r < -V* J - vTcifmi '-Wcwph A and displayed herbs and jellies t* Qorirhro f made from herbs. —. . \ The Lebanon County Fall ■l l ’'’' Convention will be held at the (Continued from Page B 17) Palmyra UCC Church Oct. 8. Six members of Society 20 will attend. Lebanon Society 20 The October meeting will be held J at the home of Marion Maulfair; Lebanon Society 20 met recently all members should bring a at the Ono Fire Hall to entertain decorated hat. It will also be craft Society 21. night. Joyce Blouch talked about herbs Lancaster Society 8 Members of Lancaster Society 8 Restaurant Oct. 14 at 9:30 a.m. met at the home of Margaret Christmas in October is scheduled Heisey, Mountville, Sept. 10. for Oct. 20 and 21 at the Farm and Anna Mae Derr gave the Home Center, secretary’s report and Evelyn The society will present a con- Dannemann gave the treasurer’s tribution to the Red Cross and will report. participate in the lawn fair at Mary Shellenberger gave a book Conestoga View. The state project review of Ruth Graham’s book, is to be a creation made from “It’s My Turn. ” something grown in Pennsylvania. Hostesses for the afternoon were The next meeting will be held at Margaret Heisey and Agnes the home of Kathy Vogt Oct. 18 at 2 Houseal. p.m. The program will be a craft Farm Women’s Day will be show and tell, celebrated at Willow Valley Lancaster Society 25 Lancaster Society 25 celebrated Carl Nolt, Lancaster, presented its 22nd anniversary at the Her- a lecture called “People are for the shey Farm Restaurant, Strasburg, birds.” on Sept. 13. Thirty-six members The Oct. 11 meeting will be held and guests attended. at the home of Mrs. Sam Goss, Mrs. David Newswenger con- Millersville. Guitarist Ben Kreider ducted devotions. will entertain. The September meeting of York Society 7 was a luncheon and tour of the Emig Mansion in Emigsville. Fourteen members and one guest from England at tended. Anna Zinn read the scripture. Beatrice Brothers won the pig game. The group will hold a sub sale York Society 7 Oct. 21. Orders are due Oct. 15. A bus trip to Bethlehem, Pa. will be held Dec. 9. The group will have a luncheon at Denny’s Oct. 14 to celebrate Farm Women Week. The next meeting will be held at the home of Irene Rentzel Oct. 8 at 12:30 p.m. The group will leave there for a tour of the PP&L plant. Performance you can bank on. Extension Agents Honored For Career Guidance Ernie White, branch manager of New Holland, Inc., left, congratulates Carol Schur man, Indiana County 4-H agent, center, and Nancy Kadwill, Montgomery County 4-H agent, right, at the recent National Association of County Agricultural Agents annual meeting in Denver, Colo. The two were honored for their work in the Career Guidance Program, sponsored by New Holland, Inc., which recognizes outstanding programs in youth careers in agriculture and agri-business. Kadwill was named the northeast regional winner for her 4-H harness groom school program. Schurman was named state winner for a teen program. A number of risk-reducing characteristics. You can count on G-4626 in your well-balanced corn program. Top-notch plant health makes this hybrid an ideal choice wherever disease pressures are common. But the good news doesn’t stop there. The yield poten tial you get with Q-4626 makes it an excellent selection for many areas. You’ll also reduce risks at harvest time. G-4626 dries down fast so you can get it out of the field right on time! And its full-season, high-yielding ability lets you push for high returns per acre. Plan on planting plenty of G-4626. Call your Hoffman representative today. Hoffman Seeds, Inc, Landisvjlle, PA. 17538 Tin Matron ol warmly and Miaady on ma tag attachm 10 each (Tag ol Funk a G-Hybnfls sold Is pan ol lira forms a iM lOartol Funk i Is a brand nama NomOats Idrnuly yariattts Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 20,1986-821 SPONSOR INEWO * %■ Funk's C-Hybrid and design are trademarks of Ciba-Geigy Corporation. 6105 H
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers