Country store is new Ag Progress hit BY ROBIN PHILLIPS Staff Correspondent ROCK SPRINGS - “It gives students the opportunity to ex- Pa. Ag Sec. Penny Hallowell congratulates Penn State ag students on their Country Store commodity booth new addition to this year's Ag Progress. From the left are Marcy Gehman, who was in charge of design; Hallowell; Dean Samuel Smith of the College of Agriculture; and Phil Price 11, chairman. “It’s produced consistently over the years Fve used it.” “A friend of mine recommended Hardy Brand 301 XS based on his experience with it, so I tried it. It had a really good yield, even under drought conditions. Last year we had three fields planted at three different times, and the Hardy still out-produced perience marketing. Besides, it the College of Agriculture at Penn helps us to show off our students.” state concerning the Ag Com- These were the sentiments ex- modities Booth initiated by the ag pressed by Dean Samuel Smith of students at Penn State. The See your local Hardy Brand dealer, or contact For a Hardy Stand use Hardy Brand everything else. Over my four years of experience I’ve been well satisfied. Hardy Corn husks nice, stands up good and dries down nicely. It’s an overall good corn for most conditions, and it’s especially proven itself under drought conditions.” that Jean Price fried right in the Country Store at Ag Progress. commodities booth, located on the upper floor of the barn at Ag Progress Days last week, featured Pennsylvania grown and processed agricultural food products. Products were offered as samples to taste and for sale to the thousands of visitors who stopped by the “Country Store” during their stroll through the Ag Progress streets. The ag commodities booth was the brainchild of the student ♦<**' . mcaster Farming, Saturday, September i, 198A-A35 council of Penn State’s College of Agriculture. Chaired by Philip Price 11, an ag student, the booth was managed and operated by students from every branch of the College of Agriculture. Com mittees were formed for pur chasing, operating, designing, and planning in order to make the endeavor run smoothly. Also lending their support, were several professors of the college who helped in procuring commodities and planning the merchandising. After letters were written to the various large commodity groups for purchases. Price states that the hardest part was getting the bam the way they had visualized it should be. With the support of Jack Macmillan, assistant to the dean, and an antique collector, many nostalgic furnishings were added to the store site to give it the authentic country store ap pearance. An antique Coke cooler tub was used to hold beverages in ice, an old school bench and cast iron stove was displayed in a comer, and wagon wheels with the “Country Store” logo were displayed on the outside of the barn. Other additions from the college wre also utilized as teams of students spent Saturday, Sun day, and Monday until 2 A.M. preparing for their opening debut at Ag Progress Days. “We did pretty well,” Price stated after the opening day last Tuesday. “If it didn’t sell, we opened up packages and gave out samples,” he added. “They like the samples,” Mary Bates, an ag business major, said about the visitors to the store. Durin fa the noon hour and early afternoon there was usually a line of people lined up to taste the jelly, Dutch cookies, canned scrapple, cheeses, and bologna in the store. After the first day, the supply of sparkling cider was sold out and additional cases were stocked. Another favorite seemed to be the Dutch cookies. The Sip-Ups also sold well according to Price who also stated that once the public got (Turn to Page A 3 7)