17578 215-267-7208 tober that World' Food Day ob servances were being planned in 145 countries, including Canada and the United States. “Even with bountiful U.S. harvests this year,*’ l Moore commented, “huge numbers of people bn this planet will still go hungry. World Food Day ob servances can be an important way not only to show humanitarian concern but to consider new steps which North Americans can take in the war against hunger.” about 75 items recorded. Besides boxes, suitcases and flowers, she wished that she could take her kitten, “Puff” along. She should have her home, away from home, well furnished. There are 18 of her high school classmates on the main campus of Penn State with her so she doesn’t want for friends. All summer she ran back and forth to her optometrist. She decided that contact lenses were what she wanted. First they tried hard lenses. She was satisifed but the doctor wasn’t so finally they settled on soft lenses. Me, I’m satisfied to wear glasses as I’ve done most of my life. Philip and Jeffrey live only a few blocks away from her dormitory' and when she visits them she can cook and bake to her hearts con tent which makes them happy too. Both Boys now have motorcycles. Philip had to move to another apartment in the middle of his seashore vacation which caused quite a bit of traveling. But, it was as nothing compared to Jeffrey who went to Seattle for his vacation to visit his sifter, Nancy, and her family. Then he had to hurry back, on his new Honda in a little over four days, as he had a seminar to give at college. He made the trip with no trouble. BOWER TAKEOFF BIDDING CHOPPER
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers