01619:: 1299 p| MODI CALS omsu'm WPOV PiViIEF l^'fuuj^rpciiv PFNNSYLVANIA STAHL UNI ■ ItNIOFRCIIY PAPK Pm 16...0. IL 34 NO. 29 Hacks Promote Dairy Industry And Guernseys , BY HELEN KELCHNER Columbia Co. Correspondent BERWICK (Columbia Co.) Each year nearly a hundred young children in Columbia County get their first hands-on experience with a dairy cow, compliments of Albert and Miriam Hack. As a way to acquaint children with the source of milk and give some of them a once-in-a-lifetime experience of reaching out to a cow, Albert and Miriam Hack 1 have entertained hundreds of youngsters from Head Start and Easter Seals over the years. Recently the Hacks hosted 30 preschool Start children at die Columbia County farm. Many of the young people had never been closer to a cow than their tele vision set, but on the Hacks’ farm rthey were treated to a romp through the straw in a pen where small Guernsey calves were -.stabled. The calves provided a * ‘real’ hands-on experience. Guiding them through the long stable, Albert explained the feed ing process of the milking herd and it (Turn to Pago A 24) National Cooking Contest, Sizzles With Flavor BY LOU ANN GOOD HERSHEY (DAUPHIN) The aroma of SI chicken dishes drifted throughout the Hershey Convention Center on Thursday. It r was the site of the nation’s largest chicken cooking contest sponsored by the National Broiler Council, TTie Pennsylvania Poultry Federa tion and trade associations. . Melissa Mathie, a personable young farm wife from Michigan won $lO,OOO for her “Summer Ita lian Stuffed Chicken," boneless New York, Pennsylvania Heifers Earn Top Bids At AGA Sale BY PAT PURCELL ROCHESTER, NY An excellent sale concluded the American Guernsey Associa tion’s 112lh annual meeting held in Rochester, New York this week. Two Pennsylvania heifers and one of New York’s finest grabbed the top bids in their divisions at the sale. i Topping the sale at $5,600 was Nedrow Farms Admirals Jen, a VG-88. Jen also ranks J 60 in the breed for CPI. John DuPont of Newtown Square, Pa. placed the final bid. In 286 . days Jen produced 18,479 pounds of milk, 4.0 percent fat, 732 pounds of butterfat, 3.2 * percent protein, and 587 pounds of protein. Projections for 305 days, 23,062 pounds of ’ milk, 914 pounds of fat. Nedrow Farms is owned by Kevin and Barb Nedrow of Clifton | Springs, New York. Top selling bred heifer was a Pennsylvania consignment from Trotacres Farm in Enon i Valley, owned by by James, Bob and Dave Trotter. Trotacre Fayette Barbie sold to Great ; Hall Dairy Inc, from Marion, Mass, for $4,100. Barbie was the ninth junior calf at the 1 1987 National Guernsey Show in Harrisburg. Sired by Fayette and due in to Jetstar. Her | dam is an EX-90 Femell daughter with 605 F. | Ken Forester of Ontario, Canada purchased the top selling open heifer. Lebanon Val | ley Pender Dori-ET ran the bidding up to $4,200 before it stopped. She is the daughter of f Pender and Lebanon Valley Star Elsie. Elsie is an EX-92 GSD. Elsie was named the 1988 1 high cow for butterfat in Pennsylvania, Robert B. Smith & Sons were the consignors. I Top selling preice for an unborn ET was $2,750 paid for Marfred Bootsy. Consignor |*as Fred T. Mills of Saluda, South Carolina. Ken Forester of Ontario, Canada made the (Tumi la Put A2l) Four SocVong i! anykoofc—od lauatTßlHH Pt—tor. Lang*, ooncumsd about the future of tire family farm, mat wihßap. Diok fchulmtacbfouts thafadarai aatmatax. Tha outcoma twaa a bW that would c« or aHpiUnaia laiitatax on family farm* within SO miles of - a metropolitan area. chicken breast halves stuffed with a combination of basil and thinly sliced plum tomatoes, then coated with a mixture of Parmesan cheese and Italian breadcrumbs. Four other state champions shared an additional $lO,OOO in prize money. June Holley, Cincinnati, Ohio, captured second prize of $4,000 for her recipe, “Chicken Santa Fe,” a zesty combination of roasted red peppers and jalapeno jelly with (Turn to Pag* A 22) Lancaster Faming, Saturday, May 27,1989 , Holiday Deadlines The office of Lancaster Farm ing will be closed Monday, May 29, to observe Meufafial Day and will reopen Tuesday, May 30. Deadlines for the June 3 (special dairy) issue are as follows: Mail Box Market Ads 9 a.m. Tuesday. Public Sale Ads Noon Tuesday. Classified Sec. B Ads S p.m. Wednesday. All Other Classified Ads 9 a.m. Thursday. General News 5 p.m. Wednesday. Late Breaking News Noon Thursday. ___ Chester County Farmer Inspires Federal Estate Tax Bill BY LISA RISSER MALVERN (Chester Co.) “Save the family farm” is Bob Lange’s battle cry. Struggling to save his family’s farm and his livelihood, Lange persuaded Rep. Dick Schulze, R-Chester Co., to propose federal legislation that would ease estate tax payments on farms. “My family would have to sell between 25 and 75 percent of the farm in order to pay estate taxes depending on the assessed value,” Lange predicted. “We don’t want to sell any ground. We want it to stay as it is.” Schulze very much agrees with Lange. ‘There are people who genuinely want to farm. It seemed to me somehow wrong that we say to farmers that they have to sell off parts of their farm to pay for taxes. We should have a device to enable them to continue farming.” House Bill 2336 has been intro duced to the House of Represents- Special Dedry Issues Next Week By next Saturday, June 3, the annual dairy month festivities will be underway. And Lancaster Farming’s annual dairy issue will add to the celebration. Along with many advertisers who have special messages for the dairy industry, you’ll find a milk pail full of dairy recipes that came in response to the drawing for one of a herd of cows (the model type you sit on the shelf). And you will find a story about a young couple who started farming last year. They tell why they did. Since good dairymen want to produce a quality pro duct, farms that have been recognized for low somatic cell counts are visited. And since BST could revolution ize the dairy industry, several farmers will tell the prac tical aspects they experienced in on-farm trials spon sored by the companies who want to getthe new bio tech product approved for commercial use. And the champion alfalfa grower in the state will tell how he manages the crop. These are only a few of the features you’ll find next week as a tribute to the dairy farmers who provide wholesome dairy products. Nedrow Farms Admirals Jen (VG-88) took the bidding to $5,600 at the American Guernsey Association’s 112th annual meeting and heifer sale held this week In Rochester, New York. John DuPont of Newtown Square, Pa. made the purchase. Consignors were Kevin and Barb Nedrow of Clifton Springs, New York. ... ... SO# Ptr Copy lives in an effort to help save fami ly farms. The bill would cut the federal estate tax by 20 percent on any family farm owned and oper ated for 10 years. Qualifying farms must be located within 30 miles of a metropolitan area. After each subsequent five-year period, the tax payment would drop another 20 percent. After 30 years of owning and operating the farm, the family would not have to pay any tax. The moment the farm is sold or changes hands or is not an operating farm, the estate tax would have to be paid. Currently up to 55 percent of the assessed value of an estate is taxed when its ownership is transferred through death or as a gift The bill, introduced May 11, has already attracted 11 other spon sors. Co-sponsoring the bill with Schulze as Lancaster Farming went to press were Helen Bentley, R-Maryland; Sherwood Boehlert, (Turn to P.g. A3B) $12.50 Per Year