A2B-Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, December 20,1986 r I '-v, ‘ ‘ v f llP** Serving behind the food trays at the farmland preservation breakfast are left to right; Allen Musselman and Bruce Shoemaker, Farm Preservation Board, and Patti Skiadas, Jay Groff, Manager, Mother Skiadas and George Skiadas, owner of Family Style Restaurant. Breakfast Served To 768; Raised For Farm Preservation LANCASTER - To help preserve farmland as open space in the growing poppulation center around Lancaster, $3,000 was raised at the Farmland Preser vation Breakfast held last Sunday at the Family Style Restaurant, 2323 Lincoln Highway East. Seven hundred sixty-eight people were served breakfast from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. by the Family Style staff and POURED REINFORCED We are qualified to handle any poured concrete job you may need We use a practical aluminum forming system to create concrete structures of maximum strength and durability For a highly satisfactory job at an affordable price, get in touch with us POURED FOR DURABILITY Croffdole concrete walls. BRICK CHURCH RD LEOLA PA 17540 FOR SALES & LAYOUT CONTACT GROFFDALE POURED WALLS (717)656 2016 JAKE KING (717)656-7566 all proceeds, $3,000 was donated to the worthy cause. Officials of the project called it a very successful day. People from surrounding counties drove to the breakfast after seeing the publicity in the Farm Press. A list of suppliers that con tributed food and supplies are as follows: Kunzler & Company, Fran Kennedy, Ellis Coffee; Turkey Hill aii me. $3,000 Dairy; Pappettis; Don Miller, Mennco Foods; Kegels Produce; Sky Brothers; G/L Clark Associates; B.J. Saylor; Ettline; Bob White; Hershey Foods; Lancaster County Farms; La Touraine; Singer Equipment; PYA Monarch. KEN CLUGSTON VERNON SEIBEL 665-6775 665-2782 CRAFT-BILT CONSTRUCTION INC. FARM-HOME BUILDING R.DJ2 MANHEIM, PA. PH: 665-4372 BUILDING & REMODELING FOR DAIRY RESIDENTAL SWINE POLE BUILDINGS BEEF STORAGE ELOMBARDINI The M The Powerhouse The Farmer s Cho,ce »- Model 11L0625-3 Is your old engine giving you a headache? Try a LOMBARDINI...WorId’s Largest Manufacturer of Small Air-Cooled Diesel Engines. DIESELS OUR SPECIALTY Service After The Sale...7hot's Us! HOOVER DIESEL SERVICE NEW YORK - Dairy fanners who supplied milk plants regulated under the New York-New Jersey marketing orders during November 1986 will be paid on the basis of a uniform price of $13.05 per hundredweight, 28.1 cents per quart; the price for the corresponding month last year was $12.30 per hundredweight. Market Administrator Thomas A. Wilson stated that the price was $13.05 in October 1986. The uniform price is a marketwide weighted average of the value of farm milk used for fluid and manufactured dairy products. The seasonal incentive fund returned $2,440,621.59, including $353,681.09 interest, to the dairy farmers’ uniform price for November, or $.284 per hun dredweight. The fund was generated by reducing the uniform price paid to producers during the high-production spring months. A total of 15,243 dairy farmers supplied the New York-New Jersey Milk Marketing Area with 858.9 million pounds of milk during November 1986. This was a decrease of 6.4 percent, about 59 million pounds, from last year. The gross value to dairy farmers for milk deliveries was $116,364,183.13. This included differentials required to be paid to dairy far mers but not voluntary premiums 1 12 month warranty or 4 2,000 hours 5 2 Low fuel consumption 6 3 Low maintenance 255 Mascot Rd. Ronks, PA 17572 (717) 656-3322 (717) 295-1729 DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED Milk Price Stable In Order 2 For November BUY DIRECT AND SAVE Self-Locking Feeding Panels ii fffrr — ffir~ ii Cow* Hell*r» CalvM Uln n WE SHIP OR DELIVER ANYWHERE UD'ER D'LITE STALL FABRICATORS Oxford, PA Toll Free Local 1-800-222-2948 301-398-2948 MOWERS, BALERS, CORNPICKERS, CHOPPERS, ETC. We have the right size, weight, shape, price and engine available. 4toBOH.P. LOMBARDINI DIESEL USES 4 OR I.ESS FUEL THAN GAS ENGINES IJCSS DOWNTIME THAN GAS ENGINES TAKE ADVANTAGE OF: Price per horsepower Easy starting 100% back-up with parts and service or deductions authorized by the farmer. Regulated milk dealers used 383,754,589 pounds of milk for Class I, 44.7 percent of the total. This milk is used for fluid milk products such as homogenized, flavored, low test, and skim milks. For November 1986, handlers paid $14.10 per hundredweight, 30.3 cents per quart, for Class I milk compared with $13.37 a year ago. The balance, 475,197,479 pounds or 55.3 percent, was used to manufacture Class II products including butter, cheese, ice cream and yogurt. Handlers paid $11.97 per hundredweight for this milk. The uniform price is based on milk containing 3.5 percent but terfat. For November 1986, there was a price differential of 17.5 cents for each one-tenth of one percent that the milk tested above or below the 3.5 percent standard. All prices quoted are for bulk tank milk received from farms in the 201-210 mile zone from New York City. L*» 0» Know Tour Survicu Problem Chuck Our Prlc*f 313 Furnace Rd. Quarryville, PA 17566 (717) 786-2173