BY LOU ANN gSOD SOMERSET (Somerset Co.) Pack your bags and head to the Pennsylvania Young Farmer Association Summer Conference in Somerset County. The agenda for the annual con ference held July 21 and 22 is packed with farm tours, great eat ing, entertainment by Captain Stubby, and a volleyball tournament “It’s a time to share ideas, exchange agriculture technology and see the technology imple mented at on-site tours,” said Doy le Paul who is coordinating the two day event. Overnight lodging is available at motels, bed and breakfast inns and camp grounds in the area, which is touted as the roof garden of Pennsylvania because of the ele vation of the Allegheny mountain chain. Registration begins at 9:00 a.m. on Friday, July 21. Lunch on both days will be served at the Somerset County Area Vocational Technical Schools. A choice of tours is offered each afternoon. Entertainment at the Friday night banquet held at the Ramada Inn is Captain Stubby, a farmer from Galveston, Indiana. Paul Harvey of ABC news reports that Captain Stubby offers good, clean, down-to-earth humor that is hard to come by. His stories are enriched by growing up in hard limes. Paul promises, ‘"Hie laughs come thick and fast and your sides will ache.” A pig roast will be held Saturday at 12:30 p.m. with county chapters NAZARETH TRIMARK BUILDING BUILDING CONTRACTORS, SYSTEMS, INC. INC. Nnarath, PA So. Vlmland, NJ PH; 215437-7700 PH; 109425-1990 D. TOMBASCO CO. HnoKon, PA PH: 7174594959 eumSSam CO., INC. dS md Strait, MO pu : 301487-7213 PH: 301-692-5350 TRI-COUNTY FOUR COUNTIES AGRI-SYSTEMS CONTRACTOR, INC. Suradtsbore, NJ Coalport, PA PH: M 9457-3174 PH: 514472-5751 DOUH & SNYDER PHIC BUILDERS CONTRACTORS PoHatown. PA Roaring Springs, PA PH: 215-323-4070 PH: 514-2244303 UATTSON TEJ Z°E TE ° ENTERPRISES SfSiS Burlington, NJ PH. 3014224400 p H: W.R. MOODY, J.E.N. CONTRACTOR CONSTRUCTION Wool Newton, PA Toms Rim, NJ PH: 4124724104 PH: 201-340-7455 PYFA Summer Conference Offers Tours And Fun competing in a volleyball tournament. Tours of the following farms and businesses are offered: •Bill and Mary Jane Yoder Farm has the top Jersey herd for butterfat for the past several years. They rank ninth in the nation for a herd of 30 to 49 cows. Their intensive grazing system has brought recog nition in state and national publica tions. Examine their gravity flow manure system. ’4-Guys, Inc. is a stainless steel and aluminum fabrication plant organized in 1975 and now has annual sales exceeding $6,000,000. •Robert Decker Farms features QUEENSTOWN. MD. Today’s farmers are asked to feed a growing population on less land, using fewer chemicals that can End their way off the Held and into our food and water supplies. What’s a producer to do? Well, a wise first step would be to attend the 21st annual Wye Field Day, August 24, at the University of Maryland Agricultural Experi ment Station’s Wye Research and Education Center. “Our goal is to improve the lives of Maryland fanners and consumers through innovative research and educational prog rams.” said Dr. Russell B. Brins ficld, head of the Wye Research and Education Center. “The Wye Field Day provides a unique opportunity to share the results of some of our efforts with the citi- KNOXVILLE , CONSTRUCTION KnoxvDlt, PA PH: 1144264119 their popular six-horse wagon teams seen at the state farm show, on TV and in movies. He owns 40 registered Belgian horses and anti que machinery. •Snyder of Berlin produces quality potato chips. •Hillside Hunting Preserve pro vides hunting excursions in a set ting that closely resembles natural , Cover. •Stony Acres Farm owned by Jim and Barbara Brant dates back to 1890. They have a rolling herd average of 21,507 pounds of milk, 811 pounds of butterfat and 708 pounds of protein. •Coal Cleaning Plant and Sur face Mine is an important industry Wye Field Day Set For Aug. 24 zens of Maryland.” Here’s a brief rundown of this year’s informative field day wagon tours: • A cornucopia of helpful infor mation about Held crops, includ ing the latest soybean variety, dis ease and weed control methods, and efficient use of fertilizers is available to those taking the field crops and soils tour. •'Horticulturists are offered the latest sweet com variety and polli nation trial results, irrigation alter natives for vegetable production, information on how to optimize fruit size in tree fruits, and how to use integrated pest management to control strawberry and bramble insect pests. • Cattlemen can learn about the future direction of research on the famous Wye Angus herd. Experts • Retail Stores • Light Commercial • Storage Bldgs. • Offices & Shops • Garages • Mini-Warehouses • Industrial, Mfg. Facilities LESTER . • Machinery Storage • Livestock Housing • Farm Shops • Horse Arenas • Hobby Barns • Open Fronts • Dairy Barns a Poultry Housing For More Information , Contact Your Local LESTER Builder. MFg"co” I Attn. P.E. Hess J P.O. Box 337, Oxford. PA 19363 I □ Plmm tend info, on LESTER BuiMings I □ I’m interasfod in a LESTER Dealership ! Name | Address I County I City _ I Phone (area code) to Somerset. Visit an active sur face mine and see the strip mine operation. •Latuch Brothers Dairy Farms boasts famous registered Holsteins with a SO dcscendents linage.' •Farmers and Threshermens Jubilee Grounds where history is brought to life. •Scchler Sugar Shack is a sugar camp that combines modem and age-old methos to produce maple syrup. •Southern Somerset County offers a scenic tour of the variety of modem agriculture and artifacts from the past •Walker’s Farm Service offers computerized fertilizer mixing and will field questions while showing cow/calf pairs and 1989 Wye progeny. Pesticide-conscious homeow ners and small orchard owners will benefit from a morning half hour clinic, “Low-input Fruit Pro duction,” where disease-resistant varieties and non-chemical con trols will be discussed. Another informative session, “Your Health and Environment,” runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Here you can learn how to prevent food-borne illness, conserve and check your water supply, and dis pose of hazardous household waste. There are three afternoon semi nars: Ag Market Outlook, Aqua culture in Maryland, and Low input Sustainable Agriculture. In addition to the buffet luncheon State Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, July 1,1989-A23 seeds. •Brendles Poultry Farm has 85,000 layers and 44,000 pullets. Manure is processed through a methane digester which supplies all the electricity for the farm plus they sell it for the community. •Somerset Historical Center exhibits recall the pioneering spirit that settled the state frontier. The host chapters included Ber lin Brothcrsvalley, Meyersdale, Noth Star, Rockwood, and Some rset Counties PYF chapters. To register, request information form James Harrold, Somerset County AVTS, R.D. #5, Vo Tech Road, Somerset, PA 15S01 of call (717) 443-3651. and program, there is also a crab feast, featuring bluegrass music, from 3 to 6 p.m. There will also be a staffed information booth for the College of Agriculture and Col lege of Life Sciences at the Uni versity of Maryland at College Park. The Wye Research and Educa tion Center is located near Queenstown on Maryland’s East ern Shore, 3 'A miles south of U.S. Route SO, on Carmichael-Wye Neck Road. Watch for the Ches ton Lane Entrance road about Vi .■ mile beyond the Carmichael Methodist Church. The 21st annual Wye Field Day is sponsored by the University of Maryland Agricultural Experi ment Station, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the Wye and Aspen Institutes. SUSQUEHANNA H.B. WEAVER METAL PRODUCTS CONSTRUCTION WctMfltown, PA Aniwlh, PA PH: 717-742-2626 717-638-3753 FISHER CONSTRUCTION WalltvUto, PA PH: 717-282-3692 CLIFFORD E REYNOLDS & BOLLINGER YELLOT CO., INC. SRSSRS PH: 215-267-8046 C & M SALES INC. Honaadala, PA PH; 717-253-1612 INVESTMENT CONTRACTORS ?hS.de Rad Lion, PA p5?Km“ • PH: 717-757-2335 GEORGE W. HOY MYERS BUILDING t SON, INC. SYSTEMS, INC. * LockHavan, PA Ctaarapring, .dD PH: 717-746-7375 PH: 301-5W4200 MAJOR BUILDINGS, INC. / Johnstown, PA PH: 114-535-7716 GEESAMAN-ROCK CONSTRUCTION INC. RouzarvlKa, PA 717-762-1116